Chapter Twenty-nine
THE breakfast hour at the
settlement was the one hour in the day
when the whole family found a little
breathing space to fellowship together.
It was an hour of relaxation. There was
a great deal of good-natured repartee
and much real wit and enjoyable fun at
this hour. The Bishop told his best
stories. Dr. Bruce was at his best in
anecdote. This company of disciples was
healthily humorous in spite of the
atmosphere of sorrow that constantly
surrounded them. In fact, the Bishop
often said the faculty of humor was as
God-given as any other and in his own
case it was the only safety valve he had
for the tremendous pressure put upon
him.
This particular morning he was
reading extracts from a morning paper
for the benefit of the others. Suddenly
he paused and his face instantly grew
stern and sad. The rest looked up and a
hush fell over the table.
"Shot and killed while taking a
lump of coal from a car! His family was
freezing and he had had no work for six
months. Six children and a wife all
packed into a cabin with three rooms, on
the West Side. One child wrapped in rags
in a closet!"
These were headlines that he read
slowly. He then went on and read the
detailed account of the shooting and the
visit of the reporter to the tenement
where the family lived. He finished, and
there was silence around the table. The
humor of the hour was swept out of
existence by this bit of human tragedy.
The great city roared about the
Settlement. The awful current of human
life was flowing in a great stream past
the Settlement House, and those who had
work were hurrying to it in a vast
throng. But thousands were going down in
the midst of that current, clutching at
last hopes, dying literally in a land of
plenty because the boon of physical toil
was denied them.
There were various comments on the
part of the residents. One of the new-
comers, a young man preparing for the
ministry, said:
"Why don't the man apply to one of
the charity organizations for help? Or
to the city? It certainly is not true
that even at its worst this city full of
Christian people would knowingly allow
any one to go without food or fuel."
"No, I don't believe it would,"
replied Dr. Bruce. "But we don't know
the history of this man's case. He may
have asked for help so often before
that, finally, in a moment of
desperation he determined to help
himself. I have known such cases this
winter."
"That is not the terrible fact in
this case," said the Bishop. "The awful
thing about it is the fact that the man
had not had any work for six months."
"Why don't such people go out into
the country?" asked the divinity
student.
Some one at the table who had made
a special study of the opportunities for
work in the country answered the
question. According to the investigator
the places that were possible for work
in the country were exceedingly few for
steady employment, and in almost every
case they were offered only to men
without families. Suppose a man's wife
or children were ill. How would he move
or get into the country? How could he
pay even the meager sum necessary to
move his few goods? There were a
thousand reasons probably why this
particular man did not go elsewhere.
"Meanwhile there are the wife and
children," said Mrs. Bruce. "How awful!
Where is the place, did you say?"
"Why, it is only three blocks from
here. This is the 'Penrose district.' I
believe Penrose himself owns half of the
houses in that block. They are among the
worst houses in this part of the city.
And Penrose is a church member."
"Yes, he belongs to the Nazareth
Avenue Church," replied Dr. Bruce in a
low voice.
The Bishop rose from the table the
very figure of divine wrath. He had
opened his lips to say what seldom came
from him in the way of denunciation,
when the bell rang and one of the
residents went to the door.
"Tell Dr. Bruce and the Bishop I
want to see them. Penrose is the name --
Clarence Penrose. Dr. Bruce knows me."
The family at the breakfast table
heard every word. The Bishop exchanged a
significant look with Dr. Bruce and the
two men instantly left the table and
went out into the hall.
"Come in here, Penrose," said Dr.
Bruce, and they ushered the visitor into
the reception room, closed the door and
were alone.
Clarence Penrose was one of the
most elegant looking men in Chicago. He
came from an aristocratic family of
great wealth and social distinction. He
was exceedingly wealthy and had large
property holdings in different parts of
the city. He had been a member of Dr.
Bruce's church many years. He faced the
two ministers with a look of agitation
on his face that showed plainly the mark
of some unusual experience. He was very
pale and his lips trembled as he spoke.
When had Clarence Penrose ever before
yielded to such a strange emotion?
"This affair of the shooting! You
understand? You have read it? The family
lived in one of my houses. It is a
terrible event. But that is not the
primary cause of my visit." He stammered
and looked anxiously into the faces of
the two men. The Bishop still looked
stern. He could not help feeling that
this elegant man of leisure could have
done a great deal to alleviate the
horrors in his tenements, possibly have
prevented this tragedy if he had
sacrificed some of his personal ease and
luxury to better the conditions of the
people in his district.
Penrose turned toward Dr. Bruce.
