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of her chamber。 They fancied that the end could not be far off; that no more strength was left in that aged body that lay prone for the moment。 But I have heard the howling wane into the distance and get lost in the outer darkness when the old Church roused herself and went forth to face the snarling teeththe eager talons。 There is life in this mighty old mother of ours still。 New life comes to her; not as it did to the fabled hero of old; by contact with the earth; but by communing with heaven。 The bark of the wolf; the snarl of the hyena; may be heard in the debate which the Government have encouraged in the House of Commons on the Church。 Philistia rejoices。 Let the movers in this obscene tumult look to themselves。 Have they the confidence of the people even as the Church has that confidence? Let them put it to the test。 I tell you; George Holland; the desert and the ditch; whose vomit those men are who now move against us in Parliament; shall receive them once more before many months have passed。 The Church on whom they hoped to prey shall witness their dispersal; never again to return。 I know the signs。 I know what the present silence throughout the country means。 The champion of God and the Church has drawn his breath for the conflict。 His teeth are sethis weapon is in his hand you will see the result within a year。 We shall have a government in power; a government whose power will not be dependent on the faddists and the self…seekersthe ignorant; the blatant bellowers of pitiful platitudes; the platform loafers who call themselves labor…leaders; but whom the real laborers repudiate。 Mark my words; their doom is sealed; back to the desert and the ditch! My dear Holland; pardon this digression。 I feel that I need say nothing more to you than I have already said。 The surprise system of therapeutics is not suited to the existing ailments of the Church。 Caution is what is needed if you would not defeat your own worthy object; which; I know; is to give fresh vitality to the Church。〃
〃That is certainly my object; my lord; only let me say that〃
〃My dear Holland; I will not let you say anything。 I asked you to come here this morning in order that you might hear me。 That is all that is necessary for the present。 Perhaps; upon some future occasion; I may have the privilege of hearing you in a discourse of some greater length than that which I have just inflicted upon you。 I have given you my candid opinion of your writings; and you know that is the opinion of a man who has but one object in lifeyou know that it is the opinion of an old man who has seen the beginning and the end of many movements in society and in the Church; and who has learned that the Church; for all her decrepitude; is yet the most stable thing that the world has seen。 I have to thank you for coming to me; Holland。〃
〃Your lordship has spoken to me with the greatest kindness;〃 said George Holland; as his spiritual father offered him his hand。
In a few minutes he was in his hansom once more。
CHAPTER XXIX。
I KNOW THAT IT DOESN'T MATTER MUCH TO GOD WHAT A MAN THINKS ABOUT HIMSELF OR HIS SOUL。
For the next hour and a half the Rev。 George Holland had an opportunity of considering his position as a clergyman of the Church of England; and as one whose chief desire was to advance the interests of the Church。 His bishop had assumed that he had been single…minded in his aimsthat his sole object in writing that book and that paper had been to cure the complaint from which the old Church was suffering。 His lordship had done him justice where Phyllis had done him a gross injustice。 What would Phyllis have said he wondered; if she had heard that concession; made not under pressure; but voluntarily by probably the highest authority in the world; to his; George Holland's; singleness of aim?
But it was so like a girl to jump at conclusionsto assume that he had been actuated by vanity in all that he had just done; that he was desirous only of getting people to talk about himbeing regardless whether they spoke well of him or ill。 He only wished that she could have heard the bishop。 He felt as a man feels whose character has just been cleared in a court of law from an aspersion that has rested on it for some time。 He wondered if that truly noble man whom he was privileged to call his Father in God; would have any objection to give him a testimonial to the effect that in his opinion;the opinion of his Father in God;there was no foundation for the accusation against him and his singleness of aim。
But the bishop knew that it was not vanity which had urged him to write what he had written。 The bishop understood men。
He was right; the bishop understood men so well as to be able to produce in a few words upon the man who had just visited the palace; the impression that he believed that that man had been impelled by a strong sense of duty without a touch of vanity。 He understood man so well as to cause that same visitor of his to make a resolution never again to publish anything in the same strain as the /Zeit Geist/ article; without first consulting with the bishop。 George Holland had pulled the bell at the palace gates with the hand of a Luther; but he had left the presence of the bishop with the step of a Francis of Assisi。 He felt that anyone who would voluntarily give pain to so gentle a man as the bishop could only be a brute。 He even felt that the bishop had shown himself to be his; George Holland's superior in judgment and in the methods which he employed。 The bishop was not an overrated man。
For a full hour in the silence and solitude of the reading room of his club he reflected upon the excellence of the bishop; and it was with a sign of regret that he rose to keep his other appointment。 He would have liked to continue for another hour or two doing justice to that good man out of whose presence he had come。
Mr。 Linton's office was not quite in the City。 Twenty minutes drive brought George Holland into the private room of Ella Linton's husband。
〃It is very good of you to come to me; Mr。 Holland;〃 said Stephen。 〃There seems to be a general idea that a clergyman should be at the beck and call of everyone who has a whim towhat do they call it in Irelandto make his soul? That has never been my opinion; I have never given any trouble to a clergyman since I was at school。〃
〃It is the privilege of a minister to be a servant;〃 said the Rev。 George Holland。
〃We were taught that at schoolin connection with the Latin verb /ministro/;〃 said Mr。 Linton。 〃Well; Mr。 Holland; I am glad that you take such a view of your calling; for I am anxious that you should do me a great service。〃
He paused。
George Holland bent his head。 He wondered if Mr。 Linton wished to intrust him with the duty of observing his wife。
〃The fact is; Mr。 Holland;〃 resumed Stephen Linton; 〃I have read your book and your paper in that review。 The way you deal with a difficult question has filled me with admiration。 You will; I need scarcely say; be outside the Church before long。〃
〃I cannot allow you to assume that; Mr。 Linton;〃 said George gravely。 〃I should be sorry to leave the Church。 I cannot see that my leaving it is the logical sequence of anything that I have yet