University of Virginia Library


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9. CHAPTER IX.
JOSEPH AND HIS FRIEND.

The train moved slowly along through the straggling and
shabby suburbs, increasing its speed as the city melted gradually
into the country; and Joseph, after a vain attempt
to fix his mind upon one of the volumes he had procured for
his slender library at home, leaned back in his seat and took
note of his fellow-travellers. Since he began to approach
the usual destiny of men, they had a new interest for him.
Hitherto he had looked upon strange faces very much as on
a strange language, without a thought of interpreting them
but now their hieroglyphics seemed to suggest a meaning
The figures around him were so many sitting, silent histories,
so many locked-up records of struggle, loss, gain, and all the
other forces which give shape and color to human life. Most
of them were strangers to each other, and as reticent (in
their railway conventionality) as himself; yet, he reflected,
the whole range of passion, pleasure, and suffering was probably
illustrated in that collection of existences. His own
troublesome individuality grew fainter, so much of it seemed
to be merged in the common experience of men.

There was the portly gentleman of fifty, still ruddy and
full of unwasted force. The keenness and coolness of his
eyes, the few firmly marked lines on his face, and the color
and hardness of his lips, proclaimed to everybody: “I am
bold, shrewd, successful in business, scrupulous in the performance
of my religious duties (on the Sabbath), voting


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with my party, and not likely to be fooled by any kind of
sentimental nonsense.” The thin, not very well-dressed man
beside him, with the irregular features and uncertain expression,
announced as clearly, to any who could read: “I
am weak, like others, but I never consciously did any harm.
I just manage to get along in the world, but if I only had a
chance, I might make something better of myself.” The
fresh, healthy fellow, in whose lap a child was sleeping,
while his wife nursed a younger one,—the man with ample
mouth, large nostrils, and the hands of a mechanic,—also
told his story: “On the whole, I find life a comfortable
thing. I don't know much about it, but I take it as it comes,
and never worry over what I can't understand.”

The faces of the younger men, however, were not so easy
to decipher. On them life was only beginning its plastic
task, and it required an older eye to detect the delicate
touches of awakening passions and hopes. But Joseph consoled
himself with the thought that his own secret was as
little to be discovered as any they might have. If they were
still ignorant of the sweet experience of love, he was already
their superior; if they were sharers in it, though strangers,
they were near to him. Had he not left the foot of the
class, after all?

All at once his eye was attracted by a new face, three or
four seats from his own. The stranger had shifted his position,
so that he was no longer seen in profile. He was
apparently a few years older than Joseph, but still bright
with all the charm of early manhood. His fair complexion
was bronzed from exposure, and his hands, graceful without
being effeminate, were not those of the idle gentleman. His
hair, golden in tint, thrust its short locks as it pleased about
a smooth, frank forehead; the eyes were dark gray, and the


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mouth, partly hidden by a mustache, at once firm and full.
He was moderately handsome, yet it was not of that which
Joseph thought; he felt that there was more of developed
character and a richer past history expressed in those features
than in any other face there. He felt sure—and
smiled at himself, notwithstanding, for the impression—
that at least some of his own doubts and difficulties had
found their solution in the stranger's nature. The more he
studied the face, the more he was conscious of its attraction,
and his instinct of reliance, though utterly without grounds,
justified itself to his mind in some mysterious way.

It was not long before the unknown felt his gaze, and,
turning slowly in his seat, answered it. Joseph dropped his
eyes in some confusion, but not until he had caught the full,
warm, intense expression of those that met them. He fancied
that he read in them, in that momentary flash, what he
had never before found in the eyes of strangers,—a simple,
human interest, above curiosity and above mistrust. The
usual reply to such a gaze is an unconscious defiance: the
unknown nature is on its guard: but the look which seems
to answer, “We are men, let us know each other!” is, alas!
too rare in this world.

While Joseph was fighting the irresistible temptation to
look again, there was a sudden thud of the car-wheels. Many
of the passengers started from their seats, only to be thrown
into them again by a quick succession of violent jolts. Joseph
saw the stranger springing towards the bell-rope; then
he and all others seemed to be whirling over each other;
there was a crash, a horrible grinding and splintering sound,
and the end of all was a shock, in which his consciousness
left him before he could guess its violence.

