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        [Back 
		to Chapter 1.]
 
 
 CHAPTER TWO
 CO-OPERATION AND
        REPUBLICANISM 1850—1853 |  
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        Men of all countries are brothers, and 
        the people of each ought to yield one another mutual aid, according to
        their ability, like citizens of the same state. 
		(Robespierre) |  |  
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 THE principles of the first Working 
		Tailors' Association were founded on a resolution which stated that 
		'individual selfishness, as embodied in the competitive system, lies at 
		the root of the evils under which English industry now suffers: the 
		remedy for the evils of competition lies in the brotherly and Christian 
		principle of Co-operation — that is, of joint work, with shared or 
		common profits.[1]  At the commencement of the venture 
		everything went smoothly.  Workrooms on the top floor, with offices and a 
		shop on the lower floors were fitted out, and the building opened for 
		business with twelve employees on 11 February 1850.  Wages for the 
		workers soon compared favourably with those of other trades, averaging 
		24s per week.  That month, Maurice published the first of a series of 
		eight Tracts on Christian Socialism which announced the term 'Christian 
		Socialism' to the public in which he presented, so he thought, his own 
		clear convictions on the subject.  But his aims as interpreted by the 
		working class were misunderstood.  In general, Christian Socialism was 
		taken to mean a restructuring of labour based on co-operation, joint 
		ownership and with increased power to the working class.  Maurice's 
		ultimate intention, however, was through using these means, to 
		Christianise socialism by opposing the unsocial Christians and the 
		unchristian socialists.[2]
 
 The early success of the Working Tailors' Association quickly prompted 
		workers in other trades to make application for membership.  In the 
		following month Massey wrote to Leno suggesting that he should, at his 
		recommendation, move to London to take charge of a Working Printers' 
		Association, soon to be formed.  Leno, following an interview with the 
		proposers, agreed, but preferred to remain as an operative rather than 
		be taken on as manager.  His printing press was moved from Uxbridge and, 
		during the three years he was with this Association, Leno found that he 
		was able to provide them with much valuable service, as well as maintain 
		his active Chartist interests.[3]
 
 
			
				
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					| 
					John Bedford Leno 1826—1894. (The 
					Commonwealth, 6 October 1866) 
					Leno had supported George Julian Harney and his 
					Internationalism during the last stage of the Chartist 
					movement.  He then involved himself with the Reform 
					League, becoming a member of the Executive Council.  He 
					wrote prose and poetry, his published poems with social and 
					labour themes being highly regarded.  Although 
					emotionally descriptive, he was not subject to over emotive 
					idealism that featured in many of Gerald Massey's poems.  
					See for example, his Herne's Oak (1853), Drury 
					Lane Lyrics (1868) and The Aftermath (1892).
 |  Despite much general approval for their venture from working class 
		journals, the Christian Socialists received a sharp attack from the 
		Daily News. Maurice and the new movement were criticised:
 The case of the working tailors ... is ... to some extent, a remedial 
		one; provided, however, the sufferers do not allow themselves to fall 
		into the hands of persons who seek to turn their case into an 
		illustration that humanity and political economy are irreconcilable, and 
		to erect on their unfortunate workshops of Christian Socialism, as Mr 
		Maurice, of King's College, in the Strand, is pleased to term his 
		hostility to the principle of commercial competition, about which he 
		seems to know as much as it is to be presumed he does of single stitch.  
		Already there are attempts to connect the working tailors' case with the 
		teaching of the Communist doctrine . . .[4]
 The promoters of the Christian Socialists with their high clerical 
		connections received visits from many upper class persons of distinction 
		who were desirous of seeing at first hand the practical work being 
		achieved by the associations.  One day a messenger hastily entered the 
		Castle Street workshop informing the workers that the Bishop of Oxford 
		was downstairs, and intended to visit the operatives before he left.[5]  This caused a great deal of excitement.  Hasty preparations were made and 
		a guard was placed on the landing to inform the men of his lordship's 
		arrival.  As the bishop started to climb the stairs to the workshops, the 
		warning was given.  Walter Cooper entered the room followed by the 
		bishop, with Gerald Massey close behind.  The workers heralded the 
		bishop's entrance with a hymn to the tune of 'Old Hundredth', although 
		the words, which differed considerably, fortunately escaped the Bishop's 
		notice:
 
			
				
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					Old Grimes, he's dead, the good old man,
 We ne'er shall see him more;
 He used to wear an old grey coat,
 All buttoned down before.
 |  The Bishop beamed jovially at the earnest workers and said to Walter 
		Cooper, 'Well, now, Mr Cooper, this is really delightful, to see a 
		number of men while engaged at their work singing praises to the glory 
		of God.  I am delighted at this spectacle!'[6]
 
 
			
				
					|  |  
					| 
					Samuel Wilberforce, Bishop of Oxford. From a 
					Carte de Visite. |  
 From the time Massey left Uxbridge he had not ceased writing poetry, 
		some pieces continuing to be accepted by the Northern Star. 
        That had come to the attention of Maurice who wrote to Charles Kingsley 
		in February, 'Has Ludlow told you of our Chartist poet on Castle Street?  He is not quite a Locke, but he has I think some real stuff in him.  I 
		hope he will not be spoiled.'[7]  It is probably this 
		remark which suggested to commentators of Alton Locke that Massey was 
		one of the main prototypes that formed Kingsley's model for this 
		character.[8]  Although similarities have been noted 
		(see the letter from Massey to Samuel Smiles, Chapter 3), other 
		proposals for this role were made for Thomas Cooper, the most likely 
		candidate, or Walter Cooper, both of whom share early experiences 
		similar to Alton Locke.  Although Alton Locke was not published until 
		August 1850, the book had been completed the previous spring, and there 
		is no evidence that Massey had made personal acquaintance with Kingsley 
		prior to commencing at Castle Street.
 
 In the London radical literary sector, Massey and his paper had gained a 
		favourable reputation.  The last issue of The Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom 
		contained an article by Massey in which he stated his views on the 
		middle class reformers.  He considered that it was time to question the 
		Chartist leaders as to the direction they were heading, as he doubted 
		there were more than two of these who knew how they would apply 
		political reform to aid the poor:
 
		It was the middle class reformers who obtained the Reform Bill, who 
		then became respectable monopolists and enemies of the unenfranchised.  Had there been no Reform Bill, the workers might have had a government 
		built on Universal Suffrage, and it should be realised that a middle 
		class despotism is worse than the tyranny of feudalism.  Whilst the 
		middle classes will precede us to power, they will not solve the problem 
		of labour.  Even if we were on political equality, our interests would be 
		at issue immediately, for while they seek a political change in order 
		that they may prevent the coming social revolution, we work for a 
		political revolution, thereby to consummate the social one, which must 
		follow.  If leaders stand in the way, they must be sacrificed at the 
		shrine of principles.[9]
 
		Editors of more powerful radical papers were taking stock of Massey's 
		developing literary talent, in particular George Julian Harney of the 
		Northern Star and the Democratic Review.  Harney was an excellent 
		journalist and a passionate supporter of internationalism.  His 
		Democratic Review welcomed the opinions of, and articles by, foreign 
		revolutionaries such as Louis Blanc, Giuseppe Mazzini and Ledru Rollin.
 
 Thomas Cooper, imprisoned in Stafford for two years 
		in 1843 for sedition and conspiracy, during which time he composed his 
		epic poem The Purgatory of Suicides, had commenced in January 1850 his most noted 
		contribution to radical journalism. Cooper's Journal: or, Unfettered 
		Thinker and Plain Speaker for Truth, Freedom, and Progress was published 
		weekly with a short break, until the following October.  As well as being 
		a focus for Cooper's own series on a critical exegesis of Gospel history 
		following the Strauss mythical system, the journal included articles by 
		Thomas Shorter on education and association, and Samuel Kydd, a 
		prominent Chartist who dealt with industrial matters.  In common with 
		journals of the time, space was given for original working-class poetry.  Massey's first poem to be published in London following his arrival, 
		appeared in the second issue.  ‘'Twas Christmas Eve!' contrasted the day 
		celebrated at a palace with that at a poor man's hovel, and was 
		characteristic of his socio-political stance:
 
			
				
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					'Twas Christmas Eve!  In the palace, where Knavery
 Crowns all the treasures the fair world can render;
 Where spirits grow rusted in silkenest slavery,
 And life is out—panted in golden—garbed splendour ...
 Love—kisses sobbed out 'twixt the rollick and rout,
 And Hope went forth reaping her long-promised treasure:
 What matter, tho' hearts may be breaking without?
 Their groans are unheard in the palace of Pleasure! ...
 
 'Twas Christmas Eve; but the poor ones heard
 No neighbourly welcome — no kind voice of kin!
 They looked at each other, but spoke not a word,
 While through cranny and crevice the sleet drifted in.
 In a desolate corner, one, hunger-killed, lies!
 And a mother's hot tears are the bosom-babe's food! ...
 
