Tuesday morning brought a strange
little untidy packet, tied with blue ribbon, understamped,
and directed to Harold Alison, Esquire, in the worst
form of poor Dora’s always bad handwriting.
Within was a single knitted muffatee, and a long
lock of the stiffly curling yellow hair peculiar to
Dora’s head. In blotted, sloping roundhand
was written:
“My Dear Harry,
“Good-bye, I do fêle so
very ill, I can’t do any more. Don’t
forget I allwaies was your wiffe.
“I
am your affex., D. A.”
We looked at each other in wonder
and dismay, sure that the child must be very ill,
and indignant that we had not been told. Harold
talked of going up to town to find out; I was rather
for going, or sending, to Therford for tidings, and
all the time, alas! alas! he was smoothing and caressing
the yellow tress between his fingers, pitying the child
and fancying she was being moped to death in the school-room.
We determined on riding to Therford,
and Harold had hastened to the office to despatch
some business first, when Mr. Horsman himself came
in on his way to the Petty Sessions to
explain matters.
Mrs. Randall Horsman had arrived with
her children at Therford the day before, flying from
the infection of smallpox, for which the doctor had
declared Dora to be sickening. The whole family
had been spending the autumn months at the seaside.
Nessy Horsman had been with them and had taken Dora
about with him much more than had been approved.
In one of these expeditions he had taken her into
the shop of a village ratcatcher, where, it had since
been ascertained, two children were ill of smallpox.
She had been ailing ever since the party had returned
to London; the doctor had been called in on Monday,
and had not only pronounced the dreadful name of the
disease, but, seeking in vain for the marks of vaccination
on her arms, he greatly apprehended that she would
have it in full and unmitigated virulence.
Mrs. Randall Horsman had herself and
her children vaccinated without loss of time and fled
to the country. Her husband would spend all day
in his chambers, and only sleep at home on the ground-floor
with every precaution, and Dora had been left in the
charge of a young under-house-maid, whose marked face
proved her safety, until the doctor could send in
a regular nurse. It was this wretched little
stupid maid who was ignorant enough to assist the
poor child in sending off her unhappy packet, all
unknowing of the seeds of destruction it conveyed.
I had had a slight attack of undoubted
smallpox when a young child, and I immediately resolved
on going to nurse my poor Dora, secure that she would
now be left to me, and unable to bear the thought of
her being among strangers. I went at once to
the office to tell Harry, and Baby Jack walked with
me as far as our roads lay together, asking me on the
way if it were true that Harold Alison was engaged
to Miss Tracy, and on my denial, saying that Mrs.
Randall had come down full of the report; that Nessy
had heard of it, and, on Sunday afternoon, had teased
Dora about it to such a degree that she had leaped
up from the sofa and actually boxed his ears, after
which she had gone into such a paroxysm of tears and
sobs that she had been sent to bed, and in the morning
the family mind began to perceive she was really ill.
The poor child’s passionate jealousy had no
doubt prompted her letter, as well as her desire to
take leave of the object of her love; and knowing her
strange character as I did, I was sure the idea was
adding tenfold to the misery of the dreadful illness
that was coming on her.
I had to pursue Harold to the potteries,
where one of the workmen directed me to him, as he
was helping to put in order some machine for hoisting
that was out of gear. “Bless you, ma’am,”
said the man, “he is as strong as any four of
we.”
When I found him, his consternation
was great, and he quite agreed with me that I had
better go up that very afternoon and take charge of
Dora, since Baby Jack answered for it that Randall
Horsman would be most grateful and thankful.
Harold found out the hours for the
trains, and did everything to expedite me. He
made it certain that poor little Dora had not been
vaccinated. When she was born, no doctor lived
within sixty miles of Boola Boola, and nobody had
ever thought of such a thing.
“And you, Harry?” I asked, with a sudden
thrill of alarm.
“Do you expect me to remember?” he asked
with a smile.
