<h1 id="id00267" style="margin-top: 6em">CHAPTER IV.</h1>
<h5 id="id00268">A LITTLE PAGAN.</h5>
<p id="id00269" style="margin-top: 5em">The joke had now taken a phase that De Forrest did not relish. While
Lottie's by-play was present, and she was telegraphing to him with
her brilliant eyes, it was excellent. But to sit with his back to
the door leading into the hall, vis-a-vis to Mr. Dimmerly's puckered
face, and give close attention to the game, was a trying ordeal to
one who only consulted his own pleasure. And yet he feared he would
offend Lottie, did he not remain at his post. She was a despotic
little sovereign, and he felt that he must use all address until she
was safely brought to the matrimonial altar. He comforted himself,
however, with the thought that she was generous, and when he acted
the role of martyr she usually rewarded him with a greater show of
kindness, and no got through an hour with indifferent grace.</p>
<p id="id00270">But this purgatorial hour to him was keenly enjoyed by Lottie and<br/>
Hemstead, though by each for different reasons.<br/></p>
<p id="id00271">"I fear you think me a giddy, wayward girl," said Lottie gently.</p>
<p id="id00272">"In frankness, I hardly know what to think," replied Hemstead.</p>
<p id="id00273">"Frank is your name, is it not?"</p>
<p id="id00274">"Yes."</p>
<p id="id00275">"It seems appropriate. I hope you won't judge me too harshly."</p>
<p id="id00276">"The danger is the other way, I fear," he said laughing.</p>
<p id="id00277">"Well, one of your profession ought to be charitable. But I might
naturally expect to be disapproved of by one so good and wise as
you are."</p>
<p id="id00278">"Why do you think me 'good and wise'?"</p>
<p id="id00279">"Because you are a minister, if for no other reason."</p>
<p id="id00280">"I am also a man."</p>
<p id="id00281">"Yes," she said innocently. "You are quite grown up."</p>
<p id="id00282">He looked at her quickly; her demure face puzzled him, and he said,<br/>
"I fear you think I am overgrown."<br/></p>
<p id="id00283">"And I fear you don't care what I think. Men of your profession
are superior to the world."</p>
<p id="id00284">"Really, I shall think you are sarcastic, if you talk in that way
any more." But she looked so serious that he half believed she was
in earnest.</p>
<p id="id00285">"Are ministers like other men?" she asked, with a spice of genuine
curiosity in her question. The venerable pastor of the church which
she attended in New York had not seemed to belong to the same race
as herself. His hair was so white, his face so bloodless, his life
so saintly, and his sermons so utterly beyond her, that he appeared
as dim and unearthly as one of the Christian Fathers. A young
theologian on the way to that same ghostly state was an object
of piquant interest. She had never had a flirtation with a man of
this character, therefore there was all the zest of novelty. Had
she been less fearless, she would have shrunk from it, however, with
something of the superstitious dread that many have of jesting in
a church, or a graveyard. But there was a trace of hardihood in her
present course that just took her fancy. From lack of familiarity
with the class, she had a vague impression that ministers differed
widely from other men, and to bring one down out of the clouds as a
fluttering captive at her feet would be a triumph indeed. A little
awe mingled with her curiosity as she sought to penetrate the
scholastic and saintly atmosphere in which she supposed even an
embryo clergyman dwelt. She hardly knew what to say when, in reply
to her question, "Are ministers like other men?" he asked, "Why
not?"</p>
<p id="id00286">"That is hardly a fair way to answer."</p>
<p id="id00287">"You do not find me a mysterious being."</p>
<p id="id00288">"I find you very different from other young men of my acquaintance.
What to me is a matter of course is dreadful to you. Then you ministers
have such strange theological ways of dividing the world up into
saints and sinners, and you coolly predict such awful things for
the sinners (though I confess the sinners take it quite as coolly).
