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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mystic London:, by Charles Maurice Davies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mystic London:
+ or, Phases of occult life in the metropolis
+
+Author: Charles Maurice Davies
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2008 [EBook #25619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYSTIC LONDON: ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Curtis Weyant and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by Case
+Western Reserve University Preservation Department Digital
+Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Note: |
+ | |
+ | Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in |
+ | this text. For a complete list, please see the bottom of |
+ | this document. |
+ | Text printed using the Greek alphabet in the original book |
+ | is shown as follows: [Greek: pistis] |
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+MYSTIC LONDON:
+
+OR,
+
+PHASES OF OCCULT LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS.
+
+BY
+
+REV. CHARLES MAURICE DAVIES, D.D.
+AUTHOR OF "ORTHODOX" AND "UNORTHODOX LONDON," ETC.
+
+"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
+ Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
+ _Hamlet._
+
+LONDON: TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND. 1875.
+[_All rights of Translation and Reproduction are reserved._]
+
+LONDON:
+SAVILL, EDWARDS AND CO., PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
+COVENT GARDEN.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. LONDON ARABS 1
+
+ II. EAST LONDON ARABS 11
+
+ III. LONDON ARABS IN CANADA 21
+
+ IV. WAIFS AND STRAYS 29
+
+ V. A LUNATIC BALL 38
+
+ VI. A BABY SHOW 51
+
+ VII. A NIGHT IN A BAKEHOUSE 58
+
+ VIII. A LONDON SLAVE MARKET 67
+
+ IX. TEA AND EXPERIENCE 73
+
+ X. SUNDAY LINNET-SINGING 85
+
+ XI. A WOMAN'S RIGHTS DEBATE 92
+
+ XII. AN OPEN-AIR TICHBORNE MEETING 100
+
+ XIII. SUNDAY IN A PEOPLE'S GARDEN 108
+
+ XIV. UTILIZING THE YOUNG LADIES 116
+
+ XV. FAIRLOP FRIDAY 122
+
+ XVI. A CHRISTMAS DIP 129
+
+ XVII. BOXING-DAY ON THE STREETS 134
+
+ XVIII. THE VIGIL OF THE DERBY 141
+
+ XIX. THE WIFESLAYER'S "HOME" 150
+
+ XX. BATHING IN THE FAR EAST 157
+
+ XXI. AMONG THE QUAKERS 164
+
+ XXII. PENNY READINGS 172
+
+ XXIII. DARWINISM ON THE DEVIL 179
+
+ XXIV. PECULIAR PEOPLE 198
+
+ XXV. INTERVIEWING AN ASTROLOGER 204
+
+ XXVI. A BARMAID SHOW 212
+
+ XXVII. A PRIVATE EXECUTION 217
+
+ XXVIII. BREAKING UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS 224
+
+ XXIX. PSYCHOLOGICAL LADIES 228
+
+ XXX. SECULARISM ON BUNYAN 233
+
+ XXXI. AL FRESCO INFIDELITY 242
+
+ XXXII. AN "INDESCRIBABLE PHENOMENON" 250
+
+ XXXIII. A LADY MESMERIST 260
+
+ XXXIV. A PSYCHOPATHIC INSTITUTION 269
+
+ XXXV. A PHRENOLOGICAL EVENING 277
+
+ XXXVI. A SPIRITUAL PICNIC 284
+
+ XXXVII. A GHOSTLY CONFERENCE 290
+
+XXXVIII. AN EVENING'S DIABLERIE 300
+
+ XXXIX. SPIRITUAL ATHLETES 307
+
+ XL. "SPOTTING" SPIRIT MEDIUMS 313
+
+ XLI. A SÉANCE FOR SCEPTICS 320
+
+ XLII. AN EVENING WITH THE HIGHER SPIRITS 328
+
+ XLIII. SPIRIT FORMS 340
+
+ XLIV. SITTING WITH A SIBYL 347
+
+ XLV. SPIRITUALISTS AND CONJURERS 355
+
+ XLVI. PROS AND CONS OF SPIRITUALISM 362
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+It is perhaps scarcely necessary to say that I use the term Mystic, as
+applied to the larger portion of this volume, in its technical sense to
+signify my own _initiation_ into some of the more occult phases of
+metropolitan existence. It is only to the Spiritualistic, or concluding
+portion of my work, that the word applies in its ordinary signification.
+
+C. M. D.
+
+
+
+
+MYSTIC LONDON.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+LONDON ARABS.
+
+
+Of all the protean forms of misery that meet us in the bosom of that
+"stony-hearted stepmother, London," there is none that appeals so
+directly to our sympathies as the spectacle of a destitute child. In the
+case of the grown man or woman, sorrow and suffering are often traceable
+to the faults, or at best to the misfortunes of the sufferers
+themselves; but in the case of the child they are mostly, if not always,
+vicarious. The fault, or desertion, or death of the natural protectors,
+turns loose upon the desert of our streets those nomade hordes of
+Bedouins, male and female, whose presence is being made especially
+palpable just now, and whose reclamation is a perplexing, yet still a
+hopeful problem. In the case of the adult Arab, there is a life's work
+to undo, and the facing of that fact it is which makes some of our
+bravest workers drop their hands in despair. With these young Arabs, on
+the contrary, it is only the wrong bias of a few early years to
+correct, leaving carte blanche for any amount of hope in youth,
+maturity, and old age. Being desirous of forming, for my own
+edification, some notion of the amount of the evil existing, and the
+efforts made to counteract it, I planned a pilgrimage into this Arabia
+Infelix--this Petræa of the London flagstones; and purpose setting down
+here, in brief, a few of my experiences, for the information of
+stay-at-home travellers, and still more for the sake of pointing out to
+such as may be disposed to aid in the work of rescuing these little
+Arabs the proper channels for their beneficence. Selecting, then, the
+Seven Dials and Bethnal Green as the foci of my observation in West and
+East London respectively, I set out for the former one bleak March
+night, and by way of breaking ground, applied to the first
+police-constable I met on that undesirable beat for information as to my
+course. After one or two failures, I met with an officer literally
+"active and intelligent," who convoyed me through several of that
+network of streets surrounding the Seven Dials, leaving me to my own
+devices when he had given me the general bearings of the district it
+would be desirable to visit.
+
+My first raid was on the Ragged School and Soup Kitchen in Charles
+Street, Drury Lane, an evil-looking and unfragrant locality; but the
+institution in question stands so close to the main thoroughfare that
+the most fastidious may visit it with ease. Here I found some twenty
+Arabs assembled for evening school. They were of all ages, from seven to
+fifteen, and their clothing was in an inverse ratio to their dirt--very
+little of the former, and a great deal of the latter. They moved about
+with their bare feet in the most feline way, like the veritable Bedouin
+himself. There they were, however, over greasy slates and grimy
+copy-books, in process of civilization. The master informed me that his
+special difficulties arose from the attractions of the theatre and the
+occasional intrusion of wild Arabs, who came only to kick up a row. At
+eight o'clock the boys were to be regaled with a brass band practice,
+so, finding from one of the assembled Arabs that there was a second
+institution of the kind in King Street, Long Acre, I passed on thereto.
+Here I was fortunate enough to find the presiding genius in the person
+of a young man engaged in business during the day, and devoting his
+extra time to the work of civilizing the barbarians of this district.
+Sunday and week-day services, night schools, day schools, Bands of Hope,
+temperance meetings, and last, not least, the soup kitchen, were the
+means at work here. Not a single officer is paid. The task is undertaken
+"all for love, and nothing for reward," and it has thriven so far that
+my presence interrupted a debate between the gentleman above-mentioned
+and one of his coadjutors on the subject of taking larger premises. The
+expenses were met by the weekly offerings, and I was surprised to see by
+a notice posted in the room where the Sunday services are held, that
+the sum total for the past week was only _19s. 4d._ So there must be
+considerable sacrifice of something more than time to carry on this
+admirable work. Under the guidance of the second gentleman mentioned
+above, I proceeded to the St. George's and St. Giles's Refuge in Great
+Queen Street, where boys are admitted on their own application, the only
+qualification being destitution. Here they are housed, clothed, boarded,
+and taught such trades as they may be fitted for, and not lost sight of
+until they are provided with situations. A hundred and fifty-four was
+the number of this truly miraculous draught from the great ocean of
+London streets, whom I saw all comfortably bedded in one spacious
+dormitory. Downstairs were the implements and products of the day's
+work, dozens of miniature cobblers' appliances, machines for sawing and
+chopping firewood, &c., whilst, in a spacious refectory on the first
+floor, I was informed, the resident Arabs extended on a Friday their
+accustomed hospitality to other tribes, to such an extent, that the
+party numbered about 500. Besides the 154 who were fortunate enough to
+secure beds, there were twenty new arrivals, who had to be quartered on
+the floor for the night; but at all events they had a roof above them,
+and were out of the cruel east wind that made Arabia Petræa that evening
+an undesirable resting-place indeed. Lights were put out, and doors
+closed, when I left, as this is not a night refuge; but notices are
+posted, I am informed, in the various casual wards and temporary
+refuges, directing boys to this. There is a kindred institution for
+girls in Broad Street. Such was my first experience of the western
+portion of Arabia Infelix.
+
+The following Sunday I visited the Mission Hall belonging to Bloomsbury
+Chapel, in Moor Street, Soho, under the management of Mr. M'Cree, and
+the nature of the work is much the same as that pursued at King Street.
+The eleven o'clock service was on this particular day devoted to
+children, who were assembled in large numbers, singing their cheerful
+hymns, and listening to a brief, practical, and taking address. These
+children, however, were of a class above the Arab type, being generally
+well dressed. I passed on thence to what was then Mr. Brock's chapel,
+where I found my veritable Arabs, whom I had seen in bed the previous
+evening, arrayed in a decent suit of "sober livery," and perched up in a
+high gallery to gather what they could comprehend of Mr. Brock's
+discourse--not very much, I should guess; for that gentleman's long
+Latinized words would certainly fire a long way over their heads, high
+as was their position. I found the whole contingent of children provided
+for at the refuge was 400, including those on board the training ship
+_Chichester_ and the farm at Bisley, near Woking, Surrey. This is
+certainly the most complete way of dealing with the Arabs par
+excellence, as it contemplates the case of utter destitution and
+homelessness. It need scarcely be said, however, that such a work must
+enlarge its boundaries very much, in order to make any appreciable
+impression on the vast amount of such destitution. Here, nevertheless,
+is the germ, and it is already fructifying most successfully. The other
+institutions, dealing with larger masses of children, aim at civilizing
+them at home, and so making each home a centre of influence.
+
+Passing back again to the King Street Mission Hall, I found assembled
+there the band of fifty missionaries, male and female, who visit every
+Sunday afternoon the kitchens of the various lodging-houses around the
+Seven Dials. Six hundred kitchens are thus visited every week. After
+roll-call, and a brief address, we sallied forth, I myself accompanying
+Mr. Hatton--the young man to whom the establishment of the Mission is
+due--and another of his missionaries. I had heard much of the St.
+Giles's Kitchens, but failed to realize any idea of the human beings
+swarming by dozens and scores in those subterranean regions. Had it not
+been for the fact that nearly every man was smoking, the atmosphere
+would have been unbearable. In most of the kitchens they were beguiling
+the ennui of Sunday afternoon with cards; but the game was invariably
+suspended on our arrival. Some few removed their hats--for all wore
+them--and a smaller number still joined in a verse or two of a hymn,
+and listened to a portion of Scripture and a few words of exhortation.
+One or two seemed interested, others smiled sardonically; the majority
+kept a dogged silence. Some read their papers and refused the tracts and
+publications offered them. These, I found, were the Catholics. I was
+assured there were many men there who themselves, or whose friends, had
+occupied high positions. I was much struck with the language of one
+crop-headed young fellow of seventeen or eighteen, who, seeing me grope
+my way, said, "They're not very lavish with the gas here, sir, are
+they?" It may appear that this "experience" has little bearing on the
+Arab boys; but really some of the inmates of these kitchens _were_ but
+boys. Those we visited were in the purlieus of the old "Rookery," and
+for these dens, I was informed, the men paid fourpence a night! Surely a
+little money invested in decent dwellings for such people would be well
+and even remuneratively spent. The kitchens, my informant--who has spent
+many years among them--added, are generally the turning point between
+honesty and crime. The discharged soldier or mechanic out of work is
+there herded with the professional thief or burglar, and learns his
+trade and gets to like his life.
+
+The succeeding evening I devoted first of all to the Girls' Refuge, 19,
+Broad Street, St. Giles's. Here were sixty-two girls of the same class
+as the boys in Great Queen Street, who remain until provided with
+places as domestic servants. A similar number were in the Home at
+Ealing. The Institution itself is the picture of neatness and order. I
+dropped in quite unexpectedly; and any visitor who may be induced to
+follow my example, will not fail to be struck with the happy, "homely"
+look of everything, the clean, cheerful appearance of the female Arabs,
+and the courtesy and kindness of the matron. These girls are considered
+to belong to St. Giles's parish, as the boys to Bloomsbury Chapel. So
+far the good work has been done by the Dissenters and Evangelical party
+in the Established Church. The sphere of the High Church--as I was
+reminded by the Superintendent Sergeant--is the Newport Market Refuge
+and Industrial Schools. Here, besides the male and female refuges, is a
+Home for Destitute Boys, who are housed and taught on the same plan as
+at St. Giles's. Their domicile is even more cosy than the other, and
+might almost tempt a boy to act the part of an "amateur Arab." I can
+only say the game that was going on, previously to bed, in the large
+covered play room, with bare feet and in shirt sleeves, was enough to
+provoke the envy of any member of a Dr. Blimber's "Establishment." The
+Institution had just had a windfall in the shape of one of those
+agreeable _1000l._ cheques that have been flying about lately, or their
+resources would have been cramped; but the managers are wisely sensible
+that such windfalls do not come every day, and so forbear enlarging
+their borders as they could wish.
+
+Strangely enough, the Roman Catholics, who usually outdo us in their
+work among the poor, seemed a little behindhand in this special
+department of settling the Arabs. They have schools largely attended in
+Tudor Place, Tottenham Court Road, White Lion Street, Seven Dials, &c.,
+but, as far as I could ascertain, nothing local in the shape of a
+Refuge. To propagate the faith may be all very well, and will be only
+the natural impulse of a man sincere in his own belief; but we must not
+forget that these Arabs have bodies as well as souls, and that those
+bodies have been so shamefully debased and neglected as to drag the
+higher energies down with them; and it is a great question whether it is
+not absolutely necessary to begin on the very lowest plane first, and so
+to work towards the higher. Through the body and the mind we may at last
+reach the highest sphere of all.
+
+Without for one moment wishing to write down the "religious" element, it
+is, I repeat, a grave question whether the premature introduction of
+that element does not sometimes act as a deterrent, and frustrate the
+good that might otherwise be done. Still there is the great fact, good
+_is_ being done. It would be idle to carp at any means when the end is
+so thoroughly good. I could not help, as I passed from squalid kitchen
+to kitchen that Sunday afternoon, feeling Lear's words ring through my
+mind:--
+
+ O, I have ta'en
+ Too little care of this. Take physic, pomp,
+ Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel,
+ That thou mayst shake the superflux to them,
+ And show the heavens more just.
+
+And now "Eastward ho!" for "experiences" in Bethnal Green.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+EAST LONDON ARABS.
+
+
+Notwithstanding my previous experiences among the Western tribes of
+Bedouins whose locale is the Desert of the Seven Dials, I must confess
+to considerable strangeness when first I penetrated the wilderness of
+Bethnal Green. Not only was it utterly terra incognita to me, but, with
+their manifold features in common, the want and squalor of the East have
+traits distinct from those of the West. I had but the name of one
+Bethnal Green parish and of one lady--Miss Macpherson--and with these
+slender data I proceeded to my work, the results of which I again
+chronicle seriatim.
+
+Passing from the Moorgate Street Station I made for the Eastern Counties
+Terminus at Shoreditch, and soon after passing it struck off to my right
+in the Bethnal Green Road. Here, amid a pervading atmosphere of
+bird-fanciers and vendors of live pets in general, I found a Mission
+Hall, belonging to I know not what denomination, and, aided by a
+vigorous policeman, kicked--in the absence of knocker or bell--at all
+the doors, without result. Nobody was there. I went on to the Bethnal
+Green parish which had been named to me as the resort of nomade tribes,
+and found the incumbent absent in the country for a week or so, and the
+Scripture-reader afraid, in his absence, to give much information. He
+ventured, however, to show me the industrial school, where some forty
+children were employed in making match-boxes for Messrs. Bryant and May.
+However, as I was told that the incumbent in question objected very
+decidedly to refuges and ragged schools, and thought it much better for
+the poor to strain a point and send their little ones to school, I felt
+that was hardly the regimen to suit my Arabian friends, who were
+evidently teeming in that locality. I was even returning home with the
+view of getting further geographical particulars of this Eastern Arabia
+Petræa, when, as a last resource, I was directed to a refuge in
+Commercial Street. I rang here, and found myself in the presence of the
+veritable Miss Macpherson herself, with whom I passed two pleasant and
+instructive hours.
+
+At starting, Miss Macpherson rather objected to being made the subject
+of an article--first of all, for the very comprehensible reason that
+such publicity would draw down upon her a host of visitors; and when I
+suggested that visitors probably meant funds, she added a second, and
+not quite so comprehensible an objection--that these funds themselves
+might alloy the element of Faith in which the work had been so far
+carried on. She had thoroughly imbibed the spirit of Müller, whose Home
+at Bristol was professedly the outcome of Faith and Prayer alone.
+However, on my promise to publish only such particulars--name, locality,
+&c.--as she might approve, this lady gave me the details of her truly
+wonderful work. The building in which I found her had been erected to
+serve as large warehouses, and here 110 of the most veritable Arabs were
+housed, fed, taught, and converted into Christians, when so convertible.
+Should they prove impressionable, Miss Macpherson then contemplates
+their emigration to Canada. Many had already been sent out; and her idea
+was to extend her operations in this respect: not, be it observed, to
+cast hundreds of the scum of the East End of London upon Canada--a
+proceeding to which the Canadians would very naturally object--but to
+form a Home on that side to be fed from the Homes on this, and so to
+remove from the old scenes of vice and temptation those who had been
+previously trained in the refuges here. She has it in contemplation to
+take a large hotel in Canada, and convert it into an institution of this
+kind; and I fancy it was the possibility that publicity might aid this
+larger scheme which eventually induced the good lady to let the world so
+far know what she is doing. At all events, she gave me carte blanche to
+publish the results of my observations.
+
+In selecting and dealing with the inmates of her refuges, Miss
+Macpherson avails herself of the science of phrenology, in which she
+believes, and she advances good reason for so doing. I presume my
+phrenological development must have been satisfactory, since she not
+only laid aside her objection to publicity, but even allowed me to carry
+off with me her MS. "casebooks," from which I cull one or two of several
+hundred:--
+
+"1. T. S., aged ten (March 5, 1869).--An orphan. Mother died in St.
+George's Workhouse. Father killed by coming in contact with a diseased
+sheep, being a slaughterman. A seller of boxes in the street. Slept last
+in a bed before Christmas. Slept in hay-carts, under a tarpaulin. Says
+the prayers his mother 'teached him.'"
+
+"2. J. H., aged twelve (March 5).--No home but the streets. Father
+killed by an engine-strap, being an engineer. Mother died of a broken
+heart. Went into ---- Workhouse; but ran away through ill-treatment last
+December. Slept in ruins near Eastern Counties Railway. _Can't remember_
+when he last lay in a bed."
+
+"3. A. R., aged eleven (March 5).--Mother and father left him and two
+brothers in an empty room in H---- Street. Policeman, hearing them
+crying, broke open the door and took them to the workhouse. His two
+brothers died. Was moved from workhouse by grandmother, and she, unable
+to support him, turned him out on the streets. Slept in railway ruins;
+lived by begging. July 24, sent to Home No. 1 as a reward for good
+conduct."
+
+Besides thus rescuing hundreds of homeless ones, Miss Macpherson has in
+many instances been the means of restoring runaway children of
+respectable parents. Here is an instance:--
+
+"Feb. 25th.--S. W. T., aged fourteen, brought into Refuge by one of the
+night teachers, who noticed him in a lodging-house respectably dressed.
+Had walked up to London from N----, in company with two sailors
+(disreputable men, whom the lodging-house keeper declined to take in).
+Had been reading sensational books. Wrote to address at N----. Father
+telegraphed to keep him. Uncle came for him with fresh clothes and took
+him home. He had begun to pawn his clothes for his night's lodging. His
+father had been for a fortnight in communication with the police."
+
+The constables in the neighbourhood all know Miss Macpherson's Refuge,
+and her readiness to take boys in at any time; so that many little
+vagrants are brought thither by them and reclaimed, instead of being
+locked up and sent to prison, to go from bad to worse. Besides this
+receptacle for boys, Miss Macpherson has also a Home at Hackney, where
+girls of the same class are housed. The plan she adopts is to get a
+friend to be responsible for one child. The cost she reckons at _6l.
+10s._ per annum for those under ten years, and _10l._ for those above.
+
+But this excellent lady's good works are by no means catalogued yet.
+Besides the children being fed and taught in these Homes, the parents
+and children are constantly gathered for sewing classes, tea meetings,
+&c. at the Refuge. Above 400 children are thus influenced; and Miss
+Macpherson, with her coadjutors, systematically visits the wretched dens
+and lodging-houses into which no well-dressed person, unless favourably
+known like her for her work among the children, would dare to set foot.
+I was also present when a hearty meal of excellent soup and a large lump
+of bread were given to between three and four hundred men, chiefly dock
+labourers out of employ. It was a touching sight to notice the stolid
+apathy depicted on most of the countenances, which looked unpleasantly
+like despair. One of the men assured me that for every package that had
+to be unladen from the docks there were ten pair of hands ready to do
+the work, where only one could be employed. Many of the men, he assured
+me, went for two, sometimes three, days without food; and with the large
+majority of those assembled the meal they were then taking would
+represent the whole of their subsistence for the twenty-four-hours.
+After supper a hymn was sung, and a few words spoken to them by Miss
+Macpherson on the allegory of the Birds and Flowers in the Sermon on the
+Mount; and so they sallied forth into the darkness of Arabia Petræa. I
+mounted to the little boys' bedroom, where the tiniest Arabs of all
+were enjoying the luxury of a game, with bare feet, before retiring.
+Miss Macpherson dragged a mattress off one of the beds and threw it down
+in the centre for them to tumble head-over-tail; and, as she truly said,
+it was difficult to recognise in those merry shouts and happy faces any
+remains of the veriest reprobates of the London streets.
+
+Let us hear Miss Macpherson herself speak. In a published pamphlet, "Our
+Perishing Little Ones," she says: "As to the present state of the
+mission, we simply say 'Come and see.' It is impossible by words to give
+an idea of the mass of 120,000 precious souls who live on this one
+square mile.... My longing is to send forth, so soon as the ice breaks,
+500 of our poor street boys, waifs and strays that have been gathered
+in, to the warm-hearted Canadian farmers. In the meantime, who will help
+us to make outfits, and collect _5l._ for each little Arab, that there
+be no hindrance to the complement being made up when the spring time is
+come?... Ladies who are householders can aid us much in endeavours to
+educate these homeless wanderers to habits of industry by sending orders
+for their firewood--_4s._ per hundred bundles, sent free eight miles
+from the City." And, again, in Miss Macpherson's book called "The Little
+Matchmakers," she says: "In this work of faith and labour of love among
+the very lowest in our beloved country, let us press on, looking for
+great things. Preventing sin and crime is a much greater work than
+curing it. There are still many things on my heart requiring more
+pennies. As they come, we will go forward."
+
+Miss Macpherson's motto is, "The Word first in all things; afterwards
+bread for this body." There are some of us who would be inclined to
+reverse this process--to feed the body and educate the mind--not
+altogether neglecting spiritual culture, even at the earliest stage, but
+leaving anything like definite religious schooling until the poor mind
+and body were, so to say, acclimatized. It is, of course, much easier to
+sit still and theorize and criticise than to do what these excellent
+people have done and are doing to diminish this gigantic evil. "By their
+fruits ye shall know them" is a criterion based on authority that we are
+none of us inclined to dispute. Miss Macpherson boasts--and a very
+proper subject for boasting it is--that she belongs to no _ism_. It is
+significant, however, that the Refuge bears, or bore, the name of the
+"Revival" Refuge, and the paper which contained the earliest accounts of
+its working was called the _Revivalist_, though now baptized with the
+broader title of the _Christian_. Amid such real work it would be a pity
+to have the semblance of unreality, and I dreaded to think of the
+possibility of its existing, when little grimy hands were held out by
+boys volunteering to say a text for my behoof. By far the most
+favourite one was "Jesus wept;" next came "God is love"--each most
+appropriate; but the sharp boy, a few years older, won approval by a
+longer and more doctrinal quotation, whilst several of these held out
+hands again when asked whether, in the course of the day, they had felt
+the efficacy of the text given on the previous evening, "Set a watch, O
+Lord, before my mouth; keep Thou the door of my lips." Such an
+experience would be a sign of advanced spirituality in an adult. Is it
+ungenerous to ask whether its manifestation in an Arab child must not be
+an anticipation of what might be the normal result of a few years'
+training? May not this kind of _forcing_ explain the cases I saw quoted
+in the books--of one boy who "felt like a fish out of water, and left
+the same day of his own accord;" another who "climbed out of a
+three-floor window and escaped?"
+
+However, here is the good work being done. Let us not carp at the
+details, but help it on, unless we can do better ourselves. One thing
+has been preeminently forced in upon me during this brief examination of
+our London Arabs--namely, that individuals work better than communities
+amongst these people. The work done by the great establishments, whether
+of England, Rome, or Protestant Dissent, is insignificant compared with
+that carried out by persons labouring like Mr. Hutton in Seven Dials and
+Miss Macpherson in Whitechapel, untrammelled by any particular system.
+The want, and sorrow, and suffering are individual, and need individual
+care, just as the Master of old worked Himself, and sent His scripless
+missionaries singly forth to labour for Him, as--on however
+incommensurate a scale--they are still labouring, East and West, amongst
+our London Arabs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+LONDON ARABS IN CANADA.
+
+
+In the previous chapter an account was given of the Arabs inhabiting
+that wonderful "square mile" in East London, which has since grown to be
+so familiar in men's mouths. The labours of Miss Macpherson towards
+reclaiming these waifs and strays in her "Refuge and Home of Industry,
+Commercial Street, Spitalfields," were described at some length, and
+allusion was at the same time made to the views which that lady
+entertained with regard to the exportation of those Arabs to Canada
+after they should have undergone a previous probationary training in the
+"Home." A short time afterwards it was my pleasing duty to witness the
+departure of one hundred of these young boys from the St. Pancras
+Station, en route for Canada; and it now strikes me that some account of
+the voyage out, in the shape of excerpts from the letters of the devoted
+ladies who themselves accompanied our Arabs across the Atlantic, may
+prove interesting; while, at the same time, a calculation of their
+probable success in their new life and homes may not improbably
+stimulate those who cannot give their time, to give at least their
+countenance, and it may be, their material aid, to a scheme which
+recommends itself to all our sympathies--the permanent reclamation of
+the little homeless wanderers of our London streets.
+
+The strange old rambling "Home" in Commercial Street, built originally
+for warehouses, then used as a cholera hospital, and now the Arab
+Refuge, presented a strange appearance during the week before the
+departure of the chosen hundred. On the ground-floor were the packages
+of the young passengers; on the first floor the "new clothes, shirts,
+and stockings, sent by kind lady friends from all parts of the kingdom,
+trousers and waistcoats made by the widows, and the boots and pilot
+jackets made by the boys themselves." The dormitory was the great
+store-closet for all the boys' bags filled with things needful on board
+ship; and on the top floor, we can well imagine, the last day was a
+peculiarly melancholy one. The work attendant upon the boys' last meal
+at the Refuge was over, and there, in the long narrow kitchen, stood the
+cook wiping away her tears with her apron, and the six little waiting
+maids around them, with the novel feeling of having nothing to
+do--there, where so much cutting, buttering, and washing-up had been the
+order of the day. When the summons came to start, the police had great
+difficulty in clearing a way for the boys to the vans through the
+surging mass of East London poverty. Some of the little match-box makers
+ran all the three miles from Commercial Street to St. Pancras Station
+to see the very last of their boy-friends.
+
+Derby was the stopping-place on the journey to Liverpool, and the
+attention of passengers and guards was arrested by this strange company
+gathering on the platform at midnight and singing two of the favourite
+Refuge hymns. Liverpool was reached at 4 A.M., and the boys filed off in
+fours, with their canvas bags over their shoulders, to the river side,
+where their wondering eyes beheld the _Peruvian_, which was to bear them
+to their new homes.
+
+At this point, Miss Macpherson's sister--who is carrying on the work of
+the Refuge during that lady's absence--wrote as follows:--"Could our
+Christian friends have seen the joy that beamed in the faces of those
+hundred lads from whom we have just parted--could they know the misery,
+the awful precipice of crime and sin from which they have been
+snatched--we are sure their hearts would be drawn out in love for those
+little ones. If still supported," she continues, "I hope to send out
+another party of fifty boys and fifty girls while my sister remains in
+Canada, and shall be happy to forward the name and history of a boy or
+girl to any kind friend wishing to provide for a special case. In the
+broad fields of that new country where the farmers are only too glad to
+adopt healthy young boys or girls into their families, hundreds of our
+perishing little ones may find a happy home."
+
+On Thursday, the 12th of May, the _Peruvian_ dropped down the river;
+and, as the last batch of friends left her when she passed out into the
+Channel, these one hundred boys, with Miss Macpherson, leaned over the
+bulwarks, singing the hymn, "Yes, we part, but not for ever."
+
+From Derry Miss Macpherson wrote under date May 13th:--"With the
+exception of two, all are on deck now, as bright as larks; they have
+carried up poor Jack Frost and Franks the runner. It is most touching to
+see them wrap them up in their rugs. Michael Flinn, the Shoreditch
+shoeblack, was up all night, caring for the sick boys. Poor Mike! He and
+I have exchanged nods at the Eastern Counties Railway corner these five
+years. It is a great joy to give him such a chance for life."
+
+The voyage out was prosperous enough, though there were some contrary
+winds, and a good deal of sea-sickness among the lads. The captain seems
+to have been quite won by the self-denying kindness of the ladies, and
+he lightened their hands by giving occupation to the boys. Then came out
+the result of training at the Refuge. Those who had been some time there
+showed themselves amenable to discipline; but the late arrivals were
+more fractious, and difficult to manage. These were the lads "upon
+whom," as Miss Macpherson says, "the street life had left sore marks."
+Even when only nearing the American coast, this indomitable lady's
+spirit is planning a second expedition. "As far as I dare make plans, I
+should like to return, starting from Montreal July 16th, reaching the
+Home July 27th; and then return with another lot the second week in
+August. This second lot must be lads who are now under influence, and
+who have been not less than six months in a refuge." The finale to this
+second letter, written from Canada, adds: "The boys, _to a man_, behaved
+splendidly. The agent's heart is won. All have improved by the voyage,
+and many are brown hearty-looking chaps fit for any toil."
+
+In the _Montreal Herald_, of May 27th, there is an account of these boys
+after their arrival, which says:--"Miss Macpherson is evidently a lady
+whose capacity for organization and command is of the very highest
+order; for boys, in most hands, are not too easily managed, but in hers
+they were as obedient as a company of soldiers.... These boys will
+speedily be placed in positions, where they will grow up respectable and
+respected members of society, with access to the highest positions in
+the country freely open to them.... We hope that Miss Macpherson will
+place all her boys advantageously, and will bring us many more. She is a
+benefactor to the Empire in both hemispheres."
+
+The importance of this testimony can scarcely be overrated, since many
+persons hold themselves aloof from a work of this nature through a
+feeling that it is not fair to draft our Arab population on a colony. It
+will be seen, however, that it is not proposed to export these boys
+until they shall have been brought well under influence, and so have got
+rid of what Miss Macpherson so graphically terms the "sore marks of
+their street life."
+
+Apropos of this subject, it may not be irrelevant to quote a
+communication which has been received from Sir John Young, the
+Governor-General of Canada, dated Ottawa, May 3rd, 1870:--"For emigrants
+able and willing to work, Canada offers at present a very good prospect.
+The demand for agricultural labourers in Ontario during the present year
+is estimated at from 30,000 to 40,000; and an industrious man may expect
+to make about one dollar a day throughout the year, if he is willing to
+turn his hand to clearing land, threshing, &c., during the winter. But
+it is of no use for emigrants to come here unless they make up their
+minds to take whatever employment offers itself most readily, without
+making difficulties because it is not that to which they have been
+accustomed, or which they prefer."
+
+I visited the Refuge and Home of Industry a few nights afterwards, and,
+though Miss Macpherson was absent, found all in working order.
+Sixty-three boys were then its occupants. The superintendent was
+anxiously looking forward to be able to carry out the plan of
+despatching fifty boys and fifty girls during the ensuing summer. The
+sum required for an East End case is _5l._; for a special case, _10l._
+The following are specimens of about sixty cases of boys whom she would
+like to send out, knowing that in Canada they could readily obtain
+places:--
+
+P. E., aged seventeen.--Mother died of fever, leaving seven children;
+father a dock labourer, but cannot get full employment.
+
+L. J., aged thirteen.--Mother dead; does not know where her father is;
+has been getting her living by singing songs in the lodging-houses; is
+much improved by her stay in the Home, and will make a tidy little maid.
+This is just one of the many who might thus be rescued from a life of
+sin and misery.
+
+Returning home through the squalid streets that night, where squatters
+were vending old shoes and boots that seemed scarcely worth picking out
+of the kennel, and garments that appeared beneath the notice of the rag
+merchant, I saw the little Bedouins still in full force, just as though
+no effort had been made for their reclamation and housing. As they
+crowded the doorsteps, huddled in the gutters, or vended boxes of lights
+and solicited the honour of shining "your boots, sir," I could not help
+picturing them crossing the sea, under kindly auspices, to the "better
+land" beyond, and anon, in the broad Canadian fields or busy Canadian
+towns, growing into respectable farmers and citizens; and straightway
+each little grimed, wan face seemed to bear a new interest for me, and
+to look wistfully up into mine with a sort of rightful demand on my
+charity, saying to me, and through me to my many readers, "Come and
+help us!"
+
+After the foregoing was written, a further letter arrived from Miss
+Macpherson. All the boys were well placed. The agent at Quebec wished to
+take the whole hundred in a lump, but only eleven were conceded to him.
+At Montreal, too, all would have been taken, but twenty-one only were
+left. All found excellent situations, many as house servants at _10l._
+and _15l._ a year. Eight were in like manner left at Belleville, half
+way between Montreal and Toronto. Sixty were taken on to Toronto; and
+here we are told "the platform was crowded with farmers anxious to
+engage them all at once. It was difficult to get them to the office." A
+gentleman arrived from Hamilton, saying that sixty applications had been
+sent in for boys, directly it was known that Miss Macpherson was coming
+out. So there is no need of anticipating anything like repugnance on the
+part of the Canadians to the reception of our superfluous Arabs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+WAIFS AND STRAYS.
+
+
+Among the various qualifications for the festivities of Christmastide
+and New Year, there is one which is, perhaps, not so generally
+recognised as it might be. Some of us are welcomed to the bright
+fireside or the groaning table on the score of our social and
+conversational qualities. At many and many a cheery board, poverty is
+the only stipulation that is made. I mean not now that the guests shall
+occupy the unenviable position of "poor relations," but, in the
+large-hearted charity that so widely prevails at that festive season,
+the need of a dinner is being generally accepted as a title to that
+staple requirement of existence. Neither of these, however, is the
+distinction required in order to entitle those who bear it to the
+hospitality of Mr. Edward Wright, better known under the abbreviated
+title of "Ned," and without the prefatory "Mr." That one social quality,
+without which a seat at Ned Wright's festive board cannot be compassed,
+is Felony. A little rakish-looking green ticket was circulated a few
+days previously among the members of Mr. Wright's former fraternity,
+bidding them to a "Great Supper" in St. John's Chapel, Penrose Street
+(late West Street), Walworth, got up under the auspices of the
+South-East London Mission. The invitation ran as follows:--
+
+ "This ticket is only available for a male person who has
+ been convicted at least once for felony, and is not
+ transferable. We purpose providing a good supper of bread
+ and soup, after which an address will be given. At the close
+ of the meeting a parcel of provisions will be given to each
+ man. Supper will be provided in the lower part of the
+ chapel. Boys not admitted this time.--Your friend, for
+ Christ's sake,
+
+ "NED WRIGHT."
+
+Why juvenile felons should be excluded "this time," and whether the fact
+of having been convicted more than once would confer any additional
+privileges, did not appear at first sight. So it was, however; adult
+felonious Walworth was bidden to the supper, and to the supper it came.
+Among the attractions held out to spectators of the proceedings was the
+announcement that a magistrate was to take part in them--a fact that
+possibly was not made generally known among the guests, in whose regard
+it is very questionable whether the presence of the dreaded "beak" might
+not have proved the reverse of a "draw." However, they came, possibly in
+happy ignorance of the potentate who was awaiting them, and than whom
+there is one only creation of civilized life considered by the London
+cadger his more natural enemy, that is the policeman.
+
+Six o'clock was the hour appointed for the repast, and there was no need
+for the wanderer in Walworth Road to inquire which was Penrose Street.
+Little groups of shambling fellows hulked about the corner waiting for
+some one to lead the way to the unaccustomed chapel. Group after group,
+however, melted away into the dingy building where Ned was ready to
+welcome them. With him I found, not one magistrate, but two; one the
+expected magnate from the country, the other a well-known occupant of
+the London bench, with whom, I fancy, many of the guests could boast a
+previous acquaintance of a character the reverse of desirable. Penrose
+Street Chapel had been formerly occupied by the Unitarians, but was then
+taken permanently by Ned Wright at a rental of between _60l._ and _70l._
+per annum, and formed the third of his "centres," the others being under
+a railway arch in the New Kent Road, and the Mission Hall, Deptford. As
+row by row filled with squalid occupants, I could but scan from my
+vantage-ground in the gallery the various physiognomies. I am bound to
+say the typical gaol-bird was but feebly represented. The visitors
+looked like hard-working men--a little pinched and hungry, perhaps, and
+in many cases obviously dejected and ashamed of the qualification which
+gave them their seat. One or two, mostly of the younger, came in with a
+swagger and a rough joke; but Ned and his guests knew one another, and
+he quickly removed the lively young gentleman to a quiet corner out of
+harm's way. A fringe of spectators, mostly female, occupied the front
+seat in the gallery when proceedings commenced, which they did with a
+hymn, composed by Ned Wright himself. The ladies' voices proved very
+useful in this respect; but most of the men took the printed copies of
+the hymns, which were handed round, and looked as if they could read
+them, not a few proving they could by singing full-voiced. After the
+hymn, Wright announced that he had ordered eighty gallons of soup--some
+facetious gentleman suggesting, "That's about a gallon apiece"--and he
+hoped all would get enough. Probably about 100 guests had by this time
+assembled, and each was provided with a white basin, which was filled by
+Ned and his assistants, with soup from a washing jug. A paper bag
+containing half a quartern loaf was also given to each, and the contents
+rapidly disappeared. As the fragrant steam mounted provokingly from the
+soup-basins up to the gallery, Mr. Wright took occasion to mention that
+at the last supper Mr. Clark, of the New Cut, furnished the soup
+gratuitously--a fact which he thought deserved to be placed on record.
+
+In the intervals of the banquet, the host informed me that he had
+already witnessed forty genuine "conversions" as the results of these
+gatherings. He had, as usual, to contend with certain obtrusive
+gentlemen who "assumed the virtue" of felony, "though they had it not,"
+and were summarily dismissed with the assurance that he "didn't want no
+tramps." One mysterious young man came in and sat down on a front row,
+but did not remain two minutes before a thought seemed to strike him,
+and he beat a hasty retreat. Whether he was possessed with the idea I
+had to combat on a previous occasion of the same kind, that I was a
+policeman, I cannot tell, but he never reappeared. I hope I was not the
+innocent cause of his losing his supper. The only "felonious" trait I
+observed was a furtive glance every now and then cast around, and
+especially up to the gallery. Beyond this there really was little to
+distinguish the gathering from a meeting of artisans a little bit "down
+on their luck," or out on strike, or under some cloud of that sort.
+
+As supper progressed, the number of spectators in the gallery increased;
+and, with all due deference to Ned Wright's good intentions, it may be
+open to question whether this presence of spectators in the gallery is
+wise. It gives a sort of spurious dash and bravado to the calling of a
+felon to be supping in public, and have ladies looking on, just like the
+"swells" at a public dinner. I am sure some of the younger men felt
+this, and swaggered through their supper accordingly. There certainly
+was not a symptom of shame on the face of a single guest, or any
+evidences of dejection, when once the pea-soup had done its work. Some
+of the very lively gentlemen in the front row even devoted themselves to
+making critical remarks on the occupants of the gallery. As a rule, and
+considering the antecedents of the men, the assembly was an orderly one;
+and would, I think, have been more so, but for the presence of the fair
+sex in the upper regions, many of whom, it is but justice to say, were
+enjoying the small talk of certain oily-haired young missionaries, and
+quite unconscious of being the objects of admiring glances from below.
+
+Supper took exactly an hour, and then came another hymn, Ned Wright
+telling his guests that the tune was somewhat difficult, but that the
+gallery would sing it for them first, and then they would be able to do
+it for themselves. Decidedly, Mr. Wright is getting "æsthetic." This
+hymn was, in fact, monopolized by the gallery, the men listening and
+evidently occupied in digesting their supper. One would rather have
+heard something in which they could join. However, it was a lively
+march-tune, and they evidently liked it, and kept time to it with their
+feet, after the custom of the gods on Boxing Night. At this point Ned
+and five others mounted the little railed platform, Bible in hand, and
+the host read what he termed "a portion out of the Good Old Book,"
+choosing appropriately Luke xv., which tells of the joy among angels
+over one sinner that repenteth, and the exquisite allegory of the
+Prodigal Son, which Ned read with a good deal of genuine pathos. It
+reminded him, he said, of old times. He himself was one of the first
+prisoners at Wandsworth when "old Brixton" was shut up. He had "done"
+three calendar months, and when he came out he saw an old grey-headed
+man, with a bundle. "That," said Ned, "was my godly old father, and the
+bundle was new clothes in place of my old rags."
+
+The country magistrate then came forward, and drew an ironical contrast
+between the "respectable" people in the gallery and the "thieves" down
+below. "God says we have all 'robbed Him.' All are equal in God's sight.
+But some of us are pardoned thieves." At this point the discourse became
+theological, and fired over the heads of the people down below. They
+listened much as they listen to a magisterial remark from the bench; but
+it was not their own language, such as Ned speaks. It was the "beak,"
+not the old "pal." It was not their vernacular. It did for the
+gallery--interested the ladies and the missionaries vastly, but not the
+thieves. It was wonderful that they bore it as well as they did. The
+magisterial dignity evidently overawed them; but they soon got used to
+it, and yawned or sat listlessly. Some leant their heads on the rail in
+front and slept. The latest arrivals left earliest. They had come to
+supper, not to sermon.
+
+Another of Ned Wright's hymns was then sung--Mr. Wright's muse having
+been apparently prolific in the past year, no less than six hymns on the
+list being written by himself during those twelve months. It is much to
+be hoped that these poetical and æsthetical proclivities will not deaden
+his practical energies. This hymn was pitched distressingly high, and
+above the powers of all but the "gallery" and a very few indeed of the
+guests; but most of them put in a final "Glory, Hallelujah," at the end
+of each stanza. Mr. Wright's tunes are bright and cheerful in the
+extreme, without being vulgar or offensively secular.
+
+The host himself then spoke a few words on the moral of the Sermon on
+the Mount: "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness." He
+claimed many of those before him as old pals who had "drunk out of the
+same pot and shuffled the same pack of cards," and contrasted his
+present state with theirs. Then they listened, open-mouthed and
+eager-eyed, though they had been sitting two full hours. He pictured the
+life of Christ, and His love for poor men. "Christ died for you," he
+said, "as well as for the 'big people.' Who is that on the cross beside
+the Son of God?" he asked in an eloquent apostrophe. "It is a thief.
+Come to Christ, and say, 'I've no character. I'm branded as a felon. I'm
+hunted about the streets of London. He will accept you.'" He drew a
+vivid picture of the number of friends he had when he rowed for Dogget's
+Coat and Badge. He met with an accident midway; "and when I got to the
+Swan at Chelsea," he said, "I had no friends left. I was a losing man.
+Christ will never treat you like that. He has never let me want in the
+nine years since I have been converted." After a prayer the assembly
+broke up, only those being requested to remain who required advice. The
+prayer was characteristic, being interspersed with groans from the
+gallery; and then a paper bag, containing bread and cakes, was given to
+each, Ned observing, "There, the devil don't give you that. He gives you
+toke and skilly." Being desired to go quietly, one gentleman expressed a
+hope that there was no policeman; another adding, "We don't want to get
+lagged." Ned had to reassure them on my score once more, and then nearly
+all disappeared--some ingenious guests managing to get two and three
+bags by going out and coming in again, until some one in the gallery
+meanly peached!
+
+Only some half-dozen out of the hundred remained, and Ned Wright
+kneeling at one of the benches prayed fervently, and entered into
+conversation with them one by one. Two or three others dropped in, and
+there was much praying and groaning, but evidently much sincerity. And
+so with at least some new impressions for good, some cheering hopeful
+words to take them on in the New Year, those few waifs and strays passed
+out into the darkness, to retain, let it be hoped, some at least of the
+better influences which were brought to bear upon them in that brighter
+epoch in their darkened lives when Ned Wright's invitation gathered them
+to the Thieves' Supper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+A LUNATIC BALL.
+
+
+One half of the world believes the other half to be mad; and who shall
+decide which moiety is right, the reputed lunatics or the supposed sane,
+since neither party can be unprejudiced in the matter? At present the
+minority believe that it is a mere matter of numbers, and that if
+intellect carried the day, and right were not overborne by might, the
+position of parties would be exactly reversed. The dilemma forced itself
+strongly on my consciousness for a solution when I attended the annual
+ball at Hanwell Lunatic Asylum. The prevailing opinion inside the walls
+was that the majority of madmen lay outside, and that the most
+hopelessly insane people in all the world were the officers immediately
+concerned in the management of the establishment itself.
+
+It was a damp, muggy January evening when I journeyed to this suburban
+retreat. It rained dismally, and the wind nearly blew the porter out of
+his lodge as he obeyed our summons at the Dantesque portal of the
+institution, in passing behind which so many had literally abandoned
+hope. I tried to fancy how it would feel if one were really being
+consigned to that receptacle by interested relatives, as we read in
+three-volume novels; but it was no use. I was one of a merry company on
+that occasion. The officials of Hanwell Asylum had been a little shy of
+being handed down to fame; so I adopted the ruse of getting into Herr
+Gustav Küster's corps of fiddlers for the occasion. However, I must in
+fairness add that the committee during the evening withdrew the taboo
+they had formerly placed on my writing. I was free to immortalize them;
+and my fiddling was thenceforth a work of supererogation.
+
+High jinks commenced at the early hour of six; and long before that time
+we had deposited our instruments in the Bazaar, as the ball-room is
+somewhat incongruously called, and were threading the Dædalean mazes of
+the wards. Life in the wards struck me as being very like living in a
+passage; but when that preliminary objection was got over, the long
+corridors looked comfortable enough. They were painted in bright warm
+colours, and a correspondingly genial temperature was secured by
+hot-water pipes running the entire length. Comfortable rooms opened out
+from the wards at frequent intervals, and there was every form of
+amusement to beguile the otherwise irksome leisure of those temporary
+recluses. Most of my hermits were smoking--I mean on the male side--many
+were reading; one had a fiddle, and I scraped acquaintance immediately
+with him; whilst another was seated at the door of his snug little
+bedroom, getting up cadenzas on the flute. He was an old
+trombone-player in one of the household regiments, an inmate of Hanwell
+for thirty years, and a fellow-bandsman with myself for the evening. He
+looked, I thought, quite as sane as myself, and played magnificently;
+but I was informed by the possibly prejudiced officials that he had his
+occasional weaknesses. A second member of Herr Küster's band whom I
+found in durance was a clarionet-player, formerly in the band of the
+Second Life Guards; and this poor fellow, who was an excellent musician
+too, felt his position acutely. He apologized sotto voce for sitting
+down with me in corduroys, as well as for being an "imbecile." He did
+not seem to question the justice of the verdict against him, and had not
+become acclimatized to the atmosphere like the old trombone-player.
+
+That New Year's night--for January was very young--the wards, especially
+on the women's side, were gaily decorated with paper flowers, and all
+looked as cheerful and happy as though no shadow ever fell across the
+threshold; but, alas, there were every now and then padded rooms opening
+out of the passage; and as this was not a refractory ward, I asked the
+meaning of the arrangement, which I had fancied was an obsolete one. I
+was told they were for epileptic patients. In virtue of his official
+position as bandmaster, Herr Küster had a key; and, after walking
+serenely into a passage precisely like the rest, informed me, with the
+utmost coolness, that I was in the refractory ward. I looked around for
+the stalwart attendant, who is generally to be seen on duty, and to my
+dismay found he was quite at the other end of an exceedingly long
+corridor. I do not know that I am particularly nervous; but I candidly
+confess to an anxiety to get near that worthy official. We were only
+three outsiders, and the company looked mischievous. One gentleman was
+walking violently up and down, turning up his coat-sleeves, as though
+bent on our instant demolition. Another, an old grey-bearded man, came
+up, and fiercely demanded if I were a Freemason. I was afraid he might
+resent my saying I was not, when it happily occurred to me that the
+third in our party, an amateur contra-bassist, was of the craft. I told
+our old friend so. He demanded the sign, was satisfied, and, in the
+twinkling of an eye, our double-bass friend was struggling in his
+fraternal embrace. The warder, mistaking the character of the hug,
+hastened to the rescue, and I was at ease.
+
+We then passed to the ball-room, where my musical friends were beginning
+to "tune up," and waiting for their conductor. The large room was gaily
+decorated, and filled with some three or four hundred patients, arranged
+Spurgeon-wise: the ladies on one side, and the gentlemen on the other.
+There was a somewhat rakish air about the gathering, due to the fact of
+the male portion not being in full dress, but arrayed in free-and-easy
+costume of corduroys and felt boots. The frequent warders in their dark
+blue uniforms lent quite a military air to the scene; and on the ladies'
+side the costumes were more picturesque; some little latitude was given
+to feminine taste, and the result was that a large portion of the
+patients were gorgeous in pink gowns. One old lady, who claimed to be a
+scion of royalty, had a resplendent mob-cap; but the belles of the
+ball-room were decidedly to be found among the female attendants, who
+were bright, fresh-looking young women, in a neat, black uniform, with
+perky little caps, and bunches of keys hanging at their side like the
+rosary of a soeur de charité, or the chatelaines with which young ladies
+love to adorn themselves at present. Files of patients kept streaming
+into the already crowded room, and one gentleman, reversing the order
+assigned to him by nature, walked gravely in on the palms of his hands,
+with his legs elevated in air. He had been a clown at a theatre, and
+still retained some of the proclivities of the boards. A wizen-faced
+man, who seemed to have no name beyond the conventional one of "Billy,"
+strutted in with huge paper collars, like the corner man in a nigger
+troupe, and a tin decoration on his breast the size of a cheeseplate. He
+was insensible to the charms of Terpsichore, except in the shape of an
+occasional pas seul, and laboured under the idea that his mission was to
+conduct the band, which he occasionally did, to the discomfiture of
+Herr Küster, and the total destruction of gravity on the part of the
+executants, so that Billy had to be displaced. It was quite curious to
+notice the effect of the music on some of the quieter patients. One or
+two, whose countenances really seemed to justify their incarceration,
+absolutely hugged the foot of my music-stand, and would not allow me to
+hold my instrument for a moment when I was not playing on it, so anxious
+were they to express their admiration of me as an artist. "I used to
+play that instrument afore I come here," said a patient, with a squeaky
+voice, who for eleven years has laboured under the idea that his mother
+is coming to see him on the morrow; indeed, most of the little group
+around the platform looked upon their temporary sojourn at Hanwell as
+the only impediment to a bright career in the musical world.
+
+Proceedings commenced with the Caledonians, and it was marvellous to
+notice the order, not to say grace and refinement with which these
+pauper lunatics went through their parts in the "mazy." The rosy-faced
+attendants formed partners for the men, and I saw a herculean warder
+gallantly leading along the stout old lady in the mob-cap. The larger
+number of the patients of course were paired with their
+fellow-prisoners, and at the top of the room the officials danced with
+some of the swells. Yes, there were swells here, ball-room coxcombs in
+fustian and felt. One in particular was pointed out to me as an
+University graduate of high family, and on my inquiring how such a man
+became an inmate of a pauper asylum the official said, "You see, sir,
+when the mind goes the income often goes too, and the people become
+virtually paupers." Insanity is a great leveller, true; but I could not
+help picturing that man's lucid intervals, and wondering whether his
+friends might not do better for him. But there he is, pirouetting away
+with the pretty female organist, the chaplain standing by and smiling
+approval, and the young doctors doing the polite to a few invited
+guests, but not disdaining, every now and then, to take a turn with a
+patient. Quadrilles and Lancers follow, but no "round dances." A popular
+prejudice on the part of the majority sets down such dances as too
+exciting for the sensitive dancers. The graduate is excessively irate at
+this, and rates the band soundly for not playing a valse. Galops are
+played, but not danced; a complicated movement termed a "Circassian
+circle" being substituted in their place. "Three hours of square dances
+are really too absurd," said the graduate to an innocent second fiddle.
+
+In the centre of the room all was gravity and decorum, but the merriest
+dances went on in corners. An Irish quadrille was played, and an
+unmistakable Paddy regaled himself with a most beautiful jig. He got on
+by himself for a figure or two, when, remembering, no doubt, that
+"happiness was born a twin," he dived into the throng, selected a
+white-headed old friend of some sixty years, and impressed him with the
+idea of a pas de deux. There they kept it up in a corner for the whole
+of the quadrille, twirling imaginary shillelaghs, and encouraging one
+another with that expressive Irish interjection which it is so
+impossible to put down on paper. For an hour all went merry as the
+proverbial marriage bell, and then there was an adjournment of the male
+portion of the company to supper. The ladies remained in the Bazaar and
+discussed oranges, with an occasional dance to the pianoforte, as the
+band retired for refreshment too, in one of the attendants' rooms. I
+followed the company to their supper room, as I had come to see, not to
+eat. About four hundred sat down in a large apartment, and there were,
+besides, sundry snug supper-parties in smaller rooms. Each guest partook
+of an excellent repast of meat and vegetables, with a sufficiency of
+beer and pipes to follow. The chaplain said a short grace before supper,
+and a patient, who must have been a retired Methodist preacher, improved
+upon the brief benediction by a long rambling "asking of a blessing," to
+which nobody paid any attention. Then I passed up and down the long rows
+with a courteous official, who gave me little snatches of the history of
+some of the patients. Here was an actor of some note in his day; there a
+barrister; here again a clergyman; here a tradesman recently "gone,"
+"all through the strikes, sir," he added. The shadow--that most
+mysterious shadow of all--had chequered life's sunshine in every one of
+these cases. Being as they are they could not be in a better place. They
+have the best advice they could get even were they--as some of them
+claim to be--princes. If they can be cured, here is the best chance. If
+not--well, there were the little dead-house and the quiet cemetery lying
+out in the moonlight, and waiting for them when, as poor maddened Edgar
+Allen Poe wrote, the "fever called living," should be "over at last."
+But who talks of dying on this one night in all the year when even that
+old freemason in the refractory ward was forgetting, after his own
+peculiar fashion, the cruel injustice that kept him out of his twelve
+thousand a year and title? Universal merriment is the rule to-night. Six
+or seven gentlemen are on their legs at once making speeches, which are
+listened to about as respectfully as the "toast of the evening" at a
+public dinner. As many more are singing inharmoniously different songs;
+the fun is getting fast and furious, perhaps a little too fast and
+furious, when a readjournment to the ball-room is proposed, and readily
+acceded to, one hoary-headed old flirt remarking to me as he went by,
+that he was going to look for his sweetheart.
+
+A long series of square dances followed, the graduate waxing more and
+more fierce at each disappointment in his anticipated valse, and Billy
+giving out every change in the programme like a parish clerk, which
+functionary he resembled in many respects. It was universally agreed
+that this was the best party that had ever been held in the asylum, just
+as the last baby is always the finest in the family. Certainly the
+guests all enjoyed themselves. The stalwart attendants danced more than
+ever with a will, the rosy attendants were rosier and nattier than
+before, if possible. The mob-cap went whizzing about on the regal head
+of its owner down the middle of tremendous country dances, hands across,
+set to partners, and then down again as though it had never tasted the
+anxieties of a throne, or learnt by bitter experience the sorrows of
+exile. Even the academical gentleman relaxed to the fair organist,
+though he stuck up his hair stiffer than ever, and stamped his felt
+boots again as he passed the unoffending double-bass with curses both
+loud and deep on the subject of square dances. At length came the
+inevitable "God Save the Queen," which was played in one key by the
+orchestra, and sung in a great many different ones by the guests. It is
+no disrespect to Her Majesty to say that the National Anthem was
+received with anything but satisfaction. It was the signal that the
+"jinks" were over, and that was quite enough to make it unpopular.
+However, they sang lustily and with a good courage, all except the old
+woman in the mob-cap, who sat with a complacent smile as much as to say,
+"This is as it should be, I appreciate the honour done to my royal
+brothers and sisters."
+
+This is the bright side of the picture; but it had its sombre tints
+also. There were those in all the wards who stood aloof from the
+merriment, and would have none of the jinks. Lean-visaged men walked
+moodily up and down the passages like caged wild beasts. Their lucid
+interval was upon them, and they fretted at the irksome restraint and
+degrading companionship. It was a strange thought; but I fancied they
+must have longed for their mad fit as the drunkard longs for the
+intoxicating draught, or the opium-eater for his delicious narcotic to
+drown the idea of the present. There were those in the ball-room itself
+who, if you approached them with the proffered pinch of snuff, drove you
+from them with curses. One fine, intellectual man, sat by the window all
+the evening, writing rhapsodies of the most extraordinary character, and
+fancying himself a poet. Another wrapped round a thin piece of lath with
+paper, and superscribed it with some strange hieroglyphics, begging me
+to deliver it. All made arrangements for their speedy departure from
+Hanwell, though many in that heart-sick tone which spoke of
+long-deferred hope--hope never perhaps to be realized. Most painful
+sight of all, there was one little girl there, a child of eleven or
+twelve years--a child in a lunatic asylum! Think of that, parents, when
+you listen to the engaging nonsense of your little ones--think of the
+child in Hanwell wards! Remember how narrow a line separates innocence
+from idiocy; so narrow a line that the words were once synonymous!
+
+Then there was the infirmary full of occupants on that merry New Year's
+night. Yonder poor patient being wheeled in a chair to bed will not
+trouble his attendant long. There is another being lifted on his
+pallet-bed, and having a cup of cooling drink applied to his parched
+lips by the great loving hands of a warder who tends him as gently as a
+woman. It seemed almost a cruel kindness to be trying to keep that poor
+body and soul together.
+
+Another hour, rapidly passed in the liberal hospitality of this great
+institution, and silence had fallen on its congregated thousands. It is
+a small town in itself, and to a large extent self-dependent and
+self-governed. It bakes and brews, and makes its gas; and there is no
+need of a Licensing Bill to keep its inhabitants sober and steady. The
+method of doing that has been discovered in nature's own law of
+kindness. Instead of being chained and treated as wild beasts, the
+lunatics are treated as unfortunate men and women, and every effort is
+made to ameliorate, both physically and morally, their sad condition.
+Hence the bright wards, the buxom attendants, the frequent jinks. Even
+the chapel-service has been brightened up for their behoof.
+
+This was what I saw by entering as an amateur fiddler Herr Küster's band
+at Hanwell Asylum; and as I ran to catch the last up-train--which I did
+as the saying is by the skin of my teeth--I felt that I was a wiser,
+though it may be a sadder man, for my evening's experiences at the
+Lunatic Ball.
+
+One question would keep recurring to my mind. It has been said that if
+you stop your ears in a ball-room, and then look at the people--reputed
+sane--skipping about in the new valse or the last galop, you will
+imagine they must be all lunatics. I did not stop my ears that night,
+but I opened my eyes and saw hundreds of my fellow-creatures, all with
+some strange delusions, many with ferocious and vicious propensities,
+yet all kept in order by a few warders, a handful of girls, and all
+behaving as decorously as in a real ball-room. And the question which
+_would_ haunt me all the way home was, which are the sane people, and
+which the lunatics?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+A BABY SHOW.
+
+
+There is no doubt that at the present moment the British baby is
+assuming a position amongst us of unusual prominence and importance.
+That he should be an institution is inevitable. That he grows upon us
+Londoners at the rate of some steady five hundred a week, the
+Registrar-General's statistics of the excess of births over deaths prove
+beyond question. His domestic importance and powers of revolutionizing a
+household are facts of which every Paterfamilias is made, from time to
+time, unpleasantly aware. But the British baby is doing more than this
+just at present. He is assuming a public position. Perhaps it is only
+the faint index of the extension of women's rights to the infantile
+condition of the sexes. Possibly our age is destined to hear of Baby
+Suffrage, Baby's Property Protection, Baby's Rights and Wrongs in
+general. It is beyond question that the British baby _is_ putting itself
+forward, and demanding to be heard--as, in fact, it always had a habit
+of doing. Its name has been unpleasantly mixed up with certain
+revelations at Brixton, Camberwell, and Greenwich. Babies have come to
+be farmed like taxes or turnpike gates. The arable infants seem to
+gravitate towards the transpontine districts south of the Thames. It
+will be an interesting task for our Legislature to ascertain whether
+there is any actual law to account for the transfer, as it inevitably
+will have to do when the delicate choice is forced upon it between
+justifiable infanticide, wholesale Hospices des Enfants Trouvés, and
+possibly some kind of Japanese "happy despatch" for high-minded infants
+who are superior to the slow poison administered by injudicious
+"farmers." At all events, one fact is certain, and we can scarcely
+reiterate it too often--the British baby is becoming emphatic beyond
+anything we can recollect as appertaining to the infantile days of the
+present generation. It is as though a ray of juvenile "swellishness," a
+scintillation of hobbledehoyhood, were refracted upon the long clothes
+or three-quarter clothes of immaturity.
+
+For, if it is true--as we may tax our infantile experiences to assure
+us--that "farmed" infants were an article unknown to husbandry in our
+golden age, it is equally certain that the idea of the modern Baby Show
+was one which, in that remote era, would not have been tolerated. Our
+mothers and grandmothers would as soon have thought of sacrificing an
+innocent to Moloch as to Mammon. What meant it then--to what can it be
+due--to precocity on the part of the British baby, or degeneracy on the
+part of the British parent--that two Baby Shows were "on" nearly at the
+same moment--one at Mr. Giovannelli's at Highbury Barn, the other at Mr.
+Holland's Gardens, North Woolwich?
+
+Anxious to keep au courant with the times, even when those times are
+chronicled by the rapid career of the British baby--anxious also to blot
+out the idea of the poor emaciated infants of Brixton, Camberwell, and
+Greenwich, by bringing home to my experience the opposite pole of
+infantile development--I paid a visit, and sixpence, at Highbury Barn
+when the Baby Show opened. On entering Mr. Giovannelli's spacious hall,
+consecrated on ordinary occasions to the Terpsichorean art, I found it a
+veritable shrine of the "Diva triformis." Immediately on entering I was
+solicited to invest extra coppers in a correct card, containing the
+names, weights, and--not colours; they were all of one colour, that of
+the ordinary human lobster--but weights, of the various forms of
+Wackford Squeers under twelve months, who were then and there assembled,
+like a lot of little fat porkers. It was, in truth, a sight to whet the
+appetite of an "annexed" Fiji Islander, or any other carnivorous animal.
+My correct card specified eighty "entries;" but, although the exhibition
+only opened at two o'clock, and I was there within an hour after, I
+found the numbers up to 100 quite full. The interesting juveniles were
+arranged within rails, draped with pink calico, all arrayed in "gorgeous
+attire," and most of them partaking of maternal sustenance. The
+mammas--all respectable married women of the working class--seemed to
+consider the exhibition of their offspring by no means infra dig., and
+were rather pleased than otherwise to show you the legs and other points
+of their adipose encumbrances. Several proposed that I should test the
+weight, which I did tremulously, and felt relieved when the infant
+Hercules was restored to its natural protector. The prizes, which
+amounted in the gross to between two and three hundred pounds, were to
+be awarded in sums of _10l._ and _5l._, and sometimes in the shape of
+silver cups, on what principle I am not quite clear; but the decision
+was to rest with a jury of three medical men and two "matrons." If
+simple adiposity, or the approximation of the human form divine to that
+of the hippopotamus, be the standard of excellence, there could be no
+doubt that a young gentleman named Thomas Chaloner, numbered 48 in the
+correct card, aged eight months, and weighing 33lbs., would be facile
+princeps, a prognostication of mine subsequently justified by the event.
+I must confess to looking with awe, and returning every now and then to
+look again, on this colossal child. At my last visit some one asked on
+what it had been fed. Shall I own that the demon of mischief prompted me
+to supplement the inquiry by adding, "Oil cake, _or_ Thorley's Food for
+Cattle?"
+
+On the score, I suppose, of mere peculiarity, my own attention--I
+frankly confess I am not a connoisseur--was considerably engrossed by
+"two little Niggers." No doubt the number afterwards swelled to the
+orthodox "ten little Niggers." One was a jovial young "cuss" of eleven
+months--weighted at 29lbs., and numbered 62 on the card. He was a
+clean-limbed young fellow, with a head of hair like a furze-bush, and
+his mother was quite untinted. I presume Paterfamilias was a fine
+coloured gentleman. The other representative of the sons of Ham--John
+Charles Abdula, aged three months, weight 21lbs., and numbered 76--was
+too immature to draw upon my sympathies; since I freely acknowledge such
+specimens are utterly devoid of interest for me until their bones are of
+sufficient consistency to enable them to sit upright and look about as a
+British baby should. This particular infant had not an idea above
+culinary considerations. He was a very Alderman in embryo, if there are
+such things as coloured Aldermen. Then there were twins--that
+inscrutable visitation of Providence--three brace of gemini. Triplets,
+in mercy to our paternal feelings, Mr. Giovannelli spared us.
+
+There was one noteworthy point about this particular exhibition. The
+mothers, at all events, got a good four days' feed whilst their
+infantile furniture was "on view." I heard, sotto voce, encomiums on the
+dinner of the day confidingly exchanged between gushing young matrons,
+and I myself witnessed the disappearance of a decidedly comfortable tea,
+to say nothing of sundry pints of porter discussed sub rosâ and free of
+expense to such as stood in need of sustenance; and indeed a good many
+seemed to stand in need of it. Small wonder, when the mammas were so
+forcibly reminded by the highly-developed British baby that, in Byron's
+own words, "our life is twofold."
+
+It is certainly passing, not from the sublime to the ridiculous, but
+vice versâ, yet it is noting another testimony to the growing importance
+of the British baby, if one mentions the growth of crèches, or
+day-nurseries for working-men's children in the metropolis. Already an
+institution in Paris, they have been recently introduced into England,
+and must surely prove a boon to the wives of our working men. What in
+the world does become of the infants of poor women who are forced to
+work all day for their maintenance? Is it not a miracle if something
+almost worse than "farming"--death from negligence, fire, or bad
+nursing--does not occur to them? The good ladies who have founded, and
+themselves work, these crèches are surely meeting a confessed necessity.
+I paid a visit one day to 4, Bulstrode Street, where one of these useful
+institutions was in full work. I found forty little toddlers, some
+playing about a comfortable day-nursery, others sleeping in tiny cribs
+ranged in a double line along a spacious, well-aired sleeping-room;
+some, too young for this, rocked in cosy cradles; but all clean, safe,
+and happy. What needs it to say whether the good ladies who tended them
+wore the habit of St. Vincent de Paul, the poke-bonnet of the Puseyite
+"sister," or the simple garb of unpretending Protestantism? The thing is
+being done. The most helpless of all our population--the children of the
+working poor--are being kept from the streets, kept from harm, and
+trained up to habits of decency, at 4, Bulstrode Street, Marylebone
+Lane. Any one can go and see it for himself; and if he does--if he sees,
+as I did, the quiet, unostentatious work that is there being done for
+the British baby, "all for love and nothing for reward"--I shall be very
+much surprised if he does not confess that it is one of the best
+antidotes imaginable to baby-farming, and a sight more decorous and
+dignified than any Baby Show that could possibly be imagined.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+A NIGHT IN A BAKEHOUSE.
+
+
+Alarmed at the prospect of "a free breakfast table" in a sense other
+than the ordinary one--that is, a breakfast table which should be minus
+the necessary accompaniment of bread, or the luxury of French rolls--I
+resolved to make myself master, so far as might be possible, of the pros
+and cons of the question at issue between bakers and masters at the
+period of the anticipated strike some years ago. I confess to having
+greatly neglected the subject of strikes. I had attended a few meetings
+of the building operatives; but the subject was one in which I myself
+was not personally interested. I am not likely to want to build a house,
+and might manage my own little repairs while the strike lasted. But I
+confess to a leaning for the staff of life. There are sundry small
+mouths around me, too, of quite disproportionate capacities in the way
+of bread and butter, to say nothing at all of biscuits, buns, and
+tartlets. The possibility of having to provide for an impending state of
+siege, then, was one that touched me immediately and vitally. Should I,
+before the dreaded event, initiate the wife of my bosom in the
+mysteries of bread baking? Should I commence forthwith a series of
+practical experiments within the limited confines of my kitchen oven? To
+prevent the otherwise inevitable heaviness and possible ropiness in my
+loaves of the future, some such previous process would certainly have to
+be adopted. But, then, in order to calculate the probabilities of the
+crisis, an examination of the status in quo was necessary. Having a
+habit of going to head-quarters in such questions, I resolved to do so
+on the present occasion; so I took my hat, and, as Sam Slick says, "I
+off an' out."
+
+The actual head-quarters of the men I found to be at the Pewter Platter,
+White Lion Street, Bishopsgate. Thither I adjourned, and, after drinking
+the conventional glass of bitter at the bar, asked for a baker. One came
+forth from an inner chamber, looking sleepy, as bakers always look. In
+the penetralia of the parlour which he left I saw a group of floury
+comrades, the prominent features of the gathering being depression and
+bagatelle. By my comatose friend I was referred to the Admiral Carter,
+in Bartholomew Close, where the men's committee sat daily at four. The
+society in front of the bar there was much more cheerful than that of
+the Pewter Platter, and the bakers were discussing much beer, of which
+they hospitably invited me to partake. Still I learned little of their
+movements, save that they were to a man resolved to abide by the now
+familiar platform of work from four to four, higher wages, and no Sunday
+bakings. These were the principal features of the demands, the sack
+money and perquisites being confessedly subsidiary. Nauseated as the
+public was and is with strikes, there are certain classes of the
+community with whom it is disposed to sympathize; and certainly one of
+those classes is that of journeymen bakers. Bread for breakfast we must
+have, and rolls we should like; but we should also like to have these
+commodities with as little nightwork as possible on the part of those
+who produce them. The "Appeal to the Public" put forth by the Strike
+Committee on the evening of the day concerning which I write was,
+perhaps, a trifle sensational; but if there was any truth in it, such a
+state of things demanded careful investigation--especially if it was a
+fact that the baker slept upon the board where the bread was made, and
+mingled his sweat and tears with the ingredients of the staff of life.
+Pardonably, I hope, I wished to eat bread without baker for my
+breakfast; but how could I probe this dreadful problem? I had it--by a
+visit to the bakehouse of my own baker, if possible, during the hours of
+work.
+
+So I set out afresh after supper, and was most obligingly received by
+the proprietor of what one may well take as a typical West-end
+shop--neither very large nor very small--what is graphically termed a
+"snug" concern with a good connexion, doing, as the technical phrase
+goes, from sixteen to twenty sacks a week. The resources of this
+establishment were at once placed at my disposal for the night. Now, the
+advantage of conferring with this particular master was, that he was not
+pig-headed on the one hand, nor unduly concessive, as he deemed some of
+his fellow-tradesmen to be, on the other. He did not consider a
+journeyman baker's berth a bed of roses, or his remuneration likely to
+make him a millionaire; but neither did he lose sight of the fact that
+certain hours must be devoted to work, and a limit somewhere placed to
+wage, or the public must suffer through the employer of labour by being
+forced to pay higher prices. The staff of this particular establishment
+consisted of four men at the following wages: A foreman at _28s._ and a
+second hand at _20s._ a week, both of whom were outsiders; while,
+sleeping on the premises, and, at the time of my arrival, buried in the
+arms of Morpheus, were a third hand, at _16s._, and a fourth, at _12s._
+Besides these wages they had certain perquisites, such as bread, butter,
+sugar, flour, sack-money, yeast-money, &c.; and the master, moreover,
+took his adequate share of day-work. He was seated outside his shop,
+enjoying the cool breezes, not of evening, but of midnight, when I
+presented myself before his astonished gaze. His wife and children had
+long since retired. The foreman and second "hand" had not arrived; the
+third and fourth "hands" were, as I said, sweetly sleeping, in a chamber
+on the basement, well out of range of the bakehouse, to which, like a
+couple of conspirators, we descended. It was not exactly the spot one
+would have selected for a permanent residence if left free to choose. It
+was, perhaps, as Mr. Dickens's theatrical gentleman phrased it,
+pernicious snug; but the ventilation was satisfactory. There were two
+ovens, which certainly kept the place at a temperature higher than might
+have been agreeable on that hot September night. Kneading troughs were
+ranged round the walls, and in the centre, like an altar-tomb, was the
+fatal "board" where, however, I sought in vain for the traces of
+perspiration or tears. All was scrupulously clean. In common phrase, you
+might have "eaten your dinner" off any portion of it.
+
+Soon after midnight the outsiders turned in, first the second hand and
+then the foreman, and, plunging into the "Black Hole," made their
+toilettes du soir. Then active operations commenced forthwith. In one
+compartment of the kneading-trough was the "sponge," which had been
+prepared by the foreman early in the evening, and which now, having
+properly settled, was mixed with the flour for the first batch, and left
+to "prove." The process of making the dough occupied until about one
+o'clock, and then followed two hours of comparative tranquillity,
+during which the men adjourned to the retirement of certain millers'
+sacks hard by, which they rolled up cleverly into extempore beds, and
+seemed to prefer to the board. The proving takes about two hours, but
+varies with the temperature. If the dough is left too long, a sour
+batch, or a "pitch in," is the result. It is then cut out, weighed, and
+"handed up;" after which it stands while the dough for the second batch
+is being made, and those fatal rolls, around which so much of this
+contest is likely to turn, are being got forward. It must be understood
+that I am here describing what took place in my typical bakehouse.
+Proceedings will of course vary in details according to the
+neighbourhood, the season, and other circumstances. This makes, as my
+informant suggested, the race of bakers necessarily in some degree a
+varium atque mutabile genus, whom it is difficult to bind by rigid "hard
+and fast" lines. The first batch is in the oven at four, and is drawn
+about 5.30. During the intervals there has been the preparation of fancy
+bread and the "getting off" of the rolls. Then the "cottage" batch is
+moulded and got off, and comes out of the oven at eight. From three
+o'clock up to this hour there has been active work enough for everybody,
+and I felt myself considerably in the way, adjourning ever and anon to
+the master's snuggery above stairs to note down my experiences. As for
+the men, they must have fancied that I was an escaped lunatic, with
+harmless eccentricities; and the fourth hand, who was young, gazed at me
+all night with a fixed and sleepy glare, as though on his guard lest I
+should be seized with a refractory fit. At eight the close atmosphere of
+the bakehouse was exchanged for the fresh morning breeze by three out of
+the four hands, who went to deliver the bread. The foreman remained with
+the master to work at "small goods" until about one, when he prepares
+the ferment for the next night's baking. All concerned can get their
+operations over about one or half-past one; so that, reckoning them to
+begin at half-past twelve, and deducting two hours of "sweat and tears"
+from one to three, when they can sleep if they will, there are some
+eleven hours of active labour. After the delivery of the bread is over,
+it should be mentioned, each man has about half an hour's bakehouse work
+in the way of getting coals, cleaning biscuit tins, brushing up, &c.
+When this is done, all, with the exception of the foreman, who will have
+to look in and make the sponge at eight P.M., are free until the
+commencement of their most untimely work at midnight.
+
+On Sunday, the work in this particular bakehouse is comparatively nil.
+The ovens have to be started on Sunday morning; but this the master does
+himself, and puts in the ferment, so that there is only the sponge to
+be made in the evening--a brief hour's job, taken on alternate Sundays
+by the foreman and the second hand. The "undersellers," my informant
+told me, made large sums by Sunday bakings, often covering their rent by
+them, so that their abandonment would be a serious question; but there
+was little in the way of Sabbath-breaking in my typical bakehouse. As
+there were no Sunday bakings, Saturday was a rather harder day than
+others, there being a general scrub-up of the premises. The work, my
+informant thought, could be condensed by judicious co-operation, and the
+"four to four" rule might be adopted in some establishments, but by no
+means in all--as, for instance, where there was a speciality for rolls
+and fancy bread. It seems, as usual, that the difficulties thicken, not
+about the necessaries, but about the luxuries and kickshaws of life. The
+master relieved my immediate fears by saying that he scarcely imagined
+matters would come to a crisis. There was this difference between the
+building and the baking trades, that all the master bakers had been
+journeymen themselves, and were thus able to sympathize with the men's
+difficulties. They were not, he seemed to think, disposed to haggle over
+a few shillings; but he added, "This is not a question of labour against
+capital only, but of labour against capital plus labour. I could," he
+said, "if my men left me on the 21st, make bread enough myself to
+supply all my customers, only they would have to fetch it for
+themselves."
+
+Thus my worst fears were relieved. If it only came to going out for my
+loaf, and even foregoing French rolls, I could face that like a man; so
+I paced the streets gaily in the morning air and arrived home safely
+some time after the milk, and about the same hour as those rolls
+themselves whose hitherto unguessed history I had so far fathomed by my
+brief experiences in the bakehouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A LONDON SLAVE MARKET.
+
+
+There is a story called "Travellers' Wonders" in that volume which used
+to be the delight of our childhood, when the rising generation was more
+easily amused and not quite so wide-awake as at present. The point of
+the narrative is, that a facetious old gentleman named Captain Compass
+beguiles a group of juveniles--who must have been singularly gullible
+even for those early days--by describing in mysterious and
+alien-sounding terms the commonest home objects, such as coals, cheese,
+butter, and so on. It would almost seem as though Hood must have been
+perpetrating a kindred joke upon grown-up children when he wrote the
+lines--
+
+ It's O to be a slave
+ Along with the barbarous Turk,
+ Where woman has never a soul to save,
+ If this is Christian Work!
+
+Was he aware that here, in the heart of Christian London, without going
+farther east than Bethnal Green, there had existed from time immemorial,
+as there exists still, a genuine Slave Market? Such there is, and
+actually so named; less romantic, indeed, than that we read of in "Don
+Juan," or used to see on the Adelphi boards in the drama of the
+"Octoroon"--but still interesting in its way to those who have a
+penchant for that grotesque side of London life where the sublime and
+the ridiculous sometimes blend so curiously.
+
+With only the vague address of Bethnal Green and the date of Tuesday
+morning to guide me, I set out for Worship Street Police Court, thinking
+it possible to gain some further particulars from the police. I found
+those functionaries civil, indeed, but disposed to observe even more
+than official reticence about the Slave Market. They told me the
+locality precisely enough, but were even more vague as to the hour than
+my own impressions. In fact, the sum of what I could gain from them was,
+in slightly Hibernian language, that there was nothing to see, and I
+could see it any time on a Tuesday morning when I chose to go down White
+Street, Bethnal Green. Leaving the Court and inquiring my route to White
+Street, I found that it ran off to the right some way down the Bethnal
+Green Road from Shoreditch Station. Having turned out of the main
+thoroughfare, you proceed down one of those characteristic East End
+streets where every small householder lives behind an elaborate bright
+green door with portentous knocker, going on until an arch of the Great
+Eastern Railway spans the road. Arriving at this point any time between
+the hours of eight and half-past nine on a Monday or Tuesday morning,
+you have no need to be told that this is the East London Slave
+Market--supposing you knew such a thing as a slave market was to be seen
+in East London at all.
+
+There was, indeed, nothing resembling Byron's graphic description in
+"Don Juan." Our English slaves were all apparently of one nation, and
+there were no slave merchants. The hundred young ladies and gentlemen,
+of all ages from seven to seventeen, were, as they would have expressed
+it, "on their own hook." Ranged under the dead brick wall of the railway
+arch, there was a generally mouldy appearance about them. Instead of a
+picturesque difference of colour, there was on every visage simply a
+greater or less degree of that peculiar neutral tint, the unmistakable
+unlovely hue of London dirt. In this respect, too, they differed from
+the fresh country lads and lasses one sees at a hiring in the North.
+They were simply male and female City Arabs, with that superabundant
+power of combining business and pleasure which characterizes their race.
+The young gentlemen, in the intervals of business--and it seemed to be
+all interval and no business--devoted themselves to games at buttons.
+Each of the young ladies--I am afraid to say _how_ young--had her
+cavalier, and applied herself to very pronounced flirtation. The
+language of one and all certainly fulfilled the baptismal promise of
+their sponsors, if the poor little waifs ever had any--for it was very
+"vulgar tongue" indeed; and there was lots of it. The great sensation
+of the morning was a broken window in an unoffending tradesman's shop--a
+far from unusual occurrence, as I learnt from the sufferer. This led to
+a slave hunt on the part of the single policeman who occasionally showed
+himself to keep as quiet as might be the seething mass of humanity; and
+the young lady or gentleman who was guilty of the damage was "off
+market" for the morning--while the suffering tradesman was assailed with
+a volley of abuse, couched in strongest Saxon, for meekly protesting
+against the demolition of his window-pane.
+
+The scene was most characteristic--very unlike the genteel West End
+Servants' Registry, where young ladies and gentlemen's gentlemen saunter
+in to find places with high wages and the work "put out." It was on
+Tuesday morning, and a little late in the day, that I timed my visit;
+and I was informed that the Market was somewhat flat. Certainly, one
+could not apply to it the technicalities of the Stock Exchange, and say
+that little boys were "dull," or girls, big or little, "inactive;" but
+early on a Monday morning is, it appears, the time to see the Slave
+Market in full swing. Strangely enough, so far as I could judge, it was
+all slaves and no buyers--or, rather, hirers. I did not see the symptom
+of a bargain being struck, though I was informed that a good many small
+tradesmen do patronize the Market, for shop-boys, nurse-girls, or
+household drudges. I do not know whether my appearance was particularly
+attractive; but the number of offers I received from domestics of all
+kinds would have sufficed to stock half-a-dozen establishments. "Want a
+boy, sir?" "A girl for the childer, sir?" said the juveniles, while the
+offers of the adult ladies were more emphatic and less quotable. All, of
+course, was mere badinage, or, as they would have called it, "chaff,"
+and it was meant good-humouredly enough; though, had I been a legitimate
+hirer, I do not know that I should have been tempted to add to my
+household from this source. Indeed, there were some not exactly pleasant
+reflections cast on the Slave Market by those whom I consulted as to its
+merits. It was not unusual, I was told, for slaves who were hired on a
+Monday to turn up again on Tuesday morning, either from incompatibility
+of temper on the part of domestic and superior, or from other causes
+unexplained. Tuesday morning is, in fact, to a large extent, the mere
+residuum either of Monday's unhired incapables, or of "returns." And
+yet, as I looked around, I saw--as where does one not see?--some fair
+young faces; girls who might have played with one's little children all
+the better because they were so nearly children themselves; and boys of
+preternatural quickness, up to any job, and capable of being useful--ay,
+and even ornamental--members of society, if only that dreadful Bethnal
+Green twang could have been eradicated. The abuse of the mother tongue
+on the part even of these children was simply frightful. If this were so
+in their playful moods, what--one could not help thinking--would it be
+if any dispute arose on a contested point of domestic economy: as, for
+instance, the too rapid disappearance of the cold mutton, or sudden
+absence of master's boots?
+
+There was a garrulous cobbler whose stall bordered on the Market, and
+his panacea for all the evils the Slave Market brought with it was the
+London School Board. "Why don't the officers come down and collar some
+o' them youngsters, sir?" Why, indeed? At present the Slave Market is
+undoubtedly a nuisance; but there is no reason why, under proper police
+supervision, it should not become a local convenience. The ways of East
+London differ in all respects from those of the West, and Servants'
+Registries would not pay. Masters and servants are alike too poor to
+advertise; and there seems to be no reason why the Slave Market, under a
+changed name, and with improved regulations, may not as really supply a
+want as the country "hirings" do. The Arab, at present, is not to be
+trusted with too much liberty. Both male and female have odd Bedouin
+ways of their own, requiring considerable and judicious manipulation to
+mould them to the customs of civilized society. The respectable
+residents, tired of the existing state of things, look not unreasonably,
+as ratepayers, to the School Board to thin down the children, and the
+police to keep the adults in order. Under such conditions, the Bethnal
+Green Slave Market may yet become a useful institution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+TEA AND EXPERIENCE.
+
+
+I was walking the other day in one of the pleasant western suburbs, and
+rashly sought a short cut back; when, as is generally the case, I found
+that the longer would have been much the nearer way home. Before I knew
+it, I was involved in the labyrinths of that region, sacred to
+washerwomen and kindred spirits, known as Kensal New Town; and my
+further progress was barred by the intervention of the Paddington Canal,
+which is spanned at rare intervals in this locality by pay-bridges, to
+the great discomfort of the often impecunious natives. There was not
+even one of these at hand, or my halfpenny would have been paid under
+protest; so I had to wander like a lost sprite among the network of
+semi-genteel streets that skirt that most ungenteel thoroughfare, the
+Kensal New Town Road, and forthwith I began to find the neighbourhood
+papered with placards, announcing a "Tea and Experience Meeting" at a
+local hall, under the presidency of the Free Church pastor, for the
+following Monday evening. Bakers' shops bristled with the handbills, and
+they studded the multitudinous pork butchers' windows in juxtaposition
+with cruel-looking black puddings and over-fat loin chops. I determined
+I would go, if not to the tea, certainly to the "Experience," for I like
+novel experiences of all kinds: and this would certainly be new, whether
+edifying or not.
+
+I got at length out of the labyrinth, and on the following Monday
+ventured once more within its mazes, though not exactly at six o'clock,
+which was the hour appointed for the preliminary experience of tea. I
+had experienced that kind of thing once or twice before, and never found
+myself in a position of such difficulty as on those occasions. In the
+first place I do not care about tea, when it is good; but loathe it when
+boiled in a washhouse copper, and poured out from a large tin can, of
+which it tastes unpleasantly. But, then again, the quantity as well as
+the quality of the viands to be consumed was literally too much for me.
+I might have managed one cup of decidedly nasty tea, or what passes
+muster for such, but not four or five, which I found to be the minimum.
+I could stomach, or secretly dispose of in my pockets, a single slice of
+leaden cake or oleaginous bread-and-butter; but I could not do this with
+multitudinous slabs of either. I never went to more than one tea-meeting
+where I felt at home, and that was at the Soirée Suisse, which takes
+place annually in London, where pretty Helvetian damsels brew the most
+fragrant coffee and hand round delicious little cakes, arrayed as they
+are in their killing national costume and chattering in a dozen
+different patois. I had a notion that tea at Kensal New Town would be
+very much less eligible, so I stopped away. Perhaps I was prejudiced.
+The tea might have been different from what I expected. The experiences
+certainly were.
+
+I got there about half-past seven, having allowed an interval of an hour
+and a half, which I thought would be sufficient for the most inveterate
+tea-drinker, even among the Kensal Town laundresses, should such happen
+to be present. I took the precaution, however, of bespeaking a lad of
+fifteen to accompany me, in case any of the fragments of the feast
+should yet have to be disposed of, since I knew his powers to equal
+those of the ostrich in stowing away eatables, especially in the lumpy
+cake line. Arrived at the hall, however, I found no symptoms of the tea
+save a steamy sort of smell and the rattle of the retreating cups and
+saucers. Whether "to my spirit's gain or loss," I had escaped the
+banquet and yet got in good time for the subsequent experiences.
+
+A motherly-looking woman stood at the door, and gave me a cheery
+invitation to come in. She looked rather askance at my boy, but finding
+him properly convoyed by my sober self, she admitted him within the
+portal. A good many young gentlemen of a similar age were evidently
+excluded, and were regaling themselves with pagan sports outside. The
+hall was partially filled with respectable-looking mechanics, their
+wives, and families, there being more wives than mechanics, and more
+families than either. Children abounded, especially babies in every
+stage of infantile development. Many were taking their maternal tea; and
+the boys and girls were got up in the most festive attire, the boys
+particularly shining with yellow soap. Most of the mammas wore perky
+hats, and many had follow-me-lads down the back, but all were
+exceedingly well-dressed and well-behaved, though evidently brimful of
+hilarity as well as cake and tea.
+
+At the end of the hall was the inevitable platform, with chairs and a
+large cushion spread over the front rail for convenience of praying;
+since the "experiences" were to be interspersed with sacred song and
+prayer. Two gentlemen--I use the term advisedly--mounted the rostrum,
+one a long-bearded, middle-aged man, in a frock coat, who was the
+pastor, and another an aged minister, superannuated, as I afterwards
+discovered, and not altogether happy in his worldly lot. He was very
+old, grey-haired, and feeble, with a worn suit of clerical black, and a
+voluminous white tie. He sat humbly, almost despondingly, by the side of
+his younger brother in the ministry, while the latter delivered a merry
+little opening address, hoping all had made a good tea; if not, there
+was still about half a can left. Nobody wanted any more; so they had a
+hymn from the "Sacred Songster," a copy of which volume I purchased in
+the hall for twopence halfpenny. The tune was a martial one, well sung
+by a choir of men and women to the accompaniment of a harmonium, and
+bravely borne part in, you may depend upon it, by the whole assembly, I
+verily believe, except the babies, and one or two of these put in a note
+sometimes. The hymn was called, "Oh, we are Volunteers!" and was very
+Church-militant indeed, beginning thus:--
+
+ Oh, we are volunteers in the army of the Lord,
+ Forming into line at our Captain's word;
+ We are under marching orders to take the battle-field,
+ And we'll ne'er give o'er the fight till the foe shall yield.
+
+Then came the chorus, repeated after every verse:--
+
+ Come and join the army, the army of the Lord,
+ Jesus is our Captain, we rally at His word:
+ Sharp will be the conflict with the powers of sin,
+ But with such a leader we are sure to win.
+
+The poor old minister offered up a short prayer. The pastor read the 1st
+Corinthians, chapter 13, and explained briefly what charity meant there;
+adding that this gathering was very like one of the Agapæ of the early
+Christians--a remark I had not expected to hear in that assembly. Then
+there was another hymn, "Beautiful Land of Rest," when it did one good
+to hear the unction with which the second syllable of the refrain was
+given:--
+
+ Jerusalem, Jerusalem,
+ Beautiful land of rest.
+
+After this the "Experiences" commenced in real earnest. Brothers and
+Sisters were exhorted to lay aside shyness and mount the platform. Of
+course no one would do so at first; and the poor shaky old minister had
+to come to the rescue.
+
+He told us, at rather too great length, the simple story of his
+life--how he was a farmer's son, and had several brothers "besides
+himself." He had to learn verses of the Bible for his father, which used
+to go against the grain, until at last, instead of being "a wicked boy,"
+he took up religion on his own account. He began to be afraid that, if
+he died, he should go to "a bad place," and therefore started saying his
+prayers. His brother George used to push him over when he was praying
+half-dressed in the bedroom, or occasionally vary proceedings by
+stirring him up with a sweeping brush. At last he found out a quiet
+place under a haystack, and there retired to pray. The old man drew a
+perfect picture of the first prayer thus offered, and told us he could
+remember every little detail of the spot, and the great oak tree
+spreading its branches over it. "Here I am," he said, "a poor old
+pilgrim on the bright side of seventy now, and yet I can remember it
+all. I say the 'bright' side, for I know it is a bright home I am soon
+going to." Then he told us how God took his wife from him and all his
+worldly goods, and he was quite eloquent about the comfort his religion
+was to him now as he went to his little lonely lodging. He drew next too
+truthful a picture of the state of things he saw around him in Kensal
+New Town--mothers with infants in their arms crowding the tavern doors;
+and finished up with a story, of which he did not see the irrelevancy,
+about a fine lady going to the "theatre," and saying how much she had
+enjoyed the anticipation, then the play itself, and, lastly, the thought
+of it afterwards. She was overheard by a faithful pastor, who told her
+she had omitted one detail. "No," she said, "I have told you all." "You
+have told us how you enjoyed the thoughts of the theatre, and the
+performance, and the recollection of it afterwards; but you have not
+told us how you will enjoy the thoughts of it on your death-bed." Of
+course the "fine lady" was converted on the spot, as they always are in
+tracts; and the good old fellow brought his long-winded narrative of
+experiences to an end by-and-by, the pastor having omitted to pull his
+coat-tails, as he promised to do if any speaker exceeded the allotted
+time. "The people were certainly very attentive to hear him," and one
+man next my boy expressed his satisfaction by letting off little groans,
+like minute guns, at frequent intervals.
+
+Then another hymn was sung, "The Beautiful Land on High," which, by the
+way, is a favourite with the spiritualists at their "Face Séances." I
+half expected to see a ghostly-looking visage peep out of some corner
+cupboard, as I had often done with my spiritual friends--that being
+another experience which I cultivate with considerable interest and
+curiosity. The hymn being over, a black-bearded, but soft-voiced man, in
+a velveteen coat, got upon the platform, and told us how the chief
+delight of his life was at one time making dogs fight. When the animals
+were not sufficiently pugnacious of themselves, his habit was to
+construct an apparatus, consisting of a pin at the end of a stick, and
+so urge them to the combat, until it proved fatal to one of them. It
+was, he said, dreadful work; and he now considered it the direct
+machination of Satan. Another favourite pursuit was interrupting the
+proceedings of open-air missionaries. One day after he had done so, he
+went home with a companion who had taken a tract from one of the
+missionaries. He had a quarrel with his "missis." "Not that missis
+sittin' there," he said, alluding to a smart lady in front, "but my
+first missis." In order to show his sulks against his missis, he took to
+reading the tract, and it soon made him cry. Then he went to chapel and
+heard a sermon on Lot's wife being turned into a pillar of salt. He was
+a little exercised by this, and saw the minister in the vestry, but soon
+fell back into bad habits again, singing canaries for _10s. 6d._ a side.
+As he was taking his bird out one Sunday morning, the bottom of the cage
+came out, and the canary escaped. This he looked upon as "God's work,"
+since it caused him to go to chapel that morning. His conversion soon
+followed, and he applied to that circumstance, in a very apposite
+manner, the Parable of the Prodigal, concluding with a stanza from the
+well-known hymn--
+
+ God moves in a mysterious way
+ His wonders to perform.
+
+Another moustached man followed. He was exceedingly well-dressed,
+though he told us he was only a common labourer. He had long given up
+his "'art" to God, but to little purpose until he came to this chapel.
+"But there," he said, "down in that corner under the gas-lamp, I prayed
+for the first time. I prayed that God would take away my stony 'art and
+give me a 'art of flesh, and renew a right sperrit within me." From that
+time he led a new life. His fellow-workmen began to sneer at the change,
+and said ironically they should take to going to chapel too. "I wish to
+God you would," was his reply. He described the personal influence of
+the pastor upon him, which strengthened the good resolutions he had
+formed, and enabled him to say, "I will not let Thee go."
+
+I could not help thinking, as I listened to the simple, earnest words of
+the speaker, that here was an element the National Church is too apt to
+ignore. The Roman Catholic Church would seize hold upon that man, and
+put him in a working men's guild or confraternity. The Free Church found
+him work to do, and gave him a chief seat in the synagogue, and an
+opportunity of airing his "experiences" on a platform. Surely better
+either one or the other, than sotting his life at a public-house, or
+turning tap-room orator. He ended by crying shame upon himself for
+having put off the change until so late in life, and added a wish that
+all the labouring classes could see, as he had been brought to see,
+where their chief interest as well as happiness lay.
+
+A tall man from the choir followed, and was considerably more
+self-possessed than the other two speakers. He told us at the outset
+that he had been "a Christian" for fourteen years. It was generally laid
+down as a rule, he said, that big men were good-tempered. He was not a
+small man; but until he gave his heart to God he was never
+good-tempered. He had, for thirty-two years, been brought up in the
+Church of England, but had found no conversion there. He had no wish to
+speak against the Church, but such was the case. He wandered about a
+good deal in those years, from Roman Catholic to Old Methodist chapels;
+but the latter settled him. He was attending a class meeting in Kensal
+New Town one night, and suddenly a determination came over him that he
+would not sleep that night until he had kneeled down and prayed with his
+wife, though it would be the first time he had done so for thirty-two
+years. When it came to bedtime his courage failed him. He could not get
+into bed; and he did not like to tell his wife why. "That," he said,
+"was the devil worritin' me." His wife said, "I know what's the matter
+with you. You want to pray. We will see what we can do." His wife, he
+told us, was "unconverted," but still she "throwed open the door" on
+that occasion. He never knew happiness, he said, until he came to Jesus;
+and he added, "Oh, I do love my Jesus." He often talked to his
+fellow-workmen about the state of their souls, and they asked him how
+it was he was so certain of being converted (a question I fancy others
+than they would like to have solved), and he answered them, "I feel it.
+I was uncomfortable before; and now I am happy. I don't wonder so much
+at the old martyrs going boldly up to the stake, because I feel I could
+do anything rather than give up my Jesus."
+
+Hereupon the pastor, anticipating the departure of some of the
+assembly--for the clock was pointing to ten--announced a Temperance
+Meeting for the following Monday, and also said he should like the
+congregation to get up these meetings entirely on their own account,
+without any "clerical" element at all, and to make the Tea Meeting a
+"Free and Easy" in the best sense of the word.
+
+I went--shall I confess it?--to the experience meeting rather inclined
+to scoff, and I stopped, if not altogether to pray, at least to think
+very seriously of the value of the instrumentality thus brought to
+bear on such intractable material as the Kensal New Town population.
+The more cumbrous, even if more perfect or polished, machinery of the
+Established Church has notoriously failed for a long time to affect
+such raw material; and if it is beginning to succeed it is really by
+"taking a leaf out of the book" of such pastors as the one whose
+Tea-and-Experience Meeting I had attended. "Palmam qui meruit ferat."
+
+Stiggins element, I must, in all justice, say there was none. The pastor
+was a simple but a refined and gentlemanly man; so was the poor broken
+old minister. There was no symptom of raving or rant; no vulgarity or
+bad taste. A gathering at a deanery or an episcopal palace could not
+have been more decorous, and I doubt if the hymns would have been sung
+as heartily. There was as little clerical starch as there was of the
+opposite element. Rubbing off the angles of character was one of the
+objects actually proposed by the pastor as the result of these
+gatherings; and I really felt as though a corner or two had gone out of
+my constitution. If a man is disposed to be priggish, or a lady
+exclusive, in religious matters, I would recommend the one or the other
+to avail themselves of the next opportunity to attend a
+Tea-and-Experience Meeting at Kensal New Town.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+SUNDAY LINNET-SINGING.
+
+
+There is something very Arcadian and un-Cockney-like in the idea of
+linnet-singing in Lock's Fields. Imagination pictures so readily the
+green pastures and the wild bird's song, and Corydon with his pipe and
+his Phyllis, that it seems a pity to disabuse that exquisite faculty of
+our nature so far as to suggest that the linnets of which we speak are
+not wild, but tame and caged, and the fields very much less rural than
+those of Lincoln's Inn. This was the announcement that drew me to the
+New Kent Road on a recent Sunday morning to hear what poor Cockney Keats
+called the "tender-legged linnets:" "Bird-singing.--A match is made
+between Thomas Walker (the Bermondsey Champion) and William Hart
+(Champion of Walworth) to sing two linnets, on Sunday, for _2l._ a side;
+birds to be on the nail precisely at two o'clock; the host to be
+referee. _10s._ is now down; the remainder by nine this evening, at the
+Jolly Butchers, Rodney Road, Lock's Fields. Also a copper kettle will be
+sung for on the same day by six pairs of linnets; first pair up at
+half-past six o'clock in the evening. Any person requiring the said
+room for matches, &c., on making application to the host, will
+immediately be answered."
+
+Rodney Road, be it known, is anything but a romantic thoroughfare,
+leading out of the New Kent Road, a little way from the Elephant and
+Castle; and the caravanserai bearing the title of the Jolly Butchers is
+an unpretending beershop, with no outward and visible signs of especial
+joviality. On entering I met mine host, rubicund and jolly enough, who
+politely pioneered me upstairs, when I reported myself as in quest of
+the linnets. The scene of contest I found to be a largish room, where
+some twenty or thirty most un-Arcadian looking gentlemen were already
+assembled, the only adjunct at all symptomatic of that pastoral district
+being their pipes, at which they were diligently puffing. The whole of
+the tender-legged competitors, both for the money and the copper kettle,
+were hanging in little square green cages over the fireplace; and the
+one idea uppermost in my mind was how well the linnets must be seasoned
+to tobacco smoke if they could sing at all in the atmosphere which those
+Corydons were so carefully polluting. Corydon, besides his pipe, had
+adopted nuts and beer to solace the tedium of the quarter of an hour
+that yet intervened before the Bermondsey bird and its Walworth
+antagonist were to be "on the nail;" and ever and anon fresh Corydons
+kept dropping in, until some fifty or sixty had assembled. They were all
+of one type. There was a "birdiness" discernible on the outer man of
+each; for birdiness, as well as horseyness, writes its mark on the
+countenance and the attire. In the latter department there was a
+proclivity to thick pea-jackets and voluminous white comforters round
+the neck, though the day was springlike and the room stuffy. The talk
+was loud, but not boisterous, and garnished with fewer elegant flowers
+of speech than one would have expected. Five minutes before two the
+non-competing birds were carefully muffled up in pocket-handkerchiefs,
+and carried in their cages out of earshot, lest their twitterings might
+inspire the competing minstrels. Bermondsey and Walworth alone occupied
+the nails. Scarcely any bets were made. They seemed an impecunious
+assemblage, gathered for mere sport. One gentleman did, indeed, offer to
+stake "that 'ere blowsy bob," as though a shilling in his possession
+were a rarity of which his friends must be certainly aware. What was the
+occult meaning of the epithet "Blowsy" I could not fathom, but there
+were no takers; and, after the windows had been opened for a few minutes
+to clear the atmosphere, they were closed again; the door locked; the
+two markers took their place at a table in front of the birds, with bits
+of chalk in their hands; mine host stood by as referee in case of
+disputes; time was called; and silence reigned supreme for a quarter of
+an hour, broken only by the vocal performances of the Bermondsey and
+Walworth champions respectively. If a hapless human being did so far
+forget himself as to cough or tread incontinently upon a nutshell, he
+was called to silence with curses not loud but deep.
+
+The Walworth bird opened the concert with a brilliant solo by way of
+overture, which was duly reported by the musical critic in the shape of
+a chalk line on the table. The length of the effusion did not matter; a
+long aria, or a brilliant but spasmodic cadenza, each counted one, and
+one only. The Bermondsey bird, heedless of the issue at stake, devoted
+the precious moments to eating, emitting nothing beyond a dyspeptic
+twitter which didn't count; and his proprietor stood by me evidently
+chagrined, and perspiring profusely, either from anxiety or superfluous
+attire. Nearly half the time had gone by before Bermondsey put forth its
+powers. Meanwhile, Walworth made the most of the opportunity, singing in
+a manner of which I did not know linnets were capable. There were notes
+and passages in the répertoire of Walworth which were worthy of a
+canary. The bird no doubt felt that the credit of home art was at stake,
+and sang with a vigour calculated to throw foreign feathered artistes
+into the shade. Bermondsey evidently sang best after dinner, so he dined
+like an alderman; yet dined, alas! not wisely, but too well, or rather
+too long. Then he sang, first, a defiant roulade or so, as much as to
+say, "Can you beat that, Walworth?" pausing, with his head wickedly on
+one side, for a reply. That reply was not wanting, for Walworth was
+flushed with success; and one could not help regretting ignorance of
+bird-language so as to gather exactly what the reply meant. Then came a
+protracted duet between the two birds, which was the pièce de résistance
+of the whole performance. The silence became irksome. I could not help
+congratulating myself on the fact that no Corydon had brought his
+Phyllis; for Phyllis, I am sure, would not have been able to stand it.
+Phyllis, I feel certain, would have giggled. We remained mute as mice,
+solemn as judges. The ghost of a twitter was hailed with mute signs of
+approval by the backers of each bird; but a glance at the expressive
+features of the host warned the markers that nothing must be chalked
+down that did not come up to his idea of singing. Had the destinies of
+empires hung upon his nod he could scarcely have looked more oracular.
+But Walworth could afford to take matters easily now. For the last five
+minutes the Bermondsey bird did most of the music; still it was a
+hopeless case. Success was not on the cards. By-and-by, time was again
+called. Babel recommenced, and the result stood as follows:
+
+ Walworth 3 score 18
+ Bermondsey 1 score 10
+
+It was an ignominious defeat truly; and, had one been disposed to
+moralize, it had not been difficult to draw a moral therefrom. It was
+not a case of "no song, no supper;" but of supper--or, rather,
+dinner--and no song. Bermondsey had failed in the artistic combat, not
+from lack of powers, as its brilliant part in the duet and its
+subsequent soli proved, but simply from a Sybaritic love for creature
+comforts. I ventured to suggest it might have been expedient to remove
+the seed, but was informed that, under those circumstances, the
+creature--its proprietor called it an uglier name--would not have sung
+at all. The remarkable part of the business to me was that they did sing
+at the proper time. They had not uttered anything beyond a twitter until
+silence was called, and from that moment one or the other was singing
+incessantly. I suppose it was the silence. I have noticed not only caged
+birds, but children--not to speak ungallantly of the fair sex--generally
+give tongue most freely when one is silent, and presumably wants to keep
+so.
+
+The contest, however, was over, the stakes paid, and Corydon sought his
+pastoral pipe again--not without beer. It was a new experience, but not
+a very exciting one--to me, at least. It evidently had its attractions
+for the very large majority of attendants. In fact, Rodney Road is
+generally a "birdy" neighbourhood. Its staple products, to judge by the
+shops, seemed birds and beer. I was much pressed by mine host to stay
+for the evening entertainment, when six birds were to sing, and the
+attendance would be more numerous. As some five hours intervened I
+expressed regret at my inability to remain, reserving my opinion that
+five hours in Lock's Fields might prove the reverse of attractive, and
+Corydon in greater force might not have an agreeable effect on that
+already stuffy chamber. So I took myself off, wondering much, by the
+way, what strange association of ideas could have led any imaginative
+man to propose such an incongruous reward as a copper kettle by way of
+præmium for linnet-singing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+A WOMAN'S RIGHTS DEBATE.
+
+
+There never was a time when, on all sorts of subjects, from Mesmerism to
+Woman's Rights, the ladies had so much to say for themselves. There is
+an ancient heresy which tells us that, on most occasions, ladies are
+prone to have the last word; but certain it is that they are making
+themselves heard now. On the special subject of her so-called "Rights"
+the abstract Woman was, I knew, prodigiously emphatic--how emphatic,
+though, I was not quite aware, until having seen from the top of a
+City-bound omnibus that a lady whom I will describe by the Aristophanic
+name of Praxagora would lecture at the Castle Street Co-operative
+Institute. I went and co-operated so far as to form one of that lady's
+audience. Her subject--the "Political Status of Women"--was evidently
+attractive, not only to what we used in our innocence to call the weaker
+sex, but also to those who are soon to have proved to them the fallacy
+of calling themselves the stronger. A goodly assemblage had gathered in
+the fine hall of the Co-operators to join in demolishing that ancient
+myth as to the superiority of the male sex. My first intention was to
+have reported verbatim or nearly so the oration of Praxagora on the
+subject; and if I changed my scheme it was not because that lady did not
+deserve to be reported. She said all that was to be said on the matter,
+and said it exceedingly well too; but when the lecture, which lasted
+fifty minutes, was over, I found it was to be succeeded by a debate; and
+I thought more might be gained by chronicling the collision of opinion
+thence ensuing than by simply quoting the words of any one speaker,
+however eloquent or exhaustive.
+
+I own with fear and trembling--for it is a delicate, dangerous
+avowal--that, as a rule, I do not sympathize with the ladies who declaim
+on the subject of Woman's Rights. I do not mean to say I lack sympathy
+with the subject--I should like everybody to have their rights, and
+especially women--but they are sometimes asserted in such a
+sledge-hammer fashion, and the ladies who give them utterance are so
+prone to run large and be shrill-voiced that their very physique proves
+their claim either unnecessary or undesirable. I feel certain that in
+whatever station of domestic life those ladies may be placed, they would
+have their full rights, if not something more; and as for Parliamentary
+rights, I tremble for the unprotected males should such viragos ever
+compass the franchise; or, worse still, realize the ambition of the
+Ecclesiazusæ of Aristophanes, and sit on the benches of St. Stephen's
+clad in the nether garments of the hirsute sex. There was nothing of
+that kind on Tuesday night. In manner and appearance our present
+Praxagora was thoroughly feminine, and, by her very quietude of manner,
+impressed me with a consciousness of power, and determination to use it.
+Her voice was soft and silvery almost as that of Miss Faithfull herself;
+and when, at the outset of her lecture, she claimed indulgence on the
+score of never having spoken in a public hall before, we had to press
+forward to the front benches to catch the modulated tones, and men who
+came clumping in with heavy boots in the course of the lecture were
+severely hushed down by stern-visaged females among the audience.
+
+Disclaiming connexion with any society, Praxagora still adopted the
+first person plural in speaking of the doctrines and intentions of the
+down-trodden females. "We" felt so and so; "we" intended to do this or
+that; and certainly her cause gained by the element of mystery thus
+introduced, as well as by her own undoubted power of dealing with the
+subject. When the "we" is seen to refer to the brazen-voiced ladies
+aforesaid, and a few of the opposite sex who appear to have changed
+natures with the gentle ones they champion, that plural pronoun is the
+reverse of imposing, but the "we" of Praxagora introduced an element of
+awe, if only on the omne ignotum pro magnifico principle. In the most
+forcible way she went through the stock objections against giving women
+the franchise, and knocked them down one by one like so many ninepins.
+That coveted boon of a vote she proved to be at the basis of all the
+regeneration of women. She claimed that woman should have her share in
+making the laws by which she was governed, and denied the popular
+assertion that in so doing she would quit her proper sphere. In fact, we
+all went with her up to a certain point, and most of the audience beyond
+that point. For myself I confess I felt disheartened when, having dealt
+in the most consummate way with other aspects of the subject, she came
+to the religious phase, and begging the question that the Bible and
+religion discountenanced woman's rights, commenced what sounded to me
+like a furious attack on each.
+
+Now I happen to know--what perhaps those who look from another
+standpoint do not know--that this aggressive attitude assumed so
+unnecessarily by the advocates of woman's rights is calculated to keep
+back the cause more than anything else; and matter and manner had been
+so much the reverse of hostile up to the moment she plunged
+incontinently into the religious question, that it quite took me by
+surprise. I have known scores of people who, when they came under
+vigorous protest to hear Miss Emily Faithfull on the same fertile
+subject, went away converted because they found no iconoclasm of this
+kind in her teaching. They came to scoff and stopped, not indeed to
+pray, but to listen very attentively to a theme which has so much to be
+said in its favour that it is a pity to complicate its advocacy by the
+introduction of an extraneous and most difficult question. So it was,
+however; with pale, earnest face, and accents more incisive than before,
+Praxagora said if Bible and religion stood in the way of Woman's Rights,
+then Bible and religion must go. That was the gist of her remarks. I
+need not follow her in detail, because the supplementary matter sounded
+more bitterly still; and, had she not been reading from MS. I should
+have thought the lecturer was carried away by her subject; but no, she
+was reading quite calmly what were clearly enough her natural and
+deliberate opinions. I said I was surprised at the line she took.
+Perhaps I ought scarcely to have been so, for she was flanked on one
+side by Mr. Bradlaugh, on the other by Mr. Holyoake! but I never
+remember being so struck with a contrast as when at one moment Praxagora
+pictured the beauty of a well-regulated home, and the tender offices of
+woman towards the little children, and then shot off at a tangent to
+fierce invectives against the Bible and religion, which seemed so
+utterly uncalled for that no adversary who wanted to damage the cause
+could possibly have invented a more complete method of doing so.
+
+The lecture over, the chairman invited discussion, and a fierce little
+working man immediately mounted the platform and took Praxagora to task
+for her injudicious onslaught. But, as usual, this gentleman was wildly
+irrelevant and carried away by his commendable zeal. Over and over again
+he had to be recalled to the question, until finally he set his whole
+audience against him, and had to sit down abruptly in the middle of a
+sort of apotheosis of Moses--as far as I could hear, for his zeal outran
+his eloquence as well as his discretion, and rendered him barely
+audible. A second speaker followed, and, though cordially sympathizing
+with the address, and tracing woman's incapacity to her state of
+subjugation, regretted that such a disturbing element as religion had
+been mixed up with a social claim. He considered that such a subject
+must inevitably prove an apple of discord. For this he was at once
+severely handled by Mr. Bradlaugh, who, consistently enough, defended
+the line Praxagora adopted towards the religious question, and justified
+the introduction of the subject from the charge of irrelevance. He also
+deprecated the surprise which the last speaker had expressed at the
+excellent address of Praxagora by pointing out that in America about
+one-third of the press were females, a fact which he attributed to the
+plan of Mixed Education. Then a new line was opened up by a speaker--it
+was as impossible to catch their names as to hear the stations announced
+by porters on the Underground Railway. He predicted that if women did
+get the franchise, Mr. Bradlaugh's "Temple" would be shut up in six
+months, as well as those of Messrs. Voysey and Conway and Dr. Perfitt.
+The ladies, he said, were swayed by Conventionalism and Priestcraft, and
+until you educated them, you could not safely give them the franchise.
+
+A youthful Good Templar mounted the rostrum, for the purpose of patting
+Praxagora metaphorically on the back, and also ventilating his own
+opinions on the apathy of the working man in claiming his vote. Then
+somebody got up and denied that ladies were by nature theological. Their
+virtues were superior to those of men just as their voices were an
+octave higher. He was for having a Moral Department of the State
+presided over by ladies. Only one lady spoke; a jaunty young woman in a
+sailor's hat, who said that in religious persecutions men, not women,
+had been the persecutors; and then Praxagora rose to reply. She first of
+all explained her position with regard to the Bible, which she denied
+having unnecessarily attacked. The Bible forbade a woman to speak; and,
+that being so, the Bible must stand on one side, for "we" were going to
+speak. That the highest intellects had been formed on Bible models she
+denied by instancing Shelley. If she thought that this movement was
+going to destroy the womanhood of her sex she would not move a finger
+for its furtherance. She only thought it would give a higher style of
+womanhood. As to women requiring to be educated before they would know
+how to use the franchise, she pointed triumphantly to the Government
+which men had placed in power. It was significant, she said, that the
+first exercise of the working men's franchise had been to place a
+Conservative Government in office.
+
+I daresay I am wrong, but the impression left on my mind by the
+discussion was that the liberty of thought and action claimed was the
+liberty of thinking as "_we_" think and doing what "_we_" want to have
+done--a process which has been before now mistaken for absolute freedom.
+Stripped of its aggressive adjuncts, Praxagora's advocacy of her main
+subject would be telling in the extreme from the fact of her blending
+such thorough womanliness of person, character, and sentiment with such
+vigorous championship of a doctrine against which I do not believe any
+prejudice exists. Drag in the religious difficulty, however, and you
+immediately array against it a host of prejudices, whether reasonable
+ones or the reverse is not now the question. I am only concerned with
+the unwisdom of having called them into existence. I own I thought that
+Christianity had been the means of raising woman from her state of
+Oriental degradation to the position she occupies in civilized
+countries. But I was only there to listen, not to speak; and I confess I
+came away in a divided frame of mind. I was pleased with the paper, but
+irritated to think that a lady, holding such excellent cards, should
+risk playing a losing game.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+AN OPEN-AIR TICHBORNE MEETING.
+
+
+When Sydney Smith, from the depths of his barbarian ignorance, sought to
+rise to the conception of a Puseyite, he said in substance much as
+follows:--"I know not what these silly people want, except to revive
+every obsolete custom which the common sense of mankind has allowed to
+go to sleep." Puseyism is not to our present purpose; but Tichborne-ism
+is--for it has attained to the dignity of a veritable ism--and we may
+define it much after the same method, as an attempt, not, indeed, to
+revive the claims of, but to restore to society a person, who, after a
+trial of unexampled length, was consigned by the verdict of a jury, and
+the consequent sentence of the Lord Chief Justice, to the possibly
+uncongenial retirement of Millbank Penitentiary. With the rights or
+wrongs of such an event I have simply nothing to do. I abandoned the
+Tichborne Trial at an early stage in a condition of utter bewilderment;
+and directly an old gentleman sought to button-hole me, and argue that
+he must be the man, or he couldn't be the man, I made off, or changed
+the conversation as rapidly as I could.
+
+But when the question had at length been resolved by wiser heads than
+mine, and when, too, I felt I could write calmly, with no fear of an
+action for contempt of court before my eyes, I confess that a poster
+announcing an open-air Tichborne meeting in Mr. Warren's cricket-field,
+Notting Hill, was too fascinating for me. I had heard of such gatherings
+in provincial places and East End halls; but this invasion of the West
+was breaking new ground. I would go; in fine I went. On the evening of
+an exceptionally hot July day, I felt there might be worse places than
+Mr. Warren's breezy cricket ground alongside Notting Barn Farm; so six
+o'clock, the hour when the chair was to be taken, found me at the
+spot--first of the outer world--and forestalled only by a solitary
+Tichbornite. How I knew that the gentleman in question deserved that
+appellation I say not; but I felt instinctively that such was the case.
+He had a shiny black frock-coat on, like a well-to-do artisan out for a
+holiday, and a roll of paper protruding from his pocket I rightly
+inferred to be a Tichborne petition for signature. As soon as we got on
+the ground, and I was enjoying the sensation of the crisp well rolled
+turf beneath my feet, a man hove in sight with a table, and this
+attracted a few observers. A gentleman in a light coat, too, who was
+serenely gazing over the hedge at the Kensington Park Cricket Club in
+the next ground, was, they informed me, Mr. Guildford Onslow. The
+presiding genius of the place, however, was Mrs. Warren, who, arrayed
+in a gown of emerald green--as though she were attending a Fenian
+meeting--bustled about in a state of intense excitement until the
+greengrocer's cart, which was to serve as a rostrum, had arrived. When
+this occurred, the table and half a dozen Windsor chairs were hoisted
+into it; another table was arranged below the van, with the Tichborne
+Petition outspread upon it; and I fancied that arrangements were
+complete.
+
+Not so, however. The gentleman in the shiny coat and emerald green Mrs.
+Warren between them tin-tacked up a long scroll or "legend" along the
+rim of the van, consisting of the text from Psalm xxxv. 11:--"False
+witnesses did rise up against me. They laid to my charge things that I
+knew not." The association of ideas was grotesque, I know, but really as
+Mrs. Warren and the shiny artisan were nailing this strip to the
+greengrocer's van, they put me very much in mind of a curate and a lady
+friend "doing decorations" at Christmas or Eastertide. Nor was this all.
+When the "strange device" was duly tin-tacked, some workmen brought four
+long pieces of quartering, and a second strip of white calico with
+letters stuck on it was nailed to these; and when the stalwart fellows
+hoisted it in air and tied the two centre pieces of wood to the wheels
+of the greengrocer's cart, I found that it consisted of the Ninth
+Commandment. The self-sacrificing carpenters were to hold--and did
+hold--the outside poles banner-wise during the entire evening; and, with
+one slight exception, this banner with the strange device, No. 2, formed
+an appropriate, if not altogether ornamental background for the
+greengrocer's van. Knots of people had gathered during these
+proceedings; and I was confused to find that I was being generally
+pointed out as Mr. Onslow, that gentleman having retired to the privacy
+of Mr. Warren's neighbouring abode. Later on I was taken for a
+detective, because, in my innocence, I withdrew ever and anon from the
+crowd, and, sitting on a verdurous bank, jotted down a note in my
+pocket-book; but this got me into such bad odour by-and-by that I felt
+it better to desist, and trust to memory. Some of the smaller boys also
+averred that I was Sir Roger himself, but their youthful opinions were
+too palpably erroneous to carry weight.
+
+In due course the van was occupied by Mr. Onslow, the Rev. Mr.
+Buckingham (about whom I felt, of course, very curious), my shining
+artisan, and a few others. A thin-faced gentleman, whose name I could
+not catch, was voted to the chair, and announced to us that he should go
+on talking awhile in order that Messrs. Onslow and Buckingham might
+"refresh," as they had each come from the country. This they did coram
+publico in the cart, while the chairman kept us amused. The wind, too,
+was blowing pretty freshly, and was especially hard on the Ninth
+Commandment, which gave considerable trouble to the holders of the
+props. It was directly in the teeth of the speaker, too--an arrangement
+which Mrs. Warren, in her zeal, had overlooked; and it was decided by
+common consent to "reverse the meeting"--that is, to turn the chairs of
+the speakers round, so that the Ninth Commandment was nowhere, and
+looked like an Egyptian hieroglyph, as the reversed letters showed dimly
+through the calico. The chairman eventually read to the meeting, which
+was now a tolerably full one, the form of petition which was to serve as
+the single resolution of the evening. I was struck with this gentleman's
+departure from conventional legal phraseology on this occasion. Instead
+of naming the cause célèbre "The Queen _versus_ Castro" (it being
+written, as Sam Weller says, with a "wee") he termed it "The Queen _via_
+Castro!" The petition was as follows:--
+
+"That in the trial at Bar in the Court of Queen's Bench, on an
+indictment of the Queen v. Castro, alias Arthur Orton, alias Sir Roger
+Charles Doughty Tichborne, Bart., for perjury, the jury, on the 28th day
+of February, 1874, brought in a verdict of guilty against him, declaring
+him to be Arthur Orton, and he was sentenced to fourteen years' penal
+servitude, which he is now undergoing.
+
+"That your petitioners have reason to know and believe and are
+satisfied, both from the evidence produced at the trial and furnished
+since, and from their own personal knowledge that he is not Arthur
+Orton.
+
+"That though 280 witnesses were examined at the said trial in his
+behalf, a very large number more, as your petitioners have been informed
+and believe, were also ready to be examined, but that funds were not
+available for the purpose, the defendant having been entirely dependent
+on the voluntary subscriptions of the public for his defence.
+
+"That your petitioners submit that such a large number as 280 witnesses,
+most of whom gave positive evidence that the defendant was not Arthur
+Orton, and whose testimony in two instances only was questioned in a
+court of law--as against about 200 witnesses for the prosecution, whose
+evidence was chiefly of a negative character--was of itself enough to
+raise a doubt in the defendant's favour, of which doubt he ought to have
+had the benefit, in accordance both with the law and the custom of the
+country.
+
+"That, under the circumstances, your petitioners submit that he had not
+a fair trial, and they pray your honourable House to take the matter
+into your serious consideration, with a view to memorialize her Majesty
+to grant a free pardon."
+
+The Rev. Mr. Buckingham, a cheery gentleman who bore a remarkable
+resemblance to the celebrated Mr. Pickwick, rose to move the resolution;
+and I could not help noticing that, not content with the ordinary white
+tie of clerical life, he had "continued the idea downwards" in a white
+waistcoat, which rather altered the state of things. He spoke well and
+forcibly I should think for an hour, confining his remarks to the
+subject of "Sir Roger" not being Arthur Orton. He (Mr. Buckingham)
+belonged to some waterside mission at Wapping, and had known Arthur
+Orton familiarly from earliest boyhood. His two grievances were that his
+negative evidence had not been taken, and that he was now being
+continually waited on by "Jesuits," who temptingly held out cheques for
+_1000l._ to him if he would only make affidavit that the man in Millbank
+was Arthur Orton.
+
+Mr. Onslow, who seconded the resolution, however, made the speech of the
+evening, and was so enthusiastically received that he had to recommence
+several times after glowing perorations. The burden of Mr. Onslow's
+prophecy was the unfairness of the trial; and his "bogies" were
+detectives, just as Mr. Buckingham's were Jesuits. The Jean Luie affair
+was the most infernal "plant" in the whole case; and he read records of
+conflicting evidence which really were enough to make one pack up one's
+traps and resolve on instant emigration. He was, however, certainly
+right on one point. He said that such meetings were safety-valves which
+prevented revolution. No doubt this was a safety-valve. It amused the
+speakers, and Mrs. Warren and the glazed artisan; and it could do nobody
+any possible harm. Whether it was likely to do the man of Millbank any
+good was quite another matter, and one which, of course, it was quite
+beside my purpose to discuss. There was a deal of--to me--very
+interesting speaking; for I gained new light about the case, and stood
+until my legs fairly ached listening to Messrs. Buckingham and Onslow.
+
+When the editor of the _Tichborne Gazette_ claimed an innings it was
+another matter; and--perhaps with lack of esprit de corps--I decamped. I
+only saw this gentleman gesticulating as I left the field; but the rate
+at which he was getting up the steam promised a speech that would last
+till nightfall.
+
+As I went off the ground I was struck with the clever way in which a
+London costermonger will turn anything and everything to account. One of
+them was going about with a truck of cherries, crying out, "Sir Roger
+Tichborne cherries. Penny a lot!"
+
+There was no symptom of overt opposition, though opponents were blandly
+invited to mount the waggon and state their views; but there was a good
+deal of quiet chaff on the outskirts of the crowd, which is the portion
+I always select on such occasions for my observation. On the whole,
+however, the assembly was pretty unanimous; and though it never assumed
+the dimensions of a "monster meeting," the fact that even so many people
+could be got together for such a purpose seemed to me sufficiently a
+sign of the times to deserve annotation in passing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+SUNDAY IN A PEOPLE'S GARDEN.
+
+
+I have often thought that an interesting series of articles might be
+written on the subject of "London out of Church," dealing with the
+manners and customs of those people who patronize no sort of religious
+establishment on the Sunday. I have seen pretty well all the typical
+phases of religious London and London irreligious; but these would
+rather be characterized as non-religious than as irreligious folks. They
+do not belong to any of the varied forms of faith; in fact faith is from
+their life a thing apart. It is in this negative way that they are
+interesting. Sunday is with them only a regularly recurring Bank
+Holiday. It would be interesting to know what they do with it. A special
+difficulty, however, exists for me in any such inquiry, resulting from
+the fact that, in my capacity of clerical casual, I am pretty generally
+engaged on the Sunday; and when I am not, my Day of Rest is too valuable
+to be devoted to any of the manifold forms of metropolitan
+Sabbath-breaking. I have a great idea that parsons ought to be
+frequently preached at; and so I generally go to some church or chapel
+when out of harness myself; and if "hearing sermons" constitute the
+proper carrying out of the things promised and vowed on my behalf at
+baptism I must have undergone as complete a course of Christian
+discipline as any man in Christendom, for I have been preached at by
+everybody from Roman Catholics down to Walworth Jumpers and Plumstead
+Peculiars!
+
+But impressed with anxiety to know about the doings of the
+non-Church-goers, I have for a long time cast sheep's eyes at the Sunday
+League, and more than once definitely promised to join one of their
+Sunday outings; but I am strongly of Tom Hood's opinion that--
+
+ The man who's fond precociously of stirring
+ Must be a _spoon_.
+
+The Sunday League commence their excursions at untimely hours; and it is
+a cardinal point in my creed that Sunday ought to be a Day of Rest, at
+all events in the matter of breakfast in bed. I missed the excursion to
+Shakspeare's House in this way, and the paper on the Bard of Avon, full
+of the genius loci, must have been as edifying as a sermon. So, too, on
+a recent Sunday, when the Sunday League on their way to Southend got
+mixed up with the Volunteer Artillery going to Shoebury, I was again
+found wanting. But still the old penchant remained, and Sunday was my
+last free one for a long time. How could I utilize it? I had it; I would
+go to the People's Garden at Willesden. I had heard that certain very
+mild forms of Sabbath breaking prevailed there. I would go and see for
+myself.
+
+I had been at the People's Garden twice before; once on the occasion of
+a spiritualistic picnic, and once, more recently, at a workmen's flower
+show; and felt considerable interest in the place, especially as the
+People had been polite enough to send me a season ticket, so that I was
+one of the People myself.
+
+This People's Garden was not exactly a Paradise yet, though it is in a
+fair way of becoming one. It is a spot of some fifty acres reclaimed
+from the scrubbiest part of Wormwood Scrubbs, and made the focus of a
+club of working men, of whom I am very proud indeed to be one. Indeed, I
+do not see why throughout the remainder of this article I should not use
+the first person plural. I will. Well, then, we secured this spot, and
+we have got in the first place one of the finest--I believe the
+finest--dancing platforms in England, for we as a community are
+Terpsichorean, though I, as an individual, am not. I felt it necessary
+to give up dancing when my weight turned the balance at fourteen stone
+odd. Then we can give our friends refreshments from a bottle of
+champagne down to tea and cresses. We have all sorts of clubs, dramatic
+and otherwise, and rather plume ourselves on having put up our
+proscenium ourselves, that is with our own hands and hammers and nails.
+There is the great advantage of being a Working Man or one of the
+People. If you had been with me that Sunday you would have seen a glow
+of conscious pride suffusing my countenance as I read the bills of our
+last amateur performance, consisting of the "Waterman" and "Ici on parle
+Français," played on the boards which I, in my corporate capacity, had
+planed, and sawn, and nailed. My route last Sunday lay across the crisp
+sward of the Scrubbs; and it was quite a pleasure to be able to walk
+there without danger of falling pierced by the bullet of some erratic
+volunteer; for there are three butts on Wormwood Scrubbs, which I
+examined with minuteness on Sunday, and was exercised to see by marks on
+the brickwork how very wide of the target a volunteer's shot can go. I
+wonder there is not a wholesale slaughter of cattle in the neighbouring
+fields. The garden lies on the other side of the Great Western Railway,
+across which I had to trespass in order to get to it. But the man in
+charge regarded me with indulgence, for was I not a working man and a
+"mate?" The portion of the garden abutting on the rail is still
+unreclaimed prairie. The working men have begun at the top of the hill,
+and are working downwards.
+
+There is a good-sized refreshment-room at the entrance, with all the
+paraphernalia of secretary's office, &c.; and this large room, which is
+exceedingly useful in wet weather, opens right on to the
+dancing-platform, in the centre of which is a pretty kiosk for the band.
+We have no gas; but tasty paraffin lamps at frequent intervals give
+sufficient light, and, at all events, do not smell _worse_ than modern
+metropolitan gas. There is a large tent standing en permanence during
+the summer for flower shows, and terrace after terrace of croquet lawns,
+all of which it will, I fear, shock some Sabbatarian persons to learn
+were occupied on that Sunday afternoon, and the balls kept clicking like
+the week-day shots of the erratic riflemen on the Scrubbs. I had a young
+lady with me who was considerably severe on the way in which we workmen
+male and female, handled our mallets. There was, I confess, something to
+be desired in the way of position; and one group of German artisans in
+the corner lawn made more noise than was necessary, howling and uttering
+all sorts of guttural interjections, as though they were playing polo at
+least, or taking part in a bull-fight, instead of in croquet--beloved of
+curates.
+
+And then the flowers. We are making the desert blossom like the rose. It
+is really marvellous to see what has been done in so short a time. We
+might have been a society of market gardeners. We don't get so many
+flowers along the walk of life, we working men; so that we want to see a
+bit of green sward and a flower or two on Sundays. There is a capital
+gymnasium, and our observation of the young men who disport themselves
+there would lead an uninitiated observer to form the opinion that the
+normal condition of humanity was upside down. The way one youthful
+workman hung by his legs on the trapeze was positively Darwinian to
+behold. Swings attracted the attention of the ladies; and I regret to
+say that the particular young lady I escorted--who was of the mature age
+of twelve--passed most of the afternoon in a state of oscillation, and
+was continually adjuring me to push her.
+
+An interesting addition to the gardens--our gardens--since I was last
+there, consisted of a cage of meditative monkeys, four in number, who
+were stationed so near the gymnasium as inevitably to suggest the
+Darwinian parallel. They had their gymnasium too, and swung gaily on
+their tree-trunks at such times as they were not engaged in eating or
+entomological researches. I could not help thinking what a deprivation
+it was to the gymnasts that, in course of evolution, we have lost our
+tails. They would have been so convenient on the horizontal bar, where
+that persevering young workman was still engaged in the pursuit of
+apoplexy by hanging head downwards. Soon after we got there an excellent
+band commenced playing, not in the kiosk, lest we should be beguiled
+into dancing. The first piece was a slow movement, which could scarcely
+have been objected to by any Sabbatarian, unless he was so
+uncompromising as to think all trumpets wrong. The second was the
+glorious march from "Athalie;" and then--my blood runs cold as I write
+it--a sort of pot pourri, in the midst of which came the "Dutchman's
+Little Wee Dog," considerably disguised in the way of accompaniment and
+variation, I own, but the "Little Wee Dog" beyond a doubt. Then I
+understood why the band was not in the kiosk; for, fourteen stone though
+I be, I felt all my toes twiddling inside my boots at that time as
+wickedly as though it had been Monday morning. There were fourteen or
+fifteen loud brass instruments, with a side and bass drum and cymbals.
+All these were playing the "Little Wee Dog" to their brazen hearts'
+content, and only one gentleman on a feeble piccolo-flute trying to
+choke their impiety by tootling out a variation, just as the stringed
+instruments in the glorious "Reformation Symphony" of Mendelssohn try in
+vain to drown with their sensuous Roman airs the massive chords of the
+old Lutheran chorale--"Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott." I really could
+not bear it any longer, and was rising to go when they stopped; and as
+the gentleman who played the circular bass got outside his portentous
+instrument, I found he had a little wee dog of his own who retired into
+the bell of the big trumpet when his master laid it on the grass.
+Perhaps it was in honour of this minute animal the air was selected.
+However, I could not lend myself to such proceedings; so I bribed my
+youthful charge with a twopenny bottle of frothless ginger beer to come
+out of her swing and return to the regions of orthodoxy. The Teutonic
+gentlemen were still hooting and yelling as we crossed the corner of
+their croquet lawn, until I expected to see them attack one another
+with the mallets and use the balls for missile warfare; but it was only
+their peculiar way of enjoying themselves.
+
+My little friend described the action of our working men in the croquet
+lawn as "spooning," and also drew my attention to the fact that two
+lovers were doing the same on a seat, in the approved fashion prevalent
+among us workmen, with the manly arm around the taper waist coram
+publico. This arrangement is quite a necessity with us. We should often
+like to forego it, especially when little boys make rude remarks about
+us in the street; but it is expected of us, and we submit.
+
+The sun was beginning to sink grandly over that magnificent panorama of
+country visible from Old Oak Common as we passed down the hill and again
+violated the bye-laws of the Great Western Railway Company. The spires
+of the West End churches were bathed in the soft glow of departing day;
+and in the distance the Crystal Palace glittered like a fairy bower. We
+got back after making a little détour on account of some gentlemen who
+were bathing in a very Paradisiacal way indeed--we actually got back in
+time to go to church like good Christians; and I do not think either of
+us felt much the worse for the hours we had spent in the People's
+Garden--save and except the wicked Little Wee Dog!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+UTILIZING THE YOUNG LADIES.
+
+
+Time was when it was accepted as an axiom that young ladies had no
+object in life but to be ornamental--no mission but matrimony. The
+"accomplishments" were the sum total of a genteel education, though
+charged as "extras" on the half-yearly accounts; and all the finished
+creature had to do, after once "coming out," was to sit down and
+languidly wait for an eligible suitor.
+
+Times changed. And, in England, when we make a change, we always rush
+violently into an opposite extreme. Woman had a mission, and no mistake.
+Now it was the franchise and Bloomer costume, just as aforetime it was
+the pianoforte and general fascination. Blue spectacles rose in the
+market. We had lady doctors and female lawyers. The only marvel is that
+there was no agitation for feminine curates.
+
+Then came reaction again. It was discovered that woman could be educated
+without becoming a bluestocking, and practical without wearing bloomers
+or going in for the suffrage. Still holding to the wholesome principle
+that "woman is not undeveloped man, but diverse," the real friends of
+the gentler sex discovered a hundred and one ways in which it could
+employ itself usefully and remuneratively. It was no longer feared lest,
+as Sydney Smith puts it, if a woman learnt algebra she would "desert her
+infant for a quadratic equation;" and the University of Cambridge soon
+fell in with the scheme for the Higher Education of Women; while Miss
+Faithfull, and several others, organized methods for employing
+practically the talents which education could only develope in a general
+way. It was to one of these methods--not Miss Faithfull's--my attention
+was drawn a short time since by a letter in the daily papers. The
+Victoria Press and International Bureau are faits accomplis, and it is
+well that efforts should be made for utilizing in other ways that
+interesting surplus in our female population. Mrs. Fernando, of Warwick
+Gardens, Kensington, has set herself to the solution of the problem, and
+the shape her method takes is a Technical Industrial School for Women.
+
+The object and aim of the institution is to examine, plan, and organize
+such branches of industrial avocation as are applicable to females, and
+open up new avocations of useful industry compatible with the
+intellectual and mechanical capabilities of the sex, not forgetting
+their delicacy, and the untutored position of females for practical
+application in all industrial labour: to give the same facilities to
+females as are enjoyed by males, in collective classes for special
+training or special preparation for passing examinations open to women,
+thereby to enable them to earn their livelihood with better success than
+is attainable by mere school education only: to give special training to
+females to qualify them to enter special industrial avocations with such
+competency as will enable them to be successful in obtaining employment:
+to apprentice females, or to employ them directly into trades where such
+employers will receive them beyond the limits of the industrial school
+and where females can be constantly employed, such as in composing,
+embossing, illuminating, black-bordering, ticket-writing,
+circular-addressing, flower-making, flower-cultivating, &c.
+
+Being a determined sceptic in the matter of prospectuses, I determined
+to go and see for myself the working of this scheme, which looked so
+well on paper. The Institution occupies a large house exactly opposite
+Dr. Punshon's chapel: and there is no chance of one's missing it, for it
+is placarded with announcements like a hoarding at election time. I
+found Mrs. Fernando an exceedingly practical lady, doing all the work of
+the institution herself, with the exception of a few special subjects
+such as botany, &c., which are conducted by her husband. There are no
+"assistants," therefore, or deputed interests, the bane of so many
+high-priced schools.
+
+These classes are held in the evening from seven to nine o'clock, and
+are intended for ladies above the age of fifteen years, who may be
+engaged through the day in various occupations, and for such as suffer
+from neglected education, and who wish conveniently and economically to
+improve themselves, without being necessitated to mix with their juniors
+in day-schools. These classes prepare ladies to meet the qualifications
+necessary to enter clerkships and other official departments; to bring
+them also to a standard to meet the qualifications for post offices and
+telegraph departments; and also to pass certain examinations open to
+them. The charge is only _2s._ per week--_8s._ per month--_1l. 4s._ per
+quarter. The first course embraces spelling, reading, writing,
+arithmetic, history, geography, and grammar. The second course consists
+of advanced arithmetic, book-keeping and commercial instruction, so as
+to qualify women to take posts of responsibility with marked success.
+The third course consists of French, for practical usefulness. The
+fourth course embraces simple or technical training in such departments
+as are available within the limits of the class-room--to qualify women
+to enter industrial avocations with competency, and to make them
+successful in obtaining employment. This department will be extended to
+greater usefulness as conveniences arise, by apprenticing the girls or
+employing them directly in trades beyond the limits of the class-room,
+where employers will receive them, or where women could be consistently
+engaged--as, for instance, in the work of compositors, ticket-writers,
+embossers, &c. &c.
+
+The two classes with which I was brought into contact were the
+book-keeping and embossing. In the former, more than a dozen young
+ladies were being initiated in the mysteries of single and double entry,
+and they posted up their books in a way that made me feel very much
+ashamed of myself, when I thought how incapable I should be of doing
+anything half so useful. Many girls go from this department to be
+book-keepers at large hotels, places of business, &c.
+
+I then went to the embossing room, where six presses were being worked
+by as many young ladies, one in an adjoining room being reserved for
+Mrs. Fernando, who not only tells her pupils what to do, but shows them
+how to do it. The gilding and colouring of the stamps was most
+elaborate; two monograms of the Queen's name and that of the Empress
+Eugénie being perfect marvels of artistic and intricate workmanship.
+Every process, from mixing the colours up to burnishing the gold, was
+gone through in detail by this practical lady and her intelligent pupils
+for my special edification, and I passed out a much wiser and certainly
+not a sadder man than I entered this veritable hive of human bees.
+
+No expense was spared in the education of these girls, low as are the
+terms they pay. I saw quite a ruinous heap of spoilt envelopes and
+fashionable sheets of thick cream-laid; for they have to make their
+experiments on the best material, and the slightest alteration in the
+position of a pin where the stamping process has to be several times
+repeated spoils the whole result. Mrs. Fernando has also introduced
+envelope and circular addressing by women, as a department of female
+industrial work in the Technical Industrial School for Women, where a
+number of females are employed between the hours of ten and four
+o'clock, receiving satisfactory remuneration. She provides the females
+employed in this department evening classes free of charge, to improve
+themselves in general education.
+
+I am an intense admirer of the female sex in general, and young ladies
+in particular, but really when I came away, leaving my pretty
+book-keepers and embossers to resume their normal work, and saw the
+numbers of young ladies sitting listlessly over misnamed "work" at the
+window, or walking languidly nowhither in the streets, I thought that,
+without losing any of their attractions, nay, adding a new claim to the
+many existing ones on our regard, they might with great advantage take a
+turn at Mrs. Fernando's sixpenny lessons in technical education.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+FAIRLOP FRIDAY.
+
+
+Amongst those customs "more honoured in the breach than the observance"
+which are rapidly being stamped out by the advancing steps of
+civilization, are the institutions which we can yet remember as so
+popular in the days of our childhood, called pleasure fairs. Like that
+social dodo in a higher section of society, the "three-bottle man," with
+the stupid Bacchanalian usages of which he was the embodiment, these
+fairs are slowly but surely disappearing as education spreads among the
+masses of the people. In the country a fair is a simple and a necessary
+thing enough. At certain seasons of the year, according to the staple
+commodities for the sale of which the assemblage was originally
+instituted, our bucolic friends gather at early morning with the
+products of their farms; a good deal of noisy buying, selling, and
+barter takes place. Later in the day the ladies invest their profits in
+a little mild finery, or in simple pleasures; and, later still, when the
+public-houses have done their work, comes a greater or lesser amount of
+riot, rude debauchery, and vice; and then, voilà tout--the fair is over
+for a year. One can easily imagine the result of the transition when,
+from the quiet country, the fair removes to the city or suburb. In such
+places every utilitarian element is wanting, and the gilt ginger-bread
+and gewgaws are only a speciously innocent attraction towards the
+drinking and dancing booth where the mischief is done. Well-wishers to
+society are unromantic enough not to regret the decidedly waning glories
+of these gatherings, from the great Bartholomew Fair itself down to that
+which, on the Friday of which I write, converted many miles of
+thoroughfare at the East End of London, as well as one of the prettiest
+forest scenes still surrounding the metropolis, into a vast al fresco
+tavern, where the "worship of Bacchus" was as freely indulged as in any
+heathen temple of ancient times.
+
+Fairlop Fair--which has not yet died out, though beginning to show
+satisfactory signs of decay--commenced its existence, innocently enough,
+about a century ago. At that time Mr. Day, a shipbuilder, wishing to
+have a day's outing in the forest with his friends and employés, fitted
+up a vessel on wheels, fully rigged, in which he conveyed his picnic
+party to Hainault Forest, on the outskirts of which, some distance from
+Ilford, stood the famous Fairlop Oak. The holiday became an annual
+custom, and gradually changed its character from the simple gathering of
+a master and his men into regular saturnalia; during which, each year,
+from the first Friday in July, over the ensuing Saturday and Sunday,
+riot and debauchery reigned supreme in the glades of the forest and the
+eastern districts of London. The example set by Mr. Day was followed by
+other ship, boat, and barge builders, but of late years, more
+particularly by the mast and block makers, riggers, shipwrights, and
+shipyard labourers; and more recently still by the licensed victuallers.
+Finding the custom good for trade, the publicans formed a society for
+building or hiring these boats on wheels, which, covered with flags, and
+provided each with a band of music and filled with revellers, annually
+make their progress into Hainault Forest. They go no longer, alas! to
+Fairlop Oak--for that is numbered with the things of the past--but now
+to Barking side, where, at the Maypole Inn, the festivities of Fairlop
+Fair are still kept up.
+
+These ship and boat cars attract immense multitudes along the Mile End,
+Bow, and Whitechapel Roads, down as far as Aldgate; the crowd assemble
+in the morning to see the holiday people start on their expedition. The
+most remarkable sight, however, is at night, when the "boats" return
+lighted with coloured lanterns, red and green fires, &c.; and at every
+public-house along the road similar fires are burnt, and brass bands
+stationed to strike up as the cars pass, and stop at certain favoured
+establishments "for the good of the house." Anxious to witness the
+fading glories of Fairlop Friday myself, before the advancing tide of
+civilization shall have done their inevitable work upon them, I sallied
+forth to the East End, and walking along one of the finest approaches to
+London, from Aldgate, by Whitechapel, to Bow and Stratford Churches,
+succeeded in realizing more completely than ever before two facts:
+first, how gigantic is the population of the East End of London; and,
+secondly, how little is required to amuse and attract it. There were
+only two of the "boats" sent to the Forest that year. Their return could
+gratify the sight of these people but for a single instant; yet there,
+from early dusk almost to succeeding daylight, those working men,
+literally "in their thousands"--and not in the Trafalgar Square
+diminutive of that expression--gathered to gratify themselves with the
+sight of the pageant. In comparison, the "Boeuf Gras," which annually
+sends the gamins of Paris insane, is really a tasteful and refined
+exhibition. Yet there they were, women, men, and children--infants in
+arms, too, to a notable extent--swarming along that vast thoroughfare,
+boozing outside the public-houses, investing their pence in
+"scratch-backs" and paper noses, feathers and decorations, as do their
+betters on the course at Epsom, under the feeble excuse of "waiting for
+the boats." The first arrived en retour at Stratford Church about ten
+o'clock; and certainly the appearance of the lumbering affair as it
+moved along, with its rigging brought out by means of coloured fires,
+lanterns, and lamps, was odd enough. As soon as it passed me at
+Stratford, I jumped outside one of the Bow and Stratford omnibuses, and
+so had an opportunity of following, or rather joining in, the procession
+as far as Whitechapel, where the "boat" turned off into Commercial Road.
+For the whole of that space the footway was filled with one seething
+mass of humanity, and the publicans were driving a rattling trade
+outside and inside their establishments. As the glare of the coloured
+fires lighted up the pale faces of the crowd with a ghastly hue, and I
+heard the silly and too often obscene remarks bandied between the
+bystanders and the returning revellers, I could not help agitating the
+question, whether it would not be possible to devise some innocent
+recreation, with a certain amount of refinement in it, to take the place
+of these--to say the best--foolish revelries. In point of fact, they are
+worse than foolish. Not only was it evident that the whole affair from
+beginning to end, as far as adults were concerned, was an apotheosis of
+drink; but amongst another section of the populace, the boys and girls,
+or what used to be boys and girls--for, as the Parisians say, "Il n'y a
+plus de garçons"--one must have been blind indeed not to see the
+mischief that was being done on those East End pavements; done more
+thoroughly perhaps, certainly on a vastly larger scale, than in the
+purlieus of the forest. It is an uninviting subject to dwell upon; but
+one could understand all about baby farms, and Lock Hospitals, and
+Contagious Diseases Acts, out there that July night, in the crowded
+streets of East London.
+
+It would be unfair to dilate upon these evils, and not to mention an
+organization which, for the last ten years, has been seeking to remedy
+the mischief. Some hundreds of working men of a more serious stamp,
+aided by a few gentlemen and ministers of various denominations, form
+themselves into small bands of street preachers, and sallying forth in a
+body, hold services and preach sermons at the most populous points of
+the Fairlop route. Being curious to see the effect of their bold
+labours--for it requires immense "pluck" to face a Whitechapel mob--I
+joined one of these detachments, where the Rev. Newman Hall was the
+preacher. Before starting, this gentleman gave it as the result of his
+long experience with the British workman that there is no use in waiting
+for him to come to church. If the church is to do anything with him, it
+must go out and meet him in the streets and fields, as it originally
+did. Mr. Hall gave some amusing illustrations of his experience at
+Hastings, where, for several weeks, he had been preaching on the beach
+to large congregations. He was idling there, he said, for health's sake,
+and one evening, seeing a number of men loafing about, he proposed to
+one of them that he should give them an address. This gentleman declined
+the address, but added, characteristically enough, "If ye'll gie me
+some beer I'll drink it." Two others, being asked if they would listen,
+"didn't know as they would." Under these unpromising auspices Mr. Hall
+began, and, attracting a crowd, was "moved on" by a policeman. A
+gentleman who recognised him proposed an adjournment to the beach, and
+there a sermon was preached, and has been repeated by Mr. Hall on
+several occasions, with a congregation of thousands. He has a peculiar
+knack of speaking in a tongue "understanded of the people," and his
+address to the Fairlop crowd on that Friday night "told" considerably.
+At its conclusion he quietly put on his hat, dropped into the crowd, and
+went his way; but the tone of criticism amongst his hearers was very
+favourable, and I quite agree with the critics that it's a pity we
+haven't "more parsons like that." It is not, however, simply by
+religious zeal such a want as that to which I allude is to be supplied,
+but by the substitution of some sensible recreation for the low
+attractions of the beershop and gin-palace. It is a problem worthy of
+our deepest thinkers: "What shall we offer our huge populations in
+exchange for the silly pageant even now being enacted in the outskirts
+of the metropolis--which may well be taken to embody the pastime of the
+lower orders--Fairlop Fair?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+A CHRISTMAS DIP.
+
+
+There are few more exhilarating things, on a breezy spring morning, than
+a spurt across that wonderful rus in urbe--Kensington Gardens and Hyde
+Park--for a prospective dip in the Serpentine, where, at specified hours
+every morning and evening, water-loving London is privileged to disport
+itself in its congenial element. So congenial is it, in fact, that some
+enthusiastic individuals do not limit themselves to warm summer
+mornings, or the cooler ones of springtide and autumn, but bathe all the
+year round--even, it is said, when a way for their manoeuvres has to be
+cut through the ice. Skirting the north bank of the Serpentine at
+morning or evening in the summer, the opposite shore appears absolutely
+pink with nude humanity, the younger portion dancing and gambolling very
+much after the manner of Robinson Crusoe's cannibals. The bathers
+occasionally look a great deal better out of their integuments than in
+them. Not from this class, however, do your all-the-year-round bathers
+come. The Arab is an exotic--a child of the Sun, loving not to disport
+himself in water the temperature of which shocks his tentative
+knuckles, as he dips them in the unaccustomed element. His wardrobe,
+again, is too much after the fashion of that pertaining to Canning's
+needy knife-grinder to make an al fresco toilette other than
+embarrassing. From the all-the-year-round bathers, as a nucleus, there
+has grown up, within the last few years, the Serpentine Swimming Club;
+and on Christmas-day in the morning they have an annual match open to
+all comers--though, it need scarcely be said, patronized only by those
+whom, for brevity's sake, we may term all-rounders.
+
+Now, I had often heard of this Christmas-day match, and as often, on
+Christmas-eve, made up my mind to go; but the evening's resolution faded
+away, as such resolutions have only too often been known to do, before
+the morning's light. This year, however--principally, I believe, because
+I had been up very late the previous night--I struggled out of bed
+before dawn, and steered for the Serpentine. A crescent moon was
+shining, and stars studded the clear spaces between ominous patches of
+cloud. A raw, moist wind was blowing, and on the muddy streets were
+evident traces of a recent shower. I had no notion that the gates of
+Kensington Gardens were open so early; and the sensation was novel as I
+threaded the devious paths in morning dawn, and saw the gas still alight
+along the Bayswater Road. A solitary thrush was whistling his Christmas
+carol as I struggled over the inundated sward; presently the sun threw a
+few red streaks along the East, over the Abbey Tower; but, until I had
+passed the Serpentine Bridge, not a single human being met my gaze.
+There, however, I found some fifty men, mostly with a "sporting" look
+about them. The ubiquitous boy was there, playing at some uncomfortable
+game in the puddles round the seats. The inevitable dog stood pensively
+by the diving board; and when, by-and-by straggling all-rounders came
+and took their morning header, the quadruped rushed after them to the
+very edge of the water, as though he had been a distinguished member of
+the Humane Society. He shirked the element itself, however, as
+religiously as though he had been one of London's great unwashed. In the
+pause which preceded the race, I learned, from the Honorary Secretary of
+the Serpentine Swimming Club, particulars of its history and of the race
+itself. For six years it had been merely a club race; but last year it
+was thrown open. Strangely enough the race had never been won twice by
+one man, though the competitors had been pretty much the same every
+year. I also conversed with one of the intending competitors, who showed
+me on his breast with pardonable pride, five medals of the Royal Humane
+Society, awarded for saving life in cases of danger from drowning. The
+wearer was a Professor of Natation, and told me that, among his pupils,
+he had an old lady sixty-seven years of age, who had just commenced, and
+was able to swim some twenty yards already. The brave old lady's
+example may do good; though it is to be hoped that she may not, at her
+time of life, be compelled to exert her art for her own protection.
+
+Names were now called, and fourteen competitors presented themselves--a
+motley group, clad for the most part in trousers, horse-rug, and
+wide-awake, or, more simply still, in Ulster frieze coat only. The group
+of spectators had by this time grown to some hundreds, nearly all
+directly interested in the noble art; and the dips became fast and
+frequent. Two flags were placed in the water at the distance of 100
+yards from the diving board; on this slender platform fourteen shivering
+specimens of humanity ranged themselves, and at the word of the starter
+plunged into the water with that downward plunge so incomprehensible to
+the uninitiated. A short, sharp struggle followed, the competitors
+swimming with the sidelong movement and obstreperous puffing which
+likens the swimmer so closely to the traditional grampus. Eventually one
+of the group is seen heading the others, and breasting the water with
+calm and equable stroke in the old-fashioned style. He reaches the flag
+a full yard before his nearest antagonist. Numbers two and three,
+following, are about half a yard apart. The others come in pretty much
+in a group. All were picked men, and there were no laggards. The names
+of the winners were as follows:--1. Ainsworth; 2. Quartermain; 3. H.
+Coulter. The time occupied in the race was 1 min. 24 sec. Immediately
+after the race there was a rapid re-assumption of rugs and Ulsters,
+though some of the more hardy walked about in the garb of Nature, making
+everybody shiver who looked at them. Finally, the prizes, consisting of
+three handsome medals, were distributed by Mr. H. Bedford, who stood on
+a park seat and addressed a few genial words to each of the successful
+candidates; then, with a cheer, and frequent wishes for a Merry
+Christmas, the assembly resolved itself into its component parts.
+
+I had taken my accustomed cold tub before coming out, yet each of these
+fourteen devoted men appeared to me as a hero. They were not Herculean
+individuals: several of them were mere youths. Some of the all-rounders
+were grey-headed men, but there was about them all a freshness and
+ruddiness which showed that their somewhat severe regimen agreed with
+them. Fresh from such a Spartan exhibition, everything seemed very late
+and Sybaritic in my domestic establishment, and I could not help
+revolving in my mind the question, what would one of these hardy
+all-the-year-rounders think of me if he knew I was ever guilty of such a
+malpractice as breakfast in bed? It is a novel method; but there are
+many worse ways of inaugurating the Great Holiday than by taking--what
+it had been a novel sensation for me even to witness--a Christmas Dip in
+the Serpentine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+BOXING-DAY ON THE STREETS.
+
+
+Boxing-day in the London streets, and especially a wet Boxing-day, can
+scarcely fail to afford us some tableaux vivants illustrative of English
+metropolitan life. In a metaphorical and technical sense, Boxing-day is
+always more or less "wet"--generally more, and not less; but this year
+the expression is used climatically, and in its first intention.
+Christmas-eve of the year about which I write was bright and springlike;
+Christmas-day dismal, dark, and un-Christmas-like; but Boxing-day that
+year was essentially muggy, sloppy, drizzly, and nasty. A day to avoid
+the London streets if you want to take a romantic Rosa-Matilda view of
+London life; but the very day of all others, if you wish to see real
+London as it is. Boxing-day will inevitably be "wetter" in every sense
+than usual this year, internally and externally. So let us commence our
+series of living pictures at ten o'clock in the morning. Suppose we
+begin with something that shall bear reference to the past festival--the
+eve and the day of the Great Birth, recollect. See, here is Grotto
+Passage, Marylebone, and at its extremity Paradise Street--the names
+sound promising, but alas for the reality! We are going to turn for a
+moment into the Marylebone Police Court, where Mr. D'Eyncourt is
+dispensing summary justice to the accumulations of the last two days.
+These are the people who have been spending Christmas-eve,
+Christmas-day, and some portion of Boxing-day already in the
+police-cells. Let us take one as a typical case. Let that poor little
+eight-year-old Arab step down from the dock and go off with his mother,
+who, we hope, will take the magistrate's excellent advice, and keep the
+child from begging--that is why he has spent Christmas in the
+cells--lest he be sent to a school for eight years, and she have to pay
+for him--God help her! she does not look as though she could afford very
+high terms. A bruised and bleeding woman, not young or good-looking,
+enters the box with her head bound up. Her lord and master confronts her
+in the dock. It is the "old, old story." A drop of drink yesterday--the
+day of the Great Nativity, never forget--series of "drops of drink" all
+day long; and, at five o'clock, just when gentility was beginning to
+think of dinner, the kitchen poker was used with frightful effect. A
+triangular cut over the right eye, and another in the dangerous
+neighbourhood of the left ear, administered with that symbol of domestic
+bliss, the kitchen poker, sends the wife doubled up into a corner, with
+an infant of two years old in her arms. The head of the family goes out
+for a walk after his exertions. The woman lies there bleeding until the
+neighbours hear her "mourning," as she terms it--the result being that
+the lord and master's "constitutional" is cut short by a policeman, and
+the happy pair are this morning separated for six months, at the
+expiration of which period Paterfamilias is to find surety for another
+six months' good behaviour. Such, starred round with endless episodes of
+"drunk and disorderly," "foul language," and so on, is our first tableau
+this Boxing-day. It is not a pleasant one. Let us pass on.
+
+Along Oxford Street, despite the Bank Holidays Act, many shops are open,
+chiefly those devoted to the sale of articles eatable, drinkable, and
+avoidable; these last being in the shape of chemists' shops, and shops
+for Christmas presents--to be shunned by miserly old bachelors. Let us
+turn into the British Museum and see sensible, decorous Boxing-day
+there. At the corner of Museum Street there is a lively itinerant
+musician, evidently French, who plays the fiddle until his bow tumbles
+all to pieces, but he goes on playing with the stick as though nothing
+had happened. When his instrument has come entirely to grief he turns to
+a clarionet, which he carries under his arm, and plays "Mourir pour la
+Patrie" with extraordinary vocal effect and irreverent gestures.
+Punch-and-Judy is largely attended at the other end; Punch is
+kitchen-pokering his wife, too, like the gentleman we have just left;
+but we pass in with the crowds to the Museum itself. Halting a moment
+in the reading-room, to jot down there a few notes, one is struck with
+the scanty show of students. _They_ are spending Boxing-day somewhere
+else. Passing through the little knot of people who are permitted by
+special order to come as far as the door of the reading-room, and who
+evidently regard the readers as some curious sort of animal exhibited
+for their special delectation--perhaps the book-"worm" of which they
+have heard so much--we go up the stairs, now thronged with crowds in
+unwonted broadcloth and fragrant with the odour of the inevitable
+orange. Next to the drinking fountain, which is decidedly the chief
+attraction, comes the gorilla, and then the extinct animals. One stout
+old lady, contemplating the megatherium and mastodon, inquires in what
+parts "them creeturs" are to be found, and seems considerably damped by
+being informed that Nature has been "out" of such articles for several
+æons. The mummies, with the bones of their toes sticking out, also come
+in for a large share of admiration. There is a good deal of rough
+flirtation going on; but, on the whole, the pleasure is rather of a
+placid order, though still contrasting favourably with the settled gloom
+visible on the faces of the attendants in the various galleries. How
+well we can understand such gloom! How utterly hateful must that giant
+elk and overgrown extinct armadillo be to a man condemned to spend a
+lifetime in their close contemplation!
+
+But let us pass on to the artistic Boxing-day keepers at the National
+Gallery. The walk will take us through the Seven Dials, and can scarcely
+fail to be suggestive. It is now one o'clock, the traditional hour of
+dinner; and in Broad Street, St. Giles's, I see, for the first time
+to-day, the human barometer evidently standing at "much wet." A
+gentleman in a grey coat and red comforter, who bears palpable signs of
+having been more than once on his back, has just reached that perplexing
+point of inebriety when he can walk quickly or run, but cannot stand
+still or walk steadily. He is pursued by small children, mostly girls,
+after whom, every now and then, he runs hopelessly, to their intense
+gratification. The poultry and bird shops in the Seven Dials are objects
+of some attraction, though they savour too much of "business" to be in
+very great force. The National Gallery is crowded with unaccustomed art
+students. There is about the visitors a quiet air of doing their duty,
+and being determined to go through with it at any price. One
+brazen-faced quean speculates audibly--in fact, very audibly--as to
+which "picter" she should choose if she had her "pick," and decent
+matrons pass the particularly High Art of the old masters with
+half-averted gaze, as though they were not quite sure of doing right in
+countenancing such exhibitions. Hogarth's evergreen "Marriage à la
+Mode" is a great centre of attraction, and the youngsters never tire of
+listening, as "with weeping and with laughter still is the story told"
+over and over again by their elders. Gainsborough's likeness of Mrs.
+Siddons is also a great favourite; but perhaps the picture that attracts
+most attention is Van Eyck's "John Arnolfini, of Lucca, and his Wife."
+The gentleman wears a portentous hat, which tickled the fancy of the
+Boxing-day people immensely. There were great speculations too among
+them as to whether the curious Tuscan pictures at the top of the stairs
+were "needlework" or not. Still, who shall say that these visitors were
+not the better for their visit, surrounded as they were by forms of
+beauty on every side, even if they did not examine them with the eyes of
+connoisseurs?
+
+Boxing-day on the river: The silent street is almost deserted. There is
+no rush for the Express boat to-day. It is literally the
+streets--muddier and sloppier than the Thames itself--that are the
+attraction. Some little boys are making the trip from Westminster to
+London Bridge as a treat; and it is an intense joke with them to pretend
+to be dreadfully seasick. Boxing-day in the City is synonymous with
+stagnation. It is a howling wilderness, with nobody to howl. On the
+Metropolitan Railway I verily believe travellers were tripping it like
+the little boys on board the penny boat. And so theatre time draws on,
+and the interest of Boxing-day grows to a climax. Soon after five
+o'clock groups furtively collect outside the playhouses, half-ashamed of
+being so early, but gathering courage from numbers to form the
+disorderly queue, so unlike that of a Parisian theatre. Boxing-night in
+the theatres others will describe. It is too much to expect of one whose
+mission has been the whole day long on the streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE VIGIL OF THE DERBY.
+
+
+In those days--happily now gone by--when public strangulation was the
+mode in Merry England, there was always an evident fascination
+appertaining to the spot where, on the morrow, some guilty wretch was to
+expiate his crimes on the gallows. Long before the erection of that
+elegant apparatus commenced, and generally on a Sunday evening, when
+decent citizens had newly come from houses of God, where they had heard
+the message of life, crowds began to collect on that central spot in the
+heart of the great City dedicated to sudden and violent death. The
+coming event seemed to cast its shadow before; and throughout the night
+the roisterer or belated traveller made a détour to visit the human
+shambles. I confess to having felt the attraction. I could not then
+bring myself to be present at the strangulation proper; so, as the
+nearest approach to a "sensation," sometimes visited Newgate on the eve
+of the victim elect's last morrow. In the same way, being unfortunate
+enough to be London-bound on the day of our great annual holiday, and
+having heard graphic accounts of the Downs on the eve of the Derby, I
+determined that year, as I could not go to the race by day, to visit the
+racecourse by night. Let me own the soft impeachment: I am not a racing
+man--not in any degree "horsey." When I do go to the Derby it is to see
+the bipeds rather than the quadrupeds; to empty the hamper from Fortnum
+and Mason's, rather than to study the "names, weights, and colours of
+the riders" on the "c'rect card." If you prefer to have the sentiment in
+Latin--and there is no doubt Latin does go much farther than English--I
+am not one of those "quos pulverem Olympicum collegisse juvat," except
+in so far that "homo sum; nihil humanum alienum a me puto." It was to
+see humanity under a new aspect, I took the last train to Epsom on the
+eve of the Derby.
+
+In order to combine business with pleasure, and economy with both, I
+took a third-class ticket at Victoria, and was fortunate enough to find
+a compartment already partially occupied by a nigger troupe. In this,
+which under ordinary circumstances I should have avoided, I took my
+seat, and was regaled all the way down with choice morceaux from the
+répertoire of my musical friends. The "talking man" of the party, too,
+enlivened the proceedings by anxiously inquiring of the porters at the
+different stations what they would take in the way of refreshment, and
+issuing unlimited orders to imaginary waiters on their behoof. It was a
+strange sensation, being whirled away from home and bed down to a wild
+heath towards midnight; and as we neared our destination, the air began
+to "bite shrewdly," and the sky to look uncommonly like rain--a
+contretemps which would have been fatal to my proposed experience. We
+had to change carriages at Sutton, and here a sociable Aunt-Sally-man,
+struggling under the implements of his craft, sought to beguile me from
+my African friends by offers of a shake-down in his tent, with which he
+proposed to walk across from Ewell and erect, instead of journeying on
+to Epsom. My Ethiopian friends jumped at the proposal, and forthwith
+fraternized with Aunt Sally. I determined to follow out my previous
+plans; so having drunk to our next merry meeting, we parted, ostensibly
+until to-morrow, but, I fear, for ever.
+
+I had been led to expect "high jinks" at Epsom--a sort of Carnival in
+the quiet town. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. The
+town, so far as outward semblance went, was almost as quiet as ever. A
+few sporting men thronged the bar of the principal hotel, and stragglers
+hung about the low beer-shops; but there was nothing at all to indicate
+the imminence of the great event. So I fell back on my usual expedient
+of applying to the executive, and found not only an active and
+intelligent but exceedingly civil sergeant of police, to whom I told my
+errand. He was pleased with the novelty of the idea, and as he happened
+to be then going the round of the town previously to visiting the
+course, I cast in my lot with him for the night. We first visited what
+he termed the "German Opera," on Epsom Common. This is an encampment of
+organ-grinders, hurdy-gurdy-players, German bands, &c., who pitch their
+tents here instead of going to the Downs. It was, however, rather late
+when we reached the spot where these artists were bivouacking, and they
+had retired for the night, so we could not form much idea of them beyond
+their numbers, which seemed considerable, and their odour, which was
+unfragrant. Thence we passed down a short alley to a railway arch, which
+was aglow with many fires, and rang with the sounds of many voices.
+Bidding me make no observation, whatever might be said, and requesting
+me to try and look like an officer in plain clothes, my cicerone led me
+into the strange arcade, which I certainly could not have entered
+without his protection. Hundreds of men, women, and boys were gathered
+in groups round coke fires, some partaking of coffee, others singing,
+the majority sleeping. After satisfying himself that the fires were
+legitimate ones, and not composed of broken fences, my guide left this
+teeming hive unmolested. We then steered for the course, not by the high
+road, but skirting it along the fields. The policeman, like myself,
+carried a stout stick, which really seemed to be endowed with creative
+powers that night. Wherever he poked that staff--and he did poke it
+everywhere--a human being growled, or snored, or cursed. Every bush
+along the hedgerow bore its occupant--often its group of four or five,
+sometimes a party of a dozen or a score. One shed filled with carts
+yielded at least a hundred, though the sergeant informed me it must have
+been already cleared several times that evening, as he had a file of men
+along the road, besides a cordon inside the Park palings, which border a
+great portion of it. It is with these palings the tramps chiefly do
+mischief, pulling them down to make fires along their route. Wherever my
+guide found these, he trampled the fires remorselessly out, and kicked
+the burning embers over the sleepers in a manner that must have been
+uncomfortable. The men submitted in comparative silence; but the
+ladies--where there happened to be any--exerted the privilege of their
+sex, and treated us to some choice specimens of the vernacular. In one
+case, a female cried out that he was kicking the fire over the
+"childer;" and, sure enough, we found half-a-dozen little ones huddled
+up asleep. The policeman remonstrated with her for bringing them to such
+a place; but she informed us it was to "make their living." In what way,
+she did not add. To us, it seemed very much like reversing the process,
+and causing their death. Fancy young children camping out on the road to
+the Downs at midnight! Boys of thirteen and fourteen abounded, sleeping
+in large groups along the hedgerows, and sometimes out in the open
+fields, where the dew lay thick.
+
+At length, after many windings, we reached the Downs. The white booths,
+following the direction of the course in their sinuous lines, looked
+like stately white marble streets and crescents in the dim, uncertain
+light of that hour which, between May 31 and June 1, is neither day nor
+night. Under the stands and around the booths, tabernacling beneath
+costermongers' barrows, and even lying out openly sub dio, were still
+the hundreds of human beings. In one small drinking booth was a sight
+the policeman said he had never seen equalled in his twenty years'
+experience. A long, narrow table ran down the centre, with benches on
+each side. The table itself was occupied with recumbent figures; on the
+benches the sleepers sat, bending forward over it, and under the benches
+sleepers sprawled upon the grass. The whole of the front of the booth
+was open, and exposed to the biting wind; but there they snored as
+calmly as though on eider-down. We climbed the steps of the stand above
+the ring, and waited for the day, which slowly broke to the song of the
+lark and nightingale over that strange scene. With the first suspicion
+of dawn the sleepers awoke and got up; what for I cannot imagine. It was
+barely two o'clock, and how they were going to kill the next twelve
+hours I could not guess. Rise they did however, and an itinerant vendor
+of coffee, who was literally up with the lark, straightway began to
+drive a roaring trade. I saw no stronger drink than this consumed; nor
+did I witness a single case of drunkenness during the whole night. But
+this was before the Derby! At this juncture we were all surprised by the
+apparition of a hansom-lamp toiling up the hill. Two adventurous
+gentlemen from Liverpool, it appeared, had arrived at the Euston
+Station, and insisted upon being driven at once to an hotel on Epsom
+Downs. The Jehu, secure of a fabulous fare, drove them accordingly; and,
+of course, had to drive them back again to Epsom--the hotels on the
+Downs quietly but firmly declining to be knocked up at that untimely
+hour even by gentlemen from Liverpool. As the sun showed his first
+up-slanting rays above the horizon, with the morning star hanging
+impertinently near, the two gipsy encampments began to exhibit signs of
+life. The Zingari encamp exclusively by themselves, and some picturesque
+specimens of the male sex, looking remarkably like the lively photograph
+of the Greek brigands, showed themselves on the outskirts. The ladies
+reserved themselves for later in the day. My guide cautioned me not to
+attempt to enter the encampment, as the men are dangerous, and their
+position on the Downs a privileged one. It was only when the tramps were
+trespassing, or evidently bent on mischief, that they were disturbed. On
+the Downs they were monarchs of all they surveyed.
+
+When the sun was fairly up, and the morning mists rolled away from those
+glorious Downs, I felt my mission accomplished. I had seen the sun rise
+on Epsom course. As it was many hours before a train would return, and
+I still felt fresh, I resolved to give the coup de grace to my night's
+adventure by walking home--at least, walking to the radius of workmen's
+trains. The vanguard of the Derby procession now began to show strongly
+in the shape of the great unwashed climbing the ridge of the hill by the
+paddock; and I felt I should see some characteristic sights along the
+road. Bidding good-bye, therefore, to my guide at Epsom, I set out on
+foot along the now-populous road, mine being the only face turned
+London-wards. Carts laden with trestles and boards for stands now began
+to be in force. By-and-by the well-known paper bouquets and outrageous
+head-gear showed themselves as forming the cargo of costermongers'
+carts. The travellers were all chatty, many of them chaffy. Frequent
+were the inquiries I had to answer as to the hour and the distance to
+the course. Occasionally a facetious gentleman anxiously inquired
+whether it was all over, as I was returning? I believe the majority
+looked upon me as a harmless lunatic, since I was travelling away from
+Epsom on the Derby morning, and pitied me accordingly. An Irishman aptly
+illustrated the genial character of Hibernian chaff as compared with
+English. "Good day to your honner!" he said. "It does me good to see
+your honner's happy face again;" though, of course, he had never seen it
+before. As I passed on with a brief salutation, he took the trouble to
+run after me, and slapping me on the shoulder, added, in a beautiful
+brogue: "Wait a minnit; I don't want to ax you for anything, but only to
+tell you how glad I am to see yer honner's happy face agin. Good
+mornin'!"
+
+So through Ewell, Cheam, and Morden, up to Tooting; the throng
+increasing at every mile. At Balham, finding no train for an hour, I
+footed it again. I found preparations for endless Aunt Sally already
+being made on Clapham Common. Soon after six, I jumped into a train on
+the London, Chatham, and Dover, and came home "with the milk;" having
+not only had a healthy night's exercise--for the weather had all along
+been splendid--but having added to my experiences of London life one new
+"wrinkle" at least: I had seen the life of St. Giles's kitchen and
+Bethnal Green lodging-house à la campagne. What I had already seen under
+the garish candlelight of the Seven Dials and Commercial Road I saw
+gilded into picturesqueness by that glorious and never-to-be-forgotten
+sunrise on Epsom Downs which ushered in the Derby Day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE WIFESLAYER'S "HOME."
+
+
+There is something very weird and strange in that exceptional avocation
+which takes one to-day to a Lord Mayor's feast or a croquet tournament,
+to-morrow to a Ritualistic service, next day to the home of a homicide.
+I am free to confess that each has its special attractions for me. I am
+very much disposed to "magnify my office" in this respect, not from any
+foolish idea that I am "seeing life," as it is termed, but still from a
+feeling that the proper study of mankind _is_ man in all his varied
+aspects.
+
+It need not always be a morbid feeling that takes one to the scene of a
+murder or other horrible event, though, as we well know, the majority of
+those who visit such localities do go out of mere idle curiosity. It may
+be worth while, however, for some who look a little below the surface of
+things, to gauge, as it were, the genius loci, and see whether, in the
+influences surrounding the spot and its inhabitants there be anything to
+afford a clue as to the causes of the crime.
+
+In summing up the evidence concerning a certain tragedy at Greenwich,
+where a man killed his wife by throwing a knife, the coroner "referred
+to the horrible abode--a coal cellar--in which the family, nine in
+number, had resided, which was unfit for human habitation, and ought to
+have been condemned by the parish authorities." Having seen and
+described in these pages something of how the poor are housed in the
+cellars of St. Giles's and Bethnal Green, and traced the probable
+influences of herding together the criminal and innocent in the low
+lodging-houses, it occurred to me to visit the scene of this awful
+occurrence, and see how far the account given before the coroner's jury
+was correct.
+
+With this view I took the train to Greenwich, and, consulting the first
+policeman I met, was by him directed to Roan Street as the scene of the
+tragedy. Roan Street I found to be a somewhat squalid by-street, running
+out of Skelton Street, close--it seemed significantly close--to the old
+parish church. One could not help thinking of the familiar proverb, "The
+nearer the church, the farther from God." The actual locality is called
+Munyard's Row, being some dozen moderate-sized houses in Roan Street,
+let out in lodgings, the particular house in question being again, with
+a horrible grotesqueness, next door but one to a beer-shop called the
+"Hit or Miss!" I expected to find Roan Street the observed of all
+observers, but the nine days' wonder was over since what Dickens called
+the "ink-widge." Indeed, a homicide has ceased to be a nine days'
+wonder now. This only happened on Saturday; and when I was there, on the
+following Wednesday, Roan Street had settled down into its wonted
+repose. A woman with a child was standing on the door-step, and, on my
+inquiring if I could see the kitchen, referred me to Mrs. Bristow at the
+chandler's shop, who farms the rent of these populous tenements; for
+Munyard's Row is peopled "from garret to basement," and a good way
+underground too.
+
+Mrs. Bristow, a civil, full-flavoured Irishwoman, readily consented to
+act cicerone, and we went through the passage into the back garden,
+where all the poor household furniture of the homicide's late "home" was
+stacked. It did not occupy a large space, consisting only of the
+bedstead on which the poor woman sat when the fatal deed was done, two
+rickety tables, and two chairs. These were all the movables of a family
+of nine. The mattress was left inside--too horrible a sight, after what
+had taken place, to be exposed to the light of day.
+
+We passed--Honora Bristow and myself--with a "gossip" or two, who had
+come to see what I was after, into the back kitchen, for the wifeslayer
+had two rooms en suite, though the family elected to occupy only one.
+The floor of this apartment was either mother earth, or, if flagged, so
+grimed with filth as to be a very fair resemblance of the soil. Here
+stood only that terrible memento, the drenched mattress. In the front
+kitchen--which, let me state, would have been palatial in comparison
+with the Seven Dials or Spitalfields, had it been only clean--there was
+very little light, for the window, which was well down below the surface
+of the pavement, had not a whole pane in it, and the broken ones had
+been stuffed up with old rags which were very protuberant indeed. That
+window alone would show that the ménage had not been a judicious one.
+
+"He was a quiet man," said Honora, "and gave trouble to no one. He and
+his wife never had a word." The gossips all believed that the story of
+the throwing the knife was true, notwithstanding the medical evidence
+went against it. The boy of twelve, who provoked the father to throw the
+knife, was evidently the incubus of the wretched home. "Almost before
+the breath was out of his mother, that boy was searching about the bed
+to see if he could find any ha'pence," said Honora. That boy was
+evidently not satisfactory. His evidence was refused by the Coroner,
+because he could not read or write. But then what had been the child's
+surroundings? They have been described above. The man himself had a
+patriarchal family of seven, from a girl of seventeen down to a baby of
+two, and all, as we have seen, slept in one room, though there were two,
+and though a bucket of whitewash would have made the pair habitable,
+besides giving the lad some useful employment.
+
+The father was of no particular occupation, picking up odd jobs, and
+leaning largely to the shrimp trade. He stood high in Honora Bristow's
+regards as having regularly paid his _1s. 9d._ a week for five years,
+or, at least, being some _5s._ behind now; a sum which will probably be
+covered by the chattels in the back garden. The poor home was silent
+then. The mother lay calmly in the dead-house, after the post-mortem
+examination, "terrible cut and hacked about," said the one gossip who
+had ventured to go and see her quondam friend. The father was in
+Maidstone Gaol. The little children were being taken care of by the
+grandmother until such time as the mother should have been buried, when
+they would gravitate to the workhouse.
+
+In the meantime the boy, æt. twelve, the cause of all the mischief,
+disports himself in Munyard's Row as though nothing had happened.
+Perhaps he is the most difficult part of the problem; but the whole
+question of the home is a puzzling one. The boy is evidently the product
+of the home. It very much concerns the community that such produce
+should become extinct; and therefore the sooner some improvements can be
+introduced into such homes the better. In the first place, there is
+decidedly too little light. Sunshine, under any circumstances, would
+have been impossible there. The advisability of human beings burrowing
+underground may be questioned, whether in cellars or genteel underground
+kitchens.
+
+Then again, one bedroom--nay, one bedstead--for father, mother, and
+seven children ranging from seventeen to two is decidedly deficient.
+This sounds almost too horrible to be true; but I was careful to
+ascertain that the eldest girl, though in domestic service in Greenwich,
+slept at the "home." More horrible still is the fact disclosed, that
+they had a second room, yet had not the decency to use it. "De mortuis
+nil nisi bonum." They lived according to their light; but they had very
+little light, literally or figuratively. Surely we want to teach our
+poor the simple rules of hygiene. One of the gossips, a clean, healthy
+little woman, with a fine baby at her breast, referred with pride to her
+poor kitchen, identical in all respects, save dirt, with the home.
