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+Project Gutenberg's Etext of In Darkest England and The Way Out
+by General William Booth
+
+[ The founder of the Salvation Army tells of his philosophy,
+motivation, and plans for the future. Set against various
+tales of destitution in Victorian England. ]
+
+
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+"In Darkest England and The Way Out"
+
+by General William Booth
+
+March, 1996 [Etext #475]
+
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+
+
+IN DARKEST ENGLAND and THE WAY OUT
+
+by GENERAL BOOTH
+
+
+(this Etext comes from the 1890 1st ed. pub. The Salvation Army)
+
+
+ To the memory of the companion, counsellor, and comrade of
+ nearly 40 years. The sharer of my every ambition for the
+ welfare of mankind, my loving, faithful, and devoted wife
+ this book is dedicated.
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The progress of The Salvation Army in its work amongst the poor and
+lost of many lands has compelled me to face the problems which an more
+or less hopefully considered in the following pages. The grim
+necessities of a huge Campaign carried on for many years against the
+evils which lie at the root of all the miseries of modern life,
+attacked in a thousand and one forms by a thousand and one lieutenants,
+have led me step by step to contemplate as a possible solution of at
+least some of those problems the Scheme of social Selection and
+Salvation which I have here set forth.
+
+When but a mere child the degradation and helpless misery of the poor
+Stockingers of my native town, wandering gaunt and hunger-stricken
+through the streets droning out their melancholy ditties, crowding the
+Union or toiling like galley slaves on relief works for a bare
+subsistence kindled in my heart yearnings to help the poor which have
+continued to this day and which have had a powerful influence on my
+whole life. A last I may be going to see my longings to help the
+workless realised. I think I am.
+
+The commiseration then awakened by the misery of this class has been an
+impelling force which has never ceased to make itself felt during forty
+years of active service in the salvation of men. During this time I am
+thankful that I have been able, by the good hand of God upon me, to do
+something in mitigation of the miseries of this class, and to bring not
+only heavenly hopes and earthly gladness to the hearts of multitudes of
+these wretched crowds, but also many material blessings, including such
+commonplace things as food, raiment, home, and work, the parent of so
+many other temporal benefits. And thus many poor creatures have proved
+Godliness to be "profitable unto all things, having the promise of the
+life that now is as well as of that which is to come."
+
+These results have been mainly attained by spiritual means. I have
+boldly asserted that whatever his peculiar character or circumstances
+might be, if the prodigal would come home to his Heavenly Father, he
+would find enough and to spare in the Father's house to supply all his
+need both for this world and the next; and I have known thousands nay,
+I can say tens of thousands, who have literally proved this to be true,
+having, with little or no temporal assistance, come out of the darkest
+depths of destitution, vice and crime, to be happy and honest citizens
+and true sons and servants of God.
+
+And yet all the way through my career I have keenly felt the remedial
+measures usually enunciated in Christian programmes and ordinarily
+employed by Christian philanthropy to be lamentably inadequate for any
+effectual dealing with the despairing miseries of these outcast
+classes. The rescued are appallingly few--a ghastly minority compared
+with the multitudes who struggle and sink in the open-mouthed abyss.
+Alike, therefore, my humanity and my Christianity, if I may speak of
+them in any way as separate one from the other, have cried out for some
+more comprehensive method of reaching and saving the perishing crowds.
+
+No doubt it is good for men to climb unaided out of the whirlpool on to
+the rock of deliverance in the very presence of the temptations which
+have hitherto mastered them, and to maintain a footing there with the
+same billows of temptation washing over them. But, alas! with many
+this seems to be literally impossible. That decisiveness of character,
+that moral nerve which takes hold of the rope thrown for the rescue and
+keeps its hold amidst all the resistances that have to be encountered,
+is wanting. It is gone.
+The general wreck has shattered and disorganised the whole man.
+
+Alas, what multitudes there are around us everywhere, many known to my
+readers personally, and any number who may be known to them by a very
+short walk from their own dwellings, who are in this very plight! Their
+vicious habits and destitute circumstances make it certain that without
+some kind of extraordinary help, they must hunger and sin, and sin and
+hunger, until, having multiplied their kind, and filled up the measure
+of their miseries, the gaunt fingers of death will close upon then and
+terminate their wretchedness. And all this will happen this very
+winter in the midst of the unparalleled wealth, and civilisation, and
+philanthropy of this professedly most Christian land.
+
+Now, I propose to go straight for these sinking classes, and in doing
+so shall continue to aim at the heart. I still prophesy the uttermost
+disappointment unless that citadel is reached. In proposing to add one
+more to the methods I have already put into operation to this end, do
+not let it be supposed that I am the less dependent upon the old plans
+or that I seek anything short of the old conquest. If we help the man
+it is in order that we may change him. The builder who should elaborate
+his design and erect his house and risk his reputation without burning
+his bricks would be pronounced a failure and a fool. Perfection of
+architectural beauty, unlimited expenditure of capital, unfailing
+watchfulness of his labourers, would avail him nothing if the bricks
+were merely unkilned clay. Let him kindle a fire. And so here I see
+the folly of hoping to accomplish anything abiding, either in the
+circumstances or the morals of these hopeless classes, except there be
+a change effected in the whole man as well as in his surroundings.
+To this everything I hope to attempt will tend. In many cases I shall
+succeed, in some I shall fail; but even in failing of this my ultimate
+design, I shall at least benefit the bodies, if not the souls, of men;
+and if I do not save the fathers, I shall make a better chance for the
+children.
+
+It will be seen therefore that in this or in any other development that
+may follow I have no intention to depart in the smallest degree from
+the main principles on which I have acted in the past. My only hope
+for the permanent deliverance of mankind from misery, either in this
+world or the next, is the regeneration or remaking of the individual by
+the power of the Holy Ghost through Jesus Christ. But in providing for
+the relief of temporal misery I reckon that I am only making it easy
+where it is now difficult, and possible where it is now all but
+impossible, for men and women to find their way to the Cross of our
+Lord Jesus Christ.
+
+That I have confidence in my proposals goes without saying.
+I believe they will work. In miniature many of them are working
+already. But I do not claim that my Scheme is either perfect in its
+details or complete in the sense of being adequate to combat all forms
+of the gigantic evils against which it is in the main directed.
+Like other human things it must be perfected through suffering.
+But it is a sincere endeavour to do something, and to do it on
+principles which can be instantly applied and universally developed.
+Time, experience, criticism, and, above all, the guidance of God will
+enable us, I hope, to advance on the lines here laid down to a true and
+practical application of the words of the Hebrew Prophet: "Loose the
+bands of wickedness; undo the heavy burdens; let the oppressed go free;
+break every yoke; deal thy bread to the hungry; bring the poor that are
+cast out to thy house. When thou seest the naked cover him and hide
+not thyself from thine own flesh. Draw out thy soul to the hungry--
+Then they that be of thee shall build the old waste places and Thou
+shalt raise up the foundations of many generations."
+
+To one who has been for nearly forty years indissolubly associated with
+me in every undertaking I owe much of the inspiration which has found
+expression in this book. It is probably difficult for me to fully
+estimate the extent to which the splendid benevolence and unbounded
+sympathy of her character have pressed me forward in the life-long
+service of man, to which we have devoted both ourselves and our
+children. It will be an ever green and precious memory to me that amid
+the ceaseless suffering of a dreadful malady my dying wife found relief
+in considering and developing the suggestions for the moral and social
+and spiritual blessing of the people which are here set forth, and I do
+thank God she was taken from me only when the book was practically
+complete and the last chapters had been sent to the press.
+
+In conclusion, I have to acknowledge the services rendered to me in
+preparing this book by Officers under my command. There could be no
+hope of carrying out any part of it, but for the fact that so many
+thousands are ready at my call and under my direction to labour to the
+very utmost of their strength for the salvation of others without the
+hope of earthly reward. Of the practical common sense, the resource,
+the readiness for every form of usefulness of those Officers and
+Soldiers, the world has no conception. Still less is it capable of
+understanding the height and depth of their self-sacrificing devotion
+to God and the poor.
+
+I have also to acknowledge valuable literary help from a friend of the
+poor, who, though not in any way connected with the Salvation Army,
+has the deepest sympathy with its aims and is to a large extent in
+harmony with its principles. Without such assistance I should probably
+have found it--overwhelmed as I already am with the affairs of a
+world-wide enterprise--extremely difficult, if not impossible, to
+have presented these proposals for which I am alone responsible in so
+complete a form, at any rate at this time. I have no doubt that if any
+substantial part of my plan is successfully carried out he will
+consider himself more than repaid for the services so ably rendered.
+
+WILLIAM BOOTH.
+
+INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS OF THE SALVATION ARMY, LONDON, E.C.,
+October, 1890.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART 1. THE DARKNESS.
+
+CHAPTER 1. Why "Darkest England"?
+
+CHAPTER 2. The Submerged Tenth
+
+CHAPTER 3. The Homeless
+
+CHAPTER 4. The Out-of-Works
+
+CHAPTER 5. On the Verge of the Abyss
+
+CHAPTER 6. The Vicious
+
+CHAPTER 7. The Criminals
+
+CHAPTER 8. The Children of the Lost
+
+CHAPTER 9. Is there no Help?
+
+
+PART 2. DELIVERANCE.
+
+CHAPTER 1. A Stupendous Undertaking
+
+ Section 1. The Essentials to Success
+ Section 2. My Scheme
+
+
+CHAPTER 2. To the Rescue!--The City Colony
+
+ Section 1. Food and Shelter for Every Man
+ Section 2. Work for the Out-of-Works--The Factory
+ Section 3. The Regimentation of the Unemployed
+ Section 4. The Household Salvage Brigade
+
+
+CHAPTER 3. To the Country!--The Farm Colony
+
+ Section 1. The Farm Proper
+ Section 2. The Industrial Village
+ Section 3. Agricultural Villages
+ Section 4. Co-operative Farm
+
+
+CHAPTER 4. New Britain--The Colony Over Sea
+
+ Section 1. The Colony and the Colonists
+ Section 2. Universal Emigration
+ Section 3. The Salvation Ship
+
+
+CHAPTER 5. More Crusades
+
+ Section 1. A Slum Crusade.--Our Slum Sisters
+ Section 2. The Travelling Hospital
+ Section 3. Regeneration of our Criminals--The Prison Gate Brigade
+ Section 4. Effectual Deliverance for the Drunkard
+ Section 5. A New Way of Escape for Lost Women--The Rescue Homes
+ Section 6. A Preventive Home for Unfallen Girls when in Danger
+ Section 7. Enquiry Office for Lost People
+ Section 8. Refuges for the Children of the Streets
+ Section 9. Industrial Schools
+ Section 10. Asylums for Moral Lunatics
+
+
+CHAPTER 6. Assistance in General
+
+ Section 1. Improved Lodgings
+ Section 2. Model Suburban Villages
+ Section 3. The Poor Man's Bank
+ Section 4. The Poor Man's Lawyer
+ Section 5. Intelligence Department
+ Section 6. Co-operation in General
+ Section 7. Matrimonial Bureau
+ Section 8. Whitechapel-by-the-sea
+
+
+CHAPTER 7. Can it be done, and how?
+
+ Section 1. The Credentials of the Salvation Army
+ Section 2. How much will it cost?
+ Section 3. Some advantages stated
+ Section 4. Some objections met
+ Section 5. Recapitulation
+
+CHAPTER 8. A Pratical Conclusion
+
+
+
+IN DARKEST ENGLAND
+
+PART 1. THE DARKNESS.
+
+CHAPTER 1. WHY "DARKEST ENGLAND"?
+
+This summer the attention of the civilised world has been arrested by
+the story which Mr. Stanley has told of Darkest Africa and his
+journeyings across the heart of the Lost Continent. In all that
+spirited narrative of heroic endeavour, nothing has so much impressed
+the imagination, as his description of the immense forest, which
+offered an almost impenetrable barrier to his advance. The intrepid
+explorer, in his own phrase, "marched, tore, ploughed, and cut his way
+for one hundred and sixty days through this inner womb of the true
+tropical forest." The mind of man with difficulty endeavours to
+realise this immensity of wooded wilderness, covering a territory half
+as large again as the whole of France, where the rays of the sun never
+penetrate, where in the dark, dank air, filled with the steam of the
+heated morass, human beings dwarfed into pygmies and brutalised into
+cannibals lurk and live and die. Mr Stanley vainly endeavours to bring
+home to us the full horror of that awful gloom. He says:
+
+Take a thick Scottish copse dripping with rain; imagine this to be mere
+undergrowth nourished under the impenetrable shade of ancient trees
+ranging from 100 to 180 feet high; briars and thorns abundant; lazy
+creeks meandering through the depths of the jungle, and sometimes a
+deep affluent of a great river. Imagine this forest and jungle in all
+stages of decay and growth, rain pattering on you every other day of
+the year; an impure atmosphere with its dread consequences, fever and
+dysentery; gloom throughout the day and darkness almost palpable
+throughout the night; and then if you can imagine such a forest
+extending the entire distance from Plymouth to Peterhead, you will have
+a fair idea of some of the inconveniences endured by us in the Congo
+forest.
+
+The denizens of this region are filled with a conviction that the
+forest is endless--interminable. In vain did Mr. Stanley and his
+companions endeavour to convince them that outside the dreary wood were
+to be found sunlight, pasturage and peaceful meadows.
+
+They replied in a manner that seemed to imply that we must be strange
+creatures to suppose that it would be possible for any world to exist
+save their illimitable forest. "No," they replied, shaking their heads
+compassionately, and pitying our absurd questions, "all like this," and
+they moved their hand sweepingly to illustrate that the world was all
+alike, nothing but trees, trees and trees--great trees rising as high
+as an arrow shot to the sky, lifting their crowns intertwining their
+branches, pressing and crowding one against the other, until neither
+the sunbeam nor shaft of light can penetrate it.
+
+"We entered the forest," says Mr. Stanley, "with confidence; forty
+pioneers in front with axes and bill hooks to clear a path through the
+obstructions, praying that God and good fortune would lead us."
+But before the conviction of the forest dwellers that the forest was
+without end, hope faded out of the hearts of the natives of Stanley's
+company. The men became sodden with despair, preaching was useless to
+move their brooding sullenness, their morbid gloom.
+
+The little religion they knew was nothing more than legendary lore,
+and in their memories there dimly floated a story of a land which grew
+darker and darker as one travelled towards the end of the earth and
+drew nearer to the place where a great serpent lay supine and coiled
+round the whole world. Ah! then the ancients must have referred to
+this, where the light is so ghastly, and the woods are endless, and are
+so still and solemn and grey; to this oppressive loneliness, amid so
+much life, which is so chilling to the poor distressed heart; and the
+horror grew darker with their fancies; the cold of early morning, the
+comfortless grey of dawn, the dead white mist, the ever-dripping tears
+of the dew, the deluging rains, the appalling thunder bursts and the
+echoes, and the wonderful play of the dazzling lightning. And when the
+night comes with its thick palpable darkness, and they lie huddled in
+their damp little huts, and they hear the tempest overhead, and the
+howling of the wild winds, the grinding an groaning of the storm-tost
+trees, and the dread sounds of the falling giants, and the shock of the
+trembling earth which sends their hearts with fitful leaps to their
+throats, and the roaring and a rushing as of a mad overwhelming sea--
+oh, then the horror is intensified! When the march has begun once
+again, and the files are slowly moving through the woods, they renew
+their morbid broodings, and ask themselves: How long is this to last?
+Is the joy of life to end thus? Must we jog on day after day in this
+cheerless gloom and this joyless duskiness, until we stagger and fall
+and rot among the toads? Then they disappear into the woods by twos,
+and threes, and sixes; and after the caravan has passed they return by
+the trail, some to reach Yambuya and upset the young officers with
+their tales of woe and war; some to fall sobbing under a spear-thrust;
+some to wander and stray in the dark mazes of the woods, hopelessly
+lost; and some to be carved for the cannibal feast. And those who
+remain compelled to it by fears of greater danger, mechanically march
+on, a prey to dread and weakness.
+
+That is the forest. But what of its denizens? They are comparatively
+few; only some hundreds of thousands living in small tribes from ten to
+thirty miles apart, scattered over an area on which ten thousand
+million trees put out the sun from a region four times as wide as
+Great Britain. Of these pygmies there are two kinds; one a very
+degraded specimen with ferretlike eyes, close-set nose, more nearly
+approaching the baboon than was supposed to be possible, but very
+human; the other very handsome, with frank open innocent features,
+very prepossessing. They are quick and intelligent, capable of deep
+affection and gratitude, showing remarkable industry and patience.
+A pygmy boy of eighteen worked with consuming zeal; time with him was
+too precious to waste in talk. His mind seemed ever concentrated on
+work. Mr. Stanley said: --
+
+"When I once stopped him to ask him his name, his face seemed to say,
+'Please don't stop me. I must finish my task.'
+
+"All alike, the baboon variety and the handsome innocents, are
+cannibals. They are possessed with a perfect mania for meat. We were
+obliged to bury our dead in the river, lest the bodies should be
+exhumed and eaten, even when they had died from smallpox."
+
+Upon the pygmies and all the dwellers of the forest has descended a
+devastating visitation in the shape of the ivory raiders of
+civilisation. The race that wrote the Arabian Nights, built Bagdad and
+Granada, and invented Algebra, sends forth men with the hunger for gold
+in their hearts, and Enfield muskets in their hands, to plunder and to
+slay. They exploit the domestic affections of the forest dwellers in
+order to strip them of all they possess in the world. That has been
+going on for years. It is going on to-day. It has come to be regarded
+as the natural and normal law of existence. Of the religion of these
+hunted pygmies Mr. Stanley tells us nothing, perhaps because there is
+nothing to tell. But an earlier traveller, Dr. Kraff, says that one
+of these tribes, by name Doko, had some notion of a Supreme Being, to
+whom, under the name of Yer, they sometimes addressed prayers in
+moments of sadness or terror. In these prayers they say; "Oh Yer, if
+Thou dost really exist why dost Thou let us be slaves? We ask not for
+food or clothing, for we live on snakes, ants, and mice. Thou hast
+made us, wherefore dost Thou let us be trodden down?"
+
+It is a terrible picture, and one that has engraved itself deep on the
+heart of civilisation. But while brooding over the awful presentation
+of life as it exists in the vast African forest, it seemed to me only
+too vivid a picture of many parts of our own land. As there is a
+darkest Africa is there not also a darkest England? Civilisation,
+which can breed its own barbarians, does it not also breed its own
+pygmies? May we not find a parallel at our own doors, and discover
+within a stone's throw of our cathedrals and palaces similar horrors to
+those which Stanley has found existing in the great Equatorial forest?
+
+The more the mind dwells upon the subject, the closer the analogy
+appears. The ivory raiders who brutally traffic in the unfortunate
+denizens of the forest glades, what are they but the publicans who
+flourish on the weakness of our poor? The two tribes of savages the
+human baboon and the handsome dwarf, who will not speak lest it impede
+him in his task, may be accepted as the two varieties who are
+continually present with us--the vicious, lazy lout, and the toiling
+slave. They, too, have lost all faith of life being other than it is
+and has been. As in Africa, it is all trees trees, trees with no other
+world conceivable; so is it here--it is all vice and poverty and
+crime. To many the world is all slum, with the Workhouse as an
+intermediate purgatory before the grave. And just as Mr. Stanley's
+Zanzibaris lost faith, and could only be induced to plod on in brooding
+sullenness of dull despair, so the most of our social reformers, no
+matter how cheerily they may have started off, with forty pioneers
+swinging blithely their axes as they force their way in to the wood,
+soon become depressed and despairing. Who can battle against the ten
+thousand million trees? Who can hope to make headway against the
+innumerable adverse conditions which doom the dweller in Darkest
+England to eternal and immutable misery? What wonder is it that many
+of the warmest hearts and enthusiastic workers feel disposed to repeat
+the lament of the old English chronicler, who, speaking of the evil
+days which fell upon our forefathers in the reign of Stephen, said
+"It seemed to them as if God and his Saints were dead."
+
+An analogy is as good as a suggestion; it becomes wearisome when it is
+pressed too far. But before leaving it, think for a moment how close
+the parallel is, and how strange it is that so much interest should be
+excited by a narrative of human squalor and human heroism in a distant
+continent, while greater squalor and heroism not less magnificent may
+be observed at our very doors.
+
+The Equatorial Forest traversed by Stanley resembles that Darkest
+England of which I have to speak, alike in its vast extent--both
+stretch, in Stanley's phrase, "as far as from Plymouth to Peterhead;"
+its monotonous darkness, its malaria and its gloom, its dwarfish
+de-humanized inhabitants, the slavery to which they are subjected,
+their privations and their misery. That which sickens the stoutest
+heart, and causes many of our bravest and best to fold their hands in
+despair, is the apparent impossibility of doing more than merely to
+peck at the outside of the endless tangle of monotonous undergrowth;
+to let light into it, to make a road clear through it, that shall not
+be immediately choked up by the ooze of the morass and the luxuriant
+parasitical growth of the forest--who dare hope for that?
+At present, alas, it would seem as though no one dares even to hope!
+It is the great Slough of Despond of our time.
+
+And what a slough it is no man can gauge who has not waded therein, as
+some of us have done, up to the very neck for long years. Talk about
+Dante's Hell, and all the horrors and cruelties of the torture-chamber
+of the lost! The man who walks with open eyes and with bleeding heart
+through the shambles of our civilisation needs no such fantastic images
+of the poet to teach him horror. Often and often, when I have seen the
+young and the poor and the helpless go down before my eyes into the
+morass, trampled underfoot by beasts of prey in human shape that haunt
+these regions, it seemed as if God were no longer in His world, but
+that in His stead reigned a fiend, merciless as Hell, ruthless as the
+grave. Hard it is, no doubt, to read in Stanley's pages of the
+slave-traders coldly arranging for the surprise of a village, the
+capture of the inhabitants, the massacre of those who resist, and the
+violation of all the women; but the stony streets of London, if they
+could but speak, would tell of tragedies as awful, of ruin as complete,
+of ravishments as horrible, as if we were in Central Africa; only the
+ghastly devastation is covered, corpselike, with the artificialities
+and hypocrisies of modern civilisation.
+
+The lot of a negress in the Equatorial Forest is not, perhaps, a very
+happy one, but is it so very much worse than that of many a pretty
+orphan girl in our Christian capital? We talk about the brutalities of
+the dark ages, and we profess to shudder as we read in books of the
+shameful exaction of the rights of feudal superior. And yet here,
+beneath our very eyes, in our theatres, in our restaurants, and in many
+other places, unspeakable though it be but to name it, the same hideous
+abuse flourishes unchecked. A young penniless girl, if she be pretty,
+is often hunted from pillar to post by her employers, confronted always
+by the alternative--Starve or Sin. And when once the poor girl has
+consented to buy the right to earn her living by the sacrifice of her
+virtue, then she is treated as a slave and an outcast by the very men
+who have ruined her. Her word becomes unbelievable, her life an
+ignominy, and she is swept downward ever downward, into the bottomless
+perdition of prostitution. But there, even in the lowest depths,
+excommunicated by Humanity and outcast from God, she is far nearer the
+pitying heart of the One true Saviour than all the men who forced her
+down, aye, and than all the Pharisees and Scribes who stand silently by
+while these Fiendish wrongs are perpetrated before their very eyes.
+
+The blood boils with impotent rage at the sight of these enormities,
+callously inflicted, and silently borne by these miserable victims.
+Nor is it only women who are the victims, although their fate is the
+most tragic. Those firms which reduce sweating to a fine art,
+who systematically and deliberately defraud the workman of his pay,
+who grind the faces of the poor, and who rob the widow and the orphan,
+and who for a pretence make great professions of public spirit and
+philanthropy, these men nowadays are sent to Parliament to make laws
+for the people. The old prophets sent them to Hell--but we have
+changed all that. They send their victims to Hell, and are rewarded by
+all that wealth can do to make their lives comfortable. Read the House
+of Lords' Report on the Sweating System, and ask if any African slave
+system, making due allowance for the superior civilisation, and
+therefore sensitiveness, of the victims, reveals more misery.
+
+Darkest England, like Darkest Africa, reeks with malaria. The foul and
+fetid breath of our slums is almost as poisonous as that of the African
+swamp. Fever is almost as chronic there as on the Equator. Every year
+thousands of children are killed off by what is called defects of our
+sanitary system. They are in reality starved and poisoned, and all
+that can be said is that, in many cases, it is better for them that
+they were taken away from the trouble to come.
+
+Just as in Darkest Africa it is only a part of the evil and misery that
+comes from the superior race who invade the forest to enslave and
+massacre its miserable inhabitants, so with us, much of the misery of
+those whose lot we are considering arises from their own habits.
+Drunkenness and all manner of uncleanness, moral and physical, abound.
+Have you ever watched by the bedside of a man in delirium tremens?
+Multiply the sufferings of that one drunkard by the hundred thousand,
+and you have some idea of what scenes are being witnessed in all our
+great cities at this moment. As in Africa streams intersect the forest
+in every direction, so the gin-shop stands at every corner with its
+River of the Water of Death flowing seventeen hours out of the
+twenty-four for the destruction of the people. A population sodden
+with drink, steeped in vice, eaten up by every social and physical
+malady, these are the denizens of Darkest England amidst whom my life
+has been spent, and to whose rescue I would now summon all that is best
+in the manhood and womanhood of our land.
+
+But this book is no mere lamentation of despair. For Darkest England,
+as for Darkest Africa, there is a light beyond. I think I see my way
+out, a way by which these wretched ones may escape from the gloom of
+their miserable existence into a higher and happier life.
+Long wandering in the Forest of the Shadow of Death at out doors, has
+familiarised me with its horrors; but while the realisation is a
+vigorous spur to action it has never been so oppressive as to
+extinguish hope. Mr. Stanley never succumbed to the terrors which
+oppressed his followers. He had lived in a larger life, and knew that
+the forest, though long, was not interminable. Every step forward
+brought him nearer his destined goal, nearer to the light of the sun,
+the clear sky, and the rolling uplands of the grazing land.
+Therefore he did not despair. The Equatorial Forest was, after all,
+a mere corner of one quarter of the world. In the knowledge of
+the light outside, in the confidence begotten by past experience of
+successful endeavour, he pressed forward; and when the 160 days'
+struggle was over, he and his men came out into a pleasant place where
+the land smiled with peace and plenty, and their hardships and hunger
+were forgotten in the joy of a great deliverance.
+
+So I venture to believe it will be with us. But the end is not yet.
+We are still in the depths of the depressing gloom. It is in no spirit
+of light-heartedness that this book is sent forth into the world as if
+it was written some ten years ago.
+
+If this were the first time that this wail of hopeless misery had
+sounded on our ears the matter would have been less serious. It is
+because we have heard it so often that the case is so desperate.
+The exceeding bitter cry of the disinherited has become to be as
+familiar in the ears of men as the dull roar of the streets or as the
+moaning of the wind through the trees. And so it rises unceasing, year
+in and year out, and we are too busy or too idle, too indifferent or
+too selfish, to spare it a thought. Only now and then, on rare
+occasions, when some clear voice is heard giving more articulate
+utterance to the miseries of the miserable men, do we pause in the
+regular routine of our daily duties, and shudder as we realise for one
+brief moment what life means to the inmates of the Slums. But one of
+the grimmest social problems of our time should be sternly faced, not
+with a view to the generation of profitless emotion, but with a view to
+its solution.
+
+Is it not time? There is, it is true, an audacity in the mere
+suggestion that the problem is not insoluble that is enough to take
+away the breath. But can nothing be done? If, after full and
+exhaustive consideration, we come to the deliberate conclusion that
+nothing can be done, and that it is the inevitable and inexorable
+destiny of thousands of Englishmen to be brutalised into worse than
+beasts by the condition of their environment, so be it. But if, on the
+contrary, we are unable to believe that this "awful slough," which
+engulfs the manhood and womanhood of generation after generation is
+incapable of removal; and if the heart and intellect of mankind alike
+revolt against the fatalism of despair, then, indeed, it is time, and
+high time, that the question were faced in no mere dilettante spirit,
+but with a resolute determination to make an end of the crying scandal
+of our age.
+
+What a satire it is upon our Christianity and our civilisation that the
+existence of these colonies of heathens and savages in the heart of our
+capital should attract so little attention! It is no better than a
+ghastly mockery--theologians might use a stronger word--to call by
+the name of One who came to seek and to save that which was lost those
+Churches which in the midst of lost multitudes either sleep in apathy
+or display a fitful interest in a chasuble. Why all this apparatus of
+temples and meeting-houses to save men from perdition in a world which
+is to come, while never a helping hand is stretched out to save them
+from the inferno of their present life? Is it not time that,
+forgetting for a moment their wranglings about the infinitely little or
+infinitely obscure, they should concentrate all their energies on a
+united effort to break this terrible perpetuity of perdition, and to
+rescue some at least of those for whom they profess to believe their
+Founder came to die?
+
+Before venturing to define the remedy, I begin by describing the
+malady. But even when presenting the dreary picture of our social
+ills, and describing the difficulties which confront us, I speak not in
+despondency but in hope. "I know in whom I have believed." I know,
+therefore do I speak. Darker England is but a fractional part of
+"Greater England." There is wealth enough abundantly to minister to its
+social regeneration so far as wealth can, if there be but heart enough
+to set about the work in earnest. And I hope and believe that the
+heart will not be lacking when once the problem is manfully faced, and
+the method of its solution plainly pointed out.
+
+CHAPTER II. THE SUBMERGED TENTH.
+
+In setting forth the difficulties which have to be grappled with,
+I shall endeavour in all things to understate rather than overstate my
+case. I do this for two reasons: first, any exaggeration would create
+a reaction; and secondly, as my object is to demonstrate the
+practicability of solving the problem, I do not wish to magnify its
+dimensions. In this and in subsequent chapters I hope to convince
+those who read them that there is no overstraining in the
+representation of the facts, and nothing Utopian in the presentation of
+remedies. I appeal neither to hysterical emotionalists nor headlong
+enthusiasts; but having tried to approach the examination of this
+question in a spirit of scientific investigation, I put forth my
+proposals with the view of securing the support and co-operation of the
+sober, serious, practical men and women who constitute the saving
+strength and moral backbone of the country. I fully admit that them is
+much that is lacking in the diagnosis of the disease, and, no doubt,
+in this first draft of the prescription there is much room for
+improvement, which will come when we have the light of fuller
+experience. But with all its drawbacks and defects, I do not hesitate
+to submit my proposals to the impartial judgment of all who are
+interested in the solution of the social question as an immediate and
+practical mode of dealing with this, the greatest problem of our time.
+
+The first duty of an investigator in approaching the study of any
+question is to eliminate all that is foreign to the inquiry, and to
+concentrate his attention upon the subject to be dealt with. Here I
+may remark that I make no attempt in this book to deal with Society as
+a whole. I leave to others the formulation of ambitious programmes for
+the reconstruction of our entire social system; not because I may not
+desire its reconstruction, but because the elaboration of any plans
+which are more or less visionary and incapable of realisation for many
+years would stand in the way of the consideration of this Scheme for
+dealing with the most urgently pressing aspect of the question, which I
+hope may be put into operation at once.
+
+In taking this course I am aware that I cut myself off from a wide and
+attractive field; but as a practical man, dealing with sternly prosaic
+facts, I must confine my attention to that particular section of the
+problem which clamours most pressingly for a solution. Only one thing
+I may say in passing. Then is nothing in my scheme which will bring it
+into collision either with Socialists of the State, or Socialists of
+the Municipality, with Individualists or Nationalists, or any of the
+various schools of though in the great field of social economics--
+excepting only those anti-christian economists who hold that it is an
+offence against the doctrine of the survival of the fittest to try to
+save the weakest from going to the wall, and who believe that when once
+a man is down the supreme duty of a self-regarding Society is to jump
+upon him. Such economists will naturally be disappointed with this
+book I venture to believe that all others will find nothing in it to
+offend their favourite theories, but perhaps something of helpful
+suggestion which they may utilise hereafter. What, then, is Darkest
+England? For whom do we claim that "urgency" which gives their case
+priority over that of all other sections of their countrymen and
+countrywomen?
+
+I claim it for the Lost, for the Outcast, for the Disinherited of the
+World.
+
+These, it may be said, are but phrases. Who are the Lost? reply, not
+in a religious, but in a social sense, the lost are those who have gone
+under, who have lost their foothold in Society, those to whom the
+prayer to our Heavenly Father, "Give us day by day our daily bread,"
+is either unfulfilled, or only fulfilled by the Devil's agency: by the
+earnings of vice, the proceeds of crime, or the contribution enforced
+by the threat of the law.
+
+But I will be more precise. The denizens in Darkest England; for whom
+I appeal, are (1) those who, having no capital or income of their own,
+would in a month be dead from sheer starvation were they exclusively
+dependent upon the money earned by their own work; and (2) those who by
+their utmost exertions are unable to attain the regulation allowance of
+food which the law prescribes as indispensable even for the worst
+criminals in our gaols.
+
+I sorrowfully admit that it would be Utopian in our present social
+arrangements to dream of attaining for every honest Englishman a gaol
+standard of all the necessaries of life. Some time, perhaps, we may
+venture to hope that every honest worker on English soil will always be
+as warmly clad, as healthily housed, and as regularly fed as our
+criminal convicts--but that is not yet.
+
+Neither is it possible to hope for many years to come that human beings
+generally will be as well cared for as horses. Mr. Carlyle long ago
+remarked that the four-footed worker has already got all that this
+two-handed one is clamouring for: "There are not many horses in
+England, able and willing to work, which have not due food and lodging
+and go about sleek coated, satisfied in heart." You say it is
+impossible; but, said Carlyle, "The human brain, looking at these sleek
+English horses, refuses to believe in such impossibility for English
+men." Nevertheless, forty years have passed since Carlyle said that,
+and we seem to be no nearer the attainment of the four-footed standard
+for the two-handed worker. "Perhaps it might be nearer realisation,"
+growls the cynic, "if we could only product men according to demand, as
+we do horses, and promptly send them to the slaughter-house when past
+their prime"--which, of course, is not to be thought of.
+
+What, then, is the standard towards which we may venture to aim with
+some prospect of realisation in our time? It is a very humble one, but
+if realised it would solve the worst problems of modern Society. It is
+the standard of the London Cab Horse. When in the streets of London a
+Cab Horse, weary or careless or stupid, trips and falls and lies
+stretched out in the midst of the traffic there is no question of
+debating how he came to stumble before we try to get him on his legs
+again. The Cab Horse is a very real illustration of poor broken-down
+humanity; he usually falls down because of overwork and underfeeding.
+If you put him on his feet without altering his conditions, it would
+only be to give him another dose of agony; but first of all you'll have
+to pick him up again. It may have been through overwork or
+underfeeding, or it may have been all his own fault that he has broken
+his knees and smashed the shafts, but that does not matter. If not for
+his own sake, then merely in order to prevent an obstruction of the
+traffic, all attention is concentrated upon the question of how we are
+to get him on his legs again. Tin load is taken off, the harness is
+unbuckled, or, if need be, cut, and everything is done to help him up.
+Then he is put in the shafts again and once more restored to his
+regular round of work. That is the first point. The second is that
+every Cab Horse in London has three things; a shelter for the night,
+food for its stomach, and work allotted to it by which it can earn its
+corn.
+
+These are the two points of the Cab Horse's Charter. When he is down
+he is helped up, and while he lives he has food, shelter and work.
+That, although a humble standard, is at present absolutely unattainable
+by millions--literally by millions--of our fellow-men and women in
+this country. Can the Cab Horse Charter be gained for human beings?
+I answer, yes. The Cab Horse standard can be attained on the Cab Horse
+terms. If you get your fallen fellow on his feet again, Docility and
+Discipline will enable you to reach the Cab Horse ideal, otherwise it
+will remain unattainable. But Docility seldom fails where Discipline
+is intelligently maintained. Intelligence is more frequently lacking
+to direct than obedience to follow direction. At any rate it is not
+for those who possess the intelligence to despair of obedience, until
+they have done their part. Some, no doubt, like the bucking horse that
+will never be broken in, will always refuse to submit to any guidance
+but their own lawless will. They will remain either the Ishmaels or
+the Sloths of Society. But man is naturally neither an Ishmael nor a
+Sloth.
+
+The first question, then, which confronts us is, what are the
+dimensions of the Evil? How many of our fellow-men dwell in this
+Darkest England? How can we take the census of those who have fallen
+below the Cab Horse standard to which it is our aim to elevate the most
+wretched of our countrymen?
+
+The moment you attempt to answer this question, you are confronted by
+the fact that the Social Problem has scarcely been studied at all
+scientifically. Go to Mudie's and ask for all the books that have been
+written on the subject, and you will be surprised to find how few there
+are. There are probably more scientific books treating of diabetes or
+of gout than there are dealing with the great social malady which eats
+out the vitals of such numbers of our people. Of late there has been a
+change for the better. The Report of the Royal Commission on the
+Housing of the Poor, and the Report of the Committee of the House of
+Lords on Sweating, represent an attempt at least to ascertain the facts
+which bear upon the Condition of the People question. But, after all,
+more minute, patient, intelligent observation has been devoted to the
+study of Earthworms, than to the evolution, or rather the degradation,
+of the Sunken Section of our people. Here and there in the immense
+field individual workers make notes, and occasionally emit a wail of
+despair, but where is there any attempt even so much as to take the
+first preliminary step of counting those who have gone under? One book
+there is, and so far as I know at present, only one, which even
+attempts to enumerate the destitute. In his "Life and Labour in the
+East of London," Mr. Charles Booth attempts to form some kind of an
+idea as to the numbers of those with whom we have to deal. With a
+large staff of assistants, and provided with all the facts in
+possession of the School Board Visitors, Mr. Booth took an industrial
+census of East London. This district, which comprises Tower Hamlets,
+Shoreditch, Bethnal Green and Hackney, contains a population of
+908,000; that is to say, less than one-fourth of the population of
+London. How do his statistics work out? If we estimate the number of
+the poorest class in the rest of London as being twice as numerous as
+those in the Eastern District, instead of being thrice as numerous, as
+they would be if they were calculated according to the population in
+the same proportion, the following is the result:
+
+ PAUPERS
+ Inmates of Workhouses, Asylums,
+ and Hospitals .. .. .. 17,000 34,000 51,000
+
+ HOMELESS
+ Loafers, Casuals,
+ and some Criminals .. .. 11,000 22,000 33,000
+
+ STARVING
+ Casual earnings between
+ 18s. per week and chronic want 100,000 200,000 300,000
+
+ THE VERY POOR.
+ Intermittent earnings
+ 18s. to 21s. per week .. .. 74,000 148,000 222,000
+
+ Small regular earnings
+ 18s.to 21s. per week .. .. 129,000 258,000 387,000
+ ------- ------- -------
+ 331,000 662,000 993,000
+
+
+ Regular wages, artizans, etc.,
+ 22s. to 30s. per week .. .. 337,000
+
+ Higher class labour,
+ 30s. to 50s. per week .. .. 121,000
+
+ Lower middle class,
+ shopkeepers, clerks, etc. .. 34,000
+
+ Upper middle class
+ (servant keepers) .. .. .. 45,000
+ -------
+ 908,000
+It may be admitted that East London affords an exceptionally bad
+district from which to generalise for the rest of the country.
+Wages are higher in London than elsewhere, but so is rent, and the
+number of the homeless and starving is greater in the human warren at
+the East End. There are 31 millions of people in Great Britain,
+exclusive of Ireland. If destitution existed everywhere in East London
+proportions, there would be 31 times as many homeless and starving
+people as there are in the district round Bethnal Green.
+
+But let us suppose that the East London rate is double the average for
+the rest of the country. That would bring out the following figures:
+
+ HOUSELESS
+ East London. United Kingdom.
+
+ Loafers, Casuals, and some Criminals 11,000 165,500
+
+ STARVING
+ Casual earnings or chronic want .. 100,000 1,550,000
+
+ Total Houseless and Starving .. 111,000 1,715,500
+
+ In Workhouses, Asylums, &c. .. 17,000 190,000
+ -------- ----------
+ 128,000 1,905,500
+
+
+Of those returned as homeless and starving, 870,000 were in receipt of
+outdoor relief. To these must be added the inmates of our prisons.
+In 1889 174,779 persons were received in the prisons, but the average
+number in prison at any one time did not exceed 60,000. The figures,
+as given in the Prison Returns, are as follows: --
+
+ In Convict Prisons .. .. .. .. .. 11,600
+ In Local Prisons.. .. .. .. .. .. 20,883
+ In Reformatories.. .. .. .. .. .. 1,270
+ In Industrial Schools .. .. .. .. 21,413
+ Criminal Lunatics .. .. .. .. .. 910
+ -------
+ 56,136
+
+Add to this the number of indoor paupers and lunatics (excluding
+criminals) 78,966--and we have an army of nearly two million:
+belonging to the submerged classes. To this there must be added at the
+very least, another million, representing those dependent upon the
+criminal, lunatic and other classes, not enumerated here, and the more
+or less helpless of the class immediately above the houseless and
+starving. This brings my total to three millions, or, to put it
+roughly to one-tenth of the population. According to Lord Brabazon and
+Mr. Samuel Smith, "between two and three millions of our population
+are always pauperised and degraded." Mr. Chamberlain says there is a
+"population equal to that of the metropolis,--that is, between four
+and five millions--"which has remained constantly in a state of
+abject destitution and misery." Mr. Giffen is more moderate.
+The submerged class, according to him, comprises one in five of manual
+labourers, six in 100 of the population. Mr. Giffen does not add the
+third million which is living on the border line.
+Between Mr Chamberlain's four millions and a half, and Mr. Giffen's
+1,800,000 I am content to take three millions as representing the total
+strength of the destitute army.
+
+Darkest England, then, may be said to have a population about equal to
+that of Scotland. Three million men, women, and children a vast
+despairing multitude in a condition nominally free, but really
+enslaved;--these it is whom we have to save.
+
+It is a large order. England emancipated her negroes sixty years ago,
+at a cost of #40,000,000, and has never ceased boasting about it since.
+But at our own doors, from "Plymouth to Peterhead," stretches this
+waste Continent of humanity--three million human beings who are
+enslaved--some of them to taskmasters as merciless as any West Indian
+overseer, all of them to destitution and despair?
+
+Is anything to be done with them? Can anything be done for them?
+Or is this million-headed mass to be regarded as offering a problem as
+insoluble as that of the London sewage, which, feculent and festering,
+swings heavily up and down the basin of the Thames with the ebb and
+flow of the tide?
+
+This Submerged Tenth--is it, then, beyond the reach of the
+nine-tenths in the midst of whom they live, and around whose homes they
+rot and die? No doubt, in every large mass of human beings there will
+be some incurably diseased in morals and in body, some for whom nothing
+can be done, some of whom even the optimist must despair, and for whom
+he can prescribe nothing but the beneficently stern restraints of an
+asylum or a gaol.
+
+But is not one in ten a proportion scandalously high?
+The Israelites of old set apart one tribe in twelve to minister to
+the Lord in the service of the Temple; but must we doom one in ten of
+"God's Englishmen" to the service of the great Twin Devils--
+Destitution and Despair?
+
+
+CHAPTER 3. THE HOMELESS
+
+Darkest England may be described as consisting broadly of three
+circles, one within the other. The outer and widest circle is
+inhabited by the starving and the homeless, but honest, Poor.
+The second by those who live by Vice; and the third and innermost
+region at the centre is peopled by those who exist by Crime. The whole
+of the three circles is sodden with Drink. Darkest England has many
+more public-houses than the Forest of the Aruwimi has rivers, of which
+Mr. Stanley sometimes had to cross three in half-an-hour.
+
+The borders of this great lost land are not sharply defined. They are
+continually expanding or contracting. Whenever there is a period of
+depression in trade, they stretch; when prosperity returns, they
+contract. So far as individuals are concerned, there are none among
+the hundreds of thousands who live upon the outskirts of the dark
+forest who can truly say that they or their children are secure from
+being hopelessly entangled in its labyrinth. The death of the
+bread-winner, a long illness, a failure in the City, or any one of a
+thousand other causes which might be named, will bring within the first
+circle those who at present imagine themselves free from all danger of
+actual want. The death-rate in Darkest England is high. Death is the
+great gaol-deliverer of the captives. But the dead are hardly in the
+grave before their places are taken by others. Some escape, but the
+majority, their health sapped by their surroundings, become weaker and
+weaker, until at last they fall by the way, perishing without hope at
+the very doors of the palatial mansions which, maybe, some of them
+helped to build.
+
+Some seven years ago a great outcry was made concerning the Housing of
+the Poor. Much was said, and rightly said--it could not be said too
+strongly--concerning the disease-breeding, manhood-destroying
+character of many of the tenements in which the poor herd in our large
+cities. But there is a depth below that of the dweller in the slums.
+It is that of the dweller in the street, who has not even a lair in the
+slums which he can call his own. The houseless Out-of-Work is in one
+respect at least like Him of whom it was said, "Foxes have holes, and
+birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man hath not where to lay
+His head."
+
+The existence of these unfortunates was somewhat rudely forced upon the
+attention of Society in 1887, when Trafalgar Square became the camping
+ground of the Homeless Outcasts of London. Our Shelters have done
+something, but not enough, to provide for the outcasts, who this night
+and every night are walking about the streets, not knowing where they
+can find a spot on which to rest their weary frames.
+
+Here is the return of one of my Officers who was told off this summer
+to report upon the actual condition of the Homeless who have no roof to
+shelter them in all London: --
+
+There are still a large number of Londoners and a considerable
+percentage of wanderers from the country in search of work, who find
+themselves at nightfall destitute. These now betake themselves to the
+seats under the plane trees on the Embankment. Formerly they
+endeavoured to occupy all the seats, but the lynx-eyed Metropolitan
+Police declined to allow any such proceedings, and the dossers, knowing
+the invariable kindness of the City Police, made tracks for that
+portion of the Embankment which, lying east of the Temple, comes under
+the control of the Civic Fathers. Here, between the Temple and
+Blackfriars, I found the poor wretches by the score; almost every seat
+contained its full complement of six--some men, some women--all
+reclining in various postures and nearly all fast asleep. Just as
+Big Ben strikes two, the moon, flashing across the Thames and lighting
+up the stone work of the Embankment, brings into relief a pitiable
+spectacle. Here on the stone abutments, which afford a slight
+protection from the biting wind, are scores of men lying side by side,
+huddled together for warmth, and, of course, without any other covering
+than their ordinary clothing, which is scanty enough at the best. Some
+have laid down a few pieces of waste paper, by way of taking the chill
+off the stones, but the majority are too tired, even for that, and the
+nightly toilet of most consists of first removing the hat, swathing the
+head in whatever old rag may be doing duty as a handkerchief, and then
+replacing the hat.
+
+The intelligent-looking elderly man, who was just fixing himself up on
+a seat, informed me that he frequently made that his night's abode.
+"You see," quoth he, "there's nowhere else so comfortable. I was here
+last night, and Monday and Tuesday as well, that's four nights this
+week. I had no money for lodgings, couldn't earn any, try as I might.
+I've had one bit of bread to-day nothing else whatever, and I've earned
+nothing to-day or yesterday; I had threepence the day before. Gets my
+living by carrying parcels, or minding horses, or odd jobs of that
+sort. You see I haven't got my health, that's where it is. I used to
+work on the London General Omnibus Company and after that on the Road
+Car Company, but I had to go to the infirmary with bronchitis and
+couldn't get work after that. What's the good of a man what's got
+bronchitis and just left the infirmary? Who'll engage him, I'd like to
+know? Besides, it makes me short of breath at times, and I can't do
+much. I'm a widower; wife died long ago. I have one boy, abroad, a
+sailor, but he's only lately started and can't help me. Yes! its very
+fair out here of nights, seats rather hard, but a bit of waste paper
+makes it a lot softer. We have women sleep here often, and children,
+too. They're very well conducted, and there's seldom many rows here,
+you see, because everybody's tired out. We're too sleepy to make a
+row."
+
+Another party, a tall, dull, helpless-looking individual, had walked up
+from the country; would prefer not to mention the place. He had hoped
+to have obtained a hospital letter at the Mansion House so as to obtain
+a truss for a bad rupture, but failing, had tried various other places,
+also in vain, win up minus money or food on the Embankment.
+
+In addition to these sleepers, a considerable number walk about the
+streets up till the early hours of the morning to hunt up some job
+which will bring I copper into the empty exchequer, and save them from
+actual starvation. I had some conversation with one such, a stalwart
+youth lately discharged from the militia, and unable to get work.
+
+"You see," said he, pitifully, "I don't know my way about like most of
+the London fellows. I'm so green, and don't know how to pick up jobs
+like they do. I've been walking the streets almost day and night these
+two weeks and can't get work. I've got the strength, though I shan't
+have it long at this rate. I only want a job. This is the third night
+running that I've walked the streets all night; the only money I get is
+by minding blacking-boys' boxes while they go into Lockhart's for their
+dinner. I got a penny yesterday at it, and twopence for carrying a
+parcel, and to-day I've had a penny. Bought a ha'porth of bread and a
+ha'penny mug of tea."
+
+Poor lad! probably he would soon get into thieves' company, and sink
+into the depths, for there is no other means of living for many like
+him; it is starve or steal, even for the young. There are gangs of lad
+thieves in the low Whitechapel lodging-houses, varying in age from
+thirteen to fifteen, who live by thieving eatables and other easily
+obtained goods from shop fronts. In addition to the Embankment,
+al fresco lodgings are found in the seats outside Spitalfields Church,
+and many homeless wanderers have their own little nooks and corners of
+resort in many sheltered yards, vans, etc., all over London.
+Two poor women I observed making their home in a shop door-way in
+Liverpool Street. Thus they manage in the summer; what it's like in
+winter time is terrible to think of. In many cases it means the
+pauper's grave, as in the case of a young woman who was wont to sleep
+in a van in Bedfordbury. Some men who were aware of her practice
+surprised her by dashing a bucket of water on her. The blow to her
+weak system caused illness, and the inevitable sequel--a coroner's
+jury came to the conclusion that the water only hastened her death,
+which was due, in plain English, to starvation.
+
+The following are some statements taken down by the same Officer from
+twelve men whom he found sleeping on the Embankment on the nights of
+June 13th and 14th, 1890:-
+
+No. 1. "I've slept here two nights; I'm a confectioner by trade;
+I come from Dartford. I got turned off because I'm getting elderly.
+They can get young men cheaper, and I have the rheumatism so bad.
+I've earned nothing these two days; I thought I could get a job at
+Woolwich, so I walked there, but could get nothing. I found a bit of
+bread in the road wrapped up in a bit of newspaper. That did me for
+yesterday. I had a bit of bread and butter to-day. I'm 54 years old.
+When it's wet we stand about all night under the arches.'
+
+No. 2. "Been sleeping out three weeks all but one night; do odd jobs,
+mind horses, and that sort of thing. Earned nothing to-day, or
+shouldn't be here. Have had a pen'orth of bread to-day. That's all.
+Yesterday had some pieces given to me at a cook-shop. Two days last
+week had nothing at all from morning till night. By trade I'm a
+feather-bed dresser, but it's gone out of fashion, and besides that,
+I've a cataract in one eye, and have lost the sight of it completely.
+I'm a widower, have one child, a soldier, at Dover. My last regular
+work was eight months ago, but the firm broke. Been doing odd jobs
+Since."
+
+No. 3. "I'm a tailor; have slept here four nights running. Can't get
+work. Been out of a job three weeks. If I can muster cash I sleep at
+a lodging-house in Vere Street, Glare Market. It was very wet last
+night. I left these seats and went to Covent Garden Market and slept
+under cover. There were about thirty of us. The police moved us on,
+but we went back as soon as they had gone. I've had a pen'orth of
+bread and pen'orth of soup during the last two days--often goes
+without altogether. There are women sleep out here. They are decent
+people, mostly charwomen and such like who can't get work."
+
+No.4. Elderly man; trembles visibly with excitement at mention of
+work; produces a card carefully wrapped in old newspaper, to the effect
+that Mr. J.R. is a member of the Trade Protection League. He is a
+waterside labourer; last job at that was a fortnight since. Has earned
+nothing for five days. Had a bit of bread this morning, but not a
+scrap since. Had a cup of tea and two slices of bread yesterday, and
+the same the day before; the deputy at a lodging house gave it to him.
+He is fifty years old, and is still damp from sleeping out in the wet
+last night.
+
+No. 5. Sawyer by trade, machinery cut him out. Had a job, haymaking
+near Uxbridge. Had been on same job lately for a month; got 2s. 6d a
+day. (Probably spent it in drink, seems a very doubtful worker.) Has
+been odd jobbing a long time, earned 2d. to-day, bought a pen'orth of
+tea and ditto of sugar (produces same from pocket) but can't get any
+place to make the tea; was hoping to get to a lodging house where he
+could borrow a teapot, but had no money. Earned nothing yesterday,
+slept at a casual ward; very poor place, get insufficient food,
+considering the labour. Six ounces of bread and a pint of skilly for
+breakfast, one ounce of cheese and six or seven ounces of bread for
+dinner (bread cut by guess). Tea same as breakfast,--no supper.
+For this you have to break 10 cwt. of stones, or pick 4 lbs. of oakum.
+
+Number 6. Had slept out four nights running. Was a distiller by trade
+been out four months; unwilling to enter into details of leaving, but
+it was his own fault. (Very likely; a heavy, thick, stubborn, and
+senseless-looking fellow, six feet high, thick neck, strong limbs,
+evidently destitute of ability. Does odd jobs; earned 3d. for minding
+a horse, bought a cup of coffee and pen'orth of bread and butter.
+Has no money now. Slept under Waterloo Bridge last night.
+
+No. 7. Good-natured looking man; one who would suffer and say nothing
+clothes shining with age, grease, and dirt; they hang on his joints as
+on pegs; awful rags! I saw him endeavouring to walk. He lifted his
+feet very slowly and put them down carefully in evident pain. His legs
+are bad; been in infirmary several times with them. His uncle and
+grandfather were clergymen; both dead now. He was once in a good
+position in a money office, and afterwards in the London and County
+Bank for nine years. Then he went with an auctioneer who broke, and he
+was left ill, old, and without any trade. "A clerk's place," says he,
+"is never worth having, because there are so many of them, and once out
+you can only get another place with difficulty. I have a
+brother-in-law on the Stock Exchange, but he won't own me. Look at my
+clothes? Is it likely?"
+
+No. 8. Slept here four nights running. Is a builder's labourer by
+trade, that is, a handy-man. Had a settled job for a few weeks which
+expired three weeks since. Has earned nothing for nine days. Then
+helped wash down a shop front and got 2s. 6d. for it. Does anything
+he can get. Is 46 years old. Earns about 2d. or 3d. a day at horse
+minding. A cup of tea and a bit of bread yesterday, and same to-day,
+is all he has had.
+
+No. 9. A plumber's labourer (all these men who are somebody's
+"labourers" are poor samples of humanity, evidently lacking in grit,
+and destitute of ability to do any work which would mean decent wages).
+Judging from appearances, they will do nothing well. They are a kind
+of automaton, with the machinery rusty; slow, dull, and incapable.
+The man of ordinary intelligence leaves them in the rear. They could
+doubtless earn more even at odd jobs, but lack the energy. Of course,
+this means little food, exposure to weather, and increased incapability
+day by day. ("From him that hath not," etc.) Out of work through
+slackness, does odd jobs; slept here three nights running. Is a dock
+labourer when he can get work. Has 6d. an hour; works so many hours,
+according as he is wanted. Gets 2s., 3s., or 4s. 6d. a day.
+Has to work very hard for it. Casual ward life is also very hard he
+says, for those who are not used to it, and there is not enough to eat.
+Has had to-day a pen'orth of bread, for minding a cab. Yesterday he
+spent 3 1/2d. on a breakfast, and that lasted him all day. Age 25.
+
+No. 10. Been out of work a month. Carman by trade. Arm withered,
+and cannot do work properly. Has slept here all the week; got an awful
+cold through the wet. Lives at odd jobs (they all do). Got sixpence
+yesterday for minding a cab and carrying a couple of parcels.
+Earned nothing to-day, but had one good meal; a lady gave it him.
+Has been walking about all day looking for work, and is tired out.
+
+No. 11. Youth, aged 16. Sad case; Londoner. Works at odd jobs and
+matches selling. Has taken 3d. to-day, i.e., net profit 1 1/2d. Has
+five boxes still. Has slept here every night for a month. Before that
+slept in Covent Garden Market or on doorsteps. Been sleeping out six
+months, since he left Feltham Industrial School. Was sent there for
+playing truant. Has had one bit of bread to-day; yesterday had only
+some gooseberries and cherries, i.e., bad ones that had been thrown
+away. Mother is alive. She "chucked him out" when he returned home on
+leaving Feltham because he could'nt find her money for drink.
+
+No. 12. Old man, age 67. Seems to take rather a humorous view of the
+position. Kind of Mark Tapley. Says he can't say he does like it, but
+then he must like it! Ha, ha! Is a slater by trade. Been out of work
+some time; younger men naturally get the work. Gets a bit of
+bricklaying sometimes; can turn his hand to anything. Goes miles and
+gets nothing. Earned one and twopence this week at holding horses.
+Finds it hard, certainly. Used to care once, and get down-hearted, but
+that's no good; don't trouble now. Had a bit of bread and butter and
+cup of coffee to-day. Health is awful bad, not half the size he was;
+exposure and want of food is the cause; got wet last night, and is very
+stiff in consequence. Has been walking about since it was light, that
+is 3 a.m. Was so cold and wet and weak, scarcely knew what to do.
+Walked to Hyde Park, and got a little sleep there on a dry seat as soon
+as the park opened.
+
+These are fairly typical cases of the men who are now wandering
+homeless through the streets. That is the way in which the nomads of
+civilization are constantly being recruited from above.
+
+Such are the stories gathered at random one Midsummer night this year
+under the shade of the plane trees of the Embankment. A month later,
+when one of my staff took the census of the sleepers out of doors along
+the line of the Thames from Blackfriars to Westminster, he found three
+hundred and sixty-eight persons sleeping in the open air. Of these,
+two hundred and seventy were on the Embankment proper, and ninety-eight
+in and about Covent Garden Market, while the recesses of Waterloo and
+Blackfriars Bridges were full of human misery.
+
+This, be it remembered, was not during a season of bad trade.
+The revival of business has been attested on all hands, notably by the
+barometer of strong drink. England is prosperous enough to drink rum
+in quantities which appall the Chancellor of the Exchequer but she is
+not prosperous enough to provide other shelter than the midnight sky
+for these poor outcasts on the Embankment.
+
+To very many even of those who live in London it may be news that there
+are so many hundreds who sleep out of doors every night. There are
+comparatively few people stirring after midnight, and when we are
+snugly tucked into our own beds we are apt to forget the multitude
+outside in the rain and the storm who are shivering the long hours
+through on the hard stone seats in the open or under the arches of the
+railway. These homeless, hungry people are, however there, but being
+broken-spirited folk for the most part they seldom make their voices
+audible in the ears of their neighbours. Now and again, however, a
+harsh cry from the depths is heard for a moment, jarring rudely upon
+the ear and then all is still. The inarticulate classes speak as
+seldom as Balaam's ass. But they sometimes find a voice. Here for
+instance is one such case which impressed me much. It was reported in
+one of the Liverpool papers some time back. The speaker was haranguing
+a small knot of twenty or thirty men: --
+
+"My lads," he commenced, with one hand in the breast of his ragged
+vest, and the other, as usual, plucking nervously at his beard,
+"This kind o' work can't last for ever." (Deep and earnest
+exclamations, "It can't! It shan't") "Well, boys," continued the
+speaker, "Somebody'll have to find a road out o' this. What we want is
+work, not work'us bounty, though the parish has been busy enough
+amongst us lately, God knows! What we want is honest work,
+(Hear, hear.) Now, what I propose is that each of you gets fifty mates
+to join you; that'll make about 1,200 starving chaps--And then?"
+asked several very gaunt and hungry-looking men excitedly.
+"Why, then," continued the leader. "Why, then," interrupted a
+cadaverous-looking man from the farther and darkest end of the cellar,
+"of course we'll make a--London job of it, eh?" "No, no," hastily
+interposed my friend, and holding up his hands deprecatingly, "we'll go
+peaceably about it chaps; we'll go in a body to the Town Hall, and show
+our poverty, and ask for work. We'll take the women and children with
+us too." ("Too ragged! Too starved! They can't walk it!") "The women's
+rags is no disgrace, the staggerin' children 'll show what we come to.
+Let's go a thousand strong, and ask for work and bread!"
+
+Three years ago, in London, there were some such processions. Church
+parades to the Abbey and St. Paul's, bivouacs in Trafalgar Square, etc.
+But Lazarus showed his rags and his sores too conspicuously for
+the convenience of Dives, and was summarily dealt with in the name of
+law and order. But as we have Lord Mayor's Days, when all the well-fed
+fur-clad City Fathers go in State Coaches through the town, why should
+we not have a Lazarus Day, in which the starving Out-of-Works, and the
+sweated half-starved "in-works" of London should crawl in their
+tattered raggedness, with their gaunt, hungry faces, and emaciated
+Wives and children, a Procession of Despair through the main
+thoroughfares past the massive houses and princely palaces of luxurious
+London?
+
+For these men are gradually, but surely, being sucked down into the
+quicksand of modern life. They stretch out their grimy hands to us in
+vain appeal, not for charity, but for work.
+
+Work, work! it is always work that they ask. The Divine curse is to
+them the most blessed of benedictions. "In the sweat of thy brow thou
+shalt eat thy bread," but alas for these forlorn sons of Adam, they
+fail to find the bread to eat, for Society has no work for them to do.
+They have not even leave to sweat. As well as discussing how these
+poor wanderers should in the second Adam "all be made alive," ought we
+not to put forth some effort to effect their restoration to that share
+in the heritage of lab our which is theirs by right of descent from the
+first Adam?
+
+
+CHAPTER 4. THE OUT-OF-WORKS
+
+There is hardly any more pathetic figure than that of the strong able
+worker crying plaintively in the midst of our palaces and churches not
+for charity, but for work, asking only to be allowed the privilege of
+perpetual hard labour, that thereby he may earn wherewith to fill his
+empty belly and silence the cry of his children for food. Crying for it
+and not getting it, seeking for labour as lost treasure and finding it
+not, until at last, all spirit and vigour worn out in the weary quest,
+the once willing worker becomes a broken-down drudge, sodden with
+wretchedness and despairing of all help in this world or in that which
+is to come. Our organisation of industry certainly leaves much to be
+desired. A problem which even slave owners have solved ought not to be
+abandoned as insoluble by the Christian civilisation of the Nineteenth
+Century.
+
+I have already given a few life stories taken down from the lip: of
+those who were found homeless on the Embankment which suggest somewhat
+of the hardships and the misery of the fruitless search for work.
+But what a volume of dull, squalid horror--a horror of great darkness
+gradually obscuring all the light of day from the life of the sufferer
+might be written from the simple prosaic experiences of the ragged
+fellows whom you meet every day in the street. These men, whose labour
+is their only capital, are allowed, nay compelled to waste day after
+day by the want of any means of employment, and then when they have
+seen days and weeks roll by during which their capital has been wasted
+by pounds and pounds, they are lectured for not saving the pence.
+When a rich man cannot employ his capital he puts it out at interest,
+but the bank for the labour capital of the poor man has yet to be
+invented. Yet it might be worth while inventing one. A man's labour
+is not only his capital but his life. When it passes it returns never
+more. To utilise it, to prevent its wasteful squandering, to enable
+the poor man to bank it up for use hereafter, this surely is one of the
+most urgent tasks before civilisation.
+
+Of all heart-breaking toil the hunt for work is surely the worst.
+Yet at any moment let a workman lose his present situation, and he is
+compelled to begin anew the dreary round of fruitless calls. Here is
+the story of one among thousands of the nomads, taken down from his own
+lips, of one who was driven by sheer hunger into crime.
+
+A bright Spring morning found me landed from a western colony.
+Fourteen years had passed since I embarked from the same spot.
+They were fourteen years, as far as results were concerned, of
+non-success, and here I was again in my own land, a stranger, with anew
+career to carve for myself and the battle of life to fight over again.
+
+My first thought was work. Never before had I felt more eager for a
+down right good chance to win my way by honest toil; but where was I to
+find work. With firm determination I started in search. One day
+passed without success and another, and another, but the thought
+cheered me, "Better luck to-morrow." It has been said, "Hope springs
+eternal in the human breast." In my case it was to be severely tested.
+Days soon ran into weeks, and still I was on the trail patiently and
+hopefully. Courtesy and politeness so often met me in my enquiries for
+employment that I often wished they would kick me out, and so vary the
+monotony of the sickly veneer of consideration that so thinly overlaid
+the indifference and the absolute unconcern they had to my need. A few
+cut up rough and said, No; we don't want you. "Please don't trouble us
+again (this after the second visit). We have no vacancy; and if we
+had, we have plenty of people on hand to fill it."
+
+Who can express the feeling that comes over one when the fact begins to
+dawn that the search for work is a failure? All my hopes and prospects
+seemed to have turned out false. Helplessness, I had often heard of
+it, had often talked about it, thought I knew all about it. Yes! in
+others, but now began to understand it for myself. Gradually my
+personal appearance faded. My once faultless linen became unkempt and
+unclean. Down further and further went the heels of my shoes, and I
+drifted into that distressing condition "shabby gentility." If the odds
+were against me before, how much more so now, seeing that I was too
+shabby even to command attention, much less a reply to my enquiry for
+work.
+
+Hunger now began to do its work, and I drifted to the dock gates, but
+what chance had I among the hungry giants there? And so down the
+stream drifted until "Grim Want" brought me to the last shilling, the
+last lodging, and the last meal. What shall I do? Where shall I go?
+I tried to think. Must I starve? Surely there must be some door still
+open for honest willing endeavour, but where? What can I do? "Drink,"
+said the Tempter; but to drink to drunkenness needs cash, and oblivion
+by liquor demands an equivalent in the currency.
+
+Starve or steal. "You must do one or the other," said the Tempter.
+But recoiled from being a Thief. "Why be so particular?" says the
+Tempter again "You are down now, who will trouble about you?
+Why trouble about yourself? The choice is between starving and
+stealing." And I struggled until hunger stole my judgment, and then I
+became a Thief.
+
+No one can pretend that it was an idle fear of death by starvation
+which drove this poor fellow to steal. Deaths from actual hunger an
+more common than is generally supposed. Last year, a man, whose name
+was never known, was walking through St. James's Park, when three of
+our Shelter men saw him suddenly stumble and fall. They thought he was
+drunk, but found he had fainted. They carried him to the bridge and
+gave him to the police. They took him to St George's Hospital, where
+he died. It appeared that he had, according to his own tale, walked up
+from Liverpool, and had been without food for five days. The doctor,
+however, said he had gone longer than that. The jury returned a
+verdict of "Death from Starvation."
+
+Without food for five days or longer! Who that has experienced the
+sinking sensation that is felt when even a single meal has been
+sacrificed may form some idea of what kind of slow torture killed that
+man!
+
+In 1888 the average daily number of unemployed in London was estimated
+by the Mansion House Committee at 20,000. This vast reservoir of
+unemployed labour is the bane of all efforts to raise the scale of
+living, to improve the condition of labour. Men hungering to death for
+lack of opportunity to earn a crust are the materials from which
+"blacklegs" are made, by whose aid the labourer is constantly defeated
+in his attempts to improve his condition.
+
+This is the problem that underlies all questions of Trades Unionism and
+all Schemes for the Improvement of the Condition of the Industrial Army.
+To rear any stable edifice that will not perish when the first storm
+rises and the first hurricane blows, it must be built not upon sand,
+but upon a rock. And the worst of all existing Schemes for social
+betterment by organisation of the skilled workers and the like is that
+they are founded, not upon "rock," nor even upon "sand," but upon the
+bottomless bog of the stratum of the Workless. It is here where we
+must begin. The regimentation of industrial workers who have got
+regular work is not so very difficult. That can be done, and is
+being done, by themselves. The problem that we have to face is the
+regimentation, the organisation, of those who have not got work, or who
+have only irregular work, and who from sheer pressure of absolute
+starvation are driven irresistibly into cut-throat competition with
+their better employed brothers and sisters. Skin for skin, all that a
+man hath, will he give for his life; much more, then, will those who
+experimentally know not God give all that they might hope hereafter to
+have--in this world or in the world to come.
+
+There is no gainsaying the immensity of the problem. It is appalling
+enough to make us despair. But those who do not put their trust in man
+alone, but in One who is Almighty, have no right to despair.
+To despair is to lose faith; to despair is to forget God Without God we
+can do nothing in this frightful chaos of human misery. But with God
+we can do all things, and in the faith that He has made in His image
+all the children of men we face even this hideous wreckage of humanity
+with a cheerful confidence that if we are but faithful to our own high
+calling He will not fail to open up a way of deliverance.
+
+I have nothing to say against those who are endeavouring to open up a
+way of escape without any consciousness of God's help. For them I feel
+only sympathy and compassion. In so far as they are endeavouring to
+give bread to the hungry, clothing to the naked, and above all, work to
+the workless, they are to that extent endeavouring to do the will of
+our Father which is in Heaven, and woe be unto all those who say them
+nay! But to be orphaned of all sense of the Fatherhood of God is surely
+not a secret source of strength. It is in most cases--it would be in
+my own--the secret of paralysis. If I did not feel my Father's hand
+in the darkness, and hear His voice in the silence of the night watches
+bidding me put my hand to this thing, I would shrink back dismayed;--
+but as it is I dare not.
+
+How many are there who have made similar attempts and have failed, and
+we have heard of them no more! Yet none of them proposed to deal with
+more than the mere fringe of the evil which, God helping me, I will try
+to face in all its immensity. Most Schemes that are put forward for
+the Improvement of the Circumstances of the People are either avowedly
+or actually limited to those whose condition least needs amelioration.
+The Utopians, the economists, and most of the philanthropists propound
+remedies, which, if adopted to-morrow, would only affect the
+aristocracy of the miserable. It is the thrifty, the industrious,
+the sober, the thoughtful who can take advantage of these plans.
+But the thrifty, the industrious, the sober, and the thoughtful are
+already very well able for the most part to take care of themselves.
+No one will ever make even a visible dint on the Morass of Squalor who
+does not deal with the improvident, the lazy, the vicious, and the
+criminal. The Scheme of Social Salvation is not worth discussion which
+is not as wide as the Scheme of Eternal Salvation set forth in the
+Gospel. The Glad Tidings must be to every creature, not merely to an
+elect few who are to be saved while the mass of their fellow are
+predestined to a temporal damnation. We have had this doctrine of an
+inhuman cast-iron pseudo-political economy too long enthroned amongst us.
+It is now time to fling down the false idol and proclaim a Temporal
+Salvation as full, free, and universal, and with no other limitations
+than the "Whosoever will," of the Gospel.
+
+To attempt to save the Lost, we must accept no Limitations to human
+brotherhood. If the Scheme which I set forth in these and the
+following pages is not applicable to the Thief, the Harlot,
+the Drunkard, and the Sluggard, it may as well be dismissed without
+ceremony. As Christ came to call not the saints but sinners to
+repentance, so the New Message of Temporal Salvation, of salvation from
+pinching poverty, from rags and misery, must be offered to all.
+They may reject it, of course. But we who call ourselves by the name
+of Christ are not worthy to profess to be His disciples until we have
+set an open door before the least and worst of these who are now
+apparently imprisoned for life in a horrible dungeon of misery and
+despair. The responsibility for its rejection must be theirs, not
+ours. We all know the prayer, "Give me neither poverty nor riches,
+feed me with food convenient for me"--and for every child of man on
+this planet, thank God the prayer of Agur, the son of Jakeh, may be
+fulfilled.
+
+At present how far it is from being realised may be seen by anyone who
+will take the trouble to go down to the docks and see the struggle for
+work. Here is a sketch of what was found there this summer: --
+
+London Docks, 7.25 a.m. The three pairs of huge wooden doors are
+closed. Leaning against then, and standing about, there are perhaps a
+couple of hundred men. The public house opposite is full, doing a
+heavy trade. All along the road are groups of men, and from each
+direction a steady stream increases the crowd at the gate.
+
+7.30 Doors open, there is a general rush to the interior. Everybody
+marches about a hundred yards along to the iron barrier--a temporary
+chair affair, guarded by the dock police. Those men who have
+previously (i.e., night before) been engaged, show their ticket and
+pass through, about six hundred. The rest--some five hundred stand
+behind the barrier, patiently waiting the chance of a job, but less
+than twenty of these get engaged. They are taken on by a foreman who
+appears next the barrier and proceeds to pick his men. No sooner is
+the foreman seen, than there is a wild rush to the spot and a sharp mad
+fight to "catch his eye." The men picked out, pass the barrier, and the
+excitement dies away until another lot of men are wanted.
+
+They wait until eight o'clock strikes, which is the signal to withdraw.
+The barrier is taken down and all those hundreds of men, wearily
+disperse to "find a job." Five hundred applicants, twenty acceptances!
+No wonder one tired-out looking individual ejaculates, "Oh dear,
+Oh dear! Whatever shall I do?" A few hang about until mid-day on the
+slender chance of getting taken on then for half a day.
+
+Ask the men and they will tell you something like the following story,
+which gives the simple experiences of a dock labourer.
+
+R. P. said: --"I was in regular work at the South West India Dock
+before the strike. We got 5d. an hour. Start work 8 a.m. summer and
+9 a.m winter. Often there would be five hundred go, and only twenty
+get taken on (that is besides those engaged the night previous.)
+The foreman stood in his box, and called out the men he wanted.