The whole thing seems professional rather than true."</p>
<p id="id00289">The tone of deep sadness in which the young man next spoke caused
her to look at him with a little surprise.</p>
<p id="id00290">"I do not wonder that this mutual coolness perplexes you. If we
believe the Bible, it is the strangest mystery in existence."</p>
<p id="id00291">"You may well put that in. Do the generality of people believe the
Bible? But as I was saying, from the very nature of your calling
you come to live far away from us. Our old minister knows more about
dead people than living. He knows all about the Jews and Greeks who
lived eighteen centuries ago, but next to nothing of the young of
his own church. My motives and temptations would be worse than
Sanscrit to him,—harder to understand than the unsolved problems
of mathematics. What does such a man know about the life of a young
lady in society? That which influences me would seem less than
nothing to him."</p>
<p id="id00292">"I think you misjudge your pastor. If you became well acquainted
with him, you might find a heart overflowing with sympathy."</p>
<p id="id00293">"I can no more get acquainted with him than if he dwelt on Mount
Olympus. If I were only a doctrine, he might study me up and know
something about me. But there is so much flesh and blood about me
that I fear I shall always be distasteful to ministers."</p>
<p id="id00294">"I assure you, Miss Marsden, I find you more interesting than some
doctrines."</p>
<p id="id00295">"But you are young. You are on a vacation, and can for a time descend
to trifles, but you will grow like the rest. As it is, you speak
very guardedly, and intimate that I would be as nothing compared
with other doctrines."</p>
<p id="id00296">"What is a doctrine, Miss Marsden?"</p>
<p id="id00297">"O, bless me, I don't know exactly; a sort of abstract summing up
of either our qualities or God's qualities. The only doctrine I
even half understand is that of 'total depravity,' and I sometimes
fear it's true."</p>
<p id="id00298">"I think you are a great deal more interesting than the 'doctrine
of total depravity,'" said Hemstead, laughing.</p>
<p id="id00299">"Perhaps you will come to think I am synonymous with it."</p>
<p id="id00300">"No fear. I have seen too much of you for that already."</p>
<p id="id00301">"What redeeming features have you seen?"</p>
<p id="id00302">He looked at her earnestly for a moment, and she sustained his
gaze with an expression of such innocent sweetness that he said, a
little impulsively, "All your features redeem you from that charge."</p>
<p id="id00303">"O, fie!" she exclaimed, "a pun and flattery in one breath!"</p>
<p id="id00304">"I do not mean to flatter. Although in some respects you puzzle me,
I am very clear and positive as to my feeling of gratitude. While
my aunt feels kindly toward me, she is formal. It seemed to me when
I came out of the cold of the wintry night I found within a more
chilling coldness. But when you gave me your warm hand and claimed
something like kindred, I was grateful for that which does not always
accompany kindred,—genuine kindness. This feeling was greatly
increased when instead of making my diffidence and awkwardness
a theme of ridicule, you evinced a delicate sympathy, and with
graceful tact suggested a better courtesy to others. Do you think
then, that, after this glimpse down such a beautiful vista in your
nature, I can associate you with 'total depravity'? It was plain
to you, Miss Marsden, that I had seen little of society, but you
acted as if that were my misfortune, not my fault. I think the
impulse that leads one to try to shield or protect another who for
the time may be weak or defenceless is always noble."</p>
<p id="id00305">If Lottie had shown a little before that she had a heart, she now
became painfully aware that she had a conscience, and it gave her
some severe twinges during this speech. For a moment she wished
she deserved his commendation. But she was not one to do things
by halves, and so, recklessly throwing aside her qualms, she said
laughingly, "I don't think a gentleman of your inches at all an
object of pity. You are big enough to take care of yourself."</p>
<p id="id00306">"And I mean to as far as I can. But we all need help at times. You
know a mouse once served a lion."</p>
<p id="id00307">"Thank you. Now you have counterbalanced all your fine speeches
and compliments. 'A mouse serving a lion!' Well, roar gently if
you please."</p>
<p id="id00308">"I'm afraid I appear to you like another animal that once donned
a lion's skin, but whose ears, alas, protruded."</p>
<p id="id00309">"That is rather a skilful retreat; but I imagine that you think
yourself a veritable lion."</p>
<p id="id00310">"If you insist on my being a lion, I must refer you to ancient
mythology, where one of these overrated beasts is held a crouching
captive by Diana."</p>
<p id="id00311">"Well, that is quite a transition. First compared to a mouse, and
then to the moon. I fear that if you have not visited 'questionable
places,' you have permitted your mind to dwell on the 'questionable'
myths of the past.</p>
<p id="id00312">"O, that was in the regular order of things," he replied. "Before
coming to the study of theology, we are put through mythology;
that is, under the guidance of reverend professors we make the
acquaintance of a set of imaginary beings who, had they veritably
lived, and in our day, would have soon found their way to the
penitentiary."</p>
