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<h2> XVI. JOHN'S REVIVAL. </h2>
<p>The New England country-boy of the last generation never heard of
Christmas. There was no such day in his calendar. If John ever came across
it in his reading, he attached no meaning to the word.</p>
<p>If his curiosity had been aroused, and he had asked his elders about it,
he might have got the dim impression that it was a kind of Popish holiday,
the celebration of which was about as wicked as "card-playing," or being a
"Democrat." John knew a couple of desperately bad boys who were reported
to play "seven-up" in a barn, on the haymow, and the enormity of this
practice made him shudder. He had once seen a pack of greasy
"playing-cards," and it seemed to him to contain the quintessence of sin.
If he had desired to defy all Divine law and outrage all human society, he
felt that he could do it by shuffling them. And he was quite right. The
two bad boys enjoyed in stealth their scandalous pastime, because they
knew it was the most wicked thing they could do. If it had been as sinless
as playing marbles, they would n't have cared for it. John sometimes drove
past a brown, tumble-down farmhouse, whose shiftless inhabitants, it was
said, were card-playing people; and it is impossible to describe how
wicked that house appeared to John. He almost expected to see its shingles
stand on end. In the old New England one could not in any other way so
express his contempt of all holy and orderly life as by playing cards for
amusement.</p>
<p>There was no element of Christmas in John's life, any more than there was
of Easter; and probably nobody about him could have explained Easter; and
he escaped all the demoralization attending Christmas gifts. Indeed, he
never had any presents of any kind, either on his birthday or any other
day. He expected nothing that he did not earn, or make in the way of
"trade" with another boy. He was taught to work for what he received. He
even earned, as I said, the extra holidays of the day after the Fourth and
the day after Thanksgiving. Of the free grace and gifts of Christmas he
had no conception. The single and melancholy association he had with it
was the quaking hymn which his grandfather used to sing in a cracked and
quavering voice:</p>
<p>"While shepherds watched their flocks by night,<br/>
All seated on the ground."<br/></p>
<p>The "glory" that "shone around" at the end of it—the doleful voice
always repeating, "and glory shone around "—made John as miserable
as "Hark! from the tombs." It was all one dreary expectation of something
uncomfortable. It was, in short, "religion." You'd got to have it some
time; that John believed. But it lay in his unthinking mind to put off the
"Hark! from the tombs" enjoyment as long as possible. He experienced a
kind of delightful wickedness in indulging his dislike of hymns and of
Sunday.</p>
<p>John was not a model boy, but I cannot exactly define in what his
wickedness consisted. He had no inclination to steal, nor much to lie; and
he despised "meanness" and stinginess, and had a chivalrous feeling toward
little girls. Probably it never occurred to him that there was any virtue
in not stealing and lying, for honesty and veracity were in the atmosphere
about him. He hated work, and he "got mad" easily; but he did work, and he
was always ashamed when he was over his fit of passion. In short, you
couldn't find a much better wicked boy than John.</p>
<p>When the "revival" came, therefore, one summer, John was in a quandary.
Sunday meeting and Sunday-school he did n't mind; they were a part of
regular life, and only temporarily interrupted a boy's pleasures. But when
there began to be evening meetings at the different houses, a new element
came into affairs. There was a kind of solemnity over the community, and a
seriousness in all faces. At first these twilight assemblies offered a
little relief to the monotony of farm life; and John liked to meet the
boys and girls, and to watch the older people coming in, dressed in their
second best. I think John's imagination was worked upon by the sweet and
mournful hymns that were discordantly sung in the stiff old parlors. There
was a suggestion of Sunday, and sanctity too, in the odor of caraway-seed
that pervaded the room. The windows were wide open also, and the scent of
June roses came in, with all the languishing sounds of a summer night. All
the little boys had a scared look, but the little girls were never so
pretty and demure as in this their susceptible seriousness. If John saw a
boy who did not come to the evening meeting, but was wandering off with
his sling down the meadow, looking for frogs, maybe, that boy seemed to
him a monster of wickedness.</p>
<p>After a time, as the meetings continued, John fell also under the general
impression of fright and seriousness. All the talk was of "getting
religion," and he heard over and over again that the probability was if he
did not get it now, he never would. The chance did not come often, and if
this offer was not improved, John would be given over to hardness of
heart. His obstinacy would show that he was not one of the elect. John
fancied that he could feel his heart hardening, and he began to look with
a wistful anxiety into the faces of the Christians to see what were the
visible signs of being one of the elect. John put on a good deal of a
manner that he "did n't care," and he never admitted his disquiet by
asking any questions or standing up in meeting to be prayed for. But he
did care. He heard all the time that all he had to do was to repent and
believe. But there was nothing that he doubted, and he was perfectly
willing to repent if he could think of anything to repent of.</p>
<p>It was essential he learned, that he should have a "conviction of sin."
