The Inside of the Cup
 
  
CHAPTER I
THE WARING PROBLEMS 
I 
With few exceptions, the incidents recorded in these pages take place in one 
of the largest cities of the United States of America, and of that portion 
called the Middle West,—a city once conservative and provincial, and rather 
proud of these qualities; but now outgrown them, and linked by lightning limited 
trains to other teeming centers of the modern world: a city overtaken, in recent 
years, by the plague which has swept our country from the Atlantic to the 
Pacific—Prosperity. Before its advent, the Goodriches and Gores, the Warings, 
the Prestons and the Atterburys lived leisurely lives in a sleepy quarter of 
shade trees and spacious yards and muddy macadam streets, now passed away 
forever. Existence was decorous, marriage an irrevocable step, wives were wives, 
and the Authorized Version of the Bible was true from cover to cover. So Dr. 
Gilman preached, and so they believed. 
Sunday was then a day essentially different from other days—you could tell it 
without looking at the calendar. The sun knew it, and changed the quality of his 
light the very animals, dogs and cats and horses, knew it: and most of all the 
children knew it, by Sunday school, by Dr. Gilman's sermon, by a dizzy afternoon 
connected in some of their minds with ceramics and a lack of exercise; by a cold 
tea, and by church bells. You were not allowed to forget it for one instant. The 
city suddenly became full of churches, as though they had magically been let 
down from heaven during Saturday night. They must have been there on week days, 
but few persons ever thought of them. 
Among the many church bells that rang on those bygone Sundays was that of St. 
John's, of which Dr. Gilman, of beloved memory, was rector. Dr. Gilman was a 
saint, and if you had had the good luck to be baptized or married or buried by 
him, you were probably fortunate in an earthly as well as heavenly sense. One 
has to be careful not to deal exclusively in superlatives, and yet it is not an 
exaggeration to say that St. John's was the most beautiful and churchly edifice 
in the city, thanks chiefly to several gentlemen of sense, and one gentleman, at 
least, of taste—Mr. Horace Bentley. The vicissitudes of civil war interrupted 
its building; but when, in 1868, it stood completed, its stone unsoiled as yet 
by factory smoke, its spire delicately pointing to untainted skies, its rose 
window glowing above the porch, citizens on Tower Street often stopped to gaze 
at it diagonally across the vacant lot set in order by Mr. Thurston Gore, with 
the intent that the view might be unobstructed. 
Little did the Goodriches and Gores, the Warings and Prestons and Atterburys 
and other prominent people foresee the havoc that prosperity and smoke were to 
play with their residential plans! One by one, sooty commerce drove them out, 
westward, conservative though they were, from the paradise they had created; 
blacker and blacker grew the gothic facade of St. John's; Thurston Gore 
departed, but leased his corner first for a goodly sum, his ancestors being from 
Connecticut; leased also the vacant lot he had beautified, where stores arose 
and hid the spire from Tower Street. Cable cars moved serenely up the long hill 
where a panting third horse had been necessary, cable cars resounded in Burton 
Street, between the new factory and the church where Dr. Gilman still preached 
of peace and the delights of the New-Jerusalem. And before you could draw your 
breath, the cable cars had become electric. Gray hairs began to appear in the 
heads of the people Dr. Gilman had married in the '60's and their children were 
going East to College. 
II 
In the first decade of the twentieth century, Asa, Waring still clung to the 
imposing, early Victorian mansion in Hamilton Street. It presented an 
uncompromising and rather scornful front to the sister mansions with which it 
had hitherto been on intimate terms, now fast degenerating into a shabby 
gentility, seeking covertly to catch the eye of boarders, but as yet refraining 
from open solicitation. Their lawns were growing a little ragged, their stone 
steps and copings revealing cracks. 
Asa Waring looked with a stern distaste upon certain aspects of modern life. 
