| Great Story For Youth and Adults
Christian Fiction That Popularized Saying "WWJD", (What Would Jesus Do?) By Charles M. Sheldon First Published In Late 1800's |
Gospel To The World 24/7 |
_______________________ CHAPTER 22. “He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also to walk even as He walked.” Felicia started off to the play not very happy, but she was familiar with
that feeling, only sometimes she was more unhappy than at others. Her
feeling expressed itself tonight by a withdrawal into herself. When the
company was seated in the box and the curtain had gone up Felicia was back
of the others and remained for the evening by herself. Mrs. Delano, as
chaperon for half a dozen young ladies, understood Felicia well enough to
know that she was “queer,” as Rose so often said, and she made no attempt to
draw her out of her corner. And so the girl really experienced that night by
herself one of the feelings that added to the momentum that was increasing
the coming on of her great crisis.
The play was an English melodrama, full of startling situations, realistic
scenery and unexpected climaxes. There was one scene in the third act that
impressed even Rose Sterling.
It was midnight on Blackfriars Bridge. The Thames flowed dark and forbidden
below. St. Paul's rose through the dim light imposing, its dome seeming to
float above the buildings surrounding it. The figure of a child came upon
the bridge and stood there for a moment peering about as if looking for some
one. Several persons were crossing the bridge, but in one of the recesses
about midway of the river a woman stood, leaning out over the parapet, with
a strained agony of face and figure that told plainly of her intention. Just
as she was stealthily mounting the parapet to throw herself into the river,
the child caught sight of her, ran forward with a shrill cry more animal
than human, and seizing the woman's dress dragged back upon it with all her
little strength. Then there came suddenly upon the scene two other
characters who had already figured in the play, a tall, handsome, athletic
gentleman dressed in the fashion, attended by a slim-figured lad who was as
refined in dress and appearance as the little girl clinging to her mother,
who was mournfully hideous in her rags and repulsive poverty. These two, the
gentleman and the lad, prevented the attempted suicide, and after a tableau
on the bridge where the audience learned that the man and woman were brother
and sister, the scene was transferred to the interior of one of the slum
tenements in the East Side of London. Here the scene painter and carpenter
had done their utmost to produce an exact copy of a famous court and alley
well known to the poor creatures who make up a part of the outcast London
humanity. The rags, the crowding, the vileness, the broken furniture, the
horrible animal existence forced upon creatures made in God's image were so
skilfully shown in this scene that more than one elegant woman in the
theatre, seated like Rose Sterling in a sumptuous box surrounded with silk
hangings and velvet covered railing, caught herself shrinking back a little
as if contamination were possible from the nearness of this piece of
scenery. It was almost too realistic, and yet it had a horrible fascination
for Felicia as she sat there alone, buried back in a cushioned seat and
absorbed in thoughts that went far beyond the dialogue on the stage.
From the tenement scene the play shifted to the interior of a nobleman's
palace, and almost a sigh of relief went up all over the house at the sight
of the accustomed luxury of the upper classes. The contrast was startling.
It was brought about by a clever piece of staging that allowed only a few
moments to elapse between the slum and the palace scene. The dialogue went
on, the actors came and went in their various roles, but upon Felicia the
play made but one distinct impression. In realty the scenes on the bridge
and in the slums were only incidents in the story of the play, but Felicia
found herself living those scenes over and over. She had never philosophized
about the causes of human misery, she was not old enough she had not the
temperament that philosophizes. But she felt intensely, and this was not the
first time she had felt the contrast thrust into her feeling between the
upper and the lower conditions of human life. It had been growing upon her
until it had made her what Rose called “queer,” and other people in her
circle of wealthy acquaintances called very unusual. It was simply the human
problem in its extreme of riches and poverty, its refinement and its
vileness, that was, in spite of her unconscious attempts to struggle against
the facts, burning into her life the impression that would in the end either
transform her into a woman of rare love and self-sacrifice for the world, or
a miserable enigma to herself and all who knew her.
“Come, Felicia, aren't you going home?” said Rose. The play was over, the
curtain down, and people were going noisily out, laughing and gossiping as
if “The Shadows of London” were simply good diversion, as they were, put on
the stage so effectively.
Felicia rose and went out with the rest quietly, and with the absorbed
feeling that had actually left her in her seat oblivious of the play's
ending. She was never absent-minded, but often thought herself into a
condition that left her alone in the midst of a crowd.
“Well, what did you think of it?” asked Rose when the sisters had reached
home and were in the drawing-room. Rose really had considerable respect for
Felicia's judgment of a play.
“I thought it was a pretty fair picture of real life.”
“I mean the acting,” said Rose, annoyed.
“The bridge scene was well acted, especially the woman's part. I thought the
man overdid the sentiment a little.”
“Did you? I enjoyed that. And wasn't the scene between the two cousins funny
when they first learned they were related? But the slum scene was horrible.
I think they ought not to show such things in a play. They are too
painful.”
“They must be painful in real life, too,” replied Felicia.
“Yes, but we don't have to look at the real thing. It's bad enough at the
theatre where we pay for it.”
Rose went into the dining-room and began to eat from a plate of fruit and
cakes on the sideboard.
“Are you going up to see mother?” asked Felicia after a while. She had
remained in front of the drawing-room fireplace.
“No,” replied Rose from the other room. “I won't trouble her tonight. If you
go in tell her I am too tired to be agreeable.”
So Felicia turned into her mother's room, as she went up the great staircase
and down the upper hall. The light was burning there, and the servant who
always waited on Mrs. Sterling was beckoning Felicia to come in.
“Tell Clara to go out,” exclaimed Mrs. Sterling as Felicia came up to the
bed.
Felicia was surprised, but she did as her mother bade her, and then inquired
how she was feeling.
“Felicia,” said her mother, “can you pray?”
The question was so unlike any her mother had ever asked before that she was
startled. But she answered: “Why, yes, mother. Why do you ask such a
question?”
“Felicia, I am frightened. Your father—I have had such strange fears about
him all day. Something is wrong with him. I want you to pray—.”
“Now, here, mother?”
“Yes. Pray, Felicia.”
Felicia reached out her hand and took her mother's. It was trembling. Mrs.
Sterling had never shown such tenderness for her younger daughter, and her
strange demand now was the first real sign of any confidence in Felicia's
character.
The girl kneeled, still holding her mother's trembling hand, and prayed. It
is doubtful if she had ever prayed aloud before. She must have said in her
prayer the words that her mother needed, for when it was silent in the room
the invalid was weeping softly and her nervous tension was over.
Felicia stayed some time. When she was assured that her mother would not
need her any longer she rose to go.
“Good night, mother. You must let Clara call me if you feel badly in the
night.”
“I feel better now.” Then as Felicia was moving away, Mrs. Sterling said:
“Won't you kiss me, Felicia?”
Felicia went back and bent over her mother. The kiss was almost as strange
to her as the prayer had been. When Felicia went out of the room her cheeks
were wet with tears. She had not often cried since she was a little child.
Sunday morning at the Sterling mansion was generally very quiet. The girls
usually went to church at eleven o'clock service. Mr. Sterling was not a
member but a heavy contributor, and he generally went to church in the
morning. This time he did not come down to breakfast, and finally sent word
by a servant that he did not feel well enough to go out. So Rose and Felicia
drove up to the door of the Nazareth Avenue Church and entered the family
pew alone.
When Dr. Bruce walked out of the room at the rear of the platform and went
up to the pulpit to open the Bible as his custom was, those who knew him
best did not detect anything unusual in his manner or his expression. He
proceeded with the service as usual. He was calm and his voice was steady
and firm. His prayer was the first intimation the people had of anything new
or strange in the service. It is safe to say that the Nazareth Avenue Church
had not heard Dr. Bruce offer such a prayer before during the twelve years
he had been pastor there. How would a minister be likely to pray who had
come out of a revolution in Christian feeling that had completely changed
his definition of what was meant by following Jesus? No one in Nazareth
Avenue Church had any idea that the Rev. Calvin Bruce, D. D., the dignified,
cultured, refined Doctor of Divinity, had within a few days been crying like
a little child on his knees, asking for strength and courage and
Christlikeness to speak his Sunday message; and yet the prayer was an
unconscious involuntary disclosure of his soul's experience such as the
Nazareth Avenue people had seldom heard, and never before from that pulpit.
In the hush that succeeded the prayer a distinct wave of spiritual power
moved over the congregation. The most careless persons in the church felt
it. Felicia, whose sensitive religious nature responded swiftly to every
touch of emotion, quivered under the passing of that supernatural pressure,
and when she lifted her head and looked up at the minister there was a look
in her eyes that announced her intense, eager anticipation of the scene that
was to follow. And she was not alone in her attitude. There was something in
the prayer and the result of it that stirred many and many a disciple in
that church. All over the house men and women leaned forward, and when Dr.
Bruce began to speak of his visit to Raymond, in the opening sentence of his
address which this morning preceded his sermon, there was an answering
response in the people that came back to him as he spoke, and thrilled him
with the hope of a spiritual baptism such as he had never during all his
ministry experienced.
~ end of chapter 22 ~ Back To "In His Steps" Index |