<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER III</h3></div>
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<div class='line'>Nay, but I think the whisper crept</div>
<div class='line'>Like growth through childhood. Work and play,</div>
<div class='line'>Things common to the course of day,</div>
<div class='line'>Awed thee with meanings unfulfill’d;</div>
<div class='line'>And all through girlhood, something still’d</div>
<div class='line'>Thy senses like the birth of light,</div>
<div class='line'>When thou hast trimmed thy lamp at night</div>
<div class='line'>Or washed thy garments in the stream.</div>
<div class='line in32'>—<span class='sc'>Dante Gabriel Rossetti.</span></div>
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<p class='c010'>Until her twelfth year Anna had not encountered the
severities of Calvinistic theology, Samuel Mallison having
intrusted the spiritual guidance of his children, during
their earlier years, to their mother. Anna was the
youngest child. Mrs. Mallison was of a German Moravian
family who, coming from Pennsylvania, had settled
on the eastern boundary of New York early in the century.
She possessed the serene and trustful temperament
of her people. The subtleties of her husband’s religious
system were beyond her simple ken; she loved to sing
the hymns of Zinzendorf, as she sewed and spun and
ordered her household in true German <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Hausfräulichkeit</span></i>,
a sincere, devout, affectionate soul who had found the
tone of the frigid little north New England community
more chilling than she dared to own.</p>
<p class='c011'>From her Anna inherited her warm impulses, her
abounding delight in nature, her susceptibility to the
simplest impressions of sweet and common things.
Gulielma Mallison understood the child when she
came running to her one early spring morning from
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>the parsonage garden, where the dark brown earth was
freshly upturned and young green things were springing,
and had tears in her eyes, veiling wonder, and a shy
thrill of joy in all her small birdlike frame, and had
asked, her hands clasped upon her breast:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Why am I so happy, mother, that I can’t bear it?
Why does something ache so here?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“It is because thou art in God’s beautiful world, little
Benigna,” the mother had said, “and thou art God’s
child. He is near thee, and thy heart yearns to him.
Be glad in God.”</p>
<p class='c011'>In his study, through the open door, Samuel Mallison
heard these words, and, whatever his perplexity as to
their doctrinal inconsistency, he did not gainsay them.
From his point of view at this time little Anna was
entirely out of relation to God and out of harmony with
his being, and it would have been impossible for her to
please him. But just then an old question, which would
not always down, had forced its way to his mind—What
if there were a wrong link somewhere in the logic?
What if the love of God were something greater than
the schoolmen guessed?</p>
<p class='c011'>But on a certain winter night Anna’s childhood died,
and the battle of her life began.</p>
<p class='c011'>Well she remembered every physical sensation even,
accompanying that experience.</p>
<p class='c011'>It had been a snowy Saturday night, and she had come
in from the warm kitchen where, in a round washing-day
tub, drawn close to the hot stove, she had taken a
merry, splashing bath, after the regular order of exercises
for Saturday night at the parsonage. Her older sister,
Lucia, had presided over the function, and when it was
accomplished she had been closely wrapped in a pale
<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>straw-hued, homespun flannel sheet, over her nightclothes,
preparatory to facing the rigours of the bitterly cold hall
and stairs, and the little bedroom above.</p>
<p class='c011'>So she had trailed into the living-room, where the
boys and her parents were gathered around a large table.
