<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
<blockquote><p>The sun is bright, the fields are gay<br/>
With people in their best array,<br/>
Through the vale retired and lowly<br/>
Trooping to the summons holy.<br/>
And up among the woodlands see<br/>
What sparklings of blithe company!<br/>
Of lasses and of shepherd grooms<br/>
That down the steep hills force their way,<br/>
Like cattle through the budded brooms;<br/>
Path or no path, what care they?</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">White Doe of
Rylstone</span>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“You recollect that in our interview with Robert Walker
on the top of <span class="smcap">Walna</span>, we were directed
by him to assemble at his church on the following Sunday, the
children to commence their preparation for Confirmation, and the
parents to present their offspring and themselves to derive
comfort and instruction from the occasion. Never did a
brighter sun shine on the world than that which rose on that
memorable morning! Why, sir, does the sun shine brighter on
a Sunday than on any other day in the week?”</p>
<p>“I cannot,” said I, sniffing, “give a reason
for that which does not exist; but I can see a reason why good
men should sometimes <i>think</i> so, from their mistaking the
warmth and light of gratitude springing up in their own hearts on
that holy day, for the rays of the sun above them!”</p>
<p>“It may be so,” said the old man, “but I
shall live and die in the belief that there was something warmer
and brighter in the sun on that blessed morning, than I ever felt
either before or since. The early work of the day, (and in
a farm like ours there is always some labour which must
necessarily be attended to even on the Sunday,) was finished long before
the usual hour, and we were all dressed in our very best and on
our way for <span class="smcap">Seathwaite</span> Chapel, soon
after nine o’clock. The early rays of the sun lighted
up Coniston <span class="smcap">Old Man</span>, <SPAN name="citation52"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote52" class="citation">[52]</SPAN> so that you might count every stone in
his body. As we descended the slope of the mountain side
for the vale of the Duddon, you might see a thousand white
threads of water pouring down from every height that surrounded
the valley, (for there had been a heavy shower of rain in the
night,) and all rushing, with headlong impetuosity, into the
brawling stream below. Then you could trace that stream,
winding its beautiful way, now in sunshine, and now in shadow,
till it gradually widened into a broad estuary, and lost\ itself
in the bay of <span class="smcap">Morecambe</span>, the dark mass
of <span class="smcap">Peel Castle</span> standing calmly amidst
the waves, as if to mark the boundary between the broad river and
the ocean. This sight of itself prepared the mind for the
religious impressions which were to follow; even a child like me
seeing in the picture before him an emblem of the hasty bustle of
time and the quiet repose of eternity; and I could not resist
putting up a silent prayer to <span class="smcap">God</span>,
that the light of His <i>Grace</i> might continue to shine upon
the days of my short and feverish life as the sun in heaven was
then glittering upon the mountain rills, now so bright and busy,
and in a few hours doomed to become silent and still, as though
they had never been. But another sight, still more
impressive, broke on our view as we turned the crest of the
little hill from which we first looked down on the chapel to
which we were tending. Nothing, I believe, puzzles
strangers so much, on visiting our Lake country, as to find out
where all the people live. The houses of the district are
placed in such odd nooks and corners, so buried under little
knolls or spreading trees, and so like the old grey rocks about
them in colour and shape, that an inexperienced traveller might
roam through half that mountainous region, and fancy that its
only inhabitants were sheep, rooks, and wanderers like himself. In
the mining districts, too, one half of the inhabitants live under
ground during the week, and it is only on a Sunday, when they
come up to worship <span class="smcap">God</span> with their
brethren, that they see the light of the blessed day. Hence
it is on Sundays only, that any man, native or stranger, can get
a real sight of the whole population. Now, at the moment I
speak of, just as we got a first view of the whole valley round
Mr. Walker’s chapel, the whole population of the district
burst on our sight at once. They were seen pouring over
every height, and hurrying down the breast of every hill, of all
ages, and in dresses of almost every variety of hue. The