I begged him to look for the moons
upon his arm, and at any rate to undergo the operation
again, since, even if it had been done in his infancy,
the effect might have worn out, and it was only too
probable that in the case of a child born on board
a sailing vessel, without a doctor, it had been forgotten.
He gave in to my solicitude so far as to say that
he would see about it, but reminded me that it was
not he who was going into the infection. Yes,
I said, but there was that lock of hair and the worsted
cuff. Such things did carry contagion, and he
ought to burn them at once.
“Poor Dora!” he said, rather indignantly.
Oh that I had seen them burnt!
Oh that I had taken him to Dr. Kingston’s for
vaccination before I went away, instead of contenting
myself with the unmeaning, half-incredulous promise
to “see about it!” by which, of course,
he meant to mention it when George Yolland came home.
Yet it might have made no difference, for he had been
fondling and smoothing that fatal curl all the time
we were talking over the letter.
He came to the station with me, gave
me the kindest messages for Dora, arranged for my
telegraphing reports of her every day took
care of me as men will do when they seem to think
their womankind incapable without them, making all
the more of me because I did not venture to take Colman,
whom I sent to visit her home. He insisted on
Mr. Ben Yolland, who had been detained a day behind
his brother, going in a first-class carriage with
me. I leant out at the window for the parting
kiss, and the last sight I had of my dear Harold, as
the train steamed out of the station, was bearing
on his shoulder a fat child a potter’s who
had just arrived by the train, and had been screaming
to his mother to carry him, regardless of the younger
baby and baskets in her arms. It might well
make my last sight of him remind me of St. Christopher.
That journey with the curate was comfortable
in itself, and a great comfort to me afterwards.
We could not but rejoice together over that Sunday,
and Ben Yolland showed himself deeply struck with the
simplicity and depth that had been revealed to him,
the reality of whatever Harold said, and his manner
of taking his dire disappointment as the just and
natural outcome of his former life. Many men would
have been soured and driven back to evil by such a
rejection. Harold had made it the occasion of
his most difficult victory and sharpest struggle;
yet all the time he was unconscious how great a victory
it was. And so thorough was the penitence, so
great the need of refreshment after the keen struggle
for self-mastery, and so needful the pledge of pardon,
that though he had never been confirmed, there was
no doubt as to making him welcome at once to the Heavenly
Feast. Well that it was so!
The “What next” concerned
Mr. Yolland as much as it did me. He could not
bear to think of relinquishing one who all
unknown to himself did more to guide and
win the hearts of those Hydriots than teaching or
sermons could ever do, and yet no one could advise
Harold to remain after this winter. In the reprieve,
however, we both rejoiced, and Ben then added, “For
my brother’s sake, especially.”
“Do you think the example tells
on him?” I ventured on asking.
“I can hardly say it does,”
was the answer. “George used to point to
Harold Alison as a specimen of a vigorous physical
development so perfectly balanced as to be in a manner
self-adjusting, without need of what he called imaginative
influences. I always thought he was a little
staggered that evening that he had to summon you, Miss
Alison, to his help; but he had some theory of sentiment
to account for it, and managed, as people do, to put
it aside. Lately, however, he has been looking
on, he says, with curiosity I believe with
something more. You see he reveres Alison for
what he is, not for what he knows.”
“Of course not; your brother
must know far more than Harold.”
“But the strength of character
and will impresses him. The bending of such
a nature to faith, the acceptance of things spiritual,
by one real, unimaginative and unsophisticated,
and, above all, the self conquest, just where
a great Greek hero would have failed, have certainly
told on George, so that I see more hope than I have
ever done before.”
So careful of me was Mr. Yolland,
that he only parted with me at Randall Horsman’s
door, where I was gladly welcomed by the master of
the house, and found my poor little niece a grievous
spectacle, and so miserable with the horrible illness,
that she only showed her pleasure in my coming by
fretting whenever anyone else touched her.