+He would know quite five hundred by name. It was a regular fight to
+get work, I have known nine hundred to be taken on, but there's always
+hundreds turned away. You see they get to know when ships come in, and
+when they're consequently likely to be wanted, and turn up then in
+greater numbers. I would earn 30s. a week sometimes and then perhaps
+nothing for a fortnight. That's what makes it so hard. You get
+nothing to eat for a week scarcely, and then when you get taken on, you
+are so weak that you can't do it properly. I've stood in the crowd at
+the gate and had to go away without work, hundreds of times. Still I
+should go at it again if I could. I got tired of the little work and
+went away into the country to get work on a farm, but couldn't get it,
+so I'm without the 10s. that it costs to join the Dockers' Union. I'm
+going to the country again in a day or two to try again. Expect to get
+3s. a day perhaps. Shall come back to the docks again. Then is a
+chance of getting regular dock work, and that is, to lounge about the
+pubs where the foremen go, and treat them. Then they will very likely
+take you on next day."
+
+R. P. was a non-Unionist. Henry F. is a Unionist. His history is much
+the same.
+
+"I worked at St. Katherine's Docks five months ago. You have to get
+to the gates at 6 o'clock for the first call. There's generally about
+400 waiting. They will take on one to two hundred. Then at 7 o'clock
+there's a second call. Another 400 will have gathered by then, and
+another hundred or so will be taken on. Also there will probably be
+calls at nine and one o'clock. About the same number turn up but
+there's no work for many hundreds of them. I was a Union man. That
+means 10s. a week sick pay, or 8s. a week for slight accidents; also
+some other advantages. The Docks won't take men on now unless they are
+Unionists. The point is that there's too many men. I would often be
+out of work a fortnight to three weeks at a time. Once earned #3 in a
+week, working day and night, but then had a fortnight out directly
+after. Especially when then don't happen to be any ships in for a few
+days, which means, of course, nothing to unload. That's the time;
+there's plenty of men almost starving then. They have no trade to go
+to, or can get no work at it, and they swoop down to the docks for
+work, when they had much better stay away."
+
+But it is not only at the dock-gates that you come upon these
+unfortunates who spend their lives in the vain hunt for work. Here is
+the story of another man whose case has only too many parallels.
+
+C. is a fine built man, standing nearly six feet. He has been in the
+Royal Artillery for eight years and held very good situations whilst in
+it. It seems that he was thrifty and consequently steady. He bought
+his discharge, and being an excellent cook opened a refreshment house,
+but at the end of five months he was compelled to close his shop on
+account of slackness in trade, which was brought about by the closing
+of a large factory in the locality.
+
+After having worked in Scotland and Newcastle-on-Tyne for a few years,
+and through ill health having to give up his situation, he came to
+London with he hope that he might get something to do in his native
+town. He has had no regular employment for the past eight months.
+His wife and family are in a state of destitution, and he remarked,
+"We only had 1 lb. of bread between us yesterday." He is six weeks in
+arrears of rent, and is afraid that he will be ejected. The furniture
+which is in his home is not worth 3s. and the clothes of each member
+of his family are in a tattered state and hardly fit for the rag bag.
+He assured us he had tried every where to get employment and would be
+willing to take anything. His characters are very good indeed.
+
+Now, it may seem a preposterous dream that any arrangement can be
+devised by which it may be possible, under all circumstances,
+to provide food, clothes, and shelter for all these Out-of-Works
+without any loss of self respect; but I am convinced that it can be
+done, providing only that they are willing to Work, and, God helping
+me, if the means are forthcoming, I mean to try to do it; how, and
+where, and when, I will explain in subsequent chapters.
+
+All that I need say here is, that so long as a man or woman is willing
+to submit to the discipline indispensable in every campaign against any
+formidable foe, there appears to me nothing impossible about this
+ideal; and the great element of hope before us is that the majority
+are, beyond all gainsaying, eager for work. Most of them now do more
+exhausting work in seeking for employment than the regular toilers do
+in their workshops, and do it, too, under the darkness of hope deferred
+which maketh the heart sick.
+
+
+CHAPTER 5. ON THE VERGE OF THE ABYSS.
+
+There is, unfortunately, no need for me to attempt to set out, however
+imperfectly, any statement of the evil case of the sufferers what we
+wish to help. For years past the Press has been filled with echoes of
+the "Bitter Cry of Outcast London," with pictures of "Horrible Glasgow,"
+and the like. We have had several volumes describing "How the Poor Live"
+and I may therefore assume that all my readers are more or less cognizant
+of the main outlines a "Darkest England." My slum officers are living in
+the midst of it their reports are before me, and one day I may publish
+some more detailed account of the actual facts of the social condition
+of the Sunken Millions. But not now. All that must be taken as read.
+I only glance at the subject in order to bring into clear relief the
+salient points of our new Enterprise.
+
+I have spoken of the houseless poor. Each of these represents a point
+in the scale of human suffering below that of those who have still
+contrived to keep a shelter over their heads. A home is a home, be it
+ever so low; and the desperate tenacity with which the poor will cling
+to the last wretched semblance of one is very touching. There are vile
+dens, fever-haunted and stenchful crowded courts, where the return of
+summer is dreaded because it means the unloosing of myriads of vermin
+which render night unbearable, which, nevertheless, are regarded at
+this moment as havens of rest by their hard-working occupants.
+They can scarcely be said to be furnished. A chair, a mattress, and a
+few miserable sticks constitute all the furniture of the single room in
+which they have to sleep, and breed, and die; but they cling to it as a
+drowning man to a half-submerged raft. Every week they contrive by
+pinching and scheming to raise the rent, for with them it is pay or go
+and they struggle to meet the collector as the sailor nerves himself to
+avoid being sucked under by the foaming wave. If at any time work
+fails or sickness comes they are liable to drop helplessly into the
+ranks of the homeless. It is bad for a single man to have to confront
+the struggle for life in the streets and Casual Wards. But how much
+more terrible must it be for the married man with his wife and children
+to be turned out into the streets. So long as the family has a lair
+into which it can creep at night, he keeps his footing; but when he
+loses that solitary foothold then arrives the time if there be such a
+thing as Christian compassion, for the helping hand to be held out to
+save him from the vortex that sucks him downward--ay, downward to the
+hopeless under-strata of crime and despair.
+
+"The heart knoweth its own bitterness and the stranger inter-meddleth
+not therewith." But now and then out of the depths there sounds a
+bitter wail as of some strong swimmer in his agony as he is drawn under
+by the current. A short time ago a respectable man, a chemist in
+Holloway, fifty years of age, driven hard to the wall, tried to end it
+all by cutting his throat. His wife also cut her throat, and at the
+same time they gave strychnine to their only child. The effort failed,
+and they were placed on trial for attempted murder. In the Court a
+letter was read which the poor wretch had written before attempting his
+life:-
+
+MY DEAREST GEORGE,--Twelve months have I now passed of a most
+miserable and struggling existence, and I really cannot stand it any
+more. I am completely worn out, and relations who could assist me
+won't do any more, for such was uncle's last intimation. Never mind;
+he can't take his money and comfort with him, and in all probability
+will find himself in the same boat as myself. He never enquires
+whether I am starving or not. #3--a mere flea-bite to him--would
+have put us straight, and with his security and good interest might
+have obtained me a good situation long ago. I can face poverty and
+degradation no longer, and would sooner die than go to the workhouse,
+whatever may be the awful consequences of the steps we have taken.
+We have, God forgive us, taken our darling Arty with us out of pure
+love and affection, so that the darling should never be cuffed about,
+or reminded or taunted with his heartbroken parents' crime. My poor
+wife has done her best at needle-work, washing, house-minding, &c.,
+in fact, anything and everything that would bring in a shilling; but it
+would only keep us in semi-starvation. I have now done six weeks'
+travelling from morning till night, and not received one farthing for
+it, If that is not enough to drive you mad--wickedly mad--I don't
+know what is. No bright prospect anywhere; no ray of hope.
+
+May God Almighty forgive us for this heinous sin, and have mercy on our
+sinful souls, is the prayer of your miserable, broken-hearted, but
+loving brother, Arthur. We have now done everything that we can
+possibly think of to avert this wicked proceeding, but can discover no
+ray of hope. Fervent prayer has availed us nothing; our lot is cast,
+and we must abide by it. It must be God's will or He would have
+ordained it differently. Dearest Georgy, I am exceedingly sorry to
+leave you all, but I am mad--thoroughly mad. You, dear, must try and
+forget us, and, if possible, forgive us; for I do not consider it our
+own fault we have not succeeded. If you could get #3 for our bed it
+will pay our rent, and our scanty furniture may fetch enough to bury us
+in a cheap way. Don't grieve over us or follow us, for we shall not be
+worthy of such respect. Our clergyman has never called on us or given
+us the least consolation, though I called on him a month ago. He is
+paid to preach, and there he considers his responsibility ends, the
+rich excepted. We have only yourself and a very few others who care
+one pin what becomes of us, but you must try and forgive us, is the
+last fervent prayer of your devotedly fond and affectionate but
+broken-hearted and persecuted brother.
+(Signed) R. A. O----.
+
+That is an authentic human document--a transcript from the life of
+one among thousands who go down inarticulate into the depths, They die
+and make no sign, or, worse still, they continue to exist, carrying
+about with them, year after year, the bitter ashes of a life from which
+the furnace of misfortune has burnt away all joy, and hope, and
+strength. Who is there who has not been confronted by many despairing
+ones, who come, as Richard O---- went, to the clergyman, crying for
+help, and how seldom have we been able to give it them? It is unjust,
+no doubt, for them to blame the clergy and the comfortable well-to-do
+--for what can they do but preach and offer good advice? To assist
+all the Richard O----s' by direct financial advance would drag even
+Rothschild into the gutter. And what else can be done? Yet something
+else must be done if Christianity is not to be a mockery to perishing
+men.
+
+Here is another case, a very common case, which illustrates how the
+Army of Despair is recruited.
+
+Mr. T., Margaret Place, Gascoign Place, Bethnal Green, is a bootmaker
+by trade. Is a good hand, and has earned three shillings and sixpence
+to four shillings and sixpence a day. He was taken ill last Christmas,
+and went to the London Hospital; was there three months. A week after
+he had gone Mrs. T. had rheumatic fever, and was taken to Bethnal
+Green Infirmary, where she remained about three months. Directly after
+they had been taken ill, their furniture was seized for the three
+weeks' rent which was owing. Consequently, on becoming convalescent,
+they were homeless. They came out about the same time. He went out to
+a lodging-house for a night or two, until she came out. He then had
+twopence, and she had sixpence, which a nurse had given her. They went
+to a lodging-house together, but the society there was dreadful.
+Next day he had a day's work, and got two shillings and sixpence, and
+on the strength of this they took a furnished room at tenpence per day
+(payable nightly). His work lasted a few weeks, when he was again
+taken ill, lost his job, and spent all their money. Pawned a shirt and
+apron for a shilling; spent that, too. At last pawned their tools for
+three shillings, which got them a few days' food and lodging. He is
+now minus tools and cannot work at his own job, and does anything he
+can. Spent their last twopence on a pen'orth each of tea and sugar.
+In two days they had a slice of bread and butter each, that's all.
+They are both very weak through want of food.
+
+"Let things alone," the laws of supply and demand, and all the rest
+of the excuses by which those who stand on firm ground salve their
+consciences when they leave their brother to sink, how do they look
+when we apply them to the actual loss of life at sea? Does "Let things
+alone" man the lifeboat? Will the inexorable laws of political economy
+save the shipwrecked sailor from the boiling surf? They often enough
+are responsible for his disaster. Coffin ships are a direct result of
+the wretched policy of non-interference with the legitimate operations
+of commerce, but no desire to make it pay created the National Lifeboat
+Institution, no law of supply and demand actuates the volunteers who
+risk their lives to bring the shipwrecked to shore.
+
+What we have to do is to apply the same principle to society. We want
+a Social Lifeboat Institution, a Social Lifeboat Brigade, to snatch
+from the abyss those who, if left to themselves, will perish as
+miserably as the crew of a ship that founders in mid-ocean.
+
+The moment that we take in hand this work we shall be compelled to turn
+our attention seriously to the question whether prevention is not
+better than cure. It is easier and cheaper, and in every way better,
+to prevent the loss of home than to have to re-create that home.
+It is better to keep a man out of the mire than to let him fall in
+first and then risk the chance of plucking him out. Any Scheme,
+therefore, that attempts to deal with the reclamation of the lost must
+tend to develop into an endless variety of ameliorative measures, of
+some of which I shall have somewhat to say hereafter. I only mention
+the subject here in order that no one may say I am blind to the
+necessity of going further and adopting wider plans of operation than
+those which I put forward in this book. The renovation of our Social
+System is a work so vast that no one of us, nor all of us put together,
+can define all the measures that will have to be taken before we attain
+even the Cab-Horse Ideal of existence for our children and children's
+children. All that we can do is to attack, in a serious, practical
+spirit the worst and most pressing evils, knowing that if we do our
+duty we obey the voice of God. He is the Captain of our Salvation.
+If we but follow where He leads we shall not want for marching orders,
+nor need we imagine that He will narrow the field of operations.
+
+I am labouring under no delusions as to the possibility of inaugurating
+the Millennium by any social specific. In the struggle of life the
+weakest will go to the wall, and there are so many weak. The fittest,
+in tooth and claw, will survive. All that we can do is to soften the
+lot of the unfit and make their suffering less horrible than it is at
+present. No amount of assistance will give a jellyfish a backbone.
+No outside propping will make some men stand erect. All material help
+from without is useful only in so far as it develops moral strength
+within. And some men seem to have lost even the very faculty of
+self-help. There is an immense lack of common sense and of vital
+energy on the part of multitudes.
+
+It is against Stupidity in every shape and form that we have to wage
+our eternal battle. But how can we wonder at the want of sense on the
+part of those who have had no advantages, when we see such plentiful
+absence of that commodity on the part of those who have had all the
+advantages?
+
+How can we marvel if, after leaving generation after generation to grow
+up uneducated and underfed, there should be developed a heredity of
+incapacity, and that thousands of dull-witted people should be born
+into the world, disinherited before their birth of their share in the
+average intelligence of mankind?
+
+Besides those who are thus hereditarily wanting in the qualities
+necessary to enable them to hold their own, there are the weak, the
+disabled, the aged, and the unskilled; worse than all, there is the
+want of character. Those who have the best of reputation, if they lose
+their foothold on the ladder, find it difficult enough to regain their
+place. What, then, can men and women who have no character do? When a
+master has the choice of a hundred honest men, is it reasonable to
+expect that he will select a poor fellow with tarnished reputation?
+All this is true, and it is one of the things that makes the problem
+almost insoluble. And insoluble it is, I am absolutely convinced
+unless it is possible to bring new moral life into the soul of these
+people. This should be the first object of every social reformer,
+whose work will only last if it is built on the solid foundation of a
+new birth, to cry "You must be born again."
+
+To get a man soundly saved it is not enough to put on him a pair of new
+breeches, to give him regular work, or even to give him a University
+education. These things are all outside a man, and if the inside
+remains unchanged you have wasted your labour. You must in some way or
+other graft upon the man's nature a new nature, which has in it the
+element of the Divine. All that I propose in this book is governed by
+that principle.
+
+The difference between the method which seeks to regenerate the man by
+ameliorating his circumstances and that which ameliorates his
+circumstances in order to get at the regeneration of his heart, is the
+difference between the method of the gardener who grafts a Ribstone
+Pippin on a crab-apple tree and one who merely ties apples with string
+upon the branches of the crab. To change the nature of the individual,
+to get at the heart, to save his soul is the only real, lasting method
+of doing him any good. In many modern schemes of social regeneration
+it is forgotten that "it takes a soul to move a body, e'en to a cleaner
+sty," and at the risk of being misunderstood and misrepresented, I must
+assert in the most unqualified way that it is primarily and mainly for
+the sake of saving the soul that I seek the salvation of the body.
+
+But what is the use of preaching the Gospel to men whose whole
+attention is concentrated upon a mad, desperate struggle to keep
+themselves alive? You might as well give a tract to a shipwrecked
+sailor who is battling with the surf which has drowned his comrades and
+threatens to drown him. He will not listen to you. Nay, he cannot
+hear you any more than a man whose head is underwater can listen to a
+sermon. The first thing to do is to get him at least a footing on firm
+ground, and to give him room to live. Then you may have a chance.
+At present you have none. And you will have all the better opportunity
+to find a way to his heart, if he comes to know that it was you who
+pulled him out of the horrible pit and the miry clay in which he was
+sinking to perdition.
+
+
+CHAPTER 6. THE VICIOUS.
+
+There are many vices and seven deadly sins. But of late years many of
+the seven have contrived to pass themselves off as virtues. Avarice,
+for instance; and Pride, when re-baptised thrift and self-respect, have
+become the guardian angels of Christian civilisation; and as for Envy,
+it is the corner-stone upon which much of our competitive system is
+founded. There are still two vices which are fortunate, or
+unfortunate, enough to remain undisguised, not even concealing from
+themselves the fact that they are vices and not virtues. One is
+drunkenness; the other fornication. The viciousness of these vices is
+so little disguised, even from those who habitually practise them, that
+there will be a protest against merely describing one of them by the
+right Biblical name. Why not say prostitution? For this reason:
+prostitution is a word applied to only one half of the vice, and that
+the most pitiable. Fornication hits both sinners alike. Prostitution
+applies only to the woman.
+
+When, however, we cease to regard this vice from the point of view of
+morality and religion, and look at it solely as a factor in the social
+problem, the word prostitution is less objectionable. For the social
+burden of this vice is borne almost entirely by women. The male sinner
+does not, by the mere fact of his sin, find himself in a worse position
+in obtaining employment, in finding a home, or even in securing a wife.
+His wrong-doing only hits him in his purse, or, perhaps, in his health.
+His incontinence, excepting so far as it relates to the woman whose
+degradation it necessitates, does not add to the number of those for
+whom society has to provide. It is an immense addition to the infamy
+of this vice in man that its consequences have to be borne almost
+exclusively by woman. The difficulty of dealing with drunkards and
+harlots is almost insurmountable. Were it not that I utterly repudiate
+as a fundamental denial of the essential principle of the Christian
+religion the popular pseudo-scientific doctrine that any man or woman
+is past saving by the grace of God and the power of the Holy Spirit,
+I would sometimes be disposed to despair when contemplating these
+victims of the Devil. The doctrine of Heredity and the suggestion of
+Irresponsibility come perilously near re-establishing, on scientific
+bases, the awful dogma of Reprobation which has cast so terrible a
+shadow over the Christian Church. For thousands upon thousands of
+these poor wretches are, as Bishop South truly said, "not so much born
+into this world as damned into it." The bastard of a harlot, born in a
+brothel, suckled on gin, and familiar from earliest infancy with all
+the bestialities of debauch, violated before she is twelve, and driven
+out into the streets by her mother a year or two later, what chance is
+there for such a girl in this world--I say nothing about the next?
+Yet such a case is not exceptional. There are many such differing in
+detail, but in essentials the same. And with boys it is almost as bad.
+There are thousands who were begotten when both parents were besotted
+with drink, whose mothers saturated themselves with alcohol every day
+of their pregnancy, who may be said to have sucked in a taste for
+strong drink with their mothers' milk, and who were surrounded from
+childhood with opportunities and incitements to drink. How can we
+marvel that the constitution thus disposed to intemperance finds the
+stimulus of drink indispensable? Even if they make a stand against it,
+the increasing pressure of exhaustion and of scanty food drives them
+back to the cup. Of these poor wretches, born slaves of the bottle,
+predestined to drunkenness from their mother's womb, there are--who
+can say how many? Yet they are all men; all with what the Russian
+peasants call "a spark of God" in them, which can never be wholly
+obscured and destroyed while life exists, and if any social scheme is
+to be comprehensive and practical it must deal with these men. It must
+provide for the drunkard and the harlot as it provides for the
+improvident and the out-of-work. But who is sufficient for these
+things?
+
+I will take the question of the drunkard, for the drink difficulty lies
+at the root of everything. Nine-tenths of our poverty, squalor, vice,
+and crime spring from this poisonous tap-root. Many of our social
+evils, which overshadow the land like so many upas trees, would dwindle
+away and die if they were not constantly watered with strong drink.
+There is universal agreement on that point; in fact, the agreement as
+to the evils of intemperance is almost as universal as the conviction
+that politicians will do nothing practical to interfere with them.
+In Ireland, Mr. Justice Fitzgerald says that intemperance leads to
+nineteen-twentieths of the crime in that country, but no one proposes a
+Coercion Act to deal with that evil. In England, the judges all say
+the same thing. Of course it is a mistake to assume that a murder, for
+instance, would never be committed by sober men, because murderers in
+most cases prime themselves for their deadly work by a glass of Dutch
+courage. But the facility of securing a reinforcement of passion
+undoubtedly tends to render always dangerous, and sometimes
+irresistible, the temptation to violate the laws of God and man.
+
+Mere lectures against the evil habit are, however, of no avail.
+We have to recognise, that the gin-palace, like many other evils,
+although a poisonous, is still a natural outgrowth of our social
+conditions. The tap-room in many cases is the poor man's only parlour.
+Many a man takes to beer, not from the love of beer, but from a natural
+craving for the light, warmth, company, and comfort which is thrown in
+along with the beer, and which he cannot get excepting by buying beer.
+Reformers will never get rid of the drink shop until they can outbid it
+in the subsidiary attractions which it offers to its customers.
+Then, again, let us never forget that the temptation to drink is
+strongest when want is sharpest and misery the most acute. A well-fed
+man is not driven to drink by the craving that torments the hungry; and
+the comfortable do not crave for the boon of forgetfulness. Gin is the
+only Lethe of the miserable. The foul and poisoned air of the dens in
+which thousands live predisposes to a longing for stimulant.
+Fresh air, with its oxygen and its ozone, being lacking, a man supplies
+the want with spirit. After a time the longing for drink becomes a
+mania. Life seems as insupportable without alcohol as without food.
+It is a disease often inherited, always developed by indulgence, but as
+clearly a disease as ophthalmia or stone.
+
+All this should predispose us to charity and sympathy.
+While recognising that the primary responsibility must always rest upon
+the individual, we may fairly insist that society, which, by its
+habits, its customs, and its laws, has greased the slope down which
+these poor creatures slide to perdition, shall seriously take in hand
+their salvation. How many are there who are, more or less, under the
+dominion of strong drink? Statistics abound, but they seldom tell us
+what we want to know. We know how many public-houses there are in the
+land, and how many arrests for drunkenness the police make in a year;
+but beyond that we know little. Everyone knows that for one man who is
+arrested for drunkenness there are at least ten and often twenty--who
+go home intoxicated. In London, for instance, there are 14,000 drink
+shops, and every year 20,000 persons are arrested for drunkenness. But
+who can for a moment believe that there are only 20,000, more or less,
+habitual drunkards in London? By habitual drunkard I do not mean one
+who is always drunk, but one who is so much under the dominion of the
+evil habit that he cannot be depended upon not to get drunk whenever
+the opportunity offers.
+
+In the United Kingdom there are 190,000 public-houses, and every year
+there are 200,000 arrests for drunkenness. Of course, several of these
+arrests refer to the same person, who is locked up again and again.
+Were this not so, if we allowed six drunkards to each house as an
+average, or five habitual drunkards for one arrested for drunkenness,
+we should arrive at a total of a million adults who are more or less
+prisoners of the publican--as a matter of fact, Isaac Hoyle gives
+1 in 12 of the adult population. This may be an excessive estimate,
+but, if we take half of a million, we shall not be accused of
+exaggeration. Of these some are in the last stage of confirmed
+dipsomania; others are but over the verge; but the procession tends
+ever downwards.
+
+The loss which the maintenance of this huge standing army of a half of
+a million of men who are more or less always besotted men whose
+intemperance impairs their working power, consumes their earnings, and
+renders their homes wretched, has long been a familiar theme of the
+platform. But what can be done for them? Total abstinence is no doubt
+admirable, but how are you to get them to be totally abstinent? When a
+man is drowning in mid-ocean the one thing that is needful, no doubt,
+is that he should plant his feet firmly on terra firma. But how is he
+to get there? It is just what he cannot do. And so it is with the
+drunkards. If they are to be rescued there must be something more done
+for them than at present is attempted, unless, of course, we decide
+definitely to allow the iron laws of nature to work themselves out in
+their destruction. In that case it might be more merciful to
+facilitate the slow workings of natural law. There is no need of
+establishing a lethal chamber for drunkards like that into which the
+lost dogs of London are driven, to die in peaceful sleep under the
+influence of carbonic oxide. The State would only need to go a little
+further than it goes at present in the way of supplying poison to the
+community. If, in addition to planting a flaming gin palace at each
+corner, free to all who enter, it were to supply free gin to all who
+have attained a certain recognised standard of inebriety, delirium
+tremens would soon reduce our drunken population to manageable
+proportions. I can imagine a cynical millionaire of the scientific
+philanthropic school making a clearance of all the drunkards in a
+district by the simple expedient of an unlimited allowance of alcohol.
+But that for us is out of the question. The problem of what to do with
+our half of a million drunkards remains to be solved, and few more
+difficult questions confront the social reformer.
+
+The question of the harlots is, however, quite as insoluble by the
+ordinary methods. For these unfortunates no one who looks below the
+surface can fail to have the deepest sympathy. Some there are, no
+doubt, perhaps many, who--whether from inherited passion or from evil
+education--have deliberately embarked upon a life of vice, but with
+the majority it is not so. Even those who deliberately and of free
+choice adopt the profession of a prostitute, do so under the stress of
+temptations which few moralists seem to realise. Terrible as the fact
+is, there is no doubt it is a fact that there is no industrial career
+in which for a short time a beautiful girl can make as much money with
+as little trouble as the profession of a courtesan. The case recently
+tried at the Lewes assizes, in which the wife of an officer in the army
+admitted that while living as a kept mistress she had received as much
+as #4,000 a year, was no doubt very exceptional. Even the most
+successful adventuresses seldom make the income of a Cabinet Minister.
+But take women in professions and in businesses all round, and the
+number of young women who have received #500 in one year for the sale
+of their person is larger than the number of women of all ages who make
+a similar sum by honest industry. It is only the very few who draw
+these gilded prizes, and they only do it for a very short time. But it
+is the few prizes in every profession which allure the multitude, who
+think little of the many blanks. And speaking broadly, vice offers to
+every good-looking girl during the first bloom of her youth and beauty
+more money than she can earn by labour in any field of industry open to
+her sex. The penalty exacted afterwards is disease, degradation and
+death, but these things at first are hidden from her sight.
+
+The profession of a prostitute is the only career in which the maximum
+income is paid to the newest apprentice. It is the one calling in
+which at the beginning the only exertion is that of self-indulgence;
+all the prizes are at the commencement. It is the ever new embodiment
+of the old fable of the sale of the soul to the Devil. The tempter
+offers wealth, comfort, excitement, but in return the victim must sell
+her soul, nor does the other party forget to exact his due to the
+uttermost farthing. Human nature, however, is short-sighted.
+Giddy girls, chafing against the restraints of uncongenial industry,
+see the glittering bait continually before them. They are told that if
+they will but "do as others do" they will make more in a night, if they
+are lucky, than they can make in a week at their sewing; and who can
+wonder that in many cases the irrevocable step is taken before they
+realise that it is irrevocable, and that they have bartered away the
+future of their lives for the paltry chance of a year's ill-gotten
+gains?
+
+Of the severity of the punishment there can be no question. If the
+premium is high at the beginning, the penalty is terrible at the close.
+And this penalty is exacted equally from those who have deliberately
+said, "Evil, be thou my Good," and for those who have been decoyed,
+snared, trapped into the life which is a living death. When you see a
+girl on the street you can never say without enquiry whether she is one
+of the most-to-be condemned, or the most-to-be pitied of her sex.
+Many of them find themselves where they are because of a too trusting
+disposition, confidence born of innocence being often the unsuspecting
+ally of the procuress and seducer. Others are as much the innocent
+victims of crime as if they had been stabbed or maimed by the dagger of
+the assassin. The records of our Rescue Homes abound with
+life-stories, some of which we have been able to verify to the letter
+--which prove only too conclusively the existence of numbers of
+innocent victims whose entry upon this dismal life can in no way be
+attributed to any act of their own will. Many are orphans or the
+children of depraved mothers, whose one idea of a daughter is to make
+money out of her prostitution. Here are a few cases on our register: --
+
+E. C., aged 18, a soldier's child, born on the sea. Her father died,
+and her mother, a thoroughly depraved woman, assisted to secure her
+daughter's prostitution.
+
+P. S., aged 20, illegitimate child. Went to consult a doctor one time
+about some ailment. The doctor abused his position and took advantage
+of his patient, and when she complained, gave her #4 as compensation.
+When that was spent, having lost her character, she came on the town.
+We looked the doctor up, and he fled.
+
+E. A., aged 17, was left an orphan very early in life, and adopted by
+her godfather, who himself was the means of her ruin at the age of 10.
+
+A girl in her teens lived with her mother in the "Dusthole," the lowest
+part of Woolwich. This woman forced her out upon the streets, and
+profited by her prostitution up to the very night of her confinement.
+The mother had all the time been the receiver of the gains.
+
+E., neither father nor mother, was taken care of by a grandmother till,
+at an early age, accounted old enough. Married a soldier; but shortly
+before the birth of her first child, found that her deceiver had a wife
+and family in a distant part of the country, and she was soon left
+friendless and alone. She sought an asylum in the Workhouse for a few
+weeks' after which she vainly tried to get honest employment. Failing
+that, and being on the very verge of starvation, she entered a
+lodging-house in Westminster and "did as other girls." Here our
+lieutenant found and persuaded her to leave and enter one of our Homes,
+where she soon gave abundant proof of her conversion by a thoroughly
+changed life. She is now a faithful and trusted servant in a
+clergyman's family.
+
+A girl was some time ago discharged from a city hospital after an
+illness. She was homeless and friendless, an orphan, and obliged to
+work for her living. Walking down the street and wondering what she
+should do next, she met a girl, who came up to her in a most friendly
+fashion and speedily won her confidence.
+
+"Discharged ill, and nowhere to go, are you?" said her new friend.
+"Well, come home to my mother's; she will lodge you, and we'll go to
+work together, when you are quite strong."
+
+The girl consented gladly, but found herself conducted to the very
+lowest part of Woolwich and ushered into a brothel; there was no mother
+in the case. She was hoaxed, and powerless to resist.
+Her protestations were too late to save her, and having had her
+character forced from her she became hopeless, and stayed on to live
+the life of her false friend.
+
+There is no need for me to go into the details of the way in which men
+and women, whose whole livelihood depends upon their success in
+disarming the suspicions of their victims and luring them to their
+doom, contrive to overcome the reluctance of the young girl without
+parents, friends, or helpers to enter their toils. What fraud fails to
+accomplish, a little force succeeds in effecting; and a girl who has
+been guilty of nothing but imprudence finds herself an outcast for
+life. The very innocence of a girl tells against her. A woman of the
+world, once entrapped, would have all her wits about her to extricate
+herself from the position in which she found herself. A perfectly
+virtuous girl is often so overcome with shame and horror that there
+seems nothing in life worth struggling for. She accepts her doom
+without further struggle, and treads the long and torturing path-way of
+"the streets" to the grave.
+
+"Judge not, that ye be not judged" is a saying that applies most
+appropriately of all to these unfortunates. Many of them would have
+escaped their evil fate had they been less innocent. They are where
+they are because they loved too utterly to calculate consequences, and
+trusted too absolutely to dare to suspect evil. And others are there
+because of the false education which confounds ignorance with virtue,
+and throws our young people into the midst of a great city, with all
+its excitements and all its temptations, without more preparation or
+warning than if they were going to live in the Garden of Eden.
+
+Whatever sin they have committed, a terrible penalty is exacted.
+While the man who caused their ruin passes as a respectable member of
+society, to whom virtuous matrons gladly marry--if he is rich--
+their maiden daughters, they are crushed beneath the millstone of
+social excommunication. Here let me quote from a report made to me by
+the head of our Rescue Homes as to the actual life of these
+unfortunates.
+
+The following hundred cases are taken as they come from our Rescue
+Register. The statements are those of the girls themselves. They are
+certainly frank, and it will be noticed that only two out of the
+hundred allege that they took to the life out of poverty: --
+
+ CAUSE OF FALL.
+
+ Drink .. .. .. 14
+ Seduction .. .. 33
+ Wilful choice .. .. 24
+ Bad company .. .. 27
+ Poverty .. .. .. 2
+ ----
+ Total 100
+
+
+ CONDITION WHEN APPLYING.
+
+ Rags.. .. .. 25
+ Destitution .. 27
+ Decently dressed 48
+ ----
+ Total 100
+
+Out of these girls twenty-three have been in prison. The girls suffer
+so much that the shortness of their miserable life is the only
+redeeming feature. Whether we look at the wretchedness of the life
+itself; their perpetual intoxication; the cruel treatment to which they
+are subjected by their task-masters and mistresses or bullies; the
+hopelessness, suffering and despair induced by their circumstances and
+surroundings; the depths of misery, degradation and poverty to which
+they eventually descend; or their treatment in sickness, their
+friendlessness and loneliness in death, it must be admitted that a more
+dismal lot seldom falls to the fate of a human being. I will take each
+of these in turn.
+
+HEALTH.--This life induces insanity, rheumatism, consumption, and
+all forms of syphilis. Rheumatism and gout are the commonest of these
+evils. Some were quite crippled by both--young though they were.
+Consumption sows its seeds broadcast. The life is a hot-bed for the
+development of any constitutional and hereditary germs of the disease.
+We have found girls in Piccadilly at midnight who are continually
+prostrated by haemorrhage, yet who have no other way of life open, so
+struggle on in this awful manner between whiles.
+
+DRINK.--This is an inevitable part of the business. All Confess
+that they could never lead their miserable lives if it were not for its
+influence.
+
+A girl, who was educated at college, and who had a home in which was
+every comfort, but who, when ruined, had fallen even to the depth of
+Woolwich "Dusthole," exclaimed to us indignantly--"Do you think I
+could ever, ever do this if it weren't for the drink? I always have to
+be in drink if I want to sin." No girl has ever come into our Homes
+front street-life but has been more or less a prey to drink.
+
+CRUEL TREATMENT.--The devotion of these women to their bullies is as
+remarkable as the brutality of their bullies is abominable. Probably
+the primary cause of the fall of numberless girls of the lower class,
+is their great aspiration to the dignity of wifehood;--they are never
+"somebody" until they are married, and will link themselves to any
+creature, no matter how debased, in the hope of being ultimately
+married by him. This consideration, in addition to their helpless
+condition when once character has gone, makes them suffer cruelties
+which they would never otherwise endure from the men with whom large
+numbers of them live.
+
+One case in illustration of this is that of a girl who was once a
+respectable servant, the daughter of a police sergeant. She was
+ruined, and shame led her to leave home. At length she drifted to
+Woolwich, where she came across a man who persuaded her to live with
+him, and for a considerable length of time she kept him, although his
+conduct to her was brutal in the extreme.
+
+The girl living in the next room to her has frequently heard him knock
+her head against the wall, and pound it, when he was out of temper,
+through her gains of prostitution being less than usual. He lavished
+upon her every sort of cruelty and abuse, and at length she grew so
+wretched, and was reduced to so dreadful a plight, that she ceased to
+attract. At this he became furious, and pawned all her clothing but
+one thin garment of rags. The week before her first confinement he
+kicked her black and blue from neck to knees, and she was carried to
+the police station in a pool of blood, but; she was so loyal to the
+wretch that she refused to appear against him.
+
+She was going to drown herself in desperation, when our Rescue Officers
+spoke to her, wrapped their own shawl around her shivering shoulders,
+took her home with them, and cared for her. The baby was born dead--
+a tiny, shapeless mass. This state of things is all too common.
+
+HOPELESSNESS--SURROUNDINGS.--The state of hopelessness and despair
+in which these girls live continually, makes them reckless of
+consequences, and large numbers commit suicide who are never heard of.
+A West End policeman assured us that the number of prostitute-suicides
+was terribly in advance of anything guessed at by the public.
+
+DEPTHS TO WHICH THEY SINK.--There is Scarcely a lower class of girls
+to be found than the girls of Woolwich "Dusthole"--where one of our
+Rescue Slum Homes is established. The women living and following their
+dreadful business in this neighbourhood are so degraded that even
+abandoned men will refuse to accompany them home. Soldiers are
+forbidden to enter the place, or to go down the street, on pain of
+twenty-five days' imprisonment; pickets are stationed at either end to
+prevent this. The streets are much cleaner than many of the rooms we
+have seen.
+
+One public house there is shut up three or four times in a day
+sometimes for fear of losing the licence through the terrible brawls
+which take place within. A policeman never goes down this street alone
+at night--one having died not long ago from injuries received there
+--but our two lasses go unharmed and loved at all hours, spending
+every other night always upon the streets.
+
+The girls sink to the "Dusthole" after coming down several grades.
+There is but one on record who came there with beautiful clothes, and
+this poor girl, when last seen by the officers, was a pauper in the
+workhouse infirmary in a wretched condition. The lowest class of all
+is the girls who stand at the pier-head--these sell themselves
+literally for a bare crust of bread and sleep in the streets. Filth
+and vermin abound to an extent to which no one who has not seen it can
+have any idea. The "Dusthole" is only one, alas of many similar
+districts in this highly civilised land.
+
+SICKNESS, FRIENDLESSNESS--DEATH.--In hospitals it is a known fact
+that these girls are not treated at all like other cases; they inspire
+disgust, and are most frequently discharged before being really cured.
+Scorned by their relations, and ashamed to make their case known even
+to those who would help them, unable longer to struggle out on the
+streets to earn the bread of shame, there are girls lying in many a
+dark hole in this big city positively rotting away, and maintained by
+their old companions on the streets. Many are totally friendless,
+utterly cast out and left to perish by relatives and friends. One of
+this class came to us, sickened and died, and we buried her, being her
+only followers to the grave.
+
+It is a sad story, but one that must not be forgotten, for these women
+constitute a large standing army whose numbers no one can calculate.
+All estimates that I have seem purely imaginary. The ordinary figure
+given for London is from 60,000 to 80,000. This maybe true if it is
+meant to include all habitually unchaste women. It is a monstrous
+exaggeration if it is meant to apply to those who make their living
+solely and habitually by prostitution. These figures, however, only
+confuse. We shall have to deal with hundreds every month, whatever
+estimate we take. How utterly unprepared society is for any such
+systematic reformation may be seen from the fact that even now at our
+Homes we are unable to take in all the girls who apply. They cannot
+escape, even if they would, for want of funds whereby to provide them a
+way of release.
+
+
+CHAPTER 7. THE CRIMINALS.
+
+One very important section of the denizens of Darkest England are the
+criminals and the semi-criminals. They are more or less predatory,
+and are at present shepherded by the police and punished by the gaoler.
+Their numbers cannot be ascertained with very great precision, but the
+following figures are taken from the prison returns of 1889: --
+
+The criminal classes of Great Britain, in round figures, sum up a total
+of no less than 90,000 persons, made up as follows: --
+
+ Convict prisons contain.. .. .. .. .. .. 11,660 persons
+ Local prisons contain.. .. .. .. .. .. 20,883 ,,
+ Reformatories for children convicted of crime .. 1,270 ,,
+ Industrial schools for vagrant
+ and refractory children .. .. .. .. .. 21,413 ,,
+ Criminal lunatics under restraint.. .. .. .. 910 ,,
+ Known thieves at large .. .. .. .. .. .. 14,747 ,,
+ Known receivers of stolen goods .. .. .. .. 1,121 ,,
+ Suspected persons .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 17,042 ,,
+ -------
+ Total 89,046
+ -------
+
+The above does not include the great army of known prostitutes, nor the
+keepers and owners of brothels and disorderly houses, as to whose
+numbers Government is rigidly silent. These figures are, however,
+misleading. They only represent the criminals actually in gaol on a
+given day. The average gaol population in England and Wales, excluding
+the convict establishments, was, in 1889, 15,119 but the total number
+actually sentenced and imprisoned in local prisons was 153,000, of whom
+25,000 only came on first term sentences; 76,300 of them had been
+convicted at least 10 times. But even if we suppose that the criminal
+class numbers no more than 90,000, of whom only 35,000 persons are at
+large, it is still a large enough section of humanity to compel
+attention. 90,000 criminals represents a wreckage whose cost to the
+community is very imperfectly estimated when we add up the cost of the
+prisons, even if we add to them the whole cost of the police.
+The police have so many other duties besides the shepherding of
+criminals that it is unfair to saddle the latter with the whole of the
+cost of the constabulary. The cost of prosecution and maintenance of
+criminals, and the expense of the police involves an annual outlay of
+#4,437,000. This, however, is small compared with the tax and toll
+which this predatory horde inflicts upon the community on which it is
+quartered. To the loss caused by the actual picking and stealing must
+be added that of the unproductive labour of nearly 65,000 adults.
+Dependent upon these criminal adults must be at least twice as many
+women and children, so that it is probably an under-estimate to say
+that this list of criminals and semi-criminals represents a population
+of at least 200,000, who all live more or less at the expense of
+society.
+
+Every year, in the Metropolitan district alone, 66,100 persons are
+arrested, of whom 444 are arrested for trying to commit suicide--life
+having become too unbearable a burden. This immense population is
+partially, no doubt, bred to prison, the same as other people are bred
+to the army and to the bar. The hereditary criminal is by no means
+confined to India, although it is only in that country that they have
+the engaging simplicity to describe themselves frankly in the census
+returns. But it is recruited constantly from the outside. In many
+cases this is due to sheer starvation. Fathers of the Church have laid
+down the law that a man who is in peril of death from hunger is
+entitled to take bread wherever he can find it to keep body and soul
+together. That proposition is not embodied in our jurisprudence.
+Absolute despair drives many a man into the ranks of the criminal
+class, who would never have fallen into the category of criminal
+convicts if adequate provision had been made for the rescue of those
+drifting to doom. When once he has fallen, circumstances seem to
+combine to keep him there. As wounded and sickly stags are gored to
+death by their fellows, so the unfortunate who bears the prison brand
+is hunted from pillar to post, until he despairs of ever regaining his
+position, and oscillates between one prison and another for the rest of
+his days. I gave in a preceding page an account of how a man, after
+trying in vain to get work, fell before the temptation to steal in
+order to escape starvation. Here is the sequel of that man's story.
+After he had stolen he ran away, and thus describes his experiences: --
+
+"To fly was easy. To get away from the scene required very little
+ingenuity, but the getting away from one suffering brought another.
+A straight look from a stranger; a quick step behind me, sent a chill
+through every nerve. The cravings of hunger had been satisfied, but it
+was the cravings of conscience that were clamorous now. It was easy to
+get away from the earthly consequences of sin, but from the fact--
+never. And yet it was the compulsion of circumstances that made me a
+criminal. It was neither from inward viciousness or choice, and how
+bitterly did I cast reproach on society for allowing such an
+alternative to offer itself--'to Steal or Starve,' but there was
+another alternative that here offered itself--either give myself up,
+or go on with the life of crime. I chose the former. I had travelled
+over 100 miles to get away from the scene of my theft, and I now find
+myself outside the station house at a place where I had put in my
+boyhood days.
+
+"How many times when a lad, with wondering eyes, and a heart stirred
+with childhood's pure sympathy, I had watched the poor waifs from time
+to time led within its doors. It was my turn now. I entered the
+charge room, and with business-like precision disclosed my errand, viz.
+that I wished to surrender myself for having committed a felony.
+My story was doubted. Question followed question, and confirmation
+must be waited. 'Why had I surrendered?' 'I was a rum'un.' 'Cracked.'
+'More fool than rogue.' 'He will be sorry when he mounts the wheel.'
+These and such like remarks were handed round concerning me. An hour
+passed by. An inspector enters, and announces the receipt of a
+telegram. 'It is all right. You can put him down.' And turning to me,
+he said, 'They will send for you on Monday,' and then I passed into
+the inner ward, and a cell. The door closed with a harsh, grating
+clang, and I was left to face the most clamorous accuser of all--
+my own interior self'
+
+"Monday morning, the door opened, and a complacent detective stood
+before me. Who can tell the feeling as the handcuffs closed round my
+wrists, and we started for town. As again the charge was entered, and
+the passing of another night in the cell; then the morning of the day
+arrived. The gruff, harsh 'Come on' of the gaoler roused me, and the
+next moment I found myself in the prison van, gazing through the
+crevices of the floor, watching the stones flying as it were from
+beneath our feet. Soon the court-house was reached, and hustled into a
+common cell, I found myself amongst a crowd of boys and men, all bound
+for the 'dock.' One by one the names are called, and the crowd is
+gradually thinning down, when the announcement of my own name fell on
+my startled ear, and I found myself stumbling up the stairs, and
+finding myself in daylight and the 'dock.' What a terrible ordeal it
+was. The ceremony was brief enough; 'Have you anything to say?'
+'Don't interrupt his Worship; prisoner!' 'Give over talking!'
+'A month's hard labour.' This is about all I heard, or at any rate
+realised, until a vigorous push landed me into the presence of the
+officer who booked the sentence, and then off I went to gaol.
+I need not linger over the formalities of the reception. A nightmare
+seemed to have settled upon me as I passed into the interior of the
+correctional.
+
+"I resigned my name, and I seemed to die to myself for henceforth.
+332B disclosed my identity to myself and others.
+
+"Through all the weeks that followed I was like one in a dream.
+Meal times, resting hours, as did every other thing, came with
+clock-like precision. At times I thought my mind had gone--so dull,
+so callous, so weary appeared the organs of the brain. The harsh
+orders of the gaolers; the droning of the chaplain in the chapel;
+the enquiries of the chief warder or the governor in their periodical
+visits,--all seemed so meaningless.
+
+"As the day of my liberation drew near, the horrid conviction that
+circumstances would perhaps compel me to return to prison haunted me,
+and so helpless did I feel at the prospects that awaited me outside,
+that I dreaded release, which seemed but the facing of an unsympathetic
+world. The day arrived, and, strange as it may sound, it was with
+regret that I left my cell. It had become my home, and no home waited
+me outside.
+
+"How utterly crushed I felt; feelings of companionship had gone out to
+my unfortunate fellow-prisoners, whom I had seen daily, but the sound
+of whose voices I had never heard, whilst outside friendships were
+dead, and companionships were for ever broken, and I felt as an outcast
+of society, with the mark of 'gaol bird' upon me, that I must cover my
+face, and stand aside and cry 'unclean.' Such were my feelings.
+
+"The morning of discharge came, and I am once more on the streets.
+My scanty means scarcely sufficient for two days' least needs. Could I
+brace myself to make another honest endeavour to start afresh?
+Try, indeed, I did. I fell back upon my antecedents, and tried to cut
+the dark passage out of my life, but straight came the questions to me
+at each application for employment, 'What have you been doing lately?'
+'Where have you been living?' If I evaded the question it caused doubt;
+if I answered, the only answer I could give was 'in gaol,' and that
+settled my chances.
+
+"What a comedy, after all, it appeared. I remember the last words of
+the chaplain before leaving the prison, cold and precise in their
+officialism: 'Mind you never come back here again, young man.' And now,
+as though in response to my earnest effort to keep from going to
+prison, society, by its actions, cried out, 'Go back to gaol. There
+are honest men enough to do our work without such as you.' "Imagine,
+if you can, my condition. At the end of a few days, black despair had
+wrapt itself around every faculty of mind and body. Then followed
+several days and nights with scarcely a bit of food or a resting-place.
+I prowled the streets like a dog, with this difference, that the dog
+has the chance of helping himself, and I had not. I tried to forecast
+how long starvation's fingers would be in closing round the throat they
+already gripped. So indifferent was I alike to man or God, as I waited
+for the end."
+
+In this dire extremity the writer found his way to one of our Shelters,
+and there found God and friends and hope, and once more got his feet on
+to the ladder which leads upward from the black gulf of starvation to
+competence and character, and usefulness and heaven.
+
+As he was then, however, there are hundreds--nay, thousands--now.
+Who will give these men a helping hand? What is to be done with them?
+Would it not be more merciful to kill them off at once instead of
+sternly crushing them out of all semblance of honest manhood?
+Society recoils from such a short cut. Her virtuous scruples reminds
+me of the subterfuge by which English law evaded the veto on torture.
+Torture was forbidden, but the custom of placing an obstinate witness
+under a press and slowly crushing him within a hairbreadth of death was
+legalised and practised. So it is to-day. When the criminal comes out
+of gaol the whole world is often but a press whose punishment is sharp
+and cruel indeed. Nor can the victim escape even if he opens his mouth
+and speaks.
+
+
+CHAPTER 8. THE CHILDREN OF THE LOST.
+
+Whatever may be thought of the possibility of doing anything with the
+adults, it is universally admitted that there is hope for the children.
+"I regard the existing generation as lost," said a leading Liberal
+statesman. "Nothing can be done with men and women who have grown up
+under the present demoralising conditions. My only hope is that the
+children may have a better chance. Education will do much."
+But unfortunately the demoralising circumstances of the children are
+not being improved--are, indeed, rather, in many respects, being
+made worse. The deterioration of our population in large towns is one
+of the most undisputed facts of social economics. The country is the
+breeding ground of healthy citizens. But for the constant influx of
+Countrydom, Cockneydom would long ere this have perished.
+But unfortunately the country is being depopulated. The towns, London
+especially, are being gorged with undigested and indigestible masses of
+labour, and, as the result, the children suffer grievously.
+
+The town-bred child is at a thousand disadvantages compared with his
+cousin in the country. But every year there are more town-bred
+children and fewer cousins in the country. To rear healthy children
+you want first a home; secondly, milk; thirdly, fresh air;
+and fourthly, exercise under the green trees and blue sky. All these
+things every country labourer's child possesses, or used to possess.
+For the shadow of the City life lies now upon the fields, and even in
+the remotest rural district the labourer who tends the cows is often
+denied the milk which his children need. The regular demand of the
+great towns forestalls the claims of the labouring hind. Tea and slops
+and beer take the place of milk, and the bone and sinew of the next
+generation are sapped from the cradle. But the country child, if he
+has nothing but skim milk, and only a little of that, has at least
+plenty of exercise in the fresh air. He has healthy human relations
+with his neighbours. He is looked after, and in some sort of fashion
+brought into contact with the life of the hall, the vicarage, and the
+farm. He lives a natural life amid the birds and trees and growing
+crops and the animals of the fields. He is not a mere human ant,
+crawling on the granite pavement of a great urban ants' nest, with an
+unnaturally developed nervous system and a sickly constitution.
+
+But, it will be said, the child of to-day has the inestimable advantage
+of Education. No; he has not. Educated the children are not.
+They are pressed through "standards," which exact a certain
+acquaintance with A B C and pothooks and figures, but educated they are
+not in the sense of the development of their latent capacities so as to
+make them capable for the discharge of their duties in life.
+The new generation can read, no doubt. Otherwise, where would be the
+sale of "Sixteen String Jack," "Dick Turpin," and the like? But take
+the girls. Who can pretend that the girls whom our schools are now
+turning out are half as well educated for the work of life as their
+grandmothers were at the same age? How many of all these mothers of
+the future know how to bake a loaf or wash their clothes? Except
+minding the baby--a task that cannot be evaded--what domestic
+training have they received to qualify them for being in the future the
+mothers of babies themselves?
+
+And even the schooling, such as it is, at what an expense is it often
+imparted! The rakings of the human cesspool are brought into the
+school-room and mixed up with your children. Your little ones, who
+never heard a foul word and who are not only innocent, but ignorant, of
+all the horrors of vice and sin, sit for hours side by side with little
+ones whose parents are habitually drunk, and play with others whose
+ideas of merriment are gained from the familiar spectacle of the
+nightly debauch by which their mothers earn the family bread.
+It is good, no doubt, to learn the ABC, but it is not so good that in
+acquiring these indispensable rudiments, your children should also
+acquire the vocabulary of the harlot and the corner boy. I speak only
+of what I know, and of that which has been brought home to me as a
+matter of repeated complaint by my Officers, when I say that the
+obscenity of the talk of many of the children of some of our public
+schools could hardly be outdone even in Sodom and Gomorrha. Childish
+innocence is very beautiful; but the bloom is soon destroyed, and it is
+a cruel awakening for a mother to discover that her tenderly nurtured
+boy, or her carefully guarded daughter, has been initiated by a
+companion into the mysteries of abomination that are concealed in the
+phrase--a house of ill-fame.
+
+The home is largely destroyed where the mother follows the father into
+the factory, and where the hours of labour are so long that they have
+no time to see their children. The omnibus drivers of London, for
+instance, what time have they for discharging the daily duties of
+parentage to their little ones? How can a man who is on his omnibus
+from fourteen to sixteen hours a day have time to be a father to his
+children in any sense of the word? He has hardly a chance to see them
+except when they are asleep. Even the Sabbath, that blessed
+institution which is one of the sheet anchors of human existence, is
+encroached upon. Many of the new industries which have been started or
+developed since I was a boy ignore man's need of one day's rest in
+seven. The railway, the post-office, the tramway all compel some of
+their employes to be content with less than the divinely appointed
+minimum of leisure. In the country darkness restores the labouring
+father to his little ones. In the town gas and the electric light
+enables the employer to rob the children of the whole of their father's
+waking hours, and in some cases he takes the mother's also. Under some
+of the conditions of modern industry, children are not so much born
+into a home as they are spawned into the world like fish, with the
+results which we see.
+
+The decline of natural affection follows inevitably from the
+substitution of the fish relationship for that of the human. A father
+who never dandles his child on his knee cannot have a very keen sense
+of the responsibilities of paternity. In the rush and pressure of our
+competitive City life, thousands of men have not time to be fathers.
+Sires, yes; fathers, no. It will take a good deal of schoolmaster to
+make up for that change. If this be the case, even with the children
+constantly employed, it can be imagined what kind of a home life is
+possessed by the children of the tramp, the odd jobber, the thief, and
+the harlot. For all these people have children, although they have no
+homes in which to rear them. Not a bird in all the woods or fields but
+prepares some kind of a nest in which to hatch and rear its young, even
+if it be but a hole in the sand or a few crossed sticks in the bush.
+But how many young ones amongst our people are hatched before any nest
+is ready to receive them?
+
+Think of the multitudes of children born in our workhouses, children of
+whom it may be said "they are conceived in sin and shapen in iniquity,"
+and, as a punishment of the sins of the parents, branded from birth as
+bastards, worse than fatherless, homeless, and friendless, "damned into
+an evil world," in which even those who have all the advantages of a
+good parentage and a careful training find it hard enough to make their
+way. Sometimes, it is true, the passionate love of the deserted mother
+for the child which has been the visible symbol and the terrible result
+of her undoing stands between the little one and all its enemies.
+But think how often the mother regards the advent of her child with
+loathing and horror; how the discovery that she is about to become a
+mother affects her like a nightmare; and how nothing but the dread of
+the hangman's rope keeps her from strangling the babe on the very hour
+of its birth. What chances has such a child? And there are many such.
+
+In a certain country that I will not name there exists a scientifically
+arranged system of infanticide cloaked under the garb of philanthropy.
+Gigantic foundling establishments exist in its principal cities, where
+every comfort and scientific improvement is provided for the deserted
+children, with the result that one-half of them die. The mothers are
+spared the crime. The State assumes the responsibility.
+We do something like that here, but our foundling asylums are the
+Street, the Workhouse, and the Grave. When an English Judge tells us,
+as Mr. Justice Wills did the other day, that there were any number of
+parents who would kill their children for a few pounds' insurance
+money, we can form some idea of the horrors of the existence into which
+many of the children of this highly favoured land are ushered at their
+birth.
+
+The overcrowded homes of the poor compel the children to witness
+everything. Sexual morality often comes to have no meaning to them.
+Incest is so familiar as hardly to call for remark. The bitter poverty
+of the poor compels them to leave their children half fed. There are
+few more grotesque pictures in the history of civilisation than that of
+the compulsory attendance of children at school, faint with hunger
+because they had no breakfast, and not sure whether they would even
+secure a dry crust for dinner when their morning's quantum of education
+had been duly imparted. Children thus hungered, thus housed, and thus
+left to grow up as best they can without being fathered or mothered,
+are not, educate them as you will, exactly the most promising material
+for the making of the future citizens and rulers of the Empire.
+
+What, then, is the ground for hope that if we leave things alone the
+new generation will be better than their elders? To me it seems that
+the truth is rather the other way. The lawlessness of our lads the
+increased license of our girls, the general shiftlessness from the
+home-making point of view of the product of our factories and schools
+are far from reassuring. Our young people have never learned to obey.
+The fighting gangs of half-grown lads in Lisson Grove, and the
+scuttlers of Manchester are ugly symptoms of a social condition that
+will not grow better by being left alone.
+
+It is the home that has been destroyed, and with the home the home-like
+virtues. It is the dis-homed multitude, nomadic, hungry that is
+rearing an undisciplined population, cursed from birth with hereditary
+weakness of body and hereditary faults of character. It is idle to
+hope to mend matters by taking the children and bundling them up in
+barracks. A child brought up in an institution is too often only
+half-human, having never known a mother's love and a father's care.
+To men and women who are without homes children must be more or less of
+an incumbrance. Their advent is regarded with impatience, and often it
+is averted by crime. The unwelcome little stranger is badly cared for,
+badly fed, and allowed every chance to die. Nothing is worth doing to
+increase his chances of living that does not Reconstitute the Home.
+But between us and that ideal how vast is the gulf! It will have to be
+bridged, however, if anything practical is to be done.
+
+
+CHAPTER 9. IS THERE NO HELP?
+
+It may be said by those who have followed me to this point that while
+it is quite true that there are many who are out of work, and not less
+true that there are many who sleep on the Embankment and elsewhere, the
+law has provided a remedy, or if not a remedy, at least a method, of
+dealing with these sufferers which is sufficient: The Secretary of the
+Charity Organisation Society assured one of my Officers, who went to
+inquire for his opinion on the subject, "that no further machinery was
+necessary. All that was needed in this direction they already had in
+working order, and to create any further machinery would do more harm
+than good."
+
+Now, what is the existing machinery by which Society, whether through
+the organisation of the State, or by individual endeavour, attempts to
+deal with the submerged residuum? I had intended at one time to have
+devoted considerable space to the description of the existing agencies,
+together with certain observations which have been forcibly impressed
+upon my mind as to their failure and its cause. The necessity,
+however, of subordinating everything to the supreme purpose of this
+book, which is to endeavour to show how light can be let into the heart
+of Darkest England, compels me to pass rapidly over this department of
+the subject, merely glancing as I go at the well-meaning, but more or
+less abortive, attempts to cope with this great and appalling evil.
+
+The first place must naturally be given to the administration of the
+Poor Law. Legally the State accepts the responsibility of providing
+food and shelter for every man, woman, or child who is utterly
+destitute. This responsibility it, however, practically shirks by the
+imposition of conditions on the claimants of relief that are hateful
+and repulsive, if not impossible. As to the method of Poor Law
+administration in dealing with inmates of workhouses or in the
+distribution of outdoor relief, I say nothing. Both of these raise
+great questions which lie outside my immediate purpose. All that I
+need to do is to indicate the limitations--it may be the necessary
+limitations--under which the Poor Law operates. No Englishman can
+come upon the rates so long as he has anything whatever left to call
+his own. When long-continued destitution has been carried on to the
+bitter end, when piece by piece every article of domestic furniture
+has been sold or pawned, when all efforts to procure employment have
+failed, and when you have nothing left except the clothes in which you
+stand, then you can present yourself before the relieving officer and
+secure your lodging in the workhouse, the administration of which
+varies infinitely according to the disposition of the Board of
+Guardians under whose control it happens to be.
+
+If, however, you have not sunk to such despair as to be willing to
+barter your liberty for the sake of food, clothing, and shelter in the
+Workhouse, but are only temporarily out of employment seeking work,
+then you go to the Casual Ward. There you are taken in, and provided
+for on the principle of making it as disagreeable as possible for
+yourself, in order to deter you from again accepting the hospitality of
+the rates,--and of course in defence of this a good deal can be said
+by the Political Economist. But what seems utterly indefensible is the
+careful precautions which are taken to render it impossible for the
+unemployed Casual to resume promptly after his night's rest the search
+for work. Under the existing regulations, if you are compelled to seek
+refuge on Monday night in the Casual Ward, you are bound to remain
+there at least till Wednesday morning.
+
+The theory of the system is this, that individuals casually poor and
+out of work, being destitute and without shelter, may upon application
+receive shelter for the night, supper and a breakfast, and in return
+for this, shall perform a task of work, not necessarily in repayment
+for the relief received, but simply as a test of their willingness to
+work for their living. The work given is the same as that given to
+felons in gaol, oakum-picking and stone-breaking.
+
+The work, too, is excessive in proportion to what is received.
+Four pounds of oakum is a great task to an expert and an old hand.
+To a novice it can only be accomplished with the greatest difficulty,
+if indeed it can be done at all. It is even in excess of the amount
+demanded from a criminal in gaol.
+
+The stone-breaking test is monstrous. Half a ton of stone from any man
+in return for partially supplying the cravings of hunger is an outrage
+which, if we read of as having occurred in Russia or Siberia, would
+find Exeter Hall crowded with an indignant audience, and Hyde Park
+filled with strong oratory. But because this system exists at our own
+doors, very little notice is taken of it. These tasks are expected
+from all comers, starved, ill-clad, half-fed creatures from the
+streets, foot-sore and worn out, and yet unless it is done, the
+alternative is the magistrate and the gaol. The old system was bad
+enough, which demanded the picking of one pound of oakum. As soon as
+this task was accomplished, which generally kept them till the middle
+of next day, it was thus rendered impossible for them to seek work, and
+they were forced to spend another night in the ward. The Local
+Government Board, however, stepped in, and the Casual was ordered to be
+detained for the whole day and the second night, the amount of labour
+required from him being increased four-fold.
+
+Under the present system, therefore, the penalty for seeking shelter
+from the streets is a whole day and two nights, with an almost
+impossible task, which, failing to do, the victim is liable to be
+dragged before a magistrate and committed to gaol as a rogue and
+vagabond, while in the Casual Ward their treatment is practically that
+of a criminal. They sleep in a cell with an apartment at the back,
+in which the work is done, receiving at night half a pound of gruel and
+eight ounces of bread, and next morning the same for breakfast, with
+half a pound of oakum and stones to occupy himself for a day.
+
+The beds are mostly of the plank type, the coverings scant, the comfort
+nil. Be it remembered that this is the treatment meted out to those
+who are supposed to be Casual poor, in temporary difficulty, walking
+from place to place seeking some employment.
+
+The treatment of the women is as follows: Each Casual has to stay in
+the Casual Wards two nights and one day, during which time they have to
+pick 2 lb. of oakum or go to the wash-tub and work out the time there.
+While at the wash-tub they are allowed to wash their own clothes, but
+not otherwise. If seen more than once in the same Casual Ward, they
+are detained three days by order of the inspector each time seen, or if
+sleeping twice in the same month the master of the ward has power to
+detain them three days. There are four inspectors who visit different
+Casual Wards; and if the Casual is seen by any of the inspectors
+(who in turn visit all the Casual Wards) at any of the wards they have
+previously visited they are detained three days in each one.
+The inspector, who is a male person, visits the wards at all unexpected
+hours, even visiting while the females are in bed. The beds are in
+some wards composed of straw and two rugs, in others cocoanut fibre and
+two rugs. The Casuals rise at 5.45 a.m. and go to bed 7 p.m. If they
+do not finish picking their oakum before 7 p.m., they stay up till they
+do. If a Casual does not come to the ward before 12.30, midnight, they
+keep them one day extra. The way in which this operates, however, can
+be best understood by the following statements, made by those who have
+been in Casual Wards, and who can, therefore, speak from experience as
+to how the system affects the individual: --
+
+J. C. knows Casual Wards pretty well. Has been in St. Giles,
+Whitechapel, St. George's, Paddington, Marylebone, Mile End.
+They vary a little in detail, but as a rule the doors open at 6;
+you walk in; they tell you what the work is, and that if you fail to do
+it, you will be liable to imprisonment. Then you bathe. Some places
+the water is dirty. Three persons as a rule wash in one water.
+At Whitechapel (been there three times) it has always been dirty; also
+at St. George's. I had no bath at Mile End; they were short of water.
+If you complain they take no notice. You then tie your clothes in a
+bundle, and they give you a nightshirt. At most places they serve
+supper to the men, who have to go to bed and eat it there. Some beds
+are in cells; some in large rooms. You get up at 6 a.m. and do the
+task. The amount of stone-breaking is too much; and the oakum-picking
+is also heavy. The food differs. At St. Giles, the gruel left
+over-night is boiled up for breakfast, and is consequently sour; the
+bread is puffy, full of holes, and don't weigh the regulation amount.
+Dinner is only 8 ounces of bread and 1 1/2 ounce of cheese, and its
+that's short, how can anybody do their work? They will give you water
+to drink if you ring the cell bell for it, that is, they will tell you
+to wait, and bring it in about half an hour. There are a good lot of
+"moochers" go to Casual Wards, but there are large numbers of men who
+only want work.
+
+J.D.; age 25; Londoner; can't get work, tried hard; been refused work
+several times on account of having no settled residence; looks
+suspicious, they think, to have "no home." Seems a decent, willing man.
+Had two penny-worth of soup this morning, which has lasted all day.
+Earned 1s. 6d. yesterday, bill distributing, nothing the day before.
+Been in good many London Casual Wards. Thinks they are no good,
+because they keep him all day, when he might be seeking work.
+Don't want shelter in day time, wants work. If he goes in twice in a
+month to the same Casual Ward, they detain him four days. Considers
+the food decidedly insufficient to do the required amount of work.
+If the work is not done to time, you are liable to 21 days'
+imprisonment. Get badly treated some places, especially where there is
+a bullying superintendent. Has done 21 days for absolutely refusing to
+do the work on such low diet, when unfit. Can't get justice, doctor
+always sides with superintendent.
+
+J. S.; odd jobber. Is working at board carrying, when he can get it.
+There's quite a rush for it at 1s. 2d. a day. Carried a couple of
+parcels yesterday, got 5d. for them; also had a bit of bread and meat
+given him by a working man, so altogether had an excellent day.
+Sometimes goes all day without food, and plenty more do the same.
+Sleeps on Embankment, and now and then in Casual Ward. Latter is clean
+and comfortable enough, but they keep you in all day; that means no
+chance of getting work. Was a clerk once, but got out of a job, and
+couldn't get another; there are so many clerks.
+
+"A Tramp" says: "I've been in most Casual Wards in London; was in the
+one in Macklin Street, Drury Lane, last week. They keep you two nights
+and a day, and more than that if they recognise you. You have to break
+10 cwt. of stone, or pick four pounds of oakum. Both are hard.
+About thirty a night go to Macklin Street. The food is 1 pint gruel
+and 6 oz. bread for breakfast; 8 oz. bread and 1 1/2 oz. cheese for
+dinner; tea same as breakfast. No supper. It is not enough to do the
+work on. Then you are obliged to bathe, of course; sometimes three
+will bathe in one water, and if you complain they turn nasty, and ask
+if you are come to a palace. Mitcham Workhouse I've been in; grub is
+good; 1 1/2 pint gruel and 8 oz. bread for breakfast, and same for
+supper.
+
+F.K. W.; baker. Been board-carrying to-day, earned one shilling,
+Hours 9 till 5. I've been on this kind of life six years. Used to
+work in a bakery, but had congestion of the brain, and couldn't stand
+the heat. I've been in about every Casual Ward in England. They treat
+men too harshly. Have to work very hard, too. Has had to work whilst
+really unfit. At Peckham (known as Camberwell) Union, was quite unable
+to do it through weakness, and appealed to the doctor, who, taking the
+part of the other officials, as usual, refused to allow him to forego
+the work. Cheeked the doctor, telling him he didn't understand his
+work; result, got three days' imprisonment. Before going to a Casual
+Ward at all, I spent seven consecutive nights on the Embankment, and at
+last went to the Ward.
+
+The result of the deliberate policy of making the night refuge for the
+unemployed labourer as disagreeable as possible, and of placing as many
+obstacles as possible in the way of his finding work the following day,
+is, no doubt, to minimise the number of Casuals, and without question
+succeeds. In the whole of London the number of Casuals in the wards at
+night is only 1,136. That is to say, the conditions which are imposed
+are so severe, that the majority of the Out-of-Works prefer to sleep in
+the open air, taking their chance of the inclemency and mutability of
+our English weather, rather than go through the experience of the
+Casual Ward.
+
+It seems to me that such a mode of coping with distress does not so
+much meet the difficulty as evade it. It is obvious that an apparatus,
+which only provides for 1,136 persons per night, is utterly unable to
+deal with the numbers of the homeless Out-of-Works. But if by some
+miracle we could use the Casual Wards as a means of providing for all
+those who are seeking work from day to day, without a place in which to
+lay their heads, save the kerbstone of the pavement or the back of a
+seat on the Embankment, they would utterly fail to have any appreciable
+effect upon the mass of human misery with which we have to deal.
+For this reason; the administration of the Casual Wards is mechanical,
+perfunctory, and formal. Each of the Casuals is to the Officer in
+Charge merely one Casual the more. There is no attempt whatever to do
+more than provide for them merely the indispensable requisites of
+existence. There has never been any attempt to treat them as human
+beings, to deal with them as individuals, to appeal to their hearts,
+to help them on their legs again. They are simply units, no more
+thought of and cared for than if they were so many coffee beans passing
+through a coffee mill; and as the net result of all my experience and
+observation of men and things, I must assert unhesitatingly that
+anything which dehumanises the individual, anything which treats a man
+as if he were only a number of a series or a cog in a wheel, without
+any regard to the character, the aspirations, the temptations, and the
+idiosyncrasies of the man, must utterly fail as a remedial agency.
+The Casual Ward, at the best, is merely a squalid resting place for the
+Casual in his downward career. It anything is to be done for these
+men, it must be done by other agents than those which prevail in the
+administration of the Poor Laws.
+
+The second method in which Society endeavours to do its duty to the
+lapsed masses is by the miscellaneous and heterogeneous efforts which
+are clubbed together under the generic head of Charity. Far be it from
+me to say one word in disparagement of any effort that is prompted by a
+sincere desire to alleviate the misery of our fellow creatures, but the
+most charitable are those who most deplore the utter failure which has,
+up till now, attended all their efforts to do more than temporarily
+alleviate pain, or effect an occasional improvement in the condition of
+individuals.
+
+There are many institutions, very excellent in their way, without which
+it is difficult to see how society could get on at all, but when they
+have done their best there still remains this great and appalling mass
+of human misery on our hands, a perfect quagmire of Human Sludge.
+They may ladle out individuals here and there, but to drain the whole
+bog is an effort which seems to be beyond the imagination of most of
+those who spend their lives in philanthropic work. It is no doubt
+better than nothing to take the individual and feed him from day to
+day, to bandage up his wounds and heal his diseases; but you may go on
+doing that for ever, if you do not do more than that; and the worst of
+it is that all authorities agree that if you only do that you will
+probably increase the evil with which you are attempting to deal, and
+that you had much better let the whole thing alone.
+
+There is at present no attempt at Concerted Action. Each one deals
+with the case immediately before him, and the result is what might be
+expected; there is a great expenditure, but the gains are, alas! very
+small. The fact, however, that so much is subscribed for the temporary
+relief and the mere alleviation of distress justifies my confidence
+that if a Practical Scheme of dealing with this misery in a permanent,
+comprehensive fashion be discovered, there will be no lack of the
+sinews of war. It is well, no doubt, sometimes to administer an
+anaesthetic, but the Cure of the Patient is worth ever so much more,
+and the latter is the object which we must constantly set before us in
+approaching this problem.
+
+The third method by which Society professes to attempt the reclamation
+of the lost is by the rough, rude surgery of the Gaol. Upon this a
+whole treatise might be written, but when it was finished it would be
+nothing more than a demonstration that our Prison system has
+practically missed aiming at that which should be the first essential
+of every system of punishment. It is not Reformatory, it is not worked
+as if it were intended to be Reformatory. It is punitive, and only
+punitive. The whole administration needs to be reformed from top to
+bottom in accordance with this fundamental principle, viz., that while
+every prisoner should be subjected to that measure of punishment which
+shall mark a due sense of his crime both to himself and society, the
+main object should be to rouse in his mind the desire to lead an honest
+life; and to effect that change in his disposition and character which
+will send him forth to put that desire into practice. At present,
+every Prison is more or less a Training School for Crime,
+an introduction to the society of criminals, the petrifaction of any
+lingering human feeling and a very Bastille of Despair. The prison
+brand is stamped upon those who go in, and that so deeply, that it
+seems as if it clung to them for life. To enter Prison once, means in
+many cases an almost certain return there at an early date. All this
+has to be changed, and will be, when once the work of Prison Reform is
+taken in hand by men who understand the subject, who believe in the
+reformation of human nature in every form which its depravity can
+assume, and who are in full sympathy with the class for whose benefit
+they labour; and when those charged directly with the care of criminals
+seek to work out their regeneration in the same spirit.
+
+The question of Prison Reform is all the more important because it is
+only by the agency of the Gaol that Society attempts to deal with its
+hopeless cases. If a woman, driven mad with shame, flings herself into
+the river, and is fished out alive, we clap her into Prison on a charge
+of attempted suicide. If a man, despairing of work and gaunt with
+hunger, helps himself to food, it is to the same reformatory agency
+that he is forthwith subjected. The rough and ready surgery with which
+we deal with our social patients recalls the simple method of the early
+physicians. The tradition still lingers among old people of doctors
+who prescribed bleeding for every ailment, and of keepers of asylums
+whose one idea of ministering to a mind diseased was to put the body
+into a strait waistcoat. Modern science laughs to scorn these simple
+"remedies" of an unscientific age, and declares that they were, in most
+cases, the most efficacious means of aggravating the disease they
+professed to cure. But in social maladies we are still in the age of
+the blood-letter and the strait waistcoat. The Gaol is our specific
+for Despair. When all else fails Society will always undertake to
+feed, clothe, warm, and house a man, if only he will commit a crime.
+It will do it also in such a fashion as to render it no temporary help,
+but a permanent necessity.