And though he possessed the means to follow his friends and erstwhile neighbours 
into the newer paradise five miles westward, he had successfully resisted for 
several years a formidable campaign to uproot him. His three married daughters 
lived in that clean and verdant district surrounding the Park (spelled with a 
capital), while Evelyn and Rex spent most of their time in the West End or at 
the Country Clubs. Even Mrs. Waring, who resembled a Roman matron, with her wavy 
white hair parted in the middle and her gentle yet classic features, sighed 
secretly at times at the unyielding attitude of her husband, although admiring 
him for it. The grandchildren drew her. 
On the occasion of Sunday dinner, when they surrounded her, her heart was 
filled to overflowing. 
The autumn sunlight, reddened somewhat by the slight haze of smoke, poured in 
at the high windows of the dining-room, glinted on the silver, and was split 
into bewildering colors by the prisms of the chandelier. Many precious extra 
leaves were inserted under the white cloth, and Mrs. Waring's eyes were often 
dimmed with happiness as she glanced along the ranks on either side until they 
rested on the man with whom she had chosen to pass her life. Her admiration for 
him had gradually grown into hero-worship. His anger, sometimes roused, had a 
terrible moral quality that never failed to thrill her, and the Loyal Legion 
button on his black frock coat seemed to her an epitome of his character. He sat 
for the most part silent, his remarkable, penetrating eyes, lighting under his 
grizzled brows, smiling at her, at the children, at the grandchildren. And 
sometimes he would go to the corner table, where the four littlest sat, and 
fetch one back to perch on his knee and pull at his white, military mustache. 
It was the children's day. Uproar greeted the huge white cylinder of 
ice-cream borne by Katie, the senior of the elderly maids; uproar greeted the 
cake; and finally there was a rush for the chocolates, little tablets wrapped in 
tinfoil and tied with red and blue ribbon. After that, the pandemonium left the 
dining-room, to spread itself over the spacious house from the basement to the 
great playroom in the attic, where the dolls and blocks and hobby-horses of the 
parental generation stoically awaited the new. 
Sometimes a visitor was admitted to this sacramental feat, the dearest old 
gentleman in the world, with a great, high bridged nose, a slight stoop, a 
kindling look, and snow white hair, though the top of his head was bald. He sat 
on Mrs. Waring's right, and was treated with the greatest deference by the 
elders, and with none at all by the children, who besieged him. The bigger ones 
knew that he had had what is called a history; that he had been rich once, with 
a great mansion of his own, but now he lived on Dalton Street, almost in the 
slums, and worked among the poor. His name was Mr. Bentley. 
He was not there on the particular Sunday when this story opens, otherwise 
the conversation about to be recorded would not have taken place. For St. John's 
Church was not often mentioned in Mr. Bentley's presence. 
"Well, grandmother," said Phil Goodrich, who was the favourite son-in-law, 
"how was the new rector to-day?" 
"Mr. Hodder is a remarkable young man, Phil," Mrs. Waring declared, "and 
delivered such a good sermon. I couldn't help wishing that you and Rex and 
Evelyn and George had been in church." 
"Phil couldn't go," explained the unmarried and sunburned Evelyn, "he had a 
match on of eighteen holes with me." 
Mrs. Waring sighed. 
"I can't think what's got into the younger people these days that they seem 
so indifferent to religion. Your father's a vestryman, Phil, and I believe it 
has always been his hope that you would succeed him. I'm afraid Rex won't 
succeed his father," she added, with a touch of regret and a glance of pride at 
her husband. "You never go to church, Rex. Phil does." 
"I got enough church at boarding-school to last me a lifetime, mother," her 
son replied. He was slightly older than Evelyn, and just out of college. 
"Besides, any heathen can get on the vestry—it's a financial board, and they're 
due to put Phil on some day. They're always putting him on boards." 
His mother looked a little distressed. 
"Rex, I wish you wouldn't talk that way about the Church—" 
"I'm sorry, mother," he said, with quick penitence. "Mr. Langmaid's a 
vestryman, you know, and they've only got him there because he's the best 
corporation lawyer in the city. He isn't exactly what you'd call orthodox. He 
never goes." 
"We are indebted to Mr. Langmaid for Mr. Hodder." This was one of Mr. 
