Chapter Eleven
DONALD MARSH, President of Lincoln
College, walked home with Mr. Maxwell.
"I have reached one conclusion,
Maxwell," said Marsh, speaking slowly.
"I have found my cross and it is a heavy
one, but I shall never be satisfied
until I take it up and carry it."
Maxwell was silent and the President
went on.
"Your sermon today made clear to me
what I have long been feeling I ought to
do. 'What would Jesus do in my place?' I
have asked the question repeatedly since
I made my promise. I have tried to
satisfy myself that He would simply go
on as I have done, attending to the
duties of my college work, teaching the
classes in Ethics and Philosophy. But I
have not been able to avoid the feeling
that He would do something more. That
something is what I do not want to do.
It will cause me genuine suffering to do
it. I dread it with all my soul. You may
be able to guess what it is."
"Yes, I think I know. It is my
cross too. I would almost rather do any
thing else."
Donald Marsh looked surprised, then
relieved. Then he spoke sadly but with
great conviction:
"Maxwell, you and I belong to a
class of professional men who have
always avoided the duties of
citizenship. We have lived in a little
world of literature and scholarly
seclusion, doing work we have enjoyed
and shrinking from the disagreeable
duties that belong to the life of the
citizen. I confess with shame that I
have purposely avoided the
responsibility that I owe to this city
personally. I understand that our city
officials are a corrupt, unprincipled
set of men, controlled in large part by
the whiskey element and thoroughly
selfish so far as the affairs of city
government are concerned. Yet all these
years I, with nearly every teacher in
the college, have been satisfied to let
other men run the municipality and have
lived in a little world of my own, out
of touch and sympathy with the real
world of the people. 'What would Jesus
do?' I have even tried to avoid an
honest answer. I can no longer do so. My
plain duty is to take a personal part in
this coming election, go to the
primaries, throw the weight of my
influence, whatever it is, toward the
nomination and election of good men, and
plunge into the very depths of the
entire horrible whirlpool of deceit,
bribery, political trickery and
saloonism as it exists in Raymond today.
I would sooner walk up to the mouth of a
cannon any time than do this. I dread it
because I hate the touch of the whole
matter. I would give almost any thing to
be able to say, 'I do not believe Jesus
would do anything of the sort.' But I am
more and more persuaded that He would.
This is where the suffering comes for
me. It would not hurt me half so much to
lose my position or my home. I loathe
the contact with this municipal problem.
I would so much prefer to remain quietly
in my scholastic life with my classes in
Ethics and Philosophy. But the call has
come to me so plainly that I cannot
escape. 'Donald Marsh, follow me. Do
your duty as a citizen of Raymond at the
point where your citizenship will cost
you something. Help to cleanse this
municipal stable, even if you do have to
soil your aristocratic feelings a
little.' Maxwell, this is my cross, I
must take it up or deny my Lord."
"You have spoken for me also,"
replied Maxwell with a sad smile. "Why
should I, simply because I am a
minister, shelter myself behind my
refined, sensitive feelings, and like a
coward refuse to touch, except in a
sermon possibly, the duty of
citizenship? I am unused to the ways of
the political life of the city. I have
never taken an active part in any
nomination of good men. There are
hundreds of ministers like me. As a
class we do not practice in the
municipal life the duties and privileges
we preach from the pulpit. 'What would
Jesus do?' I am now at a point where,
like you, I am driven to answer the
question one way. My duty is plain. I
must suffer. All my parish work, all my
little trials or self-sacrifices are as
nothing to me compared with the breaking
into my scholarly, intellectual,
self-contained habits, of this open,
coarse, public fight for a clean city
life. I could go and live at the
Rectangle the rest of my life and work
in the slums for a bare living, and I
could enjoy it more than the thought of
plunging into a fight for the reform of
this whiskey-ridden city. It would cost
me less. But, like you, I have been
unable to shake off my responsibility.
The answer to the question 'What would
Jesus do?' in this case leaves me no
peace except when I say, Jesus would
have me act the part of a Christian
citizen. Marsh, as you say, we
professional men, ministers, professors,
artists, literary men, scholars, have
almost invariably been political
cowards. We have avoided the sacred
duties of citizenship either ignorantly
or selfishly. Certainly Jesus in our age
would not do that. We can do no less
than take up this cross, and follow
Him."
The two men walked on in silence
for a while. Finally President Marsh
said:
"We do not need to act alone in
this matter. With all the men who have
made the promise we certainly can have
companionship, and strength even, of
numbers. Let us organize the Christian
forces of Raymond for the battle against
rum and corruption. We certainly ought
to enter the primaries with a force that
will be able to do more than enter a
protest. It is a fact that the saloon
element is cowardly and easily
frightened in spite of its lawlessness
and corruption. Let us plan a campaign
that will mean something because it is
organized righteousness. Jesus would use
great wisdom in this matter. He would
employ means. He would make large plans.
Let us do so. If we bear this cross let
us do it bravely, like men."
