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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59724 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Cover art]
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: ...stood with arms interlocked and heads touching as
+their voices soared in the grand finale.]
+
+
+
+
+ _The Baritone's Parish_
+
+ _or_
+
+ "_All Things to all Men_"
+
+
+
+ _By_
+
+ _James M. Ludlow_
+
+
+
+ _Fleming H. Revell Company_
+ _New York Chicago Toronto_
+ _MDCCCXCVI_
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1896, by
+ FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOKS BY
+ JAMES M. LUDLOW,
+ D.D., Litt.D.
+
+
+THE CAPTAIN OF THE JANIZARIES.
+
+A Story of the Times of Scanderbey, and the Fall of Constantinople.
+
+
+A KING OF TYRE.
+
+Contrasted Scenes of Jewish and Phoenician Life, 400 B.C., woven into
+romance.
+
+
+THAT ANGELIC WOMAN.
+
+A Story from High Life To-day.
+
+
+A MAN FOR 'A THAT; OR, "MY SAINT JOHN."
+
+A Story of City Life among the Lowly.
+
+
+THE AGE OF THE CRUSADES.
+
+Life in the XI. and XII. Centuries. _In preparation_.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BARITONE'S PARISH; OR,
+ "ALL THINGS TO ALL MEN"
+
+
+
+The pulpit and the choir gallery are closely related in our city
+churches. It is, however, a sad fact that the "sons of the prophets"
+and the "sons of Korah" usually know but little of one another; and
+this is to the loss of both. To the musicians the minister often seems
+a recluse, and the clergyman comes to look upon his choir as a band of
+itinerant minstrels.
+
+It is therefore very refreshing to note that between the pastor of St.
+Philemon's, the Rev. Dr. Wesley Knox, and Mr. Philip Vox, there sprang
+up an intimacy almost from the day when the new baritone sang his first
+solo. It was Shelley's "Resurrection," which had been rendered as an
+offertory after one of the doctor's finest efforts at an Easter sermon.
+
+Deacon Brisk, the chairman of the music committee, met the preacher at
+the chancel-rail within fifteen seconds after the benediction had been
+pronounced; before the sexton could deliver a message that a
+parishioner was in momentary expectation of death, and required the
+pastor's immediate attendance; before Lawyer Codey had adjusted his
+silk hat like a falcon on his wrist preparatory to his stately march
+down the middle aisle; and even before the soprano had adjusted her
+handsome face and bonnet over the front of the choir gallery to inspect
+the passers-out.
+
+Deacon Brisk was like most music committee-men in that he knew little
+about the musical art; but he was a hustler in getting the worth of his
+money in whatever job he undertook. Rubbing his hands in
+self-congratulation upon the new baritone's engagement, he delivered
+himself of a panegyric which he had spent the time of the closing
+prayer in composing:
+
+"I tell you, doctor, Vox was a catch. Why, he sang
+
+ "'In slumber lay the brooding world
+ Upon that glorious night,'
+
+so sweetly that you could almost hear the stars twinkle through the
+music; and when he struck
+
+ "'Let heaven's vaulted arches ring,'
+
+it seemed as if the sky were tumbling down through the church roof.
+That's great singing; eh, doctor? Cost only three hundred extra; worth
+a thousand on the church market!"
+
+"Yes," said the doctor, "I was pleased with the man's voice. I am
+impressed with the idea that there is more than larynx and training in
+him. There must be bigness and sweetness of soul behind those tones.
+Men can't sing that way to order. Come, Brisk, introduce us when those
+young women get through talking to him. I know I shall like him. But
+I didn't know that you were so well up in musical judgment."
+
+"Why, doctor," rejoined Brisk, "it doesn't require that a man shall be
+an electrical engineer in order to invest successfully in a trolley."
+
+The dominie was a bachelor. That was a pity; for a wife and family of
+ten could have homed themselves in his heart without detracting from
+the love he had for everybody else. But having no wife to console him
+after the efforts of a hard Sunday, he was accustomed to ask one or
+another of the young men to come to the study and "curry him down," as
+he said, after evening service.
+
+Soon Vox came to occupy permanently this place of clerical groom. The
+saintly folk who thought that the light burning until Sunday midnight
+in the sanctum was a sign of the protracted devotions of their pastor
+would, on one occasion at least, have been astounded to see the
+reality. On the lounge was stretched the tired preacher, his feet on a
+pile of "skimmed" newspapers, reserved for the more thorough perusal
+they would never get. In his lap lay the head of a big collie, whose
+eyes were fixed on the handsome face of his master. Do dogs have
+religious instinct? If so, this was a canine hour of worship, and the
+dog was a genuine mystic. In some famous pictures of the adoration of
+the Magi less reverence and love are depicted on the faces than gleamed
+from beneath the shaggy eyebrows of the brute.
+
+By the study-table sat Vox, his big bushy head and square Schiller-cut
+face (except for the very unpoetic mustache) bending over a
+chafing-dish that sent up the incense of Welsh rarebit, the ingredients
+of which were the offering of the landlady's piety.
+
+"Doctor," said Vox, suddenly poising the spoon as if it were a baton,
+and dripping the melted cheese on to the manuscript of the night's
+sermon before the preacher had decided whether to put it into his
+"barrel" or his waste-basket--"doctor, do you know that I feel like a
+hypocrite, singing in a Christian church?"
+
+"You a hypocrite, Vox? You couldn't act a false part any more than you
+could sing a false note without having the shivers go all through you."
+
+"Well," replied the singer, "that is just what is the matter with me.
