[Scenes of Clerical Life by George Eliot]@TWC D-Link book
Scenes of Clerical Life

CHAPTER 9
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CHAPTER 9.
Mr.Tryan showed no such symptoms of weakness on the critical Sunday.

He unhesitatingly rejected the suggestion that he should be taken to church in Mr.Landor's carriage--a proposition which that gentleman made as an amendment on the original plan, when the rumours of meditated insult became alarming.

Mr.Tryan declared he would have no precautions taken, but would simply trust in God and his good cause.

Some of his more timid friends thought this conduct rather defiant than wise, and reflecting that a mob has great talents for impromptu, and that legal redress is imperfect satisfaction for having one's head broken with a brickbat, were beginning to question their consciences very closely as to whether it was not a duty they owed to their families to stay at home on Sunday evening.
These timorous persons, however, were in a small minority, and the generality of Mr.Tryan's friends and hearers rather exulted in an opportunity of braving insult for the sake of a preacher to whom they were attached on personal as well as doctrinal grounds.

Miss Pratt spoke of Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, and observed that the present crisis afforded an occasion for emulating their heroism even in these degenerate times; while less highly instructed persons, whose memories were not well stored with precedents, simply expressed their determination, as Mr.
Jerome had done, to 'stan' by' the preacher and his cause, believing it to be the 'cause of God'.
On Sunday evening, then, at a quarter past six, Mr.Tryan, setting out from Mr.Landor's with a party of his friends who had assembled there, was soon joined by two other groups from Mr.Pratt's and Mr.Dunn's; and stray persons on their way to church naturally falling into rank behind this leading file, by the time they reached the entrance of Orchard Street, Mr.Tryan's friends formed a considerable procession, walking three or four abreast.


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