<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE CHAUTAUQUA GIRLS AT HOME</h1>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>PANSY</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>TREADING ON NEW GROUND.</h3>
<p>THAT last Sabbath of August was a lovely
day; it was the first Sabbath that our
girls had spent at home since the revelation of
Chautauqua. It seemed lovely to them. "The
world looks as though it was made over new in
the night," Eurie had said, as she threw open
her blinds, and drew in whiffs of the sweet, soft
air. And the church, whither these girls had so
often betaken themselves on summer mornings,
just like this one—how <i>could</i> two or three<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>
weeks have changed it? They could not feel
that it was the same building.</p>
<p>Hitherto it had been to them simply the First
Church; grander, by several degrees, than any
other church in the city, having the finest choir,
and the finest organ, and the most elegant carpets,
and making the grandest floral display of
all the temples, as became the First Church,
of course; but to-day, this glowing, glorious
August day, it was something infinitely above
and beyond all this; it was the visible temple of
the invisible God, <i>their</i> Saviour, and they were
going up to worship—aye, really and truly to
<i>worship</i>. They, in their different ways, according
to their very different natures, felt this and
were thrilled with it as their feet trod the aisles.
People can feel a great many things, and not
show them to the casual observer. Sitting in
their respective pews, they looked in no sense
different from the way they had looked on a
hundred different Sabbaths before this.</p>
<p>Ruth Erskine, in the corner of her father's
pew, attired, as she had often been before, in the
most delicate and exquisite of summer silks, with
exactly the right shade of necktie, gloves and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span>
sash, to set off the beauty of the dress, with the
soft and delicate laces about her white throat,
for which she was especially noted, looked not
one whit different from the lady who sat there
three weeks before. You wouldn't have known
that her heart was singing for joy.</p>
<p>Flossy Shipley, aglow with elegance, as she
always was, looked the same airy butterfly that
had flitted in and out of that church on many a
summer day before; and Marion, in her corner
in the gallery, was simply the grave, somewhat
weary-looking school-teacher at one of the wards—"a
girl with infidel tendencies," that is all the
great congregation knew about her; in fact,
comparatively few of them knew even that.</p>
<p>Eurie Mitchell was the doctor's eldest daughter,
and had in no sense improved as to her toilet—"a
thing which could hardly be expected,
since she had thrown away so much money on
that wild scheme of living in the woods;" that
was what some of the congregation thought
about her.</p>
<p>Dr. Dennis saw all these girls, and looked
gloomy over them; he was in the mood to need
sympathetic hearers, to long to be in accord with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span>
his audience, and feel that they could sympathize
with him in his reach after a higher type
of religion. What could these four girls know
about a higher type, when they had no religion
at all, and had been spending two lawless weeks
in looking at the subject, till their hearts were
either attuned to ridicule or disgusted, according
to their several temperaments? That was
what the faces of our four girls said to him. Yet
how they listened to his sermon.</p>
<p>"I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy
likeness." These were the words on which he
spoke; and the burden of his thought was that
satisfaction was not to be sought for here; nothing
less than the absolute <i>likeness</i> should give
absolute satisfaction; and this likeness was to
be forever eagerly, earnestly, constantly, sought
for, striven after, until some day would come
that blessed awakening, and the picture would
be found to be complete!</p>
<p>Was it the best sermon that had ever been
preached? Was it the <i>only</i> spiritual sermon
that the First Church people had ever heard, or
was it that four girls had been to Chautauqua,
and there learned how to listen? Their cheeks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>
glowed, and their eyes dilated over the wonderful
thoughts that the subject presented, the endless
possibility for climbing!</p>
<p>Marion Wilbur had been counted ambitious;
she had longed for a chance to reach high; here
was her chance; she felt it, and gloried in it;
she meant to try. Every nerve quivered with
the determination, and the satisfaction of realizing
that she belonged to the great royal family.
No more obscurity for her. She was a child of
the King, and the kingdom was in view. A
crown, aglow with jewels—nothing less must
satisfy her now. The sermon over, the hymn
sung, and amid the pealing of the organ, as it
played the worshipers down the aisles, our four
girls met.</p>
<p>They knew each other's determination. The
next thing to do was to go to Sunday-school.