+
+Then, again, there was one thing that struck me forcibly, and that was
+the sort of qualified reprobation with which these good gossips--really
+decent people in their way--spoke of the habit of throwing knives.
+Honora had once thrown one at her daughter of eighteen, but never meant
+to do so again. And all this under the bells of the old parish church of
+Greenwich in the year of grace 1870!
+
+Clearly, however, the first question is what to do with the boy, æt.
+twelve. Comporting himself as he did in the face of the awful tragedy he
+had caused, this young gentleman must clearly not be lost sight of, or
+it will be the worse for himself and those with whom he is brought into
+contact. Nay, in a few years, he will become a centre of influence, and
+radiate around him another such "home," worse, perhaps, than the first.
+
+Let our Social Science so far break through the programme it may have
+laid down as to touch on this very appropriate subject of squalid homes,
+and its next sitting may be a very useful one indeed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+BATHING IN THE FAR EAST.
+
+
+Visions of Oriental splendour and magnificence float across the
+imagination at the mere mention of the storied East. Soaring above all
+the routine of ordinary existence and the commonplaces of history, that
+creative faculty within us pictures Pactolus with its golden sands; or
+recalls from the legendary records of childhood the pomp of Aladdin's
+Princess going to her luxurious bath; or brings back to mind the almost
+prosaic minuteness with which the Greek poet describes the bath of
+Ulysses when he returned from his wanderings. In the East the bath has
+ever been an institution--not merely a luxury, but a necessity; and it
+is a proof of the eclectic tendencies of our generation that we have
+domesticated here in the West that great institution, the Hammam, or
+Turkish bath, which the Romans were wise enough to adopt, after their
+Eastern experience, more than two thousand years ago. Of none of these
+Oriental splendours, however, has the present narrative to tell. I ask
+those interested in social questions to take a very early Sunday
+expedition to the East End of London, and catch a glimpse of those whom,
+after what I have to relate, it would be libel to call the "Great
+Unwashed." We will look at East London engaged in the interesting
+process of performing its ablutions.
+
+Very enjoyable is a Saturday afternoon stroll in Victoria Park. Those
+gentlemen of London who sit at home at ease are apt to think of the East
+End as a collection of slums, with about as much breathing space for its
+congregated thousands as that supplied to the mites in a superannuated
+Cheshire cheese. Let us pass through Bethnal Green Road, and, leaving
+behind the new Museum, go under a magic portal into the stately acres
+which bear the name of our Sovereign. On our right is the Hospital for
+Diseases of the Chest, of which the foundation-stone was laid by the
+Prince Consort, and the new wing of which our Orientals hope one day to
+see opened by her Majesty in person. Most convincing test of all is the
+situation of this Consumptive Hospital--showing the salubrity of the
+Eastern breezes. Inside the imposing gate the visitor will find
+extensive cricket-grounds interspersed with broad pastures, whose flocks
+are the reverse of Arcadian in hue. Cricket-balls whiz about us like
+shells at Inkermann; and the suggestive "Thank you" of the scouts forces
+the passer-by into unwonted activity as he shies the ball to the bowler.
+Then there are roundabouts uncountable, and gymnasia abundant. There are
+bosquets for the love-makers, and glassy pools, studded with islands
+innumerable, over which many a Lady of the Lake steers her shallop,
+while Oriental sailor-boys canoe wildly along. There are flower-beds
+which need not blush to be compared with Kew or the Crystal Palace. But
+it is not with such that we are now concerned. On one of those same
+lakes over which, on Saturday evening, sailors in embryo float their
+mimic craft--and one young gentleman, slightly in advance of the rest,
+directs a very miniature steamship--we see boards suggesting that daily,
+from four to eight A.M., the Orientals may immerse themselves in the
+limpid and most tempting waters. The depth, they are paternally
+informed, increases towards the centre, buoys marking where it is six
+feet; so that our Eastern friends have no excuse for suicide by
+drowning.
+
+East London birds are early birds, and to catch them at their bath you
+must be literally up with the lark. Towards six o'clock is the most
+fashionable hour for our metropolitan Pactolus; and, as it is some miles
+distant from what can, by any stretch of courtesy, be called the West
+End, and as there are no workmen's trains on a Sunday morning, a long
+walk or cab drive is inevitable for all who would witness the disporting
+of our amphibious Orientals. Rising thus betimes on a recent "Sunday
+morning before the bells did ring," I sped me to the bathing pond,
+judiciously screened off by shrubs from the main path. It was between
+the appointed hours that I arrived; and, long before I saw anything, the
+ringing laughter of the young East reached me through the shrubs.
+Threading the path which led to the lake, I found the water literally
+alive with men, boys, and hobbledehoys, revelling in the water like
+young hippopotami on the Nile. Boys were largely in the ascendant--boys
+from ten to fifteen years of age swam like young Leanders, and sunned
+themselves on the bank, in the absence of towels, as the preparative to
+dressing, or smoked their pipes in a state of nature. It is only just to
+say that while I remained, I heard little if any language that could be
+called "foul." Very free and easy, of course, were the remarks, and
+largely illustrative of the vulgar tongue; not without a share of light
+chaff directed against myself, whose presence by the lake-side puzzled
+my young friends. I received numerous invitations to "peel" and have a
+dip; and one young urchin assured me in the most patronizing way
+possible that he "wouldn't laugh at me" if I could not get on. The
+language may not have been quite so refined as that which I heard a few
+days before from the young gentlemen with tall hats and blue ties at
+Lord's; but I do say advisedly that it would more than bear comparison
+with that of the bathers in the Serpentine, where my ears have often
+been assailed with something far worse than anything I heard in East
+London. In the matter of clothes, too, the apparel of our young friends
+was indeed Eastern in its simplicity; yet they left it unprotected on
+the bank with a confidence that did honour to our common humanity in
+general, and to the regulations of Victoria Park in particular. Swimming
+in some sort was almost universal among the bathers, showing that their
+visit to the water was not an isolated event in their existence, but a
+constant as it is a wholesome habit. The Oriental population were for
+the most part apparently well fed; and one saw there lithe and active
+frames, either careering gracefully along in the old style of swimming,
+or adopting the new and scientific method which causes the human form
+divine to approach very nearly to the resemblance of a rather excited
+grampus.
+
+But inexorable Time warns the youthful bathers that they must sacrifice
+to the Graces; and some amusing incidents occur during the process.
+Generally speaking, though the amount of attire is not excessive,
+considerable effort in the way of pinning and hitching is required to
+get things in their proper places. A young gentleman was reduced to
+inexpressible grief, and held up to the scorn of his fellow-bathers, by
+the fact that, in the course of his al fresco toilette, one of his feet
+went through his inexpressibles in an honourable quarter, instead of
+proceeding by the proper route; the error interested his friends
+vastly--for they are as critical as the most fastidious could be of any
+singularity in attire, and they held the unfortunate juvenile in his
+embarrassing position for a long time, to his intense despair, until he
+was rescued from his ignoble position by some grown-up friend. Then,
+the young East is prone to the pleasures of tobacco. It was, I presume,
+before breakfast with most of the bathers, and smoking under those
+conditions is a trial even to the experienced. Some, pale from their
+long immersion--for theirs was no transient dip--grew paler still after
+they had discussed the pipe or cigar demanded of them by rigorous
+custom. Fashion reigns supreme among the gamins of the East as well as
+among the ladies of the West. Off they went, however, cleaner and
+fresher than before--tacitly endorsing by their matutinal amusement the
+motto that has come down from the philosopher of old, and even now
+reigns supreme from Bermondsey to Belgravia, that "water is a most
+excellent thing."
+
+The day may arrive perhaps when, having embanked the Thames, we shall
+follow suit to the Seine and the Rhine, by tenanting it with cheap baths
+for the many. Until we do so, the stale joke of the "Great Unwashed"
+recoils upon ourselves, and is no less symptomatic of defective sanitary
+arrangements than the possibility of a drought in Bermondsey. But we are
+forgetting our bathers. They have gone, leaving the place to
+solitude--some, I hope, home to breakfast, others out among the
+flower-walks or on the greensward. It is a gloomy, overcast, muggy,
+unseasonable July morning; and the civil attendant by the lake-side
+tells me that the gathering has not been so large as usual. The young
+Orientals--as is the custom of their race--love sunshine. They get
+little enough of it, Heaven knows. The next bright Sunday morning, any
+one who happens to be awake between the hours mentioned, and who would
+like to add to his experiences of metropolitan existence, may do a worse
+thing, and see many a less pleasant sight, than if he hailed a hansom
+and drove by the principal entrance of Victoria Park to our Eastern
+Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+AMONG THE QUAKERS.
+
+
+There is no more engaging or solemn subject of contemplation than the
+decay of a religious belief. Right or wrong, by that faith men have
+lived and died, perhaps for centuries; and one cannot see it pass out
+from the consciousness of humanity without something more than a cursory
+thought as to the reasons of its decadence. Being led by exceptional
+causes to take a more than common interest in those forms of belief
+which lie beyond the pale of the Church of England, I was attracted by a
+notice in the public journals that on the following morning the Society
+of Friends would assemble from all parts of England and open a
+Conference to inquire into the causes which had brought about the
+impending decay of their body. So, then, the fact of such decay stood
+confessed. In most cases the very last persons to realize the unwelcome
+truth are those who hold the doctrines that are becoming effete.
+Quakerism must, I felt, be in a very bad condition indeed when its own
+disciples called together a conference to account for its passing away.
+Neither men nor communities, as a rule, act crowner's 'quest on their
+own decease. That faith, it was clear, must be almost past praying for
+which, disbelieving, as our modern Quietism does, the efficacy of
+assemblies, and trusting all to the inward illumination of individuals,
+should yet summon a sort of Quaker Oecumenical Council. I thought I
+should like to probe this personal light myself, and by inquiring of one
+or two of the members of the body, learn what they thought of the
+matter. I was half inclined to array myself in drab, and _tutoyer_ the
+first of the body I chanced to encounter in my walks abroad. But then it
+occurred to me how very seldom one did meet a Quaker nowadays except in
+the "month of Maying." I actually had to cast about for some time before
+I could select from a tolerably wide and heterogeneous circle of
+acquaintance two names of individuals belonging to the Society of
+Friends; though I could readily remember half a dozen of every other
+culte, from Ultramontanes down to Jumpers. These two, at all events, I
+would "interview," and so forestall the Conference with a little select
+synod of my own.
+
+It was possible, of course, to find a ludicrous side to the question;
+but, as I said, I approached it seriously. Sydney Smith, with his
+incorrigible habit of joking, questioned the existence of Quaker
+babies--a position which, if proven, would, of course, at once account
+for the diminution of adult members of the sect. It was true I had never
+seen a Quaker infant; but I did not therefore question their existence,
+any more than I believed postboys and certain humble quadrupeds to be
+immortal because I had never seen a dead specimen of either. The
+question I acknowledged at once to be a social and religious, not a
+physiological one. Why is Quakerism, which has lived over two hundred
+years, from the days of George Fox, and stood as much persecution as any
+system of similar age, beginning to succumb to the influences of peace
+and prosperity? Is it the old story of Capua and Cannæ over again?
+Perhaps it is not quite correct to say that it is now beginning to
+decline; nor, as a fact, is this Conference the first inquiry which the
+body itself has made into its own incipient decay. It is even said that
+symptoms of such an issue showed themselves as early as the beginning of
+the eighteenth century; and prize essays have been from time to time
+written as to the causes, before the Society so far fell in with the
+customs of the times as to call a council for the present very difficult
+and delicate inquiry. The first prize essay by William Rountree
+attributes the falling off to the fact that the early Friends, having
+magnified a previously slighted truth--that of the Indwelling Word--fell
+into the natural error of giving it an undue place, so depriving their
+representations of Christian doctrine of the symmetry they would
+otherwise have possessed, and influencing their own practices in such a
+way as to contract the basis on which Christian fellowship rests. A
+second prize essay, called "The Peculium," takes a still more practical
+view, and points out in the most unflattering way that the Friends, by
+eliminating from their system all attention to the arts, music, poetry,
+the drama, &c., left nothing for the exercise of their faculties save
+eating, drinking, and making money. "The growth of Quakerism," says Mr.
+T. Hancock, the author of this outspoken essay, "lies in its
+enthusiastic tendency. The submission of Quakers to the commercial
+tendency is signing away the life of their own schism. Pure enthusiasm
+and the pursuit of money (which _is_ an enthusiasm) can never coexist,
+never co-operate; but," he adds, "the greatest loss of power reserved
+for Quakerism is the reassumption by the Catholic Church of those
+Catholic truths which Quakerism was separated to witness and to
+vindicate."
+
+I confess myself, however, so far Quaker too that I care little for the
+written testimony of friends or foes. I have, in all my religious
+wanderings and inquiries, adopted the method of oral examination; so I
+found myself on a recent November morning speeding off by rail to the
+outskirts of London to visit an ancient Quaker lady whom I knew very
+slenderly, but who I had heard was sometimes moved by the spirit to
+enlighten a little suburban congregation, and was, therefore, I felt the
+very person to enlighten me too, should she be thereunto moved. She was
+a venerable, silver-haired old lady, clad in the traditional dress of
+her sect, and looking very much like a living representation of
+Elizabeth Fry. She received me very cordially; though I felt as if I
+were a fussy innovation of the nineteenth century breaking in upon the
+sacred, old-fashioned quiet of her neat parlour. She "thee'd and thou'd"
+me to my heart's content: and--to summarize the conversation I held with
+her--it was to the disuse of the old phraseology and the discarding of
+the peculiar dress that she attributed most of the falling off which she
+was much too shrewd a woman of the world to shut her eyes to. These
+were, of course, only the outward and visible signs of a corresponding
+change within; but this was why the Friends fell off, and gravitated, as
+she confessed they were doing, to steeple-houses, water-dipping, and
+bread-and-wine-worship. She seemed to me like a quiet old Prophetess
+Anna chanting a "Nunc Dimittis" of her own on the passing away of her
+faith. She would be glad to depart before the glory had quite died out.
+She said she did not hope much from the Conference, and, to my
+amazement, rather gloried in the old irreverent title given by the
+Independents to her forefathers from their "quaking and trembling" when
+they heard the Word of God, though she preferred still more the older
+title of "Children of the Light." She was, in fact, a rigid old
+Conservative follower of George Fox, from the top of her close-bordered
+cap to the skirts of her grey silk gown. I am afraid my countenance
+expressed incredulity as to her rationale of the decay; for, as I rose
+to go, she said, "Thou dost not agree, friend, with what I have said to
+thee--nay, never shake thy head; it would be wonderful if thou didst,
+when our own people don't. Stay; I'll give thee a note to my son in
+London, though he will gainsay much of what I have told thee." She gave
+me the letter, which was just what I wanted, for I felt I had gained
+little beyond a pleasant experience of old-world life from my morning's
+jaunt. I partook of her kindly hospitality, was shown over her
+particularly cosy house, gardens, and hothouses, and meditated, on my
+return journey, upon many particulars I learnt for the first time as to
+the early history of Fox; realizing what a consensus there was between
+the experiences of all illuminati. I smiled once and again over the
+quaint title of one of Fox's books which my venerable friend had quoted
+to me--viz., "A Battle-door for Teachers and Professors to learn Plural
+and Singular. _You_ to _Many_, and _Thou_ to _One_; Singular, One,
+_Thou_; Plural, Many, _You_." While so meditating, my cab deposited me
+at the door of a decidedly "downy" house, at the West End, where my
+prospective friend was practising in I will not mention which of the
+learned professions. Both the suburban cottage of the mother and the
+London ménage of the son assured me that they had thriven on Quakerism;
+and it was only then I recollected that a poor Quaker was as rare a
+personage as an infantile member of the Society.
+
+The young man--who neither in dress, discourse, nor manner differed
+from an ordinary English gentleman--smiled as he read his mother's
+lines, and, with a decorous apology for disturbing the impressions which
+her discourse might have left upon me, took precisely the view which had
+been latent in my own mind as to the cause of the Society's decay.
+Thoroughly at one with them still on the doctrine of the illuminating
+power of the Spirit in the individual conscience, he treated the archaic
+dress, the obsolete phraseology, the obstinate opposition to many
+innocent customs of the age, simply as anachronisms. He pointed with
+pride to the fact that our greatest living orator was a member of the
+Society; and claimed for the underlying principle of Quakerism--namely,
+the superiority of a conscience void of offence over written scripture
+or formal ceremony--the character of being in essence the _broadest_
+creed of Christendom. Injudicious retention of customs which had grown
+meaningless had, he felt sure, brought down upon the body that most
+fatal of all influences--contempt. "You see it in your own Church," he
+said. "There is a school which, by reviving obsolete doctrines and
+practices, will end in getting the Church of England disestablished as
+it is already disintegrated. You see it even in the oldest religion of
+all--Judaism. You see, I mean, a school growing into prominence and
+power which discards all the accumulations of ages, and by going back to
+real antiquity, at once brings the system more into unison with the
+century, and prevents that contempt attaching to it which will accrue
+wherever a system sets its face violently against the tone of current
+society." He thought the Conference quite unnecessary. "There needs no
+ghost come from the dead to tell us that, Horatio," he said, cheerily.
+"They will find out that Quakerism is not a proselytizing religion," he
+added; "which, of course, we knew before. They will point to the
+fashionable attire, the gold rings, and lofty chignons of our younger
+sisters as direct defiance of primitive custom. I am unorthodox
+enough"--and he smiled as he used that word--"to think that the attire
+is more becoming to my younger sisters, just as the Society's dress is
+to my dear mother." That young man, and the youthful sisters he told me
+of, stood as embodied answers to the question I had proposed to myself.
+They were outward and visible evidences of the doctrine of Quaker
+"development." The idea is not dead. The spirit is living still. It is
+the spirit that underlies all real religion--namely, the personal
+relation of the human soul to God as the source of illumination. That
+young man was as good a Quaker at heart as George Fox or William Penn
+themselves; and the "apology" he offered for his transformed faith was a
+better one than Barclay's own. I am wondering whether the Conference
+will come to anything like so sensible a conclusion as to why Quakerism
+is declining.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+PENNY READINGS.
+
+
+Who has ever penetrated beneath the surface of clerical society--meaning
+thereby the sphere of divinities (mostly female) that doth hedge a
+curate of a parish--without being sensible of the eligibility of Penny
+Readings for a place in Mystic London? When the Silly Season is at its
+very bathos; when the monster gooseberries have gone to seed and the
+showers of frogs ceased to fall; after the matrimonial efforts of
+Margate or Scarborough, and before the more decided business of the
+Christmas Decorations, then there is deep mystery in the penetralia of
+every parish. The great scheme of Penny Readings is being concocted, and
+all the available talent of the district--all such as is "orthodox" and
+"correct"--is laid under contribution.
+
+It is true to a proverb that we English people have a knack of doing the
+best possible things in the worst possible way; and that not
+unfrequently when we do once begin doing them we do them to death. It
+takes some time to convince us that the particular thing is worth doing
+at all; but, once persuaded, we go in for it with all our British might
+and main. The beard-and-moustache movement was a case in point. Some
+years ago a moustache was looked upon by serious English people as
+decidedly reckless and dissipated. A beard was fit only for a bandit.
+Nowadays, the mildest youth in the Young Men's Christian Association may
+wear a moustache without being denounced as "carnal," and paterfamilias
+revels in the beard of a sapeur, no misopogon daring to say him nay. To
+no "movement," however, does the adage "Vires acquirit eundo" apply more
+thoroughly than to that connected with "Penny Readings." Originally
+cropping up timidly in rustic and suburban parishes, it has of late
+taken gigantic strides, and made every parish where it does _not_ exist,
+rural or metropolitan, very exceptional indeed. There was a sound
+principle lying at the bottom of the movement, in so far as it was
+designed to bring about a fusion of classes; though, perhaps, it
+involved too much of an assumption that the "working man" had to be
+lectured to, or read to, by his brother in purple and fine linen. Still
+the theory was so far sound. Broad cloth was to impart to fustian the
+advantages it possessed in the way of reading, singing, fiddling, or
+what not; and that not gratuitously, which would have offended the
+working man's dignity, but for the modest sum of one penny, which,
+whilst Lazarus was not too poor to afford, Dives condescended to accept,
+and apply to charitable purposes.
+
+Such being, in brief, the theory of the Penny Reading movement, it may
+be interesting to see how it is carried out in practice. Now, in order
+to ascertain this, I availed myself of several opportunities afforded by
+the commencement of the Penny Reading season, which may be said to
+synchronize very nearly with the advent of London fogs, and attended the
+opening of the series in several widely different localities. In
+describing my experiences it would perhaps be invidious to specify the
+exact locality where they were gathered. I prefer to collate those
+experiences which range from Campden Hill to Camden Town inclusive. Amid
+many distinguishing traits there are common elements traceable in all,
+which may enable us to form some estimate of the working of the scheme,
+and possibly to offer a few words of advice to those interested therein.
+
+In most cases the Penny Readings are organized by the parochial clergy.
+We will be orthodox, and consider them so to be on the present occasion.
+In that case, the series would probably be opened by the incumbent in
+person. Some ecclesiastical ladies, young and middle-aged, who, rightly
+or wrongly, believe their mission is music, and to whom the curate is
+very probably an attraction, aid his efforts. Serious young men read,
+and others of a more mundane turn of mind sing doleful "comic" songs,
+culled from the more presentable of the music-hall répertoire. In many
+cases skilled amateurs or professionals lend their valuable assistance;
+and it is not too much to say that many a programme is presented to the
+audience--ay, and faithfully carried out too--which would do credit to a
+high-priced concert-room. But, then, who make up the audience? Gradually
+the "penny" people have been retiring into the background, as slowly but
+as surely as the old-fashioned pits at our theatres are coyly
+withdrawing under the boxes to make way for the stalls. The Penny
+Readings have been found to "draw" a higher class of audience than those
+for whom they were originally intended. The curate himself, if
+unmarried, secures the whole spinsterhood of the parish. His rendering
+of the lines, "On the receipt of my mother's picture out of Norfolk," is
+universally acknowledged to be "delightful;" and so, in course of time,
+the Penny Readings have been found to supply a good parochial income;
+and the incumbent, applying the proceeds to some local charity,
+naturally wishes to augment that income as much as possible. The
+consequence is that the penny people are as completely nowhere at the
+Penny Readings as they are in the free seats at their parish church. The
+whole of the body of the room is "stalled off," so to say, for sixpenny
+people, and the penny folk are stowed away anywhere. Then, again, in
+several programmes I have been at the pains to analyse, it is palpable
+that, whilst the bulk of the extracts fire over the heads of the poor
+people, one or two are inserted which are as studiously aimed at them as
+the parson's remarks in last Sunday's sermon against public-house
+loafing. Still "naming no names," I attended some readings where one of
+the clergy read a long extract from Bailey's "Festus," whilst he was
+succeeded by a vulgar fellow, evidently put in for "the gods," who
+delivered himself of a parody on Ingoldsby, full of the coarsest
+slang--nay, worse than that, abounding in immoralities which, I hope,
+made the parochial clergy sit on thorns, and place the reader on their
+"Index Expurgatorius" from henceforth.
+
+Excellent in its original design, the movement is obviously degenerating
+into something widely different. First, I would say, Let your Penny
+Readings be really Penny Readings, and not the egregious _lucus a non_
+they now are. If there is any distinction, the penny people should have
+the stalls, and then, _if there were room_, the "swells" (I must use an
+offensive term) could come in for sixpence, and stand at the back. But
+there should be no difference at all. Dives and Lazarus should sit
+together, or Dives stop away if he were afraid his fine linen may get
+soiled. Lazarus, at all events, must not be lost sight of, or treated to
+second best. The experiment of thus mingling them has been tried, I
+know, and succeeds admirably. Dives and Lazarus _do_ hobnob; and though
+the former occasionally tenders a silver coin for his entrée, he does
+not feel that he is thereby entitled to a better seat. The committee
+gets the benefit of his liberality; and when the accounts are audited in
+the spring, Lazarus is immensely pleased at the figure his pence make.
+Then, again, as to the quality of the entertainment. Let us remember
+Lazarus comes there to be elevated. That was the theory we set out
+with--that we, by our reading, or our singing, or fiddling, or
+tootle-tooing on the cornet, could civilize our friend in fustian. Do
+not let us fall into the mistake, then, of descending to his standard.
+We want to level him up to ours. Give him the music we play in our own
+drawing-rooms; read the choice bits of fiction or poetry to his wife and
+daughters which we should select for our own. Amuse his poor little
+children with the same innocent nonsense with which we treat our young
+people. Above all, don't bore him. I do not say, never be serious,
+because it is a great mistake to think Lazarus can only guffaw. Read
+"The Death of Little Nell" or of Paul Dombey, and look at Mrs. Lazarus's
+eyes. Read Tom Hood's "Song of the Shirt," and see whether the poor
+seamstress out in the draughty penny seats at the back appreciates it or
+not. I did hear of one parish at the West End--the very same, by the
+way, I just now commended for sticking to the "penny" system--where
+Hood's "Nelly Gray," proposed to be read by the son of one of our best
+known actors, was tabooed as "unedifying." Lazarus does not come to be
+"edified," but to be amused. If he can be at the same time instructed,
+so much the better; but the bitter pill must be highly gilded, or he
+will pocket his penny and spend it in muddy beer at the public-house.
+If the Penny Reading can prevent this--and we see no reason why it
+should not--it will have had a mission indeed. Finally, I feel sure that
+there is in this movement, and lying only a very little way from the
+surface, a wholesome lesson for Dives too; and that is, how little
+difference there is, after all, between himself and Lazarus. I have been
+surprised to see how some of the more recherché "bits" of our genuine
+humorists have told upon the penny people, and won applause which the
+stalest burlesque pun or the nastiest music-hall inanity would have
+failed to elicit. Lazarus must be represented on the platform then, as
+well as comfortably located in the audience. He must be asked to read,
+or sing, or fiddle, or do whatever he can. If not, he will feel he is
+being read at, or sung to, or fiddled for, and will go off to the Magpie
+and Stump, instead of bringing missus and the little ones to the
+"pa'son's readings." Let the Penny Reading teach us the truth--and how
+true it is--that we are all "working men." What matters it whether we
+work with head or with hand--with brain or muscle?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+DARWINISM ON THE DEVIL.
+
+
+It has been said--perhaps more satirically than seriously--that theology
+could not get on without its devil. Certain it is that wherever there
+has been a vivid realization of the Spirit of Light, there, as if by way
+of antithesis, there has been an equally clear recognition of the Power
+of Darkness. Ormuzd--under whatever name recognised--generally supposes
+his opponent Ahriman; and there have even been times, as in the
+prevalence of the Manichean heresy, when the Evil Spirit has been
+affected in preference to the good--probably only another way of saying
+that morals have been held subordinate to intellect. But I am growing at
+once prosy and digressive.
+
+The announcement that the "Liberal Social Union" would devote one of
+their sweetly heretical evenings at the Beethoven Rooms, Harley Street,
+to an examination of the Darwinian development of the Evil Spirit, was
+one not to be scorned by an inquirer into the more eccentric and erratic
+phases of theology. Literary engagements stood in the way--for the
+social heretics gather on a Friday--but come what might, I would hear
+them discuss diabolism. Leaving my printer's devil to indulge in
+typographical errors according to his own sweet will (and I must confess
+he _did_ wander), I presented myself, as I thought in good time, at the
+portals of the Harley Street room, where his Satanic Majesty was to be
+heretically anatomized. But, alas! I had not calculated aright the power
+of that particular potentate to "draw." No sooner had I arrived at the
+cloak-room than the very hats and umbrellas warned me of the number of
+his votaries. Evening Dress was "optional;" and I frankly confess, at
+whatever risk of his displeasure, that I had not deemed Mephistopheles
+worthy of a swallow-tailed coat. I came in the garb of ordinary life;
+and at once felt uncomfortable when, mounting the stairs, I was received
+by a portly gentleman and an affable lady in violent tenue de soir. The
+room was full to the very doors; and as soon as I squeezed into earshot
+of the lecturer (who had already commenced his discourse) I was greeted
+by a heterodox acquaintance in elaborate dress-coat and rose-pink
+gloves. Experience in such matters had already told me--and thereupon I
+proved it by renewed personal agony--that an Englishman never feels so
+uncomfortable as when dressed differently from his compeers at any kind
+of social gathering. Mrs. T---- asks you to dinner, and you go clad in
+the correct costume in deference to the prandial meal, but find all the
+rest in morning dress. Mrs. G----, on the contrary, sends you a
+rollicking note to feed with a few friends--no party; and you go
+straight from office to find a dozen heavily-got-up people sniggering at
+your frock coat and black tie. However, as I said, on this occasion the
+lecturer, Dr. Zerffi, was in the thick of what proved to be a very
+attractive lecture; so I was not the observed of all observers for more
+than two or three minutes, and was able to give him my whole attention
+as soon as I had recovered from my confusion. Dr. Zerffi said:--
+
+Dr. Darwin's theory of evolution and selection has changed our modern
+mode of studying the inorganic and organic phenomena of nature, and
+investigating the realities of truth. His theory is not altogether new,
+having been first proclaimed by Leibnitz, and followed up with regard to
+history by Giovanni Battista Vico. Oken and Goethe amplified it towards
+the end of the last, and at the beginning of the present century.
+Darwin, however, has systematized the theory of evolution, and now the
+branches of human knowledge can only be advantageously pursued if we
+trace in all phenomena, whether material or spiritual, a beginning and a
+gradual development. One fact has prominently been established, that
+there is order in the eternal change, that this order is engendered by
+law, and that law and order are the criterions of an all-wise ruling
+Spirit pervading the Universe. To this positive spirit of law a spirit
+of negation, an element of rebellion and mischief, of mockery and
+selfishness, commonly called the Devil, has been opposed from the
+beginning.
+
+It appeared, till very lately, as though God had created the world only
+for the purpose of amusing the Devil, and giving him an abundance of
+work, all directed to destroying the happiness of God's finest
+creation--man. Treating the Devil from a Darwinian point of view, we may
+assert that he developed himself from the protoplasm of ignorance, and
+in the gloomy fog of fear and superstition grew by degrees into a
+formidable monster, being changed by the overheated imaginations of
+dogmatists into a reptile, an owl, a raven, a dog, a wolf, a lion, a
+centaur, a being half monkey, half man, till, finally, he became a
+polite and refined human being.
+
+Man once having attained a certain state of consciousness, saw sickness,
+evil, and death around him, and as it was usual to assign to every
+effect some tangible cause, man developed the abstract notion of evil
+into a concrete form, which changed with the varying impressions of
+climate, food, and the state of intellectual progress. To the white man
+the Devil was black, and to the black man white. Originally, then, the
+Devil was merely a personification of the apparently destructive forces
+of nature. Fire was his element. The Indians had their Rakshas and
+Uragas, the Egyptians their Typhon, and the Persians their Devas. The
+Israelites may claim the honour of having brought the theory of evil
+into a coarse and sensual form, and the Christians took up this
+conception, and developed it with the help of the Gnostics, Plato, and
+the Fathers dogmatically into an entity.
+
+I shall not enter on a minute inquiry into the origin of this formidable
+antagonist of common sense and real piety; I intend to take up the three
+principal phases of the Devil's development, at a period when he already
+appears to us as a good Christian Devil, and always bearing in mind Mr.
+Darwin's theory of evolution, I shall endeavour to trace spiritually the
+changes in the conceptions of evil from the Devil of Luther to that of
+Milton, and at last to that of Goethe.
+
+The old Jewish Rabbis and theological doctors were undoubtedly the first
+to trace, genealogically, the pedigree of the Christian Devil in its
+since general form. If we take the trouble to compare chap. i. v. 27 of
+Genesis with chap. ii. v. 21, we will find that two distinct creations
+of man are given. The one is different from the other. In the first
+instance we have the clear, indisputable statement, "So God created man
+in his own image:" and to give greater force to this statement the text
+goes on, "in the image of God created he him; male and female created he
+them." Both man and woman were then created. Nothing could be plainer.
+But as though no creation of man had taken place at all, we find, chap.
+ii. v. 7: "And the Lord formed man of the dust of the ground, and
+breathed into his nostrils the breath of life." This was evidently a
+second man, differently created from the first, who is stated to have
+been made "in the image of God himself." This second creature was
+entrusted with the nomination and classification of all created things;
+that is, with the formation of language, and the laying down of the
+first principles of botany and zoology. After he had performed this
+arduous task it happened that "for Adam there was not found an help meet
+for him" (verse 20), and chap. ii. v. 21 tells us, "The Lord God caused
+a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his
+ribs and closed up the flesh instead thereof;" and verse 22, "And of the
+rib which the Lord God had taken from man made He a woman, and brought
+her unto man." Adam then joyfully exclaims (verse 23), "This _is_ now
+bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh." This cannot but lead to the
+conclusion that this woman was an altogether different creature from the
+first. The contradiction was most ingeniously explained by the learned
+Jewish Rabbis, who considered the first woman the organic germ from
+which the special Hebrew-Christian devils were evolved. The Rabbis
+discovered that the name of the first woman was "Lilith"[1] (the
+nightly); they knew positively--and who can disprove their
+assertion?--that she was the most perfect beauty, more beautiful than
+Eve; she had long waving hair, bright eyes, red lips and cheeks, and a
+charmingly finished form and complexion; but having been created at the
+same moment as the first man, and like him, in the image of God, she
+refused to become man's wife; she objected to being subordinate to the
+male part of creation--she was, in fact, the first strong-minded woman,
+claiming the same rights as man, though a woman in body and form. Under
+these circumstances the existence of the human race was deemed to be an
+impossibility, and therefore the Lord had to make good his error, and He
+created Eve as the completing part of man. The first woman left her
+co-equally created male, and was changed into an enormous, most
+beautiful, and seducing "She Devil," and her very thoughts brought forth
+daily a legion of devils--incarnations of pride, vanity, conceit, and
+unnaturalness. Happily these devils were so constituted that they
+devoured one another. But in their rage they could take possession of
+others, and more especially entered little children--boys under three
+days old, girls under twenty days--and devoured them. This myth, by
+means of evolution and the law of action and re-action, engendered the
+further legend about the existence of three special angels who acted as
+powerful antidotes to these devils, and whose names, "Senoi, Sansenoi,
+and Sanmangeloph," if written on a piece of parchment suspended round
+the neck of children afforded certain protection against them.
+
+The origin of the Devil may thus be traced to the first vain contempt
+for the eternal laws of nature. The woman, refusing to be a woman,
+engenders devils; the man, trying to be a God, loses paradise and his
+innocence, for the element of the supernatural intruded upon him and
+abstracted his thoughts from this earth. These were the half idealistic
+and half realistic elements from which the three greatest spiritual
+incarnations of the Evil Spirit sprung up. Luther took the Evil Spirit
+as a bodily entity, with big horns, fiery eyes, a reddish, protruding
+tongue, a long tail, and the hoof of a horse. In this latter attribute
+we trace at once the Kentaur element of ancient times. Through nearly
+one thousand three hundred years from Tertullian and Thaumaturgus down
+to Luther, every one was accustomed to look upon life as one great
+battle with tens of thousands of devils, assaulting, harassing,
+annoying, and seducing humanity. All fought, quarrelled, talked, and
+wrestled with the Devil. He was more spoken of in the pulpits of the
+Christian Churches, written about in theological and scientific books,
+than God or Christ. All misfortunes were attributed to him. Thunder and
+lightning, hailstorms and the rinderpest, the hooping cough and
+epileptic fits were all the Devil's work. A man who suffered from
+madness was said to be possessed by a legion of Evil Spirits. The Devil
+settled himself in the gentle dimples of a pretty girl with the same
+ease and comfort as in the wrinkles of an old woman. Everything that
+was inexplicable was evil. Throughout the Middle Ages the masses and the
+majority of their learned theological teachers believed the Greek and
+Latin classics were inspired by Evil Spirits; that sculptures or
+paintings, if beautiful, were of evil; that all cleverness in
+Mathematics, Chemistry, or Medicine proved the presence of the
+corrupting Evil Spirit working in man. Any bridge over a chasm or a
+rapid river was the work of the Devil; even the most beautiful Gothic
+cathedrals, like those of Cologne and St. Stephen at Vienna were
+constructed by architects who served their apprenticeship in the
+infernal regions. The Devil sat grinning on the inkstands of poets and
+learned men, dictating to the poor deluded mortals, as the price for
+their souls, charming love-songs or deep theological and philosophical
+essays. It was extremely dangerous during this period of man's
+historical evolution to be better or wiser than the ignorant masses.
+Learning, talent, a superior power of reasoning, love for truth, a
+spirit of inquiry, the capacity of making money by clever trading, an
+artistic turn of mind, success in life, even in the Church, were only so
+many proofs that the soul had been sold to some dwarfish or giant
+messenger from Lucifer, who could appear in a thousand different forms.
+Man was, since his assumed Fall, the exclusive property of the coarse
+and vulgar conception of the Evil Spirit. Luther was full of these
+ideas, he was brought up in this belief, and though he unconsciously
+felt that the Devil ought to be expelled from our creed, he did not dare
+to attempt the reform of humanity by annihilating the mischief-maker: he
+could not rob man of his dearest spiritual possession; had he thought of
+consigning the Devil to the antediluvian period of our moral and social
+formation, he never could have succeeded in his reform. The Devil, in
+fact, was his strongest helpmate; he could describe the ritual of the
+Romish Church as the work of the Evil Spirit, produced to delude
+mankind. The Devil had his Romish prayers, his processions, his worship
+of relics, his remission of sins, his confessional, his infernal synods;
+he was to Luther an active, rough, and material incarnation of the
+roaring lion of the Scriptures in the shape of the Romish Church,
+walking about visibly, tangibly, bodily amongst men, devouring all who
+believed in the Pope, and who disbelieved in this stupid phantom of a
+dogmatically blinded imagination.
+
+The Evolution-theory may be clearly traced in the two next conceptions:
+Milton's Satan and Goethe's Mephistopheles. They differ as strongly as
+the periods and the poems in which they appear. Milton's Satan loses the
+vulgar flesh and bone, horn and hoof nature--he is an epic character;
+whilst Goethe's Devil is an active dramatic entity of modern times.
+Milton's representative of evil is a very powerful conception--it is
+evil in abstracto; whilst Mephistopheles is evil in concreto--the
+intelligible, tangible Devil, evolved by the power of selection from an
+antediluvian monster, and transformed through a civilizing process of at
+least six thousand years into its present form. Milton's Satan is a
+debased intellect who in his boundless ambition is still a supernatural
+being. Mephistopheles is the incarnation of our complicated modern
+social evils, full of petty tricks and learned quotations; he piously
+turns up his eyes, he lies, doubts, calumniates, seduces, philosophizes,
+sneers, but all in a polite and highly educated way; he is a scholar, a
+divine, a politician, a diplomatist. Satan is capable of wild
+enthusiasm, he sometimes remembers his bright sinless past; "from the
+lowest deep," he yearns, "once more to lift himself up, in spite of
+fate, nearer to his ancient seat;"--he hopes to re-enter heaven, "to
+purge off his gloom;" some remnant of heavenly innocence still clings to
+him, for, though _fallen_, he is still an _angel_! Mephistopheles in his
+real nature is without any higher aspirations, he argues with a
+sarcastic smile on his lips, he is ironical with sophisticated
+sharpness. Satan has unconsciously gigantic ideas, he is ready to
+wrestle with God for the dominion of heaven. Mephistopheles is perfectly
+conscious of his littleness as opposed to our better intellectual
+nature, and does evil for evil's sake. Satan is sublime through the
+grandeur of his primitive elements, pride and ambition. Mephistopheles
+is only grave in his pettiness; he does not refuse an orgie with
+drunken students, indulges in jokes with monkeys, works miracles in the
+witch's kitchen, delights in the witch's "one-time-one;" distributes
+little tracts "to stir up the witch's heart with special fire." Satan
+has nothing vulgar in him: he is capable of melancholy feelings, he can
+be pathetic and eloquent. Mephistopheles laughs at the stupidity of the
+world, and at his own. Satan believes in God and in himself, whilst
+Mephistopheles is the "Spirit that denies;" he believes neither in God
+nor in heaven nor in hell; he does not believe in his own entity--he is
+no supernatural, fantastic being, but man incarnate: he is the evil part
+of a good whole, which loses its entity when once seen and recognised in
+its real nature; for Mephistopheles in reality is our own ignorant,
+besotted, animal nature, cultivated and developed at the expense of our
+intellectual part.
+
+Luther's devil is the outgrowth of humanity in long-clothes. Man,
+ignorant of the forces of the Cosmos, blinded by theological dialectics
+and metaphysical subtleties, incapable of understanding the real essence
+of our moral and intellectual nature, philosophically untrained to
+observe that evil is but a sequence of the disturbed balance between our
+double nature--spirit and matter--attributed all mischief in the
+intellectual as well as in our social spheres to an absolute powerful
+being who continually tormented him.
+
+Milton's Satan is the poetical conception of man developed from an
+infant in long-clothes into a boisterous but dreamy youth, ascribing to
+every incomprehensible effect an arbitrary, poetical cause. Goethe's
+Mephistopheles, lastly is the truthful conception of evil as it really
+exists in a thousand forms, evolved from our own misunderstood and
+artificially and dogmatically distorted nature.
+
+Goethe in destroying the Devil as such, consigned him to the primeval
+myths and legends of ignorance and fear, and has shown us the real
+nature of the evil.
+
+What then is the Devil?
+
+The Devil took, as I said in the beginning, his origin in our blinded
+senses, in an undue preponderance of that which is material in us over
+that which is intellectual. The moment we look the Evil Spirit in the
+face, he vanishes as an _absolute_ being and becomes--
+
+ A portion of that power
+ Which wills the bad and works the good at every hour.
+
+After having been exposed during several periods of generations to new
+conditions, thus rendering a great amount of variation possible, the
+Devil has developed from a monster into a monkey, and from a monkey into
+a man endowed with the nature of a monkey and the propensities of a
+monster. In the State and in the Church, in Arts and Sciences, the Devil
+is the principle of injustice, hypocrisy, ugliness, and ignorance.
+Goethe has annihilated the ideal poetical grandeur of Milton's Satan; he
+has stripped Luther's Devil of his vulgar realism; Goethe has driven
+Satan from an imaginary hell, where he preferred to rule instead of
+worshipping and serving in heaven, and with the sponge of common sense
+he wiped the horned monster, drawn by the imagination of dogmatists,
+from the black board of ignorance. In banishing the Evil Spirit into the
+dominion of myths, Goethe showed him in his real nature. Darwin
+displaced man from the exalted pedestal of a special creation, and
+endeavoured to trace him as the development of cosmical elements. Darwin
+enabled us to look upon man as the completing link in the great chain of
+the gradual evolution of the life-giving forces of the Universe, and he
+rendered thus our position more comprehensible and natural. Goethe, in
+proving that the Evil Spirit of ancient and Hebrew-Christian times was a
+mere phantom of an ill-regulated fantasy, taught us to look for the real
+origin of evil. What was a metaphysical incomprehensibility became an
+intelligible reality. The Demon can be seen in "Faust" as in a mirror,
+and in glancing into it we behold our Darwinian progenitor, the animal,
+face to face. Before the times of Goethe, with very few exceptions, the
+Evil Spirit was an entity with whom any one might become familiar--in
+fact, the "spiritus familiaris" of old. The Devil spoke, roared,
+whispered, could sign contracts. We were able to yield our soul to him;
+and he could bodily enter our body. The Devil was a corporeal entity.
+The rack, water, and fire were used to expel him from sorcerers and
+witches, and to send him into all sorts of unclean animals. Goethe, in
+unmasking this phantom, introduced him not as something _without_, but
+as an element _within_ us. The service rendered to humanity in showing
+us the true nature of evil is as grand as the service rendered by Mr.
+Darwin in assigning to man his place _in_ nature, and not _above_
+nature. It is curious that those who have most of the incorrigible and
+immovable animal nature in them should protest with the greatest
+vehemence and clamour against this theory. They think by asserting their
+superiority, based on a special creation, to become at once special and
+superior beings, and prefer this position to trying, through a
+progressive development in science and knowledge, in virtue and honesty,
+to prove the existence of the higher faculties with which man has been
+endowed through his gradual development from the lowest phases of living
+creatures to the highest. In assuming the Devil to be something absolute
+and positive, and not something relative and negative, man hoped to be
+better able to grapple with him. Mephistopheles is nothing personal; he
+can, like the Creator himself, be only traced in his works. The Devil
+lurks beneath the venerable broadcloth of an intolerant and ignorant
+priest; he uses the seducing smiles of a wicked beauty; he stirs the
+blood of the covetous and grasping; he strides through the gilded halls
+of ambitious emperors and ministers, who go with "light hearts" to kill
+thousands of human beings with newly-invented infernal machines; he
+works havoc in the brains of the vain. The Devil shuffles the cards for
+the gambler, and destroys our peace whether he makes us win or lose on
+the turf; he sits joyfully grinning on the tops of bottles and tankards
+filled with alcoholic drinks; he entices us on Sundays to shut our
+museums and open our gin-palaces; to neglect the education of the
+masses; and then prompts us to accuse them with hypocritical
+respectability of drunkenness and stupidity. It is the Devil who turns
+us into friends of lapdogs and makes us enemies of the homeless. The
+Devil is the greatest master in dogmatism; he creates sects who, in the
+name of love and humility, foster hatred and pride; the Devil encloses
+men in a magic circle on the barren heath of useless speculation; drives
+them round and round like blinded horses in a mill, starting from one
+point, and after miles and miles of travel and fatigue, leading us to
+the point, sadder but not wiser, from which we set out. The Devil makes
+us quarrel whether we ought to have schools with or without bigoted
+religious teachings; he burns incense to stupefy our senses, lights
+candles to obscure our sight, amuses the masses with buffooneries to
+prevent them from thinking, draws us away from common-sense morality,
+and leads us, under the pretext of a mystic and symbolic religion, to
+the confessional, the very hothouse of mischief. Satan in all his
+shapes and forms as he rules the world has been described by Goethe as
+Egotism. Selfishness is his element and real nature. Selfishness not yet
+realizing the divine, because so entirely _humane_ command--"Do unto
+others as you wish that they should do unto you." Selfishness is the
+only essence of evil. Selfishness has divided men into different
+nations, and fosters in them pride, envy, jealousy, and hatred. Mr.
+Darwin has shown that one animal preys on the other, that the weaker
+species has to yield to the stronger. Goethe again has shown us how the
+Evil Spirit drags us through life's wild scenes and its flat
+unmeaningness, to seek mere sensual pleasures and to neglect altogether
+our higher and better nature, which is the outgrowth of our more
+complicated, more highly developed organization. Were we only to
+recognise this, our real nature, we should leave less to chance and
+prejudices; were we to study man from a physiological, psychological,
+and honestly historical point of view, we should soon eliminate
+selfishness from among us, and be able to appreciate what is really the
+essence of evil. The more nearly we approach Darwin's primitive man, the
+ape, the nearer do we draw to the Mephistopheles who shows us his exact
+nature with impudent sincerity in Goethe's "Faust."
+
+That which changes our Psyche, that is our intellectual faculty with its
+airy wings of imagination, its yearnings for truth, into an ugly,
+submissive, crawling worm, is heartless selfishness. Not without reason
+is poor guileless Margaret horrified at Mephistopheles. She shudders,
+hides herself on the bosom of Faust, like a dove under the wings of an
+eagle, and complains that the Evil Spirit--
+
+ ... Always wears such mocking grin,
+ Half cold, half grim,
+ One sees that nought has interest for him;
+ 'Tis writ on his brow, and can't be mistaken,
+ No soul in him can love awaken.
+
+When all goes wrong, when religious, social, and political animosities and
+hatred disturb the peace; when unintelligible controversies on the
+inherited sin, the origin of evil, justification, and transubstantiation,
+"grace and free will," the creative and the created, mystic incantations,
+real and unreal presences, the like but not equal, the affirmative and the
+negative natures of God and man confuse the finite brains of infinite
+talkers and repeaters of the same things; when they quarrel about the
+wickedness of the hen who dared to lay an egg on the Sabbath; when the
+glaring torch of warfare is kindled by the fire of petty animosities, then
+the Evil Spirit of egotism celebrates its most glorious festivals.
+
+What can banish this monster, this second and worse part of our nature?
+To look upon it from a Darwinian point of view. Goethe saves his fallen
+Faust through useful "occupation," through honest hard work for the
+benefit of mankind. The more we make ourselves acquainted with evil, the
+last remnant of our animal nature, in a rational and not mystic
+dogmatical sense, the less we exalt ourselves as exceptional creatures
+above nature, the easier it must be for us to dry up the source of
+superstition and ignorance which serves to nourish this social monster.
+
+Let our relations to each other be based on "mutual love," for God is
+love, and selfishness as the antagonist of love, and the Devil as the
+antagonist of God, will both vanish.
+
+Let us strive to vanquish our unnatural social organization by a
+natural, social, but at the same time, liberal union of all into one
+common brotherhood, and the roaring lion will be silenced for ever.
+
+Let us purify society of all its social, or rather unsocial, iniquities
+and falsehoods, of all ingratitude and envy, in striving for an honest
+regeneration of ourselves, and through ourselves of humanity at large,
+convincing one another that man has developed by degrees into earth's
+fairest creature, destined for good and happiness, and not for evil and
+wretchedness, and there will be an end of the _Devil_ and all his
+_devilries_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] The word is found in Isaiah xxxiv. 14. Translated in the Vulgate as
+"Lamia;" in Luther's translation as "Kobold;" in the English version as
+"screech-owl;" and in others as "an ugly night-bird."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+PECULIAR PEOPLE.
+
+
+In this title, be it distinctly understood, no reference is intended to
+those anti-Æsculapian persons who, from time to time, sacrifice to
+Moloch among the Essex marshes. It is not necessary to journey even as
+far as Plumstead in search of peculiarity, since the most manifold and
+ever-varying types of it lie at one's very doors. And here, at the
+outset, without quite endorsing the maxim that genius is always
+eccentric, let it be confessed that a slight deviation from the beaten
+track is generally apt to be interesting. When we see the photograph of
+some distinguished artist, musician, or poet, and find the features very
+like those of the pork butcher in the next street, or the footman over
+the way, we are conscious of a feeling of disappointment almost
+amounting to a personal grievance. Mr. Carlyle and Algernon Swinburne
+satisfy us. They look as we feel graphic writers and erotic poets ought
+to look. Not so the literary females who affect the compartment labelled
+"For ladies only," in the reading room of the British Museum or on the
+Metropolitan Railway. They are mostly like one's maiden aunts, and
+savour far less of the authoress than some of the charming girls who
+studiously avoid their exclusive locale, and evidently use their reading
+ticket only to cover with an appearance of propriety a most unmistakable
+flirtation. This they carry on sotto voce with ardent admirers of the
+male sex, who, though regular frequenters of the reading room, are no
+more literary than themselves. One might pick out a good many peculiar
+people from that learned retreat--that poor scholar's club room; but let
+us rather avoid any such byways of life, and select our peculiars from
+the broad highway. Hunting there, Diogenes-wise, with one's modest
+lantern, in search--not of honest--but eccentric individuals.
+
+And first of all, having duly attended to the ladies at the outset, let
+there be "Place for the Clergy." There is my dear friend the Rev. Gray
+Kidds, the best fellow breathing, but, from a Diogenes point of view,
+decidedly eccentric. Gray Kidds is one of those individuals whose
+peculiarity it is never to have been a boy. Kidds at fifteen had
+whiskers as voluminous as he now has at six-and-twenty, and as he
+gambolled heavily amongst his more puerile schoolfellows, visitors to
+the playground used to ask the assistant masters who that man was
+playing with the boys. They evidently had an uneasy notion that a
+private lunatic asylum formed a branch of the educational establishment,
+and that Gray Kidds was a harmless patient allowed to join the boys in
+their sports. Gray Kidds was and is literally harmless. He grew up
+through school and college, innocently avoiding all those evils which
+proved the ruin of many who were deemed far wiser than himself. He
+warbled feebly on the flute, and was adored as a curate, not only for
+his tootle-tooings, but for his diligent presence at mothers' meetings,
+and conscientious labours among the poor. A preacher Kidds never
+pretended to be; but he had the singular merit of brevity, and crowded
+more harmless heresies into ten minutes' pulpit oratory than Colenso or
+Voysey could have done in double the time. The young ladies made a dead
+set at him, of course, for Kidds was in every respect eligible; and he
+let them stroke him like a big pet lamb, but there matters ended. Kidds
+never committed himself. He is now the incumbent of a pretty church in
+the suburbs, built for him by his aunt, and, strange to say, the church
+fills. Whether it is that his brevity is attractive, or his transparent
+goodness compensates for his other peculiarities, certainly he has a
+congregation; and if you polled that congregation, the one point on
+which all would agree, in addition to his eligibility or innocence,
+would be that the Rev. Gray Kidds was "so funny."
+
+And now, for our second type of peculiarity, let us beat back for one
+moment to the fair sex again. Mrs. Ghoul is the reverse of spirituelle;
+but she is something more--she is spiritualistic. She devoutly believes
+that the spirits of deceased ancestors come at her bidding, and tilt the
+table, move furniture insanely about, or write idiotic messages
+automatically. She is perfectly serious. She does "devoutly" believe
+this. It is her creed. It is a comfort to her. It is extremely difficult
+to reconcile such a source of comfort with any respect for one's
+departed relatives, but that is Mrs. Ghoul's peculiarity and
+qualification for a niche amongst our originals.
+
+Miss Deedy, on the other hand, is ecclesiastical to the backbone. Miss
+Deedy ruins her already feeble health with early mattins (she insists on
+the double t) and frequent fasts. Beyond an innocuous flirtation with
+the curate at decorations, or a choral meeting, Miss Deedy has as few
+sins as most of us to answer for; but, from her frequent penances, she
+might be a monster of iniquity. She is known to confess, and is
+suspected of wearing sackcloth. Balls and theatres she eschews as
+"worldly," and yet she is only just out of her teens. She would like to
+be a nun, she says, if the habits were prettier, and they allowed long
+curls down the back, and Gainsboroughs above the brow. As it is, Miss
+Deedy occupies a somewhat abnormal position, dangling, like Mahomet's
+coffin, between the Church and the world. That, again, is Miss Deedy's
+peculiarity.
+
+Miss Wiggles is a "sensitive." That is a new vocation struck out by the
+prolific ingenuity of the female mind. Commonplace doctors would simply
+call her "hysterical;" but she calls herself magnetic. She is stout and
+inclined to a large appetite, particularly affecting roast pork with
+plenty of seasoning; but she passes readily into "the superior
+condition" under the manipulations of a male operator. She makes
+nothing, save notoriety, by her clairvoyance and other peculiarities;
+but she _is_ very peculiar, though the type of a larger class than is
+perhaps imagined in this highly sensational age of ours.
+
+Peculiar boys, too--what lots of them there are! What is called
+affectation in a girl prevails to quite as large an extent in the shape
+of endless peculiarities among boys. A certain Dick (his name is
+Adolphus, but he is universally, and for no assignable reason, known as
+Dick) rejoices in endorsing Darwinism by looking and acting like a human
+gorilla. Dick is no fool, but assumes that virtue though he has it not.
+To see him mumbling his food at meals, or making mops and mows at the
+wall, you would think him qualified for Earlswood; but if it comes to
+polishing off a lesson briskly or being mulct of his pudding or
+pocket-money, Master Dick accomplishes the polishing process with a
+rapidity that gives the lie to his Darwinian assumption.
+
+Well, they are a source of infinite fun, these eccentrics--the comets of
+our social system. They have, no doubt, an object in their
+eccentricity, a method in their madness, which we prosaic planetary
+folks cannot fathom. At all events, they amuse us and don't harm
+themselves. They are uniformly happy and contented with themselves. Of
+them assuredly is true, and without the limitation he appends, Horace's
+affirmation, _Dulce est desipere_, which Mr. Theodore Martin translates,
+"'Tis pleasing at times to be slightly insane."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+INTERVIEWING AN ASTROLOGER.
+
+
+For several years--in fact ever since my first acquaintance with these
+"occult" matters whereinto I am now such a veteran investigator--my
+great wish has been to become practically acquainted with some Professor
+of Astral Science. One friend, indeed, I had who had devoted a long
+lifetime to this and kindred subjects, and of whom I shall have to speak
+anon; but he had never utilized his knowledge so as to become the guide,
+philosopher, and friend of amorous housemaids on the subject of their
+matrimonial alliances, or set himself to discover petty larcenies for a
+fee of half-a-crown. He assured me, however, that the practice of
+astrology was as rife as ever in London at this moment, and that
+businesses in that line were bought and sold for sterling coin of the
+realm, just as though they had been "corner" publics, or "snug concerns"
+in the cheesemongery line. All this whetted my appetite for inquiry, and
+seeing one Professor Wilson advertise persistently in the _Medium_ to
+the effect that "the celebrated Astrologer may be consulted on the
+events of life" from two to nine P.M., I wrote to Professor Wilson
+asking for an interview; but the celebrated astrologer did not favour
+me with a reply.
+
+Foiled in my first attempt I waited patiently for about a year, and then
+broke ground again--I will not say whether with Professor Wilson, or
+some other practitioner of astral science. I will call my Archimago
+Professor Smith, of Newington Causeway, principally for the reason that
+this is neither the real name nor the correct address. I have no wish to
+advertise any wizard gratuitously; nor would it be fair to him, since,
+as will be seen from the sequel, his reception of me was such as to make
+it probable that he would have an inconvenient number of applicants on
+the conditions observed at my visit.
+
+Availing myself, then, of the services of my friend above-mentioned, I
+arranged that we should together pay a visit to Professor Smith, of
+Newington Causeway, quite "permiscuous," as Mrs. Gamp would say. My
+companion would go with his own horoscope already constructed, as he
+happened to know the exact hour and minute of his birth--particulars as
+to which I only possessed the vaguest information, which is all I fancy
+most of us have; though there was one circumstance connected with my own
+natal day which went a long way towards "fixing" it.
+
+It was on a Monday evening that I visited this modern Delphic oracle;
+and, strangely enough, as is often the case, other events seemed to lead
+up to this one. The very lesson on Sunday evening was full of
+astrology. It was, I may mention, the story of the handwriting on the
+wall and the triumph of Daniel over the magicians. Then I took up my
+Chaucer on Monday morning; and instead of the "Canterbury Tales," opened
+it at the "Treatise on the Astrolabe," which I had never read before,
+but devoured then as greedily as no doubt did "Little Lowis," to whom it
+is addressed. All this tended to put me in a proper frame of mind for my
+visit to Newington; so, after an early tea, we took my friend's figure
+of his nativity with us, and went.
+
+Professor Smith, we found, lived in a cosy house in the main road, the
+parlours whereof he devoted to the purposes of a medical magnetist,
+which was his calling, as inscribed upon the wire blinds of the ground
+floor front. We were ushered at once into the professor's presence by a
+woman who, I presume, was his wife--a quiet respectable body with
+nothing uncanny about her. The front parlour was comfortably furnished
+and scrupulously clean, and the celebrated Professor himself, a pleasant
+elderly gentleman, was sitting over a manuscript which he read by the
+light of a Queen's reading lamp. There was not, on the one hand, any
+charlatan assumption in his get-up, nor, on the other, was there that
+squalor and neglect of the decencies of life which I have heard
+sometimes attaches to the practitioners in occult science. Clad in a
+light over-coat, with spectacles on nose, and bending over his MS.,
+Professor Smith might have been a dissenting parson en déshabille
+"getting off" his Sunday discourse, or a village schoolmaster correcting
+the "themes" of his pupils. He was neither; he was a nineteenth century
+astrologer, calculating the probabilities of success for a commercial
+scheme, the draft prospectus of which was the document over which he
+pored. As he rose to receive us I was almost disappointed to find that
+he held no wand, wore no robe, and had no volume of mystic lore by his
+side. The very cat that emerged from underneath his table, and rubbed
+itself against my legs was not of the orthodox sable hue, but simple
+tabby and white.
+
+My friend opened the proceedings by producing the figure of his
+nativity, and saying he had come to ask a question in horary astrology
+relative to a certain scheme about which he was anxious, such anxiety
+constituting what he termed a "birth of the mind." Of course this was
+Dutch to me, and I watched to see whether the Professor would be taken
+off his guard by finding he was in presence of one thoroughly posted up
+in astral science. Not in the least; he greeted him as a brother chip,
+and straightway the two fell to discussing the figure. The Professor
+worked a new one, which he found to differ in some slight particulars
+from the one my friend had brought. Each, however, had worked it by
+logarithms, and there was much talk of "trines" and "squares" and
+"houses," which I could not understand; but eventually the coveted
+advice was given by the Professor and accepted by my friend as devoutly
+as though it had been a response of the Delphic oracle itself. The
+business would succeed, but not without trouble, and possibly litigation
+on my friend's part. He was to make a call on a certain day and "push
+the matter" a month afterwards; all of which he booked in a
+business-like manner. This took a long time, for the Professor was
+perpetually making pencil signs on the figure he had constructed, and
+the two also discussed Zadkiel, Raphael, and other astrologers they had
+mutually known. Continual reference had to be made to the "Nautical
+Almanack;" but by-and-by my friend's innings was over and mine
+commenced. I have said that I did not know the exact hour and minute of
+my birth, and when, with appropriate hesitation, I named the 1st of
+April as the eventful day, the Professor looked at me for a moment with
+a roguish twinkle of the eye as though to ascertain that I was not
+poking fun at him. I assured him, however, that such was the
+inauspicious era of my nativity, and moreover that I was born so closely
+on the confines of March 31--I do not feel it necessary to specify the
+year--as to make it almost dubious whether I could claim the honours of
+April-Fooldom. This seemed enough for him--though he warned me that the
+absence of the exact time might lead to some vagueness in his
+communications--and he proceeded forthwith to erect my figure; which,
+by the way, looked to me very much like making a "figure" in Euclid;
+and I peered anxiously to see whether mine bore any resemblance to the
+Pons Asinorum!
+
+I feared I had led my philosopher astray altogether when the first item
+of information he gave me was that, at about the age of twenty-one, I
+had met with some accident to my arm, a circumstance which I could not
+recall to memory. Several years later I broke my leg, but I did not tell
+him that. Going further back, he informed me that about the age of
+fourteen, if I happened to be apprenticed, or in any way placed under
+authority, I kicked violently over the traces, which was quite true,
+inasmuch as I ran away from school twice at that precise age, so that my
+astrologer scored one. At twenty-eight I married (true), and at
+thirty-two things were particularly prosperous with me--a fact which I
+was also constrained to acknowledge correct. Then came a dreadful
+mistake. If ever I had anything to do with building or minerals, I
+should be very successful. I never had to do with building save once in
+my life, and then Mr. Briggs's loose tile was nothing to the
+difficulties in which I became involved. Minerals I had never dabbled in
+beyond the necessary consumption of coals for domestic purposes. I had
+an uncle who interested himself in my welfare some years ago--this was
+correct--and something was going to happen to my father's sister at
+Midsummer, 1876. This, of course, I cannot check; but I trust, for the
+sake of my venerable relation, it may be nothing prejudicial. I was also
+to suffer from a slight cold about the period of my birthday in that
+same year, and was especially to beware of damp feet. My eldest brother,
+if I had one, he said, had probably died, which was again correct; and
+if my wife caught cold she suffered in her throat, which piece of
+information, if not very startling, I am also constrained to confess is
+quite true. Then followed a most delicate piece of information which I
+blush as I commit to paper. I wished to marry when I was twenty-one, but
+circumstances prevented. Then it was that memories of a certain
+golden-haired first love came back through the vista of memory. I was
+then a Fellow of my College, impecunious except as regarded my
+academical stipend, so the young lady took advice and paired off with a
+well-to-do cousin. Sic transit gloria mundi! We are each of us stout,
+unromantic family people now; but the reminiscence made me feel quite
+romantic for the moment in that ground floor front in Newington
+Causeway; and I was inclined to say, "A Daniel come to judgment!" but I
+checked myself and remarked, sotto voce, in the vernacular, "Right
+again, Mr. Smith!"
+
+Before passing on to analyse me personally he remarked that my wife's
+sister and myself were not on the best of terms. I owned that words had
+passed between us; and then he told me that in my cerebral development
+there was a satisfactory fusion of caution and combativeness. I was not
+easily knocked over, or, if so, had energy to get up again. This energy
+was to tell in the future. This, I believe, is a very usual feature of
+horoscopic revelation. Next year was to be particularly prosperous. I
+should travel a good deal--had travelled somewhat this year, and was
+just now going to take a short journey; but I should travel a great deal
+more next year. I own to asking myself whether this could bear any
+reference to the Pontigny Pilgrimage in which I shared this year, and
+the possible pilgrimage to Rome next summer, and also a projected
+journey to Scotland by the Limited Mail next Tuesday evening! On the
+whole, my astrologer had scored a good many points.
+
+The most marvellous revelation of all yet remains to be made, however.
+When we rose to go we each of us endeavoured to force a fee on Professor
+Smith, but nothing would induce him to receive a farthing! I had got all
+my revelations, my "golden" memories of the past, my bright promises of
+the future free, gratis, for nothing! It will be evident, then, why I do
+not give this good wizard's address lest I inundate him with gratuitous
+applicants, and why I therefore veil his personality under the
+misleading title of Professor Smith of Newington Causeway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+A BARMAID SHOW.
+
+
+The present age, denounced by some ungenial censors as the age of shams,
+may be described by more kindly critics as emphatically an age of
+"shows." Advancing from the time-honoured shows of Flora and Pomona--if
+not always improving on the type--and so on from the cattle show,
+suggestive of impending Christmas fare, we have had horse shows, dog
+shows, and bird shows. To these the genius of Barnum added baby shows;
+and, if we are not misinformed, a foreign firm, whose names have become
+household words amongst us, originated, though not exactly in its
+present form, the last kind of show which has been acclimatized in
+England--an exhibition of barmaids. We had two baby shows in one
+year--one at Highbury Barn by Mr. Giovannelli, the other at North
+Woolwich Gardens by Mr. Holland; and it is to the talent of this latter
+gentleman in the way of adaptation that we owe the exhibition of young
+ladies "practising at the bar." From babies to barmaids is indeed a
+leap, reversing the ordinary process of going from the sublime to the
+ridiculous, for while to all but appreciative mammas those infantile
+specimens of humanity savour largely of the ridiculous, there can be no
+question that the present generation of _dames de comptoir_ is a very
+sublime article indeed. I do not say this in derision, nor am I among
+those who decry the improvements introduced during the last few years,
+both into refreshment bars themselves, and notably into the class of
+ladies who preside over them. The discriminating visitor will decidedly
+prefer to receive his sandwich and glass of bitter at the hands of a
+pretty barmaid rather than from an oleaginous pot-man in his
+shirt-sleeves; and the sherry-cobbler acquires a racier flavour from the
+arch looks of the Hebe who dispenses it. If silly young men do dawdle at
+the bar for the sake of the sirens inside, and occasionally, as we have
+known to be the case, take unto themselves these same sirens "for better
+or for worse," we can only cite the opinion of well-informed
+authorities, that very possibly the young gentlemen in question might
+have gone farther and fared worse, and that it is not always the young
+lady who has, in such a case, the best of the bargain.
+
+So, then, the "Grand Barmaid Contest" opened; and in spite of the very
+unmistakable appearance put in by Jupiter Fluvius, a numerous assemblage
+gathered in the North Woolwich Gardens to inaugurate a festival which,
+whatever else we may think of it, is at all events sui generis. Prizes
+to the value of _300l._ were to be presented to the successful
+candidates, varying from a purse of twenty sovereigns and a gold watch
+and chain, down to "a purse of two sovereigns," with "various other
+prizes, consisting of jewellery, &c."
+
+Among the conditions it was required, that every young lady should be
+over sixteen years of age; that she should be dressed in _plain_ but
+_good_ articles of attire, "in which a happy blending of colours without
+prominent display is most suitable;" and it was moreover stipulated that
+each "young lady" should "ingratiate herself with the public in the most
+affable manner at her command, without undue forwardness or frivolity,
+but still retaining a strict attention to business." No young lady was
+permitted to take part in the contest unless she had been in the
+refreshment business for twelve months, and could produce good
+testimonials of character.
+
+Upwards of 700 applications were made, out of which Mr. Holland selected
+fifty. Whence the large number of rejections "deponeth sayeth not." Of
+these twenty-eight actually put in an appearance at three P.M. on the
+opening day and four were expected to join in a day or two. Every
+visitor is provided with a voting ticket, which he hands to the lady of
+his admiration, and which counts towards the prize. Each young lady also
+receives 5 per cent. on what she sells at her bar. The places are
+awarded by lot; and, by a freak of fortune, the two most attractive
+demoiselles happened to come together. These were Numbers One and
+Fourteen. The former young lady--who desires to be known by her number
+only, true genius being ever modest--was certain to stand Number One in
+popular esteem; and, if chignons are taken into account, she ought
+literally to "head" the list by a very long way. The room was tastefully
+decorated by Messrs. Defries, and an excellent band enlivened the
+proceedings. As evening drew on the meeting grew more hilarious, but
+there was not the slightest impropriety of any kind, the faintest
+approach thereto leading to immediate expulsion.
+
+Many persons may be disposed to ask, in respect of such exhibitions, Cui
+bono? But at all events there was nothing which the veriest Cato could
+denounce as demoralizing. The "young ladies" were all most modestly
+attired in "sober livery;" and certainly--though comparisons are
+odious--not so pressing in their attentions as we have seen some other
+young ladies at Dramatic Fêtes, or even some dévouées at charitable
+bazaars. If we may judge from the large numbers that visited North
+Woolwich, "in spite of wind and weather," Mr. Holland was likely to reap
+an abundant harvest from this latest "idea," excogitated from his
+fertile brain. As the babies have had their "show," and the stronger sex
+is not likely to be equal to the task of being exhibited just yet, there
+seems only one section of society open to the speculations of a skilful
+entrepreneur. Why does not some one, in a more serious line than Mr.
+Holland, try what Sydney Smith calls the "third sex," and open an
+exhibition of curates, with a genuine competition for prizes? There
+could be no possible doubt as to the success of such a display, and the
+instruction to be derived from it would be equally beyond question. In
+the meantime we have advanced one step towards such a consummation. The
+adult human being has taken the place of the baby; and people evidently
+like it. Where will the rage for exhibitions stop? Who can say to the
+advancing tide of shows, "Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther?" Other
+classes of society will probably have their turn, and may think
+themselves fortunate if they show up as well as Mr. Holland's "young
+ladies."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+A PRIVATE EXECUTION.
+
+
+I was quietly fiddling away one evening in the Civil Service band at
+King's College, as was my custom while my leisure was larger than at
+present, when the gorgeous porter of the college entered with a huge
+billet which he placed on my music-stand with a face of awe. It was
+addressed to me, and in the corner of it was written "Order for
+Execution." The official waited to see how I bore it, and seemed rather
+surprised that I went on with my fiddling, and smilingly said, "All
+right." I knew it was an order from the authorities of Horsemonger Lane
+Gaol admitting me to the private execution of Margaret Waters, the
+notorious baby-farmer.
+
+If anything is calculated to promote the views of those who advocate the
+abolition of capital punishment, it is the fact of a woman meeting her
+death at the hands of the common hangman. There is something abhorrent,
+especially to the mind of the stronger sex, in the idea of a female
+suffering the extreme penalty of the law. On the other hand, the crime
+for which Margaret Waters suffered--which is too much a cause célèbre to
+need recapitulation--is exactly the one that would exile her from the
+sympathy of her own sex. Whilst therefore her case left the broad
+question much in the same position as before, we are not surprised to
+find that strenuous efforts had been made to obtain a commutation of the
+sentence. Mr. Gilpin, Mr. Samuel Morley, and Mr. Baines had been
+conspicuous for their efforts in the cause of mercy. All, however, had
+been to no purpose. Margaret Waters was privately executed within the
+walls of Horsemonger Lane Gaol at nine o'clock.
+
+It was a thankless errand that called one from one's bed whilst the moon
+was still struggling with the feeble dawn of an October morning, and
+through streets already white with the incipient frost of approaching
+winter, to see a fellow-creature--and that a woman--thus hurried out of
+existence. On arriving at the gloomy prison-house I saw a fringe of
+roughs lounging about, anxious to catch a glimpse, if only of the black
+flag that should apprize them of the tragedy they were no longer
+privileged to witness. Even these, however, did not muster in strong
+force until the hour of execution drew near. On knocking at the outer
+wicket, the orders of admission were severely scrutinized, and none
+allowed to pass except those borne by the representatives of the press,
+or persons in some way officially connected with the impending "event."
+There was an air of grim "business" about all present, which showed
+plainly that none were there from choice, nor any who would not feel
+relief when the fearful spectacle was over. After assembling, first of
+all, in the porter's lodge, we were conducted by the governor, Mr.
+Keene, to the back of the prison, through courtyards and kitchen
+gardens; and in a corner of one of the former we came upon the ghastly
+instrument of death itself. Here half-a-dozen warders only were
+scattered about, and Mr. Calcraft was arranging his paraphernalia with
+the air of a connoisseur. I remember--so strangely does one's mind take
+in unimportant details at such a crisis--being greatly struck with the
+fine leeks which were growing in that particular corner of the prison
+garden where the grim apparatus stood, and we--some five-and-twenty at
+most, and all in the way of "business"--stood, too, waiting for the
+event!
+
+Then ensued a quarter of an hour's pause, in that cold morning air, when
+suddenly boomed out the prison bell, that told us the last few minutes
+of the convict's life had come. The pinioning took place within the
+building; and on the stroke of nine, the gloomy procession emerged, the
+prisoner walking between the chaplain and Calcraft, with a firm step,
+and even mounting the steep stair to the gallows without needing
+assistance. She was attired in a plaid dress with silk mantle, her head
+bare, and hair neatly arranged.
+
+As this was my first experience in private hanging, I do not mind
+confessing that I misdoubted my powers of endurance. I put a small
+brandy-flask in my pocket, and stood close by a corner around which I
+could retire if the sight nauseated me; but such is the strange
+fascination attaching to exhibitions even of this horrible kind, that I
+pushed forward with the rest, and when the governor beckoned me on to a
+"good place," I found myself standing in the front rank with the rest of
+my confrères, and could not help picturing what that row of upturned,
+unsympathizing, pitiless faces must have looked like to the culprit as
+contrasted with the more sympathetic crowds that used to be present at a
+public execution.
+
+One of the daily papers in chronicling this event went so far as to
+point a moral on the brutalizing effect of such exhibitions from my
+momentary hesitation and subsequent struggle forward into the front
+rank. The convict's perfect sang froid had a good deal to do with my own
+calmness, I expect.
+
+When the executioner had placed the rope round her neck, and the cap on
+her head ready to be drawn over the face, she uttered a long and fervent
+prayer, expressed with great volubility and propriety of diction, every
+word of which could be distinctly heard by us as we circled the
+scaffold. She could not have rounded her periods more gracefully or
+articulated them more perfectly, if she had rehearsed her part
+beforehand! Though most of the spectators were more or less inured to
+scenes of horror, several were visibly affected, one kneeling on the
+bare ground, and another leaning, overcome with emotion, against the
+prison wall. At last she said to the chaplain, "Mr. Jessopp, do you
+think I am saved?" A whispered reply from the clergyman conveyed his
+answer to that momentous question. All left the scaffold except the
+convict. The bolt was withdrawn, and, almost without a struggle,
+Margaret Waters ceased to exist. Nothing could exceed the calmness and
+propriety of her demeanour, and this, the chaplain informed us, had been
+the case throughout since her condemnation. She had been visited on one
+occasion by a Baptist minister, to whose persuasion she belonged; but he
+had, at her own request, forborne to repeat his visit. The prisoner said
+he was evidently unused to cases like hers, and his ministrations rather
+distracted than comforted her. The chaplain of the gaol had been
+unremitting in his attentions, and seemingly with happy effect. Though
+she constantly persisted in saying she was not a murderess in intent,
+she was yet brought to see her past conduct in its true light; and on
+the previous Saturday received the Holy Communion in her cell with one
+of her brothers. Two of them visited her, and expressed the strongest
+feelings of attachment. In fact, the unhappy woman seemed to have been
+deeply attached to and beloved by all the members of her family. She
+had, since her condemnation, eaten scarcely anything, having been kept
+alive principally by stimulants. Although this, of course, induced great
+bodily weakness, she did not from the first exhibit any physical fear of
+death. On the night before her execution--that peaceful moonlit
+night--when so many thoughts must have turned to this unhappy woman, she
+slept little, and rose early. The chaplain had arranged to be with her
+at eight, but she sent for him an hour earlier, and he continued with
+her until the end. On Monday night she penned a long statement addressed
+to Mr. Jessopp. This was written with a firm hand on four sides of a
+foolscap sheet, expressed with great perspicuity, and signed with the
+convict's name. Whilst still repudiating the idea of being a murderess
+in intent, she pleaded guilty to great deceit, and to having obtained
+money under false pretences. If she had not given proper food, that, she
+contended, was an error of judgment. It was hard, she thought, that she
+should be held accountable for the child who died in the workhouse. She
+dwelt much upon the difficulties brought upon her by her dread of the
+money-lender--that fungus growth of our so-called civilization, who has
+brought so many criminals to the gallows, besides ruining families every
+day in each year of grace! That she had administered laudanum she
+denied. The evidence as to the dirty condition of the children she
+asserted to be false. She wished to avoid all bitterness; but those who
+had so deposed had sworn falsely. "I feel sure their consciences will
+condemn them to-night," she wrote, "for having caused the death of a
+fellow-creature." In the face of the evidence, she felt the jury could
+not find any other verdict, or the judge pass any other sentence than
+had been done. The case had been got up, she argued, to expose a system
+which was wrong. Parents wished to get rid of their ill-gotten
+offspring. Their one thought was to hide their own shame. "They," she
+concluded, "are the real sinners. If it were not for their sin, _we_
+should not be sought after."
+
+There must surely be some whose consciences these words will prick.
+However this woman deserved the bitter penalty she has now paid, there
+is indeed a tremendous truth in her assertion that she, and such as she,
+are but the supply which answers their demand.
+
+And so we filed away as the autumnal sun shone down upon that gloomy
+spectacle, leaving her to the "crowner's 'quest," and the dishonoured
+grave in the prison precincts. Up to the previous night strong hopes of
+a commutation of the sentence were entertained. Her brothers had
+memorialized the Home Secretary, and were only on the previous day
+informed that the law must take its course. Let us hope that this stern
+example will put a stop, not only to "baby-farming," which, as the dead
+woman truly said, is but a consequence of previous crime--but also to
+those "pleasant vices" which are its antecedents and encouragements.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+BREAKING UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
+
+
+Unromantic as it sounds to say it, I know of few things more disgusting
+than to revisit one's old school after some twenty or thirty years. Let
+that dubious decade still remain as to the number of years that have
+elapsed since I left school. In fact, it matters to nobody when I left
+it; I revisited it lately. I went to see the boys break up, as I once
+broke up, and I felt disgusted--not with the school, or the breaking up,
+but with myself. I felt disgracefully old. In fact, I went home, and
+began a poem with these words:--
+
+ My years, I feel, are getting on:
+ Yet, ere the trembling balance kicks, I
+ Will imitate the dying swan,
+ And sing an ode threnodic--vixi.
+
+I never got any farther than that. By the way, I shall have to mention
+eventually that the school was King's College, in the Strand. I am not
+going to unbosom beyond this, or to add anything in the way of an
+autobiography; but the locale would have to come out anon, and there is
+no possible reason for concealment.
+
+Well, I went to see them break up for the holidays, and only got over my
+antediluvian feelings by seeing one of the masters still on the staff
+who was there when I was a boy. It was a comfort to think what a
+Methuselah he must be; and yet, if he will excuse the personality, he
+looked as rosy and smooth-faced as when he used to stand me outside his
+door with my coat-sleeves turned inside out. It was a way he had. Well,
+the presence of that particular master made me feel an Adonis forthwith.
+
+I will not go into the prizes. There were lots of them, and they were
+very nice, and the boys looked very happy, and their mammas legitimately
+proud. What I want to speak of is the school speeches or recitations, as
+they are termed. King's College School speeches are, to my thinking, a
+model of what such things ought to be.
+
+Some schools--I name no names--go in for mere scholastic recitations
+which nobody understands, and the boys hate. Others burst out in
+full-blown theatricals. King's College acts on the motto, Medio
+tutissimus ibis. It keeps the old scholastic recitations, but gilds the
+pill by adding the accessory of costume. I can quote Latin as well as
+Dr. Pangloss, and certain lines were running in my mind all the time I
+was in King's College Hall. They were
+
+ Pueris olim dant crustula blandi
+ Doctores, elementa velint ut discere prima.
+
+First we had a bit of German in the shape of an extract from Kotzebue's
+"Die Schlaue Wittwe," or "Temperaments." I wish I had my programme, I
+would compliment by name the lad who played the charming young Frau.
+Suffice it to say the whole thing went off sparkling like a firework. It
+was short, and made you wish for more--a great virtue in speeches and
+sermons. The dancing-master was perfect. Then came a bit of Colman's
+"Heir at Law." Dr. Pangloss--again I regret the absence of the
+programme--was a creation, and--notwithstanding the proximity of King's
+College to the Strand Theatre--the youth wisely abstained from copying
+even so excellent a model as Mr. Clarke. Of course, the bits of Latinity
+came out with a genuine scholastic ring. Then a bit of a Greek play, at
+which--mirabile dictu!--everybody laughed, and with which everybody was
+pleased. And why? Because the adjuncts of costume and properties added
+to the correct enunciation of the text, prevented even those, who knew
+little Latin and less Greek, from being one moment in the dark as to
+what was going on. The passage was one from the "Birds" of Aristophanes;
+and the fact of a treaty being concluded between the Olympians and
+terrestrials, led to the introduction of some interpolations as to the
+Washington Treaty, which, when interpreted by the production of the
+American flag and English Union Jack, brought down thunders of applause.
+The final chorus was sung to "Yankee Doodle," and accompanied by a
+fiddle. The acting and accessories were perfect; and what poor Robson
+used to term the "horgan" of Triballos, was wonderful. That youth would
+be a nice young man for a small tea party. It is to be hoped that, like
+Bottom the weaver, he can modulate his voice, and roar as gently as any
+sucking-dove.
+
+Most wonderful, however, of all the marvels--that met me at my old
+school--was a scene from the "Critic," played by the most Lilliputian
+boys. Puff--played by Powell (I don't forget that name)--was simply
+marvellous. And yet Powell, if he will forgive me for saying so, was the
+merest whipper-snapper. Sir Christopher Hatton could scarcely have
+emerged from the nursery; and yet the idea of utter stolidity never
+found a better exponent than that same homoeopathic boy.
+
+Last of all came the conventional scene from Molière's "L'Avare." Maître
+Jacques was good; Harpagon more than good. I came away well satisfied,
+only regretting I had not brought my eldest boy to see it. My eldest
+boy! Egad, and I was just such as he is now, when I used to creep like a
+snail unwillingly to those scholastic shades. The spirit of Pangloss
+came upon me again as I thought of all I had seen that day,--there was
+nothing like it in my day. King's College keeps pace with the times.
+"Tempora mutantur!" I mentally exclaimed; and added, not without a
+pleasant scepticism, as I gazed once more on the pippin-faced master, "I
+wonder whether--nos mutamur in illis?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+PSYCHOLOGICAL LADIES.
+
+
+There is no doubt that the "Woman's Rights" question is going ahead with
+gigantic strides, not only in social and political, but also in
+intellectual matters. Boys and girls--or rather we ought to say young
+ladies and young gentlemen--are grouped together on the class list of
+the Oxford Local Examination, irrespective of sex. A glance at the daily
+papers will show us that women are being lectured to on all subjects
+down from physical sciences, through English literature and art, to the
+construction of the clavecin. We had fancied, however, that what are
+technically termed "the Humanities," or, in University diction,
+"Science"--meaning thereby ethics and logic--were still our own. Now, we
+are undeceived. We are reminded that woman can say, without a solecism,
+"Homo sum," and may therefore claim to embrace even the humanities among
+her subjects of study. Henceforth the realm of woman is not merely what
+may be called "pianofortecultural," as was once the case. It has soared
+even above art, literature, and science itself into what might at first
+sight appear the uncongenial spheres of dialectics and metaphysics.
+
+Professor G. Croom Robertson recently commenced a course of thirty
+lectures to ladies on Psychology and Logic, at the Hall, 15, Lower
+Seymour Street, Portman Square. Urged, it may be, rather by a desire to
+see whether ladies would be attracted by such a subject, and, if so,
+what psychological ladies were like, than by any direct interest in the
+matters themselves, I applied to the hon. secretary, inquiring whether
+the inferior sex were admissible; and was answered by a ticket admitting
+one's single male self and a party of ladies à discrétion. The very
+entrance to the hall--nay, the populous street itself--removed my doubts
+as to whether ladies would be attracted by the subjects; and on entering
+I discovered that the audience consisted of several hundred ladies, and
+two unfortunate--or shall it not rather be said privileged?--members of
+the male sex. The ladies were of all ages, evidently matrons as well as
+spinsters, with really nothing at all approaching a "blue stocking"
+element; but all evidently bent on business. All were taking vigorous
+notes, and seemed to follow the Professor's somewhat difficult Scotch
+diction at least as well as our two selves, who appeared to represent
+not only the male sex in general, but the London press in particular.
+
+Professor Robertson commenced by a brief and well-timed reference to the
+accomplished Hypatia, familiar to ladies from Kingsley's novel--in the
+days when ladies used to read novels--and also the Royal ladies whom
+Descartes and Leibnitz found apter disciples than the savants. It was,
+however, he remarked, an impertinence to suppose that any apology was
+needed for introducing such subjects before ladies. He plunged therefore
+at once in medias res, and made his first lecture not a mere isolated or
+introductory one, but the actual commencement of his series. Unreasoned
+facts, he said, formed but a mere fraction of our knowledge--even the
+simplest processes resolving themselves into a chain of inference. Truth
+is the result of logical reasoning; and not only truth, but truth _for
+all_. The sciences deal with special aspects of truth. These sciences
+may be arranged in the order--1. Mathematics; 2. Physics; 3. Chemistry;
+4. Biology--each gradually narrowing its sphere; the one enclosed, so to
+say, in the other, and each presupposing those above it. Logic was
+presupposed in all. Each might be expressed by a word ending in "logy,"
+therefore logic might be termed the "science of sciences." The sciences
+were special applications of logic. Scientific men speak lightly of
+logic, and say truth can be discovered without it. This is true, but
+trivial. We may as well object to physiology because we can digest
+without a knowledge of it; or to arithmetic, because it is possible to
+reckon without it. Scientific progress has been great; but its course
+might have been strewn with fewer wrecks had its professors been more
+generally logicians. But then logic presupposes something else. We have
+to investigate the origin and growth of knowledge--the laws under which
+knowledge comes to be. Under one aspect this science--psychology--should
+be placed highest up in the scale; but under another it would rank later
+in point of development than even biology itself, because it is not
+every being that thinks. This twofold aspect is accounted for by the
+peculiarity of its subject-matter--viz., mind.
+
+The sciences are comparatively modern. Mathematics but some 3000 or 4000
+years old; physics, three centuries; chemistry, a thing of the last,
+biology only of the present century. But men philosophized before the
+sciences. The ancient Greeks had but one science--mathematics. Now men
+know a little of many sciences; but what we want is men to connect--to
+knit together--the sciences; to have their knowledge all of a piece. The
+knowledge of the ancient Greek directed his actions, and entered far
+more into his daily life than ours does. This, he observed, was
+philosophy. This is what we want now; and this is what is to be got from
+psychology. There is not a single thing between heaven and earth that
+does not admit of a mental expression; or, in other words, possess a
+subjective aspect, and therefore come under psychology.
+
+This, in briefest outline, is a sketch of the "strong meat" offered to
+the psychological ladies. A single branch of psychology--that, namely,
+of the intellect, excluding that of feeling and action--is to occupy ten
+lectures, the above being number one. The other twenty will be devoted
+to logic.
+
+The next lecture was devoted to an examination of the brain and nervous
+system, and their office in mental processes. Alas, however, how
+different was now the audience! Only some thirty ladies--scarcely more
+than one-tenth of those who were present at the opening lecture--have
+permanently entered for the course. It is no disrespect to the ladies to
+hazard the conjecture whether the subject be not a little out of range
+for the present. We are moving ahead rapidly, and many foolish ideas as
+to the intellectual differences of the sexes are becoming obsolete. We
+have literary and artistic ladies by thousands. Scientific ladies, in
+the ordinary acceptation of the term, are coming well to the front.
+Possibly we may have to "wait a little longer" before we get, on
+anything like a large scale, psychological or even logical ladies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+SECULARISM ON BUNYAN.
+
+
+It is very marvellous to observe the number of strange and unexpected
+combinations that are continually occurring in that moral kaleidoscope
+we call society. I do not suppose that I am exceptional in coming across
+these; nor do I use any particular industry in seeking them out. They
+come to me; all I do is to keep my eyes open, and note the impressions
+they make on me. I was humbly pursuing my way one Tuesday evening
+towards the abode of a phrenologist with the honest intention of
+discovering my craniological condition, when, in passing down Castle
+Street, Oxford Market, I was made aware that Mr. G. J. Holyoake was
+there and then to deliver himself on the "Literary Genius of Bunyan."
+This was one of the incongruous combinations I spoke of; and forthwith I
+passed into the Co-operative Hall, resolving to defer my visit to the
+phrenologist. There are some facts of which it is better to remain
+contentedly ignorant; and I have no doubt my own mental condition
+belongs to that category.
+
+I found the Co-operative Hall a handsome and commodious building; and a
+very fair audience had gathered to listen to Mr. Holyoake, who is an
+elderly thin-voiced man, and his delivery was much impeded on the
+occasion in question by the circumstance of his having a bad cold and
+cough. After a brief extempore allusion to the fact of the Duke of
+Bedford having erected a statue to Bunyan, which he regarded as a sort
+of compensation for his Grace ceasing to subscribe to the races, Mr.
+Holyoake proceeded to read his treatise, which he had written on several
+slips of paper--apparently backs of circulars--and laid one by one on a
+chair as he finished them.
+
+The world, he said, is a big place; but people are always forgetting
+what a variety of humanity it contains. Two hundred years ago, the
+authorities of Bedford made it very unpleasant for one John Bunyan,
+because they thought they knew everything, and could not imagine that a
+common street workman might know more. The trade of a tinker seems an
+unpromising preparation for a literary career. A tinker in Bedford
+to-day would not find himself much flattered by the attentions paid him,
+especially if he happened to be an old gaol-bird as well. So much the
+more creditable to Bunyan the ascendancy he gained. If he mended pots as
+well as he made sentences he was the best tinker that ever travelled.
+
+Bunyan had no worldly notions. His doctrine was that men were not saved
+by any good they might do--a doctrine that would ruin the morals of any
+commercial establishment in a month! He declared himself the "chief of
+sinners;" but judged by his townsmen he was a stout-hearted,
+stout-minded, scrupulous man.
+
+He was not a pleasant man to know. He had an unrelenting sincerity which
+often turned into severity. Yet he had much tenderness. He had a soul
+like a Red Indian's--all tomahawk and truth, until the literary passion
+came and added humour to it. He demands in his vigorous doggerel:--
+
+ May I not write in such a style as this,
+ In such a method, too, and yet not miss
+ My end, thy good? Why may it not be done?
+ Dark clouds bring waters, when the bright bring none.
+
+Like all men of original genius, this stout-minded pot-mender had
+unbounded confidence in himself. He was under no delusion as to his own
+powers. No man knew better what he was about. He could take the measure
+of all the justices about him, and he knew it. Every shallow-headed
+gentleman in Bedfordshire towns and villages was made to wince under his
+picturesque and satiric tongue. To clergymen, bishops, lawyers, and
+judges he gave names which all his neighbours knew. Mr. Pitiless, Mr.
+Hardheart, Mr. Forget-good, Mr. No-truth, Mr. Haughty--thus he named the
+disagreeable dignitaries of the town of Mansoul.
+
+At first he was regarded by his "pastors and masters" as a mere wilful,
+noisy, praying sectary. Very soon they discovered that he was a
+fighting preacher. As tinker or Christian he always had his sleeves
+turned up. When he had to try his own cause he put in the jury-box Mr.
+True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. See-Truth, and other amiable
+persons. His witnesses were Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, Mr. Hate-Lies,
+Mr. Vouch-Truth, Mr. Did-See. His Town Clerk was Mr. Do-Right, the
+Recorder was Mr. Conscience, the gaoler was Mr. True-Man, Lord
+Understanding was on the bench, and the Judge bears the dainty name of
+the "Golden-headed Prince."
+
+Bunyan's adversaries are always a bad set. They live in Villain's Lane,
+in Blackmouth Street, or Blasphemer's Row, or Drunkard's Alley, or
+Rascal's Corner. They are the sons of one Beastly, whose mother bore
+them in Flesh Square: they live at the house of one Shameless, at the
+sign of the Reprobate, next door to the Descent into the Pit, whose
+retainers are Mr. Flatter, Mr. Impiety, Mr. False-Peace, Mr.
+Covetousness, who are housed by one Mr. Simple, in Folly's Yard.
+
+Bunyan had a perfect wealth of sectarian scurrility at his command. His
+epithets are at times unquotable and ferocious. When, however, his
+friends are at the bar, the witnesses against them comprise the choicest
+scoundrels of all time--Mr. Envy, Mr. Pick-thank, and others, whose
+friends are Lord Carnal-Delight, Lord Luxurious, Lord Lechery, Sir
+Having Greedy, and similar villanous people of quality. The Judge's
+name is now Lord Hate-Good. The Jury consist of Mr. No-Good, Mr. Malice,
+Mr. Love-Lust, Mr. Live-Loose, Mr. Heady, Mr. Hate-Light, Mr. Enmity,
+Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, and Mr. Implacable, with Mr. Blindman for
+Foreman.
+
+Never was such an infamous gang impanelled. Rancour and rage and
+vindictiveness, and every passion awakened in the breasts of the strong
+by local insolence and legal injustice, is supplied by Bunyan with
+epithets of immense retaliative force. He is the greatest name-maker
+among authors. He was a spiritual Comanche. He prayed like a savage. He
+said himself, when describing the art of the religious rhetorician--an
+art of which he was the greatest master of his time:--
+
+ You see the ways the fisherman doth take
+ To catch the fish; what engines doth he make!
+ Behold! how he engageth all his wits,
+ Also his snares, lines, angles, hooks, and nets;
+ Yet fish there be that neither hook nor line,
+ Nor snare, nor net, nor engine can make thine;
+ They must be grop'd for, and be tickled too,
+ Or they will not be catch'd, whate'er you do.
+
+Bunyan never tickled the sinner. It was not his way. He carried a prong.
+He pricked the erring. He published a pamphlet to suggest what ought to
+be done to holy pedestrians, whose difficulties lay rearward. He put
+detonating balls under their feet which exploded as they stepped and
+alarmed them along. He lined the celestial road with horrors. If they
+turned their heads they saw a fiend worse than Lot's wife who was merely
+changed into a pillar of sweet all-preserving salt. Bunyan's unfortunate
+converts who looked back fell into a pit filled with fire, where they
+howled and burnt for evermore.
+
+Ah! with what pleasure must the great Bedfordshire artist have
+contemplated his masterly pages as day by day he added to them the
+portrait of some new scoundrel, or painted with dexterous and loving
+hand the wholesome outlines of some honest man, or devised some new
+phrase which like a new note or new colour would delight singer or
+painter for generations yet to come. He must have strode proudly along
+his cell as he put his praise and his scorn into imperishable similes.
+
+But Bunyan had never been great had he been merely disagreeable. He had
+infinite wit in him. It was his carnal genius that saved him. He wrote
+sixty books, and two of them--the "Siege of the Town of Mansoul" and the
+"Pilgrim's Progress"--exceed all ever written for creative swiftness of
+imagination, racy English speech, sentences of literary art, cunningness
+in dialogue, satire, ridicule, and surpassing knowledge of the
+picturesque ways of the obscure minds of common men. In his pages men
+rise out of the ground--they always come up on an open space so that
+they can be seen. They talk naturally, so that you know them at once;
+and they act without delay, so that you never forget them. They
+surprise you, delight you, they interest you, they instruct you, and
+disappear. They never linger, they never weary you. Incidents new and
+strange arise at every step in his story. The scene changes like the men
+and their adventures. Now it is field or morass, plain or bypath, bog or
+volcano, castle or cottage, sandy scorching desert or cold river; the
+smoke of the bottomless pit or bright, verdant, delectable mountains and
+enchanted lands where there are no bishops, no gaols, and no tinkers;
+where aboundeth grapes, calico, brides, eternal conversation, and
+trumpets. The great magician's genius forsakes him when he comes to the
+unknown regions, and he knoweth no more than the rest of us. But while
+his foot is on the earth he steps like a king among writers. His
+Christian is no fool. He is cunning of fence, suspicious, sagacious,
+witty, satirical, abounding in invective, and broad, bold, delicious
+insolence. Bye-Ends is a subtle, evasive knave drawn with infinite
+skill.
+
+Had Bunyan merely preached the Gospel he had no more been remembered
+than thousands of his day who are gratefully forgotten--had he prayed to
+this time he had won no statue; but his literary genius lives when the
+preacher is very dead.
+
+He saw with such vividness that the very passions and wayward moods of
+men stood apart and distinct in his sight, and he gave names to them and
+endowed them with their natural speech. He created new men out of
+characteristics of mind, and sent them into the world in shapes so
+defined and palpable that men know them for evermore. It was the way of
+his age for writers to give names to their adversaries. Bunyan imitated
+this in his life of Mr. Badman. Others did this, but Bunyan did it
+better than any man. His invention was marvellous, and he had besides
+the faculty of the dramatist.
+
+If any man wrote the adventures of a Co-operator, he would have to tell
+of his meeting with Mr. Obstinate, who will not listen to him, and wants
+to pull him back. We all get the company of Mr. Pliable, who is
+persuaded without being convinced, who at the first splash into
+difficulty crawls out and turns back with a cowardly adroitness. We have
+all encountered the stupidity of Mr. Ignorance, which nothing can
+enlighten. We know Mr. Turnaway, who comes from the town of Apostacy,
+whose face we cannot perfectly see. Others merely gave names, he drew
+characters, he made the qualities of his men speak; you knew them by
+their minds better than by their dress. That is why succeeding ages have
+read the "Pilgrim's Progress," because the same people who met that
+extraordinary traveller are always turning up in the way of every man
+who has a separate and a high purpose, and is bent upon carrying it out.
+Manners change, but humanity has still its old ways. It is because
+Bunyan painted these that his writing lasts like a picture by one of the
+old masters who painted for all time.
+
+Such is an outline of the paper, which was interesting from its
+associations, and only spoilt by the cough. We had had Bunyan in pretty
+well every shape possible during the last few weeks. Certainly one of
+the most original is this which presents the man of unbounded faith in
+the light of utter scepticism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AL FRESCO INFIDELITY.
+
+
+In a series of papers like the present it is necessary, every now and
+then, to pause and apologize, either for the nature of the work in
+general, or for certain particulars in its execution calculated to shock
+good people whose feelings one would wish to respect. Having so long been
+engaged in the study of infidelity in London, I may, perhaps, be
+permitted to speak with something like authority in the matter; and I
+have no hesitation in saying that I believe the policy of shirking the
+subject is the most fatal and foolish one that could be adopted. Not only
+does such a course inspire people, especially young people, with the idea
+that there is something very fascinating in infidelity--something which,
+if allowed to meet their gaze, would be sure to attract and convince
+them--than which nothing is farther from the truth--not only so, however,
+but many of the statements and most of the arguments which sound
+plausibly enough on the glib tongue of a popular speaker read very
+differently indeed, when put down in cold-blooded letter-press, and
+published in the pages of a book. I protest strongly against making a
+mystery of London infidelity. It has spread and is spreading, I know,
+and it is well the public should know; but I believe there would be no
+such antidote to it as for people to be fully made aware how and where it
+is spreading. That is the rôle I have all along proposed to myself: not
+to declaim against any man or any system, not to depreciate or disguise
+the truth, but simply to describe. I cannot imagine a more legitimate
+method of doing my work.
+
+I suppose no one will regard it in any way as an indulgence or a luxury
+on the part of a clergyman, who be it remembered, is, during a portion
+of the Sunday, engaged in ministering to Christian people, that he
+should devote another portion of that day to hearing Christ vilified,
+and having his own creed torn to pieces. I myself feel that my own
+belief is not shaken, but in a tenfold degree confirmed by all I have
+heard and seen and written of infidelity; and therefore I cannot concede
+the principle that to convey my experiences to others is in any way
+dangerous. Take away the halo of mystery that surrounds this subject,
+and it would possess very slender attractions indeed.
+
+It was, for instance, on what has always appeared to me among the most
+affecting epochs of our Christian year, the Fifth Sunday after
+Easter--Christ's last Sunday upon earth--that, by one of those violent
+antitheses, I went to Gibraltar Walk, Bethnal Green Road, to hear Mr.
+Ramsey there demolish the very system which, for many years, it has
+been my mission to preach. I did not find, and I hope my congregation
+did not find, that I faltered in my message that evening. I even venture
+to think that Mr. Ramsey's statements, which I shall repeat as
+faithfully as possible, will scarcely seem as convincing here as they
+did when he poured them forth so fluently to the costermongers and
+navvies of the Bethnal Green Road; and if this be true of Mr. Ramsey it
+is certainly so of the smaller men; for he is a master in his craft, and
+certainly a creditable antagonist for a Christian to meet with the mild
+defensive weapons we have elected to use.
+
+When the weather proves fine, as it ought to have done in May, 1874,
+infidelity adjourns from its generally slummy halls to the street
+corners, and to fields which are often the reverse of green; thus
+adopting, let me remark in passing, one of the oldest instrumentalities
+of Christianity itself, one, too, in which we shall do well to follow
+its example. Fas est ab hoste doceri--I cannot repeat too often.
+Scorning the attractions of the railway arches in the St. Pancras Road,
+where I hope soon to be a listener, I sped viâ the Metropolitan Railway
+and tram to Shoreditch Church, not far from which, past the Columbia
+Market and palatial Model Lodging Houses, is the unpicturesque corner
+called Gibraltar Walk, debouching from the main road, with a triangular
+scrap of very scrubby ground, flanked by a low wall, which young
+Bethnal Green is rapidly erasing from the face of the earth. When I got
+here, I found an unclerical-looking gentleman in a blue great-coat and
+sandy moustache erecting his rostrum in the shape of a small deal stool,
+from whence I could see he was preparing to pour forth the floods of his
+rhetoric by diligent study of some exceedingly greasy notes which he
+held in his hand and perused at what I feel sure must have been the
+windiest street corner procurable outside the cave of Æolus. I fell back
+into the small but very far from select crowd which had already begun to
+gather, and an old man, who was unmistakably a cobbler, having
+ascertained that I had come to hear the lecture, told me he had
+"listened to a good many of 'em, but did not feel much for'arder."
+Undismayed by this intelligence I still elected to tarry, despite the
+cruel nor'-easter that was whistling round the corner of the Bethnal
+Green Road. In a few minutes I perceived a slight excitement in the
+small gathering due to the fact that the Christians had put in an
+appearance, so that there would be some opposition. Mr. Harrington, a
+young man whom I had heard once speak fluently enough on the theistic
+side at an infidel meeting, was unpacking his rostrum, which was a
+patent folding one, made of deal, like that of his adversary, but neatly
+folded along with a large Bible, inside a green baize case. Both
+gentlemen commenced proceedings at the same time; and as they had
+pitched their stools very close to one another, the result was very
+much like that of two grinding organs in the same street. Of the two,
+Mr. Harrington's voice was louder than Mr. Ramsey's. The latter
+gentleman had a sore throat, and had to be kept lubricated by means of a
+jug of water, which a brother heretic held ready at his elbow. Mr.
+Harrington was in prime condition, but his congregation was smaller than
+ours; for I kept at first--I was going to say religiously, I suppose I
+ought to say _ir_-religiously--to the infidels.
+
+Mr. Ramsey, who had a rooted aversion to the letter "h," except where a
+smooth breathing is usual, began by saying that Christianity differed
+from other religions in the fact of its having an eternal 'Ell. The
+Mahometans had their beautiful ladies; the North American Indian looked
+for his 'Appy 'Unting Grounds; but 'Ell was a speciality of the
+Christian system. On the other side was the fact that you continually
+had salvation inundated upon you. Tracts were put into your hand,
+asking--"What must I do to be saved?" We had to pay for this salvation
+about _11,000,000l._ a year to the Church of England, and something like
+an equal amount to the Dissenters. In fact every tub-thumper went about
+preaching and ruining servant girls, and for this we paid over twenty
+millions a year--more than the interest on the whole National Debt.
+After this elegant exordium, Mr. Ramsey said he proposed to divide his
+remarks under four heads. 1. Is Salvation necessary? 2. What are we to
+be saved from? 3. What for? 4. How?
+
+1. According to the Christian theory, God, after an eternity of "doin'
+nothin'," created the world. He made Adam sin by making sin for him to
+commit; and then damned him for doing what He knew he would do. He
+predestined you--the audience--to be damned because of Adam's sin; but
+after a time God "got sick and tired of damning people," and sent His
+Son to redeem mankind.
+
+This flower of rhetoric tickled Bethnal Green immensely; but Mr.
+Harrington was equal to the occasion, and thundered out his orthodoxy so
+successfully that Mr. Ramsey took a longer drink than usual, and
+complained that he was not having "a free platform"--it was so he
+dignified the rickety stool on which he was perched. He then meandered
+into a long dissection of Genesis i., appearing to feel particularly
+aggrieved by the fact of the moon being said to "rule the night," though
+I could not see how this was relevant to the Christian scheme of
+salvation; and a superb policeman, who had listened for a moment to Mr.
+Ramsey's astronomical lucubrations, evidently shared my feelings and
+passed on superciliously. I devoutly wished my duty had permitted me to
+do the same.
+
+The speaker then went into a long dissertation on the primal sin; the
+gist of which was that though the woman had never been warned not to eat
+of the Forbidden Fruit, she had to bear the brunt of the punishment.
+Then--though one is almost ashamed to chronicle such a triviality--he
+waxed very wroth because the serpent was spoken of as being cursed above
+all "cattle." Who ever heard of snakes being called cattle? He was
+condemned to go on his belly. How did he go before? Did he go on his
+back or "'op" along on the tip of his tail? These pleasantries drew all
+Mr. Harrington's audience away except a few little dirty boys on the
+wall. Mr. Ramsey clearly knew his audience, and "acted to the gallery."
+
+2. But what were we to be saved from? Eternal 'Ell-fire. This 'Ell-fire
+was favourite sauce for sermons, and served to keep people awake. Where
+was 'Ell? It was said to be a bottomless pit; if so, he should be all
+right, because he could get out at the other end! Then, again, 'Ell was
+said to be a very 'ot place. When the missionaries told the Greenlanders
+that, everybody wanted to go to 'Ell; so they had to change their tune
+and say it was very cold. Mr. Ramsey omitted to mention his authority
+for this statement.
+
+Into his pleasantries on the monotony of life in 'Eaven, I do not feel
+inclined to follow this gentleman. The Atonement, he went on to remark,
+if necessary at all, came 4000 years too late. It should have been--so
+we were to believe on his ipse dixit--contemporaneous with the Fall.
+This atonement we were to avail ourselves of by means of faith. Idiots
+could not have faith, but were allowed to be saved. Consequently, argued
+Mr. Ramsey, in conclusion, the best thing for all of us would have been
+to have been born idiots, and, consistently enough, Christianity tried
+to turn us all into idiots.
+
+Such were some of the statements. I refrain from quoting the most
+offensive, which were deliberately put forward at this al fresco
+infidels' meeting; and with what result? Though a vast population kept
+moving to and fro along that great highway there were never, I am sure,
+more than a hundred people gathered at the shrine of Mr. Ramsey. They
+laughed at his profanities, yes; but directly he dropped these, and grew
+argumentative, they talked, and had to be vigorously reduced to order.
+Gallio-like they cared for none of these things, and I am quite sure a
+good staff of working clergy, men like Mr. Body or Mr. Steele of St.
+Thomas's, who could talk to the people, would annihilate Mr. Ramsey's
+prestige. As for Mr. Harrington, he meant well, and had splendid
+lung-power, but his theology was too sectarian to suit a mixed body of
+listeners embracing all shades of thought and no-thought.
+
+Supposing Mr. Ramsey to have put forth all his power that morning--and I
+have no reason to doubt that he did so--I deliberately say that I should
+not hesitate to take my own boy down to hear him, because I feel that
+even his immature mind would be able to realize how little there was to
+be said against Christianity, if that were all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+AN "INDESCRIBABLE PHENOMENON."
+
+
+When the bulk of the London Press elects to gush over anything or
+anybody, there are at all events, primâ facie grounds for believing that
+there is something to justify such a consensus. When, moreover, the
+object of such gush is a young lady claiming to be a spirit-medium, the
+unanimity is so unusual as certainly to make the matter worth the most
+careful inquiry, for hitherto the London Press has either denounced
+spiritualism altogether, or gushed singly over individual mediums,
+presumably according to the several proclivities of the correspondents.
+Of Miss Annie Eva Fay, however--is not the very name fairy-like and
+fascinating?--I read in one usually sober-minded journal that "there is
+something not of this earth about the young lady's powers." Another
+averred that she was "a spirit medium of remarkable and extraordinary
+power." Others, more cautious, described the "mystery" as "bewildering,"
+the "entertainment" as "extraordinary and incomprehensible," while yet
+another seemed to me to afford an index to the cause of this gush by
+saying that "Miss Fay is a pretty young lady of about twenty, with a
+delicate spirituelle face, and a profusion of light hair, frizzled on
+the forehead."
+
+I made a point of attending Miss Annie Eva Fay's opening performance at
+the Hanover Square Rooms, and found all true enough as to the pretty
+face and the frizzled hair. Of the "indescribable" nature of the
+"phenomenon" (for by that title is Miss Fay announced, à la Vincent
+Crummles) there may be two opinions, according as we regard the young
+lady as a kind of Delphic Priestess and Cumæan Sibyl rolled into one, or
+simply a clever conjuror--conjuress, if there be such a word.
+
+Let me, then, with that delightful inconsistency so often brought to
+bear on the so-called or self-styled "supernatural," first describe the
+"indescribable," and then, in the language of the unspiritual Dr. Lynn,
+tell how it is all done; for, of course, I found it all out, like a
+great many others of the enlightened and select audience which gathered
+at Miss Annie Eva Fay's first drawing-room reception in the Queen's
+Concert Rooms.
+
+Arriving at the door half an hour too early, as I had misread the time
+of commencement, I found at the portal Mr. Burns, of the Progressive
+Library, and a gentleman with a diamond brooch in his shirt-front, whom
+I guessed at once, from that adornment, to be the proprietor of the
+indescribable phenomenon, and I was, in fact, immediately introduced to
+him as Colonel Fay.
+
+Passing in due course within the cavernous room which might have suited
+well a Cumæan Sibyl on a small scale, I found the platform occupied by a
+tiny cabinet, unlike that of the Davenports in that it was open in
+front, with a green curtain, which I could see was destined to be let
+down during the performance of the phenomenal manifestations. There was
+a camp-stool inside the cabinet; a number of cane-bottomed chairs on the
+platform, and also the various properties of a spirit séance, familiar
+to me from long experience, guitar, fiddle, handbells, tambourine, &c.
+One adjunct alone was new; and that was a green stable bucket, destined,
+I could not doubt, to figure in what my Rimmel-scented programme
+promised as the climax of Part I.--the "Great Pail Sensation." Presently
+Colonel Fay, in a brief speech, nasal but fluent, introduced the
+subject, and asked two gentlemen to act as a Committee of Inspection.
+Two stepped forward immediately--indeed too immediately, as the result
+proved; one a "citizen of this city," as Colonel Fay had requested; but
+the other a Hindoo young gentleman, who, I believe, lost the confidence
+of the audience at once from his foreign face and Oriental garb.
+However, they were first to the front, and so were elected, and
+proceeded at once to "examine" the cabinet in that obviously helpless
+and imperfect way common to novices who work with the gaze of an
+audience upon them. Then, from a side door, stage left, enter the
+Indescribable Phenomenon. A pretty young lady, yes, and with light
+frizzled hair to any extent. There was perhaps "a spirit look within her
+eyes;" but then I have often found this to be the case with young ladies
+of twenty. Her dress of light silk was beyond reproach. I had seen
+Florence Cook and Miss Showers lately; and,--well, I thought those two,
+with the assistance of Miss Annie Eva Fay, would have made a very pretty
+model for a statuette of the Three Graces.
+
+Miss Fay, after being described by the Colonel vaguely enough as "of the
+United States," was bound on both wrists with strips of calico; the
+knots were sewn by the European gentleman--as distinguished from the
+Asiatic youth. He was not quite au fait at the needle, but got through
+it in time. Miss Fay was then placed on the camp-stool, her wrists
+fastened behind her, and her neck also secured to a ring screwed into
+the back of the cabinet. A rope was tied round her ankles, and passed
+right to the front of the stage, where the Hindoo youth was located and
+bidden hold it taut, which he did conscientiously, his attitude being
+what Colman describes "like some fat gentleman who bobbed for eels."
+
+First of all, another strip of calico was placed loosely round Miss
+Fay's neck; the curtain descended. Hey, presto! it was up again, sooner
+than it takes to write, and this strip was knotted doubly and trebly
+round her neck. A tambourine hoop was put in her lap, and this, in like
+manner, was found encircling her neck, as far as the effervescent hair
+would allow it.
+
+The audience at this point grew a little fidgety; and though they did
+not say anything against the Oriental young gentleman, the 'cute
+American colonel understood it, adding two others from the audience to
+the committee on the stage, and leaving the young gentleman to "bob"
+down below as if to keep him out of mischief.
+
+The other "manifestations" were really only different in detail from the
+first. The guitar was placed on the lap, the curtain fell and it played;
+so did the fiddle--out of tune, as usual--and also a little glass
+harmonicon with actually a soupçon of melody. A mouth-organ
+tootle-tooed, and what Colonel Fay described as a "shingle nail" was
+driven with a hammer into a piece of wood. A third of a tumbler of water
+laid on the lap of the Indescribable Phenomenon was drunk, and the great
+Pail Sensation consisted in the bucket being put on her lap and then
+discovered slung by the handle around her neck. The last "manifestation"
+is the one to which I would draw attention; for it was by this I
+discovered how it was all done. A knife was put on Miss Fay's lap; the
+curtain lowered, the knife pitched on to the platform, and behold the
+Indescribable Phenomenon stepped from the cabinet with the ligature that
+had bound her wrists and neck severed.
+
+Now, all through this portion of the entertainment the audience,
+instead of sitting quiet, amused themselves with proposing idiotic
+tests, or suggesting audibly how it was all done. One man behind me
+pertinaciously clung to the theory of a concealed boy, and trotted him
+to the front after every phase of the exhibition. He must have been
+infinitesimally small; but that did not matter. It was "that boy again"
+after every trick. One manifestation consisted in putting a piece of
+paper and pair of scissors on Miss Fay's lap, and having several "tender
+little infants" cut out, as the Colonel phrased it.
+
+Hereupon sprang up a 'cute individual in the room, and produced a sheet
+of paper he had marked. Would Miss Fay cut out a tender little infant
+from that? Miss Fay consented, and of course did it, the 'cute
+individual retiring into private life for the rest of the evening.
+Another wanted Miss Fay's mouth to be bound with a handkerchief, and
+there was no objection raised, until the common-sense and humanity of
+the audience protested against such a needless cruelty on a broiling
+night and in that Cumæan cave. An excited gentleman in front of me, too,
+whose mission I fancy was simply to protest against the spiritual
+character of the phenomena (which was never asserted) would interrupt us
+all from time to time by declaring his intense satisfaction with it all.
+It was a splendid trick. We tried to convince him that his individual
+satisfaction was irrelevant to us, but it was, as Wordsworth says,
+"Throwing words away." It was a beautiful trick; and he was satisfied,
+quite satisfied.
+
+The Dark Séance, which formed the second part of the performance, was a
+dreadful mistake. It was not only unsatisfactory in result, but--and no
+doubt this was the reason--it was so mismanaged as to threaten more than
+once to eventuate in a riot. Twelve or fourteen persons were to form a
+committee representing the audience, and to sit in a circle, with the
+Indescribable Phenomenon in their centre, while we remained below in
+Egyptian darkness and received their report. Of course we all felt that
+we--if not on the committee--might just as well be sitting at home or in
+the next parish as in the cave of Cumæ. The method of electing the
+committee was briefly stated by Colonel Fay to be "first come first
+served," and the consequence was a rush of some fifty excited people on
+to the platform, with earnest requests on the part of the proprietary to
+be "still." There was no more stillness for the rest of the evening. The
+fifty were pruned down to about fifteen of the most pertinacious, who
+would not move at any price; in fact, the others only descended on being
+promised that the dark sitting should be divided into two, and another
+committee appointed. The Indescribable Phenomenon took her seat on the
+camp-stool in the centre, where she was to remain clapping her hands, to
+show she was not producing the manifestations. The gas was put out and
+darkness prevailed--darkness, but not silence. The disappointed and
+rejected committee men--and women--first began to grumble in the freedom
+which the darkness secured. The committee was a packed one. They were
+Spiritualists. This was vigorously denied by somebody, who said he saw a
+Press man in the circle, and therefore (such was his logic) he could not
+be a Spiritualist. All this time the Indescribable Phenomenon was
+clapping her hands, and now some of the more restless of the audience
+clapped theirs in concert. The guitar and fiddle began to thump and
+twang, and the bells to ring, and then again the more refractory
+lunatics amongst us began to beat accompaniment on our hats. The whole
+affair was worthy of Bedlam or Hanwell, or, let us add, an Indescribable
+Phenomenon.
+
+The committee was changed with another rush, and those who were finally
+exiled from the hope of sitting took it out in the subsequent darkness
+by advising us to "beware of our pockets." When Colonel Fay asked for
+quietude he was rudely requested "not to talk through his nose." It was
+not to be wondered at that the séance was very brief, and the meeting
+adjourned.
+
+Now to describe the indescribable. If it be a spiritual manifestation,
+of course there is an end of the matter; but if a mere conjuring trick,
+I would call attention to the following facts. The fastening of Miss
+Fay's neck to the back of the cabinet at first is utterly gratuitous. It
+offers no additional difficulty to any manifestations, and appears only
+intended to prevent the scrutineers seeing behind her. A very simple
+exercise of sleight of hand would enable the gallant Colonel to cut the
+one ligature that binds the two wrists, when, for instance, he goes into
+the cabinet with scissors to trim off the ends of the piece of calico in
+the opening trick. The hands being once free all else is easy. The hands
+are _never once seen_ during the performance. The committee can feel
+them, and feel the knots at the wrists; but they cannot discover whether
+the ligature connecting the wrists is entire.
+
+The last trick, be it recollected, consists in the ligature being cut
+and Miss Fay's coming free to the front. If my theory is incorrect--and
+no doubt it _is_ ruinously wrong--will she consent to _omit the last
+trick_ and come to the front with wrists bound as she entered the
+cabinet? Of course, if I had suggested it, she would have done it as
+easily as she cut out the tender infants for the 'cute gentleman behind
+me; so, to adopt the language of Miss Fay's fellow-citizen, I "bit in my
+breath and swallered it down." I adopted the course Mr. Maskelyne told
+me he did with the Davenports, sat with my eyes open and my mouth shut.
+It is marvellous to see how excited we phlegmatic islanders grow when
+either spirits are brought to the front, or we think we have found out a
+conjuring trick. I am not going to follow the example of my gushing
+brethren, but I can safely say that if anybody has an afternoon or
+evening to spare, he may do worse than go to the Crystal Palace or the
+Hanover Square Rooms, to see a very pretty and indescribable phenomenon,
+and to return as I did, a wiser, though perhaps a sadder man, in the
+proud consciousness of having "found out how it is all done."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A LADY MESMERIST.
+
+
+When a man's whole existence has resolved itself into hunting up strange
+people and poking his nose into queer nooks and corners, he has a sorry
+time of it in London during August; for, as a rule, all the funny folks
+have gone out of town, and the queer nooks and corners are howling
+wildernesses. There is always, of course, a sort of borderland, if he
+can only find it out, some peculiar people who never go out of town,
+some strange localities which are still haunted by them; only he has to
+find them out--people and places--for it is so universally allowed
+now-a-days that all genteel people must be out of London in August, and
+all respectable places must be covered up in old newspapers, that it is
+difficult to get them to own the soft impeachment.
+
+However, there is one queer place that is never shut up, the Progressive
+Library in Southampton Row; and Mr. Burns and the Spiritualists, as a
+rule, do not shut up shop even in August. Their Summerland lies
+elsewhere than Margate or the Moors; and a valse with a pirouetting
+table or a little gentle levitation or elongation delights them more
+than all the revels of the countryside. I was getting a little blasé, I
+own, on the subject of Spiritualism after my protracted experiences
+during the Conference, and I do not think I should have turned my steps
+in the direction of the Progressive Institution that week had not the
+following announcement caught my eye as I scanned the ghostly pages of
+the _Medium and Daybreak_:--
+
+ "A MESMERIC SÉANCE.
+
+ "We have been authorized to announce that Miss Chandos,
+ whose advertisement appears in another part of this paper,
+ will give a mesmeric séance at the Spiritual Institution,
+ 15, Southampton Row, on Wednesday evening, August 19th, at
+ eight o'clock. Admission will be free by ticket, which may
+ be obtained at the Institution. The object which Miss
+ Chandos has in view is to interest a few truth-seekers who
+ could aid her in promoting a knowledge of psychological
+ phenomena. As a crowded meeting is not desired, an early
+ application should be made for tickets."
+
+I do not know that I said "Eureka!" Indeed I have considerable historic
+doubts as to whether anybody ever did, but I felt it. I was a
+truth-seeker forthwith. I resolved to sit at the feet of Miss Chandos,
+and, should her mesmeric efforts prove satisfactory, "aid her in
+promoting a knowledge of psychological phenomena." I did not go through
+the prescribed process of getting a ticket beforehand, because I
+thought in my innocence that everybody would be out of town, or that the
+Hall of the Progressive Institute would certainly accommodate those who
+remained. Never was a more fatal mistake. The psychological folks were
+all in London, and the capacities of the Progressive Library are not
+palatial. Miss Chandos had a crowded meeting whether she desired it or
+not. Genius will not be concealed; and Miss Chandos was learning that
+lesson in a very satisfactory way. It was a sultry evening when a small
+boy opened the back door of the little first floor apartment in
+Southampton Row, and squeezed me in like the thirteenth in an omnibus,
+and I found myself walking on people's toes, and sitting down on their
+hats in the most reckless manner. At length, however, I struggled to a
+vacant corner, and deposited myself perspiring and expectant.
+
+Mr. Burns was "orating" on the revival mesmerism was destined to make,
+and telling us how, like the Plumstead Peculiars, we should be able to
+do without doctors as soon as the healing powers of animal magnetism
+were properly recognised and diffused. I did not listen very carefully,
+I fear, for I was nervously looking about for Miss Chandos. Nervously, I
+say, because lady mediums and mesmerizers are so apt to run to eighteen
+stone, or be old and frumpish, that I had terrible fears lest I should
+be scared when I met Miss Chandos in the flesh. I was very agreeably
+surprised, however, for when Mr. Burns resumed--not his chair but his
+table, since he sat on that article of furniture, a very pretty young
+lady indeed, of not more than eighteen or twenty years of age, took his
+place, and, in a few well-chosen words, said this was her first
+appearance as a public mesmerist, and claimed indulgence should any
+failure in the phenomena result. She also drew attention to the fact
+that the apartment was "pernicious snug" (she put it, of course, in more
+scientific language), and straightway proceeded to business.
+
+When Miss Chandos invited patients to put themselves in her hands I
+thought the room had risen en masse. Everybody wanted to be mesmerized.
+I had no chance in my retired position; but she soon got a front row of
+likely people, and I sat down once more disappointed and exuding.
+
+She was a tall active young lady was Miss Chandos, and had a mystic crop
+of long black curls, which waved about like the locks of a sibyl when
+she made a lunge at an innocent looking young man who sat No. 1--and
+whom, with the other patients, I shall designate thus numerically. He
+seemed to like it immensely, and smiled a fatuous smile as those taper
+fingers lighted on his head, while the other hand rested on the frontal
+portion of his face, as though Miss Chandos were going to pull his nose.
+He was off in a moment, and sat facing the audience in his magnetic
+trance, looking like a figure at a waxwork show. Miss Chandos then
+passed on to a gentleman, No. 2, who never succumbed during the entire
+evening, though she made several onslaughts upon him. Consequently I
+dismiss No. 2 as incorrigible forthwith. No. 3 was a lady who only gave
+way after a lengthened attack, and did not seem to appreciate the effect
+of Miss Chandos' lustrous eyes so much as No. 1 did. He gave signs of
+"coming to," but Miss Chandos kept looking round at him and No. 2, while
+she was attending to No. 3, and directly she did this No. 1 closed his
+eyes, and slept the sleep of innocence again.
+
+Having reduced No. 3 to a comatose condition Miss Chandos reverted to
+No. 1, and by attractive passes got him on his legs and made him follow
+her up and down the limited space at her disposal. She looked then like
+a pretty Vivien manipulating a youthful Merlin; and I was not at all
+surprised at the effect of her "woven paces and her waving hands." She
+asked him his name, and he told her. It was W----. "No," she said, "it's
+Jones. Mary Jones. What's your name?" But the youth was not quite so far
+gone as to rebaptize himself with a female cognomen just yet. He stuck
+to his W., and Miss Chandos put him into his waxwork position again, and
+got No. 3 on her legs at last, but did nothing more with her than make
+her walk up and down. Presently No. 3 woke up, and was put to air at the
+window.
+
+No. 4 was now selected, in the person of a big burly man; and I could
+not help thinking, as she manipulated him, what a capital pose it would
+have been for Hercules and Omphale. He seemed to like it exceedingly,
+and I thought was dropping comfortably off when he whispered something
+to his operator (I have no notion what the feminine of that word is),
+who fixed her brilliant eyes on somebody near me--I feared it was
+actually on me--and said, "Somebody at the back of the room is
+exercising control. I shall be glad if they will refrain." I was quite
+innocent of exercising conscious control, and did not quite know what
+the phrase meant. I certainly had once or twice thought it must be much
+pleasanter to be operated upon by so pretty a young lady than by some
+bull-necked male mesmerist or aged spinster above-mentioned, but I could
+scarcely believe that such a mild sentiment could affect that colossal
+man. However, I recollected the delicacy of these psychological
+relations, and sat down conscience-stricken and warmer than ever.
+
+Miss Chandos selected No. 5 in the person of a young man with a nascent
+moustache, who had successfully struggled into the front row at the
+outset. He promised well at first; but, like other young men with
+incipient moustaches, disappointed us afterwards. Then came No. 6 upon
+the scene.
+
+No. 6 was a lady who came late, and at once pushed to the front with the
+air of a person who was not doing so for the first time. She went off in
+a moment--far too suddenly, in fact, and then did everything she was
+told in a very obedient way. Being told that she was in a beautiful
+garden, she stooped down on the floral carpet and proceeded to gather
+materials for a bouquet. I confess I did not care about No. 6, and was
+proceeding to read Professor Tyndall's Belfast Address, which I had in
+my pocket, when Miss Chandos looked up No. 1 again.
+
+Reduced to a proper frame of mind, either by Miss Chandos' continued
+attentions or the contagion of No. 6's docility, the youth was now all
+submission. He walked up and down any number of times like a tame animal
+at the Zoological Gardens, and now quite agreed that his name was Mary
+Jones. He sang "Tom Bowling" at command, and No. 6, not to be outdone,
+warbled a ditty called, I think, "The Slave Girl's Love," the refrain of
+which, according to her version, was, "I cannot love, because I _ham_ a
+slave." She broke down in the middle of this aspiring ditty, and then
+personated a Jew old clo' man, a woman selling "ornaments for your
+firestoves," and various other characters, all of which she overacted
+considerably. I may be wrong, of course, but I fancied the fair
+lecturess was as dissatisfied with No. 6 as I was. The audience was an
+indulgent one, and thought it splendid. Mr. Burns sat on the table and
+yawned. I relapsed into Tyndall, and wondered what he would have said
+about it all; or, at least, I did not wonder, for I knew he would have
+consigned us all to the nearest lunatic asylum as exceptions to the rule
+that the European has so many more cubic inches of cerebral development
+than the Papuan.
+
+When it was drawing near ten, Miss Chandos brought the proceedings to a
+close by animating--like Pygmalion--her waxwork statues. She apologized
+once more, in a few well-chosen sentences, for what she was pleased to
+call her "failure," but the audience would not hear of the term, and
+applauded to the echo, only there was no room for an echo in the
+Progressive Institute. The young man, No. 1, who I found was a spirit
+medium, wound up by an address from his Indian guide on the subject of
+"control."
+
+I confess I failed to gather from the perambulating youth and maidens
+No. 1 and 3, or the impersonations of No. 6, any signs of the revival
+alluded to by Mr. Burns at the outset; and there was not the remotest
+connexion with the healing art. In fact, nobody seemed suffering from
+anything except heat.
+
+Miss Chandos said to me, however, in a sensible conversation with which
+she favoured me in private, that all she had attempted to show was but
+the lowest manifestation of a power which had far higher ends in view.
+She doubted almost whether it was not something like sacrilege to use
+such a power for playing tricks and gratifying curiosity.
+
+She was thoroughly in earnest; and laboured both physically during the
+evening and logically in her after-discourse, with an energy which some
+persons would have said was worthy of a better cause.
+
+It was nearly eleven when I left the miniature hall of the Progressive
+Institute, and as I passed along the streets, digesting what I had seen
+and heard during the evening, I took myself to task severely--as it is
+always well to do, if only to prevent somebody else doing it for me--and
+asked whether, if the lecturess had not been a lecturess but a
+lecturer--if being a lecturess she weighed eighteen stone, or was old
+and wizen, or dropped her h's--whether I should have stayed three mortal
+hours in that stuffy room, and I frankly own I came to the conclusion I
+should _not_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+A PSYCHOPATHIC INSTITUTION.
+
+
+Reading my _Figaro_ the other day--as I hope I need not state it is my
+custom devoutly to do--I came upon the following passage in the review
+of a book called "Psychopathy; or, the True Healing Art. By Joseph
+Ashman. London: Burns, Southampton Row. We have not the pleasure of
+being personally acquainted with Joseph Ashman, and we fear that the
+loss is ours. Judging him through the medium of his book, he must,
+indeed, be a rara avis.... The one great thing," it went on to say,
+"that Joseph Ashman wants the world to know is, that he cures disease by
+very simple means. And all that the world wants to know from Joseph
+Ashman is, Are these cures real--are his statements facts? Why, then,
+does not Joseph content himself with his facts? He has plenty of them.
+Here is one:--'Seeing one day a cabman with a swollen face standing by a
+police-court ready to prosecute a man who had assaulted him, I asked if,
+on condition I healed him, he would forgive his adversary. He replied
+that he would, and we accordingly got into his cab together. Bringing
+out the magnetized carte, I told him to look at it, and at the same
+time made a few motions over the swelling with my hand. I then left him
+feeling much better, and returned in an hour's time, when I found him
+taking a glass of beer with his antagonist, whom he had forgiven.'"
+
+Now as the one pursuit and end of my present existence is the discovery
+of raræ aves, I need not say I at once took up the clue herein afforded,
+and went in pursuit of Joseph Ashman. I found not only him but his
+institution, for Mr. Ashman does not work single-handed. It is in the
+Marylebone Road, almost opposite the Yorkshire Stingo; and is most
+modest and unpretending in its outward semblance, being situated in one
+of those semi-rustic houses so indicative of suburban London, down an
+overstocked garden, into which you enter by means of a blistered iron
+gate, painted violently green, and swinging heavily on its hinges. Down
+a vista of decrepit dahlias one sped to the portal, alongside which was
+a trio of bell-handles, one above the other, showing that the
+Psychopathic Institution did not occupy the whole even of that modest
+domicile. I always approach these manifold bells with considerable
+diffidence, conscious that I must inevitably ring the wrong one; so, on
+this occasion, I rang none at all, but knocked a faint double knock on
+the knocker by way of compromise--very faint, indeed, lest I should
+disturb any patients who were being "psychopathized." While I waited I
+had leisure to observe that hidden among the dahlias, and thatched over
+as it were with a superannuated costermonger's barrow, was a double
+perambulator, which set me calculating the probabilities of Mr. Ashman
+being a family man.
+
+The door was opened before I had settled the point to my own mental
+satisfaction, by a short, cheery-looking man, with long, straight flaxen
+hair flowing down over the shoulders of his black frock-coat, a beard a
+few shades lighter, and a merry twinkling eye, which looked more
+sympathetic than psychopathic, and I should think was calculated to do
+patients good directly it lighted on them. He looked as much as to ask
+whether I was psychopathically wrong, when I informed him that I had not
+come as a patient, but simply to inspect his institution if he would
+permit me. The permission was at once accorded. "We are hard at work,"
+he said, as he ushered me into the front parlour; "but come in and see
+what we are about."
+
+A man who looked like a respectable artisan was sitting at the table;
+and a second, in his shirt sleeves, was astride of a chair in what
+appeared to be rather an idiotic ride-a-cock-horse-to-Banbury-Cross
+fashion, and Mr. Ashman was pinching him and prodding him as butchers do
+fat animals at the Smithfield Show.
+
+"That there gentleman," said Mr. Ashman, in a broad provincial dialect,
+"couldn't get astride that chair when he come here half-an-hour ago. How
+d'ye feel now, sir?"
+
+"Feel as though I should like to race somebody twenty rods for five
+pound a-side," answered the patient, getting up and walking about the
+room as if it were a new sensation. He had been brought, it appeared, to
+Mr. Ashman by his friend, who was sitting at the table, and who was an
+old psychopathic patient. He assured me he had suffered from rheumatism
+for twenty years, and was completely disabled without his stick until he
+came into that room half-an-hour since. He walked up and down stickless
+and incessantly as the carnivora at the Zoo all the time he was telling
+me.
+
+"Would you mind putting your ear to this man's back, sir?" said Mr.
+Ashman to me. I did so; and when he bent, his backbone seemed to go off
+with a lot of little cracks like the fog-signals of a railway. "That
+there old rusty hinge we mean to grease." And away he went
+psychopathizing him again. When he was done, Mr. Ashman explained to me
+learnedly, and with copious illustrations from anatomical plates, his
+theory of this disease, which was his favourite one for treatment,
+because it yielded rapidly. Paralysis and that class of disease are much
+slower. He had succeeded in acute rheumatism, and also in calculus. "I
+like fat men--fighting men to heal," he said. "I leave the delicate ones
+to others." The sturdy little psychopathist looked healthy enough to
+heal a sick rhinoceros.
+
+While he was lecturing me his hands were not idle. I should think they
+seldom were. He was pouring salad oil from a flask on to flannel to give
+to the other man who was sitting at the table, and had approached
+convalescence from a chronic disease after one or two visits, and who
+used this oiled flannel to keep up the influence. Both the men seemed
+perfectly genuine; and the rheumatic gentleman, when he left, pronounced
+the effect of his psychopathizing miraculous. The fee was five
+shillings. "I shan't charge you nothin' for the flannel," he said to No.
+2. I began to take quite a fancy to Joseph Ashman, and thanked _Figaro_
+inwardly for directing me to the institution.
+
+A working woman who was next in the little row of patients assembled in
+the back room, came in with her wrists bound up in bits of flannel, and
+her hands looking puffed and glazy. She, too, had lost the use of them
+for six years, she told me, and had been pronounced incurable by the
+doctors. This was her fourth visit to Mr. Ashman. "Take up the chair,
+ma'am," he said to his patient; and she did carry it in rather a wobbly
+fashion across the room. "Now the other hand," and she did it with the
+other hand. "Now show the gentleman how you did it when you came to me.
+She's rather hard o' hearin'," he explained to me; but after one or two
+repetitions the poor old body comprehended, and carried it in her
+crooked elbow. "Now I'll call my assistant," he said, and summoned a
+ruddy, red-bearded man, who looked as though he might have just come in
+from a brisk country walk. "When these cases require a good deal of
+rubbing I let my assistants do the preliminary work, and then come in as
+the Healing Medium myself." The rubbers, he informed me, like the
+Medium, must be qualified, not only physically, but morally. Benevolence
+was the great requisite; and certainly both these men seemed running
+over with it, if looks meant anything. When Joseph Ashman took his turn,
+working the poor old patient's stiff wrists, and pulling her fingers
+till they cracked, like children playing "sweethearts," she never
+winced, but actually seemed to like it, and trotted off well satisfied
+with her fourth instalment of good health.
+
+The next rubber who was introduced to me was not such a ruddy man,
+being, in fact, somewhat saturnine in appearance; but I could quite
+understand that he was, as he described himself, brimful of electricity.
+His chevelure was like that on the little man we stick on the conductor
+of an electrical machine and make each particular hair stand on end like
+quills upon the fretful porcupine.
+
+I could not for the life of me see the difference between this treatment
+and simple mesmerism, except that it was much more rapid in its effects
+than any magnetic treatment I have ever witnessed. Indeed, I frankly
+confess I do not understand it now, though Mr. Ashman made me accept one
+of his little books on Psychopathic healing, and told me I should see
+the distinction when I had read it. I must be very dense, for I have
+read it diligently through, and still fail to trace the distinction.
+
+The man made a great impression on me. I felt he was just one of those
+who would carry life into a sick room, and communicate vital
+power--supposing it to be communicable--from the dumpy fingers of his
+fat soft hand. The perambulator did not belie him. Numbers of pretty
+black-eyed children were running about, and there was a Mrs. Ashman
+somewhere among the poor patients in the back room. All the children
+came to me except the eldest boy, who, his father told me in a
+mysterious tone, had suffered some indignity at the hands of my cloth,
+and dreaded a parson ever after. I believe my injudicious brother had
+set him a long task (perhaps his Duty to his Neighbour), and the poor
+lad was always afraid he should be dropped down upon to "say it." Mr.
+Ashman's book is a little bewildering to an outsider who fails to
+distinguish the _two_ vital forces. He says: "It is much rarer to find a
+high development of a temperament in which the psychical element
+prevails, than in which it is well blended with the vital-magnetic, or
+than in which the latter excels. In nearly all popular public men there
+is a blending of the two. We see it well exemplified in John Bright,
+Spurgeon, and others. This is the secret of their drawing, magnetic
+power. It is the secret, too, of many a physician's success: his genial
+magnetism cures when his medicine is useless, although, of course, he
+does not know it. As is the difference between these two forces, so is
+the difference in the method of their employment for the purpose of
+cure." However, when I left I promised--and I mean to keep my vow--that
+if ever I am unfortunate enough to find my vertebræ creaking like "an
+old hinge," I will come to Mr. Ashman and have it greased. The remark in
+his book as to the success of medicine depending on the qualities of him
+who administered it was, we may recollect, confirmed at the 1874 meeting
+of the British Association in Belfast.
+
+Joseph Ashman has had a chequered history. He has dwelt in the tents of
+the Mormonites; has been one of the Peculiar People. In early life he
+was in service in the country, where his master used to flog him until,
+to use his own expression, he nearly cut him in two. His earliest
+patients were cattle. "For a healer," he said, "give me a man as can
+clean a window or scrub a floor. Christ himself, when He chose those who
+were to be healers as well as preachers, chose fishermen, fine, deep
+chested men, depend upon it, sir," and he rapped upon his own sonorous
+lungs until they reverberated. He was certainly blessed with a
+superabundance of good health, and looked benevolent enough to impart
+all his surplus stock to anybody who wanted it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+A PHRENOLOGICAL EVENING.
+
+
+The experience I am about to chronicle occurred when the Beecher-Tilton
+scandal was at its height; and I was attracted by the somewhat ambiguous
+title "Burns upon Beecher."
+
+Mr. James Burns, the spirited proprietor of the Progressive Library,
+Southampton Row, having devoted himself to the study of phrenology, has
+for some time past held a series of craniological séances on Tuesday
+evenings, at which he "takes off" the head of some well-known person, or
+your own, if you like, whether you are well-known or born to blush
+unseen, not in the way of physical decapitation, but by the method of
+phrenological diagnosis. I greatly regretted having, on a previous
+occasion, missed the analysis of Dr. Kenealy's cerebral developments. I
+believe the Claimant himself was once the object of Mr. Burns' remarks;
+but when Mr. Beecher's cranium was laid down for dissection at the
+height of the Beecher-Tilton sensation, I could resist no longer, but,
+despite all obstacles, repaired to the Institute of Progress.
+
+About a score of people were gathered in that first-floor front where I
+had seen so many strange things. Of these persons some formed the
+regular phrenological class conducted there weekly by Mr. Burns. The
+others were, generally speaking, of the ordinary lecture-audience type.
+One stout lady occupied an easy-chair in a corner, and slept from first
+to last.
+
+The first part of the lecture was a little discursive, I fancy for my
+especial benefit, and summarized Mr. Burns' system, which is to a great
+extent original. Beginning by a disavowal of all dogmas, he began by
+advancing what was to me the entirely novel doctrine, that the brain was
+not the sole organ of the mind, but that the whole organism of man had
+to be taken into account in the diagnosis of character, since the entire
+body was permeated with the mind. The bones, fluids, and viscera were
+all related to mental phenomena. The lecturer even questioned whether
+the science he promulgated was properly termed phrenology. It certainly
+did not answer to the conventional idea of that craft. Referring to a
+calico diagram which was pinned to the curtains of the first-floor
+front, and at which he pointed with a walking-stick, Mr. Burns notified
+four divisions of the animal frame--1, the vital organs; 2, the
+mechanical; 3, the nervous (which in the lower orders were ganglionic
+only); 4, the cerebral apparatus. He defended the animal powers from the
+debased idea usually attached to them, and pointed out their close
+connexion with the spirit, nearer to which they were placed than any
+portion of the economy.
+
+He then proceeded to apply his preliminary remarks to preachers in
+general. Theodore Parker, for instance, was a man of spare body and
+large brain. He was surrounded by intellectual people, and his disciples
+were quite sui generis. On the other hand, Spurgeon was a man of strong
+animal and perceptive powers, and so able to send the Walworth
+shopkeepers into ecstasies. His ganglions were big, as was the case in
+all great preachers. Emotion, he said, was more a matter of bowels than
+of brain. The ganglionic power carried the brain; but there were, of
+course, combinations of all grades.
+
+In the case of Henry Ward Beecher, two of whose photographs he held in
+his hand, he dwelt on the disadvantage of having only the shadow instead
+of the substance of his head to deal with. Here, he said, we had all the
+elements on a large scale. The brain, thoracic system, osseous
+structure, and abdominal development were all in excess. The face was,
+as it were, the picture of all. Henry Ward Beecher was emphatically a
+large man. The blood was positive; the circulation good. The digestion
+was perfect, and the man enjoyed good food. Especially the length from
+the ear to the front of the eyebrows denoted intellectual grasp. There
+was not much will power. Whatever he had done (and Mr. Burns
+emphatically disclaimed passing any judgment on the "scandal") he had
+not done of determination, but had rather "slid into it." He was no
+planner. He gathered people round him by the "solar" force of his mind.
+If he had been a designing man--if largely developed behind the ears--he
+would have gone to work in a different way. There was good development
+in the intellectual, sympathetic, and emotional part of his nature; and
+this combination made him a popular preacher. There was more than mere
+animal magnetism needed to account for this; there was intellectual
+power, but not much firmness or conscientiousness. If he were present,
+he would probably acknowledge that something had led him on to do
+whatever he had done in spite of himself. What was very peculiar in the
+man was his youthfulness. He had been before the world for forty years.
+Mr. Fowler, the phrenologist, of Ludgate Circus, had been a fellow
+student of Beecher, and had measured his head, which he ascertained to
+have grown an inch in ten years. Beecher was essentially a growing
+man--growing like a boy. The ganglionic power was that which kept people
+always growing, and was the great means of their getting a hold over
+other people.
+
+Mr. Burns then passed in review the three portraits of Beecher, Tilton,
+and Mrs. Tilton respectively, in the _Pictorial World_. Mrs. Tilton he
+described as a negative person, inclined to be hysterical and
+"clinging." There was in her a high type of brain, morally,
+intellectually, and spiritually. Still the brain, he said, did not make
+us good or bad. Again repudiating all judgment as to the scandal, he
+dwelt upon the close social relationships between Beecher and Mrs.
+Tilton, and recurred to the strong vital influence of the former,
+comparing it to that of Brigham Young upon his "spiritual affinities."
+In all probability, taking into account the different natures of Beecher
+and Mrs. Tilton, whatever had occurred "the people couldn't help
+themselves."
+
+Then as to Theodore Tilton. Mr. Burns had read the _Golden Age_, and
+pronounced it a smart publication. There was, however, in Tilton a want
+of ganglionic power; he was all brain. He was a man who might be read,
+but he could not lecture or preach. His was a higher mind than
+Beecher's, but not one that would command much human sympathy.
+
+Suppose Mrs. Tilton were not the wife of either, her relations to each
+might be conscientious, but still violate the laws of monogamic life.
+The influence of Beecher over her would be ganglionic as well as
+intellectual; that of Tilton purely intellectual: when lo, a gust of
+ganglionic power would supervene on the latter, and carry all before it.
+
+Concluding his analysis of Mr. Beecher thus, Mr. Burns discovered that
+he had two clerics among his audience, and asked us--for I was one of
+them--if we would be examined. I readily consented, and handed my notes
+to Miss Chandos (the young lady mesmerist, whose séance I reported a
+few pages back) to report progress. She, therefore, is responsible for
+the diagnosis that follows.
+
+Handling me from head to foot, much as a fancier does a prize ox at
+Smithfield, Mr. Burns found the life power good, and the muscles well
+nourished, the working faculties being in a high state of activity. The
+head--I blushed to hear--measured one inch beyond the average of a man
+of my size, and the cerebral faculties were harmoniously organized. I
+had large perceptive powers; and my human nature (wherever that may be
+located) was full, as was also firmness. The thinking sphere was good. I
+should have made, Mr. Burns informed me, a good sculptor or artist.
+
+Omitting one or two complimentary remarks which Miss Chandos has
+faithfully, if not flatteringly, reported, and the enunciation of which
+quite confused me as I sat the centre and cynosure of that wondering
+group, I was glad to learn that I was an open man, though possessed of
+sufficient caution and not defective in moral courage. In fact "pluck"
+was large. I really wished Mr. Burns would relieve me by finding some
+bad bumps; but no--the worst he could say of me was that I was restless.
+What chiefly seemed to strike him, though, were my vital powers, and he
+really covered me with confusion when he began to calculate my Beecher
+powers on a possible Mrs. Tilton. However, he toned down this remark by
+noticing that my domestic faculties were well developed. My faith and
+hope were small. I was a "doubting" man. The positive and negative were
+well blent in me, and I was also "mediumistic."
+
+The diagnosis of two ladies concluded the evening's exercises, but
+neither of these personages displayed any very remarkable traits; Mr.
+Burns declaring he felt some difficulty in discovering the bumps under
+the "back hair."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+A SPIRITUAL PICNIC.
+
+
+In a volume bearing the title of _Mystic London_ it would seem perchance
+that Spiritualism, as par excellence the modern mystery, should stand
+first. I have thought it better, however, to defer its treatment
+somewhat, working up to it as to a climax, and then gently descending to
+mundane matters once more ere I close my present work.
+
+Of London at this hour, just as of Rome in the later Republic and
+Empire, it may be safely affirmed that there is in its midst an element
+of the mysterious and occult utterly undreamed of by the practical
+people. Many phases of this element have already been treated of in my
+different works; and I add some of the more exceptional as properly
+belonging to my present subject.
+
+Now I candidly confess that, up to a recent date, I had not given
+Spiritualists--quâ spiritualists--credit for being a cheerful or
+convivial people. Though there exist upon the tablets of my memory
+recollections of certain enjoyable dinners, cosy teas, and charming
+petits soupers, eaten at the mahogany of believers in the modern
+mystery, yet these were purely exceptional events, oases in the desert
+of spiritualistic experiences. Generally speaking, the table, instead of
+groaning under its accumulated bounties, leapt about as if from the
+absence thereof; and the only adjuncts of the inhospitable mahogany were
+paper tubes for the spirit voices, handbells for the spirit hands, and
+occasional accordions and musical boxes for the delectation of
+harmonious ghosts. It was a "flow of soul" if not always a "feast of
+reason;" but, as regarded creature comforts, or any of the ordinary
+delights of mundane existence, a very Siberian desert. A grave subject
+of discussion (I am not, I assure you, indulging in a sepulchral pun) at
+the recent Liverpool Conference was how to feed mediums, and I fancy the
+preponderating opinion was that fasting was a cardinal virtue in their
+case--a regimen that had come to be in my mind, perhaps unfairly,
+associated with séances in general. I was glad, therefore, when I read
+in the columns of the _Medium_ the announcement of the spiritual picnic
+or "demonstration," at the People's Garden, Willesden. Still I wanted to
+see Spiritualists enjoy themselves in the "normal condition." I
+sympathized with the avowed object of the gathering, that the followers
+of the new creed should know one another, as surely the disciples of a
+common school ought to do. Armed, therefore, with a ticket, I proceeded,
+viâ the North London Railway, to the scene of action. It was not what we
+materialistic people should call a fine August day. It was cold and
+dull, and tried hard to rain; but it was far more in keeping with the
+character of the meeting than what Father Newman calls the "garish day"
+one looks for in mid-August. In the words of the circle the "conditions
+were excellent;" and as I journeyed on, reading my _Medium_ like a true
+believer, I marvelled to see, by the evidence of its advertisements, how
+the new creed had taken hold of a certain section, at all events, of
+society. Besides a dozen public mediums who paraded their varied
+attractions at terms ranging from _2s. 6d._ to _21s._, there were
+spiritualistic young men who put forward their creed as a qualification
+for clerkships--perhaps they had no other claim--spiritual lodging-house
+keepers, and even spiritual undertakers, all pervaded by what we may
+literally call a common esprit de corps.
+
+In due course we reached the People's Garden, the popular title whereof
+seemed to have been given on the lucus a non principle, for the London
+folk have not, as yet, affected it largely. Why this should be so one
+cannot guess, for it is the very ideal of a Cockney Paradise, and is
+admirably worked by a body of shareholders, most of whom belong to the
+artisan class, though under very distinguished patronage indeed. When I
+got to the grounds the Spiritualists were indulging in a merry-go-round
+during a refreshing drizzle. A temporary rush under cover ensued, and
+then the weather became more favourable, though the skies preserved
+their neutral tint. Mrs. Bullock, a suburban medium, who had become
+entranced, had located herself in a bower, and beckoned people from the
+audience to receive her "benediction," which was given in a remarkable
+dialect. I thought it was Yorkshire, but a spiritualistic gentleman
+explained to me that it was "partly North American Indian." The Osborne
+Bellringers next gave a campanological concert, which was exceedingly
+good of its kind, the small gentleman who played the bass bell working
+so actively as to suggest the idea that he could not long survive such
+hard labour in his fleshly condition. These campanologists are said to
+be big mediums, and occasionally to be floated or otherwise spirited
+during their performances; but nothing abnormal occurred at the People's
+Garden. Then there was dancing on the monster platform, which is, I
+should think, correctly described as "the largest in the world." This
+was indeed a new phase of Spiritualism: the terpsichorean spiritualists
+generally let their tables do the dancing for them, as Eastern
+potentates hire their dancing-girls. Donkey-races, croquet, and other
+unspiritual diversions varied the order of proceedings; and as for the
+one-and-ninepenny teas, I can only say I should think the Garden
+Committee did not get much profit out of them, for the Spiritualists
+regaled themselves in the most material fashion. During the afternoon
+the arrivals were fast and frequent. All the medium-power of London
+seemed present; and the only wonder was that we were not all floated
+bodily away. There was Mrs. Guppy, who, in answer to my demand whether
+she had been "floated" from Highbury, informed me that she had come far
+less romantically--"nine in a cab!" There was Dr. Monk, too, a
+Nonconformist clergyman, who had lately been taking aërial journeys of
+the Guppy order about Bristol. In fact, the élite of the sect were well
+represented; and during the whole afternoon, despite the dirty-looking
+day, the fun was fast and furious, and all went merry as the proverbial
+marriage-bell.
+
+Part of the programme was an entertainment by a gentleman bearing the
+delightfully sepulchral name of Dr. Sexton, whose mission in life it is
+to "expose" the tricks of Dr. Lynn and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke. How
+those gentlemen are to be "exposed," seeing they only claim to deceive
+you by legerdemain, I cannot comprehend; but they made the Spiritualists
+very angry by taking their names in vain on the handbills of the
+Egyptian Hall, and more than insinuating that there was a family
+likeness between their performances; and, consequently, the conjurors
+were to be "exposed;" that is, the public were to have their visit to
+the Temple of Magic spoilt by being shown beforehand how the tricks were
+done. Aided by an expert assistant named Organ, Dr. Sexton soon let us
+into the mysteries of the cabinet business, which seemed just as easy as
+making the egg stand on end--when you know how. It is perfectly true
+that, after hearing Dr. Sexton's exposition--rather than exposé--it is
+quite easy for any one to frustrate the designs of these clever
+conjurors, if he wishes to do so. I am not sure that the exposé is wise.
+Illogical people will not see the force of Dr. Sexton's argument, and
+will possibly think it "proves too much." If so much can be done by
+sleight of hand and ingenious machinery, they will argue, perhaps, that
+the Davenports and other mediums are only cleverer conjurors still, or
+have better machinery. Alas! all my fairyland is pasteboard now. I know
+how the man gets out of the corded box--I could do it myself. I know
+where the gorilla goes when he seems lost in the magic cabinet. It is
+all a clever combination of mirrors. The blood-red letters of some dear
+departed friend are only made with red ink and a quill pen, and the name
+of the "dear departed" forged. Well, I suppose _I_ am illogical, too. If
+one set of things is so simple when it is shown to you, why may not all
+be? I fear the Willesden outing has unsettled my convictions, and shaken
+my faith in most sublunary things.
+
+The gathering clearly proved the growth of Spiritualism in London. That
+such numbers could be got together in the dead season bespeaks a very
+extensive ramification indeed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+A GHOSTLY CONFERENCE.
+
+
+A distinct and well-marked epoch is reached in the history of any
+particular set of opinions when its adherents begin to organize and
+confer, and the individual tenets become the doctrines of a party. Such
+a culmination has been attained by the believers in Modern Spiritualism.
+For a long while after the date of the now historical Rochester
+Rappings, the manifestations were mostly individual, and in a great
+degree limited to such exercises as Mr. Home's elongation, Mrs. Guppy's
+flight from Highbury to Lamb's Conduit Street, or, more recently still,
+the voices and manipulations of John and Katie King, the orations of
+Mrs. Hardinge, Mr. Morse, and Mrs. Tappan. But all this was spasmodic,
+and not likely to take the world by storm, while Spiritualists had
+adopted the time-honoured maxim--"Magna est veritas et prevalebit."
+Therefore they must organize. They have done so, not without protest on
+the part of some of the most noted of their adherents; but the majority
+carried the day, and the result is the British National Association of
+Spiritualists, which has recently been sitting in solemn conclave at
+its first Annual Conference in Lawson's Rooms, Gower Street.
+
+Now I plead guilty to being greatly interested in this subject of
+Spiritualism generally, and in the doings of the Conference in
+particular. I cannot help thinking that clergymen and scientists ought
+to look into any set of opinions whose professors have attained the
+dimensions of this body. Their doctrines have spread and are spreading.
+Already the Spiritualists number among them such men as Mr. Alfred
+Wallace, Mr. Varley, Mr. Crookes, Mr. S. C. Hall, &c., and are extending
+their operations amongst all classes of society, notably among the
+higher. I could even name clergymen of all denominations who hold
+Spiritualistic views, but refrain, lest it should seem invidious, though
+I cannot see why it should be incongruous for the clergy to examine
+doctrines which profess to amplify rather than supplant those of
+revelation, any more than I can why scientists stand aloof from what
+professes to be a purely positive philosophy, based upon the inductive
+method. So it is, however; Spiritualism is heterodox at once in its
+religious and philosophical aspects. I suppose that is why it had such
+special attraction for me. Certain it is, I have been following the
+ghostly conference like a devotee.
+
+We began on Monday evening with a musical soirée at the Beethoven Rooms,
+in Harley Street; and there was certainly nothing ghostly or sepulchral
+in our opening day; only then there was nothing very spiritualistic
+either. For a long time I thought it was going to be all tea and muffins
+and pianoforte. By-and-by, however, Mr. Algernon Joy read a report of
+the organization, which was rather more interesting than reports
+generally are, and Mr. Benjamin Coleman, a venerable gentleman, the
+father of London Spiritualists, delivered a Presidential address. Still
+there were no ghosts--not even a spirit rap to augment the applause
+which followed the speakers. Once my hopes revived when two new physical
+mediums, with letters of recommendation from Chicago, were introduced,
+and I expected to see the young gentlemen elongate or float round the
+room; but nothing of the kind occurred; and a young lady dashed my hopes
+to the ground by singing "The Nightingale's Trill." Mr. Morse gave an
+address in the trance state--as I was afterwards informed; but he looked
+and spoke so like an ordinary mortal that I should not have found out
+that he was in an abnormal condition.
+
+I fear I went home from Harley Street not quite in so harmonious a frame
+of mind as could have been wished.
+
+The next morning (Wednesday) Dr. Gully presided at the opening of the
+Conference proper in Gower Street, where the rooms were more like vaults
+and smelt earthy. The President ably enough summarized the objections
+which had been raised to the Association, and also the objects it
+proposed to itself. He said:--"If the Association keeps clear of
+dogmatic intrusion, then will there be no fear of its becoming
+sectarian. Already, however, there is a signal of dogmatism among
+Spiritualists--and already the dogmatizers call themselves by another
+name. But the Association has nothing to do with this. It knows its
+function to be the investigation of facts, and of facts only; and, as
+was said, no sect was ever yet framed on undoubted facts. Now what are
+the facts of Spiritualism up to this date? They are reducible to
+two:--1st. The continued life and individuality of the spirit body of
+man after it has quitted its body of flesh; and, 2nd. Its communion with
+spirits still in the flesh, under certain conditions, by physical
+exhibition and mental impression. Spirit identity cannot be regarded yet
+as an established fact--at all events, not so as to warrant us in
+building upon it."
+
+I was agreeably surprised with the moderate tone of this address; and
+after a brief theological discussion, Mr. W. H. Harrison, the editor of
+the _Spiritualist_, followed with a paper on Organization. I do not know
+what Mr. Harrison was not for organizing. Libraries, reading-rooms,
+colleges, everything was to be spiritualized. Later in the day there was
+a paper on Physical Manifestations. I should have preferred the
+manifestations without the paper, for I fear I am a poor believer at
+second hand. The reader told some "stumping" stories. Here is one as a
+specimen--spiritual in more senses than one:--
+
+"One evening I accompanied the Davenports to Mr. Guppy's residence in
+Great Marlborough Street. After supper Ira, the eldest of the brothers,
+Mr. Guppy, and myself, adjourned to a dark room, which Mr. Guppy had had
+prepared for experimental purposes. To get to this room we had to pass
+through a room that served the combined purposes of a sculptor's studio
+and a billiard room. Emerging from this room we came into a yard, in one
+corner of which the dark cabinet in question was constructed. Taking our
+seats, we extinguished the light. Mr. Guppy was at the time smoking a
+cigar. This was at once taken from his hand, and carried in the air,
+where it could be seen by the light given out by its combustion. Some
+whisky and water was standing on the table. This was handed to us to
+drink. When it came to my turn, I found there was but little left in the
+glass. This I pointed out. The glass was forthwith taken from my mouth,
+and replenished and brought back again."
+
+On Thursday Mr. Everitt read a paper on Direct Writing by Spirits,
+telling us that on one occasion nine hundred and thirty-six words were
+written in six seconds. Mr. Everitt must be a bold man--I don't mean
+altogether for asking us to believe that, but for saying what he did
+about the medium, who was his wife:--"There are many considerations why
+it would be impossible for the medium to have produced these writings.
+For instance, we have sixteen papers upon the same subject, and in those
+papers there are a great many ancient authors referred to. Mrs. Everitt
+has never read or seen a single book of any of these authors, and, with
+a few exceptions, their names had never been heard by her before, much
+less did she know the age they lived in, the country they belonged to,
+the works they had written, or the arguments made use of for the defence
+of their doctrines and teachings. Besides the above reasons there are
+physical and mental difficulties which preclude the possibility of their
+being produced by the medium. The physical impossibility is the
+marvellous rapidity of their production, as many as 936 words having
+been written in six seconds. The mental difficulty is that the medium
+has not a logical mind. Like most females, she takes a short cut by
+jumping to conclusions. She does not, indeed cannot, argue out any
+proposition by the ordinary rules of logic. Now the papers referred to
+show that the author or authors are not only well acquainted with
+ancient lore and the classics, but also possessed very high ability as
+logicians. For the above reasons we conclude that the medium, from sheer
+incapacity, both mentally and physically, could not have written these
+papers, nor any other human being under the same circumstances. We are
+therefore absolutely driven, after looking at the subject from every
+conceivable point of view, to conclude respecting their production that
+they came from a supernatural source, and were produced by supernatural
+means."
+
+In the afternoon of this day a clergyman, whose name it would be highly
+indecorous in me to mention, descanted on the aspect of Spiritualism
+from his point of view in the Church of England. I understood the
+purport of the paper to be (1) that he claimed the right of members of
+the Church of England to investigate the phenomena; (2) that, if
+convinced of their spiritual origin, such conviction need not shake the
+investigator's previous faith. If the clergyman in question really said
+no more than the printed reports of the Conference represent him to have
+done, he rather reversed the conduct of Balaam, and cursed those he came
+to bless. This is the curt résumé that went forth:--
+
+"The Rev. ---- read a paper, in which he defined his position with
+regard to Spiritualism as that of a mere inquirer, adding that even if
+he became convinced of its truth, he saw no reason why he should alter
+the opinions he at present held as a clergyman of the Church of England.
+After eighteen months' inquiry into the subject, however, he was,
+perhaps, more of a sceptic than before." If that was all the clergyman
+in question had to say for the Association, they must rather regret they
+ever "organized" him, and might well pray to be saved from their
+friends; but I heard it whispered--presumably by a spirit voice--that
+there had been a passage at arms between the lady secretary and the
+clergyman in question, and that Miss--but no, I must not mention
+names--the fair official punished the delinquent that most awful
+penalty--silence.
+
+Friday finished the Conference with a trance paper--I did not know there
+were such things--dictated to Mrs. Cora Tappan by invisible guides, and
+was read by Miss--I mean by the fair incognita above-mentioned. Not a
+manifestation--literally not the ghost of one--only this very glowing
+peroration:--"But it is in a larger sense of social, mental, political,
+and even religious renovation, that Spiritualism is destined to work its
+chief results. The abrogation of the primal terror of mankind, the most
+ancient spectre in the world of thought, grim and shadowy Death, is, in
+itself, so vital a change that it constitutes a revolution in the world
+of mind. Chemistry has already revealed the wonderful fact that no
+ultimate atom can perish. The subtle chemistry of Spiritualism steps in
+where science ceases, gathering up the ultimate atoms of thought into a
+spiritual entity and proving them imperishable. Already has this thought
+pervaded the popular mind, tinged the decaying forms of theology and
+external science with its glow, and made the life of man a heritage of
+immortal glory. More than this, taking spirit as the primal basis of
+life, each individual, and all members of society and humanity in the
+aggregate, must for ever strive to express its highest life (i.e. the
+life of the spirit). The child will be taught from within, external
+methods being employed only as aids, but never as dictators of thought.
+Society will be the flowing out of spiritual truths, taking shape and
+substance as the expression of the soul. Governments will be the
+protecting power of a parent over loving children, instead of the
+dictates of force or tyranny. Religion will wear its native garb of
+simplicity and truth, the offspring of the love and faith that gave it
+birth. Modern Spiritualism is as great a solvent of creeds, dogmas,
+codes, scientific sophisms, as is the sunlight of the substances
+contained in earth and air, revealing by the stages of intermediate
+life, from man, through spirits, angels, archangels, seraphim, and
+cherubim, to God, the glorious destiny of every soul. There is a vine
+growing in the islands of the tropic seas that thrives best upon the
+ancient ruins or crumbling walls of some edifice built by man; yet ever
+as it thrives, the tiny tendrils penetrate between the fibres of the
+stone, cutting and cutting till the whole fabric disappears, leaving
+only the verdant mass of the foliage of the living vine. Spiritualism is
+to the future humanity what this vine is to the ancient ruin."
+
+There was another paper coming on "Compound Consciousness," but the
+title did not attract me. After my four days' patient waiting for ghosts
+who never came and spirits that would not manifest, I felt, perhaps, a
+little impatient, put on my hat and left abruptly--the fair secretary,
+of whom I shall evermore stand in supreme awe, scowling at me when I did
+so. As I passed into Gower Street--sweet, serene Gower Street, sacred
+from the wheels of profane cabmen, I was almost surprised to see the
+"materialized" forms around me; and it really was not until I got well
+within sound--and smell--of the Underground Railway that I quite
+realized my abased position, or got out of the spheres whither the lofty
+periods of Mrs. Tappan's paper, so mellifluously delivered, had wafted
+me!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+AN EVENING'S DIABLERIE.
+
+
+Mr. Spurgeon a short time since oracularly placed it on record that,
+having hitherto deemed Spiritualism humbug, he now believes it to be the
+devil. This sudden conversion is, of course, final; and I proceed to
+narrate a somewhat exceptional endorsement of the opinion which has
+recently occurred within my own experience. There was a time, how long
+ago it boots not to say, when _I_ considered Spiritualism humbug; and a
+good deal came in my way which might have led me to the same conclusion
+as Mr. Spurgeon, if I had been disposed--which I am not--to go with a
+hop, skip, and jump.
+
+The investigator who first presented the "diabolical" theory to my
+notice was a French Roman Catholic priest, who had broken discipline so
+far as to enter the married state, but retained all the doctrines of his
+former faith intact. He had, in fact, anticipated to some extent the
+position of Père Hyacinthe; for it was several years ago I first became
+acquainted with him. Individually as well as nationally this gentleman,
+too, was prone to jump at conclusions. He lost a dear friend, and
+immediately proceeded to communicate with the departed by means of
+table-turning and rapping. For a few days he was quite convinced of the
+identity of the communicating spirit; but then, and all within the
+compass of a single week, he pronounced the exorcism of the Catholic
+Church on the intelligence, I suppose experimentally in the first
+instance; found his challenge not satisfactorily answered, and
+immediately jumped to the conclusion that it was the foul fiend himself.
+I sat very frequently with this gentleman afterwards, prior to the
+experience I am about to narrate; and certainly the intelligence always
+gave itself out to be the spirit unmentionable to ears polite, whose
+presence my friend had taken for granted.
+
+I once went with this gentleman to the Marshalls, when they were at
+their zenith. We arranged previously that he should not sit at the
+table, but on one side, and give me a secret signal when he was silently
+pronouncing the exorcism. He did so; and certainly all manifestations at
+once ceased, though we had been in full converse with the invisibles a
+moment before. Old Mrs. M. had to announce with much chagrin, "The
+sperrits is gone!"
+
+My other partner in diablerie was a barrister whom I must not mention by
+name, but who possessed considerable power as a writing medium. The
+presiding intelligence in his case was, however, of a low character, and
+given to very bad language. He avowed himself to have been a bargee in
+the earth-plane--should one say the water-plane?--and certainly swore
+like one.
+
+As for myself, I am destitute of all "medium-power," whatever that may
+be, though enthusiastic spirituelle ladies tell me I am "mediumistic"--a
+qualification which is still more occult to me. I own to being greatly
+interested in spiritualistic inquiries, except as regards dark séances,
+which have a tendency to send me to sleep; and I believe that my
+presence does not "stop manifestations:" so that I suppose I am not a
+hopeless sceptic.
+
+On the occasion of which I am about to speak we met in my study, where I
+am in the habit of rearing a few pet snakes. I had just got a fine new
+specimen; and having no proper habitation for it, had turned my
+waste-basket upside-down on a small chess table, and left him to
+tabernacle under it for the night. This was the table we generally used
+for séances; and my legal friend, who was writing, immediately began to
+use most foul language, on the subject of the snake, exhorting me to
+"put him anywhere, put him in the cupboard, old boy." Such was the
+edifying style of communication we always got through this worthy limb
+of the law, but it was so much worse than usual on the present occasion
+as to fairly make us roar at its insane abuse. The gentleman himself, I
+ought to add, is by no means prone to profane swearing. My priestly
+friend was making a wide-awake hat reply by tilts; and still got his old
+reply that his Satanic Majesty was personally present. I did not in the
+least credit this assertion, any more than I accepted as proven the
+identity of the bargee, though I hold the impersonation in either case
+to be a strange psychological fact. That I did not do so is best
+evidenced by the circumstance that I said, "This spirit asserts himself
+to be his Satanic Majesty. Have you either of you any objection to
+communicate with him supposing such to be the case?"
+
+Neither one nor the other had the slightest. My Catholic friend, I knew,
+always carried a bottle of holy water in his pocket, and at my entreaty
+forbore for the moment to exorcise. The legal gentleman, though a
+"writer" himself, was not at all convinced about the phenomena, as was
+perhaps natural, seeing the exceedingly bad company to which it
+professed to relegate him. As for me, my scepticism was to me robur et
+æs triplex. I disposed of the snake, put out the gas; and down we three
+sat, amid profound darkness, like three male witches in "Macbeth,"
+having previously locked the door to prevent any one disturbing our
+hocus-pocus.
+
+Any one who has sat at an ordinary dark séance will recollect the number
+of false starts the table makes, the exclamations, "Was that a rap?"
+when the wood simply cracks, or, "Did you feel a cold air?" when
+somebody breathes a little more heavily than usual. I have myself made
+the experiment, though not without adding an open confession
+immediately afterwards. I have blown on the fingers of the sitters, and
+made them feel sure it was a "spirit aura," have done the neatest of
+raps with my index-finger when my little finger has been securely hooked
+in that of my next neighbour. In fact, for test purposes, dark séances
+are a mistake, though they are admirable for a flirtation.
+
+On this occasion, however, we were very much in earnest, and there was
+no waiting--I hope no collusion. I am quite sure I did not myself
+consciously produce any manifestation. I can answer for my legal friend,
+as far as any one person can answer for another; and we neither of us
+suspected--or suspect--the priest of the order of St. Benedict; only we
+would rather he had not pronounced such decided opinions; because the
+wish might have been father to the thought, or rather the thought might,
+in some utterly unaccountable way, have produced the effects that
+followed. I have an idea that if Mr. Spurgeon in his present frame of
+mind were to sit at a table for manifestations, he would obtain the
+clearest assurance that it was "all the devil," just as it is well known
+Roman Catholic sitters get communications from Roman Catholic spirits,
+theists from theistic, and Mormons from the denizens of some
+spiritualistic Utah.
+
+We had not, on this occasion, a moment to wait. The table forthwith
+began to plunge and career about the room as though the bargee--or the
+other personage himself--had actually been "in possession." It required
+all our agility to follow it in its rapid motion about the room. At last
+it became comparatively quiet; and I received in reply to a question as
+to who was present the exceedingly objectionable name which Mr. Spurgeon
+has coupled with the whole subject. Some persons I know entertain a
+certain amount of respect, or at all events awe, for the intelligence in
+question. For myself I feel nothing of the kind, and therefore I added,
+"If you are what you profess to be, give us some proof." We were sitting
+with only the tips of our fingers on the table; but it forthwith rose up
+quite perpendicularly, and came down with a crash that completely
+shivered it in pieces. I have not the slightest idea how it was
+done--but it certainly was done. A large portion of the table was
+reduced to a condition that fitted it for Messrs. Bryant and May's
+manufactory. When we lighted the gas and looked at our watches we found
+we had only been sitting a very few minutes.
+
+Of course the obvious explanation will be that the gentleman with the
+diabolical theory and the evidently strong will-power (as evidenced in
+the dénouement at Mrs. Marshall's) produced the diabolical effects
+consciously or unconsciously. I do not think the former was the case;
+and if it is possible to get such results unconsciously, that phenomenon
+is quite as curious as the spiritualistic explanation. In fact I am not
+sure that the psychological is not more difficult than the
+pneumatological theory. My own notion is that the "Psychic Force" people
+are clearly on the right track, though their cause, as at present
+elaborated, is not yet equal to cover all the effects.
+
+Mr. Spurgeon and the "diabolists" concede the whole of the
+spiritualistic position. They not only say that the effects are due to
+spiritual causes, but they also identify the producing spirit. I have
+never been able to get as far as that. I did not feel on the occasion in
+question at all as though I had been in communication with his sable
+Majesty. If I was, certainly my respect for that potentate is not
+increased, for I should have fancied he would have done something much
+"bigger" in reply to my challenge than smash up a small chess-table.
+However, there was a sort of uncanny feeling about the experience, and
+it seemed to me so far illustrative of Mr. Spurgeon's position as to be
+worth committing to paper. If that gentleman, however, lends such a
+doctrine the sanction of his approval, he will, let him be assured, do
+more to confirm the claims of Spiritualism than all the sneers of
+Professors Huxley and Tyndall, and the scorn of Mr. George Henry Lewes
+can undo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+SPIRITUAL ATHLETES.
+
+
+I am about for once to depart from my usual custom of narrating only
+personal experiences, and in this and the two following chapters print
+the communications of a friend who shares my interest in these matters,
+and has frequently accompanied me in my investigations into this
+mysterious Borderland. In these cases, however, he investigated on his
+own account, and I am not responsible for the conclusions at which he
+arrives:--
+
+"Attracted," he says, "by an article in a popular journal on the subject
+of 'Spirit Faces,' I determined, if possible, to 'assist' at a séance. I
+had not hitherto taken much interest in spiritualistic matters, because
+in the first place, the cui bono question remained persistently
+unanswered; and, secondly, because most of the 'doings' were in the
+dark; and it appears to me that, given darkness, there are few things in
+the way of conjuring and ventriloquism that could _not_ be done.
+Terpsichorean tables and talking hats never had any particular charm for
+me, because I could always make a table dance, or a hat say anything I
+wanted it to say. I saw the Davenports, and preferred Professor
+Anderson. I even went to a dark séance at the Marshalls', and noticed
+that when Mr. and Mrs. Marshall had perceptibly partaken of beefsteak
+and onions, or some equally fragrant food, for dinner, the breath which
+accompanied the spirit-voices was unmistakably impregnated with onions
+too; and hence I drew my own conclusions. I am not saying I know how Mr.
+and Mrs. Marshall do John King and Katie King. I don't know how
+Professor Anderson or Professor Pepper do their tricks. I confess Mr.
+Home and the Marshalls have the pull of the professors in one way--that
+is, they don't perform on a platform but in a private room, and they let
+you examine everything beforehand. Theirs is the ars celare artem.
+Again, I don't know how men in the street get out of the very curious
+knots in which I have tied them, but I know they do it; and therefore I
+am sure the Davenports could do it without calling in the ghost of one's
+deceased grandmamma as a sort of Deus--or rather Dea--ex machinâ. I have
+never seen Mr. Home handle fire or elongate. I have seen him 'levitate,'
+or float, and I candidly confess I don't know how he does it, any more
+than I can solve Sir David Brewster's trick by which four young ladies
+can lift a heavy man on the points of their fingers. It's very
+mysterious, and very nice for the man.
+
+"So it happened that I had shelved spiritualism for some time, when the
+article on 'Spirit Faces' came under my notice. I did not care so much
+about the face part of the matter (at least not the spirit face), but I
+wanted to test it as a matter of athletics. In one respect the
+physiognomy did interest me, for I read that the medium was
+pretty--mediums, according to my experience, being generally very much
+the reverse--and I found that report had certainly not misrepresented
+the young lady in this respect. Her name is now public property, so I
+need not veil it under the pseudonyms of Miss Blank, or Asterisk, or
+anything of that sort. Miss Florence Cook, then, is a trim little lady
+of sweet sixteen, and dwells beneath the parental roof in an eastern
+suburb of London. It is quite true she does not accept payment for
+séances, which I strove to impress upon her was very foolish indeed, for
+she works almost as hard as Lulu twice in the week. However, she, or
+rather her parents, take high ground in the matter, which of course is
+very praiseworthy on their parts, and convenient for their guests if
+they happen to be impecunious.
+
+"Now, I do not purpose going through the details of the séance, which
+was considerably irksome, being protracted by endless psalm singing.
+What I want to do--with Miss Cook's permission--is to calculate the
+chances of her being sufficiently athletic to perform the tricks
+herself, without the aid of spirits. Does she not underrate her unaided
+powers in assigning a supernatural cause for the effects produced?
+
+"Well, then, this lithe little lady is arrayed in the ordinary garb of
+the nineteenth century with what is technically termed a 'pannier,' and
+large open sleeves, each of which, I fear, she must have found
+considerably in the way, as also the sundry lockets and other nick-nacks
+suspended from her neck. However, there they were. We put her in a
+cupboard, which had a single Windsor chair in it, and laid a stoutish
+new cord on her lap. Then came singing, which may or may not have been
+intended to drown any noise in the cupboard; but, after some delay, she
+was found tied around the waist, neck, and two wrists, and the ends of
+the cord fastened to the back of the chair. These knots we sealed, and
+consigned her to the cupboard again. Shortly after there appeared at an
+aperture in the upper portion of the cupboard a face which looked
+utterly unspiritual and precisely like that of the medium, only with
+some white drapery thrown over the head. The aperture was just the
+height that would have allowed Miss Cook to stand on the chair and peep
+out. I do not say she did; I am only calculating the height. The face
+remained some minutes in a strong light; then descended. We opened the
+cupboard, and found the little lady tied as before with the seals
+unbroken. Spiritual, or material, it was clever.
+
+"After a pause, the same process was gone through again; only this time
+stout tape was substituted for rope. The cord cut the girl's wrists; and
+tape was almost more satisfactory. Again she was bound, and we sealed
+the knots; and again a face appeared--this time quite black, and not
+like the medium at all. I noticed that the drapery ran right round the
+face, and cut it off at a straight line on the lower part. This gave the
+idea of a mask. I am not saying it was a mask. I am only throwing out a
+hint that, if the 'spirits' wish to convince people they should let the
+neck be well seen. I am bound to say it bore a strong light for several
+minutes; and some people say they saw eyelids. I did not. I do not say
+they were not there. I know how impossible it is to prove a negative,
+and only say I did not see them.
+
+"What followed possessed no special interest for any but the professed
+spiritualist, as it was done without any tying; Miss Cook arguing
+logically enough that, if the previous manifestations were clearly
+proved to have taken place by other agency than that of the medium
+herself, mere multiplication of proofs was unnecessary. I had only gone
+to study the matter from an athletic point of view; and I certainly came
+away impressed with the idea that, if Miss Florence Cook first got into
+and then got out of those knots, she was even more nimble and lithesome
+than she looked, and ought to start an Amateur Ladies' Athletic Society
+forthwith. As to her making faces at us through the window, I did not
+care sufficiently about the matter to inquire whether she did or not,
+because, if she got out of the ropes, it was easy enough to get on the
+chair and make faces.
+
+"Of course the cui bono remains. The professors make money by it; and
+Miss Cook can make at most, only a little mild and scarcely enviable
+notoriety. A satirical old friend of mine, when I told him the above
+facts, chuckled, and said, 'That's quite enough for a girl of sixteen;
+and anything that's do-able, a girl of those years will do.' It was no
+use talking to him of panniers and loose sleeves, and lockets. He was an
+old bachelor, and knew nothing about such things. At least, he had no
+business to, if he did.
+
+"I cannot forbear adding a domestic episode, though it is perhaps
+scarcely relevant to the subject. Certain young imps in my house,
+hearing what I had seen, got up an exhibition of spirit faces for my
+benefit. They rigged up a kind of Punch-and-Judy erection, and the
+cleanest of them did the spirit face, with a white pocket-handkerchief
+over his head. He looked as stolid and unwinking as the genuine
+spirit-physiognomy itself. The gas was lowered to a 'dim religious
+light,' and then a black coal-scuttle, with features chalked on it,
+deceived some of the circle into the idea that it was a nigger. But the
+one element which interested me was wanting; there was no rope-tying
+which could at all entitle the juvenile performance to be categorized
+under 'Spiritual Athletics.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+"SPOTTING" SPIRIT MEDIUMS.
