SUNDAY UNDER THREE HEADS
DEDICATION
To The Right Reverend
THE BISHOP OF LONDON
MY
LORD,
You were among the first, some years ago, to expatiate on the vicious
addiction of the lower classes of society to Sunday excursions; and were thus
instrumental in calling forth occasional demonstrations of those extreme
opinions on the subject, which are very generally received with derision, if not
with contempt.
Your elevated station, my Lord, affords you countless
opportunities of increasing the comforts and pleasures of the humbler classes of
society - not by the expenditure of the smallest portion of your princely
income, but by merely sanctioning with the influence of your example, their
harmless pastimes, and innocent recreations.
That your Lordship would ever have
contemplated Sunday recreations with so much horror, if you had been at all
acquainted with the wants and necessities of the people who indulged in them, I
cannot imagine possible. That a
Prelate of your elevated rank has the faintest conception of the extent of those
wants, and the nature of those necessities, I do not believe.
For these
reasons, I venture to address this little Pamphlet to your Lordship's
consideration. I am quite conscious
that the outlines I have drawn, afford but a very imperfect description of the
feelings they are intended to illustrate; but I claim for them one merit - their
truth and freedom from exaggeration. I
may have fallen short of the mark, but I have never overshot it: and while I have pointed out what appears to me, to be
injustice on the part of others, I hope I have carefully abstained from
committing it myself.
I am, My Lord, Your Lordship's most obedient, Humble
Servant,
TIMOTHY SPARKS. JUNE, 1836.
CHAPTER I - AS IT IS
There are few
things from which I derive greater pleasure, than walking through some of the
principal streets of London on a fine Sunday, in summer, and watching the
cheerful faces of the lively groups with which they are thronged.
There is something, to my eyes at least, exceedingly pleasing in the
general desire evinced by the humbler classes of society, to appear neat and
clean on this their only holiday. There
are many grave old persons, I know, who shake their heads with an air of
profound wisdom, and tell you that poor people dress too well now-a-days; that
when they were children, folks knew their stations in life better; that you may
depend upon it, no good will come of this sort of thing in the end, - and so
forth: but I fancy I can discern in
the fine bonnet of the working-man's wife, or the feather-bedizened hat of his
child, no inconsiderable evidence of good feeling on the part of the man
himself, and an affectionate desire to expend the few shillings he can spare
from his week's wages, in improving the appearance and adding to the happiness
of those who are nearest and dearest to him.
This may be a very heinous and unbecoming degree of vanity, perhaps, and
the money might possibly be applied to better uses; it must not be forgotten,
however, that it might very easily be devoted to worse:
and if two or three faces can be rendered happy and contented, by a
trifling improvement of outward appearance, I cannot help thinking that the
object is very cheaply purchased, even at the expense of a smart gown, or a
gaudy riband. There is a great deal
of very unnecessary cant about the over-dressing of the common people.
There is not a manufacturer or tradesman in existence, who would not
employ a man who takes a reasonable degree of pride in the appearance of himself
and those about him, in preference to a sullen, slovenly fellow, who works
doggedly on, regardless of his own clothing and that of his wife and children,
and seeming to take pleasure or pride in nothing.
The pampered aristocrat,
whose life is one continued round of licentious pleasures and sensual
gratifications; or the gloomy enthusiast, who detests the cheerful amusements he
can never enjoy, and envies the healthy feelings he can never know, and who
would put down the one and suppress the other, until he made the minds of his
fellow-beings as besotted and distorted as his own; - neither of these men can
by possibility form an adequate notion of what Sunday really is to those whose
lives are spent in sedentary or laborious occupations, and who are accustomed to
look forward to it through their whole existence, as their only day of rest from
toil, and innocent enjoyment.
The sun that rises over the quiet streets of
London on a bright Sunday morning, shines till his setting, on gay and happy
faces. Here and there, so early as six o'clock, a young man and woman in their
best attire, may be seen hurrying along on their way to the house of some
acquaintance, who is included in their scheme of pleasure for the day; from
whence, after stopping to take "a bit of breakfast," they sally forth,
accompanied by several old people, and a whole crowd of young ones, bearing
large hand-baskets full of provisions, and Belcher handkerchiefs done up in
bundles, with the neck of a bottle sticking out at the top, and closely-packed
apples bulging out at the sides, - and away they hurry along the streets leading
to the steam-packet wharfs, which are already plentifully sprinkled with parties
bound for the same destination. Their
good humour and delight know no bounds - for it is a delightful morning, all
blue over head, and nothing like a cloud in the whole sky; and even the air of
the river at London Bridge is something to them, shut up as they have been, all
the week, in close streets and heated rooms.
There are dozens of steamers to all sorts of places - Gravesend,
Greenwich, and Richmond; and such numbers of people, that when you have once sat
down on the deck, it is all but a moral impossibility to get up again - to say
nothing of walking about, which is entirely out of the question.
Away they go, joking and laughing, and eating and drinking, and admiring
everything they see, and pleased with everything they hear, to climb Windmill
Hill, and catch a glimpse of the rich corn-fields and beautiful orchards of
Kent; or to stroll among the fine old trees of Greenwich Park, and survey the
wonders of Shooter's Hill and Lady James's Folly; or to glide past the beautiful
meadows of Twickenham and Richmond, and to gaze with a delight which only people
like them can know, on every lovely object in the fair prospect around.
Boat follows boat, and coach succeeds coach, for the next three hours;
but all are filled, and all with the same kind of people - neat and clean,
cheerful and contented.
They reach their places of destination, and the taverns
are crowded; but there is no drunkenness or brawling, for the class of men who
commit the enormity of making Sunday excursions, take their families with them:
and this in itself would be a check upon them, even if they were inclined
to dissipation, which they really are not.
Boisterous their mirth may be, for they have all the excitement of
feeling that fresh air and green fields can impart to the dwellers in crowded
cities, but it is innocent and harmless. The glass is circulated, and the joke
goes round; but the one is free from excess, and the other from offence; and
nothing but good humour and hilarity prevail.
In streets like Holborn and
Tottenham Court Road, which form the central market of a large neighbourhood,
inhabited by a vast number of mechanics and poor people, a few shops are open at
an early hour of the morning; and a very poor man, with a thin and sickly woman
by his side, may be seen with their little basket in hand, purchasing the scanty
quantity of necessaries they can afford, which the time at which the man
receives his wages, or his having a good deal of work to do, or the woman's
having been out charing till a late hour, prevented their procuring over-night.
The coffee-shops too, at which clerks and young men employed in
counting-houses can procure their breakfasts, are also open.
This class comprises, in a place like London, an enormous number of
people, whose limited means prevent their engaging for their lodgings any other
apartment than a bedroom, and who have consequently no alternative but to take
their breakfasts at a coffee-shop, or go without it altogether.
All these places, however, are quickly closed; and by the time the church
bells begin to ring, all appearance of traffic has ceased.
And then, what are the signs of immorality that meet the eye?
Churches are well filled, and Dissenters' chapels are crowded to
suffocation. There is no preaching to empty benches, while the drunken and
dissolute populace run riot in the streets.
Here is a fashionable church, where
the service commences at a late hour, for the accommodation of such members of
the congregation - and they are not a few - as may happen to have lingered at
the Opera far into the morning of the Sabbath; an excellent contrivance for
poising the balance between God and Mammon, and illustrating the ease with which
a man's duties to both, may be accommodated and adjusted.
How the carriages rattle up, and deposit their richly- dressed burdens
beneath the lofty portico! The
powdered footmen glide along the aisle, place the richly-bound prayer-books on
the pew desks, slam the doors, and hurry away, leaving the fashionable members
of the congregation to inspect each other through their glasses, and to dazzle
and glitter in the eyes of the few shabby people in the free seats.
