[The Sky Pilot by Ralph Connor]@TWC D-Link bookThe Sky Pilot CHAPTER XIV 3/10
These were the arguments which Robbie's "ay" stamped as quite unanswerable. It was a sore blow to The Pilot, who had set his heart upon a church, and neither Mrs.Muir's "hoots" at her husband's slowness nor her promises that she "wad mak him hear it" could bring comfort or relieve his gloom. In this state of mind he rode up with me to pay our weekly visit to the little girl shut up in her lonely house among the hills. It had become The Pilot's custom during these weeks to turn for cheer to that little room, and seldom was he disappointed.
She was so bright, so brave, so cheery, and so full of fun, that gloom faded from her presence as mist before the sun, and impatience was shamed into content. Gwen's bright face--it was almost always bright now--and her bright welcome did something for The Pilot, but the feeling of failure was upon him, and failure to his enthusiastic nature was worse than pain.
Not that he confessed either to failure or gloom; he was far too true a man for that; but Gwen felt his depression in spite of all his brave attempts at brightness, and insisted that he was ill, appealing to me. "Oh, it's only his church," I said, proceeding to give her an account of Robbie Muir's silent, solid inertness, and how he had blocked The Pilot's scheme. "What a shame!" cried Gwen, indignantly.
"What a bad man he must be!" The Pilot smiled.
"No, indeed," he answered; "why, he's the best man in the place, but I wish he would say or do something.
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