She had it badly in the natural form,
but never was in immediate danger, and began in due
time to recover. I had ceased my daily telegrams,
and had not been alarmed by some days’ intermission
of Harold’s letters, for I knew that Dermot
was at Arked alone, and that by this time the Yollands
would be returned and my nephew would have less time
to spend on me.
One dismal wintry afternoon, however,
when I was sitting in the dark, telling Dora stories,
a card was brought up to me by the little housemaid.
The gentleman begged to see me. “Mr. Tracy”
was on the card, and the very sight startled me with
the certainty that something was amiss.
I left the girl in charge and hurried
down to the room, where Dermot was leaning over the
mantel-shelf, with his head against his arms, in a
sorrowful attitude, as if he could not bear to turn
round and face me, I flew up to him, crying out that
I knew he was come to fetch me to Harold; Dora was
so much better that I could leave her.
He turned up to me a white haggard
face, and eyes with dismay, pity, and grief in them,
such as even now it wrings my heart to recall, and
hoarsely said in a sunken voice, “No, Lucy, I
am not come to fetch you!” and he took my hand
and grasped it convulsively.
“But he has caught it?”
Dermot bent his head. “I must go to him,
even if he bids me not. I know he wants me.”
“No!” again said Dermot,
as if his tongue refused to move. “Oh,
Lucy, Lucy, I cannot tell you!”
And he burst into a flood of tears,
shaking, choking, even rending him.
I stood, feeling as if turned to stone,
and presently the words came out in a sob, “Oh,
Lucy, he is dead!” and, sinking on the nearest
seat, his tempest of grief was for the moment more
frightful than the tidings, which I could not take
in, so impossible did the sudden quenching of that
glorious vitality seem. I began in some foolish
way to try to console him, as if it were a mere fancy.
I brought him a glass of water from the sideboard,
and implored him to compose himself, and tell me what
made him say such terrible things, but he wrung my
hand and leant his head against me, as he groaned,
“I tell you, it is true. We buried him
this morning. The noblest, dearest friend that
ever ”
“And you never told me!
You never fetched me; I might have saved him,”
was my cry; then, “Oh! why did you not?”
Then he told me that there had been
no time, and how useless my presence would have been.
We sat on the sofa, and he gasped out something of
the sad story, though not by any means all that I
afterwards learnt from himself and from the Yollands,
but enough to make me feel the reality of the terrible
loss. And I will tell the whole here.
Left to himself, the dear fellow had
no doubt forgotten all about vaccination, or any peril
to himself, for he never mentioned it to Dermot, who
only thought him anxious about Dora. On the Saturday
they were to have had a day’s shooting, and
then to have dined at Erymanth, but Harold sent over
in the morning to say he had a headache and could
not come, so Dermot went alone. When the Yollands
came home at nine at night a message was given that
Mr. Alison would like to see Mr. George as soon as
he came in; but as the train had been an hour late,
and the message had not been delivered immediately
on their coming in, George thought it could not concern
that night, so he waited till morning; but he was
awaked in the winter twilight by Harold at his door,
saying, “Doctor, I’m not quite right.
I wish you would come up presently and see after
me.”
He was gone again, while he was being
called to wait; and, dressing as fast as possible,
George Yolland went out after him into the dark, cold,
frosty, foggy morning, and overtook him, leaning on
the gate of a field, shivering, panting, and so dizzy,
that it was with difficulty he was helped to the house.
He made known that he had felt very unwell all the
day before, and had had a miserable night, in which
all the warnings about infection had returned on him.
The desire to keep clear of all whom he might endanger,
as well as a fevered perhaps already half-delirious longing
for cool air, had sent him forth himself to summon
George Yolland. And already strong shivering
fits and increased distress showed what fatal mischief
that cold walk had done. All he cared now to
say was that he trusted to his doctor to keep everybody
out of the house; that I was not to be called away
from Dora, and that it was all his own fault.