The organ peals forth, the hired singers commence a short hymn, and the
congregation condescendingly rise, stare about them, and converse in whispers.
The clergyman enters the reading-desk, - a young man of noble family and
elegant demeanour, notorious at Cambridge for his knowledge of horse-flesh and
dancers, and celebrated at Eton for his hopeless stupidity. The service
commences. Mark the soft voice in
which he reads, and the impressive manner in which he applies his white hand,
studded with brilliants, to his perfumed hair.
Observe the graceful emphasis with which he offers up the prayers for the
King, the Royal Family, and all the Nobility; and the nonchalance with which he
hurries over the more uncomfortable portions of the service, the seventh
commandment for instance, with a studied regard for the taste and feeling of his
auditors, only to be equalled by that displayed by the sleek divine who succeeds
him, who murmurs, in a voice kept down by rich feeding, most comfortable
doctrines for exactly twelve minutes, and then arrives at the anxiously expected
'Now to God,' which is the signal for the dismissal of the congregation.
The organ is again heard; those who have been asleep wake up, and those
who have kept awake, smile and seem greatly relieved; bows and congratulations
are exchanged, the livery servants are all bustle and commotion, bang go the
steps, up jump the footmen, and off rattle the carriages: the inmates discoursing on the dresses of the congregation,
and congratulating themselves on having set so excellent an example to the
community in general, and Sunday-pleasurers in particular.
Enter a less
orthodox place of religious worship, and observe the contrast.
A small close chapel with a white-washed wall, and plain deal pews and
pulpit, contains a closely-packed congregation, as different in dress, as they
are opposed in manner, to that we have just quitted.
The hymn is sung - not by paid singers, but by the whole assembly at the
loudest pitch of their voices, unaccompanied by any musical instrument, the
words being given out, two lines at a time, by the clerk.
There is something in the sonorous quavering of the harsh voices, in the
lank and hollow faces of the men, and the sour solemnity of the women, which
bespeaks this a strong-hold of intolerant zeal and ignorant enthusiasm.
The preacher enters the pulpit. He
is a coarse, hard-faced man of forbidding aspect, clad in rusty black, and
bearing in his hand a small plain Bible from which he selects some passage for
his text, while the hymn is concluding. The
congregation fall upon their knees, and are hushed into profound stillness as he
delivers an extempore prayer, in which he calls upon the Sacred Founder of the
Christian faith to bless his ministry, in terms of disgusting and impious
familiarity not to be described. He
begins his oration in a drawling tone, and his hearers listen with silent
attention. He grows warmer as he
proceeds with his subject, and his gesticulation becomes proportionately
violent. He clenches his fists,
beats the book upon the desk before him, and swings his arms wildly about his
head. The congregation murmur their
acquiescence in his doctrines: and a short groan, occasionally bears testimony
to the moving nature of his eloquence. Encouraged
by these symptoms of approval, and working himself up to a pitch of enthusiasm
amounting almost to frenzy, he denounces sabbath-breakers with the direst
vengeance of offended Heaven. He
stretches his body half out of the pulpit, thrusts forth his arms with frantic
gestures, and blasphemously calls upon The Deity to visit with eternal torments,
those who turn aside from the word, as interpreted and preached by - himself. A low moaning is heard, the women rock their bodies to and
fro, and wring their hands; the preacher's fervour increases, the perspiration
starts upon his brow, his face is flushed, and he clenches his hands
convulsively, as he draws a hideous and appalling picture of the horrors
preparing for the wicked in a future state.
A great excitement is visible among his hearers, a scream is heard, and
some young girl falls senseless on the floor. There is a momentary rustle, but
it is only for a moment - all eyes are turned towards the preacher.
He pauses, passes his handkerchief across his face, and looks
complacently round. His voice
resumes its natural tone, as with mock humility he offers up a thanksgiving for
having been successful in his efforts, and having been permitted to rescue one
sinner from the path of evil. He sinks back into his seat, exhausted with the
violence of his ravings; the girl is removed, a hymn is sung, a petition for
some measure for securing the better observance of the Sabbath, which has been
prepared by the good man, is read; and his worshipping admirers struggle who
shall be the first to sign it.
But the morning service has concluded, and the
streets are again crowded with people. Long
rows of cleanly-dressed charity children, preceded by a portly beadle and a
withered schoolmaster, are returning to their welcome dinner; and it is evident,
from the number of men with beer-trays who are running from house to house, that
no inconsiderable portion of the population are about to take theirs at this
early hour. The bakers' shops in
the humbler suburbs especially, are filled with men, women, and children, each
anxiously waiting for the Sunday dinner. Look
at the group of children who surround that working man who has just emerged from
the baker's shop at the corner of the street, with the reeking dish, in which a
diminutive joint of mutton simmers above a vast heap of half-browned potatoes.
How the young rogues clap their hands, and dance round their father, for
very joy at the prospect of the feast: and
how anxiously the youngest and chubbiest of the lot, lingers on tiptoe by his
side, trying to get a peep into the interior of the dish.
They turn up the street, and the chubby- faced boy trots on as fast as
his little legs will carry him, to herald the approach of the dinner to 'Mother'
who is standing with a baby in her arms on the doorstep, and who seems almost as
pleased with the whole scene as the children themselves; whereupon 'baby' not
precisely understanding the importance of the business in hand, but clearly
perceiving that it is something unusually lively, kicks and crows most lustily,
to the unspeakable delight of all the children and both the parents:
and the dinner is borne into the house amidst a shouting of small voices,
and jumping of fat legs, which would fill Sir Andrew Agnew with astonishment; as
well it might, seeing that Baronets, generally speaking, eat pretty comfortable
dinners all the week through, and cannot be expected to understand what people
feel, who only have a meat dinner on one day out of every seven.
The bakings
being all duly consigned to their respective owners, and the beer-man having
gone his rounds, the church bells ring for afternoon service, the shops are
again closed, and the streets are more than ever thronged with people; some who
have not been to church in the morning, going to it now; others who have been to
church, going out for a walk; and others - let us admit the full measure of
their guilt - going for a walk, who have not been to church at all.
I am afraid the smart servant of all work, who has been loitering at the
corner of the square for the last ten minutes, is one of the latter class.
She is evidently waiting for somebody, and though she may have made up
her mind to go to church with him one of these mornings, I don't think they have
any such intention on this particular afternoon.
Here he is, at last. The
white trousers, blue coat, and yellow waistcoat - and more especially that cock
of the hat - indicate, as surely as inanimate objects can, that Chalk Farm and
not the parish church, is their destination.
The girl colours up, and puts out her hand with a very awkward
affectation of indifference. He gives it a gallant squeeze, and away they walk, arm in
arm, the girl just looking back towards her 'place' with an air of conscious
self-importance, and nodding to her fellow-servant who has gone up to the
two-pair-of- stairs window, to take a full view of 'Mary's young man,' which
being communicated to William, he takes off his hat to the fellow- servant:
a proceeding which affords unmitigated satisfaction to all parties, and
impels the fellow-servant to inform Miss Emily confidentially, in the course of
the evening, 'that the young man as Mary keeps company with, is one of the most
genteelest young men as ever she see.'
The two young people who have just
crossed the road, and are following this happy couple down the street, are a
fair specimen of another class of Sunday-pleasurers.
