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+Project Gutenberg's Joel: A Boy of Galilee, by Annie Fellows Johnston
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Joel: A Boy of Galilee
+
+Author: Annie Fellows Johnston
+
+Illustrator: L. J. Bridgman
+
+Release Date: March 23, 2012 [EBook #39231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOEL: A BOY OF GALILEE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Emmy and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Cover]
+
+
+
+
+JOEL: A BOY OF GALILEE.
+
+
+
+
+Works of
+
+ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON
+
+
+The Little Colonel Series
+
+(_Trade Mark, Reg. U. S. Pat. Of._)
+
+Each one vol., large 12mo, cloth, illustrated
+
+ The Little Colonel Stories $1.50
+ (Containing in one volume the three
+ stories, "The Little Colonel," "The
+ Giant Scissors," and "Two Little
+ Knights of Kentucky.")
+ The Little Colonel's House Party 1.50
+ The Little Colonel's Holidays 1.50
+ The Little Colonel's Hero 1.50
+ The Little Colonel at Boarding-School 1.50
+ The Little Colonel in Arizona 1.50
+ The Little Colonel's Christmas Vacation 1.50
+ The Little Colonel: Maid of Honor 1.50
+ The Little Colonel's Knight Comes Riding 1.50
+ Mary Ware: The Little Colonel's Chum 1.50
+ Mary Ware in Texas 1.50
+ Mary Ware's Promised Land 1.50
+ The above 12 vols., _boxed_, as a set 18.00
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Little Colonel Good Times Book 1.50
+ The Little Colonel Doll Book--First Series 1.50
+ The Little Colonel Doll Book--Second Series 1.50
+
+
+Illustrated Holiday Editions
+
+Each one vol., small quarto, cloth, illustrated, and printed in color
+
+ The Little Colonel $1.25
+ The Giant Scissors 1.25
+ Two Little Knights of Kentucky 1.25
+ Big Brother 1.25
+
+
+Cosy Corner Series
+
+Each one vol., thin 12mo, cloth, illustrated
+
+ The Little Colonel $.50
+ The Giant Scissors .50
+ Two Little Knights of Kentucky .50
+ Big Brother .50
+ Ole Mammy's Torment .50
+ The Story of Dago .50
+ Cicely .50
+ Aunt 'Liza's Hero .50
+ The Quilt that Jack Built .50
+ Flip's "Islands of Providence" .50
+ Mildred's Inheritance .50
+
+
+Other Books
+
+ Joel: A Boy of Galilee $1.50
+ In the Desert of Waiting Net .50
+ The Three Weavers Net .50
+ Keeping Tryst Net .50
+ The Legend of the Bleeding Heart Net .50
+ The Rescue of the Princess Winsome Net .50
+ The Jester's Sword Net .50
+ Asa Holmes 1.00
+ Travelers Five Along Life's Highway 1.25
+
+ THE PAGE COMPANY
+ 53 Beacon Street Boston, Mass.
+
+[Illustration: "'THEN TAKE YOURSELF OUT OF MY SIGHT FOR EVER'"
+
+ (_See page 96_)]
+
+
+
+
+_NEW ILLUSTRATED EDITION_
+
+JOEL: A BOY OF GALILEE
+
+By
+
+ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON
+
+ Author of "The Little Colonel Series," "Big Brother,"
+ "Ole Mammy's Torment," "Asa Holmes," etc.
+
+ With Pictures by L. J. BRIDGMAN
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ BOSTON
+ THE PAGE COMPANY
+ PUBLISHERS
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1895_
+ BY ROBERTS BROTHERS
+
+ _Copyright, 1904_
+ BY THE PAGE COMPANY
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+ Eleventh Impression, October, 1910
+ Twelfth Impression, March, 1915
+ Thirteenth Impression, March, 1918
+
+ THE COLONIAL PRESS
+ C. H. SIMONDS CO., BOSTON, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHER'S PREFACE
+
+
+IN this volume, it has been the purpose of the author to present to
+children, through "Joel," as accurate a picture of the times of the
+Christ as has been given to older readers through "Ben Hur." With this
+in view, the customs of the private and public life of the Jews, the
+temple service with its sacerdotal rites, and the minute observances of
+the numerous holidays have been studied so carefully that the
+descriptions have passed the test of the most critical inspection. An
+eminent rabbi pronounces them correct in every detail.
+
+While the story is that of an ordinary boy, living among shepherds and
+fishermen, it touches at every point the gospel narrative, making Joel,
+in a natural and interesting way, a witness to the miracles, the death,
+and the resurrection of the Nazarene.
+
+It was with the deepest reverence that the task was undertaken, and the
+fact that the little book is accomplishing its mission is evinced not
+only by the approval accorded its first editions by so many, from Bible
+students to bishops, but by the boys and girls here and in distant
+lands.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ "'THEN TAKE YOURSELF OUT OF MY SIGHT FOR
+ EVER'" (_See page 96_) _Frontispiece_
+
+ "HE LOOKED DOWN AT PHINEAS, AND SMILED
+ BLISSFULLY" 34
+
+ "'I PEEPED OUT 'TWEEN 'E WOSE-VINES'" 82
+
+ "NOT A WORD WAS SAID" 104
+
+ "'WE TALKED LATE'" 139
+
+ "'YOU BUT MOCK ME, BOY'" 184
+
+ "A DARK FIGURE WENT SKULKING OUT INTO THE
+ NIGHT" 203
+
+ "'THE STONE IS GONE!'" 233
+
+
+
+
+JOEL: A BOY OF GALILEE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+IT was market day in Capernaum. Country people were coming in from the
+little villages among the hills of Galilee, with fresh butter and eggs.
+Fishermen held out great strings of shining perch and carp, just dipped
+up from the lake beside the town. Vine-dressers piled their baskets with
+tempting grapes, and boys lazily brushed the flies from the dishes of
+wild honey, that they had gone into the country before day-break to
+find.
+
+A ten-year-old girl pushed her way through the crowded market-place,
+carrying her baby brother in her arms, and scolding another child, who
+clung to her skirts.
+
+"Hurry, you little snail!" she said to him. "There's a camel caravan
+just stopped by the custom-house. Make haste, if you want to see it!"
+
+Their bare feet picked their way quickly over the stones, down to the
+hot sand of the lake shore. The children crept close to the shaggy
+camels, curious to see what they carried in their huge packs. But before
+they were made to kneel, so that the custom-house officials could
+examine the loads, the boy gave an exclamation of surprise.
+
+"Look, Jerusha! Look!" he cried, tugging at her skirts. "What's that?"
+
+Farther down the line, came several men carrying litters. On each one
+was a man badly wounded, judging by the many bandages that wrapped him.
+
+Jerusha pushed ahead to hear what had happened. One of the drivers was
+telling a tax-gatherer.
+
+"In that last rocky gorge after leaving Samaria," said the man, "we were
+set upon by robbers. They swarmed down the cliffs, and fought as
+fiercely as eagles. These men, who were going on ahead, had much gold
+with them. They lost it all, and might have been killed, if we had not
+come up behind in such numbers. That poor fellow there can hardly live,
+I think, he was beaten so badly."
+
+The children edged up closer to the motionless form on the litter. It
+was badly bruised and blood-stained, and looked already lifeless.
+
+"Let's go, Jerusha," whispered the boy, whimpering and pulling at her
+hand. "I don't like to look at him."
+
+With the heavy baby still in her arms, and the other child tagging
+after, she started slowly back towards the market-place.
+
+"I'll tell you what we'll do," she exclaimed. "Let's go up and get the
+other children, and play robbers. We never did do that before. It will
+be lots of fun."
+
+There was a cry of welcome as Jerusha appeared again in the
+market-place, where a crowd of children were playing tag, regardless of
+the men and beasts they bumped against. They were all younger than
+herself, and did not resent her important air when she called, "Come
+here! I know a better game than that!"
+
+She told them what she had just seen and heard down at the beach, and
+drew such a vivid picture of the attack, that the children were ready
+for anything she might propose.
+
+"Now we'll choose sides," she said. "I'll be a rich merchant coming up
+from Jerusalem with my family and servants, and the rest of you can be
+robbers. We'll go along with our goods, and you pounce out on us as we
+go by. You may take the baby as a prisoner if you like," she added, with
+a mischievous grin. "I'm tired of carrying him."
+
+A boy sitting near by on a door-step, jumped up eagerly. "Let me play,
+too, Jerusha!" he cried. "I'll be one of the robbers. I know just the
+best places to hide!"
+
+The girl paused an instant in her choosing to say impatiently, although
+not meaning to be unkind, "Oh, no, Joel! We do not want you. You're too
+lame to run. You can't play with us!"
+
+The bright, eager look died out of the boy's face, and an angry light
+shone in his eyes. He pressed his lips together hard, and sat down again
+on the step.
+
+There was a patter of many bare feet as the children raced away. Their
+voices sounded fainter and fainter, till they were lost entirely in the
+noise of the busy street.
+
+Usually, Joel found plenty to amuse and interest him here. He liked to
+watch the sleepy donkeys with their loads of fresh fruit and vegetables.
+He liked to listen to the men as they cried their wares, or chatted over
+the bargains with their customers. There was always something new to be
+seen in the stalls and booths. There was always something new to be
+heard in the scraps of conversation that came to him where he sat.
+
+Down this street there sometimes came long caravans; for this was "the
+highway to the sea,"--the road that led from Egypt to Syria. Strange,
+dusky faces sometimes passed this way; richly dressed merchant princes
+with their priceless stuffs from beyond the Nile; heavy loads of
+Babylonian carpets; pearls from Ceylon, and rich silks for the court of
+the wicked Herodias, in the town beyond. Fisherman and sailor, rabbi and
+busy workman passed in an endless procession.
+
+Sometimes a Roman soldier from the garrison came by with ringing step
+and clanking sword. Then Joel would start up to look after the erect
+figure, with a longing gaze that told more plainly than words, his
+admiration of such strength and symmetry.
+
+But this morning the crowd gave him a strange, lonely feeling,--a hungry
+longing for companionship.
+
+Two half-grown boys passed by on their way to the lake, with fish nets
+slung over their shoulders. He knew the larger one,--a rough,
+kind-hearted fellow who had once taken him in his boat across the lake.
+He gave Joel a careless, good-natured nod as he passed. A moment after
+he felt a timid pull at the fish net he was carrying, and turned to see
+the little cripple's appealing face.
+
+"Oh, Dan!" he cried eagerly. "Are you going out on the lake this
+morning? Could you take me with you?"
+
+The boy hesitated. Whatever kindly answer he may have given, was rudely
+interrupted by his companion, whom Joel had never seen before.
+
+"Oh, no!" he said roughly. "We don't want anybody limping along after
+us. You can't come, Jonah; you would bring us bad luck."
+
+"My name isn't Jonah!" screamed the boy, angrily clinching his fists.
+"It's Joel!"
+
+"Well, it is all the same," his tormentor called back, with a coarse
+laugh. "You're a Jonah, any way."
+
+There were tears in the boy's eyes this time, as he dragged himself back
+again to the step.
+
+"I hate everybody in the world!" he said in a hissing sort of whisper.
+"I hate'm! I hate'm!"
+
+A stranger passing by turned for a second look at the little cripple's
+sensitive, refined face. A girlishly beautiful face it would have been,
+were it not for the heavy scowl that darkened it.
+
+Joel pulled the ends of his head-dress round to hide his crooked back,
+and drew the loose robe he wore over his twisted leg.
+
+Life seemed very bitter to him just then. He would gladly have changed
+places with the heavily laden donkey going by.
+
+"I wish I were dead," he thought moodily. "Then I would not ache any
+more, and I could not hear when people call me names!"
+
+Beside the door where he sat was a stand where tools and hardware were
+offered for sale. A man who had been standing there for some time,
+selecting nails from the boxes placed before him, and had heard all that
+passed, spoke to him.
+
+"Joel, my lad, may I ask your help for a little while?" The friendly
+question seemed to change the whole atmosphere.
+
+Joel drew his hands across his eyes to clear them of the blur of tears
+he was too proud to let fall, and then stood up respectfully. "Yes,
+Rabbi Phineas, what would you have me to do?"
+
+The carpenter gathered up some strips of lumber in one hand, and his
+hammer and saws in the other.
+
+"I have my hands too full to carry these nails," he answered. "If you
+could bring them for me, it would be a great service."
+
+If the man had offered him pity, Joel would have fiercely resented it.
+His sensitive nature appreciated the unspoken sympathy, the fine tact
+that soothed his pride by asking a service of him, instead of seeking to
+render one.
+
+He could not define the feeling, but he gratefully took up the bag of
+nails, and limped along beside his friend to the carpenter's house at
+the edge of the town. He had never been there before, although he met
+the man daily in the market-place, and long ago had learned to look
+forward to his pleasant greeting; it was so different from most
+people's. Somehow the morning always seemed brighter after he had met
+him.
+
+The little whitewashed house stood in the shade of two great fig-trees
+near the beach. A cool breeze from the Galilee lifted the leaves, and
+swayed the vines growing around the low door.
+
+Joel, tired by the long walk, was glad to throw himself on the grass in
+the shade. It was so still and quiet here, after the noise of the street
+he had just left.
+
+An old hen clucked around the door-step with a brood of downy, yellow
+chickens. Doves cooed softly, somewhere out of sight. The carpenter's
+bench stood under one of the trees, with shavings and chips all around
+it. Two children were playing near it, building houses of the scattered
+blocks; one of them, a black-eyed, sturdy boy of five, kept on playing.
+The other, a little girl, not yet three, jumped up and followed her
+father into the house. Her curls gleamed like gold as she ran through
+the sunshine. She glanced at the stranger with deep-blue eyes so like
+her father's that Joel held out his hand.
+
+"Come and tell me your name," he said coaxingly. But she only shook the
+curls all over her dimpled face, and hurried into the house.
+
+"It's Ruth," said the boy, deigning to look up. "And mine is Jesse, and
+my mother's is Abigail, and my father's is Phineas, and my grandfather's
+is--"
+
+How far back he would have gone in his genealogy, Joel could not guess;
+for just then his father came out with a cool, juicy melon, and Jesse
+hurried forward to get his share.
+
+"How good it is!" sighed Joel, as the first refreshing mouthful slipped
+down his thirsty throat. "And how cool and pleasant it is out here. I
+did not know there was such a peaceful spot in all Capernaum."
+
+"Didn't you always live here?" asked the inquisitive Jesse.
+
+"No, I was born in Jerusalem. I was to have been a priest," he said
+sadly.
+
+"Well, why didn't you be one then," persisted the child, with his mouth
+full of melon.
+
+Joel glanced down at his twisted leg, and said nothing.
+
+"Why?" repeated the boy.
+
+Phineas, who had gone back to his work-bench, looked up kindly. "You ask
+too many questions, my son. No one can be a priest who is maimed or
+blemished in any way. Some sad accident must have befallen our little
+friend, and it may be painful for him to talk about it."
+
+Jesse asked no more questions with his tongue; but his sharp, black eyes
+were fixed on Joel like two interrogation points.
+
+"I do not mind telling about it," said Joel, sitting up straighter.
+"Once when I was not much older than you, just after my mother died, my
+father brought me up to this country from Jerusalem, to visit my Aunt
+Leah.
+
+"I used to play down here by the lake, with my cousins, in the
+fishermen's boats. There was a boy that came to the beach sometimes, a
+great deal larger than I,--a dog of a Samaritan,--who pulled my hair
+and threw sand in my eyes. He was so much stronger than I, that I could
+not do anything to him but call him names. But early one morning he was
+swimming in the lake. I hid his clothes in the oleander bushes that
+fringe the water. Oh, but he was angry! I wanted him to be. But I had to
+keep away from the lake after that.
+
+"One day some older children took me to the hills back of the town to
+gather almonds. This Rehum followed us. I had strayed away from the
+others a little distance, and was stooping to put the nuts in my basket,
+when he slipped up behind me. How he beat me! I screamed so that the
+other children came running back to me. When he saw them coming, he gave
+me a great push that sent me rolling over a rocky bank. It was not very
+high, but there were sharp stones below.
+
+"They thought I was dead when they picked me up. It was months before I
+could walk at all; and I can never be any better than I am now. Just as
+my father was about to take me back to Jerusalem, he took a sudden
+fever, and died. So I was left, a poor helpless burden for my aunt to
+take care of. It has been six years since then."
+
+Joel threw himself full length on the grass, and scowled up at the sky.
+
+"Where is that boy that hurt you," asked Jesse.
+
+"Rehum?" questioned Joel. "I wish I knew," he muttered fiercely. "Oh,
+how I hate him! I can never be a priest as my father intended. I can
+never serve in the beautiful temple with the white pillars and golden
+gates. I can never be like other people, but must drag along, deformed
+and full of pain as long as I live. And it's all his fault!"
+
+A sudden gleam lit up the boy's eyes, as lightning darts through a
+storm-cloud.
+
+"But I shall have my revenge!" he added, clinching his fists. "I cannot
+die till I have made him feel at least a tithe of what I have suffered.
+'An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth!' That is the least that can
+satisfy me. Oh, you cannot know how I long for that time! Often I lie
+awake late into the night, planning my revenge. Then I forget how my
+back hurts and my leg pains; then I forget all the names I have been
+called, and the taunts that make my life a burden. But they all come
+back with the daylight; and I store them up and add them to his account.
+For everything he has made me suffer, I swear he shall pay for it
+four-fold in his own sufferings!"
+
+Ruth shrank away, frightened by the wild, impassioned boy who sat up,
+angrily staring in front of him with eyes that saw nothing of the sweet,
+green-clad world around him. The face of his enemy blotted out all the
+sunny landscape. One murderous purpose filled him, mind and soul.
+
+Nothing was said for a little while. The doves as before cooed of peace,
+and Phineas began a steady tap-tap with his hammer.
+
+A pleasant-faced woman came out of the door with a water-jar on her
+head, and passed down the path to the public well. She gave Joel a
+friendly greeting in passing.
+
+"Wait, mother!" lisped Ruth, as she ran after her. The woman turned to
+smile at the little one, and held out her hand. Her dress, of some soft,
+cotton material, hung in long flowing folds. It was a rich blue color,
+caught at the waist with a white girdle. The turban wound around her
+dark hair was white also, and so was the veil she pushed aside far
+enough to show a glimpse of brown eyes and red cheeks. She wore a broad
+silver bracelet on the bare arm which was raised to hold the water-jar,
+and the rings in her ears and talismans on her neck were of quaintly
+wrought silver.
+
+"I did not know it was so late," said Joel, rising to his feet. "Time
+passes so fast here."
+
+"Nay, do not go," said Phineas. "It is a long walk back to your home,
+and the sun is very hot. Stay and eat dinner with us."
+
+Joel hesitated; but the invitation was repeated so cordially, that he
+let Jesse pull him down on the grass again.
+
+"Now I'll tickle your lips with this blade of grass," said the child.
+"See how long you can keep from laughing."
+
+When Abigail came back with the water, both the boys were laughing as
+heartily as if there had never been an ache or pain in the world. She
+smiled at them approvingly, as she led the way into the house.
+
+Joel looked around with much curiosity. It was like most of the other
+houses of its kind in the town. There was only one large square room, in
+which the family cooked, ate, and slept; but on every side it showed
+that Phineas had left traces of his skilful hands.
+
+There was a tiny window cut in one wall; most of the houses of this
+description had none, but depended on the doorway for light and air.
+Several shelves around the walls held the lamp and the earthenware
+dishes. The chest made to hold the rugs and cushions which they spread
+down at night to sleep on, was unusually large and ornamental. A broom,
+a handmill, and a bushel stood in one corner.
+
+Near the door, a table which Phineas had made, stood spread for the
+mid-day meal.
+
+There was broiled fish on one of the platters, beans and barley bread, a
+dish of honey, and a pitcher of milk. The fare was just the same that
+Joel was accustomed to in his uncle's house; but something made the
+simple meal seem like a banquet. It may have been that the long walk had
+made him hungrier than usual, or it may have been because he was treated
+as the honored guest, instead of a child tolerated through charity.
+
+He watched his host carefully, as he poured the water over his hands
+before eating, and asked a blessing on the food.
+
+"He does not keep the law as strictly as my Uncle Laban," was his inward
+comment. "He asked only one blessing, and Uncle Laban blesses every kind
+of food separately. But he must be a good man, even if he is not so
+strict a Pharisee as my uncle, for he is kinder than any one I ever knew
+before."
+
+It was wonderful how much Joel had learned, in his eleven short years,
+of the Law. His aunt's husband had grown to manhood in Jerusalem, and,
+unlike the simple Galileans among whom he now lived, tried to observe
+its most detailed rules.
+
+The child heard them discussed continually, till he felt he could
+neither eat, drink, nor dress, except by these set rules. He could not
+play like other children, and being so much with older people had made
+him thoughtful and observant.
+
+He had learned to read very early; and hour after hour he spent in the
+house of Rabbi Amos, the most learned man of the town, poring over his
+rolls of scriptures. Think of a childhood without a picture, or a
+story-book! All that there was to read were these old records of Jewish
+history.
+
+The old man had taken a fancy to him, finding him an appreciative
+listener and an apt pupil. So Joel was allowed to come whenever he
+pleased, and take out the yellow rolls of parchment from their velvet
+covers.
+
+He was never perfectly happy except at these times, when he was reading
+these old histories of his country's greatness. How he enjoyed chasing
+the armies of the Philistines, and fighting over again the battles of
+Israel's kings! Many a tale he stored away in his busy brain to be
+repeated to the children gathered around the public fountain in the cool
+of the evening.
+
+It mattered not what character he told them of,--priest or prophet,
+judge or king,--the picture was painted in life-like colors by this
+patriotic little hero-worshipper.
+
+Here and at home he heard so many discussions about what was lawful and
+what was not, that he was constantly in fear of breaking one of the many
+rules, even in as simple a duty as washing a cup.
+
+So he watched his host closely till the meal was over, finding that in
+the observance of many customs, he failed to measure up to his uncle's
+strict standard.
+
+Phineas went back to his work after dinner. He was greatly interested in
+Joel, and, while he sawed and hammered, kept a watchful eye on him. He
+was surprised at the boy's knowledge. More than once he caught himself
+standing with an idle tool in hand, as he listened to some story that
+Joel was telling to Jesse.
+
+After a while he laid down his work and leaned against the bench. "What
+do you find to do all day, my lad?" he asked, abruptly.
+
+"Nothing," answered Joel, "after I have recited my lessons to Rabbi
+Amos."
+
+"Does your aunt never give you any tasks to do at home?"
+
+"No. I think she does not like to have me in her sight any more than she
+is obliged to. She is always kind to me, but she doesn't love me. She
+only pities me. I hate to be pitied. There is not a single one in the
+world who really loves me."
+
+His lips quivered, but he winked back the tears. Phineas seemed lost in
+thought a few minutes; then he looked up. "You are a Levite," he said
+slowly, "so of course you could always be supported without needing to
+learn a trade. Still you would be a great deal happier, in my opinion,
+if you had something to keep you busy. If you like, I will teach you to
+be a carpenter. There are a great many things you might learn to make
+well, and, by and by, it would be a source of profit to you. There is no
+bread so bitter as the bread of dependence, as you may learn when you
+are older."
+
+"Oh, Rabbi Phineas!" cried Joel. "Do you mean that I may come here every
+day? It is too good to be true!"
+
+"Yes; if you will promise to stick to it until you have mastered the
+trade. If you are as quick to learn with your hands as you have been
+with your head, I shall have reason to be proud of such a pupil."
+
+Joel's face flushed with pleasure, and he sprang up quickly, saying,
+"May I begin right now? Oh, I'll try _so_ hard to please you!"
+
+Phineas laid a soft pine board on the bench, and began to mark a line
+across it with a piece of red chalk.
+
+"Well, you may see how straight a cut you can make through this plank."
+
+He picked up a saw, and ran his fingers lightly along its sharp teeth.
+But he paused in the act of handing it to Joel, to ask, "You are sure,
+now, that your uncle and aunt will consent to such an arrangement?"
+
+"Yes indeed!" was the emphatic answer. "They will be glad enough to have
+me out of the way, and learning something useful."
+
+The saw cut slowly through the wood; for the weak little hand was a
+careful one, and the boy was determined not to swerve once from the
+line. He smiled with satisfaction as the pieces fell apart, showing a
+clean, straight edge.
+
+"Well done!" said Phineas, kindly. "Now let me see you drive a nail."
+Made bold by his first success, Joel pounded away vigorously, but the
+hammer slipped more than once, and his unpractised fingers ached with
+the blows that he had aimed at the nail's head.
+
+"You'll soon learn," said Phineas, with an encouraging pat on the boy's
+shoulder. "Gather up those odds and ends under the bench. When you've
+sawed them into equal lengths, I'll show you how to make a box."
+
+Joel bent over his work with almost painful intensity. He fairly held
+his breath, as he made the measurements. He gripped the saw as if his
+life depended on the strength of his hold. Phineas smiled at his
+earnestness.
+
+"Be careful, my lad," he said. "You will soon wear out at that rate."
+
+It seemed to Joel that there never had been such a short afternoon. He
+had stopped to rest several times, when Phineas had insisted upon it;
+but this new work had all the fascination of an interesting game. The
+trees threw giant shadows across the grass, when he finally laid his
+tools aside. His back ached with so much unusual exercise, and he was
+very tired.
+
+"Rabbi Phineas," he asked gently, after a long pause, "what makes you so
+good to me? What makes you so different from other people? While I am
+with you, I feel like I want to be good. Other people seem to rub me the
+wrong way, and make me cross and hateful; then I feel like I'd rather
+be wicked than not. Why this afternoon, I've scarcely thought of Rehum
+at all. I forgot at times that I am lame. When you talk to me, I feel
+like I did that day Dan took me out on the lake. It seemed a different
+kind of a world,--all blue sky and smooth water. I felt if I could stay
+out there all the time, where it was so quiet and comforting, that I
+could not even hate Rehum as much as I do."
+
+A surprised, pleased look passed over the man's face. "Do I really make
+you feel that way, little one? Then I am indeed glad. Once when I was a
+young boy living in Nazareth, I had a playmate who had that influence
+over me and all the boys he played with. I never could be selfish and
+impatient when he was with me. His very presence rebuked such
+thoughts,--when we were children playing together, like my own two
+little ones there, and when we were older grown, working at the same
+bench. It has been many a long year since I left Nazareth, but I think
+of him daily. Even now, after our long separation, the thought of his
+blameless life inspires me to a higher living. Yes," he went on
+musingly, more to himself than the boy, "it was like music. Surely no
+white-robed priest in the holy temple ever offered up more acceptable
+praise than the perfect harmony of his daily life."
+
+Joel's lips trembled. "If I had ever had one real friend to care for
+me--not just pity me, you know--maybe I would have been different. But I
+have never had a single one since my father died."
+
+Phineas smiled, and held out his hand. "You have one now, my lad, never
+forget that."
+
+The strong brown hand closed in a warm grasp, and Joel drew it, with a
+grateful impulse, to his lips. Ruth came up with wondering eyes. She
+could not understand what had passed; but Joel's eyes were full of
+tears, and she vaguely felt that he needed comfort. She had a pet pigeon
+in her arms, that she carried everywhere with her.
+
+"Here," she lisped, holding out the snowy winged bird. "Boy, take it!
+Boy, keep it!"
+
+Joel looked up inquiringly at Phineas. "Take it," he said, in a low
+tone. "Let it be the omen of a happier life commencing for you."
+
+"I never had a pet of any kind before," said Joel, in delight, smoothing
+the white wings folded contentedly against his breast. "But she loves
+it so, I dislike to take it from her. How beautiful it is!"
+
+"My little Ruth is a born comforter," said Phineas, tossing her up in
+his arms. "Shall Joel take the pigeon home with him, little daughter?"
+
+"Yes," she answered, nodding her head. "Boy cried."
+
+"I'll name it 'Little Friend,'" said Joel, rising with it in his arms.
+"I'll take it home with me, and keep it until after the Sabbath, to make
+me feel sure that this day has not been just a dream; but I will bring
+it back next time I come. I can see it here every day, and it will be
+happier here. Oh, Rabbi Phineas, I can never thank you enough for this
+day!"
+
+It was a pitiful little figure that limped away homeward in the fading
+light, with the white pigeon in his arms.
+
+Looking anxiously up in the sky, Joel saw one star come twinkling out.
+The Sabbath would soon begin, and then he must not be found carrying
+even so much as this one poor little pigeon. The slightest burden would
+be unlawful.
+
+As he hurried on, the loud blast of a trumpet, blown from the roof of
+the synagogue, signalled the laborers in the fields to stop all work.
+He knew that very soon it would sound again, to call the town people
+from their tasks; and at the third blast, the Sabbath lamp would be
+lighted in every home.
+
+Fearful of his uncle's displeasure at his tardiness, he hurried
+painfully onward, to provide food and a resting-place for his "little
+friend" before the second sounding of the trumpet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+EARLY in the morning after the Sabbath, Joel was in his accustomed place
+in the market, waiting for his friend Phineas. His uncle had given a
+gruff assent, when he timidly asked his approval of the plan.
+
+The good Rabbi Amos was much pleased when he heard of the arrangement.
+"Thou hast been a faithful student," he said, kindly. "Thou knowest
+already more of the Law than many of thy elders. Now it will do thee
+good to learn the handicraft of Phineas. Remember, my son, 'the balm was
+created by God before the wound.' Work, that is as old as Eden, has been
+given us that we might forget the afflictions of this life that fleeth
+like a shadow. May the God of thy fathers give thee peace!"
+
+With the old man's benediction repeating itself like a solemn refrain in
+all his thoughts, Joel stood smoothing the pigeon in his arms, until
+Phineas had made his daily purchases. Then they walked on together in
+the cool of the morning, to the little white house under the fig-trees.
+Phineas was surprised at his pupil's progress. To be sure, the weak arms
+could lift little, the slender hands could attempt no large tasks. But
+the painstaking care he bestowed on everything he attempted, resulted in
+beautifully finished work. If there was an extra smooth polish to be put
+on some wood, or a delicate piece of joining to do, Joel's deft fingers
+seemed exactly suited to the task.
+
+Before the winter was over, he had made many pretty little articles of
+furniture for Abigail's use.
+
+"May I have these pieces of fine wood to use as I please?" he asked of
+Phineas, one day.
+
+"All but that largest strip," he answered. "What are you going to make?"
+
+"Something for Ruth's birthday. She will be three years old in a few
+weeks, Jesse says, and I want to make something for her to play with."
+
+"What are you going to make her?" inquired Jesse, from under the
+work-bench. "Let me see too."
+
+"Oh, I didn't know you were anywhere near," answered Joel, with a start
+of alarm.
+
+"Tell me!" begged Jesse.
+
+"Well, if you will promise to keep her out of the way while I am
+finishing it, and never say a word about it--"
+
+"I'll promise," said the child, solemnly. He had to clap his hand over
+his mouth a great many times in the next few weeks, to keep his secret
+from telling itself, and he watched admiringly while Joel carved and
+polished and cut.
+
+One of the neighbors had come in to talk with Abigail the day he
+finished it, and as the children were down on the beach, playing in the
+sand, he took it in the house to show to the women. It was a little
+table set with toy dishes, that he had carved out of wood,--plates and
+cups and platters, all complete.
+
+The visitor held up her hands with an exclamation of delight. After
+taking up each little highly polished dish to admire it separately, she
+said, "I know where you might get a great deal of money for such work.
+There is a rich Roman living near the garrison, who spends money like a
+lord. No price is too great for him to pay for anything that pleases his
+fancy. Why don't you take some up there, and offer them for sale?"
+
+"I believe I will," said Joel, after considering the matter. "I'll go
+just as soon as I can get them made."
+
+Ruth spread many a little feast under the fig-trees; but after the first
+birthday banquet, Jesse was her only guest. Joel was too busy making
+more dishes and another little table, to partake of them.
+
+The whole family were interested in his success. The day he went up to
+the great house near the garrison to offer them for sale, they waited
+anxiously for his return.
+
+"He's sold them! He's sold them!" cried Jesse, hopping from one foot to
+the other, as he saw Joel coming down the street empty-handed. Joel was
+hobbling along as fast as he could, his face beaming.
+
+"See how much money!" he cried, as he opened his hand to show a shining
+coin, stamped with the head of Cćsar. "And I have an order for two more.
+I'll soon have a fortune! The children liked the dishes so much,
+although they had the most beautiful toys I ever saw. They had images
+they called dolls. Some of them had white-kid faces, and were dressed as
+richly as queens. I wish Ruth had one."
+
+"The law forbids!" exclaimed Phineas. "Have you forgotten that it is
+written, 'Thou shalt not make any likeness of anything in the heavens
+above or the earth beneath, or the waters under the earth'? She is happy
+with what she has, and needs no strange idols of the heathen to play
+with."
