Indeed, many divines treat them with contempt.
It seems the drollest thing to think of the four-and-twenty elders, or bishops, or whatever number they were, sitting with long faces and writing down such stuff."
Jude looked pained.
"You are quite Voltairean!" he murmured.
"Indeed?
Then I won't say any more, except that people have no right to falsify the Bible!
I hate such hum-bug as could attempt to plaster over with ecclesiastical abstractions such ecstatic, natural, human love as lies in that great and passionate song!"
Her speech had grown spirited, and almost petulant at his rebuke, and her eyes moist.
"I wish I had a friend here to support me; but nobody is ever on my side!"
"But my dear Sue, my very dear Sue, I am not against you!" he said, taking her hand, and surprised at her introducing personal feeling into mere argument.
"Yes you are, yes you are!" she cried, turning away her face that he might not see her brimming eyes. "You are on the side of the people in the training-school—at least you seem almost to be!
What I insist on is, that to explain such verses as this:
'Whither is thy beloved gone, O thou fairest among women?' by the note:
'The Church professeth her faith,' is supremely ridiculous!"
"Well then, let it be!
You make such a personal matter of everything!
I am—only too inclined just now to apply the words profanely.
You know you are fairest among women to me, come to that!"
"But you are not to say it now!" Sue replied, her voice changing to its softest note of severity.
Then their eyes met, and they shook hands like cronies in a tavern, and Jude saw the absurdity of quarrelling on such a hypothetical subject, and she the silliness of crying about what was written in an old book like the Bible.
"I won't disturb your convictions—I really won't!" she went on soothingly, for now he was rather more ruffled than she.
"But I did want and long to ennoble some man to high aims; and when I saw you, and knew you wanted to be my comrade, I—shall I confess it?—thought that man might be you.
But you take so much tradition on trust that I don't know what to say."
"Well, dear; I suppose one must take some things on trust.
Life isn't long enough to work out everything in Euclid problems before you believe it.
I take Christianity."
"Well, perhaps you might take something worse."
"Indeed I might.
Perhaps I have done so!"
He thought of Arabella.
"I won't ask what, because we are going to be very nice with each other, aren't we, and never, never, vex each other any more?"
She looked up trustfully, and her voice seemed trying to nestle in his breast.
"I shall always care for you!" said Jude.
"And I for you.
Because you are single-hearted, and forgiving to your faulty and tiresome little Sue!"
He looked away, for that epicene tenderness of hers was too harrowing.
Was it that which had broken the heart of the poor leader-writer; and was he to be the next one? … But Sue was so dear! … If he could only get over the sense of her sex, as she seemed to be able to do so easily of his, what a comrade she would make; for their difference of opinion on conjectural subjects only drew them closer together on matters of daily human experience.
She was nearer to him than any other woman he had ever met, and he could scarcely believe that time, creed, or absence, would ever divide him from her.
But his grief at her incredulities returned.
They sat on till she fell asleep again, and he nodded in his chair likewise.
Whenever he aroused himself he turned her things, and made up the fire anew.
About six o'clock he awoke completely, and lighting a candle, found that her clothes were dry.
Her chair being a far more comfortable one than his she still slept on inside his great-coat, looking warm as a new bun and boyish as a Ganymede.
Placing the garments by her and touching her on the shoulder he went downstairs, and washed himself by starlight in the yard.
V
When he returned she was dressed as usual.
"Now could I get out without anybody seeing me?" she asked.
"The town is not yet astir."
"But you have had no breakfast."
"Oh, I don't want any!