“How is business?”
“Very dull, I am losing terribly.”
“Any prospect of times brightening?”
“I don’t see my way out
clear; but I hope there will be a change for the better.
Confidence has been greatly shaken, men of[?] business
have grown exceedingly timid about investing and there
is a general depression in every department of trade
and business.”
“Now Paul will you listen to
reason and common sense? I have a proposition
to make. I am about to embark in a profitable
business, and I know that it will pay better than
anything else I could undertake in these times.
Men will buy liquor if they have not got money for
other things. I am going to open a first class
saloon, and club-house, on M. Street, and if you will
join with me we can make a splendid thing of it.
Why just see how well off Joe Harden is since he set
up in the business; and what airs he does put on!
I know when he was not worth fifty dollars, and kept
a little low groggery on the corner of L. and S. Streets,
but he is out of that now-keeps a first
class Cafe, and owns a block of houses.
Now Paul, here is a splendid chance for you; business
is dull, and now accept this opening. Of course
I mean to keep a first class saloon. I don’t
intend to tolerate loafing, or disorderly conduct,
or to sell to drunken men. In fact, I shall put
up my scale of prices so that you need fear no annoyance
from rough, low, boisterous men who don’t know
how to behave themselves. What say you, Paul?”
“I say, no! I wouldn’t
engage in such a business, not if it paid me a hundred
thousand dollars a year. I think these first class
saloons are just as great a curse to the community
as the low groggeries, and I look upon them as the
fountain heads of the low groggeries. The man
who begins to drink in the well lighted and splendidly
furnished saloon is in danger of finishing in the
lowest dens of vice and shame.”
“As you please,” said
John Anderson stiffly, “I thought that as business
is dull that I would show you a chance, that would
yield you a handsome profit; but if you refuse, there
is no harm done. I know young men who would jump
at the chance.”
You may think it strange that knowing
Paul Clifford as John Anderson did, that he should
propose to him an interest in a drinking saloon; but
John Anderson was a man who was almost destitute of
faith in human goodness. His motto was that “every
man has his price,” and as business was fairly
dull, and Paul was somewhat cramped for want of capital,
he thought a good business investment would be the
price for Paul Clifford’s conscientious scruples.
“Anderson,” said Paul
looking him calmly in the face, “you may call
me visionary and impracticable; but I am determined
however poor I may be, never to engage in any business
on which I cannot ask God’s blessing. And
John I am sorry from the bottom of my heart, that you
have concluded to give up your grocery and keep a
saloon. You cannot keep that saloon without sending
a flood of demoralizing influence over the community.
Your profit will be the loss of others. Young
men will form in that saloon habits which will curse
and overshadow all their lives. Husbands and
fathers will waste their time and money, and confirm
themselves in habits which will bring misery, crime,
and degradation; and the fearful outcome of your business
will be broken hearted wives, neglected children,
outcast men, blighted characters and worse than wasted
lives. No not for the wealth of the Indies, would
I engage in such a ruinous business, and I am thankful
today that I had a dear sainted mother who taught
me that it was better to have my hands clear than to
have them full. How often would she lay her dear
hands upon my head, and clasp my hands in hers and
say, ’Paul, I want you to live so that you can
always feel that there is no eye before whose glance
you will shrink, no voice from whose tones your heart
will quail, because your hands are not clean, or your
record not pure,’ and I feel glad to-day that
the precepts and example of that dear mother have
given tone and coloring to my life; and though she
has been in her grave for many years, her memory and
her words are still to me an ever present inspiration.”
“Yes Paul; I remember your mother.
I wish! Oh well there is no use wishing.
But if all Christians were like her, I would have more
faith in their religion.”
“But John the failure of others
is no excuse for our own dérélictions.”
“Well, I suppose not. It
is said, the way Jerusalem was kept clean, every man
swept before his own door. And so you will not
engage in the business?”
“No John, no money I would earn
would be the least inducement.”
“How foolish,” said John
Anderson to himself as they parted. “There
is a young man who might succeed splendidly if he
would only give up some of his old fashioned notions,
and launch out into life as if he had some common
sense. If business remains as it is, I think he
will find out before long that he has got to shut
his eyes and swallow down a great many things he don’t
like.”
After the refusal of Paul Clifford,
John soon found a young man of facile conscience who
was willing to join with him in a conspiracy of sin
against the peace, happiness and welfare of the community.
And he spared neither pains nor expense to make his
saloon attractive to what he called, “the young
bloods of the city,” and by these he meant young
men whose parents were wealthy, and whose sons had
more leisure and spending money than was good for
them. He succeeded in fitting up a magnificent
palace of sin. Night after night till morning
flashed the orient, eager and anxious men sat over
the gaming table watching the turn of a card, or the
throw of a dice. Sparkling champaign, or ruby-tinted
wine were served in beautiful and costly glasses.
Rich divans and easy chairs invited weary men to seek
repose from unnatural excitement. Occasionally
women entered that saloon, but they were women not
as God had made them, but as sin had debased them.
Women whose costly jewels and magnificent robes were
the livery of sin, the outside garnishing of moral
death; the flush upon whose cheek, was not the flush
of happiness, and the light in their eyes was not the
sparkle of innocent joy,-women whose laughter
was sadder than their tears, and who were dead while
they lived. In that house were wine, and mirth,
and revelry, “but the dead were there,”
men dead to virtue, true honor and rectitude, who
walked the streets as other men, laughed, chatted,
bought, sold, exchanged and bartered, but whose souls
were encased in living tombs, bodies that were dead
to righteousness but alive to sin. Like a spider
weaving its meshes around the unwary fly, John Anderson
wove his network of sin around the young men that entered
his saloon. Before they entered there, it was
pleasant to see the supple vigor and radiant health
that were manifested in the poise of their bodies,
the lightness of their eyes, the freshness of their
lips and the bloom upon their cheeks. But Oh!
it was so sad to see how soon the manly gait would
change to the drunkard’s stagger. To see
eyes once bright with intelligence growing vacant
and confused and giving place to the drunkard’s
leer. In many cases lassitude supplanted vigor,
and sickness overmastered health. But the saddest
thing was the fearful power that appetite had gained
over its victims, and though nature lifted her signals
of distress, and sent her warnings through weakened
nerves and disturbed functions, and although they
were wasting money, time, talents, and health, ruining
their characters, and alienating their friends, and
bringing untold agony to hearts that loved them and
yearned over their defections, yet the fascination
grew stronger and ever and anon the grave opened at
their feet; and disguise it as loving friends might,
the seeds of death had been nourished by the fiery
waters of alcohol.