+
+Society says to the individual: "To qualify for free board and lodging
+you must commit a crime. But if you do you must pay the price.
+You must allow me to ruin your character, and doom you for the rest of
+your life to destitution, modified by the occasional successes of
+criminality. You shall become the Child of the State, on condition
+that we doom you to a temporal perdition, out of which you will never
+be permitted to escape, and in which you will always be a charge upon
+our resources and a constant source of anxiety and inconvenience to the
+authorities. I will feed you, certainly, but in return you must permit
+me to damn you." That surely ought not to be the last word of Civilised
+Society.
+
+"Certainly not," say others. "Emigration is the true specific.
+The waste lands of the world are crying aloud for the application of
+surplus labour. Emigration is the panacea." Now I have no objection to
+emigration. Only a criminal lunatic could seriously object to the
+transference of hungry Jack from an overcrowded shanty--where he
+cannot even obtain enough bad potatoes to dull the ache behind his
+waistcoat, and is tempted to let his child die for the sake of the
+insurance money--to a land flowing with milk and honey, where he can
+eat meat three times a day and where a man's children are his wealth.
+But you might as well lay a new-born child naked in the middle of a
+new-sown field in March, and expect it to live and thrive, as expect
+emigration to produce successful results on the lines which some lay
+down. The child, no doubt, has within it latent capacities which, when
+years and training have done their work, will enable him to reap a
+harvest from a fertile soil, and the new sown field will be covered
+with golden grain in August. But these facts will not enable the
+infant to still its hunger with the clods of the earth in the cold
+spring time. It is just like that with emigration. It is simply
+criminal to take a multitude of untrained men and women and land them
+penniless and helpless on the fringe of some new continent. The result
+of such proceedings we see in the American cities; in the degradation
+of their slums, and in the hopeless demoralisation of thousands who, in
+their own country, were living decent, industrious lives.
+
+A few months since, in Paramatta, in New South Wales, a young man who
+had emigrated with a vague hope of mending his fortunes, found himself
+homeless, friendless, and penniless. He was a clerk. They wanted no
+more clerks in Paramatta. Trade was dull, employment was scarce, even
+for trained hands. He went about from day to day seeking work and
+finding none. At last he came to the end of all his resources. He went
+all day without food; at night he slept as best he could. Morning
+came, and he was hopeless. All next day passed without a meal.
+Night came. He could not sleep. He wandered about restlessly.
+At last, about midnight, an idea seized him. Grasping a brick, he
+deliberately walked up to a jeweller's window, and smashed a hole
+through the glass. He made no attempt to steal anything: He merely
+smashed the pane and then sat down on the pavement beneath the window,
+waiting for the arrival of the policeman. He waited some hours; but at
+last the constable arrived. He gave himself up, and was marched off to
+the lock-up. "I shall at least have something to eat now," was the
+reflection. He was right. He was sentenced to one year's imprisonment,
+and he is in gaol at this hour. This very morning he received his
+rations, and at this very moment he is dodged, and clothed and cared
+for at the cost of the rates and taxes. He has become the child of
+the State, and, therefore, one of the socially damned.
+Thus emigration itself, instead of being an invariable specific,
+sometimes brings us back again to the gaol door.
+
+Emigration, by all means. But whom are you to emigrate? These girls
+who do not know how to bake? These lads who never handled a spade?
+And where are you to emigrate them? Are you going to make the Colonies
+the dumping ground of your human refuse? On that the colonists will
+have something decisive to say, where there are colonists; and where
+there are not, how are you to feed, clothe, and employ your emigrants
+in the uninhabited wilderness? Immigration, no doubt, is the making of
+a colony, just as bread is the staff of life. But if you were to cram
+a stomach with wheat by a force-pump you would bring on such a fit of
+indigestion that unless your victim threw up the indigestible mass of
+unground, uncooked, unmasticated grain he would never want another
+meal. So it is with the new colonies and the surplus labour of other
+countries.
+
+Emigration is in itself not a panacea. Is Education? In one sense it
+may be, for Education, the developing in a man of all his latent
+capacities for improvement, may cure anything and everything. But the
+Education of which men speak when they use the term, is mere schooling.
+No one but a fool would say a word against school teaching. By all
+means let us have our children educated. But when we have passed them
+through the Board School Mill we have enough experience to see that
+they do not emerge the renovated and regenerated beings whose advent
+was expected by those who passed the Education Act. The "scuttlers"
+who knife inoffensive persons in Lancashire, the fighting gangs of the
+West of London, belong to the generation that has enjoyed the advantage
+of Compulsory Education. Education, book-learning and schooling will
+not solve the difficulty. It helps, no doubt. But in some ways it
+aggravates it. The common school to which the children of thieves and
+harlots and drunkards are driven, to sit side by side with our little
+ones, is often by no means a temple of all the virtues.
+It is sometimes a university of all the vices. The bad infect the
+good, and your boy and girl come back reeking with the contamination of
+bad associates, and familiar with the coarsest obscenity of the slum.
+Another great evil is the extent to which our Education tends to
+overstock the labour market with material for quill-drivers and
+shopmen, and gives our youth a distaste for sturdy labour. Many of the
+most hopeless cases in our Shelters are men of considerable education.
+Our schools help to enable a starving man to tell his story in more
+grammatical language than that which his father could have employed,
+but they do not feed him, or teach him where to go to get fed. So far
+from doing this they increase the tendency to drift into those channels
+where food is least secure, because employment is most uncertain, and
+the market most overstocked.
+
+"Try Trades Unionism," say some, and their advice is being widely
+followed. There are many and great advantages in Trades Unionism.
+The fable of the bundle of sticks is good for all time. The more the
+working people can be banded together in voluntary organisations,
+created and administered by themselves for the protection of their own
+interests, the better--at any rate for this world--and not only for
+their own interests, but for those of every other section of the
+community. But can we rely upon this agency as a means of solving the
+problems which confront us? Trades Unionism has had the field to itself
+for a generation. It is twenty years since it was set free from all
+the legal disabilities under which it laboured. But it has not covered
+the land. It has not organised all skilled labour. Unskilled labour
+is almost untouched. At the Congress at Liverpool only one and a half
+million workmen were represented. Women are almost entirely outside
+the pale. Trade Unions not only represent a fraction of the labouring
+classes, but they are, by their constitution, unable to deal with those
+who do not belong to their body. What ground can there be, then, for
+hoping that Trades Unionism will by itself solve the difficulty? The
+most experienced Trades Unionists will be the first to admit that any
+scheme which could deal adequately with the out-of-works and others who
+hang on to their skirts and form the recruiting ground of blacklegs and
+embarrass them in ever way, would be, of all others that which would be
+most beneficial to Trades Unionism. The same may be said about
+Co-operation. Personally, I am a strong believer in Co-operation, but
+it must be Co-operation based on the spirit of benevolence. I don't
+see how any pacific re-adjustment of the social and economic relations
+between classes in this country can be effected except by the gradual
+substitution of cooperative associations for the present wages system.
+As you will see in subsequent chapters, so far from there being
+anything in my proposals that would militate in any way against the
+ultimate adoption of the co-operative solution of the question, I look
+to Co-operation as one of the chief elements of hope in the future.
+But we have not to deal with the ultimate future, but with the
+immediate present, and for the evils with which we are dealing the
+existing cooperative organisations do not and cannot give us much help.
+
+Another--I do not like to call it specific; it is only a name, a mere
+mockery of a specific--so let me call it another suggestion made when
+discussing this evil, is Thrift. Thrift is a great virtue no doubt.
+But how is Thrift to benefit those who have nothing? What is the use
+of the gospel of Thrift to a man who had nothing to eat yesterday, and
+has not threepence to-day to pay for his lodging to-night? To live on
+nothing a day is difficult enough, but to save on it would beat the
+cleverest political economist that ever lived. I admit without
+hesitation that any Scheme which weakened the incentive to Thrift would
+do harm. But it is a mistake to imagine that social damnation is an
+incentive to Thrift. It operates least where its force ought to be
+most felt. There is no fear that any Scheme that we can devise will
+appreciably diminish the deterrent influences which dispose a man to
+save. But it is idle wasting time upon a plea that is only brought
+forward as an excuse for inaction. Thrift is a great virtue, the
+inculcation of which must be constantly kept in view by all those who
+are attempting to "educate and save the people. It is not in any sense
+a specific for the salvation of the lapsed and the lost. Even among
+the most wretched of the very poor, a man must have an object and a
+hope before he will save a halfpenny. "Let us eat and drink, for
+to-morrow we perish," sums up the philosophy of those who have no hope.
+In the thriftiness of the French peasant we see that the temptation of
+eating and drinking is capable of being resolutely subordinated to the
+superior claims of the accumulation of a dowry for the daughter, or for
+the acquisition of a little more land for the son.
+
+Of the schemes of those who propose to bring in a new heaven and a new
+earth by a more scientific distribution of the pieces of gold and
+silver in the trouser pockets of mankind, I need not say anything here.
+They may be good or they may not. I say nothing against any short cut
+to the Millennium that is compatible with the Ten Commandments.
+I intensely sympathise with the aspirations that lie behind all these
+Socialist dreams. But whether it is Henry George's Single Tax on Land
+Values, or Edward Bellamy's Nationalism, or the more elaborate schemes
+of the Collectivists, my attitude towards them all is the same.
+What these good people want to do, I also want to do. But I am a
+practical man, dealing with the actualities of to-day. I have no
+preconceived theories, and I flatter myself I am singularly free from
+prejudices. I am ready to sit at the feet of any who will show me any
+good. I keep my mind open on all these subjects; and am quite prepared
+to hail with open arms any Utopia that is offered me. But it must be
+within range of my finger-tips. It is of no use to me if it is in the
+clouds. Cheques on the Bank of Futurity I accept gladly enough as a
+free gift, but I can hardly be expected to take them as if they were
+current coin, or to try to cash them at the Bank of England.
+
+It may be that nothing will be put permanently right until everything
+has been turned upside down. There are certainly so many things that
+need transforming, beginning with the heart of each individual man and
+woman, that I do not quarrel with any Visionary when in his intense
+longing for the amelioration of the condition of mankind he lays down
+his theories as to the necessity for radical change, however
+impracticable they may appear to me. But this is the question.
+Here at our Shelters last night were a thousand hungry, workless
+people. I want to know what to do with them? Here is John Jones,
+a stout stalwart labourer in rags, who has not had one square meal for
+a month, who has been hunting for work that will enable him to keep
+body and soul together, and hunting in vain. There he is in his hungry
+raggedness, asking for work that he may live, and not die of sheer
+starvation in the midst of the wealthiest city in the world.
+What is to be done with John Jones?
+
+The individualist tells me that the free play of the Natural Laws
+governing the struggle for existence will result in the Survival of the
+Fittest, and that in the course of a few ages, more or less, a much
+nobler type will be evolved. But meanwhile what is to become of John
+Jones? The Socialist tells me that the great Social Revolution is
+looming large on the horizon. In the good time coming, when wealth
+will be re-distributed and private property abolished, all stomachs
+will be filled and there will be no more John Jones' impatiently
+clamouring for opportunity to work that they may not die. It may be
+so, but in the meantime here is John Jones growing more impatient than
+ever because hungrier, who wonders if he is to wait for a dinner until
+the Social Revolution has arrived. What are we to do with John Jones?
+That is the question. And to the solution of that question none of the
+Utopians give me much help. For practical purposes these dreamers fall
+under the condemnation they lavish so freely upon the conventional
+religious people who relieve themselves of all anxiety for the welfare
+of the poor by saying that in the next world all will be put right.
+This religious cant, which rids itself of all the importunity of
+suffering humanity by drawing unnegotiable bills payable on the other
+side of the grave, is not more impracticable than the Socialistic
+clap-trap which postpones all redress of human suffering until after
+the general overturn. Both take refuge in the Future to escape a
+solution of the problems of the Present, and it matters little to the
+sufferers whether the Future is on this side of the grave or the other.
+Both are, for them, equally out of reach.
+
+When the sky falls we shall catch larks. No doubt.
+But in the meantime?
+
+It is the meantime--that is the only time in which we have to work.
+It is in the meantime that the people must be fed, that their life's
+work must be done or left undone for ever. Nothing that I have to
+propose in this book, or that I propose to do by my Scheme, will in the
+least prevent the coming of any of the Utopias. I leave the limitless
+infinite of the Future to the Utopians. They may build there as they
+please. As for me, it is indispensable that whatever I do is founded
+on existing fact, and provides a present help for the actual need.
+
+There is only one class or men who have cause to oppose the proposals
+which I am about to set forth. That is those, if such there be,
+who are determined to bring about by any and every means a bloody and
+violent overturn of all existing institutions. They will oppose the
+Scheme, and they will act logically in so doing. For the only hope of
+those who are the artificers of Revolution is the mass of seething
+discontent and misery that lies in the heart of the social system.
+Honestly believing that things must get worse before they get better,
+they build all their hopes upon the general overturn, and they resent
+as an indefinite postponement of the realisation of their dreams any
+attempt at a reduction of human misery.
+
+The Army of the Revolution is recruited by the Soldiers of Despair.
+Therefore, down with any Scheme which gives men Hope. In so far as it
+succeeds it curtails our recruiting ground and reinforces the ranks of
+our Enemies. Such opposition is to be counted upon, and to be utilised
+as the best of all tributes to the value of our work. Those who thus
+count upon violence and bloodshed are too few to hinder, and their
+opposition will merely add to the momentum with which I hope and
+believe this Scheme will ultimately be enabled to surmount all dissent,
+and achieve, with the blessing of God, that measure of success with
+which I verily believe it to be charged.
+
+
+
+PART 2.--DELIVERANCE.
+
+CHAPTER 1. A STUPENDOUS UNDERTAKING.
+
+Such, then, is a brief and hurried survey of Darkest England, and those
+who have been in the depths of the enchanted forest in which wander the
+tribes of the despairing Lost will be the first to admit that I have in
+no way exaggerated its horrors, while most will assert that I have
+under-estimated the number of its denizens. I have, indeed, very
+scrupulously striven to keep my estimates of the extent of the evil
+within the lines of sobriety. Nothing in such an enterprise as that on
+which I am entering could worse befall me than to come under the
+reproach of sensationalism or exaggeration. Most of the evidence upon
+which I have relied is taken direct from the official statistics
+supplied by the Government Returns; and as to the rest, I can only say
+that if my figures are compared with those of any other writer upon
+this subject, it will be found that my estimates are the lowest.
+I am not prepared to defend the exact accuracy of my calculations,
+excepting so far as they constitute the minimum. To those who believe
+that the numbers of the wretched are far in excess of my figures,
+I have nothing to say, excepting this, that if the evil is so much
+greater than I have described, then let your efforts be proportioned to
+your estimate, not to mine. The great point with each of us is, not
+how many of the wretched exist to-day, but how few shall there exist in
+the years that are to come.
+
+The dark and dismal jungle of pauperism, vice, and despair is the
+inheritance to which we have succeeded from the generations and
+centuries past, during which wars, insurrections, and internal troubles
+left our forefathers small leisure to attend to the well-being of the
+sunken tenth. Now that we have happened upon more fortunate times,
+let us recognise that we are our brother's keepers, and set to work,
+regardless of party distinctions and religious differences, to make
+this world of ours a little bit more like home for those whom we call
+our brethren.
+
+The problem, it must be admitted, is by no means a simple one; nor can
+anyone accuse me in the foregoing pages of having minimised the
+difficulties which heredity, habit, and surroundings place in the way
+of its solution, but unless we are prepared to fold our arms in
+selfish ease and say that nothing can be done, and thereby doom those
+lost millions to remediless perdition in this world, to say nothing of
+the next, the problem must be solved in some way. But in what way?
+That is the question. It may tend, perhaps, to the crystallisation of
+opinion on this subject if I lay down, with such precision as I can
+command, what must be the essential elements of any scheme likely to
+command success.
+
+SECTION I.--THE ESSENTIALS TO SUCCESS.
+
+The first essential that must be borne in mind as governing every
+Scheme that may be put forward is that it must change the man when it
+is his character and conduct which constitute the reasons for his
+failure in the battle of life. No change in circumstances, no
+revolution in social conditions, can possibly transform the nature of
+man. Some of the worst men and women in the world, whose names are
+chronicled by history with a shudder of horror, were those who had all
+the advantages that wealth, education and station could confer or
+ambition could attain.
+
+The supreme test of any scheme for benefiting humanity lies in the
+answer to the question, What does it make of the individual? Does it
+quicken his conscience, does it soften his heart, does it enlighten his
+mind, does it, in short, make more of a true man of him, because only
+by such influences can he be enabled to lead a human life? Among the
+denizens of Darkest England there are many who have found their way
+thither by defects of character which would under the most favourable
+circumstances relegate them to the same position. Hence, unless you can
+change their character your labour will be lost. You may clothe the
+drunkard, fill his purse with gold, establish him in a well-furnished
+home, and in three, or six, or twelve months he will once more be on
+the Embankment, haunted by delirium tremens, dirty, squalid, and
+ragged. Hence, in all cases where a man's own character and defects
+constitute the reasons for his fall, that character must be changed and
+that conduct altered if any permanent beneficial results are to be
+attained. If he is a drunkard, he must be made sober; if idle, he must
+be made industrious; if criminal, he must be made honest; if impure,
+he must be made clean; and if he be so deep down in vice, and has been
+there so long that he has lost all heart, and hope, and power to help
+himself, and absolutely refuses to move, he must be inspired with hope
+and have created within him the ambition to rise; otherwise he will
+never get out of the horrible pit.
+
+Secondly: The remedy, to be effectual, must change the circumstances of
+the individual when they are the cause of his wretched condition, and
+lie beyond his control. Among those who have arrived at their present
+evil plight through faults of self-indulgence or some defect in their
+moral character, how many are there who would have been very
+differently placed to-day had their surroundings been otherwise?
+Charles Kingsley puts this very abruptly where he makes the Poacher's
+widow say, when addressing the Bad Squire, who drew back
+
+ "Our daughters, with base--born babies,
+ Have wandered away in their shame.
+ If your misses had slept, Squire, where they did,
+ Your misses might do the same.'
+
+
+Placed in the same or similar circumstances, how many of us would have
+turned out better than this poor, lapsed, sunken multitude?
+
+Many of this crowd have never had a chance of doing better; they have
+been born in a poisoned atmosphere, educated in circumstances which
+have rendered modesty an impossibility, and have been thrown into life
+in conditions which make vice a second nature. Hence, to provide an
+effective remedy for the evils which we are deploring these
+circumstances must be altered, and unless my Scheme effects such a
+change, it will be of no use. There are multitudes, myriads, of men and
+women, who are floundering in the horrible quagmire beneath the burden
+of a load too heavy for them to bear; every plunge they take forward
+lands them deeper; some have ceased even to struggle, and lie prone in
+the filthy bog, slowly suffocating, with their manhood and womanhood
+all but perished. It is no use standing on the firm bank of the
+quaking morass and anathematising these poor wretches; if you are to do
+them any good, you must give them another chance to get on their feet,
+you must give them firm foothold upon which they can once more stand
+upright, and you must build stepping-stones across the bog to enable
+them safely to reach the other side. Favourable circumstances will not
+change a man's heart or transform his nature, but unpropitious
+circumstances may render it absolutely impossible for him to escape,
+no matter how he may desire to extricate himself. The first step with
+these helpless, sunken creatures is to create the desire to escape,
+and then provide the means for doing so. In other words, give the man
+another chance.
+
+Thirdly: Any remedy worthy of consideration must be on a scale
+commensurate with the evil with which it proposes to deal. It is no use
+trying to bail out the ocean with a pint pot. This evil is one whose
+victims are counted by the million. The army of the Lost in our midst
+exceeds the numbers of that multitudinous host which Xerxes led from
+Asia to attempt the conquest of Greece. Pass in parade those who make
+up the submerged tenth, count the paupers indoor and outdoor, the
+homeless, the starving, the criminals, the lunatics, the drunkards,
+and the harlots--and yet do not give way to despair! Even to attempt
+to save a tithe of this host requires that we should put much more
+force and fire into our work than has hitherto been exhibited by
+anyone. There must be no more philanthropic tinkering, as if this vast
+sea of human misery were contained in the limits of a garden pond.
+
+Fourthly: Not only must the Scheme be large enough, but it must be
+permanent. That is to say, it must not be merely a spasmodic effort
+coping with the misery of to-day; it must be established on a durable
+footing, so as to go on dealing with the misery of tomorrow and the
+day after, so long as there is misery left in the world with which to
+grapple.
+
+Fifthly: But while it must be permanent, it must also be immediately
+practicable. Any Scheme, to be of use, must be capable of being brought
+into instant operation with beneficial results.
+
+Sixthly: The indirect features of the Scheme must not be such as to
+produce injury to the persons whom we seek to benefit. Mere charity,
+for instance, while relieving the pinch of hunger, demoralises the
+recipient; and whatever the remedy is that we employ, it must be of
+such a nature as to do good without doing evil at the same time.
+It is no use conferring sixpennyworth of benefit on a man if, at the
+same time, we do him a shilling'sworth of harm.
+
+Seventhly: While assisting one class of the community, it must not
+seriously interfere with the interests of another. In raising one
+section of the fallen, we must not thereby endanger the safety of those
+who with difficulty are keeping on their feet.
+
+These are the conditions by which I ask you to test the Scheme I am
+about to unfold. They are formidable enough, possibly, to deter many
+from even attempting to do anything. They are not of my making. They
+are obvious to anyone who looks into the matter. They are the laws
+which govern the work of the philanthropic reformer, just as the laws
+of gravitation, of wind and of weather, govern the operations of the
+engineer. It is no use saying we could build a bridge across the Tay
+if the wind did not blow, or that we could build a railway across a bog
+if the quagmire would afford us a solid foundation. The engineer has
+to take into account the difficulties, and make them his starting
+point. The wind will blow, therefore the bridge must be made strong
+enough to resist it. Chat Moss will shake; therefore we must construct
+a foundation in the very bowels of the bog on which to build our
+railway. So it is with the social difficulties which confront us.
+If we act in harmony with these laws we shall triumph; but if we ignore
+them they will overwhelm us with destruction and cover us with
+disgrace.
+
+But, difficult as the task may be, it is not one which we can neglect.
+When Napoleon was compelled to retreat under circumstances which
+rendered it impossible for him to carry off his sick and wounded,
+he ordered his doctors to poison every man in the hospital. A general
+has before now massacred his prisoners rather than allow them to
+escape. These Lost ones are the Prisoners of Society; they are the
+Sick and Wounded in our Hospitals. What a shriek would arise from the
+civilised world if it were proposed to administer to-night to every one
+of these millions such a dose of morphine that they would sleep to wake
+no more. But so far as they are concerned, would it not be much less
+cruel thus to end their life than to allow them to drag on day after
+day, year after year, in misery, anguish, and despair, driven into vice
+and hunted into crime, until at last disease harries them into the
+grave?
+
+I am under no delusion as to the possibility of inaugurating a
+millennium by my Scheme; but the triumphs of science deal so much with
+the utilisation of waste material, that I do not despair of something
+effectual being accomplished in the utilisation of this waste human
+product. The refuse which was a drug and a curse to our manufacturers,
+when treated under the hands of the chemist, has been the means of
+supplying us with dyes rivalling in loveliness and variety the hues of
+the rainbow. If the alchemy of science can extract beautiful colours
+from coal tar, cannot Divine alchemy enable us to evolve gladness and
+brightness out of the agonised hearts and dark, dreary, loveless lives
+of these doomed myriads? Is it too much to hope that in God's world
+God's children may be able to do something, if they set to work with a
+will, to carry out a plan of campaign against these great evils which
+are the nightmare of our existence?
+
+The remedy, it may be, is simpler than some imagine. The key to the
+enigma may lie closer to our hands than we have any idea of.
+Many devices have been tried, and many have failed, no doubt;
+it is only stubborn, reckless perseverance that can hope to succeed;
+it is well that we recognise this. How many ages did men try to make
+gunpowder and never succeeded? They would put saltpetre to charcoal,
+or charcoal to sulphur, or saltpetre to sulphur, and so were ever
+unable to make the compound explode. But it has only been discovered
+within the last few hundred years that all three were needed.
+Before that gunpowder was a mere imagination, a phantasy of the
+alchemists. How easy it is to make gunpowder, now the secret of its
+manufacture is known!
+
+But take a simpler illustration, one which lies even within the memory
+of some that read these pages. From the beginning of the world down to
+the beginning of this century, mankind had not found out, with all its
+striving after cheap and easy transport, the miraculous difference that
+would be brought about by laying down two parallel lines of metal.
+All the great men and the wise men of the past lived and died oblivious
+of that fact. The greatest mechanicians and engineers of antiquity,
+the men who bridged all the rivers of Europe, the architects who built
+the cathedrals which are still the wonder of the world, failed to
+discern what seems to us so obviously simple a proposition, that two
+parallel lines of rail would diminish the cost and difficulty of
+transport to a minimum. Without that discovery the steam engine, which
+has itself been an invention of quite recent years, would have failed
+to transform civilisation.
+
+What we have to do in the philanthropic sphere is to find something
+analogous to the engineers' parallel bars. This discovery think I have
+made, and hence have I written this book.
+
+
+SECTION 2--MY SCHEME
+
+What, then, is my Scheme? It is a very simple one, although in its
+ramifications and extensions it embraces the whole world. In this book
+I profess to do no more than to merely outline, as plainly and as
+simply as I can, the fundamental features of my proposals. I propose
+to devote the bulk of this volume to setting forth what can practically
+be done with one of the most pressing parts of the problem, namely,
+that relating to those who are out of work, and who, as the result,
+are more or less destitute. I have many ideas of what might be done
+with those who are at present cared for in some measure by the State,
+but I will leave these ideas for the present.
+
+It is not urgent that I should explain how our Poor Law system could be
+reformed, or what I should like to see done for the Lunatics in
+Asylums, or the Criminals in Gaols. The persons who are provided for by
+the State we will, therefore, for the moment, leave out of count.
+The indoor paupers, the convicts, the inmates of the lunatic asylums
+are cared for, in a fashion; already. But, over and above all these,
+there exists some hundreds of thousands who are not quartered on the
+State, but who are living on the verge of despair, and who at any
+moment, under circumstances of misfortune, might be compelled to demand
+relief or support in one shape or another. I will confine myself,
+therefore, for the present to those who have no helper.
+
+It is possible, I think probable, if the proposals which I am now
+putting forward are carried out successfully in relation to the lost,
+homeless, and helpless of the population, that many of those who are at
+the present moment in somewhat better circumstances will demand that
+they also shall be allowed to partake in the benefits of the Scheme.
+But upon this, also, I remain silent. I merely remark that we have,
+in the recognition of the importance of discipline and organisation;
+what may be called regimented co-operation, a principle that will be
+found valuable for solving many social problems other than that of
+destitution. Of these plans, which are at present being brooded over
+with a view to their realisation when the time is propitious and the
+opportunity occurs, I shall have something to say.
+
+What is the outward and visible form of the Problem of the Unemployed?
+Alas! we are all too familiar with it for any lengthy description to
+be necessary. The social problem presents itself before us whenever a
+hungry, dirty and ragged man stands at our door asking if we can give
+him a crust or a job. That is the social question. What are you to do
+with that man? He has no money in his pocket, all that he can pawn he
+has pawned long ago, his stomach is as empty as his purse, and the
+whole of the clothes upon his back, even if sold on the best terms,
+would not fetch a shilling. There he stands, your brother, with
+sixpennyworth of rags to cover his nakedness from his fellow men and
+not sixpennyworth of victuals within his reach. He asks for work,
+which he will set to even on his empty stomach and in his ragged
+uniform, if so be that you will give him something for it, but his
+hands are idle, for no one employs him. What are you to do with that
+man? That is the great note of interrogation that confronts Society
+to-day. Not only in overcrowded England, but in newer countries beyond
+the sea, where Society has not yet provided a means by which the men
+can be put upon the land and the land be made to feed the men.
+To deal with this man is the Problem of the Unemployed. To deal with
+him effectively you must deal with him immediately, you must provide
+him in some way or other at once with food, and shelter, and warmth.
+Next you must find him something to do, something that will test the
+reality of his desire to work. This test must be more or less
+temporary, and should be of such a nature as to prepare him for making
+a permanent livelihood. Then, having trained him, you must provide him
+wherewithal to start life afresh. All these things I propose to do.
+My Scheme divides itself into three sections, each of which is
+indispensable for the success of the whole. In this three-fold
+organisation lies the open secret of the solution of the Social Problem.
+
+The Scheme I have to offer consists in the formation of these people
+into self-helping and self-sustaining communities, each being a kind of
+co-operative society, or patriarchal family, governed and disciplined
+on the principles which have already proved so effective in the
+Salvation Army.
+
+
+These communities we will call, for want of a better term, Colonies.
+There will be: --
+
+ (1) The City Colony.
+ (2) The Farm Colony.
+ (3) The Over-Sea Colony.
+
+
+THE CITY COLONY.
+
+By the City Colony is meant the establishment, in the very centre of
+the ocean of misery of which we have been speaking, of a number of
+Institutions to act as Harbours of Refuge for all and any who have been
+shipwrecked in life, character, or circumstances. These Harbours will
+gather up the poor destitute creatures, supply their immediate pressing
+necessities, furnish temporary employment, inspire them with hope for
+the future, and commence at once a course of regeneration by moral and
+religious influences.
+
+From these Institutions, which are hereafter described, numbers would,
+after a short time, be floated off to permanent employment, or sent
+home to friends happy to receive them on hearing of their reformation.
+All who remain on our hands would, by varied means, be tested as to
+their sincerity, industry, and honesty, and as soon as satisfaction was
+created, be passed on to the Colony of the second class.
+
+
+THE FARM COLONY.
+
+This would consist of a settlement of the Colonists on an estate in the
+provinces, in the culture of which they would find employment and
+obtain support. As the race from the Country to the City has been the
+cause of much of the distress we have to battle with, we propose to
+find a substantial part of our remedy by transferring these same people
+back to the country, that is back again to "the Garden!"
+
+Here the process of reformation of character would be carried forward
+by the same industrial, moral, and religious methods as have already
+been commenced in the City, especially including those forms of labour
+and that knowledge of agriculture which, should the Colonist not
+obtain employment in this country, will qualify him for pursuing his
+fortunes under more favourable circumstances in some other land.
+
+From the Farm, as from the City, there can be no question that large
+numbers, resuscitated in health and character, would be restored to
+friends up and down the country. Some would find employment in their
+own callings, others would settle in cottages on a small piece of land
+that we should provide, or on Co-operative Farms which we intend to
+promote; while the great bulk, after trial and training, would be
+passed on to the Foreign Settlement, which would constitute our third
+class, namely The Over-Sea Colony.
+
+
+THE OVER-SEA COLONY.
+
+All who have given attention to the subject are agreed that in our
+Colonies in South Africa, Canada, Western Australia and elsewhere,
+there are millions of acres of useful land to be obtained almost for
+the asking, capable of supporting our surplus population in health and
+comfort, were it a thousand times greater than it is. We propose to
+secure a tract of land in one of these countries, prepare it for
+settlement, establish in it authority, govern it by equitable laws,
+assist it in times of necessity, settling it gradually with a prepared
+people, and so create a home for these destitute multitudes.
+
+The Scheme, in its entirety, may aptly be compared to A Great Machine,
+foundationed in the lowest slums and purlieus of our great towns and
+cities, drawing up into its embrace the depraved and destitute of all
+classes; receiving thieves, harlots, paupers, drunkards, prodigals,
+all alike, on the simple conditions of their being willing to work and
+to conform to discipline. Drawing up these poor outcasts, reforming
+them, and creating in them habits of industry, honesty, and truth;
+teaching them methods by which alike the bread that perishes and that
+which endures to Everlasting Life can be won. Forwarding them from the
+City to the Country, and there continuing the process of regeneration,
+and then pouring them forth on to the virgin soils that await their
+coming in other lands, keeping hold of them with a strong government,
+and yet making them free men and women; and so laying the foundations,
+perchance, of another Empire to swell to vast proportions in later
+times. Why not?
+
+CHAPTER 2. TO THE RESCUE!--THE CITY COLONY.
+
+The first section of my Scheme is the establishment of a Receiving
+House for the Destitute in every great centre of population. We start,
+let us remember, from the individual, the ragged, hungry, penniless man
+who confronts us with despairing demands for food, shelter, and work.
+Now, I have had some two or three years' experience in dealing with
+this class. I believe, at the present moment, the Salvation Army
+supplies more food and shelter to the destitute than any other
+organisation in London, and it is the experience and encouragement
+which I have gained in the working of these Food and Shelter Depots
+which has largely encouraged me to propound this scheme.
+
+
+SECTION 1.--FOOD AND SHELTER FOR EVERY MAN.
+
+As I rode through Canada and the United States some three years ago,
+I was greatly impressed with the superabundance of food which I saw at
+every turn. Oh, how I longed that the poor starving people, and the
+hungry children of the East of London and of other centres of our
+destitute populations, should come into the midst of this abundance,
+but as it appeared impossible for me to take them to it, I secretly
+resolved that I would endeavour to bring some of it to them.
+I am thankful to say that I have already been able to do so on a small
+scale, and hope to accomplish it ere long on a much vaster one.
+
+With this view, the first Cheap Food Depot was opened in the East of
+London two and a half years ago. This has been followed by others,
+and we have now three establishments: others are being arranged for.
+
+Since the commencement in 1888, we have supplied over three and a half
+million meals. Some idea can be formed of the extent to which these
+Food and Shelter Depots have already struck their roots into the strata
+of Society which it is proposed to benefit, by the following figures,
+which give the quantities of food sold during the year at our Food
+Depots.
+
+FOOD SOLD IN DEPOTS AND SHELTERS DURING 1889.
+
+ Article Weight Measure Remarks
+ Soup ......... 116,400 gallons
+ Bread 192.5 tons 106,964 4-lb loaves
+ Tea 2.5 tons 46,980 gallons
+ Coffee 15 cwt. 13,949 gallons
+ Cocoa 6 tons 29,229 gallons
+ Sugar 25 tons ..................... 300 bags
+ Potatoes 140 tons ..................... 2,800 bags
+ Flour 18 tons ..................... 180 sacks
+ Peaflour 28.5 tons ..................... 288 sacks
+ Oatmeal 3.5 tons ..................... 36 sacks
+ Rice 12 tons ..................... 120 sacks
+ Beans 12 tons ..................... 240 sacks
+Onions and parsnips 12 tons ..................... 240 sacks
+ Jam 9 tons ..................... 2,880 jars
+ Marmalade 6 tons ..................... 1,920 jars
+ Meat 15 tons .....................
+ Milk .......... 14,300 quarts
+
+This includes returns from three Food Depots and five Shelters.
+I propose to multiply their number, to develop their usefulness,
+and to make them the threshold of the whole Scheme. Those who have
+already visited our Depots will understand exactly what th is means.
+The majority, however, of the readers of these pages have not done so,
+and for them it is necessary to explain what they are.
+
+At each of our Depots, which can be seen by anybody that cares to take
+the trouble to visit them, there are two departments, one dealing with
+food, the other with shelter. Of these both are worked together and
+minister to the same individuals. Many come for food who do not come
+for shelter, although most of those who come for shelter also come for
+food, which is sold on terms to cover, as nearly as possible, the cost
+price and working expenses of the establishment. In this our Food
+Depots differ from the ordinary soup kitchens.
+
+There is no gratuitous distribution of victuals. The following is our
+Price List: --
+
+ WHAT IS SOLD AT THE FOOD DEPOTS.
+
+For a child
+
+Soup Per Basin 1/4d
+Soup With Bread 1/2d
+Coffee or Cocoa per cup 1/4d
+Coffee or Cocoa With Bread and Jam 1/2d
+
+For adults
+
+Soup .. .. .. Per Basin 1/2d
+Soup .. .. .. With Bread 1d
+Potatoes .. .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Cabbage .. .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Haricot Beans .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Boiled Jam Pudding .. .. .. 1/2d
+Boiled Plum Pudding .. .. Each 1d
+Rice .. .. .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Baked Plum .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Baked Jam Roll .. .. .. .. 1/2d
+Meat Pudding and Potatoes .. .. 3d
+Corned Beef .. .. .. .. 2d
+Corned Mutton .. .. .. .. 2d
+Coffee per cup 1/2d; per mug 1d
+Cocoa per cup 1/2d; per mug 1d
+Tea per cup 1/2d; per mug 1d
+Bread & Butter, Jam or Marmalade per slice 1/2d
+
+Soup in own Jugs, 1d per Quart. Ready at 10 a.m.
+
+A certain discretionary power is vested in the Officers in charge of
+the Depot, and they can in very urgent cases give relief, but the rule
+is for the food to be paid for, and the financial results show that
+working expenses are just about covered.
+
+These Cheap Food Depots I have no doubt have been and are or great
+service to numbers of hungry starving men, women, and children, at the
+prices just named, which must be within the reach of all, except the
+absolutely penniless; but it is the Shelter that I regard as the most
+useful feature in this part of our undertaking, for if anything is to
+be done to get hold of those who use the Depot, some more favourable
+opportunity must be afforded than is offered by the mere coming into
+the food store to get, perhaps, only a basin of soup. This part of the
+Scheme I propose to extend very considerably.
+
+Suppose that you are a casual in the streets of London, homeless,
+friendless, weary with looking for work all day and finding none.
+Night comes on. Where are you to go? You have perhaps only a few
+coppers, or it may be, a few shillings, left of the rapidly dwindling
+store of your little capital. You shrink from sleeping in the open
+air; you equally shrink from going to the fourpenny Dosshouse where,
+in the midst of strange and ribald company, you may be robbed of the
+remnant of the money still in your possession. While at a loss as to
+what to do, someone who sees you suggests that you should go to our
+Shelter. You cannot, of course, go to the Casual Ward of the Workhouse
+as long as you have any money in your possession. You come along to
+one of our Shelters. On entering you pay fourpence, and are free of
+the establishment for the night. You can come in early or late.
+The company begins to assemble about five o'clock in the afternoon.
+In the women's Shelter you find that many come much earlier and sit
+sewing, reading or chatting in the sparely furnished but well warmed
+room from the early hours of the afternoon until bedtime.
+
+You come in, and you get a large pot of coffee, tea, or cocoa,
+and a hunk of bread. You can go into the wash-house, where you can
+have a wash with plenty of warm water, and soap and towels free.
+Then after having washed and eaten you can make yourself comfortable.
+You can write letters to your friends, if you have any friends to
+write to, or you can read, or you can sit quietly and do nothing.
+At eight o'clock the Shelter is tolerably full, and then begins what
+we consider to be the indispensable feature of the whole concern.
+Two or three hundred men in the men's Shelter, or as many women in the
+women's Shelter, are collected together, most of them strange to each
+other, in a large room. They are all wretchedly poor--what are you
+to do with them? This is what we do with them.
+
+We hold a rousing Salvation meeting. The Officer in charge of the
+Depot, assisted by detachments from the Training Homes, conducts a
+jovial free-and-easy social evening. The girls have their banjos and
+their tambourines, and for a couple of hours you have as lively a
+meeting as you will find in London. There is prayer, short and to the
+point; there are addresses, some delivered by the leaders of the
+meeting, but the most of them the testimonies of those who have been
+saved at previous meetings, and who, rising in their seats, tell their
+companions their experiences. Strange experiences they often are of
+those who have been down in the very bottomless depths of sin and vice
+and misery, but who have found at last firm footing on which to stand,
+and who are, as they say in all sincerity, "as happy as the day is
+long." There is a joviality and a genuine good feeling at some of these
+meetings which is refreshing to the soul. There are all sorts and
+conditions of men; casuals, gaol birds, Out-of-Works, who have come
+there for the first time, and who find men who last week or last month
+were even as they themselves are now--still poor but rejoicing in a
+sense of brotherhood and a consciousness of their being no longer
+outcasts and forlorn in this wide world. There are men who have at
+last seen revive before them a hope of escaping from that dreadful
+vortex, into which their sins and misfortunes had drawn them, and being
+restored to those comforts that they had feared so long were gone for
+ever; nay, of rising to live a true and Godly life. These tell their
+mates how this has come about, and urge all who hear them to try for
+themselves and see whether it is not a good and happy thing to be
+soundly saved. In the intervals of testimony--and these testimonies,
+as every one will bear me witness who has ever attended any of our
+meetings, are not long, sanctimonious lackadaisical speeches, but
+simple confessions of individual experience--there are bursts of
+hearty melody. The conductor of the meeting will start up a verse or
+two of a hymn illustrative of the experiences mentioned by the last
+speaker, or one of the girls from the Training Home will sing a solo,
+accompanying herself on her instrument, while all join in a rattling
+and rollicking chorus.
+
+There is no compulsion upon anyone of our dossers to take part in this
+meeting; they do not need to come in until it is over; but as a simple
+matter of fact they do come in. Any night between eight and ten o'clock
+you will find these people sitting there, listening to the
+exhortations and taking part in the singing, many of them, no doubt,
+unsympathetic enough, but nevertheless preferring to be present with
+the music and the warmth, mildly stirred, if only by curiosity,
+as the various testimonies are delivered.
+
+Sometimes these testimonies are enough to rouse the most cynical of
+observers. We had at one of our shelters the captain of an ocean
+steamer, who had sunk to the depths of destitution through strong
+drink. He came in there one night utterly desperate and was taken in
+hand by our people--and with us taking in hand is no mere phrase,
+for at the close of our meetings our officers go from seat to seat,
+and if they see anyone who shows signs of being affected by the
+speeches or the singing, at once sit down beside him and begin to
+labour with him for the salvation of his soul. By this means they are
+able to get hold of the men and to know exactly where the difficulty
+lies, what the trouble is, and if they do nothing else, at least
+succeed in convincing them that there is someone who cares for their
+soul and would do what he could to lend them a helping hand.
+
+The captain of whom I was speaking was got hold of in this way.
+He was deeply impressed, and was induced to abandon once and for all
+his habits of intemperance. From that meeting he went an altered man.
+He regained his position in the merchant service, and twelve months
+afterwards astonished us all by appearing in the uniform of a captain
+of a large ocean steamer, to testify to those who were there how low he
+had been, how utterly he had lost all hold on Society and all hope of
+the future, when, fortunately led to the Shelter, he found friends,
+counsel, and salvation, and from that time had never rested until he
+had regained the position which he had forfeited by his intemperance.
+
+The meeting over, the singing girls go back to the Training Home,
+and the men prepare for bed. Our sleeping arrangements are somewhat
+primitive; we do not provide feather beds, and when you go into our
+dormitories, you will be surprised to find the floor covered by what
+look like an endless array of packing cases. These are our beds,
+and each of them forms a cubicle. There is a mattress laid on the
+floor, and over the mattress a leather apron, which is all the
+bedclothes that we find it possible to provide. The men undress,
+each by the side of his packing box, and go to sleep under their
+leather covering. The dormitory is warmed with hot water pipes to a
+temperature of 60 degrees, and there has never been any complaint of
+lack of warmth on the part of those who use the Shelter. The leather
+can be kept perfectly clean, and the mattresses, covered with American
+cloth, are carefully inspected every day, so that no stray specimen of
+vermin may be left in the place. The men turn in about ten o'clock and
+sleep until six. We have never any disturbances of any kind in the
+Shelters. We have provided accommodation now for several thousand of
+the most helplessly broken-down men in London, criminals many of them,
+mendicants, tramps, those who are among the filth and offscouring of
+all things; but such is the influence that is established by the
+meeting and the moral ascendancy of our officers themselves, that we
+have never had a fight on the premises, and very seldom do we ever hear
+an oath or an obscene word. Sometimes there has been trouble outside
+the Shelter, when men insisted upon coming in drunk or were otherwise
+violent; but once let them come to the Shelter, and get into the swing
+of the concern, and we have no trouble with them. In the morning they
+get up and have their breakfast and, after a short service, go off
+their various ways. We find that we can do this, that is to say, we
+can provide coffee and bread for breakfast and for supper, and a
+shake-down on the floor in the packing-boxes I have described in a warm
+dormitory for fourpence a head.
+
+I propose to develop these Shelters, so as to afford every man a
+locker, in which he could store any little valuables that he may
+possess. I would also allow him the use of a boiler in the washhouse
+with a hot drying oven, so that he could wash his shirt over night and
+have it returned to him dry in the morning. Only those who have had
+practical experience of the difficulty of seeking for work in London
+can appreciate the advantages of the opportunity to get your shirt
+washed in this way--if you have one. In Trafalgar Square, in 1887,
+there were few things that scandalised the public more than the
+spectacle of the poor people camped in the Square, washing their shirts
+in the early morning at the fountains. If you talk to any men who have
+been on the road for a lengthened period they will tell you that
+nothing hurts their self-respect more or stands more fatally in the way
+of their getting a job than the impossibility of getting their little
+things done up and clean.
+
+In our poor man's "Home" everyone could at least keep himself clean and
+have a clean shirt to his back, in a plain way, no doubt; but still not
+less effective than if he were to be put up at one of the West End
+hotels, and would be able to secure anyway the necessaries of life
+while being passed on to something far better. This is the first step.
+
+SOME SHELTER TROPHIES.
+
+Of the practical results which have followed our methods of dealing
+with the outcasts who take shelter with us we have many striking
+examples. Here are a few, each of them a transcript of a life
+experience relating to men who are now active, industrious members of
+the community upon which but for the agency of these Depots they would
+have been preying to this day.
+
+A.S.--Born in Glasgow, 1825. Saved at Clerkenwell, May 19, 1889.
+Poor parents raised in a Glasgow Slum. Was thrown on the streets at
+seven years of age, became the companion and associate of thieves, and
+drifted into crime. The following are his terms of imprisonment: --
+14 days, 30 days, 30 days. 60 days, 60 days (three times in succession),
+4 months, 6 months (twice), 9 months, 18 months, 2 years, 6 years,
+7 years (twice), 14 years; 40 years 3 months and 6 days in the
+aggregate. Was flogged for violent conduct in gaol 8 times.
+
+W. M. ("Buff").--Born in Deptford, 1864, saved at Clerkenwell,
+March 31st, 1889. His father was an old Navy man, and earned a decent
+living as manager. Was sober, respectable, and trustworthy. Mother
+was a disreputable drunken slattern: a curse and disgrace to husband
+and family. The home was broken up, and little Buff was given over to
+the evil influences of his depraved mother. His 7th birthday present
+from his admiring parent was a "quarten o'gin." He got some education
+at the One Tun Alley Ragged School, but when nine years old was caught
+apple stealing, and sent to the industrial School at Ilford for
+7 years. Discharged at the end of his term, he drifted to the streets,
+the casual wards, and Metropolitan gaols, every one of whose interiors
+he is familiar with. He became a ringleader of a gang that infested
+London; a thorough mendicant and ne'er-do-well; a pest to society.
+Naturally he is a born leader, and one of those spirits that command a
+following; consequently, when he got Salvation, the major part of his
+following came after him to the Shelter, and eventually to God.
+His character since conversion has been altogether satisfactory, and he
+is now an Orderly at Whitechapel, and to all appearances a "true lad."
+
+C. W. ("Frisco").--Born in San Francisco, 1862. Saved April 24th,
+1889. Taken away from home at the age of eight years, and made his way
+to Texas. Here he took up life amongst the Ranches as a Cowboy,
+and varied it with occasional trips to sea, developing into a typical
+brass and rowdy. He had 2 years for mutiny at sea, 4 years for mule
+stealing, 5 years for cattle stealing and has altogether been in gaol
+for thirteen years and eleven months. He came over to England,
+got mixed up with thieves and casuals here, and did several short terms
+of imprisonment. He was met on his release at Millbank by an old chum
+(Buff) and the Shelter Captain; came to Shelter, got saved, and has
+stood firm.
+
+H. A.--Born at Deptford, 1850. Saved at Clerkenwell, January 12th,
+1889. Lost mother in early life, step-mother difficulty supervening,
+and a propensity to misappropriation of small things developed into
+thieving. He followed the sea, became a hard drinker, a foul-mouthed
+blasphemer, and a blatant spouter of infidelity. He drifted about for
+years, ashore and afloat, and eventually reached the Shelter stranded.
+Here he sought God, and has done well. This summer he had charge of a
+gang of haymakers sent into the country, and stood the ordeal
+satisfactorily. He seems honest in his profession, and strives
+patiently to follow after God. He is at the workshops.
+
+H. S.--Born at A---, in Scotland. Like most Scotch lads although
+parents were in poor circumstances he managed to get a good education.
+Early in life he took to newspaper work, and picked up the details of
+the journalistic profession in several prominent papers in N.B.
+Eventually he got a position on a provincial newspaper, and having put
+in a course at Glasgow University, graduated B.A. there. After this
+he was on the staff of a Welsh paper. He married a decent girl,
+and had several little ones, but giving way to drink, lost position,
+wife, family, and friends. At times he would struggle up and recover
+himself, and appears generally to have been able to secure a position,
+but again and again his besetment overcame him, and each time he would
+drift lower and lower. For a time he was engaged in secretarial work
+on a prominent London Charity, but fell repeatedly, and at length was
+dismissed. He came to us an utter outcast, was sent to Shelter and
+Workshop got saved, and is now in a good situation. He gives every
+promise, and those best able to judge seem very sanguine that at last a
+real good work has been accomplished in him.
+
+F. D.--Was born in London, and brought up to the iron trade.
+Held several good situations, losing one after another, from drink and
+irregularity. On one occasion, with #20 in his pocket, he started for
+Manchester, got drunk there, was locked up and fined five shillings,
+and fifteen shillings costs; this he paid, and as he was leaving the
+Court, a gentleman stopped him, saying that he knew his father,
+and inviting him to his house; however, with #10 in his pocket, he was
+too independent, and he declined; but the gentleman gave him his
+address, and left him. A few days squandered his cash, and clothes
+soon followed, all disappearing for drink, and then without a coin he
+presented himself at the address given to him, at ten o'clock at night.
+It turned out to be his uncle, who gave him #2 to go back to London,
+but this too disappeared for liquor. He tramped back to London utterly
+destitute. Several nights were passed on the Embankment, and on one
+occasion a gentleman gave him a ticket for the Shelter; this, however,
+he sold for 2d. and had a pint of beer, and stopped out all night.
+But it set him thinking, and he determined next day to raise 4d. and
+see what a Shelter was like. He came to Whitechapel, became a regular
+customer, eight months ago got saved, and is now doing well.
+
+F. H.--Was born at Birmingham, 1858. Saved at Whitechapel,
+March 26th, 1890. Father died in his infancy, mother marrying again.
+The stepfather was a drunken navvy, and used to knock the mother about,
+and the lad was left to the streets. At 12 years of age he left home,
+and tramped to Liverpool, begging his way, and sleeping on the
+roadsides. In Liverpool he lived about the Docks for some days,
+sleeping where he could. Police found him and returned him to
+Birmingham; his reception being an unmerciful thrashing from the
+drunken stepfather. He got several jobs as errand-boy, remarkable for
+his secret pilferings, and two years later left with fifty shillings
+stolen money, and reached Middlesbrough by road. Got work in a nail
+factory stayed nine months, then stole nine shillings from
+fellow-lodger, and again took the road. He reached Birmingham, and
+finding a warrant out for him, joined the Navy. He was in the
+Impregnable training-ship three years behaved himself, only getting
+"one dozen," and was transferred with character marked "good" to the
+Iron Duke in the China seas; soon got drinking, and was locked up and
+imprisoned for riotous conduct in almost every port in the stations.
+He broke ship, and deserted several times, and was a thorough specimen
+of a bad British tar. He saw gaol in Signapore, Hong Kong, Yokohama,
+Shanghai, Canton, and other places. In five years returned home, and,
+after furlough, joined the Belle Isle in the Irish station. Whisky
+here again got hold of him, and excess ruined his constitution.
+On his leave he had married, and on his discharge joined his wife in
+Birmingham. For some time he worked as sweeper in the market, but two
+years ago deserted his wife and family, and came to London, settled
+down to a loafer's life, lived on the streets with Casual Wards for his
+home. Eventually came to Whitechapel Shelter, and got saved.
+He is now a trustworthy, reliable lad; has become reconciled to wife,
+who came to London to see him, and he bids fair to be a useful man.
+
+J. W. S.--Born in Plymouth. His parents are respectable people.
+He is clever at his business, and has held good situations. Two years
+ago he came to London, fell into evil courses, and took to drink.
+Lost situation after situation, and kept on drinking; lost everything,
+and came to the streets. He found out Westminster Shelter,
+and eventually got saved; his parents were communicated with, and help
+and clothes forthcoming; with Salvation came hope and energy; he got a
+situation at Lewisham (7d. per hour) at his trade. Four months
+standing, and is a promising Soldier as well as a respectable mechanic.
+
+J. T.--Born in Ireland; well educated (commercially); clerk and
+accountant. Early in life joined the Queen's Army, and by good conduct
+worked his way up. Was orderly-room clerk and paymaster's assistant in
+his regiment. He led a steady life whilst in the service, and at the
+expiration of his term passed into the Reserve with a "very good"
+character. He was a long time unemployed, and this appears to have
+reduced him to despair, and so to drink. He sank to the lowest ebb,
+and came to Westminster in a deplorable condition; coatless, hatless,
+shirtless, dirty altogether, a fearful specimen of what a man of good
+parentage can be brought to. After being at Shelter some time, he got
+saved, was passed to Workshops, and gave great satisfaction.
+At present he is doing clerical work and gives satisfaction as a workman:
+a good influence in the place.
+
+J. S.--Born in London, of decent parentage. From a child he
+exhibited thieving propensities; soon got into the hands of the police,
+and was in and out of gaol continually. He led the life of a confirmed
+tramp, and roved all over the United Kingdom. He has been in penal
+servitude three times, and his last term was for seven years, with
+police supervision. After his release he married a respectable girl,
+and tried to reform, but circumstances were against him; character he
+had none, a gaol career only to recommend him, and so he and his wife
+eventually drifted to destitution. They came to the Shelter, and asked
+advice; they were received, and he made application to the sitting
+Magistrate at Clerkenwell as to a situation, and what he ought to do.
+The Magistrate helped him, and thanked the Salvation Army for its
+efforts in behalf of him and such as he, and asked us to look after the
+applicant. A little work was given him, and after a time a good
+situation procured. To-day they have a good time; he is steadily
+employed, and both are serving God, holding the respect and confidence
+of neighbours, etc.
+
+E. G.--Came to England in the service of a family of position,
+and afterwards was butler and upper servant in several houses of the
+nobility. His health broke down, and for a long time he was altogether
+unfit for work. He had saved a considerable sum of money, but the cost
+of doctors and the necessaries of a sick man soon played havoc with his
+little store, and he became reduced to penury and absolute want.
+For some time he was in the Workhouse, and, being discharged,
+he was advised to go to the Shelter. He was low in health as well as
+in circumstances, and broken in spirit, almost despairing. He was
+lovingly advised to cast his care upon God, and eventually he was
+converted. After some time work was obtained as porter in a City
+warehouse. Assiduity and faithfulness in a year raised him to the
+position of traveller. Today he prospers in body and soul, retaining
+the respect and confidence of all associated with him.
+
+We might multiply these records, but those given show the kind of
+results attained.
+
+There's no reason to think that influences which have been blessed of
+God to the salvation of these poor fellows will not be equally
+efficacious if applied on a wider scale and over a vaster area.
+
+The thing to be noted in all these cases is that it was not the mere
+feeding which effected the result; it was the combination of the
+feeding with the personal labour for the individual soul. Still, if we
+had not fed them, we should never have come near enough to gain any
+hold upon their hearts. If we had merely fed them, they would have
+gone away next day to resume, with increased energy, the predatory and
+vagrant life which they had been leading. But when our feeding and
+Shelter Depots brought them to close quarters, our officers were
+literally able to put their arms round their necks and plead with them
+as brethren who had gone astray. We told them that their sins and
+sorrows had not shut them out from the love of the Everlasting Father,
+who had sent us to them to help them with all the power of our strong
+Organisation, of the Divine authority of which we never feel so sure as
+when it is going forth to seek and to save the lost.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--WORK FOR THE OUT-OF-WORKS.--THE FACTORY.
+
+The foregoing, it will be said, is all very well for your outcast when
+he has got fourpence in his pocket, but what if he has not got his
+fourpence? What if you are confronted with a crowd of hungry desperate
+wretches, without even a penny in their pouch, demanding food and
+shelter? This objection is natural enough, and has been duly
+considered from the first.
+
+I propose to establish in connection with every Food and Shelter Depot
+a Workshop or Labour Yard, in which any person who comes destitute and
+starving will be supplied with sufficient work to enable him to earn
+the fourpence needed for his bed and board. This is a fundamental
+feature of the Scheme, and one which I think will commend it to all
+those who are anxious to benefit the poor by enabling them to help
+themselves without the demoralising intervention of charitable relief.
+
+Let us take our stand for a moment at the door of one of our Shelters.
+There comes along a grimy, ragged, footsore tramp, his feet bursting
+out from the sides of his shoes, his clothes all rags, with filthy
+shirt and towselled hair. He has been, he tells you, on the tramp for
+the last three weeks, seeking work and finding none, slept last night
+on the Embankment, and wants to know if you can give him a bite and a
+sup, and shelter for the night. Has he any money? Not he; he probably
+spent the last penny he begged or earned in a pipe of tobacco, with
+which to dull the cravings of his hungry stomach. What are you to do
+with this man?
+
+Remember this is no fancy sketch--it is a typical case. There are
+hundreds and thousands of such applicants. Any one who is at all
+familiar with life in London and our other large towns, will recognise
+that gaunt figure standing there asking for bread and shelter or for
+work by which he can obtain both. What can we do with him? Before him
+Society stands paralysed, quieting its conscience every now and then by
+an occasional dole of bread and soup, varied with the semi-criminal
+treatment of the Casual Ward, until the manhood is crushed out of the
+man and you have in your hands a reckless, despairing, spirit-broken
+creature, with not even an aspiration to rise above his miserable
+circumstances, covered with vermin and filth, sinking ever lower and
+lower, until at last he is hurried out of sight in the rough shell
+which carries him to a pauper's grave.
+
+I propose to take that man, put a strong arm round him, and extricate
+him from the mire in which he is all but suffocated. As a first step we
+will say to him, "You are hungry, here is food; you are homeless, here
+is a shelter for your head; but remember you must work for your
+rations. This is not charity; it is work for the workless, help for
+those who cannot help themselves. There is the labour shed, go and earn
+your fourpence, and then come in out of the cold and the wet into the
+warm shelter; here is your mug of coffee and your great chunk of bread,
+and after you have finished these there is a meeting going on in full
+swing with its joyful music and hearty human intercourse. There are
+those who pray for you and with you, and will make you feel yourself a
+brother among men. There is your shake-down on the floor, where you
+will have your warm, quiet bed, undisturbed by the ribaldry and curses
+with which you have been familiar too long. There is the wash-house,
+where you can have a thorough wash-up at last, after all these days of
+unwashedness. There is plenty of soap and warm water and clean towels;
+there, too, you can wash your shirt and have it dried while you sleep.
+In the morning when you get up there will be breakfast for you,
+and your shirt will be dry and clean. Then when you are washed and
+rested, and are no longer faint with hunger, you can go and seek a job,
+or go back to the Labour shop until something better turns up."
+
+But where and how?
+
+Now let me introduce you to our Labour Yard. Here is no pretence
+of charity beyond the charity which gives a man remunerative labour.
+It is not our business to pay men wages. What we propose is to enable
+those, male or female, who are destitute, to earn their rations and do
+enough work to pay for their lodging until they are able to go out into
+the world and earn wages for themselves. There is no compulsion upon
+any one to resort to our shelter, but if a penniless man wants food he
+must, as a rule, do work sufficient to pay for what he has of that and
+of other accommodation. I say as a rule because, of course, our
+Officers will be allowed to make exceptions in extreme cases, but the
+rule will be first work then eat. And that amount of work will be
+exacted rigorously. It is that which distinguishes this Scheme from
+mere charitable relief.
+
+I do not wish to have any hand in establishing a new centre of
+demoralisation. I do not want my customers to be pauperised by being
+treated to anything which they do not earn. To develop self-respect in
+the man, to make him feel that at last he has go this foot planted on
+the first rung of the ladder which leads upwards, is vitally important,
+and this cannot be done unless the bargain between him and me is
+strictly carried out. So much coffee, so much bread, so much shelter,
+so much warmth and light from me, but so much labour in return from
+him.
+
+What labour? it is asked. For answer to this question I would like to
+take you down to our Industrial Workshops in Whitechapel. There you
+will see the Scheme in experimental operation. What we are doing there
+we propose to do everywhere up to the extent of the necessity, and
+there is no reason why we should fail elsewhere if we can succeed
+there.
+
+Our Industrial Factory at Whitechapel was established this Spring.
+We opened it on a very small scale. It has developed until we have
+nearly ninety men at work. Some of these are skilled workmen who are
+engaged in carpentry. The particular job they have now in hand is the
+making of benches for the Salvation Army. Others are engaged in
+mat-making, some are cobblers, others painters, and so forth.
+This trial effort has, so far, answered admirably. No one who is taken
+on comes for a permanency. So long as he is willing to work for his
+rations he is supplied with materials and provided with skilled
+superintendents. The hours of work are eight per day. Here are the
+rules and regulations under which the work is carried on at present:-
+
+THE SALVATION ARMY SOCIAL REFORM WING.
+
+Temporary Headquarters--
+36, UPPER THAMES STREET, LONDON, E.C,
+
+CITY INDUSTRIAL WORKSHOPS.
+
+OBJECTS.--These workshops are open for the relief of the unemployed
+and destitute, the object being to make it unnecessary for the homeless
+or workless to be compelled to go to the Workhouse or Casual Ward,
+food and shelter being provided for them in exchange for work done by
+them, until they can procure work for themselves, or it can be found
+for them elsewhere.
+
+PLAN OF OPERATION.--All those applying for assistance will be placed
+in what is termed the first class. They must be willing to do any kind
+of work allotted to them. While they remain in the first class,
+they shall be entitled to three meals a day, and shelter for the night,
+and will be expected in return to cheerfully perform the work allotted
+to them.
+
+Promotions will be made from this first-class to the second-class of
+all those considered eligible by the Labour Directors. They will,
+in addition to the food and shelter above mentioned, receive sums of
+money up to 5s. at the end of the week, for the purpose of assisting
+them to provide themselves with tools, to get work outside.
+
+REGULATIONS.--No smoking, drinking, bad language, or conduct
+calculated to demoralize will be permitted on the factory premises.
+No one under the influence of drink will be admitted. Any one refusing
+to work, or guilty of bad conduct, will be required to leave the
+premises.
+
+HOURS OF WORK.--7 a.m. to 8.30 a.m.; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
+2 p.m. to 5.30 p.m, Doors will be closed 5 minutes after 7, 9,
+and 2 p.m. Food Checks will be given to all as they pass out at each
+meal time. Meals and Shelter provided at 272, Whitechapel Road.
+
+Our practical experience shows that we can provide work by which a man
+can earn his rations. We shall be careful not to sell the goods so
+manufactured at less than the market prices. In firewood, for instance,
+we have endeavoured to be rather above the average than below it.
+As stated elsewhere, we are firmly opposed to injuring one class of
+workmen while helping another.
+
+Attempts on somewhat similar lines to those now being described have
+hitherto excited the liveliest feelings of jealousy on the part of the
+Trade Unions, and representatives of labour. They rightly consider it
+unfair that labour partly paid for out of the Rates and Taxes, or by
+Charitable Contributions, should be put upon the market at less than
+market value, and so compete unjustly with the production of those who
+have in the first instance to furnish an important quota of the funds
+by which these Criminal or Pauper workers are supported. No such
+jealousy can justly exist in relation to our Scheme, seeing that we are
+endeavouring to raise the standard of labour and are pledged to a war
+to the death against sweating in every shape and form.
+
+But, it will be asked, how do these Out-of-Works conduct themselves
+when you get them into the Factory? Upon this point I have a very
+satisfactory report to render. Many, no doubt, are below par,
+under-fed, and suffering from ill health, or the consequence of their
+intemperance. Many also are old men, who have been crowded out of the
+labour market by their younger generation. But, without making too
+many allowances on these grounds, I may fairly say that these men have
+shown themselves not only anxious and willing, but able to work.
+Our Factory Superintendent reports:-
+
+Of loss or time there has practically been none since the opening,
+June 29th. Each man during his stay, with hardly an exception,
+has presented himself punctually at opening time and worked more or
+less assiduously the whole of the labour hours. The morals of the men
+have been good, in not more than three instances has there been an
+overt act of disobedience, insubordination, or mischief. The men, as a
+whole, are uniformly civil, willing, and satisfied; they are all fairly
+industrious, some, and that not a few, are assiduous and energetic.
+The Foremen have had no serious complaints to make or delinquencies to
+report.
+
+On the 15th of August I had a return made of the names and trades and
+mode of employment of the men at work. Of the forty in the shops at
+that moment, eight were carpenters, twelve labourers, two tailors,
+two sailors, three clerks, two engineers, while among the rest was a
+shoemaker, two grocers, a cooper, a sailmaker, a musician, a painter,
+and a stonemason. Nineteen of these were employed in sawing, cutting
+and tying up firewood, six were making mats, seven making sacks, and
+the rest were employed in various odd jobs. Among them was a Russian
+carpenter who could not speak a word of English. The whole place is a
+hive of industry which fills the hearts of those who go to see it with
+hope that something is about to be done to solve the difficulty of the
+unemployed.
+
+Although our Factories will be permanent institutions they will not be
+anything more than temporary resting-places to those who avail
+themselves of their advantages. They are harbours of refuge into which
+the storm-tossed workman may run and re-fit, so that he may again push
+out to the ordinary sea of labour and earn his living.
+The establishment of these Industrial Factories seems to be one of the
+most obvious duties of those who would effectually deal with the Social
+Problem. They are as indispensable a link in the chain of deliverance
+as the Shelters, but they are only a link and not a stopping-place.
+And we do not propose that they should be regarded as anything but
+stepping-stones to better things.
+
+These Shops will also be of service for men and women temporarily
+unemployed who have families, and who possess some sort of a home.
+In numerous instances, if by any means these unfortunates could find
+bread and rent for a few weeks, they would tide over their
+difficulties, and an untold amount of misery would be averted, In such
+cases Work would be supplied at their own homes where preferred,
+especially for the women and children, and such remuneration would be
+aimed at as would supply the immediate necessities of the hour.
+To those who have rent to pay and families to support something beyond
+rations would be indispensable.
+
+The Labour Shops will enable us to work out our Anti-Sweating
+experiments. For instance, we propose at once to commence manufacturing
+match boxes, for which we shall aim at giving nearly treble the amount
+at present paid to the poor starving creatures engaged in this work.
+
+In all these workshops our success will depend upon the extent to which
+we are able to establish and maintain in the minds of the workers sound
+moral sentiments and to cultivate a spirit of hopefulness and
+aspiration. We shall continually seek to impress upon them the fact
+that while we desire to feed the hungry, and clothe the naked, and
+provide shelter for the shelterless, we are still more anxious to bring
+about that regeneration of heart and life which is essential to their
+future happiness and well-being.
+
+But no compulsion will for a moment be allowed with respect to religion.
+The man who professes to love and serve God will be helped because of
+such profession, and the man who does not will be helped in the hope
+that he will, sooner or later, in gratitude to God, do the same; but
+there will be no melancholy misery-making for any. There is no
+sanctimonious long face in the Army. We talk freely about Salvation,
+because it is to us the very light and joy of our existence.
+We are happy, and we wish others to share our joy. We know by our own
+experience that life is a very different thing when we have found the
+peace of God, and are working together with Him for the salvation of
+the world, instead of toiling for the realisation of worldly ambition
+or the amassing of earthly gain.
+
+
+SECTION 3.--THE REGIMENTATION OF THE UNEMPLOYED.
+
+When we have got the homeless, penniless tramp washed, and housed,
+and fed at the Shelter, and have secured him the means of earning his
+fourpence by chopping firewood, or making mats or cobbling the shoes of
+his fellow-labourers at the Factory, we have next to seriously address
+ourselves to the problem of how to help him to get back into the
+regular ranks of industry. The Shelter and the Factory are but
+stepping-stones, which have this advantage, they give us time to look
+round and to see what there is in a man and what we can make of him.
+
+The first and most obvious thing to do is to ascertain whether there is
+any demand in the regular market for the labour which is thus thrown
+upon our hands. In order to ascertain this I have already established a
+Labour Bureau, the operations of which I shall at once largely extend,
+at which employers can register their needs, and workmen can register
+their names and the kind of work they can do.
+
+At present there is no labour exchange in existence in this country.
+The columns of the daily newspaper are the only substitute for this
+much needed register. It is one of the many painful consequences
+arising from the overgrowth of cities. In a village where everybody
+knows everybody else this necessity does not exist. If a farmer wants
+a couple of extra men for mowing or some more women for binding at
+harvest time, he runs over in his mind the names of every available
+person in the parish. Even in a small town there is little difficulty
+in knowing who wants employment. But in the cities this knowledge is
+not available; hence we constantly hear of persons who would be very
+glad to employ labour for odd jobs in an occasional stress of work
+while at the same time hundreds of persons are starving for want of
+work at another end of the town. To meet this evil the laws of Supply
+and Demand have created the Sweating Middlemen, who farm out the
+unfortunates and charge so heavy a commission for their share that the
+poor wretches who do the work receive hardly enough to keep body and
+soul together. I propose to change all this by establishing Registers
+which will enable us to lay our hands at a moment's notice upon all the
+unemployed men in a district in any particular trade. In this way we
+should become the universal intermediary between those who have no
+employment and those who want workmen.
+
+In this we do not propose to supersede or interfere with the regular
+Trade Unions. Where Unions exist we should place ourselves in every
+case in communication with their officials. But the most helpless mass
+of misery is to be found among the unorganised labourers who have no
+Union, and who are, therefore, the natural prey of the middleman.
+Take, for instance, one of the most wretched classes of the community,
+the poor fellows who perambulate the streets as Sandwich Men. These
+are farmed out by certain firms. If you wish to send fifty or a
+hundred men through London carrying boards announcing the excellence of
+your goods, you go to an advertising firm who will undertake to supply
+you with as many sandwich men as you want for two shillings or half a
+crown a day. The men are forthcoming, your goods are advertised,
+you pay your money, but how much of that goes to the men? About one
+shilling, or one shilling and threepence; the rest goes to the
+middleman. I propose to supersede this middleman by forming a
+Co-operative Association of Sandwich Men. At every Shelter there would
+be a Sandwich Brigade ready in any numbers when wanted. The cost of
+registration and organisation, which the men would gladly pay, need not
+certainly amount to more than a penny in the shilling.
+
+All that is needed is to establish a trustworthy and disinterested
+centre round which the unemployed can group themselves, and which will
+form the nucleus of a great Co-operative Self-helping Association. The
+advantages of such a Bureau are obvious. But in this, also, I do not
+speak from theory. I have behind me the experience of seven months of
+labour both in England and Australia. In London we have a registration
+office in Upper Thames Street, where the unemployed come every morning
+in droves to register their names and to see whether they can obtain
+situations. In Australia, I see, it was stated in the House of
+Assembly that our Officers had been instrumental in finding situations
+for no less than one hundred and thirty-two "Out-of-Works" in a few
+days. Here, in London, we have succeeded in obtaining employment for a
+great number, although, of course, it is beyond our power to help all
+those who apply. We have sent hay-makers down to the country and there
+is every reason to believe that when our Organisation is better known,
+and in more extended operation, we shall have a great labour exchange
+between town and country, so that when there is scarcity in one place
+and congestion in another, there will be information immediately sent,
+so that the surplus labour can be drafted into those districts where
+labour is wanted. For instance, in the harvest seasons,
+with changeable weather, it is quite a common occurrence for the crops
+to be seriously damaged for want of labourers, while at the same time
+there will be thousands wandering about in the big towns and cities
+seeking work, but finding no one to hire them. Extend this system all
+over the world, and make it not only applicable to the transfer of
+workers between the towns and the provinces, but between Country and
+Country, and it is impossible to exaggerate the enormous advantages
+which would result. The officer in charge of our experimental Labour
+Bureau sends me the following notes as to what has already been done
+through the agency of the Upper Thames Street office:
+
+SALVATION ARMY SOCIAL REFORM WING.
+
+LABOR BUREAU.
+
+Bureau opened June 16th, 1890. The following are particulars of
+transactions up to September 26th, 1890: --
+
+ Applications for employment--Men .. .. 2462
+ Women .. 208
+ ----- 2670
+ ====
+
+ Applications from Employers for Men .. 128
+ Women .. 59
+ ----- 187
+ ====
+
+ Sent to Work--Men .. .. .. .. .. 301
+ Women .. .. .. .. 68
+ ---- 369
+ ====
+
+ Permanent Situations .. .. .. .. .. 146
+
+ Temporary Employment,
+ viz: --Boardmen, Cleaners, &c., &c .. .. 223
+
+ Sent to Workshop in Hanbury Street .. .. 165
+ ====
+
+
+SECTION 4.--THE HOUSEHOLD SALVAGE BRIGADE.
+
+It is obvious that the moment you begin to find work for the unemployed
+labour of the community, no matter what you do by way of the
+registration and bringing together of those who want work and those who
+want workers, there will still remain a vast residuum of unemployed,
+and it will be the duty of those who undertake to deal with the
+question to devise means for securing them employment. Many things are
+possible when there is a directing intelligence at headquarters and
+discipline in the rank and file, which would be utterly impossible when
+everyone is left to go where he pleases, when ten men are running for
+one man's job, and when no one can be depended upon to be in the way at
+the time he is wanted. When my Scheme is carried out, there will be in
+every populous centre a Captain of Industry, an Officer specially
+charged with the regimentation of unorganised labour, who would be
+continually on the alert, thinking how best to utilise the waste human
+material in his district. It is contrary to all previous experience to
+suppose that the addition of so much trained intelligence will not
+operate beneficially in securing the disposal of a commodity which is
+at present a drug in the market.
