<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VI<br/> <small>THE YOUNG MAN WITH GREAT POSSESSIONS</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>DR. AND MRS. CAIAPHAS were spending
the latter part of the summer at the sea-side
with their son-in-law, Mr. Henry Herbert Gilderman.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gilderman was Dr. and Mrs. Caiaphas’s
daughter Florence–their eldest girl, and perhaps
the best-beloved by the doctor of all the children.
She had been married now a little over a year,
during nearly all of which time she and her husband
had lived abroad.</p>
<p>Gilderman was one of the richest men in the
world. His grandfather had laid the foundation
of that great Gilderman estate of the present
generation, and his father had built well upon
the foundation that the first Gilderman had
laid. Gilderman had been born into all this great
wealth–so great that, perhaps, no man could
realize how vast it was. To be born into such a
fortune is almost as to be born into royalty. It
shuts the inheritor into a shell of circumstances<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
from which there is no escape. Such a man as
Gilderman must live his life after a certain routine
and in a certain way from which there is no
escape. There was no privacy in his life, for all
the world looked on and saw what he did. His
business of life was to spend money and to enjoy
himself. For that purpose, and for that purpose
alone, he was born into the world. He had a
house in the metropolis, another at the nation’s
capital, and still another where the Romans of
his class spent the torrid weather of summer.
Each of these was a palace, and each was filled
with gems of art and rare pieces of china, plate,
tapestries, and bric-à-brac that his agents had
collected for him from all parts of the world.
He had given a hundred and sixty thousand dollars
for a single painting, and after it was hung
he had, perhaps, hardly looked at it. When he
travelled he had a valet to look after him, and
to foresee and to fulfil his wishes. He hardly
did anything for himself–not even to order
a cab or to purchase a railroad-ticket. Other
attendants looked after the heaps of luggage
which he took with him when he travelled. He
had his <i>avant-courier</i> to prepare soft places for
him in which to lodge, and others remained behind
to close the places which he left. Now that
he was married, his wife–who had fallen very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
pliantly into her new life, as women do–must
also have a maid to accompany her wherever she
went. They would almost fill the private car in
which they nearly always travelled if they had
any distance to go, especially if they travelled
upon any of the railroads which Gilderman controlled.
There was no escape from this routine.
Even when Gilderman would seek to change the
monotonous smoothness of his existence with a
taste of something rougher–say of the mountains–it
was only a pretended roughness covering
over the same perpetual smoothness and softness
of life. His log-hut in the wilderness was a
palace masquerading as a hut of logs. Everything
was really soft and warm; the furniture was
an artificial reproduction of something rough;
the floors were spread with skins of wild beasts
that cost three or four or five hundred dollars
apiece; there was an open fireplace that was designed
and built by Marcy, the architect, and a
picture of this pretence of roughness was published
in the voluminous Sunday issue of some
daily paper for all the world to behold.</p>
<p>Such were the surroundings of Henry Herbert
Gilderman. Into these circumstances the mysterious
paradox of divine wisdom had placed
a selfhood, eager, alertly intelligent, receptive,
warm, affectionate. A nature which, perhaps,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
lacked the gritty strenuosity in which a character
grows strong and fibrous and hard, but a
nature soft, rich, and lovable–a nature into
which the seeds of truth fell easily and struck
quick roots and thrust forth a rapid growth.
The garden of his soul was rather luxuriant
than well tilled, but it was fruitful and beautiful.</p>
<p>As said before, the business of Gilderman’s
life was its enjoyments–and the spending of
money; the dream of his life was of religious
faith, of social reform, of an equitable readjustment
of the classes. He read intermittently of
advanced socialistic and theological literature.
