SO the morning found them fast
asleep. The man awoke first and felt the child
against his bosom, soft and warm. It was some
moments ere he understood what it meant. It seemed
as if the wretched life he had been leading was all
a horrible dream out of which he had awakened, and
that the child sleeping in his bosom was his own tenderly-loved
baby. But the sweet illusions faded away, and
the hard, sorrowful truth stood out sternly before
him.
Then Andy’s eyes opened and
looked into his face. There was nothing scared
in the look-hardly an expression of surprise.
But the man saw a mute appeal and a tender confidence
that made his heart swell and yearn toward the homeless
little one.
“Had a nice sleep?” he
asked, in a tone of friendly encouragement.
Andy nodded his head, and then gazed
curiously about the room.
“Want some breakfast?”
The hungry face lit up with a flash of pleasure.
“Of course you do, little one.”
The man was on his feet by this time,
with his hand in his pocket, from which he drew a
number of pennies. These he counted over carefully
twice. The number was just ten. If there
had been only himself to provide for, it would not
have taken long to settle the question of expenditure.
Five cents at an eating-shop where the caterer supplied
himself from the hodge-podge of beggars’ baskets
would have given him a breakfast fit for a dog or pig,
while the remaining five cents would have gone for
fiery liquor to quench a burning thirst.
But another mouth had too be fed.
All at once this poor degraded man had risen to a
sense of responsibility, and was practicing the virtue
of self-denial. A little child was leading him.
He had no toilette to make, no ablutions
to practice. There was neither pail nor wash-basin
in his miserable kennel. So, without any delay
of preparation, he caught up the broken mug and went
out, as forlorn a looking wretch as was to be seen
in all that region. Almost every house that he
passed was a grog-shop, and his nerves were all unstrung
and his mouth and throat dry from a night’s
abstinence. But he was able to go by without a
pause. In a few minutes he returned with a loaf
of bread, a pint of milk and a single dried sausage.
What a good breakfast the two made.
Not for a long time had the man so enjoyed a meal.
The sight of little Andy, as he ate with the fine
relish of a hungry child, made his dry bread and sausage
taste sweeter than anything that had passed his lips
for weeks.
Something more than the food he had
taken steadied the man’s nerves and allayed
his thirst. Love was beating back into his heart—love
for this homeless wanderer, whose coming had supplied
the lost links in the chain which bound him to the
past and called up memories that had slept almost
the sleep of death for years. Good resolutions
began forming in his mind.
“It may be,” he said to
himself as new and better impressions than he had
known for a long time began to crowd upon him, “that
God has led this baby here.”
The thought sent a strange thrill
to his soul. He trembled with excess of feeling.
He had once been a religious man; and with the old
instinct of dependence on God, he clasped his hands
together with a sudden, desperate energy, and looking
up, cried, in a half-despairing, half-trustful voice,
“Lord, help me!”
No earnest cry like that ever goes
up without an instant answer in the gift of divine
strength. The man felt it in a stronger purpose
and a quickening hope. He was conscious of a new
power in himself.
“God being my helper,”
he said in the silence of his heart, “I will
be a man again.”
There was a long distance between
him and a true manhood. The way back was over
very rough and difficult places, and through dangers
and temptations almost impossible to resist. Who
would have faith in him? Who would help him in
his great extremity? How was he to live?
Not any longer by begging or petty theft. He must
do honest work. There was no hope in anything
else. If God were to be his helper, he must be
honest, and work. To this conviction he had come.
But what was to be done with Andy
while he was away trying to earn something? The
child might get hurt in the street or wander off in
his absence and never find his way back. The care
he felt for the little one was pleasure compared to
the thought of losing him.
As for Andy, the comfort of a good
breakfast and the feeling that he had a home, mean
as it was, and somebody to care for him, made his
heart light and set his lips to music.
When before had the dreary walls of
that poor hovel echoed to the happy voice of a light-hearted
child? But there was another echo to the voice,
and from walls as long a stranger to such sounds as
these—the walls in the chambers of that
poor man’s memory. A wellnigh lost and
ruined soul was listening to the far-off voices of
children. Sunny-haired little ones were thronging
about him; he was looking into their tender eyes;
their soft arms were clinging to his neck; he was
holding them tightly clasped to his bosom.
“Baby,” he said.
It was the word that came most naturally to his lips.
Andy, who was sitting where a few
sunbeams came in through a rent in the wall, with
the warm light on his head, turned and looked into
the bleared but friendly eyes gazing at him so earnestly.
“I’m going out, baby.
Will you stay here till I come back?”
“Yes,” answered the child, “I’ll
stay.”
“I won’t be gone very
long, and I’ll bring you an apple and something
good for dinner.”
Andy’s face lit up and his eyes danced.
