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<h2> CHAPTER VII </h2>
<p>It is determined with something like humour that communities very young
should occupy themselves almost altogether with matters of grave and
serious import. The vision of life at that period is no doubt unimpeded
and clear; its conditions offer themselves with a certain nakedness and
force, both as to this world and to that which is to come. The town of
Elgin thus knew two controlling interests—the interest of politics
and the interest of religion. Both are terms we must nevertheless
circumscribe. Politics wore a complexion strictly local, provincial, or
Dominion. The last step of France in Siam, the disputed influence of
Germany in the Persian Gulf, the struggle of the Powers in China were not
matters greatly talked over in Elgin; the theatre of European diplomacy
had no absorbed spectators here. Nor can I claim that interest in the
affairs of Great Britain was in any way extravagant.</p>
<p>A sentiment of affection for the reigning house certainly prevailed. It
was arbitrary, rococo, unrelated to current conditions as a tradition sung
down in a ballad, an anachronism of the heart, cherished through long rude
lifetimes for the beauty and poetry of it—when you consider, beauty
and poetry can be thought of in this. Here was no Court aiding the
transmutation of the middle class, no King spending money; here were no
picturesque contacts of Royalty and the people, no pageantry, no blazonry
of the past, nothing to lift the heart but an occasional telegram from the
monarch expressing, upon an event of public importance, a suitable
emotion. Yet the common love for the throne amounted to a half-ashamed
enthusiasm that burned with something like a sacred flame, and was among
the things not ordinarily alluded to, because of the shyness that attaches
to all feeling that cannot be justified in plain terms. A sentiment of
affection for the reigning house certainly prevailed; but it was a thing
by itself. The fall of a British Government would hardly fail to excite
comment, and the retirement of a Prime Minister would induce both the
Mercury and the Express to publish a biographical sketch of him,
considerably shorter than the leader embodying the editor’s views as to
who should get the electric light contract. But the Government might
become the sole employer of labour in those islands, Church and school
might part company for ever, landlords might be deprived of all but
compassionate allowances and, except for the degree of extravagance
involved in these propositions, they would hardly be current in Elgin. The
complications of England’s foreign policy were less significant still. It
was recognized dimly that England had a foreign policy, more or less had
to have it, as they would have said in Elgin; it was part of the huge
unnecessary scheme of things for which she was responsible—unnecessary
from Elgin’s point of view as a father’s financial obligations might be to
a child he had parted with at birth. It all lay outside the facts of life,
far beyond the actual horizon, like the affairs of a distant relation from
whom one has nothing to hope, not even personal contact, and of whose
wealth and greatness one does not boast much, because of the irony
involved. Information upon all these matters was duly put before Elgin
every morning in the telegrams of the Toronto papers; the information
came, until the other day, over cables to New York and was disseminated by
American news agencies. It was, therefore, not devoid of bias; but if this
was perceived it was by no means thought a matter for protesting measures,
especially as they would be bound to involve expense. The injury was too
vague, too remote, to be more than sturdily discounted by a mental
attitude. Belief in England was in the blood, it would not yield to the
temporary distortion of facts in the newspapers—at all events, it
would not yield with a rush. Whether there was any chance of insidious
sapping was precisely what the country was too indifferent to discover.
Indifferent, apathetic, self-centred—until whenever, down the wind,
across the Atlantic, came the faint far music of the call to arms. Then
the old dog of war that has his kennel in every man rose and shook
himself, and presently there would be a baying! The sense of kinship,
lying too deep for the touch of ordinary circumstance, quickened to that;
and in a moment “we” were fighting, “we” had lost or won.</p>
<p>Apart, however, from the extraordinary, the politics of Elgin’s daily
absorption were those of the town, the Province, the Dominion. Centres of
small circumference yield a quick swing; the concern of the average
intelligent Englishman as to the consolidation of his country’s interests
in the Yangtse Valley would be a languid manifestation beside that of an
Elgin elector in the chances of an appropriation for a new court house.
The single mind is the most fervid: Elgin had few distractions from the
question of the court house or the branch line to Clayfield. The arts
conspired to be absent; letters resided at the nearest university city;
science was imported as required, in practical improvements. There was
nothing, indeed, to interfere with Elgin’s attention to the immediate, the
vital, the municipal: one might almost read this concentration of interest
in the white dust of the rambling streets, and the shutters closed against
it. Like other movements of the single mind, it had something of the
ferocious, of the inflexible, of the unintelligent; but it proudly wore
the character of the go-ahead and, as Walter Winter would have pointed out
to you, it had granted eleven bonuses to “capture” sound commercial
concerns in six years.</p>
<p>In wholesome fear of mistake, one would hesitate to put church matters
either before or after politics among the preoccupations of Elgin. It
would be safer and more indisputable to say that nothing compared with
religion but politics, and nothing compared with politics but religion. In
offering this proposition also we must think of our dimensions. There is a
religious fervour in Oxford, in Mecca, in Benares, and the sign for these
ideas is the same; we have to apply ourselves to the interpretation. In
Elgin religious fervour was not beautiful, or dramatic, or
self-immolating; it was reasonable. You were perhaps your own first
creditor; after that your debt was to your Maker. You discharged this
obligation in a spirit of sturdy equity: if the children didn’t go to
Sunday school you knew the reason why. The habit of church attendance was
not only a basis of respectability, but practically the only one: a person
who was “never known to put his head inside a church door” could not be
more severely reprobated, by Mrs Murchison at all events. It was the
normal thing, the thing which formed the backbone of life, sustaining to
the serious, impressive to the light, indispensable to the rest, and the
thing that was more than any of these, which you can only know when you
stand in the churches among the congregations. Within its prescribed
limitations it was for many the intellectual exercise, for more the
emotional lift, and for all the unfailing distraction of the week. The
repressed magnetic excitement in gatherings of familiar faces,
fellow-beings bound by the same convention to the same kind of behaviour,
is precious in communities where the human interest is still thin and
sparse. It is valuable in itself, and it produces an occasional detached
sensation. There was the case, in Dr Drummond’s church, of placid-faced,
saintly old Sandy MacQuhot, the epileptic. It used to be a common regret
with Lorne Murchison that as sure as he was allowed to stay away from
church Sandy would have a fit. That was his little boy’s honesty; the
elders enjoyed the fit and deprecated the disturbance.</p>
<p>There was a simple and definite family feeling within communions. “They
come to our church” was the argument of first force whether for calling or
for charity. It was impossible to feel toward a Congregationalist or an
Episcopalian as you felt toward one who sang the same hymns and sat under
the same admonition week by week, year in and year out, as yourself.
“Wesleyans, are they?” a lady of Knox Church would remark of the newly
arrived, in whom her interest was suggested. “Then let the Wesleyans look
after them.” A pew-holder had a distinct status; an “adherent” enjoyed
friendly consideration, especially if he adhered faithfully; and stray
attendants from other congregations were treated with punctilious
hospitality, places being found for them in the Old Testament, as if they
could hardly be expected to discover such things for themselves. The
religious interest had also the strongest domestic character in quite
another sense from that of the family prayers which Dr Drummond was always
enjoying. “Set your own house in order and then your own church” was a
wordless working precept in Elgin. Threadbare carpet in the aisles was
almost as personal a reproach as a hole under the dining-room table; and
self-respect was barely possible to a congregation that sat in faded pews.
The minister’s gown even was the subject of scrutiny as the years went on.