This he earnestly tried to have. Other people, no better than he, had it,
and he wondered why he could n't have it. Boys and girls whom he knew were
"under conviction," and John began to feel not only panicky, but lonesome.
Cynthia Rudd had been anxious for days and days, and not able to sleep at
night, but now she had given herself up and found peace. There was a kind
of radiance in her face that struck John with awe, and he felt that now
there was a great gulf between him and Cynthia. Everybody was going away
from him, and his heart was getting harder than ever. He could n't feel
wicked, all he could do. And there was Ed Bates his intimate friend,
though older than he, a "whaling," noisy kind of boy, who was under
conviction and sure he was going to be lost. How John envied him! And
pretty soon Ed "experienced religion." John anxiously watched the change
in Ed's face when he became one of the elect. And a change there was. And
John wondered about another thing. Ed Bates used to go trout-fishing, with
a tremendously long pole, in a meadow brook near the river; and when the
trout didn't bite right off, Ed would—get mad, and as soon as one
took hold he would give an awful jerk, sending the fish more than three
hundred feet into the air and landing it in the bushes the other side of
the meadow, crying out, "Gul darn ye, I'll learn ye." And John wondered if
Ed would take the little trout out any more gently now.</p>
<p>John felt more and more lonesome as one after another of his playmates
came out and made a profession. Cynthia (she too was older than John) sat
on Sunday in the singers' seat; her voice, which was going to be a
contralto, had a wonderful pathos in it for him, and he heard it with a
heartache. "There she is," thought John, "singing away like an angel in
heaven, and I am left out." During all his after life a contralto voice
was to John one of his most bitter and heart-wringing pleasures. It
suggested the immaculate scornful, the melancholy unattainable.</p>
<p>If ever a boy honestly tried to work himself into a conviction of sin,
John tried. And what made him miserable was, that he couldn't feel
miserable when everybody else was miserable. He even began to pretend to
be so. He put on a serious and anxious look like the others. He pretended
he did n't care for play; he refrained from chasing chipmunks and snaring
suckers; the songs of birds and the bright vivacity of the summer—time
that used to make him turn hand-springs smote him as a discordant levity.
He was not a hypocrite at all, and he was getting to be alarmed that he
was not alarmed at himself. Every day and night he heard that the spirit
of the Lord would probably soon quit striving with him, and leave him out.
The phrase was that he would "grieve away the Holy Spirit." John wondered
if he was not doing it. He did everything to put himself in the way of
conviction, was constant at the evening meetings, wore a grave face,
refrained from play, and tried to feel anxious. At length he concluded
that he must do something.</p>
<p>One night as he walked home from a solemn meeting, at which several of his
little playmates had "come forward," he felt that he could force the
crisis. He was alone on the sandy road; it was an enchanting summer night;
the stars danced overhead, and by his side the broad and shallow river ran
over its stony bed with a loud but soothing murmur that filled all the air
with entreaty. John did not then know that it sang, "But I go on forever,"
yet there was in it for him something of the solemn flow of the eternal
world. When he came in sight of the house, he knelt down in the dust by a
pile of rails and prayed. He prayed that he might feel bad, and be
distressed about himself. As he prayed he heard distinctly, and yet not as
a disturbance, the multitudinous croaking of the frogs by the meadow
spring. It was not discordant with his thoughts; it had in it a melancholy
pathos, as if it were a kind of call to the unconverted. What is there in
this sound that suggests the tenderness of spring, the despair of a summer
night, the desolateness of young love? Years after it happened to John to
be at twilight at a railway station on the edge of the Ravenna marshes. A
little way over the purple plain he saw the darkening towers and heard
"the sweet bells of Imola." The Holy Pontiff Pius IX. was born at Imola,
and passed his boyhood in that serene and moist region. As the train
waited, John heard from miles of marshes round about the evening song of
millions of frogs, louder and more melancholy and entreating than the
vesper call of the bells. And instantly his mind went back for the
association of sound is as subtle as that of odor—to the prayer,
years ago, by the roadside and the plaintive appeal of the unheeded frogs,
and he wondered if the little Pope had not heard the like importunity, and
perhaps, when he thought of himself as a little Pope, associated his
conversion with this plaintive sound.</p>
<p>John prayed, but without feeling any worse, and then went desperately into
the house, and told the family that he was in an anxious state of mind.