matrons, in their scarlet cloaks, which shone brightly among the
green heather, were walking carefully along in groups of two or
three, talking over, no doubt, the events of the week since they
last met, the occasion that now more especially brought them
together, and, it must be confessed, perhaps now and then mixing
with more serious topics a little of the passing scandal of the
country-side. The old grey-coated farmers, with stout
sticks in their hands, said a few words on the subject of prices
at the last Broughton sheep and wool fair; while the young men
and maidens, laughing a little more loudly than the day
justified, and walking a little nearer each other than their
elders always quite approved, seemed to select, by way of
preference, the most rugged and slippery paths they could
find. In front of all rushed on the children and dogs, the
latter, even at church, the better behaved if not the more
intelligent party of the two. I would rather take my chance
in the next world with some of the good dogs that I knew in
Seathwaite, than some of the beasts in human shape that I have
met with since I left it! Well, sir, all these were seen
pouring at once down the hill sides, as lighthearted and cheerful
as the larks over their heads. There could be no mistake as
to the point to which, straggling as they seemed to be in their
course, they were all finally aiming; for the little chapel-bell
of Seathwaite was sending forth its sharp sound, not much louder
than a mountain cuckoo, but still distinctly enough to be heard
throughout <SPAN name="page54"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
54</span>the whole region in that still and silent air.
What a picture had we then before us of the <span class="GutSmall">UNITY</span> of the Church of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>! Though the paths of these men,
in the world, might be different, yet they all met together in
harmony in the House of <span class="smcap">God</span>—they
all aimed at one point—they all hoped to be saved by the
same faith. Here there was indeed ‘one house
appointed for all living’—to pray in during life, to
rest in after death. They all took Seathwaite chapel on
their road to heaven! The bell which called them together
to prayer was not much larger than a sheep bell, but it was
obeyed by all the flock with a readiness which shewed how anxious
they all were to be included within the fold of the <span class="smcap">Good Shepherd</span> of their souls.
Doubtless He was present in spirit. His minister on earth,
as far as that little flock was concerned, was there in person;
ready, as he always was, to see his flock, and administer to
their spiritual comforts. There he stood, at the door of
his humble parsonage, in his stuff gown and cassock, and his
silver locks streaming in the wind, greeting every one as he
passed by his door on the way to the chapel, and listening kindly
to any little intelligence, either of joy or of sorrow, which the
events of the last week might have brought forth. What a
crowd there was assembled within and around that humble chapel,
on that Sunday morning! There was not sitting or rather
kneeling room for one half of the congregation. For though
probably the number of candidates for Confirmation did not much
exceed a dozen, yet Mr. Walker’s expressed wish, (and his
wish was law,) had brought together all the parents, god-fathers
and god-mothers, and elder brothers and sisters of every
candidate, that they might be, on that occasion, reminded of
their own Christian duties. These, together with a number
of strangers attracted by the unusual circumstances, swelled the
congregation to an amount far exceeding what the little chapel
could contain; and so they stood about the door, or sat upon the
walls and grave-stones of the church-yard, which, to a
mountain-race on a fine autumn morning, formed quite as agreeable
a temple of worship as the close-packed and somewhat mouldy space
within. We, as being somewhat visitors and I a candidate,
were civilly accommodated with seats by one to whom we were well
known, and so heard and saw every thing that passed. There
was no distinction of seats, or rather <i>forms</i>, in that
little house of prayer. The forms all looked to the east,
being entered from one small aisle which ran up from the west
door to the altar. The people sat in families, but without
distinction as to rank, all going to the place where their
fathers had worshipped before, from time immemorial. The
only difference was, that as each by degrees grew old and deaf,
they advanced a step nearer the altar, that they might be able
better to hear and see the clergyman. Thus the more sacred