+
+
+"Among the recent utterances of spiritualistic organs is one to the
+effect that 'manifestations' come in cycles--in 'great waves,' I believe
+was the actual expression; and of the many fluctuations to which
+spiritualistic society has been exposed of late is a very prominent
+irruption of young lady mediums. The time seems to have gone by for
+portly matrons to be wafted aërially from the northern suburbs to the
+W.C. district, or elderly spinsters to exhibit spirit drawings which
+gave one the idea of a water-colour palette having been overturned, and
+the resulting 'mess' sat upon for the purposes of concealment. Even
+inspirational speakers have so far 'gone out' as to subside from
+aristocratic halls to decidedly second-rate institutions down back
+streets. In fact, the 'wave' that has come over the spirit world seems
+to resemble that which has also supervened upon the purely mundane
+arrangements of Messrs. Spiers and Pond; and we anxious investigators
+can scarcely complain of the change which brings us face to face with
+fair young maidens in their teens to the exclusion of the matrons and
+spinsters aforesaid, or the male medium who was once irreverently
+termed by a narrator a 'bull-necked young man.'
+
+"The names of these interesting young denizens of two worlds are so well
+known that it is perhaps unnecessary caution or superfluous gallantry to
+conceal them; but I will err, if error it be, on the safe side, and call
+No. 1 Miss C. and No. 2 Miss S., premising only that each is decidedly
+attractive, with the unquestioned advantage of having seen only some
+sixteen or seventeen summers apiece. Miss C. has been 'out' some time;
+her familiar being 'Katie King;' while Miss S. has made her debut more
+recently, having for her attendant sprites one 'Florence Maple,' a young
+lady spirit who has given a wrong terrestrial address in Aberdeen, and
+Peter, a defunct market gardener, who sings through the young lady's
+organism in a clear baritone voice. It was to me personally a source of
+great satisfaction when I learnt that Miss C. had been taken in hand by
+a F.R.S.--whom I will call henceforth the Professor--and Miss S. by a
+Serjeant learned in the law. Now, if ever, I thought, we have a chance
+of hearing what science and evidential acumen have to say on the subject
+of 'Face Manifestations.' Each of these gentlemen, I ought to mention,
+had written voluminously on the subject of Spiritualism, and both seemed
+inclined to contest its claims in favour of some occult physical--or, as
+they named it, psychic--force. This would make their verdict the more
+valuable to outsiders, as it was clear they had not approached the
+subject with a foregone conclusion in its favour. True, the
+Spiritualists claimed both the Professor and the Serjeant persistently
+as their own; but Spiritualists have a way of thinking everybody
+'converted' who simply sits still in a decorous manner, and keeps his
+eyes open without loudly proclaiming scepticism.
+
+"Personally I had been, up to the date of present occurrences,
+accustomed to summarize my convictions on the subject by the
+conveniently elastic formula that there might be 'something in it.' I
+still think so; but perhaps with a difference.
+
+"For the former of the two exposés--if such they shall be deemed--I am
+compelled to rely on documentary evidence; but I have 'sat' so many
+times with Miss S., have been requested so often by the inspirational
+Peter to 'listen to the whip-poor-will, a-singin' on the tree,' have
+shaken the spirit hand, gazed on the spirit face, and even cut off
+portions of the spirit veil of the fair Florence, that I can follow the
+order of events just as though I had been present. I must confess the
+wonderful similarity existing between Miss S. and Florence had exercised
+me considerably, and perhaps prepared me to accept with calmness what
+followed. Why delay the result? Miss S. and her mamma were invited to
+the country house of the learned Serjeant. A 'cabinet' was extemporized
+in the bay of the window, over which the curtains were drawn and a shawl
+pinned. With a confidence which is really charming to contemplate, no
+'tests' were asked of the medium, no 'conditions' imposed on the sitter.
+Miss S. was put in the cabinet with only a chair, and the expectant
+circle waited with patience. In due time the curtains were drawn aside,
+and the spirit-face appeared at the opening. It was still the facsimile
+of Miss S., with the eyes piously turned up and a ghostly head-dress
+covering the hair. One by one the assembled were summoned to look more
+closely. The initiated gazed and passed on, knowing they must not peep;
+but, alas, one lady who was _not_ initiated, and therefore unaware of
+the tacitly imposed conditions, imitated the example of Mother Eve, drew
+aside the curtains and exposed the unspiritual form of Miss S. standing
+on the chair; the 'spirit-hands' at the same time struggling so
+convulsively to close the aperture that the head-gear fell off, and
+betrayed the somewhat voluminous chignon of Miss S. herself. Hereupon
+ensued a row, it being declared that the medium was killed, though
+eventually order was restored by the rather incongruous process of a
+gentleman present singing a comic song. The learned Serjeant still
+clings to the belief that Miss S. was in a condition of 'unconscious
+somnambulism.' I only hope, if ever I am arraigned before him in his
+judicial capacity, he will extend his benevolent credulity to me in an
+equal degree, and give me the benefit of the doubt.
+
+"It may be in the recollection of those who follow the fluctuations of
+the Spiritual 'wave' that some months ago a Dialectical gentleman seized
+rudely on the spirit form of Katie, which struggled violently with him,
+scratching his face and pulling out his whiskers, eventually making good
+its retreat into the cupboard, where Miss C. was presumably bound hand
+and foot. I must confess the fact of that escape rather prejudiced me in
+favour of Katie, though I would rather she had evaporated into thin air,
+and left the dialectical whiskers intact. Still it scored a point on
+Katie's side, and I eagerly availed myself of the opportunity to pay my
+devoirs at the shrine of Miss C.; the more so as the Professor had
+asserted twice that he had seen and handled the form of the medium while
+looking on and conversing with that of the spirit at the same time. If I
+could retain my former faith in the Professor, of course this would be
+final and my conversion an accomplished fact.
+
+"We sat no longer in the subterranean breakfast room of Miss C.'s
+parental abode; but moved up to the parlour floor, where two rooms
+communicated through folding doors, the front apartment being that in
+which we assembled, and the back used as a bedroom, where the ladies
+took off their 'things.' This latter room, be it remembered, had a
+second room communicating with the passage, and so with the universe of
+space in general. One leaf of the folding doors was closed, and a
+curtain hung over the other. Pillows were placed on the floor, just
+inside the curtain, and the little medium, who was nattily arrayed in a
+blue dress, was laid upon them. We were requested to sing and talk
+during 'materialization,' and there was as much putting up and lowering
+of the light as in a modern sensation drama. The Professor acted all the
+time as Master of the Ceremonies, retaining his place at the aperture;
+and I fear, from the very first, exciting suspicion by his marked
+attentions, not to the medium, but to the ghost. When it did come it was
+arrayed according to orthodox ghost fashion, in loose white garments,
+and I must confess with no resemblance to Miss C. We were at the same
+time shown the recumbent form of the pillowed medium, and there
+certainly was something blue, which might have been Miss C., or only her
+gown going to the wash. By-and-by, however, with 'lights down,' a bottle
+of phosphorized oil was produced, and by this weird and uncanny radiance
+one or two privileged individuals were led by the 'ghost' into the back
+bedroom, and allowed to put their hands on the entranced form of the
+medium. I was not of the 'elect,' but I talked to those who were, and
+their opinion was that the 'ghost' was a much stouter, bigger woman than
+the medium; and I must confess that certain unhallowed ideas of the
+bedroom door and the adjacent kitchen stairs connected themselves in my
+mind with recollections of a brawny servant girl who used to sit sentry
+over the cupboard in the breakfast room. Where was she?
+
+"As a final bonne bouche the spirit made its exit from the side of the
+folding door covered by the curtain, and immediately Miss C. rose up
+with dishevelled locks in a way that must have been satisfactory to
+anybody who knew nothing of the back door and the brawny servant, or who
+had never seen the late Mr. Charles Kean act in the 'Corsican Brothers'
+or the 'Courier of Lyons.'
+
+"I am free to confess the final death-blow to my belief that there might
+be 'something in' the Face Manifestations was given by the effusive
+Professor who has 'gone in' for the Double with a pertinacity altogether
+opposed to the calm judicial examination of his brother learned in the
+law, and with prejudice scarcely becoming a F.R.S.
+
+"I am quite aware that all this proves nothing. Miss S. and Miss C. may
+each justify Longfellow's adjuration--
+
+ 'Trust her not, she is fooling thee;'
+
+and yet ghosts be as genuine as guano. Only I fancy the 'wave' of young
+ladies will have to ebb for a little while; and I am exceedingly
+interested in speculating as to what will be the next 'cycle.' From
+'information I have received,' emanating from Brighton, I am strongly of
+opinion that babies are looking up in the ghost market, and that our
+next manifestations may come through an infant phenomenon."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+A SÉANCE FOR SCEPTICS.
+
+
+"Attracted by the prominence recently given to the subject of
+Spiritualism in the _Times_, and undeterred by that journal's subsequent
+recantation, or the inevitable scorn of the _Saturday Review_, I
+determined to test for myself the value of the testimony so copiously
+quoted by believers in the modern marvel. Clearly if certain published
+letters of the period were to be put in evidence, Spiritualism had very
+much the better, and Science exceedingly little to say for itself. But
+we all know that this is a subject on which scientific men are apt to be
+reticent. 'Tacere tutum est' seems the Fabian policy adopted by those
+who find this new Hannibal suddenly come from across sea into their
+midst. It is moreover a subject about which the public will not be
+convinced by any amount of writing or talking, but simply by what it can
+see and handle for itself. It may be of service, then, if I put on
+record the result of an examination made below the surface of this
+matter.
+
+"Like most other miracles this particular one evidently has its phases
+and comes about in cycles. For a generation past, or nearly so, Modern
+Spiritualism has been so far allied with Table-turning and mysterious
+rappings as to have appropriated to itself in consequence certain
+ludicrous titles, against which it vainly protests. Then cropped up
+'levitations' and 'elongations' of the person, and Mr. Home delighted to
+put red-hot coals on the heads of his friends. None of these
+manifestations, however, were sufficient to make the spiritualistic
+theory any other than a huge petitio principii. The Davenports were the
+first to inaugurate on anything like an extended scale the alleged
+appearance of the human body, or rather of certain members of the human
+body, principally arms and hands, through the peep-hole of their
+cabinet. Then came 'spirit-voices' with Mrs. Marshall, and aërial
+transits on the part of Mrs. Guppy; then the entire 'form of the
+departed' was said to be visible chez Messrs. Herne and Williams in
+Lamb's Conduit Street, whose abode formed Mrs. Guppy's terminus on the
+occasion of her nocturnal voyage. Then came Miss Florence Cook's spirit
+faces at Hackney, which were produced under a strong light, which
+submitted to be touched and tested in what seemed a very complete
+manner, and even held conversations with persons in the circle. Finally,
+I heard it whispered that these faces were being recognised on a
+somewhat extensive scale at the séances of Mrs. Holmes, in Old Quebec
+Street, where certain other marvels were also to be witnessed, which
+decided me on paying that lady a visit.
+
+"Even these, however, were not the principal attractions which drew me
+to the tripod of the seeress in Quebec Street. It had been continually
+urged as an argument against the claims of Modern Spiritualism, first,
+that it shunned the light and clave to 'dark' circles; secondly, that it
+was over-sensitive on the subject of 'sceptics.' Surely, we are all
+sceptics in the sense of investigators. The most pretentious disciple of
+Spiritualism does not claim to have exhausted the subject. On the
+contrary, they all tell us we are now only learning the alphabet of the
+craft. Perhaps the recognised Spirit-faces may have landed us in words
+of one syllable, but scarcely more. However, the great advantage which
+Mrs. Holmes possessed in my eyes over all professors of the new art was
+that she did not object to sceptics. Accordingly to Quebec Street I
+went, for the distinct purpose of testing the question of recognition.
+If I myself, or any person on whose testimony I could rely, established
+a single case of undoubted recognition, that, I felt, would go farther
+than anything else towards solving the spiritualistic problem.
+
+"I devoted two Monday evenings to this business; that being the day on
+which Mrs. Holmes, as she phrases it, 'sits for faces.' On the former of
+the two occasions twenty-seven persons assembled, and the first portion
+of the evening was devoted to the Dark Séance, which presented some
+novel features in itself, but was not the special object for which I
+was present. Mrs. Holmes, who is a self-possessed American lady,
+evidently equal to tackling any number of sceptics, was securely tied in
+a chair. All the circle joined hands; and certainly, as soon as the
+light was out, fiddles, guitars, tambourines and bells did fly about the
+room in a very unaccountable manner, and when the candle was lighted, I
+found a fiddle-bow down my back, a guitar on my lap, and a tambourine
+ring round my neck. But there was nothing spiritual in this, and the
+voice which addressed us familiarly during the operation may or may not
+have been a spirit voice.
+
+"Mrs. Holmes having been released from some very perplexing knots,
+avowedly by Spirit power, proceeded to what is called the 'Ring Test,'
+and I was honoured by being selected to make the experiment. I sat in
+the centre of the room and held both her hands firmly in mine. I passed
+my hands over her arms, without relaxing my grasp, so as to feel that
+she had nothing secreted there; when suddenly a tambourine ring,
+jinglers and all, was passed on to my arm. Very remarkable; but still
+not necessarily spiritual. Certain clairvoyants present said they could
+witness the 'disintegration' of the ring. I only felt it pass on to my
+arm. On the occasion of my second visit this same feat was performed on
+an elderly gentleman, a very confirmed sceptic indeed. This second
+circle consisted of twenty persons, many of them very pronounced
+disbelievers, and not a little inclined to be 'chaffy.' However all
+went on swimmingly.
+
+"After about an hour of rather riotous dark séance, lights were
+rekindled and circles re-arranged for the Face Séance which takes place
+in subdued light. In the space occupied by the folding doors between the
+front and back room a large black screen is placed, with an aperture, or
+peep-hole, about eighteen inches square, cut in it. The most minute
+examination of this back room is allowed, and I took care to lock both
+doors, leaving the keys crosswise in the key-hole, so that they could
+not be opened from the outside. We then took our seats in the front room
+in three or four lines. I myself occupied the centre of the first row,
+about four feet from the screen, Mr. and Mrs. Holmes sitting at a small
+table in front of the screen; the theory being that the spirits behind
+collect from their 'emanations' material to form the faces. Soon after
+we were in position a most ghostly-looking child's face appeared at the
+aperture, but was not recognised. Several other corpse-like visages
+followed with like absence of recognition. Then came a very old lady's
+face, quite life-like, and Mrs. Holmes informed us that the cadaverous
+people were those only recently deceased. The old lady looked anxiously
+round as if expecting to be recognised, but nobody claimed acquaintance.
+In fact no face was recognised at my first visit. The next was a jovial
+Joe Bagstock kind of face which peered quite merrily round our circle,
+and lastly came a most life-like countenance of an elderly man. This
+face, which had a strange leaden look about the eyes, came so close to
+the orifice that it actually _lifted_ its grey beard outside. On the
+occasion of my second visit a lady present distinctly recognised this as
+the face of her husband, and asked the form to show its hand as an
+additional mark of identity. This request was complied with, the figure
+lifting a thin, white and--as the widow expressed it--'aristocratic'
+hand, and kissing it most politely. I am bound to say there was less
+emotion manifested on the part of the lady than I should have expected
+under the circumstances; and a young man who accompanied her, and who
+from the likeness to her must have been her son, surveyed his
+resuscitated papa calmly through a double-barrelled opera glass. I am
+not sure that I am at liberty to give this lady's name; but, at this
+second visit, Mrs. Makdougall Gregory, of 21, Green Street, Grosvenor
+Square, positively identified the old lady above-mentioned as a Scotch
+lady of title well known to her.
+
+"I myself was promised that a relation of my own would appear on a
+future occasion; but on neither of those when I attended did I see
+anything that would enable me to test the value of the identifications.
+The faces, however, were so perfectly life-like, with the solitary
+exception of a dull leaden expression in the eye, that I cannot imagine
+the possibility of a doubt existing as to whether they belonged to
+persons one knew or not. At all events here is the opportunity of making
+the test. No amount of scepticism is a bar to being present. The
+appearances are not limited to a privileged few. All see alike: so that
+the matter is removed out of the sphere of 'hallucinations.' Everything
+is done in the light, too, as far as the faces are concerned. So that
+several not unreasonable test-conditions are fulfilled in this case, and
+so far a step made in advance of previous manifestations.
+
+"We may well indeed pause--at least I know I did--to shake ourselves,
+and ask whereabouts we are. Is this a gigantic imposture? or are the
+Witch of Endor and the Cumæan Sibyl revived in the unromantic
+neighbourhood of the Marble Arch, and under circumstances that
+altogether remove them from the category of the miraculous? England will
+take a good deal of convincing on this subject, which is evidently one
+that no amount of 'involuntary muscular action,' or 'unconscious
+cerebration,' will cover. What if the good old-fashioned ghost be a
+reality after all, and Cock Lane no region of the supernatural?
+
+"What then? Why, one may expect to meet one's deceased ancestors at any
+hour of the day or night, provided only there be a screen for them to
+'form' behind, and a light sufficiently subdued to prevent
+disintegration; with, of course, the necessary pigeon-hole for the
+display of their venerable physiognomies. On their side of the question,
+it will be idle to say, 'No rest but the grave!' for there may not be
+rest even there, if Delphic priestesses and Cumæan Sibyls come into
+vogue again; and we may as well omit the letters R. I. P. from our
+obituary notices as a purely superfluous form of speech."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speaking now in my own proper person as author, I may mention--as I have
+purposely deferred doing up to this point--that a light was subsequently
+struck at one of Mrs. Holmes's Dark Séances, and that the discoveries
+thus made rendered the séance a final one. Mr. and Mrs. Holmes retired,
+first to Brighton, and then to America.
+
+They were, at the time of my writing, holding successful séances in the
+latter place; and public (Spiritualistic) opinion still clings to the
+belief that Mrs. Holmes is a genuine medium.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+AN EVENING WITH THE HIGHER SPIRITS.
+
+
+At the head of social heresies, and rapidly beginning to take rank as a
+religious heresy as well, I have no hesitation in placing modern
+Spiritualism. Those who associate this latest mystery only with gyrating
+articles of furniture, rapping tables, or simpering planchettes, are
+simply in the abyss of ignorance, and dangerously underrate the gravity
+of the subject. The later development of Spirit Faces and Spirit Forms,
+each of which I have examined thoroughly, and made the results of my
+observations public, fail to afford any adequate idea of the pitch to
+which the mania--if mania it be--has attained. To many persons
+Spiritualism forms the ultimatum, not only in science, but also in
+religion. Whatever the Spirits tell them they believe and do as devoutly
+as the Protestant obeys his Bible, the Catholic his Church, or the
+scientific man follows up the results of his demonstrations. That is, in
+fact, the position they assume. They claim to have attained in matters
+of religion to demonstration as clear and infallible as the philosopher
+does in pure science. They say no longer "We believe," but "We know."
+These people care little for the vagaries of Dark Circles, or even the
+doings of young ladies with "doubles." The flight of Mrs. Guppy through
+the air, the elongation of Mr. Home's braces, the insertion of live
+coals among the intricacies of Mr. S. C. Hall's exuberant locks, are but
+the A B C which have led them to their present advanced position. These
+physical "manifestations" may do for the neophytes. They are the
+initiated. I am the initiated; or I ought to be, if patience and
+perseverance constitute serving an apprenticeship. I have devoted a good
+portion of my late life to the study. I have given up valuable evenings
+through several consecutive winters to dark séances; have had my hair
+pulled, my head thumped with paper tubes, and suffered other indignities
+at the hands of the "Invisibles;" and, worse than all, my friends have
+looked upon me as a lunatic for my pains, and if my enemies could have
+wrought their will they would have incarcerated me as non compos, or
+made an auto-da-fe of me as a heretic years ago.
+
+Through sheer length of service, then, if on no other account, I had
+grown somewhat blasé with the ordinary run of manifestations. Spirit
+Faces no longer interest me; for I seek among them in vain the
+lineaments of my departed friends. Spirit Hands I shake as unconcernedly
+as I do those of my familiar acquaintances at the club or in the street.
+I have even cut off a portion of the veil of Miss Florence Maple, the
+Aberdeen Spirit, and gone away with it in my pocket: so that it was, at
+all events, a new sensation when I received an invitation to be present
+at a trance séance, where one of the Higher Spirits communicated to the
+assembled things undreamed of in mundane philosophy. The sitting was a
+strictly private one; so I must not mention names or localities; but
+this does not matter, as I have no marvels in the vulgar sense of the
+word to relate: only Higher Teachings, which will do just as well with
+asterisks or initials as with the names in full.
+
+The scene, then, was an artist's studio at the West End of London, and
+the medium a magnetic lady with whom I had frequently sat before, though
+not for the "Higher" teachings. Her instruction had so far come in the
+shape of very vigorous raps, which ruined my knuckles to imitate them,
+and in levitation of a small and volatile chess table, which resisted
+all my efforts to keep it to the paths of propriety. This lady was not
+young; and I confess frankly this was, to my thinking, an advantage.
+When I once told a sceptical friend about Miss Florence Cook's séance,
+and added, triumphantly, "Why, she's a pretty little simple girl of
+sixteen," that clenched the doubts of this Thomas at once, for he
+rejoined, "What is there that a pretty little _simple_ girl of sixteen
+won't do?" Miss Showers is sweet sixteen, too; and when "Peter" sings
+through her in a clear baritone voice, I cannot, despite myself, help
+the thought occasionally flitting across my mind, "Would that you were
+six-and-twenty, or, better still, six-and-thirty, instead of sixteen!"
+Without specifying to which of the two latter classes our present medium
+belonged, one might venture to say she had safely passed the former. She
+was of that ripe and Rubens-like beauty to which we could well imagine
+some "Higher" spirit offering the golden apple of its approval, however
+the skittish Paris of the spheres might incline to sweet sixteen. I had
+a short time before sat infructuously with this lady, when a distressing
+contretemps occurred. We were going in for a dark séance then, and just
+as we fancied the revenants were about to justify the title, we were
+startled by a crash, and on my lighting up, all of the medium I could
+see were two ankles protruding from beneath the table. She had fainted
+"right off," as the ladies say, and it required something strong to
+bring her to. In fact, we all had a "refresher," I recollect, for
+sitting is generally found to be exhausting to the circle as well as to
+the medium. On the present occasion, however, everything was, if not en
+plein jour, en plein gaz. There was a good deal of preliminary
+difficulty as to the choice of a chair for the medium. Our artist-friend
+had a lot of antique affairs in his studio, no two being alike, and I
+was glad to see the lady select a capacious one with arms to it, from
+which she would not be likely to topple off when the spirits took
+possession. The rest of us sat in a sort of irregular circle round the
+room, myself alone being accommodated with a small table, not for the
+purposes of turning (I am set down as "too physical") but in order to
+report the utterances of the Higher Spirits. We were five "assistants"
+in all--our host, a young lady residing with him, another lady well
+known as a musical artiste, with her mamma and my unworthy self.
+Installed in her comfortable chair, the medium went through a series of
+facial contortions, most of which looked the reverse of pleasing, though
+occasionally she smiled benignantly par parenthèse. I was told--or I
+understood it so--that this represented her upward passage through
+different spheres. She was performing, in fact, a sort of spiritualistic
+"Excelsior." By way of assimilating our minds to the matter in hand, we
+discussed the Apocryphal Gospels, which happened to be lying on the
+table; and very soon, without any other process than the facial
+contortions having been gone through, the medium broke silence, and, in
+measured tones of considerable benignity, said:--"Friends, we greet you
+in the name of our Lord and Master. Let us say the Lord's Prayer."
+
+She then repeated the Lord's Prayer, with considerable alterations from
+the Authorized Version, especially, I noticed, inserting the
+Swedenborgian expressions, "the Heavens," "on earth;" but also altering
+the order of the clauses, and omitting one altogether. She then informed
+us that she was ready to answer questions on any subject, but that we
+were not bound to accept any teaching which she--or let us say they,
+for it was the spirits now speaking--might give us. "What did we wish to
+know?" I always notice that when this question is asked at a spirit
+circle everybody simultaneously shuts up, as though the desire for
+knowledge were dried at its source. Nobody spoke, and I myself was not
+prepared with a subject, but I had just been reviewing a Swedenborgian
+book, and I softly insinuated "Spiritual Marriage." It was graciously
+accepted; and our Sibyl thus delivered herself:--Mankind, the higher
+Spirit or Spirits, said was originally created in pairs, and the soul
+was still dual. Somehow or other--my notes are not quite clear how--the
+parts had got mixed up, separated, or wrongly sorted. There were,
+however, some advantages in this wrong sorting, which was so frequent an
+accident of terrestrial marriage, since it was possible for people to be
+too much alike--an observation I fancied I had heard before, or at least
+not so profound a one as to need a ghost "Come from the dead to tell us
+that, Horatio!" When the right halves did get together on earth the good
+developed for good, the evil for evil, until they got to the heavens or
+the other places--they were all plurals. Swedenborgianism has an
+objection to the singular number; and I could not fail to identify the
+teaching of the Higher Spirit at once with that of the New Jerusalem
+Church. Two preliminary facts were brought before us; the Higher Spirits
+were in theology Swedenborgian, and in medical practice homoeopaths. So
+was the Medium. Although there was no marriage in the spiritual world,
+in our sense of the term, there was not only this re-sorting and
+junction of the disunited bivalves, but there were actual "nuptials"
+celebrated. We were to be careful and understand that what terrestrials
+called marriage celestials named nuptials--it seemed to me rather a
+distinction without a difference. There was no need of any ceremony, but
+still a ceremony was pleasing and also significant. I asked if it was
+true, as I had read in the Swedenborgian book, that all adult angels
+were married. She replied, "Yes; they married from the age of 18 to 24,
+and the male was always a few years older than the female."
+
+There was a tendency, which I continually had to check, on the part of
+the Medium to wander off from matrimonial to theological subjects; and
+the latter, though trite, were scarcely so heterodox as I expected. I
+had found most "spiritualistic" teaching to be purely Theistic. Love to
+God and man were declared to be the great essentials, and creeds to
+matter little. If a man loved truth, it was no matter how wild or absurd
+his ideas might be. The love of God might seem a merely abstract idea,
+but it was not so. To love goodness was to love God. The love of the
+neighbour, in the sense of loving all one's kind, might seem hard, too;
+but it was not really so. There were in the sphere where this
+Intelligence dwelt millions of angels, or good spirits, working for the
+salvation of men.
+
+I ought to mention that this lady, in her normal condition, is
+singularly reticent, and that the "communications" I chronicle were
+delivered fluently in one unbroken chain of what often rose into real
+eloquence.
+
+So Christ came for the good of man, and Christ was not the only Messiah
+who had appeared on earth. In the millions of ages that had passed over
+our globe, and in the other planets of our solar system, there had risen
+up "other men filled with the spirit of good, and so Sons of God." I
+here tried to get at the views of the Higher Spirits on the Divinity of
+Christ, but found considerable haziness; at one time it was roundly
+asserted, at another it seemed to me explained away by such expressions
+as I have quoted above.
+
+Our planet, I was informed, had been made the subject of special care
+because we were more material, more "solid" than the inhabitants of any
+other orb. There was an essential difference between Christ and all
+other great teachers, such as Buddha; and there were no historical
+records of any other manifestation of the Messiah than that we
+possessed; but such manifestations had taken place.
+
+The Spirit then gave us an account of its surroundings, which is, I
+believe, purely Swedenborgian. The "celestial" angels were devoted to
+truth, the "spiritual" angels to goodness; and so, too, there were the
+Homes of the Satans, where falsehoods prevailed, and of the Devils,
+where evils predominated. Spirits from each of these came to man and
+held him in equilibrio; but gained power as his will inclined towards
+them. The will was not altogether free, because affected by inherited
+tendencies; but the "determination" was. I have no idea what the Higher
+Spirit meant by this; and I rather fancy the Higher Spirit was in some
+doubt itself. It rather put me in mind of the definition of metaphysics:
+"If you are talking to me of what you know nothing about, and I don't
+understand a word of what you are saying--that's metaphysics."
+
+All can do good, continued the Sibyl. Evil cannot compel you. Utter only
+such an aspiration as, "God help me," and it brings a crowd of angels
+round you. From those who came to them from this world, however, they
+(the Higher Spirits) found that teachers taught more about what we were
+to think than what we were to do. Goodness was so easy. A right belief
+made us happier; but right action was essential.
+
+Pushed by our host, who was rather inclined to "badger" the Higher
+Spirit, as to irresistible tendencies, the Intelligence said they were
+_not_ irresistible. When we arrived in the Spirit World we should find
+everything that had occurred in our lives photographed. You will condemn
+yourselves, it was added. You will not be "had up" before an angry God.
+_You_ will decide, in reference to any wrong action, whether you could
+help it. Even in the act of doing it a man condemns himself; much more
+so there. The doctrine of the Atonement was summarily disposed of as a
+"damnable heresy." "Does the Great Spirit want one man to die? It hurts
+us even to think of it!"
+
+I then questioned the Medium with regard to the resurrection of the
+body; and was told that man, as originally created, was a spiritual
+being, but had "superinduced" his present body of flesh--how he managed
+it I did not quite gather. As to possible sublimation of corporeal
+integument, the case of ghosts was mentioned. It was to no purpose I
+gently insinuated I had never seen a ghost, or had the existence of one
+properly authenticated. I was told that if I fired a pistol through a
+ghost only a small particle of dust would remain which could be swept
+up. I was not aware that even so much would remain. Fancy "sweeping up"
+a Higher Spirit!
+
+I could not help once or twice pausing to look round on this strange
+preacher and congregation. The comfortable-looking lady propped in an
+arm-chair, and with an urbane smile discoursing on these tremendous
+topics, our little congregation of five, myself writing away for dear
+life, the young hostess nursing a weird-looking black cat; the other
+young lady continually harking back to "conjugal" subjects, which
+seemed to interest her; the mamma slightly flabbergastered at the rather
+revolutionary nature of the communications; and our host every now and
+then throwing in a rude or caustic remark. I dreaded to think what might
+have been the result of a domiciliary visit paid by a Commissioner in
+Lunacy to that particular studio!
+
+Back, then, the musical young lady took us to conjugal pairs. It was
+very difficult to convey to us what this conjugal love was like. Was it
+Elective Affinity? I asked. Yes; something like that, but still not
+that. It was the spontaneous gravitation in the spheres, either to
+other, of the halves of the dual spirit dissociated on earth. Not at
+all--again in reply to me--like flirting in a corner. The two, when
+walking in the spheres, looked like one. This conjugal puzzle was too
+much for us. We "gave it up;" and with an eloquent peroration on the
+Dynamics of Prayer, the séance concluded.
+
+The Lord's Prayer was again said, with even more varieties than before;
+a few extemporaneous supplications were added. The process of coming-to
+seemed even more disagreeable, if one may judge by facial expression,
+than going into the trance. Eventually, to get back quite to earth, our
+Sibyl had to be demesmerized by our host, and in a few minutes was
+partaking of a ham sandwich and a cup of coffee as though she had never
+been in nubibus at all.
+
+What the psychological condition had been I leave for those more
+learned than myself to determine. That some exaltation of the faculties
+took place was clear. That the resulting intelligence was of deep
+practical import few, I fancy, would aver. Happily my mission is not to
+discuss, but to describe; and so I simply set down my experience in the
+same terms in which it was conveyed to me as "An Evening with the Higher
+Spirits."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+SPIRIT FORMS.
+
+
+Some years ago I contributed to the columns of a daily paper an article
+on Spirit Faces, which was to me the source of troubles manifold. In the
+first place, the inquirers into Spiritualism, whose name I found to be
+legion, inundated me with letters, asking me to take them to the house
+of pretty Miss Blank, the medium. Miss Blank might have been going on
+till now, holding nightly receptions, without having exhausted her list
+of self-invited guests; I had but one answer; the lady was a comparative
+stranger to me, and not a professional medium; ergo, the legion must ask
+some one to chaperone them elsewhere. Spirit Faces had got comparatively
+common and almost gone out since I wrote. We are a long way beyond faces
+now. Then, again, my second source of trouble was that forthwith, from
+the date of my writing, the Spiritualists claimed me for their own, as
+Melancholy did the young gentleman in Gray's elegy. Though I fancied my
+paper was only a calm judicial statement of things seen, and I carefully
+avoided saying whether I was convinced or not, I found myself nolens
+volens enrolled among the initiated, and expected to devote about five
+evenings out of the seven to séances. I did go, and do go still to a
+great many; so that I feel pretty well posted up in the "Latest
+Intelligence" of the Spiritual world. But the worst of all is that my
+own familiar friends, in whom I trusted, have also lifted up their heels
+against me--I mean metaphorically, of course. "What's the last new thing
+in spirits?" they ask me out loud in omnibuses or railway carriages,
+causing my fellow-travellers to look at me in doubt as to whether I am a
+licensed victualler or a necromancer. As "bigots feign belief till they
+believe," I really begin to have some doubts myself as to the state of
+my convictions.
+
+But I wish to make this paper again a simple statement of things heard
+and seen--especially seen. I flatter myself the title is a nice, weird,
+ghostly one, calculated to make people feel uncomfortable about the
+small hours of the morning. Should such be the case--as they say in
+prefaces--the utmost hopes of the writer will be realized. When last I
+communicated my experiences, the ultimate end we had reached was the
+appearance of a white counterpart of pretty Miss Blank's face at the
+peep-hole of a corner cupboard. There were a good many more or
+less--generally less--successful imitations of this performance in
+various quarters, and the sensation subsided. Miss B. was still facile
+princeps from the fact that she stood full light--I mean her spirit-face
+did--whilst all the others leaned to a more or less dim religious kind
+of gloom. In a short time, however, "Katie"--as the familiar of Miss B.
+was termed--thought she would be able to "materialize" herself so far as
+to present the whole form, if we re-arranged the corner cupboard so as
+to admit of her doing so. Accordingly we opened the door, and from it
+suspended a rug or two opening in the centre, after the fashion of a
+Bedouin Arab's tent, formed a semicircle, sat and sang Longfellow's
+"Footsteps of Angels." Therein occurs the passage: "Then the forms of
+the departed enter at the open door." And, lo and behold, though we had
+left Miss B. tied and sealed to her chair, and clad in an ordinary black
+dress somewhat voluminous as to the skirts, a tall female figure draped
+classically in white, with bare arms and feet, did enter at the open
+door, or rather down the centre from between the two rugs, and stood
+statue-like before us, spoke a few words, and retired; after which we
+entered the Bedouin tent and found pretty Miss B. with her dress as
+before, knots and seals secure, and her boots on! This was Form No. 1,
+the first I had ever seen. It looked as material as myself; and on a
+subsequent occasion--for I have seen it several times--we took four very
+good photographic portraits of it by magnesium light. The difficulty I
+still felt, with the form as with the faces, was that it seemed so
+thoroughly material and flesh-and-blood like. Perhaps, I thought, the
+authoress of "The Gates Ajar" is right, and the next condition of things
+may be more material than we generally think, even to the extent of
+admitting, as she says, pianofortes among its adjuncts. But I was to see
+something much more ghostly than this.
+
+The great fact I notice about Spiritualism is, that it is obeying the
+occult impetus of all great movements, and steadily going from east to
+west. From Hackney and Highbury it gravitates towards Belgravia and
+Tyburnia. I left the wilds of Hackney behind, and neared Hyde Park for
+my next Form. I must again conceal names and localities; I have no
+desire to advertise mediums, or right to betray persons who have shown
+me hospitality--and Spirit Forms. We arranged ourselves in a semicircle
+around the curtains which separated the small back drawing-room from the
+large front one, joined hands, sang until we were hoarse as crows, and
+kept our eyes steadily fixed on an aperture left between the curtains
+for the faces to show themselves. The room was in blank darkness, and,
+feeling rather tired of the incantation, I looked over my shoulder into
+the gloom, and lo! a shadowy form stood self-illuminated not far from
+me. At last I had seen it--a good orthodox ghost in white, and visible
+in the darkness. It was the form of the redoubtable John King himself,
+who was, I believe, a bold buccaneer in the flesh, but who looked more
+like an Arab sheikh in the spirit. He sailed about the room, talked to
+us, and finally disappeared. Eventually he reappeared behind the
+curtains, and for a brief space the portière was drawn aside, and the
+spirit form was seen lighting up the recumbent figure of the medium,
+who was stretched on a sofa, apparently in deep trance. It must be borne
+in mind that we were forming a cordon round the passage from one room to
+the other during the whole of this time. A trio of "spirits" generally
+puts in an appearance at these séances. In this case there were John
+King, whom I had now seen, as well as heard; Katie, the familiar of Miss
+B.; and a peculiarly lugubrious gentleman named Peter, who, I fancy, has
+not been seen, but who has several times done me the favour of grasping
+my hand and hoisting me towards the ceiling, as though he were going to
+carry me off bodily to spirit-land. I stand some six feet in my boots,
+and have stepped upon my chair, and still felt the hand coming downwards
+to me--where from I have no idea.
+
+But my later experiences have still to be told. I was invited a few
+weeks ago to a very select séance indeed, where the same medium was to
+officiate. This family, who spared no expense in their investigations,
+had actually got a large, handsome cabinet standing in their dining-room
+as a recognised piece of furniture. It was only used, however, on this
+occasion for the imprisonment of the medium. The evolutions of John
+King, who soon appeared, all took place outside the cabinet door. He was
+only "materialized" to the middle; and, to our utter amazement, came up
+to the table, and apparently _through_ the table, into the very middle
+of the circle, where he disported himself in various ways, keeping up
+an animated conversation the whole time, and frequently throwing himself
+into the attitude of a person swimming on his back. He also went upwards
+as high as the gasalier, and altogether did a good many marvellous
+things, considering that all this time he presented the appearance of
+only half a man illuminated by his own light.
+
+On one occasion only have I been seated next to the medium during the
+manifestation of any of these forms. At this séance I held him firmly by
+one hand, and a slightly sceptical lady had the other. We never let go
+for a moment, but during the whole of the sitting, while John King,
+Katie, and Peter were talking, tiny children's hands were playing with
+my arm, hands, and hair. There were, of course, no children in the room.
+Peter, the lugubrious, is great at light porterage. I have known him
+bring a large collection of valuable Sèvres china, and a timepiece with
+its glass case, from the chimney-piece to the table--no easy task in the
+light, much less in blank darkness. He also frequently takes down the
+pictures from the wall and puts them on the table. Katie winds up a
+large musical box, and wafts it, while playing, all over the room. Of
+course we rub our eyes and ask what on earth, if it be on earth, does
+this mean? I have not--to keep up the diction of my subject--the _ghost_
+of an idea. If it's conjuring, why don't the mediums say so, and enter
+the field openly against Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke and Dr. Lynn? Even
+if I had a decided opinion about it I should refrain from propounding it
+here, because, in the first place, it would be an impertinence, and, in
+the second, no conclusion can be arrived at upon testimony alone. People
+must see for themselves and draw their own inferences. In the meantime
+the thing, whatever it is, grows and grows upwards. A year ago I had to
+journey down east to find it. Now I must array myself gorgeously like a
+Staffordshire miner, and seek the salons of the West. The great
+desideratum, it still appears to me, is that some man with a name in
+science should examine the matter, honestly resolving to endorse the
+facts if true, but to expose them mercilessly if there be a loophole for
+suspicion. Omne ignotum pro magnifico habetur. I used to think ghosts
+big things, but that was before I knew them. I should think no more of
+meeting a ghost now than a donkey on a dark night, and would infinitely
+sooner tackle a spirit than a burglar. People's curiosity is roused, and
+the sooner somebody gets at the truth the better. It is a somewhat
+irksome task, it is true; but no general principle can be arrived at
+except by an induction of particulars. Let us be Baconian, even to our
+ghosts. If they _are_ ghosts, they are a good deal more substantial than
+I had thought. If they are not, let somebody, in the name of
+nineteenth-century science, send them off as with the crow of
+chanticleer, and let us hear no more of Spirit Faces or Spirit Forms.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+SITTING WITH A SIBYL.
+
+
+The connexion of modesty with merit is proverbial, though questioned by
+Sydney Smith, who says their only point in common is the fact that each
+begins with an--m. Modesty, however--waiving the question of
+accompanying merit--is a trait which, in my mystic inquiries and devious
+wanderings, I meet with far more frequently than might be expected. I
+have just met with two instances which I hasten to put on record, if
+only to confute those who say that the age in general, and spirit
+mediums in particular, are not prone to be modest and retiring. My first
+modest person was a Spirit Photographer; my second was a Sibyl. I might
+have looked for bashfulness in the latter, but was certainly surprised
+to meet with it in the former. I suddenly learnt from the Medium the
+fact that a Spirit Photographer had settled down in my immediate
+neighbourhood, and the appearance of his ghostly advertisement brings to
+my recollection some previous mystic experiences I myself had in this
+way.
+
+A now celebrated medium, Mrs. Guppy, née Miss Nicholl, was, in the days
+of her maidenhood, a practitioner of photography in Westbourne Grove;
+and, as far as I know, she might have been the means of opening up to
+the denizens of the Summer Land this new method of terrestrial
+operations. Ever on the qui vive for anything new in the occult line, I
+at once interviewed Miss Nicholl and sat for my portrait, expecting at
+the least to find the attendant spirit of my departed grandmamma or
+defunct maiden aunt standing sentinel over me, as I saw departed
+relations doing in many cartes de visite in the room. I confess there
+was a kind of made-up theatrical-property look about the attendant
+spirits which gave one the idea that the superior intelligences must
+have dressed in a hurry when they sat or stood for their portraits. They
+looked, in fact, if it be not irreverent to say it, rather like so many
+bundles of pneumatical rags than respectable domestic ghosts. However,
+as long as I got the ghosts I did not care about the dress. Tenue de
+soir point de rigueur, I would have said, as they do outside the cheap
+casinos in Paris, or "Evening dress not required," if one must descend
+to the vernacular. Well, I sat persistently and patiently through I am
+afraid to say how many operations, and the operator described me as
+being surrounded by spirits--I always am according to Mediums, but my
+spirits must be eminently unsociable ones, for they seldom give me a
+word, and on this occasion refused to be "taken" as resolutely as the
+bashful gentleman in the _Graphic_ who resisted the operations of the
+prison officials to obtain a sun-picture of his interesting
+physiognomy. There was indeed a blotch on one of the negatives, which I
+was assured was a spirit. I could not see things in that light.
+
+Foiled on this particular occasion my anxiety was dormant, but never
+died out. I still longed for a denizen of the other world to put in an
+appearance, and kept on being photographed over and over again until I
+might have been the vainest man alive, on the bare hope that the artist
+might be a Medium malgré lui or undeveloped. I had heard there were such
+beings, but they never came in my way. I was really serious in this
+wish, because I felt if it could be granted, the possibility of
+deception being prevented, the objectivity of the phenomena would be
+guaranteed. At this time I was heretical enough to believe that most
+ghosts were due to underdone pork or untimely Welsh rare-bits, and that
+the raps assigned to their agency were assignable to the active toes of
+the Medium which might be anywhere and up to anything with the
+opportunities of a dark séance.
+
+A short time since, however, M. Buguet, a celebrated French Spirit
+Photographer came from Paris to London, and received sitters for the
+modest sum of _30s._ each. This would have been much beyond my means;
+but I suppose my wish had transpired, and that gentleman sent me an
+invitation to sit gratis, which, I need not say, I thankfully accepted.
+I felt sure that M. Buguet did not know either my long-lost grandmother
+or lamented maiden aunt, so that any portraits I might get from him
+would be presumably genuine. I sat; and over my manly form, when the
+negative came to be cleaned, was a female figure in the act of
+benediction. I have no notion how she got there--for I watched every
+stage in the operation, and selected my plate myself; but neither, on
+the other hand, does she bear the faintest resemblance to anybody I ever
+knew.
+
+Still M. Buguet is not my modest photographer. Elated by success so far,
+I called on the local gentleman who advertised in the _Medium_; but the
+local gentleman was "engaged." I wrote to the local gentleman appointing
+an interview; but the local gentleman replied not. Yet still his
+advertisement remains; and I see in every spiritualistic album dozens of
+"property" relations in the shape of quasi-spirits, and wonder why the
+local gentleman would not take me, so as to be immortalized in these
+pages.
+
+Equally modest was the advertising Sibyl. I wrote to the Sibyl, and
+somebody replied, and "respectfully declined." But I was not to be done.
+There is more than one Sibyl in the world. I called on No. 2 without
+announcing my intention or sending in my name. This Sibyl at once
+admitted me, and I mounted to the first floor front of a respectable
+suburban lodging-house.
+
+I waited anxiously for a long time, wondering whether Sibyl was
+partaking of the onions, whose presence in that modest domicile was
+odoriferously evidenced to my nose, though it was then scarcely
+half-past one o'clock. Presently a portly middle-aged man, who might
+have been Sibyl's youthful papa, or rather aged husband, entered, wiping
+his mouth. He had clearly been partaking of the fragrant condiment.
+
+Where was Sibyl?
+
+"She would be with us directly," the gentleman said, varying the
+proceedings by picking his teeth in the interim.
+
+She _was_ with us in a minute, and never, I suppose, did picturesque
+anticipations more suddenly collapse and come to grief than mine. I had
+pictured Sibyl a bright ethereal being, and the realization of my ideal
+weighed twelve stone, if an ounce. She was a big, fleshy, large-boned
+woman of an utterly uncertain age, not without considerable good-nature
+in her extensive features; but the pervading idea that you had when you
+looked at Sibyl was that there was _too much of her_. I could not help
+thinking of the husband who said he did not like a big wife: he
+preferred two small ones; and then again I fell into wonderment as to
+whether the man who was still engaged with his dental apparatus was
+Sibyl's husband or papa.
+
+I told them I was anxious to test Sibyl's powers; and, with a few passes
+from his fat dumpy hands, the man soon put her to sleep. It looked to me
+like an after-dinner nap, but I was told it was magnetic. It might have
+been. By the way, I had unmistakable evidence from my olfactory organ
+that Sibyl _had_ been eating onions.
+
+I had provided myself with two locks of hair, as I had heard that
+"psychometry" was among Sibyl's qualifications. I handed her the first,
+and she immediately proceeded to describe a series of tableaux which
+appeared to pass through her mind. She kept handling the lock of hair,
+and said, "The person to whom this belongs is ill--weak," which was true
+enough, but might, I thought, be a shot. I should mention, however, that
+it was quite impossible Sibyl could know me. She had not even heard my
+name. She then described a bedroom, with some person--she could not see
+what person--lying in bed, and a lady in a blue dress bending over her.
+This, again, I thought might flow out as a deduction from her premises
+of the hair belonging to an invalid. The blue dress was correct enough,
+but still so little special as to be a very possible coincidence. She
+then, however, startled me by saying, "I notice this, that on the table
+by the bedside, where the bottles of medicine are standing, milk has
+been spilt--a large quantity--and not wiped up." This was a trivial
+detail, not known to me at the time, but confirmed on subsequent
+inquiry.
+
+She then passed on to describe a second tableau, where the same person
+in the blue dress was in a room _all hung over with plates_, along with
+a gentleman whom she described very accurately. He was the occupant of
+the house where the patient lay, and, having a hobby for old china, had
+turned his dining-room into a sort of crockery shop by hanging it all
+over with the delf.
+
+This was curious enough, though not very convincing. It seemed as though
+the influence of this person who had given me the hair was stronger than
+that of the hair itself. With the second lock of hair we failed utterly.
+She said that also came from a sick person, but a person not sick with
+the same disease as the other. She was quite positive they came from
+different people, and asked me to feel the difference of texture. I am
+sorry, for Sibyl's sake, to say they both came from the same person, and
+were cut at the same time, though from different parts of the head,
+which made one look silkier than the other.
+
+As a test of Sibyl's clairvoyance, this was not very satisfactory. She
+read the inscription on a card when her eyes were bandaged, pressing it
+to her forehead; but then olden experiences in the way of blindman's
+buff convince me that it is very difficult to say when a person is
+properly blinded.
+
+Altogether, then, I never quite got over my previous disappointment at
+Sibyl's bulk. Had she been pretty and frizzle-headed like Miss Annie Eva
+Fay, or like Miss Showers or Miss Florence Cook, I might have been
+disposed to make more of her coincidences and to wink at her failures.
+We _are_ so liable to be led away by our feelings in these matters.
+Sibyl was large, had eaten onions, and would have been improved if she
+had brushed her hair, and so I am afraid I rather grudged the somewhat
+exorbitant fee which the fat-handed man--not Sibyl--took and pocketed in
+an interval of his dental pursuit, and I passed out from that suburban
+lodging, none of us, I fancy, very well satisfied with one another. I
+have an idea I unconsciously expressed my inner feelings of
+disappointment with Sibyl and something stronger in reference to her
+male companion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+SPIRITUALISTS AND CONJURERS.
+
+
+"How it's done" is the question which, in the words of Dr. Lynn, we want
+to settle with reference to his own or kindred performances, and, still
+more, in the production of the phenomena known as spiritual. I have
+spent some years of my existence in a hitherto vain endeavour to solve
+the latter problem; and the farther I go, the more the mystery seems to
+deepen. Of late, the two opposed parties, the Spiritualists and the
+Conjurers, have definitely entered the arena, and declared war to the
+knife. Each claims to be Moses, and denounces the others as mere
+magicians. Mr. Maskelyne holds a dark séance, professing to expose the
+spiritualistic ones; Dr. Lynn brandishes against them his strong right
+arm upon which is written in letters all of blood the name of one's
+deceased grandmother, while, in return, Dr. Sexton exposes the
+conjurers, and spoils one's enjoyment of a hitherto enjoyable evening,
+by showing "how it's done"--how the name of one's departed relative is
+forged and painted early in the afternoon, instead of "coming out" on
+the spot--and in spots--like measles or nettle-rash (as we feel defunct
+relations ought to come) or walking in and out of the corded box at
+pleasure, and even going so far as to give the address of the clever
+mechanist down a by-street near Notting-hill Gate, who will make the
+mysterious packing case to order in return for a somewhat heavy
+"consideration."
+
+I accepted Dr. Lynn's invitation to be present on his "opening night;"
+and wondered, in passing, why everybody should not make their cards of
+invitation such thorough works of art as his. Now I am going to do
+even-handed justice all the way round; and I must say that Dr. Lynn's
+experiment of fastening his attendant to a sort of penitential stool
+with copper wire, surrounded by scrutineers from the audience, and then
+making the man's coat come off, and a ring pass over his arm, behind a
+simple rug held in front of him, is quite as wonderful as anything I
+have ever witnessed at a séance. It has the great advantage of being
+done in the light, instead of, as in Mr. Fay's case, in darkness, and
+without a cabinet. In fact, I have no idea how it's done; though I have
+no doubt the first time I see Dr. Sexton he will point to something
+unsatisfactory in the bolts to which that doorkeeper is fastened, and
+give me the addresses of the ironmonger who will sell me some like them,
+or the tailor who will manufacture me a swallow tail coat with an
+imperceptible slit down the back. Then again, I have, as I said, seen
+young Mr. Sexton go in and out of the corded box, and I know how that's
+done; but Dr. Lynn's man goes into three, one inside the other. Well, I
+can understand that if Dr. Sexton's theory be correct, it may perhaps be
+as easy to get into a "nest" of three as into one box; but how, in the
+name of nature--or art--does the nautical gentleman get out of the
+double sack in which he is tied? I cannot bring myself to print what Dr.
+Sexton's theory of the box is, because it appears to be such a wanton
+cruelty to "expose" things when people go to the Egyptian Hall on
+purpose to be mystified. I remember how the fact of having seen Dr.
+Sexton do the trick of reading the names in the hat spoilt my enjoyment
+of Dr. Lynn's experiment. He really appeared quite bungling when I knew
+all he was about. He did not, on this occasion, produce the letters on
+his arm; but I saw he could quite easily have done so, though the doing
+it would have been no sort of reproduction of Mr. Forster's
+manifestation, who showed you the name of some relative when you had
+looked in on him quite unexpectedly. I can quite understand how it is
+that the spiritualists, who hold these matters to be sacred as
+revelation itself--in fact, to be revelation itself, are shocked at
+seeing their convictions denounced as trickery and "exposed" on a public
+platform; but I confess I do not quite see how they can adopt the tu
+quoque principle, and "expose" Dr. Lynn and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke
+as tricksters, because they do not pretend to be anything else. It
+would have been fatal if the magicians had "found out" Moses, and they
+wisely refrained from trying; but it would have served no purpose for
+Moses to "find out" the magicians: and it strikes me Moses would have
+deemed it very infra dig. to make the attempt. The two things stand on
+quite different grounds; and I cannot help thinking that the
+spiritualists unwisely concede a point when they accept the challenge of
+the conjurers. I am quite aware that the theory of the spiritualists
+makes of many a conjurer a medium malgré lui, and says he ought to come
+out in his true colours. It was so Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke were
+originally introduced to a London public at the Crystal Palace under the
+auspices of an eminent spiritualist; but it really appears to me that
+such an assertion amounts to begging the question; for I doubt whether
+it would not "pay" quite as well to come out boldly in Mr. Williams's or
+Mr. Morse's line as in that of Dr. Lynn or Mr. Maskelyne.
+
+In a lengthened confab which I once had with Mr. Maskelyne himself after
+one of his performances, he told me that by constant attendance at the
+séances of the Davenports he found out how that was all done; and, being
+a working watchmaker, was able soon to get the necessary apparatus
+constructed. I must again be just, and state that while the cabinet
+séance of Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke seems to me the exact counterpart
+of the Davenports', their dark séance fails to reproduce that of the
+spiritualists as the performances of Professor Pepper himself. True,
+this latter gentleman does all his exposés on a platform which is sacred
+against all intrusion, and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke assume to allow
+as much examination as the spiritualists. But I myself, who have seen
+Mr. Home float around Mr. S. C. Hall's drawing-room, and handled him
+above and below in transitu, quite fail to discern any reproduction of
+that phenomenon in the heavy, lumbering levitation of the lady by means
+of the scissors-like apparatus behind her, which we are only privileged
+to behold from the stalls. The dancing walking-stick is as palpably made
+terpsichorean by a string as the chairs I have seen cross Mr. Hall's
+drawing-room in full light were not drawn by strings, for I was able to
+look closely at them; and I do not know how that was done.
+
+Fresh from Dr. Lynn's really marvellous performances of recent times,
+and with Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke's equally clever tricks in my
+mind's eye, though not quite so recently, I still am bold to say I
+believe there are still six of one to half-a-dozen of the other. If the
+conjurers reproduce the spiritual phenomena in some instances, the
+spiritualists distance the conjurers in others. I speak of phenomena
+only. The magicians produced many of the same phenomena as Moses; but,
+even so, if we are orthodox we must believe the source of such
+manifestations to have been utterly different.
+
+But I am, as I said, wise in my generation, and stick to phenomena. I
+venture to think the conjurers unwise in irritating the spiritualists,
+who are a growing body, by placarding their entertainment as exposés,
+even though such announcements may "draw" the non-spiritual public. I
+suppose, however, they understand the science of advertising better than
+I do; but I feel sure the spiritualists are unwise to follow their
+example, because they have got nothing to expose. Dr. Lynn or Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke are as much pleased as conscientious mediums would
+be shocked at being proved clever tricksters. The only folks who are
+injured by being told "how it's done," are the British Public, who pay
+their five shillings to be mystified at the Egyptian Hall, just as the
+spiritualists do in Lamb's Conduit Street.
+
+If it is to come to a race for the championship--and seriously it would
+seem that, having begun, the two parties are bound to continue the
+strife--one can scarcely imagine anything more attractive than such a
+combined display of talent. Dr. Lynn gets lots of people to come and see
+"How it's done"--the gentleman with the mandolin is well worth a visit,
+and I cannot guess how he does it--while Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke
+must really be making a good thing of it. Mr. Williams's séances are
+decidedly attractive (and how he does it has puzzled me for years, as I
+said), nor does the Progressive Institute seem to decrease in interest;
+but let us only picture the fascination of a long evening where Pepper's
+Ghost should be pitted against John King, Mrs. Guppy and Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke's lady float in competition round the room or even
+in from the suburbs, while the Davenports and Dr. Lynn's man should
+wriggle out of or into iron rings and their own dress coats! Until some
+such contest takes place, the public mind will probably gravitate
+towards the conjurers rather than the spiritualists, and that through
+the actually suicidal policy of the latter; because while the
+spiritualists of necessity can show no visible source of their
+manifestations, one of their own rank devotes himself to aiding the
+conjurers by showing in reference to their tricks, "How it's done." It
+would have been wiser, surely, to stand upon dignity, and in a truly
+conservative spirit (is it too late even now to reassume it?), say,
+"These men are mediums, but it does not suit their pockets to confess
+it."
+
+Well, they are signs of the times. London loves to be mystified, and
+would only have one instead of manifold methods to be so if the
+spiritualists and conjurers were to strike hands, and reduce us all to
+the dead level of pure faith or relentless reason and cold common
+sense!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+PROS AND CONS OF SPIRITUALISM.
+
+
+It has been repeatedly urged upon me on previous occasions, and also
+during the progress of these sheets through the press, that I should
+make a clean breast of my own belief or disbelief in spiritualism; that
+besides being descriptive, I should go one step beyond a mere catalogue
+of phenomena, and, to some extent at least, theorize on this mysterious
+and generally proscribed subject.
+
+Let me say at the outset that against the proscription of this, or
+indeed any topic which does not offend against morals, I would at the
+very outset protest as the height of unwisdom. Thus to taboo a subject
+is at once to lend it a factitious interest, and more than half to
+endorse its truth: and I believe modern spiritualism has been very
+generally treated in this way. Whether truth has gained by such
+indiscriminate condemnation and prejudgment is, I think, greatly open to
+question.
+
+For myself, I have, from the first, steadily refused to look upon
+spiritualism in this bugbear fashion. The thing was either true or
+false--or, more probably still, partly true and partly false: and I must
+bring to bear on the discovery of its truth or falsehood, just the same
+critical faculties that I should employ on any other problem of common
+life. That, I fancy, is no transcendental view of the matter; but just
+the plain common sense way of going to work. It was, at all events,
+right or wrong, the method I adopted to get at such results as I proceed
+to make public. I declined to be scared from the study either by Bogey
+or my esteemed friend Mrs. Grundy, but went at it just in the calm
+Baconian inductive method in which I should have commenced any other
+study or pursuit.
+
+What I want to do is to tabulate these results in the same order as that
+in which they occurred to me; and here I am met by a preliminary
+difficulty, not incidental to this subject only, but common to any
+narrative where we have to take a retrospective glance over a number of
+years. We are apt to view the subject from our present standpoint; and I
+shall try to avoid this by quoting, whenever I can, what I published, or
+committed to writing in the course of my investigations. I shall not
+cull from others, because I want to make this purely a personal
+narrative.
+
+Let me add, too, I do not in the least expect persons to believe what I
+say. Some, I think, will regard me as a harmless (_if_ a harmless)
+lunatic, on account of certain statements I may have to make. Others
+will consider the whole thing as decidedly unorthodox and "wrong." For
+each of these issues I am prepared. I would not have believed any one
+else if they had, prior to my experience, told me what I am going to
+tell them here; and therefore I do not expect them to believe me. All I
+hope to do is to interest persons sufficiently in the subject to induce
+them to look into the matter on their own account; for verily I believe,
+as a distinguished spiritualist once said to me, that this thing is
+either an important truth or else one of the biggest swindles ever
+palmed off upon humanity.
+
+One word more, and I proceed to my narrative. Of the three aspects under
+which it is possible to view spiritualism, the scientific, the
+theological, and the social, I shall not touch at all on the first since
+I am not a scientific man; shall only glance at the second, because this
+is not the place for a theological discussion. I shall confine myself to
+the third, therefore, which I call the social aspect; looking at the
+subject as a question of the day, the truth about which we are as much
+interested in solving as any other political or social question, but the
+investigation of which need not make us get excited and angry and call
+one another bad names. I venture to hope that by these means I may
+manage to compile a not unedifying or uninteresting narrative, though
+our subject be withal somewhat a ponderous one.
+
+In order then to cover the preliminary part of my narrative, and to let
+my readers somewhat into the state of my own mind, when I had looked at
+the subject for several years, I will quote some extracts from a paper
+I read before a society of spiritualists at the Beethoven Rooms a few
+years ago under the title "Am I a Spiritualist?" I may mention that the
+assembly was divided, and never decided whether I was or not, and what
+is more, I do not think they are quite decided to the present day. I am
+a patient investigator still; but I really do not feel it necessary to
+issue perpetual bulletins as to the state of my convictions.
+
+Taking as my thesis, then, the question, Am I a Spiritualist? it will
+certainly appear, at first sight, I said, that the person best qualified
+to answer this question is precisely the person who puts it; but a
+little consideration will, I think, show that the term "Spiritualist" is
+one of such wide and somewhat elastic meaning--in fact, that the word
+varies so widely according to the persons who use it--that the question
+may really be asked of one's self without involving an inconsistency.
+
+When persons ask me, as they often do, with a look of unmitigated
+horror, "Is it possible that you, a clergyman, are a spiritualist?" I am
+often inclined to answer, "Yes, madam,"--(for it is generally a lady who
+puts the question in that particular shape)--"I _am_ a spiritualist, and
+precisely because I am a clergyman. I have had to express more than once
+my unfeigned assent and consent to the Common Prayer Book, and the
+Thirty Nine Articles; and that involves belief in the inspiration of all
+the Bible (except the Apocrypha), and the whole of that (_not_ excepting
+the Apocrypha) is spiritual, or spiritualistic (if you prefer the term)
+from beginning to end; and therefore it is not _in spite of_ my being a
+clergyman, but _because_ I am a clergyman that I am such a confirmed
+spiritualist."
+
+I could answer thus, only I do not, simply because to do so would be
+dishonest. I know my questioner is using the word in an utterly
+different sense from what I have thought proper to suppose. Besides such
+an answer would only lead to argumentation, and the very form of the
+question shows me the person who puts it has made up her mind on this,
+as probably on most other subjects; and when a feminine mind is once
+made up (others than ladies have feminine minds on these subjects) it is
+very little use trying to alter it. I never do. I administer some
+orthodox verbal sedative, and change the subject. But even accepting the
+term in the way I know it is meant to be used--say, for instance, as it
+comes from the mouth of some conservative old gentleman, or supposed
+scientific authority--one's medical man to wit--"Do you believe in
+spiritualism?" meaning "Are you such an ass as to believe in
+table-turning, and rapping, and all that kind of nonsense?"--even so,
+the question would admit of being answered by another question; though I
+rarely enter so far on the matter with those whose minds are evidently
+quite comfortably made up on the matter. It is such a pity to interfere
+with cherished opinions. I have found out that there are Athanasian
+creeds in science as well as in theology; and really, whilst they form
+recognised formulæ in the one or the other, it is positively lost labour
+to go running one's head against them. The question I want to ask--not
+the gentle apothecaries, but my readers--is, What do you mean by
+believing in spiritualism? Many of the phenomena of spiritualism I
+cannot but believe, if I am to take my five senses as my guides in this
+as in other matters, and quite setting aside any credence I may give to
+respectable testimony. When, however, I pass from facts to theories, and
+am asked to account for those facts, then I hesitate. There are some
+here, I know, who will say that the spiritualist like the lady who
+hesitates is lost--who think me as heterodox for doing so, as the
+inflexible old ladies and the omniscient apothecaries did on account of
+my even deigning to look into the evidence of such phenomena. I feel
+really that I have set myself up like an animated ninepin to be knocked
+down by the first thorough-going spiritualist who cares to bowl at me.
+But whatever else they think of me--sceptical though they deem me on
+subjects where perhaps you are, many of you, a little prone to
+dogmatize--I claim the character at least of an honest sceptic. I do not
+altogether disavow the title, but I understand it to mean "inquirer." I
+confess myself, after long years of perfectly unbiassed inquiry, still
+an investigator--a sceptic. It is the fashion to abuse St. Thomas
+because he sought sensible proofs on a subject which it was certainly
+most important to have satisfactorily cleared up. I never could read the
+words addressed to him at all in the light of a rebuke--"Because thou
+hast seen thou hast believed." The Church of England treats the doubt of
+St. Thomas as permitted by God "for the more confirmation of the faith;"
+and I feel sure that professed spiritualists will not be so inconsistent
+as to censure any man for examining long and carefully matters which
+they believe to admit of demonstration. I heard the most eloquent of
+their advocates say, when comparing spiritual with credal conviction,
+"Our motto no longer is 'I believe,' but 'I know.'" Belief may be
+instantaneous, but knowledge will be gradual; and so it is that,
+standing at a certain fixed point in very many years' study of
+spiritualism, I pause, and--so to say, empanelling a jury--ask the
+question it seems I ought to answer at others' asking--Am I a
+Spiritualist?
+
+One word of apology further before entering on the details of the
+matter. It will be inevitable that the first personal pronoun shall
+recur frequently in the course of this paper, and that so the paper
+shall seem egotistical. The very question itself sounds so. I am not
+vain enough to suppose that it matters much to anybody here whether I am
+a spiritualist or not, except in so far as I may be in any sense a
+representative man. I believe I am. That is, I believe, nay, am sure,
+that a great many persons go as far as I do, and stop where I stop.
+There is a largish body of investigators, I believe, dangling there,
+like Mahomet's coffin, between heaven and earth, and it would be a
+charity to land them somewhere. Of the clerical mind, I do _not_ claim
+to be a representative, because the clerical mind, quâ clerical, has
+made up itself that the phenomena in question are diabolical. Of course
+if I accepted this theory my question would be utterly irrelevant, and I
+should claim a place among the spiritualists at once. The diabolical
+people not only accept the phenomena, but admit their spiritual origin,
+and, more than this, identify the spirits. They are in point of fact the
+most thorough-going spiritualists of all.
+
+In sketching their creed, I have mentioned the three stages through
+which most minds must go in this matter. Some few, indeed, take them by
+intuition, but most minds have to plod patiently along the path of
+inquiry, as I have done. The first stage is acceptance of the phenomena,
+the second the assignment of those phenomena to spirits as their source,
+the third is identification of these spirits.
+
+1. On the first part of my subject I shall venture to speak with some
+boldness. I am not a philosopher, therefore I can afford to do so. I
+shall suppose my five senses to serve my purposes of observation, as
+they would be supposed to serve me if I were giving evidence in a court
+of justice. If I saw a table move, I shall say _it did_ move, not "it
+appeared to move." I do this in my capacity of a commonplace instead of
+a philosophical investigator; and I must say, if I were, as I supposed
+myself just now, in the witness-box, with a good browbeating counsel
+cross-examining me on this point, I would rather have to defend the
+position of the commonplace inquirer than the philosopher, pledged to
+defend the philosophy of the last fifty years, and bound hand and foot
+by his philosophic Athanasian Creed, and I don't know how many articles,
+more than thirty-nine, I fancy.
+
+In the latter part of the year 1856, or beginning of 1857, then, I was
+residing in Paris, that lively capital being full of Mr. Home's doings
+at the Tuileries. At that time I knew nothing, even of table-turning. I
+listened to the stories of Mr. Home and the Emperor as mere canards. I
+never stopped to question whether the matter were true, because I in my
+omniscience knew it to be impossible. It is this phase of my experience
+that makes me so unwilling to argue with the omniscient people now; it
+is such a waste of time. At this period my brother came to visit me, and
+he had either been present himself or knew persons who had been present
+at certain séances at Mr. Rymer's. He seemed staggered, if not
+convinced, by what he had heard or seen, and this staggered me too, for
+he was not exactly a gullible person and certainly by no means
+"spiritual." I was staggered, I own, but then I was omniscient, and so I
+did what is always safest, laughed at the matter. He suggested that we
+should try experiments instead of laughing, and, not being a
+philosopher, I consented. We sat at the little round table in our tiny
+salon, which soon began to turn, then answered questions, and finally
+told us that one of the three, viz., my wife, was a medium, and
+consequently we could receive communications. I went to a side table and
+wrote a question as to the source of the manifestations, keeping it
+concealed from those at the table, and not rejoining them myself. The
+answer spelt out by them was--"We, the spirits of the departed, are
+permitted thus to appear to men." Again I wrote--"What object is served
+by your doing so?" The answer was--"It may make men believe in God." I
+have said I am not a philosopher, therefore I do not mind confessing
+that I collapsed. I struck my flag at once as to the _impossibility_ of
+the matter. At the same time I did not--as I know many ardent
+spiritualists will think I ought--at once swallow the whole thing,
+theory and all. I should not have believed if a man had told me this;
+was it to be expected that I should believe a table? Honesty is my best
+policy; and I had better, therefore, say I was never so utterly knocked
+over by anything that occurred to me in my life before or since. My
+visage of utter, blank astonishment is a joke against me to this hour.
+We pursued the inquiry almost nightly during the remainder of my stay in
+Paris--up to late in the summer of 1857 that is--and also on our return
+to England; but, strangely as it seems to me now, considering how we
+began, we did it more as a pastime than anything else. The only time we
+were serious was when my wife and I sat alone, as we often did. Of
+course when I came to inquire at all into the matter I was met by
+Faraday's theory of involuntary muscular action, and also with the
+doctrine of unconscious cerebration--I was quite ready to accept either.
+My own position, as far as I can recall it, then was that the spiritual
+agency was "not proven." My wife had great reluctance against admitting
+the spiritual theory. I was simply passive; but two circumstances seemed
+to me to militate against the theories I have mentioned: (1.) The table
+we used for communicating was a little gimcrack French affair, the top
+of which spun round on the slightest provocation, and no force whatever,
+not even a philosopher's, applied to the surface would do more than spin
+the top round; but when the table turned, _it turned bodily, legs and
+all_. (2.) As to that ponderously difficult theory of unconscious
+cerebration communicated by involuntary muscular action, whenever we
+asked any questions as to the future, we were instantly checked, and
+told it was better that the future should not be revealed to us. I was
+anxious about a matter in connexion with an election to an appointment
+in England, and we asked some questions as to what form the proceedings
+would take. The reply was that certain candidates would be selected from
+the main body, and the election made from these. I thought I had caught
+the table in an inconsistency, and said--"There now you _have_ told us
+something about the future." It immediately replied--"No, I have not;
+the matter is already settled in the minds of the examiners." Whence
+came that answer? Certainly not from our minds, for it took us both by
+surprise. I could multiply a hundredfold instances of this kind, but, of
+course, to educated spiritualists these are mere A B C matters; whilst
+non-spiritualists would only accept them on the evidence of their own
+senses. I do not mean to say they actually question the facts to the
+extent of doubting one's veracity, or else nearly all testimony must go
+for nothing; but there is in these matters always room for doubting
+whether the narrator has not been deceived; and, moreover, even if
+accepted at secondhand, I doubt whether facts so accepted ever become,
+as it were, assimilated, so as to have any practical effect.
+
+My facts at all events came at first-hand. I suppose a man need not be
+considered credulous for believing in his own wife, and nearly all these
+phenomena were produced by my wife's mediumship. It was not until late
+in the year 1865 or early in 1866, that I ever sat with a professional
+medium. My wife, moreover, from first to last, has steadily disbelieved
+the spirit theory, so that she has not laid herself open to suspicion of
+being prejudiced in favour of the subject. She has been emphatically an
+involuntary, nay, even unwilling agent in these matters.
+
+During these eight or nine years the communications were generally given
+by automatic writing, though sometimes still by tilting of the table. I
+am very much tempted to quote two, which linger in my recollection,
+principally, I believe, because they were so destructive of the
+cerebration theory, besides being curious in themselves. I kept no
+records until a later date. At present all rests on tradition. Each of
+these cases occurred in presence of myself, my wife, and a pupil. In the
+former, he was a young Englishman, who had lived a great deal abroad,
+whose mother was a Catholic and father a Protestant. He had been brought
+up in the latter faith; and when I desired him to ask a mental question,
+he asked, in French--that being the language most familiar to him--"Is
+the Catholic or the Protestant religion the true one?" Mark you, he
+never articulated this, or gave the least hint that he was asking in
+French. He did it in fact, spontaneously. My wife immediately wrote "Ta
+mère est Catholique"--so far, in French, with difficulty, and then
+breaking off into English, "Respect her faith."
+
+In the second instance, my pupil was a French youth, a Catholic, who was
+living in my house, but used to go to his priest frequently to be
+prepared for his first communion. One day when we were writing, this
+youth asked who the communicating spirit was, and received in reply the
+name of Louis D----. The name was totally unknown to us; but to our
+surprise when the youth came back from his visit to the priest that day
+he informed us that his reverend instructor had dwelt strongly on the
+virtues of Louis D----. Seeing the boy look amazed as the name which had
+just been given at our séance was pronounced, the priest inquired the
+reason; and, on being informed, of course directed his catechumen never
+to join in such diablerie again.
+
+The impression, then, left on my mind by these years of desultory
+dabbling with--rather than study of--the subject, was decidedly that the
+phenomena of spiritualism were genuine. Looking at the matter from my
+present standpoint and frame of mind, it seems to me incredible that I
+should have thought so little of the source of the phenomena. It was, as
+I said, that I was then dabbling with, not studying, the subject.
+
+But even without advancing beyond this rudimentary stage, I saw a very
+serious result produced. I saw men who literally believed in nothing,
+and who entered on this pursuit in a spirit of levity, suddenly
+staggered with what appeared to afford even possibility of demonstration
+of another world, and the continued existence of the spirit after bodily
+death. I believe a great many persons who have never felt doubt
+themselves are unaware of the extent to which doubt prevails amongst
+young men especially; and I have seen many instances of this doubt
+being--if not removed--shaken to its very foundation by their witnessing
+the phenomena of spiritualism. "Yes, but did it make good consistent
+Christians of them?" asks one of my excellent simple-minded objectors.
+Alas! my experience does not tell me that good consistent Christians are
+so readily made. Does our faith--I might have asked--make _us_ the good
+consistent Christians it ought to do, and would do perhaps, if we gave
+it fair play?
+
+So, then, my study of spiritualism had been purely phenomenal. It was a
+very sad and serious event which drove me to look deeper. Some people
+will, I daresay, think it strange that I allude to this cause here. The
+fact that I do so shows, at all events, that I have looked seriously at
+spiritualism since. It was none other than the loss, under painful
+circumstances, of one of my children. Now I had always determined that,
+in the event of my losing one near and dear to me, I would put
+spiritualism to the test, by trying to communicate with that one. This
+will, I think, show that, even then, if I did not accept the
+spiritualistic theory, I did not by any means consider the position
+untenable. The very day after my boy's death, I got his mother to sit,
+and found she was writing a little loving message purporting to come
+from him. This, a sceptic would say, was natural enough under the
+circumstances. I said no word, but sat apart, and kept writing "Who is
+it that communicates? write your name." Suddenly the sentence was
+broken off, and the child's name written, though I had not expressed my
+wish aloud. This was strange; but what followed was stranger still. Of
+course, so far all might have been fairly attributed to cerebration--if
+such a process exists. It was natural enough, it might be urged, that
+the mother, previously schooled in the belief of the probability of
+communication, should write in her lost child's name. For years the same
+thing never occurred again, though we sat night after night for the
+purpose of renewing such communications. I can certainly say of myself
+that, at this time, I _was_ a spiritualist--as thorough and devout a one
+as any existing; and the fact that I was so, when carried away by my
+feelings, makes me the more cautious to test and try myself as to
+whether my feelings may not sometimes sway my judgment even now; whether
+the wish be not often father of the thought, at all events in the
+identification of spiritual communications, and so, possibly, of the
+spiritual nature of such communications altogether.
+
+However, from this time--the autumn of 1865--my spiritual studies
+underwent an entire change--they _were_ studies--serious studies. I now
+kept a careful journal of all communications, which journal I continued
+for three years, so that I can trace all my fluctuations of opinion--for
+I did fluctuate--during that period. Now, too, it was necessary for me
+to consult those who had already gone deeply into the subject; and the
+record of my experiences would be both imperfect and ungracious if I did
+not here acknowledge the prompt kindness of the two gentlemen to whom I
+applied--Mr. Benjamin Coleman and Mr. Samuel Carter Hall. I was
+comparatively a stranger to each of them, but they replied to my
+inquiries with the most ready courtesy, and I am happy to date my
+present friendship with each of them from this time. At Mr. Hall's I met
+Mr. Home, and on the second occasion of my doing so, not only saw him
+float, but handled him above and below during the whole of the time he
+floated round Mr. Hall's drawing-room. I am unphilosophical enough to
+say that I entirely credit the evidence of my senses on that occasion,
+and am as certain that Mr. Home was in space for five minutes as I am of
+my own existence. The ordinary solution of cranes and other cumbrous
+machinery in Mr. Hall's drawing-room I cannot credit, for I think we
+should have seen them, and I am sure I should have felt ropes round Mr.
+Home's body. Chairs went from one end of the room to the other _in full
+light_; and nobody had previously tumbled over strings and wires, so
+that I don't think there could have been any there.
+
+I fancy, as far as any order is traceable in the somewhat erratic course
+of spiritualistic experiences, that most people arrive at spiritualism
+viâ mesmerism. It so happened that this order was exactly inverted in
+my case. It was not until 1866 that I found I possessed the power of
+magnetism, and moreover, had in my house a subject whom Alphonse Didier
+(with whom I afterwards put myself in communication) declared to be "one
+in a thousand." Some of the details of this lady's case are very
+curious, but this is scarcely the place to dilate upon them further than
+as they affected my spiritualistic studies. She passed with
+extraordinary ease into the condition of lucidity, when she was
+conscious only of basking in light, anxious to be magnetized more deeply
+so as to get more thoroughly into the light, and, moreover, aware only
+of the existence of those who had passed away from earth. She knew they
+were with her: said I _must_ know it, as I was there too, and that it
+was I only who would not "let her" see them. The fact that "our life is
+twofold" was to me most marvellously brought out by my magnetic
+treatment of this lady; and, moreover, the power of influencing action
+could not fail to be suggestive of the truth of one of the cardinal
+doctrines of spiritualism--that we are thus influenced by disembodied
+spirits, as I, an embodied spirit, could influence another spirit in the
+body. Some of the likes and dislikes which I, so to say, produced then
+in 1866 have remained to the present hour. For instance, one particular
+article of food (I will not mention what, or it would be fatal to my
+reader's gravity), for which she previously had a penchant, I rendered
+so distasteful to her that the very smell of it now makes her
+uncomfortable. I must plead guilty to having experimented somewhat in
+this way; but what a wonderful light it sheds upon the great problem of
+the motives of human action! By the simple exercise of my will I could
+make my patient perform actions the most abhorrent to her. For
+instance--the ladies will appreciate this power--at a time when
+crinolines were extensive, I made that poor creature draggle about in a
+costume conspicuous by the absence of crinoline, and making her look
+like some of the ladies out of a Noah's ark.
+
+During this period my wife and I constantly sat alone, and she wrote. It
+is no disrespect to her to say that writing is not her forte, but the
+communications she made in this way were exceedingly voluminous, and
+couched in a particularly happy style, though on subjects far above the
+range of ordinary compositions. We never obtained a single communication
+purporting to come from our child, but the position claimed by the
+communicating intelligence was that of his spirit-guardian.
+
+Having now probably said enough in these confessions to convince every
+non-spiritualist that I am insane, because I believed the evidence of my
+senses, and even ventured to look into matters so unorthodox and
+unscientific as mesmerism and spiritualism, I go on to "make a clean
+breast," and set myself wrong with the other moiety of my readers. I
+must candidly confess that the experiences of this year (1866) did not
+confirm my sudden conviction of the spiritual agency in these phenomena.
+I drifted back, in fact, to my previous position, accepting the
+phenomena, but holding the cause an open question. The preface to the
+book, "From Matter to Spirit," exactly expressed--shall I say
+expresses?--my state of mind. There is one passage in that preface which
+appears to me to clinch the difficulty--"I am perfectly convinced that I
+have both seen and heard, in a manner which should make unbelief
+impossible, things called spiritual, which cannot be taken by a
+reasonable being to be capable of explanation by imposture, coincidence,
+or mistake. So far I feel the ground firm under me. But when it comes to
+what is the cause of these phenomena I find I cannot adopt any
+explanation which has yet been suggested. If I were bound to choose
+among things which I can conceive, I should say that there is some sort
+of action--some sort of combination of will, intellect, and physical
+power, which is not that of any of the human beings present. But
+thinking it very likely that the universe may contain a few agencies,
+say half a million, about which no man knows anything, I cannot but
+suspect that a small proportion of these agencies, say five thousand,
+may be severally competent to the production of all the phenomena, or
+may be quite up to the task among them. _The physical explanations which
+I have seen are easy, but miserably insufficient: the spiritual
+hypothesis is sufficient but ponderously difficult._" This statement is
+natural enough from the scientific side of the question. Perhaps the
+theological inquirer, taking the fact into consideration that Scripture
+certainly concedes the spiritual origin of kindred phenomena, would
+rather reverse the statement, and say (what I individually feel) that
+the psychological explanation is the ponderously difficult--the
+pneumatological, the comparatively easy one.
+
+It is now no secret that the author of this excellent treatise, is
+Professor De Morgan; and I can only say that if I am accused of
+heterodoxy, either from the spiritualist or anti-spiritualist side of
+the discussion, I am not ashamed to be a heretic in such company. Let me
+put the matter in the present tense, indicative mood--that is the state
+of my opinion on the cause of the phenomena. Admitting the facts, I hold
+the spiritual theory to be "not proven," but still to be a hypothesis
+deserving our most serious consideration, not only as being the only one
+that will cover all the facts, but as the one I believe invariably given
+in explanation by the intelligence that produces the phenomena, even
+when, as in our case, all those present are sceptical of or opposed to
+such a theory.
+
+3. It may perhaps sound illogical if, after stating that I hold the
+spiritual origin of these phenomena unproven, I go on to speak of the
+identification of the communicating spirit; but I hope I have made it
+clear that, even if I do not consider the spiritualistic explanation
+demonstrated, it is still a hypothesis which has much in its favour.
+
+I have already mentioned the subject of identification in the case of
+the first communication purporting to come from our little child, and
+how no such communications were received for a period of some years
+after. In December, 1866, I went to the Marshalls', entering as an
+entire stranger, and sitting down at the table. I saw some strong
+physical manifestations--a large table being poised in space, in full
+light, for some seconds. It was signified there was a spirit present who
+wished to communicate, and the message given by raps to me was--"Will
+you try to think of us more than you have done?" I asked the name, and
+my child's was correctly given, though I had not been announced, and I
+have no reason to believe my name was known. The place where he passed
+away from earth was also correctly specified. I then asked for my
+father, and his name was correctly given, and a message added, which I
+cannot say was equally suggestive of individuality. It was--"Bright
+inspiration will dawn upon your soul, and do not hide your light under a
+bushel."
+
+Another case in which I tested individuality strongly, with utter
+absence of success, was also brought before me somewhat earlier in this
+year. I was sent for by a lady who had been a member of my congregation,
+and who had taken great interest in these questions. She was suddenly
+smitten down with mortal disease, and I remained with her almost to the
+last--indeed, I believe her last words were addressed to me, and
+referred to this very subject of identification--she consulting _me_ as
+to the great problem she was then on the very point of solving! As soon
+as she had gone from us, I went home, and tried to communicate with her.
+I was informed that her spirit was present, and yet every detail as to
+names, &c., was utterly wrong.
+
+In the spring of the following year I went again to the Marshalls', in
+company with one or two other persons, my own object being to see if I
+could obtain communication from the spirit of a highly-gifted lady who
+had recently died--and also, I may mention--had been the medium of my
+previous slight acquaintance with Mr. Coleman. She was very much
+interested in these matters, and, when in this world, her great forte
+had been writing. She published a volume of poems, which won the special
+commendation of the late Charles Dickens, and her letters were most
+characteristic ones. I mentioned that I wished to communicate with the
+spirit I was thinking of, and said I should be quite satisfied if the
+initials were correctly given. Not so--the whole three names were
+immediately given in full. I do not feel at liberty to mention the
+names; but the surname was one that nine out of ten people always spelt
+wrongly (just as they do _my_ name), but on this occasion it was
+correctly spelt. I asked for a characteristic message, and received the
+words, "I am saved, and will now save others;"--about as unlike my
+friend's ordinary style as possible. It may be said her nature had
+undergone revolution, but that was not the question. The test was that
+something should be given, identifying the spirit, by the style of its
+_former_ writing while embodied on earth.
+
+With one more case, bearing on this subject of identity, and bringing
+the matter up to the present date, I feel I may advantageously close
+this portion of my experiences--though as I do so, I am thoroughly
+dissatisfied with myself to find how much I have left unsaid. It is so
+difficult to put these things on paper, or in any way to convey them to
+another;--most difficult of all for one unblessed with leisure, and
+combining in his single self the pursuits of some three laborious
+callings.
+
+Last year, whilst sitting at Mrs. B----'s, I was touched by a hand which
+seemed to me that of a small girl, and which attracted my attention by
+the way it lingered in mine--this would amuse Professor Pepper--and the
+pertinacity with which it took off my ring. However, I never took any
+steps to identify the owner of the hand.
+
+Some few months ago, my wife and I were sitting, and a communication
+came ostensibly from our child. It was quite unexpected; and I said, "I
+thought you could not communicate." "I could not before," was the reply.
+"But you have not tried me for two years." This we found was true; but
+we actually had to look into dates to ascertain it. He added, that he
+always was present at séances where I went, and especially at Mrs.
+B----'s. It will, I daresay, sound strange to non-spiritualists, but the
+initiated can understand the conversational tone we adopt. I said, "But,
+Johnny, that was not your hand that touched me at Mrs. B----'s. It was
+too large." The answer was, "No! it was Charlie's turn." I said, "What
+_do_ you mean by Charlie's turn?" The word was rewritten with almost
+petulant haste and remarkable plainness, "Charlie's _twin_." Charlie is
+my eldest boy, and his twin-brother was still-born. He would be between
+thirteen and fourteen years of age, and that was precisely the sized
+hand I felt. This was curious; as the event had occurred a year before,
+and such an explanation had never even crossed my mind. I was promised
+that, if I would go to Mrs. B----'s again, each of the children would
+come and place a hand in mine. I went to the ordinary séance some time
+before Christmas, and was then told that the test I wished--which I had
+not then specified--should be given to me at a private séance. We had
+the private séance, but nothing occurred.
+
+Such is my case. To one section of my readers I shall appear credulous,
+to another hard of belief. I believe that I represent the candid
+inquirer. As for being scared off from the inquiry by those who call it
+unorthodox, or cry out "fire and brimstone," I should as little think of
+heeding them as the omniscient apothecaries who smile at my believing in
+mesmerism. If a man's opinions are worth anything--if he has fought his
+way to those opinions at the bayonet's point--he will not be scared off
+from them by the whole bench of Bishops on the one side, or the College
+of Surgeons on the other. Not that I for one moment plead guilty to
+heterodoxy, either scientific or theological. I am not, as I have said
+several times, a philosopher, but I believe it is scientific to hold as
+established what you can prove by experiment. I don't think my creed
+contains a jot or tittle beyond this. And as for theological orthodoxy,
+I simply take my stand upon the Canons of the Church of England. If all
+this spiritual business is delusion, how comes it that No. 72 of the
+Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical says: "Neither shall any
+minister, not licensed, attempt, upon any pretence whatever, either of
+possession or obsession, by fasting or prayer, to cast out any devil or
+devils?"
+
+The question, however, is not of this kind of orthodoxy. It rather
+refers to the creed of spiritualism. The question, in fact, to which I
+and the many who think with me pause for a reply, is:--Allowing, as we
+do, some of the phenomena--but considering the pneumatological
+explanation hypothetical only--and therefore any identification of
+communicating intelligence impossible--are we (for I am sincerely tired
+of that first person singular, and glad to take refuge in a community),
+are we, or are we not, spiritualists?
+
+So far was I able to commit myself in my address to the spiritualists of
+Harley Street. I was, I confess, greatly pleased when, in 1869, the
+Dialectical Society took up this matter, because I felt they were just
+the people to look into it dispassionately. They were bound to no set of
+opinions, but regarded everything as an open question, accepting nothing
+save as the conclusion of a logical argument. I joined the
+Society--straining my clerical conscience somewhat to do so--and
+eventually formed one of the committee appointed by the Society to
+inquire into the matter, and having a sub-committee sitting at my own
+house. This, however, broke up suddenly, for I found even philosophers
+were not calm in their examination of unpalatable facts. One gentleman
+who approached the subject with his mind fully made up, accused the lady
+medium of playing tricks, and me of acting showman on the occasion. As
+there was no method of shunting this person, I was obliged to break up
+my sub-committee. To mention spiritualism to these omniscient gentlemen
+is like shaking a red rag at a bull. As a case in point (though, of
+course, I do not credit these gentlemen with the assumption of
+omniscience), I may quote the replies of Professor Huxley and Mr. G. H.
+Lewes to the Society's invitation to sit on their committee:--
+
+"Sir,--I regret that I am unable to accept the invitation of the Council
+of the Dialectical Society to co-operate with a committee for the
+investigation of 'spiritualism;' and for two reasons. In the first
+place, I have no time for such an inquiry, which would involve much
+trouble and (unless it were unlike all inquiries of that kind I have
+known) much annoyance. In the second place, I take no interest in the
+subject. The only case of 'spiritualism' I have had the opportunity of
+examining into for myself, was as gross an imposture as ever came under
+my notice. But supposing the phenomena to be genuine--they do not
+interest me. If anybody would endow me with the faculty of listening to
+the chatter of old women and curates in the nearest cathedral town, I
+should decline the privilege, having better things to do.
+
+"And if the folk in the spiritual world do not talk more wisely and
+sensibly than their friends report them to do, I put them in the same
+category.
+
+"The only good that I can see in a demonstration of the truth of
+'spiritualism' is to furnish an additional argument against suicide.
+Better live a crossing-sweeper than die and be made to talk twaddle by a
+'medium' hired at a guinea a séance.
+
+"I am, Sir, &c.,
+"T. H. HUXLEY.
+
+"29th January, 1869."
+
+Confessedly Professor Huxley only tried one experiment. I cannot help
+thinking if he had not approached the subject with a certain amount of
+prejudice he would have been content to "Try again." The side-hit at
+curates of course I appreciate!
+
+"Dear Sir,--I shall not be able to attend the investigation of
+'spiritualism;' and in reference to your question about suggestions
+would only say that the one hint needful is that all present should
+distinguish between facts and inferences from facts. When any man says
+that phenomena are produced by _no_ known physical laws, he declares
+that he knows the laws by which they are produced.
+
+"Yours, &c.,
+"G. H. LEWES.
+
+"Tuesday, 2nd February, 1869."
+
+I am not, as I have said, a scientific man, nor do I advance the
+slightest pretensions to genius; therefore I have no doubt it is some
+mental defect on my part which prevents my seeing the force of Mr. G. H.
+Lewes's concluding sentence. I have worked at it for years and am
+compelled to say I cannot understand it.
+
+I sat, however, through the two years' examination which the Society
+gave to the subject; and it is not anticipating the conclusion of this
+chapter to say I was fully able to concur in the report they
+subsequently issued, the gist of which is continued in the final
+paragraph:--
+
+"In presenting their report, your committee taking into consideration
+the high character and great intelligence of many of the witnesses to
+the more extraordinary facts, the extent to which their testimony is
+supported by the reports of the sub-committees, and the absence of any
+proof of imposture or delusion as regards a large portion of the
+phenomena; and further, having regard to the exceptional character of
+the phenomena, the large number of persons in every grade of society and
+over the whole civilized world who are more or less influenced by a
+belief in their supernatural origin, and to the fact that no
+philosophical explanation of them has yet been arrived at, deem it
+incumbent upon them to state their conviction that the subject is worthy
+of more serious attention and careful investigation than it has hitherto
+received."
+
+With those cautiously guarded words I venture to think that any one who
+even reads the body of evidence contained in the Dialectical Society's
+report will be able to coincide.
+
+To return to my more personal narrative.
+
+As far as I can trace any order in this somewhat erratic subject, I
+think I may venture to say that the manifestations of the last few years
+have assumed a more _material_ form than before. It sounds a little
+Hibernian to say so, I know; but I still retain the expression.
+Supposing, for the moment, that the effects were produced by spirits,
+the control of the medium for the production of trance, spirit-voice,
+automatic writing, or even communications through raps and tilts of the
+table was much more intellectual--less physical than those of which I
+now have to speak--namely, the production of the materialized Spirit
+Faces and Spirit Forms.
+
+Two phases of manifestation, I may mention in passing, I have not
+seen--namely, the elongation of the body, and the fire test--both as far
+as I know peculiar to Mr. Home: nor again have I had personal experience
+of Mrs. Guppy's aërial transit, or Dr. Monk's nocturnal flight from
+Bristol to Swindon. Nothing of the kind has ever come at all within the
+sphere of my observation: therefore I forbear to speak about it.
+
+I shall never forget the delight with which I received a letter from a
+gentleman connected with the literature of spiritualism, informing me
+that materialized Spirit Faces had at last been produced in full light,
+and inviting me to come and see. I was wearied of dark séances, of fruit
+and flowers brought to order. John King's talk wearied me; and Katie's
+whispers had become fatally familiar: so I went in eagerly for the new
+sensation, and communicated my results to the world in the two papers
+called _Spirit Faces_ and _Spirit Forms_, the former published in
+_Unorthodox London_, the latter in Chapter 43 of the present volume.
+This class of manifestation has since become very common. I cannot say I
+ever considered it very satisfactory. I have never discovered any
+trickery--and I assure my readers I have kept my eyes and ears very wide
+open--but there are in such manifestations facilities for charlatanism
+which it is not pleasant to contemplate. This, let me continually
+repeat, is a purely personal narrative, and I have never seen any Spirit
+Face or Form that I could in the faintest way recognise. Others, I know,
+claim to have done so; but I speak strictly of what has occurred to
+myself. The same has been the case with Spirit Photographs. I have sat,
+after selecting my own plate and watching every stage in the process;
+and certainly over my form there has been a shadowy female figure
+apparently in the act of benediction;[2] but I cannot trace resemblance
+to any one I ever saw in the flesh. Perhaps I have been unfortunate in
+this respect.
+
+Very similar to Miss Cook's mediumship was that of Miss Showers; a young
+lady whom I have met frequently at the house of a lady at the West-end
+of London, both the medium and her hostess being quite above suspicion.
+In this case, besides the face and full form we have singing in a clear
+baritone voice presumably by a spirit called Peter--who gives himself
+out as having been in earth-life, I believe, a not very estimable
+specimen of a market-gardener. I am exceedingly puzzled how to account
+for these things. I dare not suspect the medium; but even granting the
+truth of the manifestations, they seem to me to be of a low class which
+one would only come into contact with under protest and for the sake of
+evidence.
+
+Mr. Crookes used to explain, and Serjeant Cox still explains these
+manifestations as being the products of a so-called Psychic Force--a
+term which I below define. Although I am as little inclined to
+hero-worship, and care as little for large names as any man living, yet
+it is quite impossible not to attach importance to the testimony of
+these gentlemen; one so eminent in the scientific world, and privileged
+to write himself F.R.S., the other trained to weigh evidence and decide
+between balanced probabilities. But it would seem that while Psychic
+Force might cover the ground of my earlier experiences, it singularly
+fails to account for the materializations, and obliges us to relegate
+them to the category of fraud, unless we accept them as being what they
+profess to be. This I believe Serjeant Cox ruthlessly does. He claims as
+we have seen to have "caught" Miss Showers, and was not, I believe,
+convinced by Miss Cook. Mr. Crookes was: and, when we remember that Mr.
+Wallace, the eminent naturalist, and Mr. Cromwell Varley, the
+electrician, both accept the spiritual theory, it really looks as though
+the scientific mind was more open to receive--perhaps driven to
+receive--this which I frankly concede to be the only adequate cause for
+the effects, while the legal mind still remains hair-splitting upon
+conflicting evidence. Whereabouts the theological mind is I do not quite
+know--perhaps still dangling between the opposite poles of Faith and
+Reason, and dubiously debating with me "Am I a Spiritualist or not?"
+
+In a recent pamphlet reprinted from the Quarterly Journal of Science,
+Mr. Crookes thus compendiously sums up the various theories which have
+been invented to account for spiritualistic phenomena, and, in so doing,
+incidentally defines his now discarded theory of Psychic Force which
+owns Mr. Serjeant Cox for its patron:--
+
+_First Theory._--The phenomena are all the results of tricks, clever
+mechanical arrangements, or legerdemain; the mediums are impostors, and
+the rest of the company fools.
+
+It is obvious that this theory can only account for a very small
+proportion of the facts observed. I am willing to admit that some
+so-called mediums of whom the public have heard much are arrant
+impostors who have taken advantage of the public demand for
+spiritualistic excitement to fill their purses with easily earned
+guineas; whilst others who have no pecuniary motive for imposture are
+tempted to cheat, it would seem, solely by a desire for notoriety.
+
+_Second Theory._--The persons at a séance are the victims of a sort of
+mania or delusion, and imagine phenomena to occur which have no real
+objective existence.
+
+_Third Theory._--The whole is the result of conscious or unconscious
+cerebral action.
+
+These two theories are evidently incapable of embracing more than a
+small portion of the phenomena, and they are improbable explanations for
+even those. They may be dismissed very briefly.
+
+I now approach the "spiritual" theories. It must be remembered that the
+word "spirits" is used in a very vague sense by the generality of
+people.
+
+_Fourth Theory._--The result of the spirit of the medium, perhaps in
+association with the spirits of some or all of the people present.
+
+_Fifth Theory._--The actions of evil spirits or devils, personifying who
+or what they please, in order to undermine Christianity and ruin men's
+souls.
+
+_Sixth Theory._--The actions of a separate order of beings, living on
+this earth, but invisible and immaterial to us. Able, however,
+occasionally to manifest their presence; known in almost all countries
+and ages as demons not necessarily bad, gnomes, fairies, kobolds, elves,
+goblins, Puck, &c.
+
+_Seventh Theory._--The actions of departed human beings--the spiritual
+theory _par excellence_.
+
+_Eighth Theory._--(_The Psychic Force Theory_).--This is a necessary
+adjunct to the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th theories, rather than a theory by
+itself.
+
+According to this theory the "medium," or the circle of people
+associated together as a whole, is supposed to possess a force, power,
+influence, virtue, or gift, by means of which intelligent beings are
+enabled to produce the phenomena observed. What these intelligent beings
+are is a subject for other theories.
+
+It is obvious that a "medium" possesses a _something_ which is not
+possessed by an ordinary being. Give this _something_ a name. Call it
+"_x_" if you like. Mr. Serjeant Cox calls it Psychic Force. There has
+been so much misunderstanding on this subject that I think it best to
+give the following explanation in Mr. Serjeant Cox's own words:--
+
+"The Theory of _Psychic Force_ is in itself merely the recognition of
+the now almost undisputed fact that under certain conditions, as yet but
+imperfectly ascertained, and within a limited, but as yet undefined,
+distance from the bodies of certain persons having a special nerve
+organization, a Force operates by which, without muscular contact or
+connexion, action at a distance is caused, and visible motions and
+audible sounds are produced in solid substances. As the presence of such
+an organization is necessary to the phenomenon, it is reasonably
+concluded that the Force does, in some manner as yet unknown, proceed
+from that organization. As the organism is itself moved and directed
+within its structure by a Force which either is, or is controlled by,
+the Soul, Spirit, or Mind (call it what we may) which constitutes the
+individual being we term 'the Man,' it is an equally reasonable
+conclusion that the Force which causes the motions beyond the limits of
+the body is the same Force that produces motion within the limits of the
+body. And, inasmuch as the external force is seen to be often directed
+by Intelligence, it is an equally reasonable conclusion that the
+directing Intelligence of the external force is the same Intelligence
+that directs the Force internally. This is the force to which the name
+of _Psychic Force_ has been given by me as properly designating a force
+which I thus contend to be traced back to the Soul or Mind of the Man as
+its source. But I, and all who adopt this theory of Psychic Force, as
+being the agent through which the phenomena are produced, do not thereby
+intend to assert that this Psychic Force may not be sometimes seized and
+directed by some other Intelligence than the Mind of the Psychic. The
+most ardent spiritualists practically admit the existence of Psychic
+Force under the very inappropriate name of Magnetism (to which it has no
+affinity whatever), for they assert that the Spirits of the Dead can
+only do the acts attributed to them by using the Magnetism (that is, the
+Psychic Force) of the Medium. The difference between the advocates of
+Psychic Force and the spiritualists consists in this--that we contend
+that there is as yet insufficient proof of any other directing agent
+than the Intelligence of the Medium, and no proof whatever of the agency
+of Spirits of the Dead; while the spiritualists hold it as a faith, not
+demanding further proof, that Spirits of the Dead are the sole agents in
+the production of all the phenomena. Thus the controversy resolves
+itself into a pure question of _fact_, only to be determined by a
+laborious and long continued series of experiments and an extensive
+collection of psychological facts, which should be the first duty of the
+Psychological Society, the formation of which is now in progress."
+
+It has frequently struck me, especially in connexion with certain
+investigations that I have been making during the last few years, that
+Spiritualism is going through much the same phases as Positivism. It
+seemed at first impossible that the Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte
+could culminate in a highly ornate Religion of Humanity, with its fall
+ritual, its ninefold sacramental system. It is even curious to notice
+that it was the death of Clotilde which brought about the change, by
+revealing to him the gap which Philosophy always does leave between the
+present and the future. So too Spiritualism is beginning to "organize"
+and exhibits some symptoms of formulating a Creed and Articles of
+Belief. The British National Association of Spiritualists, which has
+honoured me by placing my name on its Council, thus states its
+principles, under the mottoes:--
+
+"He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame
+unto him."--Proverbs xviii. 13.
+
+"In Scripture we are perpetually reminded that the Laws of the Spiritual
+World are, in the highest sense, Laws of Nature."--Argyll.
+
+"He who asserts that, outside of the domain of pure Mathematics,
+anything is impossible, lacks a knowledge of the first principles of
+Logic."--Arago.
+
+
+DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES AND PURPOSES.
+
+"Spiritualism implies the recognition of an inner nature in man. It
+deals with facts concerning that inner nature, the existence of which
+has been the subject of speculation, dispute, and even of denial,
+amongst philosophers in all ages; and in particular, with certain
+manifestations of that inner nature which have been observed in persons
+of peculiar organizations, now called Mediums or Sensitives, and in
+ancient times Prophets, Priests, and Seers.
+
+"Spiritualism claims to have established on a firm scientific basis the
+immortality of man, the permanence of his individuality, and the Open
+Communion, under suitable conditions, of the living with the so-called
+dead, and affords grounds for the belief in progressive spiritual states
+in new spheres of existence.
+
+"Spiritualism furnishes the key to the better understanding of all
+religions, ancient and modern. It explains the philosophy of
+Inspiration, and supersedes the popular notion of the miraculous by the
+revelation of hitherto unrecognised laws.
+
+"Spiritualism tends to abrogate exaggerated class distinctions; to
+reunite those who are now too often divided by seemingly conflicting
+material interests; to encourage the co-operation of men and women in
+many new spheres; and to uphold the freedom and rights of the
+individual, while maintaining as paramount the sanctity of family life.
+
+"Finally, the general influence of Spiritualism on the individual is to
+inspire him with self-respect, with a love of justice and truth, with a
+reverence for Divine law, and with a sense of harmony between man, the
+universe, and God.
+
+"The British National Association of Spiritualists is formed to unite
+Spiritualists of every variety of opinion, for their mutual aid and
+benefit; to promote the study of Pneumatology and Psychology; to aid
+students and inquirers in their researches, by placing at their disposal
+the means of systematic investigation into the now recognised facts and
+phenomena, called Spiritual or Psychic; to make known the positive
+results arrived at by careful scientific research; and to direct
+attention to the beneficial influence which those results are calculated
+to exercise upon social relationships and individual conduct. It is
+intended to include spiritualists of every class, whether members of
+Local and Provincial Societies or not, and all inquirers into
+psychological and kindred phenomena.
+
+"The Association, whilst cordially sympathizing with the teachings of
+Jesus Christ, will hold itself entirely aloof from all dogmatism or
+finalities, whether religious or philosophical, and will content itself
+with the establishment and elucidation of well-attested facts, as the
+only basis on which any true religion or philosophy can be built up."
+
+This last clause has, I believe, been modified to suit certain members
+of my profession who were a little staggered by its apparent
+_patronizing_ of Christianity. For myself (but then, I am unorthodox) I
+care little for these written or printed symbola. Having strained my
+conscience to join the Dialecticians, I allow my name, without
+compunction, to stand on the Council of the Association,--and shall be
+really glad if it does them any good. The fact is, I care little for
+formal creeds, but much for the fruit of those creeds. I stand by that
+good old principle--"By their fruits ye shall know them;" and that
+reminds me that to my shreds and patches of "experience" I am to append
+some pros and cons of this matter. They have cropped up incidentally as
+we have gone on: but I could with advantage collect them if my limits
+admitted of sermonizing.
+
+As to the fruits of Spiritualism, I can only say that I have never
+witnessed any of these anti-Christianizing effects which some persons
+say arise from a belief in Spiritualism. They simply have not come
+within the sphere of my observation, nor do I see any tendency towards
+them in the tenets of Spiritualism--rather the reverse.
+
+Then again, to pass from practice to faith, Spiritualism professes to be
+the reverse of exclusive. In addressing the Conference of 1874, and
+defending my position as a clerical inquirer, I was able to say:--"On
+the broad question of theology I can conceive no single subject which a
+clergyman is more bound to examine than that which purports to be a new
+revelation, or, at all events, a large extension of the old; and which,
+if its claims be substantiated, will quite modify our notions as to what
+we now call faith. It proposes, in fact, to supply in matters we have
+been accustomed to take on trust, something so like demonstration, that
+I feel not only at liberty, but actually bound, whether I like it or
+not, to look into the thing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whether your creed is right or wrong is not for me to tell you; but it
+is most important for me that I should assure myself. And while I
+recognise that my own duty clearly is to examine the principles you
+profess, I find this to be eminently their characteristic, _that they
+readily assimilate with those of my own Church_. I see nothing
+revolutionary in them. You have no propaganda. You do not call upon me,
+as far as I understand, to come out of the body I belong to and join
+yours, as so many other bodies do; but you ask me simply to take your
+doctrines into my own creed, and vitalize it by their means. That has
+always attracted me powerfully towards you. You are the broadest
+Churchmen I find anywhere."
+
+I am not writing thus in any sense as the apologist of Spiritualism. I
+am not offering anything like an Apologia pro vitâ meâ in making the
+inquiries I have done, am doing, and hope to do. I have elected to take,
+and I elect to maintain, a neutral position in this matter. All I have
+done is to select from the Pros and Cons that present themselves to my
+mind. If the Pros seem to outweigh the Cons--or vice versâ--be it so. I
+cannot help it. I have scarcely decided for myself yet, and I am a
+veteran investigator. Others may be more speedy in arriving at a
+conclusion.
+
+Among the more obvious "Cons" are the oft-quoted facts that some people
+have lost their heads and wasted a good deal of their time on
+Spiritualism. But people lose their heads by reading classics or
+mathematics, or overdoing any one subject however excellent--even
+falling in love: and the ingenuity displayed in wasting time is so
+manifold that this is an objection that can scarcely be urged specially
+against Spiritualism, though I own Dark Séances do cut terribly into
+time.
+
+Then again one is apt to be taken in by mediums or even by spirits. Yes;
+but this only imposes the ordinary obligation of keeping one's eyes
+open. I know spiritualists who believe in every medium quâ medium, and
+others who accept as unwritten gospel the idiotic utterances of a
+departed buccaneer or defunct clown: but these people are so purely
+exceptional as simply to prove a rule. Do _not_ accept as final in
+so-called spiritual what you would not accept in avowedly mundane
+matters. Keep your eyes open and your head cool, and you will not go far
+wrong. These are the simple rules that I have elaborated during my
+protracted study of the subject.
+
+"We do not believe, we know," was, as I said, the proud boast a
+spiritualist once made to me. And if the facts--any of the facts--of
+Spiritualism stand _as_ facts, there is no doubt that it would form the
+strongest possible counterpoise to the materialism of our age. It
+presses the method of materialism into its service, and meets the
+doubter on his own ground of demonstration--a low ground, perhaps, but a
+tremendously decisive one, the very one perhaps on which the Battle of
+Faith and Reason will have to be fought out.
+
+If--let us not forget that pregnant monosyllable--if the assumptions of
+Spiritualism be true, and that we can only ascertain by personal
+investigation, I believe the circumstance would be efficacious in
+bringing back much of the old meaning of the word [Greek: pistis] which
+was something more than the slipshod Faith standing as its modern
+equivalent. It would make it really the substance of things hoped for,
+the evidence of things not seen.
+
+Even if the dangers of Spiritualism were much greater than they
+are--aye, as great as the diabolical people themselves make out--I
+should still think (in the cautious words of the Dialecticians)
+Spiritualism was worth looking into, if only on the bare chance, however
+remote, of lighting on some such Philosophy as that so beautifully
+sketched by Mr. S. C. Hall in some of the concluding stanzas of his poem
+"Philosophy," with which I may fitly conclude--
+
+ And those we call "the dead" (who are not dead--
+ Death was their herald to Celestial Life)--
+ May soothe the aching heart and weary head
+ In pain, in toil, in sorrow, and in strife.
+
+ That is a part of every natural creed--
+ Instinctive teaching of another state:
+ When manacles of earth are loosed and freed--
+ Which Science vainly strives to dissipate.
+
+ In tortuous paths, with prompters blind, we trust
+ One Guide--to lead us forth and set us free!
+ Give us, Lord God! all merciful and just!
+ The FAITH that is but Confidence in Thee!
+
+THE END.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[2] Alluded to above, p. 350.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Notes: |
+ | |
+ | Page 36: Single closing quote mark after "He will accept |
+ | you" _sic_ |
+ | Page 79: "next my boy" _sic_ |
+ | Page 110: Wormwood Scrubbs _sic_; platform amended to |
+ | platforms |
+ | Page 185: anatotomized amended to anatomized; full stop |
+ | following "few friends" removed |
+ | Page 186: hooping cough _sic_ |
+ | Page 234: umpromising amended to unpromising |
+ | Page 244: "vary scrubby ground" amended to "very scrubby |
+ | ground" |
+ | Page 338: flabbergastered _sic_ |
+ | Page 341: facilè princeps amended to facile princeps |
+ | Page 360: scarely amended to scarcely |
+ | Page 365: closing parenthesis added after "particular shape" |
+ | Page 370: invesgator amended to investigator |
+ | Page 388: closing parenthesis added after "assumption of |
+ | omniscience" |
+ | |
+ | In the last essay, while there are paragraphs numbered 1 |
+ | and 3, there is no paragraph numbered 2 in the original. |
+ | |
+ | Hyphenation has generally been standardized. However, when |
+ | hyphenated and unhyphenated versions of a word each occur |
+ | an equal number of times, both versions have been retained |
+ | (beershop/beer-shop; nowadays/now-a-days; |
+ | reaction/re-action; reassumption/re-assumption). |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Mystic London:, by Charles Maurice Davies
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mystic London:, by Charles Maurice Davies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mystic London:
+ or, Phases of occult life in the metropolis
+
+Author: Charles Maurice Davies
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2008 [EBook #25619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYSTIC LONDON: ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Curtis Weyant and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by Case
+Western Reserve University Preservation Department Digital
+Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in
+this text. For a complete list, please see <a href="#transnotes">the bottom of
+this document</a>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h1>MYSTIC LONDON:</h1>
+
+<h3>OR,</h3>
+
+<h2>PHASES OF OCCULT LIFE IN<br />
+THE METROPOLIS.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>REV. CHARLES MAURICE DAVIES, D.D.</h2>
+<h4>AUTHOR OF "ORTHODOX" AND "UNORTHODOX LONDON," ETC.</h4>
+
+
+<div class="epigraph">
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Hamlet.</i></p></div>
+
+<p class='center'>LONDON:<br />
+TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND.<br />
+1875.<br />
+[<i>All rights of Translation and Reproduction are reserved.</i>]</p>
+
+<p class='frontend'>LONDON:<br />
+SAVILL, EDWARDS AND CO., PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,<br />
+COVENT GARDEN.<br /></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="toc">
+<tr><td align='right'><span class="smcap">chap.</span></td><td align='left'></td><td align='right'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">London Arabs</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">East London Arabs</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">London Arabs in Canada</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Waifs and Strays</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Lunatic Ball</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Baby Show</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Night in a Bakehouse</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A London Slave Market</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Tea and Experience</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Sunday Linnet-singing</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Woman's Rights Debate</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Open-Air Tichborne Meeting</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Sunday in a People's Garden</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Utilizing the Young Ladies</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Fairlop Friday</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Christmas Dip</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Boxing-day on the Streets</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Vigil of the Derby</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Wifeslayer's "Home"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Bathing in the Far East</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">XXI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Among the Quakers</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_164">164</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Penny Readings</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Darwinism on the Devil</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">XXIV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Peculiar People</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">XXV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Interviewing an Astrologer</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">XXVI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Barmaid Show</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">XXVII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Private Execution</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">XXVIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Breaking up for the Holidays</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">XXIX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Psychological Ladies</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">XXX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Secularism on Bunyan</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">XXXI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Al Fresco Infidelity</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_242">242</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">XXXII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An "Indescribable Phenomenon"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">XXXIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Lady Mesmerist</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">XXXIV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Psychopathic Institution</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">XXXV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Phrenological Evening</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_277">277</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">XXXVI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Spiritual Picnic</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">XXXVII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Ghostly Conference</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_290">290</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">XXXVIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Evening's Diablerie</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">XXXIX.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Spiritual Athletes</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">XL.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">"Spotting" Spirit Mediums</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_313">313</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">XLI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A S&eacute;ance for Sceptics</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">XLII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Evening with the Higher Spirits</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">XLIII.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Spirit Forms</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">XLIV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Sitting with a Sibyl</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_347">347</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">XLV.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Spiritualists and Conjurers</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">XLVI.</a></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Pros and Cons of Spiritualism</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_362">362</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is perhaps scarcely necessary to say that I use
+the term Mystic, as applied to the larger portion of
+this volume, in its technical sense to signify my
+own <i>initiation</i> into some of the more occult phases of
+metropolitan existence. It is only to the Spiritualistic,
+or concluding portion of my work, that the word
+applies in its ordinary signification.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>C. M. D.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>MYSTIC LONDON.</h2>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>LONDON ARABS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Of all the protean forms of misery that meet us in the
+bosom of that "stony-hearted stepmother, London,"
+there is none that appeals so directly to our sympathies
+as the spectacle of a destitute child. In the
+case of the grown man or woman, sorrow and suffering
+are often traceable to the faults, or at best to the
+misfortunes of the sufferers themselves; but in the
+case of the child they are mostly, if not always,
+vicarious. The fault, or desertion, or death of the
+natural protectors, turns loose upon the desert of our
+streets those nomade hordes of Bedouins, male and
+female, whose presence is being made especially palpable
+just now, and whose reclamation is a perplexing,
+yet still a hopeful problem. In the case of the adult
+Arab, there is a life's work to undo, and the facing
+of that fact it is which makes some of our bravest
+workers drop their hands in despair. With these
+young Arabs, on the contrary, it is only the wrong<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+bias of a few early years to correct, leaving carte
+blanche for any amount of hope in youth, maturity,
+and old age. Being desirous of forming, for my own
+edification, some notion of the amount of the evil
+existing, and the efforts made to counteract it, I
+planned a pilgrimage into this Arabia Infelix&mdash;this
+Petr&aelig;a of the London flagstones; and purpose setting
+down here, in brief, a few of my experiences, for the
+information of stay-at-home travellers, and still more
+for the sake of pointing out to such as may be disposed
+to aid in the work of rescuing these little Arabs
+the proper channels for their beneficence. Selecting,
+then, the Seven Dials and Bethnal Green as the foci
+of my observation in West and East London respectively,
+I set out for the former one bleak March night,
+and by way of breaking ground, applied to the first
+police-constable I met on that undesirable beat for
+information as to my course. After one or two
+failures, I met with an officer literally "active and
+intelligent," who convoyed me through several of
+that network of streets surrounding the Seven Dials,
+leaving me to my own devices when he had given me
+the general bearings of the district it would be
+desirable to visit.</p>
+
+<p>My first raid was on the Ragged School and Soup
+Kitchen in Charles Street, Drury Lane, an evil-looking
+and unfragrant locality; but the institution
+in question stands so close to the main thoroughfare
+that the most fastidious may visit it with ease. Here<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+I found some twenty Arabs assembled for evening
+school. They were of all ages, from seven to fifteen,
+and their clothing was in an inverse ratio to their
+dirt&mdash;very little of the former, and a great deal of the
+latter. They moved about with their bare feet in the
+most feline way, like the veritable Bedouin himself.
+There they were, however, over greasy slates and
+grimy copy-books, in process of civilization. The
+master informed me that his special difficulties arose
+from the attractions of the theatre and the occasional
+intrusion of wild Arabs, who came only to kick up a
+row. At eight o'clock the boys were to be regaled
+with a brass band practice, so, finding from one of
+the assembled Arabs that there was a second institution
+of the kind in King Street, Long Acre, I
+passed on thereto. Here I was fortunate enough to
+find the presiding genius in the person of a young
+man engaged in business during the day, and devoting
+his extra time to the work of civilizing the barbarians
+of this district. Sunday and week-day services, night
+schools, day schools, Bands of Hope, temperance
+meetings, and last, not least, the soup kitchen, were
+the means at work here. Not a single officer is paid.
+The task is undertaken "all for love, and nothing for
+reward," and it has thriven so far that my presence
+interrupted a debate between the gentleman above-mentioned
+and one of his coadjutors on the subject of
+taking larger premises. The expenses were met by
+the weekly offerings, and I was surprised to see by a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+notice posted in the room where the Sunday services
+are held, that the sum total for the past week was
+only 19<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> So there must be considerable sacrifice
+of something more than time to carry on this admirable
+work. Under the guidance of the second
+gentleman mentioned above, I proceeded to the St.
+George's and St. Giles's Refuge in Great Queen Street,
+where boys are admitted on their own application, the
+only qualification being destitution. Here they are
+housed, clothed, boarded, and taught such trades as
+they may be fitted for, and not lost sight of until they
+are provided with situations. A hundred and fifty-four
+was the number of this truly miraculous draught
+from the great ocean of London streets, whom I saw
+all comfortably bedded in one spacious dormitory.
+Downstairs were the implements and products of the
+day's work, dozens of miniature cobblers' appliances,
+machines for sawing and chopping firewood, &amp;c.,
+whilst, in a spacious refectory on the first floor, I was
+informed, the resident Arabs extended on a Friday
+their accustomed hospitality to other tribes, to such
+an extent, that the party numbered about 500. Besides
+the 154 who were fortunate enough to secure
+beds, there were twenty new arrivals, who had to be
+quartered on the floor for the night; but at all events
+they had a roof above them, and were out of the cruel
+east wind that made Arabia Petr&aelig;a that evening an
+undesirable resting-place indeed. Lights were put
+out, and doors closed, when I left, as this is not a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+night refuge; but notices are posted, I am informed,
+in the various casual wards and temporary
+refuges, directing boys to this. There is a
+kindred institution for girls in Broad Street. Such
+was my first experience of the western portion of
+Arabia Infelix.</p>
+
+<p>The following Sunday I visited the Mission Hall
+belonging to Bloomsbury Chapel, in Moor Street,
+Soho, under the management of Mr. M'Cree, and the
+nature of the work is much the same as that pursued
+at King Street. The eleven o'clock service was on
+this particular day devoted to children, who were
+assembled in large numbers, singing their cheerful
+hymns, and listening to a brief, practical, and taking
+address. These children, however, were of a class
+above the Arab type, being generally well dressed.
+I passed on thence to what was then Mr. Brock's
+chapel, where I found my veritable Arabs, whom I
+had seen in bed the previous evening, arrayed in a
+decent suit of "sober livery," and perched up in a
+high gallery to gather what they could comprehend
+of Mr. Brock's discourse&mdash;not very much, I should
+guess; for that gentleman's long Latinized words
+would certainly fire a long way over their heads, high
+as was their position. I found the whole contingent
+of children provided for at the refuge was 400, including
+those on board the training ship <i>Chichester</i>
+and the farm at Bisley, near Woking, Surrey. This
+is certainly the most complete way of dealing with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+the Arabs par excellence, as it contemplates the case
+of utter destitution and homelessness. It need
+scarcely be said, however, that such a work must
+enlarge its boundaries very much, in order to make
+any appreciable impression on the vast amount of
+such destitution. Here, nevertheless, is the germ,
+and it is already fructifying most successfully. The
+other institutions, dealing with larger masses of
+children, aim at civilizing them at home, and so
+making each home a centre of influence.</p>
+
+<p>Passing back again to the King Street Mission
+Hall, I found assembled there the band of fifty
+missionaries, male and female, who visit every Sunday
+afternoon the kitchens of the various lodging-houses
+around the Seven Dials. Six hundred kitchens are
+thus visited every week. After roll-call, and a brief
+address, we sallied forth, I myself accompanying Mr.
+Hatton&mdash;the young man to whom the establishment
+of the Mission is due&mdash;and another of his missionaries.
+I had heard much of the St. Giles's Kitchens, but
+failed to realize any idea of the human beings swarming
+by dozens and scores in those subterranean
+regions. Had it not been for the fact that nearly
+every man was smoking, the atmosphere would have
+been unbearable. In most of the kitchens they were
+beguiling the ennui of Sunday afternoon with cards;
+but the game was invariably suspended on our arrival.
+Some few removed their hats&mdash;for all wore them&mdash;and
+a smaller number still joined in a verse or two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+of a hymn, and listened to a portion of Scripture and
+a few words of exhortation. One or two seemed
+interested, others smiled sardonically; the majority
+kept a dogged silence. Some read their papers and
+refused the tracts and publications offered them.
+These, I found, were the Catholics. I was assured
+there were many men there who themselves, or whose
+friends, had occupied high positions. I was much
+struck with the language of one crop-headed young
+fellow of seventeen or eighteen, who, seeing me grope
+my way, said, "They're not very lavish with the gas
+here, sir, are they?" It may appear that this "experience"
+has little bearing on the Arab boys; but
+really some of the inmates of these kitchens <i>were</i> but
+boys. Those we visited were in the purlieus of the
+old "Rookery," and for these dens, I was informed,
+the men paid fourpence a night! Surely a little
+money invested in decent dwellings for such people
+would be well and even remuneratively spent. The
+kitchens, my informant&mdash;who has spent many years
+among them&mdash;added, are generally the turning point
+between honesty and crime. The discharged soldier
+or mechanic out of work is there herded with the
+professional thief or burglar, and learns his trade
+and gets to like his life.</p>
+
+<p>The succeeding evening I devoted first of all to
+the Girls' Refuge, 19, Broad Street, St. Giles's. Here
+were sixty-two girls of the same class as the boys in
+Great Queen Street, who remain until provided with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+places as domestic servants. A similar number were
+in the Home at Ealing. The Institution itself is the
+picture of neatness and order. I dropped in quite
+unexpectedly; and any visitor who may be induced
+to follow my example, will not fail to be struck with
+the happy, "homely" look of everything, the clean,
+cheerful appearance of the female Arabs, and the
+courtesy and kindness of the matron. These girls
+are considered to belong to St. Giles's parish, as the
+boys to Bloomsbury Chapel. So far the good work
+has been done by the Dissenters and Evangelical
+party in the Established Church. The sphere of the
+High Church&mdash;as I was reminded by the Superintendent
+Sergeant&mdash;is the Newport Market Refuge
+and Industrial Schools. Here, besides the male and
+female refuges, is a Home for Destitute Boys, who
+are housed and taught on the same plan as at St.
+Giles's. Their domicile is even more cosy than the
+other, and might almost tempt a boy to act the
+part of an "amateur Arab." I can only say the
+game that was going on, previously to bed, in the
+large covered play room, with bare feet and in shirt
+sleeves, was enough to provoke the envy of any
+member of a Dr. Blimber's "Establishment." The
+Institution had just had a windfall in the shape of
+one of those agreeable 1000<i>l.</i> cheques that have been
+flying about lately, or their resources would have
+been cramped; but the managers are wisely sensible
+that such windfalls do not come every day,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+and so forbear enlarging their borders as they could
+wish.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, the Roman Catholics, who
+usually outdo us in their work among the poor, seemed
+a little behindhand in this special department of
+settling the Arabs. They have schools largely
+attended in Tudor Place, Tottenham Court Road,
+White Lion Street, Seven Dials, &amp;c., but, as far as I
+could ascertain, nothing local in the shape of a Refuge.
+To propagate the faith may be all very well, and will
+be only the natural impulse of a man sincere in his
+own belief; but we must not forget that these Arabs
+have bodies as well as souls, and that those bodies
+have been so shamefully debased and neglected as to
+drag the higher energies down with them; and it is a
+great question whether it is not absolutely necessary
+to begin on the very lowest plane first, and so to
+work towards the higher. Through the body and
+the mind we may at last reach the highest sphere
+of all.</p>
+
+<p>Without for one moment wishing to write down the
+"religious" element, it is, I repeat, a grave question
+whether the premature introduction of that element
+does not sometimes act as a deterrent, and frustrate
+the good that might otherwise be done. Still there
+is the great fact, good <i>is</i> being done. It would be
+idle to carp at any means when the end is so
+thoroughly good. I could not help, as I passed
+from squalid kitchen to kitchen that Sunday<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+afternoon, feeling Lear's words ring through my
+mind:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i10">O, I have ta'en<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Too little care of this. Take physic, pomp,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That thou mayst shake the superflux to them,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And show the heavens more just.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And now "Eastward ho!" for "experiences" in
+Bethnal Green.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>EAST LONDON ARABS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Notwithstanding my previous experiences among
+the Western tribes of Bedouins whose locale is the
+Desert of the Seven Dials, I must confess to considerable
+strangeness when first I penetrated the wilderness
+of Bethnal Green. Not only was it utterly terra incognita
+to me, but, with their manifold features in
+common, the want and squalor of the East have traits
+distinct from those of the West. I had but the name
+of one Bethnal Green parish and of one lady&mdash;Miss
+Macpherson&mdash;and with these slender data I proceeded
+to my work, the results of which I again
+chronicle seriatim.</p>
+
+<p>Passing from the Moorgate Street Station I made
+for the Eastern Counties Terminus at Shoreditch, and
+soon after passing it struck off to my right in the
+Bethnal Green Road. Here, amid a pervading atmosphere
+of bird-fanciers and vendors of live pets in
+general, I found a Mission Hall, belonging to I know
+not what denomination, and, aided by a vigorous
+policeman, kicked&mdash;in the absence of knocker or bell&mdash;at
+all the doors, without result. Nobody was there.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+I went on to the Bethnal Green parish which had
+been named to me as the resort of nomade tribes, and
+found the incumbent absent in the country for a week
+or so, and the Scripture-reader afraid, in his absence,
+to give much information. He ventured, however, to
+show me the industrial school, where some forty
+children were employed in making match-boxes for
+Messrs. Bryant and May. However, as I was told
+that the incumbent in question objected very decidedly
+to refuges and ragged schools, and thought it much
+better for the poor to strain a point and send their
+little ones to school, I felt that was hardly the regimen
+to suit my Arabian friends, who were evidently
+teeming in that locality. I was even returning
+home with the view of getting further geographical
+particulars of this Eastern Arabia Petr&aelig;a, when,
+as a last resource, I was directed to a refuge in
+Commercial Street. I rang here, and found myself
+in the presence of the veritable Miss Macpherson
+herself, with whom I passed two pleasant and instructive
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>At starting, Miss Macpherson rather objected to
+being made the subject of an article&mdash;first of all, for
+the very comprehensible reason that such publicity
+would draw down upon her a host of visitors; and
+when I suggested that visitors probably meant funds,
+she added a second, and not quite so comprehensible
+an objection&mdash;that these funds themselves might alloy
+the element of Faith in which the work had been so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+far carried on. She had thoroughly imbibed the spirit
+of M&uuml;ller, whose Home at Bristol was professedly the
+outcome of Faith and Prayer alone. However, on my
+promise to publish only such particulars&mdash;name, locality,
+&amp;c.&mdash;as she might approve, this lady gave me
+the details of her truly wonderful work. The building
+in which I found her had been erected to serve as
+large warehouses, and here 110 of the most veritable
+Arabs were housed, fed, taught, and converted into
+Christians, when so convertible. Should they prove
+impressionable, Miss Macpherson then contemplates
+their emigration to Canada. Many had already been
+sent out; and her idea was to extend her operations
+in this respect: not, be it observed, to cast
+hundreds of the scum of the East End of London
+upon Canada&mdash;a proceeding to which the Canadians
+would very naturally object&mdash;but to form a Home on
+that side to be fed from the Homes on this, and so to
+remove from the old scenes of vice and temptation
+those who had been previously trained in the refuges
+here. She has it in contemplation to take a large
+hotel in Canada, and convert it into an institution of
+this kind; and I fancy it was the possibility that publicity
+might aid this larger scheme which eventually
+induced the good lady to let the world so far know
+what she is doing. At all events, she gave me
+carte blanche to publish the results of my observations.</p>
+
+<p>In selecting and dealing with the inmates of her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+refuges, Miss Macpherson avails herself of the science
+of phrenology, in which she believes, and she advances
+good reason for so doing. I presume my phrenological
+development must have been satisfactory, since
+she not only laid aside her objection to publicity, but
+even allowed me to carry off with me her MS. "casebooks,"
+from which I cull one or two of several
+hundred:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"1. T. S., aged ten (March 5, 1869).&mdash;An orphan.
+Mother died in St. George's Workhouse. Father
+killed by coming in contact with a diseased sheep,
+being a slaughterman. A seller of boxes in the street.
+Slept last in a bed before Christmas. Slept in hay-carts,
+under a tarpaulin. Says the prayers his mother
+'teached him.'"</p>
+
+<p>"2. J. H., aged twelve (March 5).&mdash;No home but
+the streets. Father killed by an engine-strap, being
+an engineer. Mother died of a broken heart. Went
+into &mdash;&mdash; Workhouse; but ran away through ill-treatment
+last December. Slept in ruins near Eastern
+Counties Railway. <i>Can't remember</i> when he last lay
+in a bed."</p>
+
+<p>"3. A. R., aged eleven (March 5).&mdash;Mother and
+father left him and two brothers in an empty room in
+H&mdash;&mdash; Street. Policeman, hearing them crying, broke
+open the door and took them to the workhouse. His
+two brothers died. Was moved from workhouse by
+grandmother, and she, unable to support him, turned
+him out on the streets. Slept in railway ruins; lived<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+by begging. July 24, sent to Home No. 1 as a reward
+for good conduct."</p>
+
+<p>Besides thus rescuing hundreds of homeless ones,
+Miss Macpherson has in many instances been the
+means of restoring runaway children of respectable
+parents. Here is an instance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Feb. 25th.&mdash;S. W. T., aged fourteen, brought
+into Refuge by one of the night teachers, who noticed
+him in a lodging-house respectably dressed. Had
+walked up to London from N&mdash;&mdash;, in company with
+two sailors (disreputable men, whom the lodging-house
+keeper declined to take in). Had been reading
+sensational books. Wrote to address at N&mdash;&mdash;.
+Father telegraphed to keep him. Uncle came for him
+with fresh clothes and took him home. He had
+begun to pawn his clothes for his night's lodging.
+His father had been for a fortnight in communication
+with the police."</p>
+
+<p>The constables in the neighbourhood all know Miss
+Macpherson's Refuge, and her readiness to take boys
+in at any time; so that many little vagrants are
+brought thither by them and reclaimed, instead of
+being locked up and sent to prison, to go from bad
+to worse. Besides this receptacle for boys, Miss
+Macpherson has also a Home at Hackney, where girls
+of the same class are housed. The plan she adopts is
+to get a friend to be responsible for one child. The
+cost she reckons at 6<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i> per annum for those under
+ten years, and 10<i>l.</i> for those above.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But this excellent lady's good works are by no
+means catalogued yet. Besides the children being
+fed and taught in these Homes, the parents and
+children are constantly gathered for sewing classes,
+tea meetings, &amp;c. at the Refuge. Above 400 children
+are thus influenced; and Miss Macpherson, with her
+coadjutors, systematically visits the wretched dens and
+lodging-houses into which no well-dressed person,
+unless favourably known like her for her work among
+the children, would dare to set foot. I was also
+present when a hearty meal of excellent soup and a
+large lump of bread were given to between three and
+four hundred men, chiefly dock labourers out of
+employ. It was a touching sight to notice the stolid
+apathy depicted on most of the countenances, which
+looked unpleasantly like despair. One of the men
+assured me that for every package that had to be
+unladen from the docks there were ten pair of hands
+ready to do the work, where only one could be employed.
+Many of the men, he assured me, went for
+two, sometimes three, days without food; and with
+the large majority of those assembled the meal they
+were then taking would represent the whole of their
+subsistence for the twenty-four-hours. After supper a
+hymn was sung, and a few words spoken to them by
+Miss Macpherson on the allegory of the Birds and
+Flowers in the Sermon on the Mount; and so they
+sallied forth into the darkness of Arabia Petr&aelig;a. I
+mounted to the little boys' bedroom, where the tiniest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+Arabs of all were enjoying the luxury of a game,
+with bare feet, before retiring. Miss Macpherson
+dragged a mattress off one of the beds and threw
+it down in the centre for them to tumble head-over-tail;
+and, as she truly said, it was difficult to
+recognise in those merry shouts and happy faces
+any remains of the veriest reprobates of the London
+streets.</p>
+
+<p>Let us hear Miss Macpherson herself speak. In a
+published pamphlet, "Our Perishing Little Ones,"
+she says: "As to the present state of the mission, we
+simply say 'Come and see.' It is impossible by words
+to give an idea of the mass of 120,000 precious souls
+who live on this one square mile.... My longing
+is to send forth, so soon as the ice breaks, 500 of our
+poor street boys, waifs and strays that have been
+gathered in, to the warm-hearted Canadian farmers.
+In the meantime, who will help us to make outfits,
+and collect 5<i>l.</i> for each little Arab, that there be no
+hindrance to the complement being made up when the
+spring time is come?... Ladies who are householders
+can aid us much in endeavours to educate
+these homeless wanderers to habits of industry by
+sending orders for their firewood&mdash;4<i>s.</i> per hundred
+bundles, sent free eight miles from the City." And,
+again, in Miss Macpherson's book called "The Little
+Matchmakers," she says: "In this work of faith and
+labour of love among the very lowest in our beloved
+country, let us press on, looking for great things.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+Preventing sin and crime is a much greater work
+than curing it. There are still many things on my
+heart requiring more pennies. As they come, we will
+go forward."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Macpherson's motto is, "The Word first in
+all things; afterwards bread for this body." There
+are some of us who would be inclined to reverse this
+process&mdash;to feed the body and educate the mind&mdash;not
+altogether neglecting spiritual culture, even at the
+earliest stage, but leaving anything like definite religious
+schooling until the poor mind and body were,
+so to say, acclimatized. It is, of course, much
+easier to sit still and theorize and criticise than to do
+what these excellent people have done and are doing to
+diminish this gigantic evil. "By their fruits ye shall
+know them" is a criterion based on authority that we
+are none of us inclined to dispute. Miss Macpherson
+boasts&mdash;and a very proper subject for boasting it is&mdash;that
+she belongs to no <i>ism</i>. It is significant, however,
+that the Refuge bears, or bore, the name of the
+"Revival" Refuge, and the paper which contained
+the earliest accounts of its working was called the
+<i>Revivalist</i>, though now baptized with the broader title
+of the <i>Christian</i>. Amid such real work it would be a
+pity to have the semblance of unreality, and I dreaded
+to think of the possibility of its existing, when little
+grimy hands were held out by boys volunteering to
+say a text for my behoof. By far the most favourite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+one was "Jesus wept;" next came "God is love"&mdash;each
+most appropriate; but the sharp boy, a few years
+older, won approval by a longer and more doctrinal
+quotation, whilst several of these held out hands again
+when asked whether, in the course of the day, they
+had felt the efficacy of the text given on the previous
+evening, "Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep
+Thou the door of my lips." Such an experience
+would be a sign of advanced spirituality in an adult.
+Is it ungenerous to ask whether its manifestation in
+an Arab child must not be an anticipation of what
+might be the normal result of a few years' training?
+May not this kind of <i>forcing</i> explain the cases I saw
+quoted in the books&mdash;of one boy who "felt like a fish
+out of water, and left the same day of his own accord;"
+another who "climbed out of a three-floor
+window and escaped?"</p>
+
+<p>However, here is the good work being done. Let
+us not carp at the details, but help it on, unless we
+can do better ourselves. One thing has been preeminently
+forced in upon me during this brief examination
+of our London Arabs&mdash;namely, that individuals
+work better than communities amongst these people.
+The work done by the great establishments, whether
+of England, Rome, or Protestant Dissent, is insignificant
+compared with that carried out by persons
+labouring like Mr. Hutton in Seven Dials and Miss
+Macpherson in Whitechapel, untrammelled by any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+particular system. The want, and sorrow, and suffering
+are individual, and need individual care, just as
+the Master of old worked Himself, and sent His
+scripless missionaries singly forth to labour for Him,
+as&mdash;on however incommensurate a scale&mdash;they are
+still labouring, East and West, amongst our London
+Arabs.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>LONDON ARABS IN CANADA.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the previous chapter an account was given of the
+Arabs inhabiting that wonderful "square mile" in
+East London, which has since grown to be so familiar
+in men's mouths. The labours of Miss Macpherson
+towards reclaiming these waifs and strays in her
+"Refuge and Home of Industry, Commercial Street,
+Spitalfields," were described at some length, and
+allusion was at the same time made to the views which
+that lady entertained with regard to the exportation of
+those Arabs to Canada after they should have undergone
+a previous probationary training in the "Home."
+A short time afterwards it was my pleasing duty to
+witness the departure of one hundred of these young
+boys from the St. Pancras Station, en route for Canada;
+and it now strikes me that some account of the voyage
+out, in the shape of excerpts from the letters of the
+devoted ladies who themselves accompanied our Arabs
+across the Atlantic, may prove interesting; while, at
+the same time, a calculation of their probable success
+in their new life and homes may not improbably
+stimulate those who cannot give their time, to give at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+least their countenance, and it may be, their material
+aid, to a scheme which recommends itself to all our
+sympathies&mdash;the permanent reclamation of the little
+homeless wanderers of our London streets.</p>
+
+<p>The strange old rambling "Home" in Commercial
+Street, built originally for warehouses, then used as a
+cholera hospital, and now the Arab Refuge, presented
+a strange appearance during the week before the
+departure of the chosen hundred. On the ground-floor
+were the packages of the young passengers; on
+the first floor the "new clothes, shirts, and stockings,
+sent by kind lady friends from all parts of the kingdom,
+trousers and waistcoats made by the widows,
+and the boots and pilot jackets made by the boys
+themselves." The dormitory was the great store-closet
+for all the boys' bags filled with things needful
+on board ship; and on the top floor, we can well
+imagine, the last day was a peculiarly melancholy
+one. The work attendant upon the boys' last meal
+at the Refuge was over, and there, in the long narrow
+kitchen, stood the cook wiping away her tears with
+her apron, and the six little waiting maids around
+them, with the novel feeling of having nothing to do&mdash;there, where
+so much cutting, buttering, and
+washing-up had been the order of the day. When
+the summons came to start, the police had great difficulty
+in clearing a way for the boys to the vans
+through the surging mass of East London poverty.
+Some of the little match-box makers ran all the three<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+miles from Commercial Street to St. Pancras Station
+to see the very last of their boy-friends.</p>
+
+<p>Derby was the stopping-place on the journey to
+Liverpool, and the attention of passengers and guards
+was arrested by this strange company gathering on
+the platform at midnight and singing two of the
+favourite Refuge hymns. Liverpool was reached at
+4 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, and the boys filed off in fours, with their
+canvas bags over their shoulders, to the river side,
+where their wondering eyes beheld the <i>Peruvian</i>,
+which was to bear them to their new homes.</p>
+
+<p>At this point, Miss Macpherson's sister&mdash;who is
+carrying on the work of the Refuge during that lady's
+absence&mdash;wrote as follows:&mdash;"Could our Christian
+friends have seen the joy that beamed in the faces of
+those hundred lads from whom we have just parted&mdash;could
+they know the misery, the awful precipice of
+crime and sin from which they have been snatched&mdash;we
+are sure their hearts would be drawn out in love
+for those little ones. If still supported," she continues,
+"I hope to send out another party of fifty boys and fifty
+girls while my sister remains in Canada, and shall be
+happy to forward the name and history of a boy or
+girl to any kind friend wishing to provide for a special
+case. In the broad fields of that new country where
+the farmers are only too glad to adopt healthy young
+boys or girls into their families, hundreds of our
+perishing little ones may find a happy home."</p>
+
+<p>On Thursday, the 12th of May, the <i>Peruvian</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+dropped down the river; and, as the last batch of
+friends left her when she passed out into the Channel,
+these one hundred boys, with Miss Macpherson,
+leaned over the bulwarks, singing the hymn, "Yes,
+we part, but not for ever."</p>
+
+<p>From Derry Miss Macpherson wrote under date
+May 13th:&mdash;"With the exception of two, all are on
+deck now, as bright as larks; they have carried up
+poor Jack Frost and Franks the runner. It is most
+touching to see them wrap them up in their rugs.
+Michael Flinn, the Shoreditch shoeblack, was up all
+night, caring for the sick boys. Poor Mike! He
+and I have exchanged nods at the Eastern Counties
+Railway corner these five years. It is a great joy to
+give him such a chance for life."</p>
+
+<p>The voyage out was prosperous enough, though
+there were some contrary winds, and a good deal of
+sea-sickness among the lads. The captain seems to
+have been quite won by the self-denying kindness of
+the ladies, and he lightened their hands by giving
+occupation to the boys. Then came out the result of
+training at the Refuge. Those who had been some
+time there showed themselves amenable to discipline;
+but the late arrivals were more fractious, and difficult
+to manage. These were the lads "upon whom," as
+Miss Macpherson says, "the street life had left sore
+marks." Even when only nearing the American
+coast, this indomitable lady's spirit is planning a
+second expedition. "As far as I dare make plans, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+should like to return, starting from Montreal July
+16th, reaching the Home July 27th; and then return
+with another lot the second week in August. This
+second lot must be lads who are now under influence,
+and who have been not less than six months in a
+refuge." The finale to this second letter, written
+from Canada, adds: "The boys, <i>to a man</i>, behaved
+splendidly. The agent's heart is won. All have
+improved by the voyage, and many are brown hearty-looking
+chaps fit for any toil."</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>Montreal Herald</i>, of May 27th, there is an
+account of these boys after their arrival, which says:&mdash;"Miss
+Macpherson is evidently a lady whose capacity
+for organization and command is of the very highest
+order; for boys, in most hands, are not too easily
+managed, but in hers they were as obedient as a company
+of soldiers.... These boys will speedily be
+placed in positions, where they will grow up respectable
+and respected members of society, with access to
+the highest positions in the country freely open to
+them.... We hope that Miss Macpherson will
+place all her boys advantageously, and will bring us
+many more. She is a benefactor to the Empire in
+both hemispheres."</p>
+
+<p>The importance of this testimony can scarcely be
+overrated, since many persons hold themselves aloof
+from a work of this nature through a feeling that it is
+not fair to draft our Arab population on a colony. It
+will be seen, however, that it is not proposed to export<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+these boys until they shall have been brought well
+under influence, and so have got rid of what Miss
+Macpherson so graphically terms the "sore marks of
+their street life."</p>
+
+<p>Apropos of this subject, it may not be irrelevant to
+quote a communication which has been received from
+Sir John Young, the Governor-General of Canada,
+dated Ottawa, May 3rd, 1870:&mdash;"For emigrants able
+and willing to work, Canada offers at present a very
+good prospect. The demand for agricultural labourers
+in Ontario during the present year is estimated at
+from 30,000 to 40,000; and an industrious man may
+expect to make about one dollar a day throughout the
+year, if he is willing to turn his hand to clearing land,
+threshing, &amp;c., during the winter. But it is of no
+use for emigrants to come here unless they make up
+their minds to take whatever employment offers itself
+most readily, without making difficulties because it is
+not that to which they have been accustomed, or
+which they prefer."</p>
+
+<p>I visited the Refuge and Home of Industry a few
+nights afterwards, and, though Miss Macpherson was
+absent, found all in working order. Sixty-three boys
+were then its occupants. The superintendent was
+anxiously looking forward to be able to carry out the
+plan of despatching fifty boys and fifty girls during the
+ensuing summer. The sum required for an East End
+case is 5<i>l.</i>; for a special case, 10<i>l.</i> The following are
+specimens of about sixty cases of boys whom she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+would like to send out, knowing that in Canada they
+could readily obtain places:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>P. E., aged seventeen.&mdash;Mother died of fever,
+leaving seven children; father a dock labourer, but
+cannot get full employment.</p>
+
+<p>L. J., aged thirteen.&mdash;Mother dead; does not know
+where her father is; has been getting her living by
+singing songs in the lodging-houses; is much improved
+by her stay in the Home, and will make a
+tidy little maid. This is just one of the many
+who might thus be rescued from a life of sin and
+misery.</p>
+
+<p>Returning home through the squalid streets that
+night, where squatters were vending old shoes and
+boots that seemed scarcely worth picking out of the
+kennel, and garments that appeared beneath the
+notice of the rag merchant, I saw the little Bedouins
+still in full force, just as though no effort had been
+made for their reclamation and housing. As they
+crowded the doorsteps, huddled in the gutters, or
+vended boxes of lights and solicited the honour of
+shining "your boots, sir," I could not help picturing
+them crossing the sea, under kindly auspices, to the
+"better land" beyond, and anon, in the broad Canadian
+fields or busy Canadian towns, growing into
+respectable farmers and citizens; and straightway
+each little grimed, wan face seemed to bear a new
+interest for me, and to look wistfully up into mine
+with a sort of rightful demand on my charity, saying<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+to me, and through me to my many readers, "Come
+and help us!"</p>
+
+<p>After the foregoing was written, a further letter
+arrived from Miss Macpherson. All the boys were
+well placed. The agent at Quebec wished to take the
+whole hundred in a lump, but only eleven were conceded
+to him. At Montreal, too, all would have been
+taken, but twenty-one only were left. All found
+excellent situations, many as house servants at 10<i>l.</i>
+and 15<i>l.</i> a year. Eight were in like manner left at
+Belleville, half way between Montreal and Toronto.
+Sixty were taken on to Toronto; and here we are
+told "the platform was crowded with farmers anxious
+to engage them all at once. It was difficult to get
+them to the office." A gentleman arrived from Hamilton,
+saying that sixty applications had been sent in
+for boys, directly it was known that Miss Macpherson
+was coming out. So there is no need of anticipating
+anything like repugnance on the part of the Canadians
+to the reception of our superfluous Arabs.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>WAIFS AND STRAYS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Among the various qualifications for the festivities of
+Christmastide and New Year, there is one which is,
+perhaps, not so generally recognised as it might be.
+Some of us are welcomed to the bright fireside or the
+groaning table on the score of our social and conversational
+qualities. At many and many a cheery
+board, poverty is the only stipulation that is made. I
+mean not now that the guests shall occupy the unenviable
+position of "poor relations," but, in the large-hearted
+charity that so widely prevails at that festive
+season, the need of a dinner is being generally accepted
+as a title to that staple requirement of existence.
+Neither of these, however, is the distinction
+required in order to entitle those who bear it to the
+hospitality of Mr. Edward Wright, better known
+under the abbreviated title of "Ned," and without
+the prefatory "Mr." That one social quality, without
+which a seat at Ned Wright's festive board cannot
+be compassed, is Felony. A little rakish-looking
+green ticket was circulated a few days previously
+among the members of Mr. Wright's former fraternity,
+bidding them to a "Great Supper" in St. John's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+Chapel, Penrose Street (late West Street), Walworth,
+got up under the auspices of the South-East London
+Mission. The invitation ran as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"This ticket is only available for a male person
+who has been convicted at least once for felony, and
+is not transferable. We purpose providing a good
+supper of bread and soup, after which an address will
+be given. At the close of the meeting a parcel of
+provisions will be given to each man. Supper will be
+provided in the lower part of the chapel. Boys not
+admitted this time.&mdash;Your friend, for Christ's sake,</p>
+
+<p class='right'>"<span class="smcap">Ned Wright</span>."</p></div>
+
+<p>Why juvenile felons should be excluded "this
+time," and whether the fact of having been convicted
+more than once would confer any additional privileges,
+did not appear at first sight. So it was, however;
+adult felonious Walworth was bidden to the
+supper, and to the supper it came. Among the
+attractions held out to spectators of the proceedings
+was the announcement that a magistrate was to take
+part in them&mdash;a fact that possibly was not made
+generally known among the guests, in whose regard
+it is very questionable whether the presence of the
+dreaded "beak" might not have proved the reverse of
+a "draw." However, they came, possibly in happy
+ignorance of the potentate who was awaiting them,
+and than whom there is one only creation of civilized<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+life considered by the London cadger his more natural
+enemy, that is the policeman.</p>
+
+<p>Six o'clock was the hour appointed for the repast,
+and there was no need for the wanderer in Walworth
+Road to inquire which was Penrose Street.
+Little groups of shambling fellows hulked about the
+corner waiting for some one to lead the way to the
+unaccustomed chapel. Group after group, however,
+melted away into the dingy building where Ned was
+ready to welcome them. With him I found, not
+one magistrate, but two; one the expected magnate
+from the country, the other a well-known occupant of
+the London bench, with whom, I fancy, many of the
+guests could boast a previous acquaintance of a character
+the reverse of desirable. Penrose Street Chapel
+had been formerly occupied by the Unitarians, but
+was then taken permanently by Ned Wright at a
+rental of between 60<i>l.</i> and 70<i>l.</i> per annum, and formed
+the third of his "centres," the others being under a
+railway arch in the New Kent Road, and the Mission
+Hall, Deptford. As row by row filled with squalid
+occupants, I could but scan from my vantage-ground
+in the gallery the various physiognomies. I am bound
+to say the typical gaol-bird was but feebly represented.
+The visitors looked like hard-working men&mdash;a little
+pinched and hungry, perhaps, and in many cases
+obviously dejected and ashamed of the qualification
+which gave them their seat. One or two, mostly of
+the younger, came in with a swagger and a rough<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+joke; but Ned and his guests knew one another, and
+he quickly removed the lively young gentleman to a
+quiet corner out of harm's way. A fringe of spectators,
+mostly female, occupied the front seat in the
+gallery when proceedings commenced, which they did
+with a hymn, composed by Ned Wright himself. The
+ladies' voices proved very useful in this respect; but
+most of the men took the printed copies of the hymns,
+which were handed round, and looked as if they could
+read them, not a few proving they could by singing
+full-voiced. After the hymn, Wright announced that
+he had ordered eighty gallons of soup&mdash;some facetious
+gentleman suggesting, "That's about a gallon apiece"&mdash;and
+he hoped all would get enough. Probably
+about 100 guests had by this time assembled,
+and each was provided with a white basin, which was
+filled by Ned and his assistants, with soup from a
+washing jug. A paper bag containing half a quartern
+loaf was also given to each, and the contents rapidly
+disappeared. As the fragrant steam mounted provokingly
+from the soup-basins up to the gallery, Mr.
+Wright took occasion to mention that at the last
+supper Mr. Clark, of the New Cut, furnished the
+soup gratuitously&mdash;a fact which he thought deserved
+to be placed on record.</p>
+
+<p>In the intervals of the banquet, the host informed
+me that he had already witnessed forty genuine
+"conversions" as the results of these gatherings. He
+had, as usual, to contend with certain obtrusive gen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>tlemen
+who "assumed the virtue" of felony, "though
+they had it not," and were summarily dismissed with
+the assurance that he "didn't want no tramps."
+One mysterious young man came in and sat down on
+a front row, but did not remain two minutes before a
+thought seemed to strike him, and he beat a hasty
+retreat. Whether he was possessed with the idea I
+had to combat on a previous occasion of the same
+kind, that I was a policeman, I cannot tell, but he
+never reappeared. I hope I was not the innocent
+cause of his losing his supper. The only "felonious"
+trait I observed was a furtive glance every now and
+then cast around, and especially up to the gallery.
+Beyond this there really was little to distinguish the
+gathering from a meeting of artisans a little bit
+"down on their luck," or out on strike, or under
+some cloud of that sort.</p>
+
+<p>As supper progressed, the number of spectators in
+the gallery increased; and, with all due deference to
+Ned Wright's good intentions, it may be open to
+question whether this presence of spectators in the
+gallery is wise. It gives a sort of spurious dash and
+bravado to the calling of a felon to be supping in
+public, and have ladies looking on, just like the
+"swells" at a public dinner. I am sure some of the
+younger men felt this, and swaggered through their
+supper accordingly. There certainly was not a symptom
+of shame on the face of a single guest, or any
+evidences of dejection, when once the pea-soup had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+done its work. Some of the very lively gentlemen
+in the front row even devoted themselves to making
+critical remarks on the occupants of the gallery. As
+a rule, and considering the antecedents of the men,
+the assembly was an orderly one; and would, I think,
+have been more so, but for the presence of the fair
+sex in the upper regions, many of whom, it is but
+justice to say, were enjoying the small talk of certain
+oily-haired young missionaries, and quite unconscious
+of being the objects of admiring glances from below.</p>
+
+<p>Supper took exactly an hour, and then came another
+hymn, Ned Wright telling his guests that the tune
+was somewhat difficult, but that the gallery would
+sing it for them first, and then they would be able to
+do it for themselves. Decidedly, Mr. Wright is
+getting "&aelig;sthetic." This hymn was, in fact, monopolized
+by the gallery, the men listening and evidently
+occupied in digesting their supper. One would rather
+have heard something in which they could join.
+However, it was a lively march-tune, and they evidently
+liked it, and kept time to it with their feet,
+after the custom of the gods on Boxing Night. At
+this point Ned and five others mounted the little
+railed platform, Bible in hand, and the host read what
+he termed "a portion out of the Good Old Book,"
+choosing appropriately Luke xv., which tells of the
+joy among angels over one sinner that repenteth, and
+the exquisite allegory of the Prodigal Son, which Ned
+read with a good deal of genuine pathos. It reminded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+him, he said, of old times. He himself was one of
+the first prisoners at Wandsworth when "old Brixton"
+was shut up. He had "done" three calendar months,
+and when he came out he saw an old grey-headed
+man, with a bundle. "That," said Ned, "was my
+godly old father, and the bundle was new clothes in
+place of my old rags."</p>
+
+<p>The country magistrate then came forward, and
+drew an ironical contrast between the "respectable"
+people in the gallery and the "thieves" down below.
+"God says we have all 'robbed Him.' All are equal
+in God's sight. But some of us are pardoned thieves."
+At this point the discourse became theological, and
+fired over the heads of the people down below. They
+listened much as they listen to a magisterial remark
+from the bench; but it was not their own language,
+such as Ned speaks. It was the "beak," not the old
+"pal." It was not their vernacular. It did for the
+gallery&mdash;interested the ladies and the missionaries
+vastly, but not the thieves. It was wonderful that
+they bore it as well as they did. The magisterial
+dignity evidently overawed them; but they soon got
+used to it, and yawned or sat listlessly. Some leant
+their heads on the rail in front and slept. The latest
+arrivals left earliest. They had come to supper, not
+to sermon.</p>
+
+<p>Another of Ned Wright's hymns was then sung&mdash;Mr.
+Wright's muse having been apparently prolific in
+the past year, no less than six hymns on the list<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+being written by himself during those twelve months.
+It is much to be hoped that these poetical and
+&aelig;sthetical proclivities will not deaden his practical
+energies. This hymn was pitched distressingly high,
+and above the powers of all but the "gallery" and a
+very few indeed of the guests; but most of them put in
+a final "Glory, Hallelujah," at the end of each stanza.
+Mr. Wright's tunes are bright and cheerful in the extreme,
+without being vulgar or offensively secular.</p>
+
+<p>The host himself then spoke a few words on the
+moral of the Sermon on the Mount: "Seek ye first
+the kingdom of God and His righteousness." He
+claimed many of those before him as old pals who had
+"drunk out of the same pot and shuffled the same
+pack of cards," and contrasted his present state with
+theirs. Then they listened, open-mouthed and eager-eyed,
+though they had been sitting two full hours.
+He pictured the life of Christ, and His love for poor
+men. "Christ died for you," he said, "as well as for
+the 'big people.' Who is that on the cross beside
+the Son of God?" he asked in an eloquent apostrophe.
+"It is a thief. Come to Christ, and say, 'I've no
+character. I'm branded as a felon. I'm hunted about
+the streets of London. He will accept you.'" He
+drew a vivid picture of the number of friends he had
+when he rowed for Dogget's Coat and Badge. He
+met with an accident midway; "and when I got to
+the Swan at Chelsea," he said, "I had no friends left.
+I was a losing man. Christ will never treat you like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+that. He has never let me want in the nine years
+since I have been converted." After a prayer the
+assembly broke up, only those being requested to
+remain who required advice. The prayer was characteristic,
+being interspersed with groans from the
+gallery; and then a paper bag, containing bread and
+cakes, was given to each, Ned observing, "There, the
+devil don't give you that. He gives you toke and
+skilly." Being desired to go quietly, one gentleman
+expressed a hope that there was no policeman; another
+adding, "We don't want to get lagged." Ned
+had to reassure them on my score once more, and
+then nearly all disappeared&mdash;some ingenious guests
+managing to get two and three bags by going out and
+coming in again, until some one in the gallery meanly
+peached!</p>
+
+<p>Only some half-dozen out of the hundred remained,
+and Ned Wright kneeling at one of the benches
+prayed fervently, and entered into conversation with
+them one by one. Two or three others dropped in,
+and there was much praying and groaning, but evidently
+much sincerity. And so with at least some
+new impressions for good, some cheering hopeful words
+to take them on in the New Year, those few waifs and
+strays passed out into the darkness, to retain, let it
+be hoped, some at least of the better influences which
+were brought to bear upon them in that brighter
+epoch in their darkened lives when Ned Wright's invitation
+gathered them to the Thieves' Supper.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>A LUNATIC BALL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>One half of the world believes the other half to be mad;
+and who shall decide which moiety is right, the reputed
+lunatics or the supposed sane, since neither
+party can be unprejudiced in the matter? At present
+the minority believe that it is a mere matter of
+numbers, and that if intellect carried the day, and
+right were not overborne by might, the position of
+parties would be exactly reversed. The dilemma
+forced itself strongly on my consciousness for a solution
+when I attended the annual ball at Hanwell
+Lunatic Asylum. The prevailing opinion inside the
+walls was that the majority of madmen lay outside,
+and that the most hopelessly insane people in all the
+world were the officers immediately concerned in the
+management of the establishment itself.</p>
+
+<p>It was a damp, muggy January evening when I
+journeyed to this suburban retreat. It rained dismally,
+and the wind nearly blew the porter out of his
+lodge as he obeyed our summons at the Dantesque
+portal of the institution, in passing behind which so
+many had literally abandoned hope. I tried to fancy
+how it would feel if one were really being consigned<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+to that receptacle by interested relatives, as we read
+in three-volume novels; but it was no use. I was
+one of a merry company on that occasion. The
+officials of Hanwell Asylum had been a little shy of
+being handed down to fame; so I adopted the ruse
+of getting into Herr Gustav K&uuml;ster's corps of fiddlers
+for the occasion. However, I must in fairness add
+that the committee during the evening withdrew the
+taboo they had formerly placed on my writing. I
+was free to immortalize them; and my fiddling was
+thenceforth a work of supererogation.</p>
+
+<p>High jinks commenced at the early hour of six; and
+long before that time we had deposited our instruments
+in the Bazaar, as the ball-room is somewhat incongruously
+called, and were threading the D&aelig;dalean
+mazes of the wards. Life in the wards struck me as
+being very like living in a passage; but when that
+preliminary objection was got over, the long corridors
+looked comfortable enough. They were painted in
+bright warm colours, and a correspondingly genial
+temperature was secured by hot-water pipes running
+the entire length. Comfortable rooms opened out
+from the wards at frequent intervals, and there was
+every form of amusement to beguile the otherwise
+irksome leisure of those temporary recluses. Most of
+my hermits were smoking&mdash;I mean on the male side&mdash;many
+were reading; one had a fiddle, and I scraped
+acquaintance immediately with him; whilst another
+was seated at the door of his snug little bedroom,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+getting up cadenzas on the flute. He was an old
+trombone-player in one of the household regiments,
+an inmate of Hanwell for thirty years, and a fellow-bandsman
+with myself for the evening. He looked,
+I thought, quite as sane as myself, and played magnificently;
+but I was informed by the possibly
+prejudiced officials that he had his occasional weaknesses.
+A second member of Herr K&uuml;ster's band
+whom I found in durance was a clarionet-player,
+formerly in the band of the Second Life Guards; and
+this poor fellow, who was an excellent musician too,
+felt his position acutely. He apologized sotto voce
+for sitting down with me in corduroys, as well as for
+being an "imbecile." He did not seem to question
+the justice of the verdict against him, and had not
+become acclimatized to the atmosphere like the old
+trombone-player.</p>
+
+<p>That New Year's night&mdash;for January was very
+young&mdash;the wards, especially on the women's side,
+were gaily decorated with paper flowers, and all
+looked as cheerful and happy as though no shadow
+ever fell across the threshold; but, alas, there were
+every now and then padded rooms opening out of the
+passage; and as this was not a refractory ward, I
+asked the meaning of the arrangement, which I had
+fancied was an obsolete one. I was told they were
+for epileptic patients. In virtue of his official position
+as bandmaster, Herr K&uuml;ster had a key; and, after
+walking serenely into a passage precisely like the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+rest, informed me, with the utmost coolness, that I
+was in the refractory ward. I looked around for the
+stalwart attendant, who is generally to be seen on
+duty, and to my dismay found he was quite at the
+other end of an exceedingly long corridor. I do not
+know that I am particularly nervous; but I candidly
+confess to an anxiety to get near that worthy official.
+We were only three outsiders, and the company
+looked mischievous. One gentleman was walking
+violently up and down, turning up his coat-sleeves,
+as though bent on our instant demolition. Another,
+an old grey-bearded man, came up, and fiercely
+demanded if I were a Freemason. I was afraid he
+might resent my saying I was not, when it happily
+occurred to me that the third in our party, an amateur
+contra-bassist, was of the craft. I told our old friend
+so. He demanded the sign, was satisfied, and, in the
+twinkling of an eye, our double-bass friend was
+struggling in his fraternal embrace. The warder,
+mistaking the character of the hug, hastened to the
+rescue, and I was at ease.</p>
+
+<p>We then passed to the ball-room, where my musical
+friends were beginning to "tune up," and waiting for
+their conductor. The large room was gaily decorated,
+and filled with some three or four hundred patients,
+arranged Spurgeon-wise: the ladies on one side, and
+the gentlemen on the other. There was a somewhat
+rakish air about the gathering, due to the fact of the
+male portion not being in full dress, but arrayed in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+free-and-easy costume of corduroys and felt boots.
+The frequent warders in their dark blue uniforms lent
+quite a military air to the scene; and on the ladies'
+side the costumes were more picturesque; some little
+latitude was given to feminine taste, and the result was
+that a large portion of the patients were gorgeous in
+pink gowns. One old lady, who claimed to be a scion
+of royalty, had a resplendent mob-cap; but the belles
+of the ball-room were decidedly to be found among
+the female attendants, who were bright, fresh-looking
+young women, in a neat, black uniform, with perky
+little caps, and bunches of keys hanging at their
+side like the rosary of a s&oelig;ur de charit&eacute;, or the
+chatelaines with which young ladies love to adorn
+themselves at present. Files of patients kept
+streaming into the already crowded room, and
+one gentleman, reversing the order assigned to
+him by nature, walked gravely in on the palms of
+his hands, with his legs elevated in air. He had been
+a clown at a theatre, and still retained some of the
+proclivities of the boards. A wizen-faced man, who
+seemed to have no name beyond the conventional one
+of "Billy," strutted in with huge paper collars, like
+the corner man in a nigger troupe, and a tin decoration
+on his breast the size of a cheeseplate. He was
+insensible to the charms of Terpsichore, except in the
+shape of an occasional pas seul, and laboured under
+the idea that his mission was to conduct the band,
+which he occasionally did, to the discomfiture of Herr<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+K&uuml;ster, and the total destruction of gravity on the
+part of the executants, so that Billy had to be displaced.
+It was quite curious to notice the effect of
+the music on some of the quieter patients. One or
+two, whose countenances really seemed to justify their
+incarceration, absolutely hugged the foot of my music-stand,
+and would not allow me to hold my instrument
+for a moment when I was not playing on it, so
+anxious were they to express their admiration of me
+as an artist. "I used to play that instrument afore
+I come here," said a patient, with a squeaky voice,
+who for eleven years has laboured under the idea that
+his mother is coming to see him on the morrow;
+indeed, most of the little group around the platform
+looked upon their temporary sojourn at Hanwell as
+the only impediment to a bright career in the musical
+world.</p>
+
+<p>Proceedings commenced with the Caledonians, and
+it was marvellous to notice the order, not to say grace
+and refinement with which these pauper lunatics went
+through their parts in the "mazy." The rosy-faced
+attendants formed partners for the men, and I saw a
+herculean warder gallantly leading along the stout old
+lady in the mob-cap. The larger number of the
+patients of course were paired with their fellow-prisoners,
+and at the top of the room the officials
+danced with some of the swells. Yes, there were
+swells here, ball-room coxcombs in fustian and felt.
+One in particular was pointed out to me as an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+University graduate of high family, and on my inquiring
+how such a man became an inmate of a pauper
+asylum the official said, "You see, sir, when the mind
+goes the income often goes too, and the people become
+virtually paupers." Insanity is a great leveller, true;
+but I could not help picturing that man's lucid
+intervals, and wondering whether his friends might
+not do better for him. But there he is, pirouetting
+away with the pretty female organist, the chaplain
+standing by and smiling approval, and the young
+doctors doing the polite to a few invited guests, but
+not disdaining, every now and then, to take a turn
+with a patient. Quadrilles and Lancers follow, but
+no "round dances." A popular prejudice on the part
+of the majority sets down such dances as too exciting
+for the sensitive dancers. The graduate is excessively
+irate at this, and rates the band soundly for not playing
+a valse. Galops are played, but not danced; a
+complicated movement termed a "Circassian circle"
+being substituted in their place. "Three hours of
+square dances are really too absurd," said the graduate
+to an innocent second fiddle.</p>
+
+<p>In the centre of the room all was gravity and
+decorum, but the merriest dances went on in corners.
+An Irish quadrille was played, and an unmistakable
+Paddy regaled himself with a most beautiful jig. He
+got on by himself for a figure or two, when, remembering,
+no doubt, that "happiness was born a
+twin," he dived into the throng, selected a white-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>headed
+old friend of some sixty years, and impressed
+him with the idea of a pas de deux. There they kept
+it up in a corner for the whole of the quadrille,
+twirling imaginary shillelaghs, and encouraging one
+another with that expressive Irish interjection which
+it is so impossible to put down on paper. For an
+hour all went merry as the proverbial marriage bell,
+and then there was an adjournment of the male
+portion of the company to supper. The ladies remained
+in the Bazaar and discussed oranges, with an
+occasional dance to the pianoforte, as the band retired
+for refreshment too, in one of the attendants' rooms.
+I followed the company to their supper room, as I
+had come to see, not to eat. About four hundred sat
+down in a large apartment, and there were, besides,
+sundry snug supper-parties in smaller rooms. Each
+guest partook of an excellent repast of meat and
+vegetables, with a sufficiency of beer and pipes to
+follow. The chaplain said a short grace before
+supper, and a patient, who must have been a retired
+Methodist preacher, improved upon the brief benediction
+by a long rambling "asking of a blessing,"
+to which nobody paid any attention. Then I passed
+up and down the long rows with a courteous official,
+who gave me little snatches of the history of some of
+the patients. Here was an actor of some note in
+his day; there a barrister; here again a clergyman;
+here a tradesman recently "gone," "all through the
+strikes, sir," he added. The shadow&mdash;that most<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+mysterious shadow of all&mdash;had chequered life's sunshine
+in every one of these cases. Being as they are
+they could not be in a better place. They have the
+best advice they could get even were they&mdash;as some
+of them claim to be&mdash;princes. If they can be cured,
+here is the best chance. If not&mdash;well, there were
+the little dead-house and the quiet cemetery lying
+out in the moonlight, and waiting for them when, as
+poor maddened Edgar Allen Poe wrote, the "fever
+called living," should be "over at last." But who
+talks of dying on this one night in all the year when
+even that old freemason in the refractory ward was
+forgetting, after his own peculiar fashion, the cruel
+injustice that kept him out of his twelve thousand a
+year and title? Universal merriment is the rule to-night.
+Six or seven gentlemen are on their legs at
+once making speeches, which are listened to about as
+respectfully as the "toast of the evening" at a public
+dinner. As many more are singing inharmoniously
+different songs; the fun is getting fast and furious,
+perhaps a little too fast and furious, when a readjournment
+to the ball-room is proposed, and readily
+acceded to, one hoary-headed old flirt remarking to
+me as he went by, that he was going to look for his
+sweetheart.</p>
+
+<p>A long series of square dances followed, the graduate
+waxing more and more fierce at each disappointment
+in his anticipated valse, and Billy giving
+out every change in the programme like a parish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+clerk, which functionary he resembled in many
+respects. It was universally agreed that this was the
+best party that had ever been held in the asylum,
+just as the last baby is always the finest in the
+family. Certainly the guests all enjoyed themselves.
+The stalwart attendants danced more than ever with
+a will, the rosy attendants were rosier and nattier
+than before, if possible. The mob-cap went whizzing
+about on the regal head of its owner down the middle
+of tremendous country dances, hands across, set to
+partners, and then down again as though it had never
+tasted the anxieties of a throne, or learnt by bitter
+experience the sorrows of exile. Even the academical
+gentleman relaxed to the fair organist, though he
+stuck up his hair stiffer than ever, and stamped his
+felt boots again as he passed the unoffending double-bass
+with curses both loud and deep on the subject
+of square dances. At length came the inevitable
+"God Save the Queen," which was played in one key
+by the orchestra, and sung in a great many different
+ones by the guests. It is no disrespect to Her Majesty
+to say that the National Anthem was received
+with anything but satisfaction. It was the signal
+that the "jinks" were over, and that was quite enough
+to make it unpopular. However, they sang lustily
+and with a good courage, all except the old woman
+in the mob-cap, who sat with a complacent smile as
+much as to say, "This is as it should be, I appreciate
+the honour done to my royal brothers and sisters."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This is the bright side of the picture; but it had its
+sombre tints also. There were those in all the wards
+who stood aloof from the merriment, and would have
+none of the jinks. Lean-visaged men walked moodily
+up and down the passages like caged wild beasts.
+Their lucid interval was upon them, and they fretted
+at the irksome restraint and degrading companionship.
+It was a strange thought; but I fancied they
+must have longed for their mad fit as the drunkard
+longs for the intoxicating draught, or the opium-eater
+for his delicious narcotic to drown the idea of
+the present. There were those in the ball-room itself
+who, if you approached them with the proffered pinch
+of snuff, drove you from them with curses. One fine,
+intellectual man, sat by the window all the evening,
+writing rhapsodies of the most extraordinary character,
+and fancying himself a poet. Another wrapped
+round a thin piece of lath with paper, and superscribed
+it with some strange hieroglyphics, begging
+me to deliver it. All made arrangements for their
+speedy departure from Hanwell, though many in
+that heart-sick tone which spoke of long-deferred
+hope&mdash;hope never perhaps to be realized. Most
+painful sight of all, there was one little girl there,
+a child of eleven or twelve years&mdash;a child in a
+lunatic asylum! Think of that, parents, when you
+listen to the engaging nonsense of your little ones&mdash;think
+of the child in Hanwell wards! Remember
+how narrow a line separates innocence from idiocy;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+so narrow a line that the words were once synonymous!</p>
+
+<p>Then there was the infirmary full of occupants on
+that merry New Year's night. Yonder poor patient
+being wheeled in a chair to bed will not trouble his
+attendant long. There is another being lifted on his
+pallet-bed, and having a cup of cooling drink applied
+to his parched lips by the great loving hands of a
+warder who tends him as gently as a woman. It
+seemed almost a cruel kindness to be trying to keep
+that poor body and soul together.</p>
+
+<p>Another hour, rapidly passed in the liberal hospitality
+of this great institution, and silence had fallen
+on its congregated thousands. It is a small town in
+itself, and to a large extent self-dependent and self-governed.
+It bakes and brews, and makes its gas;
+and there is no need of a Licensing Bill to keep its
+inhabitants sober and steady. The method of doing
+that has been discovered in nature's own law of kindness.
+Instead of being chained and treated as wild
+beasts, the lunatics are treated as unfortunate men
+and women, and every effort is made to ameliorate,
+both physically and morally, their sad condition.
+Hence the bright wards, the buxom attendants, the
+frequent jinks. Even the chapel-service has been
+brightened up for their behoof.</p>
+
+<p>This was what I saw by entering as an amateur
+fiddler Herr K&uuml;ster's band at Hanwell Asylum; and
+as I ran to catch the last up-train&mdash;which I did as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+the saying is by the skin of my teeth&mdash;I felt that I
+was a wiser, though it may be a sadder man, for my
+evening's experiences at the Lunatic Ball.</p>
+
+<p>One question would keep recurring to my mind.
+It has been said that if you stop your ears in a ball-room,
+and then look at the people&mdash;reputed sane&mdash;skipping
+about in the new valse or the last galop,
+you will imagine they must be all lunatics. I did
+not stop my ears that night, but I opened my eyes
+and saw hundreds of my fellow-creatures, all with
+some strange delusions, many with ferocious and
+vicious propensities, yet all kept in order by a few
+warders, a handful of girls, and all behaving as decorously
+as in a real ball-room. And the question
+which <i>would</i> haunt me all the way home was, which
+are the sane people, and which the lunatics?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A BABY SHOW.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is no doubt that at the present moment the
+British baby is assuming a position amongst us of
+unusual prominence and importance. That he should
+be an institution is inevitable. That he grows upon
+us Londoners at the rate of some steady five hundred
+a week, the Registrar-General's statistics of the excess
+of births over deaths prove beyond question. His
+domestic importance and powers of revolutionizing
+a household are facts of which every Paterfamilias is
+made, from time to time, unpleasantly aware. But
+the British baby is doing more than this just at
+present. He is assuming a public position. Perhaps
+it is only the faint index of the extension of women's
+rights to the infantile condition of the sexes. Possibly
+our age is destined to hear of Baby Suffrage,
+Baby's Property Protection, Baby's Rights and
+Wrongs in general. It is beyond question that the
+British baby <i>is</i> putting itself forward, and demanding
+to be heard&mdash;as, in fact, it always had a habit of
+doing. Its name has been unpleasantly mixed up
+with certain revelations at Brixton, Camberwell, and
+Greenwich. Babies have come to be farmed like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+taxes or turnpike gates. The arable infants seem to
+gravitate towards the transpontine districts south of
+the Thames. It will be an interesting task for our
+Legislature to ascertain whether there is any actual
+law to account for the transfer, as it inevitably will
+have to do when the delicate choice is forced upon it
+between justifiable infanticide, wholesale Hospices des
+Enfants Trouv&eacute;s, and possibly some kind of Japanese
+"happy despatch" for high-minded infants who are
+superior to the slow poison administered by injudicious
+"farmers." At all events, one fact is certain,
+and we can scarcely reiterate it too often&mdash;the British
+baby is becoming emphatic beyond anything we can
+recollect as appertaining to the infantile days of the
+present generation. It is as though a ray of juvenile
+"swellishness," a scintillation of hobbledehoyhood,
+were refracted upon the long clothes or three-quarter
+clothes of immaturity.</p>
+
+<p>For, if it is true&mdash;as we may tax our infantile experiences
+to assure us&mdash;that "farmed" infants were an
+article unknown to husbandry in our golden age, it is
+equally certain that the idea of the modern Baby
+Show was one which, in that remote era, would not
+have been tolerated. Our mothers and grandmothers
+would as soon have thought of sacrificing an innocent
+to Moloch as to Mammon. What meant it then&mdash;to
+what can it be due&mdash;to precocity on the part of the
+British baby, or degeneracy on the part of the British
+parent&mdash;that two Baby Shows were "on" nearly at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+same moment&mdash;one at Mr. Giovannelli's at Highbury
+Barn, the other at Mr. Holland's Gardens, North
+Woolwich?</p>
+
+<p>Anxious to keep au courant with the times, even
+when those times are chronicled by the rapid career of
+the British baby&mdash;anxious also to blot out the idea of
+the poor emaciated infants of Brixton, Camberwell,
+and Greenwich, by bringing home to my experience
+the opposite pole of infantile development&mdash;I paid a
+visit, and sixpence, at Highbury Barn when the Baby
+Show opened. On entering Mr. Giovannelli's spacious
+hall, consecrated on ordinary occasions to the Terpsichorean
+art, I found it a veritable shrine of the "Diva
+triformis." Immediately on entering I was solicited
+to invest extra coppers in a correct card, containing
+the names, weights, and&mdash;not colours; they were all
+of one colour, that of the ordinary human lobster&mdash;but
+weights, of the various forms of Wackford Squeers
+under twelve months, who were then and there assembled,
+like a lot of little fat porkers. It was, in
+truth, a sight to whet the appetite of an "annexed"
+Fiji Islander, or any other carnivorous animal. My
+correct card specified eighty "entries;" but, although
+the exhibition only opened at two o'clock, and I was
+there within an hour after, I found the numbers up
+to 100 quite full. The interesting juveniles were
+arranged within rails, draped with pink calico, all
+arrayed in "gorgeous attire," and most of them partaking
+of maternal sustenance. The mammas&mdash;all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+respectable married women of the working class&mdash;seemed
+to consider the exhibition of their offspring
+by no means infra dig., and were rather pleased than
+otherwise to show you the legs and other points of
+their adipose encumbrances. Several proposed that I
+should test the weight, which I did tremulously, and
+felt relieved when the infant Hercules was restored to
+its natural protector. The prizes, which amounted in
+the gross to between two and three hundred pounds,
+were to be awarded in sums of 10<i>l.</i> and 5<i>l.</i>, and sometimes
+in the shape of silver cups, on what principle I
+am not quite clear; but the decision was to rest with
+a jury of three medical men and two "matrons." If
+simple adiposity, or the approximation of the human
+form divine to that of the hippopotamus, be the standard
+of excellence, there could be no doubt that a
+young gentleman named Thomas Chaloner, numbered
+48 in the correct card, aged eight months, and weighing
+33lbs., would be facile princeps, a prognostication
+of mine subsequently justified by the event. I must
+confess to looking with awe, and returning every now
+and then to look again, on this colossal child. At my
+last visit some one asked on what it had been fed.
+Shall I own that the demon of mischief prompted me
+to supplement the inquiry by adding, "Oil cake, <i>or</i>
+Thorley's Food for Cattle?"</p>
+
+<p>On the score, I suppose, of mere peculiarity, my
+own attention&mdash;I frankly confess I am not a connoisseur&mdash;was
+considerably engrossed by "two little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+Niggers." No doubt the number afterwards swelled
+to the orthodox "ten little Niggers." One was a
+jovial young "cuss" of eleven months&mdash;weighted at
+29lbs., and numbered 62 on the card. He was a
+clean-limbed young fellow, with a head of hair like a
+furze-bush, and his mother was quite untinted. I
+presume Paterfamilias was a fine coloured gentleman.
+The other representative of the sons of Ham&mdash;John
+Charles Abdula, aged three months, weight 21lbs.,
+and numbered 76&mdash;was too immature to draw upon
+my sympathies; since I freely acknowledge such
+specimens are utterly devoid of interest for me until
+their bones are of sufficient consistency to enable them
+to sit upright and look about as a British baby should.
