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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62995 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62995)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Book About Myself, by Theodore Dreiser
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Book About Myself
-
-
-Author: Theodore Dreiser
-
-
-
-Release Date: August 24, 2020 [eBook #62995]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF***
-
-
-E-text prepared by ellinora, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/bookaboutmyself00drei
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores
- (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
- BOOKS BY
-
- THEODORE DREISER
-
- SISTER CARRIE
- JENNIE GERHARDT
- THE FINANCIER
- THE TITAN
- THE GENIUS
- A TRAVELER AT FORTY
- A HOOSIER HOLIDAY
- PLAYS OF THE NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL
- THE HAND OF THE POTTER
- FREE AND OTHER STORIES
- TWELVE MEN
- HEY RUB-A-DUB-DUB
- A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF
-
-THEODORE DREISER
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Boni and Liveright
-Publishers New York
-
-Copyright, 1922, by
-Boni and Liveright, Inc.
-——————
-All rights reserved
-
-First edition November, 1922
-Second edition December, 1922
-
-Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-DURING the year 1890 I had been formulating my first dim notion as to
-what it was I wanted to do in life. For two years and more I had been
-reading Eugene Field’s “Sharps and Flats,” a column he wrote daily for
-the Chicago _Daily News_, and through this, the various phases of life
-which he suggested in a humorous though at times romantic way, I was
-beginning to suspect, vaguely at first, that I wanted to write, possibly
-something like that. Nothing else that I had so far read—novels, plays,
-poems, histories—gave me quite the same feeling for constructive thought
-as did the matter of his daily notes, poems, and aphorisms, which were
-of Chicago principally, whereas nearly all others dealt with foreign
-scenes and people.
-
-But this comment on local life here and now, these trenchant bits on
-local street scenes, institutions, characters, functions, all moved me
-as nothing hitherto had. To me Chicago at this time seethed with a
-peculiarly human or realistic atmosphere. It is given to some cities, as
-to some lands, to suggest romance, and to me Chicago did that hourly. It
-sang, I thought, and in spite of what I deemed my various troubles—small
-enough as I now see them—I was singing with it. These seemingly drear
-neighborhoods through which I walked each day, doing collecting for an
-easy-payment furniture company, these ponderous regions of large homes
-where new-wealthy packers and manufacturers dwelt, these curiously
-foreign neighborhoods of almost all nationalities; and, lastly, that
-great downtown area, surrounded on two sides by the river, on the east
-by the lake, and on the south by railroad yards and stations, the whole
-set with these new tall buildings, the wonder of the western world,
-fascinated me. Chicago was so young, so blithe, so new, I thought.
-Florence in its best days must have been something like this to young
-Florentines, or Venice to the young Venetians.
-
-Here was a city which had no traditions but was making them, and this
-was the very thing that every one seemed to understand and rejoice in.
-Chicago was like no other city in the world, so said they all. Chicago
-would outstrip every other American city, New York included, and become
-the first of all American, if not European or world, cities.... This
-dream many hundreds of thousands of its citizens held dear. Chicago
-would be first in wealth, first in beauty, first in art achievement. A
-great World’s Fair was even then being planned that would bring people
-from all over the world. The Auditorium, the new Great Northern Hotel,
-the amazing (for its day) Masonic Temple twenty-two stories high, a
-score of public institutions, depots, theaters and the like, were being
-constructed. It is something wonderful to witness a world metropolis
-springing up under one’s very eyes, and this is what was happening here
-before me.
-
-Nosing about the city in an inquiring way and dreaming half-formed
-dreams of one and another thing I would like to do, it finally came to
-me, dimly, like a bean that strains at its enveloping shell, that I
-would like to write of these things. It would be interesting, so I
-thought, to describe a place like Goose Island in the Chicago River, a
-mucky and neglected realm then covered with shanties made of upturned
-boats sawed in two, and yet which seemed to me the height of the
-picturesque; also a building like the Auditorium or the Masonic Temple,
-that vast wall of masonry twenty-two stories high and at that time
-actually the largest building in the world; or a seething pit like that
-of the Board of Trade, which I had once visited and which astonished and
-fascinated me as much as anything ever had. That roaring, yelling,
-screaming whirlpool of life! And then the lake, with its pure white
-sails and its blue water; the Chicago River, with its black, oily water,
-its tall grain elevators and black coal pockets; the great railroad
-yards, covering miles and miles of space with their cars.
