<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>V<br/> <small>THE BEGINNING OF THE WORKS</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>WITH the dispersion of the great crowd of
poor ignorants who had gathered about
John the Baptist, we thought that the agitation
was ended.</p>
<p>We were mistaken.</p>
<p>For a time nothing more was heard of the
Christ whom John had baptized. Then, suddenly,
there came rumors, first from one side and
then from another; fugitive words telling of a
renewed excitement that had begun to ferment
obscurely in that same nether class that had followed
John to his baptism. Gradually these
rumors became more and more dominant, and
every day more people heard of and became interested
in what was said. The interest was not
very great with us, but it was sufficient to keep
alive the observation of the daily papers.</p>
<p>The Messiah who had been baptized by John
had reappeared, and many people of the poorer
classes were gathering about Him in numbers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
to hear His teachings and to receive His word.
These poor people asserted that He performed
many miracles; that He could heal the sick and
diseased by merely touching them with His
hand; that He caused the lame to walk, the
dumb to speak, and the blind to see. It was said
that many miraculous cures had already been
performed by Him.</p>
<p>It happened at this time that a party of men
of the literary and artistic world had chartered a
vessel and had fitted it up as a floating studio,
adorning it with antique furniture, rugs, hangings,
and bric-à-brac.</p>
<p>It was a very merry party–a party of sadducees
who strenuously believed in no resurrection.
There was Archibald Redfern, the writer-artist-man-about-town;
Corry King, assistant editor
and business manager of the <i>Aurora;</i> Marcey,
the architect; Chillingham Norcott, the artist;
Allington, of the publishing-house of Richard
White & Co.; Dr. Ames, Pinwell, and others.
During the cruise, Norcott, Pinwell, and Redfern
had enriched the panels of the cabin with
marines and landscapes and decorative pieces
until the interior looked almost like a picture-gallery.
Everything was as luxurious as possible.
They had engaged Pierre Blanc to go with
them and to cook for them, and they paid him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
six hundred dollars for the three or four weeks of
the cruise. When it is said that Dr. Ames himself
selected the wines and liquors, nothing more
need be said concerning the provisioning of the
expedition.</p>
<p>The cruise had been a complete success, and
now they were about returning to the metropolis
again. They had run short of ice, and had put
in at a small coast town for a fresh supply.</p>
<p>Redfern, who had arrogated to himself the position
of head-steward, had gone ashore in the
boat with the steward <i>de facto</i>. There he heard
strange and wonderful reports of miracles that
were being performed in the neighborhood.</p>
<p>As the boat, returning from the shore, touched
the side of the schooner, Redfern came scrambling
aboard, and almost immediately his loud,
brassy voice was heard from end to end of the
vessel, telling of wonders performed and of miracles
wrought.</p>
<p>Some of the party were mildly gambling at
poker under the awning, waiting Redfern’s return
with the ice. Corry King lay stretched out
upon a couch in his shirt-sleeves reading a magazine,
a tall glass of brandy-and-soda at his elbow.
Norcott was sketching listlessly; the others
were talking together. They all looked up
at the sound of Redfern’s loud voice. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
was nothing funny in what he said, but they all
laughed.</p>
<p>“And you have returned cured of body and
sound of soul, I suppose,” said Ames.</p>
<p>“It isn’t of myself I’m thinking,” said Redfern,
in his strident, insistent voice, a voice that
almost stunned the hearer if he were near by and
not used to it. “It’s not of myself I’m thinking.
I’m thinking of you. I tell you, boys, this is the
chance of your life. I’m going to take you all
ashore this afternoon. Your souls have run
down during this cruise, and what you want is
to get a good brace of salvation before you get
back home again.”</p>
<p>They all went ashore in the afternoon. The
town appeared to be singularly deserted. A few
guests hung about the third-class summer hotel
porch, sitting uncomfortably on the hard, wooden
chairs in the shade. An occasional inhabitant
appeared here and there on the hot, sandy
stretch of street, but everywhere there was a feeling
of dull and silent depletion. The party inquired
at the hotel office and found that He
whom they sought was then supposed to be at
a certain place about six miles below the town
where there was a high and rocky hill. They
found that they could obtain a conveyance, and,
after a good deal of jocular chaffing with the fat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
and grinning hackman, the vehicle was ordered,
and a team of four horses. It was a dusty, rattletrap
affair, and the party piled in with much
noisy confusion, struggling for seats, and sitting
in one another’s laps. The hotel guests sat looking
on with a sort of outside interest and amusement.
Then the hack drove away with a volley
of cheers and a chorus of mimic coach-horns.</p>
<p>“Look here, boys,” called out Corry King,
“what I want to know is whether Redfern’s taking
us down here for our sakes or for his own?
Either he has got to take this thing seriously or
else we have.”</p>
<p>“It’s all for your sake, my boy! For your
sake!” cried out Redfern’s brazen, dominant
voice. “I made up my mind last night when I
saw the way you bucked up against Marcy’s
luck in that last jack-pot that you needed some
sort of salvation to pull you through till we get
you home again.”</p>
<p>It was three o’clock before they approached
their destination. As they drew near they found
that everywhere vehicles of all sorts were standing
along the road, the horses hitched to the
fence at the road-sides. They could see from a
distance as they approached that the hill was
covered with a restless, swaying mass of people,
and then they saw that the crowd was moving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
voluminously all in one direction–away from
the crest.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid you’re too late to hear Him, gentlemen,”
said the driver, and he urged the horses
forward with greater speed.</p>
<p>It was true; they were just too late to hear that
sermon which voiced the sublimest code of ethics
the world has ever heard–sublime, but, in our
opinion, impracticable.</p>
<p>Presently they were met, almost suddenly, by
the broken, ragged outskirts of the moving crowd
that was beginning to pour away from the hill.
