The next morning the parson was standing before his scant congregation of

Episcopalians.

It was the first body of these worshippers gathered together in the

wilderness mainly from the seaboard aristocracy of the Church of England. A

small frame building on the northern slope of the wide valley served them

for a meeting-house. No mystical half-lights there but the mystical

half-lights of Faith; no windows but the many-hued windows of Hope; no

arches but the vault of Love. What more did those men and women need in that

land, over-shadowed always by the horror of quick or

waiting death?

In addition to his meagre flock many an unclaimed goat of the world fell

into that meek valley-path of Sunday mornings and came to hear, if not to

heed, the voice of this quiet shepherd; so that now, as be stood delivering

his final exhortation, his eyes ranged over wild, lawless, desperate

countenances, rimming him darkly around. They glowered in at him through the

door, where some sat upon the steps; others leaned in at the windows on each

side of the room.

Over the closely packed rough heads of these he could see

others lounging further away on the grass beside their rifles, listening,

laughing and talking. Beyond these stretched near fields green with maize,

and cabins embosomed in orchards and gardens. Once a far-off band of

children rushed across his field of vision, playing at Indian warfare and

leaving in the bright air a cloud of dust from an old Indian war trail.

As he observed it all--this singularly mixed concourse of God-fearing men

and women and of men and women who feared neither God nor man nor devil--as

he beheld the young fields and the young children and the sweet transition

of the whole land from bloodshed to innocence, the recollection of his

mission in it and of the message of his Master brough out upon his cold,

bleak, beautiful face the light of the Divine: so from a dark valley one may

sometime have seen a snow-clad peak of the Alps lit up with the rays of the

hidden sun.

He had chosen for his text the words "My peace I give unto you," and long

before the closing sentences were reached, his voice was floating out with

silvery, flute-like clearness on the still air of the summer morning,

holding every soul, however unreclaimed, to intense and reverential silence: "It is now twenty years since you scaled the mountains and hewed your path

into this wilderness, never again to leave it. Since then you have known but

war. As I look into your faces, I see the scar of many a wound; but more

than the wounds I see are the wounds I do not see: of the body as well as of

the spirit--the lacerations of sorrow, the strokes of bereavement. So that

perhaps not one of you here but bears some brave visible or invisible sin of

this awful past and of his share in the common strife. Twenty years are a

long time to fight enemies of any kind, a long time to bold out against such

as you have faced; and had you not been a mighty people sprung from the

loins of a mighty race, no one of you would be here this day to worship the

God of your fathers in the faith of your fathers. The victory upon which you

are entering at last is never the reward of the feeble, the cowardly, the

faint-hearted. Out of your strength alone you have won your peace.




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