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PAGE 3

Little Lizzie
by [?]

“Promise!” said Leslie, in a stern yet solemn voice, as he turned and fixed his eyes upon the landlord.

“If I do promise, I’ll keep it!” returned Jenks, in a threatening tone, as he returned the gaze of Leslie.

“Then, for God’s sake, promise!” exclaimed Leslie, in a half-despairing voice. “Promise, and I’m safe!”

“Be it so! May I be cursed, if ever I sell you a drop of drinking at this bar, while I am landlord of the ‘Stag and Hounds’!” Jenks spoke with with an angry emphasis.

“God be thanked!” murmured the poor drunkard, as he led his child away. “God be thanked! There is hope for me yet.”

Hardly had the mother of Lizzie missed her child, ere she entered, leading her father by the hand.

“O, mother!” she exclaimed, with a joy-lit countenance, and in a voice of exultation, “Mr. Jenks has promised.”

“Promised what?” Hope sprung up in her heart, on wild and fluttering wings, her face flushed, and then grew deadly pale. She sat panting for a reply.

“That he would never sell me another glass of liquor,” said her husband.

A pair of thin, white hands were clasped quickly together, an ashen face was turned upwards, tearless eyes looked their thankfulness to heaven.

“There is hope yet, Ellen,” said Leslie.

“Hope, hope! And O, Edward, you have said the word!”

“Hope, through our child. Innocence has prevailed over vice and cruelty. She came to the strong, evil, passionate man, and, in her weakness and innocence, prevailed over him. God made her fearless and eloquent.”

A year afterwards a stranger came again that way, and stopped at the “Stag and Hounds.” As before, Jenks was behind his well-filled bar, and drinking customers came and went in numbers. Jenks did not recognize him until he called for water, and drank a full tumbler of the pure liquor with a hearty zest. Then he knew him, but feigned to be ignorant of his identity. The stranger made no reference to the scene he had witnessed there a twelvemonth before, but lingered in the bar for most of the day, closely observing every one that came to drink. Leslie was not among the number.

“What has become of the man and the little girl I saw here, at my last visit to Milanville?” said the stranger, speaking at last to Jenks.

“Gone to the devil, for all I care,” was the landlord’s rude answer, as he turned off from his questioner.

“For all you care, no doubt,” said the stranger to himself. “Men often speak their real thoughts in a passion.”

“Do you see that little white cottage away off there, just at the edge of the wood? Two tall poplars stand in front.”

Thus spoke to the stranger one who had heard him address the landlord.

“I do. What of it?” he answered.

“The man you asked for lives there.”

“Indeed!”

“And what is more, if he keeps on as he has begun, the cottage will be all his own in another year. Jenks, here, doesn’t feel any good blood for him, as you may well believe. A poor man’s prosperity is regarded as so much loss to him. Leslie is a good mechanic–one of the best in Milanville. He can earn twelve dollars a week, year in and year out. Two hundred dollars he has already paid on his cottage; and as he is that much richer, Jenks thinks himself just so much poorer; for all this surplus, and more too, would have gone into his till, if Leslie had not quit drinking.”

“Aha! I see! Well, did Leslie, as you call him, ever try to get a drink here, since the landlord promised never to let him have another drop?”

“Twice to my knowledge.”

“And he refused him?”

“Yes. If you remember, he said, in his anger, ‘May I be cursed, if I sell him another drop.'”

“I remember it very well.”

“That saved poor Leslie. Jenks is superstitious in some things. He wanted to get his custom again,–for it was well worth having,–and he was actually handing him the bottle one day, when I saw it, and reminded him of his self-imprecation. He hesitated, looked frightened, withdrew the bottle from the counter, and then, with curses, drove Leslie from his bar-room, threatening, at the same time, to horsewhip him if ever he set a foot over his threshold again.”

“Poor drunkards!” mused the stranger, as he rode past the neat cottage of the reformed man a couple of hours afterwards. “As the case now stands, you are only saved as by fire. All law, all protection, is on the side of those who are engaged in enticing you into sin, and destroying you, body and soul. In their evil work, they have free course. But for you, unhappy wretches, after they have robbed you of worldly goods, and even manhood itself, are provided prisons and pauper homes! And for your children,”–a dark shadow swept over the stranger’s face, and a shudder went through his frame. “Can it be, a Christian country in which I live, and such things darken the very sun at noonday!” he added as he sprung his horse into a gallop and rode swiftly onward.