+
+Robertson, of Brighton, used frequently to remark that every truth was
+built up of two apparent contradictory propositions. In the same way I
+may say that the solution of every social difficulty is to be found in
+the discovery of two corresponding difficulties. It is like the puzzle
+maps of children. When you are putting one together, you suddenly come
+upon some awkward piece that will not fit in anywhere, but you do not
+in disgust and despair break your piece into fragments or throw it
+away. On the contrary, you keep it by you, knowing that before long
+you will discover a number of other pieces which it will be impossible
+to fit in until you fix your unmanageable, unshapely piece in the
+centre. Now, in the work of piecing together the fragments which lie
+scattered around the base of our social system we must not despair
+because we have in the unorganised, untrained labourers that which
+seems hopelessly out of fit with everything around. There must be
+something corresponding to it which is equally useless until he can be
+brought to bear upon it. In other words, having got one difficulty in
+the case of the Out-of-Works, we must cast about to find another
+difficulty to pair off against it, and then out of two difficulties
+will arise the solution of the problem.
+
+We shall not have far to seek before we discover in every town and in
+every country the corresponding element to our unemployed labourer.
+We have waste labour on the one hand; we have waste commodities on the
+other. About waste land I shall speak in the next chapter;
+I am concerned now solely with waste commodities. Herein we have a
+means of immediately employing a large number of men under conditions
+which will enable us to permanently provide for many of those whose
+hard lot we are now considering.
+
+I propose to establish in every large town what I may call "A Household
+Salvage Brigade," a civil force of organised collectors, who will
+patrol the whole town as regularly as the policeman, who will have
+their appointed beats, and each of whom will been trusted with the task
+of collecting the waste of the houses in their circuit. In small towns
+and villages this is already done, and it will be noticed that most of
+the suggestions which I have put forth in this book are based upon the
+central principle, which is that of restoring; to the over-grown, and,
+therefore, uninformed masses of population in our towns the same
+intelligence and co-operation as to the mutual wants of each and all,
+that prevails in your small town or village. The latter is the
+manageable unit, because its dimensions and its needs have not
+out-grown the range of the individual intelligence and ability of those
+who dwell therein. Our troubles in large towns arise chiefly from the
+fact that the massing of population has caused the physical bulk of
+Society to outgrow its intelligence. It is as if a human being had
+suddenly developed fresh limbs which were not connected by any nervous
+system with the gray matter of his brain. Such a thing is impossible
+in the human being, but, unfortunately, it is only too possible in
+human society. In the human body no member can suffer without an
+instantaneous telegram being despatched, as it were, to the seat of
+intelligence; the foot or the finger cries out when it suffers, and the
+whole body suffers with it. So, in a small community, every one, rich
+and poor, is more or less cognizant of the sufferings of the community.
+In a large town, where people have ceased to be neighbourly, there is
+only a congested mass of population settled down on a certain small
+area without any human ties connecting them together. Here, it is
+perfectly possible, and it frequently happens, that men actually die of
+starvation within a few doors of those who, if they had been informed
+of the actual condition of the sufferer that lay within earshot of
+their comfortable drawing-rooms, would have been eager to minister the
+needed relief. What we have to do, therefore, is to grow a new nervous
+system for the body politic, to create a swift, almost automatic, means
+of communication between the community as a whole and the meanest of
+its members, so as to restore to the city what the village possesses.
+
+I do not say that the plan which I have suggested is the only plan or
+the best plan conceivable. All that I claim for it is that it is the
+only plan which I can conceive as practicable at the present moment,
+and that, as a matter of fact, it holds the field alone, for no one,
+so far as I have been able to discover, even proposes to reconstitute
+the connection between what I have called the gray matter of the brain
+of the municipal community and all the individual units which make up
+the body politic.
+
+Carrying out the same idea I come to the problem of the waste
+commodities of the towns, and we will take this as an earnest of the
+working out of the general principle. In the villages there is very
+little waste. The sewage is applied directly to the land, and so
+becomes a source of wealth instead of being emptied into great
+subterranean reservoirs, to generate poisonous gases, which by a most
+ingenious arrangement, are then poured forth into the very heart of our
+dwellings, as is the case in the great cities. Neither is there any
+waste of broken victuals. The villager has his pig or his poultry, or
+if he has not a pig his neighbour has one, and the collection of broken
+victuals is conducted as regularly as the delivery of the post. And as
+it is with broken victuals, so it is with rags and bones, and old iron,
+and all the debris of a household. When I was a boy one of the most
+familiar figures in the streets of a country town was the man, who,
+with his small hand-barrow or donkey-cart, made a regular patrol
+through all the streets once a week, collecting rags, bones, and all
+other waste materials, buying the same from the juveniles who collected
+them in specie, not of Her Majesty's current coin, but of common
+sweetmeats, known as "claggum" or "taffy." When the tootling of his
+familiar horn was heard the children would bring out their stores, and
+trade as best they could with the itinerant merchant, with the result
+that the closets which in our towns to-day have become the receptacles
+of all kinds of, disused lumber were kept then swept and garnished.
+Now, what I want to know is why can we not establish on a scale
+commensurate with our extended needs the rag-and-bone industry in all
+our great towns? That there is sufficient to pay for the collection is,
+I think, indisputable. If it paid in a small North-country town or
+Midland village, why would it not pay much better in an area where the
+houses stand more closely together, and where luxurious living and
+thriftless habits have so increased that there must be proportionately
+far more breakage, more waste, and, therefore, more collectable matter
+than in the rural districts? In looking over the waste of London it has
+occurred to me that in the debris of our households there is sufficient
+food, it utilised, to feed many of the starving poor, and to employ
+some thousands of them in its collection, and, in addition, largely to
+assist the general scheme. What I propose would be to go to work on
+something like the following plan:-
+
+London would be divided into districts, beginning with that portion of
+it most likely to furnish the largest supplies of what would be worth
+collection. Two men, or a man and a boy, would be told of for this
+purpose to this district.
+
+Households would be requested to allow a receptacle to be placed in
+some convenient spot in which the servants could deposit the waste
+food, and a sack of some description would also be supplied for the
+paper, rags, &c.
+
+The whole would be collected, say once or twice a week, or more
+frequently, according to the season and circumstances, and transferred
+to depots as central as possible to the different districts.
+
+At present much of this waste is thrown into the dust-bin, there to
+fester and breed disease. Then there are old newspapers, ragged books,
+old bottles, tins, canisters, etc. We all know what a number of
+articles there are which are not quite bad enough to be thrown into the
+dust heap, and yet are no good to us. We put them on one side,
+hoping that something may turn up, and as that something very seldom
+does turn up, there they remain.
+
+Crippled musical instruments, for instance, old toys, broken-down
+perambulators, old clothes, all the things, in short, for which we have
+no more need, and for which there is no market within our reach, but
+which we feel it would be a sin and a shame to destroy.
+
+When I get my Household Salvage Brigade properly organised, beginning,
+as I said, in some district where we should be likely to meet with most
+material, our uniformed collectors would call every other day or twice
+a week with their hand barrow or pony cart. As these men would be
+under strict discipline, and numbered, the householder would have a
+security against any abuse of which such regular callers might
+otherwise be the occasion.
+
+At present the rag and bone man who drives a more or less precarious
+livelihood by intermittent visits, is looked upon askance by prudent
+housewives. They fear in many cases he takes the refuse in order to
+have the opportunity of finding something which may be worth while
+"picking up," and should he be impudent or negligent there is no
+authority to whom they can appeal. Under our Brigade, each district
+would have its numbered officer, who would himself be subordinate to a
+superior officer, to whom any complaints could be made, and whose duty
+it would be to see that the officers under his command punctually
+performed their rounds and discharged their duties without offence.
+
+Here let me disclaim any intention of interfering with the Little
+Sisters of the Poor, or any other persons, who collect the broken
+victuals of hotels and other establishments for charitable purposes.
+My object is not to poach on my neighbour's domains, nor shall I ever
+be a party to any contentious quarrels for the control of this or that
+source of supply. All that is already utilised I regard as outside my
+sphere. The unoccupied wilderness of waste is a wide enough area for
+the operations of our Brigade. But it will be found in practice that
+there are no competing agencies. While the broken victuals of certain
+large hotels are regularly collected, the things before enumerated,
+and a number of others, are untouched because not sought after.
+
+Of the immense extent to which Food is wasted few people have any
+notion except those who have made actual experiments. Some years ago,
+Lady Wolseley established a system of collection from house to house in
+Mayfair, in order to secure materials for a charitable kitchen which,
+in concert with Baroness Burdett-Coutts, she had started at
+Westminster. The amount of the food which she gathered was enormous.
+Sometimes legs of mutton from which only one or two slices had been cut
+were thrown into the tub, where they waited for the arrival of the cart
+on its rounds. It is by no means an excessive estimate to assume that
+the waste of the kitchens of the West End would provide a sufficient
+sustenance for all the Out-of-Works who will be employed in our labour
+sheds at the industrial centres. All that it needs is collection,
+prompt, systematic, by disciplined men who can be relied upon to
+discharge their task with punctuality and civility, and whose failure
+in this duty can be directly brought to the attention of the
+controlling authority.
+
+Of the utilisation of much of the food which is to be so collected I
+shall speak hereafter, when I come to describe the second great
+division of my scheme, namely the Farm Colony. Much of the food
+collected by the Household Salvage Brigade would not be available for
+human consumption. In this the greatest care would be exercised,
+and the remainder would be dispatched, if possible, by barges down the
+river to the Farm Colony, where we shall meet it hereafter.
+
+But food is only one of the materials which we should handle. At our
+Whitechapel Factory there is one shoemaker whom we picked off the
+streets destitute and miserable. He is now saved, and happy, and
+cobbles away at the shoe leather of his mates. That shoemaker, I
+foresee, is but the pioneer of a whole army of shoemakers constantly at
+work in repairing the cast-off boots and shoes of London. Already in
+some provincial towns a great business is done by the conversion of old
+shoes into new. They call the men so employed translators. Boots and
+shoes, as every wearer of them knows, do not go to pieces all at once
+or in all parts at once. The sole often wears out utterly, while the
+upper leather is quite good, or the upper leather bursts while the sole
+remains practically in a salvable condition; but your individual pair
+of shoes and boots are no good to you when any section of them is
+hopelessly gone to the bad. But give our trained artist in leather and
+his army of assistants a couple of thousand pairs of boots and shoes,
+and it will go ill with him if out of the couple of thousand pairs of
+wrecks he cannot construct five hundred pairs, which, if not quite
+good, will be immeasurably better than the apologies for boots which
+cover the feet of many a poor tramp, to say nothing of the thousands of
+poor children who are at the present moment attending our public
+schools. In some towns they have already established a Boot and Shoe
+Fund in order to provide the little ones who come to school with shoes
+warranted not to let in water between the school house and home. When
+you remember the 43,000 children who are reported by the School Board
+to attend the schools of London alone unfed and starving, do you not
+think there are many thousands to whom we could easily dispose, with
+advantage, the resurrected shoes of our Boot Factory?
+
+This, however, is only one branch of industry. Take old umbrellas.
+We all know the itinerant umbrella mender, whose appearance in the
+neighbourhood of the farmhouse leads the good wife to look after her
+poultry and to see well to it that the watchdog is on the premises.
+But that gentleman is almost the only agency by which old umbrellas can
+be rescued from the dust heap. Side by side with our Boot Factory we
+shall have a great umbrella works. The ironwork of one umbrella will
+be fitted to the stick of another, and even from those that are too
+hopelessly gone for any further use as umbrellas we shall find plenty
+of use for their steels and whalebone.
+
+So I might go on. Bottles are a fertile source of minor domestic
+worry. When you buy a bottle you have to pay a penny for it; but when
+you have emptied it you cannot get a penny back; no, nor even a
+farthing. You throw your empty bottle either into the dust heap,
+or let it lie about. But if we could collect all the waste bottles of
+London every day, it would go hardly with us if we could not turn a
+very pretty penny by washing them, sorting them, and sending them out
+on a new lease of life. The washing of old bottles alone will keep a
+considerable number of people going.
+
+I can imagine the objection which will be raised by some shortsighted
+people, that by giving the old, second-hand material a new lease of
+life it will be said that we shall diminish the demand for new
+material, and so curtail work and wages at one end while we are
+endeavouring to piece on something at the other. This objection reminds
+me of a remark of a North Country pilot who, when speaking of the
+dulness in the shipbuilding industry, said that nothing would do any
+good but a series of heavy storms, which would send a goodly number of
+ocean-going steamers to the bottom, to replace which, this political
+economist thought, the yards would once more be filled with orders.
+This, however, is not the way in which work is supplied. Economy is a
+great auxiliary to trade, inasmuch as the money saved is expended on
+other products of industry.
+
+There is one material that is continually increasing in quantity, which
+is the despair of the life of the householder and of the Local Sanitary
+Authority. I refer to the tins in which provisions are supplied.
+Nowadays everything comes to us in tins. We have coffee tins,
+meat tins, salmon tins, and tins ad nauseam. Tin is becoming more and
+more the universal envelope of the rations of man. But when you have
+extracted the contents of the tin what can you do with it?
+Huge mountains of empty tins lie about every dustyard, for as yet no
+man has discovered a means of utilising them when in great masses.
+Their market price is about four or five shillings a ton, but they are
+so light that it would take half a dozen trucks to hold a ton.
+They formerly burnt them for the sake of the solder, but now, by a new
+process, they are jointed without solder. The problem of the
+utilisation of the tins is one to which we would have to address
+ourselves, and I am by no means desponding as to the result.
+
+I see in the old tins of London at least one means of establishing an
+industry which is at present almost monopolised by our neighbours.
+Most of the toys which are sold in France on New Year's Day are almost
+entirely made of sardine tins collected in the French capital. The toy
+market of England is at present far from being overstocked, for there
+are multitudes of children who have no toys worth speaking of with
+which to amuse themselves. In these empty tins I see a means of
+employing a large number of people in turning out cheap toys which will
+add a new joy to the households of the poor--the poor to whom every
+farthing is important, not the rich the rich can always get toys--but
+the children of the poor, who live in one room and have nothing to look
+out upon but the slum or the street. These desolate little things need
+our toys, and if supplied cheap enough they will take them in
+sufficient quantities to make it worth while to manufacture them.
+
+A whole book might be written concerning the utilisation of the waste
+of London. But I am not going to write one. I hope before long to do
+something much better than write a book, namely, to establish an
+organisation to utilise the waste, and then if I describe what is being
+done it will be much better than by now explaining what I propose to do.
+But there is one more waste material to which it is necessary to allude.
+I refer to old newspapers and magazines, and books.
+Newspapers accumulate in our houses until we sometimes burn them in
+sheer disgust. Magazines and old books lumber our shelves until we
+hardly know where to turn to put a new volume. My Brigade will relieve
+the householder from these difficulties, and thereby become a great
+distributing agency of cheap literature. After the magazine has done
+its duty in the middle class household it can be passed on to the
+reading-rooms, workhouses, and hospitals. Every publication issued
+from the Press that is of the slightest use to men and women will,
+by our Scheme, acquire a double share of usefulness. It will be read
+first by its owner, and then by many people who would never otherwise
+see it.
+
+We shall establish an immense second-hand book shop. All the best
+books that come into our hands will be exposed for sale, not merely at
+our central depots, but on the barrows of our peripatetic colporteurs,
+who will go from street to street with literature which, I trust, will
+be somewhat superior to the ordinary pabulum supplied to the poor.
+After we have sold all we could, and given away all that is needed to
+public institutions, the remainder will be carried down to our great
+Paper Mill, of which we shall speak later, in connection with our Farm
+Colony.
+
+The Household Salvage Brigade will constitute an agency capable of
+being utilised to any extent for the distribution of parcels
+newspapers, &c. When once you have your reliable man who will call at
+every house with the regularity of a postman, and go his beat with the
+punctuality of a policeman, you can do great things with him. I do not
+need to elaborate this point. It will be a universal Corps of
+Commissionaires, created for the service of the public and in the
+interests of the poor, which will bring us into direct relations with
+every family in London, and will therefore constitute an unequalled
+medium for the distribution of advertisements and the collection of
+information.
+
+It does not require a very fertile imagination to see that when such a
+house-to-house visitation is regularly established, it will develop in
+all directions; and working, as it would, in connection with our
+Anti-sweating Shops and Industrial Colony, would probably soon become
+the medium for negotiating sundry household repairs, from a broken
+window to a damaged stocking. If a porter were wanted to move
+furniture, or a woman wanted to do charing, or some one to clean
+windows or any other odd job, the ubiquitous Servant of All who called
+for the waste, either verbally or by postcard, would receive the order,
+and whoever was wanted would appear at the time desired without any
+further trouble on the part of the householder.
+
+One word as to the cost. There are five hundred thousand houses in the
+Metropolitan Police district. To supply every house with a tub and a
+sack for the reception of waste would involve an initial expenditure
+which could not possibly be less than one shilling a house. So huge is
+London, and so enormous the numbers with which we shall have to deal,
+that this simple preliminary would require a cost of #25,000.
+Of course I do not propose to begin on anything like such a vast scale.
+That sum, which is only one of the many expenditures involved, will
+serve to illustrate the extent of the operations which the Household
+Salvage Brigade will necessitate. The enterprise is therefore beyond
+the reach of any but a great and powerful organisation, commanding
+capital and able to secure loyalty, discipline, and willing service.
+
+
+CHAPTER 3. TO THE COUNTRY!--THE FARM COLONY.
+
+A leave on one side for a moment various features of the operations
+which will be indispensable but subsidiary to the City Colony, such as
+the Rescue Homes for Lost Women, the Retreats for Inebriates, the Homes
+for Discharged Prisoners, the Enquiry Office for the Discovery of Lost
+Friends and Relatives, and the Advice Bureau, which will, in time,
+become an institution that will be invaluable as a poor man's Tribune.
+All these and other suggestions for saving the lost and helping the
+poor, although they form essential elements of the City Colony, will be
+better dealt with after I have explained the relation which the Farm
+Colony will occupy to the City Colony, and set forth the way in which
+the former will act as a feeder to the Colony Over sea.
+
+I have already described how I propose to deal, in the first case, with
+the mass of surplus labour which will infallibly accumulate on our
+hands as soon as the Shelters are more extensively established and in
+good working order. But I fully recognise that when all has been done
+that can be done in the direction of disposing of the unhired men and
+women of the town, there will still remain many whom you can neither
+employ in the Household Salvage Brigade, nor for whom employers,
+be they registered never so carefully, can be found. What, then, must
+be done with them? The answer to that question seems to me obvious.
+They must go upon the land!
+
+The land is the source of all food; only by the application of labour
+can the land be made fully productive. There is any amount of waste
+land in the world, not far away in distant Continents, next door to the
+North Pole, but here at our very doors. Have you ever calculated,
+for instance, the square miles of unused land which fringe the sides of
+all our railroads? No doubt some embankments are of material that
+would baffle the cultivating skill at a Chinese or the careful
+husbandry of a Swiss mountaineer; but these are exceptions. When other
+people talk of reclaiming Salisbury Plain, or of cultivating the bare
+moorlands of the bleak North, I think of the hundreds of square miles
+of land that lie in long ribbons on the side of each of our railways,
+upon which, without any cost for cartage, innumerable tons of City
+manure could be shot down, and the crops of which could be carried at
+once to the nearest market without any but the initial cost of heaping
+into convenient trucks. These railway embankments constitute a vast
+estate, capable of growing fruit enough to supply all the jam that
+Crosse and Blackwell ever boiled. In almost every county in England
+are vacant farms, and, in still greater numbers, farms but a quarter
+cultivated, which only need the application of an industrious
+population working with due incentive to produce twice, thrice,
+and four times as much as they yield to-day.
+
+I am aware that there are few subjects upon which there are such fierce
+controversies as the possibilities of making a livelihood out of small
+holdings, but Irish cottiers do it, and in regions infinitely worse
+adapted for the purpose than our Essex corn lands, and possessing none
+of the advantages which civilization and co-operation place at the
+command of an intelligently directed body of husbandmen. Talk about
+the land not being worth cultivating! Go to the Swiss Valleys and
+examine for yourself the miserable patches of land, hewed out as it
+were from the heart of the granite mountains, where the cottager grows
+his crops and makes a livelihood. No doubt he has his Alp, where his
+cows pasture in summer-time, and his other occupations which enable him
+to supplement the scanty yield of his farm garden among the crags;
+but if it pays the Swiss mountaineer in the midst of the eternal snows,
+far removed from any market, to cultivate such miserable soil in the
+brief summer of the high Alps, it is impossible to believe that
+Englishmen, working on English soil, close to our markets and enjoying
+all the advantages of co-operation, cannot earn their daily bread by
+their daily toil. The soil of England is not unkindly, and although
+much is said against our climate, it is, as Mr. Russell Lowell
+observes, after a lengthened experience of many countries and many
+climes, "the best climate in the whole world for the labouring man."
+There are more days in the English year on which a man can work out of
+doors with a spade with comparative comfort than in any other country
+under heaven. I do not say that men will make a fortune out of the
+land, nor do I pretend that we can, under the grey English skies,
+hope ever to vie with the productiveness of the Jersey farms; but I am
+prepared to maintain against all comers that it is possible for an
+industrious man to grow his rations, provided he is given a spade with
+which to dig and land to dig in. Especially will this be the case with
+intelligent direction and the advantages of co-operation.
+
+Is it not a reasonable supposition? It always seems to me a strange
+thing that men should insist that you must first transport your
+labourer thousands of miles to a desolate, bleak country in order to
+set him to work to extract a livelihood from the soil when hundreds of
+thousands of acres lie only half tilled at home or not tilled at all.
+Is it reasonable to think that you can only begin to make a living out
+of land when it lies several thousand miles from the nearest market,
+and thousands of miles from the place where the labourer has to buy his
+tools and procure all the necessaries of life which are not grown on
+the spot? If a man can make squatting pay on the prairies or in
+Australia, where every quarter of grain which he produces has to be
+dragged by locomotives across the railways of the continent, and then
+carried by steamers across the wide ocean, can he not equally make the
+operation at least sufficiently profitable to keep himself alive if you
+plant him with the same soil within an hour by rail of the greatest
+markets in the world?
+
+The answer to this is, that you cannot give your man as much soil as he
+has on the prairies or in the Canadian lumber lands. This, no doubt,
+is true, but the squatter who settles in the Canadian backwoods does
+not clear his land all at once. He lives on a small portion of it,
+and goes on digging and delving little by little, until, after many
+years of Herculean labour, he hews out for himself, and his children
+after him, a freehold estate. Freehold estates, I admit, are not to be
+had for the picking up on English soil, but if a man will but work in
+England as they work in Canada or in Australia, he will find as little
+difficulty in making a livelihood here as there.
+
+I may be wrong, but when I travel abroad and see the desperate struggle
+on the part of peasant proprietors and the small holders in mountainous
+districts for an additional patch of soil, the idea of cultivating
+which would make our agricultural labourers turn up their noses in
+speechless contempt, I cannot but think that our English soil could
+carry a far greater number of souls to the acre than that which it
+bears at present. Suppose, for instance, that Essex were suddenly to
+find itself unmoored from its English anchorage and towed across the
+Channel to Normandy, or, not to imagine miracles, suppose that an
+Armada of Chinese were to make a descent on the Isle of Thanet, as did
+the sea-kings, Hengist and Horsa, does anyone imagine for a moment that
+Kent, fertile and cultivated as it is, would not be regarded as a very
+Garden of Eden out of the odd corners of which our yellow-skinned
+invaders would contrive to extract sufficient to keep themselves in
+sturdy health? I only suggest the possibility in order to bring out
+clearly the fact that the difficulty is not in the soil nor in the
+climate, but in the lack of application of sufficient labour to
+sufficient land in the truly scientific way.
+
+"What is the scientific way?" I shall be asked impatiently. I am not
+an agriculturist; I do not dogmatize. I have read much from many pens,
+and have noted the experiences of many colonies, and I have learned the
+lesson that it is in the school of practical labour that the most
+valuable knowledge is to be obtained. Nevertheless, the bulk of my
+proposals are based upon the experience of many who have devoted their
+lives to the study of the subject, and have been endorsed by
+specialists whose experience gives them authority to speak with
+unquestioning confidence.
+
+
+SECTION 1.--THE FARM PROPER.
+
+My present idea is to take an estate from five hundred to a thousand
+acres within reasonable distance of London. It should be of such land
+as will be suitable for market gardening, while having some clay on it
+for brick-making and for crops requiring a heavier soil. If possible,
+it should not only be on a line of railway which is managed by
+intelligent and progressive directors, but it should have access to the
+sea and to the river. It should be freehold land, and it should lie at
+some considerable distance from any town or village. The reason for
+the latter desideratum is obvious. We must be near London for the sake
+of our market and for the transmission of the commodities collected by
+our Household Salvage Brigade, but it must be some little distance from
+any town or village in order that the Colony may be planted clear out
+in the open away from the public house, that upas tree of civilisation.
+A sine qua non of the new Farm Colony is that no intoxicating liquors
+will be permitted within its confines on any pretext whatever.
+The doctors will have to prescribe some other stimulant than alcohol
+for residents in this Colony. But it will be little use excluding
+alcohol with a strong hand and by cast-iron regulations if the
+Colonists have only to take a short walk in order to find themselves in
+the midst of the "Red Lions," and the "Blue Dragons," and the
+"George the Fourths," which abound in every country town.
+
+Having obtained the land I should proceed to prepare it for the
+Colonists. This is an operation which is essentially the same in any
+country. You need water supply, provisions and shelter. All this
+would be done at first in the simplest possible style. Our pioneer
+brigade, carefully selected from the competent Out-of-Works in the City
+Colony, would be sent down to layout the estate and prepare it for
+those who would come after. And here let me say that it is a great
+delusion to imagine that in the riffraff and waste of the labour market
+there are no workmen to be had except those that are worthless.
+Worthless under the present conditions, exposed to constant temptations
+to intemperance no doubt they are, but some of the brightest men in
+London, with some of the smartest pairs of hands, and the cleverest
+brains, are at the present moment weltering helplessly in the sludge
+from which we propose to rescue them.
+
+I am not speaking without book in this matter. Some of my best
+Officers to-day have been even such as they. There is an infinite
+potentiality of capacity lying latent in our Provincial Tap-rooms and
+the City Gin Palaces if you can but get them soundly saved, and even
+short of that, if you can place them in conditions where they would no
+longer be liable to be sucked back into their old disastrous habits,
+you may do great things with them.
+
+I can well imagine the incredulous laughter which will greet my proposal.
+"What," it will be said, "do you think that you can create agricultural
+pioneers out of the scum of Cockneydom?" Let us look for a moment at
+the ingredients which make up what you call "the scum of Cockneydom."
+After careful examination and close cross-questioning of the
+Out-of-Works, whom we have already registered at our Labour Bureau,
+we find that at least sixty per cent. are country folk, men, women,
+boys, and girls, who have left their homes in the counties to come up
+to town in the hope of bettering themselves. They are in no sense of
+the word Cockneys, and they represent not the dregs of the country but
+rather its brighter and more adventurous spirits who have boldly tried
+to make their way in new and uncongenial spheres and have terribly come
+to grief. Of thirty cases, selected haphazard, in the various Shelters
+during the week ending July 5th, 1890, twenty-two were country-born,
+sixteen were men who had come up a long time ago, but did not ever seem
+to have settled to regular employ, and four were old military men.
+Of sixty cases examined into at the Bureau and Shelters during the
+fortnight ending August 2nd, forty-two were country people; twenty-six
+men who had been in London for various periods; ranging from six months
+to four years; nine were lads under eighteen, who had run away from
+home and come up to town; while four were ex-military. Of eighty-five
+cases of dossers who were spoken to at night when they slept in the
+streets, sixty-three were country people. A very small proportion of
+the genuine homeless Out-of-Works are Londoners bred and born.
+
+There is another element in the matter, the existence of which will be
+news to most people, and that is the large proportion of ex-military
+men who are among the helpless, hopeless destitute. Mr. Arnold White,
+after spending many months in the streets of London interrogating more
+than four thousand men whom he found in the course of one bleak winter
+sleeping out of doors like animals returns it as his conviction that at
+least 20 per cent. are Army Reserve men. Twenty per cent! That is to
+say one man in every five with whom we shall have to deal has served
+Her Majesty the Queen under the colours. This is the resource to which
+these poor fellows come after they have given the prime of their lives
+to the service of their country. Although this may be largely brought
+about by their own thriftless and evil conduct, it is a scandal and
+disgrace which may well make the cheek of the patriot tingle.
+Still, I see in it a great resource. A man who has been in the Queen's
+Army is a man who has learnt to obey. He is further a man who has been
+taught in the roughest of rough schools to be handy and smart, to make
+the best of the roughest fare, and not to consider himself a martyr if
+he is sent on a forlorn hope. I often say if we could only get
+Christians to have one-half of the practical devotion and sense of duty
+that animates even the commonest Tommy Atkins what a change would be
+brought about in the world!
+
+Look at poor Tommy! A country lad who gets himself into some scrape,
+runs away from home, finds himself sinking lower and lower, with no
+hope of employment, no friends to advise; him, and no one to give him a
+helping hand. In sheer despair he takes the Queen's shilling and
+enters the ranks. He is handed over to an inexorable drill sergeant,
+he is compelled to room in barracks where privacy is unknown, to mix
+with men, many of them vicious, few of them companions whom he would of
+his own choice select. He gets his rations, and although he is told he
+will get a shilling a day, there are so many stoppages that he often
+does not finger a shilling a week. He is drilled and worked and
+ordered hither and thither as if he were a machine, all of which he
+takes cheerfully, without even considering that there is any hardship
+in his lot, plodding on in a dull, stolid kind of way for his Queen and
+his country, doing his best, also, poor chap, to be proud of his red
+uniform, and to cultivate his self-respect by reflecting that he is one
+of the defenders of his native land, one of the heroes upon whose
+courage and endurance depends the safety of the British realm.
+
+Some fine day at the other end of the world some prancing pro-consul
+finds it necessary to smash one of the man-slaying machines that loom
+ominous on his borders, or some savage potentate makes an incursion
+into territory of a British colony, or some fierce outburst of
+Mahommedan fanaticism raises up a Mahdi in mid-Africa. In a moment
+Tommy Atkins is marched off to the troop-ship, and swept across the
+seas, heart-sick and sea-sick, and miserable exceedingly, to tight the
+Queen's enemies in foreign parts. When he arrives there he is bundled
+ashore, brigaded with other troops, marched to the front through the
+blistering glare of a tropical sun over poisonous marshes in which his
+comrades sicken and die, until at last he is drawn up in square to
+receive the charge of tens of thousands of ferocious savages.
+Far away from all who love him or care for him, foot-sore and travel
+weary, having eaten perhaps but a piece of dry bread in the last
+twenty-four hours, he must stand up and kill or be killed. Often he
+falls beneath the thrust of an assegai or the slashing broadsword of
+the charging enemy. Then, after the fight is over his comrades turn up
+the sod where he lies, bundle his poor bones into the shallow pit,
+and leave him without even a cross to mark his solitary grave.
+Perhaps he is fortunate and escapes. Yet Tommy goes uncomplainingly
+through all these hardships and privations, does not think himself
+a martyr, takes no fine airs about what he has done and suffered,
+and shrinks uncomplainingly into our Shelters and our Factories, only
+asking as a benediction from heaven that someone will give him an
+honest job of work to do. That is the fate of Tommy Atkins. If in our
+churches and chapels as much as one single individual were to bear and
+dare, for the benefit of his kind and the salvation of men, what a
+hundred thousand Tommy Atkins' bear uncomplainingly, taking it all as
+if it were in the day's work, for their rations and their shilling a
+day (with stoppages), think you we should not transform the whole face
+of the world? Yea, verily. We find but very little of such devotion;
+no, not in Israel.
+
+I look forward to making great use of these Army Reserve men.
+There are engineers amongst them; there are artillery men and infantry;
+there are cavalry men, who know what a horse needs to keep him in good
+health, and men of the transport department, for whom I shall find work
+enough to do in the transference of the multitudinous waste of London
+from our town Depots to the outlying Farm. This, however, is a
+digression, by the way.
+
+After having got the Farm into some kind of ship-shape, we should
+select from the City Colonies all those who were likely to be
+successful as our first settlers. These would consist of men who had
+been working so many weeks or days in the Labour Factory, or had been
+under observation for a reasonable time at the Shelters or in the
+Slums, and who had given evidence of their willingness to work, their
+amenity to discipline, and their ambition to improve themselves.
+On arrival at the Farm they would be installed in a barracks, and at
+once told off to work. In winter time there would be draining,
+and road-making, and fencing, and many other forms of industry which
+could go on when the days are short and the nights are long.
+In Spring, Summertime and Autumn, some would be employed on the land,
+chiefly in spade husbandry, upon what is called the system of
+"intensive" agriculture, such as prevails in the suburbs of Paris,
+where the market gardeners literally create the soil, and which yields
+much greater results than when you merely scratch the surface with a
+plough.
+
+Our Farm, I hope, would be as productive as a great market garden.
+There would be a Superintendent on the Colony, who would be a practical
+gardener, familiar with the best methods of small agriculture,
+and everything that science and experience shows to be needful for the
+profitable treatment of the land. Then there would be various other
+forms of industry continually in progress, so that employment could be
+furnished, adapted to the capacity and skill of every Colonist.
+Where farm buildings are wanted, the Colonists must erect them
+themselves. If they want glass houses, they must put them up.
+Everything on the Estate must be the production of the Colonists.
+Take, for instance, the building of cottages. After the first
+detachment has settled down into its quarters and brought the fields
+somewhat into cultivation, there will arise a demand for houses.
+These houses must be built, and the bricks made; by the Colonists
+themselves. All the carpentering and the joinery will be done on the
+premises, and by this means a sustained demand for work will be
+created. Then there would be furniture, clothing, and a great many
+other wants, the supply of the whole of which would create labour which
+the Colonists must perform.
+
+For a long time to come the Salvation Army will be able to consume all
+the vegetables and crops which the Colonies will produce. That is one
+advantage of being connected with so great and growing a concern;
+the right hand will help the left, and we shall be able to do many
+things which those who devote themselves exclusively to colonisation
+would find it impossible to accomplish. We have seen the large
+quantities of provisions which are required to supply the Food Depots
+in their present dimensions, and with the coming extensions the
+consumption will be enormously augmented. On this Farm I propose to
+carry on every description of "little agriculture."
+
+I have not yet referred to the female side of our operations,
+but have reserved them for another chapter. It is necessary, however,
+to bring them in here in order to explain that employment will be
+created for women as well as men. Fruit farming affords a great
+opening for female labour, and it will indeed be a change as from
+Tophet to the Garden of Eden when the poor lost girls on the
+streets of London exchange the pavements of Piccadilly for the
+strawberry Beds of Essex or Kent.
+
+Not only will vegetables and fruit of every description be raised,
+but I think that a great deal might be done in the smaller adjuncts of
+the Farm.
+
+It is quite certain that amongst the mass of people with whom we have
+to deal there will be a residual remnant of persons to some extent
+mentally infirm or physically incapacitated from engaging in the harder
+toils. For these people it is necessary to find work, and I think
+there would be a good field for their benumbed energies in looking
+after rabbits, feeding poultry, minding bees, and, in short doing all
+those little odd jobs about a place which must be attended to,
+but which will not repay the labour of able-bodied men.
+
+One advantage of the cosmopolitan nature of the Army is that we have
+Officers in almost every country in the world. When this Scheme is
+well on the way every Salvation Officer in every I and will have it
+imposed upon him as one of the duties of his calling to keep his eyes
+open for every useful notion and every conceivable contrivance for
+increasing the yield of the soil and utilising the employment of waste
+labour. By this means I hope that there will not be an idea in the
+world which will not be made available for our Scheme. If an Officer
+in Sweden can give us practical hints as to how they manage food
+kitchens for the people, or an Officer in the South of France can
+explain how the peasants are able to rear eggs and poultry not only for
+their own use, but so as to be able to export them by the million to
+England; if a Sergeant in Belgium understands how it is that the rabbit
+farmers there can feed and fatten and supply our market with millions
+of rabbits we shall have him over, tap his brains, and set him to work
+to benefit our people.
+
+By the establishment of this Farm Colony we should create a great
+school of technical agricultural education. It would be a Working
+Men's Agricultural University, training people for the life which they
+would have to lead in the new countries they will go forth to colonise
+and possess.
+
+Every man who goes to our Farm Colony does so, not to acquire his
+fortune, but to obtain a knowledge of an occupation and that mastery of
+his tools which will enable him to play his part in the battle of life.
+He will be provided with a cheap uniform, which we shall find no
+difficulty in rigging up from the old clothes of London, and it will go
+hardly with us, and we shall have worse luck than the ordinary market
+gardener, if we do not succeed in making sufficient profit to pay all
+the expenses of the concern, and leave something over for the
+maintenance of the hopelessly incompetent, and those who, to put it
+roughly, are not worth their keep.
+
+Every person in the Farm Colony will be taught the elementary lesson of
+obedience, and will be instructed in the needful arts of husbandry,
+or some other method of earning his bread. The Agricultural Section
+will learn the lesson of the seasons and of the best kind of seeds and
+plants. Those belonging to this Section will learn how to hedge and
+ditch, how to make roads and build bridges, and generally to subdue the
+earth and make it yield to him the riches which it never withholds from
+the industrious and skilful workman. But the Farm Colony, any more
+than the City Colony, although an abiding institution, will not provide
+permanently for those with whom we have to deal. It is a Training
+School for Emigrants, a place where those indispensably practical
+lessons are given which will enable the Colonists to know their way
+about and to feel themselves at home wherever there is land to till,
+stock to rear, and harvests to reap. We shall rely greatly for the
+peace and prosperity of the Colony upon the sense of brotherhood which
+will be universal in it from the highest to the lowest. While there
+will be no systematic wage-paying there will be some sort of rewards
+and remuneration for honest industry, which will be stored up, for his
+benefit, as afterwards explained. They will in the main work each for
+all, and, therefore, the needs of all will be supplied, and any
+overplus will go to make the bridge over which any poor fellow may
+escape from the horrible pit and the miry clay from which they
+themselves have been rescued.
+
+The dulness and deadness of country life, especially in the Colonies,
+leads many men to prefer a life of hardship and privation in a City
+slum. But in our Colony they would be near to each other, and would
+enjoy the advantages of country life and the association and
+companionship of life in town.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--THE INDUSTRIAL VILLAGE.
+
+In describing the operations of the Household Salvage Brigade I have
+referred to the enormous quantities of good sound food which would be
+collected from door to door every day of the year. Much of this food
+would be suitable for human consumption, its waste being next door to
+sinful. Imagine, for instance, the quantities of soup which might be
+made from boiling the good fresh meaty bones of the great City!
+Think of the dainty dishes which a French cook would be able to serve
+up from the scraps and odds and ends of a single West End kitchen.
+Good cookery is not an extravagance but an economy, and many a tasty
+dish is made by our Continental friends out of materials which would be
+discarded indignantly by the poorest tramp in Whitechapel.
+
+But after all that is done there will remain a mass of food which
+cannot be eaten by man, but can be converted into food for him by the
+simple process of passing it through another digestive apparatus.
+The old bread of London, the soiled, stale crusts can be used in
+foddering the horses which are employed in collecting the waste.
+It will help to feed the rabbits, whose hutches will be close by every
+cottage on the estate, and the hens of the Colony will flourish on the
+crumbs which fall from the table of Dives. But after the horses and
+the rabbits and poultry have been served, there will remain a residuum
+of eatable matter, which can only be profitably disposed of to the
+voracious and necessary pig. I foresee the rise of a piggery in
+connection with the new Social Scheme, which will dwarf into
+insignificance all that exist in Great Britain and Ireland. We have
+the advantage of the experience of the whole world as to the choice of
+breeds, the construction of sties, and the rearing of stock. We shall
+have the major part of our food practically for the cost of collection,
+and be able to adopt all the latest methods of Chicago for the killing,
+curing, and disposing of our pork, ham, and bacon.
+
+There are few animals more useful than the pig. He will eat anything,
+live anywhere, and almost every particle of him, from the tip of his
+nose to the end of his tail, is capable of being converted into a
+saleable commodity. Your pig also is a great producer of manure,
+and agriculture is after all largely a matter of manure. Treat the
+land well and it will treat you well. With our piggery in connection
+with our Farm Colony there would be no lack of manure.
+
+With the piggery there would grow up a great bacon factory for curing,
+and that again would make more work. Then as for sausages they would
+be produced literally by the mile, and all made of the best meat
+instead of being manufactured out of the very objectionable ingredients
+too often stowed away in that poor man's favourite ration.
+
+Food, however, is only one of the materials which will be collected
+by the Household Salvage Brigade. The barges which float down the
+river with the tide, laden to the brim with the cast-off waste of
+half a million homes, will bring down an enormous quantity of material
+which cannot be eaten even by pigs. There will be, for instance, the
+old bones. At present it pays speculators to go to the prairies of
+America and gather up the bleached bones of the dead buffaloes,
+in order to make manure. It pays manufacturers to bring bones from the
+end of the earth in order to grind them up for use on our fields.
+But the waste bones of London; who collects them? I see, as in a
+vision, barge loads upon barge loads of bones floating down the Thames
+to the great Bone Factory. Some of the best will yield material for
+knife handles and buttons, and the numberless articles which will
+afford ample opportunity in the long winter evenings for the
+acquisition of skill on the part of our Colonist carvers, while the
+rest will go straight to the Manure Mill. There will be a constant
+demand for manure on the part of our ever-increasing nests of new
+Colonies and our Co-operative Farm, every man in which will be educated
+in the great doctrine that there is no good agriculture without liberal
+manuring. And here will be an unfailing source of supply.
+
+Among the material which comes down will be an immense quantity of
+greasy matter, bits of fat, suet and lard, tallow, strong butter,
+and all the rancid fat of a great city. For all that we shall have to
+find use. The best of it will make waggon grease, the rest, after due
+boiling and straining, will form the nucleus of the raw material which
+will make our Social Soap a household word throughout the kingdom.
+After the Manure Works, the Soap Factory will be the natural adjunct of
+our operations.
+
+The fourth great output of the daily waste of London will be waste
+paper and rags, which, after being chemically treated, and duly
+manipulated by machinery, will be re-issued to the world in the shape
+of paper. The Salvation Army consumes no less than thirty tons of
+paper every week. Here, therefore, would be one customer for as much
+paper as the new mill would be able to turn out at the onset; paper on
+which we could print the glad tidings of great joy, and tell the poor
+of all nations the news of salvation for earth and Heaven, full,
+present, and free to all the children of men.
+
+Then comes the tin. It will go hard with us if we cannot find some way
+of utilizing these tins, whether we make them into flowerpots with a
+coat of enamel, or convert them into ornaments, or cut them up for toys
+or some other purpose. My officers have been instructed to make an
+exhaustive report on the way the refuse collectors of Paris deal with
+the sardine tins. The industry of making tin toys will be one which
+can be practised better in the Farm Colony than in the City.
+If necessary, we shall bring an accomplished workman from France,
+who will teach our people the way of dealing with the tin.
+
+In connection with all this it is obvious there would be a constant
+demand for packing cases, for twine, rope, and for boxes of all kinds;
+for carts and cars; and, in short, we should before long have a
+complete community practising almost all the trades that are to be
+found in London, except the keeping of grog shops, the whole being
+worked upon co-operative principles, but co-operation not for the
+benefit of the individual co-operator, but for the benefit of the
+sunken mass that lies behind it.
+
+RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF COLONISTS.
+
+A document containing the Orders and Regulations for the Government of
+the Colony must be approved and signed by every Colonist before
+admission. Amongst other things there will be the following: --
+
+1. All Officers must be treated respectfully and implicitly obeyed.
+
+2. The use of intoxicants strictly prohibited, none being allowed
+ within its borders. Any Colonist guilty of violating this Order to
+ be expelled, and that on the first offence.
+
+3. Expulsion for drunkenness, dishonesty, or falsehood will follow the
+ third offence.
+
+4. Profane language strictly forbidden.
+
+5. No cruelty to be practised on man, woman, child, or animal.
+
+6. Serious offenders against the virtue of women, or of children of
+ either sex, to incur immediate expulsion.
+
+7. After a certain period of probation, and a considerable amount of
+ patience, all who will not work to be expelled.
+
+8. The decision of the Governor of the Colony, whether in the City,
+ or the Farm, or Over the Sea, to be binding in all cases.
+
+9. With respect to penalties, the following rules will be acted upon.
+ The chief reliance for the maintenance of order, as has been
+ observed before, will be placed upon the spirit of love which will
+ prevail throughout the community. But as it cannot be expected to
+ be universally successful, certain penalties will have to be
+ provided: --
+
+ (a) First offences, except in flagrant cases, will be recorded.
+ (b) The second offence will be published.
+ (c) The third offence will incur expulsion or being handed over to the
+ authorities.
+
+ Other regulations will be necessary as the Scheme develops.
+
+There will be no attempt to enforce upon the Colonists the rules and
+regulations to which Salvation Soldiers are subjected. Those who are
+soundly saved and who of their own free will desire to become
+Salvationists will, of course, be subjected to the rules of the
+Service. But Colonists who are willing to work and obey the orders of
+the Commanding Officer will only be subject to the foregoing and
+similar regulations; in all other things they will be left free.
+
+For instance, there will be no objection to field recreations or any
+outdoor exercises which conduce to the maintenance of health and
+spirits. A reading room and a library will be provided, together with
+a hall, in which they can amuse themselves in the long winter nights
+and in unfavourable weather. These things are not for the Salvation
+Army Soldiers, who have other work in the world, but for those who are
+not in the Army these recreations will be permissible. Gambling and
+anything of an immoral tendency will be repressed like stealing.
+
+There will probably be an Annual Exhibition of fruit and flowers,
+at which all the Colonists who have a plot of garden of their own will
+take part. They will exhibit their fruit and vegetables as well as
+their rabbits, their poultry and all the other live-stock of the farm.
+Every effort will be made to establish village industries, and I am not
+without hope but that we may be able to restore some of the domestic
+occupations which steam has compelled us to confine to the great
+factories. The more the Colony can be made self-supporting the better.
+And although the hand loom can never compete with Manchester mills,
+still an occupation which kept the hands of the goodwife busy in the
+long winter nights, is not to be despised as an element in the
+economics of the Settlement. While Manchester and Leeds may be able to
+manufacture common goods much more cheaply than they can be spun at
+home, even these emporiums, with all their grand improvements in
+machinery, would be sorely pressed to-day to compete with the hand-loom
+in many superior classes of work. For instance, we all know the
+hand-sewn boot still holds its own against the most perfect article
+that machinery can turn out.
+
+There would be, in the centre of the Colony, a Public Elementary School
+at which the children would receive training, and side by side with
+that an Agricultural Industrial School, as elsewhere described.
+
+The religious welfare of the Colony would be looked after by the
+Salvation Army, but there will be no compulsion to take part in
+its services. The Sabbath will be strictly observed; no unnecessary
+work will be done in the Colony on that day, but beyond interdicted
+labour, the Colonists will be allowed to spend Sunday as they please.
+It will be the fault of the Salvation Army if they do not find our
+Sunday Services sufficiently attractive to command their attendance.
+
+
+SECTION 3.--AGRICULTURAL VILLAGES.
+
+This brings me to the next feature of the Scheme, the creation of
+agricultural settlements in the neighbourhood of the Farm, around the
+original Estate. I hope to obtain land for the purpose of allotments
+which can be taken up to the extent of so many acres by the more
+competent Colonists who wish to remain at home instead of going abroad.
+There will be allotments from three to five acres with a cottage,
+a cow, and the necessary tools and seed for making the allotment
+self-supporting. A weekly charge will be imposed for the he repayment
+of the cost of the fixing and stock. The tenant will of course,
+be entitled to his tenant-right, but adequate precautions will be taken
+against underletting and other forms by which sweating makes its way
+into agricultural communities. On entering into possession, the tenant
+will become responsible for his own and his family's maintenance.
+I shall stand no longer in the relation of father of the household to
+him, as I do to the other members of the Colony; his obligations will
+cease to me, except in the payment of his rent.
+
+The creation of a large number of Allotment Farms would make the
+establishment of a creamery necessary, where the milk could be brought
+in every day and converted into butter by the most modern methods,
+with the least possible delay. Dairying, which has in some places on
+the Continent almost developed to a fine art, is in a very backward
+condition in this country. But by co-operation among the cottiers and
+an intelligent Headquarter staff much could be done which at present
+appears impossible.
+
+The tenant will be allowed permanent tenancy on payment of an annual
+rent or land tax, subject, of course, to such necessary regulations
+which may be made for the prevention of intemperance and immorality and
+the preservation of the fundamental features of the Colony. In this
+way our Farm Colony will throw off small Colonies all round it until
+the original site is but the centre of a whole series of small farms,
+where those whom we have rescued and trained will live, if not under
+their own vine and fig tree, at least in the midst of their own little
+fruit farm, and surrounded by their small flocks and herds.
+The cottages will be so many detached residences, each standing in its
+own ground, not so far away from its neighbours as to deprive its
+occupants of the benefit of human intercourse.
+
+
+SECTION 4.--CO-OPERATIVE FARM.
+
+Side by side with the Farm Colony proper I should propose to renew the
+experiment of Mr. E. T. Craig, which he found work so successfully at
+Ralahine. When any members of the original Colony had pulled
+themselves sufficiently together to desire to begin again on their own
+account, I should group some of them as partners in a Co-operative
+Farm, and see whether or no the success achieved in County Clare could
+not be repeated in Essex or in Kent. I cannot have more unpromising
+material to deal with than the wild Irishmen on Colonel Vandeleur's
+estate, and I would certainly take care to be safeguarded against any
+such mishap as destroyed the early promise of Ralahine.
+
+I shall look upon this as one of the most important experiments of the
+entire series, and if, as I anticipate, it can be worked successfully,
+that is, if the results of Ralahine can be secured on a larger scale,
+I shall consider that the problem of the employment of the people,
+and the use of the land, and the food supply for the globe,
+is unquestionably solved, were its inhabitants many times greater in
+number than they are.
+
+Without saying more, some idea will be obtained as to what I propose
+from the story of Ralahine related briefly at the close of this volume.
+
+
+CHAPTER 4. NEW BRITAIN--THE COLONY OVER-SEA.
+
+We now come to the third and final stage of the regenerative process.
+The Colony Over-Sea. To mention Over-Sea is sufficient with some
+people to damn the Scheme. A prejudice against emigration has been
+diligently fostered in certain quarters by those who have openly
+admitted that they did not wish to deplete the ranks of the Army of
+Discontent at home, for the more discontented people you have here the
+more trouble you can give the Government, and the more power you have
+to bring about the general overturn, which is the only thing in which
+they see any hope for the future. Some again object to emigration on
+the ground that it is transportation. I confess that I have great
+sympathy with those who object to emigration as carried on hitherto,
+and if it be a consolation to any of my critics I may say at once that
+so far from compulsorily expatriating any Englishman I shall refuse to
+have any part or lot in emigrating any man or woman who does not
+voluntarily wish to be sent out.
+
+A journey over sea is a very different thing now to what it was when
+a voyage to Australia consumed more than six months, when emigrants
+were crowded by hundreds into sailing ships, and scenes of abominable
+sin and brutality were the normal incidents of the passage. The world
+has grown much smaller since the electric telegraph was discovered and
+side by side with the shrinkage of this planet under the influence of
+steam and electricity there has come a sense of brotherhood and a
+consciousness of community of interest and of nationality on the part
+of the English-speaking people throughout the world. To change from
+Devon to Australia is not such a change in many respects as merely to
+cross over from Devon to Normandy. In Australia the Emigrant finds him
+self among men and women of the same habits, the same language, and in
+fact the same people, excepting that they live under the southern cross
+instead of in the northern latitudes. The reduction of the postage
+between England and the Colonies, a reduction which I hope will soon be
+followed by the establishment of the Universal Penny Post between the
+English speaking lands, will further tend to lessen the sense of
+distance.
+
+The constant travelling of the Colonists backwards and forwards to
+England makes it absurd to speak of the Colonies as if they were a
+foreign land. They are simply pieces of Britain distributed about the
+world, enabling the Britisher to have access to the richest parts of
+the earth.
+
+Another objection which will be taken to this Scheme is that colonists
+already over sea will see with infinite alarm the prospect of the
+transfer of our waste labour to their country. It is easy to
+understand how this misconception will arise, but there is not much
+danger of opposition on this score. The working-men who rule the roost
+at Melbourne object to the introduction of fresh workmen into their
+labour market, for the same reason that the new Dockers' Union objects
+to the appearance of new hands at the dock gates, that is for fear the
+newcomers will enter into unfriendly competition with them. But no
+Colony, not even the Protectionist and Trade Unionists who govern
+Victoria, could rationally object to the introduction of trained
+Colonists planted out upon the land. They would see that these men
+would become a source of wealth, simply because they would at once
+become producers as well as consumers, and instead of cutting down
+wages they would tend directly to improve trade and so increase the
+employment of the workmen now in the Colony. Emigration as hitherto
+conducted has been carried out on directly opposite principles to
+these. Men and women have simply been shot down into countries without
+any regard to their possession of ability to earn a livelihood,
+and have consequently become an incubus upon the energies of the
+community, and a discredit, expense, and burden. The result is that
+they gravitate to the towns and compete with the colonial workmen,
+and thereby drive down wages. We shall avoid that mistake. We need
+not wonder that Australians and other Colonists should object to their
+countries being converted into a sort of dumping ground, on which to
+deposit men and women totally unsuited for the new circumstances in
+which they find themselves.
+
+Moreover, looking at it from the aspect of the class itself, would such
+emigration be of any enduring value? It is not merely more favourable
+circumstances that are required by these crowds, but those habits of
+industry, truthfulness, and self-restraint, which will enable them to
+profit by better conditions if they could only come to possess them.
+According to the most reliable information there are already sadly too
+many of the same classes we want to help in countries supposed to be
+the paradise of the working-man.
+
+What could be done with a people whose first enquiry on reaching
+a foreign land would be for a whisky shop, and who were utterly
+ignorant of those forms of labour and habits of industry absolutely
+indispensable to the earning of a subsistence amid the hardships of an
+Emigrant's life? Such would naturally shrink from the self-denial the
+new circumstances inevitably called for, and rather than suffer the
+inconveniences connected with a settler's life, would probably sink
+down into helpless despair, or settle in the slums of the first city
+they came to.
+
+These difficulties, in my estimation, bar the way to the emigration on
+any considerable scale of the "submerged tenth," and yet I am strongly
+of opinion, with the majority of those who have thought and written on
+political economy, that emigration is the only remedy for this
+mighty evil. Now, the Over-Sea Colony plan, I think, meets these
+difficulties: --
+
+ (1) In the preparation of the Colony for the people.
+ (2) In the preparation of the people for the Colony.
+ (3) In the arrangements that are rendered possible for the transport
+ of the people when prepared.
+
+It is proposed to secure a large tract of land in some country suitable
+to our purpose. We have thought of South Africa, to begin with.
+We are in no way pledged to this part of the world, or to it alone.
+There is nothing to prevent our establishing similar settlements in
+Canada, Australia, or some other land. British Columbia has been
+strongly urged upon our notice. Indeed, it is certain if this Scheme
+proves the success we anticipate, the first Colony will be the
+forerunner of similar communities elsewhere. Africa, however, presents
+to us great advantages for the moment. There is any amount of land
+suitable for our purpose which can be obtained, we think, without
+difficulty. The climate is healthy. Labour is in great demand,
+so that if by any means work failed on the Colony, there would be
+abundant opportunities for securing good wages from the neighbouring
+Companies.
+
+
+SECTION 1.--THE COLONY AND THE COLONISTS.
+
+Before any decision is arrived at, however, information will be
+obtained as to the position and character of the land;
+the accessibility of markets for commodities; communication with
+Europe, and other necessary particulars.
+
+The next business would be to obtain on grant, or otherwise,
+a sufficient tract of suitable country for the purpose of a Colony,
+on conditions that would meet its present and future character.
+
+After obtaining a title to the country, the next business will be to
+effect a settlement in it. This, I suppose, will be accomplished by
+sending a competent body of men under skilled supervision to fix on a
+suitable location for the first settlement, erecting such buildings as
+would be required, enclosing and breaking up the land, putting in first
+crops, and so storing sufficient supplies of food for the future.
+
+Then a supply of Colonists would be sent out to join them, and from
+time to time other detachments, as the Colony was prepared to receive
+them. Further locations could then be chosen, and more country broken
+up, and before a very long period has passed the Colony would be
+capable of receiving and absorbing a continuous stream of emigration of
+considerable proportions.
+
+The next work would be the establishment of a strong and efficient
+government, prepared to carry out and enforce the same laws and
+discipline to which the Colonists had been accustomed in England,
+together with such alterations and additions as the new circumstances
+would render necessary.
+
+The Colonists would become responsible for all that concerned their own
+support; that is to say, they would buy and sell, engage in trade,
+hire servants, and transact all the ordinary business affairs of
+every-day life.
+
+Our Headquarters in England would represent the Colony in this country
+on their behalf, and with money supplied by them, when once fairly
+established, would buy for their agents what they were at the outset
+unable to produce themselves, such as machinery and the like,
+also selling their produce to the best advantage.
+
+All land, timber, minerals, and the like, would be rented to the
+Colonists, all unearned increments, and improvements on the land,
+would be held on behalf of the entire community, and utilised for its
+general advantages, a certain percentage being set apart for the
+extension of its borders, and the continued transmission of Colonists
+from England in increasing numbers.
+
+Arrangements would be made for the temporary accommodation of new
+arrivals, Officers being maintained for the purpose of taking them
+in hand on landing and directing and controlling them generally.
+So far as possible, they would be introduced to work without any waste
+of time, situations being ready for them to enter upon; and any way,
+their wants would be supplied till this was the case.
+
+There would be friends who would welcome and care for them, not merely
+on the principle of profit and loss, but on the ground of friendship
+and religion, many of whom the emigrants would probably have known
+before in the old country, together with all the social influences,
+restraints, and religious enjoyments to which the Colonists have
+been accustomed. After dealing with the preparation of the Colony
+for the Colonists, we now come to the preparation of the
+COLONISTS FOR THE COLONY OVER-SEA.
+
+They would be prepared by an education in honesty, truth, and industry,
+without which we could not indulge in any hope of their succeeding.
+While men and women would be received into the City Colony without
+character, none would be sent over the sea who had not been proved
+worthy of this trust.
+
+They would be inspired with an ambition to do well for themselves
+and their fellow Colonists.
+
+They would be instructed in all that concerned their future career.
+
+They would be taught those industries in which they would be most
+profitably employed.
+
+They would be inured to the hardships they would have to endure.
+
+They would be accustomed to the economies they would have to practise.
+
+They would be made acquainted with the comrades with whom they would
+have to live and labour.
+
+They would be accustomed to the Government, Orders, and Regulations
+which they would have to obey.
+
+They would be educated, so far as the opportunity served, in those
+habits of patience, forbearance, and affection which would so largely
+tend to their own welfare, and to the successful carrying out of this
+part of our Scheme.
+
+TRANSPORT TO THE COLONY OVER-SEA.
+
+We now come to the question of transport. This certainly has an
+element of difficulty in it, if the remedy is to be applied on a very
+large scale. But this will appear of less importance if we consider: --
+
+That the largeness of the number will reduce the individual cost.
+Emigrants can be conveyed to such a location in South Africa, as we
+have in view, by ones and twos at #8 per head, including land journey;
+and, no doubt, were a large number carried, this figure would be
+reduced considerably.
+
+Many of the Colonists would have friends who would assist them with the
+cost of passage money and outfit.
+
+All the unmarried will have earned something on the City and Farm
+Colonies, which will go towards meeting their passage money. In the
+course of time relatives, who are comfortably settled in the Colony,
+will save money, and assist their kindred in getting out to them.
+We have the examples before our eyes in Australia and the United States
+of how those countries have in this form absorbed from Europe millions
+of poor struggling people.
+
+All Colonists and emigrants generally will bind themselves in a legal
+instrument to repay all monies, expenses of passage, outfit,
+or otherwise, which would in turn be utilised in sending out further
+contingents.
+
+On the plan named, if prudently carried out, and generously assisted,
+the transfer of the entire surplus population of this country is not
+only possible, but would, we think, in process of time, be effected
+with enormous advantage to the people themselves, to this country,
+and the country of their adoption. The history of Australia and the
+United States evidences this. It is quite true the first settlers in
+the latter were people superior in every way for such an enterprise to
+the bulk of those we propose to send out. But it is equally true that
+large numbers of the most ignorant and vicious of our European
+populations have been pouring into that country ever since without
+affecting its prosperity, and this Colony Over-Sea would have the
+immense advantage at the outset which would come from a government and
+discipline carefully adapted to its peculiar circumstances, and rigidly
+enforced in every particular.
+
+I would guard against misconception in relation to this Colony Over-Sea
+by pointing out that all my proposals here are necessarily tentative
+and experimental. There is no intention on my part to stick to any of
+these suggestions if, on maturer consideration and consultation with
+practical men, they can be improved upon. Mr. Arnold White, who has
+already conducted two parties of Colonists to South Africa, is one of
+the few men in this country who has had practical experience of the
+actual difficulties of colonisation. I have, through a mutual friend,
+had the advantage of comparing notes with him very fully, and I venture
+to believe that there is nothing in this Scheme that is not in harmony
+with the result of his experience. In a couple of months this book will
+be read all over the world. It will bring me a plentiful crop of
+suggestions, and, I hope, offers of service from many valuable and
+experienced Colonists in every country. In the due order of things the
+Colony Over-Sea is the last to be started. Long before our first batch
+of Colonists is ready to cross the ocean I shall be in a position to
+correct and revise the proposals of this chapter by the best wisdom and
+matured experience of the practical men of every Colony in the Empire.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--UNIVERSAL EMIGRATION.
+
+We have in our remarks on the Over-Sea Colony referred to the general
+concensus of opinion on the part of those who have studied the Social
+Question as to Emigration being the only remedy for the overcrowded
+population of this country, at the same time showing some of the
+difficulties which lie in the way of the adoption of the remedy; the
+dislike of the people to so great a change as is involved in going from
+one country to another; the cost of their transfer, and their general
+unfitness for an emigrant's life. These difficulties, as I think we
+have seen, are fully met by the Over-Sea Colony Scheme. But, apart
+from those who, driven by their abject poverty, will avail themselves
+of our Scheme, there are multitudes of people all over the country who
+would be likely to emigrate could they be assisted in so doing.
+Those we propose to help in the following manner: --
+
+ 1. By opening a Bureau in London, and appointing Officers whose
+ business it will be to acquire every kind of information as to
+ suitable countries, their adaptation to, and the openings they
+ present for different trades and callings, the possibility of
+ obtaining land and employment, the rates of remuneration, and the
+ like. These enquiries will include the cost of passage-money,
+ railway fares, outfit, together with every kind of information
+ required by an emigrant.
+
+ 2. From this Bureau any one may obtain all necessary information.
+
+ 3. Special terms will be arranged with steamships, railway companies,
+ and land agents, of which emigrants using the Bureau will have the
+ advantage.
+
+ 4. Introductions will be supplied, as far as possible, to agents and
+ friends in the localities to which the emigrant may be proceeding.
+
+ 5. Intending emigrants, desirous of saving money, can deposit it
+ through this Bureau in the Army Bank for that purpose.
+
+ 6. It is expected that government contractors and other employers of
+ labour requiring Colonists of reliable character will apply to this
+ Bureau for such, offering favourable terms with respect to
+ passage-money, employment, and other advantages.
+
+ 7. No emigrant will be sent out in response to any application from
+ abroad where the emigrant's expenses are defrayed, without
+ references as to character, industry, and fitness.
+
+This Bureau, we think, will be especially useful to women and young
+girls. There must be a large number of such in this country living in
+semi-starvation, anyway, with very poor prospects, who would be very
+welcome abroad, the expense of whose transfer governments, and masters
+and mistresses alike would be very glad to defray, or assist in
+defraying, if they could only be assured on both sides of the
+beneficial character of the arrangements when made.
+
+So widespread now are the operations of the Army, and so extensively
+will this Bureau multiply its agencies that it will speedily be able to
+make personal enquiries on both sides, that is in the interest alike of
+the emigrant and the intended employer in any part of the world.
+
+
+SECTION 3.--THE SALVATION SHIP.
+
+When we have selected a party of emigrants whom we believe to be
+sufficiently prepared to settle on the land which has been got ready
+for them in the Colony over Sea, it will be no dismal expatriation
+which will await them. No one who has ever been on the West Coast of
+Ireland when the emigrants were departing, and has heard the dismal
+wails which arise from those who are taking leave of each other for the
+last time on earth, can fail to sympathise with the horror excited in
+many minds by the very word emigration. But when our party sets out,
+there will be no violent wrenching of home ties. In our ship we shall
+export them all--father, mother, and children. The individuals will
+be grouped in families, and the families will, on the Farm Colony, have
+been for some months past more or less near neighbours, meeting each
+other in the field, in the workshops, and in the Religious Services.
+It will resemble nothing so much as the unmooring of a little piece of
+England, and towing it across the sea to find a safe anchorage in a
+sunnier clime. The ship which takes out emigrants will bring back the
+produce of the farms, and constant travelling to and fro will lead more
+than ever to the feeling that we and our ocean-sundered brethren are
+members of one family.
+
+No one who has ever crossed the ocean can have failed to be impressed
+with the mischief that comes to emigrants when they are on their way to
+their destination. Many and many a girl has dated her downfall from
+the temptations which beset her while journeying to a land where she
+had hoped to find a happier future
+
+"Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do," and he must
+have his hands full on board an emigrant ship. Look into the steerage
+at any time, and you will find boredom inexpressible on every face.
+The men have nothing to do, and an incident of no more importance than
+the appearance of a sail upon the distant horizon is an event which
+makes the whole ship talk. I do not see why this should be so.
+Of course, in the case of conveying passengers and freight, with the
+utmost possible expedition, for short distances, it would be idle to
+expect that either time or energies could be spared for the employment
+or instruction of the passengers. But the case is different when,
+instead of going to America, the emigrant turns his face to South
+Africa or remote Australia. Then, even with the fastest steamers,
+they must remain some weeks or months upon the high seas. The result
+is that habits of idleness are contracted, bad acquaintances are
+formed, and very often the moral and religious work of a lifetime is
+undone.
+
+To avoid these evil consequences, I think we should be compelled to
+have a ship of our own as soon as possible. A sailing vessel might be
+found the best adapted for the work. Leaving out the question of time,
+which would be of very secondary importance with us, the construction
+of a sailing ship would afford more space for the accommodation of
+emigrants and for industrial occupation, and would involve considerably
+less working expenses, besides costing very much less at the onset,
+even if we did not have one given to us, which I should think would be
+very probable.
+
+All the emigrants would be under the charge of Army Officers, and
+instead of the voyage being demoralising, it would be made instructive
+and profitable. From leaving London to landing at their destination,
+every colonist would be under watchful oversight, could receive
+instruction in those particulars where they were still needing it,
+and be subjected to influences that would be beneficial everyway.
+
+Then we have seen that one of the great difficulties in the direction
+of emigration is the cost of transport. The expense of conveying a man
+from England to Australia, occupying as it does some seven or eight
+weeks, arises not so much from the expense connected with the working
+of the vessel which carries him, as the amount of provisions he
+consumes during the passage. Now, with this plan I think that the
+emigrants might be made to earn at least a portion of this outlay.
+There is no reason why a man should not work on board ship any more
+than on land. Of course, nothing much could be done when the weather
+was very rough; but the average number of days during which it would be
+impossible for passengers to employ themselves profitably in the time
+spent between the Channel and Cape Town or Australia would be
+comparatively few.
+
+When the ship was pitching or rolling, work would be difficult; but
+even then, when the Colonists get their sea-legs, and are free from the
+qualmishness which overtakes landsmen when first getting afloat,
+I cannot see why they should not engage in some form of industrial work
+far more profitable than yawning and lounging about the deck, to say
+nothing of the fact that by so doing they would lighten the expense of
+their transit. The sailors, firemen, engineers, and everybody else
+connected with a vessel have to work, and there is no reason why our
+Colonists should not work also.
+
+Of course, this method would require special arrangements in the
+fitting up of the vessel, which, if it were our own, it would not be
+difficult to make. At first sight it may seem difficult to find
+employments on board ship which could be engaged in to advantage,
+and it might not be found possible to fix up every individual right
+away; but I think there would be very few of the class and character of
+people we should take out, with the prior instructions they would have
+received, who would not have fitted themselves into some useful labour
+before the voyage ended.
+
+To begin with, there would be a large amount of the ordinary ship's
+work that the Colonists could perform, such as the preparation of food,
+serving it out, cleaning the decks and fittings of the ship generally,
+together with the loading and unloading of cargo. All these operations
+could be readily done under the direction of permanent hands.
+Then shoemaking, knitting, sewing, tailoring, and other kindred
+occupations could be engaged in. I should think sewing-machines could
+be worked, and, one way or another, any amount of garments could be
+manufactured, which would find ready and profitable sale on landing,
+either among the Colonists themselves, or with the people round about.
+
+Not only would the ship thus be a perfect hive of industry, it would
+also be a floating temple. The Captain, Officers, and every member of
+the crew would be Salvationists, and all, therefore, alike interested
+in the enterprise. Moreover, the probabilities are that we should
+obtain the service of the ship's officers and crew in the most
+inexpensive manner, in harmony with the usages of the Army everywhere
+else, men serving from love and not as a mere business. The effect
+produced by our ship cruising slowly southwards testifying to the
+reality of a Salvation for both worlds, calling at all convenient
+ports, would constitute a new kind of mission work, and drawing out
+everywhere a large amount of warm practical sympathy. At present the
+influence of those who go down to the sea in ships is not always in
+favour of raising the morals and religion of the dwellers in the places
+where they come. Here, however, would be one ship at least whose
+appearance foretold no disorder, gave rise to no debauchery, and from
+whose capacious hull would stream forth an Army of men, who, instead of
+thronging the grog-shops and other haunts of licentious indulgence,
+would occupy themselves with explaining and proclaiming the religion of
+the Love of God and the Brotherhood of Man.
+
+
+CHAPTER 5. MORE CRUSADES.
+
+I have now sketched out briefly the leading features of the threefold
+Scheme by which I think a way can be opened out of "Darkest England,"
+by which its forlorn denizens can escape into the light and freedom of
+a new life. But it is not enough to make a clear broad road out of the
+heart of this dense and matted jungle forest; its inhabitants are in
+many cases so degraded, so hopeless, so utterly desperate that we shall
+have to do something more than make roads. As we read in the parable,
+it is often not enough that the feast be prepared, and the guests be
+bidden; we must needs go into the highways and byways and compel them
+to come in. So it is not enough to provide our City Colony and our
+Farm Colony, and then rest on our oars as if we had done our work.
+That kind of thing will not save the Lost.
+
+It is necessary to organise rescue expeditions to free the miserable
+wanderers from their captivity, and bring them out into the larger
+liberty and the fuller life. Talk about Stanley and Emin! There is not
+one of us but has an Emin somewhere or other in the heart of Darkest
+England, whom he ought to sally forth to rescue. Our Emins have the
+Devil for their Mahdi, and when we get to them we find that it is their
+friends and neighbours who hold them back, and they are, oh,
+so irresolute! It needs each of us to be as indomitable as Stanley,
+to burst through all obstacles, to force our way right to the centre of
+things, and then to labour with the poor prisoner of vice and crime
+with all our might. But had not the Expeditionary Committee furnished
+the financial means whereby a road was opened to the sea, both Stanley
+and Emin would probably have been in the heart of Darkest Africa to
+this day. This Scheme is our Stanley Expedition. The analogy is very
+close. I propose to make a road clear down to the sea. But alas our
+poor Emin! Even when the road is open, he halts and lingers and doubts.
+First he will, and then he won't, and nothing less than the
+irresistible pressure of a friendly and stronger purpose will constrain
+him to take the road which has been opened for him at such a cost of
+blood and treasure. I now, therefore, proceed to sketch some of the
+methods by which we shall attempt to save the lost and to rescue those
+who are perishing in the midst of "Darkest England."
+
+
+SECTION 1.--A SLUM CRUSADE.--OUR SLUM SISTERS.
+
+When Professor Huxley lived as a medical officer in the East of London
+he acquired a knowledge of the actual condition of the life of many of
+its populace which led him long afterwards to declare that the
+surroundings of the savages of New Guinea were much more conducive to
+the leading of a decent human existence than those in which many of the
+East-Enders live. Alas, it is not only in London that such lairs exist
+in which the savages of civilisation lurk and breed. All the great
+towns in both the Old World and the New have their slums, in which
+huddle together, in festering and verminous filth, men, women, and
+children. They correspond to the lepers who thronged the lazar houses
+of the Middle Ages.
+
+As in those days St. Francis of Assissi and the heroic band of saints
+who gathered under his orders were wont to go and lodge with the lepers
+at the city gates, so the devoted souls who have enlisted in the
+Salvation Army take up their quarters in the heart of the worst slums.
+But whereas the Friars were men, our Slum Brigade is composed of women.
+I have a hundred of them under my orders, young women for the most part,
+quartered all of them in outposts in the heart of the Devil's country.
+Most of them are the children of the poor who have known hardship from
+their youth up. Some are ladies born and bred, who have not been
+afraid to exchange the comfort of a West End drawing-room for service
+among the vilest of the vile, and a residence in small and fetid rooms
+whose walls were infested with vermin. They live the life of the
+Crucified for the sake of the men and women for whom He lived and died.