Waring's rare remarks. 
Eleanor Goodrich caught her husband's eye, and smiled. 
"I wonder why it is," she said, "that we are so luke-warm about church in 
these days? I don't mean you, Lucy, or Laureston," she added to her sister, Mrs. 
Grey. "You're both exemplary." Lucy bowed ironically. "But most people of our 
ages with whom we associate. Martha Preston, for instance. We were all brought 
up like the children of Jonathan Edwards. Do you remember that awful 
round-and-round feeling on Sunday afternoons, Sally, and only the wabbly Noah's 
Ark elephant to play with, right in this house? instead of THAT!" There was a 
bump in the hall without, and shrieks of laughter. "I'll never forget the first 
time it occurred to me—when I was reading Darwin—that if the ark were as large 
as Barnum's Circus and the Natural History Museum put together, it couldn't have 
held a thousandth of the species on earth. It was a blow." 
"I don't know what we're coming to," exclaimed Mrs. Waring gently. 
"I didn't mean to be flippant, mother," said Eleanor penitently, "but I do 
believe the Christian religion has got to be presented in a different way, and a 
more vital way, to appeal to a new generation. I am merely looking facts in the 
face." 
"What is the Christian religion?" asked Sally's husband, George Bridges, who 
held a chair of history in the local flourishing university. "I've been trying 
to find out all my life." 
"You couldn't be expected to know, George," said his wife. "You were brought 
up an Unitarian, and went to Harvard." 
"Never mind, professor," said Phil Goodrich, in a quizzical, affectionate 
tone. "Take the floor and tell us what it isn't." 
George Bridges smiled. He was a striking contrast in type to his square-cut 
and vigorous brother-in-law; very thin, with slightly protruding eyes the color 
of the faded blue glaze of ancient pottery, and yet humorous. 
"I've had my chance, at any rate. Sally made me go last Sunday and hear Mr. 
Hodder." 
"I can't see why you didn't like him, George," Lucy cried. "I think he's 
splendid." 
"Oh, I like him," said Mr. Bridges. 
"That's just it!" exclaimed Eleanor. "I like him. I think he's sincere. And 
that first Sunday he came, when I saw him get up in the pulpit and wave that 
long arm of his, all I could think of was a modern Savonarola. He looks one. And 
then, when he began to preach, it was maddening. I felt all the time that he 
could say something helpful, if he only would. But he didn't. It was all about 
the sufficiency of grace,—whatever that may be. He didn't explain it. He didn't 
give me one notion as to how to cope a little better with the frightful 
complexities of the modern lives we live, or how to stop quarrelling with Phil 
when he stays at the office and is late for dinner." 
"Eleanor, I think you're unjust to him," said Lucy, amid the laughter of the 
men of the family. "Most people in St. John's think he is a remarkable 
preacher." 
"So were many of the Greek sophists," George Bridges observed. 
"Now if it were only dear old Doctor Gilman," Eleanor continued, "I could 
sink back into a comfortable indifference. But every Sunday this new man stirs 
me up, not by what he says, but by what he is. I hoped we'd get a rector with 
modern ideas, who would be able to tell me what to teach my children. Little 
Phil and Harriet come back from Sunday school with all sorts of questions, and I 
feel like a hypocrite. At any rate, if Mr. Hodder hasn't done anything else, 
he's made me want to know." 
"What do you mean by a man of modern ideas, Eleanor?" inquired Mr. Bridges, 
with evident relish. 
Eleanor put down her coffee cup, looked at him helplessly, and smiled. 
"Somebody who will present Christianity to me in such a manner that it will 
appeal to my reason, and enable me to assimilate it into my life." 
"Good for you, Nell," said her husband, approvingly. "Come now, professor, 
you sit up in the University' Club all Sunday morning and discuss recondite 
philosophy with other learned agnostics, tell us what is the matter with Mr. 
Hodder's theology. That is, if it will not shock grandmother too much." 
"I'm afraid I've got used to being shocked, Phil," said Mrs. Waring, with her 
quiet smile. 
