True to his Colours

Theodore P. Wilson
True to his Colours
The Life that Wears Best
By Reverend Theodore P Wilson
CHAPTER ONE.
A SCEPTIC'S HOME.
Look back some forty years--there was not a quieter place then than the
little village of Crossbourne. It was a snug spot, situated among hills,
and looked as though it were hiding away out of the sight and notice of
the bustling, roaring traffic that was going ceaselessly on all around it.
A little fussy stream or brook flowed on restlessly day and night
through the centre of the village, and seemed to be the only thing there
that was ever in a hurry. Carts and carriages, but seldom many of the
latter, had to drive through the stream when they wished to cross it; for
there was no bridge except a very rude one for foot-passengers just
before you came to the old mill, where the villagers had had their corn
ground for generations.
Then to the north of the stream the houses straggled up on either side of
a long winding street, sometimes two or three together under one long
thatched roof, and in other places singly, with a small bit of meagre
garden round them; a wooden latch lifted by a string which dangled
outside being the prevailing fastening to the outer doors.
Right up at the top of the street, and a little to the left, was the old
Saxon church, which had retained a considerable share of its original
massive beauty, spite of the combined attacks of plaster, mildew, and a
succession of destructive restorations which had lowered the roof,
bricked up more than one fine old window, and thrust out a great iron
chimney, which looked not unlike the mailed hand of some giant

shaking its clenched fist at the solid tower which it was unable to
destroy.
Just under the shadow of the old church, and separated from it by the
low wall of the churchyard, was the vicarage, a grey-looking structure
in the midst of a small but well-stocked garden; while beyond it were
fields in long succession, with a ponderous-looking farm-house
crouching down here and there amongst them.
Of course there was an inn in the village. It was marked out to
travellers by a sign-board dependent from a beam projecting over the
footpath. Something had once been painted on the board, but it had
become so blurred and indistinct under the corroding action of sun and
rain, that it would be quite impossible now to decide whether the
features delineated on it were those of a landscape, a lion, or a human
countenance.
Such was Crossbourne some forty years back. But now, what a
marvellous change! Coal has been found close by, and the little village
has leapt, as if by magic, into a thriving town. Huge factories and
foundries rise from the banks of the stream; the ford is spanned by a
substantial bridge; the corn-mill has disappeared, and so have the
rheumatic-looking old mossy cottages. A street of prim, substantial
houses, uniform, and duly numbered, with brass handles, latches, and
knockers to the doors, now leads up to the church. And that venerable
building has certainly gained by the change; for the plaster and the iron
chimney have vanished, full daylight pours in through all the windows,
while two new aisles have been added in harmony with the original
design of the unknown architect. The vicarage, too, has expanded, and
been smartened up to suit more modern tastes and requirements. And
then all around the principal street are swarms of workmen's
dwellings,--and, alas! public- houses and beer-shops at every corner
ready to entrap the wretched victims of intemperance. Besides all these
there are a Town Hall and a Mechanics' Institute; and the streets and
shops and dwelling-houses are lighted with gas.
Crossbourne has, in fact, become a very hive of industry; but,
unhappily, too many of the cells of the hive are fuller of gall than of

honey, for money is made fast and squandered faster: and what wonder,
seeing that King Alcohol holds his court amongst the people day and
night! And, to make all complete, Crossbourne now boasts of a railway
running through it, and of a station of its own, from which issues many
a train of goods; and near the station a distillery, from which there
issues continually a long and lengthening train of evils.
Turning out of the principal street to the right, just opposite to where
the old dingy sign-board used to swing, a passer-by could not fail to
notice a detached house more lofty and imposing in its appearance than
the plain working-men's cottages on either side of it.
At the time our story opens this house was occupied by William Foster,
a skilled ironworker, who was earning his fifty shillings a week, when
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