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<h2> SIX. The Beacon on the Hill </h2>
<p>Mullins said afterward that it was ever so much easier than he thought it
would have been. The Dean, he said, was so quiet. Of course if Mr. Drone
had started to swear at Mullins, or tried to strike him, it would have
been much harder. But as it was he was so quiet that part of the time he
hardly seemed to follow what Mullins was saying. So Mullins was glad of
that, because it proved that the Dean wasn't feeling disappointed as, in a
way, he might have.</p>
<p>Indeed, the only time when the rector seemed animated and excited in the
whole interview was when Mullins said that the campaign had been ruined by
a lot of confounded mugwumps. Straight away the Dean asked if those
mugwumps had really prejudiced the outcome of the campaign. Mullins said
there was no doubt of it, and the Dean enquired if the presence of
mugwumps was fatal in matters of endeavour, and Mullins said that it was.
Then the rector asked if even one mugwump was, in the Christian sense,
deleterious. Mullins said that one mugwump would kill anything. After that
the Dean hardly spoke at all.</p>
<p>In fact, the rector presently said that he mustn't detain Mullins too long
and that he had detained him too long already and that Mullins must be
weary from his train journey and that in cases of extreme weariness
nothing but a sound sleep was of any avail; he himself, unfortunately,
would not be able to avail himself of the priceless boon of slumber until
he had first retired to his study to write some letters; so that Mullins,
who had a certain kind of social quickness of intuition, saw that it was
time to leave, and went away.</p>
<p>It was midnight as he went down the street, and a dark, still night. That
can be stated positively because it came out in court afterwards. Mullins
swore that it was a dark night; he admitted, under examination, that there
may have been the stars, or at least some of the less important of them,
though he had made no attempt, as brought out on cross-examination, to
count them: there may have been, too, the electric lights, and Mullins was
not willing to deny that it was quite possible that there was more or less
moonlight. But that there was no light that night in the form of sunlight,
Mullins was absolutely certain. All that, I say, came out in court.</p>
<p>But meanwhile the rector had gone upstairs to his study and had seated
himself in front of his table to write his letters. It was here always
that he wrote his sermons. From the window of the room you looked through
the bare white maple trees to the sweeping outline of the church shadowed
against the night sky, and beyond that, though far off, was the new
cemetery where the rector walked of a Sunday (I think I told you why):
beyond that again, for the window faced the east, there lay, at no very
great distance, the New Jerusalem. There were no better things that a man
might look towards from his study window, nor anything that could serve as
a better aid to writing.</p>
<p>But this night the Dean's letters must have been difficult indeed to
write. For he sat beside the table holding his pen and with his head bent
upon his other hand, and though he sometimes put a line or two on the
paper, for the most part he sat motionless. The fact is that Dean Drone
was not trying to write letters, but only one letter. He was writing a
letter of resignation. If you have not done that for forty years it is
extremely difficult to get the words.</p>
<p>So at least the Dean found it. First he wrote one set of words and then he
sat and thought and wrote something else. But nothing seemed to suit.</p>
<p>The real truth was that Dean Drone, perhaps more than he knew himself, had
a fine taste for words and effects, and when you feel that a situation is
entirely out of the common, you naturally try, if you have that instinct,
to give it the right sort of expression.</p>
<p>I believe that at the time when Rupert Drone had taken the medal in Greek
over fifty years ago, it was only a twist of fate that had prevented him
from becoming a great writer. There was a buried author in him just as
there was a buried financier in Jefferson Thorpe. In fact, there were many
people in Mariposa like that, and for all I know you may yourself have
seen such elsewhere. For instance, I am certain that Billy Rawson, the
telegraph operator at Mariposa, could easily have invented radium. In the
same way one has only to read the advertisements of Mr. Gingham, the
undertaker, to know that there is still in him a poet, who could have
written on death far more attractive verses than the Thanatopsis of Cullen
Bryant, and under a title less likely to offend the public and drive away
custom. He has told me this himself.</p>
<p>So the Dean tried first this and then that and nothing would seem to suit.