+The shivers do go through me. I am shocked at the moral discord I am
+making. I am striking false notes all the time. My life doesn't
+follow the score of my conscience. I don't mean that I have committed
+murder or picked pockets, but it seems to me that I am breaking the
+commandment by bearing false witness about myself, making people think
+I am a saint, or want to be one, when the fact is that I put no more
+heart into my singing than the organ-pipe does."
+
+So saying Vox strode across the floor, holding a plate of rarebit as if
+it were a sheet of music, and jerked the toasted cheese off it as he
+seemed to jerk the notes off the paper when he sang.
+
+The doctor slipped from the lounge just in time to escape a savory
+splash which was aiming itself straight for the space between his vest
+and shirt-bosom. The dog growled at the apparent attack upon his
+master, but was diverted from further warlike demonstrations by the bit
+of toast that fell under his nose.
+
+"Your dog is as good as a special policeman for you, doctor."
+
+"Yes, he defends me in more ways than one. Do you know why I call him
+Caleb? Caleb is Hebrew for 'God's dog.' One day, when he was a pup, I
+forgot myself and dropped into a regular pessimist over some
+materialistic trash I was reading. The pup seemed to notice my sour
+face, and put his paws upon my knees, lolled out his tongue, and
+searched me through and through with those bright eyes of his. It was
+as much as to say, 'Master, you're a fool. Look at me. Didn't it take
+a God to make such a marvelous creature as I am?' So I have called him
+Caleb ever since. He tackles many a doubt for me, as he would any
+other robber."
+
+"I wish I had your faith, doctor," said Vox, putting his arm around
+Caleb's neck, and dropping another piece of toast into the waiting jaws.
+
+"Faith? You have got it, Phil; only you don't know it."
+
+"Nonsense, doctor! I suppose I believe the Creed; at least I don't
+disbelieve it. But I don't feel these things. That's what makes me
+say that I am a hypocrite to sing in a Christian church. To-night I
+saw a woman crying during my solo. I felt like stopping. I never feel
+like crying, except when the notes cry themselves; then I confess to a
+moistening that goes all through me. Now what right have I to make
+another feel what I don't feel myself? I tell you, doctor, I am
+nothing but a bellowing hypocrite. I'm going into opera, where it is
+all make-believe. You know that I've had offers that would tempt a
+singing devil; and I believe I would be one if it were not for you."
+
+The doctor eyed his guest quizzically for a moment, then deliberately
+stretched himself again on the lounge.
+
+"Phil, that cheese has gone to your head. I didn't think it was so
+strong. Yet I can understand your mistake, for I used to talk that way
+to myself when I was as green and unsophisticated as you are. I would
+scratch out the best sentences from my sermons, because I didn't feel
+all they meant, and would accuse myself of duplicity and cant because
+my experience was not up to my doctrine. But what if it wasn't? My
+brain isn't as big as the Bible. My conscience isn't as true and vivid
+as Moses' was when he wrote down the Ten Commandments. My heart isn't
+as tender as Christ's. If a preacher says only what he is able to feel
+at the moment, there will be poor fodder for the parish. So it is all
+through life. People talk in society on a higher level than they
+habitually think. They ought to. That is what society is for--to tune
+up to key the sagging strings of common, humdrum life. All politeness
+will cease when everybody acts on your theory. We must not say
+'Good-morning' to a neighbor because at the moment we do not really
+care whether his day is going to be pleasant or not. You must not take
+off your hat to a lady on the street, unless at the instant you are
+possessed of a profound respect for the sex. Who was that composer
+that said that he never knew what a piece he had written until he heard
+Joseffy play it? They asked Parepa to sing 'Coming through the Rye.'
+She said, 'Pshaw! I've sung it threadbare. I grind it out now as the
+hand-organ does.' But she sang it, and brought down the house. Why
+shouldn't she? Feel! Do you suppose that old violin feels anything of
+the joy that thrills through its fibers? Shall I smash it for a
+hypocritical contrivance of wood and catgut? Did I kick Dr. Cutt out
+of the study the other day because he didn't realize the good he had
+done me in reducing the swelling of my sprained ankle? Yet you want me
+to let you kick yourself out of the church because you are not one of
+the 'angels of Jesus,' or haven't had all the joy of life crushed out
+of you by affliction, so that you are 'weary of earth,' as you sing!"
+
+The doctor warmed with his theme, until, standing up, he put his big
+hands on Vox's shoulders, and fairly shouted at him:
+
+"Sing, Phil! Sing the brightest, happiest things that God ever
+inspired men to write. But don't go croaking like an owl because you
+don't feel like a nightingale."
+
+"Well," said Vox, drawing a long breath, and letting it out in a
+whistle, "that cheese or something else has inspired you, doctor. I
+never heard you so eloquent in the pulpit. Why don't you preach at us
+that way? Take us, as it were, one by one, and go through us, instead
+of preaching at humanity in the lump. I confess that you have
+persuaded me about my Sunday work. I am not going to leave it off.
+But now for the other six days in the week. I can convince you that
+they are full of husks that do nobody any good. Here's my diary.
+Isn't it contemptible for a man with even a singer's conscience?
+Monday, sung at Checkley's musicale for fifty dollars and a score of
+feminine compliments; Tuesday, in oratorio for one hundred dollars and
+some newspaper puffs, which were all wrong from a critical standpoint;
+Wednesday, moped all day because I couldn't sing--raw throat; Thursday,
+made believe teach a lot of tone-deaf fellows who can never sing any
+more than crows, and took their money for the imposition; Friday,
+ditto; Saturday, rehearsal. Now who am I helping by peddling my
+chin-wares?"
