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CONTENTS
CHAP.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
The Old Organ , . , ,
Christie's Important Charge .
Only Another Month
Mabel's First Lesson in Organ-
Grinding
No Sin in the City Bright
The Only Way into "Home, Sweet
Home "
Little Mabel's Snowdrops
Made Meet for Home
Treffy Enters the City .
No Place Like Home
Alone in the World .
Christie Well Cared For
Christie's Work for the Master
"Home, Sweet Home," at Last
PAGB
7
H
34
41
50
59
69
78
^6
94
lOI
108
119
Christie's Old Organ
CHAPTER I
THE OLD ORGAN
"Home, sweet home, theie's no place like home,
there \< no place like home," played the unmusical
notes cf a barrel-organ in the top room of a lodg-
ing house in a dreary back street. The words
certainly did not seem to apply to that dismal
abode ; there were not many there who knew much
of the sweets of home.
It was a ver}^ dark, uncomfortable place, and
as the lodgers in the lower room turned over on
their wretched beds, many of which were merely
bare wooden benches, it may be that one and
another gave a sigh as he thought how far he was
from "home, sweet home."
But the organ played on, though the hour was
late, and the candle was put out, and the fire was
dying away. If you had climbed the crooked
staircase, you would have seen an old man sitting
alone in his attic, and smiling at his organ as he
turned it with a trembling hand.
Old Treffy loved his barrel-organ; it was the
one comfort of his life. He was a poor, forlorn
old man, without a friend in the world. Every
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
one that he had ever loved was dead. He had no
one to whom he could talk, or to whom he could
tell his troubles. And thus he gathered up all the
remaining bits and fragments of love in his old
heart, faded and withered though they were, and
he gave them all to his old organ, which had well-
nigh seen as many summers as he had. It was
getting very antiquated and old-fashioned now.
The red silk in front of it was very soiled and
worn, and it could not play any of the new tunes
of which the children were so fond. It sometimes
struck old Treffy that he and his organ were very
much alike — they were getting altogether behind
the age; and people looked down on them and
pushed past them, as they hurried along the street.
And though old Treffy was very patient, yet he
could not help feeling this.
He had felt it very much on the day of which
I am writing. It was cold, dismal weather. A
cutting east wind had swept round the corners of
the streets, and had chilled the old man through
and through. His threadbare coat could not keep
it out — how could he expect it to do so, when he
had worn it so many years he could scarcely count
them? His thin, trembling old hands were so
benumbed with cold that he could scarcely feel the
handle of the organ, and, as he turned it, he made
sundry little shakes and quavers in the tune, which
were certainly not intended by the maker of the
old barrel-organ.
THE OLD ORGAN
There was not much variety in the tunes old
Treffy could play. There was the "Old Hun-
dredth," and "Poor Mary Ann," and "Rule
Britannia"; the only other one was "Home, sweet
Home," but that was old Treffy 's favorite. He
always played it very slowly, to make it last
longer, and on this cold day the shakes and the
quavers in it sounded most pathetic. But no one
took much notice pf old Treffy or his organ. A
little crowd of children gathered round him, and
asked him for all sorts of new tunes of which he
had never even heard the names. They did not
seem to care for "Home, sweet Home," or the
"Old Hundredth," and soon moved away. Then
an old gentleman put his head out of a window,
and in a cross voice told him to go on, and not dis-
turb a quiet neighborhood with his noise. Old
Treffy meekly obeyed, and, battling with the
rough easst wind, he tried another and a more
bustling street ; but here a policeman warned him
to depart, lest he should crowd up the way.
Poor old Treff}^ was almost fainting, but he must
not give up, for he had not a cent in his pocket,
and he had come out without breakfast. At
length a kind-hearted farmer's wife, who was pass-
ing with a basket on her arm, took pity on the
trembling old man, and gave him a coin from her
capacious pocket.
Thus all day long Treffy played on. Over and
over again his four tunes were sounded forth, but
■mi
10
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
that was the only money he received that cold day.
At last, as the daylight was fading, he turned
homeward. On his way he parted with his solitary
cent for a cake of bread, and slowly and wearily
he dragged himself up the steep stairs to his lonely
attic.
Poor old Treffy was in bad spirits this evening.
He felt that he and his organ weie getting out of
date, things of the past. They were growing old
together. He could remember the day when it
was new. How proud he had been of it! Oh,
how he had admired it ! The red silk was quite
bright, and the tunes were all in fashion. There
were not so many organs about then, and people
stopped to listen — not children only, but grown
men and women — and Treffy had been a proud
man in those aays. But a generation had grown
up since then, and now Treffy felt that he was a
poor, lone old man, very far behind the age, and
that his organ was getting too old-fashioned for
the present day. Thus he felt very cast down
and dismal, as he raked together the cinders, and
tried to make a little blaze in the smalKfire he had
lighted.
But when he had eaten his cake, and had taken
some tea which he had warmed over again, old
Treffy felt rather better, and he turned as usual
to his old organ to cheer his fainting spirits. For
old Treffy knew nothing of a better Comforter.
The landlady of the house had objected at first
THE OLD ORGAN
11
to old Treffy's organ ; she said it disturbed the
lodgers; but on Treffy's offering to pay a little per
week extra for his little attic, on condition of his
being able to play whenever he liked, she made
no further opposition.
And thus, till late in the night, he turned away,
and his face grew brighter, and his heart lighter, as
he listened to his four tunes. It was such good
company, he said, and the attic was so lonely at
night. And there was no one to find fault with
the organ there, or to call it old-fashioned. Treffy
admired it with all his heart, and felt that at night
at least it had justice done to it.
But there was one who was listening to the old
organ, and admiring it as much as old Treffy, of
whom the old man knew nothing. Outside his
door, crouching down with his ear against a large
crack, lay a little ragged boy. He had come into
the lodging-room downstairs to sleep, and had lain
down on one of the hard benches, when old
Treffy's barrel-organ began to play. He had not
listened to it much at first, but when the first notes
of " Home, sweet Home" had been sounded forth,
little Christie had raised his head on his elbow, and
listened with all his might. It was almost too
much for him. It was a memory of the past. A
few months ago, little Christie had a mother, and
thi'i was the last tune she sang. It brought it all
back to him — the bare, desolate room, the wasted
form on the bed, the dear, loving hand which had
-.•afeiSS.-M^i-rr.-
"Tirnt;
12
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
Stroked his face so gently, and the sweet voice
which had sung that very tune to him. He could
hear her, even now :
"Home, sweet home, there's no place like
home; there's no place like home."
How sweetly she had sung it ! — he remembered
it so well. And he remembered what she had said
to him just afterwards- —
'Tm going home, Christie — going home — home,
sweet home. I'm going home, Christie."
And those were the last words she had said to
him.
Since then, life had been very dreary to little
Christopher. Life without a mother, it hardly was
life to him. He had never been happy since she
had died. He had worked very hard, poor little
fellow, to earn his bread, for she had told him to
do that. But he had often wished he could go to
his mother in "Home, sweet Home." And he
wished it more than ever this night, as he heard
his mother's tune. He waited very patiently for
it, whilst old Treffy was playing vhe other three
which came first, but at length some one closed
the door, and the noise inside the lodging-room
was so great that he could not distinguish the notes
of the longed-for tune.
So Christie crept out quietly in the darkness,
and closing the door softly, that no one might
notice it, he stole gently upstairs. He knelt down
by the door and listened. It was very cold, and
THE OLD ORGAN
18
the wind swept up the staircase, and made little
Christie shiver. Yet still he knelt by the door.
At length the organ stopped. He heard the old
man putting it down by the wall, and in a few
minutes all was still.
Then Christie crept downstairs again, and lay
dowr once more on his hard b<5nch, and fell
asleep, and dreamt of the mother in the far-off
land. And he thought he heard her singing,
"'Home, sweet Home.' I'm home now, Christie.
Tm borne now, and there's no place like home."
CHAPTER II
CHRISTIE'S IMPORTANT CHARGE
The dismal lodging-house had a charm for littU
Christie now. Night after night he returned
there, that he iT>ight hear his mother's tune. The
landlady began to look upon him as one o£ her
regular household. She sometimes gave him a
crust of bread, for she noticed his hungry face each
night, as he came to the large lodging-room to
sleep.
And every night old Treffy played, and Christie
crept upstairs to listen.
One night, however, as he was kneeling at the
attic Hoor, the music suddenly ceased, and Chi istie
heard a dull, heavy sound, as if something had
fallen on the floor. He waited a minute, but all
was quite ctill ; s<' he cautiously lifted the latch and
peeped into the room. There was only a dim light
in the attic, for the fire was nearly out, and old
Treffy had no candle. But the moonlight,
streaming in at the window, showed Christie the
form of the old man stretched on the ground, and
his poor old barrel-organ laid beside him. Christie
crept to his side, e id took hold of his hand. It
was deadly cold, e d Christie thought he was dead.
He was just going to call the landlady, when the
old m&n mbv«d, and in a trembling voice asked :
u
CHRISTIE'S IMPORTANT CHARGE
II
"What's the matter? Who's there?"
"It's only me, Master Treffy," said Christie,
"it's only me. I was listening to your organ, I
was, and I heard you tumble, so I came in. Are
you better, Master Treffy?"
The old man raised his head, and looked around.
Christie helped him to get up, and took him to his
little straw bed in the corner of the attic.
"Are you better, Master Treffy?" he asked
again.
"Yes, yes," said the old man; "it's only the
cold, boy ; it's very chilly o' nights now, and I'm
a poor lone old man. Good-night."
And so the old man fell asleep, and Christie lay
down by his side and slept also.
That was the beginning of a friendship between
old Treffy and Christie. They were both alone in
the world, both friendless and desolate, and it
drew them to each other. Christie was a great
comfort to Treffy. He went errands for him, he
cleaned the old attic, and he carried the barrel-
organ downstairs each morning when Treffy went
on his rounds. And, in return, Treffy gave
Christie a corner of the attic to sleep in, and let
him sit over his tiny fire whilst he played h's dear
old organ. And whenever he came to "Home,
sweet Home," Christie thought of his mother,
and of what she had said to him before she died.
"Where is *Kome, sweet Home,' Master
Treffy?" he asked one night.
16
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
Treffy looked round the wretched little attic,
with its damp, weather-stained roof, and its
rickety, rotten floor, and felt that he could not
call // "Home, sweet Home."
"It's not here, Christie," he said.
"No," said Christie, thoughtfull}^ ; "I expect
it's a long way from here. Master Treffy."
"Yes," said the old man; "there must be some-
thing better somewhere."
"My mother used to talk about heaven," said
Christie, doubtfully. "I wonder if that was the
home she meant?"
But old Treffy knew very little of heaven ; no
one had ever told him of the home above. Yet
he thought of Christie's words many times that
day, as he dragged himself about wearily, with his
old organ. He was failing very fast, poor old
man. His legs were becoming feeble, and he was
almost fainting when he reached the attic. The
cold wind had chilled him through and through.
Christie was at home before him, and had lit the
fire, and boiled the kettle, and put all ready for
old Treffy's comfort. He wondered what was
the matter with Treffy that night ; he was so quiet
and silent, and he never even asked for his old
organ after tea, but went to bed as soon as possi-
ble.
The next day he was too weak and feeble to go
out, and Christie watched beside hfm, and got
him all he wanted, as tenderly as a woman could
have done.
CHRISTIE'S IMPORTANT CHARGE
17
The next day it was the same, and the day after
that, till the attic cupboard grew empty, and all
poor old Treffy's money was gone.
"What are we to do now, Christie?" he said,
pitifully; "I can't go out to-day, my lad, can I?"
"No," said Christie, "you mustn't think of it.
Master Treffy. Let me see, what can we do?
Shall /take the organ out?"
Old Treffy did not answer. A great strug-
gle was going on in his mind. Could he let
any one but himself touch his dear old organ?
It would be hard to see it go out, and have
to stay behind — very hard indeed. But Christie
was a careful lad ; he would rather trust it with
him than with any one else ; and he had come
to his last piece of money. He must not
sit still and starve. Yes, the organ must go; but
it would be a great trial to him. He would be so
lonelv in the dark attic when Christie and the
organ were both gone. What a long, tedious day
it would be to him !
"Yes, Christie, you may take her to-morrow,"
he said at length; "but you must be very careful
of her, my lad — very careful."
"All right. Master Treffy," said Chnstie,
cheerily; "I'll bring her safe home, you see if I
don'i."
What a day that was in Christie's life! He
was up with the lark, as people say, but there was
no lark within many a mile of that dismal street.
18
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGA.V
He was certainly up before the sparrows, and long
before the men on the benches in the great lodg-
ing-room. He crept out cautiously into the court
in the grey morning light, and kneeling by the
common pump, he splashed the water upon his
face and neck till they lost all feeling with the cold.
Then he rubbed his hands till they were as red as
cherries, and he was obliged to wrap them up in
his ragged coat, that he might feel they still be-
longed to him. And then he stole upstairs again,
and lifting the latch of the attic door very gently,
lest old Treffy should awake, he combed his rough
hair with a broken comb, and arranged his ragged
garments to the best possible advantage.
Then Christie was ready ; and he longed for
the time when old Treffy would wake, and give
him leave to go. The sparrows were chirping on
the eaves now, and the sun was beginning to shine.
There were noises in the house, too, and one by
one the men in the great lodging-room shook
themselves, and went out to their work and to
their labor until the evening.
Christie watched them crossing the court, and
his impatience to be off grew stronger. At
length he touched old Treffy 's hand very gently,
and the old man said, in a bewildered voice :
"What is it, Christie, boy; what is it?"
"It's morning, Master Treffy," said Christie;
"shall you soon be awake?"
The old man turned over in bed, and finally sat up.
CHRISTIE'S IMPORTANT CHARGE
10
*'Why, Christie, boy, how nice you look!" sa-d
Treffy, admiringly.
Christie drew himself up with considerable im-
portance, and walked up and down the attic, that
Treffy might further admire him.
''May I go now. Master Treffy?" he asked.
"Yes, Christie, boy, go if you like," said the
old man; "but you'll be very careful of her, won't
you, Christie?"
"Yes, Master Treffy," said the boy, "I'll be as
careful as you an:."
"And you'll not turn her round too fast,
Christie?" he went on.
"No, Master Treffy," said Christie; "I'll turn
her no faster than you do."
"And you mustn't stop and talk to boys in the
street, Christie ; they're very rude sometimes, are
boys, and they always want the new tunes,
Christie ; but never you heed them. Her tunes
are getting old-fashioned, poor old thing; she's
something like me. But you mustn't take no
notice of the boys, Christie."
"No, Master Treffy," said Christie ; "no more
than you do.-*'
"There's one tune they're very fond of," said
old Treffy, meditatively; "I don't rightly know
what it is; they call it 'Marshal Lazy' (Marseil-
laise) or something of that sort. I reckon it's
called after some man in the wars, maybe."
"You don't know who he was?" asked Christie.
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
"No," said old Treffy, '4 don't bother my head
about it. I expect he was some lazy scoundrel
who wouldn't do his duty, and so they made up a
song to mock at him. But that's as it may be,
Ctiristie; I don t know, I'm sure. I expect he
wasn't born when my organ was made ; I expect
not, Christie.'*
*'Well, Master Treffy, I'm ready," said
Christie, putting the organ strap over his neck ;
'* good-bye."
And, with an air of great importance, Christie
carefully descended the rickety stairs, and
marched triumphantly across the court. A few
children who were there, gathered round him with
admiring eyes, and escorted him down the street.
"Give us a tune, Christie ; play away, Christie,"
they all cried out. But Christie shook his head
resolutely, and marched on. He was not sorry
when they grew tired of following him and turned
back. Now he felt himself a man ; and he went
on in a most independent manner.
And then he began to play. What a moment
that was for him !
