Father
Damien ~ An Open Letter To The Reverend Dr. Hyde Of Honolulu
February 25, 1890
Sir, - It may probably occur to you that we have met, and
visited, and conversed; on my side, with interest. You may
remember that you have done me several courtesies, for which
I was prepared to be grateful. But there are duties which
come before gratitude, and offences which justly divide
friends, far more acquaintances. Your letter to the Reverend
H. B. Gage is a document which, in my sight, if you had
filled me with bread when I was starving, if you had sat
up to nurse my father when he lay a-dying, would yet absolve
me from the bonds of gratitude. You know enough, doubtless,
of the process of canonisation to be aware that, a hundred
years after the death of Damien, there will appear a man
charged with the painful office of the DEVIL'S ADVOCATE.
After that noble brother of mine, and of all frail clay,
shall have lain a century at rest, one shall accuse, one
defend him. The circumstance is unusual that the devil's
advocate should be a volunteer, should be a member of a
sect immediately rival, and should make haste to take upon
himself his ugly office ere the bones are cold; unusual,
and of a taste which I shall leave my readers free to qualify;
unusual, and to me inspiring. If I have at all learned the
trade of using words to convey truth and to arouse emotion,
you have at last furnished me with a subject. For it is
in the interest of all mankind, and the cause of public
decency in every quarter of the world, not only that Damien
should be righted, but that you and your letter should be
displayed at length, in their true colours, to the public
eye.
To do this properly, I must begin by quoting you at large:
I shall then proceed to criticise your utterance from several
points of view, divine and human, in the course of which
I shall attempt to draw again, and with more specification,
the character of the dead saint whom it has pleased you
to vilify: so much being done, I shall say farewell to you
for ever.
"HONOLULU, "August 2, 1889.
"Rev. H. B. GAGE.
"Dear Brother, - In answer to your inquires about Father
Damien, I can only reply that we who knew the man are surprised
at the extravagant newspaper laudations, as if he was a
most saintly philanthropist. The simple truth is, he was
a coarse, dirty man, headstrong and bigoted. He was not
sent to Molokai, but went there without orders; did not
stay at the leper settlement (before he became one himself),
but circulated freely over the whole island (less than half
the island is devoted to the lepers), and he came often
to Honolulu. He had no hand in the reforms and improvements
inaugurated, which were the work of our Board of Health,
as occasion required and means were provided. He was not
a pure man in his relations with women, and the leprosy
of which he died should be attributed to his vices and carelessness.
Other have done much for the lepers, our own ministers,
the government physicians, and so forth, but never with
the Catholic idea of meriting eternal life.
- Yours, etc., "C. M. HYDE" (1)
(1) From the Sydney PRESBYTERIAN, October 26, 1889.
To deal fitly with a letter so extraordinary, I must draw
at the outset on my private knowledge of the signatory and
his sect. It may offend others; scarcely you, who have been
so busy to collect, so bold to publish, gossip on your rivals.
And this is perhaps the moment when I may best explain to
you the character of what you are to read: I conceive you
as a man quite beyond and below the reticences of civility:
with what measure you mete, with that shall it be measured
you again; with you, at last, I rejoice to feel the button
off the foil and to plunge home. And if in aught that I
shall say I should offend others, your colleagues, whom
I respect and remember with affection, I can but offer them
my regret; I am not free, I am inspired by the consideration
of interests far more large; and such pain as can be inflicted
by anything from me must be indeed trifling when compared
with the pain with which they read your letter.
It
is not the hangman, but the criminal, that brings dishonour
on the house.
You belong, sir, to a sect - I believe my sect, and that
in which my ancestors laboured - which has enjoyed, and
partly failed to utilise, and exceptional advantage in the
islands of Hawaii. The first missionaries came; they found
the land already self-purged of its old and bloody faith;
they were embraced, almost on their arrival, with enthusiasm;
what troubles they supported came far more from whites than
from Hawaiins; and to these last they stood (in a rough
figure) in the shoes of God. This is not the place to enter
into the degree or causes of their failure, such as it is.
