Miss McDonald - Page 46/65

She had heard much of his eloquence, and as his name was McDonald, he

might possibly be some distant relative. Inasmuch as her father was of

Scotch descent she felt a double interest in him, and with her mother

was among the first who entered the little, humble building and took a

seat upon one of the hard, uncomfortable benches near the pulpit.

The speaker was young--about Tom's age--and with a look on his florid

face and a sound in his voice so like that of the dead man that Daisy

half started to her feet when he first took his stand in front of her

and announced the opening hymn. His text was: "Why stand ye here all the

day idle?" and so well did he handle it, and so forcible were his

gestures and eloquent his style of delivery, that Daisy listened to him

spellbound, her eyes fixed intently upon his glowing face and her ears

drinking in every word he uttered.

After dwelling for a time upon the loiterers in God's vineyard, the

idlers from choice, who worked not for lack of an inclination to do so,

he spoke next of the class whose whole life was a weariness for want of

something to do, and to these he said: "Have you never read how, when

the disciples rebuked the grateful woman for wasting upon her Master's

head what might have been sold for three hundred pence and given to the

poor, Jesus said unto them, 'The poor ye have with you always,' and is

it not so, my hearers? Are there no poor at your door to be fed, no

hungry little ones to be cared for out of the abundance which God has

only loaned you for this purpose? Are there no wretched homes which you

can make happier, no aching hearts which a kind word would cheer?

Remember there is a blessing pronounced for even the cup of cold water,

and how much greater shall be the reward of those who, forgetting

themselves, seek the good of others and turn not away from the needy and

the desolate. See to it, then, you to whom God has given much. See to it

that you sit not down in idle ease, wasting upon yourself alone the

goods designed for others, for to whom much is given of him much shall

be required."

Attracted, perhaps, by the deep black of Daisy's attire, or the

something about her which marked her as different from the mass of his

hearers, the speaker had seemed to address the last of his remarks

directly to her, and had the dead Tom risen from his grave and spoken

with her face to face, she could hardly have been more affected than she

was. The resemblance was so striking and the voice so like her cousin's

that she felt as if she had received a message direct from him; or, if

not from him, she surely had from God, whose almoner she henceforth

would be.