+This particular infant had not an idea above culinary
+considerations. He was a very Alderman in embryo,
+if there are such things as coloured Aldermen. Then
+there were twins&mdash;that inscrutable visitation of Providence&mdash;three
+brace of gemini. Triplets, in mercy
+to our paternal feelings, Mr. Giovannelli spared us.</p>
+
+<p>There was one noteworthy point about this particular
+exhibition. The mothers, at all events, got a
+good four days' feed whilst their infantile furniture
+was "on view." I heard, sotto voce, encomiums
+on the dinner of the day confidingly exchanged between
+gushing young matrons, and I myself witnessed
+the disappearance of a decidedly comfortable tea, to
+say nothing of sundry pints of porter discussed sub
+ros&acirc; and free of expense to such as stood in need of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+sustenance; and indeed a good many seemed to stand
+in need of it. Small wonder, when the mammas were
+so forcibly reminded by the highly-developed British
+baby that, in Byron's own words, "our life is twofold."</p>
+
+<p>It is certainly passing, not from the sublime to the
+ridiculous, but vice vers&acirc;, yet it is noting another testimony
+to the growing importance of the British baby,
+if one mentions the growth of cr&egrave;ches, or day-nurseries
+for working-men's children in the metropolis. Already
+an institution in Paris, they have been recently introduced
+into England, and must surely prove a boon
+to the wives of our working men. What in the world
+does become of the infants of poor women who are
+forced to work all day for their maintenance? Is it not
+a miracle if something almost worse than "farming"&mdash;death
+from negligence, fire, or bad nursing&mdash;does
+not occur to them? The good ladies who have
+founded, and themselves work, these cr&egrave;ches are surely
+meeting a confessed necessity. I paid a visit one
+day to 4, Bulstrode Street, where one of these
+useful institutions was in full work. I found forty
+little toddlers, some playing about a comfortable day-nursery,
+others sleeping in tiny cribs ranged in a
+double line along a spacious, well-aired sleeping-room;
+some, too young for this, rocked in cosy cradles; but
+all clean, safe, and happy. What needs it to say
+whether the good ladies who tended them wore the
+habit of St. Vincent de Paul, the poke-bonnet of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+Puseyite "sister," or the simple garb of unpretending
+Protestantism? The thing is being done. The most
+helpless of all our population&mdash;the children of the
+working poor&mdash;are being kept from the streets, kept
+from harm, and trained up to habits of decency, at
+4, Bulstrode Street, Marylebone Lane. Any one can go
+and see it for himself; and if he does&mdash;if he sees, as I
+did, the quiet, unostentatious work that is there being
+done for the British baby, "all for love and nothing
+for reward"&mdash;I shall be very much surprised if he does
+not confess that it is one of the best antidotes
+imaginable to baby-farming, and a sight more decorous
+and dignified than any Baby Show that could possibly
+be imagined.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A NIGHT IN A BAKEHOUSE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Alarmed at the prospect of "a free breakfast table"
+in a sense other than the ordinary one&mdash;that is, a
+breakfast table which should be minus the necessary
+accompaniment of bread, or the luxury of French
+rolls&mdash;I resolved to make myself master, so far as
+might be possible, of the pros and cons of the question
+at issue between bakers and masters at the period of
+the anticipated strike some years ago. I confess to
+having greatly neglected the subject of strikes. I had
+attended a few meetings of the building operatives;
+but the subject was one in which I myself was not
+personally interested. I am not likely to want to
+build a house, and might manage my own little
+repairs while the strike lasted. But I confess to a
+leaning for the staff of life. There are sundry small
+mouths around me, too, of quite disproportionate
+capacities in the way of bread and butter, to say
+nothing at all of biscuits, buns, and tartlets. The
+possibility of having to provide for an impending
+state of siege, then, was one that touched me immediately
+and vitally. Should I, before the dreaded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+event, initiate the wife of my bosom in the mysteries
+of bread baking? Should I commence forthwith a
+series of practical experiments within the limited
+confines of my kitchen oven? To prevent the otherwise
+inevitable heaviness and possible ropiness in my
+loaves of the future, some such previous process would
+certainly have to be adopted. But, then, in order to
+calculate the probabilities of the crisis, an examination
+of the status in quo was necessary. Having a habit of
+going to head-quarters in such questions, I resolved
+to do so on the present occasion; so I took my hat,
+and, as Sam Slick says, "I off an' out."</p>
+
+<p>The actual head-quarters of the men I found to be
+at the Pewter Platter, White Lion Street, Bishopsgate.
+Thither I adjourned, and, after drinking the
+conventional glass of bitter at the bar, asked for a
+baker. One came forth from an inner chamber,
+looking sleepy, as bakers always look. In the penetralia
+of the parlour which he left I saw a group of
+floury comrades, the prominent features of the
+gathering being depression and bagatelle. By my
+comatose friend I was referred to the Admiral Carter,
+in Bartholomew Close, where the men's committee
+sat daily at four. The society in front of the bar
+there was much more cheerful than that of the
+Pewter Platter, and the bakers were discussing much
+beer, of which they hospitably invited me to partake.
+Still I learned little of their movements, save that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+they were to a man resolved to abide by the now
+familiar platform of work from four to four, higher
+wages, and no Sunday bakings. These were the
+principal features of the demands, the sack money
+and perquisites being confessedly subsidiary. Nauseated
+as the public was and is with strikes, there are
+certain classes of the community with whom it is
+disposed to sympathize; and certainly one of those
+classes is that of journeymen bakers. Bread for
+breakfast we must have, and rolls we should like; but
+we should also like to have these commodities with as
+little nightwork as possible on the part of those who
+produce them. The "Appeal to the Public" put
+forth by the Strike Committee on the evening of the
+day concerning which I write was, perhaps, a trifle
+sensational; but if there was any truth in it, such
+a state of things demanded careful investigation&mdash;especially
+if it was a fact that the baker slept upon
+the board where the bread was made, and mingled
+his sweat and tears with the ingredients of the staff
+of life. Pardonably, I hope, I wished to eat bread
+without baker for my breakfast; but how could I
+probe this dreadful problem? I had it&mdash;by a visit to
+the bakehouse of my own baker, if possible, during
+the hours of work.</p>
+
+<p>So I set out afresh after supper, and was most
+obligingly received by the proprietor of what one may
+well take as a typical West-end shop&mdash;neither very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+large nor very small&mdash;what is graphically termed a
+"snug" concern with a good connexion, doing, as the
+technical phrase goes, from sixteen to twenty sacks a
+week. The resources of this establishment were at
+once placed at my disposal for the night. Now, the
+advantage of conferring with this particular master
+was, that he was not pig-headed on the one hand, nor
+unduly concessive, as he deemed some of his fellow-tradesmen
+to be, on the other. He did not consider a
+journeyman baker's berth a bed of roses, or his remuneration
+likely to make him a millionaire; but neither
+did he lose sight of the fact that certain hours must
+be devoted to work, and a limit somewhere placed to
+wage, or the public must suffer through the employer
+of labour by being forced to pay higher prices. The
+staff of this particular establishment consisted of four
+men at the following wages: A foreman at 28<i>s.</i> and a
+second hand at 20<i>s.</i> a week, both of whom were outsiders;
+while, sleeping on the premises, and, at the
+time of my arrival, buried in the arms of Morpheus,
+were a third hand, at 16<i>s.</i>, and a fourth, at 12<i>s.</i>
+Besides these wages they had certain perquisites, such
+as bread, butter, sugar, flour, sack-money, yeast-money,
+&amp;c.; and the master, moreover, took his
+adequate share of day-work. He was seated outside
+his shop, enjoying the cool breezes, not of evening,
+but of midnight, when I presented myself before his
+astonished gaze. His wife and children had long<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+since retired. The foreman and second "hand" had
+not arrived; the third and fourth "hands" were, as I
+said, sweetly sleeping, in a chamber on the basement,
+well out of range of the bakehouse, to which, like a
+couple of conspirators, we descended. It was not
+exactly the spot one would have selected for a permanent
+residence if left free to choose. It was,
+perhaps, as Mr. Dickens's theatrical gentleman
+phrased it, pernicious snug; but the ventilation was
+satisfactory. There were two ovens, which certainly
+kept the place at a temperature higher than might
+have been agreeable on that hot September night.
+Kneading troughs were ranged round the walls, and
+in the centre, like an altar-tomb, was the fatal "board"
+where, however, I sought in vain for the traces of
+perspiration or tears. All was scrupulously clean. In
+common phrase, you might have "eaten your dinner"
+off any portion of it.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after midnight the outsiders turned in, first
+the second hand and then the foreman, and, plunging
+into the "Black Hole," made their toilettes du soir.
+Then active operations commenced forthwith. In
+one compartment of the kneading-trough was the
+"sponge," which had been prepared by the foreman
+early in the evening, and which now, having properly
+settled, was mixed with the flour for the first batch,
+and left to "prove." The process of making the
+dough occupied until about one o'clock, and then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+followed two hours of comparative tranquillity, during
+which the men adjourned to the retirement of certain
+millers' sacks hard by, which they rolled up
+cleverly into extempore beds, and seemed to prefer
+to the board. The proving takes about two hours,
+but varies with the temperature. If the dough is left
+too long, a sour batch, or a "pitch in," is the result.
+It is then cut out, weighed, and "handed up;" after
+which it stands while the dough for the second batch
+is being made, and those fatal rolls, around which so
+much of this contest is likely to turn, are being got
+forward. It must be understood that I am here
+describing what took place in my typical bakehouse.
+Proceedings will of course vary in details according
+to the neighbourhood, the season, and other
+circumstances. This makes, as my informant
+suggested, the race of bakers necessarily in some
+degree a varium atque mutabile genus, whom it
+is difficult to bind by rigid "hard and fast"
+lines. The first batch is in the oven at four, and is
+drawn about 5.30. During the intervals there has
+been the preparation of fancy bread and the "getting
+off" of the rolls. Then the "cottage" batch is
+moulded and got off, and comes out of the oven at
+eight. From three o'clock up to this hour there has
+been active work enough for everybody, and I felt
+myself considerably in the way, adjourning ever and
+anon to the master's snuggery above stairs to note<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+down my experiences. As for the men, they must
+have fancied that I was an escaped lunatic, with
+harmless eccentricities; and the fourth hand, who
+was young, gazed at me all night with a fixed and
+sleepy glare, as though on his guard lest I should be
+seized with a refractory fit. At eight the close atmosphere
+of the bakehouse was exchanged for the fresh
+morning breeze by three out of the four hands, who
+went to deliver the bread. The foreman remained
+with the master to work at "small goods" until
+about one, when he prepares the ferment for the
+next night's baking. All concerned can get their
+operations over about one or half-past one; so that,
+reckoning them to begin at half-past twelve, and
+deducting two hours of "sweat and tears" from one
+to three, when they can sleep if they will, there are
+some eleven hours of active labour. After the delivery
+of the bread is over, it should be mentioned,
+each man has about half an hour's bakehouse work in
+the way of getting coals, cleaning biscuit tins, brushing
+up, &amp;c. When this is done, all, with the exception
+of the foreman, who will have to look in and make
+the sponge at eight <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, are free until the commencement
+of their most untimely work at midnight.</p>
+
+<p>On Sunday, the work in this particular bakehouse
+is comparatively nil. The ovens have to be started
+on Sunday morning; but this the master does himself,
+and puts in the ferment, so that there is only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+the sponge to be made in the evening&mdash;a brief hour's
+job, taken on alternate Sundays by the foreman and
+the second hand. The "undersellers," my informant
+told me, made large sums by Sunday bakings, often
+covering their rent by them, so that their abandonment
+would be a serious question; but there was
+little in the way of Sabbath-breaking in my typical
+bakehouse. As there were no Sunday bakings,
+Saturday was a rather harder day than others, there
+being a general scrub-up of the premises. The
+work, my informant thought, could be condensed by
+judicious co-operation, and the "four to four" rule
+might be adopted in some establishments, but by no
+means in all&mdash;as, for instance, where there was a
+speciality for rolls and fancy bread. It seems, as
+usual, that the difficulties thicken, not about the
+necessaries, but about the luxuries and kickshaws of
+life. The master relieved my immediate fears by
+saying that he scarcely imagined matters would come
+to a crisis. There was this difference between the
+building and the baking trades, that all the master
+bakers had been journeymen themselves, and were
+thus able to sympathize with the men's difficulties.
+They were not, he seemed to think, disposed to
+haggle over a few shillings; but he added, "This is
+not a question of labour against capital only, but of
+labour against capital plus labour. I could," he said,
+"if my men left me on the 21st, make bread enough<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+myself to supply all my customers, only they would
+have to fetch it for themselves."</p>
+
+<p>Thus my worst fears were relieved. If it only
+came to going out for my loaf, and even foregoing
+French rolls, I could face that like a man; so I paced
+the streets gaily in the morning air and arrived home
+safely some time after the milk, and about the same
+hour as those rolls themselves whose hitherto unguessed
+history I had so far fathomed by my brief
+experiences in the bakehouse.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A LONDON SLAVE MARKET.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is a story called "Travellers' Wonders" in that
+volume which used to be the delight of our childhood,
+when the rising generation was more easily amused
+and not quite so wide-awake as at present. The point
+of the narrative is, that a facetious old gentleman
+named Captain Compass beguiles a group of juveniles&mdash;who
+must have been singularly gullible even
+for those early days&mdash;by describing in mysterious and
+alien-sounding terms the commonest home objects,
+such as coals, cheese, butter, and so on. It would
+almost seem as though Hood must have been perpetrating
+a kindred joke upon grown-up children when
+he wrote the lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">It's O to be a slave<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Along with the barbarous Turk,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where woman has never a soul to save,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If this is Christian Work!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Was he aware that here, in the heart of Christian
+London, without going farther east than Bethnal
+Green, there had existed from time immemorial, as
+there exists still, a genuine Slave Market? Such
+there is, and actually so named; less romantic, indeed,
+than that we read of in "Don Juan," or used to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+see on the Adelphi boards in the drama of the
+"Octoroon"&mdash;but still interesting in its way to those
+who have a penchant for that grotesque side of London
+life where the sublime and the ridiculous sometimes
+blend so curiously.</p>
+
+<p>With only the vague address of Bethnal Green and
+the date of Tuesday morning to guide me, I set out
+for Worship Street Police Court, thinking it possible
+to gain some further particulars from the police. I
+found those functionaries civil, indeed, but disposed to
+observe even more than official reticence about the
+Slave Market. They told me the locality precisely
+enough, but were even more vague as to the hour
+than my own impressions. In fact, the sum of what
+I could gain from them was, in slightly Hibernian
+language, that there was nothing to see, and I could
+see it any time on a Tuesday morning when I chose
+to go down White Street, Bethnal Green. Leaving
+the Court and inquiring my route to White Street, I
+found that it ran off to the right some way down the
+Bethnal Green Road from Shoreditch Station. Having
+turned out of the main thoroughfare, you proceed
+down one of those characteristic East End streets
+where every small householder lives behind an elaborate
+bright green door with portentous knocker, going
+on until an arch of the Great Eastern Railway spans
+the road. Arriving at this point any time between
+the hours of eight and half-past nine on a Monday or
+Tuesday morning, you have no need to be told that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+this is the East London Slave Market&mdash;supposing
+you knew such a thing as a slave market was to be
+seen in East London at all.</p>
+
+<p>There was, indeed, nothing resembling Byron's
+graphic description in "Don Juan." Our English
+slaves were all apparently of one nation, and there
+were no slave merchants. The hundred young ladies
+and gentlemen, of all ages from seven to seventeen,
+were, as they would have expressed it, "on their own
+hook." Ranged under the dead brick wall of the
+railway arch, there was a generally mouldy appearance
+about them. Instead of a picturesque difference
+of colour, there was on every visage simply a greater
+or less degree of that peculiar neutral tint, the unmistakable
+unlovely hue of London dirt. In this respect,
+too, they differed from the fresh country lads
+and lasses one sees at a hiring in the North. They
+were simply male and female City Arabs, with that
+superabundant power of combining business and pleasure
+which characterizes their race. The young gentlemen,
+in the intervals of business&mdash;and it seemed to
+be all interval and no business&mdash;devoted themselves
+to games at buttons. Each of the young ladies&mdash;I
+am afraid to say <i>how</i> young&mdash;had her cavalier, and
+applied herself to very pronounced flirtation. The
+language of one and all certainly fulfilled the baptismal
+promise of their sponsors, if the poor little
+waifs ever had any&mdash;for it was very "vulgar tongue"
+indeed; and there was lots of it. The great sensation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+of the morning was a broken window in an unoffending
+tradesman's shop&mdash;a far from unusual occurrence,
+as I learnt from the sufferer. This led to a slave
+hunt on the part of the single policeman who occasionally
+showed himself to keep as quiet as might be
+the seething mass of humanity; and the young lady
+or gentleman who was guilty of the damage was "off
+market" for the morning&mdash;while the suffering tradesman
+was assailed with a volley of abuse, couched in
+strongest Saxon, for meekly protesting against the
+demolition of his window-pane.</p>
+
+<p>The scene was most characteristic&mdash;very unlike the
+genteel West End Servants' Registry, where young
+ladies and gentlemen's gentlemen saunter in to find
+places with high wages and the work "put out." It
+was on Tuesday morning, and a little late in the day,
+that I timed my visit; and I was informed that the
+Market was somewhat flat. Certainly, one could not
+apply to it the technicalities of the Stock Exchange,
+and say that little boys were "dull," or girls, big or
+little, "inactive;" but early on a Monday morning is,
+it appears, the time to see the Slave Market in full
+swing. Strangely enough, so far as I could judge, it
+was all slaves and no buyers&mdash;or, rather, hirers. I
+did not see the symptom of a bargain being struck,
+though I was informed that a good many small tradesmen
+do patronize the Market, for shop-boys, nurse-girls,
+or household drudges. I do not know whether
+my appearance was particularly attractive; but the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+number of offers I received from domestics of all kinds
+would have sufficed to stock half-a-dozen establishments.
+"Want a boy, sir?" "A girl for the childer,
+sir?" said the juveniles, while the offers of the adult
+ladies were more emphatic and less quotable. All, of
+course, was mere badinage, or, as they would have
+called it, "chaff," and it was meant good-humouredly
+enough; though, had I been a legitimate hirer, I do
+not know that I should have been tempted to add to
+my household from this source. Indeed, there were
+some not exactly pleasant reflections cast on the Slave
+Market by those whom I consulted as to its merits.
+It was not unusual, I was told, for slaves who were
+hired on a Monday to turn up again on Tuesday
+morning, either from incompatibility of temper on the
+part of domestic and superior, or from other causes
+unexplained. Tuesday morning is, in fact, to a large
+extent, the mere residuum either of Monday's unhired
+incapables, or of "returns." And yet, as I looked
+around, I saw&mdash;as where does one not see?&mdash;some fair
+young faces; girls who might have played with one's
+little children all the better because they were so
+nearly children themselves; and boys of preternatural
+quickness, up to any job, and capable of being useful&mdash;ay,
+and even ornamental&mdash;members of society, if
+only that dreadful Bethnal Green twang could have
+been eradicated. The abuse of the mother tongue on
+the part even of these children was simply frightful.
+If this were so in their playful moods, what&mdash;one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+could not help thinking&mdash;would it be if any dispute
+arose on a contested point of domestic economy: as,
+for instance, the too rapid disappearance of the cold
+mutton, or sudden absence of master's boots?</p>
+
+<p>There was a garrulous cobbler whose stall bordered
+on the Market, and his panacea for all the evils the
+Slave Market brought with it was the London School
+Board. "Why don't the officers come down and
+collar some o' them youngsters, sir?" Why, indeed?
+At present the Slave Market is undoubtedly a
+nuisance; but there is no reason why, under proper
+police supervision, it should not become a local convenience.
+The ways of East London differ in all
+respects from those of the West, and Servants' Registries
+would not pay. Masters and servants are alike
+too poor to advertise; and there seems to be no reason
+why the Slave Market, under a changed name, and
+with improved regulations, may not as really supply
+a want as the country "hirings" do. The Arab, at
+present, is not to be trusted with too much liberty.
+Both male and female have odd Bedouin ways of their
+own, requiring considerable and judicious manipulation
+to mould them to the customs of civilized society.
+The respectable residents, tired of the existing state
+of things, look not unreasonably, as ratepayers, to the
+School Board to thin down the children, and the
+police to keep the adults in order. Under such conditions,
+the Bethnal Green Slave Market may yet
+become a useful institution.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>TEA AND EXPERIENCE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was walking the other day in one of the pleasant
+western suburbs, and rashly sought a short cut back;
+when, as is generally the case, I found that the longer
+would have been much the nearer way home. Before
+I knew it, I was involved in the labyrinths of that
+region, sacred to washerwomen and kindred spirits,
+known as Kensal New Town; and my further progress
+was barred by the intervention of the Paddington
+Canal, which is spanned at rare intervals in
+this locality by pay-bridges, to the great discomfort of
+the often impecunious natives. There was not even
+one of these at hand, or my halfpenny would have
+been paid under protest; so I had to wander like a
+lost sprite among the network of semi-genteel streets
+that skirt that most ungenteel thoroughfare, the
+Kensal New Town Road, and forthwith I began to
+find the neighbourhood papered with placards, announcing
+a "Tea and Experience Meeting" at a local
+hall, under the presidency of the Free Church pastor,
+for the following Monday evening. Bakers' shops
+bristled with the handbills, and they studded the multitudinous
+pork butchers' windows in juxtaposition with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+cruel-looking black puddings and over-fat loin chops.
+I determined I would go, if not to the tea, certainly
+to the "Experience," for I like novel experiences of
+all kinds: and this would certainly be new, whether
+edifying or not.</p>
+
+<p>I got at length out of the labyrinth, and on the following
+Monday ventured once more within its mazes,
+though not exactly at six o'clock, which was the hour
+appointed for the preliminary experience of tea. I
+had experienced that kind of thing once or twice
+before, and never found myself in a position of such
+difficulty as on those occasions. In the first place I
+do not care about tea, when it is good; but loathe it
+when boiled in a washhouse copper, and poured out
+from a large tin can, of which it tastes unpleasantly.
+But, then again, the quantity as well as the quality
+of the viands to be consumed was literally too much
+for me. I might have managed one cup of decidedly
+nasty tea, or what passes muster for such, but not
+four or five, which I found to be the minimum. I
+could stomach, or secretly dispose of in my pockets, a
+single slice of leaden cake or oleaginous bread-and-butter;
+but I could not do this with multitudinous
+slabs of either. I never went to more than one tea-meeting
+where I felt at home, and that was at the Soir&eacute;e
+Suisse, which takes place annually in London, where
+pretty Helvetian damsels brew the most fragrant
+coffee and hand round delicious little cakes, arrayed
+as they are in their killing national costume and chat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>tering
+in a dozen different patois. I had a notion that
+tea at Kensal New Town would be very much less
+eligible, so I stopped away. Perhaps I was prejudiced.
+The tea might have been different from what I expected.
+The experiences certainly were.</p>
+
+<p>I got there about half-past seven, having allowed
+an interval of an hour and a half, which I thought
+would be sufficient for the most inveterate tea-drinker,
+even among the Kensal Town laundresses, should such
+happen to be present. I took the precaution,
+however, of bespeaking a lad of fifteen to accompany
+me, in case any of the fragments of the feast should
+yet have to be disposed of, since I knew his powers to
+equal those of the ostrich in stowing away eatables,
+especially in the lumpy cake line. Arrived at the
+hall, however, I found no symptoms of the tea save
+a steamy sort of smell and the rattle of the retreating
+cups and saucers. Whether "to my spirit's gain or
+loss," I had escaped the banquet and yet got in good
+time for the subsequent experiences.</p>
+
+<p>A motherly-looking woman stood at the door, and
+gave me a cheery invitation to come in. She looked
+rather askance at my boy, but finding him properly
+convoyed by my sober self, she admitted him within
+the portal. A good many young gentlemen of a
+similar age were evidently excluded, and were regaling
+themselves with pagan sports outside. The hall was
+partially filled with respectable-looking mechanics,
+their wives, and families, there being more wives than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+mechanics, and more families than either. Children
+abounded, especially babies in every stage of infantile
+development. Many were taking their maternal tea;
+and the boys and girls were got up in the most festive
+attire, the boys particularly shining with yellow soap.
+Most of the mammas wore perky hats, and many had
+follow-me-lads down the back, but all were exceedingly
+well-dressed and well-behaved, though evidently
+brimful of hilarity as well as cake and tea.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the hall was the inevitable platform,
+with chairs and a large cushion spread over the front
+rail for convenience of praying; since the "experiences"
+were to be interspersed with sacred song and
+prayer. Two gentlemen&mdash;I use the term advisedly&mdash;mounted
+the rostrum, one a long-bearded, middle-aged
+man, in a frock coat, who was the pastor, and
+another an aged minister, superannuated, as I afterwards
+discovered, and not altogether happy in his
+worldly lot. He was very old, grey-haired, and
+feeble, with a worn suit of clerical black, and a
+voluminous white tie. He sat humbly, almost
+despondingly, by the side of his younger brother in
+the ministry, while the latter delivered a merry little
+opening address, hoping all had made a good tea; if
+not, there was still about half a can left. Nobody
+wanted any more; so they had a hymn from the
+"Sacred Songster," a copy of which volume I purchased
+in the hall for twopence halfpenny. The tune
+was a martial one, well sung by a choir of men and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+women to the accompaniment of a harmonium, and
+bravely borne part in, you may depend upon it, by the
+whole assembly, I verily believe, except the babies,
+and one or two of these put in a note sometimes.
+The hymn was called, "Oh, we are Volunteers!" and
+was very Church-militant indeed, beginning thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, we are volunteers in the army of the Lord,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forming into line at our Captain's word;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We are under marching orders to take the battle-field,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we'll ne'er give o'er the fight till the foe shall yield.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Then came the chorus, repeated after every verse:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come and join the army, the army of the Lord,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Jesus is our Captain, we rally at His word:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sharp will be the conflict with the powers of sin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But with such a leader we are sure to win.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The poor old minister offered up a short prayer.
+The pastor read the 1st Corinthians, chapter 13, and
+explained briefly what charity meant there; adding
+that this gathering was very like one of the
+Agap&aelig; of the early Christians&mdash;a remark I had not
+expected to hear in that assembly. Then there was
+another hymn, "Beautiful Land of Rest," when it did
+one good to hear the unction with which the second
+syllable of the refrain was given:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Jerusalem, Jerusalem,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beautiful land of rest.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After this the "Experiences" commenced in real
+earnest. Brothers and Sisters were exhorted to lay
+aside shyness and mount the platform. Of course no
+one would do so at first; and the poor shaky old
+minister had to come to the rescue.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He told us, at rather too great length, the simple
+story of his life&mdash;how he was a farmer's son, and had
+several brothers "besides himself." He had to learn
+verses of the Bible for his father, which used to go
+against the grain, until at last, instead of being "a
+wicked boy," he took up religion on his own account.
+He began to be afraid that, if he died, he should go
+to "a bad place," and therefore started saying his
+prayers. His brother George used to push him over
+when he was praying half-dressed in the bedroom, or
+occasionally vary proceedings by stirring him up with
+a sweeping brush. At last he found out a quiet place
+under a haystack, and there retired to pray. The
+old man drew a perfect picture of the first prayer thus
+offered, and told us he could remember every little
+detail of the spot, and the great oak tree spreading
+its branches over it. "Here I am," he said, "a poor
+old pilgrim on the bright side of seventy now, and
+yet I can remember it all. I say the 'bright' side, for
+I know it is a bright home I am soon going to." Then
+he told us how God took his wife from him and all
+his worldly goods, and he was quite eloquent about
+the comfort his religion was to him now as he went
+to his little lonely lodging. He drew next too
+truthful a picture of the state of things he saw
+around him in Kensal New Town&mdash;mothers with
+infants in their arms crowding the tavern doors; and
+finished up with a story, of which he did not see the
+irrelevancy, about a fine lady going to the "theatre,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+and saying how much she had enjoyed the anticipation,
+then the play itself, and, lastly, the thought
+of it afterwards. She was overheard by a faithful
+pastor, who told her she had omitted one detail.
+"No," she said, "I have told you all." "You have
+told us how you enjoyed the thoughts of the theatre,
+and the performance, and the recollection of it afterwards;
+but you have not told us how you will
+enjoy the thoughts of it on your death-bed." Of
+course the "fine lady" was converted on the spot, as
+they always are in tracts; and the good old fellow
+brought his long-winded narrative of experiences to
+an end by-and-by, the pastor having omitted to pull
+his coat-tails, as he promised to do if any speaker
+exceeded the allotted time. "The people were certainly
+very attentive to hear him," and one man next
+my boy expressed his satisfaction by letting off little
+groans, like minute guns, at frequent intervals.</p>
+
+<p>Then another hymn was sung, "The Beautiful Land
+on High," which, by the way, is a favourite with the
+spiritualists at their "Face S&eacute;ances." I half expected
+to see a ghostly-looking visage peep out of
+some corner cupboard, as I had often done with my
+spiritual friends&mdash;that being another experience which
+I cultivate with considerable interest and curiosity.
+The hymn being over, a black-bearded, but soft-voiced
+man, in a velveteen coat, got upon the platform, and
+told us how the chief delight of his life was at one
+time making dogs fight. When the animals were not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+sufficiently pugnacious of themselves, his habit was
+to construct an apparatus, consisting of a pin at the
+end of a stick, and so urge them to the combat, until
+it proved fatal to one of them. It was, he said,
+dreadful work; and he now considered it the direct
+machination of Satan. Another favourite pursuit was
+interrupting the proceedings of open-air missionaries.
+One day after he had done so, he went home with a
+companion who had taken a tract from one of the
+missionaries. He had a quarrel with his "missis."
+"Not that missis sittin' there," he said, alluding to a
+smart lady in front, "but my first missis." In order
+to show his sulks against his missis, he took to
+reading the tract, and it soon made him cry. Then
+he went to chapel and heard a sermon on Lot's wife
+being turned into a pillar of salt. He was a little
+exercised by this, and saw the minister in the vestry,
+but soon fell back into bad habits again, singing
+canaries for 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a side. As he was taking his
+bird out one Sunday morning, the bottom of the cage
+came out, and the canary escaped. This he looked
+upon as "God's work," since it caused him to go to
+chapel that morning. His conversion soon followed,
+and he applied to that circumstance, in a very apposite
+manner, the Parable of the Prodigal, concluding
+with a stanza from the well-known hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">God moves in a mysterious way<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His wonders to perform.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another moustached man followed. He was ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>ceedingly
+well-dressed, though he told us he was only
+a common labourer. He had long given up his "'art"
+to God, but to little purpose until he came to this
+chapel. "But there," he said, "down in that corner
+under the gas-lamp, I prayed for the first time. I
+prayed that God would take away my stony 'art and
+give me a 'art of flesh, and renew a right sperrit
+within me." From that time he led a new life. His
+fellow-workmen began to sneer at the change, and
+said ironically they should take to going to chapel
+too. "I wish to God you would," was his reply. He
+described the personal influence of the pastor upon him,
+which strengthened the good resolutions he had formed,
+and enabled him to say, "I will not let Thee go."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help thinking, as I listened to the
+simple, earnest words of the speaker, that here was an
+element the National Church is too apt to ignore.
+The Roman Catholic Church would seize hold upon
+that man, and put him in a working men's guild or
+confraternity. The Free Church found him work to
+do, and gave him a chief seat in the synagogue, and
+an opportunity of airing his "experiences" on a platform.
+Surely better either one or the other, than
+sotting his life at a public-house, or turning tap-room
+orator. He ended by crying shame upon himself for
+having put off the change until so late in life, and
+added a wish that all the labouring classes could see,
+as he had been brought to see, where their chief interest
+as well as happiness lay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A tall man from the choir followed, and was considerably
+more self-possessed than the other two
+speakers. He told us at the outset that he had been
+"a Christian" for fourteen years. It was generally
+laid down as a rule, he said, that big men were good-tempered.
+He was not a small man; but until he
+gave his heart to God he was never good-tempered.
+He had, for thirty-two years, been brought up in the
+Church of England, but had found no conversion
+there. He had no wish to speak against the Church,
+but such was the case. He wandered about a good
+deal in those years, from Roman Catholic to Old
+Methodist chapels; but the latter settled him. He
+was attending a class meeting in Kensal New Town
+one night, and suddenly a determination came over
+him that he would not sleep that night until he had
+kneeled down and prayed with his wife, though it
+would be the first time he had done so for thirty-two
+years. When it came to bedtime his courage failed
+him. He could not get into bed; and he did not
+like to tell his wife why. "That," he said, "was the
+devil worritin' me." His wife said, "I know what's
+the matter with you. You want to pray. We will
+see what we can do." His wife, he told us, was "unconverted,"
+but still she "throwed open the door" on
+that occasion. He never knew happiness, he said,
+until he came to Jesus; and he added, "Oh, I do
+love my Jesus." He often talked to his fellow-workmen
+about the state of their souls, and they asked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+him how it was he was so certain of being converted
+(a question I fancy others than they would like to
+have solved), and he answered them, "I feel it. I
+was uncomfortable before; and now I am happy. I
+don't wonder so much at the old martyrs going
+boldly up to the stake, because I feel I could do anything
+rather than give up my Jesus."</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon the pastor, anticipating the departure of
+some of the assembly&mdash;for the clock was pointing to
+ten&mdash;announced a Temperance Meeting for the following
+Monday, and also said he should like the congregation
+to get up these meetings entirely on their
+own account, without any "clerical" element at all,
+and to make the Tea Meeting a "Free and Easy" in
+the best sense of the word.</p>
+
+<p>I went&mdash;shall I confess it?&mdash;to the experience
+meeting rather inclined to scoff, and I stopped, if not
+altogether to pray, at least to think very seriously of
+the value of the instrumentality thus brought to bear
+on such intractable material as the Kensal New Town
+population. The more cumbrous, even if more perfect
+or polished, machinery of the Established Church
+has notoriously failed for a long time to affect such
+raw material; and if it is beginning to succeed it is
+really by "taking a leaf out of the book" of such
+pastors as the one whose Tea-and-Experience Meeting
+I had attended. "Palmam qui meruit ferat."</p>
+
+<p>Stiggins element, I must, in all justice, say there
+was none. The pastor was a simple but a refined and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+gentlemanly man; so was the poor broken old minister.
+There was no symptom of raving or rant; no
+vulgarity or bad taste. A gathering at a deanery or
+an episcopal palace could not have been more decorous,
+and I doubt if the hymns would have been sung
+as heartily. There was as little clerical starch as
+there was of the opposite element. Rubbing off the
+angles of character was one of the objects actually
+proposed by the pastor as the result of these gatherings;
+and I really felt as though a corner or two had
+gone out of my constitution. If a man is disposed to
+be priggish, or a lady exclusive, in religious matters,
+I would recommend the one or the other to avail
+themselves of the next opportunity to attend a Tea-and-Experience
+Meeting at Kensal New Town.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>SUNDAY LINNET-SINGING.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is something very Arcadian and un-Cockney-like
+in the idea of linnet-singing in Lock's Fields.
+Imagination pictures so readily the green pastures
+and the wild bird's song, and Corydon with his pipe
+and his Phyllis, that it seems a pity to disabuse that
+exquisite faculty of our nature so far as to suggest
+that the linnets of which we speak are not wild, but
+tame and caged, and the fields very much less rural
+than those of Lincoln's Inn. This was the announcement
+that drew me to the New Kent Road on a
+recent Sunday morning to hear what poor Cockney
+Keats called the "tender-legged linnets:" "Bird-singing.&mdash;A
+match is made between Thomas Walker
+(the Bermondsey Champion) and William Hart
+(Champion of Walworth) to sing two linnets, on
+Sunday, for 2<i>l.</i> a side; birds to be on the nail precisely
+at two o'clock; the host to be referee. 10<i>s.</i> is
+now down; the remainder by nine this evening, at
+the Jolly Butchers, Rodney Road, Lock's Fields.
+Also a copper kettle will be sung for on the same
+day by six pairs of linnets; first pair up at half-past
+six o'clock in the evening. Any person requiring the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+said room for matches, &amp;c., on making application to
+the host, will immediately be answered."</p>
+
+<p>Rodney Road, be it known, is anything but a
+romantic thoroughfare, leading out of the New Kent
+Road, a little way from the Elephant and Castle;
+and the caravanserai bearing the title of the Jolly
+Butchers is an unpretending beershop, with no outward
+and visible signs of especial joviality. On
+entering I met mine host, rubicund and jolly enough,
+who politely pioneered me upstairs, when I reported
+myself as in quest of the linnets. The scene of
+contest I found to be a largish room, where some
+twenty or thirty most un-Arcadian looking gentlemen
+were already assembled, the only adjunct at all symptomatic
+of that pastoral district being their pipes, at
+which they were diligently puffing. The whole of
+the tender-legged competitors, both for the money
+and the copper kettle, were hanging in little square
+green cages over the fireplace; and the one idea
+uppermost in my mind was how well the linnets
+must be seasoned to tobacco smoke if they could sing
+at all in the atmosphere which those Corydons were
+so carefully polluting. Corydon, besides his pipe, had
+adopted nuts and beer to solace the tedium of the
+quarter of an hour that yet intervened before the
+Bermondsey bird and its Walworth antagonist were
+to be "on the nail;" and ever and anon fresh Corydons
+kept dropping in, until some fifty or sixty had
+assembled. They were all of one type. There was a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+"birdiness" discernible on the outer man of each;
+for birdiness, as well as horseyness, writes its mark
+on the countenance and the attire. In the latter
+department there was a proclivity to thick pea-jackets
+and voluminous white comforters round the neck,
+though the day was springlike and the room stuffy.
+The talk was loud, but not boisterous, and garnished
+with fewer elegant flowers of speech than one would
+have expected. Five minutes before two the non-competing
+birds were carefully muffled up in pocket-handkerchiefs,
+and carried in their cages out of earshot,
+lest their twitterings might inspire the competing
+minstrels. Bermondsey and Walworth alone
+occupied the nails. Scarcely any bets were made.
+They seemed an impecunious assemblage, gathered for
+mere sport. One gentleman did, indeed, offer to stake
+"that 'ere blowsy bob," as though a shilling in his
+possession were a rarity of which his friends must be
+certainly aware. What was the occult meaning of
+the epithet "Blowsy" I could not fathom, but there
+were no takers; and, after the windows had been
+opened for a few minutes to clear the atmosphere,
+they were closed again; the door locked; the two
+markers took their place at a table in front of the
+birds, with bits of chalk in their hands; mine host
+stood by as referee in case of disputes; time was
+called; and silence reigned supreme for a quarter of
+an hour, broken only by the vocal performances of
+the Bermondsey and Walworth champions respec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>tively.
+If a hapless human being did so far forget
+himself as to cough or tread incontinently upon a
+nutshell, he was called to silence with curses not loud
+but deep.</p>
+
+<p>The Walworth bird opened the concert with a brilliant
+solo by way of overture, which was duly reported
+by the musical critic in the shape of a chalk line on
+the table. The length of the effusion did not matter;
+a long aria, or a brilliant but spasmodic cadenza, each
+counted one, and one only. The Bermondsey bird,
+heedless of the issue at stake, devoted the precious
+moments to eating, emitting nothing beyond a dyspeptic
+twitter which didn't count; and his proprietor
+stood by me evidently chagrined, and perspiring profusely,
+either from anxiety or superfluous attire.
+Nearly half the time had gone by before Bermondsey
+put forth its powers. Meanwhile, Walworth made
+the most of the opportunity, singing in a manner of
+which I did not know linnets were capable. There
+were notes and passages in the r&eacute;pertoire of Walworth
+which were worthy of a canary. The bird no doubt
+felt that the credit of home art was at stake, and sang
+with a vigour calculated to throw foreign feathered
+artistes into the shade. Bermondsey evidently sang
+best after dinner, so he dined like an alderman; yet
+dined, alas! not wisely, but too well, or rather too
+long. Then he sang, first, a defiant roulade or so, as
+much as to say, "Can you beat that, Walworth?"
+pausing, with his head wickedly on one side, for a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+reply. That reply was not wanting, for Walworth
+was flushed with success; and one could not help regretting
+ignorance of bird-language so as to gather
+exactly what the reply meant. Then came a protracted
+duet between the two birds, which was the
+pi&egrave;ce de r&eacute;sistance of the whole performance. The
+silence became irksome. I could not help congratulating
+myself on the fact that no Corydon had brought
+his Phyllis; for Phyllis, I am sure, would not have
+been able to stand it. Phyllis, I feel certain, would
+have giggled. We remained mute as mice, solemn as
+judges. The ghost of a twitter was hailed with mute
+signs of approval by the backers of each bird; but a
+glance at the expressive features of the host warned
+the markers that nothing must be chalked down that
+did not come up to his idea of singing. Had the
+destinies of empires hung upon his nod he could
+scarcely have looked more oracular. But Walworth
+could afford to take matters easily now. For the last
+five minutes the Bermondsey bird did most of the
+music; still it was a hopeless case. Success was not
+on the cards. By-and-by, time was again called.
+Babel recommenced, and the result stood as follows:</p>
+
+<p>
+Walworth 3 score 18<br />
+Bermondsey 1 score 10<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It was an ignominious defeat truly; and, had one
+been disposed to moralize, it had not been difficult to
+draw a moral therefrom. It was not a case of "no
+song, no supper;" but of supper&mdash;or, rather, dinner<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>&mdash;and
+no song. Bermondsey had failed in the artistic
+combat, not from lack of powers, as its brilliant part
+in the duet and its subsequent soli proved, but simply
+from a Sybaritic love for creature comforts. I ventured
+to suggest it might have been expedient to
+remove the seed, but was informed that, under those
+circumstances, the creature&mdash;its proprietor called it
+an uglier name&mdash;would not have sung at all. The
+remarkable part of the business to me was that they
+did sing at the proper time. They had not uttered
+anything beyond a twitter until silence was called,
+and from that moment one or the other was singing
+incessantly. I suppose it was the silence. I have
+noticed not only caged birds, but children&mdash;not to
+speak ungallantly of the fair sex&mdash;generally give
+tongue most freely when one is silent, and presumably
+wants to keep so.</p>
+
+<p>The contest, however, was over, the stakes paid,
+and Corydon sought his pastoral pipe again&mdash;not
+without beer. It was a new experience, but not a
+very exciting one&mdash;to me, at least. It evidently had
+its attractions for the very large majority of attendants.
+In fact, Rodney Road is generally a "birdy" neighbourhood.
+Its staple products, to judge by the shops,
+seemed birds and beer. I was much pressed by mine
+host to stay for the evening entertainment, when six
+birds were to sing, and the attendance would be more
+numerous. As some five hours intervened I expressed
+regret at my inability to remain, reserving my opinion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+that five hours in Lock's Fields might prove the reverse
+of attractive, and Corydon in greater force might
+not have an agreeable effect on that already stuffy
+chamber. So I took myself off, wondering much, by
+the way, what strange association of ideas could have
+led any imaginative man to propose such an incongruous
+reward as a copper kettle by way of pr&aelig;mium
+for linnet-singing.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A WOMAN'S RIGHTS DEBATE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There never was a time when, on all sorts of subjects,
+from Mesmerism to Woman's Rights, the ladies had
+so much to say for themselves. There is an ancient
+heresy which tells us that, on most occasions, ladies
+are prone to have the last word; but certain it is that
+they are making themselves heard now. On the special
+subject of her so-called "Rights" the abstract Woman
+was, I knew, prodigiously emphatic&mdash;how emphatic,
+though, I was not quite aware, until having seen from
+the top of a City-bound omnibus that a lady whom I
+will describe by the Aristophanic name of Praxagora
+would lecture at the Castle Street Co-operative Institute.
+I went and co-operated so far as to form one
+of that lady's audience. Her subject&mdash;the "Political
+Status of Women"&mdash;was evidently attractive, not
+only to what we used in our innocence to call the
+weaker sex, but also to those who are soon to have
+proved to them the fallacy of calling themselves the
+stronger. A goodly assemblage had gathered in the
+fine hall of the Co-operators to join in demolishing
+that ancient myth as to the superiority of the male
+sex. My first intention was to have reported verbatim<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+or nearly so the oration of Praxagora on the subject;
+and if I changed my scheme it was not because that
+lady did not deserve to be reported. She said all that
+was to be said on the matter, and said it exceedingly
+well too; but when the lecture, which lasted fifty
+minutes, was over, I found it was to be succeeded by a
+debate; and I thought more might be gained by chronicling
+the collision of opinion thence ensuing than
+by simply quoting the words of any one speaker, however
+eloquent or exhaustive.</p>
+
+<p>I own with fear and trembling&mdash;for it is a delicate,
+dangerous avowal&mdash;that, as a rule, I do not sympathize
+with the ladies who declaim on the subject of
+Woman's Rights. I do not mean to say I lack sympathy
+with the subject&mdash;I should like everybody to
+have their rights, and especially women&mdash;but they
+are sometimes asserted in such a sledge-hammer
+fashion, and the ladies who give them utterance are
+so prone to run large and be shrill-voiced that their
+very physique proves their claim either unnecessary
+or undesirable. I feel certain that in whatever station
+of domestic life those ladies may be placed, they
+would have their full rights, if not something more;
+and as for Parliamentary rights, I tremble for the unprotected
+males should such viragos ever compass the
+franchise; or, worse still, realize the ambition of the
+Ecclesiazus&aelig; of Aristophanes, and sit on the benches
+of St. Stephen's clad in the nether garments of the
+hirsute sex. There was nothing of that kind on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+Tuesday night. In manner and appearance our present
+Praxagora was thoroughly feminine, and, by her
+very quietude of manner, impressed me with a consciousness
+of power, and determination to use it.
+Her voice was soft and silvery almost as that of Miss
+Faithfull herself; and when, at the outset of her lecture,
+she claimed indulgence on the score of never
+having spoken in a public hall before, we had to press
+forward to the front benches to catch the modulated
+tones, and men who came clumping in with heavy
+boots in the course of the lecture were severely hushed
+down by stern-visaged females among the audience.</p>
+
+<p>Disclaiming connexion with any society, Praxagora
+still adopted the first person plural in speaking of the
+doctrines and intentions of the down-trodden females.
+"We" felt so and so; "we" intended to do this or
+that; and certainly her cause gained by the element
+of mystery thus introduced, as well as by her own
+undoubted power of dealing with the subject. When
+the "we" is seen to refer to the brazen-voiced ladies
+aforesaid, and a few of the opposite sex who appear
+to have changed natures with the gentle ones they
+champion, that plural pronoun is the reverse of imposing,
+but the "we" of Praxagora introduced an element
+of awe, if only on the omne ignotum pro magnifico
+principle. In the most forcible way she went through
+the stock objections against giving women the franchise,
+and knocked them down one by one like so
+many ninepins. That coveted boon of a vote she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+proved to be at the basis of all the regeneration of
+women. She claimed that woman should have her
+share in making the laws by which she was governed,
+and denied the popular assertion that in so doing she
+would quit her proper sphere. In fact, we all went
+with her up to a certain point, and most of the
+audience beyond that point. For myself I confess I
+felt disheartened when, having dealt in the most consummate
+way with other aspects of the subject, she
+came to the religious phase, and begging the question
+that the Bible and religion discountenanced woman's
+rights, commenced what sounded to me like a furious
+attack on each.</p>
+
+<p>Now I happen to know&mdash;what perhaps those who
+look from another standpoint do not know&mdash;that this
+aggressive attitude assumed so unnecessarily by the
+advocates of woman's rights is calculated to keep back
+the cause more than anything else; and matter and
+manner had been so much the reverse of hostile up to
+the moment she plunged incontinently into the
+religious question, that it quite took me by surprise.
+I have known scores of people who, when they came
+under vigorous protest to hear Miss Emily Faithfull
+on the same fertile subject, went away converted
+because they found no iconoclasm of this kind in her
+teaching. They came to scoff and stopped, not indeed
+to pray, but to listen very attentively to a theme
+which has so much to be said in its favour that
+it is a pity to complicate its advocacy by the introduc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>tion
+of an extraneous and most difficult question. So
+it was, however; with pale, earnest face, and accents
+more incisive than before, Praxagora said if Bible and
+religion stood in the way of Woman's Rights,
+then Bible and religion must go. That was the gist
+of her remarks. I need not follow her in detail,
+because the supplementary matter sounded more
+bitterly still; and, had she not been reading from MS.
+I should have thought the lecturer was carried away
+by her subject; but no, she was reading quite calmly
+what were clearly enough her natural and deliberate
+opinions. I said I was surprised at the line she took.
+Perhaps I ought scarcely to have been so, for she was
+flanked on one side by Mr. Bradlaugh, on the other by
+Mr. Holyoake! but I never remember being so struck
+with a contrast as when at one moment Praxagora
+pictured the beauty of a well-regulated home, and the
+tender offices of woman towards the little children,
+and then shot off at a tangent to fierce invectives
+against the Bible and religion, which seemed so
+utterly uncalled for that no adversary who wanted to
+damage the cause could possibly have invented a more
+complete method of doing so.</p>
+
+<p>The lecture over, the chairman invited discussion,
+and a fierce little working man immediately mounted the
+platform and took Praxagora to task for her injudicious
+onslaught. But, as usual, this gentleman was wildly
+irrelevant and carried away by his commendable zeal.
+Over and over again he had to be recalled to the ques<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>tion,
+until finally he set his whole audience against
+him, and had to sit down abruptly in the middle of a
+sort of apotheosis of Moses&mdash;as far as I could hear,
+for his zeal outran his eloquence as well as his discretion,
+and rendered him barely audible. A second
+speaker followed, and, though cordially sympathizing
+with the address, and tracing woman's incapacity to her
+state of subjugation, regretted that such a disturbing
+element as religion had been mixed up with a social
+claim. He considered that such a subject must inevitably
+prove an apple of discord. For this he was
+at once severely handled by Mr. Bradlaugh, who, consistently
+enough, defended the line Praxagora adopted
+towards the religious question, and justified the introduction
+of the subject from the charge of irrelevance.
+He also deprecated the surprise which the last speaker
+had expressed at the excellent address of Praxagora by
+pointing out that in America about one-third of the
+press were females, a fact which he attributed to the
+plan of Mixed Education. Then a new line was opened
+up by a speaker&mdash;it was as impossible to catch
+their names as to hear the stations announced by
+porters on the Underground Railway. He predicted
+that if women did get the franchise, Mr. Bradlaugh's
+"Temple" would be shut up in six months, as well as
+those of Messrs. Voysey and Conway and Dr. Perfitt.
+The ladies, he said, were swayed by Conventionalism
+and Priestcraft, and until you educated them, you
+could not safely give them the franchise.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A youthful Good Templar mounted the rostrum,
+for the purpose of patting Praxagora metaphorically on
+the back, and also ventilating his own opinions on the
+apathy of the working man in claiming his vote.
+Then somebody got up and denied that ladies were
+by nature theological. Their virtues were superior
+to those of men just as their voices were an octave
+higher. He was for having a Moral Department of
+the State presided over by ladies. Only one lady
+spoke; a jaunty young woman in a sailor's hat, who
+said that in religious persecutions men, not women,
+had been the persecutors; and then Praxagora rose to
+reply. She first of all explained her position with
+regard to the Bible, which she denied having unnecessarily
+attacked. The Bible forbade a woman to
+speak; and, that being so, the Bible must stand on
+one side, for "we" were going to speak. That the
+highest intellects had been formed on Bible models
+she denied by instancing Shelley. If she thought
+that this movement was going to destroy the womanhood
+of her sex she would not move a finger for its
+furtherance. She only thought it would give a
+higher style of womanhood. As to women requiring
+to be educated before they would know how to use
+the franchise, she pointed triumphantly to the Government
+which men had placed in power. It was
+significant, she said, that the first exercise of the
+working men's franchise had been to place a Conservative
+Government in office.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I daresay I am wrong, but the impression left on
+my mind by the discussion was that the liberty of
+thought and action claimed was the liberty of thinking
+as "<i>we</i>" think and doing what "<i>we</i>" want to have
+done&mdash;a process which has been before now mistaken
+for absolute freedom. Stripped of its aggressive adjuncts,
+Praxagora's advocacy of her main subject would
+be telling in the extreme from the fact of her blending
+such thorough womanliness of person, character, and
+sentiment with such vigorous championship of a
+doctrine against which I do not believe any prejudice
+exists. Drag in the religious difficulty, however, and
+you immediately array against it a host of prejudices,
+whether reasonable ones or the reverse is not now the
+question. I am only concerned with the unwisdom
+of having called them into existence. I own I
+thought that Christianity had been the means of
+raising woman from her state of Oriental degradation
+to the position she occupies in civilized countries.
+But I was only there to listen, not to speak; and I
+confess I came away in a divided frame of mind. I
+was pleased with the paper, but irritated to think
+that a lady, holding such excellent cards, should risk
+playing a losing game.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN OPEN-AIR TICHBORNE MEETING.</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Sydney Smith, from the depths of his barbarian
+ignorance, sought to rise to the conception of a
+Puseyite, he said in substance much as follows:&mdash;"I
+know not what these silly people want, except to
+revive every obsolete custom which the common sense
+of mankind has allowed to go to sleep." Puseyism is
+not to our present purpose; but Tichborne-ism is&mdash;for
+it has attained to the dignity of a veritable ism&mdash;and
+we may define it much after the same method, as
+an attempt, not, indeed, to revive the claims of, but
+to restore to society a person, who, after a trial of
+unexampled length, was consigned by the verdict of a
+jury, and the consequent sentence of the Lord Chief
+Justice, to the possibly uncongenial retirement of
+Millbank Penitentiary. With the rights or wrongs
+of such an event I have simply nothing to do. I
+abandoned the Tichborne Trial at an early stage in a
+condition of utter bewilderment; and directly an old
+gentleman sought to button-hole me, and argue that
+he must be the man, or he couldn't be the man, I
+made off, or changed the conversation as rapidly as I
+could.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But when the question had at length been resolved
+by wiser heads than mine, and when, too, I felt I could
+write calmly, with no fear of an action for contempt
+of court before my eyes, I confess that a poster
+announcing an open-air Tichborne meeting in Mr.
+Warren's cricket-field, Notting Hill, was too fascinating
+for me. I had heard of such gatherings in
+provincial places and East End halls; but this invasion
+of the West was breaking new ground. I
+would go; in fine I went. On the evening of an
+exceptionally hot July day, I felt there might be
+worse places than Mr. Warren's breezy cricket ground
+alongside Notting Barn Farm; so six o'clock, the
+hour when the chair was to be taken, found me at the
+spot&mdash;first of the outer world&mdash;and forestalled only
+by a solitary Tichbornite. How I knew that the
+gentleman in question deserved that appellation I
+say not; but I felt instinctively that such was the case.
+He had a shiny black frock-coat on, like a well-to-do
+artisan out for a holiday, and a roll of paper protruding
+from his pocket I rightly inferred to be a
+Tichborne petition for signature. As soon as we got
+on the ground, and I was enjoying the sensation of
+the crisp well rolled turf beneath my feet, a man hove
+in sight with a table, and this attracted a few
+observers. A gentleman in a light coat, too, who
+was serenely gazing over the hedge at the Kensington
+Park Cricket Club in the next ground, was, they
+informed me, Mr. Guildford Onslow. The presiding<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+genius of the place, however, was Mrs. Warren, who,
+arrayed in a gown of emerald green&mdash;as though she
+were attending a Fenian meeting&mdash;bustled about in a
+state of intense excitement until the greengrocer's
+cart, which was to serve as a rostrum, had arrived.
+When this occurred, the table and half a dozen
+Windsor chairs were hoisted into it; another table
+was arranged below the van, with the Tichborne
+Petition outspread upon it; and I fancied that
+arrangements were complete.</p>
+
+<p>Not so, however. The gentleman in the shiny
+coat and emerald green Mrs. Warren between them
+tin-tacked up a long scroll or "legend" along the rim
+of the van, consisting of the text from Psalm xxxv.
+11:&mdash;"False witnesses did rise up against me. They
+laid to my charge things that I knew not." The
+association of ideas was grotesque, I know, but really
+as Mrs. Warren and the shiny artisan were nailing
+this strip to the greengrocer's van, they put me very
+much in mind of a curate and a lady friend "doing
+decorations" at Christmas or Eastertide. Nor was this
+all. When the "strange device" was duly tin-tacked,
+some workmen brought four long pieces of quartering,
+and a second strip of white calico with letters stuck
+on it was nailed to these; and when the stalwart
+fellows hoisted it in air and tied the two centre pieces
+of wood to the wheels of the greengrocer's cart, I
+found that it consisted of the Ninth Commandment.
+The self-sacrificing carpenters were to hold&mdash;and did<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+hold&mdash;the outside poles banner-wise during the entire
+evening; and, with one slight exception, this banner
+with the strange device, No. 2, formed an appropriate,
+if not altogether ornamental background for the greengrocer's
+van. Knots of people had gathered during
+these proceedings; and I was confused to find that I
+was being generally pointed out as Mr. Onslow, that
+gentleman having retired to the privacy of Mr.
+Warren's neighbouring abode. Later on I was taken
+for a detective, because, in my innocence, I withdrew
+ever and anon from the crowd, and, sitting on a
+verdurous bank, jotted down a note in my pocket-book;
+but this got me into such bad odour by-and-by
+that I felt it better to desist, and trust to memory.
+Some of the smaller boys also averred that I was Sir
+Roger himself, but their youthful opinions were too
+palpably erroneous to carry weight.</p>
+
+<p>In due course the van was occupied by Mr. Onslow,
+the Rev. Mr. Buckingham (about whom I felt, of
+course, very curious), my shining artisan, and a few
+others. A thin-faced gentleman, whose name I could
+not catch, was voted to the chair, and announced to
+us that he should go on talking awhile in order that
+Messrs. Onslow and Buckingham might "refresh," as
+they had each come from the country. This they did
+coram publico in the cart, while the chairman kept us
+amused. The wind, too, was blowing pretty freshly,
+and was especially hard on the Ninth Commandment,
+which gave considerable trouble to the holders of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+props. It was directly in the teeth of the speaker,
+too&mdash;an arrangement which Mrs. Warren, in her zeal,
+had overlooked; and it was decided by common consent
+to "reverse the meeting"&mdash;that is, to turn the
+chairs of the speakers round, so that the Ninth Commandment
+was nowhere, and looked like an Egyptian
+hieroglyph, as the reversed letters showed dimly
+through the calico. The chairman eventually read to
+the meeting, which was now a tolerably full one, the
+form of petition which was to serve as the single resolution
+of the evening. I was struck with this gentleman's
+departure from conventional legal phraseology
+on this occasion. Instead of naming the cause c&eacute;l&egrave;bre
+"The Queen <i>versus</i> Castro" (it being written, as Sam
+Weller says, with a "wee") he termed it "The Queen
+<i>via</i> Castro!" The petition was as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That in the trial at Bar in the Court of Queen's
+Bench, on an indictment of the Queen v. Castro, alias
+Arthur Orton, alias Sir Roger Charles Doughty Tichborne,
+Bart., for perjury, the jury, on the 28th day of
+February, 1874, brought in a verdict of guilty against
+him, declaring him to be Arthur Orton, and he was
+sentenced to fourteen years' penal servitude, which he
+is now undergoing.</p>
+
+<p>"That your petitioners have reason to know and
+believe and are satisfied, both from the evidence
+produced at the trial and furnished since, and from
+their own personal knowledge that he is not Arthur
+Orton.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That though 280 witnesses were examined at the
+said trial in his behalf, a very large number more, as
+your petitioners have been informed and believe, were
+also ready to be examined, but that funds were not
+available for the purpose, the defendant having been
+entirely dependent on the voluntary subscriptions of
+the public for his defence.</p>
+
+<p>"That your petitioners submit that such a large
+number as 280 witnesses, most of whom gave positive
+evidence that the defendant was not Arthur Orton,
+and whose testimony in two instances only was questioned
+in a court of law&mdash;as against about 200 witnesses
+for the prosecution, whose evidence was chiefly
+of a negative character&mdash;was of itself enough to raise
+a doubt in the defendant's favour, of which doubt he
+ought to have had the benefit, in accordance both
+with the law and the custom of the country.</p>
+
+<p>"That, under the circumstances, your petitioners
+submit that he had not a fair trial, and they pray
+your honourable House to take the matter into your
+serious consideration, with a view to memorialize her
+Majesty to grant a free pardon."</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Mr. Buckingham, a cheery gentleman
+who bore a remarkable resemblance to the celebrated
+Mr. Pickwick, rose to move the resolution; and I
+could not help noticing that, not content with the
+ordinary white tie of clerical life, he had "continued
+the idea downwards" in a white waistcoat, which
+rather altered the state of things. He spoke well<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+and forcibly I should think for an hour, confining his
+remarks to the subject of "Sir Roger" not being
+Arthur Orton. He (Mr. Buckingham) belonged to
+some waterside mission at Wapping, and had known
+Arthur Orton familiarly from earliest boyhood. His
+two grievances were that his negative evidence had
+not been taken, and that he was now being continually
+waited on by "Jesuits," who temptingly
+held out cheques for 1000<i>l.</i> to him if he would only
+make affidavit that the man in Millbank was Arthur
+Orton.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Onslow, who seconded the resolution, however,
+made the speech of the evening, and was so enthusiastically
+received that he had to recommence several
+times after glowing perorations. The burden of Mr.
+Onslow's prophecy was the unfairness of the trial;
+and his "bogies" were detectives, just as Mr. Buckingham's
+were Jesuits. The Jean Luie affair was
+the most infernal "plant" in the whole case; and he
+read records of conflicting evidence which really were
+enough to make one pack up one's traps and resolve
+on instant emigration. He was, however, certainly
+right on one point. He said that such meetings were
+safety-valves which prevented revolution. No doubt
+this was a safety-valve. It amused the speakers, and
+Mrs. Warren and the glazed artisan; and it could do
+nobody any possible harm. Whether it was likely to
+do the man of Millbank any good was quite another
+matter, and one which, of course, it was quite beside<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+my purpose to discuss. There was a deal of&mdash;to
+me&mdash;very interesting speaking; for I gained new
+light about the case, and stood until my legs fairly
+ached listening to Messrs. Buckingham and Onslow.</p>
+
+<p>When the editor of the <i>Tichborne Gazette</i> claimed
+an innings it was another matter; and&mdash;perhaps with
+lack of esprit de corps&mdash;I decamped. I only saw this
+gentleman gesticulating as I left the field; but the
+rate at which he was getting up the steam promised
+a speech that would last till nightfall.</p>
+
+<p>As I went off the ground I was struck with the
+clever way in which a London costermonger will turn
+anything and everything to account. One of them
+was going about with a truck of cherries, crying out,
+"Sir Roger Tichborne cherries. Penny a lot!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no symptom of overt opposition, though
+opponents were blandly invited to mount the waggon
+and state their views; but there was a good deal of
+quiet chaff on the outskirts of the crowd, which is
+the portion I always select on such occasions for my
+observation. On the whole, however, the assembly
+was pretty unanimous; and though it never assumed
+the dimensions of a "monster meeting," the fact that
+even so many people could be got together for such
+a purpose seemed to me sufficiently a sign of the
+times to deserve annotation in passing.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>SUNDAY IN A PEOPLE'S GARDEN.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have often thought that an interesting series of
+articles might be written on the subject of "London
+out of Church," dealing with the manners and customs
+of those people who patronize no sort of religious
+establishment on the Sunday. I have seen pretty well
+all the typical phases of religious London and London
+irreligious; but these would rather be characterized as
+non-religious than as irreligious folks. They do not
+belong to any of the varied forms of faith; in fact
+faith is from their life a thing apart. It is in this
+negative way that they are interesting. Sunday is
+with them only a regularly recurring Bank Holiday.
+It would be interesting to know what they do with it.
+A special difficulty, however, exists for me in any such
+inquiry, resulting from the fact that, in my capacity
+of clerical casual, I am pretty generally engaged on
+the Sunday; and when I am not, my Day of Rest is
+too valuable to be devoted to any of the manifold forms
+of metropolitan Sabbath-breaking. I have a great
+idea that parsons ought to be frequently preached at;
+and so I generally go to some church or chapel when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+out of harness myself; and if "hearing sermons"
+constitute the proper carrying out of the things promised
+and vowed on my behalf at baptism I must
+have undergone as complete a course of Christian discipline
+as any man in Christendom, for I have been
+preached at by everybody from Roman Catholics down
+to Walworth Jumpers and Plumstead Peculiars!</p>
+
+<p>But impressed with anxiety to know about the
+doings of the non-Church-goers, I have for a long
+time cast sheep's eyes at the Sunday League, and
+more than once definitely promised to join one of their
+Sunday outings; but I am strongly of Tom Hood's
+opinion that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The man who's fond precociously of stirring<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Must be a <i>spoon</i>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Sunday League commence their excursions at
+untimely hours; and it is a cardinal point in my creed
+that Sunday ought to be a Day of Rest, at all events
+in the matter of breakfast in bed. I missed the excursion
+to Shakspeare's House in this way, and the
+paper on the Bard of Avon, full of the genius loci,
+must have been as edifying as a sermon. So, too, on
+a recent Sunday, when the Sunday League on their
+way to Southend got mixed up with the Volunteer
+Artillery going to Shoebury, I was again found
+wanting. But still the old penchant remained, and
+Sunday was my last free one for a long time. How
+could I utilize it? I had it; I would go to the
+People's Garden at Willesden. I had heard that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+certain very mild forms of Sabbath breaking prevailed
+there. I would go and see for myself.</p>
+
+<p>I had been at the People's Garden twice before;
+once on the occasion of a spiritualistic picnic, and once,
+more recently, at a workmen's flower show; and felt
+considerable interest in the place, especially as the
+People had been polite enough to send me a season
+ticket, so that I was one of the People myself.</p>
+
+<p>This People's Garden was not exactly a Paradise
+yet, though it is in a fair way of becoming one. It
+is a spot of some fifty acres reclaimed from the scrubbiest
+part of Wormwood Scrubbs, and made the focus
+of a club of working men, of whom I am very proud
+indeed to be one. Indeed, I do not see why throughout
+the remainder of this article I should not use the
+first person plural. I will. Well, then, we secured
+this spot, and we have got in the first place one of the
+finest&mdash;I believe the finest&mdash;dancing platforms in
+England, for we as a community are Terpsichorean,
+though I, as an individual, am not. I felt it necessary
+to give up dancing when my weight turned the
+balance at fourteen stone odd. Then we can give our
+friends refreshments from a bottle of champagne down
+to tea and cresses. We have all sorts of clubs, dramatic
+and otherwise, and rather plume ourselves on
+having put up our proscenium ourselves, that is with
+our own hands and hammers and nails. There is the
+great advantage of being a Working Man or one of
+the People. If you had been with me that Sunday<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+you would have seen a glow of conscious pride suffusing
+my countenance as I read the bills of our last
+amateur performance, consisting of the "Waterman"
+and "Ici on parle Fran&ccedil;ais," played on the boards
+which I, in my corporate capacity, had planed, and
+sawn, and nailed. My route last Sunday lay across
+the crisp sward of the Scrubbs; and it was quite a
+pleasure to be able to walk there without danger of
+falling pierced by the bullet of some erratic volunteer;
+for there are three butts on Wormwood Scrubbs, which
+I examined with minuteness on Sunday, and was exercised
+to see by marks on the brickwork how very
+wide of the target a volunteer's shot can go. I
+wonder there is not a wholesale slaughter of cattle in
+the neighbouring fields. The garden lies on the other
+side of the Great Western Railway, across which I
+had to trespass in order to get to it. But the man in
+charge regarded me with indulgence, for was I not a
+working man and a "mate?" The portion of the
+garden abutting on the rail is still unreclaimed prairie.
+The working men have begun at the top of the hill,
+and are working downwards.</p>
+
+<p>There is a good-sized refreshment-room at the
+entrance, with all the paraphernalia of secretary's
+office, &amp;c.; and this large room, which is exceedingly
+useful in wet weather, opens right on to the dancing-platform,
+in the centre of which is a pretty kiosk for
+the band. We have no gas; but tasty paraffin lamps
+at frequent intervals give sufficient light, and, at all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+events, do not smell <i>worse</i> than modern metropolitan
+gas. There is a large tent standing en permanence
+during the summer for flower shows, and terrace after
+terrace of croquet lawns, all of which it will, I fear,
+shock some Sabbatarian persons to learn were occupied
+on that Sunday afternoon, and the balls kept
+clicking like the week-day shots of the erratic riflemen
+on the Scrubbs. I had a young lady with me who was
+considerably severe on the way in which we workmen
+male and female, handled our mallets. There was, I
+confess, something to be desired in the way of position;
+and one group of German artisans in the corner
+lawn made more noise than was necessary, howling
+and uttering all sorts of guttural interjections, as
+though they were playing polo at least, or taking part
+in a bull-fight, instead of in croquet&mdash;beloved of
+curates.</p>
+
+<p>And then the flowers. We are making the desert
+blossom like the rose. It is really marvellous to see
+what has been done in so short a time. We might
+have been a society of market gardeners. We don't
+get so many flowers along the walk of life, we working
+men; so that we want to see a bit of green sward
+and a flower or two on Sundays. There is a capital
+gymnasium, and our observation of the young men
+who disport themselves there would lead an uninitiated
+observer to form the opinion that the normal
+condition of humanity was upside down. The way
+one youthful workman hung by his legs on the tra<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>peze
+was positively Darwinian to behold. Swings
+attracted the attention of the ladies; and I regret to
+say that the particular young lady I escorted&mdash;who
+was of the mature age of twelve&mdash;passed most of the
+afternoon in a state of oscillation, and was continually
+adjuring me to push her.</p>
+
+<p>An interesting addition to the gardens&mdash;our gardens&mdash;since
+I was last there, consisted of a cage of
+meditative monkeys, four in number, who were stationed
+so near the gymnasium as inevitably to suggest
+the Darwinian parallel. They had their gymnasium
+too, and swung gaily on their tree-trunks at
+such times as they were not engaged in eating or
+entomological researches. I could not help thinking
+what a deprivation it was to the gymnasts that, in
+course of evolution, we have lost our tails. They
+would have been so convenient on the horizontal bar,
+where that persevering young workman was still
+engaged in the pursuit of apoplexy by hanging head
+downwards. Soon after we got there an excellent
+band commenced playing, not in the kiosk, lest we
+should be beguiled into dancing. The first piece was
+a slow movement, which could scarcely have been
+objected to by any Sabbatarian, unless he was so uncompromising
+as to think all trumpets wrong. The
+second was the glorious march from "Athalie;" and
+then&mdash;my blood runs cold as I write it&mdash;a sort of
+pot pourri, in the midst of which came the "Dutchman's
+Little Wee Dog," considerably disguised in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+way of accompaniment and variation, I own, but the
+"Little Wee Dog" beyond a doubt. Then I understood
+why the band was not in the kiosk; for, fourteen
+stone though I be, I felt all my toes twiddling
+inside my boots at that time as wickedly as though it
+had been Monday morning. There were fourteen or
+fifteen loud brass instruments, with a side and bass
+drum and cymbals. All these were playing the
+"Little Wee Dog" to their brazen hearts' content,
+and only one gentleman on a feeble piccolo-flute trying
+to choke their impiety by tootling out a variation,
+just as the stringed instruments in the glorious
+"Reformation Symphony" of Mendelssohn try in
+vain to drown with their sensuous Roman airs the
+massive chords of the old Lutheran chorale&mdash;"Ein
+feste Burg ist unser Gott." I really could not bear
+it any longer, and was rising to go when they
+stopped; and as the gentleman who played the circular
+bass got outside his portentous instrument, I
+found he had a little wee dog of his own who retired
+into the bell of the big trumpet when his master laid
+it on the grass. Perhaps it was in honour of this
+minute animal the air was selected. However, I could
+not lend myself to such proceedings; so I bribed my
+youthful charge with a twopenny bottle of frothless
+ginger beer to come out of her swing and return to
+the regions of orthodoxy. The Teutonic gentlemen
+were still hooting and yelling as we crossed the
+corner of their croquet lawn, until I expected to see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+them attack one another with the mallets and use the
+balls for missile warfare; but it was only their peculiar
+way of enjoying themselves.</p>
+
+<p>My little friend described the action of our working
+men in the croquet lawn as "spooning," and also
+drew my attention to the fact that two lovers were
+doing the same on a seat, in the approved fashion
+prevalent among us workmen, with the manly arm
+around the taper waist coram publico. This arrangement
+is quite a necessity with us. We should often
+like to forego it, especially when little boys make rude
+remarks about us in the street; but it is expected of
+us, and we submit.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was beginning to sink grandly over that
+magnificent panorama of country visible from Old
+Oak Common as we passed down the hill and again
+violated the bye-laws of the Great Western Railway
+Company. The spires of the West End churches
+were bathed in the soft glow of departing day; and
+in the distance the Crystal Palace glittered like a
+fairy bower. We got back after making a little
+d&eacute;tour on account of some gentlemen who were
+bathing in a very Paradisiacal way indeed&mdash;we actually
+got back in time to go to church like good
+Christians; and I do not think either of us felt much
+the worse for the hours we had spent in the People's
+Garden&mdash;save and except the wicked Little Wee
+Dog!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>UTILIZING THE YOUNG LADIES.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Time was when it was accepted as an axiom that
+young ladies had no object in life but to be ornamental&mdash;no
+mission but matrimony. The "accomplishments"
+were the sum total of a genteel education,
+though charged as "extras" on the half-yearly
+accounts; and all the finished creature had to do, after
+once "coming out," was to sit down and languidly
+wait for an eligible suitor.</p>
+
+<p>Times changed. And, in England, when we make
+a change, we always rush violently into an opposite
+extreme. Woman had a mission, and no mistake.
+Now it was the franchise and Bloomer costume, just
+as aforetime it was the pianoforte and general fascination.
+Blue spectacles rose in the market. We had
+lady doctors and female lawyers. The only marvel is
+that there was no agitation for feminine curates.</p>
+
+<p>Then came reaction again. It was discovered that
+woman could be educated without becoming a bluestocking,
+and practical without wearing bloomers or
+going in for the suffrage. Still holding to the wholesome
+principle that "woman is not undeveloped man,
+but diverse," the real friends of the gentler sex dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>covered
+a hundred and one ways in which it could
+employ itself usefully and remuneratively. It was no
+longer feared lest, as Sydney Smith puts it, if a woman
+learnt algebra she would "desert her infant for a
+quadratic equation;" and the University of Cambridge
+soon fell in with the scheme for the Higher Education
+of Women; while Miss Faithfull, and several others,
+organized methods for employing practically the
+talents which education could only develope in a
+general way. It was to one of these methods&mdash;not
+Miss Faithfull's&mdash;my attention was drawn a short
+time since by a letter in the daily papers. The
+Victoria Press and International Bureau are faits
+accomplis, and it is well that efforts should be made
+for utilizing in other ways that interesting surplus
+in our female population. Mrs. Fernando, of
+Warwick Gardens, Kensington, has set herself to
+the solution of the problem, and the shape her method
+takes is a Technical Industrial School for Women.</p>
+
+<p>The object and aim of the institution is to examine,
+plan, and organize such branches of industrial avocation
+as are applicable to females, and open up new
+avocations of useful industry compatible with the
+intellectual and mechanical capabilities of the sex, not
+forgetting their delicacy, and the untutored position
+of females for practical application in all industrial
+labour: to give the same facilities to females as are
+enjoyed by males, in collective classes for special
+training or special preparation for passing examina<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>tions
+open to women, thereby to enable them to earn
+their livelihood with better success than is attainable
+by mere school education only: to give special training
+to females to qualify them to enter special
+industrial avocations with such competency as will
+enable them to be successful in obtaining employment:
+to apprentice females, or to employ them directly into
+trades where such employers will receive them beyond
+the limits of the industrial school and where females
+can be constantly employed, such as in composing,
+embossing, illuminating, black-bordering, ticket-writing,
+circular-addressing, flower-making, flower-cultivating,
+&amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Being a determined sceptic in the matter of prospectuses,
+I determined to go and see for myself the
+working of this scheme, which looked so well on
+paper. The Institution occupies a large house exactly
+opposite Dr. Punshon's chapel: and there is no chance
+of one's missing it, for it is placarded with announcements
+like a hoarding at election time. I found Mrs.
+Fernando an exceedingly practical lady, doing all the
+work of the institution herself, with the exception of
+a few special subjects such as botany, &amp;c., which are
+conducted by her husband. There are no "assistants,"
+therefore, or deputed interests, the bane of so many
+high-priced schools.</p>
+
+<p>These classes are held in the evening from seven to
+nine o'clock, and are intended for ladies above the age
+of fifteen years, who may be engaged through the day<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+in various occupations, and for such as suffer from
+neglected education, and who wish conveniently and
+economically to improve themselves, without being
+necessitated to mix with their juniors in day-schools.
+These classes prepare ladies to meet the qualifications
+necessary to enter clerkships and other official departments;
+to bring them also to a standard to meet the
+qualifications for post offices and telegraph departments;
+and also to pass certain examinations open to
+them. The charge is only 2<i>s.</i> per week&mdash;8<i>s.</i> per
+month&mdash;1<i>l.</i> 4<i>s.</i> per quarter. The first course embraces
+spelling, reading, writing, arithmetic, history, geography,
+and grammar. The second course consists of
+advanced arithmetic, book-keeping and commercial
+instruction, so as to qualify women to take posts of
+responsibility with marked success. The third course
+consists of French, for practical usefulness. The
+fourth course embraces simple or technical training in
+such departments as are available within the limits of
+the class-room&mdash;to qualify women to enter industrial
+avocations with competency, and to make them successful
+in obtaining employment. This department
+will be extended to greater usefulness as conveniences
+arise, by apprenticing the girls or employing them
+directly in trades beyond the limits of the class-room,
+where employers will receive them, or where
+women could be consistently engaged&mdash;as, for instance,
+in the work of compositors, ticket-writers, embossers,
+&amp;c. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>&amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The two classes with which I was brought into
+contact were the book-keeping and embossing. In
+the former, more than a dozen young ladies were
+being initiated in the mysteries of single and double
+entry, and they posted up their books in a way that
+made me feel very much ashamed of myself, when I
+thought how incapable I should be of doing anything
+half so useful. Many girls go from this
+department to be book-keepers at large hotels, places
+of business, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>I then went to the embossing room, where six
+presses were being worked by as many young ladies,
+one in an adjoining room being reserved for Mrs.
+Fernando, who not only tells her pupils what to do,
+but shows them how to do it. The gilding and
+colouring of the stamps was most elaborate; two
+monograms of the Queen's name and that of the Empress
+Eug&eacute;nie being perfect marvels of artistic and
+intricate workmanship. Every process, from mixing
+the colours up to burnishing the gold, was gone
+through in detail by this practical lady and her intelligent
+pupils for my special edification, and I passed
+out a much wiser and certainly not a sadder man than
+I entered this veritable hive of human bees.</p>
+
+<p>No expense was spared in the education of these
+girls, low as are the terms they pay. I saw quite a
+ruinous heap of spoilt envelopes and fashionable sheets
+of thick cream-laid; for they have to make their experiments
+on the best material, and the slightest alte<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>ration
+in the position of a pin where the stamping
+process has to be several times repeated spoils the
+whole result. Mrs. Fernando has also introduced envelope
+and circular addressing by women, as a department
+of female industrial work in the Technical
+Industrial School for Women, where a number of
+females are employed between the hours of ten and
+four o'clock, receiving satisfactory remuneration. She
+provides the females employed in this department
+evening classes free of charge, to improve themselves
+in general education.</p>
+
+<p>I am an intense admirer of the female sex in general,
+and young ladies in particular, but really when I
+came away, leaving my pretty book-keepers and embossers
+to resume their normal work, and saw the
+numbers of young ladies sitting listlessly over misnamed
+"work" at the window, or walking languidly
+nowhither in the streets, I thought that, without
+losing any of their attractions, nay, adding a new
+claim to the many existing ones on our regard, they
+might with great advantage take a turn at Mrs.
+Fernando's sixpenny lessons in technical education.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3>FAIRLOP FRIDAY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Amongst those customs "more honoured in the
+breach than the observance" which are rapidly being
+stamped out by the advancing steps of civilization,
+are the institutions which we can yet remember as so
+popular in the days of our childhood, called pleasure
+fairs. Like that social dodo in a higher section of
+society, the "three-bottle man," with the stupid
+Bacchanalian usages of which he was the embodiment,
+these fairs are slowly but surely disappearing
+as education spreads among the masses of the people.
+In the country a fair is a simple and a necessary
+thing enough. At certain seasons of the year, according
+to the staple commodities for the sale of
+which the assemblage was originally instituted, our
+bucolic friends gather at early morning with the products
+of their farms; a good deal of noisy buying,
+selling, and barter takes place. Later in the day the
+ladies invest their profits in a little mild finery, or in
+simple pleasures; and, later still, when the public-houses
+have done their work, comes a greater or lesser
+amount of riot, rude debauchery, and vice; and then,
+voil&agrave; tout&mdash;the fair is over for a year. One can easily<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+imagine the result of the transition when, from the
+quiet country, the fair removes to the city or suburb.
+In such places every utilitarian element is wanting,
+and the gilt ginger-bread and gewgaws are only a
+speciously innocent attraction towards the drinking
+and dancing booth where the mischief is done. Well-wishers
+to society are unromantic enough not to
+regret the decidedly waning glories of these gatherings,
+from the great Bartholomew Fair itself down to
+that which, on the Friday of which I write, converted
+many miles of thoroughfare at the East End
+of London, as well as one of the prettiest forest
+scenes still surrounding the metropolis, into a vast
+al fresco tavern, where the "worship of Bacchus"
+was as freely indulged as in any heathen temple of
+ancient times.</p>
+
+<p>Fairlop Fair&mdash;which has not yet died out, though
+beginning to show satisfactory signs of decay&mdash;commenced
+its existence, innocently enough, about a
+century ago. At that time Mr. Day, a shipbuilder,
+wishing to have a day's outing in the forest with his
+friends and employ&eacute;s, fitted up a vessel on wheels,
+fully rigged, in which he conveyed his picnic party
+to Hainault Forest, on the outskirts of which, some
+distance from Ilford, stood the famous Fairlop Oak.
+The holiday became an annual custom, and gradually
+changed its character from the simple gathering of a
+master and his men into regular saturnalia; during
+which, each year, from the first Friday in July, over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+the ensuing Saturday and Sunday, riot and debauchery
+reigned supreme in the glades of the forest
+and the eastern districts of London. The example
+set by Mr. Day was followed by other ship, boat, and
+barge builders, but of late years, more particularly by
+the mast and block makers, riggers, shipwrights, and
+shipyard labourers; and more recently still by the
+licensed victuallers. Finding the custom good for
+trade, the publicans formed a society for building or
+hiring these boats on wheels, which, covered with
+flags, and provided each with a band of music and
+filled with revellers, annually make their progress
+into Hainault Forest. They go no longer, alas! to
+Fairlop Oak&mdash;for that is numbered with the things
+of the past&mdash;but now to Barking side, where, at the
+Maypole Inn, the festivities of Fairlop Fair are still
+kept up.</p>
+
+<p>These ship and boat cars attract immense multitudes
+along the Mile End, Bow, and Whitechapel
+Roads, down as far as Aldgate; the crowd assemble
+in the morning to see the holiday people start on
+their expedition. The most remarkable sight, however,
+is at night, when the "boats" return lighted
+with coloured lanterns, red and green fires, &amp;c.; and
+at every public-house along the road similar fires are
+burnt, and brass bands stationed to strike up as the
+cars pass, and stop at certain favoured establishments
+"for the good of the house." Anxious to witness the
+fading glories of Fairlop Friday myself, before the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+advancing tide of civilization shall have done their
+inevitable work upon them, I sallied forth to the East
+End, and walking along one of the finest approaches
+to London, from Aldgate, by Whitechapel, to Bow
+and Stratford Churches, succeeded in realizing more
+completely than ever before two facts: first, how
+gigantic is the population of the East End of
+London; and, secondly, how little is required to
+amuse and attract it. There were only two of the
+"boats" sent to the Forest that year. Their return
+could gratify the sight of these people but for a single
+instant; yet there, from early dusk almost to succeeding
+daylight, those working men, literally "in
+their thousands"&mdash;and not in the Trafalgar Square
+diminutive of that expression&mdash;gathered to gratify
+themselves with the sight of the pageant. In comparison,
+the "B&oelig;uf Gras," which annually sends the
+gamins of Paris insane, is really a tasteful and refined
+exhibition. Yet there they were, women, men, and
+children&mdash;infants in arms, too, to a notable extent&mdash;swarming
+along that vast thoroughfare, boozing outside
+the public-houses, investing their pence in
+"scratch-backs" and paper noses, feathers and decorations,
+as do their betters on the course at Epsom,
+under the feeble excuse of "waiting for the boats."
+The first arrived en retour at Stratford Church
+about ten o'clock; and certainly the appearance of
+the lumbering affair as it moved along, with its
+rigging brought out by means of coloured fires, lan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>terns,
+and lamps, was odd enough. As soon as it
+passed me at Stratford, I jumped outside one of the
+Bow and Stratford omnibuses, and so had an opportunity
+of following, or rather joining in, the procession
+as far as Whitechapel, where the "boat" turned
+off into Commercial Road. For the whole of that
+space the footway was filled with one seething mass of
+humanity, and the publicans were driving a rattling
+trade outside and inside their establishments. As the
+glare of the coloured fires lighted up the pale faces of
+the crowd with a ghastly hue, and I heard the silly
+and too often obscene remarks bandied between the
+bystanders and the returning revellers, I could not
+help agitating the question, whether it would not be
+possible to devise some innocent recreation, with a
+certain amount of refinement in it, to take the place
+of these&mdash;to say the best&mdash;foolish revelries. In point
+of fact, they are worse than foolish. Not only was it
+evident that the whole affair from beginning to end,
+as far as adults were concerned, was an apotheosis of
+drink; but amongst another section of the populace,
+the boys and girls, or what used to be boys and
+girls&mdash;for, as the Parisians say, "Il n'y a plus de
+gar&ccedil;ons"&mdash;one must have been blind indeed not to see
+the mischief that was being done on those East End
+pavements; done more thoroughly perhaps, certainly
+on a vastly larger scale, than in the purlieus of the
+forest. It is an uninviting subject to dwell upon;
+but one could understand all about baby farms, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+Lock Hospitals, and Contagious Diseases Acts, out
+there that July night, in the crowded streets of East
+London.</p>
+
+<p>It would be unfair to dilate upon these evils, and
+not to mention an organization which, for the last
+ten years, has been seeking to remedy the mischief.
+Some hundreds of working men of a more serious
+stamp, aided by a few gentlemen and ministers of
+various denominations, form themselves into small
+bands of street preachers, and sallying forth in a body,
+hold services and preach sermons at the most populous
+points of the Fairlop route. Being curious to
+see the effect of their bold labours&mdash;for it requires immense
+"pluck" to face a Whitechapel mob&mdash;I joined
+one of these detachments, where the Rev. Newman
+Hall was the preacher. Before starting, this gentleman
+gave it as the result of his long experience with
+the British workman that there is no use in waiting
+for him to come to church. If the church is to do
+anything with him, it must go out and meet him in
+the streets and fields, as it originally did. Mr. Hall
+gave some amusing illustrations of his experience at
+Hastings, where, for several weeks, he had been
+preaching on the beach to large congregations. He
+was idling there, he said, for health's sake, and one
+evening, seeing a number of men loafing about, he
+proposed to one of them that he should give them an
+address. This gentleman declined the address, but
+added, characteristically enough, "If ye'll gie me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+some beer I'll drink it." Two others, being asked if
+they would listen, "didn't know as they would."
+Under these unpromising auspices Mr. Hall began,
+and, attracting a crowd, was "moved on" by a policeman.
+A gentleman who recognised him proposed an
+adjournment to the beach, and there a sermon was
+preached, and has been repeated by Mr. Hall on
+several occasions, with a congregation of thousands.
+He has a peculiar knack of speaking in a tongue
+"understanded of the people," and his address to the
+Fairlop crowd on that Friday night "told" considerably.
+At its conclusion he quietly put on his hat,
+dropped into the crowd, and went his way; but the
+tone of criticism amongst his hearers was very
+favourable, and I quite agree with the critics that it's
+a pity we haven't "more parsons like that." It is
+not, however, simply by religious zeal such a want as
+that to which I allude is to be supplied, but by the
+substitution of some sensible recreation for the low
+attractions of the beershop and gin-palace. It is a
+problem worthy of our deepest thinkers: "What shall
+we offer our huge populations in exchange for the
+silly pageant even now being enacted in the outskirts
+of the metropolis&mdash;which may well be taken to embody
+the pastime of the lower orders&mdash;Fairlop Fair?"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A CHRISTMAS DIP.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There are few more exhilarating things, on a breezy
+spring morning, than a spurt across that wonderful
+rus in urbe&mdash;Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park&mdash;for
+a prospective dip in the Serpentine, where, at
+specified hours every morning and evening, water-loving
+London is privileged to disport itself in its
+congenial element. So congenial is it, in fact, that
+some enthusiastic individuals do not limit themselves
+to warm summer mornings, or the cooler ones of
+springtide and autumn, but bathe all the year round&mdash;even,
+it is said, when a way for their man&oelig;uvres
+has to be cut through the ice. Skirting the north
+bank of the Serpentine at morning or evening in the
+summer, the opposite shore appears absolutely pink
+with nude humanity, the younger portion dancing
+and gambolling very much after the manner of
+Robinson Crusoe's cannibals. The bathers occasionally
+look a great deal better out of their integuments
+than in them. Not from this class, however,
+do your all-the-year-round bathers come. The Arab
+is an exotic&mdash;a child of the Sun, loving not to disport
+himself in water the temperature of which shocks his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+tentative knuckles, as he dips them in the unaccustomed
+element. His wardrobe, again, is too much
+after the fashion of that pertaining to Canning's
+needy knife-grinder to make an al fresco toilette
+other than embarrassing. From the all-the-year-round
+bathers, as a nucleus, there has grown up,
+within the last few years, the Serpentine Swimming
+Club; and on Christmas-day in the morning they
+have an annual match open to all comers&mdash;though, it
+need scarcely be said, patronized only by those whom,
+for brevity's sake, we may term all-rounders.</p>
+
+<p>Now, I had often heard of this Christmas-day
+match, and as often, on Christmas-eve, made up my
+mind to go; but the evening's resolution faded away,
+as such resolutions have only too often been known to
+do, before the morning's light. This year, however&mdash;principally,
+I believe, because I had been up very
+late the previous night&mdash;I struggled out of bed before
+dawn, and steered for the Serpentine. A crescent
+moon was shining, and stars studded the clear spaces
+between ominous patches of cloud. A raw, moist
+wind was blowing, and on the muddy streets were
+evident traces of a recent shower. I had no notion
+that the gates of Kensington Gardens were open so
+early; and the sensation was novel as I threaded the
+devious paths in morning dawn, and saw the gas still
+alight along the Bayswater Road. A solitary thrush
+was whistling his Christmas carol as I struggled over
+the inundated sward; presently the sun threw a few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+red streaks along the East, over the Abbey Tower;
+but, until I had passed the Serpentine Bridge, not a
+single human being met my gaze. There, however,
+I found some fifty men, mostly with a "sporting"
+look about them. The ubiquitous boy was there,
+playing at some uncomfortable game in the puddles
+round the seats. The inevitable dog stood pensively
+by the diving board; and when, by-and-by straggling
+all-rounders came and took their morning header, the
+quadruped rushed after them to the very edge of the
+water, as though he had been a distinguished member
+of the Humane Society. He shirked the element
+itself, however, as religiously as though he had been
+one of London's great unwashed. In the pause
+which preceded the race, I learned, from the
+Honorary Secretary of the Serpentine Swimming
+Club, particulars of its history and of the race itself.
+For six years it had been merely a club race; but last
+year it was thrown open. Strangely enough the race
+had never been won twice by one man, though the
+competitors had been pretty much the same every
+year. I also conversed with one of the intending
+competitors, who showed me on his breast with
+pardonable pride, five medals of the Royal Humane
+Society, awarded for saving life in cases of danger
+from drowning. The wearer was a Professor of
+Natation, and told me that, among his pupils, he had
+an old lady sixty-seven years of age, who had just
+commenced, and was able to swim some twenty yards<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+already. The brave old lady's example may do good;
+though it is to be hoped that she may not, at her
+time of life, be compelled to exert her art for her own
+protection.</p>
+
+<p>Names were now called, and fourteen competitors
+presented themselves&mdash;a motley group, clad for the
+most part in trousers, horse-rug, and wide-awake, or,
+more simply still, in Ulster frieze coat only. The
+group of spectators had by this time grown to some
+hundreds, nearly all directly interested in the noble
+art; and the dips became fast and frequent. Two
+flags were placed in the water at the distance of
+100 yards from the diving board; on this slender
+platform fourteen shivering specimens of humanity
+ranged themselves, and at the word of the starter
+plunged into the water with that downward plunge
+so incomprehensible to the uninitiated. A short,
+sharp struggle followed, the competitors swimming
+with the sidelong movement and obstreperous puffing
+which likens the swimmer so closely to the traditional
+grampus. Eventually one of the group is seen
+heading the others, and breasting the water with
+calm and equable stroke in the old-fashioned style.
+He reaches the flag a full yard before his nearest
+antagonist. Numbers two and three, following, are
+about half a yard apart. The others come in pretty
+much in a group. All were picked men, and there
+were no laggards. The names of the winners were
+as follows:&mdash;1. Ainsworth; 2. Quartermain; 3. H.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+Coulter. The time occupied in the race was 1 min.
+24 sec. Immediately after the race there was a rapid
+re-assumption of rugs and Ulsters, though some of
+the more hardy walked about in the garb of Nature,
+making everybody shiver who looked at them.
+Finally, the prizes, consisting of three handsome
+medals, were distributed by Mr. H. Bedford, who
+stood on a park seat and addressed a few genial
+words to each of the successful candidates; then, with
+a cheer, and frequent wishes for a Merry Christmas,
+the assembly resolved itself into its component parts.</p>
+
+<p>I had taken my accustomed cold tub before coming
+out, yet each of these fourteen devoted men appeared
+to me as a hero. They were not Herculean individuals:
+several of them were mere youths. Some
+of the all-rounders were grey-headed men, but there
+was about them all a freshness and ruddiness which
+showed that their somewhat severe regimen agreed
+with them. Fresh from such a Spartan exhibition,
+everything seemed very late and Sybaritic in my
+domestic establishment, and I could not help revolving
+in my mind the question, what would one of
+these hardy all-the-year-rounders think of me if he
+knew I was ever guilty of such a malpractice as
+breakfast in bed? It is a novel method; but there
+are many worse ways of inaugurating the Great Holiday
+than by taking&mdash;what it had been a novel sensation
+for me even to witness&mdash;a Christmas Dip in the
+Serpentine.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BOXING-DAY ON THE STREETS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Boxing-day in the London streets, and especially a
+wet Boxing-day, can scarcely fail to afford us some
+tableaux vivants illustrative of English metropolitan
+life. In a metaphorical and technical sense, Boxing-day
+is always more or less "wet"&mdash;generally more,
+and not less; but this year the expression is used
+climatically, and in its first intention. Christmas-eve
+of the year about which I write was bright and
+springlike; Christmas-day dismal, dark, and un-Christmas-like;
+but Boxing-day that year was essentially
+muggy, sloppy, drizzly, and nasty. A day to
+avoid the London streets if you want to take a
+romantic Rosa-Matilda view of London life; but the
+very day of all others, if you wish to see real London
+as it is. Boxing-day will inevitably be "wetter" in
+every sense than usual this year, internally and externally.
+So let us commence our series of living
+pictures at ten o'clock in the morning. Suppose we
+begin with something that shall bear reference to the
+past festival&mdash;the eve and the day of the Great Birth,
+recollect. See, here is Grotto Passage, Marylebone,
+and at its extremity Paradise Street&mdash;the names<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+sound promising, but alas for the reality! We are
+going to turn for a moment into the Marylebone
+Police Court, where Mr. D'Eyncourt is dispensing
+summary justice to the accumulations of the last two
+days. These are the people who have been spending
+Christmas-eve, Christmas-day, and some portion of
+Boxing-day already in the police-cells. Let us take
+one as a typical case. Let that poor little eight-year-old
+Arab step down from the dock and go off with his
+mother, who, we hope, will take the magistrate's excellent
+advice, and keep the child from begging&mdash;that
+is why he has spent Christmas in the cells&mdash;lest he
+be sent to a school for eight years, and she have to
+pay for him&mdash;God help her! she does not look as
+though she could afford very high terms. A bruised
+and bleeding woman, not young or good-looking,
+enters the box with her head bound up. Her lord
+and master confronts her in the dock. It is the "old,
+old story." A drop of drink yesterday&mdash;the day of
+the Great Nativity, never forget&mdash;series of "drops of
+drink" all day long; and, at five o'clock, just when
+gentility was beginning to think of dinner, the kitchen
+poker was used with frightful effect. A triangular
+cut over the right eye, and another in the dangerous
+neighbourhood of the left ear, administered with that
+symbol of domestic bliss, the kitchen poker, sends the
+wife doubled up into a corner, with an infant of two
+years old in her arms. The head of the family goes
+out for a walk after his exertions. The woman lies<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+there bleeding until the neighbours hear her "mourning,"
+as she terms it&mdash;the result being that the lord
+and master's "constitutional" is cut short by a policeman,
+and the happy pair are this morning separated
+for six months, at the expiration of which period
+Paterfamilias is to find surety for another six months'
+good behaviour. Such, starred round with endless
+episodes of "drunk and disorderly," "foul language,"
+and so on, is our first tableau this Boxing-day. It is
+not a pleasant one. Let us pass on.</p>
+
+<p>Along Oxford Street, despite the Bank Holidays
+Act, many shops are open, chiefly those devoted to
+the sale of articles eatable, drinkable, and avoidable;
+these last being in the shape of chemists' shops, and
+shops for Christmas presents&mdash;to be shunned by
+miserly old bachelors. Let us turn into the British
+Museum and see sensible, decorous Boxing-day there.
+At the corner of Museum Street there is a lively itinerant
+musician, evidently French, who plays the fiddle
+until his bow tumbles all to pieces, but he goes on
+playing with the stick as though nothing had happened.
+When his instrument has come entirely to
+grief he turns to a clarionet, which he carries under
+his arm, and plays "Mourir pour la Patrie" with
+extraordinary vocal effect and irreverent gestures.
+Punch-and-Judy is largely attended at the other end;
+Punch is kitchen-pokering his wife, too, like the gentleman
+we have just left; but we pass in with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+crowds to the Museum itself. Halting a moment in
+the reading-room, to jot down there a few notes, one
+is struck with the scanty show of students. <i>They</i>
+are spending Boxing-day somewhere else. Passing
+through the little knot of people who are permitted
+by special order to come as far as the door of the
+reading-room, and who evidently regard the readers
+as some curious sort of animal exhibited for their
+special delectation&mdash;perhaps the book-"worm" of
+which they have heard so much&mdash;we go up the stairs,
+now thronged with crowds in unwonted broadcloth
+and fragrant with the odour of the inevitable orange.
+Next to the drinking fountain, which is decidedly the
+chief attraction, comes the gorilla, and then the
+extinct animals. One stout old lady, contemplating
+the megatherium and mastodon, inquires in what
+parts "them creeturs" are to be found, and seems
+considerably damped by being informed that Nature
+has been "out" of such articles for several &aelig;ons. The
+mummies, with the bones of their toes sticking out,
+also come in for a large share of admiration. There
+is a good deal of rough flirtation going on; but, on
+the whole, the pleasure is rather of a placid order,
+though still contrasting favourably with the settled
+gloom visible on the faces of the attendants in the
+various galleries. How well we can understand such
+gloom! How utterly hateful must that giant elk
+and overgrown extinct armadillo be to a man con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>demned
+to spend a lifetime in their close contemplation!</p>
+
+<p>But let us pass on to the artistic Boxing-day
+keepers at the National Gallery. The walk will take
+us through the Seven Dials, and can scarcely fail to
+be suggestive. It is now one o'clock, the traditional
+hour of dinner; and in Broad Street, St. Giles's, I see,
+for the first time to-day, the human barometer evidently
+standing at "much wet." A gentleman in a
+grey coat and red comforter, who bears palpable signs
+of having been more than once on his back, has just
+reached that perplexing point of inebriety when he
+can walk quickly or run, but cannot stand still or
+walk steadily. He is pursued by small children,
+mostly girls, after whom, every now and then, he runs
+hopelessly, to their intense gratification. The poultry
+and bird shops in the Seven Dials are objects of some
+attraction, though they savour too much of "business"
+to be in very great force. The National Gallery is
+crowded with unaccustomed art students. There is
+about the visitors a quiet air of doing their duty, and
+being determined to go through with it at any price.
+One brazen-faced quean speculates audibly&mdash;in fact,
+very audibly&mdash;as to which "picter" she should choose
+if she had her "pick," and decent matrons pass the
+particularly High Art of the old masters with half-averted
+gaze, as though they were not quite sure of
+doing right in countenancing such exhibitions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+Hogarth's evergreen "Marriage &agrave; la Mode" is a great
+centre of attraction, and the youngsters never tire of
+listening, as "with weeping and with laughter still is
+the story told" over and over again by their elders.
+Gainsborough's likeness of Mrs. Siddons is also a great
+favourite; but perhaps the picture that attracts most
+attention is Van Eyck's "John Arnolfini, of Lucca,
+and his Wife." The gentleman wears a portentous
+hat, which tickled the fancy of the Boxing-day people
+immensely. There were great speculations too among
+them as to whether the curious Tuscan pictures at the
+top of the stairs were "needlework" or not. Still,
+who shall say that these visitors were not the better
+for their visit, surrounded as they were by forms of
+beauty on every side, even if they did not examine
+them with the eyes of connoisseurs?</p>
+
+<p>Boxing-day on the river: The silent street is almost
+deserted. There is no rush for the Express boat to-day.
+It is literally the streets&mdash;muddier and sloppier
+than the Thames itself&mdash;that are the attraction. Some
+little boys are making the trip from Westminster to
+London Bridge as a treat; and it is an intense joke
+with them to pretend to be dreadfully seasick.
+Boxing-day in the City is synonymous with stagnation.
+It is a howling wilderness, with nobody to howl.
+On the Metropolitan Railway I verily believe travellers
+were tripping it like the little boys on board the
+penny boat. And so theatre time draws on, and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+interest of Boxing-day grows to a climax. Soon after
+five o'clock groups furtively collect outside the playhouses,
+half-ashamed of being so early, but gathering
+courage from numbers to form the disorderly queue,
+so unlike that of a Parisian theatre. Boxing-night in
+the theatres others will describe. It is too much to
+expect of one whose mission has been the whole day
+long on the streets.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VIGIL OF THE DERBY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In those days&mdash;happily now gone by&mdash;when public
+strangulation was the mode in Merry England, there
+was always an evident fascination appertaining to the
+spot where, on the morrow, some guilty wretch was
+to expiate his crimes on the gallows. Long before
+the erection of that elegant apparatus commenced,
+and generally on a Sunday evening, when decent
+citizens had newly come from houses of God, where
+they had heard the message of life, crowds began to
+collect on that central spot in the heart of the great
+City dedicated to sudden and violent death. The
+coming event seemed to cast its shadow before; and
+throughout the night the roisterer or belated traveller
+made a d&eacute;tour to visit the human shambles. I confess
+to having felt the attraction. I could not then
+bring myself to be present at the strangulation
+proper; so, as the nearest approach to a "sensation,"
+sometimes visited Newgate on the eve of the victim
+elect's last morrow. In the same way, being unfortunate
+enough to be London-bound on the day of our
+great annual holiday, and having heard graphic accounts
+of the Downs on the eve of the Derby, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+determined that year, as I could not go to the race
+by day, to visit the racecourse by night. Let me own
+the soft impeachment: I am not a racing man&mdash;not
+in any degree "horsey." When I do go to the Derby
+it is to see the bipeds rather than the quadrupeds; to
+empty the hamper from Fortnum and Mason's, rather
+than to study the "names, weights, and colours of the
+riders" on the "c'rect card." If you prefer to have
+the sentiment in Latin&mdash;and there is no doubt Latin
+does go much farther than English&mdash;I am not one of
+those "quos pulverem Olympicum collegisse juvat,"
+except in so far that "homo sum; nihil humanum
+alienum a me puto." It was to see humanity under
+a new aspect, I took the last train to Epsom on the
+eve of the Derby.</p>
+
+<p>In order to combine business with pleasure, and
+economy with both, I took a third-class ticket at
+Victoria, and was fortunate enough to find a compartment
+already partially occupied by a nigger
+troupe. In this, which under ordinary circumstances
+I should have avoided, I took my seat, and was
+regaled all the way down with choice morceaux from
+the r&eacute;pertoire of my musical friends. The "talking
+man" of the party, too, enlivened the proceedings by
+anxiously inquiring of the porters at the different
+stations what they would take in the way of refreshment,
+and issuing unlimited orders to imaginary
+waiters on their behoof. It was a strange sensation,
+being whirled away from home and bed down to a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+wild heath towards midnight; and as we neared our
+destination, the air began to "bite shrewdly," and
+the sky to look uncommonly like rain&mdash;a contretemps
+which would have been fatal to my proposed experience.
+We had to change carriages at Sutton, and
+here a sociable Aunt-Sally-man, struggling under the
+implements of his craft, sought to beguile me from
+my African friends by offers of a shake-down in his
+tent, with which he proposed to walk across from
+Ewell and erect, instead of journeying on to Epsom.
+My Ethiopian friends jumped at the proposal, and
+forthwith fraternized with Aunt Sally. I determined
+to follow out my previous plans; so having drunk to
+our next merry meeting, we parted, ostensibly until
+to-morrow, but, I fear, for ever.</p>
+
+<p>I had been led to expect "high jinks" at Epsom&mdash;a
+sort of Carnival in the quiet town. Nothing could
+have been farther from the truth. The town, so far
+as outward semblance went, was almost as quiet as
+ever. A few sporting men thronged the bar of the
+principal hotel, and stragglers hung about the low
+beer-shops; but there was nothing at all to indicate
+the imminence of the great event. So I fell back on
+my usual expedient of applying to the executive, and
+found not only an active and intelligent but exceedingly
+civil sergeant of police, to whom I told my
+errand. He was pleased with the novelty of the idea,
+and as he happened to be then going the round of
+the town previously to visiting the course, I cast in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+my lot with him for the night. We first visited what
+he termed the "German Opera," on Epsom Common.
+This is an encampment of organ-grinders, hurdy-gurdy-players,
+German bands, &amp;c., who pitch
+their tents here instead of going to the Downs.
+It was, however, rather late when we reached the
+spot where these artists were bivouacking, and they
+had retired for the night, so we could not form much
+idea of them beyond their numbers, which seemed
+considerable, and their odour, which was unfragrant.
+Thence we passed down a short alley to a railway
+arch, which was aglow with many fires, and rang
+with the sounds of many voices. Bidding me make
+no observation, whatever might be said, and requesting
+me to try and look like an officer in plain clothes,
+my cicerone led me into the strange arcade, which I
+certainly could not have entered without his protection.
+Hundreds of men, women, and boys were
+gathered in groups round coke fires, some partaking
+of coffee, others singing, the majority sleeping. After
+satisfying himself that the fires were legitimate ones,
+and not composed of broken fences, my guide left this
+teeming hive unmolested. We then steered for the
+course, not by the high road, but skirting it along
+the fields. The policeman, like myself, carried a stout
+stick, which really seemed to be endowed with creative
+powers that night. Wherever he poked that
+staff&mdash;and he did poke it everywhere&mdash;a human being
+growled, or snored, or cursed. Every bush along the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+hedgerow bore its occupant&mdash;often its group of four
+or five, sometimes a party of a dozen or a score. One
+shed filled with carts yielded at least a hundred,
+though the sergeant informed me it must have been
+already cleared several times that evening, as he had
+a file of men along the road, besides a cordon inside
+the Park palings, which border a great portion of it.
+It is with these palings the tramps chiefly do mischief,
+pulling them down to make fires along their
+route. Wherever my guide found these, he trampled
+the fires remorselessly out, and kicked the burning
+embers over the sleepers in a manner that must have
+been uncomfortable. The men submitted in comparative
+silence; but the ladies&mdash;where there happened
+to be any&mdash;exerted the privilege of their sex,
+and treated us to some choice specimens of the vernacular.
+In one case, a female cried out that he was
+kicking the fire over the "childer;" and, sure enough,
+we found half-a-dozen little ones huddled up asleep.
+The policeman remonstrated with her for bringing
+them to such a place; but she informed us it was to
+"make their living." In what way, she did not add.
+To us, it seemed very much like reversing the process,
+and causing their death. Fancy young children
+camping out on the road to the Downs at midnight!
+Boys of thirteen and fourteen abounded, sleeping in
+large groups along the hedgerows, and sometimes out
+in the open fields, where the dew lay thick.</p>
+
+<p>At length, after many windings, we reached the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+Downs. The white booths, following the direction of
+the course in their sinuous lines, looked like stately
+white marble streets and crescents in the dim, uncertain
+light of that hour which, between May 31
+and June 1, is neither day nor night. Under the
+stands and around the booths, tabernacling beneath
+costermongers' barrows, and even lying out openly
+sub dio, were still the hundreds of human beings. In
+one small drinking booth was a sight the policeman
+said he had never seen equalled in his twenty years'
+experience. A long, narrow table ran down the
+centre, with benches on each side. The table itself
+was occupied with recumbent figures; on the benches
+the sleepers sat, bending forward over it, and under
+the benches sleepers sprawled upon the grass. The
+whole of the front of the booth was open, and exposed
+to the biting wind; but there they snored as
+calmly as though on eider-down. We climbed the
+steps of the stand above the ring, and waited for
+the day, which slowly broke to the song of the
+lark and nightingale over that strange scene. With
+the first suspicion of dawn the sleepers awoke and
+got up; what for I cannot imagine. It was barely
+two o'clock, and how they were going to kill the
+next twelve hours I could not guess. Rise they did
+however, and an itinerant vendor of coffee, who
+was literally up with the lark, straightway began to
+drive a roaring trade. I saw no stronger drink than
+this consumed; nor did I witness a single case of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+drunkenness during the whole night. But this was
+before the Derby! At this juncture we were all surprised
+by the apparition of a hansom-lamp toiling up
+the hill. Two adventurous gentlemen from Liverpool,
+it appeared, had arrived at the Euston Station, and
+insisted upon being driven at once to an hotel on
+Epsom Downs. The Jehu, secure of a fabulous fare,
+drove them accordingly; and, of course, had to drive
+them back again to Epsom&mdash;the hotels on the Downs
+quietly but firmly declining to be knocked up at that
+untimely hour even by gentlemen from Liverpool.
+As the sun showed his first up-slanting rays above the
+horizon, with the morning star hanging impertinently
+near, the two gipsy encampments began to exhibit
+signs of life. The Zingari encamp exclusively by
+themselves, and some picturesque specimens of the
+male sex, looking remarkably like the lively photograph
+of the Greek brigands, showed themselves on
+the outskirts. The ladies reserved themselves for
+later in the day. My guide cautioned me not to
+attempt to enter the encampment, as the men are
+dangerous, and their position on the Downs a privileged
+one. It was only when the tramps were trespassing,
+or evidently bent on mischief, that they were
+disturbed. On the Downs they were monarchs of all
+they surveyed.</p>
+
+<p>When the sun was fairly up, and the morning
+mists rolled away from those glorious Downs, I felt
+my mission accomplished. I had seen the sun rise on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+Epsom course. As it was many hours before a train
+would return, and I still felt fresh, I resolved to give
+the coup de grace to my night's adventure by walking
+home&mdash;at least, walking to the radius of workmen's
+trains. The vanguard of the Derby procession now
+began to show strongly in the shape of the great unwashed
+climbing the ridge of the hill by the paddock;
+and I felt I should see some characteristic sights
+along the road. Bidding good-bye, therefore, to my
+guide at Epsom, I set out on foot along the now-populous
+road, mine being the only face turned
+London-wards. Carts laden with trestles and boards
+for stands now began to be in force. By-and-by the
+well-known paper bouquets and outrageous head-gear
+showed themselves as forming the cargo of costermongers'
+carts. The travellers were all chatty, many
+of them chaffy. Frequent were the inquiries I had to
+answer as to the hour and the distance to the course.
+Occasionally a facetious gentleman anxiously inquired
+whether it was all over, as I was returning? I believe
+the majority looked upon me as a harmless
+lunatic, since I was travelling away from Epsom on
+the Derby morning, and pitied me accordingly. An
+Irishman aptly illustrated the genial character of
+Hibernian chaff as compared with English. "Good
+day to your honner!" he said. "It does me good to
+see your honner's happy face again;" though, of
+course, he had never seen it before. As I passed on
+with a brief salutation, he took the trouble to run after<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+me, and slapping me on the shoulder, added, in a
+beautiful brogue: "Wait a minnit; I don't want to
+ax you for anything, but only to tell you how glad I
+am to see yer honner's happy face agin. Good
+mornin'!"</p>
+
+<p>So through Ewell, Cheam, and Morden, up to
+Tooting; the throng increasing at every mile. At
+Balham, finding no train for an hour, I footed it
+again. I found preparations for endless Aunt Sally
+already being made on Clapham Common. Soon after
+six, I jumped into a train on the London, Chatham,
+and Dover, and came home "with the milk;" having
+not only had a healthy night's exercise&mdash;for the
+weather had all along been splendid&mdash;but having
+added to my experiences of London life one new
+"wrinkle" at least: I had seen the life of St. Giles's
+kitchen and Bethnal Green lodging-house &agrave; la campagne.
+What I had already seen under the garish
+candlelight of the Seven Dials and Commercial Road
+I saw gilded into picturesqueness by that glorious
+and never-to-be-forgotten sunrise on Epsom Downs
+which ushered in the Derby Day.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WIFESLAYER'S "HOME."</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is something very weird and strange in that
+exceptional avocation which takes one to-day to a
+Lord Mayor's feast or a croquet tournament, to-morrow
+to a Ritualistic service, next day to the home
+of a homicide. I am free to confess that each has its
+special attractions for me. I am very much disposed
+to "magnify my office" in this respect, not from any
+foolish idea that I am "seeing life," as it is termed,
+but still from a feeling that the proper study of mankind
+<i>is</i> man in all his varied aspects.</p>
+
+<p>It need not always be a morbid feeling that takes
+one to the scene of a murder or other horrible event,
+though, as we well know, the majority of those who
+visit such localities do go out of mere idle curiosity.
+It may be worth while, however, for some who look
+a little below the surface of things, to gauge, as it
+were, the genius loci, and see whether, in the
+influences surrounding the spot and its inhabitants
+there be anything to afford a clue as to the causes of
+the crime.</p>
+
+<p>In summing up the evidence concerning a certain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+tragedy at Greenwich, where a man killed his wife by
+throwing a knife, the coroner "referred to the horrible
+abode&mdash;a coal cellar&mdash;in which the family, nine in
+number, had resided, which was unfit for human
+habitation, and ought to have been condemned by
+the parish authorities." Having seen and described
+in these pages something of how the poor are
+housed in the cellars of St. Giles's and Bethnal Green,
+and traced the probable influences of herding together
+the criminal and innocent in the low lodging-houses,
+it occurred to me to visit the scene of this awful
+occurrence, and see how far the account given before
+the coroner's jury was correct.</p>
+
+<p>With this view I took the train to Greenwich, and,
+consulting the first policeman I met, was by him
+directed to Roan Street as the scene of the tragedy.
+Roan Street I found to be a somewhat squalid by-street,
+running out of Skelton Street, close&mdash;it seemed
+significantly close&mdash;to the old parish church. One
+could not help thinking of the familiar proverb, "The
+nearer the church, the farther from God." The actual
+locality is called Munyard's Row, being some dozen
+moderate-sized houses in Roan Street, let out in
+lodgings, the particular house in question being again,
+with a horrible grotesqueness, next door but one to a
+beer-shop called the "Hit or Miss!" I expected to
+find Roan Street the observed of all observers, but the
+nine days' wonder was over since what Dickens called
+the "ink-widge." Indeed, a homicide has ceased to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+be a nine days' wonder now. This only happened on
+Saturday; and when I was there, on the following
+Wednesday, Roan Street had settled down into its
+wonted repose. A woman with a child was standing
+on the door-step, and, on my inquiring if I could see
+the kitchen, referred me to Mrs. Bristow at the
+chandler's shop, who farms the rent of these populous
+tenements; for Munyard's Row is peopled "from
+garret to basement," and a good way underground
+too.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bristow, a civil, full-flavoured Irishwoman,
+readily consented to act cicerone, and we went through
+the passage into the back garden, where all the poor
+household furniture of the homicide's late "home"
+was stacked. It did not occupy a large space, consisting
+only of the bedstead on which the poor woman
+sat when the fatal deed was done, two rickety tables,
+and two chairs. These were all the movables of a
+family of nine. The mattress was left inside&mdash;too
+horrible a sight, after what had taken place, to be
+exposed to the light of day.</p>
+
+<p>We passed&mdash;Honora Bristow and myself&mdash;with a
+"gossip" or two, who had come to see what I was
+after, into the back kitchen, for the wifeslayer had two
+rooms en suite, though the family elected to occupy
+only one. The floor of this apartment was either
+mother earth, or, if flagged, so grimed with filth as
+to be a very fair resemblance of the soil. Here stood
+only that terrible memento, the drenched mattress.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+In the front kitchen&mdash;which, let me state, would have
+been palatial in comparison with the Seven Dials or
+Spitalfields, had it been only clean&mdash;there was very
+little light, for the window, which was well down
+below the surface of the pavement, had not a whole
+pane in it, and the broken ones had been stuffed up
+with old rags which were very protuberant indeed.
+That window alone would show that the m&eacute;nage had
+not been a judicious one.</p>
+
+<p>"He was a quiet man," said Honora, "and gave
+trouble to no one. He and his wife never had a
+word." The gossips all believed that the story of
+the throwing the knife was true, notwithstanding the
+medical evidence went against it. The boy of twelve,
+who provoked the father to throw the knife, was evidently
+the incubus of the wretched home. "Almost
+before the breath was out of his mother, that boy was
+searching about the bed to see if he could find any
+ha'pence," said Honora. That boy was evidently not
+satisfactory. His evidence was refused by the Coroner,
+because he could not read or write. But then what
+had been the child's surroundings? They have been
+described above. The man himself had a patriarchal
+family of seven, from a girl of seventeen down to a
+baby of two, and all, as we have seen, slept in one
+room, though there were two, and though a bucket
+of whitewash would have made the pair habitable,
+besides giving the lad some useful employment.</p>
+
+<p>The father was of no particular occupation, picking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+up odd jobs, and leaning largely to the shrimp trade.
+He stood high in Honora Bristow's regards as having
+regularly paid his 1<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> a week for five years, or,
+at least, being some 5<i>s.</i> behind now; a sum which
+will probably be covered by the chattels in the back
+garden. The poor home was silent then. The mother
+lay calmly in the dead-house, after the post-mortem
+examination, "terrible cut and hacked about," said
+the one gossip who had ventured to go and see her
+quondam friend. The father was in Maidstone Gaol.
+The little children were being taken care of by the
+grandmother until such time as the mother should have
+been buried, when they would gravitate to the workhouse.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime the boy, &aelig;t. twelve, the cause of
+all the mischief, disports himself in Munyard's Row
+as though nothing had happened. Perhaps he is the
+most difficult part of the problem; but the whole
+question of the home is a puzzling one. The boy is
+evidently the product of the home. It very much
+concerns the community that such produce should
+become extinct; and therefore the sooner some improvements
+can be introduced into such homes the
+better. In the first place, there is decidedly too little
+light. Sunshine, under any circumstances, would
+have been impossible there. The advisability of
+human beings burrowing underground may be questioned,
+whether in cellars or genteel underground
+kitchens.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then again, one bedroom&mdash;nay, one bedstead&mdash;for
+father, mother, and seven children ranging from
+seventeen to two is decidedly deficient. This sounds
+almost too horrible to be true; but I was careful to
+ascertain that the eldest girl, though in domestic
+service in Greenwich, slept at the "home." More
+horrible still is the fact disclosed, that they had a
+second room, yet had not the decency to use it.
+"De mortuis nil nisi bonum." They lived according
+to their light; but they had very little light, literally
+or figuratively. Surely we want to teach our poor
+the simple rules of hygiene. One of the gossips, a
+clean, healthy little woman, with a fine baby at her
+breast, referred with pride to her poor kitchen, identical
+in all respects, save dirt, with the home.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, there was one thing that struck me
+forcibly, and that was the sort of qualified reprobation
+with which these good gossips&mdash;really decent people
+in their way&mdash;spoke of the habit of throwing knives.
+Honora had once thrown one at her daughter of
+eighteen, but never meant to do so again. And all
+this under the bells of the old parish church of
+Greenwich in the year of grace 1870!</p>
+
+<p>Clearly, however, the first question is what to do
+with the boy, &aelig;t. twelve. Comporting himself as he
+did in the face of the awful tragedy he had caused,
+this young gentleman must clearly not be lost sight
+of, or it will be the worse for himself and those with
+whom he is brought into contact. Nay, in a few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+years, he will become a centre of influence, and
+radiate around him another such "home," worse,
+perhaps, than the first.</p>
+
+<p>Let our Social Science so far break through the
+programme it may have laid down as to touch on this
+very appropriate subject of squalid homes, and its
+next sitting may be a very useful one indeed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<h3>BATHING IN THE FAR EAST.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Visions of Oriental splendour and magnificence float
+across the imagination at the mere mention of the
+storied East. Soaring above all the routine of ordinary
+existence and the commonplaces of history, that
+creative faculty within us pictures Pactolus with its
+golden sands; or recalls from the legendary records
+of childhood the pomp of Aladdin's Princess going to
+her luxurious bath; or brings back to mind the almost
+prosaic minuteness with which the Greek poet describes
+the bath of Ulysses when he returned from
+his wanderings. In the East the bath has ever been
+an institution&mdash;not merely a luxury, but a necessity;
+and it is a proof of the eclectic tendencies of our
+generation that we have domesticated here in the
+West that great institution, the Hammam, or Turkish
+bath, which the Romans were wise enough to adopt,
+after their Eastern experience, more than two thousand
+years ago. Of none of these Oriental splendours,
+however, has the present narrative to tell. I ask
+those interested in social questions to take a very
+early Sunday expedition to the East End of London,
+and catch a glimpse of those whom, after what I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+have to relate, it would be libel to call the "Great
+Unwashed." We will look at East London engaged
+in the interesting process of performing its ablutions.</p>
+
+<p>Very enjoyable is a Saturday afternoon stroll in
+Victoria Park. Those gentlemen of London who sit
+at home at ease are apt to think of the East End as
+a collection of slums, with about as much breathing
+space for its congregated thousands as that supplied
+to the mites in a superannuated Cheshire cheese. Let
+us pass through Bethnal Green Road, and, leaving
+behind the new Museum, go under a magic portal
+into the stately acres which bear the name of our
+Sovereign. On our right is the Hospital for Diseases
+of the Chest, of which the foundation-stone was laid
+by the Prince Consort, and the new wing of which
+our Orientals hope one day to see opened by her
+Majesty in person. Most convincing test of all is
+the situation of this Consumptive Hospital&mdash;showing
+the salubrity of the Eastern breezes. Inside the imposing
+gate the visitor will find extensive cricket-grounds
+interspersed with broad pastures, whose flocks
+are the reverse of Arcadian in hue. Cricket-balls
+whiz about us like shells at Inkermann; and the
+suggestive "Thank you" of the scouts forces the
+passer-by into unwonted activity as he shies the
+ball to the bowler. Then there are roundabouts
+uncountable, and gymnasia abundant. There are
+bosquets for the love-makers, and glassy pools,
+studded with islands innumerable, over which many<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+a Lady of the Lake steers her shallop, while Oriental
+sailor-boys canoe wildly along. There are flower-beds
+which need not blush to be compared with Kew
+or the Crystal Palace. But it is not with such that
+we are now concerned. On one of those same lakes
+over which, on Saturday evening, sailors in embryo
+float their mimic craft&mdash;and one young gentleman,
+slightly in advance of the rest, directs a very miniature
+steamship&mdash;we see boards suggesting that daily,
+from four to eight <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, the Orientals may immerse
+themselves in the limpid and most tempting waters.
+The depth, they are paternally informed, increases
+towards the centre, buoys marking where it is six
+feet; so that our Eastern friends have no excuse for
+suicide by drowning.</p>
+
+<p>East London birds are early birds, and to catch
+them at their bath you must be literally up with the
+lark. Towards six o'clock is the most fashionable
+hour for our metropolitan Pactolus; and, as it is
+some miles distant from what can, by any stretch of
+courtesy, be called the West End, and as there are no
+workmen's trains on a Sunday morning, a long walk
+or cab drive is inevitable for all who would witness
+the disporting of our amphibious Orientals. Rising
+thus betimes on a recent "Sunday morning before
+the bells did ring," I sped me to the bathing pond,
+judiciously screened off by shrubs from the main path.
+It was between the appointed hours that I arrived;
+and, long before I saw anything, the ringing laughter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+of the young East reached me through the shrubs.
+Threading the path which led to the lake, I found
+the water literally alive with men, boys, and
+hobbledehoys, revelling in the water like young
+hippopotami on the Nile. Boys were largely in the
+ascendant&mdash;boys from ten to fifteen years of age
+swam like young Leanders, and sunned themselves on
+the bank, in the absence of towels, as the preparative
+to dressing, or smoked their pipes in a state of nature.
+It is only just to say that while I remained, I heard
+little if any language that could be called "foul."
+Very free and easy, of course, were the remarks, and
+largely illustrative of the vulgar tongue; not without
+a share of light chaff directed against myself, whose
+presence by the lake-side puzzled my young friends.
+I received numerous invitations to "peel" and have a
+dip; and one young urchin assured me in the most
+patronizing way possible that he "wouldn't laugh at
+me" if I could not get on. The language may not
+have been quite so refined as that which I heard a
+few days before from the young gentlemen with tall
+hats and blue ties at Lord's; but I do say advisedly
+that it would more than bear comparison with that of
+the bathers in the Serpentine, where my ears have
+often been assailed with something far worse than
+anything I heard in East London. In the matter of
+clothes, too, the apparel of our young friends was indeed
+Eastern in its simplicity; yet they left it unprotected
+on the bank with a confidence that did honour to our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+common humanity in general, and to the regulations
+of Victoria Park in particular. Swimming in some
+sort was almost universal among the bathers, showing
+that their visit to the water was not an isolated event
+in their existence, but a constant as it is a wholesome
+habit. The Oriental population were for the most
+part apparently well fed; and one saw there lithe and
+active frames, either careering gracefully along in the
+old style of swimming, or adopting the new and
+scientific method which causes the human form divine
+to approach very nearly to the resemblance of a rather
+excited grampus.</p>
+
+<p>But inexorable Time warns the youthful bathers
+that they must sacrifice to the Graces; and some
+amusing incidents occur during the process. Generally
+speaking, though the amount of attire is not
+excessive, considerable effort in the way of pinning
+and hitching is required to get things in their proper
+places. A young gentleman was reduced to inexpressible
+grief, and held up to the scorn of his fellow-bathers,
+by the fact that, in the course of his al fresco
+toilette, one of his feet went through his inexpressibles
+in an honourable quarter, instead of proceeding
+by the proper route; the error interested his friends
+vastly&mdash;for they are as critical as the most fastidious
+could be of any singularity in attire, and they held
+the unfortunate juvenile in his embarrassing position
+for a long time, to his intense despair, until he was
+rescued from his ignoble position by some grown-up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+friend. Then, the young East is prone to the pleasures
+of tobacco. It was, I presume, before breakfast
+with most of the bathers, and smoking under those
+conditions is a trial even to the experienced. Some,
+pale from their long immersion&mdash;for theirs was no
+transient dip&mdash;grew paler still after they had discussed
+the pipe or cigar demanded of them by rigorous
+custom. Fashion reigns supreme among the gamins
+of the East as well as among the ladies of the West.
+Off they went, however, cleaner and fresher than
+before&mdash;tacitly endorsing by their matutinal amusement
+the motto that has come down from the philosopher
+of old, and even now reigns supreme from
+Bermondsey to Belgravia, that "water is a most
+excellent thing."</p>
+
+<p>The day may arrive perhaps when, having embanked
+the Thames, we shall follow suit to the Seine
+and the Rhine, by tenanting it with cheap baths for
+the many. Until we do so, the stale joke of the
+"Great Unwashed" recoils upon ourselves, and is no
+less symptomatic of defective sanitary arrangements
+than the possibility of a drought in Bermondsey.
+But we are forgetting our bathers. They have gone,
+leaving the place to solitude&mdash;some, I hope, home to
+breakfast, others out among the flower-walks or on the
+greensward. It is a gloomy, overcast, muggy, unseasonable
+July morning; and the civil attendant by the lake-side
+tells me that the gathering has not been so large
+as usual. The young Orientals&mdash;as is the custom of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+their race&mdash;love sunshine. They get little enough of
+it, Heaven knows. The next bright Sunday morning,
+any one who happens to be awake between the hours
+mentioned, and who would like to add to his experiences
+of metropolitan existence, may do a worse
+thing, and see many a less pleasant sight, than if he
+hailed a hansom and drove by the principal entrance
+of Victoria Park to our Eastern Bath.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>AMONG THE QUAKERS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is no more engaging or solemn subject of contemplation
+than the decay of a religious belief. Right
+or wrong, by that faith men have lived and died,
+perhaps for centuries; and one cannot see it pass out
+from the consciousness of humanity without something
+more than a cursory thought as to the reasons
+of its decadence. Being led by exceptional causes to
+take a more than common interest in those forms of
+belief which lie beyond the pale of the Church of
+England, I was attracted by a notice in the public
+journals that on the following morning the Society of
+Friends would assemble from all parts of England
+and open a Conference to inquire into the causes
+which had brought about the impending decay of
+their body. So, then, the fact of such decay stood
+confessed. In most cases the very last persons to
+realize the unwelcome truth are those who hold the
+doctrines that are becoming effete. Quakerism must,
+I felt, be in a very bad condition indeed when its own
+disciples called together a conference to account for
+its passing away. Neither men nor communities, as
+a rule, act crowner's 'quest on their own decease.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+That faith, it was clear, must be almost past praying
+for which, disbelieving, as our modern Quietism does,
+the efficacy of assemblies, and trusting all to the
+inward illumination of individuals, should yet summon
+a sort of Quaker &OElig;cumenical Council. I thought
+I should like to probe this personal light myself, and
+by inquiring of one or two of the members of the
+body, learn what they thought of the matter. I was
+half inclined to array myself in drab, and <i>tutoyer</i> the
+first of the body I chanced to encounter in my walks
+abroad. But then it occurred to me how very seldom
+one did meet a Quaker nowadays except in the
+"month of Maying." I actually had to cast about
+for some time before I could select from a tolerably
+wide and heterogeneous circle of acquaintance two
+names of individuals belonging to the Society of
+Friends; though I could readily remember half a
+dozen of every other culte, from Ultramontanes down
+to Jumpers. These two, at all events, I would
+"interview," and so forestall the Conference with a
+little select synod of my own.</p>
+
+<p>It was possible, of course, to find a ludicrous side
+to the question; but, as I said, I approached it
+seriously. Sydney Smith, with his incorrigible habit
+of joking, questioned the existence of Quaker babies&mdash;a
+position which, if proven, would, of course, at once
+account for the diminution of adult members of the
+sect. It was true I had never seen a Quaker infant;
+but I did not therefore question their existence, any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+more than I believed postboys and certain humble
+quadrupeds to be immortal because I had never seen
+a dead specimen of either. The question I acknowledged
+at once to be a social and religious, not a
+physiological one. Why is Quakerism, which has
+lived over two hundred years, from the days of George
+Fox, and stood as much persecution as any system of
+similar age, beginning to succumb to the influences
+of peace and prosperity? Is it the old story of Capua
+and Cann&aelig; over again? Perhaps it is not quite
+correct to say that it is now beginning to decline; nor,
+as a fact, is this Conference the first inquiry which
+the body itself has made into its own incipient decay.
+It is even said that symptoms of such an issue showed
+themselves as early as the beginning of the eighteenth
+century; and prize essays have been from time to
+time written as to the causes, before the Society so
+far fell in with the customs of the times as to call a
+council for the present very difficult and delicate inquiry.
+The first prize essay by William Rountree
+attributes the falling off to the fact that the early
+Friends, having magnified a previously slighted
+truth&mdash;that of the Indwelling Word&mdash;fell into the
+natural error of giving it an undue place, so depriving
+their representations of Christian doctrine of the symmetry
+they would otherwise have possessed, and influencing
+their own practices in such a way as to
+contract the basis on which Christian fellowship rests.
+A second prize essay, called "The Peculium," takes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+a still more practical view, and points out in the
+most unflattering way that the Friends, by eliminating
+from their system all attention to the arts,
+music, poetry, the drama, &amp;c., left nothing for the
+exercise of their faculties save eating, drinking, and
+making money. "The growth of Quakerism," says
+Mr. T. Hancock, the author of this outspoken essay,
+"lies in its enthusiastic tendency. The submission
+of Quakers to the commercial tendency is signing
+away the life of their own schism. Pure enthusiasm
+and the pursuit of money (which <i>is</i> an enthusiasm)
+can never coexist, never co-operate; but," he adds,
+"the greatest loss of power reserved for Quakerism is
+the reassumption by the Catholic Church of those
+Catholic truths which Quakerism was separated to
+witness and to vindicate."</p>
+
+<p>I confess myself, however, so far Quaker too that
+I care little for the written testimony of friends or
+foes. I have, in all my religious wanderings and inquiries,
+adopted the method of oral examination; so I
+found myself on a recent November morning speeding
+off by rail to the outskirts of London to visit an
+ancient Quaker lady whom I knew very slenderly,
+but who I had heard was sometimes moved by the
+spirit to enlighten a little suburban congregation, and
+was, therefore, I felt the very person to enlighten
+me too, should she be thereunto moved. She was a
+venerable, silver-haired old lady, clad in the traditional
+dress of her sect, and looking very much like a living<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+representation of Elizabeth Fry. She received me
+very cordially; though I felt as if I were a fussy innovation
+of the nineteenth century breaking in upon
+the sacred, old-fashioned quiet of her neat parlour.
+She "thee'd and thou'd" me to my heart's content:
+and&mdash;to summarize the conversation I held with her&mdash;it
+was to the disuse of the old phraseology and the
+discarding of the peculiar dress that she attributed
+most of the falling off which she was much too shrewd
+a woman of the world to shut her eyes to. These
+were, of course, only the outward and visible signs of
+a corresponding change within; but this was why
+the Friends fell off, and gravitated, as she confessed
+they were doing, to steeple-houses, water-dipping, and
+bread-and-wine-worship. She seemed to me like a
+quiet old Prophetess Anna chanting a "Nunc
+Dimittis" of her own on the passing away of her
+faith. She would be glad to depart before the glory
+had quite died out. She said she did not hope much
+from the Conference, and, to my amazement, rather
+gloried in the old irreverent title given by the Independents
+to her forefathers from their "quaking and
+trembling" when they heard the Word of God, though
+she preferred still more the older title of "Children
+of the Light." She was, in fact, a rigid old Conservative
+follower of George Fox, from the top of her
+close-bordered cap to the skirts of her grey silk gown.
+I am afraid my countenance expressed incredulity as
+to her rationale of the decay; for, as I rose to go, she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+said, "Thou dost not agree, friend, with what I have
+said to thee&mdash;nay, never shake thy head; it would be
+wonderful if thou didst, when our own people don't.
+Stay; I'll give thee a note to my son in London,
+though he will gainsay much of what I have told
+thee." She gave me the letter, which was just what
+I wanted, for I felt I had gained little beyond a pleasant
+experience of old-world life from my morning's
+jaunt. I partook of her kindly hospitality, was
+shown over her particularly cosy house, gardens, and
+hothouses, and meditated, on my return journey,
+upon many particulars I learnt for the first time as to
+the early history of Fox; realizing what a consensus
+there was between the experiences of all illuminati.
+I smiled once and again over the quaint title of one
+of Fox's books which my venerable friend had quoted
+to me&mdash;viz., "A Battle-door for Teachers and Professors
+to learn Plural and Singular. <i>You</i> to <i>Many</i>,
+and <i>Thou</i> to <i>One</i>; Singular, One, <i>Thou</i>; Plural, Many,
+<i>You</i>." While so meditating, my cab deposited me at
+the door of a decidedly "downy" house, at the West
+End, where my prospective friend was practising in I
+will not mention which of the learned professions.
+Both the suburban cottage of the mother and the
+London m&eacute;nage of the son assured me that they had
+thriven on Quakerism; and it was only then I recollected
+that a poor Quaker was as rare a personage as
+an infantile member of the Society.</p>
+
+<p>The young man&mdash;who neither in dress, discourse,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+nor manner differed from an ordinary English gentleman&mdash;smiled
+as he read his mother's lines, and, with
+a decorous apology for disturbing the impressions
+which her discourse might have left upon me, took
+precisely the view which had been latent in my own
+mind as to the cause of the Society's decay.
+Thoroughly at one with them still on the doctrine of
+the illuminating power of the Spirit in the individual
+conscience, he treated the archaic dress, the obsolete
+phraseology, the obstinate opposition to many innocent
+customs of the age, simply as anachronisms. He
+pointed with pride to the fact that our greatest living
+orator was a member of the Society; and claimed for
+the underlying principle of Quakerism&mdash;namely, the
+superiority of a conscience void of offence over written
+scripture or formal ceremony&mdash;the character of being
+in essence the <i>broadest</i> creed of Christendom. Injudicious
+retention of customs which had grown
+meaningless had, he felt sure, brought down upon the
+body that most fatal of all influences&mdash;contempt.
+"You see it in your own Church," he said. "There
+is a school which, by reviving obsolete doctrines and
+practices, will end in getting the Church of England
+disestablished as it is already disintegrated. You see
+it even in the oldest religion of all&mdash;Judaism. You
+see, I mean, a school growing into prominence and
+power which discards all the accumulations of ages,
+and by going back to real antiquity, at once brings
+the system more into unison with the century, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+prevents that contempt attaching to it which will
+accrue wherever a system sets its face violently
+against the tone of current society." He thought
+the Conference quite unnecessary. "There needs no
+ghost come from the dead to tell us that, Horatio,"
+he said, cheerily. "They will find out that Quakerism
+is not a proselytizing religion," he added; "which, of
+course, we knew before. They will point to the
+fashionable attire, the gold rings, and lofty chignons
+of our younger sisters as direct defiance of primitive
+custom. I am unorthodox enough"&mdash;and he smiled
+as he used that word&mdash;"to think that the attire is
+more becoming to my younger sisters, just as the
+Society's dress is to my dear mother." That young
+man, and the youthful sisters he told me of, stood as
+embodied answers to the question I had proposed to
+myself. They were outward and visible evidences of
+the doctrine of Quaker "development." The idea is
+not dead. The spirit is living still. It is the spirit
+that underlies all real religion&mdash;namely, the personal
+relation of the human soul to God as the source of
+illumination. That young man was as good a Quaker
+at heart as George Fox or William Penn themselves;
+and the "apology" he offered for his transformed
+faith was a better one than Barclay's own. I am
+wondering whether the Conference will come to anything
+like so sensible a conclusion as to why Quakerism
+is declining.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+<h3>PENNY READINGS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Who has ever penetrated beneath the surface of
+clerical society&mdash;meaning thereby the sphere of
+divinities (mostly female) that doth hedge a curate
+of a parish&mdash;without being sensible of the eligibility
+of Penny Readings for a place in Mystic London?
+When the Silly Season is at its very bathos; when
+the monster gooseberries have gone to seed and the
+showers of frogs ceased to fall; after the matrimonial
+efforts of Margate or Scarborough, and before the
+more decided business of the Christmas Decorations,
+then there is deep mystery in the penetralia of every
+parish. The great scheme of Penny Readings is
+being concocted, and all the available talent of the
+district&mdash;all such as is "orthodox" and "correct"&mdash;is
+laid under contribution.</p>
+
+<p>It is true to a proverb that we English people have
+a knack of doing the best possible things in the worst
+possible way; and that not unfrequently when we do
+once begin doing them we do them to death. It
+takes some time to convince us that the particular
+thing is worth doing at all; but, once persuaded, we
+go in for it with all our British might and main.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+The beard-and-moustache movement was a case in
+point. Some years ago a moustache was looked upon
+by serious English people as decidedly reckless and
+dissipated. A beard was fit only for a bandit. Nowadays,
+the mildest youth in the Young Men's
+Christian Association may wear a moustache without
+being denounced as "carnal," and paterfamilias revels
+in the beard of a sapeur, no misopogon daring to say
+him nay. To no "movement," however, does the
+adage "Vires acquirit eundo" apply more thoroughly
+than to that connected with "Penny Readings."
+Originally cropping up timidly in rustic and suburban
+parishes, it has of late taken gigantic strides, and
+made every parish where it does <i>not</i> exist, rural or
+metropolitan, very exceptional indeed. There was a
+sound principle lying at the bottom of the movement,
+in so far as it was designed to bring about a fusion of
+classes; though, perhaps, it involved too much of an
+assumption that the "working man" had to be lectured
+to, or read to, by his brother in purple and fine
+linen. Still the theory was so far sound. Broad
+cloth was to impart to fustian the advantages it possessed
+in the way of reading, singing, fiddling, or
+what not; and that not gratuitously, which would
+have offended the working man's dignity, but for the
+modest sum of one penny, which, whilst Lazarus was
+not too poor to afford, Dives condescended to accept,
+and apply to charitable purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Such being, in brief, the theory of the Penny<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+Reading movement, it may be interesting to see how
+it is carried out in practice. Now, in order to ascertain
+this, I availed myself of several opportunities
+afforded by the commencement of the Penny Reading
+season, which may be said to synchronize very nearly
+with the advent of London fogs, and attended the
+opening of the series in several widely different localities.
+In describing my experiences it would perhaps
+be invidious to specify the exact locality where they
+were gathered. I prefer to collate those experiences
+which range from Campden Hill to Camden Town
+inclusive. Amid many distinguishing traits there
+are common elements traceable in all, which may
+enable us to form some estimate of the working of the
+scheme, and possibly to offer a few words of advice to
+those interested therein.</p>
+
+<p>In most cases the Penny Readings are organized
+by the parochial clergy. We will be orthodox, and
+consider them so to be on the present occasion. In
+that case, the series would probably be opened by the
+incumbent in person. Some ecclesiastical ladies,
+young and middle-aged, who, rightly or wrongly,
+believe their mission is music, and to whom the
+curate is very probably an attraction, aid his efforts.
+Serious young men read, and others of a more mundane
+turn of mind sing doleful "comic" songs, culled
+from the more presentable of the music-hall r&eacute;pertoire.
+In many cases skilled amateurs or professionals lend
+their valuable assistance; and it is not too much to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+say that many a programme is presented to the
+audience&mdash;ay, and faithfully carried out too&mdash;which
+would do credit to a high-priced concert-room. But,
+then, who make up the audience? Gradually the
+"penny" people have been retiring into the background,
+as slowly but as surely as the old-fashioned
+pits at our theatres are coyly withdrawing under
+the boxes to make way for the stalls. The Penny
+Readings have been found to "draw" a higher class
+of audience than those for whom they were originally
+intended. The curate himself, if unmarried, secures
+the whole spinsterhood of the parish. His rendering
+of the lines, "On the receipt of my mother's picture
+out of Norfolk," is universally acknowledged to be
+"delightful;" and so, in course of time, the Penny
+Readings have been found to supply a good parochial
+income; and the incumbent, applying the proceeds
+to some local charity, naturally wishes to augment
+that income as much as possible. The consequence
+is that the penny people are as completely nowhere
+at the Penny Readings as they are in the free seats
+at their parish church. The whole of the body of
+the room is "stalled off," so to say, for sixpenny
+people, and the penny folk are stowed away anywhere.
+Then, again, in several programmes I have been at
+the pains to analyse, it is palpable that, whilst the
+bulk of the extracts fire over the heads of the poor
+people, one or two are inserted which are as studiously
+aimed at them as the parson's remarks in last<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+Sunday's sermon against public-house loafing. Still
+"naming no names," I attended some readings where
+one of the clergy read a long extract from Bailey's
+"Festus," whilst he was succeeded by a vulgar fellow,
+evidently put in for "the gods," who delivered himself
+of a parody on Ingoldsby, full of the coarsest
+slang&mdash;nay, worse than that, abounding in immoralities
+which, I hope, made the parochial clergy sit
+on thorns, and place the reader on their "Index
+Expurgatorius" from henceforth.</p>
+
+<p>Excellent in its original design, the movement is
+obviously degenerating into something widely different.
+First, I would say, Let your Penny Readings
+be really Penny Readings, and not the egregious
+<i>lucus a non</i> they now are. If there is any distinction,
+the penny people should have the stalls, and then, <i>if
+there were room</i>, the "swells" (I must use an offensive
+term) could come in for sixpence, and stand at the
+back. But there should be no difference at all. Dives
+and Lazarus should sit together, or Dives stop away
+if he were afraid his fine linen may get soiled. Lazarus,
+at all events, must not be lost sight of, or treated
+to second best. The experiment of thus mingling
+them has been tried, I know, and succeeds admirably.
+Dives and Lazarus <i>do</i> hobnob; and though the
+former occasionally tenders a silver coin for his
+entr&eacute;e, he does not feel that he is thereby entitled to
+a better seat. The committee gets the benefit of his
+liberality; and when the accounts are audited in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+spring, Lazarus is immensely pleased at the figure his
+pence make. Then, again, as to the quality of the
+entertainment. Let us remember Lazarus comes
+there to be elevated. That was the theory we set out
+with&mdash;that we, by our reading, or our singing, or
+fiddling, or tootle-tooing on the cornet, could civilize
+our friend in fustian. Do not let us fall into the
+mistake, then, of descending to his standard. We
+want to level him up to ours. Give him the music
+we play in our own drawing-rooms; read the choice
+bits of fiction or poetry to his wife and daughters
+which we should select for our own. Amuse his poor
+little children with the same innocent nonsense with
+which we treat our young people. Above all, don't
+bore him. I do not say, never be serious, because it
+is a great mistake to think Lazarus can only guffaw.
+Read "The Death of Little Nell" or of Paul Dombey,
+and look at Mrs. Lazarus's eyes. Read Tom Hood's
+"Song of the Shirt," and see whether the poor seamstress
+out in the draughty penny seats at the back
+appreciates it or not. I did hear of one parish at the
+West End&mdash;the very same, by the way, I just now
+commended for sticking to the "penny" system&mdash;where
+Hood's "Nelly Gray," proposed to be read by
+the son of one of our best known actors, was tabooed
+as "unedifying." Lazarus does not come to be
+"edified," but to be amused. If he can be at the
+same time instructed, so much the better; but the
+bitter pill must be highly gilded, or he will pocket<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+his penny and spend it in muddy beer at the public-house.
+If the Penny Reading can prevent this&mdash;and
+we see no reason why it should not&mdash;it will have had
+a mission indeed. Finally, I feel sure that there is in
+this movement, and lying only a very little way from
+the surface, a wholesome lesson for Dives too; and
+that is, how little difference there is, after all, between
+himself and Lazarus. I have been surprised to see
+how some of the more recherch&eacute; "bits" of our
+genuine humorists have told upon the penny people,
+and won applause which the stalest burlesque pun or
+the nastiest music-hall inanity would have failed to
+elicit. Lazarus must be represented on the platform
+then, as well as comfortably located in the audience.
+He must be asked to read, or sing, or fiddle, or do
+whatever he can. If not, he will feel he is being
+read at, or sung to, or fiddled for, and will go off to
+the Magpie and Stump, instead of bringing missus
+and the little ones to the "pa'son's readings." Let
+the Penny Reading teach us the truth&mdash;and how true
+it is&mdash;that we are all "working men." What matters
+it whether we work with head or with hand&mdash;with
+brain or muscle?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>DARWINISM ON THE DEVIL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>It has been said&mdash;perhaps more satirically than
+seriously&mdash;that theology could not get on without its
+devil. Certain it is that wherever there has been
+a vivid realization of the Spirit of Light, there, as if
+by way of antithesis, there has been an equally clear
+recognition of the Power of Darkness. Ormuzd&mdash;under
+whatever name recognised&mdash;generally supposes
+his opponent Ahriman; and there have even been
+times, as in the prevalence of the Manichean heresy,
+when the Evil Spirit has been affected in preference
+to the good&mdash;probably only another way of saying
+that morals have been held subordinate to intellect.
+But I am growing at once prosy and digressive.</p>
+
+<p>The announcement that the "Liberal Social
+Union" would devote one of their sweetly heretical
+evenings at the Beethoven Rooms, Harley Street, to
+an examination of the Darwinian development of the
+Evil Spirit, was one not to be scorned by an inquirer
+into the more eccentric and erratic phases of theology.
+Literary engagements stood in the way&mdash;for the
+social heretics gather on a Friday&mdash;but come what
+might, I would hear them discuss diabolism. Leaving<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+my printer's devil to indulge in typographical errors
+according to his own sweet will (and I must confess
+he <i>did</i> wander), I presented myself, as I thought in
+good time, at the portals of the Harley Street room,
+where his Satanic Majesty was to be heretically anatomized.
+But, alas! I had not calculated aright the
+power of that particular potentate to "draw." No
+sooner had I arrived at the cloak-room than the very
+hats and umbrellas warned me of the number of his
+votaries. Evening Dress was "optional;" and I
+frankly confess, at whatever risk of his displeasure,
+that I had not deemed Mephistopheles worthy of a
+swallow-tailed coat. I came in the garb of ordinary
+life; and at once felt uncomfortable when, mounting
+the stairs, I was received by a portly gentleman and
+an affable lady in violent tenue de soir. The room
+was full to the very doors; and as soon as I squeezed
+into earshot of the lecturer (who had already commenced
+his discourse) I was greeted by a heterodox
+acquaintance in elaborate dress-coat and rose-pink
+gloves. Experience in such matters had already told
+me&mdash;and thereupon I proved it by renewed personal
+agony&mdash;that an Englishman never feels so uncomfortable
+as when dressed differently from his compeers
+at any kind of social gathering. Mrs. T&mdash;&mdash; asks
+you to dinner, and you go clad in the correct costume
+in deference to the prandial meal, but find all the rest
+in morning dress. Mrs. G&mdash;&mdash;, on the contrary,
+sends you a rollicking note to feed with a few friends<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>&mdash;no
+party; and you go straight from office to find a
+dozen heavily-got-up people sniggering at your frock
+coat and black tie. However, as I said, on this occasion
+the lecturer, Dr. Zerffi, was in the thick of what
+proved to be a very attractive lecture; so I was not
+the observed of all observers for more than two or
+three minutes, and was able to give him my whole
+attention as soon as I had recovered from my confusion.
+Dr. Zerffi said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Darwin's theory of evolution and selection
+has changed our modern mode of studying the
+inorganic and organic phenomena of nature, and
+investigating the realities of truth. His theory
+is not altogether new, having been first proclaimed
+by Leibnitz, and followed up with regard to history
+by Giovanni Battista Vico. Oken and Goethe amplified
+it towards the end of the last, and at the beginning
+of the present century. Darwin, however, has systematized
+the theory of evolution, and now the
+branches of human knowledge can only be advantageously
+pursued if we trace in all phenomena,
+whether material or spiritual, a beginning and a
+gradual development. One fact has prominently
+been established, that there is order in the eternal
+change, that this order is engendered by law, and
+that law and order are the criterions of an all-wise
+ruling Spirit pervading the Universe. To this positive
+spirit of law a spirit of negation, an element of
+rebellion and mischief, of mockery and selfishness,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+commonly called the Devil, has been opposed from
+the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared, till very lately, as though God had
+created the world only for the purpose of amusing
+the Devil, and giving him an abundance of work, all
+directed to destroying the happiness of God's finest
+creation&mdash;man. Treating the Devil from a Darwinian
+point of view, we may assert that he developed himself
+from the protoplasm of ignorance, and in the gloomy
+fog of fear and superstition grew by degrees into a
+formidable monster, being changed by the overheated
+imaginations of dogmatists into a reptile, an owl, a
+raven, a dog, a wolf, a lion, a centaur, a being half
+monkey, half man, till, finally, he became a polite and
+refined human being.</p>
+
+<p>Man once having attained a certain state of consciousness,
+saw sickness, evil, and death around him,
+and as it was usual to assign to every effect some
+tangible cause, man developed the abstract notion of
+evil into a concrete form, which changed with the
+varying impressions of climate, food, and the state of
+intellectual progress. To the white man the Devil
+was black, and to the black man white. Originally,
+then, the Devil was merely a personification of the
+apparently destructive forces of nature. Fire was his
+element. The Indians had their Rakshas and Uragas,
+the Egyptians their Typhon, and the Persians their
+Devas. The Israelites may claim the honour of
+having brought the theory of evil into a coarse and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+sensual form, and the Christians took up this conception,
+and developed it with the help of the Gnostics,
+Plato, and the Fathers dogmatically into an entity.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not enter on a minute inquiry into the
+origin of this formidable antagonist of common sense
+and real piety; I intend to take up the three principal
+phases of the Devil's development, at a period
+when he already appears to us as a good Christian
+Devil, and always bearing in mind Mr. Darwin's
+theory of evolution, I shall endeavour to trace
+spiritually the changes in the conceptions of evil
+from the Devil of Luther to that of Milton, and at
+last to that of Goethe.</p>
+
+<p>The old Jewish Rabbis and theological doctors were
+undoubtedly the first to trace, genealogically, the pedigree
+of the Christian Devil in its since general form. If
+we take the trouble to compare chap. i. v. 27 of Genesis
+with chap. ii. v. 21, we will find that two distinct creations
+of man are given. The one is different from the other. In
+the first instance we have the clear, indisputable statement,
+"So God created man in his own image:" and
+to give greater force to this statement the text goes
+on, "in the image of God created he him; male and
+female created he them." Both man and woman were
+then created. Nothing could be plainer. But as
+though no creation of man had taken place at all, we
+find, chap. ii. v. 7: "And the Lord formed man of
+the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils
+the breath of life." This was evidently a second man,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+differently created from the first, who is stated to have
+been made "in the image of God himself." This
+second creature was entrusted with the nomination
+and classification of all created things; that is, with
+the formation of language, and the laying down of
+the first principles of botany and zoology. After he
+had performed this arduous task it happened that
+"for Adam there was not found an help meet for
+him" (verse 20), and chap. ii. v. 21 tells us, "The
+Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and
+he slept; and He took one of his ribs and closed up
+the flesh instead thereof;" and verse 22, "And of the
+rib which the Lord God had taken from man made
+He a woman, and brought her unto man." Adam
+then joyfully exclaims (verse 23), "This <i>is</i> now bone
+of my bones, and flesh of my flesh." This cannot
+but lead to the conclusion that this woman was an
+altogether different creature from the first. The contradiction
+was most ingeniously explained by the
+learned Jewish Rabbis, who considered the first woman
+the organic germ from which the special Hebrew-Christian
+devils were evolved. The Rabbis discovered
+that the name of the first woman was
+"Lilith"<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> (the nightly); they knew positively&mdash;and
+who can disprove their assertion?&mdash;that she was the
+most perfect beauty, more beautiful than Eve; she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+had long waving hair, bright eyes, red lips and
+cheeks, and a charmingly finished form and complexion;
+but having been created at the same moment
+as the first man, and like him, in the image of God,
+she refused to become man's wife; she objected to
+being subordinate to the male part of creation&mdash;she
+was, in fact, the first strong-minded woman, claiming
+the same rights as man, though a woman in body and
+form. Under these circumstances the existence of
+the human race was deemed to be an impossibility,
+and therefore the Lord had to make good his error,
+and He created Eve as the completing part of man.
+The first woman left her co-equally created male, and
+was changed into an enormous, most beautiful, and
+seducing "She Devil," and her very thoughts brought
+forth daily a legion of devils&mdash;incarnations of pride,
+vanity, conceit, and unnaturalness. Happily these
+devils were so constituted that they devoured one
+another. But in their rage they could take possession
+of others, and more especially entered little
+children&mdash;boys under three days old, girls under
+twenty days&mdash;and devoured them. This myth, by
+means of evolution and the law of action and re-action,
+engendered the further legend about the existence of
+three special angels who acted as powerful antidotes
+to these devils, and whose names, "Senoi, Sansenoi,
+and Sanmangeloph," if written on a piece of parchment
+suspended round the neck of children afforded
+certain protection against them.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
+<p>The origin of the Devil may thus be traced to the
+first vain contempt for the eternal laws of nature.
+The woman, refusing to be a woman, engenders
+devils; the man, trying to be a God, loses paradise
+and his innocence, for the element of the supernatural
+intruded upon him and abstracted his thoughts
+from this earth. These were the half idealistic and
+half realistic elements from which the three greatest
+spiritual incarnations of the Evil Spirit sprung up.
+Luther took the Evil Spirit as a bodily entity, with
+big horns, fiery eyes, a reddish, protruding tongue, a
+long tail, and the hoof of a horse. In this latter
+attribute we trace at once the Kentaur element of
+ancient times. Through nearly one thousand three
+hundred years from Tertullian and Thaumaturgus
+down to Luther, every one was accustomed to look
+upon life as one great battle with tens of thousands
+of devils, assaulting, harassing, annoying, and seducing
+humanity. All fought, quarrelled, talked,
+and wrestled with the Devil. He was more spoken
+of in the pulpits of the Christian Churches, written
+about in theological and scientific books, than God or
+Christ. All misfortunes were attributed to him.
+Thunder and lightning, hailstorms and the rinderpest,
+the hooping cough and epileptic fits were all the
+Devil's work. A man who suffered from madness
+was said to be possessed by a legion of Evil Spirits.
+The Devil settled himself in the gentle dimples of
+a pretty girl with the same ease and comfort as in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+the wrinkles of an old woman. Everything that was
+inexplicable was evil. Throughout the Middle Ages
+the masses and the majority of their learned theological
+teachers believed the Greek and Latin classics
+were inspired by Evil Spirits; that sculptures or
+paintings, if beautiful, were of evil; that all cleverness
+in Mathematics, Chemistry, or Medicine proved
+the presence of the corrupting Evil Spirit working in
+man. Any bridge over a chasm or a rapid river was
+the work of the Devil; even the most beautiful
+Gothic cathedrals, like those of Cologne and St.
+Stephen at Vienna were constructed by architects
+who served their apprenticeship in the infernal regions.
+The Devil sat grinning on the inkstands of
+poets and learned men, dictating to the poor deluded
+mortals, as the price for their souls, charming love-songs
+or deep theological and philosophical essays.
+It was extremely dangerous during this period of
+man's historical evolution to be better or wiser than
+the ignorant masses. Learning, talent, a superior
+power of reasoning, love for truth, a spirit of inquiry,
+the capacity of making money by clever trading, an
+artistic turn of mind, success in life, even in the
+Church, were only so many proofs that the soul had
+been sold to some dwarfish or giant messenger from
+Lucifer, who could appear in a thousand different
+forms. Man was, since his assumed Fall, the exclusive
+property of the coarse and vulgar conception of
+the Evil Spirit. Luther was full of these ideas, he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+was brought up in this belief, and though he unconsciously
+felt that the Devil ought to be expelled from
+our creed, he did not dare to attempt the reform of
+humanity by annihilating the mischief-maker: he could
+not rob man of his dearest spiritual possession; had
+he thought of consigning the Devil to the antediluvian
+period of our moral and social formation, he
+never could have succeeded in his reform. The Devil,
+in fact, was his strongest helpmate; he could describe
+the ritual of the Romish Church as the work of the
+Evil Spirit, produced to delude mankind. The Devil
+had his Romish prayers, his processions, his worship
+of relics, his remission of sins, his confessional, his
+infernal synods; he was to Luther an active, rough,
+and material incarnation of the roaring lion of the
+Scriptures in the shape of the Romish Church, walking
+about visibly, tangibly, bodily amongst men,
+devouring all who believed in the Pope, and who disbelieved
+in this stupid phantom of a dogmatically
+blinded imagination.</p>
+
+<p>The Evolution-theory may be clearly traced in the
+two next conceptions: Milton's Satan and Goethe's
+Mephistopheles. They differ as strongly as the periods
+and the poems in which they appear. Milton's Satan
+loses the vulgar flesh and bone, horn and hoof nature&mdash;he
+is an epic character; whilst Goethe's Devil is an
+active dramatic entity of modern times. Milton's
+representative of evil is a very powerful conception&mdash;it
+is evil in abstracto; whilst Mephistopheles is evil<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+in concreto&mdash;the intelligible, tangible Devil, evolved
+by the power of selection from an antediluvian
+monster, and transformed through a civilizing process
+of at least six thousand years into its present form.
+Milton's Satan is a debased intellect who in his
+boundless ambition is still a supernatural being.
+Mephistopheles is the incarnation of our complicated
+modern social evils, full of petty tricks and learned
+quotations; he piously turns up his eyes, he lies,
+doubts, calumniates, seduces, philosophizes, sneers,
+but all in a polite and highly educated way; he is a
+scholar, a divine, a politician, a diplomatist. Satan is
+capable of wild enthusiasm, he sometimes remembers
+his bright sinless past; "from the lowest deep," he
+yearns, "once more to lift himself up, in spite of fate,
+nearer to his ancient seat;"&mdash;he hopes to re-enter
+heaven, "to purge off his gloom;" some remnant of
+heavenly innocence still clings to him, for, though
+<i>fallen</i>, he is still an <i>angel</i>! Mephistopheles in his
+real nature is without any higher aspirations, he
+argues with a sarcastic smile on his lips, he is ironical
+with sophisticated sharpness. Satan has unconsciously
+gigantic ideas, he is ready to wrestle with God for
+the dominion of heaven. Mephistopheles is perfectly
+conscious of his littleness as opposed to our better
+intellectual nature, and does evil for evil's sake.
+Satan is sublime through the grandeur of his primitive
+elements, pride and ambition. Mephistopheles
+is only grave in his pettiness; he does not refuse an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+orgie with drunken students, indulges in jokes with
+monkeys, works miracles in the witch's kitchen, delights
+in the witch's "one-time-one;" distributes little
+tracts "to stir up the witch's heart with special
+fire." Satan has nothing vulgar in him: he is capable
+of melancholy feelings, he can be pathetic and eloquent.
+Mephistopheles laughs at the stupidity of the
+world, and at his own. Satan believes in God and
+in himself, whilst Mephistopheles is the "Spirit that
+denies;" he believes neither in God nor in heaven
+nor in hell; he does not believe in his own entity&mdash;he
+is no supernatural, fantastic being, but man incarnate:
+he is the evil part of a good whole, which loses its
+entity when once seen and recognised in its real
+nature; for Mephistopheles in reality is our own
+ignorant, besotted, animal nature, cultivated and developed
+at the expense of our intellectual part.</p>
+
+<p>Luther's devil is the outgrowth of humanity in
+long-clothes. Man, ignorant of the forces of the
+Cosmos, blinded by theological dialectics and metaphysical
+subtleties, incapable of understanding the
+real essence of our moral and intellectual nature, philosophically
+untrained to observe that evil is but a
+sequence of the disturbed balance between our double
+nature&mdash;spirit and matter&mdash;attributed all mischief in
+the intellectual as well as in our social spheres to an
+absolute powerful being who continually tormented
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Milton's Satan is the poetical conception of man<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+developed from an infant in long-clothes into a
+boisterous but dreamy youth, ascribing to every incomprehensible
+effect an arbitrary, poetical cause.
+Goethe's Mephistopheles, lastly is the truthful conception
+of evil as it really exists in a thousand forms,
+evolved from our own misunderstood and artificially
+and dogmatically distorted nature.</p>
+
+<p>Goethe in destroying the Devil as such, consigned
+him to the primeval myths and legends of ignorance
+and fear, and has shown us the real nature of the evil.</p>
+
+<p>What then is the Devil?</p>
+
+<p>The Devil took, as I said in the beginning, his
+origin in our blinded senses, in an undue preponderance
+of that which is material in us over that
+which is intellectual. The moment we look the Evil
+Spirit in the face, he vanishes as an <i>absolute</i> being and
+becomes&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i8">A portion of that power<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which wills the bad and works the good at every hour.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After having been exposed during several periods
+of generations to new conditions, thus rendering a
+great amount of variation possible, the Devil has
+developed from a monster into a monkey, and from a
+monkey into a man endowed with the nature of a
+monkey and the propensities of a monster. In the
+State and in the Church, in Arts and Sciences, the
+Devil is the principle of injustice, hypocrisy, ugliness,
+and ignorance. Goethe has annihilated the ideal
+poetical grandeur of Milton's Satan; he has stripped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+Luther's Devil of his vulgar realism; Goethe has
+driven Satan from an imaginary hell, where he preferred
+to rule instead of worshipping and serving in
+heaven, and with the sponge of common sense he
+wiped the horned monster, drawn by the imagination
+of dogmatists, from the black board of ignorance. In
+banishing the Evil Spirit into the dominion of myths,
+Goethe showed him in his real nature. Darwin displaced
+man from the exalted pedestal of a special
+creation, and endeavoured to trace him as the development
+of cosmical elements. Darwin enabled us to
+look upon man as the completing link in the great chain
+of the gradual evolution of the life-giving forces of
+the Universe, and he rendered thus our position more
+comprehensible and natural. Goethe, in proving that
+the Evil Spirit of ancient and Hebrew-Christian times
+was a mere phantom of an ill-regulated fantasy,
+taught us to look for the real origin of evil. What
+was a metaphysical incomprehensibility became an
+intelligible reality. The Demon can be seen in
+"Faust" as in a mirror, and in glancing into it we
+behold our Darwinian progenitor, the animal,
+face to face. Before the times of Goethe, with very
+few exceptions, the Evil Spirit was an entity with
+whom any one might become familiar&mdash;in fact, the
+"spiritus familiaris" of old. The Devil spoke, roared,
+whispered, could sign contracts. We were able to
+yield our soul to him; and he could bodily enter our
+body. The Devil was a corporeal entity. The rack,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+water, and fire were used to expel him from sorcerers
+and witches, and to send him into all sorts of unclean
+animals. Goethe, in unmasking this phantom, introduced
+him not as something <i>without</i>, but as an element
+<i>within</i> us. The service rendered to humanity in
+showing us the true nature of evil is as grand as the
+service rendered by Mr. Darwin in assigning to man
+his place <i>in</i> nature, and not <i>above</i> nature. It is
+curious that those who have most of the incorrigible
+and immovable animal nature in them should protest
+with the greatest vehemence and clamour against this
+theory. They think by asserting their superiority,
+based on a special creation, to become at once special
+and superior beings, and prefer this position to trying,
+through a progressive development in science and
+knowledge, in virtue and honesty, to prove the existence
+of the higher faculties with which man has
+been endowed through his gradual development from
+the lowest phases of living creatures to the highest.
+In assuming the Devil to be something absolute and
+positive, and not something relative and negative,
+man hoped to be better able to grapple with him.
+Mephistopheles is nothing personal; he can, like the
+Creator himself, be only traced in his works. The
+Devil lurks beneath the venerable broadcloth of an
+intolerant and ignorant priest; he uses the seducing
+smiles of a wicked beauty; he stirs the blood of the
+covetous and grasping; he strides through the gilded
+halls of ambitious emperors and ministers, who go<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+with "light hearts" to kill thousands of human
+beings with newly-invented infernal machines; he
+works havoc in the brains of the vain. The Devil
+shuffles the cards for the gambler, and destroys our
+peace whether he makes us win or lose on the turf;
+he sits joyfully grinning on the tops of bottles and
+tankards filled with alcoholic drinks; he entices us
+on Sundays to shut our museums and open our gin-palaces;
+to neglect the education of the masses; and
+then prompts us to accuse them with hypocritical
+respectability of drunkenness and stupidity. It is
+the Devil who turns us into friends of lapdogs and
+makes us enemies of the homeless. The Devil is the
+greatest master in dogmatism; he creates sects who,
+in the name of love and humility, foster hatred and
+pride; the Devil encloses men in a magic circle on
+the barren heath of useless speculation; drives them
+round and round like blinded horses in a mill, starting
+from one point, and after miles and miles of
+travel and fatigue, leading us to the point, sadder but
+not wiser, from which we set out. The Devil makes
+us quarrel whether we ought to have schools with or
+without bigoted religious teachings; he burns incense
+to stupefy our senses, lights candles to obscure our
+sight, amuses the masses with buffooneries to
+prevent them from thinking, draws us away from
+common-sense morality, and leads us, under the pretext
+of a mystic and symbolic religion, to the confessional,
+the very hothouse of mischief. Satan in all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+his shapes and forms as he rules the world has been
+described by Goethe as Egotism. Selfishness is his
+element and real nature. Selfishness not yet realizing
+the divine, because so entirely <i>humane</i> command&mdash;"Do
+unto others as you wish that they should do
+unto you." Selfishness is the only essence of evil. Selfishness
+has divided men into different nations, and
+fosters in them pride, envy, jealousy, and hatred. Mr.
+Darwin has shown that one animal preys on the other,
+that the weaker species has to yield to the stronger.
+Goethe again has shown us how the Evil Spirit drags
+us through life's wild scenes and its flat unmeaningness,
+to seek mere sensual pleasures and to neglect altogether
+our higher and better nature, which is the outgrowth
+of our more complicated, more highly developed organization.
+Were we only to recognise this, our real
+nature, we should leave less to chance and prejudices;
+were we to study man from a physiological, psychological,
+and honestly historical point of view, we should
+soon eliminate selfishness from among us, and be able
+to appreciate what is really the essence of evil. The
+more nearly we approach Darwin's primitive man, the
+ape, the nearer do we draw to the Mephistopheles
+who shows us his exact nature with impudent sincerity
+in Goethe's "Faust."</p>
+
+<p>That which changes our Psyche, that is our intellectual
+faculty with its airy wings of imagination, its
+yearnings for truth, into an ugly, submissive, crawling
+worm, is heartless selfishness. Not without<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+reason is poor guileless Margaret horrified at Mephistopheles.
+She shudders, hides herself on the bosom
+of Faust, like a dove under the wings of an eagle, and
+complains that the Evil Spirit&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">... Always wears such mocking grin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Half cold, half grim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One sees that nought has interest for him;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Tis writ on his brow, and can't be mistaken,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No soul in him can love awaken.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When all goes wrong, when religious, social, and
+political animosities and hatred disturb the peace;
+when unintelligible controversies on the inherited sin,
+the origin of evil, justification, and transubstantiation,
+"grace and free will," the creative and the created,
+mystic incantations, real and unreal presences, the
+like but not equal, the affirmative and the negative
+natures of God and man confuse the finite brains of
+infinite talkers and repeaters of the same things;
+when they quarrel about the wickedness of the hen
+who dared to lay an egg on the Sabbath; when the
+glaring torch of warfare is kindled by the fire of petty
+animosities, then the Evil Spirit of egotism celebrates
+its most glorious festivals.</p>
+
+<p>What can banish this monster, this second and
+worse part of our nature? To look upon it from a
+Darwinian point of view. Goethe saves his fallen
+Faust through useful "occupation," through honest
+hard work for the benefit of mankind. The more we
+make ourselves acquainted with evil, the last remnant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+of our animal nature, in a rational and not mystic
+dogmatical sense, the less we exalt ourselves as exceptional
+creatures above nature, the easier it must
+be for us to dry up the source of superstition and
+ignorance which serves to nourish this social monster.</p>
+
+<p>Let our relations to each other be based on "mutual
+love," for God is love, and selfishness as the antagonist
+of love, and the Devil as the antagonist of God, will
+both vanish.</p>
+
+<p>Let us strive to vanquish our unnatural social organization
+by a natural, social, but at the same time,
+liberal union of all into one common brotherhood, and
+the roaring lion will be silenced for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Let us purify society of all its social, or rather unsocial,
+iniquities and falsehoods, of all ingratitude and
+envy, in striving for an honest regeneration of ourselves,
+and through ourselves of humanity at large,
+convincing one another that man has developed by
+degrees into earth's fairest creature, destined for good
+and happiness, and not for evil and wretchedness, and
+there will be an end of the <i>Devil</i> and all his <i>devilries</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The word is found in Isaiah xxxiv. 14. Translated in the Vulgate
+as "Lamia;" in Luther's translation as "Kobold;" in the English
+version as "screech-owl;" and in others as "an ugly night-bird."</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>PECULIAR PEOPLE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In this title, be it distinctly understood, no reference
+is intended to those anti-&AElig;sculapian persons who,
+from time to time, sacrifice to Moloch among the
+Essex marshes. It is not necessary to journey even
+as far as Plumstead in search of peculiarity, since the
+most manifold and ever-varying types of it lie at one's
+very doors. And here, at the outset, without quite
+endorsing the maxim that genius is always eccentric,
+let it be confessed that a slight deviation from the
+beaten track is generally apt to be interesting. When
+we see the photograph of some distinguished artist,
+musician, or poet, and find the features very like those
+of the pork butcher in the next street, or the footman
+over the way, we are conscious of a feeling of disappointment
+almost amounting to a personal grievance.
+Mr. Carlyle and Algernon Swinburne satisfy us.
+They look as we feel graphic writers and erotic poets
+ought to look. Not so the literary females who affect
+the compartment labelled "For ladies only," in the
+reading room of the British Museum or on the Metropolitan
+Railway. They are mostly like one's maiden<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+aunts, and savour far less of the authoress than some
+of the charming girls who studiously avoid their exclusive
+locale, and evidently use their reading ticket
+only to cover with an appearance of propriety a most
+unmistakable flirtation. This they carry on sotto voce
+with ardent admirers of the male sex, who, though
+regular frequenters of the reading room, are no more
+literary than themselves. One might pick out a good
+many peculiar people from that learned retreat&mdash;that
+poor scholar's club room; but let us rather avoid any
+such byways of life, and select our peculiars from the
+broad highway. Hunting there, Diogenes-wise, with
+one's modest lantern, in search&mdash;not of honest&mdash;but
+eccentric individuals.</p>
+
+<p>And first of all, having duly attended to the ladies
+at the outset, let there be "Place for the Clergy."
+There is my dear friend the Rev. Gray Kidds, the
+best fellow breathing, but, from a Diogenes point of
+view, decidedly eccentric. Gray Kidds is one of those
+individuals whose peculiarity it is never to have been
+a boy. Kidds at fifteen had whiskers as voluminous
+as he now has at six-and-twenty, and as he gambolled
+heavily amongst his more puerile schoolfellows,
+visitors to the playground used to ask the assistant
+masters who that man was playing with the boys.
+They evidently had an uneasy notion that a private
+lunatic asylum formed a branch of the educational
+establishment, and that Gray Kidds was a harmless<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+patient allowed to join the boys in their sports. Gray
+Kidds was and is literally harmless. He grew up
+through school and college, innocently avoiding all
+those evils which proved the ruin of many who were
+deemed far wiser than himself. He warbled feebly
+on the flute, and was adored as a curate, not only for
+his tootle-tooings, but for his diligent presence at
+mothers' meetings, and conscientious labours among
+the poor. A preacher Kidds never pretended to be;
+but he had the singular merit of brevity, and crowded
+more harmless heresies into ten minutes' pulpit oratory
+than Colenso or Voysey could have done in double the
+time. The young ladies made a dead set at him, of
+course, for Kidds was in every respect eligible; and
+he let them stroke him like a big pet lamb, but there
+matters ended. Kidds never committed himself. He
+is now the incumbent of a pretty church in the
+suburbs, built for him by his aunt, and, strange to say,
+the church fills. Whether it is that his brevity is attractive,
+or his transparent goodness compensates for
+his other peculiarities, certainly he has a congregation;
+and if you polled that congregation, the one point on
+which all would agree, in addition to his eligibility or
+innocence, would be that the Rev. Gray Kidds was
+"so funny."</p>
+
+<p>And now, for our second type of peculiarity, let us
+beat back for one moment to the fair sex again. Mrs.
+Ghoul is the reverse of spirituelle; but she is some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>thing
+more&mdash;she is spiritualistic. She devoutly believes
+that the spirits of deceased ancestors come at
+her bidding, and tilt the table, move furniture insanely
+about, or write idiotic messages automatically. She
+is perfectly serious. She does "devoutly" believe this.
+It is her creed. It is a comfort to her. It is extremely
+difficult to reconcile such a source of comfort
+with any respect for one's departed relatives, but that
+is Mrs. Ghoul's peculiarity and qualification for a
+niche amongst our originals.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Deedy, on the other hand, is ecclesiastical
+to the backbone. Miss Deedy ruins her already
+feeble health with early mattins (she insists on the
+double t) and frequent fasts. Beyond an innocuous
+flirtation with the curate at decorations, or a choral
+meeting, Miss Deedy has as few sins as most of us
+to answer for; but, from her frequent penances, she
+might be a monster of iniquity. She is known to
+confess, and is suspected of wearing sackcloth. Balls
+and theatres she eschews as "worldly," and yet she is
+only just out of her teens. She would like to be a
+nun, she says, if the habits were prettier, and they
+allowed long curls down the back, and Gainsboroughs
+above the brow. As it is, Miss Deedy occupies a
+somewhat abnormal position, dangling, like Mahomet's
+coffin, between the Church and the world. That,
+again, is Miss Deedy's peculiarity.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Wiggles is a "sensitive." That is a new<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+vocation struck out by the prolific ingenuity of the
+female mind. Commonplace doctors would simply
+call her "hysterical;" but she calls herself magnetic.
+She is stout and inclined to a large appetite, particularly
+affecting roast pork with plenty of seasoning;
+but she passes readily into "the superior condition"
+under the manipulations of a male operator. She
+makes nothing, save notoriety, by her clairvoyance
+and other peculiarities; but she <i>is</i> very peculiar,
+though the type of a larger class than is perhaps
+imagined in this highly sensational age of ours.</p>
+
+<p>Peculiar boys, too&mdash;what lots of them there are!
+What is called affectation in a girl prevails to quite
+as large an extent in the shape of endless peculiarities
+among boys. A certain Dick (his name is Adolphus,
+but he is universally, and for no assignable reason,
+known as Dick) rejoices in endorsing Darwinism by
+looking and acting like a human gorilla. Dick is no
+fool, but assumes that virtue though he has it not.
+To see him mumbling his food at meals, or making
+mops and mows at the wall, you would think him
+qualified for Earlswood; but if it comes to polishing
+off a lesson briskly or being mulct of his pudding or
+pocket-money, Master Dick accomplishes the polishing
+process with a rapidity that gives the lie to his Darwinian
+assumption.</p>
+
+<p>Well, they are a source of infinite fun, these eccentrics&mdash;the
+comets of our social system. They have,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+no doubt, an object in their eccentricity, a method in
+their madness, which we prosaic planetary folks cannot
+fathom. At all events, they amuse us and don't
+harm themselves. They are uniformly happy and
+contented with themselves. Of them assuredly is
+true, and without the limitation he appends, Horace's
+affirmation, <i>Dulce est desipere</i>, which Mr. Theodore
+Martin translates, "'Tis pleasing at times to be
+slightly insane."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>INTERVIEWING AN ASTROLOGER.</h3>
+
+
+<p>For several years&mdash;in fact ever since my first acquaintance
+with these "occult" matters whereinto I
+am now such a veteran investigator&mdash;my great wish
+has been to become practically acquainted with some
+Professor of Astral Science. One friend, indeed, I
+had who had devoted a long lifetime to this and kindred
+subjects, and of whom I shall have to speak
+anon; but he had never utilized his knowledge so as
+to become the guide, philosopher, and friend of
+amorous housemaids on the subject of their matrimonial
+alliances, or set himself to discover petty larcenies
+for a fee of half-a-crown. He assured me,
+however, that the practice of astrology was as rife as
+ever in London at this moment, and that businesses
+in that line were bought and sold for sterling coin of
+the realm, just as though they had been "corner"
+publics, or "snug concerns" in the cheesemongery
+line. All this whetted my appetite for inquiry, and
+seeing one Professor Wilson advertise persistently in
+the <i>Medium</i> to the effect that "the celebrated Astrologer
+may be consulted on the events of life" from two
+to nine <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, I wrote to Professor Wilson asking for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+an interview; but the celebrated astrologer did not
+favour me with a reply.</p>
+
+<p>Foiled in my first attempt I waited patiently for
+about a year, and then broke ground again&mdash;I will not
+say whether with Professor Wilson, or some other
+practitioner of astral science. I will call my Archimago
+Professor Smith, of Newington Causeway, principally
+for the reason that this is neither the real
+name nor the correct address. I have no wish to
+advertise any wizard gratuitously; nor would it be
+fair to him, since, as will be seen from the sequel, his
+reception of me was such as to make it probable that
+he would have an inconvenient number of applicants
+on the conditions observed at my visit.</p>
+
+<p>Availing myself, then, of the services of my friend
+above-mentioned, I arranged that we should together
+pay a visit to Professor Smith, of Newington Causeway,
+quite "permiscuous," as Mrs. Gamp would say.
+My companion would go with his own horoscope
+already constructed, as he happened to know the exact
+hour and minute of his birth&mdash;particulars as to which
+I only possessed the vaguest information, which is all
+I fancy most of us have; though there was one circumstance
+connected with my own natal day which
+went a long way towards "fixing" it.</p>
+
+<p>It was on a Monday evening that I visited this
+modern Delphic oracle; and, strangely enough, as is
+often the case, other events seemed to lead up to this
+one. The very lesson on Sunday evening was full of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+astrology. It was, I may mention, the story of
+the handwriting on the wall and the triumph of
+Daniel over the magicians. Then I took up my
+Chaucer on Monday morning; and instead of the
+"Canterbury Tales," opened it at the "Treatise on the
+Astrolabe," which I had never read before, but devoured
+then as greedily as no doubt did "Little
+Lowis," to whom it is addressed. All this tended to
+put me in a proper frame of mind for my visit to
+Newington; so, after an early tea, we took my friend's
+figure of his nativity with us, and went.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Smith, we found, lived in a cosy house
+in the main road, the parlours whereof he devoted to
+the purposes of a medical magnetist, which was his
+calling, as inscribed upon the wire blinds of the
+ground floor front. We were ushered at once into
+the professor's presence by a woman who, I presume,
+was his wife&mdash;a quiet respectable body with nothing
+uncanny about her. The front parlour was comfortably
+furnished and scrupulously clean, and the
+celebrated Professor himself, a pleasant elderly gentleman,
+was sitting over a manuscript which he read
+by the light of a Queen's reading lamp. There was
+not, on the one hand, any charlatan assumption in
+his get-up, nor, on the other, was there that squalor
+and neglect of the decencies of life which I have
+heard sometimes attaches to the practitioners in
+occult science. Clad in a light over-coat, with
+spectacles on nose, and bending over his MS.,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+Professor Smith might have been a dissenting parson
+en d&eacute;shabille "getting off" his Sunday discourse, or a
+village schoolmaster correcting the "themes" of his
+pupils. He was neither; he was a nineteenth century
+astrologer, calculating the probabilities of success
+for a commercial scheme, the draft prospectus of
+which was the document over which he pored. As
+he rose to receive us I was almost disappointed to
+find that he held no wand, wore no robe, and had no
+volume of mystic lore by his side. The very cat that
+emerged from underneath his table, and rubbed itself
+against my legs was not of the orthodox sable hue,
+but simple tabby and white.</p>
+
+<p>My friend opened the proceedings by producing
+the figure of his nativity, and saying he had come to
+ask a question in horary astrology relative to a certain
+scheme about which he was anxious, such anxiety
+constituting what he termed a "birth of the mind."
+Of course this was Dutch to me, and I watched to
+see whether the Professor would be taken off his
+guard by finding he was in presence of one thoroughly
+posted up in astral science. Not in the least; he
+greeted him as a brother chip, and straightway the
+two fell to discussing the figure. The Professor
+worked a new one, which he found to differ in some
+slight particulars from the one my friend had brought.
+Each, however, had worked it by logarithms, and
+there was much talk of "trines" and "squares" and
+"houses," which I could not understand; but even<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>tually
+the coveted advice was given by the Professor
+and accepted by my friend as devoutly as though it
+had been a response of the Delphic oracle itself. The
+business would succeed, but not without trouble, and
+possibly litigation on my friend's part. He was to
+make a call on a certain day and "push the matter"
+a month afterwards; all of which he booked in a
+business-like manner. This took a long time, for the
+Professor was perpetually making pencil signs on the
+figure he had constructed, and the two also discussed
+Zadkiel, Raphael, and other astrologers they had
+mutually known. Continual reference had to be
+made to the "Nautical Almanack;" but by-and-by
+my friend's innings was over and mine commenced.
+I have said that I did not know the exact hour and
+minute of my birth, and when, with appropriate
+hesitation, I named the 1st of April as the eventful
+day, the Professor looked at me for a moment with a
+roguish twinkle of the eye as though to ascertain
+that I was not poking fun at him. I assured him,
+however, that such was the inauspicious era of my
+nativity, and moreover that I was born so closely
+on the confines of March 31&mdash;I do not feel it
+necessary to specify the year&mdash;as to make it almost
+dubious whether I could claim the honours of April-Fooldom.
+This seemed enough for him&mdash;though he
+warned me that the absence of the exact time might
+lead to some vagueness in his communications&mdash;and
+he proceeded forthwith to erect my figure; which, by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+the way, looked to me very much like making a
+"figure" in Euclid; and I peered anxiously to see
+whether mine bore any resemblance to the Pons
+Asinorum!</p>
+
+<p>I feared I had led my philosopher astray altogether
+when the first item of information he gave me was
+that, at about the age of twenty-one, I had met with
+some accident to my arm, a circumstance which I
+could not recall to memory. Several years later I
+broke my leg, but I did not tell him that. Going
+further back, he informed me that about the age
+of fourteen, if I happened to be apprenticed, or in
+any way placed under authority, I kicked violently
+over the traces, which was quite true, inasmuch as I
+ran away from school twice at that precise age, so
+that my astrologer scored one. At twenty-eight I
+married (true), and at thirty-two things were particularly
+prosperous with me&mdash;a fact which I was also
+constrained to acknowledge correct. Then came a
+dreadful mistake. If ever I had anything to do with
+building or minerals, I should be very successful. I
+never had to do with building save once in my life,
+and then Mr. Briggs's loose tile was nothing to the
+difficulties in which I became involved. Minerals I
+had never dabbled in beyond the necessary consumption
+of coals for domestic purposes. I had an uncle
+who interested himself in my welfare some years
+ago&mdash;this was correct&mdash;and something was going to
+happen to my father's sister at Midsummer, 1876.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+This, of course, I cannot check; but I trust, for the
+sake of my venerable relation, it may be nothing prejudicial.
+I was also to suffer from a slight cold about
+the period of my birthday in that same year, and was
+especially to beware of damp feet. My eldest brother,
+if I had one, he said, had probably died, which was
+again correct; and if my wife caught cold she suffered
+in her throat, which piece of information, if not very
+startling, I am also constrained to confess is quite
+true. Then followed a most delicate piece of information
+which I blush as I commit to paper. I wished
+to marry when I was twenty-one, but circumstances
+prevented. Then it was that memories of a certain
+golden-haired first love came back through the vista
+of memory. I was then a Fellow of my College, impecunious
+except as regarded my academical stipend,
+so the young lady took advice and paired off with a
+well-to-do cousin. Sic transit gloria mundi! We are
+each of us stout, unromantic family people now; but
+the reminiscence made me feel quite romantic for the
+moment in that ground floor front in Newington
+Causeway; and I was inclined to say, "A Daniel
+come to judgment!" but I checked myself and remarked,
+sotto voce, in the vernacular, "Right again,
+Mr. Smith!"</p>
+
+<p>Before passing on to analyse me personally he remarked
+that my wife's sister and myself were not on
+the best of terms. I owned that words had passed
+between us; and then he told me that in my cerebral<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+development there was a satisfactory fusion of caution
+and combativeness. I was not easily knocked over,
+or, if so, had energy to get up again. This energy
+was to tell in the future. This, I believe, is a very
+usual feature of horoscopic revelation. Next year
+was to be particularly prosperous. I should travel a
+good deal&mdash;had travelled somewhat this year, and was
+just now going to take a short journey; but I should
+travel a great deal more next year. I own to asking
+myself whether this could bear any reference to the
+Pontigny Pilgrimage in which I shared this year,
+and the possible pilgrimage to Rome next summer,
+and also a projected journey to Scotland by the
+Limited Mail next Tuesday evening! On the whole,
+my astrologer had scored a good many points.</p>
+
+<p>The most marvellous revelation of all yet remains
+to be made, however. When we rose to go we each
+of us endeavoured to force a fee on Professor Smith,
+but nothing would induce him to receive a farthing!
+I had got all my revelations, my "golden" memories
+of the past, my bright promises of the future free,
+gratis, for nothing! It will be evident, then, why I
+do not give this good wizard's address lest I inundate
+him with gratuitous applicants, and why I therefore
+veil his personality under the misleading title of Professor
+Smith of Newington Causeway.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A BARMAID SHOW.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The present age, denounced by some ungenial
+censors as the age of shams, may be described by more
+kindly critics as emphatically an age of "shows."
+Advancing from the time-honoured shows of Flora
+and Pomona&mdash;if not always improving on the type&mdash;and
+so on from the cattle show, suggestive of impending
+Christmas fare, we have had horse shows, dog
+shows, and bird shows. To these the genius of
+Barnum added baby shows; and, if we are not misinformed,
+a foreign firm, whose names have become
+household words amongst us, originated, though not
+exactly in its present form, the last kind of show
+which has been acclimatized in England&mdash;an exhibition
+of barmaids. We had two baby shows in one
+year&mdash;one at Highbury Barn by Mr. Giovannelli, the
+other at North Woolwich Gardens by Mr. Holland;
+and it is to the talent of this latter gentleman in the
+way of adaptation that we owe the exhibition of
+young ladies "practising at the bar." From babies
+to barmaids is indeed a leap, reversing the ordinary
+process of going from the sublime to the ridiculous,
+for while to all but appreciative mammas those infantile<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+specimens of humanity savour largely of the ridiculous,
+there can be no question that the present generation
+of <i>dames de comptoir</i> is a very sublime article indeed.
+I do not say this in derision, nor am I among those who
+decry the improvements introduced during the last
+few years, both into refreshment bars themselves, and
+notably into the class of ladies who preside over them.
+The discriminating visitor will decidedly prefer to
+receive his sandwich and glass of bitter at the hands of
+a pretty barmaid rather than from an oleaginous pot-man
+in his shirt-sleeves; and the sherry-cobbler acquires
+a racier flavour from the arch looks of the Hebe
+who dispenses it. If silly young men do dawdle
+at the bar for the sake of the sirens inside, and occasionally,
+as we have known to be the case, take unto
+themselves these same sirens "for better or for worse,"
+we can only cite the opinion of well-informed authorities,
+that very possibly the young gentlemen in
+question might have gone farther and fared worse, and
+that it is not always the young lady who has, in such
+a case, the best of the bargain.</p>
+
+<p>So, then, the "Grand Barmaid Contest" opened;
+and in spite of the very unmistakable appearance put
+in by Jupiter Fluvius, a numerous assemblage gathered
+in the North Woolwich Gardens to inaugurate a festival
+which, whatever else we may think of it, is at all
+events sui generis. Prizes to the value of 300<i>l.</i> were
+to be presented to the successful candidates, varying
+from a purse of twenty sovereigns and a gold watch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+and chain, down to "a purse of two sovereigns," with
+"various other prizes, consisting of jewellery, &amp;c."</p>
+
+<p>Among the conditions it was required, that every
+young lady should be over sixteen years of age; that she
+should be dressed in <i>plain</i> but <i>good</i> articles of attire,
+"in which a happy blending of colours without prominent
+display is most suitable;" and it was moreover
+stipulated that each "young lady" should "ingratiate
+herself with the public in the most affable manner at
+her command, without undue forwardness or frivolity,
+but still retaining a strict attention to business." No
+young lady was permitted to take part in the contest
+unless she had been in the refreshment business for
+twelve months, and could produce good testimonials of
+character.</p>
+
+<p>Upwards of 700 applications were made, out of
+which Mr. Holland selected fifty. Whence the
+large number of rejections "deponeth sayeth not." Of
+these twenty-eight actually put in an appearance at
+three <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> on the opening day and four were expected
+to join in a day or two. Every visitor is provided
+with a voting ticket, which he hands to the lady of
+his admiration, and which counts towards the prize.
+Each young lady also receives 5 per cent. on what
+she sells at her bar. The places are awarded by lot;
+and, by a freak of fortune, the two most attractive
+demoiselles happened to come together. These were
+Numbers One and Fourteen. The former young lady&mdash;who
+desires to be known by her number only, true<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+genius being ever modest&mdash;was certain to stand
+Number One in popular esteem; and, if chignons are
+taken into account, she ought literally to "head" the
+list by a very long way. The room was tastefully
+decorated by Messrs. Defries, and an excellent band
+enlivened the proceedings. As evening drew on the
+meeting grew more hilarious, but there was not the
+slightest impropriety of any kind, the faintest approach
+thereto leading to immediate expulsion.</p>
+
+<p>Many persons may be disposed to ask, in respect of
+such exhibitions, Cui bono? But at all events there
+was nothing which the veriest Cato could denounce as
+demoralizing. The "young ladies" were all most
+modestly attired in "sober livery;" and certainly&mdash;though
+comparisons are odious&mdash;not so pressing in
+their attentions as we have seen some other young
+ladies at Dramatic F&ecirc;tes, or even some d&eacute;vou&eacute;es at
+charitable bazaars. If we may judge from the large
+numbers that visited North Woolwich, "in spite of
+wind and weather," Mr. Holland was likely to reap an
+abundant harvest from this latest "idea," excogitated
+from his fertile brain. As the babies have had their
+"show," and the stronger sex is not likely to be equal
+to the task of being exhibited just yet, there seems
+only one section of society open to the speculations of
+a skilful entrepreneur. Why does not some one, in a
+more serious line than Mr. Holland, try what Sydney
+Smith calls the "third sex," and open an exhibition
+of curates, with a genuine competition for prizes?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+There could be no possible doubt as to the success of
+such a display, and the instruction to be derived from
+it would be equally beyond question. In the meantime
+we have advanced one step towards such a consummation.
+The adult human being has taken the
+place of the baby; and people evidently like it. Where
+will the rage for exhibitions stop? Who can say to
+the advancing tide of shows, "Thus far shalt thou go,
+and no farther?" Other classes of society will probably
+have their turn, and may think themselves fortunate
+if they show up as well as Mr. Holland's
+"young ladies."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A PRIVATE EXECUTION.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was quietly fiddling away one evening in the Civil
+Service band at King's College, as was my custom
+while my leisure was larger than at present, when
+the gorgeous porter of the college entered with a
+huge billet which he placed on my music-stand with
+a face of awe. It was addressed to me, and in the
+corner of it was written "Order for Execution." The
+official waited to see how I bore it, and seemed rather
+surprised that I went on with my fiddling, and
+smilingly said, "All right." I knew it was an order
+from the authorities of Horsemonger Lane Gaol admitting
+me to the private execution of Margaret
+Waters, the notorious baby-farmer.</p>
+
+<p>If anything is calculated to promote the views of
+those who advocate the abolition of capital punishment,
+it is the fact of a woman meeting her death at
+the hands of the common hangman. There is something
+abhorrent, especially to the mind of the
+stronger sex, in the idea of a female suffering the
+extreme penalty of the law. On the other hand, the
+crime for which Margaret Waters suffered&mdash;which is
+too much a cause c&eacute;l&egrave;bre to need recapitulation&mdash;is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+exactly the one that would exile her from the sympathy
+of her own sex. Whilst therefore her case
+left the broad question much in the same position as
+before, we are not surprised to find that strenuous
+efforts had been made to obtain a commutation of the
+sentence. Mr. Gilpin, Mr. Samuel Morley, and Mr.
+Baines had been conspicuous for their efforts in the
+cause of mercy. All, however, had been to no purpose.
+Margaret Waters was privately executed within the
+walls of Horsemonger Lane Gaol at nine o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>It was a thankless errand that called one from one's
+bed whilst the moon was still struggling with the
+feeble dawn of an October morning, and through
+streets already white with the incipient frost of approaching
+winter, to see a fellow-creature&mdash;and that
+a woman&mdash;thus hurried out of existence. On arriving
+at the gloomy prison-house I saw a fringe of roughs
+lounging about, anxious to catch a glimpse, if only
+of the black flag that should apprize them of the
+tragedy they were no longer privileged to witness.
+Even these, however, did not muster in strong force
+until the hour of execution drew near. On knocking
+at the outer wicket, the orders of admission were
+severely scrutinized, and none allowed to pass except
+those borne by the representatives of the press, or
+persons in some way officially connected with the
+impending "event." There was an air of grim
+"business" about all present, which showed plainly
+that none were there from choice, nor any who would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+not feel relief when the fearful spectacle was over.
+After assembling, first of all, in the porter's lodge,
+we were conducted by the governor, Mr. Keene, to
+the back of the prison, through courtyards and
+kitchen gardens; and in a corner of one of the former
+we came upon the ghastly instrument of death itself.
+Here half-a-dozen warders only were scattered about,
+and Mr. Calcraft was arranging his paraphernalia with
+the air of a connoisseur. I remember&mdash;so strangely
+does one's mind take in unimportant details at such
+a crisis&mdash;being greatly struck with the fine leeks
+which were growing in that particular corner of the
+prison garden where the grim apparatus stood, and
+we&mdash;some five-and-twenty at most, and all in the
+way of "business"&mdash;stood, too, waiting for the event!</p>
+
+<p>Then ensued a quarter of an hour's pause, in that
+cold morning air, when suddenly boomed out the
+prison bell, that told us the last few minutes of the
+convict's life had come. The pinioning took place
+within the building; and on the stroke of nine, the
+gloomy procession emerged, the prisoner walking
+between the chaplain and Calcraft, with a firm step,
+and even mounting the steep stair to the gallows
+without needing assistance. She was attired in a
+plaid dress with silk mantle, her head bare, and hair
+neatly arranged.</p>
+
+<p>As this was my first experience in private hanging,
+I do not mind confessing that I misdoubted my
+powers of endurance. I put a small brandy-flask in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+my pocket, and stood close by a corner around which
+I could retire if the sight nauseated me; but such is
+the strange fascination attaching to exhibitions even
+of this horrible kind, that I pushed forward with the
+rest, and when the governor beckoned me on to a
+"good place," I found myself standing in the front
+rank with the rest of my confr&egrave;res, and could not
+help picturing what that row of upturned, unsympathizing,
+pitiless faces must have looked like to the
+culprit as contrasted with the more sympathetic
+crowds that used to be present at a public execution.</p>
+
+<p>One of the daily papers in chronicling this event
+went so far as to point a moral on the brutalizing
+effect of such exhibitions from my momentary hesitation
+and subsequent struggle forward into the front
+rank. The convict's perfect sang froid had a good
+deal to do with my own calmness, I expect.</p>
+
+<p>When the executioner had placed the rope round
+her neck, and the cap on her head ready to be drawn
+over the face, she uttered a long and fervent prayer,
+expressed with great volubility and propriety of
+diction, every word of which could be distinctly heard
+by us as we circled the scaffold. She could not have
+rounded her periods more gracefully or articulated
+them more perfectly, if she had rehearsed her part
+beforehand! Though most of the spectators were
+more or less inured to scenes of horror, several were
+visibly affected, one kneeling on the bare ground, and
+another leaning, overcome with emotion, against the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+prison wall. At last she said to the chaplain, "Mr.
+Jessopp, do you think I am saved?" A whispered
+reply from the clergyman conveyed his answer to that
+momentous question. All left the scaffold except the
+convict. The bolt was withdrawn, and, almost without
+a struggle, Margaret Waters ceased to exist. Nothing
+could exceed the calmness and propriety of her demeanour,
+and this, the chaplain informed us, had
+been the case throughout since her condemnation.
+She had been visited on one occasion by a Baptist
+minister, to whose persuasion she belonged; but he
+had, at her own request, forborne to repeat his visit.
+The prisoner said he was evidently unused to cases
+like hers, and his ministrations rather distracted than
+comforted her. The chaplain of the gaol had been
+unremitting in his attentions, and seemingly with
+happy effect. Though she constantly persisted in
+saying she was not a murderess in intent, she was yet
+brought to see her past conduct in its true light; and
+on the previous Saturday received the Holy Communion
+in her cell with one of her brothers. Two of
+them visited her, and expressed the strongest feelings
+of attachment. In fact, the unhappy woman seemed
+to have been deeply attached to and beloved by all
+the members of her family. She had, since her condemnation,
+eaten scarcely anything, having been kept
+alive principally by stimulants. Although this, of
+course, induced great bodily weakness, she did not
+from the first exhibit any physical fear of death. On<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+the night before her execution&mdash;that peaceful moonlit
+night&mdash;when so many thoughts must have turned to
+this unhappy woman, she slept little, and rose early.
+The chaplain had arranged to be with her at eight, but
+she sent for him an hour earlier, and he continued
+with her until the end. On Monday night she
+penned a long statement addressed to Mr. Jessopp.
+This was written with a firm hand on four sides of a
+foolscap sheet, expressed with great perspicuity, and
+signed with the convict's name. Whilst still repudiating
+the idea of being a murderess in intent, she
+pleaded guilty to great deceit, and to having obtained
+money under false pretences. If she had not given
+proper food, that, she contended, was an error of
+judgment. It was hard, she thought, that she should
+be held accountable for the child who died in the
+workhouse. She dwelt much upon the difficulties
+brought upon her by her dread of the money-lender&mdash;that
+fungus growth of our so-called civilization, who
+has brought so many criminals to the gallows, besides
+ruining families every day in each year of grace!
+That she had administered laudanum she denied.
+The evidence as to the dirty condition of the children
+she asserted to be false. She wished to avoid all
+bitterness; but those who had so deposed had sworn
+falsely. "I feel sure their consciences will condemn
+them to-night," she wrote, "for having caused the
+death of a fellow-creature." In the face of the evidence,
+she felt the jury could not find any other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+verdict, or the judge pass any other sentence than
+had been done. The case had been got up, she
+argued, to expose a system which was wrong.
+Parents wished to get rid of their ill-gotten offspring.
+Their one thought was to hide their own shame.
+"They," she concluded, "are the real sinners. If it
+were not for their sin, <i>we</i> should not be sought after."</p>
+
+<p>There must surely be some whose consciences these
+words will prick. However this woman deserved the
+bitter penalty she has now paid, there is indeed a
+tremendous truth in her assertion that she, and such
+as she, are but the supply which answers their
+demand.</p>
+
+<p>And so we filed away as the autumnal sun shone
+down upon that gloomy spectacle, leaving her to the
+"crowner's 'quest," and the dishonoured grave in the
+prison precincts. Up to the previous night strong hopes
+of a commutation of the sentence were entertained.
+Her brothers had memorialized the Home Secretary,
+and were only on the previous day informed that the
+law must take its course. Let us hope that this
+stern example will put a stop, not only to "baby-farming,"
+which, as the dead woman truly said, is
+but a consequence of previous crime&mdash;but also to
+those "pleasant vices" which are its antecedents and
+encouragements.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BREAKING UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Unromantic as it sounds to say it, I know of few
+things more disgusting than to revisit one's old school
+after some twenty or thirty years. Let that dubious
+decade still remain as to the number of years that
+have elapsed since I left school. In fact, it matters
+to nobody when I left it; I revisited it lately. I
+went to see the boys break up, as I once broke up,
+and I felt disgusted&mdash;not with the school, or the
+breaking up, but with myself. I felt disgracefully old.
+In fact, I went home, and began a poem with these
+words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">My years, I feel, are getting on:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Yet, ere the trembling balance kicks, I<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will imitate the dying swan,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And sing an ode threnodic&mdash;vixi.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I never got any farther than that. By the way, I
+shall have to mention eventually that the school was
+King's College, in the Strand. I am not going to
+unbosom beyond this, or to add anything in the way
+of an autobiography; but the locale would have to
+come out anon, and there is no possible reason for concealment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Well, I went to see them break up for the holidays,
+and only got over my antediluvian feelings by seeing
+one of the masters still on the staff who was there
+when I was a boy. It was a comfort to think what a
+Methuselah he must be; and yet, if he will excuse the
+personality, he looked as rosy and smooth-faced as
+when he used to stand me outside his door with my
+coat-sleeves turned inside out. It was a way he had.
+Well, the presence of that particular master made me
+feel an Adonis forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>I will not go into the prizes. There were lots of
+them, and they were very nice, and the boys looked
+very happy, and their mammas legitimately proud.
+What I want to speak of is the school speeches or recitations,
+as they are termed. King's College School
+speeches are, to my thinking, a model of what such
+things ought to be.</p>
+
+<p>Some schools&mdash;I name no names&mdash;go in for mere
+scholastic recitations which nobody understands, and
+the boys hate. Others burst out in full-blown theatricals.
+King's College acts on the motto, Medio
+tutissimus ibis. It keeps the old scholastic recitations,
+but gilds the pill by adding the accessory of costume.
+I can quote Latin as well as Dr. Pangloss, and certain
+lines were running in my mind all the time I was in
+King's College Hall. They were</p>
+
+<p>
+Pueris olim dant crustula blandi<br />
+Doctores, elementa velint ut discere prima.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>First we had a bit of German in the shape of an ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>tract
+from Kotzebue's "Die Schlaue Wittwe," or
+"Temperaments." I wish I had my programme, I
+would compliment by name the lad who played the
+charming young Frau. Suffice it to say the whole
+thing went off sparkling like a firework. It was short,
+and made you wish for more&mdash;a great virtue in
+speeches and sermons. The dancing-master was
+perfect. Then came a bit of Colman's "Heir at
+Law." Dr. Pangloss&mdash;again I regret the absence of
+the programme&mdash;was a creation, and&mdash;notwithstanding
+the proximity of King's College to the Strand
+Theatre&mdash;the youth wisely abstained from copying
+even so excellent a model as Mr. Clarke. Of course,
+the bits of Latinity came out with a genuine scholastic
+ring. Then a bit of a Greek play, at which&mdash;mirabile
+dictu!&mdash;everybody laughed, and with which
+everybody was pleased. And why? Because the
+adjuncts of costume and properties added to the
+correct enunciation of the text, prevented even those,
+who knew little Latin and less Greek, from being one
+moment in the dark as to what was going on. The
+passage was one from the "Birds" of Aristophanes;
+and the fact of a treaty being concluded between the
+Olympians and terrestrials, led to the introduction of
+some interpolations as to the Washington Treaty,
+which, when interpreted by the production of the
+American flag and English Union Jack, brought down
+thunders of applause. The final chorus was sung to
+"Yankee Doodle," and accompanied by a fiddle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+The acting and accessories were perfect; and what
+poor Robson used to term the "horgan" of Triballos,
+was wonderful. That youth would be a nice young
+man for a small tea party. It is to be hoped that,
+like Bottom the weaver, he can modulate his voice,
+and roar as gently as any sucking-dove.</p>
+
+<p>Most wonderful, however, of all the marvels&mdash;that
+met me at my old school&mdash;was a scene from the
+"Critic," played by the most Lilliputian boys. Puff&mdash;played
+by Powell (I don't forget that name)&mdash;was simply
+marvellous. And yet Powell, if he will forgive me for
+saying so, was the merest whipper-snapper. Sir Christopher
+Hatton could scarcely have emerged from the
+nursery; and yet the idea of utter stolidity never found
+a better exponent than that same hom&oelig;opathic boy.</p>
+
+<p>Last of all came the conventional scene from
+Moli&egrave;re's "L'Avare." Ma&icirc;tre Jacques was good;
+Harpagon more than good. I came away well satisfied,
+only regretting I had not brought my eldest
+boy to see it. My eldest boy! Egad, and I was just
+such as he is now, when I used to creep like a snail
+unwillingly to those scholastic shades. The spirit of
+Pangloss came upon me again as I thought of all
+I had seen that day,&mdash;there was nothing like it in
+my day. King's College keeps pace with the times.
+"Tempora mutantur!" I mentally exclaimed; and
+added, not without a pleasant scepticism, as I gazed
+once more on the pippin-faced master, "I wonder
+whether&mdash;nos mutamur in illis?"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>PSYCHOLOGICAL LADIES.</h3>
+
+
+<p>There is no doubt that the "Woman's Rights"
+question is going ahead with gigantic strides, not
+only in social and political, but also in intellectual
+matters. Boys and girls&mdash;or rather we ought to say
+young ladies and young gentlemen&mdash;are grouped together
+on the class list of the Oxford Local Examination,
+irrespective of sex. A glance at the daily
+papers will show us that women are being lectured to
+on all subjects down from physical sciences, through
+English literature and art, to the construction of the
+clavecin. We had fancied, however, that what are
+technically termed "the Humanities," or, in University
+diction, "Science"&mdash;meaning thereby ethics
+and logic&mdash;were still our own. Now, we are undeceived.
+We are reminded that woman can say, without
+a solecism, "Homo sum," and may therefore
+claim to embrace even the humanities among her
+subjects of study. Henceforth the realm of woman is
+not merely what may be called "pianofortecultural,"
+as was once the case. It has soared even above art,
+literature, and science itself into what might at first<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+sight appear the uncongenial spheres of dialectics and
+metaphysics.</p>
+
+<p>Professor G. Croom Robertson recently commenced
+a course of thirty lectures to ladies on Psychology
+and Logic, at the Hall, 15, Lower Seymour Street,
+Portman Square. Urged, it may be, rather by a
+desire to see whether ladies would be attracted by
+such a subject, and, if so, what psychological ladies
+were like, than by any direct interest in the matters
+themselves, I applied to the hon. secretary, inquiring
+whether the inferior sex were admissible; and was
+answered by a ticket admitting one's single male self
+and a party of ladies &agrave; discr&eacute;tion. The very entrance
+to the hall&mdash;nay, the populous street itself&mdash;removed
+my doubts as to whether ladies would be attracted by
+the subjects; and on entering I discovered that the
+audience consisted of several hundred ladies, and two
+unfortunate&mdash;or shall it not rather be said privileged?&mdash;members
+of the male sex. The ladies were
+of all ages, evidently matrons as well as spinsters,
+with really nothing at all approaching a "blue stocking"
+element; but all evidently bent on business.
+All were taking vigorous notes, and seemed to follow
+the Professor's somewhat difficult Scotch diction at
+least as well as our two selves, who appeared to
+represent not only the male sex in general, but the
+London press in particular.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Robertson commenced by a brief and
+well-timed reference to the accomplished Hypatia,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+familiar to ladies from Kingsley's novel&mdash;in the days
+when ladies used to read novels&mdash;and also the Royal
+ladies whom Descartes and Leibnitz found apter
+disciples than the savants. It was, however, he remarked,
+an impertinence to suppose that any apology
+was needed for introducing such subjects before ladies.
+He plunged therefore at once in medias res, and
+made his first lecture not a mere isolated or introductory
+one, but the actual commencement of his
+series. Unreasoned facts, he said, formed but a mere
+fraction of our knowledge&mdash;even the simplest processes
+resolving themselves into a chain of inference.
+Truth is the result of logical reasoning; and not
+only truth, but truth <i>for all</i>. The sciences deal with
+special aspects of truth. These sciences may be
+arranged in the order&mdash;1. Mathematics; 2. Physics;
+3. Chemistry; 4. Biology&mdash;each gradually narrowing
+its sphere; the one enclosed, so to say, in the other,
+and each presupposing those above it. Logic was presupposed
+in all. Each might be expressed by a word
+ending in "logy," therefore logic might be termed
+the "science of sciences." The sciences were special
+applications of logic. Scientific men speak lightly of
+logic, and say truth can be discovered without it.
+This is true, but trivial. We may as well object to
+physiology because we can digest without a knowledge
+of it; or to arithmetic, because it is possible
+to reckon without it. Scientific progress has been
+great; but its course might have been strewn with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+fewer wrecks had its professors been more generally
+logicians. But then logic presupposes something
+else. We have to investigate the origin and growth
+of knowledge&mdash;the laws under which knowledge comes
+to be. Under one aspect this science&mdash;psychology&mdash;should
+be placed highest up in the scale; but under
+another it would rank later in point of development
+than even biology itself, because it is not every being
+that thinks. This twofold aspect is accounted for
+by the peculiarity of its subject-matter&mdash;viz., mind.</p>
+
+<p>The sciences are comparatively modern. Mathematics
+but some 3000 or 4000 years old; physics,
+three centuries; chemistry, a thing of the last, biology
+only of the present century. But men philosophized
+before the sciences. The ancient Greeks had but one
+science&mdash;mathematics. Now men know a little of
+many sciences; but what we want is men to connect&mdash;to
+knit together&mdash;the sciences; to have their knowledge
+all of a piece. The knowledge of the ancient
+Greek directed his actions, and entered far more into
+his daily life than ours does. This, he observed, was
+philosophy. This is what we want now; and this
+is what is to be got from psychology. There is not
+a single thing between heaven and earth that does
+not admit of a mental expression; or, in other words,
+possess a subjective aspect, and therefore come under
+psychology.</p>
+
+<p>This, in briefest outline, is a sketch of the "strong
+meat" offered to the psychological ladies. A single<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+branch of psychology&mdash;that, namely, of the intellect,
+excluding that of feeling and action&mdash;is to occupy ten
+lectures, the above being number one. The other
+twenty will be devoted to logic.</p>
+
+<p>The next lecture was devoted to an examination of
+the brain and nervous system, and their office in
+mental processes. Alas, however, how different was
+now the audience! Only some thirty ladies&mdash;scarcely
+more than one-tenth of those who were present at
+the opening lecture&mdash;have permanently entered for
+the course. It is no disrespect to the ladies to hazard
+the conjecture whether the subject be not a little
+out of range for the present. We are moving ahead
+rapidly, and many foolish ideas as to the intellectual
+differences of the sexes are becoming obsolete. We
+have literary and artistic ladies by thousands. Scientific
+ladies, in the ordinary acceptation of the term,
+are coming well to the front. Possibly we may have
+to "wait a little longer" before we get, on anything
+like a large scale, psychological or even logical ladies.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
+
+<h3>SECULARISM ON BUNYAN.</h3>
+
+
+<p>It is very marvellous to observe the number of strange
+and unexpected combinations that are continually occurring
+in that moral kaleidoscope we call society. I
+do not suppose that I am exceptional in coming
+across these; nor do I use any particular industry in
+seeking them out. They come to me; all I do is to
+keep my eyes open, and note the impressions they
+make on me. I was humbly pursuing my way one
+Tuesday evening towards the abode of a phrenologist
+with the honest intention of discovering my craniological
+condition, when, in passing down Castle Street,
+Oxford Market, I was made aware that Mr. G. J.
+Holyoake was there and then to deliver himself on
+the "Literary Genius of Bunyan." This was one of
+the incongruous combinations I spoke of; and forthwith
+I passed into the Co-operative Hall, resolving to
+defer my visit to the phrenologist. There are some
+facts of which it is better to remain contentedly
+ignorant; and I have no doubt my own mental condition
+belongs to that category.</p>
+
+<p>I found the Co-operative Hall a handsome and commodious
+building; and a very fair audience had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+gathered to listen to Mr. Holyoake, who is an elderly
+thin-voiced man, and his delivery was much impeded
+on the occasion in question by the circumstance of his
+having a bad cold and cough. After a brief extempore
+allusion to the fact of the Duke of Bedford
+having erected a statue to Bunyan, which he regarded
+as a sort of compensation for his Grace ceasing to
+subscribe to the races, Mr. Holyoake proceeded to read
+his treatise, which he had written on several slips of
+paper&mdash;apparently backs of circulars&mdash;and laid one by
+one on a chair as he finished them.</p>
+
+<p>The world, he said, is a big place; but people are
+always forgetting what a variety of humanity it contains.
+Two hundred years ago, the authorities of
+Bedford made it very unpleasant for one John Bunyan,
+because they thought they knew everything, and
+could not imagine that a common street workman
+might know more. The trade of a tinker seems an
+unpromising preparation for a literary career. A
+tinker in Bedford to-day would not find himself much
+flattered by the attentions paid him, especially if he
+happened to be an old gaol-bird as well. So much the
+more creditable to Bunyan the ascendancy he gained.
+If he mended pots as well as he made sentences he was
+the best tinker that ever travelled.</p>
+
+<p>Bunyan had no worldly notions. His doctrine was
+that men were not saved by any good they might do&mdash;a
+doctrine that would ruin the morals of any commercial
+establishment in a month! He declared him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>self
+the "chief of sinners;" but judged by his townsmen
+he was a stout-hearted, stout-minded, scrupulous
+man.</p>
+
+<p>He was not a pleasant man to know. He had an
+unrelenting sincerity which often turned into severity.
+Yet he had much tenderness. He had a soul like a
+Red Indian's&mdash;all tomahawk and truth, until the
+literary passion came and added humour to it. He
+demands in his vigorous doggerel:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">May I not write in such a style as this,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In such a method, too, and yet not miss<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My end, thy good? Why may it not be done?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dark clouds bring waters, when the bright bring none.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Like all men of original genius, this stout-minded
+pot-mender had unbounded confidence in himself. He
+was under no delusion as to his own powers. No man
+knew better what he was about. He could take the
+measure of all the justices about him, and he knew it.
+Every shallow-headed gentleman in Bedfordshire
+towns and villages was made to wince under his picturesque
+and satiric tongue. To clergymen, bishops,
+lawyers, and judges he gave names which all his
+neighbours knew. Mr. Pitiless, Mr. Hardheart, Mr.
+Forget-good, Mr. No-truth, Mr. Haughty&mdash;thus he
+named the disagreeable dignitaries of the town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+
+<p>At first he was regarded by his "pastors and
+masters" as a mere wilful, noisy, praying sectary.
+Very soon they discovered that he was a fighting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+preacher. As tinker or Christian he always had his
+sleeves turned up. When he had to try his own
+cause he put in the jury-box Mr. True-Heart, Mr.
+Upright, Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. See-Truth, and other
+amiable persons. His witnesses were Mr. Know-All,
+Mr. Tell-True, Mr. Hate-Lies, Mr. Vouch-Truth, Mr.
+Did-See. His Town Clerk was Mr. Do-Right, the
+Recorder was Mr. Conscience, the gaoler was Mr.
+True-Man, Lord Understanding was on the bench,
+and the Judge bears the dainty name of the "Golden-headed
+Prince."</p>
+
+<p>Bunyan's adversaries are always a bad set. They
+live in Villain's Lane, in Blackmouth Street, or
+Blasphemer's Row, or Drunkard's Alley, or Rascal's
+Corner. They are the sons of one Beastly, whose
+mother bore them in Flesh Square: they live at the
+house of one Shameless, at the sign of the Reprobate,
+next door to the Descent into the Pit, whose retainers
+are Mr. Flatter, Mr. Impiety, Mr. False-Peace, Mr.
+Covetousness, who are housed by one Mr. Simple, in
+Folly's Yard.</p>
+
+<p>Bunyan had a perfect wealth of sectarian scurrility
+at his command. His epithets are at times unquotable
+and ferocious. When, however, his friends are
+at the bar, the witnesses against them comprise the
+choicest scoundrels of all time&mdash;Mr. Envy, Mr. Pick-thank,
+and others, whose friends are Lord Carnal-Delight,
+Lord Luxurious, Lord Lechery, Sir Having
+Greedy, and similar villanous people of quality. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+Judge's name is now Lord Hate-Good. The Jury
+consist of Mr. No-Good, Mr. Malice, Mr. Love-Lust,
+Mr. Live-Loose, Mr. Heady, Mr. Hate-Light, Mr.
+Enmity, Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, and Mr. Implacable,
+with Mr. Blindman for Foreman.</p>
+
+<p>Never was such an infamous gang impanelled.
+Rancour and rage and vindictiveness, and every
+passion awakened in the breasts of the strong by
+local insolence and legal injustice, is supplied by
+Bunyan with epithets of immense retaliative force.
+He is the greatest name-maker among authors. He
+was a spiritual Comanche. He prayed like a savage.
+He said himself, when describing the art of the religious
+rhetorician&mdash;an art of which he was the
+greatest master of his time:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">You see the ways the fisherman doth take<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To catch the fish; what engines doth he make!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Behold! how he engageth all his wits,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Also his snares, lines, angles, hooks, and nets;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet fish there be that neither hook nor line,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor snare, nor net, nor engine can make thine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They must be grop'd for, and be tickled too,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or they will not be catch'd, whate'er you do.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Bunyan never tickled the sinner. It was not his
+way. He carried a prong. He pricked the erring.
+He published a pamphlet to suggest what ought to be
+done to holy pedestrians, whose difficulties lay rearward.
+He put detonating balls under their feet which
+exploded as they stepped and alarmed them along.
+He lined the celestial road with horrors. If they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+turned their heads they saw a fiend worse than Lot's
+wife who was merely changed into a pillar of sweet
+all-preserving salt. Bunyan's unfortunate converts
+who looked back fell into a pit filled with fire, where
+they howled and burnt for evermore.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! with what pleasure must the great Bedfordshire
+artist have contemplated his masterly pages as
+day by day he added to them the portrait of some
+new scoundrel, or painted with dexterous and loving
+hand the wholesome outlines of some honest man, or
+devised some new phrase which like a new note or
+new colour would delight singer or painter for generations
+yet to come. He must have strode proudly
+along his cell as he put his praise and his scorn into
+imperishable similes.</p>
+
+<p>But Bunyan had never been great had he been
+merely disagreeable. He had infinite wit in him. It
+was his carnal genius that saved him. He wrote sixty
+books, and two of them&mdash;the "Siege of the Town of
+Mansoul" and the "Pilgrim's Progress"&mdash;exceed all
+ever written for creative swiftness of imagination,
+racy English speech, sentences of literary art, cunningness
+in dialogue, satire, ridicule, and surpassing knowledge
+of the picturesque ways of the obscure minds of
+common men. In his pages men rise out of the
+ground&mdash;they always come up on an open space so
+that they can be seen. They talk naturally, so that
+you know them at once; and they act without delay,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+so that you never forget them. They surprise you,
+delight you, they interest you, they instruct you, and
+disappear. They never linger, they never weary you.
+Incidents new and strange arise at every step in his
+story. The scene changes like the men and their adventures.
+Now it is field or morass, plain or bypath,
+bog or volcano, castle or cottage, sandy scorching
+desert or cold river; the smoke of the bottomless pit
+or bright, verdant, delectable mountains and enchanted
+lands where there are no bishops, no gaols, and no
+tinkers; where aboundeth grapes, calico, brides, eternal
+conversation, and trumpets. The great magician's
+genius forsakes him when he comes to the unknown
+regions, and he knoweth no more than the rest of us.
+But while his foot is on the earth he steps like a king
+among writers. His Christian is no fool. He is
+cunning of fence, suspicious, sagacious, witty, satirical,
+abounding in invective, and broad, bold, delicious insolence.
+Bye-Ends is a subtle, evasive knave drawn
+with infinite skill.</p>
+
+<p>Had Bunyan merely preached the Gospel he had
+no more been remembered than thousands of his day
+who are gratefully forgotten&mdash;had he prayed to this
+time he had won no statue; but his literary genius
+lives when the preacher is very dead.</p>
+
+<p>He saw with such vividness that the very passions
+and wayward moods of men stood apart and distinct
+in his sight, and he gave names to them and endowed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+them with their natural speech. He created new men
+out of characteristics of mind, and sent them into the
+world in shapes so defined and palpable that men
+know them for evermore. It was the way of his age
+for writers to give names to their adversaries. Bunyan
+imitated this in his life of Mr. Badman. Others did
+this, but Bunyan did it better than any man. His
+invention was marvellous, and he had besides the
+faculty of the dramatist.</p>
+
+<p>If any man wrote the adventures of a Co-operator,
+he would have to tell of his meeting with Mr. Obstinate,
+who will not listen to him, and wants to pull him
+back. We all get the company of Mr. Pliable, who is
+persuaded without being convinced, who at the first
+splash into difficulty crawls out and turns back with
+a cowardly adroitness. We have all encountered the
+stupidity of Mr. Ignorance, which nothing can
+enlighten. We know Mr. Turnaway, who comes
+from the town of Apostacy, whose face we cannot
+perfectly see. Others merely gave names, he drew
+characters, he made the qualities of his men speak;
+you knew them by their minds better than by their
+dress. That is why succeeding ages have read the
+"Pilgrim's Progress," because the same people who
+met that extraordinary traveller are always turning
+up in the way of every man who has a separate and a
+high purpose, and is bent upon carrying it out.
+Manners change, but humanity has still its old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+ways. It is because Bunyan painted these that his
+writing lasts like a picture by one of the old masters
+who painted for all time.</p>
+
+<p>Such is an outline of the paper, which was interesting
+from its associations, and only spoilt by the
+cough. We had had Bunyan in pretty well every
+shape possible during the last few weeks. Certainly
+one of the most original is this which presents the
+man of unbounded faith in the light of utter
+scepticism.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>AL FRESCO INFIDELITY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In a series of papers like the present it is necessary,
+every now and then, to pause and apologize, either for
+the nature of the work in general, or for certain particulars
+in its execution calculated to shock good
+people whose feelings one would wish to respect.
+Having so long been engaged in the study of infidelity
+in London, I may, perhaps, be permitted to speak with
+something like authority in the matter; and I have
+no hesitation in saying that I believe the policy of
+shirking the subject is the most fatal and foolish one
+that could be adopted. Not only does such a course
+inspire people, especially young people, with the idea
+that there is something very fascinating in infidelity&mdash;something
+which, if allowed to meet their gaze,
+would be sure to attract and convince them&mdash;than
+which nothing is farther from the truth&mdash;not only so,
+however, but many of the statements and most of the
+arguments which sound plausibly enough on the glib
+tongue of a popular speaker read very differently indeed,
+when put down in cold-blooded letter-press,
+and published in the pages of a book. I protest
+strongly against making a mystery of London infi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>delity.
+It has spread and is spreading, I know, and
+it is well the public should know; but I believe
+there would be no such antidote to it as for people to
+be fully made aware how and where it is spreading.
+That is the r&ocirc;le I have all along proposed to myself:
+not to declaim against any man or any system, not to
+depreciate or disguise the truth, but simply to
+describe. I cannot imagine a more legitimate method
+of doing my work.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose no one will regard it in any way as an indulgence
+or a luxury on the part of a clergyman, who
+be it remembered, is, during a portion of the Sunday,
+engaged in ministering to Christian people, that he
+should devote another portion of that day to hearing
+Christ vilified, and having his own creed torn to
+pieces. I myself feel that my own belief is not
+shaken, but in a tenfold degree confirmed by all I
+have heard and seen and written of infidelity; and
+therefore I cannot concede the principle that to convey
+my experiences to others is in any way dangerous.
+Take away the halo of mystery that surrounds this
+subject, and it would possess very slender attractions
+indeed.</p>
+
+<p>It was, for instance, on what has always appeared
+to me among the most affecting epochs of our
+Christian year, the Fifth Sunday after Easter&mdash;Christ's
+last Sunday upon earth&mdash;that, by one of those violent
+antitheses, I went to Gibraltar Walk, Bethnal Green
+Road, to hear Mr. Ramsey there demolish the very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+system which, for many years, it has been my mission
+to preach. I did not find, and I hope my congregation
+did not find, that I faltered in my message
+that evening. I even venture to think that Mr.
+Ramsey's statements, which I shall repeat as faithfully
+as possible, will scarcely seem as convincing here
+as they did when he poured them forth so fluently to
+the costermongers and navvies of the Bethnal Green
+Road; and if this be true of Mr. Ramsey it is certainly
+so of the smaller men; for he is a master in his
+craft, and certainly a creditable antagonist for a
+Christian to meet with the mild defensive weapons we
+have elected to use.</p>
+
+<p>When the weather proves fine, as it ought to have
+done in May, 1874, infidelity adjourns from its generally
+slummy halls to the street corners, and to fields
+which are often the reverse of green; thus adopting,
+let me remark in passing, one of the oldest instrumentalities
+of Christianity itself, one, too, in which
+we shall do well to follow its example. Fas est ab
+hoste doceri&mdash;I cannot repeat too often. Scorning
+the attractions of the railway arches in the St.
+Pancras Road, where I hope soon to be a listener, I
+sped vi&acirc; the Metropolitan Railway and tram to Shoreditch
+Church, not far from which, past the Columbia
+Market and palatial Model Lodging Houses, is the
+unpicturesque corner called Gibraltar Walk, debouching
+from the main road, with a triangular scrap of
+very scrubby ground, flanked by a low wall, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+young Bethnal Green is rapidly erasing from the face
+of the earth. When I got here, I found an unclerical-looking
+gentleman in a blue great-coat and sandy
+moustache erecting his rostrum in the shape of a small
+deal stool, from whence I could see he was preparing
+to pour forth the floods of his rhetoric by diligent
+study of some exceedingly greasy notes which he held
+in his hand and perused at what I feel sure must
+have been the windiest street corner procurable outside
+the cave of &AElig;olus. I fell back into the small but
+very far from select crowd which had already begun
+to gather, and an old man, who was unmistakably a
+cobbler, having ascertained that I had come to hear
+the lecture, told me he had "listened to a good many
+of 'em, but did not feel much for'arder." Undismayed
+by this intelligence I still elected to tarry, despite the
+cruel nor'-easter that was whistling round the corner
+of the Bethnal Green Road. In a few minutes I
+perceived a slight excitement in the small gathering
+due to the fact that the Christians had put in an appearance,
+so that there would be some opposition.
+Mr. Harrington, a young man whom I had heard once
+speak fluently enough on the theistic side at an infidel
+meeting, was unpacking his rostrum, which was
+a patent folding one, made of deal, like that of his
+adversary, but neatly folded along with a large Bible,
+inside a green baize case. Both gentlemen commenced
+proceedings at the same time; and as they
+had pitched their stools very close to one another, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+result was very much like that of two grinding organs
+in the same street. Of the two, Mr. Harrington's voice
+was louder than Mr. Ramsey's. The latter gentleman
+had a sore throat, and had to be kept lubricated by
+means of a jug of water, which a brother heretic held
+ready at his elbow. Mr. Harrington was in prime condition,
+but his congregation was smaller than ours;
+for I kept at first&mdash;I was going to say religiously, I
+suppose I ought to say <i>ir</i>-religiously&mdash;to the infidels.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Ramsey, who had a rooted aversion to the
+letter "h," except where a smooth breathing is usual,
+began by saying that Christianity differed from other
+religions in the fact of its having an eternal 'Ell.
+The Mahometans had their beautiful ladies; the
+North American Indian looked for his 'Appy 'Unting
+Grounds; but 'Ell was a speciality of the Christian
+system. On the other side was the fact that you
+continually had salvation inundated upon you. Tracts
+were put into your hand, asking&mdash;"What must I do
+to be saved?" We had to pay for this salvation about
+11,000,000<i>l.</i> a year to the Church of England, and
+something like an equal amount to the Dissenters.
+In fact every tub-thumper went about preaching and
+ruining servant girls, and for this we paid over
+twenty millions a year&mdash;more than the interest on the
+whole National Debt. After this elegant exordium, Mr.
+Ramsey said he proposed to divide his remarks under
+four heads. 1. Is Salvation necessary? 2. What are
+we to be saved from? 3. What for? 4. How?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>1. According to the Christian theory, God, after an
+eternity of "doin' nothin'," created the world. He
+made Adam sin by making sin for him to commit;
+and then damned him for doing what He knew he
+would do. He predestined you&mdash;the audience&mdash;to be
+damned because of Adam's sin; but after a time God
+"got sick and tired of damning people," and sent His
+Son to redeem mankind.</p>
+
+<p>This flower of rhetoric tickled Bethnal Green immensely;
+but Mr. Harrington was equal to the
+occasion, and thundered out his orthodoxy so successfully
+that Mr. Ramsey took a longer drink than usual,
+and complained that he was not having "a free platform"&mdash;it
+was so he dignified the rickety stool on
+which he was perched. He then meandered into a
+long dissection of Genesis i., appearing to feel particularly
+aggrieved by the fact of the moon being said to
+"rule the night," though I could not see how this
+was relevant to the Christian scheme of salvation;
+and a superb policeman, who had listened for a
+moment to Mr. Ramsey's astronomical lucubrations,
+evidently shared my feelings and passed on superciliously.
+I devoutly wished my duty had permitted
+me to do the same.</p>
+
+<p>The speaker then went into a long dissertation on
+the primal sin; the gist of which was that though
+the woman had never been warned not to eat of the
+Forbidden Fruit, she had to bear the brunt of the
+punishment. Then&mdash;though one is almost ashamed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+to chronicle such a triviality&mdash;he waxed very wroth
+because the serpent was spoken of as being cursed
+above all "cattle." Who ever heard of snakes being
+called cattle? He was condemned to go on his belly.
+How did he go before? Did he go on his back or
+"'op" along on the tip of his tail? These pleasantries
+drew all Mr. Harrington's audience away except
+a few little dirty boys on the wall. Mr. Ramsey
+clearly knew his audience, and "acted to the gallery."</p>
+
+<p>2. But what were we to be saved from? Eternal
+'Ell-fire. This 'Ell-fire was favourite sauce for sermons,
+and served to keep people awake. Where was
+'Ell? It was said to be a bottomless pit; if so, he
+should be all right, because he could get out at the
+other end! Then, again, 'Ell was said to be a very
+'ot place. When the missionaries told the Greenlanders
+that, everybody wanted to go to 'Ell; so they
+had to change their tune and say it was very cold.
+Mr. Ramsey omitted to mention his authority for this
+statement.</p>
+
+<p>Into his pleasantries on the monotony of life in
+'Eaven, I do not feel inclined to follow this gentleman.
+The Atonement, he went on to remark, if
+necessary at all, came 4000 years too late. It should
+have been&mdash;so we were to believe on his ipse dixit&mdash;contemporaneous
+with the Fall. This atonement we
+were to avail ourselves of by means of faith. Idiots
+could not have faith, but were allowed to be saved.
+Consequently, argued Mr. Ramsey, in conclusion, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+best thing for all of us would have been to have been
+born idiots, and, consistently enough, Christianity
+tried to turn us all into idiots.</p>
+
+<p>Such were some of the statements. I refrain from
+quoting the most offensive, which were deliberately
+put forward at this al fresco infidels' meeting; and
+with what result? Though a vast population kept
+moving to and fro along that great highway there
+were never, I am sure, more than a hundred people
+gathered at the shrine of Mr. Ramsey. They laughed
+at his profanities, yes; but directly he dropped these,
+and grew argumentative, they talked, and had to be
+vigorously reduced to order. Gallio-like they cared
+for none of these things, and I am quite sure a good
+staff of working clergy, men like Mr. Body or Mr.
+Steele of St. Thomas's, who could talk to the people,
+would annihilate Mr. Ramsey's prestige. As for Mr.
+Harrington, he meant well, and had splendid lung-power,
+but his theology was too sectarian to suit a
+mixed body of listeners embracing all shades of
+thought and no-thought.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing Mr. Ramsey to have put forth all his
+power that morning&mdash;and I have no reason to doubt
+that he did so&mdash;I deliberately say that I should not
+hesitate to take my own boy down to hear him,
+because I feel that even his immature mind would be
+able to realize how little there was to be said against
+Christianity, if that were all.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN "INDESCRIBABLE PHENOMENON."</h3>
+
+
+<p>When the bulk of the London Press elects to gush
+over anything or anybody, there are at all events,
+prim&acirc; facie grounds for believing that there is something
+to justify such a consensus. When, moreover,
+the object of such gush is a young lady claiming to
+be a spirit-medium, the unanimity is so unusual as
+certainly to make the matter worth the most careful
+inquiry, for hitherto the London Press has either
+denounced spiritualism altogether, or gushed singly
+over individual mediums, presumably according to
+the several proclivities of the correspondents. Of
+Miss Annie Eva Fay, however&mdash;is not the very name
+fairy-like and fascinating?&mdash;I read in one usually
+sober-minded journal that "there is something not of
+this earth about the young lady's powers." Another
+averred that she was "a spirit medium of remarkable
+and extraordinary power." Others, more cautious,
+described the "mystery" as "bewildering," the
+"entertainment" as "extraordinary and incomprehensible,"
+while yet another seemed to me to afford
+an index to the cause of this gush by saying that
+"Miss Fay is a pretty young lady of about twenty,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+with a delicate spirituelle face, and a profusion of
+light hair, frizzled on the forehead."</p>
+
+<p>I made a point of attending Miss Annie Eva Fay's
+opening performance at the Hanover Square Rooms,
+and found all true enough as to the pretty face and
+the frizzled hair. Of the "indescribable" nature of
+the "phenomenon" (for by that title is Miss Fay
+announced, &agrave; la Vincent Crummles) there may be two
+opinions, according as we regard the young lady as a
+kind of Delphic Priestess and Cum&aelig;an Sibyl rolled
+into one, or simply a clever conjuror&mdash;conjuress, if
+there be such a word.</p>
+
+<p>Let me, then, with that delightful inconsistency so
+often brought to bear on the so-called or self-styled
+"supernatural," first describe the "indescribable,"
+and then, in the language of the unspiritual Dr.
+Lynn, tell how it is all done; for, of course, I found it
+all out, like a great many others of the enlightened
+and select audience which gathered at Miss Annie
+Eva Fay's first drawing-room reception in the Queen's
+Concert Rooms.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at the door half an hour too early, as I
+had misread the time of commencement, I found at
+the portal Mr. Burns, of the Progressive Library, and
+a gentleman with a diamond brooch in his shirt-front,
+whom I guessed at once, from that adornment, to be
+the proprietor of the indescribable phenomenon, and
+I was, in fact, immediately introduced to him as
+Colonel Fay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Passing in due course within the cavernous room
+which might have suited well a Cum&aelig;an Sibyl on a
+small scale, I found the platform occupied by a tiny
+cabinet, unlike that of the Davenports in that
+it was open in front, with a green curtain, which I
+could see was destined to be let down during the
+performance of the phenomenal manifestations. There
+was a camp-stool inside the cabinet; a number of
+cane-bottomed chairs on the platform, and also the
+various properties of a spirit s&eacute;ance, familiar to me
+from long experience, guitar, fiddle, handbells, tambourine,
+&amp;c. One adjunct alone was new; and that
+was a green stable bucket, destined, I could not
+doubt, to figure in what my Rimmel-scented programme
+promised as the climax of Part I.&mdash;the
+"Great Pail Sensation." Presently Colonel Fay, in a
+brief speech, nasal but fluent, introduced the subject,
+and asked two gentlemen to act as a Committee of
+Inspection. Two stepped forward immediately&mdash;indeed
+too immediately, as the result proved; one a
+"citizen of this city," as Colonel Fay had requested;
+but the other a Hindoo young gentleman, who, I
+believe, lost the confidence of the audience at once
+from his foreign face and Oriental garb. However,
+they were first to the front, and so were elected, and
+proceeded at once to "examine" the cabinet in that
+obviously helpless and imperfect way common to
+novices who work with the gaze of an audience upon
+them. Then, from a side door, stage left, enter the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+Indescribable Phenomenon. A pretty young lady,
+yes, and with light frizzled hair to any extent. There
+was perhaps "a spirit look within her eyes;" but then
+I have often found this to be the case with young
+ladies of twenty. Her dress of light silk was beyond
+reproach. I had seen Florence Cook and Miss
+Showers lately; and,&mdash;well, I thought those two,
+with the assistance of Miss Annie Eva Fay, would
+have made a very pretty model for a statuette of the
+Three Graces.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fay, after being described by the Colonel
+vaguely enough as "of the United States," was bound
+on both wrists with strips of calico; the knots were
+sewn by the European gentleman&mdash;as distinguished
+from the Asiatic youth. He was not quite au fait
+at the needle, but got through it in time. Miss Fay
+was then placed on the camp-stool, her wrists fastened
+behind her, and her neck also secured to a ring screwed
+into the back of the cabinet. A rope was tied round
+her ankles, and passed right to the front of the stage,
+where the Hindoo youth was located and bidden hold
+it taut, which he did conscientiously, his attitude
+being what Colman describes "like some fat gentleman
+who bobbed for eels."</p>
+
+<p>First of all, another strip of calico was placed loosely
+round Miss Fay's neck; the curtain descended. Hey,
+presto! it was up again, sooner than it takes to write,
+and this strip was knotted doubly and trebly round
+her neck. A tambourine hoop was put in her lap,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+and this, in like manner, was found encircling her
+neck, as far as the effervescent hair would allow it.</p>
+
+<p>The audience at this point grew a little fidgety;
+and though they did not say anything against the
+Oriental young gentleman, the 'cute American colonel
+understood it, adding two others from the audience
+to the committee on the stage, and leaving the young
+gentleman to "bob" down below as if to keep him
+out of mischief.</p>
+
+<p>The other "manifestations" were really only different
+in detail from the first. The guitar was placed
+on the lap, the curtain fell and it played; so did the
+fiddle&mdash;out of tune, as usual&mdash;and also a little glass
+harmonicon with actually a soup&ccedil;on of melody. A
+mouth-organ tootle-tooed, and what Colonel Fay described
+as a "shingle nail" was driven with a hammer
+into a piece of wood. A third of a tumbler of water
+laid on the lap of the Indescribable Phenomenon was
+drunk, and the great Pail Sensation consisted in the
+bucket being put on her lap and then discovered slung
+by the handle around her neck. The last "manifestation"
+is the one to which I would draw attention;
+for it was by this I discovered how it was all done.
+A knife was put on Miss Fay's lap; the curtain
+lowered, the knife pitched on to the platform, and
+behold the Indescribable Phenomenon stepped from
+the cabinet with the ligature that had bound her
+wrists and neck severed.</p>
+
+<p>Now, all through this portion of the entertainment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+the audience, instead of sitting quiet, amused themselves
+with proposing idiotic tests, or suggesting
+audibly how it was all done. One man behind me
+pertinaciously clung to the theory of a concealed boy,
+and trotted him to the front after every phase of the
+exhibition. He must have been infinitesimally small;
+but that did not matter. It was "that boy again"
+after every trick. One manifestation consisted in
+putting a piece of paper and pair of scissors on Miss
+Fay's lap, and having several "tender little infants"
+cut out, as the Colonel phrased it.</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon sprang up a 'cute individual in the room,
+and produced a sheet of paper he had marked.
+Would Miss Fay cut out a tender little infant from
+that? Miss Fay consented, and of course did it, the
+'cute individual retiring into private life for the rest
+of the evening. Another wanted Miss Fay's mouth
+to be bound with a handkerchief, and there was no
+objection raised, until the common-sense and humanity
+of the audience protested against such a needless
+cruelty on a broiling night and in that Cum&aelig;an cave.
+An excited gentleman in front of me, too, whose
+mission I fancy was simply to protest against the
+spiritual character of the phenomena (which was never
+asserted) would interrupt us all from time to time by
+declaring his intense satisfaction with it all. It was
+a splendid trick. We tried to convince him that his
+individual satisfaction was irrelevant to us, but it
+was, as Wordsworth says, "Throwing words away."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+It was a beautiful trick; and he was satisfied, quite
+satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>The Dark S&eacute;ance, which formed the second part of
+the performance, was a dreadful mistake. It was not
+only unsatisfactory in result, but&mdash;and no doubt this
+was the reason&mdash;it was so mismanaged as to threaten
+more than once to eventuate in a riot. Twelve or
+fourteen persons were to form a committee representing
+the audience, and to sit in a circle, with the
+Indescribable Phenomenon in their centre, while we
+remained below in Egyptian darkness and received
+their report. Of course we all felt that we&mdash;if not
+on the committee&mdash;might just as well be sitting at
+home or in the next parish as in the cave of Cum&aelig;.
+The method of electing the committee was briefly
+stated by Colonel Fay to be "first come first served,"
+and the consequence was a rush of some fifty excited
+people on to the platform, with earnest requests on
+the part of the proprietary to be "still." There was
+no more stillness for the rest of the evening. The
+fifty were pruned down to about fifteen of the most
+pertinacious, who would not move at any price; in
+fact, the others only descended on being promised
+that the dark sitting should be divided into two,
+and another committee appointed. The Indescribable
+Phenomenon took her seat on the camp-stool in the
+centre, where she was to remain clapping her hands,
+to show she was not producing the manifestations.
+The gas was put out and darkness prevailed&mdash;dark<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>ness,
+but not silence. The disappointed and rejected
+committee men&mdash;and women&mdash;first began to grumble
+in the freedom which the darkness secured. The
+committee was a packed one. They were Spiritualists.
+This was vigorously denied by somebody, who said
+he saw a Press man in the circle, and therefore (such
+was his logic) he could not be a Spiritualist. All this
+time the Indescribable Phenomenon was clapping her
+hands, and now some of the more restless of the
+audience clapped theirs in concert. The guitar and
+fiddle began to thump and twang, and the bells to
+ring, and then again the more refractory lunatics
+amongst us began to beat accompaniment on our hats.
+The whole affair was worthy of Bedlam or Hanwell,
+or, let us add, an Indescribable Phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p>The committee was changed with another rush, and
+those who were finally exiled from the hope of sitting
+took it out in the subsequent darkness by advising
+us to "beware of our pockets." When Colonel Fay
+asked for quietude he was rudely requested "not to
+talk through his nose." It was not to be wondered
+at that the s&eacute;ance was very brief, and the meeting
+adjourned.</p>
+
+<p>Now to describe the indescribable. If it be a spiritual
+manifestation, of course there is an end of the
+matter; but if a mere conjuring trick, I would call
+attention to the following facts. The fastening of
+Miss Fay's neck to the back of the cabinet at first is
+utterly gratuitous. It offers no additional difficulty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+to any manifestations, and appears only intended to
+prevent the scrutineers seeing behind her. A very
+simple exercise of sleight of hand would enable the
+gallant Colonel to cut the one ligature that binds the
+two wrists, when, for instance, he goes into the
+cabinet with scissors to trim off the ends of the piece
+of calico in the opening trick. The hands being once
+free all else is easy. The hands are <i>never once seen</i>
+during the performance. The committee can feel
+them, and feel the knots at the wrists; but they cannot
+discover whether the ligature connecting the wrists
+is entire.</p>
+
+<p>The last trick, be it recollected, consists in the
+ligature being cut and Miss Fay's coming free to the
+front. If my theory is incorrect&mdash;and no doubt it
+<i>is</i> ruinously wrong&mdash;will she consent to <i>omit the last
+trick</i> and come to the front with wrists bound as she
+entered the cabinet? Of course, if I had suggested
+it, she would have done it as easily as she cut out the
+tender infants for the 'cute gentleman behind me; so,
+to adopt the language of Miss Fay's fellow-citizen, I
+"bit in my breath and swallered it down." I adopted
+the course Mr. Maskelyne told me he did with the
+Davenports, sat with my eyes open and my mouth
+shut. It is marvellous to see how excited we phlegmatic
+islanders grow when either spirits are brought
+to the front, or we think we have found out a conjuring
+trick. I am not going to follow the example
+of my gushing brethren, but I can safely say that if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+anybody has an afternoon or evening to spare, he
+may do worse than go to the Crystal Palace or the
+Hanover Square Rooms, to see a very pretty and
+indescribable phenomenon, and to return as I did, a
+wiser, though perhaps a sadder man, in the proud
+consciousness of having "found out how it is all
+done."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A LADY MESMERIST.</h3>
+
+
+<p>When a man's whole existence has resolved itself into
+hunting up strange people and poking his nose into
+queer nooks and corners, he has a sorry time of it in
+London during August; for, as a rule, all the funny
+folks have gone out of town, and the queer nooks and
+corners are howling wildernesses. There is always, of
+course, a sort of borderland, if he can only find it out,
+some peculiar people who never go out of town, some
+strange localities which are still haunted by them;
+only he has to find them out&mdash;people and places&mdash;for
+it is so universally allowed now-a-days that all
+genteel people must be out of London in August, and
+all respectable places must be covered up in old newspapers,
+that it is difficult to get them to own the soft
+impeachment.</p>
+
+<p>However, there is one queer place that is never shut
+up, the Progressive Library in Southampton Row;
+and Mr. Burns and the Spiritualists, as a rule, do not
+shut up shop even in August. Their Summerland
+lies elsewhere than Margate or the Moors; and a
+valse with a pirouetting table or a little gentle levitation
+or elongation delights them more than all the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+revels of the countryside. I was getting a little blas&eacute;,
+I own, on the subject of Spiritualism after my protracted
+experiences during the Conference, and I do not
+think I should have turned my steps in the direction
+of the Progressive Institution that week had not the
+following announcement caught my eye as I scanned
+the ghostly pages of the <i>Medium and Daybreak</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>"<span class="smcap"><b>a mesmeric s&eacute;ance.</b></span></p>
+
+<p>"We have been authorized to announce that Miss
+Chandos, whose advertisement appears in another part
+of this paper, will give a mesmeric s&eacute;ance at the
+Spiritual Institution, 15, Southampton Row, on Wednesday
+evening, August 19th, at eight o'clock. Admission
+will be free by ticket, which may be obtained
+at the Institution. The object which Miss Chandos
+has in view is to interest a few truth-seekers who
+could aid her in promoting a knowledge of psychological
+phenomena. As a crowded meeting is not
+desired, an early application should be made for
+tickets."</p></div>
+
+<p>I do not know that I said "Eureka!" Indeed I
+have considerable historic doubts as to whether anybody
+ever did, but I felt it. I was a truth-seeker
+forthwith. I resolved to sit at the feet of Miss
+Chandos, and, should her mesmeric efforts prove satisfactory,
+"aid her in promoting a knowledge of
+psychological phenomena." I did not go through
+the prescribed process of getting a ticket beforehand,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+because I thought in my innocence that everybody
+would be out of town, or that the Hall of the Progressive
+Institute would certainly accommodate those
+who remained. Never was a more fatal mistake.
+The psychological folks were all in London, and the
+capacities of the Progressive Library are not palatial.
+Miss Chandos had a crowded meeting whether she
+desired it or not. Genius will not be concealed; and
+Miss Chandos was learning that lesson in a very satisfactory
+way. It was a sultry evening when a small
+boy opened the back door of the little first floor
+apartment in Southampton Row, and squeezed me in
+like the thirteenth in an omnibus, and I found myself
+walking on people's toes, and sitting down on their
+hats in the most reckless manner. At length, however,
+I struggled to a vacant corner, and deposited
+myself perspiring and expectant.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Burns was "orating" on the revival mesmerism
+was destined to make, and telling us how,
+like the Plumstead Peculiars, we should be able to
+do without doctors as soon as the healing powers of
+animal magnetism were properly recognised and
+diffused. I did not listen very carefully, I fear, for
+I was nervously looking about for Miss Chandos.
+Nervously, I say, because lady mediums and mesmerizers
+are so apt to run to eighteen stone, or be old
+and frumpish, that I had terrible fears lest I should
+be scared when I met Miss Chandos in the flesh. I
+was very agreeably surprised, however, for when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+Mr. Burns resumed&mdash;not his chair but his table, since
+he sat on that article of furniture, a very pretty
+young lady indeed, of not more than eighteen or
+twenty years of age, took his place, and, in a few
+well-chosen words, said this was her first appearance
+as a public mesmerist, and claimed indulgence should
+any failure in the phenomena result. She also drew
+attention to the fact that the apartment was "pernicious
+snug" (she put it, of course, in more scientific
+language), and straightway proceeded to business.</p>
+
+<p>When Miss Chandos invited patients to put themselves
+in her hands I thought the room had risen en
+masse. Everybody wanted to be mesmerized. I had
+no chance in my retired position; but she soon got a
+front row of likely people, and I sat down once more
+disappointed and exuding.</p>
+
+<p>She was a tall active young lady was Miss Chandos,
+and had a mystic crop of long black curls, which
+waved about like the locks of a sibyl when she made
+a lunge at an innocent looking young man who sat
+No. 1&mdash;and whom, with the other patients, I shall
+designate thus numerically. He seemed to like it
+immensely, and smiled a fatuous smile as those taper
+fingers lighted on his head, while the other hand
+rested on the frontal portion of his face, as though
+Miss Chandos were going to pull his nose. He was
+off in a moment, and sat facing the audience in his
+magnetic trance, looking like a figure at a waxwork
+show. Miss Chandos then passed on to a gentleman,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+No. 2, who never succumbed during the entire evening,
+though she made several onslaughts upon him.
+Consequently I dismiss No. 2 as incorrigible forthwith.
+No. 3 was a lady who only gave way after a
+lengthened attack, and did not seem to appreciate
+the effect of Miss Chandos' lustrous eyes so much as
+No. 1 did. He gave signs of "coming to," but
+Miss Chandos kept looking round at him and No. 2,
+while she was attending to No. 3, and directly she
+did this No. 1 closed his eyes, and slept the sleep of
+innocence again.</p>
+
+<p>Having reduced No. 3 to a comatose condition Miss
+Chandos reverted to No. 1, and by attractive passes
+got him on his legs and made him follow her up and
+down the limited space at her disposal. She looked
+then like a pretty Vivien manipulating a youthful
+Merlin; and I was not at all surprised at the effect of
+her "woven paces and her waving hands." She asked
+him his name, and he told her. It was W&mdash;&mdash;.
+"No," she said, "it's Jones. Mary Jones. What's
+your name?" But the youth was not quite so far
+gone as to rebaptize himself with a female cognomen
+just yet. He stuck to his W., and Miss Chandos put
+him into his waxwork position again, and got No. 3
+on her legs at last, but did nothing more with her
+than make her walk up and down. Presently No. 3
+woke up, and was put to air at the window.</p>
+
+<p>No. 4 was now selected, in the person of a big
+burly man; and I could not help thinking, as she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+manipulated him, what a capital pose it would have
+been for Hercules and Omphale. He seemed to like
+it exceedingly, and I thought was dropping comfortably
+off when he whispered something to his operator
+(I have no notion what the feminine of that
+word is), who fixed her brilliant eyes on somebody
+near me&mdash;I feared it was actually on me&mdash;and said,
+"Somebody at the back of the room is exercising control.
+I shall be glad if they will refrain." I was
+quite innocent of exercising conscious control, and did
+not quite know what the phrase meant. I certainly
+had once or twice thought it must be much pleasanter
+to be operated upon by so pretty a young lady than
+by some bull-necked male mesmerist or aged spinster
+above-mentioned, but I could scarcely believe that such
+a mild sentiment could affect that colossal man.
+However, I recollected the delicacy of these psychological
+relations, and sat down conscience-stricken and
+warmer than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Chandos selected No. 5 in the person of a
+young man with a nascent moustache, who had successfully
+struggled into the front row at the outset.
+He promised well at first; but, like other young men
+with incipient moustaches, disappointed us afterwards.
+Then came No. 6 upon the scene.</p>
+
+<p>No. 6 was a lady who came late, and at once pushed
+to the front with the air of a person who was not
+doing so for the first time. She went off in a moment&mdash;far
+too suddenly, in fact, and then did everything<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+she was told in a very obedient way. Being told that
+she was in a beautiful garden, she stooped down on
+the floral carpet and proceeded to gather materials for
+a bouquet. I confess I did not care about No. 6, and
+was proceeding to read Professor Tyndall's Belfast
+Address, which I had in my pocket, when Miss
+Chandos looked up No. 1 again.</p>
+
+<p>Reduced to a proper frame of mind, either by Miss
+Chandos' continued attentions or the contagion of
+No. 6's docility, the youth was now all submission.
+He walked up and down any number of times like a
+tame animal at the Zoological Gardens, and now quite
+agreed that his name was Mary Jones. He sang
+"Tom Bowling" at command, and No. 6, not to be
+outdone, warbled a ditty called, I think, "The Slave
+Girl's Love," the refrain of which, according to her
+version, was, "I cannot love, because I <i>ham</i> a slave."
+She broke down in the middle of this aspiring ditty,
+and then personated a Jew old clo' man, a woman
+selling "ornaments for your firestoves," and various
+other characters, all of which she overacted considerably.
+I may be wrong, of course, but I fancied the
+fair lecturess was as dissatisfied with No. 6 as I was.
+The audience was an indulgent one, and thought it
+splendid. Mr. Burns sat on the table and yawned. I
+relapsed into Tyndall, and wondered what he would
+have said about it all; or, at least, I did not wonder,
+for I knew he would have consigned us all to the
+nearest lunatic asylum as exceptions to the rule that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+the European has so many more cubic inches of cerebral
+development than the Papuan.</p>
+
+<p>When it was drawing near ten, Miss Chandos
+brought the proceedings to a close by animating&mdash;like
+Pygmalion&mdash;her waxwork statues. She apologized
+once more, in a few well-chosen sentences, for
+what she was pleased to call her "failure," but the
+audience would not hear of the term, and applauded
+to the echo, only there was no room for an echo in
+the Progressive Institute. The young man, No. 1,
+who I found was a spirit medium, wound up by an
+address from his Indian guide on the subject of
+"control."</p>
+
+<p>I confess I failed to gather from the perambulating
+youth and maidens No. 1 and 3, or the impersonations
+of No. 6, any signs of the revival alluded to by Mr.
+Burns at the outset; and there was not the remotest
+connexion with the healing art. In fact, nobody
+seemed suffering from anything except heat.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Chandos said to me, however, in a sensible
+conversation with which she favoured me in private,
+that all she had attempted to show was but the
+lowest manifestation of a power which had far
+higher ends in view. She doubted almost whether
+it was not something like sacrilege to use such a
+power for playing tricks and gratifying curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>She was thoroughly in earnest; and laboured
+both physically during the evening and logically
+in her after-discourse, with an energy which some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+persons would have said was worthy of a better
+cause.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly eleven when I left the miniature hall
+of the Progressive Institute, and as I passed along
+the streets, digesting what I had seen and heard
+during the evening, I took myself to task severely&mdash;as
+it is always well to do, if only to prevent somebody
+else doing it for me&mdash;and asked whether, if the
+lecturess had not been a lecturess but a lecturer&mdash;if
+being a lecturess she weighed eighteen stone, or was
+old and wizen, or dropped her h's&mdash;whether I should
+have stayed three mortal hours in that stuffy room,
+and I frankly own I came to the conclusion I should
+<i>not</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A PSYCHOPATHIC INSTITUTION.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Reading my <i>Figaro</i> the other day&mdash;as I hope I need
+not state it is my custom devoutly to do&mdash;I came
+upon the following passage in the review of a book
+called "Psychopathy; or, the True Healing Art.
+By Joseph Ashman. London: Burns, Southampton
+Row. We have not the pleasure of being personally
+acquainted with Joseph Ashman, and we fear that
+the loss is ours. Judging him through the medium
+of his book, he must, indeed, be a rara avis....
+The one great thing," it went on to say, "that
+Joseph Ashman wants the world to know is, that he
+cures disease by very simple means. And all that
+the world wants to know from Joseph Ashman is,
+Are these cures real&mdash;are his statements facts? Why,
+then, does not Joseph content himself with his facts?
+He has plenty of them. Here is one:&mdash;'Seeing one
+day a cabman with a swollen face standing by a police-court
+ready to prosecute a man who had assaulted
+him, I asked if, on condition I healed him, he would
+forgive his adversary. He replied that he would, and
+we accordingly got into his cab together. Bringing
+out the magnetized carte, I told him to look at it,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+and at the same time made a few motions over the
+swelling with my hand. I then left him feeling much
+better, and returned in an hour's time, when I found
+him taking a glass of beer with his antagonist, whom
+he had forgiven.'"</p>
+
+<p>Now as the one pursuit and end of my present
+existence is the discovery of rar&aelig; aves, I need not say
+I at once took up the clue herein afforded, and went
+in pursuit of Joseph Ashman. I found not only him
+but his institution, for Mr. Ashman does not work
+single-handed. It is in the Marylebone Road, almost
+opposite the Yorkshire Stingo; and is most modest
+and unpretending in its outward semblance, being
+situated in one of those semi-rustic houses so indicative
+of suburban London, down an overstocked garden,
+into which you enter by means of a blistered iron
+gate, painted violently green, and swinging heavily on
+its hinges. Down a vista of decrepit dahlias one
+sped to the portal, alongside which was a trio of
+bell-handles, one above the other, showing that the
+Psychopathic Institution did not occupy the whole
+even of that modest domicile. I always approach
+these manifold bells with considerable diffidence,
+conscious that I must inevitably ring the wrong one;
+so, on this occasion, I rang none at all, but knocked
+a faint double knock on the knocker by way of compromise&mdash;very
+faint, indeed, lest I should disturb any
+patients who were being "psychopathized." While I
+waited I had leisure to observe that hidden among<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
+the dahlias, and thatched over as it were with a
+superannuated costermonger's barrow, was a double
+perambulator, which set me calculating the probabilities
+of Mr. Ashman being a family man.</p>
+
+<p>The door was opened before I had settled the point
+to my own mental satisfaction, by a short, cheery-looking
+man, with long, straight flaxen hair flowing
+down over the shoulders of his black frock-coat, a
+beard a few shades lighter, and a merry twinkling
+eye, which looked more sympathetic than psychopathic,
+and I should think was calculated to do
+patients good directly it lighted on them. He looked
+as much as to ask whether I was psychopathically
+wrong, when I informed him that I had not come as
+a patient, but simply to inspect his institution if he
+would permit me. The permission was at once
+accorded. "We are hard at work," he said, as he
+ushered me into the front parlour; "but come in and
+see what we are about."</p>
+
+<p>A man who looked like a respectable artisan was
+sitting at the table; and a second, in his shirt sleeves,
+was astride of a chair in what appeared to be rather
+an idiotic ride-a-cock-horse-to-Banbury-Cross fashion,
+and Mr. Ashman was pinching him and prodding him
+as butchers do fat animals at the Smithfield Show.</p>
+
+<p>"That there gentleman," said Mr. Ashman, in a
+broad provincial dialect, "couldn't get astride that
+chair when he come here half-an-hour ago. How d'ye
+feel now, sir?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Feel as though I should like to race somebody
+twenty rods for five pound a-side," answered the
+patient, getting up and walking about the room as if
+it were a new sensation. He had been brought, it
+appeared, to Mr. Ashman by his friend, who was
+sitting at the table, and who was an old psychopathic
+patient. He assured me he had suffered from
+rheumatism for twenty years, and was completely
+disabled without his stick until he came into that
+room half-an-hour since. He walked up and down
+stickless and incessantly as the carnivora at the Zoo
+all the time he was telling me.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind putting your ear to this man's
+back, sir?" said Mr. Ashman to me. I did so; and
+when he bent, his backbone seemed to go off with a
+lot of little cracks like the fog-signals of a railway.
+"That there old rusty hinge we mean to grease."
+And away he went psychopathizing him again. When
+he was done, Mr. Ashman explained to me learnedly,
+and with copious illustrations from anatomical plates,
+his theory of this disease, which was his favourite
+one for treatment, because it yielded rapidly. Paralysis
+and that class of disease are much slower. He had
+succeeded in acute rheumatism, and also in calculus.
+"I like fat men&mdash;fighting men to heal," he said. "I
+leave the delicate ones to others." The sturdy little
+psychopathist looked healthy enough to heal a sick
+rhinoceros.</p>
+
+<p>While he was lecturing me his hands were not idle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+I should think they seldom were. He was pouring
+salad oil from a flask on to flannel to give to the other
+man who was sitting at the table, and had approached
+convalescence from a chronic disease after one or two
+visits, and who used this oiled flannel to keep up the
+influence. Both the men seemed perfectly genuine;
+and the rheumatic gentleman, when he left, pronounced
+the effect of his psychopathizing miraculous. The fee
+was five shillings. "I shan't charge you nothin' for
+the flannel," he said to No. 2. I began to take quite
+a fancy to Joseph Ashman, and thanked <i>Figaro</i> inwardly
+for directing me to the institution.</p>
+
+<p>A working woman who was next in the little row
+of patients assembled in the back room, came in with
+her wrists bound up in bits of flannel, and her hands
+looking puffed and glazy. She, too, had lost the use
+of them for six years, she told me, and had been pronounced
+incurable by the doctors. This was her
+fourth visit to Mr. Ashman. "Take up the chair,
+ma'am," he said to his patient; and she did carry it
+in rather a wobbly fashion across the room. "Now
+the other hand," and she did it with the other hand.
+"Now show the gentleman how you did it when you
+came to me. She's rather hard o' hearin'," he explained
+to me; but after one or two repetitions the
+poor old body comprehended, and carried it in her
+crooked elbow. "Now I'll call my assistant," he
+said, and summoned a ruddy, red-bearded man, who
+looked as though he might have just come in from a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+brisk country walk. "When these cases require a
+good deal of rubbing I let my assistants do the preliminary
+work, and then come in as the Healing
+Medium myself." The rubbers, he informed me, like
+the Medium, must be qualified, not only physically,
+but morally. Benevolence was the great requisite;
+and certainly both these men seemed running over
+with it, if looks meant anything. When Joseph
+Ashman took his turn, working the poor old patient's
+stiff wrists, and pulling her fingers till they cracked,
+like children playing "sweethearts," she never winced,
+but actually seemed to like it, and trotted off well
+satisfied with her fourth instalment of good health.</p>
+
+<p>The next rubber who was introduced to me was
+not such a ruddy man, being, in fact, somewhat
+saturnine in appearance; but I could quite understand
+that he was, as he described himself, brimful of electricity.
+His chevelure was like that on the little
+man we stick on the conductor of an electrical machine
+and make each particular hair stand on end like
+quills upon the fretful porcupine.</p>
+
+<p>I could not for the life of me see the difference
+between this treatment and simple mesmerism, except
+that it was much more rapid in its effects than any
+magnetic treatment I have ever witnessed. Indeed,
+I frankly confess I do not understand it now, though
+Mr. Ashman made me accept one of his little books
+on Psychopathic healing, and told me I should see
+the distinction when I had read it. I must be very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+dense, for I have read it diligently through, and still
+fail to trace the distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The man made a great impression on me. I felt
+he was just one of those who would carry life into a
+sick room, and communicate vital power&mdash;supposing
+it to be communicable&mdash;from the dumpy fingers of
+his fat soft hand. The perambulator did not belie
+him. Numbers of pretty black-eyed children were
+running about, and there was a Mrs. Ashman somewhere
+among the poor patients in the back room.
+All the children came to me except the eldest boy,
+who, his father told me in a mysterious tone, had
+suffered some indignity at the hands of my cloth, and
+dreaded a parson ever after. I believe my injudicious
+brother had set him a long task (perhaps his Duty to
+his Neighbour), and the poor lad was always afraid
+he should be dropped down upon to "say it." Mr.
+Ashman's book is a little bewildering to an outsider
+who fails to distinguish the <i>two</i> vital forces. He
+says: "It is much rarer to find a high development
+of a temperament in which the psychical element
+prevails, than in which it is well blended with the
+vital-magnetic, or than in which the latter excels.
+In nearly all popular public men there is a blending
+of the two. We see it well exemplified in John
+Bright, Spurgeon, and others. This is the secret of
+their drawing, magnetic power. It is the secret, too,
+of many a physician's success: his genial magnetism
+cures when his medicine is useless, although, of course,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+he does not know it. As is the difference between
+these two forces, so is the difference in the method of
+their employment for the purpose of cure." However,
+when I left I promised&mdash;and I mean to keep
+my vow&mdash;that if ever I am unfortunate enough to
+find my vertebr&aelig; creaking like "an old hinge," I
+will come to Mr. Ashman and have it greased. The
+remark in his book as to the success of medicine
+depending on the qualities of him who administered
+it was, we may recollect, confirmed at the 1874 meeting
+of the British Association in Belfast.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Ashman has had a chequered history. He
+has dwelt in the tents of the Mormonites; has been
+one of the Peculiar People. In early life he was in
+service in the country, where his master used to flog
+him until, to use his own expression, he nearly cut
+him in two. His earliest patients were cattle. "For
+a healer," he said, "give me a man as can clean a
+window or scrub a floor. Christ himself, when He
+chose those who were to be healers as well as
+preachers, chose fishermen, fine, deep chested men, depend
+upon it, sir," and he rapped upon his own sonorous
+lungs until they reverberated. He was certainly
+blessed with a superabundance of good health, and
+looked benevolent enough to impart all his surplus
+stock to anybody who wanted it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A PHRENOLOGICAL EVENING.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The experience I am about to chronicle occurred
+when the Beecher-Tilton scandal was at its height;
+and I was attracted by the somewhat ambiguous
+title "Burns upon Beecher."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. James Burns, the spirited proprietor of the
+Progressive Library, Southampton Row, having devoted
+himself to the study of phrenology, has for
+some time past held a series of craniological s&eacute;ances
+on Tuesday evenings, at which he "takes off" the
+head of some well-known person, or your own, if you
+like, whether you are well-known or born to blush
+unseen, not in the way of physical decapitation, but
+by the method of phrenological diagnosis. I greatly
+regretted having, on a previous occasion, missed the
+analysis of Dr. Kenealy's cerebral developments. I
+believe the Claimant himself was once the object of
+Mr. Burns' remarks; but when Mr. Beecher's cranium
+was laid down for dissection at the height of the
+Beecher-Tilton sensation, I could resist no longer,
+but, despite all obstacles, repaired to the Institute of
+Progress.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>About a score of people were gathered in that first-floor
+front where I had seen so many strange things.
+Of these persons some formed the regular phrenological
+class conducted there weekly by Mr. Burns.
+The others were, generally speaking, of the ordinary
+lecture-audience type. One stout lady occupied an
+easy-chair in a corner, and slept from first to last.</p>
+
+<p>The first part of the lecture was a little discursive,
+I fancy for my especial benefit, and summarized Mr.
+Burns' system, which is to a great extent original.
+Beginning by a disavowal of all dogmas, he began
+by advancing what was to me the entirely novel
+doctrine, that the brain was not the sole organ of the
+mind, but that the whole organism of man had to be
+taken into account in the diagnosis of character, since
+the entire body was permeated with the mind. The
+bones, fluids, and viscera were all related to mental phenomena.
+The lecturer even questioned whether the
+science he promulgated was properly termed phrenology.
+It certainly did not answer to the conventional
+idea of that craft. Referring to a calico diagram
+which was pinned to the curtains of the first-floor
+front, and at which he pointed with a walking-stick,
+Mr. Burns notified four divisions of the animal frame&mdash;1,
+the vital organs; 2, the mechanical; 3, the
+nervous (which in the lower orders were ganglionic
+only); 4, the cerebral apparatus. He defended the
+animal powers from the debased idea usually attached
+to them, and pointed out their close connexion with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+the spirit, nearer to which they were placed than any
+portion of the economy.</p>
+
+<p>He then proceeded to apply his preliminary remarks
+to preachers in general. Theodore Parker, for
+instance, was a man of spare body and large brain.
+He was surrounded by intellectual people, and his
+disciples were quite sui generis. On the other hand,
+Spurgeon was a man of strong animal and perceptive
+powers, and so able to send the Walworth shopkeepers
+into ecstasies. His ganglions were big, as
+was the case in all great preachers. Emotion, he
+said, was more a matter of bowels than of brain.
+The ganglionic power carried the brain; but there
+were, of course, combinations of all grades.</p>
+
+<p>In the case of Henry Ward Beecher, two of whose
+photographs he held in his hand, he dwelt on the
+disadvantage of having only the shadow instead of
+the substance of his head to deal with. Here, he
+said, we had all the elements on a large scale. The
+brain, thoracic system, osseous structure, and abdominal
+development were all in excess. The face
+was, as it were, the picture of all. Henry Ward
+Beecher was emphatically a large man. The blood
+was positive; the circulation good. The digestion
+was perfect, and the man enjoyed good food. Especially
+the length from the ear to the front of the
+eyebrows denoted intellectual grasp. There was not
+much will power. Whatever he had done (and Mr.
+Burns emphatically disclaimed passing any judgment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+on the "scandal") he had not done of determination,
+but had rather "slid into it." He was no planner.
+He gathered people round him by the "solar" force
+of his mind. If he had been a designing man&mdash;if
+largely developed behind the ears&mdash;he would have
+gone to work in a different way. There was good
+development in the intellectual, sympathetic, and
+emotional part of his nature; and this combination
+made him a popular preacher. There was
+more than mere animal magnetism needed to account
+for this; there was intellectual power, but not much
+firmness or conscientiousness. If he were present,
+he would probably acknowledge that something had
+led him on to do whatever he had done in spite of
+himself. What was very peculiar in the man was
+his youthfulness. He had been before the world for
+forty years. Mr. Fowler, the phrenologist, of Ludgate
+Circus, had been a fellow student of Beecher,
+and had measured his head, which he ascertained to
+have grown an inch in ten years. Beecher was essentially
+a growing man&mdash;growing like a boy. The
+ganglionic power was that which kept people always
+growing, and was the great means of their getting a
+hold over other people.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Burns then passed in review the three portraits
+of Beecher, Tilton, and Mrs. Tilton respectively, in
+the <i>Pictorial World</i>. Mrs. Tilton he described as a
+negative person, inclined to be hysterical and
+"clinging." There was in her a high type of brain,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+morally, intellectually, and spiritually. Still the
+brain, he said, did not make us good or bad. Again
+repudiating all judgment as to the scandal, he dwelt
+upon the close social relationships between Beecher
+and Mrs. Tilton, and recurred to the strong vital influence
+of the former, comparing it to that of Brigham
+Young upon his "spiritual affinities." In all
+probability, taking into account the different natures
+of Beecher and Mrs. Tilton, whatever had occurred
+"the people couldn't help themselves."</p>
+
+<p>Then as to Theodore Tilton. Mr. Burns had read
+the <i>Golden Age</i>, and pronounced it a smart publication.
+There was, however, in Tilton a want of ganglionic
+power; he was all brain. He was a man who might
+be read, but he could not lecture or preach. His was
+a higher mind than Beecher's, but not one that
+would command much human sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>Suppose Mrs. Tilton were not the wife of either,
+her relations to each might be conscientious, but still
+violate the laws of monogamic life. The influence
+of Beecher over her would be ganglionic as well as
+intellectual; that of Tilton purely intellectual: when
+lo, a gust of ganglionic power would supervene on
+the latter, and carry all before it.</p>
+
+<p>Concluding his analysis of Mr. Beecher thus, Mr.
+Burns discovered that he had two clerics among his
+audience, and asked us&mdash;for I was one of them&mdash;if
+we would be examined. I readily consented, and
+handed my notes to Miss Chandos (the young lady<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+mesmerist, whose s&eacute;ance I reported a few pages back)
+to report progress. She, therefore, is responsible for
+the diagnosis that follows.</p>
+
+<p>Handling me from head to foot, much as a fancier
+does a prize ox at Smithfield, Mr. Burns found the
+life power good, and the muscles well nourished, the
+working faculties being in a high state of activity.
+The head&mdash;I blushed to hear&mdash;measured one inch
+beyond the average of a man of my size, and the
+cerebral faculties were harmoniously organized. I
+had large perceptive powers; and my human nature
+(wherever that may be located) was full, as was also
+firmness. The thinking sphere was good. I should
+have made, Mr. Burns informed me, a good sculptor
+or artist.</p>
+
+<p>Omitting one or two complimentary remarks which
+Miss Chandos has faithfully, if not flatteringly, reported,
+and the enunciation of which quite confused
+me as I sat the centre and cynosure of that wondering
+group, I was glad to learn that I was an open
+man, though possessed of sufficient caution and not
+defective in moral courage. In fact "pluck" was
+large. I really wished Mr. Burns would relieve me
+by finding some bad bumps; but no&mdash;the worst he
+could say of me was that I was restless. What
+chiefly seemed to strike him, though, were my vital
+powers, and he really covered me with confusion
+when he began to calculate my Beecher powers on a
+possible Mrs. Tilton. However, he toned down this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
+remark by noticing that my domestic faculties were
+well developed. My faith and hope were small. I
+was a "doubting" man. The positive and negative
+were well blent in me, and I was also "mediumistic."</p>
+
+<p>The diagnosis of two ladies concluded the evening's
+exercises, but neither of these personages displayed
+any very remarkable traits; Mr. Burns declaring he
+felt some difficulty in discovering the bumps under
+the "back hair."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A SPIRITUAL PICNIC.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In a volume bearing the title of <i>Mystic London</i> it
+would seem perchance that Spiritualism, as par excellence
+the modern mystery, should stand first. I have
+thought it better, however, to defer its treatment
+somewhat, working up to it as to a climax, and then
+gently descending to mundane matters once more ere
+I close my present work.</p>
+
+<p>Of London at this hour, just as of Rome in the later
+Republic and Empire, it may be safely affirmed that
+there is in its midst an element of the mysterious and
+occult utterly undreamed of by the practical people.
+Many phases of this element have already been treated
+of in my different works; and I add some of the more
+exceptional as properly belonging to my present subject.</p>
+
+<p>Now I candidly confess that, up to a recent date, I
+had not given Spiritualists&mdash;qu&acirc; spiritualists&mdash;credit
+for being a cheerful or convivial people. Though
+there exist upon the tablets of my memory recollections
+of certain enjoyable dinners, cosy teas, and charming
+petits soupers, eaten at the mahogany of believers in
+the modern mystery, yet these were purely exceptional<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
+events, oases in the desert of spiritualistic experiences.
+Generally speaking, the table, instead of groaning
+under its accumulated bounties, leapt about as if from
+the absence thereof; and the only adjuncts of the inhospitable
+mahogany were paper tubes for the spirit
+voices, handbells for the spirit hands, and occasional
+accordions and musical boxes for the delectation of
+harmonious ghosts. It was a "flow of soul" if not
+always a "feast of reason;" but, as regarded creature
+comforts, or any of the ordinary delights of mundane
+existence, a very Siberian desert. A grave subject of
+discussion (I am not, I assure you, indulging in a
+sepulchral pun) at the recent Liverpool Conference
+was how to feed mediums, and I fancy the preponderating
+opinion was that fasting was a cardinal
+virtue in their case&mdash;a regimen that had come to be
+in my mind, perhaps unfairly, associated with s&eacute;ances
+in general. I was glad, therefore, when I read in the
+columns of the <i>Medium</i> the announcement of the
+spiritual picnic or "demonstration," at the People's
+Garden, Willesden. Still I wanted to see Spiritualists
+enjoy themselves in the "normal condition." I sympathized
+with the avowed object of the gathering, that
+the followers of the new creed should know one
+another, as surely the disciples of a common school
+ought to do. Armed, therefore, with a ticket, I proceeded,
+vi&acirc; the North London Railway, to the scene
+of action. It was not what we materialistic people
+should call a fine August day. It was cold and dull,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
+and tried hard to rain; but it was far more in keeping
+with the character of the meeting than what Father
+Newman calls the "garish day" one looks for in mid-August.
+In the words of the circle the "conditions
+were excellent;" and as I journeyed on, reading my
+<i>Medium</i> like a true believer, I marvelled to see, by the
+evidence of its advertisements, how the new creed had
+taken hold of a certain section, at all events, of society.
+Besides a dozen public mediums who paraded their
+varied attractions at terms ranging from 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to
+21<i>s.</i>, there were spiritualistic young men who put
+forward their creed as a qualification for clerkships&mdash;perhaps
+they had no other claim&mdash;spiritual lodging-house
+keepers, and even spiritual undertakers, all pervaded
+by what we may literally call a common esprit
+de corps.</p>
+
+<p>In due course we reached the People's Garden, the
+popular title whereof seemed to have been given on
+the lucus a non principle, for the London folk have
+not, as yet, affected it largely. Why this should be
+so one cannot guess, for it is the very ideal of a Cockney
+Paradise, and is admirably worked by a body of
+shareholders, most of whom belong to the artisan
+class, though under very distinguished patronage
+indeed. When I got to the grounds the Spiritualists
+were indulging in a merry-go-round during a refreshing
+drizzle. A temporary rush under cover ensued, and
+then the weather became more favourable, though the
+skies preserved their neutral tint. Mrs. Bullock, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+suburban medium, who had become entranced, had
+located herself in a bower, and beckoned people from
+the audience to receive her "benediction," which was
+given in a remarkable dialect. I thought it was
+Yorkshire, but a spiritualistic gentleman explained to
+me that it was "partly North American Indian."
+The Osborne Bellringers next gave a campanological
+concert, which was exceedingly good of its kind, the
+small gentleman who played the bass bell working so
+actively as to suggest the idea that he could not long
+survive such hard labour in his fleshly condition.
+These campanologists are said to be big mediums, and
+occasionally to be floated or otherwise spirited during
+their performances; but nothing abnormal occurred
+at the People's Garden. Then there was dancing on
+the monster platform, which is, I should think, correctly
+described as "the largest in the world." This
+was indeed a new phase of Spiritualism: the terpsichorean
+spiritualists generally let their tables do the
+dancing for them, as Eastern potentates hire their
+dancing-girls. Donkey-races, croquet, and other unspiritual
+diversions varied the order of proceedings;
+and as for the one-and-ninepenny teas, I can only say
+I should think the Garden Committee did not get
+much profit out of them, for the Spiritualists regaled
+themselves in the most material fashion. During the
+afternoon the arrivals were fast and frequent. All the
+medium-power of London seemed present; and the
+only wonder was that we were not all floated bodily<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
+away. There was Mrs. Guppy, who, in answer to my
+demand whether she had been "floated" from Highbury,
+informed me that she had come far less romantically&mdash;"nine
+in a cab!" There was Dr. Monk, too,
+a Nonconformist clergyman, who had lately been
+taking a&euml;rial journeys of the Guppy order about
+Bristol. In fact, the &eacute;lite of the sect were well represented;
+and during the whole afternoon, despite the
+dirty-looking day, the fun was fast and furious, and
+all went merry as the proverbial marriage-bell.</p>
+
+<p>Part of the programme was an entertainment by a
+gentleman bearing the delightfully sepulchral name of
+Dr. Sexton, whose mission in life it is to "expose"
+the tricks of Dr. Lynn and Messrs. Maskelyne and
+Cooke. How those gentlemen are to be "exposed,"
+seeing they only claim to deceive you by legerdemain,
+I cannot comprehend; but they made the Spiritualists
+very angry by taking their names in vain on the handbills
+of the Egyptian Hall, and more than insinuating
+that there was a family likeness between their performances;
+and, consequently, the conjurors were to
+be "exposed;" that is, the public were to have their
+visit to the Temple of Magic spoilt by being shown
+beforehand how the tricks were done. Aided by an
+expert assistant named Organ, Dr. Sexton soon let us
+into the mysteries of the cabinet business, which
+seemed just as easy as making the egg stand on end&mdash;when
+you know how. It is perfectly true that,
+after hearing Dr. Sexton's exposition&mdash;rather than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+expos&eacute;&mdash;it is quite easy for any one to frustrate the
+designs of these clever conjurors, if he wishes to do
+so. I am not sure that the expos&eacute; is wise. Illogical
+people will not see the force of Dr. Sexton's argument,
+and will possibly think it "proves too much." If so
+much can be done by sleight of hand and ingenious
+machinery, they will argue, perhaps, that the Davenports
+and other mediums are only cleverer conjurors
+still, or have better machinery. Alas! all my fairyland
+is pasteboard now. I know how the man gets
+out of the corded box&mdash;I could do it myself. I know
+where the gorilla goes when he seems lost in the
+magic cabinet. It is all a clever combination of mirrors.
+The blood-red letters of some dear departed
+friend are only made with red ink and a quill pen, and
+the name of the "dear departed" forged. Well, I
+suppose <i>I</i> am illogical, too. If one set of things is so
+simple when it is shown to you, why may not all be?
+I fear the Willesden outing has unsettled my convictions,
+and shaken my faith in most sublunary things.</p>
+
+<p>The gathering clearly proved the growth of Spiritualism
+in London. That such numbers could be got
+together in the dead season bespeaks a very extensive
+ramification indeed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>A GHOSTLY CONFERENCE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>A distinct and well-marked epoch is reached in the
+history of any particular set of opinions when its
+adherents begin to organize and confer, and the individual
+tenets become the doctrines of a party. Such
+a culmination has been attained by the believers in
+Modern Spiritualism. For a long while after the
+date of the now historical Rochester Rappings, the
+manifestations were mostly individual, and in a great
+degree limited to such exercises as Mr. Home's elongation,
+Mrs. Guppy's flight from Highbury to Lamb's
+Conduit Street, or, more recently still, the voices and
+manipulations of John and Katie King, the orations
+of Mrs. Hardinge, Mr. Morse, and Mrs. Tappan.
+But all this was spasmodic, and not likely to take
+the world by storm, while Spiritualists had adopted
+the time-honoured maxim&mdash;"Magna est veritas et
+prevalebit." Therefore they must organize. They
+have done so, not without protest on the part of some
+of the most noted of their adherents; but the majority
+carried the day, and the result is the British National
+Association of Spiritualists, which has recently been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
+sitting in solemn conclave at its first Annual Conference
+in Lawson's Rooms, Gower Street.</p>
+
+<p>Now I plead guilty to being greatly interested in
+this subject of Spiritualism generally, and in the
+doings of the Conference in particular. I cannot
+help thinking that clergymen and scientists ought to
+look into any set of opinions whose professors have
+attained the dimensions of this body. Their doctrines
+have spread and are spreading. Already the
+Spiritualists number among them such men as Mr.
+Alfred Wallace, Mr. Varley, Mr. Crookes, Mr. S. C.
+Hall, &amp;c., and are extending their operations amongst
+all classes of society, notably among the higher. I
+could even name clergymen of all denominations who
+hold Spiritualistic views, but refrain, lest it should
+seem invidious, though I cannot see why it should be
+incongruous for the clergy to examine doctrines which
+profess to amplify rather than supplant those of revelation,
+any more than I can why scientists stand aloof
+from what professes to be a purely positive philosophy,
+based upon the inductive method. So it is, however;
+Spiritualism is heterodox at once in its religious and
+philosophical aspects. I suppose that is why it had
+such special attraction for me. Certain it is, I have
+been following the ghostly conference like a devotee.</p>
+
+<p>We began on Monday evening with a musical soir&eacute;e
+at the Beethoven Rooms, in Harley Street; and there
+was certainly nothing ghostly or sepulchral in our
+opening day; only then there was nothing very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
+spiritualistic either. For a long time I thought it
+was going to be all tea and muffins and pianoforte.
+By-and-by, however, Mr. Algernon Joy read a report
+of the organization, which was rather more interesting
+than reports generally are, and Mr. Benjamin Coleman,
+a venerable gentleman, the father of London Spiritualists,
+delivered a Presidential address. Still
+there were no ghosts&mdash;not even a spirit rap to
+augment the applause which followed the speakers.
+Once my hopes revived when two new physical
+mediums, with letters of recommendation from
+Chicago, were introduced, and I expected to see the
+young gentlemen elongate or float round the room;
+but nothing of the kind occurred; and a young lady
+dashed my hopes to the ground by singing "The
+Nightingale's Trill." Mr. Morse gave an address in
+the trance state&mdash;as I was afterwards informed; but he
+looked and spoke so like an ordinary mortal that I
+should not have found out that he was in an abnormal
+condition.</p>
+
+<p>I fear I went home from Harley Street not quite
+in so harmonious a frame of mind as could have been
+wished.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning (Wednesday) Dr. Gully presided
+at the opening of the Conference proper in Gower
+Street, where the rooms were more like vaults and
+smelt earthy. The President ably enough summarized
+the objections which had been raised to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+Association, and also the objects it proposed to itself.
+He said:&mdash;"If the Association keeps clear of dogmatic
+intrusion, then will there be no fear of its
+becoming sectarian. Already, however, there is a
+signal of dogmatism among Spiritualists&mdash;and
+already the dogmatizers call themselves by another
+name. But the Association has nothing to do with
+this. It knows its function to be the investigation
+of facts, and of facts only; and, as was said, no sect
+was ever yet framed on undoubted facts. Now what
+are the facts of Spiritualism up to this date? They
+are reducible to two:&mdash;1st. The continued life and
+individuality of the spirit body of man after it has
+quitted its body of flesh; and, 2nd. Its communion
+with spirits still in the flesh, under certain conditions,
+by physical exhibition and mental impression. Spirit
+identity cannot be regarded yet as an established fact&mdash;at
+all events, not so as to warrant us in building
+upon it."</p>
+
+<p>I was agreeably surprised with the moderate tone of
+this address; and after a brief theological discussion,
+Mr. W. H. Harrison, the editor of the <i>Spiritualist</i>,
+followed with a paper on Organization. I do not
+know what Mr. Harrison was not for organizing.
+Libraries, reading-rooms, colleges, everything was to
+be spiritualized. Later in the day there was a paper
+on Physical Manifestations. I should have preferred
+the manifestations without the paper, for I fear I am<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
+a poor believer at second hand. The reader told some
+"stumping" stories. Here is one as a specimen&mdash;spiritual
+in more senses than one:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"One evening I accompanied the Davenports to
+Mr. Guppy's residence in Great Marlborough Street.
+After supper Ira, the eldest of the brothers, Mr.
+Guppy, and myself, adjourned to a dark room, which
+Mr. Guppy had had prepared for experimental purposes.
+To get to this room we had to pass through
+a room that served the combined purposes of a
+sculptor's studio and a billiard room. Emerging from
+this room we came into a yard, in one corner of which
+the dark cabinet in question was constructed.
+Taking our seats, we extinguished the light. Mr.
+Guppy was at the time smoking a cigar. This was
+at once taken from his hand, and carried in the air,
+where it could be seen by the light given out by its
+combustion. Some whisky and water was standing
+on the table. This was handed to us to drink. When
+it came to my turn, I found there was but little left
+in the glass. This I pointed out. The glass was
+forthwith taken from my mouth, and replenished and
+brought back again."</p>
+
+<p>On Thursday Mr. Everitt read a paper on Direct
+Writing by Spirits, telling us that on one occasion
+nine hundred and thirty-six words were written in six
+seconds. Mr. Everitt must be a bold man&mdash;I don't
+mean altogether for asking us to believe that, but for
+saying what he did about the medium, who was his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+wife:&mdash;"There are many considerations why it would
+be impossible for the medium to have produced these
+writings. For instance, we have sixteen papers upon
+the same subject, and in those papers there are a
+great many ancient authors referred to. Mrs. Everitt
+has never read or seen a single book of any of these
+authors, and, with a few exceptions, their names had
+never been heard by her before, much less did she
+know the age they lived in, the country they belonged
+to, the works they had written, or the arguments
+made use of for the defence of their doctrines and
+teachings. Besides the above reasons there are physical
+and mental difficulties which preclude the possibility
+of their being produced by the medium. The
+physical impossibility is the marvellous rapidity of
+their production, as many as 936 words having been
+written in six seconds. The mental difficulty is that
+the medium has not a logical mind. Like most
+females, she takes a short cut by jumping to conclusions.
+She does not, indeed cannot, argue out any
+proposition by the ordinary rules of logic. Now the
+papers referred to show that the author or authors
+are not only well acquainted with ancient lore and
+the classics, but also possessed very high ability as
+logicians. For the above reasons we conclude that
+the medium, from sheer incapacity, both mentally
+and physically, could not have written these papers,
+nor any other human being under the same circumstances.
+We are therefore absolutely driven, after<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+looking at the subject from every conceivable point of
+view, to conclude respecting their production that
+they came from a supernatural source, and were produced
+by supernatural means."</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon of this day a clergyman, whose
+name it would be highly indecorous in me to mention,
+descanted on the aspect of Spiritualism from his point
+of view in the Church of England. I understood the
+purport of the paper to be (1) that he claimed the
+right of members of the Church of England to investigate
+the phenomena; (2) that, if convinced of their
+spiritual origin, such conviction need not shake the
+investigator's previous faith. If the clergyman in
+question really said no more than the printed reports
+of the Conference represent him to have done, he
+rather reversed the conduct of Balaam, and cursed
+those he came to bless. This is the curt r&eacute;sum&eacute; that
+went forth:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The Rev. &mdash;&mdash; read a paper, in which he defined
+his position with regard to Spiritualism as that of a
+mere inquirer, adding that even if he became convinced
+of its truth, he saw no reason why he should
+alter the opinions he at present held as a clergyman
+of the Church of England. After eighteen months'
+inquiry into the subject, however, he was, perhaps,
+more of a sceptic than before." If that was all the
+clergyman in question had to say for the Association,
+they must rather regret they ever "organized" him,
+and might well pray to be saved from their friends;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+but I heard it whispered&mdash;presumably by a spirit
+voice&mdash;that there had been a passage at arms between
+the lady secretary and the clergyman in question, and
+that Miss&mdash;but no, I must not mention names&mdash;the
+fair official punished the delinquent that most
+awful penalty&mdash;silence.</p>
+
+<p>Friday finished the Conference with a trance paper&mdash;I
+did not know there were such things&mdash;dictated to
+Mrs. Cora Tappan by invisible guides, and was read
+by Miss&mdash;I mean by the fair incognita above-mentioned.
+Not a manifestation&mdash;literally not the ghost
+of one&mdash;only this very glowing peroration:&mdash;"But it
+is in a larger sense of social, mental, political, and
+even religious renovation, that Spiritualism is destined
+to work its chief results. The abrogation of
+the primal terror of mankind, the most ancient spectre
+in the world of thought, grim and shadowy Death, is,
+in itself, so vital a change that it constitutes a revolution
+in the world of mind. Chemistry has already
+revealed the wonderful fact that no ultimate atom can
+perish. The subtle chemistry of Spiritualism steps in
+where science ceases, gathering up the ultimate atoms
+of thought into a spiritual entity and proving them
+imperishable. Already has this thought pervaded
+the popular mind, tinged the decaying forms of
+theology and external science with its glow, and made
+the life of man a heritage of immortal glory. More
+than this, taking spirit as the primal basis of life,
+each individual, and all members of society and hu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>manity
+in the aggregate, must for ever strive to express
+its highest life (i.e. the life of the spirit). The child
+will be taught from within, external methods being
+employed only as aids, but never as dictators of thought.
+Society will be the flowing out of spiritual truths,
+taking shape and substance as the expression of the
+soul. Governments will be the protecting power of a
+parent over loving children, instead of the dictates of
+force or tyranny. Religion will wear its native garb
+of simplicity and truth, the offspring of the love and
+faith that gave it birth. Modern Spiritualism is as
+great a solvent of creeds, dogmas, codes, scientific
+sophisms, as is the sunlight of the substances contained
+in earth and air, revealing by the stages of
+intermediate life, from man, through spirits, angels,
+archangels, seraphim, and cherubim, to God, the
+glorious destiny of every soul. There is a vine growing
+in the islands of the tropic seas that thrives best
+upon the ancient ruins or crumbling walls of some
+edifice built by man; yet ever as it thrives, the tiny
+tendrils penetrate between the fibres of the stone,
+cutting and cutting till the whole fabric disappears,
+leaving only the verdant mass of the foliage of the
+living vine. Spiritualism is to the future humanity
+what this vine is to the ancient ruin."</p>
+
+<p>There was another paper coming on "Compound
+Consciousness," but the title did not attract me.
+After my four days' patient waiting for ghosts who
+never came and spirits that would not manifest, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
+felt, perhaps, a little impatient, put on my hat and
+left abruptly&mdash;the fair secretary, of whom I shall
+evermore stand in supreme awe, scowling at me when
+I did so. As I passed into Gower Street&mdash;sweet,
+serene Gower Street, sacred from the wheels of profane
+cabmen, I was almost surprised to see the
+"materialized" forms around me; and it really was
+not until I got well within sound&mdash;and smell&mdash;of the
+Underground Railway that I quite realized my abased
+position, or got out of the spheres whither the lofty
+periods of Mrs. Tappan's paper, so mellifluously delivered,
+had wafted me!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN EVENING'S DIABLERIE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Spurgeon a short time since oracularly placed
+it on record that, having hitherto deemed Spiritualism
+humbug, he now believes it to be the devil.
+This sudden conversion is, of course, final; and
+I proceed to narrate a somewhat exceptional endorsement
+of the opinion which has recently occurred
+within my own experience. There was a time, how
+long ago it boots not to say, when <i>I</i> considered Spiritualism
+humbug; and a good deal came in my way
+which might have led me to the same conclusion as
+Mr. Spurgeon, if I had been disposed&mdash;which I am
+not&mdash;to go with a hop, skip, and jump.</p>
+
+<p>The investigator who first presented the "diabolical"
+theory to my notice was a French Roman
+Catholic priest, who had broken discipline so far as to
+enter the married state, but retained all the doctrines
+of his former faith intact. He had, in fact, anticipated
+to some extent the position of P&egrave;re Hyacinthe;
+for it was several years ago I first became acquainted
+with him. Individually as well as nationally this
+gentleman, too, was prone to jump at conclusions.
+He lost a dear friend, and immediately proceeded to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+communicate with the departed by means of table-turning
+and rapping. For a few days he was quite
+convinced of the identity of the communicating spirit;
+but then, and all within the compass of a single week,
+he pronounced the exorcism of the Catholic Church
+on the intelligence, I suppose experimentally in the
+first instance; found his challenge not satisfactorily
+answered, and immediately jumped to the conclusion
+that it was the foul fiend himself. I sat very frequently
+with this gentleman afterwards, prior to the
+experience I am about to narrate; and certainly the
+intelligence always gave itself out to be the spirit unmentionable
+to ears polite, whose presence my friend
+had taken for granted.</p>
+
+<p>I once went with this gentleman to the Marshalls,
+when they were at their zenith. We arranged previously
+that he should not sit at the table, but on
+one side, and give me a secret signal when he was
+silently pronouncing the exorcism. He did so; and
+certainly all manifestations at once ceased, though we
+had been in full converse with the invisibles a moment
+before. Old Mrs. M. had to announce with much
+chagrin, "The sperrits is gone!"</p>
+
+<p>My other partner in diablerie was a barrister whom
+I must not mention by name, but who possessed
+considerable power as a writing medium. The presiding
+intelligence in his case was, however, of a
+low character, and given to very bad language. He
+avowed himself to have been a bargee in the earth-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>plane&mdash;should
+one say the water-plane?&mdash;and certainly
+swore like one.</p>
+
+<p>As for myself, I am destitute of all "medium-power,"
+whatever that may be, though enthusiastic
+spirituelle ladies tell me I am "mediumistic"&mdash;a
+qualification which is still more occult to me. I own
+to being greatly interested in spiritualistic inquiries,
+except as regards dark s&eacute;ances, which have a tendency
+to send me to sleep; and I believe that my
+presence does not "stop manifestations:" so that I
+suppose I am not a hopeless sceptic.</p>
+
+<p>On the occasion of which I am about to speak we
+met in my study, where I am in the habit of rearing
+a few pet snakes. I had just got a fine new specimen;
+and having no proper habitation for it, had turned
+my waste-basket upside-down on a small chess table,
+and left him to tabernacle under it for the night.
+This was the table we generally used for s&eacute;ances; and
+my legal friend, who was writing, immediately began
+to use most foul language, on the subject of the
+snake, exhorting me to "put him anywhere, put him
+in the cupboard, old boy." Such was the edifying
+style of communication we always got through this
+worthy limb of the law, but it was so much worse
+than usual on the present occasion as to fairly make
+us roar at its insane abuse. The gentleman himself,
+I ought to add, is by no means prone to profane
+swearing. My priestly friend was making a wide-awake
+hat reply by tilts; and still got his old reply<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+that his Satanic Majesty was personally present. I
+did not in the least credit this assertion, any more
+than I accepted as proven the identity of the bargee,
+though I hold the impersonation in either case to be
+a strange psychological fact. That I did not do so
+is best evidenced by the circumstance that I said,
+"This spirit asserts himself to be his Satanic Majesty.
+Have you either of you any objection to communicate
+with him supposing such to be the case?"</p>
+
+<p>Neither one nor the other had the slightest. My
+Catholic friend, I knew, always carried a bottle of
+holy water in his pocket, and at my entreaty forbore
+for the moment to exorcise. The legal gentleman,
+though a "writer" himself, was not at all convinced
+about the phenomena, as was perhaps natural, seeing
+the exceedingly bad company to which it professed to
+relegate him. As for me, my scepticism was to me
+robur et &aelig;s triplex. I disposed of the snake, put out
+the gas; and down we three sat, amid profound darkness,
+like three male witches in "Macbeth," having
+previously locked the door to prevent any one disturbing
+our hocus-pocus.</p>
+
+<p>Any one who has sat at an ordinary dark s&eacute;ance
+will recollect the number of false starts the table
+makes, the exclamations, "Was that a rap?" when
+the wood simply cracks, or, "Did you feel a cold
+air?" when somebody breathes a little more heavily
+than usual. I have myself made the experiment,
+though not without adding an open confession im<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>mediately
+afterwards. I have blown on the fingers
+of the sitters, and made them feel sure it was a
+"spirit aura," have done the neatest of raps with my
+index-finger when my little finger has been securely
+hooked in that of my next neighbour. In fact, for
+test purposes, dark s&eacute;ances are a mistake, though they
+are admirable for a flirtation.</p>
+
+<p>On this occasion, however, we were very much
+in earnest, and there was no waiting&mdash;I hope
+no collusion. I am quite sure I did not myself consciously
+produce any manifestation. I can answer for
+my legal friend, as far as any one person can answer
+for another; and we neither of us suspected&mdash;or suspect&mdash;the
+priest of the order of St. Benedict; only we
+would rather he had not pronounced such decided
+opinions; because the wish might have been father to
+the thought, or rather the thought might, in some
+utterly unaccountable way, have produced the effects
+that followed. I have an idea that if Mr. Spurgeon
+in his present frame of mind were to sit at a table for
+manifestations, he would obtain the clearest assurance
+that it was "all the devil," just as it is well known
+Roman Catholic sitters get communications from
+Roman Catholic spirits, theists from theistic, and
+Mormons from the denizens of some spiritualistic
+Utah.</p>
+
+<p>We had not, on this occasion, a moment to wait.
+The table forthwith began to plunge and career about
+the room as though the bargee&mdash;or the other personage<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+himself&mdash;had actually been "in possession." It required
+all our agility to follow it in its rapid motion about
+the room. At last it became comparatively quiet;
+and I received in reply to a question as to who was
+present the exceedingly objectionable name which Mr.
+Spurgeon has coupled with the whole subject. Some
+persons I know entertain a certain amount of respect,
+or at all events awe, for the intelligence in question.
+For myself I feel nothing of the kind, and therefore I
+added, "If you are what you profess to be, give us
+some proof." We were sitting with only the tips of
+our fingers on the table; but it forthwith rose up
+quite perpendicularly, and came down with a crash
+that completely shivered it in pieces. I have not the
+slightest idea how it was done&mdash;but it certainly was
+done. A large portion of the table was reduced to a
+condition that fitted it for Messrs. Bryant and May's
+manufactory. When we lighted the gas and looked
+at our watches we found we had only been sitting a
+very few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Of course the obvious explanation will be that the
+gentleman with the diabolical theory and the evidently
+strong will-power (as evidenced in the d&eacute;nouement at
+Mrs. Marshall's) produced the diabolical effects consciously
+or unconsciously. I do not think the former
+was the case; and if it is possible to get such results
+unconsciously, that phenomenon is quite as curious as
+the spiritualistic explanation. In fact I am not sure
+that the psychological is not more difficult than the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
+pneumatological theory. My own notion is that the
+"Psychic Force" people are clearly on the right
+track, though their cause, as at present elaborated, is
+not yet equal to cover all the effects.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Spurgeon and the "diabolists" concede the
+whole of the spiritualistic position. They not only
+say that the effects are due to spiritual causes, but
+they also identify the producing spirit. I have never
+been able to get as far as that. I did not feel on the
+occasion in question at all as though I had been in
+communication with his sable Majesty. If I was, certainly
+my respect for that potentate is not increased,
+for I should have fancied he would have done something
+much "bigger" in reply to my challenge than
+smash up a small chess-table. However, there was a
+sort of uncanny feeling about the experience, and it
+seemed to me so far illustrative of Mr. Spurgeon's
+position as to be worth committing to paper. If that
+gentleman, however, lends such a doctrine the sanction
+of his approval, he will, let him be assured, do more
+to confirm the claims of Spiritualism than all the
+sneers of Professors Huxley and Tyndall, and the
+scorn of Mr. George Henry Lewes can undo.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>SPIRITUAL ATHLETES.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I am about for once to depart from my usual custom
+of narrating only personal experiences, and in this
+and the two following chapters print the communications
+of a friend who shares my interest in these
+matters, and has frequently accompanied me in my
+investigations into this mysterious Borderland. In
+these cases, however, he investigated on his own
+account, and I am not responsible for the conclusions
+at which he arrives:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Attracted," he says, "by an article in a popular
+journal on the subject of 'Spirit Faces,' I determined,
+if possible, to 'assist' at a s&eacute;ance. I had not hitherto
+taken much interest in spiritualistic matters, because
+in the first place, the cui bono question remained persistently
+unanswered; and, secondly, because most of
+the 'doings' were in the dark; and it appears to me
+that, given darkness, there are few things in the way
+of conjuring and ventriloquism that could <i>not</i> be done.
+Terpsichorean tables and talking hats never had any
+particular charm for me, because I could always make
+a table dance, or a hat say anything I wanted it to
+say. I saw the Davenports, and preferred Professor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
+Anderson. I even went to a dark s&eacute;ance at the
+Marshalls', and noticed that when Mr. and Mrs.
+Marshall had perceptibly partaken of beefsteak and
+onions, or some equally fragrant food, for dinner, the
+breath which accompanied the spirit-voices was unmistakably
+impregnated with onions too; and hence
+I drew my own conclusions. I am not saying I know
+how Mr. and Mrs. Marshall do John King and Katie
+King. I don't know how Professor Anderson or
+Professor Pepper do their tricks. I confess Mr. Home
+and the Marshalls have the pull of the professors in
+one way&mdash;that is, they don't perform on a platform
+but in a private room, and they let you examine
+everything beforehand. Theirs is the ars celare artem.
+Again, I don't know how men in the street get out
+of the very curious knots in which I have tied them,
+but I know they do it; and therefore I am sure the
+Davenports could do it without calling in the ghost
+of one's deceased grandmamma as a sort of Deus&mdash;or
+rather Dea&mdash;ex machin&acirc;. I have never seen Mr.
+Home handle fire or elongate. I have seen him
+'levitate,' or float, and I candidly confess I don't
+know how he does it, any more than I can solve Sir
+David Brewster's trick by which four young ladies
+can lift a heavy man on the points of their fingers.
+It's very mysterious, and very nice for the man.</p>
+
+<p>"So it happened that I had shelved spiritualism for
+some time, when the article on 'Spirit Faces' came
+under my notice. I did not care so much about the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+face part of the matter (at least not the spirit face),
+but I wanted to test it as a matter of athletics. In
+one respect the physiognomy did interest me, for I
+read that the medium was pretty&mdash;mediums, according
+to my experience, being generally very much the
+reverse&mdash;and I found that report had certainly not
+misrepresented the young lady in this respect. Her
+name is now public property, so I need not veil it
+under the pseudonyms of Miss Blank, or Asterisk, or
+anything of that sort. Miss Florence Cook, then, is
+a trim little lady of sweet sixteen, and dwells beneath
+the parental roof in an eastern suburb of London. It
+is quite true she does not accept payment for s&eacute;ances,
+which I strove to impress upon her was very foolish
+indeed, for she works almost as hard as Lulu twice in
+the week. However, she, or rather her parents, take
+high ground in the matter, which of course is very
+praiseworthy on their parts, and convenient for their
+guests if they happen to be impecunious.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I do not purpose going through the details
+of the s&eacute;ance, which was considerably irksome, being
+protracted by endless psalm singing. What I want
+to do&mdash;with Miss Cook's permission&mdash;is to calculate
+the chances of her being sufficiently athletic to perform
+the tricks herself, without the aid of spirits.
+Does she not underrate her unaided powers in assigning
+a supernatural cause for the effects produced?</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, this lithe little lady is arrayed in the
+ordinary garb of the nineteenth century with what<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
+is technically termed a 'pannier,' and large open
+sleeves, each of which, I fear, she must have found
+considerably in the way, as also the sundry lockets
+and other nick-nacks suspended from her neck.
+However, there they were. We put her in a cupboard,
+which had a single Windsor chair in it, and
+laid a stoutish new cord on her lap. Then came
+singing, which may or may not have been intended
+to drown any noise in the cupboard; but, after some
+delay, she was found tied around the waist, neck, and
+two wrists, and the ends of the cord fastened to the
+back of the chair. These knots we sealed, and consigned
+her to the cupboard again. Shortly after there
+appeared at an aperture in the upper portion of the
+cupboard a face which looked utterly unspiritual and
+precisely like that of the medium, only with some
+white drapery thrown over the head. The aperture
+was just the height that would have allowed Miss
+Cook to stand on the chair and peep out. I do not
+say she did; I am only calculating the height. The
+face remained some minutes in a strong light; then
+descended. We opened the cupboard, and found the
+little lady tied as before with the seals unbroken.
+Spiritual, or material, it was clever.</p>
+
+<p>"After a pause, the same process was gone through
+again; only this time stout tape was substituted for
+rope. The cord cut the girl's wrists; and tape was
+almost more satisfactory. Again she was bound, and
+we sealed the knots; and again a face appeared&mdash;this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
+time quite black, and not like the medium at all. I
+noticed that the drapery ran right round the face, and
+cut it off at a straight line on the lower part. This
+gave the idea of a mask. I am not saying it was a
+mask. I am only throwing out a hint that, if the
+'spirits' wish to convince people they should let the
+neck be well seen. I am bound to say it bore a
+strong light for several minutes; and some people
+say they saw eyelids. I did not. I do not say they
+were not there. I know how impossible it is to prove
+a negative, and only say I did not see them.</p>
+
+<p>"What followed possessed no special interest for
+any but the professed spiritualist, as it was done without
+any tying; Miss Cook arguing logically enough
+that, if the previous manifestations were clearly
+proved to have taken place by other agency than
+that of the medium herself, mere multiplication of
+proofs was unnecessary. I had only gone to study
+the matter from an athletic point of view; and I
+certainly came away impressed with the idea that, if
+Miss Florence Cook first got into and then got out of
+those knots, she was even more nimble and lithesome
+than she looked, and ought to start an Amateur
+Ladies' Athletic Society forthwith. As to her making
+faces at us through the window, I did not care sufficiently
+about the matter to inquire whether she did
+or not, because, if she got out of the ropes, it was
+easy enough to get on the chair and make faces.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course the cui bono remains. The professors<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
+make money by it; and Miss Cook can make at most,
+only a little mild and scarcely enviable notoriety. A
+satirical old friend of mine, when I told him the
+above facts, chuckled, and said, 'That's quite enough
+for a girl of sixteen; and anything that's do-able, a
+girl of those years will do.' It was no use talking to
+him of panniers and loose sleeves, and lockets. He
+was an old bachelor, and knew nothing about such
+things. At least, he had no business to, if he did.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot forbear adding a domestic episode, though
+it is perhaps scarcely relevant to the subject. Certain
+young imps in my house, hearing what I had seen,
+got up an exhibition of spirit faces for my benefit.
+They rigged up a kind of Punch-and-Judy erection,
+and the cleanest of them did the spirit face, with a
+white pocket-handkerchief over his head. He looked
+as stolid and unwinking as the genuine spirit-physiognomy
+itself. The gas was lowered to a 'dim
+religious light,' and then a black coal-scuttle, with
+features chalked on it, deceived some of the circle into
+the idea that it was a nigger. But the one element
+which interested me was wanting; there was no
+rope-tying which could at all entitle the juvenile
+performance to be categorized under 'Spiritual
+Athletics.'"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL"></a>CHAPTER XL.</h2>
+
+<h3>"SPOTTING" SPIRIT MEDIUMS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Among the recent utterances of spiritualistic
+organs is one to the effect that 'manifestations' come
+in cycles&mdash;in 'great waves,' I believe was the actual
+expression; and of the many fluctuations to which
+spiritualistic society has been exposed of late is a very
+prominent irruption of young lady mediums. The
+time seems to have gone by for portly matrons to be
+wafted a&euml;rially from the northern suburbs to the W.C.
+district, or elderly spinsters to exhibit spirit drawings
+which gave one the idea of a water-colour palette
+having been overturned, and the resulting 'mess' sat
+upon for the purposes of concealment. Even inspirational
+speakers have so far 'gone out' as to subside
+from aristocratic halls to decidedly second-rate institutions
+down back streets. In fact, the 'wave' that
+has come over the spirit world seems to resemble that
+which has also supervened upon the purely mundane
+arrangements of Messrs. Spiers and Pond; and we
+anxious investigators can scarcely complain of the
+change which brings us face to face with fair young
+maidens in their teens to the exclusion of the matrons
+and spinsters aforesaid, or the male medium who was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+once irreverently termed by a narrator a 'bull-necked
+young man.'</p>
+
+<p>"The names of these interesting young denizens of
+two worlds are so well known that it is perhaps unnecessary
+caution or superfluous gallantry to conceal
+them; but I will err, if error it be, on the safe side,
+and call No. 1 Miss C. and No. 2 Miss S., premising
+only that each is decidedly attractive, with the unquestioned
+advantage of having seen only some sixteen
+or seventeen summers apiece. Miss C. has been
+'out' some time; her familiar being 'Katie King;'
+while Miss S. has made her debut more recently,
+having for her attendant sprites one 'Florence
+Maple,' a young lady spirit who has given a wrong
+terrestrial address in Aberdeen, and Peter, a defunct
+market gardener, who sings through the young lady's
+organism in a clear baritone voice. It was to me
+personally a source of great satisfaction when I learnt
+that Miss C. had been taken in hand by a F.R.S.&mdash;whom
+I will call henceforth the Professor&mdash;and Miss
+S. by a Serjeant learned in the law. Now, if ever, I
+thought, we have a chance of hearing what science
+and evidential acumen have to say on the subject of
+'Face Manifestations.' Each of these gentlemen, I
+ought to mention, had written voluminously on the
+subject of Spiritualism, and both seemed inclined to
+contest its claims in favour of some occult physical&mdash;or,
+as they named it, psychic&mdash;force. This would
+make their verdict the more valuable to outsiders, as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+it was clear they had not approached the subject with
+a foregone conclusion in its favour. True, the Spiritualists
+claimed both the Professor and the Serjeant
+persistently as their own; but Spiritualists have a
+way of thinking everybody 'converted' who simply
+sits still in a decorous manner, and keeps his eyes
+open without loudly proclaiming scepticism.</p>
+
+<p>"Personally I had been, up to the date of present
+occurrences, accustomed to summarize my convictions
+on the subject by the conveniently elastic formula
+that there might be 'something in it.' I still think
+so; but perhaps with a difference.</p>
+
+<p>"For the former of the two expos&eacute;s&mdash;if such they
+shall be deemed&mdash;I am compelled to rely on documentary
+evidence; but I have 'sat' so many times
+with Miss S., have been requested so often by the
+inspirational Peter to 'listen to the whip-poor-will,
+a-singin' on the tree,' have shaken the spirit hand,
+gazed on the spirit face, and even cut off portions of
+the spirit veil of the fair Florence, that I can follow
+the order of events just as though I had been present.
+I must confess the wonderful similarity existing between
+Miss S. and Florence had exercised me considerably,
+and perhaps prepared me to accept with
+calmness what followed. Why delay the result?
+Miss S. and her mamma were invited to the country
+house of the learned Serjeant. A 'cabinet' was extemporized
+in the bay of the window, over which the
+curtains were drawn and a shawl pinned. With a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
+confidence which is really charming to contemplate,
+no 'tests' were asked of the medium, no 'conditions'
+imposed on the sitter. Miss S. was put in the cabinet
+with only a chair, and the expectant circle waited
+with patience. In due time the curtains were drawn
+aside, and the spirit-face appeared at the opening. It
+was still the facsimile of Miss S., with the eyes piously
+turned up and a ghostly head-dress covering the hair.
+One by one the assembled were summoned to look
+more closely. The initiated gazed and passed on,
+knowing they must not peep; but, alas, one lady who
+was <i>not</i> initiated, and therefore unaware of the tacitly
+imposed conditions, imitated the example of Mother
+Eve, drew aside the curtains and exposed the unspiritual
+form of Miss S. standing on the chair; the
+'spirit-hands' at the same time struggling so convulsively
+to close the aperture that the head-gear fell off,
+and betrayed the somewhat voluminous chignon of
+Miss S. herself. Hereupon ensued a row, it being
+declared that the medium was killed, though eventually
+order was restored by the rather incongruous
+process of a gentleman present singing a comic
+song. The learned Serjeant still clings to the belief
+that Miss S. was in a condition of 'unconscious
+somnambulism.' I only hope, if ever I am arraigned
+before him in his judicial capacity, he will extend his
+benevolent credulity to me in an equal degree, and
+give me the benefit of the doubt.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be in the recollection of those who follow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
+the fluctuations of the Spiritual 'wave' that some
+months ago a Dialectical gentleman seized rudely on
+the spirit form of Katie, which struggled violently
+with him, scratching his face and pulling out his
+whiskers, eventually making good its retreat into the
+cupboard, where Miss C. was presumably bound hand
+and foot. I must confess the fact of that escape
+rather prejudiced me in favour of Katie, though I
+would rather she had evaporated into thin air, and
+left the dialectical whiskers intact. Still it scored a
+point on Katie's side, and I eagerly availed myself of
+the opportunity to pay my devoirs at the shrine of
+Miss C.; the more so as the Professor had asserted
+twice that he had seen and handled the form of the
+medium while looking on and conversing with that of
+the spirit at the same time. If I could retain my
+former faith in the Professor, of course this would be
+final and my conversion an accomplished fact.</p>
+
+<p>"We sat no longer in the subterranean breakfast
+room of Miss C.'s parental abode; but moved up to
+the parlour floor, where two rooms communicated
+through folding doors, the front apartment being that
+in which we assembled, and the back used as a bedroom,
+where the ladies took off their 'things.' This
+latter room, be it remembered, had a second room
+communicating with the passage, and so with the
+universe of space in general. One leaf of the folding
+doors was closed, and a curtain hung over the other.
+Pillows were placed on the floor, just inside the cur<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>tain,
+and the little medium, who was nattily arrayed
+in a blue dress, was laid upon them. We were requested
+to sing and talk during 'materialization,'
+and there was as much putting up and lowering of
+the light as in a modern sensation drama. The Professor
+acted all the time as Master of the Ceremonies,
+retaining his place at the aperture; and I fear, from
+the very first, exciting suspicion by his marked attentions,
+not to the medium, but to the ghost. When
+it did come it was arrayed according to orthodox
+ghost fashion, in loose white garments, and I must
+confess with no resemblance to Miss C. We were at
+the same time shown the recumbent form of the pillowed
+medium, and there certainly was something
+blue, which might have been Miss C., or only her
+gown going to the wash. By-and-by, however, with
+'lights down,' a bottle of phosphorized oil was produced,
+and by this weird and uncanny radiance one
+or two privileged individuals were led by the 'ghost'
+into the back bedroom, and allowed to put their hands
+on the entranced form of the medium. I was not of
+the 'elect,' but I talked to those who were, and their
+opinion was that the 'ghost' was a much stouter,
+bigger woman than the medium; and I must confess
+that certain unhallowed ideas of the bedroom door
+and the adjacent kitchen stairs connected themselves
+in my mind with recollections of a brawny servant
+girl who used to sit sentry over the cupboard in the
+breakfast room. Where was she?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"As a final bonne bouche the spirit made its exit
+from the side of the folding door covered by the
+curtain, and immediately Miss C. rose up with dishevelled
+locks in a way that must have been satisfactory
+to anybody who knew nothing of the back door
+and the brawny servant, or who had never seen the
+late Mr. Charles Kean act in the 'Corsican Brothers'
+or the 'Courier of Lyons.'</p>
+
+<p>"I am free to confess the final death-blow to my
+belief that there might be 'something in' the Face
+Manifestations was given by the effusive Professor
+who has 'gone in' for the Double with a pertinacity
+altogether opposed to the calm judicial examination
+of his brother learned in the law, and with prejudice
+scarcely becoming a F.R.S.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite aware that all this proves nothing.
+Miss S. and Miss C. may each justify Longfellow's
+adjuration&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Trust her not, she is fooling thee;'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and yet ghosts be as genuine as guano. Only I fancy
+the 'wave' of young ladies will have to ebb for a
+little while; and I am exceedingly interested in
+speculating as to what will be the next 'cycle.'
+From 'information I have received,' emanating from
+Brighton, I am strongly of opinion that babies are
+looking up in the ghost market, and that our next
+manifestations may come through an infant phenomenon."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLI" id="CHAPTER_XLI"></a>CHAPTER XLI.</h2>
+
+<h3>A S&Eacute;ANCE FOR SCEPTICS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Attracted by the prominence recently given to the
+subject of Spiritualism in the <i>Times</i>, and undeterred
+by that journal's subsequent recantation, or the inevitable
+scorn of the <i>Saturday Review</i>, I determined
+to test for myself the value of the testimony so
+copiously quoted by believers in the modern marvel.
+Clearly if certain published letters of the period were
+to be put in evidence, Spiritualism had very much the
+better, and Science exceedingly little to say for itself.
+But we all know that this is a subject on which
+scientific men are apt to be reticent. 'Tacere tutum
+est' seems the Fabian policy adopted by those who
+find this new Hannibal suddenly come from across
+sea into their midst. It is moreover a subject about
+which the public will not be convinced by any amount
+of writing or talking, but simply by what it can see
+and handle for itself. It may be of service, then, if
+I put on record the result of an examination made
+below the surface of this matter.</p>
+
+<p>"Like most other miracles this particular one evidently
+has its phases and comes about in cycles. For
+a generation past, or nearly so, Modern Spiritualism<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+has been so far allied with Table-turning and mysterious
+rappings as to have appropriated to itself in
+consequence certain ludicrous titles, against which it
+vainly protests. Then cropped up 'levitations' and
+'elongations' of the person, and Mr. Home delighted
+to put red-hot coals on the heads of his friends.
+None of these manifestations, however, were sufficient
+to make the spiritualistic theory any other than a
+huge petitio principii. The Davenports were the first
+to inaugurate on anything like an extended scale the
+alleged appearance of the human body, or rather of
+certain members of the human body, principally arms
+and hands, through the peep-hole of their cabinet.
+Then came 'spirit-voices' with Mrs. Marshall, and
+a&euml;rial transits on the part of Mrs. Guppy; then the
+entire 'form of the departed' was said to be visible
+chez Messrs. Herne and Williams in Lamb's Conduit
+Street, whose abode formed Mrs. Guppy's terminus
+on the occasion of her nocturnal voyage. Then came
+Miss Florence Cook's spirit faces at Hackney, which
+were produced under a strong light, which submitted
+to be touched and tested in what seemed a very complete
+manner, and even held conversations with persons
+in the circle. Finally, I heard it whispered that these
+faces were being recognised on a somewhat extensive
+scale at the s&eacute;ances of Mrs. Holmes, in Old Quebec
+Street, where certain other marvels were also to be
+witnessed, which decided me on paying that lady a
+visit.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Even these, however, were not the principal attractions
+which drew me to the tripod of the seeress in
+Quebec Street. It had been continually urged as an
+argument against the claims of Modern Spiritualism,
+first, that it shunned the light and clave to 'dark'
+circles; secondly, that it was over-sensitive on the
+subject of 'sceptics.' Surely, we are all sceptics in
+the sense of investigators. The most pretentious
+disciple of Spiritualism does not claim to have exhausted
+the subject. On the contrary, they all tell us
+we are now only learning the alphabet of the craft.
+Perhaps the recognised Spirit-faces may have landed
+us in words of one syllable, but scarcely more. However,
+the great advantage which Mrs. Holmes possessed
+in my eyes over all professors of the new art
+was that she did not object to sceptics. Accordingly
+to Quebec Street I went, for the distinct purpose of
+testing the question of recognition. If I myself, or
+any person on whose testimony I could rely, established
+a single case of undoubted recognition, that, I
+felt, would go farther than anything else towards
+solving the spiritualistic problem.</p>
+
+<p>"I devoted two Monday evenings to this business;
+that being the day on which Mrs. Holmes,
+as she phrases it, 'sits for faces.' On the former of
+the two occasions twenty-seven persons assembled,
+and the first portion of the evening was devoted to
+the Dark S&eacute;ance, which presented some novel features
+in itself, but was not the special object for which I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+was present. Mrs. Holmes, who is a self-possessed
+American lady, evidently equal to tackling any
+number of sceptics, was securely tied in a chair.
+All the circle joined hands; and certainly, as soon as
+the light was out, fiddles, guitars, tambourines and
+bells did fly about the room in a very unaccountable
+manner, and when the candle was lighted, I found a
+fiddle-bow down my back, a guitar on my lap, and a
+tambourine ring round my neck. But there was
+nothing spiritual in this, and the voice which
+addressed us familiarly during the operation may or
+may not have been a spirit voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Holmes having been released from some very
+perplexing knots, avowedly by Spirit power, proceeded
+to what is called the 'Ring Test,' and I was
+honoured by being selected to make the experiment.
+I sat in the centre of the room and held both her
+hands firmly in mine. I passed my hands over her
+arms, without relaxing my grasp, so as to feel that
+she had nothing secreted there; when suddenly a
+tambourine ring, jinglers and all, was passed on to
+my arm. Very remarkable; but still not necessarily
+spiritual. Certain clairvoyants present said they
+could witness the 'disintegration' of the ring. I
+only felt it pass on to my arm. On the occasion
+of my second visit this same feat was performed on
+an elderly gentleman, a very confirmed sceptic indeed.
+This second circle consisted of twenty persons, many
+of them very pronounced disbelievers, and not a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
+little inclined to be 'chaffy.' However all went on
+swimmingly.</p>
+
+<p>"After about an hour of rather riotous dark s&eacute;ance,
+lights were rekindled and circles re-arranged for the
+Face S&eacute;ance which takes place in subdued light. In the
+space occupied by the folding doors between the front
+and back room a large black screen is placed, with an
+aperture, or peep-hole, about eighteen inches square,
+cut in it. The most minute examination of this back
+room is allowed, and I took care to lock both doors,
+leaving the keys crosswise in the key-hole, so that
+they could not be opened from the outside. We
+then took our seats in the front room in three or four
+lines. I myself occupied the centre of the first row,
+about four feet from the screen, Mr. and Mrs. Holmes
+sitting at a small table in front of the screen; the
+theory being that the spirits behind collect from their
+'emanations' material to form the faces. Soon
+after we were in position a most ghostly-looking
+child's face appeared at the aperture, but was not
+recognised. Several other corpse-like visages followed
+with like absence of recognition. Then came
+a very old lady's face, quite life-like, and Mrs. Holmes
+informed us that the cadaverous people were those
+only recently deceased. The old lady looked
+anxiously round as if expecting to be recognised,
+but nobody claimed acquaintance. In fact no face
+was recognised at my first visit. The next was a
+jovial Joe Bagstock kind of face which peered quite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+merrily round our circle, and lastly came a most life-like
+countenance of an elderly man. This face,
+which had a strange leaden look about the eyes, came
+so close to the orifice that it actually <i>lifted</i> its grey
+beard outside. On the occasion of my second visit a
+lady present distinctly recognised this as the face of
+her husband, and asked the form to show its hand as
+an additional mark of identity. This request was
+complied with, the figure lifting a thin, white and&mdash;as
+the widow expressed it&mdash;'aristocratic' hand, and kissing
+it most politely. I am bound to say there was less
+emotion manifested on the part of the lady than I should
+have expected under the circumstances; and a young
+man who accompanied her, and who from the likeness
+to her must have been her son, surveyed his resuscitated
+papa calmly through a double-barrelled
+opera glass. I am not sure that I am at liberty to
+give this lady's name; but, at this second visit, Mrs.
+Makdougall Gregory, of 21, Green Street, Grosvenor
+Square, positively identified the old lady above-mentioned
+as a Scotch lady of title well known to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"I myself was promised that a relation of my own
+would appear on a future occasion; but on neither of
+those when I attended did I see anything that would
+enable me to test the value of the identifications. The
+faces, however, were so perfectly life-like, with the
+solitary exception of a dull leaden expression in the
+eye, that I cannot imagine the possibility of a doubt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
+existing as to whether they belonged to persons one
+knew or not. At all events here is the opportunity
+of making the test. No amount of scepticism is a
+bar to being present. The appearances are not limited
+to a privileged few. All see alike: so that the
+matter is removed out of the sphere of 'hallucinations.'
+Everything is done in the light, too, as far
+as the faces are concerned. So that several not
+unreasonable test-conditions are fulfilled in this case,
+and so far a step made in advance of previous manifestations.</p>
+
+<p>"We may well indeed pause&mdash;at least I know I did&mdash;to
+shake ourselves, and ask whereabouts we are.
+Is this a gigantic imposture? or are the Witch of
+Endor and the Cum&aelig;an Sibyl revived in the unromantic
+neighbourhood of the Marble Arch, and under
+circumstances that altogether remove them from the
+category of the miraculous? England will take a
+good deal of convincing on this subject, which is evidently
+one that no amount of 'involuntary muscular
+action,' or 'unconscious cerebration,' will cover.
+What if the good old-fashioned ghost be a reality
+after all, and Cock Lane no region of the supernatural?</p>
+
+<p>"What then? Why, one may expect to meet one's
+deceased ancestors at any hour of the day or night,
+provided only there be a screen for them to 'form'
+behind, and a light sufficiently subdued to prevent
+disintegration; with, of course, the necessary pigeon-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>hole
+for the display of their venerable physiognomies.
+On their side of the question, it will be idle to say,
+'No rest but the grave!' for there may not be rest
+even there, if Delphic priestesses and Cum&aelig;an
+Sibyls come into vogue again; and we may as well
+omit the letters R. I. P. from our obituary notices as
+a purely superfluous form of speech."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Speaking now in my own proper person as author,
+I may mention&mdash;as I have purposely deferred doing
+up to this point&mdash;that a light was subsequently struck
+at one of Mrs. Holmes's Dark S&eacute;ances, and that the
+discoveries thus made rendered the s&eacute;ance a final one.
+Mr. and Mrs. Holmes retired, first to Brighton, and
+then to America.</p>
+
+<p>They were, at the time of my writing, holding
+successful s&eacute;ances in the latter place; and public
+(Spiritualistic) opinion still clings to the belief that
+Mrs. Holmes is a genuine medium.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLII" id="CHAPTER_XLII"></a>CHAPTER XLII.</h2>
+
+<h3>AN EVENING WITH THE HIGHER SPIRITS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the head of social heresies, and rapidly beginning
+to take rank as a religious heresy as well, I have no
+hesitation in placing modern Spiritualism. Those
+who associate this latest mystery only with gyrating
+articles of furniture, rapping tables, or simpering
+planchettes, are simply in the abyss of ignorance,
+and dangerously underrate the gravity of the
+subject. The later development of Spirit Faces and
+Spirit Forms, each of which I have examined thoroughly,
+and made the results of my observations
+public, fail to afford any adequate idea of the pitch to
+which the mania&mdash;if mania it be&mdash;has attained. To
+many persons Spiritualism forms the ultimatum, not
+only in science, but also in religion. Whatever the
+Spirits tell them they believe and do as devoutly as
+the Protestant obeys his Bible, the Catholic his
+Church, or the scientific man follows up the results of
+his demonstrations. That is, in fact, the position
+they assume. They claim to have attained in matters
+of religion to demonstration as clear and infallible as
+the philosopher does in pure science. They say no
+longer "We believe," but "We know." These people<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
+care little for the vagaries of Dark Circles, or even
+the doings of young ladies with "doubles." The
+flight of Mrs. Guppy through the air, the elongation
+of Mr. Home's braces, the insertion of live coals
+among the intricacies of Mr. S. C. Hall's exuberant
+locks, are but the A B C which have led them to
+their present advanced position. These physical
+"manifestations" may do for the neophytes. They
+are the initiated. I am the initiated; or I ought to
+be, if patience and perseverance constitute serving an
+apprenticeship. I have devoted a good portion of my
+late life to the study. I have given up valuable
+evenings through several consecutive winters to dark
+s&eacute;ances; have had my hair pulled, my head thumped
+with paper tubes, and suffered other indignities at the
+hands of the "Invisibles;" and, worse than all, my
+friends have looked upon me as a lunatic for my
+pains, and if my enemies could have wrought their
+will they would have incarcerated me as non compos,
+or made an auto-da-fe of me as a heretic years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Through sheer length of service, then, if on no
+other account, I had grown somewhat blas&eacute; with the
+ordinary run of manifestations. Spirit Faces no
+longer interest me; for I seek among them in vain
+the lineaments of my departed friends. Spirit Hands
+I shake as unconcernedly as I do those of my familiar
+acquaintances at the club or in the street. I have
+even cut off a portion of the veil of Miss Florence
+Maple, the Aberdeen Spirit, and gone away with it in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
+my pocket: so that it was, at all events, a new sensation
+when I received an invitation to be present at a
+trance s&eacute;ance, where one of the Higher Spirits communicated
+to the assembled things undreamed of in
+mundane philosophy. The sitting was a strictly
+private one; so I must not mention names or localities;
+but this does not matter, as I have no marvels
+in the vulgar sense of the word to relate: only
+Higher Teachings, which will do just as well with
+asterisks or initials as with the names in full.</p>
+
+<p>The scene, then, was an artist's studio at the West
+End of London, and the medium a magnetic lady with
+whom I had frequently sat before, though not for the
+"Higher" teachings. Her instruction had so far
+come in the shape of very vigorous raps, which ruined
+my knuckles to imitate them, and in levitation of a
+small and volatile chess table, which resisted all my
+efforts to keep it to the paths of propriety. This lady
+was not young; and I confess frankly this was, to my
+thinking, an advantage. When I once told a sceptical
+friend about Miss Florence Cook's s&eacute;ance, and
+added, triumphantly, "Why, she's a pretty little
+simple girl of sixteen," that clenched the doubts of
+this Thomas at once, for he rejoined, "What is there
+that a pretty little <i>simple</i> girl of sixteen won't do?"
+Miss Showers is sweet sixteen, too; and when
+"Peter" sings through her in a clear baritone voice,
+I cannot, despite myself, help the thought occasionally
+flitting across my mind, "Would that you were six-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>and-twenty,
+or, better still, six-and-thirty, instead of
+sixteen!" Without specifying to which of the two
+latter classes our present medium belonged, one might
+venture to say she had safely passed the former. She
+was of that ripe and Rubens-like beauty to which we
+could well imagine some "Higher" spirit offering
+the golden apple of its approval, however the skittish
+Paris of the spheres might incline to sweet sixteen.
+I had a short time before sat infructuously with this
+lady, when a distressing contretemps occurred. We
+were going in for a dark s&eacute;ance then, and just as we
+fancied the revenants were about to justify the title,
+we were startled by a crash, and on my lighting up,
+all of the medium I could see were two ankles protruding
+from beneath the table. She had fainted
+"right off," as the ladies say, and it required something
+strong to bring her to. In fact, we all had a
+"refresher," I recollect, for sitting is generally found
+to be exhausting to the circle as well as to the
+medium. On the present occasion, however, everything
+was, if not en plein jour, en plein gaz. There
+was a good deal of preliminary difficulty as to the
+choice of a chair for the medium. Our artist-friend
+had a lot of antique affairs in his studio, no two
+being alike, and I was glad to see the lady select a
+capacious one with arms to it, from which she would
+not be likely to topple off when the spirits took
+possession. The rest of us sat in a sort of irregular
+circle round the room, myself alone being accom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>modated
+with a small table, not for the purposes of
+turning (I am set down as "too physical") but in
+order to report the utterances of the Higher Spirits.
+We were five "assistants" in all&mdash;our host, a young
+lady residing with him, another lady well known as a
+musical artiste, with her mamma and my unworthy
+self. Installed in her comfortable chair, the medium
+went through a series of facial contortions, most of
+which looked the reverse of pleasing, though occasionally
+she smiled benignantly par parenth&egrave;se. I was
+told&mdash;or I understood it so&mdash;that this represented
+her upward passage through different spheres. She
+was performing, in fact, a sort of spiritualistic "Excelsior."
+By way of assimilating our minds to the
+matter in hand, we discussed the Apocryphal Gospels,
+which happened to be lying on the table; and very
+soon, without any other process than the facial contortions
+having been gone through, the medium
+broke silence, and, in measured tones of considerable
+benignity, said:&mdash;"Friends, we greet you in the
+name of our Lord and Master. Let us say the
+Lord's Prayer."</p>
+
+<p>She then repeated the Lord's Prayer, with considerable
+alterations from the Authorized Version, especially,
+I noticed, inserting the Swedenborgian expressions,
+"the Heavens," "on earth;" but also altering
+the order of the clauses, and omitting one altogether.
+She then informed us that she was ready to answer
+questions on any subject, but that we were not bound<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+to accept any teaching which she&mdash;or let us say they,
+for it was the spirits now speaking&mdash;might give us.
+"What did we wish to know?" I always notice
+that when this question is asked at a spirit circle
+everybody simultaneously shuts up, as though the
+desire for knowledge were dried at its source. Nobody
+spoke, and I myself was not prepared with a
+subject, but I had just been reviewing a Swedenborgian
+book, and I softly insinuated "Spiritual
+Marriage." It was graciously accepted; and our
+Sibyl thus delivered herself:&mdash;Mankind, the higher
+Spirit or Spirits, said was originally created in pairs,
+and the soul was still dual. Somehow or other&mdash;my
+notes are not quite clear how&mdash;the parts had got
+mixed up, separated, or wrongly sorted. There were,
+however, some advantages in this wrong sorting, which
+was so frequent an accident of terrestrial marriage,
+since it was possible for people to be too much alike&mdash;an
+observation I fancied I had heard before, or at
+least not so profound a one as to need a ghost "Come
+from the dead to tell us that, Horatio!" When the
+right halves did get together on earth the good developed
+for good, the evil for evil, until they got to
+the heavens or the other places&mdash;they were all plurals.
+Swedenborgianism has an objection to the singular
+number; and I could not fail to identify the teaching
+of the Higher Spirit at once with that of the New
+Jerusalem Church. Two preliminary facts were
+brought before us; the Higher Spirits were in theo<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>logy
+Swedenborgian, and in medical practice hom&oelig;opaths.
+So was the Medium. Although there was
+no marriage in the spiritual world, in our sense of the
+term, there was not only this re-sorting and junction
+of the disunited bivalves, but there were actual "nuptials"
+celebrated. We were to be careful and understand
+that what terrestrials called marriage celestials
+named nuptials&mdash;it seemed to me rather a distinction
+without a difference. There was no need of any
+ceremony, but still a ceremony was pleasing and also
+significant. I asked if it was true, as I had read in
+the Swedenborgian book, that all adult angels were
+married. She replied, "Yes; they married from the
+age of 18 to 24, and the male was always a few years
+older than the female."</p>
+
+<p>There was a tendency, which I continually had to
+check, on the part of the Medium to wander off from
+matrimonial to theological subjects; and the latter,
+though trite, were scarcely so heterodox as I expected.
+I had found most "spiritualistic" teaching to be
+purely Theistic. Love to God and man were declared
+to be the great essentials, and creeds to matter little.
+If a man loved truth, it was no matter how wild or
+absurd his ideas might be. The love of God might
+seem a merely abstract idea, but it was not so. To
+love goodness was to love God. The love of the
+neighbour, in the sense of loving all one's kind, might
+seem hard, too; but it was not really so. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
+were in the sphere where this Intelligence dwelt millions
+of angels, or good spirits, working for the salvation
+of men.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to mention that this lady, in her normal
+condition, is singularly reticent, and that the "communications"
+I chronicle were delivered fluently in one
+unbroken chain of what often rose into real eloquence.</p>
+
+<p>So Christ came for the good of man, and Christ
+was not the only Messiah who had appeared on earth.
+In the millions of ages that had passed over our
+globe, and in the other planets of our solar system,
+there had risen up "other men filled with the spirit
+of good, and so Sons of God." I here tried to get at
+the views of the Higher Spirits on the Divinity of
+Christ, but found considerable haziness; at one time
+it was roundly asserted, at another it seemed to me
+explained away by such expressions as I have quoted
+above.</p>
+
+<p>Our planet, I was informed, had been made the
+subject of special care because we were more material,
+more "solid" than the inhabitants of any other orb.
+There was an essential difference between Christ and
+all other great teachers, such as Buddha; and there
+were no historical records of any other manifestation
+of the Messiah than that we possessed; but such
+manifestations had taken place.</p>
+
+<p>The Spirit then gave us an account of its surroundings,
+which is, I believe, purely Swedenborgian. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
+"celestial" angels were devoted to truth, the "spiritual"
+angels to goodness; and so, too, there were
+the Homes of the Satans, where falsehoods prevailed,
+and of the Devils, where evils predominated. Spirits
+from each of these came to man and held him in
+equilibrio; but gained power as his will inclined towards
+them. The will was not altogether free, because
+affected by inherited tendencies; but the "determination"
+was. I have no idea what the Higher Spirit
+meant by this; and I rather fancy the Higher Spirit
+was in some doubt itself. It rather put me in mind
+of the definition of metaphysics: "If you are talking
+to me of what you know nothing about, and I don't
+understand a word of what you are saying&mdash;that's
+metaphysics."</p>
+
+<p>All can do good, continued the Sibyl. Evil cannot
+compel you. Utter only such an aspiration as, "God
+help me," and it brings a crowd of angels round you.
+From those who came to them from this world, however,
+they (the Higher Spirits) found that teachers
+taught more about what we were to think than what
+we were to do. Goodness was so easy. A right
+belief made us happier; but right action was essential.</p>
+
+<p>Pushed by our host, who was rather inclined to
+"badger" the Higher Spirit, as to irresistible tendencies,
+the Intelligence said they were <i>not</i> irresistible.
+When we arrived in the Spirit World we should find
+everything that had occurred in our lives photographed.
+You will condemn yourselves, it was added.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
+You will not be "had up" before an angry God.
+<i>You</i> will decide, in reference to any wrong action,
+whether you could help it. Even in the act of doing
+it a man condemns himself; much more so there.
+The doctrine of the Atonement was summarily disposed
+of as a "damnable heresy." "Does the Great
+Spirit want one man to die? It hurts us even to
+think of it!"</p>
+
+<p>I then questioned the Medium with regard to the
+resurrection of the body; and was told that man, as
+originally created, was a spiritual being, but had
+"superinduced" his present body of flesh&mdash;how he
+managed it I did not quite gather. As to possible
+sublimation of corporeal integument, the case of
+ghosts was mentioned. It was to no purpose I gently
+insinuated I had never seen a ghost, or had the existence
+of one properly authenticated. I was told
+that if I fired a pistol through a ghost only a small
+particle of dust would remain which could be swept
+up. I was not aware that even so much would
+remain. Fancy "sweeping up" a Higher Spirit!</p>
+
+<p>I could not help once or twice pausing to look
+round on this strange preacher and congregation.
+The comfortable-looking lady propped in an arm-chair,
+and with an urbane smile discoursing on these
+tremendous topics, our little congregation of five,
+myself writing away for dear life, the young hostess
+nursing a weird-looking black cat; the other young
+lady continually harking back to "conjugal" sub<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>jects,
+which seemed to interest her; the mamma
+slightly flabbergastered at the rather revolutionary
+nature of the communications; and our host every
+now and then throwing in a rude or caustic remark.
+I dreaded to think what might have been the result
+of a domiciliary visit paid by a Commissioner in
+Lunacy to that particular studio!</p>
+
+<p>Back, then, the musical young lady took us to
+conjugal pairs. It was very difficult to convey to us
+what this conjugal love was like. Was it Elective
+Affinity? I asked. Yes; something like that, but
+still not that. It was the spontaneous gravitation in
+the spheres, either to other, of the halves of the dual
+spirit dissociated on earth. Not at all&mdash;again in
+reply to me&mdash;like flirting in a corner. The two,
+when walking in the spheres, looked like one. This
+conjugal puzzle was too much for us. We "gave it
+up;" and with an eloquent peroration on the Dynamics
+of Prayer, the s&eacute;ance concluded.</p>
+
+<p>The Lord's Prayer was again said, with even more
+varieties than before; a few extemporaneous supplications
+were added. The process of coming-to seemed
+even more disagreeable, if one may judge by facial
+expression, than going into the trance. Eventually,
+to get back quite to earth, our Sibyl had to be demesmerized
+by our host, and in a few minutes was partaking
+of a ham sandwich and a cup of coffee as
+though she had never been in nubibus at all.</p>
+
+<p>What the psychological condition had been I leave<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+for those more learned than myself to determine.
+That some exaltation of the faculties took place was
+clear. That the resulting intelligence was of deep
+practical import few, I fancy, would aver. Happily
+my mission is not to discuss, but to describe; and so
+I simply set down my experience in the same terms
+in which it was conveyed to me as "An Evening
+with the Higher Spirits."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIII" id="CHAPTER_XLIII"></a>CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>SPIRIT FORMS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Some years ago I contributed to the columns of a
+daily paper an article on Spirit Faces, which was to
+me the source of troubles manifold. In the first place,
+the inquirers into Spiritualism, whose name I found
+to be legion, inundated me with letters, asking me to
+take them to the house of pretty Miss Blank, the
+medium. Miss Blank might have been going on till
+now, holding nightly receptions, without having exhausted
+her list of self-invited guests; I had but one
+answer; the lady was a comparative stranger to me,
+and not a professional medium; ergo, the legion must
+ask some one to chaperone them elsewhere. Spirit
+Faces had got comparatively common and almost
+gone out since I wrote. We are a long way beyond
+faces now. Then, again, my second source of trouble
+was that forthwith, from the date of my writing, the
+Spiritualists claimed me for their own, as Melancholy
+did the young gentleman in Gray's elegy. Though I
+fancied my paper was only a calm judicial statement
+of things seen, and I carefully avoided saying whether
+I was convinced or not, I found myself nolens volens
+enrolled among the initiated, and expected to devote<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
+about five evenings out of the seven to s&eacute;ances. I
+did go, and do go still to a great many; so that I feel
+pretty well posted up in the "Latest Intelligence" of
+the Spiritual world. But the worst of all is that my
+own familiar friends, in whom I trusted, have also
+lifted up their heels against me&mdash;I mean metaphorically,
+of course. "What's the last new thing in
+spirits?" they ask me out loud in omnibuses or railway
+carriages, causing my fellow-travellers to look at
+me in doubt as to whether I am a licensed victualler
+or a necromancer. As "bigots feign belief till they
+believe," I really begin to have some doubts myself
+as to the state of my convictions.</p>
+
+<p>But I wish to make this paper again a simple statement
+of things heard and seen&mdash;especially seen. I
+flatter myself the title is a nice, weird, ghostly one,
+calculated to make people feel uncomfortable about
+the small hours of the morning. Should such be the
+case&mdash;as they say in prefaces&mdash;the utmost hopes of
+the writer will be realized. When last I communicated
+my experiences, the ultimate end we had reached
+was the appearance of a white counterpart of pretty
+Miss Blank's face at the peep-hole of a corner cupboard.
+There were a good many more or less&mdash;generally
+less&mdash;successful imitations of this performance
+in various quarters, and the sensation subsided.
+Miss B. was still facile princeps from the fact that
+she stood full light&mdash;I mean her spirit-face did&mdash;whilst
+all the others leaned to a more or less dim<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+religious kind of gloom. In a short time, however,
+"Katie"&mdash;as the familiar of Miss B. was termed&mdash;thought
+she would be able to "materialize" herself so
+far as to present the whole form, if we re-arranged
+the corner cupboard so as to admit of her doing so.
+Accordingly we opened the door, and from it suspended
+a rug or two opening in the centre, after the
+fashion of a Bedouin Arab's tent, formed a semicircle,
+sat and sang Longfellow's "Footsteps of Angels."
+Therein occurs the passage: "Then the forms of the
+departed enter at the open door." And, lo and behold,
+though we had left Miss B. tied and sealed to her
+chair, and clad in an ordinary black dress somewhat
+voluminous as to the skirts, a tall female figure draped
+classically in white, with bare arms and feet, did enter
+at the open door, or rather down the centre from
+between the two rugs, and stood statue-like before
+us, spoke a few words, and retired; after which we
+entered the Bedouin tent and found pretty Miss B.
+with her dress as before, knots and seals secure, and
+her boots on! This was Form No. 1, the first I had
+ever seen. It looked as material as myself; and on a
+subsequent occasion&mdash;for I have seen it several times&mdash;we
+took four very good photographic portraits of it
+by magnesium light. The difficulty I still felt, with
+the form as with the faces, was that it seemed so
+thoroughly material and flesh-and-blood like. Perhaps,
+I thought, the authoress of "The Gates Ajar" is right,
+and the next condition of things may be more material<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
+than we generally think, even to the extent of admitting,
+as she says, pianofortes among its adjuncts. But
+I was to see something much more ghostly than this.</p>
+
+<p>The great fact I notice about Spiritualism is, that
+it is obeying the occult impetus of all great movements,
+and steadily going from east to west. From
+Hackney and Highbury it gravitates towards Belgravia
+and Tyburnia. I left the wilds of Hackney
+behind, and neared Hyde Park for my next Form. I
+must again conceal names and localities; I have no
+desire to advertise mediums, or right to betray persons
+who have shown me hospitality&mdash;and Spirit Forms.
+We arranged ourselves in a semicircle around the
+curtains which separated the small back drawing-room
+from the large front one, joined hands, sang until we
+were hoarse as crows, and kept our eyes steadily fixed
+on an aperture left between the curtains for the faces
+to show themselves. The room was in blank darkness,
+and, feeling rather tired of the incantation, I
+looked over my shoulder into the gloom, and lo! a
+shadowy form stood self-illuminated not far from me.
+At last I had seen it&mdash;a good orthodox ghost in white,
+and visible in the darkness. It was the form of the
+redoubtable John King himself, who was, I believe, a
+bold buccaneer in the flesh, but who looked more like
+an Arab sheikh in the spirit. He sailed about the
+room, talked to us, and finally disappeared. Eventually
+he reappeared behind the curtains, and for a brief
+space the porti&egrave;re was drawn aside, and the spirit<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+form was seen lighting up the recumbent figure of
+the medium, who was stretched on a sofa, apparently
+in deep trance. It must be borne in mind that we
+were forming a cordon round the passage from one
+room to the other during the whole of this time. A
+trio of "spirits" generally puts in an appearance at
+these s&eacute;ances. In this case there were John King,
+whom I had now seen, as well as heard; Katie, the
+familiar of Miss B.; and a peculiarly lugubrious gentleman
+named Peter, who, I fancy, has not been
+seen, but who has several times done me the favour
+of grasping my hand and hoisting me towards the
+ceiling, as though he were going to carry me off bodily
+to spirit-land. I stand some six feet in my boots, and
+have stepped upon my chair, and still felt the hand
+coming downwards to me&mdash;where from I have no idea.</p>
+
+<p>But my later experiences have still to be told. I
+was invited a few weeks ago to a very select s&eacute;ance
+indeed, where the same medium was to officiate. This
+family, who spared no expense in their investigations,
+had actually got a large, handsome cabinet standing
+in their dining-room as a recognised piece of furniture.
+It was only used, however, on this occasion for the
+imprisonment of the medium. The evolutions of John
+King, who soon appeared, all took place outside the
+cabinet door. He was only "materialized" to the
+middle; and, to our utter amazement, came up to the
+table, and apparently <i>through</i> the table, into the very
+middle of the circle, where he disported himself in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+various ways, keeping up an animated conversation
+the whole time, and frequently throwing himself into
+the attitude of a person swimming on his back. He
+also went upwards as high as the gasalier, and altogether
+did a good many marvellous things, considering
+that all this time he presented the appearance of
+only half a man illuminated by his own light.</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion only have I been seated next to
+the medium during the manifestation of any of these
+forms. At this s&eacute;ance I held him firmly by one
+hand, and a slightly sceptical lady had the other.
+We never let go for a moment, but during the whole
+of the sitting, while John King, Katie, and Peter
+were talking, tiny children's hands were playing with
+my arm, hands, and hair. There were, of course, no
+children in the room. Peter, the lugubrious, is great
+at light porterage. I have known him bring a large
+collection of valuable S&egrave;vres china, and a timepiece
+with its glass case, from the chimney-piece to the
+table&mdash;no easy task in the light, much less in blank
+darkness. He also frequently takes down the pictures
+from the wall and puts them on the table.
+Katie winds up a large musical box, and wafts it,
+while playing, all over the room. Of course we rub
+our eyes and ask what on earth, if it be on earth,
+does this mean? I have not&mdash;to keep up the diction
+of my subject&mdash;the <i>ghost</i> of an idea. If it's conjuring,
+why don't the mediums say so, and enter the
+field openly against Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+and Dr. Lynn? Even if I had a decided opinion
+about it I should refrain from propounding it here,
+because, in the first place, it would be an impertinence,
+and, in the second, no conclusion can be arrived at
+upon testimony alone. People must see for themselves
+and draw their own inferences. In the meantime
+the thing, whatever it is, grows and grows
+upwards. A year ago I had to journey down east to
+find it. Now I must array myself gorgeously like a
+Staffordshire miner, and seek the salons of the West.
+The great desideratum, it still appears to me, is that
+some man with a name in science should examine the
+matter, honestly resolving to endorse the facts if true,
+but to expose them mercilessly if there be a loophole
+for suspicion. Omne ignotum pro magnifico habetur.
+I used to think ghosts big things, but that was
+before I knew them. I should think no more of
+meeting a ghost now than a donkey on a dark night,
+and would infinitely sooner tackle a spirit than a
+burglar. People's curiosity is roused, and the sooner
+somebody gets at the truth the better. It is a somewhat
+irksome task, it is true; but no general principle
+can be arrived at except by an induction of particulars.
+Let us be Baconian, even to our ghosts.
+If they <i>are</i> ghosts, they are a good deal more substantial
+than I had thought. If they are not, let
+somebody, in the name of nineteenth-century
+science, send them off as with the crow of chanticleer,
+and let us hear no more of Spirit Faces or Spirit Forms.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLIV" id="CHAPTER_XLIV"></a>CHAPTER XLIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>SITTING WITH A SIBYL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The connexion of modesty with merit is proverbial,
+though questioned by Sydney Smith, who says
+their only point in common is the fact that each
+begins with an&mdash;m. Modesty, however&mdash;waiving
+the question of accompanying merit&mdash;is a trait which,
+in my mystic inquiries and devious wanderings, I
+meet with far more frequently than might be expected.
+I have just met with two instances which I
+hasten to put on record, if only to confute those who
+say that the age in general, and spirit mediums in
+particular, are not prone to be modest and retiring.
+My first modest person was a Spirit Photographer;
+my second was a Sibyl. I might have looked for
+bashfulness in the latter, but was certainly surprised
+to meet with it in the former. I suddenly learnt
+from the Medium the fact that a Spirit Photographer
+had settled down in my immediate neighbourhood,
+and the appearance of his ghostly advertisement
+brings to my recollection some previous mystic experiences
+I myself had in this way.</p>
+
+<p>A now celebrated medium, Mrs. Guppy, n&eacute;e Miss
+Nicholl, was, in the days of her maidenhood, a prac<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>titioner
+of photography in Westbourne Grove; and,
+as far as I know, she might have been the means of
+opening up to the denizens of the Summer Land this
+new method of terrestrial operations. Ever on the
+qui vive for anything new in the occult line, I at once
+interviewed Miss Nicholl and sat for my portrait, expecting
+at the least to find the attendant spirit of my
+departed grandmamma or defunct maiden aunt standing
+sentinel over me, as I saw departed relations
+doing in many cartes de visite in the room. I confess
+there was a kind of made-up theatrical-property
+look about the attendant spirits which gave one the
+idea that the superior intelligences must have dressed
+in a hurry when they sat or stood for their portraits.
+They looked, in fact, if it be not irreverent to say it,
+rather like so many bundles of pneumatical rags than
+respectable domestic ghosts. However, as long as I
+got the ghosts I did not care about the dress. Tenue
+de soir point de rigueur, I would have said, as they do
+outside the cheap casinos in Paris, or "Evening dress
+not required," if one must descend to the vernacular.
+Well, I sat persistently and patiently through I am
+afraid to say how many operations, and the operator
+described me as being surrounded by spirits&mdash;I always
+am according to Mediums, but my spirits must be
+eminently unsociable ones, for they seldom give me a
+word, and on this occasion refused to be "taken" as
+resolutely as the bashful gentleman in the <i>Graphic</i>
+who resisted the operations of the prison officials to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+obtain a sun-picture of his interesting physiognomy.
+There was indeed a blotch on one of the negatives,
+which I was assured was a spirit. I could not see
+things in that light.</p>
+
+<p>Foiled on this particular occasion my anxiety was
+dormant, but never died out. I still longed for a
+denizen of the other world to put in an appearance,
+and kept on being photographed over and over again
+until I might have been the vainest man alive, on the
+bare hope that the artist might be a Medium malgr&eacute;
+lui or undeveloped. I had heard there were such
+beings, but they never came in my way. I was really
+serious in this wish, because I felt if it could be
+granted, the possibility of deception being prevented,
+the objectivity of the phenomena would be guaranteed.
+At this time I was heretical enough to believe that
+most ghosts were due to underdone pork or untimely
+Welsh rare-bits, and that the raps assigned to their
+agency were assignable to the active toes of the
+Medium which might be anywhere and up to anything
+with the opportunities of a dark s&eacute;ance.</p>
+
+<p>A short time since, however, M. Buguet, a celebrated
+French Spirit Photographer came from Paris
+to London, and received sitters for the modest sum of
+30<i>s.</i> each. This would have been much beyond my
+means; but I suppose my wish had transpired, and
+that gentleman sent me an invitation to sit gratis,
+which, I need not say, I thankfully accepted. I felt
+sure that M. Buguet did not know either my long-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>lost
+grandmother or lamented maiden aunt, so that
+any portraits I might get from him would be presumably
+genuine. I sat; and over my manly form,
+when the negative came to be cleaned, was a female
+figure in the act of benediction. I have no notion
+how she got there&mdash;for I watched every stage in the
+operation, and selected my plate myself; but neither,
+on the other hand, does she bear the faintest resemblance
+to anybody I ever knew.</p>
+
+<p>Still M. Buguet is not my modest photographer.
+Elated by success so far, I called on the local gentleman
+who advertised in the <i>Medium</i>; but the local
+gentleman was "engaged." I wrote to the local
+gentleman appointing an interview; but the local
+gentleman replied not. Yet still his advertisement
+remains; and I see in every spiritualistic album dozens
+of "property" relations in the shape of quasi-spirits,
+and wonder why the local gentleman would not take
+me, so as to be immortalized in these pages.</p>
+
+<p>Equally modest was the advertising Sibyl. I wrote
+to the Sibyl, and somebody replied, and "respectfully
+declined." But I was not to be done. There is more
+than one Sibyl in the world. I called on No. 2 without
+announcing my intention or sending in my name.
+This Sibyl at once admitted me, and I mounted to
+the first floor front of a respectable suburban lodging-house.</p>
+
+<p>I waited anxiously for a long time, wondering
+whether Sibyl was partaking of the onions, whose<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
+presence in that modest domicile was odoriferously
+evidenced to my nose, though it was then scarcely
+half-past one o'clock. Presently a portly middle-aged
+man, who might have been Sibyl's youthful papa, or
+rather aged husband, entered, wiping his mouth. He
+had clearly been partaking of the fragrant condiment.</p>
+
+<p>Where was Sibyl?</p>
+
+<p>"She would be with us directly," the gentleman
+said, varying the proceedings by picking his teeth in
+the interim.</p>
+
+<p>She <i>was</i> with us in a minute, and never, I suppose,
+did picturesque anticipations more suddenly collapse
+and come to grief than mine. I had pictured Sibyl a
+bright ethereal being, and the realization of my ideal
+weighed twelve stone, if an ounce. She was a big,
+fleshy, large-boned woman of an utterly uncertain age,
+not without considerable good-nature in her extensive
+features; but the pervading idea that you had when
+you looked at Sibyl was that there was <i>too much of
+her</i>. I could not help thinking of the husband who
+said he did not like a big wife: he preferred two small
+ones; and then again I fell into wonderment as to
+whether the man who was still engaged with his
+dental apparatus was Sibyl's husband or papa.</p>
+
+<p>I told them I was anxious to test Sibyl's powers;
+and, with a few passes from his fat dumpy hands, the
+man soon put her to sleep. It looked to me like an
+after-dinner nap, but I was told it was magnetic. It
+might have been. By the way, I had unmistakable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
+evidence from my olfactory organ that Sibyl <i>had</i> been
+eating onions.</p>
+
+<p>I had provided myself with two locks of hair, as I
+had heard that "psychometry" was among Sibyl's
+qualifications. I handed her the first, and she immediately
+proceeded to describe a series of tableaux
+which appeared to pass through her mind. She kept
+handling the lock of hair, and said, "The person to
+whom this belongs is ill&mdash;weak," which was true
+enough, but might, I thought, be a shot. I should
+mention, however, that it was quite impossible Sibyl
+could know me. She had not even heard my name.
+She then described a bedroom, with some person&mdash;she
+could not see what person&mdash;lying in bed, and a lady
+in a blue dress bending over her. This, again, I
+thought might flow out as a deduction from her
+premises of the hair belonging to an invalid. The
+blue dress was correct enough, but still so little
+special as to be a very possible coincidence. She then,
+however, startled me by saying, "I notice this, that
+on the table by the bedside, where the bottles of
+medicine are standing, milk has been spilt&mdash;a large
+quantity&mdash;and not wiped up." This was a trivial
+detail, not known to me at the time, but confirmed
+on subsequent inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>She then passed on to describe a second tableau,
+where the same person in the blue dress was in a room
+<i>all hung over with plates</i>, along with a gentleman
+whom she described very accurately. He was the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
+occupant of the house where the patient lay, and,
+having a hobby for old china, had turned his dining-room
+into a sort of crockery shop by hanging it all
+over with the delf.</p>
+
+<p>This was curious enough, though not very convincing.