One person could not be kept away,
and that was Dermot Tracy. He came over to spend
the Sunday with his friend, and finding the door closed,
and Richardson giving warning of smallpox, only made
him the more eagerly run upstairs. George could
by that time ill dispense with a strong man’s
help, and after vaccinating him, admitted him to the
room, where the checking of the eruption had already
produced terrible fever and violent raving.
It was a very remarkable delirium,
as the three faithful watchers described it.
The mind and senses seemed astray, only not the will.
It was as if all the vices of his past life came in
turn to assail him, and he was writhing and struggling
under their attacks, yet not surrendering himself.
When the Sunday duties over Ben
Yolland came in, he found him apparently acting over
some of the wild scenes of his early youth, with shreds
of the dreadful mirth, and evil words of profane revelry;
and yet, as if they struck his ears, he would catch
himself up and strike his fist on his mouth, and when
Ben entered, he stretched out his arms and said, “Don’t
let me.” Prayer soothed him for a short
interval, but just as they hoped that sleep might come,
the fierce struggle with oppression brought back the
old habits of violent language, and then the distressed
endeavour to check himself, and the clutch at the
clergyman’s aid. Ben Yolland saw, standing
in the room, a great rough wooden cross which Harold
had made for some decorating plan of mine. He
held it over him, put it into his hand, and bade him
repeat after him, “Christ has conquered.
By Thy Cross and Passion; by Thy precious Death and
Burial, good Lord deliver us.”
So it went on hour after hour, evening
closing into night, the long, long night brightening
at last into day, and still the fever raged, and the
fits of delirious agony came on, as though every fiend
that had ever tempted him were assailing him now.
Yet still he had the power to grasp the Cross when
it was held to him, and speak the words, “Christ
has conquered,” and his ears were open to the
prayer, “By Thy Cross and Passion, by Thine
Agony and Bloody Sweat, good Lord deliver us!” the
prayer that Ben prayed like Moses at Rephidim.
Time came and went, the Northchester physician came
and said he might be saved, if the eruption could
only be brought out, but he feared that it had been
thrown inwards, so that nothing would avail; but of
all this Harold knew nothing, he was only in that
seething brain, whose former injury now added to the
danger, living over again all his former life, as those
who knew it could trace in the choked and broken words.
Yet, as the doctors averred, that the conscience
and the will should not be mastered by the delirium
was most unusual, and proved the extraordinary force
of his character and resolution, even though the conflict
was evidently a great addition to his sufferings.
Worst of all was the deadly strife,
when with darkness came the old horror of being pursued
by hell hounds, driven on by Meg and the rival he
had killed nay, once it was even by his
little children. Then he turned even from the
Cross in agony. “I cannot! See there!
They will not let me!” and he would have thrown
himself from his bed, taking the hands that held him
for the dogs’ fangs. And yet even then
a command rather than a prayer from the priest reached
his ears. He wrestled, with choking, stifling
breath, as though with a weight on his chest, grappling
with his hands as if the dog were at his throat; but
at last he uttered those words once more, “Christ
has conquered;” then with a gasp, as from a
freed breast, for his strength was going fast, fell
back in a kind of swoon. Yes, he was delivered
from the power of the dog, for after that, when he
woke, it was in a different mood. He knew Ben,
but he thought he had little Ambrose sitting on his
pillow; held his arm as if his baby were in it, and
talked to them smiling and tenderly, as if glad they
had come to him, and he were enjoying their caresses,
their brightness, and beauty. Nor did the peace
pass away. He was so quiet that all hoped except
George Yolland, who knew the mischief had become irreparable;
and though he never was actually sensible, the borderland
was haunted no more with images of evil or of terror,
but with the fair visions fit for “him that overcometh.”
Once they thought he fancied he was showing his children
to Viola or to me. Once, when Dermot’s
face came before him, he recurred to some of the words
used in the struggle about Viola.
“I don’t deserve her.
Good things are not for me. All will be made
pure there.”
