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    Chapter 14

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    "We'll follow Cade--we'll follow Cade."

    MOB.

    "The views of this Mr. Bragg, and of our old fellow-traveller, Mr.
    Dodge, appear to be peculiar on the subject of religious forms,"
    observed Sir George Templemore, as he descended the little lawn
    before the Wigwam, in company with the three ladies, Paul Powis, and
    John Effingham, on their way to the lake. "I should think it would be
    difficult to find another Christian, who objects to kneeling at
    prayer."

    "Therein you are mistaken, Templemore," answered Paul; "for this
    country, to say nothing of one sect which holds it in utter
    abomination, is filled with them. Our pious ancestors, like
    neophytes, ran into extremes, on the subject of forms, as well as in
    other matters. When you go to Philadelphia, Miss Effingham, you will
    see an instance of a most ludicrous nature--ludicrous, if there were
    not something painfully revolting mingled with it--of the manner in
    which men can strain at a gnat and swallow a camel; and which, I am
    sorry to say, is immediately connected with our own church."

    It was music to Eve's ears, to hear Paul Powis speak of his pious
    ancestors, as being American, and to find him so thoroughly
    identifying himself with her own native land; for, while condemning
    so many of its practices, and so much alive to its absurdities and
    contradictions, our heroine had seen too much of other countries, not
    to take an honest pride in the real excellencies of her own. There
    was, also, a soothing pleasure in hearing him openly own that he
    belonged to the same church as herself.

    "And what is there ridiculous in Philadelphia, in particular, and in
    connection with our own church?" she asked. "I am not so easily
    disposed to find fault where the venerable church is concerned."

    "You know that the Protestants, in their horror of idolatry,
    discontinued, in a great degree, the use of the cross, as an outward
    religious symbol; and that there was probably a time when there was
    not a single cross to be seen in the whole of a country that was
    settled by those who made a profession of love for Christ, and a
    dependence on his expiation, the great business of their lives?"

    "Certainly. We all know our predecessors were a little over-rigid and
    scrupulous on all the points connected with outward appearances."

    "They certainly contrived to render the religious rites as little
    pleasing to the senses as possible, by aiming at a sublimation that
    peculiarly favours spiritual pride and a pious conceit. I do not know
    whether travelling has had the same effect on you, as it has produced
    on me; but I find all my inherited antipathies to the mere visible
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