<p>"O CAN-A-DA!" <SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> FOUR. The Ministrations of the Rev. Mr. Drone </h2>
<p>The Church of England in Mariposa is on a side street, where the maple
trees are thickest, a little up the hill from the heart of the town. The
trees above the church and the grass plot that was once the cemetery, till
they made the new one (the Necropolis, over the brow of the hill), fill
out the whole corner. Down behind the church, with only the driving shed
and a lane between, is the rectory. It is a little brick house with odd
angles. There is a hedge and a little gate, and a weeping ash tree with
red berries.</p>
<p>At the side of the rectory, churchward, is a little grass lawn with low
hedges and at the side of that two wild plum trees, that are practically
always in white blossom. Underneath them is a rustic table and chairs, and
it is here that you may see Rural Dean Drone, the incumbent of the Church
of England Church, sitting, in the chequered light of the plum tress that
is neither sun nor shadow. Generally you will find him reading, and when I
tell you that at the end of the grass plot where the hedge is highest
there is a yellow bee hive with seven bees that belong to Dean Drone, you
will realize that it is only fitting that the Dean is reading in the
Greek. For what better could a man be reading beneath the blossom of the
plum trees, within the very sound of the bees, than the Pastorals of
Theocritus? The light trash of modern romance might put a man to sleep in
such a spot, but with such food for reflection as Theocritus, a man may
safely close his eyes and muse on what he reads without fear of dropping
into slumber.</p>
<p>Some men, I suppose, terminate their education when they leave their
college. Not so Dean Drone. I have often heard him say that if he couldn't
take a book in the Greek out on the lawn in a spare half hour, he would
feel lost. It's a certain activity of the brain that must be stilled
somehow. The Dean, too, seemed to have a native feeling for the Greek
language. I have often heard people who might sit with him on the lawn,
ask him to translate some of it. But he always refused. One couldn't
translate it, he said. It lost so much in the translation that it was
better not to try. It was far wiser not to attempt it. If you undertook to
translate it, there was something gone, something missing immediately. I
believe that many classical scholars feel this way, and like to read the
Greek just as it is, without the hazard of trying to put it into so poor a
medium as English. So that when Dean Drone said that he simply couldn't
translate it, I believe he was perfectly sincere.</p>
<p>Sometimes, indeed, he would read it aloud. That was another matter.
Whenever, for example, Dr. Gallagher—I mean, of course, old Dr.
Gallagher, not the young doctor (who was always out in the country in the
afternoon)—would come over and bring his latest Indian relics to
show to the Dean, the latter always read to him a passage or two. As soon
as the doctor laid his tomahawk on the table, the Dean would reach for his
Theocritus. I remember that on the day when Dr. Gallagher brought over the
Indian skull that they had dug out of the railway embankment, and placed
it on the rustic table, the Dean read to him so long from Theocritus that
the doctor, I truly believe, dozed off in his chair. The Dean had to wait
and fold his hands with the book across his knee, and close his eyes till
the doctor should wake up again. And the skull was on the table between
them, and from above the plum blossoms fluttered down, till they made
flakes on it as white as Dr. Gallagher's hair.</p>
<p>I don't want you to suppose that the Rev. Mr. Drone spent the whole of his
time under the trees. Not at all. In point of fact, the rector's life was
one round of activity which lie himself might deplore but was powerless to
prevent. He had hardly sat down beneath the trees of an afternoon after
his mid-day meal when there was the Infant Class at three, and after that,
with scarcely an hour between, the Mothers' Auxiliary at five, and the
next morning the Book Club, and that evening the Bible Study Class, and
the next morning the Early Workers' Guild at eleven-thirty. The whole week
was like that, and if one found time to sit down for an hour or so to
recuperate it was the most one could do. After all, if a busy man spends
the little bit of leisure that he gets in advanced classical study, there
is surely no harm in it. I suppose, take it all in all, there wasn't a
busier man than the Rural Dean among the Anglican clergy of the diocese.</p>
<p>If the Dean ever did snatch a half-day from his incessant work, he spent
it in fishing. But not always that, for as likely as not, instead of
taking a real holiday he would put in the whole afternoon amusing the
children and the boys that he knew, by making kites and toys and clockwork
steamboats for them.</p>
<p>It was fortunate for the Dean that he had the strange interest and
aptitude for mechanical advices which he possessed, or otherwise this kind
of thing would have been too cruel an imposition. But the Rev. Mr. Drone
had a curious liking for machinery. I think I never heard him preach a
better sermon than the one on Aeroplanes (Lo, what now see you on high
Jeremiah Two).</p>
<p>So it was that he spent two whole days making a kite with Chinese wings
for Teddy Moore, the photographer's son, and closed down the infant class
for forty-eight hours so that Teddy Moore should not miss the pleasure of
flying it, or rather seeing it flown. It is foolish to trust a Chinese
kite to the hands of a young child.</p>
<p>In the same way the Dean made a mechanical top for little Marjorie
Trewlaney, the cripple, to see spun: it would have been unwise to allow
the afflicted girl to spin it. There was no end to the things that Mr.