“Don’t go out until I
come back. Somebody might carry you off, and
then I couldn’t give you the nice red apple.”
“I’ll stay right here,” said Andy,
in a positive tone.
“And won’t go into the street till I come
back?”
“No, I won’t.” Andy knit his
brows and closed his lips firmly.
“All right, little one,”
answered the man, in a cheery sort of voice that was
so strange to his own ears that it seemed like the
voice of somebody else.
Still, he could not feel satisfied.
He was living in the midst of thieves to whom the
most insignificant thing upon which they could lay
their hands was booty. Children who had learned
to be hard and cruel thronged the court, and he feared,
if he left Andy alone in the hovel, that it would
not only be robbed of its meagre furniture, but the
child subjected to ill-treatment. He had always
fastened the door on going out, but hesitated now
about locking Andy in.
All things considered, it was safest,
he felt, to lock the door. There was nothing
in the room that could bring harm to the child—no
fire or matches, no stairs to climb or windows out
of which he could fall.
“I guess I’d better lock
the door, hadn’t I, so that nobody can carry
off my little boy?” he asked of Andy.
Andy made no objections. He was
ready for anything his kind friend might propose.
“And you mustn’t cry or
make a noise. The police might break in if you
did.”
“All right,” said Andy,
with the self-assertion of a boy of ten.
The man stroked the child’s
head and ran his fingers through his hair in a fond
way; then, as one who tore himself from an object of
attraction, went hastily out and locked the door.
And now was to begin a new life.
Friendless, debased, repulsive in appearance, everything
about him denoting the abandoned drunkard, this man
started forth to get honest bread. Where should
he go? What could he do? Who would give
employment to an object like him? The odds were
fearfully against him—no, not that, either.
In outward respects, fearful enough were the odds,
but on the other side agencies invisible to mortal
sight were organizing for his safety. In to his
purpose to lead a new life and help a poor homeless
child God’s strength was flowing. Angels
were drawing near to a miserable wreck of humanity
with hands outstretched to save. All heaven was
coming to the rescue.
He was shuffling along in the direction
of a market-house, hoping to earn a little by carrying
home baskets, when he came face to face with an old
friend of his better days, a man with whom he had once
held close business relations.
“Mr. Hall!” exclaimed
this man in a tone of sorrowful surprise, stopping
and looking at him with an expression of deepest pity
on his countenance. “This is dreadful!”
“You may well say that, Mr.
Graham. It dreadful enough. No one knows
that better than I do,” was answered, with a
bitterness that his old friend felt to be genuine.
“Why, then, lead this terrible
life a day longer?” asked the friend.
“I shall not lead it a day longer
if God will help me,” was replied, with a genuineness
of purpose that was felt by Mr. Graham.
“Give me your hand on that,
Andrew Hall,” he exclaimed. Two hands closed
in a tight grip.
“Where are you going now?” inquired the
friend.
“I’m in search of something
to do—something that will give me honest
bread. Look at my hand.”
He held it up.
“It shakes, you see. I
have not tasted liquor this morning. I could
have bought it, but I did not.”
“Why?”
“I said, ‘God being my
helper, I will be a man again,’ and I am trying.”
“Andrew Hall,” said his
old friend, solemnly, as he laid his hand on his shoulder,
“if you are really in earnest—if you
do mean, in the help of God, to try—all
will be well. But in his help alone is there
any hope. Have you seen Mr. Paulding?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“He has no faith in me. I have deceived
him too often.”
“What ground of faith is there now?” asked
Mr. Graham.
“This,” was the firm but
hastily spoken answer. “Last night as I
sat in the gloom of my dreary hovel, feeling so wretched
that I wished I could die, a little child came in—a
poor, motherless, homeless wanderer, almost a baby—and
crept down to my heart, and he is lying there still,
Mr. Graham, soft, and warm and precious, a sweet burden
to bear. I bought him a supper and a breakfast
of bread and milk with the money, I had saved for
drink, and now, both for his sake and mine, I am out
seeking for work. I have locked him in, so that
no one can harm or carry him away while I earn enough
to buy him his dinner, and maybe something better
to wear, poor little homeless thing!”
There was a genuine earnestness and
pathos about the man that could not be mistaken.
“I think,” said Mr. Graham,
his voice not quite steady, “that God brought
us together this morning. I know Mr. Paulding.
Let us go first to the mission, and have some talk
with him. You must have a bath and better, and
cleaner clothes before you are in a condition to get
employment.”
The bath and a suit of partly-worn
but good clean clothes were supplied at the mission
house.
“Now come with me, and I will
find you something to do,” said the old friend.
But Andrew Hall stood hesitating.
“The little child—I
told him I’d come back soon. He’s
locked up all alone, poor baby!”
