THE SEAMLESS o ROBE CARTER THE SEAMLESS ROBE THE SEAMLESS ROBE BY ADA CARTER ' There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." ' Christ is the head of the church: and he is the saviour of the bodv." ' Realism will at length be found to surpass imagination, and to suit and savour all luerature." MARY BAKER (?. EDDY. Hew THE PLATT & PECK CO. Copyright, 1907 JAMES D. PINKER Copyright, 1909 NEWOLD PUBLISHING CO. Copyright, 1912 BY THE PLATT & PECK CO. DEDICATION To all nations and all kindreds this book is dedicated and sent forth upon its journey through the world, with the desire that it may speed Love's sweet message from city to city, there proclaiming from every house- top the glory of a promise in swift process of fulfil- ment; going also out into the highways and hedges and, with tender compulsion, bidding the hungry " come in " ; whispering the while to the waiting heart the mighty truth that holiness and health, twin off- spring of Soul, dwell ever hand in hand; bidding the dormant heart awake and know that the veil of mate- rialism is rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and upraising the earth-bound eyes to behold Man, Godlike in his immortality, Chris Hike in his perfect health. 2134951 CONTENTS PROLOGUE 11 PART I DRAMATIS PERSONS OR TANGLED THREADS IN THE HAND OF MAN CHAPTER I. MIST 21 II. SHADOW-LAND 27 III. MENTAL ASSASSINATION 30 IV. THE MESMERISM OF FEAR; OR, "THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW " 89 V. THE UNBURIED DEAD; OR, " THE FRUIT OF His BODY FOR THE SIN OF His SOUL " . 49 VI. THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN 59 VII. THE WORLD, THE FLESH AND EVIL ... 63 PART II MORTALS WEAVING IN THE DARK VIII. A MAN AND A WOMAN 75 IX. DAY DREAMS . 86 CONTENTS CHAPTEH PAGH X. PARTIAL ECLIPSK 93 XI. TOTAL ECLIPSE 102 XII. DERELICT 109 XIII. "MAN, WHOSE BREATH is IN His NOSTRILS" 119 XIV. ANGOLA 127 PART III A THREAD OF GOLD IN THE HAND OF GOD XV. THE MIDNIGHT CALL 141 XVI. NEWNESS OF LIFE 151 XVII. EBB AND FLOW 156 XVIII. HUMAN LIMITATIONS 165 XIX. SELF-DECEPTION 174 XX. MENTAL FERMENTATION 178 XXI. A BARQUE WITH WHITE SAILS UNFURLED 182 XXII. CALLED 191 XXIII. DOMESTIC TYRANNY 199 PART IV BROKEN SHUTTLES UPON THE TABLE OF TIME XXIV. THE RECANTATION 213 XXV. HATE ' 223 XXVI. CASTLES BUILT UPON SHIFTING SANDS . 229 XXVII. THE FLOOD-TIDE 238 XXVIII. A BARQUE STORM-TOSSED UPON A STORMY SEA 243 CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE XXIX. EGYPT 250 XXX. MESMERIZED 254 XXXI. CLOUDS OF SENSE 263 XXXII. CONFUSION 272 XXXIII. THE MAN-MADE HELL OF MAN ... 280 PART V WHITE WARP AND WOOF IN THE LOOM OF MIND XXXIV. LOOKING TOWARDS THE LIGHT . . . 293 XXXV. THE QUESTION 302 XXXVI. THE ANSWER 314 XXXVII. THE SWING OF THE PENDULUM . . . 328 XXXVIII. PENIEL 337 XXXIX. OUT OF DARKNESS INTO His MARVEL- LOUS LIGHT 344; XL. A LONELY BARQUE UPON THE MIGHTY DEEP 355 XLI. SCALING THE HIGHER HEIGHTS . . . 360 EPILOGUE 368 PROLOGUE Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright. Ecclesiastes. I KNOW not how most books are written. I know how this one came to me oft troubling me in the long night watch, when otherwise I would have slept; oft flashing across my busy path and, with soft compelling touch, bidding me " Be still and write " ; and always, when it came, filling my heart with a great desire, thus stilling my life with the silence of prayer. I, the prisoner, lay upon my bed. The June sunshine streamed in through the open win- dow, and joined hands with the mirror. Together, they threw gay discs of light bright-hued as is the opal fire upon my prison walls, there to coquet among a pretence of climbing roses roses drawn by a hand that loved them, drawn even while they grew. How else did they speak of summer gardens and sweet June life? How else did they whisper to the gentle breeze that seemed to stir their leaves? How else did the bud speak so clearly of promise, and the bloom smile with the rapture of hope passed into fruition ? I had chosen that paper in spite of protest. " The carmine will fade," they told me. No matter! My will was law: but even as paste touched paper, I sighed, realising that always I commanded, except in the one thing for which I greatly longed the one thing that I had asked of life for many weary years. 