<SPAN name="preacher"></SPAN>
<h1> OFF-HAND SKETCHES. </h1>
<br/>
<h3> THE CIRCUIT-PREACHER. </h3>
<p>THE Methodist circuit-preacher is in the way of seeing human nature
in many rare and curious aspects. Under the itinerating system, the
United States are divided into conferences, districts, and circuits.
The conference usually embraces a State, the district a certain
division of the State or conference, and the circuit a portion of
the district. To every circuit is assigned a preacher, who is
expected to provide himself with a horse, and his duty is to pass
round his circuit regularly at appointed seasons through the year,
and meet the members of the church at the various places of worship
established on the circuit. Every year, he attends the annual
conference of preachers, at which one of the bishops presides, and
is liable to be assigned a new circuit, in the selection of which,
as a general thing, he has no choice—the bishop making all the
appointments; and so, term after term, he goes to a new place, among
strangers. Before any strong attachments can be formed, the relation
between him and his people is severed; and he begins, as it were,
life anew, hundreds of miles away, it may be, from any former field
of labour. To a married man, this system is one involving great
self-denial and sacrifice, assuming often a painful character.</p>
<p>In those circuits that embrace wealthy and populous sections of the
country, the Methodist minister is well taken care of; but there are
many other sections, where the people are not only very poor, but
indifferent to matters of religion, ignorant in the extreme, and not
over-burdened with kind or generous feelings. On circuits of this
character, the preacher meets sometimes with pretty rough treatment;
and if, for his year's service, he is able to get, being, we will
suppose, a single man, fifty or sixty dollars in money, he may think
himself pretty well off.</p>
<p>To one of these hard circuits, a preacher, whom we shall call the
Rev. Mr. Odell, of the New Jersey conference, found himself assigned
by the bishop who presided at the annual conference. The change was
felt as pretty severe, he having been on a comfortable station for
two years; but as he must take the evil with the good, he
conscientiously repressed all natural regrets and murmurings, and,
as in duty bound, started, at the close of the conference, for his
new field of labour. A day or two before leaving, and after the
appointments were announced, Mr. Odell said to the brother who had
ridden that circuit during the previous year—"So, I am to follow in
your footsteps?"</p>
<p>"It appears so," was the brief reply.</p>
<p>"How did you like the circuit?"</p>
<p>"I am very well pleased to change."</p>
<p>"Not much encouragement in that answer."</p>
<p>"We can't all have good places. Some of us must take our turn in the
highways and byways of the land."</p>
<p>"True; I am not disposed to complain. I have taken up the cross, and
mean to bear it to the end, if possible, without a murmur."</p>
<p>"As we all should. Well, brother Odell, if you pass the year on the
circuit without a murmur, your faith and firmness will be strong. I
can assure you that it will be more than I did—a great deal more."</p>
<p>"I have been among some pretty rough people in my time."</p>
<p>"So have I; but"—and he checked himself; "however, I will not
prejudice your mind; it would be wrong. They do as well, I suppose,
as they know how, and the best can do no more."</p>
<p>"Truly said. And the more rude, ignorant, and selfish they are, the
more need they have of gospel instruction, and the more willing
should we be to break the bread of life for them. If our Master had
not even 'where to lay his head,' it ill becomes us to murmur
because every natural good is not spread out before us."</p>
<p>In this state of mind, Odell went to his new circuit. Having
deposited his family, consisting of a wife and one child, in the
little village of S—, with a kind brother, who offered them a
home at a mere nominal board, he mounted his horse and started forth
on a three weeks' tour among the members of the church to whom he
was to minister, during the next twelve months, in holy things. The
first preaching-place was ten miles distant, and the little
meeting-house stood on the roadside, nearly a mile from any
dwelling, and in an exceedingly poor district of country.</p>
<p>Before leaving S—, Mr. Odell made inquiries of the brother at
whose house he was staying, in regard to the route he was to take,
and the people among whom he was going. As to the route, all that
was made satisfactory enough; but the account given of the people