 False Priests, dare ye say 'tis the will of your God,
 (And veil Jesu's message in dark sophistry),
 That these millions of paupers should bow to the sod! …
 |  
		Cooper's Journal published fourteen of Massey's social protest 
		but less overtly martial poems during its run, a notable exception being 
		the 'Song of the Red Republican':
 
			
				
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					Ay, tyrants, build your bulwarks! forge your fetters! 
					link your chains!
 As brims your guilt-cup fuller, ours of grief runs to the 
					drains:
 Still, as on Christ's brow, crowns of thorns for Freedom's 
					martyrs twine,
 Still batten on live hearts, and madden o'er the hot 
					blood-wine!
 Murder men sleeping; or awake — torture them dumb with pain,
 And tear with hands all bloody-red Mind's jewels from the 
					brain!
 Your feet are on us, tyrants: strike, and hush Earth's wail 
					of sorrow!
 Your sword of power, so red today, shall kiss the dust 
					to-morrow ... [10]
 |  'The Cry of the Unemployed' demonstrates another typically more socially 
		directed example:
 
			
				
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					There's honeyed fruit for bee and bird, with bloom laughs 
					out the tree:
 There's food for all God's happy things; but none gives food 
					to me!
 Earth decked with Plenty's garland-crown, smiles on my 
					aching eye:
 The purse-proud, swathed in luxury, disdainful pass me by:
 I've eager hands — I've earnest heart — but may not work for 
					bread:
 God of the wretched, hear my prayer! I would that I were 
					dead! ... [11]
 |  
		Massey contributed only one article to Cooper's Journal.  ‘Signs of 
		Progress' exhibited a style that he had developed during this early 
		period and illustrated so often in his poetry; a proselytising optimism 
		directed at the working class.  At that time there were strong hopes of a 
		Chartist revival, and the radical papers kept up relentless pressure on 
		their readers to prepare them for that advent, as Massey demonstrated:
 
		For it is in the dense ignorance which covers the people like a sea 
		of darkness, that Tyranny lets drop its anchors.  Remove this, and its 
		mainstay is gone; and the King-craft, the Priest-craft, and the 
		State-craft shall be swept away by the rushing waves of Progress ... It 
		needs a high heart and never-tiring faith to bear up; but, let not your 
		hearts die within you, ye who toil on thro' nights of suffering and days 
		of pain, watering the bread of penury with the tears of misery … For 
		even as God said, ‘Let there be light'' and there was light; so let the 
		people say, ‘Let there be Freedom!' and there shall be Freedom. [12]
 
		Prior to and following the 1848 revolutions in Europe, Harney had 
		supported the Hungarian, French, Italian and German refugees, and had 
		provided space for their opinions in his Democratic Review.  In January 
		1850, to give further assistance to the cause of foreign democratic and 
		social progress, he enlarged the scope of his Society of Fraternal 
		Democrats that he had founded in 1845.  The objects of this new 
		association were for the fraternity of nations, the abolition of stamp 
		duty on newspapers and the political emancipation of the working classes 
		through the Charter.  The ‘diffusion of political and social knowledge 
		for the purpose of deliverance from the oppression of irresponsible 
		Capital and usurping Feudalism', would be promoted by meetings and 
		continued through Harney's Democratic Review.[13]  This produced an immediate response from Massey's idealism, and he 
		joined with Harney, who was secretary to the association, to serve on 
		the committee for twelve months.
 
 Soon after the association had been formed, the committee decided to 
		celebrate the ninety-second anniversary of the birth of Maximilian 
		Robespierre, the ‘Incorruptible'.  A democratic social reformist and 
		revolutionary leader of the Jacobins in the French National Convention, 
		he had been guillotined in 1794.  A special supper was arranged at the 
		John Street Institute on the 6 April 1850, to which members and friends 
		of the Fraternal Democrats were invited to attend.  Many organisations 
		held that pattern of social event that provided the advantage of a large 
		meal with convivial companionship, during which they solidified their 
		members by declarations of future intent.  Some seventy persons attended 
		the commemoration with Harney presiding, and many toasts and speeches 
		were given following the meal.  Harney proposed ‘To the Sovereignty of 
		the People, and the Fraternity of all Nations', responded to by Citizen 
		G. W. M. Reynolds.  Citizen Gerald Massey sang the English version of the 
		‘Marseillaise Hymn', and Citizens Reed and Massey responded to a speech 
		by a German exile.  Massey concluded this with ‘To persecution and 
		martyrdom in the glorious cause of freedom'.  Other toasts and responses 
		were made by Chartists Bronterre O'Brien (the health and prosperity of 
		the chairman, George Julian Harney), J. B. Leno (the memories of Paine 
		and Washington), and John Arnott, general secretary of the National 
		Charter Association (Prosperity to the Society of Fraternal Democrats, 
		and the Democratic Press).[14]
 
 Very early that year in 1850, following his move to London, Massey had 
		been invited to a demonstration of clairvoyance which, together with 
		mesmerism and more physical phenomena, were attracting quite wide 
		interest since the publicity of the Fox sisters in America in 1848.  This 
		young clairvoyant had the apparent ability to read while blindfolded, 
		and was able also to perceive the cause of some persons' illnesses, the 
		body appearing to her as translucent during that time.  She visited 
		hospitals and, using her powers, assisted some doctors in their 
		diagnoses.[15]  It was reported that she had 
		manifested this ability from the age of nine, following a head injury, 
		and had given demonstrations to the Earl of Carlyle, the Duke of Argyle, 
		Sir David Brewster and Charles Sumner, then Bishop of Winchester.[16]
 
 
			
				
					|  |  
					| 
					Gerald Massey, Chartist, mid 1850's.From Samuel Smiles' Brief Biographies, 1876. (Library 
					of Congress)
 A faded carte de visite shows a similar picture, probably 
					from the same original source.
 |    
			
				
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					 |  
					| 
					Thomas Hughes (1822-96), English lawyer and 
					author. |  
		Massey at that time was handsome and eligible.  Although short in stature 
		at five feet four inches, his brown hair worn long and brushed back, 
		with beard and moustache, a Grecian nose and blue eyes gave him a very 
		distinguished appearance.  This chance acquaintance blossomed into love, 
		and on the 8 July, 1850, Rosina Jane Knowles, aged nineteen, was married 
		to Gerald Massey at All Souls' Church, St Marylebone, witnessed
        by Walter Cooper and Thomas Hughes.  Hughes was a valued member of the 
		Christian Socialists, and later the author of Tom Brown's Schooldays.  
		Rosina came originally from Bolton, Lancashire, where her father was a 
		boot and shoe maker in Independent Street, and the family had moved some 
		years earlier to 21 New Church Street, Marylebone.  Although short-lived, 
		Rosina transformed the whole of Massey's philosophical conceptions which 
		he expressed so often in his lyric verse and, less fortunately, 
		re-orientated his mundane lifestyle for the next fifteen years.  There is 
		no description of her physical appearance, but from indirect references 
		it may be assumed she was rather taller than her husband, of firm build, 
		with dark brown hair, brown eyes and a pale complexion.
 Immediately following her marriage, Rosina moved in with her husband at 
		55 Wells Street, off Oxford Street, where he shared lodgings with 
		Jeremire Jerome, a master tailor and his family.  Jerome may have been 
		employed at the Castle Street workshops, or have been connected with 
		Thomas Jerome who kept a tailor's shop in Oxford Market, sited at that 
		time in a small area between Castle Street, Castle Street East, and 
		Great Titchfield Street.
 
		The 1851 census return for 34 Castle Street 
		(the headquarters and workshops of the Working Tailors' Association) 
		shows that Walter Cooper, then aged 38, born in Aberdeen, was residing 
		there with his wife, Ann, aged 43 years.  He is listed as ‘Manager of 
		Tailors' Association.'  They had two sons and three daughters.  Also 
		residing there was Massey's brother, Frederick, listed as a ‘Porter.'  It 
		is likely that he left home to find work in London, and was staying 
		temporarily at Castle Street prior to finding his later occupation as a 
		ladies hatter.  He married in 1854.
 
 
 
		Oxford Market c. 1870. 
		Marriage did not decrease Massey's political activity, nor his 
		idealistic enthusiasm for co-operation.  Indeed, he became more involved 
		with the events that were shaping themselves as the last breaths of 
		active Chartist protest.  His first advertised but unreported public 
		lecture had been delivered on 21 April 1850 at the Institution, Golden 
		Lane, Barbican, on ‘The Poetry of Freedom and Progress'.[17]  At the same time he was forming a closer association with Harney whose 
		developing socio-political plans most nearly approached his own ideals.  Since 1848 there had been increasing ideological disharmony between 
		Harney and O'Connor.  O'Connor was attempting to unite the Chartists with 
		the middle-class radicals to form a new National Charter League, to 
		which Harney became increasingly opposed.  In order to force a decision, 
		Harney resigned from the provisional executive of the National Charter 
		Association and, following elections, won the day.  Members of Harney's 
		Fraternal Democrats now dominated the executive, which decided to 
		reconstitute the Metropolitan District Council.  At a meeting of the 
		provisional committee on the 19 March, following a speech by Harney, 
		Massey confirmed Harney's objectives concisely:
 
		The Charter was very good, but we wanted something 
		with it — our social rights.  The capitalists were the great bane and 
		curse of the nation.  In 1848, kings and priests were kicking about, but 
		the capitalist could buy up both kings and priests.  The remedy was 
		co-operation, Chartism and Socialism united. (Loud cheers.)  They had 
		already established a tailors, a printers, a shoemakers, and a provision 
		store. (Loud cheers.)
 
 Mr Massey concluded a highly poetical speech which elicited 
		hearty applause.[18]
 
		Harney had only recently expanded his ideas that would, he hoped, 
		provide a new impetus in revitalising a flagging interest in active 
		Chartism.  His call for ‘The Charter, and Something More' was first 
		announced in the Democratic Review in rather vague terms as meaning ‘The 
		Charter, the Land, and the organisation of Labour', the Land belonging 
		to all the people which, being the natural right of all, should be made 
		national property.[19]  This call for ‘Something more' 
		was echoed continuously at subsequent Chartist meetings.
 