The room was not very brightly lighted by the single oil
lamp, but a great fire crackled loudly in the stove, and
the rattle of the hard snowflakes on the window panes
and the whistling of the wind outside gave keen emphasis
to the sense of cheerful safety and comfort.</p>
<p class='c011'>Warm and languid from the heat of her bath, Anna
had sat down on a low seat and dropped her head on her
mother’s knees, feeling an indescribable sensation of
happy lassitude and physical well-being. She recalled
how interested she had been in the shrivelled whiteness
of her own long, little fingers, and how soft and woolly
that dear old blanket had felt; it was on her bed now,
with her mother’s maiden name worked in cross-stitch
in one corner, in pale pink crewel.</p>
<p class='c011'>They had been waiting for her, to proceed with the
evening devotions, and her father had at once begun to
read a part of a sermon from one of the standard divines
who, though somewhat out of fashion in the centres of
progressive thought, were still held infallible in these
remoter regions.</p>
<p class='c011'>The subject was “The Benevolence of God in Inflicting
Punishment,” from a work entitled “The Effects of
the Fall.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Anna did not listen very closely for a time, but presently
her attention was caught and held. The writer
was seeking to prove that “the damnation of a large
part of the human race directly subserved the general
happiness of mankind and the glory of God.” That
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>even if he had saved none of the sons of men, but “had
left them to the endless torment they had so justly deserved,”
and “had glorified himself in their eternal ruin,
they would have had no cause to complain.” That the
best of what were illusively known as “good works,”
were “no more than splendid sins.” That no doubt,
if any heathen could be found who was truly virtuous
and holy, who loved God in the strictly evangelical
sense, as infinitely great, wise, and holy, and who kept all
his perfect law without infraction, such heathen might
be saved. But as there was no evidence that any such
heathen ever had existed, or ever could exist, there was
no reason to believe that any had been saved. As the
heathen still formed a vast proportion of the population
of the globe, and as only a small fraction of those nations
commonly known as Christian had actually and experimentally
come under the law of grace, the only conclusion
possible was, that a vast proportion of the human
family throughout all ages and down to the present time
“were serving the purposes of God’s infinite wisdom
and benevolence in their creation in endless misery or
torment.”</p>
<p class='c011'>The triumphant logic of the old divine, which Mrs.
Mallison secretly found discomfiting but accepted calmly
enough considering its terrific import, and which her
husband read with the sad and solemn pathos of one to
whom it was a mournful verity, had a curious effect
upon little Anna. For the first time the real meaning
of familiar words like these smote full and sharp upon
her mind, and in the physical lassitude of the moment
acted like a bodily injury upon her. She grew whiter
and whiter, and she touched and grasped the soft blanket
about her with powerless fingers, to convince herself
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>that she could feel and find what was familiar, faintness
being an absolutely unknown sensation.</p>
<p class='c011'>Suddenly, with an imperious impulse, and a singular
effect of childish courage which dared to do an unheard-of
thing, she rose and said with perfect apparent composure,
breaking in upon the reading:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“I am too tired to stay here any longer, I am going
upstairs now,” and so left the room. Her mother had
watched the slight figure in its close drapery with anxious
eyes until the door closed upon her, but had not thought
of following. This reading was a solemn function not
to be lightly interrupted.</p>
<p class='c011'>Upstairs, Anna had betaken herself hastily to bed, and
lay there, motionless, somewhat alarmed at her own revolutionary
action, and with little to say when questioned
by her mother presently.</p>
<p class='c011'>But when the house was still, and the night advancing
to its mid depth of darkness, the child, still lying with
wide, wakeful eyes, cried silently with a piteous consciousness
of desolation and sorrow. A sense of the bitterness
of a world where millions of helpless human spirits
were shut up to endless agony had overwhelmed her, and
a spirit of rebellion against God who willed it so for his
own glory had taken intense possession of her thought.</p>
<p class='c011'>In the passion of her childish resentment and grief
and worn by the unwonted wakefulness, her breath came
in long, quivering sobs which were heard in the next
room, and brought her father to her side.</p>
<p class='c011'>She could answer nothing to his questions, but he
found her hands cold, and her pulse weak and rapid.</p>
<p class='c011'>“You did not eat your supper to-night, little Anna,”
he said gently, remembering her faint appetite for the
frugal fare of the parsonage table.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>Anna only sobbed more convulsively. She had expected
severity and blame, feeling verily guilty in spirit.</p>
<p class='c011'>Samuel Mallison said nothing more, but Anna, wondering,
heard him go downstairs, heard doors open and
shut, and then silence fell again. Ten minutes later her
father stood again by the bedside in the icy chill of the
winter midnight in the unwarmed chamber, and he had
brought a bowl of broth, hot and smoking, bread, too,
and, most unwonted pampering, a piece of the rare poundcake,
kept for company and never given to children
except on high holidays.</p>
<p class='c011'>Neither of them spoke, but Samuel Mallison, for all
the cold, sat on the bed’s edge while Anna ate and
drank, drawing her frail little body to rest against his
own.</p>
<p class='c011'>The broth was salted for Anna by her tears, and the
long-drawn sobs, coming at intervals, half choked her as
she ate, but she was comforted at last and fortified against
the woe of the world, and she pressed her cheek against
her father’s arm with a sense of the infinite sweetness of
fatherhood warm at her heart. As she finished the last
crumb of cake, she thought:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“If only God had been kind like my father! I was
naughty, and that only makes him good to me and pitiful.”
