The voice of the speaker broke as
she uttered the last sentence. A deep silence
fell upon the little company. Mrs. Birtwell had
turned her face, so that it could not be seen, and
tears that she was unable to keep back were falling
over it. She was first to speak.
“What,” she asked, “was
this young lady doing at the house of your friend?”
“She had applied for the situation
of day-governess. My friend advertised, and Ethel
Ridley, not knowing that the lady had any knowledge
of her or her family came and offered herself for the
place. Not being able to decide what was best
to be done, she requested Ethel to call again on the
next day, and I came in while she was there.”
“Did your friend engage her?” asked Mrs.
Birtwell.
“She had not done so when I
saw her yesterday. The question of fitness for
the position was one that she had not been able to
determine. Ethel is young and inexperienced.
But she will do all for her that lies in her power.”
“What is your friend’s name?” asked
Mrs. Birtwell.
“The lady I refer to is Mrs. Sandford.
You know her, I believe?”
“Mrs. Sandford? Yes; I know her very well.”
By a mutual and tacit consent the
subject was here dropped, and soon after Mrs. Birtwell
retired. On gaining the street she stood with
an air of indetermination for a little while, and
then walked slowly away. Once or twice before
reaching the end of the block she paused and went
back a few steps, turned and moved on again, but still
in an undecided manner. At the corner she stopped
for several moments, then, as if her mind was made
up, walked forward rapidly. By the firm set of
her mouth and the contraction of her brows it was
evident that some strong purpose was taking shape in
her thoughts.
As she was passing a handsome residence
before which a carriage was standing a lady came out.
She had been making a call. On seeing her Mrs.
Birtwell stopped, and reaching out her hand, said:
“Mrs. Sandford! Oh, I’m
glad to see you. I was just going to your house.”
The lady took her hand, and grasping
it warmly, responded:
“And I’m right glad to
see you, Mrs. Birtwell. I’ve been thinking
about you all day. Step into the carriage.
I shall drive directly home.”
Mrs. Birtwell accepted the invitation.
As the carriage moved away she said:
“I heard something to-day that
troubles me. I am told that Mr. Ridley, since
the death of his wife, has become very intemperate,
and that his family are destitute—so much
so, indeed, that his daughter has applied to you for
the situation of day-governess in order to earn something
for their support.”
“It is too true,” replied
Mrs. Sandford. “The poor child came to see
me in answer to an advertisement.”
“Have you engaged her?”
“No. She is too young and
inexperienced for the place. But something must
be done for her.”
“What? Have you thought
out anything? You may count on my sympathy and
co-operation.”
“The first thing to be done,”
replied Mrs. Sandford, “is to lift her out of
her present wretched condition. She must not be
left where she is, burdened with the support of her
drunken and debased father. She is too weak for
that—too young and beautiful and innocent
to be left amid the temptations and sorrows of a life
such as she must lead if no one comes to her rescue.”
“But what will become of her
father if you remove his child from him?” asked
Mrs. Birtwell.
Her voice betrayed concern. The
carriage stopped at the residence of Mrs. Sandford,
and the two ladies went in.
“What will become of her wretched father?”
Mrs. Birtwell repeated her question as they entered
the parlors.
“He is beyond our reach,”
was answered. “When a man falls so low,
the case is hopeless. He is the slave of an appetite
that never gives up its victims. It is a sad
and a sorrowful thing, I know, to abandon all efforts
to save a human soul, to see it go drafting off into
the rapids with the sound of the cataract in your ears,
and it is still more sad and sorrowful to be obliged
to hold back the loving ones who could only perish
in their vain attempts at rescue. So I view the
case. Ethel must not be permitted to sacrifice
herself for her father.”
Mrs. Birtwell sat for a long time
without replying. Her eyes were bent upon the
floor.
“Hopeless!” she murmured,
at length, in a low voice that betrayed the pain she
felt. “Surely that cannot be so. While
there is life there must be hope. God is not
dead.”
