GOOD NEWS TO THE CAPTAIN-ALSO TO JEFF
There is a period, probably, in the
life of every man, when a feeling akin to despair
creeps over him, and the natural tendency of his heart
to rebel against his Maker becomes unquestionable.
There may be some on whom this epoch descends gently others,
perhaps, who may even question whether they have met
with it at all; but there must be many, of whom Jeff
was one, on whom it comes like a thunderbolt, scathing
for a time all the finer qualities of heart and mind.
“If it had only come at a later
period of life, or in some other form, auntie,”
he said one day, as he lay on a sofa at the open window
of the cottage, looking out upon the sea; “but
to be bowled over at my age, when the world was all
before me, and I was so well able physically,
at least to fight my way. It is terrible,
and seems so outrageous! What good can possibly
come of rendering a young man helpless a
strong, capable machine, that might do so much good
in the world, useless?”
He spoke in an almost querulous tone,
and looked inquiringly in his nurse’s face.
It did not occur to the youth, as he looked at her,
that the weak-bodied, soft, and gentle creature herself
had been, and still was, doing more good to the world
than a hundred young men such as he!
Miss Millet’s face was a wholesome
one to look into. She did not shake her head
and look solemn or shocked. Neither did she laugh
at his petulance. She merely said, with the
sweetest of little smiles, “You may live, Jeff,
to be a very useful machine yet; if not quite
as strong as you were though even that
is uncertain, for doctors are fallible, you know.
Never forget that, Jeff doctors are fallible.
Besides, your living at all shows that God has something
for you to do for Him.”
“Nonsense, auntie. If
that is true of me, it is just as true of hundreds
of men who live and die without making the smallest
attempt to accomplish any work for God. Yet
He lets them live for many years.”
“Quite true,” returned
Miss Millet; “and God has work for all
these men to do, though many of them refuse to do
it. But I feel sure that that won’t be
your case, Jeff. He finds work just suited to
our capacities at the time we need it,
too, if we are only willing. Why, in my own
very case, has He not sent you to me to be nursed,
just as I had finished organising the new night-classes
for the usher-boys; and I was puzzled absolutely
puzzled as to what I should do next and
here you step in, requiring my assistance, and giving
me full employment.”
“That’s it that’s
it,” returned Jeff hastily. “I am
without means, and a burden on you and Captain Millet.
Oh! it is hard very hard!”
“Yes, indeed, it is hard
to bear. Of course that is what you mean, for,
as God has done it we cannot suppose anything that
He does is really hard. If your illness had
been the result of dissipation, now, or through your
own fault, you could not have said exactly it was God’s
doing; but when it was the result of noble self-sacrifice ”
“Come, come, auntie; don’t
make me more vain than I am. I’m bad enough
as it is, and and I’m very
weary.”
The poor youth’s head fell back
on the pillow, and he sighed deeply as his nurse brought
him some strengthening food. He needed it much,
for he was reduced to a mere shadow of his former
self.
His fine eyes had become quite awful
in their size and solemnity. His once ruddy
cheeks were hollow. His well-formed nose had
become pinched, and his garments hung on, rather than
clothed, a huge skeleton.
During all Jeff’s illness Captain
Millet was unremitting in his attentions, insomuch
that a certain careworn expression began to take up
its settled abode on his countenance. But this
was not altogether owing to sympathy with his friend,
it was partly the consequence of his financial affairs.
Having lost his situation, as he had
expected, he found it difficult to procure another,
and was under the necessity of living on the small
capital which he had accumulated in the course of laborious
years. Had his own subsistence been all his
care, he would have had little trouble; but Rose had
to be supported and educated, his sister had to be
assisted, his charities had to be kept up, and now
Jeff Benson had to be maintained, and his doctor paid.
The worst of it all was, that he could not talk on
the subject to any of the three, which, to a sympathetic
soul, was uncommonly hard but unavoidable.
“Yes, quite unavoidable,”
he muttered to himself one evening, when alone in
his lodging. “They think I’m a rich
old fellow, but I daren’t say a word.
