Page:Lesbia Newman - Dalton - 1889.djvu/135

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CHAPTER XVIII.

The Correspondence Concluded.

No. 4.—Letitia to Lesbia.

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Assuredly, my dear girl, I do not take you, or your uncle either, for a bibliolater in the vulgar sense; but it is clear that Mr Bristley is a believer, after a sort, in the inspiration of the Bible. I hardly expected this, and I must say it is a belief I do not share. A man with a hobby and lots of talent can hew anything he pleases into the shape of his theory; but to my mind the authors of the Jewish sacred books were simply augurs, who pandered to the ignorant superstitions of a people sitting in darkness, solely with a view to keep them under their thumb. Still your uncle is not the only clever man of the present day who thinks otherwise. For instance, we have here in Brooklyn a noted preacher, Dr Josiah Mispath,[1] who delights in just such lucubrations as those you have treated me to. I read to him that part of your letter; he was much interested, and said he would like to meet you. In particular, he asked me to draw your attention to Isaiah xiv. 29. “Rejoice not thou, whole Palestina, because the rod of him that smote thee is broken: for out of the serpent’s root shall come forth a cockatrice, and his fruit shall be a flying

  1. Corrupted from Mishpat.