+
+Joel made no answer; but he thought of the merry group of Roman children
+seated around the little table he had made, and wished again that Ruth
+had one of those gorgeously dressed dolls.
+
+Skill and strength were not all he gained by his winter's work; for some
+of the broad charity that made continual summer in the heart of Phineas
+crept into his own embittered nature. He grew less suspicious of those
+around him, and smiles came more easily now to his face than scowls.
+
+But the strong ambition of his life never left him for an instant. To
+all the rest of the world he might be a friend; to Rehum he could only
+be the most unforgiving of enemies.
+
+The thought that had given him most pleasure when the wealthy Roman had
+tossed him his first earnings, was not that his work could bring him
+money, but that the money could open the way for his revenge.
+
+That thought, like a dark undercurrent, gained depth and force as the
+days went by. As he saw how much he could do in spite of his lameness,
+he thought of how much more he might have accomplished, if he had been
+like other boys. It was a constant spur to his desire for revenge.
+
+One day Phineas laid aside his tools much earlier than usual, and
+without any explanation to his wondering pupil, went up into the town.
+
+When he returned, he nodded to his wife, who sat in the doorway
+spinning, and who had looked up inquiringly as he approached.
+
+"Yes, it's all arranged," he said to her. Then he turned to Joel to ask,
+"Did you ever ride on a camel, my boy?"
+
+"No, Rabbi," answered the boy, in surprise, wondering what was coming
+next.
+
+"Well, I have a day's journey to make to the hills in Upper Galilee. A
+camel caravan passes near the place where my business calls me, as it
+goes to Damascus. I seek to accompany it for protection. I go on foot,
+but I have made arrangements for you to ride one of the camels."
+
+"Oh, am I really to go, too?" gasped Joel, in delighted astonishment.
+"Oh, Rabbi Phineas! How did you ever think of asking me?"
+
+"You have not seemed entirely well, of late," was the answer. "I thought
+the change would do you good. I said nothing about it before, for I had
+no opportunity to see your uncle until this afternoon; and I did not
+want to disappoint you, in case he refused his permission."
+
+"And he really says I may go?" demanded the boy, eagerly.
+
+"Yes, the caravan moves in the morning, and we will go with it."
+
+There was little more work done that day. Joel was so full of
+anticipations of his journey that he scarcely knew what he was doing.
+Phineas was busy with preparations for the comfort of his little family
+during his absence, and went into town again.
+
+On his return he seemed strangely excited. Abigail, seeing something was
+amiss, watched him carefully, but asked no questions. He took a piece of
+timber that had been laid away for some especial purpose, and began
+sawing it into small bits.
+
+"Rabbi Phineas," ventured Joel, respectfully, "is that not the wood you
+charged me to save so carefully?"
+
+Phineas gave a start as he saw what he had done, and threw down his saw.
+
+"Truly," he said, smiling, "I am beside myself with the news I have
+heard. I just now walked ten cubits past my own house, unknowing where I
+was, so deeply was I thinking upon it. Abigail," he asked, "do you
+remember my friend in Nazareth whom I so often speak of,--the son of
+Joseph the carpenter? Last week he was bidden to a marriage in Cana. It
+happened, before the feasting was over, the supply of wine was
+exhausted, and the mortified host knew not what to do. Six great jars of
+stone had been placed in the room, to supply the guests with water for
+washing. _He changed that water into wine!_"
+
+"I cannot believe it!" answered Abigail, simply.
+
+"But Ezra ben Jared told me so. He was there, and drank of the wine,"
+insisted Phineas.
+
+"He could not have done it," said Abigail, "unless he were helped by the
+evil one, or unless he were a prophet. He is too good a man to ask help
+of the powers of darkness; and it is beyond belief that a son of Joseph
+should be a prophet."
+
+To this Phineas made no answer. His quiet thoughts were shaken out of
+their usual routine as violently as if by an earthquake.
+
+Joel thought more of the journey than he did of the miracle. It seemed
+to the impatient boy that the next day never would dawn. Many times in
+the night he wakened to hear the distant crowing of cocks. At last, by
+straining his eyes he could distinguish the green leaves of the vine on
+the lattice from the blue of the half-opened blossoms. By that token he
+knew it was near enough the morning for him to commence saying his first
+prayers.
+
+Dressing noiselessly, so as not to disturb the sleeping family, he
+slipped out of the house and down to the well outside the city-gate.
+Here he washed, and then ate the little lunch he had wrapped up the
+night before. A meagre little breakfast,--only a hard-boiled egg, a bit
+of fish, and some black bread. But the early hour and his excitement
+took away his appetite for even that little.
+
+Soon all was confusion around the well, as the noisy drivers gathered to
+water their camels, and make their preparations for the start.
+
+Joel shrunk away timidly to the edge of the crowd, fearful that his
+friend Phineas had overslept himself.
+
+In a few minutes he saw him coming with a staff in one hand, and a small
+bundle swinging from the other.
+
+Joel had one breathless moment of suspense as he was helped on to the
+back of the kneeling camel; one desperate clutch at the saddle as the
+huge animal plunged about and rose to its feet. Then he looked down at
+Phineas, and smiled blissfully.
+
+[Illustration: "HE LOOKED DOWN AT PHINEAS, AND SMILED BLISSFULLY"]
+
+Oh, the delight of that slow easy motion! The joy of being carried along
+without pain or effort! Who could realize how much it meant to the
+little fellow whose halting steps had so long been taken in weariness
+and suffering?
+
+Swinging along in the cool air, so far above the foot-passengers, it
+seemed to him that he looked down upon a new earth. Blackbirds flew
+along the roads, startled by their passing. High overhead, a lark had
+not yet finished her morning song. Lambs bleated in the pastures, and
+the lowing of herds sounded on every hill-side.
+
+Not a sight or sound escaped the boy; and all the morning he rode on
+without speaking, not a care in his heart, not a cloud on his horizon.
+
+At noon they stopped in a little grove of olive-trees where a cool
+spring gurgled out from the rocks.
+
+Phineas spread out their lunch at a little distance from the others; and
+they ate it quickly, with appetites sharpened by the morning's travel.
+Afterwards Joel stretched himself out on the ground to rest, and was
+asleep almost as soon as his eyelids could shut out the noontide glare
+of the sun from his tired eyes.
+
+When he awoke, nearly an hour afterward, he heard voices near him in
+earnest conversation. Raising himself on his elbow, he saw Phineas at a
+little distance, talking to an old man who had ridden one of the
+foremost camels.
+
+They must have been talking of the miracle, for the old man, as he
+stroked his long white beard, was saying, "But men are more wont to be
+astonished at the sun's eclipse, than at his daily rising. Look, my
+friend!"
+
+He pointed to a wild grape-vine clinging to a tree near by. "Do you see
+those bunches of half-grown grapes? There is a constant miracle. Day by
+day, the water of the dew and rain is being changed into the wine of the
+grape. Soil and sunshine are turning into fragrant juices. Yet you feel
+no astonishment."
+
+"No," assented Phineas; "for it is by the hand of God it is done."
+
+"Why may not this be also?" said the old man. "Even this miracle at the
+marriage feast in Cana?"
+
+Phineas started violently. "What!" he cried. "Do you think it possible
+that this friend of mine is the One to be sent of God?"
+
+"Is not this the accepted time for the coming of Israel's Messiah?"
+answered the old man, solemnly. "Is it not meet that he should herald
+his presence by miracles and signs and wonders?"
+
+Joel lay down again to think over what he had just heard. Like every
+other Israelite in the whole world, he knew that a deliverer had been
+promised his people.
+
+Time and again he had read the prophecies that foretold the coming of a
+king through the royal line of David; time and again he had pictured to
+himself the mighty battles to take place between his down-trodden race
+and the haughty hordes of Cćsar. Sometime, somewhere, a universal
+dominion awaited them. He firmly believed that the day was near at hand;
+but not even in his wildest dreams had he ever dared to hope that it
+might come in his own lifetime.
+
+He raised himself on his elbow again, for the old man was speaking.
+
+"About thirty years ago," he said slowly, "I went up to Jerusalem to be
+registered for taxation, for the emperor's decree had gone forth and no
+one could escape enrolment. You are too young to remember the taking of
+that census, my friend; but you have doubtless heard of it."
+
+"Yes," assented Phineas, respectfully.
+
+"I was standing just outside the Joppa gate, bargaining with a man for a
+cage of gold finches he had for sale, which I wished to take to my
+daughter, when we heard some one speaking to us. Looking up we saw
+several strange men on camels, who were inquiring their way. They were
+richly dressed. The trappings and silver bells on their camels, as well
+as their own attire, spoke of wealth. Their faces showed that they were
+wise and learned men from far countries.
+
+"We greeted them respectfully, but could not speak for astonishment when
+we heard their question:
+
+"'Where is he that is born king of the Jews? For we have seen his star
+in the East, and have come to worship him.' The bird-seller looked at
+me, and I looked at him in open-mouthed wonder. The men rode on before
+we could find words wherewith to answer them.
+
+"All sorts of rumors were afloat, and everywhere we went next day,
+throughout Jerusalem, knots of people stood talking of the mysterious
+men, and their strange question. Even the king was interested, and
+sought audience with them."
+
+"Could any one answer them?" asked Phineas.
+
+"Nay! but it was then impressed on me so surely that the Christ was
+born, that I have asked myself all these thirty years, 'Where is he that
+is born king of the Jews?' For I too would fain follow on to find and
+worship him. As soon as I return from Damascus, I shall go at once to
+Cana, and search for this miracle-worker."
+
+The old man's earnest words made a wonderful impression on Joel. All the
+afternoon, as they rose higher among the hills, the thought took
+stronger possession of him. He might yet live, helpless little cripple
+as he was, to see the dawn of Israel's deliverance, and a son of David
+once more on its throne.
+
+Ride on, little pilgrim, happy in thy day-dreams! The time is coming;
+but weary ways and hopeless heart-aches lie between thee and that
+to-morrow. The king is on his way to his coronation, but it will be with
+thorns.
+
+Ride on, little pilgrim, be happy whilst thou can!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+IT was nearly the close of the day when the long caravan halted, and
+tents were pitched for the night near a little brook that came splashing
+down from a cold mountain-spring.
+
+Joel, exhausted by the long day's travel, crowded so full of new
+experiences, was glad to stretch his cramped limbs on a blanket that
+Phineas took from the camel's back.
+
+Here, through half-shut eyes, he watched the building of the camp-fire,
+and the preparations for the evening meal.
+
+"I wonder what Uncle Laban would do if he were here!" he said to
+Phineas, with an amused smile. "Look at those dirty drivers with their
+unwashed hands and unblessed food. How little regard they have for the
+Law. Uncle Laban would fast a lifetime rather than taste anything that
+had even been passed over a fire of their building. I can imagine I see
+him now, gathering up his skirts and walking on the tips of his sandals
+for fear of being touched by anything unclean."
+
+"Your Uncle Laban is a good man," answered Phineas, "one careful not to
+transgress the Law."
+
+"Yes," said the boy. "But I like your way better. You keep the fasts,
+and repeat the prayers, and love God and your neighbors. Uncle Laban is
+careful to do the first two things; I am not so sure about the others.
+Life is too short to be always washing one's hands."
+
+Phineas looked at the little fellow sharply. How shrewd and old he
+seemed for one of his years! Such independence of thought was unusual in
+a child trained as he had been. He scarcely knew how to answer him, so
+he turned his attention to spreading out the fruits and bread he had
+brought for their supper.
+
+Next morning, after the caravan had gone on without them, they started
+up a narrow bridle-path, that led through hillside-pastures where flocks
+of sheep and goats were feeding.
+
+The dew was still on the grass, and the air was so fresh and sweet in
+this higher altitude that Joel walked on with a feeling of strength and
+vigor unknown to him before.
+
+"Oh, look!" he cried, clasping his hands in delight, as a sudden turn
+brought them to the upper course of the brook whose waters, falling far
+below, had refreshed them the night before.
+
+The poetry of the Psalms came as naturally to the lips of this
+beauty-loving little Israelite as the breath he drew.
+
+Now he repeated, in a low, reverent voice, "'The Lord is my shepherd; I
+shall not want.' Oh, Rabbi Phineas, did you ever know before that there
+could be such green pastures and still waters?"
+
+The man smiled at the boy's radiant, upturned face. "'Yea, the earth is
+the Lord's and the fulness thereof,'" he murmured. "We have indeed a
+goodly heritage."
+
+Hushed into silence by the voice of the hills and the beauty on every
+side, they walked on till the road turned again.
+
+Just ahead stood a house unusually large for a country district;
+everything about it bore an air of wealth and comfort.
+
+"Our journey is at an end now," said Phineas. "Yonder lies the house of
+Nathan ben Obed. He owns all those flocks and herds we have seen in
+passing this last half hour. It is with him that I have business; and we
+will tarry with him until after the Sabbath."
+
+They were evidently expected, for a servant came running out to meet
+them. He opened the gate and conducted them into a shaded court-yard.
+Here another servant took off their dusty sandals, and gave them water
+to wash their feet.
+
+They had barely finished, when an old man appeared in the doorway; his
+long beard and hair were white as the abba he wore.
+
+Phineas would have bowed himself to the ground before him, but the old
+man prevented it, by hurrying to take both hands in his, and kiss him on
+each cheek.
+
+"Peace be to thee, thou son of my good friend Jesse!" he said. "Thou art
+indeed most welcome."
+
+Joel lagged behind. He was always sensitive about meeting strangers; but
+the man's cordial welcome soon put him at his ease.
+
+He was left to himself a great deal during the few days following. The
+business on which the old man had summoned Phineas required long
+consultations.
+
+One day they rode away together to some outlying pastures, and were gone
+until night-fall. Joel did not miss them. He was spending long happy
+hours in the country sunshine. There was something to entertain him,
+every way he turned. For a while he amused himself by sitting in the
+door and poring over a roll of parchment that Sarah, the wife of Nathan
+ben Obed, brought him to read.
+
+She was an old woman, but one would have found it hard to think so, had
+he seen how briskly she went about her duties of caring for such a large
+household.
+
+After Joel had read for some little time, he became aware that some one
+was singing outside, in a whining, monotonous way, and he laid down his
+book to listen. The voice was not loud, but so penetrating he could not
+shut it out, and fix his mind on his story again. So he rolled up the
+parchment and laid it on the chest from which it had been taken; then
+winding his handkerchief around his head, turban fashion, he limped out
+in the direction of the voice.
+
+Just around the corner of the house, under a great oak-tree, a woman sat
+churning. From three smooth poles joined at the top to form a tripod, a
+goat-skin bag hung by long leather straps. This was filled with cream;
+she was slapping it violently back and forth in time to her weird song.
+
+Her feet were bare, and she wore only a coarse cotton dress. But a gay
+red handkerchief covered her black hair, and heavy copper rings hung
+from her nose and ears.
+
+The song stopped suddenly as she saw Joel. Then recognizing her master's
+guest, she smiled at him so broadly that he could see her pretty white
+teeth.
+
+Joel hardly knew what to say at this unexpected encounter, but bethought
+himself to ask the way to the sheep-folds and the watch-tower. "It is a
+long way there," said the woman, doubtfully; Joel flushed as he felt her
+black eyes scanning his misshapen form.
+
+Just then Sarah appeared in the door, and the maid repeated the question
+to her mistress.
+
+"To be sure," she said. "You must go out and see our shepherds with
+their flocks. We have a great many employed just now, on all the
+surrounding hills. Rhoda, call your son, and bid him bring hither the
+donkey that he always drives to market."
+
+The woman left her churning, and presently came back with a boy about
+Joel's age, leading a donkey with only one ear.
+
+Joel knew what that meant. At some time in its life the poor beast had
+strayed into some neighbor's field, and the owner of the field had been
+at liberty to cut off an ear in punishment.
+
+The boy that led him wore a long shirt of rough hair-cloth. His feet and
+legs were brown and tanned. A shock of reddish sunburned hair was the
+only covering for his head. There was a squint in one eye, and his face
+was freckled.
+
+He made an awkward obeisance to his mistress.
+
+"Buz," she said, "this young lad is your master's guest. Take him out
+and show him the flocks and herds, and the sheep-folds. He has never
+seen anything of shepherd life, so be careful to do his pleasure. Stay!"
+she added to Joel. "You will not have time to visit them all before the
+mid-day meal, so I will give you a lunch, and you can enjoy an entire
+day in the fields."
+
+As the two boys started down the hill, Joel stole a glance at his
+companion. "What a stupid-looking fellow!" he thought; "I doubt if he
+knows anything more than this sleepy beast I am riding. I wonder if he
+enjoys any of this beautiful world around him. How glad I am that I am
+not in his place."
+
+Buz, trudging along in the dust, glanced at the little cripple on the
+donkey's back with an inward shiver.
+
+"What a dreadful lot his must be," he thought. "How glad I am that I am
+not like he is!"
+
+It was not very long till the shyness began to wear off, and Joel found
+that the stupid shepherd lad had a very busy brain under his shock of
+tangled hair. His eyes might squint, but they knew just where to look in
+the bushes for the little hedge-sparrow's nest. They could take unerring
+aim, too, when he sent the smooth sling-stones whizzing from the sling
+he carried.
+
+"How far can you shoot with it?" asked Joel.
+
+For answer Buz looked all around for some object on which to try his
+skill; then he pointed to a hawk slowly circling overhead. Joel watched
+him fit a smooth pebble into his sling; he had no thought that the boy
+could touch it at such a distance. The stone whizzed through the air
+like a bullet, and the bird dropped several yards ahead of them.
+
+"See!" said Buz, as he ran to pick it up, and display it proudly. "I
+struck it in the head."
+
+Joel looked at him with increasing respect. "That must have been the
+kind of sling that King David killed the giant with," he said, handing
+it back after a careful examination.
+
+"King David!" repeated Buz, dully, "seems to me I have heard of him,
+sometime or other; but I don't know about the giant."
+
+"Why where have you been all your life?" cried Joel, in amazement. "I
+thought everybody knew about that. Did you never go to a synagogue?"
+
+Buz shook his bushy head. "They don't have synagogues in these parts.
+The master calls us in and reads to us on the Sabbath; but I always get
+sleepy when I sit right still, and so I generally get behind somebody
+and go to sleep. The shepherds talk to each other a good deal about such
+things, I am never with them though. I spend all my time running
+errands."
+
+Shocked at such ignorance, Joel began to tell the shepherd king's life
+with such eloquence that Buz stopped short in the road to listen.
+
+Seeing this the donkey stood still also, wagged its one ear, and went to
+sleep. But Buz listened, wider awake than he had ever been before in his
+life.
+
+The story was a favorite one with Joel, and he put his whole soul into
+it.
+
+"Who told you that?" asked Buz, taking a long breath when the
+interesting tale was finished.
+
+"Why I read it myself!" answered Joel.
+
+"Oh, can you read?" asked Buz, looking at Joel in much the same way that
+Joel had looked at him after he killed the hawk. "I do not see how
+anybody can. It puzzles me how people can look at all those crooked
+black marks and call them rivers and flocks and things. I looked one
+time, just where Master had been reading about a great battle. And I
+didn't see a single thing that looked like a warrior or a sword or a
+battle-axe, though he called them all by name. There were several little
+round marks that might have been meant for sling-stones; but it was more
+than I could make out, how he could get any sense out of it."
+
+Joel leaned back and laughed till the hills rang, laughed till the tears
+stood in his eyes, and the donkey waked up and ambled on.
+
+Buz did not seem to be in the least disturbed by his merriment, although
+he was puzzled as to its cause. He only stooped to pick up more stones
+for his sling as they went on.
+
+It was not long till they came to some of the men,--great brawny fellows
+dressed in skins, with coarse matted hair and tanned faces. How little
+they knew of what was going on in the busy world outside their fields!
+As Joel talked to them he found that Cćsar's conquests and Hero's
+murders had only come to them as vague rumors. All the petty wars and
+political turmoils were unknown to them. They could talk to him only of
+their flocks and their faith, both as simple as their lives.
+
+Joel, in his wisdom learned of the Rabbis, felt himself infinitely their
+superior, child though he was. But he enjoyed his day spent with them.
+He and Buz ate the ample lunch they had brought, dipped up water from
+the brook in cups they made of oak-leaves, and both finally fell asleep
+to the droning music of the shepherd's pipes, played softly on the
+uplands.
+
+A distant rumble of thunder aroused them, late in the afternoon; and
+they started up to find the shepherds calling in their flocks. The gaunt
+sheep dogs raced to and fro, bringing the straying goats together. The
+shepherds brought the sheep into line with well-aimed sling-shots,
+touching them first on one side, and then on the other, as oxen are
+guided by the touch of the goad.
+
+Joel looked up at the darkening sky with alarm. "Who would have thought
+of a storm on such a day!" he exclaimed.
+
+Buz cocked his eyes at the horizon. "I thought it might come to this,"
+he said; "for as we came along this morning there were no spider-webs
+on the grass; the ants had not uncovered the doors of their hills; and
+all the signs pointed to wet weather. I thought though, that the time of
+the latter rains had passed a week ago. I am always glad when the stormy
+season is over. This one is going to be a hard one."
+
+"What shall we do?" asked Joel.
+
+Buz scratched his head. Then he looked at Joel. "You never could get
+home on that trifling donkey before it overtakes us; and they'll be
+worried about you. I'd best take you up to the sheep-fold. You can stay
+all night there, very comfortably. I'll run home and tell them where you
+are, and come back for you in the morning."
+
+Joel hesitated, appalled at spending the night among such dirty men; but
+the heavy boom of thunder, steadily rolling nearer, silenced his
+half-spoken objection. By the time the donkey had carried him up the
+hillside to the stone-walled enclosure round the watch-tower, the
+shepherds were at the gates with their flocks.
+
+Joel watched them go through the narrow passage, one by one. Each man
+kept count of his own sheep, and drove them under the rough sheds put up
+for their protection.
+
+A good-sized hut was built against the hillside, where the shepherds
+might find refuge. Buz pointed it out to Joel; then he turned the donkey
+into one of the sheds, and started homeward on the run.
+
+Joel shuddered as a blinding flash of lightning was followed by a crash
+of thunder that shook the hut. The wind bore down through the trees like
+some savage spirit, shrieking and moaning as it flew. Joel heard a
+shout, and looked out to the opposite hillside. Buz was flying along in
+break-neck race with the storm. At that rate he would soon be home. How
+he seemed to enjoy the race, as his strong limbs carried him lightly as
+a bird soars!
+
+At the top he turned to look back and laugh and wave his arms,--a sinewy
+little figure standing out in bold relief against a brazen sky.
+
+Joel watched till he was out of sight. Then, as the wind swooped down
+from the mountains, great drops of rain began to splash through the
+leaves.
+
+The men crowded into the hut. One of them started forward to close the
+door, but stopped suddenly, with his brown hairy hand uplifted.
+
+"Hark ye!" he exclaimed.
+
+Joel heard only the shivering of the wind in the tree-tops; but the
+man's trained ear caught the bleating of a stray lamb, far off and very
+faint.
+
+"I was afraid I was mistaken in my count; they jostled through the gate
+so fast I could not be sure." Going to a row of pegs along the wall, he
+took down a lantern hanging there and lit it; then wrapping his coat of
+skins more closely around him, and calling one of the dogs, he set out
+into the gathering darkness.
+
+Joel watched the fitful gleam of the lantern, flickering on unsteadily
+as a will-o'-the-wisp. A moment later he heard the man's deep voice
+calling tenderly to the lost animal; then the storm struck with such
+fury that they had to stand with their backs against the door of the hut
+to keep it closed.
+
+Flash after flash of lightning blinded them. The wind roared down the
+mountain and beat against the house till Joel held his breath in terror.
+It was midnight before it stopped. Joel thought of the poor shepherd out
+on the hills, and shuddered. Even the men seemed uneasy about him, as
+hour after hour passed, and he did not come.
+
+Finally he fell asleep in the corner, on a pile of woolly skins. In the
+gray dawn he was awakened by a great shout. He got up, and went to the
+door. There stood the shepherd. His bare limbs were cut by stones and
+torn by thorns. Blood streamed from his forehead where he had been
+wounded by a falling branch. The mud on his rough garments showed how
+often he had slipped and fallen on the steep paths.
+
+Joel noticed, with a thrill of sympathy, how painfully he limped. But
+there on the bowed shoulders was the lamb he had wandered so far to
+find; and as the welcoming shout arose again, Joel's weak little cheer
+joined gladly in.
+
+"How brave and strong he is," thought the boy. "He risked his life for
+just one pitiful little lamb."
+
+The child's heart went strangely out to this rough fellow who stood
+holding the shivering animal, sublimely unconscious that he had done
+anything more than a simple duty.
+
+Joel, who felt uncommonly hungry after his supperless night, thought he
+would mount the donkey and start back alone. But just as he was about to
+do so, a familiar bushy head showed itself in the door of the sheepfold.
+Buz had brought him some wheat-cakes and cheese to eat on the way back.
+
+Joel was so busy with this welcome meal that he did not talk much. Buz
+kept eying him in silence, as if he longed to ask some question. At
+last, when the cheese had entirely disappeared, he found courage to ask
+it.
+
+"Were you always like that?" he said abruptly, motioning to Joel's back
+and leg. Somehow the reference did not wound him as it generally did. He
+began to tell Buz about the Samaritan boy who had crippled him. He never
+was able to tell the story of his wrongs without growing passionately
+angry. He had worked himself into a white heat by the time he had
+finished.
+
+"I'd get even with him," said Buz, excitedly, with a wicked squint of
+his eyes.
+
+"How would you do it?" demanded Joel. "Cripple him as he did me?"
+
+"Worse than that!" exclaimed Buz, stopping to take deliberate aim at a
+leaf overhead, and shooting a hole exactly through the centre with his
+sling. "I'd blind him as quick as that! It's a great deal worse to be
+blind than lame."
+
+Joel closed his eyes, and rode on a few moments in darkness. Then he
+opened them and gave a quick glad look around the landscape. "My! What
+if I never could have opened them again," he thought. "Yes, Buz, you're
+right," he said aloud. "It _is_ worse to be blind; so I shall take
+Rehum's eyesight also, some time. Oh, if that time were only here!"
+
+Although the subject of the miracle at Cana had been constantly in the
+mind of Phineas, and often near his lips, he did not speak of it to his
+host until the evening before his departure.
+
+It was just at the close of the evening meal. Nathan ben Obed rose
+half-way from his seat in astonishment, then sank back.
+
+"How old a man is this friend of yours?" he asked.
+
+"About thirty, I think," answered Phineas. "He is a little younger than
+I."
+
+"Where was he born?"
+
+"In Bethlehem, I have heard it said, though his home has always been in
+Nazareth."
+
+"Strange, strange!" muttered the man, stroking his long white beard
+thoughtfully.
+
+Joel reached over and touched Phineas on the arm. "Will you not tell
+Rabbi Nathan about the wonderful star that was seen at that time?" he
+asked, in a low tone.
+
+"What was that?" asked the old man, arousing from his reverie.
+
+When Phineas had repeated his conversation with the stranger on the day
+of his journey, Nathan ben Obed exchanged meaning glances with his
+wife.
+
+"Send for the old shepherd Heber," he said. "I would have speech with
+him."
+
+Rhoda came in to light the lamps. He bade her roll a cushioned couch
+that was in one corner to the centre of the room.
+
+"This old shepherd Heber was born in Bethlehem," he said; "but since his
+sons and grandsons have been in my employ, he has come north to live. He
+used to help keep the flocks that belonged to the Temple, and that were
+used for sacrifices. His has always been one of the purest of lives; and
+I have never known such faith as he has. He is over a hundred years old,
+so must have been quite aged at the time of the event of which he will
+tell us."
+
+Presently an old, old man tottered into the room, leaning on the
+shoulders of his two stalwart grandsons. They placed him gently on the
+cushions of the couch, and then went into the court-yard to await his
+readiness to return. Like the men Joel had seen the day before, they
+were dressed in skins, and were wild-looking and rough. But this aged
+father, with dim eyes and trembling wrinkled hands, sat before them like
+some hoary patriarch, in a fine linen mantle.
+
+Pleased as a child, he saluted his new audience, and began to tell them
+his only story.
+
+As the years had gone by, one by one the lights of memory had gone out
+in darkness. Well-known scenes had grown dim; old faces were forgotten;
+names he knew as well as his own, could not be recalled: but this one
+story was as fresh and real to him, as on the night he learned it.
+
+The words he chose were simple, the voice was tremulous with weakness;
+but he spoke with a dramatic fervor that made Joel creep nearer and
+nearer, until he knelt, unknowing, at the old man's knee, spell-bound by
+the wonderful tale.
+
+"We were keeping watch in the fields by night," began the old shepherd,
+"I and my sons and my brethren. It was still and cold, and we spoke but
+little to each other. Suddenly over all the hills and plains shone a
+great light,--brighter than light of moon or stars or sunshine. It was
+so heavenly white we knew it must be the glory of the Lord we looked
+upon and we were sore afraid, and hid our faces, falling to the ground.
+And, lo! an angel overhead spake to us from out of the midst of the
+glory, saying, 'Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great
+joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the
+city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a
+sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes,
+lying in a manger.'
+
+"And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host
+praising God, and saying, 'Glory to God in the highest, peace on earth,
+good-will toward men!'
+
+"Oh, the sound of the rejoicing that filled that upper air! Ever since
+in my heart have I carried that foretaste of heaven!"
+
+The old shepherd paused, with such a light on his upturned face that he
+seemed to his awestruck listeners to be hearing again that same angelic
+chorus,--the chorus that rang down from the watch-towers of heaven,
+across earth's lowly sheep-fold, on that first Christmas night.
+
+There was a solemn hush. Then he said, "And when they were gone away,
+and the light and the song were no more with us, we spake one to
+another, and rose in haste and went to Bethlehem. And we found the Babe
+lying in a manger with Mary its mother; and we fell down and worshipped
+Him.
+
+"Thirty years has it been since the birth of Israel's Messiah; and I sit
+and wonder all the day,--wonder when He will appear once more to His
+people. Surely the time must be well nigh here when He may claim His
+kingdom. O Lord, let not Thy servant depart until these eyes that
+beheld the Child shall have seen the King in His beauty!"
+
+Joel remained kneeling beside old Heber, perfectly motionless. He was
+fitting together the links that he had lately found. A child, heralded
+by angels, proclaimed by a star worshipped by the Magi! A man changing
+water into wine at only a word!
+
+"I shall yet see Him!" exclaimed the voice of old Heber, with such
+sublime assurance of faith that it found a response in every heart.
+
+There was another solemn stillness, so deep that the soft fluttering of
+a night-moth around the lamp startled them.
+
+Then the child's voice rang out, eager and shrill, but triumphant as if
+inspired: "Rabbi Phineas, _He_ it was who changed the water into
+wine!--This friend of Nazareth and the babe of Bethlehem are the same!"
+
+The heart of the carpenter was strangely stirred, but it was full of
+doubt. Not that the Christ had been born,--the teachings of all his
+lifetime led him to expect that; but that the chosen One could be a
+friend of his,--the thought was too wonderful for him.
+
+The old shepherd sat on the couch, feebly twisting his fingers, and
+talking to himself. He was repeating bits of the story he had just told
+them: "And, lo, an angel overhead!" he muttered. Then he looked up,
+whispering softly, "Glory to God in the highest--and peace, yes, on
+earth peace!"
+
+"He seems to have forgotten everything else," said Nathan, signalling to
+the men outside to lead him home. "His mind is wiped away entirely, that
+it may keep unspotted the record of that night's revelation. He tells it
+over and over, whether he has a listener or not."
+
+They led him gently out, the white-haired, white-souled old shepherd
+Heber. It seemed to Joel that the wrinkled face was illuminated by some
+inner light, not of this world, and that he lingered among men only to
+repeat to them, over and over, his one story. That strange sweet story
+of Bethlehem's first Christmas-tide.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Next morning a goodly train set out from the gates of Nathan ben Obed.
+It was near the time of the feast of the Passover, and he, with many of
+his household, was going down to Jerusalem.
+
+The family and guests went first on mules and asses. Behind them
+followed a train of servants, driving the lambs, goats, and oxen to be
+offered as sacrifices in the temple, or sold in Jerusalem to other
+pilgrims.
+
+All along the highway, workmen were busy repairing the bridges, and
+cleaning the springs and wells, soon to be used by the throngs of
+travellers.
+
+All the tombs near the great thoroughfares were being freshly
+white-washed; they gleamed with a dazzling purity through the green
+trees, only to warn passers-by of the defilement within. For had those
+on their way to the feast approached too near these homes of the dead,
+even unconsciously, they would have been accounted unclean, and unfit
+to partake of the Passover. Nothing escaped Joel's quick sight, from the
+tulips and marigolds flaming in the fields, to the bright-eyed little
+viper crawling along the stone-wall.
