As I searched for a penny it began
to rain. The blind man opened a parcel and I
saw that it contained a small tarpaulin cape.
But the several coats I wore made it difficult to
find my change; I thought I had better forego my charity
that day, and I walked away. “Eight or
nine hours a day waiting for alms is his earthly lot,”
I said, and walking towards the river, and leaning
on the parapet, I wondered if he recognised the passing
step if he recognised my step and
associated them with a penny? Of what use that
he should know the different steps? if he knew them
there would be anticipation and disappointments.
But a dog would make life comprehensible; and I imagined
a companionship, a mingling of muteness and blindness,
and the joy that would brighten the darkness when
the dog leaped eagerly upon the blind man’s knees.
I imagined the joy of warm feet and limb, and the
sudden poke of the muzzle. A dog would be a link
to bind the blind beggar to the friendship of life.
Now why has this small blind man, with a face as pale
as a plant that never sees the sun, not a dog?
A dog is the natural link and the only link that binds
the blind beggar to the friendship of life.
Looking round, I could see that he
was taking off his little cape, for it had ceased
raining. But in a few weeks it would rain every
day, and the wind would blow from the river in great
gusts. “Will he brave another winter?”
I asked myself. “Iron blasts will sweep
through the passage; they will find him through the
torn shirt and the poor grey trousers, the torn waist-coat,
the black jacket, and the threadbare over-coat someone’s
cast-off garment.... Now, he may have been born
blind, or he may have become blind; in any case he
has been blind for many years, and if he persist in
living he will have to brave many winters in that
passage, for he is not an old man. What instinct
compels him to bear his dark life? Is he afraid
to kill himself? Does this fear spring from physical
or from religious motives? Fear of hell?
Surely no other motive would enable him to endure his
life.”
In my intolerance for all life but
my own I thought I could estimate the value of the
Great Mockery, and I asked myself angrily why he persisted
in living. I asked myself why I helped him to
live. It would be better that he should throw
himself at once into the river. And this was
reason talking to me, and it told me that the most
charitable act I could do would be to help him over
the parapet. But behind reason there is instinct,
and in obedience to an impulse, which I could not weigh
or appreciate, I went to the blind man and put some
money into his hand; the small coin slipped through
his fingers; they were so cold that he could not retain
it, and I had to pick it from the ground.
“Thankee, sir. Can you tell, sir, what
time it is?”
And this little question was my recompense.
He and I wanted to know the time. I asked him
why he wanted to know the time, and he told me because
that evening a friend was coming to fetch him.
And, wondering who that friend might be, and, hoping
he might tell me, I asked him about his case of pencils,
expressing a hope that he sold them. He answered
that he was doing a nice bit of trading.
“The boys about here are a trouble,”
he said, “but the policeman on the beat is a
friend of mine, and he watches them and makes them
count the pencils they take. The other day they
robbed me, and he gave them such a cuffing that I
don’t think they’ll take my pencils again.
You see, sir, I keep the money I take for the pencils
in the left pocket, and the money that is given to
me I keep in the right pocket. In this way I
know if my accounts are right when I make them up in
the evening.”
Now where, in what lonely room does
he sit making up his accounts? but, not wishing to
seem inquisitorial, I turned the conversation.
“I suppose you know some of the passers-by.”
“Yes, I know a tidy few.
There’s one gentleman who gives me a penny every
day, but he’s gone abroad, I hear, and sixpence
a week is a big drop.”
As I had given him a penny a day all
the summer, I assumed he was speaking of me.
And my sixpence a week meant a day’s dinner,
perhaps two days’ dinners! It was only
necessary for me to withhold my charity to give him
ease. He would hardly be able to live without
my charity, and if one of his other patrons were to
do likewise the world would be freed from a life that
I could not feel to be of any value.