-
-How wonderful it all was! As I walked from place to place collecting I
-began betimes to improvise rhythmic, vaguely formulated word-pictures or
-rhapsodies anent these same and many other things—free verse, I suppose
-we should call it now—which concerned everything and nothing but somehow
-expressed the seething poetry of my soul and this thing to me. Indeed I
-was crazy with life, a little demented or frenzied with romance and
-hope. I wanted to sing, to dance, to eat, to love. My word-dreams and
-maunderings concerned my day, my age, poverty, hope, beauty, which I
-mouthed to myself, chanting aloud at times. Sometimes, because on a
-number of occasions I had heard the Reverend Frank W. Gunsaulus and his
-like spout rocket-like sputterings on the subjects of life and religion,
-I would orate, pleading great causes as I went. I imagined myself a
-great orator with thousands of people before me, my gestures and
-enunciation and thought perfect, poetic, and all my hearers moved to
-tears or demonstrations of wild delight.
-
-After a time I ventured to commit some of these things to paper,
-scarcely knowing what they were, and in a fever for self-advancement I
-bundled them up and sent them to Eugene Field. In his column and
-elsewhere I had read about geniuses being occasionally discovered by
-some chance composition or work noted by one in authority. I waited for
-a time, with great interest but no vast depression, to see what my fate
-would be. But no word came and in time I realized that they must have
-been very bad and had been dropped into the nearest waste basket. But
-this did not give me pause nor grieve me. I seethed to express myself. I
-bubbled. I dreamed. And I had a singing feeling, now that I had done
-this much, that some day I should really write and be very famous into
-the bargain.
-
-But how? How? My feeling was that I ought to get into newspaper work,
-and yet this feeling was so nebulous that I thought it would never come
-to pass. I saw mention in the papers of reporters calling to find out
-this, or being sent to do that, and so the idea of becoming a reporter
-gradually formulated itself in my mind, though how I was to get such a
-place I had not the slightest idea. Perhaps reporters had to have a
-special training of some kind; maybe they had to begin as clerks behind
-a counter, and this made me very somber, for those glowing business
-offices always seemed so far removed from anything to which I could
-aspire. Most of them were ornate, floreate, with onyx or chalcedony wall
-trimmings, flambeaux of bronze or copper on the walls, imitation
-mother-of-pearl lights in the ceilings—in short, all the gorgeousness of
-a sultan’s court brought to the outer counter where people subscribed or
-paid for ads. Because the newspapers were always dealing with signs and
-wonders, great functions, great commercial schemes, great tragedies and
-pleasures, I began to conceive of them as wonderlands in which all
-concerned were prosperous and happy. I painted reporters and newspaper
-men generally as receiving fabulous salaries, being sent on the most
-urgent and interesting missions. I think I confused, inextricably,
-reporters with ambassadors and prominent men generally. Their lives were
-laid among great people, the rich, the famous, the powerful; and because
-of their position and facility of expression and mental force they were
-received everywhere as equals. Think of me, new, young, poor, being
-received in that way!
-
-Imagine then my intense delight one day, when, scanning the “Help
-Wanted: Male” columns of the Chicago _Herald_, I encountered an
-advertisement which ran (in substance):
-
- Wanted: A number of bright young men to assist in the business
- department during the Christmas holidays. Promotion possible.
- Apply to Business Manager between 9 and 10 a.m.
-
-“Here,” I thought as I read it, “is just the thing I am looking for.
-Here is this great paper, one of the most prosperous in Chicago, and
-here is an opening for me. If I can only get this my fortune is made. I
-shall rise rapidly.” I conceived of myself as being sent off the same
-day, as it were, on some brilliant mission and returning, somehow,
-covered with glory.