There is a dapper smartness, struggling through very limited means, about
the young man, which induces one to set him down at once as a junior clerk to a
tradesman or attorney. The girl no
one could possibly mistake. You may tell a young woman in the employment of a
large dress- maker, at any time, by a certain neatness of cheap finery and
humble following of fashion, which pervade her whole attire; but unfortunately
there are other tokens not to be misunderstood - the pale face with its hectic
bloom, the slight distortion of form which no artifice of dress can wholly
conceal, the unhealthy stoop, and the short cough - the effects of hard work and
close application to a sedentary employment, upon a tender frame.
They turn towards the fields. The
girl's countenance brightens, and an unwonted glow rises in her face.
They are going to Hampstead or Highgate, to spend their holiday afternoon
in some place where they can see the sky, the fields, and trees, and breathe for
an hour or two the pure air, which so seldom plays upon that poor girl's form,
or exhilarates her spirits.
I would to God, that the iron-hearted man who would
deprive such people as these of their only pleasures, could feel the sinking of
heart and soul, the wasting exhaustion of mind and body, the utter prostration
of present strength and future hope, attendant upon that incessant toil which
lasts from day to day, and from month to month; that toil which is too often
protracted until the silence of midnight, and resumed with the first stir of
morning. How marvellously would his
ardent zeal for other men's souls, diminish after a short probation, and how
enlightened and comprehensive would his views of the real object and meaning of
the institution of the Sabbath become!
The afternoon is far advanced - the
parks and public drives are crowded. Carriages,
gigs, phaetons, stanhopes, and vehicles of every description, glide smoothly on. The promenades are filled with loungers on foot, and the road
is thronged with loungers on horseback. Persons
of every class are crowded together, here, in one dense mass.
The plebeian, who takes his pleasure on no day but Sunday, jostles the
patrician, who takes his, from year's end to year's end.
You look in vain for any outward signs of profligacy or debauchery.
You see nothing before you but a vast number of people, the denizens of a
large and crowded city, in the needful and rational enjoyment of air and
exercise.
It grows dusk. The roads
leading from the different places of suburban resort, are crowded with people on
their return home, and the sound of merry voices rings through the gradually
darkening fields. The evening is
hot and sultry. The rich man throws
open the sashes of his spacious dining-room, and quaffs his iced wine in
splendid luxury. The poor man, who
has no room to take his meals in, but the close apartment to which he and his
family have been confined throughout the week, sits in the tea-garden of some
famous tavern, and drinks his beer in content and comfort.
The fields and roads are gradually deserted, the crowd once more pour
into the streets, and disperse to their several homes; and by midnight all is
silent and quiet, save where a few stragglers linger beneath the window of some
great man's house, to listen to the strains of music from within: or stop to gaze upon the splendid carriages which are waiting
to convey the guests from the dinner-party of an Earl.
There is a darker side
to this picture, on which, so far from its being any part of my purpose to
conceal it, I wish to lay particular stress.
In some parts of London, and in many of the manufacturing towns of
England, drunkenness and profligacy in their most disgusting forms, exhibit in
the open streets on Sunday, a sad and a degrading spectacle. We need go no farther than St. Giles's, or Drury Lane, for
sights and scenes of a most repulsive nature. Women with scarcely the articles
of apparel which common decency requires, with forms bloated by disease, and
faces rendered hideous by habitual drunkenness - men reeling and staggering
along - children in rags and filth - whole streets of squalid and miserable
appearance, whose inhabitants are lounging in the public road, fighting,
screaming, and swearing - these are the common objects which present themselves
in, these are the well-known characteristics of, that portion of London to which
I have just referred.
And why is it, that all well-disposed persons are
shocked, and public decency scandalised, by such exhibitions?
These people are
poor - that is notorious. It may be
said that they spend in liquor, money with which they might purchase
necessaries, and there is no denying the fact; but let it be remembered that
even if they applied every farthing of their earnings in the best possible way,
they would still be very - very poor. Their
dwellings are necessarily uncomfortable, and to a certain degree unhealthy.
Cleanliness might do much, but they are too crowded together, the streets
are too narrow, and the rooms too small, to admit of their ever being rendered
desirable habitations. They work very hard all the week.
We know that the effect of prolonged and arduous labour, is to produce,
when a period of rest does arrive, a sensation of lassitude which it requires
the application of some stimulus to overcome.
What stimulus have they? Sunday comes, and with it a cessation of labour.
How are they to employ the day, or what inducement have they to employ
it, in recruiting their stock of health? They
see little parties, on pleasure excursions, passing through the streets; but
they cannot imitate their example, for they have not the means.
They may walk, to be sure, but it is exactly the inducement to walk that
they require. If every one of these
men knew, that by taking the trouble to walk two or three miles he would be
enabled to share in a good game of cricket, or some athletic sport, I very much
question whether any of them would remain at home.
But you hold out no
inducement, you offer no relief from listlessness, you provide nothing to amuse
his mind, you afford him no means of exercising his body.
Unwashed and unshaven, he saunters moodily about, weary and dejected.
In lieu of the wholesome stimulus he might derive from nature, you drive
him to the pernicious excitement to be gained from art.
He flies to the gin-shop as his only resource; and when, reduced to a
worse level than the lowest brute in the scale of creation, he lies wallowing in
the kennel, your saintly lawgivers lift up their hands to heaven, and exclaim
for a law which shall convert the day intended for rest and cheerfulness, into
one of universal gloom, bigotry, and persecution.
CHAPTER II - AS SABBATH
BILLS WOULD MAKE IT
The provisions of the bill introduced into the House of
Commons by Sir Andrew Agnew, and thrown out by that House on the motion for the
second reading, on the 18th of May in the present year, by a majority of 32, may
very fairly be taken as a test of the length to which the fanatics, of which the
honourable Baronet is the distinguished leader, are prepared to go.
No test can be fairer; because while on the one hand this measure may be
supposed to exhibit all that improvement which mature reflection and long
deliberation may have suggested, so on the other it may very reasonably be
inferred, that if it be quite as severe in its provisions, and to the full as
partial in its operation, as those which have preceded it and experienced a
similar fate, the disease under which the honourable Baronet and his friends
labour, is perfectly hopeless, and beyond the reach of cure.
The proposed
enactments of the bill are briefly these:- All work is prohibited on the Lord's
day, under heavy penalties, increasing with every repetition of the offence. There are penalties for keeping shops open - penalties for
drunkenness - penalties for keeping open houses of entertainment - penalties for
being present at any public meeting or assembly - penalties for letting
carriages, and penalties for hiring them - penalties for travelling in
steam-boats, and penalties for taking passengers - penalties on vessels
commencing their voyage on Sunday - penalties on the owners of cattle who suffer
them to be driven on the Lord's day - penalties on constables who refuse to act,
and penalties for resisting them when they do.
In addition to these trifles, the constables are invested with arbitrary,
vexatious, and most extensive powers; and all this in a bill which sets out with
a hypocritical and canting declaration that 'nothing is more acceptable to God
than the TRUE AND SINCERE worship of Him according to His holy will, and that it
is the bounden duty of Parliament to promote the observance of the Lord's day,
by protecting every class of society against being required to sacrifice their
comfort, health, religious privileges, and conscience, for the convenience,
enjoyment, or supposed advantage of any other class on the Lord's day'! The idea of making a man truly moral through the ministry of
constables, and sincerely religious under the influence of penalties, is worthy
of the mind which could form such a mass of monstrous absurdity as this bill is
composed of.
The House of Commons threw the measure out certainly, and by so
doing retrieved the disgrace - so far as it could be retrieved - of placing
among the printed papers of Parliament, such an egregious specimen of
legislative folly; but there was a degree of delicacy and forbearance about the
debate that took place, which I cannot help thinking as unnecessary and uncalled
for, as it is unusual in Parliamentary discussions.
