The evening was somewhat advanced,
but Arthur determined at once to seek an interview
with Miss Ayleff. Hastily arranging his toilet,
he walked briskly up Broadway, revolving in his mind
a fit course for fulfilling his delicate errand.
To shorten his way, he turned into
a cross street in the upper part of the city.
As he approached the hall door of a large brick house,
his eye chanced to fall upon a man who was ringing
for admittance. The light from the street lamp
fell full upon his face, and he recognized the features
of Philip Searle. At that moment the door was
opened, and Philip entered. Arthur would have
passed on, but something in the appearance of the
house arrested his attention, and, on closer scrutiny,
revealed to him its character. One of those impulses
which sometimes sway our actions, tempted him to enter,
and learn, if possible, something further respecting
the habits of the man whose scheme he had been commissioned
to thwart. A moment’s reflection might have
changed his purpose, but his hand was already upon
the bell, and the summons was quickly answered by
a good-looking but faded young woman, with painted
cheeks and gay attire. She fixed her keen, bold
eyes upon him for a few seconds, and then, tossing
her ringlets, pertly invited him to enter.
“Who is within?” asked Arthur, standing
in the hall.
“Only the girls. Walk in.”
“The gentleman who came in before me, is he
there?”
“Do you want to see him?” she asked, suspiciously.
“Oh, no. Only I would avoid being seen
by any one.”
“He will not see you. Come
right in.” And she threw open the door,
and flaunted in.
Arthur followed her without hesitation.
Bursts of forced and cheerless laughter,
and the shrill sound of rude and flippant talk, smote
unpleasantly upon his ear. The room was richly
furnished, but without taste or modesty. The tall
mirrors were displayed with ostentation, and the paintings,
offensive in design, hung conspicuous in showy frames.
The numerous gas jets, flashing among glittering crystal
pendants, made vice more glaring and heartlessness
more terribly apparent. Women, with bold and haggard
eyes, with brazen brows, and cheeks from which the
roses of virgin shame had been plucked to bloom no
more forever mostly young girls, scourging
their youth into old age, and gathering poison at
once for soul and body with sensual indolence
reclined upon the rich ottomans, or with fantastic
grace whirled through lewd waltzes over the velvet
carpets. There was laughter without joy there
was frivolity without merriment there was
the surface of enjoyment and the substance of woe,
for beneath those painted cheeks was the pallor of
despair and broken health, and beneath those whitened
bosoms, half veiled with gaudy silks, were hearts that
were aching with remorse, or, yet more unhappy, benumbed
and callous with habitual sin.
Yet there, like a crushed pearl upon
a heap of garbage, lingers the trace of beauty; and
there, surely, though sepulchred in the caverns of
vice, dwells something that was once innocence, and
not unredeemable. But whence is the friendly
word to come, whence the guardian hand that might
lift them from the slough. They live accursed
by even charity, shunned by philanthropy, and shut
from the Christian world like a tribe of lepers whose
touch is contagion and whose breath is pestilence.
In the glittering halls of fashion, the high-born
beauty, with wreaths about her white temples and diamonds
upon her chaste bosom, gives her gloved hand for the
dance, and forgets that an erring sister, by the touch
of those white fingers, might be raised from the grave
of her chastity, and clothed anew with the white garments
of repentance. But no; the cold world of fashion,
that from its cushioned pew has listened with stately
devotion to the words of the Redeemer, has taught her
that to redeem the fallen is beneath her caste.
The bond of sisterhood is broken. The lost one
must pursue her hideous destiny, each avenue of escape
blocked by the scorn and loathing which denies her
the contact of virtue and the counsel of purity.
In the broad fields of charity, invaded by cold philosophers,
losing themselves in searching unreal and vague philanthropies,
none so practical in beneficence as to take her by
the hand, saying, “Go, and sin no more.”
But whenever the path of benevolence
is intricate and doubtful, whenever the work is linked
with a riddle whose solving will breed discord and
trouble among men, whenever there is a chance to make
philanthropy a plea for hate, and bitterness and charity
can be made a battle-cry to arouse the spirit of destruction,
and spread ruin and desolation over the fair face
of the earth, then will the domes of our churches resound
with eloquence, then will the journals of the land
teem with their mystic theories, then will the mourners
of human woe be loud in lamentation, and lift up their
mighty voices to cry down an abstract evil. When
actual misery appeals to them, they are deaf; when
the plain and palpable error stalks before them, they
turn aside. They are too busy with the tangles
of some philanthropic Gordian knot, to stretch out
a helping hand to the sufferer at their sides.
They are frenzied with their zeal to build a bridge
over a spanless ocean, while the drowning wretch is
sinking within their grasp. They scorn the simple
charity of the good Samaritan; theirs must be a gigantic
and splendid achievement in experimental beneficence,
worthy of their philosophic brains. The wrong
they would redress must be one that half the world
esteems a right; else there would be no room for their
arguments, no occasion for their invective, no excuse
for their passion. To do good is too simple for
their transcendentalism; they must first make evil
out of their logic, and then, through blood and wasting
flames, drive on the people to destruction, that the
imaginary evil may be destroyed. While Charity
soars so high among the clouds, she will never stoop
to lift the Magdalen from sin.