He had often turned the handle of the barrel- .
organ in the lonely old attic, but that was a very
different thing from playing it in the street. There
had been no one to hear him there but old Treffy,
who used to stand by anxiously, saying: "Turn
her gently, Christie; turn her gently." But here
there were crowds of people passing by, and some-
CHRISTIE'S IMPORTANT CHARGE
SI
times some one stopped for a minute, and then how
proud Christie felt! There was no barrel-organ
like his, he felt sure. He did not care what the
folks said about Marshal Lazy ; he was not so good
as poor Mary Ann, Christie felt sure ; and as for
*'Home, sweet Home," Christie almost broke
down every time he played it. He did so love his
mother, and he could not hjp thinking she was
singing it still somewhere. He wondered very
much where she was, and where "Home, sweet
Home" was. He must try to find out somehow.
Thus the day wore away, and Christie's
patience was rewarded by quite a little store of
money. How proud he was to spend it on his way
home in comforts for old Treffy, and how much
he enjoyed giving the old man an account of his
day's adventures!
Tre'iify gave Christie a warm welcome when he
opened the attic door; but it would be hard to say
whether he was more pleased to see Christie, or to
see his dear old barrel-organ. He examined it
most carefully and tenderly, but he could not dis-
cover that Christie had done any harm to it, and
he praised him accordingly.
Then, whilst Christie was getting tea ready,
Treffy played through all his four tunes, dwelling
most affectionately and admiringly on "Home,
sweet Home."
^smmsm
CHAPTER III
ONLY ANOTHER MONTH
«
Old Treffy did not regain his strength. He
continued weak and feeble. He was not actually
ill, and could sit up day after day by the tiny fire
which Christie lighted for him in the morning.
But he was not able to descend the steep staircase,
much less to walk about with the heavy organ,
which even made Christie's shoulders ache
So Christie took the old man's place. It was not
always such pleasant work as on that first morn-
ing. There were cold days and rainy days ; there
was drizzling sleet, which lashed Christie's face ;
and biting frost which chilled him through and
through. There were damp fogs, which wrapped
him round like a wet blanket, and rough winds,
which nearly took him off his feet. Then he
grew a little weary of the sound of the poor old
organ. He never had the heart to confess this to
old Treffy ; indeed he scarcely liked to own it to
himself ; but he could not help wishing that poor
Mary Ann would come to the end of her troubles,
and that the "Old Hundredth" would change into
something new. He never grew tired of " Home,
sweet Home"; it was ever fresh to him, for he
heard in it his mother's voice.
Thus the winter wore away, and the spring came
02
ONLY ANOTHER MONTH
on, and the days became longer and lighter. Then
Christie would go much farther out of the town, to
the quiet suburbs where the sound of a barrel-
organ was not so often heard. The people had time
to listen in these parts. They were far away from
the busy stir of the town, and there were but few
passers-by on the pavement. It was rather dull in
these outlying suburbs. The rows of villas, with
their stiff gardens in front, grew a little monoto-
nous. It was just the kind of place in which a
busy, active mind would long for a little variety.
And so it came to pass that even a barrel-organ
was a welcome visitor, and one and another would
throw Christie a coin, and encourage him to come
again.
One hot spring day, when the sun was shining
in all his vigor, as if he had been tired of being
hidden in the winter, Christie was toiling up one
of the roads on the outskirts of the town. The
organ was very heavy for him, and he had to stop
every now and then to rest for a minute. At
length he reached a nice-looking house, standing
in a very pretty garden. The flower-beds in front
of the house were filled with the early spring
flowers; snowdrops, crocuses, violets, and hepat-
icas were in full bloom.
Before this house Christie began to play. He
could hardly have told you why he chose it ; per-
haps he had no reason for doing so, except that it
had such a pretty garden in front, and Christie
24
CHRISTIE'S OLL^ ORGAN
always loved flowers. His mother had once
bought him a bunch of spring flowers, which, after
liviijg for many days in a broken bottle, Christie
had pressed in an old spelling-book, and, through
all his troubles, he had never parted with them.
And thus, before the house with the pretty gar-
den, Christie began to play. He had not turned
the handle of the organ three times, before two
merry little faces appeared at a window at the top
of the house, and watched him with lively interest.
They put their heads out of the window as far as
the protecting bars v/ould allow them, and Christie
could hear all they said.
"Look at him," said the little girl, who seemed
to be about five years old; "doesn't he turn it
nicely, Charlie?"
"Yes, he does," said Charlie, "and what a
pretty tune he's playing!"
"Yes," said the little girl, "it's so cheerful.
Isn't it, nurse?" she added, turning round to the
girl, who was holding her by the waist to prevent
her falling out of the window. Mabel had heard
her papa make a similar remark to her mamma the
night before, when she had been playing a piece
of music to him for the first time, and she there-
fore thought it was the correct way to express her
admiration of Christie's tune.
But the tune happened to be "Poor Mary Ann,"
the words of which nurse knew very well indeed.
And as Mary Ann was nurse's own name, she had
ONLY ANOTHRR MONTH
grown quite sentimental whilst Christie was play-
ing it, and had been wondering wliclher John
Brown, the grocer's young man, who had promised
to be faithful to her forever and evermore, would
ever behave to her as poor Mary Ann's lover did,
and leave her to die forlorn. Thus she could not
quite agree with Miss Mabel's remark, that "Poor
Mary Ann" was so cheerful, and she seemed rather
relieved when the tune changed to " Rule Britan-
nia." But when " Rule Britannia" v/as finished,
and the organ began "Home, sweet Home," the
children fairly screamed with delight; for their
mother had often sung it to them, and they re-
cognized it as an old favorite ; and with their pretty,
childish voices, they joined in the chorus: "Home,
sweet home, there's no place like home, there's
no place like home." As poor Christie looked
up at them, it seemed to him that they, at least,
did know something of what they sang.
"Why have I not a nice home?" he wondered.
But the children had run away from the window,
and scampered downstairs to ask their mamma for
some money for the poor organ-boy. A minute
afterwards two coins were thrown to Christie
from the nursery v^'indow. They fell down into
the middle of a bed of pure white snowdrops, and
Christie had to open the garden gate, and walk cau-
tiously over the grass to pick them up. But for
some time he could not find them, for they were
hidden by the flowers ; so the children ran down-
98
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
Stairs again to help him. At last they were discov-
ered, and Christie took off his hat and made a low
bow, as they presented them to him. He put the
money in his pocket, and looked down lovingly on
the snowdrops.
"They are pretty flowf .s, missie," he said.
"Would you ^''iw one, organ-boy?" asked
Mabel, standing on tip-toe, and looking into
Christie's face.
"Could you spare one?" said Christie, eagerly.
"I'll ask mamma," said Mabel, and she ran
into the house.
"I'm to gather four," she said, when she came
back; "o"gan-boy, you shall choose."
It was a weighty matter selecting the flowers ;
and then the four snowdrops were tied together and
given to Christie.
"My mother once gave me some like these^
missie," he said.
"Does she never give you any now?" said
Mabel.
"No, missie, she's dead," said Christie, mourn-
fully.
"Oh!" said little Mabel, in a sorrowful, pitying
voice, "poor organ-boy, poor organ-boy!"
Christie now put his organ on his back and pre-
pared to depart.
"Ask him what his name is," whispered Mabel
to Charlie.
"No, no; you ask him."
ONDt ANOTHER MONTH
Hi
''^Pieasey Charlie, ask him," said Mabel again.
"What is your name, organ-boy?" said Charlie,
shyly.
Christie told them his name, and as he went
down the road he heard their voices calling after
him:
"Come again, Christie. Come again another
day, Christie. Come again soon, Christie."
The snowdrops were very faded and withered
when Christie reached the attic that night. He
tried to revive them in water, but they would not
look fresh again ; so he laid them to rest beside his
mother's faded flowers in the old spelling-book.
Christie was not long in repeating his visit to
the suburban road, but this time, though he played
his four tunes twice through, and lingered regret-
fully over "Home, sweet Home," he saw nothing
of the children, and received neither smiles nor
snowdrops ; for Mabel and Charlie had gone for
a long country walk with their nurse, and were far
away from the sound of poor Christie's organ.
Treffy was still unable lo get out, and he grew
rather fretful sometimes, even with Christie. It
was very dull for him sitting alone all day, and he
had nothing to comfort him, not even his old friend
the organ. When Christie came home at night,
if the receipts were not so large as usual, poor old
Treffy would sigh, and moan, and wish he could
get about again, and take his old organ out as be-
fore.
28
CftRISTlE'S OLD ORGAN
Put Christie bore it very patiently, for he loved
his old master more than he had loved any one
since his mother died ; and love can bear many
things. Still, he did wish he could find some one
or something to comfort Treffy, and to make. him
better.
"Master Treffy," he said, one night, "shall I
fetch the doctor to you?"
"No, no, Christie, boy," said Treffy; "let me
be, let me be."
But Christie was not to be so easily put off.
What if Treffy should die, and leave him alone in
the world again ? The little attic, dismal though
it was, had been a home to Christie, and it had
been good to have some one to love him once
again. He would be very, very lonely if Treffy
died ; and the old man was growing very thin and
pale, and his hands were very trembling and
feeble ; he could scarcely turn the old organ now.
Christie had heard of old people "breaking up,"
as it is called, and then going off suddenly ; and
he began to be very much afraid old Treff}" would
do the same. He must get some one to come and
see his old master.
The landlady of the house had fallen downstairs
and broken her arm. A doctor came to sec her^
Christie knew. Oh, if he* would only step upstairs
and look at old Treffy ! It was such a little way
from the landlad^''s room to the aitic, and it would
only take him a few minutes. And then Christie
ONL Y ANOTHER MONTH
could ask him what was the matter with the old
man, and whether old Treffy would get better.
These thoughts kept Christie awake a long time
that night. He turned restlessly on his pillow,
and felt very troubled and anxious. The moon-
light streamed into the room, and fell on old
Treify's face as he lay on his bed in the corner.
Christie raised himself on his elbow, and looked
at him. Yes, he did look very wasted and ill.
Oh, how he hoped Treffy would not go away, as
his mother had done, and leave him behind I
Christie cried himself to sleep that night.
The next day he watched about on the stairs
till the landlady's doctor came. Old Treffy
thought him very idle because he would not go out
with the organ, but Christie put him off with first
one excuse and then another, and kept looking
out of the window and down the court, that he
might see the doctor's carriage stop at the en-
trance.
When at last the doctor came, Christie watched
him go into the landlady's room, and sat at the
door till he came out. He shut the door quickly
after him, and was running down the steps, when
he heard an eager voice calling after him.
"Please, sir, please, sir," said Christie.
"Well, my boy, what do you want.?" said the
doctor.
"Please, sir— don't be cross, sir, but if you
would walk upstairs a minute into the attic, sir ;
K)
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAM
it's old Treffy, and he's ever so poorl}'."
*'Who is old Treffy?" asked the doctor.
" He's my old master ; that's to say, he takes
care of me — at least it's me that takes care of
him, please, sir."
The doctor did not quite know what to make of
this lucid explanation. However, he turned round
and began slowly to ascend the attic stairs.
"What's the matter with him ?" he asked, kindly.
"That's what I want to know, sir," said
Christie; "he's a very old man, sir, and I'm
afraid he won't live long, and I want to know,
please. But I'd better go in first, please, sir;
Master Treffy doesn't know you're coming.
Master Treff}'," said Christie, walking bravely
into the room, "here's the landlady's doctor come
to see you."
And to Christie's great joy, old Treffy made
no objection, but submitted very patiently and
gently to the doctor's investigations, without even
asking who had sent him. And then the doctor
took leave, promising to send some medicine
in the morning, a; d walked out into the close
court. He was just getting into his carriage,
when he felt a little cold hand on his arm.
"Please, sir, how much is it?" said Christie's
voice.
"How much is what?" asked the doctor.
"How much is it for coming to see poor old
Treffy, sir? I've got a few cents here, ^ir," said
f:NL y ANOTHER MONTH
ti
Christie, bringing them out of his pocket; "will
these be enough, sir? or, if not, sir, I'll bring
some more to your house to-morrow."
**Oh," said the doctor, smiling, "you may
keep your money, boy. I won't take your last
cent, and when I come to see Mrs. White I'll give
a look at the old man again."
Christie looked, but did not speak his thanks.
"Pleaye, sir, what do you think of Master
Treffy?" he asked.
"He won't be here long, boy — perhaps another
month or so," said the doctor, as he drove away.
"A month or so! only a month!" said Christie
to himjielf, as he walked slowly back, with a dead
weight on his soul. A month more with his dear
old master — only another month, only another
month. And in the minute which passed before
Christie reached the attic, he saw, as in a sorrow-
ful picture, what life would be to him without old
Treffy. He would have no home, not even the
old attic ; he would have no friend. JVo homey no
friend; no home, no friend/ that would be his sor-
row. And only another month before it came!
only another month !
It was w'th a dull, heavy heart that Christie
opened the attic door.
"Christie, boy," said old Treffy's voice, "what
did the doctor say ?"
"He said you had only another month. Master
Treffy," sobbed Christie, "only another month;
and whatever shall I do without you?"
82
CffRISTIR'S OLD ORGAN
Treffy did not speak. It was a solemn thing to
be told he had only another month to live ; that in
another month he must leave Christie and the attic
and the old organ, and go — he knew not whither.
It was a solemn, searching thought for old
Treffy.
He spoke very little all day. Christie stayed
at home, for he had not heart enough to take the
organ out that sorrowful day ; and he watched old
Treffy very gently and mournfully. Only another
month! only another month! was ringing in the
ears of both.
But when the evening came on, and there was no
light in the room but what came from the hand-
ful of fire in the grate, old Treffy began to talk.
*' Christie," he said, uneasily, "where am I go-
ing? Where shall I be in a month, Christie?"
Christie gazed into the fire thoughtfully.
"My molher talked about heaven. Master
Treffy ; and she said she was going home. ' Home,
sweet Home,' that was the last thing she sang.
I expect that 'Home, sweet Home,' is somewhere
in heaven, Master Treffy ; I expect so. It's a good
place, so my mother said."
"Yes," said old Treffy, "I suppose it is; but I
can't help thinking I shall be very strange there,
Christie, very strange indeed. I know so little
about it, so very little, Christie, boy."
"Yes," said Christie, "and I don't know
much."
ONLY ANO THER MONTH
88
"And I don't know any one there, Christie.
You won't be there, nor any one that I know ; and
I shall have to leave my poor old organ. You
don't suppose they'll have any barrel-organs there
will they, Christie.?"
*'No," said Christie, "I never heard my mother
speak of any. I think she said they played on
harps in !ieaven."
"I shan't like that half so well," said old
Treffy, sorrowfully; "I don't know howl shall
pass my time."
Christie did not know what to say to this, so he
made no answer.
"Christie, boy," said old Treffy, suddenly, "I
want you to make out about heaven, I want you to
find out all about it for me. Maybe, I shouldn't
feel so strange there, if I knew what I was going
to. And your mother called it *Home, sweet
Home,' didn't she.?"
"Yes," said Christie, "I'm almost sure it was
heaven she meant."
"Now, Christie, boy, mind you make out,"
said Treffy, earnestly; ''and remember there's
only another month! only another month!"
^ "I'll do my best. Master Treffy," said Christie,
I 11 do my very best."
And Christie kept his word.
CHAPTER IV
Mabel's first lesson in organ-grinding
The next day Christie had to go out as usual.
Old Treffy seemed no worse than before — he was
able to sit up, and Christie opened the small win-
dow before he went out to let a breath of fresh air
into the close attic. But there was very little fresh
air anywhere that day. The atmosphere was
heavy and stifling, and poor Christie's heart felt
depressed and weary. He turned, he hardly
knew why, to the suburban road, and stopped
before the house with the pretty garden. He
wanted to see those merry little faces again — per-
haps they would cheer him ; he felt so very dull
to-day.
Christie was not disappointed this time. He had
hardly turned the handle of the organ twice before
Mabel and Charlie appeared at the nursery win-
dow ; and after satisfying themselves that it really
was Christie, their own organ-boy, they ran into
the garden, and stood beside him as he played.
"Doesn't he turn it nicely?" whispered Charlie
to his sister.
"Yes," said little Mabel; "I wish I had an
organ, don't you, Charlie?"