In these readings he would soon grow tired, presently
find himself becoming dull and drowsy;
but each time he read a few seeds would fall
scatteringly in the soft, warm loam of his soul,
and would there spring up into the quick, rank
growth of which he was very proud.</p>
<p>He loved nothing better than to talk to some
intimate friend of his dreams and of his religious
and socialistic views. He would talk on
such an occasion until his cheeks glowed and his
breath came hot and thick. He would, sometimes,
afterwards wonder dimly whether he had
not been a little foolish–whether he had not
talked too much and said too much nonsense.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
But he enjoyed the intensity of the excitement
while it lasted.</p>
<p>His friends loved him.</p>
<p>He was, unless crossed in his desires, kind to
every one whom he met; but he never forgot that
he was Henry Herbert Gilderman and the grandson
of James Quincy Gilderman.</p>
<p>Gilderman was singularly attracted by the
popular interest that centred about John the
Baptist, and now about the Christ who taught
and healed the poor. He used to talk about
these things to his father-in-law when he could
get Dr. Caiaphas to discuss the matter. The
subject was one not very pleasant to the rector
of the Church of the Advent, and he was not
often willing to discuss it.</p>
<p>When September arrived, Mrs. Caiaphas did
not immediately return to town. Mrs. Gilderman
was not at that time feeling at all well, and
her mother continued with her for a while. Dr.
Caiaphas, however, used to go down on a Saturday
morning–generally in Gilderman’s yacht–preach
on Sunday, attend to his more pressing
parish work on Monday and possibly on Tuesday,
and then return directly to his summer home
again.</p>
<p>One day Gilderman went down to the metropolis
with his father-in-law, having business in town<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
with his manager. They started late in the afternoon,
and took their dinner aboard the yacht,
which they had to themselves. They sat smoking
on the deck after dinner, each in a great rattan
chair. The day had been very hot, and they enjoyed
to the full the swift motion and the chill of
the night air. It was a beautiful night, soft and
mild–the sky dusted over with a myriad stars.
The yacht sped forward, with a ceaseless rushing
of the water alongside. The cigar-points alternately
glowed and paled as they smoked. Dr.
Caiaphas buttoned up his coat close to his chin.
Every now and then the voice of the sailors
forward broke the stillness of the night, or the
clinking of dishes and tumblers sounded loud as
the steward put away the glass and the china in
the saloon.</p>
<p>There was a distant light over across the dark
water. It led Gilderman’s thoughts to the subject
which had occupied them much of late.</p>
<p>“By-the-way,” he said, “has it never occurred
to you, sir, to question whether, after all, the
Messiah whom the people are proclaiming over
yonder is not really the Divine Truth incarnated?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Dr. Caiaphas, “it has not. And,
to tell you the truth, Henry, I would a great deal
rather not discuss that phase of the question.”</p>
<p>“Why no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>t?”</p>
<p>“Well, because it is unpleasant to me–because
it is distressful to me.” Gilderman was
silent, and, by-and-by, Dr. Caiaphas voluntarily
continued: “The Divine Word leads us to understand
that God is a spirit, and they that worship
Him must worship Him in spirit and in
truth. It is revolting to me to even listen to the
supposition that the God of Heaven could have
a human son–a carpenter by trade–and that
the mother should be the wife of a common carpenter.”</p>
<p>“I think I enter perfectly into your feelings,”
said Gilderman, after another little space of silence;
“but–I don’t want to force the conversation
upon you, you understand, sir–but I must
say that it seems to me that you think only of
God’s acting according to your own ideas of fitness.
I do not believe that He ever acts according
to man’s ideas, and maybe He may not have
done so in this instance. How do you know, sir,
that we may not be mistaken? And, if we are
mistaken, what a great wrong are we doing!”</p>
<p>“In that case,” said Dr. Caiaphas, “and, if I
am mistaken, speaking for myself, I see nothing
for it but to suffer for my own short-sightedness.
Every man must exercise his own judgment, and
if his judgment is wrong he must suffer for it. I
cannot believe that this poor journeyman carpenter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
is the son of the Almighty God whom
I worship. If I am mistaken, I must suffer for
it, for I cannot change my mind. And I am so
sure in my disbelief,” he added, as though to
close the discussion, “that I am willing to stand
my chances upon it at the day of judgment, even
if that day were to-morrow.”</p>
<p>After that, Gilderman did not say anything
more. But in the few words he had said he had
begun almost to convince himself that the miracles
of which the world was beginning to talk
were really worthy of attention.</p>
<p>The next morning, after an eleven-o’clock
breakfast aboard the yacht, Gilderman had himself
driven down to his office. After the freshness
of the open air at the sea-side, the city felt
like a steaming oven. Gilderman sat leaning
back in the brougham smoking and looking out
upon the hot bustle of the street. The ceaselessly
streaming crowds on the sidewalk hurried
and jostled and pushed, paying no attention to
the heat or to their fellow-men or to heaven
or to hell, or to anything but the business they
were just then so intent upon–each man a little
life in himself shut out from all the other little
lives around him.</p>
<p>A bulletin was posted on a board in front of
a newspaper-office–a square of brownish paper<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
covered with ink-drawn characters. Half a
dozen men stood looking at it, but the stream of
humanity flowed by, neither thinking of nor caring
for the words posted above their heads.</p>
<p>In large letters it proclaimed that John the
Baptist had been executed the night before.</p>
<p>It brought a singular shock to Gilderman, who
was still impressed by the recollection of the
brief talk that he had had with his father-in-law.
