SIR RICHARD VISITS THE BEEHIVE, AND
SEES MANY SURPRISING THINGS
“My dear Mrs Loper,” said
Mrs Twitter over a cup of tea, “it is very kind
of you to say so, and I really do think you are right,
we have done full justice to our dear wee Mita.
Who would ever have thought, remembering the thin
starved sickly child she was the night that Sam brought
her in, that she would come to be such a plump, rosy,
lovely child? I declare to you that I feel as
if she were one of my own.”
“She is indeed a very lovely
infant,” returned Mrs Loper. “Don’t
you think so, Mrs Larrabel?”
The smiling lady expanded her mouth, and said, “very.”
“But,” continued Mrs Twitter,
“I really find that the entire care of her is
too much for me, for, although dear Mary assists me,
her studies require to be attended to, and, do you
know, babies interfere with studies dreadfully.
Not that I have time to do much in that way at present.
I think the Bible is the only book I really study
now, so, you see, I’ve been thinking of adding
to our establishment by getting a new servant; a
sort of nursery governess, you know, a cheap
one, of course. Sam quite agrees with me, and,
as it happens, I know a very nice little girl just
now a very very poor girl who
helps us so nicely on Sundays in George Yard, and
has been recommended to me as a most deserving creature.
I expect her to call to-night.”
“Be cautious, Mrs Twitter,”
said Mrs Loper. “These very poor
girls from the slums of Whitechapel are sometimes
dangerous, and, excuse me, rather dirty. Of
course, if you know her, that is some security, but
I would advise you to be very cautious.”
“Thank you, my dear,”
said Mrs Twitter, “I usually am very cautious,
and will try to be so on this occasion. I mean
her to be rather a sort of nursery governess than
a servant. That is probably the girl.”
She referred to a rather timid knock
at the front door. In another second the domestic
announced Hetty Frog, who entered with a somewhat
shy air, and seemed fluttered at meeting with unexpected
company.
“Come in, Hetty, my dear; I’m
glad to see you. My friends here know that you
are a helper in our Sunday-schools. Sit down,
and have a cup of tea. You know why I have sent
for you?”
“Yes, Mrs Twitter. It it
is very kind. Our Bible-nurse told me, and I
shall be so happy to come, because but I
fear I have interrupted you. I I can
easily come back ”
“No interruption at all, my
dear. Here, take this cup of tea ”
“And a crumpet,” added
Mrs Larrabel, who sympathised with the spirit of hospitality.
“Yes, take a crumpet, and let
me hear about your last place.”
Poor Hetty, who was still very weak
from her recent illness, and would gladly have been
excused sitting down with two strangers, felt constrained
to comply, and was soon put at her ease by the kindly
tone and manner of the hostess. She ran quickly
over the chief points of her late engagements, and
roused, without meaning to do so, the indignation
of the ladies by the bare mention of the wages she
had received for the amount of work done.
“Well, my dear,” said
the homely Mrs Twitter, “we won’t be so
hard on you here. I want you to assist me with
my sewing and darning of which I have a
very great deal and help to take care of
baby.”
“Very well, ma’am,”
said Hetty, “when do you wish me to begin my
duties?”
“Oh! to-morrow after
breakfast will do. It is too late to-night.
But before you go, I may as well let you see the
little one you are to have charge of. I hear
she is awake.”
There could be no doubt upon that
point, for the very rafters of the house were ringing
at the moment with the yells which issued from an
adjoining room.
“Come this way, Hetty.”
Mrs Loper and Mrs Larrabel, having
formed a good opinion of the girl, looked on with
approving smiles. The smiles changed to glances
of surprise, however, when Hetty, having looked on
the baby, uttered a most startling scream, while her
eyes glared as though she saw a ghostly apparition.
Seizing the baby with unceremonious
familiarity, Hetty struck Mrs Twitter dumb by turning
it on its face, pulling open its dress, glancing at
a bright red spot on its back, and uttering a shriek
of delight as she turned it round again, and hugged
it with violent affection, exclaiming, “Oh!
my blessed Matty!”
