Chapter Fifteen
"He that followeth me shall not walk in
darkness."
THE body of Loreen lay in state at
the Page mansion on the avenue. It was
Sunday morning and the clear sweet
spring air, just beginning to breathe
over the city the perfume of early
blossoms in the woods and fields, swept
over the casket from one of the open
windows at the end of the grand hall.
The church bells were ringing and people
on the avenue going by to service turned
curious, inquiring looks up at the great
house and then went on, talking of the
recent events which had so strangely
entered into and made history in the
city.
At the First Church, Mr. Maxwell,
bearing on his face marks of the scene
he had been through, confronted an
immense congregation, and spoke to it
with a passion and a power that came so
naturally out of the profound
experiences of the day before that his
people felt for him something of the old
feeling of pride they once had in his
dramatic delivery. Only this was with a
different attitude. And all through his
impassioned appeal this morning, there
was a note of sadness and rebuke and
stern condemnation that made many of the
members pale with self-accusation or
with inward anger.
For Raymond had awakened that
morning to the fact that the city had
gone for license after all. The rumor at
the Rectangle that the second and third
wards had gone no-license proved to be
false. It was true that the victory was
won by a very meager majority. But the
result was the same as if it had been
overwhelming. Raymond had voted to
continue for another year the saloon.
The Christians of Raymond stood
condemned by the result. More than a
hundred professing Christian disciples
had failed to go to the polls, and many
more than that number had voted with the
whiskey men. If all the church members
of Raymond had voted against the saloon,
it would today be outlawed instead of
crowned king of the municipality. For
that had been the fact in Raymond for
years. The saloon ruled. No one denied
that. What would Jesus do? And this
woman who had been brutally struck down
by the very hand that had assisted so
eagerly to work her earthly ruin what of
her? Was it anything more than the
logical sequence of the whole horrible
system of license, that for another year
the very saloon that received her so
often and compassed her degradation,
from whose very spot the weapon had been
hurled that struck her dead, would, by
the law which the Christian people of
Raymond voted to support, perhaps open
its doors tomorrow and damn a hundred
Loreens before the year had drawn to its
bloody close?
All this, with a voice that rang
and trembled and broke in sobs of
anguish for the result, did Henry
Maxwell pour out upon his people that
Sunday morning. And men and women wept
as he spoke. President Marsh sat there,
his usual erect, handsome, firm, bright
self-confident bearing all gone; his
head bowed upon his breast, the great
tears rolling down his cheeks, unmindful
of the fact that never before had he
shown outward emotion in a public
service. Edward Norman near by sat with
his clear-cut, keen face erect, but his
lip trembled and he clutched the end of
the pew with a feeling of emotion that
struck deep into his knowledge of the
truth as Maxwell spoke it. No man had
given or suffered more to influence
public opinion that week than Norman.
The thought that the Christian
conscience had been aroused too late or
too feebly, lay with a weight of
accusation upon the heart of the editor.
What if he had begun to do as Jesus
would have done, long ago? Who could
tell what might have been accomplished
by this time! And up in the choir,
Rachel Winslow, with her face bowed on
the railing of the oak screen, gave way
to a feeling which she had not allowed
yet to master her, but it so unfitted
her for her part that when Mr. Maxwell
finished and she tried to sing the
closing solo after the prayer, her voice
broke, and for the first time in her
life she was obliged to sit down,
sobbing, and unable to go on.
Over the church, in the silence
that followed this strange scene, sobs
and the noise of weeping arose. When had
the First Church yielded to such a
baptism of tears? What had become of its
regular, precise, conventional order of
service, undisturbed by any vulgar
emotion and unmoved by any foolish
excitement? But the people had lately
had their deepest convictions touched.
They had been living so long on their
surface feelings that they had almost
forgotten the deeper wells of life. Now
that they had broken the surface, the
people were convicted of the meaning of
their discipleship.
