The First Soprano eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about The First Soprano.

The First Soprano eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about The First Soprano.

“That’s right,” laughed George again.  “Tell me when you are going to deliver your broadside.”

“It will not be very soon,” said Hubert.  “I do not find such comfort in my doubts as to give me a missionary call to spread them.”

They came to a turn in the road and parted.  Hubert had had a more animated conversation with his sister’s friend than he remembered ever to have had before.  He strode on alone through the park whither his steps had taken him, still pursuing the same line of thought.

“No,” he reflected, “why should I seek to communicate my doubts?  I never knew a man to be worse for believing in Jesus Christ.  I believe some men have been better for it.  Certainly I do not admire the company I am in.”

His mind reviewed a company such as would be called together by an infidel cause, and he recoiled from it.  He saw socialist faces of the baser type, ready but for the occasion to blossom into anarchism; he saw clever women whose bold loosening of the yoke of conventional religion had relaxed also the hold of conventional morals, and he was glad Winifred was not among them; he saw the face of Doctor Bossman, the leader of the cause, tall, massive-browed, handsome, with bold, full, outstanding eyes, a man of defiant words, of jovial popularity, and egregiously self-centered.  Into the young man’s mind, in contrast to the proud face, there flashed fragments of the words of the Nazarene:  “Except ye be converted, and become as little children!” He saw other faces not so typical, and found himself seated amongst them, and abhorred the fraternity cemented by a common unbelief—­a cold negation.  He was unhappy.  He found no territory on which to stand.  He hated the cant and formalism that chilled him in the fashionable church.  He hated the insolent creed of the deist, and the ignorance of the agnostic.  He seemed to be hating almost all things with himself included.  If he had been sure there was a God who heard mortals pray, he would have cried to Him to deliver him from so wretched a position.  But he roused himself from his reverie and sought to throw to the winds his unhappy feelings.  He walked back to the house endeavoring to think of to-morrow’s business, and determining to give himself to an interesting book when he got there.

Winifred had a headache which was opportune.  By it she excused herself from tea and from church that evening.  Her father carried her apologies to the leader of the choir.  Mr. Gray alone of the family listened to the evening discourse, and he listened well, for the young minister spoke again with truth and earnestness.  The machinery of the meeting moved smoothly, and George Frothingham sang with much feeling, “If with all your hearts ye truly seek Him.”

In Winifred’s room the light burned late.  The battle waged there saw many tears and the confirmation of the edict put forth in the morning service that the false god must be taken from its niche in the house of the Lord.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The First Soprano from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.