was not encouraging in a very high degree.</p>
<p>"The fact is," said the brother, rather warmly, "it's my opinion
that they don't deserve to have the gospel preached among them."</p>
<p>To this, however, the preacher very naturally demurred, and said
that he was not sent to call the righteous, but sinners, to
repentance.</p>
<p>"Where will I stop to-night?" he inquired. It was Saturday
afternoon, and on Sunday morning he was to preach at his first
appointment.</p>
<p>"Well," said the brother, slowly and thoughtfully, "I can tell you
where you ought to stop, but I don't know you will be so welcome
there as at a poorer place. Brother Martin is better able to
entertain the preachers comfortably than any one else in that
section; but I believe he has never invited them home, and they have
generally gone to the house of a good widow-lady, named Russell,
whose barrel of meal and cruse of oil deserve never to fail. She is
about the only real Christian among them."</p>
<p>"Is brother Martin a farmer?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and comfortably off; but how he ever expects to get his load
of selfishness into heaven, is more than I can tell."</p>
<p>"You must not be uncharitable, brother," said Odell.</p>
<p>"I know that; but truth is truth. However, you must see and judge
for yourself. I think you had better go to the house of sister
Russell, who will welcome you with all her heart, and give you the
best she has."</p>
<p>"And I want no more," said the preacher.</p>
<p>After getting precise directions for finding sister Russell, he
started on his journey. It was nearly five o'clock, and he made his
calculation to reach sister Russell's by seven, where he would
remain all night, and go with her to the preaching-place on Sunday
morning. He had not, however, been half an hour on his journey,
before heavy masses of deep blue clouds began to roll up from the
horizon and spread over the sky; and ere he had accomplished half
the distance he was going, large drops of rain began to fall, as the
beginning of a heavy storm. The preacher was constrained to turn
aside and seek the shelter of a farm-house, where he was received
with much kindness.</p>
<p>Night-fall brought no abatement of the tempest. The lightning still
blazed out in broad masses of fire, the thunder jarred and rattled
amid the clouds like parks of artillery, and the rain continued to
pour down unceasingly. The invitation to remain all night, which the
farmer and his wife tendered in all sincerity, was not, of course,
declined by the preacher.</p>
<p>In the morning, after being served with a plentiful breakfast, Odell
returned his warmest thanks for the kindness he had received, and
proceeded on his journey. He had five miles to ride; but it was only
half-past eight o'clock when he started, and as the hour for
preaching was ten, there was plenty of time for him to proceed at
his leisure. As sister Russell lived nearly a mile away from a
direct course, he did not turn aside to call upon her, but went on
to the meeting-house. On reaching the little country church, Mr.
Odell found a small company of men assembled in front of the humble
building, who looked at him curiously, and with something of shyness
in their manner, as he rode up and dismounted. No one offering to
take his horse, he led him aside to a little grove and tied the
reins to a tree. One or two of the men nodded, distantly, as he
passed them on his way to the meeting-house door, but none of them
spoke to him.</p>
<p>On entering the meeting-house, Mr. Odell found some thirty persons
assembled, most of them women. If there were any "official members"
present, they made themselves in no way officious in regard to the
preacher, who, after pausing at the door leading into the little
altar or chancel for a short time, and looking around with an
expression of inquiry on his face, ascended the pulpit-stairs and
took his seat. All was as silent, almost, as if the house had been
tenantless.</p>
<p>In a little while, the preacher arose and gave out a hymn; but there
was no one to raise the tune. One looked at another uneasily; sundry
persons coughed and cleared their throats, but all remained silent.
Odell was not much of a singer, but had practised on "Old Hundred"
so much, that he could lead that air very well; and the hymn
happening, by good luck, to be set to a long-metre tune, he was able
to start it. This done, the congregation joined in, and the singing
went off pretty well. After praying and reading a chapter in the
Bible, Odell sat down to collect his thoughts for the sermon, which
was, of course, to be extempore, as Methodist sermons usually are.