First of all he wrote:</p>
<p>"It is now forty years since I came among you, a youth full of life and
hope and ardent in the work before me—" Then he paused, doubtful of
the accuracy and clearness of the expression, read it over again and again
in deep thought and then began again:</p>
<p>"It is now forty years since I came among you, a broken and melancholy
boy, without life or hope, desiring only to devote to the service of this
parish such few years as might remain of an existence blighted before it
had truly begun—" And then again the Dean stopped. He read what he
had written; he frowned; he crossed it through with his pen. This was no
way to write, this thin egotistical strain of complaint. Once more he
started:</p>
<p>"It is now forty years since I came among you, a man already tempered and
trained, except possibly in mathematics—" And then again the rector
paused and his mind drifted away to the memory of the Anglican professor
that I spoke of, who had had so little sense of his higher mission as to
omit the teaching of logarithms. And the rector mused so long that when he
began again it seemed to him that it was simpler and better to discard the
personal note altogether, and he wrote:</p>
<p>"There are times, gentlemen, in the life of a parish, when it comes to an
epoch which brings it to a moment when it reaches a point—"</p>
<p>The Dean stuck fast again, but refusing this time to be beaten went
resolutely on:</p>
<p>"—reaches a point where the circumstances of the moment make the
epoch such as to focus the life of the parish in that time."</p>
<p>Then the Dean saw that he was beaten, and he knew that he not only
couldn't manage the parish but couldn't say so in proper English, and of
the two the last was the bitterer discovery.</p>
<p>He raised his head, and looked for a moment through the window at the
shadow of the church against the night, so outlined that you could almost
fancy that the light of the New Jerusalem was beyond it. Then he wrote,
and this time not to the world at large but only to Mullins:</p>
<p>"My dear Harry, I want to resign my charge. Will you come over and help
me?"</p>
<p>When the Dean at last rose from writing that, I think it was far on in the
night. As he rose he looked again through the window, looked once and then
once more, and so stood with widening eyes, and his face set towards what
he saw.</p>
<p>What was that? That light in the sky there, eastward?—near or far he
could not say. Was it already the dawn of the New Jerusalem brightening in
the east, or was it—look—in the church itself,—what is
that?—that dull red glow that shines behind the stained-glass
windows, turning them to crimson? that fork of flame that breaks now from
the casement and flashes upward, along the wood—and see—that
sudden sheet of fire that springs the windows of the church with the roar
of splintered glass and surges upward into the sky, till the dark night
and the bare trees and sleeping street of Mariposa are all illumined with
its glow!</p>
<p>Fire! Fire! and the sudden sound of the bell now, breaking upon the night.</p>
<p>So stood the Dean erect, with one hand pressed against the table for
support, while the Mariposa fire bell struck out its warning to the
sleeping town,—stood there while the street grew loud with the
tumult of voices,—with the roaring gallop of the fire brigade,—with
the harsh note of the gong—and over all other sounds, the great
seething of the flames that tore their way into the beams and rafters of
the pointed church and flared above it like a torch into the midnight sky.</p>
<p>So stood the Dean, and as the church broke thus into a very beacon kindled
upon a hill,—sank forward without a sign, his face against the
table, stricken.</p>
<p>You need to see a fire in a place such as Mariposa, a town still half of
wood, to know what fire means. In the city it is all different. To the
onlooker, at any rate, a fire is only a spectacle, nothing more.