After a while, out of some blank, haunted by a single


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lost, wandering sense of existence, he began to awaken
slowly to life. Flames were still dancing in his eyeballs,
and waters and whirlwinds roaring in his ears; but it was
only a passive sensation, without the will to know more.
Then he felt himself partly lifted and his head supported,
and presently a soft warmth fell upon the region of his
heart. There were noises all about him, but he did not
listen to them; his effort to regain his consciousness fixed
itself on that point alone, and grew stronger as the warmth
calmed the confusion of his nerves.

“Dip this in water!” said a voice, and the hand (as he
now knew it to be) was removed from his heart.

Something cold came over his forehead, and at the same
time warm drops fell upon his cheek.

“Look out for yourself: your head is cut!” exclaimed
another voice.

“Only a scratch. Take the handkerchief out of my pocket
and tie it up; but first ask yon gentleman for his flask!”

Joseph opened his eyes, knew the face that bent over his,
and then closed them again. Gentle and strong hands raised
him, a flask was set to his lips, and he drank mechanically,
but a full sense of life followed the draught. He looked
wistfully in the stranger's face.

“Wait a moment,” said the latter; “I must feel your
bones before you try to move. Arms and legs all right,—
impossible to tell about the ribs. There! now put your
arm around my neck, and lean on me as much as you like,
while I lift you.”

Joseph did as he was bidden, but he was still weak and
giddy, and after a few steps, they both sat down together
upon a bank. The splintered car lay near them upside
down; the passengers had been extricated from it, and were


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now busy in aiding the few who were injured. The train
had stopped and was waiting on the track above. Some
were very pale and grave, feeling that Death had touched
without taking them; but the greater part were concerned
only about the delay to the train.

“How did it happen?” asked Joseph: “where was I?
how did you find me?”

“The usual story,—a broken rail,” said the stranger. “I
had just caught the rope when the car went over, and was
swung off my feet so luckily that I somehow escaped the
hardest shock. I don't think I lost my senses for a moment.
When we came to the bottom you were lying just before me;
I thought you dead until I felt your heart. It is a severe
shock, but I hope nothing more.”

“But you,—are you not badly hurt?”

The stranger pushed up the handkerchief which was tied
around his head, felt his temple, and said: “It must have
been one of the splinters; I know nothing about it. But
there is no harm in a little blood-letting except”—he added,
smiling—“except the spots on your face.”

By this time the other injured passengers had been conveyed
to the train; the whistle sounded a warning of departure.

“I think we can get up the embankment now,” said the
stranger. “You must let me take care of you still: I am
travelling alone.”

When they were seated side by side, and Joseph leaned
his head back on the supporting arm, while the train moved
away with them, he felt that a new power, a new support,
had come to his life. The face upon which he looked was
no longer strange; the hand which had rested on his heart
was warm with kindred blood. Involuntarily he extended


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his own; it was taken and held, and the dark-gray, courageous
eyes turned to him with a silent assurance which he felt
needed no words.

“It is a rough introduction,” he then said: “my name is
Philip Held. I was on my way to Oakland Station; but if
yon are going farther—”

“Why, that is my station also!” Joseph exclaimed, giving
his name in return.

“Then we should have probably met, sooner or later, in any
case. I am bound for the forge and furnace at Coventry,
which is for sale. If the company who employ me decide to
buy it,—according to the report I shall make,—the works
will be placed in my charge.”

“It is but six miles from my farm,” said Joseph, “and
the road up the valley is the most beautiful in our neighborhood.
I hope you can make a favorable report.”

“It is only too much to my own interest to do so. I have
been mining and geologizing in Nevada and the Rocky
Mountains for three or four years, and long for a quiet, ordered
life. It is a good omen that I have found a neighbor
in advance of my settlement. I have often ridden fifty
miles to meet a friend who cared for something else than
horse-racing or monte; and your six miles,—it is but a step!”

“How much you have seen!” said Joseph. “I know
very little of the world. It must be easy for you to take
your own place in life.

A shade passed over Philip Held's face. “It is only easy
to a certain class of men,” he replied,—“a class to which I
should not care to belong. I begin to think that nothing is
very valuable, the right to which a man don't earn,—except
human love, and that seems to come by the grace of
God.”


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“I am younger than you are,—not yet twenty-three,”
Joseph remarked. “You will find that I am very ignorant.”

“And I am twenty-eight, and just beginning to get my
eyes open, like a nine-days' kitten. If I had been frank
enough to confess my ignorance, five years ago, as you do
now, it would have been better for me. But don't let us
measure ourselves or our experience against each other.
That is one good thing we learn in Rocky Mountain
life; there is no high or low, knowledge or ignorance, except
what applies to the needs of men who come together. So
there are needs which most men have, and go all their lives
hungering for, because they expect them to be supplied in a
particular form. There is something,” Philip concluded,
“deeper than that in human nature.”

Joseph longed to open his heart to this man, every one of
whose words struck home to something in himself. But the
lassitude which the shock left behind gradually overcame
him. He suffered his head to be drawn upon Philip Held's
shoulder, and slept until the train reached Oakland Station.
When the two got upon the platform, they found Dennis
waiting for Joseph, with a light country vehicle. The news
of the accident had reached the station, and his dismay was
great when he saw the two bloody faces. A physician had
already been summoned from the neighboring village, but
they had little need of his services. A prescription of quiet
and sedatives for Joseph, and a strip of plaster for his companion,
were speedily furnished, and they set out together
for the Asten place.

It is unnecessary to describe Rachel Miller's agitation
when the party arrived; or the parting of the two men who
had been so swiftly brought near to each other; or Philip
Held's farther journey to the forge that evening. He resisted


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all entreaty to remain at the farm until morning, on
the ground of an appointment made with the present proprietor
of the forge. After his departure Joseph was sent
to bed, where he remained for a day or two, very sore and
a little feverish. He had plenty of time for thought,—not
precisely of the kind which his aunt suspected, for out of
pure, honest interest in his welfare, she took a step which
proved to be of doubtful benefit. If he had not been so innocent,—if
he had not been quite as unconscious of his inner
nature as he was over-conscious of his external self,—
he would have perceived that his thoughts dwelt much more
on Philip Held than on Julia Blessing. His mind seemed
to run through a swift, involuntary chain of reasoning, to
account to himself for his feeling towards her, and her inevitable
share in his future; but towards Philip his heart
sprang with an instinct beyond his control. It was impossible
to imagine that the latter also would not be shot, like
a bright thread, through the web of his coming days.

On the third morning, when he had exchanged the bed for
an arm-chair, a letter from the city was brought to him.
“Dearest Joseph,” it ran, “what a fright and anxiety we
have had! When pa brought the paper home, last night,
and I read the report of the accident, where it said, `J.
Asten,
severe contusions,' my heart stopped beating for a
minute, and I can only write now (as you see) with a
trembling hand. My first thought was to go directly to
you; but ma said we had better wait for intelligence. Unless
our engagement were generally known, it would give
rise to remarks,—in short, I need not repeat to you all the
worldly reasons with which she opposed me; but, oh, how I
longed for the right to be at your side, and assure myself
that the dreadful, dreadful danger has passed! Pa was


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quite shaken with the news: he felt hardly able to go to the
Custom-House this morning. But he sides with ma about
my going, and now, when my time as a daughter with them
is growing so short, I dare not disobey. I know you will
understand my position, yet, dear and true as you are, you
cannot guess the anxiety with which I await a line from
your hand, the hand that was so nearly taken from me
forever!”

Joseph read the letter twice and was about to commence
it for the third time, when a visitor was announced. He
had barely time to thrust the scented sheet into his pocket;
and the bright eyes and flushed face with which he met the
Rev. Mr. Chaffinch convinced both that gentleman and his
aunt, as she ushered the latter into the room, that the visit
was accepted as an honor and a joy.

On Mr. Chaffinch's face the air of authority which he had
been led to believe belonged to his calling had not quite succeeded
in impressing itself; but melancholy, the next best
thing, was strongly marked. His dark complexion and his
white cravat intensified each other; and his eyes, so long
uplifted above the concerns of this world, had ceased to vary
their expression materially for the sake of any human interest.
All this had been expected of him, and he had simply
done his best to meet the requirements of the flock over
which he was placed. Any of the latter might have easily
been shrewd enough to guess, in advance, very nearly what
the pastor would say, upon a given occasion; but each and
all of them would have been both disappointed and disturbed
if he had not said it.

