<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER XXXVII</h3></div>
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<div class='line'>From the unhappy desire of becoming great;</div>
<div class='line'><em>Preserve us, gracious Lord and God.</em></div>
<div class='line in30'>—<cite>Old Moravian Liturgy.</cite></div>
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<p class='c014'>There is a time when religion is only felt as a bridle that checks us, and
then comes another time when it is a sweet and penetrating life-blood, which
sets in motion every fibre of the soul, expands the understanding, gives us the
Infinite for our horizon, and makes all things clear to us.—<span class='sc'>Lacordaire.</span></p>
<p class='c010'>On the quiet street of the hill town of Bethlehem
stands the quaint and ancient building set apart in the
Moravian economy as the Widows’ House.</p>
<p class='c011'>In the interior of the old stone house, with its massive
walls and rows of dormer windows, are wide, low-ceiled
halls, and sunny, sweet-smelling chambers, clean
and orderly, chaste and simple, as those of a convent.
Here in mild monotony and peace the women of the
“Widows’ Choir” live their quiet life, and here in
September we find Anna Burgess, who had fled to this
haven of her mother’s abiding-place, as to a sanctuary.</p>
<p class='c011'>The evening was warm, and the windows of Gulielma
Mallison’s room were open to the sunshine and the sweet
air. Flowers blossomed in the deep window-sills; the
bare floor was as white as scrubbing could make it; the
appointments of the room were cheerful and refined, albeit
homely, and the atmosphere was that of still repose.
By the window Gulielma Mallison sat knitting, her face
beneath its widow’s cap calm and strong in its submissive
sadness. Opposite her on the sofa lay Anna, each line
of her face and figure expressing the suffering of a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>stricken heart. There had been months of slow, wearisome
illness and of grievous mental suffering, in which
her days had been a Purgatorio and her nights an
Inferno; and now weeks of convalescence, which were
bringing life back into her wasted frame, still failed to
bring healing to her mind.</p>
<p class='c011'>The mother’s fond eyes, glancing unperceived across
her knitting, noted the listless droop of the long white
hands upon the white dress, the marblelike pallor of the
forehead from which the hair was so closely drawn, the
hollow cheeks, the piteous sadness of the mouth,
the glassy brightness of the eyes, fixed in the long, still
gaze of habitual introspection.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Surely,” sighed Gulielma Mallison to herself, as she
had before a hundred times, “there is more than the
bitterness of death in her face; widowhood alone to
the Christian brings not such havoc as this. It is in
some place of danger that her thoughts are dwelling. I
should fear less for her if she could only speak!”</p>
<p class='c011'>But Anna’s grief could not find its way to words.
How could her mother, in her sober, ordered existence,
her decorous and righteous experiences of life and love
and death, comprehend what it was to live with shadows
of faithlessness, even of blood-guiltiness, for perpetual
company? For to Anna’s thought Keith had been
driven to his lonely death by the hardness of Gregory,
by words which had issued from the white heat of his
passion for her, a passion unrebuked by her,—nay,
rather, shared to the full. Was she then guiltless of
her husband’s death?</p>
<p class='c011'>Not for a moment could Anna divide herself from
Gregory in responsibility for the action which Oliver
had characterized as “moral murder.” Unsparingly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>just to herself, she bore to the very limit of reason all
the fellowship which was imposed upon her by the
mastery of a love so long lived in its unconsciousness
and silence, so soon cut off, once perceived and acknowledged.
It has been said that “all great loves that have
ever died, dropped dead.” Anna’s mighty passion had
been stillborn, slain by the words which had sent Keith
on his dim way to death. For she had never doubted
that Oliver’s rehearsal of the scene in the woods between
Gregory and Keith had been substantially true. She
knew there had been spiritual violence done, and her
soul recoiled from the very strength and power which
had once enchained her. Something of diabolical pride
seemed to her now to invest even the austere morality
of Gregory. He would have spurned a yielding to the
weakness of the flesh, his moral fastidiousness would
have made it impossible; but he fought the fire of love
fiercely with the fire of pride, not humbly with the
weapons of prayer. No shield of faith nor sword of the
spirit had been his in the hour of temptation, for all his
high ideals, but the sheer, elemental force of human will.
