O Christ whose Cross began to bloom
With peaceful lilies long
ago;
Each year above Thy empty tomb
More thick the Easter garlands
grow.
O’er all the wounds of this sad
strife
Bright wreathes the new immortal
life.
Thus came the word: Proclaim the
year of the Lord!
And so he sang in peace;
Under the yoke he sang, in the shadow
of the sword,
Sang of glory and release.
The heart may sigh with pain for the people
pressed and slain,
The soul may faint and fall:
The flesh may melt and die-but
the Voice saith, Cry!
And the Voice is more than all.-CARL
SPENCER.
It was Saturday morning and the next
day was Easter Sunday. The little town of Kirkwall
was in a state of happy, busy excitement, for though
the particular house cleaning of the great occasion
was finished, every housewife was full laden with
the heavy responsibility of feeding the guests sure
to arrive for the Easter service. Even Rahal
Ragnor had both hands full. She was expecting
her sister-in-law, Madame Barbara Brodie by that day’s
boat, and nobody ever knew how many guests Aunt Barbara
would bring with her. Then if her own home was
not fully prepared to afford them every comfort, she
would be sure to leave them at the Ragnor house until
all was in order. Certainly she had said in her
last letter that she was not “going to be imposed
upon, by anyone this spring”-and Thora
reminded her mother of this fact.
“Dost thou indeed believe thy
aunt’s assurances?” asked Rahal. “Hast
thou not seen her break them year after year?
She will either ask some Edinburgh friend to come
back to Kirkwall with her, or she will pick up someone
on the way home. Is it not so?”
“Aunt generally leaves Edinburgh
alone. It is the people she picks up on her way
home that are so uncertain. Dear Mother, can I
go now to the cathedral? The flowers are calling
me.”
“Are there many flowers this year?”
“More than we expected.
The Balfour greenhouse has been stripped and they
have such a lovely company of violets and primroses
and white hyacinths with plenty of green moss and
ivy. The Baikies have a hothouse and have such
roses and plumes of curled parsley to put behind them,
and lilies-of-the-valley; and I have robbed thy greenhouse,
Mother, and taken all thy fairest aurículas and
cyclamens.”
“They are for God’s altar.
All I have is His. Take what vases thou wants,
but Helga must carry them for thee.”
“And, Mother, can I have the
beautiful white Wedgewood basket for the altar?
It looked so exquisite last Easter.”
“It now belongs to the altar.
I gave it freely last Easter. I promised then
that it should never hold flowers again for any meaner
festival. Take whatever thou wants for thy purpose,
and delay me no longer. I have this day to put
two days’ work into one day.” Then
she lifted her eyes from the pastry she was making
and looking at Thora, asked: “Art thou
not too lightly clothed?”
“I have warm underclothing on.
Thou would not like me to dress God’s altar
in anything but pure white linen? All that I wear
has been made spotless for this day’s work.”
“That is right, but now thou
must make some haste. There is no certainty about
Aunt Barbie. She may be at her home this very
minute.”
“The boat is not due until ten o’clock.”
“Not unless Barbara Brodie wanted
to land at seven. Then, if she wished, winds
and waves would have her here at seven. Her wishes
follow her like a shadow. Go thy way now.
Thou art troubling me. I believe I have put too
much sugar in the custard.”
“But that would be a thing incredible.”
Then Thora took a hasty kiss, and went her way.
A large scarlet cloak covered her white linen dress,
and its hood was drawn partially over her head.
In her hands she carried the precious Wedgewood basket,
and Helga and her daughter had charge of the flowers
and of several glass vases for their reception.
In an hour all Thora required had been brought safely
to the vestry of Saint Magnus, and then she found
herself quite alone in this grand, dim, silent House
of God.
In the meantime Aunt Barbara Brodie
had done exactly as Rahal Ragnor anticipated.
The boat had made the journey in an abnormally short
time. A full sea, and strong, favourable winds,
had carried her through the stormiest Firth in Scotland,
at a racer’s speed; and she was at her dock,
and had delivered all her passengers when Conall Ragnor
arrived at his warehouse. Then he had sent word
to Rahal, and consequently she ventured on the prediction
that “Aunt Barbara might already be at her home.”