One element alone is pertinent, and must here be plainly
dealt with. In the course of their evangelical calling,
they - or too many of them - grew rich. It may be news to
you that the houses of missionaries are a cause of mocking
on the streets of Honolulu. It will at least be news to
you, that when I returned your civil visit, the driver of
my cab commented on the size, the taste, and the comfort
of your home. It would have been news certainly to myself,
had any one told me that afternoon that I should live to
drag such a matter into print. But you see, sir, how you
degrade better men to your own level; and it is needful
that those who are to judge betwixt you and me, betwixt
Damien and the devil's advocate, should understated your
letter to have been penned in a house which could raise,
and that very justly, the envy and the comments of the passers-by.
I think (to employ a phrase of yours which I admire) it
"should be attributed" to you that you have never
visited the scene of Damien's life and death. If you had,
and had recalled it, and looked about your pleasant rooms,
even your pen perhaps would have been stayed.
Your sect (and remember, as far as any sect avows me, it
is mine) has not done ill in a worldly sense in the Hawaiian
Kingdom. When calamity befell their innocent parishioners,
when leprosy descended and took root in the Eight Islands,
a QUID PRO QUO was to be looked for. To that prosperous
mission, and to you, as one of its adornments, God had sent
at last an opportunity. I know I am touching here upon a
nerve acutely sensitive. I know that others of your colleagues
look back on the inertia of your Church, and the intrusive
and decisive heroism of Damien, with something almost to
be called remorse. I am sure it is so with yourself; I am
persuaded your letter was inspired by a certain envy, not
essentially ignoble, and the one human trait to be espied
in that performance. You were thinking of the lost chance,
the past day; of that which should have been conceived and
was not; of the service due and not rendered. TIME WAS,
said the voice in your ear, in your pleasant room, as you
sat raging and writing; and if the words written were base
beyond parallel, the rage, I am happy to repeat - it is
the only compliment I shall pay you - the rage was almost
virtuous. But, sir, when we have failed, and another has
succeeded; when we have stood by, and another has stepped
in; when we sit and grow bulky in our charming mansions,
and a plain, uncouth peasant steps into the battle, under
the eyes of God, and succours the afflicted, and consoles
the dying, and is himself afflicted in his turn, and dies
upon the field of honour - the battle cannot be retrieved
as your unhappy irritation has suggested. It is a lost battle,
and lost for ever. One thing remained to you in your defeat
- some rags of common honour; and these you have made haste
to cast away.
Common honour; not the honour of having done anything right,
but the honour of not having done aught conspicuously foul;
the honour of the inert: that was what remained to you.
We are not all expected to be Damiens; a man may conceive
his duty more narrowly, he may love his comforts better;
and none will cast a stone at him for that. But will a gentleman
of your reverend profession allow me an example from the
fields of gallantry? When two gentlemen compete for the
favour of a lady, and the one succeeds and the other is
rejected, and (as will sometimes happen) matter damaging
to the successful rival's credit reaches the ear of the
defeated, it is held by plain men of no pretensions that
his mouth is, in the circumstance, almost necessarily closed.
Your
Church and Damien's were in Hawaii upon a rivalry to do
well: to help, to edify, to set divine examples. You having
(in one huge instance) failed, and Damien succeeded, I marvel
it should not have occurred to you that you were doomed
to silence; that when you had been outstripped in that high
rivalry, and sat inglorious in the midst of your well- being,
in your pleasant room - and Damien, crowned with glories
and horrors, toiled and rotted in that pigsty of his under
the cliffs of Kalawao - you, the elect who would not, were
the last man on earth to collect and propagate gossip on
the volunteer who would and did.
I think I see you - for I try to see you in the flesh as
I write these sentences - I think I see you leap at the
word pigsty, a hyperbolical expression at the best. "He
had no hand in the reforms," he was "a coarse,
dirty man"; these were your own words; and you may
think it possible that I am come to support you with fresh
evidence. In a sense, it is even so. Damien has been too
much depicted with a conventional halo and conventional
features; so drawn by men who perhaps had not the eye to
remark or the pen to express the individual; or who perhaps
were only blinded and silenced by generous admiration, such
as I partly envy for myself - such as you, if your soul
were enlightened, would envy on your bended knees. It is
the least defect of such a method of portraiture that it
makes the path easy for the devil's advocate, and leaves
the misuse of the slanderer a considerable field of truth.
For the truth that is suppressed by friends is the readiest
weapon of the enemy. The world, in your despite, may perhaps
owe you something, if your letter be the means of substituting
once for all a credible likeness for a wax abstraction.
For, if that world at all remember you, on the day when
Damien of Molokai shall be named a Saint, it will be in
virtue of one work: your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage.