She uttered the last sentence with
a strong rising inflection in her tones.
“But the drunkard seems dead
to all the saving influences that God or man can bring
to bear upon him,” replied Mrs. Sandford.
“No, no, no! I will not
believe it,” said Mrs. Birtwell, speaking now
with great decision of manner. “God can
and does save to the uttermost all who come unto him.”
“Yes, all who come unto him.
But men like Mr. Ridley seem to have lost the power
of going to God.”
“Then is it not our duty to
help them to go? A man with a broken leg cannot
walk to the home where love and care await him, but
his Good Samaritan neighbor who finds him by the way
can help him thither. The traveler benumbed with
cold lies helpless in the road, and will perish if
some merciful hand does not lift him up and bear him
to a place of safety. Even so these unhappy men
who, as you say, seem to have lost the power of returning
to God, can be lifted up, I am sure, and set down,
as it were, in his very presence, there to feel his
saving, comforting and renewing power.”
“Perhaps so. Nothing is
impossible,” said Mrs. Sandford, with but little
assent in her voice. “But who is to lift
them up and where will you take them? Let us
instance Mr. Ridley for the sake of illustration.
What will you do with him? How will you go about
the work of rescue? Tell me.”
Mrs. Birtwell had nothing to propose.
She only felt an intense yearning to save this man,
and in her yearning an undefined confidence had been
born. There must be away to save even the most
wretched and abandoned of human beings, if we could
but find that way, and so she would not give up her
hope of Mr. Ridley—nay, her hope grew stronger
every moment; and to all the suggestions of Mrs. Sanford
looking to help for the daughter she supplemented
something that included the father, and so pressed
her views that the other became half impatient and
exclaimed:
“I will have nothing to do with the miserable
wretch!”
Mrs. Birtwell went away with a heavy
heart after leaving a small sum of money for Mrs.
Sandford to use as her judgment might dictate, saying
that she would call and see her again in a few days.
The Rev. Mr. Brantly Elliott was sitting
in his pleasant study, engaged in writing, when a
servant opened the door and said:
“A gentleman wishes to see you, sir.”
“What name?” asked the clergyman.
“He did not give me his name.
I asked him, but he said it wasn’t any matter.
I think he’s been drinking, sir.”
“Ask him to send his name,”
said Mr. Elliott, a slight shade of displeasure settling
over his pleasant face.
The servant came back with information
that the visitor’s name was Ridley. At
mention of this name the expression on Mr. Elliott’s
countenance changed:
“Did you say he was in liquor?”
“Yes, sir. Shall I tell him that you cannot
see him, sir?”
“No. Is he very much the worse for drink?”
“He’s pretty bad, I should say, sir.”
Mr. Elliott reflected for a little while, and then
said:
“I will see him.”
The servant retired. In a few
minutes he came back, and opening the door, let the
visitor pass in. He stood for a few moments, with
his hand on the door, as if unwilling to leave Mr.
Elliott alone with the miserable-looking creature
he had brought to the study. Observing him hesitate,
Mr. Elliott said:
“That will do, Richard.”
The servant shut the door, and he
was alone with Mr. Ridley. Of the man’s
sad story he was not altogether ignorant. His
fall from the high position to which he had risen
in two years and utter abandonment of himself to drink
were matters of too much notoriety to have escaped
his knowledge. But that he was in the slightest
degree responsible for this wreck of a human soul was
so far from his imagination as that of his responsibility
for the last notorious murder or bank-robbery.
The man who now stood before him was
a pitiable-looking object indeed. Not that he
was ragged or filthy in attire or person. Though
all his garments were poor and threadbare, they were
not soiled nor in disorder. Either a natural
instinct of personal cleanliness yet remained or a
loving hand had cared for him. But he was pitiable
in the signs of a wrecked and fallen manhood that
were visible everywhere about him. You saw it
most in his face, once so full of strength and intelligence,
now so weak and dull and disfigured. The mouth
so mobile and strong only a few short months before
was now drooping and weak, its fine chiseling all
obliterated or overlaid with fever crusts. His
eyes, once steady and clear as eagles’, were
now bloodshotten and restless.