<p id="id00313">"At the door of which the 'lion' and 'Diana' would part company,
and so I should lose my gentle 'captive' and become as disconsolate
as auntie would have been had you trodden on the reverse extremity
of her pet."</p>
<p id="id00314">"O, pardon me, but Diana was an exception to the rest."</p>
<p id="id00315">"Better or worse?"</p>
<p id="id00316">"Better, of course. She was a trifle cruel, though, was she not?"</p>
<p id="id00317">"You have been proving me very tender-hearted."</p>
<p id="id00318">"So every woman should be."</p>
<p id="id00319">"I doubt whether you know much about us."</p>
<p id="id00320">"I cannot imagine a being—not even an angel-more pure, unselfish,
and true than my mother; and she is a woman."</p>
<p id="id00321">"Miss Lottie," here broke in De Forrest, "I've played whist to the
utmost limit of my conscience. You will not keep me on the rack
any longer."</p>
<p id="id00322">"O, no, Cousin Julian," she replied, sotto voce, "only on the sofa
with our dear cousin Bel. See, she sits there alone. Good-by," and
she swept past, with a malicious twinkle in her eyes at his blank
expression.</p>
<p id="id00323">But Bel saw and understood the scene. With a cynical smile she
went to the piano, and commenced a brilliant waltz. Under its spell
Addie and Mr. Harcourt came whirling up the hall, and Lottie, who
had been under restraint so long, could not resist the temptation
of letting De Forrest carry her off also.</p>
<p id="id00324">"It's only with my cousin, you know," she whispered apologetically
to Hemstead.</p>
<p id="id00325">He stood in the door-way for a few moments and watched her graceful
figure with a strange and growing interest Whether saint or sinner,
this being so emphatically of flesh and blood was exceedingly
fascinating. The transition from the cloister-like seclusion of his
seminary life to this suburb of the gay world was almost bewildering;
and Lottie Marsden was one to stir the thin blood and withered
heart of the coldest anchorite. The faint perfume which she seemed
to exhale like a red rosebush in June was a pleasing exchange for
the rather musty and scholastic atmosphere in which he so long
had dwelt. As she glanced by as lightly as a bird on the wing, she
occasionally beamed upon him with one of her dangerous smiles. She
then little thought or cared that his honest and unoccupied heart
was as ready to thaw and blossom into love as a violet bank facing
the south in spring. He soon had a vague consciousness that he was
not doing just the prudent thing, and therefore rejoined his aunt
and uncle. Soon after he pleaded the weariness of his journey and
retired. As he was about to mount the stairs Lottie whirled by and
whispered, "Don't think me past praying for."</p>
<p id="id00326">The slang she used in jest came to him, with his tendencies and
convictions, like an unconscious appeal and a divine suggestion.
He was utterly unconventional, and while readily unbending into
mirthfulness, he regarded life as an exceedingly serious thing.
As the eyes of artist and poet catch glimpses of beauty where to
others are only hard lines and plain surfaces, so strong religious
temperaments are quick to see providences, intimations, and leadings.</p>
<p id="id00327">Hemstead went to his room with steps that deep thought rendered
slower and slower. He forgot his weariness, and sat down before
the fire to think of one known but a few brief hours. If there are
those who can coolly predict "awful things" of the faithless and
godless, Hemstead was not one of them. The young girl who thought
him a good subject for jest and ridicule, he regarded with profound
pity. Her utter unconsciousness of danger had to him the elements
of deepest pathos.</p>
<p id="id00328">While perplexed by contradictions in her manner and words, he
concluded that she was what she seemed, a girl of unusual force
of mind, frank and kindly, and full of noble impulses, but whose
religious nature was but slightly developed. He at that time would
have been shocked and indignant if he had known the truth. Her
natural tendencies had been good. Her positive nature would never
waver weakly along the uncertain boundary of good and evil, as was
the case with Bel Parton. She was one who would be decided and
progressive in one direction or the other, but now was clearly
on the sinister side of truth and moral loveliness. Surrounding
influences had been adverse. She had yielded to them, and they had
carried her farther astray than if she had been of a cautious and
less forceful temperament. While therefore full of good impulses,
she was also passionate and selfish. Much homage had made her
imperious, exacting, and had developed no small degree of vanity.
She exulted in the power and pre-eminence that beauty gave, and
often exerted the former cruelly, though it is due to her to state
that she did not realize the pain she caused. While her own heart
slept, she could not understand the aching disquiet of others that
she toyed with. That it was good sport, high-spiced excitement, and
occupation for her restless, active mind, was all she considered.
As she would never be neutral in her moral character, so she was
one who would do much of either harm or good. Familiarity with
the insincerities of fashionable life had blurred her sense of
truthfulness in little things, and in matters of policy she could
hide her meaning or express another as well as her veteran mother.</p>
<p id="id00329">And yet there were great possibilities of good in her character.
