<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p class="letter">
Camp-Meeting</p>
<p>It was in the course of this summer that I found the opportunity I had long
wished for, of attending a camp-meeting, and I gladly accepted the invitation
of an English lady and gentleman to accompany them in their carriage to the
spot where it is held; this was in a wild district on the confines of Indiana.</p>
<p>The prospect of passing a night in the back woods of Indiana was by no means
agreeable, but I screwed my courage to the proper pitch, and set forth
determined to see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears, what a
camp-meeting really was. I had heard it said that being at a camp-meeting was
like standing at the gate of heaven, and seeing it opening before you; I had
heard it said, that being at a camp-meeting was like finding yourself within
the gates of hell; in either case there must be something to gratify curiosity,
and compensate one for the fatigue of a long rumbling ride and a sleepless
night.</p>
<p>We reached the ground about an hour before midnight, and the approach to it was
highly picturesque. The spot chosen was the verge of an unbroken forest, where
a space of about twenty acres appeared to have been partially cleared for the
purpose. Tents of different sizes were pitched very near together in a circle
round the cleared space; behind them were ranged an exterior circle of
carriages of every description, and at the back of each were fastened the
horses which had drawn them thither. Through this triple circle of defence we
distinguished numerous fires burning brightly within it; and still more
numerous lights flickering from the trees that were left in the enclosure. The
moon was in meridian splendour above our heads.</p>
<p>We left the carriage to the care of a servant, who was to prepare a bed in it
for Mrs. B. and me, and entered the inner circle. The first glance reminded me
of Vauxhall, from the effect of the lights among the trees, and the moving
crowd below them; but the second shewed a scene totally unlike any thing I had
ever witnessed. Four high frames, constructed in the form of altars, were
placed at the four corners of the enclosure; on these were supported layers of
earth and sod, on which burned immense fires of blazing pinewood. On one side a
rude platform was erected to accommodate the preachers, fifteen of whom
attended this meeting, and with very short intervals for necessary refreshment
and private devotion, preached in rotation, day and night, from Tuesday to
Saturday.</p>
<p>When we arrived, the preachers were silent; but we heard issuing from nearly
every tent mingled sounds of praying, preaching, singing, and lamentation. The
curtains in front of each tent were dropped, and the faint light that gleamed
through the white drapery, backed as it was by the dark forest, had a beautiful
and mysterious effect, that set the imagination at work; and had the sounds
which vibrated around us been less discordant, harsh, and unnatural, I should
have enjoyed it; but listening at the corner of a tent, which poured forth more
than its proportion of clamour, in a few moments chased every feeling derived
from imagination, and furnished realities that could neither be mistaken or
forgotten.</p>
<p>Great numbers of persons were walking about the ground, who appeared like
ourselves to be present only as spectators; some of these very unceremoniously
contrived to raise the drapery of this tent, at one comer, so as to afford us a
perfect view of the interior.</p>
<p>The floor was covered with straw, which round the sides was heaped in masses,
that might serve as seats, but which at that moment were used to support the
heads and the arms of the close-packed circle of men and women who kneeled on
the floor.</p>
<p>Out of about thirty persons thus placed, perhaps half a dozen were men. One of
these, a handsome looking youth of eighteen or twenty, kneeled just below the
opening through which I looked. His arm was encircling the neck of a young girl
who knelt beside him, with her hair hanging dishevelled upon her shoulders, and
her features working with the most violent agitation; soon after they both fell
forward on the straw, as if unable to endure in any other attitude the burning
eloquence of a tall grim figure in black, who, standing erect in the centre,
was uttering with incredible vehemence an oration that seemed to hover between
praying and preaching; his arms hung stiff and immoveable by his side, and he
looked like an ill-constructed machine, set in action by a movement so violent,
as to threaten its own destruction, so jerkingly, painfully, yet rapidly, did
his words tumble out; the kneeling circle ceasing not to call in every variety
of tone on the name of Jesus; accompanied with sobs, groans, and a sort of low
howling inexpressibly painful to listen to. But my attention was speedily
withdrawn from the preacher, and the circle round him, by a figure which knelt