12 PROLOGUE That midsummer day, my restless glance left the dancing discs of light and turned outward, there to linger momentarily upon the grace and beauty of the silver birch. The brightness of its summer robe, the tender whiteness of its bark and the gentle yielding of its rounded limbs held my thought to love to love most passing fair, but all too frail, and thus imper- fect, holding within itself the seeds of death, the doom of all mortality. Roving onward, deep crimson and palest rose caught my eye and chained it, a willing captive, to the queenly rhododendron, whose crowns of royal splendour gave token of the lavish month of June. What a wealth of living colour was there ! Its charm increased, its beauty doubled, as, earth meeting sky, each wound loving arms about the other in the clear waters of the lake. Tossed upon the bright blue of reflected ether, lay round clouds, richly white. Nestling within their bosom, half hid- den, half revealed, softly blushed the rhododendron. Now meeting with the quick embrace of love, now part- ing with a lingering touch, the boughs of noble elm and bending birch caressed the whole, picturing the while burnished greens and purple greys upon the shining surface beneath their feet. I, the prisoner, manacled to my bed, turned face to pillow and groaned within my heart, " How long, dear God! how long! . . . The glory of heaven upon earth out there: within my soul the pangs of hell! And betwixt the two a great gulf fixed ! " One day I found upon my bed a little book: black it was, and ordinary. Three times I threw it from me. Three times he brought it back. PROLOGUE 13 Yet once again he pleaded, " Beloved, if not for your own, for my sake, and for theirs ! " " Sweet," I said at last, " for your sake and for theirs, I will try to understand." I held the thing within my hand; I turned it here, I turned it there. Black it was without, and dark within. I could not understand. A woman stood beside my bed. Soft-voiced she was, and sweet of face. " Nay," she said, " it is not black nor dark within, but of the purest gold." I thought her mad. Once more she spoke, " There is a way, but only one; take it, and understand." " This way," I asked, " whither leads it, and its name? " " It leads," she said, " to Freedom, and its name is Silent Prayer." I held her with astonished gaze. Then loud I laughed and long. It was so very droll ! Despair sat by my side; Death reached out cold white arms. Pray! I had prayed while the days passed into weeks, full-laden with the burden of their tears. I had prayed while those weeks merged slowly into months of that unholy calm which is the devil's rhapsody when the eyes are dry and the lips are still, save that perchance they twitch into a smile at the sight of another's tears. Kind fools ! to weep in pity, when the bleeding heart, its passion spent, and the tortured limbs, all tempest-torn, are one in their voiceless pain! Blind fools! to weep in pity for that which passeth tears! ... I had prayed whilst from out the womb of that Satanic calm dropped forth the still-born years. Ah me! that laboured lingering 14 PROLOGUE birth with its foul fruitage all of woe! Ah me! those hopeless, helpless, endless years ! I marvelled when men called them living, for 7 knew them to be dead. The devil's horrid counterfeit of life, they lay behind me and before, a ghastly throng; they mocked me where they lay; the face of each defaced, the form of each defiled, by the cruel hand of a dread monotony. . . . I had prayed whilst the nights of hell's own revelry gave hideous promise of eternal woe, and thus the end! Pray? oh! my mirth, it shook me merrily! Pray? to understand a thing like this? Once more the answer came, " It is the only way." And thus she left me. That day, Death held his face to mine, and promised me deep sleep and rest from pain. Almost, I let his lips rest on my own. But Doubt sprang up and shouted in my ear; " How know you that his promise is not vain? There is a life beyond!" Again Death whispered to my heart, but now, I knew he mocked my need, though I knew not how I knew it. Methought I heard hell's laughter, so soft ! so low ! and yet, though soft, too subtle to be sweet. I turned me in my chains, and as I turned, a little child climbed on my bed, and wound soft arms about my neck. So small she was and weak, she held me back. Perforce, I prayed once more. But first, I placed my finger on my lips, and thus I raised my heart to God. And lo ! within mine hand, beneath