They talked over the matter a long
time and met again the next day in
Maxwell's study to develop plans. The
city primaries were called for Friday.
Rumors of strange and unknown events to
the average citizen were current that
week in political circles throughout
Raymond. The Crawford system of
balloting for nominations was not in use
in the state, and the primary was called
for a public meeting at the court house.
The citizens of Raymond will never
forget that meeting. It was so unlike
any political meeting ever held in
Raymond before, that there was no
attempt at comparison. The special
officers to be nominated were mayor,
city council, chief of police, city
clerk and city treasurer.
The evening NEWS in its Saturday
edition gave a full account of the
primaries, and in the editorial columns
Edward Norman spoke with a directness
and conviction that the Christian people
of Raymond were learning to respect
deeply, because it was so evidently
sincere and unselfish. A part of that
editorial is also a part of this
history. We quote the following:
"It is safe to say that never
before in the history of Raymond was
there a primary like the one in the
court house last night. It was, first of
all, a complete surprise to the city
politicians who have been in the habit
of carrying on the affairs of the city
as if they owned them, and every one
else was simply a tool or a cipher. The
overwhelming surprise of the wire
pullers last night consisted in the fact
that a large number of the citizens of
Raymond who have heretofore taken no
part in the city's affairs, entered the
primary and controlled it, nominating
some of the best men for all the offices
to be filled at the coming election.
"It was a tremendous lesson in good
citizenship. President Marsh of Lincoln
College, who never before entered a city
primary, and whose face was not even
known to the ward politicians, made one
of the best speeches ever made in
Raymond. It was almost ludicrous to see
the faces of the men who for years have
done as they pleased, when President
Marsh rose to speak. Many of them asked,
'Who is he?' The consternation deepened
as the primary proceeded and it became
evident that the oldtime ring of city
rulers was outnumbered. Rev. Henry
Maxwell of the First Church, Milton
Wright, Alexander Powers, Professors
Brown, Willard and Park of Lincoln
College, Dr. West, Rev. George Main of
the Pilgrim Church, Dean Ward of the
Holy Trinity, and scores of well-known
business men and professional men, most
of them church members, were present,
and it did not take long to see that
they had all come with the one direct
and definite purpose of nominating the
best men possible. Most of those men had
never before been seen in a primary.
They were complete strangers to the
politicians. But they had evidently
profited by the politician's methods and
were able by organized and united effort
to nominate the entire ticket.
"As soon as it became plain that
the primary was out of their control the
regular ring withdrew in disgust and
nominated another ticket. The NEWS
simply calls the attention of all decent
citizens to the fact that this last
ticket contains the names of whiskey
men, and the line is sharply and
distinctly drawn between the saloon and
corrupt management such as we have known
for years, and a clean, honest, capable,
business-like city administration, such
as every good citizen ought to want. It
is not necessary to remind the people of
Raymond that the question of local
option comes up at the election. That
will be the most important question on
the ticket. The crisis of our city
affairs has been reached. The issue is
squarely before us. Shall we continue
the rule of rum and boodle and shameless
incompetency, or shall we, as President
Marsh said in his noble speech, rise as
good citizens and begin a new order of
things, cleansing our city of the worst
enemy known to municipal honesty, and
doing what lies in our power to do with
the ballot to purify our civic life?
"The NEWS is positively and without
reservation on the side of the new
movement. We shall henceforth do all in
our power to drive out the saloon and
destroy its political strength. We shall
advocate the election of the men
nominated by the majority of citizens
met in the first primary and we call
upon all Christians, church members,
lovers of right, purity, temperance, and
the home, to stand by President Marsh
and the rest of the citizens who have
thus begun a long-needed reform in our
city."
President Marsh read this editorial
and thanked God for Edward Norman. At
the same time he understood well enough
that every other paper in Raymond was on
the other side. He did not underestimate
the importance and seriousness of the
fight which was only just begun. It was
no secret that the NEWS had lost
enormously since it had been governed by
the standard of "What would Jesus do?"
And the question was, Would the
Christian people of Raymond stand by it?
Would they make it possible for Norman
to conduct a daily Christian paper? Or
would the desire for what is called news
in the way of crime, scandal, political
partisanship of the regular sort, and a
dislike to champion so remarkable a
reform in journalism, influence them to
drop the paper and refuse to give it
their financial support? That was, in
fact, the question Edward Norman was
asking even while he wrote that Saturday
editorial. He knew well enough that his
actions expressed in that editorial
would cost him very heavily from the
hands of many business men in Raymond.
And still, as he drove his pen over the
paper, he asked another question, "What
would Jesus do?" That question had
become a part of this whole life now. It
was greater than any other.
But for the first time in its
history Raymond had seen the
professional men, the teachers, the
college professors, the doctors, the
ministers, take political action and put
themselves definitely and sharply in
public antagonism to the evil forces
that had so long controlled the machine
of municipal government. The fact itself
was astounding. President Marsh
acknowledged to himself with a feeling
of humiliation, that never before had he
known what civic righteousness could
accomplish. From that Friday night's
work he dated for himself and his
college a new definition of the worn
phrase "the scholar in politics."
