The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

D. Randall MacRae, popular Princeton football star of the roaring twenties, has everything most people want: looks, intelligence, athletic ability, musical talent, and the promise of a successful future. What more could he ask for? But Randall MacRae is bored; something is missing. Falling in love quite by accident, he leaves Princeton, giving up the prestigious advertising career planned for him, and enters a small Christian college in an ordinary Midwestern town. The rest of his story is anything but ordinary.

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The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

D. Randall MacRae, popular Princeton football star of the roaring twenties, has everything most people want: looks, intelligence, athletic ability, musical talent, and the promise of a successful future. What more could he ask for? But Randall MacRae is bored; something is missing. Falling in love quite by accident, he leaves Princeton, giving up the prestigious advertising career planned for him, and enters a small Christian college in an ordinary Midwestern town. The rest of his story is anything but ordinary.

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The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

by James Ingles
The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

The Amazing D. Randall MacRae

by James Ingles

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Overview

D. Randall MacRae, popular Princeton football star of the roaring twenties, has everything most people want: looks, intelligence, athletic ability, musical talent, and the promise of a successful future. What more could he ask for? But Randall MacRae is bored; something is missing. Falling in love quite by accident, he leaves Princeton, giving up the prestigious advertising career planned for him, and enters a small Christian college in an ordinary Midwestern town. The rest of his story is anything but ordinary.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802488510
Publisher: Moody Publishers
Publication date: 11/08/1984
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 287
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

JAMES WESLEY INGLES was born in 1905 in Dunoon, Scotland. His family moved to New York when he was 5 and he grew up in Nyack and Ossining, NY. He received his undergraduate degree from Wheaton College, his masters from Princeton, and did his graduate study at Drew University, NJ. He summered in Maine for many years before becoming a professor of literature at Bates College (1943) and moving to Augurn, Maine. He is best known for his novels, although he also wrote poetry, book reviews, literary criticism, and at least one of his short stories, The Wind is Blind was included in the O Henry Prize Collection for 1948.

Read an Excerpt

The Amazing D. Randall MacRae


By James Wesley Ingles

Moody Press

Copyright © 1984 The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8024-8851-0


CHAPTER 1

Subway trains carry so many people, so many different people, to so many different places. And in a great city some of those very different places may happen to be located very strangely near each other.

But D. Randall MacRae was not thinking of that as he removed his panama and passed a soft handkerchief across his forehead for the third time in half an hour. He looked reflectively for a moment at the soil his motion had left on the white, letting the pungent underground wind run swift fingers through his damp hair, rumpling it.

He hated riding on the subway. He hated the deafening roar. He hated the repeated jerky stops. He hated the dank odor. Above all, he despised the people—the loose, cheap mixture of them: the gibbering, gesticulating Jews; the gabbling, garlic-smelling Italians; the dumb, ox-faced laborers; the flabby, white-faced businessmen; the loudmouthed, loud-colored boys; the thin, anemic men; the fat men; the fatter, sloppy women; the squawking kids; the whole noisy, crowding, shuffling, hurrying, tired mass. The crowds varied in nature and type, according to the hour of day; but he disliked them all—perhaps because he did not know them. He did not know the things their loved ones knew about them. He thought nothing of the pathos, the humor, the love, contained in one hurtling car.

Very rarely it would happen that some slim and not uncomely girl would be found among the insipid crowd, who could help to keep his eyes from taking in the sight of the rest. But even a pretty girl could not keep him from taking in the smell of cheap powder, and July sweat, and bad breaths. And on this particular evening, and on this particular car there happened to be no statuesque form so far as he could see, and he had looked carefully.

He cursed himself for not having brought something to read and began wearily to let his eyes wander again over the advertising cards which he had read numerous times, the long, gaudy row of them with their psychological gags and their high-toned illustrations. One in particular held his eye for a moment by its combination of simple honesty and suave logic. It seemed out of place up there.

The train screeched to a stop. He noticed the name of the station mechanically, half-heard the rattle and metallic clank of the turnstiles, noticed a few more push their way inside the door before it closed on one man's arm and another's foot, and then turned his eyes back to the posters.

He still believed that he had chosen the lesser of two evils. To drive a sports car in a milling herd of cars that seem to move for a brief moment and then lie still for three long moments; to sit impatiently behind the pulsing heart of a thing meant to leap and run into the wind, and never be able to give it rein for so much as a city block—this was to him an even greater strain than the cramped subway.

Ten hot minutes passed slowly in the swaying cattle car. The man next to him rose as the sound of the brakes went on again. MacRae shot him a contemptuous glance and remained seated. The car was full of such men, each one killing himself to get ahead of another, if only by inches.

It was his station also. When the train had stopped he made for an exit. Most of the close-packed crowd charged the sluiceway at the same time. They were evidently all heading in his direction. A fat man with an unlighted cigar in his cheek began shoving him from the rear. A quick, back jab of his elbow, and MacRae smiled sardonically at the grunt that followed.