"Shall I ask papa to buy us one?" asked her
brother.
MABEL'S LESSON IN ORGAN GRINDING
SS
"I don't know, Charlie, if mamma would like
it always," said Mabel. "She has such bad
headaches, you know."
"Well; bu. up in the nursery she would hardly
hear it, Vm sure," said Charlie, regretfully.
"I should so like to turn it," said Mabel, shyly
looking up into Christie's face.
"All right, missie; come here," said Christie.
And standing on tip-toe at his side, little Mabel
took hold of the handle of the organ with her tiny
white hand. Very slowly and carefully she turned
it — so slowly that her mamma came to the window
to see if the organ-boy had been taken ill.
It was a pretty sight which that young mother
looked upon. The little fair, delicate child, in her
light summer dress, turning the handle of the old,
faded barrel-organ, and the organ-boy standing by,
watching her with admiring eyes. Then little
Mabel looked up, and saw her mother's face at the
window, and smiled and nodded to her, delighted
to find that she was watching.
But Mabel turned so slowly that she grew tired
of the melancholy wails of " Poor Mary Ann."
"Change it, please, organ-boy," she said ; "make
it play 'Home, sweet Home,' mother does like
that so."
Christie knew that "Rule Britannia" lay be-
tween that and "Home, sweet Home"; so he took
the handle from Mabel, and saying brightly, " All
right, missie, I'll make it come as quick as lean,"
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
he turned it round so fast that if old Treffy had
been within hearing, he would certainly have died
from fright about his dear old organ, long before
the month was over. Several people in the oppo-
site houses came to their windows to look out.
They thought the organ must be possessed with
some evil spirit, so slowly did it go one minute,
so quickly the next.
But they understood how it was a minute after-
ward, when little Mabel again began to turn, and
very slowly and deliberately the first notes of
"Home, sweet Home" were sounded forth. She
turned the handle of the organ until "Home, sweet
Home" was quite finished, and then, wi^h a sigh
of satisfaction, she gave it up to Christie.
"I like 'Home, sweet Home,"' she said; "it's
such a pretty tune."
"Yes," said Christie, "it*s my favorite, missie.
Where is *Home, sweet Home?"' he asked sud-
denly, as he remembered his promise to old Treffy.
"That's my home," said little Mabel, nodding
her head in the direction of the pretty house. " I
don't know where yours is, Christie."
"I haven't much of a place to call home,
missie," said Christie; "me and old Treffy we
live together in an old attic, and that won't be for
long — only another month. Miss Mabel, and I shall
have no home then."
"Poor organ-boy — poor Christie!" said little
Mabel, in a pitying voice.
AfA BEL'S LESSON /N ORGANGRINDtmi
m
Charlie had taken the handle of the organ now,
and was rejoicing in "Poor Mary Ann"; but
Mabel hardly listened to him. She was thinking of
the poor boy who had no home but an attic, and
who soon would have no home at all.
*' There's another home somewhere," said Chris-
tie, "isn't there, missie? Isn't heaven some sort
of a home?"
"Oh yes, there's heaven," said little Mabel,
brightly; "you'll have a home there, won't you,
organ-boy?"
"Where is heaven?" said Christie.
"It's up there," 6aid little Mabel, pointing up to
the sky; "up so high, Christie. The little stars
live in heaven. I used to think they were the
angels' eyes, but nurse says it's silly to think
that."
''I like the stars," said Christie.
"Yes," said Mabel, "so do I; and you'll see
them all when you go to heaven, Christie, I'm sure
you will."
"What is heaven like, Miss Mabel.?" asked
Christie.
"Oh, it's so nice," said little Mabel; "they
have white dresses on, and the streets are all gold,
Christie, all gold and shining. And Jesus is there,
Christie; wouldn't you like to see Jesus?" she
added in a whisper.
"I don't know," said Christie, in a bewildered
tone; "I don't know much about Him."
CHRIST/RS OLD ORGAN
** Don't you love Je«us, Christie?" said Mabel,
with a very grave, sorrowful face, and with tears in
her large, brown eyes. "Oh! organ-boy, don't
you love Jesus?"
"No," said Christie; "I know so little about
Him, Miss Mabel."
"But you can't go to heaven if you don't love
Jes.is, Christie. Oh! I'm so sorry — you won't
have a home at all; what will yow do?" and the
tears ran down little Mabel's cheeks.
But just then the bell rang for dinner, and
nurse's voice called the children in.
Christie walked on very thoughtfully. He was
thinking of little Mabel's words, and of little
Mabel's tears. "You can't go to heaven if you
don't love Jesus," she had said; "and then you
won't have a home at all." It was a new thought
for Christie, and a very sad thought. What if he
should never, never know anything of "Home,
sweet Home"? And then came the remembrance
of poor old Treffy, his dear old master, who had
only another month to li- o. Did he love Jesus?
He had never heard old liCffy mention His name;
and what if Treffy should die, and never go to
heaven at all, but go to the other place ! Christie
had heard of hell ; he did not know much about it,
'and he had always fancied it was for very bad
people. He must tell Treffy about Mabel's words.
Perhaps, after all, his old master did love Jesus.
Christie hoped very much that he did. He longed
MABEL'S LESSOR /y ORGAN GRINDING
for evening to come, that he might go home and
ask him.
The afternoon was still more close and sultry
than the morning had been, and little Christie was
very weary. The organ was heavy for him at all
times, and it seemed heavier than usual to-day.
He was obliged to sit down to rest for a few min-
utes on a doorstep in one of the back streets,
about half a mile from the court where old Treffy
lived. As he was sitting there, with his organ
resting against the wall, two women met each
other just in front of the doorstep, and after asking
most affectionately after each other's health, they
began to talk, and Christie could not help hearing
every word they said.
"What's that place?" said one of them, looking
across the road at a long, low building with a
board in front of it.
"Oh! that's our new mission-room, Mrs. West,"
said the other; "it belongs to the church at the
corner of Melville Street. A young man comes
and preaches there every Sunday night. I like to
hear him, I do," she went on, "he puts it so plain."
"Puts what plain, Mrs. Smith?" said her friend.
" Oh, all about heaven, and how we're to get
there, and about Jesus, and what He's done for us.
He's a kind man, is Mr. Wilton. He came to see
our Tommy when he was badly. Do you know
him, Mrs. West?"
"No," said Mrs. West; "maybe I'll come to-
morrow; what time is it?"
40
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAff
**It begins at seven o'clock every Sunday," said
Mrs. Smith; "and you needn't bother about your
clothes. There's no one there but poor folks like
ourselves."
"Well, I'll come, Mrs. Smith. Good-day"; and
the two parted.
Christie had heard all they said, and had firmly
made up his mind to be at the mission-room the
next evening at seven o'clock. He must lose no
time in making out what Trefty wanted to know.
One day of the month was gone already.
"Master Treffy," said Christie that night, "do
you love Jesus?"
"Jesus!" said the old man; "no, Christie, I
can't say I do. I suppose I ought to. Good folk
do, don't they?"
"Master Treffy," said Christie, solemnly, "if
you don't love Jesus you can't go to heaven, and
you'll never have a home any more — never any
more."
" Ay, ay, Christie, that's true, I'm afraid. When
I was a little chap no bigger than you, I used to
hear tell about these things. But I gave no heed
to them then, and I've forgotten all I ever heard.
Tve been thinking a deal lately, since I was took
so bad ; and some of it seems to come back to me.
But I can't rightly mind what I was told. It*s a
bad job, Christie, a bad job."
CHAPTER V
NO SIN IN THE CITY BRIGHT
It had been a close, sultry day, and it was a still
more oppressive night. It was long before Christie
could get to sleep, and wh-m at last he had sunk
into a troubled slumber, he was w?ked suddenly
by a loud peal of thunder, which made the old
attic shake from end to end.
Old Treffy raised himself in bed, and Christie
crept to his side. It was an awful storm. The
lightning flashed into the attic, lighting up for a
moment every corner of it, and showing Christie
old Treffy 's white and trembling face. Then
all was dark again, and there came the heavy
roll of the thunder, which sounded like the noise
of falling houses, and which made old Treffy
shake from head to foot. Christie never remem-
bered such a storm before, and he was very much
afraid. He knelt very close to his old master, and
took hold o! his trembling hand,
"Are you frightened. Master Treffy?" he asked
at last, as a vivid flash again darted into the room.
''Yes, Christie, boy," said old Treffy ;" I don't
know how it is ; I used not to be afraid of a storm,
but I am to-night."
Poor Christie did not speak, so Treffy went on :
"The lightning seems like God looking at me,
41
#
42
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
!!!i
Christie, and the thunder seems like God's voice,
and I am afraid of Him. I don't love Him, Christie,
I don't love Him."
And again the lightning flashed and the thun-
der rolled, and again old Treffy shook from head to
foot.
"I shouldn't like to die to-night, Christie," he
said; "and the lightning comes so very near me.
Christie, boy, do you know what sin is?" he whis-
pered.
"Yes," said Christie; "it's doing wrong things,
isn't it?"
"Yes," said Treffy, "and I've done a many of
them, Christie; and it's thinking bad thoughts,
and I've thought a many of them, Chrisrtie; and
it's saying bad words, and I've said a many of
them, Christie. But I never cared about it be-
fore to-night."
"How did you come to care about it to-night?"
asked Christie.
"I've had a dream, Christie, boy, and it has
made me tremble."
"Tell me it, Master Treffy," pleaded Christie.
"I was thinking of what you said about loving
Jesus, and I fell asleep, and I thought I was stand-
ing before a beautiful gate ; it was made of gold,
Christie, and over the gate there were some shin-
ing letters. I spelt them out, and they were 'Home,
sweet Home,' Christie, and I said to myself, 'I've
found it at last; T wish Christie was here.' But
NO SIN IN THE CITY BRIGHT
48
just then some one opened the gate and said,
* What do you want, old man ?' *I want to come in, *
I said, 'I'm very tired, and I want to be at home.'
But he shut the gate, and said to me very gravely
and sorrowfully, 'No sin can come in here, old
Treffy; no sin can come in here.' And, Christie,
I felt as if I was nothing but sin, so I turned round
and walked away, and it grew very dark. And
just then came the thunder, and I awoke with a
start. I can't forget it, Christie; I can't forget it,"
said old Treffy.
And still the lightning flashed and the thunder
rolled, and still old Treffy trembled.
Christie could not comfort him, for he was very
much afraid himself, but he pressed very close up
to his side, and did not leave him till the storm
was over, and there was no sound but the heavy
downpour of the rain on the roof of the attic.
Then he crept back to bed and fell asleep.
The next morning it all seemed like a bad
dream. The sun was shining brightly, and
Christie rose and opened the attic window.
Everything looked fresh and clean after the rain.
The dull, heavy feeling was gone out of the air,
and the little sparrows were chirping in the eaves.
It was Sunday morning, and on Sunday evening
Christie was to hear the clergyman preach in the
mission-room. Oh ! how he wished it was seven
o'clock, that he might go and find out what old
Treffy wanted to know!
M
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
ivu
The poor old man seemed vjry restless and
unhappy all that long spring day. Christie never
left him, for it was only on Sunday that he could
watch beside his dear old master. He could see
that old Treify had not forgotten his dream, though
he did not speak of it again.
And at last the long, weary day wore away, and
at six o'clock Christie washed himself and pre-
pared to depart.
"Be sure you mind every word he says,
Christie, boy," said old Treffy, earnestly.
The mission-room was only just open when
little Christie arrived. A woman was inside light-
ing the gas and preparing the place for the con-
gregation. Christie peeped shyly in at the poor,
and she caught sight of him r.iid ordered him off.
''Isn't there going to be any preaching to-night ?"
said Christie, in a disappointed vcice.
"Oh! you've come to the service, have you?"
said the woman. "All right, you can come in,
only you must sit still, and you mustn't talk or
make a noise."
Now, as poor Christie had no one to talk to,
this was rather an unnecessary speech. However,
he went in very meekly, and sat down c.i one of
the frcit benches.
Then the congregation began to arrive^^-old
men and little children; mothers with babies in
their arms; old women with shawls over their
heads; husbands and wives; a few young men;
N^ SIN IN THE CITY BRIGHT
4S
people with all kinds of faces, and all kinds of
characters, from the quiet and respectable artisan's
wife to the poor little beggar girl who sat on the
form beside Christie.
And as seven o'clock struck, the door opened
and the minister came in. Christie never took
his eyes off him during the whole service. And,
oh ! how he enjoyed the singing, the last hymn
especially ! A young woman behind him was sing-
ing it very distinctly, and he could hear every word.
Oh, if he could only have remembered it to repeat
to old Treffy ! The words of the hymn were as
follows :
"There is a city bright,
Closed are its gates to sin,
Nought that defileth,
Nought that letileth
Can ever enter in.
•• Savior, I come to Thee,
O Lamb of God, I pray,
Cleanse me and save me.
Cleanse me and save me,
Wash all my sin^ away.
" Lord, make me from this hour
Thy loving child to be.
Kept by Thy power,
Kept by Thy power,
From all that grieveth Thee.
*'Till in the snowy dress
Of Thy redeemed I stand,
Faultless and stainless.
Faultless and stainless,
Sale in that happy land I "
4A
Cf/R/ST/E'S OLD ORGAN
And after the hymn came the sermon. The
clergyman's text was Revelation xxi. 27: *' There
shall in no wise enter into it anything that
defileth."
He spoke of the Heavenly City of which they
had just been singing, the bright, beautiful city,
with its streets of gold and gates of pearl. He
spoke of the river of the water of life, and the
trees on either side of the river. He spoke of
those who live in that happy place, of their white
robes and crowns of gold, of the sweet songs they
ever sing, and the joy in all their faces.
The clergyman also told them that in that
bright city sorrow was never found. No weeping
there, no tears, no sighs, no trouble. No tired
feet on that golden pavement, no hungry ones
there, no hot, burning sun, no cold frost or snow.
No sickness there, and no death, no funerals in
heaven, no graves in the golden city. Perfect
love there, no more quarreling or strife, no angry
tonf-3 or discordant murmurs, no rude, rough
voices yo disturb the peace. And all this for-
ever and ever, no dread of it coming to an end,
no gloomy fears for the future, no partings there,
no good-byes. Once there, safe forever. At
home, at rest, with God.
"Would you like to go there?" asked the
clergyman's voice.
And a quiet murmur passed through the room,
a sigh of longing, an expression of assent.
NO SIN IN THE CITY BRIGHT
47
And little Christie whispered softly to himself:
"Like to go there! ay, that I would, me and
oldTreffy and all."
'**There shall in no wise enter into it an3'thing
that defileth,'" said the clergyman's voice. "'Closed
are its gates to sin. * My friends, if there is one
sin on your soul, heaven's gates will be closed
against you. 'Nought that defileth, nought that
defileth can ever enter in.' If all my life I
had never sinned — if all my life I had never
done a wicked deed, or spoken a wicked word,
or thought a wicked thought; if all my life I
had done everything I ought to have done,
and had been perfectly sinless and holy, and
yet to-night I was to commit one sin, that sin,
however small a sin in man's eyes — that sin would
be quite enough to shut me out of heaven. The
gates would be shut against me for that one sin.
No soul on which there is a speck of sin can go
into that bright city.
"Is there one in this room," asked the clergy-
man, "who can say that he has only sinned once?
Is there one here who can say that there is only
one sin on his soul ?"
And again there was a faint murmur round the
room, and again a deep-drawn sigh ; but this time
it was the suppressed sigh of accusing con-
sciences.
"No," said the clergyman, "there is not one of
us who can say that. Every one of us has sinned
T
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAiV
again and again and again. And each sin is like
a dark blot, a deep inkstain on the soul."
"Oh!" said little Christie, in his heart, as he
listened to these words, "whatever will me and
Master Treffy do?"
And Christie's thoughts wandered to the lonely
attic, and to old Treffy 's sad, worn-out face.
"So it was all true," he said to himself. "Miss
Mabel's words, and Master Treffy's dream; all
too true, all too true."