Everything is arranged, organized, certain. It is only once perhaps in a
century that fire comes to a large city as it comes to the little wooden
town like Mariposa as a great Terror of the Night.</p>
<p>That, at any rate, is what it meant in Mariposa that night in April, the
night the Church of England Church burnt down. Had the fire gained but a
hundred feet, or less, it could have reached from the driving shed behind
the church to the backs of the wooden shops of the Main Street, and once
there not all the waters of Lake Wissanotti could stay the course of its
destruction. It was for that hundred feet that they fought, the men of
Mariposa, from the midnight call of the bell till the slow coming of the
day. They fought the fire, not to save the church, for that was doomed
from the first outbreak of the flames, but to stop the spread of it and
save the town. They fought it at the windows, and at the blazing doors,
and through the yawning furnace of the open belfry; fought it, with the
Mariposa engine thumping and panting in the street, itself aglow with fire
like a servant demon fighting its own kind, with tall ladders reaching to
the very roof, and with hose that poured their streams of tossing water
foaming into the flames.</p>
<p>Most of all they fought to save the wooden driving shed behind the church
from which the fire could leap into the heart of Mariposa. That was where
the real fight was, for the life of the town. I wish you could have seen
how they turned the hose against the shingles, ripping and tearing them
from their places with the force of the driven water: how they mounted on
the roof, axe in hand, and cut madly at the rafters to bring the building
down, while the black clouds of smoke rolled in volumes about the men as
they worked. You could see the fire horses harnessed with logging chains
to the uprights of the shed to tear the building from its place.</p>
<p>Most of all I wish you could have seen Mr. Smith, proprietor, as I think
you know, of Smith's Hotel, there on the roof with a fireman's helmet on,
cutting through the main beam of solid cedar, twelve by twelve, that held
tight still when the rafters and the roof tree were down already, the shed
on fire in a dozen places, and the other men driven from the work by the
flaming sparks, and by the strangle of the smoke. Not so Mr. Smith! See
him there as he plants himself firm at the angle of the beams, and with
the full impact of his two hundred and eighty pounds drives his axe into
the wood! I tell you it takes a man from the pine country of the north to
handle an axe! Right, left, left, right, down it comes, with never a pause
or stay, never missing by a fraction of an inch the line of the stroke! At
it, Smith! Down with it! Till with a shout from the crowd the beam gapes
asunder, and Mr. Smith is on the ground again, roaring his directions to
the men and horses as they haul down the shed, in a voice that dominates
the fire itself.</p>
<p>Who made Mr. Smith the head and chief of the Mariposa fire brigade that
night, I cannot say. I do not know even where he got the huge red helmet
that he wore, nor had I ever heard till the night the church burnt down
that Mr. Smith was a member of the fire brigade at all. But it's always
that way. Your little narrow-chested men may plan and organize, but when
there is something to be done, something real, then it's the man of size
and weight that steps to the front every time. Look at Bismarck and Mr.
Gladstone and President Taft and Mr. Smith,—the same thing in each
case.</p>
<p>I suppose it was perfectly natural that just as soon as Mr. Smith came on
the scene he put on somebody's helmet and shouted his directions to the
men and bossed the Mariposa fire brigade like Bismarck with the German
parliament.</p>
<p>The fire had broken out late, late at night, and they fought it till the
day. The flame of it lit up the town and the bare grey maple trees, and
you could see in the light of it the broad sheet of the frozen lake, snow
covered still. It kindled such a beacon as it burned that from the other
side of the lake the people on the night express from the north could see
it twenty miles away. It lit up such a testimony of flame that Mariposa
has never seen the like of it before or since. Then when the roof crashed
in and the tall steeple tottered and fell, so swift a darkness seemed to
come that the grey trees and the frozen lake vanished in a moment as if
blotted out of existence.</p>
<p>When the morning came the great church of Mariposa was nothing but a
ragged group of walls with a sodden heap of bricks and blackened wood,
still hissing here and there beneath the hose with the sullen anger of a
conquered fire. Round the ruins of the fire walked the people of Mariposa
next morning, and they pointed out where the wreck of the steeple had
fallen, and where the bells of the church lay in a molten heap among the
bricks, and they talked of the loss that it was and how many dollars it
would take to rebuild the church, and whether it was insured and for how
much. And there were at least fourteen people who had seen the fire first,
and more than that who had given the first alarm, and ever so many who
knew how fires of this sort could be prevented.</p>
<p>Most noticeable of all you could see the sidesmen and the wardens and
Mullins, the chairman of the vestry, talking in little groups about the
fire. Later in the day there came from the city the insurance men and the
fire appraisers, and they too walked about the ruins, and talked with the
wardens and the vestry men. There was such a luxury of excitement in the
town that day that it was just as good as a public holiday.</p>
<p>But the strangest part of it was the unexpected sequel. I don't know
through what error of the Dean's figures it happened, through what lack of
mathematical training the thing turned out as it did. No doubt the memory
of the mathematical professor was heavily to blame for it, but the solid
fact is that the Church of England Church of Mariposa turned out to be
insured for a hundred thousand, and there were the receipts and the
vouchers, all signed and regular, just as they found them in a drawer of
the rector's study. There was no doubt about it. The insurance people
might protest as they liked. The straight, plain fact was that the church
was insured for about twice the whole amount of the cost and the debt and
the rector's salary and the boarding-school fees of the littlest of the
Drones all put together.</p>
<p>There was a Whirlwind Campaign for you! Talk of raising money,—that
was something like! I wonder if the universities and the city institutions
that go round trying to raise money by the slow and painful method called
a Whirlwind Campaign, that takes perhaps all day to raise fifty thousand
dollars, ever thought of anything so beautifully simple as this.</p>
<p>The Greater Testimony that had lain so heavily on the congregation went
flaming to its end, and burned up its debts and its obligations and
enriched its worshippers by its destruction. Talk of a beacon on a hill!