alone at some distance; it was a living image of Scott’s Macbriar, as
young, as wild, and as terrible. His thin arms tossed above his head, had
forced themselves so far out of the sleeves, that they were bare to the elbow;
his large eyes glared frightfully, and he continued to scream without an
instant’s intermission the word “Glory!” with a violence that
seemed to swell every vein to bursting. It was too dreadful to look upon long,
and we turned away shuddering.</p>
<p>We made the circuit of the tents, pausing where attention was particularly
excited by sounds more vehement than ordinary. We contrived to look into many;
all were strewed with straw, and the distorted figures that we saw kneeling,
sitting, and lying amongst it, joined to the woeful and convulsive cries, gave
to each, the air of a cell in Bedlam.</p>
<p>One tent was occupied exclusively by Negroes. They were all full-dressed, and
looked exactly as if they were performing a scene on the stage. One woman wore
a dress of pink gauze trimmed with silver lace; another was dressed in pale
yellow silk; one or two had splendid turbans; and all wore a profusion of
ornaments. The men were in snow white pantaloons, with gay coloured linen
jackets. One of these, a youth of coal-black comeliness, was preaching with the
most violent gesticulations, frequently springing high from the ground, and
clapping his hands over his head. Could our missionary societies have heard the
trash he uttered, by way of an address to the Deity, they might perhaps have
doubted whether his conversion had much enlightened his mind.</p>
<p>At midnight a horn sounded through the camp, which, we were told, was to call
the people from private to public worship; and we presently saw them flocking
from all sides to the front of the preachers’ stand. Mrs. B. and I
contrived to place ourselves with our backs supported against the lower part of
this structure, and we were thus enabled to witness the scene which followed
without personal danger. There were about two thousand persons assembled.</p>
<p>One of the preachers began in a low nasal tone, and, like all other Methodist
preachers, assured us of the enormous depravity of man as he comes from the
hands of his Maker, and of his perfect sanctification after he had wrestled
sufficiently with the Lord to get hold of him, <i>et cetera</i>. The admiration
of the crowd was evinced by almost constant cries of “Amen! Amen!”
“Jesus! Jesus!” “Glory! Glory!” and the like. But this
comparative tranquility did not last long: the preacher told them that
“this night was the time fixed upon for anxious sinners to wrestle with
the Lord;” that he and his brethren “were at hand to help
them,” and that such as needed their help were to come forward into
“the pen.” The phrase forcibly recalled Milton’s lines—</p>
<p class="poem">
“Blind mouths! that scarce themselves know how to hold<br/>
A sheep-hook, or have learned aught else, the least<br/>
That to the faithful herdsman’s art belongs!<br/>
—But when they list their lean and flashy songs,<br/>
Grate on their scrannel pipes of wretched straw;—<br/>
The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed!<br/>
But swoln with wind, and the rank mist they draw,<br/>
Rot inwardly—and foul contagion spread.”</p>
<p>“The pen” was the space immediately below the preachers’
stand; we were therefore placed on the edge of it, and were enabled to see and
hear all that took place in the very centre of this extraordinary exhibition.</p>
<p>The crowd fell back at the mention of the <i>pen</i>, and for some minutes
there was a vacant space before us. The preachers came down from their stand
and placed themselves in the midst of it, beginning to sing a hymn, calling
upon the penitents to come forth. As they sung they kept turning themselves
round to every part of the crowd and, by degrees, the voices of the whole
multitude joined in chorus. This was the only moment at which I perceived any
thing like the solemn and beautiful effect, which I had heard ascribed to this
woodland worship. It is certain that the combined voices of such a multitude,
heard at dead of night, from the depths of their eternal forests, the many fair
young faces turned upward, and looking paler and lovelier as they met the
moon-beams, the dark figures of the officials in the middle of the circle, the
lurid glare thrown by the altar-fires on the woods beyond, did altogether
produce a fine and solemn effect, that I shall not easily forget; but ere I had
well enjoyed it, the scene changed, and sublimity gave place to horror and
disgust.</p>
<p>The exhortation nearly resembled that which I had heard at “the
Revival,” but the result was very different; for, instead of the few
hysterical women who had distinguished themselves on that occasion, above a
hundred persons,, nearly all females, came forward, uttering howlings and
groans, so terrible that I shall never cease to shudder when I recall them.
