June was at home; she had come down hotfoot on hearing the news of

Jolly's enlistment. His patriotism had conquered her feeling for the

Boers. The atmosphere of his house was strange and pocketty when Jolyon

came in and told them of the dog Balthasar's death. The news had a

unifying effect. A link with the past had snapped--the dog Balthasar!

Two of them could remember nothing before his day; to June he

represented the last years of her grandfather; to Jolyon that life of

domestic stress and aesthetic struggle before he came again into the

kingdom of his father's love and wealth! And he was gone!

In the afternoon he and Jolly took picks and spades and went out to the

field. They chose a spot close to the russet mound, so that they need

not carry him far, and, carefully cutting off the surface turf, began to

dig. They dug in silence for ten minutes, and then rested.

"Well, old man," said Jolyon, "so you thought you ought?"

"Yes," answered Jolly; "I don't want to a bit, of course."

How exactly those words represented Jolyon's own state of mind

"I admire you for it, old boy. I don't believe I should have done it at

your age--too much of a Forsyte, I'm afraid. But I suppose the type gets

thinner with each generation. Your son, if you have one, may be a pure

altruist; who knows?"

"He won't be like me, then, Dad; I'm beastly selfish."

"No, my dear, that you clearly are not." Jolly shook his head, and they

dug again.

"Strange life a dog's," said Jolyon suddenly: "The only four-footer with

rudiments of altruism and a sense of God!"

Jolly looked at his father.

"Do you believe in God, Dad? I've never known."

At so searching a question from one to whom it was impossible to make

a light reply, Jolyon stood for a moment feeling his back tried by the

digging.

"What do you mean by God?" he said; "there are two irreconcilable ideas

of God. There's the Unknowable Creative Principle--one believes in That.

And there's the Sum of altruism in man--naturally one believes in That."

"I see. That leaves out Christ, doesn't it?"

Jolyon stared. Christ, the link between those two ideas! Out of the

mouth of babes! Here was orthodoxy scientifically explained at last!

The sublime poem of the Christ life was man's attempt to join those two

irreconcilable conceptions of God. And since the Sum of human altruism

was as much a part of the Unknowable Creative Principle as anything else

in Nature and the Universe, a worse link might have been chosen after

all! Funny--how one went through life without seeing it in that sort of

way!




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