+It seemed as though the influence of this
+person who had given me the hair was stronger than
+that of the hair itself. With the second lock of hair
+we failed utterly. She said that also came from a
+sick person, but a person not sick with the same
+disease as the other. She was quite positive they
+came from different people, and asked me to feel the
+difference of texture. I am sorry, for Sibyl's sake,
+to say they both came from the same person, and
+were cut at the same time, though from different parts
+of the head, which made one look silkier than the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>As a test of Sibyl's clairvoyance, this was not very
+satisfactory. She read the inscription on a card when
+her eyes were bandaged, pressing it to her forehead;
+but then olden experiences in the way of blindman's
+buff convince me that it is very difficult to say when
+a person is properly blinded.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, then, I never quite got over my previous
+disappointment at Sibyl's bulk. Had she been pretty
+and frizzle-headed like Miss Annie Eva Fay, or like
+Miss Showers or Miss Florence Cook, I might have
+been disposed to make more of her coincidences and
+to wink at her failures. We <i>are</i> so liable to be led<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
+away by our feelings in these matters. Sibyl was
+large, had eaten onions, and would have been improved
+if she had brushed her hair, and so I am
+afraid I rather grudged the somewhat exorbitant fee
+which the fat-handed man&mdash;not Sibyl&mdash;took and
+pocketed in an interval of his dental pursuit, and I
+passed out from that suburban lodging, none of us,
+I fancy, very well satisfied with one another. I have
+an idea I unconsciously expressed my inner feelings
+of disappointment with Sibyl and something stronger
+in reference to her male companion.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV"></a>CHAPTER XLV.</h2>
+
+<h3>SPIRITUALISTS AND CONJURERS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"How it's done" is the question which, in the
+words of Dr. Lynn, we want to settle with reference
+to his own or kindred performances, and, still more,
+in the production of the phenomena known as spiritual.
+I have spent some years of my existence in
+a hitherto vain endeavour to solve the latter problem;
+and the farther I go, the more the mystery seems to
+deepen. Of late, the two opposed parties, the Spiritualists
+and the Conjurers, have definitely entered
+the arena, and declared war to the knife. Each
+claims to be Moses, and denounces the others as
+mere magicians. Mr. Maskelyne holds a dark s&eacute;ance,
+professing to expose the spiritualistic ones; Dr. Lynn
+brandishes against them his strong right arm upon
+which is written in letters all of blood the name
+of one's deceased grandmother, while, in return,
+Dr. Sexton exposes the conjurers, and spoils one's
+enjoyment of a hitherto enjoyable evening, by
+showing "how it's done"&mdash;how the name of one's
+departed relative is forged and painted early in the
+afternoon, instead of "coming out" on the spot&mdash;and
+in spots&mdash;like measles or nettle-rash (as we feel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
+defunct relations ought to come) or walking in and
+out of the corded box at pleasure, and even going so
+far as to give the address of the clever mechanist
+down a by-street near Notting-hill Gate, who will
+make the mysterious packing case to order in return
+for a somewhat heavy "consideration."</p>
+
+<p>I accepted Dr. Lynn's invitation to be present on
+his "opening night;" and wondered, in passing, why
+everybody should not make their cards of invitation
+such thorough works of art as his. Now I am going
+to do even-handed justice all the way round; and I
+must say that Dr. Lynn's experiment of fastening
+his attendant to a sort of penitential stool with
+copper wire, surrounded by scrutineers from the
+audience, and then making the man's coat come off,
+and a ring pass over his arm, behind a simple rug
+held in front of him, is quite as wonderful as anything
+I have ever witnessed at a s&eacute;ance. It has the
+great advantage of being done in the light, instead
+of, as in Mr. Fay's case, in darkness, and without a
+cabinet. In fact, I have no idea how it's done;
+though I have no doubt the first time I see
+Dr. Sexton he will point to something unsatisfactory
+in the bolts to which that doorkeeper is fastened,
+and give me the addresses of the ironmonger who
+will sell me some like them, or the tailor who will
+manufacture me a swallow tail coat with an imperceptible
+slit down the back. Then again, I have, as
+I said, seen young Mr. Sexton go in and out of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
+corded box, and I know how that's done; but
+Dr. Lynn's man goes into three, one inside the other.
+Well, I can understand that if Dr. Sexton's theory
+be correct, it may perhaps be as easy to get into a
+"nest" of three as into one box; but how, in the
+name of nature&mdash;or art&mdash;does the nautical gentleman
+get out of the double sack in which he is tied? I
+cannot bring myself to print what Dr. Sexton's
+theory of the box is, because it appears to be such a
+wanton cruelty to "expose" things when people go
+to the Egyptian Hall on purpose to be mystified.
+I remember how the fact of having seen Dr. Sexton
+do the trick of reading the names in the hat spoilt
+my enjoyment of Dr. Lynn's experiment. He really
+appeared quite bungling when I knew all he was
+about. He did not, on this occasion, produce the
+letters on his arm; but I saw he could quite easily
+have done so, though the doing it would have been
+no sort of reproduction of Mr. Forster's manifestation,
+who showed you the name of some relative
+when you had looked in on him quite unexpectedly.
+I can quite understand how it is that the spiritualists,
+who hold these matters to be sacred as revelation
+itself&mdash;in fact, to be revelation itself, are shocked at
+seeing their convictions denounced as trickery and
+"exposed" on a public platform; but I confess I do
+not quite see how they can adopt the tu quoque
+principle, and "expose" Dr. Lynn and Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke as tricksters, because they do<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
+not pretend to be anything else. It would have
+been fatal if the magicians had "found out" Moses,
+and they wisely refrained from trying; but it would
+have served no purpose for Moses to "find out" the
+magicians: and it strikes me Moses would have
+deemed it very infra dig. to make the attempt. The
+two things stand on quite different grounds; and I
+cannot help thinking that the spiritualists unwisely
+concede a point when they accept the challenge of
+the conjurers. I am quite aware that the theory of
+the spiritualists makes of many a conjurer a medium
+malgr&eacute; lui, and says he ought to come out in his
+true colours. It was so Messrs. Maskelyne and
+Cooke were originally introduced to a London public
+at the Crystal Palace under the auspices of an
+eminent spiritualist; but it really appears to me
+that such an assertion amounts to begging the
+question; for I doubt whether it would not "pay"
+quite as well to come out boldly in Mr. Williams's
+or Mr. Morse's line as in that of Dr. Lynn or
+Mr. Maskelyne.</p>
+
+<p>In a lengthened confab which I once had with
+Mr. Maskelyne himself after one of his performances,
+he told me that by constant attendance at the s&eacute;ances
+of the Davenports he found out how that was all
+done; and, being a working watchmaker, was able
+soon to get the necessary apparatus constructed. I
+must again be just, and state that while the cabinet
+s&eacute;ance of Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke seems to me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
+the exact counterpart of the Davenports', their dark
+s&eacute;ance fails to reproduce that of the spiritualists as
+the performances of Professor Pepper himself. True,
+this latter gentleman does all his expos&eacute;s on a platform
+which is sacred against all intrusion, and
+Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke assume to allow as
+much examination as the spiritualists. But I myself,
+who have seen Mr. Home float around Mr. S. C.
+Hall's drawing-room, and handled him above and
+below in transitu, quite fail to discern any reproduction
+of that phenomenon in the heavy, lumbering
+levitation of the lady by means of the scissors-like
+apparatus behind her, which we are only privileged
+to behold from the stalls. The dancing walking-stick
+is as palpably made terpsichorean by a string
+as the chairs I have seen cross Mr. Hall's drawing-room
+in full light were not drawn by strings, for I
+was able to look closely at them; and I do not know
+how that was done.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh from Dr. Lynn's really marvellous performances
+of recent times, and with Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke's equally clever tricks in my
+mind's eye, though not quite so recently, I still am
+bold to say I believe there are still six of one to half-a-dozen
+of the other. If the conjurers reproduce
+the spiritual phenomena in some instances, the spiritualists
+distance the conjurers in others. I speak
+of phenomena only. The magicians produced many
+of the same phenomena as Moses; but, even so, if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
+we are orthodox we must believe the source of such
+manifestations to have been utterly different.</p>
+
+<p>But I am, as I said, wise in my generation, and
+stick to phenomena. I venture to think the conjurers
+unwise in irritating the spiritualists, who are a growing
+body, by placarding their entertainment as expos&eacute;s,
+even though such announcements may "draw" the
+non-spiritual public. I suppose, however, they understand
+the science of advertising better than I do;
+but I feel sure the spiritualists are unwise to follow
+their example, because they have got nothing to
+expose. Dr. Lynn or Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke
+are as much pleased as conscientious mediums would
+be shocked at being proved clever tricksters. The
+only folks who are injured by being told "how it's
+done," are the British Public, who pay their five
+shillings to be mystified at the Egyptian Hall, just
+as the spiritualists do in Lamb's Conduit Street.</p>
+
+<p>If it is to come to a race for the championship&mdash;and
+seriously it would seem that, having begun, the
+two parties are bound to continue the strife&mdash;one
+can scarcely imagine anything more attractive than
+such a combined display of talent. Dr. Lynn gets
+lots of people to come and see "How it's done"&mdash;the
+gentleman with the mandolin is well worth a
+visit, and I cannot guess how he does it&mdash;while
+Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke must really be making
+a good thing of it. Mr. Williams's s&eacute;ances are decidedly
+attractive (and how he does it has puzzled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+me for years, as I said), nor does the Progressive
+Institute seem to decrease in interest; but let us
+only picture the fascination of a long evening where
+Pepper's Ghost should be pitted against John King,
+Mrs. Guppy and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke's
+lady float in competition round the room or even
+in from the suburbs, while the Davenports and
+Dr. Lynn's man should wriggle out of or into iron
+rings and their own dress coats! Until some such
+contest takes place, the public mind will probably
+gravitate towards the conjurers rather than the spiritualists,
+and that through the actually suicidal
+policy of the latter; because while the spiritualists
+of necessity can show no visible source of their manifestations,
+one of their own rank devotes himself to
+aiding the conjurers by showing in reference to their
+tricks, "How it's done." It would have been wiser,
+surely, to stand upon dignity, and in a truly conservative
+spirit (is it too late even now to reassume
+it?), say, "These men are mediums, but it does not
+suit their pockets to confess it."</p>
+
+<p>Well, they are signs of the times. London loves
+to be mystified, and would only have one instead of
+manifold methods to be so if the spiritualists and
+conjurers were to strike hands, and reduce us all to
+the dead level of pure faith or relentless reason and
+cold common sense!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XLVI" id="CHAPTER_XLVI"></a>CHAPTER XLVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>PROS AND CONS OF SPIRITUALISM.</h3>
+
+
+<p>It has been repeatedly urged upon me on previous
+occasions, and also during the progress of these sheets
+through the press, that I should make a clean breast
+of my own belief or disbelief in spiritualism; that
+besides being descriptive, I should go one step beyond
+a mere catalogue of phenomena, and, to some extent
+at least, theorize on this mysterious and generally
+proscribed subject.</p>
+
+<p>Let me say at the outset that against the proscription
+of this, or indeed any topic which does not offend
+against morals, I would at the very outset protest as
+the height of unwisdom. Thus to taboo a subject is
+at once to lend it a factitious interest, and more than
+half to endorse its truth: and I believe modern
+spiritualism has been very generally treated in this
+way. Whether truth has gained by such indiscriminate
+condemnation and prejudgment is, I think,
+greatly open to question.</p>
+
+<p>For myself, I have, from the first, steadily refused
+to look upon spiritualism in this bugbear fashion.
+The thing was either true or false&mdash;or, more probably
+still, partly true and partly false: and I must bring<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
+to bear on the discovery of its truth or falsehood, just
+the same critical faculties that I should employ on
+any other problem of common life. That, I fancy, is
+no transcendental view of the matter; but just the
+plain common sense way of going to work. It was,
+at all events, right or wrong, the method I adopted to
+get at such results as I proceed to make public. I
+declined to be scared from the study either by Bogey
+or my esteemed friend Mrs. Grundy, but went at it
+just in the calm Baconian inductive method in which
+I should have commenced any other study or pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>What I want to do is to tabulate these results in
+the same order as that in which they occurred to me;
+and here I am met by a preliminary difficulty, not incidental
+to this subject only, but common to any
+narrative where we have to take a retrospective glance
+over a number of years. We are apt to view the
+subject from our present standpoint; and I shall try
+to avoid this by quoting, whenever I can, what I published,
+or committed to writing in the course of my
+investigations. I shall not cull from others, because
+I want to make this purely a personal narrative.</p>
+
+<p>Let me add, too, I do not in the least expect
+persons to believe what I say. Some, I think, will
+regard me as a harmless (<i>if</i> a harmless) lunatic, on
+account of certain statements I may have to make.
+Others will consider the whole thing as decidedly unorthodox
+and "wrong." For each of these issues I am
+prepared. I would not have believed any one else if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+they had, prior to my experience, told me what I am
+going to tell them here; and therefore I do not
+expect them to believe me. All I hope to do is to
+interest persons sufficiently in the subject to induce
+them to look into the matter on their own account;
+for verily I believe, as a distinguished spiritualist
+once said to me, that this thing is either an important
+truth or else one of the biggest swindles ever palmed
+off upon humanity.</p>
+
+<p>One word more, and I proceed to my narrative.
+Of the three aspects under which it is possible to view
+spiritualism, the scientific, the theological, and the
+social, I shall not touch at all on the first since I am
+not a scientific man; shall only glance at the second,
+because this is not the place for a theological discussion.
+I shall confine myself to the third, therefore,
+which I call the social aspect; looking at the subject
+as a question of the day, the truth about which we
+are as much interested in solving as any other political
+or social question, but the investigation of which need
+not make us get excited and angry and call one another
+bad names. I venture to hope that by these
+means I may manage to compile a not unedifying or
+uninteresting narrative, though our subject be withal
+somewhat a ponderous one.</p>
+
+<p>In order then to cover the preliminary part of my
+narrative, and to let my readers somewhat into
+the state of my own mind, when I had looked at the
+subject for several years, I will quote some extracts<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
+from a paper I read before a society of spiritualists at
+the Beethoven Rooms a few years ago under the title
+"Am I a Spiritualist?" I may mention that the
+assembly was divided, and never decided whether I
+was or not, and what is more, I do not think they are
+quite decided to the present day. I am a patient investigator
+still; but I really do not feel it necessary to issue
+perpetual bulletins as to the state of my convictions.</p>
+
+<p>Taking as my thesis, then, the question, Am I a
+Spiritualist? it will certainly appear, at first sight, I
+said, that the person best qualified to answer this
+question is precisely the person who puts it; but a
+little consideration will, I think, show that the term
+"Spiritualist" is one of such wide and somewhat
+elastic meaning&mdash;in fact, that the word varies so
+widely according to the persons who use it&mdash;that the
+question may really be asked of one's self without
+involving an inconsistency.</p>
+
+<p>When persons ask me, as they often do, with a
+look of unmitigated horror, "Is it possible that you,
+a clergyman, are a spiritualist?" I am often inclined
+to answer, "Yes, madam,"&mdash;(for it is generally a lady
+who puts the question in that particular shape)&mdash;"I
+<i>am</i> a spiritualist, and precisely because I am a clergyman.
+I have had to express more than once my
+unfeigned assent and consent to the Common Prayer
+Book, and the Thirty Nine Articles; and that involves
+belief in the inspiration of all the Bible (except the
+Apocrypha), and the whole of that (<i>not</i> excepting the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
+Apocrypha) is spiritual, or spiritualistic (if you prefer
+the term) from beginning to end; and therefore it is
+not <i>in spite of</i> my being a clergyman, but <i>because</i> I am
+a clergyman that I am such a confirmed spiritualist."</p>
+
+<p>I could answer thus, only I do not, simply because
+to do so would be dishonest. I know my questioner
+is using the word in an utterly different sense from
+what I have thought proper to suppose. Besides
+such an answer would only lead to argumentation,
+and the very form of the question shows me the
+person who puts it has made up her mind on this, as
+probably on most other subjects; and when a feminine
+mind is once made up (others than ladies have feminine
+minds on these subjects) it is very little use
+trying to alter it. I never do. I administer some
+orthodox verbal sedative, and change the subject.
+But even accepting the term in the way I know it is
+meant to be used&mdash;say, for instance, as it comes from
+the mouth of some conservative old gentleman, or supposed
+scientific authority&mdash;one's medical man to wit&mdash;"Do
+you believe in spiritualism?" meaning "Are
+you such an ass as to believe in table-turning, and
+rapping, and all that kind of nonsense?"&mdash;even so,
+the question would admit of being answered by another
+question; though I rarely enter so far on the matter
+with those whose minds are evidently quite comfortably
+made up on the matter. It is such a pity to interfere
+with cherished opinions. I have found out that there
+are Athanasian creeds in science as well as in theology;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
+and really, whilst they form recognised formul&aelig; in
+the one or the other, it is positively lost labour to go
+running one's head against them. The question I
+want to ask&mdash;not the gentle apothecaries, but my
+readers&mdash;is, What do you mean by believing in
+spiritualism? Many of the phenomena of spiritualism
+I cannot but believe, if I am to take my five
+senses as my guides in this as in other matters, and
+quite setting aside any credence I may give to
+respectable testimony. When, however, I pass from
+facts to theories, and am asked to account for those
+facts, then I hesitate. There are some here, I know,
+who will say that the spiritualist like the lady who
+hesitates is lost&mdash;who think me as heterodox for
+doing so, as the inflexible old ladies and the omniscient
+apothecaries did on account of my even
+deigning to look into the evidence of such phenomena.
+I feel really that I have set myself up like an animated
+ninepin to be knocked down by the first
+thorough-going spiritualist who cares to bowl at me.
+But whatever else they think of me&mdash;sceptical though
+they deem me on subjects where perhaps you are,
+many of you, a little prone to dogmatize&mdash;I claim
+the character at least of an honest sceptic. I do not
+altogether disavow the title, but I understand it to
+mean "inquirer." I confess myself, after long years
+of perfectly unbiassed inquiry, still an investigator&mdash;a
+sceptic. It is the fashion to abuse St. Thomas
+because he sought sensible proofs on a subject which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
+it was certainly most important to have satisfactorily
+cleared up. I never could read the words addressed
+to him at all in the light of a rebuke&mdash;"Because
+thou hast seen thou hast believed." The Church of
+England treats the doubt of St. Thomas as permitted
+by God "for the more confirmation of the faith;" and
+I feel sure that professed spiritualists will not be so
+inconsistent as to censure any man for examining
+long and carefully matters which they believe to
+admit of demonstration. I heard the most eloquent
+of their advocates say, when comparing spiritual
+with credal conviction, "Our motto no longer is 'I
+believe,' but 'I know.'" Belief may be instantaneous,
+but knowledge will be gradual; and so it is
+that, standing at a certain fixed point in very many
+years' study of spiritualism, I pause, and&mdash;so to say,
+empanelling a jury&mdash;ask the question it seems I ought
+to answer at others' asking&mdash;Am I a Spiritualist?</p>
+
+<p>One word of apology further before entering on the
+details of the matter. It will be inevitable that the
+first personal pronoun shall recur frequently in the
+course of this paper, and that so the paper shall seem
+egotistical. The very question itself sounds so. I am
+not vain enough to suppose that it matters much to
+anybody here whether I am a spiritualist or not,
+except in so far as I may be in any sense a representative
+man. I believe I am. That is, I believe,
+nay, am sure, that a great many persons go as far as
+I do, and stop where I stop. There is a largish body<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
+of investigators, I believe, dangling there, like
+Mahomet's coffin, between heaven and earth, and it
+would be a charity to land them somewhere. Of the
+clerical mind, I do <i>not</i> claim to be a representative,
+because the clerical mind, qu&acirc; clerical, has made up
+itself that the phenomena in question are diabolical.
+Of course if I accepted this theory my question would
+be utterly irrelevant, and I should claim a place
+among the spiritualists at once. The diabolical
+people not only accept the phenomena, but admit
+their spiritual origin, and, more than this, identify
+the spirits. They are in point of fact the most
+thorough-going spiritualists of all.</p>
+
+<p>In sketching their creed, I have mentioned the
+three stages through which most minds must go in
+this matter. Some few, indeed, take them by intuition,
+but most minds have to plod patiently along the path
+of inquiry, as I have done. The first stage is acceptance
+of the phenomena, the second the assignment of
+those phenomena to spirits as their source, the third
+is identification of these spirits.</p>
+
+<p>1. On the first part of my subject I shall venture
+to speak with some boldness. I am not a philosopher,
+therefore I can afford to do so. I shall suppose my
+five senses to serve my purposes of observation, as
+they would be supposed to serve me if I were giving
+evidence in a court of justice. If I saw a table move,
+I shall say <i>it did</i> move, not "it appeared to move."
+I do this in my capacity of a commonplace instead of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
+a philosophical investigator; and I must say, if I
+were, as I supposed myself just now, in the witness-box,
+with a good browbeating counsel cross-examining
+me on this point, I would rather have to defend the
+position of the commonplace inquirer than the
+philosopher, pledged to defend the philosophy of the
+last fifty years, and bound hand and foot by his
+philosophic Athanasian Creed, and I don't know how
+many articles, more than thirty-nine, I fancy.</p>
+
+<p>In the latter part of the year 1856, or beginning of
+1857, then, I was residing in Paris, that lively capital
+being full of Mr. Home's doings at the Tuileries. At
+that time I knew nothing, even of table-turning. I
+listened to the stories of Mr. Home and the Emperor
+as mere canards. I never stopped to question whether
+the matter were true, because I in my omniscience
+knew it to be impossible. It is this phase of my
+experience that makes me so unwilling to argue with
+the omniscient people now; it is such a waste of
+time. At this period my brother came to visit me,
+and he had either been present himself or knew
+persons who had been present at certain s&eacute;ances at
+Mr. Rymer's. He seemed staggered, if not convinced,
+by what he had heard or seen, and this staggered me
+too, for he was not exactly a gullible person and
+certainly by no means "spiritual." I was staggered,
+I own, but then I was omniscient, and so I did what
+is always safest, laughed at the matter. He suggested
+that we should try experiments instead of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
+laughing, and, not being a philosopher, I consented.
+We sat at the little round table in our tiny salon,
+which soon began to turn, then answered questions,
+and finally told us that one of the three, viz., my
+wife, was a medium, and consequently we could
+receive communications. I went to a side table and
+wrote a question as to the source of the manifestations,
+keeping it concealed from those at the table,
+and not rejoining them myself. The answer spelt out
+by them was&mdash;"We, the spirits of the departed, are
+permitted thus to appear to men." Again I wrote&mdash;"What
+object is served by your doing so?" The
+answer was&mdash;"It may make men believe in God."
+I have said I am not a philosopher, therefore I do not
+mind confessing that I collapsed. I struck my flag
+at once as to the <i>impossibility</i> of the matter. At the
+same time I did not&mdash;as I know many ardent spiritualists
+will think I ought&mdash;at once swallow the
+whole thing, theory and all. I should not have
+believed if a man had told me this; was it to be expected
+that I should believe a table? Honesty is my
+best policy; and I had better, therefore, say I
+was never so utterly knocked over by anything that
+occurred to me in my life before or since. My visage
+of utter, blank astonishment is a joke against me to
+this hour. We pursued the inquiry almost nightly
+during the remainder of my stay in Paris&mdash;up to late
+in the summer of 1857 that is&mdash;and also on our return
+to England; but, strangely as it seems to me now,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
+considering how we began, we did it more as a pastime
+than anything else. The only time we were
+serious was when my wife and I sat alone, as we often
+did. Of course when I came to inquire at all into
+the matter I was met by Faraday's theory of involuntary
+muscular action, and also with the doctrine of
+unconscious cerebration&mdash;I was quite ready to accept
+either. My own position, as far as I can recall it,
+then was that the spiritual agency was "not proven."
+My wife had great reluctance against admitting the
+spiritual theory. I was simply passive; but two circumstances
+seemed to me to militate against the
+theories I have mentioned: (1.) The table we used
+for communicating was a little gimcrack French
+affair, the top of which spun round on the slightest
+provocation, and no force whatever, not even a philosopher's,
+applied to the surface would do more than
+spin the top round; but when the table turned, <i>it
+turned bodily, legs and all</i>. (2.) As to that ponderously
+difficult theory of unconscious cerebration communicated
+by involuntary muscular action, whenever we
+asked any questions as to the future, we were instantly
+checked, and told it was better that the future
+should not be revealed to us. I was anxious about a
+matter in connexion with an election to an appointment
+in England, and we asked some questions as to
+what form the proceedings would take. The reply
+was that certain candidates would be selected from
+the main body, and the election made from these.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
+I thought I had caught the table in an inconsistency,
+and said&mdash;"There now you <i>have</i> told us something
+about the future." It immediately replied&mdash;"No, I
+have not; the matter is already settled in the minds
+of the examiners." Whence came that answer?
+Certainly not from our minds, for it took us both by
+surprise. I could multiply a hundredfold instances
+of this kind, but, of course, to educated spiritualists
+these are mere A B C matters; whilst non-spiritualists
+would only accept them on the evidence of their
+own senses. I do not mean to say they actually
+question the facts to the extent of doubting one's
+veracity, or else nearly all testimony must go for
+nothing; but there is in these matters always room
+for doubting whether the narrator has not been deceived;
+and, moreover, even if accepted at secondhand,
+I doubt whether facts so accepted ever become,
+as it were, assimilated, so as to have any practical
+effect.</p>
+
+<p>My facts at all events came at first-hand. I suppose
+a man need not be considered credulous for
+believing in his own wife, and nearly all these phenomena
+were produced by my wife's mediumship. It
+was not until late in the year 1865 or early in 1866,
+that I ever sat with a professional medium. My
+wife, moreover, from first to last, has steadily disbelieved
+the spirit theory, so that she has not laid
+herself open to suspicion of being prejudiced in favour
+of the subject. She has been emphatically an in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>voluntary,
+nay, even unwilling agent in these
+matters.</p>
+
+<p>During these eight or nine years the communications
+were generally given by automatic writing,
+though sometimes still by tilting of the table. I am
+very much tempted to quote two, which linger in my
+recollection, principally, I believe, because they were
+so destructive of the cerebration theory, besides being
+curious in themselves. I kept no records until a later
+date. At present all rests on tradition. Each of
+these cases occurred in presence of myself, my wife,
+and a pupil. In the former, he was a young Englishman,
+who had lived a great deal abroad, whose mother
+was a Catholic and father a Protestant. He had been
+brought up in the latter faith; and when I desired
+him to ask a mental question, he asked, in French&mdash;that
+being the language most familiar to him&mdash;"Is
+the Catholic or the Protestant religion the true one?"
+Mark you, he never articulated this, or gave the least
+hint that he was asking in French. He did it in
+fact, spontaneously. My wife immediately wrote
+"Ta m&egrave;re est Catholique"&mdash;so far, in French, with
+difficulty, and then breaking off into English,
+"Respect her faith."</p>
+
+<p>In the second instance, my pupil was a French
+youth, a Catholic, who was living in my house, but
+used to go to his priest frequently to be prepared for
+his first communion. One day when we were writing,
+this youth asked who the communicating spirit was,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
+and received in reply the name of Louis D&mdash;&mdash;.
+The name was totally unknown to us; but to our
+surprise when the youth came back from his visit to
+the priest that day he informed us that his reverend
+instructor had dwelt strongly on the virtues of Louis
+D&mdash;&mdash;. Seeing the boy look amazed as the name
+which had just been given at our s&eacute;ance was pronounced,
+the priest inquired the reason; and, on
+being informed, of course directed his catechumen
+never to join in such diablerie again.</p>
+
+<p>The impression, then, left on my mind by these
+years of desultory dabbling with&mdash;rather than study
+of&mdash;the subject, was decidedly that the phenomena of
+spiritualism were genuine. Looking at the matter
+from my present standpoint and frame of mind, it
+seems to me incredible that I should have thought
+so little of the source of the phenomena. It was, as
+I said, that I was then dabbling with, not studying,
+the subject.</p>
+
+<p>But even without advancing beyond this rudimentary
+stage, I saw a very serious result produced.
+I saw men who literally believed in nothing, and who
+entered on this pursuit in a spirit of levity, suddenly
+staggered with what appeared to afford even possibility
+of demonstration of another world, and the
+continued existence of the spirit after bodily death.
+I believe a great many persons who have never felt
+doubt themselves are unaware of the extent to which
+doubt prevails amongst young men especially; and I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
+have seen many instances of this doubt being&mdash;if not
+removed&mdash;shaken to its very foundation by their witnessing
+the phenomena of spiritualism. "Yes, but
+did it make good consistent Christians of them?"
+asks one of my excellent simple-minded objectors.
+Alas! my experience does not tell me that good consistent
+Christians are so readily made. Does our
+faith&mdash;I might have asked&mdash;make <i>us</i> the good consistent
+Christians it ought to do, and would do
+perhaps, if we gave it fair play?</p>
+
+<p>So, then, my study of spiritualism had been
+purely phenomenal. It was a very sad and serious
+event which drove me to look deeper. Some people
+will, I daresay, think it strange that I allude to this
+cause here. The fact that I do so shows, at all events,
+that I have looked seriously at spiritualism since. It
+was none other than the loss, under painful circumstances,
+of one of my children. Now I had always
+determined that, in the event of my losing one near
+and dear to me, I would put spiritualism to the test,
+by trying to communicate with that one. This will,
+I think, show that, even then, if I did not accept the
+spiritualistic theory, I did not by any means consider
+the position untenable. The very day after my boy's
+death, I got his mother to sit, and found she was
+writing a little loving message purporting to come
+from him. This, a sceptic would say, was natural
+enough under the circumstances. I said no word,
+but sat apart, and kept writing "Who is it that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
+communicates? write your name." Suddenly the
+sentence was broken off, and the child's name written,
+though I had not expressed my wish aloud. This
+was strange; but what followed was stranger still.
+Of course, so far all might have been fairly attributed
+to cerebration&mdash;if such a process exists. It was
+natural enough, it might be urged, that the mother,
+previously schooled in the belief of the probability of
+communication, should write in her lost child's name.
+For years the same thing never occurred again, though
+we sat night after night for the purpose of renewing
+such communications. I can certainly say of myself
+that, at this time, I <i>was</i> a spiritualist&mdash;as thorough
+and devout a one as any existing; and the fact
+that I was so, when carried away by my feelings,
+makes me the more cautious to test and try myself
+as to whether my feelings may not sometimes sway
+my judgment even now; whether the wish be not
+often father of the thought, at all events in the identification
+of spiritual communications, and so, possibly,
+of the spiritual nature of such communications altogether.</p>
+
+<p>However, from this time&mdash;the autumn of 1865&mdash;my
+spiritual studies underwent an entire change&mdash;they
+<i>were</i> studies&mdash;serious studies. I now kept a
+careful journal of all communications, which journal
+I continued for three years, so that I can trace all my
+fluctuations of opinion&mdash;for I did fluctuate&mdash;during
+that period. Now, too, it was necessary for me to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
+consult those who had already gone deeply into the
+subject; and the record of my experiences would be
+both imperfect and ungracious if I did not here
+acknowledge the prompt kindness of the two gentlemen
+to whom I applied&mdash;Mr. Benjamin Coleman
+and Mr. Samuel Carter Hall. I was comparatively a
+stranger to each of them, but they replied to my inquiries
+with the most ready courtesy, and I am happy
+to date my present friendship with each of them
+from this time. At Mr. Hall's I met Mr. Home, and
+on the second occasion of my doing so, not only saw
+him float, but handled him above and below during
+the whole of the time he floated round Mr. Hall's
+drawing-room. I am unphilosophical enough to say
+that I entirely credit the evidence of my senses on
+that occasion, and am as certain that Mr. Home was
+in space for five minutes as I am of my own
+existence. The ordinary solution of cranes and
+other cumbrous machinery in Mr. Hall's drawing-room
+I cannot credit, for I think we should have seen
+them, and I am sure I should have felt ropes round
+Mr. Home's body. Chairs went from one end of the
+room to the other <i>in full light</i>; and nobody had previously
+tumbled over strings and wires, so that I don't
+think there could have been any there.</p>
+
+<p>I fancy, as far as any order is traceable in the somewhat
+erratic course of spiritualistic experiences, that
+most people arrive at spiritualism vi&acirc; mesmerism.
+It so happened that this order was exactly inverted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
+in my case. It was not until 1866 that I found I
+possessed the power of magnetism, and moreover, had
+in my house a subject whom Alphonse Didier (with
+whom I afterwards put myself in communication) declared
+to be "one in a thousand." Some of the
+details of this lady's case are very curious, but this is
+scarcely the place to dilate upon them further than as
+they affected my spiritualistic studies. She passed
+with extraordinary ease into the condition of lucidity,
+when she was conscious only of basking in light,
+anxious to be magnetized more deeply so as to get
+more thoroughly into the light, and, moreover, aware
+only of the existence of those who had passed away
+from earth. She knew they were with her: said I
+<i>must</i> know it, as I was there too, and that it was I
+only who would not "let her" see them. The fact
+that "our life is twofold" was to me most marvellously
+brought out by my magnetic treatment of this
+lady; and, moreover, the power of influencing action
+could not fail to be suggestive of the truth of one of
+the cardinal doctrines of spiritualism&mdash;that we are
+thus influenced by disembodied spirits, as I, an embodied
+spirit, could influence another spirit in the
+body. Some of the likes and dislikes which I, so to
+say, produced then in 1866 have remained to the
+present hour. For instance, one particular article of
+food (I will not mention what, or it would be fatal to
+my reader's gravity), for which she previously had a
+penchant, I rendered so distasteful to her that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
+very smell of it now makes her uncomfortable. I
+must plead guilty to having experimented somewhat
+in this way; but what a wonderful light it sheds upon
+the great problem of the motives of human action!
+By the simple exercise of my will I could make my
+patient perform actions the most abhorrent to her.
+For instance&mdash;the ladies will appreciate this power&mdash;at
+a time when crinolines were extensive, I made that
+poor creature draggle about in a costume conspicuous
+by the absence of crinoline, and making her look like
+some of the ladies out of a Noah's ark.</p>
+
+<p>During this period my wife and I constantly sat
+alone, and she wrote. It is no disrespect to her to
+say that writing is not her forte, but the communications
+she made in this way were exceedingly
+voluminous, and couched in a particularly happy
+style, though on subjects far above the range of
+ordinary compositions. We never obtained a single
+communication purporting to come from our child,
+but the position claimed by the communicating intelligence
+was that of his spirit-guardian.</p>
+
+<p>Having now probably said enough in these confessions
+to convince every non-spiritualist that I am
+insane, because I believed the evidence of my senses,
+and even ventured to look into matters so unorthodox
+and unscientific as mesmerism and spiritualism, I go
+on to "make a clean breast," and set myself wrong
+with the other moiety of my readers. I must
+candidly confess that the experiences of this year<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
+(1866) did not confirm my sudden conviction of the
+spiritual agency in these phenomena. I drifted
+back, in fact, to my previous position, accepting the
+phenomena, but holding the cause an open question.
+The preface to the book, "From Matter to Spirit,"
+exactly expressed&mdash;shall I say expresses?&mdash;my state
+of mind. There is one passage in that preface which
+appears to me to clinch the difficulty&mdash;"I am perfectly
+convinced that I have both seen and heard,
+in a manner which should make unbelief impossible,
+things called spiritual, which cannot be taken by a
+reasonable being to be capable of explanation by imposture,
+coincidence, or mistake. So far I feel the
+ground firm under me. But when it comes to what
+is the cause of these phenomena I find I cannot adopt
+any explanation which has yet been suggested. If
+I were bound to choose among things which I can
+conceive, I should say that there is some sort of action&mdash;some
+sort of combination of will, intellect, and physical
+power, which is not that of any of the human
+beings present. But thinking it very likely that the
+universe may contain a few agencies, say half a million,
+about which no man knows anything, I cannot but
+suspect that a small proportion of these agencies, say
+five thousand, may be severally competent to the production
+of all the phenomena, or may be quite up to
+the task among them. <i>The physical explanations
+which I have seen are easy, but miserably insufficient:
+the spiritual hypothesis is sufficient but ponderously difficult.</i>"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
+This statement is natural enough from the
+scientific side of the question. Perhaps the theological
+inquirer, taking the fact into consideration that
+Scripture certainly concedes the spiritual origin of
+kindred phenomena, would rather reverse the statement,
+and say (what I individually feel) that the
+psychological explanation is the ponderously difficult&mdash;the
+pneumatological, the comparatively easy one.</p>
+
+<p>It is now no secret that the author of this excellent
+treatise, is Professor De Morgan; and I can only say
+that if I am accused of heterodoxy, either from the
+spiritualist or anti-spiritualist side of the discussion,
+I am not ashamed to be a heretic in such company.
+Let me put the matter in the present tense, indicative
+mood&mdash;that is the state of my opinion on the cause of
+the phenomena. Admitting the facts, I hold the
+spiritual theory to be "not proven," but still to be a
+hypothesis deserving our most serious consideration,
+not only as being the only one that will cover all the
+facts, but as the one I believe invariably given in
+explanation by the intelligence that produces the
+phenomena, even when, as in our case, all those
+present are sceptical of or opposed to such a theory.</p>
+
+<p>3. It may perhaps sound illogical if, after stating
+that I hold the spiritual origin of these phenomena
+unproven, I go on to speak of the identification of the
+communicating spirit; but I hope I have made it
+clear that, even if I do not consider the spiritualistic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
+explanation demonstrated, it is still a hypothesis
+which has much in its favour.</p>
+
+<p>I have already mentioned the subject of identification
+in the case of the first communication purporting
+to come from our little child, and how no such communications
+were received for a period of some years
+after. In December, 1866, I went to the Marshalls',
+entering as an entire stranger, and sitting down at
+the table. I saw some strong physical manifestations&mdash;a
+large table being poised in space, in full light, for
+some seconds. It was signified there was a spirit
+present who wished to communicate, and the message
+given by raps to me was&mdash;"Will you try to think of
+us more than you have done?" I asked the name,
+and my child's was correctly given, though I had not
+been announced, and I have no reason to believe my
+name was known. The place where he passed away
+from earth was also correctly specified. I then asked
+for my father, and his name was correctly given, and a
+message added, which I cannot say was equally suggestive
+of individuality. It was&mdash;"Bright inspiration
+will dawn upon your soul, and do not hide your
+light under a bushel."</p>
+
+<p>Another case in which I tested individuality
+strongly, with utter absence of success, was also
+brought before me somewhat earlier in this year. I
+was sent for by a lady who had been a member of
+my congregation, and who had taken great interest in
+these questions. She was suddenly smitten down with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
+mortal disease, and I remained with her almost to the
+last&mdash;indeed, I believe her last words were addressed to
+me, and referred to this very subject of identification&mdash;she
+consulting <i>me</i> as to the great problem she was
+then on the very point of solving! As soon as she
+had gone from us, I went home, and tried to communicate
+with her. I was informed that her spirit
+was present, and yet every detail as to names, &amp;c.,
+was utterly wrong.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of the following year I went again to
+the Marshalls', in company with one or two other
+persons, my own object being to see if I could obtain
+communication from the spirit of a highly-gifted lady
+who had recently died&mdash;and also, I may mention&mdash;had
+been the medium of my previous slight acquaintance
+with Mr. Coleman. She was very much interested
+in these matters, and, when in this world,
+her great forte had been writing. She published a
+volume of poems, which won the special commendation
+of the late Charles Dickens, and her
+letters were most characteristic ones. I mentioned
+that I wished to communicate with the spirit I was
+thinking of, and said I should be quite satisfied if the
+initials were correctly given. Not so&mdash;the whole
+three names were immediately given in full. I do
+not feel at liberty to mention the names; but the
+surname was one that nine out of ten people always
+spelt wrongly (just as they do <i>my</i> name), but on this
+occasion it was correctly spelt. I asked for a cha<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>racteristic
+message, and received the words, "I am
+saved, and will now save others;"&mdash;about as unlike
+my friend's ordinary style as possible. It may be
+said her nature had undergone revolution, but that
+was not the question. The test was that something
+should be given, identifying the spirit, by the style
+of its <i>former</i> writing while embodied on earth.</p>
+
+<p>With one more case, bearing on this subject of
+identity, and bringing the matter up to the present
+date, I feel I may advantageously close this portion
+of my experiences&mdash;though as I do so, I am thoroughly
+dissatisfied with myself to find how much I
+have left unsaid. It is so difficult to put these things
+on paper, or in any way to convey them to another;&mdash;most
+difficult of all for one unblessed with leisure,
+and combining in his single self the pursuits of some
+three laborious callings.</p>
+
+<p>Last year, whilst sitting at Mrs. B&mdash;&mdash;'s, I was
+touched by a hand which seemed to me that of a
+small girl, and which attracted my attention by the
+way it lingered in mine&mdash;this would amuse Professor
+Pepper&mdash;and the pertinacity with which it took off
+my ring. However, I never took any steps to
+identify the owner of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>Some few months ago, my wife and I were sitting,
+and a communication came ostensibly from our
+child. It was quite unexpected; and I said, "I
+thought you could not communicate." "I could
+not before," was the reply. "But you have not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
+tried me for two years." This we found was true;
+but we actually had to look into dates to ascertain it.
+He added, that he always was present at s&eacute;ances
+where I went, and especially at Mrs. B&mdash;&mdash;'s. It
+will, I daresay, sound strange to non-spiritualists,
+but the initiated can understand the conversational
+tone we adopt. I said, "But, Johnny, that was not
+your hand that touched me at Mrs. B&mdash;&mdash;'s. It was
+too large." The answer was, "No! it was Charlie's
+turn." I said, "What <i>do</i> you mean by Charlie's
+turn?" The word was rewritten with almost
+petulant haste and remarkable plainness, "Charlie's
+<i>twin</i>." Charlie is my eldest boy, and his twin-brother
+was still-born. He would be between thirteen
+and fourteen years of age, and that was precisely the
+sized hand I felt. This was curious; as the event
+had occurred a year before, and such an explanation
+had never even crossed my mind. I was promised
+that, if I would go to Mrs. B&mdash;&mdash;'s again, each of
+the children would come and place a hand in mine.
+I went to the ordinary s&eacute;ance some time before
+Christmas, and was then told that the test I wished&mdash;which
+I had not then specified&mdash;should be given
+to me at a private s&eacute;ance. We had the private s&eacute;ance,
+but nothing occurred.</p>
+
+<p>Such is my case. To one section of my readers I
+shall appear credulous, to another hard of belief. I
+believe that I represent the candid inquirer. As for
+being scared off from the inquiry by those who call it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
+unorthodox, or cry out "fire and brimstone," I should
+as little think of heeding them as the omniscient
+apothecaries who smile at my believing in mesmerism.
+If a man's opinions are worth anything&mdash;if he has
+fought his way to those opinions at the bayonet's
+point&mdash;he will not be scared off from them by the
+whole bench of Bishops on the one side, or the
+College of Surgeons on the other. Not that I for
+one moment plead guilty to heterodoxy, either scientific
+or theological. I am not, as I have said several
+times, a philosopher, but I believe it is scientific to
+hold as established what you can prove by experiment.
+I don't think my creed contains a jot or tittle beyond
+this. And as for theological orthodoxy, I simply
+take my stand upon the Canons of the Church of
+England. If all this spiritual business is delusion,
+how comes it that No. 72 of the Constitutions and
+Canons Ecclesiastical says: "Neither shall any
+minister, not licensed, attempt, upon any pretence
+whatever, either of possession or obsession, by fasting
+or prayer, to cast out any devil or devils?"</p>
+
+<p>The question, however, is not of this kind of orthodoxy.
+It rather refers to the creed of spiritualism.
+The question, in fact, to which I and the many who
+think with me pause for a reply, is:&mdash;Allowing, as we
+do, some of the phenomena&mdash;but considering the
+pneumatological explanation hypothetical only&mdash;and
+therefore any identification of communicating intelligence
+impossible&mdash;are we (for I am sincerely tired<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
+of that first person singular, and glad to take
+refuge in a community), are we, or are we not,
+spiritualists?</p>
+
+<p>So far was I able to commit myself in my address
+to the spiritualists of Harley Street. I was, I confess,
+greatly pleased when, in 1869, the Dialectical Society
+took up this matter, because I felt they were just the
+people to look into it dispassionately. They were
+bound to no set of opinions, but regarded everything
+as an open question, accepting nothing save as the
+conclusion of a logical argument. I joined the
+Society&mdash;straining my clerical conscience somewhat to
+do so&mdash;and eventually formed one of the committee
+appointed by the Society to inquire into the matter,
+and having a sub-committee sitting at my own house.
+This, however, broke up suddenly, for I found even
+philosophers were not calm in their examination of
+unpalatable facts. One gentleman who approached
+the subject with his mind fully made up, accused the
+lady medium of playing tricks, and me of acting
+showman on the occasion. As there was no method
+of shunting this person, I was obliged to break up
+my sub-committee. To mention spiritualism to these
+omniscient gentlemen is like shaking a red rag at a
+bull. As a case in point (though, of course, I do not
+credit these gentlemen with the assumption of omniscience),
+I may quote the replies of Professor Huxley
+and Mr. G. H. Lewes to the Society's invitation to sit
+on their committee:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sir,&mdash;I regret that I am unable to accept the invitation
+of the Council of the Dialectical Society to
+co-operate with a committee for the investigation of
+'spiritualism;' and for two reasons. In the first
+place, I have no time for such an inquiry, which
+would involve much trouble and (unless it were unlike
+all inquiries of that kind I have known) much annoyance.
+In the second place, I take no interest in the
+subject. The only case of 'spiritualism' I have had
+the opportunity of examining into for myself, was as
+gross an imposture as ever came under my notice.
+But supposing the phenomena to be genuine&mdash;they
+do not interest me. If anybody would endow me
+with the faculty of listening to the chatter of old
+women and curates in the nearest cathedral town, I
+should decline the privilege, having better things to do.</p>
+
+<p>"And if the folk in the spiritual world do not talk
+more wisely and sensibly than their friends report
+them to do, I put them in the same category.</p>
+
+<p>"The only good that I can see in a demonstration
+of the truth of 'spiritualism' is to furnish an additional
+argument against suicide. Better live a
+crossing-sweeper than die and be made to talk
+twaddle by a 'medium' hired at a guinea a s&eacute;ance.</p>
+
+<p class='indent'>"I am, Sir, &amp;c.,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<span class="smcap">T. H. Huxley.</span></p>
+
+<p class='indentdate'>"29th January, 1869."</p>
+
+<p>Confessedly Professor Huxley only tried one experiment.
+I cannot help thinking if he had not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
+approached the subject with a certain amount of prejudice
+he would have been content to "Try again."
+The side-hit at curates of course I appreciate!</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Sir,&mdash;I shall not be able to attend the investigation
+of 'spiritualism;' and in reference to
+your question about suggestions would only say that
+the one hint needful is that all present should distinguish
+between facts and inferences from facts. When
+any man says that phenomena are produced by <i>no</i>
+known physical laws, he declares that he knows the
+laws by which they are produced.</p>
+
+<p class='indent'>"Yours, &amp;c.,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"<span class="smcap">G. H. Lewes.</span></p>
+
+<p class='indentdate'>"Tuesday, 2nd February, 1869."</p>
+
+<p>I am not, as I have said, a scientific man, nor do I
+advance the slightest pretensions to genius; therefore
+I have no doubt it is some mental defect on
+my part which prevents my seeing the force of Mr.
+G. H. Lewes's concluding sentence. I have worked
+at it for years and am compelled to say I cannot
+understand it.</p>
+
+<p>I sat, however, through the two years' examination
+which the Society gave to the subject; and it is not
+anticipating the conclusion of this chapter to say I
+was fully able to concur in the report they subsequently
+issued, the gist of which is continued in the
+final paragraph:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"In presenting their report, your committee taking
+into consideration the high character and great in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>telligence
+of many of the witnesses to the more extraordinary
+facts, the extent to which their testimony
+is supported by the reports of the sub-committees,
+and the absence of any proof of imposture or delusion
+as regards a large portion of the phenomena; and
+further, having regard to the exceptional character of
+the phenomena, the large number of persons in every
+grade of society and over the whole civilized world
+who are more or less influenced by a belief in their
+supernatural origin, and to the fact that no philosophical
+explanation of them has yet been arrived at,
+deem it incumbent upon them to state their conviction
+that the subject is worthy of more serious attention
+and careful investigation than it has hitherto received."</p>
+
+<p>With those cautiously guarded words I venture to
+think that any one who even reads the body of evidence
+contained in the Dialectical Society's report
+will be able to coincide.</p>
+
+<p>To return to my more personal narrative.</p>
+
+<p>As far as I can trace any order in this somewhat
+erratic subject, I think I may venture to say that the
+manifestations of the last few years have assumed a
+more <i>material</i> form than before. It sounds a little
+Hibernian to say so, I know; but I still retain the
+expression. Supposing, for the moment, that the
+effects were produced by spirits, the control of the
+medium for the production of trance, spirit-voice,
+automatic writing, or even communications through
+raps and tilts of the table was much more intellectual<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>&mdash;less
+physical than those of which I now have to
+speak&mdash;namely, the production of the materialized
+Spirit Faces and Spirit Forms.</p>
+
+<p>Two phases of manifestation, I may mention in
+passing, I have not seen&mdash;namely, the elongation of the
+body, and the fire test&mdash;both as far as I know peculiar
+to Mr. Home: nor again have I had personal experience
+of Mrs. Guppy's a&euml;rial transit, or Dr. Monk's nocturnal
+flight from Bristol to Swindon. Nothing of the
+kind has ever come at all within the sphere of my
+observation: therefore I forbear to speak about it.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the delight with which I received
+a letter from a gentleman connected with the
+literature of spiritualism, informing me that materialized
+Spirit Faces had at last been produced in full
+light, and inviting me to come and see. I was
+wearied of dark s&eacute;ances, of fruit and flowers brought
+to order. John King's talk wearied me; and Katie's
+whispers had become fatally familiar: so I went in
+eagerly for the new sensation, and communicated my
+results to the world in the two papers called <i>Spirit
+Faces</i> and <i>Spirit Forms</i>, the former published in
+<i>Unorthodox London</i>, the latter in Chapter 43 of the
+present volume. This class of manifestation has since
+become very common. I cannot say I ever considered
+it very satisfactory. I have never discovered
+any trickery&mdash;and I assure my readers I have kept
+my eyes and ears very wide open&mdash;but there are in
+such manifestations facilities for charlatanism which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
+it is not pleasant to contemplate. This, let me continually
+repeat, is a purely personal narrative, and
+I have never seen any Spirit Face or Form that I
+could in the faintest way recognise. Others, I know,
+claim to have done so; but I speak strictly of what
+has occurred to myself. The same has been the case
+with Spirit Photographs. I have sat, after selecting
+my own plate and watching every stage in the process;
+and certainly over my form there has been a shadowy
+female figure apparently in the act of benediction;<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> but
+I cannot trace resemblance to any one I ever saw in the
+flesh. Perhaps I have been unfortunate in this respect.</p>
+
+<p>Very similar to Miss Cook's mediumship was that
+of Miss Showers; a young lady whom I have met
+frequently at the house of a lady at the West-end of
+London, both the medium and her hostess being quite
+above suspicion. In this case, besides the face and
+full form we have singing in a clear baritone voice
+presumably by a spirit called Peter&mdash;who gives himself
+out as having been in earth-life, I believe, a not
+very estimable specimen of a market-gardener. I am
+exceedingly puzzled how to account for these things.
+I dare not suspect the medium; but even granting
+the truth of the manifestations, they seem to me to
+be of a low class which one would only come into
+contact with under protest and for the sake of evidence.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crookes used to explain, and Serjeant Cox still<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
+explains these manifestations as being the products of a
+so-called Psychic Force&mdash;a term which I below define.
+Although I am as little inclined to hero-worship, and
+care as little for large names as any man living, yet it
+is quite impossible not to attach importance to the
+testimony of these gentlemen; one so eminent in the
+scientific world, and privileged to write himself F.R.S.,
+the other trained to weigh evidence and decide
+between balanced probabilities. But it would seem
+that while Psychic Force might cover the ground of
+my earlier experiences, it singularly fails to account
+for the materializations, and obliges us to relegate
+them to the category of fraud, unless we accept them
+as being what they profess to be. This I believe
+Serjeant Cox ruthlessly does. He claims as we have
+seen to have "caught" Miss Showers, and was not, I
+believe, convinced by Miss Cook. Mr. Crookes was:
+and, when we remember that Mr. Wallace, the eminent
+naturalist, and Mr. Cromwell Varley, the electrician,
+both accept the spiritual theory, it really looks as
+though the scientific mind was more open to receive&mdash;perhaps
+driven to receive&mdash;this which I frankly concede
+to be the only adequate cause for the effects,
+while the legal mind still remains hair-splitting upon
+conflicting evidence. Whereabouts the theological
+mind is I do not quite know&mdash;perhaps still dangling
+between the opposite poles of Faith and Reason, and
+dubiously debating with me "Am I a Spiritualist or
+not?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In a recent pamphlet reprinted from the Quarterly
+Journal of Science, Mr. Crookes thus compendiously
+sums up the various theories which have been invented
+to account for spiritualistic phenomena, and,
+in so doing, incidentally defines his now discarded
+theory of Psychic Force which owns Mr. Serjeant
+Cox for its patron:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>First Theory.</i>&mdash;The phenomena are all the results
+of tricks, clever mechanical arrangements, or legerdemain;
+the mediums are impostors, and the rest of the
+company fools.</p>
+
+<p>It is obvious that this theory can only account for
+a very small proportion of the facts observed. I am
+willing to admit that some so-called mediums of whom
+the public have heard much are arrant impostors who
+have taken advantage of the public demand for
+spiritualistic excitement to fill their purses with easily
+earned guineas; whilst others who have no pecuniary
+motive for imposture are tempted to cheat, it would
+seem, solely by a desire for notoriety.</p>
+
+<p><i>Second Theory.</i>&mdash;The persons at a s&eacute;ance are the
+victims of a sort of mania or delusion, and imagine phenomena
+to occur which have no real objective existence.</p>
+
+<p><i>Third Theory.</i>&mdash;The whole is the result of conscious
+or unconscious cerebral action.</p>
+
+<p>These two theories are evidently incapable of embracing
+more than a small portion of the phenomena,
+and they are improbable explanations for even those.
+They may be dismissed very briefly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I now approach the "spiritual" theories. It
+must be remembered that the word "spirits" is used
+in a very vague sense by the generality of people.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fourth Theory.</i>&mdash;The result of the spirit of the
+medium, perhaps in association with the spirits of
+some or all of the people present.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fifth Theory.</i>&mdash;The actions of evil spirits or devils,
+personifying who or what they please, in order to undermine
+Christianity and ruin men's souls.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sixth Theory.</i>&mdash;The actions of a separate order of
+beings, living on this earth, but invisible and immaterial
+to us. Able, however, occasionally to manifest
+their presence; known in almost all countries and
+ages as demons not necessarily bad, gnomes, fairies,
+kobolds, elves, goblins, Puck, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><i>Seventh Theory.</i>&mdash;The actions of departed human
+beings&mdash;the spiritual theory <i>par excellence</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Eighth Theory.</i>&mdash;(<i>The Psychic Force Theory</i>).&mdash;This
+is a necessary adjunct to the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th
+theories, rather than a theory by itself.</p>
+
+<p>According to this theory the "medium," or the
+circle of people associated together as a whole, is supposed
+to possess a force, power, influence, virtue, or
+gift, by means of which intelligent beings are enabled
+to produce the phenomena observed. What these
+intelligent beings are is a subject for other theories.</p>
+
+<p>It is obvious that a "medium" possesses a <i>something</i>
+which is not possessed by an ordinary being. Give
+this <i>something</i> a name. Call it "<i>x</i>" if you like. Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
+Serjeant Cox calls it Psychic Force. There has been
+so much misunderstanding on this subject that I think
+it best to give the following explanation in Mr. Serjeant
+Cox's own words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The Theory of <i>Psychic Force</i> is in itself merely the
+recognition of the now almost undisputed fact that
+under certain conditions, as yet but imperfectly ascertained,
+and within a limited, but as yet undefined,
+distance from the bodies of certain persons
+having a special nerve organization, a Force operates
+by which, without muscular contact or connexion,
+action at a distance is caused, and visible motions and
+audible sounds are produced in solid substances. As
+the presence of such an organization is necessary to
+the phenomenon, it is reasonably concluded that the
+Force does, in some manner as yet unknown, proceed
+from that organization. As the organism is itself
+moved and directed within its structure by a Force
+which either is, or is controlled by, the Soul, Spirit,
+or Mind (call it what we may) which constitutes the
+individual being we term 'the Man,' it is an equally
+reasonable conclusion that the Force which causes the
+motions beyond the limits of the body is the same
+Force that produces motion within the limits of the
+body. And, inasmuch as the external force is seen to
+be often directed by Intelligence, it is an equally
+reasonable conclusion that the directing Intelligence
+of the external force is the same Intelligence that
+directs the Force internally. This is the force to which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
+the name of <i>Psychic Force</i> has been given by me as
+properly designating a force which I thus contend to
+be traced back to the Soul or Mind of the Man as its
+source. But I, and all who adopt this theory of
+Psychic Force, as being the agent through which the
+phenomena are produced, do not thereby intend to
+assert that this Psychic Force may not be sometimes
+seized and directed by some other Intelligence than
+the Mind of the Psychic. The most ardent spiritualists
+practically admit the existence of Psychic Force
+under the very inappropriate name of Magnetism (to
+which it has no affinity whatever), for they assert
+that the Spirits of the Dead can only do the acts
+attributed to them by using the Magnetism (that is,
+the Psychic Force) of the Medium. The difference
+between the advocates of Psychic Force and the
+spiritualists consists in this&mdash;that we contend that
+there is as yet insufficient proof of any other directing
+agent than the Intelligence of the Medium, and no
+proof whatever of the agency of Spirits of the Dead;
+while the spiritualists hold it as a faith, not demanding
+further proof, that Spirits of the Dead are the
+sole agents in the production of all the phenomena.
+Thus the controversy resolves itself into a pure question
+of <i>fact</i>, only to be determined by a laborious and
+long continued series of experiments and an extensive
+collection of psychological facts, which should be the
+first duty of the Psychological Society, the formation
+of which is now in progress."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It has frequently struck me, especially in connexion
+with certain investigations that I have been making
+during the last few years, that Spiritualism is going
+through much the same phases as Positivism. It
+seemed at first impossible that the Positive Philosophy
+of Auguste Comte could culminate in a highly
+ornate Religion of Humanity, with its fall ritual, its
+ninefold sacramental system. It is even curious to
+notice that it was the death of Clotilde which brought
+about the change, by revealing to him the gap which
+Philosophy always does leave between the present
+and the future. So too Spiritualism is beginning to
+"organize" and exhibits some symptoms of formulating
+a Creed and Articles of Belief. The British
+National Association of Spiritualists, which has
+honoured me by placing my name on its Council,
+thus states its principles, under the mottoes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"He that answereth a matter before he heareth it,
+it is folly and shame unto him."&mdash;Proverbs xviii. 13.</p>
+
+<p>"In Scripture we are perpetually reminded that
+the Laws of the Spiritual World are, in the highest
+sense, Laws of Nature."&mdash;Argyll.</p>
+
+<p>"He who asserts that, outside of the domain of
+pure Mathematics, anything is impossible, lacks a
+knowledge of the first principles of Logic."&mdash;Arago.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'><b><span class="smcap">declaration of principles and purposes.</span></b></p>
+
+<p>"Spiritualism implies the recognition of an inner
+nature in man. It deals with facts concerning that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
+inner nature, the existence of which has been the
+subject of speculation, dispute, and even of denial,
+amongst philosophers in all ages; and in particular,
+with certain manifestations of that inner nature which
+have been observed in persons of peculiar organizations,
+now called Mediums or Sensitives, and in
+ancient times Prophets, Priests, and Seers.</p>
+
+<p>"Spiritualism claims to have established on a firm
+scientific basis the immortality of man, the permanence
+of his individuality, and the Open Communion,
+under suitable conditions, of the living with
+the so-called dead, and affords grounds for the belief
+in progressive spiritual states in new spheres of
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>"Spiritualism furnishes the key to the better understanding
+of all religions, ancient and modern. It
+explains the philosophy of Inspiration, and supersedes
+the popular notion of the miraculous by the revelation
+of hitherto unrecognised laws.</p>
+
+<p>"Spiritualism tends to abrogate exaggerated class
+distinctions; to reunite those who are now too often
+divided by seemingly conflicting material interests;
+to encourage the co-operation of men and women in
+many new spheres; and to uphold the freedom and
+rights of the individual, while maintaining as paramount
+the sanctity of family life.</p>
+
+<p>"Finally, the general influence of Spiritualism on the
+individual is to inspire him with self-respect, with a
+love of justice and truth, with a reverence for Divine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
+law, and with a sense of harmony between man, the
+universe, and God.</p>
+
+<p>"The British National Association of Spiritualists is
+formed to unite Spiritualists of every variety of opinion,
+for their mutual aid and benefit; to promote the
+study of Pneumatology and Psychology; to aid
+students and inquirers in their researches, by placing
+at their disposal the means of systematic investigation
+into the now recognised facts and phenomena, called
+Spiritual or Psychic; to make known the positive
+results arrived at by careful scientific research; and to
+direct attention to the beneficial influence which those
+results are calculated to exercise upon social relationships
+and individual conduct. It is intended to include
+spiritualists of every class, whether members of
+Local and Provincial Societies or not, and all inquirers
+into psychological and kindred phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>"The Association, whilst cordially sympathizing
+with the teachings of Jesus Christ, will hold itself
+entirely aloof from all dogmatism or finalities, whether
+religious or philosophical, and will content itself with
+the establishment and elucidation of well-attested
+facts, as the only basis on which any true religion or
+philosophy can be built up."</p>
+
+<p>This last clause has, I believe, been modified to
+suit certain members of my profession who were a
+little staggered by its apparent <i>patronizing</i> of Christianity.
+For myself (but then, I am unorthodox) I
+care little for these written or printed symbola.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
+Having strained my conscience to join the Dialecticians,
+I allow my name, without compunction, to
+stand on the Council of the Association,&mdash;and shall
+be really glad if it does them any good. The fact is,
+I care little for formal creeds, but much for the fruit
+of those creeds. I stand by that good old principle&mdash;"By
+their fruits ye shall know them;" and that
+reminds me that to my shreds and patches of
+"experience" I am to append some pros and
+cons of this matter. They have cropped up incidentally
+as we have gone on: but I could with
+advantage collect them if my limits admitted of
+sermonizing.</p>
+
+<p>As to the fruits of Spiritualism, I can only say that
+I have never witnessed any of these anti-Christianizing
+effects which some persons say arise from a belief in
+Spiritualism. They simply have not come within the
+sphere of my observation, nor do I see any tendency
+towards them in the tenets of Spiritualism&mdash;rather the
+reverse.</p>
+
+<p>Then again, to pass from practice to faith, Spiritualism
+professes to be the reverse of exclusive. In
+addressing the Conference of 1874, and defending my
+position as a clerical inquirer, I was able to say:&mdash;"On
+the broad question of theology I can conceive
+no single subject which a clergyman is more bound
+to examine than that which purports to be a new
+revelation, or, at all events, a large extension of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
+old; and which, if its claims be substantiated, will
+quite modify our notions as to what we now call
+faith. It proposes, in fact, to supply in matters we
+have been accustomed to take on trust, something so
+like demonstration, that I feel not only at liberty, but
+actually bound, whether I like it or not, to look into
+the thing.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Whether your creed is right or wrong is not for me
+to tell you; but it is most important for me that I
+should assure myself. And while I recognise that
+my own duty clearly is to examine the principles
+you profess, I find this to be eminently their characteristic,
+<i>that they readily assimilate with those of my own
+Church</i>. I see nothing revolutionary in them. You
+have no propaganda. You do not call upon me, as
+far as I understand, to come out of the body I belong
+to and join yours, as so many other bodies do; but
+you ask me simply to take your doctrines into my own
+creed, and vitalize it by their means. That has
+always attracted me powerfully towards you. You
+are the broadest Churchmen I find anywhere."</p>
+
+<p>I am not writing thus in any sense as the apologist
+of Spiritualism. I am not offering anything like an
+Apologia pro vit&acirc; me&acirc; in making the inquiries I have
+done, am doing, and hope to do. I have elected to
+take, and I elect to maintain, a neutral position in
+this matter. All I have done is to select from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
+Pros and Cons that present themselves to my mind.
+If the Pros seem to outweigh the Cons&mdash;or vice
+vers&acirc;&mdash;be it so. I cannot help it. I have scarcely
+decided for myself yet, and I am a veteran investigator.
+Others may be more speedy in arriving at a
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Among the more obvious "Cons" are the oft-quoted
+facts that some people have lost their heads and
+wasted a good deal of their time on Spiritualism.
+But people lose their heads by reading classics or
+mathematics, or overdoing any one subject however
+excellent&mdash;even falling in love: and the ingenuity
+displayed in wasting time is so manifold that
+this is an objection that can scarcely be urged specially
+against Spiritualism, though I own Dark S&eacute;ances do
+cut terribly into time.</p>
+
+<p>Then again one is apt to be taken in by mediums
+or even by spirits. Yes; but this only imposes the
+ordinary obligation of keeping one's eyes open. I
+know spiritualists who believe in every medium qu&acirc;
+medium, and others who accept as unwritten gospel
+the idiotic utterances of a departed buccaneer or
+defunct clown: but these people are so purely exceptional
+as simply to prove a rule. Do <i>not</i> accept
+as final in so-called spiritual what you would not
+accept in avowedly mundane matters. Keep your
+eyes open and your head cool, and you will not go far
+wrong. These are the simple rules that I have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
+elaborated during my protracted study of the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"We do not believe, we know," was, as I said, the
+proud boast a spiritualist once made to me. And if
+the facts&mdash;any of the facts&mdash;of Spiritualism stand
+<i>as</i> facts, there is no doubt that it would form the
+strongest possible counterpoise to the materialism
+of our age. It presses the method of materialism
+into its service, and meets the doubter on his own
+ground of demonstration&mdash;a low ground, perhaps,
+but a tremendously decisive one, the very one perhaps
+on which the Battle of Faith and Reason will have to
+be fought out.</p>
+
+<p>If&mdash;let us not forget that pregnant monosyllable&mdash;if
+the assumptions of Spiritualism be true, and that
+we can only ascertain by personal investigation, I
+believe the circumstance would be efficacious in bringing
+back much of the old meaning of the word <span class="correction" title="pistis">&#960;&#953;&#963;&#964;&#953;&#962;</span>
+which was something more than the slipshod Faith
+standing as its modern equivalent. It would make
+it really the substance of things hoped for, the
+evidence of things not seen.</p>
+
+<p>Even if the dangers of Spiritualism were much
+greater than they are&mdash;aye, as great as the diabolical
+people themselves make out&mdash;I should still think
+(in the cautious words of the Dialecticians) Spiritualism
+was worth looking into, if only on the bare chance,
+however remote, of lighting on some such Philosophy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
+as that so beautifully sketched by Mr. S. C. Hall in
+some of the concluding stanzas of his poem "Philosophy,"
+with which I may fitly conclude&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And those we call "the dead" (who are not dead&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Death was their herald to Celestial Life)&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">May soothe the aching heart and weary head<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In pain, in toil, in sorrow, and in strife.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">That is a part of every natural creed&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Instinctive teaching of another state:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When manacles of earth are loosed and freed&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Which Science vainly strives to dissipate.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In tortuous paths, with prompters blind, we trust<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">One Guide&mdash;to lead us forth and set us free!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Give us, Lord God! all merciful and just!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The <span class="smcap">Faith</span> that is but Confidence in Thee!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4>THE END.</h4>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Alluded to above, p. <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</p></div></div>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<a name="transnotes" id="transnotes"></a><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_36">36</a>: Single closing quote mark after "He will accept you" <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_79">79</a>: "next my boy" <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_110">110</a>: Wormwood Scrubbs <i>sic</i>; platform amended to
+platforms</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_185">185</a>: anatotomized amended to anatomized; full stop
+following "few friends" removed</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_186">186</a>: hooping cough <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_234">234</a>: umpromising amended to unpromising</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_244">244</a>: "vary scrubby ground" amended to "very scrubby
+ground"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_338">338</a>: flabbergastered <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_341">341</a>: facil&egrave; princeps amended to facile princeps</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_360">360</a>: scarely amended to scarcely</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_365">365</a>: closing parenthesis added after "particular shape"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_370">370</a>: invesgator amended to investigator</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_388">388</a>: closing parenthesis added after "assumption of
+omniscience"</p>
+
+<p>In the last essay, while there are paragraphs numbered 1 and 3,
+there is no paragraph numbered 2 in the original.</p>
+
+<p>Hyphenation has generally been standardized. However, when
+hyphenated and unhyphenated versions of a word each occur
+an equal number of times, both versions have been retained
+(beershop/beer-shop; nowadays/now-a-days;
+reaction/re-action; reassumption/re-assumption).</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
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diff --git a/25619.txt b/25619.txt
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+++ b/25619.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mystic London:, by Charles Maurice Davies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mystic London:
+ or, Phases of occult life in the metropolis
+
+Author: Charles Maurice Davies
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2008 [EBook #25619]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYSTIC LONDON: ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Curtis Weyant and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by Case
+Western Reserve University Preservation Department Digital
+Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Note: |
+ | |
+ | Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in |
+ | this text. For a complete list, please see the bottom of |
+ | this document. |
+ | Text printed using the Greek alphabet in the original book |
+ | is shown as follows: [Greek: pistis] |
+ +------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+MYSTIC LONDON:
+
+OR,
+
+PHASES OF OCCULT LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS.
+
+BY
+
+REV. CHARLES MAURICE DAVIES, D.D.
+AUTHOR OF "ORTHODOX" AND "UNORTHODOX LONDON," ETC.
+
+"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
+ Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
+ _Hamlet._
+
+LONDON: TINSLEY BROTHERS, 8, CATHERINE STREET, STRAND. 1875.
+[_All rights of Translation and Reproduction are reserved._]
+
+LONDON:
+SAVILL, EDWARDS AND CO., PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
+COVENT GARDEN.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. LONDON ARABS 1
+
+ II. EAST LONDON ARABS 11
+
+ III. LONDON ARABS IN CANADA 21
+
+ IV. WAIFS AND STRAYS 29
+
+ V. A LUNATIC BALL 38
+
+ VI. A BABY SHOW 51
+
+ VII. A NIGHT IN A BAKEHOUSE 58
+
+ VIII. A LONDON SLAVE MARKET 67
+
+ IX. TEA AND EXPERIENCE 73
+
+ X. SUNDAY LINNET-SINGING 85
+
+ XI. A WOMAN'S RIGHTS DEBATE 92
+
+ XII. AN OPEN-AIR TICHBORNE MEETING 100
+
+ XIII. SUNDAY IN A PEOPLE'S GARDEN 108
+
+ XIV. UTILIZING THE YOUNG LADIES 116
+
+ XV. FAIRLOP FRIDAY 122
+
+ XVI. A CHRISTMAS DIP 129
+
+ XVII. BOXING-DAY ON THE STREETS 134
+
+ XVIII. THE VIGIL OF THE DERBY 141
+
+ XIX. THE WIFESLAYER'S "HOME" 150
+
+ XX. BATHING IN THE FAR EAST 157
+
+ XXI. AMONG THE QUAKERS 164
+
+ XXII. PENNY READINGS 172
+
+ XXIII. DARWINISM ON THE DEVIL 179
+
+ XXIV. PECULIAR PEOPLE 198
+
+ XXV. INTERVIEWING AN ASTROLOGER 204
+
+ XXVI. A BARMAID SHOW 212
+
+ XXVII. A PRIVATE EXECUTION 217
+
+ XXVIII. BREAKING UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS 224
+
+ XXIX. PSYCHOLOGICAL LADIES 228
+
+ XXX. SECULARISM ON BUNYAN 233
+
+ XXXI. AL FRESCO INFIDELITY 242
+
+ XXXII. AN "INDESCRIBABLE PHENOMENON" 250
+
+ XXXIII. A LADY MESMERIST 260
+
+ XXXIV. A PSYCHOPATHIC INSTITUTION 269
+
+ XXXV. A PHRENOLOGICAL EVENING 277
+
+ XXXVI. A SPIRITUAL PICNIC 284
+
+ XXXVII. A GHOSTLY CONFERENCE 290
+
+XXXVIII. AN EVENING'S DIABLERIE 300
+
+ XXXIX. SPIRITUAL ATHLETES 307
+
+ XL. "SPOTTING" SPIRIT MEDIUMS 313
+
+ XLI. A SEANCE FOR SCEPTICS 320
+
+ XLII. AN EVENING WITH THE HIGHER SPIRITS 328
+
+ XLIII. SPIRIT FORMS 340
+
+ XLIV. SITTING WITH A SIBYL 347
+
+ XLV. SPIRITUALISTS AND CONJURERS 355
+
+ XLVI. PROS AND CONS OF SPIRITUALISM 362
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+It is perhaps scarcely necessary to say that I use the term Mystic, as
+applied to the larger portion of this volume, in its technical sense to
+signify my own _initiation_ into some of the more occult phases of
+metropolitan existence. It is only to the Spiritualistic, or concluding
+portion of my work, that the word applies in its ordinary signification.
+
+C. M. D.
+
+
+
+
+MYSTIC LONDON.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+LONDON ARABS.
+
+
+Of all the protean forms of misery that meet us in the bosom of that
+"stony-hearted stepmother, London," there is none that appeals so
+directly to our sympathies as the spectacle of a destitute child. In the
+case of the grown man or woman, sorrow and suffering are often traceable
+to the faults, or at best to the misfortunes of the sufferers
+themselves; but in the case of the child they are mostly, if not always,
+vicarious. The fault, or desertion, or death of the natural protectors,
+turns loose upon the desert of our streets those nomade hordes of
+Bedouins, male and female, whose presence is being made especially
+palpable just now, and whose reclamation is a perplexing, yet still a
+hopeful problem. In the case of the adult Arab, there is a life's work
+to undo, and the facing of that fact it is which makes some of our
+bravest workers drop their hands in despair. With these young Arabs, on
+the contrary, it is only the wrong bias of a few early years to
+correct, leaving carte blanche for any amount of hope in youth,
+maturity, and old age. Being desirous of forming, for my own
+edification, some notion of the amount of the evil existing, and the
+efforts made to counteract it, I planned a pilgrimage into this Arabia
+Infelix--this Petraea of the London flagstones; and purpose setting down
+here, in brief, a few of my experiences, for the information of
+stay-at-home travellers, and still more for the sake of pointing out to
+such as may be disposed to aid in the work of rescuing these little
+Arabs the proper channels for their beneficence. Selecting, then, the
+Seven Dials and Bethnal Green as the foci of my observation in West and
+East London respectively, I set out for the former one bleak March
+night, and by way of breaking ground, applied to the first
+police-constable I met on that undesirable beat for information as to my
+course. After one or two failures, I met with an officer literally
+"active and intelligent," who convoyed me through several of that
+network of streets surrounding the Seven Dials, leaving me to my own
+devices when he had given me the general bearings of the district it
+would be desirable to visit.
+
+My first raid was on the Ragged School and Soup Kitchen in Charles
+Street, Drury Lane, an evil-looking and unfragrant locality; but the
+institution in question stands so close to the main thoroughfare that
+the most fastidious may visit it with ease. Here I found some twenty
+Arabs assembled for evening school. They were of all ages, from seven to
+fifteen, and their clothing was in an inverse ratio to their dirt--very
+little of the former, and a great deal of the latter. They moved about
+with their bare feet in the most feline way, like the veritable Bedouin
+himself. There they were, however, over greasy slates and grimy
+copy-books, in process of civilization. The master informed me that his
+special difficulties arose from the attractions of the theatre and the
+occasional intrusion of wild Arabs, who came only to kick up a row. At
+eight o'clock the boys were to be regaled with a brass band practice,
+so, finding from one of the assembled Arabs that there was a second
+institution of the kind in King Street, Long Acre, I passed on thereto.
+Here I was fortunate enough to find the presiding genius in the person
+of a young man engaged in business during the day, and devoting his
+extra time to the work of civilizing the barbarians of this district.
+Sunday and week-day services, night schools, day schools, Bands of Hope,
+temperance meetings, and last, not least, the soup kitchen, were the
+means at work here. Not a single officer is paid. The task is undertaken
+"all for love, and nothing for reward," and it has thriven so far that
+my presence interrupted a debate between the gentleman above-mentioned
+and one of his coadjutors on the subject of taking larger premises. The
+expenses were met by the weekly offerings, and I was surprised to see by
+a notice posted in the room where the Sunday services are held, that
+the sum total for the past week was only _19s. 4d._ So there must be
+considerable sacrifice of something more than time to carry on this
+admirable work. Under the guidance of the second gentleman mentioned
+above, I proceeded to the St. George's and St. Giles's Refuge in Great
+Queen Street, where boys are admitted on their own application, the only
+qualification being destitution. Here they are housed, clothed, boarded,
+and taught such trades as they may be fitted for, and not lost sight of
+until they are provided with situations. A hundred and fifty-four was
+the number of this truly miraculous draught from the great ocean of
+London streets, whom I saw all comfortably bedded in one spacious
+dormitory. Downstairs were the implements and products of the day's
+work, dozens of miniature cobblers' appliances, machines for sawing and
+chopping firewood, &c., whilst, in a spacious refectory on the first
+floor, I was informed, the resident Arabs extended on a Friday their
+accustomed hospitality to other tribes, to such an extent, that the
+party numbered about 500. Besides the 154 who were fortunate enough to
+secure beds, there were twenty new arrivals, who had to be quartered on
+the floor for the night; but at all events they had a roof above them,
+and were out of the cruel east wind that made Arabia Petraea that evening
+an undesirable resting-place indeed. Lights were put out, and doors
+closed, when I left, as this is not a night refuge; but notices are
+posted, I am informed, in the various casual wards and temporary
+refuges, directing boys to this. There is a kindred institution for
+girls in Broad Street. Such was my first experience of the western
+portion of Arabia Infelix.
+
+The following Sunday I visited the Mission Hall belonging to Bloomsbury
+Chapel, in Moor Street, Soho, under the management of Mr. M'Cree, and
+the nature of the work is much the same as that pursued at King Street.
+The eleven o'clock service was on this particular day devoted to
+children, who were assembled in large numbers, singing their cheerful
+hymns, and listening to a brief, practical, and taking address. These
+children, however, were of a class above the Arab type, being generally
+well dressed. I passed on thence to what was then Mr. Brock's chapel,
+where I found my veritable Arabs, whom I had seen in bed the previous
+evening, arrayed in a decent suit of "sober livery," and perched up in a
+high gallery to gather what they could comprehend of Mr. Brock's
+discourse--not very much, I should guess; for that gentleman's long
+Latinized words would certainly fire a long way over their heads, high
+as was their position. I found the whole contingent of children provided
+for at the refuge was 400, including those on board the training ship
+_Chichester_ and the farm at Bisley, near Woking, Surrey. This is
+certainly the most complete way of dealing with the Arabs par
+excellence, as it contemplates the case of utter destitution and
+homelessness. It need scarcely be said, however, that such a work must
+enlarge its boundaries very much, in order to make any appreciable
+impression on the vast amount of such destitution. Here, nevertheless,
+is the germ, and it is already fructifying most successfully. The other
+institutions, dealing with larger masses of children, aim at civilizing
+them at home, and so making each home a centre of influence.
+
+Passing back again to the King Street Mission Hall, I found assembled
+there the band of fifty missionaries, male and female, who visit every
+Sunday afternoon the kitchens of the various lodging-houses around the
+Seven Dials. Six hundred kitchens are thus visited every week. After
+roll-call, and a brief address, we sallied forth, I myself accompanying
+Mr. Hatton--the young man to whom the establishment of the Mission is
+due--and another of his missionaries. I had heard much of the St.
+Giles's Kitchens, but failed to realize any idea of the human beings
+swarming by dozens and scores in those subterranean regions. Had it not
+been for the fact that nearly every man was smoking, the atmosphere
+would have been unbearable. In most of the kitchens they were beguiling
+the ennui of Sunday afternoon with cards; but the game was invariably
+suspended on our arrival. Some few removed their hats--for all wore
+them--and a smaller number still joined in a verse or two of a hymn,
+and listened to a portion of Scripture and a few words of exhortation.
+One or two seemed interested, others smiled sardonically; the majority
+kept a dogged silence. Some read their papers and refused the tracts and
+publications offered them. These, I found, were the Catholics. I was
+assured there were many men there who themselves, or whose friends, had
+occupied high positions. I was much struck with the language of one
+crop-headed young fellow of seventeen or eighteen, who, seeing me grope
+my way, said, "They're not very lavish with the gas here, sir, are
+they?" It may appear that this "experience" has little bearing on the
+Arab boys; but really some of the inmates of these kitchens _were_ but
+boys. Those we visited were in the purlieus of the old "Rookery," and
+for these dens, I was informed, the men paid fourpence a night! Surely a
+little money invested in decent dwellings for such people would be well
+and even remuneratively spent. The kitchens, my informant--who has spent
+many years among them--added, are generally the turning point between
+honesty and crime. The discharged soldier or mechanic out of work is
+there herded with the professional thief or burglar, and learns his
+trade and gets to like his life.
+
+The succeeding evening I devoted first of all to the Girls' Refuge, 19,
+Broad Street, St. Giles's. Here were sixty-two girls of the same class
+as the boys in Great Queen Street, who remain until provided with
+places as domestic servants. A similar number were in the Home at
+Ealing. The Institution itself is the picture of neatness and order. I
+dropped in quite unexpectedly; and any visitor who may be induced to
+follow my example, will not fail to be struck with the happy, "homely"
+look of everything, the clean, cheerful appearance of the female Arabs,
+and the courtesy and kindness of the matron. These girls are considered
+to belong to St. Giles's parish, as the boys to Bloomsbury Chapel. So
+far the good work has been done by the Dissenters and Evangelical party
+in the Established Church. The sphere of the High Church--as I was
+reminded by the Superintendent Sergeant--is the Newport Market Refuge
+and Industrial Schools. Here, besides the male and female refuges, is a
+Home for Destitute Boys, who are housed and taught on the same plan as
+at St. Giles's. Their domicile is even more cosy than the other, and
+might almost tempt a boy to act the part of an "amateur Arab." I can
+only say the game that was going on, previously to bed, in the large
+covered play room, with bare feet and in shirt sleeves, was enough to
+provoke the envy of any member of a Dr. Blimber's "Establishment." The
+Institution had just had a windfall in the shape of one of those
+agreeable _1000l._ cheques that have been flying about lately, or their
+resources would have been cramped; but the managers are wisely sensible
+that such windfalls do not come every day, and so forbear enlarging
+their borders as they could wish.
+
+Strangely enough, the Roman Catholics, who usually outdo us in their
+work among the poor, seemed a little behindhand in this special
+department of settling the Arabs. They have schools largely attended in
+Tudor Place, Tottenham Court Road, White Lion Street, Seven Dials, &c.,
+but, as far as I could ascertain, nothing local in the shape of a
+Refuge. To propagate the faith may be all very well, and will be only
+the natural impulse of a man sincere in his own belief; but we must not
+forget that these Arabs have bodies as well as souls, and that those
+bodies have been so shamefully debased and neglected as to drag the
+higher energies down with them; and it is a great question whether it is
+not absolutely necessary to begin on the very lowest plane first, and so
+to work towards the higher. Through the body and the mind we may at last
+reach the highest sphere of all.
+
+Without for one moment wishing to write down the "religious" element, it
+is, I repeat, a grave question whether the premature introduction of
+that element does not sometimes act as a deterrent, and frustrate the
+good that might otherwise be done. Still there is the great fact, good
+_is_ being done. It would be idle to carp at any means when the end is
+so thoroughly good. I could not help, as I passed from squalid kitchen
+to kitchen that Sunday afternoon, feeling Lear's words ring through my
+mind:--
+
+ O, I have ta'en
+ Too little care of this. Take physic, pomp,
+ Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel,
+ That thou mayst shake the superflux to them,
+ And show the heavens more just.
+
+And now "Eastward ho!" for "experiences" in Bethnal Green.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+EAST LONDON ARABS.
+
+
+Notwithstanding my previous experiences among the Western tribes of
+Bedouins whose locale is the Desert of the Seven Dials, I must confess
+to considerable strangeness when first I penetrated the wilderness of
+Bethnal Green. Not only was it utterly terra incognita to me, but, with
+their manifold features in common, the want and squalor of the East have
+traits distinct from those of the West. I had but the name of one
+Bethnal Green parish and of one lady--Miss Macpherson--and with these
+slender data I proceeded to my work, the results of which I again
+chronicle seriatim.
+
+Passing from the Moorgate Street Station I made for the Eastern Counties
+Terminus at Shoreditch, and soon after passing it struck off to my right
+in the Bethnal Green Road. Here, amid a pervading atmosphere of
+bird-fanciers and vendors of live pets in general, I found a Mission
+Hall, belonging to I know not what denomination, and, aided by a
+vigorous policeman, kicked--in the absence of knocker or bell--at all
+the doors, without result. Nobody was there. I went on to the Bethnal
+Green parish which had been named to me as the resort of nomade tribes,
+and found the incumbent absent in the country for a week or so, and the
+Scripture-reader afraid, in his absence, to give much information. He
+ventured, however, to show me the industrial school, where some forty
+children were employed in making match-boxes for Messrs. Bryant and May.
+However, as I was told that the incumbent in question objected very
+decidedly to refuges and ragged schools, and thought it much better for
+the poor to strain a point and send their little ones to school, I felt
+that was hardly the regimen to suit my Arabian friends, who were
+evidently teeming in that locality. I was even returning home with the
+view of getting further geographical particulars of this Eastern Arabia
+Petraea, when, as a last resource, I was directed to a refuge in
+Commercial Street. I rang here, and found myself in the presence of the
+veritable Miss Macpherson herself, with whom I passed two pleasant and
+instructive hours.
+
+At starting, Miss Macpherson rather objected to being made the subject
+of an article--first of all, for the very comprehensible reason that
+such publicity would draw down upon her a host of visitors; and when I
+suggested that visitors probably meant funds, she added a second, and
+not quite so comprehensible an objection--that these funds themselves
+might alloy the element of Faith in which the work had been so far
+carried on. She had thoroughly imbibed the spirit of Mueller, whose Home
+at Bristol was professedly the outcome of Faith and Prayer alone.
+However, on my promise to publish only such particulars--name, locality,
+&c.--as she might approve, this lady gave me the details of her truly
+wonderful work. The building in which I found her had been erected to
+serve as large warehouses, and here 110 of the most veritable Arabs were
+housed, fed, taught, and converted into Christians, when so convertible.
+Should they prove impressionable, Miss Macpherson then contemplates
+their emigration to Canada. Many had already been sent out; and her idea
+was to extend her operations in this respect: not, be it observed, to
+cast hundreds of the scum of the East End of London upon Canada--a
+proceeding to which the Canadians would very naturally object--but to
+form a Home on that side to be fed from the Homes on this, and so to
+remove from the old scenes of vice and temptation those who had been
+previously trained in the refuges here. She has it in contemplation to
+take a large hotel in Canada, and convert it into an institution of this
+kind; and I fancy it was the possibility that publicity might aid this
+larger scheme which eventually induced the good lady to let the world so
+far know what she is doing. At all events, she gave me carte blanche to
+publish the results of my observations.
+
+In selecting and dealing with the inmates of her refuges, Miss
+Macpherson avails herself of the science of phrenology, in which she
+believes, and she advances good reason for so doing. I presume my
+phrenological development must have been satisfactory, since she not
+only laid aside her objection to publicity, but even allowed me to carry
+off with me her MS. "casebooks," from which I cull one or two of several
+hundred:--
+
+"1. T. S., aged ten (March 5, 1869).--An orphan. Mother died in St.
+George's Workhouse. Father killed by coming in contact with a diseased
+sheep, being a slaughterman. A seller of boxes in the street. Slept last
+in a bed before Christmas. Slept in hay-carts, under a tarpaulin. Says
+the prayers his mother 'teached him.'"
+
+"2. J. H., aged twelve (March 5).--No home but the streets. Father
+killed by an engine-strap, being an engineer. Mother died of a broken
+heart. Went into ---- Workhouse; but ran away through ill-treatment last
+December. Slept in ruins near Eastern Counties Railway. _Can't remember_
+when he last lay in a bed."
+
+"3. A. R., aged eleven (March 5).--Mother and father left him and two
+brothers in an empty room in H---- Street. Policeman, hearing them
+crying, broke open the door and took them to the workhouse. His two
+brothers died. Was moved from workhouse by grandmother, and she, unable
+to support him, turned him out on the streets. Slept in railway ruins;
+lived by begging. July 24, sent to Home No. 1 as a reward for good
+conduct."
+
+Besides thus rescuing hundreds of homeless ones, Miss Macpherson has in
+many instances been the means of restoring runaway children of
+respectable parents. Here is an instance:--
+
+"Feb. 25th.--S. W. T., aged fourteen, brought into Refuge by one of the
+night teachers, who noticed him in a lodging-house respectably dressed.
+Had walked up to London from N----, in company with two sailors
+(disreputable men, whom the lodging-house keeper declined to take in).
+Had been reading sensational books. Wrote to address at N----. Father
+telegraphed to keep him. Uncle came for him with fresh clothes and took
+him home. He had begun to pawn his clothes for his night's lodging. His
+father had been for a fortnight in communication with the police."
+
+The constables in the neighbourhood all know Miss Macpherson's Refuge,
+and her readiness to take boys in at any time; so that many little
+vagrants are brought thither by them and reclaimed, instead of being
+locked up and sent to prison, to go from bad to worse. Besides this
+receptacle for boys, Miss Macpherson has also a Home at Hackney, where
+girls of the same class are housed. The plan she adopts is to get a
+friend to be responsible for one child. The cost she reckons at _6l.
+10s._ per annum for those under ten years, and _10l._ for those above.
+
+But this excellent lady's good works are by no means catalogued yet.
+Besides the children being fed and taught in these Homes, the parents
+and children are constantly gathered for sewing classes, tea meetings,
+&c. at the Refuge. Above 400 children are thus influenced; and Miss
+Macpherson, with her coadjutors, systematically visits the wretched dens
+and lodging-houses into which no well-dressed person, unless favourably
+known like her for her work among the children, would dare to set foot.
+I was also present when a hearty meal of excellent soup and a large lump
+of bread were given to between three and four hundred men, chiefly dock
+labourers out of employ. It was a touching sight to notice the stolid
+apathy depicted on most of the countenances, which looked unpleasantly
+like despair. One of the men assured me that for every package that had
+to be unladen from the docks there were ten pair of hands ready to do
+the work, where only one could be employed. Many of the men, he assured
+me, went for two, sometimes three, days without food; and with the large
+majority of those assembled the meal they were then taking would
+represent the whole of their subsistence for the twenty-four-hours.
+After supper a hymn was sung, and a few words spoken to them by Miss
+Macpherson on the allegory of the Birds and Flowers in the Sermon on the
+Mount; and so they sallied forth into the darkness of Arabia Petraea. I
+mounted to the little boys' bedroom, where the tiniest Arabs of all
+were enjoying the luxury of a game, with bare feet, before retiring.
+Miss Macpherson dragged a mattress off one of the beds and threw it down
+in the centre for them to tumble head-over-tail; and, as she truly said,
+it was difficult to recognise in those merry shouts and happy faces any
+remains of the veriest reprobates of the London streets.
+
+Let us hear Miss Macpherson herself speak. In a published pamphlet, "Our
+Perishing Little Ones," she says: "As to the present state of the
+mission, we simply say 'Come and see.' It is impossible by words to give
+an idea of the mass of 120,000 precious souls who live on this one
+square mile.... My longing is to send forth, so soon as the ice breaks,
+500 of our poor street boys, waifs and strays that have been gathered
+in, to the warm-hearted Canadian farmers. In the meantime, who will help
+us to make outfits, and collect _5l._ for each little Arab, that there
+be no hindrance to the complement being made up when the spring time is
+come?... Ladies who are householders can aid us much in endeavours to
+educate these homeless wanderers to habits of industry by sending orders
+for their firewood--_4s._ per hundred bundles, sent free eight miles
+from the City." And, again, in Miss Macpherson's book called "The Little
+Matchmakers," she says: "In this work of faith and labour of love among
+the very lowest in our beloved country, let us press on, looking for
+great things. Preventing sin and crime is a much greater work than
+curing it. There are still many things on my heart requiring more
+pennies. As they come, we will go forward."
+
+Miss Macpherson's motto is, "The Word first in all things; afterwards
+bread for this body." There are some of us who would be inclined to
+reverse this process--to feed the body and educate the mind--not
+altogether neglecting spiritual culture, even at the earliest stage, but
+leaving anything like definite religious schooling until the poor mind
+and body were, so to say, acclimatized. It is, of course, much easier to
+sit still and theorize and criticise than to do what these excellent
+people have done and are doing to diminish this gigantic evil. "By their
+fruits ye shall know them" is a criterion based on authority that we are
+none of us inclined to dispute. Miss Macpherson boasts--and a very
+proper subject for boasting it is--that she belongs to no _ism_. It is
+significant, however, that the Refuge bears, or bore, the name of the
+"Revival" Refuge, and the paper which contained the earliest accounts of
+its working was called the _Revivalist_, though now baptized with the
+broader title of the _Christian_. Amid such real work it would be a pity
+to have the semblance of unreality, and I dreaded to think of the
+possibility of its existing, when little grimy hands were held out by
+boys volunteering to say a text for my behoof. By far the most
+favourite one was "Jesus wept;" next came "God is love"--each most
+appropriate; but the sharp boy, a few years older, won approval by a
+longer and more doctrinal quotation, whilst several of these held out
+hands again when asked whether, in the course of the day, they had felt
+the efficacy of the text given on the previous evening, "Set a watch, O
+Lord, before my mouth; keep Thou the door of my lips." Such an
+experience would be a sign of advanced spirituality in an adult. Is it
+ungenerous to ask whether its manifestation in an Arab child must not be
+an anticipation of what might be the normal result of a few years'
+training? May not this kind of _forcing_ explain the cases I saw quoted
+in the books--of one boy who "felt like a fish out of water, and left
+the same day of his own accord;" another who "climbed out of a
+three-floor window and escaped?"
+
+However, here is the good work being done. Let us not carp at the
+details, but help it on, unless we can do better ourselves. One thing
+has been preeminently forced in upon me during this brief examination of
+our London Arabs--namely, that individuals work better than communities
+amongst these people. The work done by the great establishments, whether
+of England, Rome, or Protestant Dissent, is insignificant compared with
+that carried out by persons labouring like Mr. Hutton in Seven Dials and
+Miss Macpherson in Whitechapel, untrammelled by any particular system.
+The want, and sorrow, and suffering are individual, and need individual
+care, just as the Master of old worked Himself, and sent His scripless
+missionaries singly forth to labour for Him, as--on however
+incommensurate a scale--they are still labouring, East and West, amongst
+our London Arabs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+LONDON ARABS IN CANADA.
+
+
+In the previous chapter an account was given of the Arabs inhabiting
+that wonderful "square mile" in East London, which has since grown to be
+so familiar in men's mouths. The labours of Miss Macpherson towards
+reclaiming these waifs and strays in her "Refuge and Home of Industry,
+Commercial Street, Spitalfields," were described at some length, and
+allusion was at the same time made to the views which that lady
+entertained with regard to the exportation of those Arabs to Canada
+after they should have undergone a previous probationary training in the
+"Home." A short time afterwards it was my pleasing duty to witness the
+departure of one hundred of these young boys from the St. Pancras
+Station, en route for Canada; and it now strikes me that some account of
+the voyage out, in the shape of excerpts from the letters of the devoted
+ladies who themselves accompanied our Arabs across the Atlantic, may
+prove interesting; while, at the same time, a calculation of their
+probable success in their new life and homes may not improbably
+stimulate those who cannot give their time, to give at least their
+countenance, and it may be, their material aid, to a scheme which
+recommends itself to all our sympathies--the permanent reclamation of
+the little homeless wanderers of our London streets.
+
+The strange old rambling "Home" in Commercial Street, built originally
+for warehouses, then used as a cholera hospital, and now the Arab
+Refuge, presented a strange appearance during the week before the
+departure of the chosen hundred. On the ground-floor were the packages
+of the young passengers; on the first floor the "new clothes, shirts,
+and stockings, sent by kind lady friends from all parts of the kingdom,
+trousers and waistcoats made by the widows, and the boots and pilot
+jackets made by the boys themselves." The dormitory was the great
+store-closet for all the boys' bags filled with things needful on board
+ship; and on the top floor, we can well imagine, the last day was a
+peculiarly melancholy one. The work attendant upon the boys' last meal
+at the Refuge was over, and there, in the long narrow kitchen, stood the
+cook wiping away her tears with her apron, and the six little waiting
+maids around them, with the novel feeling of having nothing to
+do--there, where so much cutting, buttering, and washing-up had been the
+order of the day. When the summons came to start, the police had great
+difficulty in clearing a way for the boys to the vans through the
+surging mass of East London poverty. Some of the little match-box makers
+ran all the three miles from Commercial Street to St. Pancras Station
+to see the very last of their boy-friends.
+
+Derby was the stopping-place on the journey to Liverpool, and the
+attention of passengers and guards was arrested by this strange company
+gathering on the platform at midnight and singing two of the favourite
+Refuge hymns. Liverpool was reached at 4 A.M., and the boys filed off in
+fours, with their canvas bags over their shoulders, to the river side,
+where their wondering eyes beheld the _Peruvian_, which was to bear them
+to their new homes.
+
+At this point, Miss Macpherson's sister--who is carrying on the work of
+the Refuge during that lady's absence--wrote as follows:--"Could our
+Christian friends have seen the joy that beamed in the faces of those
+hundred lads from whom we have just parted--could they know the misery,
+the awful precipice of crime and sin from which they have been
+snatched--we are sure their hearts would be drawn out in love for those
+little ones. If still supported," she continues, "I hope to send out
+another party of fifty boys and fifty girls while my sister remains in
+Canada, and shall be happy to forward the name and history of a boy or
+girl to any kind friend wishing to provide for a special case. In the
+broad fields of that new country where the farmers are only too glad to
+adopt healthy young boys or girls into their families, hundreds of our
+perishing little ones may find a happy home."
+
+On Thursday, the 12th of May, the _Peruvian_ dropped down the river;
+and, as the last batch of friends left her when she passed out into the
+Channel, these one hundred boys, with Miss Macpherson, leaned over the
+bulwarks, singing the hymn, "Yes, we part, but not for ever."
+
+From Derry Miss Macpherson wrote under date May 13th:--"With the
+exception of two, all are on deck now, as bright as larks; they have
+carried up poor Jack Frost and Franks the runner. It is most touching to
+see them wrap them up in their rugs. Michael Flinn, the Shoreditch
+shoeblack, was up all night, caring for the sick boys. Poor Mike! He and
+I have exchanged nods at the Eastern Counties Railway corner these five
+years. It is a great joy to give him such a chance for life."
+
+The voyage out was prosperous enough, though there were some contrary
+winds, and a good deal of sea-sickness among the lads. The captain seems
+to have been quite won by the self-denying kindness of the ladies, and
+he lightened their hands by giving occupation to the boys. Then came out
+the result of training at the Refuge. Those who had been some time there
+showed themselves amenable to discipline; but the late arrivals were
+more fractious, and difficult to manage. These were the lads "upon
+whom," as Miss Macpherson says, "the street life had left sore marks."
+Even when only nearing the American coast, this indomitable lady's
+spirit is planning a second expedition. "As far as I dare make plans, I
+should like to return, starting from Montreal July 16th, reaching the
+Home July 27th; and then return with another lot the second week in
+August. This second lot must be lads who are now under influence, and
+who have been not less than six months in a refuge." The finale to this
+second letter, written from Canada, adds: "The boys, _to a man_, behaved
+splendidly. The agent's heart is won. All have improved by the voyage,
+and many are brown hearty-looking chaps fit for any toil."
+
+In the _Montreal Herald_, of May 27th, there is an account of these boys
+after their arrival, which says:--"Miss Macpherson is evidently a lady
+whose capacity for organization and command is of the very highest
+order; for boys, in most hands, are not too easily managed, but in hers
+they were as obedient as a company of soldiers.... These boys will
+speedily be placed in positions, where they will grow up respectable and
+respected members of society, with access to the highest positions in
+the country freely open to them.... We hope that Miss Macpherson will
+place all her boys advantageously, and will bring us many more. She is a
+benefactor to the Empire in both hemispheres."
+
+The importance of this testimony can scarcely be overrated, since many
+persons hold themselves aloof from a work of this nature through a
+feeling that it is not fair to draft our Arab population on a colony. It
+will be seen, however, that it is not proposed to export these boys
+until they shall have been brought well under influence, and so have got
+rid of what Miss Macpherson so graphically terms the "sore marks of
+their street life."
+
+Apropos of this subject, it may not be irrelevant to quote a
+communication which has been received from Sir John Young, the
+Governor-General of Canada, dated Ottawa, May 3rd, 1870:--"For emigrants
+able and willing to work, Canada offers at present a very good prospect.
+The demand for agricultural labourers in Ontario during the present year
+is estimated at from 30,000 to 40,000; and an industrious man may expect
+to make about one dollar a day throughout the year, if he is willing to
+turn his hand to clearing land, threshing, &c., during the winter. But
+it is of no use for emigrants to come here unless they make up their
+minds to take whatever employment offers itself most readily, without
+making difficulties because it is not that to which they have been
+accustomed, or which they prefer."
+
+I visited the Refuge and Home of Industry a few nights afterwards, and,
+though Miss Macpherson was absent, found all in working order.
+Sixty-three boys were then its occupants. The superintendent was
+anxiously looking forward to be able to carry out the plan of
+despatching fifty boys and fifty girls during the ensuing summer. The
+sum required for an East End case is _5l._; for a special case, _10l._
+The following are specimens of about sixty cases of boys whom she would
+like to send out, knowing that in Canada they could readily obtain
+places:--
+
+P. E., aged seventeen.--Mother died of fever, leaving seven children;
+father a dock labourer, but cannot get full employment.
+
+L. J., aged thirteen.--Mother dead; does not know where her father is;
+has been getting her living by singing songs in the lodging-houses; is
+much improved by her stay in the Home, and will make a tidy little maid.
+This is just one of the many who might thus be rescued from a life of
+sin and misery.
+
+Returning home through the squalid streets that night, where squatters
+were vending old shoes and boots that seemed scarcely worth picking out
+of the kennel, and garments that appeared beneath the notice of the rag
+merchant, I saw the little Bedouins still in full force, just as though
+no effort had been made for their reclamation and housing. As they
+crowded the doorsteps, huddled in the gutters, or vended boxes of lights
+and solicited the honour of shining "your boots, sir," I could not help
+picturing them crossing the sea, under kindly auspices, to the "better
+land" beyond, and anon, in the broad Canadian fields or busy Canadian
+towns, growing into respectable farmers and citizens; and straightway
+each little grimed, wan face seemed to bear a new interest for me, and
+to look wistfully up into mine with a sort of rightful demand on my
+charity, saying to me, and through me to my many readers, "Come and
+help us!"
+
+After the foregoing was written, a further letter arrived from Miss
+Macpherson. All the boys were well placed. The agent at Quebec wished to
+take the whole hundred in a lump, but only eleven were conceded to him.
+At Montreal, too, all would have been taken, but twenty-one only were
+left. All found excellent situations, many as house servants at _10l._
+and _15l._ a year. Eight were in like manner left at Belleville, half
+way between Montreal and Toronto. Sixty were taken on to Toronto; and
+here we are told "the platform was crowded with farmers anxious to
+engage them all at once. It was difficult to get them to the office." A
+gentleman arrived from Hamilton, saying that sixty applications had been
+sent in for boys, directly it was known that Miss Macpherson was coming
+out. So there is no need of anticipating anything like repugnance on the
+part of the Canadians to the reception of our superfluous Arabs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+WAIFS AND STRAYS.
+
+
+Among the various qualifications for the festivities of Christmastide
+and New Year, there is one which is, perhaps, not so generally
+recognised as it might be. Some of us are welcomed to the bright
+fireside or the groaning table on the score of our social and
+conversational qualities. At many and many a cheery board, poverty is
+the only stipulation that is made. I mean not now that the guests shall
+occupy the unenviable position of "poor relations," but, in the
+large-hearted charity that so widely prevails at that festive season,
+the need of a dinner is being generally accepted as a title to that
+staple requirement of existence. Neither of these, however, is the
+distinction required in order to entitle those who bear it to the
+hospitality of Mr. Edward Wright, better known under the abbreviated
+title of "Ned," and without the prefatory "Mr." That one social quality,
+without which a seat at Ned Wright's festive board cannot be compassed,
+is Felony. A little rakish-looking green ticket was circulated a few
+days previously among the members of Mr. Wright's former fraternity,
+bidding them to a "Great Supper" in St. John's Chapel, Penrose Street
+(late West Street), Walworth, got up under the auspices of the
+South-East London Mission. The invitation ran as follows:--
+
+ "This ticket is only available for a male person who has
+ been convicted at least once for felony, and is not
+ transferable. We purpose providing a good supper of bread
+ and soup, after which an address will be given. At the close
+ of the meeting a parcel of provisions will be given to each
+ man. Supper will be provided in the lower part of the
+ chapel. Boys not admitted this time.--Your friend, for
+ Christ's sake,
+
+ "NED WRIGHT."
+
+Why juvenile felons should be excluded "this time," and whether the fact
+of having been convicted more than once would confer any additional
+privileges, did not appear at first sight. So it was, however; adult
+felonious Walworth was bidden to the supper, and to the supper it came.
+Among the attractions held out to spectators of the proceedings was the
+announcement that a magistrate was to take part in them--a fact that
+possibly was not made generally known among the guests, in whose regard
+it is very questionable whether the presence of the dreaded "beak" might
+not have proved the reverse of a "draw." However, they came, possibly in
+happy ignorance of the potentate who was awaiting them, and than whom
+there is one only creation of civilized life considered by the London
+cadger his more natural enemy, that is the policeman.
+
+Six o'clock was the hour appointed for the repast, and there was no need
+for the wanderer in Walworth Road to inquire which was Penrose Street.
+Little groups of shambling fellows hulked about the corner waiting for
+some one to lead the way to the unaccustomed chapel. Group after group,
+however, melted away into the dingy building where Ned was ready to
+welcome them. With him I found, not one magistrate, but two; one the
+expected magnate from the country, the other a well-known occupant of
+the London bench, with whom, I fancy, many of the guests could boast a
+previous acquaintance of a character the reverse of desirable. Penrose
+Street Chapel had been formerly occupied by the Unitarians, but was then
+taken permanently by Ned Wright at a rental of between _60l._ and _70l._
+per annum, and formed the third of his "centres," the others being under
+a railway arch in the New Kent Road, and the Mission Hall, Deptford. As
+row by row filled with squalid occupants, I could but scan from my
+vantage-ground in the gallery the various physiognomies. I am bound to
+say the typical gaol-bird was but feebly represented. The visitors
+looked like hard-working men--a little pinched and hungry, perhaps, and
+in many cases obviously dejected and ashamed of the qualification which
+gave them their seat. One or two, mostly of the younger, came in with a
+swagger and a rough joke; but Ned and his guests knew one another, and
+he quickly removed the lively young gentleman to a quiet corner out of
+harm's way. A fringe of spectators, mostly female, occupied the front
+seat in the gallery when proceedings commenced, which they did with a
+hymn, composed by Ned Wright himself. The ladies' voices proved very
+useful in this respect; but most of the men took the printed copies of
+the hymns, which were handed round, and looked as if they could read
+them, not a few proving they could by singing full-voiced. After the
+hymn, Wright announced that he had ordered eighty gallons of soup--some
+facetious gentleman suggesting, "That's about a gallon apiece"--and he
+hoped all would get enough. Probably about 100 guests had by this time
+assembled, and each was provided with a white basin, which was filled by
+Ned and his assistants, with soup from a washing jug. A paper bag
+containing half a quartern loaf was also given to each, and the contents
+rapidly disappeared. As the fragrant steam mounted provokingly from the
+soup-basins up to the gallery, Mr. Wright took occasion to mention that
+at the last supper Mr. Clark, of the New Cut, furnished the soup
+gratuitously--a fact which he thought deserved to be placed on record.
+
+In the intervals of the banquet, the host informed me that he had
+already witnessed forty genuine "conversions" as the results of these
+gatherings. He had, as usual, to contend with certain obtrusive
+gentlemen who "assumed the virtue" of felony, "though they had it not,"
+and were summarily dismissed with the assurance that he "didn't want no
+tramps." One mysterious young man came in and sat down on a front row,
+but did not remain two minutes before a thought seemed to strike him,
+and he beat a hasty retreat. Whether he was possessed with the idea I
+had to combat on a previous occasion of the same kind, that I was a
+policeman, I cannot tell, but he never reappeared. I hope I was not the
+innocent cause of his losing his supper. The only "felonious" trait I
+observed was a furtive glance every now and then cast around, and
+especially up to the gallery. Beyond this there really was little to
+distinguish the gathering from a meeting of artisans a little bit "down
+on their luck," or out on strike, or under some cloud of that sort.
+
+As supper progressed, the number of spectators in the gallery increased;
+and, with all due deference to Ned Wright's good intentions, it may be
+open to question whether this presence of spectators in the gallery is
+wise. It gives a sort of spurious dash and bravado to the calling of a
+felon to be supping in public, and have ladies looking on, just like the
+"swells" at a public dinner. I am sure some of the younger men felt
+this, and swaggered through their supper accordingly. There certainly
+was not a symptom of shame on the face of a single guest, or any
+evidences of dejection, when once the pea-soup had done its work. Some
+of the very lively gentlemen in the front row even devoted themselves to
+making critical remarks on the occupants of the gallery. As a rule, and
+considering the antecedents of the men, the assembly was an orderly one;
+and would, I think, have been more so, but for the presence of the fair
+sex in the upper regions, many of whom, it is but justice to say, were
+enjoying the small talk of certain oily-haired young missionaries, and
+quite unconscious of being the objects of admiring glances from below.
+
+Supper took exactly an hour, and then came another hymn, Ned Wright
+telling his guests that the tune was somewhat difficult, but that the
+gallery would sing it for them first, and then they would be able to do
+it for themselves. Decidedly, Mr. Wright is getting "aesthetic." This
+hymn was, in fact, monopolized by the gallery, the men listening and
+evidently occupied in digesting their supper. One would rather have
+heard something in which they could join. However, it was a lively
+march-tune, and they evidently liked it, and kept time to it with their
+feet, after the custom of the gods on Boxing Night. At this point Ned
+and five others mounted the little railed platform, Bible in hand, and
+the host read what he termed "a portion out of the Good Old Book,"
+choosing appropriately Luke xv., which tells of the joy among angels
+over one sinner that repenteth, and the exquisite allegory of the
+Prodigal Son, which Ned read with a good deal of genuine pathos. It
+reminded him, he said, of old times. He himself was one of the first
+prisoners at Wandsworth when "old Brixton" was shut up. He had "done"
+three calendar months, and when he came out he saw an old grey-headed
+man, with a bundle. "That," said Ned, "was my godly old father, and the
+bundle was new clothes in place of my old rags."
+
+The country magistrate then came forward, and drew an ironical contrast
+between the "respectable" people in the gallery and the "thieves" down
+below. "God says we have all 'robbed Him.' All are equal in God's sight.
+But some of us are pardoned thieves." At this point the discourse became
+theological, and fired over the heads of the people down below. They
+listened much as they listen to a magisterial remark from the bench; but
+it was not their own language, such as Ned speaks. It was the "beak,"
+not the old "pal." It was not their vernacular. It did for the
+gallery--interested the ladies and the missionaries vastly, but not the
+thieves. It was wonderful that they bore it as well as they did. The
+magisterial dignity evidently overawed them; but they soon got used to
+it, and yawned or sat listlessly. Some leant their heads on the rail in
+front and slept. The latest arrivals left earliest. They had come to
+supper, not to sermon.
+
+Another of Ned Wright's hymns was then sung--Mr. Wright's muse having
+been apparently prolific in the past year, no less than six hymns on the
+list being written by himself during those twelve months. It is much to
+be hoped that these poetical and aesthetical proclivities will not deaden
+his practical energies. This hymn was pitched distressingly high, and
+above the powers of all but the "gallery" and a very few indeed of the
+guests; but most of them put in a final "Glory, Hallelujah," at the end
+of each stanza. Mr. Wright's tunes are bright and cheerful in the
+extreme, without being vulgar or offensively secular.
+
+The host himself then spoke a few words on the moral of the Sermon on
+the Mount: "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness." He
+claimed many of those before him as old pals who had "drunk out of the
+same pot and shuffled the same pack of cards," and contrasted his
+present state with theirs. Then they listened, open-mouthed and
+eager-eyed, though they had been sitting two full hours. He pictured the
+life of Christ, and His love for poor men. "Christ died for you," he
+said, "as well as for the 'big people.' Who is that on the cross beside
+the Son of God?" he asked in an eloquent apostrophe. "It is a thief.
+Come to Christ, and say, 'I've no character. I'm branded as a felon. I'm
+hunted about the streets of London. He will accept you.'" He drew a
+vivid picture of the number of friends he had when he rowed for Dogget's
+Coat and Badge. He met with an accident midway; "and when I got to the
+Swan at Chelsea," he said, "I had no friends left. I was a losing man.
+Christ will never treat you like that. He has never let me want in the
+nine years since I have been converted." After a prayer the assembly
+broke up, only those being requested to remain who required advice. The
+prayer was characteristic, being interspersed with groans from the
+gallery; and then a paper bag, containing bread and cakes, was given to
+each, Ned observing, "There, the devil don't give you that. He gives you
+toke and skilly." Being desired to go quietly, one gentleman expressed a
+hope that there was no policeman; another adding, "We don't want to get
+lagged." Ned had to reassure them on my score once more, and then nearly
+all disappeared--some ingenious guests managing to get two and three
+bags by going out and coming in again, until some one in the gallery
+meanly peached!
+
+Only some half-dozen out of the hundred remained, and Ned Wright
+kneeling at one of the benches prayed fervently, and entered into
+conversation with them one by one. Two or three others dropped in, and
+there was much praying and groaning, but evidently much sincerity. And
+so with at least some new impressions for good, some cheering hopeful
+words to take them on in the New Year, those few waifs and strays passed
+out into the darkness, to retain, let it be hoped, some at least of the
+better influences which were brought to bear upon them in that brighter
+epoch in their darkened lives when Ned Wright's invitation gathered them
+to the Thieves' Supper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+A LUNATIC BALL.
+
+
+One half of the world believes the other half to be mad; and who shall
+decide which moiety is right, the reputed lunatics or the supposed sane,
+since neither party can be unprejudiced in the matter? At present the
+minority believe that it is a mere matter of numbers, and that if
+intellect carried the day, and right were not overborne by might, the
+position of parties would be exactly reversed. The dilemma forced itself
+strongly on my consciousness for a solution when I attended the annual
+ball at Hanwell Lunatic Asylum. The prevailing opinion inside the walls
+was that the majority of madmen lay outside, and that the most
+hopelessly insane people in all the world were the officers immediately
+concerned in the management of the establishment itself.
+
+It was a damp, muggy January evening when I journeyed to this suburban
+retreat. It rained dismally, and the wind nearly blew the porter out of
+his lodge as he obeyed our summons at the Dantesque portal of the
+institution, in passing behind which so many had literally abandoned
+hope. I tried to fancy how it would feel if one were really being
+consigned to that receptacle by interested relatives, as we read in
+three-volume novels; but it was no use. I was one of a merry company on
+that occasion. The officials of Hanwell Asylum had been a little shy of
+being handed down to fame; so I adopted the ruse of getting into Herr
+Gustav Kuester's corps of fiddlers for the occasion. However, I must in
+fairness add that the committee during the evening withdrew the taboo
+they had formerly placed on my writing. I was free to immortalize them;
+and my fiddling was thenceforth a work of supererogation.
+
+High jinks commenced at the early hour of six; and long before that time
+we had deposited our instruments in the Bazaar, as the ball-room is
+somewhat incongruously called, and were threading the Daedalean mazes of
+the wards. Life in the wards struck me as being very like living in a
+passage; but when that preliminary objection was got over, the long
+corridors looked comfortable enough. They were painted in bright warm
+colours, and a correspondingly genial temperature was secured by
+hot-water pipes running the entire length. Comfortable rooms opened out
+from the wards at frequent intervals, and there was every form of
+amusement to beguile the otherwise irksome leisure of those temporary
+recluses. Most of my hermits were smoking--I mean on the male side--many
+were reading; one had a fiddle, and I scraped acquaintance immediately
+with him; whilst another was seated at the door of his snug little
+bedroom, getting up cadenzas on the flute. He was an old
+trombone-player in one of the household regiments, an inmate of Hanwell
+for thirty years, and a fellow-bandsman with myself for the evening. He
+looked, I thought, quite as sane as myself, and played magnificently;
+but I was informed by the possibly prejudiced officials that he had his
+occasional weaknesses. A second member of Herr Kuester's band whom I
+found in durance was a clarionet-player, formerly in the band of the
+Second Life Guards; and this poor fellow, who was an excellent musician
+too, felt his position acutely. He apologized sotto voce for sitting
+down with me in corduroys, as well as for being an "imbecile." He did
+not seem to question the justice of the verdict against him, and had not
+become acclimatized to the atmosphere like the old trombone-player.
+
+That New Year's night--for January was very young--the wards, especially
+on the women's side, were gaily decorated with paper flowers, and all
+looked as cheerful and happy as though no shadow ever fell across the
+threshold; but, alas, there were every now and then padded rooms opening
+out of the passage; and as this was not a refractory ward, I asked the
+meaning of the arrangement, which I had fancied was an obsolete one. I
+was told they were for epileptic patients. In virtue of his official
+position as bandmaster, Herr Kuester had a key; and, after walking
+serenely into a passage precisely like the rest, informed me, with the
+utmost coolness, that I was in the refractory ward. I looked around for
+the stalwart attendant, who is generally to be seen on duty, and to my
+dismay found he was quite at the other end of an exceedingly long
+corridor. I do not know that I am particularly nervous; but I candidly
+confess to an anxiety to get near that worthy official. We were only
+three outsiders, and the company looked mischievous. One gentleman was
+walking violently up and down, turning up his coat-sleeves, as though
+bent on our instant demolition. Another, an old grey-bearded man, came
+up, and fiercely demanded if I were a Freemason. I was afraid he might
+resent my saying I was not, when it happily occurred to me that the
+third in our party, an amateur contra-bassist, was of the craft. I told
+our old friend so. He demanded the sign, was satisfied, and, in the
+twinkling of an eye, our double-bass friend was struggling in his
+fraternal embrace. The warder, mistaking the character of the hug,
+hastened to the rescue, and I was at ease.
+
+We then passed to the ball-room, where my musical friends were beginning
+to "tune up," and waiting for their conductor. The large room was gaily
+decorated, and filled with some three or four hundred patients, arranged
+Spurgeon-wise: the ladies on one side, and the gentlemen on the other.
+There was a somewhat rakish air about the gathering, due to the fact of
+the male portion not being in full dress, but arrayed in free-and-easy
+costume of corduroys and felt boots. The frequent warders in their dark
+blue uniforms lent quite a military air to the scene; and on the ladies'
+side the costumes were more picturesque; some little latitude was given
+to feminine taste, and the result was that a large portion of the
+patients were gorgeous in pink gowns. One old lady, who claimed to be a
+scion of royalty, had a resplendent mob-cap; but the belles of the
+ball-room were decidedly to be found among the female attendants, who
+were bright, fresh-looking young women, in a neat, black uniform, with
+perky little caps, and bunches of keys hanging at their side like the
+rosary of a soeur de charite, or the chatelaines with which young ladies
+love to adorn themselves at present. Files of patients kept streaming
+into the already crowded room, and one gentleman, reversing the order
+assigned to him by nature, walked gravely in on the palms of his hands,
+with his legs elevated in air. He had been a clown at a theatre, and
+still retained some of the proclivities of the boards. A wizen-faced
+man, who seemed to have no name beyond the conventional one of "Billy,"
+strutted in with huge paper collars, like the corner man in a nigger
+troupe, and a tin decoration on his breast the size of a cheeseplate. He
+was insensible to the charms of Terpsichore, except in the shape of an
+occasional pas seul, and laboured under the idea that his mission was to
+conduct the band, which he occasionally did, to the discomfiture of
+Herr Kuester, and the total destruction of gravity on the part of the
+executants, so that Billy had to be displaced. It was quite curious to
+notice the effect of the music on some of the quieter patients. One or
+two, whose countenances really seemed to justify their incarceration,
+absolutely hugged the foot of my music-stand, and would not allow me to
+hold my instrument for a moment when I was not playing on it, so anxious
+were they to express their admiration of me as an artist. "I used to
+play that instrument afore I come here," said a patient, with a squeaky
+voice, who for eleven years has laboured under the idea that his mother
+is coming to see him on the morrow; indeed, most of the little group
+around the platform looked upon their temporary sojourn at Hanwell as
+the only impediment to a bright career in the musical world.
+
+Proceedings commenced with the Caledonians, and it was marvellous to
+notice the order, not to say grace and refinement with which these
+pauper lunatics went through their parts in the "mazy." The rosy-faced
+attendants formed partners for the men, and I saw a herculean warder
+gallantly leading along the stout old lady in the mob-cap. The larger
+number of the patients of course were paired with their
+fellow-prisoners, and at the top of the room the officials danced with
+some of the swells. Yes, there were swells here, ball-room coxcombs in
+fustian and felt. One in particular was pointed out to me as an
+University graduate of high family, and on my inquiring how such a man
+became an inmate of a pauper asylum the official said, "You see, sir,
+when the mind goes the income often goes too, and the people become
+virtually paupers." Insanity is a great leveller, true; but I could not
+help picturing that man's lucid intervals, and wondering whether his
+friends might not do better for him. But there he is, pirouetting away
+with the pretty female organist, the chaplain standing by and smiling
+approval, and the young doctors doing the polite to a few invited
+guests, but not disdaining, every now and then, to take a turn with a
+patient. Quadrilles and Lancers follow, but no "round dances." A popular
+prejudice on the part of the majority sets down such dances as too
+exciting for the sensitive dancers. The graduate is excessively irate at
+this, and rates the band soundly for not playing a valse. Galops are
+played, but not danced; a complicated movement termed a "Circassian
+circle" being substituted in their place. "Three hours of square dances
+are really too absurd," said the graduate to an innocent second fiddle.
+
+In the centre of the room all was gravity and decorum, but the merriest
+dances went on in corners. An Irish quadrille was played, and an
+unmistakable Paddy regaled himself with a most beautiful jig. He got on
+by himself for a figure or two, when, remembering, no doubt, that
+"happiness was born a twin," he dived into the throng, selected a
+white-headed old friend of some sixty years, and impressed him with the
+idea of a pas de deux. There they kept it up in a corner for the whole
+of the quadrille, twirling imaginary shillelaghs, and encouraging one
+another with that expressive Irish interjection which it is so
+impossible to put down on paper. For an hour all went merry as the
+proverbial marriage bell, and then there was an adjournment of the male
+portion of the company to supper. The ladies remained in the Bazaar and
+discussed oranges, with an occasional dance to the pianoforte, as the
+band retired for refreshment too, in one of the attendants' rooms. I
+followed the company to their supper room, as I had come to see, not to
+eat. About four hundred sat down in a large apartment, and there were,
+besides, sundry snug supper-parties in smaller rooms. Each guest partook
+of an excellent repast of meat and vegetables, with a sufficiency of
+beer and pipes to follow. The chaplain said a short grace before supper,
+and a patient, who must have been a retired Methodist preacher, improved
+upon the brief benediction by a long rambling "asking of a blessing," to
+which nobody paid any attention. Then I passed up and down the long rows
+with a courteous official, who gave me little snatches of the history of
+some of the patients. Here was an actor of some note in his day; there a
+barrister; here again a clergyman; here a tradesman recently "gone,"
+"all through the strikes, sir," he added. The shadow--that most
+mysterious shadow of all--had chequered life's sunshine in every one of
+these cases. Being as they are they could not be in a better place. They
+have the best advice they could get even were they--as some of them
+claim to be--princes. If they can be cured, here is the best chance. If
+not--well, there were the little dead-house and the quiet cemetery lying
+out in the moonlight, and waiting for them when, as poor maddened Edgar
+Allen Poe wrote, the "fever called living," should be "over at last."
+But who talks of dying on this one night in all the year when even that
+old freemason in the refractory ward was forgetting, after his own
+peculiar fashion, the cruel injustice that kept him out of his twelve
+thousand a year and title? Universal merriment is the rule to-night. Six
+or seven gentlemen are on their legs at once making speeches, which are
+listened to about as respectfully as the "toast of the evening" at a
+public dinner. As many more are singing inharmoniously different songs;
+the fun is getting fast and furious, perhaps a little too fast and
+furious, when a readjournment to the ball-room is proposed, and readily
+acceded to, one hoary-headed old flirt remarking to me as he went by,
+that he was going to look for his sweetheart.
+
+A long series of square dances followed, the graduate waxing more and
+more fierce at each disappointment in his anticipated valse, and Billy
+giving out every change in the programme like a parish clerk, which
+functionary he resembled in many respects. It was universally agreed
+that this was the best party that had ever been held in the asylum, just
+as the last baby is always the finest in the family. Certainly the
+guests all enjoyed themselves. The stalwart attendants danced more than
+ever with a will, the rosy attendants were rosier and nattier than
+before, if possible. The mob-cap went whizzing about on the regal head
+of its owner down the middle of tremendous country dances, hands across,
+set to partners, and then down again as though it had never tasted the
+anxieties of a throne, or learnt by bitter experience the sorrows of
+exile. Even the academical gentleman relaxed to the fair organist,
+though he stuck up his hair stiffer than ever, and stamped his felt
+boots again as he passed the unoffending double-bass with curses both
+loud and deep on the subject of square dances. At length came the
+inevitable "God Save the Queen," which was played in one key by the
+orchestra, and sung in a great many different ones by the guests. It is
+no disrespect to Her Majesty to say that the National Anthem was
+received with anything but satisfaction. It was the signal that the
+"jinks" were over, and that was quite enough to make it unpopular.
+However, they sang lustily and with a good courage, all except the old
+woman in the mob-cap, who sat with a complacent smile as much as to say,
+"This is as it should be, I appreciate the honour done to my royal
+brothers and sisters."
+
+This is the bright side of the picture; but it had its sombre tints
+also. There were those in all the wards who stood aloof from the
+merriment, and would have none of the jinks. Lean-visaged men walked
+moodily up and down the passages like caged wild beasts. Their lucid
+interval was upon them, and they fretted at the irksome restraint and
+degrading companionship. It was a strange thought; but I fancied they
+must have longed for their mad fit as the drunkard longs for the
+intoxicating draught, or the opium-eater for his delicious narcotic to
+drown the idea of the present. There were those in the ball-room itself
+who, if you approached them with the proffered pinch of snuff, drove you
+from them with curses. One fine, intellectual man, sat by the window all
+the evening, writing rhapsodies of the most extraordinary character, and
+fancying himself a poet. Another wrapped round a thin piece of lath with
+paper, and superscribed it with some strange hieroglyphics, begging me
+to deliver it. All made arrangements for their speedy departure from
+Hanwell, though many in that heart-sick tone which spoke of
+long-deferred hope--hope never perhaps to be realized. Most painful
+sight of all, there was one little girl there, a child of eleven or
+twelve years--a child in a lunatic asylum! Think of that, parents, when
+you listen to the engaging nonsense of your little ones--think of the
+child in Hanwell wards! Remember how narrow a line separates innocence
+from idiocy; so narrow a line that the words were once synonymous!
+
+Then there was the infirmary full of occupants on that merry New Year's
+night. Yonder poor patient being wheeled in a chair to bed will not
+trouble his attendant long. There is another being lifted on his
+pallet-bed, and having a cup of cooling drink applied to his parched
+lips by the great loving hands of a warder who tends him as gently as a
+woman. It seemed almost a cruel kindness to be trying to keep that poor
+body and soul together.
+
+Another hour, rapidly passed in the liberal hospitality of this great
+institution, and silence had fallen on its congregated thousands. It is
+a small town in itself, and to a large extent self-dependent and
+self-governed. It bakes and brews, and makes its gas; and there is no
+need of a Licensing Bill to keep its inhabitants sober and steady. The
+method of doing that has been discovered in nature's own law of
+kindness. Instead of being chained and treated as wild beasts, the
+lunatics are treated as unfortunate men and women, and every effort is
+made to ameliorate, both physically and morally, their sad condition.
+Hence the bright wards, the buxom attendants, the frequent jinks. Even
+the chapel-service has been brightened up for their behoof.
+
+This was what I saw by entering as an amateur fiddler Herr Kuester's band
+at Hanwell Asylum; and as I ran to catch the last up-train--which I did
+as the saying is by the skin of my teeth--I felt that I was a wiser,
+though it may be a sadder man, for my evening's experiences at the
+Lunatic Ball.
+
+One question would keep recurring to my mind. It has been said that if
+you stop your ears in a ball-room, and then look at the people--reputed
+sane--skipping about in the new valse or the last galop, you will
+imagine they must be all lunatics. I did not stop my ears that night,
+but I opened my eyes and saw hundreds of my fellow-creatures, all with
+some strange delusions, many with ferocious and vicious propensities,
+yet all kept in order by a few warders, a handful of girls, and all
+behaving as decorously as in a real ball-room. And the question which
+_would_ haunt me all the way home was, which are the sane people, and
+which the lunatics?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+A BABY SHOW.
+
+
+There is no doubt that at the present moment the British baby is
+assuming a position amongst us of unusual prominence and importance.
+That he should be an institution is inevitable. That he grows upon us
+Londoners at the rate of some steady five hundred a week, the
+Registrar-General's statistics of the excess of births over deaths prove
+beyond question. His domestic importance and powers of revolutionizing a
+household are facts of which every Paterfamilias is made, from time to
+time, unpleasantly aware. But the British baby is doing more than this
+just at present. He is assuming a public position. Perhaps it is only
+the faint index of the extension of women's rights to the infantile
+condition of the sexes. Possibly our age is destined to hear of Baby
+Suffrage, Baby's Property Protection, Baby's Rights and Wrongs in
+general. It is beyond question that the British baby _is_ putting itself
+forward, and demanding to be heard--as, in fact, it always had a habit
+of doing. Its name has been unpleasantly mixed up with certain
+revelations at Brixton, Camberwell, and Greenwich. Babies have come to
+be farmed like taxes or turnpike gates. The arable infants seem to
+gravitate towards the transpontine districts south of the Thames. It
+will be an interesting task for our Legislature to ascertain whether
+there is any actual law to account for the transfer, as it inevitably
+will have to do when the delicate choice is forced upon it between
+justifiable infanticide, wholesale Hospices des Enfants Trouves, and
+possibly some kind of Japanese "happy despatch" for high-minded infants
+who are superior to the slow poison administered by injudicious
+"farmers." At all events, one fact is certain, and we can scarcely
+reiterate it too often--the British baby is becoming emphatic beyond
+anything we can recollect as appertaining to the infantile days of the
+present generation. It is as though a ray of juvenile "swellishness," a
+scintillation of hobbledehoyhood, were refracted upon the long clothes
+or three-quarter clothes of immaturity.
+
+For, if it is true--as we may tax our infantile experiences to assure
+us--that "farmed" infants were an article unknown to husbandry in our
+golden age, it is equally certain that the idea of the modern Baby Show
+was one which, in that remote era, would not have been tolerated. Our
+mothers and grandmothers would as soon have thought of sacrificing an
+innocent to Moloch as to Mammon. What meant it then--to what can it be
+due--to precocity on the part of the British baby, or degeneracy on the
+part of the British parent--that two Baby Shows were "on" nearly at the
+same moment--one at Mr. Giovannelli's at Highbury Barn, the other at Mr.
+Holland's Gardens, North Woolwich?
+
+Anxious to keep au courant with the times, even when those times are
+chronicled by the rapid career of the British baby--anxious also to blot
+out the idea of the poor emaciated infants of Brixton, Camberwell, and
+Greenwich, by bringing home to my experience the opposite pole of
+infantile development--I paid a visit, and sixpence, at Highbury Barn
+when the Baby Show opened. On entering Mr. Giovannelli's spacious hall,
+consecrated on ordinary occasions to the Terpsichorean art, I found it a
+veritable shrine of the "Diva triformis." Immediately on entering I was
+solicited to invest extra coppers in a correct card, containing the
+names, weights, and--not colours; they were all of one colour, that of
+the ordinary human lobster--but weights, of the various forms of
+Wackford Squeers under twelve months, who were then and there assembled,
+like a lot of little fat porkers. It was, in truth, a sight to whet the
+appetite of an "annexed" Fiji Islander, or any other carnivorous animal.
+My correct card specified eighty "entries;" but, although the exhibition
+only opened at two o'clock, and I was there within an hour after, I
+found the numbers up to 100 quite full. The interesting juveniles were
+arranged within rails, draped with pink calico, all arrayed in "gorgeous
+attire," and most of them partaking of maternal sustenance. The
+mammas--all respectable married women of the working class--seemed to
+consider the exhibition of their offspring by no means infra dig., and
+were rather pleased than otherwise to show you the legs and other points
+of their adipose encumbrances. Several proposed that I should test the
+weight, which I did tremulously, and felt relieved when the infant
+Hercules was restored to its natural protector. The prizes, which
+amounted in the gross to between two and three hundred pounds, were to
+be awarded in sums of _10l._ and _5l._, and sometimes in the shape of
+silver cups, on what principle I am not quite clear; but the decision
+was to rest with a jury of three medical men and two "matrons." If
+simple adiposity, or the approximation of the human form divine to that
+of the hippopotamus, be the standard of excellence, there could be no
+doubt that a young gentleman named Thomas Chaloner, numbered 48 in the
+correct card, aged eight months, and weighing 33lbs., would be facile
+princeps, a prognostication of mine subsequently justified by the event.
+I must confess to looking with awe, and returning every now and then to
+look again, on this colossal child. At my last visit some one asked on
+what it had been fed. Shall I own that the demon of mischief prompted me
+to supplement the inquiry by adding, "Oil cake, _or_ Thorley's Food for
+Cattle?"
+
+On the score, I suppose, of mere peculiarity, my own attention--I
+frankly confess I am not a connoisseur--was considerably engrossed by
+"two little Niggers." No doubt the number afterwards swelled to the
+orthodox "ten little Niggers." One was a jovial young "cuss" of eleven
+months--weighted at 29lbs., and numbered 62 on the card. He was a
+clean-limbed young fellow, with a head of hair like a furze-bush, and
+his mother was quite untinted. I presume Paterfamilias was a fine
+coloured gentleman. The other representative of the sons of Ham--John
+Charles Abdula, aged three months, weight 21lbs., and numbered 76--was
+too immature to draw upon my sympathies; since I freely acknowledge such
+specimens are utterly devoid of interest for me until their bones are of
+sufficient consistency to enable them to sit upright and look about as a
+British baby should. This particular infant had not an idea above
+culinary considerations. He was a very Alderman in embryo, if there are
+such things as coloured Aldermen. Then there were twins--that
+inscrutable visitation of Providence--three brace of gemini. Triplets,
+in mercy to our paternal feelings, Mr. Giovannelli spared us.
+
+There was one noteworthy point about this particular exhibition. The
+mothers, at all events, got a good four days' feed whilst their
+infantile furniture was "on view." I heard, sotto voce, encomiums on the
+dinner of the day confidingly exchanged between gushing young matrons,
+and I myself witnessed the disappearance of a decidedly comfortable tea,
+to say nothing of sundry pints of porter discussed sub rosa and free of
+expense to such as stood in need of sustenance; and indeed a good many
+seemed to stand in need of it. Small wonder, when the mammas were so
+forcibly reminded by the highly-developed British baby that, in Byron's
+own words, "our life is twofold."
+
+It is certainly passing, not from the sublime to the ridiculous, but
+vice versa, yet it is noting another testimony to the growing importance
+of the British baby, if one mentions the growth of creches, or
+day-nurseries for working-men's children in the metropolis. Already an
+institution in Paris, they have been recently introduced into England,
+and must surely prove a boon to the wives of our working men. What in
+the world does become of the infants of poor women who are forced to
+work all day for their maintenance? Is it not a miracle if something
+almost worse than "farming"--death from negligence, fire, or bad
+nursing--does not occur to them? The good ladies who have founded, and
+themselves work, these creches are surely meeting a confessed necessity.
+I paid a visit one day to 4, Bulstrode Street, where one of these useful
+institutions was in full work. I found forty little toddlers, some
+playing about a comfortable day-nursery, others sleeping in tiny cribs
+ranged in a double line along a spacious, well-aired sleeping-room;
+some, too young for this, rocked in cosy cradles; but all clean, safe,
+and happy. What needs it to say whether the good ladies who tended them
+wore the habit of St. Vincent de Paul, the poke-bonnet of the Puseyite
+"sister," or the simple garb of unpretending Protestantism? The thing is
+being done. The most helpless of all our population--the children of the
+working poor--are being kept from the streets, kept from harm, and
+trained up to habits of decency, at 4, Bulstrode Street, Marylebone
+Lane. Any one can go and see it for himself; and if he does--if he sees,
+as I did, the quiet, unostentatious work that is there being done for
+the British baby, "all for love and nothing for reward"--I shall be very
+much surprised if he does not confess that it is one of the best
+antidotes imaginable to baby-farming, and a sight more decorous and
+dignified than any Baby Show that could possibly be imagined.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+A NIGHT IN A BAKEHOUSE.
+
+
+Alarmed at the prospect of "a free breakfast table" in a sense other
+than the ordinary one--that is, a breakfast table which should be minus
+the necessary accompaniment of bread, or the luxury of French rolls--I
+resolved to make myself master, so far as might be possible, of the pros
+and cons of the question at issue between bakers and masters at the
+period of the anticipated strike some years ago. I confess to having
+greatly neglected the subject of strikes. I had attended a few meetings
+of the building operatives; but the subject was one in which I myself
+was not personally interested. I am not likely to want to build a house,
+and might manage my own little repairs while the strike lasted. But I
+confess to a leaning for the staff of life. There are sundry small
+mouths around me, too, of quite disproportionate capacities in the way
+of bread and butter, to say nothing at all of biscuits, buns, and
+tartlets. The possibility of having to provide for an impending state of
+siege, then, was one that touched me immediately and vitally. Should I,
+before the dreaded event, initiate the wife of my bosom in the
+mysteries of bread baking? Should I commence forthwith a series of
+practical experiments within the limited confines of my kitchen oven? To
+prevent the otherwise inevitable heaviness and possible ropiness in my
+loaves of the future, some such previous process would certainly have to
+be adopted. But, then, in order to calculate the probabilities of the
+crisis, an examination of the status in quo was necessary. Having a
+habit of going to head-quarters in such questions, I resolved to do so
+on the present occasion; so I took my hat, and, as Sam Slick says, "I
+off an' out."
+
+The actual head-quarters of the men I found to be at the Pewter Platter,
+White Lion Street, Bishopsgate. Thither I adjourned, and, after drinking
+the conventional glass of bitter at the bar, asked for a baker. One came
+forth from an inner chamber, looking sleepy, as bakers always look. In
+the penetralia of the parlour which he left I saw a group of floury
+comrades, the prominent features of the gathering being depression and
+bagatelle. By my comatose friend I was referred to the Admiral Carter,
+in Bartholomew Close, where the men's committee sat daily at four. The
+society in front of the bar there was much more cheerful than that of
+the Pewter Platter, and the bakers were discussing much beer, of which
+they hospitably invited me to partake. Still I learned little of their
+movements, save that they were to a man resolved to abide by the now
+familiar platform of work from four to four, higher wages, and no Sunday
+bakings. These were the principal features of the demands, the sack
+money and perquisites being confessedly subsidiary. Nauseated as the
+public was and is with strikes, there are certain classes of the
+community with whom it is disposed to sympathize; and certainly one of
+those classes is that of journeymen bakers. Bread for breakfast we must
+have, and rolls we should like; but we should also like to have these
+commodities with as little nightwork as possible on the part of those
+who produce them. The "Appeal to the Public" put forth by the Strike
+Committee on the evening of the day concerning which I write was,
+perhaps, a trifle sensational; but if there was any truth in it, such a
+state of things demanded careful investigation--especially if it was a
+fact that the baker slept upon the board where the bread was made, and
+mingled his sweat and tears with the ingredients of the staff of life.
+Pardonably, I hope, I wished to eat bread without baker for my
+breakfast; but how could I probe this dreadful problem? I had it--by a
+visit to the bakehouse of my own baker, if possible, during the hours of
+work.
+
+So I set out afresh after supper, and was most obligingly received by
+the proprietor of what one may well take as a typical West-end
+shop--neither very large nor very small--what is graphically termed a
+"snug" concern with a good connexion, doing, as the technical phrase
+goes, from sixteen to twenty sacks a week. The resources of this
+establishment were at once placed at my disposal for the night. Now, the
+advantage of conferring with this particular master was, that he was not
+pig-headed on the one hand, nor unduly concessive, as he deemed some of
+his fellow-tradesmen to be, on the other. He did not consider a
+journeyman baker's berth a bed of roses, or his remuneration likely to
+make him a millionaire; but neither did he lose sight of the fact that
+certain hours must be devoted to work, and a limit somewhere placed to
+wage, or the public must suffer through the employer of labour by being
+forced to pay higher prices. The staff of this particular establishment
+consisted of four men at the following wages: A foreman at _28s._ and a
+second hand at _20s._ a week, both of whom were outsiders; while,
+sleeping on the premises, and, at the time of my arrival, buried in the
+arms of Morpheus, were a third hand, at _16s._, and a fourth, at _12s._
+Besides these wages they had certain perquisites, such as bread, butter,
+sugar, flour, sack-money, yeast-money, &c.; and the master, moreover,
+took his adequate share of day-work. He was seated outside his shop,
+enjoying the cool breezes, not of evening, but of midnight, when I
+presented myself before his astonished gaze. His wife and children had
+long since retired. The foreman and second "hand" had not arrived; the
+third and fourth "hands" were, as I said, sweetly sleeping, in a chamber
+on the basement, well out of range of the bakehouse, to which, like a
+couple of conspirators, we descended. It was not exactly the spot one
+would have selected for a permanent residence if left free to choose. It
+was, perhaps, as Mr. Dickens's theatrical gentleman phrased it,
+pernicious snug; but the ventilation was satisfactory. There were two
+ovens, which certainly kept the place at a temperature higher than might
+have been agreeable on that hot September night. Kneading troughs were
+ranged round the walls, and in the centre, like an altar-tomb, was the
+fatal "board" where, however, I sought in vain for the traces of
+perspiration or tears. All was scrupulously clean. In common phrase, you
+might have "eaten your dinner" off any portion of it.
+
+Soon after midnight the outsiders turned in, first the second hand and
+then the foreman, and, plunging into the "Black Hole," made their
+toilettes du soir. Then active operations commenced forthwith. In one
+compartment of the kneading-trough was the "sponge," which had been
+prepared by the foreman early in the evening, and which now, having
+properly settled, was mixed with the flour for the first batch, and left
+to "prove." The process of making the dough occupied until about one
+o'clock, and then followed two hours of comparative tranquillity,
+during which the men adjourned to the retirement of certain millers'
+sacks hard by, which they rolled up cleverly into extempore beds, and
+seemed to prefer to the board. The proving takes about two hours, but
+varies with the temperature. If the dough is left too long, a sour
+batch, or a "pitch in," is the result. It is then cut out, weighed, and
+"handed up;" after which it stands while the dough for the second batch
+is being made, and those fatal rolls, around which so much of this
+contest is likely to turn, are being got forward. It must be understood
+that I am here describing what took place in my typical bakehouse.
+Proceedings will of course vary in details according to the
+neighbourhood, the season, and other circumstances. This makes, as my
+informant suggested, the race of bakers necessarily in some degree a
+varium atque mutabile genus, whom it is difficult to bind by rigid "hard
+and fast" lines. The first batch is in the oven at four, and is drawn
+about 5.30. During the intervals there has been the preparation of fancy
+bread and the "getting off" of the rolls. Then the "cottage" batch is
+moulded and got off, and comes out of the oven at eight. From three
+o'clock up to this hour there has been active work enough for everybody,
+and I felt myself considerably in the way, adjourning ever and anon to
+the master's snuggery above stairs to note down my experiences. As for
+the men, they must have fancied that I was an escaped lunatic, with
+harmless eccentricities; and the fourth hand, who was young, gazed at me
+all night with a fixed and sleepy glare, as though on his guard lest I
+should be seized with a refractory fit. At eight the close atmosphere of
+the bakehouse was exchanged for the fresh morning breeze by three out of
+the four hands, who went to deliver the bread. The foreman remained with
+the master to work at "small goods" until about one, when he prepares
+the ferment for the next night's baking. All concerned can get their
+operations over about one or half-past one; so that, reckoning them to
+begin at half-past twelve, and deducting two hours of "sweat and tears"
+from one to three, when they can sleep if they will, there are some
+eleven hours of active labour. After the delivery of the bread is over,
+it should be mentioned, each man has about half an hour's bakehouse work
+in the way of getting coals, cleaning biscuit tins, brushing up, &c.
+When this is done, all, with the exception of the foreman, who will have
+to look in and make the sponge at eight P.M., are free until the
+commencement of their most untimely work at midnight.
+
+On Sunday, the work in this particular bakehouse is comparatively nil.
+The ovens have to be started on Sunday morning; but this the master does
+himself, and puts in the ferment, so that there is only the sponge to
+be made in the evening--a brief hour's job, taken on alternate Sundays
+by the foreman and the second hand. The "undersellers," my informant
+told me, made large sums by Sunday bakings, often covering their rent by
+them, so that their abandonment would be a serious question; but there
+was little in the way of Sabbath-breaking in my typical bakehouse. As
+there were no Sunday bakings, Saturday was a rather harder day than
+others, there being a general scrub-up of the premises. The work, my
+informant thought, could be condensed by judicious co-operation, and the
+"four to four" rule might be adopted in some establishments, but by no
+means in all--as, for instance, where there was a speciality for rolls
+and fancy bread. It seems, as usual, that the difficulties thicken, not
+about the necessaries, but about the luxuries and kickshaws of life. The
+master relieved my immediate fears by saying that he scarcely imagined
+matters would come to a crisis. There was this difference between the
+building and the baking trades, that all the master bakers had been
+journeymen themselves, and were thus able to sympathize with the men's
+difficulties. They were not, he seemed to think, disposed to haggle over
+a few shillings; but he added, "This is not a question of labour against
+capital only, but of labour against capital plus labour. I could," he
+said, "if my men left me on the 21st, make bread enough myself to
+supply all my customers, only they would have to fetch it for
+themselves."
+
+Thus my worst fears were relieved. If it only came to going out for my
+loaf, and even foregoing French rolls, I could face that like a man; so
+I paced the streets gaily in the morning air and arrived home safely
+some time after the milk, and about the same hour as those rolls
+themselves whose hitherto unguessed history I had so far fathomed by my
+brief experiences in the bakehouse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A LONDON SLAVE MARKET.
+
+
+There is a story called "Travellers' Wonders" in that volume which used
+to be the delight of our childhood, when the rising generation was more
+easily amused and not quite so wide-awake as at present. The point of
+the narrative is, that a facetious old gentleman named Captain Compass
+beguiles a group of juveniles--who must have been singularly gullible
+even for those early days--by describing in mysterious and
+alien-sounding terms the commonest home objects, such as coals, cheese,
+butter, and so on. It would almost seem as though Hood must have been
+perpetrating a kindred joke upon grown-up children when he wrote the
+lines--
+
+ It's O to be a slave
+ Along with the barbarous Turk,
+ Where woman has never a soul to save,
+ If this is Christian Work!
+
+Was he aware that here, in the heart of Christian London, without going
+farther east than Bethnal Green, there had existed from time immemorial,
+as there exists still, a genuine Slave Market? Such there is, and
+actually so named; less romantic, indeed, than that we read of in "Don
+Juan," or used to see on the Adelphi boards in the drama of the
+"Octoroon"--but still interesting in its way to those who have a
+penchant for that grotesque side of London life where the sublime and
+the ridiculous sometimes blend so curiously.
+
+With only the vague address of Bethnal Green and the date of Tuesday
+morning to guide me, I set out for Worship Street Police Court, thinking
+it possible to gain some further particulars from the police. I found
+those functionaries civil, indeed, but disposed to observe even more
+than official reticence about the Slave Market. They told me the
+locality precisely enough, but were even more vague as to the hour than
+my own impressions. In fact, the sum of what I could gain from them was,
+in slightly Hibernian language, that there was nothing to see, and I
+could see it any time on a Tuesday morning when I chose to go down White
+Street, Bethnal Green. Leaving the Court and inquiring my route to White
+Street, I found that it ran off to the right some way down the Bethnal
+Green Road from Shoreditch Station. Having turned out of the main
+thoroughfare, you proceed down one of those characteristic East End
+streets where every small householder lives behind an elaborate bright
+green door with portentous knocker, going on until an arch of the Great
+Eastern Railway spans the road. Arriving at this point any time between
+the hours of eight and half-past nine on a Monday or Tuesday morning,
+you have no need to be told that this is the East London Slave
+Market--supposing you knew such a thing as a slave market was to be seen
+in East London at all.
+
+There was, indeed, nothing resembling Byron's graphic description in
+"Don Juan." Our English slaves were all apparently of one nation, and
+there were no slave merchants. The hundred young ladies and gentlemen,
+of all ages from seven to seventeen, were, as they would have expressed
+it, "on their own hook." Ranged under the dead brick wall of the railway
+arch, there was a generally mouldy appearance about them. Instead of a
+picturesque difference of colour, there was on every visage simply a
+greater or less degree of that peculiar neutral tint, the unmistakable
+unlovely hue of London dirt. In this respect, too, they differed from
+the fresh country lads and lasses one sees at a hiring in the North.
+They were simply male and female City Arabs, with that superabundant
+power of combining business and pleasure which characterizes their race.
+The young gentlemen, in the intervals of business--and it seemed to be
+all interval and no business--devoted themselves to games at buttons.
+Each of the young ladies--I am afraid to say _how_ young--had her
+cavalier, and applied herself to very pronounced flirtation. The
+language of one and all certainly fulfilled the baptismal promise of
+their sponsors, if the poor little waifs ever had any--for it was very
+"vulgar tongue" indeed; and there was lots of it. The great sensation
+of the morning was a broken window in an unoffending tradesman's shop--a
+far from unusual occurrence, as I learnt from the sufferer. This led to
+a slave hunt on the part of the single policeman who occasionally showed
+himself to keep as quiet as might be the seething mass of humanity; and
+the young lady or gentleman who was guilty of the damage was "off
+market" for the morning--while the suffering tradesman was assailed with
+a volley of abuse, couched in strongest Saxon, for meekly protesting
+against the demolition of his window-pane.
+
+The scene was most characteristic--very unlike the genteel West End
+Servants' Registry, where young ladies and gentlemen's gentlemen saunter
+in to find places with high wages and the work "put out." It was on
+Tuesday morning, and a little late in the day, that I timed my visit;
+and I was informed that the Market was somewhat flat. Certainly, one
+could not apply to it the technicalities of the Stock Exchange, and say
+that little boys were "dull," or girls, big or little, "inactive;" but
+early on a Monday morning is, it appears, the time to see the Slave
+Market in full swing. Strangely enough, so far as I could judge, it was
+all slaves and no buyers--or, rather, hirers. I did not see the symptom
+of a bargain being struck, though I was informed that a good many small
+tradesmen do patronize the Market, for shop-boys, nurse-girls, or
+household drudges. I do not know whether my appearance was particularly
+attractive; but the number of offers I received from domestics of all
+kinds would have sufficed to stock half-a-dozen establishments. "Want a
+boy, sir?" "A girl for the childer, sir?" said the juveniles, while the
+offers of the adult ladies were more emphatic and less quotable. All, of
+course, was mere badinage, or, as they would have called it, "chaff,"
+and it was meant good-humouredly enough; though, had I been a legitimate
+hirer, I do not know that I should have been tempted to add to my
+household from this source. Indeed, there were some not exactly pleasant
+reflections cast on the Slave Market by those whom I consulted as to its
+merits. It was not unusual, I was told, for slaves who were hired on a
+Monday to turn up again on Tuesday morning, either from incompatibility
+of temper on the part of domestic and superior, or from other causes
+unexplained. Tuesday morning is, in fact, to a large extent, the mere
+residuum either of Monday's unhired incapables, or of "returns." And
+yet, as I looked around, I saw--as where does one not see?--some fair
+young faces; girls who might have played with one's little children all
+the better because they were so nearly children themselves; and boys of
+preternatural quickness, up to any job, and capable of being useful--ay,
+and even ornamental--members of society, if only that dreadful Bethnal
+Green twang could have been eradicated. The abuse of the mother tongue
+on the part even of these children was simply frightful. If this were so
+in their playful moods, what--one could not help thinking--would it be
+if any dispute arose on a contested point of domestic economy: as, for
+instance, the too rapid disappearance of the cold mutton, or sudden
+absence of master's boots?
+
+There was a garrulous cobbler whose stall bordered on the Market, and
+his panacea for all the evils the Slave Market brought with it was the
+London School Board. "Why don't the officers come down and collar some
+o' them youngsters, sir?" Why, indeed? At present the Slave Market is
+undoubtedly a nuisance; but there is no reason why, under proper police
+supervision, it should not become a local convenience. The ways of East
+London differ in all respects from those of the West, and Servants'
+Registries would not pay. Masters and servants are alike too poor to
+advertise; and there seems to be no reason why the Slave Market, under a
+changed name, and with improved regulations, may not as really supply a
+want as the country "hirings" do. The Arab, at present, is not to be
+trusted with too much liberty. Both male and female have odd Bedouin
+ways of their own, requiring considerable and judicious manipulation to
+mould them to the customs of civilized society. The respectable
+residents, tired of the existing state of things, look not unreasonably,
+as ratepayers, to the School Board to thin down the children, and the
+police to keep the adults in order. Under such conditions, the Bethnal
+Green Slave Market may yet become a useful institution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+TEA AND EXPERIENCE.
+
+
+I was walking the other day in one of the pleasant western suburbs, and
+rashly sought a short cut back; when, as is generally the case, I found
+that the longer would have been much the nearer way home. Before I knew
+it, I was involved in the labyrinths of that region, sacred to
+washerwomen and kindred spirits, known as Kensal New Town; and my
+further progress was barred by the intervention of the Paddington Canal,
+which is spanned at rare intervals in this locality by pay-bridges, to
+the great discomfort of the often impecunious natives. There was not
+even one of these at hand, or my halfpenny would have been paid under
+protest; so I had to wander like a lost sprite among the network of
+semi-genteel streets that skirt that most ungenteel thoroughfare, the
+Kensal New Town Road, and forthwith I began to find the neighbourhood
+papered with placards, announcing a "Tea and Experience Meeting" at a
+local hall, under the presidency of the Free Church pastor, for the
+following Monday evening. Bakers' shops bristled with the handbills, and
+they studded the multitudinous pork butchers' windows in juxtaposition
+with cruel-looking black puddings and over-fat loin chops. I determined
+I would go, if not to the tea, certainly to the "Experience," for I like
+novel experiences of all kinds: and this would certainly be new, whether
+edifying or not.
+
+I got at length out of the labyrinth, and on the following Monday
+ventured once more within its mazes, though not exactly at six o'clock,
+which was the hour appointed for the preliminary experience of tea. I
+had experienced that kind of thing once or twice before, and never found
+myself in a position of such difficulty as on those occasions. In the
+first place I do not care about tea, when it is good; but loathe it when
+boiled in a washhouse copper, and poured out from a large tin can, of
+which it tastes unpleasantly. But, then again, the quantity as well as
+the quality of the viands to be consumed was literally too much for me.
+I might have managed one cup of decidedly nasty tea, or what passes
+muster for such, but not four or five, which I found to be the minimum.
+I could stomach, or secretly dispose of in my pockets, a single slice of
+leaden cake or oleaginous bread-and-butter; but I could not do this with
+multitudinous slabs of either. I never went to more than one tea-meeting
+where I felt at home, and that was at the Soiree Suisse, which takes
+place annually in London, where pretty Helvetian damsels brew the most
+fragrant coffee and hand round delicious little cakes, arrayed as they
+are in their killing national costume and chattering in a dozen
+different patois. I had a notion that tea at Kensal New Town would be
+very much less eligible, so I stopped away. Perhaps I was prejudiced.
+The tea might have been different from what I expected. The experiences
+certainly were.
+
+I got there about half-past seven, having allowed an interval of an hour
+and a half, which I thought would be sufficient for the most inveterate
+tea-drinker, even among the Kensal Town laundresses, should such happen
+to be present. I took the precaution, however, of bespeaking a lad of
+fifteen to accompany me, in case any of the fragments of the feast
+should yet have to be disposed of, since I knew his powers to equal
+those of the ostrich in stowing away eatables, especially in the lumpy
+cake line. Arrived at the hall, however, I found no symptoms of the tea
+save a steamy sort of smell and the rattle of the retreating cups and
+saucers. Whether "to my spirit's gain or loss," I had escaped the
+banquet and yet got in good time for the subsequent experiences.
+
+A motherly-looking woman stood at the door, and gave me a cheery
+invitation to come in. She looked rather askance at my boy, but finding
+him properly convoyed by my sober self, she admitted him within the
+portal. A good many young gentlemen of a similar age were evidently
+excluded, and were regaling themselves with pagan sports outside. The
+hall was partially filled with respectable-looking mechanics, their
+wives, and families, there being more wives than mechanics, and more
+families than either. Children abounded, especially babies in every
+stage of infantile development. Many were taking their maternal tea; and
+the boys and girls were got up in the most festive attire, the boys
+particularly shining with yellow soap. Most of the mammas wore perky
+hats, and many had follow-me-lads down the back, but all were
+exceedingly well-dressed and well-behaved, though evidently brimful of
+hilarity as well as cake and tea.
+
+At the end of the hall was the inevitable platform, with chairs and a
+large cushion spread over the front rail for convenience of praying;
+since the "experiences" were to be interspersed with sacred song and
+prayer. Two gentlemen--I use the term advisedly--mounted the rostrum,
+one a long-bearded, middle-aged man, in a frock coat, who was the
+pastor, and another an aged minister, superannuated, as I afterwards
+discovered, and not altogether happy in his worldly lot. He was very
+old, grey-haired, and feeble, with a worn suit of clerical black, and a
+voluminous white tie. He sat humbly, almost despondingly, by the side of
+his younger brother in the ministry, while the latter delivered a merry
+little opening address, hoping all had made a good tea; if not, there
+was still about half a can left. Nobody wanted any more; so they had a
+hymn from the "Sacred Songster," a copy of which volume I purchased in
+the hall for twopence halfpenny. The tune was a martial one, well sung
+by a choir of men and women to the accompaniment of a harmonium, and
+bravely borne part in, you may depend upon it, by the whole assembly, I
+verily believe, except the babies, and one or two of these put in a note
+sometimes. The hymn was called, "Oh, we are Volunteers!" and was very
+Church-militant indeed, beginning thus:--
+
+ Oh, we are volunteers in the army of the Lord,
+ Forming into line at our Captain's word;
+ We are under marching orders to take the battle-field,
+ And we'll ne'er give o'er the fight till the foe shall yield.
+
+Then came the chorus, repeated after every verse:--
+
+ Come and join the army, the army of the Lord,
+ Jesus is our Captain, we rally at His word:
+ Sharp will be the conflict with the powers of sin,
+ But with such a leader we are sure to win.
+
+The poor old minister offered up a short prayer. The pastor read the 1st
+Corinthians, chapter 13, and explained briefly what charity meant there;
+adding that this gathering was very like one of the Agapae of the early
+Christians--a remark I had not expected to hear in that assembly. Then
+there was another hymn, "Beautiful Land of Rest," when it did one good
+to hear the unction with which the second syllable of the refrain was
+given:--
+
+ Jerusalem, Jerusalem,
+ Beautiful land of rest.
+
+After this the "Experiences" commenced in real earnest. Brothers and
+Sisters were exhorted to lay aside shyness and mount the platform. Of
+course no one would do so at first; and the poor shaky old minister had
+to come to the rescue.
+
+He told us, at rather too great length, the simple story of his
+life--how he was a farmer's son, and had several brothers "besides
+himself." He had to learn verses of the Bible for his father, which used
+to go against the grain, until at last, instead of being "a wicked boy,"
+he took up religion on his own account. He began to be afraid that, if
+he died, he should go to "a bad place," and therefore started saying his
+prayers. His brother George used to push him over when he was praying
+half-dressed in the bedroom, or occasionally vary proceedings by
+stirring him up with a sweeping brush. At last he found out a quiet
+place under a haystack, and there retired to pray. The old man drew a
+perfect picture of the first prayer thus offered, and told us he could
+remember every little detail of the spot, and the great oak tree
+spreading its branches over it. "Here I am," he said, "a poor old
+pilgrim on the bright side of seventy now, and yet I can remember it
+all. I say the 'bright' side, for I know it is a bright home I am soon
+going to." Then he told us how God took his wife from him and all his
+worldly goods, and he was quite eloquent about the comfort his religion
+was to him now as he went to his little lonely lodging. He drew next too
+truthful a picture of the state of things he saw around him in Kensal
+New Town--mothers with infants in their arms crowding the tavern doors;
+and finished up with a story, of which he did not see the irrelevancy,
+about a fine lady going to the "theatre," and saying how much she had
+enjoyed the anticipation, then the play itself, and, lastly, the thought
+of it afterwards. She was overheard by a faithful pastor, who told her
+she had omitted one detail. "No," she said, "I have told you all." "You
+have told us how you enjoyed the thoughts of the theatre, and the
+performance, and the recollection of it afterwards; but you have not
+told us how you will enjoy the thoughts of it on your death-bed." Of
+course the "fine lady" was converted on the spot, as they always are in
+tracts; and the good old fellow brought his long-winded narrative of
+experiences to an end by-and-by, the pastor having omitted to pull his
+coat-tails, as he promised to do if any speaker exceeded the allotted
+time. "The people were certainly very attentive to hear him," and one
+man next my boy expressed his satisfaction by letting off little groans,
+like minute guns, at frequent intervals.
+
+Then another hymn was sung, "The Beautiful Land on High," which, by the
+way, is a favourite with the spiritualists at their "Face Seances." I
+half expected to see a ghostly-looking visage peep out of some corner
+cupboard, as I had often done with my spiritual friends--that being
+another experience which I cultivate with considerable interest and
+curiosity. The hymn being over, a black-bearded, but soft-voiced man, in
+a velveteen coat, got upon the platform, and told us how the chief
+delight of his life was at one time making dogs fight. When the animals
+were not sufficiently pugnacious of themselves, his habit was to
+construct an apparatus, consisting of a pin at the end of a stick, and
+so urge them to the combat, until it proved fatal to one of them. It
+was, he said, dreadful work; and he now considered it the direct
+machination of Satan. Another favourite pursuit was interrupting the
+proceedings of open-air missionaries. One day after he had done so, he
+went home with a companion who had taken a tract from one of the
+missionaries. He had a quarrel with his "missis." "Not that missis
+sittin' there," he said, alluding to a smart lady in front, "but my
+first missis." In order to show his sulks against his missis, he took to
+reading the tract, and it soon made him cry. Then he went to chapel and
+heard a sermon on Lot's wife being turned into a pillar of salt. He was
+a little exercised by this, and saw the minister in the vestry, but soon
+fell back into bad habits again, singing canaries for _10s. 6d._ a side.
+As he was taking his bird out one Sunday morning, the bottom of the cage
+came out, and the canary escaped. This he looked upon as "God's work,"
+since it caused him to go to chapel that morning. His conversion soon
+followed, and he applied to that circumstance, in a very apposite
+manner, the Parable of the Prodigal, concluding with a stanza from the
+well-known hymn--
+
+ God moves in a mysterious way
+ His wonders to perform.
+
+Another moustached man followed. He was exceedingly well-dressed,
+though he told us he was only a common labourer. He had long given up
+his "'art" to God, but to little purpose until he came to this chapel.
+"But there," he said, "down in that corner under the gas-lamp, I prayed
+for the first time. I prayed that God would take away my stony 'art and
+give me a 'art of flesh, and renew a right sperrit within me." From that
+time he led a new life. His fellow-workmen began to sneer at the change,
+and said ironically they should take to going to chapel too. "I wish to
+God you would," was his reply. He described the personal influence of
+the pastor upon him, which strengthened the good resolutions he had
+formed, and enabled him to say, "I will not let Thee go."
+
+I could not help thinking, as I listened to the simple, earnest words of
+the speaker, that here was an element the National Church is too apt to
+ignore. The Roman Catholic Church would seize hold upon that man, and
+put him in a working men's guild or confraternity. The Free Church found
+him work to do, and gave him a chief seat in the synagogue, and an
+opportunity of airing his "experiences" on a platform. Surely better
+either one or the other, than sotting his life at a public-house, or
+turning tap-room orator. He ended by crying shame upon himself for
+having put off the change until so late in life, and added a wish that
+all the labouring classes could see, as he had been brought to see,
+where their chief interest as well as happiness lay.
+
+A tall man from the choir followed, and was considerably more
+self-possessed than the other two speakers. He told us at the outset
+that he had been "a Christian" for fourteen years. It was generally laid
+down as a rule, he said, that big men were good-tempered. He was not a
+small man; but until he gave his heart to God he was never
+good-tempered. He had, for thirty-two years, been brought up in the
+Church of England, but had found no conversion there. He had no wish to
+speak against the Church, but such was the case. He wandered about a
+good deal in those years, from Roman Catholic to Old Methodist chapels;
+but the latter settled him. He was attending a class meeting in Kensal
+New Town one night, and suddenly a determination came over him that he
+would not sleep that night until he had kneeled down and prayed with his
+wife, though it would be the first time he had done so for thirty-two
+years. When it came to bedtime his courage failed him. He could not get
+into bed; and he did not like to tell his wife why. "That," he said,
+"was the devil worritin' me." His wife said, "I know what's the matter
+with you. You want to pray. We will see what we can do." His wife, he
+told us, was "unconverted," but still she "throwed open the door" on
+that occasion. He never knew happiness, he said, until he came to Jesus;
+and he added, "Oh, I do love my Jesus." He often talked to his
+fellow-workmen about the state of their souls, and they asked him how
+it was he was so certain of being converted (a question I fancy others
+than they would like to have solved), and he answered them, "I feel it.
+I was uncomfortable before; and now I am happy. I don't wonder so much
+at the old martyrs going boldly up to the stake, because I feel I could
+do anything rather than give up my Jesus."
+
+Hereupon the pastor, anticipating the departure of some of the
+assembly--for the clock was pointing to ten--announced a Temperance
+Meeting for the following Monday, and also said he should like the
+congregation to get up these meetings entirely on their own account,
+without any "clerical" element at all, and to make the Tea Meeting a
+"Free and Easy" in the best sense of the word.
+
+I went--shall I confess it?--to the experience meeting rather inclined
+to scoff, and I stopped, if not altogether to pray, at least to think
+very seriously of the value of the instrumentality thus brought to
+bear on such intractable material as the Kensal New Town population.
+The more cumbrous, even if more perfect or polished, machinery of the
+Established Church has notoriously failed for a long time to affect
+such raw material; and if it is beginning to succeed it is really by
+"taking a leaf out of the book" of such pastors as the one whose
+Tea-and-Experience Meeting I had attended. "Palmam qui meruit ferat."
+
+Stiggins element, I must, in all justice, say there was none. The pastor
+was a simple but a refined and gentlemanly man; so was the poor broken
+old minister. There was no symptom of raving or rant; no vulgarity or
+bad taste. A gathering at a deanery or an episcopal palace could not
+have been more decorous, and I doubt if the hymns would have been sung
+as heartily. There was as little clerical starch as there was of the
+opposite element. Rubbing off the angles of character was one of the
+objects actually proposed by the pastor as the result of these
+gatherings; and I really felt as though a corner or two had gone out of
+my constitution. If a man is disposed to be priggish, or a lady
+exclusive, in religious matters, I would recommend the one or the other
+to avail themselves of the next opportunity to attend a
+Tea-and-Experience Meeting at Kensal New Town.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+SUNDAY LINNET-SINGING.
+
+
+There is something very Arcadian and un-Cockney-like in the idea of
+linnet-singing in Lock's Fields. Imagination pictures so readily the
+green pastures and the wild bird's song, and Corydon with his pipe and
+his Phyllis, that it seems a pity to disabuse that exquisite faculty of
+our nature so far as to suggest that the linnets of which we speak are
+not wild, but tame and caged, and the fields very much less rural than
+those of Lincoln's Inn. This was the announcement that drew me to the
+New Kent Road on a recent Sunday morning to hear what poor Cockney Keats
+called the "tender-legged linnets:" "Bird-singing.--A match is made
+between Thomas Walker (the Bermondsey Champion) and William Hart
+(Champion of Walworth) to sing two linnets, on Sunday, for _2l._ a side;
+birds to be on the nail precisely at two o'clock; the host to be
+referee. _10s._ is now down; the remainder by nine this evening, at the
+Jolly Butchers, Rodney Road, Lock's Fields. Also a copper kettle will be
+sung for on the same day by six pairs of linnets; first pair up at
+half-past six o'clock in the evening. Any person requiring the said
+room for matches, &c., on making application to the host, will
+immediately be answered."
+
+Rodney Road, be it known, is anything but a romantic thoroughfare,
+leading out of the New Kent Road, a little way from the Elephant and
+Castle; and the caravanserai bearing the title of the Jolly Butchers is
+an unpretending beershop, with no outward and visible signs of especial
+joviality. On entering I met mine host, rubicund and jolly enough, who
+politely pioneered me upstairs, when I reported myself as in quest of
+the linnets. The scene of contest I found to be a largish room, where
+some twenty or thirty most un-Arcadian looking gentlemen were already
+assembled, the only adjunct at all symptomatic of that pastoral district
+being their pipes, at which they were diligently puffing. The whole of
+the tender-legged competitors, both for the money and the copper kettle,
+were hanging in little square green cages over the fireplace; and the
+one idea uppermost in my mind was how well the linnets must be seasoned
+to tobacco smoke if they could sing at all in the atmosphere which those
+Corydons were so carefully polluting. Corydon, besides his pipe, had
+adopted nuts and beer to solace the tedium of the quarter of an hour
+that yet intervened before the Bermondsey bird and its Walworth
+antagonist were to be "on the nail;" and ever and anon fresh Corydons
+kept dropping in, until some fifty or sixty had assembled. They were all
+of one type. There was a "birdiness" discernible on the outer man of
+each; for birdiness, as well as horseyness, writes its mark on the
+countenance and the attire. In the latter department there was a
+proclivity to thick pea-jackets and voluminous white comforters round
+the neck, though the day was springlike and the room stuffy. The talk
+was loud, but not boisterous, and garnished with fewer elegant flowers
+of speech than one would have expected. Five minutes before two the
+non-competing birds were carefully muffled up in pocket-handkerchiefs,
+and carried in their cages out of earshot, lest their twitterings might
+inspire the competing minstrels. Bermondsey and Walworth alone occupied
+the nails. Scarcely any bets were made. They seemed an impecunious
+assemblage, gathered for mere sport. One gentleman did, indeed, offer to
+stake "that 'ere blowsy bob," as though a shilling in his possession
+were a rarity of which his friends must be certainly aware. What was the
+occult meaning of the epithet "Blowsy" I could not fathom, but there
+were no takers; and, after the windows had been opened for a few minutes
+to clear the atmosphere, they were closed again; the door locked; the
+two markers took their place at a table in front of the birds, with bits
+of chalk in their hands; mine host stood by as referee in case of
+disputes; time was called; and silence reigned supreme for a quarter of
+an hour, broken only by the vocal performances of the Bermondsey and
+Walworth champions respectively. If a hapless human being did so far
+forget himself as to cough or tread incontinently upon a nutshell, he
+was called to silence with curses not loud but deep.
+
+The Walworth bird opened the concert with a brilliant solo by way of
+overture, which was duly reported by the musical critic in the shape of
+a chalk line on the table. The length of the effusion did not matter; a
+long aria, or a brilliant but spasmodic cadenza, each counted one, and
+one only. The Bermondsey bird, heedless of the issue at stake, devoted
+the precious moments to eating, emitting nothing beyond a dyspeptic
+twitter which didn't count; and his proprietor stood by me evidently
+chagrined, and perspiring profusely, either from anxiety or superfluous
+attire. Nearly half the time had gone by before Bermondsey put forth its
+powers. Meanwhile, Walworth made the most of the opportunity, singing in
+a manner of which I did not know linnets were capable. There were notes
+and passages in the repertoire of Walworth which were worthy of a
+canary. The bird no doubt felt that the credit of home art was at stake,
+and sang with a vigour calculated to throw foreign feathered artistes
+into the shade. Bermondsey evidently sang best after dinner, so he dined
+like an alderman; yet dined, alas! not wisely, but too well, or rather
+too long. Then he sang, first, a defiant roulade or so, as much as to
+say, "Can you beat that, Walworth?" pausing, with his head wickedly on
+one side, for a reply. That reply was not wanting, for Walworth was
+flushed with success; and one could not help regretting ignorance of
+bird-language so as to gather exactly what the reply meant. Then came a
+protracted duet between the two birds, which was the piece de resistance
+of the whole performance. The silence became irksome. I could not help
+congratulating myself on the fact that no Corydon had brought his
+Phyllis; for Phyllis, I am sure, would not have been able to stand it.
+Phyllis, I feel certain, would have giggled. We remained mute as mice,
+solemn as judges. The ghost of a twitter was hailed with mute signs of
+approval by the backers of each bird; but a glance at the expressive
+features of the host warned the markers that nothing must be chalked
+down that did not come up to his idea of singing. Had the destinies of
+empires hung upon his nod he could scarcely have looked more oracular.
+But Walworth could afford to take matters easily now. For the last five
+minutes the Bermondsey bird did most of the music; still it was a
+hopeless case. Success was not on the cards. By-and-by, time was again
+called. Babel recommenced, and the result stood as follows:
+
+ Walworth 3 score 18
+ Bermondsey 1 score 10
+
+It was an ignominious defeat truly; and, had one been disposed to
+moralize, it had not been difficult to draw a moral therefrom. It was
+not a case of "no song, no supper;" but of supper--or, rather,
+dinner--and no song. Bermondsey had failed in the artistic combat, not
+from lack of powers, as its brilliant part in the duet and its
+subsequent soli proved, but simply from a Sybaritic love for creature
+comforts. I ventured to suggest it might have been expedient to remove
+the seed, but was informed that, under those circumstances, the
+creature--its proprietor called it an uglier name--would not have sung
+at all. The remarkable part of the business to me was that they did sing
+at the proper time. They had not uttered anything beyond a twitter until
+silence was called, and from that moment one or the other was singing
+incessantly. I suppose it was the silence. I have noticed not only caged
+birds, but children--not to speak ungallantly of the fair sex--generally
+give tongue most freely when one is silent, and presumably wants to keep
+so.
+
+The contest, however, was over, the stakes paid, and Corydon sought his
+pastoral pipe again--not without beer. It was a new experience, but not
+a very exciting one--to me, at least. It evidently had its attractions
+for the very large majority of attendants. In fact, Rodney Road is
+generally a "birdy" neighbourhood. Its staple products, to judge by the
+shops, seemed birds and beer. I was much pressed by mine host to stay
+for the evening entertainment, when six birds were to sing, and the
+attendance would be more numerous. As some five hours intervened I
+expressed regret at my inability to remain, reserving my opinion that
+five hours in Lock's Fields might prove the reverse of attractive, and
+Corydon in greater force might not have an agreeable effect on that
+already stuffy chamber. So I took myself off, wondering much, by the
+way, what strange association of ideas could have led any imaginative
+man to propose such an incongruous reward as a copper kettle by way of
+praemium for linnet-singing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+A WOMAN'S RIGHTS DEBATE.
+
+
+There never was a time when, on all sorts of subjects, from Mesmerism to
+Woman's Rights, the ladies had so much to say for themselves. There is
+an ancient heresy which tells us that, on most occasions, ladies are
+prone to have the last word; but certain it is that they are making
+themselves heard now. On the special subject of her so-called "Rights"
+the abstract Woman was, I knew, prodigiously emphatic--how emphatic,
+though, I was not quite aware, until having seen from the top of a
+City-bound omnibus that a lady whom I will describe by the Aristophanic
+name of Praxagora would lecture at the Castle Street Co-operative
+Institute. I went and co-operated so far as to form one of that lady's
+audience. Her subject--the "Political Status of Women"--was evidently
+attractive, not only to what we used in our innocence to call the weaker
+sex, but also to those who are soon to have proved to them the fallacy
+of calling themselves the stronger. A goodly assemblage had gathered in
+the fine hall of the Co-operators to join in demolishing that ancient
+myth as to the superiority of the male sex. My first intention was to
+have reported verbatim or nearly so the oration of Praxagora on the
+subject; and if I changed my scheme it was not because that lady did not
+deserve to be reported. She said all that was to be said on the matter,
+and said it exceedingly well too; but when the lecture, which lasted
+fifty minutes, was over, I found it was to be succeeded by a debate; and
+I thought more might be gained by chronicling the collision of opinion
+thence ensuing than by simply quoting the words of any one speaker,
+however eloquent or exhaustive.
+
+I own with fear and trembling--for it is a delicate, dangerous
+avowal--that, as a rule, I do not sympathize with the ladies who declaim
+on the subject of Woman's Rights. I do not mean to say I lack sympathy
+with the subject--I should like everybody to have their rights, and
+especially women--but they are sometimes asserted in such a
+sledge-hammer fashion, and the ladies who give them utterance are so
+prone to run large and be shrill-voiced that their very physique proves
+their claim either unnecessary or undesirable. I feel certain that in
+whatever station of domestic life those ladies may be placed, they would
+have their full rights, if not something more; and as for Parliamentary
+rights, I tremble for the unprotected males should such viragos ever
+compass the franchise; or, worse still, realize the ambition of the
+Ecclesiazusae of Aristophanes, and sit on the benches of St. Stephen's
+clad in the nether garments of the hirsute sex. There was nothing of
+that kind on Tuesday night. In manner and appearance our present
+Praxagora was thoroughly feminine, and, by her very quietude of manner,
+impressed me with a consciousness of power, and determination to use it.
+Her voice was soft and silvery almost as that of Miss Faithfull herself;
+and when, at the outset of her lecture, she claimed indulgence on the
+score of never having spoken in a public hall before, we had to press
+forward to the front benches to catch the modulated tones, and men who
+came clumping in with heavy boots in the course of the lecture were
+severely hushed down by stern-visaged females among the audience.
+
+Disclaiming connexion with any society, Praxagora still adopted the
+first person plural in speaking of the doctrines and intentions of the
+down-trodden females. "We" felt so and so; "we" intended to do this or
+that; and certainly her cause gained by the element of mystery thus
+introduced, as well as by her own undoubted power of dealing with the
+subject. When the "we" is seen to refer to the brazen-voiced ladies
+aforesaid, and a few of the opposite sex who appear to have changed
+natures with the gentle ones they champion, that plural pronoun is the
+reverse of imposing, but the "we" of Praxagora introduced an element of
+awe, if only on the omne ignotum pro magnifico principle. In the most
+forcible way she went through the stock objections against giving women
+the franchise, and knocked them down one by one like so many ninepins.
+That coveted boon of a vote she proved to be at the basis of all the
+regeneration of women. She claimed that woman should have her share in
+making the laws by which she was governed, and denied the popular
+assertion that in so doing she would quit her proper sphere. In fact, we
+all went with her up to a certain point, and most of the audience beyond
+that point. For myself I confess I felt disheartened when, having dealt
+in the most consummate way with other aspects of the subject, she came
+to the religious phase, and begging the question that the Bible and
+religion discountenanced woman's rights, commenced what sounded to me
+like a furious attack on each.
