<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<h3>THE STRUGGLE IN THE DARK</h3>
<p>It was a long, lonesome, fearful night that the school-master
passed, lying with nerves on edge and eyes wide open in that
comfortless bed in the "furdest corner" of the loft of Pete Jones's
house, shivering with cold, while the light snow that was falling
sifted in upon the ragged patch-work quilt that covered him. Nerves
broken by sleeplessness imagine many things, and for the first hour
Ralph felt sure that Pete would cut his throat before morning.</p>
<p>And you, friend Callow, who have blunted your palate by
swallowing the Cayenne pepper of the penny-dreadfuls, you wish me
to make this night exciting by a hand-to-hand contest between Ralph
and a robber. You would like it better if there were a trap-door.
There's nothing so convenient as a trap-door, unless it be a
subterranean passage. And you'd like something of that sort just
here. It's so pleasant to have one's hair stand on end, you know,
when one is safe from danger to one's self. But if you want each
individual hair to bristle with such a "Struggle in the Dark," you
can buy trap-doors and subterranean passages dirt cheap at the next
news-stand. But it was, indeed, a real and terrible "Struggle in
the Dark" that Ralph fought out at Pete Jones's.</p>
<p>When he had vanquished his fears of personal violence by
reminding himself that it would be folly for Jones to commit murder
in his own house, the question of Bud and Hannah took the uppermost
place in his thoughts. And as the image of Hannah spelling against
the master came up to him, as the memory of the walk, the talk, the
box-elder tree, and all the rest took possession of him, it seemed
to Ralph that his very life depended upon his securing her love. He
would shut his teeth like the jaws of a bulldog, and all Bud's
muscles should not prevail over his resolution and his
stratagems.</p>
<p>It was easy to persuade himself that this was right. Hannah
ought not to throw herself away on Bud Means. Men of some culture
always play their conceit off against their consciences. To a man
of literary habits it usually seems to be a great boon that he
confers on a woman when he gives her his love. Reasoning thus,
Ralph had fixed his resolution, and if the night had been shorter,
or sleep possible, the color of his life might have been
changed.</p>
<p>But some time along in the tedious hours came the memory of his
childhood, the words of his mother, the old Bible stories, the
aspiration after nobility of spirit, the solemn resolutions to be
true to his conscience. These angels of the memory came flocking
back before the animal, the bull-doggedness, had "set," as workers
in plaster say. He remembered the story of David and Nathan, and it
seemed to him that he, with all his abilities and ambitions and
prospects, was about to rob Bud of the one ewe-lamb, the only thing
he had to rejoice in in his life. In getting Hannah, he would make
himself unworthy of Hannah. And then there came to him a vision of
the supreme value of a true character; how it was better than
success, better than to be loved, better than heaven. And how near
he had been to missing it! And how certain he was, when these
thoughts should fade, to miss it! He was as one fighting for a
great prize who feels his strength failing and is sure of
defeat.</p>
<p>This was the real, awful "Struggle in the Dark." A human soul
fighting with heaven in sight, but certain of slipping inevitably
into hell! It was the same old battle. The Image of God fought with
the Image of the Devil. It was the same fight that Paul described
so dramatically when he represented the Spirit as contending with
the Flesh. Paul also called this dreadful something the Old Adam,
and I suppose Darwin would call it the remains of the Wild Beast.
But call it what you will, it is the battle that every well-endowed
soul must fight at some point. And to Ralph it seemed that the
final victory of the Evil, the Old Adam, the Flesh, the Wild Beast,
the Devil, was certain. For, was not the pure, unconscious face of
Hannah on the Devil's side? And so the battle had just as well be
given up at once, for it must be lost in the end.</p>
<p>But to Ralph, lying there in the still darkness, with his
conscience as wide awake as if it were the Day of Doom, there
seemed something so terrible in this overflow of the better nature
which he knew to be inevitable as soon as the voice of conscience
became blunted, that he looked about for help. He did not at first
think of God; but there came into his thoughts the memory of a
travel-worn Galilean peasant, hungry, sleepy, weary, tempted,
tried, like other men, but having a strange, divine Victory in him
by which everything evil was vanquished at his coming. He
remembered how He had reached out a Hand to every helpless one, how
He was the Helper of every weak one. And out of the depths of his
soul he cried to the Helper, and found comfort. Not victory, but,
what is better, strength. And so, without a thought of the niceties
of theological distinctions, without dreaming that it was the
beginning of a religious experience, he found what he needed, help.
And the Helper gave His beloved sleep.</p>
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