+They form one of the branches of the activity of the Army upon which I
+dwell with deepest sympathy. They are at the front; they are at close
+quarters with the enemy. To the dwellers in decent homes who occupy
+cushioned pews in fashionable churches there is something strange and
+quaint in the language they hear read from the Bible, language which
+habitually refers to the Devil as an actual personality, and to the
+struggle against sin and uncleanness as if it were a hand to hand death
+wrestle with the legions of Hell. To our little sisters who dwell in
+an atmosphere heavy with curses, among people sodden with drink,
+in quarters where sin and uncleanness are universal, all these Biblical
+sayings are as real as the quotations of yesterday's price of Consols
+are to a City man. They dwell in the midst of Hell, and in their daily
+warfare with a hundred devils it seems incredible to them that anyone
+can doubt the existence of either one or the other.
+
+The Slum Sister is what her name implies, the Sister of the Slum.
+They go forth in Apostolic fashion, two-and-two living in a couple of
+the same kind of dens or rooms as are occupied by the people
+themselves, differing only in the cleanliness and order, and the few
+articles of furniture which they contain. Here they live all the year
+round, visiting the sick, looking after the children, showing the women
+how to keep themselves and their homes decent, often discharging the
+sick mother's duties themselves; cultivating peace, advocating
+temperance, counselling in temporalities, and ceaselessly preaching the
+religion of Jesus Christ to the Outcasts of Society.
+
+I do not like to speak of their work. Words fail me, and what I say
+is so unworthy the theme. I prefer to quote two descriptions by
+Journalists who have seen these girls at work in the field.
+The first is taken from a long article which Julia Hayes Percy
+contributed to the New York World, describing a visit paid by her to
+the slum quarters of the Salvation Army in Cherry Hill Alleys, in the
+Whitechapel of New York.
+
+Twenty-four hours in the slums--just a night and a day--
+yet into them were crowded such revelations of misery, depravity,
+and degradation as having once been gazed upon life can never be the
+same afterwards. Around and above his blighted neighbourhood flows
+the tide of active, prosperous life. Men and women travel past in
+street cars by the Elevated Railroad and across the bridge,
+and take no thought of its wretchedness, of the criminals bred there,
+and of the disease engendered by its foulness. It is a fearful menace
+to the public health, both moral and physical, yet the multitude is as
+heedless of danger as the peasant who makes his house and plants green
+vineyards and olives above Vesuvian fires. We are almost as careless
+and quite as unknowing as we pass the bridge in the late afternoon.
+Our immediate destination is the Salvation Army Barracks in Washington
+Street, and we are going finally to the Salvation Officers--two young
+women--who have been dwelling and doing a noble mission work for
+months in one of the worst corners of New York's most wretched quarter.
+These Officers are not living under the aegis of the Army, however.
+The blue bordered flag is furled out of sight, the uniforms and poke
+bonnets are laid away, and there are no drums or tambourines.
+"The banner over them is love" of their fellow-creatures among whom
+they dwell upon an equal plane of poverty, wearing no better clothes
+than the rest, eating coarse and scanty food, and sleeping upon hard
+cots or upon the floor. Their lives are consecrated to God's service
+among the poor of the earth. One is a woman in the early prime of
+vigorous life, the other a girl of eighteen. The elder of these
+devoted women is awaiting us at the barracks to be our guide to
+Slumdom. She is tall, slender, and clad in a coarse brown gown, mended
+with patches. A big gingham apron, artistically rent in several
+places, is tied about her waist. She wears on old plaid woollen shawl
+and an ancient brown straw hat. Her dress indicates extreme poverty,
+her face denotes perfect peace. "This is Em," says Mrs. Ballington
+Booth, and after this introduction we sally forth.
+
+More and more wretched grows the district as we penetrate further Em
+pauses before a dirty, broken, smoke-dimmed window, through which in a
+dingy room are seen a party of roughs, dark-looking men, drinking and
+squabbling at a table. "They are our neighbours in the front."
+We enter the hall-way and proceed to the rear room. It is tiny,
+but clean and warm. A fire burns on the little cracked stove,
+which stands up bravely on three legs, with a brick eking out its
+support at the fourth corner. A tin lamp stands on the table,
+half-a-dozen chairs, one of which has arms, but must have renounced its
+rockers long ago, and a packing box, upon which we deposit our shawls,
+constitute the furniture. Opening from this is a small dark bedroom,
+with one cot made up and another folded against the wall. Against a
+door, which must communicate with the front room, in which we saw the
+disagreeable-looking men sitting, is a wooden table for the hand-basin.
+A small trunk and a barrel of clothing complete the inventory.
+
+Em's sister in the slum work gives us a sweet shy welcome. She is a
+Swedish girl, with the fair complexion and crisp, bright hair peculiar
+to the Scandinavian blonde-type. Her head reminds me of a Grenze that
+hangs in the Louvre, with its low knot of rippling hair, which fluffs
+out from her brow and frames a dear little face with soft childish
+outlines, a nez retrousse, a tiny mouth, like a crushed pink rose,
+and wistful blue eyes. This girl has been a Salvationist for two
+years. During that time she has learned to speak, read, and write
+English, while she has constantly laboured among the poor and wretched.
+The house where we find ourselves was formerly notorious as one of the
+worst in the Cherry Hill district. It has been the scene of some
+memorable crimes, and among them that of the Chinaman who slew his
+Irish wife, after the manner of "Jack the Ripper," on the staircase
+leading to the second floor. A notable change has taken place in the
+tenement since Mattie and Em have lived there, and their gentle
+influence is making itself felt in the neighbouring houses as well.
+It is nearly eight o'clock when we sally forth. Each of us carries a
+handful of printed slips bearing a text of Scripture and a few words of
+warning to lead the better life.
+
+"These furnish an excuse for entering places where otherwise we could
+not go," explains Em.
+
+After arranging a rendezvous, we separate. Mattie and Liz go off in
+one direction, and Em and I in another. From this our progress seems
+like a descent into Tartarus. Em pauses before a miserable-looking
+saloon, pushes open the low, swinging door, and we go in.
+It is a low-ceiled room, dingy with dirt, dim with the smoke,
+nauseating with the fumes of sour beer and vile liquor. A sloppy bar
+extends along one side, and opposite is a long table, with
+indescribable viands littered over it, interspersed with empty glasses,
+battered hats, and cigar stumps. A motley crowd of men and women
+jostle in the narrow space. Em speaks to the soberest looking of the
+lot. He listens to her words, others crowd about. Many accept the
+slips we offer, and gradually as the throng separates to make way,
+we gain the further end of the apartment. Em's serious, sweet,
+saint-like face I follow like a star. All sense of fear slips from me,
+and a great pity fills my soul as I look upon the various types of
+wretchedness.
+
+As the night wears on, the whole apartment seems to wake up.
+Every house is alight; the narrow sidewalks and filthy streets are full
+of people. Miserable little children, with sin-stamped faces,
+dart about like rats; little ones who ought to be in their cribs shift
+for themselves, and sleep on cellar doors and areas, and under carts;
+a few vendors are abroad with their wares, but the most of the traffic
+going on is of a different description. Along Water Street are women
+conspicuously dressed in gaudy colours. Their heavily-painted faces
+are bloated or pinched; they shiver in the raw night air. Liz speaks
+to one, who replies that she would like to talk, but dare not,
+and as she says this an old hag comes to the door and cries:
+"Get along; don't hinder her work! During the evening a man to whom Em
+has been talking has told her: --"You ought to join the Salvation Army;
+they are the only good women who, bother us down here. I don't want to
+lead that sort of life; but I must go where it is light and warm and
+clean after working all day, and there isn't any place but this to come
+to" exclaimed the man. "You will appreciate the plea to-morrow when
+you see how the people live," Em says, as we turn our steps toward the
+tenement room, which seems like an oasis of peace and purity after the
+howling desert we have been wandering in. Em and Mattie brew some
+oatmeal gruel, and being chilled and faint we enjoyed a cup of it.
+Liz and I share a cot in the outer room. We are just going to sleep
+when agonised cries ring out through the night; then the tones of a
+woman's voice pleading pitifully reach our ears. We are unable to
+distinguish her words, but the sound is heart-rending. It comes from
+one of those dreadful Water Street houses, and we all feel that a
+tragedy is taking place. There is a sound of crashing blows and then
+silence.
+
+It is customary in the slums to leave the house door open perpetually,
+which is convenient for tramps, who creep into the hall-ways to sleep
+at night, thereby saving the few pence it costs to occupy a "spot" in
+the cheap lodging houses. Em and Mat keep the corridor without their
+room beautifully clean, and so it has become an especial favourite
+stamping ground for these vagrants. We were told this when Mattie
+locked and bolted the door and then tied the keys and the door-handle
+together. So we understand why there are shuffling steps along the
+corridor, bumping against the panels of the door, and heavily breathing
+without during the long hours of the night.
+
+All day Em and Mat have been toiling among their neighbours, and the
+night before last they sat up with a dying woman. They are worn out
+and sleep heavily. Liz and I lie awake and wait for the coming of the
+morning; we are too oppressed by what we have seen and heard to talk.
+
+In the morning Liz and I peep over into the rear houses where we
+heard those dreadful shrieks in the night. There is no sign of life,
+but we discover enough filth to breed diphtheria and typhoid throughout
+a large section. In the area below our window there are several inches
+of stagnant water, in which is heaped a mass of old shoes, cabbage
+heads, garbage, rotten wood, bones, rags and refuse, and a few dead rats.
+We understand now why Em keeps her room full of disinfectants.
+She tells us that she dare not make any appeal to the sanitary
+authorities, either on behalf of their own or any other dwelling,
+for fear of antagonizing the people, who consider such officials as
+their natural enemies.
+
+The first visit we pay is up a number of eccentric little flights of
+shaky steps interspersed with twists of passageway. The floor is full
+of holes. The stairs have been patched here and there, but look
+perilous and sway beneath the feet, A low door on the landing is opened
+by a bundle of rags and filth, out of which issues a woman's voice in
+husky tones, bidding us enter. She has La grippe. We have to stand
+very close together, for the room is small, and already contains three
+women, a man, a baby, a bedstead, a stove, and indescribable dirt.
+The atmosphere is rank with impurity. The man is evidently dying.
+Seven weeks ago he was "gripped." He is now in the last stages of
+pneumonia. Em has tried to induce him to be removed to the hospital,
+and he gasps out his desire "to die in comfort in my own bed." Comfort!
+The "bed' is a rack heaped with rags. Sheets, pillow-cases, and
+night-clothes are not in vogue in the slums. A woman lies asleep on
+the dirty floor with her head under the table. Another woman, who has
+been sharing the night watch with the invalid's wife, is finishing her
+morning meal, in which roast oysters on the half shell are conspicuous.
+A child that appears never to have been washed toddles about the floor
+and tumbles over the sleeping woman's form. Em gives it some gruel,
+and ascertains that its name is "Christine."
+
+The dirt, crowding, and smells in the first place are characteristic of
+half a dozen others we visited. We penetrate to garrets and descend
+into cellars. The "rear houses" are particularly dreadful. Everywhere
+there is decaying garbage lying about, and the dead cats and rats are
+evidence that there are mighty hunters among the gamins of the Fourth
+Ward. We find a number ill from the grip and consequent maladies.
+None of the sufferers will entertain the thought of seeking a hospital.
+One probably voices the opinion of the majority when he declares that
+"they'll wash you to death there." For these people a bath possesses
+more terror than the gallows or the grave.
+
+In one room, with a wee window, lies a women dying of consumption;
+wasted wan, and wretched, lying on rags and swarming with vermin.
+Her little son, a boy of eight years, nestles beside her. His cheeks
+are scarlet, his eyes feverishly bright, and he has a hard cough.
+"It's the chills, mum," says the little chap. Six beds stand close
+together in another room; one is empty. Three days ago a woman died
+there and the body has just been taken away. It hasn't disturbed the
+rest of the inmates to have death present there. A woman is lying on
+the wrecks of a bedstead, slats and posts sticking out in every
+direction from the rags on which she reposes.
+
+"It broke under me in the night," she explains. A woman is sick and
+wants Liz to say a prayer. We kneel on the filthy floor. Soon all my
+faculties are absorbed in speculating which will arrive first, the
+"Amen" or the "B flat" which is wending its way to wards me. This time
+the bug does not get there, and I enjoy grinding him under the sole of
+my Slum shoe when the prayer is ended.
+
+In another room we find what looks like a corpse. It is a woman in an
+opium stupor. Drunken men are brawling around her.
+
+Returning to our tenement, Em and Liz meet us, and we return to our
+experience. The minor details vary slightly, but the story is the same
+piteous tale of woe everywhere, and crime abounding, conditions which
+only change to a prison, a plunge in the river, or the Potter's field.
+
+The Dark Continent can show no lower depth of degradation than that
+sounded by the dwellers of the dark alleys in Cherry Hill. There isn't
+a vice missing in that quarter. Every sin in the Decalogue flourishes
+in that feeder of penitentiaries and prisons. And even as its moral
+foulness permeates and poisons the veins of our social life so the
+malarial filth with which the locality reeks must sooner or later
+spread disease and death.
+
+An awful picture, truly, but one which is to me irradiated with the
+love-light which shone in the eyes of "Em's serious, sweet, saintlike
+face."
+
+Here is my second. It was written by a Journalist who had just
+witnessed the scene in Whitechapel. He writes: --
+
+I had just passed Mr. Barnett's church when I was stopped by a small
+crowd at a street corner. There were about thirty or forty men, women,
+and children standing loosely together, some others were lounging on
+the opposite side of the street round the door of a public-house.
+In the centre of the crowd was a plain-looking little woman in
+Salvation Army uniform, with her eyes closed, praying the "dear Lord
+that he would bless these dear people, and save them, save them now!"
+Moved by curiosity, I pressed through the outer fringe of the crowd,
+and in doing so, I noticed a woman of another kind, also invoking
+Heaven, but in an altogether different fashion. Two dirty tramp-like
+men were listening to the prayer, standing the while smoking their
+short cutty pipes. For some reason or other they had offended the
+woman, and she was giving them a piece of her mind. They stood
+stolidly silent while she went at them like a fiend. She had been
+good-looking once, but was now horribly bloated with drink, and excited
+by passion. I heard both voices at the same time. What a contrast!
+The prayer was over now, and a pleading earnest address was being
+delivered.
+
+"You are wrong," said the voice in the centre "you know you are; all
+this misery and poverty is a proof of it. You are prodigals. You have
+got away from your Father's house, and you are rebelling against Him
+every day Can you wonder that there is so much hunger, and oppression,
+and wretchedness allowed to come upon you? In the midst of it all your
+Father loves you He wants you to return to Him; to turn your backs upon
+your sins; abandon your evil doings; give up the drink and the service
+of the devil. He has given His Son Jesus Christ to die for you.
+He wants to save you. Come to His feet. He is waiting. His arms are
+open. I know the devil has got fast hold of you; but Jesus will give
+you grace to conquer him. He will help you to master your wicked
+habits and your love of drink. But come to Him now. God is love.
+He loves me. He loves you. He loves us all. He wants to save us all."
+
+Clear and strong the voice, eloquent with the fervour of intense
+feeling, rang through the little crowd, past which streamed the
+ever-flowing tide of East End life. And at the same time that I heard
+this pure and passionate invocation to love God and be true to man I
+heard a voice on the outskirts, and it said this: "You ---- swine!
+I'll knock the vitals out of yer. None of your ---- impudence to me.
+---- your ---- eyes, what do you mean by telling me that? You know
+what you ha' done, and now you are going to the Salvation Army.
+I'll let them know you, you dirty rascal." The man shifted his pipe.
+"What's the matter?" "Matter!" screamed the virago hoarsely." ----
+yer life, don't you know what's the matter? I'll matter ye, you ----
+hound. By God! I will, as sure as I'm alive. Matter! you know what's
+the matter." And so she went on, the men standing silently smoking
+until at last she took herself off her mouth full of oaths and cursing,
+to the public-house. It seemed as though the presence, and spirit,
+and words of the Officer, who still went on with the message of mercy,
+had some strange effect upon them, which made these poor wretches
+impervious to the taunting, bitter sarcasms of this brazen, blatant
+virago.
+
+"God is love." Was it not, then, the accents of God's voice that
+sounded there above the din of the street and the swearing of the
+slums? Yea, verily, and that voice ceases not and will not cease,
+so long as the Slum Sisters fight under the banner of the Salvation
+Army.
+
+To form an idea of the immense amount of good, temporal and spiritual,
+which the Slum Sister is doing; you need to follow them into the
+kennels where they live, preaching the Gospel with the mop and the
+scrubbing brush, and driving out the devil with soap and water.
+In one of our Slum posts, where the Officer's rooms were on the ground
+floor, about fourteen other families lived in the same house.
+One little water-closet in the back yard had to do service for the
+whole place. As for the dirt, one Officer writes, "It is impossible to
+scrub the Homes; some of them are in such a filthy condition.
+When they have a fire the ashes are left to accumulate for days.
+The table is very seldom, if ever, properly cleaned, dirty cups and
+saucers lie about it, together with bits of bread, and if they have
+bloaters the bones and heads are left on the table, Sometimes there are
+pieces of onions mixed up with the rest. The floors are in a very much
+worse condition than the street pavements, and when they are supposed
+to clean them they do it with about a pint of dirty water. When they
+wash, which is rarely, for washing to them seems an unnecessary work,
+they do it in a quart or two of water, and sometimes boil the things in
+some old saucepan in which they cook their food. They do this simply
+because they have no larger vessel to wash in. The vermin fall off the
+walls and ceiling on you while you are standing in the rooms.
+Some of the walls are covered with marks where they have killed them.
+Many people in the summer sit on the door steps all night, the reason
+for this being, that their rooms are so close from the heat and so
+unendurable from the vermin that they prefer staying out in the cool
+night air. But as they cannot stay anywhere long without drinking,
+they send for beer from the neighbouring public--alas! never far away
+--and pass it from one doorway to another, the result being singing,
+shouting and fighting up till three and four o'clock in the morning."
+
+I could fill volumes with stories of the war against vermin, which is
+part of this campaign in the slums, but the subject is too revolting to
+those who are often indifferent to the agonies their fellow creatures
+suffer, so long as their sensitive ears are not shocked by the mention
+of so painful a subject. Here, for instance, is a sample of the kind
+of region in which the Slum Sisters spend themselves:
+
+"In an apparently respectable street near Oxford street, the Officers
+where visiting one day when they saw a very dark staircase leading into
+a cellar, and thinking it possible that someone might be there they
+attempted to go down, and yet the staircase was so dark they thought it
+impossible for anyone to be there. However, they tried again and
+groped their way along in the dark for some time until at last they
+found the door and entered the room. At first they could not discern
+anything because of the darkness. But after they got used to it they
+saw a filthy room. There was no fire in the grate, but the fire-place
+was heaped up with ashes, an accumulation of several weeks at least.
+At one end of the room there was an old sack of rags and bones partly
+emptied upon the floor, from which there came a most unpleasant odour.
+At the other end lay an old man very ill. The apology for a bed on
+which he lay was filthy and had neither sheets nor blankets.
+His covering consisted of old rags. His poor wife, who attended on
+him, appeared to be a stranger to soap and water. These Slum Sisters
+nursed the old people, and on one occasion undertook to do their
+washing, and they brought it home to their copper for this purpose,
+but it was so infested with vermin that they did not know how to wash
+it. Their landlady, who happened to see them, forbade them ever to
+bring such stuff there any more. The old man, when well enough, worked
+at his trade, which was tailoring. They had two shillings and sixpence
+per week from the parish."
+
+Here is a report from the headquarters of our Slum Brigade as to the
+work which the Slum Sisters have done. It is almost four years since
+the Slum Work was started in London. The principal work done by our
+first Officers was that of visiting the sick, cleansing the homes of
+the Slummers, and of feeding the hungry. The following are a few of
+the cases of those who have gained temporally, as well as spiritually,
+through our work: --
+
+Mrs. W.--Of Haggerston Slum. Heavy drinker, wrecked home, husband a
+drunkard, place dirty and filthy, terribly poor. Saved now over two
+years, home A1., plenty of employment at cane-chair bottoming; husband
+now saved also.
+
+Mrs. R.--Drury Lane Slum. Husband and wife, drunkards; husband
+very lazy, only worked when starved in to it. We found them both out
+of work, home furnitureless, in debt. She got saved, and our lasses
+prayed for him to get work. He did so, and went to it. He fell out
+again a few weeks after, and beat his wife. She sought employment at
+charing and office cleaning, got it, and has been regularly at work
+since. He too got work. He is now a teetotaler. The home is very
+comfortable now, and they are putting money in the bank.
+
+A.M. in the Dials. Was a great drunkard, thriftless, did not go to
+the trouble of seeking work. Was in a Slum meeting, heard the Captain
+speak on "Seek first the Kingdom of God!" called out and said,
+"Do you mean that if I ask God for work, He will give it me?"
+Of course she said, "Yes." He was converted that night, found work,
+and is now employed in the Gas Works, Old Kent Road.
+
+Jimmy is a soldier in the Boro' Slum! Was starving when he got
+converted through being out of work. Through joining the Army, he was
+turned out of his home. He found work, and now owns a coffee-stall in
+Billingsgate Market, and is doing well.
+
+Sergeant R.--Of Marylebone Slum. Used to drink, lived in a wretched
+place in the famous Charles Street, had work at two places, at one of
+which he got 5s. a week and the other 10s., when he got saved;
+this was starvation wages, on which to keep himself, his wife,
+and four children. At the 10s. a week work he had to deliver drink for
+a spirit merchant; feeling condemned over it, he gave it up, and was
+out of work for weeks. The brokers were put in, but the Lord rescued
+him just in time. The 5s. a week employer took him afterwards at 18s.,
+and he is now earning 22s., and has left the ground-floor slum tenement
+for a better house.
+
+H.--Nine Elms Slum. Was saved on Easter Monday, out of work several
+weeks before, is a labourer, seems very earnest, in terrible distress.
+We allow his wife 2s. 6d. a week for cleaning the hall (to help them).
+In addition to that, she gets another 2s. 6d. for nursing, and on that
+husband, wife, and a couple of children pay the rent of 2s. a week and
+drag out an existence. I have tried to get work for this man, but have
+failed.
+
+T.--Of Rotherhithe Slum. Was a great drunkard, is a carpenter;
+saved about nine months ago, but, having to work in a public-house on a
+Sunday, he gave it up; he has not been able to get another job, and has
+nothing but what we have given him for making seats.
+
+Emma Y.--Now a Soldier of the Marylebone Slum Post, was a wild young
+Slummer when we opened in the Boro'; could be generally seen in the
+streets, wretchedly clad, her sleeves turned up, idle, only worked
+occasionally, got saved two years ago, had terrible persecution in her
+home. We got her a situation, where she has been for nearly eighteen
+months, and is now a good servant.
+
+Lodging-House Frank.--At twenty-one came into the possession of
+#750, but, through drink and gambling, lost it all in six or eight
+months, and for over seven years he has tramped about from Portsmouth,
+through the South of England, and South Wales, from one lodging-house
+to another, often starving, drinking when he could get any money;
+thriftless, idle, no heart for work. We found him in a lodging-house
+six months ago, living with a fallen girl; got them both saved and
+married; five weeks after he got work as a carpenter at 30s. a week.
+He has a home of his own now, and promises well to make an officer.
+
+The Officer who furnishes the above reports goes on to say: --
+
+I can't call the wretched dwelling home, to which drink had brought
+Brother and Sister X. From a life of luxury, they drifted down by
+degrees to one room in a Slum tenement, surrounded by drunkards and the
+vilest characters. Their lovely half-starved children were compelled
+to listen to the foulest language, and hear fighting and quarrelling,
+and alas, alas, not only to hear it in the adjoining rooms, but witness
+it within their own. For over two years they have been delivered from
+the power of the cursed drink. The old rookery is gone, and now they
+have a comfortably-furnished home. Their children give evidence of
+being truly converted, and have a lively gratitude for their father's
+salvation. One boy of eight said, last Christmas Day, "I remember when
+we had only dry bread for Christmas; but to-day we had a goose and two
+plum-puddings." Brother X. was dismissed in disgrace from his
+situation as commercial traveller before his conversion; to-day he is
+chief man, next to his employer, in a large business house.
+
+He says: --
+
+I and perfectly satisfied that very few of the lowest strata of Society
+are unwilling to work if they could get it. The wretched hand-to-mouth
+existence many of them have to live disheartens them, and makes life
+with them either a feast or a famine, and drives those who have brains
+enough to crime.
+
+The results of our work in the Slums may be put down as: --
+
+1st. A marked improvement in the cleanliness of the homes and
+ children; disappearance of vermin, and a considerable lessening
+ of drunkenness.
+
+2nd. A greater respect for true religion, and especially that of the
+ Salvation Army.
+
+3rd. A much larger amount of work is being done now than before our
+ going there.
+
+4th. The rescue of many fallen girls.
+
+5th. The Shelter work seems to us a development of the Slum work.
+
+In connection with our Scheme, we propose to immediately increase the
+numbers of these Slum Sisters, and to add to their usefulness by
+directly connecting their operations with the Colony, enabling them
+thereby to help the poor people to conditions of life more favourable
+to health, morals, and religion. This would be accomplished by getting
+some of them employment in the City, which must necessarily result in
+better homes and surroundings, or in the opening up for others of a
+straight course from the Slums to the Farm Colony.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--THE TRAVELLING HOSPITAL.
+
+Of course, there is only one real remedy for this state of things,
+and that is to take the people away from the wretched hovels in which
+they sicken, suffer, and die, with less comfort and consideration than
+the cattle in the stalls and styes of many a country Squire.
+And this is certainly our ultimate ambition, but for the present
+distress something might be done on the lines of district nursing,
+which is only in very imperfect operation.
+
+I have been thinking that if a little Van, drawn by a pony, could be
+fitted up with what is ordinarily required by the sick and dying, and
+trot round amongst these abodes of desolation, with a couple of nurses
+trained for the business, it might be of immense service, without being
+very costly. They could have a few simple instruments, so as to draw a
+tooth or lance an abscess, and what was absolutely requisite for simple
+surgical operations. A little oil-stove for hot water to prepare a
+poultice, or a hot foment, or a soap wash, and a number of other
+necessaries for nursing, could be carried with ease.
+
+The need for this will only be appreciated by those who know how
+utterly bereft of all the comforts and conveniences for attending to
+the smallest matters in sickness which prevails in these abodes of
+wretchedness. It may be suggested, why don't the people when they
+are ill go to the hospital? To which we simply reply that they won't.
+They cling to their own bits of rooms and to the companionship of
+the members of their own families, brutal as they often are,
+and would rather stay and suffer, and die in the midst of all the
+filth and squalor that surrounds them in their own dens, than go to
+the big house, which, to them, looks very like a prison.
+
+The sufferings of the wretched occupants of the Slums that we have been
+describing, when sick and unable to help themselves, makes the
+organisation of some system of nursing them in their own homes a
+Christian duty. Here are a handful of cases, gleaned almost at random
+from the reports of our Slum Sisters, which will show the value of the
+agency above described: --
+
+Many of those who are sick have often only one room, and often several
+children. The Officers come across many cases where, with no one to
+look after them, they have to lie for hours without food or nourishment
+of any kind. Sometimes the neighbours will take them in a cup of tea.
+It is really a mystery how they live.
+
+A poor woman in Drury Lane was paralyzed. She had no one to attend to
+her; she lay on the floor, on a stuffed sack, and an old piece of cloth
+to cover her. Although it was winter, she very seldom had any fire.
+She had no garments to wear, and but very little to eat.
+
+Another poor woman, who was very ill, was allowed a little money by her
+daughter to pay her rent and get her food; but very frequently she had
+not the strength to light a fire or to get herself food. She was
+parted from her husband because of his cruelty. Often she lay for
+hours without a soul to visit or help her.
+
+Adjutant McClellan found a man lying on a straw mattress in a very bad
+condition. The room was filthy; the smell made the Officer feel ill.
+The man had been lying for days without having anything done for him.
+A cup of water was by his side. The Officers vomited from the terrible
+smells of this place. Frequently sick people are found who need the
+continual application of hot poultices, but who are left with a cold
+one for hours.
+
+In Marylebone the Officers visited a poor old woman who was very ill.
+She lived in an underground back kitchen, with hardly a ray of light
+and never a ray of sunshine. Her bed was made up on some egg boxes.
+She had no one to look after her, except a drunken daughter, who very
+often, when drunk, used to knock the poor old woman about very badly.
+The Officers frequently found that she had not eaten any food up to
+twelve o'clock, not even a cup of tea to drink. The only furniture in
+the room was a small table, an old fender, and a box. The vermin
+seemed to be innumerable.
+
+A poor woman was taken very ill, but, having a small family, she felt
+she must get up and wash them. While she was washing the baby she fell
+down and was unable to move. Fortunately a neighbour came in soon
+after to ask some question, and saw her lying there. She at once ran
+and fetched another neighbour. Thinking the poor woman was dead, they
+got her into bed and sent for a doctor. He said she was in consumption
+and required quiet and nourishment. This the poor woman could not get,
+on account of her children. She got up a few hours afterwards. As she
+was going downstairs she fell down again. The neighbour picked her up
+and put her back to bed, where for a long time she lay thoroughly
+prostrated. The Officers took her case in hand, fed, and nursed her,
+cleaned her room and generally looked after her.
+
+In another dark slum the Officers found a poor old woman in an
+underground back kitchen. She was suffering with some complaint.
+When they knocked at the door she was terrified for fear it was the
+landlord. The room was in a most filthy condition, never having
+been cleaned. She had a penny paraffin lamp which filled the room
+with smoke. The old woman was at times totally unable to do anything
+for herself. The Officers looked after her.
+
+SECTION 3. REGENERATlON OF OUR CRIMINALS.--THE PRISON GATE BRIGADE
+
+Our Prisons ought to be reforming institutions, which should turn men
+out better than when they entered their doors. As a matter of fact
+they are often quite the reverse. There are few persons in this world
+more to be pitied than the poor fellow who has served his first term of
+imprisonment or finds himself outside the gaol doors without a
+character, and often without a friend in the world. Here, again,
+the process of centralization, gone on apace of late years, however
+desirable it maybe in the interests of administration, tells with
+disastrous effects on the poor wretches who are its victims.
+
+In the old times, when a man was sent to prison, the gaol stood within
+a stone's throw of his home. When he came out he was at any rate close
+to his old friends and relations, who would take him in and give him a
+helping hand to start once more a new life. But what has happened
+owing to the desire of the Government to do away with as many local
+gaols as possible? The prisoners, when convicted, are sent long
+distances by rail to the central prisons, and on coming out find
+themselves cursed with the brand of the gaol bird, so far from home,
+character gone, and with no one to fall back upon for counsel, or to
+give them a helping hand. No wonder it is reported that vagrancy has
+much increased in some large towns on account of discharged prisoners
+taking to begging, having no other resource.
+
+In the competition for work no employer is likely to take a man who is
+fresh from gaol; nor are mistresses likely to engage a servant whose
+last character was her discharge from one of Her Majesty's prisons.
+It is incredible how much mischief is often done by well-meaning
+persons, who, in struggling towards the attainment of an excellent end
+--such, for instance, as that of economy and efficiency in prison
+administration--forget entirely the bearing which their reforms may
+have upon the prisoners themselves.
+
+The Salvation Army has at least one great qualification for dealing
+with this question I believe I am in the proud position of being at the
+head of the only religious body which has always some of its members in
+gaol for conscience' sake. We are also one of the few religious bodies
+which can boast that many of those who are in our ranks have gone
+through terms of penal servitude. We, therefore, know the prison at
+both ends. Some men go to gaol because they are better than their
+neighbours, most men because they are worse. Martyrs, patriots,
+reformers of all kinds belong to the first category. No great cause
+has ever achieved a triumph before it has furnished a certain quota to
+the prison population. The repeal of an unjust law is seldom carried
+until a certain number of those who are labouring for the reform have
+experienced in their own persons the hardships of fine and imprisonment.
+Christianity itself would never have triumphed over the Paganism of
+ancient Rome had the early Christians not been enabled to testify from
+the dungeon and the arena as to the sincerity and serenity of soul with
+which they could confront their persecutors, and from that time down to
+the successful struggles of our people for the right of public meeting
+at Whitchurch and elsewhere, the Christian religion and the liberties
+of men have never failed to demand their quota of martyrs for the
+faith.
+
+When a man has been to prison in the best of causes he learns to look
+at the question of prison discipline with a much more sympathetic eye
+for those who are sent there, even for the worst offences, than judges
+and legislators who only look at the prison from the outside.
+"A fellow-feeling makes one wondrous kind," and it is an immense
+advantage to us in dealing with the criminal classes that many of our
+best Officers have themselves been in a prison cell. Our people, thank
+God, have never learnt to regard a prisoner as a mere convict--A 234.
+He is ever a human being to them, who is to be cared for and looked
+after as a mother looks after her ailing child. At present there seems
+to be but little likelihood of any real reform in the interior of our
+prisons. We have therefore to wait until the men come outside, in
+order to see what, can be done. Our work begins when that of the
+prison authorities ceases. We have already had a good deal of
+experience in this work, both here and in Bombay, in Ceylon,
+in South Africa, in Australia and elsewhere, and as the nett result of
+our experience we proceed now to set forth the measures we intend to
+adopt, some of which are already in successful operation.
+
+1. We propose the opening of Homes for this class as near as possible
+ to the different gaols. One for men has just been taken at
+ King's Cross, and will be occupied as soon as it can be got ready.
+ One for women must follow immediately. Others will be required in
+ different parts of the Metropolis, and contiguous to each of its
+ great prisons. Connected with these Homes will be workshops in
+ which the inmates will be regularly employed until such time as we
+ can get them work elsewhere. For this class must also work,
+ not only as a discipline, but as the means for their own support.
+
+2. In order to save, as far as possible, first offenders from the
+ contamination of prison life, and to prevent the formation of
+ further evil companionships, and the recklessness which follows the
+ loss of character entailed by imprisonment, we would offer, in the
+ Police and Criminal Courts, to take such offenders under our wing as
+ were anxious to come and willing to accept our regulations.
+ The confidence of both magistrates and prisoners would, we think,
+ soon be secured, the friends of the latter would be mostly on our
+ side, and the probability, therefore, is that we should soon have a
+ large number of cases placed under our care on what is known as
+ "suspended sentence," to be brought up for judgment when called
+ upon, the record of each sentence to be wiped out on report being
+ favourable of their conduct in the Salvation Army Home.
+
+3. We should seek access to the prisons in order to gain such
+ acquaintance with the prisoners as would enable us the more
+ effectually to benefit them on their discharge. This privilege,
+ we think, would be accorded us by the prison authorities when they
+ became acquainted with the nature of our work and the remarkable
+ results which followed it. The right of entry into the gaols has
+ already been conceded to our people in Australia, where they have
+ free access to, and communion with, the inmates while under going
+ their sentences. Prisoners are recommended to come to us by the
+ gaol authorities, who also forward to our people information of the
+ date and hour when they leave, in order that they may be met on
+ their release,
+
+4. We propose to meet the criminals at the prison gates with the offer
+ of immediate admission to our Homes. The general rule is for them
+ to be met by their friends or old associates, who ordinarily belong
+ to the same class. Any way, it would be an exception to the rule
+ were they not all alike believers in the comforting and cheering
+ power of the intoxicating cup. Hence the public-house is invariably
+ adjourned to, where plans for further crime are often decided upon
+ straight away, resulting frequently, before many weeks are past,
+ in the return of the liberated convict to the confinement from
+ which he has just escaped. Having been accustomed during confinement
+ to the implicit submission of themselves to the will of another, the
+ newly-discharged prisoner is easily influenced by whoever first gets
+ hold of him. Now, we propose to be beforehand with these old
+ companions by taking the gaol-bird under our wing and setting before
+ him an open door of hope the moment he crosses the threshold of the
+ prison, assuring him that if he is willing to work and comply with
+ our discipline, he never need know want any more.
+
+5. We shall seek from the authorities the privilege of supervising
+ and reporting upon those who are discharged with tickets-of-leave,
+ so as to free them from the humiliating and harassing duty of having
+ to report themselves at the police stations.
+
+6. We shall find suitable employment for each individual. If not in
+ possession of some useful trade or calling we will teach him one.
+
+7. After a certain length of residence in these Homes, if consistent
+ evidence is given of a sincere purpose to live an honest life,
+ he will be transferred to the Farm Colony, unless in the meanwhile
+ friends or old employers take him off our hands, or some other form
+ of occupation is obtained, in which case he will still be the object
+ of watchful care.
+
+We shall offer to all the ultimate possibility of being restored to
+Society in this country, or transferred to commence life afresh in
+another
+
+With respect to results we can speak very positively, for although our
+operations up to the present, except for a short time some three years
+ago, have been limited, and unassisted by the important accessories
+above described, yet the success that has at tended them has been most
+remarkable. The following are a few instances which might be
+multiplied: --
+
+J. W. was met at prison gate by the Captain of the Home and offered
+help. He declined to come at once as he had friends in Scotland who he
+thought would help him; but if they failed, he promised to come.
+It was his first conviction, and he had six months for robbing his
+employer. His trade was that of a baker. In a few days he presented
+himself at the Home, and was received. In the course of a few weeks,
+he professed conversion, and gave every evidence of the change.
+For four months he was cook and baker in the kitchen, and at last a
+situation as second hand was offered for him, with the [sic]
+
+J. S. Sergeant-major of the Congress Hall Corps. That is three years
+ago. He is there to-day, saved, and satisfactory; a thoroughly useful
+and respectable man.
+
+J. P. was an old offender. He was met at Millbank on the expiration
+of his last term (five years), and brought to the Home, where he worked
+at his trade a tailor. Eventually he got a situation, and has since
+married. He has now a good home, the confidence of his neighbours,
+is well saved, and a soldier of the Hackney Corps.
+
+C. M. Old offender, and penal servitude case. Was induced to come to
+the Home, got saved, was there for a long period, offered for the work,
+and went into the Field, was Lieutenant for two years, and eventually
+married. He is now a respectable mechanic and soldier of a Corps in
+Derbyshire.
+
+J. W. Was manager in a large West End millinery establishment.
+He was sent out with two ten-pound packages of silver to change.
+On his way he met a companion and was induced to take a drink.
+In the tavern the companion made an excuse to go outside and did not
+return, and W. found one of the packages had been abstracted from his
+outside pocket. He was afraid to return, and decamped with the other
+into the country. Whilst in a small town he strolled into a Mission
+Hall; there happened to be a hitch in the proceedings, the organist was
+absent, a volunteer was called for, and W., being a good musician,
+offered to play. It seems the music took hold of him. In the middle
+of the hymn he walked out and went to the police station and gave
+himself up. He got six months. When he came out, he saw that Happy
+George, an ex-gaol bird, was announced at the Congress Hall. He went
+to the meeting and was induced to come to the Home. He eventually got
+saved, and to-day he is at the head of a Mission work in the provinces.
+
+"Old Dan" was a penal servitude case, and had had several long
+sentences. He came into the Home and was saved. He managed the
+bootmaking there for a long time. He has since gone into business at
+Hackney, and is married. He is of four years' standing, a thorough
+respectable tradesman, and a Salvationist.
+
+Charles C. has done in the aggregate twenty-three years' penal
+servitude. Was out on licence, and got saved at the Hull Barracks.
+At that time he had neglected to report himself, and had destroyed his
+licence, taking an assumed name. When he got saved he gave himself up,
+and was taken before the magistrate, who, instead of sending him back
+to fulfil his sentence, gave him up to the Army. He was sent to us
+from Hull by our representative, is now in our factory and doing well.
+He is still under police supervision for five years.
+
+H. Kelso. Also a licence man. He had neglected to report himself,
+and was arrested. While before the magistrate he said he was tired of
+dishonesty, and would go to the Salvation Army if they would discharge
+him. He was sent back to penal servitude. Application was made by us
+to the Home Secretary on his behalf, and Mr. Matthews granted his
+release. He was handed over to our Officers at Bristol, brought to
+London, and is now in the Factory, saved and doing well.
+
+E. W. belongs to Birmingham, is in his forty-ninth year, and has been
+in and out of prison all his life. He was at Redhill Reformatory five
+years, and his last term was five years' penal servitude. The Chaplain
+at Pentonville advised him it he really meant reformation to seek the
+Salvation Army on his release. He came to Thames Street, was sent to
+the Workshop and professed salvation the following Sunday at the
+Shelter. This is three months ago. He is quite satisfactory,
+industrious, contented and seemingly godly.
+
+A. B., Gentleman loafer, good prospects, drink and idleness broke up
+his home, killed his wife, and got him into gaol. Presbyterian
+minister, friend of his family, tried to reclaim him, but
+unsuccessfully. He entered the Prison Gate Home, became thoroughly
+saved, distributed handbills for the Home, and ultimately got work in a
+large printing and publishing works, where, after three years' service,
+he now occupies a most responsible position. Is an elder in the
+Presbyterian Church, restored to his family, and the possessor of a
+happy home.
+
+W. C., a native of London, a good-for-nothing lad, idle and dissolute.
+When leaving England his father warned him that if he didn't alter he'd
+end his days on the gallows. Served various sentences on all sorts of
+charges. Over six years ago we took him in hand, admitted him into
+Prison Gate Brigade Home, where he became truly saved; he got a job of
+painting, which he had learnt in gaol, and has married a woman who had
+formerly been a procuress, but had passed through our Rescued Sinners'
+Home, and there became thoroughly converted. Together they have braved
+the storms of life, both working diligently for their living.
+They have now a happy little home of their own, and are doing very well.
+
+F. X., the son of a Government officer, a drunkard, gambler, forger,
+and all-round blackguard; served numerous sentences for forgery.
+On his last discharge was admitted into Prison Gate Brigade Home, where
+he stayed about five months and became truly saved. Although his
+health was completely shattered from the effects of his sinful life,
+he steadfastly resisted all temptations to drink, and kept true to God.
+Through advertising in the War Cry, he found his lost son and daughter,
+who are delighted with the wonderful change in their father. They have
+become regular attendants at our meetings in the Temperance Hall.
+He now keeps a coffee-stall, is doing well, and properly saved.
+
+G. A., 72, spent 23 years in gaol, last sentence two years for
+burglary; was a drunkard, gambler, and swearer. Met on his discharge
+by the Prison Gate Brigade, admitted into Home, where he remained four
+months, and became truly saved. He is living a consistent, godly life,
+and is in employment.
+
+C. D., aged 64, opium-smoker, gambler, blackguard, separated from wife
+and family, and eventually landed in gaol, was met on his discharge and
+admitted into Prison Gate Brigade Home, was saved, and is now restored
+to his wife and family, and giving satisfaction in his employment.
+
+S. T. was an idle, loafing, thieving, swearing, disreputable young man,
+who lived, when out of gaol, with the low prostitutes of Little Bourke
+Street. Was taken in hand by our Prison Gate Brigade Officers,
+who got him saved, then found him work. After a few months he
+expressed a desire to work for God, and although a cripple, and having
+to use a crutch, such was his earnestness that he was accepted and has
+done good service as an Army officer. His testimony is good and his
+life consistent. He is, indeed, a marvel of Divine grace.
+
+M. J., a young man holding a high position in England, got into a fast
+set; thought a change to the Colonies would be to his advantage.
+Started for Australia with #200 odd, of which he spent a good portion
+on board ship in drink, soon dissipated the balance on landing,
+and woke up one morning to find himself in gaol, with delirium tremens
+on him, no money, his luggage lost, and without a friend on the whole
+continent. On his discharge he entered our Prison Gate Home,
+became converted, and is now occupying a responsible position in a
+Colonial Bank.
+
+B. C., a man of good birth, education, and position; drank himself out
+of home and friends and into gaol on leaving which he came to our Home;
+was saved, exhibiting by an earnest and truly consistent life the depth
+of his conversion, being made instrumental while with us in the
+salvation of many who, like himself, had come to utter destitution and
+crime through drink. He is now in a first-class situation, getting
+#300 a year, wife and family restored, the possessor of a happy home,
+and the love of God shed abroad in it.
+
+I do not produce these samples, which are but a few, taken at random
+from the many, for the purpose of boasting. The power which has
+wrought these miracles is not in me nor in my Officers; it is power
+which comes down from above. But I think I may fairly point to these
+cases, in which our instrumentality has been blessed, to the plucking
+of these brands from the burning, as affording some justification for
+the plea to be enabled to go on with this work on a much more extended
+scale. If any other organisation, religious or secular, can show
+similar trophies as the result of such limited operations as ours have
+hitherto been among the criminal population, I am willing to give place
+to them. All that I want is to have the work done.
+
+
+SECTION 4.--EFFECTUAL DELIVERANCE FOR THE DRUNKARD.
+
+The number, misery, and hopeless condition of the slaves of strong
+drink, of both sexes, have been already dealt with at considerable
+length.
+
+We have seen that there are in Great Britain one million of men and
+women, or thereabouts, completely under the domination of this cruel
+appetite. The utter helplessness of Society to deal with the drunkard
+has been proved again and again, and confessed on all hands by those
+who have had experience on the subject. As we have before said, the
+general feeling of all those who have tried their hands at this kind of
+business is one of despair. They think the present race of drunkards
+must be left to perish, that every species of effort having proved
+vain, the energies expended in the endeavour to rescue the parents will
+be laid out to greater advantages upon the children.
+
+There is a great deal of truth in all this. Our own efforts have been
+successful in a very remarkable degree. Some of the bravest, most
+devoted, and successful workers in our ranks are men and women who were
+once the most abject slaves of the intoxicating cup. Instances of this
+have been given already. We might multiply them by thousands.
+Still, when compared with the ghastly array which the drunken army
+presents to-day, those rescued are comparatively few. The great reason
+for this is the simple fact that the vast majority of those addicted to
+the cup are its veritable slaves. No amount of reasoning, or earthly
+or religious considerations, can have any effect upon a man who is so
+completely under the mastery of this passion that he cannot break away
+from it, although he sees the most terrible consequences staring him in
+the face.
+
+The drunkard promises and vows, but promises and vows in vain.
+Occasionally he will put forth frantic efforts to deliver himself,
+but only to fall again in the presence of the opportunity.
+The insatiable crave controls him. He cannot get away from it.
+It compels him to drink, whether he will or not, and, unless delivered
+by an Almighty hand, he will drink himself into a drunkard's grave and
+a drunkard's hell.
+
+Our annals team with successful rescues effected from the ranks of
+the drunken army. The following will not only be examples of this,
+but will tend to illustrate the strength and madness of the passion
+which masters the slave to strong drink.
+
+Barbara.--She had sunk about as low as any woman could when we found
+her. From the age of eighteen, when her parents had forced her to
+throw over her sailor sweetheart and marry a man with "good prospects,"
+she had been going steadily down.
+
+She did not love her husband, and soon sought comfort from the little
+public-house only a few steps from her own door. Quarrels in her home
+quickly gave place to fighting, angry curses, and oaths, and soon her
+life became one of the most wretched in the place. Her husband made no
+pretence of caring for her, and when she was ill and unable to earn
+money by selling fish in the streets, he would go off for a few months,
+leaving her to keep the house and support herself and babies as best
+she could. Out of her twenty years of married life, ten were spent in
+these on-and-off separations. And so she got to live for only one
+thing--drink. It was life to her; and the mad craving grew to be
+irresistible. The woman who looked after her at the birth of her child
+refused to fetch her whisky, so when she had done all she could and
+left the mother to rest, Barbara crept out of bed and crawled slowly
+down the stairs over the way to the tap-room, where she sat drinking
+with the baby, not yet an hour old, in her arms. So things went on,
+until her life got so unbearable that she determined to have done with
+it. Taking her two eldest children with her, she went down to the bay,
+and deliberately threw them both into the water, jumping in herself
+after them. "Oh, mither, mither, dinna droon me!" wailed her little
+three-year-old Sarah, but she was determined and held them under the
+water, till, seeing a boat put out to the rescue she knew that she was
+discovered. Too late to do it now, she thought, and, holding both
+children, swam quickly back to the shore. A made-up story about having
+fallen into the water satisfied the boatman, and Barbara returned home
+dripping and baffled. But little Sarah did not recover from the shock,
+and after a few weeks her short life ended, and she was laid in the
+Cemetery.
+
+Yet another time, goaded to desperation, she tried to take her life
+by hanging herself, but a neighbour came in and cut her down
+unconscious, but still living. She became a terror to all the
+neighbourhood, and her name was the bye-word for daring and desperate
+actions. But our Open-Air Meetings attracted her, she came to the
+Barracks, got saved, and was delivered from her love of drink and sin.
+
+From being a dread her home became a sort of house of refuge in the
+little low street where she lived; other wives as unhappy as herself
+would come in for advice and help. Anyone knew that Barbie was
+changed, and loved to do all she could for her neighbours.
+A few months ago she came up to the Captain's in great distress over a
+woman who lived just opposite. She had been cruelly kicked and cursed
+by her husband, who had finally bolted the door against her, and she
+had turned to Barbie as the only hope. And of course Barbie took her
+in, with her rough-and-ready kindness got her to bed, kept out the
+other women who crowded round to sympathise and declaim against the
+husband's brutality, was both nurse and doctor for the poor woman till
+her child was born and laid in the mother's arms. And then, to
+Barbie's distress, she could do no more, for the woman, not daring to
+be absent longer, got up as best she could, and crawled on hands and
+knees down the little steep steps, across the street, and back to her
+own door. "But, Barbie!" exclaimed the Captain, horrified,
+"you should have nursed her, and kept her until she was strong enough."
+But Barbie answered by reminding the Captain of "John's" fearful
+temper, and how it might cost the woman her life to be absent from her
+home more than a couple of hours.
+
+The second is the case of--
+
+Maggie.--She had a home, but seldom was sober enough to reach it at
+nights. She would fall down on the doorsteps until found by some
+passer-by or a policeman.
+
+In one of her mad freaks a boon-companion happened to offend her.
+He was a little hunch-back, and a fellow-drunkard; but without a
+moment's hesitation, Maggie seized him and pushed him head-foremost
+down the old-fashioned wide sewer of the Scotch town. Had not some one
+seen his heel's kicking out and rescued him, he would surley have been
+suffocated.
+
+One winter's night Maggie had been drinking heavily, fighting, too,
+as usual, and she staggered only as far, on her way home, as the narrow
+chain-pier. Here she stumbled and fell, and lay along on the snow, the
+blood oozing from her cuts, and her hair spread out in a tangled mass.
+
+At 5 in the morning, some factory girls, crossing the bridge to their
+work, came upon her, lying stiff and stark amidst the snow and
+darkness.
+
+To rouse her from her drunken sleep was hard, but to raise her from the
+ground was still harder. The matted hair and blood had frozen fast to
+the earth, and Maggie was a prisoner. After trying to free her in
+different ways, and receiving as a reward volleys of abuse and bad
+language, one of the girl's ran for a kettle of boiling water, and by
+pouring it all around her, they succeeded by degrees in melting her on
+to her feet again! But she came to our Barracks, and got soundly
+converted, and the Captain was rewarded for nights and days of toil by
+seeing her a saved and sober woman.
+
+All went right till a friend asked her to his house, to drink his
+health, and that of his newly-married wife. "I wouldn't ask you to
+take anything strong," he said. "Drink to me with this lemonade."
+And Maggie, nothing suspecting, drank, and as she drank tasted in the
+glass her old enemy, whisky! The man laughed at her dismay, but a
+friend rushed off to tell the Captain. "I may be in time, she has not
+really gone back"; and the Captain ran to the house, tying her bonnet
+strings as she ran. "It's no good--keep awa'--I don't want to
+see'er, Captain," wailed Maggie "let me have some more--oh, I'm on
+fire inside." But the Captain was firm, and taking her to her home,
+she locked herself in with the woman, and sat with the key in her
+pocket, while Maggie, half mad with craving, paced the floor like a
+caged animal, threatening and entreating by terms. "Never while I live,"
+was all the answer she could get; so she turned to the door, and busied
+herself there a moment or two. A clinking noise. The Captain started
+up--to see the door open and Maggie rush through it! Accustomed to
+stealing and all its "dodges," she had taken the lock off the door,
+and was away to the nearest public-house.
+
+Down the stairs, Captain after her, into the gin palace; but before the
+astonished publican could give her the drink she was clamouring for,
+the "bonnet" was by her side, "If you dare to serve her, I'll break the
+glass before it reaches her lips. She shall not have any!" and so
+Maggie was coaxed away, and shielded till the passion was over, and she
+was Herself once more.
+
+But the man who gave her the whisky durst not leave his house for
+weeks. The roughs got to know of the trap he had laid for her,
+and would have lynched him could they have got hold of him.
+
+The third is the case of Rose.
+
+Rose was ruined, deserted, and left to the streets when only a girl of
+thirteen, by a once well-to-do man, who is now, we believe, closing his
+days in a workhouse in the North of England.
+
+Fatherless, motherless, and you might almost say friendless, Rose trod
+the broad way to destruction, with all its misery and shame, for twelve
+long years. Her wild, passionate nature, writhing under the wrong
+suffered, sought forgetfulness in the intoxicating cup, and she soon
+became a notorious drunkard. Seventy-four times during her career she
+was dragged before the magistrates, and seventy-four times, with one
+exception, she was punished, but the seventy-fourth time she was
+as far off reformation as ever. The one exception happened on the
+Queen's Jubilee Day. On seeing her well-known face again before him, the
+magistrate enquired, "How many times has this woman been here before?"
+
+The Police Superintendent answered, "Fifty times." The magistrate
+remarked, in somewhat grim humour, "Then this is her Jubilee," and,
+moved by the coincidence, he let her go free. So Rose spent her
+jubilee out of prison.
+
+It is a wonder that the dreadful, drunken, reckless, dissipated life
+she lived did not hurry her to an early grave; it did affect her
+reason, and for three weeks she was locked up in Lancaster Lunatic
+Asylum, having really gone mad through drink and sin.
+
+In evidence of her reckless nature, it is said that after her second
+imprisonment she vowed she would never again walk to the police
+station; consequently, when in her wild orgies the police found it
+necessary to arrest her, they had to get her to the police station as
+best they could, sometimes by requisitioning a wheelbarrow or a cart,
+or the use of a stretcher, and sometimes they had to carry her right
+out. On one occasion, towards the close of her career, when driven to
+the last-named method, four policemen were carrying her to the station,
+and she was extra violent, screaming, plunging and biting, when, either
+by accident or design, one of the policemen let go of her head, and it
+came in contact with the curbstone, causing the blood to pour forth in
+a stream. As soon as they placed her in the cell the poor creature
+caught the blood in her hands, and literally washed her face with it.
+On the following morning she presented a pitiable sight, and before
+taking her into the court the police wanted to wash her, but she
+declared she would draw any man's blood who attempted to put a finger
+upon her; they had spilt her blood, and she would carry it into the
+court as a witness against them. On coming out of gaol for the last
+time, she met with a few Salvationists beating the drum and singing
+"Oh! the Lamb, the bleeding Lamb; He was found worthy." Rose, struck
+with the song, and impressed with the very faces of the people,
+followed them, saying to herself, "I never before heard anything like
+that, or seen such happy looking people." She came into the Barracks;
+her heart was broken; she found her way to the Penitent Form, and
+Christ, with His own precious blood, washed her sins away. She arose
+from her knees and said to the Captain, "It is all right now."
+
+Three months after her conversion a great meeting was held in the
+largest hall in the town, where she was known to almost every inhabitant.
+There were about three thousand people present. Rose was called upon
+to give her testimony to the power of God to save. A more enthusiastic
+wave of sympathy never greeted any speaker than that which met her from
+that crowd, every one of whom was familiar with her past history.
+After a few broken words, in which she spoke of the wonderful change
+that had taken place, a cousin, who, like herself, had lived a
+notoriously evil life, came to the Cross.
+
+Rose is now War Cry sergeant. She goes into the brothels and
+gin palaces and other haunts of vice, from which she was rescued,
+and sells more papers than any other Soldier.
+
+The Superintendent of Police, soon after her conversion, told the
+Captain at the Corps that in rescuing Rose a more wonderful work had
+been done than he had seen in all the years gone by.
+
+S. was a native of Lancashire, the son of poor, but pious, parents.
+He was saved when sixteen years of age. He was first an Evangelist,
+then a City Missionary for five or six years, and afterwards a Baptist
+Minister. He then fell under the influence of drink, resigned,
+and became a commercial traveller, but lost his berth through drink.
+He was then an insurance agent, and rose to be superintendent, but was
+again dismissed through drink. During his drunken career he had
+delirium tremens four times, attempted suicide three times, sold up six
+homes, was in the workhouse with his wife and family three times.
+His last contrivance for getting drink was to preach mock sermons,
+and offer mock prayers in the tap-rooms.
+
+After one of these blasphemous performances in a public-house, on the
+words, "Are you Saved?" he was challenged to go to the Salvation
+Barracks. He went, and the Captain, who knew him well, at once made
+for him, to plead for his soul, but S. knocked him down, and rushed
+back to the public-house for more drink. He was, however, so moved by
+what he had heard that he was unable to raise the liquor to his mouth,
+although he made three attempts. He again returned to the meeting,
+and again quitted it for the public-house. He could not rest, and for
+the third time he returned to the Barracks. As he entered the last
+time the Soldiers were singing: --
+
+ "Depth of mercy, can there be
+ Mercy still reserved for me?
+ Can my God his wrath forbear?
+ Me, the chief of Sinners, spare?
+
+This song impressed him still further; he wept, and remained in the
+Barracks under deep conviction until midnight. He was drunk all the
+next day, vainly trying to drown his convictions. The Captain visited
+him at night, but was quickly thrust out of the house. He was there
+again next morning, and prayed and talked with S. for nearly two hours.
+Poor S. was in despair. He persisted that there was no mercy for him.
+After a long struggle, however, hope sprung up, he fell upon his knees,
+confessed his sins, and obtained forgiveness.
+
+When this happened, his furniture consisted of a soap-box for a table,
+and starch boxes for chairs. His wife, himself, and three children,
+had not slept in a bed for three years. He has now a happy family,
+a comfortable home, and has been the means of leading numbers of other
+slaves of sin to the Saviour, and to a truly happy life.
+
+Similar cases, describing the deliverance of drunkards from the bondage
+of strong drink, could be produced indefinitely. There are Officers
+marching in our ranks to-day, who where once gripped by this fiendish
+fascination, who have had their fetters broken, and are now free men in
+the Army. Still the mighty torrent of Alcohol, fed by ten thousand
+manufactories, sweeps on, bearing with it, I have no hesitation in
+saying, the foulest, bloodiest tide that ever flowed from earth to
+eternity. The Church of the living God ought not--and to say nothing
+about religion, the people who have any humanity ought not, to rest
+without doing something desperate to rescue this half of a million who
+are in the eddying maelstrom. We purpose, therefore, the taking away
+of the people from the temptation which they cannot resist. We would
+to God that the temptation could be taken away from them, that every
+house licensed to send forth the black streams of bitter death were
+closed, and closed for ever. But this will not be, we fear, for the
+present at least.
+
+While in one case drunkenness may be resolved into a habit, in another
+it must be accounted a disease. What is wanted in the one case,
+therefore, is some method of removing the man out of the sphere of the
+temptation, and in the other for treating the passion as a disease,
+as we should any other physical affection, bringing to bear upon it
+every agency, hygienic and otherwise, calculated to effect a cure.
+
+The Dalrymple Homes, in which, on the order of a magistrate and by
+their own consent, Inebriates can be confined for a time, have been a
+partial success in dealing with this class in both these respects;
+but they are admittedly too expensive to be of any service to the poor.
+It could never be hoped that working people of themselves, or with the
+assistance of their friends, would be able to pay two pounds a week for
+the privilege of being removed away from the licensed temptations to
+drink which surround them at every step. Moreover, could they obtain
+admission they would feel themselves anything but at ease amongst the
+class who avail themselves of these institutions. We propose to
+establish Homes which will contemplate the deliverance, not of ones and
+twos, but of multitudes, and which will be accessible to the poor,
+or to persons of any class choosing to use them. This is our national
+vice, and it demands nothing short of a national remedy--anyway,
+one of proportions large enough to be counted national.
+
+1. To begin with, there will be City Homes, into which a man can be
+ taken, watched over, kept out of the way of temptation, and if
+ possible delivered from the power of this dreadful habit.
+
+In some cases persons would be taken in who are engaged in business in
+the City in the day, being accompanied by an attendant to and from the
+Home. In this case, of course, adequate remuneration for this extra
+care would be required.
+
+2. Country Homes, which we shall conduct on the Dalrymple principle;
+ that is, taking persons for compulsory confinement, they binding
+ themselves by a bond confirmed by a magistrate that they would
+ remain for a certain period. The general regulations for both
+ establishments would be something as follows: --
+
+ (1). There would be only one class in each establishment. If it was
+ found that the rich and the poor did not work comfortably
+ together, separate institutions must be provided.
+ (2). All would alike have to engage in some remunerative form of
+ employment. Outdoor work would be preferred, but indoor
+ employment would be arranged for those for whom it was most
+ suitable, and in such weather and at such times of the year when
+ garden work was impracticable.
+ (3). A charge of 10s. per week would be made. This could be
+ remitted when there was no ability to pay it.
+
+The usefulness of such Homes is too evident to need any discussion.
+There is one class of unfortunate creatures who must be objects of pity
+to all who have any knowledge of their existence, and that is, those
+men and women who are being continually dragged before the magistrates,
+of whom we are constantly reading in the police reports, whose lives
+are spent in and out of prison, at an enormous cost to the country,
+and without any benefit to themselves.
+
+We should then be able to deal with this class. It would be possible
+for a magistrate, instead of sentencing the poor wrecks of humanity to
+the sixty-fourth and one hundred and twentieth term of imprisonment,
+to send them to this Institution, by simply remanding them to come up
+for sentence when called for. How much cheaper such an arrangement
+would be for the country!
+
+
+SECTION 5.--A NEW WAY OF ESCAPE FOR LOST WOMEN. THE RESCUE HOMES.
+
+Perhaps there is no evil more destructive of the best interests of
+Society, or confessedly more difficult to deal with remedially,
+than that which is known as the Social Evil. We have already seen
+something of the extent to which this terrible scourge has grown,
+and the alarming manner in which it affects our modern civilisation.
+
+We have already made an attempt at grappling with this evil, having
+about thirteen Homes in Great Britain, accommodating 307 girls under
+the charge of 132 Officers, together with seventeen Homes abroad,
+open for the same purpose. The whole, although a small affair compared
+with the vastness of the necessity, nevertheless constitutes perhaps
+the largest and most efficient effort of its character in the world.
+
+It is difficult to estimate the results that have been already
+realised. By our varied operations, apart from these Homes, probably
+hundreds, if not thousands, have been delivered from lives of shame and
+misery. We have no exact return of the number who have gone through
+the Homes abroad, but in connection with the work in this country,
+about 3,000 have been rescued, and are living lives of virtue.
+
+This success has not only been gratifying on account of the blessing it
+has brought these young women, the gladness it has introduced to the
+homes to which they have been restored, and the benefit it has bestowed
+upon Society, but because it has assured us that much greater results
+of the same character may be realised by operations conducted on a
+larger scale, and under more favourable circumstances.
+
+With this view we propose to remodel and greatly increase the number of
+our Homes both in London and the provinces, establishing one in every
+great centre of this infamous traffic.
+
+To make them very largely Receiving Houses, where the girls will be
+initiated into the system of reformation, tested as to the reality of
+their desires for deliverance, and started forward on the highway of
+truth, virtue, and religion.
+
+From these Homes large numbers, as at present, would be restored to
+their friends and relatives, while some would be detained in training
+for domestic service, and others passed on to the Farm Colony.
+
+On the Farm they would be engaged in various occupations.
+In the Factory, at Bookbinding and Weaving; in the Garden and
+Glasshouses amongst fruit and flowers; in the Dairy, making butter;
+in all cases going through a course of House-work which will fit them
+for domestic service.
+
+At every stage the same process of moral and religious training,
+on which we specially rely, will be carried forward.
+
+There would probably be a considerable amount of inter-marriage amongst
+the Colonists, and in this way a number of these girl's would be
+absorbed into Society.
+
+A large number would be sent abroad as domestic servants. In Canada,
+the girls are taken out of the Rescue Homes as servants, with no other
+reference than is gained by a few weeks' residence there, and are paid
+as much as #3 a month wages. The scarcity of domestic servants in the
+Australian Colonies, Western States of America, Africa, and elsewhere
+is well known. And we have no doubt that on all hands our girls with
+12 months' character will be welcomed, the question of outfit and
+passage-money being easily arranged for by the persons requiring their
+services advancing the amount, with an understanding that it is to be
+deducted out of their first earnings.
+
+Then we have the Colony Over-Sea, which will require the service of a
+large number. Very few families will go out who will not be very glad
+to take a young woman with them, not as a menial servant, but as a
+companion and friend.
+
+By this method we should be able to carry out Rescue work on a much
+larger scale. At present two difficulties very largely block our way.
+One is the costliness of the work. The expense of rescuing a girl on
+the present plan cannot be much less than #7; that is, if we include
+the cost of those with whom we fail, and on whom the money is largely
+thrown away. Seven pounds is certainly not a very large sum for the
+measure of benefit bestowed upon the girl by bringing her off the
+streets, and that which is bestowed on Society by removing her from her
+evil course. Still, when the work runs into thousands of individuals,
+the amount required becomes considerable. On the plan proposed we
+calculate that from the date of their reaching the Farm Colony they
+will earn nearly all that is required for their support.
+
+The next difficulty which hinders our expansion in this department is
+the want of suitable and permanent situations, Although we have been
+marvellously successful so far, having at this hour probably 1,200
+girls in domestic service alone, still the difficulty in this respect
+is great. Families are naturally shy at receiving these poor
+unfortunates when they can secure the help they need combined with
+unblemished character; and we cannot blame them.
+
+Then, again, it can easily be understood that the monotony of domestic
+service in this country is not altogether congenial to the tastes of
+many of these girls, who have been accustomed to a life of excitement
+and freedom. This can be easily understood. To be shut up seven days
+a week with little or no intercourse, either with friends or with the
+outside world, beyond that which comes of the weekly Church service or
+"night out" with nowhere to go, as many of them are tied off from the
+Salvation Army Meetings, becomes very monotonous, and in hours of
+depression it is not to be wondered at if a few break down in their
+resolutions, and fall back into their old ways.
+
+On the plan we propose there is something to cheer these girls forward.
+Life on the farm will be attractive. From there they can go to a new
+country and begin the world afresh, with the possibility of being
+married and having a little home of their own some day. With such
+prospects, we think, they will be much more likely to fight their way
+through seasons of darkness and temptation than as at present.
+
+This plan will also make the task of rescuing the girls much more
+agreeable to the Officers engaged in it. They will have this future to
+dwell upon as an encouragement to persevere with the girls, and will be
+spared one element at least in the regret they experience, when a girl
+falls back into old habits, namely, that she earned the principal part
+of the money that has been expended upon her.
+
+That girls can be rescued and blessedly saved even now, despite all
+their surroundings, we have many remarkable proofs. Of these take one
+or two as examples: --
+
+J. W. was brought by our Officers from a neighbourhood which has,
+by reason of the atrocities perpetrated in it, obtained an unenviable
+renown, even among similar districts of equally bad character.
+
+She was only nineteen. A country girl. She had begun the struggle for
+life early as a worker in a large laundry, and at thirteen years of age
+was led away by an inhuman brute. The first false step taken,
+her course on the downward road was rapid, and growing restless and
+anxious for more scope than that afforded in a country town, she came
+up to London.
+
+For some time she lived the life of extravagance and show, known to
+many of this class for a short time--having plenty of money,
+fine clothes, and luxurious surroundings until the terrible disease
+seized her poor body, and she soon found herself deserted, homeless and
+friendless, an outcast of Society.
+
+When we found her she was hard and impenitent, difficult to reach even
+with the hand of love; but love won, and since that time she has been
+in two or three situations, a consistent Soldier of an Army corps,
+and a champion War Cry seller.
+
+A TICKET-OF-LEAVE WOMAN.
+
+A. B. was the child of respectable working people--Roman Catholics--
+but was early left an orphan. She fell in with bad companions,
+and became addicted to drink, going from bad to worse until
+drunkenness, robbery, and harlotry brought her to the lowest depths.
+She passed seven years in prison, and after the last offence was
+discharged with seven years' police supervision. Failing to report
+herself, she was brought before the bench.
+
+The magistrate inquired whether she had ever had a chance in a Home of
+any kind. "She is too old, no one will take her," was the reply,
+but a Detective present, knowing a little about the Salvation Army,
+stepped forward and explained to the magistrate th at he did not think
+the Salvation Army refused any who applied. She was formally handed
+over to us in a deplorable condition, her clothing the scantiest and
+dirtiest. For over three years she has given evidence of a genuine
+reformation, during which time she has industriously earned her own
+living.
+
+A WILD WOMAN.
+
+In visiting a slum in a town in the North of England, our Officers
+entered a hole, unfit to be called a human habitation--more like the
+den of some wild animal--almost the only furniture of which was a
+filthy iron bedstead, a wooden box to serve for table and chair,
+while an old tin did duty as a dustbin.
+
+The inhabitant of this wretched den was a poor woman, who fled into the
+darkest corner of the place as our Officer entered. This poor wretch
+was the victim of a brutal man, who never allowed her to venture
+outside the door, keeping her alive by the scantiest allowance of food.
+Her only clothing consisted of a sack tied round her body. Her feet
+were bare, her hair matted and foul, presenting on the whole such an
+object as one could scarcely imagine living in a civilised country.
+
+She had left a respectable home, forsaken her husband and family,
+and sunk so low that the man who then claimed her boasted to the
+Officer that he had bettered her condition by taking her off the
+streets.
+
+We took the poor creature away, washed and clothed her; and, changed in
+heart and life, she is one more added to the number of those who rise
+up to bless the Salvation Army workers.
+
+
+SECTION 6.--A PREVENTIVE HOME FOR UNFALLEN GIRLS WHEN IN DANGER.
+
+There is a story told likely enough to be true about a young girl who
+applied one evening for admission to some home established for the
+purpose of rescuing fallen women. The matron naturally inquired
+whether she had forfeited her virtue; the girl replied in the negative.
+She had been kept from that infamy, but she was poor and friendless,
+and wanted somewhere to lay her head until she could secure work,
+and obtain a home. The matron must have pitied her, but she could not
+help her as she did not belong to the class for whose benefit the
+Institution was intended. The girl pleaded, but the matron could not
+alter the rule, and dare not break it, they were so pressed to find
+room for their own poor unfortunates, and she could not receive her.
+The poor girl left the door reluctantly but returned in a very short
+time, and said, "I am fallen now, will you take me in?"
+
+I am somewhat slow to credit this incident; anyway it is true in
+spirit, and illustrates the fact that while there are homes to which
+any poor, ruined, degraded harlot can run for shelter, there is only
+here and there a corner to which a poor friendless, moneyless,
+homeless, but unfallen girl can fly for shelter from the storm which
+bids fair to sweep her away whether she will or no into the deadly
+vortex of ruin which gapes beneath her.
+
+In London and all our large towns there must be a considerable number
+of poor girls who from various causes are suddenly plunged into this
+forlorn condition; a quarrel with the mistress and sudden discharge,
+a long bout of disease and dismissal penniless from the hospital,
+a robbery of a purse, having to wait for a situation until the last
+penny is spent, and many other causes will leave a girl an almost
+hopeless prey to the linx-eyed villains who are ever watching to take
+advantage of innocence when in danger. Then, again, what a number
+there must be in a great city like London who are ever faced with the
+alternative of being turned out of doors if they refuse to submit
+themselves to the infamous overtures of those around them.
+I understand that the Society for the Protection of Children prosecuted
+last year a fabulous number of fathers for unnatural sins with their
+children. If so many were brought to justice, how many were there of
+whom the world never heard in any shape or form? We have only to
+imagine how many a poor girl is, faced with the terrible alternative of
+being driven literally into the streets by employers or relatives or
+others in whose power she is unfortunately placed.
+
+Now, we want a real home for such--a house to which any girl can fly
+at any hour of the day or night, and be taken in, cared for, shielded
+from the enemy, and helped into circumstances of safety.
+
+The Refuge we propose will be very much on the same principle as the
+Homes for the Destitute already described. We should accept any girls,
+say from fourteen years of age, who were without visible means of
+support, but who were willing to work, and to conform to discipline.
+There would be various forms of labour provided, such as laundry work,
+sewing, knitting by machines, &c. Every beneficial influence within
+our power would be brought to bear on the rectification and formation
+of character. Continued efforts would be made to secure situations
+according to the adaptation of the girls, to restore wanderers to their
+homes, and otherwise provide for all. From this, as with the other
+Homes, there will be a way made to the Farm and to the Colony over the
+sea. The institutions would be multiplied as we had means and found
+them to be necessary, and made self-supporting as far as possible.
+
+
+SECTION 7.--ENQUIRY OFFICE FOR LOST PEOPLE.
+
+Perhaps nothing more vividly suggests the varied forms of
+broken-hearted misery in the great City than the statement that 18,000
+people are lost in it every year, of whom 9,000 are never heard of any
+more, anyway in this world. What is true about London is, we suppose,
+true in about the same proportion of the rest of the country.
+Husbands, sons, daughters, and mothers are continually disappearing,
+and leaving no trace behind.
+
+In such cases, where the relations are of some importance in the world,
+they may interest the police authorities sufficiently to make some
+enquiries in this country, which, however, are not often successful;
+or where they can afford to spend large sums of money, they can fall
+back upon the private detective, who will continue these enquiries,
+not only at home but abroad.
+
+But where the relations of the missing individual are in humble
+circumstances, they are absolutely powerless, in nine cases out of ten,
+to effectually prosecute any search at all that is likely to be
+successful.
+
+Take, for instance, a cottager in a village, whose daughter leaves for
+service in a big town or city. Shortly afterwards a letter arrives
+informing her parents of the satisfactory character of her place.
+The mistress is kind, the work easy, and she likes her fellow servants.
