them--and, please God, shall soon have better. For it is not a 
pleasant thing for a young man, or a young woman either, I venture to 
say, to have an old voice, and a wrinkled face, and weak knees, and 
gray hair, or no hair at all. And if any moral Philistine, as our queer 
German brothers over the Northern fish-pond would call him, say that 
this is all rubbish, for that we ARE old, I would answer: "Of all 
children how can the children of God be old?" 
So little do I give in to calling this outside of me, ME, that I should not 
mind presenting a minute description of my own person such as would 
at once clear me from any suspicion of vanity in so introducing myself. 
Not that my honesty would result in the least from indifference to the 
external--but from comparative indifference to the transitional; not to 
the transitional in itself, which is of eternal significance and result, but 
to the particular form of imperfection which it may have reached at any
individual moment of its infinite progression towards the complete. For 
no sooner have I spoken the word NOW, than that NOW is dead and 
another is dying; nay, in such a regard, there is no NOW--only a past of 
which we know a little, and a future of which we know far less and far 
more. But I will not speak at all of this body of my earthly tabernacle, 
for it is on the whole more pleasant to forget all about it. And besides, I 
do not want to set any of my readers to whom I would have the 
pleasure of speaking far more openly and cordially than if they were 
seated on the other side of my writing-table--I do not want to set them 
wondering whether the vicar be this vicar or that vicar; or indeed to run 
the risk of giving the offence I might give, if I were anything else than 
"a wandering voice." 
I did not feel as I feel now when first I came to this parish. For, as I 
have said, I am now getting old very fast. True, I was thirty when I was 
made a vicar, an age at which a man might be expected to be beginning 
to grow wise; but even then I had much yet to learn. 
I well remember the first evening on which I wandered out from the 
vicarage to take a look about me--to find out, in short, where I was, and 
what aspect the sky and earth here presented. Strangely enough, I had 
never been here before; for the presentation had been made me while I 
was abroad.--I was depressed. It was depressing weather. Grave doubts 
as to whether I was in my place in the church, would keep rising and 
floating about, like rain-clouds within me. Not that I doubted about the 
church; I only doubted about myself. "Were my motives pure?" "What 
were my motives?" And, to tell the truth, I did not know what my 
motives were, and therefore I could not answer about the purity of them. 
Perhaps seeing we are in this world in order to become pure, it would 
be expecting too much of any young man that he should be absolutely 
certain that he was pure in anything. But the question followed very 
naturally: "Had I then any right to be in the Church--to be eating her 
bread and drinking her wine without knowing whether I was fit to do 
her work?" To which the only answer I could find was, "The Church is 
part of God's world. He makes men to work; and work of some sort 
must be done by every honest man. Somehow or other, I hardly know 
how, I find myself in the Church. I do not know that I am fitter for any 
other work. I see no other work to do. There is work here which I can 
do after some fashion. With God's help I will try to do it well."
This resolution brought me some relief, but still I was depressed. It was 
depressing weather.--I may as well say that I was not married then, and 
that I firmly believed I never should be married--not from any ambition 
taking the form of self-denial; nor yet from any notion that God takes 
pleasure in being a hard master; but there was a lady--Well, I WILL be 
honest, as I would be.--I had been refused a few months before, which I 
think was the best thing ever happened to me except one. That one, of 
course, was when I was accepted. But this is not much to the purpose 
now. Only it was depressing weather. 
For is it not depressing when the rain is    
    
		
	
	
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