Preached at Southsea for the Mission
of the Good Shepherd. October 1871.
Isaiah -17. “To what
purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto
me? saith the Lord: . . . When ye come
to appear before me, who hath required this at your
hand, to tread my courts? Bring no more vain
oblations; incense is an abomination to me; the new
moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I
cannot away with; it is iniquity, even the solemn
meeting. Your new moons and your appointed feasts
my soul hateth: they are a trouble to me; I
am weary to bear them. And when ye spread forth
your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you: yea,
when ye make many prayers, I will not hear:
your hands are full of blood. Wash you, make
you clean; put away the evil of your doings from
before mine eyes; cease to do evil; learn to do well;
seek judgement, relieve the oppressed, judge the
fatherless, plead for the widow.”
I have been asked to plead to-day
for the mission of the Good Shepherd in Portsea.
I am informed that Portsea contains
some thirteen thousand souls, divided between two
parishes. That they, as I feared, include some
of the most ignorant and vicious of both sexes which
can be found in the kingdom; that there are few or
no rich people in the place; that the rich who have
an interest in the labour of these masses live away
from the place, and from the dwellings of those whom
they employ a social evil new to England;
but growing, alas! fearfully common in it; and that
vice, and unthrift, uncertain wages, and unhealthy
dwellings produce there, as elsewhere, misery and
savagery most deplorable. I am told, too, that
this mission has been working, nobly and self-denyingly,
among these unhappy people for some years past.
That it can, and ought to largely extend its operations;
that it is in want of fresh funds; that it is proposed
to build a new church, which, it is hoped, will be
a centre of civilization and organization, as well
as of religion and morality, for the district; and
I am bidden to invite you, as close neighbours of
Portsea, to help in the good work. I, of course,
know too little of local facts, or of the temper
of the people of Southsea. But I am bound to
believe it to be the same as I have found it elsewhere.
And I therefore shall confine myself to general
questions, and shall treat this case of Portsea,
as what it is, alas! one among a hundred similar ones,
and say to you simply what I have said for twenty-five
years, wherever and whenever I can get a hearing.
And therefore if I seem here and there to speak
sharply and sternly, recollect that I pay you a compliment
in so doing first, that I speak not to
you, but to all English men and women; and next,
that I speak as to those who have noble instincts,
if they will be only true to them: as
to English people, who are not afraid of being told
the truth; to English people who do wrong rather from
forgetfulness and luxury, than from meanness and
cruelty aforethought; who, as far as I have seen,
need, for the most part, only to be reminded that they
are doing wrong, to reawaken them to their better
selves, and set them trying honestly and bravely
to do right.
Let me then begin this sermon with
a parable. Alas! that the parable should represent
a common and notorious fact. Suppose yourselves
in some stately palace, amid marbles and bronzes,
statues and pictures, and all that cunning brain
and cunning hand, when wedded to the high instinct
of beauty, can produce. The furniture is of
the very richest, and kept with the most fastidious
cleanliness. The floors of precious wood are
polished like mirrors. The rooms have every
appliance for the ease of the luxurious inmates.
Everywhere you see, not mere brute wealth, but taste,
purity, and comfort. There is no lack of intellect
either: wise and learned books fill the
library shelves; maps and scientific instruments
crowd the tables. Nor of religion either; for
the house contains a private chapel, fitted up in
the richest style of mediaeval ecclesiastical art.
And as you walk along from polished floor to polished
floor, you seem to pass in review every object which
the body, or the mind, or the spirit, of the most
civilized human being can need for its satisfaction.
But, next to the chapel itself, a
scent of carrion makes you start. You look,
against the will of your smart and ostentatious guide,
through a half-open door, and see another sight a
room, dark and foul, mildewed and ruinous; and, swept
carelessly into a corner, a heap of dirt, rags, bones,
waifs and strays of every kind, decaying all together.
You ask, with astonishment and disgust,
how comes that there? and are told, to your fresh
astonishment and disgust, that that is only where the
servants sweep the litter. But crouching behind
the litter, in the darkest corner, something moves.
You go up to it, in spite of the entreaties of your
guide, and find an aged idiot gibbering in her rags.
Who is she? Oh, an old servant or
a child, or possibly a grand-child, of some old servant your
guide does not remember which. She is better
out of the way there in the corner. At all
events she can find plenty to eat among the dirt-heap;
and as for her soul, if she has one, the clergyman
is said to come and see her now and then, so probably
it will be saved.
Would you not turn away from that
palace with the contemptuous thought Civilized?
Refined? These people’s civilization is
but skin-deep. Their refinement is but an outside
show. Look into the first back room, and you
find that they are foul barbarians still.