It was an expensive thing to buy, but an oyster supper would do it and
leave something over for the organ. Which brings us to the very core and
centre of these activities, their pivot, their focus and, in a human
sense, their inspiration—the minister himself.</p>
<p>The minister was curiously special among a people so general; he was in a
manner raised in life on weekdays as he was in the pulpit on Sundays. He
had what one might call prestige; some form of authority still survived in
his person, to which the spiritual democracy he presided over gave a
humorous, voluntary assent. He was supposed to be a person of undetermined
leisure—what was writing two sermons a week to earn your living by?—and
he was probably the more reverend, or the more revered, from the fact that
he was in the house all day. A particular importance attached to
everything he said and did; he was a person whose life answered different
springs, and was sustained on quite another principle than that of supply
and demand. The province of public criticism was his; but his people made
up for the meekness with which they sat under it by a generous use of the
corresponding privilege in private. Comments upon the minister partook of
hardiness; it was as if the members were determined to live up to the fact
that the office-bearers could reduce his salary if they liked. Needless to
say, they never did like. Congregations stood loyally by their pastors,
and discussion was strictly intramural. If the Methodists handed theirs on
at the end of three years with a breath of relief, they exhaled it among
themselves; after all, for them it was a matter of luck. The
Presbyterians, as in the case of old Mr Jamesion of St Andrew’s, held on
till death, pulling a long upper lip: election was not a thing to be
trifled with in heaven or upon earth.</p>
<p>It will be imagined whether Dr Drummond did not see in these conditions
his natural and wholesome element, whether he did not fit exactly in. The
God he loved to worship as Jehovah had made him a beneficent despot and
given him, as it were, a commission. If the temporal power had charged him
to rule an eastern province, he would have brought much the same qualities
to the task. Knox Church, Elgin, was his dominion, its moral and material
affairs his jealous interest, and its legitimate expansion his chief
pride. In “anniversary” sermons, which he always announced the Sunday
before, he seldom refrained from contrasting the number on the roll of
church membership, then and now, with the particular increase in the year
just closed. If the increase was satisfactory, he made little comment
beyond the duty of thanksgiving—figures spoke for themselves. If it
was otherwise Dr Drummond’s displeasure was not a thing he would conceal.
He would wing it eloquently on the shaft of his grief that the harvest had
been so light; but he would more than hint the possibility that the
labourers had been few. Most important among his statistics was the number
of young communicants. Wanderers from other folds he admitted, with a not
wholly satisfied eye upon their early theological training, and to persons
duly accredited from Presbyterian churches elsewhere he gave the right
hand of fellowship; but the young people of his own congregation were his
chief concern always, and if a gratifying number of these had failed to
“come forward” during the year, the responsibility must lie somewhere. Dr
Drummond was willing to take his own share; “the ministrations of this
pulpit” would be more than suspected of having come short, and the
admission would enable him to tax the rest upon parents and Bible-class
teachers with searching effect. The congregation would go gloomily home to
dinner, and old Sandy MacQuhot would remark to his wife, “It’s hard to say
why will the Doctor get himself in sic a state aboot mere numbers. We’re
told ‘where two or three are gathered together.’ But the Doctor’s all for
a grand congregation.”</p>
<p>Knox Church, under such auspices could hardly fail to enlarge her borders;
but Elgin enlarged hers faster. Almost before you knew where you were
there spread out the district of East Elgin, all stacks of tall chimneys
and rows of little houses. East Elgin was not an attractive locality; it
suffered from inundation sometimes, when the river was in spring flood; it
gave unresentful room to a tannery. It was the home of dubious practices
at the polls, and the invariable hunting-ground for domestic servants.
