i^' :^ 'm^~ L^f ■;# miv^m o.i^^ -''\^^^^ m.. I %^,'Sf, L 1 B R.A RY OF THE U N I VERSITY Of ILLl NOIS IS: SOME ACCOUNT OP djlait p;ai|kt glissiaii. €hn P^arltet ||lissioit IN THE PARISH OP SAINT CLEMENT DANES. The Parish of St. Clement Danes contains a population of 17,000 persons, most of whom are among the poorest in London ; of the ignorance of the masses inhabiting the courts and alleys in the neighbourhood of Clare Market and Drury Lane, it would be difficult to convey any adequate idea. Their number and past neglect, have placed them beyond the reach of the ordinary ministra- tions of the Parish Church, and an attempt has therefore been made to influence them by services specially intended for their banefit ; a Chapel capable of containing 300 persons, was opened last year by the Bishop of London, who preached the first sermon. The difficulty so often met with of inducing the very poorest to enter the House of Prayer, has in this case been overcome: situated in the very midst of the courts, and furnished in the simplest manner, with chairs free to all, there is nothing in this Chapel to repel those who would shrink from a place of worship where their poverty would excite remark. A series of open air services held every Sunday morning at the close of last summer in the centre of Clare Market, by God's blessing was productive of the best results. Sunday trading, carried on to a fearful extent, is one of the greatest evils of the neighbourhood, and these services were conducted close to open shops, and amidst the cries of the sellers of meat, vege- tables etc. The Clergyman attended by his choir, commenced the service by giving out a hymn, copies of which were freely distributed to all around, and very generally sung, he then read a chapter and preached from some text in it; nothing could be more reverent or attentive than the behaviour of the large crowd collected; though made up mainly of the roughest and most ignorant there was never the slightest interruption, but on I III !i^ ,UIUC •VnpiV the contrary all seemed eager to listen. At the close of the sermon, the choir preceded the Clergy- man down the narrow lane leading to the Chapel, singing as they went the Litany hymn, ^' Saviour when in dust to Thee," and those who were pre- sent will not soon forget the impression made on them hy the sight of that crowd of poor people streaming down the lane into the Chapel, where the Litany was then said. Some of the effects of these services were visible at once in the largely increased congregations, and in the altered beha- viour of the people; those who had shops or stalls in the lane, along which the procession passed, closed them, at any rate for the time, saying (to use their own words) **that it was not possible to keep them open when all out of doors seemed like a Church." They were also very much struck by the fact of a real minister, as they phrased it, preaching in the open air, and admitted readily his claims to do so. It is only by degrees that cases are now becoming known of those who can trace their first good impressions to these services, but sufficient have already come to light to prove how greatly God has blessed the work. One or two of these may be interesting. A poor woman who had been sent out by her husband to get the materials for their Sunday dinner, in pas- sing through the market was attracted by the crowd, and stopped to listen to the sermon ; she was so much interested that she forgot her errand, and followed the others into the Chapel; from that time she was a changed character, she had been an habitual drunkard, and had lived a wild, careless life, she is now a constant attendant at all the ser- vices held in the Chapel, and has given up the use of all intoxicating drink; her room which used to be most miserable is now a pattern of cleanliness, and comfort, and she is humbly trying to w^alk in the right way. Another woman who had started on a similar errand, was so touched by what she heard, that she returned with an empty basket, and said she could never again make Sunday purchases. When the services were discontinued in conse- quence of the change of weather, several notes were sent to the clergyman begging him to go on with them as the people did not mind the cold or •z wet. Anxious enquiries are now being made, especially by the men, to know when these services will be resumed. The work within the Chapel is not less encoura- ging; the morning congregation has more than doubled, and in the evening the place is quite full of tha very poor. On week day evenings there is an average congregation of 70 grown up persons, sometimes there are 100, while at the early ser- vice (at 7 o'clock a.m.) a large number attend. The number of Communicants has increased from about 12 to upwards of 60, and though the Holy Communion is administered twice a month, and every Sunday during Advent and Lent, the num- ber of Communicants is not lessened. The amount, of money given by these poor people is most remarkable ; during the last six months more than £30 have been contributed by them for the use of the sick, and to defray the incidental expenses of the Chapel, by far the larger portion of which has been given in pence and small coin ; the plates always return piled up with pence, and this to any one who knows the poor is the most con- vincing prcof that they value the services of the Chapel; every one present seems to consider it a privilege to give, and many out of their deep poverty contribute what must cost them much self denial. The service is partly Choral, but is noticeable for its simplicity, and the consequence is that the people enter into it in a way seldom heard, singing with all their hearts; so much so indeed that the organ often ceases without its being observed. More than one case has occurred in which the singing these hymns has produced the best results; in one instance a man told the Clergyman who attended him on his death-bed that his first serious impressions arose from hearing his little girl sing the hymns she had learnt at the Chapel; he was led to attend it himself, and spoke with deep feeling of the blessing he had gained there; he bore a lingering illness with much patience, and after receiving the Holy Communion died very peacefully. Another poor person, now dying of consumption, says that her greatest earthly pleasure is to have her little boy sing at her bedside the hymns he hears sung at the Chapel; and there are many sick people in the neighhourhood who have their win- dows opened during service time that they may hear the singing, and on their beds join in the well known hymns. A school is held in the Chapel during the week, and though only lately established is attended regularly by 60 or 70 children, who are making satisfactory progress. A large and increasing Sun- day school is held in the same place, and every effort is made to influence the parents through their children. The Choir and Sunday school are very efficiently conducted by the voluntary efforts of young men living in the parish who take an interest in what is being done. In connection with the Mission, a Refuge for destitute, orphan boys was opened last Michael- mas, and has by God's blessing already been pro- ductive of good. No one who has not undertaken such work, can form any idea of the temptations and wretchedness of London street life. These boys left to themselves, in many cases at a very early age, are familiar with every kind of hardship. 10 Cold, hungry, and half naked, with scarcely any definite notions of right and wrong, the only wonder seems that ihey have not yielded to the temptation of dishonesty. They were found, in some cases at night,in strange resting places, lying on door-steps, in carts, and in empty houses. One boy who was taken in with scarcely any clothing on, had been left to himself for more than four years, during which time he had never slept in a bed. His father died from the effects of an accident, and his mother of cholera in St. Luke's workhouse, after which he was taken care of by a poor old woman in White Cross Street, who sent him to school, and then got him a place as errand boy in a shop : after a long illness, during which he nursed her as well as he was able, she died and he had then no home, and began to sleep in the streets as his wages were not enough to pay for a lodging. It is pitiful to hear his account of his struggles to keep himself decent, every day with less and less success, till he became so ragged and wretched that he was forced to leave his place, never having had courage to tell his employer the cause of his 11 gradual degradation. He then took to a regular street life, hardly any phase of which has been untried by him. In the summer he would either earn a few half- pence in London by tumbling at the side of omnibuses, or pleasure vans, or else join a par^ going into the country haymaking or hopping, living a wild gipsy life till the winter came on, and with it a hard struggle for life. The night Refuges for the houseless afforded a shelter and some little food, but this could be only a temporary relief for him, and many nights he has laid down to sleep in a cart with two or three other boys in as forlorn a state as himself, huddling together to keep off the bitter cold, having had perhaps for the whole day no other food than some rotten fruit picked up in Covent Garden. On one occasion when he had lain outside to keep another boy warm, his charity almost cost him his life, as he was found in the morning so numbed with the cold that his limbs were perfectly stiff, and it was some time before he recovered. Another boy, left in an equally destitute state, slept for six months in a baker's cart in the Mile 12 End Road, thinking himself well off in having a covered resting place. They all shared in that almost universal dread, which London street boys seem to have of going to prison for the first time, a wholesome dread, that has proved in their case a safeguard, but jpne that might soon have given way under the solici- tations of those who had been convicted, who