The Vicar's Daughter by George MacDonald (funny books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: George MacDonald
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I am still very much afraid that all this nonsense will hardly be interesting, even to parents. But I may as well suffer for a sheep as a lamb; and, as I had an opportunity of hearing two such sermons myself not long after, I shall give them, trusting they will occupy far less space in print than they do in my foolish heart.
It was Ernest who was in the pulpit and just commencing his discourse when I entered the nursery, and sat down with the congregation. Sheltered by a clothes-horse, apparently set up for a screen, I took out my pencil, and reported on a fly-leaf of the book I had been reading:â
âMy brother was goinâ to preach about the wicked: I will preach about the good. Twenty-sixth day. In the time of Elizabeth there was a very old house. It was so old that it was pulled down, and a quite new one was built instead. Some people who lived in it did not like it so much now as they did when it was old. I take their part, you know, and think they were quite right in preferring the old one to the ugly, bare, new one. They left itâsold itâand got into another old house instead.â
Here, I am sorry to say, his curate interjected the scornful remark,â
âHeâs not lookinâ in the book a bit!â
But the preacher went on, without heeding the attack on his orthodoxy.
âThis other old house was still more uncomfortable: it was very draughty; the gutters were always leaking; and they wished themselves back in the new house. So, you see, if you wish for a better thing, you donât get it so good after all.â
âErnest, that is about the bad, after all!â cried Charles.
âWell, itâs silly,â remarked Freddy severely.
âBut I wrote it myself,â pleaded the preacher from the pulpit; and, in consideration of the fact, he was allowed to go on.
âI was reading about them being always uncomfortable. At last they decided to go back to their own house, which they had sold. They had to pay so much to get it back, that they had hardly any money left; and then they got so unhappy, and the husband whipped his wife, and took to drinking. Thatâs a lesson.â (_Here the preacherâs voice became very plaintive_), âthatâs a lesson to show you shouldnât try to get the better thing, for it turns out worse, and then you get sadder, and every thing.â
He paused, evidently too mournful to proceed. Freddy again remarked that it was silly; but Charles interposed a word for the preacher.
âItâs a good lesson, I think. A good lesson, I say,â he repeated, as if he would not be supposed to consider it much of a sermon.
But here the preacher recovered himself and summed up.
âSee how it comes: wanting to get every thing, you come to the bad and drinking. And I think Iâll leave off here. Let us sing.â
The song was âLittle Robin Redbreast;â during which Charles remarked to Freddy, apparently by way of pressing home the lesson upon his younger brother,â
âFancy! flogginâ his wife!â
Then he got into the pulpit himself, and commenced an oration.
âChapter eighty-eight. The wicked.âWell, the time when the story was, was about Herod. There were some wicked people wanderinâ about there, and theyânot killed them, you know, butâwent to the judge. We shall see what they did to them. I tell you this to make you understand. Now the story beginsâbut I must think a little. Ernest, letâs sing âSince first I saw your face.â
âWhen the wicked man was taken then to the good judgeâthere were some good people: when I said I was going to preach about the wicked, I did not mean that there were no good, only a good lot of wicked. There were pleacemans about here, and they put him in prison for a few days, and then the judge could see about what he is to do with him. At the end of the few days, the judge asked him if he would stay in prison for life or be hanged.â
Here arose some inquiries among the congregation as to what the wicked, of whom the prisoner was one, had done that was wrong; to which Charles replied,â
âOh! they murdered and killed; they stealed, and they were very wicked altogether. Well,â he went on, resuming his discourse, âthe morning came, and the judge said, âGet the ropes and my throne, and order the people not to come to see the hanginâ.â For the man was decided to be hanged. Now, the people would come. They were the wicked, and they would persist in cominâ. They were the wicked; and, if that was the fact, the judge must do something to them.
âChapter eighty-nine. The hanginâ.âWeâll have some singinâ while I think.â
âYankee Doodleâ was accordingly sung with much enthusiasm and solemnity. Then Charles resumed.
âWell, they had to put the other people, who persisted in coming, in prison, till the man who murdered people was hanged. I think my brother will go on.â
He descended, and gave place to Ernest, who began with vigor.
