higher the rate. Thus, while
seven shillings in the pound sufficed for the comparatively poor
land of the center of Surrey, it rose to twenty-two shillings in
the pound in the rich wealds of Kent. For a practical knowledge
of the then existing state of things in England I refer the
reader to the preamble of Lord Brougham's Poor Law Amendment
Act.
Individually the parish officers of
Camberwell were in support of Brougham's efforts, and such
measures as were carried in that spirit during their first
year's service were by the rate-payers duly appreciated, and the
means of leading a large majority to make requisition for our
services for another year, which was complied with on
understanding that to reassess the parish would be their
earliest endeavor, and when such were fairly before the parish
the people craved the active co-operation of all who were
desirous of such a measure. The vote was such as to give rise to
the coarse Tory opposition above spoken of. Baldwin, the
proprietor of the Standard {the. man who said in his
journal that it would be to the advantage of England were all
her manufactories destroyed), under the auspices of the vicar,
led the opposition against the overseers and called for a
revision of the vote of Easter. There being no opposition on the
part of the officers a meeting was convened by them, as it were,
for the purpose of trying themselves, the chair occupied by the
vicar of St. Giles, Camberwell, and the hall crammed. They
having called a meeting it devolved on the officers to make
known its purpose. Daniel Triquet said: "The object of this
meeting is to revise or rescind certain resolutions passed at a
former meeting of yourselves. The action referred to on Easter
Tuesday placed in power your present officers, and if I may be
allowed to speak for my brother officers, in common with myself,
I would say that while we enjoy the honor of the trust which has
been placed in our hands we are by no means insensible of the
nature of its responsibilities. We leave the investigation of
our conduct in your hands untrammeled." A spirited meeting
terminated in a vote of thanks to and an expression of
confidence in the present officers of St. Giles, Camberwell. Not
a soul left the parish in consequence of our over-assessments,
as they were termed, but to allay all bitter hostility we
established a committee of appeal of eighteen gentlemen, before
whom cases in dispute should be brought, all expenses in the way
of appraising to fall on the party found in error. This scheme
worked admirably, threw oil upon the troubled waters, and
brought the labors of the three triumphant parochial officers to
a successful termination, having by dint of much labor and some
tongue-fighting augmented the rental assessable to the extent of
.£48,000 and reduced the poor-rate from five shillings in the
pound to three shillings and nine pence in the pound per annum.
The novelty of voting for members of
parliament now presented itself to the middle class, and our
reform club was far from being idle in canvassing our district
of the metropolitan borough of Lambeth on behalf of the two
successful candidates, Charles E. D'Eyncourt and Benjamin Hawes,
Junior, Esquires. One of the first acts of the reform parliament
was to pass the poor law amendment act. Henceforth all parochial
matters were placed under the management of a board of
guardians, eighteen in number, elected by the plurality of
voting system. That is, according to the extent of the voter's
assessment to the support of the poor shall his power to
dispense it be regulated. Now this measure, according to its
preamble, among other things fully intended to eschew all
semblance to the older system, even to the exclusion of those
persons who participated in the affairs of the past fossil. I
therefore regard the fact of placing my name among the
successful candidates for the honor of sitting on that board as
one of the most unmistakable compliments and marks of esteem
that my fellow-parishioners could confer. At this board I felt
less at home than I did at the old work-house board, of which
the overseer was necessarily a prominent member and the board
itself composed of materials much more in unison with my own
position in society—several my intimate neighbors. Here I am in
contact with men moving in a more elevated atmosphere, higher in
wealth, in education, influence, in habit of prestige, and that
which I will not rank among the higher attributes, and which
happily was confined to a few—contemptible hauteur. What
did I possess, or did I possess anything, to fit me for such
society? I'll look in and see. On self-examination I found a
mass of contrarieties, the predominant ingredient being a
stubborn, unconquerable Scotch pride, which enabled me to look
and laugh at airs assumed, and which can be turned to practical
advantage if kept under control. I also found my knowledge of
the poor of the parish a powerful incentive to respect and
deference on the part of my seventeen compeers, who were
doubtless practiced in eleemosynary relief, but found that to
administer relief to the poor by act of parliament involved
duties with which they were entirely unacquainted, and for
necessary information had to be beholden to the ex-overseer or
to the paid officers of the parish, who might not be present
when wanted. It required but a few evenings to find ease and
homely comfort in the meetings.
An anecdote told by Sir John Pirie, one of
the most efficient members of the board, is worthy of a place
here as an illustration of Scottish character. After a hard
afternoon's work the board relapsed into a chatty, social mood,
the conversation—on the constituent elements necessary to form a
business man—shaping itself into a friendly argument. Integrity,
punctuality, perseverance and other attributes shared the common
praise, and their opposites the common censure. But the question
assumed a more definite shape as to which of the three
first-named qualities was the most important ingredient in the
compound. After several speeches Sir John arose and said, "I am
gratified with the remarks made on this important subject, and
feel inclined to depart from my usual practice of silence on
occasions of this kind and to say a few words in behalf of the
opinions advanced in favor of perseverance. Some twenty years
ago I was informed that a ragged but cleanly boy had called at
the outer office of my establishment in the city, day after
day, at precisely the same hour, for more than a week.
'What does he want?' 'He wants to see you.' 'Have you asked if
he has any business with the house?' 'I have, sir, and he
answers in the affirmative, but it can only be done with you
personally.' 'Is he likely to call again?' ' I should think him
dead should he fail to make his call at
ten to-morrow morning.' 'Then if he does call, and I am
here, bring him in.' Sure enough, the sonorous sound of Bow Bell
had not ceased to vibrate the hour of ten when the timid knock
of the little fellow was the open sesame to the business
establishment of the greatest ship owner in the world, the man
who had but a few months ago descended from the loftiest seat of
the greatest city in the world. His little body clothed in a
shabby corduroy suit, out at elbows, and his curly pow
surmounted by a blue bonnet, with shoes barely keeping his toes
from the stony street, and a small bundle squeezed so tightly
under his arm as to indicate fear that his property was
jeopardized by the interview, there stood the boy, bonnet in
hand, before me," said Sir John, "inspiring confidence at the
first glance. Still I deemed it a duty thus to interrogate him
closely:
"'I am informed you called repeatedly at the
office to see me; now I stand before you, let me ask you what is
your business with me?'
"'I want employment, sir.'
"'Employment? Is that all?'
"'It is everything to me, sir.'
"'That may be true, but mine is not an
employment office. Did any one tell you to apply to me for
employment?'
"'Yes, my mither telt me, sir. She said that
if ever I be spared to reach London to be sure and ask your
guidance. She telt me you had been a puir laddie once yersel',
and that ye left the toon o' Dunse wi' very little siller in yer
pouch, and ye had only half a croon when ye reached London; that
ye was a guid man, that ye read yer Bible, that ye prospered in
business, that the folks o' London loved ye and made ye Lord
Mayor, that the folks o' Dunse were proud o' ye, and that------'
"Here I had to stop him by asking him where
his mother was that was so lavish in her praises of an
individual she could not possibly know.
"'Know? she kens ye weel, my faither was
second gardener o' Dunse Castle; he died whan I was young; my
mither has since then worked hard tae keep me at the schule. Her
knowledge of you and your family was during her young and happy
days. She aften made me greet in speakin' o' them, and no that
seldom grat hersel'.'
"'How did you get so far from home?'
"'I started on fit, but had mony a lift.'
"'How much money did you possess on starting
on a journey of four hundred miles on foot?'
"'Nine shillings, the wages of the half
year's herding in the Lammermuirs.'
"I confess," said Sir John, "to a little
suspicion from his ready answers, and trying him in another way.
'Please to name the prominent men of Dunse when' you left.' And
it was grateful to my ear, being a native of the place, to
listen to a long, clear roll of clergymen, school-masters,
doctors, lawyers, merchants and tradesmen, which he rattled off,
many of whom were familiar names and dearly beloved friends.
Seeing that I was losing ground I ceased to interrogate, and
stooped to business. 'What can you do should I make room in this
office for you?'
"''Deed, I can do but little, but I can soon
learn mair. In the meantime, I can supe the house and rin an
errand.'
"'I have never asked your name.'
"'Georgy Denham.'
"'Well, George, consider yourself one of us,
and at ten to-morrow you can draw in advance what you require to
get rid of your corduroys.' And when I inform you, gentlemen,
that the boy of twenty years ago and the gentleman now in charge
of my books is one and the same person you will not marvel at my
giving perseverance the preference in your discussion."
About this time the parish sustained a
serious loss. The new system of heating buildings by hot air
ramifying in pipes had been two years in operation in the grand
old parish church, when the smell of smouldering fire on the
evening of a very cold Sunday was felt. The wardens went through
the form of a superficial examination, locked the doors, and
pocketing the keys left the ancient Gothic edifice to its fate.
By eight o'clock on the following morning a mass of black ruins
marked the spot whereon stood one of the finest specimens of its
kind for seven hundred years, dating back to the days of Edward
the Confessor. The rebuilding of the church gave rise to a
bitter controversy. The taste of the reverend incumbent could
not be satisfied short of a .£40,000 structure. Others, perhaps
equally orthodox, would have been contented with an edifice at a
much less cost; a third party, again, held that the burden of
building a new church should not be saddled on the parish, but
on those who worshiped in it. A well finished perspective
drawing of an architectural design, which met the views of the
incumbent and his party, settled the matter, and now St. Giles,
Camberwell, is ornamented with a very costly accommodation for
the few at the expense of the many.
In the course of these events I happened to
be eyewitness to three great fires—the Tower of London, the
Royal Exchange and the Houses of Parliament—involving the loss
of historical buildings impossible to replace. The Thames tunnel
was also concocted, begun and finished during these busy years
of adventure. An accident happened in the process of
construction which threatened destruction to the whole scheme.
The excavation had successfully reached about half-way across,
when suddenly, without any warning,
the angry Thames broke in upon seven poor souls, who were
instantly washed back to the entrance, to find the doors hung
the wrong way, and their retreat irremediably cut off. This
untoward event cast a gloom on the scientific world, of which
the community partook, all but the great inventor himself, who
immediately applied his brain to the remedy. He stopped the leak
by means of sandbags and clay, and by powerful pumps emptied the
cavity in an incredibly short space of time, went on to its
satisfactory completion, thereby setting the egg on end to all
tunnel builders in the future.
Not long after this achievement Mr. Brunei
met with a personal accident which very nearly cost him his
valuable life. In his hours of relaxation from business he was
wont to play with the children, making himself one of them, and
on one occasion he was distending their wondering eyes by
sleight-of-hand tricks with coin, and by some unaccountable
means a half sovereign got into his throat, and there it stuck
for several days, bidding defiance to the surgical skill of the
metropolis. A bulletin every half hour announced the painful
condition of the patient, till a conversation was overheard in
the kitchen by a member of the family which was anything but
complimentary to the faculty, one of the servants declaring that
she knew what would cure her master. This being made known to
the physician in charge of the case he sought an interview with
the eloquent maid, who, being brought face to face with him and
the family, thought she was about to be rebuked for her freedom
of speech, but was greatly relieved by a kind interrogatory on
the part of the doctor, if she would please explain the theory
of the curative she spoke of in the kitchen last evening
touching the case in hand, stating that in the event of its
being reasonable he might be induced to avail himself of it, and
if successful she alone should reap
the honor. Thus encouraged, the girl stated that while in the
service of a family in Scarborough one of her fellow-servants,
playing with a silver thimble and pretending to swallow it, got
it so fixed in her throat that it baffled all the skill of the
doctors to remove it. Everybody thought she must die, when a
young doctor from Newcastle, hearing of the case, suggested that
as a dernier ressort the patient should be suspended by her
heels. This experiment was put in force, and while in that
position it was fearful to witness her struggles for breath ;
she grew black in the face, but, thank God ! the thimble tumbled
on the floor. The physician listened to the girl's simple story,
and lost no time in gravely submitting the proposition that such
an experiment might be tried with Mr. Brunei. The family, having
lost all hope of saving his life, readily acquiesced, and
accordingly the great engineer was subjected to the painful
ordeal, and a nation had to thank God that the insignificant
metallic representation of a paltry sum of ten shillings
trundled on the carpet. It is needless here to observe that the
loquacious servant was not forgotten by the liberal family to
whose happiness she unwittingly contributed. Another
extraordinary surgical case transpired about this time. The laws
of China are based on the philosophy of Confucius, who seemed to
have had an overweening regard for human blood, so much so, that
even in the process of necessary healing there should not be a
drop spilled.
I make mention of the case of Hoo Loo to show
the folly of such an enactment as is built on this dread of
blood-letting in China. This poor fellow had a tumor on the
lower part of his abdomen, the removal of which, taken in time,
it was asserted by the faculty, was susceptible of being
performed in safety. But in the event of a failure in the use of
the scalpel, so that the patient dies in consequence of its
application, the life of the surgeon using it is called for to
satisfy the law. Hoo Loo, whose rapidly increasing appendage now
touched the ground, seeing his end approaching, agreed to
accompany the physician of a London ship for the purpose of
having it removed.
This case was put under the care of Sir Aston
Key, at Guy's Hospital, Southwark, who reluctantly assumed the
responsibility, saying there was a very faint hope of saving the
life of the patient. The case was unprecedented, and provoked an
immense popular sympathy in his preparation for the knife. An
hourly bulletin was posted on the hospital gates announcing his
condition, and when the morning dawned whereon the great test of
human skill versus human tenacity of life was to be made the
intervals between the bulletins was shortened to five minutes.
The history of the sequel of this interesting case cannot, I
think, be given better than by recording the bulletins as I then
read them as announced on that day:
Hoo Loo is cheerful, ate breakfast with fair
appetite, 8:30; Hoo Loo preparing for the operation, 9 o'clock ;
Hoo Loo in hospital theater, bearing up well, 9:30; Hoo Loo's
tumor removed, vitality hopeful, 10 o'clock; Hoo Loo not so
well, a slight fever set in, 10:30; Hoo Loo rallying, 11
o'clock; Hoo Loo worse, with return of fever, 11:30; Hoo Loo
hopelessly sinking, 12 o'clock; Hoo Loo worse, hemorrhage set
in, 12:30; Hoo Loo sinking, no hope in the case, 1 o'clock; Hoo
Loo dying, 1:30; Hoo Loo died at 2 minutes to 2 o'clock. All
signed in person by Sir Aston Key, who, next to Sir Astley
Cooper, was at this time considered the leading surgeon in
England.
Thus was added one more human life to the
long list lying at the door of Confucius. But doubtless it was
not so intended by that great philosopher.
I had had, from time to time, friendly visits
from William Sue, who had married a second cousin of mine, who
had many years ago settled in Rouen, in Normandy, and whose
skill in the construction of wind-mills attracted the attention
of Louis Philippe, then Duc D'Orleans. William's fortune rose
with his patron, and when Charles X
fell from his high estate, and La Fayette, like a second
Warwick, set up Louis Philippe in his place, it might have been
said that his fortune was made.
The firm of Messrs. Sue, Adkins & Barker
became famous throughout Europe for the excellence of their
marine and other engines.' An incident may here be recorded to
show how the firm stood with the king. The Duc de Chartres, the
eldest-born of the king, was dispatched to investigate and
report upon the manufactures of Rouen, and on such occasions it
is the duty of the mayor of the city to furnish the delegated
authority with a list of all the fabriques (as
they are called) within his jurisdiction. On the return
of the report the king discovered the omission of the concern in
which he was the most interested, and gave orders that no time
be lost in redeeming the insult by a special visit to Messrs.
Sue, Adkins & Barker, also to inquire whence the garbled list.