-
-I hurried to the office of the _Herald_, in Washington Street near Fifth
-Avenue, this same morning, and asked to see the business manager. After
-a short wait I was permitted to enter the sanctuary of this great
-person, who to me, because of the material splendor of the front office,
-seemed to be the equal of a millionaire at least. He was tall, graceful,
-dark, his full black whiskers parted aristocratically in the middle of
-his chin, his eyes vague pools of subtlety. “See what a wonderful thing
-it is to be connected with the newspaper business!” I told myself.
-
-“I saw your ad in this morning’s paper,” I said hopefully.
-
-“Yes, I did want a half dozen young men,” he replied, beaming upon me
-reassuringly, “but I think I have nearly enough. Most of the young men
-that come here seem to think they are to be connected with the _Herald_
-direct, but the fact is we want them only for clerks in our free
-Christmas gift bureau. They have to judge whether or not the applicants
-are impostors and keep people from imposing on the paper. The work will
-only be for a week or ten days, but you will probably earn ten or twelve
-dollars in that time——” My heart sank. “After the first of the year, if
-you take it, you may come around to see me. I may have something for
-you.”
-
-When he spoke of the free Christmas gift bureau I vaguely understood
-what he meant. For weeks past, the _Herald_ had been conducting a
-campaign for gifts for the poorest children of the city. It had been
-importuning the rich and the moderately comfortable to give, through the
-medium of its scheme, which was a bureau for the free distribution of
-all such things as could be gathered via cash or direct donation of
-supplies: toys, clothing, even food, for children.
-
-“But I wanted to become a reporter if I could,” I suggested.
-
-“Well,” he said, with a wave of his hand, “this is as good a way as any
-other. When this is over I may be able to introduce you to our city
-editor.” The title, “city editor,” mystified and intrigued me. It
-sounded so big and significant.
-
-This offer was far from what I anticipated, but I took it joyfully. Thus
-to step from one job to another, however brief, and one with such
-prospects, seemed the greatest luck in the world. For by now I was
-nearly hypochondriacal on the subjects of poverty, loneliness, the want
-of the creature comforts and pleasures of life. The mere thought of
-having enough to eat and to wear and to do had something of paradise
-about it. Some previous long and fruitless searches for work had marked
-me with a horror of being without it.
-
-I bustled about to the _Herald’s_ Christmas Annex, as it was called, a
-building standing in Fifth Avenue between Madison and Monroe, and
-reported to a brisk underling in charge of the doling out of these
-pittances to the poor. Without a word he put me behind the single long
-counter which ran across the front of the room and over which were
-handled all those toys and Christmas pleasure pieces which a loud
-tomtoming concerning the dire need of the poor and the proper Christmas
-spirit had produced.
-
-Life certainly offers some amusing paradoxes at times, and that with
-that gay insouciance which life alone can muster and achieve when it is
-at its worst anachronistically. Here was I, a victim of what Socialists
-would look upon as wage slavery and economic robbery, quite as worthy, I
-am sure, of gifts as any other, and yet lined up with fifteen or twenty
-other economic victims, ragamuffin souls like myself, all out of jobs,
-many of them out at elbows, and all of them doling out gifts from
-eight-thirty in the morning until eleven and twelve at night to people
-no worse off than themselves.
-
-I wish you might have seen this chamber as I saw it for eight or nine
-days just preceding and including Christmas day itself. (Yes; we worked
-from eight a.m. to five-thirty p.m. on Christmas day, and very glad to
-get the money, thank you.) There poured in here from the day the bureau
-opened, which was the morning I called, and until it closed Christmas
-night, as diverse an assortment of alleged poverty-stricken souls as one
-would want to see. I do not say that many of them were not deserving; I
-am willing to believe that most of them were; but, deserving or no, they
-were still worthy of all they received here. Indeed when I think of the
-many who came miles, carrying slips of paper on which had been listed,
-as per the advice of this paper, all they wished Santa Claus to bring
-them or their children, and then recall that, for all their pains in
-having their minister or doctor or the _Herald_ itself visé their
-request, they received only a fraction of what they sought, I am
-inclined to think that all were even more deserving than their reward
-indicated.