+
+But while he looked, he never lost a word that passed between his friend
+Phineas and their host. The pride of an ancient nation took possession
+of him as he listened to the prophecies they quoted.
+
+Every one they met along the way coming from Capernaum had something to
+say about this new prophet who had arisen in Galilee. When they reached
+the gate of the city, a great disappointment awaited them. _He had been
+there, and gone again._
+
+Nathan ben Obed and his train tarried only one night in the place, and
+then pressed on again towards Jerusalem. Phineas went with them.
+
+"You shall go with us next year," he said to Joel; "then you will be
+over twelve. I shall take my own little ones too, and their mother."
+
+"Only one more year," exclaimed Joel, joyfully. "If that passes as
+quickly as the one just gone, it will soon be here."
+
+"Look after my little family," said the carpenter, at parting. "Come
+every day to the work, if you wish, just as when I am here; and
+remember, my lad, you are almost a man."
+
+Almost a man! The words rang in the boy's thoughts all day as he pounded
+and cut, keeping time to the swinging motion of hammer and saw. Almost a
+man! But what kind of one? Crippled and maimed, shorn of the strength
+that should have been his pride, beggared of his priestly birthright.
+
+Almost, it might be, but never in its fulness, could he hope to attain
+the proud stature of a perfect man.
+
+A fiercer hate sprang up for the enemy who had made him what he was; and
+the wild burning for revenge filled him so he could not work. He put
+away his tools, and went up the narrow outside stairway that led to the
+flat roof of the carpenter's house. It was called the "upper chamber."
+Here a latticed pavilion, thickly overgrown with vines, made a cool
+green retreat where he might rest and think undisturbed.
+
+Sitting there, he could see the flash of white sails on the blue lake,
+and slow-moving masses of fleecy clouds in the blue of the sky above.
+They brought before him the picture of the flocks feeding on the
+pastures of Nathan ben Obed.
+
+Then, naturally enough, there flashed through his mind a thought of Buz.
+He seemed to see him squinting his little eyes to take aim at a leaf
+overhead. He heard the stone whirr through it, as Buz said: "I'd blind
+him!"
+
+Some very impossible plans crept into Joel's day-dreams just then. He
+imagined himself sitting in a high seat, wrapped in robes of state;
+soldiers stood around him to carry out his slightest wish. The door
+would open and Rehum would be brought forth in fetters.
+
+"What is your will concerning the prisoner, O most gracious sovereign,"
+the jailer would ask.
+
+Joel closed his eyes, and waved his hand before an imaginary audience.
+"Away with him,--to the torture! Wrench his limbs on the rack! Brand his
+eyelids with hot irons! Let him suffer all that man can suffer and live!
+Thus shall it be done unto the man on whom the king delighteth to take
+vengeance!"
+
+Joel was childish enough to take a real satisfaction in this scene he
+conjured up. But as it faded away, he was man enough to realize it could
+never come to pass, save in his imagination; he could never be in such a
+position for revenge, unless,--
+
+That moment a possible way seemed to open for him. Phineas would
+probably see his friend of Nazareth at the Passover. What could be more
+natural than that the old friendship should be renewed. He whose hand
+had changed the water into wine should finally cast out the alien king
+who usurped the throne of Israel, for one in whose veins the blood of
+David ran royal red,--what was more to be expected than that?
+
+The Messiah would come to His kingdom, and then--and then--the thought
+leaped to its last daring limit.
+
+Phineas, who had been His earliest friend and playfellow, would he not
+be lifted to the right hand of power? Through him, then, lay the royal
+road to revenge.
+
+The thought lifted him unconsciously to his feet. He stood with his arms
+out-stretched in the direction of the far-away Temple, like some young
+prophet. David's cry of triumph rose to his lips: "Thou hast girded me
+with strength unto the battle," he murmured. "Thou hast also given me
+the necks of mine enemies, that I might destroy them that hate me!"
+
+A sweet baby voice at the foot of the steps brought him suddenly down
+from the height of his intense feeling.
+
+"Joel! Joel!" called little Ruth, "where is you?"
+
+Then Jesse's voice added, "We're all a-coming up for you to tell us a
+story."
+
+Up the stairs they swarmed to the roof, the carpenter's children and
+half-a-dozen of their little playmates.
+
+Joel, with his head still in the clouds, told them of a mighty king who
+was coming to slay all other kings, and change all tears--the waters of
+affliction--into the red wine of joy.
+
+"H'm! I don't think much of that story," said Jesse, with out-spoken
+candor. "I'd rather hear about Goliath, or the bears that ate up the
+forty children."
+
+But Joel was in no mood for such stories, just then. On some slight
+pretext he escaped from his exacting audience, and went down to the
+sea-shore. Here, skipping stones across the water, or writing idly in
+the sand, he was free to go on with his fascinating day-dreams.
+
+For the next two weeks the boy gave up work entirely. He haunted the
+toll-gates and public streets, hoping to hear some startling news from
+Jerusalem. He was so full of the thought that some great revolution was
+about to take place, that he could not understand how people could be
+so indifferent. All on fire with the belief that this man of Nazareth
+was the one in whom lay the nation's hope, he looked and longed for the
+return of Phineas, that he might learn more of Him.
+
+But Phineas had little to tell when he came back. He had met his friend
+twice in Jerusalem,--the same gentle quiet man he had always known,
+making no claims, working no wonders. Phineas had heard of His driving
+the moneychangers out of the Temple one day, and those who sold doves in
+its sacred courts, although he had not witnessed the scene.
+
+The carpenter was rather surprised that He should have made such a
+public disturbance.
+
+"Rabbi Phineas," said Joel, with a trembling voice, "don't you think
+your friend is the prophet we are expecting?"
+
+Phineas shook his head. "No, my lad, I am sure of it now."
+
+"But the herald angels and the star," insisted the boy.
+
+"They must have proclaimed some one else. He is the best man I ever
+knew; but there is no more of the king in His nature, than there is in
+mine."
+
+The man's positive answer seemed to shatter Joel's last hope. Downcast
+and disappointed, he went back to his work. Only with money could he
+accomplish his life's object, and only by incessant work could he earn
+the shining shekels that he needed.
+
+Phineas wondered sometimes at the dogged persistence with which the
+child stuck to his task, in spite of his tired, aching body.
+
+He had learned to make sandal-wood jewel-boxes, and fancifully wrought
+cups to hold the various dyes and cosmetics used by the ladies of the
+court.
+
+Several times, during the following months, he begged a sail in some of
+the fishing-boats that landed at the town of Tiberias. Having gained the
+favor of the keeper of the gates, by various little gifts of his own
+manufacture, he always found a ready admittance to the palace.
+
+To the ladies of the court, the sums they paid for his pretty wares
+seemed trifling; but to Joel the small bag of coins hidden in the folds
+of his clothes was a little fortune, daily growing larger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+IT was Sabbath morning in the house of Laban the Pharisee. Joel, sitting
+alone in the court-yard, could hear his aunt talking to the smaller
+children, as she made them ready to take with her to the synagogue.
+
+From the upper chamber on the roof, came also a sound of voices, for two
+guests had arrived the day before, and were talking earnestly with their
+host. Joel already knew the object of their visit.
+
+They had been there before, when the preaching of John Baptist had drawn
+such great crowds from all the cities to the banks of the Jordan. They
+had been sent out then by the authorities in Jerusalem to see what
+manner of man was this who, clothed in skins and living in the
+wilderness, could draw the people so wonderfully, and arouse such
+intense excitement. Now they had come on a like errand, although on
+their own authority.
+
+Another prophet had arisen whom this John Baptist had declared to be
+greater than himself. They had seen Him drive the moneychangers from the
+Temple; they had heard many wild rumors concerning Him. So they followed
+Him to His home in the little village of Nazareth, where they heard Him
+talk in the synagogue.
+
+They had seen the listening crowd grow amazed at the eloquence of His
+teaching, and then indignant that one so humble as a carpenter's son
+should claim that Isaiah's prophecies had been fulfilled in Himself.
+
+They had seen Him driven from the home of His boyhood, and now had come
+to Capernaum that they might be witnesses in case this impostor tried to
+lead these people astray by repeating His claims.
+
+All this Joel heard, and more, as the earnest voices came distinctly
+down to him through the deep hush of the Sabbath stillness. It shook his
+faith somewhat, even in the goodness of this friend of his friend
+Phineas, that these two learned doctors of the Law should consider Him
+an impostor.
+
+He stood aside respectfully for them to pass, as they came down the
+outside stairway, and crossed the court-yard on their way to the
+morning service.
+
+Their long, flowing, white robes, their broad phylacteries, their
+dignified bearing, impressed him greatly. He knew they were wise, good
+men whose only aim in life was to keep the letter of the Law, down to
+its smallest details. He followed them through the streets until they
+came to the synagogue. They gave no greeting to any one they passed, but
+walked with reverently bowed heads that their pious meditation might not
+be disturbed by the outside world. His aunt had already gone by the way
+of the back streets, as it was customary for women to go, her face
+closely veiled.
+
+The synagogue, of finely chiselled limestone, with its double rows of
+great marble pillars, stood in its white splendor, the pride of the
+town. It had been built by the commander of the garrison who, though a
+Roman centurion, was a believer in the God of the Hebrews, and greatly
+loved by the whole people.
+
+Joel glanced up at the lintel over the door, where Aaron's rod and a pot
+of manna carved in the stone were constant reminders to the daily
+worshippers of the Hand that fed and guided them from generation to
+generation.
+
+Joel limped slowly to his place in the congregation. In the seats of
+honor, facing it, sat his uncle and his guests, among the rulers of the
+synagogue.
+
+For a moment his eyes wandered curiously around, hoping for a glimpse of
+the man whose fame was beginning to spread all over Galilee. It had been
+rumored that He would be there. But Joel saw only familiar faces. The
+elders took their seats.
+
+During the reading of the usual psalm, the reciting of a benediction,
+and even the confession of the creed, Joel's thoughts wandered. When the
+reader took up his scroll to read the passages from Deuteronomy, the boy
+stole one more quick glance all around. But as the whole congregation
+arose, and turned facing the east, he resolutely fixed his mind on the
+duties of the hour.
+
+The eighteen benedictions, or prayers, were recited in silence by each
+devout worshipper. Then the leader repeated them aloud, all the
+congregation responding with their deep Amen! and Amen! Joel always
+liked that part of the service and the chanting that followed.
+
+Another roll of parchment was brought out. The boy looked up with
+interest. Probably one of his uncle's guests would be invited to read
+from it, and speak to the people.
+
+No, it was a stranger whom he had not noticed before, sitting behind one
+of the tall elders, who was thus honored.
+
+Joel's heart beat so fast that the blood throbbed against his ear-drums,
+as he heard the name called. It was the friend of his friend Phineas,
+_the Rabbi Jesus_.
+
+Joel bent forward, all his soul in his eyes, as the stranger unrolled
+the book, and began to read from the Prophets. The words were old
+familiar ones; he even knew them by heart. But never before had they
+carried with them such music, such meaning. When He laid aside the roll,
+and began to speak, every fibre in the boy's being thrilled in response
+to the wonderful eloquence of that voice and teaching.
+
+The whole congregation sat spell-bound, forgetful of everything except
+the earnestness of the speaker who moved and swayed them as the wind
+does the waving wheat.
+
+Suddenly there arose a wild shriek, a sort of demon-like howl that
+transfixed them with its piercing horror. Every one turned to see the
+cause of the startling sound. There, near the door, stood a man whom
+they all knew,--an unhappy creature said to be possessed of an unclean
+spirit.
+
+"Ha!" he cried, in a blood-curdling tone. "What have we to do with Thee,
+Jesus of Nazareth? Art thou come to destroy us? I know Thee, who thou
+art, the holy One of God!"
+
+There was a great stir, especially in the woman's gallery; and those
+standing nearest him backed away as far as possible.
+
+Every face was curious and excited, at this sudden interruption,--every
+face but one; the Rabbi Jesus alone was calm.
+
+"Hold thy peace and come out of him!" He commanded. There was one more
+shriek, worse than before, as the man fell at His feet in a convulsion;
+but in a moment he stood up again, quiet and perfectly sane. The wild
+look was gone from his eyes. Whatever had been the strange spell that
+had bound him before, he was now absolutely free.
+
+There was another stir in the woman's gallery. Contrary to all rule or
+custom, an aged woman pushed her way out. Down the stairs she went,
+unveiled through the ranks of the men, to reach her son whom she had
+just seen restored to reason. With a glad cry she fell forward,
+fainting, in his arms, and was borne away to the little home, now no
+longer darkened by the shadow of a sore affliction.
+
+Little else was talked about that day, until the rumor of another
+miracle began to spread through the town. Phineas, stopping at Laban's
+house on his way home from an afternoon service, confirmed the truth of
+it.
+
+One of his neighbors had been dangerously ill with a fever that was
+common in that part of the country; she was the mother-in-law of Simon
+bar Jonah. It was at his home that the Rabbi Jesus had been invited to
+dine.
+
+As soon as He entered the house, they besought Him to heal her. Standing
+beside her, He rebuked the fever; and immediately she arose, and began
+to help her daughter prepare for the entertainment of their guest.
+
+"Abigail was there yesterday," said Phineas, "to carry some broth she
+had made. She thought then it would be impossible for the poor creature
+to live through the night. I saw the woman a few hours ago, and she is
+perfectly well and strong."
+
+That night when the sun was setting, and the Sabbath was at an end, a
+motley crowd streamed along the streets to the door of Simon bar Jonah.
+Men carried on couches; children in their mother's arms; those wasted by
+burning fevers; those shaken by unceasing palsy; the lame; the blind;
+the death-stricken,--all pressing hopefully on.
+
+What a scene in that little court-yard as the sunset touched the wan
+faces and smiled into dying eyes. Hope for the hopeless! Balm for the
+broken in body and spirit! There was rejoicing in nearly every home in
+Capernaum that night, for none were turned away. Not one was refused. It
+is written, "He laid His hand on every one of them, and healed them."
+
+That he might not seem behind his guests in zeal and devotion to the
+Law, the dignified Laban would not follow the crowds.
+
+"Let others be carried away by strange doctrines and false prophets, if
+they will," he declared; "as for me and my household, we will cling to
+the true faith of our fathers."
+
+So the three sat in the upper chamber on the roof, and discussed the new
+teacher with many shakes of their wise heads.
+
+"It is not lawful to heal on the Sabbath day," they declared. "Twice
+during the past day He has openly transgressed the Law. He will lead all
+Galilee astray!"
+
+But Galilee cared little how far the path turned from the narrow faith
+of the Pharisees, so long as it led to life and healing.
+
+Down in the garden below, the children climbed up on the grape-arbor,
+and peered through the vines at the surging crowds which they would have
+joined, had it not been for Laban's strict commands.
+
+One by one they watched people whom they knew go by, some carried on
+litters, some leaning on the shoulders of friends. One man crawled
+painfully along on his hands and knees.
+
+After awhile the same people began to come back.
+
+"Look, quick, Joel!" one of the children cried; "there goes Simon ben
+Levi. Why, his palsy is all gone! He doesn't shake a bit now! And
+there's little Martha that lives out near Aunt Rebecca's! Don't you know
+how white and thin she looked when they carried her by a little while
+ago? See! she is running along by herself now as well as we are!"
+
+The children could hardly credit their own sense of sight, when
+neighbors they had known all their lives to be bed-ridden invalids came
+back cured, singing and praising God.
+
+It was a sight they never could forget. So they watched wonderingly till
+darkness fell, and the last happy-hearted healed one had gone home to a
+rejoicing household.
+
+While the fathers on the roof were deciding they would have naught of
+this man, the children in the grape-arbor were storing up in their
+simple little hearts these proofs of his power and kindness.
+
+Then they gathered around Joel on the doorstep, while he repeated the
+story that the old shepherd Heber had told him, of the angels and the
+star, and the baby they had worshipped that night in Bethlehem.
+
+"Come, children," called his Aunt Leah, as she lit the lamp that was to
+burn all night. "Come! It is bed-time!"
+
+His cousin Hannah lingered a moment after the others had gone in, to
+say, "That was a pretty story, Joel. Why don't you go and ask the good
+man to straighten your back?"
+
+Strange as it may seem, this was the first time the thought had occurred
+to him that he might be benefited himself. He had been so long
+accustomed to thinking of himself as hopelessly lame, that the wonderful
+cures he had witnessed had awakened no hope for himself. A new life
+seemed to open up before him at the little girl's question. He sat on
+the doorstep thinking about it until his Uncle Laban came down and
+crossly ordered him to go to bed.
+
+He went in, saying softly to himself, "I will go to him to-morrow; yes,
+early in the morning!"
+
+Strange that an old proverb should cross his mind just then. "Boast not
+thyself of to-morrow. Thou knowest not what a day may bring forth."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+WHEN Joel went out on the streets next morning, although it was quite
+early, he saw a disappointed crowd coming up from the direction of
+Simon's house on the lake shore.
+
+"Where have all these people been?" he asked of the baker's boy, whom he
+ran against at the first corner.
+
+The boy stopped whistling, and rested his basket of freshly baked bread
+against his knee, as he answered:--
+
+"They were looking for the Rabbi who healed so many people last night.
+Say! do you know," he added quickly, as if the news were too good to
+keep, "he healed my mother last night. You cannot think how different it
+seems at home, to have her going about strong and well like she used to
+be."
+
+Joel's eyes brightened. "Do you think he'll do anything for me, if I go
+to him now?" he asked wistfully. "Do you suppose he could straighten out
+such a crooked back as mine? Look how much shorter this leg is than the
+other. Oh, _do_ you think he could make them all right?"
+
+The boy gave him a critical survey, and then answered, emphatically,
+"Yes! It really does not look like it would be as hard to straighten you
+as old Jeremy, the tailor's father. He was twisted all out of shape, you
+know. Well, I'll declare! There he goes now!"
+
+Joel looked across the street. The wrinkled face of the old
+basket-weaver was a familiar sight in the market; but Joel could hardly
+recognize the once crippled form, now restored to its original
+shapeliness.
+
+"I am going right now," he declared, starting to run in his excitement.
+"I can't wait another minute."
+
+"But he's gone!" the boy called after him. "That's why the people are
+all coming back."
+
+Joel sat down suddenly on a ledge projecting from the stone-wall.
+"Gone!" he echoed drearily. It was as if he had been starving, and the
+life-giving food held to his famished lips had been suddenly snatched
+away. Both his heart and his feet felt like lead when he got up after
+awhile, and dragged himself slowly along to the carpenter's house.
+
+[Illustration: "'I PEEPED OUT 'TWEEN 'E WOSE--VINES'"]
+
+It was such a bitter disappointment to be so near the touch of healing,
+and then to miss it altogether.
+
+No cheerful tap of the hammer greeted him. The idle tools lay on the
+deserted workbench. "Disappointed again!" he thought. Then the doves
+cooed, and he caught a glimpse of Ruth's fair hair down among the garden
+lilies.
+
+"Where is your father, little one?" he called.
+
+"Gone away wiv 'e good man 'at makes everybody well," she answered. Then
+she came skipping down the path to stand close beside him, and say
+confidentially: "I saw Him--'e good man--going by to Simon's house. I
+peeped out 'tween 'e wose-vines, and He looked wite into my eyes wiv His
+eyes, and I couldn't help loving Him!"
+
+Joel looked into the beautiful baby face, thinking what a picture it
+must have made, as framed in roses it smiled out on the Tender-hearted
+One, going on His mission of help and healing.
+
+With her little hand in his, she led him back to hope, for she took him
+to her mother, who comforted him with the assurance that Phineas
+expected to be home soon, and doubtless his friend would be with him.
+
+So there came another time to work by himself and dream of the hour
+surely dawning. And the dreams were doubly sweet now; for side by side
+with his hope of revenge, was the belief in his possible cure.
+
+They heard only once from the absent ones. Word came back that a leper
+had been healed. Joel heard it first, down at the custom-house. He had
+gotten into the way of strolling down in that direction after his work
+was done; for here the many trading-vessels from across the lake, or
+those that shipped from Capernaum, had to stop and pay duty. Here, too,
+the great road of Eastern commerce passed which led from Damascus to the
+harbors of the West. So here he would find a constant stream of
+travellers, bringing the latest news from the outside world.
+
+The boy did not know, as he limped up and down the water's edge, longing
+for some word from his absent friends, that near by was one who watched
+almost as eagerly as himself.
+
+It was Levi-Matthew, one of the officials, sitting in the seat of
+custom. Sprung from the same priestly tribe as Joel, he had sunk so low,
+in accepting the office of tax-gatherer, that the righteous Laban would
+not have touched him so much as with the tip of his sandal.
+
+"Bears and lions," said a proverb, "might be the fiercest wild beasts in
+the forests; but publicans and informers were the worst in cities."
+
+One could not bear witness in the courts, and the disgrace extended to
+the whole family. They were even classed with robbers and murderers. No
+doubt there was deep cause for such a feeling; as a class they were
+unscrupulous and unjust. There might have been good ones among their
+number, but the company they kept condemned them to the scorn of high
+and low.
+
+When a Jew hates, or a Jew scorns, be sure it is thoroughly done; there
+is no half-way course for his intense nature to take.
+
+So this son of Levi, sitting in the seat of custom, and this son of Levi
+strolling past him, were, socially, as far apart as the east is from the
+west,--as unlike as thorn and blossom on the same tribal stem.
+
+Matthew knew all the fishermen and ship-owners that thronged the busy
+beach in front of him. The sons of Jonah and of Zebedee passed him
+daily; and he must have wondered when he saw them throw down their nets
+and leave everything to follow a stranger.
+
+He must have wondered also at the reports on every tongue, and the
+sights he had seen himself of miraculous healing. But while strangely
+drawn towards this new teacher from Nazareth, it could have been with no
+thought that the hand and the voice were for him. He was a publican, and
+how could they reach to such depths?
+
+A caravan had just stopped. The pack-animals were being unloaded, bales
+and packages opened, private letters pried into. The insolent officials
+were tossing things right and left, as they made a list of the taxable
+goods.
+
+Joel was watching them with as much interest as if he had not witnessed
+such scenes dozens of times before, till he noticed a group gathering
+around one of the drivers. He was telling what he had seen on his way to
+Capernaum. Several noisy companions kept interrupting him to bear
+witness to the truth of his statements.
+
+"And he who but a moment before had been the most miserable of lepers
+stood up before us all, cleansed of his leprosy. His skin was soft and
+fair as a child's, and his features were restored to him," said the
+driver.
+
+Joel and Levi-Matthew stood side by side. At another time the boy might
+have drawn his clothes away to keep from brushing against the despised
+tax-gatherer. But he never noticed now that their elbows touched.
+
+When he had heard all there was to be told, he limped away to carry the
+news to Abigail. To know that others were being cured daily made him all
+the more impatient for the return of this friend of Phineas.
+
+The publican turned again to his pen and his account-book. He, too,
+looked forward with a burning heart to the return of the Nazarene,
+unknowing why he did so.
+
+At last Joel heard of the return, in a very unexpected way. There were
+guests in the house of Laban again. One of the rabbis who had been there
+before, and a scribe from Jerusalem. Now there were longer conferences
+in the upper chamber, and graver shakings of the head, over this false
+prophet whose fame was spreading wider.
+
+The miracle of healing the paralytic at the pool of Bethesda, when he
+had gone down to Jerusalem to one of the many feasts, had stirred Judea
+to its farthest borders. So these two men had been sent to investigate.
+
+On the very afternoon of their arrival, a report flew through the
+streets that the Rabbi Jesus was once more in the town. Their host led
+them with all the haste their dignity would allow, to the house where He
+was said to be preaching. The common people fell back when they saw
+them, and allowed them to pass into the centre of the throng.
+
+The Rabbi stood in the doorway, so that both those in the house and
+without could distinctly hear Him. The scribe had never seen Him before,
+and in spite of his deep-seated prejudice could not help admiring the
+man whom he had come prepared to despise. It was no wild fanatic who
+stood before him, no noisy debater whose fiery eloquence would be likely
+to excite and inflame His hearers.
+
+He saw a man of gentlest dignity; truth looked out from the depths of
+His calm eyes. Every word, every gesture, carried with it the conviction
+that He who spoke taught with God-given authority.
+
+The scribe began to grow uneasy as he listened, carried along by the
+earnest tones of the speaker.
+
+There was a great commotion on the edge of the crowd, as some one tried
+to push through to the centre.
+
+"Stand back! Go away!" demanded angry voices.
+
+The scribe was a tall man, and by stretching a little, managed to see
+over the heads of the others. Four men, bearing a helpless paralytic,
+were trying to carry him through the throngs; but they would not make
+room for this interruption.
+
+After vainly hunting for some opening through which they might press,
+the men mounted the steep, narrow staircase on the outside of the
+building, and drew the man up, hammock and all, to the flat roof on
+which they stood.
+
+There was a sound of scraping and scratching as they broke away the
+brush and mortar that formed the frail covering of the roof. Then the
+people in the room below saw slowly coming down upon them between the
+rafters, this man whom no obstacle could keep back from the Great
+Physician.
+
+But the paralyzed hands could not lift themselves in supplication; the
+helpless tongue could frame no word of pleading,--only the eyes of the
+sick man could look up into the pitying face bent over him, and implore
+a blessing.
+
+The scribe leaned forward, confidently expecting to hear the man bidden
+to arise. To his surprise and horror, the words he heard were: "Son, thy
+_sins_ be forgiven thee!"
+
+He looked at Laban and his companion, and the three exchanged meaning
+glances. When they looked again at the speaker, His eyes seemed to read
+their inmost thoughts.
+
+"Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts?" He asked, with startling
+distinctness. "Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the palsy, Thy
+sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and take up thy bed, and walk?
+But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive
+sins," here He turned to the helpless form lying at His feet, "I say
+unto thee, Arise, and take up thy bed, and go thy way unto thine house."
+
+The man bounded to his feet, and picking up the heavy rug on which he
+had been lying, went running and leaping out of their midst.
+
+Without a word, Laban and his two guests drew their clothes carefully
+around them, and picked their way through the crowd. Phineas, who stood
+at the gate, gave them a respectful greeting. Laban only turned his eyes
+away with a scowl, and passed coldly on.
+
+"The man is a liar and a blasphemer!" exclaimed the scribe, as they sat
+once more in the privacy of Laban's garden.
+
+"Only God can forgive sins!" added his companion. "This paralytic should
+have taken a sin-offering to the priest. For only by the blood of
+sacrifice can one hope to obtain pardon."
+
+"Still He healed him," spoke up the scribe, musingly.
+
+"Only through the power of Satan!" interrupted Laban. "When He says He
+can forgive sins, He blasphemes."
+
+The other Pharisee leaned forward to say, in an impressive whisper:
+"Then you know the Law on that point. He should be stoned to death, His
+body hung on a tree, and then buried with shame!"
+
+It was not long after that Joel, just back from a trip to Tiberias in a
+little sailing-boat, came into the garden. He had been away since early
+morning, so had heard nothing of what had just occurred; he had had good
+luck in disposing of his wares, and was feeling unusually cheerful.
+Hearing voices in the corner of the garden, he was about to pass out
+again, when his uncle called him sternly to come to him at once.
+
+Surprised at the command, he obeyed, and was questioned and
+cross-questioned by all three. It was very little he could tell them
+about his friend's plans; but he acknowledged proudly that Phineas had
+always known this famous man from Nazareth, even in childhood, and was
+one of his most devoted followers.
+
+"This man Phineas is a traitor to the faith!" roared Laban. "He is a
+dangerous man, and in league with these fellows to do great evil to our
+nation."
+
+The scribe and the rabbi nodded approvingly.
+
+"Hear me, now!" he cried, sternly. "Never again are you to set foot over
+his threshold, or have any communication whatsoever with him or his
+associates. I make no idle threat; if you disobey me in this, you will
+have cause to wish you had never been born. You may leave us now!"
+
+Too surprised and frightened to say a word, the child slipped away. To
+give up his daily visit to the carpenter's house, was to give up all
+that made his life tolerable; while to be denied even speaking to his
+associates, meant to abandon all hope of cure.
+
+But he dared not rebel; obedience to those in authority was too
+thoroughly taught in those days to be lightly disregarded. But his uncle
+seemed to fear that his harsh command would be eluded in some way, and
+kept such a strict watch over him, that he rarely got beyond the borders
+of the garden by himself.
+
+One day he was all alone in the grape-arbor, looking out into the
+streets that he longed to be in, since their freedom had been denied
+him.
+
+A little girl passed, carrying one child in her arms, and talking to
+another who clung to her skirts. It was Jerusha.
+
+Joel threw a green grape at her to attract her attention, and then
+beckoned her mysteriously to come nearer. She set the baby on the
+ground, and gave him her bracelet to play with, while she listened to a
+whispered account of his wrongs through the latticed arbor.
+
+"It's a shame!" she declared indignantly. "I'll go right down to the
+carpenter's house and tell them why you cannot go there any more. And
+I'll keep watch on all that happens, and let you know. I go past here
+every day, and if I have any news, I'll toss a pebble over the wall and
+cluck like a hen. Then if nobody is watching, you can come to this hole
+in the arbor again."
+
+The next day, as Joel was going in great haste to the baker's, whither
+his aunt had sent him, he heard some one behind him calling him to wait.
+In another moment Jerusha was in speaking distance, nearly bent double
+with the weight of her little brother, whom she was carrying as usual.
+
+"There!" she said, with a puff of relief, as she put him on his own
+feet. "Wait till I get my breath! It's no easy thing to carry such a
+load and run at the same time! How did you get out?"
+
+"There was an errand to be done, and no one else to do it," answered
+Joel, "so Aunt sent me."
+
+"Oh, I've got such news for you!" she exclaimed. "Guess what has
+happened! Your Rabbi Jesus has asked Levi-Matthew to be one of His
+followers, and go around with Him wherever He goes. Think of it! One of
+those horrid tax-gatherers! He settled his accounts and gave up his
+position in the custom-house yesterday. And he is getting ready for a
+great feast. I heard the butcher and the wine-dealer both telling about
+the big orders he had given them.
+
+"All the publicans and low common people that are his friends are
+invited. Yes, and so is your friend the carpenter. Think of that, now!
+He is going to sit down and eat with such people! Of course respectable
+folks will never have anything more to do with him after that! I guess
+your uncle was right about him, after all!"
+
+Both the little girl's face and manner expressed intense disgust.
+
+Joel was shocked. "Oh, are you sure?" he cried. "You certainly must be
+mistaken! It cannot be so!"
+
+"I guess I know what I see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears!"
+she retorted, angrily. "My father says they are a bad lot. People that
+go with publicans are just as unclean themselves. If you know so much
+more than everybody else, I'll not trouble myself to run after you with
+any more news. Mistaken, indeed!"
+
+With her head held high, and her nose scornfully turned up, she jerked
+her little brother past him, and went quickly around the corner of the
+street.
+
+The indignation of some of the rabbis knew no bounds. "It has turned out
+just as I predicted," said the scribe to Laban, at supper. "They are
+nothing but a set of gluttons and wine-bibbers!"
+
+There was nothing else talked of during the entire meal. How Joel's
+blood boiled as he listened to their conversation! The food seemed to
+choke him. As they applied one coarse epithet after another to his
+friend Phineas, all the kindness and care this man had ever given him
+seemed to rise up before him. But when they turned on the Nazarene, all
+the stories Joel had heard in the carpenter's house of His gentle
+sinless childhood, all the tokens he had seen himself of His pure
+unselfish manhood, seemed to cry out against such gross injustice.
+
+It was no light thing for a child to contradict the doctors of the Law,
+and, in a case of this kind, little less than a crime to take the stand
+Joel did.
+
+But the memory of two faces gave him courage: that of Phineas as it had
+looked on him through all those busy happy hours in the carpenter's
+home; the other face he had seen but once, that day of healing in the
+synagogue,--who, having once looked into the purity of those eyes, the
+infinite tenderness of that face, could sit calmly by and raise no voice
+against the calumny of his enemies?
+
+The little cripple was white to the lips, and he trembled from head to
+foot as he stood up to speak.
+
+The scribe lifted up both hands, and turned to Laban with a meaning
+shrug of the shoulders. "To think of finding such heresy in your own
+household!" he exclaimed. "Among your own children!"
+
+"He is no child of mine!" retorted Laban. "Nor shall he stay among
+them!" Then he turned to Joel.
+
+"Boy, take back every word you have just uttered! Swear you will
+renounce this man,--this son of perdition,--and never have aught to say
+well of Him again!"
+
+Joel looked around the table, at each face that shone out pale and
+excited in the yellow lamplight. His eyes were dilated with fear; his
+heart thumped so in the awful pause that followed, that he thought
+everybody else must hear it.
