THE BASES OF T-F. TEMPERANCE REFORM; AN EXPOSITION AND APPEAL. WI TII REPLIES TO NrUi,fEROUS OB_7ECy'~OArS. REV. DAWSON BURNS, M.A., F.S.S. ' The best," said he, "that I can you advise, Is to avoid the occasion of the ill; For when the cause whence evil doth arise Removed is, the effect surceaseth still." -SVesser's Fairy Queen, b. vi. c. 6. NEW YORK: National Temperance Society and Publication House, No. 53 READE STREET. 1873. BY I Va\\ C)l TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE PREFACE,. v. ii CHAPTER I.-PROPOSITION: THAT THE DRINKING SYSTEM IS THE GREAT EST SOCIAL EVIL IN OUR LAND,... 9 I. The Production of Intoxicating Liquors,...o 2. The Circulation of Intoxicating Liquors,... 14 3. The Consumption of Intoxicatinzg Liquors as Beverages,. 6 (i.) Effects upon the Individual,..... 17 (2.) Effects upon the Family,..... 9 (3) Effects upon the Nation,.... 21 (4.) Effects viewed as Lestructive and Obstructive,.. 23 OBJECTIONS (FOUR) stated and examined,... 26 CHAPTER II. PROPOSITION: THAT INTOXICATING LIQUORS ARE USELESS AND INJURIOUS AS ARTICLES OF DIET,... 35 I. Intoxicating Liquors USELESS,.... 35 Their suA]osed uses considered,..... 37 II. INJURIOUS ACTION of A lcoholic Drinks,.... 46 1. Shecific Poisonous Nature of Alcohol,... 46 2. Pzysiological Relations of Alcohol,.... 47 3. Testimonies of Medical A uthorities, 5.. 56 4. Evidence from Exierience,..... 56 OBJECTIONS (FIVE) stated and examined,... 62 CHAPTER III.-PROPOSITION: THAT INTEMPERANCE IS A TRUE PLAGUE, WHICH CAN ONLY BE EFFECTUALLY SUPPRESSED BY THE EXCLUSION OF INTOXICATING DRINKS,.. 74 OBJECTIONS (TWO) stated a0r, tamrined,.... 0O I,. 1O -T 7, Canteents. PAGE CHAPTER IV.-PROPOSITION: THAT VIOLENCE IS 1 OF GOD AND THE WELFARE OF MA THE FRUITS OF THE EARTH TO THE TOXICATING DRINKS,. OBJECTIONS (THREE) stated and examined,... C: TAL ABSTINENCE PRACTICE,.. 99 I. Scribture does not Sanction the Use of Alcoholic Liquors,.. 02 I. Cautions given,....... 04 2. SuM,osed Formns of Sanction considered,.. Io6 II. Scripture gives SuAyort and Encouragement to tle Practice o Total Abstinence,.... OBJECTIONS (SIX) stated and examined,.. I CHAPTER VI.-PROPOSITION: THAT THE TRAFFIC IN ALCOHOLIC LI QUORS EXERTS A PERNICIOUS INFLUENCE, CALLING FOR ITS LEGISLATIVE SUPPRESSION,.... I38 i. In the Production pf Intemnerance,.. 14.. 40 2. In the Development of other Soc,ial Evils,... 46 3. In the Diminution of Trade and Commterce,... 52 4. In the Growth of Insecurity and Local Burdens,. x53 REASONS FOR SUPPRESSION BASED ON I. General Benevolence,..... 155 2. Social Self-Interest,...... 56 3. Enlightened Patriotis,,..... I56 4. Christian Civilization,..... 57 OBJECTIONS (FIVE) stated and examiined,.. 9. 59 CHAPTER VII.-PROPOSITION: THAT THE EXCLUSION OF INTOXICATING DRINKS FROM THE DIET, THE ENTERTAINMENTS, AND THE COMMERCE OF SOCIETY, IS A PRINCIPLE APPROVED BY SCIENCE AND CHRISTIANITY; AND IS THE ONLY EFFI CIENT CURE AND PREVENTIVE OF INTEMPERANCE. I69 OBJECTIONS (TWO) stated and examined,.. 76 APPEALS TO VARIOUS CLASSES,.... 8 4 85 93 . — 5 . 8 Coitfetis. PAGE I83 I84 -87 x88 I89 I92 X96 207 2I6 223 224 226 APPEN-DIX-A. Benj,amzin zFrankiia's Expe;ience,... B..aste in the Production of Fermented Drinks,. C. A duzllterations of Intoxicating Liquors,.. D. ANature of the Traffc in Intoxicating Drinks,. E. Res2oasibility for the Continuance of Intemt,,erance, F. The French Exserimzents in Alcohol,. G. Medical Declarations,... H. Cases of Longevity and A bstinence fromn Drink, I. Testimonies of Distinguished Men,... J. Effect of Abstinence in Prisons and Workhouses, K. Views of A rchbishof Fenelon, etc.. L. Effjects of no Liquor Trafc on Social Conditions, 5 k PREFACE. TIIE design of this work is to set forth, with clearness and succinctness, the principal grounds of the Temperance Reform, with the hope that, by securing the reader's enlightened assent, a stronger public sentiment may be called forth against all the causes-personal, social, and legalized-of Intemperance. There are many opponents who, if better informed, would be converted into friends. There are many inquirers to whom an Essay like the present will be acceptable, as furnishing, within a brief compass, answers to questions by which they have been perplexed. There are also many personal abstainers, who, having become such from benevolent impulse, will be confirmed in their course by an acquaintance with the argumentative bases of the Temperance system. Pr,face. The mission of this work is in the highest degree pracical, since nothing can be more eminently practical than the promotion of perfect and universal sobriety-one of the most important of all conceivable ends in reference to the material and moral interests of mankind. How this end canl be reached most surely and speedily, is a subject of transcendent and urgent moment; and the writer makes his confident appeal to those who are prepared to conduct this inquiry in a candid spirit, and to carry into effect, faithfully and resolutely, the line of action best contributive to the highest good of the individual and of society at large. 8 THE BASES OF THE TEMPERANCE REFORM. CHAPTER I. PROPOSITION: THAT THE DRINKING SYSTEM IS THE GREATEST SOCIAL EVIL IN OUR LAND. A FAMILIAR adage tells us that the knowledge of a disease is half its cure; but this proverb must be taken with due qualification, or it will lead to false security and folly. To know something about an evil may still leave unknown what is essential to its successful treatment. Neither will simple knowledge insure a remedy, for the passive contemplation of great evils often deadens a suitable anxiety for their removal. It is when full-orbed knowledge rouses the moral forces of a man or a community that hope may be entertained of efficient exertion. Partial knowledge, leading to inadequate or ill-advised action, will tend to little but waste of energy and grievous disappointment. And it is not too much to say that for want of a larger knowledge-in connection, in some quarters, with an indifference calling for the severest censurethe drinking system has continued, down to this time, the weakness, the burden, the curse, and the shame of the British people. In everyday language, drunkenness is the greatest evil of our social life; but who does not feel, on reflection, I o The Drinking System our Chzief Social Evil. that "drunkenness" is a term at once too narrow and too lax for the subject of such a predicate? To speak even of "intoxication" or "intemperance" as our master-curse would be to employ language superficial and misleading; for drunkenness in all its degrees, intoxication in all its stages, intemperance in all its shifting forms, these, each and all, do but indicate the rank exuberance of the evil we deplore; they only mark the brimming channels fed by higher fountains-social arrangements, institutions, and habits-the whole constituting what has been fitly denominated the DRINKING SYSTEM. The phrase may be new to some, but its convenience and expressiveness are its merit. General terms may be compared to the camera-obscura, which depicts miles of scenery on inches of space; and such a term as the DRINKING SYSTE-M will preserve the social student from confusing effects with causes, and will enable him to apprehend by what means and in what manner we are misled by the drink curse, the saddest and darkest evil of our age. The drinking system comprehends whatever is concerned in the production, circulation, and consumption of intoxicating drinks, with all the consequences, direct and indirect; and of this system, so viewed, we affirm that it stands forth as a colossus among the degenerating and mischievous factors of our social state. To see how this proposition is sustained, it is necessary to enumerate some of the more pregnant facts in relation to the several points. I. THE PRODUCTION OF INTOXICATING LIQUOR.-The genesis of strong drinks, and therefore of all future evils from their use, is effected by the conversion of sugar into alcohol. " When a moderately warm solution of cane-sugar or grape-sugar is mixed with certain albuminous matters, as blood, white of egg, flour paste, and especially beer-yeast, in a state of deconmosition, a peculiar process is set up, by which the sugar is resolved into ethyl Nature of Alcoholic Liquors. alcohol and carbon oxide (carbonic acid). In the case of glucose (grape-sugar), these products result from a single splitting up of the molecule: C 6 H 12 0 6 (glucose) 2 C 0 2 (carbon oxide) + 2 C 2 H 60 (alcohol). Cane-sugar is first converted into glucose by assumption of water, and the latter is then decomposed as above."* In wine-making, "the vegetable albumen of the juice absorbs oxygen from the air, runs into decomposition, and in that state becomes a ferment to the sugar, which is gradually converted into alcohol and carbonic acid gas."t Fermented liquors are those in which the sweet liquid has.undergone this change; distilled liquors consist of the alcohol and water drawn off from the fermented mass. The art of distillation (which dates in Europe from about the twelfth century) has rendered possible the use of beverages alcoholically very strong. In fermented liquors the alcohol varies from 3 to I 5 per cent., but most of the wines used in this country are branded, or "fortified," as it is termed, up to 25 per cent. Distilled spirits (fitly called ardent, from ardens, "burning") contain from 40 to 60 per cent. of alcohol. Rectified spirits consist of 75 parts alcohol and 25 water. Pure or anhydrous (waterless) alcohol is rarely used. A knowledge of these facts will dissipate two vulgar errors, but errors held by many otherwise highly-educated persons. The one error is that "alcohol is in sugar," or " in everything," as some comprehensively phrase it. It might as well be affirmed that there is blasphemy in the Lord's Prayer, because the words or letters composing it can be so arranged as to express profane ideas. The other error-that fermentation resembles the process of cooking or baking —is equally absurd. Cook * Fownes' "Chemistry," p. 6ox. It is a theory received by many scientific men that nitrogenous substances are not changed into ferment by the action of oxygen, but by the presence of 4nimalcula invisible to the eye, which abound in the air, and which, according to their own nature, impart a speci. fic character to the decomposing action they assist to carry on. t Ibid. p. 602. I I I 2 The Dri)tking Systcnz our Clzicf Social Evil. ing makes no change in the substance of the article cooked, but simply renders it more digestible or palatable, whereas fermentation radically alters the constitution of the thing fermented.* What has to be particularly noted, however, in the production of the intoxicating liquors in comnmon use is that fermentation on so extensive a scale involves the appropriation of corn to an enormous amount, which thereby ceases So be azvalable for food. In the United Kingdom the grain annually used in distillation is about ten million bushels, and in the manufacture of malt liquors fifty million bushels-a total of sixty million bushels. But in distillation not a trace remains of the nutritious parts of the corn employed, so that the waste is complete. Hence, in times of scarcity, distillation has been repeatedly prohibited by the British Legislature. Paley on this ground condemns the production of spirits;t and the Ti/res newspaper has, for the same reason, described their manufacture as an "infinite waste." Nor can it be denied that in the processes of malting and brewing a similar waste occurs. The notion that beer "is liquid bread" could not be retained were it remembered that the whole object of brewing is the production, not of a thick, soup-like solution of the barley, but of a clear, attenuated, and exciting drink. Franklin acted upon this discovery when a journeyman printer;; and an accurate study of the brewing process, and an analysis of the liquors produced, concur in exposing the superstitious esteem in which malt liquors have been held from the darkest fges.~ Beer is the British fetich, and the sooner the ridiculous idolatry is overthrown, the * In baking with yeast, part of the sugar of the dough is changed into a cohol and carbonic acid gas, but the former is entirely dissipated by the het of the oven. The latter, whose struggle to escape makes the bread porou and light, is alone of any service, and mneans have been applied for obtainin and using it for this purpose, apart from the employment of yeast, t Moral Philosophy, book ii. chapter r i. ' See Appendix A. See Appendix B. It T[W(sle of Food by iztoricaiinz, Liquors. sooner will the tremendous waste of food, now annually repeated, be arrested. The 6o,ooo,ooo bushels of corn thus lost as nutriment would supply some millions of persons with wholesome food; and it is no defence to assert that the void thus created is filled with imports from abroad. Destruction of food is not rendered less criminal because more remains behind; the food fund of the world is, of necessity, reduced by the quantity thus wasted; and foreign imports raise the price of corn in our home markets beyond the actual standard. To this must be added the loss of the labor of all kinds in bringing about a waste of valuable aliment. If he who makes a grass-blade grow where one did not grow before is a benefactor of his species, what name shall be bestowed upon the system which causes the yearly loss as human food of 2,000 square miles of strengthening grain? The same objection lies against the liquors imported, all of which have been produced by the waste of substances sent by Providence for the sustenance of man. It will be observed that this effect is bound up with the very production of alcoholic liquors, which could have no existence but for the conversion of that which is nutritious into that which is not. It may also be remarked that in the production of intoxicating liquors, more than of other articles of consumption, forms of adulterations can be practised, and are known to be so, extremely pernicious to the consumer. Complaints are made that such practices are almost universal, and the temptations to this abuse are too powerful to permit the hope that they will be very sensibly reduced while the manufacture of the liquors is continued.* The plea that "very much capital and labor are embarked in the production of alcoholic liquors "is no justification, unless it can be shown that capital and labor so * See Appendix C. I3 I4 The Driizki'i6- S,slem our Chitf Social Evil. applied result in a public benefit. But in reality the plea recoils on the system it is advanced to shield; for, compared with the cost to the purchaser, the production of alcoholic drink gives extremely limited employment to capital and labor. A quantity of spirits or beer costing the buyer a pound sterling can be distilled or brewed for about two shillings in wages, while a pound spent in furniture and clothes will yield to the workman from twelve to fourteen shillings. But it is certain that if the drinks were not produced a large portion of the money spent on them would be spent on articles of personal wear and family comfort, the increased demand for which would stimulate the labor market of the country.* Hence the production of intoxicating liquors may be pronounced not only necessarily destructive of the people's food, and conducive to noxious adulterations of every kind, but also incompatible, in proportion to its extent, with that healthy development of native industry which would relieve the public distress and increase the substantial wealth of the community to an unprecedented degree. 2. THE CIRCULATION OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS.These liquors are circulated by way of public sale or private distribution. The public traffic is wholesale and retail, and it is chiefly by means of the retail sale that the great bulk of the liquor produced is diffused among the people. This sale is licensed, and all unlicensed sale is illegal and subject to heavy penalty, because the state assumes a special control of a traffic found, by long experience, to be dangerous and hurtful to society.t But as * This point has been treated with unanswerable ability in Mr. W. Hoyle's work, "Our National Resources, and How they are Wasted." The Caledo. nian Distillery, which sends out spirits valued at ~s,5oo,ooo yearly, employs -50 men; the same money spent on cotton goods would employ io0,000ooo workmen. t By the "Intoxicating Liquor (Licensing) Act" (35 and 36 Vict., cap. 94), the penalties for selling by retail any intoxicating liquor without being duly linjury froit Circutlatioiz of Alcoholic liquzors. 15 the licensed vendors derive all their profits frcmi the extent of their sales, it is also found that the legal c')nltrol claimed is mostly nominal, and that the evils which that control is intended to avert flourish with fatal luxuriance wherever the traffic is allowed. As public circulation of the drinks is the means of private profit, the circulation is cultivated by the vendor at all risks and consequences to society; nor need this conduct excite surprise. It is too much to expect that the dealer in strong drinks, who makes money by provoking and gratifying an appetite for them, should be solicitous to curb the appetite or refuse to satisfy its demands. By a fiction of law he is supposed to be able and willing to solve the problem-how he shall traffic in intoxicating drink, and not assist in creating and confirming the love for such drink; but it is a problem which he could not solve, however willing; and, being neither able nor willing, the ruinous results are visible on every hand. The traffic in alcoholic liquors has confessedly become a system of solicitation and seduction to drinking, issuing in the formation and strengthening of tastes, habits, and customs, destructive to health, morals, and the social good.* The circulation of intoxicating liquors is also greatly favored by many trade usages and convivial customs; by free gifts of liquor to servants and others; by the festal, hospitable, and dietetic exhibition and and recommendation of drink; by licensed to sell the same, or at any place where a person is not authorized by his license to sell the same, are a sum not exceeding ~50, or imprisonment with or without hard labor for a term not exceeding one month; for a second offence, a sum not exceeding ~soo, or imprisonment with or without hard labor for a term not exceeding three months; for a third offence, a similar fine, or imprisonment with or without hard labor for a term not exceeding six mnonths, and the offender may be disqualified for ever holding a license. If a license-hiolder, he shall forfeit his license on a second conviction; and, in the case of any conviction, all liquor found on the offender's premises may be forfeited. * See Appendix D. i6 Thize Driilkin, Systez ouzr Chiief Social Evil. injudicious medical advice, and other private means.* It may be laid down as axiomatic that this circulation of alcoholic beverages, however brought about, is attended with innumerable dangers and evils; and that upon all who assist in this circulation, and more especially upon persons of public and social influence, a great weight of responsibility rests, which cannot be shaken off by any avowal of good intentions or regrets for the miseries that ensue. Ignorance cannot be pleaded of the tendency of alcoholic liquors to entice, corrupt, and destroy; and no one can be released from that share of accountability for the aggregate effects, which is incurred by helping to circulate the drinks that operate thus injuriously on the personal, domestic, and national state.t But both the production and circulation of intoxicating liquids are subservient to 3. THE CONSUMPTION OF THESE ARTICLES AS BEVERAGES.-They are produced to be drunk; they are circulated to be drunk; and that they are very generally and copiously drunk is a matter of statistical demonstration. They are drunk to such an extent that (looking to their alcoholic quality) above two gallons of alcohol would be the yearly portion of each person in the nation, did every person drink and did all drink alike; but, as millions drink little or nothing, the average consumption of alcohol for each drinker cannot be less than from three to four gallons per annum. The question, then, presents itself-whether this aggregate consumption be a good or an evil? and what is the kind and degree of good or evil, or both, resulting from the system of drinking? If any good arises from strong drink, it must be derived * Mr. Dunlop, in his "Philosophy of Drinking Usages," enumerates nearly 300 trade and other usages associated with drinking. Many of these (especially the compulsory forms) are extinct; but the reform is yet incomplete. t See Appendix E. Eff'cls of Izto.ricalinZ Liquzor onz the Consusmern. I7 from properties which it possesses in common with other articles of consumption, or from properties peculiar to itself. But good of the former kind would be no reason for using strong drink, when the same good is so plentifully and innocently provided elsewhere; and, indeed, the universal reason for using alcoholic liquor is its possessiDn of some special virtue not present in other articles of consumption. But this special virtue can reside in nothing but the alcohol, the intoxicating element, which distinguishes fermented and distilled liquors from all other articles of diet, whether solid or fluid. In the investigation of the effects of alcoholic beverages it will be desirable to consider them, first of all, as related to the individual, the family, and the nation. (I). The z;zdididtal is affected by his ozwn itse of these drinks, or by the use of lhenz by others. Are the effects of intoxicating liquors on the consumers salulary or otherwise? Here it is to be remarked that rarely any advantage is claimed from them except of a physical kind, and that even this advantage is invariably restricted to their use "in the strictest moderation." Any "excess" is confessed to be an evil-an evil also allowed to prevail very extensively both in the form of drunkenness and in less repulsive forms. Since, then, any transgression of the rule of "moderation" is pernicious, it is important to know what this rule is, and how it may be applied. It cannot be altogether a rule of quantity, for the liquors greatly differ in alcoholic strength, and even liquors of the same class have never the same amount of alcoholic ingredient. To say that there is no general rule, and that each must discover or frame a rule for himself, " as in eating," is, in truth, no direction at all; for (I) in eating there is, at least, an approximation to a general rule as to quantity; (2) occasional excess in food does not create a habit of gluttony; and (3) no excess in food is followed by results like those 1i 8 The Drinzking Sys/enz outr Chief Socihzl Evil. which attend even a slight excess in drinkl Besides-a point of primary importance-nature imposes a restraint on eating when hunger is satisfied, so that the individual appetite for food becomes its own protection against excess, whereas the effect of strong drink is to beget an appetite for itself, and, therefore, no such safeguard is provided; and hence the need of some other rule, plainly perceived and easily applied, is the more urgently demanded. Especially is this the case in view of the admrnitted tendency of alcoholic drink to strengthen desire, while it weakens the power of restraint, and even the power of perception that restraint, at each removal from the line of strict sobriety, is more and more required. Proceeding upon the assumption that some portion of intoxicating liquor is good for him, the consumer should be able to satisfy himself first as to how much alcohol it is safe and good to take at one time, and, next, as to how often in the day this amount may be safely taken; for, though the quantity may be small at one time, the times may be so numerous, in any given period, as to render the daily or weekly quantity excessive. Sir Henry Holland warns wine-drinkers against "a dangerous plenitude," which they are apt mistakenly to think consistent with moderation; and as an error of this kind will, it is acknowledged, turn the drink used into an unmixed evil(not so in the case of excess in food-another broad distinction)-every user of alcohol is bound, before he can claim to be deriving good from the quantity he takes, to have established for himself some rule of " moderation" by which he strictly and constantly abides, and so avoids the excess which he condemns. It is needless to ask how many-rather how few-" moderate drinkers" adopt and carry out such a precautionary rule. The facts of society render such an enquiry superfluous, and demonstrate, on the consumer's own ground, how little security he can have for the virtue or even innocuousness of the Liffccis of Sti-ong D-ilk upon /i te IFainz/'. I19 alcoholic liquor he consumes day by day and year by year. In the following chapter we shall examine whether the use of alcohol, in any measure, is ever a benefit, and whether it be not in all cases a means of physical injury instead of good; at present we are content to ask the candid reader whether any supposed benefit'to the individual derived from its very careful use is to be compared for an instant with the amount of evil-bodily, mental, and moral-caused by indulgence which even stops short of habitual and gross excess? To this must be added the loss of personal health, character, prospects, and life itself, induced by notoriously intemperate habits. If there are 6oo00,oo0o distinct persons in the United Kingdom who deserve the name of " drunkard "-and the estimate is not too high-the number of persons below that black line who take, as the phrase goes, " more than is good for them," must be very much greater-opening up to view a magnitude of individual suffering perfectly appalling. We have been referring to the user of strong drink; but individual wrong, and loss, and even death-nay, worse than death-may rise quite independently of a person's own relation to intoxicating liquor. A man or woman may lose work; may be put in peril of limib and life, or forfeit both; may be compelled to see and hear what is odious and revolting; may be heavily taxed and burdened; may be made to undergo for years exquisite suffering, not from personal drinking, but from the drinking of neighbors, associates, friends, relatives, or even strangers. And what is here said to be possible is a real infliction in countless thousands of cases, and oftentimes, as with the wives and children of the intemperate, without any power of self-protection or escape. (2.) The family effects of using strong drink are not visibly beneficial, but are very visiby and hainfuly injurious. The families of abstainers may claim to enjoy as much health 20 f'ic ]D)riii4'iki Sysiciz oui -'hiif Social Equil. and happiness as the families of any who use alcoholic drinks; while the families of those who deal in intoxicating liquors share with others in the evils that attend their circulation.* There are between five and six million families in the United Kingdom whose average expenditure on strong drink annually is nearly ~2o; with many families it is'much more; and, as the families of the worklng class are to be counted by millions, we mayjudge what is involved in the abstraction as drink-money of so large a proportion of the wages earned. If but forty of the hundred millions annually spent in alcoholic drink flow from the working class, this will form about a tenth of their aggregate wvages; and even where drunkenness is not doing its fell work, what can this abstraction of money signify but less food, less furniture, less clothing, fewer innocent pleasures, smaller provident investments, and more limited educational advantages for the little ones? Then, too, tippling is awfully prevalent, and this, sooner or later, settles into sottish dissipation. Should the wife and mother prove a victim, as she often does, the fate of her fiamily is dire. An unprejudiced observer has vividly said, "It would not be too much to say that there are at this moment half a million homes in the United Kingdom where home happiness is never felt, owing to this cause alone-where the wives are brokenhearted, and the children brought up in misery. For the children what hope is there, amid ceaseless scenes of quarrelling, cursing, and blows, when, as Cassio says,' It hath pleased the devil drunkenness to give place to the devil wrath,' and the two devils together have driven from the house all that peace and sweetness which should be the moral atmosphere of the young".* Family purity, * The late Rev. Dr. McLeod has pathetically described the loss of health and virtue by twenty-two families of drunkenness known to himself; and similar instances are of. common observation. t The late Mr. C. Buxton, in the North British Review, on " low to Stop Drurkenness" (lFeb. 1854). The,c7ational Effects of Driz;king. 2 family happiness, family prosperity, and family piety are sacrificed to the drinking system with a prodigality that must alarm while it humiliates the honest, patient, and ardent philanthropist; and most of all worthy of commiseration are those tender branches of the family stock which have their vital sap poisoned by the parental devotion to alcohol, and which, if they resist the nipping frosts of parental neglect, survive only to yield the bitter fruit upon which society, though disgusted and diseased thereby, is compelled to feed. (3.) Thze inaz'onal effects of drinkinzg include those named above upon individual and family welfare, all of which assist to mark and mould the character arnd destiny of the whole people. On the maintenance of physical stamina and virtue, on the development of the national resources, on the wise application of time and talent, and on the education (in the best sense) of the youthful population must depend the national greatness and glory. What influence the use of strong drink has upon these conditions and elements of national prosperity every one can judge. Drink (as commonly used) produces weakness, disease, and death; it impedes the accumulation of capital and the remunerative employment of labor; it induces idleness, dislike of steady work, absence from employment, and consequent disorganization in business affairs; it hinders and makes practically impossible the effective education of vast multitudes of the young; it renders excess, crime, poverty, and vice prolific, and adds a stimulus to every form of evil; and all this it is doing wzithoui inztermission, and on a scale of national amplitude. Bearing these things in mind, it is reasonable to enquire - TI'at zs Ihere -/o set over agfaiznsl Ihese disastrous effects? It may be said-(I.) There are the capital invested in the liquor traffic, the money spent upon it, and the persons supported by it. But the capital and money come out of the public resources, which are otherwise impoverished 2 f 22 Th,e Drinkiizg Systemi our Chief Social Evil. by this kind of expenditure, while a different expenditure would enable a far larger number of persons to be supported without suffering to the state. (2.) There is the notion that health and strength are promoted by "the proper and moderate" use of drink-a rule of use which has never been defined; and a notion which will be shown, in future pages of this work, to be founded in delusion. (3.) We may be reminded of the "pleasure" excited by the use of alcohol, whether as a means of personal gratification, or of social and convivial entertainmnent. But in this species of pleasure lies the source of the moral peril against which all philosophy and religion warn; the pleasure and peril increasing with equal pace. The pleasure arises from the abnormal excitement of the nervous system, and, therefore, when it is keenest, insures a corresponding reaction. It is a pleasure, also, which is only obtained by rendering the senses less susceptible of delight from natural objects, so that, even physically speaking, the abstainer, as compared with the non-abstainer, has a larger sum of "pleasure" during life.* It is a pleasure, too, which, in the case of multitudes, is dearly bought at the loss of pure and permanent happiness which, by a different outlay of drink-money, might have been derived from intellectual and moral sources.t * Dr. James Johnson, physician to William IV., and original editor of the Medico-Chzirurgical Review, has said-" There can be no question that water is the best and only drink which nature has designed for man. The waterdrinker glides tranquilly through life, without much exhilaration or depression, and escapes many diseases to which otherwise he would be subject. .. The balance of enjoyment turns decidedly in favor of the waterdrinker, leaving out his temporal prosperity and future anticipations; and the nearer we keep to his regimen, the happier we shall be."-(Civic Life and Sedentary Habits. i8I8.) t Dr. Samuel Johnson, who owned that he found relief from mental oppression and gloom by abstinence of wine, said, "Wine gives us light, gay, ideal hilarity"; and he observed, on arguing on wine-drinking," Wine makesa man better pleased with himself, but the danger is that while a man grows better pleased with himself, he may be growing less pleasing to others." The Dcstruici'-ec -fi itcilc.cs of Stronwg I)inle. 23 Taking the drinking system collectively, i.e., the production, circulation, and consumption of alcoholic beverages, we may sum up its effects under tlhe twofold division of DESTRUCTIVE and OBSTRUCTIVE: I. DESTRUCTIVE in the following respects: (I.) Economicaly, by wasting the alimentary products of the earth, by causing destruction and theft of property, by weakening the power and desire of productive labor, by entailing loss on commercial and mercantile undertakings, by eating up savings and capital, and by creating three-quarters of the national poverty and criminality, and much of the disease, all of which become a necessary and oppressive burden upon society. (2.) Piysically, by engendering and aggravating bodily ailments which impair the corporeal stamina both of the present and future generations, raising the national rate of mortality, inflicting intense suffering, particularly on children, and giving to epidemical disorders a fatality they would not otherwise exert. Mental diseases dependent on congenital malady or physical malformation are also thus fearfully increased. (3.) Inftelleclzial,y, by indisposing to thoughit, study, and the acquisition of useful knowledge-by the deterioration and perversion of the mental powers -by rendering adults brutish and animalized, by disabling and disinclining parents from supplying their children with school instruction, and by reducing many intelligent and educated persons to a sensual state, till " the light that is in them becomes darkness," and not unfrequently the reason is lost beyond recall.* Rev. Sydney Smith has amusingly described, in letters to his daughter, Lady Holland, his improvement in spirits by abstinence from wine. * Callimachus of old sang that "wine shakes all the reason out of men"; and Butler, in his poem on" Drunkenness," puts this quaintly, where he says that "man with raging drink inflamed " " Lays by his reason in his bowls, I As Turks arc said to do their souls,' 24 TI/e Drikzing s im uiir Chief S o ci al -Evil. (4.) zlfora/y and relz,iotisy, by the depraved tendencies and propensities called into exercise, by the temptations to vice elicited and encouraged, by tihe exclusion from ilmylriads of families of moral and spiritual influences, by the weakening of the will-faculty and loss of moral control, by the callousness of conscience produced and the reckless wickedness to which alcohol impels its votaries.* To the depraving effect of alcoholic drink every minister of religion, every Sunday-school teacher, every town missionary, every district visitor, every prison chaplain, bears the fullest witness. This corrupting power of alcoholic liquor is, in truth, something astounding and unparalleled, and is incapable of being more fitly symbolized than by the image of the Serpent, full of guile and fascination in its approach, but armed with fangs charged with deadly poison. A Cochin-Chinrese proverb gives the same idea with a local coloring —" As a tiger in a wood, so is wine in a man." Lord Bacon's saying is full of weight; "WVine is the most powerful of all things for exciting and inflaming passions of all kinds, being, indeed, a common fuel to them all." There was more than symbolic teaching in the ancient association of Bacchus with every species of debauchery and vice. 2. The OBSTRUCTIVE effects of the drinking system aire innumerable, universal, and all-pervasive. It has been powerfully said, " Intemperance is the mightiest of all the forces that clog the progress of good. It is in vain that every engine is set to work that philanthropy can devise, Until it has so often been Shut out of its lodgings, and let in, At length it never can attain To find the right way back again." * "Wine is a moecker (scorner), strong drink is ra~itg"'-(Prov. xx. i.)epithets which, by being applied to the drinks used, indicate their characteristic effects in disposing to a contempt and violent disregard of all things good and sacred. Dr. Adam Clarke caustically remarks, "Stron,g dr;nk is not only man's wav to the devil, but the devil's w-t, to0 nlan." Obstruzctive Efficts of Stirong Drinzk. when those whom we seek to benefit are habitually tampering with their faculties of reason and will-soaking their brains with beer, or inflaming them with ardent spirits. The struggle of the school, and the library, and the church, all united against the beer-house and ginpalace, is but one development of the war between heaven and hell."* WVith human nature, weak always, depraved often, the issue of this contest is too often certain. But the drinking system makes such a condition chronic in our midst. The institutions formed to elevate and bless the people are impeded and half paralyzed by this common foe. What they attempt to do is imperfectly performed, or half undone again, by this one agency of evil. The persons to be acted upon are made by it either incapable of appreciating the efforts for their good, or indisposed to co-operate with their friends. "A sound mind in a sound body," is the condition of great success in all benevolent and educational and religious enterprise; but the drinking system is incessantly operating to increase and confirm unsoundness both of body and mind. Then, again, it reduces the number of workers in all good works, diminishes the pecuniary support they would receive, and tends to discourage the most zealous laborers. While the drinking system remains, the obstructions it causes must continue, and those who would desire to give free play to every noble movement, and to ensure a glorious success for each, should energetically aid in putting the drinking system out of the way. It is emphatically the great "stone of stumbling, and rock of offence," and its removal is imperative, if moral, social, and spiritual reforms are to advance and triumph. To sum up- the benefits of the drinking system are, at best, questionable and infinitesimal; its evils are ubiquitous and tremendous, and, because directly involved in * Mr. Charles Buxton, in.,Vorth Britisht Review,, Feb., x854. 25 26 The Drinkizg Sstemn oir Clzilf Social Evil. theo svstem, or emanating from it, the system itself may be truthlfully described as the GREATEST SOCIAL EVIL OF OUR AGE. OBJECTIONS. To this conclusion some objections may be taken, and it is our duty to examine them with-care. I. It may be said "/ at thze citarges made are marked by rhetorical ex,aggerazioin, and that manty of the evils named are adie, at least int their darker formss, to other and less froxiimate caitses-badt food, bad dwelli,gs, bad trainiitg, and sur rozindiigs." (i.)'lhe charge of e.raggeration cannot proceed from any one vlwho has made this subject his earnest study. The statistics arranged and the inferences drawn, as to the extent and virulence of the evils of the drinking system, do not proceed from total abstainers exclusively or mainly. Every Parliamentary enquiry, every independent and local investigation, teems with evidence refuting the assertion that things are not so bad as they are represented. Nothing is easier than to raise the cry of "exaggeration," but where no proof is given the cry may be disregarded. The difficulty, indeed, consists in getting at all the facts of this tragedy; they are literally innumerable. It is simply impossible to find the bottom of the mischief. How few are the families into which drink has not put, within living memory, "a skeleton " one or more mournful evidences-of the power for evil incessantly exercised by the drinking system! Occasionally, no doubt, ill-instructed speakers may use figures without authority or discretion; but no official data have ever vet been collected setting fully forth the baneful operations of the drinking system. What is seen is but "through a glass darkly," and vast realms of evil endured and done lie unexplored and undetermined. The exaggeration, if any, lies at the door of those who have no i The Objectioiz fi-oi "Exaggeratioit" Answered. 27 bias in favor of total abstinence. WVhat say the Committee of the Lower House of Convocation in their Report on Intemperance? " The results of intemperance, as portrayed in the evidence before your Committee, are of the most appalling description. To this cause may be traced many of the crimes and miseries which disturb the peace of states and poison the happiness of families; while it depraves the character, impairs the strength, shatters the health and nerves, and brings thousands to an early death. It is found to fill our prisons, our workhouses, our lunatic asylums, and penitentiaries, and, more than any other cause or complication of causes, to frustrate the efforts and baffle the hopes of all who have at heart the elevation and welfare of the people.... As to the evils inflicted on society and the nation at large by intemperance, these, in their nature and amount, as attested in the evidence before your Committee, are not only harrowing and humiliating to contemplate, but so many and widespread as almost to defyvcomputation. It may be truly said of our body politic'that the whole head is sick and the whole heart faint.' "* The latest Parliamentary Committee on the subject of intemperance (to enquire into the best plan for the con trol and management of habitual drunkards) state in their Report (I872)- -"There is much evidence to show that in large towns and populous districts the great evil of drunkenness is on the increase. That drunkenness is the prolific parent of crimie, disease, and poverty, has received much additional confirmation. That it is in evidence that there is a very large amount of drunkenness among all classes and both sexes, which never becomes public or is dealt with by the authorities, but which is probably even a more fertile source of misery, * See " Report of Convocation," pp. 7-11, with corroborative evidence in the Appendix to the Report. 28 Tize Drintking Systemt our Chief Social Evil. poverty, and degradation than that which comes before the police courts." (2) The attempt to foist these evils upon bad s6cial conditions is both absurd and futile. Absurd, because those conditions, however sad and lamentable, could not induce drinking and the effects of drinking, if the drink were not made, circulated, and consumed. If it be allowed that they cause many to fly to strong drink for a temporary though delusive relief, it must also be allowed that this could not happen if the liquor were not manufactured and placed (and often in alluring forms) within sight and reach of the lowest of our poor. But the attempt to make "bad social conditions," and not the drinking system, responsible for the evils deplored is perfectly futile, when it is borne in mind that it is drinking which is perpetually reducing great numbers from good social conditions to bad ones; and that all the bad conditions that could proceed from unavoidable poverty are multiplied and made worse by the drinking system. These very conditions are invariably amended or banished whenever the drink is excluded; and to seek to drain off the effects of the drinking system while intoxicating drink is made, sold, patronized, and generally consumed is to convert the fable of Sisyphus into a fact. 2. It may be said "that the evils alleged a,-ainst the drinkiizg system are, in reality, its abuses, and have no necessary connection with that system w,hen ib iroieriy coniducted and controlled." Certainly, the abuse of a system is no legitimate argument against it; but this plea of "abuse " is notoriously a common resort in defence of systems inherently vicious; and, when it is adduced in defence of the' drinking system, justice requires that evidence should be given (i) that the system has practically been free, or can be made free, from the "abuses "; and (2) that it has uses which compensate for the " abuses" while they Bad Social Conditions a Result of Drinking. 