THE TURNING-POINT.
As time advanced Philip Maylands’
circumstances improved, for Phil belonged to that
class of which it is sometimes said “they are
sure to get on.” He was thorough-going
and trustworthy two qualities these which
the world cannot do without, and which, being always
in demand, are never found begging.
Phil did not “set up”
for anything. He assumed no airs of superior
sanctity. He did not even aim at being better
than others, though he did aim, daily, at being better
than he was. In short, the lad, having been
trained in ways of righteousness, and having the Word
of God as his guide, advanced steadily and naturally
along the narrow way that leads to life. Hence
it came to pass in the course of time that he passed
from the ranks of Out-door Boy Telegraph Messenger
to that of Boy-Sorter, with a wage of twelve shillings
a week, which was raised to eighteen shillings.
His hours of attendance at the Circulation Department
were from 4:30 in the morning till 9; and from 4:30
in the evening till 8. These suited him well,
for he had ever been fond of rising with the lark
while at home, and had no objection to rise before
the lark in London. The evening being free he
devoted to study for Phil was one of that
by no means small class of youths who, in default
of a College education, do their best to train themselves,
by the aid of books and the occasional help of clergymen,
philanthropists, and evening classes.
In all this Phil was greatly assisted
by his sister May, who, although not much more highly
educated than himself, was quick of perception, of
an inquiring mind, and a sympathetic soul. He
was also somewhat assisted, and, at times, not a little
retarded, by his ardent admirer Peter Pax, who joined
him enthusiastically in his studies, but, being of
a discursive and enterprising spirit, was prone to
tempt him off the beaten paths of learning into the
thickets of speculative philosophy.
One evening Pax was poring over a
problem in Euclid with his friend in Pegaway Hall.
“Phil,” he said uneasily,
“drop your triangles a bit and listen.
Would you think it dishonest to keep a thing secret
that ought to be known?”
“That depends a good deal on
what the secret is, and what I have got to do with
it,” replied Phil. “But why do you
ask?”
“Because I’ve been keeping
a secret a long time much against my will
an’ I can stand it no longer. If I don’t
let it out, it’ll bu’st me
besides, I’ve got leave to tell it.”
“Out with it, then, Pax; for
it’s of no use trying to keep down things that
don’t agree with you.”
“Well, then,” said Pax. “I
know where George Aspel is!”
Phil, who had somewhat unwillingly
withdrawn his mind from Euclid, turned instantly with
an eager look towards his little friend.
“Ah, I thought that would rouse
you,” said the latter, with a look of unwonted
earnestness on his face. “You must know,
Phil, that a long while ago just about
the time of the burglary at Miss Stivergill’s
cottage I made the amazin’ discovery
that little Tottie Bones is Mariar alias
Merry, the little baby-cousin I was nuss
to in the country long ago, whom I’ve often
spoke to you about, and from whom I was torn when
she had reached the tender age of two or thereby.
It follows, of course, that Tottie’s father old
Bones is my uncle, alias Blackadder,
alias the Brute, of whom I have also made mention,
and who, it seems, came to London to try his fortune
in knavery after havin’ failed in the country.
I saw him once, I believe, at old Blurt’s bird-shop,
but did not recognise ‘im at the time, owin’
to his hat bein’ pulled well over his eyes,
though I rather think he must have recognised me.
The second time I saw him was when Tottie came to
me for help and set me on his tracks, when he was
goin’ to commit the burglary on Rosebud Cottage.
I’ve told you all about that, but did not tell
you that the burglar was Tottie’s father, as
Tottie had made me promise not to mention it to any
one. I knew the rascal at once on seeing him
in the railway carriage, and could hardly help explodin’
in his face at the fun of the affair. Of course
he didn’t know me on account of my bein’
as black in the face as the King of Dahomey. Well,”
continued Pax, warming with his subject, “it
also follows, as a matter of course, that Mrs Bones
is my blessed old aunt Georgie now changed
into Molly, on account, no doubt, of the Brute’s
desire to avoid the attentions of the police.
Now, as I’ve a great regard for aunt Georgie,
and have lost a good deal of my hatred of the Brute,
and find myself fonder than ever of Tottie I
beg her pardon, of Merry I’ve been
rather intimate indeed, I may say, pretty
thick with the Boneses ever since; and as
I am no longer a burden to the Brute can
even help ’im a little he don’t
abominate me as much as he used to. They’re
wery poor awful poor are the
Boneses. The Brute still keeps up a fiction of
a market-garden and a dairy the latter
bein’ supplied by a cow and a pump but
it don’t pay, and the business in the city,
whatever it may be, seems equally unprofitable, for
their town house is not a desirable residence.”
“This is all very interesting
and strange, Pax, but what has it to do with George
Aspel?” asked Phil. “You know I’m
very anxious about him, and have long been hunting
after him. Indeed, I wonder that you did not
tell me about him before.”