mine eye, I found a thing of gold. Its very shape had changed! A key, it seemed to be, of strange device and strength most rare. And right within its heart, behold, a pearl ! and deeply graved upon that pearl, these words ; " This is the key : unlock the ' Word.' Search deep PROLOGUE 15 within its very soul; find there, and keep, that all- inclusive gift of God to man the Truth." I placed the key within the lock. Slowly at first, then quickly, and more quickly yet it turned. Now stilled with wonder, now rent by doubt; anon, borne upward by the might of Hope so strong of wing and eagle-eyed I searched; I found; through all eternity I keep the Truth. Through all eternity I thank my God who gave the Truth to me. I thank that child of God, that brave New England woman, who, by the grace of God, has wrought a key so fine and strong, that it has opened wide the Word of God, and thrown upon the sacred page the clear white light of love divine. We, who try to follow, guess a little what it must have cost to make that key of purest gold. We know, though only something, of the fire through which she must have passed, when throwing the searchlight of this revelation upon the darkened thought of ages. And knowing, though so little, we yet thank God Almighty for her patience and her love. And thus it was, that the white-winged angel Hope first came to me, and waked my slumbering soul from lethargy to life: while her gentle sister, Faith, so soft of tread, so still of voice, stood by my side, and pointed to the Light, till their beauteous mother, Love the greatest of the three holding a hand of each, bent over me and pressed upon my weary brow the kiss of peace. And now, together, they pointed to the Light. And within the Light, I saw a crown, and upon that crown a great word written a word so high, and broad, and 16 PROLOGUE long, and deep, that I could not read its name aright. But as I tried, and tried again, the days rose up and clapped their hands, then bid me merrily, Adieu. For the weeks were there in joyous mood. But scarcely had they smiled upon my path than the gladsome months were with me. And then I lost all count of time, for its day was done, and it meekly bowed before a far-off glimmer of Eternity: for I had learned to read that word aright, though still I knew not all its depth. No mortal may know that; for the measure of that word is All Eternity. But even now much may be known; for even here, the mortal may begin to put on Immortality. And as my life is filled with gratitude, my heart sends forth a long, full note of praise, and I bow more low than I ever dreamed that I could bow, and yet ! not low enough. For as my hope soars higher than I ever dreamed a human hope could soar, my life is shaken by a mighty sound, sublime and wonderful ! Surging about my onward path, it sweeps a matter-world away and throws a chastened suppliant at the feet of Mind. Prostrate I lay, till I, my pride rebuked, learned a great lesson of Eternity that Hope, to be true Hope, must first be shorn of mad ambition's earthy wings, ere it may wear the vesture of humility and rise on pinions all divine. Now my whole being bows before the Majesty of God; and once again, more clearly than before, I hear that mighty sound surely an impartation of an endless harmony ! And lo ! em- braced within that glorious song, yet ever individual, I hear that same full note of praise ; but fuller, stronger, purer than before. Now holy awe lays chastening hand upon my head, as I whisper to my heart, " Can this thing be? May man, while yet on earth, make PROLOGUE 17 one with that sweet choir above? " For answer, I swiftly search the " little book " within my hand, and there I read of Man, the work of God. Man ! as he is, as he always has been, and as he ever more shall be, the perfect offspring of the only Mind. Now, as I read and read again, lo ! far and wide throughout the vastness of Infinity, I see that " Fourth " for which a matter-world has searched in vain. And as I look and look again, I hear a voice as the voice of many angels say, " Come unto me and live." Hearing, I must needs obey, and thus perpetual peace is mine, for one by one the fetters fall away. And now, with steadfast glance upheld, I see Man roam strong, free, new-born amid the height and depth, the breadth, the length, the wealth of Mind. Upon Purity's white pinions, far outspread and all begleamed with light, he rises, ever rises, from sense to Soul, till lo ! he stands revealed the image and the likeness of his God ! And thus I see Man live forever, individualised in infinite variety, high-poised within the Eternal Three, upheld by the Almighty power of that Immortal " Fourth " AT ONE WITH GOOD. PAET I DRAMATIS PERSONS OR TANGLED THREADS IN THE HAND OF MAN All the world's a stage And all the men and women merely players: They have their exits and their entrances. SHAKESPEARE. CHAPTER I MIST What is life? 