-
-For the whole scheme, as I soon found in talking with others and seeing
-for myself how it worked, was most loosely managed. Endless varieties of
-toys and comforts had been talked about in the paper, but only a few of
-the things promised, or vaguely indicated, were here to give—for the
-very good reason that no one would give them for nothing to the
-_Herald_. Nor had any sensible plan been devised for checking up either
-the gifts given or the persons who had received them, and so the same
-person, as some of these recipients soon discovered, could come over and
-over, bearing different lists of toys, and get them, or at least a part
-of them, until some clerk with a better eye for faces than another would
-chance to recognize the offender and point him or her out. Jews, the
-fox-like Slavic type of course, and the poor Irish, were the worst
-offenders in this respect. The _Herald_ was supposed to have kept all
-applications written by children to Santa Claus, but it had not done so,
-and so hundreds claimed that they had written letters and received no
-answer. At the end of the second or third day before Christmas it was
-found necessary, because of the confusion and uncertainty, to throw the
-doors wide open and give to all and sundry who looked worthy of whatever
-was left or “handy,” we, the ragamuffin clerks, being the judges.
-
-And now the clerks themselves, seeing that no records were kept and how
-without plan the whole thing was, notified poor relatives and friends,
-and these descended upon us with baskets, expecting candy, turkeys,
-suits of clothing and the like, but receiving instead only toy wagons,
-toy stoves, baby brooms, Noah’s Arks, story books—the shabbiest mess of
-cheap things one could imagine. For the newspaper, true to that canon of
-commerce which demands the most for the least, the greatest show for the
-least money, had gathered all the odds and ends and left-overs of toy
-bargain sales and had dumped them into the large lofts above, to be
-doled out as best we could. We could not give a much-desired article to
-any one person because, supposing it were there, which was rarely the
-case, we could not get at it or find it; yet later another person might
-apply and receive the very thing the other had wanted.
-
-And we clerks, going out to lunch or dinner (save the mark!), would seek
-some scrubby little restaurant and eat ham and beans, or crullers and
-coffee, or some other tasteless dish, at ten or fifteen cents per head.
-Hard luck stories, comments on what a botch the _Herald_ gift bureau
-was, on the strange characters that showed up—the hooded Niobes and
-dusty Priams, with eyes too sunken and too dry for tears—were the order
-of the day. Here I met a young newspaper man, gloomy, out at elbows, who
-told me what a wretched, pathetic struggle the newspaper world
-presented, but I did not believe him although he had worked in Chicago,
-Denver, St. Paul.
-
-“A poor failure,” I thought, “some one who can’t write and who now
-whines and wastes his substance in riotous living when he has it!”
-
-So much for the sympathy of the poor for the poor.
-
-But the _Herald_ was doing very well. Daily it was filling its pages
-with the splendid results of its charity, the poor relieved, the
-darkling homes restored to gayety and bliss.... Can you beat it? But it
-was good advertising, and that was all the _Herald_ wanted.
-
-Hey, Rub-a-dub! Hey, Rub-a-dub-dub!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-ON Christmas Eve there came to our home to spend the next two days,
-which chanced to be Saturday and Sunday, Alice Kane, a friend and
-fellow-clerk of one of my sisters in a department store. Because the
-store kept open until ten-thirty or eleven that Christmas Eve, and my
-labors at the _Herald_ office detained me until the same hour, we three
-arrived at the house at nearly the same time.
-
-I should say here that the previous year, my mother having died and the
-home being in dissolution, I had ventured into the world on my own.
-Several sisters, two brothers and my father were still together, but it
-was a divided and somewhat colorless home at best. Our mother was gone.
