t Eline
herself answered their call.
"Guard well the temple while I am away," Eline charged her people. "I
must travel far, but in no long time I will return!--I will return! Be
watchful, therefore, that the light be burning, that the oil fade not.
None can tell the time of the coming, whether it be by night or day.
With your lives must you guard the light!"
She spoke somewhat sadly as it seemed to them, and they supposed she
thought of the great misery and need of those she went to succor in
their distress.
And they answered the more eagerly:
"We will! We will!"
For the first time since it had been built the temple was left without
its head--a sacred trust indeed.
They thought they knew themselves; they thought they knew the evil in
their natures, and the good, did those temple watchers.
And in their surety of knowing they grew careless, so that in no long
time they lost their caution. Some there were who were faithless, and
these began to tell them of their great success; how they had built the
temple; how their industry and labor had succeeded; how well they had
learned to know themselves. Gently they suggested these things, gently
these sayings took root, almost unperceived.
"Our temple which we have built is very mighty. It can never fall," they
said.
Some few there were who would have spoken for Eline, but they were timid
and afraid of those who talked so boastfully. Wherefore they were
silent. It is true that one or two attempted to recall the noble deeds
of the absent one, and to point out that she had really built the
temple; they had supplied only the labor; yet the fruits of it were
theirs and the world's.
"True," said the wicked and faithless ones, "she had a great mind for
building; but she made mistakes. She herself said so. We have learned by
those mistakes and we know. She would have made the temple teachings too
common altogether. Why, she actually began to turn into a teacher of
virtues of which the world is weary, instead of building as at first.
She had taught all she knew, but we can teach greater things, and better
things; we can teach the world twenty different styles of building in
metals, wood, stone, and marble; of ornaments and decorations enough to
last for a century. Thus we honor her; thus we carry on her work and
make it grow--although she made mistakes."
"Indeed she did make mistakes," said one, "and the greatest mistake of
all was when she chose such faithless c
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