And only the Master shall praise us, and
only the
Master shall blame,
And no one shall work for money, and no one
shall work for fame,
But each for the joy of working, and each, in
his
separate star,
Shall draw the Thing as he sees It for the God
of
Things as They Are.
KIPLING
JUNE time in the Walnut Valley, and
commencement time at Sunrise on the limestone ridge!
Nor pen nor brush can show the glory of the radiant
prairies, and the deep blue of the “unscarred
heavens,” and the bright gleams from rippling
waters. And at the end of a perfect day comes
the silvery grandeur of a moonlit June night.
It was late afternoon of the day before
commencement. Victor Burleigh stood on the stone
where four years ago the bull snake had stretched
itself in the lazy sunshine. Only one more day
at Sunrise for him, and the little heartache, unlike
any other sorrow a life can ever know, was his, as
he stood there. In the four years’ battle
he had come off conqueror until the symbol above the
doorway no longer held any mystery for him. His
character and culture now matched his voice. Before
him was higher learning, an under-professorship at
Harvard, and later on the pulpit for his life work.
But now the heartache of parting was his, and a deeper
pain than breaking school ties was his also. A
year of jolly goodfellowship was ending, a happy year,
with Elinor his most frequent companion. And
often in this year he had wondered at Lloyd Fenneben’s
harsh judgment of her. Fondness of luxury seemed
foreign to her, and womanly beauty of character made
her always “Norrie the beloved.” But
Victor was true to Fenneben’s demands and willing
to try to live through the years after, if one year
of happy association could be his now. Whatever
claims Burgess might assert later, he could not take
from another the claim to happy memories. But,
today, there was the dull steady heartache that he
knew had come to stay.
Presently Elinor joined him.
“May I come down tonight for
a goodby stroll, Elinor? There’s a full
moon and after tomorrow there are to be no more moons,
nor stars, nor suns, nor lands, nor seas, nor principalities,
nor powers for us at Sunrise.”
“I wish you would come, Victor,”
Elinor said. “Come early. There’s
a crowd going out somewhere, and we can join the ranks
of the great ungraduated for the last time.”
“Elinor, I’m not hunting
a crowd tonight,” Vic said in a low voice.
“Well, come, anyway, and we’ll
hunt the solitude, if we can’t hunt any other
game.” And they strolled homeward together.
In the early evening Lloyd Fenneben
and Elinor sat on the veranda watching the sunset
through the trees beyond the river.
“You are to graduate from Sunrise
tomorrow,” Dr. Fenneben was saying. “For
a Wream that is the real beginning of life. I
have your business matters entrusted to me, ready
to close up as soon as you are ’legally graduated’
according to my brother’s wishes, but you may
as well know them now.”
He paused, and Elinor, thinking of
the moonlight, maybe, waited in peaceful silence.
“Norrie, when I finished at
the university my brother put a small fortune into
my hands and bade me go West and build a new Harvard.
You know our family hold that that is the only legitimate
use for money.”
Norrie smiled assent.
“I did not ask whose money it
was, for my brother handled many bequests, and I was
a poor business man then. I came and invested
it at last in Sunrise-by-the-Walnut. That was
your mother’s money, given by your father to
Joshua, who gave it to me. Joshua did not tell
me, and I supposed some good, old Boston philanthropist
had bought an indulgence for his ignorant soul by
endowing this thing so freely. I found it out
on Joshua’s deathbed, and only to pacify him
would I consent to keep it until now. Henceforth,
it must be yours. That is why I asked you a year
ago to just be a college girl and drop all thought
about marrying. I wanted you to come into possession
of your own property before you bound yourself by
any bonds you could not break.”
Elinor sat silent for a while, her
dark eyes seeing only the low golden sunset.
She understood now what had grooved that line of care
in Lloyd Fenneben’s face when he came home from
the East. But he had conquered, aye, he had won
the mastery.
“And you and Sunrise?” she asked at length.
“I can sell the college site
and buildings to this new manufactory coming here
in August. Added to this, I have acquired sufficient
funds of my own to pay you the entire amount and a
good rate of interest with it. My grief is that
for all these years, I have kept you out of your own.”
Elinor rose up, white and cold, and
put her hand on her uncle’s hand.
“Let me think a little, Uncle
Lloyd. It is not easy to realize one’s
fortune in a minute.” Then she left him.
“It makes little difference
what passion possesses a man’s soul, if it possesses
him he will wrong his fellowmen,” Fenneben said
to himself. “In Joshua Wream’s craving
to endow college claims he robbed this girl of her
inheritance and sent her to me, telling me she was
shallow-minded and wholly given to a love of luxuries,
that I might not see his plans; while Norrie, never
knowing, has proved over and over how false these
charges were. And at last, to still his noisy
conscience, he would marry her, willing or unwilling,
to Vincent Burgess. But with all this, his last
hours were full of sorrowful confession. What
do these Masters’ Degrees my brother bore avail
a man if he have not the mastery within? Meanwhile,
my labors here must end.”
Lonely and crushed, with his life
work taken from him, he sat and faced the sunset.
Presently, he saw Elinor and Victor Burleigh strolling
away in the soft evening light. At the corner,
Elinor turned and waved a good-by to him. Then
the memory of his own commencement day came back to
him, and of the happy night before. Oh, that night
before! Can a man ever forget! And now,
tonight!
“Don Fonnybone,” Bug Buler
piped, as he came trudging around the corner.
“I want to confessing.”
He came to Fenneben’s side and
looked up confidently in his face.
“Well, confessing. I’ve
just finished doing that myself,” Fenneben said.
“I did a bad, long ago.
I want to go and confessing. Will you go with
me?”
“Where shall we go to be shriven, Bug?
“To Pigeon Place,” Bug
responded. “The Pigeon woman is there now.
I saw her coming, and I must go right away and confessing.”
“I’ll go with you, Bug.
I want to see that woman, anyhow,” Fenneben
said.
And the two went away in the early
twilight of this rare June evening.
Out at Pigeon Place, when Dr. Fenneben
and little Bug walked up the grassy way to the vine-covered
porch in the misty twilight, Mrs. Marian sat in the
shadow, unaware of their coming until they stood before
her.
Lloyd Fenneben lifted his hat, and
little Bug imitated him.
“I beg your pardon, Mrs. Marian.
This little boy wanted to tell you of something that
was troubling him. I think he trespassed on your
property unknowingly.”
The gray-haired woman stood motionless
in the shadow still. Her fair face less haggard
than of yore, as if some dread had left it, and only
loneliness remained.
“I was here, and you was away,
and I peeked in the window. It was rude and I
never did see you to tell you, and I’m sorry
and I won’t for never do it again.
Dennie told me to come tonight, and bring Don Fonnybone.”
Bug had his part well in hand.
Even as she smiled at him, Dr. Fenneben
noticed how her hand on the lattice shook.
“And I want to thank you, Mrs.
Marian, for your bravery and goodness on the night
I was assaulted here.” Fenneben was a gentleman
to the core and his courtesy was charming. “I
meant to find you long ago, but my brother’s
death, with my own long illness, and your absence,
and my many duties ” He paused with
a smile.
“Oh, Lloyd, Lloyd, on an evening
like this, why do you come here?”
The woman stood in the light now,
a tragic figure of sorrow. And she was not yet
forty.
Dr. Fenneben caught his breath and
the light seemed to go out before him.
“Marian, oh, Marian! After
all these years, do I find you here? They said
you were dead.” He caught her in his arms
and held her close to his breast.
“Lots of folks spoons round
the Saxon House, so I went away and lef ’em,”
Bug explained to Vic once afterward.
And that accounted for little Bug
sitting lonely on the flat stone by the bend in the
river where Dennie and Burgess found him later.
“So you have stood between me
and that assassin all these years, even when the lies
against me made you doubt my love. Oh, Marian,
the strength of a woman’s heart!” Fenneben
declared, as, side by side, black hair and the gray
near together, these long-separated lovers rebuilt
their world.
“And this little child brought
you here at last. ’A little child shall
lead them,’” the woman murmured.
“Yes, Bug is a gift of God.”
Lloyd Fenneben was bending over her. “He
is Victor Burleigh’s nephew, who found him in
a deserted place ”
A shriek cut the evening air and she
who had been known as Mrs. Marian lay in a faint at
Fenneben’s feet.
“Tell me, Marian, what this means.”
Lloyd Fenneben had restored her to
consciousness and she was resting, white and trembling,
in his arms.
“My little Bug, my baby, Burgess!”
she sobbed. “Bond Saxon, in a drunken fit,
killed his father. Then Tom Gresh carried him
away to save him from Bond, too, so Tom declared,
but I did not believe him. Bond never harmed
a little child. Tom said he meant no harm and
that Bug was stolen from where he had left him.
It was then that my hair turned white. Tom tried
once, a year ago in December, to make me believe he
could bring Bug back to me if I would care for him for
that wicked murderer! Oh, Lloyd!”
She nestled close in Dr. Fenneben’s
protecting arms, and shivered at the thought.
“And you named him Burgess for
your own name. Does Vincent know?” Fenneben
questioned, tenderly smoothing the white hair as Norrie
had so often smoothed his own.
“Is this Vincent my own brother?
Will he really own me as his sister? I’ve
tried to meet him many times. I left his picture
on my table that he might see it if he should ever
come. My father separated us years ago.
After we came West he sent me just one letter in which
he said Vincent would never speak to me nor claim
me as his sister again. A brother a
lover and my baby boy!”
And the lonely woman, overcome with
joy, sat white and still beneath the white moonbeams.
Joy does not kill any more than sorrow.
Vincent Burgess and Dennie Saxon, who came just at
the right time, told how they had waited with Bug
at the slab of stone by the bend in the river until
they should be needed.
“It was Dennie who planned it
all,” Vincent said, “and did not even let
me know. Bug told her my picture was on the table
in there. But so long as her father lived, she
kept her counsel.”
“I tried four years ago to get
Dr. Fenneben to come out here,” Dennie said.
And the Dean remembered the autumn holiday and Dennie’s
solicitude for an unknown woman.
But the joy of this night, crowning
all other joys in the Walnut Valley, was in that sacred
moment when Bug Buler walked slowly up to Marian Burleigh,
sister to Vincent Burgess, lost love of Lloyd Fenneben’s
youth slowly, and with big brown eyes glowing
with a strange new love light, and, putting up both
his chubby hands to her cheeks, he murmured softly:
“Is you my own mother? Then, I’ll
love you fornever.”
Meantime, on this last moonlit June
night, Elinor and Vic were strolling down the new
south cement walk, a favorite place for the young people
now.
At the farther end, Vic said:
“Norrie, let’s go down
across the shallows to the west bluff again. Can
you climb it, or shall we join the crowd down in the
Kickapoo Corral?”
“I can climb where you can, Victor,” Elinor
declared.
“Dennie will never want to come here again.
Poor Dennie!”
Vic was helping Elinor across the
shallows as he spoke. Up in the Corral a happy
crowd of young people were finishing their last “picnic
spread” for the year. Below the shallows
the whirlpool was glistening all treacherously smooth
and level under the moonbeams.
“Why ‘poor Dennie,’
Victor? Her father had nothing more for him, here,
except disgrace. The tribute paid him at his funeral
would have been forever withheld, if he had lived
a day longer, and he died sure of Dennie’s future.”
Elinor spoke gently.
“Who told you all this, Elinor?” Victor
asked.
“Professor Burgess, when he
showed me the diamond ring Dennie is to wear tomorrow.”
“Dennie, a diamond! I’m
glad for Dennie. Diamonds are fine to have,”
Vic declared.
They had climbed to the top of the
west bluff. The silvery prairie and silver river
and mist-wreathed valley, and overhead, the clear,
calm sky, where the moon sailed in magnificent grandeur,
were a setting to make the evening a perfect one.
And in this setting was Elinor, herself the jewel,
beautiful, winsome, womanly.
“I have some good news.”
She turned to the young man beside her. “You
know the Wreams have made a life business of endowing
colleges. Well, I am a Wream by blood, and tomorrow,
oh, Victor, tomorrow, I, too, have the opportunity
of a lifetime. I’m going to endow Sunrise.”