'Tis but a madness. What is life? A mere illusion, Fleeting pleasure, fond delusion, Short-lived joy that ends in sadness, Whose most constant substance seems But the dream of other dreams. Calderon. MOST of the room was in shadow, but the carefully arranged blind permitted a strong light to rest upon the couch whereon lay, at full length, a young man. Another man, in regulation frock-coat of sombre hue, sat before his desk, moving nothing but his right hand. With firmly held pen he made notes in a dreary folio before him. Suddenly, the stillness was broken. Very quietly, the recumbent man asked a momentous question. " How long have I to live ? " Sir James Norton placed his pen across the rack with some deliberation. He was a little taken aback by the cool delivery of the unexpected query ; and it was not until his trained eye detected a certain hard- ness in his patient's look, that he realised how com- pletely the sick man understood the situation. " It is clearly impossible to speak with certainty upon such a matter," he replied gently ; " we must hope for the best. You are a young man, and of course that is in your favour." 21 22 THE SEAMLESS ROBE The Duke looked steadily into the doctor's face. " How long have I to live ? " He repeated the words calmly, though a little wearily. " I cannot say," the doctor answered, with the faint- est touch of asperity in his tone. Then, compelled by the steadiness of the quiet gaze fixed upon him, he added : " Of course all excitement must be avoided, for another attack of hemorrhage like the last might be very weakening to the system." " Thanks ! " The young man rose and stood for a moment deep in thought. Then he returned the prescription which Sir James had just handed him, gently remarking, " For many years I have taken much medicine; on the whole, I think I will not take any more ; " and the hardness of the mouth relaxed a little, for the Duke was smiling. At the street door he turned and said, with the gentle courtesy which always endeared him to those with whom he came in touch, " I am grateful for your attentive care of my case very grateful to you for arranging the consultation here to-day. As you know, I am anxious about my wife. She gains strength very slowly and we try to spare her as much as possible, for to-morrow we go North, our little son is to be christened this week." A minute later Sir James re-entered his consulting room. He stood for a moment thinking deeply, then he tore his rejected prescription neatly in half and, with a manner still preoccupied, consigned it to the waste-paper basket. No one knew better than the celebrated physician that drugs were entirely useless in such a case as this; THE SEAMLESS ROBE 23 but, of course, he must follow the usual routine and send his patient from stethoscope to pharmacy. And here a thought, long dormant, woke to vigorous action and fretted the doctor's rather weary brain; uncon- sciously, but none the less deliberately, he turned his back upon the thought. It grew in strength and faced him. This time he ordered it away. But the thought had made its home with him too long and now became importunate. When had it entered, unrecognised, into his mind ? Futile question ! Perhaps- in boy- ( hood's day, when, Homer in hand, he had sought the assistance of his Liddell and Scott. Unconsciously impelled by the worrying thought, he now turned to his bookshelves and took down his old-time companion which had rested there undisturbed for many years. Soon he found that which he, half protestingly, sought. " 3>ap/ia/cov," (Pharmakon) ; " a drug, whether heal- ing or noxious." Then, in Homer, " a healing remedy, medicine " generally applied outwardly. Next, in the later classics, " an enchanted potion, spell, incanta- tion." Next, " a poison (as Shakespeare uses drug)" Turning to the derivatives he found : "