However, it had not been told the
Mistress of Ragnor, that her sister-in-law had actually
“picked up someone on the way”; and that
for this reason she had gone directly to her own residence.
For on this occasion, her hospitality had been stimulated
by a remarkably handsome young man, who had proved
to be the son of Dr. John Macrae, a somewhat celebrated
preacher of the most extreme Calvinist type. She
heartily disapproved of the minister, but she instantly
acknowledged the charm of his son; but without her
brother’s permission she thought it best not
to hazard his influence over the inexperienced Thora.
“I am fifty-two years old,”
she thought, “and I know the measure of a man’s
deceitfulness, so I can take care of myself, but Thora
is a childlike lassie. It would not be fair to
put her in danger without word or warning. The
lad has a wonderful winning way with women.”
So she took her fascinating guest
to her own residence, and when he had been refreshed
by a good breakfast, he frankly said to her:
“I came here on special business.
I have a large sum of money to deliver, and I think
I will attend to that matter at once.”
“I will not hinder thee,”
said Mrs. Brodie, “I’m no way troubled
to take care of my own money, but it is just an aggravation
to take care of other folks’ siller. And
who may thou be going to give a ’large sum of
money’ to, in Kirkwall town? I wouldn’t
wonder if the party isn’t my own brother, Captain
Conall Ragnor?”
“No, Mistress,” the young
man replied. “It belongs to a young gentleman
called McLeod.”
“Humph! A trading man is
whiles very little of a gentleman. What do you
think of McLeod?”
“I am the manager of his Edinburgh
business, so I cannot discuss his personality.”
“That’s right, laddie!
Folks seldom see any good thing in their employer;
and it is quite fair for them to be just as blind to
any bad thing in him-but I’ll tell
you frankly that your employer has not a first rate
reputation here.”
“All right, Mistress Brodie!
His reputation is not in my charge-only
his money. I do not think the quality of his reputation
can hurt mine.”
“Your father’s reputation
will stand bail for yours. Well now, run away
and get business off your mind, and be back here for
one o’clock dinner. I will not wait a minute
after the clock chaps one. This afternoon I am
going to my brother’s house, and I sent him a
message which asks for permission to bring you with
me.”
“Thanks!” but he said
the word in an unthankful tone, and then he looked
into Mistress Brodie’s face, and she laughed
and imitated his expression, as she assured him “she
had no girl with matrimonial intentions in view.”
“You see, Mistress,” he
said, “I do not intend to remain longer than
a week. Why should I run into danger? I
am ready to take heartaches. Can you tell me
how best to find McLeod’s warehouse?”
“Speir at any man you meet,
and any man will show you the place. I, myself,
am not carin’ to send folk an ill road.”
So Ian Macrae went into the town and
easily found his friend and employer. Then their
business was easily settled and it appeared to be
every way gratifying to both men.
“You have taken a business I
hate off my hands, Ian,” said McLeod, “and
I am grateful to you. Where shall we go today?
What would you like to do with yourself?”
“Why, Kenneth, I would like
first of all to see the inside of your grand cathedral.
I would say, it must be very ancient.”
“Began in A. D., 1138. Is that old?”
“Seven hundred years! That
will do for age. They were good builders then.
I have a strange love for these old shrines where multitudes
have prayed for centuries. They are full of Presence
to me.”
“Presence. What do you mean?”
“Souls.”
“You are a creepy kind of mortal.
I think, Ian, if you were not such a godless man,
you might have been a saint.”
Macrae drew his lips tight, and then
said in detached words-“My father
is-sure-I-was-born-at-the-other-end-of-the-measure.”
Then they were in the interior of
the cathedral. The light was dim, the silence
intense, and both men were profoundly affected by
influences unknown and unseen. As they moved slowly
forward into the nave, the altar became visible, and
in this sacred place of Communion Thora was moving
slowly about, leaving beauty and sweetness wherever
she lingered.
Her appearance gave both men a shock
and both expressed it by a spasmodic breath.
They spoke not; they watched her slim, white figure
pass to-and-fro with soft and reverent steps, arranging
violets and white hyacinths with green moss in the
exquisite white Wedgewood. Then with a face full
of innocent joy she placed it upon the altar, and for
a few moments stood with clasped hands, looking at
it.