“The child’s name is not
Matty; it is Mita,” said Mrs Twitter, on recovering
her breath. “What do you mean, girl?”
“Her name is not Mita,
it is Matty,” returned Hetty, with a flatness
of contradiction that seemed impossible in one so naturally
gentle.
Mrs Twitter stood, aghast bereft
of the power of speech or motion. Mrs Loper and
Mrs Larrabel were similarly affected. They soon
recovered, however, and exclaimed in chorus, “What
can she mean?”
“Forgive me, ma’am,”
said Hetty, still holding on to baby, who seemed to
have an idea that she was creating a sensation of some
sort, without requiring to yell, “forgive my
rudeness, ma’am, but I really couldn’t
help it, for this is my long-lost sister Matilda.”
“Sister Matilda!” echoed Mrs Loper.
“Long-lost sister Matilda!” repeated Mrs
Larrabel.
“This is your long-lost
sister Matilda,” rehearsed Mrs Twitter, like
one in a dream.
The situation was rendered still more
complex by the sudden entrance of Mr Twitter and his
friend Crackaby.
“What what what’s
to do now, Mariar?”
“Sister Matilda!” shouted all three with
a gasp.
“Lunatics, every one of ’em,” murmured
Crackaby.
It is, perhaps, scarcely necessary
to add that a full explanation ensued when the party
became calmer; that Mrs Twitter could not doubt the
veracity of Hetty Frog, but suspected her sanity; that
Mrs Frog was sent for, and was recognised at once
by Mr Twitter as the poor woman who had asked him
such wild and unmeaning questions the night on which
he had found the baby; and that Mr and Mrs Twitter,
Mrs Loper, Mrs Larrabel, and Crackaby came to the
unanimous conclusion that they had never heard of
such a thing before in the whole course of their united
lives which lives, when united, as some
statisticians would take a pride in recording, formed
two hundred and forty-three years! Poor Mrs
Twitter was as inconsolable at the loss of her baby
as Mrs Frog was overjoyed at the recovery of hers.
She therefore besought the latter to leave little
Mita, alias Matty, with her just for one night
longer only one night and then
she might come for her in the morning, for, you know,
it would have been cruel to remove the child from her
warm crib at that hour to a cold and comfortless lodging.
Of course Mrs Frog readily consented.
If Mrs Frog had known the events that lay in the
womb of the next few hours, she would sooner have
consented to have had her right-hand cut off than have
agreed to that most reasonable request.
But we must not anticipate.
A few of our dramatis personae took both an
active and an inactive part in the events of these
hours. It is therefore imperative that we should
indicate how some of them came to be in that region.
About five of the clock in the afternoon
of the day in question, Sir Richard Brandon, his daughter
and idol Diana, and his young friend Stephen Welland,
sat in the dining-room of the West-end mansion concluding
an early and rather hasty dinner. That something
was pending was indicated by the fact that little
Di sat accoutred in her hat and cloak.
“We shall have to make haste,”
said Sir Richard, rising, “for I should not
like to be late, and it is a long drive to Whitechapel.”
“When do they begin?” asked Welland.
“They have tea at six, I believe,
and then the meeting commences at seven, but I wish
to be early that I may have a short conversation with
one of the ladies of the Home.”
“Oh! it will be so nice, and
such fun to see the dear little boys. How many
are going to start for Canada, to-night, papa?”
“About fifty or sixty, I believe,
but I’m not sure. They are sent off in
batches of varying size from time to time.”
“Is the demand for them so great?”
asked Welland, “I should have thought that Canadian
farmers and others would be afraid to receive into
their dwellings what is often described as the scum
of the London streets.”
“They were afraid at first,
I am told, but soon discovered that the little fellows
who came from Miss Macpherson’s Home had been
subjected to such good training and influences before
leaving that they almost invariably turned out valuable
and trustworthy workmen. No doubt there are
exceptions in this as in every other case, but the
demand is, it seems, greater than the supply.