This was joyful news to the sweet and pious household, and the little boy
was urged to feel that he was a sinner, to repent, and to become that
night a Christian; he was prayed over, and told to read the Bible, and put
to bed with the injunction to repeat all the texts of Scripture and hymns
he could think of. John did this, and said over and over the few texts he
was master of, and tossed about in a real discontent now, for he had a dim
notion that he was playing the hypocrite a little. But he was sincere
enough in wanting to feel, as the other boys and girls felt, that he was a
wicked sinner. He tried to think of his evil deeds; and one occurred to
him; indeed, it often came to his mind. It was a lie; a deliberate, awful
lie, that never injured anybody but himself John knew he was not wicked
enough to tell a lie to injure anybody else.</p>
<p>This was the lie. One afternoon at school, just before John's class was to
recite in geography, his pretty cousin, a young lady he held in great love
and respect, came in to visit the school. John was a favorite with her,
and she had come to hear him recite. As it happened, John felt shaky in
the geographical lesson of that day, and he feared to be humiliated in the
presence of his cousin; he felt embarrassed to that degree that he could
n't have "bounded" Massachusetts. So he stood up and raised his hand, and
said to the schoolma'am, "Please, ma'am, I 've got the stomach-ache; may I
go home?" And John's character for truthfulness was so high (and even this
was ever a reproach to him), that his word was instantly believed, and he
was dismissed without any medical examination. For a moment John was
delighted to get out of school so early; but soon his guilt took all the
light out of the summer sky and the pleasantness out of nature. He had to
walk slowly, without a single hop or jump, as became a diseased boy. The
sight of a woodchuck at a distance from his well-known hole tempted John,
but he restrained himself, lest somebody should see him, and know that
chasing a woodchuck was inconsistent with the stomach-ache. He was acting
a miserable part, but it had to be gone through with. He went home and
told his mother the reason he had left school, but he added that he felt
"some" better now. The "some" did n't save him. Genuine sympathy was
lavished on him. He had to swallow a stiff dose of nasty "picra,"—the
horror of all childhood, and he was put in bed immediately. The world
never looked so pleasant to John, but to bed he was forced to go. He was
excused from all chores; he was not even to go after the cows. John said
he thought he ought to go after the cows,—much as he hated the
business usually, he would now willingly have wandered over the world
after cows,—and for this heroic offer, in the condition he was, he
got credit for a desire to do his duty; and this unjust confidence in him
added to his torture. And he had intended to set his hooks that night for
eels. His cousin came home, and sat by his bedside and condoled with him;
his schoolma'am had sent word how sorry she was for him, John was Such a
good boy. All this was dreadful.</p>
<p>He groaned in agony. Besides, he was not to have any supper; it would be
very dangerous to eat a morsel. The prospect was appalling. Never was
there such a long twilight; never before did he hear so many sounds
outdoors that he wanted to investigate. Being ill without any illness was
a horrible condition. And he began to have real stomach-ache now; and it
ached because it was empty. John was hungry enough to have eaten the New
England Primer. But by and by sleep came, and John forgot his woes in
dreaming that he knew where Madagascar was just as easy as anything.</p>
<p>It was this lie that came back to John the night he was trying to be
affected by the revival. And he was very much ashamed of it, and believed
he would never tell another. But then he fell thinking whether, with the
"picra," and the going to bed in the afternoon, and the loss of his
supper, he had not been sufficiently paid for it. And in this unhopeful
frame of mind he dropped off in sleep.</p>
<p>And the truth must be told, that in the morning John was no nearer to
realizing the terrors he desired to feel. But he was a conscientious boy,
and would do nothing to interfere with the influences of the season. He
not only put himself away from them all, but he refrained from doing
almost everything that he wanted to do. There came at that time a
newspaper, a secular newspaper, which had in it a long account of the Long
Island races, in which the famous horse "Lexington" was a runner. John was
fond of horses, he knew about Lexington, and he had looked forward to the
result of this race with keen interest. But to read the account of it how
he felt might destroy his seriousness of mind, and in all reverence and
simplicity he felt it—be a means of "grieving away the Holy Spirit."
He therefore hid away the paper in a table-drawer, intending to read it
when the revival should be over. Weeks after, when he looked for the
newspaper, it was not to be found, and John never knew what "time"
Lexington made nor anything about the race. This was to him a serious
loss, but by no means so deep as another feeling that remained with him;
for when his little world returned to its ordinary course, and long after,
John had an uneasy apprehension of his own separateness from other people,
in his insensibility to the revival. Perhaps the experience was a damage
to him; and it is a pity that there was no one to explain that religion
for a little fellow like him is not a "scheme."</p>
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