As she did so, the organist began
to practice his Easter music, and she turned her face
towards the organ. Then they saw fully a beautiful,
almost childlike face transfigured with celestial
emotions.
“Let us get out of this,”
whispered McLeod. “What business have we
here? It is a kind of sacrilege.” And
Ian bowed his head and followed him. But it was
some minutes ere the every-day world became present
to their senses. McLeod was the first to speak:-
“What an experience!”
he sighed. “I should not dare to try it
often. It would send me into a monastery.”
“Are you a Roman Catholic?”
“What else would I be?
When I was a lad, I used to dream of being a monk.
It was power I wanted. I thought then, that priests
had more power than any other men; as I grew older
I found out that it was money that owned the earth.”
“Not so!” said Ian sharply,
“’the earth is the Lord’s, and the
fulness thereof.’ I promised to be at Mistress
Brodie’s for dinner at one o’clock.
What is the time?”
McLeod took out his watch:-“You
have twenty minutes,” he said. “I
was just going to tell you that the girl we saw in
the cathedral is her niece.”
Ian had taken a step or two in the
direction of the Brodie house, but he turned his head,
and with a bright smile said, “Thank you, Ken!”
and McLeod watched him a moment and then with a sigh
softly ejaculated: “What a courteous chap
he is-when he is in the mood to be courteous-and
what a - when he is not in the mood.”
Ian was at the Brodie house five minutes
before one, and he found Mistress Brodie waiting for
him. “I am glad that you have kept your
tryst,” she said. “We will just have
a modest bite now, and we can make up all that is
wanting here, at my brother Coll’s, a little
later. I have a pleasant invite for yourself.
My good sister-in-law has read some of your father’s
sermons in the Sunday papers and magazines, and for
their sake she will be glad to see you. I just
promised for you.”
“Thank you, I shall be glad
to go with you,” and it was difficult for him
to disguise how more than glad he was to have this
opportunity.
“So then, you will put on the
best you have with you-the best is none
too good to meet Thora in.”
“Thora?”
“Thora Ragnor, my own niece.
She is the bonniest and the best girl in Scotland,
if you will take me as a judge of girls. ’Good
beyond the lave of girls,’ and so Bishop Hadley
asked her special to dress the altar for Easter.
He knew there would be no laughing and daffing about
the work, if Thora Ragnor had the doing of it.”
“Is there any reason to refrain
from laughing and daffing while at that work?”
“At God’s altar there
should be nothing but prayer and praise. You
know what girls talk and laugh about. If they
have not some poor lad to bring to worship, or to
scorn, they have no heart to help their hands; and
the work is done silent and snappy. They are wishing
they were at home, and could get their straight, yellow
hair on to crimping pins, because Laurie or Johnny
would be coming to see them, it being Saturday night.”
“Then the Bishop thought your
niece would be more reverent?”
“He knew she would. He
knew also, that she would not be afraid to be in the
cathedral by herself, she would do the work with her
own hands, and that there would be no giggling and
gossiping and no young lads needed to hold vases and
scissors and little balls of twine.”
Their “moderate bite”
was a pleasant lingering one. They talked of
people in Edinburgh with whom they had some kind of
a mutual acquaintance, and Mistress Brodie did the
most of the talking. She was a charming story-teller,
and she knew all the good stories about the University
and its great professors. This day she spent the
time illustrating John Stuart Blackie taking his ease
in a dressing gown and an old straw hat. She
made you see the man, and Ian felt refreshed and cheered
by the mental vision. As for Lord Roseberry, he
really sat at their “modest bite” with
them. “You know, laddie,” she said,
“Scotsmen take their politics as if they were
the Highland fling; and Roseberry was Scotland’s
idol. He was an orator who carried every soul
with him, whether they wanted to go or not; and I was
told by J. M. Barrie, that once when he had fired
an audience to the delirium point, an old man in the
hall shouted out:-’I dinna hear a
word; but it’s grand; it’s grand!’”
They barely touched on Scottish religion.
Mistress Brodie easily saw it was a subject her guest
did not wish to discuss, and she shut it off from
conversation, with the finality of her remark that
“some people never understood Scotch religion,
except as outsiders misunderstood it. Well, Ian,
I will be ready for our visit in about two hours;
one hour to rest after eating and a whole hour to dress
myself and lecture the lasses anent behaving themselves
when they are left to their own idle wishes and wasteful
work.”
