登陆注册
38537200000073

第73章 CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CHURCH IS NOT NEUROTIC.(4)

For the next hour and a half the Rev. George Holland had an opportunity of considering his position as a clergyman of the Church of England, and as one whose chief desire was to advance the interests of the Church. His bishop had assumed that he had been single-minded in his aims--that his sole object in writing that book and that paper had been to cure the complaint from which the old Church was suffering. His lordship had done him justice where Phyllis had done him a gross injustice. What would Phyllis have said he wondered, if she had heard that concession, made not under pressure, but voluntarily by probably the highest authority in the world, to his, George Holland's, singleness of aim?

But it was so like a girl to jump at conclusions--to assume that he had been actuated by vanity in all that he had just done; that he was desirous only of getting people to talk about him--being regardless whether they spoke well of him or ill. He only wished that she could have heard the bishop. He felt as a man feels whose character has just been cleared in a court of law from an aspersion that has rested on it for some time. He wondered if that truly noble man whom he was privileged to call his Father in God, would have any objection to give him a testimonial to the effect that in his opinion,--the opinion of his Father in God,--there was no foundation for the accusation against him and his singleness of aim.

But the bishop knew that it was not vanity which had urged him to write what he had written. The bishop understood men.

He was right; the bishop understood men so well as to be able to produce in a few words upon the man who had just visited the palace, the impression that he believed that that man had been impelled by a strong sense of duty without a touch of vanity. He understood man so well as to cause that same visitor of his to make a resolution never again to publish anything in the same strain as the /Zeit Geist/ article, without first consulting with the bishop. George Holland had pulled the bell at the palace gates with the hand of a Luther; but he had left the presence of the bishop with the step of a Francis of Assisi. He felt that anyone who would voluntarily give pain to so gentle a man as the bishop could only be a brute. He even felt that the bishop had shown himself to be his, George Holland's superior in judgment and in the methods which he employed. The bishop was not an overrated man.

For a full hour in the silence and solitude of the reading room of his club he reflected upon the excellence of the bishop, and it was with a sign of regret that he rose to keep his other appointment. He would have liked to continue for another hour or two doing justice to that good man out of whose presence he had come.

Mr. Linton's office was not quite in the City. Twenty minutes drive brought George Holland into the private room of Ella Linton's husband.

"It is very good of you to come to me, Mr. Holland," said Stephen.

"There seems to be a general idea that a clergyman should be at the beck and call of everyone who has a whim to--what do they call it in Ireland--to make his soul? That has never been my opinion; I have never given any trouble to a clergyman since I was at school."

"It is the privilege of a minister to be a servant," said the Rev.

George Holland.

"We were taught that at school--in connection with the Latin verb /ministro/," said Mr. Linton. "Well, Mr. Holland, I am glad that you take such a view of your calling, for I am anxious that you should do me a great service."

He paused.

George Holland bent his head. He wondered if Mr. Linton wished to intrust him with the duty of observing his wife.

"The fact is, Mr. Holland," resumed Stephen Linton, "I have read your book and your paper in that review. The way you deal with a difficult question has filled me with admiration. You will, I need scarcely say, be outside the Church before long."

"I cannot allow you to assume that, Mr. Linton," said George gravely.

"I should be sorry to leave the Church. I cannot see that my leaving it is the logical sequence of anything that I have yet written. My aim is, as doubtless you have perceived, to bring about such reasonable and, after all, not radical changes in the Church system as shall make her in the future a more potent agency for good than she has ever yet been, splendid though her services to humanity have been."

"Still you will find yourself outside the walls of your Church, Mr. Holland. And you will probably adopt the course which other sons of the Church have thought necessary to pursue when the stubborn old thing refused to be reformed."

"If you suggest that I shall become a Dissenter, Mr. Linton--"

"I suggest nothing of the sort, though you dissent already from a good many of the fundamental practices of the Church, if I may be permitted the expression. Now, I should like to make a provision for your future, Mr. Holland."

"My dear sir, such a proposition seems to me to be a most extraordinary one. I hope you will not think me rude in saying so much. I have not suggested, Mr. Linton, as other clergymen might, that you mean an affront to me, but I don't think that anything would be gained by prolonging--"

"Permit me to continue, and perhaps you may get a glimmer of gain. Mr. Holland, I am what people usually term a doomed man. So far as I can gather I have only about six months longer to live."

"Merciful Heaven!"

"Perhaps it is merciful on the part of Heaven to destroy a man when he has reached the age of forty. We'll not go into that question just now. I was warned by a doctor two years ago that I had not long to live. It appears that my heart was never really a heart--that is to say, it may have had its affections, its emotions, its passions, but pneumatically it is a failure; it was never a blood-pump. Six months ago I was examined by the greatest authority in Europe, and he pronounced my doom. Three days ago I went to the leading specialist in London, and he told me I might with care live six months longer."

"My dear Mr. Linton, with what words can I express to you my deep feeling for you?"

同类推荐
  • 新吾吕先生实政录

    新吾吕先生实政录

    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。
  • 杨文敏集

    杨文敏集

    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。
  • 法胜阿毗昙心论

    法胜阿毗昙心论

    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。
  • 伤寒辨要笺记

    伤寒辨要笺记

    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。
  • 华严经问答

    华严经问答

    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。
热门推荐
  • 相遇在最初的地方

    相遇在最初的地方

    或许,在你喜欢我之前,我就已经喜欢你了,我只想默默地守护着你。
  • EXO之魂牵梦萦

    EXO之魂牵梦萦

    身为47世纪的你,魂穿到末生,逆袭女配,
  • tfboys爱情

    tfboys爱情

    命运安排她们在一起,那就在一起了,可又有了阻碍,看三只和女主怎样冲破阻碍,获得爱情吧
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 足球经理之决胜伊比利亚

    足球经理之决胜伊比利亚

    如果是你,你会怎样!!!豪门球会的主帅职位摆在毕业后对未来迷茫的你,你会怎样?是选择单恋八年的,陪你走过青葱岁月的“沈佳宜”还是对你无微不至,体贴入微的那个X女孩?只是一场关于足球,又远超于足球竞技的文学新作。爱情,亲情,事业2013年,作品重新起航,你还在等待什么?
  • 乱把云揉碎

    乱把云揉碎

    人们总认为,只有初中高中才是青春,殊不知,只要自己心里年轻,哪个时间段都是青春。——黑板上的粉笔灰,课桌上刻的某某某,还有上课总盯着那个男孩的女孩,大笑时总先去望她的男孩,还有台上光芒四射,为他高兴,却又暗含自卑所谓的年少,大慨就是拥有一段拼搏岁月,拥有一段真挚感情——我不知道凌晨五点是说早安还是晚安也不知道这个年纪是说爱还是喜欢
  • 锦绣丰园:肥娘种田好发家

    锦绣丰园:肥娘种田好发家

    一口燕窝把她呛成了一个吃啥啥都香的大肥婆。这里有瞎眼的婆婆,瘸腿的公公,身子病弱的小娃娃,还有个生不见人死不见尸的男人,她真想再喝口燕窝把自己呛死回去。怎奈全家的生计都在她一人身上,极品乡邻虎视眈眈,阴险妯娌泼辣嚣张,不彪不悍日子怎个过?好不容易把自家面冠如玉的男人拐上了床,正吹灯拔蜡脱了衣裳准备造娃娃,没成想,这边厢杀出了个年轻的小寡妇,那边又来了个昔日俏情郎。且看巧手肥娘种田逗娃如何把日子过的有滋有味。推荐新坑《悍妇当家:相公,请上炕》一对一爽文
  • 都市神级助手

    都市神级助手

    叶想,平凡的上班族。没钱、没车,还没女朋友,连自己心仪的女生,他都不敢表白。一次诡异的断电,他编写的智能助手软件进化了。它具备初级智能,升级到最高版本,将成为超人工智能。有了它!你想成为网络之神,没问题!想成为游戏界巨头,没问题!想成为娱乐圈大鳄,没问题!只要你敢想的,通通都到碗里来!你还怕没钱、没车、没女朋友吗?你说啥,送上门来的你不要?少年,活该单身啊!
  • 无限神系之收尸人

    无限神系之收尸人

    老板,需要人帮忙收尸吗?毕竟你无儿无女,更没有三亲四戚什么的。不怕一万就怕万一嘛,死后有个人帮你收尸不是很好吗?“滚,老子堂堂大罗金仙,证得无尽时空永恒的存在,还需要你来收尸?”你以为以上就简介?作者追加一条,这就是披着无限神系的皮,在各各世界搞事情的书( ̄⊿ ̄)
  • 坠入无底林

    坠入无底林

    深挖至地下12350米。意外的发现竟是一片森林。