You may ask on what authority I speak. It was my inclement
destiny to become acquainted, not with Damien, but with
Dr. Hyde. When I visited the lazaretto, Damien was already
in his resting grave. But such information as I have, I
gathered on the spot in conversation with those who knew
him well and long: some indeed who revered his memory; but
others who had sparred and wrangled with him, who beheld
him with no halo, who perhaps regarded him with small respect,
and through whose unprepared and scarcely partial communications
the plain, human features of the man shone on me convincingly.
These gave me what knowledge I possess; and I learnt it
in that scene where it could be most completely and sensitively
understood - Kalawao, which you have never visited, about
which you have never so much as endeavoured to inform yourself;
for, brief as your letter is, you have found the means to
stumble into that confession. "LESS THAN ONE-HALF of
the island," you say, "is devoted to the lepers."
Molokai - "MOLOKAI AHINA," the "grey,"
lofty, and most desolate island - along all its northern
side plunges a front of precipice into a sea of unusual
profundity. This range of cliff is, from east to west, the
true end and frontier of the island. Only in one spot there
projects into the ocean a certain triangular and rugged
down, grassy, stony, windy, and rising in the midst into
a hill with a dead crater: the whole bearing to the cliff
that overhangs it somewhat the same relation as a bracket
to a wall. With this hint you will now be able to pick out
the leper station on a map; you will be able to judge how
much of Molokai is thus cut off between the surf and precipice,
whether less than a half, or less than a quarter, or a fifth,
or a tenth - or, say a twentieth; and the next time you
burst into print you will be in a position to share with
us the issue of your calculations.
I imagine you to be one of those persons who talk with cheerfulness
of that place which oxen and wain-ropes could not drag you
to behold. You, who do not even know its situation on the
map, probably denounce sensational descriptions, stretching
your limbs the while in your pleasant parlour on Beretania
Street.
When
I was pulled ashore there one early morning, there sat with
me in the boat two sisters, bidding farewell (in humble
imitation of Damien) to the lights and joys of human life.
One of these wept silently; I could not withhold myself
from joining her. Had you been there, it is my belief that
nature would have triumphed even in you; and as the boat
drew but a little nearer, and you beheld the stairs crowded
with abominable deformations of our common manhood, and
saw yourself landing in the midst of such a population as
only now and then surrounds us in the horror of a nightmare
- what a haggard eye you would have rolled over your reluctant
shoulder towards the house on Beretania Street! Had you
gone on; had you found every fourth face a blot upon the
landscape; had you visited the hospital and seen the butt-ends
of human beings lying there almost unrecognisable, but still
breathing, still thinking, still remembering; you would
have understood that life in the lazaretto is an ordeal
from which the nerves of a man's spirit shrink, even as
his eye quails under the brightness of the sun; you would
have felt it was (even today) a pitiful place to visit and
a hell to dwell in. It is not the fear of possible infection.
That seems a little thing when compared with the pain, the
pity, and the disgust of the visitor's surroundings, and
the atmosphere of affliction, disease, and physical disgrace
in which he breathes. I do not think I am a man more than
usually timid; but I never recall the days and nights I
spent upon that island promontory (eight days and seven
nights), without heartfelt thankfulness that I am somewhere
else. I find in my diary that I speak of my stay as a "grinding
experience": I have once jotted in the margin, "HARROWING
is the word"; and when the MOKOLII bore me at last
towards the outer world, I kept repeating to myself, with
a new conception of their pregnancy, those simple words
of the song -
" 'Tis the most distressful country that ever yet was
seen."
And observe: that which I saw and suffered from was a settlement
purged, bettered, beautified; the new village built, the
hospital and the Bishop-Home excellently arranged; the sisters,
the poctor, and the missionaries, all indefatigable in their
noble tasks. It was a different place when Damien came there
and made this great renunciation, and slept that first night
under a tree amidst his rotting brethren: alone with pestilence;
and looking forward (with what courage, with what pitiful
sinkings of dread, God only knows) to a lifetime of dressing
sores and stumps.
You will say, perhaps, I am too sensitive, that sights as
painful abound in cancer hospitals and are confronted daily
by doctors and nurses. I have long learned to admire and
envy the doctors and the nurses. But there is no cancer
hospital so large and populous as Kalawao and Kalaupapa;
and in such a matter every fresh case, like every inch of
length in the pipe of an organ, deepens the note of the
impression; for what daunts the onlooker is that monstrous
sum of human suffering by which he stands surrounded. Lastly,
no doctor or nurse is called upon to enter once for all
the doors of that gehenna; they do not say farewell, they
need not abandon hope, on its sad threshold; they but go
for a time to their high calling, and can look forward as
they go to relief, to recreation, and to rest. But Damien
shut-to with his own hand the doors of his own sepulchre.
I shall now extract three passages from my diary at Kalawao.
A. "Damien is dead and already somewhat ungratefully
remembered in the field of his labours and sufferings. 'He
was a good man, but very officious,' says one. Another tells
me he had fallen (as other priests so easily do) into something
of the ways and habits of thought of a Kanaka; but he had
the wit to recognise the fact, and the good sense to laugh
at" [over] "it. A plain man it seems he was; I
cannot find he was a popular."
B. "After Ragsdale's death" [Ragsdale was a famous
Luna, or overseer, of the unruly settlement] "there
followed a brief term of office by Father Damien which served
only to publish the weakness of that noble man. He
was rough in his ways, and he had no control. Authority
was relaxed; Damien's life was threatened, and he was soon
eager to resign."
C. "Of Damien I begin to have an idea. He seems to
have been a man of the peasant class, certainly of the peasant
type: shrewd, ignorant and bigoted, yet with an open mind,
and capable of receiving and digesting a reproof if it were
bluntly administered; superbly generous in the least thing
as well as in the greatest, and as ready to give his last
shirt (although not without human grumbling) as he had been
to sacrifice his life; essentially indiscreet and officious,
which made him a troublesome colleague; domineering in all
his ways, which made him incurably unpopular with the Kanakas,
but yet destitute of real authority, so that his boys laughed
at him and he must carry out his wishes by the means of
bribes. He learned to have a mania for doctoring; and set
up the Kanakas against the remedies of his regular rivals:
perhaps (if anything matter at all in the treatment of such
a disease) the worst thing that he did, and certainly the
easiest. The best and worst of the man appear very plainly
in his dealings with Mr. Chapman's money; he had originally
laid it out" [intended to lay it out] "entirely
for the benefit of Catholics, and even so not wisely; but
after a long, plain talk, he admitted his error fully and
revised the list. The sad state of the boys' home is in
part the result of his lack of control; in part, of his
own slovenly ways and false ideas of hygiene. Brother officials
used to call it 'Damien's Chinatown.' 'Well,' they would
say, 'your Chinatown keeps growing.' And he would laugh
with perfect good-nature, and adhere to his errors with
perfect obstinacy. So much I have gathered of truth about
this plain, noble human brother and father of ours; his
imperfections are the traits of his face, by which we know
him for our fellow; his martyrdom and his example nothing
can lessen or annul; and only a person here on the spot
can properly appreciate their greatness."
I have set down these private passages, as you perceive,
without correction; thanks to you, the public has them in
their bluntness. They are almost a list of the man's faults,
for it is rather these that I was seeking: with his virtues,
with the heroic profile of his life, I and the world were
already sufficiently acquainted. I was besides a little
suspicious of Catholic testimony; in no ill sense, but merely
because Damien's admirers and disciples were the least likely
to be critical. I know you will be more suspicious still;
and the facts set down above were one and all collected
from the lips of Protestants who had opposed the father
in his life. Yet I am strangely deceived, or they build
up the image of a man, with all his weakness, essentially
heroic, and alive with rugged honesty, generosity, and mirth.
Take it for what it is, rough private jottings of the worst
sides of Damien's character, collected from the lips of
those who had laboured with and (in your own phrase) "knew
the man"; - though I question whether Damien would
have said that he knew you. Take it, and observe with wonder
how well you were served by your gossips, how ill by your
intelligence and sympathy; in how many points of fact we
are at one, and how widely our appreciations vary. There
is something wrong here; either with you or me. It is possible,
for instance, that you, who seem to have so many ears in
Kalawao, had heard of the affair of Mr. Chapman's money,
and were singly struck by Damien's intended wrong-doing.