+She is going to chapel or church, and the family are pleased. Letters
+continue to arrive of the same purport, but, at length, they suddenly
+cease. Full of concern, the mother writes to know the reason, but no
+answer comes back, and after a time the letters are returned with
+"gone, no address," written on the envelope. The mother writes to the
+mistress, or the father journeys to the city, but no further
+information can be obtained beyond the fact that "the girl has
+conducted herself somewhat mysteriously of late; had ceased to be as
+careful at her work; had been noticed to be keeping company with some
+young man; had given notice and disappeared altogether."
+
+Now, what can these poor people do? They apply to the police, but they
+can do nothing. Perhaps they ask the clergyman of the parish, who is
+equally helpless, and there is nothing for them but for the father to
+hang his head and the mother to cry her self to sleep--to long,
+and wait, and pray for information that perhaps never comes, and to
+fear the worst.
+
+Now, our Enquiry Department supplies a remedy for this state of things.
+In such a case application would simply have to be made to the nearest
+Salvation Army Officer--probably in her own village, any way, in the
+nearest town--who would instruct the parents to write to the Chief
+Office in London, sending portraits and all particulars. Enquiries
+would at once be set on foot, which would very possibly end in the
+restoration of the girl.
+
+The achievements of this Department, which has only been in operation
+for a short time, and that on a limited scale, as a branch of Rescue
+Work, have been marvellous. No more romantic stories can be found in
+the pages of our most imaginative writers than those it records.
+We give three or four illustrative cases of recent date.
+
+A LOST HUSBAND.
+
+ENQUIRY.
+
+Mrs. S., of New Town, Leeds, wrote to say that ROBERT R. left England
+in July 1889, for Canada to improve his position. He left a wife and
+four little children behind, and on leaving said that if he were
+successful out there he should send for them, but if not he should
+return.
+
+As he was unsuccessful, he left Montreal in the Dominion Liner
+"Oregon," on October 30th, but except receiving a card from him ere he
+started, the wife and friends had heard no more of him from that day
+till the date they wrote us.
+
+They had written to the "Dominion" Company, who replied that "he landed
+at Liverpool all right," so, thinking he had disappeared upon his
+arrival, they put the matter in the hands of the Liverpool Police, who,
+after having the case in hand for several weeks made the usual report
+--"Cannot be traced."
+
+RESULT.
+
+We at once commenced looking for some passenger who had come over by
+the same steamer, and after the lapse of a little time we succeeded in
+getting hold of one.
+
+In our first interview with him we learned that Robert R. did not land
+at Liverpool, but when suffering from depression threw himself
+overboard three days after leaving America, and was drowned.
+We further elicited that upon his death the sailors rifled his clothes
+and boxes, and partitioned them.
+
+We wrote the Company reporting this, and they promised to make
+enquiries and amends, but as too often happens, upon making report of
+the same to the family they took the matter into their own hands,
+dealt with the Company direct, and in all probability thereby lost a
+good sum in compensation which we should probably have obtained for
+them.
+
+
+A LOST WIFE.
+
+ENQUIRY.
+
+F. J. L. asked us to seek for his wife, who left him on November 4th,
+1888. He feared she had gone to live an immoral life; gave us two
+addresses at which she might possibly be heard of, and a description.
+They had three children.
+
+RESULT.
+
+Enquiries at the addresses given elicited no information, but from
+observation in the neighbourhood the woman's whereabouts was
+discovered.
+
+After some difficulty our Officer obtained an interview with the woman,
+who was greatly astonished at our having discovered her. She was dealt
+with faithfully and firmly: the plain truth of God set before her,
+and was covered with shame and remorse, and promised to return.
+
+We communicated with Mr. L. A few days after he wrote that he had
+been telegraphed for, had forgiven his wife, and that they were
+re-united.
+
+Soon afterwards she wrote expressing her deep gratitude to
+Mrs. Bramwell Booth for the trouble taken in her case.
+
+
+A LOST CHILD.
+
+ENQUIRY.
+
+ALICE P. was stolen away from home by Gypsies ten years ago, and now
+longs to find her parents to be restored to them. She believes her
+home to be in Yorkshire. The Police had this case in hand for some
+time, but failed entirely.
+
+RESULT.
+
+With these particulars we advertised in the "War Cry." Captain Green,
+seeing the advertisement, wrote, April 3rd, from 3, C. S., M. H.,
+that her Lieutenant knew a family of the name advertised for, living at
+Gomersal, Leeds.
+
+We, on the 4th, wrote to this address for confirmation.
+
+April 6th, we heard from Mr. P---, that this lass is his child, and he
+writes full of gratitude and joy, saying he will send money for her to
+go home We, meanwhile, get from the Police, who had long sought this
+girl, a full description and photo, which we sent to Captain Cutmore;
+and on April 9th, she wrote us to the effect that the girl exactly
+answered the description. We got from the parents 15/- for the fare,
+and Alice was once more restored to her parents. Praise God.
+
+
+A LOST DAUGHTER.
+
+ENQUIRY.
+
+E. W. Age 17. Application from this girl's mother and brother, who
+had lost all trace of her since July, 1885, when she left for Canada.
+Letters had been once or twice received, dated from Montreal, but they
+stopped. A photo., full description, and handwriting were supplied.
+
+RESULT.
+
+We discovered that some kind Church people here had helped E. W. to
+emigrate, but they had no information as to her movements after
+landing.
+
+Full particulars, with photo., were sent to our Officers in Canada.
+The girl was not found in Montreal. The information was then sent to
+Officers in other towns in that part of the Colony.
+
+The enquiry was continued through some months; and, finally, through
+our Major of Division, the girl was reported to us as having been
+recognised in one of our Barracks and identified. When suddenly called
+by her own name, she nearly fainted with agitation.
+
+She was in a condition of terrible poverty and shame, but at once
+consented, on hearing of her mother's enquiries, to go into one of our
+Canadian Rescue Homes. She is now doing well. Her mother's joy may be
+imagined.
+
+
+A LOST SERVANT.
+
+ENQUIRY.
+
+Mrs. M., Clevedon, one of Harriett P.'s old mistresses, wrote us, in
+deep concern, about this girl. She said she was a good servant, but
+was ruined by the young man who courted her, and had since had three
+children. Occasionally, she would have a few bright and happy weeks,
+but would again lapse into the "vile path."
+
+Mrs. M. tells us that Harriett had good parents, who are dead, but
+she still has a respectable brother in Hampshire. The last she heard
+of her was that some weeks ago she was staying at a Girl's Shelter at
+Bristol, but had since left, and nothing more had been heard of her.
+
+The enquirer requested us to find her, and in much faith added,
+"I believe you are the only people who, if successful in tracing her,
+can rescue and do her a permanent good."
+
+RESULT.
+
+We at once set enquiries on foot, and in the space of a few days found
+that she had started from Bristol on the road for Bath. Following her
+up we found that at a little place called Bridlington, on the way to
+Bath, she had met a man, of whom she enquired her way. He hearing a
+bit of her story, after taking her to a public-house, prevailed upon
+her to go home and live with him, as he had lost his wife.
+
+It was at this stage that we came upon the scene, and having dealt with
+them both upon the matter, got her to consent to come away if the man
+would not marry her, giving him two days to make up his mind.
+
+The two days' respite having expired and, he being unwilling to
+undertake matrimony, we brought her away, and sent her to one of our
+Homes, where she is enjoying peace and penitence.
+
+When we informed the mistress and brother of the success, they were
+greatly rejoiced and overwhelmed us with thanks.
+
+
+A LOST HUSBAND.
+
+In a seaside home last Christmas there was a sorrowing wife, who
+mourned over the basest desertion of her husband. Wandering from place
+to place drinking, he had left her to struggle alone with four little
+ones dependent upon her exertions.
+
+Knowing her distress, the captain of the corps wrote begging us to
+advertise for the man in the Cry. We did this, but for some time heard
+nothing of the result.
+
+Several weeks later a Salvationist entered a beer-house, where a group
+of men were drinking, and began to distribute War Crys amongst them,
+speaking here and there upon the eternity which faced everyone.
+
+At the counter stood a man with a pint pot in hand, who took one of the
+papers passed to him, and glancing carelessly down its columns caught
+sight of his own name, and was so startled that the pot fell from his
+grasp to the floor. "Come home," the paragraph ran, "and all will be
+forgiven."
+
+His sin faced him; the thought of a broken-hearted wife and starving
+children conquered him completely, and there and then he left the
+public-house, and started to walk home--a distance of many mile--
+arriving there about midnight the same night, after an absence of
+eleven months.
+
+The letter from his wife telling the good news of his return, spoke
+also of his determination by God's help to be a different man, and they
+are both attendants at the Salvation Army barracks.
+
+
+A SEDUCER COMPELLED TO PAY.
+
+Amongst the letters that came to the Inquiry Office one morning was one
+from a girl who asked us to help her to trace the father of her child
+who had for some time ceased to pay anything towards its support.
+The case had been brought into the Police Court, and judgment given in
+her favour, but the guilty one had hidden, and his father refused to
+reveal his whereabouts.
+
+We called upon the elder man and laid the matter before him, but failed
+to prevail upon him either to pay his son's liabilities or to put us
+into communication with him. The answers to an advertisement in the
+War Cry, however, had brought the required in formation as to his son's
+whereabouts, and the same morning that our Inquiry Officer communicated
+with the police, and served a summons for the overdue money, the young
+man had also received a letter from his father advising him to leave
+the country at once. He had given notice to his employers; and the #16
+salary he received, with some help his father had sent him towards the
+journey, he was compelled to hand over to the mother of his child.
+
+
+FOUND IN THE BUSH.
+
+A year or two ago a respectable-looking Dutch girl might have been seem
+making her way quickly and stealthily across a stretch of long rank
+grass towards the shelter of some woods on the banks of a distant
+river. Behind her lay the South African town from which she had come,
+betrayed, disgraced, ejected from her home with words of bitter scorn,
+having no longer a friend in the wide world who would hold out to her a
+hand of help. What could there be better for her than to plunge into
+that river yonder, and end this life--no matter what should come
+after the plunge? But Greetah feared the "future," and turned aside to
+spend the night in darkness, wretched and alone.
+
+Seven years had passed. An English traveller making his way through
+Southern Africa halted for the Sabbath at a little village on his
+route. A ramble through the woods brought him unexpectedly in front of
+a kraal, at the door of which squatted all old Hottentot, with a fair
+white-faced Child playing on the ground near by. Glad to accept the
+proffered shelter of the hut from the burning sun, the traveller
+entered, and was greatly astonished to find within a young white girl,
+evidently the mother of the frolicsome child. Full of pity for the
+strange pair, and especially for the girl, who wore an air of
+refinement little to be expected in this out-of-the-world spot, he sat
+down on the earthen floor, and told them of the wonderful Salvation of
+God. This was Greetah, and the Englishman would have given a great
+deal if he could have rescued her from this miserable lot. But this
+was impossible, and with reluctance he bid her farewell.
+
+It was an English home. By a glowing fire one night a man sat alone,
+and in his imaginings there came up the vision of the girl he had met
+in the Hottentot's Kraal, and wondering whether any way of rescue was
+possible. Then he remembered reading, since his return, the following
+paragraph in the War Cry: --
+
+"TO THE DISTRESSED. The Salvation Army invite parents, relations,
+and friends in any part of the world interested in any woman or girl
+who is known, or feared to be, living in immorality, or is in danger
+of coming under the control of immoral persons, to write, stating full
+particulars, with names, dates, and address of all concerned, and,
+if possible, a photograph of the person in who the interest is taken.
+
+"All letters, whether from these persons or from such women or girls
+themselves, will be regarded as strictly confidential. They maybe
+written in any language, and should be addressed to Mrs. Bramwell
+Booth, 101, Queen Victoria Street, London, E.C." "It will do no harm to
+try, anyhow," exclaimed he, "the thing haunts me as it is," and without
+further delay he penned an account of his African adventure, as full as
+possible. The next African mail carried instructions to the Officer in
+Command of our South African work.
+
+Shortly after, one of our Salvation Riders was exploring the bush, and
+after some difficulty the kraal was discovered the girl was rescued and
+saved. The Hottentot was converted afterwards, and both are now
+Salvation Soldiers.
+
+Apart from the independent agencies employed to prosecute this class of
+enquiries, which it is proposed to very largely increase, the Army
+possesses in itself peculiar advantages for this kind of investigation.
+The mode of operation is as follows: --
+
+There is a Head Centre under the direction of a capable Officer and
+assistants, to which particulars of lost husbands, sons, daughters,
+and wives, as the case may be, are forwarded. These are advertised,
+except when deemed inadvisable, in the English "War Cry," with its
+300,000 circulation, and from it copied into the twenty-three other
+"War Crys" published in different parts of the world. Specially
+prepared information in each case is sent to the local Officers of the
+Army when that is thought wise, or Special Enquiry Officers trained to
+their work are immediately set to work to follow up any clue which has
+been given by enquiring relations or friends.
+
+Every one of its 10,000 Officers, nay, almost every soldier in its
+ranks, scattered, as they are, through every quarter of the globe, may
+be regarded as an Agent. A small charge for enquiries is made, and,
+where persons are able, all the costs of the investigation will he
+defrayed by them.
+
+
+SECTION 8.--REFUGES FOR THE CHILDREN OF THE STREETS.
+
+For the waifs and strays of the streets of London much commiseration is
+expressed, and far more pity is deserved than is bestowed. We have no
+direct purpose of entering on a crusade on their behalf, apart from our
+attempt at changing the hearts and lives and improving the
+circumstances of their parents.
+
+Our main hope for these wild, youthful, outcasts lies in this
+direction. If we can reach and benefit their guardians, morally and
+materially, we shall take the most effectual road to benefit the
+children themselves.
+
+Still, a number of them will unavoidably be forced upon us; and we
+shall be quite prepared to accept the responsibility of dealing with
+them, calculating that our organisation will enable us to do so,
+not only with facility and efficiency, but with trifling cost to the
+public
+
+To begin with, Children's Creches or Children's Day Homes would be
+established in the centres of every poor population, where for a small
+charge babies and young children can be taken care of in the day while
+the mothers are at work, instead of being left to the dangers of the
+thoroughfares or the almost greater peril of being burnt to death in
+their own miserable homes.
+
+By this plan we shall not only be able to benefit the poor children,
+if in no other direction than that of soap and water and a little
+wholesome food, but exercise some humanising influence upon the mothers
+themselves.
+
+On the Farm Colony, we should be able to deal with the infants from the
+Unions and other quarters. Our Cottage mothers, with two or three
+children of their own, would readily take in an extra one on the usual
+terms of boarding out children, and nothing would be more simple or
+easy for us than to set apart some trustworthy experienced dame to make
+a constant inspection as to whether the children placed out were
+enjoying the necessary conditions of health and general well-being.
+Here would be a Baby Farm carried on with the most favourable
+surroundings.
+
+
+SECTION 9.--INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS.
+
+I also propose, at the earliest opportunity, to give the subject of the
+industrial training of boys a fair trial; and, if successful, follow it
+on with a similar one for girls. I am nearly satisfied in my own mind
+that the children of the streets taken, say at eight years of age,
+and kept till, say twenty-one, would, by judicious management and the
+utilisation of their strength and capacity, amply supply all their own
+wants, and would, I think, be likely to turn out thoroughly good and
+capable members of the community.
+
+Apart from the mere benevolent aspect of the question, the present
+system of teaching is, to my mind, unnatural, and shamefully wasteful
+of the energies of the children. Fully one-half the time that boys and
+girls are compelled to sit in school is spent to little or no purpose
+--nay, it is worse than wasted. The minds of the children are only
+capable of useful application for so many consecutive minutes,
+and hence the rational method must be to apportion the time of the
+children; say, half the morning's work to be given to their books,
+and the other half to some industrial employment; the garden would be
+most natural and healthy in fair weather, while the workshop should be
+fallen back upon when unfavourable.
+
+By this method health would be promoted, school would be loved,
+the cost of education would be cheapened, and the natural bent of the
+child's capacities would be discovered and could be cultivated.
+Instead of coming out of school, or going away from apprenticeship,
+with the most precious part of life for ever gone so far as learning
+is concerned, chained to some pursuit for which there is no
+predilection, and which promises nothing higher than mediocrity if not
+failure--the work for which the mind was peculiarly adapted and for
+which, therefore, it would have a natural capacity, would not only have
+been discovered, but the bent of the inclination cultivated, and the
+life's work chosen accordingly.
+
+
+It is not for me to attempt any reform of our School system on this
+model. But I do think that I may be allowed to test the theory by its
+practical working in an Industrial School in connection with the Farm
+Colony. I should begin probably with children selected for their
+goodness and capacity, with a view to imparting a superior education,
+thus fitting them for the position of Officers in all parts of the
+world, with the special object of raising up a body of men thoroughly
+trained and educated, among other things, to carry out all the branches
+of the Social work that are set forth in this book, and it may be to
+instruct other nations in the same.
+
+
+SECTION 10.--ASYLUMS FOR MORAL LUNATICS.
+
+There will remain, after all has been said and done, one problem that
+has yet to be faced. You may minimise the difficulty every way,
+and it is your duty to do so, but no amount of hopefulness can make us
+blink the fact that when all has been done and every chance has been
+offered, when you have forgiven your brother not only seven times but
+seventy times seven, when you have fished him up from the mire and put
+him on firm ground only to see him relapse and again relapse until you
+have no strength left to pull him out once more, there will still
+remain a residuum of men and women who have, whether from heredity or
+custom, or hopeless demoralisation, become reprobates. After a certain
+time, some men of science hold that persistence in habits tends to
+convert a man from a being with freedom of action and will into a mere
+automaton. There are some cases within our knowledge which seem to
+confirm the somewhat dreadful verdict by which a man appears to be a
+lost soul on this side of the grave.
+
+There are men so incorrigibly lazy that no inducement that you can
+offer will tempt them to work; so eaten up by vice that virtue is
+abhorrent to them, and so inveterately dishonest that theft is to them
+a master passion. When a human being has reached that stage, there is
+only one course that can be rationally pursued. Sorrowfully, but
+remorselessly, it must be recognised that he has become lunatic,
+morally demented, incapable of self-government, and that upon him,
+therefore, must be passed the sentence of permanent seclusion from a
+world in which he is not fit to be at large. The ultimate destiny of
+these poor wretches should be a penal settlement where they could be
+confined during Her Majesty's pleasure as are the criminal lunatics at
+Broadmoor. It is a crime against the race to allow those who are so
+inveterately depraved the freedom to wander abroad, infect their
+fellows, prey upon Society, and to multiply their kind. Whatever else
+Society may do, and suffer to be done, this thing it ought not to
+allow, any more than it should allow the free perambulation of a mad
+dog. But before we come to this I would have every possible means
+tried to effect their reclamation. Let Justice punish them, and Mercy
+put her arms around them; let them be appealed to by penalty and by
+reason, and by every influence, human and Divine, that can possibly be
+brought to bear upon them. Then, if all alike failed, their ability to
+further curse their fellows and themselves should be stayed.
+
+They will still remain objects worthy of infinite compassion.
+They should lead as human a life as is possible to those who have
+fallen under so terrible a judgment. They should have their own little
+cottages in their own little gardens, under the blue sky, and, if
+possible, amid the green fields. I would deny them none of the
+advantages, moral, mental, and religious which might minister to their
+diseased minds, and tend to restore them to a better state. Not until
+the breath leaves their bodies should we cease to labour and wrestle
+for their salvation. But when they have reached a certain point access
+to their fellow men should be forbidden. Between them and the wide
+world there should be reared an impassable barrier, which once passed
+should be recrossed no more for ever. Such a course must be wiser than
+allowing them to go in and out among their fellows, carrying with them
+the contagion of moral leprosy, and multiplying a progeny doomed before
+its birth to inherit the vices and diseased cravings of their unhappy
+parents. To these proposals three leading objections will probably be
+raised
+
+1. It may be said that to shut out men and women from that liberty
+ which is their universal birthright would be cruel.
+
+To this it might be sufficient to reply that this is already done;
+twenty years' immurement is a very common sentence passed upon
+wrong-doers, and in some cases the law goes as far as to inflict penal
+servitude for life. But we say further that it would be far more
+merciful treatment than that which is dealt out to them at present,
+and it would be far more likely to secure a pleasant existence.
+Knowing their fate they would soon become resigned to it.
+Habits of industry, sobriety, and kindness with them would create a
+restfulness of spirit which goes far on in the direction of happiness,
+and if religion were added it would make that happiness complete.
+There might be set continually before them a large measure of freedom
+and more frequent intercourse with the world in the shape of
+correspondence, newspapers, and even occasional interviews with
+relatives, as rewards for well-doing. And in sickness and old age
+their latter days might be closed in comfort. In fact, so far as this
+class of people were concerned, we can see that they would be far
+better circumstanced for happiness in this life and in the life to come
+than in their present liberty--if a life spent alternatively in
+drunkenness, debauchery, and crime, on the one hand, or the prison on
+the other, can be called liberty.
+
+2. It may be said that the carrying out of such a suggestion would be
+ too expensive.
+
+To this we reply that it would have to be very costly to exceed the
+expense in which all such characters involve the nation under the
+present regulations of vice and crime. But there is no need for any
+great expense, seeing that after the first outlay the inmates of such
+an institution, if it were fixed upon the land, would readily earn all
+that would be required for their support.
+
+3. But it may be said that this is impossible.
+
+It would certainly be impossible other than as a State regulation.
+But it would surely be a very simple matter to enact a law which should
+decree that after an individual had suffered a certain number of
+convictions for crime, drunkenness, or vagrancy, he should forfeit his
+freedom to roam abroad and curse his fellows. When I include vagrancy
+in this list, I do it on the supposition that the opportunity and
+ability for work are present. Otherwise it seems to me most heartless
+to punish a hungry man who begs for food because he can in no other way
+obtain it. But with the opportunity and ability for work I would count
+the solicitation of charity a crime, and punish it as such. Anyway, if
+a man would not work of his own free will I would compel him.
+
+
+CHAPTER 6. ASSISTANCE IN GENERAL.
+
+There are many who are not lost, who need help. A little assistance
+given to-day will perhaps prevent the need of having to save them
+to-morrow. There are some, who, after they have been rescued,
+will still need a friendly hand. The very service which we have
+rendered them at starting makes it obligatory upon us to finish the
+good work. Hitherto it may be objected that the Scheme has dealt
+almost exclusively with those who are more or less disreputable and
+desperate. This was inevitable. We obey our Divine Master and seek to
+save those who are lost. But because, as I said at the beginning,
+urgency is claimed rightly for those who have no helper, we do not,
+therefore, forget the needs and the aspirations of the decent working
+people who are poor indeed, but who keep their feet, who have not
+fallen, and who help themselves and help each other. They constitute
+the bulk of the nation. There is an uppercrust and a submerged tenth.
+But the hardworking poor people, who earn a pound a week or less,
+constitute in every land the majority of the population. We cannot
+forget them, for we are at home with them. We belong to them and many
+thousands of them belong to us. We are always studying how to help
+them, and we think this can be done in many ways, some of which I
+proceed to describe.
+
+
+SECTION 1.--IMPROVED LODGINGS.
+
+The necessity for a superior class of lodgings for the poor men rescued
+at our Shelters has been forcing itself already upon our notice,
+and demanding attention. One of the first things that happens when a
+man, lifted out of the gutter, has obtained a situation, and is earning
+a decent livelihood, is for him to want some better accommodation than
+that afforded at the Shelters. We have some hundreds on our hands now
+who can afford to pay for greater comfort and seclusion.
+These are continually saying to us something like the following: --
+
+The Shelters are all very well when a man is down in his luck.
+They have been a good thing for us; in fact, had it not been for them,
+we would still have been without a friend, sleeping on the Embankment,
+getting our living dishonestly, or not getting a living at all.
+We have now got work, and want a bed to sleep on, and a room to
+ourselves, and a box, or something where we can stow away our bits of
+things. Cannot you do something for us?" We have replied that there
+were Lodging-houses elsewhere, which, now that they were in work,
+they could afford to pay for, where they would obtain the comfort they
+desired. To this they answer, "That is all very well. We know there
+are these places, and that we could go to them. But then," they said,
+"you see, here in the Shelters are our mates, who think as we do.
+And there is the prayer, and the meeting, and kind influence every
+night, that helps to keep us straight. We would like a better place,
+but if you cannot find us one we would rather stop in the Shelter and
+sleep on the floor, as we have been doing, than go to something more
+complete, get into bad company, and so fall back again to where we were
+before."
+
+But this, although natural, is not desirable; for, if the process went
+on, in course of time the whole of the Shelter Depots would be taken up
+by persons who had risen above the class for whom they were originally
+destined. I propose, therefore, to draft those who get on, but wish to
+continue in connection with the Army, into a superior lodging-house, a
+sort of POOR MAN'S METROPOLE, managed on the same principles, but with
+better accommodation in every way, which, I anticipate, would be
+self-supporting from the first. In these homes there would be separate
+dormitories, good sitting-rooms, cooking conveniences, baths, a hall
+for meetings, and many other comforts, of which all would have the
+benefit at as low a figure above cost price as will not only pay
+interest on the original outlay, but secure us against any shrinkage of
+capital.
+
+Something superior in this direction will also be required for the
+women. Having begun, we must go on. Hitherto I have proposed to deal
+only with single men and single women, but one of the consequences of
+getting hold of these men very soon makes itself felt. Your ragged,
+hungry, destitute Out-of-Work in almost every case is married.
+When he comes to us he comes as single and is dealt with as such,
+but after you rouse in him aspirations for better things he remembers
+the wife whom he has probably enough deserted, or left from sheer
+inability to provide her anything to eat. As soon as such a man finds
+himself under good influence and fairly employed his first thought is
+to go and look after the "Missis." There is very little reality about
+any change of heart in a married man who does not thus turn in sympathy
+and longing towards his wife, and the more successful we are in dealing
+with these people the more inevitable it is that we shall be confronted
+with married couple's who in turn demand that we should provide for
+them lodgings. This we propose to do also on a commercial footing.
+I see greater developments in this direction, one of which will be
+described in the chapter relating to Suburban Cottages.
+The Model-lodging House for Married People is, however, one of
+those things that must be provided as an adjunct of the Food and
+Shelter Depots.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--MODEL SUBURBAN VILLAGES.
+
+As I have repeatedly stated already, but will state once more, for it
+is important enough to bear endless repetition, one of the first steps
+which must inevitably be taken in the reformation of this class, is to
+make for them decent, healthy, pleasant homes, or help them to make
+them for themselves, which, if possible, is far better. I do not regard
+the institution of any first, second, or third-class lodging-houses as
+affording anything but palliatives of the existing distress.
+To substitute life in a boarding-house for life in the streets is,
+no doubt, an immense advance, but it is by no means the ultimatum.
+Life in a boarding-house is better than the worst, but it is far from
+being the best form of human existence. Hence, the object I constantly
+keep in view is how to pilot those persons who have been set on their
+feet again by means of the Food and Shelter Depots, and who have
+obtained employment in the City, into the possession of homes of their
+own.
+
+Neither can I regard the one, or at most two, rooms in which the large
+majority of the inhabitants of our great cities are compelled to spend
+their days, as a solution of the question. The overcrowding which fills
+every separate room of a tenement with a human litter, and compels
+family life from the cradle to the grave to be lived within the four
+walls of a single apartment, must go on reproducing in endless
+succession all the terrible evils which such a state of things must
+inevitably create.
+
+Neither can I be satisfied with the vast, unsightly piles of
+barrack-like buildings, which are only a slight advance upon the
+Union Bastille--dubbed Model Industrial Dwellings--so much in
+fashion at present, as being a satisfactory settlement of the burning
+question of the housing of the poor. As a contribution to this
+question, I propose the establishment of a series of Industrial
+Settlements or Suburban Villages, lying out in the country, within a
+reasonable distance of all our great cities, composed of cottages of
+suitable size and construction, and with all needful comfort and
+accommodation for the families of working-men, the rent of which,
+together with the railway fare, and other economic conveniences,
+should be within the reach of a family of moderate income.
+
+This proposal lies slightly apart from the scope of this book,
+otherwise I should be disposed to elaborate the project at greater
+length. I may say, however, that what I here propose has been carefully
+thought out, and is of a perfectly practical character.
+In the planning of it I have received some valuable assistance from a
+friend who has had considerable experience in the building trade,
+and he stakes his professional reputation on its feasibility.
+The following, however, may be taken as a rough outline: --
+
+The Village should not be more than twelve miles from town; should be
+in a dry and healthy situation, and on a line of railway. It is not
+absolutely necessary that it should be near a station, seeing that the
+company would, for their own interests, immediately erect one.
+
+The Cottages should be built of the best material and workmanship.
+This would be effected most satisfactorily by securing a contract for
+the labour only, the projectors of the Scheme purchasing the materials
+and supplying them direct from the manufacturers to the builders.
+The cottages would consist of three or four rooms, with a scullery,
+and out-building in the garden. The cottages should be built in
+terraces, each having a good garden attached. Arrangements should be
+made for the erection of from one thousand to two thousand houses at
+the onset. In the Village a Co-operative Goods Store should be
+established, supplying everything that was really necessary for the
+villagers at the most economic prices. The sale of intoxicating drink
+should be strictly forbidden on the Estate, and, if possible,
+the landowner from whom the land is obtained should be tied off from
+allowing any licences to be held on any other portion of the adjoining
+land. It is thought that the Railway Company, in consideration of the
+inconvenience and suffering they have inflicted on the poor,
+and in their own interests, might be induced to make the following
+advantageous arrangements: --
+
+(1) The conveyance of each member actually living in the village to and
+ from London at the rate of sixpence per week. Each pass should
+ have on it the portrait of the owner, and be fastened to some
+ article of the dress, and be available only by Workmen's Trains
+ running early and late and during certain hours of the day, when
+ the trains are almost empty.
+
+(2) The conveyance of goods and parcels should be at half the ordinary
+ rates. It is reasonable to suppose that large landowners would
+ gladly give one hundred acres of land in view of the immensely
+ advanced values of the surrounding property which would immediately
+ follow, seeing that the erection of one thousand or two thousand
+ cottages would constitute the nucleus of a much larger Settlement.
+
+Lastly, the rent of a four-roomed cottage must not exceed 3s. per week.
+Add to this the sixpenny ticket to and from London, and you have 3s. 6d.
+and if the company should insist on 1s., it will make 4s., for which
+there would be all the advantages of a comfortable cottage--of which
+it would be possible for the tenant to become the owner--a good garden,
+pleasant surroundings, and other influences promotive of the health
+and happiness of the family. It is hardly necessary to remark that
+in connection with this Village there will be perfect freedom of
+opinion on all matters. A glance at the ordinary homes of the poor
+people of this great City will at once assure us that such a village
+would be a veritable Paradise to them, and that were four, five,
+or six settlements provided at once they would not contain a tithe of
+the people who would throng to occupy them.
+
+
+SECTION 3.--THE POOR MAN'S BANK.
+
+If the love of money is the root of all evil, the want of money is the
+cause of an immensity of evil and trouble. The moment you begin
+practically to alleviate the miseries of the people, you discover that
+the eternal want of pence is one of their greatest difficulties.
+In my most sanguine moments I have never dreamed of smoothing this
+difficulty out of the lot of man, but it is surely no unattainable
+ideal to establish a Poor Man's Bank, which will extend to the lower
+middle class and the working population the advantages of the credit
+system, which is the very foundation of our boasted commerce.
+
+It might be better that there should be no such thing as credit,
+that no one should lend money, and that everyone should be compelled to
+rely solely upon whatever ready money he may possess from day to day.
+But if so, let us apply the principle all round; do not let us glory in
+our world-wide commerce and boast ourselves in our riches, obtained,
+in so many cases, by the ignoring of this principle. If it is right
+for a great merchant to have dealings with his banker, if it is
+indispensable for the due carrying on of the business of the rich men
+that they should have at their elbow a credit system which will from
+time to time accommodate them with needful advances and enable them to
+stand up against the pressure of sudden demands, which otherwise would
+wreck them, then surely the case is still stronger for providing a
+similar resource for the smaller men, the weaker men. At present
+Society is organised far too much on the principle of giving to him who
+hath so that he shall have more abundantly, and taking away from him
+who hath not even that which he hath.
+
+If we are to really benefit the poor, we can only do so by practical
+measures. We have merely to look round and see the kind of advantages
+which wealthy men find indispensable for the due management of their
+business, and ask ourselves whether poor men cannot be supplied with
+the same opportunities. The reason why they are not is obvious.
+To supply the needs of the rich is a means of making yourself rich;
+to supply the needs of the poor will involve you in trouble so out of
+proportion to the profit that the game may not be worth the candle.
+Men go into banking and other businesses for the sake of obtaining what
+the American humourist said was the chief end of man in these modern
+times, namely, "ten per cent." To obtain a ten per cent. what will not
+men do? They will penetrate the bowels of the earth, explore the depths
+of the sea, ascend the snow-capped mountain's highest peak, or navigate
+the air, if they can be guaranteed a ten per cent. I do not venture to
+suggest that the business of a Poor Man's Bank would yield ten per cent.,
+or even five, but I think it might be made to pay its expenses,
+and the resulting gain to the community would be enormous.
+
+Ask any merchant in your acquaintance where his business would be if
+he had no banker, and then, when you have his answer, ask yourself
+whether it would not be an object worth taking some trouble to secure,
+to furnish the great mass of our fellow countrymen, on sound business
+principles with the advantages of the credit system, which is found to
+work so beneficially for the "well-to-do" few.
+
+Some day I hope the State may be sufficiently enlightened to take up
+this business itself; at present it is left in the hands of the
+pawnbroker and the loan agency, and a set of sharks, who cruelly prey
+upon the interests of the poor. The establishment of land banks,
+where the poor man is almost always a peasant, has been one of the
+features of modern legislation in Russia, Germany, and elsewhere.
+The institution of a Poor Man's Bank will be, I hope, before long,
+one of the recognised objects of our own government.
+
+Pending that I venture to throw out a suggestion, without in any way
+pledging myself to add this branch of activity to the already gigantic
+range of operations foreshadowed in this book--Would it not be
+possible for some philanthropists with capital to establish on clearly
+defined principles a Poor Man's Bank for the making of small loans on
+good security, or making advances to those who are in danger of being
+overwhelmed by sudden financial pressure--in fact, for doing for the
+"little man" what all the banks do for the "big man"? Meanwhile,
+should it enter into the heart of some benevolently disposed possessor
+of wealth to give the price of a racehorse, or of an "old master,"
+to form the nucleus of the necessary capital, I will certainly
+experiment in this direction.
+
+I can anticipate the sneer of the cynic who scoffs at what he calls my
+glorified pawnshop. I am indifferent to his sneers. A Mont de Piete--
+the very name (Mount of Piety) shows that the Poor Man's Bank is
+regarded as anything but an objectionable institution across the
+Channel--might be an excellent institution in England. Owing,
+however, to the vested interests of the existing traders it might be
+impossible for the State to establish it, excepting at a ruinous
+expense. There would be no difficulty, however, of instituting a
+private Mont de Piete, which would confer an incalculable boon upon the
+struggling poor.
+
+Further, I am by no means indisposed to recognise the necessity of
+dealing with this subject in connection with the Labour Bureau,
+provided that one clearly recognised principle can be acted upon.
+That principle is that a man shall be free to bind himself as security
+for the repayment of a loan, that is to pledge himself to work for his
+rations until such time as he has repaid capital and interest.
+An illustration or two will explain what I mean. Here is a carpenter
+who comes to our Labour shed; he is an honest, decent man, who has by
+sickness or some other calamity been reduced to destitution. He has by
+degrees pawned one article after another to keep body and soul
+together, until at last he has been compelled to pawn his tools.
+We register him, and an employer comes along who wants a carpenter whom
+we can recommend. We at once suggest this man, but then arises this
+difficulty. He has no tools; what are we to do? As things are at
+present, the man loses the job and continues on our hands. Obviously
+it is most desirable in the interest of the community that the man
+should get his tools out of pawn; but who is to take the responsibility
+of advancing the money to redeem them? This difficulty might be met,
+I think, by the man entering into a legal undertaking to make over his
+wages to us, or such proportion of them as would be convenient to his
+circumstances, we in return undertaking to find him in food and shelter
+until such time as he has repaid the advance made. That obligation it
+would be the truest kindness to enforce with Rhadamantine severity.
+Until the man is out of debt he is not his own master. All that he can
+make over his actual rations and Shelter money should belong to his
+creditor. Of course such an arrangement might be varied indefinitely
+by private agreement; the repayment of instalments could be spread ever
+a longer or shorter time, but the mainstay of the whole principle would
+be the execution of a legal agreement by which the man makes over the
+whole product of his labour to the Bank until he has repaid, his debt.
+
+Take another instance. A clerk who has been many years in a situation
+and has a large family, which he has brought up respectably and
+educated. He has every prospect of retiring in a few years upon a
+superannuating allowance, but is suddenly confronted by a claim often
+through no fault of his own, of a sum of fifty or a hundred pounds,
+which is quite beyond his means. He has been a careful saving man,
+who has never borrowed a penny in his life, and does not know where to
+turn in his emergency. If he can not raise this money he will be sold
+up, his family will be scattered, his situation and his prospective
+pension will be lost, and blank ruin will stare him in the face.
+Now, were he in receipt of an income of ten times the amount, he would
+probably have a banking account, and, in consequence, be able to secure
+an advance of all he needed from his banker. Why should he not be able
+to pledge his salary, or a portion of it, to an Institution which would
+enable him to pay off his debt, on terms that, while sufficiently
+remunerative to the bank, would not unduly embarrass him?
+
+At present what does the poor wretch do? He consults his friends, who,
+it is quite possible, are as hard up as himself, or he applies to some
+loan agency, and as likely as not falls into the hands of sharpers,
+who indeed, let him have the money, but at interest altogether out of
+proportion to the risk which they run, and use the advantage which
+their position gives them to extort every penny he has. A great black
+book written within and without in letters of lamentation, mourning,
+and woe might be written on the dealings of these usurers with their
+victims in every land.
+
+It is of little service denouncing these extortioners. They have always
+existed, and probably always will; but what we can do is to
+circumscribe the range of their operations and the number of their
+victims. This can only be done by a legitimate and merciful provision
+for these poor creatures in their hours of desperate need, so as to
+prevent their falling into the hands of these remorseless wretches,
+who have wrecked the fortunes of thousands, and driven many a decent
+man to suicide or a premature grave.
+
+There are endless ramifications of this principle, which do not need to
+be described here, but before leaving the subject I may allude to an
+evil which is a cruel reality, alas! to a multitude of unfortunate men
+and women. I refer to the working of the Hire System. The decent poor
+man or woman who is anxious to earn an honest penny by the use of,
+it may be a mangle, or a sewing-machine, a lathe, or some other
+indispensable instrument, and is without the few pounds necessary to
+buy it, must take it on the Hire System--that is to say, for the
+accommodation of being allowed to pay for the machine by instalments--
+he is charged, in addition to the full market value of his purchase,
+ten or twenty times the amount of what would be a fair rate of
+interest, and more than this if he should at any time, through
+misfortune, fail in his payment, the total amount already paid will be
+confiscated, the machine seized, and the money lost.
+
+Here again we fall back on our analogy of what goes on in a small
+community where neighbours know each other. Take, for instance, when a
+lad who is recognised as bright, promising, honest, and industrious,
+who wants to make a start in life which requires some little outlay,
+his better-to-do neighbour will often assist him by providing the
+capital necessary to enable him to make a way for himself in the world.
+The neighbour does this because he knows the lad, because the family is
+at least related by ties of neighbourhood, and the honour of the lad's
+family is a security upon which a man may safely advance a small sum.
+All this would equally apply to a destitute widow, an artizan suddenly
+thrown out of work, an orphan family, or the like. In the large City
+all this kindly helpfulness disappears, and with it go all those small
+acts of service which are, as it were, the buffers which save men from
+being crushed to death against the iron walls of circumstances. We must
+try to replace them in some way or other if we are to get back, not to
+the Garden of Eden, but to the ordinary conditions of life, as they
+exist in a healthy, small community. No institution, it is true,
+can ever replace the magic bond of personal friendship, but if we have
+the whole mass of Society permeated in every direction by brotherly
+associations established for the purpose of mutual help and
+sympathising counsel, it is not an impossible thing to believe that we
+shall be able to do something to restore the missing element in modern
+civilisation.
+
+
+SECTION 4.--THE POOR MAN'S LAWYER.
+
+The moment you set about dealing with the wants of the people,
+you discover that many of their difficulties are not material,
+but moral. There never was a greater mistake than to imagine that you
+have only to fill a man's stomach, and clothe his back in order to
+secure his happiness. Man is, much more than a digestive apparatus,
+liable to get out of order. Hence, while it is important to remember
+that man has a stomach, it is also necessary to bear in mind that he
+has a heart, and a mind that is frequently sorely troubled by
+difficulties which, if he lived in a friendly world, would often
+disappear. A man, and still more a woman, stands often quite as much
+in need of a trusted adviser as he or she does of a dinner or a dress.
+Many a poor soul is miserable all the day long, and gets dragged down
+deeper and deeper into the depths of sin and sorrow and despair for
+want of a sympathising friend, who can give her advice, and make her
+feel that somebody in the world cares for her, and will help her if
+they can.
+
+If we are to bring back the sense of brotherhood to the world,
+we must confront this difficulty. God, it was said in old time,
+setteth the desolate in families; but somehow, in our time,
+the desolate wander alone in the midst of a careless and unsympathising
+world. "There is no-one who cares for my soul. There is no creature
+loves me, and if I die no one will pity me," is surely one of the
+bitterest cries that can burst from a breaking heart. One of the
+secrets of the success of the Salvation Army is, that the friendless of
+the world find friends in it. There is not one sinner in the world--
+no matter how degraded and dirty he may be--whom my people will not
+rejoice to take by the hand and pray with, and labour for, if thereby
+they can but snatch him as a brand from the burning. Now, we want to
+make more use of this, to make the Salvation Army the nucleus of a
+great agency for bringing comfort and counsel to those who are at their
+wits' end, feeling as if in the whole world there was no one to whom
+they could go.
+
+What we want to do is to exemplify to the world the family idea.
+"Our Father" is the keynote. One is Our Father, then all we are
+brethren. But in a family, if anyone is troubled in mind or
+conscience, there is no difficulty. The daughter goes to her father,
+or the son to his mother, and pour out their soul's troubles, and are
+relieved. If there is any serious difficulty a family council is held,
+and all unite their will and their resources to get matters put
+straight. This is what we mean to try to get done in the New
+Organisation of Society for which we are labouring. We cannot know
+better than God Almighty what will do good to man. We are content to
+follow on His lines, and to mend the world we shall seek to restore
+something of the family idea to the many hundreds of thousands--ay,
+millions--who have no one wiser or more experienced than themselves,
+to whom they can take their sorrows, or consult in their difficulties.
+
+Of course we can do this but imperfectly. Only God can create a mother.
+But Society needs a great deal of mothering, much more than it gets.
+And as a child needs a mother to run to in its difficulties and troubles,
+to whom it can let out its little heart in confidence, so men and
+women, weary and worn in the battles of life, need someone to whom they
+can go when pressed down with a sense of wrongs suffered or done,
+knowing that their confidence will be preserved inviolate, and that
+their statements will be received with sympathy. I propose to attempt
+to meet this want. I shall establish a department, over which I shall
+place the wisest, the pitifullest, and the most sagacious men and women
+whom I can find on my staff, to whom all those in trouble and
+perplexity shall be invited to address themselves. It is no use saying
+that we love our fellow men unless we try to help them, and it is no
+use pretending to sympathise with the heavy burdens which darken their
+lives unless we try to ease them and to lighten their existence.
+
+Insomuch as we have more practical experience of life than other men,
+by so much are we bound to help their inexperience, and share our
+talents with them. But if we believe they are our brothers, and that
+One is our Father, even the God who will come to judge us hereafter for
+all the deeds that we have done in the body, then must we constitute,
+in some such imperfect way as is open to us, the parental office.
+We must be willing to receive the outpourings of our struggling fellow
+men, to listen to the long-buried secret that has troubled the human
+heart, and to welcome instead of repelling those who would obey the
+Apostolic precept: "To confess their sins one to another." Let not
+that word confession scandalise any. Confession of the most open sort;
+confession on the public platform before the presence of all the man's
+former associates in sin has long been one of the most potent weapons
+by which the Salvation Army has won its victories. That confession we
+have long imposed on all our converts, and it is the only confession
+which seems to us to be a condition of Salvation. But this suggestion
+is of a different kind. It is not imposed as a means of grace.
+It is not put forward as a preliminary to the absolution which no one
+can pronounce but our Lord Himself. It is merely a response on our
+part to one of the deepest needs and secret longings of the actual men
+and women who are meeting us daily in our work. Why should they be
+left to brood in misery over their secret sin, when a plain
+straightforward talk with a man or woman selected for his or her
+sympathetic common-sense and spiritual experience might take the weight
+off their shoulders which is crushing them into dull despair?
+
+Not for absolution, but for sympathy and direction, do I propose to
+establish my Advice Bureau in definite form, for in practice it has
+been in existence for some time, and wonderful things have been done
+in the direction on which I contemplate it working. I have no pleasure
+in inventing these departments. They all entail hard work and no end
+of anxiety. But if we are to represent the love of God to men, we must
+minister to all the wants and needs of the human heart. Nor is it only
+in affairs of the heart that this Advice Bureau will be of service. It
+will be quite as useful in affairs of the head. As I conceive it, the
+Advice Bureau will be THE POOR MANS LAWYER AND THE POOR MANS TRIBUNE.
+
+There are no means in London, so far as my knowledge goes, by which the
+poor and needy can obtain any legal assistance in the varied
+oppressions and difficulties from which they must, in consequence of
+their poverty and associations, be continually suffering.
+
+While the "well-to-do" classes can fall back upon skilful friends for
+direction, or avail themselves of the learning and experience of the
+legal profession, the poor man has literally no one qualified to
+counsel him on such matters. In cases of sickness he can apply to the
+parish doctor or the great hospital, and receive an odd word or two of
+advice, with a bottle of physic which may or may not be of service.
+But if his circumstances are sick, out of order, in danger of carrying
+him to utter destitution, or to prison, or to the Union, he has no one
+to appeal to who has the willingness or the ability to help him.
+
+Now, we want to create a Court of Counsel or Appeal, to which anyone
+suffering from imposition having to do with person, liberty, or
+property, or anything else of sufficient importance, can apply,
+and obtain not only advice, but practical assistance.
+
+Among others for whom this Court would be devised is the
+shamefully-neglected class of Widows, of whom in the East of London
+there are 6,000, mostly in very destitute circumstances. In the whole
+of London there cannot be less than 20,000, and in England and Wales it
+is estimated there are 100,000, fifty thousand of whom are probably
+poor and friendless.
+
+The treatment these poor people by the nation is a crying scandal.
+Take the case of the average widow, even when left in comfortable
+circumstances. She will often be launched into a sea of perplexity,
+although able to avail herself of the best advice. But think of the
+multitudes of poor women, who, when they close their husbands' eyes,
+lose the only friend who knows anything; about their circumstances.
+There may be a trifle of money or a struggling business or a little
+income connected with property or some other possession, all needing
+immediate attention, and that of a skilful sort, in order to enable the
+poor creature to weather the storm and avoid the vortex of utter
+destitution.
+
+All we have said applies equally to orphans and friendless people
+generally. Nothing, however, short of a national institution could
+meet the necessities of all such cases. But we can do something, and
+in matters already referred to, such as involve loss of property,
+malicious prosecution, criminal and otherwise, we can render
+substantial assistance.
+
+In carrying out this purpose it will be no part of our plan to
+encourage legal proceedings in others, or to have recourse to them
+ourselves. All resort to law would be avoided either in counsel or
+practice, unless absolutely necessary. But where manifest injustice
+and wrong are perpetrated, and every other method of obtaining
+reparation fails, we shall avail ourselves of the assistance the Law
+affords.
+
+Our great hope of usefulness, however, in this Department lies in
+prevention, The knowledge that the oppressed poor have in us a friend
+able to speak for them will often prevent the injustice which cowardly
+and avaricious persons might otherwise inflict, and the same
+considerations may induce them to accord without compulsion the right
+of the weak and friendless.
+
+I also calculate upon a wide sphere of usefulness in the direction of
+friendly arbitration and intervention. There will be at least one
+disinterested tribunal, however humble, to which business, domestic,
+or any other questions of a contentious and litigious nature can be
+referred without involving any serious costs.
+
+The following incidents have been gathered from operations already
+undertaken in this direction, and will explain and illustrate the kind
+of work we contemplate, and some of the benefits that may be expected
+to follow from it.
+
+About four years ago a young and delicate girl, the daughter of a
+pilot, came to us in great distress. Her story was that of thousands
+of others. She had been betrayed by a man in a good position in the
+West End, and was now the mother of an infant child.
+
+Just before her confinement her seducer had taken her to his solicitors
+and made her sign and swear an affidavit to the effect that he was not
+the father of the then expected child. Upon this he gave her a few
+pounds in settlement of all claims upon him. The poor thing was in
+great poverty and distress. Through our solicitors, we immediately
+opened communications with the man, and after negotiations, he, to
+avoid further proceedings, was compelled to secure by a deed a proper
+allowance to his unfortunate victim for the maintenance of her child.
+
+SHADOWED AND CAUGHT.
+
+A-- was induced to leave a comfortable home to become the governess of
+the motherless children of Mr. G--, whom she found to be a kind and
+considerate employer. After she had been in his service some little
+time he proposed that she should take a trip to London. To this she
+very gladly consented, all the more so when he offered to take her
+himself to a good appointment he had secured for her. In London he
+seduced her, and kept her as his mistress until, tired of her,
+he told her to go and do as "other women did."
+
+Instead of descending to this infamy, she procured work, and so
+supported herself and child in some degree of comfort, when he sought
+her out and again dragged her down. Another child was born, and a
+second time he threw her up and left her to starve. It was then she
+applied to our people. We hunted up the man, followed him to the
+country, threatened him with public exposure, and forced from him the
+payment to his victim of #60 down, an allowance of #1 a week, and an
+Insurance Policy on his life for #450 in her favour.
+
+#60 FROM ITALY.
+
+C. was seduced by a young Italian of good position in society,
+who promised to marry her, but a short time before the day fixed for
+the ceremony he told her urgent business called him abroad. He assured
+her he would return in two years and make her his wife. He wrote
+occasionally, and at last broke her heart by sending the news of his
+marriage to another, adding insult to injury by suggesting that she
+should come and live with his wife as her maid, offering at the same
+time to pay for the maintenance of the child till it was old enough to
+be placed in charge of the captain of one of the vessels belonging to
+his firm.
+
+None of these promises were fulfilled, and C., with her mother's
+assistance, for a time managed to support herself and child; but the
+mother, worn out by age and trouble, could help her no longer,
+and the poor girl was driven to despair. Her case was brought before
+us, and we at once set to work to assist her. The Consul of the town
+where the seducer lived in style was communicated with. Approaches
+were made to the young man's father, who, to save the dishonour that
+would follow exposure, paid over #60. This helps to maintain the
+child; and the girl is in domestic service and doing well.
+
+THE HIRE SYSTEM.
+
+The most cruel wrongs are frequently inflicted on the very poorest
+persons, in connection with this method of obtaining Furniture, Sewing
+Machines, Mangles, or other articles. Caught by the lure of misleading
+advertisements, the poor are induced to purchase articles to be paid
+for by weekly or monthly instalments. They struggle through half the
+amount perhaps, at all manner of sacrifice, when some delay in the
+payment is made the occasion not only for seizing the goods, which they
+have come to regard as their own, and on which their very existence
+depends, but by availing themselves of some technical clause in the
+agreement, for robbing them in addition. In such circumstances the
+poor things, being utterly friendless, have to submit to these infamous
+extortions without remedy. Our Bureau will be open to all such.
+
+TALLYMEN, MONEY LENDERS, AND BILLS-OF-SALEMONGERS.
+
+Here again we have a class who prey upon the poverty of the people,
+inducing them to purchase things for which they have often no immediate
+use--anyway for which there is no real necessity--by all manner of
+specious promises as to easy terms of repayment. And once having got
+their dupes into their power they drag them down to misery, and very
+often utter temporal ruin; once in their net escape is exceedingly
+difficult, if not impossible. We propose to help the poor victims by
+this Scheme, as far as possible.
+
+Our Bureau, we expect will be of immense service to Clergymen Ministers
+of all denominations, District Visitors, Missionaries, and others who
+freely mix among the poor, seeing that they must be frequently appealed
+to for legal advice, which they are quite unable to give, and equally
+at a loss to obtain. We shall always be very glad to assist such.
+
+THE DEFENCE OF UNDEFENDED PERSONS.
+
+The conviction is gradually fixing itself upon the public mind that a
+not inconsiderable number of innocent persons are from time to time
+convicted of crimes and offences, the reason for which often is the
+mere inability to secure an efficient defence. Although there are
+several societies in London and the country dealing with the criminal
+classes, and more particularly with discharged prisoners, yet there
+does not appear to be one for the purpose of assisting unconvicted
+prisoners. This work we propose boldly to take up.
+
+By this and many other ways we shall help those charged with criminal
+offences, who, on a most careful enquiry, might reasonably be supposed
+to be innocent, but who, through want of means, are unable to obtain
+the legal assistance, and produce the evidence necessary for an
+efficient defence.
+
+We shall not pretend authoritatively to judge as to who is innocent or
+who is guilty, but if after full explanation and enquiry the person
+charged may reasonably be supposed to be innocent, and is not in a
+position to defend himself, then we should feel free to advise such a
+case, hoping thereby to save such person and his family and friends
+from much misery, and possibly from utter ruin. Mr. Justice Field
+recently remarked: --
+
+"For a man to assist another man who was under a criminal charge was a
+highly laudable and praiseworthy act. If a man was without friends,
+and an Englishman came forward and legitimately, and for the purpose of
+honestly assisting him with means to put before the Court his case,
+that was a highly laudable and praiseworthy act, and he should be the
+last man in the country to complain of any man for so doing."
+
+These remarks are endorsed by most Judges and Magistrates, and our
+Advice Bureau will give practical effect to them.
+
+In every case an attempt will be made to secure, not only the outward
+reformation, but the actual regeneration of all whom we assist.
+Special attention, as has been described under the "Criminal Reform
+Department," will be paid to first offenders.
+
+We shall endeavour also to assist, as far as we have ability, the Wives
+and Children of persons who are undergoing sentences, by endeavouring
+to obtain for them employment, or otherwise rendering them help.
+Hundreds of this class fall into the deepest distress and
+demoralisation through want of friendly aid in the forlorn
+circumstances in which they find themselves on the conviction of
+relatives on whom they have been dependent for a livelihood,
+or for protection and direction in the ordinary affairs of life.
+
+This Department will also be responsible for gathering intelligence,
+spreading information, and the general prosecution of such measures as
+are likely to lead to the much-needed beneficial changes in our Prison
+Management. In short, it will seek to become the true friend and
+saviour of the Criminal Classes in general, and in doing so we shall
+desire to act in harmony with the societies at present in existence,
+who may be seeking for objects kindred to the Advice Bureau.
+We pen the following list to give some idea of the topics on which the
+Advice Bureau may be consulted: --
+
+ Accidents, Claim for
+ Administration of Estates
+ Adulteration of Food and Drugs
+ Agency, Questions of
+ Agreements, Disputed
+ Affiliation Cases
+ Animals, Cruelty to
+ Arrest, Wrongful
+ Assault
+
+ Bankruptcies
+ Bills of Exchange
+ Bills of Sale
+ Bonds, Forfeited
+ Breach of Promise
+
+ Children, Cruelty to
+ Children, Custody of
+ Compensation for Injuries
+ Compensation for Accident
+ Compensation for Defamation
+ Compensation for Loss of Employment, &c., &c.
+ Confiscation by Landlords
+ Contracts, Breach of
+ Copyright, Infringement of
+ County Court Cases
+
+ Debts
+ Distress, Illegal
+ Divorce
+
+ Ejectment Cases
+ Employers Liability Act
+ Executors, Duties of
+
+ Factory Act, Breach of
+ Fraud, Attempted
+
+ Goodwill, Sale of
+ Guarantee, Forfeited
+
+ Heir-at-Law
+ Husbands and Wives, Disputes of
+
+ Imprisonment, False
+ Infants, Custody of
+ Intestacy, Cases of
+
+ Judgment Summonses
+
+ Landlord and Tenant Cases
+ Leases, Lapses and Renewals of
+ Legacies, Disputed
+ Libel Cases
+ Licences
+
+ Marriage Law, Question of the
+ Masters' and Servants' Acts
+ Meeting, Right of Public
+ Mortgages
+
+ Negligence, Alleged
+ Next of Kill Wanted
+ Nuisances, Alleged
+
+ Partnership, The Law of
+ Patents, Registration and Infringement of
+ Pawnbrokers and their Pledges
+ Police Cases
+ Probate
+
+ Rates and Taxes
+ Reversionary Interests
+
+ Seduction, Cases of
+ Servants' Wrongful Dismissal
+ Sheriffs
+ Sureties Estreated
+
+ Tenancies, Disputed
+ Trade Marks, Infringement of
+ Trespass, Cases of
+ Trustees and Trusts
+
+ Wages Kept Back
+ Wills, Disputed and Unproved
+ Women, Cruelty to
+ Workmen, Grievances of &c.,&c.
+
+The Advice Bureau will therefore be, first of all, a place where men
+and women in trouble can come when they please to communicate in
+confidence the cause of their anxiety, with a certainty that they will
+receive a sympathetic hearing and the best advice.
+
+Secondly, it will be a Poor Man's Lawyer, giving the best legal counsel
+as to the course to be pursued in the various circumstances with which
+the poor find themselves confronted.
+
+Thirdly, it will act as a Poor Man's Tribune, and will undertake the
+defence of friendless prisoners supposed to be innocent, together with
+the resistance of illegal extortions, and the prosecution of offenders
+who refuse legal satisfaction for the wrongs they have committed.
+
+Fourthly, it will act wherever it is called upon as a Court of
+Arbitration between litigants, where the decision will be according to
+equity, and the costs cut down to the lowest possible figure.
+Such a Department cannot be improvised; but it is already in a fair way
+of development, and it can hardly fail to do great good.
+
+
+SECTION 5.--OUR INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT.
+
+An indispensable adjunct of this Scheme will be the institution of what
+may be called an Intelligence Department at Headquarters. Power, it
+has been said, belongs to the best informed, and if we are effectually
+to deal with the forces of social evil, we must have ready at our
+fingers' ends the accumulated experience and information of the whole
+world on this subject. The collection of facts and the systematic
+record of them would be invaluable, rendering the result of the
+experiments of previous generations available for the information of
+our own.
+
+At the present there is no central institution, either governmental or
+otherwise, in this country or any other, which charges itself with the
+duty of collecting and collating the ideas and conclusions on Social
+Economy, so far as they are likely to help the solution of the problem
+we have in hand. The British Home Office has only begun to index its
+own papers. The Local Government Board is in a similar condition, and,
+although each particular Blue Book may be admirably indexed, there is
+no classified index of the whole series. If this is the case with the
+Government, it is not likely that the innumerable private organisations
+which are pecking here and there at the social question should possess
+any systematised method for the purpose of comparing notes and storing
+information. This Intelligence Department, which I propose to found on
+a small scale at first, will have in it the germ of vast extension
+which will, if adequately supported become a kind of University,
+in which the accumulated experiences of the human race will be massed,
+digested, and rendered available to the humblest toiler in the great
+work of social reform. At the present moment, who is there that can
+produce in any of our museums and universities as much as a classified
+index of publications relating to one of the many heads under which I
+have dealt with this subject? Who is there among all our wise men and
+social reformers that can send me a list of all the best tracts upon--
+say, the establishment of agricultural colonies or the experiments that
+have been made in dealing with inebriates; or the best plans for the
+construction of a working man's cottage?
+
+For the development of this Scheme I want an Office to begin with, in
+which, under the head of the varied subjects treated of in this volume,
+I may have arranged the condensed essence of all the best books that
+have been written, and the names and addresses of those whose opinions
+are worth having upon them, together with a note of what those opinions
+are, and the results of experiments which have been made in relation to
+them. I want to establish a system which will enable me to use,
+not only the eyes and hands of Salvation Officers, but of sympathetic
+friends in all parts of the world, for purposes of noticing and
+reporting at once every social experiment of importance, any words of
+wisdom on the social question, whether it may be the breeding of
+rabbits, the organisation of an emigration service, the best method of
+conducting a Cottage Farm, or the best way of cooking potatoes.
+There is nothing in the whole range of our operations upon which we
+should not be accumulating and recording the results of human
+experience. What I want is to get the essence of wisdom which the
+wisest have gathered from the widest experience, rendered instantly
+available for the humblest worker in the Salvation Factory or Farm
+Colony, and for any other toiler in similar fields of social progress.
+
+It can be done, and in the service of the people it ought to be done.
+I look for helpers in this department among those who hitherto may not
+have cared for the Salvation Army, but who in the seclusion of their
+studies and libraries will assist in the compiling of this great Index
+of Sociological Experiments, and who would be willing, in this form,
+to help in this Scheme, as Associates, for the ameliorating of the
+condition of the people, if in nothing else than in using their eyes
+and ears, and giving me the benefit of their brains as to where
+knowledge lies, and how it can best be utilised. I propose to make a
+beginning by putting two capable men and a boy in an office, with
+instructions to cut out, preserve, and verify all contemporary records
+in the daily and weekly press that have a bearing upon any branch of
+our departments. Round these two men and a boy will grow up,
+I confidently believe, a vast organisation of zealous unpaid workers,
+who will co-operate in making our Intelligence Department a great
+storehouse of information--a universal library where any man may
+learn what is the sum of human knowledge upon any branch of the subject
+which we have taken in hand.
+
+
+SECTION 6.--CO-OPERATION IN GENERAL.
+
+If anyone asked me to state in one word what seemed likely to be the
+key of the solution of the Social Problem I should answer
+unhesitatingly Co-operation. It being always understood that it is
+Co-operation conducted on righteous principles, and for wise and
+benevolent ends; otherwise Association cannot be expected to bear any
+more profitable fruit than Individualism. Co-operation is applied
+association--association for the purpose of production and
+distribution. Co-operation implies the voluntary combination of
+individuals to the attaining an object by mutual help, mutual counsel,
+and mutual effort. There is a great deal of idle talk in the world
+just now about capital, as if capital were the enemy of labour.
+It is quite true that there are capitalists not a few who may be
+regarded as the enemies, not only of labour, but of the human race;
+but capital itself, so far from being a natural enemy of labour,
+is the great object which the labourer has constantly in view.
+However much an agitator may denounce capital, his one great grievance
+is that he has not enough of it for himself. Capital, therefore, is
+not an evil in itself; on the contrary, it is good--so good that one
+of the great aims of the social reformer ought to be to facilitate its
+widest possible distribution among his fellow-men. It is the
+congestion of capital that is evil, and the labour question will never
+be finally solved until every labourer is his own capitalist.
+
+All this is trite enough, and has been said a thousand times already,
+but, unfortunately, with the saying of it the matter ends.
+Co-operation has been brought into practice in relation to distribution
+with considerable success, but co-operation, as a means of production,
+has not achieved anything like the success that was anticipated.
+Again and again enterprises have been begun on co-operative principles
+which bid fair, in the opinion of the promoters, to succeed; but after
+one, two, three, or ten years, the enterprise which was started with
+such high hopes has dwindled away into either total or partial failure.
+At present, many co-operative undertakings are nothing more or less
+than huge Joint Stock Limited Liability concerns, shares of which are
+held largely by working people, but not necessarily, and sometimes not
+at all by those who are actually employed in the so-called co-operative
+business. Now, why is this? Why do co-operative firms, co-operative
+factories, and co-operative Utopias so very often come to grief?
+I believe the cause is an open secret, and can be discerned by anyone
+who will look at the subject with an open eye.
+
+The success of industrial concerns is largely a question of management.
+Management signifies government, and government implies authority,
+and authority is the last thing which co-operators of the Utopian order
+are willing to recognise as an element essential to the success of
+their Schemes. The co-operative institution which is governed on
+Parliamentary principles, with unlimited right of debate and right of
+obstruction, will never be able to compete successfully with
+institutions which are directed by a single brain wielding the united
+resources of a disciplined and obedient army of workers. Hence, to
+make co-operation a success you must superadd to the principle of
+consent the principle of authority; you must invest in those to whom
+you entrust the management of your co-operative establishment the same
+liberty of action that is possessed by the owner of works on the other
+side of the repudiation of the rotten and effete regime of the
+Bourbons, the French peasants and workmen imagined that they were
+inaugurating the millennium when they scrawled Liberty, Equality, and
+Fraternity across all the churches in every city of France.
+They carried their principles of freedom and license to the logical
+ultimate, and attempted to manage their army on Parliamentary
+principles. It did not work; their undisciplined levies were driven
+back; disorder reigned in the Republican camp; and the French
+Revolution would have been stifled in its cradle had not the instinct
+of the nation discerned in time the weak point in its armour.
+Menaced by foreign wars and intestine revolt, the Republic established
+an iron discipline in its army, and enforced obedience by the summary
+process of military execution. The liberty and the enthusiasm
+developed by the outburst of the long pent-up revolutionary forces
+supplied the motive power, but it was the discipline of the
+revolutionary armies, the stern, unbending obedience which was enforced
+in all ranks from the highest to the lowest, which created for Napoleon
+the admirable military instrument by which he shattered every throne in
+Europe and swept in triumph from Paris to Moscow.
+
+In industrial affairs we are very much like the French Republic before
+it tempered its doctrine of the rights of man by the duty of obedience
+on the part of the soldier. We have got to introduce discipline into
+the industrial army, we have to superadd the principle of authority to
+the principle of co-operation, and so to enable the worker to profit to
+the full by the increased productiveness of the willing labour of men
+who are employed in their own workshops and on their own property.
+There is no need to clamour for great schemes of State Socialism.
+The whole thing can be done simply, economically, and speedily if only
+the workers will practice as much self-denial for the sake of
+establishing themselves as capitalists, as the Soldiers of the
+Salvation Army practice every year in Self Denial Week. What is the
+sense of never making a levy except during a strike? Instead of calling
+for a shilling, or two shillings, a week in order to maintain men who
+are starving in idleness because of a dispute with their masters,
+why should there not be a levy kept up for weeks or months, by the
+workers, for the purpose of setting themselves up in business as
+masters? There would then be no longer a capitalist owner face to face
+with the masses of the proletariat, but all the means of production,
+the plant, and all the accumulated resources of capital would really be
+at the disposal of labour. This will never be done, however, as long
+as co-operative experiments are carried on in the present archaic
+fashion.
+
+Believing in co-operation as the ultimate solution, if to co-operation
+you can add subordination, I am disposed to attempt something in this
+direction in my new Social Scheme. I shall endeavour to start a
+Co-operative Farm on the principles of Ralahine, and base the whole of
+my Farm Colony on a Co-operative foundation.
+
+In starting this little Co-operative Commonwealth, I am reminded by
+those who are always at a man's elbow to fill him with forebodings of
+ill, to look at the failures, which I have just referred to, which make
+up the history of the attempt to realise ideal commonwealths in this
+practical workaday world. Now, I have read the history of the many
+attempts at co-operation that have been made to form communistic
+settlements in the United States, and am perfectly familiar with the
+sorrowful fate with which nearly all have been overtaken; but the story
+of their failures does not deter me in the least, for I regard them as
+nothing more than warnings to avoid certain mistakes, beacons to
+illustrate the need of proceeding on a different tack.
+Broadly speaking, your experimental communities fail because your
+Utopias all start upon the system of equality and government by vote of
+the majority, and, as a necessary and unavoidable consequence,
+your Utopians get to loggerheads, and Utopia goes to smash, I shall
+avoid that rock. The Farm Colony, like all the other departments of
+the Scheme, will be governed, not on the principle of counting noses,
+but on the exactly opposite principle of admitting no noses into the
+concern that are not willing to be guided by the directing brain.
+It will be managed on principles which assert that the fittest ought to
+rule, and it will provide for the fittest being selected, and having
+got them at the top, will insist on universal and unquestioning
+obedience from those at the bottom. If anyone does not like to work
+for his rations and submit to the orders of his superior Officers he
+can leave. There is no compulsion on him to stay. The world is wide,
+and outside the confines of our Colony and the operations of our Corps
+my authority does not extend. But judging from our brief experience it
+is not from revolt against authority that the Scheme is destined to
+fail.
+
+There cannot be a greater mistake in this world than to imagine that
+men object to be governed. They like to be governed, provided that the
+governor has his "head screwed on right" and that he is prompt to hear
+and ready to see and recognise all that is vital to the interests of
+the commonwealth. So far from there being an innate objection on the
+part of mankind to being governed, the instinct to obey is so universal
+that even when governments have gone blind, and deaf, and paralytic,
+rotten with corruption, and hopelessly behind the times, they still
+contrive to live on. Against a capable Government no people ever
+rebel, only when stupidity and incapacity have taken possession of the
+seat of power do insurrections break out.
+
+
+SECTION 7.--A MATRIMONIAL BUREAU.
+
+There is another direction in which something ought to be done to
+restore the natural advantages enjoyed by every rural community which
+have been destroyed by the increasing tendency of mankind to come
+together in huge masses. I refer to that which is after all one of the
+most important elements in every human life, that of marrying and
+giving in marriage. In the natural life of a country village all the
+lads and lasses grow up together, they meet together in religious
+associations, in daily employments, and in their amusements on the
+village green. They have learned their A, B, C and pothooks together,
+and when the time comes for pairing off they have had excellent
+opportunities of knowing the qualities and the defects of those whom
+they select as their partners in life. Everything in such a community
+lends itself naturally to the indispensable preliminaries of
+love-making, and courtships, which, however much they may be laughed at,
+contribute more than most things to the happiness or life. But in a
+great city all this is destroyed. In London at the present moment how
+many hundreds, nay thousands, of young men and young women, who are
+living in lodgings, are practically without any opportunity of making
+the acquaintance of each other, or of any one of the other sex!
+The street is no doubt the city substitute for the village green,
+and what a substitute it is!
+
+It has been bitterly said by one who knew well what he was talking
+about, "There are thousands of young men to-day who have no right to
+call any woman by her Christian name, except the girls they meet plying
+their dreadful trade in our public thoroughfares." As long as that is
+the case, vice has an enormous advantage over virtue; such an abnormal
+social arrangement interdicts morality and places a vast premium upon
+prostitution. We must get back to nature if we have to cope with this
+ghastly evil. There ought to be more opportunities afforded for
+healthy human intercourse between young men and young women, nor can
+Society rid itself of a great responsibility for all the wrecks of
+manhood and womanhood with which our streets are strewn, unless it does
+make some attempt to bridge this hideous chasm which yawns between the
+two halves of humanity. The older I grow the more absolutely am I
+opposed to anything that violates the fundamental law of the family.
+Humanity is composed of two sexes, and woe be to those who attempt to
+separate them into distinct bodies, making of each half one whole!
+It has been tried in monasteries and convents with but poor success,
+yet what our fervent Protestants do not seem to see is that we are
+reconstructing a similar false system for our young people without the
+safeguards and the restraints of convent walls or the sanctifying
+influence of religious conviction. The conditions of City life,
+the absence of the enforced companionship of the village and small
+town, the difficulty of young people finding harmless opportunities of
+friendly intercourse, all tends to create classes of celibates who are
+not chaste, and whose irregular and lawless indulgence of a universal
+instinct is one of the most melancholy features of the present state of
+society. Nay, so generally is this recognised, that one of the terms
+by which one of the consequences of this unnatural state of things is
+popularly known is "the social evil," as if all other social evils were
+comparatively unworthy of notice in comparison to this.
+
+While I have been busily occupied in working out my Scheme for the
+registration of labour, it has occurred to me more than once, why could
+not something like the same plan be adopted in relation to men who want
+wives and women who want husbands? Marriage is with most people largely
+a matter or opportunity. Many a man and many a woman, who would,
+if they had come together, have formed a happy household, are leading
+at this moment miserable and solitary lives, suffering in body and in
+soul, in consequence of their exclusion from the natural state of
+matrimony. Of course, the registration of the unmarried who wish to
+marry would be a matter of much greater delicacy than the registration
+of the joiners and stone-masons who wish to obtain work. But the thing
+is not impossible. I have repeatedly found in my experience that many
+a man and many a woman would only be too glad to have a friendly hint
+as to where they might prosecute their attentions or from which they
+might receive proposals. In connection with such an agency, if it were
+established--for I am mot engaging to undertake this task--
+I am only throwing out a possible suggestion as to the development in
+the direction of meeting a much needed want, there might be added
+training homes for matrimony. My heart bleeds for many a young couple
+whom I see launching out into the sea of matrimony with no housewifery
+experience. The young girls who leave our public elementary schools
+and go out into factories have never been trained to home duties, and
+yet, when taken to wife, are unreasonably expected to fill worthily the
+difficult positions of the head of a household and the mother of a
+family. A month spent before marriage in a training home of
+housewifery would conduce much more to the happiness of the married
+life than the honeymoon which immediately follows it.
+
+Especially is this the case with those who marry to go abroad and
+settle in a distant country. I often marvel when I think of the utter
+helplessness of the modern woman, compared with the handiness of her
+grandmother. How many of our girls can even bake a loaf? The baker has
+killed out one of our fundamental domestic arts. But if you are in the
+Backwoods or in the Prairie or in the Bush, no baker's cart comes round
+every morning with the new-made bread, and I have often thought with
+sorrow of the kind of stuff which this poor wife must serve up to her
+hungry husband. As it is with baking, so it is with washing, with
+milking, with spinning, with all the arts and sciences of the
+household, which were formerly taught, as a matter of course, to all
+the daughters who were born in the world. Talk about woman's rights,
+one of the first of woman's rights is to be trained to her trade, to be
+queen of her household, and mother of her children.