+
+Now I happen to know--what perhaps those who look from another
+standpoint do not know--that this aggressive attitude assumed so
+unnecessarily by the advocates of woman's rights is calculated to keep
+back the cause more than anything else; and matter and manner had been
+so much the reverse of hostile up to the moment she plunged
+incontinently into the religious question, that it quite took me by
+surprise. I have known scores of people who, when they came under
+vigorous protest to hear Miss Emily Faithfull on the same fertile
+subject, went away converted because they found no iconoclasm of this
+kind in her teaching. They came to scoff and stopped, not indeed to
+pray, but to listen very attentively to a theme which has so much to be
+said in its favour that it is a pity to complicate its advocacy by the
+introduction of an extraneous and most difficult question. So it was,
+however; with pale, earnest face, and accents more incisive than before,
+Praxagora said if Bible and religion stood in the way of Woman's Rights,
+then Bible and religion must go. That was the gist of her remarks. I
+need not follow her in detail, because the supplementary matter sounded
+more bitterly still; and, had she not been reading from MS. I should
+have thought the lecturer was carried away by her subject; but no, she
+was reading quite calmly what were clearly enough her natural and
+deliberate opinions. I said I was surprised at the line she took.
+Perhaps I ought scarcely to have been so, for she was flanked on one
+side by Mr. Bradlaugh, on the other by Mr. Holyoake! but I never
+remember being so struck with a contrast as when at one moment Praxagora
+pictured the beauty of a well-regulated home, and the tender offices of
+woman towards the little children, and then shot off at a tangent to
+fierce invectives against the Bible and religion, which seemed so
+utterly uncalled for that no adversary who wanted to damage the cause
+could possibly have invented a more complete method of doing so.
+
+The lecture over, the chairman invited discussion, and a fierce little
+working man immediately mounted the platform and took Praxagora to task
+for her injudicious onslaught. But, as usual, this gentleman was wildly
+irrelevant and carried away by his commendable zeal. Over and over again
+he had to be recalled to the question, until finally he set his whole
+audience against him, and had to sit down abruptly in the middle of a
+sort of apotheosis of Moses--as far as I could hear, for his zeal outran
+his eloquence as well as his discretion, and rendered him barely
+audible. A second speaker followed, and, though cordially sympathizing
+with the address, and tracing woman's incapacity to her state of
+subjugation, regretted that such a disturbing element as religion had
+been mixed up with a social claim. He considered that such a subject
+must inevitably prove an apple of discord. For this he was at once
+severely handled by Mr. Bradlaugh, who, consistently enough, defended
+the line Praxagora adopted towards the religious question, and justified
+the introduction of the subject from the charge of irrelevance. He also
+deprecated the surprise which the last speaker had expressed at the
+excellent address of Praxagora by pointing out that in America about
+one-third of the press were females, a fact which he attributed to the
+plan of Mixed Education. Then a new line was opened up by a speaker--it
+was as impossible to catch their names as to hear the stations announced
+by porters on the Underground Railway. He predicted that if women did
+get the franchise, Mr. Bradlaugh's "Temple" would be shut up in six
+months, as well as those of Messrs. Voysey and Conway and Dr. Perfitt.
+The ladies, he said, were swayed by Conventionalism and Priestcraft, and
+until you educated them, you could not safely give them the franchise.
+
+A youthful Good Templar mounted the rostrum, for the purpose of patting
+Praxagora metaphorically on the back, and also ventilating his own
+opinions on the apathy of the working man in claiming his vote. Then
+somebody got up and denied that ladies were by nature theological. Their
+virtues were superior to those of men just as their voices were an
+octave higher. He was for having a Moral Department of the State
+presided over by ladies. Only one lady spoke; a jaunty young woman in a
+sailor's hat, who said that in religious persecutions men, not women,
+had been the persecutors; and then Praxagora rose to reply. She first of
+all explained her position with regard to the Bible, which she denied
+having unnecessarily attacked. The Bible forbade a woman to speak; and,
+that being so, the Bible must stand on one side, for "we" were going to
+speak. That the highest intellects had been formed on Bible models she
+denied by instancing Shelley. If she thought that this movement was
+going to destroy the womanhood of her sex she would not move a finger
+for its furtherance. She only thought it would give a higher style of
+womanhood. As to women requiring to be educated before they would know
+how to use the franchise, she pointed triumphantly to the Government
+which men had placed in power. It was significant, she said, that the
+first exercise of the working men's franchise had been to place a
+Conservative Government in office.
+
+I daresay I am wrong, but the impression left on my mind by the
+discussion was that the liberty of thought and action claimed was the
+liberty of thinking as "_we_" think and doing what "_we_" want to have
+done--a process which has been before now mistaken for absolute freedom.
+Stripped of its aggressive adjuncts, Praxagora's advocacy of her main
+subject would be telling in the extreme from the fact of her blending
+such thorough womanliness of person, character, and sentiment with such
+vigorous championship of a doctrine against which I do not believe any
+prejudice exists. Drag in the religious difficulty, however, and you
+immediately array against it a host of prejudices, whether reasonable
+ones or the reverse is not now the question. I am only concerned with
+the unwisdom of having called them into existence. I own I thought that
+Christianity had been the means of raising woman from her state of
+Oriental degradation to the position she occupies in civilized
+countries. But I was only there to listen, not to speak; and I confess I
+came away in a divided frame of mind. I was pleased with the paper, but
+irritated to think that a lady, holding such excellent cards, should
+risk playing a losing game.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+AN OPEN-AIR TICHBORNE MEETING.
+
+
+When Sydney Smith, from the depths of his barbarian ignorance, sought to
+rise to the conception of a Puseyite, he said in substance much as
+follows:--"I know not what these silly people want, except to revive
+every obsolete custom which the common sense of mankind has allowed to
+go to sleep." Puseyism is not to our present purpose; but Tichborne-ism
+is--for it has attained to the dignity of a veritable ism--and we may
+define it much after the same method, as an attempt, not, indeed, to
+revive the claims of, but to restore to society a person, who, after a
+trial of unexampled length, was consigned by the verdict of a jury, and
+the consequent sentence of the Lord Chief Justice, to the possibly
+uncongenial retirement of Millbank Penitentiary. With the rights or
+wrongs of such an event I have simply nothing to do. I abandoned the
+Tichborne Trial at an early stage in a condition of utter bewilderment;
+and directly an old gentleman sought to button-hole me, and argue that
+he must be the man, or he couldn't be the man, I made off, or changed
+the conversation as rapidly as I could.
+
+But when the question had at length been resolved by wiser heads than
+mine, and when, too, I felt I could write calmly, with no fear of an
+action for contempt of court before my eyes, I confess that a poster
+announcing an open-air Tichborne meeting in Mr. Warren's cricket-field,
+Notting Hill, was too fascinating for me. I had heard of such gatherings
+in provincial places and East End halls; but this invasion of the West
+was breaking new ground. I would go; in fine I went. On the evening of
+an exceptionally hot July day, I felt there might be worse places than
+Mr. Warren's breezy cricket ground alongside Notting Barn Farm; so six
+o'clock, the hour when the chair was to be taken, found me at the
+spot--first of the outer world--and forestalled only by a solitary
+Tichbornite. How I knew that the gentleman in question deserved that
+appellation I say not; but I felt instinctively that such was the case.
+He had a shiny black frock-coat on, like a well-to-do artisan out for a
+holiday, and a roll of paper protruding from his pocket I rightly
+inferred to be a Tichborne petition for signature. As soon as we got on
+the ground, and I was enjoying the sensation of the crisp well rolled
+turf beneath my feet, a man hove in sight with a table, and this
+attracted a few observers. A gentleman in a light coat, too, who was
+serenely gazing over the hedge at the Kensington Park Cricket Club in
+the next ground, was, they informed me, Mr. Guildford Onslow. The
+presiding genius of the place, however, was Mrs. Warren, who, arrayed
+in a gown of emerald green--as though she were attending a Fenian
+meeting--bustled about in a state of intense excitement until the
+greengrocer's cart, which was to serve as a rostrum, had arrived. When
+this occurred, the table and half a dozen Windsor chairs were hoisted
+into it; another table was arranged below the van, with the Tichborne
+Petition outspread upon it; and I fancied that arrangements were
+complete.
+
+Not so, however. The gentleman in the shiny coat and emerald green Mrs.
+Warren between them tin-tacked up a long scroll or "legend" along the
+rim of the van, consisting of the text from Psalm xxxv. 11:--"False
+witnesses did rise up against me. They laid to my charge things that I
+knew not." The association of ideas was grotesque, I know, but really as
+Mrs. Warren and the shiny artisan were nailing this strip to the
+greengrocer's van, they put me very much in mind of a curate and a lady
+friend "doing decorations" at Christmas or Eastertide. Nor was this all.
+When the "strange device" was duly tin-tacked, some workmen brought four
+long pieces of quartering, and a second strip of white calico with
+letters stuck on it was nailed to these; and when the stalwart fellows
+hoisted it in air and tied the two centre pieces of wood to the wheels
+of the greengrocer's cart, I found that it consisted of the Ninth
+Commandment. The self-sacrificing carpenters were to hold--and did
+hold--the outside poles banner-wise during the entire evening; and, with
+one slight exception, this banner with the strange device, No. 2, formed
+an appropriate, if not altogether ornamental background for the
+greengrocer's van. Knots of people had gathered during these
+proceedings; and I was confused to find that I was being generally
+pointed out as Mr. Onslow, that gentleman having retired to the privacy
+of Mr. Warren's neighbouring abode. Later on I was taken for a
+detective, because, in my innocence, I withdrew ever and anon from the
+crowd, and, sitting on a verdurous bank, jotted down a note in my
+pocket-book; but this got me into such bad odour by-and-by that I felt
+it better to desist, and trust to memory. Some of the smaller boys also
+averred that I was Sir Roger himself, but their youthful opinions were
+too palpably erroneous to carry weight.
+
+In due course the van was occupied by Mr. Onslow, the Rev. Mr.
+Buckingham (about whom I felt, of course, very curious), my shining
+artisan, and a few others. A thin-faced gentleman, whose name I could
+not catch, was voted to the chair, and announced to us that he should go
+on talking awhile in order that Messrs. Onslow and Buckingham might
+"refresh," as they had each come from the country. This they did coram
+publico in the cart, while the chairman kept us amused. The wind, too,
+was blowing pretty freshly, and was especially hard on the Ninth
+Commandment, which gave considerable trouble to the holders of the
+props. It was directly in the teeth of the speaker, too--an arrangement
+which Mrs. Warren, in her zeal, had overlooked; and it was decided by
+common consent to "reverse the meeting"--that is, to turn the chairs of
+the speakers round, so that the Ninth Commandment was nowhere, and
+looked like an Egyptian hieroglyph, as the reversed letters showed dimly
+through the calico. The chairman eventually read to the meeting, which
+was now a tolerably full one, the form of petition which was to serve as
+the single resolution of the evening. I was struck with this gentleman's
+departure from conventional legal phraseology on this occasion. Instead
+of naming the cause celebre "The Queen _versus_ Castro" (it being
+written, as Sam Weller says, with a "wee") he termed it "The Queen _via_
+Castro!" The petition was as follows:--
+
+"That in the trial at Bar in the Court of Queen's Bench, on an
+indictment of the Queen v. Castro, alias Arthur Orton, alias Sir Roger
+Charles Doughty Tichborne, Bart., for perjury, the jury, on the 28th day
+of February, 1874, brought in a verdict of guilty against him, declaring
+him to be Arthur Orton, and he was sentenced to fourteen years' penal
+servitude, which he is now undergoing.
+
+"That your petitioners have reason to know and believe and are
+satisfied, both from the evidence produced at the trial and furnished
+since, and from their own personal knowledge that he is not Arthur
+Orton.
+
+"That though 280 witnesses were examined at the said trial in his
+behalf, a very large number more, as your petitioners have been informed
+and believe, were also ready to be examined, but that funds were not
+available for the purpose, the defendant having been entirely dependent
+on the voluntary subscriptions of the public for his defence.
+
+"That your petitioners submit that such a large number as 280 witnesses,
+most of whom gave positive evidence that the defendant was not Arthur
+Orton, and whose testimony in two instances only was questioned in a
+court of law--as against about 200 witnesses for the prosecution, whose
+evidence was chiefly of a negative character--was of itself enough to
+raise a doubt in the defendant's favour, of which doubt he ought to have
+had the benefit, in accordance both with the law and the custom of the
+country.
+
+"That, under the circumstances, your petitioners submit that he had not
+a fair trial, and they pray your honourable House to take the matter
+into your serious consideration, with a view to memorialize her Majesty
+to grant a free pardon."
+
+The Rev. Mr. Buckingham, a cheery gentleman who bore a remarkable
+resemblance to the celebrated Mr. Pickwick, rose to move the resolution;
+and I could not help noticing that, not content with the ordinary white
+tie of clerical life, he had "continued the idea downwards" in a white
+waistcoat, which rather altered the state of things. He spoke well and
+forcibly I should think for an hour, confining his remarks to the
+subject of "Sir Roger" not being Arthur Orton. He (Mr. Buckingham)
+belonged to some waterside mission at Wapping, and had known Arthur
+Orton familiarly from earliest boyhood. His two grievances were that his
+negative evidence had not been taken, and that he was now being
+continually waited on by "Jesuits," who temptingly held out cheques for
+_1000l._ to him if he would only make affidavit that the man in Millbank
+was Arthur Orton.
+
+Mr. Onslow, who seconded the resolution, however, made the speech of the
+evening, and was so enthusiastically received that he had to recommence
+several times after glowing perorations. The burden of Mr. Onslow's
+prophecy was the unfairness of the trial; and his "bogies" were
+detectives, just as Mr. Buckingham's were Jesuits. The Jean Luie affair
+was the most infernal "plant" in the whole case; and he read records of
+conflicting evidence which really were enough to make one pack up one's
+traps and resolve on instant emigration. He was, however, certainly
+right on one point. He said that such meetings were safety-valves which
+prevented revolution. No doubt this was a safety-valve. It amused the
+speakers, and Mrs. Warren and the glazed artisan; and it could do nobody
+any possible harm. Whether it was likely to do the man of Millbank any
+good was quite another matter, and one which, of course, it was quite
+beside my purpose to discuss. There was a deal of--to me--very
+interesting speaking; for I gained new light about the case, and stood
+until my legs fairly ached listening to Messrs. Buckingham and Onslow.
+
+When the editor of the _Tichborne Gazette_ claimed an innings it was
+another matter; and--perhaps with lack of esprit de corps--I decamped. I
+only saw this gentleman gesticulating as I left the field; but the rate
+at which he was getting up the steam promised a speech that would last
+till nightfall.
+
+As I went off the ground I was struck with the clever way in which a
+London costermonger will turn anything and everything to account. One of
+them was going about with a truck of cherries, crying out, "Sir Roger
+Tichborne cherries. Penny a lot!"
+
+There was no symptom of overt opposition, though opponents were blandly
+invited to mount the waggon and state their views; but there was a good
+deal of quiet chaff on the outskirts of the crowd, which is the portion
+I always select on such occasions for my observation. On the whole,
+however, the assembly was pretty unanimous; and though it never assumed
+the dimensions of a "monster meeting," the fact that even so many people
+could be got together for such a purpose seemed to me sufficiently a
+sign of the times to deserve annotation in passing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+SUNDAY IN A PEOPLE'S GARDEN.
+
+
+I have often thought that an interesting series of articles might be
+written on the subject of "London out of Church," dealing with the
+manners and customs of those people who patronize no sort of religious
+establishment on the Sunday. I have seen pretty well all the typical
+phases of religious London and London irreligious; but these would
+rather be characterized as non-religious than as irreligious folks. They
+do not belong to any of the varied forms of faith; in fact faith is from
+their life a thing apart. It is in this negative way that they are
+interesting. Sunday is with them only a regularly recurring Bank
+Holiday. It would be interesting to know what they do with it. A special
+difficulty, however, exists for me in any such inquiry, resulting from
+the fact that, in my capacity of clerical casual, I am pretty generally
+engaged on the Sunday; and when I am not, my Day of Rest is too valuable
+to be devoted to any of the manifold forms of metropolitan
+Sabbath-breaking. I have a great idea that parsons ought to be
+frequently preached at; and so I generally go to some church or chapel
+when out of harness myself; and if "hearing sermons" constitute the
+proper carrying out of the things promised and vowed on my behalf at
+baptism I must have undergone as complete a course of Christian
+discipline as any man in Christendom, for I have been preached at by
+everybody from Roman Catholics down to Walworth Jumpers and Plumstead
+Peculiars!
+
+But impressed with anxiety to know about the doings of the
+non-Church-goers, I have for a long time cast sheep's eyes at the Sunday
+League, and more than once definitely promised to join one of their
+Sunday outings; but I am strongly of Tom Hood's opinion that--
+
+ The man who's fond precociously of stirring
+ Must be a _spoon_.
+
+The Sunday League commence their excursions at untimely hours; and it is
+a cardinal point in my creed that Sunday ought to be a Day of Rest, at
+all events in the matter of breakfast in bed. I missed the excursion to
+Shakspeare's House in this way, and the paper on the Bard of Avon, full
+of the genius loci, must have been as edifying as a sermon. So, too, on
+a recent Sunday, when the Sunday League on their way to Southend got
+mixed up with the Volunteer Artillery going to Shoebury, I was again
+found wanting. But still the old penchant remained, and Sunday was my
+last free one for a long time. How could I utilize it? I had it; I would
+go to the People's Garden at Willesden. I had heard that certain very
+mild forms of Sabbath breaking prevailed there. I would go and see for
+myself.
+
+I had been at the People's Garden twice before; once on the occasion of
+a spiritualistic picnic, and once, more recently, at a workmen's flower
+show; and felt considerable interest in the place, especially as the
+People had been polite enough to send me a season ticket, so that I was
+one of the People myself.
+
+This People's Garden was not exactly a Paradise yet, though it is in a
+fair way of becoming one. It is a spot of some fifty acres reclaimed
+from the scrubbiest part of Wormwood Scrubbs, and made the focus of a
+club of working men, of whom I am very proud indeed to be one. Indeed, I
+do not see why throughout the remainder of this article I should not use
+the first person plural. I will. Well, then, we secured this spot, and
+we have got in the first place one of the finest--I believe the
+finest--dancing platforms in England, for we as a community are
+Terpsichorean, though I, as an individual, am not. I felt it necessary
+to give up dancing when my weight turned the balance at fourteen stone
+odd. Then we can give our friends refreshments from a bottle of
+champagne down to tea and cresses. We have all sorts of clubs, dramatic
+and otherwise, and rather plume ourselves on having put up our
+proscenium ourselves, that is with our own hands and hammers and nails.
+There is the great advantage of being a Working Man or one of the
+People. If you had been with me that Sunday you would have seen a glow
+of conscious pride suffusing my countenance as I read the bills of our
+last amateur performance, consisting of the "Waterman" and "Ici on parle
+Francais," played on the boards which I, in my corporate capacity, had
+planed, and sawn, and nailed. My route last Sunday lay across the crisp
+sward of the Scrubbs; and it was quite a pleasure to be able to walk
+there without danger of falling pierced by the bullet of some erratic
+volunteer; for there are three butts on Wormwood Scrubbs, which I
+examined with minuteness on Sunday, and was exercised to see by marks on
+the brickwork how very wide of the target a volunteer's shot can go. I
+wonder there is not a wholesale slaughter of cattle in the neighbouring
+fields. The garden lies on the other side of the Great Western Railway,
+across which I had to trespass in order to get to it. But the man in
+charge regarded me with indulgence, for was I not a working man and a
+"mate?" The portion of the garden abutting on the rail is still
+unreclaimed prairie. The working men have begun at the top of the hill,
+and are working downwards.
+
+There is a good-sized refreshment-room at the entrance, with all the
+paraphernalia of secretary's office, &c.; and this large room, which is
+exceedingly useful in wet weather, opens right on to the
+dancing-platform, in the centre of which is a pretty kiosk for the band.
+We have no gas; but tasty paraffin lamps at frequent intervals give
+sufficient light, and, at all events, do not smell _worse_ than modern
+metropolitan gas. There is a large tent standing en permanence during
+the summer for flower shows, and terrace after terrace of croquet lawns,
+all of which it will, I fear, shock some Sabbatarian persons to learn
+were occupied on that Sunday afternoon, and the balls kept clicking like
+the week-day shots of the erratic riflemen on the Scrubbs. I had a young
+lady with me who was considerably severe on the way in which we workmen
+male and female, handled our mallets. There was, I confess, something to
+be desired in the way of position; and one group of German artisans in
+the corner lawn made more noise than was necessary, howling and uttering
+all sorts of guttural interjections, as though they were playing polo at
+least, or taking part in a bull-fight, instead of in croquet--beloved of
+curates.
+
+And then the flowers. We are making the desert blossom like the rose. It
+is really marvellous to see what has been done in so short a time. We
+might have been a society of market gardeners. We don't get so many
+flowers along the walk of life, we working men; so that we want to see a
+bit of green sward and a flower or two on Sundays. There is a capital
+gymnasium, and our observation of the young men who disport themselves
+there would lead an uninitiated observer to form the opinion that the
+normal condition of humanity was upside down. The way one youthful
+workman hung by his legs on the trapeze was positively Darwinian to
+behold. Swings attracted the attention of the ladies; and I regret to
+say that the particular young lady I escorted--who was of the mature age
+of twelve--passed most of the afternoon in a state of oscillation, and
+was continually adjuring me to push her.
+
+An interesting addition to the gardens--our gardens--since I was last
+there, consisted of a cage of meditative monkeys, four in number, who
+were stationed so near the gymnasium as inevitably to suggest the
+Darwinian parallel. They had their gymnasium too, and swung gaily on
+their tree-trunks at such times as they were not engaged in eating or
+entomological researches. I could not help thinking what a deprivation
+it was to the gymnasts that, in course of evolution, we have lost our
+tails. They would have been so convenient on the horizontal bar, where
+that persevering young workman was still engaged in the pursuit of
+apoplexy by hanging head downwards. Soon after we got there an excellent
+band commenced playing, not in the kiosk, lest we should be beguiled
+into dancing. The first piece was a slow movement, which could scarcely
+have been objected to by any Sabbatarian, unless he was so
+uncompromising as to think all trumpets wrong. The second was the
+glorious march from "Athalie;" and then--my blood runs cold as I write
+it--a sort of pot pourri, in the midst of which came the "Dutchman's
+Little Wee Dog," considerably disguised in the way of accompaniment and
+variation, I own, but the "Little Wee Dog" beyond a doubt. Then I
+understood why the band was not in the kiosk; for, fourteen stone though
+I be, I felt all my toes twiddling inside my boots at that time as
+wickedly as though it had been Monday morning. There were fourteen or
+fifteen loud brass instruments, with a side and bass drum and cymbals.
+All these were playing the "Little Wee Dog" to their brazen hearts'
+content, and only one gentleman on a feeble piccolo-flute trying to
+choke their impiety by tootling out a variation, just as the stringed
+instruments in the glorious "Reformation Symphony" of Mendelssohn try in
+vain to drown with their sensuous Roman airs the massive chords of the
+old Lutheran chorale--"Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott." I really could
+not bear it any longer, and was rising to go when they stopped; and as
+the gentleman who played the circular bass got outside his portentous
+instrument, I found he had a little wee dog of his own who retired into
+the bell of the big trumpet when his master laid it on the grass.
+Perhaps it was in honour of this minute animal the air was selected.
+However, I could not lend myself to such proceedings; so I bribed my
+youthful charge with a twopenny bottle of frothless ginger beer to come
+out of her swing and return to the regions of orthodoxy. The Teutonic
+gentlemen were still hooting and yelling as we crossed the corner of
+their croquet lawn, until I expected to see them attack one another
+with the mallets and use the balls for missile warfare; but it was only
+their peculiar way of enjoying themselves.
+
+My little friend described the action of our working men in the croquet
+lawn as "spooning," and also drew my attention to the fact that two
+lovers were doing the same on a seat, in the approved fashion prevalent
+among us workmen, with the manly arm around the taper waist coram
+publico. This arrangement is quite a necessity with us. We should often
+like to forego it, especially when little boys make rude remarks about
+us in the street; but it is expected of us, and we submit.
+
+The sun was beginning to sink grandly over that magnificent panorama of
+country visible from Old Oak Common as we passed down the hill and again
+violated the bye-laws of the Great Western Railway Company. The spires
+of the West End churches were bathed in the soft glow of departing day;
+and in the distance the Crystal Palace glittered like a fairy bower. We
+got back after making a little detour on account of some gentlemen who
+were bathing in a very Paradisiacal way indeed--we actually got back in
+time to go to church like good Christians; and I do not think either of
+us felt much the worse for the hours we had spent in the People's
+Garden--save and except the wicked Little Wee Dog!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+UTILIZING THE YOUNG LADIES.
+
+
+Time was when it was accepted as an axiom that young ladies had no
+object in life but to be ornamental--no mission but matrimony. The
+"accomplishments" were the sum total of a genteel education, though
+charged as "extras" on the half-yearly accounts; and all the finished
+creature had to do, after once "coming out," was to sit down and
+languidly wait for an eligible suitor.
+
+Times changed. And, in England, when we make a change, we always rush
+violently into an opposite extreme. Woman had a mission, and no mistake.
+Now it was the franchise and Bloomer costume, just as aforetime it was
+the pianoforte and general fascination. Blue spectacles rose in the
+market. We had lady doctors and female lawyers. The only marvel is that
+there was no agitation for feminine curates.
+
+Then came reaction again. It was discovered that woman could be educated
+without becoming a bluestocking, and practical without wearing bloomers
+or going in for the suffrage. Still holding to the wholesome principle
+that "woman is not undeveloped man, but diverse," the real friends of
+the gentler sex discovered a hundred and one ways in which it could
+employ itself usefully and remuneratively. It was no longer feared lest,
+as Sydney Smith puts it, if a woman learnt algebra she would "desert her
+infant for a quadratic equation;" and the University of Cambridge soon
+fell in with the scheme for the Higher Education of Women; while Miss
+Faithfull, and several others, organized methods for employing
+practically the talents which education could only develope in a general
+way. It was to one of these methods--not Miss Faithfull's--my attention
+was drawn a short time since by a letter in the daily papers. The
+Victoria Press and International Bureau are faits accomplis, and it is
+well that efforts should be made for utilizing in other ways that
+interesting surplus in our female population. Mrs. Fernando, of Warwick
+Gardens, Kensington, has set herself to the solution of the problem, and
+the shape her method takes is a Technical Industrial School for Women.
+
+The object and aim of the institution is to examine, plan, and organize
+such branches of industrial avocation as are applicable to females, and
+open up new avocations of useful industry compatible with the
+intellectual and mechanical capabilities of the sex, not forgetting
+their delicacy, and the untutored position of females for practical
+application in all industrial labour: to give the same facilities to
+females as are enjoyed by males, in collective classes for special
+training or special preparation for passing examinations open to women,
+thereby to enable them to earn their livelihood with better success than
+is attainable by mere school education only: to give special training to
+females to qualify them to enter special industrial avocations with such
+competency as will enable them to be successful in obtaining employment:
+to apprentice females, or to employ them directly into trades where such
+employers will receive them beyond the limits of the industrial school
+and where females can be constantly employed, such as in composing,
+embossing, illuminating, black-bordering, ticket-writing,
+circular-addressing, flower-making, flower-cultivating, &c.
+
+Being a determined sceptic in the matter of prospectuses, I determined
+to go and see for myself the working of this scheme, which looked so
+well on paper. The Institution occupies a large house exactly opposite
+Dr. Punshon's chapel: and there is no chance of one's missing it, for it
+is placarded with announcements like a hoarding at election time. I
+found Mrs. Fernando an exceedingly practical lady, doing all the work of
+the institution herself, with the exception of a few special subjects
+such as botany, &c., which are conducted by her husband. There are no
+"assistants," therefore, or deputed interests, the bane of so many
+high-priced schools.
+
+These classes are held in the evening from seven to nine o'clock, and
+are intended for ladies above the age of fifteen years, who may be
+engaged through the day in various occupations, and for such as suffer
+from neglected education, and who wish conveniently and economically to
+improve themselves, without being necessitated to mix with their juniors
+in day-schools. These classes prepare ladies to meet the qualifications
+necessary to enter clerkships and other official departments; to bring
+them also to a standard to meet the qualifications for post offices and
+telegraph departments; and also to pass certain examinations open to
+them. The charge is only _2s._ per week--_8s._ per month--_1l. 4s._ per
+quarter. The first course embraces spelling, reading, writing,
+arithmetic, history, geography, and grammar. The second course consists
+of advanced arithmetic, book-keeping and commercial instruction, so as
+to qualify women to take posts of responsibility with marked success.
+The third course consists of French, for practical usefulness. The
+fourth course embraces simple or technical training in such departments
+as are available within the limits of the class-room--to qualify women
+to enter industrial avocations with competency, and to make them
+successful in obtaining employment. This department will be extended to
+greater usefulness as conveniences arise, by apprenticing the girls or
+employing them directly in trades beyond the limits of the class-room,
+where employers will receive them, or where women could be consistently
+engaged--as, for instance, in the work of compositors, ticket-writers,
+embossers, &c. &c.
+
+The two classes with which I was brought into contact were the
+book-keeping and embossing. In the former, more than a dozen young
+ladies were being initiated in the mysteries of single and double entry,
+and they posted up their books in a way that made me feel very much
+ashamed of myself, when I thought how incapable I should be of doing
+anything half so useful. Many girls go from this department to be
+book-keepers at large hotels, places of business, &c.
+
+I then went to the embossing room, where six presses were being worked
+by as many young ladies, one in an adjoining room being reserved for
+Mrs. Fernando, who not only tells her pupils what to do, but shows them
+how to do it. The gilding and colouring of the stamps was most
+elaborate; two monograms of the Queen's name and that of the Empress
+Eugenie being perfect marvels of artistic and intricate workmanship.
+Every process, from mixing the colours up to burnishing the gold, was
+gone through in detail by this practical lady and her intelligent pupils
+for my special edification, and I passed out a much wiser and certainly
+not a sadder man than I entered this veritable hive of human bees.
+
+No expense was spared in the education of these girls, low as are the
+terms they pay. I saw quite a ruinous heap of spoilt envelopes and
+fashionable sheets of thick cream-laid; for they have to make their
+experiments on the best material, and the slightest alteration in the
+position of a pin where the stamping process has to be several times
+repeated spoils the whole result. Mrs. Fernando has also introduced
+envelope and circular addressing by women, as a department of female
+industrial work in the Technical Industrial School for Women, where a
+number of females are employed between the hours of ten and four
+o'clock, receiving satisfactory remuneration. She provides the females
+employed in this department evening classes free of charge, to improve
+themselves in general education.
+
+I am an intense admirer of the female sex in general, and young ladies
+in particular, but really when I came away, leaving my pretty
+book-keepers and embossers to resume their normal work, and saw the
+numbers of young ladies sitting listlessly over misnamed "work" at the
+window, or walking languidly nowhither in the streets, I thought that,
+without losing any of their attractions, nay, adding a new claim to the
+many existing ones on our regard, they might with great advantage take a
+turn at Mrs. Fernando's sixpenny lessons in technical education.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+FAIRLOP FRIDAY.
+
+
+Amongst those customs "more honoured in the breach than the observance"
+which are rapidly being stamped out by the advancing steps of
+civilization, are the institutions which we can yet remember as so
+popular in the days of our childhood, called pleasure fairs. Like that
+social dodo in a higher section of society, the "three-bottle man," with
+the stupid Bacchanalian usages of which he was the embodiment, these
+fairs are slowly but surely disappearing as education spreads among the
+masses of the people. In the country a fair is a simple and a necessary
+thing enough. At certain seasons of the year, according to the staple
+commodities for the sale of which the assemblage was originally
+instituted, our bucolic friends gather at early morning with the
+products of their farms; a good deal of noisy buying, selling, and
+barter takes place. Later in the day the ladies invest their profits in
+a little mild finery, or in simple pleasures; and, later still, when the
+public-houses have done their work, comes a greater or lesser amount of
+riot, rude debauchery, and vice; and then, voila tout--the fair is over
+for a year. One can easily imagine the result of the transition when,
+from the quiet country, the fair removes to the city or suburb. In such
+places every utilitarian element is wanting, and the gilt ginger-bread
+and gewgaws are only a speciously innocent attraction towards the
+drinking and dancing booth where the mischief is done. Well-wishers to
+society are unromantic enough not to regret the decidedly waning glories
+of these gatherings, from the great Bartholomew Fair itself down to that
+which, on the Friday of which I write, converted many miles of
+thoroughfare at the East End of London, as well as one of the prettiest
+forest scenes still surrounding the metropolis, into a vast al fresco
+tavern, where the "worship of Bacchus" was as freely indulged as in any
+heathen temple of ancient times.
+
+Fairlop Fair--which has not yet died out, though beginning to show
+satisfactory signs of decay--commenced its existence, innocently enough,
+about a century ago. At that time Mr. Day, a shipbuilder, wishing to
+have a day's outing in the forest with his friends and employes, fitted
+up a vessel on wheels, fully rigged, in which he conveyed his picnic
+party to Hainault Forest, on the outskirts of which, some distance from
+Ilford, stood the famous Fairlop Oak. The holiday became an annual
+custom, and gradually changed its character from the simple gathering of
+a master and his men into regular saturnalia; during which, each year,
+from the first Friday in July, over the ensuing Saturday and Sunday,
+riot and debauchery reigned supreme in the glades of the forest and the
+eastern districts of London. The example set by Mr. Day was followed by
+other ship, boat, and barge builders, but of late years, more
+particularly by the mast and block makers, riggers, shipwrights, and
+shipyard labourers; and more recently still by the licensed victuallers.
+Finding the custom good for trade, the publicans formed a society for
+building or hiring these boats on wheels, which, covered with flags, and
+provided each with a band of music and filled with revellers, annually
+make their progress into Hainault Forest. They go no longer, alas! to
+Fairlop Oak--for that is numbered with the things of the past--but now
+to Barking side, where, at the Maypole Inn, the festivities of Fairlop
+Fair are still kept up.
+
+These ship and boat cars attract immense multitudes along the Mile End,
+Bow, and Whitechapel Roads, down as far as Aldgate; the crowd assemble
+in the morning to see the holiday people start on their expedition. The
+most remarkable sight, however, is at night, when the "boats" return
+lighted with coloured lanterns, red and green fires, &c.; and at every
+public-house along the road similar fires are burnt, and brass bands
+stationed to strike up as the cars pass, and stop at certain favoured
+establishments "for the good of the house." Anxious to witness the
+fading glories of Fairlop Friday myself, before the advancing tide of
+civilization shall have done their inevitable work upon them, I sallied
+forth to the East End, and walking along one of the finest approaches to
+London, from Aldgate, by Whitechapel, to Bow and Stratford Churches,
+succeeded in realizing more completely than ever before two facts:
+first, how gigantic is the population of the East End of London; and,
+secondly, how little is required to amuse and attract it. There were
+only two of the "boats" sent to the Forest that year. Their return could
+gratify the sight of these people but for a single instant; yet there,
+from early dusk almost to succeeding daylight, those working men,
+literally "in their thousands"--and not in the Trafalgar Square
+diminutive of that expression--gathered to gratify themselves with the
+sight of the pageant. In comparison, the "Boeuf Gras," which annually
+sends the gamins of Paris insane, is really a tasteful and refined
+exhibition. Yet there they were, women, men, and children--infants in
+arms, too, to a notable extent--swarming along that vast thoroughfare,
+boozing outside the public-houses, investing their pence in
+"scratch-backs" and paper noses, feathers and decorations, as do their
+betters on the course at Epsom, under the feeble excuse of "waiting for
+the boats." The first arrived en retour at Stratford Church about ten
+o'clock; and certainly the appearance of the lumbering affair as it
+moved along, with its rigging brought out by means of coloured fires,
+lanterns, and lamps, was odd enough. As soon as it passed me at
+Stratford, I jumped outside one of the Bow and Stratford omnibuses, and
+so had an opportunity of following, or rather joining in, the procession
+as far as Whitechapel, where the "boat" turned off into Commercial Road.
+For the whole of that space the footway was filled with one seething
+mass of humanity, and the publicans were driving a rattling trade
+outside and inside their establishments. As the glare of the coloured
+fires lighted up the pale faces of the crowd with a ghastly hue, and I
+heard the silly and too often obscene remarks bandied between the
+bystanders and the returning revellers, I could not help agitating the
+question, whether it would not be possible to devise some innocent
+recreation, with a certain amount of refinement in it, to take the place
+of these--to say the best--foolish revelries. In point of fact, they are
+worse than foolish. Not only was it evident that the whole affair from
+beginning to end, as far as adults were concerned, was an apotheosis of
+drink; but amongst another section of the populace, the boys and girls,
+or what used to be boys and girls--for, as the Parisians say, "Il n'y a
+plus de garcons"--one must have been blind indeed not to see the
+mischief that was being done on those East End pavements; done more
+thoroughly perhaps, certainly on a vastly larger scale, than in the
+purlieus of the forest. It is an uninviting subject to dwell upon; but
+one could understand all about baby farms, and Lock Hospitals, and
+Contagious Diseases Acts, out there that July night, in the crowded
+streets of East London.
+
+It would be unfair to dilate upon these evils, and not to mention an
+organization which, for the last ten years, has been seeking to remedy
+the mischief. Some hundreds of working men of a more serious stamp,
+aided by a few gentlemen and ministers of various denominations, form
+themselves into small bands of street preachers, and sallying forth in a
+body, hold services and preach sermons at the most populous points of
+the Fairlop route. Being curious to see the effect of their bold
+labours--for it requires immense "pluck" to face a Whitechapel mob--I
+joined one of these detachments, where the Rev. Newman Hall was the
+preacher. Before starting, this gentleman gave it as the result of his
+long experience with the British workman that there is no use in waiting
+for him to come to church. If the church is to do anything with him, it
+must go out and meet him in the streets and fields, as it originally
+did. Mr. Hall gave some amusing illustrations of his experience at
+Hastings, where, for several weeks, he had been preaching on the beach
+to large congregations. He was idling there, he said, for health's sake,
+and one evening, seeing a number of men loafing about, he proposed to
+one of them that he should give them an address. This gentleman declined
+the address, but added, characteristically enough, "If ye'll gie me
+some beer I'll drink it." Two others, being asked if they would listen,
+"didn't know as they would." Under these unpromising auspices Mr. Hall
+began, and, attracting a crowd, was "moved on" by a policeman. A
+gentleman who recognised him proposed an adjournment to the beach, and
+there a sermon was preached, and has been repeated by Mr. Hall on
+several occasions, with a congregation of thousands. He has a peculiar
+knack of speaking in a tongue "understanded of the people," and his
+address to the Fairlop crowd on that Friday night "told" considerably.
+At its conclusion he quietly put on his hat, dropped into the crowd, and
+went his way; but the tone of criticism amongst his hearers was very
+favourable, and I quite agree with the critics that it's a pity we
+haven't "more parsons like that." It is not, however, simply by
+religious zeal such a want as that to which I allude is to be supplied,
+but by the substitution of some sensible recreation for the low
+attractions of the beershop and gin-palace. It is a problem worthy of
+our deepest thinkers: "What shall we offer our huge populations in
+exchange for the silly pageant even now being enacted in the outskirts
+of the metropolis--which may well be taken to embody the pastime of the
+lower orders--Fairlop Fair?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+A CHRISTMAS DIP.
+
+
+There are few more exhilarating things, on a breezy spring morning, than
+a spurt across that wonderful rus in urbe--Kensington Gardens and Hyde
+Park--for a prospective dip in the Serpentine, where, at specified hours
+every morning and evening, water-loving London is privileged to disport
+itself in its congenial element. So congenial is it, in fact, that some
+enthusiastic individuals do not limit themselves to warm summer
+mornings, or the cooler ones of springtide and autumn, but bathe all the
+year round--even, it is said, when a way for their manoeuvres has to be
+cut through the ice. Skirting the north bank of the Serpentine at
+morning or evening in the summer, the opposite shore appears absolutely
+pink with nude humanity, the younger portion dancing and gambolling very
+much after the manner of Robinson Crusoe's cannibals. The bathers
+occasionally look a great deal better out of their integuments than in
+them. Not from this class, however, do your all-the-year-round bathers
+come. The Arab is an exotic--a child of the Sun, loving not to disport
+himself in water the temperature of which shocks his tentative
+knuckles, as he dips them in the unaccustomed element. His wardrobe,
+again, is too much after the fashion of that pertaining to Canning's
+needy knife-grinder to make an al fresco toilette other than
+embarrassing. From the all-the-year-round bathers, as a nucleus, there
+has grown up, within the last few years, the Serpentine Swimming Club;
+and on Christmas-day in the morning they have an annual match open to
+all comers--though, it need scarcely be said, patronized only by those
+whom, for brevity's sake, we may term all-rounders.
+
+Now, I had often heard of this Christmas-day match, and as often, on
+Christmas-eve, made up my mind to go; but the evening's resolution faded
+away, as such resolutions have only too often been known to do, before
+the morning's light. This year, however--principally, I believe, because
+I had been up very late the previous night--I struggled out of bed
+before dawn, and steered for the Serpentine. A crescent moon was
+shining, and stars studded the clear spaces between ominous patches of
+cloud. A raw, moist wind was blowing, and on the muddy streets were
+evident traces of a recent shower. I had no notion that the gates of
+Kensington Gardens were open so early; and the sensation was novel as I
+threaded the devious paths in morning dawn, and saw the gas still alight
+along the Bayswater Road. A solitary thrush was whistling his Christmas
+carol as I struggled over the inundated sward; presently the sun threw a
+few red streaks along the East, over the Abbey Tower; but, until I had
+passed the Serpentine Bridge, not a single human being met my gaze.
+There, however, I found some fifty men, mostly with a "sporting" look
+about them. The ubiquitous boy was there, playing at some uncomfortable
+game in the puddles round the seats. The inevitable dog stood pensively
+by the diving board; and when, by-and-by straggling all-rounders came
+and took their morning header, the quadruped rushed after them to the
+very edge of the water, as though he had been a distinguished member of
+the Humane Society. He shirked the element itself, however, as
+religiously as though he had been one of London's great unwashed. In the
+pause which preceded the race, I learned, from the Honorary Secretary of
+the Serpentine Swimming Club, particulars of its history and of the race
+itself. For six years it had been merely a club race; but last year it
+was thrown open. Strangely enough the race had never been won twice by
+one man, though the competitors had been pretty much the same every
+year. I also conversed with one of the intending competitors, who showed
+me on his breast with pardonable pride, five medals of the Royal Humane
+Society, awarded for saving life in cases of danger from drowning. The
+wearer was a Professor of Natation, and told me that, among his pupils,
+he had an old lady sixty-seven years of age, who had just commenced, and
+was able to swim some twenty yards already. The brave old lady's
+example may do good; though it is to be hoped that she may not, at her
+time of life, be compelled to exert her art for her own protection.
+
+Names were now called, and fourteen competitors presented themselves--a
+motley group, clad for the most part in trousers, horse-rug, and
+wide-awake, or, more simply still, in Ulster frieze coat only. The group
+of spectators had by this time grown to some hundreds, nearly all
+directly interested in the noble art; and the dips became fast and
+frequent. Two flags were placed in the water at the distance of 100
+yards from the diving board; on this slender platform fourteen shivering
+specimens of humanity ranged themselves, and at the word of the starter
+plunged into the water with that downward plunge so incomprehensible to
+the uninitiated. A short, sharp struggle followed, the competitors
+swimming with the sidelong movement and obstreperous puffing which
+likens the swimmer so closely to the traditional grampus. Eventually one
+of the group is seen heading the others, and breasting the water with
+calm and equable stroke in the old-fashioned style. He reaches the flag
+a full yard before his nearest antagonist. Numbers two and three,
+following, are about half a yard apart. The others come in pretty much
+in a group. All were picked men, and there were no laggards. The names
+of the winners were as follows:--1. Ainsworth; 2. Quartermain; 3. H.
+Coulter. The time occupied in the race was 1 min. 24 sec. Immediately
+after the race there was a rapid re-assumption of rugs and Ulsters,
+though some of the more hardy walked about in the garb of Nature, making
+everybody shiver who looked at them. Finally, the prizes, consisting of
+three handsome medals, were distributed by Mr. H. Bedford, who stood on
+a park seat and addressed a few genial words to each of the successful
+candidates; then, with a cheer, and frequent wishes for a Merry
+Christmas, the assembly resolved itself into its component parts.
+
+I had taken my accustomed cold tub before coming out, yet each of these
+fourteen devoted men appeared to me as a hero. They were not Herculean
+individuals: several of them were mere youths. Some of the all-rounders
+were grey-headed men, but there was about them all a freshness and
+ruddiness which showed that their somewhat severe regimen agreed with
+them. Fresh from such a Spartan exhibition, everything seemed very late
+and Sybaritic in my domestic establishment, and I could not help
+revolving in my mind the question, what would one of these hardy
+all-the-year-rounders think of me if he knew I was ever guilty of such a
+malpractice as breakfast in bed? It is a novel method; but there are
+many worse ways of inaugurating the Great Holiday than by taking--what
+it had been a novel sensation for me even to witness--a Christmas Dip in
+the Serpentine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+BOXING-DAY ON THE STREETS.
+
+
+Boxing-day in the London streets, and especially a wet Boxing-day, can
+scarcely fail to afford us some tableaux vivants illustrative of English
+metropolitan life. In a metaphorical and technical sense, Boxing-day is
+always more or less "wet"--generally more, and not less; but this year
+the expression is used climatically, and in its first intention.
+Christmas-eve of the year about which I write was bright and springlike;
+Christmas-day dismal, dark, and un-Christmas-like; but Boxing-day that
+year was essentially muggy, sloppy, drizzly, and nasty. A day to avoid
+the London streets if you want to take a romantic Rosa-Matilda view of
+London life; but the very day of all others, if you wish to see real
+London as it is. Boxing-day will inevitably be "wetter" in every sense
+than usual this year, internally and externally. So let us commence our
+series of living pictures at ten o'clock in the morning. Suppose we
+begin with something that shall bear reference to the past festival--the
+eve and the day of the Great Birth, recollect. See, here is Grotto
+Passage, Marylebone, and at its extremity Paradise Street--the names
+sound promising, but alas for the reality! We are going to turn for a
+moment into the Marylebone Police Court, where Mr. D'Eyncourt is
+dispensing summary justice to the accumulations of the last two days.
+These are the people who have been spending Christmas-eve,
+Christmas-day, and some portion of Boxing-day already in the
+police-cells. Let us take one as a typical case. Let that poor little
+eight-year-old Arab step down from the dock and go off with his mother,
+who, we hope, will take the magistrate's excellent advice, and keep the
+child from begging--that is why he has spent Christmas in the
+cells--lest he be sent to a school for eight years, and she have to pay
+for him--God help her! she does not look as though she could afford very
+high terms. A bruised and bleeding woman, not young or good-looking,
+enters the box with her head bound up. Her lord and master confronts her
+in the dock. It is the "old, old story." A drop of drink yesterday--the
+day of the Great Nativity, never forget--series of "drops of drink" all
+day long; and, at five o'clock, just when gentility was beginning to
+think of dinner, the kitchen poker was used with frightful effect. A
+triangular cut over the right eye, and another in the dangerous
+neighbourhood of the left ear, administered with that symbol of domestic
+bliss, the kitchen poker, sends the wife doubled up into a corner, with
+an infant of two years old in her arms. The head of the family goes out
+for a walk after his exertions. The woman lies there bleeding until the
+neighbours hear her "mourning," as she terms it--the result being that
+the lord and master's "constitutional" is cut short by a policeman, and
+the happy pair are this morning separated for six months, at the
+expiration of which period Paterfamilias is to find surety for another
+six months' good behaviour. Such, starred round with endless episodes of
+"drunk and disorderly," "foul language," and so on, is our first tableau
+this Boxing-day. It is not a pleasant one. Let us pass on.
+
+Along Oxford Street, despite the Bank Holidays Act, many shops are open,
+chiefly those devoted to the sale of articles eatable, drinkable, and
+avoidable; these last being in the shape of chemists' shops, and shops
+for Christmas presents--to be shunned by miserly old bachelors. Let us
+turn into the British Museum and see sensible, decorous Boxing-day
+there. At the corner of Museum Street there is a lively itinerant
+musician, evidently French, who plays the fiddle until his bow tumbles
+all to pieces, but he goes on playing with the stick as though nothing
+had happened. When his instrument has come entirely to grief he turns to
+a clarionet, which he carries under his arm, and plays "Mourir pour la
+Patrie" with extraordinary vocal effect and irreverent gestures.
+Punch-and-Judy is largely attended at the other end; Punch is
+kitchen-pokering his wife, too, like the gentleman we have just left;
+but we pass in with the crowds to the Museum itself. Halting a moment
+in the reading-room, to jot down there a few notes, one is struck with
+the scanty show of students. _They_ are spending Boxing-day somewhere
+else. Passing through the little knot of people who are permitted by
+special order to come as far as the door of the reading-room, and who
+evidently regard the readers as some curious sort of animal exhibited
+for their special delectation--perhaps the book-"worm" of which they
+have heard so much--we go up the stairs, now thronged with crowds in
+unwonted broadcloth and fragrant with the odour of the inevitable
+orange. Next to the drinking fountain, which is decidedly the chief
+attraction, comes the gorilla, and then the extinct animals. One stout
+old lady, contemplating the megatherium and mastodon, inquires in what
+parts "them creeturs" are to be found, and seems considerably damped by
+being informed that Nature has been "out" of such articles for several
+aeons. The mummies, with the bones of their toes sticking out, also come
+in for a large share of admiration. There is a good deal of rough
+flirtation going on; but, on the whole, the pleasure is rather of a
+placid order, though still contrasting favourably with the settled gloom
+visible on the faces of the attendants in the various galleries. How
+well we can understand such gloom! How utterly hateful must that giant
+elk and overgrown extinct armadillo be to a man condemned to spend a
+lifetime in their close contemplation!
+
+But let us pass on to the artistic Boxing-day keepers at the National
+Gallery. The walk will take us through the Seven Dials, and can scarcely
+fail to be suggestive. It is now one o'clock, the traditional hour of
+dinner; and in Broad Street, St. Giles's, I see, for the first time
+to-day, the human barometer evidently standing at "much wet." A
+gentleman in a grey coat and red comforter, who bears palpable signs of
+having been more than once on his back, has just reached that perplexing
+point of inebriety when he can walk quickly or run, but cannot stand
+still or walk steadily. He is pursued by small children, mostly girls,
+after whom, every now and then, he runs hopelessly, to their intense
+gratification. The poultry and bird shops in the Seven Dials are objects
+of some attraction, though they savour too much of "business" to be in
+very great force. The National Gallery is crowded with unaccustomed art
+students. There is about the visitors a quiet air of doing their duty,
+and being determined to go through with it at any price. One
+brazen-faced quean speculates audibly--in fact, very audibly--as to
+which "picter" she should choose if she had her "pick," and decent
+matrons pass the particularly High Art of the old masters with
+half-averted gaze, as though they were not quite sure of doing right in
+countenancing such exhibitions. Hogarth's evergreen "Marriage a la
+Mode" is a great centre of attraction, and the youngsters never tire of
+listening, as "with weeping and with laughter still is the story told"
+over and over again by their elders. Gainsborough's likeness of Mrs.
+Siddons is also a great favourite; but perhaps the picture that attracts
+most attention is Van Eyck's "John Arnolfini, of Lucca, and his Wife."
+The gentleman wears a portentous hat, which tickled the fancy of the
+Boxing-day people immensely. There were great speculations too among
+them as to whether the curious Tuscan pictures at the top of the stairs
+were "needlework" or not. Still, who shall say that these visitors were
+not the better for their visit, surrounded as they were by forms of
+beauty on every side, even if they did not examine them with the eyes of
+connoisseurs?
+
+Boxing-day on the river: The silent street is almost deserted. There is
+no rush for the Express boat to-day. It is literally the
+streets--muddier and sloppier than the Thames itself--that are the
+attraction. Some little boys are making the trip from Westminster to
+London Bridge as a treat; and it is an intense joke with them to pretend
+to be dreadfully seasick. Boxing-day in the City is synonymous with
+stagnation. It is a howling wilderness, with nobody to howl. On the
+Metropolitan Railway I verily believe travellers were tripping it like
+the little boys on board the penny boat. And so theatre time draws on,
+and the interest of Boxing-day grows to a climax. Soon after five
+o'clock groups furtively collect outside the playhouses, half-ashamed of
+being so early, but gathering courage from numbers to form the
+disorderly queue, so unlike that of a Parisian theatre. Boxing-night in
+the theatres others will describe. It is too much to expect of one whose
+mission has been the whole day long on the streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE VIGIL OF THE DERBY.
+
+
+In those days--happily now gone by--when public strangulation was the
+mode in Merry England, there was always an evident fascination
+appertaining to the spot where, on the morrow, some guilty wretch was to
+expiate his crimes on the gallows. Long before the erection of that
+elegant apparatus commenced, and generally on a Sunday evening, when
+decent citizens had newly come from houses of God, where they had heard
+the message of life, crowds began to collect on that central spot in the
+heart of the great City dedicated to sudden and violent death. The
+coming event seemed to cast its shadow before; and throughout the night
+the roisterer or belated traveller made a detour to visit the human
+shambles. I confess to having felt the attraction. I could not then
+bring myself to be present at the strangulation proper; so, as the
+nearest approach to a "sensation," sometimes visited Newgate on the eve
+of the victim elect's last morrow. In the same way, being unfortunate
+enough to be London-bound on the day of our great annual holiday, and
+having heard graphic accounts of the Downs on the eve of the Derby, I
+determined that year, as I could not go to the race by day, to visit the
+racecourse by night. Let me own the soft impeachment: I am not a racing
+man--not in any degree "horsey." When I do go to the Derby it is to see
+the bipeds rather than the quadrupeds; to empty the hamper from Fortnum
+and Mason's, rather than to study the "names, weights, and colours of
+the riders" on the "c'rect card." If you prefer to have the sentiment in
+Latin--and there is no doubt Latin does go much farther than English--I
+am not one of those "quos pulverem Olympicum collegisse juvat," except
+in so far that "homo sum; nihil humanum alienum a me puto." It was to
+see humanity under a new aspect, I took the last train to Epsom on the
+eve of the Derby.
+
+In order to combine business with pleasure, and economy with both, I
+took a third-class ticket at Victoria, and was fortunate enough to find
+a compartment already partially occupied by a nigger troupe. In this,
+which under ordinary circumstances I should have avoided, I took my
+seat, and was regaled all the way down with choice morceaux from the
+repertoire of my musical friends. The "talking man" of the party, too,
+enlivened the proceedings by anxiously inquiring of the porters at the
+different stations what they would take in the way of refreshment, and
+issuing unlimited orders to imaginary waiters on their behoof. It was a
+strange sensation, being whirled away from home and bed down to a wild
+heath towards midnight; and as we neared our destination, the air began
+to "bite shrewdly," and the sky to look uncommonly like rain--a
+contretemps which would have been fatal to my proposed experience. We
+had to change carriages at Sutton, and here a sociable Aunt-Sally-man,
+struggling under the implements of his craft, sought to beguile me from
+my African friends by offers of a shake-down in his tent, with which he
+proposed to walk across from Ewell and erect, instead of journeying on
+to Epsom. My Ethiopian friends jumped at the proposal, and forthwith
+fraternized with Aunt Sally. I determined to follow out my previous
+plans; so having drunk to our next merry meeting, we parted, ostensibly
+until to-morrow, but, I fear, for ever.
+
+I had been led to expect "high jinks" at Epsom--a sort of Carnival in
+the quiet town. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. The
+town, so far as outward semblance went, was almost as quiet as ever. A
+few sporting men thronged the bar of the principal hotel, and stragglers
+hung about the low beer-shops; but there was nothing at all to indicate
+the imminence of the great event. So I fell back on my usual expedient
+of applying to the executive, and found not only an active and
+intelligent but exceedingly civil sergeant of police, to whom I told my
+errand. He was pleased with the novelty of the idea, and as he happened
+to be then going the round of the town previously to visiting the
+course, I cast in my lot with him for the night. We first visited what
+he termed the "German Opera," on Epsom Common. This is an encampment of
+organ-grinders, hurdy-gurdy-players, German bands, &c., who pitch their
+tents here instead of going to the Downs. It was, however, rather late
+when we reached the spot where these artists were bivouacking, and they
+had retired for the night, so we could not form much idea of them beyond
+their numbers, which seemed considerable, and their odour, which was
+unfragrant. Thence we passed down a short alley to a railway arch, which
+was aglow with many fires, and rang with the sounds of many voices.
+Bidding me make no observation, whatever might be said, and requesting
+me to try and look like an officer in plain clothes, my cicerone led me
+into the strange arcade, which I certainly could not have entered
+without his protection. Hundreds of men, women, and boys were gathered
+in groups round coke fires, some partaking of coffee, others singing,
+the majority sleeping. After satisfying himself that the fires were
+legitimate ones, and not composed of broken fences, my guide left this
+teeming hive unmolested. We then steered for the course, not by the high
+road, but skirting it along the fields. The policeman, like myself,
+carried a stout stick, which really seemed to be endowed with creative
+powers that night. Wherever he poked that staff--and he did poke it
+everywhere--a human being growled, or snored, or cursed. Every bush
+along the hedgerow bore its occupant--often its group of four or five,
+sometimes a party of a dozen or a score. One shed filled with carts
+yielded at least a hundred, though the sergeant informed me it must have
+been already cleared several times that evening, as he had a file of men
+along the road, besides a cordon inside the Park palings, which border a
+great portion of it. It is with these palings the tramps chiefly do
+mischief, pulling them down to make fires along their route. Wherever my
+guide found these, he trampled the fires remorselessly out, and kicked
+the burning embers over the sleepers in a manner that must have been
+uncomfortable. The men submitted in comparative silence; but the
+ladies--where there happened to be any--exerted the privilege of their
+sex, and treated us to some choice specimens of the vernacular. In one
+case, a female cried out that he was kicking the fire over the
+"childer;" and, sure enough, we found half-a-dozen little ones huddled
+up asleep. The policeman remonstrated with her for bringing them to such
+a place; but she informed us it was to "make their living." In what way,
+she did not add. To us, it seemed very much like reversing the process,
+and causing their death. Fancy young children camping out on the road to
+the Downs at midnight! Boys of thirteen and fourteen abounded, sleeping
+in large groups along the hedgerows, and sometimes out in the open
+fields, where the dew lay thick.
+
+At length, after many windings, we reached the Downs. The white booths,
+following the direction of the course in their sinuous lines, looked
+like stately white marble streets and crescents in the dim, uncertain
+light of that hour which, between May 31 and June 1, is neither day nor
+night. Under the stands and around the booths, tabernacling beneath
+costermongers' barrows, and even lying out openly sub dio, were still
+the hundreds of human beings. In one small drinking booth was a sight
+the policeman said he had never seen equalled in his twenty years'
+experience. A long, narrow table ran down the centre, with benches on
+each side. The table itself was occupied with recumbent figures; on the
+benches the sleepers sat, bending forward over it, and under the benches
+sleepers sprawled upon the grass. The whole of the front of the booth
+was open, and exposed to the biting wind; but there they snored as
+calmly as though on eider-down. We climbed the steps of the stand above
+the ring, and waited for the day, which slowly broke to the song of the
+lark and nightingale over that strange scene. With the first suspicion
+of dawn the sleepers awoke and got up; what for I cannot imagine. It was
+barely two o'clock, and how they were going to kill the next twelve
+hours I could not guess. Rise they did however, and an itinerant vendor
+of coffee, who was literally up with the lark, straightway began to
+drive a roaring trade. I saw no stronger drink than this consumed; nor
+did I witness a single case of drunkenness during the whole night. But
+this was before the Derby! At this juncture we were all surprised by the
+apparition of a hansom-lamp toiling up the hill. Two adventurous
+gentlemen from Liverpool, it appeared, had arrived at the Euston
+Station, and insisted upon being driven at once to an hotel on Epsom
+Downs. The Jehu, secure of a fabulous fare, drove them accordingly; and,
+of course, had to drive them back again to Epsom--the hotels on the
+Downs quietly but firmly declining to be knocked up at that untimely
+hour even by gentlemen from Liverpool. As the sun showed his first
+up-slanting rays above the horizon, with the morning star hanging
+impertinently near, the two gipsy encampments began to exhibit signs of
+life. The Zingari encamp exclusively by themselves, and some picturesque
+specimens of the male sex, looking remarkably like the lively photograph
+of the Greek brigands, showed themselves on the outskirts. The ladies
+reserved themselves for later in the day. My guide cautioned me not to
+attempt to enter the encampment, as the men are dangerous, and their
+position on the Downs a privileged one. It was only when the tramps were
+trespassing, or evidently bent on mischief, that they were disturbed. On
+the Downs they were monarchs of all they surveyed.
+
+When the sun was fairly up, and the morning mists rolled away from those
+glorious Downs, I felt my mission accomplished. I had seen the sun rise
+on Epsom course. As it was many hours before a train would return, and
+I still felt fresh, I resolved to give the coup de grace to my night's
+adventure by walking home--at least, walking to the radius of workmen's
+trains. The vanguard of the Derby procession now began to show strongly
+in the shape of the great unwashed climbing the ridge of the hill by the
+paddock; and I felt I should see some characteristic sights along the
+road. Bidding good-bye, therefore, to my guide at Epsom, I set out on
+foot along the now-populous road, mine being the only face turned
+London-wards. Carts laden with trestles and boards for stands now began
+to be in force. By-and-by the well-known paper bouquets and outrageous
+head-gear showed themselves as forming the cargo of costermongers'
+carts. The travellers were all chatty, many of them chaffy. Frequent
+were the inquiries I had to answer as to the hour and the distance to
+the course. Occasionally a facetious gentleman anxiously inquired
+whether it was all over, as I was returning? I believe the majority
+looked upon me as a harmless lunatic, since I was travelling away from
+Epsom on the Derby morning, and pitied me accordingly. An Irishman aptly
+illustrated the genial character of Hibernian chaff as compared with
+English. "Good day to your honner!" he said. "It does me good to see
+your honner's happy face again;" though, of course, he had never seen it
+before. As I passed on with a brief salutation, he took the trouble to
+run after me, and slapping me on the shoulder, added, in a beautiful
+brogue: "Wait a minnit; I don't want to ax you for anything, but only to
+tell you how glad I am to see yer honner's happy face agin. Good
+mornin'!"
+
+So through Ewell, Cheam, and Morden, up to Tooting; the throng
+increasing at every mile. At Balham, finding no train for an hour, I
+footed it again. I found preparations for endless Aunt Sally already
+being made on Clapham Common. Soon after six, I jumped into a train on
+the London, Chatham, and Dover, and came home "with the milk;" having
+not only had a healthy night's exercise--for the weather had all along
+been splendid--but having added to my experiences of London life one new
+"wrinkle" at least: I had seen the life of St. Giles's kitchen and
+Bethnal Green lodging-house a la campagne. What I had already seen under
+the garish candlelight of the Seven Dials and Commercial Road I saw
+gilded into picturesqueness by that glorious and never-to-be-forgotten
+sunrise on Epsom Downs which ushered in the Derby Day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE WIFESLAYER'S "HOME."
+
+
+There is something very weird and strange in that exceptional avocation
+which takes one to-day to a Lord Mayor's feast or a croquet tournament,
+to-morrow to a Ritualistic service, next day to the home of a homicide.
+I am free to confess that each has its special attractions for me. I am
+very much disposed to "magnify my office" in this respect, not from any
+foolish idea that I am "seeing life," as it is termed, but still from a
+feeling that the proper study of mankind _is_ man in all his varied
+aspects.
+
+It need not always be a morbid feeling that takes one to the scene of a
+murder or other horrible event, though, as we well know, the majority of
+those who visit such localities do go out of mere idle curiosity. It may
+be worth while, however, for some who look a little below the surface of
+things, to gauge, as it were, the genius loci, and see whether, in the
+influences surrounding the spot and its inhabitants there be anything to
+afford a clue as to the causes of the crime.
+
+In summing up the evidence concerning a certain tragedy at Greenwich,
+where a man killed his wife by throwing a knife, the coroner "referred
+to the horrible abode--a coal cellar--in which the family, nine in
+number, had resided, which was unfit for human habitation, and ought to
+have been condemned by the parish authorities." Having seen and
+described in these pages something of how the poor are housed in the
+cellars of St. Giles's and Bethnal Green, and traced the probable
+influences of herding together the criminal and innocent in the low
+lodging-houses, it occurred to me to visit the scene of this awful
+occurrence, and see how far the account given before the coroner's jury
+was correct.
+
+With this view I took the train to Greenwich, and, consulting the first
+policeman I met, was by him directed to Roan Street as the scene of the
+tragedy. Roan Street I found to be a somewhat squalid by-street, running
+out of Skelton Street, close--it seemed significantly close--to the old
+parish church. One could not help thinking of the familiar proverb, "The
+nearer the church, the farther from God." The actual locality is called
+Munyard's Row, being some dozen moderate-sized houses in Roan Street,
+let out in lodgings, the particular house in question being again, with
+a horrible grotesqueness, next door but one to a beer-shop called the
+"Hit or Miss!" I expected to find Roan Street the observed of all
+observers, but the nine days' wonder was over since what Dickens called
+the "ink-widge." Indeed, a homicide has ceased to be a nine days'
+wonder now. This only happened on Saturday; and when I was there, on the
+following Wednesday, Roan Street had settled down into its wonted
+repose. A woman with a child was standing on the door-step, and, on my
+inquiring if I could see the kitchen, referred me to Mrs. Bristow at the
+chandler's shop, who farms the rent of these populous tenements; for
+Munyard's Row is peopled "from garret to basement," and a good way
+underground too.
+
+Mrs. Bristow, a civil, full-flavoured Irishwoman, readily consented to
+act cicerone, and we went through the passage into the back garden,
+where all the poor household furniture of the homicide's late "home" was
+stacked. It did not occupy a large space, consisting only of the
+bedstead on which the poor woman sat when the fatal deed was done, two
+rickety tables, and two chairs. These were all the movables of a family
+of nine. The mattress was left inside--too horrible a sight, after what
+had taken place, to be exposed to the light of day.
+
+We passed--Honora Bristow and myself--with a "gossip" or two, who had
+come to see what I was after, into the back kitchen, for the wifeslayer
+had two rooms en suite, though the family elected to occupy only one.
+The floor of this apartment was either mother earth, or, if flagged, so
+grimed with filth as to be a very fair resemblance of the soil. Here
+stood only that terrible memento, the drenched mattress. In the front
+kitchen--which, let me state, would have been palatial in comparison
+with the Seven Dials or Spitalfields, had it been only clean--there was
+very little light, for the window, which was well down below the surface
+of the pavement, had not a whole pane in it, and the broken ones had
+been stuffed up with old rags which were very protuberant indeed. That
+window alone would show that the menage had not been a judicious one.
+
+"He was a quiet man," said Honora, "and gave trouble to no one. He and
+his wife never had a word." The gossips all believed that the story of
+the throwing the knife was true, notwithstanding the medical evidence
+went against it. The boy of twelve, who provoked the father to throw the
+knife, was evidently the incubus of the wretched home. "Almost before
+the breath was out of his mother, that boy was searching about the bed
+to see if he could find any ha'pence," said Honora. That boy was
+evidently not satisfactory. His evidence was refused by the Coroner,
+because he could not read or write. But then what had been the child's
+surroundings? They have been described above. The man himself had a
+patriarchal family of seven, from a girl of seventeen down to a baby of
+two, and all, as we have seen, slept in one room, though there were two,
+and though a bucket of whitewash would have made the pair habitable,
+besides giving the lad some useful employment.
+
+The father was of no particular occupation, picking up odd jobs, and
+leaning largely to the shrimp trade. He stood high in Honora Bristow's
+regards as having regularly paid his _1s. 9d._ a week for five years,
+or, at least, being some _5s._ behind now; a sum which will probably be
+covered by the chattels in the back garden. The poor home was silent
+then. The mother lay calmly in the dead-house, after the post-mortem
+examination, "terrible cut and hacked about," said the one gossip who
+had ventured to go and see her quondam friend. The father was in
+Maidstone Gaol. The little children were being taken care of by the
+grandmother until such time as the mother should have been buried, when
+they would gravitate to the workhouse.
+
+In the meantime the boy, aet. twelve, the cause of all the mischief,
+disports himself in Munyard's Row as though nothing had happened.
+Perhaps he is the most difficult part of the problem; but the whole
+question of the home is a puzzling one. The boy is evidently the product
+of the home. It very much concerns the community that such produce
+should become extinct; and therefore the sooner some improvements can be
+introduced into such homes the better. In the first place, there is
+decidedly too little light. Sunshine, under any circumstances, would
+have been impossible there. The advisability of human beings burrowing
+underground may be questioned, whether in cellars or genteel underground
+kitchens.
+
+Then again, one bedroom--nay, one bedstead--for father, mother, and
+seven children ranging from seventeen to two is decidedly deficient.
+This sounds almost too horrible to be true; but I was careful to
+ascertain that the eldest girl, though in domestic service in Greenwich,
+slept at the "home." More horrible still is the fact disclosed, that
+they had a second room, yet had not the decency to use it. "De mortuis
+nil nisi bonum." They lived according to their light; but they had very
+little light, literally or figuratively. Surely we want to teach our
+poor the simple rules of hygiene. One of the gossips, a clean, healthy
+little woman, with a fine baby at her breast, referred with pride to her
+poor kitchen, identical in all respects, save dirt, with the home.
+
+Then, again, there was one thing that struck me forcibly, and that was
+the sort of qualified reprobation with which these good gossips--really
+decent people in their way--spoke of the habit of throwing knives.
+Honora had once thrown one at her daughter of eighteen, but never meant
+to do so again. And all this under the bells of the old parish church of
+Greenwich in the year of grace 1870!
+
+Clearly, however, the first question is what to do with the boy, aet.
+twelve. Comporting himself as he did in the face of the awful tragedy he
+had caused, this young gentleman must clearly not be lost sight of, or
+it will be the worse for himself and those with whom he is brought into
+contact. Nay, in a few years, he will become a centre of influence, and
+radiate around him another such "home," worse, perhaps, than the first.
+
+Let our Social Science so far break through the programme it may have
+laid down as to touch on this very appropriate subject of squalid homes,
+and its next sitting may be a very useful one indeed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+BATHING IN THE FAR EAST.
+
+
+Visions of Oriental splendour and magnificence float across the
+imagination at the mere mention of the storied East. Soaring above all
+the routine of ordinary existence and the commonplaces of history, that
+creative faculty within us pictures Pactolus with its golden sands; or
+recalls from the legendary records of childhood the pomp of Aladdin's
+Princess going to her luxurious bath; or brings back to mind the almost
+prosaic minuteness with which the Greek poet describes the bath of
+Ulysses when he returned from his wanderings. In the East the bath has
+ever been an institution--not merely a luxury, but a necessity; and it
+is a proof of the eclectic tendencies of our generation that we have
+domesticated here in the West that great institution, the Hammam, or
+Turkish bath, which the Romans were wise enough to adopt, after their
+Eastern experience, more than two thousand years ago. Of none of these
+Oriental splendours, however, has the present narrative to tell. I ask
+those interested in social questions to take a very early Sunday
+expedition to the East End of London, and catch a glimpse of those whom,
+after what I have to relate, it would be libel to call the "Great
+Unwashed." We will look at East London engaged in the interesting
+process of performing its ablutions.
+
+Very enjoyable is a Saturday afternoon stroll in Victoria Park. Those
+gentlemen of London who sit at home at ease are apt to think of the East
+End as a collection of slums, with about as much breathing space for its
+congregated thousands as that supplied to the mites in a superannuated
+Cheshire cheese. Let us pass through Bethnal Green Road, and, leaving
+behind the new Museum, go under a magic portal into the stately acres
+which bear the name of our Sovereign. On our right is the Hospital for
+Diseases of the Chest, of which the foundation-stone was laid by the
+Prince Consort, and the new wing of which our Orientals hope one day to
+see opened by her Majesty in person. Most convincing test of all is the
+situation of this Consumptive Hospital--showing the salubrity of the
+Eastern breezes. Inside the imposing gate the visitor will find
+extensive cricket-grounds interspersed with broad pastures, whose flocks
+are the reverse of Arcadian in hue. Cricket-balls whiz about us like
+shells at Inkermann; and the suggestive "Thank you" of the scouts forces
+the passer-by into unwonted activity as he shies the ball to the bowler.
+Then there are roundabouts uncountable, and gymnasia abundant. There are
+bosquets for the love-makers, and glassy pools, studded with islands
+innumerable, over which many a Lady of the Lake steers her shallop,
+while Oriental sailor-boys canoe wildly along. There are flower-beds
+which need not blush to be compared with Kew or the Crystal Palace. But
+it is not with such that we are now concerned. On one of those same
+lakes over which, on Saturday evening, sailors in embryo float their
+mimic craft--and one young gentleman, slightly in advance of the rest,
+directs a very miniature steamship--we see boards suggesting that daily,
+from four to eight A.M., the Orientals may immerse themselves in the
+limpid and most tempting waters. The depth, they are paternally
+informed, increases towards the centre, buoys marking where it is six
+feet; so that our Eastern friends have no excuse for suicide by
+drowning.
+
+East London birds are early birds, and to catch them at their bath you
+must be literally up with the lark. Towards six o'clock is the most
+fashionable hour for our metropolitan Pactolus; and, as it is some miles
+distant from what can, by any stretch of courtesy, be called the West
+End, and as there are no workmen's trains on a Sunday morning, a long
+walk or cab drive is inevitable for all who would witness the disporting
+of our amphibious Orientals. Rising thus betimes on a recent "Sunday
+morning before the bells did ring," I sped me to the bathing pond,
+judiciously screened off by shrubs from the main path. It was between
+the appointed hours that I arrived; and, long before I saw anything, the
+ringing laughter of the young East reached me through the shrubs.
+Threading the path which led to the lake, I found the water literally
+alive with men, boys, and hobbledehoys, revelling in the water like
+young hippopotami on the Nile. Boys were largely in the ascendant--boys
+from ten to fifteen years of age swam like young Leanders, and sunned
+themselves on the bank, in the absence of towels, as the preparative to
+dressing, or smoked their pipes in a state of nature. It is only just to
+say that while I remained, I heard little if any language that could be
+called "foul." Very free and easy, of course, were the remarks, and
+largely illustrative of the vulgar tongue; not without a share of light
+chaff directed against myself, whose presence by the lake-side puzzled
+my young friends. I received numerous invitations to "peel" and have a
+dip; and one young urchin assured me in the most patronizing way
+possible that he "wouldn't laugh at me" if I could not get on. The
+language may not have been quite so refined as that which I heard a few
+days before from the young gentlemen with tall hats and blue ties at
+Lord's; but I do say advisedly that it would more than bear comparison
+with that of the bathers in the Serpentine, where my ears have often
+been assailed with something far worse than anything I heard in East
+London. In the matter of clothes, too, the apparel of our young friends
+was indeed Eastern in its simplicity; yet they left it unprotected on
+the bank with a confidence that did honour to our common humanity in
+general, and to the regulations of Victoria Park in particular. Swimming
+in some sort was almost universal among the bathers, showing that their
+visit to the water was not an isolated event in their existence, but a
+constant as it is a wholesome habit. The Oriental population were for
+the most part apparently well fed; and one saw there lithe and active
+frames, either careering gracefully along in the old style of swimming,
+or adopting the new and scientific method which causes the human form
+divine to approach very nearly to the resemblance of a rather excited
+grampus.
+
+But inexorable Time warns the youthful bathers that they must sacrifice
+to the Graces; and some amusing incidents occur during the process.
+Generally speaking, though the amount of attire is not excessive,
+considerable effort in the way of pinning and hitching is required to
+get things in their proper places. A young gentleman was reduced to
+inexpressible grief, and held up to the scorn of his fellow-bathers, by
+the fact that, in the course of his al fresco toilette, one of his feet
+went through his inexpressibles in an honourable quarter, instead of
+proceeding by the proper route; the error interested his friends
+vastly--for they are as critical as the most fastidious could be of any
+singularity in attire, and they held the unfortunate juvenile in his
+embarrassing position for a long time, to his intense despair, until he
+was rescued from his ignoble position by some grown-up friend. Then,
+the young East is prone to the pleasures of tobacco. It was, I presume,
+before breakfast with most of the bathers, and smoking under those
+conditions is a trial even to the experienced. Some, pale from their
+long immersion--for theirs was no transient dip--grew paler still after
+they had discussed the pipe or cigar demanded of them by rigorous
+custom. Fashion reigns supreme among the gamins of the East as well as
+among the ladies of the West. Off they went, however, cleaner and
+fresher than before--tacitly endorsing by their matutinal amusement the
+motto that has come down from the philosopher of old, and even now
+reigns supreme from Bermondsey to Belgravia, that "water is a most
+excellent thing."
+
+The day may arrive perhaps when, having embanked the Thames, we shall
+follow suit to the Seine and the Rhine, by tenanting it with cheap baths
+for the many. Until we do so, the stale joke of the "Great Unwashed"
+recoils upon ourselves, and is no less symptomatic of defective sanitary
+arrangements than the possibility of a drought in Bermondsey. But we are
+forgetting our bathers. They have gone, leaving the place to
+solitude--some, I hope, home to breakfast, others out among the
+flower-walks or on the greensward. It is a gloomy, overcast, muggy,
+unseasonable July morning; and the civil attendant by the lake-side
+tells me that the gathering has not been so large as usual. The young
+Orientals--as is the custom of their race--love sunshine. They get
+little enough of it, Heaven knows. The next bright Sunday morning, any
+one who happens to be awake between the hours mentioned, and who would
+like to add to his experiences of metropolitan existence, may do a worse
+thing, and see many a less pleasant sight, than if he hailed a hansom
+and drove by the principal entrance of Victoria Park to our Eastern
+Bath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+AMONG THE QUAKERS.
+
+
+There is no more engaging or solemn subject of contemplation than the
+decay of a religious belief. Right or wrong, by that faith men have
+lived and died, perhaps for centuries; and one cannot see it pass out
+from the consciousness of humanity without something more than a cursory
+thought as to the reasons of its decadence. Being led by exceptional
+causes to take a more than common interest in those forms of belief
+which lie beyond the pale of the Church of England, I was attracted by a
+notice in the public journals that on the following morning the Society
+of Friends would assemble from all parts of England and open a
+Conference to inquire into the causes which had brought about the
+impending decay of their body. So, then, the fact of such decay stood
+confessed. In most cases the very last persons to realize the unwelcome
+truth are those who hold the doctrines that are becoming effete.
+Quakerism must, I felt, be in a very bad condition indeed when its own
+disciples called together a conference to account for its passing away.
+Neither men nor communities, as a rule, act crowner's 'quest on their
+own decease. That faith, it was clear, must be almost past praying for
+which, disbelieving, as our modern Quietism does, the efficacy of
+assemblies, and trusting all to the inward illumination of individuals,
+should yet summon a sort of Quaker Oecumenical Council. I thought I
+should like to probe this personal light myself, and by inquiring of one
+or two of the members of the body, learn what they thought of the
+matter. I was half inclined to array myself in drab, and _tutoyer_ the
+first of the body I chanced to encounter in my walks abroad. But then it
+occurred to me how very seldom one did meet a Quaker nowadays except in
+the "month of Maying." I actually had to cast about for some time before
+I could select from a tolerably wide and heterogeneous circle of
+acquaintance two names of individuals belonging to the Society of
+Friends; though I could readily remember half a dozen of every other
+culte, from Ultramontanes down to Jumpers. These two, at all events, I
+would "interview," and so forestall the Conference with a little select
+synod of my own.
+
+It was possible, of course, to find a ludicrous side to the question;
+but, as I said, I approached it seriously. Sydney Smith, with his
+incorrigible habit of joking, questioned the existence of Quaker
+babies--a position which, if proven, would, of course, at once account
+for the diminution of adult members of the sect. It was true I had never
+seen a Quaker infant; but I did not therefore question their existence,
+any more than I believed postboys and certain humble quadrupeds to be
+immortal because I had never seen a dead specimen of either. The
+question I acknowledged at once to be a social and religious, not a
+physiological one. Why is Quakerism, which has lived over two hundred
+years, from the days of George Fox, and stood as much persecution as any
+system of similar age, beginning to succumb to the influences of peace
+and prosperity? Is it the old story of Capua and Cannae over again?
+Perhaps it is not quite correct to say that it is now beginning to
+decline; nor, as a fact, is this Conference the first inquiry which the
+body itself has made into its own incipient decay. It is even said that
+symptoms of such an issue showed themselves as early as the beginning of
+the eighteenth century; and prize essays have been from time to time
+written as to the causes, before the Society so far fell in with the
+customs of the times as to call a council for the present very difficult
+and delicate inquiry. The first prize essay by William Rountree
+attributes the falling off to the fact that the early Friends, having
+magnified a previously slighted truth--that of the Indwelling Word--fell
+into the natural error of giving it an undue place, so depriving their
+representations of Christian doctrine of the symmetry they would
+otherwise have possessed, and influencing their own practices in such a
+way as to contract the basis on which Christian fellowship rests. A
+second prize essay, called "The Peculium," takes a still more practical
+view, and points out in the most unflattering way that the Friends, by
+eliminating from their system all attention to the arts, music, poetry,
+the drama, &c., left nothing for the exercise of their faculties save
+eating, drinking, and making money. "The growth of Quakerism," says Mr.
+T. Hancock, the author of this outspoken essay, "lies in its
+enthusiastic tendency. The submission of Quakers to the commercial
+tendency is signing away the life of their own schism. Pure enthusiasm
+and the pursuit of money (which _is_ an enthusiasm) can never coexist,
+never co-operate; but," he adds, "the greatest loss of power reserved
+for Quakerism is the reassumption by the Catholic Church of those
+Catholic truths which Quakerism was separated to witness and to
+vindicate."
+
+I confess myself, however, so far Quaker too that I care little for the
+written testimony of friends or foes. I have, in all my religious
+wanderings and inquiries, adopted the method of oral examination; so I
+found myself on a recent November morning speeding off by rail to the
+outskirts of London to visit an ancient Quaker lady whom I knew very
+slenderly, but who I had heard was sometimes moved by the spirit to
+enlighten a little suburban congregation, and was, therefore, I felt the
+very person to enlighten me too, should she be thereunto moved. She was
+a venerable, silver-haired old lady, clad in the traditional dress of
+her sect, and looking very much like a living representation of
+Elizabeth Fry. She received me very cordially; though I felt as if I
+were a fussy innovation of the nineteenth century breaking in upon the
+sacred, old-fashioned quiet of her neat parlour. She "thee'd and thou'd"
+me to my heart's content: and--to summarize the conversation I held with
+her--it was to the disuse of the old phraseology and the discarding of
+the peculiar dress that she attributed most of the falling off which she
+was much too shrewd a woman of the world to shut her eyes to. These
+were, of course, only the outward and visible signs of a corresponding
+change within; but this was why the Friends fell off, and gravitated, as
+she confessed they were doing, to steeple-houses, water-dipping, and
+bread-and-wine-worship. She seemed to me like a quiet old Prophetess
+Anna chanting a "Nunc Dimittis" of her own on the passing away of her
+faith. She would be glad to depart before the glory had quite died out.
+She said she did not hope much from the Conference, and, to my
+amazement, rather gloried in the old irreverent title given by the
+Independents to her forefathers from their "quaking and trembling" when
+they heard the Word of God, though she preferred still more the older
+title of "Children of the Light." She was, in fact, a rigid old
+Conservative follower of George Fox, from the top of her close-bordered
+cap to the skirts of her grey silk gown. I am afraid my countenance
+expressed incredulity as to her rationale of the decay; for, as I rose
+to go, she said, "Thou dost not agree, friend, with what I have said to
+thee--nay, never shake thy head; it would be wonderful if thou didst,
+when our own people don't. Stay; I'll give thee a note to my son in
+London, though he will gainsay much of what I have told thee." She gave
+me the letter, which was just what I wanted, for I felt I had gained
+little beyond a pleasant experience of old-world life from my morning's
+jaunt. I partook of her kindly hospitality, was shown over her
+particularly cosy house, gardens, and hothouses, and meditated, on my
+return journey, upon many particulars I learnt for the first time as to
+the early history of Fox; realizing what a consensus there was between
+the experiences of all illuminati. I smiled once and again over the
+quaint title of one of Fox's books which my venerable friend had quoted
+to me--viz., "A Battle-door for Teachers and Professors to learn Plural
+and Singular. _You_ to _Many_, and _Thou_ to _One_; Singular, One,
+_Thou_; Plural, Many, _You_." While so meditating, my cab deposited me
+at the door of a decidedly "downy" house, at the West End, where my
+prospective friend was practising in I will not mention which of the
+learned professions. Both the suburban cottage of the mother and the
+London menage of the son assured me that they had thriven on Quakerism;
+and it was only then I recollected that a poor Quaker was as rare a
+personage as an infantile member of the Society.
+
+The young man--who neither in dress, discourse, nor manner differed
+from an ordinary English gentleman--smiled as he read his mother's
+lines, and, with a decorous apology for disturbing the impressions which
+her discourse might have left upon me, took precisely the view which had
+been latent in my own mind as to the cause of the Society's decay.
+Thoroughly at one with them still on the doctrine of the illuminating
+power of the Spirit in the individual conscience, he treated the archaic
+dress, the obsolete phraseology, the obstinate opposition to many
+innocent customs of the age, simply as anachronisms. He pointed with
+pride to the fact that our greatest living orator was a member of the
+Society; and claimed for the underlying principle of Quakerism--namely,
+the superiority of a conscience void of offence over written scripture
+or formal ceremony--the character of being in essence the _broadest_
+creed of Christendom. Injudicious retention of customs which had grown
+meaningless had, he felt sure, brought down upon the body that most
+fatal of all influences--contempt. "You see it in your own Church," he
+said. "There is a school which, by reviving obsolete doctrines and
+practices, will end in getting the Church of England disestablished as
+it is already disintegrated. You see it even in the oldest religion of
+all--Judaism. You see, I mean, a school growing into prominence and
+power which discards all the accumulations of ages, and by going back to
+real antiquity, at once brings the system more into unison with the
+century, and prevents that contempt attaching to it which will accrue
+wherever a system sets its face violently against the tone of current
+society." He thought the Conference quite unnecessary. "There needs no
+ghost come from the dead to tell us that, Horatio," he said, cheerily.
+"They will find out that Quakerism is not a proselytizing religion," he
+added; "which, of course, we knew before. They will point to the
+fashionable attire, the gold rings, and lofty chignons of our younger
+sisters as direct defiance of primitive custom. I am unorthodox
+enough"--and he smiled as he used that word--"to think that the attire
+is more becoming to my younger sisters, just as the Society's dress is
+to my dear mother." That young man, and the youthful sisters he told me
+of, stood as embodied answers to the question I had proposed to myself.
+They were outward and visible evidences of the doctrine of Quaker
+"development." The idea is not dead. The spirit is living still. It is
+the spirit that underlies all real religion--namely, the personal
+relation of the human soul to God as the source of illumination. That
+young man was as good a Quaker at heart as George Fox or William Penn
+themselves; and the "apology" he offered for his transformed faith was a
+better one than Barclay's own. I am wondering whether the Conference
+will come to anything like so sensible a conclusion as to why Quakerism
+is declining.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+PENNY READINGS.
+
+
+Who has ever penetrated beneath the surface of clerical society--meaning
+thereby the sphere of divinities (mostly female) that doth hedge a
+curate of a parish--without being sensible of the eligibility of Penny
+Readings for a place in Mystic London? When the Silly Season is at its
+very bathos; when the monster gooseberries have gone to seed and the
+showers of frogs ceased to fall; after the matrimonial efforts of
+Margate or Scarborough, and before the more decided business of the
+Christmas Decorations, then there is deep mystery in the penetralia of
+every parish. The great scheme of Penny Readings is being concocted, and
+all the available talent of the district--all such as is "orthodox" and
+"correct"--is laid under contribution.
+
+It is true to a proverb that we English people have a knack of doing the
+best possible things in the worst possible way; and that not
+unfrequently when we do once begin doing them we do them to death. It
+takes some time to convince us that the particular thing is worth doing
+at all; but, once persuaded, we go in for it with all our British might
+and main. The beard-and-moustache movement was a case in point. Some
+years ago a moustache was looked upon by serious English people as
+decidedly reckless and dissipated. A beard was fit only for a bandit.
+Nowadays, the mildest youth in the Young Men's Christian Association may
+wear a moustache without being denounced as "carnal," and paterfamilias
+revels in the beard of a sapeur, no misopogon daring to say him nay. To
+no "movement," however, does the adage "Vires acquirit eundo" apply more
+thoroughly than to that connected with "Penny Readings." Originally
+cropping up timidly in rustic and suburban parishes, it has of late
+taken gigantic strides, and made every parish where it does _not_ exist,
+rural or metropolitan, very exceptional indeed. There was a sound
+principle lying at the bottom of the movement, in so far as it was
+designed to bring about a fusion of classes; though, perhaps, it
+involved too much of an assumption that the "working man" had to be
+lectured to, or read to, by his brother in purple and fine linen. Still
+the theory was so far sound. Broad cloth was to impart to fustian the
+advantages it possessed in the way of reading, singing, fiddling, or
+what not; and that not gratuitously, which would have offended the
+working man's dignity, but for the modest sum of one penny, which,
+whilst Lazarus was not too poor to afford, Dives condescended to accept,
+and apply to charitable purposes.
+
+Such being, in brief, the theory of the Penny Reading movement, it may
+be interesting to see how it is carried out in practice. Now, in order
+to ascertain this, I availed myself of several opportunities afforded by
+the commencement of the Penny Reading season, which may be said to
+synchronize very nearly with the advent of London fogs, and attended the
+opening of the series in several widely different localities. In
+describing my experiences it would perhaps be invidious to specify the
+exact locality where they were gathered. I prefer to collate those
+experiences which range from Campden Hill to Camden Town inclusive. Amid
+many distinguishing traits there are common elements traceable in all,
+which may enable us to form some estimate of the working of the scheme,
+and possibly to offer a few words of advice to those interested therein.
+
+In most cases the Penny Readings are organized by the parochial clergy.
+We will be orthodox, and consider them so to be on the present occasion.
+In that case, the series would probably be opened by the incumbent in
+person. Some ecclesiastical ladies, young and middle-aged, who, rightly
+or wrongly, believe their mission is music, and to whom the curate is
+very probably an attraction, aid his efforts. Serious young men read,
+and others of a more mundane turn of mind sing doleful "comic" songs,
+culled from the more presentable of the music-hall repertoire. In many
+cases skilled amateurs or professionals lend their valuable assistance;
+and it is not too much to say that many a programme is presented to the
+audience--ay, and faithfully carried out too--which would do credit to a
+high-priced concert-room. But, then, who make up the audience? Gradually
+the "penny" people have been retiring into the background, as slowly but
+as surely as the old-fashioned pits at our theatres are coyly
+withdrawing under the boxes to make way for the stalls. The Penny
+Readings have been found to "draw" a higher class of audience than those
+for whom they were originally intended. The curate himself, if
+unmarried, secures the whole spinsterhood of the parish. His rendering
+of the lines, "On the receipt of my mother's picture out of Norfolk," is
+universally acknowledged to be "delightful;" and so, in course of time,
+the Penny Readings have been found to supply a good parochial income;
+and the incumbent, applying the proceeds to some local charity,
+naturally wishes to augment that income as much as possible. The
+consequence is that the penny people are as completely nowhere at the
+Penny Readings as they are in the free seats at their parish church. The
+whole of the body of the room is "stalled off," so to say, for sixpenny
+people, and the penny folk are stowed away anywhere. Then, again, in
+several programmes I have been at the pains to analyse, it is palpable
+that, whilst the bulk of the extracts fire over the heads of the poor
+people, one or two are inserted which are as studiously aimed at them as
+the parson's remarks in last Sunday's sermon against public-house
+loafing. Still "naming no names," I attended some readings where one of
+the clergy read a long extract from Bailey's "Festus," whilst he was
+succeeded by a vulgar fellow, evidently put in for "the gods," who
+delivered himself of a parody on Ingoldsby, full of the coarsest
+slang--nay, worse than that, abounding in immoralities which, I hope,
+made the parochial clergy sit on thorns, and place the reader on their
+"Index Expurgatorius" from henceforth.
+
+Excellent in its original design, the movement is obviously degenerating
+into something widely different. First, I would say, Let your Penny
+Readings be really Penny Readings, and not the egregious _lucus a non_
+they now are. If there is any distinction, the penny people should have
+the stalls, and then, _if there were room_, the "swells" (I must use an
+offensive term) could come in for sixpence, and stand at the back. But
+there should be no difference at all. Dives and Lazarus should sit
+together, or Dives stop away if he were afraid his fine linen may get
+soiled. Lazarus, at all events, must not be lost sight of, or treated to
+second best. The experiment of thus mingling them has been tried, I
+know, and succeeds admirably. Dives and Lazarus _do_ hobnob; and though
+the former occasionally tenders a silver coin for his entree, he does
+not feel that he is thereby entitled to a better seat. The committee
+gets the benefit of his liberality; and when the accounts are audited in
+the spring, Lazarus is immensely pleased at the figure his pence make.
+Then, again, as to the quality of the entertainment. Let us remember
+Lazarus comes there to be elevated. That was the theory we set out
+with--that we, by our reading, or our singing, or fiddling, or
+tootle-tooing on the cornet, could civilize our friend in fustian. Do
+not let us fall into the mistake, then, of descending to his standard.
+We want to level him up to ours. Give him the music we play in our own
+drawing-rooms; read the choice bits of fiction or poetry to his wife and
+daughters which we should select for our own. Amuse his poor little
+children with the same innocent nonsense with which we treat our young
+people. Above all, don't bore him. I do not say, never be serious,
+because it is a great mistake to think Lazarus can only guffaw. Read
+"The Death of Little Nell" or of Paul Dombey, and look at Mrs. Lazarus's
+eyes. Read Tom Hood's "Song of the Shirt," and see whether the poor
+seamstress out in the draughty penny seats at the back appreciates it or
+not. I did hear of one parish at the West End--the very same, by the
+way, I just now commended for sticking to the "penny" system--where
+Hood's "Nelly Gray," proposed to be read by the son of one of our best
+known actors, was tabooed as "unedifying." Lazarus does not come to be
+"edified," but to be amused. If he can be at the same time instructed,
+so much the better; but the bitter pill must be highly gilded, or he
+will pocket his penny and spend it in muddy beer at the public-house.
+If the Penny Reading can prevent this--and we see no reason why it
+should not--it will have had a mission indeed. Finally, I feel sure that
+there is in this movement, and lying only a very little way from the
+surface, a wholesome lesson for Dives too; and that is, how little
+difference there is, after all, between himself and Lazarus. I have been
+surprised to see how some of the more recherche "bits" of our genuine
+humorists have told upon the penny people, and won applause which the
+stalest burlesque pun or the nastiest music-hall inanity would have
+failed to elicit. Lazarus must be represented on the platform then, as
+well as comfortably located in the audience. He must be asked to read,
+or sing, or fiddle, or do whatever he can. If not, he will feel he is
+being read at, or sung to, or fiddled for, and will go off to the Magpie
+and Stump, instead of bringing missus and the little ones to the
+"pa'son's readings." Let the Penny Reading teach us the truth--and how
+true it is--that we are all "working men." What matters it whether we
+work with head or with hand--with brain or muscle?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+DARWINISM ON THE DEVIL.
+
+
+It has been said--perhaps more satirically than seriously--that theology
+could not get on without its devil. Certain it is that wherever there
+has been a vivid realization of the Spirit of Light, there, as if by way
+of antithesis, there has been an equally clear recognition of the Power
+of Darkness. Ormuzd--under whatever name recognised--generally supposes
+his opponent Ahriman; and there have even been times, as in the
+prevalence of the Manichean heresy, when the Evil Spirit has been
+affected in preference to the good--probably only another way of saying
+that morals have been held subordinate to intellect. But I am growing at
+once prosy and digressive.
+
+The announcement that the "Liberal Social Union" would devote one of
+their sweetly heretical evenings at the Beethoven Rooms, Harley Street,
+to an examination of the Darwinian development of the Evil Spirit, was
+one not to be scorned by an inquirer into the more eccentric and erratic
+phases of theology. Literary engagements stood in the way--for the
+social heretics gather on a Friday--but come what might, I would hear
+them discuss diabolism. Leaving my printer's devil to indulge in
+typographical errors according to his own sweet will (and I must confess
+he _did_ wander), I presented myself, as I thought in good time, at the
+portals of the Harley Street room, where his Satanic Majesty was to be
+heretically anatomized. But, alas! I had not calculated aright the power
+of that particular potentate to "draw." No sooner had I arrived at the
+cloak-room than the very hats and umbrellas warned me of the number of
+his votaries. Evening Dress was "optional;" and I frankly confess, at
+whatever risk of his displeasure, that I had not deemed Mephistopheles
+worthy of a swallow-tailed coat. I came in the garb of ordinary life;
+and at once felt uncomfortable when, mounting the stairs, I was received
+by a portly gentleman and an affable lady in violent tenue de soir. The
+room was full to the very doors; and as soon as I squeezed into earshot
+of the lecturer (who had already commenced his discourse) I was greeted
+by a heterodox acquaintance in elaborate dress-coat and rose-pink
+gloves. Experience in such matters had already told me--and thereupon I
+proved it by renewed personal agony--that an Englishman never feels so
+uncomfortable as when dressed differently from his compeers at any kind
+of social gathering. Mrs. T---- asks you to dinner, and you go clad in
+the correct costume in deference to the prandial meal, but find all the
+rest in morning dress. Mrs. G----, on the contrary, sends you a
+rollicking note to feed with a few friends--no party; and you go
+straight from office to find a dozen heavily-got-up people sniggering at
+your frock coat and black tie. However, as I said, on this occasion the
+lecturer, Dr. Zerffi, was in the thick of what proved to be a very
+attractive lecture; so I was not the observed of all observers for more
+than two or three minutes, and was able to give him my whole attention
+as soon as I had recovered from my confusion. Dr. Zerffi said:--
+
+Dr. Darwin's theory of evolution and selection has changed our modern
+mode of studying the inorganic and organic phenomena of nature, and
+investigating the realities of truth. His theory is not altogether new,
+having been first proclaimed by Leibnitz, and followed up with regard to
+history by Giovanni Battista Vico. Oken and Goethe amplified it towards
+the end of the last, and at the beginning of the present century.
+Darwin, however, has systematized the theory of evolution, and now the
+branches of human knowledge can only be advantageously pursued if we
+trace in all phenomena, whether material or spiritual, a beginning and a
+gradual development. One fact has prominently been established, that
+there is order in the eternal change, that this order is engendered by
+law, and that law and order are the criterions of an all-wise ruling
+Spirit pervading the Universe. To this positive spirit of law a spirit
+of negation, an element of rebellion and mischief, of mockery and
+selfishness, commonly called the Devil, has been opposed from the
+beginning.
+
+It appeared, till very lately, as though God had created the world only
+for the purpose of amusing the Devil, and giving him an abundance of
+work, all directed to destroying the happiness of God's finest
+creation--man. Treating the Devil from a Darwinian point of view, we may
+assert that he developed himself from the protoplasm of ignorance, and
+in the gloomy fog of fear and superstition grew by degrees into a
+formidable monster, being changed by the overheated imaginations of
+dogmatists into a reptile, an owl, a raven, a dog, a wolf, a lion, a
+centaur, a being half monkey, half man, till, finally, he became a
+polite and refined human being.
+
+Man once having attained a certain state of consciousness, saw sickness,
+evil, and death around him, and as it was usual to assign to every
+effect some tangible cause, man developed the abstract notion of evil
+into a concrete form, which changed with the varying impressions of
+climate, food, and the state of intellectual progress. To the white man
+the Devil was black, and to the black man white. Originally, then, the
+Devil was merely a personification of the apparently destructive forces
+of nature. Fire was his element. The Indians had their Rakshas and
+Uragas, the Egyptians their Typhon, and the Persians their Devas. The
+Israelites may claim the honour of having brought the theory of evil
+into a coarse and sensual form, and the Christians took up this
+conception, and developed it with the help of the Gnostics, Plato, and
+the Fathers dogmatically into an entity.
+
+I shall not enter on a minute inquiry into the origin of this formidable
+antagonist of common sense and real piety; I intend to take up the three
+principal phases of the Devil's development, at a period when he already
+appears to us as a good Christian Devil, and always bearing in mind Mr.
+Darwin's theory of evolution, I shall endeavour to trace spiritually the
+changes in the conceptions of evil from the Devil of Luther to that of
+Milton, and at last to that of Goethe.
+
+The old Jewish Rabbis and theological doctors were undoubtedly the first
+to trace, genealogically, the pedigree of the Christian Devil in its
+since general form. If we take the trouble to compare chap. i. v. 27 of
+Genesis with chap. ii. v. 21, we will find that two distinct creations
+of man are given. The one is different from the other. In the first
+instance we have the clear, indisputable statement, "So God created man
+in his own image:" and to give greater force to this statement the text
+goes on, "in the image of God created he him; male and female created he
+them." Both man and woman were then created. Nothing could be plainer.
+But as though no creation of man had taken place at all, we find, chap.
+ii. v. 7: "And the Lord formed man of the dust of the ground, and
+breathed into his nostrils the breath of life." This was evidently a
+second man, differently created from the first, who is stated to have
+been made "in the image of God himself." This second creature was
+entrusted with the nomination and classification of all created things;
+that is, with the formation of language, and the laying down of the
+first principles of botany and zoology. After he had performed this
+arduous task it happened that "for Adam there was not found an help meet
+for him" (verse 20), and chap. ii. v. 21 tells us, "The Lord God caused
+a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his
+ribs and closed up the flesh instead thereof;" and verse 22, "And of the
+rib which the Lord God had taken from man made He a woman, and brought
+her unto man." Adam then joyfully exclaims (verse 23), "This _is_ now
+bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh." This cannot but lead to the
+conclusion that this woman was an altogether different creature from the
+first. The contradiction was most ingeniously explained by the learned
+Jewish Rabbis, who considered the first woman the organic germ from
+which the special Hebrew-Christian devils were evolved. The Rabbis
+discovered that the name of the first woman was "Lilith"[1] (the
+nightly); they knew positively--and who can disprove their
+assertion?--that she was the most perfect beauty, more beautiful than
+Eve; she had long waving hair, bright eyes, red lips and cheeks, and a
+charmingly finished form and complexion; but having been created at the
+same moment as the first man, and like him, in the image of God, she
+refused to become man's wife; she objected to being subordinate to the
+male part of creation--she was, in fact, the first strong-minded woman,
+claiming the same rights as man, though a woman in body and form. Under
+these circumstances the existence of the human race was deemed to be an
+impossibility, and therefore the Lord had to make good his error, and He
+created Eve as the completing part of man. The first woman left her
+co-equally created male, and was changed into an enormous, most
+beautiful, and seducing "She Devil," and her very thoughts brought forth
+daily a legion of devils--incarnations of pride, vanity, conceit, and
+unnaturalness. Happily these devils were so constituted that they
+devoured one another. But in their rage they could take possession of
+others, and more especially entered little children--boys under three
+days old, girls under twenty days--and devoured them. This myth, by
+means of evolution and the law of action and re-action, engendered the
+further legend about the existence of three special angels who acted as
+powerful antidotes to these devils, and whose names, "Senoi, Sansenoi,
+and Sanmangeloph," if written on a piece of parchment suspended round
+the neck of children afforded certain protection against them.
+
+The origin of the Devil may thus be traced to the first vain contempt
+for the eternal laws of nature. The woman, refusing to be a woman,
+engenders devils; the man, trying to be a God, loses paradise and his
+innocence, for the element of the supernatural intruded upon him and
+abstracted his thoughts from this earth. These were the half idealistic
+and half realistic elements from which the three greatest spiritual
+incarnations of the Evil Spirit sprung up. Luther took the Evil Spirit
+as a bodily entity, with big horns, fiery eyes, a reddish, protruding
+tongue, a long tail, and the hoof of a horse. In this latter attribute
+we trace at once the Kentaur element of ancient times. Through nearly
+one thousand three hundred years from Tertullian and Thaumaturgus down
+to Luther, every one was accustomed to look upon life as one great
+battle with tens of thousands of devils, assaulting, harassing,
+annoying, and seducing humanity. All fought, quarrelled, talked, and
+wrestled with the Devil. He was more spoken of in the pulpits of the
+Christian Churches, written about in theological and scientific books,
+than God or Christ. All misfortunes were attributed to him. Thunder and
+lightning, hailstorms and the rinderpest, the hooping cough and
+epileptic fits were all the Devil's work. A man who suffered from
+madness was said to be possessed by a legion of Evil Spirits. The Devil
+settled himself in the gentle dimples of a pretty girl with the same
+ease and comfort as in the wrinkles of an old woman. Everything that
+was inexplicable was evil. Throughout the Middle Ages the masses and the
+majority of their learned theological teachers believed the Greek and
+Latin classics were inspired by Evil Spirits; that sculptures or
+paintings, if beautiful, were of evil; that all cleverness in
+Mathematics, Chemistry, or Medicine proved the presence of the
+corrupting Evil Spirit working in man. Any bridge over a chasm or a
+rapid river was the work of the Devil; even the most beautiful Gothic
+cathedrals, like those of Cologne and St. Stephen at Vienna were
+constructed by architects who served their apprenticeship in the
+infernal regions. The Devil sat grinning on the inkstands of poets and
+learned men, dictating to the poor deluded mortals, as the price for
+their souls, charming love-songs or deep theological and philosophical
+essays. It was extremely dangerous during this period of man's
+historical evolution to be better or wiser than the ignorant masses.
+Learning, talent, a superior power of reasoning, love for truth, a
+spirit of inquiry, the capacity of making money by clever trading, an
+artistic turn of mind, success in life, even in the Church, were only so
+many proofs that the soul had been sold to some dwarfish or giant
+messenger from Lucifer, who could appear in a thousand different forms.
+Man was, since his assumed Fall, the exclusive property of the coarse
+and vulgar conception of the Evil Spirit. Luther was full of these
+ideas, he was brought up in this belief, and though he unconsciously
+felt that the Devil ought to be expelled from our creed, he did not dare
+to attempt the reform of humanity by annihilating the mischief-maker: he
+could not rob man of his dearest spiritual possession; had he thought of
+consigning the Devil to the antediluvian period of our moral and social
+formation, he never could have succeeded in his reform. The Devil, in
+fact, was his strongest helpmate; he could describe the ritual of the
+Romish Church as the work of the Evil Spirit, produced to delude
+mankind. The Devil had his Romish prayers, his processions, his worship
+of relics, his remission of sins, his confessional, his infernal synods;
+he was to Luther an active, rough, and material incarnation of the
+roaring lion of the Scriptures in the shape of the Romish Church,
+walking about visibly, tangibly, bodily amongst men, devouring all who
+believed in the Pope, and who disbelieved in this stupid phantom of a
+dogmatically blinded imagination.
+
+The Evolution-theory may be clearly traced in the two next conceptions:
+Milton's Satan and Goethe's Mephistopheles. They differ as strongly as
+the periods and the poems in which they appear. Milton's Satan loses the
+vulgar flesh and bone, horn and hoof nature--he is an epic character;
+whilst Goethe's Devil is an active dramatic entity of modern times.
+Milton's representative of evil is a very powerful conception--it is
+evil in abstracto; whilst Mephistopheles is evil in concreto--the
+intelligible, tangible Devil, evolved by the power of selection from an
+antediluvian monster, and transformed through a civilizing process of at
+least six thousand years into its present form. Milton's Satan is a
+debased intellect who in his boundless ambition is still a supernatural
+being. Mephistopheles is the incarnation of our complicated modern
+social evils, full of petty tricks and learned quotations; he piously
+turns up his eyes, he lies, doubts, calumniates, seduces, philosophizes,
+sneers, but all in a polite and highly educated way; he is a scholar, a
+divine, a politician, a diplomatist. Satan is capable of wild
+enthusiasm, he sometimes remembers his bright sinless past; "from the
+lowest deep," he yearns, "once more to lift himself up, in spite of
+fate, nearer to his ancient seat;"--he hopes to re-enter heaven, "to
+purge off his gloom;" some remnant of heavenly innocence still clings to
+him, for, though _fallen_, he is still an _angel_! Mephistopheles in his
+real nature is without any higher aspirations, he argues with a
+sarcastic smile on his lips, he is ironical with sophisticated
+sharpness. Satan has unconsciously gigantic ideas, he is ready to
+wrestle with God for the dominion of heaven. Mephistopheles is perfectly
+conscious of his littleness as opposed to our better intellectual
+nature, and does evil for evil's sake. Satan is sublime through the
+grandeur of his primitive elements, pride and ambition. Mephistopheles
+is only grave in his pettiness; he does not refuse an orgie with
+drunken students, indulges in jokes with monkeys, works miracles in the
+witch's kitchen, delights in the witch's "one-time-one;" distributes
+little tracts "to stir up the witch's heart with special fire." Satan
+has nothing vulgar in him: he is capable of melancholy feelings, he can
+be pathetic and eloquent. Mephistopheles laughs at the stupidity of the
+world, and at his own. Satan believes in God and in himself, whilst
+Mephistopheles is the "Spirit that denies;" he believes neither in God
+nor in heaven nor in hell; he does not believe in his own entity--he is
+no supernatural, fantastic being, but man incarnate: he is the evil part
+of a good whole, which loses its entity when once seen and recognised in
+its real nature; for Mephistopheles in reality is our own ignorant,
+besotted, animal nature, cultivated and developed at the expense of our
+intellectual part.
+
+Luther's devil is the outgrowth of humanity in long-clothes. Man,
+ignorant of the forces of the Cosmos, blinded by theological dialectics
+and metaphysical subtleties, incapable of understanding the real essence
+of our moral and intellectual nature, philosophically untrained to
+observe that evil is but a sequence of the disturbed balance between our
+double nature--spirit and matter--attributed all mischief in the
+intellectual as well as in our social spheres to an absolute powerful
+being who continually tormented him.
+
+Milton's Satan is the poetical conception of man developed from an
+infant in long-clothes into a boisterous but dreamy youth, ascribing to
+every incomprehensible effect an arbitrary, poetical cause. Goethe's
+Mephistopheles, lastly is the truthful conception of evil as it really
+exists in a thousand forms, evolved from our own misunderstood and
+artificially and dogmatically distorted nature.
+
+Goethe in destroying the Devil as such, consigned him to the primeval
+myths and legends of ignorance and fear, and has shown us the real
+nature of the evil.
+
+What then is the Devil?
+
+The Devil took, as I said in the beginning, his origin in our blinded
+senses, in an undue preponderance of that which is material in us over
+that which is intellectual. The moment we look the Evil Spirit in the
+face, he vanishes as an _absolute_ being and becomes--
+
+ A portion of that power
+ Which wills the bad and works the good at every hour.
+
+After having been exposed during several periods of generations to new
+conditions, thus rendering a great amount of variation possible, the
+Devil has developed from a monster into a monkey, and from a monkey into
+a man endowed with the nature of a monkey and the propensities of a
+monster. In the State and in the Church, in Arts and Sciences, the Devil
+is the principle of injustice, hypocrisy, ugliness, and ignorance.
+Goethe has annihilated the ideal poetical grandeur of Milton's Satan; he
+has stripped Luther's Devil of his vulgar realism; Goethe has driven
+Satan from an imaginary hell, where he preferred to rule instead of
+worshipping and serving in heaven, and with the sponge of common sense
+he wiped the horned monster, drawn by the imagination of dogmatists,
+from the black board of ignorance. In banishing the Evil Spirit into the
+dominion of myths, Goethe showed him in his real nature. Darwin
+displaced man from the exalted pedestal of a special creation, and
+endeavoured to trace him as the development of cosmical elements. Darwin
+enabled us to look upon man as the completing link in the great chain of
+the gradual evolution of the life-giving forces of the Universe, and he
+rendered thus our position more comprehensible and natural. Goethe, in
+proving that the Evil Spirit of ancient and Hebrew-Christian times was a
+mere phantom of an ill-regulated fantasy, taught us to look for the real
+origin of evil. What was a metaphysical incomprehensibility became an
+intelligible reality. The Demon can be seen in "Faust" as in a mirror,
+and in glancing into it we behold our Darwinian progenitor, the animal,
+face to face. Before the times of Goethe, with very few exceptions, the
+Evil Spirit was an entity with whom any one might become familiar--in
+fact, the "spiritus familiaris" of old. The Devil spoke, roared,
+whispered, could sign contracts. We were able to yield our soul to him;
+and he could bodily enter our body. The Devil was a corporeal entity.
+The rack, water, and fire were used to expel him from sorcerers and
+witches, and to send him into all sorts of unclean animals. Goethe, in
+unmasking this phantom, introduced him not as something _without_, but
+as an element _within_ us. The service rendered to humanity in showing
+us the true nature of evil is as grand as the service rendered by Mr.
+Darwin in assigning to man his place _in_ nature, and not _above_
+nature. It is curious that those who have most of the incorrigible and
+immovable animal nature in them should protest with the greatest
+vehemence and clamour against this theory. They think by asserting their
+superiority, based on a special creation, to become at once special and
+superior beings, and prefer this position to trying, through a
+progressive development in science and knowledge, in virtue and honesty,
+to prove the existence of the higher faculties with which man has been
+endowed through his gradual development from the lowest phases of living
+creatures to the highest. In assuming the Devil to be something absolute
+and positive, and not something relative and negative, man hoped to be
+better able to grapple with him. Mephistopheles is nothing personal; he
+can, like the Creator himself, be only traced in his works. The Devil
+lurks beneath the venerable broadcloth of an intolerant and ignorant
+priest; he uses the seducing smiles of a wicked beauty; he stirs the
+blood of the covetous and grasping; he strides through the gilded halls
+of ambitious emperors and ministers, who go with "light hearts" to kill
+thousands of human beings with newly-invented infernal machines; he
+works havoc in the brains of the vain. The Devil shuffles the cards for
+the gambler, and destroys our peace whether he makes us win or lose on
+the turf; he sits joyfully grinning on the tops of bottles and tankards
+filled with alcoholic drinks; he entices us on Sundays to shut our
+museums and open our gin-palaces; to neglect the education of the
+masses; and then prompts us to accuse them with hypocritical
+respectability of drunkenness and stupidity. It is the Devil who turns
+us into friends of lapdogs and makes us enemies of the homeless. The
+Devil is the greatest master in dogmatism; he creates sects who, in the
+name of love and humility, foster hatred and pride; the Devil encloses
+men in a magic circle on the barren heath of useless speculation; drives
+them round and round like blinded horses in a mill, starting from one
+point, and after miles and miles of travel and fatigue, leading us to
+the point, sadder but not wiser, from which we set out. The Devil makes
+us quarrel whether we ought to have schools with or without bigoted
+religious teachings; he burns incense to stupefy our senses, lights
+candles to obscure our sight, amuses the masses with buffooneries to
+prevent them from thinking, draws us away from common-sense morality,
+and leads us, under the pretext of a mystic and symbolic religion, to
+the confessional, the very hothouse of mischief. Satan in all his
+shapes and forms as he rules the world has been described by Goethe as
+Egotism. Selfishness is his element and real nature. Selfishness not yet
+realizing the divine, because so entirely _humane_ command--"Do unto
+others as you wish that they should do unto you." Selfishness is the
+only essence of evil. Selfishness has divided men into different
+nations, and fosters in them pride, envy, jealousy, and hatred. Mr.
+Darwin has shown that one animal preys on the other, that the weaker
+species has to yield to the stronger. Goethe again has shown us how the
+Evil Spirit drags us through life's wild scenes and its flat
+unmeaningness, to seek mere sensual pleasures and to neglect altogether
+our higher and better nature, which is the outgrowth of our more
+complicated, more highly developed organization. Were we only to
+recognise this, our real nature, we should leave less to chance and
+prejudices; were we to study man from a physiological, psychological,
+and honestly historical point of view, we should soon eliminate
+selfishness from among us, and be able to appreciate what is really the
+essence of evil. The more nearly we approach Darwin's primitive man, the
+ape, the nearer do we draw to the Mephistopheles who shows us his exact
+nature with impudent sincerity in Goethe's "Faust."
+
+That which changes our Psyche, that is our intellectual faculty with its
+airy wings of imagination, its yearnings for truth, into an ugly,
+submissive, crawling worm, is heartless selfishness. Not without reason
+is poor guileless Margaret horrified at Mephistopheles. She shudders,
+hides herself on the bosom of Faust, like a dove under the wings of an
+eagle, and complains that the Evil Spirit--
+
+ ... Always wears such mocking grin,
+ Half cold, half grim,
+ One sees that nought has interest for him;
+ 'Tis writ on his brow, and can't be mistaken,
+ No soul in him can love awaken.
+
+When all goes wrong, when religious, social, and political animosities and
+hatred disturb the peace; when unintelligible controversies on the
+inherited sin, the origin of evil, justification, and transubstantiation,
+"grace and free will," the creative and the created, mystic incantations,
+real and unreal presences, the like but not equal, the affirmative and the
+negative natures of God and man confuse the finite brains of infinite
+talkers and repeaters of the same things; when they quarrel about the
+wickedness of the hen who dared to lay an egg on the Sabbath; when the
+glaring torch of warfare is kindled by the fire of petty animosities, then
+the Evil Spirit of egotism celebrates its most glorious festivals.
+
+What can banish this monster, this second and worse part of our nature?
+To look upon it from a Darwinian point of view. Goethe saves his fallen
+Faust through useful "occupation," through honest hard work for the
+benefit of mankind. The more we make ourselves acquainted with evil, the
+last remnant of our animal nature, in a rational and not mystic
+dogmatical sense, the less we exalt ourselves as exceptional creatures
+above nature, the easier it must be for us to dry up the source of
+superstition and ignorance which serves to nourish this social monster.
+
+Let our relations to each other be based on "mutual love," for God is
+love, and selfishness as the antagonist of love, and the Devil as the
+antagonist of God, will both vanish.
+
+Let us strive to vanquish our unnatural social organization by a
+natural, social, but at the same time, liberal union of all into one
+common brotherhood, and the roaring lion will be silenced for ever.
+
+Let us purify society of all its social, or rather unsocial, iniquities
+and falsehoods, of all ingratitude and envy, in striving for an honest
+regeneration of ourselves, and through ourselves of humanity at large,
+convincing one another that man has developed by degrees into earth's
+fairest creature, destined for good and happiness, and not for evil and
+wretchedness, and there will be an end of the _Devil_ and all his
+_devilries_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] The word is found in Isaiah xxxiv. 14. Translated in the Vulgate as
+"Lamia;" in Luther's translation as "Kobold;" in the English version as
+"screech-owl;" and in others as "an ugly night-bird."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+PECULIAR PEOPLE.
+
+
+In this title, be it distinctly understood, no reference is intended to
+those anti-AEsculapian persons who, from time to time, sacrifice to
+Moloch among the Essex marshes. It is not necessary to journey even as
+far as Plumstead in search of peculiarity, since the most manifold and
+ever-varying types of it lie at one's very doors. And here, at the
+outset, without quite endorsing the maxim that genius is always
+eccentric, let it be confessed that a slight deviation from the beaten
+track is generally apt to be interesting. When we see the photograph of
+some distinguished artist, musician, or poet, and find the features very
+like those of the pork butcher in the next street, or the footman over
+the way, we are conscious of a feeling of disappointment almost
+amounting to a personal grievance. Mr. Carlyle and Algernon Swinburne
+satisfy us. They look as we feel graphic writers and erotic poets ought
+to look. Not so the literary females who affect the compartment labelled
+"For ladies only," in the reading room of the British Museum or on the
+Metropolitan Railway. They are mostly like one's maiden aunts, and
+savour far less of the authoress than some of the charming girls who
+studiously avoid their exclusive locale, and evidently use their reading
+ticket only to cover with an appearance of propriety a most unmistakable
+flirtation. This they carry on sotto voce with ardent admirers of the
+male sex, who, though regular frequenters of the reading room, are no
+more literary than themselves. One might pick out a good many peculiar
+people from that learned retreat--that poor scholar's club room; but let
+us rather avoid any such byways of life, and select our peculiars from
+the broad highway. Hunting there, Diogenes-wise, with one's modest
+lantern, in search--not of honest--but eccentric individuals.
+
+And first of all, having duly attended to the ladies at the outset, let
+there be "Place for the Clergy." There is my dear friend the Rev. Gray
+Kidds, the best fellow breathing, but, from a Diogenes point of view,
+decidedly eccentric. Gray Kidds is one of those individuals whose
+peculiarity it is never to have been a boy. Kidds at fifteen had
+whiskers as voluminous as he now has at six-and-twenty, and as he
+gambolled heavily amongst his more puerile schoolfellows, visitors to
+the playground used to ask the assistant masters who that man was
+playing with the boys. They evidently had an uneasy notion that a
+private lunatic asylum formed a branch of the educational establishment,
+and that Gray Kidds was a harmless patient allowed to join the boys in
+their sports. Gray Kidds was and is literally harmless. He grew up
+through school and college, innocently avoiding all those evils which
+proved the ruin of many who were deemed far wiser than himself. He
+warbled feebly on the flute, and was adored as a curate, not only for
+his tootle-tooings, but for his diligent presence at mothers' meetings,
+and conscientious labours among the poor. A preacher Kidds never
+pretended to be; but he had the singular merit of brevity, and crowded
+more harmless heresies into ten minutes' pulpit oratory than Colenso or
+Voysey could have done in double the time. The young ladies made a dead
+set at him, of course, for Kidds was in every respect eligible; and he
+let them stroke him like a big pet lamb, but there matters ended. Kidds
+never committed himself. He is now the incumbent of a pretty church in
+the suburbs, built for him by his aunt, and, strange to say, the church
+fills. Whether it is that his brevity is attractive, or his transparent
+goodness compensates for his other peculiarities, certainly he has a
+congregation; and if you polled that congregation, the one point on
+which all would agree, in addition to his eligibility or innocence,
+would be that the Rev. Gray Kidds was "so funny."
+
+And now, for our second type of peculiarity, let us beat back for one
+moment to the fair sex again. Mrs. Ghoul is the reverse of spirituelle;
+but she is something more--she is spiritualistic. She devoutly believes
+that the spirits of deceased ancestors come at her bidding, and tilt the
+table, move furniture insanely about, or write idiotic messages
+automatically. She is perfectly serious. She does "devoutly" believe
+this. It is her creed. It is a comfort to her. It is extremely difficult
+to reconcile such a source of comfort with any respect for one's
+departed relatives, but that is Mrs. Ghoul's peculiarity and
+qualification for a niche amongst our originals.
+
+Miss Deedy, on the other hand, is ecclesiastical to the backbone. Miss
+Deedy ruins her already feeble health with early mattins (she insists on
+the double t) and frequent fasts. Beyond an innocuous flirtation with
+the curate at decorations, or a choral meeting, Miss Deedy has as few
+sins as most of us to answer for; but, from her frequent penances, she
+might be a monster of iniquity. She is known to confess, and is
+suspected of wearing sackcloth. Balls and theatres she eschews as
+"worldly," and yet she is only just out of her teens. She would like to
+be a nun, she says, if the habits were prettier, and they allowed long
+curls down the back, and Gainsboroughs above the brow. As it is, Miss
+Deedy occupies a somewhat abnormal position, dangling, like Mahomet's
+coffin, between the Church and the world. That, again, is Miss Deedy's
+peculiarity.
+
+Miss Wiggles is a "sensitive." That is a new vocation struck out by the
+prolific ingenuity of the female mind. Commonplace doctors would simply
+call her "hysterical;" but she calls herself magnetic. She is stout and
+inclined to a large appetite, particularly affecting roast pork with
+plenty of seasoning; but she passes readily into "the superior
+condition" under the manipulations of a male operator. She makes
+nothing, save notoriety, by her clairvoyance and other peculiarities;
+but she _is_ very peculiar, though the type of a larger class than is
+perhaps imagined in this highly sensational age of ours.
+
+Peculiar boys, too--what lots of them there are! What is called
+affectation in a girl prevails to quite as large an extent in the shape
+of endless peculiarities among boys. A certain Dick (his name is
+Adolphus, but he is universally, and for no assignable reason, known as
+Dick) rejoices in endorsing Darwinism by looking and acting like a human
+gorilla. Dick is no fool, but assumes that virtue though he has it not.
+To see him mumbling his food at meals, or making mops and mows at the
+wall, you would think him qualified for Earlswood; but if it comes to
+polishing off a lesson briskly or being mulct of his pudding or
+pocket-money, Master Dick accomplishes the polishing process with a
+rapidity that gives the lie to his Darwinian assumption.
+
+Well, they are a source of infinite fun, these eccentrics--the comets of
+our social system. They have, no doubt, an object in their
+eccentricity, a method in their madness, which we prosaic planetary
+folks cannot fathom. At all events, they amuse us and don't harm
+themselves. They are uniformly happy and contented with themselves. Of
+them assuredly is true, and without the limitation he appends, Horace's
+affirmation, _Dulce est desipere_, which Mr. Theodore Martin translates,
+"'Tis pleasing at times to be slightly insane."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+INTERVIEWING AN ASTROLOGER.
+
+
+For several years--in fact ever since my first acquaintance with these
+"occult" matters whereinto I am now such a veteran investigator--my
+great wish has been to become practically acquainted with some Professor
+of Astral Science. One friend, indeed, I had who had devoted a long
+lifetime to this and kindred subjects, and of whom I shall have to speak
+anon; but he had never utilized his knowledge so as to become the guide,
+philosopher, and friend of amorous housemaids on the subject of their
+matrimonial alliances, or set himself to discover petty larcenies for a
+fee of half-a-crown. He assured me, however, that the practice of
+astrology was as rife as ever in London at this moment, and that
+businesses in that line were bought and sold for sterling coin of the
+realm, just as though they had been "corner" publics, or "snug concerns"
+in the cheesemongery line. All this whetted my appetite for inquiry, and
+seeing one Professor Wilson advertise persistently in the _Medium_ to
+the effect that "the celebrated Astrologer may be consulted on the
+events of life" from two to nine P.M., I wrote to Professor Wilson
+asking for an interview; but the celebrated astrologer did not favour
+me with a reply.
+
+Foiled in my first attempt I waited patiently for about a year, and then
+broke ground again--I will not say whether with Professor Wilson, or
+some other practitioner of astral science. I will call my Archimago
+Professor Smith, of Newington Causeway, principally for the reason that
+this is neither the real name nor the correct address. I have no wish to
+advertise any wizard gratuitously; nor would it be fair to him, since,
+as will be seen from the sequel, his reception of me was such as to make
+it probable that he would have an inconvenient number of applicants on
+the conditions observed at my visit.
+
+Availing myself, then, of the services of my friend above-mentioned, I
+arranged that we should together pay a visit to Professor Smith, of
+Newington Causeway, quite "permiscuous," as Mrs. Gamp would say. My
+companion would go with his own horoscope already constructed, as he
+happened to know the exact hour and minute of his birth--particulars as
+to which I only possessed the vaguest information, which is all I fancy
+most of us have; though there was one circumstance connected with my own
+natal day which went a long way towards "fixing" it.
+
+It was on a Monday evening that I visited this modern Delphic oracle;
+and, strangely enough, as is often the case, other events seemed to lead
+up to this one. The very lesson on Sunday evening was full of
+astrology. It was, I may mention, the story of the handwriting on the
+wall and the triumph of Daniel over the magicians. Then I took up my
+Chaucer on Monday morning; and instead of the "Canterbury Tales," opened
+it at the "Treatise on the Astrolabe," which I had never read before,
+but devoured then as greedily as no doubt did "Little Lowis," to whom it
+is addressed. All this tended to put me in a proper frame of mind for my
+visit to Newington; so, after an early tea, we took my friend's figure
+of his nativity with us, and went.
+
+Professor Smith, we found, lived in a cosy house in the main road, the
+parlours whereof he devoted to the purposes of a medical magnetist,
+which was his calling, as inscribed upon the wire blinds of the ground
+floor front. We were ushered at once into the professor's presence by a
+woman who, I presume, was his wife--a quiet respectable body with
+nothing uncanny about her. The front parlour was comfortably furnished
+and scrupulously clean, and the celebrated Professor himself, a pleasant
+elderly gentleman, was sitting over a manuscript which he read by the
+light of a Queen's reading lamp. There was not, on the one hand, any
+charlatan assumption in his get-up, nor, on the other, was there that
+squalor and neglect of the decencies of life which I have heard
+sometimes attaches to the practitioners in occult science. Clad in a
+light over-coat, with spectacles on nose, and bending over his MS.,
+Professor Smith might have been a dissenting parson en deshabille
+"getting off" his Sunday discourse, or a village schoolmaster correcting
+the "themes" of his pupils. He was neither; he was a nineteenth century
+astrologer, calculating the probabilities of success for a commercial
+scheme, the draft prospectus of which was the document over which he
+pored. As he rose to receive us I was almost disappointed to find that
+he held no wand, wore no robe, and had no volume of mystic lore by his
+side. The very cat that emerged from underneath his table, and rubbed
+itself against my legs was not of the orthodox sable hue, but simple
+tabby and white.
+
+My friend opened the proceedings by producing the figure of his
+nativity, and saying he had come to ask a question in horary astrology
+relative to a certain scheme about which he was anxious, such anxiety
+constituting what he termed a "birth of the mind." Of course this was
+Dutch to me, and I watched to see whether the Professor would be taken
+off his guard by finding he was in presence of one thoroughly posted up
+in astral science. Not in the least; he greeted him as a brother chip,
+and straightway the two fell to discussing the figure. The Professor
+worked a new one, which he found to differ in some slight particulars
+from the one my friend had brought. Each, however, had worked it by
+logarithms, and there was much talk of "trines" and "squares" and
+"houses," which I could not understand; but eventually the coveted
+advice was given by the Professor and accepted by my friend as devoutly
+as though it had been a response of the Delphic oracle itself. The
+business would succeed, but not without trouble, and possibly litigation
+on my friend's part. He was to make a call on a certain day and "push
+the matter" a month afterwards; all of which he booked in a
+business-like manner. This took a long time, for the Professor was
+perpetually making pencil signs on the figure he had constructed, and
+the two also discussed Zadkiel, Raphael, and other astrologers they had
+mutually known. Continual reference had to be made to the "Nautical
+Almanack;" but by-and-by my friend's innings was over and mine
+commenced. I have said that I did not know the exact hour and minute of
+my birth, and when, with appropriate hesitation, I named the 1st of
+April as the eventful day, the Professor looked at me for a moment with
+a roguish twinkle of the eye as though to ascertain that I was not
+poking fun at him. I assured him, however, that such was the
+inauspicious era of my nativity, and moreover that I was born so closely
+on the confines of March 31--I do not feel it necessary to specify the
+year--as to make it almost dubious whether I could claim the honours of
+April-Fooldom. This seemed enough for him--though he warned me that the
+absence of the exact time might lead to some vagueness in his
+communications--and he proceeded forthwith to erect my figure; which,
+by the way, looked to me very much like making a "figure" in Euclid;
+and I peered anxiously to see whether mine bore any resemblance to the
+Pons Asinorum!
+
+I feared I had led my philosopher astray altogether when the first item
+of information he gave me was that, at about the age of twenty-one, I
+had met with some accident to my arm, a circumstance which I could not
+recall to memory. Several years later I broke my leg, but I did not tell
+him that. Going further back, he informed me that about the age of
+fourteen, if I happened to be apprenticed, or in any way placed under
+authority, I kicked violently over the traces, which was quite true,
+inasmuch as I ran away from school twice at that precise age, so that my
+astrologer scored one. At twenty-eight I married (true), and at
+thirty-two things were particularly prosperous with me--a fact which I
+was also constrained to acknowledge correct. Then came a dreadful
+mistake. If ever I had anything to do with building or minerals, I
+should be very successful. I never had to do with building save once in
+my life, and then Mr. Briggs's loose tile was nothing to the
+difficulties in which I became involved. Minerals I had never dabbled in
+beyond the necessary consumption of coals for domestic purposes. I had
+an uncle who interested himself in my welfare some years ago--this was
+correct--and something was going to happen to my father's sister at
+Midsummer, 1876. This, of course, I cannot check; but I trust, for the
+sake of my venerable relation, it may be nothing prejudicial. I was also
+to suffer from a slight cold about the period of my birthday in that
+same year, and was especially to beware of damp feet. My eldest brother,
+if I had one, he said, had probably died, which was again correct; and
+if my wife caught cold she suffered in her throat, which piece of
+information, if not very startling, I am also constrained to confess is
+quite true. Then followed a most delicate piece of information which I
+blush as I commit to paper. I wished to marry when I was twenty-one, but
+circumstances prevented. Then it was that memories of a certain
+golden-haired first love came back through the vista of memory. I was
+then a Fellow of my College, impecunious except as regarded my
+academical stipend, so the young lady took advice and paired off with a
+well-to-do cousin. Sic transit gloria mundi! We are each of us stout,
+unromantic family people now; but the reminiscence made me feel quite
+romantic for the moment in that ground floor front in Newington
+Causeway; and I was inclined to say, "A Daniel come to judgment!" but I
+checked myself and remarked, sotto voce, in the vernacular, "Right
+again, Mr. Smith!"
+
+Before passing on to analyse me personally he remarked that my wife's
+sister and myself were not on the best of terms. I owned that words had
+passed between us; and then he told me that in my cerebral development
+there was a satisfactory fusion of caution and combativeness. I was not
+easily knocked over, or, if so, had energy to get up again. This energy
+was to tell in the future. This, I believe, is a very usual feature of
+horoscopic revelation. Next year was to be particularly prosperous. I
+should travel a good deal--had travelled somewhat this year, and was
+just now going to take a short journey; but I should travel a great deal
+more next year. I own to asking myself whether this could bear any
+reference to the Pontigny Pilgrimage in which I shared this year, and
+the possible pilgrimage to Rome next summer, and also a projected
+journey to Scotland by the Limited Mail next Tuesday evening! On the
+whole, my astrologer had scored a good many points.
+
+The most marvellous revelation of all yet remains to be made, however.
+When we rose to go we each of us endeavoured to force a fee on Professor
+Smith, but nothing would induce him to receive a farthing! I had got all
+my revelations, my "golden" memories of the past, my bright promises of
+the future free, gratis, for nothing! It will be evident, then, why I do
+not give this good wizard's address lest I inundate him with gratuitous
+applicants, and why I therefore veil his personality under the
+misleading title of Professor Smith of Newington Causeway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+A BARMAID SHOW.
+
+
+The present age, denounced by some ungenial censors as the age of shams,
+may be described by more kindly critics as emphatically an age of
+"shows." Advancing from the time-honoured shows of Flora and Pomona--if
+not always improving on the type--and so on from the cattle show,
+suggestive of impending Christmas fare, we have had horse shows, dog
+shows, and bird shows. To these the genius of Barnum added baby shows;
+and, if we are not misinformed, a foreign firm, whose names have become
+household words amongst us, originated, though not exactly in its
+present form, the last kind of show which has been acclimatized in
+England--an exhibition of barmaids. We had two baby shows in one
+year--one at Highbury Barn by Mr. Giovannelli, the other at North
+Woolwich Gardens by Mr. Holland; and it is to the talent of this latter
+gentleman in the way of adaptation that we owe the exhibition of young
+ladies "practising at the bar." From babies to barmaids is indeed a
+leap, reversing the ordinary process of going from the sublime to the
+ridiculous, for while to all but appreciative mammas those infantile
+specimens of humanity savour largely of the ridiculous, there can be no
+question that the present generation of _dames de comptoir_ is a very
+sublime article indeed. I do not say this in derision, nor am I among
+those who decry the improvements introduced during the last few years,
+both into refreshment bars themselves, and notably into the class of
+ladies who preside over them. The discriminating visitor will decidedly
+prefer to receive his sandwich and glass of bitter at the hands of a
+pretty barmaid rather than from an oleaginous pot-man in his
+shirt-sleeves; and the sherry-cobbler acquires a racier flavour from the
+arch looks of the Hebe who dispenses it. If silly young men do dawdle at
+the bar for the sake of the sirens inside, and occasionally, as we have
+known to be the case, take unto themselves these same sirens "for better
+or for worse," we can only cite the opinion of well-informed
+authorities, that very possibly the young gentlemen in question might
+have gone farther and fared worse, and that it is not always the young
+lady who has, in such a case, the best of the bargain.
+
+So, then, the "Grand Barmaid Contest" opened; and in spite of the very
+unmistakable appearance put in by Jupiter Fluvius, a numerous assemblage
+gathered in the North Woolwich Gardens to inaugurate a festival which,
+whatever else we may think of it, is at all events sui generis. Prizes
+to the value of _300l._ were to be presented to the successful
+candidates, varying from a purse of twenty sovereigns and a gold watch
+and chain, down to "a purse of two sovereigns," with "various other
+prizes, consisting of jewellery, &c."
+
+Among the conditions it was required, that every young lady should be
+over sixteen years of age; that she should be dressed in _plain_ but
+_good_ articles of attire, "in which a happy blending of colours without
+prominent display is most suitable;" and it was moreover stipulated that
+each "young lady" should "ingratiate herself with the public in the most
+affable manner at her command, without undue forwardness or frivolity,
+but still retaining a strict attention to business." No young lady was
+permitted to take part in the contest unless she had been in the
+refreshment business for twelve months, and could produce good
+testimonials of character.
+
+Upwards of 700 applications were made, out of which Mr. Holland selected
+fifty. Whence the large number of rejections "deponeth sayeth not." Of
+these twenty-eight actually put in an appearance at three P.M. on the
+opening day and four were expected to join in a day or two. Every
+visitor is provided with a voting ticket, which he hands to the lady of
+his admiration, and which counts towards the prize. Each young lady also
+receives 5 per cent. on what she sells at her bar. The places are
+awarded by lot; and, by a freak of fortune, the two most attractive
+demoiselles happened to come together. These were Numbers One and
+Fourteen. The former young lady--who desires to be known by her number
+only, true genius being ever modest--was certain to stand Number One in
+popular esteem; and, if chignons are taken into account, she ought
+literally to "head" the list by a very long way. The room was tastefully
+decorated by Messrs. Defries, and an excellent band enlivened the
+proceedings. As evening drew on the meeting grew more hilarious, but
+there was not the slightest impropriety of any kind, the faintest
+approach thereto leading to immediate expulsion.
+
+Many persons may be disposed to ask, in respect of such exhibitions, Cui
+bono? But at all events there was nothing which the veriest Cato could
+denounce as demoralizing. The "young ladies" were all most modestly
+attired in "sober livery;" and certainly--though comparisons are
+odious--not so pressing in their attentions as we have seen some other
+young ladies at Dramatic Fetes, or even some devouees at charitable
+bazaars. If we may judge from the large numbers that visited North
+Woolwich, "in spite of wind and weather," Mr. Holland was likely to reap
+an abundant harvest from this latest "idea," excogitated from his
+fertile brain. As the babies have had their "show," and the stronger sex
+is not likely to be equal to the task of being exhibited just yet, there
+seems only one section of society open to the speculations of a skilful
+entrepreneur. Why does not some one, in a more serious line than Mr.
+Holland, try what Sydney Smith calls the "third sex," and open an
+exhibition of curates, with a genuine competition for prizes? There
+could be no possible doubt as to the success of such a display, and the
+instruction to be derived from it would be equally beyond question. In
+the meantime we have advanced one step towards such a consummation. The
+adult human being has taken the place of the baby; and people evidently
+like it. Where will the rage for exhibitions stop? Who can say to the
+advancing tide of shows, "Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther?" Other
+classes of society will probably have their turn, and may think
+themselves fortunate if they show up as well as Mr. Holland's "young
+ladies."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+A PRIVATE EXECUTION.
+
+
+I was quietly fiddling away one evening in the Civil Service band at
+King's College, as was my custom while my leisure was larger than at
+present, when the gorgeous porter of the college entered with a huge
+billet which he placed on my music-stand with a face of awe. It was
+addressed to me, and in the corner of it was written "Order for
+Execution." The official waited to see how I bore it, and seemed rather
+surprised that I went on with my fiddling, and smilingly said, "All
+right." I knew it was an order from the authorities of Horsemonger Lane
+Gaol admitting me to the private execution of Margaret Waters, the
+notorious baby-farmer.
+
+If anything is calculated to promote the views of those who advocate the
+abolition of capital punishment, it is the fact of a woman meeting her
+death at the hands of the common hangman. There is something abhorrent,
+especially to the mind of the stronger sex, in the idea of a female
+suffering the extreme penalty of the law. On the other hand, the crime
+for which Margaret Waters suffered--which is too much a cause celebre to
+need recapitulation--is exactly the one that would exile her from the
+sympathy of her own sex. Whilst therefore her case left the broad
+question much in the same position as before, we are not surprised to
+find that strenuous efforts had been made to obtain a commutation of the
+sentence. Mr. Gilpin, Mr. Samuel Morley, and Mr. Baines had been
+conspicuous for their efforts in the cause of mercy. All, however, had
+been to no purpose. Margaret Waters was privately executed within the
+walls of Horsemonger Lane Gaol at nine o'clock.
+
+It was a thankless errand that called one from one's bed whilst the moon
+was still struggling with the feeble dawn of an October morning, and
+through streets already white with the incipient frost of approaching
+winter, to see a fellow-creature--and that a woman--thus hurried out of
+existence. On arriving at the gloomy prison-house I saw a fringe of
+roughs lounging about, anxious to catch a glimpse, if only of the black
+flag that should apprize them of the tragedy they were no longer
+privileged to witness. Even these, however, did not muster in strong
+force until the hour of execution drew near. On knocking at the outer
+wicket, the orders of admission were severely scrutinized, and none
+allowed to pass except those borne by the representatives of the press,
+or persons in some way officially connected with the impending "event."
+There was an air of grim "business" about all present, which showed
+plainly that none were there from choice, nor any who would not feel
+relief when the fearful spectacle was over. After assembling, first of
+all, in the porter's lodge, we were conducted by the governor, Mr.
+Keene, to the back of the prison, through courtyards and kitchen
+gardens; and in a corner of one of the former we came upon the ghastly
+instrument of death itself. Here half-a-dozen warders only were
+scattered about, and Mr. Calcraft was arranging his paraphernalia with
+the air of a connoisseur. I remember--so strangely does one's mind take
+in unimportant details at such a crisis--being greatly struck with the
+fine leeks which were growing in that particular corner of the prison
+garden where the grim apparatus stood, and we--some five-and-twenty at
+most, and all in the way of "business"--stood, too, waiting for the
+event!
+
+Then ensued a quarter of an hour's pause, in that cold morning air, when
+suddenly boomed out the prison bell, that told us the last few minutes
+of the convict's life had come. The pinioning took place within the
+building; and on the stroke of nine, the gloomy procession emerged, the
+prisoner walking between the chaplain and Calcraft, with a firm step,
+and even mounting the steep stair to the gallows without needing
+assistance. She was attired in a plaid dress with silk mantle, her head
+bare, and hair neatly arranged.
+
+As this was my first experience in private hanging, I do not mind
+confessing that I misdoubted my powers of endurance. I put a small
+brandy-flask in my pocket, and stood close by a corner around which I
+could retire if the sight nauseated me; but such is the strange
+fascination attaching to exhibitions even of this horrible kind, that I
+pushed forward with the rest, and when the governor beckoned me on to a
+"good place," I found myself standing in the front rank with the rest of
+my confreres, and could not help picturing what that row of upturned,
+unsympathizing, pitiless faces must have looked like to the culprit as
+contrasted with the more sympathetic crowds that used to be present at a
+public execution.
+
+One of the daily papers in chronicling this event went so far as to
+point a moral on the brutalizing effect of such exhibitions from my
+momentary hesitation and subsequent struggle forward into the front
+rank. The convict's perfect sang froid had a good deal to do with my own
+calmness, I expect.
+
+When the executioner had placed the rope round her neck, and the cap on
+her head ready to be drawn over the face, she uttered a long and fervent
+prayer, expressed with great volubility and propriety of diction, every
+word of which could be distinctly heard by us as we circled the
+scaffold. She could not have rounded her periods more gracefully or
+articulated them more perfectly, if she had rehearsed her part
+beforehand! Though most of the spectators were more or less inured to
+scenes of horror, several were visibly affected, one kneeling on the
+bare ground, and another leaning, overcome with emotion, against the
+prison wall. At last she said to the chaplain, "Mr. Jessopp, do you
+think I am saved?" A whispered reply from the clergyman conveyed his
+answer to that momentous question. All left the scaffold except the
+convict. The bolt was withdrawn, and, almost without a struggle,
+Margaret Waters ceased to exist. Nothing could exceed the calmness and
+propriety of her demeanour, and this, the chaplain informed us, had been
+the case throughout since her condemnation. She had been visited on one
+occasion by a Baptist minister, to whose persuasion she belonged; but he
+had, at her own request, forborne to repeat his visit. The prisoner said
+he was evidently unused to cases like hers, and his ministrations rather
+distracted than comforted her. The chaplain of the gaol had been
+unremitting in his attentions, and seemingly with happy effect. Though
+she constantly persisted in saying she was not a murderess in intent,
+she was yet brought to see her past conduct in its true light; and on
+the previous Saturday received the Holy Communion in her cell with one
+of her brothers. Two of them visited her, and expressed the strongest
+feelings of attachment. In fact, the unhappy woman seemed to have been
+deeply attached to and beloved by all the members of her family. She
+had, since her condemnation, eaten scarcely anything, having been kept
+alive principally by stimulants. Although this, of course, induced great
+bodily weakness, she did not from the first exhibit any physical fear of
+death. On the night before her execution--that peaceful moonlit
+night--when so many thoughts must have turned to this unhappy woman, she
+slept little, and rose early. The chaplain had arranged to be with her
+at eight, but she sent for him an hour earlier, and he continued with
+her until the end. On Monday night she penned a long statement addressed
+to Mr. Jessopp. This was written with a firm hand on four sides of a
+foolscap sheet, expressed with great perspicuity, and signed with the
+convict's name. Whilst still repudiating the idea of being a murderess
+in intent, she pleaded guilty to great deceit, and to having obtained
+money under false pretences. If she had not given proper food, that, she
+contended, was an error of judgment. It was hard, she thought, that she
+should be held accountable for the child who died in the workhouse. She
+dwelt much upon the difficulties brought upon her by her dread of the
+money-lender--that fungus growth of our so-called civilization, who has
+brought so many criminals to the gallows, besides ruining families every
+day in each year of grace! That she had administered laudanum she
+denied. The evidence as to the dirty condition of the children she
+asserted to be false. She wished to avoid all bitterness; but those who
+had so deposed had sworn falsely. "I feel sure their consciences will
+condemn them to-night," she wrote, "for having caused the death of a
+fellow-creature." In the face of the evidence, she felt the jury could
+not find any other verdict, or the judge pass any other sentence than
+had been done. The case had been got up, she argued, to expose a system
+which was wrong. Parents wished to get rid of their ill-gotten
+offspring. Their one thought was to hide their own shame. "They," she
+concluded, "are the real sinners. If it were not for their sin, _we_
+should not be sought after."
+
+There must surely be some whose consciences these words will prick.
+However this woman deserved the bitter penalty she has now paid, there
+is indeed a tremendous truth in her assertion that she, and such as she,
+are but the supply which answers their demand.
+
+And so we filed away as the autumnal sun shone down upon that gloomy
+spectacle, leaving her to the "crowner's 'quest," and the dishonoured
+grave in the prison precincts. Up to the previous night strong hopes of
+a commutation of the sentence were entertained. Her brothers had
+memorialized the Home Secretary, and were only on the previous day
+informed that the law must take its course. Let us hope that this stern
+example will put a stop, not only to "baby-farming," which, as the dead
+woman truly said, is but a consequence of previous crime--but also to
+those "pleasant vices" which are its antecedents and encouragements.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+BREAKING UP FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
+
+
+Unromantic as it sounds to say it, I know of few things more disgusting
+than to revisit one's old school after some twenty or thirty years. Let
+that dubious decade still remain as to the number of years that have
+elapsed since I left school. In fact, it matters to nobody when I left
+it; I revisited it lately. I went to see the boys break up, as I once
+broke up, and I felt disgusted--not with the school, or the breaking up,
+but with myself. I felt disgracefully old. In fact, I went home, and
+began a poem with these words:--
+
+ My years, I feel, are getting on:
+ Yet, ere the trembling balance kicks, I
+ Will imitate the dying swan,
+ And sing an ode threnodic--vixi.
+
+I never got any farther than that. By the way, I shall have to mention
+eventually that the school was King's College, in the Strand. I am not
+going to unbosom beyond this, or to add anything in the way of an
+autobiography; but the locale would have to come out anon, and there is
+no possible reason for concealment.
+
+Well, I went to see them break up for the holidays, and only got over my
+antediluvian feelings by seeing one of the masters still on the staff
+who was there when I was a boy. It was a comfort to think what a
+Methuselah he must be; and yet, if he will excuse the personality, he
+looked as rosy and smooth-faced as when he used to stand me outside his
+door with my coat-sleeves turned inside out. It was a way he had. Well,
+the presence of that particular master made me feel an Adonis forthwith.
+
+I will not go into the prizes. There were lots of them, and they were
+very nice, and the boys looked very happy, and their mammas legitimately
+proud. What I want to speak of is the school speeches or recitations, as
+they are termed. King's College School speeches are, to my thinking, a
+model of what such things ought to be.
+
+Some schools--I name no names--go in for mere scholastic recitations
+which nobody understands, and the boys hate. Others burst out in
+full-blown theatricals. King's College acts on the motto, Medio
+tutissimus ibis. It keeps the old scholastic recitations, but gilds the
+pill by adding the accessory of costume. I can quote Latin as well as
+Dr. Pangloss, and certain lines were running in my mind all the time I
+was in King's College Hall. They were
+
+ Pueris olim dant crustula blandi
+ Doctores, elementa velint ut discere prima.
+
+First we had a bit of German in the shape of an extract from Kotzebue's
+"Die Schlaue Wittwe," or "Temperaments." I wish I had my programme, I
+would compliment by name the lad who played the charming young Frau.
+Suffice it to say the whole thing went off sparkling like a firework. It
+was short, and made you wish for more--a great virtue in speeches and
+sermons. The dancing-master was perfect. Then came a bit of Colman's
+"Heir at Law." Dr. Pangloss--again I regret the absence of the
+programme--was a creation, and--notwithstanding the proximity of King's
+College to the Strand Theatre--the youth wisely abstained from copying
+even so excellent a model as Mr. Clarke. Of course, the bits of Latinity
+came out with a genuine scholastic ring. Then a bit of a Greek play, at
+which--mirabile dictu!--everybody laughed, and with which everybody was
+pleased. And why? Because the adjuncts of costume and properties added
+to the correct enunciation of the text, prevented even those, who knew
+little Latin and less Greek, from being one moment in the dark as to
+what was going on. The passage was one from the "Birds" of Aristophanes;
+and the fact of a treaty being concluded between the Olympians and
+terrestrials, led to the introduction of some interpolations as to the
+Washington Treaty, which, when interpreted by the production of the
+American flag and English Union Jack, brought down thunders of applause.
+The final chorus was sung to "Yankee Doodle," and accompanied by a
+fiddle. The acting and accessories were perfect; and what poor Robson
+used to term the "horgan" of Triballos, was wonderful. That youth would
+be a nice young man for a small tea party. It is to be hoped that, like
+Bottom the weaver, he can modulate his voice, and roar as gently as any
+sucking-dove.
+
+Most wonderful, however, of all the marvels--that met me at my old
+school--was a scene from the "Critic," played by the most Lilliputian
+boys. Puff--played by Powell (I don't forget that name)--was simply
+marvellous. And yet Powell, if he will forgive me for saying so, was the
+merest whipper-snapper. Sir Christopher Hatton could scarcely have
+emerged from the nursery; and yet the idea of utter stolidity never
+found a better exponent than that same homoeopathic boy.
+
+Last of all came the conventional scene from Moliere's "L'Avare." Maitre
+Jacques was good; Harpagon more than good. I came away well satisfied,
+only regretting I had not brought my eldest boy to see it. My eldest
+boy! Egad, and I was just such as he is now, when I used to creep like a
+snail unwillingly to those scholastic shades. The spirit of Pangloss
+came upon me again as I thought of all I had seen that day,--there was
+nothing like it in my day. King's College keeps pace with the times.
+"Tempora mutantur!" I mentally exclaimed; and added, not without a
+pleasant scepticism, as I gazed once more on the pippin-faced master, "I
+wonder whether--nos mutamur in illis?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+PSYCHOLOGICAL LADIES.
+
+
+There is no doubt that the "Woman's Rights" question is going ahead with
+gigantic strides, not only in social and political, but also in
+intellectual matters. Boys and girls--or rather we ought to say young
+ladies and young gentlemen--are grouped together on the class list of
+the Oxford Local Examination, irrespective of sex. A glance at the daily
+papers will show us that women are being lectured to on all subjects
+down from physical sciences, through English literature and art, to the
+construction of the clavecin. We had fancied, however, that what are
+technically termed "the Humanities," or, in University diction,
+"Science"--meaning thereby ethics and logic--were still our own. Now, we
+are undeceived. We are reminded that woman can say, without a solecism,
+"Homo sum," and may therefore claim to embrace even the humanities among
+her subjects of study. Henceforth the realm of woman is not merely what
+may be called "pianofortecultural," as was once the case. It has soared
+even above art, literature, and science itself into what might at first
+sight appear the uncongenial spheres of dialectics and metaphysics.
+
+Professor G. Croom Robertson recently commenced a course of thirty
+lectures to ladies on Psychology and Logic, at the Hall, 15, Lower
+Seymour Street, Portman Square. Urged, it may be, rather by a desire to
+see whether ladies would be attracted by such a subject, and, if so,
+what psychological ladies were like, than by any direct interest in the
+matters themselves, I applied to the hon. secretary, inquiring whether
+the inferior sex were admissible; and was answered by a ticket admitting
+one's single male self and a party of ladies a discretion. The very
+entrance to the hall--nay, the populous street itself--removed my doubts
+as to whether ladies would be attracted by the subjects; and on entering
+I discovered that the audience consisted of several hundred ladies, and
+two unfortunate--or shall it not rather be said privileged?--members of
+the male sex. The ladies were of all ages, evidently matrons as well as
+spinsters, with really nothing at all approaching a "blue stocking"
+element; but all evidently bent on business. All were taking vigorous
+notes, and seemed to follow the Professor's somewhat difficult Scotch
+diction at least as well as our two selves, who appeared to represent
+not only the male sex in general, but the London press in particular.
+
+Professor Robertson commenced by a brief and well-timed reference to the
+accomplished Hypatia, familiar to ladies from Kingsley's novel--in the
+days when ladies used to read novels--and also the Royal ladies whom
+Descartes and Leibnitz found apter disciples than the savants. It was,
+however, he remarked, an impertinence to suppose that any apology was
+needed for introducing such subjects before ladies. He plunged therefore
+at once in medias res, and made his first lecture not a mere isolated or
+introductory one, but the actual commencement of his series. Unreasoned
+facts, he said, formed but a mere fraction of our knowledge--even the
+simplest processes resolving themselves into a chain of inference. Truth
+is the result of logical reasoning; and not only truth, but truth _for
+all_. The sciences deal with special aspects of truth. These sciences
+may be arranged in the order--1. Mathematics; 2. Physics; 3. Chemistry;
+4. Biology--each gradually narrowing its sphere; the one enclosed, so to
+say, in the other, and each presupposing those above it. Logic was
+presupposed in all. Each might be expressed by a word ending in "logy,"
+therefore logic might be termed the "science of sciences." The sciences
+were special applications of logic. Scientific men speak lightly of
+logic, and say truth can be discovered without it. This is true, but
+trivial. We may as well object to physiology because we can digest
+without a knowledge of it; or to arithmetic, because it is possible to
+reckon without it. Scientific progress has been great; but its course
+might have been strewn with fewer wrecks had its professors been more
+generally logicians. But then logic presupposes something else. We have
+to investigate the origin and growth of knowledge--the laws under which
+knowledge comes to be. Under one aspect this science--psychology--should
+be placed highest up in the scale; but under another it would rank later
+in point of development than even biology itself, because it is not
+every being that thinks. This twofold aspect is accounted for by the
+peculiarity of its subject-matter--viz., mind.
+
+The sciences are comparatively modern. Mathematics but some 3000 or 4000
+years old; physics, three centuries; chemistry, a thing of the last,
+biology only of the present century. But men philosophized before the
+sciences. The ancient Greeks had but one science--mathematics. Now men
+know a little of many sciences; but what we want is men to connect--to
+knit together--the sciences; to have their knowledge all of a piece. The
+knowledge of the ancient Greek directed his actions, and entered far
+more into his daily life than ours does. This, he observed, was
+philosophy. This is what we want now; and this is what is to be got from
+psychology. There is not a single thing between heaven and earth that
+does not admit of a mental expression; or, in other words, possess a
+subjective aspect, and therefore come under psychology.
+
+This, in briefest outline, is a sketch of the "strong meat" offered to
+the psychological ladies. A single branch of psychology--that, namely,
+of the intellect, excluding that of feeling and action--is to occupy ten
+lectures, the above being number one. The other twenty will be devoted
+to logic.
+
+The next lecture was devoted to an examination of the brain and nervous
+system, and their office in mental processes. Alas, however, how
+different was now the audience! Only some thirty ladies--scarcely more
+than one-tenth of those who were present at the opening lecture--have
+permanently entered for the course. It is no disrespect to the ladies to
+hazard the conjecture whether the subject be not a little out of range
+for the present. We are moving ahead rapidly, and many foolish ideas as
+to the intellectual differences of the sexes are becoming obsolete. We
+have literary and artistic ladies by thousands. Scientific ladies, in
+the ordinary acceptation of the term, are coming well to the front.
+Possibly we may have to "wait a little longer" before we get, on
+anything like a large scale, psychological or even logical ladies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+SECULARISM ON BUNYAN.
+
+
+It is very marvellous to observe the number of strange and unexpected
+combinations that are continually occurring in that moral kaleidoscope
+we call society. I do not suppose that I am exceptional in coming across
+these; nor do I use any particular industry in seeking them out. They
+come to me; all I do is to keep my eyes open, and note the impressions
+they make on me. I was humbly pursuing my way one Tuesday evening
+towards the abode of a phrenologist with the honest intention of
+discovering my craniological condition, when, in passing down Castle
+Street, Oxford Market, I was made aware that Mr. G. J. Holyoake was
+there and then to deliver himself on the "Literary Genius of Bunyan."
+This was one of the incongruous combinations I spoke of; and forthwith I
+passed into the Co-operative Hall, resolving to defer my visit to the
+phrenologist. There are some facts of which it is better to remain
+contentedly ignorant; and I have no doubt my own mental condition
+belongs to that category.
+
+I found the Co-operative Hall a handsome and commodious building; and a
+very fair audience had gathered to listen to Mr. Holyoake, who is an
+elderly thin-voiced man, and his delivery was much impeded on the
+occasion in question by the circumstance of his having a bad cold and
+cough. After a brief extempore allusion to the fact of the Duke of
+Bedford having erected a statue to Bunyan, which he regarded as a sort
+of compensation for his Grace ceasing to subscribe to the races, Mr.
+Holyoake proceeded to read his treatise, which he had written on several
+slips of paper--apparently backs of circulars--and laid one by one on a
+chair as he finished them.
+
+The world, he said, is a big place; but people are always forgetting
+what a variety of humanity it contains. Two hundred years ago, the
+authorities of Bedford made it very unpleasant for one John Bunyan,
+because they thought they knew everything, and could not imagine that a
+common street workman might know more. The trade of a tinker seems an
+unpromising preparation for a literary career. A tinker in Bedford
+to-day would not find himself much flattered by the attentions paid him,
+especially if he happened to be an old gaol-bird as well. So much the
+more creditable to Bunyan the ascendancy he gained. If he mended pots as
+well as he made sentences he was the best tinker that ever travelled.
+
+Bunyan had no worldly notions. His doctrine was that men were not saved
+by any good they might do--a doctrine that would ruin the morals of any
+commercial establishment in a month! He declared himself the "chief of
+sinners;" but judged by his townsmen he was a stout-hearted,
+stout-minded, scrupulous man.
+
+He was not a pleasant man to know. He had an unrelenting sincerity which
+often turned into severity. Yet he had much tenderness. He had a soul
+like a Red Indian's--all tomahawk and truth, until the literary passion
+came and added humour to it. He demands in his vigorous doggerel:--
+
+ May I not write in such a style as this,
+ In such a method, too, and yet not miss
+ My end, thy good? Why may it not be done?
+ Dark clouds bring waters, when the bright bring none.
+
+Like all men of original genius, this stout-minded pot-mender had
+unbounded confidence in himself. He was under no delusion as to his own
+powers. No man knew better what he was about. He could take the measure
+of all the justices about him, and he knew it. Every shallow-headed
+gentleman in Bedfordshire towns and villages was made to wince under his
+picturesque and satiric tongue. To clergymen, bishops, lawyers, and
+judges he gave names which all his neighbours knew. Mr. Pitiless, Mr.
+Hardheart, Mr. Forget-good, Mr. No-truth, Mr. Haughty--thus he named the
+disagreeable dignitaries of the town of Mansoul.
+
+At first he was regarded by his "pastors and masters" as a mere wilful,
+noisy, praying sectary. Very soon they discovered that he was a
+fighting preacher. As tinker or Christian he always had his sleeves
+turned up. When he had to try his own cause he put in the jury-box Mr.
+True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. See-Truth, and other amiable
+persons. His witnesses were Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, Mr. Hate-Lies,
+Mr. Vouch-Truth, Mr. Did-See. His Town Clerk was Mr. Do-Right, the
+Recorder was Mr. Conscience, the gaoler was Mr. True-Man, Lord
+Understanding was on the bench, and the Judge bears the dainty name of
+the "Golden-headed Prince."
+
+Bunyan's adversaries are always a bad set. They live in Villain's Lane,
+in Blackmouth Street, or Blasphemer's Row, or Drunkard's Alley, or
+Rascal's Corner. They are the sons of one Beastly, whose mother bore
+them in Flesh Square: they live at the house of one Shameless, at the
+sign of the Reprobate, next door to the Descent into the Pit, whose
+retainers are Mr. Flatter, Mr. Impiety, Mr. False-Peace, Mr.
+Covetousness, who are housed by one Mr. Simple, in Folly's Yard.
+
+Bunyan had a perfect wealth of sectarian scurrility at his command. His
+epithets are at times unquotable and ferocious. When, however, his
+friends are at the bar, the witnesses against them comprise the choicest
+scoundrels of all time--Mr. Envy, Mr. Pick-thank, and others, whose
+friends are Lord Carnal-Delight, Lord Luxurious, Lord Lechery, Sir
+Having Greedy, and similar villanous people of quality. The Judge's
+name is now Lord Hate-Good. The Jury consist of Mr. No-Good, Mr. Malice,
+Mr. Love-Lust, Mr. Live-Loose, Mr. Heady, Mr. Hate-Light, Mr. Enmity,
+Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, and Mr. Implacable, with Mr. Blindman for
+Foreman.
+
+Never was such an infamous gang impanelled. Rancour and rage and
+vindictiveness, and every passion awakened in the breasts of the strong
+by local insolence and legal injustice, is supplied by Bunyan with
+epithets of immense retaliative force. He is the greatest name-maker
+among authors. He was a spiritual Comanche. He prayed like a savage. He
+said himself, when describing the art of the religious rhetorician--an
+art of which he was the greatest master of his time:--
+
+ You see the ways the fisherman doth take
+ To catch the fish; what engines doth he make!
+ Behold! how he engageth all his wits,
+ Also his snares, lines, angles, hooks, and nets;
+ Yet fish there be that neither hook nor line,
+ Nor snare, nor net, nor engine can make thine;
+ They must be grop'd for, and be tickled too,
+ Or they will not be catch'd, whate'er you do.
+
+Bunyan never tickled the sinner. It was not his way. He carried a prong.
+He pricked the erring. He published a pamphlet to suggest what ought to
+be done to holy pedestrians, whose difficulties lay rearward. He put
+detonating balls under their feet which exploded as they stepped and
+alarmed them along. He lined the celestial road with horrors. If they
+turned their heads they saw a fiend worse than Lot's wife who was merely
+changed into a pillar of sweet all-preserving salt. Bunyan's unfortunate
+converts who looked back fell into a pit filled with fire, where they
+howled and burnt for evermore.
+
+Ah! with what pleasure must the great Bedfordshire artist have
+contemplated his masterly pages as day by day he added to them the
+portrait of some new scoundrel, or painted with dexterous and loving
+hand the wholesome outlines of some honest man, or devised some new
+phrase which like a new note or new colour would delight singer or
+painter for generations yet to come. He must have strode proudly along
+his cell as he put his praise and his scorn into imperishable similes.
+
+But Bunyan had never been great had he been merely disagreeable. He had
+infinite wit in him. It was his carnal genius that saved him. He wrote
+sixty books, and two of them--the "Siege of the Town of Mansoul" and the
+"Pilgrim's Progress"--exceed all ever written for creative swiftness of
+imagination, racy English speech, sentences of literary art, cunningness
+in dialogue, satire, ridicule, and surpassing knowledge of the
+picturesque ways of the obscure minds of common men. In his pages men
+rise out of the ground--they always come up on an open space so that
+they can be seen. They talk naturally, so that you know them at once;
+and they act without delay, so that you never forget them. They
+surprise you, delight you, they interest you, they instruct you, and
+disappear. They never linger, they never weary you. Incidents new and
+strange arise at every step in his story. The scene changes like the men
+and their adventures. Now it is field or morass, plain or bypath, bog or
+volcano, castle or cottage, sandy scorching desert or cold river; the
+smoke of the bottomless pit or bright, verdant, delectable mountains and
+enchanted lands where there are no bishops, no gaols, and no tinkers;
+where aboundeth grapes, calico, brides, eternal conversation, and
+trumpets. The great magician's genius forsakes him when he comes to the
+unknown regions, and he knoweth no more than the rest of us. But while
+his foot is on the earth he steps like a king among writers. His
+Christian is no fool. He is cunning of fence, suspicious, sagacious,
+witty, satirical, abounding in invective, and broad, bold, delicious
+insolence. Bye-Ends is a subtle, evasive knave drawn with infinite
+skill.
+
+Had Bunyan merely preached the Gospel he had no more been remembered
+than thousands of his day who are gratefully forgotten--had he prayed to
+this time he had won no statue; but his literary genius lives when the
+preacher is very dead.
+
+He saw with such vividness that the very passions and wayward moods of
+men stood apart and distinct in his sight, and he gave names to them and
+endowed them with their natural speech. He created new men out of
+characteristics of mind, and sent them into the world in shapes so
+defined and palpable that men know them for evermore. It was the way of
+his age for writers to give names to their adversaries. Bunyan imitated
+this in his life of Mr. Badman. Others did this, but Bunyan did it
+better than any man. His invention was marvellous, and he had besides
+the faculty of the dramatist.
+
+If any man wrote the adventures of a Co-operator, he would have to tell
+of his meeting with Mr. Obstinate, who will not listen to him, and wants
+to pull him back. We all get the company of Mr. Pliable, who is
+persuaded without being convinced, who at the first splash into
+difficulty crawls out and turns back with a cowardly adroitness. We have
+all encountered the stupidity of Mr. Ignorance, which nothing can
+enlighten. We know Mr. Turnaway, who comes from the town of Apostacy,
+whose face we cannot perfectly see. Others merely gave names, he drew
+characters, he made the qualities of his men speak; you knew them by
+their minds better than by their dress. That is why succeeding ages have
+read the "Pilgrim's Progress," because the same people who met that
+extraordinary traveller are always turning up in the way of every man
+who has a separate and a high purpose, and is bent upon carrying it out.
+Manners change, but humanity has still its old ways. It is because
+Bunyan painted these that his writing lasts like a picture by one of the
+old masters who painted for all time.
+
+Such is an outline of the paper, which was interesting from its
+associations, and only spoilt by the cough. We had had Bunyan in pretty
+well every shape possible during the last few weeks. Certainly one of
+the most original is this which presents the man of unbounded faith in
+the light of utter scepticism.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AL FRESCO INFIDELITY.
+
+
+In a series of papers like the present it is necessary, every now and
+then, to pause and apologize, either for the nature of the work in
+general, or for certain particulars in its execution calculated to shock
+good people whose feelings one would wish to respect. Having so long been
+engaged in the study of infidelity in London, I may, perhaps, be
+permitted to speak with something like authority in the matter; and I
+have no hesitation in saying that I believe the policy of shirking the
+subject is the most fatal and foolish one that could be adopted. Not only
+does such a course inspire people, especially young people, with the idea
+that there is something very fascinating in infidelity--something which,
+if allowed to meet their gaze, would be sure to attract and convince
+them--than which nothing is farther from the truth--not only so, however,
+but many of the statements and most of the arguments which sound
+plausibly enough on the glib tongue of a popular speaker read very
+differently indeed, when put down in cold-blooded letter-press, and
+published in the pages of a book. I protest strongly against making a
+mystery of London infidelity. It has spread and is spreading, I know,
+and it is well the public should know; but I believe there would be no
+such antidote to it as for people to be fully made aware how and where it
+is spreading. That is the role I have all along proposed to myself: not
+to declaim against any man or any system, not to depreciate or disguise
+the truth, but simply to describe. I cannot imagine a more legitimate
+method of doing my work.
+
+I suppose no one will regard it in any way as an indulgence or a luxury
+on the part of a clergyman, who be it remembered, is, during a portion
+of the Sunday, engaged in ministering to Christian people, that he
+should devote another portion of that day to hearing Christ vilified,
+and having his own creed torn to pieces. I myself feel that my own
+belief is not shaken, but in a tenfold degree confirmed by all I have
+heard and seen and written of infidelity; and therefore I cannot concede
+the principle that to convey my experiences to others is in any way
+dangerous. Take away the halo of mystery that surrounds this subject,
+and it would possess very slender attractions indeed.
+
+It was, for instance, on what has always appeared to me among the most
+affecting epochs of our Christian year, the Fifth Sunday after
+Easter--Christ's last Sunday upon earth--that, by one of those violent
+antitheses, I went to Gibraltar Walk, Bethnal Green Road, to hear Mr.
+Ramsey there demolish the very system which, for many years, it has
+been my mission to preach. I did not find, and I hope my congregation
+did not find, that I faltered in my message that evening. I even venture
+to think that Mr. Ramsey's statements, which I shall repeat as
+faithfully as possible, will scarcely seem as convincing here as they
+did when he poured them forth so fluently to the costermongers and
+navvies of the Bethnal Green Road; and if this be true of Mr. Ramsey it
+is certainly so of the smaller men; for he is a master in his craft, and
+certainly a creditable antagonist for a Christian to meet with the mild
+defensive weapons we have elected to use.
+
+When the weather proves fine, as it ought to have done in May, 1874,
+infidelity adjourns from its generally slummy halls to the street
+corners, and to fields which are often the reverse of green; thus
+adopting, let me remark in passing, one of the oldest instrumentalities
+of Christianity itself, one, too, in which we shall do well to follow
+its example. Fas est ab hoste doceri--I cannot repeat too often.
+Scorning the attractions of the railway arches in the St. Pancras Road,
+where I hope soon to be a listener, I sped via the Metropolitan Railway
+and tram to Shoreditch Church, not far from which, past the Columbia
+Market and palatial Model Lodging Houses, is the unpicturesque corner
+called Gibraltar Walk, debouching from the main road, with a triangular
+scrap of very scrubby ground, flanked by a low wall, which young
+Bethnal Green is rapidly erasing from the face of the earth. When I got
+here, I found an unclerical-looking gentleman in a blue great-coat and
+sandy moustache erecting his rostrum in the shape of a small deal stool,
+from whence I could see he was preparing to pour forth the floods of his
+rhetoric by diligent study of some exceedingly greasy notes which he
+held in his hand and perused at what I feel sure must have been the
+windiest street corner procurable outside the cave of AEolus. I fell back
+into the small but very far from select crowd which had already begun to
+gather, and an old man, who was unmistakably a cobbler, having
+ascertained that I had come to hear the lecture, told me he had
+"listened to a good many of 'em, but did not feel much for'arder."
+Undismayed by this intelligence I still elected to tarry, despite the
+cruel nor'-easter that was whistling round the corner of the Bethnal
+Green Road. In a few minutes I perceived a slight excitement in the
+small gathering due to the fact that the Christians had put in an
+appearance, so that there would be some opposition. Mr. Harrington, a
+young man whom I had heard once speak fluently enough on the theistic
+side at an infidel meeting, was unpacking his rostrum, which was a
+patent folding one, made of deal, like that of his adversary, but neatly
+folded along with a large Bible, inside a green baize case. Both
+gentlemen commenced proceedings at the same time; and as they had
+pitched their stools very close to one another, the result was very
+much like that of two grinding organs in the same street. Of the two,
+Mr. Harrington's voice was louder than Mr. Ramsey's. The latter
+gentleman had a sore throat, and had to be kept lubricated by means of a
+jug of water, which a brother heretic held ready at his elbow. Mr.
+Harrington was in prime condition, but his congregation was smaller than
+ours; for I kept at first--I was going to say religiously, I suppose I
+ought to say _ir_-religiously--to the infidels.
+
+Mr. Ramsey, who had a rooted aversion to the letter "h," except where a
+smooth breathing is usual, began by saying that Christianity differed
+from other religions in the fact of its having an eternal 'Ell. The
+Mahometans had their beautiful ladies; the North American Indian looked
+for his 'Appy 'Unting Grounds; but 'Ell was a speciality of the
+Christian system. On the other side was the fact that you continually
+had salvation inundated upon you. Tracts were put into your hand,
+asking--"What must I do to be saved?" We had to pay for this salvation
+about _11,000,000l._ a year to the Church of England, and something like
+an equal amount to the Dissenters. In fact every tub-thumper went about
+preaching and ruining servant girls, and for this we paid over twenty
+millions a year--more than the interest on the whole National Debt.
+After this elegant exordium, Mr. Ramsey said he proposed to divide his
+remarks under four heads. 1. Is Salvation necessary? 2. What are we to
+be saved from? 3. What for? 4. How?
+
+1. According to the Christian theory, God, after an eternity of "doin'
+nothin'," created the world. He made Adam sin by making sin for him to
+commit; and then damned him for doing what He knew he would do. He
+predestined you--the audience--to be damned because of Adam's sin; but
+after a time God "got sick and tired of damning people," and sent His
+Son to redeem mankind.
+
+This flower of rhetoric tickled Bethnal Green immensely; but Mr.
+Harrington was equal to the occasion, and thundered out his orthodoxy so
+successfully that Mr. Ramsey took a longer drink than usual, and
+complained that he was not having "a free platform"--it was so he
+dignified the rickety stool on which he was perched. He then meandered
+into a long dissection of Genesis i., appearing to feel particularly
+aggrieved by the fact of the moon being said to "rule the night," though
+I could not see how this was relevant to the Christian scheme of
+salvation; and a superb policeman, who had listened for a moment to Mr.
+Ramsey's astronomical lucubrations, evidently shared my feelings and
+passed on superciliously. I devoutly wished my duty had permitted me to
+do the same.
+
+The speaker then went into a long dissertation on the primal sin; the
+gist of which was that though the woman had never been warned not to eat
+of the Forbidden Fruit, she had to bear the brunt of the punishment.
+Then--though one is almost ashamed to chronicle such a triviality--he
+waxed very wroth because the serpent was spoken of as being cursed above
+all "cattle." Who ever heard of snakes being called cattle? He was
+condemned to go on his belly. How did he go before? Did he go on his
+back or "'op" along on the tip of his tail? These pleasantries drew all
+Mr. Harrington's audience away except a few little dirty boys on the
+wall. Mr. Ramsey clearly knew his audience, and "acted to the gallery."
+
+2. But what were we to be saved from? Eternal 'Ell-fire. This 'Ell-fire
+was favourite sauce for sermons, and served to keep people awake. Where
+was 'Ell? It was said to be a bottomless pit; if so, he should be all
+right, because he could get out at the other end! Then, again, 'Ell was
+said to be a very 'ot place. When the missionaries told the Greenlanders
+that, everybody wanted to go to 'Ell; so they had to change their tune
+and say it was very cold. Mr. Ramsey omitted to mention his authority
+for this statement.
+
+Into his pleasantries on the monotony of life in 'Eaven, I do not feel
+inclined to follow this gentleman. The Atonement, he went on to remark,
+if necessary at all, came 4000 years too late. It should have been--so
+we were to believe on his ipse dixit--contemporaneous with the Fall.
+This atonement we were to avail ourselves of by means of faith. Idiots
+could not have faith, but were allowed to be saved. Consequently, argued
+Mr. Ramsey, in conclusion, the best thing for all of us would have been
+to have been born idiots, and, consistently enough, Christianity tried
+to turn us all into idiots.
+
+Such were some of the statements. I refrain from quoting the most
+offensive, which were deliberately put forward at this al fresco
+infidels' meeting; and with what result? Though a vast population kept
+moving to and fro along that great highway there were never, I am sure,
+more than a hundred people gathered at the shrine of Mr. Ramsey. They
+laughed at his profanities, yes; but directly he dropped these, and grew
+argumentative, they talked, and had to be vigorously reduced to order.
+Gallio-like they cared for none of these things, and I am quite sure a
+good staff of working clergy, men like Mr. Body or Mr. Steele of St.
+Thomas's, who could talk to the people, would annihilate Mr. Ramsey's
+prestige. As for Mr. Harrington, he meant well, and had splendid
+lung-power, but his theology was too sectarian to suit a mixed body of
+listeners embracing all shades of thought and no-thought.
+
+Supposing Mr. Ramsey to have put forth all his power that morning--and I
+have no reason to doubt that he did so--I deliberately say that I should
+not hesitate to take my own boy down to hear him, because I feel that
+even his immature mind would be able to realize how little there was to
+be said against Christianity, if that were all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+AN "INDESCRIBABLE PHENOMENON."
+
+
+When the bulk of the London Press elects to gush over anything or
+anybody, there are at all events, prima facie grounds for believing that
+there is something to justify such a consensus. When, moreover, the
+object of such gush is a young lady claiming to be a spirit-medium, the
+unanimity is so unusual as certainly to make the matter worth the most
+careful inquiry, for hitherto the London Press has either denounced
+spiritualism altogether, or gushed singly over individual mediums,
+presumably according to the several proclivities of the correspondents.
+Of Miss Annie Eva Fay, however--is not the very name fairy-like and
+fascinating?--I read in one usually sober-minded journal that "there is
+something not of this earth about the young lady's powers." Another
+averred that she was "a spirit medium of remarkable and extraordinary
+power." Others, more cautious, described the "mystery" as "bewildering,"
+the "entertainment" as "extraordinary and incomprehensible," while yet
+another seemed to me to afford an index to the cause of this gush by
+saying that "Miss Fay is a pretty young lady of about twenty, with a
+delicate spirituelle face, and a profusion of light hair, frizzled on
+the forehead."
+
+I made a point of attending Miss Annie Eva Fay's opening performance at
+the Hanover Square Rooms, and found all true enough as to the pretty
+face and the frizzled hair. Of the "indescribable" nature of the
+"phenomenon" (for by that title is Miss Fay announced, a la Vincent
+Crummles) there may be two opinions, according as we regard the young
+lady as a kind of Delphic Priestess and Cumaean Sibyl rolled into one, or
+simply a clever conjuror--conjuress, if there be such a word.
+
+Let me, then, with that delightful inconsistency so often brought to
+bear on the so-called or self-styled "supernatural," first describe the
+"indescribable," and then, in the language of the unspiritual Dr. Lynn,
+tell how it is all done; for, of course, I found it all out, like a
+great many others of the enlightened and select audience which gathered
+at Miss Annie Eva Fay's first drawing-room reception in the Queen's
+Concert Rooms.
+
+Arriving at the door half an hour too early, as I had misread the time
+of commencement, I found at the portal Mr. Burns, of the Progressive
+Library, and a gentleman with a diamond brooch in his shirt-front, whom
+I guessed at once, from that adornment, to be the proprietor of the
+indescribable phenomenon, and I was, in fact, immediately introduced to
+him as Colonel Fay.