often assured them that it was nothing after they had once tried it. Several of them have said that but for this Refuge they felt sure they must have given way during this last long winter, and would now have been in prison. Strange as it may seem after so wild a life, and mixing with the worst companions, an oath, or a bad wordhas never been heard in the Refuge. The hu- manizing influence of such a home, and the kindly treatment they meet with tells upon them at once, and their manners, and even their very features become softened and improved. After a trial as shoeblacks to see if they could be depended upon for steadiness and industry, they were recommended to various situations where 13 they are doing well: they return to the Refuge for their meals, and at night, when they receive as much schooling as there is time for. It is not too much to say that each one of these boys if left unhelped would have either sunk under the priva- tions of a hard life, and have died in the hospital or infirmary, or he would at last have taken to vicious courses, and added another item to the number of our criminal population. The contrast between their present and past condition is most striking; well clothed, healthy, and happy, they have been put into the way of earning an honest livelihood, and eventually of rising in the world. It requires however constant care and watchfulness to counteract the wild habits they learnt in their former wandering life; the improvement already visible gives great encouragement for the time to come, and it is a matter of earnest prayer that God would be pleased to bless this effort made to bring to a knowledge of their Heavenly Father these poor children who were straying so far from Him. Another branch of this Mission work has been 14 the establisliment of a sort of Club Room for widows, and elderly single women. Nothing can be conceived much more dreary for an old person than to sit alone during the long hours of a win- ter's evening in an ill-lighted and half-warmed room, unable perhaps to read, and unwilling to seek companionship among neighbours with differ- ent habits and pursuits. It was thought that some attempt might be made to improve this state of things, and accordingly a room has been taken in a central position, simply, but cheerfully fitted up, with a good fire, and well lighted, where they can meet every evening from 6 till 10 o'clock, bring their work and have some pleasant talk with those like-minded with themselves. The plan has answered admirably, the old people are tho- roughly happy, and by their constantly expressed gratitude prove how much they appreciate this attention to their wants. The kindness of some friends associated for the purpose, has supplied the means for employ- ing a * Bible woman,' who works on the plan suggested in the 'Missing Link,' but in this case 15 entirely under tlie direction of the clergyman, and proves a most valuable help to him in many ways; though she has only been at work for a short time she has disposed of a large number of Bibles, Testa- ments, and Prayer books, in most cases taking small payments till the amount is made up; on the same principle she obtains from the very poorest money for clothing and beds (many of them lying on the floor on rags or shavings) and in this way many pence that would have been wasted, or have been spent in drink are turned to account, and it is hoped that the foundation is being laid for more provident habits. This slight sketch of the work that is being carried on in connection with Clare Market Chapel may prove how much need there was of such a Mission being undertaken, and may also show that God's blessing has rested on the poor efforts made for His sake: at the same time help is asked in order to carry them on, as there is at present a heavy pecuniary responsibility which falls on the clergyman of the Chapel, his stipend having been only £60 a year, while he is personally liable for 16 the rent of the Chapel, amounting to £70 per annum, and the school costs £30 a year more. It is therefore hoped that an annual sum of £150 may be raised which would add something to his income, and relieve him from a burden which presses somewhat heavily upon him. The work though only just begun, is most encouraging in its present results and future hopes; it would be very disheartening if it had to be relinquished for want of sufficient support. The Parishioners of St. Clement Danes came forward most generously, and subscribed a very large sum for the first outlay connected with the Chapel &c., which has been entirely expended, but they are not able to provide the whole of the annual sum required for its maintenance: and although the Rector of the Parish takes the greatest interest in the work, and kindly does all he can to further it, he is unable himself to support it, as the living of St. Clement Danes, though one of the most important in London, has neither endowment nor parsonage, the Income arising chiefly from the voluntary Easter offerings of tl^e Parishioners.