 At the French elections of March and April 1850, six Red Republicans had 
		been returned at the Saône et Loire district with a great majority.  To 
		celebrate their victory, the National Charter Association relinquished 
		their usual meeting at the John Street Institution in order to hold a 
		special gathering.  To a large assembly Harney, Bronterre O'Brien, Walter 
		Cooper and others spoke in praise of the democrats of France.  Massey 
		moved the first resolution that appealed to the French people to defend 
		their natural and constitutional rights by any and every means, and 
		continued:
 
		The first French revolution had been a glorious work; it broke up the 
		feudal power of the aristocracy, and it had brought the people upon the 
		stage, to play, for the first time, an important part in the area of 
		history; they mounted the platform, and crowns fell down before them 
		like old Dagon before the ark.  (Cheers.) ... There was suffering enough 
		in this country to make ten revolutions.  Might made the right to 
		liberty, if they would but struggle and contend for it. (Prolonged 
		cheering.)[20]
 |    
		
			
				|  |  
				| 
				The Literary and Scientific Institution, 23 John 
				St., Fitzroy Square(Illustrated London News 15 April 1848).
 |    
		
			
				| 
				    The release of a number of 
				Chartists from prison that year was another occasion used 
				profitably to promote the Chartist cause.  A meeting was 
				immediately convened by the provisional committee of the 
				National Charter Association, and was held at the John Street 
				Institution on 23 April 1850.  Thirteen of the released Chartists 
				mounted the platform, and spirited addresses were made by 
				committee members, including Bronterre O'Brien and Harney.  John James Bezer, one of the 
				late prisoners was introduced, and addressed the packed hall 
				amid loud cheering.  Massey responded to an address by Walter 
				Cooper, and said in conclusion that: 
				Ernest Jones, a true poet of labour, had thought that 
				Englishmen would have been prepared for the revolution, but 
				misery and degradation had done their work.  The people had 
				fallen a prey to priests, who preached of gods of wrath, and of 
				hells of torture as though they were the devil's own 
				salamanders.  But the day would come when thrones and 
				aristocracies would no longer hang as millstones round their 
				necks. (Loud cheers.)[21]
 
				John Arnott, general 
				secretary, then moved a resolution that punishment for the 
				expression of political sentiment was a gross violation of one 
				of the rights of the people, and that the people should labour 
				unceasingly for the liberation of their friends and for the 
				abrogation of those laws which denied the right of free public 
				discussion.  Harney followed by reading a memorial addressed to 
				Sir George Grey, Queen Victoria's Home Secretary, appealing for 
				the release of the other Chartists imprisoned for expressing 
				their political beliefs.  It was probably fortunate for the 
				future release of those Chartists that Queen Victoria's 
				ministers were unlikely to be reading Harney's Democratic 
				Review.  In the July issue Harney referred to the birth of Prince 
				Arthur on 1 May, as ‘a royal burden' from which the Queen ‘had 
				condescendingly allowed herself, in her magnanimous deference to 
				a natural law, to be relieved.'  The prince's christening on the 
				22 June, for which Prince Albert had composed a 'chorale', 
				suggested a new five verse rendering to Harney:
 
					
						
							| 
							… O! who would grudge to squander gold
 On such a glorious babe as this?
 What though our babes are starved and cold,
 They 
							have no claims to earthly bliss.
 Ours are no mongrel German breed,
 But English born and English bred;
 Then let them live and die in need,
 While the plump Coburg thing is fed …[22]
 |  
				The Christian Socialists at that time did not rely solely on 
				workshops to promote their ideas.  Lectures were given by 
				members, particularly by Walter Cooper, and public meetings were 
				held to ensure that their principles became known to the 
				majority of the working-class.  One such meeting was held at the 
				National Hall, Holborn, under the auspices of the Working Men's 
				Association, on 31 July 1850, when there was a large attendance 
				composed mainly of operative tailors.[23]  Vansittart Neale, a resolute supporter of co-operation took the 
				chair and, with Ernest Jones
				released from prison on 9 July, 
				together with Samuel Kydd, Walter Cooper and Gerald Massey as 
				speakers, it was shown the evils that were resulting from the 
				competitive system of society, and how these could be remedied 
				by association.  Ernest Jones pointed out that despite increasing 
				mechanisation over the last eighty years and extending markets, 
				pauperism, crime and emigration had increased.  Poor rates had 
				risen from one to eight millions and labour was shifting from 
				the shoulders of male adults to the shoulders of women and 
				children.  This state of things, he said, resulted from the 
				mechanical power of the country being in the hands of 
				capitalists, who employed it for their own profit.  The effort of 
				the people should be directed to the formation of 
				associative-working societies.  He moved that competition be one 
				of the principal causes of the existing distress, and 
				recommended association to be the best remedy.  Massey seconded, 
				and said that:
 
				If the working classes of England had helped themselves 
				before, instead of trusting to the legislation of hereditary 
				imbeciles, they would not now occupy their wretched position. 
				(Hear, hear.) ... they ought no longer to be content to weave 
				splendid robes for titled lords and garb their own hearts in the 
				shrouds of misery. (Hear, hear.)
 
				Walter Cooper called upon the working-classes to assist the 
				associations by becoming their customers, since co-operation 
				tended to increase the security and value of capital.  As manager 
				of the Working Tailors' Association, Cooper was particularly 
				well suited to debate, lecture and write upon the conditions of 
				working tailors.  Poverty stricken in childhood, he had 
				experienced the slop and sweating systems during his trade as a 
				tailor.  When his first child was born, he had no bed, 
				bedclothes, food or fire in the room, and was working on a pair 
				of trousers for which he would receive seven-pence.[24]  The condition of the journeyman tailors, male and female, had 
				received attention also at a meeting of master tailors at the 
				Freemasons' Tavern on 4 March when extreme cases of poverty and 
				social degradation were cited.  A woman who worked in a slop shop 
				stated that she received sometimes only 4d for making a 
				waistcoat; a married man with three children was making a coat 
				which would take him twenty-six hours to complete and earn him 
				two shillings.  Although he had another coat in hand to make, 
				this would take him two days, for which he would receive 3s 6d.  Yet another worker and his daughter had a room nine feet by 
				eleven which had also to accommodate two young men and one young 
				woman, and serve as workroom and bedroom for them all.[25]  An up to date statement of the Working Tailors' Association was 
				provided by Massey for the Leader, in October, when he announced 
				also that the terms of ‘master' and ‘employed' had been 
				abolished, and the workman was no longer a hireling.  He 
				applauded the Daily News for working against them, as by doing 
				so they had helped by advertising their existence, thereby 
				increasing custom.[26]
 
 On 22 June Harney, finally breaking with O'Connor over policy, 
				and having completed his notice of resignation from the Northern 
				Star, commenced his most famous radical unstamped paper, the 
				Red 
				Republican.  Through this new journal he aimed to provide a 
				strong political perspective and revive support for Chartism by 
				elaborating on his earlier ambition to obtain ‘The Charter and 
				Something More'.  Due to falling sales he discontinued his 
				Democratic Review the following September, but sustained 
				publicity and aid for the European Democrats in the Red 
				Republican.  The appropriately named title of Harney's new paper, 
				together with its contents and the fact that it was sold 
				unstamped, caused misgivings on the part of newsvendors.  So much 
				that at the weekly meeting of the National Charter Association 
				on 6 August, it was commented that a ‘contemptible conspiracy' 
				existed among the newsvendors for the purpose of ‘burking' the 
				Red Republican.  Also they opposed it because it was 
				calculated to bring royalty into contempt (hear, hear, and 
				laughter.)  Bronterre O'Brien informed the meeting that he 
				was about to visit Manchester in order to agitate the doctrines 
				of the National Reform League in connection with Chartism.  
				Playing down the precept that kings and queens were denounced as 
				being the cause of the people's suffering, he asserted that the 
				upper and middle classes were the real cause, through their 
				monopoly of land and profits.  (Hear, hear.)  
				Referring to a recent election at Lambeth where a Chartist was 
				returned, he pointed out that this person was returned by the 
				middle class, as he was a financial reformer and upholder of the 
				rights of capital.  What was required was extensive 
				organisation to endeavour to secure a large number of Chartist 
				representatives at the next general election.  Massey 
				responded and said that, as he had passed along the streets, he 
				had heard the drunken song of ‘Britons never will be slaves!'
 
				Why, the working-class of this country were bought and sold 
				like slaves in the market, and yet seemed inclined to worship 
				and bow down to those who trampled them underfoot. (Hear, hear.)  Britons were the veriest slaves in existence; they were the 
				slaves of a royalty which spent annually as much as would keep 
				10,000 families in comfort (hear, hear.); the slaves of a church 
				which took from them £12,000,000 a year; the slaves of everyone 
				who had nine-pence to buy them with — and, worse than all, the 
				slaves of drunkenness . . . I long to see a real and effective 
				union of all classes of democracy, that the power of those 
				oppressors might be broken.  He was no true friend of the people 
				who would oppose such a union, when, without it, no successful 
				effort could be made for the redemption of the people.
 
				After dwelling upon the advantages to be derived from associated 
				labour, Massey resumed his seat amid the applause of the 
				gathering.[27]
 
 Massey had been attracted to, and aligned himself increasingly 
				with, Harney's more fully developed ideas of ‘something more', 
				i.e. to make the Charter more attractive to the working class by 
				defining their societal rights as an impetus to political 
				reform.  Harney elaborated on this theme of social regeneration 
				in a series of articles throughout most issues of the Red 
				Republican under his well known pen-name ‘L'Ami du Peuple.'  
				Massey supported Harney and solidified their friendship by 
				writing poems and articles for Harney throughout the days of the 
				Red Republican, continuing when it was renamed the Friend of the 
				People.  He also acted initially as secretary to the Red 
				Republican's committee, and made two stirring contributions to 
				their first issue on 22 June, 1850; an article 'Cossack or 
				Republican' and a poem 'The Red Banner':
 
				Let us then fling ourselves into the glorious work; let 
				Chartists, Communists, and Republicans unite in one common bond 
				— forget all our idle feuds; and come what may — let us be found 
				ever in the front rank, ever at the outposts, in fighting the 
				battles of Freedom ...
 
					
						
							| 
							Fling out the Red Banner! o'er mountain and 
							valley,
 Let earth feel the tread of the Free, once again;
 Now, Soldiers of Freedom, for love of God, rally —
 Old earth yearns to know that her children are men;
 We are served by a million wrongs; burning and 
							bleeding,
 Bold thoughts leap to birth, but the bold deeds must come,
 And wherever humanity's yearning and pleading,
 One battle for liberty strike ye heart home! ...
 |  
				Although the Christian Socialists were actively sympathetic with 
				the sufferings of the working class, they were far from happy 
				with the extreme radical activities of some of the Chartist 
				leaders.  Harney, O'Connor and some others were referred to as 
				'that smoke of the pit', and it was thought that the workmen 
				were tired of idols, and were just waiting and yearning for the 
				Church and the Gospel which the Christian Socialists were 
				willing and able to provide.[28]  Kingsley 
				told the Chartists that instead of pinning their faith on the 
				Chartist leaders, they should turn to the Bible as the true 
				Radical Reformer's Guide.[29]
 
 It was understandable therefore, that Gerald Massey, a member of 
				the Christian Socialists working for the Red Republican, annoyed 
				Ludlow, who denounced anything of an extreme radical or 
				irreligious nature.  He had regularly to 'blow up' Massey:
 
				for having publicly connected himself with a thing called the 
				Red Republican, patently treasonable.  He was bullied out of it, 
				by my offering him the choice between association and the ‘Red' 
				and in the note in which he consented to withdraw, he had told 
				me that if I for instance had set up an organ of Christian 
				Socialism he should have been quite willing to write in it.[30]
 
				It was due in part to this episode and the fact that Ludlow 
				recognised other literary talent among the co-operative workmen 
				‘either lying idle, or forcing its way through wrong channels', 
				that induced him to commence the Christian Socialist the 
				following November, 1850.
 
 Appearing outwardly penitent following Ludlow's reprimand, 
				Massey was not so easily discouraged and had no intention of 
				severing his literary relationship with the Red Republican.  As 
				soon as the second issue was published, Massey ran into the 
				Castle Street workshop with a copy of the paper, which he placed 
				in front of fellow worker Robert Crowe saying, ‘Crowe, we have a 
				new poet in the field!'  Crowe immediately recognised the style 
				of Massey in ‘A Call to the People', signed with the name ‘Bandiera'.[31] 
				Massey had taken this name from the brothers Attilio and Emilio 
				Bandiera, Italian officers in the Austro-Italian navy who, in 
				1844 had planned an unsuccessful Italian insurrection.  The poem 
				had been published previously in Cooper's Journal, but Massey 
				had extended and revised it to a more republican stance.  Some 
				weeks later, with the ninth issue of the Red Republican in his 
				hand, Massey again informed Crowe that yet another new poetic 
				star had appeared in the literary firmament, this time in the 
				name of 'Armand Carrel', introducing himself with ‘A Red 
				Republican Lyric'.[32]  This was a name that 
				Massey had used originally in the Uxbridge Spirit of Freedom, 
				for a letter to the ‘editor' headed ‘Struggles for Freedom'.  Whether he thought it was too strongly worded to sign with his 
				own name, or he felt that had already provided sufficient signed 
				material for that issue is not known:
 
				Peoples of Europe, you have looked on and calmly seen a noble 
				nation [Hungary] murdered — its blood be upon your heads!  Englishmen, you are slaves, blind, plague-stricken slaves! you 
				see the brave struggling for life and liberty, and will not lend 
				the helping hand; no, you dare not help yourselves to right and 
				freedom! all the world know this! they know that the heart of 
				England hath become the prey of vipers! ...
 
				To end the letter, Massey had quoted some lines from ‘The 
				Jacobin of Paris', a poem by the Hon. George Sidney Smythe MP in 
				praise of Jean Paul Marat, a leader in the French Revolution:
 
					
						
							| 
							Ho! St Antoine! ho! St Antoine! thou quarter of 
							the poor,
 Arise! with all thy households, and pour them from 
							their door —
 Rouse thy attics, and thy garrets, — rouse cellar, 
							cell, and cave,
 Rouse over-taxed, and over-worked — the starving and 
							the slave ...
 Justice shall sheathe her sword heart-home; thrones, 
							crowns
 be swept away
 And brothers, gallant brothers, We'll be with you on 
							that day...
 |  
				Massey used to recite this dramatically at Chartist meetings 
				with an effect on the audience which was described as ‘magical', 
				and it was probably he who suggested that Harney print the poem 
				in extenso in the fourth issue of the Red Republican, and again 
				in the twenty-fifth issue of the Friend of the People.[33]  The pseudonym ‘Armand Carrel' caused some puzzlement to one 
				‘Nameless' reader of the Red Republican, who wrote to Harney 
				asking if an article under that name was really written by the 
				French patriot.  If not, why was a forgery foisted upon the 
				readers?  Although the writer found no fault with the name ‘Bandiera', 
				he wondered why it was used.  Harney had to explain that ‘Armand 
				Carrel' died fifteen years previously, and that writers with 
				good reason to withhold their own names selected their 
				favourites.  But he hoped that correspondents would exercise 
				discretion, having received that week letters signed ‘Marat' and 
				‘Robespierre'![34]
 
 During that time at the Castle Street Tailors' Association, 
				steady progress had being maintained until in September Walter 
				Cooper went on a lecturing tour to the north of England.  While 
				he was away, the accounts of the association were found to be in 
				some confusion and were examined by the Council of 
				Administration.  Called to return on a suspicion of embezzlement, 
				Cooper was investigated by the Council of the Society, and was 
				found to have been careless and too trusting, having had no 
				previous accounting experience.  There was no evidence of 
				dishonesty.  The association was dissolved, and a new association 
				elected by ballot.
 
 Some eleven of the original workers were not readmitted and 
				formed themselves into a rival association, The London 
				Association of Working Tailors.  Although that organisation 
				lasted only until the following summer, it caused a considerable 
				amount of acrimony while it existed.  The affair was not helped 
				by Ernest Jones, who denounced the entire system of local 
				co-operation in his Notes to the People in 1851, and entered 
				into some sharp correspondence with Gerald Massey in 1852.[35]  Jones complained of ‘a tissue of virulent abuse or most fulsome 
				adoration.  The abuse is my share, who exposes profit-mongering; 
				the adulation is for the wealthy gentlemen, who have advanced 
				money for the Castle-street shop, and enabled it to 
				profit—monger.'  Massey retorted, referring to Jones' ‘strange, 
				unwarranted, and artificial opposition to the co-operative 
				Movement', and of his ‘vile, contemptible and infamous 
				statements'.  Although initially supportive of 
				associative-working societies as a primary step to the relief of 
				distress at that time, Jones considered that social co-operation 
				should be applied on a national basis, which could not be 
				achieved without first having obtained political power through 
				the Charter.  Small individual co-operative associations would 
				only divert attention from, and weaken efforts towards full 
				democratic political achievement.  That unfortunate episode of 
				the Working Tailors' Association was related by Massey in a 
				trenchant series of articles for the Star of Freedom, in 1852.[36]
 
 There was, however, one fortunate outcome as a result of that 
				affair.  Had any legal action been attempted against the 
				association through Walter Cooper as manager, there would have 
				been even more difficulties, as no Act then in force gave the 
				association full protection.  At the instigation of Ludlow, 
				Robert Slaney M.P. was persuaded to establish a Commission of 
				Enquiry to look into the position of liability in the Working 
				Tailors' and other associative branches.  Ludlow, Walter Cooper, 
				Vansittart Neale and the economist John Stuart Mill were among 
				those who gave evidence.  In June 1852, Slaney's Act was passed 
				as the Industrial and Provident Societies Act, thereby giving 
				legal recognition to the co-operative movement.[37]
 
 As a result of Massey's comment to Ludlow, the first issue of 
				the Christian Socialist appeared on the 2 November 1850, and 
				Massey's first poetical contribution, in rather fulsome praise 
				of F.D. Maurice, was published in the second issue as ‘To a 
				Worker and Sufferer for Humanity':
 
					
						
							| God bless you, Brave One, in our dearth,
 Your life shall leave a trailing glory;
 And round the poor Man's homely hearth
 We'll proudly tell your suffering story...
 |  
				During 1851, J. M. Ludlow had been undertaking a ‘co-operative 
				tour' through Lancashire and Yorkshire, and in an open letter to 
				F. J. Furnivall (Christian Socialist II, 49, 4 Oct. 1851) made 
				reference to the Salford Working Hatter's Association.  Furnivall 
				considered that the current eleven members making some two dozen 
				hats per week were successful due chiefly to ideas promoted in 
				the Christian Socialist.  Part of their trade was, of course, 
				competitive.  Ludlow however decried the fact that they were mean 
				enough to charge £10 per cent commission to all other 
				co-operatives who chose to sell their hats when a small 
				compensation of £1 per cent might be reasonable.  With the 
				exception of the Manchester Working Tailors who refused to 
				accept commission, all the co-operative bodies have very quickly 
				pocketed this enormous bonus in their dealings with the Working 
				Hatters.
 
 Ludlow then continued with a reference to the Oxford Street 
				Tailors saying, "Even a certain flourishing establishment near 
				Oxford Street, — and which shall be nameless, in the hope that 
				it will mend its manners, and also because its manager, who is 
				now in the north, professes to know nothing about the matter, — 
				is stated to have given way to the money-grubbing spirit so far 
				as to accept it."
 
 Massey quickly responded with a letter in the following issue to 
				the Christian Socialist:
 
				The Manchester Hatters and the Working Tailors' Association.
 
				Dear Sir, In your last number, Mr. Ludlow assumes that our 
				Association, among other co-operative bodies, has been selling 
				the hats of the above Company with enormous profit, — permit me 
				to explain.  The Manchester Hatters sent us specimens of their 
				admirable workmanship, with the (wholesale prices) attached, 
				giving 10 per cent discount for ready money.  We entered upon no 
				stipulation — made no conditions of sale, — but simply took the 
				hats, and exerted ourselves to sell them; and not only did we 
				not add any profit to the wholesale price, which the 
				manufacturers assured us would bear 25 per cent — but we gave 
				each customer the advantage of that 10 per cent discount to the 
				utmost farthing, and in our own unsophisticated method of doing 
				business — so far from having nurtured the spirit of 
				money-grubbing, we have entirely forgotten to charge the 
				customers for the hat-box, for which, upon referring to the 
				invoice, I find we are charged at the rate of 3s. per dozen.  So 
				you see our profit has been of the same species as that of two 
				Yankees, who swapped two jack-knives till each had gained 5s. by 
				the transaction.  In conclusion, allow me to add, that with our 
				peculiar mode of dealing, I think that the portion of the 
				community so frequently appealed to as "Smart Young Men who want 
				a Cheap Hat," cannot do better than apply to us for the same at 
				34 Castle-street East.
 