If I did, Jeff would refuse to eat another bite, an’
that would kill him. If I told Rosebud, it could
do no good, and would only make her miserable.
If I told Molly, I I really don’t
know what she’d do. She’d founder,
I think. No, I must go on sailin’ under
false colours. It’s a comfort, anyhow,
to know that the funds will last some little time
yet, even at the present rate of expenditure; but it’s
perplexin’ very.”
He shook his head, wrinkled his brows,
and then, rising, took a well-worn pocket-Bible from
a shelf, and sought consolation therein.
Some time after that Captain Millet
was seated in the same room, about the same hour,
meditating on the same subject, with a few additional
wrinkles on his brow, when he received a letter.
“From Hong Kong,” he muttered,
opening it, and putting on his glasses.
The changes in his expressive face
as he read were striking, and might have been instructive.
Sadness first then surprise then
blazing astonishment then a pursing of
the mouth and a prolonged whistle, followed by an
expressive slap on the thigh. Then, crumpling
the letter into his pocket he put on his glazed hat,
sallied forth, and took the way to his sister’s
cottage.
At that cottage, about the same time,
a great change had taken place in Jeff Benson spiritually,
not physically, though even in the latter respect
he was at all events not worse than usual. Having
gone from bad to worse in his rebellion, he had at
last reached that lowest depth wherein he not only
despaired of the doctor’s power to cure him,
and his own power of constitution, but began silently,
and in his own mind, to charge his Maker with having
made a complete failure in his creation.
“Life is a muddle, auntie, altogether!”
he exclaimed when he reached this point. It
was the lowest ebb hopeless despair alike
of himself and his God.
“A muddle, Jeff?” said
the little woman, raising her eyebrows slightly.
“How can that be possible in the work of a Perfect
Creator, and a Perfect Saviour who redeems from all
evil your supposed `muddle’ included?”
Our young coastguardsman was silent.
It was probably the great turning-point when the
Holy Spirit opened his eyes to see Jesus, and all
things in relation to Him. For a long time he
did not speak. The lips of his nurse were also
silent, but her heart was not so. At last Jeff
spoke
“It must be so.
Perfection is bound to work out perfection.
This apparent evil must be for good. `He doeth
all things well.’ Surely I have read that
somewhere!”
In a low clear voice his nurse said
“`He doeth all things well,’
We say it now with tears; But we shall sing it
with those we love Through bright eternal years.”
“I think the light is dawning, auntie.”
“I am sure it is, Jeff.”
Again they were silent, and thus they
remained while the natural light faded, until the
western sky and sea were dyed in crimson.
The first thing that diverted their
thoughts was a quick step outside, then a thunderous
knock at the door, and next moment the captain stood
before them, beaming with excitement, panting heavily,
and quite unable for some minutes to talk coherently.
“Sister,” said he at last,
“sit down an’ listen. Jeff, open
your ears.”
He drew a crumpled letter from his
pocket, spread it on his knee, put on his glasses,
and read as follows:
“`My DEAR CAPTAIN MILLET,
“`You will, I know, be grieved,
though not surprised, to hear that your old friend
Nibsworth is dead. Poor fellow! his end came
much as you and I had anticipated when we last parted.
He followed his dear Clara about two months after
her death. I suppose you know that she died three
days after you left their house.
“`My object in writing just
now, however, is to convey to you a piece of good
news; namely, that Nibsworth has left you the whole
of his property, which, altogether, cannot amount
to less, I should think, than eighty thousand pounds.’”
At this point the captain paused and
looked over his glasses at his sister, who, with wide-open
eyes, exclaimed
“Brother! he must be joking!”
“Sister,” returned the
captain, “my friend never jokes, except
when in extremely congenial society, and then his
jokes are bad so bad as to be unworthy
of repetition.”
“Wonderful!” exclaimed Miss Millet.
“Singular,” murmured Jeff,
whose thoughts seemed to be engaged with some far-off
prospect.