Drone could make, and always for the children. Even when he was making the
sand-clock for poor little Willie Yodel (who died, you know) the Dean went
right on with it and gave it to another child with just the same pleasure.
Death, you know, to the clergy is a different thing from what it is to us.
The Dean and Mr. Gingham used often to speak of it as they walked through
the long grass of the new cemetery, the Necropolis. And when your Sunday
walk is to your wife's grave, as the Dean's was, perhaps it seems
different to anybody.</p>
<p>The Church of England Church, I said; stood close to the rectory, a tall,
sweeping church, and inside a great reach of polished cedar beams that ran
to the point of the roof. There used to stand on the same spot the little
stone church that all the grown-up people in Mariposa still remember, a
quaint little building in red and grey stone. About it was the old
cemetery, but that was all smoothed out later into the grass plot round
the new church, and the headstones laid out flat, and no new graves have
been put there for ever so long. But the Mariposa children still walk
round and read the headstones lying flat in the grass and look for the old
ones,—because some of them are ever so old—forty or fifty
years back.</p>
<p>Nor are you to think from all this that the Dean was not a man with
serious perplexities. You could easily convince yourself of the contrary.
For if you watched the Rev. Mr. Drone as he sat reading in the Greek, you
would notice that no very long period every passed without his taking up a
sheet or two of paper that lay between the leaves of the Theocritus and
that were covered close with figures.</p>
<p>And these the Dean would lay upon the rustic table, and he would add them
up forwards and backwards, going first up the column and then down it to
see that nothing had been left out, and then down it again to see what it
was that must have been left out.</p>
<p>Mathematics, you will understand, were not the Dean's forte. They never
were the forte of the men who had been trained at the little Anglican
college with the clipped hedges and the cricket ground, where Rupert Drone
had taken the gold medal in Greek fifty-two years ago. You will see the
medal at any time lying there in its open box on the rectory table, in
case of immediate need. Any of the Drone girls, Lilian, or Jocelyn, or
Theodora, would show it to you. But, as I say, mathematics were not the
rector's forte, and he blamed for it (in a Christian spirit, you will
understand) the memory of his mathematical professor, and often he spoke
with great bitterness. I have often heard him say that in his opinion the
colleges ought to dismiss, of course in a Christian spirit, all the
professors who are not, in the most reverential sense of the term, fit for
their jobs.</p>
<p>No doubt many of the clergy of the diocese had suffered more or less just
as the Dean had from lack of mathematical training. But the Dean always
felt that his own case was especially to be lamented. For you see, if a
man is trying to make a model aeroplane—for a poor family in the
lower part of the town—and he is brought to a stop by the need of
reckoning the coefficient of torsion of cast-iron rods, it shows plainly
enough that the colleges are not truly filling their divine mission.</p>
<p>But the figures that I speak of were not those of the model aeroplane.
These were far more serious. Night and day they had been with the rector
now for the best part of ten years, and they grew, if anything, more
intricate.</p>
<p>If, for example, you try to reckon the debt of a church—a large
church with a great sweep of polished cedar beams inside, for the special
glorification of the All Powerful, and with imported tiles on the roof for
the greater glory of Heaven and with stained-glass windows for the
exaltation of the All Seeing—if, I say, you try to reckon up the
debt on such a church and figure out its interest and its present worth,
less a fixed annual payment, it makes a pretty complicated sum. Then if
you try to add to this the annual cost of insurance, and deduct from it
three-quarters of a stipend, year by year, and then suddenly remember that
three-quarters is too much, because you have forgotten the boarding-school
fees of the littlest of the Drones (including French, as an extra—she
must have it, all the older girls did), you have got a sum that pretty
well defies ordinary arithmetic. The provoking part of it was that the
Dean knew perfectly well that with the help of logarithms he could have
done the thing in a moment. But at the Anglican college they had stopped
short at that very place in the book. They had simply explained that Logos
was a word and Arithmos a number, which at the time, seemed amply
sufficient.</p>
<p>So the Dean was perpetually taking out his sheets of figures, and adding
them upwards and downwards, and they never came the same. Very often Mr.
