Rebelliousness The English Church Abroad People say you must not try to abolish Christianity until you have something better to put in its place. They might as well say we must not take awray turnpikes and corn laws till we have some other hindrances to put in their place. ^ Besides no one wants to abolish Christianity—all we want is not to be snubbed and bullied if we reject the miraculous part of it for ourselves. At Biella an English clergyman asked if I was a Roman Catholic. 1 said, quite civilly, that I was not a Catholic. He replied that he had asked me not if I was a Catholic but if I was a Roman Catholic. What was I ? Was I an Anglican Catholic ? So, seeing that he meant to argue, I replied : " I do not know. I am a Londoner and of the same religion as people generally are in London." This made him angry. He snorted: " Oh, that's nothing at all;" and almost immediately left the table. As much as possible I keep away from English-frequented hotels in Italy and Switzerland because I find that if I do not go to service on Sunday I am made uncomfortable. It is this bullying that I want to do away with. As regards Chris- tianity I should hope and think that I am more Christian than not. People ought to be allowed to leave their cards at church, instead of going inside. I have half a mind to try this next time I am in a foreign hotel among English people. Drunkenness When we were at Shrewsbury the other day, coming up the Abbey Foregate, we met a funeral and debated whether or not to take our hats off. We always do in Italy, that is to say in the country and in villages and small towns, but wre have been told that it is not the custom to do so in large towns and in cities, which raises a question as to the exact figure that should be reached by the population of a place before one need not take off one's hat to a funeral in one of its streets. At Shrewsbury seeing no one doing it we thought