Playing With Fire. Amelia E. Barr

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       Amelia E. Barr

      Playing With Fire

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664579232

       CHAPTER I

       THE MINISTER'S FAMILY

       "There came again to her that singular sense of a past familiarity"

       CHAPTER II

       LORD RICHARD CRAMER

       CHAPTER III

       DONALD PLEASES HIS FATHER

       CHAPTER IV

       THE GREAT TEMPTATION

       "She smiled and laid her jeweled white hand confidingly on his"

       CHAPTER V

       THE MINISTER IN LOVE

       CHAPTER VI

       DONALD TAKES HIS OWN WAY

       CHAPTER VII

       MARION DECIDES

       CHAPTER VIII

       MACRAE LEARNS A HARD LESSON

       CHAPTER IX

       WHEN WILL THE NIGHT BE PAST?

       CHAPTER X

       A DREAM

       "The descent seemed steep and dark"

       CHAPTER XI

       LOVE IS THE FULFILLING OF THE LAW

       CHAPTER XII

       AFTERWARD

       THE END

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      An high priest clothed with doctrine and with truth.—Esdras I: 5:40.

      Glasgow is the city of Human Power. It is not a beautiful city, but the gray granite of which it is built gives it a natural nobility. There is nothing romantic about its situation, and its streets are too often steeped in wet, gray mist, or wrapped in yellowish vapor. But there are no loungers in them. The crowd is a busy, hard-working crowd, whose civic motto is Enterprise and Perseverance. They made the river that made the city, and then established on its banks those immense shipbuilding yards, whose fleets take the river to the ocean, and the ocean to every known port of the world.

      It is also a very religious city. Its inhabitants do not forget that they are mortals, though no doubt mortals of a superior order, and the number of churches they have built is amazing. It is impossible to walk far in any direction without coming face to face with one. I am writing of the midway years of the nineteenth century, when there was one church among the many that all strangers were advised to visit. It was not the Cathedral, nor the old Ram's Horn Kirk; it was a large, plain building, called the Church of the Disciples. No one could find it to-day, for it stood upon a corner that became necessary to the trade of a certain great street. Then the Church of the Disciples disappeared, and handsome shops devoted to business of many kinds rose in its place.

      This church derived its fame from its minister, a very handsome man, of great scholarly attainments and a preponderance of that quality we call "presence." Even when at twenty-three years of age he stepped from the halls of St. Andrew's into the pulpit of the Church of the Disciples, elders, deacons, and the whole congregation succumbed to his influence. And when, after twenty-one years of service, he made his dramatic exit from that pulpit he still held his congregation in the hollow of his hand.

      He was a Highlander of the once powerful house of Macrae; tall among his brethren as was Saul among his people. His face was darkly handsome, and made doubly attractive by a shadowy Celtic pathos. His eyes were piercing but sad, his voice grand and resonant, suiting well the wrathful, impassioned Calvinism of his sermons. For he was a Pharisee of Pharisees touching every tittle of the law laid down by that troubler of mankind called John Calvin.

      One evening in the beginning of June he went to his home after a rather unimportant session with his elders. He had taken his own way as usual, and was not in the least moved by the slight opposition he had been compelled to silence. With a slow, stately step he walked up the wide spaces of Bath Street until he came to the handsome residence in which he dwelt. He had no time to open the door; it was gently set wide by a girl who stood just within its shelter. A tinge of pleasure came into the minister's face, and when she said in a low, sweet voice:

      "Father!" he answered her in one word full of tenderness:

      "Marion!"

      They went into the parlor together. It was the ordinary parlor of its day, inartistic and comfortably ugly, but withal suitable and pleasant to the generation, who found in it their ideal of "home." A Brussels carpet covered the floor, the furniture was of mahogany upholstered in black horse-hair cloth. There were crimson damask curtains at the windows, a crimson cloth on the


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