太子爷小说网 > 英语电子书 > phyllis of philistia >

第32节

phyllis of philistia-第32节

小说: phyllis of philistia 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



quently; upon his election to a position of distinction in the eyes of his fellow…country…menor; at least; of his country…women。 But the bishop they found to be a poor thing after all。 They felt sure that what the people said about his being quite humble in the presence of his wife was not without some foundation; and they thought that; after all; there was a great deal to be said in favor of the celibacy of priests compulsory in the Church of Rome。 If the bishops of the Church of England were not very careful; they might be the means of such a going over to Rome as had never previously been witnessed in England。

George Holland may have been disappointed; or he may have been pleased at the inactivity of the bishop。 He made no sign one way or the other。 Of course he was no more than human: he would have regarded a letter of remonstrance from the bishop as a personal compliment; he had certainly expected such a letter; for he had already put together the heads of the reply he would makeand publishto any official remonstrance that might be offered to him。 Still he made no sign。 He preached at least one sermon every Sunday morning; and whenever it was known that he would preach; St。 Chad's was crowded and the offertory was all that could be desired。 The bishop's chaplain no longer held a watching brief in regard in regard to those sermons。 He did not think it worth while to do so much; George Holland's friends said; shaking their heads and pursing out their lips。 Oh; yes! there could be no doubt that the bishop was a very weak sort of man。

But then suddenly there appeared in the new number of the /Zeit Geist Review/ an article above the signature of George Holland; entitled 〃The Enemy to Christianity;〃 and in a moment it became pretty plain that George Holland had not in his 〃Revised Versions;〃 said the last word that he had to say regarding the attitude of the Church of England in respect of the non…church…goers of the day。 When people read the article they asked 〃Who is the Enemy to Christianity referred to by the writer?〃 and they were forced to conclude that the answer which was made to such an inquiry by the article itself was; 〃The Church。〃

He pointed out the infatuation which possessed the heads of the Church of England in expecting to appeal with success to the educated people of the present day; while still declining to move with the course of thought of the people。 Already the braying of a trombone out of tune; and the barbarous jingle of a tambourine; had absorbed some hundred thousand of possible church…goers; and though; of course; it was impossible for sensible men and womenthe people whom the Church should endeavor to grapple to its soul with hooks of steelto look; except with amused sadness; at the ludicrous methods and vulgar ineptitude of the Salvation Army; still the Church was making no effort to provide the sensible; thinking; educated people of England with an equivalent as suitable to their requirements as the Salvation Army was to the requirements of the foolish; the hysterical; the unthinking people who played the tambourines and brayed on the tuneless trombones。 Thus it is that one man says to another nowadays; when he has got nothing better to talk about; 〃Are you a man of intelligence; or do you go to church?〃

Men of intelligence do not go to church nowadays; Mr。 Holland announced in that article of his in the /Zeit Geist/; many women of intelligence refrain from going; he added; though many beautifully dressed women were still frequent attenders。 There was no blinking the fact that the crass stupidity of the Church had made church…going unpopularalmost impossiblewith intelligent men and women。 The Church insulted the intelligence by trying to reconcile the teachings of Judaism with the teachings of Christianity; when the two were absolutely irreconcilable。 It was the crass stupidity of the Church that had caused itfor its self…protection; it fanciedto bitterly oppose every truth that was revealed to man。 The Church had tortured and burned at the stake the great men to whom God had revealed the great facts of nature's workingsthe motion of the earth and the other planets。 But these facts; being Divine Truth; became accepted by the world in spite of the thumb…screws and the fagotsthe arguments of the Church against Divine Truth。 The list of the Divine Truths which the Church had bitterly opposed was a sickening document。 Geography; Geology; Biologythe progress of all had; even within recent years; been bitterly opposed by the Church; and yet the self… constituted arbiters between Truth and falsehood had been compelled to eat their own wordsto devour their own denunciations when they found that the Truth was accepted by the intelligence of the people in spite of the anathemas of the Church。

The intelligence of the Church was equal only to the duty of burning witches。 It burned them by the thousand; simply because ancient Judaism had a profound belief in the witch and because a blood…thirsty Jewish murderer…monarch had organized a witch hunt。

And yet with such a record against ita record of the murder of innocent men and women who endeavored to promulgate the Divine Truths of naturethe Church still arrogated to itself the right to lay down a rule of life for intelligent peoplea rule of life founded upon that impossible amalgamation of Judaism and Christianity。 The science of the Church was not equal to the task of amalgamating two such deadly opponents。

Was it any wonder; then; that church…going had become practically obsolete among intelligent men and women? the writer asked。

He then went on to refer to the nature of the existing services of the Church of England。 He dealt only casually with the mockery of the response of the congregation to the reading out of the Fourth Commandment by the priest; when no one in the Church paid the least respect to the Seventh Day。 This was additional proof of the absurdity of the attempted amalgamation of Judaism and Christianity。 But what he dealt most fully with was the indiscriminate selection of what were very properly termed the 〃Lessons〃 from the Hebrew Bible。 It was; he said; far from edifying to hear some chapters read out from the lectern without comment; though fortunately the readers were as a rule so imperfectly trained that the most objectionable passages had their potentiality of mischief minimized。 He concluded his indictment by a reference to a sermon preached by the average clergyman of the Church of England。 This was; usually; he said; either a theological essay founded upon an obsolete system of theology; or a series of platitudes of morality delivered by an unpractical man。 The first was an insult to the intelligence of an average man; the second was an insult to the intelligence of an average schoolgirl。

His summing up of the whole case against the Church was as logical as it was trenchant。 The Church had surely become; he said; like unto the Giant Pagan in 〃The Pilgrim's Progress;〃 who; when incapable of doing mischief; sat mumbling at the mouth of his cave on the roadside。 The Church had become toothless; decrepit either for evil or for good。 Its mouthings of the past had become its mumblings of the present。 The cave at the mouth of which this toothless giant sat was very dark; and intelligent people went by with a good…natured and tolerant laugh。

This article was published in the /Review/ on Tuesday。 Phyllis read it on the evening of that day。 On Wednesday the newspapers were full of this further development of the theories of the writer; and on Thursday afternoon the writer paid a visit to Phyllis。

As he entered the drawing room he found himself face to face with Herbert Courtland; who was in the act of leaving。



CHAPTER XXIV。

SHE WAS A WIFE; AND SHE HAD A LOVER WHO DISAPPOINTED HER。

The prayer of Ella Linton had not been answered。 She had prayed; not that her heart wherewith she loved Herbert Courtland might be changed that she knew would be difficult; not that her love for Herbert Courtland might ceasethat she believed to be impossible; but simply that Herbert Courtland might be kept away from herthat she knew to be the most sensible course her scheme of imploration could take。

She was well aware of the fact that God had given her strength to run away from Herbert Courtland; and for that she was sincerely thankful; she did not pause to analyze her feelings; to ask herself if her thanks were due to her reflection upon the circumstance of her husband's return; at the very hour when she had appointed to meet Herbert Courtland; she only felt that God had been good to her in giving her sufficient strength to run away from that appointment。 Then it was that she had prayed that he might be kept away from her。 Surely God would find it easy to do that; she thought。 Surely she might assume that God was on her side; and that he would not leave his work half done。

But when she began to think of the thorough manner in which God does his work she began to wish that she had not prayed quite so earnestly。 Supposing that God should think it fit to keep him away from her by sending a blast from heaven to capsize that yacht in the deep sea; what would she think of the fervency of her prayer then?

The terror of her reflect

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的