“Then in two hours I will be
ready to accompany you; and in the meantime I will
walk over the moor and smoke a cigar.”
“No, no, better go down to the
beach and watch the puffins flying over the sea, and
the terns fishing about the low lying land. Or
you might get a sight of an Arctic skua going north,
or a black guillemot with a fish in its mouth flying
fast to feed its young. The seaside is the place,
laddie! There is something going on there constantly.”
So Ian went to the seaside and found
plenty of amusement there in watching a family quarrel
among the eider ducks, who were feeding on the young
mussels attached to the rocks which a low tide had
uncovered.
It was a pleasant walk to the Ragnor
home, and Rahal and Thora were expecting them.
The sitting room was cheery with sunshine and fire
glow, Rahal was in afternoon dress and Thora was sitting
near the window spinning on the little wheel the marvellously
fine threads of wool made from the dwarfish breed
of Shetland sheep, and used generally for the knitting
of those delicate shawls which rivalled the finest
linen laces. On the entrance of her aunt and Ian
Macrae she rose and stood by her wheel, until the
effusive greetings of the two elder ladies were complete;
and Ian was utterly charmed with the picture she made-it
was completely different from anything he had ever
seen or dreamed about.
The wheel was a pretty one, and was
inlaid with some bright metal, and when Thora rose
from her chair she was still holding a handful of fine
snowy wool. Her blue-robed and blue-eyed loveliness
appeared to fill the room as she stood erect and smiling,
watching her mother and aunt. But when her aunt
stepped forward to introduce Ian to her, she turned
the full light of her lovely countenance upon him.
Then both wondered where they had met before.
Was it in dreams only?
Mother and aunt were soon deep in
the fascinating gossip of an Edinburgh winter season,
and Thora and Ian went into the greenhouse and the
garden and found plenty to talk about until Conall
Ragnor came home from business and supper was served.
And the wonder was, that Conall bent to the young
man’s charm as readily as Thora had done.
He was amazed at his shrewd knowledge of business methods
and opportunities; and listened to him with grave attention,
though laughing heartily at some of his plans and
propositions.
“Mr. Macrae,” he said,
“thou art too far north for me. I do know
a few Shetlanders that could pare the skin off thy
teeth, but we Orcadeans are simple honest folk that
just live, and let live.” At which remark
Ian laughed, and reminded Conall Ragnor of certain
transactions in railway stock which had nonplussed
the Perth directors at the time. Then Ragnor
asked how he happened to know what was generally considered
“private information,” and Ian answered,
“Private information is the most valuable, sir.
It is what I look for.” Then Ragnor rose
from the table and said, “Let us have a smoke
and a little music.”
“Take thy smoke, Coll,”
said Mrs. Ragnor, “and Mr. Macrae will give us
the music. Barbara says he sings better than Harrison.
Come, Mr. Macrae, we are waiting to hear thee.”
Ian made no excuses. He sat down
and sang with delightful charm and spirit “A
Life on the Ocean Wave” and “The Bay of
Biscay.” Then these were followed by the
fresh and then popular songs, “We May Be Happy
Yet,” “Then You’ll Remember Me”
and “The Land of Our Birth.” No one
spoke or interrupted him, even to praise; but he was
well repaid by the look on every face and the kindness
that flowed out to him. He could see it in the
eyes, and hear it in the voices, and feel it in the
manner of all present.
The silence was broken by the sound
of quick, firm footsteps. Ragnor listened a moment
and then went with alacrity to open the door.
“I knew it was thee!” he cried. “O
sir, I am glad to see thee! Come in, come in!
None can be more welcome!” And it was good to
hear the strong, sweet modulations of the voice that
answered him.
“It is Bishop Hedley!” said Rahal.
“Then I am going,” said Aunt Barbara.
“No, no, Aunt!” cried
Thora, and the next moment she was at her aunt’s
side coaxing her to resume her chair. Then the
Bishop and Ragnor entered the room, and the moment
the Bishop’s face shone upon them, all talk
about leaving the room ceased. For Bishop Hedley
carried his Great Commission in his face and his life
was a living sermon. His soul loved all mankind;
and he had with it an heroic mind and a strong-sinewed
body, which refused to recognise the fact that it died
daily. For the Bishop’s business was with
the souls of men, and he lived and moved and did his
daily work in a spiritual and eternal element.