They had not, until then, any idea how great was
the agitation centring around this strange being.</p>
<p>Then, almost in a moment, the crowd became
so dense that the hack could make no further
progress. “I reckon we’ll have to pull out of
the way,” said the driver.</p>
<p>“All right,” said Redfern; “pull away.”</p>
<p>And now the crowd was so thick about them
that it was with some difficulty that the driver
could edge his horses over to the side of the road.
And every instant the mass of men and women
grew more and more dense. “Look out where
you’re going! Look out there!” cried a chorus
of voices, as the crowd melted and dissolved before
the horses, closing again around the hack.
And now the road was suddenly filling with a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
great press of people moving all in one direction;
the air was made dense and darkened with clouds
of dust. Then the party in the hack saw approaching
along the road the nucleus of this
denser crowd which so centred about a single
point. “Yonder He is,” cried the driver, standing
up and pointing with his whip. “That’s Him,
there.”</p>
<p>The men were all standing up in the hack.</p>
<p>“Where?” said Redfern.</p>
<p>“That’s Him–that tall man,” said the driver.</p>
<p>The crowd were surging all about them, pushing
against the wheels of the hack. The air was
full of the tumult of many voices. The horses
shrank to one side as the moving mass eddied
around them. Then there came a little group of
rough men, apparently fishermen. In the midst
of them was a tall man. His face was wet with
sweat, and drops of sweat ran down His cheeks.
He gazed straight before Him and seemed oblivious
to everything about Him. The men in
the hack all knew that that must be He, and
they stood up looking at Him.</p>
<p>Then they saw a miracle.</p>
<p>Suddenly, almost alongside them, there was a
commotion and an outcry of voices. The crowd
parted, and as those in the hack looked down,
they saw a man struggling out of it and panting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
and gasping. It was a dreadful sight. He was
covered over with hideous, scrofulous sores. No
wonder the crowd parted to make way for him.
Through his panting he was shouting, hoarsely,
“Make me clean! Make me clean!” The crowd
surged and swayed with an echoing outcry of
voices, and for a moment the man was shut out
from the sight of those sadducees. Then they
could see that the diseased man was kneeling in
the road.</p>
<p>“I will,” said a loud, clear voice that dominated
the disturbance. “Be clean!” They could
see that He upon whom they were looking had
reached out His hand. They could not see what
He did, but He appeared to touch the kneeling
man. Instantly there was a great shout, and the
crowd surged and swept and heaved more tumultuously
than ever. They could not see what
had happened.</p>
<p>“My God!” cried out the driver, “did you see
that?”</p>
<p>“See what?” said Corry King, who stood next
him. In spite of himself he felt thrilled with a
sympathetic excitement.</p>
<p>“Didn’t you see it? He cured him.”</p>
<p>“Cured him?” said King. “Who? Where is
he?”</p>
<p>“Now–don’t you see him? There he i<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>s.”</p>
<p>Had they really beheld a miracle? No; they
had not. Archibald Redfern burst out laughing.
“Didn’t you see it, King?” he jeered.
“Where are your eyes?”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>That evening it was said that He would heal
the sick who would come to Him. The boat
party, interested in what they had already heard,
went ashore again after dark. The town that
had seemed to be dead and empty when they
were there before, was now full of people. There
were crowds everywhere. The night was hot
and oppressive. The sadducees followed whither
the crowd seemed to move, the press growing
ever thicker and thicker, until, by-and-by, they
reached a street densely packed with the throng.</p>
<p>It was a dark and narrow street in the suburbs.
It was packed full of people, and it was only after
much difficulty they were able to reach a point
of vantage–a broad flight of wooden steps that
led up to the door of a frame church. Thence
they could see over the heads of the mob of men
and women who filled the street beyond. They
could see that the people were bringing the sick
through the crowd. Near them was a man carrying
a little child in his arms. Its poor little legs
were twisted into a steel frame. A woman followed
close behind the man. The child lay with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
its head upon the man’s shoulder and appeared
to be crying, though it was too dark to see clearly.
The man moved, step by step, forward, and
presently was swallowed into the dark mass of
humanity beyond. In the distance was a doorway
in which stood a figure of a man, black
against the dull light of the lamp behind. There
appeared to be a number of other figures crowded
in the passageway behind Him. People were
looking out of the windows of the neighboring
houses. They could not see from the church-steps
where they stood what He was doing, but
He was constantly moving and stooping forward.
The tumult and din were dreadful. It appeared
a pandemonium of wild, unmeaning excitement.
As in the afternoon, it was an excitement that
was contagious. “Do you suppose He really is
curing them?” said Norcott, and again Archibald
Redfern burst out laughing.</p>
<p>“Why, of course He is,” said he.</p>
<p>He had seen no miracle and could see none.
How was it possible for a sadducee, who believed
in no resurrection, to see a miracle? The wisest
sadducee that ever lived, had he seen a miracle,
would not have believed it. Had the Almighty
blotted out the sun and the moon and written
the sign of His Truth in letters of fire all across
the blackened canopy of the heavens, Redfern or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
Corry King would not have believed–they would
have misdoubted their own eyesight.</p>
<p>After they had satisfied their curiosity, the
party went back to the boat and played poker
until nearly two o’clock in the morning.</p>
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