He noticed suddenly that a small elderly lady about four feet ahead of him was being crushed painfully by the pushing mob. He jerked back four men of varying sizes (but uniform tempers, judging from the expletives they used) and took her arm. Her eyes smiled her gratitude, but the words would not come at first. Spoken words require breath.

MacRae felt a little embarrassed. This was not the kind of thing he was given to doing. He did not relish it. It was distasteful. But there was something in his old Scottish blood that moved him involuntarily, and there was something in his training that made it the thing to do whether he cared to or not. They edged slowly along in the crowd. He thought he had better say something.

"Tough bunch!" he blurted out and looked at her hastily. At first sight he had noticed simply that she was short and dressed with quiet taste. Now he took in the glister of her lovely silver-gray hair and deeply set gray eyes and watched her lips as they spoke.

"A little." She smiled. "But I don't think they all mean to be rough. They're just careless."

He turned his eyes away from hers, from the look of veiled tragedy and patient suffering that did not leave them even when she smiled. He did not like that look. It made him feel helpless and foolish.

Together they climbed the crowded stairs to the street; men pushed past them with impatient and manifest contempt for their slowness. They were soon belched forth from the exit mouth and spilled down through the thick, syruplike stream of humanity to a corner where three ways crossed. There they stopped at the curb as the traffic swept by, and he ventured to speak again, although he felt like dropping her arm and slipping off through the press unnoticed.

"Do you have far to go?"

"Not far, thank you, but a rather difficult trip, to that tent over there."

She nodded across the swarming intersection to a lot that was for sale at a cool quarter of a million—and so, for the present, remained vacant. On it there was a great gray heap of canvas that rose in a series of hilly peaks like a wind-swirled ridge of dark sand. While he was wondering what it could be, she was speaking again.

"I don't know how to thank you for your kindness, dear," she said quietly, using the last word as if she were addressing one of her intimate friends, and the whole sentence as if she expected him to leave her. It made Randall MacRae's embarrassment return.

"Why, I'll see you over. I'm going right past there."

He lost her reply in the sound of a traffic whistle and the screech of brakes. When the light changed, they set out across the intersection in the center of a moving mass.

As they approached the other side he began to comprehend more clearly the thing that was looming in front of them. A large sign stood at one of the numerous entrances to the tent. He could just make out the largest letters:


REVIVAL OF THE WORD OF GOD

and farther down, the name

Dr. A. Alfred Campbell

He began to smile almost unconsciously, but she was saying, "I'm afraid I'm a little late, and I would have been much later without your help. I can't tell you how grateful I am. I dread crossing these streets; I would sooner cross the Atlantic."

He mumbled something that was incoherent to himself as well as to her, but she continued, now in a tone of earnest invitation, "I wonder if you would come into the meeting. I'm sure you would enjoy it."

They were almost at one of the entrances now. Through the raised flap he could see the long rows of benches on the earth floor, which was covered with wood chips and shavings, and the wooden platform at the front. His smile returned, expanded, became a conscious smile.

"I'm sorry," he said; "I have another engagement."

"Well, you'll come tomorrow night then, won't you?" And without waiting for his answer, she asked, "And what is your name? I want to remember you. I have a boy about your age."

He thought the look of tragedy in her eyes deepened. They were misty an instant in spite of the smile on her lips.

"MacRae," he said, "Randall MacRae. And yours?"

"I'm Mrs. Wentworth. Perhaps you have heard of my husband. I lost him three years ago. He was a colonel in the Salvation Army." She spoke with a child-like naiveté. He had never heard the name, but said,

"Oh, yes, yes. So you are Mrs. Wentworth?"

She extended her hand gently. He took it quite as gently.

"Good-bye," he said with abrupt simplicity and began to walk away.

It was the hour of summer sunset. The sky was a flood of opalescent, shimmering light. Against it loomed the black hulk of the stadium toward which he was heading. On the rim the lemon yellow sky flowed through the cut letters of the name EBBETS FIELD like pent water when floodgates are opened.

He had almost passed the end of the tent when pulsing chords from a grand piano shot into his soul and stuck there, quivering like barbed arrows. There was something different about the way those chords had been struck; and as the crowd began to sing he could hear that peculiar quality of the piano, sweet as the undertone of a deep bell, running, dancing through, and interweaving with the harmony.

If D. Randall MacRae loved anything deeply, that thing was music, music in all and in any of its forms. He paused. A group of men brushed past him on the sidewalk, and one voice was hoarsely prominent in their babble. He could hear a snatch of it. "Aw, that guy is never going to reach the third round!" MacRae glanced at his watch. Eight-fifteen. There was plenty of time before the main bout. He didn't care for the preliminaries anyhow.

With that thought he slipped into the tent by a side entrance and took a seat quickly. The people were seated as they sang. He began casually to take in his surroundings.