+
+"I cannot!" he said hoarsely. "Oh, I cannot!"
+
+"Then take yourself out of my sight forever. The doors of this house
+shall never open for you again!"
+
+There was a storm of abuse from the angry man at this open defiance of
+his authority. With these two cold, stern men to nod approval at his
+zealousness, he went to greater lengths than he might otherwise have
+done.
+
+With one more frightened glance around the table, the child hurried out
+of the room. The door into the street creaked after him, and Joel limped
+out into the night, with his uncle's curse ringing in his ears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+PHINEAS, going along the beach that night, in the early moonlight,
+towards his home, saw a little figure crouched in the shadow of a low
+building beside the wharf. It was shaking with violent sobs. He went up
+to the child, and took its hands down from its wet face, with a
+comforting expression of pity. Then he started back in surprise. It was
+Joel!
+
+"Why, my child! My poor child!" he exclaimed, putting his arm around the
+trembling, misshapen form. "What is the meaning of all this?"
+
+"Uncle Laban has driven me away from home!" sobbed the boy. "He was
+angry because you and Rabbi Jesus were invited to Levi-Matthew's feast.
+He says I have denied the faith, and am worse than an infidel. He says I
+am fit only to be cast out with the dogs and publicans!--and--and--" he
+ended with a wail. "Oh, he sent me away with his curse!"
+
+Phineas drew him closer, and stroked the head on his shoulder in pitying
+silence.
+
+"Fatherless and motherless and lame!" the boy sobbed bitterly. "And now,
+a homeless outcast, blighted by a curse, I have been sitting here with
+my feet in the dark water, thinking how easy it would be to slip down
+into it and forget; but, Rabbi Phineas, that face will not let me,--that
+face of your friend,--I keep seeing it all the time!"
+
+Phineas gathered the boy so close in his arms that Joel could feel his
+strong, even heart-beats.
+
+"My child," he said solemnly, "call me no more, Rabbi! Henceforth, it is
+to be _father_ Phineas. You shall be to me as my own son!"
+
+"But the curse!" sobbed Joel. "The curse that is set upon me! It will
+blight you too!"
+
+"Nay," was the quiet answer; "for it is written, 'As the bird by
+wandering, as the swallow by flying, _so the curse, causeless, shall not
+come_.'"
+
+But the boy still shook as with a chill. His face and hands were burning
+hot.
+
+"Come!" said Phineas. He picked him up in his strong arms, and carried
+him down the beach to Abigail's motherly care and comforting.
+
+"He will be a long time getting over the shock of this," she said to
+her husband, when he was at last soothed to sleep.
+
+"Ah, loyal little heart!" he answered, "he has suffered much for the
+sake of his friendship with us!"
+
+Poor little storm-tossed bark! In the days that followed he had reason
+to bless the boisterous winds, that blew him to such a safe and happy
+harbor!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Over on the horns of Mount Hattin, the spring morning began to shine.
+The light crept slowly down the side of the old mountain, till it fell
+on a little group of men talking earnestly together. It was the Preacher
+of Galilee, who had just chosen twelve men from among those who followed
+Him to help Him in His ministry.
+
+They gathered around Him in the fresh mountain dawn, as He pictured the
+life in store for them. Strange they did not quail before it, and turn
+back disheartened. Nay, not strange! For in the weeks they had been with
+Him, they had learned to love Him so, that His "follow me," that drew
+them from the toll-gate and fishing-boat, was stronger than ties of home
+and kindred.
+
+Just about this time, Phineas and Joel were starting out from Capernaum
+to the mountain. Hundreds of people were already on the way; people who
+had come from all parts of Judea, and beyond the Jordan. Clouds of dust
+rose above the highway as the travellers trudged along.
+
+Joel was obliged to walk slowly, so that by the time they reached the
+plain below, a great multitude had gathered.
+
+"Let's get close," he whispered. He had heard that those who barely
+touched the garments of the strange Rabbi were made whole, and it was
+with the hope that he might steal up and touch Him unobserved that he
+had begged Phineas to take him on such a long, painful walk.
+
+"There is too great a crowd, now," answered Phineas. "Let us rest here
+awhile, and listen. Let me lift you up on this big rock, so that you can
+see. 'Sh! He is speaking!"
+
+Joel looked up, and, for the second time in his life, listened to words
+that thrilled him like a trumpet call,--words that through eighteen
+hundred years have not ceased to vibrate; with what mighty power they
+must have fallen when, for the first time, they broke the morning
+stillness of those mountain wilds!
+
+Joel forgot the press of people about him, forgot even where he was, as
+sentence after sentence seemed to lift him out of himself, till he
+could catch glimpses of lofty living such as he had never even dreamed
+of before.
+
+Round by round, he seemed to be carried up some high ladder of thought
+by that voice, away from all that was common and low and earthly, to a
+summit of infinite love and light.
+
+Still the voice led on, "Ye have heard that it hath been said, 'An eye
+for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.'"
+
+Joel started so violently at hearing his own familiar motto, that he
+nearly lost his balance on the rock.
+
+"But I say unto you that you resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite
+thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.... Ye have heard
+that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbor, and hate thine
+enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you,
+do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use
+you, and persecute you."
+
+Poor little Joel, it was a hard doctrine for him to accept! How could he
+give up his hope of revenge, when it had grown with his growth till it
+had come to be as dear as life itself?
+
+He heard little of the rest of the sermon, for through it all the words
+kept echoing, "Bless them that curse you! Do good to them that hate
+you! Pray for them which despitefully use you!"
+
+"Oh, I can't! I can't!" he groaned inwardly.
+
+"I have found a chance for you to ride home," said Phineas, when the
+sermon was over, and the people began to file down the narrow mountain
+paths. "But there will be time for you to go to Him first, for healing.
+You have only to ask, you know."
+
+Joel took an eager step forward, and then shrank back guiltily. "Not
+now," he murmured, "some other time." He could not look into those clear
+eyes and ask a blessing, when he knew his heart was black with hate.
+
+After all his weeks of waiting the opportunity had come; but he dared
+not let the Sinless One look into his soul.
+
+Phineas began an exclamation of surprise, but was interrupted by some
+one asking him a question. Joel took advantage of this to climb up
+behind the man who had offered him a ride. All the way home he weighed
+the two desires in his mind,--the hope of healing, and the hope of
+revenge.
+
+By the time the two guardian fig-trees were in sight, he had decided. He
+would rather go helpless and halting through life than give up his
+cherished purpose.
+
+But there was no sleep for him that night, after he had gone up to his
+little chamber on the roof. He seemed to see that pleading face on the
+mountain-side; it came to him again and again, with the words, "Bless
+them that curse you! Pray for them that despitefully use you!"
+
+All night he fought against yielding to it. Time and again he turned
+over on his bed, and closed his eyes; but it would not let him alone.
+
+He thought of Jacob wrestling with the angel till day-break, and knew in
+his heart that the sweet spirit of forgiveness striving with his selfish
+nature was some heavenly impulse from another world.
+
+At last when the cock-crowing commenced at dawn, and the stars were
+beginning to fade, he drew up his crooked little body, and knelt with
+his face to the kindling east.
+
+"Father in heaven," he prayed softly, "bless mine enemy Rehum, and
+forgive all my sins,--fully and freely as I now forgive the wrong he has
+done to me."
+
+A feeling of light-heartedness and peace, such as he had never known
+before, stole over him. He could not settle himself to sleep, though
+worn out with his night's long vigil.
+
+[Illustration: "NOT A WORD WAS SAID"]
+
+Hastily slipping on his clothes, he tiptoed down the stairs, and limped,
+bare-headed, down to the beach. The lake shimmered and glowed under the
+faint rose and gray of the sky like a deep opal. The early breeze blew
+the hair back from his pale face with a refreshing coolness.
+
+It seemed to him the world had never looked one half so beautiful
+before, as he stood there.
+
+A firm tread on the gravel made him turn partly around. A man was coming
+up the beach; it was the friend of Phineas. As if drawn by some
+uncontrollable impulse, Joel started to meet Him, an unspoken prayer in
+his pleading little face.
+
+Not a word was said. For one little instant Joel stood there by the
+shining sea, his hand held close in the loving hand of the world's
+Redeemer. For one little instant he looked up into His face; then the
+man passed on.
+
+Joel covered his face with his hands, seeming to hear the still small
+voice that spoke to the prophet out of the whirlwind.
+
+"He is the Christ!" he whispered reverently,--"He is the Christ!"
+
+In his exalted feeling all thought of a cure had left him; but as he
+walked on down the beach, he noticed that he no longer limped. He was
+moving along with strong, quick strides. He shook himself and threw
+back his shoulders; there was no pain in the movement. He passed his
+hands over his back and down his limbs.
+
+Oh, he was straight and strong and sinewy! He seemed a stranger to
+himself, as running and leaping, then stopping to look down and feel his
+limbs again, he ran madly on.
+
+Suddenly he cast his garments aside and dived into the lake. Before his
+injury, he had been able to swim like a fish, now he reached out with
+long powerful strokes that sent him darting through the cold water with
+a wonderful sense of exhilaration.
+
+Then he dressed again, and went on running and leaping and climbing till
+he was exhausted, and his first wild delirious joy began to subside into
+a deep quiet thankfulness. Then he went home, radiant in the happiness
+of his new-found cure.
+
+But more than the mystery of the miracle, more than the joy of the
+healing, was the remembrance of that moment, that one little moment,
+when he felt the clasp of the Master's hand, and seemed wrapped about
+with the boundless love of God.
+
+From that moment, he lived but to serve and to follow Him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+HIGH up among the black lava crags of Perea stood the dismal fortress of
+Macherus. Behind its close prison bars a restless captive groped his way
+back and forth in a dungeon cell. Sometimes, at long intervals, he was
+given such liberty as a chained eagle might have, when he was led up
+into one of the towers of the gloomy keep, and allowed to look down,
+down into the bottomless gorges surrounding it. For months he had chafed
+in the darkness of his underground dungeon; escape was impossible.
+
+It was John Baptist, brought from the wild, free life of the desert to
+the tortures of the "Black Castle." Here he lay at the mercy of Herod
+Antipas, and death might strike at any moment. More than once, the
+whimsical monarch had sent for him, as he sat at his banquets, to be the
+sport of the passing hour.
+
+The lights, the color, the flash of gems may have dazzled his eyes for a
+brief space, accustomed as they were to the midnight darkness of his
+cell; but his keen vision saw, under the paint and purple of royal
+apparel, the corrupt life of king and court.
+
+Pointing his stern, accusing finger at the uneasy king, he cried, "It is
+not lawful for thee to have thy brother's wife!" With words that stung
+like hurtling arrows, he laid bare the blackened, beastly life that
+sought to hide its foulness under royal ermine.
+
+Antipas cowered before him; and while he would gladly have been freed
+from a man who had such power over him, he dared not lift a finger
+against the fearless, unflinching Baptist.
+
+But the guilty Herodias bided her time, with blood-thirsty impatience;
+his life should pay the penalty of his bold speech.
+
+Meanwhile he waited in his cell, with nothing but memories to relieve
+the tediousness of the long hours. Over and over again he lived those
+scenes of his strange life in the desert,--those days of his
+preparation,--the preaching to the multitudes, the baptizing at the ford
+of the Jordan.
+
+He wondered if his words still lived; if any of his followers still
+believed on him. But more than all, he wondered what had become of that
+One on whom he had seen the spirit of God descending out of heaven in
+the form of a dove.
+
+"Where art Thou now?" he cried. "If Thou art the Messiah, why dost Thou
+not set up Thy kingdom, and speedily give Thy servant his liberty?" The
+empty room rang often with that cry; but the hollow echo of his own
+words was the only answer.
+
+One day the door of his cell creaked back far enough to admit two men,
+and then shut again, leaving them in total darkness. In that momentary
+flash of light, he recognized two old followers of his, Timeus bar Joram
+and Benjamin the potter.
+
+With a cry of joy he groped his way toward them, and clung to their
+friendly hands.
+
+"How did you manage to penetrate these Roman-guarded walls?" he asked,
+in astonishment.
+
+"I knew the warden," answered Benjamin. "A piece of silver conveniently
+closes his eyes to many things. But we must hasten! Our time is
+limited."
+
+They had much to tell of the outside world. Pilate had just given
+special offence, by appropriating part of the treasure of the Temple,
+derived from the Temple tax, to defray the cost of great conduits he had
+begun, with which to supply Jerusalem with water.
+
+Stirred up by the priests and rabbis, the people besieged the government
+house, crying loudly that the works be given up. Armed with clubs,
+numbers of soldiers in plain clothes surrounded the great mob, and
+killed so many of the people that the wildest excitement prevailed
+throughout all Judea and Galilee.
+
+There was a cry for a national uprising to avenge the murder.
+
+"They only need a leader!" exclaimed John. "Where is He for whom I was
+but a voice crying in the wilderness? Why does He not show Himself?"
+
+"We have just come from the village of Nain," said Timeus bar Joram. "We
+saw Him stop a funeral procession and raise a widow's son to life. He
+was followed by a motley throng whom He had healed of all sorts of
+diseases; and there were twelve men whom He had chosen as life-long
+companions.
+
+"We questioned some of them closely, and they gave us marvellous reports
+of the things He had done."
+
+"Is it not strange," asked Benjamin the potter, "that having such power
+He still delays to establish His kingdom?"
+
+The captive prophet made no answer for awhile. Then he groped in the
+thick darkness till his hand rested heavily on Benjamin's arm.
+
+"Go back, and say that John Baptist asks, 'Art Thou the Coming One, or
+must we look for another?'"
+
+Days passed before the devoted friends found themselves once more inside
+the prison walls. They had had a weary journey over rough hills and
+rocky by-paths.
+
+"What did He say?" demanded the prisoner, eagerly.
+
+"Go and tell John what ye saw and heard: that the blind receive sight;
+the lame walk; the lepers are cleansed; the deaf hear; the dead are
+raised; and the poor have the gospel preached unto them."
+
+The man stood up, his long hair hanging to his shoulder, his hand
+uplifted, and his eyes dilated like a startled deer that has caught the
+sound of a coming step.
+
+"The fulfilment of the words of Isaiah!" he cried. "For he hath said,
+'Your God will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be
+opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame
+man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing!' Yea, he _hath_
+bound up the broken-hearted; and he shall yet 'proclaim liberty to the
+captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound, to
+proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord!'"
+
+Then with both hands clasped high above his head, he made the prison
+ring with the cry, "The kingdom is at hand! The kingdom is at hand! I
+shall soon be free!"
+
+Not long after that, the castle blazed with the lights of another
+banquet. The faint aroma of wines, mingled with the heavy odor of
+countless flowers, could not penetrate the grim prison walls. Nor could
+the gay snatches of song and the revelry of the feast. No sound of
+applause reached the prisoner's ear, when the daughter of Herodias
+danced before the king.
+
+Sitting in darkness while the birthday banqueters held high carnival, he
+heard the heavy tramp of soldiers' feet coming down the stairs to his
+dungeon. The great bolts shot back, the rusty hinges turned, and a
+lantern flickered its light in his face, as he stood up to receive his
+executioners.
+
+A little while later his severed head was taken on a charger to the
+smiling dancing girl. She stifled a shriek when she saw it; but the
+wicked Herodias looked at it with a gleam of triumph in her treacherous
+black eyes.
+
+When the lights were out, and the feasters gone, two men came in at the
+warden's bidding,--two men with heavy hearts, and voices that shook a
+little when they spoke to each other. They were Timeus and Benjamin.
+Silently they lifted the body of their beloved master, and carried it
+away for burial; and if a tear or two found an unaccustomed path down
+their bearded cheeks, no one knew it, under cover of the darkness.
+
+So, out of the Black Castle of Macherus, out of the prison-house of a
+mortal body, the white-souled prophet of the wilderness went forth at
+last into liberty.
+
+For him, the kingdom was indeed at hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile in the upper country, Phineas was following his friend from
+village to village. He had dropped his old familiar form of address, so
+much was he impressed by the mysterious power he saw constantly
+displayed.
+
+Now when he spoke of the man who had been both friend and playfellow,
+it was almost reverently that he gave Him the title of Master.
+
+It was with a heavy heart that Joel watched them go away. He, too,
+longed to follow; but he knew that unless he took the place at the
+bench, Phineas could not be free to go.
+
+Gratitude held him to his post. No, not gratitude alone; he was learning
+the Master's own spirit of loving self-sacrifice. As he dropped the
+plumb-line over his work, he measured himself by that perfect life, and
+tried to straighten himself to its unbending standard.
+
+He had his reward in the look of pleasure that he saw on the carpenter's
+face when Phineas came in, unexpectedly, one day, dusty and
+travel-stained.
+
+"How much you have accomplished!" he said in surprise. "You have filled
+my place like a grown man."
+
+Joel stretched his strong arms with a slight laugh. "It is a pleasure to
+work now," he said. "It seems so queer never to have a pain, or that
+worn-out feeling of weakness that used to be always with me. At first I
+was often afraid it was all a happy dream, and could not last. I am
+getting used to it now. Where is the Master?" Joel asked, as Phineas
+turned towards the house.
+
+"He is the guest of Simon. He will be here some days, my son. I know you
+wish to be with Him as much as possible, so I shall not expect your help
+as long as He stays."
+
+"If I could only do something for Him!" was Joel's constant thought
+during the next few days. Once he took a coin from the little money bag
+that held his hoarded savings--a coin that was to have helped buy his
+revenge--and bought the ripest, juiciest pear he could find in the
+market. Often he brought Him water, fresh and cold from the well when He
+looked tired and warm from His unceasing work.
+
+Wherever the Master turned, there, close beside Him, was a beaming
+little face, so full of love and childish sympathy that it must have
+brought more refreshment to His thirsty soul than either the choice
+fruit or the cooling water.
+
+One evening after a busy day, when He had talked for hours to the people
+on the seashore who had gathered around the boat in which He sat, He
+sent away the multitude.
+
+"Let us pass over unto the other side," He said.
+
+Joel slipped up to Andrew, who was busily arranging their sails. "Let me
+go, too!" he whispered pleadingly.
+
+"Well," assented the man, carelessly, "You can make yourself useful, I
+suppose. Will you hand me that rope?"
+
+Joel sprang to obey. Presently the boat pushed away from the shore, and
+the town, with its tumult and its twinkling lights, was soon left far
+behind.
+
+The sea was like glass, so calm and unruffled that every star above
+could look down and see its unbroken reflection in the dark water below.
+
+Joel, in the hinder part of the ship, lay back in his seat with a sigh
+of perfect enjoyment. The smooth gliding motion of the boat rested him;
+the soft splash of the water soothed his excited brain. He had seen his
+Uncle Laban that afternoon among other of the scribes and Pharisees, and
+heard him declare that Beelzebub alone was responsible for the wonders
+they witnessed.
+
+Joel's indignation flared up again at the memory. He looked down at the
+Master, who had fallen asleep on a pillow, and wondered how anybody
+could possibly believe such evil things about Him.
+
+It was cooler out where they were now. He wondered if he ought not to
+lay some covering over the sleeping form. He took off the outer mantle
+that he wore, and bent forward to lay it over the Master's feet. But he
+drew back timidly, afraid of wakening Him. "I'll wait awhile," he said
+to himself, folding the garment across his knees in readiness.
+
+Several times he reached forward to lay it over Him, and each time drew
+back. Then he fell asleep himself.
+
+From its situation in the basin of the hills, the Galilee is subject to
+sudden and furious storms. The winds, rushing down the heights, meet and
+clash above the water, till the waves run up like walls, then sink again
+into seething whirlpools of danger.
+
+Joel, falling asleep in a dead calm, awoke to find the ship rolling and
+tossing and half-full of water. The lightning's track was followed so
+closely by the crash of thunder, there was not even pause enough between
+to take one terrified gasp.
+
+Still the Master slept. Joel, drenched to the skin, clung to the boat's
+side, expecting that every minute would be his last. It was so dark and
+wild and awful! How helpless they were, buffetted about in the fury of
+the storm!
+
+As wave after wave beat in, some of the men could no longer control
+their fear.
+
+"Master!" they called to the sleeping man, as they bent over Him in
+terror. "Carest Thou not that we perish?"
+
+He heard the cry for help. The storm could not waken Him from His deep
+sleep of exhaustion, but at the first despairing human voice, He was up,
+ready to help.
+
+Looking up at the midnight blackness of the sky, and down at the wild
+waste of waters, He stretched out His hand.
+
+"_Peace!_" he commanded in a deep voice. "_Be still!_" The storm sank to
+earth as suddenly as a death-stricken raven; a great calm spread over
+the face of the waters. The silent stars shone out in their places; the
+silent sea mirrored back their glory at His feet.
+
+The men huddled fearfully together. "What manner of man is this?" they
+asked, one of another. "Even the wind and the sea obey Him!"
+
+Joel, looking up at the majestic form, standing so quietly by the
+railing, thought of the voice that once rang out over the night of
+Creation with the command, "Let there be light!" At its mere bidding
+light had flowed in across the darkness of primeval night.
+
+Just so had this voice thrilled the storm with its "Peace! Be still!"
+into utter calm.
+
+The child crouched at His feet, burying his face in his mantle, and
+whispering, in awe and adoration, "He _is_ the Christ! He is the son of
+God!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+AFTER that night of the voyage to the Gadarenes, Joel ceased to be
+surprised at the miracles he daily witnessed. Even when the little
+daughter of Jairus, the ruler of the synagogue, was called back to life,
+it did not seem so wonderful to him as the stilling of the tempest.
+
+Many a night after Phineas had gone away again with the Master to other
+cities, Joel used to go down to the beach, and stand looking across the
+water as he recalled that scene.
+
+The lake had always been an interesting place to him at night. He liked
+to watch the fishermen as they flashed their blazing torches this way
+and that. A sympathetic thrill ran through him as they sighted their
+prey, and raised their bare sinewy arms to fling the net or fly the
+spear.
+
+But after that morning of healing, and that night of tempest, it seemed
+to be a sacred place, to be visited only on still nights, when the town
+slept, and heaven bent nearer in the starlight to the quiet earth.
+
+The time of the Passover was drawing near,--the time that Joel had been
+looking forward to since Phineas had promised him a year ago that he
+should go to Jerusalem.
+
+The twelve disciples who had been sent out to all the little towns
+through Galilee, to teach the things they had themselves been taught,
+and work miracles in the name of Him who had sent them, began to come
+slowly back. They had an encouraging report to bring of their work; but
+it was shadowed by the news they had heard of the murder of John
+Baptist.
+
+Joel joined them as soon as they came into Capernaum, and walked beside
+Phineas as the footsore travellers pressed on a little farther towards
+Simon's house.
+
+"When are we going to start for Jerusalem?" was his first eager
+question.
+
+Phineas looked searchingly into his face as he replied, "Would you be
+greatly disappointed, my son, not to go this year?"
+
+Joel looked perplexed; it was such an unheard of thing for Phineas to
+miss going up to the Feast of the Passover.
+
+"These are evil times, my Joel," he explained. "John Baptist has just
+been beheaded. The Master has many enemies among those in high places.
+It would be like walking into a lion's den for Him to go up to
+Jerusalem.
+
+"Even here He is not safe from the hatred of Antipas, and after a little
+rest will pass over into the borders of the tetrarch Philip. We have no
+wish to leave Him!"
+
+"Oh, why should He be persecuted so?" asked Joel, looking with
+tear-dimmed eyes at the man walking in advance of them, and talking in
+low earnest tones to John, who walked beside Him.
+
+"You have been with Him so much, father Phineas. Have _you_ ever known
+Him to do anything to make these men His enemies?"
+
+"Yes," said Phineas. "He has drawn the people after Him until they are
+jealous of His popularity. He upsets their old traditions, and teaches a
+religion that ignores some of the Laws of Moses. I can easily see why
+they hate Him so. They see Him at such a long distance from themselves,
+they can not understand Him. Healing on the Sabbath, eating with
+publicans and sinners, disregarding the little customs and ceremonies
+that in all ages have set apart our people as a chosen race, are crimes
+in their eyes.
+
+"If they only could get close enough to understand Him; to see that His
+pure life needs no ceremonies of multiplied hand-washings; that it is
+His broad love for His fellow-men that makes Him stoop to the lowest
+classes,--I am sure they could not do otherwise than love Him.
+
+"Blind fanatics! They would put to death the best man that ever lived,
+because He is so much broader and higher than they that the little
+measuring line of their narrow creed cannot compass Him!"
+
+"Is He never going to set up His kingdom?" asked Joel. "Does He never
+talk about it?"
+
+"Yes," said Phineas; "though we are often puzzled by what He says, and
+ask ourselves His meaning."
+
+They had reached the house by this time, and as Simon led the way to its
+hospitable door, Phineas said, "Enter with them, my lad, if you wish. I
+must go on to my little family, but will join you soon."
+
+To Joel's great pleasure, he found they were to cross the lake at once,
+to the little fishing port of Bethsaida. It was only six miles across.
+
+"We have hardly had time to eat," said Andrew to Joel, as they walked
+along towards the boat "I will be glad to get away to some desert
+place, where we may have rest from the people that are always pushing
+and clamoring about us."
+
+"How long before you start?" asked Joel.
+
+"In a very few minutes," answered Andrew; "for the boat is in
+readiness."
+
+Joel glanced from the street above the beach to the water's edge, as if
+calculating the distance.
+
+"Don't go without me," he said as, breaking into a run, he dashed up the
+beach at his utmost speed. He was back again in a surprisingly quick
+time, with a cheap little basket in his hand; he was out of breath with
+his rapid run.
+
+"Didn't I go fast?" he panted. "I could not have done that a few weeks
+ago. Oh, it feels so good to be able to run when I please! It is like
+flying."
+
+He lifted the cover of the basket. "See!" he said. "I thought the Master
+might be hungry; but I had no time to get anything better. I had to stop
+at the first stall I came to."
+
+At the same time the boat went gliding out into the water with its
+restful motion, thousands of people were pouring out of the villages on
+foot, and hurrying on around the lake, ahead of them.
+
+The boat passed up a narrow winding creek, away from the sail-dotted
+lake; its green banks seemed to promise the longed-for quiet and rest.
+But there in front of them waited the crowds they had come so far to
+avoid.
+
+They had brought their sick for healing. They needed to be helped and
+taught; they were "as sheep without a shepherd!" He could not refuse
+them.
+
+Joel found no chance to offer the food he had bought so hastily with
+another of his hoarded coins,--the coins that were to have purchased his
+revenge.
+
+As the day wore on, he heard the disciples ask that the multitudes might
+be sent away.
+
+"It would take two hundred pennyworth of bread to feed them," said
+Philip, "and even that would not be enough."
+
+Andrew glanced over the great crowds and stroked his beard thoughtfully.
+"There is a lad here which hath five barley loaves and two small fishes,
+but what are they among so many?"
+
+Joel hurried forward and held out his basket with its little
+store,--five flat round loaves of bread, not much more than one hungry
+man could eat, and two dried fishes.
+
+He hardly knew what to expect as the people were made to sit down on the
+grass in orderly ranks of fifties.
+
+His eyes grew round with astonishment as the Master took the bread, gave
+thanks, and then passed it to the disciples, who, in turn, distributed
+it among the people. Then the two little fishes were handed around in
+the same way.
+
+Joel turned to Phineas, who had joined them some time ago. "Do you see
+that?" he asked excitedly. "They have been multiplied a thousand fold!"
+
+Phineas smiled. "We drop one tiny grain of wheat into the earth," he
+said, "and when it grows and spreads and bears dozens of other grains on
+its single stalk, we are not astonished. When the Master but does in an
+instant, what Nature takes months to do, we cry, 'a miracle!' 'Men are
+more wont to be astonished at the sun's eclipse, than at its daily
+rising,'" he quoted, remembering his conversation with the old
+traveller, on his way to Nathan ben Obed's.
+
+A feeling of exaltation seized the people as they ate the mysterious
+bread; it seemed that the days of miraculous manna had come again. By
+the time they had all satisfied their hunger, and twelve basketfuls of
+the fragments had been gathered up, they were ready to make Him their
+king. The restlessness of the times had taken possession of them; the
+burning excitement must find vent in some way, and with one accord they
+demanded Him as their leader.
+
+Joel wondered why He should refuse. Surely no other man he had ever
+known could have resisted such an appeal.
+
+The perplexed fisherman, at Jesus's command, turned their boat homeward
+without Him. To their simple minds it seemed that He had made a mistake
+in resisting the homage forced upon Him by the people; they longed for
+the time to come when they should be recognized as the honored officials
+in the new kingdom. Many a dream of future power and magnificence must
+have come to them in the still watches of the night, as they drifted
+home in the white light of the Passover moon.
+
+Many a time in the weeks that followed, Joel slipped away to his
+favorite spot on the beech, a flat rock half hidden by a clump of
+oleander bushes. Here, with his feet idly dangling in the ripples, he
+looked out over the water, and recalled the scenes he had witnessed
+there.
+
+It seemed so marvellous to him that the Master could have ever walked
+on those shining waves; and yet he had seen Him that night after the
+feeding of the multitudes. He had seen, with his own frightened eyes,
+the Master walk calmly towards the boat across the unsteady water, and
+catch up the sinking Peter, who had jumped overboard to meet Him. It
+grieved and fretted the boy that this man, of God-given power and such
+sweet unselfish spirit, could be so persistently misunderstood by the
+people. He could think of nothing else.
+
+He had not been with the crowds that pressed into the synagogue the
+Sabbath after the thousands had been fed; but Phineas came home with
+grim lips and knitted brows, and told him about it.
+
+"The Master knew they followed Him because of the loaves and fishes," he
+said. "He told them so.
+
+"When we came out of the door, I could not help looking up at the lintel
+on which is carved the pot of manna; for when they asked Him for a sign
+that they might believe Him, saying, 'Our fathers ate manna in the
+wilderness!' He answered: 'I am the bread of life! Ye have seen me, and
+yet believe not!'
+
+"While He talked there was a murmuring all over the house against Him,
+because He said that He had come down from heaven. Your uncle Laban was
+there. I heard him say scornfully: 'Is not this the son of Joseph, whose
+father and mother we know? How doth He now say, "I am come down out of
+heaven"?' Then he laughed a mocking little laugh, and nudged the man who
+stood next to him. There are many like him; I could feel a spirit of
+prejudice and persecution in the very air. Many who have professed to be
+His friends have turned against Him."
+
+While Phineas was pouring out his anxious forebodings to his wife and
+Joel, the Master was going homeward with His chosen twelve.
+
+"Would ye also go away?" He asked wistfully of His companions, as He
+noted the cold, disapproving looks of many who had only the day before
+been fed by Him, and who now openly turned their backs on Him.
+
+Simon Peter gave a questioning glance into the faces of his companions;
+then he pressed a step nearer. "Lord, to whom shall we go?" he answered
+impulsively. "Thou hast the words of eternal life. And we have believed,
+and know that Thou art the Holy One of God."
+
+The others nodded their assent, all but one. Judas Iscariot clutched the
+money bags he held, and looked off across the lake, to avoid the
+searching eyes that were fixed upon him.
+
+These honest Galileans were too simple to suspect others of dark
+designs, yet they had never felt altogether free with this stranger from
+Judea. He had never seemed entirely one of them. They did not see in his
+crafty quiet manners, the sheep's clothing that hid his wolfish nature;
+but they could feel his lack of sympathetic enthusiasm.
+
+He had been one of those who followed only for the loaves and fishes of
+a temporal kingdom, and now, in his secret soul, he was sorry he had
+joined a cause in whose final success he was beginning to lose faith.
+
+The sun went down suddenly that night behind a heavy cloud, as a
+gathering storm began to lash the Galilee and rock the little boats
+anchored at the landings.
+
+The year of popularity was at an end.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ABIGAIL sat just inside the door, turning the noisy hand-mill that
+ground out the next day's supply of flour. The rough mill-stones grated
+so harshly on each other that she did not hear the steps coming up the
+path. A shadow falling across the door-way made her look up.
+
+"You are home early, my Phineas," she said, with a smile. "Well, I shall
+soon have your supper ready. Joel has gone to the market for some honey
+and--"
+
+"Nay! I have little wish to eat," he interrupted, "but I have much to
+say to you. Come! the work can wait."
+
+Abigail put the mill aside, and brushing the flour from her hands, sat
+down on the step beside him, wondering much at his troubled face.
+
+He plunged into his subject abruptly. "The Master is soon going away,"
+he said, "that those in the uttermost parts of Galilee may be taught of
+Him. And He would fain have others beside the twelve He has chosen to go
+with Him on His journey."
+
+"And you wish to go too?" she questioned, as he paused.