They appeared to drag each other forward, and on the word being given,
“let us pray,” they all fell on their knees; but this posture was
soon changed for others that permitted greater scope for the convulsive
movements of their limbs; and they were soon all lying on the ground in an
indescribable confusion of heads and legs. They threw about their limbs with
such incessant and violent motions, that I was every instant expecting some
serious accident to occur.</p>
<p>But how am I to describe the sounds that proceeded from this strange mass of
human beings? I know no words which can convey an idea of it. Hysterical
sobbings, convulsive groans, shrieks and screams the most appalling, burst
forth on all sides. I felt sick with horror. As if their hoarse and over
strained voices failed to make noise enough, they soon began to clap their
hands violently. The scene described by Dante was before me:-</p>
<p class="poem">
“Quivi sospiri, pianti, ed alti guai<br/>
Risonavan per l’aere—<br/>
—Orribili favelle<br/>
Parole di dolore, accenti d’ira<br/>
Voci alti e fioche, <i>e suon di man con elle</i>.”</p>
<p>Many of these wretched creatures were beautiful young females. The preachers
moved about among them, at once exciting and soothing their agonies. I heard
the muttered “Sister! dear sister!” I saw the insidious lips
approach the cheeks of the unhappy girls; I heard the murmured confessions of
the poor victims, and I watched their tormentors, breathing into their ears
consolations that tinged the pale cheek with red. Had I been a man, I am sure I
should have been guilty of some rash act of interference; nor do I believe that
such a scene could have been acted in the presence of Englishmen without
instant punishment being inflicted; not to mention the salutary discipline of
the treadmill, which, beyond all question, would, in England, have been applied
to check so turbulent and so vicious a scene.</p>
<p>After the first wild burst that followed their prostration, the meanings, in
many instances, became loudly articulate; and I then experienced a strange
vibration between tragic and comic feeling.</p>
<p>A very pretty girl, who was kneeling in the attitude of Canova’s
Magdalene immediately before us, amongst an immense quantity of jargon, broke
out thus: “Woe! woe to the backsliders! hear it, hear it Jesus! when I
was fifteen my mother died, and I backslided, oh Jesus, I backslided! take me
home to my mother, Jesus! take me home to her, for I am weary! Oh John Mitchel!
John Mitchel!” and after sobbing piteously behind her raised hands, she
lifted her sweet face again, which was as pale as death, and said, “Shall
I sit on the sunny bank of salvation with my mother? my own dear mother? oh
Jesus, take me home, take me home!” Who could refuse a tear to this
earnest wish for death in one so young and so lovely? But I saw her, ere I left
the ground, with her hand fast locked, and her head supported by a man who
looked very much as Don Juan might, when sent back to earth as too bad for the
regions below.</p>
<p>One woman near us continued to “call on the Lord,” as it is termed,
in the loudest possible tone, and without a moment’s interval, for the
two hours that we kept our dreadful station. She became frightfully hoarse, and
her face so red as to make me expect she would burst a blood-vessel. Among the
rest of her rant, she said, “I will hold fast to Jesus, I never will let
him go; if they take me to hell, I will still hold him fast, fast, fast!”</p>
<p>The stunning noise was sometimes varied by the preachers beginning to sing; but
the convulsive movements of the poor maniacs only became more violent. At
length the atrocious wickedness of this horrible scene increased to a degree of
grossness, that drove us from our station; we returned to the carriage at about
three o’clock in the morning, and passed the remainder of the night in
listening to the ever increasing tumult at the pen. To sleep was impossible. At
daybreak the horn again sounded, to send them to private devotion; and in about
an hour afterwards I saw the whole camp as joyously and eagerly employed in
preparing and devouring their most substantial breakfasts as if the night had
been passed in dancing; and I marked many a fair but pale face, that I
recognised as a demoniac of the night, simpering beside a swain, to whom she
carefully administered hot coffee and eggs. The preaching saint and the howling
sinner seemed alike to relish this mode of recruiting their strength.</p>
<p>After enjoying abundance of strong tea, which proved a delightful restorative
after a night so strangely spent, I wandered alone into the forest, and I never
remember to have found perfect quiet more delightful.</p>
<p>We soon after left the ground; but before our departure we learnt that a very
<i>satisfactory</i> collection had been made by the preachers, for Bibles,
Tracts, and <i>all other religious purposes</i>.</p>
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