part of the building was surrounded by those who from age and
spiritual experience deserved to be exalted in the Church of
<span class="smcap">Christ</span>—they were, as it were,
the Elders round about the throne—they were a connecting
link between minister and people—they were looked up to by
those who sat behind, as their parents and examples; and no doubt
it was an ambitious wish in the hearts of many of the younger,
that as <i>they</i> advanced in years they might be thought
worthy to fill that honoured circle, and receive the respect
which they were then paying to their elders. Surely, sir,
this is a more becoming way of encircling the altar of our <span class="smcap">God</span>, than by crowding its steps with idle
and ill-mannered boys, as is too often the case in town churches,
putting those at the head who ought to be but at the entrance of
the Church of <span class="smcap">Christ</span>, and filling our
minds, as we think of that sacred portion of the House of <span class="smcap">God</span>, with the image of a school-master with
his ferula instead of a priest in his holy vestments!”</p>
<p>“I am nearly of your mind,” said I, smiling at the
quaintness of his notion, “but you must recollect that
necessity has no law.”</p>
<p>“True,” said he, “most true. Well,
sir, there we were, waiting in anxious expectation for the
stopping of the little tinkling bell, and the arrival of the
clergyman, for no one thought of sitting down till he
appeared. At length he advanced, with a grave face, and
placid countenance, <SPAN name="page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
56</span>bowing slightly to all as he passed, but with his eyes
fixed right before him till he reached the little altar, over the
rails of which hung the surplice. This was reverently
placed on his shoulders by a man almost as old and grey-headed as
himself, and evidently dressed in some of the minister’s
old raiment. The effect of this robing in the sight of the
congregation was very impressive. You saw as it were with
your eyes the putting off of the man and the putting on of the
minister. The world was lost for a time, and shrouded by
the clean white robe of the messenger of <span class="smcap">God</span>. I have often thought that
vestries, in and out of which the minister of a large town church
pops as in a play, destroy the effect which was certainly
produced on my mind by this robing of Robert Walker in the sight
of the people. The service began with a psalm, selected and
given out by Walker himself. His voice was rather thin from
age, but clear and distinct, for he had lost none of his teeth,
and his reading of the lines was like the sound of an instrument
of music. He read each verse separately, and separately
they were sung. The lines which he chose were the following
from the Old Version of the Psalms, which he always used not only
as being more near the original and more devotional in their
spirit than the new, but as consisting mainly of words of one
syllable, and expressly adapted to the plain-song of
congregational singing. When shall I forget the musical
cadences with which he gave out the following simple lines from
the 34th psalm?</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Come neare to me my children deare,<br/>
And to my words give eare:<br/>
I shall ye teach the perfect way<br/>
How ye the <span class="smcap">Lord</span> shall
feare.</p>
<p>‘Who is the man that would live long,<br/>
And lead a blessed life?<br/>
See thou refraine thy tongue and lips<br/>
From all deceit and strife.</p>
<p>‘Turn back thy face from doing ill,<br/>
And do the godly deed:<br/>
Inquire for peace and quietnesse,<br/>
And follow it with speed.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page57"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
57</span>‘For why? the eyes of <span class="smcap">God</span> above<br/>
Upon the just are bent:<br/>
His eares likewise do heare the plaint<br/>
Of the poor innocent.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“I wish, sir, you had heard the way in which the giving
out of the first verse of this psalm was responded to by the
congregation! There was no praising <span class="smcap">God</span> by deputy—no leaving this
delightful part of the service to a few women in pink bonnets,
and men in well-curled locks, stuck up in a gallery in front of a
conceited organist, mincing <span class="smcap">God</span>’s praise in softly warbled tones,
and ready to sing to-morrow with just the same zeal and devotion
in a Roman Catholic Chapel or an Italian Concert Hall, if they
are equally well paid for their professional services. No,
sir! every man, woman, and child sung for themselves, lustily,
and with a right good will. They sung the air in a minor