If it had been the first time of Sir Andrew Agnew's attempting to palm
such a measure upon the country, we might well understand, and duly appreciate,
the delicate and compassionate feeling due to the supposed weakness and
imbecility of the man, which prevented his proposition being exposed in its true
colours, and induced this Hon. Member to bear testimony to his excellent
motives, and that Noble Lord to regret that he could not - although he had tried
to do so - adopt any portion of the bill. But when these attempts have been
repeated, again and again; when Sir Andrew Agnew has renewed them session after
session, and when it has become palpably evident to the whole House that
His
impudence of proof in every trial, Kens no polite, and heeds no plain denial -
it really becomes high time to speak of him and his legislation, as they appear
to deserve, without that gloss of politeness, which is all very well in an
ordinary case, but rather out of place when the liberties and comforts of a
whole people are at stake.
In the first place, it is by no means the worst
characteristic of this bill, that it is a bill of blunders:
it is, from beginning to end, a piece of deliberate cruelty, and crafty
injustice. If the rich composed the
whole population of this country, not a single comfort of one single man would
be affected by it. It is directed
exclusively, and without the exception of a solitary instance, against the
amusements and recreations of the poor. This
was the bait held out by the Hon. Baronet to a body of men, who cannot be
supposed to have any very strong sympathies in common with the poor, because
they cannot understand their sufferings or their struggles.
This is the bait, which will in time prevail, unless public attention is
awakened, and public feeling exerted, to prevent it.
Take the very first
clause, the provision that no man shall be allowed to work on Sunday - 'That no
person, upon the Lord's day, shall do, or hire, or employ any person to do any
manner of labour, or any work of his or her ordinary calling.'
What class of persons does this affect?
The rich man? No. Menial
servants, both male and female, are specially exempted from the operation of the
bill. 'Menial servants' are among the poor people.
The bill has no regard for them. The
Baronet's dinner must be cooked on Sunday, the Bishop's horses must be groomed,
and the Peer's carriage must be driven. So the menial servants are put utterly beyond the pale of
grace; - unless indeed, they are to go to heaven through the sanctity of their
masters, and possibly they might think even that, rather an uncertain
passport.
There is a penalty for keeping open, houses of entertainment.
Now, suppose the bill had passed, and that half-a-dozen adventurous
licensed victuallers, relying upon the excitement of public feeling on the
subject, and the consequent difficulty of conviction (this is by no means an
improbable supposition), had determined to keep their houses and gardens open,
through the whole Sunday afternoon, in defiance of the law.
Every act of hiring or working, every act of buying or selling, or
delivering, or causing anything to be bought or sold, is specifically made a
separate offence - mark the effect. A
party, a man and his wife and children, enter a tea- garden, and the informer
stations himself in the next box, from whence he can see and hear everything
that passes. 'Waiter!' says the
father. 'Yes.
Sir.' 'Pint of the best
ale!' 'Yes, Sir.' Away runs the
waiter to the bar, and gets the ale from the landlord.
Out comes the informer's note-book - penalty on the father for hiring, on
the waiter for delivering, and on the landlord for selling, on the Lord's day.
But it does not stop here. The
waiter delivers the ale, and darts off, little suspecting the penalties in store
for him. 'Hollo,' cries the father, 'waiter!' 'Yes, Sir.' 'Just
get this little boy a biscuit, will you?' 'Yes,
Sir.' Off runs the waiter again,
and down goes another case of hiring, another case of delivering, and another
case of selling; and so it would go on AD INFINITUM, the sum and substance of
the matter being, that every time a man or woman cried 'Waiter!' on Sunday, he
or she would be fined not less than forty shillings, nor more than a hundred;
and every time a waiter replied, 'Yes, Sir,' he and his master would be fined in
the same amount: with the addition
of a new sort of window duty on the landlord, to wit, a tax of twenty shillings
an hour for every hour beyond the first one, during which he should have his
shutters down on the Sabbath.
With one exception, there are perhaps no clauses
in the whole bill, so strongly illustrative of its partial operation, and the
intention of its framer, as those which relate to travelling on Sunday.
Penalties of ten, twenty, and thirty pounds, are mercilessly imposed upon
coach proprietors who shall run their coaches on the Sabbath; one, two, and ten
pounds upon those who hire, or let to hire, horses and carriages upon the Lord's
day, but not one syllable about those who have no necessity to hire, because
they have carriages and horses of their own; not one word of a penalty on
liveried coachmen and footmen. The
whole of the saintly venom is directed against the hired cabriolet, the humble
fly, or the rumbling hackney-coach, which enables a man of the poorer class to
escape for a few hours from the smoke and dirt, in the midst of which he has
been confined throughout the week: while
the escutcheoned carriage and the dashing cab, may whirl their wealthy owners to
Sunday feasts and private oratorios, setting constables, informers, and
penalties, at defiance. Again, in
the description of the places of public resort which it is rendered criminal to
attend on Sunday, there are no words comprising a very fashionable promenade.
Public discussions, public debates, public lectures and speeches, are
cautiously guarded against; for it is by their means that the people become
enlightened enough to deride the last efforts of bigotry and superstition.
There is a stringent provision for punishing the poor man who spends an
hour in a news- room, but there is nothing to prevent the rich one from lounging
away the day in the Zoological Gardens.
There is, in four words, a mock
proviso, which affects to forbid travelling 'with any animal' on the Lord's day.
This, however, is revoked, as relates to the rich man, by a subsequent
provision. We have then a penalty
of not less than fifty, nor more than one hundred pounds, upon any person
participating in the control, or having the command of any vessel which shall
commence her voyage on the Lord's day, should the wind prove favourable.
The next time this bill is brought forward (which will no doubt be at an
early period of the next session of Parliament) perhaps it will be better to
amend this clause by declaring, that from and after the passing of the act, it
shall be deemed unlawful for the wind to blow at all upon the Sabbath.
It would remove a great deal of temptation from the owners and captains
of vessels.
The reader is now in possession of the principal enacting clauses
of Sir Andrew Agnew's bill, with the exception of one, for preventing the
killing or taking of 'FISH, OR OTHER WILD ANIMALS,' and the ordinary provisions
which are inserted for form's sake in all acts of Parliament. I now beg his attention to the clauses of exemption.
They
are two in number. The first
exempts menial servants from any rest, and all poor men from any recreation:
outlaws a milkman after nine o'clock in the morning, and makes
eating-houses lawful for only two hours in the afternoon; permits a medical man
to use his carriage on Sunday, and declares that a clergyman may either use his
own, or hire one.
The second is artful, cunning, and designing; shielding the
rich man from the possibility of being entrapped, and affecting at the same
time, to have a tender and scrupulous regard, for the interests of the whole
community. It declares, 'that
nothing in this act contained, shall extend to works of piety, charity, or
necessity.'
What is meant by the word 'necessity' in this clause?
Simply this - that the rich man shall be at liberty to make use of all
the splendid luxuries he has collected around him, on any day in the week,
because habit and custom have rendered them 'necessary' to his easy existence;
but that the poor man who saves his money to provide some little pleasure for
himself and family at lengthened intervals, shall not be permitted to enjoy it.
It is not 'necessary' to him:- Heaven knows, he very often goes long
enough without it. This is the
plain English of the clause. The
carriage and pair of horses, the coachman, the footman, the helper, and the
groom, are 'necessary' on Sundays, as on other days, to the bishop and the
nobleman; but the hackney-coach, the hired gig, or the taxed cart, cannot
possibly be 'necessary' to the working-man on Sunday, for he has it not at other
times. The sumptuous dinner and the
rich wines, are 'necessaries' to a great man in his own mansion: but the pint of beer and the plate of meat, degrade the
national character in an eating-house.