If Christie had been listening he would have
heard the clergyman tell of the way in which sin
could be taken away ; but his little mind was full
of the one idea of the sermon, and when he next
heard the clergyman's words he was telling his
congregation that he hoped they would all be
present on the following Sunday evening, as he
intended then to preach on the second verse of the
hymn, and to tell them, more fully than he had
time to do to-night, what was the only way to
enter within the gates into the city.
Christie walked home very sadly and sorrow-
fully ; he was in no haste to meet old Treffy's
anxious, inquiring eyes. When he reached the
dark attic he sat down by Treffy, and looked away
from him into the fire, as he said, mournfully :
"Your dream was quite right. Master Treffy.
I've heard it all over again to-night. 7 ie preached
about it, and we sang about it, so there's no mis-
take now."
NO S/N IN THE CITY BRIGHT
' tell
Jesus all, to turn all the sin over to Him, to ask
Him to cover it all with His blood, &o that that
very nighi they might lie down to sleep whiter
than snow.
"Will you do this?" asked the clergyman, anx-
iously; "will you?"
And little Christie said in his heart, "Yes, that
I will."
As the congregation left, the clergyman stood at
the door, and gave a friendly word to each one as
they passed by. He looked ver}' tired and anxious
after his sermon. It had been preached with much
prayer and with much feeling, and he was long-
ing, oh, so earnestly, to know that it had been
blessed to one soul.
There were some amongst the little congrega-
;
THE WA Y INTO ''HOME, S WEE T HOME »
8S
tion who passed by him with serious, thoughtful
faces, and as each one went by he breathed an
earnest prayer that the seed in that f?oul might
spring up and bring forth fruit. But there were
others, again, who had already begun to talk to
their neighbors, and who seemed to have forgotten
all they had heard. And these filled the young
minister's heart with sorrow. "Is the seed lost,
dear Lord?'' he aid, faithlessly. For he was very
tired and weary, and when the body is weak our
faith is apt to grow weak also.
But there was something in Christie's face as he
passed out of the room which made the clergyman
call him back and speak to him. Ke had noticed
the boy's attention during his sermon, and he had
longed to hear whether he had understood what
he had heard.
"My boy," said the minister, kindly, laying his
hand on Christie's shoulder, "can you tell me what
my text was to-night ?"
Christie repeated it very correctly, and the
clergyman seemed pleased. He asked Christie
several more questions about the sermon, and then
he encouraged the boy to talk to him. Christie
told him of old Treffy, who had only another
month to live, and who was longing to know how
he might go to "Home, sweet Home.'* The
clergyman promised to come and see him, and
wrote down the name of the court and the number
of the house in his little brown pocket*book. And
w
56
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
before Christie went homr the clergyman knelt
down with him in the erupty mission-room, and
prayed that that very night the dear Lord would
wash Christie's soul in His most precious blood.
Christie walked away very thoughtfully, but
still very gladly, for he had good news for old
Treffy to-night. He quickened his steps as he
drew near the court, and ran up the stairs to the
attic, eager to tell all to the poor old man.
"Oh, Master Treffy!" said Christie; "I've had
such a time ! It was beautiful. Master Treffy, and
the clergyman's been talking to me, and he's com-
ing to see you; he's coming here," said Christie,
triumphantly.
But Treffy was longing for better news than
this.
"What about 'Home, sweet Home,' Christie?"
ne asked.
"There is a way, Master Treffy," said Christie.
"You and me can't get in with our sins, but 'the
blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, cleanseth us
from all sin.' That's in the Bible, Master Treffy,
and it was the clergyman's text."
"Tell me all about it, Christie^" Treffy said, in
a tremulous voice.
"There's nothing but the blood of. Jesus can
wash away the sin, Master Treffy," said Christie,
"and you and me have just got to go to Him and
ask Him, and He'll do it for us to-night; the
clergyman said so. I've learnt another verse of
i
THE WA Y INTO " HOME, S WEE T HOME "
B?
1
'■
the hymn, Master Treffy," said Christie, kneel-
ing down beside him and repeating it reverently :
" Savior, I come to Thee,
O Lamb of God, I pray,
Cleanse me and save me,
Cleanse me and save me,
Wash all my sins away."
Treffy repeated the words after him in a trem-
bling voice.
"I wish He'd wash me, Christie, boy," he said.
"So He will. Master Treffy," said Christie;
'*He never sends anybody away."
^' '^Ay, but I'm an old man, Christie, and I've
been a sinner all my life, and I've done some such
bad things, Christie. I never knew it till this last
week, but I know it now. It's not likely He'll
ever wash my sins; they're ever such big ones,
Christie."
"Oh! but He will," said Christie, eagerly;
"that's just what the clergyman said; there's a
word in the text for you. Master Treffy: 'The
blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from
all sin.' All sin, all sin, Master Treffy; won't
that do?"
"All sin," murmured old Treffy, "all sin! yes,
Christie, I think that zvill do." »
There was a pause after this. Christie sat still,
looking into the fire. Then he said suddenly :
"Master Treffy, let's go right away now and
ask Him."
"Ask who?" said old Treffy, "the clergyman?"
68
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
l!j
ill
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"No," said Christie, "the Lord Jesus. He*8 in
the room — the minister said He was. Let's ask
Him to wash you and me, just now, Master
Treffy."
" Ay !" said old Treffy, "let's ask Him, Christie."
So the old man and the boy knelt down, and
with a strong realization of the Lord's near pres-
ence, little Christie prayed :
"O Lord Jesus, we come to Thee, me and
Master Treffy. We've got lots of sins to be
washed, but the minister said you wouldn't send us
away, and the text says all sin. We think it means
us, Lord Jesus, me and Master Treffy. Please
wash us white. We want to go to *Home, sweet
Home.' Please wash us in the blood to-night.
Amen."
Then old Treffy took up the words, and in a
trembling voice, added:
"Amen, Lord; wash us both, me and Christie,
wash us white. Please do. Amen."
And then they got up from their knees, and
Christie said :
"We may go to bed now. Master Treffy, for
I'm sure He's done it for us."
Thus the man at the gate had received both
the trembling old man and the little child, and as
they had entered in they had heard a gracious
Voice very deep down in their hearts saying to
each of them again and again :
"Be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee."
CHAPTER VII
LITTLE Mabel's snowdrops
The next morning Christie woke with a happy
heart, for he remembered his last night's prayer,
and in his simple faith he had taken the Lord at
His word, and had believed that the blood of Jesus
Christ had cleansed him from all sin.
But old Treffy's doubts and fears came back
again. He began to look within, and the remem-
brance of his sin returned upon him. What if,
after all, there was sin on his soul ? What if the
gates were still closed against him?
^* Christie, boy, I don't feel it's all right with
me yet," he said, anxiously.
"Why not. Master Treffy?" asked Christie.
"Why, I've been so bad, Christie; it doesn't
seem likely He'd do it for me so soon as that ;
there's such a deal of sin on my soul."
"But you asked Him to wash you. Master
Treffy; didn't you.?"
"Ay, I asked Him, Christie," said Treffy, in a
despairing tone.
"And He said He would if you asked Him,
Master Treffy; didn't He?"
"Ay, Christie, I believe He did," said Treffy.
"Then of course He has done it," said Christie.
"I don't know, Christie, boy; I can't feel it,"
^w
'
60
CHUISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
said old Treffy, pitifully. "I don't seem to see it
as I ought."
So whilst little Christie was walking in the sun-
shine, old Treffy was still groping on in the
shadow, sometimes hoping, sometimes fearing,
but never trusting.
Christie paid another visit to the suburban road
that week. Little Mabel and her mother were
coming out of the house when Christie reached the
gate. The little girl ran eagerly forward when
she caught sight of the organ, and begged her
mamma to stay whilst she turned the handle just
six times !
The lady spoke very kindly to Christie. She
asked him several questions, and he told her about
old Treffy, how ill he was, and how he had not
another month to live. The tears were in the
lady's eyes, and she asked Christie where he lived,
and wrote it down on a white tablet which she
carried in her pocket.
"Mamma," said little Mabel, "I want to whisper
something to you."
The lady bent down her head to listen, and then
said kindly: "Yes, if you like."
Mabel darted into the house, and returned with
a large bunch of single white snowdrops, prettily
arranged with sprigs of dark myrtle leaves. Very
white, and pure, and lovely they looked.
"Here, organ-boy," said Mabel, as she put
them into his hands, "these are my own dear snow-
LITTLE MABEVS SNOWDROPS
61
drops; Aunt Helen gave me them, and you must
take them to Master Treffy. He'll like them,
won't he?" she said.
"Ayl that he will, miseie," said Christie,
warmly.
"Mabel," said her mother, *'you must teach
Christie the little prayer I told you always to say
when you looked at the snowdrops."
"Yes, "said Mabel, "I will. This is it, Christie;
*Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow."'
Christie looked up brightly.
"Will you say that prayer, Christie?" asked the
lady, kindly.
"Yes, ma'am," said Christie, "it's just like
what me and Master Treffy said last night :
" 'Cleanse me and save me,
Cleanse me and save me,
Wash all my sins away.' "
The lady smiled when Christie said this, and
seemed very pleased.
"I am so glad you know of the only way to be
washed white," said the lady. "These snowdrops
always make me think of the souls washed white
in the blood of Jesus."
Then the lady and little Mabel passed on, and
Christie looked down very tenderly on the flowers.
How he would love them now! He turned his
steps homeward at once, for he did not want the
snowdrops to fade before they reached old Treffy.
How fair, and clean, and pure they looked ! So
63
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
different from the smoke and dirt of the noisy court.
Christie was almost afraid lest the thick air might
soil them as he carried them through it. Some of
the children ran after him and begged for a flower,
but he guarded his treasures very carefully till he
reached the attic.
When Christie opened the door who should be
there but the clergyman, sitting beside old Treffy,
and talking to him very earnestly ! He stopped to
give Christie a kind word, and then he went on
with what he was saying. He was telling Treffy
about the death of Jesus, and how it is that the
blood of Jesus can wash away all sin.
"I can't see thai it's all right with me," said
Treffy, in a trembling voice ; "it seems dark and
dim i;o me yet. I don't feel that I've got it ; I
can't feel happy."
"Treffy," said the clergyman, suddenly, "do
you think I would tell you a lie?"
"No, sir," said old Treffy; "I'm sure you
wouldn't ; I could see it in your face, sir, if no-
where else. No, sir, I'd trust you anywhere."
"Now, Treffy," said the clergyman, taking
some money from his pocket, "I've brought this
for you. You cannot work now, and j'ou need
many things you cannot get. I will give you this
money to buy them with."
"Thank you, sir," said old Treffy, the tears
running down his cheeks; "I can never thank you
enough. We are very badly off just now, Christie
and me."
LITTLE MABEL'S SNOWDROPS
''Stop, Treffy," said the clergyman, -'it isn't
yours yet; you must take it."
Treffy put out his trembling old hand, and took
it, with another murmur of thanks.
''Do you feel that you've got it, Treffy?" said
the clergyman.
"Yes, sir, it's here," said old Treffy.
"Are you sure you've got it, Treffy.?" said the
clergyman again.
"Yes, sir," said Treffy, in a bewildered voice,
"I know I have; I don't know what you mean,
sir."
"I will tell you what I mean," said the clergy-
man " The Lord Jesus has come into this room
just as I have, Treffy. He has brought a gift for
you, just as I did. His gift has cost Him far more
than mine cost me ; it has cost Him His life. He
has come close to you, as I came, and He says to
you, as I said: 'Old Treffy, can you trust Me .?
do you think I would tell you a lie ? ' And then
He holds out His gift, as I did, Treffy, and He
says, 'Take it; it is for you.' Now, Treffy, what
have you to do with this gift? Just exactly what
you did with mine. You have not to work for it,
or wait for it. You have just to put out your hand
and take it. Do you know what the gift is?"
Treffy did not answer, so the clergyman went
on —
"It is the forgiveness of your sin, Treffy; it is
the clean heart, for which you are longing ; it is
uf~-
64
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
fi'l
the right to enter into 'Home, sweet Home,' for
which you have been praying, Treffy; will you
take the gift?"
'4 want to take it," said old Treffy, "but I
don't know how."
*^Did you stop to think how you were to take
w^gift, Treffy?"
'*No," said the old man, "I just took it."
"Yes," said the clergyman, "exactly; and that
is what you must do with the Lord's gift; you
must just take it."
" Would it have pleased me, Treffy," said the
clergyman, "if you had pulled your hand back and
said, 'Oh no, sir! I don't deserve it ; I don't be-
lieve you would ever give it to me, I can't take it
yet?'"
"No," said Treffy, "I don't suppose it would."
"Yet this is just what you are doing to the Lord
Jesus, Treffy. He is holding out His gift to you,
and He wants you to take it at once, yet you hold
back, and say, 'No, Lord, I can't believe what
You say, I can't trust Your word, I can't believe
the gift is for me, I can't take it yet.' "
"Treffy," said the clergyman, earnestly, "if you
can trust me, oh, why can't you trust the Lord
Jesus?"
The tears were running down the old man's face,
and he could not speak.
"I am going to ask you another question,
Treffy," said the clergyman. "Will you trust
the Lord Jesus now ?"
II
LITTLd MABRUS SNOWDROPS
05
"Yes, sir," said Treffy, through his tears; '*I
don't think I can help trusting Him now."
"Now, Treffy, remember Jesus is in this attic,
close to you, close to me, very, very near, Treffy.
"When we speak to Him He will hear every word
we say; He will listen to every sigh; He will
read every wish.
"But, before you speak to Him, Treffy, listen
to what He says to you," said the clergyman, tpk-
ing his Bible from his pocket. "These are His
own words: 'Come, now, and let us reason to-
gether, saith the Lord: thougjh your sins be as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though
they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool,'
for 'the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth
us from all sin.' Treffy, will you trust the Lord
Jesus ? do you think He would tell you a lie ?"
"No,"said old Treffy ;"rm sure He wouldn't."
"Very well, Treffy, then we will tell Him so."
The clergyman knelt down by Treffy's side, and
Christie knelt down too, and old Treffy clasped
his trembling hands whilst the clergyman prayed.
It was a very simple prayer ; it was just taking
the Lord at His word. Old Treffy repeated the
words after the clergyman ^vith the deepest ear-
nestness, and when he had finished the old man still
clasped his hands and said :
"Lord Jesus, I do trust Thee, I do take the gift,
I do believe Thy word."
Then the clergyman rose from his knees and
mmsm
CNRISTIR*S OLD ORGAN
'!
11 i
Ik
said, "Treffy, when you had taken my gift, what
did you do next:"'
*'I thanked you for it, sir," said Treffy.
"Yes," said the clergyman, "and would you
not like to thank the Lord Jesus for His gift of
forgiveness?"
**Oh!" said Treffy, with tears in his eyes,
"I should indeed, sir."
So they all knelt down again, and in a few words
the clergyman thanked the Lord for His great
love and goodness to old Treffy, in giving him
pardon for his sin.
And again old Treffy took up the words and
added :
"Thank you, Lord Jesus, very much for the
gift; it cost Thee Thy life; oh! I do thank Thee
with all my heart."
"Now, Treffy," said the clergyman, as he rose
to go, "if Satan comes to you to-m -row, and says,
* Old Treffy, do you feel you've got forgiveness?
perhaps after all it's a mistake,' what shall you
say to him?"
"I think I shall tell him my text," said old
Treffy, "'The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son,
cleanseth us from all sin.'"
"That will do, Treffy," said the clergyman ; "he
can't answer that. And remember, the Lord
wishes you to know you are forgiven, not io/eel
you are forgiven. There is a difference between
feeling and knowing. You knew you had taken
LITTLE MABEUS SNOWDROPS
my gift, and you did not know what I meant
when I asked you if yow/elt I had given it to you.
It is the same with the Lord's gift, Treffy. Your
feelings have nothing to do with your safety, but
your faith has a great deal to do with it. Have
you taken the Lord at His word? have you
trusted Him? That is the question.'*
"Yes, sir," said Treffy, '*I have."
