<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
<h3>"BROTHER SODOM."</h3>
<p>In order to explain Walter Johnson's testimony and his state of
mind, I must carry the reader back nearly a week. The scene was Dr.
Small's office. Bud and Walter Johnson had been having some
confidential conversation that evening, and Bud had got more out of
his companion than that exquisite but weak young man had intended.
He looked round in a frightened way.</p>
<p>"You see," said Walter, "if Small knew I had told you that, I'd
get a bullet some night from somebody. But when you're initiated
it'll be all right. Sometimes I wish I was out of it. But, you
know, Small's this kind of a man. He sees through you. He can look
through a door"—and there he shivered, and his voice broke
down into a whisper. But Bud was perfectly cool, and doubtless it
was the strong coolness of Bud that made Walter, who shuddered at a
shadow, come to him for sympathy and unbosom himself of one of his
guilty secrets.</p>
<p>"Let's go and hear Brother Sodom preach to-night," said Bud.</p>
<p>"No, I don't like to."</p>
<p>"He don't scare you?" There was just a touch of ridicule in
Bud's voice. He knew Walter, and he had not counted amiss when he
used this little goad to prick a skin so sensitive. "Brother Sodom"
was the nickname given by scoffers to the preacher—Mr.
Soden—whose manner of preaching had so aroused Bud's
combativeness, and whose saddle-stirrups Bud had helped to
amputate. For reasons of his own, Bud thought best to subject young
Johnson to the heat of Mr. Soden's furnace.</p>
<p>Peter Cartwright boasts that, on a certain occasion, he "shook
his brimstone wallet" over the people. Mr. Soden could never preach
without his brimstone wallet. There are those of refinement so
attenuated that they will not admit that fear can have any place in
religion. But a religion without fear could never have evangelized
or civilized the West, which at one time bade fair to become a
perdition as bad as any that Brother Sodom ever depicted. And
against these on the one side, and the Brother Sodoms on the other,
I shall interrupt my story to put this chapter under shelter of
that wise remark of the great Dr. Adam Clark, who says "The fear of
God is the beginning of wisdom, the terror of God confounds the
soul;" and that other saying of his: "With the <i>fear</i> of God
the love of God is ever consistent; but where the <i>terror</i> of
the Lord reigns, there can neither be <i>fear, faith</i>, nor
<i>love</i>; nay, nor <i>hope</i> either." And yet I am not sure
that even the Brother Sodoms were made in vain.</p>
<p>On this evening Mr. Soden was as terrible as usual. Bud heard
him without flinching. Small, who sat farther forward, listened
with pious approval. Mr. Soden, out of distorted figures pieced
together from different passages of Scripture, built a hell, not
quite, Miltonic, nor yet Dantean, but as Miltonic and Dantean as
his unrefined imagination could make it. As he rose toward his
climax of hideous description, Walter Johnson trembled from head to
foot and sat close to Bud. Then, as burly Mr. Soden, with great
gusto, depicted materialistic tortures that startled the nerves of
everybody except Bud, Walter wanted to leave, but Bud would not let
him. For some reason he wished to keep his companion in the
crucible as long as possible.</p>
<p>"Young man!" cried Mr. Soden, and the explosive voice seemed to
come from the hell that he had created—"young man! you who
have followed the counsel of evil companions"—here he paused
and looked about, as if trying to find the man he wanted, while
Walter crept up close to Bud and shaded his face—"I mean you
who have chosen evil pursuits and who can not get free from bad
habits and associations that are dragging you down to hell! You are
standing on the very crumbling brink of hell to-night. The smell of
the brimstone is on your garments; the hot breath of hell is in
your face! The devils are waiting for you! Delay and you are
damned! You may die before daylight! You may never get out that
door! The awful angel of death is just ready to strike you down!"
Here some shrieked with terror, others sobbed, and Brother Sodom
looked with approval on the storm he had awakened. The very
harshness of his tone, his lofty egotism of manner, that which had
roused all Bud's combativeness, shook poor Walter as a wind would
shake a reed. In the midst of the general excitement he seized his
hat and hastened out the door. Bud followed, while Soden shot his
lightnings after them, declaring that "young men who ran away from
the truth would dwell in torments forever."</p>
<p>Bud had not counted amiss when he thought that Mr. Soden's
preaching would be likely to arouse so mean-spirited a fellow as
Walter. So vivid was the impression that Johnson begged Bud to
return to the office with him. He felt sick, and was afraid that he
should die before morning. He insisted that Bud should stay with
him all night. To this Means readily consented, and by morning he
had heard all that the frightened Walter had to tell.</p>
<p>And now let us return to the trial, where Ralph sits waiting the
testimony of Walter Johnson, which is to prove his statement
false.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />