Olive Part 38
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"Do not--oh! do not speak thus," cried Olive, shrinking from him, for she saw in his face a look she had never seen before--an expression answering to the bitter, daring sarcasm of his tone.
"You think me a strange specimen of a Church of England clergyman? Well, perhaps you are right! I believe I am rather different to my brethren."
He said this with sharp irony. "Nevertheless, if you inquire concerning me in the neighbourhood, I think you will find that my moral conduct has never disgraced my cloth."
"Never!" cried Olive warmly. "Mr. Gwynne, pardon me if I have overstepped the deference due to yourself and your opinions. In some things I cannot fathom them or you; but that you are a good, sincere, and pious man, I most earnestly believe."
"_Do you!_"
Olive started. The two words were simple, but she thought they had an under-meaning, as though he were mocking either himself or her, or both.
But she thought this could only be fancy; when in a minute or two after, he said in his ordinary manner,
"Miss Rothesay, we have been talking earnestly, and you have unconsciously betrayed me into speaking more warmly than I ought to speak. Do not misjudge me. All men's faith is free; and in some minor points of Christianity, I perhaps hold peculiar opinions. As regards little Ailie, I thank you for your kind interest in this matter, which we will discuss again another time."
They had now reached John Dent's cottage. Olive asked if he would not enter with her.
"No, no; you are a far better apostle than your clergyman. Besides, I have business at home, and must return. Good morning, Miss Rothesay."
He lifted his hat with a courtly grace, but his eyes showed that reverence which no courts could command--the reverence of a sincere man for a n.o.ble-hearted woman. And so he walked back into the forest.
CHAPTER x.x.x.
The dwelling which Miss Rothesay entered was one of the keeper's cottages, built within the forest. The door stood open, for the place was too lowly, even for robbers; and, besides, its inmates had nothing to lose. Still, Olive thought it was wrong to leave a poor bedridden old woman in a state of such unprotected desolation. As her step was heard crossing the threshold, there was a shrill cry from the inner room.
"John, John--the lad!--hast thee found the lad?"
"It is not your son--'tis I. Why, what has happened, my good Margery?"
But the poor old creature fell back and wrung her hands, sobbing bitterly.
"The lad!--dun ye know aught o' the lad? Poor Reuben!--he wunnot come back no more! Alack! alack!"
And with some difficulty Olive learnt that Margery's grandson, the keeper's only child, had gone into the forest some days before, and had never returned. It was no rare thing for even practised woodsmen to be lost in this wild, wide forest; and at night, in the winter time there was no hope. John Dent had gone out with his fellows, less to find the living than to bring back the dead.
Filled with deep pity Olive sat down by the miserable grandmother; but the poor soul refused to be comforted.
"John'll go mad--clean mad! There beant nowheres such a good lad as our Reuben; and to be clemmed to death, and froze! O Lord, tak' pity on us, miserable sinners!"
For hours Olive sat by the old woman's bedside. The murky winter day soon closed in, and the snow began to fall; but still there was nothing heard save the wind howling in the forest. Often Margery started up, crying out that there were footsteps at the door, and then sank back in dumb despair.
At last there was a tramp of many feet on the frozen ground, the latch was lifted, and John Dent burst in.
He was a st.u.r.dy woodsman, of a race that are often seen in this forest region, almost giant-like in height and bulk. The snow lay thick on his uncovered head and naked breast, for he had stripped off all his upper garments to wrap round something that was clasped tightly in his arms.
He spoke to no one, looked at no one, but laid his burden before the hearth supported on his knees. It was the corpse of a boy blue and shrivelled, like that of one frozen to death. He tried to chafe and bend the fingers, but they were as stiff as iron; he wrung the melting snow out of the hair, and, as the locks became soft and supple under his hand, seemed to think there was yet a little life remaining.
"Why dunnot ye stir, ye fools! Get t' blanket--pull't off the ould woman. I tell 'ee the lad's alive."
No one moved, and then the frantic father began to curse and swear. He rushed into old Margery's room.
"Get up wi' thee. How darest thee lie hallooing there. Come and help t'
lad!" and then he ran back to where poor Reuben's body lay extended on the hearth, surrounded by the other woodsmen, most of whom were pale with awe, some even melting into tears. John Dent dashed them all aside, and took his son again in his arms. Olive, from her corner, watched the writhings of his rugged features, but she ventured not to approach.
"Tak' heart, tak' heart, John!" said one of the men.
"He didna suffer much, I reckon," said another. "My owd mother was nigh froze to death in t' forest, and her said 'twas just like dropping to sleep. An' luck ye, the poor lad's face be as quiet as a child."
"John Dent, mon!" whispered one old keeper; "say thy prayers; thee doesna often do't, and thee'll want it now."
And then John Dent broke into such a paroxysm of despair, that one by one his comforters quitted the cottage. They, strong bold men, who feared none of the evils of life, became feeble as children before the awful face of Death.
One only remained--the old huntsman who had given the last counsel to the wretched father. This man, whom Olive knew, was beckoned by her to Margery's room to see what could be done.
"I'll fetch Mr. Gwynne to manage John, poor fellow! The devil's got un, sure enough; and it'll tak' a parson to drive't away. But ourn be a queer gentleman. When I get to Harbury, what mun I say!"
"Say that I am here--that I entreat him to come at once," cried Olive, feeling her strength sinking before this painful scene, from which in common charity she could not turn aside. She came once more to look at John Dent, who had crouched down before the hearth, with the stiff form of the poor dead boy extended on his knees, gazing at it with a sort of vacant, hopeless misery. Then she went back to the old woman, and tried to speak of comfort and of prayer.
It was not far to Harbury, but, in less time than Olive had expected, Harold Gwynne appeared.
"Miss Rothesay, you sent for me!"
"I did--I did. Oh, thank Heaven that you are come," eagerly cried Olive, clasping his two hands. He regarded her with a surprised and troubled look, and took them away.
"What do you wish me to do!"
"What a minister of G.o.d is able--nay, bound to do--to speak comfort in this house of misery."
The poor old woman echoed the same entreaty--
"Oh, Mr. Gwynne, you that be a parson, a man of G.o.d, come and help us."
Harold looked round, and saw he had to face the woe that no worldly comfort or counsel can lighten;--that he had entered into the awful presence of the Power, which, stripping man of all his earthly pomp, wisdom, and strength, leaves him poor, weak, and naked before his G.o.d.
The proud, the moral, the learned Harold Gwynne, stood dumb before the mystery of Death. It was too mighty for him. He looked on the dead boy, and on the living father; then cast his eyes down to the ground, and muttered within himself, "What should I do here?"
"Read to him--pray with him," whispered Olive. "Speak to him of G.o.d--of heaven--of immortality."
"G.o.d--heaven--immortality," echoed Harold, vacantly, but he never stirred.
"They say that this man has been a great sinner, and an unbeliever. Oh, tell him that he cannot deceive himself now. Death knells into his ear that there is a G.o.d--there is a hereafter. Mr. Gwynne, oh tell him that, at a time like this, there is no comfort, no hope, save in G.o.d and in His Word."
Olive had spoken thus in the excitement of the moment; then recovering herself, she asked pardon for a speech so bold, as if she would fain teach the clergyman his duty.
"My duty--yes, I must do my duty," muttered Harold Gwynne. And with his hard-set face--the face he wore in the pulpit--he went up to the father of the dead child, and said something about "patience," "submission to the decrees of Providence," and "all trials being sent for good, and by the will of G.o.d."
"Dun ye talk to me of G.o.d? I know nought about him, parson--ye never learned me."
Harold's rigid mouth quivered visibly, but he made no direct answer, only saying, in the same formal tone, "You go to church--at least, you used to go--you have heard there about 'G.o.d in his judgments remembering mercy.'"
Olive Part 38
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Olive Part 38 summary
You're reading Olive Part 38. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Dinah Maria Mulock Craik already has 752 views.
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