-I was already wondering, in great sadness, how long it could endure, for
-she had made of it something as sweet as dreams. That temperament, that
-charity and understanding and sympathy! We who were left were like
-fledglings, trying our wings but fearful of the world. My practical
-experience was slight. I was a creature of slow and uncertain response
-to anything practical, having an eye single to color, romance, beauty. I
-was but a half-baked poet, romancer, dreamer.
-
-As I was hurrying upstairs to take a bath and then see what pleasures
-were being arranged for the morrow, I was intercepted by my sister with
-a “Hurry now and come down. I have a friend here and I want you to meet
-her. She’s awful nice.”
-
-At the mere thought of meeting a girl I brightened, for my thoughts were
-always on the other sex and I was forever complaining to myself of my
-lack of opportunity, and of lack of courage when I had the opportunity,
-to do the one thing I most craved to do: shine as a lover. Although at
-her suggestion of a girl I pretended to sniff and be superior, still I
-bustled to the task of embellishing myself. On coming into the general
-livingroom, where a fire was burning brightly, I beheld a pretty
-dark-haired girl of medium height, smooth-cheeked and graceful, who
-seemed and really was guileless, good-natured and sympathetic. For a
-while after meeting her I felt stiff and awkward, for the mere presence
-of so pretty a girl was sufficient to make me nervous and
-self-conscious. My brother, E——, had gone off early in the evening to
-join the family of some girl in whom he was interested; another brother,
-A——, was out on some Christmas Eve lark with a group of
-fellow-employees; so here I was alone with C—— and this stranger, doing
-my best to appear gallant and clever.
-
-I recall now the sense of sympathy and interest which I felt for this
-girl from the start. It must have been clear to my sister, for before
-the night was over she had explained, by way of tantalizing me, that
-Miss Kane had a beau. Later I learned that Alice was an orphan adopted
-by a fairly comfortable Irish couple, who loved her dearly and gave her
-as many pleasures and as much liberty as their circumstances would
-permit. They had made the mistake, however, of telling her that she was
-only an adopted child. This gave her a sense of forlornness and a
-longing for a closer and more enduring love.
-
-Such a mild and sweet little thing she was! I never knew a more
-attractive or clinging temperament. She could play the banjo and guitar.
-I remember marveling at the dexterity of her fingers as they raced up
-and down the frets and across the strings. She was wearing a dark green
-blouse and brown corduroy skirt, with a pale brown ribbon about her
-neck; her hair was parted on one side, and this gave her a sort of
-maidenish masculinity. I found her looking at me slyly now and then, and
-smiling at one or another of my affected remarks as though she were
-pleased. I recounted the nature of the work I was doing, but
-deliberately attempted to confuse it in her mind and my sister’s with
-the idea that I was regularly employed by the _Herald_ as a newspaper
-man and that this was merely a side task. Subsequently, out of sheer
-vanity and a desire to appear more than I was, I allowed her to believe
-that I was a reporter on this paper.
-
-It was snowing. We could see great flakes fluttering about the gas lamps
-outside. In the cottage of an Irish family across the street a party of
-merrymakers was at play. I proposed that we go out and buy chestnuts and
-popcorn and roast them, and that we make snow punch out of milk, sugar
-and snow. How gay I felt, how hopeful! In a fit of great daring I took
-one hand of each of my companions and ran, trying to slide with them
-over the snow. Alice’s screams and laughter were disturbingly musical,
-and as she ran her little feet twinkled under her skirts. At one corner,
-where the stores were brightly lighted, she stopped and did a graceful
-little dance under the electric light.
-
-“Oh, if I could have a girl like this—if I could just have her!” I
-thought, forgetting that I was nightly telling a Scotch girl that she
-was the sweetest thing I had ever known or wanted to know.
-
-Bedtime came, with laughter and gayety up to the last moment. Alice was
-to sleep with my sister, and preceded me upstairs, saying she was going
-to eat salt on New Year’s Eve so that she would dream of her coming
-lover. That night I lay and thought of her, and next morning hurried
-downstairs hoping to find her, but she had not come down yet. There were
-Christmas stockings to be examined, of course, which brought her, but
-before eight-thirty I had to leave in order to be at work at nine
-o’clock. I waved them all a gay farewell and looked forward eagerly
-toward evening, for she was to remain this night and the next day.