key, as is always the case among the inhabitants of mountain
districts, perhaps because they learn to pitch their notes to the
echoes of their native valleys; but it had from that circumstance
a more solemn and devotional effect. It was taken up by
those without the doors with the same zeal as by those within,
for all knew the air as familiarly as their own names. Here
was a strict compliance with David’s precept, ‘Young
men and maidens, old men and children, praise ye the name of the
<span class="smcap">Lord</span>.’ The mighty sound
rushed down the vale of <span class="smcap">Ulpha</span> like the
bursting of a mountain cataract; nor, for aught I can tell, was
it checked in its onward course till it had scaled the heights of
the surrounding mountains, and died away at last, in a gentle
whisper, on the lonely summit of <span class="smcap">Black
Comb</span>! <i>Died away</i>, did I say? Forgive me,
sir, the lowly thought! Far higher than the cliffs of <span class="smcap">Helvellyn</span> did that holy psalm ascend; nor
stayed it in its upward flight till it approached, as a memorial
of sweet incense, the throne of <span class="smcap">God</span>—there to be heard again when
earthly sound shall be no more!”</p>
<p>There was a single tear on the old man’s withered cheek
as he said this, and a twitching about the rigid muscles of his
mouth, which showed that his iron frame could still
vibrate to the gentle recollections of his youth. He paused
in his narrative; and there was a solemn silence between us of
some minutes’ duration. At length he
resumed—</p>
<p>“The saying of the Church Service followed with the same
calm solemnity and devotion with which it began. It was
clear that the object of the priest was to forget himself, and
lead the worshippers to forget him, in the high service in which
both were engaged; and in this he fully succeeded. It was
not till the worship prescribed by the Church was ended, and the
last Amen had died on the ear, that a sensation of curiosity
seemed to run through the assembly, and those without began to
crowd nearer the door, as though something unusual was about to
take place, and they were anxious to catch words less familiar to
their ears than the well-known language of the Prayer Book.
There was little preparation necessary for the sermon. The
preacher did not leave his place to change his sacred vestments
for a black gown, as is now the general fashion. His place
of prayer was also his place of preaching. I should explain
that what we call the reading-desk was placed in the north-east
corner of the little chapel, having two ledges for his books, one
looking to the south, and the other (which also formed the door)
to the west. On the former rested the Prayer Book, and on
the latter the Bible; so that when he prayed, he naturally turned
to the altar,—when he read the Scriptures, towards the
people. When he began to preach, therefore, he simply
turned to the people as when he had read the lessons, resting his
sermon on the Bible—no bad foundation, you will say,”
added the old man with a smile, “for a scriptural
discourse! His text was a very short and simple one but had
he sought the whole Bible through, he could not have found one
better adapted to my state of mind than the one he chose—my
disposition being at that time, as I before observed, to take a
somewhat gloomy and severe view of the Gospel; it was
‘<span class="smcap">God</span> is love.’ All
my dark fears vanished at the sound; and I waited not to hear the
reasons to be convinced that the essence of the Gospel is indeed
‘glad tidings’ to mankind. There was an
unwonted appearance of excitement about the preacher as he gave
forth his text, and turned over the leaves of the manuscript
which lay before him, looking first at it, and then at the crowd
of upturned and expecting faces before him with an expression
which I did not at first comprehend. He paused before he
commenced his sermon, as if he could hardly read his own
hand-writing, and yet nothing could be plainer or more distinct
than his penmanship, even to the end of his days. At last
he seemed to have made up his mind. He closed his sermon
with a force which seemed to shew that he had come to a final
determination, and deliberately put it into the pocket of his
cassock; he then cleared his voice, paused for an instant, and
commenced as follows. You will not expect me to remember
every word of the discourse; indeed, perhaps you will be
surprised that I should remember it at all; but the substance of
it, and often the very words and looks of the preacher still
cling to my memory, with a firmness of which nothing can deprive
them but the coming grave!”</p>
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