It is customary for the choir, if there is one, to sing an anthem
during this pause; or, where no singers are set apart, for some
members to strike up an appropriate hymn, in which the congregation
joins. On this occasion, all was silent. After the lapse of a few
minutes, Mr. Odell arose, and turning, in the Bible, to the chapter
where the text, from which he was to preach, was recorded, read the
verse that was to form the groundwork of his remarks. Before opening
the subject, he stated, briefly, that he was the preacher who was to
labour among them during the ensuing year, and hoped, in the Divine
Providence, that good, both to them and to him, would result from
the new spiritual relations that were about to be commenced. Then
proceeding with his discourse, he preached to and exhorted them with
great earnestness, but without seeming to make any impression. Not
an "amen" was heard from any part of the house; not an eye grew
moist; not an audible groan or sigh disturbed the air. Nothing
responded to his appeals but the echo of his own voice.</p>
<p>Never had the preacher delivered a discourse in which he felt so
little freedom. His words came back upon his ears with a kind of a
dull reverberation, as if the hearts of his hearers were of ice,
instead of flesh.</p>
<p>Before singing the last hymn, which Mr. Odell gave out at the
conclusion of the sermon, he announced that he would hold a
class-meeting. After he had finally pronounced the benediction,
there was a general movement towards the door; only seven remained,
and these were all female members, most of them pretty well advanced
in their life-journey. Mr. Martin was at the meeting, but ere the
preacher had descended the pulpit-stairs, he was out of the house
and preparing to leave for home.</p>
<p>"Where is the new preacher going?" asked a member, of Mr. Martin, as
he led out his horse.</p>
<p>"To sister Russell's, I presume."</p>
<p>"Sister Russell is not here."</p>
<p>"Isn't she?"</p>
<p>"No; she's sick."</p>
<p>"He stayed there last night, I suppose, and will go back after
class." Martin sprang upon his horse as he said this.</p>
<p>"We ought to be sure of it," remarked the other.</p>
<p>"I can't invite him home," said Martin. "If I do, I shall have him
through the whole year, and that is not convenient. The preachers
have always stayed at sister Russell's, and there is no reason why
they shouldn't continue to do so."</p>
<p>"I haven't a corner to put him in," remarked the other. "Besides,
these preachers are too nice for me."</p>
<p>"It's all right, no doubt," said Martin, as he balanced himself in
his saddle; "all right. He stayed at sister Russell's last evening,
and will go back and stay there until to-morrow morning. Get 'up,
Tom!" And, with this self-satisfying remark, the farmer rode away.</p>
<p>The man with whom he had been talking, was, like him, a member; and,
like him, had omitted to attend class, in order to shift off upon
some one else the burden of entertaining the new preacher; for
whoever first tendered him the hospitalities of his house and table
would most probably have to do it through the year. He, too, rode
off, and left others to see that the preacher was duly cared for. An
icy coldness pervaded the class-meeting.</p>
<p>Only four, out of the seven sisters, one of whom was an old black
woman, could muster up courage enough to tell, in answer to the
preacher's call, the "dealing of God" with their souls; and only two
of them could effect an utterance louder than a whisper. What they
did say had in it but little coherence, and Mr. Odell had to content
himself with an exhortation to each, of a general rather than a
particular character. When the hymn was sung at the close, only one
thin voice joined in the song of praise, and not a sob or sigh was
heard in response to his prayer. The class-paper showed the names of
thirty members, but here were only seven! This was rather
discouraging for a commencement. Mr. Odell hardly knew what course
to take; whether to stir up with some pretty sharp remarks the
little company of believers who were present, and thus seek to
impress the whole through them; or to wait until he came round
again, and have a good chance at them from the pulpit. He concluded
in the end, that the last course might be the best one.</p>
<p>In calling over the names on the class-paper he found that sister
Russell was absent. On dismissing the meeting, all except the old
black woman retired. She lingered, however, to shake hands with the
new preacher, and to show him that, if she was old, her teeth were
good, and her eyes bright and lively.</p>
<p>On emerging into the open air, Odell saw the last of his flock
slowly retiring from the scene of worship. For two of the women,
their husbands had waited on the outside of the meeting-house, and
they had taken into their wagons two other women who lived near
them. These wagons were already in motion, when the preacher came
out followed by the old black woman, who it now appeared, had the
key of the meeting-house door, which she locked.</p>
<p>"Then you are the sexton, Aunty," remarked Odell, with a smile.</p>
<p>"Yes, massa, I keeps de key."</p>
<p>"Well, Nancy," said Odell, who had already made up his mind what he
would do, "I am going home to dinner with you."</p>
<p>"Me, massa!" Old Nancy looked as much surprised as a startled hare.</p>
<p>"Yes. You see they've all gone and left me, and I feel hungry.
You'll give me some of your dinner?"</p>
<p>"Yes, massa, please God! I'll give you all of it—but, it's only
pork and hominy."</p>
<p>"Very good; and it will be all the sweeter because I am welcome."</p>
<p>"'Deed massa, and you is welcome, five hundred times over! But it
was a downright shame for all de white folks to go off so. I never
seed such people."</p>
<p>"Never mind, Nancy, don't trouble yourself; I shall be well enough
taken care of. I'll trust to you for that."</p>
<p>And so Mr. Odell mounted his horse, and accompanied the old woman
home. She lived rather over a mile from the meeting-house—and the
way was past the comfortable residence of Mr. Martin. The latter did
not feel altogether satisfied with himself as he rode home. He was
not certain that the preacher had stayed at sister Russell's the
night before. He might have ridden over from S— since morning.
This suggestion caused him to feel rather more uneasy in mind; for,
if this were the case, it was doubtful whether, after class was
over, there would be any one to invite him home.</p>
<p>"What kind of a man is the new preacher?" asked Mrs. Martin of her
husband, on his return from meeting.</p>
<p>"He seemed like a very good sort of man," replied Martin,
indifferently.</p>
<p>"Is he young or old?"</p>
<p>"He's about my age, I should think."</p>
<p>"Married?"</p>
<p>"I'm sure I don't know."</p>
<p>"Did you speak to him?"</p>
<p>"No, I came away after the sermon."</p>
<p>"Then you didn't stop to class?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Sister Russell was not there, of course?"</p>
<p>"No; she's sick."</p>
<p>"So I heard. The preacher didn't stay at her house last night."</p>
<p>"How do you know?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Williams called in while you were away. She had just been to
sister Russell's."</p>
<p>"And the new preacher didn't stay at her house last night?"</p>
<p>"No. Mrs. Williams asked particularly."</p>
<p>"He must have ridden over from S— this morning. I am sorry I
didn't wait and ask him to come home and stay with us."</p>
<p>"I wish you had. Sister Russell is too sick to have him at her
house, if he should go there. Who stayed to class-meeting?"</p>
<p>"Not over half a dozen, and they were all women. I left Bill Taylor
and Harry Chester waiting outside for their wives."</p>
<p>"They wouldn't ask him home."</p>
<p>"No; and if they did, I should be sorry to have him go there. I wish
I had stayed in, and invited him home. But it can't be helped now,
and there's no use in fretting over it."</p>
<p>Soon after this, dinner was announced, and the farmer sat down with
his family to a table loaded with good and substantial things. He
ate and enjoyed himself; though not as highly as he would have done,
had not thoughts of the new preacher intruded themselves.</p>
<p>After dinner, Martin took a comfortable nap, which lasted about an
hour. He then went out and took a little walk to himself. While
standing at the gate, which opened from his farm on to the county
road, a man, who lived half a mile below, came along. This man was
not a member of any church, and took some delight, at times, in
having his jest with professors of religion.</p>
<p>"Fine afternoon, Mr. Ellis," said Martin, as the man stopped.</p>
<p>"Very fine. How are you all?"</p>
<p>"Quite well. Any news stirring?"</p>
<p>"Why, no, not much. Only they say that the Methodists about here
have all joined the Amalgamation Society."</p>
<p>"Who says so?" inquired Martin, slightly colouring.</p>
<p>"Well, they say it down our way. I thought it was only a joke, at
first. But a little while after dinner, Aunt Nancy's Tom came over
to my house for some oats and hay for your new minister's horse. He
said the preachers were going to stop at the old woman's after this.
