[When Valmond Came to Pontiac Complete by Gilbert Parker]@TWC D-Link bookWhen Valmond Came to Pontiac Complete CHAPTER IV 5/11
Shocked, and taken out of his dream, the Cure raised his hand against the song.
"Hush, hush, my children!" he said. "Hush, I command you!" It was the sight of the upraised hands, more than the Cure's voice, which stilled the outburst.
Those same hands had sprinkled the holy water in the sacrament of baptism, had blessed man and maid at the altar, had quieted the angry arm lifted to strike, had anointed the brow of the dying, and laid a crucifix on breasts which had ceased to harbour breath and care and love, and all things else. Silence fell.
In another moment the Cure finished his sermon, but not till his eyes had again met those of Valmond, and there had passed into his mind a sudden, startling thought. Unconsciously the Cure had declared himself the patron of all that made Pontiac for ever a notable spot in the eyes of three nations: and if he repented of it, no man ever knew. During mass and the sermon Valmond had sat very still, once or twice smiling curiously at thought of how, inactive himself, the gate of destiny was being opened up for him.
Yet he had not been all inactive. He had paid much attention to his toilet, selecting, with purpose, the white waistcoat, the long, blue-grey coat cut in a fashion anterior to this time by thirty years or more, and particularly to the arrangement of his hair.
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