THE " VILE" CINGALESE
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
Sut,—When Bishop Heber wrote the hymn he was, surely, not thinking of the Cinghalese in particular but of the human race as a whole, of man fallen, and of original sin " whereby man is very far gone from original righteousness, and is of his own nature inclined to evil." He would, I am sure, have included his own fellow Englishmen for whom, almost certainly, he had prayed on Ash Wednesday : Spare us . . . thy servants who are vile earth and miserable sinners, . . . who meekly acknowledge our vileness."
That this is so is, I suggest, borne out by the fact that originally he wrote " o'er Java's isle."—Youis, &c.,
CLEMENT F. ROGERS.
2 Raymond Buildings, Gray's Inn,W.C. 1.