Gingham, who was a warden, would come and sit beside the rector and ponder
over the figures, and Mr. Drone would explain that with a book of
logarithms you could work it out in a moment. You would simply open the
book and run your finger up the columns (he illustrated exactly the way in
which the finger was moved), and there you were. Mr. Gingham said that it
was a caution, and that logarithms (I quote his exact phrase) must be a
terror.</p>
<p>Very often, too, Nivens, the lawyer, who was a sidesman, and Mullins, the
manager of the Exchange Bank, who was the chairman of the vestry, would
come and take a look, at the figures. But they never could make much of
them, because the stipend part was not a matter that one could discuss.</p>
<p>Mullins would notice the item for a hundred dollars due on fire insurance
and would say; as a business man, that surely that couldn't be fire
insurance, and the Dean would say surely not, and change it: and Mullins
would say surely there couldn't be fifty dollars for taxes, because there
weren't any taxes, and the Dean would admit that of course it couldn't be
for the taxes. In fact, the truth is that the Dean's figures were badly
mixed, and the fault lay indubitably with the mathematical professor of
two generations back.</p>
<p>It was always Mullins's intention some day to look into the finances of
the church, the more so as his father had been with Dean Drone at the
little Anglican college with the cricket ground. But he was a busy man. As
he explained to the rector himself, the banking business nowadays is
getting to be such that a banker can hardly call even his Sunday mornings
his own. Certainly Henry Mullins could not. They belonged largely to
Smith's Hotel, and during the fishing season they belonged away down the
lake, so far away that practically no one, unless it was George Duff of
the Commercial Bank, could see them.</p>
<p>But to think that all this trouble had come through the building of the
new church.</p>
<p>That was the bitterness of it.</p>
<p>For the twenty-five years that Rural Dean Drone had preached in the little
stone church, it had been his one aim, as he often put it in his sermons,
to rear a larger Ark in Gideon. His one hope had been to set up a greater
Evidence, or, very simply stated, to kindle a Brighter Beacon.</p>
<p>After twenty-five years of waiting, he had been able at last to kindle it.
Everybody in Mariposa remembers the building of the church. First of all
they had demolished the little stone church to make way for the newer
Evidence. It seemed almost a sacrilege, as the Dean himself said, to lay
hands on it. Indeed it was at first proposed to take the stone of it and
build it into a Sunday School, as a lesser testimony. Then, when that
provided impracticable, it was suggested that the stone be reverently
fashioned into a wall that should stand as a token. And when even that
could not be managed, the stone of the little church was laid reverently
into a stone pile; afterwards it was devoutly sold to a building
contractor, and, like so much else in life, was forgotten.</p>
<p>But the building of the church, no one, I think, will forget. The Dean
threw himself into the work. With his coat off and his white shirt-sleeves
conspicuous among the gang that were working at the foundations, he set
his hand to the shovel, himself guided the road-scraper, urging on the
horses; cheering and encouraging the men, till they begged him to desist.