+
+Vox stopped for lack of breath, as well as from the fact that his week
+had run out.
+
+"Go on," said the doctor, nonchalantly. "You can certainly slander
+yourself worse than that. What! no more? Why, Vox, I know there are
+worse things about you than what you have told me."
+
+Vox colored.
+
+"You needn't blush so over it, Phil," and the doctor burst out laughing
+at him. "I am not going to twit you on any disagreeable facts. I
+didn't say I knew what those worse things were; but I do know that you
+are not such a sweet saint as to have only the faults mentioned. If
+they were all, I would have a glass case made for you at once, put your
+bones up in leather, and place a basin of holy water at your door for
+passers-by to dip their fingers in. But soberly, Phil, I think I can
+size you up, or down."
+
+"All right; try it. You may find me so big a fool that it will take
+some time to get my full measurement."
+
+With that he stretched himself to his full height, and posed with his
+fingers in his vest-holes. The attitude interested Caleb, who
+stretched himself out to almost corresponding dimensions horizontally
+along the floor, recovering his legs slowly to the accompaniment of a
+long and dismal whine.
+
+"He does that," said the doctor, "only when there is going to be a
+death in the neighborhood, or when I begin to read my sermons aloud in
+the study. He knows I am going to lecture you. Charge, Caleb!
+
+"Dearly beloved Vox! you have two first-class deficiencies. First, a
+purposeless life. You happen to be doing good with that wonderful
+voice of yours; but that is nothing to your credit. You can't help
+cheering people when you wag your jaws any more than Caleb can help
+being a comfort to me when he wags his tail. You didn't study music
+for the sake of helping anybody, but only because music gave you a
+pleasurable means of getting a livelihood. So you have no
+soul-satisfaction in your profession, for all you are succeeding so
+grandly in it. You are like that piece of music which you said was a
+failure, because, though there were some fine harmonies in it, it had
+no theme, no prevailing idea, no musical purpose."
+
+"That's me," said Vox, _sotto voce_, holding his head in his hands. "I
+know that I am a mere medley, part sacred, part profane, and both parts
+played by the devil! Go on."
+
+"Stop your pessimism," rejoined the doctor. "That poetic head of yours
+reminds me that Schiller in the 'Bell' gives utterance to the same idea
+I am trying to beat into you."
+
+"The Bell? That's me, too; all brass and clapper!" grumbled Vox,
+twisting Caleb's ears until the brute whined.
+
+The doctor, not heeding either the singer's soliloquy or the brute's,
+quoted in oratorical style:
+
+ "'So let us duly ponder all
+ The works our feeble strength achieves;
+ For mean, in truth, the man we call
+ Who ne'er what he completes conceives.
+
+ And well it stamps our human race,
+ And hence the gift to understand,
+ That man within the heart should trace
+ Whate'er he fashions with the hand.'"
+
+
+Vox groaned. "That's rather heavy poetry for creatures of our caliber,
+isn't it, Caleb? But I guess that I catch on.--It means the same as
+the line of the hymn you gave out to-night, doctor;" and Vox sang:
+
+ "'Take my voice, and let me sing
+ Always, only, for my King.'
+
+"That is, if I'm a bell, I should be one on purpose, whether a
+church-bell, or a door-bell, or only 'God's dog,' to growl"--patting
+Caleb. "But what is that second thing I lack? Since you've taken the
+contract to make me over, I want you to be thorough with the job."
+
+"The second thing you need," said the doctor, "is in some way to be
+made to see that you are doing good. From your perch in the gallery
+you don't get a glimpse into the people's hearts. I couldn't preach if
+I didn't go among the people during the week, and get the encouragement
+of knowing that I had helped somebody."
+
+"Yes," said Vox, "I've heard Joe Jefferson say that he couldn't act
+worth a cent if the people didn't applaud. I beg your pardon, doctor,
+for comparing the pulpit with the stage. But go on with your lecture."
+
+"Oh, you've knocked the lecture out of my head with your nonsense,
+Phil."
+
+"But you knocked it pretty well into mine. I'd like to see somebody
+I've helped. Show him up."
+
+"Humph!" grunted the doctor, and, after a moment's silence, said
+abruptly, "Phil, will you go with me to-morrow night?"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Leave that to me."
+
+"That's a blind sort of an invitation, doctor. But, of course, I will
+go anywhere you want me to. But what is it? Some holy Sorosis? That
+reformed theater you talk about? Any charge for admittance, or
+collection? Of course, going with a distinguished clergyman I shall
+have to appear in swallow-tails and arctic shirt-front."
+
+"Not a bit of it, Phil; your oldest clothes, so that you will look just
+as mean as you say you feel; then, for once, you can't accuse yourself
+of being a hypocrite."
+
+
+There was a motley crowd in the front room of a Bowery twenty-cent
+lodging-house. The room was the parlor, but the occupants called it
+the "deck," in distinction from the rest of the house, which was filled
+with bunks. There were hard old soakers in a periodical state of
+repentance; or, to speak more scientifically, in that state of
+gland-moistening that comes after a certain amount of poor beer has
+permeated the system. There were young prodigals, in there for the
+night because they had no money for a night's carousal elsewhere.
+There was a sprinkling of honest men, thankful for even this refuge
+from the sleety streets. There were some two hundred pieces of the
+great human wreck made by the hard times, which were beached in Brady's
+Harbor, as the place was called.
+
+The usual hubbub had calmed while a story-teller, who sat on the edge
+of a table, and whose slouch-hat and high ulster collar did not
+altogether conceal the genial face of Dr. Knox, entertained the crowd
+with old army yarns, which, as usual with such literature, were taken
+largely from the apocryphal portion of our national annals.