Mr. Maxwell did not ask, this
morning, for volunteers to join those
who had already pledged to do as Jesus
would. But when the congregation had
finally gone, and he had entered the
lecture-room, it needed but a glance to
show him that the original company of
followers had been largely increased.
The meeting was tender; it glowed with
the Spirit's presence; it was alive with
strong and lasting resolve to begin a
war on the whiskey power in Raymond that
would break its reign forever. Since the
first Sunday when the first company of
volunteers had pledged themselves to do
as Jesus would do, the different
meetings had been characterized by
distinct impulses or impressions. Today,
the entire force of the gathering seemed
to be directed to this one large
purpose. It was a meeting full of broken
prayers of contrition, of confession, of
strong yearning for a new and better
city life. And all through it ran one
general cry for deliverance from the
saloon and its awful curse.
But if the First Church was deeply
stirred by the events of the last week,
the Rectangle also felt moved strangely
in its own way. The death of Loreen was
not in itself so remarkable a fact. It
was her recent acquaintance with the
people from the city that lifted her
into special prominence and surrounded
her death with more than ordinary
importance. Every one in the Rectangle
knew that Loreen was at this moment
lying in the Page mansion up on the
avenue. Exaggerated reports of the
magnificence of the casket had already
furnished material for eager gossip. The
Rectangle was excited to know the
details of the funeral. Would it be
public? What did Miss Page intend to do?
The Rectangle had never before mingled
even in this distant personal manner
with the aristocracy on the boulevard.
The opportunities for doing so were not
frequent. Gray and his wife were
besieged by inquirers who wanted to know
what Loreen's friends and acquaintances
were expected to do in paying their last
respects to her. For her acquaintance
was large and many of the recent
converts were among her friends.
So that is how it happened that
Monday afternoon, at the tent, the
funeral service of Loreen was held
before an immense audience that choked
the tent and overflowed beyond all
previous bounds. Gray had gone up to
Virginia's and, after talking it over
with her and Maxwell, the arrangement
had been made.
"I am and always have been opposed
to large public funerals," said Gray,
whose complete wholesome simplicity of
character was one of its great sources
of strength; "but the cry of the poor
creatures who knew Loreen is so earnest
that I do not know how to refuse this
desire to see her and pay her poor body
some last little honor. What do you
think, Mr. Maxwell? I will be guided by
your judgment in the matter. I am sure
that whatever you and Miss Page think
best, will be right."
"I feel as you do," replied Mr.
Maxwell. "Under the circumstances I have
a great distaste for what seems like
display at such times. But this seems
different. The people at the Rectangle
will not come here to service. I think
the most Christian thing will be to let
them have the service at the tent. Do
you think so, Miss Virginia?"
"Yes," said Virginia. "Poor soul! I
do not know but that some time I shall
know she gave her life for mine. We
certainly cannot and will not use the
occasion for vulgar display. Let her
friends be allowed the gratification of
their wishes. I see no harm in it."
So the arrangements were made, with
some difficulty, for the service at the
tent; and Virginia with her uncle and
Rollin, accompanied by Maxwell, Rachel
and President Marsh, and the quartet
from the First Church, went down and
witnessed one of the strange things of
their lives.
It happened that that afternoon a
somewhat noted newspaper correspondent
was passing through Raymond on his way
to an editorial convention in a
neighboring city. He heard of the
contemplated service at the tent and
went down. His description of it was
written in a graphic style that caught
the attention of very many readers the
next day. A fragment of his account
belongs to this part of the history of
Raymond:
"There was a very unique and
unusual funeral service held here this
afternoon at the tent of an evangelist,
Rev. John Gray, down in the slum
district known as the Rectangle. The
occasion was caused by the killing of a
woman during an election riot last
Saturday night. It seems she had been
recently converted during the
evangelist's meetings, and was killed
while returning from one of the meetings
in company with other converts and some
of her friends. She was a common street
drunkard, and yet the services at the
tent were as impressive as any I ever
witnessed in a metropolitan church over
the most distinguished citizen.
