Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 5

The Mansion
by [?]

larger opportunities. But try to put your gifts where they can be identified and do good all around. You’ll see the wisdom of it in the long run.”

“I can see it already, sir, and the way you describe it looks amazingly wise and prudent. In other words, we must cast our bread on the waters in large loaves, carried by sound ships marked with the owner’s name, so that the return freight will be sure to come back to us.”

The father laughed, but his eyes were frowning a little as if he suspected something irreverent under the respectful reply. “You put it humorously, but there’s sense in what you say. Why not? God rules the sea; but He expects us to follow the laws of navigation and commerce. Why not take good care of your bread, even when you give it away?”

“It’s not for me to say why not–and yet I can think of cases–“

The young man hesitated for a moment. His half-finished cigar had gone out. He rose and tossed it into the fire, in front of which

he remained standing–a slender, eager, restless young figure, with a touch of hunger in the fine face, strangely like and unlike the father, at whom he looked with half-wistful curiosity.

“The fact is, sir,” he continued, “there is such a case in my mind now, and it is a good deal on my heart, too. So I thought of speaking to you about it to-night. You remember Tom Rollins, the Junior who was so good to me when I entered college?”

The father nodded. He remembered very well indeed the annoying incidents of his son’s first escapade, and how Rollins had stood by him and helped to avoid a public disgrace, and how a close friendship had grown between the two boys, so different in their fortunes.

“Yes,” he said, “I remember him. He was a promising young man. Has he succeeded?”

“Not exactly–that is not yet. His business has been going rather badly. He has a wife and little baby, you know. And now he has broken down,– something wrong with his lungs. The doctor says his only chance is a year or eighteen months in Colorado. I wish we could help him.”

“How much would it cost?”

“Three or four thousand, perhaps, as a loan.”

“Does the doctor say he will get well?”

“A fighting chance–the doctor says.”

The face of the older man changed subtly. Not a line was altered, but it seemed to have a different substance, as if it were carved out of some firm, imperishable stuff.

“A fighting chance,” he said, “may do for a speculation, but it is not a good investment. You owe something to young Rollins. Your grateful feeling does you credit. But don’t overwork it. Send him three or four hundred, if you like. You’ll never hear from it again, except in the letter of thanks. But for Heaven’s sake don’t be sentimental. Religion is not a matter of sentiment; it’s a matter of principle.”

The face of the younger man changed now. But instead of becoming

fixed and graven, it seemed to melt into life by the heat of an inward fire. His nostrils quivered with quick breath, his lips were curled. “Principle!” he said. “You mean principal–and interest too. Well, sir, you know best whether that is religion or not. But if it is, count me out, please. Tom saved me from going to the devil, six years ago; and I’ll be damned if I don’t help him to the best of my ability now.”

John Weightman looked at his son steadily. “Harold,” he said at last, “you know I dislike violent language, and it never has any influence with me. If I could honestly approve of this proposition of yours, I’d let you have the money; but I can’t; it’s extravagant and useless. But you have your Christmas check for a thousand dollars coming to you to-morrow. You can use it as you please. I never interfere with your private affairs.”