+
+"Bully for you! Give us another!" was the encore, emphasized with the
+rattle of backgammon-boards and boot-heels.
+
+"Haven't any more; but I have a friend here who will bring up the
+reserves in the way of a song."
+
+"Song, song! Rosin your larynx, old boy!" greeted the suggestion,
+while the crowd gathered closer about Vox, and several who had "turned
+in" for the night turned out of their bunks again, minus coats and
+boots. A friendly slap on the back by something less than a ten-pound
+hand helped the singer to clear his throat.
+
+Vox gave them "O'Grady's Goat" and one or two other classics of the
+Tenderloin district, with the rapt appreciation of his audience. Tom
+Moore's "Minstrel Boy," to the genuine old Irish melody, struck the
+heroic chord in the breasts of men most of whom were deserters from the
+real battle-fields of life. Then Vox dropped into a lullaby. The
+tender mother words given in his masculine tones seemed a burlesque as
+he began; but the deep bass took on the softness and sweetness of a
+contralto, and made one think, if not of a mother cooing to her baby,
+at least of some rough, great-hearted man who had found a lost child
+and was rocking it to sleep in his strong arms. More than one greasy
+sleeve got into its owner's eyes before Vox ended.
+
+"An' 'aven't ye a Scotch sang, me laddie?" asked an old fellow,
+knocking the ashes from his pipe against the window-sill.
+
+"My Ain Countrie" followed. As the music floated, the thick smoke of
+the room seemed to drift away. The land of birds and beauty lay before
+eyes that for months and years had looked only upon the crowded misery
+of slumdom. When the voice ceased the illusion continued for a while
+in spite of the picking sleet at the window-panes.
+
+At length the silence was broken by a voice that came from a distant
+corner of the room. It repeated the last verse in tones as pure as
+those of Vox himself, though a high tenor in quality. Some of the
+notes were broken by hiccups.
+
+Vox looked in amazement at the singer--a half-drunken youngish man
+curled nearly double in a chair which was tipped back against the wall.
+His battered derby and unscraped chin did not effectually disguise the
+handsome fellow beneath them. He was like the Apollo Belvedere when
+first exhumed from the mud of Antium.
+
+"Who are you, my friend?" asked Vox, in as kindly a tone as his
+surprise allowed.
+
+"Friend? (hic) haven't got any friend," replied the man; and he struck
+up the verse that had just been rendered. His voice was husky at
+first, but after a few notes it clarified itself, as brooks do in
+running. His tones became marvelously sweet, touching the highest note
+without the slightest suggestion of falsetto. It was a transcendent
+voice, one that might have once belonged to some spirit, and gone
+astray among men. The singer went through the verse this time without
+hiccup or slur; but the instant he stopped the drunk resumed its sway.
+Down came the chair with a bump on to its front legs, which sent the
+man headlong into the arms of Vox, with whom he wanted to fight.
+
+"I won't fight you," said Vox, helping him back to his seat; "but I'll
+dare you to sing with me."
+
+"Sin' wi' you! 'Cept your challenge. I can whip you with my--my
+tongue (hic) as bad as my wife she (hic) whipped me with her (hic)
+tongue."
+
+"What shall we sing, old boy?" inquired Vox, with that easy familiarity
+which showed that he had seen such customers before.
+
+ "Sin' a song o' sispence,
+ Pocket full o' rye,"
+
+sang the man. "Say, what's the use o' havin' your pocket full o' rye
+(hic)? 'D rather have a belly full o' rye; wouldn't you (hic)?"
+
+"You've enough rye in you for to-night," said Vox. "Come, pull the
+cork out of your throat, and let's have a song."
+
+Vox got a chair, and tipped it back by the side of the maudlin fellow,
+then struck up Mazzini's two-part song, "The Muleteers." The stranger
+joined in. Such singing was never heard before nor since in Brady's
+Harbor, nor, for that matter, in Carnegie Hall. After a bar or two the
+men rose to their feet and stood with arms interlocked and heads
+touching as their voices soared in the grand finale.
+
+The noise brought in Brady, who said it was "galoreous," but for all
+that they'd have to "bolt up their chins," as it was past twelve
+o'clock, and the "perlice wasn't so easy on lodgin'-houses as they was
+on the swill-shops."
+
+"See here, Vox," said the doctor, "I am going home alone to-night.
+Find out your pal. Chum him a bit. A man with that voice has had
+culture. Scrape the rust off him, and you will find something polished
+beneath, or I am no judge of human nature. Take him for your parish,
+Phil."
+
+"A heathenish sort of a mission that," replied Vox, looking at the
+fellow, who was trying, as he said, to find his night-key to get his
+boots off with. After a moment's hesitation, Vox added: "All right,
+doctor; you've had as hard a field with me, if it wasn't so dirty a
+one. I'll take him for a sobering walk in the drizzle, and then get
+him into better quarters than he has here."
+
+Vox had his hands full with his job, and at times his arms full too.
+His companion insisted that the Bowery sidewalk, covered with sleet,
+was a toboggan-slide, and that he was tumbling off the sled. What
+could Vox do with his protégé? He couldn't walk him or slide him all
+night. A policeman proposed to relieve him of his anxiety by taking
+them both to the station-house, but was persuaded not to perform this
+heroic exploit by the man's assurance that his pal's legs hadn't any
+snakes in them, and by Vox's demonstration that he could stand alone.