He mingled with the stone-masons, advising, helping, and giving counsel,
till they pleaded with him to rest. He was among the carpenters, sawing,
hammering, enquiring, suggesting, till they besought him to lay off. And
he was night and day with the architect's assistants, drawing, planning,
revising, till the architect told him to cut it out.</p>
<p>So great was his activity, that I doubt whether the new church would ever
have been finished, had not the wardens and the vestry men insisted that
Mr. Drone must take a holiday, and sent him on the Mackinaw trip up the
lakes,—the only foreign travel of the Dean's life.</p>
<p>So in due time the New Church was built and it towered above the maple
trees of Mariposa like a beacon on a hill. It stood so high that from the
open steeple of it, where the bells were, you could see all the town lying
at its feet, and the farmsteads to the south of it, and the railway like a
double pencil line, and Lake Wissanotti spread out like a map. You could
see and appreciate things from the height of the new church,—such as
the size and the growing wealth of Mariposa,—that you never could
have seen from the little stone church at all.</p>
<p>Presently the church was opened and the Dean preached his first sermon in
it, and he called it a Greater Testimony, and he said that it was an
earnest, or first fruit of endeavour, and that it was a token or pledge,
and he named it also a covenant. He said, too, that it was an anchorage
and a harbour and a lighthouse as well as being a city set upon a hill;
and he ended by declaring it an Ark of Refuge and notified them that the
Bible Class would meet in the basement of it on that and every other third
Wednesday.</p>
<p>In the opening months of preaching about it the Dean had called the church
so often an earnest and a pledge and a guerdon and a tabernacle, that I
think he used to forget that it wasn't paid for. It was only when the
agent of the building society and a representative of the Hosanna Pipe and
Steam Organ Co. (Limited), used to call for quarterly payments that he was
suddenly reminded of the fact. Always after these men came round the Dean
used to preach a special sermon on sin, in the course of which he would
mention that the ancient Hebrews used to put unjust traders to death,—a
thing of which he spoke with Christian serenity.</p>
<p>I don't think that at first anybody troubled much about the debt on the
church. Dean Drone's figures showed that it was only a matter of time
before it would be extinguished; only a little effort was needed, a little
girding up of the loins of the congregation and they could shoulder the
whole debt and trample it under their feet. Let them but set their hands
to the plough and they could soon guide it into the deep water. Then they
might furl their sails and sit every man under his own olive tree.</p>
<p>Meantime, while the congregation was waiting to gird up its loins, the
interest on the debt was paid somehow, or, when it wasn't paid, was added
to the principal.</p>
<p>I don't know whether you have had any experience with Greater Testimonies
and with Beacons set on Hills. If you have, you will realize how, at first
gradually, and then rapidly, their position from year to year grows more
distressing. What with the building loan and the organ instalment, and the
fire insurance,—a cruel charge,—and the heat and light, the
rector began to realize as he added up the figures that nothing but
logarithms could solve them. Then the time came when not only the rector,
but all the wardens knew and the sidesmen knew that the debt was more than
the church could carry; then the choir knew and the congregation knew and
at last everybody knew; and there were special collections at Easter and
special days of giving, and special weeks of tribulation, and special
arrangements with the Hosanna Pipe and Steam Organ Co. And it was noticed
that when the Rural Dean announced a service of Lenten Sorrow,—aimed
more especially at the business men,—the congregation had diminished
by forty per cent.</p>
<p>I suppose things are just the same elsewhere,—I mean the peculiar
kind of discontent that crept into the Church of England congregation in
Mariposa after the setting up of the Beacon. There were those who claimed
that they had seen the error from the first, though they had kept quiet,
as such people always do, from breadth of mind. There were those who had
felt years before how it would end, but their lips were sealed from
humility of spirit. What was worse was that there were others who grew
dissatisfied with the whole conduct of the church.</p>
<p>Yodel, the auctioneer, for example, narrated how he had been to the city
and had gone into a service of the Roman Catholic church: I believe, to
state it more fairly, he had "dropped in,"—the only recognized means
of access to such a service. He claimed that the music that he had heard
there was music, and that (outside of his profession) the chanting and
intoning could not be touched.</p>
<p>Ed Moore, the photographer, also related that he had listened to a sermon
in the city, and that if anyone would guarantee him a sermon like that he
would defy you to keep him away from church. Meanwhile, failing the
guarantee, he stayed away.</p>
<p>The very doctrines were impeached. Some of the congregation began to cast
doubts on eternal punishment,—doubts so grave as to keep them absent
from the Lenten Services of Sorrow. Indeed, Lawyer Macartney took up the
whole question of the Athanasian Creed one afternoon with Joe Milligan,
the dentist, and hardly left a clause of it intact.</p>
<p>All this time, you will understand, Dean Drone kept on with his special
services, and leaflets, calls, and appeals went out from the Ark of Gideon
like rockets from a sinking ship. More and more with every month the debt
of the church lay heavy on his mind. At times he forgot it. At other times
he woke up in the night and thought about it. Sometimes as he went down
the street from the lighted precincts of the Greater Testimony and passed
the Salvation Army, praying around a naphtha lamp under the open sky, it
smote him to the heart with a stab.</p>
<p>But the congregation were wrong, I think, in imputing fault to the sermons
of Dean Drone. There I do think they were wrong. I can speak from personal
knowledge when I say that the rector's sermons were not only stimulating
in matters of faith, but contained valuable material in regard to the
Greek language, to modern machinery and to a variety of things that should
have proved of the highest advantage to the congregation.</p>
<p>There was, I say, the Greek language. The Dean always showed the greatest
delicacy of feeling in regard to any translation in or out of it that he
made from the pulpit. He was never willing to accept even the faintest
shade of rendering different from that commonly given without being
assured of the full concurrence of the congregation. Either the
translation must be unanimous and without contradiction, or he could not
pass it. He would pause in his sermon and would say: "The original Greek
is 'Hoson,' but perhaps you will allow me to translate it as equivalent to
'Hoyon.'" And they did. So that if there was any fault to be found it was
purely on the side of the congregation for not entering a protest at the
time.</p>
<p>It was the same way in regard to machinery. After all, what better
illustrates the supreme purpose of the All Wise than such a thing as the
dynamo or the reciprocating marine engine or the pictures in the
Scientific American?</p>
<p>Then, too, if a man has had the opportunity to travel and has seen the
great lakes spread out by the hand of Providence from where one leaves the
new dock at the Sound to where one arrives safe and thankful with one's
dear fellow-passengers in the spirit at the concrete landing stage at
Mackinaw—is not this fit and proper material for the construction of
an analogy or illustration? Indeed, even apart from an analogy, is it not
mighty interesting to narrate, anyway? In any case, why should the
church-wardens have sent the rector on the Mackinaw trip, if they had not
expected him to make some little return for it?</p>
<p>I lay some stress on this point because the criticisms directed against
the Mackinaw sermons always seemed so unfair. If the rector had described
his experiences in the crude language of the ordinary newspaper, there
might, I admit, have been something unfitting about it. But he was always
careful to express himself in a way that showed,—or, listen, let me
explain with an example.</p>
<p>"It happened to be my lot some years ago," he would say, "to find myself a
voyager, just as one is a voyager on the sea of life, on the broad expanse
of water which has been spread out to the north-west of us by the hand of
Providence, at a height of five hundred and eighty-one feet above the
level of the sea,—I refer, I may say, to Lake Huron." Now, how
different that is from saying: "I'll never forget the time I went on the
Mackinaw trip." The whole thing has a different sound entirely. In the
same way the Dean would go on:</p>
<p>"I was voyaging on one of those magnificent leviathans of the water,—I
refer to the boats of the Northern Navigation Company,—and was
standing beside the forward rail talking with a dear brother in the faith
who was journeying westward also—I may say he was a commercial
traveller,—and beside us was a dear sister in the spirit seated in a
deck chair, while near us were two other dear souls in grace engaged in
Christian pastime on the deck,—I allude more particularly to the
game of deck billiards."</p>
<p>I leave it to any reasonable man whether, with that complete and
fair-minded explanation of the environment, it was not perfectly proper to
close down the analogy, as the rector did, with the simple words: "In
fact, it was an extremely fine morning."</p>
<p>Yet there were some people, even in Mariposa, that took exception and
spent their Sunday dinner time in making out that they couldn't understand
what Dean Drone was talking about, and asking one another if they knew.
Once, as he passed out from the doors of the Greater Testimony, the rector
heard some one say: "The Church would be all right if that old mugwump was
out of the pulpit." It went to his heart like a barbed thorn, and stayed
there.</p>
<p>You know, perhaps, how a remark of that sort can stay and rankle, and make
you wish you could hear it again to make sure of it, because perhaps you
didn't hear it aright, and it was a mistake after all. Perhaps no one said
it, anyway. You ought to have written it down at the time. I have seen the
Dean take down the encyclopaedia in the rectory, and move his finger
slowly down the pages of the letter M, looking for mugwump. But it wasn't
there. I have known him, in his little study upstairs, turn over the pages
of the "Animals of Palestine," looking for a mugwump. But there was none
there. It must have been unknown in the greater days of Judea.</p>
<p>So things went on from month to month, and from year to year, and the debt
and the charges loomed like a dark and gathering cloud on the horizon. I
don't mean to say that efforts were not made to face the difficulty and to
fight it. They were. Time after time the workers of the congregation got
together and thought out plans for the extinction of the debt. But
somehow, after every trial, the debt grew larger with each year, and every
system that could be devised turned out more hopeless than the last.</p>
<p>They began, I think, with the "endless chain" of letters of appeal. You
may remember the device, for it was all-popular in clerical circles some
