<SPAN name="VIII"></SPAN>
<h1 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Chapter VIII</h1>
<h2 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">The Story of the Levinskys</h2>
<p>As soon as public attention was brought to Philip
in such a generous way, he received many offers to
write for the press and magazines, and also to lecture.</p>
<p>He did not wish to draw upon his father’s slender
resources, and yet he must needs do something to meet
his living expenses, for during the months of his
inactivity, he had drawn largely upon the small sum
which he had saved from his salary.</p>
<p>The Strawns were insistent that he should continue
to make their home his own, but this he was unwilling
to do. So he rented an inexpensive room over a small
hardware store in the East Side tenement district.
He thought of getting in one of the big, evil-smelling
tenement houses so that he might live as those he
came to help lived, but he abandoned this because
he feared he might become too absorbed in those immediately
around him.</p>
<p>What he wanted was a broader view. His purpose was
not so much to give individual help as to formulate
some general plan and to work upon those lines.</p>
<p>And yet he wished an intimate view of the things he
meant to devote his life to bettering. So the clean
little room over the quiet hardware store seemed to
suit his wants.</p>
<p>The thin, sharp-featured Jew and his fat, homely wife
who kept it had lived in that neighborhood for many
years, and Philip found them a mine of useful information
regarding the things he wished to know.</p>
<p>The building was narrow and but three stories high,
and his landlord occupied all of the second story
save the one room which was let to Philip.</p>
<p>He arranged with Mrs. Levinsky to have his breakfast
with them. He soon learned to like the Jew and his
wife. While they were kind-hearted and sympathetic,
they seldom permitted their sympathy to encroach upon
their purse, but this Philip knew was a matter of
environment and early influence. He drew from them
one day the story of their lives, and it ran like
this:</p>
<p>Ben Levinsky’s forebears had long lived in Warsaw.
From father to son, from one generation to another,
they had handed down a bookshop, which included bookbinding
in a small way. They were self-educated and widely
read. Their customers were largely among the gentiles
and for a long time the anti-semitic waves passed
over them, leaving them untouched. They were law-abiding,
inoffensive, peaceable citizens, and had been for
generations.</p>
<p>One bleak December day, at a market place in Warsaw,
a young Jew, baited beyond endurance, struck out madly
at his aggressors, and in the general mêlée that followed,
the son of a high official was killed. No one knew
how he became involved in the brawl, for he was a sober,
high-minded youngster, and very popular. Just how
he was killed and by whom was never known. But the
Jew had struck the first blow and that was all sufficient
for the blood of hate to surge in the eyes of the race-mad
mob.</p>
<p>Then began a blind, unreasoning massacre. It all happened
within an hour. It was as if after nightfall a tornado
had come out of the west, and without warning had
torn and twisted itself through the city, leaving
ruin and death in its wake. No Jew that could be found
was spared. Saul Levinsky was sitting in his shop
looking over some books that had just come from the
binder. He heard shots in the distance and the dull,
angry roar of the hoarse-voiced mob. He closed his
door and bolted it, and went up the little stairs
leading to his family quarters. His wife and six-year-old
daughter were there. Ben, a boy of ten, had gone to
a nobleman’s home to deliver some books, and
had not returned.</p>
<p>Levinsky expected the mob to pass his place and leave
it unmolested. It stopped, hesitated and then rammed
in the door. It was all over in a moment. Father,
mother and child lay dead and torn almost limb from
limb. The rooms were wrecked, and the mob moved on.</p>
<p>The tempest passed as quickly as it came, and when
little Ben reached his home, the street was as silent
as the grave.</p>
<p>With quivering lip and uncertain feet he picked his
way from room to room until he came to what were once
his father, mother and baby sister, and then he swooned
away. When he awoke he was shivering with cold. For
a moment he did not realize what had happened, then
with a heartbreaking cry he fled the place, nor did
he stop until he was a league away.</p>
<p>He crept under the sheltering eaves of a half-burned
house, and cold and miserable he sobbed himself to
sleep. In the morning an itinerant tinker came by
and touched by the child’s distress, drew from
him his unhappy story. He was a lonely old man, and
offered to take Ben with him, an offer which was gladly
accepted.</p>
<p>We will not chronicle the wanderings of these two
in pursuit of food and shelter, for it would take
too long to tell in sequence how they finally reached
America, of the tinker’s death, and of the evolution
of the tinker’s pack to the well ordered hardware
shop over which Philip lived.</p>
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