CHAPTER VI.
THE MEN OF SPENERSBERG.
This Spenersberg, about which Leonhard was not a little
eager to know more when he shut the door of the apartment into
which his host had ushered him—for he must remain all
night—what was it?
A colony, or a brotherhood, or a community, six years old.
Such a fact does not lie ready for observation every
day—such a place does not lie in the hand of a man at his
bidding. What, then, was its history? We need not wait to find
out until morning, when Leonhard will proceed to discover. He
is satisfied when he lies down upon the bed, which awaited him,
it seems, as he came hither on the way-train—quite
satisfied that Spener of Spenersberg must be a man worth
seeing. Breathing beings possessed of ideas and homes here must
have been handled with power by a master mind to have brought
about this community, if so it is to be called, in six short
years, thinks Leonhard. He recalls his own past six years, and
turns uneasily on his bed, and finds no rest until he reminds
himself of the criticism he has been enabled to pass on Miss
Elise's rendering of "He is a righteous Saviour," and the
suggestion he made concerning the pitch of "Ye shall find rest
for your souls." The recollection acts upon him somewhat as the
advancing wave acts on the sand-line made by the wave
preceding. When he made the first suggestion, Sister Benigna
stood for a moment looking at him, surprised by his remark;
but, less than a second taken up with a thought of him, she had
passed instantly on to say, "Try it so, Elise: 'He is a
righteous Saviour.' We will make it a slower movement. Ah! how
impressive! how beautiful! It is the composer's very thought!
Again—slow: it is perfect!"
Was this kind of praise worth the taking? a source of praise
worth the seeking? Leonhard had said ungrateful things about
his prize-credentials to Miss Marion Ayres, and I do believe
that these very prizes, awarded for his various drawings, were
never so valued by him as the look with which priestly Benigna
seemed to admit him at least so far as into the fellowship of
the Gentiles' Court.
He would have fallen asleep just here with a pleasant
thought but for the recollection of Wilberforce's letter, which
startled him hardly less than the apparition of his friend in
the moonlight streaming through his half-curtained window would
have done. Is it always so pleasant a thought that for ever and
ever a man shall bear his own company?
But this Spenersberg? Seven years ago, on the day when he
came of age, Albert Spener, then a young clerk in a fancy-goods
store, went to look at the estate which his grandfather had
bequeathed to him the year preceding. Not ten years ago the old
man made his will and gave the property, on which he had not
quite starved, to his only grandson, and here was this
worthless gorge which stretched between the fields more
productive than many a famous gold-mine.
The youth had seen at once that if he should deal with the
land as his predecessors had done, he would be able to draw no
more from the stingy acres than they. He had shown the bent of
his mind and the nature of his talent by the promptness with
which he put things remote together, and by the directness with
which he reached his conclusions.
He had left his town-lodgings, having obtained of his
employer leave of absence for one week, and within twenty-four
hours had come to his conclusion and returned to his post. Of
that estate which he had inherited but a portion, and a very
small portion, offered to the cultivator the least
encouragement. The land had long ago been stripped of its
forest trees, and, thus defrauded of its natural fertilizers,
lay now, after successive seasons of drain and waste, as barren
as a desert, with the exception of that narrow strip between
the hills which apparently bent low that inland might look upon
river.
Along the banks of the stream, which flowed, a current of
considerable depth and swiftness, toward its outlet, the river,
willows were growing. Albert's employer was an importer to a
small extent, and fancy willow-ware formed a very considerable
share of his importations. The conclusion he had reached while
surveying his land was an answer to the question he had asked
himself: Why should not this land be made to bring forth the
kind of willow used by basket-weavers, and why should not
basket-weavers be induced to gather into a community of some
sort, and so importers be beaten in the market by domestic
productions? The aim thus clearly defined Spener had
accomplished. His Moravians furnished him with a willow-ware
which was always quoted at a high figure, and the patriotic
pride the manufacturer felt in the enterprise was abundantly
rewarded: no foreign mark was ever found on his home-made
goods.
But his Moravians: where did these people come from,
and how came they to be known as his?
The question brings us to Frederick Loretz. In those days he
was a porter in the establishment where Spener was a clerk. He
had filled this situation only one month, however, when he was
attacked with a fever which was scourging the neighborhood, and
taken to the hospital. Albert followed him thither with kindly
words and care, for the poor fellow was a stranger in the town,
and he had already told Spener his dismal story. Afar from wife
and child, among strangers and a pauper, his doom, he believed,
was to die. How he bemoaned his wasted life then, and the husks
which he had eaten!
In his delirium Loretz would have put an end to his life.
Spener talked him out of this horror of himself, and showed him
that there was always opportunity, while life lasted, for
wanderers to seek again the fold they had strayed from; for
when the delirium passed the man's conscience remained, and he
confessed that he had lived away from the brethren of his
faith, and was an outcast. Oh, if he could but be transported
to Herrnhut and set down there a well man in that sanctuary of
Moravianism, how devoutly would he return to the faith and
practice of his fathers!
