CHAPTER XVI
"THE DARKNESS DEEPENS"
There was no abatement in the vigor with which
the rector of Christ Church attacked the sins of capitalism,
the curse of wage-slavery, the glaring inequalities
of the existing social order. In the pulpit, on the platform,
to the man in the street, anywhere, everywhere,
in season and out of season, he preached his new
gospel of the brotherhood of man. But he did not call
it a new gospel. He called it the old gospel, proclaimed
by Jesus Christ as the one foundation on which
all human character and conduct must be built. He
was acclaimed by the toiler, and cursed by the capitalist.
His fame spread beyond the borders of his city and
his state. The newspapers reported his sermons and
speeches as matters of interest to the general public.
Soap-box orators quoted him with approval. Socialists
regarded him as one of their own kind; not quite, but
almost persuaded to an acceptance of all their tenets
and beliefs. There were some things in the socialistic
creed to which he could not yet subscribe. He had
little sympathy with the purely materialistic conception
of the cause and basis of either happiness or misery in
this life. He believed, with his Lord, that "The life is
more than meat, and the body more than raiment."
He could not concede the right of men and women to free themselves from a marriage bond which has become burdensome save for the one cause set down in Holy Scripture.
He could not quite assent to the doctrine that confiscation of private property by the state, beyond the customary exercise of the right of eminent domain, in