ILLUSTRATIONS
“I Was Thinking—of Mr. Stanley G. Fulton” Frontispiece
“I Can’t Help It, Aunt Maggie. I’ve Just Got to Be Away!”
“Jim, You’ll Have to Come!”
“And Look Into Those Blessed Children’s Faces”
From drawings by Mrs. Howard B. Grose, Jr.
The narrative follows a wealthy man who, uneasy about how to dispose of his fortune, experiments with different forms of charity. He debates endowments, organized philanthropy, and personal gifts, observing how money alters recipients and institutions. Through episodic scenes of private counsel, direct aid, and encounters with families and reformers, the story examines the moral and practical complications of benevolence, the bureaucratic routines of relief, and the tension between compassion and control, using light satire to probe responsibility, dignity, and unintended consequences of generosity.
“I Was Thinking—of Mr. Stanley G. Fulton” Frontispiece
“I Can’t Help It, Aunt Maggie. I’ve Just Got to Be Away!”
“Jim, You’ll Have to Come!”
“And Look Into Those Blessed Children’s Faces”
From drawings by Mrs. Howard B. Grose, Jr.