+Then Vox thought of the story of the good Samaritan, with rising
+respect for the priest that passed by on the other side. Next, having
+got into the charity business, he envied the Samaritan at least his
+ass, "instead," as Vox soliloquized, "of making an ass of myself." He
+thought of taking the fellow to some hotel, paying for his lodging, and
+hiring the clerk to see that he was properly sobered off in the
+morning; but concluded that, whatever might have been the case on the
+road to Jericho, there was no innkeeper on the Bowery whom he could
+trust with such a commission, or who would trust him to call in the
+morning and pay the bill. He could take him back to Brady's Harbor, he
+thought; but when they turned about the man declared that he wouldn't
+walk up a toboggan-slide, and sat down on the sidewalk for another ride.
+
+The flash of a passing cab let a little light in upon his problem.
+Hailing the driver, with whose help he got his load into the vehicle,
+he told him to drive to No. -- Madison Avenue, where he had his own day
+quarters--elegant rooms, fitted up for his instruction of the
+fashionable "daughters of music" at six dollars an hour. Sweezy, the
+janitor, was roused up, and with his assistance Vox was able to
+congratulate himself that he had gone "one better" on the good
+Samaritan, in that he had lodged his man in finer chambers. He could
+not help laughing at the incongruousness of the snoring mass and the
+elegant divan on which it lay. He thought of Bottom the weaver, with
+the ass's head, in the lap of Titania, and, as he piled the cushions so
+that the fellow would not tumble off, addressed him in the words of the
+fairy:
+
+ "Come, sit thee down upon this flowery bed,
+ While I thy amiable cheeks do coy,
+ And stick musk roses in thy sleek smooth head,
+ And kiss thy fair large ears, my gentle joy."
+
+But tears are near to laughter, and as Vox contemplated his completed
+work he had to sit down a moment and cry.
+
+"It's a hard sight, sir," said Sweezy, "but bless you, Mr. Vox, the
+best of us has just sich among our closest friends. I wish, sir, as
+how it was my own boy, Tommy, you had found the night." And Sweezy
+cried too.
+
+Sweezy promised to take an early look at the man in the morning when he
+turned on the steam heat. Vox went away to his boarding-house around
+the corner, vexed at the doctor for getting him into such a scrape, yet
+feeling down in the depths of his heart a satisfaction that more than
+half compensated him for his rough experience. He fell asleep thinking
+of the good Samaritan, Bottom with the ass's head, Salvation Army
+lasses, and the Prohibition party; and, in the midst of a horrid dream,
+woke up imagining himself drunk and about to fall off a precipice.
+
+Before breakfast next morning he went around to the rooms to look after
+his charge. The fellow had vamosed. Sweezy was taking account of the
+furniture, and, though nothing was missing, and only a lamp-shade
+broken, declared that Vox had been victimized by a sharper:
+
+"A regular sharper, sir. I thought so when you brought him in. You
+ought to have knowed, sir, at a glance of him, what he was. You've
+nussed, sir, a wiper in your bosom, and it's a mercy, sir, a mercy if
+he hasn't stung you no worse. Is your pocket-book with you? You ought
+at least to have took off his boots. That spot on the cover will never
+come out without piecing."
+
+Vox contemplated the scene of his first charity exploit much as
+Bonaparte did the battle-field of Waterloo. He had but one remark to
+make, which was:
+
+"Sweezy, don't you open your head about this business."
+
+Vox was not in an amiable mood when he met the doctor the next Sunday
+night. He debated with him the inadvisability of decent people
+attempting to do slumming in the name of either religion or charity.
+He took the ground that the men who had themselves been rescued from
+the dens of the city were the only ones to do this work, as they train
+chetahs to hunt their own kind, and reformed thieves to become
+detectives.
+
+The doctor was half inclined to agree with him, not so much from
+conviction as from seeing the disgust the business had wrought in the
+mind of his friend. Yet he excused himself for having led Vox into
+this experience on the ground that it is Christian duty to try to
+rescue the fallen, even though one does not accomplish anything.
+
+"I don't believe in your theory," said Vox, warmly. "Let buzzards
+clean up the offal, but decent birds had better follow their sweeter
+instincts and keep away. One thing is certain: I am not going to light
+on such moral carrion again."
+
+It was more than a month later when a respectable-looking stranger
+called upon Vox at his rooms. The singer was engaged at the time
+arranging with a lady of the Four Hundred for the vocal culture of her
+daughters. The visitor quietly awaited his leisure. He was very
+genteel in appearance. If one had been critical he might have thought
+that for such a stinging cold day an ulster would have been more
+suitable than the light fall overcoat he wore; and some might have
+observed that it was not the fashion that season to wear one's outer
+garment so short that the tails of the under-coat protruded. But Vox
+was occupied with the stranger's face, which was exceedingly
+prepossessing.
+
+"Mr. Vox, I believe?"
+
+"My name, sir. What can we do for each other?"
+
+"If I am not mistaken in the person, you once did me a great service."
+
+"You must be mistaken in the person," said Vox, "or else I have done it
+unconsciously, for I have no recollection of our having met."
+
+The man seemed puzzled. "Possibly!" he said, slowly, as he scanned the
+singer's features.
+
+"Undoubtedly it is so," said Vox, and, seeing the man's perplexity,
+quickly added, in the most genial manner, "I am sorry it is so, for I
+should be glad to remember that I had served you. Possibly I may do so
+in the future."
+
+The man hesitatingly began to withdraw. Near the door he stopped, and,
+glancing about the room, half to himself and half as an apology to Vox,
+said, "Perhaps I have dreamed it. But will you allow me to ask you a
+question? Do you ever sing Mazzini's 'Muleteers'?"
