<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER VI</h3></div>
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<div class='line'>O Joy, hast thou a shape?</div>
<div class='line'>Hast thou a breath?</div>
<div class='line'>How fillest thou the soundless air?</div>
<div class='line'>Tell me the pillars of thy house!</div>
<div class='line'>What rest they on? Do they escape</div>
<div class='line'>The victory of Death?</div>
<div class='line in30'>—H. H.</div>
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<p class='c010'>In the largest theatre of the New England city of
Springfield on a night in December, an immense assembly
of people was gathered. Every gallery was crowded
to its utmost, and the house, from floor to roof, was a
dense mass of human beings. On the stage were musical
instruments, but the customary scenery was withdrawn,
save that the background showed a Neapolitan
villa situated on the slope of a Swiss mountain, at the
base of which an ultramarine ocean heaved stormily.
Against the incongruity of this unstable structure were
massed several hundred men and women, and before
them a musical leader, baton in hand. At an appointed
signal the great chorus stood, and with them, at the gesture
of a man, himself seated near the centre of the foreground
of the stage, the whole audience, with a rushing
sound like the sea or the wind, rose also.</p>
<p class='c011'>Then there was sung by the chorus, with trained perfection,
an old hymn, the words of which, as well as the
melody, were of quaint and almost childish simplicity:—</p>
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<div class='line'>“Alas, and did my Saviour bleed?</div>
<div class='line in2'>And did my Sovereign die?</div>
<div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>Would he devote that sacred head</div>
<div class='line in2'>For such a worm as I?</div>
<div class='line'>Was it for crimes that I had done</div>
<div class='line in2'>He groaned upon the tree?</div>
<div class='line'>Amazing pity, grace unknown,</div>
<div class='line in2'>And love beyond degree.”</div>
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<p class='c011'>With a swift motion of his baton the leader indicated
that the whole assembly was to join in singing the refrain,
in lowered voices. There followed in a deep murmur
of a pathos quite indescribable:—</p>
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<div class='line'>“Remember me, remember me,</div>
<div class='line in2'>Oh, Lord, remember me!</div>
<div class='line'>And when thou sittest on thy throne</div>
<div class='line in2'>Dear Lord, remember me.”</div>
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<p class='c011'>At the close of this hymn many people in all parts of
the house were in tears, but the hush of motionless silence
following was complete, and the eyes of all were riveted
upon that central figure on the stage, the man who now
rose and, advancing to the front, began to address them.</p>
<p class='c011'>This man was of majestic personal presence and his
speech was with marked power. Thinly veiled under a
manner of unusual restraint and quietness lay a genius
for emotional appeal and for persuasion. There was in
his manner and speech an utter absence of excitability,
and yet a quality which excited; a capacity for impassioned
eloquence, apparently controlled and held back
by the speaker’s will. The congregation listened with
absorbed attention.</p>
<p class='c011'>At the close of the address, which was designed to
move all the impenitent or irresolute persons present to
an immediate confession of their need of a Saviour, the
speaker asked those of this class who were present and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>were so inclined to advance and take certain seats,
directly in front of the stage, which had been reserved
for them.</p>
<p class='c011'>A close observer would have been interested in watching
the man as this part of the evening’s work was
ushered in. The restrained intensity of his manner was
noticeably augmented; his eyes moved slowly and searchingly
from one part of the house to another with a gaze
which no trifler and no awakened soul might escape.
The expression of his face was sternly solemn, even
tragical, as of one undergoing an actual travail of spirit.
He stood absolutely motionless save for a single and
significant gesture of his right hand, an upward gesture
made with peculiar slowness and with dramatic effect.
It was at once entreating, subduing, and commanding.</p>
<p class='c011'>At the first moment no person stirred; but presently,
as if drawn by an irresistible magnetism, a stream of
men and women could be seen advancing down the various
aisles, with fixed look, pallid faces, and sometimes
with tears. Upon such the speaker bent a look of gentleness
and encouragement, in which his features would
be momentarily relaxed, only to resume the profound
solemnity already spoken of, as he lifted his eyes again
to the unmoved masses still confronting him.</p>
<p class='c011'>The chorus, without rising, now chanted softly the
words of vivid appeal:—</p>
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<div class='line'>“Why not to-night? Why not to-night?</div>
<div class='line'>Thou wouldst be saved, why not to-night?”</div>
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</div>
<p class='c011'>Many moments passed. The company of seekers
now numbered a hundred. Beneath the absolute outward
restraint which held all, an inner excitement grew
steadily in intensity, and the subtle contagion of “the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>crowd” assumed an irresistible sway. It might have
become alarming. It possessed elements of terror just
below the surface. A climax was reached when a man
of gigantic frame and brutalized features, in the upper
gallery, stepped forward, and with a gesture rude and
almost wild, flung out his arms toward the evangelist,
and called through the silence of the place:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“I give in—you knew I’d have to. Yes, I’m
comin’.” And then, turning, clattered down the bare
gallery stairs, only to reappear presently below, with his
coarse head bent and big tears flowing down his purple
cheeks.</p>
<p class='c011'>Gradually the stream of seekers abated, and the aisles
became empty. Thus far no word of appeal or warning
had been added to the sermon; save for the restrained
monotony of the music this extraordinary scene
had taken place in complete silence.</p>
<p class='c011'>Then the speaker’s voice was heard again, and in it
was a strange emotional quality which had been previously
unnoticed, and before which the pride and will of
many melted within them.</p>
<p class='c011'>“The people of this company are dismissed to their
homes,” he said, in gentle, measured tones; “my work
now is for those who have feared God rather than men.