He said to himself, as he sat leaning back in the
carriage, “It’s a confounded shame!”</p>
<p>He thought about it intermittently all the
way down to the office and until the brougham
stopped at the sidewalk and he got out.</p>
<p>The office was on the first floor of an imposing
brown-stone building. Over the great, glazed
doors were carved in relief the words:</p>
<p class='center'>
“<span class="smcap">Gilderman Building</span>.”<br/></p>
<p class='unindent'>On both sides of the plate-glass windows that
looked out into the busy street were gilt letters:</p>
<p class='center'>
“<span class="smcap">Office of the Gilderman Estate</span>.”<br/></p>
<p>Now the windows were open, and through them
he could see the clerks busy over the books. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
looked warm, and wore linen or madras jackets.
Mr. Wright, the manager, was standing with the
cashier looking over a book. They neither of
them saw him.</p>
<p>“You may come for me at three o’clock,” Gilderman
said to the man, who stood holding
open the door of the brougham. And then he
turned and went up the steps and through the
swinging-door. The electric-fans were whirring,
and the air felt cool after the hot street
outside.</p>
<p>He went directly through to the manager’s
room beyond. Those whom he passed turned
and looked after him; he was used to having
men look after him in that way. He felt that
the fact of his presence became almost instantly
known throughout the entire office. There
was a silent, indescribable movement among the
clerks. He saw the cashier speak to Mr. Wright,
the manager, who looked up sharply.</p>
<p>Gilderman went directly into his private office.
He laid his hat on the table among the newspapers.
There was a brass electric-fan on the
mantel, and he turned the switch and started it
moving, standing before the refreshing coolness.
As he did so the other door opened and Mr.
Wright came in. The manager bowed and Gilderman
acknowledged his presence with a nod.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
He did not move away from the cooling breezes
of the fan.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to have called you away from the
sea in such weather as this, Mr. Gilderman,” said
the manager.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry to come, Wright. It seems to me
we’ve had nothing but hot weather ever since
February.”</p>
<p>“How’s Mrs. Gilderman?” asked the manager.</p>
<p>“Not very well,” said Gilderman, briefly. “I
suppose you wanted me about those copper-mines?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; the transfers will have to be signed
this week. I’ve made arrangements with Mr.
Pengrist and Walton, of Walton & Boone, to be
here. Shall I send word to Mr. Pengrist now?”</p>
<p>“You might as well,” said Mr. Gilderman. As
Mr. Wright touched the electric-bell he remembered
the bulletin he had just seen posted at the
newspaper office. “By-the-way,” said he, “I
saw it posted on the bulletin-board as I came
down that John the Baptist had been executed.”</p>
<p>“Yes; so I was told awhile ago,” said Mr.
Wright. “I think it’s a pity that there should
have been any dilly-dallying about it. Herod
might as well have acted sharply in the first
instance. He has gained nothing by all this
dela<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>y.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think the Baptist ought to have been
executed at all,” said Gilderman, briefly.</p>
<p>Mr. Wright smiled, and then looked quickly
sober. He had for the moment forgotten Gilderman’s
radical and socialistic proclivities. He
thought that they were very foolish, but he was
too practical a man and had too much good
sense to argue the point.</p>
<p>The messenger-boy appeared at the open
door. “Go down to Pengrist & Ball’s,” said Mr.
Wright, “and tell Mr. Pengrist that Mr. Gilderman
is here.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said the boy and disappeared.</p>
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