				Gerald 
				Massey, Oct. 2nd. 1851. Secretary. 
				Two extended articles on Tennyson's poetry ("Tennyson's 
				Princess" and "Tennyson and his Poetry") completed Massey's 
				contribution to the second volume of the Christian Socialist, 
				which ceased publication at the end of 1851 due to high 
				production costs.  Both Massey's articles were over aesthetically 
				appreciative rather than critical, and he fell into the trap of 
				the time by quoting large passages of the poems concerned in 
				order to illustrate facets of his commentary.  Nevertheless, he 
				demonstrated a growing feeling for descriptive romanticism, 
				often to excess, in marked contrast to his realistic 
				socio-political verse.  In an article ‘Tennyson's Princess', he 
				embraces the theme of women's rights, inherent in the poem, and 
				made more self-evident since his marriage:
 
				...We do not want Women to be crammed with dead language and 
				mummified learning ... but let them be educated up to the 
				noblest offices and holiest duties of life, which they are not 
				now . . . the hallowing wretchedness of this inequality is often 
				a very hell in its torments, — the clasping ring remains, a 
				mocking symbol!
 
				Despite his plea for the education of women ‘as far as possible 
				in accordance with her nature', the added proviso that ‘all 
				attempts to train her into manhood are ... false and unnatural', 
				deny total emancipation and equate more with the current 
				Victorian mode of thought and unthinkable rule of society by 
				matriarchy.  Later he was to mellow even his liberal statement 
				and press for full equality.  However, even at that time women's 
				rights campaigners were pressing those issues.  The Woman's 
				Elevation League, together with individuals such as Mary Howitt, 
				was actively campaigning for their recognition in social, moral 
				and professional status.  This included pecuniary and political 
				elevation, together with full franchise.
 
 Within the broader aspects of Chartism, Harney was attempting by 
				means of a Democratic Conference to unite various democratic 
				associations into one solid body, into the principles of which 
				would be incorporated his proposals for greater social reform. 
				These associates, in addition to the National Charter 
				Association, would include the Fraternal Democrats, the National 
				Reform League, and the Social Reform League, and be united under 
				the title of the ‘National Charter and Social Reform Union'. The 
				proposition received considerable opposition, and Harney was 
				forced to concede that Feargus O'Connor, Bronterre O'Brien and 
				Ernest Jones were against them, and that the Trades' 
				Associations could not be relied upon for support. On account of 
				this, it was decided to draw up an address to the people of the 
				country, and the executive committee resigned for re-elections.[38] 
				Nominations from localities for the new committee included most 
				of the old members, represented by Reynolds, Harney, Jones, 
				O'Connor, Thornton Hunt (editor of the Leader), Holyoake, 
				O'Brien and Gerald Massey. But just prior to the elections 
				because of differences over policy, Massey, Walter Cooper, 
				Thomas Cooper and some others declined to stand. Appropriately, 
				Massey's articles and poetry in the Red Republican during this 
				period were appeals for unity, in which he complained that:
 
				We, the democracy of England, are disunited and fragmentary; 
				we are broken up into sects and parties ... we are even at war 
				amongst ourselves, and well may the tyrants and oppressors laugh 
				us to scorn ... they know there is little cause for disquiet so 
				long as we are disunited. . . We can accomplish little or 
				nothing, going on as we are—at present. What will the new 
				organisation of the Chartists effect — singly? ... or any other 
				body of reformers by themselves? ... Some unity policy must be 
				adopted, or I am bound to say, that we shall be no nearer the 
				realisation of our hopes in 1860 than we are in 1850... We are 
				all democrats! ... Let us then unite Red Republicans, 
				Communists, Socialists, Chartists, and Reformers. . . It is 
				unity which is the great want of the time; and if the egotism of 
				men, calling themselves ‘Leaders' should stand in the way of 
				this federation, let the party behind each leader push on...
 
				At a Conference of Delegates for effecting a union between 
				different classes of reformers, at the John Street Institute, in 
				October, Massey spoke again — as he had cause to, on many 
				occasions — on the need for greater unity:
 
 ‘The Chartist agitation had hitherto proved a failure; it had 
				never been at so low an ebb as at the present time; even the 
				Chartists themselves had acknowledged that the bulk of their 
				body were not Chartists in time of plenty, but sat as easy and 
				contented as even the middle classes.  Seeing this apathy among 
				their own body, their leaders wished to extend their basis, and 
				asked other bodies to join them; but they could not expect their 
				co-operation, unless they admitted the claim of those parties 
				which the committee had inserted in the programme; he believed 
				that no party could singly obtain their objects, and that no 
				programme could satisfy the claims of every party, but they 
				could agree on some leading principles. He belonged to the 
				Tailors' Association.  They were aware that they would not 
				struggle successfully with competition without some governmental 
				change; if they did not agree to adopt the law of Partnership, 
				or some of their principles, they would lose aid from Christian 
				Socialism and the young Republican party.'[39]
 
 At a further meeting of the Democratic Conference, it was 
				realised that its break-up would lead to the Manchester Council 
				middle-class supporters taking greater hold.  Accordingly,
				Holyoake with Arnott, Reynolds, Massey and others were appointed 
				as a Committee of Observation to deal with business and 
				correspondence regarding possible amalgamation with other 
				democratic associations.
 
 Nevertheless, despite much effort, it became increasingly 
				obvious that individual antagonisms together with policy 
				differences would negate all hope of a universal union.  A 
				Manchester conference held in January 1851 had little positive 
				outcome, but was notable for O'Connor slandering Harney, which 
				was refuted at a meeting of the National Charter Association on 
				the 25 February.  At this meeting, Harney was received with a 
				rapturous welcome and Massey, in an eloquent speech which 
				excited enthusiastic applause, contrasted the consistency and 
				manly conduct of Harney with the baseness and villainy of his 
				slanderers.[40]  Despite the negative 
				conference, a Chartist convention held in London the following 
				March and April 1852 made more firm agreement on future Chartist 
				and social agitation.  During these activities, there was found 
				time to organise the annual anniversary social evening in memory 
				of the birth of Robespierre, held as usual at the John Street 
				Institution, on 8 April.  Harney presided, and a number of 
				speeches were given by Samuel Kydd, Gerald Massey, Bronterre 
				O'Brien and others to ‘the sovereignty of the people, the 
				fraternity of nations, and the social regeneration of society'.
 
 Since joining the Red Republican which Harney had renamed the 
				Friend of the People in December 1850 to make it sound more 
				appealing to the working class and acceptable to newsvendors, 
				Massey had been compiling his published poems with a view to 
				producing them in book format.  Finally completed with some new 
				material, Voices of Freedom and Lyrics of Love by T. Gerald 
				Massey, Working Man, was published on the 21 March 1851 priced 
				one shilling, dedicated to his friend Walter Cooper:
 
				As the toiler-teacher you have won your diploma in the school 
				of our suffering, and can well appreciate the difficulties which 
				the self-educated working man has to encounter ... Who can see 
				the masses ruthlessly robbed of all the fruits of their industry 
				... and not strive to arouse them to a sense of their 
				degradation, and urge them to end the bitter bondage and the 
				murderous martyrdom of Toil? ... But do not think me a mere railer against the classes which oppress our own, I know too 
				well the evils that are self-inflicted, I know that our greatest 
				curse is in being our own Tyrants...
 
				Reviews that appeared in the radical press and smaller journals 
				were distinctly appreciative of his gentler love lyrics and, 
				surprisingly, more critical of his political poems.  The Friend 
				of the People confirmed the force and fire of his partisan 
				political poems which were, it considered, lessened by 
				‘ruggedness', and compared them with the elegance of his love 
				lyrics.[41]  A very valid comment was made 
				when the reviewer complained of a ‘painful striving for effect 
				by means of big words and monstrous fantasies.  "God", "Christ", 
				"Hell", etc. are terms used far, far too often'.  But these 
				particular words among others, together with excessive 
				capitalisation remained an expressive feature of Massey's 
				poetry.  Despite these obvious faults the Pioneer appreciated the 
				'rich fullness' in the lyrics.[42]  The 
				Northern Star referred to ‘great force of perception, 
				accompanied by an equal power of delineation . . .' admiring the 
				‘force, fervour and nervous diction', but preferred also his 
				Lyrics of Love.[43] Eliza Cooke's Journal 
				published a biographical sketch and appreciation of Massey 
				written by Dr Samuel Smiles, the self-help advocate, which has 
				since formed the basis for most early biographical details.[44] 
				The Leader, quoting from this sketch and referring to his 
				martial poems, stated that Vehemence is not Force, while his 
				lyrics would benefit from the laborious study of versification.[45]  Once all the reviews were published, Massey was able to edit 
				them, and quote the most favourable extracts in an advertisement 
				printed in the 21st June issue of the Friend of the People.
 
 Both preceding and following the review of Massey's book, Ernest 
				Jones' journal Notes to the People, which contained Jones' own 
				poems written while he was in prison, received an equally 
				honourable mention.  It may have been due to these reviews that 
				at a casual meeting between Jones and Massey in Fleet Street, 
				Jones grasped Massey's arm, and was reported to have exclaimed, 
				‘Massey, you and I are the two greatest poets in England!'[46]  
				Despite Harney having changed the name of his paper it was 
				steadily losing circulation, and to save it he was trying to 
				persuade Ernest Jones to join with him in producing a new Friend 
				of the People.  But his advertisements of the proposed format for 
				the paper were premature; Harney's paper was unstamped, and fear 
				of prosecution together with greater concern for his own Notes 
				to the People made Jones decide against the proposition.  Harney 
				therefore was forced to discontinue the Friend of the People at 
				the end of July 1851.  Having now no effective mouthpiece, he was 
				obliged to rely on accounts of his meetings being reported 
				principally in O'Connor's Northern Star and Reynolds's Weekly 
				Newspaper which, despite policy differences particularly in the 
				former, were by comparison, accurately reported.
 