"It's unfair," Mr. Bridges protested, "to ask a prejudiced pagan like me to 
pronounce judgment on an honest parson who is labouring according to his 
lights." 
"Go on, George. You shan't get out of it that way." 
"Well," said George, "the trouble is, from the theological point of view, 
that your parson is preaching what Auguste Sabatier would call a diminished and 
mitigated orthodoxy." 
"Great heavens!" cried Phil. "What's that?" 
"It's neither fish, flesh, nor fowl, nor good red herring," the professor 
declared. "If Mr. Hodder were cornered he couldn't maintain that he, as a 
priest, has full power to forgive sins, and yet he won't assert that he hasn't. 
The mediaeval conception of the Church, before Luther's day, was consistent, at 
any rate, if you once grant the premises on which it was based." 
"What premises?" 
"That the Almighty had given it a charter, like an insurance company, of a 
monopoly of salvation on this portion of the Universe, and agreed to keep his 
hands off. Under this conception, the sale of indulgences, masses for the soul, 
and temporal power are perfectly logical—inevitable. Kings and princes derive 
their governments from the Church. But if we once begin to doubt the validity of 
this charter, as the Reformers did, the whole system flies to pieces, like 
sticking a pin into a soap bubble. 
"That is the reason why—to change the figure—the so-called Protestant world 
has been gradually sliding down hill ever since the Reformation. The great 
majority of men are not willing to turn good, to renounce the material and 
sensual rewards under their hands without some definite and concrete guaranty 
that, if they do so, they are going, to be rewarded hereafter. They demand some 
sort of infallibility. And when we let go of the infallibility of the Church, we 
began to slide toward what looked like a bottomless pit, and we clutched at the 
infallibility of the Bible. And now that has begun to roll. 
"What I mean by a mitigated orthodoxy is this: I am far from accusing Mr. 
Hodder of insincerity, but he preaches as if every word of the Bible were 
literally true, and had been dictated by God to the men who held the pen, as if 
he, as a priest, held some supernatural power that could definitely be traced, 
through what is known as the Apostolic Succession, back to Peter." 
"Do you mean to say, George," asked Mrs. Waring, with a note of pain in her 
voice, "that the Apostolic Succession cannot be historically proved?" 
"My dear mother," said George, "I hope you will hold me innocent of beginning 
this discussion. As a harmless professor of history in our renowned University 
(of which we think so much that we do not send our sons to it) I have been 
compelled by the children whom you have brought up to sit in judgment on the 
theology of your rector." 
"They will leave us nothing!" she sighed. 
"Nothing, perhaps, that was invented by man to appeal to man's superstition 
and weakness. Of the remainder—who can say?" 
"What," asked Mrs. Waring, "do they say about the Apostolic Succession?" 
"Mother is as bad as the rest of us," said Eleanor. 
"Isn't she, grandfather?" 
"If I had a house to rent," said Mr. Bridges, when the laughter had subsided, 
"I shouldn't advertise five bath rooms when there were only two, or electricity 
when there was only gas. I should be afraid my tenants might find it out, and 
lose a certain amount of confidence in me. But the orthodox churches are running 
just such a risk to-day, and if any person who contemplates entering these 
churches doesn't examine the premises first, he refrains at his own cost. 
"The situation in the early Christian Church is now a matter of history, and 
he who runs may read. The first churches, like those of Corinth and Ephesus and 
Rome, were democracies: no such thing as a priestly line to carry on a 
hierarchy, an ecclesiastical dynasty, was dreamed of. It may be gathered from 
the gospels that such an idea was so far from the mind of Christ that his 
mission was to set at naught just such another hierarchy, which then existed in 
Israel. The Apostles were no more bishops than was John the Baptist, but 
preachers who travelled from place to place, like Paul. The congregations, at 
Rome and elsewhere, elected their own 'presbyteri, episcopoi' or overseers. It 
is, to say the least, doubtful, and it certainly cannot be proved historically, 
that Peter ever was in Rome." 
"The professor ought to have a pulpit of his own," said Phil. 
There was a silence. And then Evelyn, who had been eating quantities of 
hothouse grapes, spoke up. 
"So far as I can see, the dilemma in which our generation finds itself is 
this,—we want to know what there is in Christianity that we can lay hold of. We 
should like to believe, but, as George says, all our education contradicts the 
doctrines that are most insisted upon. We don't know where to turn. We have the 
choice of going to people like George, who know a great deal and don't believe 
anything, or to clergymen like Mr. Hodder, who demand that we shall violate the 
reason in us which has been so carefully trained." 
"Upon my word, I think you've put it rather well, Evelyn," said Eleanor, 
admiringly. 
"In spite of personalities," added Mr. Bridges. 
"I don't see the use of fussing about it," proclaimed Laureston Grey, who was 
the richest and sprucest of the three sons-in-law. "Why can't we let well enough 
alone?" 
"Because it isn't well enough," Evelyn replied. "I want the real thing or 
nothing. I go to church once a month, to please mother. It doesn't do me any 
good. And I don't see what good it does you and Lucy to go every Sunday. You 
never think of it when you're out at dinners and dances during the week. And 
besides," she added, with the arrogance of modern youth, "you and Lucy are both 
intellectually lazy." 
"I like that from you, Evelyn," her sister flared up. 
"You never read anything except the sporting columns and the annual rules of 
tennis and golf and polo." 
"Must everything be reduced to terms?" Mrs. Waring gently lamented. "Why 
can't we, as Laury suggests, just continue to trust?" 
"They are the more fortunate, perhaps, who can, mother," George Bridges 
answered, with more of feeling in his voice than he was wont to show. 
"Unhappily, truth does not come that way. If Roger Bacon and Galileo and Newton 
and Darwin and Harvey and the others had 'just trusted,' the world's knowledge 
would still remain as stationary as it was during the thousand-odd years the 
hierarchy of the Church was supreme, when theology was history, philosophy, and 
science rolled into one. If God had not meant man to know something of his 
origin differing from the account in Genesis, he would not have given us Darwin 
and his successors. Practically every great discovery since the Revival we owe 
to men who, by their very desire for truth, were forced into opposition to the 
tremendous power of the Church, which always insisted that people should 'just 
trust,' and take the mixture of cosmogony and Greek philosophy, tradition and 
fable, paganism, Judaic sacerdotalism, and temporal power wrongly called 
spiritual dealt out by this same Church as the last word on science, philosophy, 
history, metaphysics, and government." 
"Stop!" cried Eleanor. "You make me dizzy." 
"Nearly all the pioneers to whom we owe our age of comparative enlightenment 
were heretics," George persisted. "And if they could have been headed off, or 
burned, most of us would still be living in mud caves at the foot of the cliff 
on which stood the nobleman's castle; and kings would still be kings by divine 
decree, scientists—if there were any—workers in the black art, and every 
phenomenon we failed to understand, a miracle." 
"I choose the United States of America," ejaculated Evelyn. 
"I gather, George," said Phil Goodrich, "that you don't believe in miracles." 
"Miracles are becoming suspiciously fewer and fewer. Once, an eclipse of the 
sun was enough to throw men on their knees because they thought it supernatural. 
If they were logical they'd kneel today because it has been found natural. Only 
the inexplicable phenomena are miracles; and after a while—if the theologians 
will only permit us to finish the job—there won't be any inexplicable phenomena. 
Mystery, as I believe William James puts it may be called the more-to-be-known." 
"In taking that attitude, George, aren't you limiting the power of God?" said 
Mrs. Waring. 
"How does it limit the power of God, mother," her son-in-law asked, "to 
discover that he chooses to work by laws? The most suicidal tendency in 
religious bodies today is their mediaeval insistence on what they are pleased to 
call the supernatural. Which is the more marvellous—that God can stop the earth 
and make the sun appear to stand still, or that he can construct a universe of 
untold millions of suns with planets and satellites, each moving in its orbit, 
according to law; a universe wherein every atom is true to a sovereign 
conception? And yet this marvel of marvels—that makes God in the twentieth 
century infinitely greater than in the sixteenth—would never have been 
discovered if the champions of theology had had their way." 