He looked at her in amazement.
“Oh, it’s clear enough,”
she exclaimed. “It was my money that built
Sunrise. It shall stay here, and Dr. Lloyd Fenneben,
Dean of Sunrise, and acting-Dean Vincent Burgess,
A.B., Professor of Greek, and Victor Burleigh, Valedictorian,
who goes East to a professorship in Harvard, and to
the ministry of the gospel later on all
you mighty men of valor will know how little Norrie
Wream cares for money, except as it can make the world
better and happier. I haven’t lived in Lloyd
Fenneben’s home these four years without learning
something of what is required for a Master’s
Degree.”
“Norrie!” All the music
of a soul poured into the music of the deep voice.
“Victor! There is no sacrifice
in it. I wish there were, that I might wear the
honors you wear so modestly.”
“I, Elinor?”
“I know the whole story.
Dennie told me when you had that awful fight, and
Trenchie told me long ago, that you thought I must
have money to make me happy. Why I, more than
Dennie, or you, who gave Bug his claim?”
Elinor put up her hands to Victor,
who took them both in his, as he drew her to him and
kissed her sweet red lips. And there was a new
heaven and a new earth created that night in the soft
silvery moonlight of the Walnut Valley.
“I’d rather be here with
you than over the river with anybody else. I
feel safer here,” she murmured, remembering when
they had striven in the darkness and the storm to
reach this very height.
But Victor Burleigh could not speak.
The mastery for which he had striven seemed to bring
meed of reward too great for him to grasp with words.
THE PARTING
... There is neither East nor West, Border,
nor Breed, nor Birth,
When two strong men stand face to face, tho’
they
come from the ends of
the earth!
KIPLING
COMMENCEMENT day at Sunrise was just
one golden Kansas June day, when
The heart is so full that a drop overfills it.
Victor Burleigh, late of a claim out
beyond the Walnut, Professor-to-be in Harvard University,
and Vincent Burgess, acting-Dean of Sunrise, only
a degree less beloved than Dean Fenneben himself, met
on the morning of commencement day at the campus gate,
one to go to the East, the other to stay in the West.
Side by side they walked up the long avenue to the
foot of the slope, together they climbed the broad
flight of steps leading up to the imposing doorway
of Sunrise with the big letter S carved in relief
above it. And after pausing a moment to take in
the matchless wonder of the landscape over which old
Sunrise keeps watch, the college portal swung open
and the two entered at the same time. Inside
the doorway, under the halo of light from the stained
glass dome with its Kansas motto, wrought in dainty
coloring. Elinor Wream, niece of the Dean of
Sunrise, and Dennie Saxon, old Bond Saxon’s daughter,
who had earned her college tuition, stood side by
side, awaiting them. And beyond these, on the
rotunda stairs, Dr. Lloyd Fenneben was looking down
at the four with keen black eyes. Beside him on
the broad stairway was Marian Burgess Burleigh, the
white-haired, young-faced woman of Pigeon Place, and
Bug Buler everybody’s child.
The barriers were down at last:
the value of common life, the power of Strife and
Sacrifice and Service, the joy of Supremacy, the conflict
of rich red blood with the thinner blue, the force
of culture against mere physical strength, the power
of character over wealth these things had
been wrought out under the gracious influence of Dr.
Lloyd Fenneben in Sunrise-by-the-Walnut.
“Come up, come up; there is
room up here,” the Dean called to the group
in the rotunda. “There’s an A.B. for
all who have conquered the Course of Study, and a
Master’s Degree for everyone who has conquered
himself.”
The common level so impossible on
a September day four years ago, came now to two strong
men when the commencement exercises were ended, and
Sunrise became to the outgoing class only a hallowed
memory.
The hour is high noon, the good-bys
are given, and from the crest of the limestone ridge
the ringing chorus, led by good old Trench, sounds
far and far away along the Walnut Valley:
Rah for Funnybone! Rah for Funnybone!
Rah for Funnybone! Rah! RAW RAH!!!