+
+"Yes! How can I do otherwise? And yet how can I leave you and the little
+ones alone in these troubled times? You cannot think how great the
+danger is. Remember how many horrors we have lately heard. The whole
+country is a smouldering volcano, ready to burst into an eruption at any
+moment. A leader has only to arise, and all Israel will take up arms
+against the powers that trample us under foot."
+
+"Is not this prophet, Jesus, He who is to save Israel?" asked Abigail.
+"Is He not even now making ready to establish His kingdom?"
+
+"I do not understand Him at all!" said Phineas, sadly. "He does talk of
+a kingdom in which we are all to have a part; but He never seems to be
+working to establish it. He spends all His time in healing diseases and
+forgiving penitent sinners, and telling us to love our neighbors.
+
+"Then, again, why should He go down to the beach, and choose for His
+confidential friends just simple fishermen. They have neither influence
+nor money. As for the choice of that publican Levi-Matthew, it has
+brought disgrace on the whole movement. He does not seem to know how to
+sway the popular feeling. I believe He might have had the support of the
+foremost men of the nation, if He had approached them differently.
+
+"He shocks them by setting aside laws they would lay down their lives
+rather than violate. He associates with those they consider unclean; and
+all His miracles cannot make them forget how boldly He has rebuked them
+for hypocrisy and unrighteousness. They never will come to His support
+now; and I do not see how a new government can be formed without their
+help."
+
+Abigail laid her hand on his, her dark eyes glowing with intense
+earnestness, as she answered: "What need is there of armies and human
+hands to help?
+
+"Where were the hosts of Pharaoh when our fathers passed through the Red
+Sea? Was there bloodshed and fighting there?
+
+"Who battled for us when the walls of Jericho fell down? Whose hand
+smote the Assyrians at Sennacherib? Is the Lord's arm shortened that He
+cannot save?
+
+"Why may not His prophet speak peace to Jerusalem as easily as He did
+the other night to the stormy sea? Why may not His power be multiplied
+even as the loaves and fishes?
+
+"Why may not the sins and backslidings of the people be healed as well
+as Joel's lameness; or the glory of the nation be quickened into a new
+life, as speedily as He raised the daughter of Jairus?
+
+"Isaiah called Him the Prince of Peace. What are all these lessons, if
+not to teach us that the purposes of God do not depend on human hands to
+work out their fulfilment?"
+
+Her low voice thrilled him with its inspiring questions, and he looked
+down into her rapt face with a feeling of awe.
+
+"Abigail," he said softly, "'my source of joy,'--you are rightly named.
+You have led me out of the doubts that have been my daily torment. I see
+now, why He never incites us to rebel against the yoke of Cćsar. In the
+fulness of time He will free us with a breath.
+
+"How strange it should have fallen to my lot to have been His playmate
+and companion. My wonder is not that He is the Messiah; but that I
+should have called Him friend, all these years, unknowing."
+
+"How long do you expect to be away?" she asked, after a pause, suddenly
+returning to the first subject.
+
+"Several months, perhaps. There is no telling what insurrections and
+riots may arise, all through this part of the country. Since the murder
+of John Baptist, Herod has come back to his court in Tiberias. I dislike
+to leave you here alone."
+
+Abigail, too, looked grave, and neither spoke for a little while. "I
+have it!" she exclaimed at length, with a pleased light in her eyes. "I
+have often wished I could make a long visit in the home of my girlhood.
+The few days I have spent in my father's house, those few times I have
+gone with you to the feasts, have been so short and unsatisfactory. Can
+I not take Joel and the children to Bethany? Neither father nor mother
+has ever seen little Ruth, and we could be so safe and happy there till
+your return."
+
+"Why did I not come to you before with my worries?" asked Phineas. "How
+easily you make the crooked places straight!"
+
+Just then the children came running back from the market. Abigail went
+into the house with the provisions they had brought, leaving their
+father to tell them of the coming separation and the long journey they
+had planned.
+
+A week later, Phineas stood at the city gate, watching a little company
+file southward down the highway. He had hired two strong,
+gayly-caparisoned mules from the owner of the caravan. Abigail rode on
+one, holding little Ruth in her arms; Joel mounted the other, with Jesse
+clinging close behind him.
+
+Abigail, thinking of the joyful welcome awaiting her in her old home,
+and the children happy in the novelty of the journey, set out gayly.
+
+But Phineas, thinking of the dangers by the way, and filled with many
+forebodings, watched their departure with a heavy heart.
+
+At the top of a little rise in the road, they turned to look back and
+wave their hands. In a moment more they were out of sight. Then Phineas,
+grasping his staff more firmly, turned away, and started on foot in the
+other direction, to follow to the world's end, if need be, the friend
+who had gone on before.
+
+It was in the midst of the barley harvest. Jesse had never been in the
+country before. For the first time, Nature spread for him her great
+picture-book of field and forest and vineyard, while Abigail read to him
+the stories.
+
+First on one side of the road, then the other, she pointed out some spot
+and told its history.
+
+Here was Dothan, where Joseph went out to see his brothers, dressed in
+his coat of many colors. There was Mount Gilboa, where the arrows of the
+Philistines wounded Saul, and he fell on his own sword and killed
+himself. Shiloh, where Hannah brought little Samuel to give him to the
+Lord; where the Prophet Eli, so old that his eyes were too dim to see,
+sat by the gate waiting for news from the army, and when word was
+brought back that his two sons were dead, and the Ark of the Covenant
+taken, here it was that he fell backward from his seat, and his neck was
+broken.
+
+All these she told, and many more. Then she pointed to the gleaners in
+the fields, and told the children to notice how carefully Israel still
+kept the commandment given so many centuries before: "When ye reap the
+harvest of your land, thou shalt not wholly reap the corners of thy
+field, neither shalt thou gather the gleanings of thy harvest. And thou
+shalt not glean thy vineyard, neither shalt thou gather every grape of
+thy vineyard, thou shalt leave them for the poor and the stranger."
+
+At Jacob's well, where they stopped to rest, Joel lifted Jesse up, and
+let him look over the curb. The child almost lost his balance in
+astonishment, when his own wondering little face looked up at him from
+the deep well. He backed away from it quickly, and looked carefully into
+the cup of water Joel handed him, for more than a minute, before he
+ventured to drink.
+
+The home to which Abigail was going was a wealthy one. Her father,
+Reuben, was a goldsmith, and for years had been known in Jerusalem not
+only for the beautifully wrought ornaments and precious stones that he
+sold in his shop near the Temple, but for his rich gifts to the poor.
+
+"Reuben the Charitable," he was called, and few better deserved the
+name. His business took him every day to the city; but his home was in
+the little village of Bethany, two miles away. It was one of the largest
+in Bethany, and seemed like a palace to the children, when compared to
+the humble little home in Capernaum.
+
+Joel only looked around with admiring eyes; but Jesse walked about,
+laying curious little fingers on everything he passed. The bright
+oriental curtains, the soft cushions and the costly hangings, he
+smoothed and patted. Even the silver candlesticks and the jewelled cups
+on the side table were picked up and examined, when his mother happened
+to have her back turned.
+
+[Illustration: "'WE TALKED LATE'"]
+
+There were no pictures in the house; the Law forbade. But there were
+several mirrors of bright polished metal, and Jesse never tired of
+watching his own reflection in them.
+
+Ruth stayed close beside her mother. "She is a ray of God's own
+sunshine," said her grandmother, as she took her in her arms for the
+first time. The child, usually afraid of strangers, saw in Rebecca's
+face a look so like her mother's that she patted the wrinkled cheeks
+with her soft fingers. From that moment her grandmother was her devoted
+slave.
+
+Jesse was not long in finding the place he held in his grandfather's
+heart. The old man, whose sons had all died years before, seemed to
+centre all his hopes on this son of his only daughter. He kept Jesse
+with him as much as possible; his happiest hours were when he had the
+child on his knee, teaching him the prayers and precepts and proverbs
+that he knew would be a lamp to his feet in later years.
+
+"Nay! do not punish the child!" he said, one morning when Jesse had been
+guilty of some disobedience. Abigail went on stripping the leaves
+from an almond switch she just had broken off.
+
+"Why, father," she said, with a smile, "I have often seen you punish my
+brothers for such disobedience, and have as often heard you say that one
+of Solomon's wisest sayings is, 'Chasten thy son while there is hope,
+and let not thy soul spare for his crying.' Jesse misses his father's
+firm rule, and is getting sadly spoiled."
+
+"That is all true, my daughter," he acknowledged; "still I shall not
+stay here to witness his punishment."
+
+Abigail used the switch as she had intended. The boy had overheard the
+conversation, and the cries that reached his grandfather as he rode off
+to the city were unusually loud and appealing. They may have had
+something to do with the package the good man carried home that
+night,--cakes and figs and a gay little turban more befitting a young
+prince than the son of a carpenter.
+
+"Who lives across the street?" asked Joel, the morning after their
+arrival.
+
+"Two old friends of mine," answered Abigail. "They came to see me last
+night as soon as they heard I had arrived. You children were all asleep.
+We talked late, for they wanted to hear all I could tell them of Rabbi
+Jesus. He was here last year, and Martha said He and her brother Lazarus
+became fast friends. Ah, there is Lazarus now!--that young man just
+coming out of the house. He is a scribe, and goes up to write in one of
+the rooms of the Temple nearly every day.
+
+"Mary says some of the copies of the Scriptures he has made are the most
+beautifully written that she has ever seen."
+
+"See!" exclaimed Joel, "he has dropped one of the rolls of parchment he
+was carrying, and does not know it. I'll run after him with it."
+
+He was hardly yet accustomed to the delight of being so fleet of foot;
+no halting step now to hinder him. He almost felt as if he were flying,
+and was by the young man's side nearly as soon as he had started.
+
+"Ah, you are the guest of my good neighbor, Reuben," Lazarus said, after
+thanking him courteously. "Are you not the lad whose lameness has just
+been healed by my best friend? My sisters were telling me of it. It must
+be a strange experience to suddenly find yourself changed from a
+helpless cripple to such a strong, straight lad as you are now. How did
+it make you feel?"
+
+"Oh, I can never begin to tell you, Rabbi Lazarus," answered Joel. "I
+did not even think of it that moment when He held my hand in His. I only
+thought how much I loved Him. I had been starving before, but that
+moment He took the place of everything,--father, mother, the home love I
+had missed,--and more than that, the love of God seemed to come down and
+fold me so close and safe, that I knew He was the Messiah. I did not
+even notice that I was no longer lame, until I was far down the beach.
+Oh, you do not know how I wanted to follow Him! If I could only have
+gone with Him instead of coming here!"
+
+"Yes, my boy, I know!" answered the young man, gently; "for I, too, love
+Him."
+
+This strong bond of sympathy between the two made them feel as if they
+had known each other always.
+
+"Come walk with me a little way," said Lazarus. "I am going up to
+Jerusalem to the Temple. Or rather, would you not like to come all the
+way? I have only to carry these rolls to one of the priests, then I will
+be at liberty to show you some of the strange sights in the city."
+
+Joel ran back for permission. Only stopping to wind his white linen
+turban around his head, he soon regained his new-found friend.
+
+His recollection of Jerusalem was a very dim, confused one. Time and
+time again he had heard pilgrims returning from the feasts trying to
+describe their feelings when they had come in sight of the Holy City.
+Now as they turned with the road, the view that rose before him made him
+feel how tame their descriptions had been.
+
+The morning sun shone down on the white marble walls of the Temple and
+the gold that glittered on the courts, as they rose one above the other;
+tower and turret and pinnacle shot back a dazzling light.
+
+It did not seem possible to Joel that human hands could have wrought
+such magnificence. He caught his breath, and uttered an exclamation of
+astonishment.
+
+Lazarus smiled at his pleasure. "Come," he said, "it is still more
+beautiful inside."
+
+They went very slowly through Solomon's Porch, for every one seemed to
+know the young man, and many stopped to speak to him. Then they crossed
+the Court of the Gentiles. It seemed like a market-place; for cages of
+doves were kept there for sale, and lambs, calves, and oxen bleated and
+lowed in their stalls till Joel could scarcely hear what his friend was
+saying, as they pushed their way through the crowd, and stood before the
+Gate Beautiful that led into the Court of the Women.
+
+Here Lazarus left Joel for a few moments, while he went to give the
+rolls to the priest for whom he had copied them.
+
+Joel looked around. Then for the first time since his healing, he
+wondered if it would be possible for him to ever take his place among
+the Levites, or become a priest as he had been destined.
+
+While he wondered, Lazarus came back and led him into the next court.
+Here he could look up and see the Holy Place, over which was trained a
+golden vine, with clusters of grapes as large as a man's body, all of
+purest gold. Beyond that he knew was a heavy veil of Babylonian
+tapestry, hyacinth and scarlet and purple, that veiled in awful darkness
+the Holy of Holies.
+
+As he stood there thinking of the tinkling bells, the silver trumpets,
+the clouds of incense, and the mighty songs, a great longing came over
+him to be one of those white-robed priests, serving daily in the
+Temple.
+
+But with the wish came the recollection of a quiet hillside, where only
+bird-calls and whirr of wings stirred the stillness; where a breeze from
+the sparkling lake blew softly through the grass, and one Voice only was
+heard, proclaiming its glad new gospel under the open sky.
+
+"No," he thought to himself; "I'd rather be with Him than wear the High
+Priest's mitre."
+
+It was almost sundown when they found themselves on the road homeward.
+They had visited place after place of interest.
+
+Lazarus found the boy an entertaining companion, and the friendship
+begun that day grew deep and lasting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+"WHAT are you looking for, grandfather?" called Jesse, as he pattered up
+the outside stairs to the roof, where Reuben stood, scanning the sky
+intently.
+
+"Come here, my son," he called. "Stand right here in front of me, and
+look just where I point. What do you see?"
+
+The child peered anxiously into the blue depths just now lit up by the
+sunset.
+
+"Oh, the new moon!" he cried. "Where did it come from?"
+
+"Summer hath dropped her silver sickle there, that Night may go forth to
+harvest in her star-fields," answered the old man. Then seeing the look
+of inquiry on the boy's face, hastened to add, "Nay, it is the censer
+that God's hand set swinging in the sky, to remind us to keep the
+incense of our praises ever rising heavenward. Even now a messenger may
+be running towards the Temple, to tell the Sanhedrin that it has
+appeared. Yea, other eyes have been sharper than mine, for see! Already
+the beacon light has been kindled on the Mount of Olives!"
+
+Jesse watched the great bonfire a few minutes, then ran to call his
+sister. By the time they were both on the roof, answering fires were
+blazing on the distant hilltops throughout all Judea, till the whole
+land was alight with the announcement of the Feast of the New Moon.
+
+"I wish it could be this way every night, don't you, Ruth?" said Jesse.
+"Are you not glad we are here?"
+
+The old man looked down at the children with a pleased smile. "I'll show
+you something prettier than this, before long," he said. "Just wait till
+the Feast of Weeks, when the people all come to bring the first fruits
+of the harvests. I am glad your visit is in this time of the year, for
+you can see one festival after another."
+
+The day the celebration of the Feast of Weeks commenced, Reuben left his
+shop in charge of the attendants, and gave up his entire time to Joel
+and Jesse.
+
+"We must not miss the processions," he said. "We will go outside the
+gates a little way, and watch the people come in."
+
+They did not have long to wait till the stream of people from the upper
+countries began to pour in; each company carried a banner bearing the
+name of the town from which it came. A white ox, intended for a
+peace-offering, was driven first; its horns were gilded, and its body
+twined with olive wreaths.
+
+Flocks of sheep and oxen for the sacrifice, long strings of asses and
+camels bearing free-will gifts to the Temple, or old and helpless
+pilgrims that could not walk, came next.
+
+There were wreaths of roses on the heads of the women and children;
+bands of lilies were tied around the sheaves of wheat. Piled high in the
+silver vessels of the rich, or peeping from the willow baskets of the
+poor, were the choicest fruits of the harvest.
+
+Great bunches of grapes from whose purple globes the bloom had not been
+brushed, velvety nectarines, tempting pomegranates, mellow pears, juicy
+melons,--these offerings of fruit and flowers gleamed all down the long
+line, for no one came empty-handed up this "Hill of the Lord."
+
+As they drew near the gates, a number of white-robed priests from the
+Temple met them. Reuben lifted Jesse in his arms that he might have a
+better view. "Listen," he said. Joel climbed up on a large rock.
+
+A joyful sound of flutes commenced, and a mighty chorus went up: "I was
+glad when they said unto me, let us go into the house of the Lord. Our
+feet shall stand within thy gates, O Jerusalem!"
+
+Voice after voice took up the old psalm, and Reuben's deep tones joined
+with the others, as they chanted, "Peace be within thy walls, and
+prosperity within thy palaces!"
+
+Following the singing pilgrims to the Temple, they saw the priests take
+the doves that were to be for a burnt-offering, and the first fruits
+that were to be laid on the altars.
+
+Jesse held fast to his grandfather's hand as they passed through the
+outer courts of the Temple. He was half frightened by the din of voices,
+the stamping and bellowing and bleating of the animals as they were
+driven into the pens.
+
+He had seen one sacrificial service; the great stream of blood pouring
+over the marble steps of the altar, and the smoke of the burnt-offering
+were still in his mind. It made him look pityingly now at the
+gentle-eyed calves and the frightened lambs. He was glad to get away
+from them.
+
+Soon after the time of this rejoicing was over, came ten solemn days
+that to Joel were full of interest and mystery. They were the days of
+preparation for the Fast of the Atonement. Disputes between neighbors
+were settled, and sins confessed.
+
+The last great day, the most solemn of all, was the only time in the
+whole year when the High Priest might draw aside the veil, and enter
+into the Holy of Holies.
+
+With all his rich robes and jewels laid aside, clad only in simple
+white, with bare feet and covered head, he had to go four times into the
+awful Presence. Once to offer incense, once to pray, to sprinkle the
+blood of a goat towards the mercy-seat, and then to bring out the
+censer.
+
+That was the day when two goats were taken; by casting lots one was
+chosen for a sacrifice. On the other the High Priest laid the sins of
+the people, and it was driven out into the wilderness, to be dashed to
+pieces from some high cliff.
+
+Tears came into Joel's eyes, as he watched the scape-goat driven away
+into the dreary desert. He pitied the poor beast doomed to such a death
+because of his nation's sins.
+
+Then came the closing ceremonies, when the great congregation bowed
+themselves three times to the ground, with the High Priest shouting
+solemnly, "Ye are clean! Ye are clean! Ye are clean!"
+
+Joel was glad when the last rite was over, and the people started to
+their homes, as gay now as they had been serious before.
+
+"When are we going back to our other home?" asked Ruth, one day.
+
+"Why, are you not happy here, little daughter?" said Abigail. "I thought
+you had forgotten all about the old place."
+
+"I want my white pigeons," she said, with a quivering lip, as if she had
+suddenly remembered them. "I don't want my father not to be here!" she
+sobbed; "and I want my white pigeons!"
+
+Abigail picked her up and comforted her. "Wait just a little while. I
+think father will surely come soon. I will get my embroidery, and you
+may go with me across the street."
+
+Ruth had been shy at first about going to see her mother's friends; but
+Martha coaxed her in with honey cakes she baked for that express
+purpose, and Mary told her stories and taught her little games.
+
+After a while she began to flit in and out of the house as fearlessly as
+a bright-winged butterfly.
+
+One day her mother was sitting with the sisters in a shady corner of
+their court-yard, where a climbing honeysuckle made a cool sweet arbor.
+Ruth was going from one to the other, watching the bright embroidery
+threads take the shape of flowers under their skilful fingers. Suddenly
+she heard the faint tinkle of a silver bell. While she stood with one
+finger on her lip to listen, Lazarus came into the court-yard.
+
+"See what I have brought you, little one," he said. "It is to take the
+place of the pigeons you are always mourning for."
+
+It was a snow-white lamb, around which he had twined a garland of many
+colored flowers, and from whose neck hung the little silver bell she had
+heard.
+
+At first the child was so delighted she could only bury her dimpled
+fingers in the soft fleece, and look at it in speechless wonder. Then
+she caught his hand, and left a shy little kiss on it, as she lisped,
+"Oh, you're so good! You're so good!"
+
+After that day Ruth followed Lazarus as the white lamb followed Ruth;
+and the sisters hardly knew which sounded sweeter in their quiet home,
+the tinkling of the silver bell, or the happy prattle of the baby
+voice.
+
+Abigail spent many happy hours with her friends. One day as they sat in
+the honeysuckle arbor, busily sewing, Ruth and Jesse came running
+towards them.
+
+"I see my father coming, and another man," cried the boy. "I'm going to
+meet them."
+
+They all hastened to the door, just as the tired, dusty travellers
+reached it.
+
+"Peace be to this house, and all who dwell therein," said the stranger,
+before Phineas could give his wife and friends a warmer greeting.
+
+"We went first to your father's house, but, finding no one at home, came
+here," said Phineas.
+
+"Come in!" insisted Martha. "You look sorely in need of rest and
+refreshment."
+
+But they had a message to deliver before they could be persuaded to eat
+or wash.
+
+"The Master is coming," said Phineas. "He has sent out seventy of His
+followers, to go by twos into every town, and herald His approach, and
+proclaim that the day of the Lord is at hand. We have gone even into
+Samaria to carry the tidings there."
+
+"At last, at last!" cried Mary, clasping her hands. "Oh, to think that I
+have lived to see this day of Israel's glory!"
+
+"Tell us what the Master has been doing," urged Abigail, after the men
+had been refreshed by food and water.
+
+First one and then the other told of miracles they had seen, and
+repeated what He had taught. Even the children crept close to listen,
+leaning against their father's knees.
+
+"There has been much discussion about the kingdom that is to be formed.
+While we were in Peter's house in Capernaum, some of the disciples came
+quarrelling around Him, to ask who should have the highest positions. I
+suppose those who have followed Him longest think they have claim to the
+best offices."
+
+"What did He say?" asked Abigail, eagerly.
+
+Phineas laid his hand on Ruth's soft curls. "He took a little child like
+this, and set it in our midst, and said that he who would be greatest in
+His kingdom, must become even like unto it!"
+
+"Faith and love and purity on the throne of the Herods," cried Martha.
+"Ah, only Jehovah can bring such a thing as that to pass!"
+
+"Are you going to stay at home now, father?" asked Jesse, anxiously.
+
+"No, my son. I must go on the morrow to carry my report to the Master,
+of the reception we have had in every town. But I will soon be back
+again to the Feast of Tabernacles."
+
+"Carry with you our earnest prayer that the Master will abide with us
+when He comes again to Bethany," said Martha, as her guests departed.
+"No one is so welcome in our home, as the friend of our brother
+Lazarus."
+
+The preparation for the Feast of the Tabernacles had begun. "I am going
+to take the children to the city with me to-day!" said Reuben, one
+morning, "to see the big booth I am having built. It will hold all our
+family, and as many friends as may care to share it with us."
+
+Jesse was charmed with the great tent of green boughs.
+
+"I wish I could have been one of the children that Moses led up out of
+Egypt," he said, with a sigh.
+
+"Why, my son?" asked Reuben.
+
+"So's I could have wandered around for forty years, living in a tent
+like this. How good it smells, and how pretty it is! I wish you and
+grandmother would live here all the time!"
+
+The next day Phineas joined them. It was a happy family that gathered in
+the leafy booth for a week of out-door rejoicing in the cool autumn
+time.
+
+"Where is the Master?" asked Abigail.
+
+"I know not," answered her husband. "He sent us on before."
+
+"Will He be here, I wonder?" she asked, and that question was on nearly
+every lip in Jerusalem.
+
+"Will He be here?" asked the throngs of pilgrims who had heard of His
+miracles, and longed to see the man who could do such marvellous things.
+
+"Will He be here?" whispered the scribes to the Pharisees. "Let Him
+beware!"
+
+"Will He be here?" muttered Caiaphas the High Priest. "Then better one
+man should die, than that the whole community perish."
+
+The sight that dazzled the eyes of the children that first evening of
+the week, was like fairyland; a blaze of lanterns and torches lit up the
+whole city.
+
+In the Court of the Women, in the Temple, all the golden lamps were lit,
+twinkling and burning like countless stars.
+
+On the steps that separated this court from the next one, stood three
+thousand singers, the sons and daughters of the tribe of Levi. Two
+priests stood at the top of the steps, and as each gave the signal on a
+great silver trumpet, the burst of song that went up from the vast choir
+seemed to shake the very heavens. Harps and psalters and flutes swelled
+with the rolling waves of the organ's melody. To the sound of this
+music, men marched with flaming torches in their hands, and the marching
+and a weird torch-dance were kept up until the gates of the Temple
+closed.
+
+In the midst of all the feasting and the gayeties that followed, the
+long-expected Voice was heard in the arcades of the Temple.
+
+The Child of Nazareth was once more in His Father's house about His
+Father's business.
+
+On the last great day of the feast, Joel was up at day-break, ready to
+follow the older members of the family as soon as the first
+trumpet-blast should sound.
+
+In his right hand he carried a citron, as did all the others; in his
+left was a palm-branch, the emblem of joy. An immense multitude gathered
+at the spring of Siloam. Water was drawn in a golden pitcher, and
+carried back to be poured on the great altar, while the choir sang with
+its thousands of voices, and all the people shouted, Amen and Amen!
+
+When the days had gone by in which the seventy bullocks had been
+sacrificed, and when the ceremonies were all over, then the leaves were
+stripped from the green booths, and the people scattered to their
+homes.
+
+Long afterward, Jesse remembered only the torch-light dances, the silver
+trumpets and the crowds, and the faint ringing of the fringe of bells on
+the priest's robes as he carried the fire on the golden shovel to burn
+the sweet-smelling incense.
+
+Joel's memory rang often with two cries that had startled the people.
+One when the water was poured from the golden pitcher. It was the
+Master's voice: "_If any man thirst, let him come unto me_." The other
+was when all eyes were turned on the blazing lamps. "_I am the Light of
+the World!_"
+
+Reuben thought oftenest of the blind man to whom he had seen sight
+restored. But Lazarus was filled with anxiety and foreboding; through
+his office of scribe, he had come in close contact with the men who were
+plotting against his friend. Dark rumors were afloat. The air was hot
+with whisperings of hate.
+
+He had overheard a conversation between the Temple police, and some of
+the chief priests and Pharisees.
+
+"Why did ye not take Him, as ye were ordered?" they demanded angrily.
+
+"We could not," was the response; "for never man spake like this man."
+
+He had seen the mob searching for stones to throw at Him. Though He had
+disappeared out of their midst unhurt, still Lazarus felt that some
+terrible disaster was hanging threateningly over the head of his beloved
+friend.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+IT was with a deep feeling of relief that the two families watched the
+Master go away into Perea. Phineas still kept with Him. As the little
+band disappeared down the street, Ruth hid her face in her mother's
+dress and began to cry.
+
+"I don't want my father to go away again!" she sobbed. Abigail took her
+in her lap and tried to comfort her, although there were tears in her
+own eyes.
+
+"We will go home soon, little daughter, and then father will be with us
+all the time. But we must wait first, till after the cold, rainy season,
+and the Feast of Dedication."
+
+"What! another feast?" asked Jesse, to whom the summer had seemed one
+long confusion of festivals. "Don't they have lots of them down in this
+country! What's this one for?"
+
+"Grandfather will tell you," answered his mother. "Run out and ask him
+for the story. I know you will like it."
+
+Seated on his grandfather's knee, Jesse doubled up his little fists, as
+he heard how a heathen altar had once been set up on the great altar of
+burnt-offering, and a heathen general had driven a herd of swine through
+the holy Temple, making it unclean. But his breath came quick, and his
+eyes shone, as the proud old Israelite told him of Judas the Maccabee,
+Judas the lion-hearted, who had whipped the Syrian soldiers, purified
+the Temple, and dedicated it anew to the worship of Jehovah.
+
+"Our people never forget their heroes," ended the old man. "Every year,
+in every home, no matter how humble, one candle is lighted at the
+beginning of the feast; the next night, two, and the next night, three,
+and so on, till eight candles shine out into the winter darkness.
+
+"For so the brave deeds of the Maccabees burn in the memory of every
+child of Abraham!"
+
+The feast came and went. While the candles burned in every home, and the
+golden lamps in the great Temple blazed a welcome, the Nazarene came
+back to His Father's house, to be once more about His Father's business.
+
+Joel caught a glimpse of Him walking up and down the covered porches in
+front of the Gate Beautiful. The next moment he was pushing and
+elbowing his way through the jostling crowds, till he stood close beside
+Him.
+
+After that, the services that followed were a blank. He saw only one
+face,--the face that had looked into his beside the Galilee, and drawn
+from his heart its intensest love. He heard only one voice,--the voice
+he had longed for all these weeks and days. Just to be near Him! To be
+able to reach out reverent fingers and only touch the clothes He wore;
+to look up in His face, and look and look with a love that never
+wearied,--that was such happiness that Joel was lost to everything else!
+
+But after a while he began to realize that it was for no friendly
+purpose that the chief priests came pressing around with questions.
+
+"If Thou be the Christ, tell us plainly," they demanded. Then up and
+down through the long Porch of Solomon, among all its white marble
+pillars, they repeated His answer:--
+
+"The works that I do in my Father's name, they bear witness of me. I and
+my Father are one!"
+
+"Blasphemy!" shouted a mocking voice behind Him. "Blasphemy!" echoed
+Pharisee and Sadducee for once agreed. The crowds pushed and shoved
+between the pillars; some ran out for stones. In the confusion of the
+uproar, as they turned to lay violent hands on Him, He slipped out of
+their midst, and went quietly away.
+
+Joel hunted around awhile for the party he had come with, but seeing
+neither Phineas nor Lazarus, started back to Bethany on the run. A cold
+winter rain had begun to fall.
+
+None of Reuben's family had gone into Jerusalem that day on account of
+the weather, but were keeping the feast at home.
+
+They were startled when the usually quiet boy burst excitedly into the
+house, and told them what he had just seen.
+
+"O mother Abigail!" he cried, throwing himself on his knees beside her.
+"If He goes away again may I not go with Him? I cannot go back to
+Galilee and leave Him, unknowing what is to happen. If He is to be
+persecuted and driven out, and maybe killed, let me at least share His
+suffering, and be with Him at the last!"
+
+"You forget that He has all power, and that His enemies can do Him no
+harm," said Abigail, gently. "Has He not twice walked out unharmed,
+before their very eyes, when they would have taken Him? And besides what
+good could you do, my boy? You forget you are only a child, and might
+not be able to stand the hardships of such a journey."
+
+"I am almost fourteen," said Joel, stretching himself up proudly. "And I
+am as strong now as some of the men who go with Him. _He_ gave me back
+my strength, you know. Oh, you do not know how I love Him!" he cried.
+"When I am away from Him, I feel as you would were you separated from
+Jesse and Ruth and father Phineas. My heart is always going out after
+Him!"
+
+"Child, have you no care for us?" she responded reproachfully.
+
+"Oh, do not speak so!" he cried, catching up her hand and kissing it. "I
+_do_ love you; I can never be grateful enough for all you have done for
+me. But, O mother Abigail, you could never understand! You were never
+lame and felt the power of His healing. You were never burning with a
+wicked hatred, and felt the balm of His forgiveness! You cannot
+understand how He draws me to Him!"
+
+"Let the boy have his way," spoke up Reuben. "I, too, have felt that
+wonderful power that draws all men to Him. Gladly would I part with
+every shekel I possess, if I thereby might win Him the favor of the
+authorities."
+
+When once more a little band of fugitives followed their Master across
+the Jordan, Joel was with them.
+
+The winter wore away, and they still tarried. Day by day, they were
+listening to the simple words that dropped like seeds into their
+memories, to spring up in after months and bear great truths. Now they
+heard them as half understood parables,--the good Samaritan, the barren
+fig-tree, the prodigal son, the unjust steward.
+
+There was one story that thrilled Joel deeply,--the story of the lost
+sheep. For he recalled that stormy night in the sheepfold of Nathan ben
+Obed, and the shepherd who searched till dawn for the straying lamb.
+
+It was only long afterwards that he realized it was the Good Shepherd
+Himself who told the story, when He was about to lay down His own life
+for the lost sheep of Israel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile in Bethany, Rabbi Reuben and his wife rejoiced that their
+daughter's visit stretched out indefinitely.
+
+Jesse openly declared that he intended to stay there always, and learn
+to be a goldsmith like his grandfather.
+
+Ruth, too, was happy and contented, and seemed to have forgotten that
+she ever had any other home. As the early spring days came on, she lived
+almost entirely out in the sunshine. She had fallen into the habit of
+standing at the gate to watch for Lazarus every evening when he came
+back from the Temple. As soon as she saw him turn the corner into their
+street, she ran to meet him, her fair curls and white dress fluttering
+in the wind.
+
+No matter how tired he was, or what cares rested heavily on his mind,
+the pale face always lighted up, and his dark eyes smiled at her coming.