They thought then that he was himself,
and knew he was dying, but the next moment some words,
evidently addressed to his child, showed them he was
not in our world; and after that all the murmurs were
about what had last taken up his mind the
Bread of Heaven, the Fruit of Everlasting Life.
“To him that overcometh will
I give to eat of the Fruit of the Tree of Life, which
is in the midst of the Paradise of God.”
That was what Mr. Yolland ventured now to say over
him, and it woke the last respondent glance of his
eyes. He had tasted of that Feast of Life on
the Sunday he was alone, and Ben Yolland would even
then have given it to him, but before it could be
arranged, he could no longer swallow, and the affection
of the brain was fast blocking up the senses, so that
blindness and deafness came on, and passed into that
insensibility in which the last struggles of life
are, as they tell us, rather agonising to the beholder
than to the sufferer. It was at sundown at last
that the mightiest and gentlest spirit I ever knew
was set free.
Those three durst not wait to mourn.
Their first duty was to hasten the burial, so as
to prevent the spread of contagion, and they went at
once their different ways to make the preparations.
No form of conventional respect could be used, but
it was the three who so deeply loved him who laid
him in the rough-made coffin, hastily put together
the same evening, with the cross that had served him
in his conflict on his breast, and three camellia
buds from Viola’s tree. Dermot had thought
of her and ridden over to fetch them. There had
been no disfigurement. If there had been he
might have lived, but still it was a comfort to know
that the dear face was last seen in more than its own
calm majesty, as of one who lay asleep after a mighty
conquest. Over the coffin they placed the lion’s
skin. It had been left in the room during his
illness, and must have been condemned, and it made
his fit pall when they took it to be buried with him.
It was before daybreak that, with good old Richardson’s
help, they carried him down to a large cart belonging
to the potteries, drawn by the two big horses he used
to pet, and driven by George Yolland himself.
They took him to our own family burial-place in Arghouse
churchyard, where the grave had been dug at night.
They meant no one to be there, but behold! there was
a multitude of heads gathered round, two or three
hundred at least, and when the faithful four seemed
to need aid in carrying that great weight the few
steps from the gate, there was a rush forward, in spite
of the peril, and disappointment when no help was
accepted.
Ben Yolland read the service over
the grave, and therewith there was the low voice of
many, many weepers, as they closed it in, and left
him there among his forefathers, under his lion’s
skin; and even at that moment a great, golden, glorious
sun broke out above the horizon, and bathed them all
over with light, while going forth as a giant to run
his course, conquering the night mists.
Then they turned back to the town,
and Dermot came by the next train to town to tell
me. But of all this I at first gathered but little,
for his words were broken and his voice faint and
choked, not only with grief, but with utter exhaustion;
and I was so slow to realise all, that I hardly knew
more than the absolute fact, before a message came
hurriedly down that Dora was worse, and I must come
instantly. Dermot, who had talked himself into
a kind of dull composure, stood up and said he would
come again on the morrow, when he was a little rested,
for, indeed, he had not lain down since Saturday,
and was quite worn out.
I went up, with heart quailing at
the thought of letting that passionately loving creature
guess what had befallen her, and yet how could I command
myself with her? But that perplexity was spared
me. The tidings had, through the Horsman family,
reached the house, and, in my absence, that same foolish
housemaid had actually told Dora of them point-blank.
She said nothing, but presently the girl found her
with her teeth locked and eyes fixed in what looked
like a convulsion, but was in reality such suppressed
hysteria as she had had before.
She soon came out of that attack,
but was exceedingly ill all that night and the next
day, her recovery being altogether thrown back by
feverishness and loss of appetite; but, strange child
that she was, she never named Harold, nor let me speak
of him. I think she instinctively shrank from
her own emotion, and had a kind of dread and jealous
horror of seeing anyone else grieve for him.
Dermot did not come the next day,
but a note was brought me, left, the servant said,
by the gentleman in a cab. It told me that he
felt so ill that he thought it wisest to go at once
to the smallpox hospital, and find out whether it
were the disease, or only vaccination and fatigue.
