Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 588 pages of information about Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood.

Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 588 pages of information about Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood.
himself.  Hence his fall had been from another pinnacle—­that of pride.  When a man thinks it such a fine thing to have done right, he might almost as well have done wrong, for it shows he considers right something Extra, not absolutely essential to human existence, not the life of a man.  I call it Thomas Weir’s fall; for surely to behave in an unfatherly manner to both daughter and son—­the one sinful, and therefore needing the more tenderness—­the other innocent, and therefore claiming justification—­and to do so from pride, and hurt pride, was fall enough in one history, worse a great deal than many sins that go by harder names; for the world’s judgment of wrong does not exactly correspond with the reality.  And now if he was humbled in the one instance, there would be room to hope he might become humble in the other.  But I had soon to see that, for a time, his pride, driven from its entrenchment against his son, only retreated, with all its forces, into the other against his daughter.

Before a moment had passed, justice overcame so far that he held out his hand and said:—­

“Come, Tom, let by-gones be by-gones.”

But I stepped between.

“Thomas Weir,” I said, “I have too great a regard for you—­and you know I dare not flatter you—­to let you off this way, or rather leave you to think you have done your duty when you have not done the half of it.  You have done your son a wrong, a great wrong.  How can you claim to be a gentleman—­I say nothing of being a Christian, for therein you make no claim—­how, I say, can you claim to act like a gentleman, if, having done a man wrong—­his being your own son has nothing to do with the matter one way or other, except that it ought to make you see your duty more easily—­having done him wrong, why don’t you beg his pardon, I say, like a man?”

He did not move a step.  But young Tom stepped hurriedly forward, and catching his father’s hand in both of his, cried out: 

“My father shan’t beg my pardon.  I beg yours, father, for everything I ever did to displease you, but I wasn’t to blame in this.  I wasn’t, indeed.”

“Tom, I beg your pardon,” said the hard man, overcome at last.  “And now, sir,” he added, turning to me, “will you let by-gones be by-gones between my boy and me?”

There was just a touch of bitterness in his tone.

“With all my heart,” I replied.  “But I want just a word with you in the shop before I go.”

“Certainly,” he answered, stiffly; and I bade the old and the young man good night, and followed him down stairs.

“Thomas, my friend,” I said, when we got into the shop, laying my hand on his shoulder, “will you after this say that God has dealt hardly with you?  There’s a son for any man God ever made to give thanks for on his knees!  Thomas, you have a strong sense of fair play in your heart, and you give fair play neither to your own son nor yet to God himself.  You close your doors and

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Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.