He had conquered, or rather had grappled with, the one
passion; but the very force by which he had conquered
turned again and conquered him, and his very power
became his undoing.</p>
<p class='c011'>Beside this conception of Gregory which had now
taken possession of Anna’s mind, Keith’s gentleness,
his faithful, patient life, above all, the greatness of the
silent sacrifice which he had made for her sake when he
embarked on the Fraternia adventure, became sacred
and heroic. She saw at last what his leaving his normal
life had been; she believed, as she had said to Everett,
that he had literally given his life for her, and the sense
<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>of his devotion, so little understood, so scantily recognized,
wore ceaselessly at her heart. Her one drop of
balm was the memory of Keith’s last smile of triumphant
love and faith; the bitterest drop in her Cup of
Trembling that not one last word had been given her to
show her by what paths his soul had fared, and whether
thoughts of peace had lightened his sufferings. Having
loved her, he had loved her to the end,—this only she
knew. His faithfulness had not failed.</p>
<p class='c011'>Words which her father had spoken to her shortly
before his death, vaguely comprehended at the time,
haunted her now, “<em>With greatness we have nothing at
all to do; faithfulness only is our part.</em>”</p>
<p class='c011'>If only she had earlier discerned their meaning!</p>
<p class='c011'>Such shape did these two men take to Anna now;
the one who had moulded all her outward life and touched
her inner life hitherto so faintly, the other who had
mastered her in her innate longing for power and freedom,
and controlled her inner life for many years: Keith
seemed to her now like some spirit of gentle ministration,
humble, faithful, undefiled; Gregory, like some proud spirit,
even as Lucifer, son of the morning, who had said, ‘I will
ascend into heaven,’ but who had been brought down to
hell, dragging with him all that was highest and holiest.
And she had thought him so different! Like another,
her heart would cry out:—</p>
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<div class='line'>“I thought that he was gentle, being great;</div>
<div class='line'>O God, that I had loved a smaller man!</div>
<div class='line'>I should have found in him a greater heart.”</div>
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<p class='c011'>Once, some weeks earlier, there had come to her a
brief note from Gregory, written soon after his return to
Fraternia. It said only:—</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>“I have sinned deeply, against God; against him;
most of all against you. I cannot even venture to ask
you to forgive. I can only say to you, the penalty is
wholly mine to bear. You are blameless.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Having read the note, Anna threw it into the fire, and
wrote no word in return.</p>
<p class='c011'>And for herself—?</p>
<p class='c011'>There was no softness of self-pity in Anna’s remorse.
Dry and tearless and despairing, she saw herself, after
long years of spiritual assurance, of established and unquestioned
righteousness, overwhelmed at last by sin; not
by the delicate and dainty and inconclusive discords
which religious experts love to examine and analyze, but
by a gross ground-swell of primitive passion, linking her
with men of violence and women of shame.</p>
<p class='c011'>Looking back upon her girlhood, Anna thought with
sad self-scorning of her young desire for “a deeper
sense of sin.” It had come now, not as the initial stage
in a knowledge of God, and of her relation to him, but
as a tardy revelation of the possibility of her nature, undreamed
of in her long security. The cherished formulas
of the old system, its measure of rule and line applied
to the incalculable forces of the human spirit; its hard,
inflexible mould into which the great tides of personal
experience must be poured, seemed to lie in fragments
about her now, like wreckage after a storm. She remembered
that Professor Ward had once spoken to her of her
inherited religious conceptions as terrible in their power
to mislead, to deceive the heart as to itself; she saw the
danger of a belief founded not on infinite verities, but on a
narrow mediæval logic. She knew sin at last, and knew
that it was not slain in the hour of spiritual awakening.</p>
<p class='c011'>She thought of the night preceding her union with
<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>her father’s church, and the recoil of nameless dread
with which she had seen passing under her window the
village outcast whom she supposed to be incredibly
guilty and cut off from fellowship with all who, like
herself, were seeking God. And it was that very night
that she had first dreamed of the mighty personality,
the embodiment of power and greatness, which she had
thought to find in Gregory. Though late, she now
clearly perceived that in no human being could that ideal
of her dream find full manifestation.</p>
<p class='c011'>Such thoughts as these were passing behind the pale
mask of Anna’s pain-worn face, which her mother’s
eyes were watching. The impress of suffering which
they gave was hard to see, and a long involuntary sigh
escaped Gulielma Mallison’s lips.</p>
<p class='c011'>Anna looked up with eyes as sad as those of Michel
Angelo’s Fates.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mother dear,” she said, her voice strangely dulled
from its former clear cadence, “why do you sigh? Do I
make you unhappy?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I cannot comfort you, Anna Benigna,” said the
mother, sorrowfully. “It is for that I sigh.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“No,” Anna said slowly, her eyes falling again from
her mother’s face; “you cannot do that, no one can.