When Spener returned from his trip of investigation he
hastened immediately to the hospital, sought out poor half-dead
Loretz, laid his hand on his shoulder, and said, "Come, get up:
I want you." And he explained his project: "I will build a
house for you, send for your wife and child, put you all
together, and start you in life. I am going into the basket
business, and I want you to look after my willows. After they
are pretty well grown you shall get in some
families—Simon-Pure Moravians, you know—and we will
have a village of our own. D'ye hear me?"
The poor fellow did hear: he struggled up in his bed, threw
his arms around Spener's neck, tried to kiss him, and
fainted.
"This is a good beginning," said Spener to himself as he
laid the senseless head upon the pillow and felt for the
beating heart. The beating heart was there. In a few moments
Loretz was looking, with eyes that shone with loving gratitude
and wondering admiration, on the young man who had saved his
life.
"I have no money," said this youth in further explanation of
his project—for he wanted his companion to understand his
circumstances from the outset—"but I shall borrow five
thousand dollars. I can pay the interest on that sum out of my
salary. Perhaps I shall sell a few lots on the river, if I can
turn attention to the region. It will all come out right,
anyhow. Now, how soon can you be ready? I will write to your
wife to-day if you say so, and tell her to come on with the
little girl."
"Wait a week," said Loretz in a whisper; and all that night
and the following day his chances for this world and the next
seemed about equal.
But after that he rallied, and his recovery was certain. It
was slow, however, hastened though it was by the hope and
expectation which had opened to him when he had reached the
lowest depth of despair and covered himself with the ashes of
repentance.
The letter for the wife and little girl was written, and
money sent to bring them from the place where Loretz had left
them when he set out in search of occupation, to find
employment as a porter, and the fever, and Albert Spener.
During the first year of co-working Loretz devoted himself
to the culture of the willow, and then, as time passed on and
hands were needed, he brought one family after another to the
place—Moravians all—until now there were at least
five hundred inhabitants in Spenersberg, a large factory and a
church, whereof Spener himself was a member "in good and
regular standing."
Seven years of incessant labor, directed by a wise
foresight, which looked almost like inspiration and miracle,
had resulted in all this real prosperity. Loretz never stopped
wondering at it, and yet he could have told you every step of
the process. All that had been done he had had a hand
in, but the devising brain was Spener's; and no wonder that, in
spite of his familiarity with the details, the sum-total of the
activities put forth in that valley should have seemed to
Loretz marvelous, magical.
He had many things to rejoice over besides his own
prosperity. His daughter was in all respects a perfect being,
to his thinking. For six years now she had been under the
instruction of Sister Benigna, not only in music, but in all
things that Sister Benigna, a well-instructed woman, could
teach. She sang, as Leonhard Marten would have told you,
"divinely," she was beautiful to look upon, and Albert Spener
desired to marry her.
Surely the Lord had blessed him, and remembered no more
those years of wanderings when, alienated from the brethren, he
sought out his own ways and came close upon destruction. What
should he return to the beneficent Giver for all these
benefits?
Poor Loretz! In his prosperity he thought that he should
never be moved, but he would not basely use that conviction and
forget the source of all his satisfaction. He remembered that
it was when he repented of his misdeeds that Spener came to him
and drew him from the pit. He could never look upon Albert as
other than a divine agent; and when Spener joined himself to
the Moravians, led partly by his admiration of them, partly by
religious impulse, and partly because of his conviction that to
be wholly successful he and his people must form a unit, his
joy was complete.
The proposal for Elise's hand had an effect upon her father
which any one who knew him well might have looked for and
directed. The pride of his life was satisfied. He remembered
that he and his Anna, in seeking to know the will of the Lord
in respect to their marriage, had been answered favorably by
the lot. He desired the signal demonstration of heavenly will
in regard to the nuptials proposed. Not a shadow of a doubt
visited his mind as to the result, and the influence of his
faith upon Spener was such that he acquiesced in the measure,
though not without remonstrance and misgiving and mental
reservation.
To find his way up into the region of faith, and quiet
himself there when the result of the seeking was known, was
almost impossible for Loretz. He could fear the Judge who had
decreed, but could he trust in Him? He began to grope back
among his follies of the past, seeking a crime he had not
repented, as the cause of this domestic calamity. But ah! to
reap such a harvest as this for any youthful folly! Poor soul!
little he knew of vengeance and retribution. He was at his
wit's end, incapable alike of advancing, retreating or of
peaceful surrender.
It was pleasant to him to think, in the night-watches, of
the young man who occupied the room next to his. He did not
see—at least had not yet seen—in Leonhard a
messenger sent to the house, as did his wife; but the presence
of the young stranger spoke favorable things in his behalf; and
then, as there was really nothing to be done about this
decision, anything that gave a diversion to sombre thoughts was
welcome. Sister Benigna had spoken very kindly to Leonhard in
the evening, and he had pointed out a place in one of Elise's
solos where by taking a higher key in a single passage a
marvelous effect could be produced. That showed knowledge; and
he said that he had taught music. Perhaps he would like to
remain until after the congregation festival had taken
place.
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