He spoke with a quiver in his voice.
“Oh, true, true!” answered
Mr. Graham; “the baby must be looked after;”
and he explained to the missionary.
“I will go round with you and
get the child,” said Mr. Paulding. “My
wife will take care of him while you are away with
Mr. Graham.”
They found little Andy sitting patiently
on the floor. He did not know the friend who
had given him a home and food and loving words, and
looked at him half scared and doubting. But his
voice made the child spring to his feet with a bound,
and flushed his thin-face with the joy of a glad recognition.
Mrs. Paulding received him with a
true motherly kindness, and soon a bath and clean
clothing wrought as great a change in the child as
they had done in the man.
“I want your help in saving
him,” said Mr. Graham, aside, to the missionary.
“He was once among our most respectable citizens,
a good church-member, a good husband and father, a
man of ability and large influence. Society lost
much when it lost him. He is well worth saving,
and we must do it if possible. God sent him this
little child to touch his heart and flood it with
old memories, and then he led me to come down here
that I might meet and help him just when his good
purposes made help needful and salvation possible.
It is all of his loving care and wise providence of
his tender mercy, which is over the poorest and weakest
and most degraded of his children. Will you give
him your special care?”
“It is the work I am here to
do,” answered the missionary. “The
Master came to seek and to save that which was lost,
and I am his humble follower.”
“The child will have to be provided
for,” said Mr. Graham. “It cannot,
of course, be left with him. It needs a woman’s
care.”
“It will not do to separate
them,” returned the missionary. “As
you remarked just now, God sent him this little child
to touch his heart and lead him back from the wilderness
in which he has strayed. His safety depends on
the touch of that hand. So long as he feels its
clasp and its pull, he will walk in the new way wherein
God is setting his feet. No, no; the child must
be left with him—at least for the present.
We will take care of it while he is at work during
the day, and at night it can sleep in his arms, a protecting
angel.”
“What kind of a place does he
live in?” asked Mr. Graham.
“A dog might dwell there in
comfort, but not a man,” replied the missionary.
Mr. Graham gave him money: “Provide
a decent room. If more is required, let me know.”
He then went away, taking Mr. Hall with him.
“You will find the little one
here when you come back,” said Mr. Paulding
as he saw the anxious, questioning look that was cast
toward Andy.
Clothed and in his right mind, but
in no condition for work, was Andrew Hall. Mr.
Graham soon noticed, as he walked by his side, that
he was in a very nervous condition.
“What had you for breakfast
this morning” he asked, the right thought coming
into his mind.
“Not much. Some bread and a dried sausage.”
“Oh dear! that will never do!
You must have something more nutritious—a
good beefsteak and a cup of coffee to steady your
nerves. Come.”
And in a few minutes they were in
an eating-house. When they came out, Hall was
a different man. Mr. Graham then took him to his
store and set him to work to arrange and file a number
of letters and papers, which occupied him for several
hours. He saw that he had a good dinner and at
five o’clock gave him a couple of dollars for
his day’s work, aid after many kind words of
advice and assurance told him to come back in the
morning, and he would find something else for him
to do.
Swiftly as his feet would carry him,
Andrew Hall made his way to the Briar street mission.
He did not at first know the clean, handsome child
that lifted his large brown eyes to his face as he
came in, nor did the child know him until he spoke.
Then a cry of pleasure broke from the baby’s
lips, and he ran to the arms reached out to clasp
him.
“We’ll go home now,”
he said, as if anxious to regain possession of the
child.
“Not back to Grubb’s court,”
was answered by Mr. Paulding. “If you are
going to be a new man, you must have a new and better
home, and I’ve found one for you just a little
way from here. It’s a nice clean room,
and I’ll take you there. The rent is six
dollars a month, but you can easily pay that when
you get fairly to work.”
The room was in the second story of
a small house, better kept than most of its neighbors,
and contained a comfortable bed, with other needed
furniture, scanty, but clean and good. It was
to Mr. Hall like the chamber of a prince compared
with what he had known for a long time; and as he
looked around him and comprehended something of the
blessed change that was coming over his life, tears
filled his eyes.
“Bring Andy around in the morning,”
said the missionary as he turned to go. “Mrs.
Paulding will take good care of him.”
That night, after undressing the child
and putting on him the clean night-gown which good
Mrs. Paulding had not forgotten, he said,
“And now Andy will say his prayers.”
Andy looked at him with wide-open,
questioning eyes. Mr. Hall saw that he was not
understood.
“You know, ’Now I lay me’?”
he said.
“No, don’t know it,” replied Andy.
“‘Our Father,’ then?”
The child knit his brow. It was
plain that he did not understand what his good friend
meant.
“You’ve said your prayers?”
