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PAGE 11

The Gray Mills Of Farley
by [?]

“Like last year’s?” asked the priest, who was resting himself in the armchair. There was a friendly twinkle in his eyes.

“Like last year’s,” answered the agent. “I worked like two men, and I pushed the mills hard to make that large profit. I saw there was trouble coming, and I told the directors and asked for a special surplus, but I had no idea of anything like this.”

“Nine per cent. in these times was too good a prize,” said Father Daley, but the twinkle in his eyes had suddenly disappeared.

“You won’t get your new church for a long time yet,” said the agent.

“No, no,” said the old man impatiently. “I have kept the foundations going as well as I could, and the talk, for their own sakes. It gives them something to think about. I took the money they gave me in collections and let them have it back again for work. ‘Tis well to lead their minds,” and he gave a quick glance at the agent. “‘Tis no pride of mine for church-building and no good credit with the bishop I’m after. Young men can be satisfied with those things, not an old priest like me that prays to be a father to his people.”

Father Daley spoke as man speaks to man, straight out of an honest heart.

“I see many things now that I used to be blind about long ago,” he said. “You may take a man who comes over, him and his wife. They fall upon good wages and their heads are turned with joy. They’ve been hungry for generations back and they’ve always seen those above them who dressed fine and lived soft, and they want a taste of luxury too; they’re bound to satisfy themselves. So they’ll spend and spend and have beefsteak for dinner every day just because they never had enough before, but they’d turn into wild beasts of selfishness, most of ’em, if they had no check. ‘Tis there the church steps in. ‘Remember your Maker and do Him honor in His house of prayer,’ says she. ‘Be self-denying, be thinking of eternity and of what’s sure to come!’ And you will join with me in believing that it’s never those who have given most to the church who come first to the ground in a hard time like this. Show me a good church and I’ll show you a thrifty people.” Father Daley looked eagerly at the agent for sympathy.

“You speak the truth, sir,” said the agent. “Those that give most are always the last to hold out with honest independence and the first to do for others.”

“Some priests may have plundered their parishes for pride’s sake; there’s no saying what is in poor human nature,” repeated Father Daley earnestly. “God forgive us all for unprofitable servants of Him and His church. I believe in saying more about prayer and right living, and less about collections, in God’s house, but it’s the giving hand that’s the rich hand all the world over.”

“I don’t think Ireland has ever sent us over many misers; Saint Patrick must have banished them all with the snakes,” suggested the agent with a grim smile. The priest shook his head and laughed a little and then both men were silent again in the counting-room.

The mail train whistled noisily up the road and came into the station at the end of the empty street, then it rang its loud bell and puffed and whistled away again.

“I’ll bring your mail over, sir,” said the agent, presently. “Sit here and rest yourself until I come back and we’ll walk home together.”

The leather mail-bag looked thin and flat and the leisurely postmaster had nearly distributed its contents by the time the agent had crossed the street and reached the office. His clerks were both off on a long holiday; they were brothers and were glad of the chance to take their vacations together. They had been on lower pay; there was little to do in the counting-room–hardly anybody’s time to keep or even a letter to write.