It is, however, a false idea that little waifs and
strays, however dirty or neglected, are in any sense
the scum of London. Youth, in all circumstances,
is cream, and only turns into scum when allowed to
stagnate or run to waste. Come, now, let us
be off. Mr Seaward, the city missionary, is to
meet us after the meeting, and show you and me something
of those who have fallen very low in the social scale.
Brisbane, who is also to be at the meeting, will
bring Di home. By the way, have you heard anything
yet about that poor comrade and fellow-clerk of yours Twitter,
I think, was his name who disappeared
so suddenly?”
“Nothing whatever. I have
made inquiries in all directions for I had
a great liking for the poor fellow. I went also
to see his parents, but they seemed too much cut up
to talk on the subject at all, and knew nothing of
his whereabouts.”
“Ah! it is a very sad case very,”
said Sir Richard, as they all descended to the street.
“We might, perhaps, call at their house to-night
in passing.” Entering a cab, they drove
away.
From the foregoing conversation the
reader will have gathered that the party were about
to visit the Beehive, or Home of Industry, and that
Sir Richard, through the instrumentality of little
Di and the city missionary, had actually begun to
think about the poor!
It was a special night at the Beehive.
A number of diamonds with some of their dust rubbed
off namely, a band of little boys, rescued
from the streets and from a probable life of crime,
were to be assembled there to say farewell to such
friends as took an interest in them.
The Hive had been a huge warehouse.
It was now converted, with but slight structural
alteration, into a great centre of Light in that morally
dark region, from which emanated gospel truth and Christian
influence, and in which was a refuge for the poor,
the destitute, the sin-smitten, and the sorrowful.
Not only poverty, but sin-in-rags, was sure of help
in the Beehive. It had been set agoing to bring,
not the righteous, but sinners, to repentance.
When Sir Richard arrived he found
a large though low-roofed room crowded with people,
many of whom, to judge from their appearance, were,
like himself, diamond-seekers from the “west-end,”
while others were obviously from the “east-end,”
and had the appearance of men and women who had been
but recently unearthed. There were also city
missionaries and other workers for God in that humble-looking
hall. Among them sat Mr John Seaward and George
Brisbane, Esquire.
Placing Di and Welland near the latter,
Sir Richard retired to a corner where one of the ladies
of the establishment was distributing tea to all comers.
“Where are your boys, may I
ask?” said the knight, accepting a cup of tea.
“Over in the left corner,”
answered the lady. “You can hardly see
them for the crowd, but they will stand presently.”
At that moment, as if to justify her
words, a large body of boys rose up, at a sign from
the superintending genius of the place, and began to
sing a beautiful hymn in soft, tuneful voices.
It was a goodly array of dusty diamonds, and a few
of them had already begun to shine.
“Surely,” said Sir Richard,
in a low voice, “these cannot be the ragged,
dirty little fellows you pick up in the streets?”
“Indeed they are,” returned the lady.
“But but they seem
to me quite respectable and cleanly fellows, not at
all like why, how has the change been accomplished?”
“By the united action, sir,
of soap and water, needles and thread, scissors, cast-off
garments, and Love.”
Sir Richard smiled. Perchance
the reader may also smile; nevertheless, this statement
embodied probably the whole truth.
When an unkempt, dirty, ragged little
savage presents himself, or is presented, at the Refuge,
or is “picked up” in the streets, his case
is promptly and carefully inquired into. If
he seems a suitable character that is,
one who is utterly friendless and parentless,
or whose parents are worse than dead to him he
is received into the Home, and the work of transformation both
of body and soul commences. First
he is taken to the lavatory and scrubbed outwardly
clean. His elfin locks are cropped close and
cleansed. His rags are burned, and a new suit,
made by the old women workers, is put upon him, after
which, perhaps, he is fed. Then he is sent to
a doctor to see that he is internally sound in wind
and limb. If passed by the doctor, he receives
a brief but important training in the rudiments of
knowledge. In all of these various processes
Love is the guiding principle of the operator
love to God and love to the boy. He is made to
understand, and to feel, that it is in the
name of Jesus, for the love of Jesus, and in the spirit
of Jesus not of mere philanthropy that
all this is done, and that his body is cared for chiefly
in order that the soul may be won.
Little wonder, then, that a boy or
girl, whose past experience has been the tender mercies
of the world and that the roughest part
of the world should become somewhat “respectable,”
as Sir Richard put it, under such new and blessed
influences.
Suddenly a tiny shriek was heard in
the midst of the crowd, and a sweet little voice exclaimed,
as if its owner were in great surprise
“Oh! oh! there is my boy!”
A hearty laugh from the audience greeted
this outburst, and poor Di, shrinking down, tried
to hide her pretty face on Welland’s ready arm.
Her remark was quickly forgotten in the proceedings
that followed but it was true.
There stood, in the midst of the group
of boys, little Bobby Frog, with his face washed,
his hair cropped and shining, his garments untattered,
and himself looking as meek and “respectable”
as the best of them. Beside him stood his fast
friend Tim Lumpy. Bobby was not, however, one
of the emigrant band. Having joined only that
very evening, and been cropped, washed, and clothed
for the first time, he was there merely as a privileged
guest. Tim, also, was only a guest, not having
quite attained to the dignity of a full-fledged emigrant
at that time.
At the sound of the sweet little voice,
Bobby Frog’s meek look was replaced by one of
bright intelligence, not unmingled with anxiety, as
he tried unavailingly to see the child who had spoken.
We do not propose to give the proceedings
of this meeting in detail, interesting though they
were. Other matters of importance claim our
attention. It will be sufficient to say that
mingled with the semi-conversational, pleasantly free-and-easy,
intercourse that ensued, there were most interesting
short addresses from the lady-superintendents of “The
Sailors’ Welcome Home” and of the “Strangers’
Rest,” both of Ratcliff Highway, also from the
chief of the Ragged schools in George Yard, and several
city missionaries, as well as from city merchants
who found time and inclination to traffic in the good
things of the life to come as well as in those of the
life that now is.
Before the proceedings had drawn to
a close a voice whispered:
“It is time to go, Sir Richard.”
It was the voice of John Seaward.
Following him, Sir Richard and Welland
went out. It had grown dark by that time, and
as there were no brilliantly lighted shops near, the
place seemed gloomy, but the gloom was nothing to that
of the filthy labyrinths into which Seaward quickly
conducted his followers.
“You have no occasion to fear,
sir,” said the missionary, observing that Sir
Richard hesitated at the mouth of one very dark alley.
“It would, indeed, hardly be safe were you
to come down here alone, but most of ’em know
me. I remember being told by one of the greatest
roughs I ever knew that at the very corner where we
now stand he had many and many a time knocked
down and robbed people. That man is now an earnest
Christian, and, like Paul, goes about preaching the
Name which he once despised.”
At the moment a dark shadow seemed
to pass them, and a gruff voice said, “Good-night,
sir.”
“Was that the man you were speaking
of?” asked Sir Richard, quickly.
“Oh no, sir,” replied
Seaward with a laugh; “that’s what he was
once like, indeed, but not what he is like now.
His voice is no longer gruff. Take care of
the step, gentlemen, as you pass here; so, now we
will go into this lodging. It is one of the common
lodging-houses of London, which are regulated by law
and under the supervision of the police. Each
man pays fourpence a night here, for which he is entitled
to a bed and the use of the kitchen and its fire to
warm himself and cook his food. If he goes to
the same lodging every night for a week he becomes
entitled to a free night on Sundays.”
The room into which they now entered
was a long low chamber, which evidently traversed
the whole width of the building, for it turned at a
right angle at the inner end, and extended along the
back to some extent. It was divided along one
side into boxes or squares, after the fashion of some
eating-houses, with a small table in the centre of
each box, but, the partitions being little higher
than those of a church-pew, the view of the whole
room was unobstructed. At the inner angle of
the room blazed a coal-fire so large that a sheep
might have been easily roasted whole at it.
Gas jets, fixed along the walls at intervals, gave
a sufficient light to the place.
