Part 9 (1/2)
”By George!” said the ranchman proudly. ”I wrote to your father to send you out here and we'd make a man of you, but it seems to me you are a man already,” he continued as Mary Wright poured forth the story of their rescue.
”No, I am not a man,” said Henry to his uncle, as he flushed with pride at the hearty praise of these men. ”I am just a--”
”Just a what?” asked the conductor as the boy hesitated.
”Why, just a Boy Scout,” answered Henry.
LOOKING INTO THE MANGER
_A Christmas Meditation_
Christmas morning, the day we celebrate as the anniversary of the birth of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, in the obscure, little hill town of Bethlehem in the far-off Judaean land, over nineteen hundred years ago!
It is said:
”When beggars die, there are no comets seen: The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.”
What is true of the pa.s.sing of kings is perhaps more true of their coming; yet in this birth are singular contradictions. The Child was born a beggar. There lacks no touch which even imagination could supply to indicate the meanness of His earthly condition. Homeless, His mother, save for the stable of the public inn--and words can hardly describe any place more unsuited--was shelterless, unprotected, in that hour of travail pain.
I love to let my imagination dwell upon that scene. Sometimes I think wayfarers may have gathered in the tavern hard by and with music and play sought to while away the hours as travellers have from time immemorial. Perhaps in some pause in their merriment, a strange cry of anguish, borne by the night wind from the rude shelter without, may have stopped their revelry for a moment and one may have asked of another:
”What is that?”
The servant of the house who stood obsequious to promote their pleasure may have answered apologetically:
”It is the cry of a woman of the people in travail in the inn yard.”
I can fancy their indifference to the answer, or I can hear perhaps the rude jest, or the vulgar quip, with which such an announcement may have been received, as the play or the music went on again.
Oh, yes, the world in solemn stillness lay, doubtless, that winter night, but not the people in it. They pursued their several vocations as usual. They loved or they hated, they worked or they played, they hoped or they despaired, they dreamed or they achieved, just as they had done throughout the centuries, just as they have done since that day, just as they will do far into the future; although their little G.o.d came to them, as never He came before, in the stable in the Bethlehem hills that night.
And yet, had they but cast their eyes upward like the wise men--it is always your wise man who casts his eyes upward--they, too, might have seen the star that blazed overhead. It was placed so high above the earth that all men everywhere could see to which spot on the surface it pointed. Or, had they been devout men, they would have listened for heavenly voices--it is always your devout man who tries to hear other things than the babble of the Babel in which he lives--they, too, could have heard the angelic chorus like the shepherds in the fields and on the hillsides that frosty night.
For the heavens did blaze forth the birth of the Child. Not with the thunder of guns, not with the blare of trumpets, not with the beating of drums, not with the lighting of castle, village, and town, the kindling of beacons upon the far-flung hills, the cry of fast-riding messengers through the night, and the loud acclaim of thousands which greet the coming of an earthly king, was He welcomed; but by the still s.h.i.+ning of a silent star and by the ineffable and transcendent voices of an Angel Choir.
How long did the Shepherds listen to that chorus? How long did it ring over the hills and far away? Whither went the Wise Men? Into what dim distance vanished the star?
”Where are the roses of yesterday?
What has become of last year's snow?”
And the residuum of it all was a little Baby held to a woman's breast in a miserable hovel in the most forlorn and detested corner of the world.
And yet to-day and at this hour, and at every hour during the twenty-four, men are looking into that chamber; men are bowing to that Child and His mother, and even that mother is at the feet of the Child.
From the snow peaks of the North land, ”from Greenland's icy mountains to India's coral strand,” and on and on through all the burning tropics to the companion ice of the other pole, the antarctic, and girdling the world from east to west as well, the adoration continues. It comes alike from the world's n.o.blest, from the world's highest, from the world's truest, from the world's kindest, from the world's poorest, from the world's humblest, from the world's best.
Do not even the soldiers in the trenches upon the far-flung battle lines pause to listen, look to see as for a moment dies away the cannonade? Do not even the sailors of war and trade peer across the tossing waters of the great deep, longing for a truce of G.o.d if only for an hour upon this winter morning?
[Ill.u.s.tration: ”The world bows down to a Mother and her Child--and the Mother herself is at the feet of the Child.”]
Yes, they all look into the manger as they look upon the cross and if only for an instant this war reddened planet comes to ”_see and believe_.” What keen vision saw in the Baby the Son of G.o.d and the Son of Man? What simple faith can see these things in Him now? ”_Let us now go even unto Bethlehem and see this thing which is come to pa.s.s_.”