I was struck with that also, and set it fairly down; but
I was struck much more by the fact that he had the honesty
of mind to be convinced. I may here tell you that it was
a long business; that one of his colleagues sat with him
late into the night, multiplying arguments and accusations;
that the father listened as usual with "perfect good-
nature and perfect obstinacy"; but at the last, when
he was persuaded - "Yes," said he, "I am
very much obliged to you; you have done me a service; it
would have been a theft." There are many (not Catholics
merely) who require their heroes and saints to be infallible;
to these the story will be painful; not to the true lovers,
patrons, and servants of mankind.
And
I take it, this is a type of our division; that you are
one of those who have an eye for faults and failures; that
you take a pleasure to find and publish them; and that,
having found them, you make haste to forget the overvailing
virtues and the real success which had alone introduced
them to your knowledge. It is a dangerous frame of mind.
That you may understand how dangerous, and into what a situation
it has already brought you, we will (if you please) go hand-in-hand
through the different phrases of your letter, and candidly
examine each from the point of view of its truth, its appositeness,
and its charity.
Damien was COARSE.
It is very possible. You make us sorry for the lepers, who
had only a coarse old peasant for their friend and father.
But you, who were so refined, why were you not there, to
cheer them with the lights of culture? Or may I remind you
that we have some reason to doubt if John the Baptist were
genteel; and in the case of Peter, on whose career your
doubtless dwell approvingly in the pulpit, no doubt at all
he was a "coarse, headstrong" fisherman! Yet even
in our Protestant Bibles Peter is called Saint.
Damien was DIRTY.
He was. Think of the poor lepers annoyed with this dirty
comrade! But the clean Dr. Hyde was at his food in a fine
house.
Damien was HEADSTRONG.
I believe you are right again; and I thank God for his strong
head and heart.
Damien was BIGOTED.
I am not fond of bigots myself, because they are not fond
of me. But what is meant by bigotry, that we should regard
it as a blemish in a priest? Damien believed his own religion
with the simplicity of a peasant or a child; as I would
I could suppose that you do. For this, I wonder at him some
way off; and had that been his only character, should have
avoided him in life. But the point of interest in Damien,
which has caused him to be so much talked about and made
him at last the subject of your pen and mine, was that,
inhim, his bigotry, his intense and narrow faith, wrought
potently for good, and strengthened him to be one of the
world's heroes and exemplars.
Damien WAS NOT SENT TO MOLOKAI, BUT WENT THERE WITHOUT ORDERS.
Is this a misreading? or do you really mean the words for
blame? I have heard Christ, in the pulpits of our Church,
held up for imitation on the ground that His sacrifice was
voluntary. Does Dr. Hyde think otherwise?
Damien DID NOT STAY AT THE SETTLEMENT, ETC.
It is true he was allowed many indulgences. Am I to understand
that you blame the father for profiting by these, or the
officers for granting them? In either case, it is a mighty
Spartan standard to issue from the house on Beretania Street;
and I am convinced you will find yourself with few supporters.
Damien HAD NO HAND IN THE REFORMS, ETC.
I think even you will admit that I have already been frank
in my description of the man I am defending; but before
I take you up upon this head, I will be franker still, and
tell you that perhaps nowhere in the world can a man taste
a more pleasurable sense of contrast than when he passes
from Damien's "Chinatown" at Kalawao to the beautiful
Bishop-Home at Kalaupapa. At this point, in my desire to
make all fair for you, I will break my rule and adduce Catholic
testimony. Here is a passage from my diary about my visit
to the Chinatown, from which you will see how it is (even
now) regarded by its own officials: "We went round
all the dormitories, refectories, etc. - dark and dingy
enough, with a superficial cleanliness, which he" [Mr.
Dutton, the lay-brother] "did not seek to defend. 'It
is almost decent,' said he; 'the sisters will make that
all right when we get them here.' " And yet I gathered
it was already better since Damien was dead, and far better
than when he was there alone and had his own (not always
excellent) way. I have now come far enough to meet you on
a common ground of fact; and I tell you that, to a mind
not prejudiced by jealousy, all the reforms of the lazaretto,
and even those which he most vigorously opposed, are properly
the work of Damien.