It was a brave unselfish resolve, full of the spirit
he had imbibed, and it was wise, for the illness was
upon him already, the more severe from his exhausted
state and the shock he had undergone. Mr. Randall
Horsman, who was very kind, managed that I should hear
of him, and I knew he was going on fairly well, and
not in any special danger.
But oh! that time seems to me the
most wretched that ever I passed, up in those great
London attic nurseries, where Dora and I were prisoners all
winter fogginess, with the gas from below sending up
its light on the ceiling, and Dora never letting me
sit still to grieve. She could not bear the association
or memory, I believe, and with the imperious power
of recovery used to keep me reading Mayne Reid’s
storybooks to her incessantly, or else playing at backgammon.
I hate the sound of dice to this hour, and when I
heard that unhappy French criminals, the night before
their execution, are apt to send for Fenimore Cooper’s
novels, it seemed to reveal Dora’s state of mind.
After two or three days, George Yolland
came up to see me. He had been to see Dermot,
and gave me comfort as to his condition and the care
taken of him; but the chief cause of the visit was
that they wanted my authority for the needful destruction
of whatever had been in that room, and could not be
passed through fire. Mr. Yolland had brought
me my Harold’s big, well-worn pocket-book, which
he said must undergo the same doom, for though I was
contagion proof, yet harm might be laid up for others,
and only what was absolutely necessary must be saved.
First of all, indeed, lay in their
crumpled paper poor Dora’s fatal gifts, treasured,
no doubt, as probably her last; and there, in a deep
leathern pocket, was another little parcel with Viola’s
crystal cross, which her mother had made her return.
She might have that now, it would bear disinfecting;
but the Irish heath-bells that told of autumn days
at Killey Marey must go, and that brief note to me
that had been treasured up yes, and the
quaint old housewife, with D. L. (his aunt’s
maiden initials), whence his needles and thread used
to come for his mending work. An old, worn pencil-case
kept for his mother’s sake for Alice
was on the seal was the only thing I could
rescue; but next there came an envelope with “My
will” scrawled on it. Mr. Yolland thought
I ought to open it, to see who had authority to act,
and it proved that we alone had, for he was made executor,
with L1,000. A favourite rifle was bequeathed
to Eustace, an annuity of L50 to Smith, and all the
rest of the property was to be shared between Dora
and me. It was in the fewest words, not at all
in form, but all right, and fully witnessed.
It was in the dear handwriting, and was dated on the
sad lonely Saturday when he felt himself sickening.
The other things were accounts and all my letters,
most of which could follow the fate of all that he
had touched in those last days. However, the
visit was a comfort to me. George Yolland answered
my questions, and told me much more than poor Dermot
could do in his stupefaction from grief, fatigue,
and illness, even if I then could have understood.
He told me of the grief shown by all
Mycening and Arghouse, and of the sobbing and weeping
of mothers and children, who went in a broken pilgrimage
on Sunday afternoon to the grave at Arghouse, of the
throngs at the church and the hush, like a sob held
back, when the text was given out: “Thanks
be to Him who giveth us the victory through Jesus
Christ our Lord.”
Yet on the Saturday evening there
was something more noted still. The men stood
about when they had come up for their wages to the
office, where, but a week before, Harold had paid
them, with a sore struggle to see and to count aright,
as some even then had observed; and at last their
spokesman had explained their great desire to do something
themselves in memory of “the best friend they
ever had,” as they truly called him. Some
of them had seen memorial-windows, and they wanted
Mr. Yolland to take from each a small weekly subscription
throughout the winter, to adorn the new chapel with
windows. “With the history of Samson a
killin’ of the lion,” called out a gruff
voice. It was the voice of the father of the
boy whom Harold had rescued on Neme Heath.
