|
To return
to the story of my own life. I have said that the gipsies are very musical, and
my father was a good illustration of this statement. He was a very good
fiddler - by ear, of course. He tells a story of the days when he was
learning to play in his mother's tent. Dear old lady, she got tired of the
noise the boy was making, and she told him to stop. As he did not stop, she
said, "If you don't I will blow out the candle." This she did. That
of course made no difference to the young musician; he went on playing, and
grannie said, "I never saw such a boy; he can play in the dark!"
For years my father had greatly added to his ordinary earnings by fiddling to
the dancers in the public-houses at Baldock, |
|
All this time,
while my father was living this life of fiddling and drinking and sinning, he
was under the deepest conviction. He always said his prayers night and
morning and asked God to give him power over drink, but every time temptation
came in his way he fell before it. He was like the chaff driven before the
wind. He hated himself afterwards because he had been so easily overcome. He
was so concerned about his soul that he could rest nowhere. If he had been
able to read the Word of God, I feel sure, and he, looking back on those
days, feels sure, that he would have found the way of life. His sister and
her husband, who had no children, came to travel with us. She could struggle
her way through a little of the New Testament, and used to read to my father
about the sufferings of Christ and His death upon the tree for sinful men.
She told my father it was the sins of the people which nailed Him there, and
he often felt in his heart that he was one of them. She was deeply moved when
he wept and said, "Oh, how cruel to serve Him so!" I have seen
father when we children were in bed at night, and supposed to be asleep,
sitting over the fire, the flame from which was the only light. As it leapt
up into the darkness it showed us a sad picture. There was father, with tears
falling like bubbles on mountain streams as he talked to himself about mother
and his promise to her to be good. He would say to himself aloud, "I do
not know how to be good," and laying his hand upon his heart he would
say, "I wonder when I shall get this want satisfied, this burden
removed?" When father was in this condition there was no sleep for us
children. We lay awake listening, not daring to speak, and shedding bitter
tears. Many a time I have said the next morning to my sisters and my brother,
"We have no mother and we shall soon have no father." We thought he
was going out of his mind. We did not understand the want or the burden. It
was all quite foreign to us. My father remained in this sleepless, convicted
condition for a long time, but the hour of his deliverance was at hand. |
|
|
|
"Long
in darkness we had waited |
|
For the
shining of the light: |
|
Long have
felt the things we hated |
|
Sink us
into deeper night." |
|
|
|
One
morning we had left |
|
Though
these three men had been far apart, God had been dealing with them at the
same time and in the same way. Among the marvellous dispensations of |
|
As the
brothers talked they felt how sweet it would be to go to God's house and learn
of Him, for they had all got tired of their roaming life. My father was on
the way to |
|
On the
Sunday the three brothers went to the Primitive Methodist Chapel, |
|
We now
resumed our way to |
|
My father
was now terribly in earnest. There were a great many gipsies encamped in the
forest at the time, including his father and mother, brothers and sisters. My
father told them that he had done with the roaming and wrong-doing, and that
he meant to turn to God. They looked at him and wept. Then my father and his
brothers moved their vans to Shepherd's Bush, and placed them on a piece of
building land close to Mr. Henry Varley's Chapel. My father sold his horse,
being determined not to move from that place until he had found the way to
God. Says my father "I meant to find Christ if He was to be found. I
could think of nothing else but Him. I believed His blood was shed for
me." Then my father prayed that God would direct him to some place where
he might learn the way to heaven, and his prayer was answered. One morning he
went out searching as usual for the way to God. He met a man mending the
road, and began to talk with him - about the weather, the neighbourhood, and
such-like things. The man was kindly and sympathetic, and my father became
more communicative. The man, as the good providence of God would have it, was
a Christian, and said to my father, "I know what you want; you want to
be converted." "I do not know anything about that," said my
father, "but I want Christ, and I am resolved to find Him."
"Well," said the working-man "there is a meeting tonight in a
mission hall in |
|
|
|
"There
is a fountain filled with blood |
|
Drawn from
Emmanuel's veins, |
|
And sinners,
plunged beneath that flood, |
|
Lose all
their guilty stains." |
|
|
|
The
refrain was, " I do believe, I will believe,
that Jesus died for me." As they were singing, my father's mind seemed
to be taken away from everybody and everything. "It seemed," he
said, "as if I was bound in a chain and they were drawing me up to the
ceiling." In the agony of his soul he fell on the floor unconscious, and
lay there wallowing and foaming for half an hour. I was in great distress,
and thought my father was dead, and shouted out, "Oh dear, our father is
dead!" But presently he came to himself, stood up and, leaping joyfully,
exclaimed, "I am converted!" He has often spoken of that great
change since. He walked about the hall looking at his flesh. It did not seem
to be all quite the same colour to him. His burden was gone, and he told the
people that he felt so light that if the room had been full of eggs he could
have walked through and not have broken one of them. |
|
I did not
stay to witness the rest of the proceedings. As soon as I heard my father
say, "I am converted," I muttered to myself, "Father is
converted; I am off home." I was still in utter ignorance of what the
great transaction might mean. |
|
When my
father got home to the wagon that night he gathered us all around him. I saw
at once that the old haggard look that his face had worn for years was now
gone, and, indeed, it was gone for ever. His noble countenance was lit up
with something of that light that breaks over the cliff-tops of eternity. I
said to myself in wonderment, "What marvellous words these are – 'I do
believe, I will believe, that Jesus died for me.'" My father's brother
Bartholomew was also converted that evening, and the two stopped long enough
to learn the chorus, and they sang it all the way home through the streets.
Father sat down in the wagon, as tender and gentle as a little child. He
called his motherless children to him one by one, beginning with the
youngest, my sister Tilly. "Do not be afraid of me, my dears. God has sent
home your father a new creature and a new man." He put his arms as far
round the five of us as they would go, kissing us all, and before we could
understand what had happened he fell on his knees and began to pray. Never
will my brother, sisters, and I forget that first prayer. I still feel its
sacred influence on my heart and soul; in storm and sunshine, life and death,
I expect to feel the benediction of that first prayer. There was no sleep for
any of us that night. Father was singing, "I do believe, I will believe,
that Jesus died for me," and we soon learnt it too. Morning, when it
dawned, found my father full of this new life and this new joy. He again
prayed with his children, asking God to save them, and while he was praying
God told him he must go to the other gipsies that were encamped on the same
piece of land, in all about twenty families. Forthwith he began to sing in
the midst of them, and told them what God had done for him. Many of them
wept. Turning towards his brother Bartholomew's van he saw him and his wife
on their knees. The wife was praying to God for mercy, and God saved her then
and there. The two brothers, Bartholomew and my father, then commenced a
prayer meeting in one of the tents, and my brother and eldest sister were
brought to God. In all thirteen gipsies professed to find Christ that
morning. |
|
|
|
From:
Gypsy Smith (1860-1947) His Life & Work By Himself |
|
First
Printed in 1901 in |
|
|