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VII
SAINT DAVID AND THE PROPHETS
G.o.d grants prayers gladly. In the moment that Death was aiming at him a missile of down, Hughes-Jones prayed: "Bad I've been. Don't let me fall into the Fiery Pool. Give me a brief while and a grand one I'll be for the religion." A shaft of fire came out of the mouth of the Lord and the shaft stood in the way of the missile, consuming it utterly; "so," said the Lord, "are his offenses forgotten."
"Is it a light thing," asked Paul, "to defy the Law?"
"G.o.d is merciful," said Moses.
"Is the Kingdom for such as pray conveniently?"
"This," Moses reproved Paul, "is written in a book: 'The Lord shall judge His people.'"
Yet Paul continued to dispute, the Prophets gathering near him for entertainment; and the company did not break up until G.o.d, as is the custom in Heaven when salvation is wrought, proclaimed a period of rejoicing.
Wherefore Heaven's windows, the number of which is more than that of blades of gra.s.s in the biggest hayfield, were lit as with a flame; and Heman and his youths touched their instruments with fingers and hammers and the singing angels lifted their voices in song; and angels in the likeness of young girls brewed tea in urns and angels in the likeness of old women baked pleasant breads in the heavenly ovens. Out of h.e.l.l there arose two mountains, which established themselves one over the other on the floor of Heaven, and the height of the mountains was the depth of h.e.l.l; and you could not see the sides of the mountains for the vast mult.i.tude of sinners thereon, and you could not see the sinners for the live coals to which they were held, and you could not see the burning coals for the radiance of the pulpit which was set on the furthermost peak of the mountain, and you could not see the pulpit--from toe to head it was of pure gold--for the s.h.i.+ning countenance of Isaiah; and as Isaiah preached, blood issued out of the ends of his fingers from the violence with which he smote his Bible, and his single voice was louder than the lamentations of the d.a.m.ned.
As the Lord had enjoined, the inhabitants of Heaven rejoiced: eating and drinking, weeping and crying hosanna.
But Paul would not joy over that which the Lord had done, and soon he sought Him, and finding Him said: "A certain Roman n.o.ble labored his horses to their death in a chariot race before Caesar: was he worthy of Caesar's reward?"
"The n.o.ble is on the mountain-side," G.o.d answered, "and his horses are in my chariots."
"One bears witness to his own iniquity, and you bid us feast and you say 'He shall have remembrance of me.'"
"Is there room in Heaven for a false witness?" asked G.o.d.
Again did Paul seek G.o.d. "My Lord," he entreated, "what manner of man is this that confesses his faults?"
"You will provoke my wrath," said G.o.d. "Go and be merry."
Paul's face being well turned, G.o.d moved backward into the Record Office, and of the Clerk of the Records He demanded: "Who is he that prayed unto me?"
"William Hughes-Jones," replied the Clerk.
"Has the Forgiving Angel blotted out his sins?"
"For that I have fixed a long s.p.a.ce of time"; and the Clerk showed G.o.d eleven heavy books, on the outside of each of which was written: "William Hughes-Jones, One and All Drapery Store, Hammersmith. His sins"; and G.o.d examined the books and was pleased, and He cried: "Rejoice fourfold"; and if Isaiah's roar was higher than the wailings of the perished it was now more awful than the roar of a hundred bullocks in a slaughter-house, and if Isaiah's countenance shone more than anything in Heaven, it was now like the eye of the sun.
"Of what nation is he?" the Lord inquired of the Clerk.
"The Welsh; the Welsh Nonconformists."
"Put before me their good deeds."
"There is none. William Hughes-Jones is the first of them that has prayed. Are not the builders making a chamber for the accounts of their disobedience?"
Immediately G.o.d thundered: the earth trembled and the stars s.h.i.+vered and fled from their courses and struck against one another; and G.o.d stood on the brim of the universe and stretched out a hand and a portion of a star fell into it, and that is the portion which He hurled into the garden of Hughes-Jones's house. On a sudden the revels ceased: the bread of the feast was stone and the tea water, and the songs of the angels were hushed, and the strings of the harps and viols were withered, and the hammers were dough, and the mountains sank into h.e.l.l, and behold Satan in the pulpit which was an iron cage.
The Prophets hurried into the Judgment Hall with questions, and lo G.o.d was in a cloud, and He spoke out of the cloud.
"I am angry," He said, "that Welsh Nonconformists have not heard my name. Who are the Welsh Nonconformists?" The Prophets were silent, and G.o.d mourned: "My Word is the earth and I peopled the earth with my spittle; and I appointed my Prophets to watch over my people, and the watchers slept and my children strayed."
Thus too said the Lord: "That hour I devour my children who have forsaken me, that hour I shall devour my Prophets."
"May be there is one righteous among us?" said Moses.
"You have all erred."
"May be there is one righteous among the Nonconformists," said Moses; "will the just G.o.d destroy him?"
"The one righteous is humbled, and I have warned him to keep my commandments."
"The sown seed brought forth a prayer," Moses pleaded; "will not the just G.o.d wait for the harvest?"
"My Lord is just," Paul announced. "They who gather wickedness shall not escape the judgment, nor shall the blind instructor be held blameless."
Moreover Paul said: "The Welsh Nonconformists have been informed of you as is proved by the man who confessed his transgressions. It is a good thing for me that I am not of the Prophets."
"I'll be your comfort, Paul," the Prophets murmured, "that you have done this to our hurt." Abasing themselves, they tore their mantles and howled; and G.o.d, piteous of their howlings, was constrained to say: "Bring me the prayers of these people and I will forget your remissness."
The Prophets ran hither and thither, wailing: "Woe. Woe. Woe."
Sore that they behaved with such scant respect, Paul herded them into the Council Room. "Is it seemly," he rebuked them, "that the Prophets of G.o.d act like madmen?"
"Our lot is awful," said they.
"The lot of the backslider is justifiably awful," was Paul's rejoinder.
"You have prophesied too diligently of your own glory."
"You are learned in the Law, Paul," said Moses. "Make us waywise."
"Send abroad a messenger to preach d.a.m.nation to sinners," answered Paul.
"For Heaven," added he, "is the knowledge of h.e.l.l."
So it came to pa.s.s. From the hem of Heaven's Highway an angel flew into Wales; and the angel, having judged by his sight and his hearing, returned to the Council Room and testified to the G.o.dliness of the Welsh Nonconformists. "As difficult for me," he vowed, "to write the feathers of my wings as the sum of their daily prayers."
"None has reached the Record Office," said Paul.
"They are always engaged in this bright business," the angel declared, "and praising the Lord. And the number of the people is many and Heaven will need be enlarged for their coming."
"Of a surety they pray?" asked Paul.
"Of a surety. And as they pray they quake terribly."
"The Romans prayed hardly," said Paul. "But they prayed to other G.o.ds."