destined for my sole possession. As Ruth clave
unto Naomi, so my friend the Philanthropist clave
unto me. “Whither thou goest, I will go;
and where thou lodgest, I will lodge.”
A really kind, good man, full of zeal, determined
to help somebody, and absorbed in his one thought,
he doubted nobody’s willingness to serve him,
going, as he was, on a purely benevolent errand.
When he reads this, as I hope he will, let him be
assured of my esteem and respect; and if he gained
any accommodation from being in my company, let me
tell him that I learned a lesson from his active benevolence.
I could, however, have wished to hear him laugh once
before we parted, perhaps forever. He did not,
to the best of my recollection, even smile during
the whole period that we were in company. I am
afraid that a lightsome disposition and a relish for
humor are not so common in those whose benevolence
takes an active turn as in people of sentiment who
are always ready with their tears and abounding in
passionate expressions of sympathy. Working philanthropy
is a practical specialty, requiring not a mere impulse,
but a talent, with its peculiar sagacity for finding
its objects, a tact for selecting its agencies, an
organizing and arranging faculty, a steady set of nerves,
and a constitution such as Sallust describes in Catiline,
patient of cold, of hunger, and of watching.
Philanthropists are commonly grave, occasionally grim,
and not very rarely morose. Their expansive social
force is imprisoned as a working power, to show itself
only through its legitimate pistons and cranks.
The tighter the boiler, the less it whistles and sings
at its work. When Dr. Waterhouse, in 1780, travelled
with Howard, on his tour among the Dutch prisons and
hospitals, he found his temper and manners very different
from what would have been expected. My benevolent
companion having already made a preliminary exploration
of the hospitals of the place, before sharing my bed
with him, as above mentioned, I joined him in a second
tour through them. The authorities of Middletown
are evidently leagued with the surgeons of that place,
for such a break-neck succession of pitfalls and chasms
I have never seen in the streets of a civilized town.
It was getting late in the evening when we began our
rounds. The principal collections of the wounded
were in the churches. Boards were laid over the
tops of the pews, on these some straw was spread,
and on this the wounded lay, with little or no covering
other than such scanty clothes as they had on.
There were wounds of all degrees of severity, but I
heard no groans or murmurs. Most of the sufferers
were hurt in the limbs, some had undergone amputation,
and all had, I presume, received such attention as
was required. Still, it was but a rough and dreary
kind of comfort that the extemporized hospitals suggested.
I could not help thinking the patients must be cold;
but they were used to camp-life, and did not complain.
The men who watched were not of the soft-handed variety