But I suppose you have no idea how strangely
they felt; how much it seemed to them as if
they were children who had come to a party uninvited,
and as if they must at this last minute
hide their heads and run home. The very effort
to go up to the Sunday-school room seemed too
much a cross to undertake.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>There were so many to stare, and look their
amazement; there was no one to go with; nobody
to think of such a thing as asking them to
go. It would have been so much less awkward
if they could have followed in the lead of one
who had said, "Won't you come up and see our
Sunday-school?"</p>
<p>The superintendent passed them as they stood
irresolute; he bowed courteously, and no more
thought of asking them to join him than though
they had been birds of brilliant plumage flying
by. Dr. Dennis passed them; <i>he</i> said good-morning,
not gladly, not even graciously; he
dreaded those girls, and their undoubted influence.
They had not the least idea how much
mischief they had done him in the way of frittering
away his influence heretofore. How
should they know that he dreaded them? On
the other hand how was he to know that they
absolutely longed for him to take them by the
hand, and say, "Come?" They looked at him
curiously as he passed, and Eurie said:</p>
<p>"Doesn't it make your heart beat to think of
going to him in his study, and having a private
talk?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Dear me!" said Flossy, "I never shall think
of such a thing. I couldn't do it any more than
I could fly."</p>
<p>"There are harder things than that to do, I
suspect; and it will come to a visit to his study
if we are to unite with the church; don't you
know that is what he always asks of those?"</p>
<p>And then these girls looked absolutely blank,
for to two of them the thought of that duty
had never occurred before; they did not understand
it well enough to know that it was a
privilege.</p>
<p>"Well," said Eurie, rallying first, of course,
"are we to stand here gazing around us all day,
because nobody knows enough to invite us to go
up-stairs? It is clear that we are not to be invited.
They are all come—all the Sabbath-school
people; and, hark! why, they are singing."</p>
<p>"Dear me!" said Flossy; "then it is commenced;
I hate to go in when it is commenced.
How very unfortunate this is!"</p>
<p>"Serves us right," said Marion. "We ought
to be in a condition to invite others, instead of
waiting here to be invited. I'll tell you what,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span>
girls, if we ever get to feel that we <i>do</i> belong,
let's constitute ourselves a committee to see after
timid strangers, like ourselves, and give them a
<i>chance in</i>, at least."</p>
<p>"Well," said Ruth, speaking for the first time,
"shall we go home and wait till next Sunday,
and take a fair start, as Flossy says, it isn't pleasant
to go in after the exercises have fairly
opened?" As she said this, for the first time
in her life Miss Ruth Erskine began to have a
dim idea that possibly she might be a coward;
this certainly sounded a little like it.</p>
<p>Each waited to get a bit of advice from the
other. Both Marion and Eurie, it must be confessed,
bold spirits that they were, so dreaded
this ordeal, that each hoped the other would advise
retreat as the wisest thing to be done next.
It was Flossy who spoke:</p>
<p>"I am going up now; it won't be any easier
next Sunday, and I want to begin."</p>
<p>"There!" said Eurie, "that is just what I
needed to shame me into common sense. What
a company of idiots we are! Marion, what
would you think of a day-scholar who would
stand shivering outside your doors for this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span>
length of time? Now come on, all of you;"
and she led the way up-stairs.</p>
<p>How very awkward it was! It was during
the opening prayer that they arrived, and they
had to stand by the door and be peeped at by
irreverent children; then they had to invite
themselves to a vacant seat near the door. The
superintendent came that way presently, and
said:</p>
<p>"Good-morning, young ladies; so you have
come in to visit our school? Glad to see you;
it is a pleasant place, I think you will find."</p>
<p>"That is extremely doubtful," Eurie said, in
undertone, as he passed on. How the children
did stare!</p>
<p>"They are certainly unused to visitors," Ruth
said, growing uncomfortable under such prolonged
gazing. "What is the use of all this,
girls? We might better be at home."</p>
<p>"If we had grown up here," Eurie said,
bravely, "we should probably have our place by
this time. It all comes of our graceful lives.