And yet such, literally such and no
better, is the refinement of modern England; such,
and no better, is the civilization of our great towns.
Such I fear from what I am told, is the civilization
of Southsea, beside the barbarism to be found in
Portsea close at hand. Dirt and squalor, brutality
and ignorance close beside such luxury as the world
has not seen, it may be, since the bad days of Heathen
Rome.
But more, if you turned away, you
would say to yourselves, if you were thoughtful persons not
only what barbarism, but what folly. The owner
and his household are in daily danger. The
idiot in discontent, or even in mere folly, may seize
a lighted candle, burn petroleum, as she did in Paris
of late, and set the whole palace on fire. And
more, the very dirt is in itself inflammable, and
capable, as it festers, of spontaneous combustion.
How many a stately house has been burnt down ere now,
simply by the heating of greasy rags, thrust away
in some neglected closet. Let the owner of
the house beware. He is living, voluntarily,
over a volcano of his own making.
But more what if you were
told that the fault lay not so much in the negligence
of servants as in that of the owner himself, that the
master of that palace had over him a King, to whom
all that was foul, neglectful, cruel, was inexpressibly
hateful, so hateful that He once had actually stepped
off the throne of the universe to die for such creatures
as that poor idiot and her forgotten parents?
Would you not question whether the prayers offered
up in that chapel would have any answer from Him,
save that awful answer He once gave? “When
ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes:
yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear;
your hands are full of blood.”
Oh, my friends, you who understand
my parable, has the awful thought never struck you
that such may be God’s answer to the prayers
of a nation which leaves in its midst such barbarism,
such heathenism, as exists in every great town of
this realm? And what if you were told next that
the laws of His kingdom were eternal and inexorable,
and that one of His cardinal laws is that
as a man sows, so shall he reap; that every sin punishes
itself, even though the sinner does not know that he
has sinned; that he who knew not his master’s
will, and did it not, shall be beaten with few stripes;
that the innocent babe does not escape unburnt, because
it knew not that fire burns; that the good man who
lives in a malarious alley does not escape fever
and cholera, because he does not know that dirt breeds
pestilence; that, in a word, he who knew not his master’s
will, and did it not, shall be beaten with few stripes;
but that he who knew his master’s will, and
did it not, shall be beaten with many stripes?
Then of how many and how heavy stripes, think you,
will the inhabitant of that palace be counted worthy,
who has been taught by Christianity for the last
fifteen hundred years, and by physical science and
political economy for the last fifty years, and yet
persists, in defiance of his own knowledge, in leaving
his used-up servants, and their children and grand-children
after them, to rot, body, mind, and soul, in the
very precincts of the palace, having no other excuse
to offer for this than that it is too much trouble
to treat them better, and that, on the whole, he
can make money more rapidly by thus throwing away that
human dirt, and leaving it to decay where it can,
regardless what it pollutes and poisons; just as
the manufacturer can make money more rapidly by not
consuming his own smoke, but letting it stream out
of the chimney to poison with blackness and desolation
the green fields where God meant little children
to gather flowers?
Ladies, to you I appeal, not merely
as women, but as Ladies, if (as I am assured by those
who know you), ladies you are, in the grand old meaning
of that grand old word.
If so you know then, what
it is to be a lady and what not. You know that
it is not to go, like the daughters of Zion in Isaiah’s
time, with mincing gait, and borrowed head-gear,
and tasteless finery, the head well-nigh empty, the
heart full of little save vanity and vexation of
spirit, busy all the week over cheap novels and expensive
dresses, and on Sunday over a little dilettante devotion.
You know, I take for granted, that whatever the
world may think or say, that to be that, is not to
be a lady.
For you know, I take for granted,
what that word lady meant at first. That it
meant she who gave out the loaves, the housewife who
provided food and clothes; the stewardess of her
household and dependants; the spinner among her maidens;
the almsgiver to the poor; the worshipper in the
chapel, praying for wild men away in battle.
The being from whom flowed forth all gracious influences
of thought and order, of bounty and compassion, of
purity and piety, civilizing and Christianizing a whole
family, a whole domain. This it was to be a
lady, in the old days when too many men had little
care save to make war. And this it is to be a
lady still, in the new days in which too many men
have little care save to make money. Show then
that you can be ladies still. That the spirit
is the spirit of your ancestresses, though the form
in which it must show itself is changed with the
change of society.
To you I appeal; to as many in this
church as are ladies, not in name only, but in spirit
and in truth. Say to your fathers, husbands,
brothers, sons, and say too, and that boldly, to
the tradesmen with whom you deal Do you
hear this? Do you hear that there are savages
and heathens, generations of them, within a rifle-shot
of the house? And you cannot exterminate them;
cannot drive them out, much less kill them. You
must convert them, improve them, make them civilized
and Christian, if not for their own sakes, at least
for our sakes, and for our children.