+
+Passing in due course within the cavernous room which might have suited
+well a Cumaean Sibyl on a small scale, I found the platform occupied by a
+tiny cabinet, unlike that of the Davenports in that it was open in
+front, with a green curtain, which I could see was destined to be let
+down during the performance of the phenomenal manifestations. There was
+a camp-stool inside the cabinet; a number of cane-bottomed chairs on the
+platform, and also the various properties of a spirit seance, familiar
+to me from long experience, guitar, fiddle, handbells, tambourine, &c.
+One adjunct alone was new; and that was a green stable bucket, destined,
+I could not doubt, to figure in what my Rimmel-scented programme
+promised as the climax of Part I.--the "Great Pail Sensation." Presently
+Colonel Fay, in a brief speech, nasal but fluent, introduced the
+subject, and asked two gentlemen to act as a Committee of Inspection.
+Two stepped forward immediately--indeed too immediately, as the result
+proved; one a "citizen of this city," as Colonel Fay had requested; but
+the other a Hindoo young gentleman, who, I believe, lost the confidence
+of the audience at once from his foreign face and Oriental garb.
+However, they were first to the front, and so were elected, and
+proceeded at once to "examine" the cabinet in that obviously helpless
+and imperfect way common to novices who work with the gaze of an
+audience upon them. Then, from a side door, stage left, enter the
+Indescribable Phenomenon. A pretty young lady, yes, and with light
+frizzled hair to any extent. There was perhaps "a spirit look within her
+eyes;" but then I have often found this to be the case with young ladies
+of twenty. Her dress of light silk was beyond reproach. I had seen
+Florence Cook and Miss Showers lately; and,--well, I thought those two,
+with the assistance of Miss Annie Eva Fay, would have made a very pretty
+model for a statuette of the Three Graces.
+
+Miss Fay, after being described by the Colonel vaguely enough as "of the
+United States," was bound on both wrists with strips of calico; the
+knots were sewn by the European gentleman--as distinguished from the
+Asiatic youth. He was not quite au fait at the needle, but got through
+it in time. Miss Fay was then placed on the camp-stool, her wrists
+fastened behind her, and her neck also secured to a ring screwed into
+the back of the cabinet. A rope was tied round her ankles, and passed
+right to the front of the stage, where the Hindoo youth was located and
+bidden hold it taut, which he did conscientiously, his attitude being
+what Colman describes "like some fat gentleman who bobbed for eels."
+
+First of all, another strip of calico was placed loosely round Miss
+Fay's neck; the curtain descended. Hey, presto! it was up again, sooner
+than it takes to write, and this strip was knotted doubly and trebly
+round her neck. A tambourine hoop was put in her lap, and this, in like
+manner, was found encircling her neck, as far as the effervescent hair
+would allow it.
+
+The audience at this point grew a little fidgety; and though they did
+not say anything against the Oriental young gentleman, the 'cute
+American colonel understood it, adding two others from the audience to
+the committee on the stage, and leaving the young gentleman to "bob"
+down below as if to keep him out of mischief.
+
+The other "manifestations" were really only different in detail from the
+first. The guitar was placed on the lap, the curtain fell and it played;
+so did the fiddle--out of tune, as usual--and also a little glass
+harmonicon with actually a soupcon of melody. A mouth-organ
+tootle-tooed, and what Colonel Fay described as a "shingle nail" was
+driven with a hammer into a piece of wood. A third of a tumbler of water
+laid on the lap of the Indescribable Phenomenon was drunk, and the great
+Pail Sensation consisted in the bucket being put on her lap and then
+discovered slung by the handle around her neck. The last "manifestation"
+is the one to which I would draw attention; for it was by this I
+discovered how it was all done. A knife was put on Miss Fay's lap; the
+curtain lowered, the knife pitched on to the platform, and behold the
+Indescribable Phenomenon stepped from the cabinet with the ligature that
+had bound her wrists and neck severed.
+
+Now, all through this portion of the entertainment the audience,
+instead of sitting quiet, amused themselves with proposing idiotic
+tests, or suggesting audibly how it was all done. One man behind me
+pertinaciously clung to the theory of a concealed boy, and trotted him
+to the front after every phase of the exhibition. He must have been
+infinitesimally small; but that did not matter. It was "that boy again"
+after every trick. One manifestation consisted in putting a piece of
+paper and pair of scissors on Miss Fay's lap, and having several "tender
+little infants" cut out, as the Colonel phrased it.
+
+Hereupon sprang up a 'cute individual in the room, and produced a sheet
+of paper he had marked. Would Miss Fay cut out a tender little infant
+from that? Miss Fay consented, and of course did it, the 'cute
+individual retiring into private life for the rest of the evening.
+Another wanted Miss Fay's mouth to be bound with a handkerchief, and
+there was no objection raised, until the common-sense and humanity of
+the audience protested against such a needless cruelty on a broiling
+night and in that Cumaean cave. An excited gentleman in front of me, too,
+whose mission I fancy was simply to protest against the spiritual
+character of the phenomena (which was never asserted) would interrupt us
+all from time to time by declaring his intense satisfaction with it all.
+It was a splendid trick. We tried to convince him that his individual
+satisfaction was irrelevant to us, but it was, as Wordsworth says,
+"Throwing words away." It was a beautiful trick; and he was satisfied,
+quite satisfied.
+
+The Dark Seance, which formed the second part of the performance, was a
+dreadful mistake. It was not only unsatisfactory in result, but--and no
+doubt this was the reason--it was so mismanaged as to threaten more than
+once to eventuate in a riot. Twelve or fourteen persons were to form a
+committee representing the audience, and to sit in a circle, with the
+Indescribable Phenomenon in their centre, while we remained below in
+Egyptian darkness and received their report. Of course we all felt that
+we--if not on the committee--might just as well be sitting at home or in
+the next parish as in the cave of Cumae. The method of electing the
+committee was briefly stated by Colonel Fay to be "first come first
+served," and the consequence was a rush of some fifty excited people on
+to the platform, with earnest requests on the part of the proprietary to
+be "still." There was no more stillness for the rest of the evening. The
+fifty were pruned down to about fifteen of the most pertinacious, who
+would not move at any price; in fact, the others only descended on being
+promised that the dark sitting should be divided into two, and another
+committee appointed. The Indescribable Phenomenon took her seat on the
+camp-stool in the centre, where she was to remain clapping her hands, to
+show she was not producing the manifestations. The gas was put out and
+darkness prevailed--darkness, but not silence. The disappointed and
+rejected committee men--and women--first began to grumble in the freedom
+which the darkness secured. The committee was a packed one. They were
+Spiritualists. This was vigorously denied by somebody, who said he saw a
+Press man in the circle, and therefore (such was his logic) he could not
+be a Spiritualist. All this time the Indescribable Phenomenon was
+clapping her hands, and now some of the more restless of the audience
+clapped theirs in concert. The guitar and fiddle began to thump and
+twang, and the bells to ring, and then again the more refractory
+lunatics amongst us began to beat accompaniment on our hats. The whole
+affair was worthy of Bedlam or Hanwell, or, let us add, an Indescribable
+Phenomenon.
+
+The committee was changed with another rush, and those who were finally
+exiled from the hope of sitting took it out in the subsequent darkness
+by advising us to "beware of our pockets." When Colonel Fay asked for
+quietude he was rudely requested "not to talk through his nose." It was
+not to be wondered at that the seance was very brief, and the meeting
+adjourned.
+
+Now to describe the indescribable. If it be a spiritual manifestation,
+of course there is an end of the matter; but if a mere conjuring trick,
+I would call attention to the following facts. The fastening of Miss
+Fay's neck to the back of the cabinet at first is utterly gratuitous. It
+offers no additional difficulty to any manifestations, and appears only
+intended to prevent the scrutineers seeing behind her. A very simple
+exercise of sleight of hand would enable the gallant Colonel to cut the
+one ligature that binds the two wrists, when, for instance, he goes into
+the cabinet with scissors to trim off the ends of the piece of calico in
+the opening trick. The hands being once free all else is easy. The hands
+are _never once seen_ during the performance. The committee can feel
+them, and feel the knots at the wrists; but they cannot discover whether
+the ligature connecting the wrists is entire.
+
+The last trick, be it recollected, consists in the ligature being cut
+and Miss Fay's coming free to the front. If my theory is incorrect--and
+no doubt it _is_ ruinously wrong--will she consent to _omit the last
+trick_ and come to the front with wrists bound as she entered the
+cabinet? Of course, if I had suggested it, she would have done it as
+easily as she cut out the tender infants for the 'cute gentleman behind
+me; so, to adopt the language of Miss Fay's fellow-citizen, I "bit in my
+breath and swallered it down." I adopted the course Mr. Maskelyne told
+me he did with the Davenports, sat with my eyes open and my mouth shut.
+It is marvellous to see how excited we phlegmatic islanders grow when
+either spirits are brought to the front, or we think we have found out a
+conjuring trick. I am not going to follow the example of my gushing
+brethren, but I can safely say that if anybody has an afternoon or
+evening to spare, he may do worse than go to the Crystal Palace or the
+Hanover Square Rooms, to see a very pretty and indescribable phenomenon,
+and to return as I did, a wiser, though perhaps a sadder man, in the
+proud consciousness of having "found out how it is all done."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A LADY MESMERIST.
+
+
+When a man's whole existence has resolved itself into hunting up strange
+people and poking his nose into queer nooks and corners, he has a sorry
+time of it in London during August; for, as a rule, all the funny folks
+have gone out of town, and the queer nooks and corners are howling
+wildernesses. There is always, of course, a sort of borderland, if he
+can only find it out, some peculiar people who never go out of town,
+some strange localities which are still haunted by them; only he has to
+find them out--people and places--for it is so universally allowed
+now-a-days that all genteel people must be out of London in August, and
+all respectable places must be covered up in old newspapers, that it is
+difficult to get them to own the soft impeachment.
+
+However, there is one queer place that is never shut up, the Progressive
+Library in Southampton Row; and Mr. Burns and the Spiritualists, as a
+rule, do not shut up shop even in August. Their Summerland lies
+elsewhere than Margate or the Moors; and a valse with a pirouetting
+table or a little gentle levitation or elongation delights them more
+than all the revels of the countryside. I was getting a little blase, I
+own, on the subject of Spiritualism after my protracted experiences
+during the Conference, and I do not think I should have turned my steps
+in the direction of the Progressive Institution that week had not the
+following announcement caught my eye as I scanned the ghostly pages of
+the _Medium and Daybreak_:--
+
+ "A MESMERIC SEANCE.
+
+ "We have been authorized to announce that Miss Chandos,
+ whose advertisement appears in another part of this paper,
+ will give a mesmeric seance at the Spiritual Institution,
+ 15, Southampton Row, on Wednesday evening, August 19th, at
+ eight o'clock. Admission will be free by ticket, which may
+ be obtained at the Institution. The object which Miss
+ Chandos has in view is to interest a few truth-seekers who
+ could aid her in promoting a knowledge of psychological
+ phenomena. As a crowded meeting is not desired, an early
+ application should be made for tickets."
+
+I do not know that I said "Eureka!" Indeed I have considerable historic
+doubts as to whether anybody ever did, but I felt it. I was a
+truth-seeker forthwith. I resolved to sit at the feet of Miss Chandos,
+and, should her mesmeric efforts prove satisfactory, "aid her in
+promoting a knowledge of psychological phenomena." I did not go through
+the prescribed process of getting a ticket beforehand, because I
+thought in my innocence that everybody would be out of town, or that the
+Hall of the Progressive Institute would certainly accommodate those who
+remained. Never was a more fatal mistake. The psychological folks were
+all in London, and the capacities of the Progressive Library are not
+palatial. Miss Chandos had a crowded meeting whether she desired it or
+not. Genius will not be concealed; and Miss Chandos was learning that
+lesson in a very satisfactory way. It was a sultry evening when a small
+boy opened the back door of the little first floor apartment in
+Southampton Row, and squeezed me in like the thirteenth in an omnibus,
+and I found myself walking on people's toes, and sitting down on their
+hats in the most reckless manner. At length, however, I struggled to a
+vacant corner, and deposited myself perspiring and expectant.
+
+Mr. Burns was "orating" on the revival mesmerism was destined to make,
+and telling us how, like the Plumstead Peculiars, we should be able to
+do without doctors as soon as the healing powers of animal magnetism
+were properly recognised and diffused. I did not listen very carefully,
+I fear, for I was nervously looking about for Miss Chandos. Nervously, I
+say, because lady mediums and mesmerizers are so apt to run to eighteen
+stone, or be old and frumpish, that I had terrible fears lest I should
+be scared when I met Miss Chandos in the flesh. I was very agreeably
+surprised, however, for when Mr. Burns resumed--not his chair but his
+table, since he sat on that article of furniture, a very pretty young
+lady indeed, of not more than eighteen or twenty years of age, took his
+place, and, in a few well-chosen words, said this was her first
+appearance as a public mesmerist, and claimed indulgence should any
+failure in the phenomena result. She also drew attention to the fact
+that the apartment was "pernicious snug" (she put it, of course, in more
+scientific language), and straightway proceeded to business.
+
+When Miss Chandos invited patients to put themselves in her hands I
+thought the room had risen en masse. Everybody wanted to be mesmerized.
+I had no chance in my retired position; but she soon got a front row of
+likely people, and I sat down once more disappointed and exuding.
+
+She was a tall active young lady was Miss Chandos, and had a mystic crop
+of long black curls, which waved about like the locks of a sibyl when
+she made a lunge at an innocent looking young man who sat No. 1--and
+whom, with the other patients, I shall designate thus numerically. He
+seemed to like it immensely, and smiled a fatuous smile as those taper
+fingers lighted on his head, while the other hand rested on the frontal
+portion of his face, as though Miss Chandos were going to pull his nose.
+He was off in a moment, and sat facing the audience in his magnetic
+trance, looking like a figure at a waxwork show. Miss Chandos then
+passed on to a gentleman, No. 2, who never succumbed during the entire
+evening, though she made several onslaughts upon him. Consequently I
+dismiss No. 2 as incorrigible forthwith. No. 3 was a lady who only gave
+way after a lengthened attack, and did not seem to appreciate the effect
+of Miss Chandos' lustrous eyes so much as No. 1 did. He gave signs of
+"coming to," but Miss Chandos kept looking round at him and No. 2, while
+she was attending to No. 3, and directly she did this No. 1 closed his
+eyes, and slept the sleep of innocence again.
+
+Having reduced No. 3 to a comatose condition Miss Chandos reverted to
+No. 1, and by attractive passes got him on his legs and made him follow
+her up and down the limited space at her disposal. She looked then like
+a pretty Vivien manipulating a youthful Merlin; and I was not at all
+surprised at the effect of her "woven paces and her waving hands." She
+asked him his name, and he told her. It was W----. "No," she said, "it's
+Jones. Mary Jones. What's your name?" But the youth was not quite so far
+gone as to rebaptize himself with a female cognomen just yet. He stuck
+to his W., and Miss Chandos put him into his waxwork position again, and
+got No. 3 on her legs at last, but did nothing more with her than make
+her walk up and down. Presently No. 3 woke up, and was put to air at the
+window.
+
+No. 4 was now selected, in the person of a big burly man; and I could
+not help thinking, as she manipulated him, what a capital pose it would
+have been for Hercules and Omphale. He seemed to like it exceedingly,
+and I thought was dropping comfortably off when he whispered something
+to his operator (I have no notion what the feminine of that word is),
+who fixed her brilliant eyes on somebody near me--I feared it was
+actually on me--and said, "Somebody at the back of the room is
+exercising control. I shall be glad if they will refrain." I was quite
+innocent of exercising conscious control, and did not quite know what
+the phrase meant. I certainly had once or twice thought it must be much
+pleasanter to be operated upon by so pretty a young lady than by some
+bull-necked male mesmerist or aged spinster above-mentioned, but I could
+scarcely believe that such a mild sentiment could affect that colossal
+man. However, I recollected the delicacy of these psychological
+relations, and sat down conscience-stricken and warmer than ever.
+
+Miss Chandos selected No. 5 in the person of a young man with a nascent
+moustache, who had successfully struggled into the front row at the
+outset. He promised well at first; but, like other young men with
+incipient moustaches, disappointed us afterwards. Then came No. 6 upon
+the scene.
+
+No. 6 was a lady who came late, and at once pushed to the front with the
+air of a person who was not doing so for the first time. She went off in
+a moment--far too suddenly, in fact, and then did everything she was
+told in a very obedient way. Being told that she was in a beautiful
+garden, she stooped down on the floral carpet and proceeded to gather
+materials for a bouquet. I confess I did not care about No. 6, and was
+proceeding to read Professor Tyndall's Belfast Address, which I had in
+my pocket, when Miss Chandos looked up No. 1 again.
+
+Reduced to a proper frame of mind, either by Miss Chandos' continued
+attentions or the contagion of No. 6's docility, the youth was now all
+submission. He walked up and down any number of times like a tame animal
+at the Zoological Gardens, and now quite agreed that his name was Mary
+Jones. He sang "Tom Bowling" at command, and No. 6, not to be outdone,
+warbled a ditty called, I think, "The Slave Girl's Love," the refrain of
+which, according to her version, was, "I cannot love, because I _ham_ a
+slave." She broke down in the middle of this aspiring ditty, and then
+personated a Jew old clo' man, a woman selling "ornaments for your
+firestoves," and various other characters, all of which she overacted
+considerably. I may be wrong, of course, but I fancied the fair
+lecturess was as dissatisfied with No. 6 as I was. The audience was an
+indulgent one, and thought it splendid. Mr. Burns sat on the table and
+yawned. I relapsed into Tyndall, and wondered what he would have said
+about it all; or, at least, I did not wonder, for I knew he would have
+consigned us all to the nearest lunatic asylum as exceptions to the rule
+that the European has so many more cubic inches of cerebral development
+than the Papuan.
+
+When it was drawing near ten, Miss Chandos brought the proceedings to a
+close by animating--like Pygmalion--her waxwork statues. She apologized
+once more, in a few well-chosen sentences, for what she was pleased to
+call her "failure," but the audience would not hear of the term, and
+applauded to the echo, only there was no room for an echo in the
+Progressive Institute. The young man, No. 1, who I found was a spirit
+medium, wound up by an address from his Indian guide on the subject of
+"control."
+
+I confess I failed to gather from the perambulating youth and maidens
+No. 1 and 3, or the impersonations of No. 6, any signs of the revival
+alluded to by Mr. Burns at the outset; and there was not the remotest
+connexion with the healing art. In fact, nobody seemed suffering from
+anything except heat.
+
+Miss Chandos said to me, however, in a sensible conversation with which
+she favoured me in private, that all she had attempted to show was but
+the lowest manifestation of a power which had far higher ends in view.
+She doubted almost whether it was not something like sacrilege to use
+such a power for playing tricks and gratifying curiosity.
+
+She was thoroughly in earnest; and laboured both physically during the
+evening and logically in her after-discourse, with an energy which some
+persons would have said was worthy of a better cause.
+
+It was nearly eleven when I left the miniature hall of the Progressive
+Institute, and as I passed along the streets, digesting what I had seen
+and heard during the evening, I took myself to task severely--as it is
+always well to do, if only to prevent somebody else doing it for me--and
+asked whether, if the lecturess had not been a lecturess but a
+lecturer--if being a lecturess she weighed eighteen stone, or was old
+and wizen, or dropped her h's--whether I should have stayed three mortal
+hours in that stuffy room, and I frankly own I came to the conclusion I
+should _not_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+A PSYCHOPATHIC INSTITUTION.
+
+
+Reading my _Figaro_ the other day--as I hope I need not state it is my
+custom devoutly to do--I came upon the following passage in the review
+of a book called "Psychopathy; or, the True Healing Art. By Joseph
+Ashman. London: Burns, Southampton Row. We have not the pleasure of
+being personally acquainted with Joseph Ashman, and we fear that the
+loss is ours. Judging him through the medium of his book, he must,
+indeed, be a rara avis.... The one great thing," it went on to say,
+"that Joseph Ashman wants the world to know is, that he cures disease by
+very simple means. And all that the world wants to know from Joseph
+Ashman is, Are these cures real--are his statements facts? Why, then,
+does not Joseph content himself with his facts? He has plenty of them.
+Here is one:--'Seeing one day a cabman with a swollen face standing by a
+police-court ready to prosecute a man who had assaulted him, I asked if,
+on condition I healed him, he would forgive his adversary. He replied
+that he would, and we accordingly got into his cab together. Bringing
+out the magnetized carte, I told him to look at it, and at the same
+time made a few motions over the swelling with my hand. I then left him
+feeling much better, and returned in an hour's time, when I found him
+taking a glass of beer with his antagonist, whom he had forgiven.'"
+
+Now as the one pursuit and end of my present existence is the discovery
+of rarae aves, I need not say I at once took up the clue herein afforded,
+and went in pursuit of Joseph Ashman. I found not only him but his
+institution, for Mr. Ashman does not work single-handed. It is in the
+Marylebone Road, almost opposite the Yorkshire Stingo; and is most
+modest and unpretending in its outward semblance, being situated in one
+of those semi-rustic houses so indicative of suburban London, down an
+overstocked garden, into which you enter by means of a blistered iron
+gate, painted violently green, and swinging heavily on its hinges. Down
+a vista of decrepit dahlias one sped to the portal, alongside which was
+a trio of bell-handles, one above the other, showing that the
+Psychopathic Institution did not occupy the whole even of that modest
+domicile. I always approach these manifold bells with considerable
+diffidence, conscious that I must inevitably ring the wrong one; so, on
+this occasion, I rang none at all, but knocked a faint double knock on
+the knocker by way of compromise--very faint, indeed, lest I should
+disturb any patients who were being "psychopathized." While I waited I
+had leisure to observe that hidden among the dahlias, and thatched over
+as it were with a superannuated costermonger's barrow, was a double
+perambulator, which set me calculating the probabilities of Mr. Ashman
+being a family man.
+
+The door was opened before I had settled the point to my own mental
+satisfaction, by a short, cheery-looking man, with long, straight flaxen
+hair flowing down over the shoulders of his black frock-coat, a beard a
+few shades lighter, and a merry twinkling eye, which looked more
+sympathetic than psychopathic, and I should think was calculated to do
+patients good directly it lighted on them. He looked as much as to ask
+whether I was psychopathically wrong, when I informed him that I had not
+come as a patient, but simply to inspect his institution if he would
+permit me. The permission was at once accorded. "We are hard at work,"
+he said, as he ushered me into the front parlour; "but come in and see
+what we are about."
+
+A man who looked like a respectable artisan was sitting at the table;
+and a second, in his shirt sleeves, was astride of a chair in what
+appeared to be rather an idiotic ride-a-cock-horse-to-Banbury-Cross
+fashion, and Mr. Ashman was pinching him and prodding him as butchers do
+fat animals at the Smithfield Show.
+
+"That there gentleman," said Mr. Ashman, in a broad provincial dialect,
+"couldn't get astride that chair when he come here half-an-hour ago. How
+d'ye feel now, sir?"
+
+"Feel as though I should like to race somebody twenty rods for five
+pound a-side," answered the patient, getting up and walking about the
+room as if it were a new sensation. He had been brought, it appeared, to
+Mr. Ashman by his friend, who was sitting at the table, and who was an
+old psychopathic patient. He assured me he had suffered from rheumatism
+for twenty years, and was completely disabled without his stick until he
+came into that room half-an-hour since. He walked up and down stickless
+and incessantly as the carnivora at the Zoo all the time he was telling
+me.
+
+"Would you mind putting your ear to this man's back, sir?" said Mr.
+Ashman to me. I did so; and when he bent, his backbone seemed to go off
+with a lot of little cracks like the fog-signals of a railway. "That
+there old rusty hinge we mean to grease." And away he went
+psychopathizing him again. When he was done, Mr. Ashman explained to me
+learnedly, and with copious illustrations from anatomical plates, his
+theory of this disease, which was his favourite one for treatment,
+because it yielded rapidly. Paralysis and that class of disease are much
+slower. He had succeeded in acute rheumatism, and also in calculus. "I
+like fat men--fighting men to heal," he said. "I leave the delicate ones
+to others." The sturdy little psychopathist looked healthy enough to
+heal a sick rhinoceros.
+
+While he was lecturing me his hands were not idle. I should think they
+seldom were. He was pouring salad oil from a flask on to flannel to give
+to the other man who was sitting at the table, and had approached
+convalescence from a chronic disease after one or two visits, and who
+used this oiled flannel to keep up the influence. Both the men seemed
+perfectly genuine; and the rheumatic gentleman, when he left, pronounced
+the effect of his psychopathizing miraculous. The fee was five
+shillings. "I shan't charge you nothin' for the flannel," he said to No.
+2. I began to take quite a fancy to Joseph Ashman, and thanked _Figaro_
+inwardly for directing me to the institution.
+
+A working woman who was next in the little row of patients assembled in
+the back room, came in with her wrists bound up in bits of flannel, and
+her hands looking puffed and glazy. She, too, had lost the use of them
+for six years, she told me, and had been pronounced incurable by the
+doctors. This was her fourth visit to Mr. Ashman. "Take up the chair,
+ma'am," he said to his patient; and she did carry it in rather a wobbly
+fashion across the room. "Now the other hand," and she did it with the
+other hand. "Now show the gentleman how you did it when you came to me.
+She's rather hard o' hearin'," he explained to me; but after one or two
+repetitions the poor old body comprehended, and carried it in her
+crooked elbow. "Now I'll call my assistant," he said, and summoned a
+ruddy, red-bearded man, who looked as though he might have just come in
+from a brisk country walk. "When these cases require a good deal of
+rubbing I let my assistants do the preliminary work, and then come in as
+the Healing Medium myself." The rubbers, he informed me, like the
+Medium, must be qualified, not only physically, but morally. Benevolence
+was the great requisite; and certainly both these men seemed running
+over with it, if looks meant anything. When Joseph Ashman took his turn,
+working the poor old patient's stiff wrists, and pulling her fingers
+till they cracked, like children playing "sweethearts," she never
+winced, but actually seemed to like it, and trotted off well satisfied
+with her fourth instalment of good health.
+
+The next rubber who was introduced to me was not such a ruddy man,
+being, in fact, somewhat saturnine in appearance; but I could quite
+understand that he was, as he described himself, brimful of electricity.
+His chevelure was like that on the little man we stick on the conductor
+of an electrical machine and make each particular hair stand on end like
+quills upon the fretful porcupine.
+
+I could not for the life of me see the difference between this treatment
+and simple mesmerism, except that it was much more rapid in its effects
+than any magnetic treatment I have ever witnessed. Indeed, I frankly
+confess I do not understand it now, though Mr. Ashman made me accept one
+of his little books on Psychopathic healing, and told me I should see
+the distinction when I had read it. I must be very dense, for I have
+read it diligently through, and still fail to trace the distinction.
+
+The man made a great impression on me. I felt he was just one of those
+who would carry life into a sick room, and communicate vital
+power--supposing it to be communicable--from the dumpy fingers of his
+fat soft hand. The perambulator did not belie him. Numbers of pretty
+black-eyed children were running about, and there was a Mrs. Ashman
+somewhere among the poor patients in the back room. All the children
+came to me except the eldest boy, who, his father told me in a
+mysterious tone, had suffered some indignity at the hands of my cloth,
+and dreaded a parson ever after. I believe my injudicious brother had
+set him a long task (perhaps his Duty to his Neighbour), and the poor
+lad was always afraid he should be dropped down upon to "say it." Mr.
+Ashman's book is a little bewildering to an outsider who fails to
+distinguish the _two_ vital forces. He says: "It is much rarer to find a
+high development of a temperament in which the psychical element
+prevails, than in which it is well blended with the vital-magnetic, or
+than in which the latter excels. In nearly all popular public men there
+is a blending of the two. We see it well exemplified in John Bright,
+Spurgeon, and others. This is the secret of their drawing, magnetic
+power. It is the secret, too, of many a physician's success: his genial
+magnetism cures when his medicine is useless, although, of course, he
+does not know it. As is the difference between these two forces, so is
+the difference in the method of their employment for the purpose of
+cure." However, when I left I promised--and I mean to keep my vow--that
+if ever I am unfortunate enough to find my vertebrae creaking like "an
+old hinge," I will come to Mr. Ashman and have it greased. The remark in
+his book as to the success of medicine depending on the qualities of him
+who administered it was, we may recollect, confirmed at the 1874 meeting
+of the British Association in Belfast.
+
+Joseph Ashman has had a chequered history. He has dwelt in the tents of
+the Mormonites; has been one of the Peculiar People. In early life he
+was in service in the country, where his master used to flog him until,
+to use his own expression, he nearly cut him in two. His earliest
+patients were cattle. "For a healer," he said, "give me a man as can
+clean a window or scrub a floor. Christ himself, when He chose those who
+were to be healers as well as preachers, chose fishermen, fine, deep
+chested men, depend upon it, sir," and he rapped upon his own sonorous
+lungs until they reverberated. He was certainly blessed with a
+superabundance of good health, and looked benevolent enough to impart
+all his surplus stock to anybody who wanted it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+A PHRENOLOGICAL EVENING.
+
+
+The experience I am about to chronicle occurred when the Beecher-Tilton
+scandal was at its height; and I was attracted by the somewhat ambiguous
+title "Burns upon Beecher."
+
+Mr. James Burns, the spirited proprietor of the Progressive Library,
+Southampton Row, having devoted himself to the study of phrenology, has
+for some time past held a series of craniological seances on Tuesday
+evenings, at which he "takes off" the head of some well-known person, or
+your own, if you like, whether you are well-known or born to blush
+unseen, not in the way of physical decapitation, but by the method of
+phrenological diagnosis. I greatly regretted having, on a previous
+occasion, missed the analysis of Dr. Kenealy's cerebral developments. I
+believe the Claimant himself was once the object of Mr. Burns' remarks;
+but when Mr. Beecher's cranium was laid down for dissection at the
+height of the Beecher-Tilton sensation, I could resist no longer, but,
+despite all obstacles, repaired to the Institute of Progress.
+
+About a score of people were gathered in that first-floor front where I
+had seen so many strange things. Of these persons some formed the
+regular phrenological class conducted there weekly by Mr. Burns. The
+others were, generally speaking, of the ordinary lecture-audience type.
+One stout lady occupied an easy-chair in a corner, and slept from first
+to last.
+
+The first part of the lecture was a little discursive, I fancy for my
+especial benefit, and summarized Mr. Burns' system, which is to a great
+extent original. Beginning by a disavowal of all dogmas, he began by
+advancing what was to me the entirely novel doctrine, that the brain was
+not the sole organ of the mind, but that the whole organism of man had
+to be taken into account in the diagnosis of character, since the entire
+body was permeated with the mind. The bones, fluids, and viscera were
+all related to mental phenomena. The lecturer even questioned whether
+the science he promulgated was properly termed phrenology. It certainly
+did not answer to the conventional idea of that craft. Referring to a
+calico diagram which was pinned to the curtains of the first-floor
+front, and at which he pointed with a walking-stick, Mr. Burns notified
+four divisions of the animal frame--1, the vital organs; 2, the
+mechanical; 3, the nervous (which in the lower orders were ganglionic
+only); 4, the cerebral apparatus. He defended the animal powers from the
+debased idea usually attached to them, and pointed out their close
+connexion with the spirit, nearer to which they were placed than any
+portion of the economy.
+
+He then proceeded to apply his preliminary remarks to preachers in
+general. Theodore Parker, for instance, was a man of spare body and
+large brain. He was surrounded by intellectual people, and his disciples
+were quite sui generis. On the other hand, Spurgeon was a man of strong
+animal and perceptive powers, and so able to send the Walworth
+shopkeepers into ecstasies. His ganglions were big, as was the case in
+all great preachers. Emotion, he said, was more a matter of bowels than
+of brain. The ganglionic power carried the brain; but there were, of
+course, combinations of all grades.
+
+In the case of Henry Ward Beecher, two of whose photographs he held in
+his hand, he dwelt on the disadvantage of having only the shadow instead
+of the substance of his head to deal with. Here, he said, we had all the
+elements on a large scale. The brain, thoracic system, osseous
+structure, and abdominal development were all in excess. The face was,
+as it were, the picture of all. Henry Ward Beecher was emphatically a
+large man. The blood was positive; the circulation good. The digestion
+was perfect, and the man enjoyed good food. Especially the length from
+the ear to the front of the eyebrows denoted intellectual grasp. There
+was not much will power. Whatever he had done (and Mr. Burns
+emphatically disclaimed passing any judgment on the "scandal") he had
+not done of determination, but had rather "slid into it." He was no
+planner. He gathered people round him by the "solar" force of his mind.
+If he had been a designing man--if largely developed behind the ears--he
+would have gone to work in a different way. There was good development
+in the intellectual, sympathetic, and emotional part of his nature; and
+this combination made him a popular preacher. There was more than mere
+animal magnetism needed to account for this; there was intellectual
+power, but not much firmness or conscientiousness. If he were present,
+he would probably acknowledge that something had led him on to do
+whatever he had done in spite of himself. What was very peculiar in the
+man was his youthfulness. He had been before the world for forty years.
+Mr. Fowler, the phrenologist, of Ludgate Circus, had been a fellow
+student of Beecher, and had measured his head, which he ascertained to
+have grown an inch in ten years. Beecher was essentially a growing
+man--growing like a boy. The ganglionic power was that which kept people
+always growing, and was the great means of their getting a hold over
+other people.
+
+Mr. Burns then passed in review the three portraits of Beecher, Tilton,
+and Mrs. Tilton respectively, in the _Pictorial World_. Mrs. Tilton he
+described as a negative person, inclined to be hysterical and
+"clinging." There was in her a high type of brain, morally,
+intellectually, and spiritually. Still the brain, he said, did not make
+us good or bad. Again repudiating all judgment as to the scandal, he
+dwelt upon the close social relationships between Beecher and Mrs.
+Tilton, and recurred to the strong vital influence of the former,
+comparing it to that of Brigham Young upon his "spiritual affinities."
+In all probability, taking into account the different natures of Beecher
+and Mrs. Tilton, whatever had occurred "the people couldn't help
+themselves."
+
+Then as to Theodore Tilton. Mr. Burns had read the _Golden Age_, and
+pronounced it a smart publication. There was, however, in Tilton a want
+of ganglionic power; he was all brain. He was a man who might be read,
+but he could not lecture or preach. His was a higher mind than
+Beecher's, but not one that would command much human sympathy.
+
+Suppose Mrs. Tilton were not the wife of either, her relations to each
+might be conscientious, but still violate the laws of monogamic life.
+The influence of Beecher over her would be ganglionic as well as
+intellectual; that of Tilton purely intellectual: when lo, a gust of
+ganglionic power would supervene on the latter, and carry all before it.
+
+Concluding his analysis of Mr. Beecher thus, Mr. Burns discovered that
+he had two clerics among his audience, and asked us--for I was one of
+them--if we would be examined. I readily consented, and handed my notes
+to Miss Chandos (the young lady mesmerist, whose seance I reported a
+few pages back) to report progress. She, therefore, is responsible for
+the diagnosis that follows.
+
+Handling me from head to foot, much as a fancier does a prize ox at
+Smithfield, Mr. Burns found the life power good, and the muscles well
+nourished, the working faculties being in a high state of activity. The
+head--I blushed to hear--measured one inch beyond the average of a man
+of my size, and the cerebral faculties were harmoniously organized. I
+had large perceptive powers; and my human nature (wherever that may be
+located) was full, as was also firmness. The thinking sphere was good. I
+should have made, Mr. Burns informed me, a good sculptor or artist.
+
+Omitting one or two complimentary remarks which Miss Chandos has
+faithfully, if not flatteringly, reported, and the enunciation of which
+quite confused me as I sat the centre and cynosure of that wondering
+group, I was glad to learn that I was an open man, though possessed of
+sufficient caution and not defective in moral courage. In fact "pluck"
+was large. I really wished Mr. Burns would relieve me by finding some
+bad bumps; but no--the worst he could say of me was that I was restless.
+What chiefly seemed to strike him, though, were my vital powers, and he
+really covered me with confusion when he began to calculate my Beecher
+powers on a possible Mrs. Tilton. However, he toned down this remark by
+noticing that my domestic faculties were well developed. My faith and
+hope were small. I was a "doubting" man. The positive and negative were
+well blent in me, and I was also "mediumistic."
+
+The diagnosis of two ladies concluded the evening's exercises, but
+neither of these personages displayed any very remarkable traits; Mr.
+Burns declaring he felt some difficulty in discovering the bumps under
+the "back hair."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+A SPIRITUAL PICNIC.
+
+
+In a volume bearing the title of _Mystic London_ it would seem perchance
+that Spiritualism, as par excellence the modern mystery, should stand
+first. I have thought it better, however, to defer its treatment
+somewhat, working up to it as to a climax, and then gently descending to
+mundane matters once more ere I close my present work.
+
+Of London at this hour, just as of Rome in the later Republic and
+Empire, it may be safely affirmed that there is in its midst an element
+of the mysterious and occult utterly undreamed of by the practical
+people. Many phases of this element have already been treated of in my
+different works; and I add some of the more exceptional as properly
+belonging to my present subject.
+
+Now I candidly confess that, up to a recent date, I had not given
+Spiritualists--qua spiritualists--credit for being a cheerful or
+convivial people. Though there exist upon the tablets of my memory
+recollections of certain enjoyable dinners, cosy teas, and charming
+petits soupers, eaten at the mahogany of believers in the modern
+mystery, yet these were purely exceptional events, oases in the desert
+of spiritualistic experiences. Generally speaking, the table, instead of
+groaning under its accumulated bounties, leapt about as if from the
+absence thereof; and the only adjuncts of the inhospitable mahogany were
+paper tubes for the spirit voices, handbells for the spirit hands, and
+occasional accordions and musical boxes for the delectation of
+harmonious ghosts. It was a "flow of soul" if not always a "feast of
+reason;" but, as regarded creature comforts, or any of the ordinary
+delights of mundane existence, a very Siberian desert. A grave subject
+of discussion (I am not, I assure you, indulging in a sepulchral pun) at
+the recent Liverpool Conference was how to feed mediums, and I fancy the
+preponderating opinion was that fasting was a cardinal virtue in their
+case--a regimen that had come to be in my mind, perhaps unfairly,
+associated with seances in general. I was glad, therefore, when I read
+in the columns of the _Medium_ the announcement of the spiritual picnic
+or "demonstration," at the People's Garden, Willesden. Still I wanted to
+see Spiritualists enjoy themselves in the "normal condition." I
+sympathized with the avowed object of the gathering, that the followers
+of the new creed should know one another, as surely the disciples of a
+common school ought to do. Armed, therefore, with a ticket, I proceeded,
+via the North London Railway, to the scene of action. It was not what we
+materialistic people should call a fine August day. It was cold and
+dull, and tried hard to rain; but it was far more in keeping with the
+character of the meeting than what Father Newman calls the "garish day"
+one looks for in mid-August. In the words of the circle the "conditions
+were excellent;" and as I journeyed on, reading my _Medium_ like a true
+believer, I marvelled to see, by the evidence of its advertisements, how
+the new creed had taken hold of a certain section, at all events, of
+society. Besides a dozen public mediums who paraded their varied
+attractions at terms ranging from _2s. 6d._ to _21s._, there were
+spiritualistic young men who put forward their creed as a qualification
+for clerkships--perhaps they had no other claim--spiritual lodging-house
+keepers, and even spiritual undertakers, all pervaded by what we may
+literally call a common esprit de corps.
+
+In due course we reached the People's Garden, the popular title whereof
+seemed to have been given on the lucus a non principle, for the London
+folk have not, as yet, affected it largely. Why this should be so one
+cannot guess, for it is the very ideal of a Cockney Paradise, and is
+admirably worked by a body of shareholders, most of whom belong to the
+artisan class, though under very distinguished patronage indeed. When I
+got to the grounds the Spiritualists were indulging in a merry-go-round
+during a refreshing drizzle. A temporary rush under cover ensued, and
+then the weather became more favourable, though the skies preserved
+their neutral tint. Mrs. Bullock, a suburban medium, who had become
+entranced, had located herself in a bower, and beckoned people from the
+audience to receive her "benediction," which was given in a remarkable
+dialect. I thought it was Yorkshire, but a spiritualistic gentleman
+explained to me that it was "partly North American Indian." The Osborne
+Bellringers next gave a campanological concert, which was exceedingly
+good of its kind, the small gentleman who played the bass bell working
+so actively as to suggest the idea that he could not long survive such
+hard labour in his fleshly condition. These campanologists are said to
+be big mediums, and occasionally to be floated or otherwise spirited
+during their performances; but nothing abnormal occurred at the People's
+Garden. Then there was dancing on the monster platform, which is, I
+should think, correctly described as "the largest in the world." This
+was indeed a new phase of Spiritualism: the terpsichorean spiritualists
+generally let their tables do the dancing for them, as Eastern
+potentates hire their dancing-girls. Donkey-races, croquet, and other
+unspiritual diversions varied the order of proceedings; and as for the
+one-and-ninepenny teas, I can only say I should think the Garden
+Committee did not get much profit out of them, for the Spiritualists
+regaled themselves in the most material fashion. During the afternoon
+the arrivals were fast and frequent. All the medium-power of London
+seemed present; and the only wonder was that we were not all floated
+bodily away. There was Mrs. Guppy, who, in answer to my demand whether
+she had been "floated" from Highbury, informed me that she had come far
+less romantically--"nine in a cab!" There was Dr. Monk, too, a
+Nonconformist clergyman, who had lately been taking aerial journeys of
+the Guppy order about Bristol. In fact, the elite of the sect were well
+represented; and during the whole afternoon, despite the dirty-looking
+day, the fun was fast and furious, and all went merry as the proverbial
+marriage-bell.
+
+Part of the programme was an entertainment by a gentleman bearing the
+delightfully sepulchral name of Dr. Sexton, whose mission in life it is
+to "expose" the tricks of Dr. Lynn and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke. How
+those gentlemen are to be "exposed," seeing they only claim to deceive
+you by legerdemain, I cannot comprehend; but they made the Spiritualists
+very angry by taking their names in vain on the handbills of the
+Egyptian Hall, and more than insinuating that there was a family
+likeness between their performances; and, consequently, the conjurors
+were to be "exposed;" that is, the public were to have their visit to
+the Temple of Magic spoilt by being shown beforehand how the tricks were
+done. Aided by an expert assistant named Organ, Dr. Sexton soon let us
+into the mysteries of the cabinet business, which seemed just as easy as
+making the egg stand on end--when you know how. It is perfectly true
+that, after hearing Dr. Sexton's exposition--rather than expose--it is
+quite easy for any one to frustrate the designs of these clever
+conjurors, if he wishes to do so. I am not sure that the expose is wise.
+Illogical people will not see the force of Dr. Sexton's argument, and
+will possibly think it "proves too much." If so much can be done by
+sleight of hand and ingenious machinery, they will argue, perhaps, that
+the Davenports and other mediums are only cleverer conjurors still, or
+have better machinery. Alas! all my fairyland is pasteboard now. I know
+how the man gets out of the corded box--I could do it myself. I know
+where the gorilla goes when he seems lost in the magic cabinet. It is
+all a clever combination of mirrors. The blood-red letters of some dear
+departed friend are only made with red ink and a quill pen, and the name
+of the "dear departed" forged. Well, I suppose _I_ am illogical, too. If
+one set of things is so simple when it is shown to you, why may not all
+be? I fear the Willesden outing has unsettled my convictions, and shaken
+my faith in most sublunary things.
+
+The gathering clearly proved the growth of Spiritualism in London. That
+such numbers could be got together in the dead season bespeaks a very
+extensive ramification indeed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+A GHOSTLY CONFERENCE.
+
+
+A distinct and well-marked epoch is reached in the history of any
+particular set of opinions when its adherents begin to organize and
+confer, and the individual tenets become the doctrines of a party. Such
+a culmination has been attained by the believers in Modern Spiritualism.
+For a long while after the date of the now historical Rochester
+Rappings, the manifestations were mostly individual, and in a great
+degree limited to such exercises as Mr. Home's elongation, Mrs. Guppy's
+flight from Highbury to Lamb's Conduit Street, or, more recently still,
+the voices and manipulations of John and Katie King, the orations of
+Mrs. Hardinge, Mr. Morse, and Mrs. Tappan. But all this was spasmodic,
+and not likely to take the world by storm, while Spiritualists had
+adopted the time-honoured maxim--"Magna est veritas et prevalebit."
+Therefore they must organize. They have done so, not without protest on
+the part of some of the most noted of their adherents; but the majority
+carried the day, and the result is the British National Association of
+Spiritualists, which has recently been sitting in solemn conclave at
+its first Annual Conference in Lawson's Rooms, Gower Street.
+
+Now I plead guilty to being greatly interested in this subject of
+Spiritualism generally, and in the doings of the Conference in
+particular. I cannot help thinking that clergymen and scientists ought
+to look into any set of opinions whose professors have attained the
+dimensions of this body. Their doctrines have spread and are spreading.
+Already the Spiritualists number among them such men as Mr. Alfred
+Wallace, Mr. Varley, Mr. Crookes, Mr. S. C. Hall, &c., and are extending
+their operations amongst all classes of society, notably among the
+higher. I could even name clergymen of all denominations who hold
+Spiritualistic views, but refrain, lest it should seem invidious, though
+I cannot see why it should be incongruous for the clergy to examine
+doctrines which profess to amplify rather than supplant those of
+revelation, any more than I can why scientists stand aloof from what
+professes to be a purely positive philosophy, based upon the inductive
+method. So it is, however; Spiritualism is heterodox at once in its
+religious and philosophical aspects. I suppose that is why it had such
+special attraction for me. Certain it is, I have been following the
+ghostly conference like a devotee.
+
+We began on Monday evening with a musical soiree at the Beethoven Rooms,
+in Harley Street; and there was certainly nothing ghostly or sepulchral
+in our opening day; only then there was nothing very spiritualistic
+either. For a long time I thought it was going to be all tea and muffins
+and pianoforte. By-and-by, however, Mr. Algernon Joy read a report of
+the organization, which was rather more interesting than reports
+generally are, and Mr. Benjamin Coleman, a venerable gentleman, the
+father of London Spiritualists, delivered a Presidential address. Still
+there were no ghosts--not even a spirit rap to augment the applause
+which followed the speakers. Once my hopes revived when two new physical
+mediums, with letters of recommendation from Chicago, were introduced,
+and I expected to see the young gentlemen elongate or float round the
+room; but nothing of the kind occurred; and a young lady dashed my hopes
+to the ground by singing "The Nightingale's Trill." Mr. Morse gave an
+address in the trance state--as I was afterwards informed; but he looked
+and spoke so like an ordinary mortal that I should not have found out
+that he was in an abnormal condition.
+
+I fear I went home from Harley Street not quite in so harmonious a frame
+of mind as could have been wished.
+
+The next morning (Wednesday) Dr. Gully presided at the opening of the
+Conference proper in Gower Street, where the rooms were more like vaults
+and smelt earthy. The President ably enough summarized the objections
+which had been raised to the Association, and also the objects it
+proposed to itself. He said:--"If the Association keeps clear of
+dogmatic intrusion, then will there be no fear of its becoming
+sectarian. Already, however, there is a signal of dogmatism among
+Spiritualists--and already the dogmatizers call themselves by another
+name. But the Association has nothing to do with this. It knows its
+function to be the investigation of facts, and of facts only; and, as
+was said, no sect was ever yet framed on undoubted facts. Now what are
+the facts of Spiritualism up to this date? They are reducible to
+two:--1st. The continued life and individuality of the spirit body of
+man after it has quitted its body of flesh; and, 2nd. Its communion with
+spirits still in the flesh, under certain conditions, by physical
+exhibition and mental impression. Spirit identity cannot be regarded yet
+as an established fact--at all events, not so as to warrant us in
+building upon it."
+
+I was agreeably surprised with the moderate tone of this address; and
+after a brief theological discussion, Mr. W. H. Harrison, the editor of
+the _Spiritualist_, followed with a paper on Organization. I do not know
+what Mr. Harrison was not for organizing. Libraries, reading-rooms,
+colleges, everything was to be spiritualized. Later in the day there was
+a paper on Physical Manifestations. I should have preferred the
+manifestations without the paper, for I fear I am a poor believer at
+second hand. The reader told some "stumping" stories. Here is one as a
+specimen--spiritual in more senses than one:--
+
+"One evening I accompanied the Davenports to Mr. Guppy's residence in
+Great Marlborough Street. After supper Ira, the eldest of the brothers,
+Mr. Guppy, and myself, adjourned to a dark room, which Mr. Guppy had had
+prepared for experimental purposes. To get to this room we had to pass
+through a room that served the combined purposes of a sculptor's studio
+and a billiard room. Emerging from this room we came into a yard, in one
+corner of which the dark cabinet in question was constructed. Taking our
+seats, we extinguished the light. Mr. Guppy was at the time smoking a
+cigar. This was at once taken from his hand, and carried in the air,
+where it could be seen by the light given out by its combustion. Some
+whisky and water was standing on the table. This was handed to us to
+drink. When it came to my turn, I found there was but little left in the
+glass. This I pointed out. The glass was forthwith taken from my mouth,
+and replenished and brought back again."
+
+On Thursday Mr. Everitt read a paper on Direct Writing by Spirits,
+telling us that on one occasion nine hundred and thirty-six words were
+written in six seconds. Mr. Everitt must be a bold man--I don't mean
+altogether for asking us to believe that, but for saying what he did
+about the medium, who was his wife:--"There are many considerations why
+it would be impossible for the medium to have produced these writings.
+For instance, we have sixteen papers upon the same subject, and in those
+papers there are a great many ancient authors referred to. Mrs. Everitt
+has never read or seen a single book of any of these authors, and, with
+a few exceptions, their names had never been heard by her before, much
+less did she know the age they lived in, the country they belonged to,
+the works they had written, or the arguments made use of for the defence
+of their doctrines and teachings. Besides the above reasons there are
+physical and mental difficulties which preclude the possibility of their
+being produced by the medium. The physical impossibility is the
+marvellous rapidity of their production, as many as 936 words having
+been written in six seconds. The mental difficulty is that the medium
+has not a logical mind. Like most females, she takes a short cut by
+jumping to conclusions. She does not, indeed cannot, argue out any
+proposition by the ordinary rules of logic. Now the papers referred to
+show that the author or authors are not only well acquainted with
+ancient lore and the classics, but also possessed very high ability as
+logicians. For the above reasons we conclude that the medium, from sheer
+incapacity, both mentally and physically, could not have written these
+papers, nor any other human being under the same circumstances. We are
+therefore absolutely driven, after looking at the subject from every
+conceivable point of view, to conclude respecting their production that
+they came from a supernatural source, and were produced by supernatural
+means."
+
+In the afternoon of this day a clergyman, whose name it would be highly
+indecorous in me to mention, descanted on the aspect of Spiritualism
+from his point of view in the Church of England. I understood the
+purport of the paper to be (1) that he claimed the right of members of
+the Church of England to investigate the phenomena; (2) that, if
+convinced of their spiritual origin, such conviction need not shake the
+investigator's previous faith. If the clergyman in question really said
+no more than the printed reports of the Conference represent him to have
+done, he rather reversed the conduct of Balaam, and cursed those he came
+to bless. This is the curt resume that went forth:--
+
+"The Rev. ---- read a paper, in which he defined his position with
+regard to Spiritualism as that of a mere inquirer, adding that even if
+he became convinced of its truth, he saw no reason why he should alter
+the opinions he at present held as a clergyman of the Church of England.
+After eighteen months' inquiry into the subject, however, he was,
+perhaps, more of a sceptic than before." If that was all the clergyman
+in question had to say for the Association, they must rather regret they
+ever "organized" him, and might well pray to be saved from their
+friends; but I heard it whispered--presumably by a spirit voice--that
+there had been a passage at arms between the lady secretary and the
+clergyman in question, and that Miss--but no, I must not mention
+names--the fair official punished the delinquent that most awful
+penalty--silence.
+
+Friday finished the Conference with a trance paper--I did not know there
+were such things--dictated to Mrs. Cora Tappan by invisible guides, and
+was read by Miss--I mean by the fair incognita above-mentioned. Not a
+manifestation--literally not the ghost of one--only this very glowing
+peroration:--"But it is in a larger sense of social, mental, political,
+and even religious renovation, that Spiritualism is destined to work its
+chief results. The abrogation of the primal terror of mankind, the most
+ancient spectre in the world of thought, grim and shadowy Death, is, in
+itself, so vital a change that it constitutes a revolution in the world
+of mind. Chemistry has already revealed the wonderful fact that no
+ultimate atom can perish. The subtle chemistry of Spiritualism steps in
+where science ceases, gathering up the ultimate atoms of thought into a
+spiritual entity and proving them imperishable. Already has this thought
+pervaded the popular mind, tinged the decaying forms of theology and
+external science with its glow, and made the life of man a heritage of
+immortal glory. More than this, taking spirit as the primal basis of
+life, each individual, and all members of society and humanity in the
+aggregate, must for ever strive to express its highest life (i.e. the
+life of the spirit). The child will be taught from within, external
+methods being employed only as aids, but never as dictators of thought.
+Society will be the flowing out of spiritual truths, taking shape and
+substance as the expression of the soul. Governments will be the
+protecting power of a parent over loving children, instead of the
+dictates of force or tyranny. Religion will wear its native garb of
+simplicity and truth, the offspring of the love and faith that gave it
+birth. Modern Spiritualism is as great a solvent of creeds, dogmas,
+codes, scientific sophisms, as is the sunlight of the substances
+contained in earth and air, revealing by the stages of intermediate
+life, from man, through spirits, angels, archangels, seraphim, and
+cherubim, to God, the glorious destiny of every soul. There is a vine
+growing in the islands of the tropic seas that thrives best upon the
+ancient ruins or crumbling walls of some edifice built by man; yet ever
+as it thrives, the tiny tendrils penetrate between the fibres of the
+stone, cutting and cutting till the whole fabric disappears, leaving
+only the verdant mass of the foliage of the living vine. Spiritualism is
+to the future humanity what this vine is to the ancient ruin."
+
+There was another paper coming on "Compound Consciousness," but the
+title did not attract me. After my four days' patient waiting for ghosts
+who never came and spirits that would not manifest, I felt, perhaps, a
+little impatient, put on my hat and left abruptly--the fair secretary,
+of whom I shall evermore stand in supreme awe, scowling at me when I did
+so. As I passed into Gower Street--sweet, serene Gower Street, sacred
+from the wheels of profane cabmen, I was almost surprised to see the
+"materialized" forms around me; and it really was not until I got well
+within sound--and smell--of the Underground Railway that I quite
+realized my abased position, or got out of the spheres whither the lofty
+periods of Mrs. Tappan's paper, so mellifluously delivered, had wafted
+me!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+AN EVENING'S DIABLERIE.
+
+
+Mr. Spurgeon a short time since oracularly placed it on record that,
+having hitherto deemed Spiritualism humbug, he now believes it to be the
+devil. This sudden conversion is, of course, final; and I proceed to
+narrate a somewhat exceptional endorsement of the opinion which has
+recently occurred within my own experience. There was a time, how long
+ago it boots not to say, when _I_ considered Spiritualism humbug; and a
+good deal came in my way which might have led me to the same conclusion
+as Mr. Spurgeon, if I had been disposed--which I am not--to go with a
+hop, skip, and jump.
+
+The investigator who first presented the "diabolical" theory to my
+notice was a French Roman Catholic priest, who had broken discipline so
+far as to enter the married state, but retained all the doctrines of his
+former faith intact. He had, in fact, anticipated to some extent the
+position of Pere Hyacinthe; for it was several years ago I first became
+acquainted with him. Individually as well as nationally this gentleman,
+too, was prone to jump at conclusions. He lost a dear friend, and
+immediately proceeded to communicate with the departed by means of
+table-turning and rapping. For a few days he was quite convinced of the
+identity of the communicating spirit; but then, and all within the
+compass of a single week, he pronounced the exorcism of the Catholic
+Church on the intelligence, I suppose experimentally in the first
+instance; found his challenge not satisfactorily answered, and
+immediately jumped to the conclusion that it was the foul fiend himself.
+I sat very frequently with this gentleman afterwards, prior to the
+experience I am about to narrate; and certainly the intelligence always
+gave itself out to be the spirit unmentionable to ears polite, whose
+presence my friend had taken for granted.
+
+I once went with this gentleman to the Marshalls, when they were at
+their zenith. We arranged previously that he should not sit at the
+table, but on one side, and give me a secret signal when he was silently
+pronouncing the exorcism. He did so; and certainly all manifestations at
+once ceased, though we had been in full converse with the invisibles a
+moment before. Old Mrs. M. had to announce with much chagrin, "The
+sperrits is gone!"
+
+My other partner in diablerie was a barrister whom I must not mention by
+name, but who possessed considerable power as a writing medium. The
+presiding intelligence in his case was, however, of a low character, and
+given to very bad language. He avowed himself to have been a bargee in
+the earth-plane--should one say the water-plane?--and certainly swore
+like one.
+
+As for myself, I am destitute of all "medium-power," whatever that may
+be, though enthusiastic spirituelle ladies tell me I am "mediumistic"--a
+qualification which is still more occult to me. I own to being greatly
+interested in spiritualistic inquiries, except as regards dark seances,
+which have a tendency to send me to sleep; and I believe that my
+presence does not "stop manifestations:" so that I suppose I am not a
+hopeless sceptic.
+
+On the occasion of which I am about to speak we met in my study, where I
+am in the habit of rearing a few pet snakes. I had just got a fine new
+specimen; and having no proper habitation for it, had turned my
+waste-basket upside-down on a small chess table, and left him to
+tabernacle under it for the night. This was the table we generally used
+for seances; and my legal friend, who was writing, immediately began to
+use most foul language, on the subject of the snake, exhorting me to
+"put him anywhere, put him in the cupboard, old boy." Such was the
+edifying style of communication we always got through this worthy limb
+of the law, but it was so much worse than usual on the present occasion
+as to fairly make us roar at its insane abuse. The gentleman himself, I
+ought to add, is by no means prone to profane swearing. My priestly
+friend was making a wide-awake hat reply by tilts; and still got his old
+reply that his Satanic Majesty was personally present. I did not in the
+least credit this assertion, any more than I accepted as proven the
+identity of the bargee, though I hold the impersonation in either case
+to be a strange psychological fact. That I did not do so is best
+evidenced by the circumstance that I said, "This spirit asserts himself
+to be his Satanic Majesty. Have you either of you any objection to
+communicate with him supposing such to be the case?"
+
+Neither one nor the other had the slightest. My Catholic friend, I knew,
+always carried a bottle of holy water in his pocket, and at my entreaty
+forbore for the moment to exorcise. The legal gentleman, though a
+"writer" himself, was not at all convinced about the phenomena, as was
+perhaps natural, seeing the exceedingly bad company to which it
+professed to relegate him. As for me, my scepticism was to me robur et
+aes triplex. I disposed of the snake, put out the gas; and down we three
+sat, amid profound darkness, like three male witches in "Macbeth,"
+having previously locked the door to prevent any one disturbing our
+hocus-pocus.
+
+Any one who has sat at an ordinary dark seance will recollect the number
+of false starts the table makes, the exclamations, "Was that a rap?"
+when the wood simply cracks, or, "Did you feel a cold air?" when
+somebody breathes a little more heavily than usual. I have myself made
+the experiment, though not without adding an open confession
+immediately afterwards. I have blown on the fingers of the sitters, and
+made them feel sure it was a "spirit aura," have done the neatest of
+raps with my index-finger when my little finger has been securely hooked
+in that of my next neighbour. In fact, for test purposes, dark seances
+are a mistake, though they are admirable for a flirtation.
+
+On this occasion, however, we were very much in earnest, and there was
+no waiting--I hope no collusion. I am quite sure I did not myself
+consciously produce any manifestation. I can answer for my legal friend,
+as far as any one person can answer for another; and we neither of us
+suspected--or suspect--the priest of the order of St. Benedict; only we
+would rather he had not pronounced such decided opinions; because the
+wish might have been father to the thought, or rather the thought might,
+in some utterly unaccountable way, have produced the effects that
+followed. I have an idea that if Mr. Spurgeon in his present frame of
+mind were to sit at a table for manifestations, he would obtain the
+clearest assurance that it was "all the devil," just as it is well known
+Roman Catholic sitters get communications from Roman Catholic spirits,
+theists from theistic, and Mormons from the denizens of some
+spiritualistic Utah.
+
+We had not, on this occasion, a moment to wait. The table forthwith
+began to plunge and career about the room as though the bargee--or the
+other personage himself--had actually been "in possession." It required
+all our agility to follow it in its rapid motion about the room. At last
+it became comparatively quiet; and I received in reply to a question as
+to who was present the exceedingly objectionable name which Mr. Spurgeon
+has coupled with the whole subject. Some persons I know entertain a
+certain amount of respect, or at all events awe, for the intelligence in
+question. For myself I feel nothing of the kind, and therefore I added,
+"If you are what you profess to be, give us some proof." We were sitting
+with only the tips of our fingers on the table; but it forthwith rose up
+quite perpendicularly, and came down with a crash that completely
+shivered it in pieces. I have not the slightest idea how it was
+done--but it certainly was done. A large portion of the table was
+reduced to a condition that fitted it for Messrs. Bryant and May's
+manufactory. When we lighted the gas and looked at our watches we found
+we had only been sitting a very few minutes.
+
+Of course the obvious explanation will be that the gentleman with the
+diabolical theory and the evidently strong will-power (as evidenced in
+the denouement at Mrs. Marshall's) produced the diabolical effects
+consciously or unconsciously. I do not think the former was the case;
+and if it is possible to get such results unconsciously, that phenomenon
+is quite as curious as the spiritualistic explanation. In fact I am not
+sure that the psychological is not more difficult than the
+pneumatological theory. My own notion is that the "Psychic Force" people
+are clearly on the right track, though their cause, as at present
+elaborated, is not yet equal to cover all the effects.
+
+Mr. Spurgeon and the "diabolists" concede the whole of the
+spiritualistic position. They not only say that the effects are due to
+spiritual causes, but they also identify the producing spirit. I have
+never been able to get as far as that. I did not feel on the occasion in
+question at all as though I had been in communication with his sable
+Majesty. If I was, certainly my respect for that potentate is not
+increased, for I should have fancied he would have done something much
+"bigger" in reply to my challenge than smash up a small chess-table.
+However, there was a sort of uncanny feeling about the experience, and
+it seemed to me so far illustrative of Mr. Spurgeon's position as to be
+worth committing to paper. If that gentleman, however, lends such a
+doctrine the sanction of his approval, he will, let him be assured, do
+more to confirm the claims of Spiritualism than all the sneers of
+Professors Huxley and Tyndall, and the scorn of Mr. George Henry Lewes
+can undo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+SPIRITUAL ATHLETES.
+
+
+I am about for once to depart from my usual custom of narrating only
+personal experiences, and in this and the two following chapters print
+the communications of a friend who shares my interest in these matters,
+and has frequently accompanied me in my investigations into this
+mysterious Borderland. In these cases, however, he investigated on his
+own account, and I am not responsible for the conclusions at which he
+arrives:--
+
+"Attracted," he says, "by an article in a popular journal on the subject
+of 'Spirit Faces,' I determined, if possible, to 'assist' at a seance. I
+had not hitherto taken much interest in spiritualistic matters, because
+in the first place, the cui bono question remained persistently
+unanswered; and, secondly, because most of the 'doings' were in the
+dark; and it appears to me that, given darkness, there are few things in
+the way of conjuring and ventriloquism that could _not_ be done.
+Terpsichorean tables and talking hats never had any particular charm for
+me, because I could always make a table dance, or a hat say anything I
+wanted it to say. I saw the Davenports, and preferred Professor
+Anderson. I even went to a dark seance at the Marshalls', and noticed
+that when Mr. and Mrs. Marshall had perceptibly partaken of beefsteak
+and onions, or some equally fragrant food, for dinner, the breath which
+accompanied the spirit-voices was unmistakably impregnated with onions
+too; and hence I drew my own conclusions. I am not saying I know how Mr.
+and Mrs. Marshall do John King and Katie King. I don't know how
+Professor Anderson or Professor Pepper do their tricks. I confess Mr.
+Home and the Marshalls have the pull of the professors in one way--that
+is, they don't perform on a platform but in a private room, and they let
+you examine everything beforehand. Theirs is the ars celare artem.
+Again, I don't know how men in the street get out of the very curious
+knots in which I have tied them, but I know they do it; and therefore I
+am sure the Davenports could do it without calling in the ghost of one's
+deceased grandmamma as a sort of Deus--or rather Dea--ex machina. I have
+never seen Mr. Home handle fire or elongate. I have seen him 'levitate,'
+or float, and I candidly confess I don't know how he does it, any more
+than I can solve Sir David Brewster's trick by which four young ladies
+can lift a heavy man on the points of their fingers. It's very
+mysterious, and very nice for the man.
+
+"So it happened that I had shelved spiritualism for some time, when the
+article on 'Spirit Faces' came under my notice. I did not care so much
+about the face part of the matter (at least not the spirit face), but I
+wanted to test it as a matter of athletics. In one respect the
+physiognomy did interest me, for I read that the medium was
+pretty--mediums, according to my experience, being generally very much
+the reverse--and I found that report had certainly not misrepresented
+the young lady in this respect. Her name is now public property, so I
+need not veil it under the pseudonyms of Miss Blank, or Asterisk, or
+anything of that sort. Miss Florence Cook, then, is a trim little lady
+of sweet sixteen, and dwells beneath the parental roof in an eastern
+suburb of London. It is quite true she does not accept payment for
+seances, which I strove to impress upon her was very foolish indeed, for
+she works almost as hard as Lulu twice in the week. However, she, or
+rather her parents, take high ground in the matter, which of course is
+very praiseworthy on their parts, and convenient for their guests if
+they happen to be impecunious.
+
+"Now, I do not purpose going through the details of the seance, which
+was considerably irksome, being protracted by endless psalm singing.
+What I want to do--with Miss Cook's permission--is to calculate the
+chances of her being sufficiently athletic to perform the tricks
+herself, without the aid of spirits. Does she not underrate her unaided
+powers in assigning a supernatural cause for the effects produced?
+
+"Well, then, this lithe little lady is arrayed in the ordinary garb of
+the nineteenth century with what is technically termed a 'pannier,' and
+large open sleeves, each of which, I fear, she must have found
+considerably in the way, as also the sundry lockets and other nick-nacks
+suspended from her neck. However, there they were. We put her in a
+cupboard, which had a single Windsor chair in it, and laid a stoutish
+new cord on her lap. Then came singing, which may or may not have been
+intended to drown any noise in the cupboard; but, after some delay, she
+was found tied around the waist, neck, and two wrists, and the ends of
+the cord fastened to the back of the chair. These knots we sealed, and
+consigned her to the cupboard again. Shortly after there appeared at an
+aperture in the upper portion of the cupboard a face which looked
+utterly unspiritual and precisely like that of the medium, only with
+some white drapery thrown over the head. The aperture was just the
+height that would have allowed Miss Cook to stand on the chair and peep
+out. I do not say she did; I am only calculating the height. The face
+remained some minutes in a strong light; then descended. We opened the
+cupboard, and found the little lady tied as before with the seals
+unbroken. Spiritual, or material, it was clever.
+
+"After a pause, the same process was gone through again; only this time
+stout tape was substituted for rope. The cord cut the girl's wrists; and
+tape was almost more satisfactory. Again she was bound, and we sealed
+the knots; and again a face appeared--this time quite black, and not
+like the medium at all. I noticed that the drapery ran right round the
+face, and cut it off at a straight line on the lower part. This gave the
+idea of a mask. I am not saying it was a mask. I am only throwing out a
+hint that, if the 'spirits' wish to convince people they should let the
+neck be well seen. I am bound to say it bore a strong light for several
+minutes; and some people say they saw eyelids. I did not. I do not say
+they were not there. I know how impossible it is to prove a negative,
+and only say I did not see them.
+
+"What followed possessed no special interest for any but the professed
+spiritualist, as it was done without any tying; Miss Cook arguing
+logically enough that, if the previous manifestations were clearly
+proved to have taken place by other agency than that of the medium
+herself, mere multiplication of proofs was unnecessary. I had only gone
+to study the matter from an athletic point of view; and I certainly came
+away impressed with the idea that, if Miss Florence Cook first got into
+and then got out of those knots, she was even more nimble and lithesome
+than she looked, and ought to start an Amateur Ladies' Athletic Society
+forthwith. As to her making faces at us through the window, I did not
+care sufficiently about the matter to inquire whether she did or not,
+because, if she got out of the ropes, it was easy enough to get on the
+chair and make faces.
+
+"Of course the cui bono remains. The professors make money by it; and
+Miss Cook can make at most, only a little mild and scarcely enviable
+notoriety. A satirical old friend of mine, when I told him the above
+facts, chuckled, and said, 'That's quite enough for a girl of sixteen;
+and anything that's do-able, a girl of those years will do.' It was no
+use talking to him of panniers and loose sleeves, and lockets. He was an
+old bachelor, and knew nothing about such things. At least, he had no
+business to, if he did.
+
+"I cannot forbear adding a domestic episode, though it is perhaps
+scarcely relevant to the subject. Certain young imps in my house,
+hearing what I had seen, got up an exhibition of spirit faces for my
+benefit. They rigged up a kind of Punch-and-Judy erection, and the
+cleanest of them did the spirit face, with a white pocket-handkerchief
+over his head. He looked as stolid and unwinking as the genuine
+spirit-physiognomy itself. The gas was lowered to a 'dim religious
+light,' and then a black coal-scuttle, with features chalked on it,
+deceived some of the circle into the idea that it was a nigger. But the
+one element which interested me was wanting; there was no rope-tying
+which could at all entitle the juvenile performance to be categorized
+under 'Spiritual Athletics.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+"SPOTTING" SPIRIT MEDIUMS.
+
+
+"Among the recent utterances of spiritualistic organs is one to the
+effect that 'manifestations' come in cycles--in 'great waves,' I believe
+was the actual expression; and of the many fluctuations to which
+spiritualistic society has been exposed of late is a very prominent
+irruption of young lady mediums. The time seems to have gone by for
+portly matrons to be wafted aerially from the northern suburbs to the
+W.C. district, or elderly spinsters to exhibit spirit drawings which
+gave one the idea of a water-colour palette having been overturned, and
+the resulting 'mess' sat upon for the purposes of concealment. Even
+inspirational speakers have so far 'gone out' as to subside from
+aristocratic halls to decidedly second-rate institutions down back
+streets. In fact, the 'wave' that has come over the spirit world seems
+to resemble that which has also supervened upon the purely mundane
+arrangements of Messrs. Spiers and Pond; and we anxious investigators
+can scarcely complain of the change which brings us face to face with
+fair young maidens in their teens to the exclusion of the matrons and
+spinsters aforesaid, or the male medium who was once irreverently
+termed by a narrator a 'bull-necked young man.'
+
+"The names of these interesting young denizens of two worlds are so well
+known that it is perhaps unnecessary caution or superfluous gallantry to
+conceal them; but I will err, if error it be, on the safe side, and call
+No. 1 Miss C. and No. 2 Miss S., premising only that each is decidedly
+attractive, with the unquestioned advantage of having seen only some
+sixteen or seventeen summers apiece. Miss C. has been 'out' some time;
+her familiar being 'Katie King;' while Miss S. has made her debut more
+recently, having for her attendant sprites one 'Florence Maple,' a young
+lady spirit who has given a wrong terrestrial address in Aberdeen, and
+Peter, a defunct market gardener, who sings through the young lady's
+organism in a clear baritone voice. It was to me personally a source of
+great satisfaction when I learnt that Miss C. had been taken in hand by
+a F.R.S.--whom I will call henceforth the Professor--and Miss S. by a
+Serjeant learned in the law. Now, if ever, I thought, we have a chance
+of hearing what science and evidential acumen have to say on the subject
+of 'Face Manifestations.' Each of these gentlemen, I ought to mention,
+had written voluminously on the subject of Spiritualism, and both seemed
+inclined to contest its claims in favour of some occult physical--or, as
+they named it, psychic--force. This would make their verdict the more
+valuable to outsiders, as it was clear they had not approached the
+subject with a foregone conclusion in its favour. True, the
+Spiritualists claimed both the Professor and the Serjeant persistently
+as their own; but Spiritualists have a way of thinking everybody
+'converted' who simply sits still in a decorous manner, and keeps his
+eyes open without loudly proclaiming scepticism.
+
+"Personally I had been, up to the date of present occurrences,
+accustomed to summarize my convictions on the subject by the
+conveniently elastic formula that there might be 'something in it.' I
+still think so; but perhaps with a difference.
+
+"For the former of the two exposes--if such they shall be deemed--I am
+compelled to rely on documentary evidence; but I have 'sat' so many
+times with Miss S., have been requested so often by the inspirational
+Peter to 'listen to the whip-poor-will, a-singin' on the tree,' have
+shaken the spirit hand, gazed on the spirit face, and even cut off
+portions of the spirit veil of the fair Florence, that I can follow the
+order of events just as though I had been present. I must confess the
+wonderful similarity existing between Miss S. and Florence had exercised
+me considerably, and perhaps prepared me to accept with calmness what
+followed. Why delay the result? Miss S. and her mamma were invited to
+the country house of the learned Serjeant. A 'cabinet' was extemporized
+in the bay of the window, over which the curtains were drawn and a shawl
+pinned. With a confidence which is really charming to contemplate, no
+'tests' were asked of the medium, no 'conditions' imposed on the sitter.
+Miss S. was put in the cabinet with only a chair, and the expectant
+circle waited with patience. In due time the curtains were drawn aside,
+and the spirit-face appeared at the opening. It was still the facsimile
+of Miss S., with the eyes piously turned up and a ghostly head-dress
+covering the hair. One by one the assembled were summoned to look more
+closely. The initiated gazed and passed on, knowing they must not peep;
+but, alas, one lady who was _not_ initiated, and therefore unaware of
+the tacitly imposed conditions, imitated the example of Mother Eve, drew
+aside the curtains and exposed the unspiritual form of Miss S. standing
+on the chair; the 'spirit-hands' at the same time struggling so
+convulsively to close the aperture that the head-gear fell off, and
+betrayed the somewhat voluminous chignon of Miss S. herself. Hereupon
+ensued a row, it being declared that the medium was killed, though
+eventually order was restored by the rather incongruous process of a
+gentleman present singing a comic song. The learned Serjeant still
+clings to the belief that Miss S. was in a condition of 'unconscious
+somnambulism.' I only hope, if ever I am arraigned before him in his
+judicial capacity, he will extend his benevolent credulity to me in an
+equal degree, and give me the benefit of the doubt.
+
+"It may be in the recollection of those who follow the fluctuations of
+the Spiritual 'wave' that some months ago a Dialectical gentleman seized
+rudely on the spirit form of Katie, which struggled violently with him,
+scratching his face and pulling out his whiskers, eventually making good
+its retreat into the cupboard, where Miss C. was presumably bound hand
+and foot. I must confess the fact of that escape rather prejudiced me in
+favour of Katie, though I would rather she had evaporated into thin air,
+and left the dialectical whiskers intact. Still it scored a point on
+Katie's side, and I eagerly availed myself of the opportunity to pay my
+devoirs at the shrine of Miss C.; the more so as the Professor had
+asserted twice that he had seen and handled the form of the medium while
+looking on and conversing with that of the spirit at the same time. If I
+could retain my former faith in the Professor, of course this would be
+final and my conversion an accomplished fact.
+
+"We sat no longer in the subterranean breakfast room of Miss C.'s
+parental abode; but moved up to the parlour floor, where two rooms
+communicated through folding doors, the front apartment being that in
+which we assembled, and the back used as a bedroom, where the ladies
+took off their 'things.' This latter room, be it remembered, had a
+second room communicating with the passage, and so with the universe of
+space in general. One leaf of the folding doors was closed, and a
+curtain hung over the other. Pillows were placed on the floor, just
+inside the curtain, and the little medium, who was nattily arrayed in a
+blue dress, was laid upon them. We were requested to sing and talk
+during 'materialization,' and there was as much putting up and lowering
+of the light as in a modern sensation drama. The Professor acted all the
+time as Master of the Ceremonies, retaining his place at the aperture;
+and I fear, from the very first, exciting suspicion by his marked
+attentions, not to the medium, but to the ghost. When it did come it was
+arrayed according to orthodox ghost fashion, in loose white garments,
+and I must confess with no resemblance to Miss C. We were at the same
+time shown the recumbent form of the pillowed medium, and there
+certainly was something blue, which might have been Miss C., or only her
+gown going to the wash. By-and-by, however, with 'lights down,' a bottle
+of phosphorized oil was produced, and by this weird and uncanny radiance
+one or two privileged individuals were led by the 'ghost' into the back
+bedroom, and allowed to put their hands on the entranced form of the
+medium. I was not of the 'elect,' but I talked to those who were, and
+their opinion was that the 'ghost' was a much stouter, bigger woman than
+the medium; and I must confess that certain unhallowed ideas of the
+bedroom door and the adjacent kitchen stairs connected themselves in my
+mind with recollections of a brawny servant girl who used to sit sentry
+over the cupboard in the breakfast room. Where was she?
+
+"As a final bonne bouche the spirit made its exit from the side of the
+folding door covered by the curtain, and immediately Miss C. rose up
+with dishevelled locks in a way that must have been satisfactory to
+anybody who knew nothing of the back door and the brawny servant, or who
+had never seen the late Mr. Charles Kean act in the 'Corsican Brothers'
+or the 'Courier of Lyons.'
+
+"I am free to confess the final death-blow to my belief that there might
+be 'something in' the Face Manifestations was given by the effusive
+Professor who has 'gone in' for the Double with a pertinacity altogether
+opposed to the calm judicial examination of his brother learned in the
+law, and with prejudice scarcely becoming a F.R.S.
+
+"I am quite aware that all this proves nothing. Miss S. and Miss C. may
+each justify Longfellow's adjuration--
+
+ 'Trust her not, she is fooling thee;'
+
+and yet ghosts be as genuine as guano. Only I fancy the 'wave' of young
+ladies will have to ebb for a little while; and I am exceedingly
+interested in speculating as to what will be the next 'cycle.' From
+'information I have received,' emanating from Brighton, I am strongly of
+opinion that babies are looking up in the ghost market, and that our
+next manifestations may come through an infant phenomenon."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+A SEANCE FOR SCEPTICS.
+
+
+"Attracted by the prominence recently given to the subject of
+Spiritualism in the _Times_, and undeterred by that journal's subsequent
+recantation, or the inevitable scorn of the _Saturday Review_, I
+determined to test for myself the value of the testimony so copiously
+quoted by believers in the modern marvel. Clearly if certain published
+letters of the period were to be put in evidence, Spiritualism had very
+much the better, and Science exceedingly little to say for itself. But
+we all know that this is a subject on which scientific men are apt to be
+reticent. 'Tacere tutum est' seems the Fabian policy adopted by those
+who find this new Hannibal suddenly come from across sea into their
+midst. It is moreover a subject about which the public will not be
+convinced by any amount of writing or talking, but simply by what it can
+see and handle for itself. It may be of service, then, if I put on
+record the result of an examination made below the surface of this
+matter.
+
+"Like most other miracles this particular one evidently has its phases
+and comes about in cycles. For a generation past, or nearly so, Modern
+Spiritualism has been so far allied with Table-turning and mysterious
+rappings as to have appropriated to itself in consequence certain
+ludicrous titles, against which it vainly protests. Then cropped up
+'levitations' and 'elongations' of the person, and Mr. Home delighted to
+put red-hot coals on the heads of his friends. None of these
+manifestations, however, were sufficient to make the spiritualistic
+theory any other than a huge petitio principii. The Davenports were the
+first to inaugurate on anything like an extended scale the alleged
+appearance of the human body, or rather of certain members of the human
+body, principally arms and hands, through the peep-hole of their
+cabinet. Then came 'spirit-voices' with Mrs. Marshall, and aerial
+transits on the part of Mrs. Guppy; then the entire 'form of the
+departed' was said to be visible chez Messrs. Herne and Williams in
+Lamb's Conduit Street, whose abode formed Mrs. Guppy's terminus on the
+occasion of her nocturnal voyage. Then came Miss Florence Cook's spirit
+faces at Hackney, which were produced under a strong light, which
+submitted to be touched and tested in what seemed a very complete
+manner, and even held conversations with persons in the circle. Finally,
+I heard it whispered that these faces were being recognised on a
+somewhat extensive scale at the seances of Mrs. Holmes, in Old Quebec
+Street, where certain other marvels were also to be witnessed, which
+decided me on paying that lady a visit.
+
+"Even these, however, were not the principal attractions which drew me
+to the tripod of the seeress in Quebec Street. It had been continually
+urged as an argument against the claims of Modern Spiritualism, first,
+that it shunned the light and clave to 'dark' circles; secondly, that it
+was over-sensitive on the subject of 'sceptics.' Surely, we are all
+sceptics in the sense of investigators. The most pretentious disciple of
+Spiritualism does not claim to have exhausted the subject. On the
+contrary, they all tell us we are now only learning the alphabet of the
+craft. Perhaps the recognised Spirit-faces may have landed us in words
+of one syllable, but scarcely more. However, the great advantage which
+Mrs. Holmes possessed in my eyes over all professors of the new art was
+that she did not object to sceptics. Accordingly to Quebec Street I
+went, for the distinct purpose of testing the question of recognition.
+If I myself, or any person on whose testimony I could rely, established
+a single case of undoubted recognition, that, I felt, would go farther
+than anything else towards solving the spiritualistic problem.
+
+"I devoted two Monday evenings to this business; that being the day on
+which Mrs. Holmes, as she phrases it, 'sits for faces.' On the former of
+the two occasions twenty-seven persons assembled, and the first portion
+of the evening was devoted to the Dark Seance, which presented some
+novel features in itself, but was not the special object for which I
+was present. Mrs. Holmes, who is a self-possessed American lady,
+evidently equal to tackling any number of sceptics, was securely tied in
+a chair. All the circle joined hands; and certainly, as soon as the
+light was out, fiddles, guitars, tambourines and bells did fly about the
+room in a very unaccountable manner, and when the candle was lighted, I
+found a fiddle-bow down my back, a guitar on my lap, and a tambourine
+ring round my neck. But there was nothing spiritual in this, and the
+voice which addressed us familiarly during the operation may or may not
+have been a spirit voice.
+
+"Mrs. Holmes having been released from some very perplexing knots,
+avowedly by Spirit power, proceeded to what is called the 'Ring Test,'
+and I was honoured by being selected to make the experiment. I sat in
+the centre of the room and held both her hands firmly in mine. I passed
+my hands over her arms, without relaxing my grasp, so as to feel that
+she had nothing secreted there; when suddenly a tambourine ring,
+jinglers and all, was passed on to my arm. Very remarkable; but still
+not necessarily spiritual. Certain clairvoyants present said they could
+witness the 'disintegration' of the ring. I only felt it pass on to my
+arm. On the occasion of my second visit this same feat was performed on
+an elderly gentleman, a very confirmed sceptic indeed. This second
+circle consisted of twenty persons, many of them very pronounced
+disbelievers, and not a little inclined to be 'chaffy.' However all
+went on swimmingly.
+
+"After about an hour of rather riotous dark seance, lights were
+rekindled and circles re-arranged for the Face Seance which takes place
+in subdued light. In the space occupied by the folding doors between the
+front and back room a large black screen is placed, with an aperture, or
+peep-hole, about eighteen inches square, cut in it. The most minute
+examination of this back room is allowed, and I took care to lock both
+doors, leaving the keys crosswise in the key-hole, so that they could
+not be opened from the outside. We then took our seats in the front room
+in three or four lines. I myself occupied the centre of the first row,
+about four feet from the screen, Mr. and Mrs. Holmes sitting at a small
+table in front of the screen; the theory being that the spirits behind
+collect from their 'emanations' material to form the faces. Soon after
+we were in position a most ghostly-looking child's face appeared at the
+aperture, but was not recognised. Several other corpse-like visages
+followed with like absence of recognition. Then came a very old lady's
+face, quite life-like, and Mrs. Holmes informed us that the cadaverous
+people were those only recently deceased. The old lady looked anxiously
+round as if expecting to be recognised, but nobody claimed acquaintance.
+In fact no face was recognised at my first visit. The next was a jovial
+Joe Bagstock kind of face which peered quite merrily round our circle,
+and lastly came a most life-like countenance of an elderly man. This
+face, which had a strange leaden look about the eyes, came so close to
+the orifice that it actually _lifted_ its grey beard outside. On the
+occasion of my second visit a lady present distinctly recognised this as
+the face of her husband, and asked the form to show its hand as an
+additional mark of identity. This request was complied with, the figure
+lifting a thin, white and--as the widow expressed it--'aristocratic'
+hand, and kissing it most politely. I am bound to say there was less
+emotion manifested on the part of the lady than I should have expected
+under the circumstances; and a young man who accompanied her, and who
+from the likeness to her must have been her son, surveyed his
+resuscitated papa calmly through a double-barrelled opera glass. I am
+not sure that I am at liberty to give this lady's name; but, at this
+second visit, Mrs. Makdougall Gregory, of 21, Green Street, Grosvenor
+Square, positively identified the old lady above-mentioned as a Scotch
+lady of title well known to her.
+
+"I myself was promised that a relation of my own would appear on a
+future occasion; but on neither of those when I attended did I see
+anything that would enable me to test the value of the identifications.
+The faces, however, were so perfectly life-like, with the solitary
+exception of a dull leaden expression in the eye, that I cannot imagine
+the possibility of a doubt existing as to whether they belonged to
+persons one knew or not. At all events here is the opportunity of making
+the test. No amount of scepticism is a bar to being present. The
+appearances are not limited to a privileged few. All see alike: so that
+the matter is removed out of the sphere of 'hallucinations.' Everything
+is done in the light, too, as far as the faces are concerned. So that
+several not unreasonable test-conditions are fulfilled in this case, and
+so far a step made in advance of previous manifestations.
+
+"We may well indeed pause--at least I know I did--to shake ourselves,
+and ask whereabouts we are. Is this a gigantic imposture? or are the
+Witch of Endor and the Cumaean Sibyl revived in the unromantic
+neighbourhood of the Marble Arch, and under circumstances that
+altogether remove them from the category of the miraculous? England will
+take a good deal of convincing on this subject, which is evidently one
+that no amount of 'involuntary muscular action,' or 'unconscious
+cerebration,' will cover. What if the good old-fashioned ghost be a
+reality after all, and Cock Lane no region of the supernatural?
+
+"What then? Why, one may expect to meet one's deceased ancestors at any
+hour of the day or night, provided only there be a screen for them to
+'form' behind, and a light sufficiently subdued to prevent
+disintegration; with, of course, the necessary pigeon-hole for the
+display of their venerable physiognomies. On their side of the question,
+it will be idle to say, 'No rest but the grave!' for there may not be
+rest even there, if Delphic priestesses and Cumaean Sibyls come into
+vogue again; and we may as well omit the letters R. I. P. from our
+obituary notices as a purely superfluous form of speech."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speaking now in my own proper person as author, I may mention--as I have
+purposely deferred doing up to this point--that a light was subsequently
+struck at one of Mrs. Holmes's Dark Seances, and that the discoveries
+thus made rendered the seance a final one. Mr. and Mrs. Holmes retired,
+first to Brighton, and then to America.
+
+They were, at the time of my writing, holding successful seances in the
+latter place; and public (Spiritualistic) opinion still clings to the
+belief that Mrs. Holmes is a genuine medium.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+AN EVENING WITH THE HIGHER SPIRITS.
+
+
+At the head of social heresies, and rapidly beginning to take rank as a
+religious heresy as well, I have no hesitation in placing modern
+Spiritualism. Those who associate this latest mystery only with gyrating
+articles of furniture, rapping tables, or simpering planchettes, are
+simply in the abyss of ignorance, and dangerously underrate the gravity
+of the subject. The later development of Spirit Faces and Spirit Forms,
+each of which I have examined thoroughly, and made the results of my
+observations public, fail to afford any adequate idea of the pitch to
+which the mania--if mania it be--has attained. To many persons
+Spiritualism forms the ultimatum, not only in science, but also in
+religion. Whatever the Spirits tell them they believe and do as devoutly
+as the Protestant obeys his Bible, the Catholic his Church, or the
+scientific man follows up the results of his demonstrations. That is, in
+fact, the position they assume. They claim to have attained in matters
+of religion to demonstration as clear and infallible as the philosopher
+does in pure science. They say no longer "We believe," but "We know."
+These people care little for the vagaries of Dark Circles, or even the
+doings of young ladies with "doubles." The flight of Mrs. Guppy through
+the air, the elongation of Mr. Home's braces, the insertion of live
+coals among the intricacies of Mr. S. C. Hall's exuberant locks, are but
+the A B C which have led them to their present advanced position. These
+physical "manifestations" may do for the neophytes. They are the
+initiated. I am the initiated; or I ought to be, if patience and
+perseverance constitute serving an apprenticeship. I have devoted a good
+portion of my late life to the study. I have given up valuable evenings
+through several consecutive winters to dark seances; have had my hair
+pulled, my head thumped with paper tubes, and suffered other indignities
+at the hands of the "Invisibles;" and, worse than all, my friends have
+looked upon me as a lunatic for my pains, and if my enemies could have
+wrought their will they would have incarcerated me as non compos, or
+made an auto-da-fe of me as a heretic years ago.
+
+Through sheer length of service, then, if on no other account, I had
+grown somewhat blase with the ordinary run of manifestations. Spirit
+Faces no longer interest me; for I seek among them in vain the
+lineaments of my departed friends. Spirit Hands I shake as unconcernedly
+as I do those of my familiar acquaintances at the club or in the street.
+I have even cut off a portion of the veil of Miss Florence Maple, the
+Aberdeen Spirit, and gone away with it in my pocket: so that it was, at
+all events, a new sensation when I received an invitation to be present
+at a trance seance, where one of the Higher Spirits communicated to the
+assembled things undreamed of in mundane philosophy. The sitting was a
+strictly private one; so I must not mention names or localities; but
+this does not matter, as I have no marvels in the vulgar sense of the
+word to relate: only Higher Teachings, which will do just as well with
+asterisks or initials as with the names in full.
+
+The scene, then, was an artist's studio at the West End of London, and
+the medium a magnetic lady with whom I had frequently sat before, though
+not for the "Higher" teachings. Her instruction had so far come in the
+shape of very vigorous raps, which ruined my knuckles to imitate them,
+and in levitation of a small and volatile chess table, which resisted
+all my efforts to keep it to the paths of propriety. This lady was not
+young; and I confess frankly this was, to my thinking, an advantage.
+When I once told a sceptical friend about Miss Florence Cook's seance,
+and added, triumphantly, "Why, she's a pretty little simple girl of
+sixteen," that clenched the doubts of this Thomas at once, for he
+rejoined, "What is there that a pretty little _simple_ girl of sixteen
+won't do?" Miss Showers is sweet sixteen, too; and when "Peter" sings
+through her in a clear baritone voice, I cannot, despite myself, help
+the thought occasionally flitting across my mind, "Would that you were
+six-and-twenty, or, better still, six-and-thirty, instead of sixteen!"
+Without specifying to which of the two latter classes our present medium
+belonged, one might venture to say she had safely passed the former. She
+was of that ripe and Rubens-like beauty to which we could well imagine
+some "Higher" spirit offering the golden apple of its approval, however
+the skittish Paris of the spheres might incline to sweet sixteen. I had
+a short time before sat infructuously with this lady, when a distressing
+contretemps occurred. We were going in for a dark seance then, and just
+as we fancied the revenants were about to justify the title, we were
+startled by a crash, and on my lighting up, all of the medium I could
+see were two ankles protruding from beneath the table. She had fainted
+"right off," as the ladies say, and it required something strong to
+bring her to. In fact, we all had a "refresher," I recollect, for
+sitting is generally found to be exhausting to the circle as well as to
+the medium. On the present occasion, however, everything was, if not en
+plein jour, en plein gaz. There was a good deal of preliminary
+difficulty as to the choice of a chair for the medium. Our artist-friend
+had a lot of antique affairs in his studio, no two being alike, and I
+was glad to see the lady select a capacious one with arms to it, from
+which she would not be likely to topple off when the spirits took
+possession. The rest of us sat in a sort of irregular circle round the
+room, myself alone being accommodated with a small table, not for the
+purposes of turning (I am set down as "too physical") but in order to
+report the utterances of the Higher Spirits. We were five "assistants"
+in all--our host, a young lady residing with him, another lady well
+known as a musical artiste, with her mamma and my unworthy self.
+Installed in her comfortable chair, the medium went through a series of
+facial contortions, most of which looked the reverse of pleasing, though
+occasionally she smiled benignantly par parenthese. I was told--or I
+understood it so--that this represented her upward passage through
+different spheres. She was performing, in fact, a sort of spiritualistic
+"Excelsior." By way of assimilating our minds to the matter in hand, we
+discussed the Apocryphal Gospels, which happened to be lying on the
+table; and very soon, without any other process than the facial
+contortions having been gone through, the medium broke silence, and, in
+measured tones of considerable benignity, said:--"Friends, we greet you
+in the name of our Lord and Master. Let us say the Lord's Prayer."
+
+She then repeated the Lord's Prayer, with considerable alterations from
+the Authorized Version, especially, I noticed, inserting the
+Swedenborgian expressions, "the Heavens," "on earth;" but also altering
+the order of the clauses, and omitting one altogether. She then informed
+us that she was ready to answer questions on any subject, but that we
+were not bound to accept any teaching which she--or let us say they,
+for it was the spirits now speaking--might give us. "What did we wish to
+know?" I always notice that when this question is asked at a spirit
+circle everybody simultaneously shuts up, as though the desire for
+knowledge were dried at its source. Nobody spoke, and I myself was not
+prepared with a subject, but I had just been reviewing a Swedenborgian
+book, and I softly insinuated "Spiritual Marriage." It was graciously
+accepted; and our Sibyl thus delivered herself:--Mankind, the higher
+Spirit or Spirits, said was originally created in pairs, and the soul
+was still dual. Somehow or other--my notes are not quite clear how--the
+parts had got mixed up, separated, or wrongly sorted. There were,
+however, some advantages in this wrong sorting, which was so frequent an
+accident of terrestrial marriage, since it was possible for people to be
+too much alike--an observation I fancied I had heard before, or at least
+not so profound a one as to need a ghost "Come from the dead to tell us
+that, Horatio!" When the right halves did get together on earth the good
+developed for good, the evil for evil, until they got to the heavens or
+the other places--they were all plurals. Swedenborgianism has an
+objection to the singular number; and I could not fail to identify the
+teaching of the Higher Spirit at once with that of the New Jerusalem
+Church. Two preliminary facts were brought before us; the Higher Spirits
+were in theology Swedenborgian, and in medical practice homoeopaths. So
+was the Medium. Although there was no marriage in the spiritual world,
+in our sense of the term, there was not only this re-sorting and
+junction of the disunited bivalves, but there were actual "nuptials"
+celebrated. We were to be careful and understand that what terrestrials
+called marriage celestials named nuptials--it seemed to me rather a
+distinction without a difference. There was no need of any ceremony, but
+still a ceremony was pleasing and also significant. I asked if it was
+true, as I had read in the Swedenborgian book, that all adult angels
+were married. She replied, "Yes; they married from the age of 18 to 24,
+and the male was always a few years older than the female."
+
+There was a tendency, which I continually had to check, on the part of
+the Medium to wander off from matrimonial to theological subjects; and
+the latter, though trite, were scarcely so heterodox as I expected. I
+had found most "spiritualistic" teaching to be purely Theistic. Love to
+God and man were declared to be the great essentials, and creeds to
+matter little. If a man loved truth, it was no matter how wild or absurd
+his ideas might be. The love of God might seem a merely abstract idea,
+but it was not so. To love goodness was to love God. The love of the
+neighbour, in the sense of loving all one's kind, might seem hard, too;
+but it was not really so. There were in the sphere where this
+Intelligence dwelt millions of angels, or good spirits, working for the
+salvation of men.
+
+I ought to mention that this lady, in her normal condition, is
+singularly reticent, and that the "communications" I chronicle were
+delivered fluently in one unbroken chain of what often rose into real
+eloquence.
+
+So Christ came for the good of man, and Christ was not the only Messiah
+who had appeared on earth. In the millions of ages that had passed over
+our globe, and in the other planets of our solar system, there had risen
+up "other men filled with the spirit of good, and so Sons of God." I
+here tried to get at the views of the Higher Spirits on the Divinity of
+Christ, but found considerable haziness; at one time it was roundly
+asserted, at another it seemed to me explained away by such expressions
+as I have quoted above.
+
+Our planet, I was informed, had been made the subject of special care
+because we were more material, more "solid" than the inhabitants of any
+other orb. There was an essential difference between Christ and all
+other great teachers, such as Buddha; and there were no historical
+records of any other manifestation of the Messiah than that we
+possessed; but such manifestations had taken place.
+
+The Spirit then gave us an account of its surroundings, which is, I
+believe, purely Swedenborgian. The "celestial" angels were devoted to
+truth, the "spiritual" angels to goodness; and so, too, there were the
+Homes of the Satans, where falsehoods prevailed, and of the Devils,
+where evils predominated. Spirits from each of these came to man and
+held him in equilibrio; but gained power as his will inclined towards
+them. The will was not altogether free, because affected by inherited
+tendencies; but the "determination" was. I have no idea what the Higher
+Spirit meant by this; and I rather fancy the Higher Spirit was in some
+doubt itself. It rather put me in mind of the definition of metaphysics:
+"If you are talking to me of what you know nothing about, and I don't
+understand a word of what you are saying--that's metaphysics."
+
+All can do good, continued the Sibyl. Evil cannot compel you. Utter only
+such an aspiration as, "God help me," and it brings a crowd of angels
+round you. From those who came to them from this world, however, they
+(the Higher Spirits) found that teachers taught more about what we were
+to think than what we were to do. Goodness was so easy. A right belief
+made us happier; but right action was essential.
+
+Pushed by our host, who was rather inclined to "badger" the Higher
+Spirit, as to irresistible tendencies, the Intelligence said they were
+_not_ irresistible. When we arrived in the Spirit World we should find
+everything that had occurred in our lives photographed. You will condemn
+yourselves, it was added. You will not be "had up" before an angry God.
+_You_ will decide, in reference to any wrong action, whether you could
+help it. Even in the act of doing it a man condemns himself; much more
+so there. The doctrine of the Atonement was summarily disposed of as a
+"damnable heresy." "Does the Great Spirit want one man to die? It hurts
+us even to think of it!"
+
+I then questioned the Medium with regard to the resurrection of the
+body; and was told that man, as originally created, was a spiritual
+being, but had "superinduced" his present body of flesh--how he managed
+it I did not quite gather. As to possible sublimation of corporeal
+integument, the case of ghosts was mentioned. It was to no purpose I
+gently insinuated I had never seen a ghost, or had the existence of one
+properly authenticated. I was told that if I fired a pistol through a
+ghost only a small particle of dust would remain which could be swept
+up. I was not aware that even so much would remain. Fancy "sweeping up"
+a Higher Spirit!
+
+I could not help once or twice pausing to look round on this strange
+preacher and congregation. The comfortable-looking lady propped in an
+arm-chair, and with an urbane smile discoursing on these tremendous
+topics, our little congregation of five, myself writing away for dear
+life, the young hostess nursing a weird-looking black cat; the other
+young lady continually harking back to "conjugal" subjects, which
+seemed to interest her; the mamma slightly flabbergastered at the rather
+revolutionary nature of the communications; and our host every now and
+then throwing in a rude or caustic remark. I dreaded to think what might
+have been the result of a domiciliary visit paid by a Commissioner in
+Lunacy to that particular studio!
+
+Back, then, the musical young lady took us to conjugal pairs. It was
+very difficult to convey to us what this conjugal love was like. Was it
+Elective Affinity? I asked. Yes; something like that, but still not
+that. It was the spontaneous gravitation in the spheres, either to
+other, of the halves of the dual spirit dissociated on earth. Not at
+all--again in reply to me--like flirting in a corner. The two, when
+walking in the spheres, looked like one. This conjugal puzzle was too
+much for us. We "gave it up;" and with an eloquent peroration on the
+Dynamics of Prayer, the seance concluded.
+
+The Lord's Prayer was again said, with even more varieties than before;
+a few extemporaneous supplications were added. The process of coming-to
+seemed even more disagreeable, if one may judge by facial expression,
+than going into the trance. Eventually, to get back quite to earth, our
+Sibyl had to be demesmerized by our host, and in a few minutes was
+partaking of a ham sandwich and a cup of coffee as though she had never
+been in nubibus at all.
+
+What the psychological condition had been I leave for those more
+learned than myself to determine. That some exaltation of the faculties
+took place was clear. That the resulting intelligence was of deep
+practical import few, I fancy, would aver. Happily my mission is not to
+discuss, but to describe; and so I simply set down my experience in the
+same terms in which it was conveyed to me as "An Evening with the Higher
+Spirits."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+SPIRIT FORMS.
+
+
+Some years ago I contributed to the columns of a daily paper an article
+on Spirit Faces, which was to me the source of troubles manifold. In the
+first place, the inquirers into Spiritualism, whose name I found to be
+legion, inundated me with letters, asking me to take them to the house
+of pretty Miss Blank, the medium. Miss Blank might have been going on
+till now, holding nightly receptions, without having exhausted her list
+of self-invited guests; I had but one answer; the lady was a comparative
+stranger to me, and not a professional medium; ergo, the legion must ask
+some one to chaperone them elsewhere. Spirit Faces had got comparatively
+common and almost gone out since I wrote. We are a long way beyond faces
+now. Then, again, my second source of trouble was that forthwith, from
+the date of my writing, the Spiritualists claimed me for their own, as
+Melancholy did the young gentleman in Gray's elegy. Though I fancied my
+paper was only a calm judicial statement of things seen, and I carefully
+avoided saying whether I was convinced or not, I found myself nolens
+volens enrolled among the initiated, and expected to devote about five
+evenings out of the seven to seances. I did go, and do go still to a
+great many; so that I feel pretty well posted up in the "Latest
+Intelligence" of the Spiritual world. But the worst of all is that my
+own familiar friends, in whom I trusted, have also lifted up their heels
+against me--I mean metaphorically, of course. "What's the last new thing
+in spirits?" they ask me out loud in omnibuses or railway carriages,
+causing my fellow-travellers to look at me in doubt as to whether I am a
+licensed victualler or a necromancer. As "bigots feign belief till they
+believe," I really begin to have some doubts myself as to the state of
+my convictions.
+
+But I wish to make this paper again a simple statement of things heard
+and seen--especially seen. I flatter myself the title is a nice, weird,
+ghostly one, calculated to make people feel uncomfortable about the
+small hours of the morning. Should such be the case--as they say in
+prefaces--the utmost hopes of the writer will be realized. When last I
+communicated my experiences, the ultimate end we had reached was the
+appearance of a white counterpart of pretty Miss Blank's face at the
+peep-hole of a corner cupboard. There were a good many more or
+less--generally less--successful imitations of this performance in
+various quarters, and the sensation subsided. Miss B. was still facile
+princeps from the fact that she stood full light--I mean her spirit-face
+did--whilst all the others leaned to a more or less dim religious kind
+of gloom. In a short time, however, "Katie"--as the familiar of Miss B.
+was termed--thought she would be able to "materialize" herself so far as
+to present the whole form, if we re-arranged the corner cupboard so as
+to admit of her doing so. Accordingly we opened the door, and from it
+suspended a rug or two opening in the centre, after the fashion of a
+Bedouin Arab's tent, formed a semicircle, sat and sang Longfellow's
+"Footsteps of Angels." Therein occurs the passage: "Then the forms of
+the departed enter at the open door." And, lo and behold, though we had
+left Miss B. tied and sealed to her chair, and clad in an ordinary black
+dress somewhat voluminous as to the skirts, a tall female figure draped
+classically in white, with bare arms and feet, did enter at the open
+door, or rather down the centre from between the two rugs, and stood
+statue-like before us, spoke a few words, and retired; after which we
+entered the Bedouin tent and found pretty Miss B. with her dress as
+before, knots and seals secure, and her boots on! This was Form No. 1,
+the first I had ever seen. It looked as material as myself; and on a
+subsequent occasion--for I have seen it several times--we took four very
+good photographic portraits of it by magnesium light. The difficulty I
+still felt, with the form as with the faces, was that it seemed so
+thoroughly material and flesh-and-blood like. Perhaps, I thought, the
+authoress of "The Gates Ajar" is right, and the next condition of things
+may be more material than we generally think, even to the extent of
+admitting, as she says, pianofortes among its adjuncts. But I was to see
+something much more ghostly than this.
+
+The great fact I notice about Spiritualism is, that it is obeying the
+occult impetus of all great movements, and steadily going from east to
+west. From Hackney and Highbury it gravitates towards Belgravia and
+Tyburnia. I left the wilds of Hackney behind, and neared Hyde Park for
+my next Form. I must again conceal names and localities; I have no
+desire to advertise mediums, or right to betray persons who have shown
+me hospitality--and Spirit Forms. We arranged ourselves in a semicircle
+around the curtains which separated the small back drawing-room from the
+large front one, joined hands, sang until we were hoarse as crows, and
+kept our eyes steadily fixed on an aperture left between the curtains
+for the faces to show themselves. The room was in blank darkness, and,
+feeling rather tired of the incantation, I looked over my shoulder into
+the gloom, and lo! a shadowy form stood self-illuminated not far from
+me. At last I had seen it--a good orthodox ghost in white, and visible
+in the darkness. It was the form of the redoubtable John King himself,
+who was, I believe, a bold buccaneer in the flesh, but who looked more
+like an Arab sheikh in the spirit. He sailed about the room, talked to
+us, and finally disappeared. Eventually he reappeared behind the
+curtains, and for a brief space the portiere was drawn aside, and the
+spirit form was seen lighting up the recumbent figure of the medium,
+who was stretched on a sofa, apparently in deep trance. It must be borne
+in mind that we were forming a cordon round the passage from one room to
+the other during the whole of this time. A trio of "spirits" generally
+puts in an appearance at these seances. In this case there were John
+King, whom I had now seen, as well as heard; Katie, the familiar of Miss
+B.; and a peculiarly lugubrious gentleman named Peter, who, I fancy, has
+not been seen, but who has several times done me the favour of grasping
+my hand and hoisting me towards the ceiling, as though he were going to
+carry me off bodily to spirit-land. I stand some six feet in my boots,
+and have stepped upon my chair, and still felt the hand coming downwards
+to me--where from I have no idea.
+
+But my later experiences have still to be told. I was invited a few
+weeks ago to a very select seance indeed, where the same medium was to
+officiate. This family, who spared no expense in their investigations,
+had actually got a large, handsome cabinet standing in their dining-room
+as a recognised piece of furniture. It was only used, however, on this
+occasion for the imprisonment of the medium. The evolutions of John
+King, who soon appeared, all took place outside the cabinet door. He was
+only "materialized" to the middle; and, to our utter amazement, came up
+to the table, and apparently _through_ the table, into the very middle
+of the circle, where he disported himself in various ways, keeping up
+an animated conversation the whole time, and frequently throwing himself
+into the attitude of a person swimming on his back. He also went upwards
+as high as the gasalier, and altogether did a good many marvellous
+things, considering that all this time he presented the appearance of
+only half a man illuminated by his own light.
+
+On one occasion only have I been seated next to the medium during the
+manifestation of any of these forms. At this seance I held him firmly by
+one hand, and a slightly sceptical lady had the other. We never let go
+for a moment, but during the whole of the sitting, while John King,
+Katie, and Peter were talking, tiny children's hands were playing with
+my arm, hands, and hair. There were, of course, no children in the room.
+Peter, the lugubrious, is great at light porterage. I have known him
+bring a large collection of valuable Sevres china, and a timepiece with
+its glass case, from the chimney-piece to the table--no easy task in the
+light, much less in blank darkness. He also frequently takes down the
+pictures from the wall and puts them on the table. Katie winds up a
+large musical box, and wafts it, while playing, all over the room. Of
+course we rub our eyes and ask what on earth, if it be on earth, does
+this mean? I have not--to keep up the diction of my subject--the _ghost_
+of an idea. If it's conjuring, why don't the mediums say so, and enter
+the field openly against Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke and Dr. Lynn? Even
+if I had a decided opinion about it I should refrain from propounding it
+here, because, in the first place, it would be an impertinence, and, in
+the second, no conclusion can be arrived at upon testimony alone. People
+must see for themselves and draw their own inferences. In the meantime
+the thing, whatever it is, grows and grows upwards. A year ago I had to
+journey down east to find it. Now I must array myself gorgeously like a
+Staffordshire miner, and seek the salons of the West. The great
+desideratum, it still appears to me, is that some man with a name in
+science should examine the matter, honestly resolving to endorse the
+facts if true, but to expose them mercilessly if there be a loophole for
+suspicion. Omne ignotum pro magnifico habetur. I used to think ghosts
+big things, but that was before I knew them. I should think no more of
+meeting a ghost now than a donkey on a dark night, and would infinitely
+sooner tackle a spirit than a burglar. People's curiosity is roused, and
+the sooner somebody gets at the truth the better. It is a somewhat
+irksome task, it is true; but no general principle can be arrived at
+except by an induction of particulars. Let us be Baconian, even to our
+ghosts. If they _are_ ghosts, they are a good deal more substantial than
+I had thought. If they are not, let somebody, in the name of
+nineteenth-century science, send them off as with the crow of
+chanticleer, and let us hear no more of Spirit Faces or Spirit Forms.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+SITTING WITH A SIBYL.
+
+
+The connexion of modesty with merit is proverbial, though questioned by
+Sydney Smith, who says their only point in common is the fact that each
+begins with an--m. Modesty, however--waiving the question of
+accompanying merit--is a trait which, in my mystic inquiries and devious
+wanderings, I meet with far more frequently than might be expected. I
+have just met with two instances which I hasten to put on record, if
+only to confute those who say that the age in general, and spirit
+mediums in particular, are not prone to be modest and retiring. My first
+modest person was a Spirit Photographer; my second was a Sibyl. I might
+have looked for bashfulness in the latter, but was certainly surprised
+to meet with it in the former. I suddenly learnt from the Medium the
+fact that a Spirit Photographer had settled down in my immediate
+neighbourhood, and the appearance of his ghostly advertisement brings to
+my recollection some previous mystic experiences I myself had in this
+way.
+
+A now celebrated medium, Mrs. Guppy, nee Miss Nicholl, was, in the days
+of her maidenhood, a practitioner of photography in Westbourne Grove;
+and, as far as I know, she might have been the means of opening up to
+the denizens of the Summer Land this new method of terrestrial
+operations. Ever on the qui vive for anything new in the occult line, I
+at once interviewed Miss Nicholl and sat for my portrait, expecting at
+the least to find the attendant spirit of my departed grandmamma or
+defunct maiden aunt standing sentinel over me, as I saw departed
+relations doing in many cartes de visite in the room. I confess there
+was a kind of made-up theatrical-property look about the attendant
+spirits which gave one the idea that the superior intelligences must
+have dressed in a hurry when they sat or stood for their portraits. They
+looked, in fact, if it be not irreverent to say it, rather like so many
+bundles of pneumatical rags than respectable domestic ghosts. However,
+as long as I got the ghosts I did not care about the dress. Tenue de
+soir point de rigueur, I would have said, as they do outside the cheap
+casinos in Paris, or "Evening dress not required," if one must descend
+to the vernacular. Well, I sat persistently and patiently through I am
+afraid to say how many operations, and the operator described me as
+being surrounded by spirits--I always am according to Mediums, but my
+spirits must be eminently unsociable ones, for they seldom give me a
+word, and on this occasion refused to be "taken" as resolutely as the
+bashful gentleman in the _Graphic_ who resisted the operations of the
+prison officials to obtain a sun-picture of his interesting
+physiognomy. There was indeed a blotch on one of the negatives, which I
+was assured was a spirit. I could not see things in that light.
+
+Foiled on this particular occasion my anxiety was dormant, but never
+died out. I still longed for a denizen of the other world to put in an
+appearance, and kept on being photographed over and over again until I
+might have been the vainest man alive, on the bare hope that the artist
+might be a Medium malgre lui or undeveloped. I had heard there were such
+beings, but they never came in my way. I was really serious in this
+wish, because I felt if it could be granted, the possibility of
+deception being prevented, the objectivity of the phenomena would be
+guaranteed. At this time I was heretical enough to believe that most
+ghosts were due to underdone pork or untimely Welsh rare-bits, and that
+the raps assigned to their agency were assignable to the active toes of
+the Medium which might be anywhere and up to anything with the
+opportunities of a dark seance.
+
+A short time since, however, M. Buguet, a celebrated French Spirit
+Photographer came from Paris to London, and received sitters for the
+modest sum of _30s._ each. This would have been much beyond my means;
+but I suppose my wish had transpired, and that gentleman sent me an
+invitation to sit gratis, which, I need not say, I thankfully accepted.
+I felt sure that M. Buguet did not know either my long-lost grandmother
+or lamented maiden aunt, so that any portraits I might get from him
+would be presumably genuine. I sat; and over my manly form, when the
+negative came to be cleaned, was a female figure in the act of
+benediction. I have no notion how she got there--for I watched every
+stage in the operation, and selected my plate myself; but neither, on
+the other hand, does she bear the faintest resemblance to anybody I ever
+knew.
+
+Still M. Buguet is not my modest photographer. Elated by success so far,
+I called on the local gentleman who advertised in the _Medium_; but the
+local gentleman was "engaged." I wrote to the local gentleman appointing
+an interview; but the local gentleman replied not. Yet still his
+advertisement remains; and I see in every spiritualistic album dozens of
+"property" relations in the shape of quasi-spirits, and wonder why the
+local gentleman would not take me, so as to be immortalized in these
+pages.
+
+Equally modest was the advertising Sibyl. I wrote to the Sibyl, and
+somebody replied, and "respectfully declined." But I was not to be done.
+There is more than one Sibyl in the world. I called on No. 2 without
+announcing my intention or sending in my name. This Sibyl at once
+admitted me, and I mounted to the first floor front of a respectable
+suburban lodging-house.
+
+I waited anxiously for a long time, wondering whether Sibyl was
+partaking of the onions, whose presence in that modest domicile was
+odoriferously evidenced to my nose, though it was then scarcely
+half-past one o'clock. Presently a portly middle-aged man, who might
+have been Sibyl's youthful papa, or rather aged husband, entered, wiping
+his mouth. He had clearly been partaking of the fragrant condiment.
+
+Where was Sibyl?
+
+"She would be with us directly," the gentleman said, varying the
+proceedings by picking his teeth in the interim.
+
+She _was_ with us in a minute, and never, I suppose, did picturesque
+anticipations more suddenly collapse and come to grief than mine. I had
+pictured Sibyl a bright ethereal being, and the realization of my ideal
+weighed twelve stone, if an ounce. She was a big, fleshy, large-boned
+woman of an utterly uncertain age, not without considerable good-nature
+in her extensive features; but the pervading idea that you had when you
+looked at Sibyl was that there was _too much of her_. I could not help
+thinking of the husband who said he did not like a big wife: he
+preferred two small ones; and then again I fell into wonderment as to
+whether the man who was still engaged with his dental apparatus was
+Sibyl's husband or papa.
+
+I told them I was anxious to test Sibyl's powers; and, with a few passes
+from his fat dumpy hands, the man soon put her to sleep. It looked to me
+like an after-dinner nap, but I was told it was magnetic. It might have
+been. By the way, I had unmistakable evidence from my olfactory organ
+that Sibyl _had_ been eating onions.
+
+I had provided myself with two locks of hair, as I had heard that
+"psychometry" was among Sibyl's qualifications. I handed her the first,
+and she immediately proceeded to describe a series of tableaux which
+appeared to pass through her mind. She kept handling the lock of hair,
+and said, "The person to whom this belongs is ill--weak," which was true
+enough, but might, I thought, be a shot. I should mention, however, that
+it was quite impossible Sibyl could know me. She had not even heard my
+name. She then described a bedroom, with some person--she could not see
+what person--lying in bed, and a lady in a blue dress bending over her.
+This, again, I thought might flow out as a deduction from her premises
+of the hair belonging to an invalid. The blue dress was correct enough,
+but still so little special as to be a very possible coincidence. She
+then, however, startled me by saying, "I notice this, that on the table
+by the bedside, where the bottles of medicine are standing, milk has
+been spilt--a large quantity--and not wiped up." This was a trivial
+detail, not known to me at the time, but confirmed on subsequent
+inquiry.
+
+She then passed on to describe a second tableau, where the same person
+in the blue dress was in a room _all hung over with plates_, along with
+a gentleman whom she described very accurately. He was the occupant of
+the house where the patient lay, and, having a hobby for old china, had
+turned his dining-room into a sort of crockery shop by hanging it all
+over with the delf.
+
+This was curious enough, though not very convincing. It seemed as though
+the influence of this person who had given me the hair was stronger than
+that of the hair itself. With the second lock of hair we failed utterly.
+She said that also came from a sick person, but a person not sick with
+the same disease as the other. She was quite positive they came from
+different people, and asked me to feel the difference of texture. I am
+sorry, for Sibyl's sake, to say they both came from the same person, and
+were cut at the same time, though from different parts of the head,
+which made one look silkier than the other.
+
+As a test of Sibyl's clairvoyance, this was not very satisfactory. She
+read the inscription on a card when her eyes were bandaged, pressing it
+to her forehead; but then olden experiences in the way of blindman's
+buff convince me that it is very difficult to say when a person is
+properly blinded.
+
+Altogether, then, I never quite got over my previous disappointment at
+Sibyl's bulk. Had she been pretty and frizzle-headed like Miss Annie Eva
+Fay, or like Miss Showers or Miss Florence Cook, I might have been
+disposed to make more of her coincidences and to wink at her failures.
+We _are_ so liable to be led away by our feelings in these matters.
+Sibyl was large, had eaten onions, and would have been improved if she
+had brushed her hair, and so I am afraid I rather grudged the somewhat
+exorbitant fee which the fat-handed man--not Sibyl--took and pocketed in
+an interval of his dental pursuit, and I passed out from that suburban
+lodging, none of us, I fancy, very well satisfied with one another. I
+have an idea I unconsciously expressed my inner feelings of
+disappointment with Sibyl and something stronger in reference to her
+male companion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+SPIRITUALISTS AND CONJURERS.
+
+
+"How it's done" is the question which, in the words of Dr. Lynn, we want
+to settle with reference to his own or kindred performances, and, still
+more, in the production of the phenomena known as spiritual. I have
+spent some years of my existence in a hitherto vain endeavour to solve
+the latter problem; and the farther I go, the more the mystery seems to
+deepen. Of late, the two opposed parties, the Spiritualists and the
+Conjurers, have definitely entered the arena, and declared war to the
+knife. Each claims to be Moses, and denounces the others as mere
+magicians. Mr. Maskelyne holds a dark seance, professing to expose the
+spiritualistic ones; Dr. Lynn brandishes against them his strong right
+arm upon which is written in letters all of blood the name of one's
+deceased grandmother, while, in return, Dr. Sexton exposes the
+conjurers, and spoils one's enjoyment of a hitherto enjoyable evening,
+by showing "how it's done"--how the name of one's departed relative is
+forged and painted early in the afternoon, instead of "coming out" on
+the spot--and in spots--like measles or nettle-rash (as we feel defunct
+relations ought to come) or walking in and out of the corded box at
+pleasure, and even going so far as to give the address of the clever
+mechanist down a by-street near Notting-hill Gate, who will make the
+mysterious packing case to order in return for a somewhat heavy
+"consideration."
+
+I accepted Dr. Lynn's invitation to be present on his "opening night;"
+and wondered, in passing, why everybody should not make their cards of
+invitation such thorough works of art as his. Now I am going to do
+even-handed justice all the way round; and I must say that Dr. Lynn's
+experiment of fastening his attendant to a sort of penitential stool
+with copper wire, surrounded by scrutineers from the audience, and then
+making the man's coat come off, and a ring pass over his arm, behind a
+simple rug held in front of him, is quite as wonderful as anything I
+have ever witnessed at a seance. It has the great advantage of being
+done in the light, instead of, as in Mr. Fay's case, in darkness, and
+without a cabinet. In fact, I have no idea how it's done; though I have
+no doubt the first time I see Dr. Sexton he will point to something
+unsatisfactory in the bolts to which that doorkeeper is fastened, and
+give me the addresses of the ironmonger who will sell me some like them,
+or the tailor who will manufacture me a swallow tail coat with an
+imperceptible slit down the back. Then again, I have, as I said, seen
+young Mr. Sexton go in and out of the corded box, and I know how that's
+done; but Dr. Lynn's man goes into three, one inside the other. Well, I
+can understand that if Dr. Sexton's theory be correct, it may perhaps be
+as easy to get into a "nest" of three as into one box; but how, in the
+name of nature--or art--does the nautical gentleman get out of the
+double sack in which he is tied? I cannot bring myself to print what Dr.
+Sexton's theory of the box is, because it appears to be such a wanton
+cruelty to "expose" things when people go to the Egyptian Hall on
+purpose to be mystified. I remember how the fact of having seen Dr.
+Sexton do the trick of reading the names in the hat spoilt my enjoyment
+of Dr. Lynn's experiment. He really appeared quite bungling when I knew
+all he was about. He did not, on this occasion, produce the letters on
+his arm; but I saw he could quite easily have done so, though the doing
+it would have been no sort of reproduction of Mr. Forster's
+manifestation, who showed you the name of some relative when you had
+looked in on him quite unexpectedly. I can quite understand how it is
+that the spiritualists, who hold these matters to be sacred as
+revelation itself--in fact, to be revelation itself, are shocked at
+seeing their convictions denounced as trickery and "exposed" on a public
+platform; but I confess I do not quite see how they can adopt the tu
+quoque principle, and "expose" Dr. Lynn and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke
+as tricksters, because they do not pretend to be anything else. It
+would have been fatal if the magicians had "found out" Moses, and they
+wisely refrained from trying; but it would have served no purpose for
+Moses to "find out" the magicians: and it strikes me Moses would have
+deemed it very infra dig. to make the attempt. The two things stand on
+quite different grounds; and I cannot help thinking that the
+spiritualists unwisely concede a point when they accept the challenge of
+the conjurers. I am quite aware that the theory of the spiritualists
+makes of many a conjurer a medium malgre lui, and says he ought to come
+out in his true colours. It was so Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke were
+originally introduced to a London public at the Crystal Palace under the
+auspices of an eminent spiritualist; but it really appears to me that
+such an assertion amounts to begging the question; for I doubt whether
+it would not "pay" quite as well to come out boldly in Mr. Williams's or
+Mr. Morse's line as in that of Dr. Lynn or Mr. Maskelyne.
+
+In a lengthened confab which I once had with Mr. Maskelyne himself after
+one of his performances, he told me that by constant attendance at the
+seances of the Davenports he found out how that was all done; and, being
+a working watchmaker, was able soon to get the necessary apparatus
+constructed. I must again be just, and state that while the cabinet
+seance of Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke seems to me the exact counterpart
+of the Davenports', their dark seance fails to reproduce that of the
+spiritualists as the performances of Professor Pepper himself. True,
+this latter gentleman does all his exposes on a platform which is sacred
+against all intrusion, and Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke assume to allow
+as much examination as the spiritualists. But I myself, who have seen
+Mr. Home float around Mr. S. C. Hall's drawing-room, and handled him
+above and below in transitu, quite fail to discern any reproduction of
+that phenomenon in the heavy, lumbering levitation of the lady by means
+of the scissors-like apparatus behind her, which we are only privileged
+to behold from the stalls. The dancing walking-stick is as palpably made
+terpsichorean by a string as the chairs I have seen cross Mr. Hall's
+drawing-room in full light were not drawn by strings, for I was able to
+look closely at them; and I do not know how that was done.
+
+Fresh from Dr. Lynn's really marvellous performances of recent times,
+and with Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke's equally clever tricks in my
+mind's eye, though not quite so recently, I still am bold to say I
+believe there are still six of one to half-a-dozen of the other. If the
+conjurers reproduce the spiritual phenomena in some instances, the
+spiritualists distance the conjurers in others. I speak of phenomena
+only. The magicians produced many of the same phenomena as Moses; but,
+even so, if we are orthodox we must believe the source of such
+manifestations to have been utterly different.
+
+But I am, as I said, wise in my generation, and stick to phenomena. I
+venture to think the conjurers unwise in irritating the spiritualists,
+who are a growing body, by placarding their entertainment as exposes,
+even though such announcements may "draw" the non-spiritual public. I
+suppose, however, they understand the science of advertising better than
+I do; but I feel sure the spiritualists are unwise to follow their
+example, because they have got nothing to expose. Dr. Lynn or Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke are as much pleased as conscientious mediums would
+be shocked at being proved clever tricksters. The only folks who are
+injured by being told "how it's done," are the British Public, who pay
+their five shillings to be mystified at the Egyptian Hall, just as the
+spiritualists do in Lamb's Conduit Street.
+
+If it is to come to a race for the championship--and seriously it would
+seem that, having begun, the two parties are bound to continue the
+strife--one can scarcely imagine anything more attractive than such a
+combined display of talent. Dr. Lynn gets lots of people to come and see
+"How it's done"--the gentleman with the mandolin is well worth a visit,
+and I cannot guess how he does it--while Messrs. Maskelyne and Cooke
+must really be making a good thing of it. Mr. Williams's seances are
+decidedly attractive (and how he does it has puzzled me for years, as I
+said), nor does the Progressive Institute seem to decrease in interest;
+but let us only picture the fascination of a long evening where Pepper's
+Ghost should be pitted against John King, Mrs. Guppy and Messrs.
+Maskelyne and Cooke's lady float in competition round the room or even
+in from the suburbs, while the Davenports and Dr. Lynn's man should
+wriggle out of or into iron rings and their own dress coats! Until some
+such contest takes place, the public mind will probably gravitate
+towards the conjurers rather than the spiritualists, and that through
+the actually suicidal policy of the latter; because while the
+spiritualists of necessity can show no visible source of their
+manifestations, one of their own rank devotes himself to aiding the
+conjurers by showing in reference to their tricks, "How it's done." It
+would have been wiser, surely, to stand upon dignity, and in a truly
+conservative spirit (is it too late even now to reassume it?), say,
+"These men are mediums, but it does not suit their pockets to confess
+it."
+
+Well, they are signs of the times. London loves to be mystified, and
+would only have one instead of manifold methods to be so if the
+spiritualists and conjurers were to strike hands, and reduce us all to
+the dead level of pure faith or relentless reason and cold common
+sense!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+PROS AND CONS OF SPIRITUALISM.
+
+
+It has been repeatedly urged upon me on previous occasions, and also
+during the progress of these sheets through the press, that I should
+make a clean breast of my own belief or disbelief in spiritualism; that
+besides being descriptive, I should go one step beyond a mere catalogue
+of phenomena, and, to some extent at least, theorize on this mysterious
+and generally proscribed subject.
+
+Let me say at the outset that against the proscription of this, or
+indeed any topic which does not offend against morals, I would at the
+very outset protest as the height of unwisdom. Thus to taboo a subject
+is at once to lend it a factitious interest, and more than half to
+endorse its truth: and I believe modern spiritualism has been very
+generally treated in this way. Whether truth has gained by such
+indiscriminate condemnation and prejudgment is, I think, greatly open to
+question.
+
+For myself, I have, from the first, steadily refused to look upon
+spiritualism in this bugbear fashion. The thing was either true or
+false--or, more probably still, partly true and partly false: and I must
+bring to bear on the discovery of its truth or falsehood, just the same
+critical faculties that I should employ on any other problem of common
+life. That, I fancy, is no transcendental view of the matter; but just
+the plain common sense way of going to work. It was, at all events,
+right or wrong, the method I adopted to get at such results as I proceed
+to make public. I declined to be scared from the study either by Bogey
+or my esteemed friend Mrs. Grundy, but went at it just in the calm
+Baconian inductive method in which I should have commenced any other
+study or pursuit.
+
+What I want to do is to tabulate these results in the same order as that
+in which they occurred to me; and here I am met by a preliminary
+difficulty, not incidental to this subject only, but common to any
+narrative where we have to take a retrospective glance over a number of
+years. We are apt to view the subject from our present standpoint; and I
+shall try to avoid this by quoting, whenever I can, what I published, or
+committed to writing in the course of my investigations. I shall not
+cull from others, because I want to make this purely a personal
+narrative.
+
+Let me add, too, I do not in the least expect persons to believe what I
+say. Some, I think, will regard me as a harmless (_if_ a harmless)
+lunatic, on account of certain statements I may have to make. Others
+will consider the whole thing as decidedly unorthodox and "wrong." For
+each of these issues I am prepared. I would not have believed any one
+else if they had, prior to my experience, told me what I am going to
+tell them here; and therefore I do not expect them to believe me. All I
+hope to do is to interest persons sufficiently in the subject to induce
+them to look into the matter on their own account; for verily I believe,
+as a distinguished spiritualist once said to me, that this thing is
+either an important truth or else one of the biggest swindles ever
+palmed off upon humanity.
+
+One word more, and I proceed to my narrative. Of the three aspects under
+which it is possible to view spiritualism, the scientific, the
+theological, and the social, I shall not touch at all on the first since
+I am not a scientific man; shall only glance at the second, because this
+is not the place for a theological discussion. I shall confine myself to
+the third, therefore, which I call the social aspect; looking at the
+subject as a question of the day, the truth about which we are as much
+interested in solving as any other political or social question, but the
+investigation of which need not make us get excited and angry and call
+one another bad names. I venture to hope that by these means I may
+manage to compile a not unedifying or uninteresting narrative, though
+our subject be withal somewhat a ponderous one.
+
+In order then to cover the preliminary part of my narrative, and to let
+my readers somewhat into the state of my own mind, when I had looked at
+the subject for several years, I will quote some extracts from a paper
+I read before a society of spiritualists at the Beethoven Rooms a few
+years ago under the title "Am I a Spiritualist?" I may mention that the
+assembly was divided, and never decided whether I was or not, and what
+is more, I do not think they are quite decided to the present day. I am
+a patient investigator still; but I really do not feel it necessary to
+issue perpetual bulletins as to the state of my convictions.
+
+Taking as my thesis, then, the question, Am I a Spiritualist? it will
+certainly appear, at first sight, I said, that the person best qualified
+to answer this question is precisely the person who puts it; but a
+little consideration will, I think, show that the term "Spiritualist" is
+one of such wide and somewhat elastic meaning--in fact, that the word
+varies so widely according to the persons who use it--that the question
+may really be asked of one's self without involving an inconsistency.
+
+When persons ask me, as they often do, with a look of unmitigated
+horror, "Is it possible that you, a clergyman, are a spiritualist?" I am
+often inclined to answer, "Yes, madam,"--(for it is generally a lady who
+puts the question in that particular shape)--"I _am_ a spiritualist, and
+precisely because I am a clergyman. I have had to express more than once
+my unfeigned assent and consent to the Common Prayer Book, and the
+Thirty Nine Articles; and that involves belief in the inspiration of all
+the Bible (except the Apocrypha), and the whole of that (_not_ excepting
+the Apocrypha) is spiritual, or spiritualistic (if you prefer the term)
+from beginning to end; and therefore it is not _in spite of_ my being a
+clergyman, but _because_ I am a clergyman that I am such a confirmed
+spiritualist."
+
+I could answer thus, only I do not, simply because to do so would be
+dishonest. I know my questioner is using the word in an utterly
+different sense from what I have thought proper to suppose. Besides such
+an answer would only lead to argumentation, and the very form of the
+question shows me the person who puts it has made up her mind on this,
+as probably on most other subjects; and when a feminine mind is once
+made up (others than ladies have feminine minds on these subjects) it is
+very little use trying to alter it. I never do. I administer some
+orthodox verbal sedative, and change the subject. But even accepting the
+term in the way I know it is meant to be used--say, for instance, as it
+comes from the mouth of some conservative old gentleman, or supposed
+scientific authority--one's medical man to wit--"Do you believe in
+spiritualism?" meaning "Are you such an ass as to believe in
+table-turning, and rapping, and all that kind of nonsense?"--even so,
+the question would admit of being answered by another question; though I
+rarely enter so far on the matter with those whose minds are evidently
+quite comfortably made up on the matter. It is such a pity to interfere
+with cherished opinions. I have found out that there are Athanasian
+creeds in science as well as in theology; and really, whilst they form
+recognised formulae in the one or the other, it is positively lost labour
+to go running one's head against them. The question I want to ask--not
+the gentle apothecaries, but my readers--is, What do you mean by
+believing in spiritualism? Many of the phenomena of spiritualism I
+cannot but believe, if I am to take my five senses as my guides in this
+as in other matters, and quite setting aside any credence I may give to
+respectable testimony. When, however, I pass from facts to theories, and
+am asked to account for those facts, then I hesitate. There are some
+here, I know, who will say that the spiritualist like the lady who
+hesitates is lost--who think me as heterodox for doing so, as the
+inflexible old ladies and the omniscient apothecaries did on account of
+my even deigning to look into the evidence of such phenomena. I feel
+really that I have set myself up like an animated ninepin to be knocked
+down by the first thorough-going spiritualist who cares to bowl at me.
+But whatever else they think of me--sceptical though they deem me on
+subjects where perhaps you are, many of you, a little prone to
+dogmatize--I claim the character at least of an honest sceptic. I do not
+altogether disavow the title, but I understand it to mean "inquirer." I
+confess myself, after long years of perfectly unbiassed inquiry, still
+an investigator--a sceptic. It is the fashion to abuse St. Thomas
+because he sought sensible proofs on a subject which it was certainly
+most important to have satisfactorily cleared up. I never could read the
+words addressed to him at all in the light of a rebuke--"Because thou
+hast seen thou hast believed." The Church of England treats the doubt of
+St. Thomas as permitted by God "for the more confirmation of the faith;"
+and I feel sure that professed spiritualists will not be so inconsistent
+as to censure any man for examining long and carefully matters which
+they believe to admit of demonstration. I heard the most eloquent of
+their advocates say, when comparing spiritual with credal conviction,
+"Our motto no longer is 'I believe,' but 'I know.'" Belief may be
+instantaneous, but knowledge will be gradual; and so it is that,
+standing at a certain fixed point in very many years' study of
+spiritualism, I pause, and--so to say, empanelling a jury--ask the
+question it seems I ought to answer at others' asking--Am I a
+Spiritualist?
+
+One word of apology further before entering on the details of the
+matter. It will be inevitable that the first personal pronoun shall
+recur frequently in the course of this paper, and that so the paper
+shall seem egotistical. The very question itself sounds so. I am not
+vain enough to suppose that it matters much to anybody here whether I am
+a spiritualist or not, except in so far as I may be in any sense a
+representative man. I believe I am. That is, I believe, nay, am sure,
+that a great many persons go as far as I do, and stop where I stop.
+There is a largish body of investigators, I believe, dangling there,
+like Mahomet's coffin, between heaven and earth, and it would be a
+charity to land them somewhere. Of the clerical mind, I do _not_ claim
+to be a representative, because the clerical mind, qua clerical, has
+made up itself that the phenomena in question are diabolical. Of course
+if I accepted this theory my question would be utterly irrelevant, and I
+should claim a place among the spiritualists at once. The diabolical
+people not only accept the phenomena, but admit their spiritual origin,
+and, more than this, identify the spirits. They are in point of fact the
+most thorough-going spiritualists of all.
+
+In sketching their creed, I have mentioned the three stages through
+which most minds must go in this matter. Some few, indeed, take them by
+intuition, but most minds have to plod patiently along the path of
+inquiry, as I have done. The first stage is acceptance of the phenomena,
+the second the assignment of those phenomena to spirits as their source,
+the third is identification of these spirits.
+
+1. On the first part of my subject I shall venture to speak with some
+boldness. I am not a philosopher, therefore I can afford to do so. I
+shall suppose my five senses to serve my purposes of observation, as
+they would be supposed to serve me if I were giving evidence in a court
+of justice. If I saw a table move, I shall say _it did_ move, not "it
+appeared to move." I do this in my capacity of a commonplace instead of
+a philosophical investigator; and I must say, if I were, as I supposed
+myself just now, in the witness-box, with a good browbeating counsel
+cross-examining me on this point, I would rather have to defend the
+position of the commonplace inquirer than the philosopher, pledged to
+defend the philosophy of the last fifty years, and bound hand and foot
+by his philosophic Athanasian Creed, and I don't know how many articles,
+more than thirty-nine, I fancy.
+
+In the latter part of the year 1856, or beginning of 1857, then, I was
+residing in Paris, that lively capital being full of Mr. Home's doings
+at the Tuileries. At that time I knew nothing, even of table-turning. I
+listened to the stories of Mr. Home and the Emperor as mere canards. I
+never stopped to question whether the matter were true, because I in my
+omniscience knew it to be impossible. It is this phase of my experience
+that makes me so unwilling to argue with the omniscient people now; it
+is such a waste of time. At this period my brother came to visit me, and
+he had either been present himself or knew persons who had been present
+at certain seances at Mr. Rymer's. He seemed staggered, if not
+convinced, by what he had heard or seen, and this staggered me too, for
+he was not exactly a gullible person and certainly by no means
+"spiritual." I was staggered, I own, but then I was omniscient, and so I
+did what is always safest, laughed at the matter. He suggested that we
+should try experiments instead of laughing, and, not being a
+philosopher, I consented. We sat at the little round table in our tiny
+salon, which soon began to turn, then answered questions, and finally
+told us that one of the three, viz., my wife, was a medium, and
+consequently we could receive communications. I went to a side table and
+wrote a question as to the source of the manifestations, keeping it
+concealed from those at the table, and not rejoining them myself. The
+answer spelt out by them was--"We, the spirits of the departed, are
+permitted thus to appear to men." Again I wrote--"What object is served
+by your doing so?" The answer was--"It may make men believe in God." I
+have said I am not a philosopher, therefore I do not mind confessing
+that I collapsed. I struck my flag at once as to the _impossibility_ of
+the matter. At the same time I did not--as I know many ardent
+spiritualists will think I ought--at once swallow the whole thing,
+theory and all. I should not have believed if a man had told me this;
+was it to be expected that I should believe a table? Honesty is my best
+policy; and I had better, therefore, say I was never so utterly knocked
+over by anything that occurred to me in my life before or since. My
+visage of utter, blank astonishment is a joke against me to this hour.
+We pursued the inquiry almost nightly during the remainder of my stay in
+Paris--up to late in the summer of 1857 that is--and also on our return
+to England; but, strangely as it seems to me now, considering how we
+began, we did it more as a pastime than anything else. The only time we
+were serious was when my wife and I sat alone, as we often did. Of
+course when I came to inquire at all into the matter I was met by
+Faraday's theory of involuntary muscular action, and also with the
+doctrine of unconscious cerebration--I was quite ready to accept either.
+My own position, as far as I can recall it, then was that the spiritual
+agency was "not proven." My wife had great reluctance against admitting
+the spiritual theory. I was simply passive; but two circumstances seemed
+to me to militate against the theories I have mentioned: (1.) The table
+we used for communicating was a little gimcrack French affair, the top
+of which spun round on the slightest provocation, and no force whatever,
+not even a philosopher's, applied to the surface would do more than spin
+the top round; but when the table turned, _it turned bodily, legs and
+all_. (2.) As to that ponderously difficult theory of unconscious
+cerebration communicated by involuntary muscular action, whenever we
+asked any questions as to the future, we were instantly checked, and
+told it was better that the future should not be revealed to us. I was
+anxious about a matter in connexion with an election to an appointment
+in England, and we asked some questions as to what form the proceedings
+would take. The reply was that certain candidates would be selected from
+the main body, and the election made from these. I thought I had caught
+the table in an inconsistency, and said--"There now you _have_ told us
+something about the future." It immediately replied--"No, I have not;
+the matter is already settled in the minds of the examiners." Whence
+came that answer? Certainly not from our minds, for it took us both by
+surprise. I could multiply a hundredfold instances of this kind, but, of
+course, to educated spiritualists these are mere A B C matters; whilst
+non-spiritualists would only accept them on the evidence of their own
+senses. I do not mean to say they actually question the facts to the
+extent of doubting one's veracity, or else nearly all testimony must go
+for nothing; but there is in these matters always room for doubting
+whether the narrator has not been deceived; and, moreover, even if
+accepted at secondhand, I doubt whether facts so accepted ever become,
+as it were, assimilated, so as to have any practical effect.
+
+My facts at all events came at first-hand. I suppose a man need not be
+considered credulous for believing in his own wife, and nearly all these
+phenomena were produced by my wife's mediumship. It was not until late
+in the year 1865 or early in 1866, that I ever sat with a professional
+medium. My wife, moreover, from first to last, has steadily disbelieved
+the spirit theory, so that she has not laid herself open to suspicion of
+being prejudiced in favour of the subject. She has been emphatically an
+involuntary, nay, even unwilling agent in these matters.
+
+During these eight or nine years the communications were generally given
+by automatic writing, though sometimes still by tilting of the table. I
+am very much tempted to quote two, which linger in my recollection,
+principally, I believe, because they were so destructive of the
+cerebration theory, besides being curious in themselves. I kept no
+records until a later date. At present all rests on tradition. Each of
+these cases occurred in presence of myself, my wife, and a pupil. In the
+former, he was a young Englishman, who had lived a great deal abroad,
+whose mother was a Catholic and father a Protestant. He had been brought
+up in the latter faith; and when I desired him to ask a mental question,
+he asked, in French--that being the language most familiar to him--"Is
+the Catholic or the Protestant religion the true one?" Mark you, he
+never articulated this, or gave the least hint that he was asking in
+French. He did it in fact, spontaneously. My wife immediately wrote "Ta
+mere est Catholique"--so far, in French, with difficulty, and then
+breaking off into English, "Respect her faith."
+
+In the second instance, my pupil was a French youth, a Catholic, who was
+living in my house, but used to go to his priest frequently to be
+prepared for his first communion. One day when we were writing, this
+youth asked who the communicating spirit was, and received in reply the
+name of Louis D----. The name was totally unknown to us; but to our
+surprise when the youth came back from his visit to the priest that day
+he informed us that his reverend instructor had dwelt strongly on the
+virtues of Louis D----. Seeing the boy look amazed as the name which had
+just been given at our seance was pronounced, the priest inquired the
+reason; and, on being informed, of course directed his catechumen never
+to join in such diablerie again.
+
+The impression, then, left on my mind by these years of desultory
+dabbling with--rather than study of--the subject, was decidedly that the
+phenomena of spiritualism were genuine. Looking at the matter from my
+present standpoint and frame of mind, it seems to me incredible that I
+should have thought so little of the source of the phenomena. It was, as
+I said, that I was then dabbling with, not studying, the subject.
+
+But even without advancing beyond this rudimentary stage, I saw a very
+serious result produced. I saw men who literally believed in nothing,
+and who entered on this pursuit in a spirit of levity, suddenly
+staggered with what appeared to afford even possibility of demonstration
+of another world, and the continued existence of the spirit after bodily
+death. I believe a great many persons who have never felt doubt
+themselves are unaware of the extent to which doubt prevails amongst
+young men especially; and I have seen many instances of this doubt
+being--if not removed--shaken to its very foundation by their witnessing
+the phenomena of spiritualism. "Yes, but did it make good consistent
+Christians of them?" asks one of my excellent simple-minded objectors.
+Alas! my experience does not tell me that good consistent Christians are
+so readily made. Does our faith--I might have asked--make _us_ the good
+consistent Christians it ought to do, and would do perhaps, if we gave
+it fair play?
+
+So, then, my study of spiritualism had been purely phenomenal. It was a
+very sad and serious event which drove me to look deeper. Some people
+will, I daresay, think it strange that I allude to this cause here. The
+fact that I do so shows, at all events, that I have looked seriously at
+spiritualism since. It was none other than the loss, under painful
+circumstances, of one of my children. Now I had always determined that,
+in the event of my losing one near and dear to me, I would put
+spiritualism to the test, by trying to communicate with that one. This
+will, I think, show that, even then, if I did not accept the
+spiritualistic theory, I did not by any means consider the position
+untenable. The very day after my boy's death, I got his mother to sit,
+and found she was writing a little loving message purporting to come
+from him. This, a sceptic would say, was natural enough under the
+circumstances. I said no word, but sat apart, and kept writing "Who is
+it that communicates? write your name." Suddenly the sentence was
+broken off, and the child's name written, though I had not expressed my
+wish aloud. This was strange; but what followed was stranger still. Of
+course, so far all might have been fairly attributed to cerebration--if
+such a process exists. It was natural enough, it might be urged, that
+the mother, previously schooled in the belief of the probability of
+communication, should write in her lost child's name. For years the same
+thing never occurred again, though we sat night after night for the
+purpose of renewing such communications. I can certainly say of myself
+that, at this time, I _was_ a spiritualist--as thorough and devout a one
+as any existing; and the fact that I was so, when carried away by my
+feelings, makes me the more cautious to test and try myself as to
+whether my feelings may not sometimes sway my judgment even now; whether
+the wish be not often father of the thought, at all events in the
+identification of spiritual communications, and so, possibly, of the
+spiritual nature of such communications altogether.
+
+However, from this time--the autumn of 1865--my spiritual studies
+underwent an entire change--they _were_ studies--serious studies. I now
+kept a careful journal of all communications, which journal I continued
+for three years, so that I can trace all my fluctuations of opinion--for
+I did fluctuate--during that period. Now, too, it was necessary for me
+to consult those who had already gone deeply into the subject; and the
+record of my experiences would be both imperfect and ungracious if I did
+not here acknowledge the prompt kindness of the two gentlemen to whom I
+applied--Mr. Benjamin Coleman and Mr. Samuel Carter Hall. I was
+comparatively a stranger to each of them, but they replied to my
+inquiries with the most ready courtesy, and I am happy to date my
+present friendship with each of them from this time. At Mr. Hall's I met
+Mr. Home, and on the second occasion of my doing so, not only saw him
+float, but handled him above and below during the whole of the time he
+floated round Mr. Hall's drawing-room. I am unphilosophical enough to
+say that I entirely credit the evidence of my senses on that occasion,
+and am as certain that Mr. Home was in space for five minutes as I am of
+my own existence. The ordinary solution of cranes and other cumbrous
+machinery in Mr. Hall's drawing-room I cannot credit, for I think we
+should have seen them, and I am sure I should have felt ropes round Mr.
+Home's body. Chairs went from one end of the room to the other _in full
+light_; and nobody had previously tumbled over strings and wires, so
+that I don't think there could have been any there.
+
+I fancy, as far as any order is traceable in the somewhat erratic course
+of spiritualistic experiences, that most people arrive at spiritualism
+via mesmerism. It so happened that this order was exactly inverted in
+my case. It was not until 1866 that I found I possessed the power of
+magnetism, and moreover, had in my house a subject whom Alphonse Didier
+(with whom I afterwards put myself in communication) declared to be "one
+in a thousand." Some of the details of this lady's case are very
+curious, but this is scarcely the place to dilate upon them further than
+as they affected my spiritualistic studies. She passed with
+extraordinary ease into the condition of lucidity, when she was
+conscious only of basking in light, anxious to be magnetized more deeply
+so as to get more thoroughly into the light, and, moreover, aware only
+of the existence of those who had passed away from earth. She knew they
+were with her: said I _must_ know it, as I was there too, and that it
+was I only who would not "let her" see them. The fact that "our life is
+twofold" was to me most marvellously brought out by my magnetic
+treatment of this lady; and, moreover, the power of influencing action
+could not fail to be suggestive of the truth of one of the cardinal
+doctrines of spiritualism--that we are thus influenced by disembodied
+spirits, as I, an embodied spirit, could influence another spirit in the
+body. Some of the likes and dislikes which I, so to say, produced then
+in 1866 have remained to the present hour. For instance, one particular
+article of food (I will not mention what, or it would be fatal to my
+reader's gravity), for which she previously had a penchant, I rendered
+so distasteful to her that the very smell of it now makes her
+uncomfortable. I must plead guilty to having experimented somewhat in
+this way; but what a wonderful light it sheds upon the great problem of
+the motives of human action! By the simple exercise of my will I could
+make my patient perform actions the most abhorrent to her. For
+instance--the ladies will appreciate this power--at a time when
+crinolines were extensive, I made that poor creature draggle about in a
+costume conspicuous by the absence of crinoline, and making her look
+like some of the ladies out of a Noah's ark.
+
+During this period my wife and I constantly sat alone, and she wrote. It
+is no disrespect to her to say that writing is not her forte, but the
+communications she made in this way were exceedingly voluminous, and
+couched in a particularly happy style, though on subjects far above the
+range of ordinary compositions. We never obtained a single communication
+purporting to come from our child, but the position claimed by the
+communicating intelligence was that of his spirit-guardian.
+
+Having now probably said enough in these confessions to convince every
+non-spiritualist that I am insane, because I believed the evidence of my
+senses, and even ventured to look into matters so unorthodox and
+unscientific as mesmerism and spiritualism, I go on to "make a clean
+breast," and set myself wrong with the other moiety of my readers. I
+must candidly confess that the experiences of this year (1866) did not
+confirm my sudden conviction of the spiritual agency in these phenomena.
+I drifted back, in fact, to my previous position, accepting the
+phenomena, but holding the cause an open question. The preface to the
+book, "From Matter to Spirit," exactly expressed--shall I say
+expresses?--my state of mind. There is one passage in that preface which
+appears to me to clinch the difficulty--"I am perfectly convinced that I
+have both seen and heard, in a manner which should make unbelief
+impossible, things called spiritual, which cannot be taken by a
+reasonable being to be capable of explanation by imposture, coincidence,
+or mistake. So far I feel the ground firm under me. But when it comes to
+what is the cause of these phenomena I find I cannot adopt any
+explanation which has yet been suggested. If I were bound to choose
+among things which I can conceive, I should say that there is some sort
+of action--some sort of combination of will, intellect, and physical
+power, which is not that of any of the human beings present. But
+thinking it very likely that the universe may contain a few agencies,
+say half a million, about which no man knows anything, I cannot but
+suspect that a small proportion of these agencies, say five thousand,
+may be severally competent to the production of all the phenomena, or
+may be quite up to the task among them. _The physical explanations which
+I have seen are easy, but miserably insufficient: the spiritual
+hypothesis is sufficient but ponderously difficult._" This statement is
+natural enough from the scientific side of the question. Perhaps the
+theological inquirer, taking the fact into consideration that Scripture
+certainly concedes the spiritual origin of kindred phenomena, would
+rather reverse the statement, and say (what I individually feel) that
+the psychological explanation is the ponderously difficult--the
+pneumatological, the comparatively easy one.
+
+It is now no secret that the author of this excellent treatise, is
+Professor De Morgan; and I can only say that if I am accused of
+heterodoxy, either from the spiritualist or anti-spiritualist side of
+the discussion, I am not ashamed to be a heretic in such company. Let me
+put the matter in the present tense, indicative mood--that is the state
+of my opinion on the cause of the phenomena. Admitting the facts, I hold
+the spiritual theory to be "not proven," but still to be a hypothesis
+deserving our most serious consideration, not only as being the only one
+that will cover all the facts, but as the one I believe invariably given
+in explanation by the intelligence that produces the phenomena, even
+when, as in our case, all those present are sceptical of or opposed to
+such a theory.
+
+3. It may perhaps sound illogical if, after stating that I hold the
+spiritual origin of these phenomena unproven, I go on to speak of the
+identification of the communicating spirit; but I hope I have made it
+clear that, even if I do not consider the spiritualistic explanation
+demonstrated, it is still a hypothesis which has much in its favour.
+
+I have already mentioned the subject of identification in the case of
+the first communication purporting to come from our little child, and
+how no such communications were received for a period of some years
+after. In December, 1866, I went to the Marshalls', entering as an
+entire stranger, and sitting down at the table. I saw some strong
+physical manifestations--a large table being poised in space, in full
+light, for some seconds. It was signified there was a spirit present who
+wished to communicate, and the message given by raps to me was--"Will
+you try to think of us more than you have done?" I asked the name, and
+my child's was correctly given, though I had not been announced, and I
+have no reason to believe my name was known. The place where he passed
+away from earth was also correctly specified. I then asked for my
+father, and his name was correctly given, and a message added, which I
+cannot say was equally suggestive of individuality. It was--"Bright
+inspiration will dawn upon your soul, and do not hide your light under a
+bushel."
+
+Another case in which I tested individuality strongly, with utter
+absence of success, was also brought before me somewhat earlier in this
+year. I was sent for by a lady who had been a member of my congregation,
+and who had taken great interest in these questions. She was suddenly
+smitten down with mortal disease, and I remained with her almost to the
+last--indeed, I believe her last words were addressed to me, and
+referred to this very subject of identification--she consulting _me_ as
+to the great problem she was then on the very point of solving! As soon
+as she had gone from us, I went home, and tried to communicate with her.
+I was informed that her spirit was present, and yet every detail as to
+names, &c., was utterly wrong.
+
+In the spring of the following year I went again to the Marshalls', in
+company with one or two other persons, my own object being to see if I
+could obtain communication from the spirit of a highly-gifted lady who
+had recently died--and also, I may mention--had been the medium of my
+previous slight acquaintance with Mr. Coleman. She was very much
+interested in these matters, and, when in this world, her great forte
+had been writing. She published a volume of poems, which won the special
+commendation of the late Charles Dickens, and her letters were most
+characteristic ones. I mentioned that I wished to communicate with the
+spirit I was thinking of, and said I should be quite satisfied if the
+initials were correctly given. Not so--the whole three names were
+immediately given in full. I do not feel at liberty to mention the
+names; but the surname was one that nine out of ten people always spelt
+wrongly (just as they do _my_ name), but on this occasion it was
+correctly spelt. I asked for a characteristic message, and received the
+words, "I am saved, and will now save others;"--about as unlike my
+friend's ordinary style as possible. It may be said her nature had
+undergone revolution, but that was not the question. The test was that
+something should be given, identifying the spirit, by the style of its
+_former_ writing while embodied on earth.
+
+With one more case, bearing on this subject of identity, and bringing
+the matter up to the present date, I feel I may advantageously close
+this portion of my experiences--though as I do so, I am thoroughly
+dissatisfied with myself to find how much I have left unsaid. It is so
+difficult to put these things on paper, or in any way to convey them to
+another;--most difficult of all for one unblessed with leisure, and
+combining in his single self the pursuits of some three laborious
+callings.
+
+Last year, whilst sitting at Mrs. B----'s, I was touched by a hand which
+seemed to me that of a small girl, and which attracted my attention by
+the way it lingered in mine--this would amuse Professor Pepper--and the
+pertinacity with which it took off my ring. However, I never took any
+steps to identify the owner of the hand.
+
+Some few months ago, my wife and I were sitting, and a communication
+came ostensibly from our child. It was quite unexpected; and I said, "I
+thought you could not communicate." "I could not before," was the reply.
+"But you have not tried me for two years." This we found was true; but
+we actually had to look into dates to ascertain it. He added, that he
+always was present at seances where I went, and especially at Mrs.
+B----'s. It will, I daresay, sound strange to non-spiritualists, but the
+initiated can understand the conversational tone we adopt. I said, "But,
+Johnny, that was not your hand that touched me at Mrs. B----'s. It was
+too large." The answer was, "No! it was Charlie's turn." I said, "What
+_do_ you mean by Charlie's turn?" The word was rewritten with almost
+petulant haste and remarkable plainness, "Charlie's _twin_." Charlie is
+my eldest boy, and his twin-brother was still-born. He would be between
+thirteen and fourteen years of age, and that was precisely the sized
+hand I felt. This was curious; as the event had occurred a year before,
+and such an explanation had never even crossed my mind. I was promised
+that, if I would go to Mrs. B----'s again, each of the children would
+come and place a hand in mine. I went to the ordinary seance some time
+before Christmas, and was then told that the test I wished--which I had
+not then specified--should be given to me at a private seance. We had
+the private seance, but nothing occurred.
+
+Such is my case. To one section of my readers I shall appear credulous,
+to another hard of belief. I believe that I represent the candid
+inquirer. As for being scared off from the inquiry by those who call it
+unorthodox, or cry out "fire and brimstone," I should as little think of
+heeding them as the omniscient apothecaries who smile at my believing in
+mesmerism. If a man's opinions are worth anything--if he has fought his
+way to those opinions at the bayonet's point--he will not be scared off
+from them by the whole bench of Bishops on the one side, or the College
+of Surgeons on the other. Not that I for one moment plead guilty to
+heterodoxy, either scientific or theological. I am not, as I have said
+several times, a philosopher, but I believe it is scientific to hold as
+established what you can prove by experiment. I don't think my creed
+contains a jot or tittle beyond this. And as for theological orthodoxy,
+I simply take my stand upon the Canons of the Church of England. If all
+this spiritual business is delusion, how comes it that No. 72 of the
+Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical says: "Neither shall any
+minister, not licensed, attempt, upon any pretence whatever, either of
+possession or obsession, by fasting or prayer, to cast out any devil or
+devils?"
+
+The question, however, is not of this kind of orthodoxy. It rather
+refers to the creed of spiritualism. The question, in fact, to which I
+and the many who think with me pause for a reply, is:--Allowing, as we
+do, some of the phenomena--but considering the pneumatological
+explanation hypothetical only--and therefore any identification of
+communicating intelligence impossible--are we (for I am sincerely tired
+of that first person singular, and glad to take refuge in a community),
+are we, or are we not, spiritualists?
+
+So far was I able to commit myself in my address to the spiritualists of
+Harley Street. I was, I confess, greatly pleased when, in 1869, the
+Dialectical Society took up this matter, because I felt they were just
+the people to look into it dispassionately. They were bound to no set of
+opinions, but regarded everything as an open question, accepting nothing
+save as the conclusion of a logical argument. I joined the
+Society--straining my clerical conscience somewhat to do so--and
+eventually formed one of the committee appointed by the Society to
+inquire into the matter, and having a sub-committee sitting at my own
+house. This, however, broke up suddenly, for I found even philosophers
+were not calm in their examination of unpalatable facts. One gentleman
+who approached the subject with his mind fully made up, accused the lady
+medium of playing tricks, and me of acting showman on the occasion. As
+there was no method of shunting this person, I was obliged to break up
+my sub-committee. To mention spiritualism to these omniscient gentlemen
+is like shaking a red rag at a bull. As a case in point (though, of
+course, I do not credit these gentlemen with the assumption of
+omniscience), I may quote the replies of Professor Huxley and Mr. G. H.
+Lewes to the Society's invitation to sit on their committee:--
+
+"Sir,--I regret that I am unable to accept the invitation of the Council
+of the Dialectical Society to co-operate with a committee for the
+investigation of 'spiritualism;' and for two reasons. In the first
+place, I have no time for such an inquiry, which would involve much
+trouble and (unless it were unlike all inquiries of that kind I have
+known) much annoyance. In the second place, I take no interest in the
+subject. The only case of 'spiritualism' I have had the opportunity of
+examining into for myself, was as gross an imposture as ever came under
+my notice. But supposing the phenomena to be genuine--they do not
+interest me. If anybody would endow me with the faculty of listening to
+the chatter of old women and curates in the nearest cathedral town, I
+should decline the privilege, having better things to do.
+
+"And if the folk in the spiritual world do not talk more wisely and
+sensibly than their friends report them to do, I put them in the same
+category.
+
+"The only good that I can see in a demonstration of the truth of
+'spiritualism' is to furnish an additional argument against suicide.
+Better live a crossing-sweeper than die and be made to talk twaddle by a
+'medium' hired at a guinea a seance.
+
+"I am, Sir, &c.,
+"T. H. HUXLEY.
+
+"29th January, 1869."
+
+Confessedly Professor Huxley only tried one experiment. I cannot help
+thinking if he had not approached the subject with a certain amount of
+prejudice he would have been content to "Try again." The side-hit at
+curates of course I appreciate!
+
+"Dear Sir,--I shall not be able to attend the investigation of
+'spiritualism;' and in reference to your question about suggestions
+would only say that the one hint needful is that all present should
+distinguish between facts and inferences from facts. When any man says
+that phenomena are produced by _no_ known physical laws, he declares
+that he knows the laws by which they are produced.
+
+"Yours, &c.,
+"G. H. LEWES.
+
+"Tuesday, 2nd February, 1869."
+
+I am not, as I have said, a scientific man, nor do I advance the
+slightest pretensions to genius; therefore I have no doubt it is some
+mental defect on my part which prevents my seeing the force of Mr. G. H.
+Lewes's concluding sentence. I have worked at it for years and am
+compelled to say I cannot understand it.
+
+I sat, however, through the two years' examination which the Society
+gave to the subject; and it is not anticipating the conclusion of this
+chapter to say I was fully able to concur in the report they
+subsequently issued, the gist of which is continued in the final
+paragraph:--
+
+"In presenting their report, your committee taking into consideration
+the high character and great intelligence of many of the witnesses to
+the more extraordinary facts, the extent to which their testimony is
+supported by the reports of the sub-committees, and the absence of any
+proof of imposture or delusion as regards a large portion of the
+phenomena; and further, having regard to the exceptional character of
+the phenomena, the large number of persons in every grade of society and
+over the whole civilized world who are more or less influenced by a
+belief in their supernatural origin, and to the fact that no
+philosophical explanation of them has yet been arrived at, deem it
+incumbent upon them to state their conviction that the subject is worthy
+of more serious attention and careful investigation than it has hitherto
+received."
+
+With those cautiously guarded words I venture to think that any one who
+even reads the body of evidence contained in the Dialectical Society's
+report will be able to coincide.
+
+To return to my more personal narrative.
+
+As far as I can trace any order in this somewhat erratic subject, I
+think I may venture to say that the manifestations of the last few years
+have assumed a more _material_ form than before. It sounds a little
+Hibernian to say so, I know; but I still retain the expression.
+Supposing, for the moment, that the effects were produced by spirits,
+the control of the medium for the production of trance, spirit-voice,
+automatic writing, or even communications through raps and tilts of the
+table was much more intellectual--less physical than those of which I
+now have to speak--namely, the production of the materialized Spirit
+Faces and Spirit Forms.
+
+Two phases of manifestation, I may mention in passing, I have not
+seen--namely, the elongation of the body, and the fire test--both as far
+as I know peculiar to Mr. Home: nor again have I had personal experience
+of Mrs. Guppy's aerial transit, or Dr. Monk's nocturnal flight from
+Bristol to Swindon. Nothing of the kind has ever come at all within the
+sphere of my observation: therefore I forbear to speak about it.
+
+I shall never forget the delight with which I received a letter from a
+gentleman connected with the literature of spiritualism, informing me
+that materialized Spirit Faces had at last been produced in full light,
+and inviting me to come and see. I was wearied of dark seances, of fruit
+and flowers brought to order. John King's talk wearied me; and Katie's
+whispers had become fatally familiar: so I went in eagerly for the new
+sensation, and communicated my results to the world in the two papers
+called _Spirit Faces_ and _Spirit Forms_, the former published in
+_Unorthodox London_, the latter in Chapter 43 of the present volume.
+This class of manifestation has since become very common. I cannot say I
+ever considered it very satisfactory. I have never discovered any
+trickery--and I assure my readers I have kept my eyes and ears very wide
+open--but there are in such manifestations facilities for charlatanism
+which it is not pleasant to contemplate. This, let me continually
+repeat, is a purely personal narrative, and I have never seen any Spirit
+Face or Form that I could in the faintest way recognise. Others, I know,
+claim to have done so; but I speak strictly of what has occurred to
+myself. The same has been the case with Spirit Photographs. I have sat,
+after selecting my own plate and watching every stage in the process;
+and certainly over my form there has been a shadowy female figure
+apparently in the act of benediction;[2] but I cannot trace resemblance
+to any one I ever saw in the flesh. Perhaps I have been unfortunate in
+this respect.
+
+Very similar to Miss Cook's mediumship was that of Miss Showers; a young
+lady whom I have met frequently at the house of a lady at the West-end
+of London, both the medium and her hostess being quite above suspicion.
+In this case, besides the face and full form we have singing in a clear
+baritone voice presumably by a spirit called Peter--who gives himself
+out as having been in earth-life, I believe, a not very estimable
+specimen of a market-gardener. I am exceedingly puzzled how to account
+for these things. I dare not suspect the medium; but even granting the
+truth of the manifestations, they seem to me to be of a low class which
+one would only come into contact with under protest and for the sake of
+evidence.
+
+Mr. Crookes used to explain, and Serjeant Cox still explains these
+manifestations as being the products of a so-called Psychic Force--a
+term which I below define. Although I am as little inclined to
+hero-worship, and care as little for large names as any man living, yet
+it is quite impossible not to attach importance to the testimony of
+these gentlemen; one so eminent in the scientific world, and privileged
+to write himself F.R.S., the other trained to weigh evidence and decide
+between balanced probabilities. But it would seem that while Psychic
+Force might cover the ground of my earlier experiences, it singularly
+fails to account for the materializations, and obliges us to relegate
+them to the category of fraud, unless we accept them as being what they
+profess to be. This I believe Serjeant Cox ruthlessly does. He claims as
+we have seen to have "caught" Miss Showers, and was not, I believe,
+convinced by Miss Cook. Mr. Crookes was: and, when we remember that Mr.
+Wallace, the eminent naturalist, and Mr. Cromwell Varley, the
+electrician, both accept the spiritual theory, it really looks as though
+the scientific mind was more open to receive--perhaps driven to
+receive--this which I frankly concede to be the only adequate cause for
+the effects, while the legal mind still remains hair-splitting upon
+conflicting evidence. Whereabouts the theological mind is I do not quite
+know--perhaps still dangling between the opposite poles of Faith and
+Reason, and dubiously debating with me "Am I a Spiritualist or not?"
+
+In a recent pamphlet reprinted from the Quarterly Journal of Science,
+Mr. Crookes thus compendiously sums up the various theories which have
+been invented to account for spiritualistic phenomena, and, in so doing,
+incidentally defines his now discarded theory of Psychic Force which
+owns Mr. Serjeant Cox for its patron:--
+
+_First Theory._--The phenomena are all the results of tricks, clever
+mechanical arrangements, or legerdemain; the mediums are impostors, and
+the rest of the company fools.
+
+It is obvious that this theory can only account for a very small
+proportion of the facts observed. I am willing to admit that some
+so-called mediums of whom the public have heard much are arrant
+impostors who have taken advantage of the public demand for
+spiritualistic excitement to fill their purses with easily earned
+guineas; whilst others who have no pecuniary motive for imposture are
+tempted to cheat, it would seem, solely by a desire for notoriety.
+
+_Second Theory._--The persons at a seance are the victims of a sort of
+mania or delusion, and imagine phenomena to occur which have no real
+objective existence.
+
+_Third Theory._--The whole is the result of conscious or unconscious
+cerebral action.
+
+These two theories are evidently incapable of embracing more than a
+small portion of the phenomena, and they are improbable explanations for
+even those. They may be dismissed very briefly.
+
+I now approach the "spiritual" theories. It must be remembered that the
+word "spirits" is used in a very vague sense by the generality of
+people.
+
+_Fourth Theory._--The result of the spirit of the medium, perhaps in
+association with the spirits of some or all of the people present.
+
+_Fifth Theory._--The actions of evil spirits or devils, personifying who
+or what they please, in order to undermine Christianity and ruin men's
+souls.
+
+_Sixth Theory._--The actions of a separate order of beings, living on
+this earth, but invisible and immaterial to us. Able, however,
+occasionally to manifest their presence; known in almost all countries
+and ages as demons not necessarily bad, gnomes, fairies, kobolds, elves,
+goblins, Puck, &c.
+
+_Seventh Theory._--The actions of departed human beings--the spiritual
+theory _par excellence_.
+
+_Eighth Theory._--(_The Psychic Force Theory_).--This is a necessary
+adjunct to the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th theories, rather than a theory by
+itself.
+
+According to this theory the "medium," or the circle of people
+associated together as a whole, is supposed to possess a force, power,
+influence, virtue, or gift, by means of which intelligent beings are
+enabled to produce the phenomena observed. What these intelligent beings
+are is a subject for other theories.
+
+It is obvious that a "medium" possesses a _something_ which is not
+possessed by an ordinary being. Give this _something_ a name. Call it
+"_x_" if you like. Mr. Serjeant Cox calls it Psychic Force. There has
+been so much misunderstanding on this subject that I think it best to
+give the following explanation in Mr. Serjeant Cox's own words:--
+
+"The Theory of _Psychic Force_ is in itself merely the recognition of
+the now almost undisputed fact that under certain conditions, as yet but
+imperfectly ascertained, and within a limited, but as yet undefined,
+distance from the bodies of certain persons having a special nerve
+organization, a Force operates by which, without muscular contact or
+connexion, action at a distance is caused, and visible motions and
+audible sounds are produced in solid substances. As the presence of such
+an organization is necessary to the phenomenon, it is reasonably
+concluded that the Force does, in some manner as yet unknown, proceed
+from that organization. As the organism is itself moved and directed
+within its structure by a Force which either is, or is controlled by,
+the Soul, Spirit, or Mind (call it what we may) which constitutes the
+individual being we term 'the Man,' it is an equally reasonable
+conclusion that the Force which causes the motions beyond the limits of
+the body is the same Force that produces motion within the limits of the
+body. And, inasmuch as the external force is seen to be often directed
+by Intelligence, it is an equally reasonable conclusion that the
+directing Intelligence of the external force is the same Intelligence
+that directs the Force internally. This is the force to which the name
+of _Psychic Force_ has been given by me as properly designating a force
+which I thus contend to be traced back to the Soul or Mind of the Man as
+its source. But I, and all who adopt this theory of Psychic Force, as
+being the agent through which the phenomena are produced, do not thereby
+intend to assert that this Psychic Force may not be sometimes seized and
+directed by some other Intelligence than the Mind of the Psychic. The
+most ardent spiritualists practically admit the existence of Psychic
+Force under the very inappropriate name of Magnetism (to which it has no
+affinity whatever), for they assert that the Spirits of the Dead can
+only do the acts attributed to them by using the Magnetism (that is, the
+Psychic Force) of the Medium. The difference between the advocates of
+Psychic Force and the spiritualists consists in this--that we contend
+that there is as yet insufficient proof of any other directing agent
+than the Intelligence of the Medium, and no proof whatever of the agency
+of Spirits of the Dead; while the spiritualists hold it as a faith, not
+demanding further proof, that Spirits of the Dead are the sole agents in
+the production of all the phenomena. Thus the controversy resolves
+itself into a pure question of _fact_, only to be determined by a
+laborious and long continued series of experiments and an extensive
+collection of psychological facts, which should be the first duty of the
+Psychological Society, the formation of which is now in progress."
+
+It has frequently struck me, especially in connexion with certain
+investigations that I have been making during the last few years, that
+Spiritualism is going through much the same phases as Positivism. It
+seemed at first impossible that the Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte
+could culminate in a highly ornate Religion of Humanity, with its fall
+ritual, its ninefold sacramental system. It is even curious to notice
+that it was the death of Clotilde which brought about the change, by
+revealing to him the gap which Philosophy always does leave between the
+present and the future. So too Spiritualism is beginning to "organize"
+and exhibits some symptoms of formulating a Creed and Articles of
+Belief. The British National Association of Spiritualists, which has
+honoured me by placing my name on its Council, thus states its
+principles, under the mottoes:--
+
+"He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame
+unto him."--Proverbs xviii. 13.
+
+"In Scripture we are perpetually reminded that the Laws of the Spiritual
+World are, in the highest sense, Laws of Nature."--Argyll.
+
+"He who asserts that, outside of the domain of pure Mathematics,
+anything is impossible, lacks a knowledge of the first principles of
+Logic."--Arago.
+
+
+DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES AND PURPOSES.
+
+"Spiritualism implies the recognition of an inner nature in man. It
+deals with facts concerning that inner nature, the existence of which
+has been the subject of speculation, dispute, and even of denial,
+amongst philosophers in all ages; and in particular, with certain
+manifestations of that inner nature which have been observed in persons
+of peculiar organizations, now called Mediums or Sensitives, and in
+ancient times Prophets, Priests, and Seers.
+
+"Spiritualism claims to have established on a firm scientific basis the
+immortality of man, the permanence of his individuality, and the Open
+Communion, under suitable conditions, of the living with the so-called
+dead, and affords grounds for the belief in progressive spiritual states
+in new spheres of existence.
+
+"Spiritualism furnishes the key to the better understanding of all
+religions, ancient and modern. It explains the philosophy of
+Inspiration, and supersedes the popular notion of the miraculous by the
+revelation of hitherto unrecognised laws.
+
+"Spiritualism tends to abrogate exaggerated class distinctions; to
+reunite those who are now too often divided by seemingly conflicting
+material interests; to encourage the co-operation of men and women in
+many new spheres; and to uphold the freedom and rights of the
+individual, while maintaining as paramount the sanctity of family life.
+
+"Finally, the general influence of Spiritualism on the individual is to
+inspire him with self-respect, with a love of justice and truth, with a
+reverence for Divine law, and with a sense of harmony between man, the
+universe, and God.
+
+"The British National Association of Spiritualists is formed to unite
+Spiritualists of every variety of opinion, for their mutual aid and
+benefit; to promote the study of Pneumatology and Psychology; to aid
+students and inquirers in their researches, by placing at their disposal
+the means of systematic investigation into the now recognised facts and
+phenomena, called Spiritual or Psychic; to make known the positive
+results arrived at by careful scientific research; and to direct
+attention to the beneficial influence which those results are calculated
+to exercise upon social relationships and individual conduct. It is
+intended to include spiritualists of every class, whether members of
+Local and Provincial Societies or not, and all inquirers into
+psychological and kindred phenomena.
+
+"The Association, whilst cordially sympathizing with the teachings of
+Jesus Christ, will hold itself entirely aloof from all dogmatism or
+finalities, whether religious or philosophical, and will content itself
+with the establishment and elucidation of well-attested facts, as the
+only basis on which any true religion or philosophy can be built up."
+
+This last clause has, I believe, been modified to suit certain members
+of my profession who were a little staggered by its apparent
+_patronizing_ of Christianity. For myself (but then, I am unorthodox) I
+care little for these written or printed symbola. Having strained my
+conscience to join the Dialecticians, I allow my name, without
+compunction, to stand on the Council of the Association,--and shall be
+really glad if it does them any good. The fact is, I care little for
+formal creeds, but much for the fruit of those creeds. I stand by that
+good old principle--"By their fruits ye shall know them;" and that
+reminds me that to my shreds and patches of "experience" I am to append
+some pros and cons of this matter. They have cropped up incidentally as
+we have gone on: but I could with advantage collect them if my limits
+admitted of sermonizing.
+
+As to the fruits of Spiritualism, I can only say that I have never
+witnessed any of these anti-Christianizing effects which some persons
+say arise from a belief in Spiritualism. They simply have not come
+within the sphere of my observation, nor do I see any tendency towards
+them in the tenets of Spiritualism--rather the reverse.
+
+Then again, to pass from practice to faith, Spiritualism professes to be
+the reverse of exclusive. In addressing the Conference of 1874, and
+defending my position as a clerical inquirer, I was able to say:--"On
+the broad question of theology I can conceive no single subject which a
+clergyman is more bound to examine than that which purports to be a new
+revelation, or, at all events, a large extension of the old; and which,
+if its claims be substantiated, will quite modify our notions as to what
+we now call faith. It proposes, in fact, to supply in matters we have
+been accustomed to take on trust, something so like demonstration, that
+I feel not only at liberty, but actually bound, whether I like it or
+not, to look into the thing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whether your creed is right or wrong is not for me to tell you; but it
+is most important for me that I should assure myself. And while I
+recognise that my own duty clearly is to examine the principles you
+profess, I find this to be eminently their characteristic, _that they
+readily assimilate with those of my own Church_. I see nothing
+revolutionary in them. You have no propaganda. You do not call upon me,
+as far as I understand, to come out of the body I belong to and join
+yours, as so many other bodies do; but you ask me simply to take your
+doctrines into my own creed, and vitalize it by their means. That has
+always attracted me powerfully towards you. You are the broadest
+Churchmen I find anywhere."
+
+I am not writing thus in any sense as the apologist of Spiritualism. I
+am not offering anything like an Apologia pro vita mea in making the
+inquiries I have done, am doing, and hope to do. I have elected to take,
+and I elect to maintain, a neutral position in this matter. All I have
+done is to select from the Pros and Cons that present themselves to my
+mind. If the Pros seem to outweigh the Cons--or vice versa--be it so. I
+cannot help it. I have scarcely decided for myself yet, and I am a
+veteran investigator. Others may be more speedy in arriving at a
+conclusion.
+
+Among the more obvious "Cons" are the oft-quoted facts that some people
+have lost their heads and wasted a good deal of their time on
+Spiritualism. But people lose their heads by reading classics or
+mathematics, or overdoing any one subject however excellent--even
+falling in love: and the ingenuity displayed in wasting time is so
+manifold that this is an objection that can scarcely be urged specially
+against Spiritualism, though I own Dark Seances do cut terribly into
+time.
+
+Then again one is apt to be taken in by mediums or even by spirits. Yes;
+but this only imposes the ordinary obligation of keeping one's eyes
+open. I know spiritualists who believe in every medium qua medium, and
+others who accept as unwritten gospel the idiotic utterances of a
+departed buccaneer or defunct clown: but these people are so purely
+exceptional as simply to prove a rule. Do _not_ accept as final in
+so-called spiritual what you would not accept in avowedly mundane
+matters. Keep your eyes open and your head cool, and you will not go far
+wrong. These are the simple rules that I have elaborated during my
+protracted study of the subject.
+
+"We do not believe, we know," was, as I said, the proud boast a
+spiritualist once made to me. And if the facts--any of the facts--of
+Spiritualism stand _as_ facts, there is no doubt that it would form the
+strongest possible counterpoise to the materialism of our age. It
+presses the method of materialism into its service, and meets the
+doubter on his own ground of demonstration--a low ground, perhaps, but a
+tremendously decisive one, the very one perhaps on which the Battle of
+Faith and Reason will have to be fought out.
+
+If--let us not forget that pregnant monosyllable--if the assumptions of
+Spiritualism be true, and that we can only ascertain by personal
+investigation, I believe the circumstance would be efficacious in
+bringing back much of the old meaning of the word [Greek: pistis] which
+was something more than the slipshod Faith standing as its modern
+equivalent. It would make it really the substance of things hoped for,
+the evidence of things not seen.
+
+Even if the dangers of Spiritualism were much greater than they
+are--aye, as great as the diabolical people themselves make out--I
+should still think (in the cautious words of the Dialecticians)
+Spiritualism was worth looking into, if only on the bare chance, however
+remote, of lighting on some such Philosophy as that so beautifully
+sketched by Mr. S. C. Hall in some of the concluding stanzas of his poem
+"Philosophy," with which I may fitly conclude--
+
+ And those we call "the dead" (who are not dead--
+ Death was their herald to Celestial Life)--
+ May soothe the aching heart and weary head
+ In pain, in toil, in sorrow, and in strife.
+
+ That is a part of every natural creed--
+ Instinctive teaching of another state:
+ When manacles of earth are loosed and freed--
+ Which Science vainly strives to dissipate.
+
+ In tortuous paths, with prompters blind, we trust
+ One Guide--to lead us forth and set us free!
+ Give us, Lord God! all merciful and just!
+ The FAITH that is but Confidence in Thee!
+
+THE END.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[2] Alluded to above, p. 350.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Transcriber's Notes: |
+ | |
+ | Page 36: Single closing quote mark after "He will accept |
+ | you" _sic_ |
+ | Page 79: "next my boy" _sic_ |
+ | Page 110: Wormwood Scrubbs _sic_; platform amended to |
+ | platforms |
+ | Page 185: anatotomized amended to anatomized; full stop |
+ | following "few friends" removed |
+ | Page 186: hooping cough _sic_ |
+ | Page 234: umpromising amended to unpromising |
+ | Page 244: "vary scrubby ground" amended to "very scrubby |
+ | ground" |
+ | Page 338: flabbergastered _sic_ |
+ | Page 341: facile princeps amended to facile princeps |
+ | Page 360: scarely amended to scarcely |
+ | Page 365: closing parenthesis added after "particular shape" |
+ | Page 370: invesgator amended to investigator |
+ | Page 388: closing parenthesis added after "assumption of |
+ | omniscience" |
+ | |
+ | In the last essay, while there are paragraphs numbered 1 |
+ | and 3, there is no paragraph numbered 2 in the original. |
+ | |
+ | Hyphenation has generally been standardized. However, when |
+ | hyphenated and unhyphenated versions of a word each occur |
+ | an equal number of times, both versions have been retained |
+ | (beershop/beer-shop; nowadays/now-a-days; |
+ | reaction/re-action; reassumption/re-assumption). |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Mystic London:, by Charles Maurice Davies
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