<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XV</h3><br/><br/>
<p>The return of Gerhardt brought forward the child
question in all its bearings. He could not help considering
it from the standpoint of a grandparent, particularly
since it was a human being possessed of a soul.
He wondered if it had been baptized. Then he inquired.</p>
<p>"No, not yet," said his wife, who had not forgotten
this duty, but had been uncertain whether the little one
would be welcome in the faith.</p>
<p>"No, of course not," sneered Gerhardt, whose opinion
of his wife's religious devotion was not any too great.
"Such carelessness! Such irreligion! That is a fine
thing."</p>
<p>He thought it over a few moments, and felt that this
evil should be corrected at once.</p>
<p>"It should be baptized," he said. "Why don't she
take it and have it baptized?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt reminded him that some one would
have to stand godfather to the child, and there was no
way to have the ceremony performed without confessing
the fact that it was without a legitimate father.</p>
<p>Gerhardt listened to this, and it quieted him for a few
moments, but his religion was something which he
could not see put in the background by any such difficulty.
How would the Lord look upon quibbling like
this? It was not Christian, and it was his duty to attend
to the matter. It must be taken, forthwith, to the
church, Jennie, himself, and his wife accompanying it as
sponsors; or, if he did not choose to condescend thus
far to his daughter, he must see that it was baptized
when she was not present. He brooded over this difficulty,
and finally decided that the ceremony should take
place on one of these week-days between Christmas and
New Year's, when Jennie would be at her work. This
proposal he broached to his wife, and, receiving her approval,
he made his next announcement. "It has no
name," he said.</p>
<p>Jennie and her mother had talked over this very matter,
and Jennie had expressed a preference for Vesta.
Now her mother made bold to suggest it as her own
choice.</p>
<p>"How would Vesta do?"</p>
<p>Gerhardt heard this with indifference. Secretly he
had settled the question in his own mind. He had a
name in store, left over from the halcyon period of his
youth, and never opportunely available in the case of his
own children—Wilhelmina. Of course he had no idea
of unbending in the least toward his small granddaughter.
He merely liked the name, and the child ought to be
grateful to get it. With a far-off, gingery air he brought
forward this first offering upon the altar of natural
affection, for offering it was, after all.</p>
<p>"That is nice," he said, forgetting his indifference.
"But how would Wilhelmina do?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt did not dare cross him when he was thus
unconsciously weakening. Her woman's tact came to
the rescue.</p>
<p>"We might give her both names," she compromised.</p>
<p>"It makes no difference to me," he replied, drawing
back into the shell of opposition from which he had been
inadvertently drawn. "Just so she is baptized."</p>
<p>Jennie heard of this with pleasure, for she was anxious
that the child should have every advantage, religious or
otherwise, that it was possible to obtain. She took great
pains to starch and iron the clothes it was to wear on the
appointed day.</p>
<p>Gerhardt sought out the minister of the nearest Lutheran
church, a round-headed, thick-set theologian of
the most formal type, to whom he stated his errand.</p>
<p>"Your grandchild?" inquired the minister.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Gerhardt, "her father is not here."</p>
<p>"So," replied the minister, looking at him curiously.</p>
<p>Gerhardt was not to be disturbed in his purpose. He
explained that he and his wife would bring her. The
minister, realizing the probable difficulty, did not question
him further.</p>
<p>"The church cannot refuse to baptize her so long as
you, as grandparent, are willing to stand sponsor for
her," he said.</p>
<p>Gerhardt came away, hurt by the shadow of disgrace
in which he felt himself involved, but satisfied that he had
done his duty. Now he would take the child and have
it baptized, and when that was over his present responsibility
would cease.</p>
<p>When it came to the hour of the baptism, however,
he found that another influence was working to guide
him into greater interest and responsibility. The stern
religion with which he was enraptured, its insistence
upon a higher law, was there, and he heard again the
precepts which had helped to bind him to his own
children.</p>
<p>"Is it your intention to educate this child in the
knowledge and love of the gospel?" asked the black-gowned
minister, as they stood before him in the silent
little church whither they had brought the infant; he
was reading from the form provided for such occasions.
Gerhardt answered "Yes," and Mrs. Gerhardt added
her affirmative.</p>
<p>"Do you engage to use all necessary care and diligence,
by prayerful instruction, admonition, example, and
discipline that this child may renounce and avoid everything
that is evil and that she may keep God's will and
commandments as declared in His sacred word?"</p>
<p>A thought flashed through Gerhardt's mind as the
words were uttered of how it had fared with his own
children. They, too, had been thus sponsored. They
too, had heard his solemn pledge to care for their spiritual
welfare. He was silent.</p>
<p>"We do," prompted the minister.</p>
<p>"We do," repeated Gerhardt and his wife weakly.</p>
<p>"Do you now dedicate this child by the rite of baptism
unto the Lord, who brought it?"</p>
<p>"We do."</p>
<p>"And, finally, if you can conscientiously declare before
God that the faith to which you have assented is your
faith, and that the solemn promises you have made are
the serious resolutions of your heart, please to announce
the same in the presence of God, by saying 'Yes.'"</p>
<p>"Yes," they replied.</p>
<p>"I baptize thee, Wilhelmina Vesta," concluded the
minister, stretching out his hand over her, "in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.
