Carrubber's Close Mission. Another sphere of
usefulness and influence in which Mr Darling took a prominent and
active part, and in connection with which he was in due time chosen
as a director, was the well-known Carrubber's Close Mission. He had
been preceded in the management and work of this mission by a fellow
church member, Mr Alexander Jenkinson, to whom in its earlier
history, next to its venerable founder, Mr Gall, it was more
indebted than to any other man. In its later and more expanded form,
since the first visit of Mr Moody to Edinburgh, Mr Darling's labours
were invaluable. In the work of organising meetings and securing
acceptable speakers for the large weekly assemblies, he grudged
neither time nor toil. And when all this had been done, he
would go forth, some time before the hour of meeting, into the
neighbouring streets and slums, and by every device of kindly moral
suasion seek to induce men and women to "come and hear." And when
this was accomplished, he would, with characteristic
self-forgetfulness, withdraw into the shadow and be an earnest
worshipper and listener.
There were occasions at this period of his
life when he was induced to address such large meetings, and in the
Bands of Hope for children he was a frequent speaker; but it was in
conversation with individuals that he most delighted and excelled.
His success in this latter form of evangelism was indeed remarkable.
And there were qualities in the man, and in his manner of
intercourse, which so far explain to us the secret of his success.
There was nothing of a pharisaic air in his bearing, even to the
most sunken and depraved. He remembered that it was "by the grace of
God that he was what he was." And then he never would allow even
those who were the most abandoned to despair of recovery, or to
think that it was in vain for them to "try." He would remind them
that the Gospel embraced in its compassionately urgent call the
chief of sinners, that "God was not willing that any should perish,"
and that there was not an angel in heaven that would not be made
gladder at the news of their repentance. And his look of compassion
and goodness, beaming upon them all the while, charmed away
suspicion, and made it impossible for them to doubt that he was
intensely in earnest.
The mention of Mr Darling's organising zeal and
power brings up to our recollection an evangelistic and temperance
meeting remarkable alike for its vast numbers, its seemly order, and
its seriousness, which was held about eight years ago on the Calton
Hill, on the afternoon of a bright Sabbath day in summer, which in a
great measure owed its arrangements as well as its origination to
him. The impression produced by the very greatness of the multitude
was great, and it became necessary to divide the multitude into
sections, which should be addressed by different speakers. The
outward scenery and surroundings added to the impressiveness and
sublimity of the sight. Who that has ever stood on the Calton Hill
on a bright summer afternoon, and looked around him on the wondrous
picture which nature and art spread before him, could be surprised
at this? We quote the words in which Principal Cairns refers to it,
in a letter written on the occasion of Mr Darling's death:—
"Another reminiscence illustrates his interest in
open-air work connected with temperance. It falls, I think, about
seven or eight years ago. It was after Gospel-temperance began to
have so much emphasis laid upon it. Mr Darling, with other friends,
on a lovely evening, I think, in the early autumn, organised a large
temperance meeting on the Calton Hill. It was the largest open-air
meeting that I ever addressed in Edinburgh. The view was exquisite,
such as only the Calton Hill can equal, when day has not yet passed
into evening, but has something of its sweetness. There was also the
pensive sacredness of the day, not disturbed by the crowd, the song,
and the life of an unwonted service. Of all this, not the least
affecting figure that I recall is that of Mr Darling. It has often
occurred to me, and is a monitor of what might be done did we take
the great panorama of nature more with us."
Mr Darling's connection with Carrubber's Close
Mission brought him into contact with not a few touching cases of
sorrow which were the immediate fruit of sin. We mention one out of
many. An afflicted father came to him with the sad story of a
daughter who had wandered away from the family fold and disappeared.
He was inconsolable, all the more that there were some things which
led him to fear that the young creature had been decoyed into the
way of transgressors. But where was she? Mr Darling's sympathy was
at once awakened by the story, and he hastened to join with the
father in searching for the wanderer. After much inquiry, and
repeated disappointments, they found her weeping in a prison cell,
and suffering punishment for a serious misdemeanour. The end was the
moral recovery of the offender. In the deeper sense "the lost was
found."
Instances came under his notice during his
evangelistic visits, or otherwise, in which the subjects of his
kindness had seen better days, but had sunk from competence into
indigence through a succession of adverse providences. Cases like
these awakened his special sympathy. The occasions were not few on
which, before the family meal was begun, some of the choicest parts
of the provisions on the table were selected, and at once sent away
by a messenger to the hungry sufferers, that they might eat with
them, as it were of the same food and at the same table. One is apt
to think that the appetite of the givers would be improved by such
charity. Most surely, at all events, their spiritual life would be
benefited.