And if constant commerce with the
physical world weakens and ages the man who lives
and works in it, surely the life passed amid spiritual
thoughts and desires is thereby fortified and strengthened
to resist the cares and worries which fret the physical
body to decay. Then vainly the flesh fades, the
soul makes all things new. This is a great truth-“it
is only by the supernatural we are strong.”
The Bishop came in bringing with him,
not only the moral tonic of his presence, but also
the very breath of the sea; its refreshing “tang,”
and good salt flavour. His smile and blessing
was a spiritual sunshine that warmed and cheered and
brightened the room. He was affectionate to all,
but to Mistress Brodie and Ian Macrae, he was even
more kindly than to the Ragnors. They were not
of his flock but he longed to take care of them.
“I heard singing as I came through
the garden,” he said, “and it was not
your voice, Conall.”
“It was Ian Macrae singing,”
Conall answered, “and he will gladly sing for
thee, sir.” This promise Macrae ratified
at once, and that with such power and sweetness that
every one was amazed and the Bishop requested him
to sing, during the next day’s service, a fine
“Gloria” he had just given them in the
cathedral choir. And Ian said he would see the
organist, and if it could be done, he would be delighted
to obey his request.
“See the organist!” exclaimed
Mistress Brodie. “What are you talking
about? The organist is Sandy Odd, the barber’s
son! How can the like of him hinder the Bishop’s
wish?” Then the Bishop wrote a few words in
his pocket book, tore out the leaf, and gave it to
Macrae, saying: “Mr. Odd will manage all
I wish, no doubt. Now, sir, for my great pleasure,
play us ‘Home, Sweet Home.’ I have
not been here for four months, and it is good to be
with friends again.” And they all sang it
together, and were perfectly at home with each other
after it. So much so, that the Bishop asked Rahal
to give him a cup of tea and a little bread; “I
have come from Fair Island today,” he said, “and
have not eaten since noon.”
Then all the women went out together
to prepare and serve the requested meal, so that it
came with wonderful swiftness, and beaming smiles,
and charming words of laughing pleasure. And when
he saw a little table drawn to the hearth for him
and quickly spread with the food he needed and smelled
the refreshing odour of the young Hyson, and heard
the pleasant tinkle of china and glass and silver as
Thora placed them before the large chair he was to
occupy, he sat down happily to eat and drink, while
Thora served him, and Conall smoked and watched them
with a now-and-then smile or word or two, while Rahal
and Barbara talked, and Ian played charmingly-with
soft pedal down-quotations from Beethoven’s
“Pastoral Symphony” and “Hark, ’Tis
the Linnet!” from the oratorio, “Joshua.”
It was a delightful interlude in which
every one was happy in their own way, and so healed
by it of all the day’s disappointments and weariness.
But the wise never prolong such perfect moments.
Even while yielding their first satisfactions, they
permit them to depart. It is a great deal to
have been happy. Every such memory sweetens
after life.
The Bishop did not linger over his
meal, and while servants were clearing away cups and
plates, he said, “Come, all of you, outside,
for a few minutes. Come and look at the Moon of
Moons! The Easter Moon! She has begun to
fill her horns; and she is throwing over the mystery
and majesty of earth and sea a soft silvery veil as
she watches for the dawn. The Easter dawn! that
in a few hours will come streaming up, full of light
and warmth for all.”
But there was not much warmth in an
Orcadean April evening and the party soon returned
to the cheerful, comfortable hearth blaze. “It
is not so beautiful as the moonlight,” said
Rahal, “but it is very good.”
“True,” said the Bishop,
“and we must not belittle the good we have,
because we look for something better. Let us be
thankful for our feet, though they are not wings.”
Then one of those sudden, inexplicable
“arrests” which seem to seal up speech
fell over every one, and for a minute or more no one
could speak. Rahal broke the spell. “Some
angel has passed through the room. Please God
he left a blessing! Or perhaps the moonlight has
thrown a spell over us. What were you thinking
of, Bishop?”
“I will tell you. I was
thinking of the first Good Friday in Old Jerusalem.
I was thinking of the sun hiding his face at noonday.
Thora, have you an almanac?”
Thora took one from a nail on which
it was hanging and gave it to him.
“I was thinking that the sun,
which hid his face at noonday, must at that time have
been in Aries, the Ram. Find me the signs of the
Zodiac.” Thora did so. “Now look
well at Aries the Ram. What month of our year
is signed thus?”
“The month of March, sir.”
“Why?”
“I do not know. Tell me, sir.”
“I believe that in a long forgotten
age, some priest or good man received a promise or
prophecy revealing the Great Sacrifice that would
be offered up for man’s salvation once and for
all time. And I think they knew that this plenary
sacrament would occur in the vernal season, in the
month of March, whose sign or symbol was Aries, the
Ram.”
“But why under that sign, sir?”
“The ram, to the ancient world,
was the sacrificial animal. We have only to open
our Bibles and be amazed at the prominence given to
the ram and his congeners. From the time of Abraham
until the time of Christ the ram is constantly present
in sacrificial and religious ceremonies. Do you
remember, Thora, any incident depending upon a ram?”
“When Isaac was to be sacrificed,
a ram caught in a thicket was accepted by God in Isaac’s
place, as a burnt offering.”
“More than once Abraham offered
a ram in sacrifice. In Exodus, Chapter Twenty-ninth,
special directions are given for the offering of a
ram as a burnt offering to the Lord. In Leviticus,
the Eighth Chapter, a bullock is sacrificed for a
sin offering but a ram for a burnt offering.
In Numbers we are told of the ram of atonement
which a man is to offer, when he has done his neighbour
an injury. In Ezra, the Tenth, the ram is offered
for a trespass because of an unlawful marriage.
On the accession of Solomon to the throne one thousand
rams with bullocks and lambs were ‘offered up
with great gladness.’ In the Old Testament
there are few books in which the sacrificial ram is
not mentioned. Even the horn of the ram was constantly
in evidence, for it called together all religious
and solemn services.
“A little circumstance,”
continued the Bishop, “that pleases me to remember
occurred in Glasgow five weeks ago. I saw a crowd
entering a large church, and I asked a workingman,
who was eating his lunch outside the building, the
name of the church; and he answered,-’It’s
just the auld Ram’s Horn Kirk. They are
putting a new minister in the pulpit today and they
seem weel pleased wi’ their choice.’
“Now I am going to leave this
subject with you. I have only indicated it.
Those who wish to do so, can finish the list, for the
half has not been told, and indeed I have left the
most significant ceremony until the last. It
is that wonderful service in the Sixteenth Chapter
of Leviticus, where the priest, after making a sin
offering of young bullocks and a burnt offering of
a ram, casts lots upon two goats for a sin offering,
and the goat upon which the lot falls is ’presented
alive before the Lord to make an atonement; and to
let him go for a scapegoat into the wilderness.’”
Then he took from his pocket a little
book and said, “Listen to the end of this service,
’And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the
head of the live goat, and confess over him all the
iniquities of the Children of Israel, and all their
transgressions in all their sins, putting them upon
the head of the goat, and shall send him away, by
the hand of a fit man into the wilderness.
“’And the goat shall bear
upon him all their iniquities unto a land not inhabited;
and he shall let go the goat in the wilderness.’
“My friends, this night let
all read the Fifty-third of Isaiah, and they will
understand how fitting it was that Christ should be
’offered up’ in Aries the Ram, the sacrificial
month representing the shadows and types of which
He was the glorious arch-type.”
Then there was silence, too deeply
charged with feeling, for words. The Bishop himself
felt that he could speak on no lesser subject, and
his small audience were lost in wonder at the vast
panorama of centuries, day by day, century after century,
through all of which God had remembered that He had
promised He would provide the Great and Final Sacrifice
for mankind’s justification. Then Aries
the Ram would no longer be a promise. It would
be a voucher forever that the Promise had been redeemed,
and a memorial that His Truth and His mercy endureth
forever!
At the door the Bishop said to Ragnor,
“In a few hours, Friend Conall, it will be Easter
Morning. Then we can tell each other ’Christ
has risen!’” And Conall’s eyes
were full of tears, he could not find his voice, he
looked upward and bowed his head.