Part 7 (1/2)

A tale is told of a fas.h.i.+onable lady residing at a fas.h.i.+onable watering-place, at which a fas.h.i.+onable preacher preached. Of course the fas.h.i.+onable chapel was filled. It was difficult to get a seat: few could get more than standing-room. Our fas.h.i.+onable heroine, according to the tale, thither wended her way one Sabbath morning; but, alas! the ground was preoccupied. There was no room. Turning to her daughters with a well-bred smile, she exclaimed: 'Well, my dears, at any rate we have done the genteel thing!' and, self-satisfied, she departed home, her piety being of that not uncommon order, that requires a comfortable well-cus.h.i.+oned seat to itself. For some reason or other, it is now considered the genteel thing to go to Dr. c.u.mming, and the consequence is, that Crown Court Chapel overflows, and that pews are not to be had there on any terms. I should have said that nowhere was there such a crowd as that you see at Dr. c.u.mming's, if I did not recollect that I had just suffered a similar squeeze over the way, when I went to see the eminent tragedian, Mr. Brooke.

I believe the principle of there being such a crowd is the same in both cases. The great ma.s.s of spectators see in Mr. Brooke a man of fine physical endowments, and a very powerful voice. They are not judges of good acting; they cannot see whether or not an actor understands his part; they have no opinion on the subject at all: but Mr. Brooke has a name, and they run to hear him. It is the same with Dr. c.u.mming. The intrepid females, the genteel young men, who go to hear him, are no more judges of learning and ability than any other miscellaneous London mob: but Dr. c.u.mming has a name. Carriages with strawberry leaves deposit high-born ladies at his chapel. Lord John Russell goes to hear him.

Actually, he has preached before the Queen. So the chapel is crammed, as if there was something wonderful to see and hear.

I confess I am of a contrary opinion. I cannot-to quote the common phrase of religious society-'sit under' Dr. c.u.mming. I weary of his Old Testament and his high-dried Scotch theology, and his Romanist antipathies, and his Millennial hopes. 'You tell me, Doctor,' I would say to him, 'that I am a sinner-born in sin, and shapen in iniquity-that I am utterly and completely bad. Why not, then, speak to me so as to do me good? I care nothing for the Pope! Immured as I am in the business of the world-with difficulty earning my daily bread-I have little time to think of the Millennium, or to discuss whether the Jewish believer, some two thousand years ago, saw in his system anything beyond it and above it-anything brighter and better than itself. The student, in his cell, may discuss such questions-as the schoolmen of the middle ages sought to settle how many angels could dance on the point of a needle-but I, and men like me, need to be ministered to in another way. Men who preach to me must not wrestle with extinct devils, but with real ones. What I want is light upon the living present, not upon the dead and buried past.

Around me are the glare and splendour of life-beauty's smile-ambition's dream-the gorgeousness of wealth-the pride of power. Are these things worth living for? Is there anything for man higher and better? and, if so, how can I drown the clamour of their seductive voices, and escape into a more serene and purer air?' And how am I to know that these professing Christians, so well dressed, listening with such complacency while Dr. c.u.mming demolishes Cardinal Wiseman-are better than other men?

As tradesmen, are they upright? As members of the commonwealth, are they patriotic? As religious men, are their lives pure and unspotted from the world? I want not theories of grace, but what shall make men practically do what they theoretically believe. It is a human world we live in.

Every heart you meet is trembling with pa.s.sion, or bursting with desire.

On every tongue there is some tale of joy or woe. If, by mysterious ties, I am connected with the Infinite and Divine, by more palpable ties I am connected with what is finite and human: and I want the preacher to remember that fact. The Hebrew Christ did it, and the result was that his enemies were constrained to confess that 'never man spake like this man,' and that the 'common people heard him gladly.'