They will remain. Let all others go without unnecessary
delay, or stopping for speech with one another.
The Spirit is here.”</p>
<p class='c011'>The benediction followed, but as they broke up, scores
hitherto irresolute turned and joined the company of
seekers in the front of the house.</p>
<p class='c011'>When the speaker, the house being otherwise emptied,
came down to the anxious and disquieted little
company waiting for his guidance, he stood before them
<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>in silence for a little space, and then, turning to a group
of clergymen who were associated with him, he said:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Pardon me, but I believe I will leave these friends
in your hands, brethren. I wish to return immediately
to my lodging,” and saying nothing further in explanation
or apology, he departed, with evident haste.</p>
<p class='c011'>When he reached the lobby of the theatre he found
three men watching who hastened toward him, their
spokesman, with outstretched hand, introducing himself
and his companions and adding, with eager cordiality:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“This is so much better than we expected. We
were prepared to wait for you some time.”</p>
<p class='c011'>The man received the greeting gravely, and, indeed,
silently.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Will you come with us now to our hotel? We
wish to confer with you. We have come from New
York for that purpose.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Will you not let me know what you wish here, at
once?” was the rejoinder. “I am in some haste.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Certainly, certainly, if you prefer it,” said the other,
cheerfully, hiding a shade of discomfiture. Then, with
a change to serious emphasis, he proceeded: “We
want you to undertake a work in New York this winter,
as soon as possible, in fact. A large group of prominent
churches is ready to unite in the movement, and unlimited
resources will be placed at your disposal. Your own
compensation, pardon me for alluding to it, will be anything
you will name—that is a matter of indifference to
the committee, save that it be large enough. We are
ready to build you a tabernacle two hundred feet square,—larger
if you like.”</p>
<p class='c011'>The man addressed involuntarily laid his hand on his
breast; a letter in the pocket under his hand, from Chicago,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>specified a tabernacle three hundred feet square.
He smiled slightly; even religious zeal was a size larger
in Chicago than elsewhere.</p>
<p class='c011'>Further details were mentioned, but the evangelist
seemed to give them a forced and mechanical attention.
Then, rather suddenly, he broke in with a word of
apology.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I am fully sensible, gentlemen,” he went on, “of
the confidence you have manifested in me, and I would,
under other conditions, have accepted your proposition.
But the very circumstance of your making it to-night
hastens an action on my part which I have been approaching,
but had not, until now, definitely determined
upon. I am about to withdraw from this work, and can
form no engagements, however promising. I shall close
the meetings here as soon as I can honourably do so, and
these meetings are, for the present certainly, my last.”</p>
<p class='c011'>The blank faces of the three men before him seemed
to demand a word or two more.</p>
<p class='c011'>“My reasons?” he asked with curt and almost chilling
brevity. “Pardon me. They are personal to
myself. Good evening. No one can regret your disappointment
more than I.” With these words the
speaker turned abruptly from the little group and left
the theatre. In great amazement and perplexity the
committee of three presently followed his example.</p>
<p class='c011'>Here was an accredited and earnest man, no irresponsible
religious tramp, who possessed, apparently in a
superlative degree, the gift of winning souls for which
Samuel Mallison had given his all, if in vain, and for
lack of which he might fairly be said to be dying, being
one who could have lived on spiritual joy, if such had
ever been his portion. And this man, possessing this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>coveted and crowning religious endowment, was deliberately
putting it aside, and refusing to use it. What
did it signify?</p>
<hr class='c012' />
<p class='c011'>Anna Mallison had left Haran, in its ice-bound valley,
early that morning, and, by travelling through snowdrifts
in a sleigh all the forenoon, had been favoured to get
as far as Springfield on her journey, at nine o’clock of
that same evening. She was bound for Boston, where she
was to go before the missionary board to be examined as
to her fitness and promise for a worker on the “foreign
field.”</p>
<p class='c011'>At the Springfield station Anna had been met by the
little missionary lady whom she had heard and met in
Haran on her night of great decision. By her she had
been conducted to a hotel, shown to a room, affectionately
if reticently counselled, and then left to sleep and
be ready for another early start on the following morning.
It was the first time Anna had ever been in a city,
and she was bewildered by the noise and lights in the
streets through which she had been hurriedly driven.</p>
<p class='c011'>Left alone, she looked about her at the stiff order of
the narrow hotel chamber, the first she had ever inhabited,
the showy, shabby carpet, the cheap carvings of
the furniture, the long mirror in which she herself stood,
still and dreary, and a rushing wave of heart-sickness
swept over her. Her anxiety for her father became
suddenly poignant; a sense of the sadness of his life
tore her heart with fierce pain: she realized now, as
she had failed to before, how fast his strength declined.
She longed to know how that moment fared with him,
and how the next would. A wild purpose seized her
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>to return the next morning to Haran, and let all other
purposes go until some later time.</p>
<p class='c011'>However, in spite of all this anxiety and doubt,
Anna’s physical weariness was sufficient to bring sleep
apace, when once her head was on the pillow, and all
the distant murmur of the city and the sudden, uncomprehended
noises of the great house were soon lost to
her. Thus she failed to hear a man who entered the
room next to hers within the same hour, who closed the
door with some emphasis and locked it fast; who, after
that, walked up and down within the narrow limits of
that room with uniform, slow step, and who continued
to do this until the December dawn filtered through the
dim windows. All was still in that next room when
Anna awoke. The anxiety and homesickness of the
night before were gone, and in their place was that
mysterious joy which once before on a June night had
strangely visited her. Again, in her dream, she had
seen the face which ever since had dominated her; as
before, it was majestic, free, and strong. As before, it
had bent to her,—</p>
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<div class='line'>“Bent down and smiled.”</div>
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<p class='c011'>She rose hastily, glad and awed and greatly wondering.
At six o’clock she was ready and went down to
the great dining-hall, dark save for the wan light of a
single gas jet under which she sat down, silent and
alone, and was served by a heavy-eyed, untidy man-servant,
with an indifferent breakfast. She swallowed
a few mouthfuls by force of will, then gathered up her
humble belongings, and started out alone into the icy
chill of the grey morning. It was too early for her
friend from the Orient to brave the rigours of the unaccustomed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>winter. It was all comfortless, dreary, and
inauspicious; small cheer for a young girl starting on
such an errand, but there was no sinking now of her
spirit. She walked to the Springfield station in the light
and warmth of that inexplicable radiance of her dream,
and so pursued her journey to Boston.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c013'>
<div>FROM ANNA MALLISON’S NOTE-BOOK</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c014'>Do you believe in the mutual penetration of mind? Do you
believe that, independent of word and voice, independent of
distance, from one end of the world to the other, minds can influence
and penetrate one another?... Do you not know a
soul can feel within it another soul which touches it?</p>
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<div class='line'>—<span class='sc'>Père Gratry.</span></div>
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<p class='c011'><em>January 28, 1870.</em>—A week to-day since my father
was buried. It is late at night, and I have come up to
my little roof room, but I cannot sleep. I have been
with my mother, and we have cried together, until she
sleeps at last, so tired, and her dear face changed so
sadly that, as she slept, I was almost afraid. And yet
she is greatly upheld, and as gentle and uncomplaining
as it is possible to be.</p>
<p class='c011'>But for me, knowing my father, and trying to find
the meaning of his life, these days give me less grief
than wonder and perplexity. For a time after my
father told me the story of his past, after I knew what
he might have been, knew his great renunciation, his
utter humility, his leaving all to seek one only thing,
and that a gift for others, and even that being denied
him, so that to himself his life seemed a failure, and
its supreme sacrifice unsanctioned and unblessed—after
<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>this I could hardly bear the heart-break of it all. So
pure, so blameless, so devoted a life, and yet, to his own
thought, so unfruitful. Just a narrow little village
church, with its narrow little victories and defeats, and
its monotony of spiritual ebb and flow—this was the
sum of his achievement. Was it not hard of God?
This he would not have said, but my undisciplined heart
has cried out in bitterness and rebellion. I have been
in deep doubt and darkness.</p>
<p class='c011'>To-night it is given me to see it all in light, and I am
reconciled. The word which changed my father’s life
was that great word of the Master, “Except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and <em>die</em>, it abideth alone.”
