John Ploughmans Talk
C.H  Spurgeon

 

John Ploughman's Talk;

or, Plain Advice for Plain People

 

by C. H. Spurgeon

 

 

Contents

 

       Preface      

1.To the Idle 

2.On Religious Grumblers

3.On the Preacher's Appearance

4.On Good Nature and Firmness

5.On Patience 

6.On Gossips

7.On Seizing Opportunities

8.On Keeping One's Eyes Open

9.Thoughts about Thought

10.Faults

11.Things Not Worth Trying

12.Debt 

13.Home 

14.Men Who Are Down 

15.Hope

16.Spending 

17.A Good Word for Wives

18.Men with Two Faces 

19.Hints as to Thriving

20.Tall Talk

21.Things I Would Not Choose

22.Try

23.Monuments

24.Very Ignorant People

 

Preface

N John Ploughman's Talk, I have written for plowmen and common people. Hence refined taste and dainty words have been discarded for strong proverbial expressions and homely phrases. I have aimed my blows at the vices of the many, and tried to inculcate those moral virtues without which men are degraded. Much that needs to be said to the toiling masses would not well suit the pulpit and the Sabbath; these lowly pages may teach thrift and industry all the days of the week in the cottage and the workshop; and if some learn these lessons I shall not repent the adoption of a rustic style.

Ploughman is a name I may justly claim. Every minister has put his hand to the plow; and it is his business to break up the fallow ground. That I have written in a semi-humorous vein needs no apology, since thereby sound moral teaching has gained a hearing from at least 300,000 persons. There is no particular virtue in being seriously unreadable.

 

C. H. Spurgeon