“Come ye yourselves
apart unto a desert place and rest
awhile. - Mark
vi: 31.
Here Christ advises His apostles to
take a vacation. They have been living an excited
as well as a useful life, and He advises that they
get out into the country. When, six weeks ago,
standing in this place, I advocated, with all the
energy I could command, the Saturday afternoon holiday,
I did not think the people would so soon get that
release. By divine fiat it has come, and I rejoice
that more people will have opportunity of recreation
this summer than in any previous summer. Others
will have whole weeks and months of rest. The
railway trains are being laden with passengers and
baggage on their way to the mountains and the lakes
and the sea-shore. Multitudes of our citizens
are packing their trunks for a restorative absence.
The city heats are pursuing the people
with torch and fear of sunstroke. The long silent
halls of sumptuous hotels are all abuzz with excited
arrivals. The crystalline surface of Winnipiseogee
is shattered with the stroke of steamer, laden with
excursionists. The antlers of Adirondack deer
rattle under the shot of city sportsmen. The
trout make fatal snaps at the hook of adroit sportsmen
and toss their spotted brilliance into the game-basket.
Already the baton of the orchestral leader taps the
music-stand on the hotel green, and American life
puts on festal array, and the rumbling of the tenpin
alley, and the crack of the ivory balls on the green-baized
billiard tables, and the jolting of the bar-room goblets,
and the explosive uncorking of champagne bottles,
and the whirl and the rustle of the ball-room dance,
and the clattering hoofs of the race-courses, attest
that the season for the great American watering-places
is fairly inaugurated. Music flute
and drum and cornet-a-piston and clapping cymbals will
wake the echoes of the mountains.
Glad I am that fagged-out American
life for the most part will have an opportunity to
rest, and that nerves racked and destroyed will find
a Bethesda. I believe in watering-places.
Let not the commercial firm begrudge the clerk, or
the employer the journeyman, or the patient the physician,
or the church its pastor, a season of inoccupation.
Luther used to sport with his children; Edmund Burke
used to caress his favorite horse; Thomas Chalmers,
in the dark hours of the church’s disruption,
played kite for recreation as I was told
by his own daughter and the busy Christ
said to the busy apostles: “Come ye apart
awhile into the desert and rest yourselves.”
And I have observed that they who do not know how
to rest do not know how to work.
But I have to declare this truth to-day,
that some of our fashionable watering-places are the
temporal and eternal destruction of “a multitude
that no man can number,” and amid the congratulations
of this season and the prospect of the departure of
many of you for the country I must utter a note of
warning plain, earnest, and unmistakable.
I. The first temptation that is apt
to hover in this direction is to leave your piety
all at home. You will send the dog and cat and
canary bird to be well cared for somewhere else; but
the temptation will be to leave your religion in the
room with the blinds down and the door bolted, and
then you will come back in the autumn to find that
it is starved and suffocated, lying stretched on the
rug stark dead. There is no surplus of piety
at the watering-places. I never knew any one to
grow very rapidly in grace at the Catskill Mountain
House, or Sharon Springs, or the Falls of Montmorency.
It is generally the case that the Sabbath is more
of a carousal than any other day, and there are Sunday
walks and Sunday rides and Sunday excursions.
Elders and deacons and ministers of
religion who are entirely consistent at home, sometimes
when the Sabbath dawns on them at Niagara Falls or
the White Mountains take the day to themselves.
If they go to the church, it is apt to be a sacred
parade, and the discourse, instead of being a plain
talk about the soul, is apt to be what is called a
crack sermon that is, some discourse
picked out of the effusions of the year as the
one most adapted to excite admiration; and in those
churches, from the way the ladies hold their fans,
you know that they are not so much impressed with the
heat as with the picturesqueness of half-disclosed
features. Four puny souls stand in the organ-loft
and squall a tune that nobody knows, and worshipers,
with two thousand dollars’ worth of diamonds
on the right hand, drop a cent into the poor-box,
and then the benediction is pronounced and the farce
is ended.
The toughest thing I ever tried to
do was to be good at a watering-place. The air
is bewitched with “the world, the flesh, and
the devil.” There are Christians who in
three or four weeks in such a place have had such
terrible rents made in their Christian robe that they
had to keep darning it until Christmas to get it mended!
The health of a great many people makes an annual
visit to some mineral spring an absolute necessity;
but, my dear people, take your Bible along with you,
and take an hour for secret prayer every day, though
you be surrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Keep
holy the Sabbath, though they denounce you as a bigoted
Puritan. Stand off from those institutions which
propose to imitate on this side the water the iniquities
of Baden-Baden. Let your moral and your immortal
health keep pace with your physical recuperation,
and remember that all the waters of Hathorne and sulphur
and chalybeate springs can not do you so much good
as the mineral, healing, perennial flood that breaks
forth from the “Rock of Ages.” This
may be your last summer. If so, make it a fit
vestibule of heaven.
