TREATS OF ALTERED CIRCUMSTANCES AND BLUE-RIBBONISM
Once again we return to the great
city, and to Mrs Frog’s poor lodging.
But it is not poor now, for the woman
has at last got riches and joy such riches
as the ungodly care not for, and a joy that they cannot
understand.
It is not all riches and joy, however.
The Master has told us that we shall have “much
tribulation.” What then? Are we worse
off than the unbelievers? Do they escape
the tribulation? It is easy to prove that the
Christian has the advantage of the worldling, for,
while both have worries and tribulation without fail,
the one has a little joy along with these nay,
much joy if you choose which, however, will
end with life, if not before; while the other has
joy unspeakable and full of glory, which will increase
with years, and end in absolute felicity!
Let us look at Mrs Frog’s room
now, and listen to her as she sits on one side of
a cheerful fire, sewing, while Hetty sits on the other
side, similarly occupied, and Matty, alias
Mita, lies in her crib sound asleep.
It is the same room, the same London
atmosphere, which no moral influence will ever purify,
and pretty much the same surroundings, for Mrs Frog’s
outward circumstances have not altered much in a worldly
point of view. The neighbours in the court are
not less filthy and violent. One drunken nuisance
has left the next room, but another almost as bad
has taken his place. Nevertheless, although not
altered much, things are decidedly improved in the
poor pitiful dwelling. Whereas, in time past,
it used to be dirty, now it is clean. The table
is the same table, obviously, for you can see the crack
across the top caused by Ned’s great fist on
that occasion when, failing rather in force of argument
while laying down the law, he sought to emphasise his
remarks with an effective blow; but a craftsman has
been at work on the table, and it is no longer rickety.
The chair, too, on which Mrs Frog sits, is the same
identical chair which missed the head of Bobby Frog
that time he and his father differed in opinion on
some trifling matter, and smashed a panel of the door;
but the chair has been to see the doctor, and its
constitution is stronger now. The other chair,
on which Hetty sits, is a distinct innovation.
So is baby’s crib. It has replaced the
heap of straw which formerly sufficed, and there are
two low bedsteads in corners which once were empty.
Besides all this there are numerous
articles of varied shape and size glittering on the
walls, such as sauce-pans and pot-lids, etcetera,
which are made to do ornamental as well as useful duty,
being polished to the highest possible degree of brilliancy.
Everywhere there is evidence of order and care, showing
that the inmates of the room are somehow in better
circumstances.
Let it not be supposed that this has
been accomplished by charity. Mrs Samuel Twitter
is very charitable, undoubtedly. There can be
no question as to that; but if she were a hundred
times more charitable than she is, and were to give
away a hundred thousand times more money than she
does give, she could not greatly diminish the vast
poverty of London. Mrs Twitter had done what
she could in this case, but that was little, in a
money point of view, for there were others who had
stronger claims upon her than Mrs Frog. But
Mrs Twitter had put her little finger under Mrs Frog’s
chin when her lips were about to go under water, and
so, figuratively, she kept her from drowning.
Mrs Twitter had put out a hand when Mrs Frog tripped
and was about to tumble, and thus kept her from falling.
When Mrs Frog, weary of life, was on the point of
rushing once again to London Bridge, with a purpose,
Mrs Twitter caught the skirt of her ragged robe with
a firm but kindly grasp and held her back, thus saving
her from destruction; but, best of all, when the poor
woman, under the influence of the Spirit of God, ceased
to strive with her Maker and cried out earnestly,
“What must I do to be saved?” Mrs Twitter
grasped her with both hands and dragged her with tender
violence towards the Fold, but not quite into it.
For Mrs Twitter was a wise, unselfish
woman, as well as good. At a certain point she
ceased to act, and said, “Mrs Frog, go to your
own Hetty, and she will tell you what to do.”
And Mrs Frog went, and Hetty, with
joyful surprise in her heart, and warm tears of gratitude
in her eyes, pointed her to Jesus the Saviour of mankind.
It was nothing new to the poor woman to be thus directed.
It is nothing new to almost any one in a Christian
land to be pointed to Christ; but it is something
new to many a one to have the eyes opened to see,
and the will influenced to accept. It was so
now with this poor, self-willed, and long-tried or,
rather, long-resisting woman. The
Spirit’s time had come, and she was made willing.
But now she had to face the difficulties of the new
life. Conscience never killed, and
now revived began to act.
“I must work,” she said,
internally, and conscience nodded approval. “I
must drink less,” she said, but conscience shook
her head. “It will be very hard, you see,”
she continued, apologetically, “for a poor woman
like me to get through a hard day without just one
glass of beer to strengthen me.”