29 remain. The evils-or "abuses," as the objector styles them-are patent and appalling —ca lthey be separated from the system? Let this be proved, if proof is procurable; but where is the proof? Can it be proved, for examiple, that the froductioit of alcoholic drink is separable from the waste of nutritious food, and from a great loss to industrial labor? Can it be proved that the circulation of drink is separable from much temptation, much seduction, much ruin? Can it be proved that the conistumetion of strong drink is separable, while human nature remains what it is, from a-long catalogue of appalling miseries, sins, sorrows, crimes, and other social calamities? It is easy to theorize, and to draw pictures of "might be"; but reasonable men have to do with experience and facts; and all these go to show that what are softly called the "abuses " of the drinking system are, in truth, either inseparable elements of it, or irrepressible tendencies and evolutions of it in connection with human temperament, appetite, and habit. All the evils do not always appear in all persons; the effects of the worst systems of error and vice are never absolute and universal; but the specialty and frequency of the evils, even when all the previous conditions have been favorable to their repression, make it evident that the so-called "abuses" (when not inherent in the drinking system) so naturally spring out of it as to render them fairly chargeable upon it. Especially is this the case when it can be shown that the very nature of intoxicating liquor, as alcoholic, is the initial and efficient cause of the subsequent evils or " abuses" by its action on the nervous system. In the light of this distinction, to talk of "'abusing the drink " is a manifest inversion of the fact, which is that the drink abuses the drinker, and therefore that the production and use of alcohol as an article of beverage is in itself an abuse, because inconsistent with the welfare of man. The only question, then, that remains is, Wh/ether the benefits out 3o Thze Dri'lkin,, Syistcm ozir Clzicf Social Evii. wert-z the evils, and whether it is wise to endure the evils for the sake of the benefits? Those who would maintain the affirmative impose a formidable labor upon themselves-one which no advocate of the drinking system has ever seriously attempted to perform. When or from what quarter is evidence forthcoming that abstainers from strong drink suffer from the absence of it as much as society suffers from its use? What testimony or inductive reasoning can justify the proposition that, if intoxicating liquors were to cease from the world, more injury would result than now results from their circulation and use? Conceding (for argument's sake) that some good attaches to the drinking system-nay, very considerable good —what sober observer can contend that the good is equal to the evil, either in kind or measure, in quality or bulk? Yet an equivalent ought to exist, or society is the loser, and the drinking system is maintained contrary to the dictates of wisdom and of the supreme law of the public good. A heathen philosopher, Pliny the Elder, supplies to Christians a memorable lesson and admonition in the words-" So vast are our efforts, so vast our labors, and so regardless of cost, which we thus lavish upon that [vizuiz-wine] which deprives man of his reason, and drives him to frenzy and the commission of a thousand crimes." 3. It may be said "that the same evilswould reafifear iunder other circumstances, and that, zf the drizikizhn systemz did not pfrodutce them, they would revive in some dzferenl way." This assumption is so entirely improbable in itself that, to render it in any degree accepted, a powerful array of testimonies ought to be adduced. But of evidence in its support there is none. Who can believe, as this objection assumes, that the effects of strong drink are really no effects of it at all, but results of other causes that would operate just the same if the alcoholic drink were absent? Who can believe that it makes no difference to Similair E-,vils not arising fiooit othe; Cazses. 31 any family, any district, or any people, whether intoxicating liquor is used in any measure or to any excess? If alcoholic liquors do no harm, abstinence from them can do no good, and the greatest drunkard would be no better were he to abandon his vice. Who can credit his?. Trace the objection to its root, and it comes to this-that a certain amount of evil will always exist, and that all means for its diminution are of no avail. To state this opinion is to consign it to the contempt of every mind elevated above the grossest fatalism. Were it universally credited, it would extinguish all hope of progress, and fulfil its own dark prophecy by arresting all endeavor after a better future. The heathen Romans were proud of the man who did not despair of the republic; and are we, who profess Christianity, to sanction a dogma which would compel us to despair of humanity? Some writers who ought to be better informed, and more capable of juster reasoning, point to the vices and crimes of pagans and Mohammedans, who do not use intoxicating liquors, as a proof that the evils connected in this country with drinking are possible without it. But certainly, drunkenness is not possible without intoxicating drink; and though many kinds of evil may hlave various causes, what reason is there to suppose that, with the removal of one cause, some other cause or causes will, sooner or later, spring up to bring the old evils back? If pagans and Mlohamme dans are vicious and criminal without drink, would they be less so-would they not be more so-with it? Is it not the fact that the heathen and Mussulman popula tions referred to are as vicious and cruel as we find them, because they do not strictly observe the rule of absti nence from intoxicants, but either use alcoholic drinks or sim.ilar substances of a narcotic or inflaming charac-ter? Is it not notorious that many of the worst outrages of the Sepoys during the Indian Mutiny-cases cited to show what horrors the sober can commit —were perpe 32 Thze Drinkiig Sysleml ozir Clii'f Social Evil. trated by the men who had first stimulated their passions by draughts of arrack or doses of bhang? Abstemious persons and communities may, indeed, be guilty of vices and crimes, but these are committed in spite of the abstinence; whereas intoxicating drink, besides giving rise to the peculiar vice of intoxication, aggravates every form of evil, and leads to crime and violence and recklessness more specifically its own. It would be as rational to argue that, if we got rid of the indigenous causes of ague and small-pox, we should be visited by yellow-fever or the plague, so that the national mortality would still be kept up to a given point, as to represent that the removal of the drinking system would be followed by an influx of the same or equal evils from other sources. Every known fact, in every quarter of the globe, cries out against this dismal conclusion. \When Ireland had abandoned whiskey-drinking, did poverty and criminality retain their former level, fed by other streams? In places where the sale of strong drink is suppressed, are the vice and misery due to other causes greater than elsewhere? It has been the habit of some opponents to charge the spread of total abstinence with an increase in the consumption of opium, but it has never been shown that any coincidence, much less a casual connection, has existed between the two events; while it must be evident that the persons who abstain from alcoholic liquors from a conviction of their injurious influence on health and character will be generally led to abstain, for similar reasons, from all narcotic agents. The use of Alcohol may physiologically lead to the use of opium, and any dietetic use of opium by abstainers must be so rare and exceptional as to confirm the rule of an ordinary and natural separation. 4. It may be said " that tAere are benej!s coiferred by the drizkiizg system of whicAh notice shonid be taken before atny just decision can be pronounced." To this objection refer The Drink4itg Sj,s/cin an Inconpaz-able Evil. 33 ence has previously been made, and to what is there advanced, it may be added'that the force of this objection must depend upon the following considerations: Ist, that the benefits pertain to the drinking system as such 2d, that they are benefits clearly established to be so 3d, that as benefits they bear some proportion in value to the evils that attend them. But on none of these points is there evidence that can satisfy the honest enquirer. On the first, it is true that both the production and circulation of alcoholic drinks are a means of employment and wealth to many persons; but it is demonstrable that the money spent on drink, if spent on other articles, would yield employment to many more persons, and would distribute a larger amount of wealth over a larger surface of society-besides extinguishing the evils now springing from the drinking system. On the second, there is good and sufficient reason for believing that the health and happiness of society would be increased, and not lessened, by the abolition of the drinking system.* Tried by every test that can be applied, it is made apparent that health does not suffer by abstinence, while there are considerations (to be afterwards assigned) that go to mark an injury to health in proportion to the quantity of alcohol used. No doubt there is a peculiar gratification experienced in drinking, else it would not be so common; but a gratification is not necessarily a benefit, and in the case of strong drink the gratification is keenest where, by universal admission, no benefit but lasting and largest injury is the result. Gratifications, too, are relative, and whatever may be lost in this respect by abstinence is more than replaced -in the judgment of those who have made trial of both sides-by the more varied and the higher gratifications flowing from another application of pecuniary means, and *This is asserted in the great Medical Certificate of x847. (See Appendix G.) 34 The Di-inkiz,i S'sitcm our Ciief Social Evil. from the consciousness of aiding the removal of the drinking system and all its evils. On the third point, it may be remarked that comparison there is none between the benefits claimed for strong drink and the calamities inflicted by it. What food does it furnish in return for the harvests wasted? What wealth for the poverty caused? What virtue for the vice? What intelligence for the ignorance diffused? What happiness to set over against the boundless miseries inflicted? What life saved to compensate for the numberless hecatombs made up of guilty and innocent alike? What assistance to religion as an equivalent for the irreligiousness, sensuality, and apostasies it is unceasingly producing? There is but one reply to these interrogations-a reply which confirms the judgment laid down as the proposition of this chapterthat of all the evils unhappily distinguishing the present age, none can comnpare with the drinking system, whether regarded in the extent, diversity, duration, or virulence of its effects. In the race of mischief, it is without a rival: the palm of infamy it bears away without appeal. 1. I CHAPTER II. PROPOSITION: THAT INTOXICATING LIQUORS ARE USELESS AND INJURIOUS AS ARTICLES OF DIET. IT is a common belief that alconolic liquors are useful, and even necessary to a good state of health and to long life; and though this belief may not absolutely regulate the personal or social consumption of those liquors, it is of the first importance that this opinion, if erroneous, should be disproved. Health andestrength are blessings of a very high order; to the multitude they areinvaluable as the means of manual work and industrial support; and although, in countless cases, health and life itself are sac-> rificed at the shrine of some custom or pleasure, it is veryevident that ignorance concerning strong drink, joined to a laudable concern for the maintenance of health, has much to do with the daily use of some alcoholic liquor, especially among the more respectable and thoughtful of all classes. I.-INTOXICATING LIQUORS USELESS. In maintaining that alcoholi liquors ar useless, it is not necessary to show that they contain nothing which is useful to the consumer. It is practically sufficient for the argument that they contain nothing of any sensible utility which does not exist in other articles of diet, free from objectionable combinations, and purchasable at a cheaper rate. The superstition of ages has attached to fermented drinks properties not residing in other dietetic substances; but scientific analysis and widespread experience have exploded this superstition-one which will, in 36 Tlic P~i3siolo,mical Effjcis of A lcoAiol. due time, come to be as generally discounted as the belief in witchcraft and the evil-eye. Scientific analysis proves that distilled liquors, when pure, consist only of alcohol and water, the service rendered by the water being to qualify the potency of the intoxicating spirit. In fermented liquors the nutritive elements are of the smallest quantity and lowest type of quality, as can be proved by any housewife who boils a pint of ale till all the watery and alcoholic parts have evaporated, when the residuum, a waxy and distasteful deposit, represents all the solid and "feeding" particles of the ale. The residuum of a glass of wine is almost imperceptible to the naked eye, and though in some high-priced wines, inaccessible to the mass of the people, there are more useful fixed ingredients, these are derived from the grapes employed in the manufacture of the wines, and are not the product of the fermenting process. There is, in short,' nothing in any alcoholic liquor except the alcohol which does not exist elsewhere in abundance, and capable of being purchased at less cost, and with an assurance of freedom from those adulterating acts bywhich the ordinary intoxicating beverages are made still further unsuited for daily use. There is in this country no real guarantee against adulteration of the liquors bought; and the wines of commerce, like the beers and ales of the public-house, are "doctored" to an extent that renders it absurd to attribute to them any marked sanitive effect. Such adulterations would neutralize any benefit derivable from them did they contain specially nutritive properties; but, on the contrary, these properties are deficient in such a degree that nourishment costing shillings or pounds to procure in the shape of such liquors can be obtained for pence and half-pence in the form of grain, flesh, and fruits. What analysis exhibits to the eye, experience has made clear to the reflection of mankind. Instead of alcoholic liquors being necessary, as some have asserted, . I iziotxicatini, Liqzlors Useless. or useful, as others have more cautiously contended, it is conclusively made evident by the experience of millions of persons that men and women are nourished and strengthened, can enjoy health and live long, without any alcoholic drinks; and so little can this conflux of personal testimony be questioned that it is now customary with political economists to class alcoholic beverages, not with necessaries, but with luxuries, and even to set them apart by themselves as "stimulants" that have no pretence to the consideration which articles of utilitv may demand when fiscal impositions are in debate. In truth, the defenders of strong drink have ceased to use the language once accredited as firmly as Gospel truth. They know that, nutritively tested, intoxicating liquors have nothing to recommend them, and they therefore confine all their praise to the alcohol-of which the unlearned drinker of beer may never have heard, but the effect of which he has mistaken for the nourishment' of which he has really stood in need. It is now conceded that whatever special virtue there may be in alcoholic fluids must proceed from the alcohol, whence they derive their distinctive odor and strength; and that, if alcohol be not useful, the controversy is at an end. When enquiry is made after the special uses of alcohol, we are referred, ist, to its use as fuel to the body; 2dly, to its use as an arrester of waste; 3dly, to its use as a promoter of digestion; 4thly, to its use as a stimulant in the performance of daily or unusual work. I. Thze use of alcohal as "fuel to the body," -inz other words, the pfiroduction of heat by the ozxidation or conzbustion of the spirit-was a theory first promulged by Professor Liebig, who included alcohol under respiratory food, while admitting that it had nothing in common with nutritious or plastic food. But the learned professor, who was induced to make this classification from purely chemical analogy, also furnished a scale showing "ap 3 7 38 Tie PIijsiolo,ical Eff~'cts of A l(olol. proximately how much of each respiratory material must be taken in the food in order, with the same consumption of oxygen, to keep the body at the same temperature during equal times"; and in this scale, placing fat and oil at Ioo, as a standard, starch was placed at 240, cane sugar at 249, grape sugar at 263, alcohol at 266; so that, as a warmer of the body, the value of alcohol was but a little over one-third that of fatty and oily substances, and inferior to the sugar by whose destruction it was called forth. "The effect of fat is the slowest in being produced, but it lasts much longer. Of all respiratory matters alcohol acts most rapidly;"* so that, besides the effect being sooner spent, the greater affinity of alcohol for oxygen was calculated to retard the removal, by oxidation, of those waste matters whose retention in the blood is always attended with danger, if not positive injury to the health. It is obvious that this theory could never justify the use -of alcohol so long as the other and better kinds of respiratory food were procurable, as they always are, and at less expense; but the theory itself, after yielding unreasoning satisfaction to the opponents of total abstinence, wvas scientifically assailed by the experiments of Drs. Lallemand and Perrin, and M. Duroy, as recorded in their great prize treatise on the "Action of Alcohol."t In this work, published in I86o, a minute account is given of numerous carefully conducted experiments, resulting in the discovery that alcohol is eliminated unchanged from the body by the various excretory organs, for many hours after it has been consumed. These experiments were repeated by Dr. Edward Smiith, * See "Familiar Letters on Chemistry," by Justus von Liebig-Letters xxvii. and xxix. t See Appendix F. $ That alcohol is present in the blood and brain for many hours after being consumed, and in a quantity sufficient to kindle a flame, had been previously shown by the researches of Mr. Hare, M.R.C.S., Dr. Ogston, Dr. Kiuk, and especially by Dr. Percy, in his prize thesis on Alcohol, published in 183q. The IAction of the Body oin Acohol. F.R.S.; and though, both in France and England, exception has been taken to the conclusions drawn by the original French experimentalists, because a large part of the alcohol swallowed was not accounted for, the scientific mind of this country generally accepts the experiments as conclusive against Liebig's theory, which taught that alcohol is more rapidly burnt off than other respiratory food, and that all the alcohol imbibed is disposed of in this mode. Seeing that for a period of eight and ten hours alcohol is eliminated unchanged by the lungs, the proof of any combustion (oxidation) within the body rests upon the supporters of Liebig's theory. Against that theory there are several powerful facts: first, the catalogue of well-established cases where alcohol has been found in the blood and brains of persons who have died under its influence, and in such quantity as to kindle on the application of a flame. Secondly, the inability to trace any of the derivatives of Alcohol, which ought to be discernible if alcohol is oxidized as the theory requires. Thirdly, the incontrovertible lowering of the animal temperature after the imbibition of alcohol, a result quite irreconcilable with the doctrine that alcohol, by its rapid combustion, helps sensibly, though briefly, to warm the human body. The utility of alcohol as a heat-producer may, therefore, be denied-first, because it is highly probable that it undergoes no decomposition in the animal economy; and, secondly, because, if it does so to any extent, it is much inferior to other substances which (I) are also nutritious (while alcohol is not); (2) do the work of warming more gradually and permanently; (3) are more cheaply procured; (4) and are entirely free from those irritant and other injurious effects of alcohol to which we shall afterwards advert. 2. The use of alcohol as "an arrester of waste " is a plea which, if founded on fact, would make strongly in favor of its general disuse. Waste of tissue is necessary to its 39 40 The Phiysiological Lffects of Alcohol renewal, and without such renewal there is death and not life; so that if alcohol does arrest the process of natural waste, it must so far act in opposition to the law of life. Dr. King Chambers says, "The most active renewal of the body possible is health the cessation of renewal is death; the arrest of renewal is disease." Dr. Markhlam says decidedly, "Alcohol does not prevent the wear and tear of the tissues." It is further impossible to harmonize with this tissue-saving theory the other theory, that alcohol stimulates to increased physical action, an effect which must carry with it a corresponding waste of tissue. The unfortunate phrase of Dr. Moleschott, that alcohol is "a box of saving," has done much to popularize the notion that in some mysterious way alcohol both saves tissue-which is only possible by lowering vital tonewhile it develops physical energy-which is only possible by facilitating the more rapid conversion of tissue. Some experiments showing an increase of weight while alcohol has been used, as compared with periods of abstention, have been cited in evidence of the "savings" theory. But what really happens seems to be this: that in small and less frequent doses, when the irritant action of alcohol predominates, there is no diminution of the waste process, while in cases where larger or more frequent doses have seriously weakened the principal organs the natural waste process is interfered with, thereby aggravating the diseased bodily condition of which it is a leading symptom. A free use of alcohol undoubtedly causes an accumulation of waste matter in the blood, but such an internal conservation of animal rubbish is anything but conservative of corporeal health and vigor. 3. I! is urged /hat "dzkestzon is imiroved by moderate surPlies of alcohol, which in this way conduces to man's ihysical welfare." Undoubtedly a sound digestion is a great blessing, and I Alcohol iot an Aid to Dizrstion. if the view just stated could be sustained, a point would be made on strictly physical grounds for the utility of alcoholic drinks. But it does not seem reasonable to suppose that the all-wise Creator would have left the soundness of digestion-an act so essential to the health of the living being-to depend upon the use of a substance whose production is the result of a twofold process of decay-first of some nitrogenous matter, and then of sugar acted upon by this decaying agent-a substance, too, of whose very existence mankind might conceivably have remained in utter ignorance, and from whose use millions of men have, in all ages, been debarred by want of knowledge or by deliberate choice. Again, if the function of digestion is aided by alcohol, we might expect this aid to be most required in the case of the very young and tender; whereas, by universal consent, its use in any degree by these is treated as unnecessary and unwise. Further, if the theory were well founded, persons using alcohol would be free from indigestion, or suffer less from this ailment than persons abstaining from its use. But the reverse of this is the patent fact. The use of alcohol is prevalent, and so is indigestion among the users, proving that the supposed assistance is very inefficient and equivocal; while the lesser prevalence among abstainers of this same complaint not only refutes the notion of some special virtue in alcohol, but is calculated to excite suspicion whether a mischievous delusion does not inhere in the traditional belief. This suspicion, we think, would be deepened into conviction if enquiry were directed to the action of alcohol within the stomach. Were the process of digestion at all assisted by alcoholic fluids, they must act by increasing the functional activity of the stomach, or by augmenting the secretion of the gastric fluid, or by rendering the food received more digestible than it would otherwise be. But it has been made clear that alcohol acts in none of these ways. Dr. Carpenter has 41 Tle'Plysiolog ic(l Effects of A lcoloi. ably exposed the fallacy of supposing that any good can arise from increasing the natural activity of the stomach, the sure consequence being that " the organ thus' assisted' will gradually lose its own independent vigor."* If it is pleaded that the alcohol is useful in giving temporary activity to an enfeebled organ, the folly of habitually using an agent which increases the feebleness complained of must be transparent. Far better will it then be to adopt some proper medicinal treatment fromn which real and permanent relief may be obtained. To expend pounds yearly in alcoholic medicines, and then, like the woman in the Gospel, to be no better, but rather worse, is not a proceeding attesting either the value of the medicine or the wisdom of the patient. As to an augmented supply of gastric juice, it is sufficient to state that the presence of food in the stomach is always followed by a sufficient supply of gastric juice; and, as will be shown hereafter, the only effect alcohol exerts upon that important fluid is to deteriorate its digestive quality and power. The notion that food is rendered more digestible by its association with an alcoholic liquid is overthrown by the well-known antiseptic property of alcohol, and by a variety of recorded experiments, making it plain that in precise proportion as it acts at all, alcohol renders food more difficult of digestion, so that its removal from the stomach is a condition essential to the completeness of the digestive process. Sometimes alcohol may mask a morbid state of the stomach, and sometimes it may give relief by helping to pass on portions of semi-digested food, but these are "aids" dearly bought, and which the intelligent owner of a disordered stomach would be only too happy to dispense with.t Hippocrates long ago had antfcipated * " Physiology of Temperance and Total Abstinence" (Prize Essay). t To apply to alcohol the name of a "tonic " is to pervert the just signification of terms. A tonic is that which gives tone or firmness to an organ, and therefore is the opposite of that which, by exciting an organ to extra action, is certain to impair its tone. I AlcoZo! not an Aid to Digestion. and opposed the fallacy here combated, for two of his aphoristic remarks are that "water-drinkers have keen appetites," and that "hunger is abated by a glass of wine." 4. fD is oflen urgfed that " the stirnuius to the general syste'iz adminiistered by a moderate guant/ly of alcohol is beneficial by the warinmt i occasions and thze strengtih i develofis." As to warmth, it has been previously explained that, on the theory of Liebig, alcohol is fuel, but of a very costly and needless kind, while, on the more recent theory of its elimination unchanged, it has no claim at all to the title of a heat-producing substance. Indeed, Liebig's theory did not explain the sudden sense of warmth experienced after the imbibition of alcohol; and, to account for this, recourse is had to the more rapid action of the heart, thus inducing an accelerated circulation of the blood. But unless this excessive action of the heart is sustained by repeated doses of alcohol, it must soon subside, and be followed by. reaction, and, in any case, habitually to drive the heart beyond its normal beat is to incur grave risk of diseased complications, both from the direct effect and the consequent reaction. All experience in the severest climates proves beyond a question that alcohol neither warms the blood nor enables the body to resist the cold; and scientific experiments have established the reality of a lowering of the vital temperature from the consumption of alcohol, however diluted or diminutive the dose. This important point will be reintroduced further on. That strength is evolved and used up by alcoholic drink is true, but this is wholly different from any development of strength in the system —as different as expending money is from its acquisition. Nothing is gained by eulogizing (as some have done) natural stimuli, and then adroitly applying the eulogium to alcohol because it, too, is a "stimulant." The language of some distinguished men in exposure of this verbal but dangerous fallacy may 1- -re be cited, not so much because of the authority of 43 44. Tze P'zysiological ]ffects of Alcohol. their names, as because of the cogency of their reasoning. Dr. James Johnson, physician to the late King William IV., thus meets the objection of a conscious benefit from the excitement induced: "Every substance, medicinal or dietetic, which is applied to the stomach induces a physiological action in the nerves, blood-vessels, and fibrous structure of that organ which we call excitement. If the substance applied be of a healthy quality and proper quantity, it produces insensible or salutary excitement; that is, an action of which we are unconscious. But let the substances introduced be of improper quality or an improper quantity (as ardent spirits or acrid medicine), and the action produced thereby will be raised from insensible to sensible excitement; that is, we shall be conscious of something going on in the stomach. Here the agent introduced becomes, in fact, an irritant, and the action introduced is irritation rather than excitement.... It is not very material whether the sensible excitement be of a pleasurable or painful kind; the final result will be the same-irritability or morbid sensibility. If the excitement be pleasurable, as from wine, we are spoiling the stomach as we spoil a child by indulgence; we are educating the organ improperly, and laying the foundation for morbid irritability.... In proportion as we rise in the scale of potation, from tablebeer to ardent spirits, in the same ratio we educate the stomach and bowels for that state of unnalural sensibility which in civilized life will sooner or later supervene."* We thus see how entirely fallacious-is the vulgar test of sensation, by which many are perniciously misled into attaching value to intoxicating drink, when, if better instructed, they would perceive that the sensations induced are witness to an agency incompatible with a perfect state of health. So, too, with the feeling of increased * "Essay on Indigestion." I Alcohol inot a Nat}ural Stimiulant. strength after the use of alcoholic liquors. That feeling, it may be observed, increases up to the point of visible intoxication-a clear indication of its radical delusiveness and of the source of the delusion-nervous irritation. But nervous irritation, so far from giving strength, uses up strength by increasing muscular exertion, or by bringing about a more rapid change of nerve-tissue without corresponding nutrition. Baron Liebig says: "Spirits, by their action on the nerves, enable him (the underfed laborer) to make up the deficient power at the expense of his body; to consume to-day that quantity which ought naturally to have been employed a day later. He draws, so to speak, a bill on his health, which must be always renewed because, for want of means, he cannot take it up; he consumes his capital instead of his interest; and the result is the inevitable bankruptcy of his body."* Dr. B. W. Richardson, in his Fourth Report on the Action of Organic Compounds, presented to the British Association for the Advancement of Science (I867), remarks: "All alcoholic bodies are depressants, and although at first, by their calling injuriously into play the natural force, they seem to excite, and are therefore called stimulants, they themselves supply no force at any time, but take up force, by which means they lead to exhaustion and paralysis of power." Alcohol, in short, no more gives strength than does nervous shock, and the delusion by which men have for ages been cheated into fancying that they are gaining strength when they are actually losing it, will be hereafter numbered among the most remarkable of the impositions perpetuated at the expense of credulous human nature. The high authority of Dr. Parkes, of Chatham, puts the relation of alcohol to strength in this conclusive form:' If we look upon the body as an agent of work from which we desire to * "Letters on Chemistry," Letter xxix. 45 46 Tile Phlysiological L.ffE,cis of A Icohol. obtain as much mechanical and mental as is compatible with health, we can consider the effect of alcohol, per se, as simply a means of irevenizfzf the develofinzeizt of force." Dr. Richardson, in discussing the " Physiological Position of Alcohol (Poizblar Science Revziew, April, I872), decisively affirms: " The evidence is all-perfect that alcohol gives no potential power to brain or muscle. A fire makes a brilliant sight, but'it leaves a desolation, and thus with alcohol." II.-I:;JURIOUS ACTION OF ALCOHOLIC DRINKS. That intoxicating liquors operate injuriously by reason of the alcohol they contain, even when the quantity consumed is not regarded as excessive, is attested by the following considerations I. PURE ALCOHOL IS CLASSED BY ALL TOXICOLOGISTS AMONRG POISONS.-Orfila and Christison place it in the catalogue of narcotic-acrid poisons-poisons, that is. whose primary effect is of an acrid or irritant nature, and whose secondary effect is that of narcotizing or paralyzing the organism with which they come into contact \When the application is very strong, the narcotic effect is hastened, and may altogether supersede the irritant symtoms. This has often been done when, by swallowing a large dose of ardent spirits, instant death has been produced. This fact proves-what might have been presumed-that dilution makes no essential difference in the character of the alcoholic action-the less water ther- is, the less alcohol is needed to produce toxic results; the more water that is mixed with alcohol, the larger or more frequent is the dose required. But in no case is the antagonistic relation between alcohol and the living system altered; any difference observed is one of degree only. It is incredible that its poisonous action can be transformed into an innocent one, unless-to speak para I k Alcoliol a l~tV;cotic and Poisot. doxicaly —the dose is so smiall, or the dilution so great, as to prevent any specific action whatever. But if intoxicating drinkl produced no characteristic effect as a bev7erage, it would not be consumed; and the retention of the epithet "intoxicating"-i.e., poisoning-to all alcoholic liquors in common use is a tacit confession that, in proportion to their strength and amount, they act toxically (poisonously) on the human system. The vulgar idea of a poison, as of something that mzust kill if not speedily ejected, blinds many to the true poisonous quality of of alcoholic drinks when freely used without causing immediate death. It is forgotten that in all these drinks the poison of alcohol is rendered less potent by its combination with water, but that the combination being mechanical, and not chemical, the alcoholic virus is not destroyed, and that, so far as it can act, the action will exhibit the distinctive features of the poisonous agent. This principle is in accordance with our kInowledge of all poisonous substances, none of which lose or change their specific properties by dilution or admixture. That alcohol should be an exception to this rule would require the plainest evidence, and from no quarter has such evidence been adduced. * 2. Evidence in support of the view that the action of alcohol is always injurious HAS BEEN FURNISHED BY PHYSIOLOGISTS OF THE HIGHEST REPUTE, wvriting, not as * Dr. Wilson, in his "Pathology of Drunkenness," writes (p. s92): " All these diversified proofs have pointed unqhallengeably to the conclusion that alcohol is the most widely and intensely destructive of poisons. In large and concentrated doses there are few which are more promptly and inevitably fatal. In more moderate and diluted potions, continuously repeated, it is, with its own peculiar modifications of action, obviously one of those so-called accumulative poisons of which science possesses other well-known examples in corrosive sublimate, foxglove, and arsenic." Dr.. Carpenter and Dr. B. Smith have expressed the same opinion in terms equally explicit. The latter says: "' For all medicinal and dietetic purposes, the dose only affects the degree, not the direction,-of the influence." (" P'hilosophical Transactions," 1859.) 47 48 The Phy'siological Effects of A co hot. advocates of a traditional bias, but as diligent searchers after truth. (I.) Evidence exists that alcohol is not int any sense a food, and hat it is not assizila!ed with the vital structure, but elii;iiinatedfromz it unzchanged, and the fresence of such a forezin substance cannot fail to be ferniczous. The doctrine here stated rests for support upon the numerous experiments of the French savants before adverted to (page 38), and repeated by Dr. Edward Smith, F.R.S., with very interesting additions. These experiments prove that immediately and for hours after swallowing even weak alcoholic drinks the spirit passes from the excretory organs unchanged. The objection raised by M. Baudot in France, and by Drs. Anstie, Dupre6, and Thudicum in England-that the major part of the alcohol imbibed cannot be re-collected-is inconclusive. To gather up the whole or chief part of a volatile fluid, after circulating through the system, and while in course of elimination for many hours by the skin, lungs, and other organs, is obviously a task next to impossible. That some sensible and not inconsiderable portion has been collected is presumptive evidence that the substance, as such, is not changed within the body; for there is not an instance on record of a substance being partly ejected unchanged, and partly transformed in the living organism. If any part of alcohol is changed, its derivatives (such as aldehyde) would be discoverable, but they have never been detected. Were alcohol oxidized so as to supply heat, according to Liebig's theory, the quantity of carbonic acid emitted would be increased, but a diminution instead of an increase is invariably perceived.* As it therefore * Besides the directly irritant effect of alcohol on the nervous system, the stimulating effect ascribed to it may probably arise, in a large degree, from the effort put forth by the organism to eject it as rapidly as possible. Voluntarily, however, to bring about and sustain a state of intestine war is not an indication of wisdom on the part of bodies corporate or corporeal. 'I' Alcohol a Caiise of Dimziisized Tctfopcrat?e. 49 serves no use in the animal economy, its introduction there (except under very rare and exceptional circumstances) must be regarded as a blunder and abuse. Dr. Parkes, in a letter to Dr. Anstie (Practz'ioner, Feb., I872), while acknowledging that the more recent experiments make the destruction of some of the alcohol taken very probable, denies that this proposition is proved, and pertinently adds: " Even if the complete destruction within certain limits were quite clear, this fact alone would not guide us to the dietetic value of alcohol. We have first to trace the effect of that destruction, and learn whether it is for good or for evil. You seem to think that the destruction must give rise to useful force, but I cannot see that this is necessarily so." (2.) Tlze f7ll of the te;iheralitre at onzce or soon after the imzbz'bilz'o, of alcoho, ol however moderaled,, is an evzdence of injtry szs/aznzed. Dr. Prout was one of the first of modern enquirers who noted this important fact, which has been corroborated by most subsequent experiments. For a time the irritant effect renders the subject unconscious of this result, but it is soon made apparent by a chilly feeling and an increased susceptibility to external cold. Every Arctic voyager bears witness to the injuriousness of spirits on this very account, when used in high latitudes to any extent. Vierordt says ("'Physiology of Respiration"): "The expiration of carbonic acid after the use of fermented liquors is considerably diminished, and does not return to its normal quantity for the space of two hours." Professor Binz, of Bonn, carried out a course of experiments upon this point, and discovered, to his surprise, as le confesses, that in both small and large doses alcohol lowered the temperature. "Experiments on man, made with small quantities of alcohol, led to very similar results. Half a glass of light hock, or a small glass of cognac, caused a fall of from o'4~ to o'6Q (centigrade) in a very short time." The explanation 50 Tlze Pl~siological Lffccts of Alcohol. offered, viz., that alcohol obstructs oxygen in its combustive operation, is reason sufficient why nature treats alcohol in the body as an intruder which cannot be too quickly expelled. An agent which hinders the natural generation of heat-one of the great manifestations and conditions of life-is prejudicial to the physical constitution. "The well-proven fact," says Dr. W. B. Richardson, "that alcohol reduces the animal temperature is full of the most important suggestions." * (3.) Thie Izfliztece of alcohol uion lihe blood is seen to be zIzjzrlozis rwherever z't /s traced. Experiments upon the blood of dogs were made with rectified spirits as far back as I679, by M. Courten, of Mlontpelier: and in the experiIments of Sir Benj. Brodie and Dr. Percy, the action of dilti/ed alcohol upon the blood was invariably seen to produce unhealthy darkness of color and evident imipurity of the vital fluid. The more recent researches of Dr. Bocker and Dr. Virchow unite to show that both the li.uor sanglztnlzis (blood-fluid) and the red corpuscles are impaired by alcohol even when the users of it appeared in good health; and Professor Schultz has observed "that alcohol stimulates the blood discs to an increased and unnatural contraction," inducing their premature decay, and rendering them less capable of absorbing oxygen and carrying away the carbon with which it is loaded. The microscope shows that dark oily specks are formed in the blood from this cause, and in I,OOO parts of a drunkard's blood Lecanu found II7 parts of fat, instead of two or three parts, the normal proportion. These observations * In the experiments made by Dr. Parkes and Dr. C. Wollowicz upon a healthy young man (Proceedings of Royal Society, No. 123,.870), the effect of red Bordeaux wine, in quantities of a half-pint per diem for five days, and of a pint per diem for the next five days, was but slightly marked upon the mean temperature, which stood in the water period of ten day at 97'726, and in the wine period at 97'560. In this case the use of the wvine at dinner, its comparative alcoholic weakness, and the state of the subject's health, may have co-operated to render the effect less than was apparent in other experiments. I A lcoliol a Cause of I~ipire Blood. show the tendency of alcohol, whenever present in the blood, to deteriorate the element on whose purity all health depends. "By experimenting on the blood (drawn from the body) with sherry wine, or diluted alcohol, the blood disc becomes altered in shape, and throws out matter from its interior; minute molecular particles also fringe the circumference. Some of these molecules separate from the blood discs, and float about in the fluid; othlers elongate into tails which move about with a tremulous motion in a very remarkable manner."* Dr. Smiles, in his Life of George Stephenson, relates an anecdote to the effect that the great engineer, who was exceedingly fond of microscopical observations, submitted to this test blood taken from several of his friends, and pronounced the blood of one, who was a teetotaler, to be "the most lively of the whole." This might be a simple coincidence, but it was in accordance with the principle that, other things being equal, blood unaffected by alcohol will be the purest and "most lively" of all. (4) The fiowers aindfrocess of dzgestion are weakened and impeded by the action of alcoholic liquor. Dr. Gordon, of the London Hospital, in his evidence before the Parliamentary Committee of 1834, said, " Dyspepsia has become the common disease of the poor class, produced entirely by the practice of sipping constantly and habitually small quantities of spirits." That the use of alcoholic fluids hinders the process of digestion is also demonstrated by direct experiments. Dr. Beddoes relates that, after giving two young dogs, of the same litter, equal quantities of food, three drachms of the spirit of wine of commerce, mixed with a drachm of water, were poured down the throat of one of the animals. On opening both, five hours afterwards, the stomach of the dog to which the alcohol had been given, was found nearly twice as full as * "The Physiological Action of Alcohol," by Dr. Monroe. 5 1 T7he Phiysiological Effec/s of Alcoiol. its fellow's. "The bits of flesh were as angular as immediately after they were cut off by the knife at the time of feeding; they were also as firmi in their substance. In the other dog, these angles were rounded off, and the pieces throughout much softer."* A similar experiment was made by Dr. Figg, who says, "To each of two mastiffs, six months old, five ounces of cold roast mutton, cut into squares, were given, the meat being passed into the cesophagus without contact with the teeth. An elastic catheter was then passed into the stomach of one of them, and one ounce and a quarter of proof spirit injected. After some hours had elapsed, both animals were killed. In the case where the meat had been administered by itself, it had disappeared. In the other the pieces were as angular as when swallowed."t The remarkable observations recorded by Dr. Beaumront, of America, upon the appearance of the stomach of Alexis St. Martin, who had an opening in his side, and put himselfunder the care of Dr. Beaumont, throw much light upon the state of that organ, when subjected to various kinds of diet. When spirits had been freely used, inflammatory and ulcerous patches appeared on the surface of the stomach, and the gastric juice was diminished in quantity, and was manifestly unhealthy. Yet though St. Martin did not complain of feeling ill, Dr. Beaumont remarks: "The free use of ardent spirits, wines, beer, or any intoxicating liquor, when continued for some days, has invariably produced these morbid changes." t That the digesting fluid, the gastric juice, is acted upon prejudicially by alcohol by precipitating one of its principal constituents, pepsine, is incontrovertibly proved. Dr. Dundas Thomson, in a lecture on "Digestion" (184I) pointed out this fact, and Drs. Todd and Bowman, in their * Hygeia, vol. ii., Essay 8. t- Report of International Temperance and PIrohibition Convention, p. 255. , Beauimont's" Experiments and Observations," etc., p. 237. 0 52 I 1. Digcstiooz Hiindcered by A lcoIo/. great work on " Physiology," after remarking the same phenomenon, instructively add: "WVere it not that wine and spirits are rapidly absorbed, the introduction of these into the stomach, in any quantity, would be a complete bar to the digestion of food, as the pepsine would be precipitated from the solution as quickly as it was formed by the stomach." Raw beef immersed in spirits for twelve hours loses a fourth of its weight, owing to the abstraction of the water, and is covered with a brown deposit, die " to the caustic influence of the alcohol on the albuminous element of the beef." Dr. Monroe, F.L.S., having placed equal quantities of finely-minced beef in three phials-one containing gastric juice and water, the second gastric juice and alcohol, the third gastric juice and paleale-the temperature being the same as that of the stomach, Ioo degrees, the results at the tenth hour were as follows: the contents of the first phial were dissolved like soup, ie., thoroughly digested; the contents of the second and third were found to be solid, with the pepsine precipitated. It thus appears that alcohol can only act on the digestive process by retarding it, and that it is only by the absorption of the alcohol imbibed that the process of digestion can be completed. So long as alcohol is present in the stomach. the first grand condition of alimentation is arrested. (5.) By the deteriora/ilit, effect of acozol on; lthe blood, and its irritait! effect onz the nervozus system at large, many diseased states of important organs of the body are set up or fostered, and the whole body becomes more easily susceptible of zymotic diseases. (a) Falt, degeneration-a very common complaint, as Dr. King Chambers testifies-is one of slow but certain formation from the impure alcoholized'state of the blood, even when no intoxication is visible; and to the same cause all experienced physicians ascribe diseases of the lungs, liver, and brain, the healthy discharge of whose functions is impossible unless the 53 54 The?Jiysiolo,ica Effects of Alcohol purity of the blood is maintained. (b) It is also clear that blood impurities must increase fie tendenzcy to " catch " diseases of zymootic orzgin, such as fever, small-pox, cholera, etc.; and it is also plain how readily the violence of these and of all other diseases, when present, is augmented, both by the bad condition of the blood and by the lessened capacity of the body and its various organs to "shake off" the particular virus in operation. The weakened walls, so to say, yield to a pressure which, had they been better cemented, they would have successfully resisted. Dr. Lionel Beale, F.R.S., physician to King's College Hospital, observes: "Alcohol does not act as food; it does not nourish tissues; it may diminish waste by altering the consistence and chemical properties of fluids and solids. It cuts short the life of rapidly-growing cells, or causes them to live more slowly. The remedies which act favorably really seem to act, not by increasing vital power, but by decreasing the rate at which vital changes are proceeding. This view accounts for the shrivelling of the hepatic cells, the shrinking of the secretive structure, and the increased hardness and condensation of the entire liver which result from the continual bathing of the gland-structure in blood loaded with alcohol. It accords with the gradual shrinking and condensation of tissues which have long been accustomed to excess. The tendency to increased formation of adipose tissue may be explained upon the same view, and the stunting which follows its exhibition to young animals is readily accounted for," (6.) The nervine stimulation following the use of alcoholic drinks, so far from supplying or inducing increased strength, is an inevitable cause of weakness. Sudden nervous shock, more or less severe, must lead to loss of power; and all scientific enquiry tends to assign alcohol a place, not among the true stimuli-such as air, light, food, and water, which act calmly and soothingly-but with It I A lcoliol ait A efosthei5c. anesthetic agents like chloroform and ether, whose short excitant effect is succeeded by a depressing or deadening influence upon the nervous system. Dr. King Chambers, in his " Renewal of Life," challenges the right of alcohol to the title of a true stimulant:" What is a stimulant? It is usually held to be something which spurs on an animal to a more vigorous performance of its duties. It seems doubtful if, on the healthy nervous system, this is ever the effect of alcohol, even in the most moderate doses, for the shortest period of time. A diminution of force is quite consistent with augmented quickness of motion, or may it not be said that, in involuntary muscles, it implies it? The action of chloroform is to quicken the pulse, yet the observations of Dr. Bedford Brown on the circulation in the human cerebrum during anaesthesia clearly show that the propelling power of the heart is diminished during that state." Dr. B. W. Richardson, in his Sixth Report to the British Scientific Association, reproduced in a lecture entitled "Physiological Research on Alcohols,"* discountenances and repels the idea that alcoholic excitement is strength: "As soon as the alcohol makes its way into the organism and diffuses through the fluids, so soon there is depression, so soon respiration falls, carbonic acid gas from respiration decreases, and muscular strength, consciousness, and sensibility decline.... Speaking honestly, I cannot admit the alcohols through any gate that might distinguish them as apart from other chemical bodies I can no more accept them as foods than I can chloroform, or ether, or methylal. That they produce a temporary ex citement is true; but, as their general action is quickly to reduce animal heat, I cannot see how they can supply animal force.... To resort for force to alcohol is, to my mind, equivalent to the act of searching for the sun in subterranean gloom, until all is night." That the * Delivered Dec. 7, IS59; reported in Medical Times aezd Gazewte, Dec. iB8. 55 56 Thze PlJysiolo,'ical LEffcc/s oXf Alcolo/. brain, the centre of nervous sensibility, should be dis turbed by alcohol, when used in any quantity, is a sign of the ficility with which injury is done to the seat of thought. The action of the heart is injuriously increased by the alcohol used, and in proportion to the amount. The very interesting experiments made by Dr. Parkes and Dr. Wollowicz (" Proceedings of the Royal Society," No. I20, I87o) showed in the case of a healthy young soldier that "the heart during the alcoholic period did daily work in excess equal to lifting I5 tons and 8-ioths per foot; and in the last two days did extra work to the amount of 24 tons lifted as far!" (Instead of daily work, equal to lifting 122 tons one foot, the daily work done was equal to lifting nearly I38 tons, and even I46 tons!) In commenting on this fact, Dr. Richardson observes (Poftlar Science IPeviek, April, I872): " Little wonder is it that, after the labor imposed upon it by six ounces of alcohol, the heart should flag. It is hard physical work to fight against alcohol-harder than rowing, walking, wrestling, carrying heavy weights, coal-heavinig, or the treadwheel itself." Yet people-and educated people-. mistake this exaction of work and loss of vital strength for an increase of vigor! 3. It is impossible to enumerate a tenth of the MIEDICAL JUDGMENTS ADVERSE TO THE USE OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, but a selection of some of the more striking is furnished elsewhere;* and it ought to be remembered, as adding peculiar force to these professional opinions, that, in a great majority of cases, they are those of men who might say, with Dr. Richardson, that their " prejudices in regard to alcohol are, by moderate habit, but confessed inconsistelicy, in favor of it." 4. bo:ertence, bo-/ genera? ano coimzaralzve, declares that the use of zlIo.ricalzg l/zio-rs is szot tsefzl4 bill jiDurz'ozs. (I.) zTallzto,s anhd tribes who have lived without any alco * See Appendix G. I t i I Evzidcnce iln I(ra,r of A4bsliitzccce. holic drinks have not only equalled in health and vigor others that have used them, but have been remarkable for their freedom from numerous species of disease. The early Persians and Romans, the Saracens for centuries, the aborigines of North America and New Zealand when first discovered, a large portion of the present inhabitants of India, including the Himlalayan tribes, and the rural population of tihe Turkish Empire, supply examples of a high average state of health, and of the strongest powers of physical endurance, without any recourse to the liquors supposed by many in this country to be the sources of both. (2.) Scr'zA/zral hzstory furnishes us with corroborative evidence, in the sojourn of the Israelites in the desert for forty years without strong drink; in the life of Samson, "strong above compare," to whom all intoxicating drink was forbidden (not, surely, because it would have made him naturally stronger!); in the experience of the Nazarites, who were famed for their personal beauty and vigor;* in the case of the Rechabites, who had been gainers by centuries of abstinence; and in the lives of men like Samuel, Elijah, Daniel, and John the Baptist, whose habits of abstinence proved serviceable, and not a hindrance, to the execution of their laborious missions. (3.) There is the evidence procurable as to the health of persons living surrounded by users of the drinks from which they themselves abstained, and attaining, in many cases, years " longi-drawn out" and a hale old age.t (4.) Appeal can be made to the testimonies of!ersons exposed to severe labors and protracted strazn on bodty and mind-philosophers, poets, generals, divines, philanthropists, travellers, and the like.: *" Her Nazarites were purer than snow, thev waere whiter than milk, they were more ruddy in body than rubies, their polishing was of sapphire" (Lam. iv. 7). t See Appendix H..t See Appendix I. 57 58 Tlie Phiy siolooica IEff('cts of A Icohol. (5.) Legitimate and striking deductions can be drawn from the statislics of healh a;zd longev/iy anmot abstainers and others. There are statistics in regard to the army of very considerable value. A division of the British Army in Egypt, sent from India in isoI, was left without ardent spirits; but, though the fatigue and heat were excessive, Sir James McGrigor, M.D., states: "At no time was the Indian Army in so healthy a state." Sale's Brigade in Affghanistan, when stationed in Jellalabad, was "without spirits " and "without either sickness or crime." The Rev. G. B. Gleig (Chaplain-General), in his history of that war, states: "Their beverage was only water, yet they drank it to the health of many far away, and were happy with a sober joy." When a temperance society was established in the Cameronian Regiment, the annual deaths in the regimental hospital, which had been for I4 years 72 per thousand, sank to 26, and the next year to 22. Liver-complaints sank to half their former amount. The hospitals received 4 per cent. of abstainers, and of others 92 per cent. In six months of i838, the sick among the abstainers averaged 3'83, and among the others 9'39. Six European regiments stationed in the Madras Presidency, in r848-9, were tested with the following results: Sick. Died. Teetotalers........... I13088 I-II* MIoderatedrinkers.. I4t'59 2'31 Intemperate........ 214'86 4'45 In regard to "fever only," it was found that the teetotalers had suffered at the rate of 3I'3o per cent.; the moderate men, I7'78; the intemperate, 2o'I6; and this solitary apparent advantage was paraded by some writers who *" Or, to put it," says Dr. Carpenter, "in another form, only one in ninety of the teetotalers dies annually even in India (and this rate would be extraordinarily low for a similar body of men in this country), whilst one in fortytwo and a half dies among the temperate, and one in twenty-two and a half among the intemperate." 11 i I Evri'ieztce iii Fav'or of A bsthi/zcncce. wished to discredit the total abstinence cause; but it was discovered, on enquiry, that the 84th Regiment, which furnished to this comparison a large proportion of the abstainers, was, during this year, stationed at Secunderabad-a most unhealthy station-but where, in J1848-9, the 84th lost 22 per one thousand, in place of the usual average of 70 per one thousand. Improved ventilation conduced, with enhanced sobriety, to moderate the fierceness of the fever-laden exhalations.* The experience of the American armies during the civil war attested the physical advantages of total abstinence when exercised on either side by officers or men. Captain Huyshe, in his narrative of the Red River Expedition, which consisted of about I,200 soldiers and several hundred assistants, bears the most emphatic testimony to the value of the abstinence regimen carried out. (See pages 92-3, I I3, etc., of his stirring story.) One extract will suffice: " Not a man of the Red River force touched a drop of alcoholic or fermented liquor the whole way from Shehandowan to Fort Garry, except he was ill and received it from the store of miedical comforts; and there was positively no sickness, and a total absence of crime, combined with the utmost cheerfulness and good-humor, while the work performed stands wholly unrivalled for its unusual nature as well as its severity." Captain Huyshe strongly advocates the abolition of the spirit-ration to the British Army in the field. In the American Navy, the exclusion of grog was followed by none but the best results, and the thousands of ships that navigate the seas with crews that are without any ration of grog or other liquor, add corroborative evidence to the worth of total separation from strong drink. Temperance benefit societies-such as the Rechabites, Sons of Temperance, etc.-show a rate of sick * During Sir John M4oore's retreat to Corunna, the army was found to improve in health as soon as the usual allowance of spirits was unattainable.Dr. CarPenter. 59 i 6o 77lie Pl'ysiolo;icl Aetl'cfs of 4 /c~/oh. ness and mortality below that of similar institutions; but the most comprehensive -and conclusive evidence upon this point is afforded by the books of the Temperance and General Provident Institution, which, after existing for ten years (1840-I85o) as a strictly Abstinence Insurance Society, and exhibiting a very low rate of mortality, began, in I850, to receive as members very sober persons not abstainers; but the two classes were kept in distinct sections, in order that the profits might be respectively apportioned. Since then, four bonuses have been declared-viz., in I855, I86o, i865, and 1870. Comparing the reversionary bonuses in the Whole Life Department of the Temperance Section with those in the General Section, the results were as follows: Date. Temperance Section. Per cent. I855......... 35 to 75 I86 0......... 35 to 86 1865......... 23 to 56 I870.........34 to 84 In the five years ending December 31, I870, the expected claims in the Temperance Section were 549, for ~Ioo0,446; the actual claims were 4II, for ~72,676. In the General Section, the expected claims were I,oo8, for ~i96,352; the actual claims were 944, for ~230,297. Comment is needless, except by way of remark, that the Temperance Section is weighted with the policies of many reclaimed drunkards whose constitutions have suffered irreparable injury from their previous habits. Despite, however, of this drawback, the superiority of the Temperance Section has been five times consecutively maintained-a result with which chance can have had nothing to do. A similar superiority is shown in the reports of other life assurance companies where the total abstainers are insured in a separate section. The general health 4 General Section. Per cent. 23 tO 50 24 tO 59 17 tO 52 20 tO 49 I I I Ezvidcice i,,t Fazu or f.4bsthiiii6ce. of abstainers, as compared with that of non-abstainers, and as compared with their own state of health before abstinence, is a further vindication of their distinctive regimen; and it is constantly remarked that in all cases of severe contusions, fractures, woundings, fevers, and epidemical disorders, the restorative powers of abstainers exceed those of other persons-the reason of which lies in a sounder condition of the vital organs, and a greater measure of that natural reserve-force which moderate drinking insidiously, but surely, drains off. Where total abstainers addict themselves to athletic and other exercises, they acquit themselves with singular credit, other conditions being equal; as witness Mr. Angus Cameron, who has made the highest score yet reached at WVimbledon, and has been twice winner of the National Rifle Association's Gold Medal and Queen's Prize. The "training " for muscular feats is, in most cases, conducted either on the abstinence plan or with a near approach to it; and so it was in ancient times with the competitors in the Grecian games.* Even the figment that sudden abstinence is dangerous is refuted by the daily experience of more than twenty thousand prisoners (amounting in the course of a year to several times that number of persons) who are instantly deprived of alcoholic drink when committed to jail. It might be expected, apart wholly from the question of abstinence as a general rule, that these individuals (most of whom are free drinkers when out of prison, and not a few of whom find their way to jail through indulgence in drink) would suffer, temporarily at least, by their sudden exclusion from alcoholic liquors; the opposite, however, is the fact, and, in the Appendix to the Convocation Report on Intemperance, eighteen pages * In a work on "Athletic Training and Health," J. Harrison, MI.R.C.S., states (p. 93) that the conviction that "alcoholic drinks are not admissible into a training dietary" "has been forced upon the writer by much observation and reflection." I I 6i Tlz6e Physiological Exects of Alcohol. of selections are given from the written evidence of governors of jails and masters of workhouses, declaring that the consequences flowing from this peremptory interdiction are of a salutary kind. * If, at all and to any, intoxicating liquors are a necessity, or an aid to health and strength, it niust be to those who are deprived of that liberty and social intercourse by which the spirits are cheered and the animal vigor sustained; yet, if prisoners can live and thrive on a dietary into which alcohol does not enter, it may be inferred that other persons, with so many advantages of life, do not stand in need of it, but would be better without it, if they had the wisdom to adopt, and the courage to continue, the abstinence plan. The conclusion, then, to which we are drawn by a candid consideration of medical principles, and a wide induction of facts, past and present, in great abundance, is adverse to any use of alcoholic beverages, and in favor of the iudgnent which treats them as essentially injurious to the physical health and vigor of our species. O BJECTIONS. I. It may be said that " inloxzicalzng agents of somze kind have been used in all a,es and by all nations, and/ hat this universal usage constitutes a defence of the practice and a reason for believing that it always will be continued." But this argument from universality is both historically and morally unsound. It would be impossible to prove that in any age of the world even a majority of the persons then living had been users of some kind of intoxicating substance. The highest moral utterances of the most ancient historical religions-Judaism (in its Nazarite institution), Brabminism, Buddhism, and Mohammedanism -have been distinctly on the side of separation from *See Appendix J. 62 I I II Objectioin fr-oim "Airtificia! Life" Answ'errcd. 63 strong drinks, and have attracted to that rule numberless millions of our race. But if it could be shown-as it can not-that indulgence in alcoholic or other intoxicants has been the common habit of mankind, the inference that the prevalence of such a habit involves its own vin dication would be utterly false. It would not even tend to show that man has a natural instinct for such drinks and drugs, since there is a flood of present evidence that they are never craved until they have been first supplied, and that there is no sign of suffering from their absence where they are never given. Surely it needs no proving that acknowledged evils may be very common in every age, and almost or quite universal in some ages, yet with out ceasing to be evils-evils not to be extenuated or cherished, but as speedily removed as can be. Slavery, despotism, superstition, violence, fraud, and every form of sensuality, are not novelties on the globe, nor has the empire of any vice been limited to a section of the human family. To assert, also, that any indefensible usage "must" continue because it is ancient and general is to resign all hope of human advancement. Is drunkenness J necessary and good, and is it always to endure because it can plead hoary antiquity and a widespread rule? Why, then, should a plea of virtue or perpetuity be set up for the liquors out of whose use, and from whose intoxicat ing quality, all this drunkenness has sprung? If the many go astray and suffer thereby, no one can find in these facts a vindication for his own sanction of the error, or of his own refusal to seek the introduction of safer and better habits. 2. It may be said that, "however scitfed total abstinence woulod be to an ideal state of society, we live in so artifi cial a state that deviations from a rig idly wholesome die tary are not only excusable, but unavoidable, and even use f'il." This argument or apology-one often heard-is a fair specimen of the confusion of thought under which N 64 The P/lisiologic?ial Effcts of A Icoho/. men love to hide the weakness of their case. Social life in itself is not artificial in any unnatural sense, for "it is not good for man to be alone," and from the social senti ment are derived the -family, the tribe, the state; nor is there any reason, intrinsically, why artificial arrangements, arising out of the complexities of civilization, should be injurious to the human constitution. Labor, either of hand or brain, is not unhealthy, but a means of health, unless excessive; and though undue labor, impure air, mental anxiety and suffering, and other things (many of them not limited to an artificial state of society), do conduce to bodily weakness and decay, how can it be shown that resorting to alcoholic drinks is wise and useful? To say that "we live artificially, and therefore must use artificial diet "-i.e., brandy, wine, or beer-is a mere play upon words; for if the artificial life be in itself an evil, and if the use of alcohol be also an evil, how can the conjunction of the evils result in benefit to the subject of them? The excuse that so much work "1must" be done, and that alcohol must be used as a forcing-pump, whatever damage may ensue, is not a plea which can be sustained on the ground of morality; and it has but a limited application in a physiological sense. If alcohol draws upon the reserve strength of the system, and uses it up, this plan, like that of living above one's income must come to an end by-and-by, and premature weakness will set in. The physiological offence will be avenged in due course, to say nothing of the collateral losses and injuries sustained, or of the affront offered to him who has made us, and who has given us our physical-powers to use and not abuse. No doubt the struggle of life is keen and wearing, and critical periods may occur when alcohol, opium, even arsenic and other poisons, would supply the temporary aid so earnestly desired; "but the prudent man foreseeth the evil," and he knows that to keep the blood, muscles, and nerves free from noxious agents is I I eI I Objectzgor fr-omi "';7odcrai-vn " A nsweried. 65 the best preparation for times of pressure; and he also knows that during periods of pressure it is the wisest, on the whole, to trust to Nature's own resources rather than to those illusory aids which, like the secrets of the black art in tales of imagic, cannot be employed without ult4iate anid heavy retribution. The gifts which alcohol proffers even to the harassed and overworked are alwavs to be feared; and many are there who, like the Trojans of old, have had reason to rue that the tempting offering was not resolutely rejected. Scientifically regarded, the very fact of so much strain being nowadays put upon all classes is an argument, not for the using, but disusing alcoholic liquors, seeing that they possess no really sustaining properties, and that their seductive tendency is calculated to encourage their use in increasing quantities, and at diminished intervals, when once they are taken into the confidence of the toiler. " Fire," says the proverb, "is a very good servant, thoiugh a very bad master "; but of the fire-waters it can be truly affirmed that. while they only render apparent service, they often end by securing a mastership fatal to the welfare of those whom they enslave. 3. It may be said " thar nearly all, zf not all, the injvry fIroduced by znztoxzcating driiks would be frevented bygreat moderation Min Ieir use." There are doubtless degrees of injury inflicted by strong drinks; but if, as we have shown, the benefit they yield is insensible, and their habitual use in any quantity pernicious, it is trifling with both language and facts to enter an appeal on behalf of "extreme moderation." No "moderation" can be so extreme, where the drinks are used at all, as to render them neutral in a physiological sense; if they act, they act for good or ill; and if for ill, they ought not to be consumed. " Do thyself no harm " not "a little harm only -is the mandate of reason and religion; and the law of temperance cannot be tolerant of indulgences that rest 66 Tfze P,zysiolog'ical b.ffccts of Alco1hol. for their defence upon the smallness of the evils they entail. 4. It may be said that "all cons/fI/z'/ins are -not azlike, and that there mzcus/, after all, be soimedfaw ale thle case for total abstinenice, because not a few, havzzng honestly tried to carry zi out, have failed and been coimjelled to return o lthe dietetic use of in/oxicat/zng drinks." That constitutions are often dissimilar, and that what suits one will not suit every one, are unquestionable truths; but extreme differences are not common, and those that exist are always found amenable to adaptations of the same general hygienic conditions-food, air, and water. Nature is elastic within i certain bounds, but nature will not make new elements for the sake of those who think they cannot support existence on the old. Certain kinds of food may be more adapted to some than to others, but the instances are * Dr. Anstie is the only man of science who has attempted to define, by alcoholic measurement, the limit of "moderation." He makes it to consist in not more than one ounce and a half of absolute alcohol daily for an adult male (or two ounces in case of unusual exertion), and three-quarters of an ounce daily for an adult female. The latter would represent two glasses of port or sherry. Judged by this rule, it may be said that "moderation" is unknown in the case of multitudes who use strong drink, and never known in convivial circles. Dr. Parkes has justly said of Dr. Anstie's daily allowance for men, "This would be contained in one and a half pint of beer with five per cent. of alcohol, or in fifteen ounces of claret with ten per cent. Is is not quite correct to say that most men would consider these quantities absurdly small?" Yet Dr. Anstie admits that all excess "acts as a narcotic poison to the nervous system"; and hence the conclusion is irresistible that millions of people, who flatter themselves that they are "moderate drinkers," are seriously deluded, and habitually poison themselves by the alcohol they consume. Even could it be shown that a particular quantity of alcohol might be taken daily without physical injury, yet the difficulty of applying the test, and the injury arising from error, would be sufficient to stamp abstinence as the wiser plan; added to which are all the extra-physiological reasons which make abstinence preferable. The Latin word moderetio (whence our "moderation ") signifies, in a moral sense, the regulation of the passions; and we contend that the virtue of moderation finds higher expression in the abstinence which renders any evil from alcohol impossible, than in the use which is checked by the desire [often inefficient] of guarding against this evil. l Objection from Alleged Failure A nswered. 67 rare and abnormal where substances, generally poisonous, are innocuous and even useful to any. In all main points men are made alike, or they would not all be men; and the man has yet to be born on whose constitution alcohol can be shown to act as a food, or as assisting, instead of retarding, the vital functions of the physical system. It is true that many who have tried the abstinence plan have abandoned it, but from the ranks of these seceders great deductions must be made. First, there are those whose trial has been plainly inadeqztate-a few days or weeks only. A mere change of habit might be expected to cause temporary inconvenience; much more when the change has been from the use to the disuse of an article characteristically exciting to the nervous system. Secondly, there are those who, having become really ill, have been easiy persuaded by their friends that thiz'r abstinence'was the cause, but who have often been ill before and since without ascribing their ailments to strong drink. Thirdly, there are those who, having become abstainers from benevolent motives, but without any knowledge of the action of strong drink on the body, have anagnz5fedMhe "sacrifices" macde, and have looked upon themselves as martyrs in the cause of humanity. That the imagination has an astonishing effect on the bodily state is known to all physiologists, who will agree that an expectation of ill-health is expressly adapted to predispose to it, and even to provoke it. Instances are known where persons who have abstained, and have suffered in health from the fancy of having resigned a physical good, have regained their spirits and health when they had become convinced that intoxicating liquors possessed no power of benefiting the users. Fourthly, there are those who, having been consumers, daily or more frequently, of bitter beers and ales, have accustomzed their stomachs to the billtter ingredient it these ziiuors, and it is not improbable but that in their case sudden abstinence from 68 Tlie Pli)'siolo,icaI Eff'cIs of A Ico hol. this tonic constituent has been followed by a sense of stomachic weakness and siymptomns of indigestion. But these effects would have followed the discontinuance of any similar beverage destitute of alcohol, and have no relation to the question of the influence of alcohol upon health and life. It should be remembered that tonics, properly so called, cannot be habitual, used with impunity, and that, when the stomach flags from their abandonmeint, the evidence of their abuse is palpably disclosed. The proper course, then, to be adopted is not to resume the use of an alcoholic drink which has a tonic united with it, but to take some tonic apart from the alcohol, diminishling the quantity and strength of the dose till the stomach regains its natural digestive power and can dispense with the misused tonic infusion.* Where the stomachic debility is chronic, enlightened medical advice should be procured, but all alcoholic compounds strenuously declined. After abstracting from the list of failures these four classes of failing abstainers, the remnant of other cases will be found exceedingly small, and will consist of two kinds: persons who have relied so much and for so long on alcoholic excitement as to require medical treanizent in connection wzth abstinence —not afiarl from abstinence and persons who are suffering from some ailment whose symptoms are masked by alcohol, but the unmasking of which by abstinence is a real service to the individuals so affected. Forms of hysteria come under this description, though it is well known that hysteria is never cured-frequently it is caused-by the use of alcoholic drinks. That total abstinence really injures any one adopting it is a notion confuted by the voluntary experience of * The fashionable taste of late years for bitter beer has been exceedingly prejudicial; the appetite may be improved for a time by the greater quantity of hops used, but all medical testimony condemns the use of bitters as an article of diet. i i iI I OU!ectioi fi'omt zclediciial Use A zszuered. 69 millions, of all ages, temperaments, constitutions, and employments; by the effects of compulsory abstinence upon the inmates of prisons and workhouses; and by the scientific researches that have proved that every specific action of alcohol on the vital organism is to injure and not to aid it. There is one other argument, of no small force, on this very point. Individuals who go to gross excess can only be reclaimed by total abstinence, which is their one means of safety, and imperative, immediate duty; all confess this; but such individuals are of varied constitutions, and they are the persons who, if long use and habit create a need for alcoholic drink, are most of all incapable of existing without it. Either, then, such persons can or cannot totally abstain without injury to health; if they cannot, to urge them to abstinence is inviting them to seal their earthly doom; if they can (and that they can is seen by the reclamation of tens of thousands who have lived more healthfully than before), it is made clear, by the most powerful form of a fortiori reasoning, that all other users of alcoholic liquors can abstain with safety, and that those who have failed to persist in their abstinence, on the ground of injury to health, have fallen into an error which longer experience and better information would have effectually dispelled. 5. It may be said that "alcoholic!reaaratioizs are usefuz adl even necessary al tiles i~n the treatment of disease." If so, there is no reason that they should be taken in health, or for the preservation of health. On the con trary, their utility in disease must be impaired by such a customary use as renders the system less susceptible of their influence at critical periods. If benefit is ever to be received from their medicinal application, the daily consumer is less likely to derive it than he who is a total abstainer from their use as a beverage. This is a universally recognized principle as to the action of all medicines, and constitutes, therefore, a cogent reason 1, i 70 Tlhe Piysiolog,ical Effects of Alcohtol. why alcoholic compounds should be removed from diet etic use, and why, when medicinally prescribed, the strength and frequency of the dose and the period of use should be strictly defined by the medical adviser. Yet, even as medicines, there are some weighty considerations for reducing their application to the lowest point, or renouncing them entirely. (I.) The long-established use of alcoholic drinks in this country makes their strzic/, nedicinal enzjloynzen/e exceedti;T/y dzifcztl, as much so as would be the simple medicinal use of opium in Eastern countries where opium is smoked and eaten daily. Under such circumstances, to maintain a sharp distinction between food and physic is next to impossible with the multitude, who will be only too glad to prize and apply as food that which can only be of value as a drug. (2.) The large number of persons who have contracted a craving for alcohol, and to whom its taste, even as medicine, brings iioral dasnhier, makes it much to be desired that it should never be prescribed where other articles will be of service. That it should never be given on any account to reclaimed inebriates seems the dictate of common sense; yet it is a dictate frequently violated by medical men, who never enquire into their patients' habits, or who recklessly ignore the moral consequences almost certain to arise. (3.) Thie special evils likely to flow from fazients actztfg as their owin doctors in regard to strong drink, when once they had been advised to take it for any ailment, is not to be overlooked. Of all "medicines," there is none that people (if at all encouraged by medical opinion) are so ready to prescribe for themselves as alcoholic liquor, however trivial the complaint. They make the wine or spirit merchant or the publican their apothecary on any pretence, and without any concern for the purity of the draught or its specific adaptation to their condition of health. I k D1isuse of A lco/iol as:I7 cdiciiie. (4) The pro//-'c.. os recommendation of alcoholic liquors by members of the medical faculty is ad azbise wholly iln'defensible, whether or not alcohol has medicinal virtues in particular cases. Dr. Carpenter has not hesitated to affirm, "Nothing in the annals of quackery can be more empirical than the mode in which fermented and distilled liquors are directed or permitted to be taken by a large proportion of medical practitioners." Since this was written, Dr. Todd's system of treating fever with heavy doses of brandy has been pursued, and, after causing an awful excess of hospital mortality, has met with the condemnation it deserved from seme of the leading organs of the profession. Dr. S. Wilks, of Guy's Hospital, has severely censured the sanction, by many medical practitioners, of the popular opinion that patients who are " low" need "supporting" by wine and spirits.* (5.) A variety of authentic testimonies and facts are on record, tending to the conclusion that a diiminished- use of alcohol. and even zts entzire dzisuse, in the treatiezetz of dizsease is attended wisth a decreased mortality and more rabzpid recover,. The most eminent members of the fiaculty are generally agreed that the alcoholic treatment of cholera and deliri'umt tremens is a complete mistake; and the statistics supplied by Drs. Gairdner and Russell, with respect to the City of Glasgow Fever Hospital, have shown a reduction of the mortality from I7-5 to ii'9 per cent., and. later still, to 9'o5 per cent., a reduction keeping pace with a lessened consumption of wine and spirits by the patients. To the same effect are the testimonies of medical men in large practice, who have, with striking advantage, discontinued for years all use of alcohol, whatever the nature or type of disease under their care.t If, then, there is rea * See also Dr. Wilks's Letter in Lancet, May iS, I867; also in Lancet, January 8, x870. t See " Medical Experience and Testimnony in Favor of Total Abstinence" ('Twecdie, Strand.)-Dr. MIunroe, of Hull: "It is now seven years since I 7 T I 72 Thze Pliysfo[ogical Effe'cts of AlcoAhol. son to believe, that diseases would be less fatal, and more successfully overcome, were alcohol less patronized, or even excluded from the mafceria izedzca; and if it is obvious that when prescribed it should not be carelessly used in the form of ordinary liquors, but carefully furnished in the form of a chemical preparation; and, if it is further apparent that any benefit by alcohol in sickness must largely depend upo-n abstinence from it in health-no argument can be other than intrinsically invalid which infers its advantage as diet from its supposed utility in disease. From all that has been advanced, we may reasonably conclude that intoxicating beverages are of no advantage, and that their alcoholic property, so far from rendering them contributory to health and strength, conduces to the injury of those who partake of them, and thereby hinders the attainment of that standard of physical vigor and enjoyment put within the reach of his creatures by the beneficent Creator; and therefore that, in the words of one great medical declaration, "Total and universal abstinence from alcoholic liquors and intoxicating beverages of all sorts would greatly contribute to the I have ordered any alcoholic drink either as medicine or diet; and the success attendant upon its disuse is so gratifying as to lead me to its entire abandonment in the treatment of disease." Mr. Higginbottom, F.R.S., of Nottingham, has discontinued the use of alcohol with marked success for forty years. Mr. Bayley, M.R.C.S., of Stourbridge: " I have treated successfully nearly every form of disease without alcohol, and with the best results, for years." Mr. Mudge, MI.R.C.S., of Bodmin: "There never has been made a trial of diminished alcohol, or none at all, without good resulting and preponderating." Mr. Collenette, L.R.C.P., Guernsey: "For some twenty-nineyears I have banished them from my practice, and I have never had cause to regret having done so." Mr. Bennett, M.R.C.S., Winterton, refers to a treatment of 40o cases of fever, and attendance on 3,0o0 cases of childbirth, without any alcoholic treatment, with manifest advantage. Dr. Nicolls, Longford: "It is now more than twenty years since wine, spirits, or porter was used inl the hospitals under my care, and the result in every way has been most satisfactory." Thie Physiological Effects of Alcohol. health, the prosperity, the morality, and the happiness of the human race." * * Those who are interested in the physiological department of the abstinence question may consult with advantage Dr. Carpenter's Prize Essay, "The Physiology of Temperance and Total Abstinence"; the works ot Dr. F. R. Lees, particularly the "Illustrated History of Alcohol," the ' Temperance Text-Book," and the Enquiry into the Prescription of Intoxicating Liquors in the Practice of Medicine "; the Prize Essay, "Bacchus"; the Essay" Anti-Bacchus "; Burne's" Teetotaler's Companion "; the "Alcohol" and " Nephalism" of the late Professor Miller; the " Pathology of Drunkenness," by Professor Wilson; together with admirable dissertations, longer or shorter, by Drs. Monroe, Edmunds, J. W. Beaumont, and Russell, Professor Youmans, and Messrs. T. Beaumont, Mudge, and others. Also, the Parliamentary Committee's Report,.834; The Committee of' Convocation's Report on Intemperance; the Reports of the Temperance Con gress and International Convention of I862; the Tenmperance Sectaeor (x85966); and the Afedical Temieraetce yoztrnal, nowv published quarterly. (Tweedie, Strand.) 73 ,~ CHAPTER III. IRC,FPOSITIoN: THAT INTEMPERANCE IS A'I'RUE PLAGUE, WHICHI CAN ONLY BE EFFECTUALLY SUPPRESSED BY THE EXCLUSION OF INTOXICATING DRINKS. NILRE confessions of the evil of intemperance, and of tile enormous evils propagated by it, will not suffice for its abatement; sincere but simple sorrow will be equally unavailing; and even much earnest effort miay be expended without the desired reward. As there must be a correct diagnosis of disease before it can be effectually encountered, so a just understanding of the origin aird nature of alcoholic intemperance must precede that use of counteractive means by which alone success can be secured. In a word, this curse must be conceived of as a veritable plague-a plague in the strict physical sense, and therefore in a sense far different from the vague and rhetorical use of the word by popular orators and writers. .iany things are plagues in the general sense of being severely burdensome and injurious; and to speak of intemperance as such a plague is possible without tihe least comprehlension by the speaker of the facts which give to that appellation a scientific significance and force. Not a little confusion, indeed, is occasioned by failing to distinguish between intemperance in the form of any sensuous excess, and intemperance in the restricted and special sense of a craving for and addiction to intoxicating drinks. There are, no doubt, features of resembl.ance both in the course and consequences of all sensuatl indulgences, as there are marks of similarity between all forms of disease; yet, just as to treat all disease as one in origin and character is the height of char i-I i I Alcohol Gcizcrates a Plaozoie. latanism-so, to regard alcoholic intemperance as identical withl sensual intemperance in general, is an error equally gross and pernicious. The distinction is profound and essential. Sensualexcess is the inordinate gratification of natural appetite —a perversion, by exaggeration, of instincts necessary to the existence of the individual or the race; an intemperance, therefore, which must find its correction in the subjection of the animal to the moral nature in man, so that while the physical appetite is gratified (and the connection between soul and body thereby maintained), the supersensuous powers may be developed, and the life of earth be made a fitting prelude to the life of heaven. But the species of intemperance of which we now treat is not the outgrowth or illicit gratification of any natural appetite; it proceeds, on the contrary, from the creation of an artificial appetite; and, therefore, if it is to be cured and prevented-i.e., entirely eradicated from among men-something more and different must be done than is necessary for the subjugation and control of natural desire. An analogy is presented in the distinction between /1'o classes of d/sease. In the one class, disease arises from poorness of blood, or some defect in the due reparation of tissue; in the other class, called zymotic or fermentative, the diseased action is set up by the introduction from without of certain organic germs, which rapidly multiply in the blood, and, by their effect on the circulation and nervous centres, weaken the vital processes, and often bring them to a dead-stop. These latter diseases frequently become epidemical, and in the case of the black death the fatality was so great that one-fourth of the populations visited by that scourge are estimated to have perished. The Great Plague of I665 was of this species of disease, and, under the name of "pest," " pestilence," or "plague," the world has had to mourn the power of this destroyer. Now, it is of the utmost importance to settle in the mind whether alco 75 76 The Hrague of Social- Iiinem2pranice. holic intemperance, as a personal and social disease, is produiced by a perversion of natural function, or by the infusion of a foreign element into the system. If the former, the remedy must be soight in a readjustment of natural powers, by educational, moral, and religious means operating within; if the latter, no real remedy can exist which does not aim at excluding the virus alre,ady imbibed, and preventing its further reception. In cholera, fever, and plague, there is no cure till the patient ejects the virulent matter; and could the entrance of that matter be entirely prevented, the existence of these diseases would, under the ordinary laws of nature, be strictly impossible. Now, an examination of alcoholic intemperance in its origin can only terminate in one result-that is, in the conviction tlat zit belongs, bolth ihysAca/y anzd'orally, lo /he class of fermetnlalvtie (zymoolz'c) diseases. No mere depravation of natural appetite will produce it; never does it exhibit itself till alcohol has been consumed; and what is specially to be remarked (as indicating not merely an analogy but a family relation between the plague and drunkenness) is, that alcohol acts, in the production of the intemperate habit, by fioisonzIZ the blood and arresltig. the healthy operalion of the nzervous systici;.* In this manner, and in no other, the craving for alcoholic drinks is produced-which is always a physical malady in its inception-until, by continuous indulgence, it takes a settled and chronic form, not rarely passing into delirizziz ireiens, or leading its victim through the stages of so-called oinomania (wine-madness) or dipsomania (thirst-madness) to a miserable * It is a curious coincidence (if only such) that alcohol, though not a ferment, is, as before explained, the result of a double fermentative processthe putrefaction of albumen, which sets up the saccharine fermentation; and both these processes are allied. Liebig says: "Both fermentation and putrefaction are processes of decomposition of a similar kind-the one of substances destitute of nitrogen, the other of substances containing that element." 4,I I Grcatzcss of tie 4A lcoliolic Plague. death. As, then, the reception of the poison-germs is essential to the appearance of all forms of plague, so the reception of the intoxicant virus is essential to the appearance of all forms of alcoholic intemperance; and as both are engendered in a similar manner, there is a certain likeness in the methods of propagation attendant on both. Contagion and infection are but other names for agencies by which the poison-germs are transported from place to place, and become more readily introduced into the human system; and in the transmission of hereditary predisposition to intemperance, together with the influence of example, customi, usage, and licensed traffic, in adding to the consumption of strong drink, we have physical and social forces by means of which the material agent of this terrible malady of intemperance is widely diffused, with its pestiferous influence, on every hand. Other resemblances may be traced, without any resort to fanciful conjecture. Like the plague, the intemperate craving is insidious in its approach-imperceptible in its inception-often deceitful in its earlier manifestations; but, when fully developed, is imperious, and raging above all common control. If either is curable, it is by the self-same method-the exclusion of the venomous agency. The pest-stricken man can only escape by throwing off and out of him the germs of destruction; and, failing to do this, an inexorable and terrible death awaits him. With the victim of intemperance the alternatives are the same; he must either cast forth the alcohol already imbibed, and preserve himself free from its further use, or he must remain diseased, and be consigned to a premature grave. * That abstinence * iIr. Neison, the eminent actuary, published, in I851, tables showing that from 20 to 9o the deaths of the intemperate exceed the deaths of the population at large in the proportion of 32 to Iso; but that between the ages of 30 and 40 the proportion is 42 to Io.; and that between 4o and 5o it is 41 to lofourfold! 77 78 Tze Plag,ic of Social Iziilcmpcrance. alone is the antidote for actual intemperance (drinkdisease) is universally admitted-a proof that society perceives one-half of the truth, by recognizing the plague-cast of the malady when formned; so that all that is needed to the full enlightenment of society is a perception of the other half of the truth-that the disease cannot be certainly prevented except by the exclusion of the foreign agent (alcohol) which engenders it. In regard to diseases of the zymotic type, the principal difficulty in the way of prevention arises from the invisibly minute constitution of the poison-germs, and their power of vital-. ity and propagation, except under conditions of heat or cold too severe for human endurance. Could their detection be secured, and means for their exclusion fromi the human system be devised, science would achieve one of its proudest triumphs and humanity reap one of its most precious boons. Happily, a great contrast is here offered to our view, for the substance by which the alcoholic craving is induced is not too attenuated to be seen, nor is there any danger of receiving it unconsciously into the body. The senses have sufficient indications of this enemy; and if the will issues orders for its rejection, no evil can ensue. If, however, we contemplate events as they are, not as they ought to be, what do we discern? \Ve see that every year the people of this country, or rather a majority of them (for very young persons and abstainers must be deducted), consume sixty million gallons of alcohol, the physical seed of the drunken appetite; and we see, as we might expect, that the agent of evil takes with it the evil effect; that those who have been smitten grow worse, and that, as they die off, a number as great begin to develop signs of the same terrible malady; that both sexes, and persons of all ages (sometimes the very young, even infants in arms), and in all social conditions, are among the victims; and that from year to year, from age' I t I 't I k I Gi-catizcss of the Alcoholioc Plegzle. to age, the /le of these victims continues to be told, and is iever completed. Here, in sorrowful truth, is one broad difference between thle Eastern plague and the plague of drink. The one breaks forth epidemically and subsides (in England, there has been no visitation since the seventeenth century-two centuries ago); whereas the alcoholic plague never intermits its ravages, and by the unrelaxing continuity of its infliction occasions an aggregate mortality far surpassing that which pestilence has produced. If plague has slain its thousands, intemperance has slain its ten thousands; and if plague can claim to have hurried its victims more quickly and in vaster masses to the tomb, intemperance may claim not only to have wrought a greater slaughter in the long run, but to have hurried out of life as many of the untainted as of the self-destroyed. The innocent child has died or grown up diseased through the sin of the drunken parent; the wife or husband has been sacrificed to the drunkenness of the sottish mate; and both on land and sea, in peace and war, as the days revolve, accidents of every kind, by which victims' lives are cut short, occur through the effect of alcohol upon those who have duties of importance committed to ~them.* To have a perpetual plague like this within our borders is, therefore, to suffer a frightful waste of life, compared with which the annual homicides by murder, manslaughter, and suicide, and even by a state of war, would be of inferior account. If these deaths have averaged but 25,o000o a year since the Eastern plague disappeared two centuries ago, we have a loss of five million fellow-creatures-a sixth of the population of the United Kingdom at this time-who might other * It is probably not true, as roundly asserted at times, that 6o,ooo drunkards die every year in the United Kingdom; but if to those who die prematurely from the effects of alcohol, in large or often-repeated doses, be added the multitudes who perish as indicated in the text, the host of slain er,ens 1r, yAd ill probably not fall short of 6o,ooo-,ooo every month. 79 80 Tlze Pl-?'ue of Social liztciiipcranzce. wise have lived long to enjoy'the bounty of their Creator and to bless succeeding generations. These statistics of destruction would be terrible enough if they stood alone. But they do not. Of the major portion of those who have died directly fP om the alcoholic plague, it must be feared that the disease attacked the mind and soul not less disastrously than the body; that the poison penetrated where the plague-geIrms never enter; that mental darkness and weakness-often mental aberration -were the consequences of the love of strong drink; that vice and irreligion brought up the dismal rear; and that when the dishonored body was laid in the dust, charity could drop no word of blessing, and hope could shed no light upon the scene. WVho also can estimate the misery of every kind brought upon the family dependents and relatives of the millions whom strong drink has delivered over to ruin? How frequently has not only pecuniary destitution been their fate, but a legacy of immoral influences and associations, which have embittered and poisoned the future lives of wives and children, to whom the domestic relations have brought only sorrow and shame! It may, then, be forcibly asked, Wihat plagte can be compared to this plague? and what can be urged in favor of these beverages, on which depend its existence, its prevalence, and its power of adding to the ills that man is heir to others of surpassing intensity and sadness? I i O BJECTIONS. The observations above offered may elicit two replies: I. It may be said that " The analogy instiztted fails in a very i2,hortaizt Aarticzlar, because all who lse alcohozc liquor do not take the drizk-filagzite; and that, iz fact, those who fall victims to this jphysical and moral zmalady formt a very smallprofortion of all who drink." I I Objcc/ion froois Jicdicizal Use A nzszercd. 8 i The supposed failure in the analogy cannot be sus tained, and if it could the core of the argument would remain untouched. During periods of epidemic plagues, all do not die, all are not seized; nor, in reference to the seeds of zymotic disease in general, can it be said that the same conditions affect all alike. Medical science does not support the theory that all w,lho receive the poison-germis are equally poisoned. The evidence rather tends to show that in various states of the body these germs are neutralized, or exert so partial an effect that the system suffers slightly, and recovers its balance by vigorously ejecting the intruders. To this extent, then, the analogy holds good-that in neither case is the full measure of possible injury generally realized; the worst effects are limited in extent; but in neither case is the connection of the effect with the cause doubtful or ob scure, nor can any one person guarantee beforehand his own immunity from the gravest and most fatal results. The plague does not strike all; but who can be sure that it will not strike him? Alcohol does not excite in all who use it the intemperate appetite; but who can foretell that he shall be exempt? Nor can it be pleaded that those affected are so few as to make the danger individually small. A much smaller proportion of seizures spreads intense alarm in a time of pestilence; and were half as much reasonable fear excited by the diffusion of the alcoholic pest, the employment of the best preventive measures would not be delayed. 2. It nmay be argued that " The disAse of alcoholic driznk is nol essential lo the security of socielyty, and that zwith the spread of knowledge, education, refinement,.and rcliion Ithe ~laffue of intent.erance will die ozut, as it has almost died oul already in some classes of society." Were this remark much better founded than it is, it would not impeach the wisdom of securing perfect and indisputable safety by excluding the actual originator of i I ) 82 Tfze Plague of Social Iziitcmpcraeiice. this specific disease. In the case of the poison-germs that produce zymnotic disease, no doubt personal cleanliness and temperance, wholesome diet, cheerfulness, moderate work, a sound constitution, and dwellings built and held under good sanitary conditions, are of much utility in protecting persons against attack and in diminishing the violence of seizure when it occurs; but who would be content with these secondary measures of defence if the poison-germs could be themselves arrested and destroyed? Why, then, should men trust to subordinate securities against the plague of drink when they can have absolute protection? or why, in other words, should they run the risk which must be run when alcohol is used, and then consider that they have done all that is needful by fortifying themselves with virtuous resolutions against excess? Do they not see that others, once as resolute and as confident as they can be, have proved the vanity of their hopes, and are now blighted in body and soul? That some classes are less deeply tainted than others may be true, but no class, however high, refined, educated, or pious, can be cited as proof against this plague; and it is certain that much of the exultation over a highly improved state in this respect is either wholly fallacious, or is based upon comparisons which prove very little as to the real position of affairs. Gentlemen do not now get drunk after dinner-convivial drinking is not the custom it once was; but to infer that gentlemen do not get drunk on set purpose, do not drink enough to injure them, and are free fromi all craving for alcoholic stimulants, is a conclusion at variance with all the known facts. The zest with which, both in public and private, respectable persons, even ladies, drink glass after glass of brandied liquors; the incontestable figures that prove an enormous consumption of intoxicating drinks (despite all that temperance societies have directly and indirectly effected) and the testimony of mnedical men and others to the diffw ! I I kI i, I Objevc/tion from3;.Von-O 1iz'ers(7/iry A sesz'crt/. 83 sion of a strongly-miarked taste for intoxicating liquors in the hilghest circles-together with lamentable consequences that cannot be entirely hid from the public eye -all unite to expose the shallowness of-the pretence, that the upper and middle classes have learned how to drink without fear of enkindling the alcoholic appetite, and so practically reversing the declaration that "wine is a mocker, and strong drink is raging." \\Were it possible, however, to bring about this security where all the social circumstances are favorable, it would be chimerical to look for it, in the face of all the predispositions and incentives to indulgence which beset the great multitude of the so-called lower orders. If they drink, they will drink for the excitement strong drink brings, and to separate this from alcoholic intemperance would require a standing miracle for this single purpose. The germs of the drink-plague have but to fall upon this prepared soil, and the harvest of disease and death must be profuse; and those who wish to be regarded as the friends of their species have to choose between letting things take their course (till, at some far-distant epoch, they have in spite of drinking raised the lowest classes to a high educational and moral level) or interfering to banish the instrument of this degradation and ruin. To effect this latter object, they must renounce alcoholic liquors themselves, and thus help to infuse into the masses, so terribly injured, a strength of resolution equal to the greatness of the effort. THE PLAGUE IS RAGING; IT MAY BE SUPPRESSED BY WITHDRAWING THE ELEMENT BY WHICH IT IS ENGENDERED AND FOSTERED; and shall it be said that those who were required to lead in this enterprise, and who were capable if willing to carry it out, were too sluggish and apathetic for the work? If there be any tenderness in humanity, any virtue in patriotism, any inspiration in Christianity, the endeavor to stop the plague of our national intemperance by banishing its cause is fitted to I I - 84 Tze Plagie of Social Iilempera1?ce. evoke and engage themn all. May the reader not suffer this knowledge to be possessed, and this appeal for hizs co-operation to be addressed, as if he had no responsibility in this matter! 31 I I [ , II I I CHAPTER IV. PROPOSITION: THAT VIOLENCE IS DONE TO THE WILL OF GOD AND THE WELFARE OF MAN BY APPROPRIATING THE FRUITS OF THE EARTH TO THE PRODUCTION OF INTOXI CATING DRINKS. IF man himself, as to his body, has sprung from the dust, not less true is it that from the dust springs the food by which his bodily life is renewed day by day. The daily (or necessary) bread for which he prays is provided by a divine economy above his control, but with which he is permitted to co-operate, in order that, instrumentally, he may earn the subsistence which gives to labor its sweet reward. There isa profound truth in the narrative, viewed literally or allegorically, which assigns to the first man the care and cultivation of the ground and the honors paid by early nations to agriculture, and the mysteries associated with the processes of natural production and increase, find their ready explanation in the felt and pressing value of the food with which, at the touch of industry, the wide earth teems. Both Scripture and reason unite to fill the mind with reverence, in the presence of that aspect of nature which, in the form of autumnal affluence, bears the sign-manual of the King of Heaven. Human science, unable to create a single grain of wheat, sees a divine phenomenon in every grain, and in the reproductive energy which makes the buried grain reappear in an increase of sixty or a hundred fold. Inscrutable as the manner of this is, there is nothing dubious as to the purpose of the gift and the will of the Allgracious Donor. It is his will that the produce of the 86 Food Dotstro yal iZt Produclction of;tronig Driik. field should be as abundant as the wants of man-enough for his "service" and " gladness "-so richly does he "bless the springing thereof." It is his will that what is so supplied should be applied to its intended purpose — not hoarded for gain, and not wasted by neglect or of evil design. It is his will that the means of nourishment, and health, and life, thus beneficently furnished, should not be changed into the means of impoverishment, disease, and death. If there be aught plain, beyond denial or doubt, in regard to the Divine will, these things are plain. Hoqu, tiheit, does tlhe ainnual afirobrzatz'ou of sirty nZil//lzi bushels of g-rain (not to speak of millions of bushels of fruit) in the nianufacture of iztoxicatizng ti.uors, co,iort zzit'lh these expiressions of the Creator's good ileasure? The leading object of that manufacture is to produce an alcoholic beverage of some kind, which, when produced, bears the faintest resemblance to the substance employed in its production; the nutritious properties almost wholly disappear, and the saccharine element is converted, as far as possible, into a gas (carbonic acid) which it is poisonous to breathe, and a liquid (alcohol) that, but for the water blended with it, would destroy the vital organs with which it is brought into contact. Here, then, we have a triple violation of the Divine will. First- Thle sulbfly of food is rendered less abundant tlhan it mnight be. Distilling and brewing abstract from the world's store of alimentary sustenance a considerable portion of what Providence bestows. The 60,ooo,ooo bushels yearly thus consumned in the British Isles alone are lost to our food-reserves; and, though Russian or American markets pour in new supplies to make good this deficiency, the corn we destroy is not, and cannot be, restored to us; the world is so much the poorer in solid sustenance, and the price of food is raised to us by the additional cost of freightage and importers' profits. Wealth, the most wonderful of all wealth, the wealth of grain-in more senses than one -;4 i s I I t i 1 How tiec,Vill of God is Violated. truly golden-is annihlilated —as much obliterated as if it were spilled into mid-ocean or committed to the devouring flames. Secondly- 77lie Dzii'ze will is frns/raled as to the firoecr a,ibl'cation of these mercies. \What God makes good he intends should be received for good-not abused or deteriorated in its transit from the field to the table. If man interferes, his interference should be limited to a better adaptation of the natural growth to the comforts an(l uses of life. Hence, the corn may be ground, baked, or boiled; and, hence, the wood of the forest may be turned into the furniture of our rooms or the ships that brave the sea. But to lessen the intrinsic value of the Divine production is a practical reflection on the wisdom and goodness of the Supreme Benefactor. Yet, in distilling and brewing, this is done with the corn of heaven. The vital process of growth-the chemistry of creation-is exchanged for the anti-vital process of disintegrationthe chemistry of death. Food has gone, and nothing has taken its place worthy of God to give or man to accept. What is done, and done too effectually, is to reverse the Divine method, and so to make it impossible that the bounties of Providence should be received with thankfulness as "the good creatures" of his power. Thirdly-The zoill of God is still iore flagranltyfrustrated by the change of thzis food into an INTOXICATING DRINK. Food is invigorating-it is the staff of life-but strong drink debilitates, diseases, and destroys innumerable thousands. Food, when employed in the production of alcoholic liquor, is not only limited and lost, but the express objects for which it was sent are contravened, and other effects are substituted-effects which cannot but grieve the Great Father, who desires to see his children flourish and live long in the earth. With food come satisfaction, strength, the power of usefulness, the joys of I ', 87 88 Food Dcstroycd in PI-oduzction of Stro'ii Drinik. society, and (in the Christian heart) the thankful sense of God's faithful love. With strong drink come growing want, premature decay, a capacity and love of evil-doing unknown before, offences against the social peace, a defiance of the Mlost High, and a hideous development of all that is bestial and infernal. The transformation is complete; it could not be more disastrous and revolting to our apprehension; how inconceivably odious, there fore, in his eyes who is too pure to look upon sin! Let no one allege that this is the language of exaggeration because all use of strong drink is not attended with these results. What arises from small quantities of food or strong drink is not the subject-of description; the general issues alone are open to observation; and no lover of truth can deny that, in the sum of their respective effects, the corn which is used as food, and the drink which is made by waste of corn, differ as widely as sweet and bitter, as light and darkness, as life and death. It seems impertinent to enquire whether the will of God can be done on earth while this threefold violation of that will is in progress, sanctioned and carried out-be it sorrowfully said-by myriads of those who profess a profound reverence for that will, and who, in many other respects, are found to render to it a cheerful and enlightened obedience. And on man himself descends the penalty of the violation. The corn which, if ground into flour and baked into bread, would feed and strengthen a nation, is diverted from this end, and disappears in the processes which issue in a stream of intoxicating drink, flowing annually at the rate of nine hundred million gallons, sixty millions of which consist of a narcotic-acrid poison fatal to the bloom and beauty of life, physical, mental, and spiritual.* A quantity of breadstuff which * It has been estimated that this amount of alcoholized fluid (9goo,ooo,ooo0 gallons) consumed every year in the United Kingdom, would form, if collected, a lake nineteen feet deep, half a mile broad, and a mile long. - k I I II I i i IJ'-olst at,gaiist WT1aste of Grair. would have stocked the granaries of Egypt, and turned into plenty the seven long years of famine, is, in Christian England, turned aside from the miller and the baker, and made over to the maltster, the brewer, and the distiller; and the fruit of this capital economical and sanitary transgression follows us, through the years, with tireless severity. The crime engenders its own Nemesis, and the punishment keeps pace with the offence. At a period when population was scanty, and the industry of the country was principally agricultural, the consequences were, at times, so sensibly injurious as to call for legislative interference. The use of aqga vi't in Ireland was condemned by a royal act, in the reign of Miary, on the ground that "much corn, grain, and other things is consumed, spent, and wasted, to the great hindrance, cost, and damage of the poor inhabitants of the realm." By the 39th and 40th Elizabeth, c. I6 (I597-8), power was given to the justices of the peace to diminish the number of maltsters, and to prevent, according to their discretion, the buying of barley for conversion into malt. Bythe ioth William III., c. 4 (1698), a check was given to the "excessive distilling of spirits and low wines from corn"; and in the early part of the next century, when the evils of spirit-drinking called for stringent legislative remedy, it was not the least reasonable of the complaints addressed to Parliament, that the corn used in the manufacture of gin was abstracted from the food of the people. Rutty attributes to the distilleries much of the scarcity commonly attributed to the failure of the crops in I757; and John Wesley, in his tract (I773), "Thoughts on the Present Scarcity of Provisions," assigns as "'the grand cause-because such immense quantities of corn are continually consumned by distilling"; and he speaks of the grain thus used as "consumed, not by so harmless a way as throwing it into the sea, but by converting it into deadly poison-poison that naturally destroys not only 89 9go Food Dcs~/ro)'cd iis PIV'oduiic ioio of Si-oilozg Drinik. the strength of life, but also the morals of our countrymen." In I795, the eloquent but not always judicious Edmund Burke made an impassioned plea on behalf of ardent spirits and against the stopping of the distillery but the logic of facts proved too heavy for the light artillery of the orator, and in I796 and I797 distillation from corn was prohibited, as a necessary alleviation of scarcity, and with the result not only of saving much food from destruction, but also of rendering the poor " app.rently more comfortable and better fed " than when the scarcity was less pressing and the distilleries were in full blast.-* Dr. Darwin, the elegant poet and able physician, denounced the whole system of using up corn for intoxicating liquor as "the conversion of the people's food into poison"; and in the Report of the Select Committee of the House of Commons into the subject of intemperance (I834), the wastefulness and injuriousness of this course is vigorously depicted: "Not only an immense amount of human food is destroyed, while thousands are inadequately fed; but this food is destroyed in such a manner as to injure greatly the agricultural producers themselves; for whose grain, but for this perverted and mistaken use of it, there would be more than twice the demand, for the use of the now scantily-fed people, who would then have healthy appetites to consume, and iim-l p r o v e d means to purchase, nutriment for themselves and children, in grain as well as in all the other varied productions of the earth." Parliament did not profit by these truths when the years of famine in Ireland (I846-9) brought death to tens of thousands and. the whole country to the verge of ruin. The policy five or six times resorted to by the English Government within the previous hundred years, and always with success-nota ! tI I * Colquhoun on the Police of the Metropolis (~oo). I I I i DI-. Clialiicrs aiid" Thze Tiiies " Qziotcd. 91 bly so in Ireland itself in I758-9 *-was left untried, althlou'gh the Irish people, who had then been largely made sober by the labors of Father Mathew, would have welcoined the legislative interdiction. It is not too much to say that, through this culpable neglect, enormous destitution and starvation occurred that might have been averted; and nowhere was this let-alone impolicy more glaringly denounced than in an article by the eminent Dr. Chalimers, in the course of which he said: " Had the distilleries been stopped, as they were in I8oo and I8OI, and as we believe they would have been now, if the famine, though not greater in amount, had only been general, this alone would have gone far to repair the deficiency. If over and above this the breweries had been stopped, and so for a season all malting had been put an end to, this would have greatly more than covered the deficiency. A humane and virtuous despotism could and would have done it at once. As it is, what between the class interests of our grandees, and the low and loathsome dissipations of our common people, the cry of famishing millions has been overborne." t Some years later, the 7T/;zes newspaper, in commenting upon efforts in Sweden to stop the use of corn in distillation, employed the following remarkable language: "It is a peculiarity of spirit-drinking that money spent upon it is, at the best, thrown away, and in general far worse than thrown away. It neither supplies the natural wants of man, nor offers an adequate substitute for them. Indeed, it is far too favorable a view of the subject to treat the money spent on it as if it were cast into the sea. Yet even so, there is something exceedingly irritating in the reflection that a * Dr. Henry, in his " Earnest Address to the People of Ireland" (1761), remarks, in reference to the stoppage of distillation in 1758-9, "the salutary effects of which were seen, restoring new vigor to our languishing manufactures, and a visible reformation in the morals of the people." t zVortI British Revie7u, No. I3. W 92 Food Destroyed ii?Pr-oductions of Si-roin Drinkk. great part of a harvest, raised with infinite care and pains on an ungrateful soil and in an inhospitable climate, instead of adding to the national wealth, is poured in the shape of liquid fire down the throats of the nation that produced it, and, instead of leaving them richer and happier, tends to impoverish them by the waste of labor and capital, and degrade them lty vicious and debilitating indulgence. A great portior of the harvest of Sweden and of many other countries 3, applied to a purpose compared with which it would h ve been far better that the corn had never grown, or ti.t it had been mildewed in the ear. No way so rapid ) increase the wealth of nations and the morality of s ciety could be devised as the utter annihilation of the n nufacture of ardent spirits, constituting as they do an infinite waste and an unmixed evil." * What is here so forcibly said concerning the manufacture of spirits is applicable substantially to the manufacture of fermented drinks; for both derive their'intoxicating property from the alcohol or "spirit" they contain, and the only superiority the fermented liquors can claim over the distilled ones is that they are richer in water, a pinch of barley extract, and a dash of hops. It must also be remembered that the corn used in distillation is barely a fourth of the quantity used in brewing; and hence the Committee of Convocation, in their Report on Intemperance, make no idle distinction between the liquors manufactured, but say: "It cannot be viewed as of inferior consequence that the drinking habits of the community are gratified at the expense of the annual conversion of fifty [sixty] millions of bushels of grain into spirits and beer-an amount of cereal produce capable of furnishing aliment daily to millions of persons from year to year."t Whlat more flagrant frustration of the beneficent will * Ti.zes, Dec. 7, 1853. t "Report of the Committee of Convocation on Intemperance, etc.," p. o. I I I I i Soiime Objectionis Anszered. of God, accompanied in the very act with the greatest evils to mankind, can be imagined than that which is here disclosed? The rain, the soil, the sunshine, join to produce miles upon miles of nutritious grain, rippling like a silver sea under a harvest moon; but the nourishment latent in all this grain, instead of being converted into blood and muscle, vital force and length of days, is disposed of with so much ingenious perversity that the national result is loss of wealth and health, ignorance and vice, violence and bloodshedding, insanity and irreligion, brutal living and hopeless dying. What sadder contrast can be conceived than the corn-field with its potentiality of blessing, and the gin-cask or beer-barrel with its plenipotentiality of physical and moral woe! The art by which this metamorphosis is executed cannot claim to be the philosopher's stone, turning whatever it touches into gold; rather, a fitter object of comparison is the Gorgon head, with its snaky hair, changing into stone everything mortal that gazed upon it. Or, varying the allusion, it may be affirmed that in the substitution of distiLled and fermented liquors for harmless and invigorating food, the nation asking for bread receives a stone, and, looking for an egg, clasps a serpent to its breast. OBJECTIONS. I. One objector may urge that "all the zztlr'itiots mzatler iz; the corn tl,us cased is ztol lZst, a _orlioiz re;zaizinizg i/z the l'quor brewed, and a fiortiot goire;zn z the shabe of grains to feed animn;als of dzserent kinds." It is, however, a very feeble plea in mitigation of sentence against the brewing process (the distilling process does not admit of even this weak defence), that eight parts out of eighty-eight parts ocf nutriment are retained in what is brewed, and this rather by accident than by design, since clearness and not thickness is desiderated by the brewer and the drinker 93 94 F1ool Destro ryed iti Productioli of SIroii& Dri.ik alike. As to the disposal of the grains, distillers' grai, are a danger rather than an advantage to the animn Is receiving them, and whatever benefit arises from the use of brewer's grains by pigs is to a great extent diminished by the changes effected in the malting process, and the striking deficiency in malt grain of the most nutritive elements of the barley, the hordein of which is dimin ished from 55 parts to I2.* The pigs have reason to complain that their interests are so little consulted in the expensive and complicated arrangements adopted for deteriorating the "good creature of God," before it is suffered to approach mfan or beast. 2. Another objector may urge that " the agrilz/llra/z!z/erest wouzhl' be z'j'zred by the closz'izg of the fl1(trkels 1zozo oeni, for the sale of cornt for dsz/Dz; a;zel brew-hgii ti rf0oses." That this is a very narrow and erroneous view of the question can be demonstrated in a few words. The barley and other grain which the farmers sell to the mnialtsters and distillers bring them, at most, twelve millions sterling per anz,'ziii- but can they fail to see that, if the hundred millions yearly expended in intoxicating liquors were otherwise devoted, their share of the expenditure would much exceed an eighth of the whole? In the hundreds of thousands of families now pinched by intemperance, the demand for farm produce would not only be doubled, but manifold increased; and, with a sober public to supply, calling for more to eat, and able to pay for it, the farmer would be one of the first to benefit by the happy reformation. 3. A third objector may urge that " hefairmers zould be unable o get r-el of hezir barley, and t/hat /he rolal'o,,z of iheir * According to P'rout, the changes are as follows, taking t0o parts of each, barley and mal.: Yellow resin, I-n; gun, 4-115; sugar, 5-15; gluten, 3-a; starch, 32-56; hordein, 55-n2. In the malt liquor scarcely any of the solid elements are retained, every part of the brewing process helping in the attenuation cf the article to be produced. z t T,Vlitt co/dId be Doi/c eitJ ijc -BaizlIcy. crofis wo'lt't b-e pr'ay..'ichdly',lct~f gregt rltl/." But the -tnswers to this objection are conclusive. (i.) ~'arlvy ai- rag stil be z'/ rcfggest, hethe/r for imaz)/? or fol,t as food for bzilocks,- wzile z'Is fcltcllz'ig powvers have been firozed Upo, horses anrdfiz, s.* So with apples now used in making, cider. The f-armers of Aimerica, amiong w-homi the practice of total abstinence has made lnost extensive way, have never found any difficulty in profitably disposing of their produce, either on their own farms or in the open market. English farmers, who haive conscientiously objected to sell barley for maltifig, have not been losers by their adherence to principle. A correspondeit of the ,7fark Lage Ef.t-iress communicated the result of an experiment in horse-feeding in these terms The keep of the horses upon which the experiment was made had been one bushel of beans, one bushel of oats, and one bushel of bran each per week. The beans and oats were discontinued, and boiled barley supplied instead, of whlich once bushel was found to suffice. In other respects, the food of the horses was the same as they had been used to, * The long and loud outcry in favor of malt as superior to barley for cattle has been scientifically disproved more than once. Inl two series of experimnents, undertaken in the months of October, November, and December, x845, by order of the Government, it was discovered that the barley-fed bullocks increased 204 lbs., as compared with an increase of Io-4'5 lbs. in the mralt-fed bullock. Experiments upon milch cows also showed, in the words of Professor Thomson, that "barley is superior to malt, we,ight fcr weight." In.865, a new set of experiments were carried out upon twenty milking cows, twenty fattening oxen, sixty sheep, and forty-eighlt pigs. The barley-fed cows "invariably showed the higher proportion of cream"; the ten oxen fed on barley gave, during twenty weeks, 408 lbs. more increase in live weight than those having an equal amount of the same barley malted. The agricultural mind must now be convinced of this fact, as the Act of Parliament providing for the making of malt free of duty for the feeding of cattle, has become practically repealed by the almost universal neglect of the farmers to take advantage of it. In I865 the bushels of malt so made were 55,321; in $871 they were next to nil! So much for the argument once raised against the malt tax, that cattle would thrive very much more on malt than on barley, and that the tax stood in the way of the better alternative. 95 96 Food Destroyed ins ProdIuction of Strozo' Drink. and they performed the same heavy work upon the road, travelling a weekly average of I40 miles. At the end of five months the animals were as healthy and active as they could possibly have been upon beans and oats, and were in'high condition.' In a pecuniary point, the savinig effected by the change (including the expense of boiling) was full ~I per week." A Cornish farmer has put the case in this practical shape: " When a laboring man spends 52s. a year in beer, the farmer gets but I3s. of the sum. He (the writer), wishes the farmer to secure the whole in this way: I2S. for a store pig, and 40s. for barley to feed it on; this quantity (12 bushels) would bring the pig to twenty-score weight, and he asks, Which is the best for a poor family, 200 lbs. of bacon or 39 gallons of beer? He puts it to any laborer, whether 2 lbs. of fresh meat a week would not be more beneficial to him than a pint of beer a day; and the answer is generally favorable to teetotalism."* And well it may be. (2.) I1 is absurd to s?/itose that, zf the destand for barly shovd declize, the farmers of the Un/led ]iiT-gdomn couinl not adaht their land to the grozvtlh of other crops, for wzhich ant egqually remunerative demand would arise. One plan has been sketched by a practical farmer; t but we should be perfectly safe in leaving their own interests in the hands of the men who, whether as landlords or tenants, have proved, within the last quarter of a century, their capacity for conductingwith enterprise and judgment the agricultural operations of the kingdom. Let them but know that there is a great increase of customn for farm produce, and they would belie their well-earned reputation if they did not meet that demand, whatever form it assumed, and make it conducive to their own satisfactory remuneration. It is lamentable to see an agitation kept up, from * "The Farmer's Manual of Teetotalism: A Reply to What will be done with the Barley?" By H. Mudge, Surgeon. Ipswich: Burton. 1841. P. 7. t "The Farmer's Manual of Teetotalism," p. i9. - I II .f II ii I f I izlcr(ras ceT l'A d F (e f A arsickpirc. year to year, to secure the repeal of the malt tax, in the hope that the farmer would be benefited by an increased cemanid for his barley, when the agitation, if successful, would either increase taxation in other ways or prevent the reduction of taxes pressing on the real comforts of the people; whereas, with the promotion of total abstisnence, the true interests of the farming body would be bound up with the sobriety and prosperity of ali other classes. The day will come, if wisdom is not to cry aloud in vain, when the lords and tenants of the soil will recognize the folly of relying for any portion of their gains upon the maintenance and increase of habits and a tLraffie which diminiish the purchasing and consuming power of the community, while poor and county rates are raised to an unprecedented and oppressive degree. No illustration could be apter than the present system of "the penny-wise and pound-foolish " method of business to which the far-sighted trader has a reasonable aversion; and if self-interest alone were to guide the counsels of the agriculturists of the land-and in such a connection self-interest (like self-love) and social are the same-it would prompt them to pray and labor for the lihastening of the period when a people, having shaken off enervating indulgences and enslaving customs, should call for larger and yet larger supplies of the really Heaven-sent food, satisfying and strengthening, in the providing of which the husbandman would find a quick and sure reward, so that sower and eater would have good reason to rejoice together. The enlightened Fe6nelon long ago saw that to stop the manufacture of strong drink was not to lessen, but to augment the wealth of the soil; and the eldest son of the late King of the French had arrived, by observation, at the same legitimate conclusion,.* All trade, and not least that which is concerned * Sce Appendix K. II 97 98 Food Destro),cd ii ProdticZioit of Stro'z6f Drinzk. in the cultivation of the soil and the satisfaction of man's most imperious wants, must be developed and enriched by the success of a movement which seeks to put the world in repossession of the fundamental virtue of sobriety, and more fully to equip it for that beneficent conquest of nature which Divine Providence has commnissioned it to effect. k i i i ~;r CHAPTER V. PROPOSITION: THAT THE SACRED SCRIPTURES DO NOI AFFORD SANCTION TO THE USE OF INTOXICATING DRINKS BUT GIVE ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE TOTAL ABSTINENCI PRACTICE. IT may be confidently asserted, that those who use intoxicating drinks are not led to do so by any supposed sanction to be gathered from Holy Writ; for there are many acts, and courses of action, sanctioned in Scripture which they never think of imitating, and a compliance with which they would regard as irksome or unmeaning. They do not drink, in short, because they think that Scripture approves of drink and drinking; but, since they drink at all, they are glad to resort to Scriptural texts for protection against the persuasions of the temperance advocate. Especially is this their refuge whier other refuges have proved too frail; and when hard pressed with the arguments of the abstainer, drawn fron science and experience, some find consolation in th(e attempt to construct a rampart of texts around the glas:of wine, or brandy, or beer which there is no desire to relinquish. This system of defence will generally be found adopted most promptly, and sustained most tenaciously, by persons of religious feeling and profession, whose consciences will not let them be at peace till they have derived, from atleast the letter of the Word, a justification of their personal and social habits. Nor is it intended to charge such persons with insincerity, or wilful false-handling of the Sacred Record. It is no new thing for good men of all opinions to seek for, and to discover, in the Bible a support of that which is conge, II ,WI;-F — '.'-"' * - -' Ioo Scripltzre and the Teciipcrance citcstiofl. nial to their tastes and prepossessions; and there would be no reason to censure so severely this use of Scripture, were the reference to it accompanied by a reverential resolve to accept its teachings in their natural sense, and to walk by the light its precepts and principles reflect. It may be observed, however, that when the Bible is resorted to for the defence of theories or customs that are indefensible by other means, the probability is that a serious error of judgment is committed, and that no real honor is done to the Inspired Oracles by this ostentatious profession of respect. Natural law cannot be opposed to the VWritten law, unless they have different authors, or the one Author be divided against himself. Questions of experience and science are strictly such as natural law is most competent to decide; and, therefore, the appeal to Scripture against natural law is not only a confession of weakness, but is indicative of a wish to take the case into a court whose decisions the appellant may more easily succeed in construing to his supposed advantage. Yet neither his real advantage nor the cause of true religion can be concerned in the result of this effort when most apparently successful; for the ultimate effect can only be to make the Bible-revelation contradict the revelation of God in the laws he has impressed upon the visible works of his hands. Infidelity may exult in the imagined contrariety, but piety must resent the mischievous inference that has produced it. Let it, for example, be proved that total abstinence is better than the use of strong drink for the individual man in all his capacities, and for society in all its relations, and what is done for the Bible, or to increase man's faith in it, by the endeavor to show that the Scriptures either teach two contradictory doctrines, or that its teaching is contrary to the verdict of nature on the subject? No way can be found so sure as this to shake confidence in the inspiration and authority of the volume of heavenly truth. The wise words of Galileo, if *!..:.. - t I Thze &Use anid A-1 buse of Scriplnre. pondered and digested, would avert such evil-meddling: "In these [natural sciences] we must not begin with the authority of the Bible, but with the observation of our senses, and the necessary proofs, because Nature and the Bible alike owe their existence to God.... Before all things, therefore, we must make sure of facts. To these the Bible cannot be opposed, else would God contradict himself; we must consequently expound their sense accordingly, and the capacity of making such researches is also a gift of God.... It is setting the reputation of the Bible on a hazard, to view the matter otherwise; and, as our opponents do, instead of expounding Scripture according to facts surely proved, rather to farce nature, to deny experiment, to despise the intellect."* Similar is the judgment of the ]riz'shI Qztarterly?evizew: "In pure science, in physics, in psychology, in medicine, in the several departments of the social economy, jurisprudence, and politics, there are principles and facts for working out the problems with which men, as philosophers, are conversant; and we are content that, in. all-such matters, man should be left to the function of analysis, and to the inductions and analogies of practical philosophy." t The proper use of Scripture in all such questions is to show, where necessary, how apparent discrepancies can be explained, and to trace how in its narrative and didactic parts Scripture is in accordance with the laws of the natural world. When, therefore, it is objected that-let the verdict of science and experience be what they may-the Bible is on the side of intoxicating drink, we are impelled, from our profound reverence for the Sacred Word, to scrutinize the alleged proofs of this position, and to enquire, in our turn, whether the opposite conclusion may not be * Letter of Galileo to Madame Cristina, Granduchcssa Madre. t Britisi Quarterly Rez,iezv, January, x846. IOI Io02 Scripture anzd the Tcnzpcrance (t2estioni. derived from a study of the Old and New Testament writings. I.-SCRIPTURE DOES NOT SANCTION THE USE OF ALCOHOLIC LIQUORS. The irrational notion on which some persons appear to proceed, that the bare mention of wine and strong drink is equivocal to a divine sanction, would be ridiculous if it did not border on the profane. Two principles of interpretation must be followed if unreason and confusion are not to reign supreme: First, alhtsioizs to customs and usages, and to te habilts of pious ment, it ancien,t times, do not involve a divine sanction of those customs, usages, and habits. The Bible is a storehouse of facts, remarkable for nothing more thain for the fidelity with which local lineaments and coloring, and individual characteristics, are represented. But to attach God's sanction to the things and persons so represented is truly absurd, even when men of virtue and renown are the subjects of the portrayal. The wisest and best mnen in all ages have done many things neither wise nor good, yet things not stamped as unwise or evil in the historic record. Neither the drunkenness of Noah nor the deceit of Jacob is expressly condemned; and these extreme cases will show how necessary is the rule just laid down. It might be, or not, that holy men of old used intoxicating drink; yet it would not follow, as some imagine, that the practice was rendered holy, or was a proof of their holiness, or was other than a remnant of the imperfection adhering to them. Secondly, Divine!ermission is not to be regarded as equivalent lo divine sanction. It was not God's pleasure (for reasons sufficient to his wisdom) to lay down minute injunctions providing against all wrong doing, even when he designed to prepare the enslaved race of Israel as a people for himself. Practices were toierated consistent with the moral per I I ut4ll of Boblicl Iizterpretfationz. fection neither of individuals nor the nation; and some of these permissions take the form of distinct arrangements and regulations. Slavery, polygamy, facility of divorce, a visible monarchy, together with much ignorance of the more spiritual elements of religion, were permitted, age after age; and what was said of one question was true, doubtless, of the rest, that this was done on account of "the hardness of their hearts." It need not surprise us, therefore, that they were also permitted to use intoxicating drinks, nor are we warranted on account of this permission to infer a divine sanction from the imputation of which every one would shrink in the other cases. As this point will afterwards recur, in regard to New Testament times, we shall proceed to consider those marks of divine sanction which are supposed to be conferred in Scripture upon the use of intoxicating drinks. One remark it is necessary to premise —that the words "wine" and "strong drink," which occur so frequently in the English version of the Bible, and which have certain fixed significations in our common speech, must not be considered as necessarily conveying the proper sense of the original terms. Excellent as is the current translation, it cannot possess the authority of the original Hebrew and Greek; and the present movement in the highest quarters for a revision of this version is a sufficient rejoinder to those who quote it, on this question, with a confidence that could not be surpassed if they held in their hands the autographs of the sacred writers. The argument, as wev shall sketch it, is not an elaborate one, and with a little candor and patience it can be mastered by those who have never been trained in Oriental or classical erudition. I. A sanction is claimed for intoxicating drink because w7zie atzd stro;i drink are associated in Scrizture wit'h the tc'z.Aoral blessinzgs froizised to the yews in their possession of the lanz. of Canzaan. So Isaac's prophecy concerning Jacob (Gen. xxvii. 28) of "plenty of corn and wine"; so 103 10o,4 &'z(zi)/II'C a(z(, //bC T7C?;2mci elce ClIcstiovn. Jacob's prediction of Judah (Gen. xlix. II, I2) as to "washig) his garments in wine, his eyes shall be red withl wine, and his teeth white with milk "; so the promise of a bountiful vintage (Lev. xxvi. 5); so the blessing of the "corn, the wine, and the oil" (Deut. vii. 13, xi. I4); so the prospect of drinking " the pure blood of the grape" (Deut. xxxii. I4); and so numerous passages in the prophets, where the corn and the wine are associated as natural blessings of great value, and their loss deplored as a national calamlt3y. All this is true, and in a footnote' we subjoin references to all the passages where "wine," and "new wine," and "sweet wine," are associated with temporal good; but in doing this we also name the H-ebrew words which are so rendered in the English translation. What, then, are the facts patent to every careful reader? (i) When YAYINthe generic term for expressed juice of the grape-is described as a blessing, it is never represented as having an intoxicating quality, but as the liquid (in one place, Jer. * YAix.-Gen xlix. II, z2; Deut. xiv. 26, xxviii. 39; Ps. civ. i5; Prov. ix. 2, 5; Eccl. ix. 7; Cant. v. V, Vii. 9, Viii. 2; Is. Iv. I; Jer. xl. Io-i2, xlviii. 33 Amos ix. 4; Micall vi. 15; Zeph. i. 13: Hag. ii. i1; Zech. x. 7. Tirosi.-Gen. xxvii. 28,,7; Num. xviii. I2; Deut. vii I3, Xi. I4, xii. 17, xiv. 23, XViiI. 4, xxvi ii. 5x, xxxiii 28; Judges ix. 13; 2 Kings xviii. 32; 2. Chron. xxxi. 5, xxxii. 28; Neh. v. II, x. 37, 39. xiii. 5, 12; PS. iv. 7; Prov. iii. IO; Is. xxiv. 7, x-Lvi. 1 7, lxii. 8, lxv. 8; Jer. xxxi. I2; Hos. ii. 8, 9, 22, iv. II, Vii. I4, iX. 2: Joel i.:O, ii. 19, 24; MIicah vi. -'5; Ha,. i. I: Zech. ix. 17. SOVEH.- IS. I. 22; Hos. ~. Iv. SPEu AR[N.. -IsS. Xs xv. 6. KOE.iER.-Deut. xxxii. 4; Is. xxvii. 2. Aiisis.-Cant. viii. 2; Joel i. 5, iii. 8S; Amos ix. I3. ASIIISHAH.-2 Saml. Vi.:9; Cant. ii. 5; Hosea iii.. SI; i,:A,.-Deut. xiv. 26. The albove are no)t references to all the texts in whichl the se-veral Ilebrew terms are translated "wine" or " stronf drink," but they comprise all the principal passages in which an idea of utility is connected with the substances indicated by the original wvords. For a complete list of all the passages, and elucidation of th.em1, the reader is referred to the' Temperance 13ible Commentary-." I 1 Icbrc,za TcriAles LExpIa iizcd. xl. IO, I2, as the solid) produce of the vine. (2) TIROSIH, often spoken of in connection with corn and oil (Itz?z,ar orchard-fruit) is represented as growing upon the vine, and was the name for vintage-fi-uit. It is distinctly spoken of (Micah vi. I5) as trodden, and thus yielding Yayin. Only once is it referred to as possibly a liquid (Isaiah lxii. 8), and this apparent exception is explicable as an idiom, as when we speak of " drinking a cup," meaning its contents. The triad of da,Lo-an (corn), TiROSH (vine-fruit), and yz't-har (olive and orchard fruit), comprehended the whole of that agricultural wealth which Israel held on the tenure of loyal obedience to the Great King. (3) SOVEH was a rich, thick, and probably boiled wine, greatly relished, not for any alcoholic property, but for its luscious quality, being more of a jelly than a liquid. (4) SIE.IARIM is, literally, "preserves," and seems to refer (Isa. xxv. 6) to the delicacies or sweetmeats common at Eastern banquets, in succession to the " fat things " i.e. savory food, first served up. (5) KHEMER, inr the passages named (Deut. xxxii. I4; Is. xxvii. 2), has obvious reference to natural unfermented wine. (6) AiSIS is the fresh sweet juice as it issues from the trodden cluster. (7) ASHISHAH is admitted by all writers to refer, not to wine, but to pressed cakes of grapes. (8) SHAKAR, translated in our version "strong drink," and once (Numbers xxviii. 7) "strong wine," is the venerable lingual ancestor of our familiar "sugar," and specifically denotes the sweet juice of other fruits than the grape, also the juice of the palm-tree. Sweetness, not alcoholic strength, was its characteristic; hence the point of the threatening (Is. xxiv. 9), that it should become "bitter" to those who drank it. Nothing is more common in the East, at the present day, than for palm-juice to be drunk in its fresh and non-inebriating state, No doubt YAYIN and SHAKAR were often allowed to ferment, and used in that state, and were also frequently mixed with drugs, to I05 Io6 Sc-iptllure a,ld the/ Tcmica'cc Qitcstliol. increase their intoxicating potency; but whenever they are named in Scripture, in language implying Divine approbation, there is either a direct or tacit reference to them as natural bouni/es, the offspring of vital growth, and no word is ever employed in approbation of them as fermzenzed liquors. What is said of them, viewed as intoxicating agents, will be shortly seen. 2. 4 dz'zoe sanclzon is clainzed for " zoiine" and "slron; drzizk" because they were aihoinz/ed as drizk-of erings under /he /aw - were a/llowed to be used al sacred festivals, and were adofi/ed as syizbols of shirziztal blesszizgs by Ihe _ewisk PioohShels. Besides what has been already advanced in explanation of the Hebrew words translated " wine" and " strong drink," it may now be replied-FIRST, and generaly, that the burden of proof rests upon Ihose ozho assert thal the or.,,z;zal lters s(~zz,fy an inloz'iaz'n,~ lizuor i/ the passages referredl o. MIere assertion, however bold, is no evidence, and till evidence is given there is no argument to answer. All that is certainly known is that yayin (grape-juice in some state) and shakar (sweet juice in some state) were appointed, and that if they were used in a natural unfermented state, the command was obeyed. SECONDLY, and ssbecialy, as to each of the cases cited-(i) The "drin;zkofferizns" were, in reality, libations-liquid offerings to be poured out, not to be consumed; and it is clear, from the letter and spirit of the Levitical law, that unfermented fluids would be in stricter accordance with that ritual than fermented ones. There were repeated prohibitions against leaven, and unleavened cakes were in numerous cases distinctly prescribed. (2) The permission (Deut. xiv. 26) was that of exchanging /irosA for yayiz, and partaking of the latter, with the "household," and so rejoicing before tle Lord. The circumstances do not warrant us to infer that the vintage-fruit was to be exchanged for intoxicating grape-juice; and if children wvere to partake of the II I k II I f':i,,c ii yCw'iS t'r''i((s. feast, and share in its gladness, the probability would rather be that for their sakes, to say nothing of the sobriety of their seniors, the yayz.n would be of thle most innocent sort procurable. There is no hint given that an intoxicating sort was to be preferred; and common prudence would dictate to the fathers and mothers of Israel that if the yayz,t had passed into a fermented state, a liberal dilution (like the three or more measures of water to one of wine used by the sober Greeks) would be expedient. There is not a shadow of reason for the shocking supposition that God desired the heads of Jewish families to provide a liberal supply of inebriating drink for their children in order that they might rejoice before him.* (3) The passages in which spiritual blessings are symbolized by wine are the following: In Proverbs ix. 2, 5, Wisdom is said to "mingle" her wine; but as the other references to mixed wine, as a curse, ascribe to it an intoxicating quality, there is the strongest reason for supposing WVisdom's wine to be deprived of that specific property. The Song of Solomon, spiritually construed, repeats the metaphor (v. I) " I have drunk my wine with my milk; eat, O friends, drink, yea, drink abundantly, O beloved;" and (viii. 2), "I would cause thee to drink of spiced wine of the juice of my pomegranate." This is language unequivocally pointing to the natural juices of ripened fruits, of which the largest possible draughts could be taken without danger to health or morals. Who would dare to apply such an unlimited invitation to drinks, a few glasses of which would derange the intellect and fire the passions of all but seasoned topers? The passage in Isaiah xxv. 6, has been adverted to above. The ancient versions give very conflicting renderings of the Hebrew mishla sheiizairiimi, "a feast of preserves"; and the coIl * See the "Temperance Bible Commentary" on this passage; also an elaborate Prize Essay upon it, by Dr. Lees. 107 io S cr/:ix Adt ei 7II t': )(;iarz/c C/lailt'0. mentators are equally disagreed. The Englishl translators have supplied the words "wine on tihe," to give, as they imagined, a suitable rendering. E ven retaining their conception of the sense, there is nothing to support the notion that the wine is eulogized because of an intoxicating quality. \Vine, well-refined from its albuminous particles, and so preserved from fermentation, would admirably fulfil the conditions of the text. Isaiah's invocationI (lv. I) may be compared with the passage in Canticles (v. I). In Isaiah lxv. 8, the " new wine in the cluster" is the vine-fruit in its ripening state clearly, it cannot be wine after fermentation. In Amos ix. 13, the " sweet wine " is a7s/s, which both the Septuagint and Latin Vulgate render by" sweetness "-the idea being that the rich ripe grapes yield their sweet juice to the treader's foot. In MIicah vi. I 5, the " sweet wine " of our version is not ahszs, but tzros,7, and the real sense of the original can only be perceived by rendering the entire verse-" Thou shalt sow, but thou shalt not reap; thou shalt tread the olives, but thou shalt not anoint thee with oil; and (thou shalt tread) the vintage-fruit (lz'ros4), but shalt not drink wine" (yayzn). In Zechariah ix. I7, the parallelism of "Corn shall retake the young men cheerful, and new wine [shall make cheerful] the maids," would lead the English reader to regard the " new wine" (lzSros/h) as a solid, answering to "corn." This passage is also valuable as showing that in Scripture "cheerfulness" is not related to an intoxicating article. It is the " corn " that makes the youths cheerful, and surely the maidens are not conceived as needing alcoholic wine to make them the same! One Scotch divine is charged with having attempted to restore what he regarded as the proper correspondence by taking " corn" as a synonym for whiskey! The anecdote may be apocryphal, but will serve to point the violation done to the true sense of Scripture by a proalcoholic exposition of its really temperance texts. HoIJo yeszis Di]4' redgfoml yowlii. 3. A divine sanction is claimed for the use of intoxicating drinks bces, bczsc, is -avccud, /he S'zz'vtr (ifercd fromiz 7/ohiz /e'azilst izZ'ts-ilz, l7 "x,'ize" a slAd "stro,l (b:zilk fl-oli z,hz'ih the latler was exclzuded. But Jesus differed from John as a non-Nazarite, and John as a Nazarite was interdicted from the use of everything that came from the vine; so that by using the fruit of the vine in any state, the Lord made this difference as clearly marked as it could have been by the use of fermented fluids. The life of John was that of a solitary, waiting till crowds came to him; that of Jesus was as strikingly social, and where men abounded he wended his way -to bless and to save them. For this purpose, and not from any disposition to self-indulgence, he visited the houses of all classes, and occasionally went to dine or sup with those who could thus be most intimately reached. Yet, through all, he pleased not himself; he did not gratify, even to the extent he lawfully might have done, his corporeal appetites; he was not the man of sensuous delights, but of sorrows; and his self-denial as far exceeded John's as the greatness of his mission exceeded that of his forerunner's. That "he came eating and drinking" is but another form of stating that he was social in his conduct; and if he was called a glutton and a wine-bibber (Ahag,os kai oizofiolees, literally "an eater and a wine-drinker"), the accusation implied excessive use of meat and drink, and not the intoxication arising from alcoholic wines. To suppose that the Saviour used any wine bccztlse it was alcoholic, and therefore sanctioned its use as such, is an assertion without the vestige of proof, nor does the Gospel history supply a fraction of evidence in support of the theory that he used the wine forbidden to the priests in their temple service-the wine forbidden to kings and judges-the wine employed by prophets to symbolize the wrath of the Almighty. To argue that lie did so because he speaks of new wine being put into new log Io Sciriptiirc aid the 7ic iicrace Quesi1on. bottles and not into old, lest the bottles should burst, is to mnisread the allusion. Fermnented wine might have been safely put into old leather-bottles, but new unfermented wine could not, because in old bottles a ferment might exist which would set the juice fermenting, and the carbonic acid gas confined within the bottles would certainly burst them; but if unfermnented wine were put into new bottles, both would be preserved. So, Christian doctrine could not be put into the old bottles of Jewish rabbinismni (with which much leaven was connected-against which he warned his disciples), but it must be reserved for other vehicles-the simple unsophisticated hearts which he had selected and consecrated for his service. As to the alleged superiority of old wine over new, of which so much is made, as a proof that the Saviour approved of fermented wine, the inference is destroyed by the three considerations: (I) that he simply alludes to the common taste, without any opinion, of his own; (2) that he himself at the supper spoke of" new wine" (symbolically), as the best; and (3) that unfermented wine is more palatable and of finer quality the longer it is kept. As to the miracle at Cana, the whole narrative has been exhaustively considered, * and it will suffice to say briefly in this place, that (I) the narrative gives no other information as to the change of water into wine, beyond this-that the water drawn and handed to the governor of the feast was so transformed. That all the rest of the water,'or any other part of it, was also changed into wine is simple inference, nothing more. The evangelist is silent concerning any other change, and the remarkable reply of Jesus to his mother, coupled with the absence of all mention of a provision of wine for the guests, leaves the question of quantity, to say the least, in the utmost doubt. Mr. Law, a century ago, held that only the cupful of water was * See "Temperance Bible Commentary" on this passage. i Tiee.Jarri-iazac at Ct/ a. turned into wine. (2) The supposition that the Lord supplied twelve gallons of alcoholic wine for a village wedding-feast, after the guests had exhausted a previous supply, is one so gross that reverence for the Redeemer would call for its rejection. If it is pleaded that his presence would guard against excess, the miracle ceases to be an argument in favor of wine-drinking, without such a protection at the present day. (3) The explanation furnished by St. Chrysostom, St. Augustine, and other eminent theologians, that the miracle consisted in doing instantaneously with the water in the firkins what is done, by Divine power, gradually with the water in the grape upon the vine, gives (on the theory of a transformation of all the water) a satisfactory key to the miracle as revealing the Saviour's glory, averts all evil reflection fronm him as the holy and blameless One, and disposes altogether of the theory that the wine so made must have been of an intoxicating character. It may further be remarked, that the merely external and physical acts of Christ, as to eating, drinking, clothing, lodging, and the like, are never proposed to us as examples for literal imitation. It is even obvious that many of those acts which were suitable to him might be very unsuitable to us; and it ought to require no words to show that to have the spiTrit of Christ-not to repeat his external actions-is to be really his, and to win his acceptance. The apostle who refused to know Christ "after the flesh," would have stood aghast at the indelicacy which holds up the Saviour as a wine-drinker, in order to justify an indulgence which prevents the rescue of souls from death, and the hiding of multitudes of sins. 4. The sanoctz'oit of the afiostles is claiiized for /he use of it Ioxzical< dri'zks. It is said that Peter, when he and the rest were accused of intoxication, did not say they were total abstainers; and that Paul inculcated temperance in all things; declared all creatures of God to be good, and I I I I I12 Scripilu, re aild Athe Tcizpcra;we eOiicstioni. to be received with thanksgiving; and advised Timothy to abandon total abstinence, and use a little wine for his stomach's sake, and many infirmities. In reply, as to Peter, hlie sought merely to argue with the accusers on their own ground; he did not even say that the apostles were never drunk; but he appealed to the hour of the morning (9 A.M.) as evidence that, if they ever drank, and ever got drunk, they were not likely to do so at that early period of the day. As to Paul-(I) He appeals to the competitors in the Grecian games, who were "temperate in all things," as an example to Christian disciples; but this temperance (or self-restraint) in all things included, as he knew, abstinence from wine and sensual pleasures. (2) The apostle affirms that whatever is good for food is not to be rejected on grounds of ceremonial uncleanness. He does not affirm (how could he?) that whatever exists ought to be eaten; but he defends what is intrinsically fit against superstitious objections. If, in truth, every creature of God good for food is to be received as God made it, what is to be said of the practice of turning incalculable quantities of corn into an intoxicating drink? (3) Paul's advice to Timothy concerning wine can no more be transferred to every other person than can his advice to him to beware of Alexander the coppersmith. The advice was given to a total abstainer in ill-healtlh, and had respect to a medicinal use of wine; but it is appropriated by those who are not abstainers, who are not ill, who apply it to a dietetic and habitual use of intoxicating drink, and who are utterly ignorant what was the cause or nature of Timothy's ailment, and equally as ignoraint of the kind of wine the most fitted for his cure. We may search long and in vain for a more extraordinary abuse of Scripture than is exhibited by this violent wresting of St. Paul's kindly counsel. 5. Sanction is claimed for the use of intoxicating drinks, bec(ause eiither Chirist nor tte Atoslle forbade Ithal use, bit ~ ant(,! PAt of Sprilpziie to Social Evils. tdac'/ 7ypcr;zi/ z!. Bishops and others, we are reminded, were waraned, not against "a ll" wine, but against "much" wine. The true meaning of Apostolic testimony on this subject will shortly be examined. On'the objection as above stated, it may be remarked that a similar sanction may be claimed for many things which the Christian world has agreed to reject. Neither Christ nor his apostles forbade polygamy,* or gladiatorial shows, or domestic slavery, or Romian suppression of Jewish independence, or an absolute form of government; yet are these things sanctioned in the Scriptures? It was not the intention of Christianity to weave a network of regulations applicable to all possible circumstances, but to breathe into men's hearts a spirit which would, if cherished, lead at length to a correction of all abuses. The early Church was far from perfect in knowledge or practice; and the apostles themselves were too sincerely conscious of imperfection to set up their own lives for imitation, except so far as they imitated the Lord in the spirit of his life. The design of God was the progressive holiness of the Church, and its increasing conformity to his laws, physical and spiritual. The plea that because this thing and the other were permitted, therefore were sanctioned once, and therefore are sanctioned for ever, is an attempt to nullify and reverse the intentions of Providence. All light is light, but not always equally luminous; all goodness is goodness, but not equally free fronm alloy. The spirit of love in the ancient Church set its brand on the cruelty associated with slavery; and now (with the fuller knowledge of the evils inherent in slavery as such) it sets its brand upon slavery itself. It would be useless to ask why ancient Christianity did not expressly condemn * A " bishop" wras to be "the hus'band of one awife"; hence it has been argued "other Christians w-ere permitted to have more than one," a mode of reasoning worthy of that vwh:och is brought against total abstinence principles. I I 3 I I4 Scriptzire aizd the/ [ratc ace i n Oesiion. slavery; it would be worse than useless to allege that therefore modern Christianity ought not to have condemned it. Christianity does not change, but its seminal principles branch forth and bear richer fruit as time goes on. The acorn is not an oakl, but the oak springs from the acorn. The apostles, while their positive religious teaching was "with the HJoly Ghost and with power," exhorted the whole body of Church members to cherish those spiritual gifts which would more and more open up fields of knowledge and pastures of truth, and ways of righteousness, in which their Divine Leader would guide them, "for his name's sake." WVe have yet to enquire what the apostles did teach respecting intoxicating drinks; but it is universally admitted that they warned men against the dangers of their use, and condemned intemperance in all its forms. The evil, as they apirehenzlfedif, they denounced-how much of the evil this was we shall proceed to consider; but, acting in the spirit, and walking in the track of the sacred writers, we are not only authorized, but constrained to condemn whatever we may discern, by means of our increased experience and scientific researches, to be also evil. Unless the apostles are supposed to have had an infallible and universal knowledge of all truth upon all questions-and we know that this knowledge they did not possess, even as to all questions of religion (for example, the period of the Lord's second coming and the final judgment), we may claim, without presumption, to possess upon many questions of physical science, social economy, and political jurisprudence a knowledge greater than theirs, and therefore the right and duty of applying to these subjects those principles of Christian judgment which it was their glory to proclaim. In so doing iwe do not disparage their work; on the contrary, we render it the loftier homage when we apply to the circumstances of our times the unchangeable canons of Christian righteousness. We i Bible Support of A bsli'zciice. deny, then, miost emphatically, that the apostles ever extended a sanction to alcoholic drinks; but what they did-as in the case of slavery-was to enunciate a rule of action, and to inculcate a spirit of judgment, carrying with them, in embryo, all that was needful to lead, in the one instance, to the overthrow of the institution and instruments of slavery, and, in the other instance, to the avoidance of all the causes of intemperance, whether residing in the nature of strong drink, or in the drinking usages and traffic of our age. I I. —THE SACRED SCRIPTURES GIVE SUPPORT AND ENCOURAGEMIENT TO THE PRACTICE-OF TOTAL ABSTINENCE. I. They show the consistenzcy of total azbstlinence with the highest health and zo'or. Thle sojourn of the Israelites for forty years in the wilderness without wine or strong drink (Deut. xxix. 6); the abstinence rule of the Nazarites, with the picture drawn of their physical vigor (Lam. iv. 7); the prescription of total abstinence to Samson, and, before parturition, to his mother (Judges xiii. 4, 5, 7); the great age attained by men who, like Samuel, were Nazarites from birth (I Sam. i. I I-25); the physical benefits enjoyed by the Rechabites for three centuries, down to the time of Jeremiah (Jer. xxxv. 7-IO); the refusal of Daniel and his'friends to take the king's wine, and the results (Dan. i. ii-I6): these are so many Old Testa - ment proofs of the greatest strength and longevity without the use of any inebriating drinks. The case of Samson alone is a crucial one; for no one can suppose that, if alcohol had been conducive, in a peculiar manner, to the development of strength, it would have been denied to him. The striking extension of this inhibition to his mother while she bore him in her womb, was also in accordance with all that science has disclosed as to the influence of the mother's diet upon her unborn offspring. The language of the chorus in Milton's Samson A4gonistes I 15 WI I I6 Sciz/zli-c a/(nd hic Tcnzcpreailce Olcstii z. gives eloquent expression to this temperance testimo ny: "Oh! madness to think use of strongest wine, And strongest drinks, our chief support of health, W,hen God, with these forbidden, made choice to rear Ilis mighty champion strong above compare, Whose drink was only from the liquid brook." That men need a daily portion of intoxicating liquor for daily sustenance, or to preserve them in good health, or to give them long life, is a doctrine contradicted and refuted by the historical parts of the Bible; and when the prophet brings before the people the man of iron sinew, the smith who "worketh in the coals, and fashioneth it with hammers, and worketh it with the strength of his arms," he does not exhibit him as flagging for want of exciting drinks; "yea, he is hungry, and his strength faileth; he drznket nzo water, anzd is fainl." * Bread and water, and a few figs and raisins, revived the fainting Egyptian after three days' want of food and drink; t and all through the Biblical record there runs the sound physiological assumption, that nutritious food, with water as a diluent, is alone essential to robustness of health and length of days. When God would threaten Judah with the severest temporal loss, it is "the whole stay of bread, and the whole stay of water," that he determines to take away.: 2. 7'lze Scrifb'tres illistrale the.ernzicios infltence of ~nloxicalil., drinzks ibfonijersonzs of the hzgAhes rank and Mte grealesi adva'ilafges of intel/ectual and mzoral training. The modern notion that only ignorant and low-born people are likely to be overcome by wine, is opposed to the whole tenor of the sacred narrative. The men who are described as betrayed by strong drink are the holy Noah, the obedclient Lot, the rich sheep-master Nabal, the royal Elah, Bernhadad, and Belshazzar; and when the ravages of in t I Sam. xxx. II, 12. , II * Isaiah xliv..2. + Isaiah iii. i. The Grcal and Gooed ill Dan&'er. temiperance are portrayed in general but appalling terms, it is not said that the classes thus scourged were the ill-educated and the down-trodden, but it is the "priest and the prophet" who stray and stumble;* the luxurious inhabitants of Ephraim who are abandoned to dissipation;t the princes who are sick with wine, and the king who stretches out his hand with scorners; I the rich and powerful oppressors, who turn their temples into wineshops;~ the wealthy sensualist, who debauches his neighbors. 11 And when the Saviour and his apostles would warn against the perils and evils of strong drink, they do not assume that only the ignorant and the worldly are exposed to those perils, but they press these warnings upon the most faithful and pious. "'Take heed to yourselves," said Jesus, in warning his followers against "surfeiting and drunkenness;" and it is to believers that the exhortations are addressed, " Be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess" (asolioa-mental and moral ruin). ** "Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour" (katai'ee-drink down). tf Thle general fact is that the richest, wisest, and best have fallen, and the general inference is that none can guard too vigilantly against the -influence of this betrayer of men. The Scriptures, therefore, do not at all sanction a current opinion that " education," or even moral and religious influences, will secure society against the evils of strong drink, unless the education and moral influence are directed specifically against the formation of the drinking appetite and the exclusion of its causes. 3. T/ze Scr!litzres clearly poiint ozit that t/e cause of nimteif5erance atd all z'ts nischief lies ait ihe ztlozoxicatii, anzd corrztlzg z nalzire of slronz drink. Alcohol, as such, was not * Isaiah xxviii. 7, 8. t Isaiah xxviii. I, 3.; Hosea viii. 5. ~ Amos ii. 8. Ilab. ii. I-, i7. ~ Luke xxi. 3, 4. ** Epli v. I3. tt I Pet. v. 8. 117 i I 8 ScripplAle anid l,ie 7ct,ipecra'lce lOucstiorl. known to the sacred writers, but they knew that y,ayin and shaZkar when fermented were no longer innocent as before; and instead of the modern epithet of " good creature" bestowed on alcoholic drinks, they used the most powerful terms they could employ to describe the evil character of that property in wine and strong drink by which they seduced and demoralized mankind. (r.) In Proverbs xxiii. 3J, the Aheonozena offernzenztation aredescribed, and in verse 32 the result is declared-" At the last it (such wine) biteth like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder." Such wine is possessed of the serpent's nature, and instils the serpent's poison. (2.) Ilz referriz, to strong drzizk there is a,eizarkaile use of "khamah," a word translated in the English version "poison," "anger," "fury," "heat"; but the sense of which is lost in two important passages, where the colorless rendering " bottle " is given to it. In Hosea vii. 5, "the princes have made him sick with bottles of wine," should be, by consent of all critics, "the princes have made him sick with poison (or inflaming heat) of wine." And in Habal-kuk ii. 15, "that puttest thy bottle to him," should be, "that puttest thy poison (or inflaming drink) to him." The same word occurs in Deut. 32, 33, "Their wine is the poison (khamazath) of dragons ": a text which throws light on Prov. xxiii. 32, where the red bubbling wine is compared to the serpent. (3.) The nature of zomze and sIro;tg drink is disfblayed by use of eli~thts wtih a mzoral sense. Prov. xx. I1,"Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging." So Habakkuk ii. 5, "he transgressethl by wine "-or rather, " the wine is defrauding " —is a defrauder or deceiver. The Vulgate renders it, "wine deceives the drinker." Other translators give, "wine is treacherous." So Doddridge and others consider that in Eph. v. 7, the apostle ascribes "excess" (dissoluteness) not to being drunk with wine, but to wine itself —" in which (wine) is asolia." The epithets used iI Biblic(l Descriipio/is of fite. by Solomon and Iabakkuk are, of course, metaphors, but they would be senseless if they did not indicate the specific character of the object to which they relate. An attempt to evade the only reasonable conclusion-that the article so described is not a good, but baneful thingis sometimes made by the plea that what is said of "wine" is said of its excessive use; but the excessive use is not "red," and does not "give its eye (bubble) in the cup"; and if such terms as " mocker," "raging," " deceiver," do not markl some causative quality in the substance spoken of, metaphorical language is a delusion. Wine cannot literally be a "mocker" (scorner); but if this epithet is not assigned it on account of its peculiar power of turning men into "mockers," or scorners, for what reason is it assigned? To say that " the effects are meant," is to say nothing, for does not the nature of the effects indicate the nature of the cause? Can a good tree bring forth corrupt fruit? The attempt to find an analogy to such metaphors by alleging that money is called "the root of all evil," and the tongue "a world of iniquity," and "full of deadly poison," is of no avail. Not money, but love of money (one word in the Greekizhilaruaria) is spoken of; and what is said of the "tongue" is plainly meant of the evil disposition which moves the tongue to evil utterances, as wine moves those who consume it to evil in thought, word, and deed. Thus we find that Scripture sustains the temperance doctrine that the evil arising from drinking is to be referred to a perverting quality and tendency in the drink used, and that, therefore, to blame the effects while cherishing the cause is not to act conformably with enlightened religion. Hence we are prepared to find that (4.) Ifzlovica/&nz druzk is emSloyed as a symibol of evil aztd of dzvote wrath. The evil operates within, the wrath from without; but they resemble one another in their disastrous effects, and this resemblance finds fit symbolic.ex iig 120o ScriIre and tke Tcmerct.ce hTicstioiZ. pression in the inebriating potion. That MLoses had this likeness in view (in Deut. xxxii. 32, 33) is probable but its recognition is indisputable in such phrases as, "the wine of astonishment;"* "In the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture," etc.;t "The cup of his fury-the cup of trembling;" I "The wine-cup of this fury;" ~ "Babylon is a golden cup: the nations have drunken of her wine; therefore the nations are mad;" it "The cup also shall pass through unto thee [Edomrl;" "I give her cup into thine hand;",* "The cup of the Lord's right hand shall be turned unto thee;" t "I will make Jerusalem a cup of trembling." 1: The same imagery recurs in the Book of Revelation, where the spiritual PBabylon is said to have "made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication;" ~ and the awful image is renewed " of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation " ill [" poured out without mixture," really, is "mingled, unmingled " —mingled with drugs, unmingled with water], and "the cup of the wine of tl-he fierceness of his wrath." It may be alleged that the "wine," thus used, as symbolical of so much profligacy and punitive fury, was wine made artificially stronger by drugs of maddening strength; and that this complex idea was in some cases in the prophets' mind may be admitted; yet it is not necessary to the force of a majority of the passages, and when included, is only an adjunct to raise the lurid glow of the prophetic symbol. The radical idea is t/at ihe zi'tze is inzloxicalit, —that the cup is full of intoxicating wine, mixed or unmixed-and that the drinking of this intoxicating draught is attended with terrible evils. Here, beyond question, the liquor is inebriating, yet it is not the symbol of good, but of evil, * Ps. Ix. 3. t Ps. lxxv. 8. t Is. li. -7, 22. ~ Jer. xxv.'5. 11 Jer. li. 7 ~ Lam. iv. 2'. ** Ezek. xxiii. 3,1-34. 1'' Hab. ii. i6. -t* Zech. xii. 2. ~~ Rev. xiv. 8. xvii. I, 2, XViii. 3. i11i Rev. xiv. To Abstizczl-ce fecoi iizcizded iz Scriplgrc I2I not of joy, but of woe; and if the intoxicating element is employed to depict such intense depravity and suffering, how can we suppose that it is recognized in Scripture with favor and approval? * 4. 7'ie Scrztzb.res d.s/tzizc/ly advise sejara/zIoz from Iizloxicaizao/ (hi;zk as a izeais of jro/cc/o;z frontz ils z;s(l/zos and de(zit,er;lzs ejfecs. There can be no doubt that the Nazarites were a body separate&" as the word implies, to exhibit in bold relief a purity of life superior to that of the people at large. Certain signs of this separation were enjoined, and it is not questioned by impartial commentators that the interdiction of intoxicating liquors was adopted to guard them against the moral perils to which, by using them they would have been exposed. Is such a precaution needless now, when the liquors in common use are much more potent, and the drinking customs much more prevalent, than in those ancient times? How vitally this abstinence was associated with Nazaritism may be gathered from the divine displeasure against seducers, "And I raised up of your sons for prophets, and of your young men for Nazarites. Is it not even thus, O ye children of Israel? saith the Lord. But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink; and commanded the prophets, saying, Prophesy not."t The Nazarite system prevailed down to New Testament times, and it was a tradition in the early Church that some of the apostles were attached to that venerable institution. Again, in Leviticus x. 8-I i, there is a remarkable prohibition made general and unchangeable in regard to the priests when they ministered before the Lord. On such * It may also be added that "ferment" or" leaven "was treated by the sacred writers as a sample and symbol of corruption. So Christ speaks of "the leaven of the Pharisees," and St. Paul bids the Corinthians "purge out the old leaven." But without leaven where would be intoxicating drink? t Amos ii. I,.2, I22 Scrizpttre aizd 1t/e Tcvniperazice Cztestion. occasions they were not to take wine nor strong drink, lest they died. Expositors usually connect this law with the preceding event described-the offering of strange fire by the sons of Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu. But whatever the origin of the interdict, its stringency and solemnity cannot be mistaken, nor can the precautionary object of the Divine Lawgiver be overlooked: "And that ye may put difference between holy and unholy, and between unclean and clean; and that ye may teach the children of Israel all the statutes which the Lord hath spoken unto them by thc.hand of Moses." Clearness of discernment, and fidelity in the discharge of duty, were the reasons for this command; and when it is pointed out that the command was only binding during the period of ministration, we are constrained to ask whether the possession of a power to see and act aright is not praiseworthy at all times; and whether the security of abstinence (a security enjoined under awful sanctions for a special purpose) may not and should not be embraced perpetually by those who are described as a "holy priesthood" appointed "to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ"? For when, it may be asked, is the Christian desirous of ceasing to be engaged in this sacrificial work? clow, indeed, can it be intermitted, when his whole body is to be "a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God"? The principle embedded in this Levitical precept is as applicable to us as to the Aaronic priests and we shall be but placing ourselves under a divine guard when we follow, in all our way of life, the rule to which they were called upon to render periodical obedience. Again, the command of the wise man, "Look not thou upon the wine when it is red,"* coupled as it is with a description of the liquor named, is not to be toned. down into a caution against overindulgence, without setting * Prov xxiii. 31. .I7oral? Stfeay iii A bstiiieizc. criticism and common usage at defiance. "Look not upon" may not mean " Do not cast your eye upon," but it unquestionably means, "Do not gaze at so as to desire the object looked upon "-an injunction which cuts away by the root the opinion that intoxicating drink is good, and therefore is to be desired and consumed. Again, the admonition addressed to Lemuel, "It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is not for kings to drink wine, nor for princes strong drink,"* remains a standing rule for all kings and princes; and when the reason is assigned, "Lest they drink and forget the law, and pervert the judgment of any of the affiicted,"t- it is manifest that such a reason renders the rule applicable, not to princes and monarchs only, but likewise to all who are engaged in any business which concerns the happiness and interests of their fellow-creatures. The import of the injunction is, "Do not imperil your capacity of benefiting those who depend upon your sobriety of judgment and feeling; and, to ensure that sobriety, hold aloof from the liquors by which it might be subverted or impaired." The following verses (Prov. xxxi. 6, 7), "Give strong drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of heavy hearts. Let him drink, and forget his poverty, and remember his misery no more," must be taken in subordination to the preceding injunction. To read them as a warrant to "drive dull care away" by the help of alcohol would be to put Anacreon into the Bible, and to turn the Proverbs into a primer of inebriation. What is intended is not to recommend wine and strong drink as antidotes to grief and pain-a proposal at which poverty revolts, and which the Redeemer rejected on the Cress;-but to point out that the only use to which such things could be put (were such use lawful) is to dull the mind, and to * Prov. xxxi. 4. t Prov. xxxi. 5. + latt. xxvii. 34, compared with Mark xv. 23. I23 I I I24 Scripture and the Temperance Question. blunt the sensibilities, and to drown the memory of past and present sorrows. Where mental activity and selfpossession are required, the exhortation is, "Drink not," lest you should-not because you certainly will-be less fitted to discharge the duties and responsibilities of your station. An important question now arises, Is there, in the New Testament, anything answering to the foregoing declarations? It must be remembered that the Old Testament retained its sacred authority in the Christian Church on all questions of morality and spiritual truth, and it was one of the points most carefully insisted upon by the apostles that the law of liberty in Christ did not free believers from the law of obedience to that divine law which is always "just and good," and in the observance of which there is a daily and everlasting reward. From the peculiarity of their circumstances as builders of the Christian society, it was not to be expected that the apostles would decide on questions of civil polity, diet, and the like. We know they did not; and it was according to the divine wisdom that they laid down broad principles of moral right and duty, the application of which was to be carried on and out under the enlightening and quickening influence of the Holy Spirit. We find, then, that the apostles did not contradict or in any way contravene tile judgment passed upon intoxicating drink by the fathers who wrote as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. But (I.) Theyenforceds the vi'rtue of tenfierance (enkrateZa)-the restraint of the appetites and passions-restraint not only as to the degree, but also as to the direction of the desires.* (2.) They enforced the virflue of mental soundness (sofhro'zsmos)-that calmin and judicial state of the faculties, of * As before remarked (p. IT2), St. Paul speaks with warm commendation of the temperance of the Grecian athletes, one feature of which consisted in the exclusion of strong drink. Thze A.postles ~izforccd Sobriety. which, as we have seen, abstinence from intoxicating drink is the appointed guardian. (3.) Tlhey enforcedthe vzrte of sobriely-freedom from unnatural excitement; and they selected for this purpose a word (neefho), the acknowledged meaning of which, at that time, was total abstinence from wine, or such a sober state of body and mind as is consequent on this abstinence.* This is the very word used in Greek to express the abstinence enjoined upon the priests during their ministrations; and, whether the apostles intended to convey the full sense of the term or not, its very selection intimated their conviction that the sobriety which was based on total abstinence was that which they could most cordially approve. To break the force of this conclusion, attention is often drawn to the passages in which bishops are enjoined "not to be given to wine," and deacons and elder women "not to be given to much wine"; hence it is inferred that some wine was permitted. But (I) cautions against excess can never be held to express approval of the acts referred to. "Let not the sun go down upon your wrath" is not an approval of wrath while the sun is above the horizon. (2.) A general condemnation of all that was comprised under the name of wines (Greek oinoi,; Latin vina), would have included some drinks perfectly harmless. (3.) Bishops were to be "not given to wine" (literally, "not near to wine "), and both these and deacons' wives were enjoined to be "abstinent" (neefihalzous),t a command not to be obeyed by any indulgence in wines capable of exciting the animal nature and deadening the mental and spiritual powers. It may, in conclusion, be affirmed that the New Testament does not contradict, but coincides with, the letter of the Old, while the ideal of religious perfection it holds * See " Temperance Biblical Commentary," pp. 36.-5. + I Tim. iii. 2, " vigilant" in English Version, but in the same version, iii. IIx, " sober." 125 4. 126 Scriptuire and Ile Tc'Jperance Qucsiion. up to imitation calls for the exercise of the greatest selfrestraint in leading to separation from articles whose influence for evil, on the bodies and minds of men, has been universally lamented. The "moderation" alluded to in Phil. iv. 5 is not moderation in wine-drinking or any kind of drinking, but moderation of mind in the midst of injustice and sufferings from without. 5. Thte Scr~13tures lay down general 5rzncipiles of action, which, without any strainizng, cover the wvhole r-ound of total abstinence firactlice. To "love his neighbor"; to care for the stranger; to build his house with a battlemented roof; to hold the owner of an ox known to push with his horns answerable for any harm the ox might do; to guard against coming or contingent evil; to break down occasions of sinful transgression; to take stumbling-stones out of the way-all these are principles of action prominently adduced and illustrated in the Old Testament: and in the New there is not less earnestly impressed upon all the duty of sacrificing sensuous pleasure (even if a real good, as an eye or right hand) rather than incur spiritual loss; the duty of so acting that others shall not be led into temptation or into conduct by which their own consciences may be defiled; the duty of sacrificing our own pleasure for others' good; the duty of subordinating our present and physical interests to the development of the inner and higher life; the duty of doing all things to the glory of God; the duty of not neglecting any known means of good-all these lines of duty are written with heavenly brilliance in the New Testament scriptures, and ought to be imprinted with equal brightness on the Christian's heart and life. But how can this be done without a cordial exemplification of the practice of total abstinence? How are the intemperate to be cured if they do not cast away that which ensnares them? 0 The TVinic of the Lord's SziLpper. How can the causes of so much temptation, seduction, and stumbling be removed while drinking customs are sanctioned by the influential and the pious? How can men effectually guard themselves against danger while they invite it by habitually using the intoxicating'cup? How can the intemperate be assisted to reform, and the young to grow up in habits of abstinence, if the sober and elder portions of society content themselves with advice which their own example does not, to say the least, comport with and confirm? How can Christian spirituality be realized in its utmost beauty and excellence while the wine which mocks and deceives is consumed day by day? How can Christian self-denial fulfil "what remains of the sufferings of Christ " when it is incompetent to the resignation of "moderate" doses of intoxicating drink? How can Christian benevolence bind up bleeding hearts, and staunch the chief sources of human wretchedness and vice, when the brewery and distillery and drink-shop are afflicting society with every species of vice, every degree of misery, every depth of degradation?' How can the believer be blameless concerning the neglect of opportunities of usefulness, while he leaves untried the means of doing good provided in the personal and associated influences of the temper ance reform? Whatever in Christianity is pure and puri fying, sweet and saving, luminous and light-giving, self protecting and self-sacrificing, brotherly and beneficent, God-honoring and Christ-imitating, finds in the practice of total abstinence either a congenial assistant or an appropriate instrument for attaining the supreme ob ject of all Christian prayer and endeavor, that God's will "may be done upon earth even as it is done ill heaven." 127 11 128 Scripptulre crzd tlie Tcicraiece 2luestiolt. OBJECTIONS. iMany objections have been disposed of in the course of this discussion, but there are several which'may be separately reviewed before this chapter concludes. I. It is said "l tat by isi/ig wz'e iit the ordi;za;zce of lthe Lor(t's Sii~per, the Savz'our ave it a sjeciza honor znconszisleizl wilh the character ascribed lto zi by the advocates of lotal abstinence." Several points of consequence are overlooked by persons who raise this objection (i.) That thfe zvord ",zvoe " does nzot once occzur in the Nezew Tesltazent in referczce to the inslilittoiz and celebralion of the Lord's Siizfier. The phrase used by the Saviour is "the fruit of the vine," and the apostle Paul simply speaks of "the cup." Those, therefore, who assume, contrary to .evidence, that the Greek word oigos always meant the intoxicating juice of the grape, gain nothing by the assumption, unless they also show that "the fruit of the vine " is also of necessity an inebriating fluid. Who, however, can pretend to advocate a proposition so utterly ridiculous? WNho does not know that the "fruit of the vine," as it exists in its natural state, is not and never can be of an intoxicating quality; and that, when'the expressed juice becomes so by passing through the fermenting process, it so far ceases to be the fruit of the vine and vital growth, and becomes the fruit of the vat? The wine of commerce can only claim to be considered the fruit of the vine to the extent that it is physically identical with the substance which the vine produces, and this identity can never be so complete as when the expressed juice of the grape is preserved and presented, in the sacramnental service, chemically the same as it exists within the uncrushed cluster. Besides, it is notorious that, beyond the change in the grape-juice effected by fermentation, the adulterations of various liquors are so ingenious that the ablest connoisseurs cannot tell fabricated from genuine wines; and are so extensive that very SacraicizitZal Consistczcy. few who purchase even the high-priced sorts can have any real guarantee of their genuine character; hence it is evident (i) that the unfermented juice of the grape is more really the "fruit of the vine" than any fermented wine, however genuine; and (2) that the assurance of using the " fruit of the vine" at all must be exceedingly slender in the great majority of cases where the wines of commerce enter into the sacramental service. It is also forgotten (2.) Tizat as allferment andfermzenled things were forbidden to the 7ews at the Passover, when the Lord's Supper was instituted, it is more in accordance with the symbolical meaning of that prohibition (one which the apostle applies to Christians-i Cor. v. 6-8) to take the unfermented than the fermented juice of the grape. We need not enter into the controversy whether the Jews celebrated their Passover with fermented or unfermented wine: if with the former, they must have broken their law; and whenever they do so now, they break their law; and those who assume that the Lord used such wine must also assume that he broke the law he came to fulfil (as a Jew) to the letter.* Modern science has demonstrated (what careful observation must always have shown) that the fermentation of grape-juice is similar to the fermentation of bread or beer; and, therefore, that whatever spiritual symbolism is conveyed by the absence of fermentation must be expressed more clearly by unfermented than by fermented wine. If it is argued that consistency would require the bread used to be unleav * The casuistry by which the modern Jews (who used fermented wine) and their Christian apologists defend this breach of the Levitical law is a striking illustration of the leaven of sophistry which characterized the teachirfn of the Scribes and Pharisees. Its inconsistency is not less marked, for, while some say that fermented solids only were meant, others assert that the fermentation of grape-juice is not like the fermentation of beer, and some that the grapejuice does not ferment at all! I29 130 Scriptulre aCd te Temperance Question. ened, it may be answereed that partial inconsistency is better than total; and, further, that if the olA symbolic meaning should be still conveyed at all, it may most properly be observed by rejecting the fermented substance (wine) which retains the products of the fermenting process (alcohol and carbonic acid), rather than the substance (bread) which has cast off those products while subjected to the heat of the oven. The objector likewise forgets (3.) That as the Lord's Szitfer is deszgned to bring before thIe cvomznizicanl tle redeeming work of C,irist as lyftied by his broken body and shed blood, Ihere ought to be as close an analogy as is piosszble between the physical elements and the sfiriz'tialfacts. The Redeemer himself was "pure, undefiled, and separate from sinners," and his work was like himself, and designed to conform us to his glorious image. Bread is a fitting representative of what is lifegiving, for it is the staff of bodily life (and leavened bread does not lose this essential representativeness); but alcoholic wine is in reality wine mixed with an element hostile to health, life, virtue, and Christian excellence-it is wine which by fermentation has become a " mocker" and " defrauder"; and, as soon as this fact is understood, the symbol loses its symbolic beauty and fitness, and the communicant is compelled to think of what the physical element ought to be, and not what it really is. But what need is there for this incongruity to subsist, when "the pure blood of the grape" can be procured, and a true correspondence between the visible substance and invisible reality can be established? The silly charge that total abstainers reject wine and prefer water in the eucharist is one of the idle tales by which ignorance or malice is accustomed to defame a principle unassailable by reason. The head and front of all the offending is that many of the friends of temperance desire to use, and to see used, in the celebration of the Scr;ipft.,re Guideance SzffcieAi.1 Lord's Supper, an article which is unquestionably "the fruit of the vine," rather than a liquor that is, at best, the fruit of the vine partially perverted, and that may not contain a single drop of the juice of the grape. The reader must judge for himself whether this preference is contrary to the example and will of the Redeemer in the institution of the Holy Supper. * 2. It is said "th at if total abstinence had beez a iracl/ce uivizzer-sally r'6lht and needful, Scriit?re leachhiz/ zvooild haz,e bcen so -Plaii as to hzave admizztted of no dozubt uJoit the qztestia,n." It might be enough to reply that if the use of intoxicating drink were right and desirable, Scripture (on the objector's principle) woluld have given a declaration to that effect impossible to have been mistaken. The objection proceeds on the assumption that God will place our duty before us in a form to render misconception i;mfiosszble; but this assumption is contradicted by all experience. In another form this objection is directed against Christianity, the evidences for which it would require to have been made impossible of denial; and it is in replying to this objection that Bishop Butler remarks: "The unsatisfactory nature of the evidence with which we are obliged to take up, in the daily course of life, is scarce to be expressed. Yet men do not throw away life, or disre gard the interest of it, upon account of this doubtfulness. The evidence of religion, then, being admitted real, those who object to it as not satisfactory, that is, as not being what they wish it, plainly forget the very condition of our being; for satisfaction, in this sense, does not belong * It will be observed that the objector is met on his own ground, though it might be retorted fairly on him that as the temperance reform aims to remove the evils of strong drink, taken as a beverage, the occasional use of wine in the Lord's Supper has never been made a bar to temperance association. An earnest desire is, however, prevalent that what is discarded as dangerous from the domestic board should not be retained at the table of the Lord. 13 I I32 Scriplure aind ilic the Yc a tp itct C csl/iiotz. to such a creature as man." * \What we do know is that God has been pleased in the Scriptures to supply such intimations upon this subject, by narrative, by description, by proverb, and by general principles, as are amply sufficient to guide men to a correct opinion and a wise decision; and it is exceedingly doubtful, had he done otherwise, and had still more precise directions been afforded, whether the world would have been more convinced and more obedient. Do we not see now that the nearest approach to a positive injunction, " Look not upon the wine," etc., is qualified and attenuated by persons professing profound reverence for the Divine Word, but who are unwilling to cast away the wine " when it is red, and when it gives its bubble in the cup"? And, further, may not the same objection be brought against every form of Christian belief, that if God had willed men to adopt it, he would have revealed it so plainly that none could have illy of the world. If it has failed to suppress the whole evil, it has done so because it has failed to be sufficiently supported, especially by those whose rank and influence would have given them the greatest power over social custom and the course of legislation. Yet how can the temperance system be blamed because such men failed to give it their valuable and necessary help? Is truth a failure because many are liars? or goodness, because many are base? or Christianity, because only a third of mankind are its nominal professors? or sobriety, because drunkenness is still extensive? Are sanitary laws failures because a fourth of those who die annually in our country are sacrificed by the neglect and violation of those laws? God demands human cooperation, in order to the full effect of his providential blessing; and where any evil is traceable-like this of intemperance-to man's own active wrong-doing, to expect its cessation until man ceases to do wrong is infatuation indeed. To go further than even this, and to ascribe the failure of relief to the system which urges man to forbear his wrong-doing, is to travesty every principle of common sense and commnon justice. Those who bring this charge will be fortunate if they can acquit themselves of contributing to the failure they discover, by withholding their own aid from the temperance reformation. Principles do not promulgate themselves, and movements are made up of co-operating minds; and those who censure either the one or the other for "failing" to do all that is needful. while they have been doing nothing to help or much to hinder, adopt the most conspicuous Appcals to Various Classes. method of blazoning abroad their own unfaithfulness to the obligations they confess. What is practicable to each one and practicable at once is to withdraw all his exam~ile and infuience from the drinking system, and lo transfer it to the side of total abstinence; and, by doing this, he will both discharge his personal responsibility and render similar conduct more easy (and, therefore, more circumstantially practicable) to some others. Parents, will you not take this step for your own benefit, and to enable you to train up your children more wisely in the way in which they should go, when they quit your roof to breast the storms and grapple with the trials of life? Ministers of religion, to you many look up-and not least the young-for an exemplary guidance and prudent counsel; can you with a pure conscience recommend by your example the use of strong drink in preference to the total abstinence principle? Teachers of youth, whether in the Sunday-school or day-school, will you not unite "wholesome doctrine" and the influence of a consistent practice in a course which must affect your youthful charge for good or evil, as long as their life shall last? Medical practitioners, increase the honors of a noble profession by throwing your great social and scientific weight into the regimen which extends human life, and helps it to attain more fully its greatest ends. Journalists and men of letters, myriads regard your words as oracles; is it too much to ask that you should employ your commanding influence not to stereotype old errors and bad habits, but to stimulate enquiry, circulate truth, and emancipate your country from the thraldroni in which the drinking system holds her? Philanthropists, add to your other works of benevo lence this one, by which the value of the rest will be heightened and their permanence secured. 18I 182 Vcrdict of Science and Chiristianity. Citizens and legislators, your patriotism must be judged by your devotion to your nation's highest interests. Give not to party what is meant for the nation. In this reform you can co-operate, with the assurance that all that is politically good will be furthered by it. Christians, your love of man, your concern for the advancement of religion, bring before you vividly the greatness of this duty and the glory of this privilege, by which you may at one and the same time assist in the reclamation of the lost and in defending the bodies and souls of men against the insidious enemy of both. Be not slack or weary in this species of well-doing: its reward is with it. Young men and maidens, to you the temperance reform presents itself as a refuge against the most destructive of vices; and on your entrance into active life it may be of the utmost consequence whether you avail yourself of its protection or reject it. By enjoying its benefits thus early, you will possess them more fully than is possible with persons of riper years, and you may hope to employ them in your turn to the greater advantage of those with whom you may form intimacies of pleasure, of business, and of affection. Reader, to you, be your position what it may, the counsel is affectionately and urgently given, to make the temperance reform your choice, and to promote it by every wise and worthy means. You will certainly find that, like "the quality of mercy," such influence as you can lend it will be "Twice blessed: "It blesseth him that gives and him that takes." Make the trial, and trust in God for the result. APPENDICES. A. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN'S EXPERIENCE. "At my first admission into the printing-house (Palmer's, Bartholomew Close, London), I took to working at press, imagining I felt the want of the bodily exercise I had been used to in America, where presswork is mixed with the composing. I drank only water; the other men, near fifty in number, were great drinkers of beer. On one occasion I carried up and down stairs a large form of types in each hand, when others carried but one form in both hands. They wondered at this and several instances that the Water American, as they called me, was stronger than themselves who drank beer. We had an alehouse-boy, who attended always in the house to supply the workmen. My companion at the press drank every day a pint before breakfast, a pint at breakfast with his bread and cheese, a pint between breakfast and dinner, a pint at dinner, a pint in the afternoon about six o'clock, and another when he hlad done his day's work. I thought it a detestable custom; but it was necessary, he supposed, to drink strong beer that he might be strong to labor. I endeavored to convince him that the bodily strength afforded by beer could only be in proportion to the grain or flour of the barley dissolved in the water of which it was made; that there was more flour in a pennyworth of bread; and, therefore, that if he would eat that with a pint of water, it would give him more strength than a quart of beer. He --------------------- Alppeindiccs. drank on, however, and had four or five shillings to pay out of his wages every Saturday night for that vile liquoran expense I was free from. And thus these poor devils keep themselves under." —Be]claiziiz Frankl'in's A4ulobiografIhy. This had respect to London workingmen's love of ale in I725. A quarter of a century previously, De Foe, in his "True Born Englishman," writing of the same class, had said: "In English ale their dear enjoyment lies, . For which they'll starve themselves and families." The same superstition still prevails, and with the same disastrous fruits. B. WASTE IN THE PRODUCTION OF FERMENTED DRINKS. In the early stage of the temperance movement, Mr. Joseph Livesey, of Preston, rendered great service by the frequent delivery of a lecture on Malting and Brewing, This lecture, when printed, went through many editions, and Mr. Livesey has since enlarged and recombined the information there given-in his essay on "Malt, Malt Liquor, Malt Tax, Beer, and Barley." Practical information of this kind is of great value, and if possessed by university scholars and writers for the press would prevent them speaking and writing the greatest nonsense on the nutritive properties of beer and ale. The process of perversion begins by steeping the barley in water for forty-eight hours, when it is taken out and laid in heaps upon a flagfloor; when it has germinated to a certain extent, it is spread to a depth of about six inches on the hot floor of the malt-kiln, and is there subjected to a uniform heat, by frequent raking and turning, for eight or nine days; thus necessitating a large amount of Sunday labor. What follows may be described in Mr. Livesey's words: "After crushing the malt, the next step is gnashing. This consists, I84 Appcllcdices. not in boiling the grain, but putting it into hot water at a temperature of I70 degrees, for the purpose of melting out the sugar or saccharine matter produced in malting. After mashing a sufficient length of time, the brewer draws off the liquor so long, as it runs sweet, and rejects all the rest, which is sold to the farmers in the shape of' grains.' The rejected parts of barley here are at least 2 lbs. out of 6 lbs. The sweet wort thus drawn off would not intoxicate, whatever quantity a person was to take. The next process, after mixing the liquor with hop-water, is to ferment it. It is here all the mischief is done. Carbonic acid gas and alcohol are here produced. The sugar becomes decomposed, and a recomposition (of its elements) takes place, forming these two. Sugar being nutritious and spirit not so, the loss of nutriment by this change and by the overflow of barm (which is part of the barley) is about I lb. The fourth process is that of fiz'g. People don't like 'muddy' ale, and as some thick matter cannot be prevented coming over in mashing, the liquor is put to settle, and these settlings are disposed of as'barrel bottoms.' These bottoms are really part of the barley, and the loss here ag,ain is at least i lb. These are the losses during the four stages of beer-making: We begin with barley................. 6 lb. In Malting we abstract as' Malt Combs'.. i- lb. In Mashing we dispose of in grains....... 2 In Fermentingwe lose in sugar and' barm' I " In fining we reject as'barrel bottoms'.... of" 5 " So that when we come to examine the beer, we find that there is not more than I2 ounces, generally not more than io ounces in the gallon, of barley left, and this chiefly gum, the worth of which, when compared with other food, is less than a penny." Analysis shows that fermented liquors are as deficient in nutritive elements as the pro I85 A eppeizdices. cess of producing them would lead us to expect. An inmperial pint of Bass's bitter beer showed on analysis the following constituents (exclusive of the acids): ...................... 52'5 gr-ains. ...................... 332-5, ac t................... iooo " ecific gravity'794.... 468'o " ...................... 7,797'0 " Total............... 8,750'o An imperial pint of Allsopp's ale was composed as follows (exclusive of the acids): Sugar........................... 40'0o grains. Gum............................ 263'75' Bitter Extract................... 9375 " Alcohol, specific gravity'794.... 477'50 " Water........................... 7,875-00 " Total................. 8,750'oo London porter differs from the above in containing less bitter extract, less alcohol, and more water; the darker color is obtained by using malt dried at a high temperature, but as the same appearance is induced by drugs, adulterations are very common. In the South Kensington Museum, London, there may be seen two bottles, each containing an imperial pint of liquor, and each bearing an inscription testifying that they contain the following ingredients: London Stout gr. oz. gr. 0 a.............. I8, 0 o 0.............. II 0 240............. 0 281 40.............. 0 54 i86 Sugar..... G u ii-i...... Bitter Extr Alcohol, sp W.-iter...., Palc Ale. OZ. Water....... I7i Alcohol...... -, Sugar........ 0 Acetic Acid.. o Appendices. C. ADULTERATIONS OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS. IN the Report of the Committee of Convocation on Intemperance, the following paragraph occurs (p. 7): "Attention is loudly called by the clergy and coroners in their returns to the extent to which the adulteration of intoxicating drink prevails, with the effect, in many cases, of circulating a liquor-to use the words of one coroner-' which maddens and destroys.' It is to be observed that these adulterations generally arise out of the competition among rival dealers, and frequently supply the only margin of profit by which the trafficker is enabled to keep possession of his house as the tenant of some brewer or distiller." Appendix J to the Report presents a train of testimonies from the clergy and coroners to the prevalence of adulterations. Tobacco and salt are very commonly used in adulterating malt liquors; but there is evidence that in the manipulation of fermented and distilled liquors, among the substances used either to impart pungency, clearness, intoxicating fume, or some other property calculated to render the liquor more popular, are the following-nux vomica and its essential principle strychnine, henbane, cocculus indicus, grains of paradise, opium, arsenic, oil of vitriol, sulphuric ether, essential oil of almonds, oil of turpentine, alum, sulphur, sulphate of iron, aloes, quassia, cherrylaurel water, foxglove, wormwood, and "headings" (a mixture of powdered copperas and alum). Brewer's Guides and similar works have been written to reduce adulteration to a science, and one of these authors (S. Child), in his "Every Man his own Brewer," explains as the reason of this drugging that "malt, to produce [suf ficient alcohol for] intoxication, must be used in such large quantities as would very much diminish, if not i87 'Appendices. totally exclude, the brewer's profit." But the retailer, when a tenant of the brewer or distiller, has his own private and cogent reasons for making use of the druggist. In almost every ginshop and public-house the charge per gallon for malt liquor or ardent spirits is less than the wholesale price adding the duty!' One of two things, therefore, either the retailer gets no profit, or his profit is obtained from dealings with the liquors before they pass into his customers' hands. Mere dilution with water, while a fraud upon the buyer, would not be objectionable in regard to the effect produced; but, as the buyers pay for excitement, and will have it, the seller is tempted to add further injury to fraud by adding from dark and occult sources to the poisonous potency of his measures. One of the worst effects of this practice is, that it enables so many drinksellers to remain in the business, and thus add to the public temptations to intemperance which the common sale of intoxicating liquors inherently presents. D. NATURE OF THE TRAFFIC IN INTOXICATING DRINKS. THE difference between legitimate trade and the traffic in intoxicating liquors is not incidental but fundamental, residing in these two points, (I) that the articles sold are in other cases an improvement on the raw material, and that (2) an increase of trade is a banafide increase in the national comfort and prosperity. In the traffic in intoxicating drinks these characteristics are not only absent, but the opposite are present in the most terrible forms. The drinks themselves have wasted in their manufacture the harvests of vast regions, and are not consumed for the little nutriment they retain. But in the place of food there is a poison. What the common sale ofalcoholic con' i88 Appendices. pounds produces, the Edintburgh Review (July, I854), may be left to describe: " The liquor traffic, and particularly the retail branch of it, is a public nuisance in all three respects, physically, economically, and morally. By its physical consequences it causes death to thousands, reduces thousands more to madness and idiocy, and afflicts myriads with diseases involving the most wretched forms of bodily and mental torture. Considered in its economical results, it impairs the national resources by destroying a large amount of corn which is annually distilled into spirits: and it indirectly causes three-fourths of the taxation required by pauperism and by criminal prosecutions and prison expenses; and, further, it diminishes the effective industry of the working-classes, thereby lessening the amount of national production. Thirdly, viewed in its social operation, it is the cause of two-thirds of the crime committed; it lowers the intelligence and hinders the civilization of the people, and it leads them to illtreat and starve their families, and sacrifice domestic comfort to riotous debauchery." E. RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE CONTINUANCE OF THE EVILS OF INTEMPERANCE [The following appeals are selected from the words of eminent men, who "being dead yet speak" to all who have ears to hear and hearts to feel.] THE late Bisizo! of Norwich (Rev. Dr. Stanley) said: "Few can bear more impartial testimony to the merits of teetotal societies than myself, since for some time I was opposed to them on the supposition that they were visionary and impracticable. I have, however, long since been a convert from conviction, founded on experience and observation, that they are most instrumental in raising thousands and tens of thousands from a degraded profligacy to virtuous and industrious habits, and converting i89 AAppendices. sinners from the ways of vice to those of religion. I think every clergyman who has the welfare of his parishioners at heart ought to give them his support, and to take the lead." Pzev. yohi WVesley said (Works, vol. 7): "You see the wine when it sparkles in the cup and are going to drink it. I say there is poison in it, and therefore beg you to throw it away. If you add, It is not poison to me though it be to others, then I say, Throw it away for thy brother's sake, lest thou embolden him to drink also. Why should thy strength occasion thy weak brother to perish for whom Christ died?" eVen. Archdeacot 7effreys, of Bombay, has said: " Friends countrymen, and, above all, Christians! can you look upon this Golgotha, this Aceldama of human blood, and not stretch out a pitying hand to save? For it is in your power to stop the pestilence and arrest the march of the destroyer, if you will but be persuaded to take your censers in your hands, not filled with the unhallowed fire of intoxicating drinks, but with clear cold water from the spring, such as God gave to Adam in Paradise, and to stand between the living and the dead, and stay the plague. I say it is in your power to do it. A confederacy of all the sober and temperate of England and her colonies, to put away the instrument of intemperance out of their houses, and to declare that they will have nothing to do with the buying, selling, or using intoxicating drinks, would bring such disgrace upon their use, as positively to drive intoxicating drinks out of England, and to save your country! But nothing short of this will do it. If you would reap the blessing, if you have the noble ambition to save your country from her besetting sin, from the curse of intoxicating drinks, you must pay the price of it." Rev. Dr. Potter (Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Pennsylvania) has said: " It was a glorious consciousness I9o Appelzdic'so which enabled St. Paul to say,' I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men.' May this consciousness be ours in respect, at least, to the blood of drunkards! May not one drop of the blood of their ruined souls be found at last spotting our garments! Are we ministers of Christ? Are we servants and followers of him who taught that it is more blessed to give than to receive? We can take a course which will embolden us to challenge the closest inspection of our influence as respects intemperance; which will enable us to enter without fear, on this ground at least, the presence of our Judge. May no false scruples, then, nor fear of man which bringeth a snare, no sordid spirit of self-indulgence, no unrelenting and unreasoning prejudice, deter us from doing that over which we cannot fail to rejoice when we come to stand before the Son of Man!" The Peav. TYi'lliai;t ay, of Bathl, wrote: "I sincerely lament that many of my ministerial brethren in our severa denominations feel so little interest in this subject, especially as they know, or easily may know-First, the immensity of evil of every kind arising from the use of these liquors, and counteracting every means of doing good. Secondly, that the entire abstraction alone can preserve the mass from the malady and the curse. Thirdly, that their own example would have an extensive and powerful influence in their moral admonitions to sway others; and that influence is a talent for which we are responsible. Fourthly, that self-denial for the sake of usefulness is a species of benevolence the most noble, heroic, and Christian, enforced by Paul, and above all by him who "pleased not himself," but when " rich, for our sakes became poor, that we through his poverty might be rich." What! cannot we watch with him one hour? Fifthly, that though we cannot, and do not, deem this practice a sub stitute for religion, it amazingly promotes the temporal welfare of men, personally and socially. And as to re -igi Appendices. ligion-it is a preparation for it, and aids it in numberless ways, which must be obvious to every reflecting mind." Rev 7. Z. fames: "I do most earnestly entreat you to abstain from all intoxicating liquors. You do not need them for health, and to take them for gratification is the germ of inebriety, F. THE FRENCH EXPERIMENT IN ALCOHOL. MUCH interest in scientific circles was caused in the autumn of i86o by the appearance of a French work, entitled Dme Rh4e de l'A,4cool et des A4testheniques danis l'Orgaizisme, Recherches Exyheriientales (Experimental Researches concerning the Procedure of Alcohol and of Anesthetic Agents in the Animal System). This work, to which the prize of the French Medical Academy was awarded, was composed by Drs. Ludger Lallemand and Maurice Perrin, and detailed numerous carefully made experiments by those gentlemen, assisted by M. Duroy, a distinguished chemist. The WestmiinsteriReview, which, in July, I855, had published an article entitled "The Physiological Errors of Teetotalism," from the pen of Mr. G. H. Lewes, gave, in the number for January, I86r, an article on "Alcohol: What becomes of it in the living body," written by Dr. W. B. Carpenter, in which a retraction of Mr. Lewes's theorizings was offered, and a careful digest presented of the methods and results of the French experiments. By means of the test employed-a solution of bichromate of potass in sulphuric acid-it was found possible to detect alcohol in the breath and other emanations of persons who had taken even small doses of alcohol, which turned the red liquor to an emerald green, by decomposing the chromic acid and reducing it to the condition of green oxide of chromium. The experimentalists justly laid 192 low -4pcndic~cs. stress on the iact "that it is not the miere excess of alcohol which the system cannot profitably use up that finds its way into the excretions; for they detected alcohol in the urine of a man. within half an hour after he had taken no more than 30 grammes (463 grains) of braindy; and the ingestion of only a litre, or ordinary bottle of weakl wine, gave rise to a continued elimination of alcohol by the lungs during eight hours, and by the kidneys during fourteen hours. A very striking proof of the length of time during which alcohol remains unmodified in the system, after being ingested in any considerable amount, is afforded by the fact that it was found in abundance in the brains, liver, and blood of a vigorous man, who died of the remote results of alcoholic poisoning, thirty-two hours after drinking a litre of brandy, notwithstanding the early use of emetics and other remoedial means." The reszuze of the French writers is, literally translated, as follows: A. Alcohol, taken into the stomach, applied by the skin, or inhaled by the lungs, is absorbed by the veins, and carried on by the blood into all the tissues. B. The reception of alcohol causes, in animals, an intoxication which declares itself by a progressive series of functional disorders and alterations, whose intensity is in proportion to the quantity of alcohol absorbed. C. It shows itself first in a general excitement; respiration and circulation are quickened; the temperature of the body is increased; afterwards, the respiration and circulation become slower, and the temperature falls. D. Muscular power becomes enfeebled, and ultimately extinct; the loss commencing always in the posterior extremities. E. Insensibility extends gradually from the circumference to the centre. The sensibility and motive power of the spinal cord and nervous trunks are abolished; mechanical irritation of these parts evokes no sign of 193 'l.,.Pclldiccs. either sensation or muscular contraction. however, the excitability of the nerves and spinal cord is still manifested under the action of electricity. F. The respiratory movements cease before the pulsations of the heart; circulation continues after suspension of the other functions; the heart is the lz/,i,zi'i izor'z'eiz5 (last to die). G. The time which elapses between the beginning of the intoxication and its termination in death, has varied in our experiments from forty-five minutes to three hours. H. VIWhen tihe dose of alcohol is not sufficient to cause death, the excitability of the spinal cord and the motivepower of the nerves reappear, after a suspension of variable duration. The sensorial and locomotive functions are not re-established in their integrity till after some considerable time-from fifteen to twenty hours. I. The arterial blood continues of a bright color, and retains all its ap'parent qualities almost up to the moment of death. J. The blood contains, both during life and after death, a great number of free globules of fat, recognizable even with the naked eye. K. The anatomical and pathological changes are-an acute inflammation of the gastric nervous membrane; an accumulation of blood in the right cavities of the heart and in the large veins; congestion of the membranes of the brain. The lungs present no notable congestion. L. All the fluids and all the solids contain alcohol, which is easily reproduced by distillation; or, by estimation, according to the method of volumes. 5I. Alcohol accumulates in the liver, and in the cerebro-spinal nervous mass. The proportional distribution of the alcohol in the principal parts of the organism is represented, in some measure, according to our observations, by the following figures: In the blond, I; in the I94 Ahetlzdiccs. cerebral substance, I.34; in the substance of the liver, 1.4S. The muscular, cellular, and other tissues retain a portion of alcohol very inferior to that which is found in the blood. N. Alcohol, diluted and injected into the veins, produces the same phenomena as alcohol taken into the stomach; but they succeed each other more rapidly, and the animal succumbs in twenty minutes. O. Alcohol, injected into the veins, spreads itself over all the tissues, but accumulates in the brain in a considerably larger proportion than in the liver, contrary to what takes place when it is administered by the stomach. This altered proportion is indicated by the following figures: In the blood, I; in the substance of the brain, 3; in the liver, I.75. P. Death by alcoholic intoxication is due primarily to the special action which the alcohol exerts upon the cerebro-spinal nervous system. Q. After the reception of a feeble dose of alcohol-say, twenty or thirty grammes of brandy-the blood, during several hours, contains alcohol, the presence of which can be demonstrated by tests. R. During life, and after death, we do not find, either in the blood or in the tissues, any of the oxygenated derivatives of alcohol-such as aldehyde, acetic acid, etc. S. The stomach, and the stomach only, contains a small quantity of acetic acid, formed at the expense of the ingested alcohol, by the action of the gastric juice, which operates in this case as a ferment. T. The alcohol is rejected from the economy by different sources of elimination-by the lungs, by the skin, and by the kidneys. It is easy to recover the alcohol, in appreciable quantity, by distillation of the urine. U. These sources of elimination reject the alcohol, not only after the ingestion of a considerable quantity of the 195 AAppendices. substance, but even after the ingestion of very small doses of alcoholic liquors. V. The elimination of the alcohol continues during several hours, even after very moderate ingestion. The elimination is continued by the kidneys for a longer time than by the skin and lungs. X. Aldehyde introduced into the stomach is absorbed by and found in the blood; there is found there, at the same time, some acetic acid, due to the transformation of a portion of the aldehyde. But the aldehyde does not give place to the production of oxalic acid. Y. Aldehyde introduced into the stomach is eliminated partially by the kidneys and by the lungs. After the ingestion of alcohol, aldehyde is not found either in the urine or in the products of the pulmonary exhalation. Z. Alcohol has the same action, and produces the same effects, in man as in the lower animals. G. MEDICAL DECLARATIONS ON THIE USE OF INTOXICATING LIQUORS AND ABSTINENCE FROM THEM. BESIDES a great variety of collective statements, signed by medical men residing in the same town or district, three certzficates of a national character have been published. The first of these wvas drawn up, in I839, by Julius Jeffreys, Esq., himself one of the faculty, and the inventor of the well-known respirator. It was expressed in these terms: " An opinion handed down from rude and ignorant times, and imbibed by Englishmen from their youth, has become very general, that the habitual use of some portion of alcoholic drink, as of wine, beer, or spirit, is beneficial to health, and even necessary for those subjected to habitual labor. Anatomy, physiology, and the experience of all ages and countries, when pro i96 -4fppel/!ces. perly examined, must satisfy every mind well informed in medical science that the above opinion is altogether erroneous. Man, in ordinary health, like other animals, requires not any such stimulants, and cannot be benefited by the habitual employment of any quantity of them, large or small; nor will their use during his lifetime increase the aggregate amount of his labor. In whatever quantity they are employed, they will rather tend to diminish it. When he is in a state of temporary debility from illness or other causes, a temporary use of them, as of other stimulant medicines, may be desirable; but as soon as he is raised to his natural standard of health, a continuance of their use can do no good to him, even in the most moderate quantities, while larger quantities (yet such as by many persons are thought moderate) do, sooner or later, prove injurious to the human constitution, without any exceptions. It is my opinion that the above statement is substantially correct." This imiportant document was signed by Sir Benjamin Brodie, F.R.S.; Dr. W. F. Chambers, F.R.S., Physician to the Queen; Sir Jas. Clarke; Barnsby Cooper, F.R.S.; Dr. D. Davis, Physician to the Duchess of Kent; Sir J. Eyre, M.D.; Dr. R. Ferguson; Dr. M\Iarshall Hall, F.R.S.; Dr. J. Hope, F.R.S.; C. A. Key; Dr. R. Lee, F.R.S.; Herbert Mayo, F.R.S.; R. Partridge, F.R.S.; Richard Quain, Professor of Anatomy in London University; Dr. A. T. Thomson; R. Travers, F.R.S., Surgeon Extraordinary to the Queen; Drs. Andrew and Alexander Ure, and, in all, by seventyeight members of the medical faculty in London and the provinces, most of them men of distinction and authority in the profession. In I847, a second M,EDICAL CERTIFICATE, in whose com position several London physicians of the highest emi nence were concerned, was published by John Dunlop, Esq., who had taken an active interest in its preparation, and in securing signatures to it. These written adhe 197 Apesezdics. sions amounted, in the course of a few years, to upwards of 2,000, and comprised the names of physicians and surgeons engaged in every branch of the profession, and acquainted with every detail, theoretical and practical, of the science of medicine in all its departments. This testimony was as follows: "WNe, the undersigned, are of opinion-I. That a very large portic.n of human misery, including poverty, disease, and crime, is induced by the use of alcoholic or fermented liquors as beverages. 2. That the most perfect health is compatible with total abstinence from all such intoxicating beverages, whether in the form of ardent spirits, or as wine, beer, ale, porter, cider, etc., etc. 3. That persons accustomed to such drinks may, with perfect safety, discontinue them entirely, either at once, or gradually after a short time. 4. That total and universal abstinence from alcoholic liquors and beverages of all sorts would greatly contribute to the health, the prosperity, the morality, and the happiness of the human race." Among the signatures to this valuable document were those of Dr. Addison, Senior Physician of Guy's Hospital; Dr. Niell Arnott, Physician to the Queen, and author of the "Elements of Physics"; Dr. B. G. Babington, F.R.S.; Dr. A. Billing, F.R.S.; Dr. John Bostock, F.R.S.; Dr. R. Bright, F.R.S., Physician to the Queen; Sir B. C. Brodie, F.R.S.; Sir \V. Burnett, M.D., F.R.S., PhysicianGeneral to the Navy; Dr. WV. B. Carpenter, F.R.S.; Sir J. Clark, M.D., F.R.S.; Dr. Copland, F.R.S., author of the "Dictionary of Practical Medicine "; Dr. A. Farre, F.R.S.; Dr. Robt. Fergusson, Physician to the Queen; Sir J. Forbes, M.D., F.R.S.; W. A. Guy, M.D., Professor iat King's College; Sir H. Holland, M.D., F.R.S., Physician to the Queen; Dr. P. \I. Latham, Physician to the Queen Sir J. McGrigor, Bart., MA.D., F.R.S., Director-General of the Army Medical Department; Dr. J. A. Paris, Presi 198 41 AiYPcldices. dent of the Royal College of Physicians; Dr. J. Pereira, F.R.S.; Dr. AV. Prout, F.R.S.; Dr. Forbes WVinslow, Dr. A. Combhe, Dr. P. Cramptonr, F.R.S.; and mnany others of equal or nearly equal eminence with the foregoing. The latest!\IEDICAL DECLARATION CONCERNING ALCOHOL was issued in December, 1871, and is as follows: "As it is believed that the inconsiderate prescription of large quantities of alcoholic liquids by medical men for their patients has given rise, in many instances, to the formation of intemperate habits, the UNDERSIGNED, while unable to abandon the use of alcohol in the treatment of certain cases of disease, are yet of opinion that no medical practitioner should prescribe it without a sense of grave responsibility. They believe that alcohol in whatever form should be prescribed with as much care as any powerful drug, and that the directions for its use should be so framed as not to be interpreted as a sanction for excess, or necessarily for the continuance of its use when the occasion is past. "They are also of opinion that many people immensely exaggerate the value of alcohol as an article of diet, and, since no class of men see so much of its ill effects, and possess such power to restrain its abuse, as members of their own profession, they hold that every medical practitioner is bound to exert his utmost influence to inculcate habits of great moderation in the use of alcoholic liquids. "Being also firmly convinced that the great amount of drinking of alcoholic liquors among the working-classes of this country is one of the greatest evils of the day, destroying, more than anything else, the health, happiness, and welfare of those classes, and neutralizing, to a large extent, the great industrial prosperity which Providence has placed within the reach of this nation, the UNDERSIGNED would gladly support any wise legislation which would tend to restrict, within proper limits, the use of 199 A4.c;dices. alcoholic beverages, and gradually introduce habits of temperance." George Burrows, MAI.D., F.R.S., President of the Royal College of Physicians, Physician-Extraordinary to the Queen; George Busk, F.R.S., President of the Royal College of Surgeons; and nearly three hundred of the miost eminent members of the Faculty in London, subscribed the above. INDIVIDUAL TESTIMONIES. The following are but a few medical diC/ta culled from a large repertory of voluntary evidence, much of it given without any intention of aiding the temperance reform: Aberrethiy.-"' If people will leave off drinking alcohol, live plainly, and take very little medicine, they will find that many disorders will be relieved by this treatment alone." 1"Wine is neither food nor drink, but a stimulant." Bo~'haae~.-" Food, not too fat or gross, and water as a drink, render our bodies the most firm and strong." Dr. Briz'lon (St. Thomas's Hospital).-" Mental acuteness, accuracy of perception, and delicacy of the,senses are all so far opposed by the action of alcohol ais that the maximumi efforts of each are incompatible with the ingestion of any moderate quantity of fermented liquid. The mathematician, the gambler, the metaphlysician, the billiard-player, the author, the artist, the physician, would, if they could analyze their experience aright, generally concur in the statement, that a single glass will often suffice to take, so to speak, the edge off both mind and body, and to reduce their capacity to something below what is relatively their perfection of work." S'zr -e/?jav'a; Dro1~ze.-" I cannot doubt that, on the whole, the condition of mankind would have been much better if alcoholic liquors had never been within their r-each" " Stimulants do not create nervous power-, thev 20C) TJ pc1zdices. merely enable you, as it were, to use up that which is left, and then they leave you more in need of rest than you wxvere before." " It is worthy of notice that opium is much less deleterious to the individual than gin or brandy." Dr. Bedezoes (I802).-" As the greatest authorities are against wine; as there are none worth regard on the other side; and, above all, as there is so little danger of being thought odd [in children abstaining], why risk the early destruction of that organ (the stomach) which maybe regarded as the great regulator of the inward man?" "All considerations combine to show that fermented liquors, by their activity, class with the most powerful and, therefore, with the most hazardous drugs. In women the digestive organs may be as much injured by a glass (suppose two ounces) of wine as in a robust man by a pint." Dr. IT. B. Carienler.-" My position is, that in the discharge of the ordinary duties of life, alcohol is not necessary, but injurious, in so far as it acts at all. Even in small quantities habitually taklen, it perverts the ordinary functions by which the body is sustained in health." Sir A. Car/isle, Jf.D.-" Long-continued experience in my profession has convinced me of the safety of a sudden transition from the daily employment of strong drink to a water diet, and that in the most inveterate habits. I have known the most emaciated and broken-down frames, both in body and mind, to spring up and become renovated after a total abstinence from strong liquors for only a fewweeks." Dr. T. K. ChIambers.-" It is clear that we must cease to regard alcohol as in any sense an aliment." Dr. George Cleyne, F.R.S. (I700).-" Without all peradventure, water was the primitive original beverage; and it is the only simple fluid fitted for diluting, moistening, 20I 02ppendices. and cooling-the code of drink appointed by nature. Happy had it been for the race of mankind if other revised and artificial liquors had never been invented! It has been an agreeable appearance to me to observe with what freshness and vigor those who, though eating freely of flesh meat, yet drank nothing but this element, have lived in health and cheerfulness to a great ag,e." Dr. Cizeyne, late Physician-General of the Army in Ireland.-"The observation of twenty years in this city (Dublin) has convinced me that were ten young men, on their twenty-first birthday, to begin to drink one glass (equal to two ounces) of ardent spirits, or a pint of port wine or sherry, and were they to drink this supposed moderate quantity of strong liquor daily, the lives of eight out of the ten would be abridged by twelve or fifteen years. They represent themselves as temperate, very temperate." S/rA4stley Coofer.-" I never suffer ardent spirits to be in my house, thinking them evil spirits, and if the poor could witness the white livers, the dropsies, and shattered nervous systems which I have seen as the consequence of drinking, they would be aware that spirits and poisons are synonymous terms." Dr. Cofiland (Auth6r of "Dictionary of Practical Medicine ").-" There can be no doubt that, as expressed by the late Dr. Gregory, an occasional excess is, upon the whole, less injurious to the constitution, than the practice of daily taking a moderate quantity of any fermented liquor or spirit." Dr. CzlleIn (Edinburgh).-" Simple water, such as nature affords it, is, without any addition, the proper drink of mankind. The drinks which supply the necessary liquid (that is, for the support of the functions of the animal economy) do it only by the quantity of elementary water they severally contain." Dr. Erasmus Darwint (iSoo).-" Under the names of 202 APpciidices. rum, brandy, gin, whiskey,, wine, cider, beer, and porter, alcohol is become the bane of the Christian world." Si Uzip, Fiow,er.-" WVater-drinkers are temperate in their actions, prudent, and ingenious; they live safe from those diseases which affect the head, such as apoplexies, palsies, pain, blindness, deafness, gout, convulsions, trembling, and madness. To the use of water children ought to be bred from their cradles." Sir 70hiz Forbes, F.R.S.-" MJen can do well without alcoholic drinks. It cannot be admitted that the most moderate quantity is, speaking generally, requisite for the maintenance of perfect vigor, under any ordinary circumstances of bodily labor. On the contrary, it seems proved that a proper allowance of good food, without any alcoholic drinks, is the best support of man." Dr. [v. T. Gairditer (Glasgow).-" I am strongly persuaded that to the young, in typhus and in most other fevers, stimulants are not less than actively poisonous and destructive, unless administered with the most extreme caution, and in the most special and critical circulm stances." Dr. Garizet (Author of " Lectures on Zoonomia," I804). -" The most mischievous agent of all, and which contributes to bring on the greater number of nervous complaints, is wine. This I believe produces more diseases than all other causes put together. Every person is ready to allow that wine taken to excess is hurtful, because he sees immediate evils will follow; but the distant effects, which require more attentive observation to perceive, very few see and believe; and, judging from pleasant and agreeable feelings, they say that a little wine is wholesome and good for every one; and accordingly take it every day, and even give it to their children. The idea that wine or spirituous liquors will assist digestion is false. Those who are acquainted with chemistry know that food is rendered hard and less digestible by these means." 203 r A,Piilz'ccs. Dr. yohiz tJo,e (inventor of the stethoscope). —" I have a strong conviction that drinking is the grand curse of this country, and more especially the notion almost universally prevalent among the lower classes, that a proportion of stimulating liquors is indispensable for the maintenance of health and strength, under which impression they take from two to four pints of ale per day, and think that moderation. I have hitherto taken no part in the cause of teetotalism, but if the question should ever become a strictly medical one, I shall feel it due to my country and to the cause of humanity to lend the aid of my feeble pen on the affirmative side." Sz'r Ifeiery -Io/ialzd, ]F.]f.S.-" We have not the less assurance that it (vine) is in numerous other cases habitually injurious in relation both to the digestive organs and to the functions of the brain. It is the part of every wise man once, at least, in life, to make trial of the effect of leaving off wine altogether; and this even without the suggestion of actual malady. To obtain them (the results) fairlvy, the abandonment must be complete for a time, a measure of no risk even where the change is greatest." Dr. _7(iizes _ohizsoT.-" A very considerable proportion of the middling and higher classes of life, as well as the lower, commit serious depredations on their constitutions, when they believe themselves to be sober citizens and really abhor debauch. This is by drinking ale or other malt liquor to a degree far short of intoxication indeed, yet from long habit producing a train of effects that nembitterthe ulterior periods of existence," Professor -fqfzaiTz (Prussia).-" Drinkers of water, provided it be pure and excellent, are more healthy and longer-lived than such as drink wine or malt liquors. It generally gives them a better appetite, and renders them plump and fleshy." Dr. HlifeZi-nd (Prussia, author of "The Art of Prolonging Life.")-" The best drink is water, a liquor commonly 204 zAppndiccs. despised, and even considered as prejudicial. I will not hesitate, however, to declare it to be one of the greatest means of prolonging life." Dr. Lallamz.-" There are whole classes of society in London who are never really sober for years together. The stimulus of spirits renewed day by day and hour by hour, gives them feelings and excitement which are unnatural and, however they may be mistaken for those of health, do not in truth at all belong to it." Dr. E. Lazkesler, FR..S.-" So far as its physical action is concerned, I do not know that we can say anything good of alcohol at all; it may seriously interfere with the tunctions of absorption and injure the coats of the stomach and, when taken injudiciously, even a long way short of producing any effect on the nervous system, may yet pre vent the proper nutrition of the system. and insidiously lay the foundation of incurable disease." Dr..f'ichel Lezy.-" The influence of alcohol upon the nervous system, and particularly upon the brain, is mani fest by a progressive but constant series of symptoms, which in different degrees of intensity are reproduced in all individuals. These constitute a true poisoning, and this morbid state is exhibited under three phases-viz., excitation, perturbation, abolition of the cerebro-spinal functions." Dr. Afacroire (late Physician to the Fever Hospital, Liverpool.)-" After having treated more than three thou sand cases in the Town Hospital, Liverpool, I give it as my decided opinion that the constant moderate use of stimulating drinks is more injurious than the now and then excessive indulgence in them." Dr. Jfarkhiamz (late editor of Brizish Medical _7ournal.' "\We are in conscience bound to say that science has found that alcohol is not good, and that being simply a stimulant to the nervous system, its use is hurtful to the body of a healthy man." 205 A.Ppcidices. Dr. B. W. 2?cAardso;z, Tf.D.-" All alcoholic bodies are depressants, and although at first, by their calling injuriously into play the natural forces, they seem to excite, and are therefore called stimulants, they themselves supply no force at any time, but take up force, by which means they lead to exhaustion and paralysis of power." Dr-. Edward Si;zth, F.R.S.-" Alcohol is probably not transformed, and does not increase the production of heat by its own chemical action. It interferes with alimentation. Its power to lessen the salivary secretions must impede the digestion of starch. It greatly lessens mnuscular tone and power. Alcohol is not a true food; and it neither warms nor sustains the body by the elements of which it is composed. In from three to seven minutes Lafter a moderate dose taken in the morning by himself and friends], the mind was disturbed. Consciousness, the power of fixing attention, the perception of light, and the power of directing and co-ordinating the muscles, were lessened. After thirty minutes the effect diminished, as shown by increased consciousness and the perception of light, as if a veil had fallen from the eyes." Dr. Troller (Physician to the English Fleet in the French War, and author of an "Essay on Drunkenness," I802).-" Intoxicating liquors in all their forms, and however disguised, are the most productive cause of disease with which I am acquainted." Dr. S. Ilezs (Guy's Hospital.)-" Alcohol, though an excitant, is a sedative to the nervous system-is, in fact, an anaesthetic. The argument, therefore, that a man feels better after his glass or two of grog would be equally applicable to the case of the Turk, who feels better for his opium.... Indeed, it may generally be assumed that whilst his feelings are benumbed, his organization is being injured." Dr. Wood (late President of the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh.)-" I have long been a practical ab 2o6 II .,4pp.idiccs. stainer, and fully sympathlize with every movement calculated to put down the monster evil of intemperance." Zi,smnerm;an (Physician to Frederick the Great of Prussia). —" Water is the most suitable drink for man, and does not chill the ardor of genius." H. CASES OF LONGEVITY IN CONNECTION WITII ABSTINENCE FROMI INTOXICATING DRINKS. [The late Sir Cornewall Lewis was sceptical as to all cases ofreputed longevity exceeding a hundred years. A tendency to exaggeration may be admitted in regard to extreme old age; but the following examples will be perused with interest, whatever allowance on the score of excess may be supposed necessary in the instances of extraordinary duration of human life. It is sometimes urged that persons who use intoxicating liquors sometimes live to very great old age, as occasionally those who indulge freely in them; yet the latter cannot be supposed to have escaped all injury from them. In not a few cases, as in those of Old Parr and Dr. Holyoke, of America, the use of intoxicating drink can be shown to have abridged even a term of life in itself of wonderful extent. Bishop Berkeley designated old topers who do not seem injured by their potations "the devil's decoy-ducks "; and that they are mere exceptions (if this can be claimed even for them) to a great physiological rule which connects shortened life with indulgence in strong drink, is strikingly illustrated in the anecdote told by Dr. Chleyne, of Dublin, of a gentleman far advanced in years, who boasted that he had drunk several bottles of wvine every day for fifty years, and was as hale and hearty as ever. " Pray," asked a bystander, "where are your boon c-onpanions?" "Ah!" he quickly replied, "that's another affair; if the truth may be told, I have burled three entire generations of them."] ACCORDING to Herodotus, the ancient 3Vacrobrans ("long-livers ") attained the age of a hundred and a hundred and twenty years; they used milk as their beverage. The same longevity is stated to have been usual among the North American Indians when first discovered, and when they were ignorant of all intoxicating drinks. The great age of the Hindoo Brahmins, and of the ancient philosophic and Christian herzmits, is proved by indisputable evidence; and their avoidance of all inebri 207 A ppc.c/l /ics. ating drinks is equally well attested. ]Cc/z[/er/]z, known a s St. M onnah, is said " never to have tasted wine or strong drink after arriving at the years of understanding." Hi s years are recorded as I85. Ol Parr, whose life extended to I52 years and 9 months, was of very abstemious habits. Taylor, the water-poet, says " His daily swig, Milk, buttermilk, water, whey, and whig." Having been invited to the Court of Charles I., his biographer says, "He fed high, and drank plenty of the best wines," and died the same year (i635). Tiz/z'laz A/Irzi'de died in I698, aged 114 years; he was remarkable for his sober habits. I. Ef,fi,/za(,z, of Cornwall, died in I757, aged I44; in his youth he never drank strong liquor, and always lived very soberly. _ozaat/hai HarloS, of Aldborough, Yorkshire, died in I791, aged I38; his only beverage was milk and water. 4nne Maynzard, of Finchley, died very aged in I756; she was exceedingly abstemious in her habits. Seth Uztanzke, of Bath, was met by Dr. Baynard, and is described by him as 87 years, "a straight, upright man, and wonderfully nimble "; his drink, buttermilk and water; nothing stronger than "small beer." ronz Baziles, also seen by Dr. Baynard, reported himself as I28), years, and said by very old people to have been old ever since they remembered; he had a very strong voice, and said "he had buried the whole town of Northampton, except three or four persons, twenty times over." "Strong drink," he said, "kills'em all." Water, small beer, and milk were his drinks. Sir William Temple relates having met a beggar I24 years old, who, when asked what he drank, said, "Oh! sir, we have the best water in our parish in the whole neighborhood." The landlord of the inn which this "ancient man" visited, said he had got many a pound in his house, but had never spent a penny. Franzcis Hozo died I702, aged II4 years and Io0 months. 208 t i A~ cn dices. Ie was never sick, and drank only water. The venerable lVe.sl,ey, who died at the age of 88, and performed labors almost unexampled for combined and continuous mental and corporeal effort, was very delicate in early life, but, by abstinence and careful diet, overcame very serious ailments and attained patriarchal years. Dr. A. Fothergill, in his essay on spirituous liquors, says: "My worthy fi-iend, Dr. B. Pitgh, of Midford Castle, having from early youth abstained from wines, spirits, and fermented liquors, declares that at this moment he not only enjoys superior health and vivacity, but feels himself as capable of every mental or corporeal exertion as he did at twenty-five, though now in the eighty-second year of his age." The late Earl Stanhope stated that his grandfalzer was a water-drinker, and at seventy-two devoted several hours a day to abstruse mathematical studies; and that his grazndmo/her, who was the same, and enjoyed the use of her ordinary faculties to extreme old age, died at 93. T'7zomas Winsloe, who died in I796, aged I46 years, was exceedingly abstemious in regard to his diet; as was also yohiz TVood, who died in I8I8, aged J22. T.hollas Lavgher, who died in I813, aged II3, never drank strong beer, small beer. or spirits. Jlary Polter, aged io6, died in i839, at Larkhill, near Bath; she never drank beer or spirits. lfr. Crossevy, of Uttoxeter, aged loo years and 9 months, had used milk for many years as his principal beverage. AIfrs. Parker, who died 1837, aged Io9, had abstained from spirituous liquors all her life..V. D'zie, of Oxford, died at the age of 95, in 1843. He had never drunk alcoholic liquors, nor had his father and grandfather, who lived to the ages of I02 and io8. Mrs. Cox, of Bybrook, Jamaica, who died in I83I, and was reckoned to have attained i6o years, had drunk only water dcluring her life. The 7z,maica Roy,al Gazetle contained the notice of an old black woman, who died I40 years old. She de clared she never drank anything but water. She lived on 209 z2p.PcIndices. Holland Estate, the property of Mr. Gladstone (the pre- sent Premier). Thle Staimzfor(Iferciztry, of I853, contained the f)llowing notice: " There is now living a fine old man, 9g years old, who worked for many years as a journeyman fellmonger at Horncastle; he can carry twenty stone weight at the present time, can walk four miles in an hour, and he has drunk nothing stronger than water for the last forty years." O~r. A. yohzson, of Howden, died August I2, I852, in his ninetieth year. He joined the Temperance Society December I5, I84o, and, up to the period of a fall some time before his death, enjoyed perfect health. The Liverpool newspapers, in I859, contained a notice of a vwomain, by name E/z'abet/ ~oberIs, who stated that she was born in Northop, Flintshire, in June, I749. She could (in I859) walk three miles an hour, and ascribed her extended life to her simple natural habits, including entire abstinence from intoxicating drinks. In the same year, the wife of a captain in the navy recorded the fact that her grandmother married at fifteen, had fifteen children, and lived to her ninetieth year, without once tasting wine, spirits, or malt liquors. So, truly has Shakespeare put into the mouth of Old Adam, in "As You Like It": "Though I look old, yet I am strong and lusty, For in my youth I never did apply Hot and rebellious liquors in my blood: Nor did not, with unbashful forehead, woo The means of weakness and debilitv. Therefore my age is, as lusty winter, Frosty, but kindly." I. TESTIMONIES OF PHILOSOPHERS, POETS, DIVINES, PHI LANTIHROPISTS, GENERALS, TRAVELLERS, ETC. Solomizon.-" Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging; and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise... Look not upon the wine whlen it is red, when it giveth 210 Ap9pendices. his color (eye-bubble) in the cup, when it moveth itself aright (in straight lines); for at the last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder." Pythagoras.-" Pythagoras laid down such rules as he thought most conducive to maintain tranquillity of mind. He allowed no beverage but water." PI'ilo.-" The truly wise man aims to offer abstemious sacrifices, steadfastly setting himself, in the firmness of his mind, against wine and every course of folly." Plato applauds the Carthaginian law against using wine in the camp, and considers it applicable to magistrates during their year of office, and to judges, and to those deliberating on any business of importance, and to persons generally during the daytime. "M lany other cases a person might mention in which wine ought not to be drunk by those who possess understanding and a correct rule of action." PliZy the ELder. (See extract on page 30.) Among English philosophers of eminence, Sir Isaac Alewtoni, _ohit Locke, and Robert Boyle were examples of remarkable abstemiousness, amounting almost to total abstinence from all intoxicating drinks. When composing his treatise upon optics, Sir Isaac used water only as a beverage; and Locke, in his writings, strongly recommended abstinence, especially in the physical training of the young. Dr. SmzoZiell, the historian and novelist, says (in his "Travels through France and Italy "), " The longer I live, the more I am convinced that wine and all fermented liquors are pernicious to the human constitution; and that, for the preservation of health, and exhilaration of the spirits, there is no beverage comparable to simple water." Dr. Saminel yohiison abstained for considerable periods from intoxicating drinks with great advantage to his mind and feelings, and alwNays resolutely contended for the wisdom of this course. Dr. Tizomzas Reid wrote: " Besides the appetites which 2lr ili2AfPcndiccs. nature hath given us, for useful and necessary purposes, we may create appetites which nature never gave us. The frequent use of things which stimulate the nervous system produces a languor when their effect is gone off, and a desire to repeat them. Such are the appetites which some men acquire for the use of tobacco, for opiates, and for intoxicating liquors." 'eremzy Bentham wrote to a friend, "I am a single man, turned of 70, and as free from melancholy as man need be. Wine I drink none, being in that particular of the persuasion of Jonadab, the son of Rechab." Wigi/ztm Cobbell wrote: "In the midst of a society where wine and spirits are considered of more value than water, I have lived two years with no other drink but water, except when I have found it convenient to obtain milk. Not an hour's illness, not a headache for an hour, not the smallest ailment, not a restless night, not a drowsy morning, have I known during these two famous years of my life." Towmas De Quzncey wrote in eulogistic terms of the modern temperance movement: " It has attained both at home and abroad a national range of grandeur." Lora 'rotzgIami highly commended temperance efforts, and was a Vice-President of the United Kingdom Alliance. lHoioer represents Hector as refusing the cup of wine offered him by his mother Hecuba, as sure to relax his vigor; and Pope, in commenting on this passage, observes that "it is a vulgar mistake to iimagine the use of wine either rouses the spirits or increases strength. The best physicians agree with Homier on this point, whatever modern writers may object to this old heroic regimen." Pz'izdar opens his first Ode with the words, ArI/s/on men fatd6r —" Water truly is the best!" Afzl/onz, in his " Paradise Lost," his " Samson Agonistes," his Sonnets, and particularly his "Comus," shows his appreciation of the strictest temperance, and his life corresponded with his doctrine. He rarely used any intoxicating liquors. These 2I2 k Appecndices. words of his are ever memorable: "Who can be ignorant that, if the importation of wine and the use of all strong drinks were forbid, it would both rid the possibility of committing that odious vice, and men might afterwards live happily and healthfully without the use of these intoxicating liquors?" Shakes.eare, in several of his dramnas, depicts the miseries of indulgence in strong drink, and puts into Cassio's mouth the celebrated words: "0 thou invisible spirit of wine! if thou hast no name to be called by, let us call thee Devil!" Waller, one of the liveliest and wittiest poets of the Restoration period, was an inflexible abstainer from all intoxicating liquors. I7'zliaiz Cowzuer and Dr. Darwiin, very dissimilar in their religious sentiments and poetic gifts, yet agreed in their aversion to indulgence in strong drinks; and the latter was both a disciple and earnest advocate of abstinence. Lord Lylloiz wrote (in I846): "I agree in the main in the principles of the temperance society, and heartily wish it success, as having already done much good, and being calculated to do much more." Lord Byron confessed: " The effect of wine upon me is to make me gloomy —gloomy at the very moment it is taken; but it never makes me gay." SI. Cleineni of A4exandria (A.D. i80) writes:" I admire those who desire no other beverage than water, avoiding wine as they do fire." St. _erome: "Whatever inebriates and throws the mind off its balance, fly in like manner as if it were wine. If, without wine, my system is vigorous and wellstrung, cheerfully will I abstain from the cup which is suspected to contain poison." Dr. Sotlh: "Nothing is so great a friend to the mind of man as abstinence; it strengthens the memory, clears the apprehension, and sharpens the judgment, and, in a word, gives reason its full scope of acting; and, when reason has that, it is always a diligent and faithful hand 2I3 4pApe;idices. maid to conscience." Among the most distinguished theologians and ornaments of the modern pulpit, there have been numerous adherents to the temperance movement in England and America. Among the modern British statesmen, Pzc/hard Cobden holds a high and noble place. For many years he was entirely or almost a total abstainer, and the sum of his testimony may be expressed in his own words: "Every day's experience tends more and more to confirm me in my opinion that the temperance cause lies at the foundation of all social and political reform." Earl Russell said in Exeter Hall (I844): "This is no party, no sectarian question; and I am convinced that there is no cause more likely to elevate the people in every respect, whether as regards religious or political opinions, or as regards literary and moral culture, than this great question of temperance. It is the common and universal cause of all morality and of all religion." /ohn Howard, the apostle of philanthropy, was a systematic abstainer, and attributed to this habit his remarkable immunity for many years from the diseases to which his prison labors exposed him. The venerable Thomas Clarkson said: "Total abstinence has been found to be an auxiliary to the promotion of Christianity and to the conversion of sinners." The late :ose4h _5ooAh Gurney, _osefSl Slzzrge, R?ev. yohn Clay, and Mr. Recorder Hill, and many of the most earnest of the social reformers of the present time, are zealous advocates of the temperance movement. Charles XII., of Sweden, used no intoxicating drinks; and the same was true of the defender of Gibraltar, General ELlzot, afterwards Lord Heathfield. It is recorded of the Emperor zVafoleon (Family Library, vol. ii. p. 246): "The labor he underwent at this period, when he was consolidating the administration throughout France, excited the astonishment of all who had access to his privacy. He exhausted the energies of secretary after 214 I ,4pe?flcldices. secretary, and seemed hardly to feel the want of slee)p; yet he sustained the unparalleled fatigue without having recourse to any stimulant stronger than lemonade." Napoleon's great rival, the Dztke of Twe/7!n;/e, was accus tonled to a very careful diet, and took but little wine for years preceding his death. The gallant General Bead was urged at the close of life to take a little wine. "Not a drop!" he said; there are things enough in the world to send the blood to the head. without strong drink." Barons Larrey, the eminent French surgeon under Napoleon, states that in the retreat from Moscow those soldiers who indulged in ardent spirits first fell victims to the cold; and the Coozznl de Lzze/zil/e, one of the few officers who survived, ascribed his escape to his having drunk water and not spirits during that disastrous march. Marshal Groitc'y ascribed his escape to his use of coffee instead of spirits. The illustrious ltavelock took a warm interest in the promotion of temperance among the English soldiers in India from the time when he was a captain in the I3th Light Infantry. In his "Narrative of the War ixAfghanistan," he relates the noble conduct of the troops engaged in the storming of Ghuznee, which he states may in "a great degree be attributed to the fact of the European soldiers having received no spirit ration since the 8th of July (the place was captured on the 23d), and having found no intoxicating liquor among the plunder of Ghuznee. Since then it has been found that troops can make forced marches of fifty miles, and storml a fortress in seventy-five minutes, without the aid of rum, behaving after success with a forbearance and humanity unparalleled in history. Let it not henceforth be argued that distilled spirits are an indispensable portion of a soldier's ration." Havelock continued to maintain his temperance principles, and though in the advance upon Cawnpore he ordered porter to be served to the troops after an exhausting march and long fast, and in the pres 2 I" D AppeCndices. ence of a numerous foe, the circumstances were exceedingly peculiar, and the issue of the experiment was so little satisfactory that the order was not renewed. General Sir FV. F. Wz'iaiizs, the hero of Kars, said, in a letter to the "Sons of Temperance," Nova Scotia: "I am indebted to a gracious Providence for preservation in very unhealthy climates; but I am satisfied that a resolution early formed, and steadily persevered in, never to take spirituous liquors, has been a means of my escaping diseases by which multitudes have fallen around me. Had not the Turkish army of Kars been literally' a cold-water army,' I am persuaded they would never have performed the achievements which crowned them with glory." During the Crimean WVar the advantages of total abstinence were very conspicuous when practised. Colonel Dacres, who was in charge of the English artillery (now General Sir Richard Dacres), in writing from the camp, Jan. I7, x855, said: " Since I have become a teetotaler I have gone through great fatigues in hot climates. I have crossed the Atlantic, come here, been exposed to disease and somie discomfort (not much from my rank and situation), and I have never been sick or had even a short attack of diarrhoea. I ascribe this to water; but mind, I am a temperate eater also; never eat animal food more than once a day; no lunch but a piece of biscuit; am a very early man. Now, all these things combined enable me to do as much hard work at fifty-five as many men ten or fifteen years younger. What I began with, as an example, I now continue, as I consider I am much better without wine, beer, etc., both in a religious and worldly point of view; and I shall continue as I am, please God, to my life's end." General Lewis Cass, of the United States, said: " The more active portion of my life was passed in a country on the very verge of civilization, and much of it beyond, and I have had my full share of exposures, exertions, privations, in peace and in war. I have had, too, my full share of health. 2i6 Appendices. I might almost say that I have enjoyed uninterrupted health; and I am, therefore, a living proof that ardent spirits are not necessary for physical endurance under any circumstances of toil and trial. It was this conviction which led me, when Secretary of War, to authorize the commutation of the ration of ardent spirits, previously issued to the troops, for the equivalent in coffee and sugar." During the sanguinary war between the Federal and Confederate armies (I86I-5), some of the ablest commanders on both sides were those who carried the temperance principle most rigidly out by precept and example, as for instance, Stonewall 7ackson and General Stuart among the Confederates, and General Howard among the Federals. The exclusion of liquor from the camps was found indispensable to sobriety, discipline, and military success. 7ames Bruce, the African traveller, I768-73, states: "I lay down, then, as a positive rule of health, that spirits and all fermented liquor should be regarded as poisons, and, for fear of temptation, not so much as to be carried along with you, unless as a menstruum for outward application. Spring or running water, if you can find it, is to be your only drink." Dr. Livingstone, writing from Kuruman, South Africa, Nov. I2, I852, said: "I have acted on the principle of total abstinence from all alcoholic liquors during more than twenty years. My individual opinion is, that the most severe labors or privations may be undergone without alcoholic stimulus, because those of us who have endured the most had nothing else than water, and not always enough of that." Mr. Charles Waterton, the eminent naturalist and author of "Wanderings in South America," writes: "I eat moderately, and never drink wine, spirits, or any fermented liquors in any climate. This abstemiousness has ever proved a faithful friend." Mr. Waterton, who died from 2I7 AAppendices. the effects of an accident, in I865, at the age of 83, had been an abstainer fPor sixty-two years. Mr. yames Silk Buckingham, the Eastern traveller and distinguished advocate of temperance, bore frequent testimony to the advantages of abstinence, and to his observation of these advantages in the. people of the various countries through which he passed where total abstinence was practised. He describes himself as having been particularly struck with the sight of a band of Himalaya mountaineers, who "were indeed perfect Samsons," both as regards their feats of strength and abstinence from intoxicating drinks. Mr. Kefifiel says, in his "Voyage up the Tigris (1820) ": "We tried to content ourselves with water-an experiment which we found to answer so well that, while actually on the road, we entirely abstained from drinking anything else. To this circumstance we alone attribute our health during our long and fatiguing journey." Mr. 7ames Backhouse said: "I have travelled over hot sands, so hot that the very dogs howled with pain on treading upon it, the thermometer often at I i6 degrees, and the water so bad that we had to conceal the taste with coffee; and I believe no journey of the same length was ever made with so little risk or danger. There is no single act of my life to which I look back with greater satisfaction than to the adoption of total abstinence." Sir.7ohn Ross, the Arctic explorer, in an account of his career, states: "I was twenty years older [at the time .of his four-years' voyage, April, I829, to October, I833] than any of the officers or crew, and thirty years older than all excepting three, yet I could stand the cold and fatigue better than any of them, who all made use of tobacco and spirits." The Rev. Dr. Scoresby, in his evidence before the Parliamentary Committee of I834 on drunkenness, said: ",My principal experience has been' in severely cold climates, 2I8 Appendices. and there it is observable that there is a very pernicious effect in the reaction after the use of ardent spirits. I did not use them myself, and I was better, I conceive, without the use of them." J. EFFECT OF ABSTINENCE IN PRISONS AND WORKHOUSES. THE venerated Howard, in his work on Lazarettos and Prisons (page I46), alluding to the Horsham County Gaol, states in a note: " The gaoler told me that he had a debtor who was so addicted to the use of spirits that he thought he should' die if they were refused him; but after his discharge he had several times called to acknowledge the benefit he had received from entirely breaking him of that habit. The gaoler also asserted that the felons after a few weeks are evidently improved in health by their restriction from all spirituous and fermented liquors, and remained in prison perfectly well." One of Howard's suggestions was the exclusion of all intoxicating liquors from prisons, on which he observes "I am satisfied my ideas are contrary to the present fashionable mode of prescriptions, which I am persuaded confirms the habit of drinking strong liquors both in town and country; but may I not hope that the opinions of medical gentlemen will in time alter as much upon this subject as I have seen in their treatment of the small-pox?" Mr. Hentry Duznni bears the following testimony: "From my position as surgeon to the West Riding of Yorkshire House of Correction, I have had thirty years' experience of all the prisoners being at once deprived of intoxicating liquors, and I cannot say with any prejudicial effect, but rather the reverse. Our committals have been for the last few years from 3,000 to 4,oo000 annually, so that the fact speaks volumes." In 2I9 Appendices. A4ppendix " S" to the Report-of the Committee of Convocation on Intemperance, there are eighteen pages of evidence on "Benefit to Health from Withdrawal of Intoxicating Liquors" from prisoners apd inmates of workhouses. The testimonies from governors and chaplains of prisons are 56, and from masters of workhouses, 89. A very few extracts are all that need be given as samples of the rest. Governors and chaplains of prisons say: "I have not known one whose health was affected." " We are constantly hearing men say how well they can do without drink." "I am not a teetotaler; but I know of nothing that affords so good an evidence of the value of teetotalism as its results in the case of hundreds of prisoners on public works." "Prisoners come in very illthey recover wonderfully when taken away from drink. I never saw one prisoner injured in his or her health by enforced abstinence, but the reverse. The women often recover their former good looks, even if they looked ugly and hideous on their admission." The masters of workhouses say: "The health of the paupers is greatly improved." " I believe, speaking from an experience of fifteen years as workhouse officer, that abstinence is beneficial to the general health of paupers." "A marked improvement is soon visible." "Twenty-four years' experience, I have not seen any injurious effects from total abstinence." "Thirty years' experience convinces me that total abstinence is not injurious to health." "We have scarcely ever any sickness or disease of any kind Out of ioo00 inmates we have 20 averaging 80 years, ir perfect health, which speaks volumes in favor of absti nence." "No injury whatever, but benefit." "In soint cases persons came in lunatics, and by abstaining from intoxicating liquors have been discharged sound in mind and body." 220 Appendices. K. VIEWS OF ARCHBISHOP FENELON AND THE DUKE OF ORLEANS ON WINE PRODUCTION. THE tale of Telemachus was written, it is well-known, by the pious Fgnelon, Archbishop of Cambrai, for the benefit of the young Duke of Burgundy, heir-apparent to the French throne, in order that, in the attractive form of fiction, the young prince might be led to contemplate and admire the examples of virtue described in the story. As we may, therefore, consider that the author declares his own opinions where he paints scenes of happiness and manners conducive to the social welfare, it is interesting to notice that he makes Adoam say of the people of Bcetica: "They content themselves with eating grapes like other fruits, and dread wine as the corrupter of mankind. It is a kind of poison, say they, which inspires madness. It does not, indeed, kill a man at once, but it degrades him into a brute. Men may preserve their health and strength without wine; with it, they run the risk of ruining both their health and morals." So, Mentor (Minerva) in advising Idomeneus as to his government, is made to observe: "Wine is the source of the greatest evils among the people; it is the cause of disease, quarrels, sedition, idleness, an aversion to labor, and family disorders. Let wine, therefore, be reserved as a kind of restorative, or as a choice liquor only to be used in sacrifices, or for very extraordinary occasions; but do not expect so very important a rule to be observed, unless you set an example of it yourself." In his description of the effects of wine, Fenelon, there can be no doubt, painted from the life, as that life was presented to his view a hundred and fifty years ago. Fe6nelon, in his "Telemachus," strongly advocated free trade and the removal of all barriers to the commercial intercourse of nations, in things conducive to their true 221 Appendizces. prosperity. When Mr. E. C. Delavan visited Paris in 1838, he waited upon the king, Louis Philipfipe, and his son, the Duke of Orleans, both of whom acknowledged that the intemperance of France was (then) upon wine, and that it would be an economical blessing to that country if the use of so large a portion of the soil in the growth of the vine for wine-making could be done away with, and if the industrial energies of the people were devoted to another purpose. The use of wine did not prevent the use of brandy and absinthe, and what wine, brandy, and absinthe have done for France, in both her military and civil estates, let history and the confessions of her wisest sons attest! L. EFFECTS OF NO LIQUOR TRAFFIC ON THE SOCIAL CONDITION OF THE PEOPLE. 70onas Hannay, in his work, "The Defects of Police the Cause of Immorality" (I775), alludes to " a certain parish in the North of England, where no public-house was licensed, and where there was no poors-rate, nor occasion for any such relief. At length three licenses were granted; and what was the consequence? Within thirty months the poors-rate amounted to eightpence in the pound. Upon this the justices withdrew the licenses, and the economy of the people reverted to its former channel, as no rate was necessary." In Dr. Lees' able "Argument for the Prohibition of the Liquor Traffic" (I856), and the "Condensed Argument" (i866), instances are given of the benefits arising from the suppression of the liquor traffic. The cases of Sallaire in England, and of Besbrook in Ireland, are illustrations of manufacturing places which are free from the sale of intoxicating liquors, and where the results are of the most pleasing description. The case of the agricultural district, 6ii miles square, in the County Zyrone, is an illustration of the similar good effect 222 E I Appendices. of the same rule applied to a rural population or upwards of 9,000ooo souls. Professor Kirk, in his "Progressive Legislation," shows how the absence of drink in Scotland operates in favor of sobriety and every social virtue. But the greatest body of evidence on this subject, in reference to the United Kingdom, is furnished in the Apffendices 7. 7. & KZ. K. to the Report of the Committee of Convocation on Intemperance, where a list of I,397 parishes, etc., without drinkil)g-shops, in the Province of Canterbury, is given, with testimonies concerning the results as brought before the notice of resident clergy and constabulary. A few of these replies are quoted, but the reader is strongly advised to consult that admirable Report, with its invaluable supplemental synopsis of facts. "There being no pliblic-house or beer-shop in the parish is a cause of unmitigated good, in so far as it removes temptation to some distance." " I attribute solely to this circumstance that there are no cases of habitual drunkenness within the parish, either of men or women." "I am glad to say that the people are very hale and temperate." " Having no public-house in the parish, intemperance is comparatively unknown to us." "I have been in the parish since I844, and have not seen any one tipsy. We have had no case for the police since I have been here." "Magistrates never have a case from this parish, nor has there been a pauper in the Union for some time past.",-Thank God there is no crime, no lunacy, no pauperism, beyond what comes occasionally of sickness!" "Intemperance does not exist." "No crime, pauperism, or lunacy." "It is a great blessing to the people that there is no public-house or beer-shop." From Chief Constables and Superintendents of Police there are some very interesting replies. " In parishes where there are neither public-houses nor beer-shops, the absence of crime is remarkable." "I may state, that from the above ninety-seven parishes,in which there are no public-houses 223 2Appendices. or beer-shops, little or no crime comes." "From the permanent population of these parishes I have had no case of drunkenness or crime during the past five years and a half." The evidence supplied by the State s of the American Union where the prohibitory law is on the statute-book, bears a uniform relation to the degree in which the law is enforced in the respective districts. Where the local authorities do their duty, the effects are invariably seen ip, the reduction of intemperance and every social vice and burden. A crucial test is afforded by a district in New Jersey (not a Maine-law State) which is known as Vineland. The overseer, Mr. T. C. Curtis, reported as follows in I869: "Though we have a population of IO,OOo people, for the period of six months no settler or citizen of Vineland has required relief at my hands as overseer of the poor. During the entire year, there has only been one indictment, and that a trifling case of assault and battery, among our colored population. We, practically, have no debt, and our taxes are only one per cent. on the valuation. The police expenses amount to $75 (~i5) per year; the sum paid to me. I ascribe this remarkable state of things-so nearly approaching the golden ageto the industry of our people and the absence of King Alcohol." At the last annual vote on the question of " license or no license," the vote was unanzmous-electors of all politics concurring to sustain so desirable a state of things. The remarkable colony so long residing on Pilcairn's Island, in the South Seas, and some years ago removed to N,orfolk Island, have, as one of their code of laws, a provision that no intoxicating liquors shall be imported, and none sold except for medicinal purposes. A number of such settlements exist in various parts of the globe, and the results are so uniformly beneficial as to constitute an argument, irresistible to the impartial mind, in favor of the extension of the same policy throughout the civilized world. 224 ,~ PUBLIOATIONS OF THE National emperance ociety AND FUBLICATION;TOUSE. THE NATIONAL TEMPERANCE SOCIETY, organized in i866 for the purpose of supplying a sound and able Temperance literature, have already stereotyped and published three hundred and fifty publications of all sorts and sizes, from the one-page tract up to the bound volume of 50o pages. This list comprises books, tracts, and pamphlets, containing essays, stories, sermons, arguments, statistics, history, etc., upon every phase of the question. Special attention has been given to the department For Sunday-School Libraries. Over fifty volumes have already been issued, written by some of the best authors in the land. These have been carefully examined and unanimously approved by the Fublication Committee of the Society, representing the various religious denominations and Temperance organizations of the country, which consists of the following members: PETER CARTER, REv. J. B. DUNN, REV. W. M. TAYLOR, REV. A. G. LAWSON, A. A. ROBBINS, REV. ALFRED TAYLOR, REV. M. C. SUTPHEN, R. R. SINCLAIR, T. A. BROUWER, REV. C. D. FOSS, J. N. STEARNS, JAMES BLACK, REV. WILLIAM HOWELL TAYLOR. These volumes have been cordially commended by leading clergymen of all denominations, and by various national and State bodies, all over the land. The following is the list, which can be procured through the regular Sunday-School trade, or by sending direct to the rooms of the Society: Rev. Dr. Willoughiby alid his Wine. I2mO, 458 pages. By Mrs. MARY SPRING WALKER, author of" The Family Doctor," etc,... $1 50 This thrillingly interesti- hook depicts i a vivid manner the terrible influence exerted by those who stad as the servants of Ood, and who sanctios the social custom of wine-drinkiog. Itis fair and faithful to the truth. It is not a b)itter tirade against the churclh or the ministry On thie contrary, it plainly and earnest acknowledges that the mnisatry is the friend ot, iorri, and the great bulwark of practical virtue. At Lion's,outh. I2mo, 4o pp. By Miss MIARY DWINELL CHELLIS, author of "Temperance Doctor," "Out of the Fire," "Aunt Dinah's Pledge," etc.,...................$1 25 This is one of the best books ever issued, written in a simple yet thrilling and interestlng style. It speaks boldly for the entire suppression of the liquor traffic, depicting vividly the misery and wrongs resulting from it. The Christiattone is most excellent, showing the neces sity of God's grace in the heart to overcome temptation and the power of appetite, and the Suence which one zuealous Christia can exert upon his cempanions andI the communlt. Ttle NatIonal Temperance SoczeIty's Book/s. Aunt Dinahl's Pledge. 12mO, 318 pages. By Miss MARY DWINELL HELLIS, author of " Temperance Doctor," "Out of the Fire," etc.,.........$1 2o Aunt Dinah was an eminent Christian wonan. Hec pledge included swearing a nd smoking, as well as drliking. It saved her bo ys w'ho lived sseful lives, anid died lhappy; and by quiet, yet loving andi persistent work, nasles of meny others were added who seeed almost beyond hope of salvation. The Old Brown Pitcher. i2mo 222 pages. By the Author of " Susie's Six Birthdays," "The Flower of the Famnily,' etc., $1 00 Beautfrully Illustrated. This admirable volumet for boys andi iels, ccetaining original stories by some of the m ost gifte wt writer., for the young, w-ill le eagerly welcomed by the chi ld'en It is aduptel al'ke 101 thedfptnil circle and the Sabbalth-schlool lib~rary. Our Pa-irish,. x8mo, 252 pages. By Mrs. EMILY PEARSON,.. $0 7: Thle maniifold evils resulting f ron tae" still" to the owner's family, as well as t,) the failies of his cunstomers, are truthfully presented. Te characte r s intr oduced, sch as ar e f d in almostBevery MDgood-sized village, are ve portrayed(. We can un1hesitatintgly comn d it, and bespeak for it a wide circulation. The Hard Ma.ster. -SmO, 278 pages By Mrs. J. E. McCoNAVCHY, au thor of " One Hundred Gold Dol lars," and other popular Sunday School books,..... $0 Sa Thirs i iterestig narrative of the temptations, tials, lrdshdips, and fortunes of poor orphan iboy I strates il a most striking manner the value of "right principles," especially of honesty truthul,ness I and s p EMPAN cE. Echo Bank..8mo, 269 pages. B1 ERVIE,........ $0 85 This is a well-written and d eep ly interestin g narrative, in which is clearly shown the sulffer ing and sorrow that too often follow and the dangers that atteonl boys and young me1n at sho ol and at college, w lho g suppose they can e as ily take a glass or two ccasio ally, siti out tear f,ever boeig aught more than. mode rate drinker. Thie Temperance Doctor. -2mo, 370 pages. By Miss MARY DWINELL CHELLIS,........$1 25 This is a true story, replete with interest and adapted to Sunday-school and family reading In it,e have graphically depicted the sad ravages that are caused by the use ol intoxicating beverages; also, the blessings of Temperance, and what may be accomplished by one earnest soul for that reform. It ought to find seader in every household. Out of the Fire..2mo, 420 pages. By Miss MARY DWNlNELL CIIELLIS, author of " Deacon Sim's Pray ers," etc....... $1 25 It is one oi the most effective and impressive Temperance books ever publibshed. The ev ils of the drinking customs of society, and the blessings tof sobriety and total abstinence, are strikingly developed in the history of various families in the community. Ilistory of a Threepenny Bit. 8mo, 216 pages,........ $0 75 This is a thrilling story, beautifully illustrated with five choice wood engravings. Tile story of little Peggy, the drunkard's daughter, is t old c i such a sple yet interesting manner that no one can read it without realizing more thaa ever before the nature and extent of ii temperace, and sympatizi.g m ore than ever with tile patient, suffering victim. It should be il every Sunday-school library. Rachel Noble's Experience. i8mo, 325 pages. By BRucE EDWARDS. $0 90 This is a story of thrilling interest, ably aIllnd eloquently told,ld is an excellent book for Suday-school libraries. It is just t'he book for the home circle, and cannot be rsead withont boen efitinn thee reader ad dvancinig the cause of Temlperanlce. Gertie's Sacrifice; or Glimpses at Two Lives. i8mo, x89 pages. liy Mrs. F. D. GAGE,.... $0 50 A story of great interest and power, iving "glimpse at two lives," and showing hob Gertie sacrificed herself ar a victim of faslion, custom, and law. Adlopted. -Smo, 236 pages. By Mrs. E. J. RICHIMOND, author of "The McAllisters,".. $0 60 This book is written in an easy, pleasant yle, seems to be true to nature, true to itself, and withal is full of the G ospel an d Tewperance. X The Red Bridge. -8mo, 321 pages. By THIRACE TALMAN,.. $0 90 We have met with few Temperance stories containin so mauy evidences of decided ability anld high literary excellence as this. 2 I' reiid b y every chilin t le land. Jug,-Or-Not. -2mO, 346 pages. By MIrs. J. \ICNAIR WIVIGHT, author of "John and the Demijohn," "Almost a Nun," " Priest and Nun,"etc.,...... $1 25 It is oneof ler best books, and treats of tle physical atu h eredit try effects of drinakingi ill a )oputlar,* endtingf, an,I whlich sho~uld be r ead by all clawsses inl tli. cm lulily, ani fin.d belac e inl ever-y Sund~ay-sch-,~ol libra^ry. The Brokeni Rock. ~8mo, IJ9 paes. By KRUNA, author of " Lift a Little," etc.,..... $0 50 inflvence of a mleek ad lowly ~pirit poiinse tl'e Ieatless ller util te roi, k ert as broki elln. A n ew Temperane story for Sumlay-sciols writtesn i a livelv, e nereti c, at popul a i style, sdapted to the Sai obat-schpool and the fiunlily circle. Vow at the Bars. -Smo, Io8 pages. $0 40 It con-tainls foulr shourt' tales, illulstr'~tingrfoulr import-tr prin c ipes IonIIe,ted wit th!e Temli permic(e mlovemlenlt, and~ is wvell a, lapledt for the f;aunily circle anld S8'bbath-schlool libraries. Job Tuftont's Rest.:t2!mo,, pages.. $1 2 A storv of life's struggrles, wvrittenl by thle griftaed authtor, CLAUA Lu'cas BALFOUR, depict mg m~lost skilfullly andt tralthfully mlany'~ Iife stragsgle vith the idemlon of internperlalce oc curring all alongr lii'e's pathwaya. It imsa tinelv written story, and full of inlterest Iom the be ginning to thle end., anld lib~rary inl the lanld.* Thie Harker Family. x2mo, 336 pages. By EMILY THOMIPSON, $1 2; A simple, spirited, aid iterestin, narratived writ.es in a rtyle especially attractive, delticicn e td edils tdt a rise fro ra ind teoperance, and te blessings thit followed tbe carne,st efforts ot th ose ho sought to w in ot lers to the laths oatotal abstinence. Illoustrated oit h three engravinlgs. Thle booki will please all. ~ Come Homne, Mother. ISMmo, 43 pages. By NELSIE BROOK. Il lustrated with six choice engsrav ings......$0..50 A fiost effective ad iteresting book, describing te dow ard cor se of the mter, andl givinlt anl accoulnt o~f thle sad sentes, buw1t e f fctua l eneavors, of the little oee ini briigiig hnermother bo3ack to f2riendas, atrod leadinig lher to God. It shoulIl e iread b ever body. Tim's Troubles. i2mo, 350 pages , By Miss M. A. PALIL,.. s50 This is the second Prize Book of the Uniited Kingdom Band of Hope Union, reprinted in this conmtry with all the origial illustrtions. It is the companion of" Frank Oldtfleld." written in a high tone, and - ill be fou n,d a valuable additlon to ont Temperance literature. The Driliking Fountain Stories. I2mO, Il2pages,.... $ 00 Thisboo of illustrated stoies for children ontains articles from som e of the beat w riters for children in America, and is beau,tiftully il lustrated with forty ctoice wood engravings. Th- e White Rose. By Mary J. H.edg es. I6mo, 320 pages,.. $1 25 - The gift of a simple white rose as the means of leadling tilse who cared for it to the Siviour. How it was oln e is very pleasantly tolil, and also the.rongsresitilig 111 the use of strong 3drink forcilyl shown. Tlze %Tatiotnal Yimperaiice Society's Books. Horpedlle Tavern, anid WIhat it Wrought..2Mo, 252 pages. By J. WVILLIA-,, VAN NA,NIEE,. $1 Z~ 1!t showvs the s~ail resullts' which iol,11owed the intr,,duction) of a Tavernl and Bar ill a b)eaulti had itlerto lived in peace and eioyent Th e c ontrast is too plainly p resented to iail to produce an impression;)n thlereader, making all1 more desirous to abolish the sale of all illtoxic ants The Pitcher of Cool Water..8mo, r8o pages By T. S. ARTHUR, author of" Tom Blinn's Temper ance Society," " Ten Nights in a Bar -room,' etc.,..... $0 50 Tis little book consistst of a series of Ten pe rance s to ries, hlandsomely illustrated, written i NIr ARTHUR'S beststyfe, and is altogether one ofI the best b ooks h h can be placed in th,e hans of children. Every Sunday-school library shoulId possess it. Little Girl in Black. 2mo0, 2x2 pages. By MARGARET E. WIL pIER......... $0 90 Her strong faithl il God, who she believes will reclaim an erring father, is a lesson to the reader, old as well as you,ng. Roy's Search; or, Lost in the Cars. 12m, 364 pages. By HELEN C. PEARSON,....... $1 25 This new Temperance book is one of the mest interesting ever published-written in a fresh, sparking style, especially adapted to please the boys, an'l contains so much that ill beefit as ell as amuse and interest that we wish all the boys in the lan.d might read it. How Could He Escape I 52mo, 324 Tpaes b..k t...... $ " pages By MRS. J. NCNASR This sew book of Tenaporance Ainecdoles, pges. By MRS. J. NCNAIR di ted by GnOR..s W. Bu.-A, contains ear RIGHT, author of "' Jug-Or- ly four hundred Anecdotes, Witticism,s, Jokes, Not." Illustrated with ten en- Co nu ndrums, etc, original and selected, and gravings, designed by the au- willmeet a want longfelt and often expressed thor,1 20 by a very large nmber of tie numerous friends ...... *. * *" of the cause in the land. The book is hand This is a tue tale and one of the writer's somely illustrated with twelve choice wood best productions. It shows the terrible effects engravings. of ee one glass of intoxicating liquor upon the sste of one unable to resists i nfluences, and the net.ssity of grace in the rt r ist The Temperance Speaker. B4 J. d tvercos the appetite for strong N STEARNS..... $ 75 Tie book contains 288 pages of Declamations The Best Fellow ill the World. and Dialogues suitable tor Susday and Day.2mo 5 pages. B3y MVrs. J. tmo 35 pagMes T Schools, Bands of Hope, and Temperance Or, gal] tions. It consists of choice selections MCNAIRWRIGHT, autnorof Jug- o p ose anId poetry, both newandold, rom Or-Not," "How Could He Es- tle Teperance orators and writers of the cape?"l, Priest and Nun," $1'25 coutry, many of hich have been written ex Ti, Rest Fl low," 515050 con psessly far this work. *' Tile Best Fello.,," wlhse course is here p Y t $ k portraved, is oe of a ver larg c lass who are eol astray and ruineS sinply because they are The IcAllisters. s8mo, 2.I pages. suihi" good fellows." To s the volume By Mrs. E. J. RICHMOND,. $0 50 speaks in thrilling tones of warni, shows the inevitable consequences of in ldul gng il strong It shows the ruin brought on a family by the drink, and the secessity of divinegrae i0l the father's intemperate habits, and the strong heart to interpose and save frlas r uiu. aith and trust of the wife in that Friend above Frank S~pe~ncers uEnle of Life. tv~ho alone gives strength to bear our earthly timo~, so pages. By JOHN W The Seymours. 52mo 23I pages. KIRTON, author of "Buy Your By Miss L. BATRS... $1 0 Own Cherries," "Four Pillars of' h Temperance," etc., etc. $0 50 A simple story, showing how a refined and cultivated family are brought low through the This is written in the author's best style, drinking habits of the father, their joy and sorntking an ilteresting,, and attractive stoly for row as he reforms only to fall again, and his children. final happy release a distant city. Work and Reward. 18 mo, 83 pp. Zoa Rodman. 52mo, 262 pages. KRO,atoof'B' orTeSymors.:M.AHOL,. 31;e, By rs.. A. HOLT,. $0 0 By Mrs. E. J. RICHMONS, $1 00 ltshoaws lthat ot the smallest effort to do Adapted cre especislly to nog girls' good is lost sight of by the all-knowing Fathel-, reading, shoing the influence they wield in and that Faith and prayer must accompany all society, and their responsibility for much of emperande effrts. o dri nking usages. 4 I The iVatoonal Temnperanzce Society's Books. Yva's iEgagement Riig. I2m0, I89 TileFireFighters. I2mO, 294 pages. pages. By MARGARET E. WIL- By Mrs. J E. MICCoNAUGCHY, au MER, author of "The Little Girl thor of" The Hard Master," in Black,"..... $0 90 $1 2, i this interesting volusmse is traced the career Anadmirable story, showiny g hov a n y uber of the roderate drinker, who takes a glass in of youg lods banded tiesele'es ito a Os ietv the name offriendehip or courtesy. to fight against Alcohol, asd tte good they did in the comunuity. Packington Parishl, and The Diver's Daughter. s2mo, 327 pages. By Tle Jewelled Serpent. 121110, 271 Miss M. A. PAULL,... $1 25 pages By is E. J RicH In tbis olume we see thera.agen whiclh author of" Adopted," "The MIcthe liquor traffic caused when iutroduced in a the li~~,.q.,r t, ~Allisters," etc.... $1 00 hitherto qeiet cillage, antihowa m inis ter's eyes h $ C * were at leigth opened to its eils, thouhe Th e sto i rtte earestl. The crahad alay delared wine to be a "gool ter ae eieate,a taken f te creature o God" ment to be sed i lera ealth a fasio able portio ofa l ge cit. tiou. 7 Thle evils whichl flow fromn tkshionlable dlrinki icog are well iportray e, a d also the danger Old Times. 21mo. By Miss IM. D arisin frote l seofintoxic antshensedas CHELLIS, authr of " TheT m |ledicine, foruming an appetite whlich last- ls CHELLIS, author of "The Tern perance Doctor," "Out of the ppdelcyl. e p nici i Fire, "Aunt Dinah's Pledgre" "At Lion's Mou,, etc.,. P The Hole in the Bag, and Other At iir s"etc," 2 An S etories. By Mrs, J. P. BALLARD It discllsses thle wvhole sulbject of mlodleraie atho f"Te lr~ lRc. "dit g,: I I,, w hec-, t,f iscdei author of "The Broken Rockj" drinki n i the history of a New England vii- TU lade. The in cide io a es ng e Lift a Li ttle," etc..2mo, $1 I..'e. T h no,d acceg r all facts, and the characters n earley all draws A collectio ev of well-weritten stories by this fro real life. The fe acos whici figse | costc poputlar uthor oc tle sebiect of temperso conspicuously altually lived aosd acted as re- ac e, i culcat i a valuabe lessons in tile peresesete presellted.~~~~~~~~ mi nids ot its readers. John Bentley's Mistake. 8mo, The Glass Cable. 2mo, 2-88 pages. 177 pages. By Mrs. M. A. HOLT, By MARGARET E. WILMER, au $0 50 thor of The Little Girl in It tk~ tpi.,,,.Oi~gBlack." "Eva's Engagement It takes an importat place amog our te- ack Eva's Engagement perance boos, taki a earnest, bold stand Ring, etc.,........... 25 aint te use of cider S a beverage, provi ih tt * lso'.t is tp tocoed sirceger Tle style of this bool; is goo-, the cha ter drinks, formaing 31 appetite for tle more fierdts liquids w hich cannot eas ily be quenched. trstha mos eeell dt Tpd mgl showens those who s neer pt a chi ld'3 pledge Nothing to DrInk ceO 40 comparing its strength to a glass cable, that t pages By Mrs. J. MCNAIR -d io i o ly ee WRIGHT, author of "The Best Fellow in the World," "Ju-or Fred' ard Fght o Not" Hw Cul HeEsc? -, Fred's Hard Fight. x;?mo, 3341 Not,"" How Could He Escape?" pages. By Miss MAION Ho — etc...... I pages. By Miss MA{IIION }ov etc.,........I1 50 ARD,.... $1 2 The story is of lighlt-hoeses keeper acd thrilling adientures at sea, being neasltical Wthile it sles. dheld the tcniptosiceei a yold scientific, an.d partly statistical, w ritten in a endured through the temptatio ns and entice charming, tbrilling, a,,d co n vincing manner. mentsoffered fi,m bythoseopposed t olisfirm It goes ot of the ordinary lie entirely, ost temperance afd elios prisciples, and of the eharctera bein por, it y arns th e r eaer against thlie use of esery kind all from absolute facts, every scietific and of al chicstiulat, it points alsotoJesus natral-history statement a verity, the sea in- tle oly true source of strength, urging all to ,ideats from actual experience rom marine accept ll"e promises of streegth anid salvation iasters for the last ten ears. offered to eve-y oe who ill see it. Nettie Loring. x2mO, 52 pages. The Dumb Traitor. 12no, 336 pp. By Mrs. GEo. S. Downs, $1 25 By MARGARET E.WILMIER, $1 25 It ralhiallv desribes the doings of ser- Iltensels iteresttin, sholig ow tile al ~ouig l adeo es o lve d to use their prospects f a well-to-do New England f amily influlence ons thle sidle of temlperance and tbanlish wvere bli rl~ted throu~'hl thse introductionl ofa ine fro m ea, the scors t hey box of w ine, gifen ist f cendship, used as me excited, and the good recults which i llo,lsed. dicine, btoprovi a m traitr ti tihe end. I which hls been issued oni the subject. The imiB mt.orality of te sale, al afact e of intox.icating liquors as a beverage is considered iln the_ ldgh t of "he Scriptures, and the wi and lap of God clearly p iresented. AlCohol: ItS Natuire anid Effects. By CHARLES A. STOREY, M M.D., $o 90 Thlis is a thoroughlly scienltific wvorkS, y,et written in afre sh, vigor ous, aetn )opLlar st ie, i language that the masses ctso A anderst, id. It consiots of ten lectures carefully preparet0, ~ redl is anl enltirely nlew work b~y onle amlply omlpetent to prese nt the subject. Four Pillars of Temperance. By, JOHN W. KIRTON,.. $0 75 Tile Fur illars arc, Reason, Science, Scriptulre, and{ ExIperienlce. Thle bxook is argutment, ative, historicaJ, anld statistical, andl~ thle lhct(s, app~eals,. and argulmenlts are presenlted inl a most convilnln g and masterly lialiner. Communion Wine; or, Bible Temii perance. By Rev. WILLIAMI M. THAYER. Paper, 20 cents; cloth, '$0 5o by tiffs younag aii taleulted aotlhor ess, suitadle tor reBylig i Temerace Soities, Lodge Rooms, Div isionls, etc. Thle simplicityv of mlanl ner, be.auty of expression, eal'nes;ness ot t,oufght, and nobleness of sentiment running through all of them make this book a rel gen, orty a place by thle side of any of the poetry in the country. Bound Tolumie of Tracts. 5s pages......$1.0~0 This volum le co ntains all the four, eight, and twelve page tracts published by tie Nation al Tei..po.rane Societ., itcluding all tlle re tracts i ssur thl e lhetst twO.3r. TK... booik comprises Ar,uienits, Statistics, Sketcaes, and Essays, vhic ake it a i able ollectio for ecery frieiii of the Teiperanc,e Reforb. Scripture Testimony Against In toxicating Wine. By Rev. WM. RITCHIE, of Scotland,.. $0 60 All nnlanlswerable refutatioul of thle thleory &at the Scriptures favor tlhe idea of the use of intoxicating w ine as a beverage. It takes tle different kit t ls cf wines mientioned i1 the Scriptires, ilvestigates the;r specific nature, a s hows wlheretoi they differ. An unanswverable argumenlt againlst tle ulse of ihntoxicating wise at Communi ioni, aond tresenting the Bible argument il fivor of total abstinlence. L,45s of Fermentation and Wrines of the Ancients. 12mo, I29 pages. By Rev. WM. PATTON, D.D. Paper, 30 cts.; cloth,.. $0 60 It preOenlts the wihole moatter of Biile Tcip eranie and tole ines of a nienlt tiies ini a new, clear, and satls amtory lanner, develoiping the laws of fermnenotation, andgivicig a largec number ol references anid stat i tistics nee r th e trt collected, sbowing concl usively the exis ten ce of untbermented wine in the olden time. Alcohol: Its Place and Power, by JAMES MILLER; and The Use:nd Abuse of Tobacco, by JOHN LI ZARS,........ $1 00 Zoolo,ical Temperancee Convention. By Rev. EDWARD HITCHCOCK, D.D., of Amherst College, $0 7, This fable gives an interestinz anld entertaining account of a Conve ntioi oe Animals. held idn Centr al Arica, ad rep orts the oen.thes mlade on the occasion. 6 i Tenpltars[ cat5 strioha: trnt Ghe sacred Script.res d.o not afford s,actiol to the use of intoxicating Temipersnce (himes. Price, in liquors. paper coers, O30 cents, single copies; $25 per hundred. Price, Bacchus Det roned. mo, 48 in board covers, -d5 cents; per BachUS Ietlroned. t2mh, 248 hundredc,...... $O OO I pages. By FREDERICK POWELL, A Temperance Hm andTne-Book of 128 ) pages, coprisig'a garet variety of Glees, This is an En zlish prize essay, written i reSogs, anad Hymns desiged for the use ofTem spouse to a prize offered by James Teare, of per'tmce Meetiugs and Oranizations, Basr ol' England, forthebest t emperance ssay. It is liope, Gte Clob'ho,aod tih e I lany one of the ablest and msost convincing wo,lst of the H ns ae been writteo expressly for ever issed. The question is presented in all this book by soe of the best writers i te its phases physiological, social, politial, counltry. inoal, and religious It i ve ry c oprehen sive multiplying fat s, aboundilg il arguBound Yolumes of Sermons, $1 me5 t 0.. i otjeti. s., and en,orcing Seventeen sermons delivered upon the invi- powerful and pathetic appeals. The author tation of The National Temperance Society cons ide rs 1. The great national curse. 2. and published in the National Series, ave all The supposed dietetic value of alcoholic beenboun in oeol e.maki n g 400) page beverages. 3. The phvsiological elatiols of tof the best temperance matter of tie kid pleveri k h saebyRv.Hnytical arguine nt. 5. The manufacture of in.,uard B-ehc,r, T L. Cuult,o D,, al toxi catina liquor an immoral ty. 6. Teetotal ~B. imnJo HalJP. a scientificD,JP truth. 7. Teetotalism in mage, J B. Dana, John'Hal,..Nemn J. v. Meats, C. D. Foss, J. oe Berr} relation to the Bible. 8. God's great remedy Herrick Johnson,PeterStryker, C. H. Foler, for the world's geat curse 9. Legislation [. C. Fish, H. Warrell S. H. Tyng, an. aid the liquor traic. W. MI. Taylor. The National Temperance Orator. 12mo, 288 pages,.. $1 o Thiis is issued in response to thie many urgent calls for a book similar to the "New Temporance Speaker," used widely thrauglout the country. It contains articles by the best teinprae writers of the day, poems, recitations, readings, dialogues, and choice extracts from speeches some of the ablest temperance speakers in the country, for the use of all temperance workers Lodges, Divisions, Bands of Hope, etc., etc. Twenty-four Page Pamphlets. (With Covers.) each; 60 Cents per Doz. Medicinal Drinking. Drinking Usages of Society; Fruits of the Liquor Traffic. Is Alcohol a Necessary of Life! A High Fene of Fifteen Bars The Son of My Friend. IF Alcohol Food I Physiological Action of Alcohol. Adulteration of Liquors. Will the Coming Man Drin,k Wine{ History and Mystery of a Glass of Ale. Bible Teetotalism. i I 7The iVatiional Temperance Societyfs Books. Pamphlets. Bound and Hlow; or, Alcohlol as a Narcotic. By CHARLES JEWETT, AhI D. Ix2mo, 24 pp.,.,$0 10i Scriptural Claims of Total Abstin ecue. By Rev. NEWMAN HALL. i2mo, 62 pp.,..... $0 lo, Buy Your Own Cherries. By JOHN 4 a. KIRTON. I~-fl0, 32 pp., $0 20 National Temperance Almanac and Teetotaler's Year Book for 1874, A$0 1l I llustrated Temperance Alpphabet $0 25 John Swig. A Poem. By EDWARD CARSWELL..2mO, 24 pages Il lustrated with eight characteristic engravings, printed on tinted paper,.........$0 1 The Ruin Fiend, and Other Poentms. By WIVLLIAM H. BURLEIGH. I21110. 46 pages. Illustrated with three wood engravings, des gned b EDWARD CARSWELL.... $0 2b) Suppression of the Liquor Traffic. A Prize Essay, by Rev. H. D. KITCHELL, President of Middle bury College. I2mO, 48 p)P., $0 10 The Youth's Temperance Banner The National Temperalce S,ciety and Publication House publish a beautifully illustrated Monthly Paper, especiallv adapted to children and youth, Sunday-school and Juvenile Temperance Organizations. Each number contains several choice engravings, a piece of music, and a great variety of articles from the pens of the best writers for children in America. It should be placed il the hands of every child ill the land. TERMS-IN ADVANCE. Su_lne copies, one year- - $5 25 Thirty copies, te-ne address3 Yl-, ~ ~~~ $0 25Tit Eight copies, to one address, - - - 1 00 Forty "p e" o - ade0 Ten "'" " - - - 1 25 Fifty " " " S'" — 1 25 Fifty, Fifteen 1 8 O" " " - _ d Twen,ty " " " _ - - 2 50 The Total Abstainer's Daily Witness and Bible Verdict. 75 Cents. This is a series of Scripture Texts printed on thirty-one large sheets, ananged so that one can Te used for each da y in the monts. The size of each sheet is 19 by 12 inches, all fastened together with roller and cord, so as to be easily hung up in roon, office, workshop, etc; and turning over a sheet day by day as required. New Temperance Dialogues. The First Glass; or, The Power ofWo- Which Will Y ou Choose! 36 pages. mlan's Influence. By Mi. M D. Chellis. 15 cets. The Young Teetotaler, or, Saved at Per dozen,..... $ S Last. 15 cents eabh. Per dozen,. $1 50 Auslt Disats's Pledge. D tid, 15 Recloaimed;- or, The Danger of Mode- The Teperane Doctor. Dramatized, 015 rate Drinkisg. 10 ceslts. Per Wine as a Medicine 10 Pe dozen.. 1 00 dozen,.... 1 00 Tile Stubling Block 0c. Perdoze, 1 0 Marry No Man if he Drinks; or, Laura's Trial and C ondenation f Judas oe Plan and How it Succeeded. 10 make 1 cents. Per don,.. 1 60 cents. Per doze,.... 1 00 Teperace Exercise,... 10 Band of Hope Supplies, Band of Hope Manual. Per dozen, $0 60 Jtvesile.Tem.perance Speaker. -.- $0 2S5 Temperance Catechism. Per dozen, 60 llunlilated Temperance Cards. Set of Band of Hope Melodies. Paper, 10 ten - - - - 35 Band of Hope Badige. Enamelled, $1 25 Jssvenile Temperance Pledges. Per 100, 3 00 per dozen; 12 cents singly. Plain, Certifi.ttes of Membership Per 100, - 3 00 $1 per dozen; 10 cents singly. Tise Teiperance Speaker, - - - 75 Silver and Enamelled, 50 cents Catechisn. oil Alcohol. By Miss Jul.a each. Colt-san. Per dozen, - - - 60 Sert by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. Add,s,s J. N. STEARNS, Puablishig Agent, 58 READE STREET, NEW YORK. .. $3 75 5 00 - 6 2.7', . - 12 00 I