Page images
PDF
EPUB

10. A notable sign of the times,-completed, in the mythical detail of it, by the defiance of the sacred name of the Church, and the desecration of good men's graves, lest, perchance, the St. Ursulas of other lands should ever come on pilgrimage, rejoicing, over the sea, hopeful to see such holy graves among the sights of London.

Infinitely ridiculous, such travelling as St. Ursula's, you think, to see dead bodies, forsooth, and ask, with every poor, bewildered Campagna peasant, "Dov'è San Paolo?" 1 Not at all such the object of modern English and American Tourists!—nay, sagacious Mr. Spurgeon came home from his foreign tour, and who more proud than he to have scorned, in a rational manner, all relics and old bones? 2 I have some notes by me, ready for February, concerning the unrejoicing manner of travel adopted by the sagacious modern tourist, and his objects of contemplation, for due comparison with St. Ursula's; but must to-day bring her lesson close home to your own thoughts.

3

11. Look back to §§ 5 and 16 of the Fors of January for this year. The first tells you, what this last sign of Church desecration now confirms, that you are in the midst of men who, if there be truth in Christianity at all, must be punished for their open defiance of Heaven by the withdrawal of the Holy Spirit, and the triumph of the Evil One. And you are told in the last paragraph that by the service of God only you can recover the presence of the Holy Ghost of Life and Health-the Comforter.

This-vaguely and imperfectly, during the last six years,

* My friend Mr. W. C. Sillar rose in the church, and protested, in the name of God, against the proceedings. He was taken into custody as disorderly, the press charitably suggested, only drunk ;-and was, I believe, discharged without fine or imprisonment, for we live in liberal days.

1 [See Letter 43, § 13 (p. 119).]

[See, for instance, My Run to Naples and Pompeii, a lecture by C. H. Spurgeon on Tuesday, January 28, 1873.]

3 [When the time came, however, other topics intervened. The notes in question are now printed in Appendix 18 (Vol. XXIX. p. 574).]

4 [Letter 61 (above, pp. 488-489, 501-502).]

proclaimed to you, as it was granted me-in this coming seventh year I trust to make more simply manifest;1 and to show you how every earthly good and possession will be given you, if you seek first the Kingdom of God and His Justice. If, in the assurance of Faith, you can ask and strive that such kingdom may be with you, though it is not meat and drink, but Justice, Peace, and Joy in the Holy Ghost,3-if, in the first terms I put to you for oath,* you will do good work, whether you live or die,* and so lie down at night, whether hungry or weary, at least in peace of heart and surety of honour;-then, you shall rejoice, in your native land, and on your nursing sea, in all fulness of temporal possession ;-then, for you the earth shall bring forth her increase, and for you the floods clap their hands; -throughout your sacred pilgrimage, strangers here and sojourners with God, yet His word shall be with you," the land shall not be sold for ever, for the land is Mine, "6 and after your numbered days of happy loyalty, you shall go to rejoice in His Fatherland, and with His people.

5

*Compare Letter 46, § 8, to end, observing especially the sentence out of 2nd Esdras, "before they were sealed that have gathered Faith for a Treasure" [§ 9].7

[blocks in formation]

NOTES AND CORRESPONDENCE

12. (I.) AFFAIRS of the Company.

There is no occasion to put our small account again in print till the end of the year: we are not more than ten pounds ahead, since last month.1

I certainly would not have believed, six years ago, that I had so few friends who had any trust in me; or that the British public would have entirely declined to promote such an object as the purchase of land for national freehold.

Next year I shall urge the operatives whom any words of mine may reach, to begin some organization with a view to this object among themselves. They have already combined to build co-operative mills; they would find common land a more secure investment.

I am very anxious to support, with a view to the determination of a standard of material in dress, the wool manufacture among the old-fashioned cottagers of the Isle of Man; and I shall be especially grateful to any readers of Fors who will communicate with Mr. Egbert Rydings (Laxey, Isle of Man) on this subject. In the island itself, Mr. Rydings tells me, the stuffs are now little worn by the better classes, because they "wear too long,”—a fault which I hope there may be yet found English housewives who will forgive. At all events, I mean the square yard of Laxey homespun of a given weight, to be one of the standards of value in St. George's currency.2

The cheque of £25, sent to Mr. Rydings for the encouragement of some of the older and feebler workers, is the only expenditure, beyond those for fittings slowly proceeded with in our museum at Sheffield, to which I shall have to call attention at the year's end.

13. (II.) Affairs of the Master.