You can hardly beat that one.</p>
<p>I wish you could have seen how the wardens and the sidesmen and Mullins,
the chairman of the vestry, smiled and chuckled at the thought of it.
Hadn't they said all along that all that was needed was a little faith and
effort? And here it was, just as they said, and they'd been right after
all.</p>
<p>Protest from the insurance people? Legal proceedings to prevent payment?
My dear sir! I see you know nothing about the Mariposa court, in spite of
the fact that I have already said that it was one of the most precise
instruments of British fair play ever established. Why, Judge Pepperleigh
disposed of the case and dismissed the protest of the company in less than
fifteen minutes! Just what the jurisdiction of Judge Pepperleigh's court
is I don't know, but I do know that in upholding the rights of a Christian
congregation—I am quoting here the text of the decision—against
the intrigues of a set of infernal skunks that make too much money,
anyway, the Mariposa court is without an equal. Pepperleigh even
threatened the plaintiffs with the penitentiary, or worse.</p>
<p>How the fire started no one ever knew. There was a queer story that went
about to the effect that Mr. Smith and Mr. Gingham's assistant had been
seen very late that night carrying an automobile can of kerosene up the
street. But that was amply disproved by the proceedings of the court, and
by the evidence of Mr. Smith himself. He took his dying oath,—not
his ordinary one as used in the License cases, but his dying one,—that
he had not carried a can of kerosene up the street, and that anyway it was
the rottenest kind of kerosene he had ever seen and no more use than so
much molasses. So that point was settled.</p>
<p>Dean Drone? Did he get well again? Why, what makes you ask that? You mean,
was his head at all affected after the stroke? No, it was not. Absolutely
not. It was not affected in the least, though how anybody who knows him
now in Mariposa could have the faintest idea that his mind was in any way
impaired by the stroke is more than I can tell. The engaging of Mr.
Uttermost, the curate, whom perhaps you have heard preach in the new
church, had nothing whatever to do with Dean Drone's head. It was merely a
case of the pressure of overwork. It was felt very generally by the
wardens that, in these days of specialization, the rector was covering too
wide a field, and that if he should abandon some of the lesser duties of
his office, he might devote his energies more intently to the Infant
Class. That was all. You may hear him there any afternoon, talking to
them, if you will stand under the maple trees and listen through the open
windows of the new Infant School.</p>
<p>And, as for audiences, for intelligence, for attention—well, if I
want to find listeners who can hear and understand about the great spaces
of Lake Huron, let me tell of it, every time face to face with the blue
eyes of the Infant Class, fresh from the infinity of spaces greater still.
Talk of grown-up people all you like, but for listeners let me have the
Infant Class with their pinafores and their Teddy Bears and their feet not
even touching the floor, and Mr. Uttermost may preach to his heart's
content of the newer forms of doubt revealed by the higher criticism.</p>
<p>So you will understand that the Dean's mind is, if anything, even keener,
and his head even clearer than before. And if you want proof of it, notice
him there beneath the plum blossoms reading in the Greek: he has told me
that he finds that he can read, with the greatest ease, works in the Greek
that seemed difficult before. Because his head is so clear now.</p>
<p>And sometimes,—when his head is very clear,—as he sits there
reading beneath the plum blossoms he can hear them singing beyond, and his
wife's voice.</p>
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