They
are the evidence of his success; they are what his heroism
provoked from the reluctant and the careless. Many were
before him in the field; Mr. Meyer, for instance, of whose
faithful work we hear too little: there have been many since;
and some had more worldly wisdom, though none had more devotion,
than our saint. Before his day, even you will confess, they
had effected little. It was his part, by one striking act
of martyrdom, to direct all men's eyes on that distressful
country. At a blow, and with the price of his life, he made
the place illustrious and public. And that, if you will
consider largely, was the one reform needful; pregnant of
all that should succeed. It brought money; it brought (best
individual addition of them all) the sisters; it brought
supervision, for public opinion and public interest landed
with the man at Kalawao. If ever any man brought reforms,
and died to bring them, it was he. There is not a clean
cup or towel in the Bishop-Home, but dirty Damien washed
it.
Damien WAS NOT A PURE MAN IN HIS RELATIONS WITH WOMEN, ETC
How do you know that? Is this the nature of conversation
in that house on Beretania Street which the cabman envied,
driving past? - racy details of the misconduct of the poor
peasant priest, toiling under the cliffs of Molokai?
Many have visited the station before me; they seem not to
have heard the rumour. When I was there I heard many shocking
tales, for my informants were men speaking with the plainness
of the laity; and I heard plenty of complaints of Damien.
Why was this never mentioned? and how came it to you in
the retirement of your clerical parlour?
But I must not even seem to deceive you. This scandal, when
I read it in your letter, was not new to me. I had heard
it once before; and I must tell you how. There came to Samoa
a man from Honolulu; he, in a public-house on the beach,
volunteered the statement that Damien had "contracted
the disease from having connection with the female lepers";
and I find a joy in telling you how the report was welcomed
in a public-house. A man sprang to his feet; I am not at
liberty to give his name, but from what I heard I doubt
if you would care to have him to dinner in Beretania Street.
"You miserable little -------" (here is a word
I dare not print, it would so shock your ears). "You
miserable little ------," he cried, "if the story
were a thousand times true, can't you see you are a million
times a lower ----- for daring to repeat it?" I wish
it could be told of you that when the report reached you
in your house, perhaps after family worship, you had found
in your soul enough holy anger to receive it with the same
expressions; ay, even with that one which I dare not print;
it would not need to have been blotted away, like Uncle
Toby's oath, by the tears of the recording angel; it would
have been counted to you for your brightest righteousness.
But you have deliberately chosen the part of the man from
Honolulu, and you have played it with improvements of your
own. The man from Honolulu - miserable, leering creature
- communicated the tale to a rude knot of beach-combing
drinkers in a public-house, where (I will so far agree with
your temperance opinions) man is not always at his noblest;
and the man from Honolulu had himself been drinking - drinking,
we may charitably fancy, to excess. It was to your "Dear
Brother, the Reverend H. B. Gage," that you chose to
communicate the sickening story; and the blue ribbon which
adorns your portly bosom forbids me to allow you the extenuating
plea that you were drunk when it was done. Your "dear
brother" - a brother indeed - made haste to deliver
up your letter (as a means of grace, perhaps) to the religious
papers; where, after many months, I found and read and wondered
at it; and whence I have now reproduced it for the wonder
of others. And you and your dear brother have, by this cycle
of operations, built up a contrast very edifying to examine
in detail. The man whom you would not care to have to dinner,
on the one side; on the other, the Reverend Dr. Hyde
and the Reverend H. B. Gage: the Apia bar- room, the Honolulu
manse.
But I fear you scarce appreciate how you appear to your
fellow-men; and to bring it home to you, I will suppose
your story to be true. I will suppose - and God forgive
me for supposing it - that Damien faltered and stumbled
in his narrow path of duty; I will suppose that, in the
horror of his isolation, perhaps in the fever of incipient
disease, he, who was doing so much more than he had sworn,
failed in the letter of his priestly oath - he, who was
so much a better man than either you or me, who did what
we have never dreamed of daring - he too tasted of our common
frailty. "O, Iago, the pity of it!" The least
tender should be moved to tears; the most incredulous to
prayer. And all that you could do was to pen your letter
to the Reverend H. B. Gage!
Is it growing at all clear to you what a picture you have
drawn of your own heart? I will try yet once again to make
it clearer. You had a father: suppose this tale were about
him, and some informant brought it to you, proof in hand:
I am not making too high an estimate of your emotional nature
when I suppose you would regret the circumstance? that you
would feel the tale of frailty the more keenly since it
shamed the author of your days? and that the last thing
you would do would be to publish it in the religious press?
Well, the man who tried to do what Damien did, is my father,
and the father of the man in the Apia bar, and the father
of all who love goodness; and he was your father too, if
God had given you grace to see it.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson
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