<h2><SPAN name="chapter_xvii" id="chapter_xvii">XVII</SPAN></h2>
<h3>JANET DEMPSTER'S TEXT</h3>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>Sitting here in my pleasaunce on the lawn, surrounded
by a riot of hollyhocks, foxgloves, roses,
geraniums, and other English flowers that she described
so vividly, and loved so well, I find myself
celebrating in my own way the hundredth anniversary
of the birth of George Eliot. Lying open beside
me on the garden-seat is a very well-worn copy
of <i>Janet's Repentance</i>. It has been read many times,
and must be read again to-day. For even those who
cannot go as far as Dr. Marcus Dods in pronouncing
it 'one of the greatest religious books ever written'
will at least agree that in religious feeling,
spiritual insight and evangelical intensity, it is
among the most noble and most notable of our
English classics. The pity of it is that, long before
the book was written, its brilliant authoress had
drifted away from that simple and majestic faith
which she so tenderly portrays. Indeed, I have
sometimes fancied that she wrote of Janet with a
great wistfulness in her heart. She seems to have
felt that if, in the straits of her soul, she had found
her storm-tossed spirit in communion with personalities
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span>
like those by whom Janet was surrounded in
the day of her distress, her spiritual pilgrimage
might have been a sunnier one. But she drifted.
No other word will describe the process. Some
powerful but sensitive minds, like that of Goethe--with
whose works she was so familiar--have been
driven or torn from their anchorage by some sudden
and desolating calamity; but with George Eliot it
was quite otherwise. She was a gentle English girl,
born on a farm, and passionately attached to the
quiet beauty of the countryside. She delighted in
the village green, the rectory garden, the fields waving
with golden buttercups, and the shady woods in
which the primroses twinkled. She loved to watch
the poppies tossing in the corn, the wind sweeping
over the red sea of clover, and the hyacinths nodding
on the banks of the silvery stream. The smell
of the hay and the song of the birds and the life
of the fields were her ceaseless satisfaction and refreshment.
Perhaps, as she wandered about those
winding lanes and lonely bridle-paths, she became
too contemplative, too introspective, too much addicted
to the analysis of frames and feelings. Perhaps,
dwelling so exclusively on the abstract and the
ideal, her fresh young spirit became unfitted for its
rude impact with the actual and the real. Perhaps,
too, she was unfortunate in respect of the particular
specimens of the evangelical faith that came
under her notice. Perhaps! At any rate, she came
at length into daily contact with men and women,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</SPAN></span>
and her girlish faith reeled under the shock. It is
one of the most grievous tragedies of the spiritual
realm that conscience often finds the sunny climate
of an ardent evangelism singularly enervating. The
<i>emotional</i> side of one's nature luxuriates in an atmosphere
in which the <i>ethical</i> side becomes languid
and relaxed. A man must be very careful, as Mr.
Gladstone once incisively observed, to prevent his
religion from damaging his morality. The simpleminded
people with whom this sharp-witted and
fresh-spirited young Englishwoman met had not
fortified themselves against that insidious peril.
One woman told a lie and the offense was sheeted
home to her. '<i>Ah, well</i>,' she replied, in a nonchalant
and easy way, '<i>I do not feel that I have
grieved the Spirit much!</i>' George Eliot was horrified.
She saw, to her disgust, that strong religious
feeling could consist with flagrant dishonor. Her
finely poised and sensitive soul experienced a revolt
and a rebound. She changed none of her opinions,
yet she changed the entire attitude of her mind;
and, with the passage of time, the new attitude produced
new ideas. She had not quarreled with the
faith of her childhood; she simply lost her love for
it. Her anchor relinquished its hold, and, almost imperceptibly,
she drifted. 'She glided out of the faith,'
as Principal Fairbairn so expressively puts it, 'as
easily and as softly as if she had been a ship obeying
wind and tide, and her faith a sea that opened silently
before and closed noiselessly behind her.'</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Wherefore let all those who name the name of
Christ depart from iniquity! For if, through any
glaring inconsistency between my faith and my behavior,
I offend one of these little ones that believe
in Him, it were better, so the Master Himself declared,
that a millstone were hanged about my neck
and that I were cast into the depths of the sea.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>Now, in the story that lies open on the garden-seat
beside me, all the characters are very religious
people. Yet they are divided sharply into two
classes. There are the very religious people who
are all the worse for their religion, and there are
the very religious people who are all the better for
it. Mr. Dempster is a very religious man. In the
opening sentence of the story, the first sentence in
the book, he acknowledges his indebtedness to his
Creator. He is a very religious man--and a
drunkard! Mr. Budd is also a very religious man.
Indeed, he is warden at the Parish Church. 'He is
a small, sleek-headed bachelor of five and forty,
whose scandalous life has long furnished his more
moral neighbors with an afterdinner joke.' But
a very religious man is Mr. Budd! Mrs. Linnett
is a very religious woman. She dotes on religious
biography. 'On taking up the biography of a celebrated
preacher, she immediately turns to the end
to see what he died of,' and she likes the book all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</SPAN></span>
the better if a sinister element enters into its composition.
Mrs. Linnett is a very religious woman--and
a gossip! We are introduced to a whole
group of such characters--men and women who are
very religious, but who are none the better for their
religion.</p>
<p>And, side by side with these unamiable figures,
are a set of people, equally religious, whose characters
are immeasurably sweetened and strengthened
by their religion. It is not that they profess another
faith, attend another church, or spend lives
remote from the affairs with which the others have
to do. As George Eliot herself pointed out, when
the publisher hesitated to commit himself to this
manuscript, it was not a case of one religion against
another, or of one creed against another, or of one
church against another, or even of one minister
against another. The members of this second
group move in the same environment as do the
members of the first; Sunday by Sunday they make
their way to the self-same sanctuaries; yet every
day they grow in gentleness, in thoughtfulness, in
kindness, and in all those graces of behavior that
constitute the charm of lovable and helpful lives.
In this attractive group we find Mr. Jerome, Mr.
Tryan, and little Mrs. Pettifer.</p>
<p>It is, of course, an old story, vividly and startlingly
retold. The same cause will produce diametrically
opposite effects. The sun that softens
the wax hardens the clay. The benefit that I derive
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
from my religion, and the enjoyment that it affords
me, must depend upon the response that I
make to it. The rays of light that fade my coat
add a warmer blush to the petals of the rose. Why?
My coat does not want the light and makes no response
to it; the rose cannot bloom without the light
and drinks in the soft rays as the source of all its
beauty. Under the influence of the sunshine, the
violets in the vase droop and become noisome; the
living lilies under my window unfold and assume
an even statelier grace. It is all a matter of response.
Religion was always beating upon the lives
of Mr. Dempster and Mr. Budd and Mrs. Linnett,
as the sunlight beats upon the coat and the cut-flowers.
They did not open their hearts to it; they
made no eager response to it; it was a thing that
shone upon the surface, and that was all. Their
lives consequently wilted and shriveled and grew
less beautiful. They were like violets made vile by
the very light that was designed to make them lovely.
Mr. Tryan, Mr. Jerome and Mrs. Pettifer, on the
other hand, opened their hearts to the love of God
as the rose opens its petals to the light of the sun.
Their religion was a revelry to them. So far from
its merely beating upon the surface, as the sunlight
beats upon the surface of the coat, it saturated the
very depths of their being. They were like the lilies
under my window; the rays that withered the violets
in the vase only make <i>them</i> more graceful and more
fair.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>Here, then, are the two groups; and the central
scene of the story is the transfer of the principal
character from the one group to the other. Janet
Dempster, the wife of Robert Dempster, is, like
her husband, very religious, but, like him, she is
none the better for her religion. But matters at
home hurry to a climax. Dempster drinks more
and more, and, drinking, goes from bad to worse.
He treats his wife, first with coldness, and then
with cruelty. At length comes the dreadful and
dramatic scene that readers of the story will never
erase from their memories. In a fit of drunken
savagery he burst into her room at midnight. He
drags her from her bed; pushes her down the stairs
and along the hall; and then, opening the front
door, he hurls her by sheer brute force out into the
street. Here is George Eliot's picture: '<i>The stony
street; the bitter north-east wind and darkness; and
in the midst of them a tender woman thrust out
from her husband's home in her thin nightdress, the
harsh wind cutting her naked feet and driving her
long hair away from her half-clad bosom, where the
poor heart is crushed with anguish and despair.</i>'
It is in these desperate straits that religion presents
itself to her view in an entirely fresh guise.</p>
<p>In her extremity, poor Janet thinks of little Mrs.
Pettifer--a member of that other group, the group
that resembles the lilies under my window, the group
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span>
of kindly souls whose lives have been irradiated and
beautified by their faith. She taps at the cottage
window; Mrs. Pettifer hastens to the door; and, as
soon as that frightened little body can recover from
the first shock of her astonishment, she draws Janet
into the room and then into the warm bed. Having
composed and soothed her, she slips out of bed
again, lights the fire and makes a cup of tea. In
<i>this</i> guise, religion presents itself to Janet!</p>
<p>But she needs more! A roof to shelter her, a
fire to warm her and a friend to caress and mother
her--these are very welcome; but her heart is crying
out with a yet deeper hunger. She feels that
she, a poor weak woman, is standing against a world
that is too hard and too strong and too terrible for
her. What can she do? Where can she go? Little
Mrs. Pettifer urges her to open her heart to Mr.