Dr. c.u.mming preaches as if you had no father or mother, no sister or brother, no wife or child, no human struggles and hopes-as if the great object of preaching was to fill you with Biblical pedantry, and not to make the man better, wiser, stronger than before: perhaps it may be because this is the case that the church is so thronged. You need not tremble lest your heart be touched, and your darling sin withered up by the indignant oratory of the preacher. He is far away in Revelation or in Exodus, telling us what the first man did, or the last man will do; giving you, it may be, a creed that is scriptural and correct, but that does not interest you-that has neither life, nor love, nor power-as well adapted to empty s.p.a.ce as to this gigantic Babel of compet.i.tion, and crime, and wrong, in which I live and move.

The service at Crown Court Chapel is very long; the Scotch measure the goodness of their services by their length. You must be well drilled if you are not weary before it is over. The chapel itself is a singular place. You enter by an archway. The gallery steps are outside; the shape is broad and short; a galley runs on three sides, and in one is placed the pulpit, which boasts, what is now so rare, a sounding-board.

As no s.p.a.ce is left unoccupied, the chapel must contain a large number of persons. The singing is very beautiful-better, I think, than that of any other place of wors.h.i.+p in London. There is some sense in that, for the Scottish version of the Psalms of King David is not one whit more refined, or less bald and repulsive, than that of our own Sternhold and Hopkins, or Tate. But, nevertheless, the singing is very beautiful. Dr.

c.u.mming himself looks not a large man, but a st.u.r.dy determined man, with good intellectual power, and that power well cultivated, but all in the dry Scotch way; though so little does the Doctor's speech betray him, that you would scarcely notice that his p.r.o.nunciation was that of a native of the 'Land of Cakes.' He is young-looking, his hair is dark, and his complexion is brown. As he wears spectacles, of course, I can say nothing about his eyes; or, as he wears a gown and bands, as to the robustness of his frame. He looks agile and well set; strong in the faith, and master of texts innumerable wherewith to support that faith.

A polished, graceful, self-contained, and self-satisfied man. He may be a man of large heart and sympathies; but he has not the appearance of one. He rather seems a man great in small things, tediously proper and scrupulously correct-a great gun, I imagine, at an Evangelical tea-table-and, with his ultra Protestantism (he is a countryman of Miss Cuninghame's, and every Scotchman hates Popery as a certain personage does holy water), he is a tremendous favourite at Exeter Hall. Indeed, I do not know that there is at this time a more popular performer on those boards, and he is a favourite with people whose favour pecuniarily is worth something-with people who can afford to buy his books. Hence, also, he is one of the most copious religious writers of our day.

It is vain to attempt to give an account of the Doctor's works, when 'every month brings forth a new one:' their name is Legion. There is only one man who can be compared with Dr. c.u.mming in this respect, and that is that notoriously hardened sinner, Mr. G. P. R. James.

I read in one place of Dr. c.u.mming that 'he has everything in his favour; his singularly handsome person, his brilliant flow of poetic thoughts, his striking talents, and his burning Protestant zeal, combine to make him one of the most interesting speakers of the day; and when we add to all this, his modest simplicity and humility (qualities as becoming in one of his years, as they are rare in one of his powers), we need not wonder that he is generally admired and beloved.' Another admirer writes: 'When hearing Dr. c.u.mming, one is reminded of the description of ”Silver-tongued Smith,” one of the celebrated preachers of Elizabeth's time. But though the subject of our sketch is truly silver-tongued, the solemnity, at times, almost the severity, of his manner preserves him from anything like tameness. Perhaps there is not a firmer or more fearless preacher than the Doctor-a fact which has been proved over and over again of late, as his Romish antagonists have found to their cost.

Dr. c.u.mming's manner in the pulpit is pleasing. He seldom uses any other action than a gentle waving of the hand, or the turning from one part of his congregation to the other. He is no cus.h.i.+on-thumper, and depends for effect more upon what he says than on the graces of action. Not that he is ungraceful at all-far from that: what we mean is, that he is in this respect directly the opposite of those pulpit fops who flourish their bordered pieces of inspiration-lawn in the pulpit, and throw themselves into such att.i.tudes as compels one to believe that the looking-gla.s.s is almost as essential a preparation for the pulpit as the Bible itself.'