"Then you know you are forgiven," said the
clergyman, with a smile.
"Yes, sir," said Treffy, brightly, " I can trust
Him now."
Then Christie walked up to Treffy, and put the
bunch of white snowdrops in his hand.
"Miss Mabel gave me them," he said, "and she
said I was to say a little prayer whenever I looked
at them: 'Wash me, and I shall be whiter than
snow.'"
"Whiter than snow," repeated the clergyman ;
"whiter than snow; Treffy! that is a sweet word,
is it not?"
"Yes," said old Treffy, earnestly, as he looked
at the flowers, "whiter than snow, washed white
in the blood of Jesus."
Then the clergyman took his leave, but as he
was crossing the court he heard Christie running
after him. He had a few of the lovely snowdrops
and a sprig of the dark myrtle in his hand.
"Please, sir," said Christie, "would you like a
few of them?"
rm
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
I !
li
'[!
"Thank you, my boy," said the clergyman, "I
should indeed."
He carried the snowdrops carefully home, and
they taught him a lesson of faith. The seed he
had sown in the mission-room had not been lost.
Already two poor sin-stained souls had come to
the fountain, and had been washed whiter than
snow. The old man and tht little boy had taken
the Lord at His word, and had found the only way
into the bright city, into "Home, sweet Home."
God had been very good to him in letting him
know this. Surely, he would trust in the future.
i
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IL
iii
CHAPTER VIII
MADE MEET FOR HOME
How different everything seemed toTreffy after
his doubts and fears had been removed! The
very attic seemed full of sunshine, and old
Treffy's heart was full of brightness. He was
forgiven, and he knew it. And, as a forgiven
child, he could look up into his Father's face with
a smile.
A great load was taken off little Christie's heart,
his old master was so happy and contented now ;
never impatient at his long absence when he was
out with the organ, or fretful and anxious about
their daily support. Old Treffy had laid upon
Jesus his load of sin, and it was not hard to lay
upon Him also his load of care. The Lord who
had borne the greater burden would surely bear
the less. Treffy could not have put this feeling
of trust into words, but he acted upon it. There
were no murmurings from old Treffy now, no
forebodings. He had always a bright smile and
a cheerful word for Christie when the boy re-
turned tired at night. And whilst Christie was
out he would lie very still and peaceful, talking
softly to himself or thanking the dear Lord for His
great gift to him.
And old Treffy's trust was not
'None that trust in Him shall be
disappointed,
desolate."
i
70
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
m
I nil
The clergyman's gift was not the only one they
received that week. Christie had come home in
the middle of the day, to see how his old master
was, and was just preparing to start again on his
rounds, when they heard a gentle rustling of silk
on the stairs, and a low knock at the door. Christie
opened it quickly, and in walked little Mabel, and
little Mabel's mamma. They had brought with
them many little comforts for old Treffy, which
Mabel had great pleasure in opening out. But
they brought with them also what money cannot
buy — sweet, gentle words, and bright smiles,
which cheered old Treffy's heart.
The lady sat down beside Treffy, and they
talked together of Jesus. The old man loved to
talk of Jesus now, for he was able to say :
"He loved me, and gave Himself for me."
The lady took a little Testament from her
pocket, and read a chapter to Treffy. She had a
sweet, clear voice, and she read so distinctly that
he could understand every word.
Little Mabel sat quite still whilst her mamma
was reading, then she got up and ran across the
attic :
"Here are my snowdrops," she said, with a cry
of joy, as she caught sight of them in the window-
sill. "Do you like them. Master Treffy?"
"Ay! little missie," said the old man, "I do,
indeed, and me and Christie always think of the
little prayer when we look at them."
r.
MADE MEET FOR HOME
71
"Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow,"
repeated Mabel, reverently. "Has He washed
you, Master Treffy ?"
"Yes, missie,"said Treffy, "I believe He has."
"I'm so glad," said little Mabel, "then you will
go to 'Home, sweet Home'; won't he, mamma .^"
"Yes," said her mother, "Treffy and Christie
have found the only road which leads home. And,
oh !" she said, the color coming into her sweet
face, " what a happy day it will be when we all meet
at home ! Wouldn't you like to see Jesus, Treffy?"
asked the lady.
"Ay," said old Treffy, "it would be a good
sight to see His blessed face. I could almost sing
for joy when I think of it, and I haven't very long
to wait."
"No," said the lady, with a wistful expression
in her eyes, "I could almost change places with
you, Treffy ; I could almost wish / were as near to
'Home, sweet Home.' But that would be selfish,"
she said brightly, as she rose to go.
But r tie Mabel had discovered the old organ,
and was n no haste to depart. She must turn it
**just alii .e bit." In former days, old Treffy would
have been seriously agitated and distressed at the
idea of the handle of his dear old organ being
turned by a little girl of six years old. Even now
he felt a small amount of anxiety when she pro-
posed it. But his fears vanished when he saw the
careful, deliberate way in which Mabel went to
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72
CHRIS TIE'S OLD ORGAN
work. The old organ was perfectly safe in her
hands. And, to Mabel's joy, the first tune which
came was "Home, sweet Home." Very sweet it
sounded in old Treffy's ears. He was thinking of
no earthly home, but of "the city bright,*' where
he hoped soon to be. And the lady was thinking
of it too.
When the tune was finished they took their
leave, and Christie looked out of the window, and
watched them crossing the dirty court, and enter-
ing the carriage which was waiting for them in
the street.
It had been a very bright week for Christie and
for old Treffy.
And then Sunday came, and another service in
the little mission-room. Christie was there in
good time, and the clergyman gave him a pleas-
ant smile as he came into the room.
It was the third verse of the hymn on which the
clergyman was to preach to-night. They sang the
whole hymn through before the sermon, and then
they sang the third verse again, that all of them
might remember it whilst he was preaching.
" Lord, make me from this hour
Thy loving chili to be,
Kept by Thy power,
Kept by Thy power,
From all that grieveth Thee."
And the clergyman's text was in Colossians i.
12: "Meet to be partakers of the inheritance."
He repeated it very slowly, and Christie whis-
MADE MEET FOR HOME
7t
perej it softly to himself, that he might be able to
teach it to old Treffy.
'"Meet to be partakers of the inheritance.'
What is the inheritance?" asked the clergyman.
"My dear friends, our inheritance is that city
bright of which we have been speaking so much,
'Home, sweet Home,' our Father's home. We
are not there yet, but for all Christ's washed
ones there is a bright home above. Jesus is pre-
paring it for us; it is our inheritance. Oh," said
the clergyman, very earnestly, "I wonder how
many in this room have a home up there. You
may have a wretched, uncomfortable home on
earth ; is it your only home? Is there no home for
you in the bright city ; no home in heaven ?
"You might all have a home there," said the
clergyman, "if you would only come to the foun-
tain, if yfiu would only say from the bottom of your
heart, 'Lord, wash me, and I shall be whiter than
snow.
7 n
And Christie smiled when the clergyman said
his little prayer, for be thought of the snowdrops.
And the clergyman thought of them too.
Then Mr. Wilton went on to say that he wished
to-night to speak to those who had come to Jesus ;
who had X2i\iQn their sin to Him, and who hadhQ^n
washed in His blood.
"That's me and old Treffy," said Christie to
himself.
"My dear friends," said the clergyman, "all of
,;?
74
CHRISTIE'H OLD ORGAN
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you have an inheritance. You are the sons of a
King. There is a place in the kingdom waiting
for you. Jesus is getting that place ready for
you, and I want to show you to-night that you
must be made ready for it, meet or fit for the in-
heritance. One day, the Prince of Wales will be
the King of England. This kingdom is his inher-
itance. As soon as he was born he had a right to
it. But he has been educated and trained with
great care, that he may be meet for the inheritance,
that he may be fit to enjoy it, and able to use it.
If he had had no education, if he had been brought
up in one of these dismal black courts, though he
might have a perfect right to be king, still he
would not be able to enjoy it, he would feel
strange, uncomfortable, out of place.
"Just so," said the clergyman, "is it with our
inheritance. As soon as we are born again we
have a right to it, we become sons and daughters
of the King of kings. But we need to be prepared
and made meet for the inheritance. We must be
made holy within. We must be trained and taught
to hate sin and to love all that is pure and holy.
And this is the work of God's Holy Spirit.
"Oh! my friends, will you not ask for the gift
of the Holy Spirit to make you meet? It will
not be all done in a day. You came to Jesus to
be washed from the stain of sin. He did that at
once ; He gave you at once the right to the inher-
itance. But you will not be made holy at once.
1 t
MADE MEET FOR HOME
75
Little by little, hour by hour, day by day, the Holy
Spirit will make you more and more ready for the
inheritance. You will become more and more
like Jesus. You will hate sin more ; you will love
Jesus mijre ; you will become more holy. But, oh !
let no one think," said the clergyman, "that being
good will ever give you a right to the inheritance.
If I were to be ever so well educated, if I were £0
be taught a hundred times better than the Prince
of Wales has been, it would never give me a right
to be King of England. No, my friends, the only
way into 'Home, sweet Home,' the only wa}' to
obtain a right to the inheritance, is by the blood
of Jesus. There is no other way, no other right.
'-But, after the Lord has given us the right to
the kingdom. He always prepares us for it. A for-
given soul will always lead a holy life. A soul that
has been washed white will always long to keep
clear of sin. Is it not so with you? Just think of
what Jesus has done for you. He has washed you
in His blood; He has taken your sins away at
the cost of His life. Will you do the very things
that grieve Him ? Will you be so ungrateful as
^ to do that? Will you?
"Oh! surely not; surely you will say, in the
words of the third verse of our hymn —
" ' Lord, make me from this hour
Thy loving child to be.
Kept by Thy power,
Kept by Thy power,
From all that grieveth Thee.*
CHRIS'UE'S OLD ORGAN
A.nd surely you will ask Him very, very
earnestly, to give you that Holy Spirit who alone
can make you holy. And when the work is
done," said the clergyman, "when you are made
meet, made fit for the inheritance, the Lord will
take you there. He will not keep you waiting.
Some are made ready very quickly. Others have
to wait long, weary years of discipline. But all
the King's sons shall be ready at last, all shall be
taken home, and shall enter upon the inheritance.
Will you be there ?"
And with that question the clergyman ended his
sermon, and the little congregation broke up very
quietly, and went home with thoughtful faces.
Christi'e lingered near the door till the clergy-
man came out. He asked very kindly of old Treffy,
and then put a few questions to Christie about the
sermon ; for he had been afraid whilst he had been
preaching that he had not made it so clear that a
child might understand. But he was cheered to
find that the leading truth of the sermon was im-
pressed on little Christie's mind, and that he would
be able to carry to old Treffy something, at least,
of what he had heard.
For Christie was taught of God, and into hearts
prepared by the Holy Spirit the seed is sure to
sink. The Lord has prepared them for the word,
and prepared the word for them, and the sower
has only to put his hand into his basket and scatter
the seed prayerfully over the softened soil. It
MADE MEET FOR HOME
77
will sink in, spring up, and bring forth fruit.
The clergyman felt the truth of this as he
walked home. And he remembered where it was
written, "The preparation of the heart is from the
Lord."
"That is a word for me, as well as for my
hearers," he said to himself. "Lord, ever let Thy
preparation go before my preaching."
PM
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CHAPTER IX
TREFFY ENTERS THE CITY
'Christie, boy," said Treffy, that night, when
Christie had told him all he could remember of
the sermon, and had repeated to him the third
verse of the hymn; "Christie, boy, the Lord will
have to get me ready very fast, very fast, indeed."
"Oh ! maybe not, Master Treffy," said Christie,
uneasily, "maybe not so fast as you think."
"The month^s nearly up, Christie," said old
Treffy; "and I think I'm getting ry near the
city, very near to 'Home, sweet Home.* I can
almost see the letters over the gate sometimes,
Christie,"
Christie could not answer. His face was buried
in his hands, and his head sank lower and lower
as he sat beside the fire. And, at length, though
he tried to keep it in, there came a -great sob,
which reached old Treffy's heart. He put his
hand lovingly on Christie's head, and for some
time neither of them spoke. But when the heart
is very sore, silence often does more to comfort than
words can do, only it must be silence which comes
from a full heart, not from an empty one. Treffy's
old heart was very full of loving, yearning pity for
poor little Christie.
"Christie, boy," he said, at length, "you
78
TREFPY ENTERS THE OTY
79
wouldn't keep me outside the gate ; would you?"
"No, no, Master Treffy," said Christie, "not
for the world I wouldn't ; but I do wish I was go-
ing in too."
"It seems tome, Christie, boy, the Lord iias got
some work for thee to do for Him first. I'm a
poor, useless old man, Christie, very tottering and
feeble, so He's going to take me home, but you
have all your life before you, Christie, boy,
haven't you?"
"Yes," said Christie, with a sigh, for he was
thinking what a long, long time it would be before
he was as old as Master Treffy, and before the
golden gates would be opened to him.
"Wouldn't you like to do something for Him,
Christie, boy," said old Treffy, "just to show you
love Him?"
"Ay, Master Treffy, I should," said Christie,
in a whisper.
"Christie, boy," said old Treffy, suddenly raising
himself in bed, " I would give all I have ; yes, ally
Christie, even my old organ, and you know how
I've loved her, Christie, but I'd give her up, her
and everything else, to have one year of my life
back again — one year — to show Him that I love
Him. Just to think," he said, regretfully, "that
He gave His life for me, and died ever such a
dreadful death for me, and I've only got a poor
little miserable week left to show that I love Him.
Oh, Christie, boy! oh, Christie, boy! it seems
mm
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CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAl^
Nil
80 ungrateful; I can't bear to think of it."
It was Christie's turn now to be the comforter.
"Master Treffy," he said, "just you tell the
Lord that; I'm sure He'll understand."
Treffy clasped his hands at once, and said,
earnestly :
**Lord Jesus, I do love Thee; I wish I could do
something for Thee, but I've only another week
to live — only another week; but, oh! I do thank
Thee, I would give anything to have some of my
life back again, to show my love to Thee ; please
understand what I mean. Amen."
Then old Treffy turned over and fell asleep.
Christie sat for some time longer by the fire. He
had tried to forget the last day or two how short a
time he had with his old master, but it had all
come back to him now. And his heart felt very
sad and desolate. It is a very dreadful thing to
lose the only friend you have in the world. And
it is a ver}' dreadful thing to see before you a thick,
dark cloud, and to feel that it hangs over your
pathway, and tliat you must pass through it. Poor
Christie was very full of sorrow, for he "feared as
he entered into the cloud." But Treffy 's words
came back to his mind, and he said, with a full
heart :
"Lord Jesus, do help me to give my life to
Thee. Oh ! please help me to spare old Treffy.
Amen."
Then, rather comforted, he went to bed.
11
TRF.FFY ENTERS THE CITY
The next morning he looked anxiously at old
Treffy. He seemed weaker than usual, and
Christie did noi like to leave him. But they had
very little money left, and Treffy seemed to wish
him to go; so Christie went on his rounds with a
heavy heart. He determined to go to the suburban
road, that he might tell little Mabel and her mother
how much worse his dear old master was. It is
such a comfort to speak of our sorrow to those who
will care to hear.
Thus Christie stopped before the house with the
pretty garden in front of it. The snowdrops were
over now, but the primroses had taken their place,
and the garden looked very gay and cheerful. But
Christie had no heart to look at it, he was gazing
up anxiously at the nursery window for little
MabePs face. But she was not to be seen, so he
turned the handle of his organ and played ''Home,
sweet Home," her favorite tune, to attract her at-
tention. A minute after he began to play he saw
little Mabel coming quickly out of the house and
running towards him. She did not smile at him
as usual, and she looked as if she had been crying,
Christie thought.
"Oh, organ-boy," she said, "don't play to-day.
Mamma is ill in bed, and it makes her head ache."
Christie stopped at once. He was just in the
midst of the chorus of "Home, sweet Home," and
the organ gave a melancholy wail as he suddenly
brought it to a conclusion.