But I must say they make it very easy for people
to stay away. Why on earth don't they invite
us to go into Bible classes? What right<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>
have they to take it for granted that we came
out of pure curiosity?"</p>
<p>The business of the hour went on, and our
girls were still left unmolested. As the newness
wore somewhat away, the situation began
to grow funny. They could see that the pastor
and the superintendent were engaged in anxious
conversation, to judge by the gravity of their
faces; and as their eyes occasionally roved in
that direction, it was natural to suppose they
were discussing the unexpected visitors.</p>
<p>Could they have heard the anxious talk it
would have been a solemn comment on their
reputations.</p>
<p>"That Morris class is vacant again to-day,"
the superintendent was saying; "I don't know
what we are to do with that class; no one is
willing to undertake it."</p>
<p>The pastor looked toward his own large class
waiting for him, and said, with a weary sigh:</p>
<p>"I believe I shall have to give up my class to
some one and take that. I don't want to; it is
a class which requires more nervous energy than
I have at command at this hour of the day. But
what is to be done with them to-day?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Would it do to ask one of the young ladies
on the visitors' seat?"</p>
<p>And then the eyes of the two men turned
toward the girls.</p>
<p>"They are afraid of us," whispered Eurie, her
propensity to see the ludicrous side of things in
no whit destroyed by her conversion. "Look
at their troubled faces; they think that we are
harbingers of mischief. Oh me! What a reputation
to have! But I declare it is funny."
Whereupon she laughed softly, but unmistakably.</p>
<p>It was at this moment that Dr. Dennis' eyes
rested on her.</p>
<p>"Oh, they are only here for material to make
sport of," he said, gloomily; "Miss Erskine
might keep the boys quiet for awhile if she
chose to do so, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Or Miss Wilbur. Some of the boys in that
class are in school, in her ward; they say she
has grand order."</p>
<p>Dr. Dennis' face grew stern.</p>
<p>"No," he said, "don't ask <i>her;</i> at least we
will not put them in a way to learn error, if we
can teach them nothing good. Miss Wilbur is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
an infidel. I don't know what is to be done
with that class, as you say. Poor Morris, I am
afraid, will never be able to take it again; and
he was utterly discouraged with them, anyway.
They get no good here that I can see; and they
certainly do infinite mischief to the rest of the
school."</p>
<p>"But at the same time I suppose we cannot
send them away?"</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly not. Well, suppose you try if
Miss Erskine will sit there, and try to awe them
by her dignity for awhile. And this week we
must see what can be done; she won't try it,
though, I presume."</p>
<p>It ended in the superintendent coming toward
them at last. He didn't like to be too personal
in his request, so he took the general way of
putting a question, resting in the belief that each
would refuse, and that then he could press the
task on Miss Erskine.</p>
<p>"We are short of teachers to-day; would one
of you be willing to sit with that class at your
right, and try to interest them a little? They
are a sad set; very little can be done with them,
but we have to try."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>I shall have to confess that both Ruth and
Marion were appalled. The one shrank as much
as the other. If it had been a class in mathematics
or philosophy Marion would have been
confident of her powers; but she felt so very
ignorant of the Bible. She had come in, hoping
and expecting a chance to slip into a grand Bible
class, where she might learn some of the inner
truths of that glorious lesson that she had
been trying to study. But to teach it! This
seemed impossible. As for Ruth, no thought of
such an experience had as yet come to her.
They, therefore, maintained a dismayed silence.
Eurie was frank.</p>
<p>"I can't teach," she said; "I don't understand
it myself. I shouldn't have the least idea
what to say to anyone about the Bible lesson."
And then they all turned and stared in a maze
of surprise and perplexity at little fair-haired
Flossy.</p>
<p>"I would like to try," she said, simply; "I
have thought about the lesson all the week; I
am not sure that I can <i>teach</i> anything, but I
should like to talk the story over with them if
they will let me."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was nothing for it but to lead this exquisite
bit of flesh and blood, in her dainty summer
toilet, before that rough and rollicking class
of boys, old enough, some of them, to be called
young men, but without an idea as to the manner
of conduct that should honor that name. It
would be hard to tell which was the most
amazed and embarrassed, the superintendent or
the girls whom Flossy left looking after her.
They were quite sobered now; they did not
want Flossy to come to grief. A tender feeling
that was new and sweet had sprung up in the
heart of each of them toward her.</p>
<p>"That innocent little kitten knows no more
what she has undertaken than if she were a
dove," said Marion, dismay and discomfort struggling
in her face. "Why, she might as well be
Daniel in the den of lions."</p>
<p>"Well," said Eurie, speaking gravely, "he
came out all right, you know." Then she hailed
the passing superintendent:</p>
<p>"Mr. Stuart, isn't there a Bible class that we
can go in? We didn't come to look on. We
want to study the lesson."</p>
<p>"Oh, why, yes, certainly," Mr. Stuart said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span>
stammering and looking unutterable astonishment.
