Cap'n Eri by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 41 of 316 (12%)
page 41 of 316 (12%)
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Thompson's spiritual exaltation exploded directly in the ear of the
nervous stranger. The young man shot out of his chair as if Mr. Thompson had fired a dynamite charge beneath him. "Oh, the Devil!" he shrieked, and then subsided, blushing to the back of his neck. Somehow this interruption took the spirit out of the meeting. Giggles from Luther and the younger element interfered with the solemnity of Mr. Perley's closing remarks, and no one else was brave enough to "testify" under the circumstances. They sang again, and the meeting broke up. The nervous young man was the first one to leave. Captain Eri got his friend out of the clutches of the "Come-Outers" as quickly as possible, and piloted him down the road toward his home. John Baxter was silent and absent-minded, and most of the Captain's cheerful remarks concerning Orham affairs in general went unanswered. As they turned in at the gate the elder man said: "Eri, do you believe that man's law ought to be allowed to interfere with God's law?" "Well, John, in most cases it's my jedgment that it pays to steer pretty close to both of 'em." "S'pose God called you to break man's law and keep His; what would you do?" "Guess the fust thing would be to make sure 'twas the Almighty that was callin'. I don't want to say nothin' to hurt your feelin's, but I |
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