“So,” said George Yolland,
as he told me, “the poor fellows’ hearty
way was almost more than one could bear, but I knew
Alison would have me try to turn it to some sort of
good to themselves; so I stood up and said I’d
take it on one condition only. They knew very
well what vexed Mr. Alison most in themselves, and
the example he had set how he had striven
to make them give up making beasts of themselves.
Wouldn’t they think with me it was insulting
him to let a drunkard have a hand in doing a thing
to his memory? So I would manage their collection
on condition they agreed that whoever took more than
his decent pint a day or whatever else
sober men among them chose to fix it at should
have his money returned on the spot. Poor fellows,
they cheered and said I was in the right, but whether
they will keep to it is another thing.”
They did keep to it. All that
winter, while the chapel was building, there were
only five cases in which the money had to be returned,
and two of those took the pledge, pleaded hard, and
were restored. Indeed, I believe it was only
the habitually sober who ventured on the tolerated
pint. Of course there were some who never came
into the thing at all, and continued in their usual
course; but these were the dregs, sure to be found
everywhere, and the main body of the Hydriot potters
kept their word so staunchly, that the demon of intoxication
among them was slain by those Samson windows, as Harold
had never slain it during his life.
Beautiful bright windows they are,
glowing with Samson in his typical might, slaying
his lion, out of the strong finding sweetness, drinking
water after the fight, bearing away the gates, and
slaying his foes in his death. But Samson is
not there alone. As the more thoughtful remarked,
Samson was scarce a worthy likeness for one who had
had grace to triumph. No, Samson, whose life
always seems like a great type in shattered fragments,
must be set in juxtaposition with the great Antitype.
His conflict with Satan, His Last Supper, His pointing
out the Water of Life, His Death and His victory over
death, shine forth, giving their own lesson of Who
hath won the victory.
We ventured to add two little windows
with St. George and St. Christopher, to show how Christ’s
soldiers may follow in the conquest, treading down
the dragon, and bending to the yoke of the Little Child
who leads them out of many waters.
That winter of temperance proved the
fulcrum that had been wanting to the lever of improvement.
Schools of art, concerts, lectures, choir preparation,
recreation, occupation, and interests of all sorts
were vigorously devised by the two Yollands; and,
moreover, the “New Dragon’s Head”
and the “Genuine Dragon’s Head,”
with sundry of their congeners, died a natural death
by inanition; so that when the winter was over, habits
had been formed, and a standard of respectability set
up, which has never entirely fallen, and a spirit which
has withstood the temptation of strikes. Of
course, the world has much to do with the tone of
many. What amount of true and real religion there
may be, can only be tested by trial, and there are
many who do not show any signs of being influenced
by anything more than public opinion, some who fall
below that; but, as everyone knows, the Hydriot works
have come to be not only noted for the beauty and
excellence of their execution, and the orderliness,
intelligence, and sobriety of their artisans, but
for their large congregations, ample offertories, and
numerous communicants.
Of course all this would never have
kept up but for the Yollands. The Hydriots are
wife, children, everything to him who is now called
Vicar of St. Christopher’s, Mycening.
He has refused better preferment, for he has grown
noted now, since the work that Harold had begun is
still the task he feels his charge.
And whatever is good is led by the
manager of the works, whose influence over the workmen’s
minds has never failed. Even when he talked
to me on that day, I thought there was a change in
his tone. He had never sneered (at least in my
hearing) nor questioned other men’s faith, but
when he told me of Harold his manner had something
of awe, as well as of sorrow and admiration, and I
could not but think that a sense had dawned out that
the spiritual was a reality, and an absolute power
over the material.
The great simple nature that had gradually
and truly undergone that influence had been watched
and studied by him, and had had its effect. The
supernatural had made itself felt, and thenceforth
he made it his study, in a quiet, unobtrusive manner,
scarcely known even to his brother, but gradually
resulting in heart-whole acceptance of faith, and
therewith in full devotion of heart and soul.
Did Harold rejoice in that victory,
which to him would have been one of the dearest of
all?