Philip
saw him glance at the hostess and then cast down his eyes; and wondered
if this were simple diffidence.
"That is hardly fair," Mr. Candish said, somewhat awkwardly. "The
clergy, not having wives, are poor judges in such a matter."
"That might be taken as an argument for the marriage of the clergy,"
she responded with a smile.
"How so?"
"If they had wives they would be better able to sympathize with the
trials and joys of their parishioners."
"I never thought of that," murmured Mrs. Fenton.
Mr. Candish flushed all over his homely, freckled face.
"By the same reasoning you might hold that a clergyman should have
committed all the sins in the decalogue, so that he should have ready
sympathy with all sorts of sinners."
"I'm not sure that he wouldn't be more useful if he had," Mrs. Herman
answered with a smile; "at least a man who hasn't wanted to commit a
sin must find it hard to sympathize with the wretch that hasn't been
strong enough to resist temptation. Still, I hope that sin and marriage
are not put into the same category."
"Oh, of course not," Mrs. Fenton interpolated. "Marriage is a
sacrament.
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