"Doctor!" he exclaimed, and there was
almost a child's terror in his voice. "I
came to say that I have had an
experience so unusual that nothing but
the supernatural can explain it. You
remember I was one of those who took the
pledge to do as Jesus would do. I
thought at the time, poor fool that I
was, that I had all along been doing the
Christian thing. I gave liberally out of
my abundance to the church and charity.
I never gave myself to cost me any
suffering. I have been living in a
perfect hell of contradictions ever
since I took that pledge. My little
girl, Diana you remember, also took the
pledge with me. She has been asking me a
great many questions lately about the
poor people and where they live. I was
obliged to answer her. One of her
questions last night touched my sore!
'Do you own any houses where these poor
people live? Are they nice and warm like
ours?' You know how a child will ask
questions like these. I went to bed
tormented with what I now know to be the
divine arrows of conscience. I could not
sleep. I seemed to see the judgment day.
I was placed before the Judge. I was
asked to give an account of my deeds
done in the body. 'How many sinful souls
had I visited in prison? What had I done
with my stewardship? How about those
tenements where people froze in winter
and stifled in summer? Did I give any
thought to them except to receive the
rentals from them? Where did my
suffering come in? Would Jesus have done
as I had done and was doing? Had I
broken my pledge? How had I used the
money and the culture and the social
influence I possessed? Had I used it to
bless humanity, to relieve the
suffering, to bring joy to the
distressed and hope to the desponding? I
had received much. How much had I
given?'
"All this came to me in a waking
vision as distinctly as I see you two
men and myself now. I was unable to see
the end of the vision. I had a confused
picture in my mind of the suffering
Christ pointing a condemning finger at
me, and the rest was shut out by mist
and darkness. I have not slept for
twenty-four hours. The first thing I
saw this morning was the account of the
shooting at the coal yards. I read the
account with a feeling of horror I have
not been able to shake off. I am a
guilty creature before God."
Penrose paused suddenly. The two
men looked at him solemnly. What power
of the Holy Spirit moved the soul of
this hitherto self-satisfied, elegant,
cultured man who belonged to the social
life that was accustomed to go its way
placidly, unmindful of the great sorrows
of a great city and practically ignorant
of what it means to suffer for Jesus'
sake? Into that room came a breath such
as before swept over Henry Maxwell's
church and through Nazareth avenue. The
Bishop laid his hand on the shoulder of
Penrose and said: "My brother, God has
been very near to you. Let us thank
Him."
"Yes! yes!" sobbed Penrose. He sat
down on a chair and covered his face.
The Bishop prayed. Then Penrose quietly
said: "Will you go with me to that
house?"
For answer the two men put on their
overcoats and went with him to the home
of the dead man's family.
That was the beginning of a new and
strange life for Clarence Penrose. From
the moment he stepped into that wretched
hovel of a home and faced for the first
time in his life a despair and suffering
such as he had read of but did not know
by personal contact, he dated a new
life. It would be another long story to
tell how, in obedience to his pledge he
began to do with his tenement property
as he knew Jesus would do. What would
Jesus do with tenement property if He
owned it in Chicago or any other great
city of the world? Any man who can
imagine any true answers to this
question can easily tell what Clarence
Penrose began to do.
Now before that winter reached its
bitter climax many things occurred in
the city which concerned the lives of
all the characters in this history of
the disciples who promised to walk in
His steps.
It chanced by one of those
coincidences that seem to occur
preternaturally that one afternoon just
as Felicia came out of the Settlement
with a basket of food which she was
going to leave as a sample with a baker
in the Penrose district, Stephen Clyde
opened the door of the carpenter shop in
the basement and came out in time to
meet her as she reached the sidewalk.
"Let me carry your basket, please,"
he said.
"Why do you say 'please'?" asked
Felicia, handing over the basket while
they walked along.
"I would like to say something
else," replied Stephen, glancing at her
shyly and yet with a boldness that
frightened him, for he had been loving
Felicia more every day since he first
saw her and especially since she stepped
into the shop that day with the Bishop,
and for weeks now they had been thrown
in each other's company.
"What else?" asked Felicia,
innocently falling into the trap.
"Why--" said Stephen, turning his
fair, noble face full toward her and
eyeing her with the look of one who
would have the best of all things in the
universe, "I would like to say: 'Let me
carry your basket, dear Felicia'."
Felicia never looked so beautiful
in her life. She walked on a little way
without even turning her face toward
him. It was no secret with her own heart
that she had given it to Stephen some
time ago. Finally she turned and said
shyly, while her face grew rosy and her
eyes tender:
"Why don't you say it, then?"