She had a substratum of sound common sense; was wholesomely averse
to meanness, cowardice, and temporizing; best of all, she was not
shallow and weak. She could appreciate noble action, and her mind
could kindle at great thoughts if presented clearly and strongly.</p>
<p id="id00330">She could scarcely be blamed severely for being what she was, for
she had only responded to the influences that had ever surrounded
her, and been moulded by them. Her character was rapidly forming,
but not as yet fixed. Therefore her best chance of escaping a moral
deformity as marked as her external beauty was the coming under an
entirely different class of influences.</p>
<p id="id00331">However earthly parents may wrong their children by neglect, or
by permitting in themselves characters that react ruinously upon
those sacredly intrusted to their training, the Divine Father seems
to give all a chance sometime in life for the achievement of the
grandest of all victories, the conquest of self. Whatever abstract
theories dreamers may evolve secluded from the world, those who observe
closely—who KNOW humanity from infancy to age—are compelled to
admit, however reluctantly, that the inner self of every heart is
tainted and poisoned by evil. The innocence of childhood is too
much like the harmlessness of the lion's whelps. However loftily and
plausibly some may assert the innate goodness and self-rectifying
power of humanity, as Tom Paine wrote against the Bible without
reading it, not having been able at the time to procure one in
infidel Paris, those who take the scientific course of getting the
facts first shake their heads despondingly. It is true that parents
discover diversities in their children. Some are sweeter-tempered
than others, and seem pointed horizontally, if not heavenward,
in their natures. Many bid fair to stand high, measured by earthly
standards. But the approving world can know nothing of the evil
thoughts that haunt the heart.</p>
<p id="id00332">What mother has not been almost appalled as she has seen the face
of her still infant child inflamed with rage and the passionate
desire for revenge? The chubby hand is not always raised to caress,
but too often to strike. As mind and heart develop, darker and meaner
traits unfold with every natural grace. There is a canker-worm in
the bud, and unless it is taken out, there never can be a perfect
flower.</p>
<p id="id00333">But Mr. and Mrs. Marsden thought of none of these things. The mother
received her estimate of life, and her duty, from current opinion
on the avenue. She complacently felicitated herself that she kept
up with the changing mode quite as well as most women of wealth
and fashion, if not better. She managed so well that she excited
the admiration of some, and the envy of more; and so was content.
As for Mr. Marsden, what with his business, his newspaper, whist,
and an occasional evening at the club or some entertainment or public
meeting that he could not escape, his life was full and running
over. He never had time to give a thought to the fine theories about
his children, nor to the rather contradictory facts often reported
from the nursery. But as year after year he paid the enormous and
increasing bills for nurses, gouvernantes, Italian music masters,
and fashionable schools, he sincerely thought that few men did as
much for their children as he.</p>
<p id="id00334">Of course, a lady from whom society expected so much as from Mrs.
Marsden could not give her time to her children. In the impressible
period of infancy and early childhood, Lottie and her brother, and
an invalid sister older than herself, had been left chiefly to the
charge of servants. But Mrs. Marsden's conscience was at rest,
for she paid the highest prices for her French and German nurses
and governesses, and of course "had the best," she said. Thus the
children lived in a semi-foreign atmosphere, and early caught a
"pretty foreign accent," which their mamma delighted to exhibit in
the parlor; and at the same time they became imbued with foreign
morals, which they also put on exhibition disagreeably often. When
through glaring faults the stylish nursery-maid was dismissed, the
obliging keeper of the intelligence office around the corner had
another foreign waif just imported, who at a slightly increased sum
was ready to undertake the care, and he might add the corruption,
of the children in the most approved style. She was at once engaged,
and to this alien the children were committed almost wholly, while
Mrs. Marsden would tell her afternoon visitors how fortunate she
had been in obtaining a new nurse with even a "purer accent." The
probabilities were that her doubtful accent was the purest thing
about her. Sometimes, as the results of this tutelage grew more
apparent, even Mrs. Marsden had misgivings. But then her wealthiest
and most fashionable neighbors were pursuing the same course with
precisely the same results; and so she must be right.</p>
<p id="id00335">If Lottie had been born pellucid as a drop of dew, as some claim,
she would not have remained so long, even in the nursery, and as
she stepped out farther and faster in the widening sphere of her
life, surrounding influences did not improve.</p>
<p id="id00336">Her extreme beauty and grace, and the consequent admiration and
flattery, developed an unusual degree of vanity, which had strengthened
with years; though now she had too much sense and refinement to
display it publicly. While generous and naturally warm-hearted,
the elements of gentleness and patient self-denial for the sake
of others at this time could scarcely have been discovered in her
character.</p>
<p id="id00337">Indeed this beautiful girl, nurtured in a Christian land, a regular
attendant upon church, was a pagan and belonged to a pagan family.