Though my readers, by this time, will scarcely be disposed to believe it, I really can keep accounts, if I set myself to do so: and even greatly enjoy keeping them, when I do them the first thing after my Exodus or Plato every morning; and keep them to the uttermost farthing. I have examples of such in past diaries; one, in particular, great in its exhibition of the prices of jargonel and Queen Louise pears at Abbeville. And my days always go best when they are thus begun, as far as pleasant feeling and general prosperity of work are concerned. But there is a great deal of work, and especially such as I am now set on, which does not admit of accounts in the morning; but imperatively requires the fastening down forthwith of what first comes into one's mind after waking. Then the accounts get put off; tangle their thread-(so the Fates always instantly then ordain)-in some eightpenny matter, and without Edipus to help on the right hand and Ariadne on the left, there's no bringing them right

1 [See above, p. 749.]

2 [For Mr. Rydings and the Laxey homespuns, see above, p. 585, and Vol. XXX.] 3 The diary of 1868.]

again. With due invocation to both, I think I have got my own accounts, for the past year, stated clearly below.

[blocks in formation]

In the first column are the receipts for each month; in the second, the expenditure; in the third, the balance, which is to be tested by adding the previous balance to the receipts in the first column, and deducting the expenditure from the sum.

The months named are those in which the number of Fors was published in which the reader will find the detailed statements: a grotesque double mistake, in March, first in the addition and then in the subtraction, concludes in a total error of threepence; the real balance being £225, 5s. 6d. instead of £225, 5s. 9d. I find no error in the following accounts beyond the inheritance of this excessive threepence (in October, p. 334,2 the entry under September 1 is misprinted 10 for 15; but the sum is right), until the confusion caused by my having given the banker's balance in September, which includes several receipts and disbursements not in my own accounts, but to be printed in the final yearly estimate in Fors of next February. My own estimate, happily less than theirs, brings my balance for last month to £784, 8s.; taking up which result, the present month's accounts are as follows:

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

1 [These balances should be £319, 14s. and £670, 9s. 4d. see the author's

correction, Letter 74, § 18 (Vol. XXIX. p. 50).]

2 [Letter 70, § 16 (p. 729).]

3 [See above, pp. 583, 729.]

XXVIII.

3 с

14. (III.) I have lost the reference to a number of the Monetary Gazette, of three or four weeks back, containing an excellent article on the Bishop of Peterborough's declaration, referred to in the text, that the disputes between masters and men respecting wages were a question of Political Economy, in which the clergy must remain "strictly neutral." Of the Bishop's Christian spirit, in the adoption of his Master's "Who made me a divider?" 2 rather than of the earthly wisdom of John the Baptist, "Exact no more than that which is appointed you," 3 the exacting public will not doubt. I must find out, however, accurately what the Bishop did say; and then we will ask Little Bear's opinion on the matter. For indeed, in the years to come, I think it will be well that nothing should be done without counsel of Ursula.

15. (IV.) The following is, I hope, the true translation of Job xxii. 24, 25, 26. I greatly thank my correspondent for it.

"Cast the brass to the dust, and the gold of Ophir to the rocks of the brooks.

"So, will the Almighty be thy gold and thy shining silver.*

"Yes, then wilt thou rejoice in the Almighty and raise thy countenance to God."

16. (V.) The following letter from a Companion may fitly close the correspondence for this year. I print it without suppression of any part, believing it may encourage many of my helpers, as it does myself:

"MY DEAR MASTER,-I have learnt a few facts about Humber keels. You know you were interested in my little keel scholars, because their vessels were so fine, and because they themselves were once simple bodies, almost guiltless of reading and writing. And it seems as if even the mud gives testimony to your words. So if you don't mind the bother of one of my tiresome letters, Pll tell you all I know about them.

"The Humber keels are, in nearly all cases, the property of the men who go in them. They are house and home to the keel family, who never live on shore like other sailors. It is very easy work navigating the rivers. There's only the worry of loading and unloading,-and then their voyages are full of leisure.

"Keelmen are rural sailors, passing for days and days between cornfields and poppy banks, meadows and orchards, through low moist lands, where skies are grand at sunrise and sunset.

"Now all this evidently makes a happy joyous life, and the smart colours and decoration of the boats are signs of it. Shouldn't you say so? Well, then, independence, home, leisure, and nature are right conditions of life-and that's a bit of St. George's doctrine I've verified nearly all by myself; and there are things I know about keel folks besides, which quite warrant my conclusions. But to see these very lowly craft stranded low on the mud at low tide, or squeezed in

* Silver of strength.

1 [See above, § 3. Search in the Monetary Gazette has failed to find the passage; nor can the Bishop's declaration be traced in his Life or Addresses. For another reference by Ruskin to it, see Letter 76, § 13 (Vol. XXIX. p. 95).]

2 [Luke xii. 14.]

3 Luke iii. 13.]

For a further reference to the letter, see Letter 75, § 17 (Vol. XXIX.

p' 72).]

« PreviousContinue »