And if they should answer: My
dears, it is too true. But we did not make
them or put them there, and they are not in our parish.
They are no concern of ours, and besides they will
not hurt us.
Answer them: Not made by our
fault! True, our hands are more or less clean:
but what of that? There they are. If you
had a tribe of Red Indians on the frontier of your
settlement, would you take the less guard against
them, because you did not put them there? Not
in our parish, and what of that? They are in
our county; they are in England. Has man the
right, has man the power in the sight of God to draw
any imaginary line of demarcation between Englishman
and Englishman, especially when that line is drawn
between rich and poor? England knows no line
of demarcation, save the shore of the great sea;
and even that her generosity is overleaping at this
moment at the call of mere humanity, in bounty to
sufferers by the West Indian hurricane, and by the
Chicago fire. Will you send your help across
the Atlantic; and deny it to the sufferers at your
own doors? At least, if the rich be confined
by an imaginary line across, the poor on the other
side will not they will cross it freely
enough; and what they will bring with them will be
concern enough of ours. Would it not be our
concern if there was small-pox, scarlet fever, cholera
among them? Should we not fear lest that might
hurt us? Would you not bestir yourselves then?
And do you not know that it is among such people
as these that pestilence is always bred? And
if not, is not the pestilence of the soul more subtle
and more contagious than any pestilence of the body?
What is the spreading power of fever to the spreading
power of vice, which springs from tongue to tongue,
from eye to eye, from heart to heart? What matter
whether they be one mile off or five? Will
not they corrupt our servants; and those servants
again our children?
And say to them, if you be prudent
and thrifty housewives, Do not tell us that their
condition costs you nothing. Even in pocket you
are suffering now as all England is suffering from
the existence of heathens and savages, reckless,
profligate, pauperized. For if you pay no poor-rates
for their support, the shop-keepers with whom you
deal pay poor-rates; and must and do repay themselves,
out of your pockets, in the form of increased prices
for their goods.
And when you have said all this, ladies,
and more, for more will suggest itself
to your woman’s wit, say to them with
St Paul “And yet show we unto you
a more excellent way,” a nobler argument and
that is Charity.
Not almsgiving. I had almost
said, anything but that; making bad worse, the improvident
more improvident, the liar more ready to lie, the idler
more ready to idle. But the Charity which is
Humanity, which is the spirit of pure pity, the Spirit
of Christ and of God.
Say then, Even if these poor creatures
did us no harm, as they must and will do civilize
and christianize them for their own sakes, simply
because they must be so very miserable miserable
too often with acute and conscious misery; too often
with a worse misery, dull and unconscious, which
knows not, stupified by ignorance and vice, that it
is miserable, and ought to be more miserable still.
For who is so worthy of our pity, as he who knows
not that he is pitiable? who takes ignorance,
dirt, vice, passion, and the wretchedness which vice
and passion bring, as all in the day’s work,
as he takes the rain and hail, the frost and snow, as
unavoidable necessities of mortal life, for which the
only temporary alleviation is drink?
If the refined and pure-minded lady
does not pity such beings as that, I know not of
what her refinement is made. If the religious
lady will not bestir herself, and make sacrifices
to teach such people that that is not what God meant
them to be to stir up in them a noble self-discontent,
a noble self-abhorrence, which may be the beginning
of repentance and amendment of life I
know not of what her religion is made.
One word more I know that
such thoughts as I have put before you to-day are
painful. I know that we all I as much
as anyone in this church are tempted to
put them by, and say, I will think of things beautiful,
not of things ugly; of art, poetry, science all
that is orderly, graceful, ennobling; and not of
dirt, ignorance, vice, misery, all that is disorderly,
degrading. Nay, even the most pious at times
are tempted to say, I will think of heaven and not
of earth. I will lift up my heart, and try
to behold the glory and the goodness of God, and not
the disgrace and sin of man.
But only for a time may they thus
think and speak. Happy if they can, at moments,
lift up their hearts unto the Lord, and catch one glimpse
of Him enthroned in perfect serenity and perfect
order, governing the worlds with that all-embracing
justice, which is at the same time all-embracing
love, and so, giving Him thanks for His great glory,
gain heart and hope to what? To
descend again, even were it from the beatific vision
itself, to this disordered earth, to work a little and,
alas how little--at lessening the sum of human ignorance,
human vice, human misery even as their
Lord and Saviour stooped from the throne of the universe,
and from the bosom of the Father, to toil and die
for such as curse about the streets outside.