+
+Speaking of colonists leads me to the suggestion whether something
+could not be done to supply, on a well-organised system, the thousands
+of bachelor miners or the vast host of unmarried males who are
+struggling with the wilderness on the outskirts of civilisation,
+with capable wives from the overplus of marriageable females who abound
+in our great towns. Woman supplied in adequate quantities is the great
+moraliser of Society, but woman doled out as she is in the Far West and
+the Australian bush, in the proportion of one woman to about a dozen
+men, is a fertile source of vice and crime. Here again we must get
+back to nature, whose fundamental laws our social arrangements have
+rudely set on one side with consequences which as usual she does not
+fail to exact with remorseless severity. There have always been born
+into the world and continue to be born boys and girls in fairly equal
+proportions, but with colonising and soldiering our men go away,
+leaving behind them a continually growing surplus of marriageable but
+unmarried spinsters, who cannot spin, and who are utterly unable to
+find themselves husbands. This is a wide field on the discussion of
+which I must not enter. I merely indicate it as one of those
+departments in which an intelligent philanthropy might find a great
+sphere for its endeavours; but it would be better not to touch it at
+all than to deal with it with light-hearted precipitancy and without
+due consideration of all the difficulties and dangers connected
+therewith. Obstacles, however, exist to be overcome and converted into
+victories. There is even a certain fascination about the difficult and
+dangerous, which appeals very strongly to all who know that it is the
+apparently insolvable difficulty which contains within its bosom the
+key to the problem which you are seeking to solve.
+
+
+SECTION 8.--WHITECHAPEL-BY-THE-SEA.
+
+In considering the various means by which some substantial improvement
+can be made in the condition of the toiling masses, recreation cannot
+be omitted. I have repeatedly had forced upon me the desirability of
+making it possible for them to spend a few hours occasionally by the
+seaside, or even at times three or four days. Notwithstanding the
+cheapened rates and frequent excursions, there are multitudes of the
+poor who, year in and out, never get beyond the crowded city, with the
+exception of dragging themselves and their children now and then to the
+parks on holidays or hot summer evenings. The majority, especially the
+inhabitants of the East of London, never get away from the sunless
+alleys and grimy streets in which they exist from year to year.
+It is true that a few here and there of the adult population, and a
+good many of the children, have a sort of annual charity excursion to
+Epping Forest, Hampton Court, or perhaps to the sea. But it is only
+the minority. The vast number, while possessed of a passionate love of
+the sea, which only those who have mixed with them can conceive,
+pass their whole lives without having once looked over its blue waters,
+or watched its waves breaking at their feet.
+
+Now I am not so foolish as to dream that it is possible to make any
+such change in Society as will enable the poor man to take his wife and
+children for a fortnight's sojourn, during the oppressive summer days,
+to brace them up for their winter's task, although this might be as
+desirable in their case as in that of their more highly favoured
+fellow-creatures. But I would make it possible for every man;
+woman and child, to get, now and then, a day's refreshing change by a
+visit to that never-failing source of interest. In the carrying out of
+this plan, we are met at the onset with a difficulty of some little
+magnitude, and that is the necessity of a vastly reduced charge in the
+cost of the journey. To do anything effective we must be able to get a
+man from Whitechapel or Stratford to the sea-side and back for a
+shilling.
+
+Unfortunately, London is sixty miles from the sea. Suppose we take it
+at seventy miles. This would involve a journey of one hundred and
+forty miles for the small sum of 1s. Can this be done? I think it can,
+and done to pay the railway companies; otherwise there is no ground to
+hope for this part of my Scheme ever being realised. But I think that
+this great boon can be granted to the poor people without the dividends
+being sensibly affected. I am told that the cost of haulage for an
+ordinary passenger train, carrying from five hundred to a thousand
+persons, is 2s. 7d. per mile; a railway company could take six
+hundred passengers seventy miles there, and bring them seventy miles
+back, at a cost of #18 1s. 8d. Six hundred passengers at a shilling is
+#30, so that there would be a clear profit to the company of nearly #12
+on the haulage, towards the payment of interest on the capital, wear
+and tear of line, &c. But I reckon, at a very moderate computation,
+that two hundred thousand persons would travel to and fro every season.
+An addition of #10,000 to the exchequer of a railway company is not to
+be despised and this would be a mere bagatelle to the indirect profits
+which would follow the establishment of a settlement which must in due
+course necessarily become very speedily a large and active community.
+
+This it would be necessary to bring home to the railway companies, and
+for the execution of this part of my Scheme I must wait till I get some
+manager sufficiently public-spirited to try the experiment. When such a
+man is found, I purpose to set at once about my Sea-Side Establishment.
+This will present the following special advantages, which I am quite
+certain will be duly appreciated by the very poorest of the London
+population: --
+
+An estate of some three hundred acres would be purchased on which
+buildings would be erected, calculated to meet the wants of this class
+of excursionists.
+
+Refreshments would be provided at rates very similar to those charged
+at our London Food Depots. There would, of course, be greater
+facilities in the way of rooms and accommodation generally.
+
+Lodgings for invalids, children, and those requiring to make a short
+stay in the place would be supplied at the lowest prices. Beds for
+single men and single women could be charged at the low rate of
+sixpence a night, and children in proportion, while accommodation of a
+suitable character, on very moderate terms, could be arranged for
+married people.
+
+No public-houses would be allowed within the precincts of the
+settlement.
+
+A park, playground, music, boats, covered conveniences for bathing,
+without the expense of hiring a machine, and other arrangements for the
+comfort and enjoyment of the people would be provided.
+
+The estate would form one of the Colonies of the general enterprise,
+and on it would be grown fruit, vegetables, flowers, and other produce
+for the use of the visitors, and sold at the lowest remunerative rates.
+One of the first provisions for the comfort of the excursionists would
+be the erection of a large hall, affording ample shelter in case of
+unfavourable weather, and in this and other parts of the place there
+would be the fullest opportunity for ministers of all denominations to
+hold religious services in connection with any excursionists they might
+bring with them.
+
+There would be shops for tradesmen, houses for residets, a museum with
+a panorama and stuffed whale; boats would be let out at moderate
+prices, and a steamer to carry people so many miles out to sea,
+and so many miles back for a penny, with a possible bout of sickness,
+for which no extra charge would be made.
+
+In fact the railway fares and refreshment arrangements would be on such
+a scale, that a husband and wife could have a 70-mile ride through the
+green fields, the new-mown hay, the waving grain or fruit laden
+orchards; could wander for hours on the seashore, have comforting and
+nourishing refreshment, and be landed back at home sober, cheered and
+invigorated for the small sum of 3s. A couple of children under 12
+might be added at 1s. 6d.--nay, a whole family, husband, wife and
+four children, supposing one is in arms, could have a day at the
+seaside, without obligation or charity, for 5s.
+
+The gaunt, hungry inhabitants of the Slums would save up their
+halfpence, and come by thousands; clergymen would find it possible to
+bring half the poor and needy occupants of their parishes; schools,
+mothers' meetings, and philanthropic societies of all descriptions
+would come down wholesale; in short, what Brighton is to the West End
+and middle classes, this place would be to the East End poor, nay, to
+the poor of the Metropolis generally, a Whitechapel-by-the-Sea.
+
+Now this ought to be done apart from my Scheme altogether. The rich
+corporations which have the charge of the affairs of this great City,
+and the millionaires, who would never have amassed their fortunes but
+by the assistance of the masses, ought to say it shall be done.
+Suppose the Railway Companies refused to lend the great highways of
+which they have become the monopolists for such an undertaking without
+a subvention, then the necessary subvention should be forthcoming.
+If it could be made possible for the joyless toilers to come out of the
+sweater's den, or the stifling factory; if the seamstress could leave
+her needle, and the mother get away from the weary round of babydom and
+household drudgery for a day now and then, to the cooling,
+invigorating, heart-stirring influences of the sea, it should be done,
+even if it did cost a few paltry thousands. Let the men and women who
+spend a little fortune every year in Continental tours, Alpine
+climbings, yacht excursions, and many another form of luxurious
+wanderings, come forward and say that it shall be possible for these
+crowds of their less fortunate brethren to have the opportunity of
+spending one day at least in the year by the sea.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+CAN IT BE DONE, AND HOW?
+
+SECTION 1.--THE CREDENTIALS OF THE SALVATION ARMY.
+
+Can this great work be done? I believe it can. And I believe that it
+can be done by the Salvation Army, because it has ready to hand an
+organisation of men and women, numerous enough and zealous enough to
+grapple with the enormous undertaking. The work may prove beyond our
+powers. But this is not so manifest as to preclude us from wishing to
+make the attempt. That in itself is a qualification which is shared by
+no other organisation--at present. If we can do it we have the field
+entirely to ourselves. The wealthy churches show no inclination to
+compete for the onerous privilege of making the experiment in this
+definite and practical form. Whether we have the power or not,
+we have, at least, the will, the ambition to do this great thing for
+the sake of our brethren, and therein lies our first credential for
+being entrusted with the enterprise.
+
+The second credential is the fact that, while using all material means,
+our reliance is on the co-working power of God. We keep our powder
+dry, but we trust in Jehovah. We go not forth in our own strength to
+this battle, our dependence is upon Him who can influence the heart of
+man. There is no doubt that the most satisfactory method of raising a
+man must be to effect such a change in his views and feelings that he
+shall voluntarily abandon his evil ways, give himself to industry and
+goodness in the midst of the very temptations and companionships that
+before led him astray, and live a Christian life, an example in himself
+of what can be done by the power of God in the very face of the most
+impossible circumstances.
+
+But herein lies the great difficulty again and again referred to,
+men have not that force of character which will constrain them to avail
+themselves of the methods of deliverance. Now our Scheme is based on
+the necessity of helping such.
+
+Our third credential is the fact that we have already out of
+practically nothing achieved so great a measure of success that we
+think we may reasonably be entrusted with this further duty.
+The ordinary operations of the Army have already effected most
+wonderful changes in the conditions of the poorest and worst.
+Multitudes of slaves of vice in every form have been delivered not only
+from these habits, but from the destitution and misery which they even
+produce. Instances have been given. Any number more can be produced.
+Our experience, which has been almost world-wide, has ever shown that
+not only does the criminal become honest, the drunkard sober,
+the harlot chaste, but that poverty of the most abject and helpless
+type vanishes away. Our fourth credential is that our Organisation
+alone of England's religious bodies is founded upon the principle of
+implicit obedience.
+
+For Discipline I can answer. The Salvation Army, largely recruited
+from among the poorest of the poor, is often reproached by its enemies
+on account of the severity of its rule. It is the only religious body
+founded in our time that is based upon the principle of voluntary
+subjection to an absolute authority. No one is bound to remain in the
+Army a day longer than he pleases. While he remains there he is bound
+by the conditions of the Service. The first condition of that Service
+is implicit, unquestioning obedience. The Salvationist is taught to
+obey as is the soldier on the field of battle.
+
+From the time when the Salvation Army began to acquire strength and to
+grow from the grain of mustard seed until now, when its branches
+overshadow the whole earth, we have been constantly warned against the
+evils which this autocratic system would entail. Especially were we
+told that in a democratic age the people would never stand the
+establishment of what was described as a spiritual despotism.
+It was contrary to the spirit of the times, it would be a stone of
+stumbling and a rock of offence to the masses to whom we appeal,
+and so forth and so forth.
+
+But what has been the answer of accomplished facts to these predictions
+of theorists? Despite the alleged unpopularity of our discipline,
+perhaps because of the rigour of military authority upon which we have
+insisted, the Salvation Army has grown from year to year with a
+rapidity to which nothing in modern Christendom affords any parallel.
+It is only twenty-five years since it was born. It is now the largest
+Home and Foreign Missionary Society in the Protestant world. We have
+nearly 10,000 officers under our orders, a number increasing every day,
+every one of whom has taken service on the express condition that he or
+she will obey without questioning or gainsaying the orders from
+Headquarters. Of these, 4,600 are in Great Britain. The greatest
+number outside these islands, in any one country, are in the American
+Republic, where we have 1,018 officers, and democratic Australia,
+where we have 800.
+
+Nor is the submission to our discipline a mere paper loyalty.
+These officers are in the field, constantly exposed to privation
+and ill-treatment of all kinds. A telegram from me will send any of
+them to the uttermost parts of the earth, will transfer them from the
+Slums of London to San Francisco, or despatch them to assist in opening
+missions in Holland, Zululand, Sweden, or South America. So far from
+resenting the exercise of authority, the Salvation Army rejoices to
+recognise it as one great secret of its success, a pillar of strength
+upon which all its soldiers can rely, a principle which stamps it as
+being different from all other religious organisations founded in our
+day.
+
+With ten thousand officers, trained to obey, and trained equally to
+command, I do not feel that the organisation even of the disorganised,
+sweated, hopeless, drink-sodden denizens of darkest England is
+impossible. It is possible, because it has already been accomplished
+in the case of thousands who, before they were saved, were even such as
+those whose evil lot we are now attempting to deal with.
+
+Our fifth credential is the extent and universality of the Army.
+What a mighty agency for working out the Scheme is found in the Army in
+this respect! This will be apparent when we consider that it has
+already stretched itself through over thirty different Countries and
+Colonies, with a permanent location in something like 4,000 different
+places, that it has either soldiers or friends sufficiently in sympathy
+with it to render assistance in almost every considerable population in
+the civilised world, and in much of the uncivilised, that it has nearly
+10,000 separated officers whose training, and leisure, and history
+qualify them to become its enthusiastic and earnest co-workers.
+In fact, our whole people will hail it as the missing link in the great
+Scheme for the regeneration of mankind, enabling them to act out those
+impulses of their hearts which are ever prompting them to do good to
+the bodies as well as to the souls of men.
+
+Take the meetings. With few exceptions, every one of these four
+thousand centres has a Hall in which, on every evening in the week and
+from early morning until nearly midnight on every Sabbath, services are
+being held; that nearly every service held indoors is preceded by one
+out of doors, the special purport of every one being the saving of
+these wretched crowds. Indeed, when this Scheme is perfected and
+fairly at work, every meeting and every procession will be looked upon
+as an advertisement of the earthly as well as the heavenly conditions
+of happiness. And every Barracks and Officer's quarters will become a
+centre where poor sinful suffering men and women may find sympathy,
+counsel, and practical assistance in every sorrow that can possibly
+come upon them, and every Officer throughout our ranks in every quarter
+of the globe will become a co-worker.
+
+See how useful our people will be in the gathering in of this class.
+They are in touch with them. They live in the same street, work in the
+same shops and factories, and come in contact with them at every turn
+and corner of life. If they don't live amongst them, they formerly did.
+They know where to find them; they are their old chums, pot-house
+companions, and pals in crime and mischief. This class is the
+perpetual difficulty of a Salvationist's life. He feels that there is
+no help for them in the conditions in which they are at present found.
+They are so hopelessly weak, and their temptations are so terribly
+strong, that they go down before them. The Salvationist feels this
+when he attacks them in the tap-rooms, in the low lodging houses, or in
+their own desolate homes. Hence, with many, the Crusader has lost all
+heart. He has tried them so often. But this Scheme of taking them
+right away from their old haunts and temptations will put new life into
+him and he will gather up the poor social wrecks wholesale, pass them
+along, and then go and hunt for more.
+
+Then see how useful this army of Officers and Soldiers will be for the
+regeneration of this festering mass of vice and crime when it is, so to
+speak, in our possession. All the thousands of drunkards, and harlots,
+and blasphemers, and idlers have to be made over again, to be renewed
+in the spirit of their minds, that is--made good. What a host of
+moral workers will be required to accomplish such a gigantic
+transformation. In the Army we have a few thousands ready, anyway we
+have as many as can be used at the outset, and the Scheme itself will
+go on manufacturing more. Look at the qualifications of these warriors
+for the work!
+
+They have been trained themselves, brought into line and are examples
+of the characters we want to produce.
+
+They understand their pupils--having been dug out of the same pit.
+Set a rogue to catch a rogue, they say, that is, we suppose, are formed
+rogue. Anyway, it is so with us. These rough-and-ready warriors will
+work shoulder to shoulder with them in the same manual employment.
+They will engage in the task for love. This is a substantial part of
+their religion, the moving instinct of the new heavenly nature that has
+come upon them. They want to spend their lives in doing good.
+Here will be an opportunity.
+
+Then see how useful these Soldiers will be for distribution!
+Every Salvation Officer and Soldier in every one of these 4,000
+centres, scattered through these thirty odd countries and colonies,
+with all their correspondents and friends and comrades living
+elsewhere, will be ever on the watch-tower looking out for homes and
+employments where these rescued men and women can be fixed up to
+advantage, nursed into moral vigour, picked up again on stumbling,
+and watched over generally until able to travel the rough and slippery
+paths of life alone.
+
+I am, therefore, not without warrant for my confidence in the
+possibility of doing great things, if the problem so long deemed
+hopeless be approached with intelligence and determination on a scale
+corresponding to the magnitude of the evil with which we have to cope.
+
+
+SECTION 2.--HOW MUCH WILL IT COST?
+
+A considerable amount of money will be required to fairly launch this
+Scheme, and some income may be necessary to sustain it for a season,
+but, once fairly afloat, we think there is good reason to believe that
+in all its branches it will be self-supporting, unless its area of
+operation is largely extended, on which we fully rely. Of course,
+the cost of the effort must depend very much upon its magnitude.
+If anything is to be done commensurate with the extent of the evil,
+it will necessarily require a proportionate outlay. If it is only the
+drainage of a garden that is undertaken, a few pounds will meet the
+cost, but if it is a great dismal swamp of many miles in area,
+harbouring all manner of vermin, and breeding all kinds of deadly
+malaria, that has to be reclaimed and cultivated, a very different sum
+will not only be found necessary, but be deemed an economic investment.
+
+Seeing that the country pays out something like Ten Millions per annum
+in Poor Law and Charitable Relief without securing any real abatement
+of the evil, I cannot doubt that the public will hasten to supply
+one-tenth of that sum. If you reckon that of the submerged tenth we
+have one million to deal with, this will only be one pound per head for
+each of those whom it is sought to benefit, or say ONE MILLION STERLING
+to give the present Scheme a fair chance of getting into practical
+operation.
+
+According to the amount furnished, must necessarily be the extent of
+our operations. We have carefully calculated that with one hundred
+thousand pounds the scheme can be successfully set in motion,
+and that it can be kept going on an annual income of #30,000
+which is about three and a-quarter per cent. on the balance of the
+million sterling, for which I ask as an earnest that the public intend
+to put its hand to this business with serious resolution; and our
+judgment is based, not on any mere imaginings, but upon the actual
+result of the experiments already made. Still it must be remembered
+that so vast and desirable an end cannot be even practically
+contemplated without a proportionate financial outlay. Supposing,
+however, by the subscription of this amount the undertaking is fairly
+set afloat. The question may be asked, "What further funds will be
+required for its efficient maintenance?" This question we proceed to
+answer. Let us look at the three Colonies apart, and then at some of
+the circumstances which apply to the whole. To begin with, there is
+
+THE FINANCIAL ASPECT OF THE CITY COLONY.
+
+Here there will be, of course, a considerable outlay required for the
+purchasing and fitting up of property, the acquisition of machinery,
+furniture, tools, and the necessary plant for carrying forward all
+these varied operations. These once acquired, no further outlay will
+be needed except for the necessary reparations.
+
+The Homes for the Destitute will be nearly, if not quite, self-sustaining.
+The Superior Homes for both Single and Married people will not only pay
+for themselves, but return some interest on the amount invested, which
+would be devoted to the futherance of other parts of the Scheme.
+
+The Refuges for Fallen Girls would require considerable funds to keep
+them going. But the public has never been slow to practically express
+its sympathy with this class of work.
+
+The Criminal Homes and Prison Gate Operations would require continued
+help, but not a very great deal. Then, the work in the Slums is
+somewhat expensive. The eighty young women at present engaged in it
+cost on an average 12s. per week each for personal maintenance,
+inclusive of clothes and other little matters, and there are expenses
+for Halls and some little relief which cannot in anyway be avoided,
+bringing our present annual Slum outlay to over #4,000. But the poor
+people amongst whom they work notwithstanding their extreme poverty,
+are already contributing over #1,000 per annum towards this amount,
+which income will increase. Still as by this Scheme we propose to add
+at once a hundred to the number already engaged, money will be required
+to keep th is department going.
+
+The Inebriate Home, I calculate, will maintain itself. All its inmates
+will have to engage in some kind of remunerative labour, and we
+calculate, in addition, upon receiving money with a considerable number
+of those availing themselves of its benefits. But to practically
+assist the half-million slaves of the cup we must have money not only
+to launch out but to keep our operations going.
+
+The Food Depots, once fitted up, pay their own working expenses.
+
+The Emigration, Advice, and Inquiry Bureaux must maintain themselves or
+nearly so. The Labour Shops, Anti-Sweating, and other similar
+operations will without question require money to make ends meet.
+But on the whole, a very small sum of money, in proportion to the
+immense amount of work done, will enable us to accomplish a vast deal
+of good.
+
+THE FARM COLONY FROM A FINANCIAL POINT OF VIEW.
+
+Let us now turn to the Farm Colony, and consider it from a monetary
+standpoint. Here also a certain amount of money will have to be
+expended at the outset; some of the chief items of which will be the
+purchase of land, the erection of buildings, the supply of stock, and
+the production of first crops. There is an abundance of land in the
+market, at the present time, at very low prices. It is rather
+important for the initial experiment that an estate should be obtained
+not too far from London, with land suitable for immediate cultivation.
+Such an estate would beyond question be expensive. After a time,
+I have no doubt, we shall be able to deal with land of almost any
+quality (and that in almost any part of the country), in consequence of
+the superabundance of labour we shall possess. There is no question if
+the scheme goes forward, but that estates will be required in
+connection with all our large towns and cities. I am not without hope
+that a sufficient quantity of land will be given, or, in any way,
+sold to us on very favourable terms.
+
+When acquired and stocked, it is calculated that this land,
+if cultivated by spade husbandry, will support at least two persons
+per acre. The ordinary reckoning of those who have had experience
+with allotments gives five persons to three acres.
+But, even supposing that this calculation is a little too sanguine,
+we can still reckon a farm of 500 acres supporting, without any
+outside assistance, say, 750 persons. But, in this Scheme, we should
+have many advantages not possessed by the simple peasant, such as
+those resulting from combination, market gardening, and the other
+forms of cultivation already referred to, and thus we should want to
+place two or three times this number on that quantity of land.
+
+By a combination of City and Town Colonies, there will be a market for
+at least a large portion of the products. At the rate of our present
+consumption in the London Food Depots and Homes for the Destitute
+alone, at least 50 acres would be required for potatoes alone,
+and every additional Colonist would be an additional consumer.
+
+There will be no rent to pay, as it is proposed to buy the land right
+out. In the event of a great rush being made for the allotment's
+spoken of, further land might be rented, with option of purchase.
+
+Of course, the continuous change of labourers would tell against the
+profitableness of the undertaking. But this would be proportionally
+beneficial to the country, seeing that everyone who passes through the
+institution with credit makes one less in the helpless crowd.
+
+The rent of Cottages and Allotments would constitute a small return,
+and at least pay interest on the money invested in them.
+
+The labour spent upon the Colony would be constantly increasing its
+money value. Cottages would be built, orchards planted, land enriched,
+factories run up, warehouses erected, while other improvements would be
+continually going forward. All the labour and a large part of the
+material would be provided by the Colonists themselves.
+
+It may be suggested that the worker would nave to be maintained during
+the progress of these erections and manufactures, the cost of which
+would in itself amount to a considerable sum. Truer and for this the
+first outlay would be required. But after this every cottage erected,
+every road made, in short every structure and improvement, would be a
+means of carrying forward the regenerating process, and in many cases
+it is expected will become a source of income.
+
+As the Scheme progresses, it is not irrational to expect that
+Government, or some of the varied Local Authorities, will assist in the
+working out of a plan which, in so marked a manner, will relieve the
+rates and taxes or the country.
+
+The salaries of Officers would be in keeping with those given in the
+Salvation Army, which are very low.
+
+No wages would be paid to Colonists, as has been described, beyond
+pocket money and a trifle for extra service.
+
+Although no permanent invalid would be knowingly taken into the
+Colonies, it is fair to assume that there will be a certain number,
+and also a considerable residuum of naturally indolent, half-witted
+people, incapable of improvement, left upon our hands. Still, it is
+thought that with reformed habits, variety of employment, and careful
+oversight, such may be made to earn their own maintenance, at least,
+especially when it is borne in mind that unless they work, so far as
+they have ability, they cannot remain in the Colony.
+
+If the Household Salvage Scheme which has been explained in Chapter II.
+proves the success we anticipate, there can be no question that great
+financial assistance will be rendered by it to the entire scheme when
+once the whole thing has been brought into working order.
+
+THE FINANCIAL ASPECT OF THE COLONY OVER-SEA.
+
+Let us now turn to the Colony Over-Sea, and regard it also from the
+financial standpoint. Here we must occupy ourselves chiefly with the
+preliminary outlay, as we could not for a moment contemplate having to
+find money to assist it when once fairly established. The initial
+expense will, no doubt, be somewhat heavy, but not beyond a reasonable
+amount.
+
+The land required would probably be given, whether we go to Africa,
+Canada, or elsewhere; anyway, it would be acquired on such easy terms
+as would be a near approach to a gift.
+
+A considerable sum would certainly be necessary for effecting the first
+settlements. There would be temporary buildings to erect, land to
+break up and crop; stock, farm implements, and furniture to purchase,
+and other similar expenses. But this would not be undertaken on a
+large scale, as we should rely, to some extent, on the successive
+batches of Colonists more or less providing for themselves, and in this
+respect working out their own salvation.
+
+The amount advanced for passages, outfit money, and settlement would be
+repaid by instalments by the Colonists, which would in turn serve to
+pay the cost of conveying others to the same destination.
+
+Passage and outfit money would, no doubt, continue to be some
+difficulty. #8 per head, say to Africa--#5 passage money, and #3 for
+the journey across the country--is a large sum when a considerable
+number are involved; and I am afraid no Colony would be reached at a
+much lower rate. But I am not without hope that the Government might
+assist us in this direction.
+
+Taking up the entire question, that is of the three Colonies, we are
+satisfied that the sum named will suffice to set to work an agency
+which will probably rescue from lives of degradation and immorality an
+immense number of people, and that an income of something like #30,000
+will keep it afloat. But supposing that a much larger amount should be
+required, by operations greatly in advance of those here spoken of,
+which we think exceedingly probable, it is not unreasonable to expect
+that it will be forthcoming, seeing that caring for the poor is not
+only a duty of universal obligation, a root principle of all religion,
+but an instinct of humanity not likely to be abolished in our time.
+We are not opposed to charity as such, but to the mode of its
+administration, which, instead of permanently relieving, only
+demoralises and plunges the recipients lower in the mire, and so
+defeats its own purpose.
+
+"What!" I think I hear some say, "a million sterling! how can any man
+out of Bedlam dream of raising such a sum?" Stop a little! A million
+may be a great deal to pay for a diamond or a palace, but it is a mere
+trifle compared with the sums which Britain lavishes whenever Britons
+are in need of deliverance if they happen to be imprisoned abroad.
+The King of Ashantee had captive some British subjects--not even of
+English birth--in 1869. John Bull despatched General Wolseley with
+the pick of the British army, who smashed Koffee Kalkallee, liberated
+the captives, and burnt Coomassie, and never winced when the bill came
+in for #750,000. But that was a mere trifle. When King Theodore,
+of Abyssinia, made captives of a couple of British representatives,
+Lord Napier was despatched to rescue. He marched his army to Magdala,
+brought back the prisoners, and left King Theodore dead.
+The cost of that expedition was over nine millions sterling.
+The Egyptian Campaign, that smashed Arabi, cost nearly five millions.
+The rush to Khartoum, that arrived too late to rescue General Gordon,
+cost at least as much. The Afghan war cost twenty-one millions
+sterling. Who dares then to say that Britain cannot provide a million
+sterling to rescue, not one or two captives, but a million, whose lot
+is quite as doleful as that of the prisoners of savage kings, but who
+are to be found, not in the land of the Soudan, or in the swamps of
+Ashantee, or in the Mountains of the Moon, but here at our very doors?
+Don't talk to me about the impossibility of raising the million.
+Nothing is impossible when Britain is in earnest. All talk of
+impossibility only means that you don't believe that the nation cares
+to enter upon a serious campaign against the enemy at our gates.
+When John Bull goes to the wars he does not count the cost. And who
+dare deny that the time has fully come for a declaration of war against
+the Social Evils which seem to shut out God from this our world?
+
+
+SECTION 3.--SOME ADVANTAGES STATED.
+
+This Scheme takes into its embrace all kinds and classes of men who may
+be in destitute circumstances, irrespective of their character or
+conduct, and charges itself with supplying at once their temporal
+needs; and then aims at placing them in a permanent position of
+comparative comfort, the only stipulation made being a willingness to
+work and to conform to discipline on the part of those receiving its
+benefit.
+
+While at the commencement, we must impose some limits with respect to
+age and sickness, we hope, when fairly at work, to be able to dispense
+with even these restrictions, and to receive any unfortunate individual
+who has only his misery to recommend him and an honest desire to get
+out of it.
+
+It will be seen that, in this respect, the Scheme stands head and
+shoulders above any plan that has ever been mooted before, seeing that
+nearly all the other charitable and remedial proposals more or less
+confess their utter inability to benefit any but what they term the
+"decent" working man.
+
+This Scheme seeks out by all manner of agencies, marvellously adapted
+for the task, the classes whose welfare it contemplates, and, by varied
+measures and motives adapted to their circumstances, compels them to
+accept its benefits.
+
+Our Plan contemplates nothing short of revolutionising the character of
+those whose faults are the reason for their destitution. We have seen
+that with fully fifty per cent. of these their own evil conduct is the
+cause of their wretchedness. To stop short with them of anything less
+than a real change of heart will be to invite and ensure failure.
+But this we are confident of effecting--anyway, in the great majority
+of cases, by reasonings and persuasions, concerning both earthly and
+heavenly advantages, by the power of man, and by the power of God.
+
+By this Scheme any man, no matter how deeply he may have fallen in
+self-respect and the esteem of all about him, may re-enter life afresh,
+with the prospect of re-establishing his character when lost,
+or perhaps of establishing a character for the first time, and so
+obtaining an introduction to decent employment, and a claim for
+admission into Society as a good citizen. While many of this crowd are
+absolutely without a decent friend, others will have, on that higher
+level of respectability they once occupied, some relative, or friend,
+or employer, who occasionally thinks of them, and who, if only
+satisfied that a real change has taken place in the prodigal, will not
+only be willing, but delighted, to help them once more.
+
+By this Scheme, we believe we shall be able to teach habits of economy,
+household management, thrift, and the like. There are numbers of men
+who, although suffering the direst pangs of poverty, know little or
+nothing about the value of money, or the prudent use of it; and there
+are hundreds of poor women who do not know what a decently-managed home
+is, and who could not make one if they had the most ample means and
+tried ever so hard to accomplish it, having never seen anything but
+dirt, disorder, and misery in their domestic history. They could not
+cook a dinner or prepare a meal decently if their lives were dependent
+on it, never having had a chance of learning how to do it. But by this
+Scheme hope to teach these things.
+
+By this Plan, habits of cleanliness will be created, and some
+knowledge of sanitary questions in general will be imparted.
+This Scheme changes the circumstances of those whose poverty is caused
+by their misfortune. To begin with, it finds work for the unemployed.
+This is the chief need. The great problem that has for ages been
+puzzling the brains of the political economist and philanthropist has
+been "How can we find these people work?" No matter what other helps
+are discovered, without work there is no real ground for hope.
+Charity and all the other ten thousand devices are only temporary
+expedients, altogether insufficient to meet the necessity. Work, apart
+from the fact that it is God's method of supplying the wants of man's
+composite nature, is an essential to his well-being in every way--
+and on this Plan there is work, honourable work--none of your
+demoralising stone-breaking, or oakum-picking business, which
+tantalises and insults poverty, Every worker will feel that he is not
+only occupied for his own benefit, but that any advantage reaped over
+and above that which he gains himself will serve to lift some other
+poor wretch out of the gutter.
+
+There would be work within the capacity of all. Every gift could be
+employed. For instance, take five persons on the Farm--a baker,
+a tailor, a shoemaker, a cook, and an agriculturist. The baker would
+make bread for all, the tailor garments for all, the shoemaker shoes
+for all, the cook would cook for all, and the agriculturist dig for all.
+Those who know anything which would be useful to the inhabitants of
+the Colony will be set to do it, and those who are ignorant of any
+trade or profession will be taught one.
+
+This Scheme removes the vicious and criminal classes out of the sphere
+of those temptations before which they have invariably fallen in the
+past. Our experience goes to show that when you have, by Divine grace,
+or by any consideration of the advantages of a good life, or the
+disadvantages of a bad one, produced in a man circumstanced as those
+whom we have been describing, the resolution to turn over a new leaf,
+the temptations and difficulties he has to encounter will ordinarily
+master him, and undo all that has been done, if he still continues to
+be surrounded by old companions and allurements to sin.
+
+Now, look at the force of the temptations this class has to fight
+against. What is it that leads people to do wrong--people of all
+classes, rich as well as poor? Not the desire to sin. They do not want
+to sin; many of them do not know what sin is, but they have certain
+appetites or natural likings, the indulgence of which is pleasant to
+them, and when the desire for their unlawful gratification is aroused,
+regardless of the claims of God, their own highest interests, or the
+well-being of their fellows, they are carried away by them; and thus
+all the good resolutions they have made in the past come to grief.
+
+For instance, take the temptation which comes through the natural
+appetite, hunger. Here is a man who has been at a religious meeting,
+or received some good advice, or, perhaps, just come out of prison,
+with the memories of the hardships he has suffered fresh upon him, or
+the advice of the chaplain ringing in his ears. He has made up his
+mind to steal no more, but he has no means of earning a livelihood.
+He becomes hungry. What is he to do? A loaf of bread tempts him, or,
+more likely, a gold chain which he can turn into bread. An inward
+struggle commences, he tries to stick to his bargain, but the hunger
+goes on gnawing within, and it may be there is a wife and children
+hungry as well as himself; so he yields to the temptation, takes the
+chain, and in turn the policeman takes him.
+
+Now this man does not want to do wrong, and still less does he want to
+go to prison. In a sincere, dreamy way he desires to be good,
+and if the path were easier for him he would probably walk in it.
+
+Again, there is the appetite for drink. That man has no thought of
+sinning when he takes his first glass. Much less does he want to get
+drunk. He may have still a vivid recollection of the unpleasant
+consequences that followed his last spree, but the craving is on him;
+the public-house is there handy; his companions press him; he yields,
+and falls, and, perhaps, falls to rise no more.
+
+We might amplify, but our Scheme proposes to take the poor slave right
+away from the public-houses, the drink, and the companions that allure
+him to it, and therefore we think the chances of reformation in him are
+far greater.
+
+Then think of the great boon this Scheme will be to the children,
+bringing them out of the slums, wretched hovels, and filthy surroundings
+in which they are being reared for lives of abomination of every
+description, into the fields, amongst the green trees and cottage homes,
+where they can grow up with a chance of saving both body and soul.
+
+Think again of the change this Scheme will make for these poor
+creatures from the depressing, demoralising surroundings, of the
+unsightly, filthy quarters in which they are huddled together, to the
+pure air and sights and sounds of the country. There is much talk
+about the beneficial influence of pictures, music and literature upon
+the multitudes. Money, like water, is being poured forth to supply
+such attractions in Museums, People's Palaces, and the like, for the
+edification and amelioration of the social condition of the masses.
+But "God made the country, man made the town," and if we take the
+people to the pictures of divine manufacture, that must be the superior
+plan.
+
+Again, the Scheme is capable of illimitable application. The plaister
+can be made as large as the wound. The wound is certainly a very
+extensive one, and it seems at first sight almost ridiculous for any
+private enterprise to attempt dealing with it. Three millions of
+people, living in little short of perpetual misery have to be reached
+and rescued out of this terrible condition. But it can be done, and
+this Scheme will do it, if it is allowed a fair chance. Not all at
+once? True! It will take time, but it will begin to tell on the
+restering mass straight away. Within a measurable distance we ought
+to be able to take out of this black sea at least a hundred individuals
+a week, and there is no reason why this number should not go on
+increasing.
+
+An appreciable impression on this gulf of misery would be immediately
+made, not only for those who are rescued from its dark waters,
+but for those who are left behind, seeing that for every hundred
+individuals removed, there is just the additional work which they
+performed for those who remain. It might not be much, but still it
+would soon count up. Supposing three carpenters are starving on
+employment which covered one-third of their time, if you take two away,
+the one left will have full employment. But it will be for the public
+to fix, by their contributions, the extent of our operations.
+
+The benefits bestowed by this Scheme will be permanent in duration.
+It will be seen that this is no temporary expedient, such as, alas!
+nearly every effort hitherto made on behalf of these classes has been.
+Relief Works, Soup Kitchens, Enquiries into Character, Emigration
+Schemes, of which none will avail themselves, Charity in its hundred
+forms, Casual Wards, the Union, and a hundred other Nostrums may serve
+for the hour, but they are only at the best palliations. But this
+Scheme, I am bold to say, offers a substantial and permanent remedy.
+
+In relieving one section of the community, our plan involves no
+interference with the well-being of any other.
+(See Chapter VII. Section 4, "Objections.")
+
+This Scheme removes the all but insuperable barrier to an industrious
+and godly life. It means not only the leading of these lost multitudes
+out of the "City of Destruction" into the Canaan of plenty, but the
+lifting of them up to the same level of advantage with the more
+favoured of mankind for securing the salvation of their souls.
+
+Look at the circumstances of hundreds and thousands of the classes of
+whom we are speaking. From the cradle to the grave, might not their
+influence in the direction of Religious Belief be summarised in one
+sentence, "Atheism made easy." Let my readers imagine theirs to have
+been a similar lot. Is it not possible that, under such circumstances,
+they might have entertained some serious doubts as to the existence of
+a benevolent God who would thus allow His creatures to starve, or that
+they would have been so preoccupied with their temporal miseries as to
+have no heart for any concern about the next life?
+
+Take a man, hungry and cold, who does not know where his next meal is
+coming from; nay, who thinks it problematical whether it will come at
+all. We know his thoughts will be taken up entirely with the bread he
+needs for his body. What he wants is a dinner. The interests of his
+soul must wait.
+
+Take a woman with a starving family, who knows that as soon as Monday
+comes round the rent must be paid, or else she and her children must
+go into the street, and her little belongings be impounded.
+At the present moment she is without it. Are not her thoughts likely
+to wander in that direction if she slips into a Church or Mission Hall,
+or Salvation Army Barracks?
+
+I have had some experience on this subject, and have been making
+observations with respect to it ever since the day I made my first
+attempt to reach these starving, hungry, crowds--just over forty-five
+years ago--and I am quite satisfied that these multitudes will not be
+saved in their present circumstances. All the Clergymen.
+Home Missionaries, Tract Distributors, Sick Visitors, and everyone else
+who care about the Salvation of the poor, may make up their minds as to
+that. If these people are to believe in Jesus Christ, become the
+Servants of God, and escape the miseries of the wrath to come, they
+must be helped out of their present social miseries. They must be put
+into a position in which they can work and eat, and have a decent room
+to live and sleep in, and see something before them besides a long,
+weary, monotonous, grinding round of toil, and anxious care to keep
+themselves and those they love barely alive, with nothing at the
+further end but the Hospital, the Union, or the Madhouse. If Christian
+Workers and Philanthropists will join hands to effect this change it
+will be accomplished, and the people will rise up and bless them, and
+be saved; if they will not, the people will curse them and perish.
+
+
+SECTION 4.--SOME OBJECTIONS MET.
+
+Objections must be expected. They are a necessity with regard to any
+Scheme that has not yet been reduced to practice, and simply signify
+foreseen difficulties in the working of it. We freely admit that there
+are abundance of difficulties in the way of working out the plan
+smoothly and successfully that has been laid down. But many of these
+we imagine will vanish when we come to close quarters, and the
+remainder will be surmounted by courage and patience. Should, however,
+this plan prove the success we predict, it must eventually
+revolutionise the condition of the starving sections of Society,
+not only in this great metropolis, but throughout the whole range of
+civilisation. It must therefore be worthy not only of a careful
+consideration but of persevering trial.
+
+Some of these difficulties at first sight appear rather serious.
+Let us look at them.
+
+Objection I.--It is suggested that the class of people for whose
+benefit the Scheme is designed would not avail themselves of it.
+
+When the feast was prepared and the invitation had gone forth,
+it is said that the starving multitudes would not come; that though
+labour was offered them in the City, or prepared for them on the Farm,
+they would prefer to rot in their present miseries rather than avail
+themselves of the benefit provided.
+
+In order to gather the opinions of those most concerned, we consulted
+one evening, by a Census in our London Shelters, two hundred and fifty
+men out of work, and all suffering severely in consequence.
+We furnished a set of questions, and obtained answers from the whole.
+Now, it must be borne in mind that these men were under no obligation
+whatever to make any reply to our enquiries, much less to answer them
+favourably to our plan, of which they knew next to nothing.
+
+These two hundred and fifty men were mostly in the prime of life,
+the greater portion of them being skilled workmen; an examination of
+the return papers showing that out of the entire number two hundred and
+seven were able to work at their trades had they the opportunity.
+
+The number of trades naturally varied. There were some of all kinds:
+Engineers, Custom House Officers, Schoolmasters, Watch and Clockmakers,
+Sailors, and men of the different branches of the Building trade;
+also a number of men who have been in business on their own account.
+
+The average amount of wages earned by the skilled mechanics when
+regularly employed was 33s. per week; the money earned by the
+unskilled averaged 22s. per week.
+
+They could not be accounted lazy, as most of them; when not employed
+at their own trade or occupation, had proved their willingness to work
+by getting jobs at anything that turned up. On looking over the list
+we saw that one who had been a Custom House Officer had recently acted
+as Carpenter's Labourer; a Type-founder had been glad to work at
+Chimney Sweeping; the Schoolmaster, able to speak five languages, who
+in his prosperous days had owned a farm, was glad to do odd jobs as a
+Bricklayer's Labourer; a Gentleman's Valet, who once earned #5 a week,
+had come so low down in the world that he was glad to act as Sandwich
+man for the magnificent sum of fourteenpence a day, and that, only as
+an occasional affair.
+
+In the list was a dyer and cleaner, married, with a wife and nine
+children, who had been able to earn 40s. a week, but had done no
+regular work for three years out of the last ten.
+
+We put the following question to the entire number: -- "If you were put
+on a farm, and set to work at anything you could do, and supplied with
+food, lodging, and clothing, with a view to getting you on to your
+feet, would you be willing to do all you could?"
+
+In response, the whole 250 replied in the affirmative, with one
+exception, and on enquiry we elicited that, being a sailor, the man was
+afraid he would not know how to do the work.
+
+On being interrogated as to their willingness to grapple with the hard
+labour on the land, they said: "Why should we not? Look at us.
+Can any plight be more miserable than ours?" Why not, indeed?
+A glance at them would certainly make it impossible for any thoughtful
+person to assign a rational reason for their refusal--in rags,
+swarming with vermin, hungry, many of them living on scraps of food,
+begged or earned in the most haphazard fashion, without sufficient
+clothing to cover their poor gaunt limbs, most of them without a shirt.
+They had to start out the next morning, uncertain which way to turn to
+earn a crust for dinner, or the fourpence necessary to supply them
+again with the humble shelter they had enjoyed that night. The idea of
+their refusing employment which would supply abundantly the necessaries
+of life, and give the prospect of becoming, in process of time,
+the owner of a home, with its comforts and companionships, is beyond
+conception. There is not much question that this class will not only
+accept the Scheme we want to set before them, but gratefully do all in
+their power to make it a success.
+
+II.--Too many would come. This would be very probable.
+There would certainly be too many apply. But we should be under no
+obligation to take more than was convenient. The larger the number of
+applications the wider the field for selection, and the greater the
+necessity for the enlargement of our operations.
+
+III.--They would run away. It is further objected that if they did
+come, the monotony of the life, the strangeness of the work, together
+with the absence of the excitements and amusements with which they had
+been entertained in the cities and towns, would render their existence
+unbearable. Even when left to the streets, there is an amount of life
+and action in the city which is very attractive. Doubtless some would
+run away, but I don't think this would be a large proportion.
+The change would be so great, and so palpably advantageous, that I
+think they would find in it ample compensation for the deprivation of
+any little pleasureable excitement they had left behind them in the
+city. For instance, there would be--
+
+ A Sufficiency of Food.
+
+ The friendliness and sympathy of their new associates. There would
+ be abundance of companions of similar tastes and circumstances--
+ not all pious. It would be quite another matter to going
+ single-handed on to a farm, or into a melancholy family.
+
+ Then there would be the prospect of doing well for themselves in
+ the future, together with all the religious life, meetings, music,
+ and freedom of the Salvation Army.
+
+But what says our experience?
+
+If there be one class which is the despair of the social reformer,
+it is that which is variously described, but which we may term the lost
+women of our streets. From the point of view of the industrial
+organiser, they suffer from almost every fault that human material can
+possess. They are, with some exceptions, untrained to labour,
+demoralised by a life of debauchery, accustomed to the wildest license,
+emancipated from all discipline but that of starvation, given to drink,
+and, for the most part, impaired in health. If, therefore,
+any considerable number of this class can be shown to be ready to
+submit themselves voluntarily to discipline, to endure deprivation of
+drink, and to apply themselves steadily to industry, then example will
+go a long way towards proving that even the worst description of
+humanity, when intelligently, thoroughly handled, is amenable to
+discipline and willing to work. In our British Rescue Homes we receive
+considerably over a thousand unfortunates every year; while all over
+the world, our annual average is two thousand. The work has been in
+progress for three years--long enough to enable us to test very fully
+the capacity of the class in question to reform.
+
+With us there is no compulsion. If any girl wishes to remain, she
+remains. If she wishes to go, she goes. No one is detained a day or
+an hour longer than they choose to stay. Yet our experience shows
+that, as a rule, they do not run away. Much more restless and
+thoughtless and given to change, as a class, than men, the girls do
+not, in any considerable numbers, desert. The average of our London
+Homes, for the last three years, gives only 14 per cent. as leaving on
+their own account, while for the year 1889 only 5 per cent. And the
+entire number, who have either left or been dismissed during that year,
+amounts only to 13 per cent. on the whole.
+
+IV.--They would not work.
+Of course, to such as had for years been leading idle lives, anything
+like work and exhaustive labour would be very trying and wearisome,
+and a little patience and coaxing might be required to get them into
+the way of it. Perhaps some would be hopelessly beyond salvation in
+this respect, and, until the time comes, if it ever does arrive,
+when the Government will make it a crime for an abled-bodied man to beg
+when there is an opportunity for him to engage in remunerative work,
+this class will wander abroad preying upon a generous public. It will,
+however, only need to be known that any man can obtain work if he wants
+it, for those who have by their liberality maintained men and women in
+idleness to cease doing so. And when it comes to this pass, that a man
+cannot eat without working, of the two evils he will choose the latter,
+preferring labour, however unpleasant it may be to his tastes, to
+actual starvation.
+
+It must be borne in mind that the penalty of certain expulsion, which
+all would be given to understand would be strictly enforced would have
+a good influence in inducing the idlest to give work a fair trial,
+and once at it should not despair of conquering the aversion
+altogether, and eventually being able to transform and pass these once
+lazy loafers as real industrious members of Society.
+
+Again, any who have fears on this point may be encouraged by
+contrasting the varied and ever-changing methods of labour we should
+pursue, with the monotonous and uninteresting grind of many of the
+ordinary employments of the poor, and the circumstances by which they
+are surrounded.
+
+Here, again, we fall back upon our actual experience in reclamation
+work. In our Homes for Saving the Lost Women we have no difficulty of
+getting them to work. The idleness of this section of the social
+strata has been before referred to; it is not for a moment denied,
+and there can be no question, as to its being the cause of much of
+their poverty and distress. But from early morn until the lights are
+out at night, all is a round of busy, and, to a great extent, very
+uninteresting labour; while the girls have, as a human inducement,
+only domestic service to look forward to--of which they are in no way
+particularly enamoured--and yet here is no mutiny, no objection,
+no unwillingness to work; in fact they appear well pleased to be kept
+continually at it. Here is a report that teaches the same lesson.
+
+A small Bookbinding Factory is worked in connection with the Rescue
+Homes in London. The folders and stitchers are girls saved from the
+streets, but who, for various reasons, were found unsuitable for
+domestic service. The Factory has solved the problem of employment for
+some of the most difficult cases. Two of the girls at present employed
+there are crippled, while one is supporting herself and two young
+children.
+
+While learning the work they live in the Rescue Homes, and the few
+shillings they are able to earn are paid into the Home funds.
+As soon as they are able to earn 12s. a week, a lodging is found for
+them (with Salvationists, if possible), and they are placed entirely
+upon their own resources. The majority of girls working at this trade
+in London are living in the family, and 6s., 7s., and 8s. a week make
+an acceptable addition to the Home income; but our girls who are
+entirely dependent upon their own earnings must make an average wage of
+12s. a week at least. In order that they may do this we are obliged to
+pay higher wages than other employers. For instance, we give from
+2 1/2d. to 3d. a thousand more than the trade for binding small
+pamphlets; nevertheless, after the Manager, a married man, is paid, and
+a man for the superintendence of the machines, a profit of about #500
+has been made, and the work is improving. They are all paid piecework.
+
+Eighteen women are supporting themselves in this way at present, and
+conducting themselves most admirably. One of their number acts as
+forewoman, and conducts the Prayer Meeting at 12.30, the Two-minutes'
+Prayer after meals, etc. Their continuance in the factory is subject
+to their good behaviour--both at home as well as at work.
+In one instance only have we had any trouble at all, and in this
+solitary case the girl was so penitent she was forgiven, and has done
+well ever since. I think that, without exception, they are Salvation
+Soldiers, and will be found at nearly every meeting on the Sabbath,
+etc. The binding of Salvation Army publications-- "The Deliverer,"
+"All the World," the Penny Song Books, etc., almost keep us going.
+A little outside work for the end of the months is taken, but we are
+not able to make any profit generally, it is so badly paid.
+
+It will be seen that this is a miniature factory, but still it is a
+factory, and worked on principles that will admit of illimitable
+extension, and may, I think, be justly regarded as an encouragement and
+an exemplification of what may be accomplished in endless variations.
+
+V.--Again, it is objected that the class whose benefit we
+contemplate would not have physical ability to work on a farm, or in
+the open air.
+
+How, it is asked, would tailors, clerks, weavers, seamstresses,
+and the destitute people, born and reared in the slums and
+poverty-hovels of the towns and cities, do farm or any other work that
+has to do with the land? The employment in the open air, with exposure
+to every kind of weather which accompanies it, would, it is said, kill
+them off right away.
+
+We reply, that the division of labour before described would render it
+as unnecessary as it would be undesirable and uneconomical, to put many
+of these people to dig or to plant. Neither is it any part of our plan
+to do so. On our Scheme we have shown how each one would be appointed
+to that kind of work for which his previous knowledge and experience
+and strength best adapted him. Moreover, there can be no possible
+comparison between the conditions of health enjoyed by men and women
+wandering about homeless, sleeping in the streets or in the
+fever-haunted lodging-houses, or living huddled up in a single room,
+and toiling twelve and fourteen hours in a sweater's den, and living in
+comparative comfort in well-warmed and ventilated houses, situated in
+the open country, with abundance of good, healthy food.
+
+Take a man or a woman out into the fresh air, give them proper
+exercise, and substantial food. Supply them with a comfortable home,
+cheerful companions, and a fair prospect of reaching a position of
+independence in this or some other land, and a complete renewal of
+health and careful increase of vigour will, we expect, be one of the
+first great benefits that will ensue.
+
+VI.--It is objected that we should be left with a considerable
+residuum of half-witted, helpless people.
+
+Doubtless this would be a real difficulty, and we should have to
+prepare for it. We certainly, at the outset, should have to guard
+against too many of this class being left upon our hands, although we
+should not be compelled to keep anyone. It would, how ever, be painful
+to have to send them back to the dreadful life from which we had
+rescued them. Still, however, this would not be so ruinous a risk,
+looked at financially, as some would imagine. We could, we think,
+maintain them for 4s. per week, and they would be very weak indeed in
+body, and very wanting in mental, strength if they were not able to
+earn that amount in some one of the many forms of employment which the
+Colony would open up.
+
+VII.--Again, it will be objected that some efforts of a similar
+character have failed. For instance, co-operative enterprises in
+farming have not succeeded.
+
+True, but so far as I can ascertain, nothing of the character I am
+describing has ever been attempted. A large number of Socialistic
+communities have been established and come to grief in the United
+States, in Germany, and elsewhere, but they have all, both in principle
+and practice, strikingly differed from what we are proposing here:
+Take one particular alone, the great bulk of these societies have not
+only been fashioned without any regard to the principles of
+Christianity, but, in the vast majority of instances, have been in
+direct opposition to them; and the only communities based on
+co-operative principles that have survived the first few months of
+their existence have been based upon Christian truth. If not absolute
+successes, there have been some very remarkable results obtained by
+efforts partaking somewhat of the nature of the one I am setting forth.
+(See that of Ralahine, described in Appendix.)
+
+VIII.--It is further objected that it would be impossible to maintain
+order and enforce good discipline amongst this class of people.
+
+We are of just the opposite opinion. We think that it would --nay,
+we are certain of it, and we speak as those who have had considerable
+experience in dealing with the lower classes of Society.
+We have already dealt with this difficulty. We may say further--
+
+That we do not propose to commence with a thousand people in a wild,
+untamed state, either at home or abroad. To the Colony Over-Sea we
+should send none but those who have had a long period of training in
+this country. The bulk of those sent to the Provincial Farm would have
+had some sort of trial in the different City Establishments. We should
+only draft them on to the Estate in small numbers, as we were prepared
+to deal with them, and I am quite satisfied that without the legal
+methods of maintaining order that are acted upon so freely in
+workhouses and other similar institutions, we should have as perfect
+obedience to Law, as great respect for authority, and as strong a
+spirit of kindness pervading all ranks throughout the whole of the
+community as could be found in any other institution in the land.
+
+It will be borne in mind that our Army system of government largely
+prepares us, if it does not qualify us, for this task. Anyway, it
+gives us a good start. All our people are trained in habits of
+obedience, and all our Officers are educated in the exercise of
+authority. The Officers throughout the Colony would be almost
+exclusively recruited from the ranks of the Army, and everyone of them
+would go to the work, both theoretically and practically, familiar with
+those principles which are the essence of good discipline.
+
+Then we can argue, and that very forcibly, from the actual experience
+we have already had in dealing with this class. Take our experience in
+the Army itself. Look at the order of our Soldiers. Here are men and
+women, who have no temporal interest whatever at stake, receiving no
+remuneration, often sacrificing their earthly interests by their union
+with us, and yet see how they fall into line, and obey orders in the
+promptest manner, even when such orders go right in the teeth of their
+temporal interests.
+
+"Yes," it will be replied by some, "this is all very excellent so far
+as it relates to those who are altogether of your own way of thinking.
+You can command them as you please, and they will obey, but what proof
+have you given of your ability to control and discipline those who are
+not of your way of thinking?
+
+"You can do that with your Salvationists because they are saved, as you
+call it. When men are born again you can do anything with them.
+But unless you convert all the denizens of Darkest England, what chance
+is there that they will be docile to your discipline? If they were
+soundly saved no doubt something might be done. But they are not
+saved, soundly or otherwise; they are lost. What reason have you for
+believing that they will be amenable to discipline?"
+
+I admit the force of this objection; but I have an answer, and an
+answer which seems to me complete. Discipline, and that of the most
+merciless description, is enforced upon multitudes of these people even
+now. Nothing that the most authoritative organisation of industry
+could devise in the excess of absolute power, could for a moment
+compare with the slavery enforced to-day in the dens of the sweater.
+It is not a choice between liberty and discipline that confronts these
+unfortunates, but between discipline mercilessly enforced by starvation
+and inspired by futile greed, and discipline accompanied with regular
+rations and administered solely for their own benefit. What liberty is
+there for the tailors who have to sew for sixteen to twenty hours a
+day, in a pest-hole, in order to earn ten shillings a week?
+There is no discipline so brutal as that of the sweater; there is no
+slavery so relentless as that from which we seek to deliver the
+victims. Compared with their normal condition of existence, the most
+rigorous discipline which would be needed to secure the complete
+success of any new individual organisation would be an escape from
+slavery into freedom.
+
+You may reply, "that it might be so, if people understood their own
+interest. But as a matter of fact they do not understand it, and that
+they will never have sufficient far-sightedness to appreciate the
+advantages that are offered them."
+
+To this I answer, that here also I do not speak from theory.
+I lay before you the ascertained results of years of experience.
+More than two years ago, moved by the misery and despair of the
+unemployed, I opened the Food and Shelter Depots in London already
+described. Here are a large number of men every night, many of them of
+the lowest type of casuals who crawl about the streets, a certain
+proportion criminals, and about as difficult a class to manage as I
+should think could be got together, and while there will be 200 of them
+in a single building night after night, from the first opening of the
+doors in the evening until the last man has departed in the morning,
+there shall scarcely be a word of dissatisfaction; anyway, nothing in
+the shape of angry temper or bad language. No policemen are required;
+indeed two or three nights' experience will be sufficient to turn the
+regular frequenters of the place of their own free will into Officers
+of Order, glad not only to keep the regulations of the place, but to
+enforce its discipline upon others.
+
+Again, every Colonist, whether in the City or elsewhere, would know
+that those who took the interests of the Colony to heart, were loyal to
+its authority and principles, and laboured industriously in promoting
+its interests, would be rewarded accordingly by promotion to positions
+of influence and authority, which would also carry with them temporal
+advantages, present and prospective.
+
+But one of our main hopes would be in the apprehension by the Colonists
+of the fact that all our efforts were put forth on their behalf.
+Every man and woman on the place would know that this enterprise was
+begun and carried on solely for their benefit, and that of the other
+members of their class, and that only their own good behaviour and
+co-operation would ensure their reaping a personal share in such
+benefit. Still our expectations would be largely based on the creation
+of a spirit of unselfish interest in the community.
+
+IX. Again, it is objected that the Scheme is too vast to be attempted
+by voluntary enterprise; it ought to be taken up and carried out by the
+Government itself.
+
+Perhaps so, but there is no very near probability of Government
+undertaking it, and we are not quite sure whether such an attempt would
+prove a success if it were made. But seeing that neither Governments,
+nor Society, nor individuals have stood forward to undertake what God
+has made appear to us to be so vitally important a work, and as He has
+given us the willingness, and in many important senses the ability,
+we are prepared, if the financial help is furnished, to make a
+determined effort, not only to undertake but to carry it forward to a
+triumphant success.
+
+X.--It is objected that the classes we seek to benefit are too
+ignorant and depraved for Christian effort, or for effort of any kind,
+to reach and reform.--
+
+Look at the tramps, the drunkards, the harlots, the criminals.
+How confirmed they are in their idle and vicious habits. It will be
+said, indeed has been already said by those with whom I have conversed,
+that I don't know them; which statement cannot, I think, be maintained,
+for if I don't know them, who does?
+
+I admit, however, that thousands of this class are very far gone from
+every sentiment, principle and practice of right conduct. But I argue
+that these poor people cannot be much more unfavourable subjects for
+the work of regeneration than are many of the savages and heathen
+tribes, in the conversion of whom Christians universally believe;
+for whom they beg large sums of money, and to whom they send their best
+and bravest people.
+
+These poor people are certainly embraced in the Divine plan of mercy.
+To their class, the Saviour especially gave His attention when he was
+on the earth, and for them He most certainly died on the Cross.
+
+Some of the best examples of Christian faith and practice, and some of
+the most successful workers for the benefit of mankind, have sprung
+from this class, of which we have instances recorded in the Bible,
+and any number in the history of the Church and of the Salvation Army.
+
+It may be objected that while this Scheme would undoubtedly assist one
+class of the community by making steady, industrious workmen, it must
+thereby injure another class by introducing so many new hands into the
+labour market, already so seriously overstocked.
+
+To this we reply that there is certainly an appearance of force in this
+objection; but it has, I think, been already answered in the foregoing
+pages. Further, if the increase of workers, which this Scheme will
+certainly bring about, was the beginning and the end of it, it would
+certainly present a somewhat serious aspect. But, even on that
+supposition, I don't see how the skilled worker could leave his
+brothers to rot in their present wretchedness, though their rescue
+should involve the sharing of a portion of his wages.
+
+(1) But there is no such danger, seeing that the number of extra
+ hands thrown on the British Labour Market must be necessarily
+ inconsiderable.
+
+(2) The increased production of food in our Farm and Colonial
+ operations must indirectly benefit the working man.
+
+(3) The taking out of the labour market of a large number of
+ individuals who at present have only partial work, while benefiting
+ them, must of necessity afford increased labour to those left
+ behind.
+
+(4) While every poor workless individual made into a wage earner will
+ of necessity have increased requirements in proportion.
+ For instance, the drunkard who has had to manage with a few bricks,
+ a soap box, and a bundle of rags, will want a chair, a table,
+ a bed, and at least the other necessary adjuncts to a furnished home,
+ however sparely fitted up it may be.
+
+There is no question but that when our Colonisation Scheme is fairly
+afloat it will drain off, not only many of those who are in the morass,
+but a large number who are on the verge of it. Nay, even artisans,
+earning what are considered good wages, will be drawn by the desire to
+improve their circumstances, or to raise their children under more
+favourable surroundings, or from still nobler motives, to leave the old
+country. Then it is expected that the agricultural labourer and the
+village artisan, who are ever migrating to the great towns and cities,
+will give the preference to the Colony Over-Sea, and so prevent that
+accumulation of cheap labour which is considered to interfere so
+materially with the maintenance of a high wages standard.
+
+
+SECTION 5. RECAPITULATION.
+
+I have now passed in review the leading features of the Scheme, which I
+put forward as one that is calculated to considerably contribute to the
+amelioration of the condition of the lowest stratum of our Society.
+It in no way professes to be complete in all its details.
+Anyone may at any point lay his finger on this, that, or the other
+feature of the Scheme, and show some void that must be filled in if it
+is to work with effect. There is one thing, however, that can be
+safely said in excuse for the short comings of the Scheme, and that is
+that if you wait until you get an ideally perfect plan you will have to
+wait until the Millennium, and then you will not need it.
+My suggestions, crude though they may be, have, nevertheless, one
+element that will in time supply all deficiencies. There is life in
+them, with life there is the promise and power of adaptation to all the
+innumerable and varying circumstances of the class with which we have
+to deal. Where there is life there is infinite power of adjustment.
+This is no cast-iron Scheme, forged in a single brain and then set up
+as a standard to which all must conform. It is a sturdy plant,
+which has its roots deep down in the nature and circumstances of men.
+Nay, I believe in the very heart of God Himself. It has already grown
+much, and will, if duly nurtured and tended, grow still further, until
+from it, as from the grain of mustard-seed in the parable, there shall
+spring up a great tree whose branches shall overshadow all the earth.
+
+Once more let me say, I claim no patent rights in any part of this
+Scheme. Indeed, I do not know what in it is original and what is not.
+Since formulating some of the plans, which I had thought were new under
+the sun, I have discovered that they have been already tried in
+different parts of the world, and that with great promise. It may be
+so with others, and in this I rejoice. I plead for no exclusiveness.
+The question is much too serious for such fooling as that. Here are
+millions of our fellow-creatures perishing amidst the breakers of the
+sea of life, dashed to pieces on sharp rocks, sucked under by eddying
+whirlpools, suffocated even when they think they have reached land by
+treacherous quicksands; to save them from this imminent destruction I
+suggest that these things should be done. If you have any better plan
+than mine for effecting this purpose, in God's name bring it to the
+light and get it carried out quickly. If you have not, then lend me a
+hand with mine, as I would be only too glad to lend you a hand with
+yours if it had in it greater promise of successful action than mine.
+
+In a Scheme for the working out of social salvation the great,
+the only, test that is worth anything is the success with which they
+attain the object for which they are devised. An ugly old tub of a
+boat that will land a shipwrecked sailor safe on the beach is worth
+more to him than the finest yacht that ever left a slip-way incapable
+of effecting the same object. The superfine votaries of culture may
+recoil in disgust from the rough-and-ready suggestions which I have
+made for dealing with the Sunken Tenth, but mere recoiling is no
+solution. If the cultured and the respectable and the orthodox and the
+established dignitaries and conventionalities of Society pass by on the
+other side we cannot follow their example.
+
+We may not be priests and Levites, but we can at least play the part of
+the Good Samaritan. The man who went down to Jericho and fell among
+thieves was probably a very improvident, reckless individual, who ought
+to have known better than to go roaming alone through defiles haunted
+by banditti, whom he even led into temptation by the careless way in
+which he exposed himself and his goods to their avaricious gaze.
+It was, no doubt, largely his own fault that he lay there bruised and
+senseless, and ready to perish, just as it is largely the fault of
+those whom we seek to help that they lie in the helpless plight in
+which we find them. But for all that, let us bind up their wounds with
+such balm as we can procure, and, setting them on our ass, let us take
+them to our Colony, where they may have time to recover, and once more
+set forth on the journey of life.
+
+And now, having said this much by way of reply to some of my critics,
+I will recapitulate the salient features of the Scheme. I laid down at
+the beginning certain points to be kept in view as embodying those
+invariable laws or principles of political economy, without due regard
+to which no Scheme can hope for even a chance of success.
+Subject to these conditions, I think my Scheme will pass muster.
+It is large enough to cope with the evils that will confront us;
+it is practicable, for it is already in course of application, and it
+is capable of indefinite expansion. But it would be better to pass the
+whole Scheme in its more salient features in review once more.
+
+The Scheme will seek to convey benefit to the destitute classes in
+various ways altogether apart from their entering the Colonies.
+Men and women maybe very poor and in very great sorrow, nay, on the
+verge of actual starvation, and yet be so circumstanced as to be unable
+to enrol themselves in the Colonial ranks. To these our cheap Food
+Depots, our Advice Bureau, Labour Shops, and other agencies will prove
+an unspeakable boon, and will be likely by such temporary assistance to
+help them out of the deep gulf in which they are struggling.
+Those who need permanent assistance will be passed on to the City
+Colony, and taken directly under our control. Here they will be
+employed as before described. Many will be sent off to friends;
+work will be found for others in the City or elsewhere, while the great
+bulk, after reasonable testing as to their sincerity and willingness to
+assist in their own salvation, will be sent on to the Farm Colonies,
+where the same process of reformation and training will be continued,
+and unless employment is otherwise obtained they will then be passed on
+to the Over-Sea Colony.
+
+All in circumstances of destitution, vice, or criminality will receive
+casual assistance or be taken into the Colony, on the sole conditions
+of their being anxious for deliverance, and willing to work for it,
+and to conform to discipline, altogether irrespective of character,
+ability, religious opinions, or anything else.
+
+No benefit will be conferred upon any individual except under
+extraordinary circumstances, without some return being made in labour.
+Even where relatives and friends supply money to the Colonists,
+the latter must take their share of work with their comrades.
+We shall not have room for a single idler throughout all our borders.
+
+The labour allotted to each individual will be chosen in view of his
+past employment or ability. Those who have any knowledge of
+agriculture will naturally be put to work on the land; the shoemaker
+will make shoes, the weaver cloth, and so on. And when there is no
+knowledge of any handicraft, the aptitude of the individual and the
+necessities of the hour will suggest the sort of work it would be most
+profitable for such an one to learn.
+
+Work of all descriptions will be executed as far as possible by hand
+labour. The present rage for machinery has tended to produce much
+destitution by supplanting hand labour so exclusively that the rush has
+been from the human to the machine. We want, as far as is practicable,
+to travel back from the machine to the human.
+
+Each member of the Colony would receive food, clothing, lodging,
+medicine, and all necessary care in case of sickness.
+
+No wages would be paid, except a trifle by way of encouragement for
+good behaviour and industry, or to those occupying positions of trust,
+part of which will be saved in view of exigencies in our Colonial Bank,
+and the remainder used for pocket money.
+
+The whole Scheme of the three Colonies will for all practical purposes
+be regarded as one; hence the training will have in view the
+qualification of the Colonists for ultimately earning their livelihood
+in the world altogether independently of our assistance, or, failing
+this, fit them for taking some permanent work within our borders either
+at home or abroad.
+
+Another result of this unity of the Town and Country Colonies will be
+the removal of one of the difficulties ever connected with the disposal
+of the products of unemployed labour. The food from the Farm would be
+consumed by the City, while many of the things manufactured in the City
+would be consumed on the Farm.
+
+The continued effort of all concerned in the reformation of these
+people will be to inspire and cultivate those habits, the want of which
+has been so largely the cause of the destitution and vice of the past.
+
+Strict discipline, involving careful and continuous oversight, would be
+necessary to the maintenance of order amongst so large a number of
+people, many of whom had hitherto lived a wild and licentious life.
+Our chief reliance in this respect would be upon the spirit of mutual
+interest that would prevail.
+
+The entire Colony would probably be divided into sections, each under
+the supervision of a sergeant--one of themselves--working side by
+side with them, yet responsible for the behaviour of all.
+
+The chief Officers of the Colony would be individuals who had given
+themselves to the work, not for a livelihood, but from a desire to be
+useful to the suffering poor. They would be selected at the outset
+from the Army, and that on the ground of their possessing certain
+capabilities for the position, such as knowledge of the particular kind
+of work they had to superintend, or their being good disciplinarians
+and having the faculty for controlling men and being themselves
+influenced by a spirit of love. Ultimately the Officers, we have no
+doubt, would be, as is the case in all our other operations, men and
+women raised up from the Colonists themselves, and who will
+consequently, possess some special qualifications for dealing with
+those they have to superintend. The Colonists will be divided into two
+classes: the 1st, the class which receives no wages will consist of: --
+
+(a) The new arrivals, whose ability, character, and habits are as yet
+ unknown.
+(b) The less capable in strength, mental calibre, or other capacity.
+(c) The indolent, and those whose conduct and character appeared
+ doubtful. These would remain in this class, until sufficiently
+ improved for advancement, or are pronounced so hopeless as to
+ justify expulsion.
+
+The 2nd class would have a small extra allowance, a part of which would
+be given to the workers for private use, and a part reserved for future
+contingencies, the payment of travelling expenses, etc.
+From this class we should obtain our petty officers, send out hired
+labourers, emigrants, etc., etc.
+
+Such is the Scheme as I have conceived it. Intelligently applied, and
+resolutely persevered in, I cannot doubt that it will produce a great
+and salutary change in the condition of many of the most hopeless of
+our fellow countrymen. Nor is it only our fellow countrymen to whom it
+is capable of application. In its salient features, with such
+alterations as are necessary, owing to differences of climate and of
+race, it is capable of adoption in every city in the world, for it is
+an attempt to restore to the masses of humanity that are crowded
+together in cities, the human and natural elements of life which they
+possessed when they lived in the smaller unit of the village or the
+market town. Of the extent of the need there can be no question.
+It is, perhaps, greatest in London, where the masses of population are
+denser than those of any other city; but it exists equally in the chief
+centres of population in the new Englands that have sprung up beyond
+the sea, as well as in the larger cities of Europe. It is a remarkable
+fact that up to the present moment the most eager welcome that has been
+extended to this Scheme reaches us from Melbourne, where our officers
+have been compelled to begin operations by the pressure of public
+opinion and in compliance with the urgent entreaties of the Government
+on one side and the leaders of the working classes on the other before
+the plan had been elaborated, or instructions could be sent out for
+their guidance.
+
+It is rather strange to hear of distress reaching starvation point in a
+city like Melbourne, the capital of a great new country which teems
+with natural wealth of every kind. But Melbourne, too, has its
+unemployed, and in no city in the Empire have we been more successful
+in dealing with the social problem than in the capital of Victoria.
+The Australian papers for some weeks back have been filled with reports
+of the dealings of the Salvation Army with the unemployed of Melbourne.
+This was before the great Strike. The Government of Victoria
+practically threw upon our officers the task of dealing with the
+unemployed. The subject was debated in the House of Assembly,
+and at the close of the debate a subscription was taken up by one of
+those who had been our most strenuous opponents, and a sum of #400
+was handed over to our officers to dispense in keeping the starving
+from perishing. Our people have found situations for no fewer than
+1,776 persons, and are dispensing meals at the rate of 700 a day.
+The Government of Victoria has long been taking the lead in recognising
+the secular uses of the Salvation Army. The following letter addressed
+by the Minister of the Interior to the Officer charged with the
+oversight of this part of our operations, indicates the estimation in
+which we are held: --
+
+Government of Victoria, Chief Secretary's Office,
+Melbourne.
+
+July 4th, 1889.
+
+Superintendent Salvation Army Rescue Work.
+
+Sir,--in compliance with your request for a letter of introduction
+which may be of use to you in England, I have much pleasure in stating
+from reports furnished by Officers of my Department, I am convinced
+that the work you have been engaged on during the past six years has
+been of material advantage to the community. You have rescued from
+crime some who, but for the counsel and assistance rendered them, might
+have been a permanent tax upon the State, and you have restrained from
+further criminal courses others who had already suffered legal
+punishment for their misdeeds. It has given me pleasure to obtain from
+the Executive Council authority for you to apprehend children found in
+Brothels, and to take charge of such children after formal committal.
+Of the great value of this branch of your work there can be no
+question. It is evident that the attendance of yourself and your
+Officers at the police-courts and lock-ups has been attended with
+beneficial results, and your invitation to our largest jails has been
+highly approved by the head of the Department. Generally speaking,
+I may say that your policy and procedure have been commended by the
+Chief Officers of the Government of this Colony, who have observed your
+work.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir, Your obedient Servant,
+
+(Signed) ALFRED DEAKIN.