The prince and suite were handsomely entertained by the firm,
and Monsieur Le Maire snubbed for his petty jealousy of the
successful English mechanics whose prosperity was not in
accordance with his will. William had several patents on the
tapis, covering England as well as France; which brought him
frequently across the channel, and every visit was accompanied
by a cordial invitation to return the visit, to which at length
I consented. After a pleasant day's sail from London we arrived
in Boulogne in the evening of July 4, 1841, and started for
Rouen on the 5th; slept at Beauvais and breakfasted at
Neufchatel, from the latter commanding one of the finest views
in the world from the eminence over which the road passes. There
lies the antique city of Rouen at your feet in all its rich
grandeur; its splendid cathedrals and churches; the ancient
tower of the cloche l'argent (to form this bell the patriotic
ladies of the time poured in their trinkets and their household
gods, hence the name); the old market place where stands the
memento of England's superstitious cruelty in the statue of the
heroic Maid of Orleans, pointing out the spot whereon she was
burned alive; Mont St. Catherine, whereon the first telegraph
was erected; the noble boulevards that ornament the suburbs,
albeit their beauty is by my-chosen foliage (Lombardy poplar)
much impaired; the beautiful Seine, meandering as. far as
the eye can reach through a magnificent country teeming
in historical reminiscences. This was for centuries the
battlefield of two enlightened nations. In the pleasant suburban
village of Chartreuse I found my friend at the head of a firm
employing four hundred men. "Welcome to France, David," he said
; "and now we have you, make yourself at home as long as you
like to stay. There is the gig at your service when you want to
drive to the city, or a saddle-horse for the forest when you
desire to see our French scenery. The Juliet fetes are at hand;
I shall have to be in Paris on that occasion, and now look to
you for a companion: go by land, return by water." Thus my
sojourn in La Grande Nation was all cut and dried by Monsieur
William Sue, who was so Frenchified as to find it irksome to
speak his mother-tongue, and so busy that I saw but little of
him. Still he did introduce me to La Societe d'Emulation and his
club, but my lack of language took the edge off the pleasure I
should otherwise have had. I was more delighted in scanning the
richly carved monuments in the interior of the cathedrals, also
the sculpture and paintings at the Musee. A few days prior to
the fetes we started for the great city, took up our quarters in
Hotel l'Empereur, and hastened to an English rendezvous for the
purpose of meeting the hero of St. Jean d'Acre, Sir Sidney
Smith, but were five minutes too late. He it was who challenged
Napoleon Bonaparte to mortal combat, which fact proved the basis
of a romantic and life-long attachment between the two heroes.
We did Paris as much as possible in the limited time at our
command, and embarked by steamer down the Seine to Rouen,
through the most delightfully variegated scenery the whole
length of the passage.
Among things to be admired in France is the"
effect of the abrogation of the law of primogeniture. The census
of 1834 showed that in a population of 33,000,-000 there were no
less than 11,000,000 having a direct interest in the land.
The manner of transacting business of
importance is also worthy of notice here, which a case in point
may serve to show:
"I want you to accompany me to the breakfast
table of Mons.------, the best boat-builder in Paris, and
observe how we do business on this side of the Channel. You will
take notice that all bargains and contracts are struck at the
breakfast table by and through the medium of the lady of the
house; when signed and countersigned by a notary public they are
binding." This invitation I readily accepted from William, and
spent a very agreeable morning. The sumptuous meal over, the
lady, in the presence of her husband, dotted down that for the
consideration of so many thousand francs she bound herself to
deliver to the firm of Messrs. Sue, Adkins & Barker, at Rouen,
on a given day, a vessel of so many tons burthen, built so as to
receive an engine of a given power and weight, and to draw just
so much water as to fit her for the navigation of the upper
Seine. His business completed, and the Juliet fetes in
commemoration of the barricades of 1830, with all their folly
annually perpetrated, now it became necessary to change the
scene from the Seine to the Thames—from happy France to happier
England. With that intent -I bade adieu to Rouen and its
hospitalities, and embarked on the steamer Normandie for Havre
de Grace, on the deck of which was sunk a coffin-shaped sheet of
brass to mark the spot whereon lay the remains of the great
Napoleon on their way from St. Helena to the Hotel des Invalides,
his last resting-place.
The scenery of the lower is bolder and more
historically interesting than that of the upper Seine. Here the
picturesque haunts of Robert Le Diable, and there the birthplace
of William the Conquerer, at old Caen.; also the ancient towns
of Harfleur and Honfleur, also the beautiful chateau and estate
of Tankerville, once the property of the celebrated financier,
John Law, terminating with the grand old town and harbor of
Havre de Grace. Then farewell, France, politically
tempest-tossed nation. Already the seat of your new king is a
seat of thorns. A few years later we find him an exile in
Holyrood House, Edinburgh. Refugees of all nations seek and find
shelter and safety on this little island of ours. Long may she
maintain her enviable position among the nations of the earth.