Dr. c.u.mming is a warm supporter of Establishments, a sworn foe of liberalism, which he declares to have 'charity on its mantle, and h.e.l.l in its heart.' He is a good hater. These things may fit him to be the idol of Crown Court, but do little more. The large vision which looks before and after, which makes man a philosopher, which teaches him to see the good in all human developments of thought and action, and calmly and lovingly to abide their legitimate results, has been denied him. The consequence is, he has sunk into the apostle of a coterie, and 'gives up to party what was meant for mankind.'

THE REV. JAMES HAMILTON, D.D.

It is a remarkable fact that a Scotchman has never led the House of Commons. The real reason is, I imagine, that Scotchmen are not generally very oratorical. The Scots suffer from the _fercidum ingenium_ which old Buchanan claimed for them, undoubtedly; but it does not generally a.s.sume an oratorical form: it finds other ways of development. It leads Sawney, junior, to bid farewell to the porridge of the paternal roof, to cross the Tweed, to travel in whatever dark and distant land gold is to be had, and a fortune to be won. But there it stops. Joseph Hume was a model of a Scotch orator. There was not a duller dog on the face of the earth than that most excellent and honoured man. One would as soon listen to a lecture from Elihu Burritt, or sit out a pantomime, as listen to a speech from the Scottish Joseph.

So it is with the Scottish pulpit. It is generally hard and heavy, dest.i.tute of life and power, abstruse, metaphysical, learned, and consequently dull. Yet there have been splendid exceptions. The fiery and holy Chalmers was one, and Edward Irving was another. The Scottish Church in Regent Square was at one time a place of no common repute.

Irving, with his splendid face, half fiend half angel-with his intellect hovering between insanity and genius, the companion of fanatics and philosophers-there

'Blazed the comet of a season.'

To this day his name yet lives. In spite of the delusions and follies with which his name was connected-in spite of the reaction, the natural result of all enthusiasm, no matter what-Irvingite churches remain amongst us to this present hour. But at one time they threatened to pervade the land. All London flocked to Regent Square Church: the religious world was in a state of intense excitement. Timid men and nervous women went there, Sunday after Sunday, till they became almost mad. Unknown tongues were heard; strange sights were seen. Some thought the end of the world had come, and were seized with trembling and fear.

It was a time of wonder, and mystery, and awe; but it pa.s.sed away, as such things in this world of ours must pa.s.s away. The great magician died. The crowd that had wondered and wept at his bidding, went to wonder and weep elsewhere.

Under such circ.u.mstances, to attempt to fill the vacant pulpit was no easy task; and yet that it has been done, and done successfully, is evinced by Dr. Hamilton's success. It is a fact that he preaches there every Sunday to a crowded church; that there, where there were divers prophesyings and bewilderment universal, now order reigns; that the only voice that you hear there now, besides that of the preacher, is that of the precentor, as he reads the bald version of the Psalms, to which the modern Scotch stick as immovably as did their fathers to the Covenant in the days of Montrose. This is an undeniable fact. Nor does it surprise you when the Doctor makes his appearance in the pulpit. At first, perhaps, you are rather surprised. There is certainty nothing taking about the man. He looks tall, strong, and awkward, with a cloudy face, and a fearfully drawling voice; a man, not timid, but not striking-plain and unaffected-better fitted for the study than for the fas.h.i.+on of May Fair. If you look closer, you will see indications of a calm, untroubled heart, with deep wells of fine feeling, of tenderness and strength combined. But still the Doctor is not the man to make a sensation at first sight-very few ministers are. One can understand this in a way.

In certain families, it is said, the good-looking are put into the army-if fools, into the Church. Yet, generally, the jewel is worthy of the casket. If the one be rich and beautiful, the other is so as well.

Plain and slouching as he is, I am told the Doctor succeeded in engaging the affections of a lady possessed of considerable property. But this is by no means remarkable: clergymen of every denomination make as many successful marriages as most men. One would think that they took the common wicked standard of wicked men, and judged a woman's worth by the extent of her purse. I fear that there are as many fortune-hunters in the Church as there are in the world.

If 'Hudibras' had been written in our day, we should at once have supposed that Dr. Hamilton had helped the poet to a hero. Like Hudibras, the Doctor