[The Shepherd of the Hills by Harold Bell Wright]@TWC D-Link bookThe Shepherd of the Hills CHAPTER XII 2/14
And then, seeing his interest, they asked him to talk to them one day when Parson Bigelow failed to make his appointment.
"He don't holler so much as a regular parson," said Uncle Josh Hensley, "but he sure talks so we'uns can understand." From that time they always called upon him at their public gatherings. So the scholar from the world beyond the ridges slipped quietly into the life of the mountain folk, and took firm root in their affections.
And in his face, so "Preachin' Bill" said, was the look of one who had "done fought his fight to a finish, an' war too dead beat t' even be glad it war all over." Between the giant Mr.Matthews and his shepherd, the friendship, begun that night, grew always stronger.
In spite of the difference in education and training, they found much in common.
Some bond of fellowship, unknown to the mountaineer, at least, drew them close, and the two men spent many evenings upon the front porch of the log house in quiet talk, while the shadows crept over the valley below; and the light went from the sky back of the clump of pines. From the first Young Matt was strongly drawn to the stranger, who was to have such influence over his life, and Pete--Pete said that "God lived with Dad Howitt in Mutton Hollow." Pete somehow knew a great deal about God these days.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|