In a few weeks the annual
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was to be administered in the parish of
Deanside; and the minister, venerable in old age, of authority by the
power of his talents and learning, almost feared for his sanctity, yet
whal beloved for gentleness and compassion that had never been found
wanting when required either by the misfortunes or errors of any of his
flock, had delivered for several successive Sabbaths, to full
congregations, sermons on the proper preparation of communicants in that
awful ordinance. The old man was a follower of Calvin; and many, who had
listened to him with a resolution in their hearts to approach the table
of the Redeemer, telt so awe-stricken and awakened at the conclusion of
his exhortations, that they gave their souls another year to meditate on
what they had heard, and by a pure and humble course of life, to render
themselves less unworthy to partake the mysterious and holy bread and
wine.
The good old man received in the Manse, for a couple of hours every
evenings such of his parishioners as came to signify their wish to
partake of the sacrament ; and it was then noted, that though he in
nowise departed, in his conversation with them at such times, from the
spirit of those doctrines which he had delivered from the pulpit, yet
his manner was milder, and more soothing, and full of encouragement; so
that many w ho went to him almost with quaking hearts, departed in
tranquillity and peace, and looked forward to that most impressive and
solemn act of the Christian faith, with calm and glad anticipation. The
old man thought truly and justly, that few, if any, would come to the
manse, after having heard him in the kirk, without due and deep
reflection; and, therefore, though he allowed none to pass through his
hands without strict examination, he spoke to them all benignly, and
with that sort of paternal pity, which a religious man, about to leave
this life, feels towards all his brethren of mankind, who are entering
upon, or engaged in its scenes of agitation, trouble, and danger.
On one of those evenings, the servant showed ‘nto the minister’s study a
tall, boid-look>ng, dark-visaged man, in the prime of life, who, with
little of the usual courtesy, advanced into the middle of the room, and
some what abruptly declared the sacred purpose of his visit. But before
he could receive a reply, he looked around and before him; and there was
something so solemn in the old minister’s appearance, as he sat like a
spirit, with his unclouded eyes fixed upon the intruder, that that
person’s countenance fell, and his heart was involuntarily knocking
against his side. An old large Bible, the same that he read from in the
pulpit, was lying open before him. One glimmering candle showed his
beautiful and silvery locks falling over his temples, as his head half
stooped over' the sacred page; a dead silence was in the room, dedicated
to meditation and prayer; the old man, it was known, had for some tune
felt himself to be dying, and had spoken of the sacrament of this summer
as the last he could ever hope to administer; so that altogether, in the
silence, the dimness, the sanctity, the unworldliness of the time, the
place, and the being before him, the visitor stood like one abashed and
appalled; and bowing more reverently, or, at least, respectfully, he
said, with a hurried and quivering voice, “Sir, I come for your sanction
to be admitted to the table of our Lord.”
The minister motioned to him -with his hand to sit down, and it was a
relief to the trembling man to do so, for he was in the presence of one
who he felt saw into his heart. A sudden change, from hardihood to
terror, took place within his dark nature; he wished himself out of the
insupportable sanctity of that breathless room; and a remorse, that had
hitherto slept, or been drowned within him, now clutched his
heartstrings, as if with an alternate grasp of frost and fire, and made
his knees knock against each other where he sat, and his face pale as
ashes.
“Norman Adams, saidst thou, that thou wilt take into that hand, and put
into those lips, the symbol of the blood that was shed for sinners, and
of the body that bowed on the cross, and then gave up the ghost? If so,
let us speak together, even as if thou wert communing with thine own
heart. Never, again, may I join in that Sacrament, for the hour of my
departure is at hand. Say, wilt thou eat and drink death to thine
immortal soul?”
The terrified man found strength to rise from his seat, and staggering
towards the door, said, “Pardon, forgive me, I am not worthy.” - “It is
not I who can pardon, Norman. That power lies not with man ; but sit
down—you are deadly pale—and though, I fear, an ill-living and a
dissolute man, greater sinners have repented, and been saved. Approach
not now the table of the Lord, but confess all your sins before him in
the silence of your own house, and upon your naked knees on the
stone-floor every morning and every night; and if this you do
faithfully, humbly, and with a contrite heart, come to me again when the
Sacrament is over, and I will speak words of comfort to you, if, then, I
am able to speak, if, Norman, it should be on my death-bed. This will I
do for the sake of thy soul, and for the sake of thy father, Norman,
whom my soul loved, and who was a support to me in my ministry for many
long long years, even for two score and ten, for we were at school
together y and had your father been living now, he would, like myself,
have this very day finished his eighty-fifth year. I send you not from
me in anger, but in pity, and love. Go, my son, and this very night
begin your repentance, for if that face speak the truth, your heart must
be. sorely charged."
Just as the old man ceased speaking, and before the humble, or at least
affrighted culprit had risen to go, another visitor of a very different
kind was shown into the room. A young beautiful girl, almost shrowded in
her cloak, with a sweet pale face, on which sadness seemed in vain to
strive with the natural expression of the happiness of youth.
“Mary Simpson," said the kind old man, as she stood with a timid curtesy
near the door; "Mary Simpson, approach, and receive from my hands the
token for which thou contest. Well, dost thou know the . history of thy
Saviour's life, and rejoicest in the life and immortality brought to
light "by the gospel. Young, and guileless, Mary, art thou; and dim as
my memory now is of many things, yet do I well remember the evening,
when first beside my knee, thou heardest read how the Divine Infant was
laid in a manger, how the wise men from the east came to the place of
his Nativity,.—and how the angels were heard singing in the fields of
Bethlehem all the night long.” Alas! every word that had thus been
uttered sent a pang into the poor creature's heart, and without lifting
her eyes from the floor, and in a voice more faint and hollow than
belonged to one so young, she said,
"Sir, I come not as an intending Communicant; yet the Lord my God knows
that I am rather miserable than guilty, and he will not suffer mj soul
to perish, though a baby »s now within me, the child of guilt, and sin,
and horror. -This, my shame, come I to tell you; but for the father of
my babe unborn, cruel though he has been to me, Oh! cruel, cruel,
indeed,—yet shall his name go down with me in silence to the grave. I
must not, must not breathe his name in mortal ears; but I have looked
round me in the wide moor, and when nothing that could understand was
by, nothing Jiving but birds, and bees, and the sheep I was herding,
often, have I whispered his name in my prayers, and beseeclied God, and
Jesus, to forgive him all his sins;”
At these Words, of -which the passionate utterance seemed to relieve her
heart, and before the pitying and bewildered old man could reply, Mary
Simpson raised her. eyes from the floor, and fearing to meet the face of
the minister, which had heretofore never shone upon her but with smiles,
and of which the expected frown was to her altogether insupportable, she
turned them wildly round the room, as if for' a dark resting-place, and
beheld; Norman Adams rooted to his seat, leaning towards her with his
white ghastly countenance, arid his eyes starting from their sockets,
seemingly in wrath, agony, fear; and remorse. That terrible face struck
poor Mary to the heart, and she sunk against the wall, and slipped down,
shuddering upon a chair.
“Norman Adams, I am old and weak, but do you put your arm round that
poor lost creature, and keep her from falling down on the hard floor. I
hear it is a stormy night, and she has walked some miles hither; no
wonder she is overcome. You have heard her confession. But it was not
meant for your ear; so, till I see you again, say nothing of what you
have now heard.”
“O Sir! a cup of water, for my blood is either leaving my heart
altogether, or it is drowning it. Your voice, Sir, is going far, far
away from me, and I am sinking down. Oh! hold me,—hold me up! Is it a
pit into which I am falling —Saw I not Norman Adams?—Where is he now?”
The poor maiden did not fall off the chair, although Norman Adams
supported her not; but her head lay back against the Avail, and a sigh,
long and dismal, burst from her bosom that deeply affected the old man’s
heart, but struck that of the speechless and motionless sinner, like the
first toll of the prison bell that warns the felon to leave his cell and
come forth to execution.
The minister fixed a stem eye upon Norman, for, from the poor girl’s
unconscious words, it was plain that he was the guilty wretch who had
wrought all this misery. "You knew, did you not, that she had neither
father nor mother, sister nor brother, scarcely one relation on earth to
care for or watch over her; and yet you have used her so? If her beauty
was a temptation unto you, did not the sweet child’s innocence touch
your hard and selfish heart with pity; or her guilt and grief must
surely now wring it with remorse. Look on
her—white—cold—breathless—still as a corpse; and yet, thou bold bad man,
thy footsteps would have approached the Table of thy Lord.”