Andy shook his head in a bewildered way.
“Never said your prayers!”
exclaimed Mr. Hall, in a voice so full of surprise
and pain that Andy grew half frightened.
“Poor baby!” was said,
pityingly, a moment after. Then the question,
“Wouldn’t you like to say your prayers?”
brought the quick answer, “Yes.”
“Kneel down, then, right here.”
Andy knelt, looking up almost wonderingly into the
face that bent over him.
“We have a good Father in heaven,”
said Mr. Hall, with tender reverence in his tone,
pointing upward as he spoke, “He loves us and
takes care of us. He brought you to me, and told
me to love you and take care of you for him, and I’m
going to do it. Now, I want you to say a little
prayer to this good and kind Father before you go to
bed. Will you?”
“Yes, I will,” came the ready answer.
“Say it over after me. ‘Now I lay
me down to sleep.’”
Andy repeated the words, his little
hands clasped together, and followed through the verse
which thousands of little children in thousands of
Christian homes were saying at the very same hour.
There was a subdued expression on
the child’s face as he rose from his knees;
and when Mr. Hall lifted him from the floor to lay
him in bed, he drew his arms about his neck and hugged
him tightly.
How beautiful the child looked as
he lay with shut eyes, the long brown lashes fringing
his flushed cheeks, that seemed already to have gained
a healthy roundness! The soft breath came through
his parted lips, about which still lingered the smile
of peace that rested there after his first prayer
was said; his little hands lay upon his breast.
As Mr. Hall sat gazing at this picture
there came a rap on his door. Then the missionary
entered. Neither of the men spoke for some moments.
Mr. Paulding comprehended the scene, and felt its sweet
and holy influence.
“Blessed childhood!” he
said, breaking the silence. “Innocent childhood!
The nearer we come to it, the nearer we get to heaven.”
Then, after a pause, he added, “And heaven is
our only hope, Mr. Hall.”
“I have no hope but in God’s
strength,” was answered, in a tone of solemn
earnestness.
“God is our refuge, our rock
of defence, our hiding-place, our sure protector.
If we trust in him, we shall dwell in safety,”
said the mission. “I am glad to hear you
speak of hoping in God. He will give you strength
if you lean upon him, and there is not power enough
in all hell to drag you down if you put forth this
God-given strength. But remember, my friend,
that you must use it as if it were your own.
You must resist. God’s strength outside
of our will and effort is of no use to any of us in
temptation. But looking to our Lord and Saviour
in humble yet earnest prayer for help in the hour of
trial and need if we put forth our strength in resistance
of evil, small though it be, then into our weak efforts
will come an influx of divine power that shall surely
give us the victory. Have you a Bible?”
Mr. Hall shook his head.
“I have brought you one;”
and the missionary drew a small Bible from his pocket.
“No man is safe without a Bible.”
“Oh, I am glad! I was just
wishing for a Bible,” said Hall as he reached
out his hand to receive the precious book.
“If you read it every night
and morning—if you treasure its holy precepts
in your memory, and call them up in times of trial,
or when evil enticements are in your way—God
can come near to your soul to succor and to save,
for the words of the holy book are his words, and
he is present in them. If we take them into our
thoughts, reverently seeking to obey them, we make
a dwelling-place for the Lord, so that he can abide
with us; and in his presence there is safety.”
“And nowhere else,” responded
Hall, speaking from a deep sense of personal helplessness.
“Nowhere else,” echoed
the missionary. “And herein lies the hope
or the despair of men. It is pitiful, it is heart-aching,
to see the vain but wild and earnest efforts made
by the slaves of intemperance to get free from their
cruel bondage. Thousands rend their fetters every
year after some desperate struggle, and escape.
But, alas! how many are captured and taken back into
slavery! Appetite springs upon them in some unguarded
moment, and in their weakness there is none to succor.
They do not go to the Strong for strength, but trust
in themselves, and are cast down. Few are ever
redeemed from the slavery of intemperance but those
who pray to God and humbly seek his aid. And
so long as they depend on him, they are safe.
He will be as a wall of fire about them.”
As the missionary talked, the face
of Mr. Hall underwent a remarkable change. It
grew solemn and very thoughtful. His hands drew
together and the fingers clasped. At the last
words of Mr. Paulding a deep groan came from his heart;
and lifting his gaze upward, he cried out,
“Lord, save me, or I perish!”
“Let us pray,” said the
missionary, and the two men knelt together, one with
bowed head and crouching body, the other with face
uplifted, tenderly talking to Him who had come down
to the lowliest and the vilest that he might make
them pure as the angels, about the poor prodigal now
coming back to his Father’s house.
After the prayer, Mr. paulding read
a chapter from the Bible aloud, and then, after words
of hope and comfort, went away.