“He goes on,” continued
the captain, reading: “`I am left the sole
executor of his affairs. Pray, therefore, write
as to what you wish done. I am not at present
conversant with the precise duties of an executor,
but of course I will get the best advice possible in
the circumstances, and do the best I can. I
would recommend you to do the same at your end of
the world, and let me have your instructions as soon
as possible. The enclosed statement will show
you the nature of your property. The greater
part, you will observe, is in hard cash. I may
add that the house and grounds here would sell well
at present, if you feel inclined to dispose of them.
“`In conclusion, allow me to
congratulate you on this piece of good fortune perhaps,
knowing your character so well, I should have written,
this good gift from God.’”
“Ay, my friend,” said
the captain, folding the letter, “you might have
written, `this unexpected and undeserved gift from
God.’ But now, Molly, what think ye of
it all?”
“Wonderful!” exclaimed
the good lady in reply; and beyond this word she seemed
unable to go for a time, save that, after a strong
mental effort, she varied it to “amazing!”
Suddenly she seemed to recover, and said with a quick,
earnest look
“Dick, what are you going to do?”
“Do?” exclaimed Captain
Millet, smiting his knee and looking from his sister
to Jeff with a broad smile. “I’ll
run up to London, an’ take a mansion in the
West End, call at Long Acre in passing, and buy a
carriage and four. Then I’ll run down to
Folkestone an’ buy a villa there, or a castle
if they have one in stock; if not, I’ll order
one o’ the newest pattern, with gas, water,
electricity, and steam laid on. After that I’ll
buy a steam-yacht and take a trip round the world,
so as to calm my brain and think over it. Of
course I’ll drop in at Hong Kong, in passing,
to have a look at my property; and then ”
“Hush, brother! don’t
run on with such nonsense when we ought to be only
filled with serious thoughts.”
“How can a man be filled with
serious thoughts, Molly, when a sort of Arabian Nights’
affair has tumbled on him all of a sudden took
him aback like a white squall, and thrown him on his
beam-ends?”
“And what a selfish fellow you
are, too!” said Jeff; “not one word in
all you propose to do about anybody except yourself no
mention even of Rosebud.”
“Pooh! Jeff, are you so
green as not to know that a wise man never puts his
best foot foremost? Don’t you know that
it is usual, when a man makes a speech, to keep tumblin’
out one point after another clinkin’
‘em all as he goes along until he
comes to the `last but not least’ point?
If you had let me alone, Molly, I was comin’
to Rosebud and yourself too; but as you’ve been
so unmannerly, I’ll keep these points till another
time. By the way, when you write to Rosebud,
not a word about all this. It might unsettle
the darlin’ with her lessons. An’
that reminds me that one o’ my first businesses
will be to have her supplied wi’ the best of
teachers French, Italian, Spanish, German
masters Greek an’ Hebrew an’
Dutch ones too if the dear child wants ‘em to
say nothin’ o’ dancin’ an’
drawin’ an’ calisthenics an’ mathematics,
an’ the use o’ the globes, an’ conundrums
o’ that sort.”
“Really, brother, if you go
on like this, I’ll begin to think your good
fortune, as you call it, has turned your brain.”
“Never fear, Molly, when I come
to say what I’m going to do about the little
church, an’ the night-classes, an’ the
soup-kitchens, and the model-houses and the swimming-bath,
you’ll whistle another tune. But come,
Jeff; it’s time to ask how you are gettin’
along. You look better, my boy.”
“I am better, captain much,
much better,” returned the youth, with
a flushed cheek and sparkling eye, “for I, too,
have got news this morning of a fortune which exceeds
yours in value, and the security is better.”
The captain was puzzled. “A fortune, Jeff?”
“Yes; but my news will keep.
You are too much excited to hear about it just now.
Enough to say that I am much better. Now, if
you are wise, you will go without delay and take some
steps about this affair.”
“You’re right, lad,”
returned the captain, rising quietly and clapping
on his hat; “so good-bye to ’ee both.
I’ll soon be back. At present I’m
off to consult my my solicitor!
though I don’t know who he is yet, more than
the man in the moon.”