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The Strange Friend
by
Henry read the question in Abraham’s face, and preferred not to answer it at that moment. Saying, “Thee must make me acquainted with the rest of our brethren,” he led the way back to the men’s end. When he had been presented to the older members, it was time for them to assemble in meeting.
The people were again quietly startled when Henry Donnelly deliberately mounted to the third and highest bench facing them, and sat down beside Abraham and Simon. These two retained, possibly with some little inward exertion, the composure of their faces, and the strange Friend became like unto them. His hands were clasped firmly in his lap; his full, decided lips were set together, and his eyes gazed into vacancy from under the broad brim. De Courcy had removed his hat on entering the house, but, meeting his father’s eyes, replaced it suddenly, with a slight blush.
When Simon Pennock and Ruth Treadwell had spoken the thoughts which had come to them in the stillness, the strange Friend arose. Slowly, with frequent pauses, as if waiting for the guidance of the Spirit, and with that inward voice which falls so naturally into the measure of a chant, he urged upon his hearers the necessity of seeking the Light and walking therein. He did not always employ the customary phrases, but neither did he seem to speak the lower language of logic and reason; while his tones were so full and mellow that they gave, with every slowly modulated sentence, a fresh satisfaction to the ear. Even his broad a’s and the strong roll of his r’s verified the rumor of his foreign birth, did not detract from the authority of his words. The doubts which had preceded him somehow melted away in his presence, and he came forth, after the meeting had been dissolved by the shaking of hands, an accepted tenant of the high seat.
That evening, the family were alone in their new home. The plain rush-bottomed chairs and sober carpet, in contrast with the dark, solid mahogany table, and the silver branched candle-stick which stood upon it, hinted of former wealth and present loss; and something of the same contrast was reflected in the habits of the inmates. While the father, seated in a stately arm-chair, read aloud to his wife and children, Sylvia’s eyes rested on a guitar- case in the corner, and her fingers absently adjusted themselves to the imaginary frets. De Courcy twisted his neck as if the straight collar of his coat were a bad fit, and Henry, the youngest boy, nodded drowsily from time to time.
“There, my lads and lasses!” said Henry Donnelly, as he closed the book, “now we’re plain farmers at last,–and the plainer the better, since it must be. There’s only one thing wanting–“
He paused; and Sylvia, looking up with a bright, arch determination, answered: “It’s too late now, father,–they have seen me as one of the world’s people, as I meant they should. When it is once settled as something not to be helped, it will give us no trouble.”
“Faith, Sylvia!” exclaimed De Courcy, “I almost wish I had kept you company.”
“Don’t be impatient, my boy,” said the mother, gently. “Think of the vexations we have had, and what a rest this life will be!”
“Think, also,” the father added, “that I have the heaviest work to do, and that thou’lt reap the most of what may come of it. Don’t carry the old life to a land where it’s out of place. We must be what we seem to be, every one of us!”
“So we will!” said Sylvia, rising from her seat,–” I, as well as the rest. It was what I said in the beginning, you–no, THEE knows, father. Somebody must be interpreter when the time comes; somebody must remember while the rest of you are forgetting. Oh, I shall be talked about, and set upon, and called hard names; it won’t be so easy. Stay where you are, De Courcy; that coat will fit sooner than you think.”