“How could I,” said Pax,
“when Tot I mean Merry no,
I’ll stick to Tottie it comes more natural than
the old name told me not for worlds to
mention it. Only now, after pressin’ her
and aunt Georgie wery hard, have I bin allowed to
let it out, for poor Aspel himself don’t want
his whereabouts to be known.”
“Surely!” exclaimed Phil,
with a troubled, anxious air, “he has not become
a criminal.”
“No. Auntie assures me
he has not, but he is sunk very low, drinks hard to
drown his sorrow, and is ashamed to be seen.
No wonder. You’d scarce know ‘im,
Phil, workin’ like a coal-heaver, in a suit of
dirty fustian, about the wharves tryin’
to keep out of sight. I’ve come across
’im once or twice, but pretended not to recognise
’im. Now, Phil,” added little Pax,
with deep earnestness in his face, as he laid his
hand impressively on his friend’s arm, “we
must save these two men somehow you and
I.”
“Yes, God helping us, we must,” said Phil.
From that moment Philip Maylands and
Peter Pax passed, as it were, into a more earnest
sphere of life, a higher stage of manhood. The
influence of a powerful motive, a settled purpose,
and a great end, told on their characters to such
an extent that they both seemed to have passed over
the period of hobbledehoyhood at a bound, and become
young men.
With the ardour of youth, they set
out on their mission at once. That very night
they went together to the wretched abode of Abel Bones,
having previously, however, opened their hearts and
minds to May Maylands, from whom, as they had expected,
they received warm encouragement.
Little did these unsophisticated youths
know what a torrent of anxiety, grief, fear, and hope
their communication sent through the heart of poor
May. The eager interest she manifested in their
plans they regarded as the natural outcome of a kind
heart towards an old friend and playfellow.
So it was, but it was more than that!
The same evening George Aspel and
Abel Bones were seated alone in their dismal abode
in Archangel Court. There were tumblers and a
pot of beer before them, but no food. Aspel
sat with his elbows on the table, grasping the hair
on his temples with both hands. The other sat
with arms crossed, and his chin sunk on his chest,
gazing gloomily but intently at his companion.
Remorse that most awful
of the ministers of vengeance had begun
to torment Abel Bones. When he saved Tottie
from the fire, Aspel had himself unwittingly unlocked
the door in the burglar’s soul which let the
vengeful minister in. Thereafter Miss Stivergill’s
illustration of mercy, for the sake of another,
had set the unlocked door ajar, and the discovery
that his ill-treated little nephew had nearly lost
his life in the same cause, had pulled the door well
back on its rusty hinges.
Having thus obtained free entrance,
Remorse sat down and did its work with terrible power.
Bones was a man of tremendous passions and powerful
will. His soul revolted violently from the mean
part he had been playing. Although he had not
succeeded in drawing Aspel into the vortex of crime
as regards human law, he had dragged him very low,
and, especially, had fanned the flame of thirst for
strong drink, which was the youth’s chief at
least his most dangerous enemy. His
thirst was an inheritance from his forefathers, but
the sin of giving way to it of encouraging
it at first when it had no power, and then of gratifying
it as it gained strength, until it became a tyrant was
all his own. Aspel knew this, and the thought
filled him with despair as he sat there with his now
scarred and roughened fingers almost tearing out his
hair, while his bloodshot eyes stared stonily at the
blank wall opposite.
Bones continued to gaze at his companion,
and to wish with all his heart that he had never met
him. He had, some time before that, made up his
mind to put no more temptation in the youth’s
way. He now went a step further he
resolved to attempt the task of getting him out of
the scrapes into which he had dragged him. But
he soon found that the will which had always been
so powerful in the carrying out of evil was woefully
weak in the unfamiliar effort to do good!
Still, Bones had made up his mind
to try. With this end in view he proposed a
walk in the street, the night being fine. Aspel
sullenly consented. The better to talk the matter
over, Bones proposed to retire to a quiet though not
savoury nook by the river-side. Aspel objected,
and proposed a public-house instead, as being more
cheerful.
Just opposite that public-house there
stood one of those grand institutions which are still
in their infancy, but which, we are persuaded, will
yet take a prominent part in the rescue of thousands
of mankind from the curse of strong drink. It
was a “public-house without drink” a
coffee-tavern, where working men could find a cheap
and wholesome meal, a cheerful, warm, and well-lit
room wherein to chat and smoke, and the daily papers,
without being obliged to swallow fire-water for the
good of the house.
Bones looked at the coffee-house,
and thought of suggesting it to his companion.
He even willed to do so, but, alas! his will in this
matter was as weak as the water which he mingled so
sparingly with his grog. Shame, which never troubled
him much when about to take a vicious course, suddenly
became a giant, and the strong man became weak like
a little child. He followed Aspel into the public-house,
and the result of this first effort at reformation
was that both men returned home drunk.
It seemed a bad beginning, but it
was a beginning, and as such was not to be
despised.