The child now partly awoke from her swoon, and her dim opening eyes met
those of Norman Adams. She shut them with a shudder, and said, sickly
and with a quivering voice, “O spare, spare me, Norman: Are we again in
that dark fearful wood? Tremble not for your life on earth, Norman, for
never, never will I tell to mortal ears that terrible secret; but spare
me, spare me, else our Saviour, with all his mercy, will never pardon
your unrelenting soul. These are cruel-looking eyes ; you will not
surely murder poor Mary Simpson, unhappy as she is, and must for ever
be—yet life is sweet! She beseeches you on her knees to spare her
life!”—and, in the intense fear of phantasy, the poor creature struggled
off the chair, and fell down indeed in a heap at his feet.
“Canst thou indeed be the son of old Norman Adams, the industrious, the
temperate, the mild, and the pious? who so often sat in this very room
which your presence has now polluted, and spake with me on the mysteries
of life and of death. Foul ravisher, what stayed thy hand from the
murder of that child, when there were none near to hear her shrieks in
the dark solitude of the great pine-wood?”
Norman Adams smote his heart and fell down too orf his knees beside the
poor ruined orphan. He put his arm round her, and, raising her from the
floor, said, “No, no, my sin is great, too great for heaven’s
forgiveness; but, O Sir, say not,—say .not-that I would have murdered
her; for, savage as my crime' was, yet may God judge me less terribly
than if I had taken her life.”
In a little while they were both seated with some composure, and silence
was in the room. No one spoke, and the old grey haired man sat with eyes
fixed, without reading, on the open Bible. At last he broke silence with
these words out of Isaiah, that seemed to have forced themselves or his
heedless eyes. “Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white
as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.”
Mary Simpson wept aloud at these words; and seemed-to forget her own
wrongs and grief in commiseration of the agonies of remorse and fear
that were now plainly preying on the soul of the guilty man. “I forgive
you Norman, and will soon be out of the way, no longer to anger you with
the sight of me.” Then fixing her streaming eyes on the minister, she
besought him not to be the means of bringing him to punishment, and a
shameful death, for that he might repent, and live to be a good man and
respected in the parish; but that she was a poor orphan for'whom few
cared, and who, when dead, would have but a small funeral."
“I will deliver myself up into the hands of justice," said the offender,
“for I do not deserve to live. Mine was an inhuman crime, and let a
violent and shameful death he my doom.”
The orphan girl now stood up as if her strength had been restored, and
stretching out her hands passionately, with a flow of most affecting and
beautiful language, inspired by a meek, single, and sinless heart, that
could not bear the thought of utter degradation and wretchedness
befalling any one of the rational children of God, implored and
beseeched the old man to comfort the sinner before them, and promise
that the dark transaction of guilt should never leave the concealment of
their own three hearts. “Did he not save the lives of two brothers once
who were drowning in that black mossy loch, when their own kindred, at
work among' the hay, feared the deep sullen water, and all stood aloof
shuddering and shrieking, till Norman Adams leapt in to their rescue,
and drew them by the drippmg hair to the shore, and then lay down beside
them on the heather, as like to death as themselves? I myself saw it
done; I myself heard their mother call down the blessing of God on
Norman’s head, and then all the haymakers knelt down and prayed. When
you, on the Sabbath, returned thanks to God for that they were saved,
Oh! kind Sir, did you not name, in the full kirk, him who, under
Providence, did deliver them from death, and who, you said, had thus
showed himself to be a Christian indeed? May his sin against.
From a few questions solemnly asked, and solemnly answered, the minister
found that Norman Adams had been won by the beauty and loveliness of
this poor orphan shepherdess, as he had sometimes spoken to her when
sitting on the hillside with her flock, but that pride had prevented him
from ever thinking of her in marriage. It appeared that he had also been
falsely, informed, by a youth whom Mary disliked for his brutal and
gross manners, that she was not the innocent girl that her seeming
simplicity denoted. On returning from a festive meeting, where this
abject person had made many mean insinuations against her virtue, Norman
Adams met her returning to her master’s house, in the dusk of the
evening, on the foot-path leading through a lonely wood; and, though his
crime was of the deepest dye, it seemed to the minister of the religion
of mercy, that by repentance, and belief in the atonement that had once
been made for sinners, he, too, might perhaps hope for forgiveness at
the throne of God.
“I warned you, miserable man, of the fatal nature ol sin, when first it
brought a trouble over your countenance, and broke in upon the peaceful
integrity of your life. Was not the silence of the night often terrible
to you, when you were alone in the moors, and the whisper of your own
conscience told you, that every wicked thought was sacrilege to your
father’s dust? Step by step, and almost imperceptibly, perhaps, did you
advance upon the road that leadeth to destruction; but look back now,
and what a long dark journey have you taken, standing, as you are, on
the brink of everlasting death. Once you were, kind, gentle, generous,
manly, and free, but you trusted to the deceitfulness of your own heart;
you estranged yourself from the house of the God of your fathers, and
what has your nature done for you at last, but sunk you into a wretch,
savage, selfish, cruel, cowardly, and in good truth a slave? A felon are
you, and forfeited to the hangman’s hands. Look on that pour innocent
child, and think what is man without God. What would you give now, if
the last three years of your reckless life had been past in a dungeon
dug deep into the earth, with hunger and thirst gnawing at your heart,
and bent down under a cart-load of chains? Yet look not so ghastly, for
I condemn you not utterly; nor, though I know your guilt, can I know
what good may yet be left uncorrupted and un-extinguiched in your soul.
Kneel not to me, Norman; fasten not so your eyes upon me; lift them
upwards, and then turn them in upon your own heart, for the dreadful
reckoning is between it and God.” Mary Simpson had now recovered all her
strength, and she knelt down by the side of the groaner. Deep was the
pity she now felt for him, who to her had shown no pity; she did not
refuse to lay her light arm tenderly upon his neck. Often had she prayed
to God to save his soul, even among her rueful sobs of shame in the
solitary glens; and now that she beheld his sin •punished with a remorse
more than he could bear, the orphan would have willingly died, to avert
from his prostrate head the wrath of the Almighty.
The old man wept at the sight of so much innocence, and so much guilt,
kneeling together before God, in strange union and fellowship of a
common being. With his own fatherly arms he lifted up the orphan from
her knees, and said: “Mary Simpson, my sweet and innocent Mary Simpson,
for innocent thou art, the elders will give thee a token, that will, on
Sabbath-day, admit thee (not for the first time, though so young) to the
communiontable. Fear not to approach it; look at me, and on my face,
when I bless the elements, and be. thou strong in the strength of the
Lord. Norman Adams, return to y our home; Go into the chamber where your
father died. “Let your knees wear out the part of the floor on which he
kneeled. It is 'somewhat worn already; you have seen the mark of your
father’s knees. Who knows, but that pardon and peace may descend from
Heaven even upon such a sinner as thou. On none such as thou have mine
eyes ever looked, in knowledge, among all those who have lived and died
under my care, for three generations. But great is the unknown guilt
that may be hidden even in the church-yard of a small quiet parish like
this ! Dost thou feel as if God-forsaken? Or, Oh! say it unto me, canst
thou, myr poor son, dare to hope for repentance?”
The pitiful tone of the old man’s trembling voice, and the motion of his
shaking and withered hands, as he lifted them up almost in an attitude
of benediction, completed the prostration of that sinner’s spirit. All
his better nature, which had too long been oppressed under scorn of holy
ordinances, and the coldness of infidelity, and the selfishness of
lawless desires that insensibly harden the heart they do not dissolve,
now struggled to rise up and respect its rights. <£ When I remember what
I once was, I can hope—when I think what I now am, I only, only fear.”
A storm of rain and wind had come on, and Mary Simpson slept in the
manse that night. On the ensuing Sabbath she partook of the Sacrament. A
woeful illness fell upon Norman Adams; and then for a long time no one
saw him, or knew where he had gone. It was said that he was in a distant
city, and that he was a miserable creature, that never again could look
upon the sun. But it was otherwise ordered. He returned to his farm,
greatly changed in face and person, but even yet more changed in spirit.
The old minister had more days allotted to him than he had thought, and
was not taken away for some summers. Before he died, he had reason to
know that Norman Adams had repented in tears of blood, in thoughts of
faith, and in deeds of charity; and he did not fear to admit him, too,
in good time, to the holy ordinance, along with Mary Simpson, then his
wife, and the mother of his children. |