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CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
"I am so sorry, missie," he said.
Mabel stood before him in silence for a minute
or two, and Christie Ipok^^d down upon her, very
pitifully and tenderly.
*'Is she very bad, missie?" he said.
"Yes," said little Mauel, "I think she must be,
papa looks so grave, and nurse won't let us play ;
and I heard her tell cook mother would never be
any better," she added, with a little sob, which
came from the bottom of her tiny heart.
"Poor little missie ! " said Christie, sorrowfully;
"poor little missie, don't fret so ; oh, don't fret so ! "
And as Christie stood looking down on the little
girl a great tear rolled down his cheek and fell on
her little white arm.
Mabel looked up suddenly.
"Christie," she said, "I think mother must be
going to 'Home, sweet Home,' and I want to go
too.
?»
"So do I," said Christie, with a sigh, "but the
gates won't open to me for a long, long time."
Then the nurse called Mabel in, and Christie
walked sorrowfully away. The world seemed
very full of trouble to him. Even the sky was
overcast, and a cutting east wind chilled Christie
through and through. The spring flowers were
nipped by it, and the budding branches were sent
backwards and forwards by each fresh gust of the
wind, and Christie felt almost glad that it was so
cheerless. He was very sad and unhappy, very
•J
TREFFY ENTERS THE CtTY
88
restless and miserable. He had begun to wonder
if God had forgotten him ; the world seemed to
him so wide and desolate. His old master was
dying, his little friend Mabel was in trouble, there
seemed to be sorrow everywhere. There seemed
to be no comfort for poor Christie.
Wearily and drearily he went homewards, and
dragged himself up the steep staircase to the attic.
He heard a voice within, a low, gentle voice, the
sound of which soothed Chris s ruffled soul. It
was the clergyman, and he /us reading to old
Treffy.
Treffy was sitting up in bed, with a sw^et smile
on his face, eagerly listening to every word. And,
as Christie came in, the clergyman was reading this
verse :
** Peace I leave with you. My peace I give mito
you ; not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let
not you heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid."
"That's a f^weet verse for you, Treffy," said the
clergyman.
"Ay," said Treffy, brightening, "and for poor
Christie too; he's very cast down, is Christie,
sir.
j»
"Christie," said the minister, laying his hand
on his shoulder, "why \^ your heart troubled?"
But Christie could not answer. He turned sud<%
denly away from the minister, and throwing him-
self on old Treffy's bed, he sobbed bitterly.
The clergyman's heart was very full of sym-
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CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
pathy for poor Christie. He knelt down beside
him, and putting his arm round him, with almost
a mother's tenderness, he said gently:
''Christie, shall we go together to the Lord
Jesus, and tel^ Him of your sorrow? '*
And then, in very plain, simple words, which
Christie's heart could understand, the clergyman
asked the Lord to look on the poor lonely child, to
comfort him and to bless him, and to make him
feel that he had one Friend who would never go
away. And long after the clergyman had gone,
when the attic was quite still and Treffy was asleep,
Christie heard, as it were, a voice in his heai t,
saying to him : "Let not your heart be troubled."
Then he fell asleep in peace.
He was wakened by his old master's voice :
"Christie!" said Treffy; -Xhri&de, boy!"
"Yes, Master Treffy," said Christie, jumping
up hastily.
" Where's the eld organ, Chr'stie ?" asked Treffy.
"She's here. Master Treff}^'* said Christie,
"all right and safe."
"Turn her, Christie," said Treffy, "play
'Home, sweet Home.'"
"It's the middle of the night, Master Treffy,"
said Christie; "folks will wonder what's the
matter."
But Treffy niade no answer, and Christie crept
to his side with a light, and looked at his face. It
was very altered and strange. Treffy's eyes were
nawsm
)|'ii
TREFFY E/VTERS THE CITY
8S
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shut, and there was that in his face which Christie
had never seen there before. He did not know
what to do. He walked to the window and looked
out. The sky was quite dark, but one bright star
was shining through it and looking in at the attic
window. "Let not your heart be trouble V' it
seemed to say to him. And Christie answered
aloud: "Lord, dear Lord, help me."
As he turned from the window Treffy spoke
again, and Christie caught the words :
"Play, Christie, boy, play."
He hesitated no longer. Taking the organ from
its place, he turned the handle, and slowly and
sadly the notes of "Home, sweet Home," were
sounded forth in the dark attic. The old man
opened his eyes as Christie played, and, when the
tune was over, he called the boy to him, and drawl-
ing him down very close to him, he whispered :
"Christie, boy, the gates are opening now. I'm
going in. Play again, Christie, boy."
It was hard work playing the three other tunes,
they seemed so out of place in the room of death.
But Treffy did not seem to hear them. He was
murmuring softly to himself the words of the
prayer, "Wash me, and I shall be whiter than
snow! whiter than snow, whiter than snow."
And, as Christie was playing "Home, sweet
Home" for the second time, old Treffy's weary
feet passed within the gates. He was at home at
last, in "Home, sweet Home."
And little Christie was left outside.
[Mi
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CHAPTER X
"no place like home"
The next morning, some of the lodgers in the
great room below remembered having heard
sounds in the stillness of the night which had
awakened them from their dreams and disturbed
their slumbers. Some maintained it was only
the wind howling in the chimney, but others felt
sure it was music, and said that the old man in the
attic must have been amusing himself with the
organ at midnight.
"Not he," said the landladv, when she heard of
it; "he'll never play it again, he's a dying man,
by what the doctor says."
"Just you go and ask him if he wasn't turning
his old organ in the middle of last night," said a
man from the far corner of the room. "I'll bet you
he was."
The landlady went upstairs to satisfy his curi-
osity, and rapped at the attic door. No one
answered, so she opened it and went in. Christie
was fast asleep, stretched upon the bed where his
old master's body lay. The tears had dried on his
cheeks, and he was resting his head on one of old
Treffy's cold, withered hands- The landlady's
face grew grave, and she inst'nct'vely shuddprt^-d
in the presence of death.
88
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"NO PLACE LIKE HOME'
87
Christie woke with a start, and looked up in her
face vvith a bewildered expression. He could not
remember at first what had happened. But in a
moment it all came back to him, and he turned
over and moaned.
The landlady was touched by the boy's sorrow,
but she was a rough woman, and knew little of the
way of showing sympathy, and Christie was not
sorry when she went downstairs and left him to
himselL As soon as the house was quiet he
brought a neighbor to attend to old Treffy's body,
and then crept out to tell the clergyman.
Mr. Wilton felt very deeply for the desolate
child. Once again he committed him to his loving
Father, to the Friend who would never leave him
nor forsake him. And when Christie was gone
he again knelt down, and thanked God with a
very full heart for having allowed him to be the
poor weak instrument in bringing this soul to
Himself. There would be one at least at the beau-
tiful gates of "Home, sweet Home," watching for
his home-going steps. Old Treffy would be
waiting for him there. Oh, how good God had
been to him! It was with a thankful heart that he
sat down to prepare his sermon for the next day,
on the last verse of the hymn. And what he had
just heard of old Treffy helped him much in the
realization of the bright city of which he was to
speak.
Mr. Wilton 1 >oked anxiously for Christie, when
I
88
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORG AM
he entered the crowded mission-room on Sunday
evening. Yes, Christie was there, sitting as usual
on the front bench, with a very pale and sorrowful
face, and with heavy, downcast eyes. And when
the hymn was being sung the clergyman noticed
that the tears were running down the boy's cheeks,
though he rubbed them away with his sleeve as
fast as they came. But Christie looked up almost
with a smile when the clergyman gave out his text.
It was from Revelation vii. 14, 15 : "These are they
which came out of great tribulation, and have washed
their robes, and made iheir white *n the blood of
the Lamb. Therefore are they before the throne
of God."
"To-night," said the clergyman, "I am to
speak of 'Home, sweet Home,' and of those
that dwell there, the great multitude of the re-
deemed. It is a very holy place. There is no
speck on the golden pavement, no evil to be
found within the city. The tempter can never enter
there. Sin is unknown. All is very, very holy.
On the white robes of those who dwell there is no
stain ; pure and clean and spotless, bright and
fair as light, are those robes of theirs. Nothing
to soil them, nothing to spoil their beauty, they
are made white forever in the blood of the Lamb,
therefore are they before the throne of God.
"Oh!" said the clergyman, "never forget that
this is the only way to stand before that throne.
Being good will never take you there, not being
''NOPLACE LIKE HOME''
^
as bad as others will avail you nothing ; if you are
ever to enter heaven, you must be washed white
in the blood of the Lamb.
"St. John was allowed to look into heaven, and
he saw a great company of these redeemed ones,
and they were singing a new song, to the praise
of Him who had redeemed them. And since St.
John's time," said the clergyman, "oh! how many
have joined their number! Every day, every
hour, almost every moment, some soul stands be-
fore the city gates. And to every soul washed in
the blood of Jesus those gates of pearl are thrown
open. They are all dressed one by one in a robe
of white, and as they walk through the golden
streets, and stand before the throne of glory, they
join in that song which never grows old — 'Amen.
Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiv-
ing, and honor, and power, and might, be unto
our God forever and ever. Amen. '
"And, my friends," said the cletgyman, "as the
holy God looks on these souls He sees in them no
trace of sin, the blood has taken it all away.
Even in His sight they are all fair, there is no spot
in them. They are faultless and stainless, per-
fectly pure and holy.
"Oh! my friends, will you ever join their num-
ber? This is a dark, dismal, dying world; will
you be content to have your all here? Will you
be content never to enter 'Home, sweet Home' ?
Oh! will you delay coming to the fountain, and then
1
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CH,..STIE'S OLD ORGAN
fi\
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wake up, and find you are shut out of the city
bright, and that forever?
"One old man," said the clergyman, "to whom
I was talking last week is now spending his first
Sunday in that city bright."
A stillness passed over the room when the
clergyman said this, and Christie whispered to
himself: "He means Master Treffy, I know he
does."
" He was a poor sin-stained old man," the clergy-
man went on, "but he took Jesus at His word,
he came to the blood of Christ to be washed, and
even here he was made whiter than snow. And
two nights ago the dear Lord sent for the old man,
and took him home. There was no sin-mark
found on his soul, so the gates were opened to
him, and now in the snowy dress of Christ's re-
deemed he stands, 'faultless and stainless, fault-
less and stainless, safe in that happy home.'
"If I were to hear next Sunday," said the
clergyman, "that any one of you was dead, could
I say the same of you? Whilst we are meeting
here, would you be In 'Honii', sweet Home'? Are
you indeed washed in the precious blood of Clirist?
Have you indeed been forgiven? Have you indeed
come to Jesus?
*'OhI do answer this question in your nwn
heart," said Mr. Wlllon, in a very eatimi vuw§,
"I do want to meet t\/try o«p of you in 'Home,
sweet Home.* I tbJnk thai when God tnliPn me
< yo yiACS UKZ i^omr-^
II
there I shall be looking out for all of you, and
oh ! how I trust we shall all meet there — all meet
at home !
"I cannot saj' more to-night," said the min-
ister, "but my heart is very full. God grant that
each of you may now be washed in the blood of
Jesus, and even in this life be made whiter than
snow, and then say with a grateful heart, 'Lord, I
will work for Thee, love Thee, serve Thee all I
can* —
•"Till in the snowy dress
Of Thy redeemed I stand,
Faultless and stainless,
Faultless and stainless,
Safe in that happy land ! ' "
And then the service was over, and the congre-
gation went away. But Christie never moved
from the bench on which he was sitting. His face
was buried in his hands, and he never looked up,
even when the clergyman laid his ha»Hl kindly on
his shoulder.
*'Oh!" he sobbed at last, "J want to go home.
My mother's gone, atid old Trt ffy's gone, and I
want to go too."
The clergyman took ChrJHtle'a little brown hand
in both of his, and said: "Christie, poor little
Clulstie, the Loid dues not like to keep you out-
side the gate ; but He has woi k for you to do a
little longer, and then the gates will be opened.
Hud home will be all the sweeter after the dark
time down heii."
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORG AS
And then with other gentle and loving words he
comforted the child, and then once more he prayed
with him, and Christie went away with a lighter
heart. But he could not help thinking of the last
Sunday evening, when he had hastened home tc
tell Treffy about the third verse of the hymn.
There was no one to-night to whom Christie
could tell what he had heard. He waited a minute
outjide the attic door ac if he was almost afraid to
go in, but it was only for a minute, and when he
walked in all fear passed away.
The sun was setting, and some rays of glory
were falling on old Treffy's face as he lay on the
bed. They seemed to Christie as if they came
straight from the golden city, there was some-
thing so bright and so unearthly about them. And
Christie fancied that Treffy smiled as he lay on the
bed. It might be fanc}', but he liked to think it
was so.
And then he went to the attic window and looked
out. He almost saw the golden city, far away
amongst those wondrous, bright clouds. It was a
strange, glad thought, to think that Treffy was
there. "What a change for him from the dark
attic ! Oh ! how bright heaven would seem to his
old master !
Christie would have given anything just to see
for one minute what Treffy was doing.
" I wonder if he will tell Jesus about me, and how
I want to come home," said Christie to hinself.
''NO PLACE LIKE HOXfR''
And as the sunset faded away and the light
grew less and less, Christie knelt down in the twi-
light, and said from the bottom of his heart :
"O Lord, please make me patient, and please
some day take me to live with Thee and old
Treffy, in 'Home, sweet Home.* "
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CHAPTER XI
ALONE IN THE WORLD
Little Christie was the only mourner who fol-
lowed old Treffy to the grave. It was a poor
parish funeral. Treffy's body was put into a parish
coffin^ and carried to the grave in a parish hearse.
But, oh ! it did not matter, for Treffy was at home
in "Home, sweet Home." All his sorrows and
troubles were over, his poverty was at an end, and
in "the Father's house" he was being well cared
for.
But the man v;ho drove the hearse was not in-
clined to lose time upon the road, and Christie had
to walk very quickly, and sometimes almost to run,
to keep up with him ; and on their way they passed
another and a very different funeral. It was going
very slowly indeed. There was a large hearse in
front, and six funeral carriages, filled with people,
followed. And as Christie passed close by them in
the middle of the road he could see that the mourners
within looked very sorrowful, and as if they
had been crying very much. But in one carriage
he saw something which he never forgot. With
her head resting on her papa's shoulder, and her
little white sorrowful face pressed close to the win-
dow, was his little friend Mabel.
"So her mother is dead!" said Christie to him-
self, "and this is her funeral! Oh, dear! what a
very sad world this is!"
94
ALONE IN THE WORLD
65
He was not sure whether Mabel had seen him,
but the little girl's sorrow had sunk very deep in-
to Christie's soul, and it was with a heavier heart
than before that he hastened forward to overtake
the hearse which was carrying his old master's
body to the grave.
So the two funeral processions— that of the
poor old man, and that of the fair young
mother—passed on to the cemetery, and over
both bodies were pronounced the words: "Earth
to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust." But all
this time their happy souls were in "Home,
sweet Home," far, far away from the scene of
sorrow, for a few days before, just at the same hour,
two souls had left this world of woe, and had met
together before the gates of pearl ; and as they were
both clean and white, both washed in the blood of
the Lamb, the gates had been opened wide^ and old
Treffy and little Mabel's mother had entered the
city together. And now they had both seen Jesus,
the dear Lord whom they loved well, and in His
presence they were even now enjoying fulness of
joy.
Christie was obliged to give up the little attic
after Treffy's death, for the landlady wished
to let it for a higher rent. However, she gave the
boy leave to sleep in the great lodging-room beiow,
whilst she took possession of all old Treffy's small
stock of furniture, in payment of the rent which he
owed her.
't .
Iir
} ii
m
m
II iuiii
m'
96
CHklSTIE'S OLD ORGAN
But the organ was Christie's property ; his old
master had given it to him most solemnly about a
week before he died. He had called Christie to his
side, and told him to bring the organ with him.
Then he had committed it to Christie's care.
•'You'll take care of her, Christie^" he had said,
*'and you'll never part with her, for my sake.
And when you play 'Home, sweet Home,' Christie,
boy, you must think of me and your mother, and
how we've both got there."
It was hard work for Christie, the first day that
he took out the organ after old Treffy's funeral.
He did not so much mind playing " Rule Britannia,"
or the "Old Hundredth," or "Poor Mary Ann,"
but when he came for the first time to "Home,
sweet Home," such a rush of feeling came over
him that he stopped short in the middle and moved
on without finishing it. The passers-by were sur-
prised at the sudden pause in the tune, and still
more so at the tears which were running down
Christie's cheeks. They little thought that the last
time he had played that tune had been in the room
of death, and that whilst he was playing it his
dearest friend on earth had passed awya into the
true "Home, sweet Home." But Christie knew,
and the notes of the tune brought back the recollec-
tion of that midnight hour. And he could not make
up his mind to go on playing till he had looked up
into the blue sky and asked for help to rejoice in
old Treffy's joy. And then the chorus came very
ALONE IN THE WORLD
VI
sweetly to him, "Home, sweet home ; there's »io
place like home, there's no place like home."
*'And old Treffy's there at last," said Christie
to himself as he finished playing.
One day, about a week after Treffy's funeral,
Christie went up the suburban road, in the hopes
of seeing poor little Miss Mabel once more. He
had never forgotten her sorrowful little face at the
window of the funeral coach. And when we are
in sorrow ourselves, it does us good to see and
sympathize with those who are in sorrow also.
Christie felt it would be a great comfort to him to
see the little girl. He wanted to hear all about her
mother, and when it was that she had gone to
•'Home, sweet Home."
When Christie reached the house he stood still
in astonishment. The pretty garden was there just
as usual, a bed of heart's-eases was blooming in the
sunshine, and the stocks and forget-me-nots were
in full flower. But the house looked very deserted
and strange ; the shutters of the lower rooms were
up, and the bedrooms had no blinds in the windows,
and looked empty and forlorn. In the nursery
window, instead of little Mabel and Charlie's merry
faces, there was a cross-looking old woman with
her head bent down over her knitting.
What could be the matter? Where were the
children gone ? Surely no one else was lying dead
in the house. Christie felt that he could not go
home without finding out; he must ask the old
w
08
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
m\
woman. So he stood at the garden-gate, and turned
the handle of the organ, hoping that she would
look out and speak to him. But, beyond a passing
glance, she gave no sign that she even heard it,
but went on diligently with her work.
At length Christie could wait no longer; so stop-
ping suddenly in the middle of "Poor Mary Ann,"
he walked up the gravel path and rang the bell.
Then the old woman put her head out of the win-
dow, and asked what he wanted. Christie did not
quite know what to say, so he carne out at once
with the great fear which was haunting him.
** Please, ma'am, is any one dead?" he asked.
"Dead? No!" said the old woman, quickly.
"What do you want to know for?"
"Please, could I speak to little Miss Mabel?"
said Christie, timidly.
"No, bless you," said the old woman, "not un-
less you'd like a walk across the sea. She's in
Europe by now."
"In Europe!" repeated Christie, with a bewil-
dered air.
"Yes," said the old woman, "they've all gone
abroad for the summer"; and then she shut the
window in a decided manner, as much as to say,
"And that's all I shall tell you about it."
Christie stood for a few minutes in the pretty
garden before he moved away. He was very dis-
appointed ; he had so hoped to have seen his little
friends, and now they were gone. They were far
^
ALO NE, IN THE WORLD
0(
away in Europe, That was a long way off.~CW
tie felt sure, and perhaps he would never see them
again.
He walked slowly down the dusty road. He felt
very lonely this afternoon, very lonely and forsaken.
His mother was gone; old Treffy was gone! the
lady was gone ; and now the children were gone
also I He had no one to cheer him or to comfort
him ; so he dragged the old organ wearily down the
hot streets. He had not heart enough to play, he
was very tired and worn out; yet he knew not
where ^d go to rest. He had not even the old at-
tic to call his home. But the pavement was so hot
to his feet, and the sun was so scorching, that Chris-
tie determined to return to the dismal court, and
to try to find a quiet corner in the great lodging-
room. But when he opened the door he was greet-
ed by a cloud of dust ; and the landlady called out to
him to take himself off, she could not do with him
loitering about at that time of day. So Christie
turned out again, very heart-sore and disconsolate;
and going into a quiet street, he sheltered for some
time from the hot sun, under a high wall which
made a little shadow across the pavement.
Christie was almost too hot and tired even to be
unhappy, and yet every now and then he shivered
and crept into the sunshine to be warmed again.'
He had a strange, -sharp pain in his head, which
made him feel very bewildered and uncomfortable.
He did not know what was the matter with him,
w
100
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
m
and sometimes he got up and tried to play for a lit-
tle time, but he was so sick and dizzy that he was
obliged to give it up, and to lie quite still under the
wall, with the organ beside him, till the sun began
to set. Then he dragged himself and his organ
back to the large lodging-room. The landlady had
finished her cleaning, and was preparing the sup-
per for her lodgers. She threw Christie a crust of
bread as he came in, but he was not able to eat it.
He crawled to a bench in the far corner of the room,
and putting his old organ against the wall beside
him, he fell asleep.
When he awoke, the room was full of men.
They were eating their supper, and talking and
laughing noisily. They took little notice of Chris-
tie, as he lay very still in the corner of the room.
He could not sleep again, for the noise in the place
was so great, and now and again he shuddered at
the wicked words and coarse jests which fell on
his ear almost every minute.
Christie's head v/as aching terribly, and he felt
very, very ill ; he had never been so ill in his life
before. "What would he not have given for a quiet
little corner, in which he might have lain, out of the
reach of the oaths and wickedness of the men in the
great lodging-room ! And then his thoughts wan-
dered to old Treffy in "Home, sweet Home."
What a different place his dear old master was in !
"There's no place like home, no place like
home," said Christie to himself. "Oh, what a
iong way I am from *Home, sweet Home!'"
CHAPTER XII
CHRISTIE WELL CARED FOR
' 'What's the matter with that little lad ?" said one
of the men to the landlady, as she was preparing
their breakfast the next morning. "He's got a
fever or something of the sort. He's been talking
about one thing or another last night. I've had
toothache, and scarcely closed my eyes, and he's
never ceased chatting the night through."
"What did he talk about?" asked another man.
*'Oh! all sorts of rubbish," said the man with
the toothache, "bright cities, and funerals, and
snowdrops ; and once he got up, and began to sing ;
I wonder you didn't hear him."
"It would have taken a great deal to make me
hear him," said the other, "tired out as I was last
night. What did he sing, though.?"
"Oh! one of the tunes on his old organ. I ex-
pect he gets them in his head so that he can't get
them out, I think it was VHome, sweet Home'
he was trying at last night"; and the man went to
his work.
"Well, Mrs. White," said another man, "if the
boy's in a fever, the sooner you get him out of this
the better; we don't want all of us to take it."
When the men were gone the landlady went up
to Christie to see if he were really ill. She tried
to wake him, but he looked wildly in her face, and
101
t,l
?f '■!
102
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
did not seem to know her. So she lifted him by
main force into a little dark room under the stairs,
which was filled with boxes and rubbish. She was
not an unkind woman ; she would not turn the poor
child into the street in his present condition ; so she
made him up a little bed on the floor, and giving
him a drink of water, she left him, to continue her
work. That evening she fetched the parish doc-
tor to see him, and he told her that Christie was in
a fever.
For many days little Christie hung between life
and death. He was quite unconscious of all that
went on ; he never heard the landlady come into the
room ; he never saw her go out. She was the only
person who came near him, and she could give him
very little attention, for she had so much to do.
But she used to wonder why Christie talked so of-
ten of "Home, sweet Home" ; through all his wan-
derings of mind this one idea seemed to run. Even
in his delirium, little Christie was longing for the
city bright.
After a time Christie began to recover ; he re-
gained his consciousness, and slowly, very slow-
ly, the fever left him. But he was so weak that
he could not even turn in bed ; and he could scarce-
ly speak above a whisper. Oh, how long and
dreary the days were to him ! Mrs. White had
begun to grow tired of waiting on him, and so
Christie was for many a long hour without seeing
any one to whom he could speak.
CHRISTIE WELL CARED FOR
lot
It was a very dark little chamber, only lighted
from the passage, and Christie could not even see
a bit of blue sky. He felt very much alone in the
world. All day long there was no sound but the
distant shouts of the children in the court ; and in
the evening he could hear the noise of the men in
the great lodging-room. Often he was awake the
greater part of the night, and lay listening to the
ticking of the clock on the Jtairs, and counting the
strokes hour after hour. And then he would watch
the faint gray light creeping into the dark room,
and listen to the footsteps of the men going out to
their daily work.
No one came to see Christie. He wondered that
Mr. Wilton did not ask after him, when he missed
him from the mission-room. Oh, how glad Chris-
tie would have been to see him ! But the days
passed slowly by, and he never came, and Chris-
tie wondered more and more. Once he asked Mrs.
White to fetch him to see him, but she said she
could not trouble to go so far.
If little Christie had not had a friend in Jesus,
his little heart would almost have broken, in the
loneliness and desolation of those days of weakness.
But though his faith was sometimes feeble, and
he was then very downcast in spirit, yet at other
times little Christie would talk with Jesus, as with
a dear friend ; in this way he was comforted. And
the words which the clergyman had read to his old
master were ever ringing in his ears :
ih
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m
104
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
**Let not your heart be troubled."
Still, those weeks did seem very long and tedious.
At last, he was able to sit up in bed, but he felt
faint and dizzy whenever he moved, for he had had
a very severe attack of fever, and he needed all man-
ner of nourishing things to bring back his strength.
But there was no one to attend to the wants of the
poor motherless boy. No one, except the dear
Lord ; He had not forgotten him.
It was a close, tiring afternoon. Christie was
lying upon his bed, panting with the heat, and long-
ing for a breath of air. He was faint and Wcary,
and felt very cast down and dispirited.
"Please, dear Lord," he said aloud, "send some
one to see me."
Even as he spoke the door opened, and the clergy-
man ccme in. It was too much for little Christie !
He held out his arms to him in joy, and then burst
into tears.
"Why, Christie," said the clergyman, "are you
not glad to see me?''
"Oh," said little Christie, "I thought you were
never coming, and I felt such a long way from home !
Gh, I am so glad to see you! "
Then Mr. Wilton told Christie that he had been
away from home, and that another clergyman had
been taking his duty. But the night before he had
preached for the first time since his return in the
little mission-room, and he had missed Christie from
the front bench. He had asked the woman who
CHKlSTfP. WELL CARED FOR
106
cleaned the room about him, and she had told him
that Christie had never been there since he went
away. The clergyman had wondered what was the
matter, and had come as soon as he could to hear.
^ "And now, Christie," he said, "tell me all about
these long, weary weeks."
But Christie was so glad and so happy now, that
the past seemed like a long, troubled dream. He
hid waked up now, and had forgotten his sorrow
and loneliness.
The clergyman and Christie had much pleasant
talk together, and then Mr. Wilton said:
*' Christie, I have had a letter about you, which
I will read to vou."
The letter was from little Mabel's papa, who was
a friend of the clergyman.
"My dear Mr. Wilto.:
"There is a poor boy of the name of Christie
(what his surname is I do not know) living in a
lodging-house in Ivy Court, Percy Street. He lived
formerly with an old organ-grinder, but I believe
the old man was thought to be dying some weeks
ago. My dear wife took a great fancy to the boy,
and my little Mabel frequently talks of him. I im-
agine he must be left in a very destitute condition ;
and T should be much obliged if you could find him'
out and provide for him some comfortable home
with any respectable person who will act as a
mother to him.
"I enclose a check which will pay his expenses
ii
106
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
for the present. I should like him to go to school
for a year or iwo, and then I intend, if the boy
desires to serve Christ, to bring him up to work
as a Gcripture-reader amongst the lowest class of
the people in your neighborhood.
"I think I could not perpetuate my dear wife's
memory in any better way than by carrying out
what I know were her wishes with regard to little
Christie. No money or pains will I spare to do
for him what she herself would have done, had her
life been spared.
"Kindly excuse me for troubling you with this
matter ; but I do not wish to defer it until our re-
turn, lest I lose sight of the boy. The dismal at-
tic where Christie and his old master lived was the
last place my dear wife visited before her illness ;
and I feel that the charge of this boy is a sacred
duty which I must perform for her dear sake, and
also for the sake of Him who has said, 'Inasmuch
as ye have done it unto one of the least of these
My brethren, ye have done it unto Me.'
*' Believe me, dear Mr. Wilton,
"Yours very sincerely,
"Gerald Lindesay.'*
"Christie," said the clergyman, "the Lord has
been very good to you."
"Yes," said little Christie," old Treffy was right;
wasn't he, sir?"
" What did old Treffy say ?" asked the clergy-
man.
CHRISTIE WELL CARED FOR
107
"He said the Lord had some work for me to do
for Him," said Christie, "and I didn't think there
was anything I could do; but He's going to let me
after all."
''Yes," said the clergyman, smiling; ''shall we
thank Him, Christie?"
So he l.nelt down by Christie's bed, and little
Christie clasped his thin hands and added his words
of praise :
"O Jesus, I thank Thee so much for letting me
hi7e some work to do for Thee ; and, please, I will
stay outside the gates a little longer, to do some-
thing to show Thee how I love Thej. Amen."
"Yes, Christie," said the clergyman, as he rose
to go, "yo- ruust work with a very loving heart.
And when the work is over will come the rest.
After the long waiting will come 'Home, sweet
Home.'"
!'
ii
M !
II
CHAPTER XIII
Christie's work for the master
It was a hot summer's afternoon, some years
after, and the air in Ivy Court was as close and
stifling as it had been in the days when Christie
and old Treffy lived there. Crowds of children
might still be seen playing there, screaming and
quarreling, just as they had done then. The
air was as full of smoke and dust, and the court
looked as desolate as it had done in those years
gone by. It was still a very dismal and a very
forlorn place.
So Christie thought, as he entered it that sultry
day. It seemed to him as far as ever from
"Home, sweet Home." Yet, of all the places
which he visited as a Scripture-reader, there
was no place in which Christie took such an
interest as Ivy Court, for he could not forget those
dreary days when he had been a little homeless
wanderer, and had gone there for a night's lodging.
And he could not forget the old attic, which had
been the first place, since his mother's death, that
he had been able to call home. It was to this very
attic that he was g ing this afternoon. He climbed
the rickety stairs, nd as he did so he thought of
the night when he had crept up them for the first
time, and had knelt down outside old Treffy's door,
108
CHRISTIES WORK FOR THE MASTER
109
listening to the organ. Christie had never parted
with that organ, his old master's last gift to him.
Scarcely a week passed that he did not turn the
handle, and listen to the dear old tunes. And he
always finished with "Home, sweet Home," for
he still loved that tune the best. And when Miss
Mabel came to see him, she always wanted to turn
the old organ in remembrance of her childish days.
She was not Miss Mabel any longer now, though
Christie still sometimes called her so when they
were talking together of the old days, and of Treify
and his organ. Mabel was married now to the
clergyman under whom Christie was working, and
she took great interest in the young Scripture-read-
er, and was always ready to help him with her ad-
vice and sympathy. And she would ask Christie
about the poor people he visited, and he would tell
her which of them most needed her aid. And
where she was most needed young Mrs. Villiers
was always ready to go.
And so it came to pass that when Christie
knocked at the old attic door, it was opened for
him by Mrs. Villiers herself, who had just come
there to see a poor sick woman. She had not met
Christie in that attic since the days when they were
both children, and Mabel smiled as he came in,
and said to him :
"Do you remember the occasion when we met
here before?"
"Yes," said Christie, "I remember it well.
no
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
There were four of us here then, Mrs. Villiers,
and two out of the four have gone to the bright city
which we talked of then."
''Yes," said Mabel, with tears in her eyes ;" they
are waiting for us in 'Home, sweet Home."'