"May I?" cried Stephen, and he was
so careless for a minute of the way he
held the basket, that Felicia exclaimed:
"Yes! But oh, don't drop my
goodies!"
"Why, I wouldn't drop anything so
precious for all the world, dear
Felicia," said Stephen, who now walked
on air for several blocks, and what was
said during that walk is private
correspondence that we have no right to
read. Only it is a matter of history
that day that the basket never reached
its destination, and that over in the
other direction, late in the afternoon,
the Bishop, walking along quietly from
the Penrose district, in rather a
secluded spot near the outlying part of
the Settlement district, heard a
familiar voice say:
"But tell me, Felicia, when did you
begin to love me?"
"I fell in love with a little pine
shaving just above your ear that day
when I saw you in the shop!" said the
other voice with a laugh so clear, so
pure, so sweet that it did one good to
hear it.
"Where are you going with that
basket?" he tried to say sternly.
"We are taking it to -- where are
we taking it, Felicia?"
"Dear Bishop, we are taking it home
to begin--"
"To begin housekeeping with,"
finished Stephen, coming to the rescue.
"Are you?" said the Bishop. "I hope
you will invite me to share. I know what
Felicia's cooking is."
"Bishop, dear Bishop!" said
Felicia, and she did not pretend to hide
her happiness; "indeed, you shall be the
most honored guest. Are you glad?"
"Yes, I am," he replied,
interpreting Felicia's words as she
wished. Then he paused a moment and said
gently: "God bless you both!" and went
his way with a tear in his eye and a
prayer in his heart, and left them to
their joy.
Yes. Shall not the same divine
power of love that belongs to earth be
lived and sung by the disciples of the
Man of Sorrows and the Burden-bearer of
sins? Yea, verily! And this man and
woman shall walk hand in hand through
this great desert of human woe in this
city, strengthening each other, growing
more loving with the experience of the
world's sorrows, walking in His steps
even closer yet because of their love
for each other, bringing added blessing
to thousands of wretched creatures
because they are to have a home of their
own to share with the homeless. "For
this cause," said our Lord Jesus Christ,
"shall a man leave his father and mother
and cleave unto his wife." And Felicia
and Stephen, following the Master, love
him with a deeper, truer service and
devotion because of the earthly
affection which Heaven itself sanctions
with its solemn blessing.
But it was a little after the love
story of the Settlement became a part of
its glory that Henry Maxwell of Raymond
came to Chicago with Rachel Winslow and
Virginia Page and Rollin and Alexander
Powers and President Marsh, and the
occasion was a remarkable gathering at
the hall of the Settlement arranged by
the Bishop and Dr. Bruce, who had
finally persuaded Mr. Maxwell and his
fellow disciples in Raymond to come on
to be present at this meeting.
There were invited into the
Settlement Hall, meeting for that night
men out of work, wretched creatures who
had lost faith in God and man,
anarchists and infidels, free-thinkers
and no-thinkers. The representation of
all the city's worst, most hopeless,
most dangerous, depraved elements faced
Henry Maxwell and the other disciples
when the meeting began. And still the
Holy Spirit moved over the great,
selfish, pleasure-loving, sin-stained
city, and it lay in God's hand, not
knowing all that awaited it. Every man
and woman at the meeting that night had
seen the Settlement motto over the door
blazing through the transparency set up
by the divinity student: "What would
Jesus do?"
And Henry Maxwell, as for the first
time he stepped under the doorway, was
touched with a deeper emotion than he
had felt in a long time as he thought of
the first time that question had come to
him in the piteous appeal of the shabby
young man who had appeared in the First
Church of Raymond at the morning
service.
Was his great desire for fellowship
going to be granted? Would the movement
begun in Raymond actually spread over
the country? He had come to Chicago with
his friends partly to see if the answer
to that question would be found in the
heart of the great city life. In a few
minutes he would face the people. He had
grown very strong and calm since he
first spoke with trembling to that
company of workingmen in the railroad
shops, but now as then he breathed a
deeper prayer for help. Then he went in,
and with the rest of the disciples he
experienced one of the great and
important events of the earthly life.
Somehow he felt as if this meeting would
indicate something of an answer to his
constant query: "What would Jesus do?"
And tonight as he looked into the faces
of men and women who had for years been
strangers and enemies to the Church, his
heart cried out: "O, my Master, teach
the Church, Thy Church, how to follow
Thy steps better!" Is that prayer of
Henry Maxwell's to be answered? Will the
Church in the city respond to the call
to follow Him? Will it choose to walk in
His steps of pain and suffering? And
still, over all the city broods the
Spirit. Grieve Him not, O city! For He
was never more ready to revolutionize
this world than now!
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