"In the first place, a most
exquisite anthem was sung by a trained
choir. It struck me, of course -- being
a stranger in the place -- with
considerable astonishment to hear voices
like those one naturally expects to hear
only in great churches or concerts, at
such a meeting as this. But the most
remarkable part of the music was a solo
sung by a strikingly beautiful young
woman, a Miss Winslow who, if I remember
right, is the young singer who was
sought for by Crandall the manager of
National Opera, and who for some reason
refused to accept his offer to go on the
stage. She had a most wonderful manner
in singing, and everybody was weeping
before she had sung a dozen words. That,
of course, is not so strange an effect
to be produced at a funeral service, but
the voice itself was one of thousands. I
understand Miss Winslow sings in the
First Church of Raymond and could
probably command almost any salary as a
public singer. She will probably be
heard from soon. Such a voice could win
its way anywhere.
"The service aside from the singing
was peculiar. The evangelist, a man of
apparently very simple, unassuming
style, spoke a few words, and he was
followed by a fine-looking man, the Rev.
Henry Maxwell, pastor of the First
Church of Raymond. Mr. Maxwell spoke of
the fact that the dead woman had been
fully prepared to go, but he spoke in a
peculiarly sensitive manner of the
effect of the liquor business on the
lives of men and women like this one.
Raymond, of course, being a railroad
town and the centre of the great packing
interests for this region, is full of
saloons. I caught from the minister's
remarks that he had only recently
changed his views in regard to license.
He certainly made a very striking
address, and yet it was in no sense
inappropriate for a funeral.
"Then followed what was perhaps the
queer part of this strange service. The
women in the tent, at least a large part
of them up near the coffin, began to
sing in a soft, tearful way, 'I was a
wandering sheep.' Then while the singing
was going on, one row of women stood up
and walked slowly past the casket, and
as they went by, each one placed a
flower of some kind upon it. Then they
sat down and another row filed past,
leaving their flowers. All the time the
singing continued softly like rain on a
tent cover when the wind is gentle. It
was one of the simplest and at the same
time one of the most impressive sights I
ever witnessed. The sides of the tent
were up, and hundreds of people who
could not get in, stood outside, all as
still as death itself, with wonderful
sadness and solemnity for such rough
looking people. There must have been a
hundred of these women, and I was told
many of them had been converted at the
meetings just recently. I cannot
describe the effect of that singing. Not
a man sang a note. All women's voices,
and so soft, and yet so distinct, that
the effect was startling.
"The service closed with another
solo by Miss Winslow, who sang, 'There
were ninety and nine.' And then the
evangelist asked them all to bow their
heads while he prayed. I was obliged in
order to catch my train to leave during
the prayer, and the last view I caught
of the service as the train went by the
shops was a sight of the great crowd
pouring out of the tent and forming in
open ranks while the coffin was borne
out by six of the women. It is a long
time since I have seen such a picture in
this unpoetic Republic."
If Loreen's funeral impressed a
passing stranger like this, it is not
difficult to imagine the profound
feelings of those who had been so
intimately connected with her life and
death. Nothing had ever entered the
Rectangle that had moved it so deeply as
Loreen's body in that coffin. And the
Holy Spirit seemed to bless with special
power the use of this senseless clay.
For that night He swept more than a
score of lost souls, mostly women, into
the fold of the Good Shepherd.
It should be said here that Mr.
Maxwell's statements concerning the
opening of the saloon from whose windows
Loreen had been killed, proved nearly
exactly true. It was formally closed
Monday and Tuesday while the authorities
made arrests of the proprietors charged
with the murder. But nothing could be
proved against any one, and before
Saturday of that week the saloon was
running as regularly as ever. No one on
the earth was ever punished by earthly
courts for the murder of Loreen.
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