Education for him and those who were
under his influence ever after meant
some element of suffering. Sacrifice
must now enter into the factor of
development.
At the Rectangle that week the tide
of spiritual life rose high, and as yet
showed no signs of flowing back. Rachel
and Virginia went every night. Virginia
was rapidly reaching a conclusion with
respect to a large part of her money.
She had talked it over with Rachel and
they had been able to agree that if
Jesus had a vast amount of money at His
disposal He might do with some of it as
Virginia planned. At any rate they felt
that whatever He might do in such case
would have as large an element of
variety in it as the differences in
persons and circumstances. There could
be no one fixed Christian way of using
money. The rule that regulated its use
was unselfish utility.
But meanwhile the glory of the
Spirit's power possessed all their best
thought. Night after night that week
witnessed miracles as great as walking
on the sea or feeding the multitude with
a few loaves and fishes. For what
greater miracle is there than a
regenerate humanity? The transformation
of these coarse, brutal, sottish lives
into praying, rapturous lovers of
Christ, struck Rachel and Virginia every
time with the feeling that people may
have had when they saw Lazarus walk out
of the tomb. It was an experience full
of profound excitement for them.
Rollin Page came to all the
meetings. There was no doubt of the
change that had come over him. Rachel
had not yet spoken much with him. He was
wonderfully quiet. It seemed as if he
was thinking all the time. Certainly he
was not the same person. He talked more
with Gray than with any one else. He did
not avoid Rachel, but he seemed to
shrink from any appearance of seeming to
renew the acquaintance with her. Rachel
found it even difficult to express to
him her pleasure at the new life he had
begun to know. He seemed to be waiting
to adjust himself to his previous
relations before this new life began. He
had not forgotten those relations. But
he was not yet able to fit his
consciousness into new ones.
The end of the week found the
Rectangle struggling hard between two
mighty opposing forces. The Holy Spirit
was battling with all His supernatural
strength against the saloon devil which
had so long held a jealous grasp on its
slaves. If the Christian people of
Raymond once could realize what the
contest meant to the souls newly
awakened to a purer life it did not seem
possible that the election could result
in the old system of license. But that
remained yet to be seen. The horror of
the daily surroundings of many of the
converts was slowly burning its way into
the knowledge of Virginia and Rachel,
and every night as they went uptown to
their luxurious homes they carried heavy
hearts.
"A good many of these poor
creatures will go back again," Gray
would say with sadness too deep for
tears. "The environment does have a good
deal to do with the character. It does
not stand to reason that these people
can always resist the sight and smell of
the devilish drink about them. O Lord,
how long shall Christian people continue
to support by their silence and their
ballots the greatest form of slavery
known in America?"
He asked the question, and did not
have much hope of an immediate answer.
There was a ray of hope in the action of
Friday night's primary, but what the
result would be he did not dare to
anticipate. The whiskey forces were
organized, alert, aggressive, roused
into unusual hatred by the events of the
last week at the tent and in the city.
Would the Christian forces act as a unit
against the saloon? Or would they be
divided on account of their business
interests or because they were not in
the habit of acting all together as the
whiskey power always did? That remained
to be seen. Meanwhile the saloon reared
itself about the Rectangle like some
deadly viper hissing and coiling, ready
to strike its poison into any unguarded
part.
Saturday afternoon as Virginia was
just stepping out of her house to go and
see Rachel to talk over her new plans, a
carriage drove up containing three of
her fashionable friends. Virginia went
out to the drive-way and stood there
talking with them. They had not come to
make a formal call but wanted Virginia
to go driving with them up on the
boulevard. There was a band concert in
the park. The day was too pleasant to be
spent indoors.
"Where have you been all this time,
Virginia?" asked one of the girls,
tapping her playfully on the shoulder
with a red silk parasol. "We hear that
you have gone into the show business.
Tell us about it."
Virginia colored, but after a
moment's hesitation she frankly told
something of her experience at the
Rectangle. The girls in the carriage
began to be really interested.
"I tell you, girls, let's go
'slumming' with Virginia this afternoon
instead of going to the band concert.
I've never been down to the Rectangle.
I've heard it's an awful wicked place
and lots to see. Virginia will act as
guide, and it would be" -- "real fun"
she was going to say, but Virginia's
look made her substitute the word
"interesting."
Virginia was angry. At first
thought she said to herself she would
never go under such circumstances. The
other girls seemed to be of the same
mind with the speaker. They chimed in
with earnestness and asked Virginia to
take them down there.
Suddenly she saw in the idle
curiosity of the girls an opportunity.
They had never seen the sin and misery
of Raymond. Why should they not see it,
even if their motive in going down there
was simply to pass away an afternoon.
"Very well, I'll go with you. You
must obey my orders and let me take you
where you can see the most," she said,
as she entered the carriage and took the
seat beside the girl who had first
suggested the trip to the Rectangle.
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