+
+"Lazarus does not seem well, lately," she heard Martha say to her mother
+one day. "I have been trying to persuade him to rest a few days; but he
+insists he cannot until he has finished the scroll he is illuminating."
+
+A few days after that he did not go to the city as usual. Ruth peeped
+into the darkened room where he was resting on a couch; his eyes were
+closed, and he was so pale it almost frightened her.
+
+He did not hear her when she tiptoed into the room and out again; but
+the fragrance of the little stemless rose she laid on his pillow aroused
+him. He opened his eyes and smiled languidly, as he caught sight of her
+slipping noiselessly through the door.
+
+Her mother, sewing by the window, looked out and saw her running across
+the street. Jesse was out in front of the house, playing with a ball.
+
+"Who is that boy talking to Jesse?" asked Abigail of Rebecca, who stood
+in the doorway, holding out her arms as Ruth came up.
+
+"Why, that is little Joseph, the only son of Simon the leper. Poor
+child!"
+
+"Simon the leper," repeated Abigail. "A stranger to me."
+
+"Surely not. Have you forgotten the wealthy young oil-seller who lived
+next the synagogue? He has the richest olive groves in this part of the
+country."
+
+"Not the husband of my little playmate Esther!" cried Abigail. "Surely
+he has not been stricken with leprosy!"
+
+"Yes; it is one of the saddest cases I ever heard of. It seems so
+terrible for a man honored as he has been, and accustomed to every
+luxury, to be such a despised outcast."
+
+"Poor Esther!" sighed Abigail. "Does she ever see him?"
+
+"Not now. The disease is fast destroying him; and he is such a hideous
+sight that he has forbidden her to ever try to see him again. Even his
+voice is changed. Of course he would be stoned if he were to come back.
+He never seeks the company of other lepers. She has had a room built for
+him away from the sight of men. Every day a servant carries him food and
+tidings. It is well that they have money, or he would be obliged to live
+among the tombs with others as repulsive-looking as himself, and such
+company must certainly be worse than none. Sometimes little Joseph is
+taken near enough to speak to him, that he may have the poor comfort of
+seeing his only child at a distance."
+
+"What if it were my Phineas!" exclaimed Abigail, her tears dropping fast
+on the needlework she held. "Oh, it is a thousand times worse than
+death!"
+
+Out in the street the boys were making each other's acquaintance in the
+off-hand way boys of that age have.
+
+"My name is Jesse. What's yours?"
+
+"Joseph."
+
+"Where do you live?"
+
+"Around the corner, next to the synagogue."
+
+"My father is a carpenter. What's yours?"
+
+Joseph hesitated. "He used to be an oil-seller," he said finally. "He
+doesn't do anything now."
+
+"Why?" persisted Jesse.
+
+"He is a leper now," was the reluctant answer.
+
+A look of distress came over Jesse's face. He had seen some lepers once,
+and the sight was still fresh in his mind. As they were riding down from
+Galilee, Joel had pointed them out to him. A group of beggars with
+horrible scaly sores that had eaten away their flesh, till some were
+left without lips or eyelids; one held out a deathly white hand from
+which nearly all the fingers had dropped. Their hair looked like white
+wire, and they called out, in shrill, cracked voices, "Unclean! Unclean!
+Come not near us!"
+
+"How terrible to have one's father like that," thought Jesse. A lump
+seemed to come up in his throat; his eyes filled with tears at the bare
+idea. Then, boy-like, he tossed up his ball, and forgot all about it in
+the game that followed.
+
+Several days after he met Joseph and a servant who was carrying a large,
+covered basket and a water-bottle made of skin.
+
+"I'm going to see my father, now," said Joseph. "Ask your mother if you
+can come with me."
+
+Jesse started towards his home, then turned suddenly. "No, I'm not going
+to ask her, for she'll be sure to say no. I am just going anyhow."
+
+"You'll catch it when you get home!" exclaimed Joseph.
+
+"Well, it cannot last long," reasoned Jesse, whose curiosity had gotten
+the better of him. "I believe I'd rather take a whipping than not to
+go."
+
+Joseph looked at him in utter astonishment.
+
+"Yes, I would," he insisted; "so come on!"
+
+A short walk down an unfrequented road, in the direction of Jericho,
+took them to a lonely place among the bare cliffs. A little cabin stood
+close against the rocks, with a great sycamore-tree bending over it.
+Near by was the entrance to a deep cave, always as cool as a cellar,
+even in the hottest summer days.
+
+At the mouth of the cave sat Simon the leper. He stood up when he saw
+them coming, and wrapped himself closely in a white linen mantle that
+covered him from head to foot. It was a ghostly sight to Jesse; but to
+Joseph, so long accustomed to it, there seemed nothing strange.
+
+At a safe distance the servant emptied his basket on a large flat rock,
+and poured the water into a stone jar standing near. Last of all, he
+laid a piece of parchment on the stone. It was Esther's daily letter to
+her exiled husband.
+
+No matter what storms swept the valley, or what duties pressed at home,
+that little missive was always sent. She had learned to write for his
+sake. By all his friends he was accounted dead; but her love, stronger
+than death, bridged the gulf that separated them. She lived only to
+minister to his comfort as best she could.
+
+Simon did not send as long a message in return as this trusted messenger
+usually carried. He had much to say to his boy, and the sun was already
+high.
+
+Jesse, lagging behind in the shelter of the rock, heard the tender words
+of counsel and blessing that came from the white-sheeted figure with a
+feeling of awe.
+
+As the father urged his boy to be faithful to every little duty, careful
+in learning the prayers, and above all obedient to his mother, Jesse's
+conscience began to prick him sorely.
+
+"I believe I know somebody that could cure him," he said, as they picked
+their way over the rocks, going home. "'Cause He made Joel well."
+
+"Who's Joel?" asked Joseph.
+
+"A boy that lives with us. He was just as lame, and limped way over when
+he walked. Now he is as straight as I am. All the sick people where I
+lived went to Him, and they got well."
+
+Joseph shook his head. "Lepers can't be cured. Can they, Seth?" he
+asked, appealing to the servant.
+
+"No, lepers are just the same as dead," answered Seth. "There's no help
+for them."
+
+Jesse was in a very uncomfortable frame of mind, as, hot and dusty, he
+left his companion and dragged home at a snail's pace.
+
+Next morning Joseph was waiting for him out in front. "Well, did she
+whip you?" he asked, with embarrassing frankness.
+
+"No," said Jesse, a little sheepishly. "She put me to bed just as soon
+as I had eaten my dinner, and made me stay there till this morning."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+RUTH went every day to ask for her sick friend, sometimes with a bunch
+of grapes, sometimes with only a flower in her warm little hand.
+
+But there came a time when Martha met her, with eyes all swollen and red
+from crying, and told her they had sent to the city for a skilful
+physician.
+
+In the night there came a loud knocking at the door, and a call for
+Rabbi Reuben to come quickly, that Lazarus was worse. At day-break a
+messenger was sent clattering away to hurry over the Jordan in hot
+haste, and bring back from Perea the only One who could help them.
+
+The noise awakened Ruth; she sat up in surprise to see her mother
+dressed so early. The outer door was ajar, and she heard the message
+that the anxious Martha bade the man deliver: "Lord, he whom Thou lovest
+is sick."
+
+"He will come right away and make him well, won't He, mother?" she asked
+anxiously.
+
+"Surely, my child," answered Abigail. "He loves him too well to let him
+suffer so."
+
+But the day wore on, and the next; still another, and He did not come.
+
+Ruth stole around like a frightened shadow, because of the anxious looks
+on every face.
+
+"Why doesn't He come?" she wondered; and on many another lip was the
+same question.
+
+She was so quiet, no one noticed when she stole into the room where her
+friend lay dying. Mary knelt on one side of the bed, Martha on the
+other, watching the breath come slower and slower, and clinging to the
+unresponsive hands as if their love could draw him back to life.
+
+Neither shed a tear, but seemed to watch with their souls in their eyes,
+for one more word, one more look of recognition.
+
+Abigail sat by the window, weeping softly. Ruth had never seen her
+mother cry before, and it frightened her. She glanced at her
+grandfather, standing by the foot of the bed; two great tears rolled
+slowly down his cheeks, and dropped on his long beard.
+
+A sudden cry from Mary, as she fell fainting to the floor, called her
+attention to the bed again. Martha was silently rocking herself to and
+fro, in an agony of grief.
+
+Still the child did not understand. Those in the room were so busy
+trying to bring Mary back to consciousness, that no one noticed Ruth.
+
+Drawn by some impulse she could not understand, the child drew nearer
+and nearer. Then she laid her soft little hand on his, thinking the
+touch would surely make him open his eyes and smile at her again; it had
+often done so before.
+
+But what was it that made her start back terrified, and shrink away
+trembling? It was not Lazarus she had touched, but the awful mystery of
+death.
+
+"I did not know that a little child could feel so deeply," said Abigail
+to her mother, when she found that Ruth neither ate nor played, but
+wandered aimlessly around.
+
+"I shall keep her away from the funeral."
+
+But all her care could not keep from the little one's ears the mournful
+music of the funeral dirge, or the wailing of the mourners, who gathered
+to do honor to the young man whom all Bethany knew and loved.
+
+Many friends came out from Jerusalem to follow the long procession to
+the tomb. There was a long eulogy at the grave; but the most impressive
+ceremony was over at last, and the great stone had to be rolled into the
+opening that formed the doorway.
+
+Then the two desolate sisters went back to their lonely home and empty
+life, wondering how they could go on without the presence that had been
+such a daily benediction.
+
+The fourth day after his death, as Martha sat listlessly looking out of
+the green arbor with unseeing eyes, Ruth ran in with a radiant face.
+
+"He's come!" she cried. "He's come, and so has my father. Hurry! He is
+waiting for you!"
+
+Martha drew her veil about her, and mechanically followed the eager
+child to the gate, where Phineas met her with the same message.
+
+"Oh, why did He not come sooner?" she thought bitterly, as she pressed
+on after her guide.
+
+Once outside of the village, she drew aside her veil. There stood the
+Master, with such a look of untold sympathy on His worn face, that
+Martha cried out, "Lord, if Thou hadst been here my brother had not
+died!"
+
+"Thy brother shall rise again," He said gently.
+
+"Yes, I know he shall rise again in the resurrection, at the last day,"
+she said brokenly. "That brings hope for the future; but what comfort is
+there for the lonely years we must live without him?" The tears streamed
+down her face again.
+
+Then for the first time came those words that have brought balm into
+thousands of broken hearts, and hope into countless tear-blind eyes.
+
+"I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth in me shall never
+die. Believest thou this?"
+
+Martha looked up reverently. "Yea, Lord, I believe that Thou art the
+Christ, the Son of God which should come into the world."
+
+A great peace came over her troubled spirit as she hurried to her home,
+where the many friends still sat who had come to comfort them. A number
+of them were from Jerusalem, and she knew that among them were some who
+were unfriendly to her brother's friend.
+
+So she quietly called her sister from the room, whispering, "The Master
+is come, and calleth for thee!"
+
+Those who sat there thought they were going to the grave to weep, as was
+the custom. So they rose also, and followed at a little distance.
+
+Mary met Him with the same exclamation that her sister had uttered, and
+fell at His feet.
+
+He, seeing in her white face the marks of the deep grief she had
+suffered, was thrilled to the depths of His humanity by the keenest
+sympathy. His tears fell too, at the sight of hers.
+
+"Behold how He loved Lazarus!" said a man to the one who stood beside
+him.
+
+"Why did He not save him then?" was the mocking answer.
+
+"They say He has the power to open the eyes of the blind, and even to
+raise the dead. Let Him show it in this case!"
+
+It was a curious crowd that followed Him to the door of the tomb: men
+who hated Him for the scorching fire-brands of rebuke He had thrown into
+their corrupt lives; men who feared Him as a dangerous teacher of false
+doctrines; men who knew His good works, but hesitated either to accept
+or refuse; and men who loved Him better than life,--all waiting,
+wondering what He would do.
+
+"Roll the stone away!" He commanded; a dozen strong shoulders bent to do
+His bidding. Then He looked up and spoke in a low tone, but so
+distinctly that no one lost a word.
+
+"Father," He said,--He seemed to be speaking to some one just beside
+Him,--"I thank Thee that Thou hast heard me, and I knew that Thou
+hearest me always: but because of the people which stand by I said it,
+that they may believe that Thou hast sent me."
+
+A cold shiver of expectancy ran over those who heard. Then He cried, in
+a loud voice, "_Lazarus, come forth!_" There was a dreadful pause. Some
+of the women clutched each other with frightened shrieks; even strong
+men fell back, as out of the dark grave walked a tall figure wrapped in
+white grave-clothes.
+
+His face was hidden in a napkin. "Loose him, and let him go," said the
+Master, calmly.
+
+Phineas stepped forward and loosened the outer bands. When the napkin
+fell from his face, they saw he was deathly white; but in an instant a
+warm, healthful glow took the place of the corpse-like pallor.
+
+Not till he spoke, however, could the frightened people believe that it
+was Lazarus, and not a ghost they saw.
+
+Never had there been such a sight since the world began: the man who had
+lain four days in the tomb, walking side by side with the man who had
+called him back to life.
+
+The streets were full of people, laughing, shouting, crying, fairly
+beside themselves with astonishment.
+
+Smiths left their irons to cool on the anvils; bakers left their bread
+to burn in the ovens; the girl at the fountain dropped her half-filled
+pitcher; and a woman making cakes ran into the street with the dough in
+her hands.
+
+Every house in the village stood empty, save one where a sick man moaned
+for water all unheeded, and another where a baby wakened in its cradle
+and began to cry.
+
+Long after the reunited family had gone into their home with their
+nearest friends, and shut the door on their overwhelming joy, the crowds
+still stood outside, talking among themselves.
+
+Many who had taken part against the Master before, now believed on
+account of what they had seen. But some still said, more openly than
+before, "He is in league with the evil one, or He could not do such
+things." These hurried back to Jerusalem, to spread the report that this
+dangerous man had again appeared, almost at the very gates of the great
+Capital.
+
+That night there was a secret council of the chief priests and the
+Pharisees. "What shall we do," was the anxious question. "If we let Him
+alone, all men will believe on Him; and the Romans shall come and take
+away both our place and our nation."
+
+Every heart beat with the same thought, but only Caiaphas put it in
+words. At last he dared repeat what he had only muttered to himself
+before: "It is expedient for us that one man should die for the people,
+and that the whole nation perish not."
+
+While the streets were still full of people, Jesse crept up to Joel, as
+they sat together in the court-yard. "Don't you think it would be just
+as easy to cure a leper as to raise Rabbi Lazarus from the dead?"
+
+"Yes, indeed!" answered Joel, positively, "I've seen it done."
+
+"Oh, have you?" cried the boy, in delight. "Then Joseph can have his
+father back again."
+
+He told him the story of Simon the leper, and of his visit to the lonely
+cave.
+
+Joel's sympathies were aroused at once. Ever since his own cure, he had
+felt that he must bring every afflicted one in the wide world to the
+great source of healing.
+
+Just then a man stopped at the gate to ask for Phineas. Joel had learned
+to know him well in the weeks they had been travelling together; it was
+Thomas.
+
+The boy sprang up eagerly. "Do you know when the Master is going to
+leave Bethany?" he asked.
+
+"In the morning," answered Thomas, "and right glad I am that it is to be
+so soon. For when we came down here, I thought it was but to die with
+Him. He is beset on all sides by secret enemies."
+
+"And will He go out by the same road that we came?"
+
+"It is most probable."
+
+Joel waited for no more information from him, but went back to Jesse to
+learn the way to the cave.
+
+Jesse was a little fellow, but a keen-eyed one, and was able to give
+Joel the few simple directions that would lead him the right way.
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad you are going!" he exclaimed. "Shall I run and tell
+Joseph what you are going to do?"
+
+"No, do not say a word to any one," answered Joel. "I shall be back in a
+very short time."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+SIMON the leper sat at the door of his cave. He held a roll of vellum in
+his unsightly fingers; it was a copy of the Psalms that Lazarus had once
+made for him in happier days.
+
+Many a time he had found comfort in these hope-inspiring songs of David;
+but to-day he was reading a wail that seemed to come from the depths of
+his own soul:
+
+"Thy wrath lieth hard upon me, and Thou hast afflicted me with all Thy
+waves. Thou hast put mine acquaintance far from me. Thou hast made me an
+abomination unto them. I am shut up and I cannot come forth. Lord, I
+have called daily upon Thee. I have stretched out my hands unto Thee.
+Wilt Thou show wonders to the dead? Shall the dead arise again and
+praise Thee? Lord, why casteth Thou off my soul? Why hidest Thou Thy
+face from me?"
+
+The roll dropped to the ground, and he hid his face in his hands,
+crying, "How long must I endure this? Oh, why was I not taken instead of
+Lazarus?"
+
+The sound of some one scrambling over the rocks made him look up
+quickly.
+
+Seth never made his visits at this time of the day, and strangers had
+never before found the path to this out-of-the-way place.
+
+Joel came on, and stopped by the rock where the water-jar stood.
+
+Simon stood up, covering himself with his mantle, and crying out,
+warningly, "Beware! Unclean! Come no further!"
+
+"I bring you news from the village," said Joel. The man threw out his
+hand with a gesture of alarm.
+
+"Oh, not of my wife Esther," he cried, imploringly, "or of my little
+Joseph! I could not bear to hear aught of ill from them. My heart is
+still sore for the death of my friend Lazarus. I went as near the
+village as I dared, and heard the dirge of the flutes and the wailing of
+the women, when they laid him in the tomb. I have sat here ever since in
+sackcloth and ashes."
+
+"But Lazarus lives again!" exclaimed Joel, simply. He had seen so many
+miracles lately, that he forgot the startling effect such an
+announcement would have on one not accustomed to them.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU BUT MOCK ME, BOY'"]
+
+The man stood petrified with astonishment. At last he said bitterly,
+"You but mock me, boy; at least leave me to my sorrow in peace."
+
+"No!" cried Joel. "As the Lord liveth, I swear it is the truth. Have you
+not heard that Messiah has come? I have followed Him up and down the
+country, and know whereof I speak. At a word from Him the dumb sing, the
+blind see, and the lame walk. I was lame myself, and He made me as you
+see me now."
+
+Joel drew himself up to his fullest height. Simon looked at him,
+completely puzzled.
+
+"Why did you take the trouble to come and tell me that,--a poor despised
+leper?" he finally asked.
+
+"Because I want everybody else to be as happy as I am. He cured me. He
+gave me back my strength. Then why should not my feet be always swift to
+bring others to Him for the same happy healing? He Himself goes about
+all the time doing good. I know there is hope for you, for I have seen
+Him cleanse lepers."
+
+Simon trembled, as the full meaning of the hope held out to him began to
+make itself clear to his confused mind: health, home, Esther,
+child,--all restored to him. It was joy too great to be possible.
+
+"Oh, if I could only believe it!" he cried.
+
+"Lazarus was raised when he had been four days dead. All Bethany can
+bear witness to that," persisted Joel. The words poured out with such
+force and earnestness, as he described the scene, that Simon felt
+impelled to believe him.
+
+"Where can I find this man?" he asked.
+
+Joel pointed down the rocky slope. "Take that road that leads into
+Bethany. Come early in the morning, and as we all pass that way, call to
+Him. He never refuses any who have faith to believe that He can grant
+what they ask."
+
+When Joel was half-way down the hill, he turned back. "If He should not
+pass on the morrow," he said, "do not fail to be there on the second
+day. We will surely leave here soon."
+
+Simon stood in bewilderment till the boy had passed down the hill; he
+began to fear that this messenger had been only the creation of a dream.
+He climbed upon the cliff and peered down into the valley. No, he had
+not been deceived; the boy was no mirage of his thirsty soul, for there,
+he came out into full sight again, and now, he was climbing the opposite
+hillside.
+
+"How beautiful upon the mountain are the feet of him who bringeth good
+tidings!" he murmured. "Oh, what a heaven opens out before me, if this
+lad's words are only true!"
+
+Next morning, after they left Bethany, Joel looked anxiously behind
+every rock and tree that they passed; but Simon was not to be seen.
+
+Presently Joel saw him waiting farther down the road; he was kneeling in
+the dust. The white mantle, that in his sensitiveness was always used to
+hide himself from view, was cast aside, that the Great Healer might see
+his great need.
+
+He scanned the approaching figures with imploring eyes. He was looking
+for the Messiah,--some one in kingly garments, whose jewelled sceptre's
+lightest touch would lay upon him the royal accolade of health.
+
+These were evidently not the ones he was waiting for. These were only
+simple wayfarers; most of them looked like Galileans.
+
+He was about to rise up with his old warning cry of unclean, when he
+caught sight of Joel. But where was the princely Redeemer of prophecy?
+
+Nearer and nearer they came, till he could look full in their faces. No
+need now to ask on which one he should call for help; indeed, he seemed
+to see but one face, it was so full of loving pity.
+
+"O Thou Messiah of Israel!" he prayed. "Thou didst call my friend
+Lazarus from the dead, O pass me not by! Call me from this living death!
+Make me clean!"
+
+The eyes that looked down into his seemed to search his soul. "Believest
+thou that I can do this?"
+
+The pleading faith in Simon's eyes could not be refused. "Yea, Lord," he
+cried, "Thou hast but to speak the word!"
+
+He waited, trembling, for the answer that meant life or death to him.
+
+"I will. Be thou clean!" He put out His hand to raise the kneeling man
+to his feet. "Go and show thyself to the priests," He added.
+
+The party passed on, and Simon stood looking after them. _Was_ it the
+Christ who had passed by? Where were His dyed garments from Bozrah? The
+prophet foretold Him as glorious in apparel, travelling in the greatness
+of His strength. No sceptre of divine power had touched him; it was only
+the clasp of a warm human hand he had felt. He looked down at himself.
+Still a leper! His faith wavered; but he remembered he had not obeyed
+the command to show himself to the priests. Immediately he started
+across the fields on a run, towards the road leading into Jerusalem.
+
+Far down the highway Joel heard a mighty shout; he turned and looked
+back. There on the brow of a hill, sharply outlined against the sky,
+stood Simon. His arms were lifted high up towards heaven; for as he ran,
+in obedience to the command, the leprosy had gone from him. He was
+pouring out a flood of praise and thanksgiving, in the first ecstasy of
+his recovery, at the top of his voice.
+
+Joel thought of the tiresome ceremonies to be observed before the man
+could go home, and wished that the eight days of purification were over,
+that the little family might be immediately reunited.
+
+Meanwhile, Seth, with his basket and water-bottle, was climbing the hill
+toward the cave. For the first time in seven years since he had
+commenced these daily visits, no expectant voice greeted him. He went
+quite close up to the little room under the cliff; he could see through
+the half-open door that it was empty. Then he cautiously approached the
+mouth of the cave, and called his master. A hundred echoes answered him,
+but no human voice responded. Call after call was sent ringing into the
+hollow darkness. The deep stillness weighed heavily upon him; he began
+to be afraid that somewhere in its mysterious depths lay a dead body.
+
+The fear mastered him. Only stopping to put down the food and pour out
+the water, he started home at the top of his speed.
+
+As he reached the road, a traveller going to Bethany hailed him. "What
+think you that I saw just now?" asked the stranger. "A man running with
+all his might towards Jerusalem. Tears of joy were streaming down his
+cheeks, and he was shouting as he ran, 'Cleansed! Cleansed! Cleansed!'
+He stopped me, and bade me say, if I met a man carrying a basket and
+water-skin, that Simon the leper has just been healed of the leprosy. He
+will be home as soon as the days of purification are over."
+
+Seth gazed at him stupidly, feeling that he must be in a dream. Esther,
+too, heard the message unbelievingly. Yet she walked the floor in a
+fever of excitement, at the bare possibility of such a thing being true.
+
+The next morning, she sent Seth, as usual, with the provisions. But he
+brought them back, saying the place was still deserted.
+
+Then she began to dare to hope; although she tried to steel herself
+against disappointment, by whispering over and over that she could never
+see him again, she waited impatiently for the days to pass. At last they
+had all dragged by.
+
+The new day would begin at sunset, the very earliest time that she might
+expect him. The house was swept and garnished as if a king were coming.
+The table was set with the choicest delicacies Seth could find in the
+Jerusalem markets.
+
+The earliest roses, his favorite red ones, were put in every room. In
+her restless excitement nothing in her wardrobe seemed rich enough to
+wear. She tried on one ornament after another before she was suited.
+Then, all in white, with jewels blazing in her ears, on her throat, on
+her little white hands, and her eyes shining like two glad stars, she
+sat down to wait for him.
+
+But she could not keep still. This rug was turned up at the corner; that
+rose had dropped its petals on the floor. She would have another kind of
+wine on the table.
+
+At last she stepped out of the door in her little silken-bound sandals,
+and climbed the outside stairs to the roof, to watch for him.
+
+The sun was entirely out of sight, but the west was glorious with the
+red gold of its afterglow. Looking up the Mount of Olives, she could see
+the smoke of the evening sacrifice rising as the clouds of incense
+filled the Temple. Surely he must be far on the way by this time.
+
+Her heart almost stopped beating as she saw a figure coming up the road,
+between the rows of palm-trees. She strained her eyes for a nearer view,
+then drew a long tremulous breath. It was Lazarus; there went the two
+children and the lamb to meet him. All along the street, people were
+standing in the doors to see him go past; he was still a wonder to them.
+
+She shaded her eyes with her hand, and looked again. But while her gaze
+searched the distant road, some one was passing just below, under the
+avenue of leafy trees, with quick impatient tread; some one paused at
+the vine-covered door; some one was leaping up the stairs three steps at
+a time; some one was coming towards her with out-stretched arms, crying,
+"Esther, little Esther, O my wife! My God-given one!"
+
+For the first time in seven years, she turned to find herself in her
+husband's arms. Strong and well, with the old light in his eyes, the old
+thrill in his voice, the glow of perfect health tingling through all his
+veins, he could only whisper tremulously, as he held her close, "Praise
+God! Praise God!"
+
+No wonder he seemed like a stranger to Joseph. But the clasp of the
+strong arms, and the deep voice saying "my son," so tenderly, were
+inexpressibly dear to the little fellow kept so long from his birthright
+of a father's love.
+
+He was the first to break the happy silence that fell upon them. "What a
+good man Rabbi Jesus must be, to go about making people glad like this
+all the time!"
+
+"It is He who shall redeem Israel!" exclaimed Simon. "To God be the
+glory, who hath sent Him into this sin-cursed world! Henceforth all that
+I have, and all that I am, shall be dedicated to His service!"
+
+Kneeling there in the dying daylight, with his arms around the wife and
+child so unexpectedly given back to him, such a heart-felt prayer of
+gratitude went upward to the good Father that even the happiest angels
+must have paused to listen, more glad because of this great
+earth-gladness below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+"I THINK there will be an unusual gathering of strangers at the Passover
+this year," said Rabbi Reuben to Lazarus, as they came out together from
+the city, one afternoon. "The number may even reach three millions. A
+travelling man from Rome was in my shop to-day. He says that in the
+remotest parts of the earth, wherever the Hebrew tongue is found, one
+may hear the name of the Messiah.
+
+"People pacing the decks of the ships, crossing the deserts, or trading
+in the shops, talk only of Him and His miracles; they have aroused the
+greatest interest even in Athens and the cities of the Nile. The very
+air seems full of expectancy. I cannot but think great things are about
+to come to pass. Surely the time is now ripe for Jesus to proclaim
+Himself king. I cannot understand why He should hide Himself away in the
+wilderness as if He feared for His safety."
+
+Lazarus smiled at the old man, with a confident expression. "Be sure, my
+friend, it is only because the hour has not yet come. What a sight it
+will be when He does stand before the tomb of our long dead power, to
+call back the nation to its old-time life and grandeur. I can well
+believe that with Him all things are possible."
+
+"Would that this next Passover were the time!" responded Reuben. "How I
+would rejoice to see His enemies laid low in the dust!"
+
+Already, on the borders of Galilee, the expected king had started toward
+His coronation. Many of the old friends and neighbors from Capernaum had
+joined their band, to go on to the Paschal feast.
+
+They made slow progress, however, for at every turn in the road they
+were stopped by outstretched hands and cries for help. Nearly every step
+was taken to the sound of some rejoicing cry from some one who had been
+blessed.
+
+Joel could not crowd all the scenes into his memory; but some stood with
+clear-cut distinctness. There were the ten lepers who met them at the
+very outset; and there was blind Bartimeus begging by the wayside. He
+could never forget the expression of that man's face, when his eyes
+were opened, and for the first time he looked out on the glory of the
+morning sunshine.
+
+Joel quivered all over with a thrill of sympathy, remembering his own
+healing, and realizing more than the others what had been done for the
+blind beggar.
+
+Then there was Zaccheus, climbing up to look down through the sycamore
+boughs that he might see the Master passing into Jericho, and Zaccheus
+scrambling down again in haste to provide entertainment for his honored
+guest.
+
+There was the young ruler going away sorrowful because the sacrifice
+asked of him was more than he was willing to make. But there was one
+scene that his memory held in unfading colors:--
+
+Roses and wild honeysuckle climbing over a bank by the road-side.
+Orange-trees dropping a heavy fragrance with the falling petals of their
+white blossoms. In the midst of the shade and the bloom the mothers from
+the village near by, gathering with their children, all freshly washed
+and dressed to find favor in the eyes of the passing Prophet.
+
+Babies cooed in their mother's arms. Bright little faces smiled out from
+behind protecting skirts, to which timid fingers clung. As they waited
+for the coming procession, and little bare feet chased each other up and
+down the bank, the happy laughter of the older children filled all the
+sunny air.
+
+As the travellers came on, the women caught up their children and
+crowded forward. It was a sight that would have made almost any one
+pause,--those innocent-eyed little ones waiting for the touch that would
+keep them always pure in heart,--that blessing their mothers coveted for
+them.
+
+But some of the disciples, impatient at the many delays, seeing in the
+rosy faces and dimpled limbs nothing that seemed to claim help or
+attention, spoke to the women impatiently. "Why trouble ye the Master?"
+they said. "Would ye stop the great work He has come to do for matters
+of such little importance?"
+
+Repelled by the rebuke, they fell back. But there was a look of
+displeasure on His face, such as they had never seen before, as Jesus
+turned toward them.
+
+"Suffer the little children to come unto me," He said, sternly, "and
+forbid them not; for of such is the kingdom of heaven!"
+
+Then holding out His hands He took them up in His arms and blessed
+them, every one, even the youngest baby, that blinked up at Him
+unknowingly with its big dark eyes, received its separate blessing.
+
+So fearlessly they came to Him, so lovingly they nestled in His arms,
+and with such perfect confidence they clung to Him, that He turned again
+to His disciples. "Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive
+the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not enter therein."
+
+Met at all points as He had been by loathsome sights, ragged beggars,
+and diseases of all kinds, this group of happy-faced children must have
+remained long in His memory, as sweet as the unexpected blossoming of a
+rose in a dreary desert.
+
+At last the slow journey drew towards a close. The Friday afternoon
+before the Passover found the tired travellers once more in Bethany.
+News of their coming had been brought several hours before by a man
+riding down from Jericho. His swift-footed beast had overtaken and
+passed the slow procession far back on the road.
+
+There was a joyful welcome for the Master in the home of Lazarus. The
+cool, vine-covered arbor was a refreshing change from the dusty road.
+Here were no curious throngs and constant demands for help.
+
+Away from the sights that oppressed Him, away from the clamor and the
+criticism, here was a place where heart and body might find rest. The
+peace of the place, and the atmosphere of sympathy surrounding Him, must
+have fallen like dew on His thirsty soul. Here, for a few short days, He
+who had been so long a houseless wanderer was to know the blessedness of
+a home.
+
+Several hours before the first trumpet blast from the roof of the
+synagogue proclaimed the approaching Sabbath, Simon hurried to his home.
+
+"Esther," he called in great excitement, "I have seen Him! The Christ! I
+have knelt at His feet. I have looked in His face. And, oh, only
+think!--He has promised to sit at our table! To-morrow night, such a
+feast as has never been known in the place shall be spread before Him.
+Help me to think of something we may do to show him especial honor."
+
+Esther sprang up at the news. "We have very little time to prepare," she
+said. "Seth must go at once into the city to make purchases. To-morrow
+night, no hireling hand shall serve him. I myself shall take that lowly
+place, with Martha and Mary to aid me. Abigail, too, shall help us, for
+it is a labor of love that she will delight to take part in. I shall go
+at once to ask them."
+
+The long, still Sabbath went by. The worshippers in the synagogue looked
+in vain for other miracles, listened in vain for the Voice that wrought
+such wonders.
