Idolatry eBook

Julian Hawthorne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Idolatry.

Idolatry eBook

Julian Hawthorne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Idolatry.
ideal and high-strung views as to its nature and scope) he never met with what is vulgarly called success.  Fortunately for the ideal barrister, an ample private estate made him independent of professional earnings.  Later in life, he trod the confines of politics, still, however, enveloping himself in that theoretical, unpractical atmosphere which was his most marked, and, to some people, least comprehensible characteristic.  A certain mild halo of statesmanship ever after invested him; not that he had at any time actually borne a share in the government of the nation, but it was understood that he might have done so, had he so chosen, or had his political principles been tough and elastic enough to endure the wear and strain of action.  As it was, some of the most renowned men in the Senate were known to have been his intimates at college, and he still met and conversed with them on terms of equality.

Between law, literature, and statesmanship, in all of which pursuits he had acquired respect and goodwill, without actually accomplishing anything, Mr. MacGentle fell, no one knew exactly how, into the presidential chair of the Beacon Hill Bank.  As soon as he was there, everybody saw that there he belonged.  His social position, his culture, his honorable, albeit intangible record, suited the old bank well.  He had an air of subdued wisdom, and people were fond of appealing to his judgment and asking his advice,—–­ perhaps because he never seemed to expect them to follow it when given (as, indeed, they never did).  The Board of Directors looked up to him, deferred to him,—­nay, believed him to be as necessary to the bank’s existence as the entire aggregate of its supporters; but neither the Board nor the President himself ever dreamed of adopting Mr. MacGentle’s financial theories in the conduct of the banking business.

Let no one hastily infer that the accomplished gentleman of whom we speak was in any sense a sham.  No one could be more true to himself and his professions.  But—­if we may hazard a conjecture—­he never breathed the air that other men breathe; another sun than ours shone for him; the world that met his senses was not our world.  His life, in short, was not human life, yet so closely like it that the two might be said to correspond, as a face to its reflection in the mirror; actual contact being in both cases impossible.  No doubt the world and he knew of the barrier between them, though neither said so.  The former, with its usual happy temperament, was little affected by the separation, smiled good-naturedly upon the latter, and never troubled itself about the difficulties in the way of shaking hands.  But Mr. MacGentle, being only a single man, perhaps felt lonely and sad.  Either he was a ghost, or the world was.  In youth, he may have believed himself to be the only real flesh and blood; but in later years, the terrible weight of the world’s majority forced him to the opposite conclusion.  And here, at last, he and the world were at one!

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Idolatry from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.