And Mrs. Harricutt put up her apron to her eyes and entered the little

haircloth parlor, while Tom, with a wry face went after the elder. The

elder proved that underneath all his narrowness and prejudice he had a

grain of the real truth, for he prayed with fervor that the Lord would

cleanse their hearts from all prejudice and open their minds to see

with heavenly vision that they might have power in prayer for the

healing of the two men.

So, through the whole little village breaches were healed, and a more

loving feeling prevailed because the bond of anxiety and love held them

all together and drew them nearer to their God.

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At last the day came when Mark, struggling up out of the fiery pit of

pain, was able to remember.

Pain, fire, flame, choking gases, smoke, remorse, despair! It was all

vague at first, but out of it came the memory slowly. There had been a

fire. He had gone back up the ladder after Mrs. Blimm's baby. He

remembered groping for the child in the smoke filled room, and bringing

it blindly through the hall and back to the window where the ladder

was, but that room had all been in flames. He had wished for a wet

cloth across his face. He could feel again the licking of the fire as

he passed the doorway. A great weight had been on his chest. His heart

seemed bursting. His head had reeled, and he had come to the window

just in time. Some one had taken the child--was it Billy?--or he would

have fallen. He did fall. The memory pieced itself out bit by

bit. He remembered thinking that he had entered the City of Fire

literally at last, "the minarets" already he seemed to descry "gleaming

vermilion as if they from the fire had issued." It was curious how

those old words from Dante had clung in his memory. "Eternal fire that

inward burns." He thought he was feeling now in his body what his soul

had experienced for long months past. It was the natural ending, the

thing he had known he was coming to all along, the road of remorse and

despair. A fire that goes no more out! And this would last forever now!

Then, someone, some strong arm had lifted him--God's air swept in--and

for an instant there seemed hope. But only that little breath of

respite and there came a cry like myriads of lost souls. They were

falling, falling, down through fire, with fire above, below, around,

everywhere. Down, down,--an abysmal eternity of fire, till his seared

soul writhed from his tortured body, and stood aside looking on at

himself.