Tryan, the minister; and to Mr. Tryan she accordingly
goes. And in Mr. Tryan she finds ready helpfulness,
warm sympathy, and a perfect understanding
of her inmost need. Her life, she feels, is but
a tangled skein. To convince her that he is no
stranger to such conditions, Mr. Tryan tells her of
his own struggles and distresses. He has not stood
aloof from the battle, looking on; he has been in the
thick of the fight--<i>and has been wounded</i>. She
feels for him, and, in feeling for him, becomes conscious
that the healing of her own hurt has already
begun. In <i>this</i> guise, religion presents itself to
Janet Dempster!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In the person of Mrs. Pettifer and in the person
of Mr. Tryan, religion became incarnate under the
eyes of poor Janet. In the person of Mrs. Pettifer
and in the person of Mr. Tryan, '<i>the word became
flesh</i>.'</p>
<p>But Janet still needs more! Mrs. Pettifer shelters
and soothes her <i>body</i>; Mr. Tryan comforts and
strengthens her <i>mind</i>; but her <i>soul</i>, her very <i>self</i>,
what is she to do with <i>that</i>? She feels that she
cannot trust <i>herself</i> with <i>herself</i>. Is there no still
greater incarnation of the faith?</p>
<p>Mrs. Pettifer is the <i>Incarnation Motherly</i>.</p>
<p>Mr. Tryan is the <i>Incarnation Ministerial</i>.</p>
<p>But, in her heart of hearts, there is still a deep
and bitter cry. Mrs. Pettifer can comfort; she
cannot keep through all the days to come! Mr.
Tryan can counsel; he cannot guard from future
sins and sorrows! To whom can she commit herself?
It is from Mr. Tryan's lips that the answer
comes. The words fall upon her broken spirit, as
she herself tells us, like rain upon the mown grass:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>
'<i>COME UNTO ME, ALL YE THAT LABOR
AND ARE HEAVY-LADEN, AND I WILL
GIVE YOU REST!</i>'</p>
</div>
<p>And once more the solution is an incarnation!
When Janet's storm-beaten <i>body</i> needed fire and
food and shelter, religion became incarnate in the
person of Mrs. Pettifer. When Janet's distracted
<i>mind</i> needed counsel and guidance, religion became
incarnate in the person of Mr. Tryan. But when
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</SPAN></span>
Janet's sin-laden <i>soul</i> cried out for a Saviour Who
could deliver her from the stains of the past, and
keep her amidst the perils of the future, religion
became incarnate in the Person of the Son of God!</p>
<p><i>The Incarnation Motherly!</i></p>
<p><i>The Incarnation Ministerial!</i></p>
<p><i>The Incarnation Mediatorial!</i></p>
<p>'<i>Come unto Me!</i>' the Saviour said. And Janet
came! She was a changed woman! '<i>A delicious
hope</i>,' George Eliot tells us, '<i>the hope of purification
and inward peace, had entered into Janet's soul, and
made it spring-time there as well as in the outer
world!</i>' '<i>She felt</i>,' we are told again, '<i>like a little
child whose hand is firmly grasped by its father, as
its frail limbs make their way over the rough
ground: if it should stumble, the father will not let
it go.</i>' She had opened her heart to the living Lord
as the living flowers open their petals to the glad
sunlight; and He had become the strength of her
life and her portion for ever. Temptation came,
fierce and sudden and terrible; but He was always
there and always able to deliver.</p>
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>In the correspondence with her publisher as to
whether or not the manuscript should be printed,
George Eliot assures him that the characters are
drawn from life. And, in the closing paragraph
of the story, she tells us that Janet--an old woman
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</SPAN></span>
whose once-black hair is now quite gray--is living
still. But Mr. Tryan, she says, is dead; and she
describes the simple gravestone in Milby churchyard.
'<i>But</i>,' she adds, '<i>there is another memorial of Edgar
Tryan, which bears a fuller record; it is Janet
Dempster, rescued from self-despair, strengthened
with Divine hopes, and now looking back on years
of purity and helpful labor. The man who has left
such a memorial behind him must have been one
whose heart beat with true compassion and whose
lips were moved by fervent faith.</i>' It is the last
sentence in the book; and every minister, as he
closes the covers and lays it aside, will covet for
himself some such incarnate monument. Only as a
preacher's preaching is '<i>made flesh</i>' in that way,
will it be understood and appreciated by the generations
following.</p>
<p style="page-break-before: always">
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />