<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE SUNRISE SERVICE ON "LOOKOUT."</div>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/drop_b.png" width-obs="87" height-obs="100" alt="B" /></div>
<div class='unindent'><br/><br/>Y some misunderstanding, Bethany
and her cousins had been assigned
to different homes.</div>
<p>"It is too late to make any
change to-night," said Mrs. Marion, as they left
her. "We are only one block further up on
this same street. We will try to make some arrangement
to-morrow to have you with us."</p>
<p>Bethany followed her hostess into the wide
reception-hall. One of the most elegant homes
of the South had opened its hospitable doors to
receive them. Ten delegates had preceded her,
all as tired and travel-stained as herself.</p>
<p>During the introductions, Bethany mentally
classified them as the most uninteresting lot of
people she had seen in a long time.</p>
<p>"I believe you are the odd one of this party,
Miss Hallam," said the hostess, glancing over
the assignment cards she held; "so I shall have
to ask you to take a very small room. It is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
one improvised for the occasion; but you will
probably be more comfortable here alone than
in a larger room with several others."</p>
<p>It had never occurred to Bethany that she
might have been asked to share an apartment
with some stranger, and she hastened to assure
her hostess of her appreciation of the little
room, which, though very small indeed compared
with the great dimensions of the others,
was quite comfortable and attractive.</p>
<p>"I have always been accustomed to being by
myself," she said, "and it makes no difference
at all if it is so far away from the other sleeping-rooms.
I am not at all timid."</p>
<p>Yet, when she had wearily locked her door,
she realized that she had never been so entirely
alone before in all her life. Home seemed so
very far away. Her surroundings were so
strange. Her extreme weariness intensified her
morbid feeling of loneliness. She remembered
such a sensation coming to her one night in
mid-ocean, but she had tapped on her state-room
wall, and her father had come to her immediately.
Now she might call a weary lifetime.
No earthly voice could ever reach him.</p>
<p>With a throbbing ache in her throat, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
hot tears springing to her eyes, she opened her
valise and took out a little photograph case of
Russia leather. Four pictured faces looked out
at her. She was kneeling before them, with
her arms resting on the low dressing-table. As
she gazed at them intently, a tear splashed
down on her black dress.</p>
<p>"O, it isn't right! It isn't right," she
sobbed, passionately, "for God to take everything!
It would have been so easy for him to
let me keep them. How could he be so cruel?
How could he take away all that made my life
worth living, and then let little Jack suffer so?"</p>
<p>She laid her head on her arms in a paroxysm
of sobbing. Presently she looked up again at
her mother's picture. It was a beautiful face,
very like her own. It brought back all her
happy childhood, that seemed almost glorified
now by the remembered halo of its devoted
mother-love.</p>
<p>The years had softened that grief, but it
all came back to-night with its old-time bitterness.</p>
<p>The next face was little Jack's—a sturdy,
wide-awake boy, with mischievous dimples and
laughing eyes. But the recollection of all he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
had suffered since his accident, made her feel
that she had lost him also, in a way. The
physician had assured her that he would be the
same vigorous, romping child again; but she
found that hard to believe when she thought
of his present helpless condition.</p>
<p>She pressed the next picture to her lips
with trembling fingers, and then looked lovingly
into the eyes that seemed to answer her
gaze with one of steadfast, manly devotion.</p>
<p>"O, it isn't right! It isn't right!" she
sobbed again. How it all came back to her—the
happy June-time of her engagement!—the
summer days when she dreamed of him, the
summer twilights when he came. Every detail
was burned into her aching memory, from the
first bunch of violets he brought her, to the
judge's tender smile when she spread out all
her bridal array for him to see. Such shimmering
lengths of the white, trailing satin; such
filmy clouds of the soft, white veil, destined
never to touch her fair hair! For there was the
telegram, and afterward the darkened room,
and the darker hour, when she groped her way
to a motionless form, and knelt beside it alone.
O, how she had clung to the cold hands, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
kissed the unresponsive lips, and turned away in
an agony of despair! But as she turned, her
father's strong arms were folded about her, and
his broken voice whispered comfort.</p>
<p>The dear father! It had been doubly desolate
since he had gone, too.</p>
<p>Kneeling there, with her head bowed on her
arms, she seemed to face a future that was utterly
hopeless. Except that Jack needed her,
she felt that there was absolutely no reason
why she should go on living.</p>
<p>The ticking of her watch reminded her that
it was nearly midnight. In a mechanical way,
she got up and began to arrange her hair for
the night.</p>
<p>After she had extinguished the light, she
pulled aside the curtain, and looked out on the
unfamiliar streets.</p>
<p>The moon had come up. In the dim light
the crest of old Lookout towered grimly above
the horizon. A verse of one of the Psalms
passed through her mind: "I will lift up mine
eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help."</p>
<p>"No," she whispered, bitterly, "there is no
help. God doesn't care. He is too far away."</p>
<p>As she went back to the bed, the words of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>
the novice in Muloch's "Benedetta Minelli"
came to her:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"O weary world, O heavy life, farewell!<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Like a tired child that creeps into the dark</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To sob itself asleep where none will mark,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">So creep I to my silent convent cell."</span><br/></div>
<p>"I wish I could do that," she thought; "lock
myself away with my memories, and not be
obliged to keep up this empty pretense of living,
just as if nothing were changed. It might not
be so hard. How I dread to-morrow, with its
crowds of strange faces! O, why did I ever
come?"</p>
<p>Next morning, the guests gathered out on
the vine-covered piazza to discuss their plans for
the day.</p>
<p>There were two theological students from
Boston, a young doctor from Texas, and the
son of a wealthy Louisiana planter. A Kansas
farmer's wife and her sister, a bright little
schoolteacher from an Iowa village, and three
pretty Georgia girls, completed the party.</p>
<p>Bethany sat a little apart from them, wondering
how they could be so greatly interested
in such things as the most direct car-line to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
Missionary Ridge, or the time it would take to
"do" the old battle-grounds.</p>
<p>The youngest Georgia girl was about her
own age. She had made several attempts to
include Bethany in the conversation, but mistaking
her reserve and indifference for haughtiness,
turned to the Louisiana boy with a remark
about unsociable Northerners.</p>
<p>Their frequent laughter reached Bethany,
and she wondered, in a dull way, how anybody
could be light-hearted enough even to smile in
such a world full of heart-aches. Then she remembered
that she had laughed herself, the day
before, when Mr. Cragmore was with them. It
rather puzzled her now to know how she could
have done so. Her wakeful night had left her
unusually depressed.</p>
<p>An open, two-seated carriage stopped at
the gate. Mrs. Marion and George Cragmore
were on the back seat. Mr. Marion and Dr.
Bascom sat with the driver. Bethany had been
waiting for them some time with her hat on,
so she went quickly out to meet them. Mr.
Cragmore leaped over the wheel to open the
gate, and assist her to a seat between himself
and Mrs. Marion.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They drove rapidly out towards Missionary
Ridge. To Bethany's great relief, neither of
her companions seemed in a talkative mood.
Mr. Marion, who was an ardent <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Southener'">Southerner</ins>, had
been deep in a political discussion with Dr. Bascom.
As they stopped on the winding road,
half way up the ridge, to look down into the
beautiful valley below, and across to the purple
summit of Lookout, Mr. Marion drew a long
breath. Then he took off his hat, saying, reverently,
"The work of His fingers! What is
man, that Thou art mindful of him?" Then,
after a long silence: "How insignificant our
little differences seem, Bascom, in the sight of
these everlasting hills! Let's change the subject."</p>
<p>Mrs. Marion, absorbed in the beauty on
every side, did not notice Bethany's continued
silence or Cragmore's spasmodic remarks. The
fresh air and brisk motion had somewhat
aroused Bethany from her apathy. First, she
began to be interested in the constantly-changing
view, and then she noticed its effect on
the erratic man beside her.</p>
<p>From the time they commenced to ascend
the ridge he had not spoken to any one directly,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
but everything he saw seemed to suggest a quotation.
He repeated them unconsciously, as if
he were all alone; some of them dreamily, some
of them with startling force, and all with the
slight brogue he spoke so musically.</p>
<p>"Every common bush afire with God," he
murmured in an undertone, looking at a dusty
wayside weed, with his soul in his eyes.</p>
<p>Bethany thought to herself, afterwards, that
if any other man of her acquaintance had kept
up such a steady string of disjointed quotations,
it would have been ridiculous. She never heard
him do it again after that day. It seemed as if
the old battle-fields suggested thoughts that
could find no adequate expression save in words
that immortal pens had made deathless.</p>
<p>The warm odor of ripe peaches floated out
to them from grassy orchards, where the trees
were bent over with their wealth of velvety, sun-reddened
fruit. Seemingly, Cragmore had
taken no notice of Bethany's depression when
she joined them, or of the soothing effect nature
was having on her sore heart. But she
knew that he had seen it, when he turned to
her abruptly with a quotation that fitted her as
well as his first one had the wayside weed. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
half sang it, with a tender, wistful smile, as he
watched her face.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"O the green things growing, the green things growing—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The faint, sweet smell of the green things growing!</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I should like to live, whether I smile or grieve,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Just to watch the happy life of my green things growing,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">For by many a tender touch, they comfort me so much,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">With the soft, mute comfort of green things growing."</span><br/></div>
<p>Bethany wondered if her cousin Frank had
told him of all she had suffered, or if he had
guessed it intuitively. Somehow she felt that
he had not been told, but that he had divined it.
Yet when they stopped on the Chickamauga
battle-field, and she saw him go leaping across
the rough fields like an overgrown boy, she
thought of her cousin Ray's remark, "They used
to call him the wild Irishman," and wondered
at the contradictory phases his character presented.
She saw him pause and lay his hand
reverently on the largest cannon, and then come
running back across the furrows with long, awkward
jumps.</p>
<p>"What on earth did you do that for, Cragmore?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
asked Mr. Marion, in his teasing way.
"The idea of keeping us waiting while you were
racing across a ten-acre lot to pat an old gun."</p>
<p>"Old gun, is it?" was the laughing answer,
yet there was a flash in his eyes that belied
the laugh. "Odds, man! it is one of the greatest
orators that ever roused a continent. I just
wanted to lay my hands on its dumb lips." He
waved his arm with an exulting gesture. "Aye,
but they spoke in thunder-tones once, the day
they spoke freedom to a race."</p>
<p>He did not take his seat in the carriage for
a while, but followed at a little distance, ranging
the woods on both sides; sometimes plunging
into a leafy hollow to examine the bark
of an old tree where the shells had plowed deep
scars; sometimes dropping on his knees to brush
away the leaves from a tiny wild-flower, that any
one but a true woodsman would have passed
with unseeing eyes. Once he brought a rare
specimen up to the carriage to ask its name.
He had never seen one like it before. That
was the only one he gathered.</p>
<p>"It's a pity to tear them up, when they
would wither in just a few hours," he said; "the
solitary places are so glad for them."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"He's a queer combination," said Dr. Bascom,
as he watched him break a little sprig of
cedar from the stump of a battle-broken tree
to put in his card-case. "Sometimes he is the
veriest clown; at others, a child could not be
more artless; and I have seen him a few times
when he seemed to be aroused into a spiritual
giant. He fairly touched the stars."</p>
<p>Bethany was so tired by the morning's drive
that she did not go to the opening services in
the big tent that afternoon.</p>
<p>"Well, you missed it!" said Mr. Marion,
when he came in after supper, "and so did
David Herschel."</p>
<p>"Missed what?" inquired Bethany.</p>
<p>"The mayor's address of welcome, this afternoon.
You know he is a Jew. Such a broad,
fraternal speech must have been a revelation
to a great many of his audience. I tell you,
it was fine! You're going to-night, aren't you,
Bethany?"</p>
<p>"No," she answered, "I want to save myself
for the sunrise prayer-meeting on the mountain
to-morrow. I saw the sun come up over the
Rigi once. It is a sight worth staying up all
night to see."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was about two o'clock in the morning
when they started up the mountain by rail. The
cars were crowded. People hung on the straps,
swaying back and forth in the aisles, as the train
lurched around sudden curves. <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Nothwithstanding'">Notwithstanding</ins>
the early hour, and the discomfort of
their position, they sang all the way up the
mountain.</p>
<p>"Cousin Ray," said Bethany, "do tell me
how these people can sing so constantly. The
last thing I heard last night before I went to
sleep was the electric street-car going past the
house, with a regular hallelujah chorus on board.
Do you suppose they really feel all they sing?
How can they keep worked up to such a pitch
all the time?"</p>
<p>"You should have been at the tent last night,
dear," answered Mrs. Marion. "Then you
would have gotten into the secret of it. There
is an inspiration in great numbers. The audiences
we are having there are said to be the
greatest ever gathered south of the Ohio. Our
League at home has been doing very faithful
work, but I couldn't help wishing last night
that every member could have been present.
To see ten thousand faces lit up with the same<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
interest and the same hope, to hear the battle-cry,
'All for Christ,' and the Amen that rolled
out in response like a volley of ten thousand
musketry, would have made them feel like a
little, straggling company of soldiers suddenly
awakened to the fact that they were not fighting
single-handed, but that all that great army
were re-enforcing them. More than that, these
were only the advance-guard, for over a million
young people are enlisted in the same cause.
Think of that, Bethany—a million leagued together
just in Methodism! Then, when you
count with them all the Christian Endeavor
forces, and the Baptist Unions, and the King's
Daughters and Sons, and the Young Men's Christian
Associations, and the Brotherhood of St.
Andrew, it looks like the combined power ought
to revolutionize the universe in the next decade."</p>
<p>"Then you think it is an inspiration of the
crowds that makes them sing all the time," said
Bethany.</p>
<p>"By no means!" answered Mrs. Marion.
"To be sure, it has something to do with it; but
to most of this vast number of young people,
their religion is not a sentiment to be fanned
into spasmodic flame by some excitement. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
is a vital force, that underlies every thought
and every act. They will sing at home over their
work, and all by themselves, just as heartily as
they do here. I remember seeing in Westminster
Abbey, one time, the profiles of John and Charles
Wesley put side by side on the same medallion.
I have thought, since then, it is only a half-hearted
sort of Methodism that does not put
the spirit of both brothers into its daily life—that
does not wing its sermons with its songs."</p>
<p>Hundreds of people had already gathered
on the brow of the mountain, waiting the appointed
hour. Mr. Marion led the way to a
place where nature had formed a great amphitheater
of the rocks. They seated themselves
on a long, narrow ledge, overlooking the valley.
They were above the clouds. Such billows of
mist rolled up and hid the sleeping earth below
that they seemed to be looking out on a boundless
ocean. The world and its petty turmoils
were blotted out. There was only this one gray
peak raising its solitary head in infinite space.
It was still and solemn in the early light. They
spoke together almost in whispers.</p>
<p>"I can not believe that any man ever went
up into a mountain to pray without feeling himself<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
drawn to a higher spiritual altitude," said
Dr. Bascom.</p>
<p>Frank Marion looked around on the assembled
crowds, and then said slowly:</p>
<p>"Once a little band of five hundred met the
risen Lord on a mountain-side in Galilee, and
were sent away with the promise, 'Lo, I am with
you alway!' Think what they accomplished,
and then think of the thousands here this morning
that may go back to the work of the valley
with the same promise and the same power!
There ought to be a wonderful work accomplished
for the Master this year."</p>
<p>Cragmore, who had walked away a little
distance from the rest, and was watching the
eastern sky, turned to them with his face alight.</p>
<p>"See!" he cried, with the eagerness of a
child, and yet with the appreciation of a poet
shining in his eyes; "the wings of the morning
rising out of the uttermost parts of the sea."</p>
<p>He pointed to the long bars of light spreading
like great flaming pinions above the horizon.
The dawn had come, bringing a new heaven
and a new earth. In the solemn hush of the
sunrise, a voice began to sing, "Nearer, my God,
to thee."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was as in the days of the old temple.
They had left the outer courts and passed up
into an inner sanctuary, where a rolling curtain
of cloud seemed to shut them in, till in
that high Holy of Holies they stood face to
face with the Shekinah of God's presence.</p>
<p>Bethany caught her breath. There had been
times before this when, carried along by the impetuous
eloquence of some sermon or prayer,
every fiber of her being seemed to thrill in response.
In her childlike reaching out towards
spiritual things, she had had wonderful glimpses
of the Fatherhood of God. She had gone
to him with every experience of her young life,
just as naturally and freely as she had to her
earthly father. But when beside the judge's
death-bed she pleaded for his life to be spared
to her a little longer, and her frenzied appeals
met no response, she turned away in rebellious
silence. "She would pray no more to a dumb
heaven," she said bitterly. Her hope had been
vain.</p>
<p>Now, as she listened to songs and prayers
and testimony, she began to feel the power that
emanated from them,—the power of the Spirit,
showing her the Father as she had never known<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
him before: the Father revealed through the
Son.</p>
<p>Below, the mists began to roll away until
the hidden valley was revealed in all its morning
loveliness. But how small it looked from
such a height! Moccasin Bend was only a silver
thread. The outlying forests dwindled to
thickets.</p>
<p>Bethany looked up. The mists began to roll
away from her spiritual vision, and she saw her
life in relation to the eternities. Self dwindled
out of sight. There was no bitterness now, no
childish questioning of Divine purposes. The
blind Bartimeus by the wayside, hearing the
cry, "Jesus of Nazareth passeth by," and, groping
his way towards "the Light of the world,"
was no surer of his dawning vision than Bethany,
as she joined silently in the prayer of consecration.
She saw not only the glory of the
June sunrise; for her the "Sun of righteousness
had arisen, with healing in his wings."</p>
<p>People seemed loath to go when the services
were over. They gathered in little groups
on the mountain-side, or walked leisurely from
one point of view to another, drinking in the
rare beauty of the morning.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bethany walked on without speaking. She
was a little in advance of the others, and did
not notice when the rest of her party were
stopped by some acquaintances. Absorbed in
her own thoughts, she turned aside at Prospect
Point, and walked out to the edge. As she
looked down over the railing, the refrain of one
of the songs that had been sung so constantly
during the last few days, unconsciously rose
to her lips. She hummed it softly to herself,
over and over, "O, there's sunshine in my
soul to-day."</p>
<p>So oblivious was she of all surroundings
that she did not hear Frank Marion's quick step
behind her. He had come to tell her they were
going down the mountain by the incline.</p>
<p>"O, there's sunshine, blessed sunshine!"
The words came softly, almost under her breath;
but he heard them, and felt with a quick heart-throb
that some thing unusual must have occurred
to bring any song to her lips.</p>
<p>"O Bethany!" he exclaimed, "do you mean
it, child? Has the light come?"</p>
<p>The face that she turned towards him was
radiant. She could find no words wherewith
to tell him her great happiness, but she laid her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
hands in his, and the tears sprang to her
eyes.</p>
<p>"Thank God! Thank God!" he exclaimed,
with a tremor in his strong voice. "It is what
I have been praying for. Now you see why I
urged you to come. I knew what a mountain-top
of transfiguration this would be."</p>
<p>Standing on the outskirts of the crowd,
David Herschel had looked around with great
curiosity on the gathering thousands. It was
only a little distance from the inn, and he had
come down hoping to discover the real motive
that had brought these people together from
such vast distances. He wondered what power
their creed contained that could draw them to
this meeting at such an early hour.</p>
<p>He had felt as keenly as Cragmore the sublimity
of the sunrise. He felt, too, the uplifting
power of the old hymn, that song drawn
from the experience of Jacob at Bethel, that
seemed to lift every heart nearer to the Eternal.</p>
<p>He was deeply stirred as the leader began
to speak of the mountain scenes of the Bible,
of Abraham's struggles at Moriah, of Horeb's
burning bush, of Sinai and Nebo, of Mount
Zion with its thousand hallowed memories. So<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
far the young Jew could follow him, but not to
the greater heights of the Mountain of Beatitudes,
of Calvary, or of Olivet.</p>
<p>He had never heard such prayers as the ones
that followed. Although there can be found
no sublimer utterances of worship, no humbler
confessions of penitence or more lofty conceptions
of Jehovah, than are bound in the rituals
of Judaism, these simple outpourings of the
heart were a revelation to him.</p>
<p>There came again the fulfillment of the
deathless words, "And I, if I be lifted up, will
draw all men unto me!" O, how the lowly
Nazarene was lifted up that morning in that
great gathering of his people! How his name
was exalted! All up and down old Lookout
Mountain, and even across the wide valley of
the Tennessee, it was echoed in every song and
prayer.</p>
<p>When the testimony service began, David
turned from one speaker to another. What
had they come so far to tell? From every
State in the Union, from Canada, and from
foreign shores, they brought only one story—"Behold
the Lamb of God!" In spite of himself,
the young Jew's heart was strangely drawn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
to this uplifted Christ. Suddenly he was
startled by a ringing voice that cried: "I am a
converted Jew. I was brought to Christ by a
little girl—a member of the Junior League.
I have given up wife, mother, father, sisters,
brothers, and fortune, but I have gained so much
that I can say from the depths of my soul, 'Take
all the world, but give me Jesus.' I have consecrated
my life to his service."</p>
<p>David changed his position in order to get
a better view of the speaker. He scrutinized
him closely. He studied his face, his dress,
even his attitude, to determine, if possible, the
character of this new witness. He saw a man
of medium height, broad forehead, and firm
mouth over which drooped a heavy, dark mustache.
There was nothing fanatical in the calm
face or dignified bearing. His eyes, which were
large, dark, and magnetic, met David's with a
steady gaze, and seemed to hold them for a
moment.</p>
<p>With a lawyer-like instinct, David longed to
probe this man with questions. As he went
back to the inn, he resolved to hunt up his history,
and find what had induced him to turn
away from the faith.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />