The Mormon Prophet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 359 pages of information about The Mormon Prophet.

The Mormon Prophet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 359 pages of information about The Mormon Prophet.

“It was just before he began to translate the gold book that he came to board at my father’s in Susquehannah County, and he told me all about it, and I believed him; but my father wouldn’t, so I had to go away with Joseph to get married; but since then father’s forgiven us; and we’ve been back home this last summer, and we’ve been to Fayette too, living with a gentleman called Mr. Whitmer, who believes in Joseph, and all the time Joseph’s been translating the book that was written on the gold plates that he found in the hill.  It’s been very hard work, and we’ve had to live very poor, because Joseph couldn’t earn anything while he was doing it, but it’s done now, so we feel cheered.  And now that it’s going to be printed, and Joseph can begin to gather in the elect very soon, and now that baby’s come—­”

Emma stopped again; the last domestic detail seemed to involve her mind in such meshes of bliss that she lost sight of the end of her sentence.  All her words had been calm, and the baby that lay upon the bed beside her stretching its crumpled rose-leaf fists into the air and making strange grotesque smiles with its little red chin and cheeks was undoubtedly a true baby, a good and delightful thing in Susannah’s estimation.  Had the Bible in the hill been a true Bible?  Susannah intuitively knew that Emma Smith, bending with grave rapture over her firstborn, was not trying to deceive her.

“It seems to me,” she said, “that it is terribly wicked of you to believe about this Bible.”  Her utterance became thick with her rising indignation.  “How can you sit and hold that child and say such terribly wicked things?” She could not have told why she referred to the child; the moment before it was spoken she had not formulated the thought.  She was not old enough to reason about the sacredness of babies; she only felt.

The tears started to Emma’s eyes.  She clasped her child to her breast.  “Yes, I know how you feel.  I felt that way too myself, and sometimes even yet it frightens me; but, you see, I know it is true, so it must be right.  But I’ve given up expecting other people to believe it just yet, until Joseph is allowed to preach, and then it’s been revealed to him that the nations shall be gathered in.  Only you looked so—­so beautiful—­you see, I thought perhaps God might have sent you to be a friend to me.  I have no friends because of the way they persecute Joseph.”

Susannah turned in incredulous wrath and tramped, young and haughty, to the outer door.  The first drops of a heavy shower were falling; she hesitated.

“But tell her about the witnesses, Emmar.”  Old Lucy stood half-way between the bed and the door, making nods and becks in her excited desire that Susannah should be impressed.  “For when the dear Lord saw that folks wouldn’t b’lieve Joseph, He didn’t leave him without witnesses.”

Susannah, stopped by the weather, felt more willing to conciliate.  She returned gloomily within the sound of Emma’s gentle voice.

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Project Gutenberg
The Mormon Prophet from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.