II. Another temptation around
nearly all our watering-places is the horse-racing
business. We all admire the horse. There
needs to be a redistribution of coronets among the
brute creation. For ages the lion has been called
the king of beasts. I knock off its coronet and
put the crown upon the horse, in every way nobler,
whether in shape or spirit or sagacity or intelligence
or affection or usefulness. He is semi-human,
and knows how to reason on a small scale. The
centaur of olden times, part horse and part man, seems
to be a suggestion of the fact that the horse is something
more than a beast.
Job sets forth his strength, his beauty,
his majesty, the panting of his nostril, the pawing
of his hoof, and his enthusiasm for the battle.
What Rosa Bonheur did for the cattle, and what Landseer
did for the dog, Job, with mightier pencil, does for
the horse. Eighty-eight times does the Bible
speak of him. He comes into every kingly procession
and into every great occasion and into every triumph.
It is very evident that Job and David and Isaiah and
Ezekiel and Jeremiah and John were fond of the horse.
He came into much of their imagery. A red horse that
meant war; a black horse that meant famine;
a pale horse that meant death; a white horse that
meant victory.
As the Bible makes a favorite of the
horse, the patriarch and the prophet and the evangelist
and the apostle, stroking his sleek hide, and patting
his rounded neck, and tenderly lifting his exquisitely
formed hoof, and listening with a thrill to the champ
of his bit, so all great natures in all ages have
spoken of him in encomiastic terms. Virgil in
his Georgics almost seems to plagiarize from the description
of Job. The Duke of Wellington would not allow
any one irreverently to touch his old war-horse, Copenhagen,
on whom he had ridden fifteen hours without dismounting
at Waterloo; and when old Copenhagen died, his master
ordered a military salute fired over his grave.
John Howard showed that he did not exhaust all his
sympathies in pitying the human race, for when sick
he writes home: “Has my old chaise-horse
become sick or spoiled?”
But we do not think that the speed
of the horse should be cultured at the expense of
human degradation. Horse-races, in olden times,
were under the ban of Christian people, and in our
day the same institution has come up under fictitious
names, and it is called a “Summer Meeting,”
almost suggestive of positive religious exercises.
And it is called an “Agricultural Fair,”
suggestive of everything that is improving in the
art of farming. But under these deceptive titles
are the same cheating and the same betting, the same
drunkenness and the same vagabondage and the same
abominations that were to be found under the old horse-racing
system.
I never knew a man yet who could give
himself to the pleasures of the turf for a long reach
of time, and not be battered in morals. They
hook up their spanking team, and put on their sporting-cap,
and light their cigar, and take the reins, and dash
down the road to perdition. The great day at
Saratoga, and Long Branch, and Cape May, and nearly
all the other watering-places, is the day of the races.
The hotels are thronged, nearly every kind of equipage
is taken up at an almost fabulous price, and there
are many respectable people mingling with jockeys,
and gamblers, and libertines, and foul-mouthed men
and flashy women. The bar-tender stirs up the
brandy-smash. The bets run high. The greenhorns,
supposing all is fair, put in their money soon enough
to lose it. Three weeks before the race takes
place the struggle is decided, and the men in the
secret know on which steed to bet their money.
The two men on the horses riding around long before
arranged who shall beat.
Leaning from the stand or from the
carriage are men and women so absorbed in the struggle
of bone and muscle and mettle that they make a grand
harvest for the pickpockets, who carry off the
pocket-books and portemonnaies. Men looking on
see only two horses with two riders flying around
the ring; but there is many a man on that stand whose
honor and domestic happiness and fortune white
mane, white foot, white flank are in the
ring, racing with inebriety, and with fraud, and with
profanity, and with ruin black neck, black
foot, black flank. Neck and neck they go in that
moral Epsom.
Ah, my friends, have nothing to do
with horse-racing dissipations this summer. Long
ago the English government got through looking to the
turf for the dragoon and light-cavalry horse.
They found the turf depreciates the stock, and it
is yet worse for men. Thomas Hughes, the member
of parliament and the author, known all the world over,
hearing that a new turf enterprise was being started
in this country, wrote a letter, in which he said:
“Heaven help you, then; for of all the cankers
of our old civilization there is nothing in this country
approaching in unblushing meanness, in rascality holding
its head high, to this belauded institution of the
British turf.” Another famous sportsman
writes: “How many fine domains have been
shared among these hosts of rapacious sharks during
the last two hundred years; and unless the system
be altered, how many more are doomed to fall into
the same gulf!” The Duke of Hamilton, through
his horse-racing proclivities, in three years got
through his entire fortune of L70,000, and I will
say that some of you are being undermined by it.
With the bull-fights of Spain and the bear-baitings
of the pit may the Lord God annihilate the infamous
and accursed horse-racing of England and America.
