"Oh, yes," the girl answered, "and I could give up the foreign field. It isn't that. But I haven't time to do anything, not even to take a mission-class, and to see so much work waiting, and be able to do nothing--"
"Margaret," the old minister said, "come here."
The girl followed him to the next room, where a mirror hung between the windows. Her reflection, pale and unhappy, faced her wearily.
"All up and down the streets," the old minister said, "in the cars, the markets, the stores, there are people starving for the bread of life. The church can not reach them--they will not enter a church. Books can not help them--many of them never open a book. There is but one way that they can ever read the gospel of hope, of joy, of courage, and that is in the faces of men and women.
"Two years ago a woman who has known deep trouble came to me one day, and asked your name. 'I wanted to tell her,' she said 'how much good her happy face did me, but I was afraid that she would think it was presuming on the part of an utter stranger. Some day, perhaps, you will tell her for me.' Margaret, my child, look in the glass and tell me if the face you see there has anything to give to the souls that are hungry for joy--and they are more than any of us realize--who, unknown to themselves, are hungering for righteousness. Do you think that woman, if she were to meet you now, would say what she said two years ago?"
The girl gave one glance and then turned away, her cheeks crimson with shame. It was hard to answer, but she was no coward. She looked up into her old friend's grave eyes.
"Thank you," she said; "I will try to learn my lesson and accept my mission--to the streets."