The tent was more massive than its outward appearance indicated. Three main poles supported it in the center, and a number of others were placed here and there. Above and in front of the speaker's desk hung a three-horn megaphone amplifier. A young man with sleek black hair and a mellow baritone voice led the singing. There was nothing but grace in his leadership. He had none of the cheerleader gyrations MacRae was accustomed to associate with such meetings as this: When he moved to the side of the desk, his voice faded into the congregational harmony. When he returned, the amplifiers would send it singing out above the rest, like an organ melody played on an oboe stop above a muted-flute stop accompaniment. Behind him stood a curiously assorted choir, and at his left, the piano and three or four solo instruments. MacRae did not recognize the hymn they were singing. He knew only that the singing was good and the accompaniment wonderful. He could not see the pianist. A pole was directly in his line of vision. After his first cursory examination of the place he closed his eyes to listen. That was a habit of his.

It was over suddenly, and the young song leader's voice came clearly, but with a somewhat distorted loudness, through the amplifiers. He was speaking:

"We will be favored at this time with a piano solo by Miss Thurston."

MacRae opened his eyes in time to see a young woman rise from her seat at the piano. She was now a little in front of the pole, and what he saw almost made him lose what she was saying; but the voice of sweet naturalness forced him to listen while he looked. She said,

"I shall play for you my interpretation of that hymn we all know and love, 'Jesus, Lover of My Soul.' Please think of the words as I play."

She sat down, and MacRae moved four seats to the left. A few seats were still vacant at the rear on each side of the main central section.

There was a movement of tense silence in which she rubbed white fingers meditatively with a gossamer wisp of handkerchief; then she slowly placed it at the right of the keyboard. MacRae was totally unprepared for what followed. He had often carelessly sung the hymn in chapel at Princeton. He knew the words quite well.

A crash, that began somewhere in the middle clef and rumbled down to the bass, came from the piano like a clap of approaching thunder. The rumble was still dying away when from the instrument seemed to come the cry of a soul in sore distress. "Jesus, lover of my soul," cried the piano. Then another crash of thunder joined the first, and the cry was repeated. Holbrook's "Refuge" was evidently furnishing the theme. But here music was being created. MacRae felt that as he listened. Here was creative genius. Above the singing call of the piano voices could be heard the continuous roar of a storm, the surge of cruel waters—waters that roll nearer—the breaking crash of surf against riven rocks, the violence of tempests that still are high. And always, always, sweetly and strong as the voice of faith, those two persistent, harmonic melodies. Then came the gradual slackening of violence and finally the sudden cessation of it altogether, as if the storm-racked vessel had been safely guided into an unexpected haven. Quiet, peaceful wash of water, and voices of stricken faith now turned to praise, now supplication, and back again to praise, ending in a shout of glory, a chord of triumph that would seem to rise to all eternity.

Miss Thurston removed her foot from the pedal. The last vibration ceased. She reached again for the handkerchief she had laid down.

There was no applause. There could be none. The audience shook itself slowly back to time and place, and the voice of the song leader announced the number of the next hymn.

This time the crowd rose to sing. As they did so, MacRae walked deliberately around the rear of the tent to the right center aisle and strode down that until he found a seat just four rows from the platform. For the first time in his life he was voluntarily sitting in a front seat at a religious meeting. He was directly below the pianist. The woman next to him extended her hymn book. He took a corner of it in his left hand but never looked at the hymn.

He was fascinated. This was something new under the sun. Here was a young woman handling a piano with the skill of a concert artist, filling in with the most delightful symmetry all those multiple harmonies that virbrate above and below every sung chord or melody. He had never heard hymns so played before. She seemed to play as a bird flies, instinctively, although behind that apparent ease there were undoubtedly long hours, years of hours, of patient, continuous practice.

He watched her with increasing interest and noticed that she was singing as she played. The electric bulb behind her head cast a halo through brown hair that rippled in waves which rainy weather would only make the more wavy. As she sang the light glistened on her moist red lips. MacRae found his pulse beating faster, and the hand that held the book began to tremble. He was glad when the hymn was finished. He could sit down.

During the singing of the last stanza a rather tall, thin man with a crown of snow-white hair had ascended the platform steps and crossed to the small table on the side opposite the piano. MacRae had scarcely noticed him. His eyes were now permanently fastened on Miss Thurston.

While the offering was being taken he was torn between the necessity of watching her and of listening to her playing. He could not do both well. She was accompanying the baritone in an offertory solo, which was simply a hymn, but a hymn sung and played in a new way. He had never heard such accompaniment before. Her fingers seemed to drip melodic sweetness, exquisite as the oil of spikenard. It was soft, full of little hurried runs, and flights of pure fancy; full of deep, single notes held for a period—vibrant, rich; full of eloquent, silent pauses. It was the essence of distilled beauty. Never were two stanzas the same.

Her soul seemed one with the singer's. She anticipated, accompanied, followed his every note with the most fitting of sounds, or the most impressive stillness. Until the song ended, his sense of hearing won the struggle over sight. He listened and thrilled to every vibrant chord.

However, there was more than music in this thrill. He knew that when it stopped and he found himself able once more to yield to his visual impressions. The girl was beautiful, with the beauty of naturalness. He began to tell himself so, and tried to analyze the particular touches which made the whole picture so delightfully pleasing.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Amazing D. Randall MacRae by James Wesley Ingles. Copyright © 1984 The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. Excerpted by permission of Moody Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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