III. I go further, and speak
of another temptation that hovers over the watering-places;
and this is the temptation to sacrifice physical strength.
The modern Bethesda was intended to recuperate the
physical health; and yet how many come from the watering-places,
their health absolutely destroyed! New York and
Brooklyn idiots boasting of having imbibed twenty
glasses of Congress water before breakfast. Families
accustomed to going to bed at ten o’clock at
night gossiping until one or two o’clock in
the morning. Dyspeptics, usually very cautious
about their health, mingling ice-creams, and lemons,
and lobster-salads, and cocoa-nuts, until the gastric
juices lift up all their voices of lamentation and
protest. Delicate women and brainless young men
chassezing themselves into vertigo and catalepsy.
Thousands of men and women coming back from our watering-places
in the autumn with the foundations laid for ailments
that will last them all their life long. You
know as well as I do that this is the simple truth.
In the summer you say to your good
health: “Good-bye, I am going to have a
good time for a little while. I will be very glad
to see you again in the autumn.” Then in
the autumn, when you are hard at work in your office,
or store, or shop, or counting-room, Good Health will
come and say: “Good-bye, I am going.”
You say: “Where are you going?” “Oh,”
says Good Health, “I am going to take a vacation!”
It is a poor rule that will not work both ways, and
your good health will leave you choleric and splenetic
and exhausted. You coquetted with your good health
in the summer-time, and your good health is coquetting
with you in the winter-time. A fragment of Paul’s
charge to the jailer would be an appropriate inscription
for the hotel-register in every watering-place:
“Do thyself no harm.”
IV. Another temptation hovering
around the watering-place is to the formation of hasty
and life-long alliances. The watering-places are
responsible for more of the domestic infelicities of
this country than all the other things combined.
Society is so artificial there that no sure judgment
of character can be formed. Those who form companionships
amid such circumstances go into a lottery where there
are twenty blanks to one prize. In the severe
tug of life you want more than glitter and splash.
Life is not a ball-room where the music decides the
step, and bow and prance and graceful swing of long
trail can make up for strong common sense. You
might as well go among the gayly painted yachts of
a summer regatta to find war vessels as to go among
the light spray of the summer watering-place to find
character that can stand the test of the great struggle
of human life. Ah, in the battle of life you
want a stronger weapon than a lace fan or a croquet
mallet! The load of life is so heavy that in order
to draw it, you want a team stronger than one made
up of a masculine grasshopper and a feminine butterfly.
If there is any man in the community
that excites my contempt, and that ought to excite
the contempt of every man and woman, it is the soft-handed,
soft-headed fop, who, perfumed until the air is actually
sick, spends his summer in taking killing attitudes,
and waving sentimental adieus, and talking infinitesimal
nothings, and finding his heaven in the set of a lavender
kid-glove. Boots as tight as an Inquisition,
two hours of consummate skill exhibited in the tie
of a flaming cravat, his conversation made up of “Ah’s”
and “Oh’s” and “He-hee’s.”
It would take five hundred of them stewed down to make
a teaspoonful of calves-foot jelly. There is
only one counterpart to such a man as that, and that
is the frothy young woman at the watering-place, her
conversation made up of French moonshine; what she
has on her head only equaled by what she has on her
back; useless ever since she was born, and to be useless
until she is dead: and what they will do with
her in the next world I do not know, except to set
her upon the banks of the River Life for eternity
to look sweet! God intends us to admire music
and fair faces and graceful step, but amid the heartlessness
and the inflation and the fantastic influences of
our modern watering-places, beware how you make life-long
covenants!
V. Another temptation that will hover
over the watering-place is that of baneful literature.
Almost every one starting off for the summer takes
some reading matter. It is a book out of the library
or off the bookstand, or bought of the boy hawking
books through the cars. I really believe there
is more pestiferous trash read among the intelligent
classes in July and August than in all the other ten
months of the year. Men and women who at home
would not be satisfied with a book that was not really
sensible, I found sitting on hotel-piazzas or under
the trees reading books the index of which would make
them blush if they knew that you knew what the book
was.
“Oh,” they say, “you
must have intellectual recreation!” Yes.
There is no need that you take along into a watering-place
“Hamilton’s Metaphysics” or some
thunderous discourse on the eternal decrees, or “Faraday’s
Philosophy.” There are many easy books that
are good. You might as well say: “I
propose now to give a little rest to my digestive
organs; and, instead of eating heavy meat and vegetables,
I will for a little while take lighter food a
little strychnine and a few grains of ratsbane.”
Literary poison in August is as bad as literary poison
in December. Mark that. Do not let the frogs
and the lice of a corrupt printing-press jump and
crawl into your Saratoga trunk or White Mountain valise.
Would it not be an awful thing for
you to be struck with lightning some day when you
had in your hand one of these paper-covered romances the
hero a Parisian roue, the heroine an unprincipled
flirt chapters in the book that you would
not read to your children at the rate of $100 a line?
Throw out all that stuff from your summer baggage.
Are there not good books that are easy to read books
of entertaining travel, books of congenial history,
books of pure fun, books of poetry ringing with merry
canto, books of fine engravings, books that will rest
the mind as well as purify the heart and elevate the
whole life? My hearers, there will not be an hour
between this and the day of your death when you can
afford to read a book lacking in moral principle.
VI. Another temptation hovering
all around our watering-places is the intoxicating
beverage. I am told that it is becoming more and
more fashionable for woman to drink. I care not
how well a woman may dress, if she has taken enough
of wine to flush her cheek and put glassiness on her
eyes, she is intoxicated. She may be handed into
a $2500 carriage, and have diamonds enough to confound
the Tiffanys she is intoxicated. She
may be a graduate of Packer Institute, and the daughter
of some man in danger of being nominated for the Presidency she
is drunk. You may have a larger vocabulary than
I have, and you may say in regard to her that she
is “convivial,” or she is “merry,”
or she is “festive,” or she is “exhilarated,”
but you can not with all your garlands of verbiage
cover up the plain fact that it is an old-fashioned
case of drunk.
Now, the watering-places are full
of temptations to men and women to tipple. At
the close of the tenpin or billiard-game they tipple.
At the close of the cotillon they tipple. Seated
on the piazza cooling themselves off they tipple.
The tinged glasses come around with bright straws,
and they tipple. First they take “light
wines,” as they call them; but “light
wines” are heavy enough to debase the appetite.
There is not a very long road between champagne at
$5 a bottle and whiskey at five cents a glass.
Satan has three or four grades down
which he takes men to destruction. One man he
takes up, and through one spree pitches him into eternal
darkness. That is a rare case. Very seldom,
indeed, can you find a man who will be such a fool
as that.
When a man goes down to destruction
Satan brings him to a plane. It is almost a level.
The depression is so slight that you can hardly see
it. The man does not actually know that he is
on the down grade, and it tips only a little toward
darkness just a little. And the first
mile it is claret, and the second mile it is sherry,
and the third mile it is punch, and the fourth mile
it is ale, and the fifth mile it is porter, and the
sixth mile it is brandy, and then it gets steeper
and steeper and steeper, and the man gets frightened
and says, “Oh, let me get off!” “No,”
says the conductor, “this is an express train,
and it does not stop until it gets to the Grand Central
Depot at Smashupton.” Ah, “look not
thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth
its color in the cup, when it moveth itself aright.
At the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth
like an adder.” And if any young man in
my congregation should get astray this summer in this
direction it will not be because I have not given
him fair warning.
My friends, whether you tarry at home which
will be quite as safe and perhaps quite as comfortable or
go into the country, arm yourself against temptation.
The grace of God is the only safe shelter, whether
in town or country. There are watering-places
accessible to all of us. You can not open a book
of the Bible without finding out some such watering-place.
Fountains open for sin and uncleanliness; wells of
salvation; streams from Lebanon; a flood struck out
of the rock by Moses; fountains in the wilderness
discovered by Hagar; water to drink and water to bathe
in; the river of God, which is full of water; water
of which if a man drink he shall never thirst; wells
of water in the Valley of Baca; living fountains of
water; a pure river of water as clear as crystal from
under the throne of God.
These are watering-places accessible
to all of us. We do not have a laborious packing
up before we start only the throwing away
of our transgressions. No expensive hotel bills
to pay; it is “without money and without price.”
No long and dirty travel before we get there; it is
only one step away. California in five minutes.
I walked around and saw ten fountains, all bubbling
up, and they were all different. And in five
minutes I can get through this Bible parterre
and find you fifty bright, sparkling fountains bubbling
up into eternal life.
A chemist will go to one of these
summer watering-places and take the water and analyze
it and tell you that it contains so much of iron,
and so much of soda, and so much of lime, and so much
of magnesia. I come to this Gospel well, this
living fountain and analyze the water, and I find
that its ingredients are peace, pardon, forgiveness,
hope, comfort, life, heaven. “Ho, every
one that thirsteth, come ye” to this watering-place!
Crowd around this Bethesda this morning!
Oh, you sick, you lame, you troubled, you dying crowd
around this Bethesda! Step in it! Oh, step
in it! The angel of the covenant this morning
stirs the water. Why do you not step in it?
Some of you are too weak to take a step in that direction.
Then we take you up in the arms of our closing prayer
and plunge you clean under the wave, hoping that the
cure may be as sudden and as radical as with Captain
Naaman, who, blotched and carbuncled, stepped into
the Jordan, and after the seventh dive came up, his
skin roseate-complexioned as the flesh of a little
child.