I ever met."
Mr. Fane-Smith looked uncomfortable. He would name any number of
heresies and heretics, but, except at grace, it was against his sense
of etiquette to speak the name of Christ at table.. Even Rose looked
surprised, and Mrs. Fane-Smith colored, and at once made the move to go.
On the plea of fetching some work, Erica escaped to her own room, and
there tried to cool her cheeks and her temper; but the idea of such a
man as Mr. Fane-Smith sitting in judgment on such men as Mr. Farrant and
Charles Osmond had thoroughly roused her, and she went down still in a
dangerous state a touch would make her anger blaze up.
"Are you fond of knitting?" asked her aunt, making room for her on the
sofa, and much relieved to find that her niece was not of the unfeminine
"blue" order.
"I don't really like any work," said Erica, "but, of course, a certain
amount must be done, and I like to knit my father's socks."
Mr. Fane-Smith, who had just joined them, took note of this answer, and
it seemed to surprise and displease him, though he made no remark.
"Did he think that atheists didn't wear socks? Or that their daughters
couldn't knit?" thought Erica to herself, with a little resentful inward
laugh.
The fact was that Mr. Fane-Smith saw more and more plainly that the
niece whom his wife was so anxious to adopt was by no means his ideal
of a convert. Of course he was really and honestly thankful that she had
adopted Christianity, but it chafed him sorely that she had not exactly
adopted his own views. He was a man absolutely convinced that there is
but one form of truth, and an exceedingly narrow form he made it, for
all mankind. He Mr. Fane-Smith had exactly grasped the whole truth,
and whoever swerved to the right or to the left, if only by a hair's
breadth, was, he considered, in a dangerous and lamentable condition.
Ah! He thought to himself, if only he had had from the beginning the
opportunity of influencing Erica, instead of that dangerously broad
Charles Osmond. It did not strike him that he HAD had the opportunity
ever since his return to England, but had entirely declined to admit an
atheist to his house. Other men had labored, and he had entered into the
fruit of their labors, and not finding it quite to his taste, fancied
that he could have managed much better.
There are few sadder things in the world than to see really good and
well-intentioned men fighting for what they consider the religious cause
wit
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