No one lives who can comfort your child, mother.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I have often thought, Anna, that you may have
suffered,” the mother ventured almost timidly, “as many
others have, from the sad mistakes so common to people
who regard the Christian life and the married life as
ends, instead of beginnings.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Gulielma noticed a slight quickening of interest in
Anna’s eyes, and went on thoughtfully, with her simple
philosophy of life:—</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>“To read the books that are written, and to hear the
things that are said, young people can hardly help supposing
that when they become Christians they will
know no more of sin, and when they are married they
will have only joy and perfect union. To my way of
thinking, these wrong ideas are responsible for a great
deal of needless unhappiness. The Christian life is
really a school, with hard discipline and harder lessons.
As for marriage—”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Well,” said Anna, as her mother paused, “as to
marriage?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“It may be a crown,” said Gulielma, slowly, “but it
is sure to be in some measure a cross. It is a testing,
a trial, a discipline, like the rest of life. Only, whether
it happens to be happy, or happens to be hard, it is
equally to be borne faithfully and in the fear of God.”</p>
<p class='c011'>There was silence for a little space, and then a laughing
voice in the street outside, called:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mrs. Mallison!”</p>
<p class='c011'>Gulielma rose and stepped to the window, looking
out over the crimson and purple asters into the street.
A young girl who stood there handed her up a letter.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I don’t know whether it belongs to Mrs. Burgess or
not. The address has been changed so many times,
but the postmaster said I was to ask you.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Very well,” was the answer, and as Gulielma
turned back, a letter in her hand, she found Anna sitting
up, leaning upon her elbow, her eyes strangely
eager. She held out her hand, not speaking, and
received the letter. The upper line, which struck her
eyes instantly, was her own name, and it had been
written by Keith. She could not be mistaken. The
mother’s anxious eyes saw every trace of colour ebb away
<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>from Anna’s face and lips, and then stream back until
the faint flush rose to her forehead. She had not
stopped to decipher the many addresses written below,
crossed and recrossed by many pens, but, seeing her own
name written by the dear dead hand, she pressed the
letter hard against her heart and so lay a moment, silent.</p>
<p class='c011'>Soon she looked up and met her mother’s eyes. A
wistful, heart-breaking request was in her own, which
she hardly dared to speak.</p>
<p class='c011'>“May I be all alone, mother?” she asked faintly;
“my letter is from <em>him</em>. It has gone wrong, but it has
come to me, you see, at last. In the morning I will see
you. I will tell you then—all.”</p>
<p class='c011'>In another minute, the door quietly closing, Anna
found herself alone. Breaking the seal, she saw that the
letter had been written three days before Keith’s death.
An error in the original address, doubtless due to his
exhaustion, had sent it far astray. The letter said:—</p>
<p class='c014'><span class='sc'>My own Anna</span>,—I am here in Raleigh in a comfortable
house, and with kind people, but I fear that
I am very ill, and that the end is now not far away,
and I want you as soon as you can come to me. I
hope there will be no need of alarming you with a telegram,
for I know that you will start as soon as this
reaches you, and that will be in good time.</p>
<p class='c014'>Do not think that this crisis is sudden and unforeseen.
The physician in Baltimore told me plainly that I
could have but a short time to live, and when I knew
that I hastened to reach you as quickly as I might. It
was for you only, Anna, in all the world that I longed.
I believed that a few weeks of quietness were for us,
not harder than we could bear, being together.</p>
<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>I think you will know that something turned me
back almost at my journey’s end. John Gregory is
honest, and he will tell you, if indeed he knows himself.</p>
<p class='c014'>I do not know now what he said to me, I do not
care to remember. Whatever it was it should have had
no weight, being spoken, I know, under some strong excitement,
but with it there went that strange, irresistible
influence which Gregory exerts over me, and before
which I was, or seemed to myself, powerless. I felt
his will was for me to go back, not onward to you, and
I yielded as if unable to do otherwise. I do not know,
I cannot understand. I wish it had not been so, but
rather for him than for myself, for I know that in his
higher mood the thought of that night must be hateful
to him.</p>
<p class='c014'>I want to say now while I can that neither you nor
he must look upon these events in a way to exaggerate
or overemphasize their importance. I can see that you
with your sensitive conscience and he with his great
moral severity may judge over hardly. The difference
to me has not been great. The end was very near, and
is not hastened, and I shall see you yet before it comes.
If I had not been weak I should have kept on my way.
It was my weakness that sent me back rather than the
outward compulsion.</p>
<p class='c014'>I shall not want to talk of this when I see you,
Anna, and so I will write to-day some things which have
come to my mind this winter, for I have come to see
many things in a new light.</p>
<p class='c014'>John Gregory loves you. I do not blame him for
that, nor wonder. “We needs must love the highest
when we see it.” He is a man of great power and of
the highest spiritual ambition. He is far nearer to you
<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>in ability than I; he could enter more deeply into your
purposes and sympathize in fuller measure with your
intellectual life. I believe you could have loved him, if
you had been free, and that the union of two such
natures would have been nobly effective for good. But
I found you first, and with my fond dream that a sign
was given me, won you for my wife. What then?</p>
<p class='c014'>It fell to my part, although not of my own will, to
give your life the shape it has taken. Sometimes I see
plainly that I, a poor, pale, colourless fellow, wholly
beneath both you and John Gregory, have maimed both
your lives, so much stronger and more potential than
mine could ever be.</p>
<p class='c014'>And yet, Anna, for all this I cannot wish the past
undone. I claim you wholly, heartily, for my own, and
whatever the future may hold for you, and however the
past has tried you, I believe in your love for me, and in
the union of our spirits. My heart is at rest. My trust
in you is absolute and beyond hurt or harm, and all the
joy my life has known has come through you, my true
and faithful wife. Never doubt this if you love me
and would honour my name.</p>
<p class='c014'>I wish to lay no hint of limitation or direction upon
your future. Wherever you go, the dear Lord will go
with you, and you will bring peace and consolation.
You cannot go astray, nor your work be brought to
naught, for God is with you. All that I have is yours
without reserve or condition, beyond the few legacies I
have named in a letter to my lawyer in Fulham. Use
what was ours together freely wherever you will,
whether to establish Fraternia, or in any line of effort
which appeals to you. My keenest regret is that heretofore
I have withheld from you what you desired. Forgive
<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>me. Those scruples look small and mean to me
to-day.</p>
<p class='c014'>Good night, my Anna—my Benigna, my highest
grace and blessing.</p>
<p class='c014'>Do not think of me as left comfortless. I am not
alone. The King is at the door, and I hear his voice.
He has even come in and will sup with me and I with
him.</p>
<p class='c014'>Let his peace be upon us both.</p>
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<div class='line'><span class='sc'>Keith.</span></div>
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<p class='c011'>It was morning.</p>
<p class='c011'>Entering her room, Gulielma Mallison found Anna
fully dressed, standing in a stream of sunshine, with a
brighter light than that of the sun upon her face.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Oh, mother!” she cried, stretching out both her
hands, “I can live. I can sleep. I can even cry now.
Oh, these tears! how they have fallen like rain on a
thirsty ground. See, mother; after all I am young still
and strong. Feel my pulse, how full it is this morning,
how strong and steady! I am at peace. The peace
of God has come to me at last. Keith has comforted
me.”</p>
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