So do we judge the world if we rely
on our reason, but instinct clings like a child and
begs like a child, and my instinct begged me to succour
this poor man, to give him a penny every day, to find
out what his condition was, and to stop for a chat
every time I gave him my penny. I had obeyed
my instinct all the summer, and now reason had intervened,
reason was in rebellion, and for a long time I avoided,
or seemed to avoid, the passage where the blind man
sat for eight or nine hours, glad to receive, but
never asking for alms.
I think I forgot the blind man for
several months. I only remembered him when I
was sitting at home, or when I was at the other side
of the town, and sometimes I thought I made myself
little excuses not to pass through the passage.
Our motives are so vague, so complex and many, that
one is never quite sure why one does a thing, and if
I were to say that I did not give the blind man pennies
that winter because I believed it better to deprive
him of his means of livelihood and force him out of
life than to help him to remain in life and suffer,
I should be saying what was certainly untrue, yet
the idea was in my mind, and I experienced more than
one twinge of conscience when I passed through the
passage. I experienced remorse when I hurried
past him, too selfish to unbutton my coat, for every
time I happened to pass him it was raining or blowing
very hard, and every time I hurried away trying to
find reasons why he bore his miserable life. I
hurried to my business, my head full of chatter about
St. Simon’s Stylites, telling myself that he
saw God far away at the end of the sky, His immortal
hands filled with immortal recompenses; reason chattered
about the compensation of celestial choirs, but instinct
told me that the blind man standing in the stone passage
knew of such miraculous consolations.
As the winter advanced, as the winds
grew harsher, my avoidance of the passage grew more
marked, and one day I stopped to think, and asked
myself why I avoided it.
There was a faint warmth in the sky,
and I heard my heart speaking to me quite distinctly,
and it said:
“Go to the blind man what
matter about your ten minutes’ delay; you have
been unhappy since you refrained from alms-giving,
and the blind beggar can feel the new year beginning.”
“You see, sir, I have added
some shirt buttons and studs to the pencils.
I don’t know how they will go, but one never
knows till one tries.”
Then he told me it was smallpox that
destroyed his eyes, and he was only eighteen at the
time.
“You must have suffered very
much when they told you your sight was going?”
“Yes, sir. I had the hump for six weeks.”
“What do you mean?”
“It doubled me up, that it did.
I sat with my head in my hands for six weeks.”
“And after that?”
“I didn’t think any more about it what
was the good?”
“Yes, but it must be difficult not to think,
sitting here all alone.”
“One mustn’t allow one’s
self to give way. One would break down if one
did. I’ve some friends, and in the evening
I get plenty of exercise.”
“What do you do in the evenings?”
“I turn a hay-cutting machine in a stable.”
“And you’re quite contented?”
“I don’t think, sir, a
happier man than I passes through this gate-way once
a month.”
He told me his little boy came to fetch him in the
evening.
“You’re married?”
“Yes, sir, and I’ve got
four children. They’re going away for their
holidays next week.”
“Where are they going?”
“To the sea. It will do
them good; a blow on the beach will do them a power
of good.”
“And when they come back they will tell you
about it?”
“Yes.”
“And do you ever go away for a holiday?”
“Last year I went with a policeman.
A gentleman who passes this way, one of my friends,
paid four shillings for me. We had a nice dinner
in a public house for a shilling, and then we went
for a walk.”
“And this year are you going with the policeman?”
“I hope so, a friend of mine gave me half-a-crown
towards it.”
“I’ll give you the rest.”
“Thankee, sir.”
A soft south wind was blowing, and
an instinct as soft and as gentle filled my heart,
and I went towards some trees. The new leaves
were beginning in the branches; and sitting where
sparrows were building their nests, I soon began to
see further into life than I had seen before.
“We’re here,” I said, “for
the purpose of learning what life is, and the blind
beggar has taught me a great deal, something that I
could not have learnt out of a book, a deeper truth
than any book contains.” ... And then I
ceased to think, for thinking is a folly when a soft
south wind is blowing, and an instinct as soft and
as gentle fills the heart.