+
+Through the unbroken rest of that day He was gathering up His strength
+for a coming trial. Something of the approaching shadow may have been
+seen in His tender eyes; some word of the awaiting doom may have been
+spoken to the brother and sisters sitting reverently at his feet,--for
+they seemed to feel that a parting was at hand, and that they must crowd
+the flying hours with all the loving service they could render Him.
+
+That night at the feast, as Esther's little white hands brought the
+water for the reclining guests to wash, and Martha and Abigail placed
+sumptuously filled dishes before them, Mary paused in her busy passing
+to and fro; she longed to do some especial thing to show her love for
+the honored guest.
+
+Never had His face worn such a look of royalty; never had He seemed so
+much the Christ. The soft light of many candles falling on His worn
+face seemed to reveal as never before the divine soul soon to leave the
+worn body where it now tarried.
+
+An old Jewish custom suddenly occurred to her. She seemed to see two
+pictures: one was Aaron, standing up in the rich garments of the
+priesthood, with his head bowed to receive the sacred anointing; the
+other was Israel's first king, on whom the hoary Samuel was bestowing
+the anointing that proclaimed his royalty. Token of both priesthood and
+kingship,--oh, if she dared but offer it!
+
+No one noticed when she stepped out after awhile, and hurried swiftly
+homeward. Hidden away in a chest in her room, was a little alabaster
+flask, carefully sealed. It held a rare sweet perfume, worth almost its
+weight in gold.
+
+She took it out with trembling fingers, and hid it in the folds of her
+long flowing white dress. Her breath came quick, and her heart beat
+fast, as she slipped in behind the guests again. The color glowed and
+paled in her cheeks, as she stood there in the shadow of the curtains,
+hesitating, half afraid to venture.
+
+At last, when the banquet was almost over, she stepped noiselessly
+forward. There was a hush of surprise at this unusual interruption,
+although every one there was familiar with the custom, and recognized
+its deep meaning and symbolism.
+
+First on His head, then on His feet, she poured the costly perfume.
+Bending low in the deepest humility, she swept her long soft hair across
+them to wipe away the crystal drops. The whole house was filled with the
+sweet, delicate odor.
+
+Some of those who saw it, remembered a similar scene in the house of
+another Simon, in far away Galilee; but only the Anointed One could feel
+the deep contrast between the two.
+
+That Simon, the proud Pharisee, condescending and critical and scant in
+hospitality; this Simon, the cleansed leper, ready to lay down his life,
+in his boundless love and gratitude. That woman, a penitent sinner,
+kneeling with tears before His mercy; this woman, so pure in heart that
+she could see God though hidden in the human body of the Nazarene. That
+anointing, to His priesthood at the beginning of His ministry; this
+anointing, to His kingdom, now almost at hand. No one spoke as the
+fragrance rose and spread itself like the incense of a benediction. It
+seemed a fitting close to this hour of communion with the Master.
+
+Across this eloquent silence that the softest sound would have jarred
+upon, a cold, unfeeling voice broke harshly.
+
+[Illustration: "A DARK FIGURE WENT SKULKING OUT INTO THE NIGHT"]
+
+It was Judas Iscariot who spoke. "Why was all this ointment wasted?" he
+asked. "It would have been better to have sold it and given it to the
+poor."
+
+Simon frowned indignantly at this low-browed guest, who was so lacking
+in courtesy, and Mary looked up distressed.
+
+"Let her alone!" said the Master, gently. "Ye have the poor with you
+always, and whensoever ye will, ye may do them good: but me ye have not
+always. She hath done what she could: she is come aforehand to anoint my
+body to the burying."
+
+A dark look gleamed in the eyes of Judas,--there was that reference
+again to His burial. There seemed to be no use of making any further
+pretence to follow Him any longer. His kingdom was a delusion,--a vague,
+shadowy, spiritual thing that the others might believe in if they chose.
+But if there was no longer any hope of gaining by His service, he would
+turn to the other side.
+
+That night there was another secret council of some of the Sanhedrin,
+and Judas Iscariot was in their midst.
+
+When the lights were out, and the Temple police were making their final
+rounds, a dark figure went skulking out into the night, and wound its
+way through the narrow streets,--the dark figure that still goes
+skulking through the night of history,--the man who covenanted for
+thirty pieces of silver to betray his Lord.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+"WHO is that talking in the house?" asked Joel of Abigail the morning
+after the feast. He had been playing in the garden with Jesse, and
+paused just outside the door as he heard voices.
+
+"Only father and Phineas, now," answered Abigail. "Simon the oil-seller
+has just been here, and I am sure you could not guess his errand. It was
+about you."
+
+"About me?" echoed Joel, in surprise.
+
+"Yes, I never knew until this morning that you were the one who
+persuaded him to go to the Master for healing. He says if it had not
+been for you, he would still be an outcast from home. During these weeks
+you have been away, he has been hoping to find some trace of you, for he
+longs to express his gratitude. Last night at the feast, he learned your
+name, and now he has just been here to talk to Phineas and father about
+you. His olive groves yield him a large fortune every year, and he is in
+a position to do a great deal for you, if you will only let him."
+
+"What does he want to do?" asked Joel.
+
+"He has offered a great deal: to send you to the best schools in the
+country; to let you travel in foreign lands, and see life as it is in
+Rome and Athens and the cities of Egypt. Then when you are grown, he
+offers to take you in business with himself, and give you the portion of
+a son. It is a rare chance for you, my boy."
+
+"Yes," answered Joel, flushing with pleasure at the thought of all he
+might be able to see and learn. He seemed lost for a few minutes in the
+bright anticipation of such a tempting future; then his face clouded.
+
+"But I would have to leave everybody I love," he cried, "and the home
+where I have been so happy! I cannot do it, mother Abigail; it is too
+much to ask."
+
+"Now you talk like a child," she answered, half impatiently; but there
+was a suspicion of tears in her eyes as she added, "Joel, you have grown
+very dear to us. It will be hard to give you up, for you seem almost
+like an own son. But consider, my boy; it would not be right to turn
+away from such advantages. Jesse and Ruth will be well provided for. All
+that my father has will be theirs some day. But Phineas is only a poor
+carpenter, and cannot give you much beyond food and clothing. I heard
+him say just now that he clearly thought it to be your duty to accept,
+and he had no doubt but that you would."
+
+"But I cannot be with the Master!" cried Joel, as the thought suddenly
+occurred to him that he could no longer follow Him as he had been doing,
+if he was to be sent away to study and travel.
+
+"No; but think what you may be able to do for His cause, if you have
+money and education and influence. It seems to me that for His sake
+alone, you ought to consent to such an arrangement."
+
+That was the argument that Phineas used when he came out; and the boy
+was sadly bewildered between the desire to be constantly with his
+beloved Master, and his wish to serve Him as they suggested.
+
+It was in this perplexed state of mind that he started up to Jerusalem
+with Jesse and his grandfather.
+
+The streets were rapidly filling with people, coming up to the Feast of
+the Passover, and Joel recognized many old friends from Galilee.
+
+"There is Rabbi Amos!" he exclaimed, as he caught sight of an old man in
+the door of a house across the street. "May I run and speak to him?"
+
+"Certainly!" answered Reuben. "You know your way so well about the
+streets that it makes no difference if we do get separated. Jesse and I
+will walk on down to the shop. You can meet us there."
+
+Rabbi Amos gave Joel a cordial greeting. "I am about to go back to the
+Damascus gate," he said. "I have just been told that the Nazarene will
+soon make His entrance into the city, and a procession of pilgrims are
+going out to meet Him. I have heard much of the man since He left
+Capernaum, and I have a desire to see Him again. Will you come?"
+
+The old man hobbled along so painfully, leaning on his staff, that they
+were a long time in reaching the gate. The outgoing procession had
+already met the coming pilgrims, and were starting to return. The way
+was strewn with palm branches and the clothes they had taken off to lay
+along the road in front of the man they wished to honor. Every hand
+carried a palm branch, and every voice cried a Hosannah.
+
+At first Joel saw only a confused waving of the green branches, and
+heard an indistinct murmur of voices; but as they came nearer, he caught
+the words, "Hosannah to the Son of David!"
+
+"Look!" cried Rabbi Amos, laying his wrinkled, shaking hand heavily on
+Joel's shoulder. "Look ye, boy, the voice of prophecy! No Roman
+war-horse bears the coming victor! It is as Zechariah foretold! That the
+king should come riding upon the colt of an ass,--the symbol of peace.
+So David rode, and so the Judges of Israel came and went!"
+
+Joel's eyes followed the gesture of the tremulous, pointing finger.
+There came the Master, right in the face of His enemies, boldly riding
+in to take possession of His kingdom.
+
+At last! No wandering now in lonely wildernesses! No fear of the jealous
+scribe or Pharisee! The time had fully come. With garments strewn in the
+way, with palms of victory waving before Him, with psalm and song and
+the shouting of the multitude, He rode triumphantly into the city.
+
+Joel was roused to the highest pitch of enthusiasm, to see His best
+beloved friend so honored. People understood Him now; they appreciated
+Him. The demonstrations of the multitude proved it. He was so happy and
+excited, he scarcely knew what he was doing. He had no palm branch to
+wave, but as the head of the procession came abreast with him, and he
+saw the face of the rider, he was almost beside himself.
+
+He waved his empty hands wildly up and down, cheering at the top of his
+voice; but his shrillest Hosannahs were heard only by himself. They were
+only a drop in that mighty surf-beat of sound.
+
+Scarcely knowing what to expect, yet prepared for almost anything, they
+followed the procession into the city. When they reached the porch of
+the Temple, the Master had disappeared.
+
+"I wonder where He has gone," said Joel, in a disappointed tone. "I
+thought they would surely crown Him."
+
+"He evidently did not wish it to be," answered Rabbi Amos. "It would be
+more fitting that the coronation take place at the great feast. Wait
+until the day of the Passover."
+
+As they sat in the Court of the Gentiles, resting, Joel told Rabbi Amos
+of the offer made him by the wealthy oil-dealer Simon.
+
+"Accept it, by all means!" was the old man's advice. "We have seen
+enough just now to know that a new day is about to dawn for Israel. In
+Bethany, you will be much nearer the Master than in Capernaum; for
+surely, after to-day's demonstration, He will take up His residence in
+the capital. In time you may rise to great influence in the new
+government soon to be established."
+
+The old rabbi's opinion weighed heavily with Joel, and he determined to
+accept Simon's offer. Then for awhile he was so full of his new plans
+and ambitions, he could think of nothing else.
+
+All that busy week he was separated from the Master and His disciples;
+for it was the first Passover he had ever taken part in. After it was
+over, he was to break the ties that bound him to the carpenter's family
+and the simple life in Galilee, and go to live in Simon's luxurious home
+in Bethany.
+
+So he stayed closely with Phineas and Abigail, taking a great interest
+in all the great preparations for the feast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reuben chose, from the countless pens, a male lamb a year old, without
+blemish. About two o'clock the blast of two horns announced that the
+priests and Levites in the Temple were ready, and the gates of the inner
+courts were opened, that all might bring the lambs for examination.
+
+The priests, in two long rows, caught the blood in great gold and silver
+vessels, as the animals were killed, and passed it to others behind,
+till it reached the altar, at the foot of which it was poured out.
+
+Then the lamb was taken up and roasted in an earthen oven, and the feast
+commenced at sunset on Thursday. The skin of the lamb, and the earthen
+dishes used, were generally given to the host, when different families
+lodged together.
+
+As many as twenty were allowed to gather at one table. Reuben had
+invited Nathan ben Obed, and those who came with him, to partake of his
+hospitality. Much to Joel's delight, a familiar shock of sunburned hair
+was poked in at the door, and he recognized Buz's freckled face,
+round-eyed and open mouthed at this first glimpse of the great city.
+
+During the first hour they were together, Buz kept his squinting eyes
+continually on Joel. He found it hard to believe that this straight,
+sinewy boy could be the same pitiful little cripple who had gone with
+him to the sheepfolds of Nathan ben Obed.
+
+"Say," he drawled, after awhile, "I know where that fellow is who made
+you lame. I was so upset at seeing you this way that I forgot to tell
+you. He had a dreadful accident, and you have already had your wish, for
+he is as blind as that stone."
+
+"Oh, how? Who told you?" cried Joel, eagerly.
+
+"I saw him myself, as we came through Jericho. He had been nearly beaten
+to death by robbers a few weeks before. It gave him a fever, and both
+eyes were so inflamed and bruised that he lost his sight."
+
+"Poor Rehum!" exclaimed Joel.
+
+"Poor Rehum!" echoed Buz, in astonishment. "What do you mean by poor
+Rehum? Aren't you glad? Isn't that just exactly what you planned; or did
+you want the pleasure of punching them out yourself?"
+
+"No," answered Joel, simply; "I forgave him a year ago, the night before
+I was healed."
+
+"You forgave him!" gasped Buz,--"you forgave him! A dog of a Samaritan!
+Why, how could you?"
+
+Buz looked at him with such a wondering, puzzled gaze that Joel did not
+attempt to explain. Buz might be ignorant of a great many things, but he
+knew enough to hate the Samaritans, and look down on them with the
+utmost contempt.
+
+"I don't really believe you could understand it," said Joel, "so it is
+of no use to try to tell you how or why. But I did forgive him, fully
+and freely. And if you will tell me just where to find him, I will go
+after him early in the morning and bring him back with me. The Hand
+that straightened my back can open his eyes; for I have seen it done
+many times."
+
+All during the feast, Buz kept stealing searching glances at Joel. He
+could hardly tell which surprised him most, the straightened body or the
+forgiving spirit. It was so wonderful to him that he sat speechless.
+
+At the same time, in an upper chamber in another street, the Master and
+His disciples were keeping the feast together. It was their last supper
+with Him, although they knew it not. Afterwards they recalled every word
+and every incident, with loving memory that lingered over each detail;
+but at the time they could not understand its full import.
+
+The gates were left open on Passover night. While the Master and His
+followers walked out to the Garden of Gethsemane, where they had often
+gone together, Joel was questioning Buz as to the exact place where he
+was to find his old enemy.
+
+"I'll go out very early in the morning," said Joel, as his head touched
+the pillow. "Very early in the morning, for I want Rehum's eyes to be
+open just as soon as possible, so that he can see the Master's face.
+Lord help me to find him to-morrow," he whispered, and with a blessing
+on his lips for the one he had so long ago forgiven, his eyes closed
+softly.
+
+Sleep came quickly to him after the fatigue and excitement of the day.
+In his dreams he saw again the Master's face as He made His triumphal
+entrance into the city; he heard again the acclamations of the crowd.
+Then he saw Rabbi Amos and Simon and little Ruth. There was a confused
+blending of kindly faces; there was a shadow-like shifting of indistinct
+but pleasant scenes. In the fair dreamland where he wandered, fortune
+smiled on him, and all his paths were peace.
+
+Sleep on, little disciple, happy in thy dreaming; out in Gethsemane's
+dark garden steals one to betray thy Lord! By the light of glimmering
+lanterns and fitful torches they take Him now. Armed with swords and
+staves, they lead Him out from the leafy darkness into the moon-flooded
+highroad.
+
+Now He stands before the High Priest,--alone, unfriended. Sleep, and
+wake not at the cock's shrill crowing, for there is none to make answer
+for Him, and one who loved Him hath thrice denied!
+
+Dream on! In the hall of Pilate now, thorn-crowned and purple-clad, Him
+whom thou lovest; scourged now, and spat upon. This day, indeed, shall
+He come into His kingdom, but well for thee, that thou seest not the
+coronation.
+
+Sleep on, little disciple, be happy whilst thou can!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+IT was so much later than he had intended, when Joel awoke next morning,
+that without stopping for anything to eat, he hurried out of the city,
+and took the road by which the Master had made such a triumphal entry a
+few days before.
+
+Faded branches of palms still lay scattered by the wayside, thickly
+covered with dust.
+
+All unconscious of what had happened the night before, and what was even
+at that very moment taking place, Joel trudged on to Bethany at a rapid
+pace, light-hearted and happy.
+
+For six days he had been among enthusiastic Galileans who firmly
+believed that before the end of Passover week they should see the
+overthrow of Rome, and all nations lying at the feet of a Jewish king.
+How long they had dreamed of this hour!
+
+He turned to look back at the city. The white and gold of the Temple
+dazzled his eyes, as it threw back the rays of the morning sun. He
+thought of himself as he had stood that day on the roof of the
+carpenter's house, stretching out longing arms to this holy place, and
+calling down curses on the head of his enemy, Rehum.
+
+Could he be the same boy? It seemed to him now that that poor, crippled
+body, that bitter hatred, that burning thirst for revenge, must have
+belonged to some one else, he felt so well, so strong, so full of love
+to God and all mankind.
+
+A little broken-winged sparrow fluttered feebly under a hedgerow. He
+stopped to gather a handful of ripe berries for it, and even retraced
+his steps to a tiny spring he had noticed farther back, to bring it
+water in the hollow of a smooth stone.
+
+He did not find Rehum at the place where Buz had told him to inquire.
+His father had taken him to his home, somewhere in Samaria.
+
+Joel turned back, tired and disappointed. He was glad to lie down, when
+he reached Bethany again, and rest awhile. A peculiar darkness began to
+settle down over the earth. Joel was perplexed and frightened; he knew
+it could not be an eclipse, for it was the time of the full moon.
+Finally he started back to Jerusalem, although it was like travelling in
+the night, for the darkness had deepened and deepened for nearly three
+hours, and the mysterious gloom made him long to be with his friends.
+
+His first thought was to find the Master, and he naturally turned toward
+the Temple. Just as he started across the Porch of Solomon, the darkness
+was lifted, and everything seemed to dance before his eyes. He had never
+experienced an earthquake shock before, but he felt sure that this was
+one.
+
+He braced himself against one of the pillars. How the massive columns
+quivered! How the hot air throbbed! The darkness had been awful, but
+this was doubly terrifying.
+
+The earth had scarcely stopped trembling, when an old white-bearded
+priest ran across the Court of the Gentiles; his wrinkled hands, raised
+above his head, shook as with palsy. The scream that he uttered seemed
+to transfix Joel with horror.
+
+"_The veil of the Temple is rent in twain!_" he cried,--"_The veil of
+the Temple is rent in twain!_"
+
+Then with a convulsive shudder he fell forward on his face. Joel's knees
+shook. The darkness, the earthquake, and now this mighty force that had
+laid bare the Holy of Holies, filled him with an undefined dread.
+
+He ran past the prostrate priest into the inner court, and saw for
+himself. There hung the heavy curtain of Babylonian tapestry, in all its
+glory of hyacinth and scarlet and purple, torn asunder from top to
+bottom. No earthquake shock could have made that ragged gash. The wrath
+of God must have come down and laid mighty fingers upon it.
+
+He ran out of the Temple, and towards the house where he had slept the
+night before.
+
+The earthquake seemed to have shaken all Jerusalem into the streets.
+Strange words were afloat. A question overheard in passing one excited
+group, an exclamation in another, made him run the faster.
+
+At Reuben's shop he found Jesse and Ruth both crying from fright. The
+attendant who had them in charge told him that his friends had been gone
+nearly all day.
+
+"Where?" demanded Joel.
+
+"I do not know exactly. They went out with one of the greatest
+multitudes that ever passed through the gates of the city. Not only
+Jews, but Greeks and Romans and Egyptians. You should have seen the
+camels and the chariots, the chairs and the litters!" exclaimed the man.
+
+A sudden fear fell upon the boy that this was the day that the One he
+loved best had been made king, and he had missed it,--had missed the
+greatest opportunity of his life.
+
+"Was it to follow Rabbi Jesus of Nazareth?" he demanded eagerly.
+
+The man nodded.
+
+"To crown Him?" was the next breathless question.
+
+"No; to crucify Him."
+
+The unexpected answer was almost a death-thrust. Joel stood a moment,
+dumb with horror. The blood seemed to stand still in his veins; there
+was a roaring in his ears; then everything grew black before him. He
+clutched blindly at the air, then staggered back against the wall.
+
+"No, _no_, _no_, NO!" he cried; each word was louder than the last. "I
+will not believe it! You do not speak truth!"
+
+He ran madly from the shop, down the street, and through the city gate.
+Out on the highway he met the returning multitude, most of them in as
+great haste as he.
+
+Everything he saw seemed to confirm the truth of what he had just heard,
+but he could not believe it.
+
+"No, no, no!" he gasped, in a breathless whisper, as he ran. "No, no,
+no! It cannot be! He is the Christ! The Son of God! They could not be
+able to do it, no matter how much they hated Him!"
+
+But even as he ran he saw the hill where three crosses rose. He turned
+sick and cold, and so weak he could scarcely stand. Still he stumbled
+resolutely on, but with his face turned away from the sight he dared not
+look upon, lest seeing should be knowing what he feared.
+
+At last he reached the place, and, shrinking back as if from an expected
+blow, he slowly raised his eyes till they rested on the face of the dead
+body hanging there.
+
+The agonized shriek on his lips died half uttered, as he fell
+unconscious at the foot of the cross.
+
+A long time after, one of the soldiers happening to notice him, turned
+him over with his foot, and prodded him sharply with his spear. It
+partially aroused him, and in a few moments he sat up. Then he looked up
+again into the white face above him; but this time the bowed head awed
+him into a deep calm.
+
+The veil of the Temple was rent indeed, and through this pierced body
+there shone out from its Holy of Holies the Shekinah of God's love for a
+dying world. It uplifted Joel, and drew him, and drew him, till he
+seemed to catch a faint glimpse of the Father's face; to feel himself
+folded in boundless pardon, in pity so deep, and a love so unfathomed,
+that the lowest sinner could find a share. But while he gazed and gazed
+into the white face, so glorified in its marble stillness, Joseph of
+Arimathea stood between him and the cross, giving directions, in a low
+tone, for the removal of the body.
+
+It seemed to waken Joel out of his trance; and when the bloodstained
+form was stretched gently on the ground, he forgot his glimpse of
+heavenly mysteries, he saw no longer the uplifted Christ. He saw
+instead, the tortured body of the man he loved; the friend for whom he
+would gladly have given his life.
+
+Almost blinded by the rush of tears, he groped his way on his knees
+toward it. A mantle of fine white linen had been laid over the lifeless
+body; but one hand lay stretched out beside Him with a great bloody
+nail-hole through the palm,--it was the hand that had healed him; the
+hand that had fed the hungry multitudes; the hand that had been laid in
+blessing on the heads of little children, waiting by the roadside! With
+the thought of all it had done for him, with the thought of all it had
+done for all the countless ones its warm, loving touch had comforted,
+came the remembrance of the torture it had just suffered. Joel lay down
+beside it with a heart-broken moan.
+
+Men came and lifted the body in its spotless covering. Joel did not look
+up to see who bore it away.
+
+The lifeless hand still hung down uncovered at His side. With his eyes
+fixed on that, Joel followed, longing to press it to his lips with
+burning kisses; but he dared not so much as touch it with trembling
+fingers,--a sense of his unworthiness forbade.
+
+As the silent procession went onward, Joel found himself walking beside
+Abigail. She had pushed her veil aside that she might better see the
+still form borne before them; she had stood near by through all those
+hours of suffering. Her wan face and swollen eyes showed how the force
+of her sympathy and grief had worn upon her.
+
+Joel glanced around for Phineas. He was one of those who walked before
+with the motionless burden, his strong brown hands tenderly supporting
+the Master's pierced feet; his face was as rigid as stone, and seemed to
+Joel to have grown years older since the night before.
+
+Another swift rush of tears blinded Joel, as he looked at the set,
+despairing face, and then at what he carried.
+
+O friend of Phineas! O feet that often ran to meet him on the grassy
+hillsides of Nazareth, that walked beside him at his daily toil, and led
+him to a nobler living!--Thou hast climbed the mountain of Beatitudes!
+Thou hast walked the wind-swept waters of the Galilee! But not of this
+is he thinking now. It is of Thy life's unselfish pilgrimage; of the
+dust and travel stains of the feet he bears; of the many steps, taken
+never for self, always for others; of the cure and the comfort they have
+daily carried; of the great love that hath made their very passing by to
+be a benediction.
+
+It seemed strange to Joel that, in the midst of such overpowering
+sorrow, trivial little things could claim his attention. Years afterward
+he remembered just how the long streaks of yellow sunshine stole under
+the trees of the garden; he could hear the whirr of grasshoppers,
+jumping up in the path ahead of them; he could smell the heavy odor of
+lilies growing beside an old tomb.
+
+The sorrowful little group wound its way to a part of the garden where a
+new tomb had been hewn out of the rock; here Joseph of Arimathea
+motioned them to stop. They laid the open bier gently on the ground, and
+Joel watched them with dry eyes but trembling lips, as they noiselessly
+prepared the body for its hurried burial.
+
+From time to time as they wound the bands of white linen, powdered with
+myrrh and aloes, they glanced up nervously at the sinking sun. The
+Sabbath eve was almost upon them, and the old slavish fear of the Law
+made them hasten. A low stifled moaning rose from the lips of the women,
+as the One they had followed so long was lifted up, and borne forever
+out of their sight, through the low doorway of the tomb.
+
+Strong hands rolled the massive stone in place that barred the narrow
+opening. Then all was over; there was nothing more that could be done.
+
+The desolate mourners sat down on the grass outside the tomb, to watch
+and weep and wait over a dead hope and a lost cause.
+
+A deep stillness settled over the garden as they lingered there in the
+gathering twilight. They grew calm after awhile, and began to talk in
+low tones of the awful events of the day just dying.
+
+Gradually, Joel learned all that had taken place. As he heard the story
+of the shame and abuse and torture that had been heaped upon the One he
+loved better than all the world, his face grew white with horror and
+indignation.
+
+"Oh, wasn't there _one_ to stand up for Him?" he cried, with clasped
+hands and streaming eyes. "Wasn't there _one_ to speak a word in His
+defence? O my Beloved!" he moaned. "Out of all the thousands Thou didst
+heal, out of all the multitudes Thou didst bless, not one to bear
+witness!"
+
+He rocked himself to and fro on his knees, wringing his hands as if the
+thought brought him unspeakable anguish.
+
+"Oh, if I had only been there!" he moaned. "If I could only have stood
+up beside Him and told what He had done for me! O my God! My God! How
+can I bear it? To think He went to His death without a friend and
+without a follower, when I loved Him so! All alone! Not one to speak for
+Him, not one!"
+
+Groping with tear-blinded eyes towards the tomb, the boy stretched his
+arms lovingly around the great stone that stopped its entrance; then
+suddenly realizing that he could never go any closer to the One inside,
+never see Him again, he leaned his head hopelessly against the rock, and
+gave way to his feeling of utter loneliness and despair.
+
+How long he stood there, he did not know. When he looked up again, the
+women had gone, and it was nearly dark. Phineas and several other men
+lingered in the black shadows of the trees, and Joel joined them.
+
+Roman guards came presently. A stout cord was stretched across the
+stone, its ends firmly fastened, and sealed with the seal of Cćsar. A
+watch-fire was kindled near by; then the Roman sentinels began their
+steady tramp! tramp! as they paced back and forth.
+
+High overhead the stars began to set their countless watch-fires in the
+heavens; then the white full moon of the Passover looked down, and all
+night long kept its silent vigil over the forsaken tomb of the sleeping
+Christ.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Abigail had found shelter for the night with friends, in a tent just
+outside the city; but Joel and Phineas took their way back to Bethany.
+
+Little was said as they trudged along in the moonlight. Joel thought
+only of one thing,--his great loss, the love of which he had been
+bereft. But to Phineas this death meant much more than the separation
+from the best of friends; it meant the death of a cause on which he had
+staked his all. He must go back to Galilee to be the laughing-stock of
+his old neighbors. He who they trusted would have saved Israel had been
+put to death as a felon,--crucified between two thieves! The cause was
+lost; he was left to face an utter failure.
+
+When the moon went down that morning over the hills of Judea, there were
+many hearts that mourned the Man of Nazareth, but not a soul in all the
+universe believed on Him as the Son of God.
+
+Hope lay dead in the tomb of Joseph, with a great stone forever walling
+it in.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+"WAKE up, Joel! Wake up! I bring you good tidings, my lad!" It was
+Abigail's voice ringing cheerily through the court-yard, as she bent
+over the boy, fast asleep on the hard stones.
+
+All the long Sabbath day after the burial, he had sat listlessly in the
+shady court-yard, his blank gaze fixed on the opposite wall. No one
+seemed able to arouse him from his apathy. He turned away from the food
+they brought him, and refused to enter the house when night came.
+
+Towards morning he had gone over to the fountain for a long draught of
+its cool water; then overcome by weakness from his continued fast, and
+exhausted by grief, he fell asleep on the pavement.
+
+Abigail came in and found him there, with the red morning sun beating
+full in his face. She had to shake him several times before she could
+make him open his eyes.
+
+He sat up dizzily, and tried to collect his thoughts. Then he
+remembered, and laid his head wearily down again, with a groan.
+
+"Wake up! Wake up!" she insisted, with such eager gladness in her voice
+that Joel opened his eyes again, now fully aroused.
+
+"What is it?" he asked indifferently.
+
+"_He is risen!_" she exclaimed joyfully, clasping her hands as she
+always did when much excited. "I went to His tomb very early in the
+morning, while it was yet dark, with Mary and Salome and some other
+women. The stone had been rolled aside; and while we wondered and wept,
+fearing His enemies had stolen Him away, He stood before us, with His
+old greeting on His lips,--'All hail!'"
+
+Joel rubbed his eyes and looked at her. "No, no!" he said wearily, "I am
+dreaming again!"
+
+He would have thrown himself on the ground as before, his head pillowed
+on his arm, but she would not let him. She shook his hands with a
+persistence that could not be refused, talking to him all the while in
+such a glad eager voice that he slowly began to realize that something
+had made her very happy.
+
+"What is it, Mother Abigail?" he asked, much puzzled.
+
+"I do not wonder you are bewildered," she cried. "It is such blessed,
+such wonderful news. Why He is _alive_, Joel, He whom Thou lovest! Try
+to understand it, my boy! I have just now come from the empty tomb. I
+saw Him! I spoke with Him! I knelt at His feet and worshipped!"
+
+By this time all the family had come out. Reuben looked at his daughter
+pityingly, as she repeated her news; then he turned to Phineas.
+
+"Poor thing!" he said, in a low tone. "She has witnessed such terrible
+scenes lately, and received such a severe shock, that her mind is
+affected by it. She does not know what she is saying. Did not you
+yourself help prepare the body for burial, and put it in the tomb?"
+
+"Yes," answered Phineas, "and helped close it with a great stone, which
+no one man could possibly move by himself. And I saw it sealed with the
+seal of Cćsar; and when I left it was guarded by Roman sentinels in
+armor. No man could have opened it."
+
+"But Abigail talks of angels who sat in the empty tomb, and who told
+them He had risen," replied her father.
+
+Joel, who had overheard this low-toned conversation, got up and stood
+close beside them. He had begun to tremble from weakness and
+excitement.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE STONE IS GONE!'"]
+
+"Father Phineas," he asked, "do you remember the story we heard from the
+old shepherd, Heber? The angels told of His birth; maybe she _did_ see
+them in His tomb."
+
+"How can such things be?" queried Reuben, stroking his beard in
+perplexity.
+
+"That's just what you said when Rabbi Lazarus was brought back to life,"
+piped Jesse's shrill voice, quite unexpectedly, at his grandfather's
+elbow. He had not lost a word of the conversation. "Why don't you go and
+see for yourself if the tomb is empty?"
+
+Abigail had gone into the house with her mother, and now the summons to
+breakfast greeted them. She saw she could not convince them of the truth
+of her story, so she said no more about it; but her happy face was more
+eloquent than words.
+
+All day snatches of song kept rising to her lips,--old psalms of
+thanksgiving, and half whispered hallelujahs. At last Joel and Phineas
+were both so much affected by her continued cheerfulness, that they
+began to believe there must be some great cause for it.
+
+Finally, in the waning afternoon, they took the road that led from
+Bethany to the garden where they firmly believed that the Master still
+lay buried.
+
+As they came in sight of the tomb, Joel clutched Phineas by the arm, and
+pointed, with a shaking finger, to the dark opening ahead of of them.
+
+"See!" he said, pointing into its yawning darkness. "She was right! The
+stone is gone!"
+
+It was some time before they could muster up courage to go nearer and
+look into the sepulchre. When at last they did so, neither spoke a word,
+but, after one startled look into each other's eyes, turned and left the
+garden.
+
+It was growing dark as they hurried along the highway homeward. Two men
+came half running towards the city, in great haste to reach the gates
+before they should be closed for the night. They were two disciples well
+known to Phineas.
+
+He stopped them with the question that was uppermost in his mind.
+
+"Yes, He is risen," answered one of the men, breathlessly. "We have seen
+Him. Hosanna to the Highest! He walked along this road with us as we
+went to Emmaus."