Conscience did all her work by looks
alone. She was naturally dumb, but she had a
grand majestic countenance with great expressive eyes,
and at the mention of one glass of beer she
frowned so that poor Mrs Frog almost trembled.
At this point Hetty stepped into the
conversation. All unaware of what had been going
on in her mother’s mind, she said, suddenly,
“Mother, I’m going to a meeting to-night;
will you come?”
Mrs Frog was quite willing.
In fact she had fairly given in and become biddable
like a little child, though, after all,
that interesting creature does not always, or necessarily,
convey the most perfect idea of obedience!
It was a rough meeting, composed of
rude elements, in a large but ungilded hall in Whitechapel.
The people were listening intently to a powerful
speaker.
The theme was strong drink.
There were opponents and sympathisers there.
“It is the greatest curse, I think, in London,”
said the speaker, as Hetty and her mother entered.
“Bah!” exclaimed a powerful
man beside whom they chanced to sit down. “I’ve
drank a lot on’t an’ don’t find it
no curse, at all.”
“Silence,” cried some in the audience.
“I tell ’ee it’s all barn wot ’e’s
talkin’,” said the powerful man.
“Put ’im out,” cried
some of the audience. But the powerful man had
a powerful look, and a great bristly jaw, and a fierce
pair of eyes which had often been blackened, and still
bore the hues of the last fight; no one, therefore,
attempted to put him out, so he snapped his fingers
at the entire meeting, said, “Bah!” again,
with a look of contempt, and relapsed into silence,
while the speaker, heedless of the slight interruption,
went on.
“Why, it’s a Blue Ribbon meeting, Hetty,”
whispered Mrs Frog.
“Yes, mother,” whispered
Hetty in reply, “that’s one of its names,
but its real title, I heard one gentleman say, is
the Gospel-Temperance Association, you see, they’re
very anxious to put the gospel first and temperance
second; temperance bein’ only one of the fruits
of the gospel of Jesus.”
The speaker went on in eloquent strains
pleading the great cause now drawing out
the sympathies of his hearers, then appealing to their
reason; sometimes relating incidents of deepest pathos,
at other times convulsing the audience with touches
of the broadest humour, insomuch that the man who
said “bah!” modified his objections to
“pooh!” and ere long came to that turning-point
where silence is consent. In this condition
he remained until reference was made by the speaker
to a man not such a bad fellow too, when
sober who, under the influence of drink,
had thrown his big shoe at his wife’s head and
cut it so badly that she was even then while
he was addressing them lying in hospital
hovering between life and death.
“That’s me!” cried
the powerful man, jumping up in a state of great excitement
mingled with indignation, while he towered head and
shoulders above the audience, “though how you
come for to ’ear on’t beats me holler.
An’ it shows ’ow lies git about, for she’s
not gone to the hospital, an’ it wasn’t
shoes at all, but boots I flung at ‘er, an’
they only just grazed ‘er, thank goodness, an’
sent the cat flyin’ through the winder.
So ”
A burst of laughter with mingled applause
and cheers cut off the end of the sentence and caused
the powerful man to sit down in much confusion, quite
puzzled what to think of it all.
“My friend,” said the
speaker, when order had been restored, “you are
mistaken. I did not refer to you at all, never
having seen or heard of you before, but there are
too many men like you men who would be good
men and true if they would only come to the Saviour,
who would soon convince them that it is wise to give
up the drink and put on the blue ribbon. Let
it not be supposed, my friends, that I say it is the
duty of every one to put on the blue ribbon
and become a total abstainer. There are circumstances
in which a `little wine’ may be advisable.
Why, the apostle Paul himself, when Timothy’s
stomach got into a chronic state of disease which
subjected him, apparently, to `frequent infirmities,’
advised him to take a `little wine,’ but he didn’t
advise him to take many quarts of beer, or numerous
glasses of brandy and water, or oceans of Old Tom,
or to get daily fuddled on the poisons which are sold
by many publicans under these names. Still less
did Paul advise poor dyspeptic Timothy to become his
own medical man and prescribe all these medicines
to himself, whenever he felt inclined for them.
Yes, there are the old and the feeble and the diseased,
who may, (observe I don’t say who do,
for I am not a doctor, but who may), require
stimulants under medical advice. To these we
do not speak, and to these we would not grudge the
small alleviation to their sad case which may be found
in stimulants; but to the young and strong and healthy
we are surely entitled to say, to plead, and to entreat put
on the blue ribbon if you see your way to it.
