"Tom," cried the manufacturer, starting forward and grasping his hand, "are you in earnest? Is it really the old Tom?"
"It"s what"s left of him, sir, and we"ll have him whole and strong very soon, if you"ll only set him at work."
"Work! Aye, Tom, and bless you, too. There is an engine to be set up and tested to-day. Come with me."
Tom"s hands were weak and unsteady, but his brain was clear, and under his skilful supervision the engine was set up and tested; but it was not perfect. There were mistakes which he had to correct, and it was late in the evening when the work was complete.
"How is it now, Tom?" asked Mr. Scott, as he came into the testing-house and found the workmen ready to depart.
"She"s all right, sir. You may give your warrant without fear."
"G.o.d bless you, Tom! You don"t know how like music the old voice sounds. Will you take your old place again?"
"Wait till Monday morning, sir. If you will offer it to me then, I will take it."
At the little cottage, Ellen Darcy"s fluttering heart was sinking.
That morning, after Tom had gone, she found a dollar bill in the coffee-cup. She knew that he left it for her. She had been out and bought tea and sugar, and flour and b.u.t.ter, and a bit of tender steak; and all day long a ray of light had been dancing and glimmering before her,--a ray from the blessed light of other days. With prayer and hope she had set out the tea-table, and waited; but the sun went down and no Tom came. Eight o"clock--and almost nine.
Hark! The old step! quick, strong, eager for home. Yes, it was Tom, with the old grime upon his hands, and the odor of oil upon his garments.
"I have kept you waiting, Nellie."
"Tom!"
"I did not mean to, but the work hung on."
"Tom! Tom! You have been to the old shop!"
"Yes, and I"m bound to have the old place, and----"
"Oh, Tom!"
And she threw her arms around his neck, and pressed a kiss upon his lips.
"Nellie, darling, wait a little, and you shall have the old Tom back again."
"Oh, I have him now! G.o.d bless you, my husband!"
It was a banquet, that supper--with the bright angels of peace, and love, and joy, spreading their wings over the board.
On the following Monday morning, Tom resumed his place at the head of the great machine-shop, and those who thoroughly knew him had no fear of his going back into the slough of joylessness.
A few days later, Tom met Peter Tindar on the street.
"Eh, Tom, old boy, what"s up?"
"I am up, right side up."
"Yes, I see; but I hope you haven"t forsaken us, Tom."
"I have forsaken only the evil you have in store, Peter. The fact is, I concluded that my wife and little ones had fed on husks long enough, and if there was a good kernel left in my heart, or in my manhood, they should have it."
"Ah, you heard what I said to my wife that night."
"Yes, Peter; and I shall be grateful to you for it as long as I live.
My remembrance of you will always be relieved by that tinge of warmth and brightness."
SONG OF THE RYE.
I was made to be eaten, And not to be drank; To be thrashed in a barn, Not soaked in a tank.
I come as a blessing When put through a mill, As a blight and a curse When run through a still.
Make me up into loaves, And the children are fed; But if into drink, I"ll starve them instead.
In bread I"m a servant, The eater shall rule; In drink I am master, The drinker a fool.
RUINED AT HOME.
"It is at home that the ruin of a soul begins."
"At home!" We hear the response in tones of pained surprise or indignant denial from many voices. "It is a hard saying and cruel."
"It may hurt like a blow many sad hearts; but if it be true--what then?"
"It is not true! I can point to you a dozen cases within my own range of observation to disprove the a.s.sertion--to young men who have gone astray in spite of the careful training and good example of religious homes--in spite of all the best of mothers and the wisest of fathers could do."
Yes, we hear such things said every day; but feel certain there is an error somewhere, a defect in your observation. Were you in the homes of these young men from the beginning? Did you observe the personal bearing of their parents toward them--know their walk and conversation? If nay, then you are not competent, with your instances, to disprove our a.s.sertion.
A small error at the beginning of a series of calculations in applied mechanics may lead to a great disaster; the slightest variation from a right line at the beginning will throw a projectile hundreds of yards away from its object. It is in the little things at home, the almost unnoticed departures from order and good government, the neglects arising from parental self-indulgence, the weakness of love that fails to nip a fault in the bud; and many other things that might be instanced, which turn the young feet into ways of life that, as the years go by, lead farther and farther from safety and happiness.
The Bible, experience, and reason all declare that the future of a child depends upon his early training. If this is bad, the chances are nearly all against him.
"But," we hear it said, "children raised under the worst influences often make good and useful men."
The cases are exceptional, and stand out in strong contrast to the general rule. And so we go back to what was declared in the beginning, that the ruin of a soul begins at home. How many instances crowd upon the memory! Let us take a few at this time for their lesson and their warning.
Not long ago, in one of our princ.i.p.al cities, an almost broken-hearted mother parted from her son in the courthouse, and was taken fainting to her home, while he was thrust into a van and conveyed to prison.
His crime was stealing. Society held up its hands in pity and amazement, for the young man"s father and mother were highly respectable people, and good church members, as the saying is. The father"s business reputation stood high. People said of him: "His word is as good as his bond." And yet his son was a condemned thief. He had stolen from his employer.
Did the ruin in this case begin at home?--Yes! It was at home the son learned to be dishonest, and he learned it from his mother! Let us rehea.r.s.e a few of the lessons, in precept and example, that were given to the boy. We begin when he was just five years of age. The boy, Karl, was standing near his mother, Mrs. Omdorff, one day, when he heard her say to his aunt: "Barker has cheated himself. Here are four yards of ribbon, instead of three. I asked for three yards, and paid for only three; but this measures full four yards."
The boy listened and waited for what was to come next. He loved his mother, and trusted in her.
"What are you going to do about it?" inquired the aunt.