ten or fifteen years ago. You got a number of people to write each of them
three letters asking for ten cents from three each of their friends and
asking each of them to send on three similar letters. Three each from
three each, and three each more from each! Do you observe the wonderful
ingenuity of it? Nobody, I think, has forgotten how the Willing Workers of
the Church of England Church of Mariposa sat down in the vestry room in
the basement with a pile of stationery three feet high, sending out the
letters. Some, I know, will never forget it. Certainly not Mr. Pupkin, the
teller in the Exchange Bank, for it was here that he met Zena Pepperleigh,
the judge's daughter, for the first time; and they worked so busily that
they wrote out ever so many letters—eight or nine—in a single
afternoon, and they discovered that their handwritings were awfully alike,
which was one of the most extraordinary and amazing coincidences, you will
admit, in the history of chirography.</p>
<p>But the scheme failed—failed utterly. I don't know why. The letters
went out and were copied broadcast and recopied, till you could see the
Mariposa endless chain winding its way towards the Rocky Mountains. But
they never got the ten cents. The Willing Workers wrote for it in
thousands, but by some odd chance they never struck the person who had it.</p>
<p>Then after that there came a regular winter of effort. First of all they
had a bazaar that was got up by the Girls' Auxiliary and held in the
basement of the church. All the girls wore special costumes that were
brought up from the city, and they had booths, where there was every
imaginable thing for sale—pincushion covers, and chair covers, and
sofa covers, everything that you can think of. If the people had once
started buying them, the debt would have been lifted in no time. Even as
it was the bazaar only lost twenty dollars.</p>
<p>After that, I think, was the magic lantern lecture that Dean Drone gave on
"Italy and her Invaders." They got the lantern and the slides up from the
city, and it was simply splendid. Some of the slides were perhaps a little
confusing, but it was all there,—the pictures of the dense Italian
jungle and the crocodiles and the naked invaders with their invading
clubs. It was a pity that it was such a bad night, snowing hard, and a
curling match on, or they would have made a lot of money out of the
lecture. As it was the loss, apart from the breaking of the lantern, which
was unavoidable, was quite trifling.</p>
<p>I can hardly remember all the things that there were after that. I
recollect that it was always Mullins who arranged about renting the hall
and printing the tickets and all that sort of thing. His father, you
remember, had been at the Anglican college with Dean Drone, and though the
rector was thirty-seven years older than Mullins, he leaned upon him, in
matters of business, as upon a staff; and though Mullins was thirty-seven
years younger than the Dean, he leaned against him, in matters of
doctrine, as against a rock.</p>
<p>At one time they got the idea that what the public wanted was not anything
instructive but something light and amusing. Mullins said that people
loved to laugh. He said that if you get a lot of people all together and
get them laughing you can do anything you like with them. Once they start
to laugh they are lost. So they got Mr. Dreery, the English Literature
teacher at the high school, to give an evening of readings from the Great
Humorists from Chaucer to Adam Smith. They came mighty near to making a
barrel of money out of that. If the people had once started laughing it
would have been all over with them. As it was I heard a lot of them say
that they simply wanted to scream with laughter: they said they just felt
like bursting into peals of laughter all the time. Even when, in the more
subtle parts, they didn't feel like bursting out laughing, they said they
had all they could do to keep from smiling. They said they never had such
a hard struggle in their lives not to smile.</p>
<p>In fact the chairman said when he put the vote of thanks that he was sure
if people had known what the lecture was to be like there would have been
a much better "turn-out." But you see all that the people had to go on was
just the announcement of the name of the lecturer, Mr. Dreery, and that he
would lecture on English Humour All Seats Twenty-five Cents. As the
chairman expressed it himself, if the people had had any idea, any idea at
all, of what the lecture would be like they would have been there in
hundreds. But how could they get an idea that it would be so amusing with
practically nothing to go upon?</p>
<p>After that attempt things seemed to go from bad to worse. Nearly everybody
was disheartened about it. What would have happened to the debt, or
whether they would have ever paid it off, is more than I can say, if it
hadn't occurred that light broke in on Mullins in the strangest and most
surprising way you can imagine. It happened that he went away for his bank
holidays, and while he was away he happened to be present in one of the
big cities and saw how they went at it there to raise money. He came home
in such a state of excitement that he went straight up from the Mariposa
station to the rectory, valise and all, and he burst in one April evening
to where the Rural Dean was sitting with the three girls beside the lamp
in the front room, and he cried out:</p>
<p>"Mr. Drone, I've got it,—I've got a way that will clear the debt
before you're a fortnight older. We'll have a Whirlwind Campaign in
Mariposa!"</p>
<p>But stay! The change from the depth of depression to the pinnacle of hope
is too abrupt. I must pause and tell you in another chapter of the
Whirlwind Campaign in Mariposa.</p>
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