He stood looking fixedly at Mr. Elliott,
and with a gleam in his eyes that gave the latter
a strange feeling of discomfort, if not uneasiness.
“Mr. Ridley” said the
clergyman, advancing to his visitor and extending
his hand. He spoke kindly, yet with a reserve
that could not be laid aside. “What can
I do for you?”
A chair was offered, and Mr. Ridley
sat down. He had come with a purpose; that was
plain from his manner.
“I am sorry to see you in this
condition, Mr. Ridley,” said the clergyman,
who felt it to be his duty to speak a word of reproof.
“In what condition, sir?”
demanded the visitor, drawing himself up with an air
of offended dignity. “I don’t understand
you.”
“You have been drinking,”
said Mr. Elliott, in a tone of severity.
“No, sir. I deny it, sir!”
and the eyes of Mr. Ridley flashed. “Before
Heaven, sir, not a drop has passed my lips to-day!”
His breath, loaded with the fumes
of a recent glass of whisky, was filling the clergyman’s
nostrils. Mr. Elliott was confounded by this
denial. What was to be done with such a man?
“Not a drop, sir,” repeated
Mr. Ridley. “The vile stuff is killing
me. I must give it up.”
“It is your only hope,”
said the clergyman. “You must give up the
vile stuff, as you call it, or it will indeed kill
you.”
“That’s just why I’ve
come to you, Mr. Elliott. You understand this
matter better than most people. I’ve heard
you talk.”
“Heard me talk?”
“Yes, sir. It’s pure
wine that the people want. My sentiments exactly.
If we had pure wine, we’d have no drunkenness.
You know that as well as I do. I’ve heard
you talk, Mr. Elliott, and you talk right—yes,
right, sir.”
“When did you hear me talk?”
asked Mr. Elliott, who was beginning to feel worried.
Oh, at a party last winter. I
was there and heard you.”
“What did I say?”
“Just these words, and they
took right hold of me. You said that ’pure
wine could hurt no one, unless indeed his appetite
were vitiated by the use of alcohol, and even then
you believed that the moderate use of strictly pure
wine would restore the normal taste and free a man
from the tyranny of an enslaving vice.’
That set me to thinking. It sounded just right.
And then you were a clergyman, you see, and had studied
out these things and so your opinion was worth something.
There’s no reason in your cold-water men; they
don’t believe in anything but their patent cut-off.
In their eyes wine is an abomination, the mother of
all evil, though the Bible doesn’t say so, Mr.
Elliott, does it?”
At this reference to the Bible in
connection with wine, the clergyman’s memory
supplied a few passages that were not at the moment
pleasant to recall. Such as, “Wine is a
mocker;” “Look not upon the wine when
it is red;” “Who hath woe? who hath sorrow?
... They that tarry long at the wine;”
“At last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth
like an adder.”
“The Bible speaks often of the
misuse of wine,” he answered, “and strongly
condemns drunkenness.”
“Of course it does, and gluttony
as well. But against the moderate use of good
wine not a word is said. Isn’t that so,
sir?”
“Six months ago you were a sober
man, Mr. Ridley, and a useful and eminent citizen.
Why did you not remain so?”
Mr. Elliott almost held his breath
for the answer. He had waived the discussion
into which his visitor was drifting, and put his question
almost desperately.
“Because your remedy failed.”
Mr. Ridley spoke in a repressed voice, but with a
deliberate utterance. There was a glitter in his
eyes, out of which looked an evil triumph.
“My remedy? What remedy?”
“The good wine remedy.