+
+"Often," replied Vox. "This, you mean," and he struck up the first
+line. His visitor instantly joined him. Vox stopped as quickly.
+
+"Good heavens!" he exclaimed. "There are not two voices in the world
+like that." Putting his hand on the man's shoulder, he peered into his
+face. He could not recall the features, for the dim light in Brady's
+Harbor and the general slouch of the fellow that night had not really
+allowed him to see his face fully. He imagined how this man might look
+with a week's beard on his chin, an untrimmed mustache covering his
+fine lips, and a dirty derby concealing his forehead.
+
+"Are you that man?"
+
+"I am; or, rather, I was that man. But I hope--thanks to God and
+you--I am a very different man to-day. I came to tell you my gratitude
+for a kindness which I had come to doubt one man ever rendered to
+another, and to apologize for my bestial treatment of you. I was not a
+man then, Mr. Vox, only a beast; and, if you will believe me, I was not
+accountable, for I knew no better. I have the vaguest remembrance of
+that night, as of many another night. When I awoke at daylight in
+these rooms I had just sense enough to know that somebody had
+befriended me or played a trick on me, and to be ashamed to meet him,
+whoever he was. So I sneaked away. When I was sobered I couldn't
+recall the place. But the 'Muleteers' rang in my ears, and your voice,
+every note, the tone and quality. I had heard you sing elsewhere, and
+knew that but one voice, that of Vox, could have sung in that way. And
+now it has taken a month for me to get up manliness enough to come and
+do the decent thing."
+
+"Don't talk in that way," said Vox, coloring as if he were receiving
+abuse instead of praise. "I did nothing that any man would not do for
+another. A man would be inhuman, a mere brute, not to--"
+
+Then he thought of what he had lately said to the doctor about buzzards
+and benevolent slummers, and he felt like a hypocrite again.
+
+"But don't talk about the past. Let it go. Isn't there something I
+can do for you now?" glancing at the man's threadbare coat.
+
+"Yes, there is one favor I would like very much to have you do me. I
+have had a hard struggle with myself these few weeks. I resolved that
+I would not drink again. I have kept my purpose, but it has been like
+being tied to a wild beast in a cage. More than once I have started
+out for a drink, but have come back without it. It is hard to feel
+that you are all alone in the fight, that nobody knows of it. It's
+like making that cane stand by itself."
+
+"But you have friends," said Vox, kindly.
+
+"Friends that have ceased to be friends are worse than strangers,"
+replied the man, in an abstracted sort of way. "My friends don't
+believe in me; I've got to make new friends, who don't know how weak I
+am. Perhaps they will believe in me for a while at least, and that
+will give a man some strength. But to be all alone in a fearful
+struggle! Oh, it's the loneliness that takes all the heart out of one.
+You know how one voice steadies another in singing. Drunk as I was
+when I sang with you, I believe I sang every note correctly; but alone
+I couldn't have rendered three notes true. I want you to let me rest
+for a while on your confidence, your good wishes, Mr. Vox; and to let
+me drop in once in a while, just to tell you that I am all right yet."
+
+"My good fellow, you can come, and you can stay with me just as much as
+you want to," said Vox; and for all that he knew that this was a very
+rash thing to say to a stranger, he would have resented any one's
+telling him so.
+
+"No," replied the man, "I shall not intrude upon you; but may I ask you
+to keep this pledge I have written? The paper is crumpled; that's
+because I have taken it out so often when the temptation was pretty
+strong. It was something like a friend; and I could say to it, 'You
+see I have kept faith with you, bit of paper, and I will.' So I would
+start out on another campaign. But if you will keep it for me I will
+feel better. I can think then that somebody knows what I am doing."
+
+Vox took the paper. It was written in fine penmanship, and signed
+"Charles Downs."
+
+"Downs? Charles Downs? Not Downs who used to be in the Mendelssohn?
+The tenor at St. Martha's? And you are speaking of being grateful to
+me for a common act of humanity! Why, man, I owe more to you than I
+can ever repay. It was hearing you sing once that gave me my first
+ambition to be a singer. I began to save my money that night that I
+might take lessons. I even tried to find you; but you had gone, nobody
+knew where."
+
+"I was on the road to hell then," said Downs. "Thank Heaven you didn't
+find me; I might have injured you by my example. But no, I think not.
+You were not inclined my way."
+
+The two men sat in silence for a few moments. Thought was becoming
+oppressive. Vox was of that mercurial disposition that cannot keep
+solemn long at a time. His vent-valves worked easily.
+
+"Come," said he, "let's try the old song."
+
+If he had deliberated he would not have chosen a reminder of the past.
+But there was something irresistible about Vox, and Downs joined with
+him as they rollicked through the "Muleteers."
+
+Sweezy stood in the doorway listening.
+
+"That," said Vox, "is the greatest compliment a man can have. Sweezy
+there has no more music in him than a horse; but see! we have woven the
+spell about him. I believe we do sing well together. What couldn't we
+do if we would practise together? Now I will keep this pledge for you,
+Downs, if you will promise to come every day at twelve and sing with
+me. We will lunch together, and I will see that you don't get a drop
+to drink."
+
+"I can't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"I have engaged to go to work."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Enlisted."
+
+"What! Enlisted? To throw yourself away again?" Vox gripped the arms
+of Downs as if he were a prisoner. "Where have you enlisted?"
+
+"In the street-sweeping brigade."
+
+"Great guns!" said Vox.
+
+"No, great brooms!" replied his friend. "I need outdoor work; there I
+will get it. I need to keep away from other men; and on the street I
+will be left to my own company as nicely as if I were a hermit.
