登陆注册
15449800000001

第1章 CHAPTER I(1)

"Dr. Lavendar," said William King, "some time when Goliath is doing his 2.40 on a plank road, don't you want to pull him up at that house on the Perryville pike where the Grays used to live, and make a call? An old fellow called Roberts has taken it; h e is a--"

"Teach your grandmother," said Dr. Lavendar; "he is an Irvingite. He comes from Lower Ripple, down on the Ohio, and he has a daughter, Philippa."

"Oh," said Dr. King, "you know 'em, do you?"

"Know them? Of course I know them! Do you think you are the only man who tries to enlarge his business?

But I was not successful in my efforts.

The old gentleman doesn't go to any church; and the young lady inclines to the Perryville meeting-house--the parson there is a nice boy."

"She is an attractive young creature," s aid the doctor, smiling at some pleasant memory; "the kind of girl a man would like to have for a daughter. But did you ever know such an old-fashioned little thing!"

"Well, she's like the girls I knew when I was the age of the Perryville parson, so I suppose you'd call her old-fashioned,"

Dr. Lavendar said. "There aren't many such girls nowadays; s weet-tempered and sensible and with some fun in 'em."

"Why don't you say 'good,' too?"

William King inquired.

"Unnecessary," Dr. Lavendar said, scratching Danny's ear; "anybody who is amiable, sensible, and humorous is good. Can't help it."

"The father is good," William King said, "but he is certainly not sensible.

He's an old donkey, with his TONGUES a nd his VOICE!"

Dr. Lavendar's face sobered. "No," h e said, "he may be an Irvingite, but he isn't a donkey."

"What on earth is an Irvingite, anyhow?" William asked.

Dr. Lavendar looked at him, pityingly:

"William, you are so ridiculously young! Well, I suppose you can't help it. My boy, about the time you were born, there was a man in London-- s ome folks called him a saint, and some folks called him a fool; it's a way folks have had ever since our Lord came into this world. His name was Irving, and he started a new sect." (Dr. Lavendar was as open-minded as it is possible for one of his Church to be, but even he said "sect" when it came to outsiders.)

"He started this new sect, which believed that the Holy Ghost would speak again by human lips, just as on the Day of Pentecost. Well, there was 'speaking' in his congregation; s ort of outbursts of exhortation, you know. Mostly unintelligible. I r emember Dr. Alexander said it was 'gibberish'; he heard some of it when he was in London. It may have been 'gibberish,' but nobody can doubt Irving's sincerity in thinking it was the Voice of God. When he couldn't understand it, he just called it an 'unknown tongue.' Of course he was considered a heretic. He was put out of his Church. He died soon after, poor fellow."

"Doesn't Mr. Roberts's everlasting arguing about it tire you out?" William asked.

"Oh no," Dr. Lavendar said, cheerfully;

"when he talks too long I just shut my eyes; he never notices it!

He's a gentle old soul. When I answer back--once in a while I really have to speak up for the Protestant Episcopal Church--I feel as if I had kicked Danny."

William King grinned. Then he got up and, drawing his coat-tails forward, stood with his back to the jug of lilacs in Dr. Lavendar's fireplace. "Oh, well, of course it's all bosh," he said, and yawned; "I was on a case till four o'clock this morning," he apologized.

"William," said Dr. Lavendar, admiringly, "what an advantage you fellows have over us poor parsons!

Everything a medical man doesn't understand is 'bosh'! Now, we can't classify things as easily as that."

"Well, I don't care," William said, doggedly; "from my point of view--"

"From your point of view," said Dr.

Lavendar, "St. Paul was an epileptic, because he heard a Voice?"

"If you really want to know what I t hink--"

"I don't," Dr. Lavendar said; "I w ant you to know what I think. Mr.

Roberts hasn't heard any Voice, yet; h e is only listening for it. William, listening for the Voice of God isn't necessarily a sign of poor health; and provided a man doesn't set himself up to think he is the only person his Heavenly Father is willing to speak to, listening won't do him any harm. As for Henry Roberts, he is a humble old man. An example to me, William! I a m pretty arrogant once in a while.

I have to be, with such men as you in my congregation. No; the real trouble in that household is that girl of his. It isn't right for a young thing to live in such an atmosphere."

William agreed sleepily. "Pretty creature. Wish I had a daughter just like her," he said, and took himself off to make up for a broken night's rest.

But Dr. Lavendar and Danny still sat in front of the lilac-filled fireplace, and thought of old Henry Roberts listening for the Voice of God, and of his Philippa.

The father and daughter had lately taken a house on a road that wandered over the hills between elderberry-bushes and under sycamores, from Old Chester to Perryville. They were about half-way between the two little towns, and they did not seem to belong to either. Perryville's small manufacturing bustle repelled the silent old man whom Dr. Lavendar called an "Irvingite"; a nd Old Chester's dignity and dull aloofness repelled young Philippa.

The result was that the Robertses and their one woman servant, Hannah, had been living on the Perryville pike for some months before anybody in either village was quite aware of their existence.

Then one day in May, Dr. Lavendar's sagging old buggy pulled up at their gate, and the old minister called over the garden wall to Philippa:

"Won't you give me some of your apple blossoms?"

That was the beginning of Old Chester's knowledge of the Roberts family.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 爱恋在那年

    爱恋在那年

    盛依高中里,一个扎着高马尾长得却还算是小家碧玉的姑娘走着,碎刘海挡住了他的浓眉大眼,却在他刚上高中的那一年里,喜欢上了一个男生……爱恋在那年
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 返璞回悠

    返璞回悠

    现代的浮华,由于大脑接受的信息过多,而回古的艰苦朴实生活,却让人因求生的信念充实本心,感受源源不断的希望。
  • 三言二拍精编(3册)

    三言二拍精编(3册)

    三言”所收录的作品,无论是宋元旧篇,还是明代新作和冯梦龙拟作,都程度不同地经过冯梦龙增删和润饰。这些作品,题材广泛,内容复杂。有对封建官僚丑恶的谴责和对正直官吏德行的赞扬,有对友谊、爱情的歌颂和对背信弃义、负心行为的斥责。更值得注意的,有不少作品描写了市井百姓的生活。“二拍”的有些作品反映了市民生活和他们的思想意识。“二拍”善于组织情节,因此多数篇章有一定的吸引力,语言也较生动。
  • 医笑倾世醉红颜

    医笑倾世醉红颜

    姐妹俩穿越到了个陌生的世界,分离、重逢、再分离、再重逢。到底是爱,还是恨。两段唯美的爱情,相爱、相离、再相爱、再相离。究竟是缘起,还是缘灭。笑凡:“姐姐,不要离开我。”凝醉:“姐姐永远也不会离开你。”两个俊美嫡仙的男子坐不住了,奋起大呼:“那我们呢!”姐妹俩相视一笑,星光璀璨。
  • 衡量谁的地老天荒

    衡量谁的地老天荒

    我明明知道接下来会发生的一切,尽管知道风险很大,但是我还是要试一试!谋反算什么?在我身上发生也不止一次了。像我这样的人,还会怕什么?但是,如果要报复就找我好了,为什么要报复在我最挚爱的人身上?前世今生交错,心中永不熄灭的怒火,是谁告诉我我们还能走到最后?与大家分离6个月的《衡量谁的地老天荒》终于归来啦!《衡量谁的地久天长》第二部《衡量谁的地老天荒》正式与大家见面!
  • 末世传奇行

    末世传奇行

    繁华至极的都市一夜之间破碎。道德法律的约束瞬间失去作用。这该死的末世。对于弱者,是地狱。对于强者,是天堂。既然让我加入这个世界,就让我好好玩耍吧。
  • 原来还有你在等我

    原来还有你在等我

    叶倾希望和顾言一起考上大学,选择了走艺术这条路,叶倾去了集训营,再回来时,早已计划好的轨迹却已经渐渐偏离,从小的暗恋,终究一刀两断,当经历了所有的离合悲欢,叶倾蓦然回首,原来,还有他在等着自己。
  • Stories To Tell To Children

    Stories To Tell To Children

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 异世斗神国度

    异世斗神国度

    一个弱肉强食的奇异世界,将为你打开异世之争.