				
  
				Ernest Jones: a 
				carte de visite. 
				The Fraternal Democrats and foreign refugees during this period 
				continued to receive Harney's attention, which culminated in the 
				arrival in England of the Hungarian leader and patriot Louis 
				Kossuth on 20 October 1851.  Massey wrote a special poem for the 
				occasion, ‘A Song of Welcome to Kossuth':
 
					
						
							| 
							... Ring out, exult, and clap your hands
 Free Men and Women brave—
 Shout Britain! shake the startled lands
 With ‘Freedom for the Slave!'
 Come forth, make merry in the sun
 And give him welcome due;
 Heroic hearts have crown'd him one
 Of Earth's Immortal few! ...
 |  
				Published first as a broadsheet, it was seen by the deaf John 
				Plummer in a Chartist bookshop near the corner of Fleet Street 
				and Fetter Lane.[47]  This would have been 
				John Bezer's shop, at 183 Fleet Street, the headquarters of The 
				Society for Promoting Working Men's Associations.  Plummer was 
				living then in Whitechapel, working as an errand boy for his 
				mother, a needlewoman, and had taught himself the rudiments of 
				reading by studying the London street names and advertising 
				placards.  It was principally Massey's poem that induced him to 
				continue with self-education.  He eventually became a writer and 
				earned the praise of John Stuart Mill and Lord Brougham.  Later, 
				he said that he had ‘passed through the same fiery ordeal of 
				poverty, neglect and suffering ... as Gerald Massey', and that 
				he deemed ‘the poetry of Gerald Massey to be the most in accord 
				with the general tone of opinion entertained by the majority of 
				working men of the present day'.[48]
 
 Massey's first child, Christabel, was born the following day, on 
				the 22 October 1851 at 50 College Place, Camden Town, where the 
				family had moved earlier that year.  At that time Massey was 
				obtaining material in order to extend his range of lectures, and 
				had been writing to Charles Kingsley, asking for some 
				suggestions.  In a letter dated Christmas Day 1851, Kingsley 
				replied:
 
				My dear Mr. Massey,
 Being in your debt three or four moderate letters, I condense 
				them all into one enormously long one.  You must not think, 
				however, that want of interest in you has kept me silent; not 
				that, but business, daily & hourly & unwillingness to write to 
				you at all, without writing carefully & at length.  Now this Xmas 
				night I seem to have time to put on paper the many thoughts 
				about you, which your letter etc. this morning, re-woke in my 
				mind; and I begin by wishing you & your wife & child all the 
				blessings of this most blessed of seasons, for the sake of the 
				Baby of Bethlehem.
 
 Next, the reviews which I promised you.  I have (to my shame) not 
				yet sent.  Nevertheless next week you shall have a parcel 
				containing 1 or 2 nos. of Frazer, and one no. of the North 
				British.  The Review of Poetry in each of them being mine ... 
				Also, in the same parcel, the only 2 books about the 
				commonwealth which I have which can help you, Milton's Prose 
				works, and Carlyle's letters & speeches of Cromwell ... & 
				lastly, a sermon which I preached today, which I wish you would 
				read, as a sample of the way in which to my mind, the great 
				doctrines of Xtianity have to do with these poor country clods 
				of mine ... The man to ask about books is Ludlow.  I am very ill 
				read in original authorities of that period.  Mr. Maurice also 
				would give you information ... [49]
 
				The ensuing twelve months were to be virtually the last of any 
				form of Chartist organisation and Massey's involvement with its 
				media propaganda came to an end.  At a meeting of the National 
				Charter Association Massey was one of thirty — later reduced to 
				twenty two — persons proposed to act on the executive committee.  The South Lancashire delegate meeting referred to Massey and 
				some others as those ‘in whom the greatest amount of confidence 
				can be placed ... '[50] It was decided also 
				at that time to reconstitute the Metropolitan Delegate Council, 
				two persons from each locality to be nominated to serve.  More 
				schisms developed within the executive when the Northern Star 
				was purchased from O'Connor by its editor and printer, and the 
				tone of the paper became more allied to the middle-class 
				reformers.  Massey, together with Bronterre O'Brien and another 
				member, then declined to serve on the committee.  Additionally, 
				Harney was away in Scotland, and Ernest Jones resigned when 
				Holyoake, a supporter of the middle-class reformers was elected.  W. J. Linton also declined to serve unless the movement joined 
				the middle class, believing that it was impossible to 
				resuscitate the Chartist movement.  Furthermore, the association 
				was in debt, and had to relinquish its offices at 14, 
				Southampton Street, Strand, and John Arnott, their general 
				secretary, refused to continue voluntarily, without payment.  The 
				association complained that it, and Chartism, had been abandoned 
				by Harney and Jones, who had represented that body in public 
				estimation.
 
 Harney, away in Scotland and aware of the censure he was 
				receiving, could exert little influence without his own paper.  Immediately following his return from Scotland in January, he 
				started a new Friend of the People on 7 February 1852.  Massey 
				had been waiting for an opportunity of leaving the Tailors' 
				Association for some time since the Christian Socialist had 
				changed its name to the Journal of Association, and had ceased 
				publication in June 1852.  Additionally, there was no outlet for 
				his writing when the first Friend of the People ended in the 
				following July through lack of support, so he was anxious to 
				obtain a position which would provide him with greater 
				opportunity.  Since his marriage, Massey had been experimenting 
				with mesmerism.  To supplement his finances he and his wife 
				started to demonstrate the phenomenon, but initially only on a 
				private basis.  Now that Harney was back in London, Massey wrote 
				to him, regarding his new venture:
 
				It's now a settled thing that I leave the Tailors' 
				Association.  They intend advertising at once for a Cutter who 
				will also keep the books.  Therefore, I am at liberty to 
				make further arrangements with you if agreeable, with regard to 
				the Friend of the People ... do not think I have any 
				utopian idea of living out of it! ... I can make as much money 
				in 2 hours by Mesmerism as I get here in a week.  What I 
				have to propose is that I become Conductor and that name, 
				influence and writing be all directed to extend the circulation 
				of the Friend with this object in view ... With regard to 
				remuneration for the present I waive that till you get something 
				for yourself.  My object is if possible to be building 
				something up for the future ...[51]
 
				Although not referred to as ‘co-conductor', Massey did assist 
				Harney by writing a considerable number of articles and reviews.
 
 At a meeting of the Chartist Executive Committee on 24 March, it 
				was obvious that Massey's earlier pleas for unity had been 
				disregarded.  They were forced to admit officially, that it was 
				‘The Executive of a society almost without members, and without 
				means — members reduced by unwise antagonism without, and 
				influence reduced by repeated resignations within   … 
				'[52]
 
 The Northern Star had been equally affected by the Chartist 
				movement's decline, its weekly sales decreasing to less than two 
				thousand.  The owner therefore decided to put it up for sale.  Harney immediately commenced negotiations to purchase it, the 
				finance being provided by Robert Le Blond, a Chartist supporter 
				and head of Benetfink, ironmongers of 81 Cheapside.  It was first 
				renamed the Star, then the Star of Freedom from 24 April 1852.  That caused Ernest Jones a considerable amount of annoyance, as 
				he had also wished to acquire it.  In an article in the Star of 
				Freedom Massey commented on reports by Jones regarding the 
				purchase of the Northern Star:
 
				It has been stated — and the statement has been assiduously 
				circulated to our prejudice and injury — that this Paper was 
				purchased by Mr Le Blond, with Middle Class gold, for the 
				purpose of advocating the Middle Class interest as opposed to 
				that of the Working Classes.  Now, Mr Le Blond has distinctly 
				denied this in a communication to Mr Ernest Jones (the author of 
				the said statement), at the same time reminding him, that he has 
				been the recipient of Middle Class gold!  This was forwarded to 
				him for publication, but Mr Ernest Jones has burked it in 
				accordance with his usual policy regarding truth …[53]
 
				Massey left the Working Tailors' Association about May 1852, 
				when the family moved from Camden Town and took up rooms at 56 
				Upper Charlotte Street, Brunswick Square.  There he continued 
				writing for both Harney's Friend of the People, and the 
				Star of 
				Freedom.  A preliminary notice by Harney in the Friend of the 
				People had informed its readers that for the Star of Freedom ‘my 
				able and enthusiastic friend, Gerald Massey, is engaged as 
				literary editor, and will, in addition to the Review department, 
				superintend that portion of the paper devoted to subjects coming 
				under the general denomination of Social Reform.'  Ernest Jones, 
				determined not to deviate from his principle of priority for the 
				Charter, and to publicise his programme of reform without 
				joining the middle class reformers, commenced his new People's 
				Paper in May.
 |  
 
 
		
			
				| 
				Massey's prose writing in the later editions of the 
				Friend of 
				the People showed continuing development.  Articles on John 
				Milton and Tennyson's poems, reviews of Wordsworth's and Poe's 
				poems demonstrated, among others, a greater positive critical 
				appraisal of his subject matter.  A portrait of Béranger, in 
				which he compared unfavourably the poems of Thomas Moore with 
				those of his subject received a sharp response from Austin 
				Holyoake, and a corresponding retort from Massey.[54]  Writing to Harney at that time, he suggested writing portraits 
				of Kingsley, Howitt and Carlyle — which was not taken up — and 
				he complained that ‘ … you don't use what I do send  …'[55]  In an article on co-operation to which he had become firmly 
				aligned, he emphasised his stance regarding Chartist policy, and 
				the solution to social inequities.  These views owed no little 
				affinity to the cause of the Christian Socialists, and the 
				ultimate higher aim of Ludlow—but lacked the orthodoxy of 
				organised religion:
 