Let us pray."</p>
<p>Gerhardt bent his gray head and followed with humble
reverence the beautiful invocation which followed:</p>
<p>"Almighty and everlasting God! we adore Thee as the
great Parent of the children of men, as the Father of our
spirits and the Former of our bodies. We praise Thee
for giving existence to this infant and for preserving her
until this day. We bless Thee that she is called to virtue
and glory, that she has now been dedicated to Thee, and
brought within-the pale of the Christian Church. We
thank Thee that by the Gospel of the Son she is furnished
with everything necessary to her spiritual happiness;
that it supplies light for her mind and comfort for her
heart, encouragement and power to discharge her duty,
and the precious hope of mercy and immortality to sustain
and make her faithful. And we beseech Thee, O
most merciful God, that this child may be enlightened
and sanctified from her early years by the Holy Spirit,
and be everlastingly saved by Thy mercy. Direct and
bless Thy servants who are intrusted with the care of
her in the momentous work of her education. Inspire
them with just conception of the absolute necessity of
religious instruction and principles. Forbid that they
should ever forget that this offspring belongs to Thee,
and that, if through their criminal neglect or bad example
Thy reasonable creature be lost, Thou wilt require
it at their hands. Give them a deep sense of the
divinity of her nature, of the worth of her soul, of the
dangers to which she will be exposed, of the honor and
felicity to which she is capable of ascending with Thy
blessing, and of the ruin in this world and the misery
in the world to come which springs from wicked passion
and conduct. Give them grace to check the first risings
of forbidden inclinations in her breast, to be her defense
against the temptations incident to childhood and youth,
and, as she grows up, to enlarge her understanding and
to lead her to an acquaintance with Thee and with Jesus
Christ, whom Thou hast sent. Give them grace to cultivate in her heart a supreme reverence and love for Thee,
a grateful attachment to the Gospel of Thy Son, her
Saviour, a due regard for all its ordinances and institutions,
a temper of kindness and goodwill to all mankind,
and an invincible love of sincerity and truth. Help them
to watch continually over her with tender solicitude, to
be studious, that by their conversation and deportment
her heart may not be corrupted, and at all times to set
before her such an example that she may safely tread
in their footsteps. If it please Thee to prolong her days
on earth, grant that she may prove an honor and a comfort
to her parents and friends, be useful in the world, and
find in Thy Providence an unfailing defense and support.
Whether she live, let her live to Thee; or whether she die,
let her die to Thee. And, at the great day of account,
may she and her parents meet each other with rapture
and rejoice together in Thy redeeming love, through
Jesus Christ, forever and ever, Amen."</p>
<p>As this solemn admonition was read a feeling of obligation
descended upon the grandfather of this little
outcast; a feeling that he was bound to give the tiny
creature lying on his wife's arm the care and attention
which God in His sacrament had commanded. He
bowed his head in utmost reverence, and when the service
was concluded and they left the silent church he was
without words to express his feelings. Religion was a
consuming thing with him. God was a person, a
dominant reality. Religion was not a thing of mere
words or of interesting ideas to be listened to on Sunday,
but a strong, vital expression of the Divine Will handed
down from a time when men were in personal contact
with God. Its fulfilment was a matter of joy and salvation
with him, the one consolation of a creature
sent to wander in a vale whose explanation was not here
but in heaven. Slowly Gerhardt walked on, and as he
brooded on the words and the duties which the sacrament
involved the shade of lingering disgust that had possessed
him when he had taken the child to church disappeared
and a feeling of natural affection took its
place. However much the daughter had sinned, the
infant was not to blame. It was a helpless, puling,
tender thing, demanding his sympathy and his love.
Gerhardt felt his heart go out to the little child, and
yet he could not yield his position all in a moment.</p>
<p>"That is a nice man," he said of the minister to his
wife as they walked along, rapidly softening in his conception
of his duty.</p>
<p>"Yes, he was," agreed Mrs. Gerhardt timidly.</p>
<p>"It's a good-sized little church," he continued.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Gerhardt looked around him, at the street, the houses,
the show of brisk life on this sunshiny, winter's day, and
then finally at the child that his wife was carrying.</p>
<p>"She must be heavy," he said, in his characteristic
German. "Let me take her."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt, who was rather weary, did not refuse.</p>
<p>"There!" he said, as he looked at her and then fixed
her comfortably upon his shoulder. "Let us hope she
proves worthy of all that has been done to-day."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerhardt listened, and the meaning in his voice
interpreted itself plainly enough. The presence of the
child in the house might be the cause of recurring spells
of depression and unkind words, but there would be
another and greater influence restraining him. There
would always be her soul to consider. He would never
again be utterly unconscious of her soul.</p>
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