<SPAN name="CH22"><!-- CH22 --></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER XXII. </h2>
<h3> "I will lead them in paths that they have not known." </h3>
<p>"See here, Tip," called Mr. Minturn, appearing in his store
door one morning not long after the examination; "I want to
talk to you."</p>
<p>Tip swung his basket off his shoulder, and went into the
store. He was at work for Mr. Dewey, and every piece of meat
which he carried home took the form, in his eyes, of a Latin
grammar and a dictionary; for these two books were what he
was at present aiming after.</p>
<p>"I'm in a great hurry, Mr. Minturn," he said; "I've got a
piece of meat for your folks in my basket, and I expect they
want it."</p>
<p>"They'll have to wait till they get it," answered Mr.
Minturn; "but I never hinder folks long. What are you going
to do with yourself, now school's out?"</p>
<p>"Oh, work; anything I can find to do while vacation lasts."</p>
<p>"So you're going to keep on at school, are you? I thought
likely, since your father was laid up, you'd he hunting for
steady work, so you could help the family along. There's a
hard winter coming, you know."</p>
<p>There was no mistaking Mr. Minturn's tone. It said, as
plainly as words could have done, "That's what I think you
ought to do, anyhow."</p>
<p>Tip looked troubled. "There's nothing for me to do," he said
at last; "I don't know of a place in this town where I could
get steady work that I could do; and besides, if there was,
I'm after an education now."</p>
<p>"My brother is here from Albany," Mr. Minturn made answer to
this. "He is a merchant, has a large store there, and keeps a
great many clerks. He's been plagued to death lately with one
of his boys,—when he sent him home with bundles, he'd
open them and help himself; and my brother told me last
night, if I could warrant him a boy who was perfectly honest,
he'd take him home with him, pay his fare down, and do well
by him. I thought of you right away, and I told my brother
that you were just the boy for him,—you'd be as true as
steel; but then, if you're going to keep on at school, it's
all up."</p>
<p>Mr. Minium did not add, that he had kept his brother until
eleven o'clock the night before, telling him Tip's
history,—what a boy he had been, how he had changed,
how he was struggling upward; and, finally, the whole story
of the examination,—the failure, the downfall, the
public confession; nor how his brother had listened eagerly,
and had said, with energy, after the story was
finished,—</p>
<p>"Such a boy as that ought to be helped; and I'm ready to help
him."</p>
<p>None of this did Tip hear, but he stooped down for his basket
when Mr. Minturn had finished speaking, with a bright blush
on his cheek. It was something for a boy like him to be
called "as true as steel."</p>
<p>"Yes," he said decidedly; "I'm going to keep on at school,
that's certain. Thank you all the same."</p>
<p>And out he went; yet all the way up and down the streets his
thoughts were busy over what he had just heard. It was
<i>time</i>, certainly, as poor as they were, that he began
to work; his mother's sewing supported the family now, and
hard and late into the nights she had to work to keep them
from hunger. Tip had thought of this question before, but had
always comforted himself with the thought that work was not
by any means an easy thing to get in the village; the odd
jobs which he could find, out of school hours, being really
the only things he could get to do. But no such comfort came
to him to-day: here was a chance, and a splendid one, for
getting steady work, and by and by good wages probably; why
wasn't he glad?</p>
<p>Oh, ever since he gave himself to Christ, there had been in
his heart a longing to get an education, and not only that,
but to become a minister. Very small, faint hopes he had, and
even those were frightened sometimes at their own boldness;
but every day the desire grew stronger, and it did not seem
as though he could possibly give up school now. It was out of
the question, he told himself, just as he was beginning to
enjoy his books so much, and was doing well. Mr. Burrows
would be disappointed in him; he had encouraged him to study.
No, it couldn't be done. He would consider the matter
settled. And yet there was his mother, working day and night,
and he, her only son, not helping. There was his father,
growing weaker every day, coughing harder every night; long
ago they had given up the hope that the cough would ever
leave him. There was Kitty, who ought to be in school, but
could not because her mother <i>must</i> have the little help
which she could give. Tip was half distracted with thinking
about it; he felt provoked at Mr. Minturn, and Mr. Minturn's
brother, and the store in Albany, and the boy who helped
himself out of other people's bundles; they were all trying
to cheat him out of his education. A dozen times he said it
was settled, and as many times began at the beginning to
think it all over again. He went home finally, after the meat
was carried around; but this didn't help him any. Home hadn't
gone back to its old state of dirt and disorder: Kitty's
first attempt had been too successful, and she had liked the
looks of things too well to give up; so there was a great
change for the better in the housekeeping, which both Kitty
and her mother enjoyed. Still, there was no denying that,
though a clean, it was a very forlorn little room, with very
few things for comfort or convenience. Tip had never seen
this with such wide-open eyes as he did today; so coming home
did not quiet the vexing thoughts.</p>
<p>He split wood and pumped water without whistling a note,
growing more sober every minute. At last, after supper, when
the work was all done that he could do, he drew a sigh of
relief; it was so nice to have time for thought. He could go
up to his attic, and he would not come down, no, not if it
wasn't in three days, until this thing was decided finally
and for ever.</p>
<p>Kitty sewed steadily on the seam which her mother had fixed
for her, and wondered why Tip didn't come down and hear her
lesson, which had been ready for him this hour. It was
another hour before he came; then his mother said,—</p>
<p>"Tip, if you've a cent in the world, do take it, and go and
get your father some of that cough-candy. I do believe he
hasn't stopped coughing since supper."</p>
<p>Tip took his hat and started for the store; as he went he
whistled a little. The cough-candy was found at a store away
up town, and, getting a paper of it, Tip dashed on around the
corner and opened Mr. Minturn's store door.</p>
<p>"When is your brother going home?" he asked, without
ceremony, seeing Mr. Minturn behind the counter.</p>
<p>"Next Monday."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm going to talk to father, and I think likely I'll
want to go along with him."</p>
<p>"All right."</p>
<p>So Tip slammed to the door and ran away and Mr. Minturn never
knew what a downfall that decision had been to the boy's dear
hopes and plans.</p>
<p>It was all settled in the course of a day or two. Mr. Minturn
from Albany was very kind. Tip was to have wages that seemed
a small fortune to him, and enough had been advanced to get
him a new suit of clothes, which his mother made.</p>
<p>One would have supposed that the future would look bright to
him; yet it was with a very sad heart that he took his seat
in prayer-meeting that Thursday evening, the last time he
expected to be in that room for—he didn't know how
long. He had a feeling that he ought to be very glad and
thankful, and wasn't at all.</p>
<p>Through the opening hymns and prayers his heart kept growing
heavier every moment, and it was not until Mr. Holbrook
arose, and repeated the text which he had chosen for the
evening, that Tip could arouse himself to listen. It was a
queer text, so he thought,—"Who shall roll away the
stone?" What could Mr. Holbrook be going to say on that? He
found out, and had reason to remember it for ever after. As
he went out from that meeting, his thoughts, had he spoken
them, would have been like these:</p>
<p>"That's true,—I don't believe any man but Mr. Holbrook
would ever have thought of it: they worried at a great rate
about that stone, how they would get it rolled away, and when
they got there it was gone. I'll remember that. I'll do just
as he said: when I see a stone ahead of me, I won't stop and
fret about it; I'll walk straight up to it, and when I get
there maybe it will roll out of my way."</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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