The attic did not look any more cheerful that
day than it had done when old Treffy lived there.
The window panes were nearly all broken and filled
with pieces of brown paper or rag. The floor was
more rotten than ever, and the boards seemed as
if they must give way when Christie crossed the
room to speak to a forlorn-looking woman, who
was sitting on a chair by the smouldering fire. She
was evidently very ill and very unhappy. Four
little children were playing about, and making so
much noise that Christie could hardly hear their
mother speak when she told him she was "no bet-
ter, no better at all, and she did not think she ever
should be."
"Have you done what I asked you, Mrs. Wil-
son?" said Christie.
"Yes, sir, I've said it again and again, and the
more I say it, the more miserable it makes me."
"What is it, Christie?" said Mrs. Villiers.
"It's a little prayer, ma'am, I asked her to say:
'O God, give me Thy Holy Spirit, to show me
what I -am.'"
"And I think He has shown me," said the poor
woman, sadly ; "anyhow, I never knew I was such
a sinner ; and every day as I sit here by my fire
CHRISTIE'S WORK FOR THE MASTER
m
I think it all over, and every night as I lie awake on
my bed I think of it again."
**rve brought another prayer for you to say new,
Mrs. Wilson," said Christie, ''and I've written it
out on a card, that you may be able to learn it
quickly: 'O God, give me Thy Holy Spirit, to
show me what Jesus is.* God has heard and an-
swered your first piayer, so you may be sure He
will hear this one also. And if He only shows you
what Jesus is, I am sure you will be happy, for
Jesus will forgive you your sin, and take away all
its heavy burden."
The poor woman read the prayer aloud several
times, and then Mrs. Villiers took a book from
her pocket and began to read. It was a little, much-
worn Testament. It had once been blue, but, from
constant use, the color had faded, and the gilt edges
were no longer bright. It was not the first time
that same Testament had been in that old attic.
It was the same book from which Mabel's mother
had read to old Treffy fifteen years before. How
Mabel loved that book! Here and there was a
pencil-mark which hec mother had made against
some favorite text, and these texts Mabel read
again and again, till they became her favorites aI.«'o.
It was one of these which she read to the poor wom-
an to-day: *'The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son,
cleanseth us from all sin." And then Mrs. Villiers
explained how ready Jesus is to save any soul that
comes to Him, and how His blood is quite sufficient
to take away sin.
"!:
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113
CHRfST/E'S OLD ORGAN
\
The sick woman listened eagerly, and a tear
came into Christie's eye as he said: "There is no
^ext that I love like that, Mrs. Villiers. Mr. Wil-
ton preached on it in the mission-room the second
time I went there, and I felt as if I could sing for
joy when I heard it. I well remember how 1 ran up
the stairs to this attic, to tell it to my old master."
"And you've found it true, Christie?"
"Yes, ma'am, indeed I have, and Treffy found
it true too."
Then Mrs. Villiers and Christie took their leave ;
but as they were going down the steep staircase
Christie said : "Have you time to call on Mrs.
White for a few minutes, ma'am ? She would be
so pleased to see you, and I don't think she will
live very long."
Mrs. Villiers gladly agreed to go; so Christie
knocked at the door at the bottom of the stairs.
A young woman opened it, and they went in.
Mrs. White was lying on a bed in the corner of
the room, and seemed to be asleep ; but presently
she opened her eyes, and when she saw Christie
her face brightened, and she held out her hands
in welcome. She was an old woman now, and had
given up taking lodgers several years before.
"Oh, Christie," she said, " I «w glad to see you ;
I have been counting the hours till you came."
"Mrs. Villiers has come to see you to-day, Mrs.
White."
"Oh! how good of you! " said the poor woman;
CtfR/STlB'S WORfC FOR THE MASTER
lis
"Christie said you would come some day."
" You have known Christie a long time, have you
not?" said Mrs. Villiers.
"Yes," said the old woman, "he came tome first
as a little ragged boy, shivering with cold ; and I
liked the look of him, ma'am, he was so much
quieter than some that came here ; and I used to
give him a crust sometimes, when he looked more
starved than usual."
"Yes, Mrs. White," said Christie, "you were
often very good to me."
"Oh! not as I should have been, Christie; they
were only crusts I gave you, bits that were left
from the men's meals, and not so much of them
either ; but you've come to me, and you've brought
me the Bread of Life — not just bits and leavings,
but enough and to spare, as much as I like, and
more than enough for all I want."
"Oh, Christie," said Mrs. Villiers, "I am glad
to hear this. The Lord has been very good to
you. Your work has not been in vain."
" In vain !" said the old woman ; "I should think
not ! There's many a one, Mrs. Villiers, that will
bless God in the home above for what you and
vour father have done for this lad : and there is no
one who will bless Him more than I shall. I was
as dark as a heathen till Christie came to me, and
read to me out of his Bible, and talked to me of
Jesus, and put it all so clear to me. And now I
know that my sins are forgiven, and very soon the
lU
CHRtSriE'S OLD ORGAN
: '
1 :■
. 11
I %
II - i
I
u
Lord will take me home ; and oh ! dear, how nice
that will be,
" ' When in the snowy dress
Of Thy iredeemed I stand,
Faultless and stainless,
Faultless and stainless,
Safe in that happy land.' "
"I see that Mrs. White knows your hymn, Chris-
tie," said Mrs. Villiers.
"Yes," said Christie, "I taught her it a long
time ago, and she is as fond of it as my old mas-
ter was."
After a little more conversation Mrs. Villiers took
her leave, and Christie continued his round of visits.
All that long, sultry afternoon he toiled on, climbing
dark staircases, going down into damp cellars, visit-
ing crowded lodging-houses ; and everywhere, as
he went, dropping seeds of the Word of life, sweet
words from the Book of books, Guited to the hearts
of those with whom he met.
For in that book Christie found there was a word
for every need, and a message for every soul.
There was peace for the sin-burdened, comfort for
the sorrowful, rest for the weary, counsel for the
perplexed, and hope for the dying. And Christie
always prayed before he went out that God's Holy
Spirit would give him the right word for each one
whom he went to see. And, as he knocked at the
door of a house, he always lifted up his heart in
a silent prayer, something like this :
"Thou, Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men,
CHRISTIE'S VVORIC FOR THE MASTER
lis
give me the opportunity of saying something for
Thee, and please help me to use it, and show me
how to say the right word."
And so it was no wonder that God blessed him.
It was no wonder that wherever he went Christie
not only found opportunities of doing good, but
was able to use these opportunities to the best ad-
vantage. It was no wonder that when the people
were ill they always sent for the young Scripture-
reader to read and pray with them. It was no won-
der that the little children loved him, or that the
poor, tired mothers were glad to sit down for a few
minutes to hear him read words of comfort from
the Book of Life. It was no wonder that all day
long Christie found work to do for the Master, and
souls waiting to receive the Master's message. He
was generally very tired when he went home at
night, but he did not mind this. For he never for-
got old Treffy's sorrow, a few days before he died,
because he had only a week left in which to show
his love to his Savior. And Christie thanked God
every day that He had given to him the honor and
privilege of working for Him.
Christie lodged in a quiet street not far from Ivy
Court. He used to live some way out of the town,
for he liked to have a walk after his day's work
was done ; but he found that the poor people often
wanted him for different things in the evening and
at other times, and so he removed nearer to them
and nearer to his work. And very often they would
m
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
. HRI
come to him with their troubles, and sit in his lit-
tle room pouring out their grief. The young men
especially were very glad to come to Christie's
lodging to have a talk with him ; and once a week
Christie had a little prayer-meeting there, to which
many of them came. And they found it a great
• help on their way to heaven.
When Christie opened the door of his lodging
on the day of which I am writing, he heard a sound
which very much surprised him. It was the sound
of his old barrel-organ, and it was pfeying a few
notes of "Home, sweet Home." He wondered
much who could be turning it, for he had forbidden
the landlady's children to touch it, except when
he was present to see that no harm came to it. He
sometimes smiled to himself at his care over the old
organ. It reminded him of the days when he had
first played it, with old Treffy standing by him and
looking over his shoulder, saying in an anxious
voice :
"Turn her gently, Christie, boy; turn her
gently."
And now he was almost as careful of it as
Treffy himself, and he would not on any ac-
count have it injured. And so he hastened up-
stairs to see who it could be that was turning it this
morning. On his way he met his landlady, who
said that a gentleman was waiting for him in his
parlor, who seemed very anxious to see him, and
had been sitting there for some time. And, when
CffRlSriE'S WORK FOR THP MASTER
117
Christie opened the door, who should be turning
the barrel-organ but his old friend Mr. Wilton !
They had not met for many years, for Mr. Wil-
ton had settled in another part of the country,
where he was preaching the same truths as he had
once preached in the little mission-room. But he
had come to spend a Sunday in the scene of his
former labors, and he was very anxious to know
how his friend Christie was getting on, and whether
he was still working for the Savior, and still look-
ing forward to "Home, sweet Home."
It was a very affectionate meeting between Mr.
Wilton and his young friend. They had much to
talk about, not having seen each other for so long.
"So you still have the old organ, Christie," said
Mr. Wilton, looking down at the faded silk, which
was even more colorless than it had been in Trcffy's
days.
"Yes, sir," said Christie, "I could never part
with it. I promised my old master that I never
would, and it was his dying gift to me. And often
now when I hear the notes of 'Home, sweet Home,*
it takes my thoughts to old Treffy, and I think what
a happy time he must have had in 'the city bright,'
all these fifteen years."
"Do you remember how you used to want to go
there too, Christie?"
"Yes, Mr. Wilton, and I don't want it any the
less now ; but still I should like to live some years
longer, if it is His will. There is so much to do
IM
CHklST/E'S OLD ORGAAT
1
in the world, isn't there, sir? And what I do only
seems to me like a drop in the ocean when I look
at the hundreds of people there are in these crowded
courts. I could almost cry sometimes when I feel
how little I can reach them."
"Yes, Christie," said Mr. Wilton, "there is a
great deal to do, and we cannot do a tenth part, nor
yet a thousandth part, of what there is to do ; what
we must strive after is, that the dear Master may
be able to say of each of us, 'He hath done what
he could.'*''''
Then Mr. Wilton and Christie knelt down and
prayed that God would give Christie a blessing on
his work, and would enable him to lead many of
the people, in the courts and lanes of that wretched
neighborhood, to come to Jesus, that they might
find a home in that city where Treffy was gone be-
fore.
CHAPTER XIV
"home, sweet home" at last
It was Sunday evening, and Christie was once
more in the little mission-room ; but not now as a
poor ragged boy, sitting on the front bench, and
in danger of being turned out by the woman who
lighted the gas-lamps. She would not dream of
turning Christie out now, for the young Scripture-
reader was a well-known man in the district. He
was always there early, before any of the people
arrived, and he used to stand at the door and wel-
come each one as they came in, helping the old
men and women to their seats, and looking out anx-
iously for those whom he had invited for the first
time during the week. And if any little ragged
boys stole in, and seemed inclined to listen, Chris-
tie took special care of them, for he had not forgot-
ten the day when he had first come to that very
room, longing to hear a word of comfort to tell to
his old master.
Mr. Wilton was to take the service to-ni^ht, and
Christie had been busy all the afternoon giving
special invitations to the people to be present, for he
wanted thoji very much to hear his dear friend.
The niission-rpom wag quite full when Mr. Wil-
ton entered.it. How it rejoiced him to see Chris-
tie going about amongst the people, with a kind
119
120
CHRISTIE'S OLD ORGAN
m
W
word for each, and handing them the small hymn-
books from which they were to sing !
"Come, for all things are now ready." That
was Mr. Wiltt)n's text. How still the mission-room
was, and how earnestly all the people listened to
the sermon ! The clergyman first spoke of the
marriage feast in the par b^j;* so carefully spread,
so kindly prepared, all ready there — and yet no
one would come ! There were excuses on all sides,
every one was too busy or too idle to attend to the
invitation ; no one was ready to obey that gracious
"Come."
And then Mr. Wilton spoke of Jesus, and how
He had made all things ready for us ; how pardon
is ready and peace is ready ; the Father's arms ready
to receive us ; the Father's love ready to welcome
us; a home in heaven ready prepared for us.
That, he said, was God's part of the matter.
"And what, my dear friends," he went on, "is
our part? Come; *come, for all things are now
ready. * Come ; you have only to come and take ;
you have only to receive this love. Come, sin-
stained soul ; come, weary one; 'come, for all things
are now ready. ' JVow ready. There is a great
deal in that word ''now. It means to-night — this
very Sunday ; not next year, or next week ; not to-
morrow, but now — all things are now ready. God
has done all He can, He can do no more, and He
says to you, 'Come!' Will you not come? Are
God's good things not worth having ? Would you
•' HOME, SWEET HOME'' A T LAST
121
not like to lie down to sleep feeling that you were
lorgiven ? Would you not like one day to sit down
to the marriage supper of the Lamb ?
"Oh, what a day that will be !" said Mr. Wilton^
as he ended his serm.on. "St. John caught a
glimpse of its glory amidst the wonderful sights he
was permitted to see. And so important was it, so
good, so specially beautiful, that the angel seems
to have stopped him, that St. John might write it
down at once : Wait a minute, don't go any farther,
take out your book and make a note of that —
* Write, Blessed are they which are called unto the
marriage supper of the Lamb. '
^^ Are you one of those blessed ones?" asked the
clergyman. "Are you washed in the blood of the
Lamb? Will you sit down to that supper? Have
you a right to enter into 'Home, sweet Home'?
I know not what is your answer to these questions.
But if you cannot answer me now, how will you in
that day answer the Great Searcher of hearts?"
And with this question the sermon ended, and the
congregation left ; those of them who had known
Mr. Wilton still lingering behind, to shake hands
with him, and to get a parting word of counsel or
comfort.
Christie walked home by the clergyman's side.
"And now, Christie," said Mr. Wilton, "do
you think you can be ready to start with me to-
morrow morning at eight o'clock?"
"To start with you, sir?" repeated Christie.
122
CffRlSTlE'S OLD ORGAN
"'"^es, Christie; you have had hard work lately,
and I have asked leave from Mr. Villiers to take
you home with me, that you may have a little
country air and quiet rest. I am sure it will not be
lost time, Christie ; you will have time for quiet
reading and prayer, and you will be able to gain
strength and freshness for future work. Well, do
you think you can oe ready in time?"
Christie thought there was no fear of his be'ng
late. He thanked Mr. Wilton with a voice full of
feeling, for he had sometimes longed very much for
a little pause in his busy life.
So the next day found Christie and Mr. Wilton
rapidly traveling towards the quiet country village
in which Mr. Wilton's church was to be found.
What was the result of that visit may be gathered
from the following extract, taken from a letter writ-
ten by Christie to Mr. Wilton some months later :
*'I promised you that I would let you know about
our little home. It is, I think, one of the happiest
to be found in this world. I shall always bless
God that I came to your village, and met my dear
little wife.
"At last I have a 'Home, sweet Home' of my
own. We are so happy together ! When I come
home from my work I always see her watching for
me, and she has everything ready. And the even-
ings we spend together are very quiet and peace-
ful. Nellie likes to hear about all my visits dur-
ing the day, and the poor people are alread}' so fond
"HOME, SWEET HOME ''AT LAST
128
of her they come to her in all their troubles. And
we find it such a comfort to be able to pray together
for those in whom we are interested, and together
to take them to the Savior.
'' Our little home is so bright and cheerful ! I wish
you could have seen it on the evening on which
we arrived. Mrs. Villiers had made all ready for
us, and with her own hand had put on the tea-table
a lovely bunch of snowdrops and dark myrtle
leaves. And I need not tell you that they reminded
me o£ those which she had given me when she was
little Miss Mabel, and when she taught me that
prayer which I have never forgotten: 'Wash me,
and I shall be whiter than snow.'
"And now, dear Mr. Wilton, you may think of
Nellie and me as living together in love and hap-
piness in the dear little earthly home, yet still look-
ing forward to the eternal home above, our true,
our best; our brightest *home, sweet home. !'"
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