Nevertheless, in the view of Knox Church, it could not bear a character
wholly degraded; too many Presbyterians, Scotch foremen, and others, had
their respectable residence there. For these it was a far cry to Dr
Drummond in bad weather, and there began to be talk of hiring the East
Elgin schoolhouse for Sunday exercises if suitable persons could be got to
come over from Knox Church and lead them. I do not know who was found to
broach the matter to Dr Drummond; report says his relative and
housekeeper, Mrs Forsyth, who perhaps might do it under circumstances of
strategical advantage. Mrs Forsyth, or whoever it was, had her reply in
the hidden terms of an equation—was it any farther for the people of
East Elgin to walk to hear him preach than for him to walk to minister to
the people of East Elgin, which he did quite once a week, and if so, how
much? Mrs Forsyth, or whoever it was, might eliminate the unknown
quantity. It cannot be said that Dr Drummond discouraged the project; he
simply did not mention it and as it was known to have been communicated to
him this represented effectively the policy of the closed door. He found
himself even oftener in East Elgin, walking about on his pastoral errands
with a fierce briskness of aspect and a sharp inquiring eye, before which
one might say the proposition slunk away. Meanwhile, the Methodists who,
it seemed, could tolerate decentralization, or anything short of round
dances, opened a chapel with a cheerful sociable, and popularized the
practice of backsliding among those for whom the position was
theologically impossible. Good Presbyterians in East Elgin began to turn
into makeshift Methodists. The Doctor missed certain occupants of the
gallery seats and felt the logic of circumstances. Here we must all yield,
and the minister concealed his discomfiture in a masterly initiative. The
matter came up again at a meeting of the church managers, brought up by Dr
Drummond, who had the satisfaction of hearing that a thing put into the
Doctor’s hands was already half done. In a very few weeks it was entirely
done. The use of the schoolhouse was granted through Dr Drummond’s
influence with the Board free of charge; and to understand the triumph of
this it should be taken into account that three of the trustees were
Wesleyans. Services were held regularly, certain of Dr Drummond’s elders
officiating; and the conventicle in the schoolhouse speedily became known
as Knox Church Mission. It grew and prospered. The first night “I to the
hills will lift mine eyes” went up from East Elgin on the uplifting tune
that belongs to it, the strayed came flocking back.</p>
<p>This kind never go forth again; once they refind the ark of the covenant
there they abide. In the course of time it became a question of a better
one, and money was raised locally to build it. Dr Drummond pronounced the
first benediction in Knox Mission Church, and waited, well knowing human
nature in its Presbyterian aspect, for the next development. It came, and
not later than he anticipated, in the form of a prayer to Knox Church for
help to obtain the services of a regularly ordained minister. Dr Drummond
had his guns ready: he opposed the application; where a regularly ordained
minister was already at the disposal of those who chose to walk a mile and
a half to hear him, the luxury of more locally consecrated services should
be at the charge of the locality. He himself was willing to spend and be
spent in the spiritual interests of East Elgin; that was abundantly
proven; what he could not comfortably tolerate was the deviation of
congregational funds, the very blood of the body of belief, into other
than legitimate channels. He fought for his view with all his tactician’s
resources, putting up one office-bearer after another to endorse it but
the matter was decided at the general yearly meeting of the congregation;
and the occasion showed Knox Church in singular sympathy with its
struggling offspring. Dr Drummond for the first time in his ministry, was
defeated by his people. It was less a defeat than a defence, an unexpected
rally round the corporate right to direct corporate activities; and the
congregation was so anxious to wound the minister’s feelings as little as
possible that the grant in aid of the East Elgin Mission was embodied in a
motion to increase Dr Drummond’s salary by two hundred and fifty dollars a
year. The Doctor with a wry joke, swallowed his gilded pill, but no
coating could dissimulate its bitterness, and his chagrin was plain for
long. The issue with which we are immediately concerned is that three
months later Knox Church Mission called to minister to it the Reverend
Hugh Finlay, a young man from Dumfriesshire and not long out. Dr Drummond
had known beforehand what their choice would be. He had brought Mr Finlay
to occupy Knox Church pulpit during his last July and August vacation, and
Mrs Forsyth had reported that such midsummer congregations she had simply
never worshipped with. Mrs Forsyth was an excellent hand at pressed tongue
and a wonder at knitted counterpanes, but she had not acquired tact and
never would.</p>
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