And by the young we mean not only all boys and girls,
but all men and women in the prime of life, ay, and
beyond the prime, if in good health. Surely you
will all admit that the young require no stimulants.
Are they not superabounding in energy? Do they
not require the very opposite sedatives,
and do they not find these in constant and violent
muscular exercise?”
With many similar and other arguments
did the speaker seek to influence the mass of human
beings before him, taking advantage of every idea that
cropped up and every incident in the meeting that occurred
to enforce his advice namely, total abstinence
for the young and the healthy until he
had stirred them up to a state of considerable enthusiasm.
Then he said:
“I am glad to see you enthusiastic.
Nothing great can be done without enthusiasm.
You may potter along the even tenor of your way without
it, but you’ll never come to much good, and
you’ll never accomplish great things, without
it. What is enthusiasm? Is it not seeing
the length, breadth, height, depth, and bearing of
a good thing, and being zealously affected in helping
to bring it about? There are many kinds of enthusiasts,
though but one quality of enthusiasm. Weak people
show their enthusiasm too much on the surface.
Powerful folk keep it too deep in their hearts to
be seen at all. What then, are we to scout it
in the impulsive because too obvious; to undervalue
it in the reticent because almost invisible?
Nay, let us be thankful for it in any form, for the
thing is good, though the individual’s
manner of displaying it may be faulty. Let us
hope that the too gushing may learn to clap on the
breaks a little a very little; but far more
let us pray that the reticent and the self-possessed,
and the oh! dear no you’ll never
catch me doing that sort of thing
people, may be enabled to get up more steam.
Better far in my estimation the wild enthusiast than
the self-possessed and self-sufficient cynic.
Just look at your gentlemanly cynic; good-natured
very likely, for he’s mightily pleased with himself
and excessively wise in regard to all things sublunary.
Why, even he has enthusiasm, though not always in
a good cause. Follow him to the races.
Watch him while he sees the sleek and beautiful creatures
straining every muscle, and his own favourite drawing
ahead, inch by inch, until it bids fair to win.
Is that our cynic, bending forward on his
steed, with gleaming eyes and glowing cheek, and partly
open mouth and quick-coming breath, and so forgetful
of himself that he swings off his hat and gives vent
to a lusty cheer as the favourite passes the winning-post?
“But follow him still further.
Don’t let him go. Hold on to his horse’s
tail till we see him safe into his club, and wait there
till he has dined and gone to the opera. There
he sits, immaculate in dress and bearing, in the stalls.
It is a huge audience. A great star is to appear.
The star comes on music such as might cause
the very angels to bend and listen.
“The sweet singer exerts herself;
her rich voice swells in volume and sweeps round the
hall, filling every ear and thrilling every heart,
until, unable to restrain themselves, the vast concourse
rises en masse, and, with waving scarf and
kerchief, thunders forth applause! And what of
our cynic? There he is, the wildest of the wild for
he happens to love music shouting like
a maniac and waving his hat, regardless of the fact
that he has broken the brim, and that the old gentleman
whose corns he has trodden on frowns at him with savage
indignation.
“Yes,” continued the speaker,
“the whole world is enthusiastic when the key-note
of each individual, or class of individuals, is struck;
and shall we be ashamed of our enthusiasm for
this little bit of heavenly blue, which symbolises
the great fact that those who wear it are racing with
the demon Drink to save men and women, (ourselves included,
perhaps), from his clutches; racing with Despair to
place Hope before the eyes of those who are blindly
rushing to destruction; racing with Time to snatch
the young out of the way of the Destroyer before he
lays hand on them; and singing ay, shouting songs
of triumph and glory to God because of the tens of
thousands of souls and bodies already saved; because
of the bright prospect of the tens of thousands more
to follow; because of the innumerable voices added
to the celestial choir, and the glad assurance that
the hymns of praise thus begun shall not die out with
our feeble frames, but will grow stronger in sweetness
as they diminish in volume, until, the river crossed,
they shall burst forth again with indescribable intensity
in the New Song.
“Some people tell us that these
things are not true. Others say they won’t
last. My friends, I know, and many of you know,
that they are true, and even if they were not
to last, have we not even now ground for praise?
Shall we not rejoice that the lifeboat has saved some,
because others have refused to embark and perished?
But we don’t admit that these things won’t
last. Very likely, in the apostolic days, some
of the unbelievers said of them and their creed, `How
long will it last?’ If these objectors be now
able to take note of the world’s doings, they
have their answer from Father Time himself; for does
he not say, `Christianity has lasted nearly nineteen
hundred years, and is the strongest moral motive-power
in the world to-day?’ The Blue Ribbon, my friends,
or what it represents, is founded on Christianity;
therefore the principles which it represents are sure
to stand. Who will come now and put it on?”