I tried it at Mr. Birtwell’s one night last
winter. But it didn’t work. And here
I am!”
Mr. Elliott made no reply. A
blow from the arm of a strong man could not have hurt
or stunned him more.
“You needn’t feel so dreadfully
about it,” said Mr. Ridley seeing the effect
produced on the clergy man. “It wasn’t
any fault of yours. The prescription was all
right, but, you see, the wine wasn’t good.
If it had been pure, the kind you drink, all would
have been well. I should have gained strength
instead of having the props knocked from under me.”
But Mr. Elliott did not answer.
The magnitude of the evil wrought through his unguarded
speech appalled him. He had learned, in his profession,
to estimate the value of a human soul, or rather to
consider it as of priceless value. And here was
a human soul cast by his hand into a river whose swift
waters were hurrying it on to destruction. The
sudden anguish that he felt sent beads of sweat to
his forehead and drew his flexible lips into rigid
lines.
“Now, don’t be troubled
about it,” urged Mr. Ridley. “You
were all right. It was Mr. Birtwell’s bad
wine that did the mischief.”
Then his manner changed, and his voice
falling to a tone of solicitation, he said:
“And now, Mr. Elliott, you know
good wine—you don’t have anything
else. I believe in your theory as much as I believe
in my existence. It stands to reason. I’m
all broken up and run down. Not much left of
me, you see. Bad liquor is killing me, and I can’t
stop. If I do, I shall die.’ God help
me!”
His voice shook now, and the muscles
of his face quivered.
“Some good wine—some
pure wine, Mr. Elliott!” he went on, his voice
rising and his manner becoming more excited. “It’s
all over with me unless I can get pure wine.
Save me, Mr. Elliott, save me, for God’s sake!”
The miserable man held out his hands
imploringly. There was wild look in his face.
He was trembling from head to foot.
“One glass of pure wine, Mr.
Elliott—just one glass.” Thus
he kept on pleading for the stimulant his insatiable
appetite was craving. “I’m a drowning
man. The floods are about me. I am sinking
in dark waters. And you can save me if you will!”
Seeing denial still on the clergyman’s
face, Mr. Ridley’s manner changed, becoming
angry and violent.
“You will not?” he cried,
starting from the chair in which he had been sitting
and advancing toward Mr. Elliott.
“I cannot. I dare not.
You have been drinking too much already,” replied
the clergyman, stepping back as Mr. Ridley came forward
until he reached the bell-rope, which he jerked violently.
The door of his study opened instantly. His servant,
not, liking the visitor’s appearance, had remained
in the hall outside and came in the moment he heard
the bell. On seeing him enter, Mr. Ridley turned
from the clergyman and stood like one at bay.
His eyes had a fiery gleam; there was anger on his
brow and defiance in the hard lines of his mouth.
He scowled at the servant threateningly. The latter,
a strong and resolute man, only waited for an order
to remove the visitor, which he would have done in
a very summary way, but Mr. Elliott wanted no violence.
The group formed a striking tableau,
and to any spectator who could have viewed it one
of intense interest. For a little while Mr. Ridley
and the servant stood scowling at each other.
Then came a sudden change. A start, a look of
alarm, followed by a low cry of fear, and Mr. Ridley
sprang toward the door, and was out of the room and
hurrying down stairs before a movement could be made
to intercept him, even if there had been on the part
of the other two men any wish to do so.
Mr. Elliott stood listening to the
sound of his departing feet until the heavy jar of
the outer door resounded through the passages and
all became still. A motion of his hand caused
the servant to retire, As he went out Mr. Elliott
sank into a chair. His face had become pale and
distressed. He was sick at heart and sorely troubled.
What did all this mean? Had his unconsidered
words brought forth fruit like this? Was he indeed
responsible for the fall of a weak brother and all
the sad and sorrowful consequences which had followed?
He was overwhelmed, crushed down, agonized by the
thought, It was the bitterest moment in all his life.