+Besides, there will be a poetic fitness in one who has lived so dirty a
+life as I have giving himself up to the work of cleaning things. Then,
+too, I can see life; and that will be interesting. Nothing is so
+fascinating to one who has had my experience as the sight of a crowd,
+if only one can himself keep out of it." With that Downs sang:
+
+ "'Hurry along, sorrow and song;
+ All is vanity under the sun.
+ Velvet and rags: so the world wags,
+ Until the river no more shall run.'"
+
+
+Vox readily upset the street-sweeping project by showing Downs how he
+could be helpful to him in certain musical matters he had on foot, and
+even guaranteed to turn over to him several of his pupils who were
+trying to develop tenor voices.
+
+The next Sunday night after service the doctor took the singer's arm at
+the church door with his usual chirpy invitation, "Come, Phil, don't
+let Mrs. Cupp's pepper and mustard get cold, or the cheese get away
+from us."
+
+"Walk around the block with me first, doctor; I've got something to
+tell you which I'd rather you would hear when you can't see my face."
+
+"Why, what have you been doing now that you are ashamed of, Phil? Oh,
+I know. You have proposed to the soprano, or been perpetrating some
+other trick on your bachelor friends. I'll forgive you at the start,
+however, because"--lowering his voice until there was a frog in
+it--"because I know something about--but it's none of your business,
+Phil, so I won't tell you anything about it. No disappointment, my
+boy?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then count on me to marry you for nothing, and throw in the
+benediction besides."
+
+"It's no love-affair," said Vox. "Cupid might as well break his arrows
+on a rhinoceros as shoot at me. It's that drunken fellow. I've been
+awfully taken in."
+
+"What! has he turned up? Fleeced you again?"
+
+"Well, not exactly fleeced me, but scorched me; he has heaped coals of
+fire on my head. I want to take back all I have said against him, and
+everything I said against slumming."
+
+He then related what the reader knows. Having worked off the steam of
+his extra emotion, he accompanied the doctor to the study. Here Vox
+gave a description of his new friend: "a well-educated man, a splendid
+all-round musician, a fine business man; has a wife who won't live with
+him, nor even let him see her--he has treated her so outrageously; but
+he loves her tenderly. He was once employed by Silver & Co., who
+thought so much of him that they were making proposals for his entering
+the firm when they began to suspect his rum habit. His name is Downs."
+
+"Downs? With Silver & Co.?" The names set the doctor thinking. At
+length, coming out of his reverie, he picked up from the study-table a
+piece of marble, a bit of a fluted column he had found amid the ruins
+of the Temple of Diana at Ephesus. He traced on it with the pen the
+word D-o-w-n-s. Then he rubbed the word out with his finger; but a
+black spot was left that he could not get off the marble.
+
+"There! that's the way I would spoil the job if I should try to restore
+the ruins of Downs. Phil, stick to that man. I'll leave him to you.
+He's your parish. With your voice and his love of music, you ought to
+make him follow you as the rocks followed Orpheus. That's the meaning
+of the old legend--you can sing the hardest wretch into heaven. Try
+it, Phil."
+
+The doctor spent a half-hour next day in Silver & Co.'s office. Just
+what he and Silver talked about we cannot say; but Silver was overheard
+to remark, as the doctor was leaving, "My wife thinks the world of the
+little woman, and when those two women are satisfied with his
+reformation, all right."
+
+
+There never was a finer program for a musicale than that which, some
+six months later, packed the upper Carnegie Hall with the elite of the
+music-lovers of New York. Vox was the drawing card, for he had become,
+if not the celebrity, at least the fad, of the season. "Oh, Vox! he's
+just splendid!" was as familiarly heard as the clicking of afternoon
+tea-cups everywhere between Flushing and Orange Mountain. On the
+occasion referred to he had achieved a sevenfold encore for one
+performance. To the surprise of everybody, however, when he appeared
+to acknowledge the ovation, he led another man with him to the
+footlights; one who might have been his twin brother, for there was
+just that sort of difference between them that ought to exist between a
+tenor and a baritone--the former a little slighter in form and
+features. Curiosity was not allowed to get to the whispering-point
+when they rendered the Graben-Hoffman duet, "I feel thy angel spirit."
+
+The applause was furious. Nothing like it had been heard for six
+months outside of Brady's Harbor. Vox gracefully stepped a little to
+the rear. The audience caught his meaning, and the room rang with the
+cry of "Tenor! tenor!"
+
+Vox slipped to the piano, and played the chords of "Salva di Mora" from
+Gounod's "Faust." And how grandly Downs sang it! If Deacon Brisk had
+been there, even he, with his "star-twinkling" and "roof-splitting"
+metaphors, could not have described it.
+
+"If Faust sang like that," said an elderly gentleman in the audience to
+his wife, "no wonder he won the heart of Marguerite." And he pressed
+his wife's hand, which somehow had got into his.
+
+"Hush, John," replied the woman. Then she put a handkerchief to her
+eyes instead of her lorgnette.
+
+"He's all right again," said the man, and he squeezed his wife's arm,
+and nudged her nervously.
+
+"John, don't!" And the woman glanced at the woman next to her, as if
+that individual might care what cooing these old doves indulged in.
+
+This other woman wore a half-veil, one of those vizors with which women
+hide their beauty or their freckles from the gaze of the curious. Not
+seeing her face, one cannot say what was transpiring behind the veil;
+but the veil shook as if some convulsive emotion might be working
+itself out, or struggling to keep itself in.
+
+When Downs left the stage Vox hugged him as a bear would her cub.
+"Come," said he, "let's go out in the room and talk to the Silvers."
