effort that
finishes a strain, as if to speed the departing interval of time; but when
it rang again, after the first hour of the new day, its voice had dropped,
as it were, to that tone of indifference which expresses the accustomed
doing of some monotonous duty which has become too much of a habit
to excite either pleasure or pain. To the tired watcher then, for whom
the notes were mere tones conveying no idea, the soft melancholy
cadence, dulled by distance, was like the half-stifled echo of her own
last stifled sigh.
It is likely, however, that the chime failed less of its effect outside the
city than it did within; but there again it depended upon the hearer.
When the mellow tones floated above the heath where the gipsies
camped, only one, perchance, might listen, lifting her bright eyes with
pleasure and longing in them, dumbly, as a child might, yet showing
for a moment some glimmering promise of a soul. But to many in the
village close at hand the chime brought comfort. It seemed to assure the
sick, counting the slow hours, that they were not forsaken, and helped
them to bear their pain with patience; it seemed to utter to the wayworn
a word which told them their trouble was not in vain; it seemed to
invite all those who waited and were anxious to trust their care to Him
and seek repose. It was all this, and much more, to many people: and
yet, when it spread in another direction over the fields, it meant nothing
to the yawning ploughman, either musical or poetical, had no
significance whatever for him if it were not of the time of day, gathered,
however, with the help of sundry other sensations of which hunger and
fatigue were chief. It probably conveyed as much, and neither more nor
less, to the team he drove.
But perhaps of all the affairs of life with which the chime had mingled,
the most remarkable, could they be collected and recorded, would be
the occasions on which the hearing of the message had marked a
turning point in the career of some one person, as happened, once on a
summer afternoon, when it was heard by a Lancashire collier--a young
lad with an unkempt mop of golden hair, delicate features, and limbs
which were too refined for his calling, who was coming up the River
Morne on a barge.
The river winds for a time through a fertile undulating bit of country,
and nothing of the city can be seen until you are almost in it, except the
castle of the Duke of Morningquest, high perched on a hill on the
farther side, and the spire of the cathedral, which might not attract your
attention, however, if it were not pointed out to you above the trees.
When the chime floated over this sparsely peopled tract, filling the air
with music, but coming from no one could tell whence, there was
something mysterious in the sound of it to an imaginative listener in so
apparently remote a place; and once, twice, as the long hours passed,
the young collier heard it ring, and wondered. He had nothing to do but
listen, and watch the man on the bank who led the horse that was
towing the barge; or address a rare remark to his solitary
companion--an old sailor, dressed in a sou'-wester, blue jersey, and the
invariable drab trowsers, tar-besprent, and long boots, of his calling,
who steered automatically, facing the meadows in beautiful abstraction.
He would have faced an Atlantic gale, however, with that same look.
When the chime rang out for the third time, the young collier spoke:
"It's the varse of a song, maybe?" he suggested.
"Aye, lad," was the laconic rejoinder.
The barge moved on--passed a little farmhouse close to the water's
edge; passed some lazy cattle standing in a field flicking off flies with
their tails; passed a patient fisherman, who had not caught a thing that
day, and scarcely expected to, but still fished on. The sun sparkled
down on the water; the weary man and horse plodded along the bank;
far away, a sweet bird sang; and the collier spoke again.
"Dost tha' know the varse?" he said.
The old man had been brought up in those parts; he knew it well; and
slowly repeated it to the lad, who listened without a sign, sitting with
his dreamy eyes fixed on the water:
"He, watching over Israel, slumbers not, nor sleeps."
There was another long silence, and then the lad spoke once more, with
apathetic gravity, asking: "Who's He?"
The old man kept his eyes fixed on a distant reach of the river, and
moved no muscle of his face.
"I guess it's Christ," he
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