Beulah - Page 108/348

She laid the volume on his knee, and tears which would not be

restrained rolled swiftly over her cheeks.

He looked at her mournfully, and took her hand in his.

"My child, do you believe all this as heartily as you did when a

little girl? Is your faith in your religion unshaken?"

He felt her fingers close over his spasmodically, as she hastily

replied: "Of course, of course! What could shake a faith which years should

strengthen?"

But the shiver which crept through her frame denied her assertion,

and with a keen pang he saw the footprints of the Destroyer. She

must not know, however, that he doubted her words, and, with an

effort, he said: "I am glad, Beulah; and if you would continue to believe, don't read

my books promiscuously. There are many on those shelves yonder which

I would advise you never to open. Be warned in time, my child."

She snatched her hand from his, and answered proudly: "Sir, think you I could be satisfied with a creed which I could not

bear to have investigated? If I abstained from reading your books,

dreading lest my faith be shaken, then I could no longer confide in

that faith. Christianity has triumphed over the subtleties of

infidelity for eighteen hundred years. What have I to fear?"

"Beulah, do you want to be just what I am? Without belief in any

creed! hopeless of eternity as of life! Do you want to be like me?

If not, keep your hands off of my books! Good night; it is time for

you to be asleep."

He motioned her away, and, too much pained to reply, she silently

withdrew.