+
+The Victorian Parliament has voted an annual grant to our funds,
+not as a religious endowment, but in recognition of the service which
+we render in the reclamation of criminals, and what may be called,
+if I may use a word which has been so depraved by Continental abuse,
+the moral police of the city. Our Officer in Melbourne has an official
+position which opens to him almost every State institution and all the
+haunts of vice where it may be necessary for him to make his way in the
+search for girls that have been decoyed from home or who have fallen
+into evil courses.
+
+It is in Victoria also that a system prevails of handing over first
+offenders to the care of the Salvation Army Officers, placing them in
+recognizance to come up when called for. An Officer of the Army
+attends at every Police Court, and the Prison Brigade is always on
+guard at the gaol doors when the prisoners are discharged.
+Our Officers also have free access to the prisons, where they can
+conduct services and labour with the inmates for their Salvation.
+As Victoria is probably the most democratic of our colonies, and the
+one in which the working-class has supreme control, the extent to which
+it has by its government recognised the value of our operations is
+sufficient to indicate that we have nothing to fear from the opposition
+of the democracy. In the neighbouring colony of New South Wales a lady
+has already given us a farm of three hundred acres fully stocked,
+on which to begin operations with a Farm Colony, and there seems some
+prospect that the Scheme will get itself into active shape at the other
+end of the world before it is set agoing in London. The eager welcome
+which has thus forced the initiative upon our Officers in Melbourne
+tends to encourage the expectation that the Scheme will be regarded as
+no quack application, but will be generally taken up and quickly set in
+operation all round the world.
+
+
+CHAPTER 8. A PRACTICAL CONCLUSION.
+
+Throughout this book I have more constantly used the first personal
+pronoun than ever before in anything I have written. I have done this
+deliberately, not from egotism, but in order to make it more clearly
+manifest that here is a definite proposal made by an individual who is
+prepared, if the means are furnished him, to carry it out. At the same
+time I want it to be clearly understood that it is not in my own
+strength, nor at my own charge, that I purpose to embark upon this
+great undertaking. Unless God wills that I should work out the idea of
+which I believe He has given me the conception, nothing can come of any
+attempt at its execution but confusion, disaster, and disappointment.
+But if it be His will--and whether it is or not, visible and manifest
+tokens will soon be forthcoming--who is there that can stand against it?
+Trusting in Him for guidance, encouragement, and support, I propose at
+once to enter upon this formidable campaign.
+
+I do not run without being called. I do not press forward to fill this
+breach without being urgently pushed from behind. Whether or not,
+I am called of God, as well as by the agonising cries of suffering men
+and women and children, He will make plain to me, and to us all;
+for as Gideon looked for a sign before he, at the bidding of the
+heavenly messenger, undertook the leading of the chosen people against
+the hosts of Midian, even so do I look for a sign. Gideon's sign was
+arbitrary. He selected it. He dictated his own terms; and out of
+compassion for his halting faith, a sign was given to him, and that
+twice over. First, his fleece was dry when all the country round was
+drenched with dew; and, secondly, his fleece was drenched with dew when
+all the country round was dry.
+
+The sign for which I ask to embolden me to go forwards is single,
+not double. It is necessary and not arbitrary, and it is one which the
+veriest sceptic or the most cynical materialist will recognise as
+sufficient. If I am to work out the Scheme I have outlined in this
+book, I must have ample means for doing so. How much would be required
+to establish this Plan of Campaign in all its fulness, overshadowing
+all the land with its branches laden with all manner of pleasant fruit,
+I cannot even venture to form a conception. But I have a definite idea
+as to how much would be required to set it fairly in operation.
+
+Why do I talk about commencing? We have already begun, and that with
+considerable effect. Our hand has been forced by circumstances.
+The mere rumour of our undertaking reaching the Antipodes, as before
+described, called forth such a demonstration of approval that my
+Officers there were compelled to begin action without waiting orders
+from home. In this country we have been working on the verge of the
+deadly morass for some years gone by, and not without marvellous
+effect. We have our Shelters, our Labour Bureau, our Factory,
+our Inquiry Officers, our Rescue Homes, our Slum Sisters, and other
+kindred agencies, all in good going order. The sphere of these
+operations may be a limited one; still, what we have done already is
+ample proof that when I propose to do much more I am not speaking
+without my book; and though the sign I ask for may not be given,
+I shall go struggling forward on the same lines; still, to seriously
+take in hand the work which I have sketched out--to establish this
+triple Colony, with all its affiliated agencies, I must have, at least,
+a hundred thousand pounds.
+
+A hundred thousand pounds! That is the dew on my fleece. It is not
+much considering the money that is raised by my poor people for the
+work of the Salvation Army. The proceeds of the Self-denial Week alone
+last year brought us in #20,000. This year it will not fall short of
+#25,000. If our poor people can do so much out of their poverty,
+I do not think I am making an extravagant demand when I ask that out of
+the millions of the wealth of the world I raise, as a first instalment,
+a hundred thousand pounds, and say that I cannot consider myself
+effectually called to undertake this work unless it is forthcoming.
+
+It is in no spirit of dictation or arrogance that I ask the sign.
+It is a necessity. Even Moses could not have taken the Children of
+Israel dry-shod through the Red Sea unless the waves had divided.
+
+That was the sign which marked out his duty, aided his faith,
+and determined his action. The sign which I seek is somewhat similar.
+Money is not everything. It is not by any means the main thing.
+Midas, with all his millions, could no more do the work than he could
+win the battle of Waterloo, or hold the Pass of Thermopylae.
+But the millions of Midas are capable of accomplishing great and mighty
+things, if they be sent about doing good under the direction of Divine
+wisdom and Christ-like love.
+
+How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the Kingdom of
+Heaven! It is easier to make a hundred poor men sacrifice their lives
+than it is to induce one rich man to sacrifice his fortune, or even a
+portion of it, to a cause in which, in his half-hearted fashion,
+he seems to believe. When I look over the roll of men and women who
+have given up friends, parents, home prospects, and everything they
+possess in order to walk bare-footed beneath a burning sun in distant
+India, to live on a handful of rice, and die in the midst of the dark
+heathen for God and the Salvation Army, I sometimes marvel how it is
+that they should be so eager to give up all, even life itself, in a
+cause which has not power enough in it to induce any reasonable number
+of wealthy men to give to it the mere superfluities and luxuries of
+their existence. From those to whom much is given much is expected;
+but, alas, alas, how little is realised! It is still the widow who
+casts her all into the Lord's treasury--the wealthy deem it a
+preposterous suggestion when we allude to the Lord's tithe, and count
+it boredom when we ask only for the crumbs that fall from their tables.
+
+Those who have followed me thus far will decide for themselves to what
+extent they ought to help me to carry out this Project, or whether they
+ought to help me at all. I do not think that any sectarian differences
+or religious feelings whatever ought to be imported into this question.
+Supposing you do not like my Salvationism, surely it is better for
+these miserable, wretched crowds to have food to eat, clothes to wear,
+and a home in which to lay their weary bones after their day's toil is
+done, even though the change is accompanied by some peculiar religious
+notions and practices, than it would be for them to be hungry,
+and naked, and homeless, and possess no religion at all. It must be
+infinitely preferable that they should speak the truth, and be
+virtuous, industrious, and contented, even if they do pray to God,
+sing Psalms, and go about with red jerseys, fanatically, as you call
+it, "seeking for the millennium"--than that they should remain
+thieves or harlots, with no belief in God at all, a burden to the
+Municipality, a curse to Society, and a danger to the State.
+
+That you do not like the Salvation Army, I venture to say, is no
+justification for withholding your sympathy and practical co-operation
+in carrying out a Scheme which promises so much blessedness to your
+fellow-men. You may not like our government, our methods, our faith.
+Your feeling towards us might perhaps be duly described by an
+observation that slipped unwittingly from the tongue of a somewhat
+celebrated leader in the evangelistic world sometime ago, who,
+when asked what he thought of the Salvation Army, replied that
+"He did not like it at all, but he believed that God Almighty did."
+Perhaps, as an agency, we may not be exactly of your way of thinking,
+but that is hardly the question. Look at that dark ocean, full of
+human wrecks, writhing in anguish and despair. How to rescue those
+unfortunates is the question. The particular character of the methods
+employed, the peculiar uniforms worn by the lifeboat crew, the noises
+made by the rocket apparatus, and the mingled shoutings of the rescued
+and the rescuers, may all be contrary to your taste and traditions.
+But all these objections and antipathies, I submit, are as nothing
+compared with the delivering of the people out of that dark sea.
+
+If among my readers there be any who have the least conception that
+this scheme is put forward by me from any interested motives by all
+means let them refuse to contribute even by a single penny to what
+would be, at least, one of the most shameless of shams. There may be
+those who are able to imagine that men who have been literally martyred
+in this cause have faced their death for the sake of the paltry coppers
+they collected to keep body and soul together. Such may possibly find
+no difficulty in persuading themselves that this is but another attempt
+to raise money to augment that mythical fortune which I, who never yet
+drew a penny beyond mere out-of-pocket expenses from the Salvation Army
+funds, am supposed to be accumulating. From all such I ask only the
+tribute of their abuse, assured that the worst they say of me is too
+mild to describe the infamy of my conduct if they are correct in this
+interpretation of my motives.
+
+There appears to me to be only two reasons that will justify any man,
+with a heart in his bosom, in refusing to co-operate with me in this
+Scheme: --
+
+1. That he should have an honest and intelligent conviction that it
+ cannot be carried out with any reasonable measure of success; or,
+
+2. That he (the objector) is prepared with some other plan which will
+ as effectually accomplish the end it contemplates.
+
+Let me consider the second reason first. If it be that you have some
+plan that promises more directly to accomplish the deliverance of these
+multitudes than mine, I implore you at once to bring it out.
+Let it see the light of day. Let us not only hear your theory,
+but see the evidences which prove its practical character and assure
+its success. If your plan will bear investigation, I shall then
+consider you to be relieved from the obligation to assist me--nay,
+if after full consideration of your plan I find it better than mine,
+I will give up mine, turn to, and help you with all my might.
+But if you have nothing to offer, I demand your help in the name of
+those whose cause I plead.
+
+Now, then, for your first objection, which I suppose can be expressed
+in one word--"impossible." This, if well founded, is equally fatal to
+my proposals. But, in reply, I may say--How do you know?
+Have you inquired? I will assume that you have read the book, and duly
+considered it. Surely you would not dismiss so important a theme
+without some thought. And though my arguments may not have sufficient
+weight to carry conviction, you must admit them to be of sufficient
+importance to warrant investigation. Will you therefore come and see
+for yourself what has been done already, or, rather, what we are doing
+to-day. Failing this, will you send someone capable of judging on your
+behalf. I do not care very much whom you send. It is true the things
+of the Spirit are spiritually discerned, but the things of humanity any
+man can judge, whether saint or sinner, if he only possess average
+intelligence and ordinary bowels of compassion.
+
+I should, however, if I had a choice, prefer an investigator who has
+some practical knowledge of social economics, and much more should I be
+pleased if he had spent some of his own time and a little of his own
+money in trying to do the work himself. After such investigation I am
+confident there could be only one result.
+
+There is one more plea I have to offer to those who might seek to
+excuse themselves from rendering any financial assistance to the
+Scheme. Is it not worthy at least of being tried as an experiment?
+Tens of thousands of pounds are yearly spent in "trying" for minerals,
+boring for coals, sinking for water, and I believe there are those who
+think it worth while, at an expenditure of hundreds of thousands of
+pounds, to experiment in order to test the possibility of making a
+tunnel under the sea between this country and France. Should these
+adventurers fail in their varied operations, they have, at least, the
+satisfaction of knowing, though hundreds of thousands of pounds have
+been expended, that they have not been wasted, and they will not
+complain; because they have at least attempted the accomplishment of
+that which they felt ought to be done; and it must be better to attempt
+a duty, though we fail, than never to attempt it at all. In this book
+we do think we have presented a sufficient reason to justify the
+expenditure of the money and effort involved in the making of this
+experiment. And though the effort should not terminate in the grand
+success which I so confidently predict, and which we all must so
+ardently desire, still there is bound to be, not only the satisfaction
+of having attempted some sort of deliverance for these wretched people,
+but certain results which will amply repay every farthing expended in
+the experiment.
+
+I am now sixty-one years of age. The last eighteen months, during
+which the continual partner of all my activities for now nearly forty
+years has laid in the arms of unspeakable suffering, has added more
+than many many former ones, to the exhaustion of my term of service.
+I feel already something of the pressure which led the dying Emperor of
+Germany to say, "I have no time to be weary." If I am to see the
+accomplishment in any considerable degree of these life-long hopes,
+I must be enabled to embark up on the enterprise without delay, and
+with the world-wide burden constantly upon me in connection with the
+universal mission of our Army I cannot be expected to struggle in this
+matter alone.
+
+But I trust that the upper and middle classes are at last being
+awakened out of their long slumber with regard to the permanent
+improvement of the lot of those who have hitherto been regarded as
+being for ever abandoned and hopeless. Shame indeed upon England if,
+with the example presented to us nowadays by the Emperor and Government
+of Germany, we simply shrug our shoulders, and pass on again to our
+business or our pleasure leaving these wretched multitudes in the
+gutters where they have lain so long. No, no, no; time is short.
+Let us arise in the name of God and humanity, and wipe away the sad
+stigma from the British banner that our horses are better treated than
+our labourers.
+
+It will be seen that this Scheme contains many branches.
+It is probable that some of my readers may not be able to endorse the
+plan as a whole, while heartily approving of some of its features and
+to the support of what they do not heartily approve they may not be
+willing to subscribe. Where this is so, we shall be glad for them to
+assist us in carrying out those portions of the undertaking which more
+especially command their sympathy and commend themselves to their
+judgment. For instance, one man may believe in the Over-Sea Colony,
+but feel no interest in the Inebriates' Home; another, who may not care
+for emigration, may desire to furnish a Factory or Rescue Home; a third
+may wish to give us an estate, assist in the Food and Shelter work, or
+the extension of the Slum Brigade. Now, although I regard the Scheme
+as one and indivisible--from which you cannot take away any portion
+without impairing the prospect of the whole--it is quite practicable
+to administer the money subscribed so that the wishes of each donor may
+be carried out. Subscriptions may, therefore, be sent in for the
+general fund of the Social Scheme, or they can be devoted to any of the
+following distinct funds: --
+
+ 1. The City Colony.
+ 2. The Farm Colony.
+ 3. The Colony Over-sea.
+ 4. The Household Salvage Brigade.
+ 5. The Rescue Homes for Fallen Women.
+ 6. Deliverance for the Drunkard.
+ 7. The Prison Gate Brigade.
+ 8. The Poor Man's Bank.
+ 9. The Poor Man's Lawyer.
+ 10. Whitechapel-by-the-Sea.
+
+Or any other department suggested by the foregoing. In making this
+appeal I have, so far, addressed myself chiefly to those who have
+money; but money, indispensable as it is, has never been the thing most
+needful. Money is the sinews of war; and, as society is at present
+constituted, neither carnal nor spiritual wars can be carried on
+without money. But there is something more necessary still.
+War cannot be waged without soldiers. A Wellington can do far more in
+a campaign than a Rothschild. More than money--a long, long way--
+I want men; and when I say men, I mean women also--men of experience,
+men of brains, men of heart, and men of God.
+
+In this great expedition, though I am starting for territory which is
+familiar enough, I am, in a certain sense, entering an unknown land.
+My people will be new at it. We have trained our soldiers to the
+saving of souls, we have taught them Knee-drill, we have instructed
+them in the art and mystery of dealing with the consciences and hearts
+of men; and that will ever continue the main business of their lives.
+
+To save the soul, to regenerate the life, and to inspire the spirit
+with the undying love of Christ is the work to which all other duties
+must ever be strictly subordinate in the Soldiers of the Salvation
+Army. But the new sphere on which we are entering will call for
+faculties other than those which have hitherto been cultivated,
+and for knowledge of a different character; and those who have these
+gifts, and who are possessed of this practical information, will be
+sorely needed.
+
+Already our world-wide Salvation work engrosses the energies of every
+Officer whom we command. With its extension we have the greatest
+difficulty to keep pace; and, when this Scheme has to be practically
+grappled with, we shall be in greater straits than ever. True, it will
+find employment for a multitude of energies and talents which are now
+lying dormant, but, nevertheless, this extension will tax our resources
+to the very utmost. In view of this, reinforcements will be
+indispensable. We shall need the best brains, the largest experience,
+and the most undaunted energy of the community.
+
+I want Recruits, but I cannot soften the conditions in order to attract
+men to the Colours. I want no comrades on these terms, but those who
+know our rules and are prepared to submit to our discipline: who are
+one with us on the great principles which determine our action,
+and whose hearts are in this great work for the amelioration of the
+hard lot of the lapsed and lost. These I will welcome to the service.
+
+It may be that you cannot deliver an open-air address, or conduct an
+indoor meeting. Public labour for souls has hitherto been outside your
+practice. In the Lord's vineyard, however, are many labourers,
+and all are not needed to do the same thing. If you have a practical
+acquaintance with any of the varied operations of which I have spoken
+in this book; if you are familiar with agriculture, understand the
+building trade, or have a practical knowledge of almost any form of
+manufacture, there is a place for you.
+
+We cannot offer you great pay, social position, or any glitter and
+tinsel of man's glory; in fact, we can promise little more than
+rations, plenty of hard work, and probably no little of worldly scorn;
+but if on the whole you believe you can in no other way help your Lord
+so well and bless humanity so much, you will brave the opposition of
+friends, abandon earthly prospects, trample pride under foot, and come
+out and follow Him in this New Crusade.
+
+To you who believe in the remedy here proposed, and the soundness of
+these plans, and have the ability to assist me, I now confidently
+appeal for practical evidence of the faith that is in you.
+The responsibility is no longer mine alone. It is yours as much as
+mine. It is yours even more than mine if you withhold the means by
+which I may carry out the Scheme. I give what I have.
+If you give what you have the work will be done. If it is not done,
+and the dark river of wretchedness rolls on, as wide and deep as ever,
+the consequences will lie at the door of him who holds back.
+
+I am only one man among my fellows, the same as you. The obligation to
+care for these lost and perishing multitudes does not rest on me any
+more than it does on you. To me has been given the idea, but to you
+the means by which it may be realised. The Plan has now been published
+to the world; it is for you to say whether it is to remain barren,
+or whether it is to bear fruit in unnumbered blessings to all the
+children of men.
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+1. The Salvation Army--A Sketch--The Position of the Forces,
+ October, 1890.
+
+2. Circular, Registration Forms, and Notices now issued by the
+ Labour Bureau.
+
+3. Count Rumford's Bavarian Experience.
+
+4. The Co-operative Experiment at Ralahine.
+
+5. Mr Carlyle on the Regimenation of the Out-of-Works.
+
+6. "Christianity and Civilization," by the Rev. Dr. Barry.
+
+
+THE SALVATION ARMY
+
+The position of our forces. October, 1890.
+
+ Corps or Outposts Officers or persons
+ Societies wholly engaged in
+ the work.
+
+The United Kingdom ... 1375 --- 4506
+
+France ... ... ) 106 72 352
+Switzerland ... )
+
+Sweden ... ... ... 103 41 328
+
+United States ... ... 363 57 1066
+
+Canada ... ... ... 317 78 1021
+
+Australia--
+ Victoria ... ...)
+ South Australia )
+ New South Wales ) 270 465 903
+ Tasmania ... ...)
+ Queensland ...)
+
+New Zeland ... ... 65 99 186
+
+India ... ... ...) 80 51 419
+Ceylon ... ...)
+
+Holland ... ... 40 8 131
+
+Denmark ... ... 33 -- 87
+
+Norway ... ... 45 7 132
+
+Germany ... ... 16 6 75
+
+Belgium ... ... 4 -- 21
+
+Finland ... ... 3 -- 12
+
+The Argentine Republic 2 -- 15
+
+South Africa & St Helena 52 12 162
+ ---- ---- ----
+ Total abroad 1499 896 4910
+ ---- ---- ----
+ Grand total 2874 896 9416
+
+
+THE SUPPLY ("TRADE") DEPARTMENT At Home. Abroad
+
+Buildings occupied ... ... ... 8 22
+
+Officers ... ... ... ... ... 53 15
+
+Employes ... ... ... ... ... 207 55
+ --- ---
+ Total 260 70
+
+
+THE PROPERTY DEPARTMENT.
+
+Property now Vested in the Army;--
+
+The United Kingdom ... ... ... #377,500
+
+France and Switzerland ... ... 10,000
+
+Sweden ... ... ... ... ... 13,598
+
+Norway ... ... ... ... ... 11,676
+
+The United States ... ... ... 6,601
+
+Canada ... ... ... ... ... 98,728
+
+Australia ... ... ... ... ... 86,251
+
+New Zealand ... ... ... ... 14,798
+
+India ... ... ... ... ... 5,537
+
+Holland ... ... ... ... ... 7,188
+
+Denmark ... ... ... ... ... 2,340
+
+South Africa ... ... ... ... 10,401
+ --------
+ Total #644,618
+ --------
+
+Value of trade effects, stock, machinery, and goods on hand,
+#130,000 additional.
+
+
+SOCIAL WORK OF THE ARMY.
+
+Rescue homes (fallen women) ... ... 33
+Slum Posts ... ... ... ... ... 33
+Prison Gate Brigades ... ... ... 10
+Food Depots ... ... ... ... ... 4
+Shelters for the Destitute ... ... 5
+Inebriates Home ... ... ... ... 1
+Factory for the "out of work" ... 1
+Labour Bureaux ... ... ... ... 2
+
+Officers and others managing those branches 384
+
+
+SALVATION AND SOCIAL REFORM LITERATURE
+
+ At home. Abroad Circulation
+Weekly Newspapers ... 3 24 31,000,000
+Monthly Magazines ... 3 12 2,400,000
+ -- --- -----------
+ Total 6 36 33,400,000
+ -- --- -----------
+
+
+Total annual circulation of the above 33,400,000
+Total annual circulation of other publications 4,000,000
+ -----------
+Total annual circulation of Army literature 37,400,000
+ -----------
+
+The United Kingdom--
+
+"The War Cry" 300,000 weekly
+"The Young Soldier" 126,750 weekly
+"All the World" 50,000 monthly
+"The Deliverer" 48,000 monthly
+
+
+GENERAL STATEMENTS AND STATISTICS.
+ Accommodation Annual cost.
+Training Garrisons for Officers
+ (United Kingdom) 28 #11,500
+ (Abroad) 38 760
+
+Large Vans for Evangelising the Villages
+ (known as Cavalry Forts)
+
+Homes of Rest for Officers 24 240 10,000
+
+Indoor Meetings, held weekly 28,351
+
+Open-air Meetings held weekly
+ (chiefly in England and Colonies) 21,467
+ -------
+Total Meetings held weekly 49,818
+ -------
+
+Number of Houses visited weekly
+ (Great Britain only) 54,000
+
+Number of Countries and Colonies occupied
+
+Number of Languages in which Literature is issued 15
+
+Number of Languages in which Salvation is preached
+by the Officers 29
+
+Number of Local (Non-Commissioned Officers)
+and Bandsman 23,069
+
+Number of Scribes and Office Employes 471
+
+Average weekly reception of telegrams, 600
+and letters, 5,400 at the London Headquarters
+
+Sum raised annually from all sources by the Army #750,000
+
+Balance Sheets, duly audited by chartered accountants, are issued
+annually in connection with the International Headquarters.
+See the Annual Report of 1889--"Apostolic Warfare."
+
+Balance Sheets are also produced quarterly at every Corps in the world,
+audited and signed by the Local Officers. Divisional Balance Sheets
+issued monthly and audited by a Special Department at Headquarters.
+
+Duly and independently audited Balance Sheets are also issued annually
+from every Territorial Headquarters.
+
+
+THE AUXILIARY LEAGUE.
+
+1.--Of persons who, without necessarily endorsing or approving of
+every single method used by thee Salvation Army, are sufficiently in
+sympathy with its great work of reclaiming drunkards, rescuing the
+fallen--in a word, saving the lost--as to give it their PRAYERS,
+INFLUENCE, AND MONEY.
+
+2.--Of persons who, although seeing eye to eye with the Army, yet are
+unable to join it, owing to being actively engaged in the work of their
+own denominations, or by reason of bad health or other infirmities,
+which forbid their taking any active part in Christian work.
+Persons are enrolled either as Subscribing or Collecting Auxiliaries.
+
+The League comprises persons of influence and position, members of
+nearly all denominations, and many ministers.
+
+PAMPHLETS.--Auxiliaries will always be supplied gratis with copies of
+our Annual Report and Balance Sheet and other pamphlets for
+distribution on application to Headquarters. Some of our Auxiliaries
+have materially helped us in this way by distributing our literature at
+the seaside and elsewhere, and by making arrangements for the regular
+supply of waiting rooms, hydropathics, and hotels, thus helping to
+dispel the prejudice under which many persons unacquainted with the
+Army are found to labour.
+
+"All The World" posted free regularly each month to Auxiliaries.
+
+For further information, and for full particulars of the work of The
+Salvation Army, apply personally or by letter to GENERAL BOOTH,.
+or to the Financial Secretary at International Headquarters,
+101, Queen Victoria St., London, E.C., to whom also contributions
+should be sent.
+
+Cheques and Postal Orders crossed "City Bank."
+
+
+THE SALVATION ARMY: A SKETCH.
+
+BY AN OFFICER OF SEVENTEEN YEARS' STANDING. What is the Salvation Army?
+
+It is an Organisation existing to effect a radical revolution in the
+spiritual condition of the enormous majority of the people of all
+lands. Its aim is to produce a change not only in the opinions,
+feelings, and principles of these vast populations, but to alter the
+whole course of their lives, so that instead of spending their time in
+frivolity and pleasure-seeking, if not in the grossest forms of vice,
+they shall spend it in the service of their generation and in the
+worship of God. So far it has mainly operated in professedly Christian
+countries, where the overwhelming majority of the people have ceased,
+publicly, at any rate, to worship Jesus Christ, or to submit themselves
+in any way to His authority. To what extent has the Army succeeded?
+
+Its flag is now flying in 34 countries or colonies, where under the
+leadership of nearly 10,000 men and women, whose lives are entirely
+given up to the work, it is holding some 49,800 religious meetings
+every week, attended by millions of persons, who ten years ago would
+have laughed at the idea of praying.
+
+And these operations are but the means for further extension,
+as will be seen, especially when it is remembered that the Army has
+its 27 weekly newspapers, of which no less than 31,000,000 copies are
+sold in the streets, public houses, and popular resorts of the
+godless majority. From its, ranks it is therefore certain that an
+ever-increasing multitude of men and women must eventually be won.
+
+That all this has not amounted to the creation of a mere passing gust
+of feeling, may best be demonstrated perhaps from the fact that the
+Army has accumulated no less than #775,000 worth of property,
+pays rentals amounting to #220,000 per annum for its meeting places,
+and has a total income from all sources of three-quarters of a million
+per annum. Now consider from whence all this has sprung.
+It is only twenty-five years since the author of this volume stood
+absolutely alone in the East of London, to endeavour to Christianise
+its irreligious multitudes, without the remotest conception in his own
+mind of the possibility of any such Organisation being created.
+
+Consider, moreover, through what opposition the Salvation Army has ever
+had to make its way.
+
+In each country it has to face universal prejudice, distrust,
+and contempt, and often stronger antipathy still. This opposition has
+generally found expression in systematic, Governmental, and Police
+restriction, followed in too many cases by imprisonment, and by the
+condemnatory outpourings of Bishops, Clergy, Pressmen and others,
+naturally followed in too many instances by the oaths and curses,
+the blows and insults of the populace. Through all this, in country
+after country, the Army makes its way to the position of universal
+respect, that respect, at any rate, which is shown to those who have
+conquered. And of what material has this conquering host been made?
+Wherever the Army goes it gathers into its meetings, in the first
+instance, a crowd of the most debased, brutal, blasphemous elements
+that can be found who, if permitted, interrupt the services,
+and if they see the slightest sign of police tolerance for their
+misconduct, frequently fall upon the Army officers or their property
+with violence. Yet a couple of Officers face such an audience with the
+absolute certainty of recruiting out of it an Army Corps.
+Many thousands of those who are now most prominent in the ranks of the
+Army never knew what it was to pray before they attended its services;
+and large numbers of them had settled into a profound conviction that
+everything connected with religion was utterly false. It is out of such
+material that God has constructed what is admitted to be one of the
+most fervid bodies of believers ever seen on the face of the earth.
+
+Many persons in looking at the progress of the Army have shown a
+strange want of discernment in talking and writing as though all this
+had been done in a most haphazard fashion, or as though an individual
+could by the mere effort of his will produce such changes in the lives
+of others as he chose. The slightest reflection will be sufficient we
+are sure to convince any impartial individual that the gigantic results
+attained by the Salvation Army could only be reached by steady
+unaltering processes adapted to this end. And what are the processes by
+which this great Army has been made?
+
+1. The foundation of all the Army's success, looked at apart from its
+divine source of strength, is its continued direct attack upon those
+whom it seeks to bring under the influence of the Gospel.
+The Salvation Army Officer, instead of standing upon some dignified
+pedestal, to describe the fallen condition of his fellow men, in the
+hope that though far from him, they may thus, by some mysterious
+process, come to a better life, goes down into the street, and from
+door to door, and from room to room, lays his hands on those who are
+spiritually sick, and leads them to the Almighty Healer. In its forms of
+speech and writing the Army constantly exhibits this same characteristic.
+Instead of propounding religious theories or pretending to teach a
+system of theology, it speaks much after the fashion of the old Prophet
+or Apostle, to each individual, about his or her sin and duty, thus
+bringing to bear upon each heart and conscience the light and power
+from heaven, by which alone the world can be transformed.
+
+2. And step by step, along with this human contact goes unmistakably
+something that is not human.
+
+The puzzlement and self-contradiction of most critics of the Army
+springs undoubtedly from the fact that they are bound to account for
+its success without admitting that any superhuman power attends its
+ministry, yet day after day, and night after night, the wonderful facts
+go on multiplying. The man who last night was drunk in a London slum,
+is to-night standing up for Christ on an Army platform. The clever
+sceptic, who a few weeks ago was interrupting the speakers in Berlin,
+and pouring contempt upon their claims to a personal knowledge of the
+unseen Saviour, is to-day as thorough a believer as any of them.
+The poor girl, lost to shame and hope, who a month ago was an outcast
+of Paris, is to-day a modest devoted follower of Christ, working in a
+humble situation. To those who admit we are right in saying
+"this is the Lord's doing," all is simple enough, and our certainty
+that the dregs of Society can become its ornaments requires no further
+explanation.
+
+3. All these modern miracles would, however, have been comparatively
+useless but for the Army's system of utilising the gifts and energy of
+our converts to the uttermost. Suppose that without any claim to Divine
+power the Army had succeeded in raising up tens of thousands of
+persons, formerly unknown and unseen in the community, and made them
+into Singers, Speakers, Musicians, and Orderlies, that would surely in
+itself have been a remarkable fact. But not only have these engaged in
+various labours for the benefit of the community. They have been filled
+with a burning ambition to attain the highest possible degree of
+usefulness. No one can wonder that we expect to see the same process
+carried on successfully amongst our new friends of the Casual Ward and
+the Slum. And if the Army has been able to accomplish all this
+utilisation of human talents for the highest purposes, in spite of an
+almost universally prevailing contrary practice amongst the Churches,
+what may not its Social Wing be expected to do, with the example of the
+Army before it?
+
+4. The maintenance of all this system has, of course, been largely due
+to the unqualified acceptance of military government and discipline.
+But for this we cannot be blind to the fact that even in our own ranks
+difficulties would every day arise as to the exaltation to front seats
+of those who were formerly persecutors and injurious. The old feeling
+which would have kept Paul suspected, in the background, after his
+conversion is, unfortunately, a part of the conservative groundwork of
+human nature that continues to exist everywhere, and which has to be
+overcome by rigid discipline in order to secure that everywhere and
+always, the new convert should be made the most of for Christ.
+But our Army system is a great indisputable fact, so much so that our
+enemies sometimes reproach us with it. That it should be possible to
+create an Army Organisation, and to secure faithful execution of duty
+daily is indeed a wonder, but a wonder accomplished, just as completely
+amongst the Republicans of America and France, as amongst the
+militarily trained Germans, or the subjects of the British monarchy.
+It is notorious that we can send an officer from London, possessed of
+no extraordinary ability, to take command of any corps in the world,
+with a certainty that he will find soldiers eager to do his bidding,
+and without a thought of disputing his commands, so long as he
+continues faithful to the orders and regulations under which his men
+are enlisted.
+
+5. But those show a curious ignorance who set down our successes to
+this discipline, as though it were something of the prison order,
+although enforced without any of the power lying either behind the
+prison warder or the Catholic priest. On the contrary, wherever the
+discipline of the Army has been endangered, and its regular success for
+a time interrupted, it has been through an attempt to enforce it
+without enough of that joyous, cheerful spirit of love which is its
+main spring. Nobody can become acquainted with our soldiers in any
+land, without being almost immediately struck with their extraordinary
+gladness, and this joy is in itself one of the most infectious and
+influential elements of the Army's success. But if this be so, amid the
+comparatively well to do, judge of what its results are likely to be
+amongst the poorest and most wretched! To those who have never known
+bright days, the mere sight of a happy face is as it were a revelation
+and inspiration in one.
+
+6. But the Army's success does not come with magical rapidity;
+it depends, like that of all real work, upon infinite perseverance.
+
+To say nothing of the perseverance of the Officer who has made the
+saving of men his life work, and who, occupied and absorbed with this
+great pursuit, may naturally enough be expected to remain faithful,
+there are multitudes of our Soldiers who, after a hard day's toil for
+their daily bread, have but a few hours of leisure, but devote it
+ungrudgingly to the service of the War. Again and again, when the
+remains of some Soldier are laid to rest, amid the almost universal
+respect of a town, which once knew him only as an evil-doer, we hear it
+said that this man, since the date of his conversion, from five to ten
+years ago, has seldom been absent from his post, and never without good
+reason for it. His duty may have been comparatively insignificant,
+"only a door-keeper," "only a War Cry seller," yet Sunday after Sunday,
+evening after evening, he would be present, no matter who the
+commanding officer might be, to do his part, bearing with the unruly,
+breathing hope into the distressed, and showing unwavering faithfulness
+to all. The continuance of these processes of mercy depends largely
+upon leadership, and the creation and maintenance of this leadership
+has been one of the marvels of the Movement. We have men to-day looked
+up to and reverenced over wide areas of country, arousing multitudes to
+the most devoted service, who a few years ago were champions of
+iniquity, notorious in nearly every form of vice, and some of them
+ringleaders in violent opposition to the Army. We have a right to
+believe that on the same lines God is going to raise up just such
+leaders without measure and without end.
+
+Beneath, behind, and pervading all the successes of the Salvation Army
+is a force against which the world may sneer, but without which the
+world's miseries cannot be removed, the force of that Divine love which
+breathed on Calvary, and which God is able to communicate by His spirit
+to human hearts to-day.
+
+It is pitiful to see intelligent men attempting to account, without the
+admission of this great fact, for the self-sacrifice and success of
+Salvation Officers and Soldiers. If those who wish to understand the
+Army would only take the trouble to spend as much as twenty-four hours
+with its people, how different in almost every instance would be the
+conclusions arrived at. Half-an-hour spent in the rooms inhabited by
+many of our officers would be sufficient to convince, even a well-to-do
+working man, that life could not be lived happily in such circumstances
+without some superhuman power, which alike sustains and gladdens the
+soul, altogether independently of earthly surroundings.
+
+The Scheme that has been propounded in this volume would, we are quite
+satisfied, have no chance of success were it not for the fact that we
+have such a vast supply of men and women who, through the love of
+Christ ruling in their hearts, are prepared to look upon a life of
+self-sacrificing effort for the benefit of the vilest and roughest as
+the highest of privileges. With such a force at command, we dare to say
+that the accomplishment of this stupendous undertaking is a foregone
+conclusion, if the material assistance which the Army does not possess
+is forthcoming.
+
+
+THE SALVATION ARMY SOCIAL REFORM WING.
+
+Temporary Headquarters 36, UPPER THAMES STREET, LONDON, E.C.
+
+OBJECTS.--The bringing together of employers and workers for their
+mutual advantage. Making known the wants of each to each by providing a
+ready method of communication.
+
+PLAN OF OPERATION.--The Opening of a Central Registry Office,
+which for the present will be located at the above address,
+and where registers will be kept free of charge wherein the wants of
+both employers and workers will be recorded, the registers being open
+for consultation by all interested.
+
+Public Waiting Rooms (for male and female), to which the unemployed may
+come for the purpose of scanning the newspapers, the insertion of
+advertisements for employment in all newspapers at lowest rates.
+Writing tables, &c., provided for their use to enable them to write
+applications for situations on work. The receiving of letters
+(replies to applications for employment) for unemployed workers.
+
+The Waiting Rooms will also act as Houses-of-Call, where employers
+can meet and enter into engagements with Workers of all kinds,
+by appointment or otherwise, thus doing away with the snare
+that awaits many of the unemployed, who have no place to wait other
+than the Public House, which at present is almost the only
+"house-of-call" for Out-of-Work men.
+
+By making known to the public generally the wants of the unemployed
+by means of advertisements, by circulars, and direct application to
+employers, the issue of labour statistics with information as to the
+number of unemployed who are anxious for work, the various trades and
+occupations they represent, &c., &c.
+
+The opening of branches of the Labour Bureau as fast as funds and
+opportunities permit, in all the large towns and centres of industry
+throughout Great Britain.
+
+In connection with the Labour Bureau, we propose to deal with both
+skilled and unskilled workers, amongst the latter forming such agencies
+as "Sandwich" Board Men's Society, Shoe Black, Carpet Beating,
+White-washing, Window Cleaning, Wood Chopping, and other Brigades,
+all of which will, with many others, be put into operation as far as
+the assistance of the public (in the shape of applying for workers of
+all kinds) will afford us the opportunity.
+
+A Domestic Servants' Agency will also be a branch of the Bureau,
+and a Home For Domestic Servants out of situation is also in
+contemplation. In this and other matters funds alone are required to
+commence operations. All communications, donations, etc., should be
+addressed as above, marked "Labour Bureau," etc.
+
+
+CENTRAL LABOUR BUREAU. LOCAL AGENTS AND CORRESPONDENTS' DEPARTMENT.
+
+Dear Comrade,--The enclosed letter, which has been sent to our
+Officers throughout the Field, will explain the object we have in view.
+Your name has been suggested to us as one whose heart is thoroughly in
+sympathy with any effort on behalf of poor suffering humanity.
+We are anxious to have in connection with each of our Corps,
+and in every locality throughout the Kingdom, some sympathetic,
+level-headed comrade, acting as our Agent or local Correspondent,
+to whom we could refer at all times for reliable information,
+and who would take it as work of love to regularly communicate useful
+information respecting the social condition of things generally in
+their neighbourhood.
+
+Kindly reply, giving us your views and feelings on the subject as soon
+as possible, as we are anxious to organise at once. The first business
+on hand is for us to get information of those out of work and employers
+requiring workers, so that we can place them upon our registers,
+and make known the wants both of employers and employes.
+
+We shall be glad of a communication from you, giving us some facts as
+to the condition of things in your locality, or any ideas or
+suggestions you would like to give, calculated to help us in connection
+with this good work.
+
+I may say that the Social Wing not only comprehends the labour
+question, but also prison rescue and other branches of Salvation work,
+dealing with broken-down humanity generally, so that you can see what a
+great blessing you may be to the work of God by co-operating with us.
+
+Believe me to be, Yours affectionately for the Suffering and Lost, etc.
+
+
+
+LOCAL AGENTS AND CORRESPONDENTS DEPARTMENT.
+
+Proposition for local agent, correspondent, etc.
+
+
+Name...................................................................
+
+Address................................................................
+
+Occupation.............................................................
+
+If a Soldier, what Corps?..............................................
+
+If not a Soldier, what Denomination?...................................
+
+If spoken to on the subject, what reply they have made?................
+
+.......................................................................
+
+.......................................................................
+
+.......................................................................
+
+.......................................................................
+
+.......................................................................
+
+ Signed.....................................................
+
+ Corps......................................................
+
+ Date............................ 189 .
+
+Kindly return this as soon as possible, and we will then place
+ourselves in communication with the Comrade you propose for this
+position.
+
+
+
+TO EMPLOYERS OF LABOUR.
+
+We beg to bring to your notice the fact that the Salvation Army has
+opened at the above address (in connection with the Social Reform Wing),
+a Labour Bureau for the Registration of the wants of all classes
+of Labour, for both employer and employe in London and throughout the
+Kingdom, our object being to place in communication with each other,
+for mutual advantage, those who want workers and those who want work.
+
+Arrangements have been made at the above address for waiting rooms,
+where employers can see unemployed men and women, and where the latter
+may have accommodation to write letters, see the advertisements in the
+papers, &c., &c.
+
+If you are in want of workers of any kind, will you kindly fill up the
+enclosed form and return it to us? We will then have the particulars
+entered up, and endeavour to have your wants supplied.
+All applications, I need hardly assure you, will have our best attention,
+whether they refer to work of a permanent or temporary character.
+
+We shall also be glad, through the information office of Labour
+Department, to give you any further information as to our plans, &c.,
+or an Officer will wait upon you to receive instructions for the supply
+of workers, if requested.
+
+As no charge will be made for registration of either the wants of
+employers or the wants of the unemployed, it will be obvious that a
+considerable outlay will be necessary to sustain these operations in
+active usefulness, and that therefore financial help will be greatly
+needed.
+
+We shall gratefully receive donations, from the smallest coin up,
+to help to cover the cost of working this department. We think it right
+to say that only in special cases shall we feel at liberty to give
+personal recommendations. This however, will no doubt be understood,
+seeing that we shall have to deal with very large numbers who are
+total strangers to us. Please address all communications or donations
+as above, marked "Central Labour Bureau," etc.
+
+
+WE PROPOSE TO ENTER UPON A CRUSADE AGAINST "SWEATING." WILL YOU HELP US?
+
+Dear Sir,--in connection with the Social Reform Wing a Central Labour
+Bureau has been opened, one department of which will deal especially
+with that class of labour termed "unskilled," from amongst whom are
+drawn BOARDMEN, MESSENGERS, BILL DISTRIBUTORS, CIRCULAR ADDRESSERS,
+WINDOW CLEANERS, WHITE-WASHERS, CARPET BEATERS, &C., &C.
+
+It is very important that work given to these workers and others not
+enumerated, should be taxed as little as possible by the Contractor,
+or those who act between the employer and the worker.
+
+In all our operations in this capacity we do not propose to make profit
+out of those we benefit; paying over the whole amount received, less
+say one halfpenny in the shilling, or some such small sum which will go
+towards the expense of providing boards for "sandwich" boardmen, the
+hire of barrows, purchase of necessary tools, &c., &c.
+
+We are very anxious to help that most needy class, the "boardmen," many
+of whom are "sweated" out of their miserable earnings; receiving often
+as low as one shilling for a day's toil.
+
+WE APPEAL TO ALL WHO SYMPATHISE WITH SUFFERING HUMANITY, especially
+Religious and Philanthropic individuals and Societies, to assist us in
+our efforts, by placing orders for the supply of Boardmen, Messengers,
+Bill-distributors, Window-cleaners and other kinds of labour in our
+hands. Our charge for "boardmen" will be 2s. 2d., including boards, the
+placing and proper supervision of the men, &c. Two shillings, at least,
+will go direct to the men; most of the hirers of boardmen pay this, and
+some even more, but often not more than one-half reaches the men.
+We shall be glad to forward you further information of our plans,
+or will send a representative to further explain, or to take orders,
+on receiving notice from you to that effect.
+
+ Believe me to be,
+ Yours faithfully, etc.
+
+
+ CENTRAL LABOUR BUREAU.
+
+ TO THE UNEMPLOYED.--MALE AND FEMALE.
+
+ NOTICE.
+
+A Free Registry, for all kinds of unemployed labour, has been opened at
+the above address. If you want work, call and make yourself and your
+wants known. Enter your name and address and wants on the Registers, or
+fill up form below, and hand it in at above address. Look over the
+advertising pages of the papers provided. Tables with pens and ink are
+provided for you to write for situations. If you live at a distance,
+fill up this form giving all particulars, or references, and forward to
+Commissioner Smith, care of the Labour Bureau.
+
+Name.......................................................
+
+Address....................................................
+
+...........................................................
+
+Kind of work wanted........................................
+
+Wages you ask..............................................
+
+
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ Name I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ Age I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ During past 10 years have I
+ you had regular employment? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ How long for? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ What kind of work? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ What work can you do? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ What have you worked at I
+ at odd times? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ How much did you earn when I
+ regularly employed? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ How much did you earn when I
+ irregularly employed? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ Are you married? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ Is wife living? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ I
+ How many children and ages? I
+ I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+If you were put on a farm to I
+work at anything you could do, I
+and were supplied with food, I
+lodging, and clothes, with a I
+view to getting you on your feet, I
+would you do all you could? I
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+HOW BEGGARY WAS ABOLISHED IN BAVARIA BY COUNT RUMFORD.
+
+Count Rumford was an American officer who served with considerable
+distinction in the Revolutionary War in that country, and afterwards
+settled in England. From thence he went to Bavaria, where he was
+promoted to the chief command of its army, and also was energetically
+employed in the Civil Government. Bavaria at this time literally
+swarmed with beggars, who were not only an eyesore and discredit to the
+nation, but a positive injury to the State. The Count resolved upon the
+extinction of this miserable profession, and the following extracts
+from his writings describe the method by which he accomplished it: --
+
+"Bavaria, by the neglect of the Government, and the abuse of the
+kindness and charity of its amiable people, had become infested with
+beggars, with whom mingled vagabonds and thieves. They were to the body
+politic what parasites and vermin are to people and dwellings--
+breeding by the same lazy neglect."--(Page 14.)
+
+"In Bavaria there were laws which made provision for the poor, but they
+suffered them to fall into neglect. Beggary had become general."--
+(Page 15.)
+
+"In short," says Count Rumford, "these detestable vermin swarmed
+everywhere; and not only their impudence and clamorous importunity were
+boundless, but they had recourse to the most diabolical arts and the
+most horrid crimes in the prosecution of their infamous trade.
+They exposed and tortured their own children, and those they stole for
+the purpose, to extort contributions from the charitable."--(Page 15.)
+
+"In the large towns beggary was an organised imposture, with a sort of
+government and police of its own. Each beggar had his beat, with
+orderly successions and promotions, as with other governments.
+There were battles to decide conflicting claims, and a good beat was
+not unfreguently a marriage portion or a thumping legacy."--(Page 16.)
+
+"He saw that it was not enough to forbid beggary by law or to punish it
+by imprisonment. The beggars cared for neither. The energetic Yankee
+Statesman attacked the question as he did problems in physical science.
+He studied beggary and beggars. How would he deal with one individual
+beggar? Send him for a month to prison to beg again as soon as he came
+out? That is no remedy. The evident course was to forbid him to beg,
+but at the same time to give him the opportunity to labor; to teach him
+to work, to encourage him to honest industry. And the wise ruler sets
+himself to provide food, comfort, and work for every beggar and
+vagabond in Bavaria, and did it."--(Page 17.)
+
+"Count Rumford, wise and just, sets himself to reform the whole class
+of beggars and vagabonds, and convert them into useful citizens, even
+those who had sunk into vice and crime.
+
+"'What,' he asked himself, 'is, after the necessaries of life, the
+first condition of comfort?' Cleanliness, which animals and insects
+prize, which in man affects his moral character, and which is akin to
+godliness. The idea that the soul is defiled and depraved by what is
+unclean has long prevailed in all ages. Virtue never dwelt long with
+filth. Our bodies are at war with everything that defiles them.
+
+"His first step, after a thorough study and consideration of the
+subject, was to provide in Munich, and at all necessary points, large,
+airy, and even elegant Houses of Industry, and store them with the
+tools and materials of such manufactures as were most needed, and would
+be most useful. Each house was provided with a large dining-room and a
+cooking apparatus sufficient to furnish an economical dinner to every
+worker. Teachers were engaged for each kind of labour. Warmth, light,
+comfort, neatness, and order, in and around these houses, made them
+attractive. The dinner every day was gratis, provided at first by the
+Government, later by the contributions of the citizens. Bakers brought
+stale bread; butchers, refuse meat; citizens, their broken victuals--
+all rejoicing in being freed from the nuisance of beggary. The teachers
+of handicrafts were provided by the Government. And while all this was
+free, everyone was paid the full value for his labour. You shall not
+beg; but here is comfort, food, work, pay. There was no ill-usage, no
+harsh language; in five years not a blow was given even to a child by
+his instructor.
+
+"When the preparations for this great experiment had been silently
+completed, the army--the right arm of the governing power, which had
+been prepared tor the work by its own thorough reformation--was
+called into action in aid of the police and the civil magistrates.
+Regiments of cavalry were so disposed as to furnish every town with a
+detachment, with patrols on every highway, and squads in the villages,
+keeping the strictest order and discipline, paying the utmost deference
+to the civil authorities, and avoiding all offence to the people;
+instructed when the order was given to arrest every beggar, vagrant,
+and deserter and bring them before the magistrates. This military
+police cost nothing extra to the country beyond a few cantonments,
+and this expense to the whole country was less than #3,000 a-year.
+
+"The 1st of January, 1790--New Year's Day, from time immemorial
+the beggars' holiday, when they swarmed in the streets, expecting
+everyone to give--the commissioned and non-commissioned officers of
+three regiments of infantry were distributed early in the morning at
+different points of Munich to wait for orders. Lieutenant-General Count
+Rumford assembled at his residence the chief officers of the army and
+principal magistrates of the city, and communicated to them his plans
+for the campaign. Then, dressed in the uniform of his rank, with his
+orders and decorations glittering on his breast, setting an example to
+the humblest soldier, he led them into the street, and had scarcely
+reached it before a beggar approached wished him a 'Happy New Year,'
+and waited for the expected aims. 'I went up to him, says Count Rumford,
+'and laying my hand gently on his shoulder, told him that henceforth
+begging would not be permitted in Munich; that if he was in need,
+assistance would be given him; and if detected begging again, he would
+be severely punished.' He was then sent to the Town Hall, his name and
+residence inscribed upon the register, and he was directed to repair to
+the Military House of Industry next morning, where he would find
+dinner, work, and wages. Every officer, every magistrate, every
+soldier, followed the example set them; every beggar was arrested,
+and in one day a stop was put to beggary in Bavaria. It was banished
+out of the kingdom.
+
+"And now let us see what was the progress and success of this
+experiment. It seemed a risk to trust the raw materials of industry--
+wool, flax, hemp, etc.--to the hands of common beggars; to render
+debauched and depraved class orderly and useful, was an arduous
+enterprise. Of course the greater number made bad work at the
+beginning. For months they cost more than they came to. They spoiled
+more horns than they made spoons. Employed first in the coarser and
+ruder manufactures, they were advanced as they improved, and were for
+some time paid more than they earned--paid to encourage good will,
+effort, and perseverance. These were worth any sum. The poor people saw
+that they were treated with more than justice--with kindness. It was
+very evident that it was all for their good. At first there was
+confusion, but no insubordination. They were awkward, but not
+insensible to kindness. The aged, the weak, and the children were put
+to the easiest tasks. The younger children were paid simply to look on
+until they begged to join in the work, which seemed to them like play.
+Everything around them was made clean, quiet, orderly, and pleasant.
+Living at their own homes, they came at a fixed hour in the morning.
+They had at noon a hot, nourishing dinner of soup and bread. Provisions
+were either contributed or bought wholesale, and the economies of
+cookery were carried to the last point of perfection. Count Rumford had
+so planned the cooking apparatus that three women cooked a dinner for
+one thousand persons at a cost though wood was used, of 4 1/2d. for
+fuel; and the entire cost of the dinner for 1,200 was only #1 7s 6 1/2d.,
+or about one-third of a penny for each person! Perfect order was kept
+--at work, at meals, and everywhere. As soon as a company took its
+place at table, the food having been previously served, all repeated a
+short prayer. 'Perhaps,' says Count Rumford, 'I ought to ask pardon for
+mentioning so old-fashioned a custom, but I own I am old-fashioned
+enough myself to like such things.'
+
+"These poor people were generously paid for their labour, but something
+more than cash payment was necessary. There was needed the feeling of
+emulation, the desire to excel, the sense of honour, the love of glory.
+Not only pay, but rewards, prizes, distinctions, were given to the more
+deserving. Peculiar care was taken with the children. They were first
+paid simply for being present, idle lookers-on, until they begged with
+tears to be allowed to work. 'How sweet those tears were to me,' says
+Count Rumford, 'can easily be imagined.' Certain hours were spent by
+them in a school, for which teachers were provided.
+
+"The effect of these measures was very remarkable. Awkward as the
+people were, they were not stupid, and learned to work with unexpected
+rapidity. More wonderful was the change in their manners, appearances
+and the very expression of their countenances. Cheerfulness and
+gratitude replaced the gloom of misery and the sullenness of despair.
+Their hearts were softened; they were most grateful to their benefactor
+for themselves, still more for their children. These worked with their
+parents, forming little industrial groups, whose affection excited the
+interest of every visitor. Parents were happy in the industry and
+growing intelligence of their children, and the children were proud of
+their own achievements.
+
+"The great experiment was a complete and triumphant success. When Count
+Rumford wrote his account of it, it had been five years in operation;
+it was, financially, a paying speculation, and had not only banished
+beggary, but had wrought an entire change in the manners, habits, and
+very appearance of the most abandoned and degraded people in the
+kingdom."--("Count Rumford," pages 18-24.)
+
+"Are the poor ungrateful? Count Rumford did not find them so. When,
+from the exhaustion of his great labours, he fell dangerously ill,
+these poor people whom he had rescued from lives of shame and misery,
+spontaneously assembled, formed a procession, and went in a body to the
+Cathedral to offer their united prayers for his recovery. When he was
+absent in Italy, and supposed to be dangerously ill in Naples, they set
+apart a certain time every day, after work hours, to pray for their
+benefactor. After an absence of fifteen months, Count Rumford returned
+with renewed health to Munich--a city where there was work for everyone,
+and not one person whose wants were not provided for. When he visited
+the military workhouse, the reception given him by these poor people
+drew tears from the eyes of all present. A few days after he
+entertained eighteen hundred of them in the English garden--a festival
+at which 30,000 of the citizens of Munich assisted."
+("Count Rumford," pages 24-25.)
+
+
+
+THE CO-OPERATIVE EXPERIMENT AT RALAHINE,
+
+"The outrages of the 'Whitefeet,' 'Lady Clare Boys,' and 'Terry Alts'
+(labourers) far exceeded those of recent occurrence; yet no remedy but
+force was attempted, except by one Irish landlord, Mr. John Scott
+Vandeleur, of Ralahine, county Clare, late high sheriff of his county.
+Early in 1831 his family had been obliged to take flight, in charge of
+an armed police force, and his steward had been murdered by one of the
+labourers, having been chosen by lot at a meeting held to decide who
+should perpetrate the deed. Mr. Vandeleur came to England to seek
+someone who would aid him in organising the labourers into an
+agricultural and manufacturing association, to be conducted on
+co-operative principles, and he was recommended to Mr. Craig, who, at
+great sacrifice of his position and prospects, consented to give his
+services.
+
+"No one but a man of rare zeal and courage would have attempted so
+apparently hopeless a task as that which Mr. Craig undertook. Both the
+men whom he had to manage--the Terry Alts who had murdered their
+master's steward--and their surroundings were as little calculated to
+give confidence in the success of the scheme as they well could be.
+The men spoke generally the Irish language, which Mr. Craig did not
+understand, and they looked upon him with suspicion as one sent to worm
+out of them the secret of the murder recently committed. He was
+consequently treated with coldness, and worse than that. On one
+occasion the outline of his grave was cut out of the pasture near his
+dwelling, and he carried his life in his hand. After a time, however,
+he won the confidence of these men, rendered savage as they had been by
+ill-treatment.
+
+"The farm was let by Mr. Vandeleur at a fixed rent, to be paid in fixed
+quantities of farm produce, which, at the prices ruling in 1830-31,
+would bring in #900, which included interest on buildings, machinery,
+and live stock provided by Mr. Vandeleur. The rent alone was #700.
+As the farm consisted of 618 acres, only 268 of which were under
+tillage, this rent was a very high one--a fact which was acknowledged
+by the landlord. All profits after payment of rent and interest
+belonged to the members, divisible at the end of the year if desired.
+They started a co-operative store to supply themselves with food and
+clothing, and the estate was managed by a committee of the members,
+who paid every male and female member wages for their labour in labour
+notes which were exchangeable at the store for goods or cash.
+Intoxicating drink or tobacco were prohibited. The committee each day
+allotted each man his duties. The members worked the land partly as
+kitchen garden and fruit orchards, and partly as dairy farm, stall
+feeding being encouraged and root crops grown for the cattle. Pigs,
+poultry, &c., were reared. Wages at the time were only 8d per day for
+men and 5d. for women, and the members were paid at these rates.
+Yet, as they lived chiefly on potatoes and milk produced on the farm,
+which, as well as mutton and pork, were sold to them at extremely low
+prices, they saved money or rather notes. Their health and appearance
+quickly improved, so much so that, with disease raging round them,
+there was no case of death or serious illness among them while the
+experiment lasted. The single men lived together in a large building,
+and the families in cottages. Assisted by Mrs. Craig, the secretary
+carried out the most enlightened system of education for the young,
+those old enough being alternately employed on the farm and in the
+school. Sanitary arrangements were in a high state of perfection, and
+physical and moral training were most carefully attended to. In respect
+of these and other social arrangements, Mr. Craig was a man much before
+his time, and he has since made himself a name in connection with their
+application in various parts of the country.
+
+"The 'New System,' as the Ralahine experiment was called, though at
+first regarded with suspicion and derision, quickly gained favour in
+the district, so that before long outsiders were extremely anxious to
+become members of the association. In January, 1832, the community
+consisted of fifty adults and seventeen children. The total number
+afterwards increased to eighty-one. Everything was prosperous, and the
+members of the association were not only benefitted themselves, but
+their improvement exercised a beneficent influence upon the people in
+their neighbourhood. It was hoped that other landlords would imitate
+the excellent example of Mr. Vandeleur, especially as his experiment
+was one profitable to himself, as well as calculated to produce peace
+and contentment in disturbed Ireland. Just when these hopes were raised
+to their highest degree of expectancy, the happy community at Ralahine
+was broken up through the ruin and flight of Mr. Vandeleur, who had
+lost his property by gambling. Everything was sold off, and the labour
+notes saved by the members would have been worthless had not Mr. Craig,
+with noble self-sacrifice, redeemed them out of his own pocket.
+
+"We have given but a very scanty description of the system pursued at
+Ralahine. The arrangements were in most respects admirable,
+and reflected the greatest credit upon Mr. Craig as an organiser and
+administrator. To his wisdom, energy, tact, and forbearance the success
+of his experiment was in great measure due, and it is greatly to be
+regretted that he was not in a position to repeat the attempt under
+more favourable circumstances." ("History of a Co-operative Farm.")
+
+
+
+CARLYLE ON THE SOCIAL OBLIGATIONS OF THE NATION
+
+FORTY-FIVE YEARS AGO. Inserted at the earnest request of a friend, who
+was struck by the coincidence of some ideas, similar to those of this
+volume, set forth so long ago, but as yet remaining unrealised, and
+which I had never read.
+
+EXTRACTS FROM "PAST AND PRESENT."
+
+"A Prime Minister, even here in England, who shall dare believe the
+heavenly omens, and address himself like a man and hero to the great
+dumb-struggling heart of England, and speak out for it, and act out for
+it, the God's-justice it is writhing to get uttered and perishing for
+want of--yes, he too will see awaken round him, in passionate,
+burning, all-defiant loyalty, the heart of England, and such a
+'support' as no Division-List or Parliamentary Majority was ever yet
+known to yield a man! Here as there, now as then, he who can and dare
+trust the heavenly Immensities, all earthly Localities are subject to
+him. We will pray for such a man and First-Lord;--yes, and far
+better, we will strive and incessantly make ready, each of us, to be
+worthy to serve and second such a First-Lord! We shall then be as good
+as sure of his arriving; sure of many things, let him arrive or not.
+
+"Who can despair of Governments that passes a Soldier's Guard-house, or
+meets a red-coated man on the streets? That a body of men could be got
+together to kill other men when you bade them: this, a priori, does it
+not seem one of the impossiblest things? Yet look, behold it: in the
+stolidest of Do-nothing Governments, that impossibility is a thing
+done."--(Carlyle, "Past and Present," page 223.)
+
+"Strange, interesting, and yet most mournful to reflect on. Was this,
+then, of all the things mankind had some talent for, the one thing
+important to learn well, and bring to perfection; this of successfully
+killing one another? Truly, you have learned it well, and carried the
+business to a high perfection. It is incalculable what, by arranging,
+commanding, and regimenting you can make of men. These thousand
+straight-standing, firm-set individuals, who shoulder arms, who march,
+wheel, advance, retreat; and are, for your behoof a magazine charged
+with fiery death, in the most perfect condition of potential activity.
+Few months ago, till the persuasive sergeant came, what were they?
+Multiform ragged losels, runaway apprentices, starved weavers thievish
+valets; an entirely broken population, fast tending towards the
+treadmill. But the persuasive sergeant came, by tap of drum enlisted,
+or formed lists of them, took heartily to drilling them; and he and you
+have made them this! Most potent effectual for all work whatsoever,
+is wise planning, firm, combining, and commanding among men. Let no man
+despair of Governments who looks on these two sentries at the Horse
+Guards and our United Service clubs. I could conceive an Emigration
+Service, a Teaching Service, considerable varieties of United and
+Separate Services, of the due thousands strong, all effective as this
+Fighting Service is; all doing their work like it--which work, much
+more than fighting, is henceforth the necessity of these new ages we
+are got into! Much lies among us, convulsively, nigh desperately,
+struggling to be born."--("Past and Present," page 224.)
+
+"It was well, all this, we know; and yet it was not well.
+Forty soldiers, I am told, will disperse the largest Spitalfields mob;
+forty to ten thousand, that is the proportion between drilled and
+undrilled. Much there is which cannot yet be organised in this world,
+but somewhat also which can--somewhat also which must. When one
+thinks, for example, what books are become and becoming for us, what
+operative Lancashires are become; what a Fourth Estate and innumerable
+virtualities not yet got to be actualities are become and becoming,
+one sees organisms enough in the dim huge future, and 'United Services'
+quite other than the redcoat one; and much, even in these years,
+struggling to be born!"--("Past and Present," page 226.)
+
+"An effective 'Teaching Service,' I do consider that there must be;
+some education secretary, captain-general of teachers, who will
+actually contrive to get us taught. Then again, why should there not be
+an 'Emigration Service,' and secretary with adjuncts, with funds,
+forces, idle navy ships, and ever-increasing apparatus, in fine an
+effective system of emigration, so that at length before our twenty
+years of respite ended, every honest willing workman who found England
+too strait, and the 'organisation of labour' not yet sufficiently
+advanced, might find likewise a bridge built to carry him into new
+western lands, there to 'organise' with more elbow room some labour for
+himself? There to be a real blessing, raising new corn for us,
+purchasing new webs and hatchets from us; leaving us at least in peace;
+instead of staying here to be a physical-force Chartist, unblessed and
+no blessing! Is it not scandalous to consider that a Prime Minister
+could raise within the year, as I have seen it done, a hundred and
+twenty millions sterling to shoot the French; and we are stopped short
+for want of the hundredth part of that to keep the English living?
+The bodies of the English living, and the souls of the English living,
+these two 'Services,' an Education Service and an Emigration Service,
+these with others, will have actually to be organised.
+
+"A free bridge for emigrants! Why, we should then be on a par with
+America itself, the most favoured of all lands that have no government;
+and we should have, besides, so many traditions and mementos of
+priceless things which America has cast away. We could proceed
+deliberately to organise labour not doomed to perish unless we effected
+it within year and day every willing worker that proved superfluous,
+finding a bridge ready for him. This verily will have to be done;
+the time is big with this. Our little Isle is grown too narrow for us;
+but the world is wide enough yet for another six thousand years.
+England's sure markets will be among new colonies of Englishmen in all
+quarters of the Globe. All men trade with all men when mutually
+convenient, and are even bound to do it by the Maker of Men.
+Our friends of China, who guiltily refused to trade in these
+circumstances--had we not to argue with them, in cannon-shot at last,
+and convince them that they ought to trade? 'Hostile tariffs' will
+arise to shut us out, and then, again, will fall, to let us in;
+but the sons of England--speakers of the English language, were it
+nothing more--will in all times have the ineradicable predisposition to
+trade with England. Mycale was the Pan-Ionian--rendezvous of all the
+tribes of Ion--for old Greece; why should not London long continue the
+All Saxon Home, rendezvous of all the 'Children of the Harz-Rock,'
+arriving, in select samples, from the Antipodes and elsewhere by steam
+and otherwise, to the 'season' here? What a future! Wide as the world,
+if we have the heart and heroism for it, which, by Heaven's blessing,
+we shall.
+
+ "Keep not standing fixed and rooted,
+ Briskly venture, briskly roam;
+ Head and hand, where'er thou foot it,
+ And stout heart are still at home.
+ In what land the sun does visit
+ Brisk are we, what e'er betide;
+ To give space for wandering is it
+ That the world was made so wide.
+
+"Fourteen hundred years ago it was a considerable 'Emigration Service,'
+never doubt it, by much enlistment, discussion, and apparatus that we
+ourselves arrived in this remarkable island, and got into our present
+difficulties among others."--("Past and Present," pages 228-230)
+
+"The main substance of this immense problem of organising labour, and
+first of all of managing the working classes, will, it is very clear,
+have to be solved by those who stand practically in the middle of it,
+by those who themselves work and preside over work. Of all that can be
+enacted by any Parliament in regard to it, the germs must already lie
+potentially extant in those two classes who are to obey such enactment.
+A human chaos in which there is no light, you vainly attempt to
+irradiate by light shed on it; order never can arise there."
+("Past and Present," pages 231-32.)
+
+"Look around you. Your world-hosts are all in mutiny, in confusion,
+destitution; on the eve of fiery wreck and madness. They will not march
+farther for you, on the sixpence a day and supply-and-demand principle:
+they will not; nor ought they; nor can they. Ye shall reduce them to
+order; begin reducing them to order, to just subordination; noble
+loyalty in return for noble guidance. Their souls are driven nigh mad;
+let yours be sane and ever saner. Not as a bewildered bewildering mob,
+but as a firm regimented mass, with real captains over them, will these
+men march any more. All human interests, combined human endeavours,
+and social growth in this world have, at a certain stage of their
+development, required organising and work, the grandest of human
+interests, does not require it.
+
+"God knows the task will be hard, but no noble task was ever easy.
+This task will wear away your lives and the lives of your sons and
+grandsons; but for what purpose, if not for tasks like this, were lives
+given to men? Ye shall cease to count your thousand-pound scalps;
+the noble of you shall cease! Nay, the very scalps, as I say,
+will not long be left, if you count only these. Ye shall cease wholly
+to be barbarous vulturous Chactaws, and become noble European
+nineteenth-century men. Ye shall know that Mammon, in never such gigs
+and flunky 'respectabilities' in not the alone God; that of himself he
+is but a devil and even a brute-god.
+
+"Difficult? Yes, it will be difficult. The short-fibre cotton; that,
+too, was difficult. The waste-cotton shrub, long useless, disobedient
+as the thistle by the wayside; have ye not conquered it, made it into
+beautiful bandana webs, white woven shirts for men, bright tinted air
+garments wherein flit goddesses? Ye have shivered mountains asunder,
+made the hard iron pliant to you as soft putty; the forest-giants--
+marsh-jotuns--bear sheaves of golden grain; AEgir--the Sea-Demon
+himself stretches his back for a sleek highway to you, and on
+Firehorses and Windhorses ye career. Ye are most strong.
+Thor, red-bearded, with his blue sun-eyes, with his cheery heart and
+strong thunder-hammer, he and you have prevailed. Ye are most strong,
+ye Sons of the icy North, of the far East, far marching from your rugged
+Eastern Wildernesses, hitherward from the gray dawn of Time!
+Ye are Sons of the Jotun-land; the land of Difficulties Conquered.
+Difficult? You must try this thing. Once try it with the understanding
+that it will and shall have to be done. Try it as ye try the paltrier
+thing, making of money! I will bet on you once more, against all
+Jotuns, Tailor-gods, Double-barrelled Law-wards, and Denizens of Chaos
+whatsoever!"--("Past and Present," pages 236-37.)
+
+"A question arises here: Whether, in some ulterior, perhaps not
+far-distant stage of this 'Chivalry of Labour,' your Master-Worker may
+not find it possible, and needful, to grant his Workers permanent
+interest in his enterprise and theirs? So that it become, in practical
+result, what in essential fact and justice it ever is, a joint
+enterprise; all men, from the Chief Master down to the lowest Overseer
+and Operative, economically as well as loyally concerned for it?
+Which question I do not answer. The answer, near or else far,
+is perhaps, Yes; and yet one knows the difficulties. Despotism is
+essential in most enterprises; I am told they do not tolerate 'freedom
+of debate' on board a seventy-four. Republican senate and plebiscite
+would not answer well in cotton mills. And yet, observe there too,
+Freedom--not nomad's or ape's Freedom, but man's Freedom; this is
+indispensable. We must have it, and will have it! To reconcile
+Despotism with Freedom--well, is that such a mystery? Do you not
+already know the way? It is to make your Despotism just. Rigorous as
+Destiny, but just, too, as Destiny and its Laws. The Laws of God;
+all men obey these, and have no 'Freedom' at all but in obeying them.
+The way is already known, part of the way; and courage and some
+qualities are needed for walking on it."
+("Past and Present ," pages 241-42)
+
+"Not a May-game is this man's life, but a battle and a march, a warfare
+with principalities and powers. No idle promenade through fragrant
+orange-groves and green flowery spaces, waited on by the choral Muses
+and the rosy Hours: it is a stern pilgrimage through burning sandy
+solitudes, through regions of thick-ribbed ice. He walks among men,
+loves men, with inexpressible soft pity, as they cannot love him,
+but his soul dwells in solitude in the uttermost parts of creation.
+In green oases by the palm-tree wells he rests a space, but anon he has
+to journey forward, escorted by the Terrors and the Splendours, the
+Archdemons and Archangels. All Heaven, all Pandemonium are his escort.
+The stars keen-glancing from the Immensities send tidings to him;
+the graves, silent with their dead, from the Eternities.
+Deep calls for him unto Deep."--("Past and Present," page 249.)
+
+
+
+THE CATHOLIC CHURCH AND THE SOCIAL QUESTION.
+
+The Rev. Dr. Barry read a paper at the Catholic Conference on
+June 30th, 1890, from which I take the following extracts as
+illustrative of the rising feeling of this subject in the Catholic
+Church. The Rev. Dr. Barry began by defining the proletariat as those
+who have only one possession--their labour. Those who have no land,
+and no stake in the land, no house, and no home except the few sticks
+of furniture they significantly call by the name, no right to employment,
+but at the most a right to poor relief; and who, until the last 20 years,
+had not even a right to be educated unless by the charity of their
+"betters." The class which, without figure of speech or flights of
+rhetoric, is homeless, landless, property less in our chief cities--
+that I call the proletariat. Of the proletariat he declared there were
+hundreds of thousands growing up outside the pale of all churches.
+
+He continued: For it is frightfully evident that Christianity has not
+kept pace with the population; that it has lagged terribly behind;
+that, in plain words, we have in our midst a nation of heathens to whom
+the ideals, the practices, and the commandments of religion are things
+unknown--as little realised in the miles on miles of tenement-houses,
+and the factories which have produced them, as though Christ had never
+lived or never died. How could it be otherwise? The great mass of men
+and women have never had time for religion. You cannot expect them to
+work double-tides. With hard physical labour, from morning till night
+in the surroundings we know and see, how much mind and leisure is left
+for higher things on six days of the week? ... We must look this matter
+in the face. I do not pretend to establish the proportion between
+different sections in which these things happen. Still less am I
+willing to lay the blame on those who are houseless, landless, and
+property less. What I say is that if the Government of a country allows
+millions of human beings to be thrown into such conditions of living
+and working as we have seen, these are the consequences that must be
+looked for. "A child," said the Anglican Bishop South, "has a right to
+be born, and not to be damned into the world." Here have been millions
+of children literally "damned into the world," neither their heads nor
+their hands trained to anything useful, their miserable subsistence a
+thing to be fought and scrambled for, their homes reeking dens under
+the law of lease-holding which has produced outcast London and horrible
+Glasgow, their right to a playground and amusement curtailed to the
+running gutter, and their great "object-lesson" in life the drunken
+parents who end so often in the prison, the hospital, and the
+workhouse. We need not be astonished if these not only are not
+Christians, but have never understood why they should be....
+
+The social condition has created this domestic heathenism.
+Then the social condition must be changed. We stand in need of a
+public creed--of a social, and if you will understand the word, of a
+lay Christianity. This work cannot be done by the clergy, nor within
+the four walls of a church. The field of battle lies in the school,
+the home, the street, the tavern, the market, and wherever men come
+together. To make the people Christian they must be restored to their
+homes, and their homes to them.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of "In Darkest England" by Booth
+
+
+
+
+While converting the original printed book into Etext,
+I noticed a couple of typographical errors within the text:
+1st., at the bottom of a page within Part II, chapter V, Section 3.
+The text seems to end abruptly at the end of a page which I have
+marked '[sic]'
+
+2nd., some of the extracts from Carlyle's "Past and Present" in
+the appendix did not read right. So I checked against an edition
+of "Past and Present" published by Chapman and Hall Limited, 1897.
+True enough they appear misquoted, so I've corrected the mistakes.
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of "In Darkest England" by Booth
+
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