âWe were reading about Herod, werenât we? Then the wicked people would come, and had to be put to death. They were on the manâs side; and they all called out that he hadnât had his wish before he died, as they did in those days. So of course he wished for his life, and of course the judge wouldnât let him have that wish; and so he wished to speak to his friends, and they let him. And the nasty wicked people took him away, and he was never seen in that country any more. And thatâs enough to-day, I think. Let us sing âLord Lovel he stood at his castle-gate, a combing his milk-white steed.ââ
At the conclusion of this mournful ballad, the congregation was allowed to disperse. But, before they had gone far, they were recalled by the offer of a more secular entertainment from Charles, who re-ascended the pulpit, and delivered himself as follows:â
âWell, the play is calledânot a proverb or a charade it isnâtâitâs a play called âThe Birds and the Babies.â Well!
âOnce there was a little cottage, and lots of little babies in it. Nobody knew who the babies were. They were so happy! Now, I canât explain it to you how they came together: they had no father and mother, but they were brothers and sisters. They never grew, and they didnât like it. Now, you wouldnât like not to grow, would you? They had a little garden, and saw a great many birds in the trees. They were happy, but didnât feel happyâthatâs a funny thing now! The wicked fairies made them unhappy, and the good fairies made them happy; they gave them lots of toys. But then, how they got their living!
âChapter second, called âThe Babies at Play.ââThe fairies told them what to getâ_that was it!_âand so they got their living Very nicely. And now I must explain what they played with. First was a house. A house. Another, dolls. They were very happy, and felt as if they had a mother and father; but they hadnât, and couldnât make it out. Couldnâtâmakeâitâout!
âThey had little pumps and trees. Then they had babiesâ rattles. Babiesâ rattles.âOh! Iâve said hardly any thing about the birds, have I? anâ itâs called âThe Birds and the Babies!â They had lots of little pretty robins and canaries hanging round the ceiling, andâshall I say?ââ
Every one listened expectant during the pause that followed.
ââAndâlivedâhappyâeverâafter.â
The puzzle in it all is chiefly what my husband hinted at,âwhy and how both the desire and the means of utterance should so long precede the possession of any thing ripe for utterance. I suspect the answer must lie pretty deep in some metaphysical gulf or other.
At the same time, the struggle to speak where there is so little to utter can hardly fail to suggest the thought of some efforts of a more pretentious and imposing character.
But more than enough!
CHAPTER XLI.
âDOUBLE, DOUBLE, TOIL AND TROUBLE.â
I had for a day or two fancied that Marion was looking less bright than usual, as if some little shadow had fallen upon the morning of her life. I say morning, because, although Marion must now have been seven or eight and twenty, her life had always seemed to me lighted by a cool, clear, dewy morning sun, over whose face it now seemed as if some film of noonday cloud had begun to gather. Unwilling at once to assert the ultimate privilege of friendship, I asked her if any thing was amiss with her friends. She answered that all was going on well, at least so far that she had no special anxiety about any of them. Encouraged by a half-conscious and more than half-sad smile, I ventured a little farther.
âI am afraid there is something troubling you,â I said.
âThere is,â she replied, âsomething troubling me a good deal; but I hope it will pass away soon.â
The sigh which followed, however, was deep though gentle, and seemed to indicate a fear that the trouble might not pass away so very soon.
âI am not to ask you any questions, I suppose,â I returned.
âBetter not at present,â she answered. âI am not quite sure thatââ
She paused several moments before finishing her sentence, then added,â
ââthat I am at liberty to tell you about it.â
âThen donât say another word,â I rejoined. âOnly when I can be of service to you, you will let me, wonât you?â
The tears rose to her eyes.
âIâm afraid it may be some fault of mine,â she said. âI donât know. I canât tell. I donât understand such things.â
She sighed again, and held her peace.
It was enigmatical enough. One thing only was clear, that at present I was not wanted. So I, too, held my peace, and in a few minutes Marion went, with a more affectionate leave-taking than usual, for her friendship was far less demonstrative than that of most women.
I pondered, but it was not of much use. Of course the first thing that suggested itself was, Could my angel be in love? and with some mortal mere? The very idea was a shock, simply from its strangeness.
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