Such is the bill for promoting the true
and sincere worship of God according to his Holy Will, and for protecting every
class of society against being required to sacrifice their health and comfort on
the Sabbath. Instances in which its
operation would be as unjust as it would be absurd, might be multiplied to an
endless amount; but it is sufficient to place its leading provisions before the
reader. In doing so, I have
purposely abstained from drawing upon the imagination for possible cases; the
provisions to which I have referred, stand in so many words upon the bill as
printed by order of the House of Commons; and they can neither be disowned, nor
explained away.
Let us suppose such a bill as this, to have actually passed
both branches of the legislature; to have received the royal assent; and to have
come into operation. Imagine its
effect in a great city like London.
Sunday comes, and brings with it a day of
general gloom and austerity. The
man who has been toiling hard all the week, has been looking towards the
Sabbath, not as to a day of rest from labour, and healthy recreation, but as one
of grievous tyranny and grinding oppression.
The day which his Maker intended as a blessing, man has converted into a
curse. Instead of being hailed by
him as his period of relaxation, he finds it remarkable only as depriving him of
every comfort and enjoyment. He has
many children about him, all sent into the world at an early age, to struggle
for a livelihood; one is kept in a warehouse all day, with an interval of rest
too short to enable him to reach home, another walks four or five miles to his
employment at the docks, a third earns a few shillings weekly, as an errand boy,
or office messenger; and the employment of the man himself, detains him at some
distance from his home from morning till night.
Sunday is the only day on which they could all meet together, and enjoy a
homely meal in social comfort; and now they sit down to a cold and cheerless
dinner: the pious guardians of the
man's salvation having, in their regard for the welfare of his precious soul,
shut up the bakers' shops. The fire
blazes high in the kitchen chimney of these well-fed hypocrites, and the rich
steams of the savoury dinner scent the air.
What care they to be told that this class of men have neither a place to
cook in - nor means to bear the expense, if they had?
Look into your churches -
diminished congregations, and scanty attendance. People have grown sullen and obstinate, and are becoming
disgusted with the faith which condemns them to such a day as this, once in
every seven. And as you cannot make
people religious by Act of Parliament, or force them to church by constables,
they display their feeling by staying away.
Turn into the streets, and mark the
rigid gloom that reigns over everything around. The roads are empty, the fields are deserted, the houses of
entertainment are closed. Groups of
filthy and discontented-looking men, are idling about at the street corners, or
sleeping in the sun; but there are no decently-dressed people of the poorer
class, passing to and fro. Where
should they walk to? It would take them an hour, at least, to get into the
fields, and when they reached them, they could procure neither bite nor sup,
without the informer and the penalty. Now
and then, a carriage rolls smoothly on, or a well-mounted horseman, followed by
a liveried attendant, canters by; but with these exceptions, all is as
melancholy and quiet as if a pestilence had fallen on the city.
Bend your steps
through the narrow and thickly-inhabited streets, and observe the sallow faces
of the men and women who are lounging at the doors, or lolling from the windows.
Regard well the closeness of these crowded rooms, and the noisome
exhalations that rise from the drains and kennels; and then laud the triumph of
religion and morality, which condemns people to drag their lives out in such
stews as these, and makes it criminal for them to eat or drink in the fresh air,
or under the clear sky. Here and there, from some half-opened window, the loud shout
of drunken revelry strikes upon the ear, and the noise of oaths and quarrelling
- the effect of the close and heated atmosphere - is heard on all sides. See how
the men all rush to join the crowd that are making their way down the street,
and how loud the execrations of the mob become as they draw nearer.
They have assembled round a little knot of constables, who have seized
the stock-in-trade, heinously exposed on Sunday, of some miserable walking-stick
seller, who follows clamouring for his property.
The dispute grows warmer and fiercer, until at last some of the more
furious among the crowd, rush forward to restore the goods to their owner.
A general conflict takes place; the sticks of the constables are
exercised in all directions; fresh assistance is procured; and half a dozen of
the assailants are conveyed to the station-house, struggling, bleeding, and
cursing. The case is taken to the
police-office on the following morning; and after a frightful amount of perjury
on both sides, the men are sent to prison for resisting the officers, their
families to the workhouse to keep them from starving:
and there they both remain for a month afterwards, glorious trophies of
the sanctified enforcement of the Christian Sabbath. Add to such scenes as these, the profligacy, idleness,
drunkenness, and vice, that will be committed to an extent which no man can
foresee, on Monday, as an atonement for the restraint of the preceding day; and
you have a very faint and imperfect picture of the religious effects of this
Sunday legislation, supposing it could ever be forced upon the people.
But let
those who advocate the cause of fanaticism, reflect well upon the probable issue
of their endeavours. They may by
perseverance, succeed with Parliament. Let
them ponder on the probability of succeeding with the people.
You may deny the concession of a political question for a time, and a
nation will bear it patiently. Strike
home to the comforts of every man's fireside - tamper with every man's freedom
and liberty - and one month, one week, may rouse a feeling abroad, which a king
would gladly yield his crown to quell, and a peer would resign his coronet to
allay.
It is the custom to affect a deference for the motives of those who
advocate these measures, and a respect for the feelings by which they are
actuated. They do not deserve it.
If they legislate in ignorance, they are criminal and dishonest; if they
do so with their eyes open, they commit wilful injustice; in either case, they
bring religion into contempt. But
they do NOT legislate in ignorance. Public
prints, and public men, have pointed out to them again and again, the
consequences of their proceedings. If
they persist in thrusting themselves forward, let those consequences rest upon
their own heads, and let them be content to stand upon their own merits.
It may
be asked, what motives can actuate a man who has so little regard for the
comfort of his fellow-beings, so little respect for their wants and necessities,
and so distorted a notion of the beneficence of his Creator. I reply, an envious, heartless, ill- conditioned dislike to
seeing those whom fortune has placed below him, cheerful and happy - an
intolerant confidence in his own high worthiness before God, and a lofty
impression of the demerits of others - pride, selfish pride, as inconsistent
with the spirit of Christianity itself, as opposed to the example of its Founder
upon earth.
To these may be added another class of men - the stern and gloomy
enthusiasts, who would make earth a hell, and religion a torment: men who,
having wasted the earlier part of their lives in dissipation and depravity, find
themselves when scarcely past its meridian, steeped to the neck in vice, and
shunned like a loathsome disease. Abandoned
by the world, having nothing to fall back upon, nothing to remember but time mis-spent,
and energies misdirected, they turn their eyes and not their thoughts to Heaven,
and delude themselves into the impious belief, that in denouncing the lightness
of heart of which they cannot partake, and the rational pleasures from which
they never derived enjoyment, they are more than remedying the sins of their old
career, and - like the founders of monasteries and builders of churches, in
ruder days - establishing a good set claim upon their Maker.
CHAPTER III - AS
IT MIGHT BE MADE
The supporters of Sabbath Bills, and more especially the
extreme class of Dissenters, lay great stress upon the declarations occasionally
made by criminals from the condemned cell or the scaffold, that to
Sabbath-breaking they attribute their first deviation from the path of
rectitude; and they point to these statements, as an incontestable proof of the
evil consequences which await a departure from that strict and rigid observance
of the Sabbath, which they uphold. I
cannot help thinking that in this, as in almost every other respect connected
with the subject, there is a considerable degree of cant, and a very great deal
of wilful blindness. If a man be
viciously disposed - and with very few exceptions, not a man dies by the
executioner's hands, who has not been in one way or other a most abandoned and
profligate character for many years - if a man be viciously disposed, there is
no doubt that he will turn his Sunday to bad account, that he will take
advantage of it, to dissipate with other bad characters as vile as himself; and
that in this way, he may trace his first yielding to temptation, possibly his
first commission of crime, to an infringement of the Sabbath. But
this would be an argument against any holiday at all. If his holiday had been Wednesday instead of Sunday, and he
had devoted it to the same improper uses, it would have been productive of the
same results. It is too much to
judge of the character of a whole people, by the confessions of the very worst
members of society. It is not fair,
to cry down things which are harmless in themselves, because evil-disposed men
may turn them to bad account. Who
ever thought of deprecating the teaching poor people to write, because some
porter in a warehouse had committed forgery?
Or into what man's head did it ever enter, to prevent the crowding of
churches, because it afforded a temptation for the picking of pockets?
When the
Book of Sports, for allowing the peasantry of England to divert themselves with
certain games in the open air, on Sundays, after evening service, was published
by Charles the First, it is needless to say the English people were
comparatively rude and uncivilised. And
yet it is extraordinary to how few excesses it gave rise, even in that day, when
men's minds were not enlightened, or their passions moderated, by the influence
of education and refinement. That
some excesses were committed through its means, in the remoter parts of the
country, and that it was discontinued in those places, in consequence, cannot be
denied: but generally speaking,
there is no proof whatever on record, of its having had any tendency to increase
crime, or to lower the character of the people.
The Puritans of that time, were
as much opposed to harmless recreations and healthful amusements as those of the
present day, and it is amusing to observe that each in their generation, advance
precisely the same description of arguments. In the British Museum, there is a curious pamphlet got up by
the Agnews of Charles's time, entitled 'A Divine Tragedie lately acted, or a
Collection of sundry memorable examples of God's Judgements upon Sabbath
Breakers, and other like Libertines in their unlawful Sports, happening within
the realme of England, in the compass only of two yeares last past, since the
Booke (of Sports) was published, worthy to be knowne and considered of all men,
especially such who are guilty of the sinne, or archpatrons thereof.'
This amusing document, contains some fifty or sixty veritable accounts of
balls of fire that fell into churchyards and upset the sporters, and sporters
that quarrelled, and upset one another, and so forth:
and among them is one anecdote containing an example of a rather
different kind, which I cannot resist the temptation of quoting, as strongly
illustrative of the fact, that this blinking of the question has not even the
recommendation of novelty.
'A woman about Northampton, the same day that she
heard the booke for sports read, went immediately, and having 3. pence in her
purse, hired a fellow to goe to the next towne to fetch a Minstrell, who coming,
she with others fell a dauncing, which continued within night; at which time
shee was got with child, which at the birth shee murthering, was detected and
apprehended, and being converted before the justice, shee confessed it, and
withal told the occasion of it, saying it was her falling to sport on the
Sabbath, upon the reading of the Booke, so as for this treble sinfull act, her
presumptuous profaning of the Sabbath, wh. brought her adultory and that murther. Shee was according to the Law both of God and man, put to
death. Much sinne and misery
followeth upon Sabbath-breaking.'
It is needless to say, that if the young lady
near Northampton had 'fallen to sport' of such a dangerous description, on any
other day but Sunday, the first result would probably have been the same:
it never having been distinctly shown that Sunday is more favourable to
the propagation of the human race than any other day in the week.
The second result - the murder of the child - does not speak very highly
for the amiability of her natural disposition; and the whole story, supposing it
to have had any foundation at all, is about as much chargeable upon the Book of
Sports, as upon the Book of Kings. Such
'sports' have taken place in Dissenting Chapels before now; but religion has
never been blamed in consequence; nor has it been proposed to shut up the
chapels on that account.
The question, then, very fairly arises, whether we
have any reason to suppose that allowing games in the open air on Sundays, or
even providing the means of amusement for the humbler classes of society on that
day, would be hurtful and injurious to the character and morals of the
people.
I was travelling in the west of England a summer or two back, and was
induced by the beauty of the scenery, and the seclusion of the spot, to remain
for the night in a small village, distant about seventy miles from London.
The next morning was Sunday; and I walked out, towards the church.
Groups of people - the whole population of the little hamlet apparently -
were hastening in the same direction. Cheerful
and good-humoured congratulations were heard on all sides, as neighbours
overtook each other, and walked on in company.
Occasionally I passed an aged couple, whose married daughter and her
husband were loitering by the side of the old people, accommodating their rate
of walking to their feeble pace, while a little knot of children hurried on
before; stout young labourers in clean round frocks; and buxom girls with
healthy, laughing faces, were plentifully sprinkled about in couples, and the
whole scene was one of quiet and tranquil contentment, irresistibly captivating.
The morning was bright and pleasant, the hedges were green and blooming,
and a thousand delicious scents were wafted on the air, from the wild flowers
which blossomed on either side of the footpath.
The little church was one of those venerable simple buildings which
abound in the English counties; half overgrown with moss and ivy, and standing
in the centre of a little plot of ground, which, but for the green mounds with
which it was studded, might have passed for a lovely meadow.
I fancied that the old clanking bell which was now summoning the
congregation together, would seem less terrible when it rung out the knell of a
departed soul, than I had ever deemed possible before - that the sound would
tell only of a welcome to calmness and rest, amidst the most peaceful and
tranquil scene in nature.
I followed into the church - a low-roofed building
with small arched windows, through which the sun's rays streamed upon a plain
tablet on the opposite wall, which had once recorded names, now as
undistinguishable on its worn surface, as were the bones beneath, from the dust
into which they had resolved. The impressive service of the Church of England was spoken -
not merely READ - by a grey- headed minister, and the responses delivered by his
auditors, with an air of sincere devotion as far removed from affectation or
display, as from coldness or indifference.
The psalms were accompanied by a few instrumental performers, who were
stationed in a small gallery extending across the church at the lower end, over
the door: and the voices were led
by the clerk, who, it was evident, derived no slight pride and gratification
from this portion of the service. The
discourse was plain, unpretending, and well adapted to the comprehension of the
hearers. At the conclusion of the
service, the villagers waited in the churchyard, to salute the clergyman as he
passed; and two or three, I observed, stepped aside, as if communicating some
little difficulty, and asking his advice. This,
to guess from the homely bows, and other rustic expressions of gratitude, the
old gentleman readily conceded. He
seemed intimately acquainted with the circumstances of all his parishioners; for
I heard him inquire after one man's youngest child, another man's wife, and so
forth; and that he was fond of his joke, I discovered from overhearing him ask a
stout, fresh-coloured young fellow, with a very pretty bashful-looking girl on
his arm, 'when those banns were to be put up?' - an inquiry which made the young
fellow more fresh-coloured, and the girl more bashful, and which, strange to
say, caused a great many other girls who were standing round, to colour up also,
and look anywhere but in the faces of their male companions.
As I approached
this spot in the evening about half an hour before sunset, I was surprised to
hear the hum of voices, and occasionally a shout of merriment from the meadow
beyond the churchyard; which I found, when I reached the stile, to be occasioned
by a very animated game of cricket, in which the boys and young men of the place
were engaged, while the females and old people were scattered about:
some seated on the grass watching the progress of the game, and others
sauntering about in groups of two or three, gathering little nosegays of wild
roses and hedge flowers. I could
not but take notice of one old man in particular, with a bright-eyed grand-
daughter by his side, who was giving a sunburnt young fellow some instructions
in the game, which he received with an air of profound deference, but with an
occasional glance at the girl, which induced me to think that his attention was
rather distracted from the old gentleman's narration of the fruits of his
experience. When it was his turn at
the wicket, too, there was a glance towards the pair every now and then, which
the old grandfather very complacently considered as an appeal to his judgment of
a particular hit, but which a certain blush in the girl's face, and a downcast
look of the bright eye, led me to believe was intended for somebody else than
the old man, - and understood by somebody else, too, or I am much mistaken.
I
was in the very height of the pleasure which the contemplation of this scene
afforded me, when I saw the old clergyman making his way towards us.
I trembled for an angry interruption to the sport, and was almost on the
point of crying out, to warn the cricketers of his approach; he was so close
upon me, however, that I could do nothing but remain still, and anticipate the
reproof that was preparing. What was my agreeable surprise to see the old gentleman
standing at the stile, with his hands in his pockets, surveying the whole scene
with evident satisfaction! And how
dull I must have been, not to have known till my friend the grandfather (who,
by- the-bye, said he had been a wonderful cricketer in his time) told me, that
it was the clergyman himself who had established the whole thing:
that it was his field they played in; and that it was he who had
purchased stumps, bats, ball, and all!
It is such scenes as this, I would see
near London, on a Sunday evening. It
is such men as this, who would do more in one year to make people properly
religious, cheerful, and contented, than all the legislation of a century could
ever accomplish.
It will be said - it has been very often - that it would be
matter of perfect impossibility to make amusements and exercises succeed in
large towns, which may be very well adapted to a country population.
Here, again, we are called upon to yield to bare assertions on matters of
belief and opinion, as if they were established and undoubted facts.
That there is a wide difference between the two cases, no one will be
prepared to dispute; that the difference is such as to prevent the application
of the same principle to both, no reasonable man, I think, will be disposed to
maintain. The great majority of the
people who make holiday on Sunday now, are industrious, orderly, and
well-behaved persons. It is not unreasonable to suppose that they would be no more
inclined to an abuse of pleasures provided for them, than they are to an abuse
of the pleasures they provide for themselves; and if any people, for want of
something better to do, resort to criminal practices on the Sabbath as at
present observed, no better remedy for the evil can be imagined, than giving
them the opportunity of doing something which will amuse them, and hurt nobody
else.
The propriety of opening the British Museum to respectable people on
Sunday, has lately been the subject of some discussion.
I think it would puzzle the most austere of the Sunday legislators to
assign any valid reason for opposing so sensible a proposition. The Museum
contains rich specimens from all the vast museums and repositories of Nature,
and rare and curious fragments of the mighty works of art, in bygone ages:
all calculated to awaken contemplation and inquiry, and to tend to the
enlightenment and improvement of the people.
But attendants would be necessary, and a few men would be employed upon
the Sabbath. They certainly would;
but how many? Why, if the British
Museum, and the National Gallery, and the Gallery of Practical Science, and
every other exhibition in London, from which knowledge is to be derived and
information gained, were to be thrown open on a Sunday afternoon, not fifty
people would be required to preside over the whole:
and it would take treble the number to enforce a Sabbath bill in any
three populous parishes.
I should like to see some large field, or open piece
of ground, in every outskirt of London, exhibiting each Sunday evening on a
larger scale, the scene of the little country meadow.
I should like to see the time arrive, when a man's attendance to his
religious duties might be left to that religious feeling which most men possess
in a greater or less degree, but which was never forced into the breast of any
man by menace or restraint. I
should like to see the time when Sunday might be looked forward to, as a
recognised day of relaxation and enjoyment, and when every man might feel, what
few men do now, that religion is not incompatible with rational pleasure and
needful recreation.
How different a picture would the streets and public places
then present! The museums, and
repositories of scientific and useful inventions, would be crowded with
ingenious mechanics and industrious artisans, all anxious for information, and
all unable to procure it at any other time.
The spacious saloons would be swarming with practical men:
humble in appearance, but destined, perhaps, to become the greatest
inventors and philosophers of their age. The
labourers who now lounge away the day in idleness and intoxication, would be
seen hurrying along, with cheerful faces and clean attire, not to the close and
smoky atmosphere of the public- house but to the fresh and airy fields.
Fancy the pleasant scene. Throngs of people, pouring out from the lanes
and alleys of the metropolis, to various places of common resort at some short
distance from the town, to join in the refreshing sports and exercises of the
day - the children gambolling in crowds upon the grass, the mothers looking on,
and enjoying themselves the little game they seem only to direct; other parties
strolling along some pleasant walks, or reposing in the shade of the stately
trees; others again intent upon their different amusements.
Nothing should be heard on all sides, but the sharp stroke of the bat as
it sent the ball skimming along the ground, the clear ring of the quoit, as it
struck upon the iron peg: the noisy
murmur of many voices, and the loud shout of mirth and delight, which would
awaken the echoes far and wide, till the fields rung with it.
The day would pass away, in a series of enjoyments which would awaken no
painful reflections when night arrived; for they would be calculated to bring
with them, only health and contentment. The
young would lose that dread of religion, which the sour austerity of its
professors too often inculcates in youthful bosoms; and the old would find less
difficulty in persuading them to respect its observances.
The drunken and dissipated, deprived of any excuse for their misconduct,
would no longer excite pity but disgust. Above all, the more ignorant and humble
class of men, who now partake of many of the bitters of life, and taste but few
of its sweets, would naturally feel attachment and respect for that code of
morality, which, regarding the many hardships of their station, strove to
alleviate its rigours, and endeavoured to soften its asperity.
This is what
Sunday might be made, and what it might be made without impiety or profanation.
The wise and beneficent Creator who places men upon earth, requires that
they shall perform the duties of that station of life to which they are called,
and He can never intend that the more a man strives to discharge those duties,
the more he shall be debarred from happiness and enjoyment.
Let those who have six days in the week for all the world's pleasures,
appropriate the seventh to fasting and gloom, either for their own sins or those
of other people, if they like to bewail them; but let those who employ their six
days in a worthier manner, devote their seventh to a different purpose.
Let divines set the example of true morality:
preach it to their flocks in the morning, and dismiss them to enjoy true
rest in the afternoon; and let them select for their text, and let Sunday
legislators take for their motto, the words which fell from the lips of that
Master, whose precepts they misconstrue, and whose lessons they pervert - 'The
Sabbath was made for man, and not man to serve the Sabbath.'
Charles Dickens, Sunday Under Three Heads, 1836
see also Charles Manby Smith in The Little World of London - click here (1) (2)
see also Thomas
Wright on Working Men's Sundays passim
and Sunday outings in
particular
see also Sundays in the East End (1) and (2)
Victorian London - Publications - Social Investigation/Journalism - Life in the London Streets, by Richard Rowe, 1881 - Chapter 24 - The City Sunday
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XXIV.
THE CITY SUNDAY.
AN unwashed, unshaven labourer sits upon a milestone, kicking it with his
listlessly-swung, unlaced boots, sulkily eyeing the closed doors and shuttered
windows of a public-house, and exchanging sleepy growls with comrades opposite
who are already waiting for the doors to open, meanwhile, to pass the time,
employing in turn a shoeblack. No smoke rolls out of the factory chimney, and a
rusty boiler basks [-349-] in the forecourt, still
showing signs of having once been a garden, as if it hoped its rest might never
again be broken. The little green arbours of the Tea Gardens are deserted, and
the old sign sways softly over the old water- trough, as if it were rocking
itself off to sleep. The warm wind rustles the leaves of the trees that shade
the churchyard, and ruffles, too, the leaves of a list hung upon a church door.
"What's that?" asks a little girl, holding on to
the smallest although not little finger of the brown hand of her father, a
red-faced navvy in clean, white frock, and other Sunday best, who is leisurely
taking his walks abroad, sunning his broad back, like a cart-horse, in the
Sunday shine.
"Catlog o' a sale, most like," answers the huge
parent, whose information is not equal to his size.
Two costermongers, who have clubbed their donkeys and
harnessed them to one barrow, rattle by upon it; riding out not on business, but
for a holiday. A knot of grimy boys are also starting for the country, with
their jackets - those who have got any - thrown over their shoulders. For a
space the sunny roadway, and the sunny footpaths on both sides are vacant, but
there come half-a-dozen bird-fanciers, with handkerchief-covered cages under
their arms, and after them two sly-faced bird-catchers slouching along with
their poles and packs [-350-] upon their shoulders.
The crossing-sweepers have already taken their stands, although they are likely
to obtain the reverse of commendation rather than coppers if they ply their
brooms on this dry, dusty day. A single omnibus rolls by, without a single
passenger. The cabmen on the rank lounge inside their vehicles, reading or
asleep, or loll with their elbows sprawled on the warm hansom roofs. A cattle
train rumbles across the railway bridge with measured pantone puff of vapour
almost vanishing before another makes its appearance - and it is hard to say
which looks the sulkier, the heavy-eyed bullock lowering between its bars, or
the guard, robbed of his Sunday; as he hangs half out of his van. In a
dead-walled corner a knot of cattle-drovers, who look as if they had never
washed their faces, or put on more than one clean shirt in the course of their
lives, are playing pitch and toss. Farther on tract distributors in couples are
tendering their flyleaves to the passers-by, and children hurrying or loitering
to Sunday-school. The clamour of a street market, in which draggle-tailed,
depressed-looking women are cheapening flabby meat and wilted vegetables for
their Sunday dinner, comes next, and then the bells leap out in silvery peal, or
toll with brazen clank and tinkettle tinkle, and the streets become gay with
smartly-dressed church and chapel goers, and gilt-edged bibles, prayer-books,
hymn-[-351-]books, bound in ivory, or gilt-rimmed,
gilt~ crossed purple morocco. Working-men roll out from the easy-shaving shops
with fresh- mown chins, and their hands in their pockets. In and about the
Sunday paper-hoarded tobacconists cluster tallow-faced mannikins, whose pipes
and cheap cigars add no Arabian perfume to the air, and the sellers of lemonade
and ginger-beer have began to do a brisk trade from shop and stall. From the
foot of Blackfriars Bridge crammed tram-cars are rolling off to Clapham,
Brixton, Peckham, and East Greenwich. Up and down the river go crowded
steamboats, a gig darts along as if its eight blue-bladed oars obeyed a single
will, and less well-pulled wherries splutter about like flies in a slop-basin.
Men, women, and children are basking quietly on the
Embankment and in the Embankment gardens, but even here the young rough must
howl and hustle. It is a curious revulsion of feeling one experiences when,
after looking up at the grey and purple dome of St. Paul's, the eye is turned
upon that swarming product of the city over which its guilt cross shines,
clearly defined on the blue, cloudless sky, - the mobs of mannikins that go
about, seeking whom they may annoy. The Temple Gardens, however, smile in
verdant peace. A line of carriages stretches along Fleet Street from the Temple
Gate. The closed new Times office symbolises [-352-]
cessation of business in the big city, but not so forcibly, I think, as
the old one, hidden, still as a hushed heart, in its dingy recesses. St.
Sepulchre's bell is giving its last toll as the charity girls, demure little
maidens in old- fashioned caps, file in beneath the inspection of the gorgeous
beadle. Newgate Prison is not generally considered one of the architectural
ornaments of London, but it and Westminster Abbey seem to me the two London
buildings which best represent externally the purposes for which they are
intended. Sternly enough, as if the sunshine were an offence to its eyeless
face, frowns the black and grey fetter-hung gaol. hard by, the shut-up
Smithfield Markets, the chequer-walled Charterhouse, and the old-fashioned
houses that stand along three sides of the leafy, grassy square garden, seem to
be dozing with less troubled breath now that for a time the trains have ceased
to rush along the railway, which has shorn off one of the sides of the square in
which monastic quiet used to brood. In a street outside, in front of a weekday
dancing-school, there is a bill which invites "All" to enter to hear
the Gospel preached. A pale-faced, shabbily-dressed woman, looking wofully in
need of glad tidings of even a little joy, slips into the narrow passage which
leads into the preaching-room. Not many besides herself have as yet obeyed the
all-embracing summons; only a few people, chiefly women or [-353-]
girls, with fagged faces and in faded dresses; not ragged or dirty, but
not smart enough to go to church, and not rich enough to go to chapel, with its
probable chance of a "collection." Their pastor, a little man in seedy
black, gives out a hymn, and the little congregation sings it with thin,
quavering voices, which, nevertheless, have a sound in them of rest and hope of
far-off happiness.
In the yard of the sealed Post Office, dingy white mail boxes
and ruddy mail-carts are taking sunny rest together; no foot-falls in shuttered
Paternoster Row and its purlieus; and in the high -walled streets and lanes
behind Cheapside-on week-days often blocked with traffic-the only people that I
pass are a meditative policeman, and a widow woman resting on a door-step. A boy
is making a bicycle scurry over the asphalte of Cheapside, and an old gentleman
is driving his old lady along it in a little pony chaise-both evidently proud of
the nerve and skill which he displays in being able to pass, without collision,
a single, very intermittently dribbling, line of omnibuses.
The organs of the city churches drone as if the old buildings
were softly singing in their sleep. Outside St. Margaret's, Lothbury, sits the
verger gazing at the blank wall of the Bank, and sunning himself complacently as
he listens to the lulling strains. In Throgmorton [-354-] Street,
otherwise untenanted, stands an empty omnibus. No driver or conductor is
visible, and the horses seem to have gone to sleep. In Bishopsgate Street there
is bustle once more, a seemingly purposeless bustle, for the most part; people
surging this way and that way, or mooning about as if they did not know what to
do with themselves.
Some of the shops in Houndsditch are open, and dingy Jews and
Gentiles are buzzing about the Phil's Buildings entrance to Rag Fair. More gaily
dressed Jews and Jewesses are still selling fruit in the unglazed shops of
rubbish- littered Duke's Place, where oranges and lemons, owing to the grimy
shabbiness around, look more brightly, purely golden than. anywhere besides.
There is more Jewish and Gentile bustle in Aldgate and Whitechapel - open.
shops, bawling stall-keepers, dawdling loungers; more sensible folk shouldering
their way eastwards to get a breath of fresh air. In Petticoat Lane proper,
redolent of fried fish, dissonant with the shouts of shopkeepers, and the yells
of roughs trying to get up rushes, you might walk on the heads of the two
jostling lines of close-packed passengers.
In Hoxton a worthy man mounted on a chair is denouncing
"Renegades! Renegades!! Renegades!!!" a costermonger
throwing in ever and anon an ironical "Hear, hear, hear." Farther on,
another preacher is bewailing at the [-355-] top of
his voice the bygone happy days of innocence, in which lie had never struck a
bagatelle ball, or even knew what dominoes meant. But now their congregations
have swarmed out from church and chapel, again brightening the thoroughfares
with purple and flue linen; the Metropolitan trains are running once more;
fathers and mothers of families are returning from the baker's, bearing
homewards, with cautious speed, the shoulder of mutton and batter pudding,
toad-in-the-hole, leg of pork and potatoes, or whatever else may be the family
dinner; and maidservants and mechanics are hastening to the taverns with their
jugs for the dinner beer.
As soon as the tavern doors swung, they were besieged by
those who had been waiting all the morning for them to open, who will remain
inside until they are turned out, when the houses are again closed in the
afternoon, stupid, savage, or idiotically "merry," to annoy more
rational people, and who will return to the public-house, when once more open in
the evening, to finish off their Sunday in the utterly joyless manner (to all
appearance) in which so many of the lower class of Londoners inexplicably fancy
that they find delight.
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