The late
Peter Marshall was an eloquent speaker and for several years served as the
chaplain of the US Senate. He used to love to tell the story of the Keeper of
the Spring, a quiet forest dweller who lived high above an Austrian village
along the eastern slope of the Alps.
The
old gentleman had been hired many years earlier by a young town councilman to
clear away the debris from the pools of water up in the mountain crevices that
fed the lovely spring flowing through their town. With faithful, silent regularity,
he patrolled the hills, removed the leaves and branches, and wiped away the
silt that would otherwise have choked and contaminated the fresh flow of water.
The village soon became a popular attraction for vacationers. Graceful swans
floated along the crystal clear spring, the mill wheels of various businesses
located near the water turned day and night, farmlands were naturally
irrigated, and the view from restaurants was picturesque beyond description.
Years
passed. One evening the town council met for its semiannual meeting. As they
reviewed the budget, one man's eye caught the salary figure being paid the
obscure keeper of the spring. Said the keeper of the purse, "Who is the
old man? Why do we keep him on year after year? No one ever sees him. For all
we know, the strange ranger of the hills is doing us no good. He isn't
necessary any longer." By a unanimous vote, they dispensed with the old
man's services.
For
several weeks, nothing changed.
By
early autumn, the trees began to shed their leaves. Small branches snapped of
and fell into the pools, hindering the rushing flow of sparkling water. One
afternoon someone noticed a slight yellowish-brown tint in the spring. A few
days later, the water was much darker. Within another week, a slimy film covered
sections of the water along the banks, and a foul odor was soon detected. The
mill wheels moved more slowly, some finally ground to a halt. Swans left, as
did the tourists. Clammy fingers of disease and sickness reached deeply into
the village.
Quickly,
the embarrassed council called a special meeting. Realizing their gross error
in judgment, they rehired the old keeper of the spring, and within a few weeks,
the veritable river of life began to clear up. The wheels started to turn, and
new life returned to the hamlet in the Alps.
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