When Phil and Pax reached Archangel
Court, a-glow with hope and good resolves, they found
the subjects of their desires helplessly asleep in
a corner of the miserable room, with Mrs Bones preparing
some warm and wholesome food against the period of
their recovery.
It was a crushing blow to their new-born
hopes. Poor little Pax had entertained sanguine
expectations of the effect of an appeal from Phil,
and lost heart completely. Phil was too much
cast down by the sight of his friend to be able to
say much, but he had a more robust spirit than his
little friend, and besides, had strong faith in the
power and willingness of God to use even weak and
sinful instruments for the accomplishment of His purposes
of mercy.
Afterwards, in talking over the subject
with his friend Sterling, the city missionary, he
spoke hopefully about Aspel, but said that he did
not expect any good could be done until they got him
out of his miserable position, and away from the society
of Bones.
To his great surprise the missionary
did not agree with him in this.
“Of course,” he said,
“it is desirable that Mr Aspel should be restored
to his right position in society, and be removed from
the bad influence of Bones, and we must use all legitimate
means for those ends; but we must not fall into the
mistake of supposing that `no good can be done’
by the Almighty to His sinful creatures even in the
worst of circumstances. No relatives or friends
solicited the Prodigal Son to leave the swine-troughs,
or dragged him away. It was God who put it into
his heart to say `I will arise and go to my father.’
It was God who gave him `power to will and to do.’”
“Would you then advise that
we should do nothing for him, and leave him entirely
in the hands of God?” asked Phil, with an uncomfortable
feeling of surprise.
“By no means,” replied
the missionary. “I only combat your idea
that no good can be done to him if he is left in his
present circumstances. But we are bound to use
every influence we can bring to bear in his behalf,
and we must pray that success may be granted to our
efforts to bring him to the Saviour. Means must
be used as if means could accomplish all, but means
must not be depended on, for `it is God who giveth
us the victory.’ The most appropriate
and powerful means applied in the wisest manner to
your friend would be utterly ineffective unless the
Holy Spirit gave him a receptive heart. This
is one of the most difficult lessons that you and
I and all men have to learn, Phil that God
must be all in all, and man nothing whatever but a
willing instrument. Even that mysterious willingness
is not of ourselves, for `it is God who maketh us
both to will and to do of His good pleasure.’
`Without me,’ says Jesus, `ye can do nothing.’
A rejecter of Jesus, therefore, is helpless for good,
yet responsible.”
“That is hard to understand,”
said Phil, with a perplexed look.
“The reverse of it is harder
to understand, as you will find if you choose to take
the trouble to think it out,” replied the missionary.
Phil Maylands did take the trouble
to think it out. One prominent trait in his
character was an intense reverence for truth any
truth, every truth a strong tendency to
distinguish between truth and error in all things
that chanced to come under his observation, but especially
in those things which his mother had taught him, from
earliest infancy, to regard as the most important
of all.
Many a passer-by did Phil jostle on
his way to the Post-Office that day, after his visit
to the missionary, for it was the first time that his
mind had been turned, earnestly at least, to the subject
of God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility.
“Too deep by far for boys,”
we hear some reader mutter. And yet that same
reader, perchance, teaches her little ones to consider
the great fact that God is One in Three!
No truth is too deep for boys and
girls to consider, if they only approach it in a teachable,
reverent spirit, and are brought to it by their teacher
in a prayerful spirit. But fear not, reader.
We do not mean to inflict on you a dissertation on
the mysterious subject referred to. We merely
state the fact that Phil Maylands met it at this period
of his career, and, instead of shelving it as
perhaps too many do as a too difficult
subject, which might lie over to a more convenient
season, tackled it with all the energy of his nature.
He went first to his closet and his knees, and then
to his Bible.
“To the law and to the testimony”
used to be Mrs Maylands’ watchword in all her
battles with Doubt. “To whom shall we go,”
she was wont to say, “if we go not to the Word
of God?”
Phil therefore searched the Scripture.
Not being a Greek scholar, he sought help of those
who were learned both personally and through
books. Thus he got at correct renderings, and
by means of dictionaries ascertained the exact meanings
of words. By study he got at what some have
styled the general spirit of Scripture, and by reading
both sides of controverted points he ascertained
the thoughts of various minds. In this way he
at length became “fully persuaded in his own
mind” that God’s sovereignty and man’s
responsibility are facts taught in Scripture, and
affirmed by human experience, and that they form a
great unsolvable mystery unsolvable at
least by man in his present condition of existence.
This not only relieved his mind greatly,
by convincing him that, the subject being bottomless,
it was useless to try to get to the bottom of it,
and wise to accept it “as a little child,”
but it led him also to consider that in the Bible
there are two kinds of mysteries, or deep things the
one kind being solvable, the other unsolvable.
He set himself, therefore, diligently to discover
and separate the one kind from the other, with keen
interest.
But this is by the way. Phil’s
greatest anxiety and care at that time was the salvation
of his old friend and former idol, George Aspel.