After that followed temperance work. This is how Miss Weston came to sign the pledge.
She was working hard at meetings for the promotion of the temperance cause when a desperate drunkard, a chimney sweep by trade, came to her at one of the meetings and was going to sign the pledge.
Pausing suddenly he remarked, “If you please, Miss Weston, be you a teetotaler?”
“No,” she replied; “I only take a glass of wine occasionally, of course in strict moderation.” Laying down the pen he remarked he thought he’d do the same. So after this Miss Weston became an out-and-out teetotaler, duly pledged.
She had some experience of good work in the army before she took to the navy. The 2nd Somerset Militia assembled every year for drill; and for their benefit coffee and reading rooms were started and entertainments arranged, Miss Weston taking an active part in their promotion. The soldiers’ Bible class which she conducted was well attended; and altogether, as one of the officers remarked, “the men were not like the same fellows” after they had been brought under her influence.
The way Agnes Weston was first introduced to the sailors was singular. She had written to a soldier on board the troopship Crocodile, and he showed the letter to a sailor friend, who remarked: “That is good: we poor fellows have no friend. Do you think she would write to me?”
“I am sure she will,” replied the soldier; “I will write and ask her.”
The good news that there was a kind friend willing to write to them gradually spread; and sailor after sailor wrote to Miss Weston, and their correspondence grew so large that at length she had to print her letters.
Even in the first year she printed 500 copies a month of her letters ("little bluebacks” the sailors called them, on account of the colour of their cover); but before many years had passed as many as 21,000 a month were printed and circulated.
Then the sailor boys wanted a letter all to themselves, saying they could not fully understand the men’s bluebacks. Miss Weston could not refuse; so she printed them a letter too; and many a reply she had from the boys, telling her of their trials and difficulties, and the help her letters had been to them.
Before Miss Weston had been long at work she thought it would be useful if she went on board the vessels, and had a chat about temperance with the men.
But there was a good deal of difficulty in the way to begin with. A man would have been allowed readily enough, but a woman to invade her Majesty’s ships,—it was not to be thought of!
At length Admiral Sir King Hall became interested in the subject. He determined to hear what Miss Weston had to say to the men, and, if he was satisfied that her teaching would benefit them, to assist her in her object. He got together a meeting of dockyard workmen, and asked her to speak to them.