				[the parsons] have gone on preaching and teaching, announcing 
				the redeemer not yet come, and the redemption that is scarcely 
				yet begun ... yet we have little more of true and practical 
				Christianity welded into our life ... this it appears to me 
				because they have merely gone on preaching and teaching, praying 
				and talking, and have not set about any practical realisation of 
				the redemption they prophesied.  They have always sought to 
				inculcate Christianity instead of so arranging the social 
				machinery and so moulding humanity, that Christianity should 
				have been developed as the outcome of a natural growth ... the 
				advocates of the Charter have pursued the same course of talking 
				everlastingly, talk, talk, nothing but talk these past twenty 
				years, save countless martyrdoms and endless sufferings; and 
				never was Chartism at so low an ebb as at present; never did we 
				appear farther from obtaining the Charter than now … We have to 
				reconstitute society on such principles as shall render the 
				fruit of a man's labour the natural reward for his toil; and 
				this I maintain, can only be done on the principle of 
				co-operation …[56]
 
				Harney's support for the democratic refugees continued despite 
				his being relegated from the National Charter Executive.  A 
				meeting of leading democrats was convened on the 9 May 1852 at 
				the John Street Institution to discuss the possibility of giving 
				aid to a large number of the refugees who were living in 
				squalor, unable to obtain employment.  Harney, Thornton Hunt and 
				Massey were appointed to act as a sub-committee to draw up a 
				public address to the people.  They decided to make a direct 
				public appeal for funds, and to hold a soirée at the John Street 
				Institution on 8 June in honour of the Star of Freedom.  
				Among those present were Louis 
				Blanc and Colonel Karl Stolzman, and 
				speeches were given by Harney, Walter Cooper, Louis Blanc and 
				others, amid general approval.  Massey gave an eloquent and 
				lengthy address which called forth the enthusiastic applause of 
				the assembly.
 
 The Star of Freedom, meanwhile, was receiving opposition from 
				some members of the Metropolitan Delegate Council who considered 
				that Jones' new People's Paper should receive the support of the 
				council.  The dissension continued throughout subsequent council 
				meetings.  At a reorganisation of the John Street locality on 25 
				May, James Grassby, formerly on the executive committee, and 
				Massey were elected as representatives to the Metropolitan 
				Delegate Council.  An address was then moved condemning some 
				despotic members of the executive.  The following week's meeting 
				resulted in a ‘disgraceful uproar', with policies being attacked 
				and Jones' People's Paper accused of gross misrepresentation.  These schisms were partly responsible for Massey ending his 
				active association with the Chartist movement.  But he continued 
				to write for the Star of Freedom until it ceased publication in 
				November, due to Ernest Jones' more successful People's Paper.  Unsigned items recognised as Massey's include reviews of 
				Longfellow's Poetical Works, William Whitmore's Firstlings, 
				Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Casa Guidi Windows and an article 
				‘A Visit to the Royal Academy'.  This latter show an effect that 
				is demonstrated in much of his poetry; a colourful chiaroscuro 
				of aesthetic description, in some parts extremely effusive:
 
				Frith's ‘Pope makes love to Lady Mary Wortley Montague' is a 
				most masterly composition.  The colouring is very white, but it 
				is of the complexion of the eighteenth century.  And what an 
				antithesis is made out!  God and the devil—hell and heaven—were scarcely greater.  Pope has had the temerity to declare his 
				love for that brilliant beautiful woman, and she has burst into 
				a fit of laughter.  And such laughter—rich, ringing, 
				spontaneous laughter, it swims like glory in her sweetly-drunken 
				eyes, dimples and bickers on her cheek, flashes from her pearly 
				teeth, so real and genuine you forget its tragic cruelty, until 
				you see the writhing victim sit there crushed into ghastly, 
				livid despondency, bitter mortification, and implacable hatred 
				of himself, her— everything! …[57]
 
				About August of that year, John James Bezer, active Chartist and 
				publisher, had been given money by Lord Goderich, the Christian 
				Socialist supporter, in aid of the Star of Freedom.  Harney, not 
				having received the money, made enquiries via Goderich, who 
				found that Bezer had fled to Australia in an emigration ship, 
				leaving his family in England.[58]  It was 
				stated also, by Ludlow, that he had run off with another man's 
				wife!  In further research I have shown that Bezer, an 
				interesting minor Chartist activist (1816—1888) made a bigamous 
				marriage in Australia.  There he raised a large family and 
				continued with some literary and political activities.[59]  Emigration to Australia had received a sharp impetus following 
				the discovery of gold in that country in 1851.  Massey was 
				disgusted at this behaviour from a previously valued upholder of 
				Chartist and co-operative principles, and sent a five verse poem 
				with his opinions on the subject to Harney for publication in 
				the Star of Freedom:
 
					
						
							| 
							Another gone back, when our battle went sorest!
 Another soul sunk, like a star from the night!
 Another hope quencht, when our progress was poorest!
 Another barque wreckt, with the haven in sight!
 Our Brother once — Traitor now: nay, we'll not curse 
							him,
 O Freedom forgive him, he knew not the cost! ...
 |  
				Titled ‘The Deserter from Democracy' it was not published by 
				Harney, but was included much amended as ‘The Deserter from the 
				Cause' in Massey's later poetical works.[60]
 
 Probably due to the knowledge that all was not well with the 
				Star of Freedom and that he could soon become jobless, Massey 
				decided to increase the scope of his lecture subjects.  He 
				therefore arranged to give a special series of three at the John 
				Street Institution commencing on 1 October 1852, during which he 
				would be assisted by his wife.  On the occasion that he had first 
				witnessed Rosina hypnotised, prior to his marriage, he was 
				indignant at the treatment to which she was subjected in order 
				to satisfy people's curiosity.  They then restricted such 
				demonstrations to small private gatherings.  Unfortunately their 
				financial state now determined the contrary, so under the broad 
				heading of ‘Mesmerism and Clairvoyance' Massey advertised the 
				subject matter to include:
 
				The truth of Phrenology illustrated by Phreno—Mesmerism . . . 
				Catalepsy induced by means of Mesmeric passes and Readings of 
				Books, Papers, etc., by means of Inner Vision, the ordinary 
				visual means being suspended by way of the audience, closing and 
				holding the eyes of the Clairvoyante with their own hands.  The Clairvoyante, Mrs. Gerald Massey, long known as the ‘Somnambule 
				Jane', has manifested the peculiar power of Clairvoyance or 
				Second Sight, for a period of eleven years, during which time 
				she has been satisfactorily tested by numerous persons ... 
				Admission to the Hall, 3d.; gallery, 4d.; Reserved seats on the 
				Platform, 6d.[61]
 
				A Star of Freedom reporter recorded that there were good 
				attendances, the last lecture being very well received as Mrs 
				Massey was in better health than previously, and the 
				demonstrations therefore more successful.  At the last lecture 
				her husband:
 
				... attempted to explain the phenomenon of Clairvoyance, and 
				show how it was produced, which was very startling and 
				interesting, and to judge from the audience, received with 
				satisfaction.  There were some medical sceptics, well known in 
				the scientific world, present, who came to doubt and expose the 
				‘humbug', and it was very interesting to watch their change from 
				doubt to wonder, from wonder to belief, and as the experiments 
				went on, to hear them assert their full and perfect conviction 
				to the audience.[62]
 
				  
				   
				The success of these demonstrations encouraged Massey to give 
				repeat lectures on 18 October, 25 October and again on 22 
				November (just to give the sceptics another chance), with an 
				intervening lecture on ‘Rienzi and Mazzini — an historical 
				parallel' on the 14 November.  He also announced his availability 
				to deliver a programme of forty-four lectures on tour the 
				following spring.  A wide range of subjects included Cromwell and 
				the Commonwealth, six lectures on English Literature, six 
				lectures on living poets, the poetry of Wordsworth and its 
				influence on the age, Thomas Carlyle and his writings, the song 
				literature of Hungary and Germany, as well as lectures on 
				Shakespeare, Chaucer, Tennyson, and American literature.  Also on 
				offer were his lectures on Mesmerism and Clairvoyance.  Massey 
				had been wise in making his plans at that time as, due to 
				decreasing circulation, Harney was forced to discontinue the 
				Star of Freedom from 27 November.  One month prior to this, 
				Harney had reasserted his previous declaration, now so obviously 
				apparent, ‘… that the Chartist organisation is literally 
				dead.  Yes, dead; and no galvanised efforts can revive it.  [But] 
				its principles are immortal.  They can never die …'[64] |  
	[Chapter 3.]
 
 NOTES
 
 
		
			| 
			1. | 
			Motion quoted in Raven, C.E., Christian Socialism 1848-1854 
			(London, Macmillan 1920, Cass 1968), 151. |  
			| 
			2. | 
			Christensen, T., Origin and History of Christian Socialism 
			1848-54. p. 135, in Acta Theologica Danica, 3, (Aarhus, 
			1962). |  
			| 
			3. | 
			Leno's activities can be noted in reports of the National Charter 
			Association and other association meetings in which he was involved, 
			which were published in the Northern Star. |  
			| 
			4. | 
			Daily News, 1 Apr. 1850, 4. Reynolds's Political 
			Instructor, 1, (27 Apr. 1850), gives extracts from this article, 
			together with generally supportive comments towards the Christian 
			Socialist experiment of the Working Tailors. |  
			| 
			5. | 
			Samuel Wilberforce (1805-1873) was appointed as Bishop of Oxford in 
			1845. |  
			| 
			6. | 
			Crowe, R., The Reminiscences of Robert Crowe the Octogenarian 
			Tailor (New York, n.p., n.d. [1902]), 15. Chapters 12 and 13, 
			dealing with his experiences at the Westminster House of Correction 
			following his arrest at the Chartist meeting on Kennington Common in 
			1848, were published separately as 'The Reminiscences of a Chartist 
			Tailor' in the Outlook, (New York) 71, (9 Aug. 1902), 915-20. |  
			| 
			7. | 
			Maurice, F., Life of Frederick Denison Maurice 2 vols. 
			(London, Macmillan, 1884), 2, 36. |  
			| 
			8. | 
			Introduction to Alton Locke (Oxford, OUP, 1983 ed.), ix, by 
			Elizabeth Cripps. |  
			| 
			9. | 
			'The Middle-Class Expediency', quoted in the Northern Star, 9 
			Feb. 1850, 3. |  
			| 
			10. | 
			Cooper's Journal, 15 Jun. 1850, 376. |  
			| 
			11. | 
			Ibid. 16 Feb. 1850, 104. |  
			| 
			12. | 
			Ibid. 23 Feb. 1850, 113-15. |  
			| 
			13. | 
			Democratic Review, 1, (Nov. 1849), 240. |  
			| 
			14. | 
			Ibid. 1, (May 1850), 463-4. The Literary and Scientific 
			Institution, 23 John Street, Fitzroy Square, (thought originally by
			W.E. Adams to have been a chapel, 
			see also illustration p. 55) had been used as a venue by the 
			delegates to the Chartist Convention in 1848 to prepare for the 
			Kennington Common demonstration. John Street—since renamed 
			Whitfield Street—was sited parallel to the west side of Tottenham 
			Court Road, extending approximately from Goodge Street to Warren 
			Street. |  
			| 
			15. | 
			Medium and Daybreak, 17 Mar. 1872, 177. Although no names are 
			given, it is possible that there was an involvement with Dr John 
			Elliotson (1791-1868), Professor of Medicine from 1832-1838 at 
			King's College Hospital, and Founder of the Phrenological Society. 
			Using treatment by mesmerism, lecturing and demonstrating the 
			subject, he founded his own London Mesmeric Infirmary in Weymouth 
			Street, Portland Place, in 1849, also publishing a journal, the 
			Zoist, a Journal of Cerebral Physiology and Mesmerism. Due to his 
			earlier activities he had to resign his professorship, but his 
			clinical abilities were always highly regarded. J. M. Ludlow, the 
			main founder of Christian Socialism mentions some mesmeric 
			experiences in his autobiography, including a visit that he made to Elliotson's Infirmary. See John Ludlow. The 
			Autobiography of a 
			Christian Socialist ed. Murray, A. D., (London, Cass, 1981), 319-22. 
			Captain Richard Burton also frequently mesmerised his wife, Isabel, 
			and consulted her whilst she was in trance. See: Lovell, M. A Rage 
			to Live. A biography of Richard Burton (London, Little, Brown, 1998, 
			460-461). |  
			| 
			16. | 
			Banner of Light, 10 Jan. 1874, 1. |  
			| 
			17. | 
			Cooper's Journal, 20 Apr. 1850, 246. |  
			| 
			18. | 
			Northern Star, 23 Mar. 1850, 1. |  
			| 
			19. | 
			Democratic Review, 1, (Feb. 1850), 349-52. |  
			| 
			20. | 
			Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper, 12 May 1850, 7. For an account 
			of the background of the French elections, see Harney's 
			Democratic Review, June 1850. |  
			| 
			21. | 
			Northern Star, 27 Apr. 1850, 1. |  
			| 
			22. | 
			Democratic Review, 2, (July 1850), 48-50. |  
			| 
			23. | 
			Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper, 4 Aug. 1850, 7. |  
			| 
			24. | 
			Reynolds's Political Instructor, 1, (16 Mar. 1850), 1. |  
			| 
			25. | 
			Northern Star, 9 Mar. 1850, 3. |  
			| 
			26. | 
			Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper, 6 Oct. 1850, 4. |  
			| 
			27. | 
			Ibid. 11 Aug. 1850, 7. |  
			| 
			28. | 
			From a letter dated 13 January 1851, quoted in the 'Prefatory 
			Memoir' to Kingsley's Alton Locke, by Thomas Hughes (London, 
			Macmillan, 1876). |  
			| 
			29. | 
			Christensen, op. cit., 76. |  
			| 
			30. | 
			Ludlow, J. M., The Christian Socialist Movement, 1850-4. 
			Lecturing and Literary work. Chap. 25, 7-8. Cambridge Univ. Library, 
			Add. 7450/5. Reprinted in John Ludlow. The autobiography of a 
			Christian Socialist, op. cit., 189. |  
			| 
			31. | 
			Crowe, Robert, op. cit. 14. |  
			| 
			32. | 
			Jean Armand Carrel (1800—1836). Often misspelled 'Carrell'. Army 
			officer and republican, later a political journalist editing the 
			Nation. Was praised by John Stuart Mill in his Dissertations 
			and Discussions. Fought several duels of honour from the last of 
			which he received a fatal wound. |  
			| 
			33. | 
			Adams, W. E., Memoirs of a 
			Social Atom 2 vols. (London, Hutchinson, 1903. New York, 
			Kelley, 1968), l, 232. |  
			| 
			34. | 
			Red Republican, 21 Sep. 1850, 109. |  
			| 
			35. | 
			Notes to the People, 1, (1851), 27, and 2, (1852), 731-2, 
			745-6, 883-4. |  
			| 
			36. | 
			Star of Freedom, 24 Apr. 1852, 5. 8 May 1852, 5. 22 May 1852, 
			5. 5 Jun. 1852, 6. For an abridgement of Massey's articles, see
			Appendix 'A'. C. E. Raven's 
			Christian Socialism 1848-1854 gives further details and later 
			outcome of this and co-existent working associations at that time. 
			Note also Christensen, op. cit. 231, and passim. |  
			| 
			37. | 
			Raven, op. cit. 289-300, and commentaries in the Christian 
			Socialist. |  
			| 
			38. | 
			Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper, 12 Oct. 1850 to 24 Nov. 1850, 
			also Gammage for a general account. |  
			| 
			39. | 
			Red Republican, 31 Aug. 1850, 82-3; Northern Star, 26 
			Oct. 1850. |  
			| 
			40. | 
			Friend of the People, 6 Mar. 1851, 101. |  
			| 
			41. | 
			Ibid. 26 Apr. 1851, 171-2. 3 May 1851, 185-87. |  
			| 
			42. | 
			Pioneer, 26 Apr. 1851, 27-8. |  
			| 
			43. | 
			Northern Star, 12 Apr. 1851, 3. |  
			| 
			44. | 
			Eliza Cooke's Journal, no. 102 (12 Apr. 1851), 372-74. 
			Although Samuel Smiles' Self Help (1859) does not mention 
			Massey, his early life was the theme of a lecture given by Smiles in 
			Leeds prior to his article in 
			Eliza Cooke's Journal, 
			while a revised edition of the latter appears in his Brief 
			Biographies. Cited in Medium and Daybreak, 10 Oct. 1873, 
			450. |  
			| 
			45. | 
			Leader, 3 May 1851, 417-8. |  
			| 
			46. | 
			Medium and Daybreak, 10 Oct. 1873, 450. |  
			| 
			47. | 
			Newcastle City Libraries. |  
			| 
			48. | 
			Plummer, J., Songs of Labour, Northamptonshire Rambles and Other 
			Poems. (Edinburgh, Tweedie, 1860), preface. See also the 
			Chimney Corner, 28 Jan. 1871, 122. |  
			| 
			49. | 
			National Library of Scotland, Ms. 3218.f.141-2. |  
			| 
			50. | 
			Northern Star, 27 Dec. 1851, 1. |  
			| 
			51. | 
			Black, F., Black, R., The Harney Papers (Assen, van Gorcum, 
			1969), letter 54. Massey letters held in the private Métivier 
			collection, Jersey. |  
			| 
			52. | 
			Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper, 28 Mar. 1852, 5. |  
			| 
			53. | 
			Star of Freedom, 5 Jun. 1852, 4. |  
			| 
			54. | 
			Friend of the People, 6 Mar., 27 Mar., and 3 Apr. 1852. [see 
			Index] |  
			| 
			55. | 
			The Harney Papers, op. cit. letters 55 and 56. |  
			| 
			56. | 
			Friend of the People, 29 Feb. 1852, 27. |  
			| 
			57. | 
			Star of Freedom, 29 May 1852, 2. |  
			| 
			58. | 
			Wolf, Julien, Life of the First Marquess of Ripon 2 vols. 
			(London, Murray, 1921), 1, 51. |  
			| 
			59. | 
			John Ludlow. The Autobiography of a Christian Socialist op. cit. 
			190. See also the section on Bezer 
			on the website gerald—massey.org.uk and in John James Bezer, 
			Chartist and John Arnott, National Charter Association by David 
			Shaw (lulu.com 2008) 
			for a full account of this interesting Chartist. |  
			| 
			60. | 
			Massey had written on it 'That blasted Bezer'. The Harney Papers, 
			op. cit. letter 57. |  
			| 
			61. | 
			Star of Freedom, 25 Sep. 1852, 104. Phreno-mesmerism was used 
			for purposes of demonstration. The operator pointed to phrenologically defined areas of the skull on a mesmerised person, 
			and responses appropriate to each defined area were elicited from 
			that mesmerised person. See Alfred Russel Wallace's account in My 
			Life, 2 vols. (London, Chapman & Hall, 1905), 2, 234-36. |  
			| 
			62. | 
			Ibid. 23 Oct. 1852, 172.  See also "Clairvoyance at 
			Tring", Bucks Advertiser and Aylesbury 
			News, 21 Jan., 1853. |  
			| 63. | Facade of the 
			Scientific & Literary Institute, Whitfield St., 1940's. Previously 
			John Street. (Survey of London, vol 21, 1949) |  
			| 
			64. | 
			Ibid. 16 Oct. 1852, 171.  |    |