"Sir," said he, "whatever, in Truth, makes a man's heart warmer, and his soul purer, is a belief, not a knowledge. Proof, sir, is a handcuff—belief is a wing! Want proof as to an ancestor in the reign of King Richard! Sir, you cannot even prove to the satisfaction of a logician that you are the son of your own father. Sir, a religious man does not want to reason about his religion—religion is not mathematics. Religion is to be felt, not proved. There are a great many things in the religion of a good man which are not in the catechism. Proof!" continued my uncle, growing violent—"Proof, sir, is a low, vulgar, levelling, rascally Jacobin—Belief is a loyal, generous, chivalrous gentleman! No, no—prove what you please, you shall never rob me of one belief, that has made me—"
"The finest hearted creature that ever talked nonsense," said my father, who came up like Horace's deity just at the right moment. "What is it you must believe in, brother, no matter what the proof against you?"
My uncle was silent; and with great energy dug the point of his cane into the gravel.
"He will not believe in our great ancestor the printer," said I, maliciously.
My father's calm brow was overcast in a moment.
"Brother," said the Captain loftily, "you have a right to your own ideas, but you should take care how they contaminate your child."
"Contaminate!" said my father; and for the first time I saw an angry sparkle flash from his eyes, but he checked himself on the instant; "change the word, my dear brother."
"No, sir, I will not change it! to bely the records of the family!"
"Records! A brass plate in a village church against all the books of the College of Arms!"
"To renounce, as your ancestor, a knight who died in the field!"