“I will!” shouted a strong
voice from among the audience, and up rose the powerful
man who began the evening with “bah!” and
“pooh!” He soon made his way to the platform
amid uproarious cheering, and donned the blue.
“Hetty,” whispered Mrs
Frog in a low, timid voice, “I think I would
like to put it on too.”
If the voice had been much lower and
more timid, Hetty would have heard it, for she sat
there watching for her mother as one might watch for
a parent in the crisis of a dread disease. She
knew that no power on earth can change the will, and
she had waited and prayed till the arrow was sent
home by the hand of God.
“Come along, mother,”
she said but said no more, for her heart
was too full.
Mrs Frog was led to the platform,
to which multitudes of men, women, and children were
pressing, and the little badge was pinned to her breast.
Thus did that poor woman begin her
Christian course with the fruit of self-denial.
She then set about the work of putting
her house in order. It was up-hill work at first,
and very hard, but the promise did not fail her, “Lo!
I am with you alway.” In all her walk
she found Hetty a guardian angel.
“I must work, Hetty, dear,”
she said, “for it will never do to make you
support us all; but what am I to do with baby?
There is no one to take charge of her when I go out.”
“I am quite able to keep the
whole of us, mother, seeing that I get such good pay
from the lady I work for, but as you want to work,
I can easily manage for baby. You know I’ve
often wished to speak of the Infant Nursery in George
Yard. Before you sent Matty away I wanted you
to send her there, but ” Hetty paused.
“Go on, dear. I was mad
agin’ you an’ your religious ways; wasn’t
that it?” said Mrs Frog.
“Well, mother, it don’t
matter now, thank God. The Infant Nursery, you
know, is a part of the Institution there. The
hearts of the people who manage it were touched by
the death of so many thousands of little ones every
year in London through want and neglect, so they set
up this nursery to enable poor widowed mothers and
others to send their babies to be cared for nursed,
fed, and amused in nice airy rooms while
the mothers are at work. They charge only fourpence
a day for this, and each baby has its own bag of clothing,
brush and comb, towel and cot. They will keep
Matty from half-past seven in the morning till eight
at night for you, so that will give you plenty of
time to work, won’t it, mother?”
“It will indeed, Hetty, and
all for fourpence a day, say you?”
“Yes, the ordinary charge is
fourpence, but widows get it for twopence for each
child, and, perhaps, they may regard a deserted wife
as a widow! There is a fine of twopence per
hour for any child not taken away after eight, so
you’ll have to be up to time, mother.”
Mrs Frog acted on this advice, and
thus was enabled to earn a sufficiency to enable her
to pay her daily rent, to clothe and feed herself
and child, to give a little to the various missions
undertaken by the Institutions near her, to put a
little now and then into the farthing bank, and even
to give a little in charity to the poor!
Now, reader, you may have forgotten
it, but if you turn back to near the beginning of
this chapter, you will perceive that all we have been
writing about is a huge digression, for which we refuse
to make the usual apology.
We return again to Mrs Frog where
we left her, sitting beside her cheerful fire, sewing
and conversing with Hetty.
“I can’t bear to think
of ‘im, Hetty,” said Mrs Frog. “You
an’ me sittin’ here so comfortable, with
as much to eat as we want, an’ to spare, while
your poor father is in a cold cell. He’s
bin pretty bad to me of late, it’s true, wi’
that drink, but he wasn’t always like that,
Hetty; even you can remember him before he took to
the drink.”
“Yes, mother, I can, and, bless
the Lord, he may yet be better than he ever was.
When is his time up?”
“This day three weeks.
The twelve months will be out then. We must
pray for ’im, Hetty.”
“Yes, mother. I am always
prayin’ for him. You know that.”
There was a touch of anxiety in the
tones and faces of both mother and daughter as they
talked of the father, for his home-coming might, perhaps,
nay probably would, be attended with serious consequences
to the renovated household. They soon changed
the subject to one more agreeable.
“Isn’t Bobby’s letter
a nice one, mother?” said Hetty, “and so
well written, though the spellin’ might have
been better; but then he’s had so little schoolin’.”
“It just makes my heart sing,”
returned Mrs Frog. “Read it again to me,
Hetty. I’ll never tire o’ hearin’
it. I only wish it was longer.”
The poor mother’s wish was not
unnatural, for the letter which Bobby had written
was not calculated to tax the reader’s patience,
and, as Hetty hinted, there was room for improvement,
not only in the spelling but in the writing.