+
+"The Silvers here!" exclaimed Downs, in consternation.
+
+"They were here, but I believe they have left. Yes, their seats are
+empty. Now that's too bad."
+
+"No wonder they left when they saw me on the stage. Vox, you know that
+they know all about me. They would kick me off their doorstep if I
+were a beggar. You've disgraced yourself by bringing me here, as I
+told you you would. The Silvers, of all the people in the world! I
+wouldn't have sung if I had suspected their being here."
+
+"Well, you did sing. Thank God for it, too," replied his friend.
+
+The next Sunday night at the hobnob Vox tried to make a report to the
+doctor of the progress of his protégé.
+
+"Oh, he sang magnificently! I tell you, that man is reinstated in this
+community. Do you know, doctor, the Silvers were both there?"
+
+"Indeed!" ejaculated his friend, pulling Caleb's tail, and laughing at
+the dog's surprise. Then he pulled it again, and laughed at the dog's
+jump as if he had never seen such antics before.
+
+"See here, doctor, you don't seem to care about Downs. That dog is
+more to you than a human being. But you've got to listen to me."
+
+Vox got rapturous in his account of Downs's success, and ended with, "I
+couldn't help wishing that his wife had been there to see
+him--handsome, healthy, true man in every feature and tone of voice.
+She would have had to fall in love again, or I'll forswear all faith in
+the sex."
+
+The doctor rolled himself on the sofa in such glee that the dog
+accepted his master's antics as a challenge to more of his own, and
+pounced upon him.
+
+"What's the matter with you now?" asked the singer, in amazement.
+
+"Why, his wife was there," roared the doctor.
+
+"The thunder she was!" Vox jumped up as if he had been sitting in an
+electric chair.
+
+Caleb growled to hear such language in the presence of his patron saint.
+
+"I beg your pardon, doctor, but how do you know she was there?"
+
+"Why, I suppose she was, because Mrs. Silver promised to go and take
+her to hear _you_ sing." And the doctor laughed so loud and
+hilariously that the collie crept under the lounge, as if in fear of
+some more serious explosion.
+
+"And you have been playing the hypocrite with me all the time?" Vox was
+nettled. "If I had known that I wouldn't have sung a note, nor would I
+have let Downs do it, either."
+
+"Yet you just said you wish she had been there. Don't you see that had
+you known you would have spoiled your own job?" said the doctor,
+working out of his hysteria. "But, Phil, I'm hungry with preaching and
+laughing at you. Light up the chafing-dish, put in plenty of red
+pepper, and when your cockles are warmed you may read this," tossing
+him a note.
+
+Vox read:
+
+
+"DEAR DOCTOR: When I heard Downs sing the other night, I felt sure that
+your judgment of him was correct, and that he is a new man. Mrs. Downs
+has been with him for several days. God bless that little woman! She
+has borne up bravely during her trial; never lost heart; and now she
+has her reward. Of course Downs has his old place with us. I want to
+know that Mr. Vox. Bring him around to dine with us Wednesday night.
+If my wife can persuade them, we will have Mr. and Mrs. Downs too.
+
+ "Yours faithfully,
+ "JOHN SILVER."
+
+
+While Vox was reading the note Caleb came out from under the lounge,
+and putting his head in the singer's lap, gazed as worshipfully into
+his face as he had ever gazed into that of his master.
+
+
+
+* * * * * * * *
+
+
+
+ THE
+ Looking Upward Booklets
+
+12mo, decorated boards, each 30 cents
+
+1. DID THE PARDON COME TOO LATE? By Mrs. Ballington Booth.
+
+2. COMFORT PEASE, AND HER GOLD RING. By Mary E. Wilkins.
+
+3. MY LITTLE BOY BLUE. By Rosa Nouchette Cary. Illustrated.
+
+4. A WASTREL REDEEMED. By David Lyall. Illustrated.
+
+5. A DAY'S TIME-TABLE. By E. S. Elliott, author of "Expectation
+Corner," etc., etc. Illustrated.
+
+6. BROTHER LAWRENCE. The Practice of the Presence of God the Best Rule
+of Holy Life. Illustrated.
+
+7. THE SWISS GUIDE. An Allegory. By Rev. C. H. Parkhurst.
+
+8. WHERE KITTY FOUND HER SOUL. By Mrs. J. H. Walworth.
+
+9. ONE OF THE SWEET OLD CHAPTERS. By Rose Porter. Illustrated.
+
+10. THE BARITONE'S PARISH. By Rev. J. M. Ludlow, D.D.
+
+11. CHILD CULTURE; or, the Science of Motherhood. By Hannah Whitall
+Smith.
+
+12. RISEN WITH CHRIST. By Rev. A. J. Gordon, D.D.
+
+13. RELIQUES OF THE CHRIST. A Poem. By Rev. Denis Wortman, D.D.
+
+14. ERIC'S GOOD NEWS. By the author of "Probable Sons." Illustrated.
+
+15. YE NEXTE THYNGE. By Eleanor Amerman Sutphen. Illustrated.
+
+16. SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHING. Two Addresses. By R. C. Ogden and J. R.
+Miller, D.D.
+
+17. SAMUEL CHAPMAN ARMSTRONG. By Robert C. Ogden. With Portrait.
+
+18. BUSINESS. A Plain Talk with Men and Women Who Work. By Amos R.
+Wells.
+
+
+
+Fleming H. Revell Company
+
+ NEW YORK: 112 Fifth Avenue
+ CHICAGO: 63 Washington Street
+ TORONTO: 154 Yonge Street
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Baritone's Parish, by James M. Ludlow
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 59724 ***