Not one of her household worshipped God. Mr. and Mrs. Marsden
would have been exceedingly shocked and angered if they had been
told they were heathens. But at the time when Paul found among
the multitudinous altars of Athens one dedicated to the "Unknown
God," there were many Grecian men and women more highly cultivated
than these two aristocrats of to-day. But in spite of external
devoutness at church, it could easily be shown that to this girl's
parents the God of the Bible was as "unknown" and unheeded as the
mysterious and unnamed deity concerning whose claims the Apostle
so startled the luxurious Athenians. Like the ancient Greeks, all
had their favorite shrines that, to a greater or a less degree,
absorbed heart and brain.</p>
<p id="id00338">Lottie was a votaress of pleasure: the first and about the only
article of her creed was to make everything and everybody minister
to her enjoyment. She rarely entered on a day with a more definite
purpose than to have a "good time"; and in the attainment of this
end we have seen that she was by no means scrupulous.</p>
<p id="id00339">She was as cruel a little pagan, too, as any of her remote Druidical
ancestors, and at her various shrines of vanity, pleasure, and
excitement, delighted in offering human sacrifices. She had become
accustomed to the writhing of her victims, and soothed herself
with the belief that it did not hurt them so very much after all.
She considered no farther than that flirtation was one of the
recognized amusements of the fashionable. What the TON did was law
and gospel to her mother; and the same to Lottie, if agreeable. If
not, there was no law and no gospel for her.</p>
<p id="id00340">She had no more scruple in making a victim of Hemstead than a Fiji
Island potentate would have in ordering a breakfast according to
his depraved and barbarous taste. And when even society-men had
succumbed to her wiles, and in abject helplessness had permitted
her to place her imperious foot upon their necks, what chance had
a warm-hearted, unsophisticated fellow, with the most chivalric
ideas of womanhood?</p>
<p id="id00341">Quick-witted Lottie, on seeing Hemstead and hearing his table-talk,
had modified Addie Marchmont's suggestion in her own mind. She saw
that, though unsuspicious and trusting in his nature, he was too
intelligent to be imposed upon by broad farce. Therefore, a religious
mask would soon be known as such. Her aunt also would detect the
mischievous plot against her nephew and guest, and thwart it. By
appearing as a well-meaning unguided girl, who both needed and
wished an adviser, she might more safely keep this modern Samson
blindly making sport for her and the others, and at the same time
not awaken the troublesome suspicions of her aunt and uncle. In the
character of one who was full of good impulses—who erred through
ignorance, and who wished to be led and helped to better things—she
was nearer the truth, and could act her part more successfully.</p>
<p id="id00342">But what could Frank Hemstead, coming from a home in which he
had breathed the very atmosphere of truth and purity, know of all
this? To him Lottie was the most beautiful creature he had ever
seen, and in his crystal integrity he would have deemed it a foul
insult to her to doubt that she was just what she seemed. To his
straightforward nature, believing a woman the opposite of what she
seemed was like saying to her, "Madam, you are a liar."</p>
<p id="id00343">The world would be better if women did more to preserve this
chivalric trust.</p>
<p id="id00344">"Past praying for!" His creed taught him to pray for all the world,
and already a subtile, unrecognized impulse of his heart led him
to plead before the Divine Father for one who seemed, in outward
grace, already fitted for heavenly surroundings.</p>
<p id="id00345">When a block of unusually perfect marble falls under the eye of
a true sculptor, he is conscious of a strong impulse to bring out
the exquisite statue that is distinctly visible to his mind. Hemstead
was an enthusiast in the highest form of art and human effort, and
was developing, as the ruling motive of his life, a passion for
moulding the more enduring material of character into moral symmetry
and loveliness. Humanity in its most forbidding guise interested
him, for his heart was warm and large and overflowed with a great
pity for the victims of evil. In this respect he was like his
Master, who had "compassion on the multitude." His anticipation
of his life-work was as non-professional as that of a mother who
yearns over the children she cannot help loving. Lottie appeared
strong and lovely by nature. It seemed to him that the half-effaced,
yet still lingering image of God rested upon her beautiful face
more distinctly than he had ever seen it elsewhere. The thought of
that image becoming gradually blurred and obliterated by sin—of
this seemingly exquisite and budding flower growing into a coarse,
rank weed—was revolting to his mind.</p>
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