I half-doubted the rascal's story, though I let him have the
provender. Sure enough, as I came along just now, who should I see
but the preacher sitting before the door of old Nancy's log-hut, as
much at home as if his skin were the colour of ebony. These are
rather queer doings, friend Martin; I don't know what folks 'll
say."</p>
<p>We will not pause to describe the astonishment and confusion of
Martin, on learning this, but step down to Aunt Nancy's, where
Odell, after dining on pork and hominy, with the addition of
potatoes and corn-bread, was sitting in the shade before the log
cabin of the old negro. The latter was busy as a bee inside in
preparation of something for the preacher's supper, that she thought
would be more suited to his mode of living and appetite, than pork,
corn-bread, and hominy.</p>
<p>Odell was rather more inclined to feel amused than annoyed at his
new position. Aunt Nancy's dinner had tasted very good; and had been
sweetened rather than spoiled by the old creature's loquacious
kindness and officious concern, lest what she had to set before him
would not be relished. While he thus sat musing—the subject of his
thoughts is of no particular consequence to be known—his attention
was arrested by hearing Aunt Nancy exclaim—</p>
<p>"Ki! Here comes Massa Martin!"</p>
<p>The preacher turned his head and saw a man approaching with the
decided and rather quick step of one who had something on his mind.</p>
<p>"Is that brother Martin?" asked Mr. Odell, calling to Aunt Nancy,
who was near the window of her hut.</p>
<p>"Yes, please goodness! Wonder what he comin' here 'bout."</p>
<p>"We'll soon see," returned the preacher, composing himself in his
chair.</p>
<p>In a few minutes, the farmer, looking sadly "flustered," arrived at
the door of the old negro's humble abode. Odell kept his seat with
an air of entire self-possession and unconcern, and looked at the
new comer as he would have done at any other stranger.</p>
<p>"Mr. Odell, the new preacher on this circuit?" said Martin, in a
respectful manner, as he advanced towards the minister.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," replied Odell, without rising or evincing any surprise
at the question.</p>
<p>"I am very sorry indeed, sir! very sorry," began Martin in a
deprecating and troubled voice, "that you should have been so badly
neglected as you were to-day. I had no idea—I never once
thought—the preachers have always stayed at sister Russell's—I
took it for granted that you were there. To think you should not
have been invited home by any one! I am mortified to death."</p>
<p>"Oh, no," returned the preacher, smiling; "it is not quite so bad as
that. Our good old sister here very kindly tendered me the
hospitalities of her humble home, which I accepted gratefully. No
one could be kinder to me than she has been—no one could have given
me a warmer welcome."</p>
<p>"But—but," stammered forth Martin, "this is no place for a preacher
to stay."</p>
<p>"A far better place than my Lord and Master had. <i>The foxes have
holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath
not where to lay his head.</i> The servant must not seek to be greater
than his Lord."</p>
<p>"But my dear sir! my house is a far more suitable and congenial home
for you," urged the distressed brother Martin. "You must go home
with me at once. My wife is terribly hurt about the matter. She
would have come over for you herself, but she is not very well
to-day."</p>
<p>"Tell the good sister," replied Odell, affecting not to know the
individual before him, "that I am so comfortable here; that I cannot
think of changing my quarters. Besides, after Aunt Nancy has been so
kind as to invite me home, and provide for both me and my horse,
when no one else took the least notice of me, nor seemed to care
whether I got the shelter of a roof or a mouthful of food, it would
not be right for me to turn away from her because a more comfortable
place is offered."</p>
<p>It was in vain that Martin argued and persuaded. The preacher's mind
was made up to stay where he was. And he did stay with Aunt Nancy
until the next morning, when, after praying with the old lady and
giving her his blessing, he started on his journey.</p>
<p>When, at the end of four weeks, Mr. Odell again appeared at the
little meeting-house, you may be sure he was received with marked
attention. Martin was the most forward of all, and, after preaching
and class-meeting—there was a pretty full attendance at both—took
the minister home with him. Ever since that time, the preachers have
been entertained at his house.</p>
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