After appropriate and sympathetic inquiries concerning
Joseph's bodily condition, he proceeded to probe him spiritually.


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“It was a merciful preservation. I hope you feel that it
is a solemn thing to look Death in the face.”

“I am not afraid of death,” Joseph replied.

“You mean the physical pang. But death includes what
comes after it,—judgment. That is a very awful thought.”

“It may be to evil men; but I have done nothing to
make me fear it.”

“You have never made an open profession of faith; yet
it may be that grace has reached you,” said Mr. Chaffinch.
“Have you found your Saviour?”

“I believe in him with all my soul!” Joseph exclaimed;
“but you mean something else by `finding' him. I will be
candid with you, Mr. Chaffinch. The last sermon I heard
you preach, a month ago, was upon the nullity of all good
works, all Christian deeds; you called them `rags, dust, and
ashes,' and declared that man is saved by faith alone. I
have faith, but I can't accept a doctrine which denies merit
to works; and you, unless I accept it, will you admit that I
have `found' Christ?”

“There is but One Truth!” exclaimed Mr. Chaffinch,
very severely.

“Yes,” Joseph answered, reverently, “and that is only
perfectly known to God.”

The clergyman was more deeply annoyed than he cared to
exhibit. His experience had been confined chiefly to the
encouragement of ignorant souls, willing to accept his message,
if they could only be made to comprehend it, or to the
conflict with downright doubt and denial. A nature so
seemingly open to the influences of the Spirit, yet inflexibly
closed to certain points of doctrine, was something of a
problem to him. He belonged to a class now happily becoming
scarce, who, having been taught to pace a reasoned


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theological round, can only efficiently meet those antagonists
who voluntarily come inside of their own ring.

His habit of control, however, enabled him to say, with a
moderately friendly manner, as he took leave: “We will
talk again when you are stronger. It is my duty to give
spiritual help to those who seek it.”

To Rachel Miller he said: “I cannot say that he is dark.
His mind is cloudy, but we find that the vanities of youth
often obscure the true light for a time.”

Joseph leaned back in his arm-chair, closed his eyes, and
meditated earnestly for half an hour. Rachel Miller, uncertain
whether to be hopeful or discouraged by Mr. Chaffinch's
words, stole into the room, but went about on tiptoe, supposing
him to be asleep. Joseph was fully conscious of all
her movements, and at last startled her by the sudden
question:—

“Aunt, why do you suppose I went to the city?”

“Goodness, Joseph! I thought you were sound asleep.
I suppose to see about the fall prices for grain and cattle.”

“No, aunt,” said he, speaking with determination,
though the foolish blood ran rosily over his face, “I went
to get a wife!”

She stood pale and speechless, staring at him. But for
the rosy sign on his cheeks and temples she could not have
believed his words.

“Miss Blessing?” she finally uttered, almost in a whisper.

Joseph nodded his head. She dropped into the nearest
chair, drew two or three long breaths, and in an indescribable
tone ejaculated, “Well!”

“I knew you would be surprised,” said he; “because it
is almost a surprise to myself. But you and she seemed to
fall so easily into each other's ways, that I hope—”


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“Why, you're hardly acquainted with her!” Rachel exclaimed.
“It is so hasty! And you are so young!”

“No younger than father was when he married mother;
and I have learned to know her well in a short time. Isn't
it so with you, too, aunt?—you certainly liked her?”

“I'll not deny that, nor say the reverse now: but a farmer's
wife should be a farmer's daughter.”

“But suppose, aunt, that the farmer doesn't happen to
love any farmer's daughter, and does love a bright, amiable,
very intelligent girl, who is delighted with country life,
eager and willing to learn, and very fond of the farmer's
aunt (who can teach her everything)?”

“Still, it seems to me a risk,” said Rachel; but she was
evidently relenting.

“There is none to you,” he answered, “and I am not
afraid of mine. You will be with us, for Julia couldn't do
without you, if she wished. If she were a farmer's daughter,
with different ideas of housekeeping, it might bring
trouble to both of us. But now you will have the management
in your own hands until you have taught Julia, and
afterwards she will carry it on in your way.”

She did not reply; but Joseph could see that she was becoming
reconciled to the prospect. After awhile she came
across the room, leaned over him, kissed him upon the forehead,
and then silently went away.