Nevertheless, it had carried great joy to the mother’s
heart. We shall therefore give it verbatim
et literatim.
Brankly Farm Kanada.
“Deer Mutrer. wen i left you
i promisd to rite so heer gos. this Plase is eaven
upon arth. so pritty an grand. O you never did
see the likes. ide park is nuffin to it, an as for
Kensintn gardings wy to kompair thems rediklis.
theres sitch a nice little gal here. shes wun of deer
mis mukfersons gals wot the vestenders
calls a wafe and sometimes a strai. were all very
fond of er spesially tim lumpy. i shuvd im in the
river wun dai. my ow e spluterd. but
e was non the wus all the better, mister
an mistress meryboi aint that a joly naim are as good
as gold to us. we as prairs nite and mornin an no
end o witls an as appy as kings and kueens a-sitin
on there throns. give all our luv to deer father, an
etty an baiby an mis mukferson an mister olland
an all our deer teechers. saï we’ll never
forgit wot they told us. your deer sun Bobby.”
“Isn’t it beautiful?”
said Mrs Frog, wiping away a tear with the sock she
was darning in preparation for her husband’s
return.
“Yes, mother. Bless the
people that sent ’im out to Canada,” said
Hetty, “for he would never have got on here.”
There came a tap to the door as she
spoke, and Mrs Twitter, entering, was received with
a hearty welcome.
“I came, Mrs Frog,” she
said, accepting the chair for there was
even a third chair which Hetty placed for
her, “to ask when your husband will be home
again.”
Good Mrs Twitter carefully avoided
the risk of hurting the poor woman’s feelings
by needless reference to jail.
“I expect him this day three
weeks, ma’am,” replied Mrs Frog.
“That will do nicely,”
returned Mrs Twitter. “You see, my husband
knows a gentleman who takes great pleasure in getting
con in getting men like Ned, you know,
into places, and giving them a chance of of
getting on in life, you understand?”
“Yes, ma’am, we
must all try to git on in life if we would keep in
life,” said Mrs Frog, sadly.
“Well, there is a situation
open just now, which the gentleman the same
gentleman who was so kind in helping us after the fire;
you see we all need help of one another, Mrs Frog which
the gentleman said he could keep open for a month,
but not longer, so, as I happened to be passing your
house to-night on my way to the Yard, to the mothers’
meeting, I thought I’d just look in and tell
you, and ask you to be sure and send Ned to me the
moment he comes home.”
“I will, ma’am, and God
bless you for thinkin’ of us so much.”
“Remember, now,” said
Mrs Twitter, impressively, “before he
has time to meet any of his old comrades. Tell
him if he comes straight to me he will hear something
that will please him very much. I won’t
tell you what. That is my message to him.
And now, how is my Mita? Oh! I need not
ask. There she lies like a little angel!”
(Mrs Twitter rose and went to the crib, but did not
disturb the little sleeper.) “I wish I saw roses
on her little cheeks and more fat, Mrs Frog.”
Mrs Frog admitted that there was possible
improvement in the direction of roses and fat, but
feared that the air, (it would have been more correct
to have said the smoke and smells), of the court went
against roses and fat, somehow. She was thankful,
however, to the good Lord for the health they all
enjoyed in spite of local disadvantages.
“Ah!” sighed Mrs Twitter,
“if we could only transport you all to Canada ”
“Oh! ma’am,” exclaimed
Mrs Frog, brightening up suddenly, “we’ve
had such a nice letter from our Bobby.
Let her see it, Hetty.”
“Yes, and so nicely written,
too,” remarked Hetty, with a beaming face, as
she handed Bobby’s production to the visitor,
“though he doesn’t quite understand yet
the need for capital letters.”
“Never mind, Hetty, so long
as he sends you capital letters,” returned Mrs
Twitter, perpetrating the first pun she had been guilty
of since she was a baby; “and, truly, this is
a charming letter, though short.”
“Yes, it’s rather short,
but it might have been shorter,” said Mrs Frog,
indulging in a truism.
Mrs Twitter was already late for the
mothers’ meeting, but she felt at once that
it would be better to be still later than to disappoint
Mrs Frog of a little sympathy in a matter which touched
her feelings so deeply. She sat down, therefore,
and read the letter over, slowly, commenting on it
as she went along in a pleasant sort of way, which
impressed the anxious mother with, not quite the belief,
but the sensation that Bobby was the most hopeful
immigrant which Canada had received since it was discovered.
“Now, mind, send Ned up at
once,” said the amiable lady when about to
quit the little room.
“Yes, Mrs Twitter, I will; good-night.”