That dying, the utterness of it, was what we did not
comprehend. I think my father understood before he
left us, although he could not express it. But all along
he had felt that in dying in his own personal life to the
world and to his ambition, he was meeting the condition,
and that in his own personal life the fruits of that
death were to be manifest, that he should be set for the
salvation of many. But God sees not with our short
vision. Days with him are years, and years days; and
our whole life but a vapour, which appeareth for a little
time, and then vanisheth away.</p>
<p class='c011'>This has come to me: My father’s sacrifice has borne
in the life of one of his children, if not in all, the fruit
of an especial dedication of that life to the service of
God. If he had not been the man he was, if he had
not laid down his life daily and hourly in humble self-surrender
to the Divine Will, never, never should I have
dreamed of giving myself to the work to which I am
now pledged. His life, in its deepest working, had been
wrought into mine, so that unconsciously I willed to be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>what he would have willed to have me. So, then, it is
no more I alone, but the spirit, the will, the nature of
my father that worketh in me.</p>
<p class='c011'>The God of my father—this phrase, so common, so
almost commonplace before, has suddenly taken to itself
an extraordinary significance. My father’s God, my
God, who began in my father’s willing sacrifice of all
the noblest powers of his manhood his purpose of grace,
will now, in his good pleasure, carry on the one work,
the same so begun, through me, all unworthy as I am,
timid, trembling, but a child. A child, and yet called
with this high calling; child of a saint, called solemnly,
sacredly, in the very depths of my being, deeper than I
feel, higher than I know, to be my father’s child, to be
the continuance, the fulfilment of his dying life, to finish
what he began, to bring to fruitage the seed he died
to sow. How sublime, how sweet, how awful the vocation
wherewith I am called!</p>
<p class='c011'>Then look upon me, O my God, my father’s God!
Behold my weakness; raise it into power; turn my dull
mind to light, my hard and narrow heart to a flame of
love; make me thy minister, thy messenger, fulfil in me
all thy great will.</p>
<p class='c011'><em>February 20.</em>—To-night I am alone in the old home,
not <em>our</em> home any more. It is stripped already of all that
made it home, but, bare and grim as it is, I love it, and
leave it with a sorrow my heart is yet too tired to realize.
They have consented to let me sleep this one last night
in my own little room. This poor bed is to be left,
being not worth removing, and all that clothes it goes
with me. So, like a pilgrim, under a tent roof for a
single night, I lie alone, and look up beyond the dear old
gable and see the winter stars.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>They shine upon his grave, and the snow already has
drifted over it, and my heart bleeds. Why will they not
let us pray for our dead as the Romish people do? Oh,
kind little father, gone what dim, dazzling way I do not
know, will they let you be happy at last? Will God let
you <em>see why</em>?</p>
<p class='c011'><em>February 21.</em>—It was a strange night, and yet most
beautiful.</p>
<p class='c011'>I hardly slept, but prayed until nearly dawn. Then
I slept a short time, and woke to find my limbs racked
with pain from the bitter chill of the room, and tears
running down my face. Almost as if I were carrying
out an order given me in my sleep, I hurried on my
clothing, and, taking my candle, came down the stairs,
both flights, through the empty, echoing house, to the
rooms below. I was so cold that I shook from head to
foot. Then I found in the kitchen wood left from our
store, and I brought it into the east room, the parlour,
where we laid my father after his death, and where I had
sat beside his dear form each night. The great fireplace
was bare and empty, like the room, but the andirons
were left.</p>
<p class='c011'>I laid the wood across and started the fire, and it
blazed and gave light, and threw strange shadows about
the room, and I kneeled beside it, on the hearth, as I
used sometimes when I was a little child, and warmed
my hands, and still I cried, and there was no one to
comfort me.</p>
<p class='c011'>Mally says she would have been afraid—in that
room. I cannot understand. It is because her dearest
have not died. What of him could have been anything
but precious? To have felt his spirit near me!
That would indeed have been holy consolation.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>But what if that were true? I do not know. While
I so crouched in the chimney corner, my heart bleeding,
and the tears bathing my poor face, there was a soft
touch, lighter than the flight of a thistledown, passing
over my head, as if the gentlest hand God himself could
make gentle had smoothed my hair, and sought to comfort
me.</p>
<p class='c011'>Then some one said: “I came here to be with you.”
But I do not know whether it was I who so said in my
own heart, or whether the words were spoken to my ear.
I only know that I was comforted, and the fire warmed
my aching limbs, and my head drooped against the wall,
and I slept with long sobs, as I slept once when I was
a child, and my dear father ministered to me.</p>
<p class='c011'>It was broad daylight when I awoke, and I felt soothed
and strong. I rose to go and make ready to lock and
leave the house. But first I knelt and prayed, and I am
praying still.</p>
<p class='c011'>Live in me, O God, as my father lives in me, and as
thou didst live in him. Let me live the life and die
the death which he sought to live, to die, for thee.
Give thou unto him through me abiding fruit in the
salvation of souls; and grant us such grace as that we
may humbly and worthily fulfil thy gracious will, I
on earth, as he in heaven.</p>
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<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>
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