Mrs. Waring smiled a little. 
"You are too strong for me, George," she said, "but you mustn't expect an old 
woman to change." 
"Mother, dear," cried Eleanor, rising and laying her hand on Mrs. Waring's 
cheek, "we don't want you to change. It's ourselves we wish to change, we wish 
for a religious faith like yours, only the same teaching which gave it to you is 
powerless for us. That's our trouble. We have only to look at you," she added, a 
little wistfully, "to be sure there is something—something vital in 
Christianity, if we could only get at it, something that does not depend upon 
what we have been led to believe is indispensable. George, and men like him, can 
only show the weakness in the old supports. I don't mean that they aren't doing 
the world a service in revealing errors, but they cannot reconstruct." 
"That is the clergyman's business," declared Mr. Bridges. "But he must first 
acknowledge that the old supports are worthless." 
"Well," said Phil, "I like your rector, in spite of his 
anthropomorphism—perhaps, as George would say, because of it. There is something 
manly about him that appeals to me." 
"There," cried Eleanor, triumphantly, "I've always said Mr. Hodder had a 
spiritual personality. You feel—you feel there is truth shut up inside of him 
which he cannot communicate. I'll tell you who impresses me in that way more 
strongly than any one else—Mr. Bentley. And he doesn't come to church any more." 
"Mr. Bentley," said her, mother, "is a saint. Your father tried to get him to 
dinner to-day, but he had promised those working girls of his, who live on the 
upper floors of his house, to dine with them. One of them told me so. Of course 
he will never speak of his kindnesses." 
"Mr. Bentley doesn't bother his head about theology," said Sally. "He just 
lives." 
"There's Eldon Parr," suggested George Bridges, mentioning the name of the 
city's famous financier; "I'm told he relieved Mr. Bentley of his property some 
twenty-five years ago. If Mr. Hodder should begin to preach the modern heresy 
which you desire, Mr Parr might object. He's very orthodox, I'm told." 
"And Mr. Parr," remarked the modern Evelyn, sententiously, "pays the bills, 
at St. John's. Doesn't he, father?" 
"I fear he pays a large proportion of them," Mr. Waring admitted, in a 
serious tone. 
"In these days," said Evelyn, "the man who pays the bills is entitled to have 
his religion as he likes it." 
"No matter how he got the money to pay them," added Phil. 
"That suggests another little hitch in the modern church which will have to 
be straightened out," said George Bridges. 
"'Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For ye make clean the 
outside of the cup and of the platter, but within they are full of extortion and 
excess.'" 
"Why, George, you of all people quoting the Bible!" Eleanor exclaimed. 
"And quoting it aptly, too," said Phil Goodrich. 
"I'm afraid if we began on the scribes and Pharisees, we shouldn't stop with 
Mr. Parr," Asa Wiring observed, with a touch of sadness. 
"In spite of all they say he has done, I can't help feeling sorry for him," 
said Mrs. Waring. "He must be so lonely in that huge palace of his beside the 
Park, his wife dead, and Preston running wild around the world, and Alison no 
comfort. The idea of a girl leaving her father as she did and going off to New 
York to become a landscape architect!" 
"But, mother," Evelyn pleaded, "I can't see why a woman shouldn't lead her 
own life. She only has one, like a man. And generally she doesn't get that." 
Mrs. Waring rose. 
"I don't know what we're coming to. I was taught that a woman's place was 
with her husband and children; or, if she had none, with her family. I tried to 
teach you so, my dear." 
"Well," said Evelyn, "I'm here yet. I haven't Alison's excuse. Cheer up, 
mother, the world's no worse than it was." 
"I don't know about that," answered Mrs. Waring. 
"Listen!" ejaculated Eleanor. 
Mrs. Waring's face brightened. Sounds of mad revelry came down from the floor 
above.