But she said nothing, only looked with a world
of wondering gratefulness in her large innocent eyes up
into her father’s face, finding some perplexity that cake
and broth should reconcile her to the everlasting torment
of the majority of mankind, but wisely concluding to
make the best of it since such seemed to be the effect,
and, as it was now undoubtedly high time, to go to sleep.</p>
<p class='c011'>Finding her bright and well next morning, the Mallisons,
father and mother, had thought little more of that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>Saturday night revolt, which they, indeed, had not known
as such; but, as she looked back over her years to-night,
in her gable window, Anna perceived that from that time
there had always been in the secret place of her heart a
sense of enmity against a God who was not kind like her
father. To-night she knew herself, at last, reconciled;
faith had triumphed and declared that even the darkest
decree of God’s great will must be right, since he was
the absolutely Good. But her heart yearned with mighty
yearning for the subjects of his just wrath, and as she
knelt in the darkness and silence she gave herself with
simple, unreserved sincerity to the service of the lost
among men.</p>
<p class='c011'>Rising from her knees, Anna felt a strange glow and
exaltation of spirit. In her own personal life sin had
been met and vanquished. Tremendous apostolic assertions
buoyed her soul upward like strong wings: “free
from the law of sin and of death,” “passed from death
unto life,” “All things are yours, and ye are Christ’s,
and Christ is God’s.” Thus she felt her finite linked to
the infinite. Her spirit was suffused with thrilling and
unspeakable joy; God was closer than breathing and
nearer than hands and feet.</p>
<p class='c011'>But, as she stood rapt and absorbed, there came up
through the hush of the night from the dim street below
a strange sound, and she was caught back by it, and
listened painfully. It was a little child crying piteously.</p>
<p class='c011'>Peering down through the clustering branches, below
her window, Anna could discern by the dim light of the
stars the shape of a woman, forlorn and spiritless, passing
silently along the shadowed way. Behind her followed
the crying child, with weary little feet stumbling
at every stone. The woman carried something in her
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>arms, hidden by an apron; she turned and looked at the
child, and shook her head, but did not speak.</p>
<p class='c011'>This woman, who moved abroad only at night, was
the village outcast, and the child was her child, born in
sin.</p>
<p class='c011'>Vague and uncomprehended to Anna’s mind was the
abyss into which this woman had fallen, but she felt it
to be black and bottomless, and to place an everlasting
separation between her and the good. She drew back
from the window, a sharp pain, made of pity and horror,
at her heart, sin embodied thus confronting her. She
felt as Sir Launfal felt when he saw the leper.</p>
<p class='c011'>Lying down to rest at last, Anna slept, in spite of
spiritual ecstasies and sufferings, the sound sleep of a
healthy girl who is fortunate enough to forget the ultimate
destinies of human souls, her own with the rest,
for certain favoured hours.</p>
<p class='c011'>It was long before her sleep was disturbed by dreams,
but an hour before sunrise she awoke with a pervading
sense of exquisite happiness brought over with her from
a dream just dreamed. It was a still dream of seeing,
not of doing. She had seen the form of a man of
heroic aspect, old rather than young, with a grey head,
leonine and majestic, strong stern features, a glance
mild and yet searching and subduing; a man imperial
and lofty, and above his fellows, but whether as king
or saint or soldier she could not guess. But here was
made visible a power, a freedom, and a greatness for
which her own nature, she felt in a swift flash of self-revelation,
passionately cried out, which it had nowhere
found, and to which it bowed in a curious delight
hitherto unknown. This only happened: this mysterious
personality, more than human, she thought, if less
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>than divine, had looked kindly upon her, in her weak,
childish abasement, and had shed into her eyes, and so
into her heart, the impossible, inexplicable happiness with
which she awoke. She did not sleep again. This waking
consciousness enamoured her.</p>
<p class='c011'>What did it mean? Anna asked herself all day. Was
it a dream sent from God at this solemn hour of dedication?
If so, what did it prefigure? Even at the sacramental
feast, her first communion, that majestic head,
with the controlling sweetness of the eyes upon her,
came before her vision, and made her heart beat fast.</p>
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