to it, no affection felt for it, no good to be drawn
from it by their children; that though there was a
monument in the church, there was no warm monument
in the hearth and house to them; that all that they
ever treasured was despised, and the places that had
sheltered and comforted them were dragged down to
the dust. I say that a good man would fear this;
and that, far more, a good son, a noble descendant,
would fear doing it to his father’s house.
I say that if men lived like men indeed, their houses
would be temples—temples which we should
hardly dare to injure, and in which it would make
us holy to be permitted to live; and there must be
a strange dissolution of natural affection, a strange
unthankfulness for all that homes have given and parents
taught, a strange consciousness that we have been unfaithful
to our fathers’ honour, or that our own lives
are not such as would make our dwellings sacred to
our children, when each man would fain build to himself,
and build for the little revolution of his own life
only. And I look upon those pitiful concretions
of lime and clay which spring up, in mildewed forwardness,
out of the kneaded fields about our capital—upon
those thin, tottering, foundationless shells of splintered
wood and imitated stone—upon those gloomy
rows of formalized minuteness, alike without difference
and without fellowship, as solitary as similar—not
merely with the careless disgust of an offended eye,
not merely with sorrow for a desecrated landscape,
but with a painful foreboding that the roots of our
national greatness must be deeply cankered when they
are thus loosely struck in their native ground; that
those comfortless and unhonoured dwellings are the
signs of a great and spreading spirit of popular discontent;
that they mark the time when every man’s aim
is to be in some more elevated sphere than his natural
one, and every man’s past life is his habitual
scorn; when men build in the hope of leaving the places
they have built, and live in the hope of forgetting
the years that they have lived; when the comfort,
the peace, the religion of home have ceased to be felt;
and the crowded tenements of a struggling and restless
population differ only from the tents of the Arab
or the Gipsy by their less healthy openness to the
air of heaven, and less happy choice of their spot
of earth; by their sacrifice of liberty without the
gain of rest, and of stability without the luxury
of change.
This is no slight, no consequenceless evil; it is ominous, infectious, and fecund of other fault and misfortune. When men do not love their hearths, nor reverence their thresholds, it is a sign that they have dishonoured both, and that they have never acknowledged the true universality of that Christian worship which was indeed to supersede the idolatry, but not the piety, of the pagan. Our God is a household God, as well as a heavenly one; He has an altar in every man’s dwelling; let men look to it when they rend it lightly and pour out its ashes. It is