This was the kitchen of the lodging-house,
and formed the sitting-room of the place; and here
was assembled perhaps the most degraded and miserable
set of men that the world can produce. They were
not all of one class, by any means; nor were they
all criminal, though certainly many of them were.
The place was the last refuge of the destitute; the
social sink into which all that is improvident, foolish,
reckless, thriftless, or criminal finally descends.
Sir Richard and Welland had put on
their oldest great-coats and shabbiest wideawakes;
they had also put off their gloves and rings and breastpins
in order to attract as little attention as possible,
but nothing that they could have done could have reduced
their habiliments to anything like the garments of
the poor creatures with whom they now mingled.
If they had worn the same garments for months or years
without washing them, and had often slept in them
out of doors in dirty places, they might perhaps have
brought them to the same level, but not otherwise.
Some of the people, however, were
noisy enough. Many of them were smoking, and
the coarser sort swore and talked loud. Those
who had once been in better circumstances sat and
moped, or spoke in lower tones, or cooked their victuals
with indifference to all else around, or ate them
in abstracted silence; while not a few laid their heads
and arms on the tables, and apparently slept.
For sleeping in earnest there were rooms overhead
containing many narrow beds with scant and coarse covering,
which, however, the law compelled to be clean.
One of the rooms contained seventy such beds.
Little notice was taken of the west-end
visitors as they passed up the room, though some dark
scowls of hatred were cast after them, and a few glanced
at them with indifference. It was otherwise in
regard to Seaward. He received many a “good-night,
sir,” as he passed, and a kindly nod greeted
him here and there from men who at first looked as
if kindness had been utterly eradicated from their
systems.
One of those whom we have described
as resting their heads and arms on the tables, looked
hastily up, on hearing the visitors’ voices,
with an expression of mingled surprise and alarm.
It was Sammy Twitter, with hands and visage filthy,
hair dishevelled, eyes bloodshot, cheeks hollow, and
garments beyond description disreputable. He
seemed the very embodiment of woe and degradation.
On seeing his old friend Welland he quickly laid
his head down again and remained motionless.
Welland had not observed him.
“You would scarcely believe
it, sir,” said the missionary, in a low tone;
“nearly all classes of society are occasionally
represented here. You will sometimes find merchants,
lawyers, doctors, military men, and even clergymen,
who have fallen step by step, chiefly in consequence
of that subtle demon drink, until the common lodging-house
is their only home.”
“Heaven help me!” said
Sir Richard; “my friend Brisbane has often told
me of this, but I have never quite believed it certainly
never realised it until to-night.
And even now I can hardly believe it. I see
no one here who seems as if he ever had belonged to
the classes you name.”
“Do you see the old man in the
last box in the room, on the left-hand side, sitting
alone?” asked Seaward, turning his back to the
spot indicated.
“Yes.”
“Well, that is a clergyman.
I know him well. You would never guess it from
his wretched clothing, but you might readily believe
it if you were to speak to him.”
“That I will not do,” returned the other
firmly.
“You are right, sir,”
said Seaward, “I would not advise that you should at
least not here, or now. I have been in the habit
of reading a verse or two of the Word and giving them
a short address sometimes about this hour. Have
you any objection to my doing so now? It won’t
detain us long.”
“None in the world; pray, my
good sir, don’t let me disarrange your plans.”
“Perhaps,” added the missionary,
“you would say a few words to ”
“No, no,” interrupted
the other, quickly; “no, they are preaching to
me just now, Mr Seaward, a very powerful sermon,
I assure you.”
During the foregoing conversation
young Welland’s thoughts had been very busy;
ay, and his conscience had not been idle, for when
mention was made of that great curse strong drink,
he vividly recalled the day when he had laughed at
Sam Twitter’s blue ribbon, and felt uneasy as
to how far his conduct on that occasion had helped
Sam in his downward career.
“My friends,” said the
missionary aloud, “we will sing a hymn.”
Some of those whom he addressed turned
towards the speaker; others paid no attention whatever,
but went on with their cooking and smoking. They
were used to it, as ordinary church-goers are to the
“service.” The missionary understood
that well, but was not discouraged, because he knew
that his “labour in the Lord” should not
be in vain. He pulled out two small hymn-books
and handed one to Sir Richard, the other to Welland.