"Where would they like to go? There
were two vacant seats in Mr. Pembrook's class,
and one in Judge Elmore's."</p>
<p>Ruth instantly chose Judge Elmore's, and left
Marion and Eurie to make their way to the vacant
places in Mr. Pembrook's class.</p>
<p>The young ladies of the class moved along
and made room for the new comers, and the
teacher carefully told them what chapter and
verse were being studied. They found their
places, and Mr. Pembrook searched laboriously
for his. He had lost the spot on his lesson leaf
where he had read the last question, and he was
all at sea.</p>
<p>"Let me see," he said, "where <i>were</i>
we?"</p>
<p>None of them seemed to know; at least they
gave him no information. One of them tried to
button a glove that was too small for her; one
yawned behind her Bible, and the most utter indifference
in regard to the lesson or the school
seemed to prevail.</p>
<p>"Oh," said. Mr. Pembrook, "here is where we
were. I was just reading the thirtieth verse:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span>
'As he spake these words many believed on him.'
Who spake them?"</p>
<p>"Jesus," one answered, speaking the word
with a yawn.</p>
<p>"What did Jesus say next?"</p>
<p>The next young lady thus appealed to, hurriedly
looked up the place in her Bible and
read:</p>
<p>"'Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed
on him, if ye continue in my word, then
are ye my disciples indeed.'"</p>
<p>"Well," said Mr. Pembrook, after a thoughtful
pause, "there doesn't seem to be anything
to say on that verse; it is all there. Will <i>you</i>
read the next verse?"</p>
<p>Now the "you" whom he timidly addressed
was our Marion. She doesn't understand even
now why her heart should have throbbed so
strangely; and her voice trembled as she read
aloud the simple words:</p>
<p>"'And ye shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free.'"</p>
<p>"Free from what?" she asked abruptly.</p>
<p>The class stared. Clearly the art of asking
questions was an unknown accomplishment in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span>
that class. Mr. Pembrook looked at her through
his glasses; then he pushed his glasses up on
his forehead. Finally he took them off, and
rubbed them carefully with the skirt of his coat
before he essayed to answer.</p>
<p>"Why, my dear young lady, I suppose it
means free from sin. The Lord Jesus Christ
was speaking to his people, you know, to Christian
people."</p>
<p>"Are Christian people free from sin?"</p>
<p>There was no note of cavil in Marion's voice.
Her eyes were earnest and serious; and she
waited, as one waits in honest perplexity, to have
a puzzle solved. But she was known as one who
held dangerous, even infidel notions, and Mr.
Pembrook, bewildered as to how to answer her,
seemed to feel that probably a rebuke was what
she needed.</p>
<p>"It is not for us to find fault with the words
of the Lord Jesus Christ, my dear young lady.
He spoke them, and they must mean what they
say. We are to accept them in all sincerity and
humility, remembering that what we know not
now we shall know hereafter. That is the <i>Christian</i>
way to do."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>And then he cleared his throat and asked the
next young lady to read the next verse.</p>
<p>Two bright spots glowed on Marion's cheeks.
She bent her head low over her Bible, and it was
with difficulty that she kept a rush of tears from
filling her eyes. Had she seemed to cavil at
the words of her Lord when she simply longed
with all her soul to understand? <i>Did</i> the promise
mean, You shall be free from sin? Had she
a right to look forward to and hope for the time
when sin should have no more dominion? Then
that other sentence: "<i>Continue</i> in my work."