+
+"Ah, how our hearts burned as He talked with us by the way!"
+interrupted the other man.
+
+"Only this hour He sat at meat with us," cried the first speaker. "He
+broke bread with us, and blessed it as He always used to do. We are
+running back to the city now to tell the other disciples."
+
+Phineas would have laid a detaining hand on them, but they hurried on,
+and left him standing in the road, looking wistfully after them.
+
+"It must be true," said Joel, "or they could not have been so nearly
+wild with joy."
+
+Phineas sadly shook his head. "I wish I could think so," he sighed.
+
+"Let us go home," urged Abigail, the next day, "the Master has bidden
+His brethren meet Him in Galilee. Let us go. There is hope of seeing Him
+again in our old home!"
+
+Joel, now nearly convinced of the truth of her belief, was also anxious
+to go. But Phineas lingered; his plodding mind was slower to grasp such
+thoughts than the sensitive woman's or the imaginative boy's. One after
+another he sought out Peter and James and John, and the other disciples
+who had seen the risen Master, and questioned them closely. Still he
+tarried for another week.
+
+One morning he met Thomas, whose doubts all along had strengthened his
+own. He ran against him in the crowded street in Jerusalem. Thomas
+seized his arm, and, turning, walked beside him a few paces.
+
+"_It is true!_" he said, in a low intense tone, with his lips close to
+his ear. "I saw Him myself last night; I held His hands in mine! I
+touched the side the spear had pierced! He called me by name; and I know
+now beyond all doubt that the Master has risen from the dead, and that
+He is the Son of God!"
+
+After that, Phineas no longer objected when it was proposed that they
+should go back to Galilee. The story of the resurrection was too great
+for him to grasp entirely, still he could not put aside such a weight of
+evidence that came to him from friends whose word he had always
+implicitly trusted.
+
+The roads were still full of pilgrims returning from the Passover. As
+Phineas journeyed on with his little family, he fell in with the sons of
+Jonah and Zebedee, going back to their nets and their fishing-boats.
+
+The order of procession was constantly shifting, and one morning Joel
+found himself walking beside John, one of the chosen twelve, who seemed
+to have understood his Master better than any of the others.
+
+The man seemed wrapped in deep thought, and took no notice of his
+companion, till Joel timidly touched his sleeve.
+
+"Do _you_ believe it is true?" the boy asked.
+
+There was no surprise in the man's face at the abrupt question, he felt,
+without asking, what Joel meant. A reassuring smile lighted up his face
+as he laid his hand kindly on Joel's shoulder.
+
+"I know it, my lad; I have been with Him." The quiet positiveness with
+which he spoke seemed to destroy Joel's last doubt.
+
+"Many things that He said to us come back to me very clearly; and I see
+now He was trying to prepare us for this."
+
+"Tell me about them," begged Joel, "and about those last hours He was
+with you. Oh, if I could only have been with Him, too!"
+
+John saw the tears gathering in the boy's eyes, heard the tremble in his
+voice, and felt a thrill of sympathy as he recognized a kindred love in
+the little fellow's heart.
+
+So he told Joel of the last supper they had taken together, of the hymn
+they had sung, and of the watch they had failed to keep, when He took
+them with Him into the garden of Gethsemane. All the little incidents
+connected with those last solemn hours, he repeated carefully to the
+listening boy.
+
+From time to time Joel brushed his hand across his eyes; but a deep calm
+fell over him as John's voice went on, slowly repeating the words the
+Master had comforted them with.
+
+"Let not your hearts be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me.
+In my Father's house are many mansions.... I go to prepare a place for
+you. I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am,
+there ye may be also.... If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I
+said, I go unto the Father.... These things I have spoken unto you, that
+in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but
+be of good cheer; I have overcome the world."
+
+Joel made an exclamation as if about to speak, and then stopped. "What
+is it?" asked John.
+
+"How could He mean that He has overcome the world? Cćsar still rules,
+and Jerusalem is full of His enemies. I can't forget that they killed
+Him, even if He has risen."
+
+John stooped to tie his sandal before he answered.
+
+"I have been fitting together different things He told us; and I begin
+to see how blind we were. Once He called Himself the Good Shepherd who
+would give his life for his sheep, and said, 'Therefore doth my Father
+love me, because I lay down my life that I might take it again. No man
+taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it
+down, and I have power to take it again.'"
+
+They walked on in silence a few paces, then John asked abruptly, "Do you
+remember about the children of Israel being so badly bitten by serpents
+in the wilderness, and how Moses was commanded to set up a brazen
+serpent in their midst?"
+
+"Yes, indeed!" answered Joel. "All who looked up at it were saved; but
+those who would not died from the poisonous bites."
+
+"One night," continued John, "a learned man by the name of Nicodemus,
+one of the rulers, came to the Master with many questions. And I
+remember one of the answers He gave him. 'As Moses lifted up the serpent
+in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that
+whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting
+life.' We did not understand Him then at all. Not till I saw Him lifted
+up on the cruel cross, did I begin to dimly see what He meant."
+
+A light broke over Joel's face as he remembered the vision he had had
+that day, kneeling at the foot of the cross; then he stopped still in
+the road, with his hands clasped in dismay. There suddenly seemed to
+rise before him the scenes of daily sacrifice in the Temple, when the
+blood of innocent lambs flowed over the altar; then he thought of the
+great Day of Atonement, when the poor scape-goat was driven away to its
+death, laden with the sins of the people.
+
+"Oh, that must be what Isaiah meant!" he cried in distress. "'He was
+brought as a lamb to the slaughter!' Oh, can it be possible that 'the
+Lord hath laid on _Him_ the iniquity of us all'? What an awful
+sacrifice!"
+
+The tears streamed down his face as the thought came over him with
+overwhelming conviction, that it was for _him_ that the man he loved so
+had endured all the horrible suffering of death by crucifixion.
+
+"Why did such a thing have to be?" he asked, looking up appealingly at
+his companion.
+
+John looked out and up, as if he saw far beyond the narrow, hill-bound
+horizon, and quoted softly: "_For God so loved the world, that He gave
+His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
+perish, but have everlasting life._"
+
+Just as the feeling had come to him that morning by the Galilee, and
+again as he gazed and gazed into the white face on the cross, Joel
+seemed to feel again the love of the Father, as it took him close into
+its infinite keeping.
+
+"'Greater love hath no man than this,'" quoted John again, "'that a man
+lay down his life for his friends.' He is the propitiation for our sins;
+and not ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world."
+
+It was hard for the child to understand this at first; but this gentle
+disciple who walked beside him had walked long beside the Master, and in
+the Master's own way and words taught Joel life's greatest lesson.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+THEY went back to their simple lives again,--those hardy fishermen, the
+busy carpenter, and the boy. Phineas was silent and grave. For him, hope
+still lay dead in that garden tomb near Golgotha; but Joel sang as he
+worked.
+
+The appointed time was nearing when the Master was to meet them on the
+mountain. As often as he could, Joel stole away from the moody man at
+the work-bench, and went down to the beach for more cheerful
+companionship.
+
+One morning, seeing a fishing-boat that he recognized pulling in quickly
+to shore, he ran down to see what luck his friends had had during the
+night.
+
+He held up his hands in astonishment at the great haul of fish the boat
+held.
+
+"We have been with the Master," explained one of the men. "We toiled all
+night, and took nothing till we met Him."
+
+Joel listened eagerly while they told him of that meeting in the early
+dawn, and of the meal they ate together, while the sun came up over the
+Galilee, and the blue waves whispered their gladness to the beach, as
+they heard the Master's voice once more.
+
+"Oh, to think that He is in Galilee again!" exclaimed Joel. That thought
+added purpose and meaning to each new day. Every morning he woke with
+the feeling, "Maybe I shall see Him before the sun goes down." Every
+night he went to sleep saying, "He is somewhere near! No telling how
+soon I may be with Him!"
+
+When the day came on which they were to go to the mountain, Joel was up
+very early in the morning. He bathed and dressed himself with the care
+of a priest about to enter the inner courts on some holy errand.
+
+When he started to the mountain, Abigail noticed that he wore his finest
+headdress of white linen. His tunic was spotless, and, from the corners
+of his brown and white striped mantle, the blue fringes that the Law
+prescribed hung smooth as silk.
+
+He did not wait for Phineas or any of his friends. Long before the time,
+he had climbed the rocky path, and was sitting all alone in the deep
+shadowed stillness.
+
+The snapping of a twig startled him; the falling of a leaf made him
+look up hopefully. Any minute the Master might come.
+
+His heart beat so loud it seemed to him that the wood-birds overhead
+must surely hear it, and be frightened away.
+
+Imagine that scene, you who can,--you who have just seen the earth close
+over your best-beloved; who have awakened in the lonely night, with that
+sudden sickening remembrance of loss; who have longed, with a longing
+like a constant ache, for the voice and the smile and the footstep that
+have slipped hopelessly beyond recall.
+
+Think of what it would mean, if you knew now, beyond doubt, that all
+that you had loved and lost would be given back to you before the
+passing of another hour!
+
+So Joel waited, restless, burning, all in a quiver of expectancy.
+
+Steps began to wind around the base of the mountain. One familiar face
+after another came in sight, then strange ones, until, by and by, five
+hundred people had gathered there, and were sitting in reverent,
+unbroken silence. The soft summer wind barely stirred the leaves; even
+the twitter of nestlings overhead was hushed.
+
+After awhile, thrilled by some unseen influence, as a field of grain is
+swayed by the passing wind, they bowed their heads. The Master stood
+before them, His hands outspread in blessing.
+
+Joel started forward with a wild desire to throw himself at His feet,
+and put his arms around them; but a majesty he had never seen before in
+that gentle face restrained him.
+
+He listened to the voice as it rose and fell with all its old winning
+tenderness. As you would listen could the dead lips you love move again;
+as you would greedily snatch up every word, and hide it in your heart of
+hearts, so Joel listened.
+
+"I go to prepare a place for you. I will come again and receive you unto
+myself, that where I am there ye may be also.... Peace I leave with
+you.... Not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be
+troubled, neither let it be afraid."
+
+As the beloved voice went on, promising the Comforter that should come
+when He was gone, all the dread and pain of the coming separation seemed
+to be lost.
+
+Boy though he was, Joel looked down the years of his life feeling it was
+only a fleeting shadow, compared with the eternal companionship just
+promised him.
+
+He would make no moan; he would utter no complaint: but he would take up
+his life's little day, and bear it after the Master,--a cup of loving
+service,--into that upper kingdom where there was a place prepared for
+him.
+
+It was all over so soon. They were left alone on the mountain-side
+again, with only the sunshine flickering through the leaves, and the
+wood-birds just beginning to trill to each other once more. But the warm
+air seemed to still throb with the last words He had spoken: "Lo, I am
+with you alway, even unto the end of the world."
+
+Phineas came down the mountain with his face all ashine; at last his
+eyes had been opened.
+
+"He and the Father are one!" he exclaimed to the man walking beside him.
+"That voice is the same that spake from the midst of the burning bush,
+and from the summit of Sinai. All these years I have followed the
+Master, I believed Him to be a perfect man and a great prophet; I
+believed Him to be 'the rod out of the stem of Jesse' who through
+Jehovah's hand was to redeem Israel, even as the rod in Aaron's hand
+smote the floods and made a pathway for our people.
+
+"When I saw Him put to death as a felon, all hope died within me; even
+to-day I came out here unbelieving. I could not think that I should see
+Him. How blind we have been all these years! God with us in the flesh,
+and we did not know Him!"
+
+Joel walked on behind the two, sharing their feeling of exaltation. As
+they came down into the valley and entered Capernaum, the work-a-day
+sights and noises seemed to jar on their senses, in this uplifted mood.
+
+A man standing in an open doorway accosted Phineas, and asked when he
+could commence work on the house he had talked to him about building.
+
+Phineas hesitated, and looked down at the ground, as if studying some
+difficult problem. In a few minutes he raised his eyes with a look of
+decision.
+
+"I cannot build it for you at all," he answered.
+
+"Not build it!" echoed the man. "I thought you were anxious for the
+job."
+
+"So I was," answered the carpenter; "but when I asked for it, I had no
+belief that the Master could rise from the dead. Just now, on the
+mountain yonder, I have been with Him. His command is still ringing in
+my ears: 'Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
+creature!'
+
+"Henceforth I give my life to Him, even as He gave His to me. My days
+are now half spent, but every remaining one shall be used to proclaim,
+as far and wide as possible, that the risen Christ is the Son of God!"
+
+The man was startled as he looked at Phineas; such a fire of love and
+purpose seemed to illuminate his earnest face that it was completely
+transformed.
+
+"Even now," exclaimed Phineas, "will I commence my mission. You are the
+first one I have met, and I must tell to you this glad new gospel. He
+died for you! 'God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten
+Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
+everlasting life!' O my friend, if you could only believe that as I
+believe it!"
+
+The man shrank back into the doorway, strangely moved by the passionate
+force of his earnestness.
+
+"I must go up to Jerusalem," continued Phineas, "and wait till power is
+given us from on high; then I can more clearly see my way. I do not know
+whether I shall be directed to go into other lands, or to come back here
+to carry the news to my old neighbors. But it matters not which path is
+pointed out, the mission has been already given,--to tell the message
+to every creature my voice can reach."
+
+"And you?" asked the man, pointing to the companion of Phineas.
+
+"I, too, received the command," was the answer, "and I, too, am ready to
+go to the world's end, if need be!"
+
+"Surely there must be truth in what you say," muttered the man. Then his
+glance fell on Joel. "You, too?" he questioned.
+
+"Nay, he is but a lad," answered Phineas, before Joel could find words
+to answer him. "Come! we must hasten home."
+
+Joel talked little during the next few days, and stole away often to
+think by himself, in the quiet little upper chamber on the roof.
+
+Phineas was making his preparations to go back to Jerusalem; and he
+urged the boy to go back with him, and accept Simon's offer. Abigail,
+too, added her persuasions to his; and even old Rabbi Amos came down one
+day, and sat for an hour under the fig-trees, painting in glowing colors
+the life that might be his for the choosing.
+
+It was a very alluring prospect; it had been the dream of his life to
+travel in far countries. He pictured himself surrounded by wealth and
+culture; he would be able to do so much for his old friends. He could
+give back to Jesse and Ruth a hundred fold, what had been bestowed on
+him; and the poor--how much he could help them, when he received a son's
+portion from the wealthy Simon! O the hearts he could make glad, all up
+and down the land!
+
+The old day-dreams he used to delight in danced temptingly before him.
+As he stood idly beside the work-bench one afternoon, thinking of such a
+future, a soft step behind him made him turn. The hammer fell from his
+hand to the grass, as he saw the woman who came timidly to meet him.
+
+"Why, Aunt Leah!" he cried. "What brought _you_ here?"
+
+He had not seen her since the night his Uncle Laban had driven him from
+home.
+
+She drew aside her veil, and looked at him. "I heard you had been
+healed," she said, "and I have always wanted to come and see you, and
+tell you how glad I am; but my husband forbade it. Child!" she cried
+abruptly, "how much you look like your father! The likeness is
+startling!"
+
+The discovery seemed to make her forget what she had come to say, and
+she stood and stared at him; then she remembered. "Rabbi Amos told me of
+the offer you have had from a rich merchant in Bethany, and I came down
+here, secretly, to beg you to accept it. In your father's name I beg
+you!"
+
+Joel looked perplexed. "I hardly know what to do," he said. "Every one
+advises me just as you do; but I feel that they are all wrong. Surely
+the Master meant me as well as father Phineas and the others, when He
+charged us to go and preach the gospel to every creature."
+
+A sudden interest came into the woman's face; she took a step forward.
+"Joel, did _you_ see Him after He was risen?"
+
+"Yes," he answered.
+
+"Oh, I believe then that He is the Christ!" she cried. "I have thought
+all the time that it might be so, and the children are so sure of it."
+
+"And Uncle Laban?" questioned Joel.
+
+She shook her head sadly. "He grows more bitterly opposed every day."
+
+"Aunt Leah," he asked, coming back to the first question, "don't you
+think He must have meant me as well as those men?"
+
+"Oh, hardly," she said, hesitatingly, "you are so young, and there are
+so many others to do it; it would surely be better for you to go to
+Bethany."
+
+After she had gone home, he put away his tools, and, like one in a
+dream, started slowly towards the mountain.
+
+The same summer stillness reigned on its shady slopes as when the five
+hundred had gathered there. He climbed up near the summit, and sat down
+on a high stone.
+
+To the eastward the Galilee glittered like a sapphire in the sun;
+Capernaum seemed like a great ant-hill in commotion. No wonder he could
+not think among all those conflicting voices; he was glad he had come up
+where it was so still.
+
+Phineas was going away in the morning. If Joel went also, maybe he would
+never look down on that scene again.
+
+Then almost as if some living voice broke the stillness, he heard the
+words: "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
+creature!" It was the echo of the words that had fallen from the
+Master's lips. Nothing once uttered by that voice can ever die; it lives
+on and on in the ever-widening circles of the centuries, as a ripple,
+once started, rings shoreward through the seas.
+
+In that instant all the things he had been considering seemed so small
+and worthless. He had been planning to give Simon's gold and silver to
+the poor; but the Master had given them His life, Himself! Could he do
+less?
+
+"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least of these, ye have done it
+unto me," something seemed to say to him. Yes; he could do it for the
+Master's sake, for the One who had healed him, for the One who had died
+for him.
+
+Then and there, high up in the mountain's solitudes, he found the path
+he was to follow; and then he wondered how he could have thought for an
+instant of making any other choice. It was the path the Master's own
+feet had trod, and the boy who had followed, knew well what a weary way
+it led.
+
+For his great love's sake, he gave up the old ambitions, the
+self-centred hopes, saying, in a low tone, as if he felt the beloved
+Presence very near, "Oh, I want to serve Thee truly! If I am too young
+now to go out into all the world, let me be Thy little cup-bearer here
+at home, to carry the story of Thy life and love to those around me!"
+
+The west was all alight with the glory of the sunset; somewhere beyond
+its burnished portals lay the City of the King. Joel turned from its
+dazzling depths to look downward into the valley. He had chosen
+persecution and sacrifice and suffering, he knew, but the light on his
+face was more than the halo of the summer sunset.
+
+As he went down the mountain to his life of lowly service, a deep peace
+fell warm across his heart; for the promise went with him, a staff to
+bear him up through all his after life's long pilgrimage: "LO, I AM WITH
+YOU ALWAY, EVEN UNTO THE END OF THE WORLD!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Selections from The Page Company's Books for Young People
+
+THE BLUE BONNET SERIES
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated,
+ per volume_ $1.50
+
+
+A TEXAS BLUE BONNET
+
+By CAROLINE E. JACOBS.
+
+"The book's heroine, Blue Bonnet, has the very finest kind of wholesome,
+honest, lively girlishness."--_Chicago Inter-Ocean._
+
+
+BLUE BONNET'S RANCH PARTY
+
+By CAROLINE E. JACOBS AND EDYTH ELLERBECK READ.
+
+"A healthy, natural atmosphere breathes from every chapter."--_Boston
+Transcript._
+
+
+BLUE BONNET IN BOSTON; OR, BOARDING-SCHOOL DAYS AT MISS NORTH'S.
+
+By CAROLINE E. JACOBS AND LELA HORN RICHARDS.
+
+"It is bound to become popular because of its wholesomeness and its many
+human touches."--_Boston Globe._
+
+
+BLUE BONNET KEEPS HOUSE; OR, THE NEW HOME IN THE EAST.
+
+By CAROLINE E. JACOBS AND LELA HORN RICHARDS.
+
+"It cannot fail to prove fascinating to girls in their teens."--_New
+York Sun._
+
+
+BLUE BONNET--DÉBUTANTE
+
+By LELA HORN RICHARDS.
+
+An interesting picture of the unfolding of life for Blue Bonnet.
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG PIONEER SERIES
+
+By HARRISON ADAMS
+
+ _Each 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume_ $1.25
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS OF THE OHIO; OR, CLEARING THE WILDERNESS.
+
+"Such books as this are an admirable means of stimulating among the
+young Americans of to-day interest in the story of their pioneer
+ancestors and the early days of the Republic."--_Boston Globe._
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS ON THE GREAT LAKES; OR, ON THE TRAIL OF THE IROQUOIS.
+
+"The recital of the daring deeds of the frontier is not only interesting
+but instructive as well and shows the sterling type of character which
+these days of self-reliance and trial produced."--_American Tourist,
+Chicago._
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS OF THE MISSISSIPPI; OR, THE HOMESTEAD IN THE
+WILDERNESS..
+
+"The story is told with spirit, and is full of adventure."--_New York
+Sun._
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS OF THE MISSOURI; OR, IN THE COUNTRY OF THE SIOUX.
+
+"Vivid in style, vigorous in movement, full of dramatic situations, true
+to historic perspective, this story is a capital one for
+boys."--_Watchman Examiner, New York City._
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS OF THE YELLOWSTONE; OR, LOST IN THE LAND OF WONDERS.
+
+"There is plenty of lively adventure and action and the story is well
+told."--_Duluth Herald, Duluth, Minn._
+
+
+THE PIONEER BOYS OF THE COLUMBIA; OR, IN THE WILDERNESS OF THE GREAT
+NORTHWEST.
+
+"The story is full of spirited action and contains much valuable
+historical information."--_Boston Herald._
+
+
+
+
+THE HADLEY HALL SERIES
+
+By LOUISE M. BREITENBACH
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume_ $1.50
+
+
+ALMA AT HADLEY HALL
+
+"The author is to be congratulated on having written such an appealing
+book for girls."--_Detroit Free Press._
+
+
+ALMA'S SOPHOMORE YEAR
+
+"It cannot fail to appeal to the lovers of good things in girls'
+books."--_Boston Herald._
+
+
+ALMA'S JUNIOR YEAR
+
+"The diverse characters in the boarding-school are strongly drawn, the
+incidents are well developed and the action is never dull."--_The Boston
+Herald._
+
+
+ALMA'S SENIOR YEAR
+
+"Incident abounds in all of Miss Breitenbach's stories and a healthy,
+natural atmosphere breathes from every Chapter."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GIRLS OF FRIENDLY TERRACE SERIES
+
+By HARRIET LUMMIS SMITH
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated; per volume_ $1.50
+
+
+THE GIRLS OF FRIENDLY TERRACE
+
+"A book sure to please girl readers, for the author seems to understand
+perfectly the girl character."--_Boston Globe._
+
+
+PEGGY RAYMOND'S VACATION
+
+"It is a wholesome, hearty story."--_Utica Observer._
+
+
+PEGGY RAYMOND'S SCHOOL DAYS
+
+The book is delightfully written, and contains lots of exciting
+incidents.
+
+
+
+
+FAMOUS LEADERS SERIES
+
+By CHARLES H. L. JOHNSTON
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume_ $1.50
+
+
+FAMOUS CAVALRY LEADERS
+
+"More of such books should be written, books that acquaint young readers
+with historical personages in a pleasant, informal way."--_New York
+Sun._
+
+"It is a book that will stir the heart of every boy and will prove
+interesting as well to the adults."--_Lawrence Daily World._
+
+
+FAMOUS INDIAN CHIEFS
+
+"Mr. Johnston has done faithful work in this volume, and his relation of
+battles, sieges and struggles of these famous Indians with the whites
+for the possession of America is a worthy addition to United States
+History."--_New York Marine Journal._
+
+
+FAMOUS SCOUTS
+
+"It is the kind of a book that will have a great fascination for boys
+and young men, and while it entertains them it will also present
+valuable information in regard to those who have left their impress upon
+the history of the country."--_The New London Day._
+
+
+FAMOUS PRIVATEERSMEN AND ADVENTURERS OF THE SEA
+
+"The tales are more than merely interesting; they are entrancing,
+stirring the blood with thrilling force and bringing new zest to the
+never-ending interest in the dramas of the sea."--_The Pittsburgh Post._
+
+
+FAMOUS FRONTIERSMEN AND HEROES OF THE BORDER
+
+This book is devoted to a description of the adventurous lives and
+stirring experiences of many pioneer heroes who were prominently
+identified with the opening of the Great West.
+
+"The accounts are not only authentic, but distinctly readable, making a
+book of wide appeal to all who love the history of actual
+adventure."--_Cleveland Leader._
+
+
+
+
+HILDEGARDE-MARGARET SERIES
+
+By LAURA E. RICHARDS
+
+Eleven Volumes
+
+The Hildegarde-Margaret Series, beginning with "Queen Hildegarde" and
+ending with "The Merryweathers," make one of the best and most popular
+series of books for girls ever written.
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume_ $1.25
+
+ _The eleven volumes boxed as a set_ $13.75
+
+
+LIST OF TITLES
+
+ QUEEN HILDEGARDE
+ HILDEGARDE'S HOLIDAY
+ HILDEGARDE'S HOME
+ HILDEGARDE'S NEIGHBORS
+ HILDEGARDE'S HARVEST
+ THREE MARGARETS
+ MARGARET MONTFORT
+ PEGGY
+ RITA
+ FERNLEY HOUSE
+ THE MERRYWEATHERS
+
+
+
+
+THE CAPTAIN JANUARY SERIES
+
+By LAURA E. RICHARDS
+
+ _Each 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume._
+ _Net_, 50 cents; carriage paid, 60 cents
+
+
+CAPTAIN JANUARY
+
+A charming idyl of New England coast life, whose success has been very
+remarkable.
+
+ SAME. _Illustrated Holiday Edition_ $1.25
+
+ SAME, FRENCH TEXT. _Illustrated Holiday Edition_ $1.25
+
+
+MELODY: THE STORY OF A CHILD.
+
+ SAME. _Illustrated Holiday Edition_ $1.25
+
+
+MARIE
+
+A companion to "Melody" and "Captain January."
+
+
+ROSIN THE BEAU
+
+A sequel to "Melody" and "Marie."
+
+
+SNOW-WHITE; OR, THE HOUSE IN THE WOOD.
+
+
+JIM OF HELLAS; OR, IN DURANCE VILE, and a companion story, BETHESDA
+POOL.
+
+
+NARCISSA
+
+And a companion story, IN VERONA, being two delightful short stories of
+New England life.
+
+
+"SOME SAY"
+
+And a companion story, NEIGHBORS IN CYRUS.
+
+
+NAUTILUS
+
+"'Nautilus' is by far the best product of the author's powers, and is
+certain to achieve the wide success it so richly merits."
+
+
+ISLA HERON
+
+This interesting story is written in the author's usual charming manner.
+
+
+THE LITTLE MASTER
+
+"A well told, interesting tale of a high character."--_California
+Gateway Gazette._
+
+
+
+
+DELIGHTFUL BOOKS FOR LITTLE FOLKS
+
+By LAURA E. RICHARDS
+
+
+THREE MINUTE STORIES
+
+Cloth decorative, 12mo, with eight plates in full color and many text
+illustrations by Josephine Bruce.
+
+ _Net_ $1.25; carriage paid $1.40
+
+"Little ones will understand and delight in the stories and
+poems."--_Indianapolis News._
+
+
+FIVE MINUTE STORIES
+
+ Cloth decorative, square 12mo, illustrated $1.25
+
+A charming collection of short stories and clever poems for children.
+
+
+MORE FIVE MINUTE STORIES
+
+ Cloth decorative, square 12mo, illustrated $1.25
+
+A noteworthy collection of short stories and poems for children, which
+will prove as popular with mothers as with boys and girls.
+
+
+FIVE MICE IN A MOUSE TRAP
+
+ Cloth decorative, square 12mo, illustrated $1.25
+
+The story of their lives and other wonderful things related by the Man
+in the Moon, done in the vernacular from the lunacular form by Laura E.
+Richards.
+
+
+WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE
+
+ Cloth, 8vo, illustrated $1.25
+
+The title most happily introduces the reader to the charming home life
+of Doctor Howe and Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, during the childhood of the
+author.
+
+
+A HAPPY LITTLE TIME
+
+ Cloth, 8vo, illustrated $1.25
+
+Little Betty and the happy time she had will appeal strongly to mothers
+as well as to the little ones who will have this story read to them, and
+appeal all the more on account of its being such a "real" story.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOYS' STORY OF THE RAILROAD SERIES
+
+By BURTON E. STEVENSON
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth decorative, illustrated, per volume_ $1.50
+
+
+THE YOUNG SECTION-HAND; OR, THE ADVENTURES OF ALLAN WEST.
+
+"A thrilling story, well told, clean and bright. The whole range of
+section railroading is covered in the story, and it contains information
+as well as interest."--_Chicago Post._
+
+
+THE YOUNG TRAIN DISPATCHER
+
+"A vivacious account of the varied and often hazardous nature of
+railroad life, full of incident and adventure, in which the author has
+woven admirable advice about honesty, manliness, self-culture, good
+reading, and the secrets of success."--_Congregationalist._
+
+
+THE YOUNG TRAIN MASTER
+
+"It is a book that can be unreservedly commended to anyone who loves a
+good, wholesome, thrilling, informing yarn."--_Passaic News._
+
+
+THE YOUNG APPRENTICE; OR, ALLAN WEST'S CHUM.
+
+"The story is intensely interesting, and one gains an intimate knowledge
+of the methods and works in the great car shops not easily gained
+elsewhere."--_Baltimore Sun._
+
+"It appeals to every boy of enterprising spirit, and at the same
+time teaches him some valuable lessons in honor, pluck, and
+perseverance."--_Cleveland Plain Dealer._
+
+"The lessons that the books teach in development of uprightness, honesty
+and true manly character are sure to appeal to the reader."--_The
+American Boy._
+
+
+
+
+THE LITTLE COLONEL BOOKS
+
+(Trade Mark)
+
+By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON
+
+ _Each large 12mo, cloth, illustrated, per volume_ $1.50
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL STORIES
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+Being three "Little Colonel" stories in the Cosy Corner Series, "The
+Little Colonel," "Two Little Knights of Kentucky," and "The Giant
+Scissors," in a single volume.
+
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S HOUSE PARTY
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S HOLIDAYS
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S HERO
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL AT BOARDING-SCHOOL
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL IN ARIZONA
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S CHRISTMAS VACATION
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL, MAID OF HONOR
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S KNIGHT COMES RIDING
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ MARY WARE: THE LITTLE COLONEL'S CHUM
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ MARY WARE IN TEXAS
+
+ MARY WARE'S PROMISED LAND
+
+ _These twelve volumes, boxed as a set_, $18.00.
+
+
+SPECIAL HOLIDAY EDITIONS
+
+ _Each small quarto, cloth decorative, per volume_ $1.25
+
+New plates, handsomely illustrated with eight full-page drawings in
+color, and many marginal sketches.
+
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL
+ (Trade Mark)
+
+ TWO LITTLE KNIGHTS OF KENTUCKY
+
+ THE GIANT SCISSORS
+
+ BIG BROTHER
+
+
+THE JOHNSTON JEWEL SERIES
+
+ _Each small 16mo, cloth decorative, with frontispiece and decorative
+ text borders, per volume_ _Net_ $0.50
+
+
+ IN THE DESERT OF WAITING: THE LEGEND OF CAMELBACK
+ MOUNTAIN.
+
+ THE THREE WEAVERS: A FAIRY TALE FOR FATHERS AND
+ MOTHERS AS WELL AS FOR THEIR DAUGHTERS.
+
+ KEEPING TRYST: A TALE OF KING ARTHUR'S TIME.
+
+ THE LEGEND OF THE BLEEDING HEART
+
+ THE RESCUE OF PRINCESS WINSOME: A FAIRY PLAY FOR OLD
+ AND YOUNG.
+
+ THE JESTER'S SWORD
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE LITTLE COLONEL'S GOOD TIMES BOOK
+
+ Uniform in size with the Little Colonel Series $1.50
+ Bound in white kid (morocco) and gold _Net_ 3.00
+
+Cover design and decorations by Peter Verberg.
+
+"A mighty attractive volume in which the owner may record the good times
+she has on decorated pages, and under the directions as it were of Annie
+Fellows Johnston."--_Buffalo Express._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Varied hyphenation as in
+"head-dress" and "headdress" was retained.
+
+Page 11, word "an" removed from text. Original read (never be an any
+better)
+
+Page 32, "a good" changed to "good a" (too good a man to)
+
+Page 68, "persistance" changed to "persistence" (persistence with which
+the)
+
+Page 68, "coin" changed to "coins" (small bag of coins)
+
+Page 90, "acknowleged" changed to "acknowledged" (he acknowledged
+proudly)
+
+Page 101, "That" changed to "that" (unto you that)
+
+Page 114, "Was" changed to "was" (was Joel's constant)
+
+Page 116, "kness" changed to "knees" (his knees in readiness)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Joel: A Boy of Galilee, by Annie Fellows Johnston
+
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