Sir Richard suddenly found himself
in what was to him a strange and uncomfortable position,
called on to take a somewhat prominent part in a religious
service in a low lodging-house!
The worst of it was that the poor
knight could not sing a note. However, his deficiency
in this respect was more than compensated by John
Seaward, who possessed a telling tuneful voice, with
a grateful heart to work it. Young Welland also
could sing well, and joined heartily in that beautiful
hymn which tells of “The wonderful words of
life.”
After a brief prayer the missionary
preached the comforting gospel, and tried, with all
the fervour of a sympathetic heart, to impress on his
hearers that there really was Hope for the hopeless,
and Rest for the weary in Jesus Christ.
When he had finished, Stephen Welland
surprised him, as well as his friend Sir Richard and
the audience generally, by suddenly exclaiming, in
a subdued but impressive voice, which drew general
attention:
“Friends, I had no intention
of saying a word when I came here, but, God forgive
me, I have committed a sin, which seems to force me
to speak and warn you against giving way to strong
drink. I had nay, I have a
dear friend who once put on the Blue Ribbon.”
Here he related the episode at the
road-side tavern, and his friend’s terrible
fall, and wound up with the warning:
“Fellow-men, fellow-sinners,
beware of being laughed out of good resolves beware
of strong drink. I know not where my comrade
is now. He may be dead, but I think not, for
he has a mother and father who pray for him without
ceasing. Still better, as you have just been
told, he has an Advocate with God, who is able and
willing to save him to the uttermost. Forgive
me, Mr Seaward, for speaking without being asked.
I could not help it.”
“No need to ask forgiveness
of me, Mr Welland. You have spoken on the Lord’s
side, and I have reason to thank you heartily.”
While this was being said, those who
sat near the door observed that a young man rose softly,
and slunk away like a criminal, with a face ashy pale
and his head bowed down. On reaching the door,
he rushed out like one who expected to be pursued.
It was young Sam Twitter. Few of the inmates
of the place observed him, none cared a straw for him,
and the incident was, no doubt, quickly forgotten.
“We must hasten now, if we are
to visit another lodging-house,” said Seaward,
as they emerged into the comparatively fresh air of
the street, “for it grows late, and riotous
drunken characters are apt to be met with as they
stagger home.”
“No; I have had enough for one
night,” said Sir Richard. “I shall
not be able to digest it all in a hurry. I’ll
go home by the Metropolitan, if you will conduct me
to the nearest station.”
“Come along, then. This way.”
They had not gone far, and were passing
through a quiet side street, when they observed a
poor woman sitting on a door-step. It was Mrs
Frog, who had returned to sit on the old familiar spot,
and watch the shadows on the blind, either from the
mere force of habit, or because this would probably
be the last occasion on which she could expect to
enjoy that treat.
A feeling of pity entered Sir Richard’s
soul as he looked on the poorly clothed forlorn creature.
He little knew what rejoicing there was in her heart
just then so deceptive are appearances at
times! He went towards her with an intention
of some sort, when a very tall policeman turned the
corner, and approached.
“Why, Giles Scott!” exclaimed
the knight, holding out his hand, which Giles shook
respectfully, “you seem to be very far away from
your beat to-night.”
“No, sir, not very far, for
this is my beat, now. I have exchanged into
the city, for reasons that I need not mention.”
At this point a belated and half-tipsy
man passed with his donkey-cart full of unsold vegetables
and rubbish.
“Hallo! you big blue-coat-boy,”
he cried politely to Giles, “wot d’ye
call that?”
Giles had caught sight of “that”
at the same moment, and darted across the street.
“Why, it’s fire!”
he shouted. “Run, young fellow, you know
the fire-station!”
“I know it,” shouted
the donkey-man, sobered in an instant, as he jumped
off his cart, left it standing, dashed round the corner,
and disappeared, while Number 666 beat a thundering
tattoo on Samuel Twitter’s front door.