Just what did it mean? Could one who was
searching it eagerly and prayerfully, and trying
to abide by its directions, be said to be continuing
in it?</p>
<p>There were a dozen questions that she longed
to ask. She had sought the Sabbath-school this
morning in search of help. She felt blind and
lame, unable to take a step in any direction lest
in her ignorance she should err, as already she
had. Something in her way of speaking of
these things must be radically wrong. She had
misled this good man. It was no use to ask <i>him</i>
questions.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>As the lesson progressed there appeared other
reasons why she need not question him. Clearly
the good man knew nothing about his lesson
save the questions contained on the bit of paper
before him. It was entirely evident that he had
not looked at the verses, nor thought of them
until he came before his class.</p>
<p>It was equally plain that his scholars were
entirely accustomed to this state of things, and
were careful to follow his example. He could
read a question at them from his lesson paper,
and they could read an answer back to him from
their Bibles, and this was all that either party
expected of the other. Why these young ladies
continued to come Sabbath after Sabbath, and
go over this weary routine of question and answer
was a mystery to Marion.</p>
<p>She came away from the school in a most uncomfortable
frame of mind. That to which she
had looked forward all the week had proved a
disappointment and a failure. She was almost
inclined to say that she would have no more to
do with Sunday-schools; that they really were
the humbug that she had always supposed them.</p>
<p>"Imagine my going to a philosophy class,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></SPAN></span>
knowing no more about the lesson than that old
man did to-day!" she said to Eurie, as they
walked down to the corner of Elm Street together.</p>
<p>"I know," said Eurie, speaking with unusual
thoughtfulness; "but suppose you <i>were</i> dull in
the class, if it were known after all that you
could make the most brilliant philosophical experiments
you would probably be listened to
with respect."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" asked Marion bewildered.</p>
<p>"Why, I mean that Deacon Pembrook can
perform the experiments successfully. In other
words, to come down to your comprehension, he
succeeds in living so pure and careful a Christian
life that he has the respect and confidence of
everybody. What if he can't preach? He can
practice. However, I am willing to admit that
the dear old man would be more edifying if he
would study his lesson a little. Wasn't it funny
to think of calling that 'teaching?'" And then
this volatile young lady laughed. But her moralizing
had done Marion good.</p>
<p>She said good-morning more cheerily, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></SPAN></span>
went on her way thinking over the many things
that she had heard in honor of Deacon Pembrook;
so that by the time she had reached her
boarding-house, although his teaching would
certainly make a very poor show, yet his sweet
Christian life had come up to plead for him, and
Marion was forced to feel that the truth had
"made him free."</p>
<p>"But it is a real pity not to study his lesson,"
she said, as she went about her gloomy-looking
room. "Those girls didn't get a single idea to
help them in any way. Some of them need
ideas badly enough. Two or three of them
are members of the church, I am sure. That
Allie March is, but she has no ideas on <i>any</i>
subject; you can see that in the grammar
class."</p>
<p>And then Marion remembered that Allie
March was in <i>her</i> <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'grammer'">grammar</ins> class; and Allie was
a professed Christian. Could <i>she</i> help her? It
was not pride in Marion, but she had to smile at
the thought of herself being helped by so very
third-rate a brain as that which Allie March possessed.
And then she paused, with her hand on
the clothes-press door, and her face glowed at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN></span>
the new and surprising thought that just then
came to her.</p>
<p>"Would it not be possible for her, Marion
Wilbur, to help Allie March, even in her Christian
life!"</p>
<p>All that afternoon, though, she went about or
sat down in her room with a sense of loneliness.
No one to speak to who could understand and
would believe in her, even in the Sunday-school
they were afraid of her. How could she help
or be helped, while this state of things lasted?</p>
<p>It was in the early twilight that, as she sat
with her hat and sack on, waiting for Eurie, who
had engaged to call for her to go to church, she
strayed across a verse or two in her new possession,
the Bible, that touched the point. It was
where Saul "essayed to join himself to the
disciples; but they were all afraid of him, and
believed not that he was a disciple." Her experience
precisely! They were afraid of her influence;
afraid of her tongue; afraid of her example;
and, indeed, what reason had they to feel
otherwise? But she read on, that blessed verse
wherein it says: "But Barnabas took him, and
brought him to the apostles, and declared unto<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN></span>
them how he had seen the Lord in the way, and
that he had spoken to him." She was reading
this for the second time, when Eurie came.</p>
<p>"See here, Eurie, read this," she said, as she
passed her the Bible and made her final preparations
for church. "Isn't that our experience?
I mean I think it <i>is</i> to be ours. Judging from
to-day as a foretaste, they will be afraid of us
and believe not that we are disciples."</p>
<p>Eurie laughed, a quick little laugh that had
an undertone of feeling in it, as she said:</p>
<p>"Well, then, I hope we shall find a Barnabas
to vouch for us before long."</p>
<p>And Marion knew that she, too, felt the loneliness
and the sense of belonging to no one.
"We must help each other very much, we girls."
This she said to herself as they went down the
steps together.</p>
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