-
-Through with my work at five-thirty, I hurried home, and then it was
-that I learned—and to my great astonishment and gratification—that she
-liked me. For when I arrived, dressed, as I had been all day, in my very
-best, E—— and A—— were there endeavoring to entertain her, E——, my
-younger brother, attempting to make love to her. His method was to press
-her toe in an open foolish way, which because of the jealousy it waked
-in me seemed to me out of the depths of dullness. From the moment I
-entered I fancied that Alice had been waiting for me. Her winning smile
-as I entered reassured me, and yet she was very quiet when I was near,
-gazing romantically into the fire.
-
-During the evening I studied her, admiring every detail of her dress,
-which was a bit different from that of the day before and more
-attractive. She seemed infinitely sweet, and I flattered myself that I
-was preferred over my two brothers. During the evening, we two being
-left together for some reason, she arose and went into the large front
-room and standing before one of the three large windows looked out in
-silence on the homelike scene that our neighborhood presented. The snow
-had ceased and a full moon was brightening everything. The little
-cottages and flat-buildings nearby glowed romantically through their
-drawn blinds, a red-ribboned Christmas wreath in every window. I pumped
-up my courage to an unusual point and, heart in mouth, followed and
-stood beside her. It was a great effort on my part.
-
-She pressed her nose to the pane and then breathed on it, making a misty
-screen between herself and the outside upon which she wrote my initials,
-rubbed them out, then breathed on the window again and wrote her own.
-Her face was like a small wax flower in the moonlight. I had drawn so
-close, moved by her romantic call, that my body almost touched hers.
-Then I slipped an arm about her waist and was about to kiss her when I
-heard my sister’s voice:
-
-“Now, Al and Theo, you come back!”
-
-“We must go,” she said shamefacedly, and as she started I ventured to
-touch her hand. She looked at me and smiled, and we went back to the
-other room. I waited eagerly for other solitary moments.
-
-Because the festivities were too general and inclusive there was no
-other opportunity that evening, but the next morning, church claiming
-some and sleep others, there was a half-hour or more in which I was
-alone with her in the front room, looking over the family album. I
-realized that by now she was as much drawn to me as I to her, and that,
-as in the case of my Scotch maid, I was master if I chose so to be. I
-was so wrought up in the face of this opportunity, however, that I
-scarcely had courage to do that which I earnestly believed I could do.
-As we stood over the album looking at the pictures I toyed first with
-the strings of her apron and then later, finding no opposition, allowed
-my hand to rest gently at her waist. Still no sign of opposition or even
-consciousness. I thrilled from head to toe. Then I closed my arm gently
-about her waist, and when it became noticeably tight she looked up and
-smiled.
-
-“You’d better watch out,” she said. “Some one may come.”
-
-“Do you like me a little?” I pleaded, almost choking.
-
-“I think so. I think you’re very nice, anyhow. But you mustn’t,” she
-said. “Some one may come in,” and as I drew her to me she pretended to
-resist, maneuvering her cheek against my mouth as she pulled away.
-
-She was just in time, for C—— came into the back parlor and said: “Oh,
-there you are! I wondered where you were.”
-
-“I was just looking over your album,” Alice said.
-
-“Yes,” I added, “I was showing it to her.”
-
-“Oh yes,” laughed my sister sarcastically. “You and Al—I know what you
-two were trying to do. You!” she exclaimed, giving me a push. “And Al,
-the silly! She has a beau already!”
-
-She laughed and went off, but I, hugely satisfied with myself, swaggered
-into the adjoining room. Beau or no beau, Alice belonged to me. Youthful
-vanity was swelling my chest. I was more of a personage for having had
-it once more proved to me that I was not unattractive to girls.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-WHEN I asked Alice when I should see her again she suggested the
-following Tuesday or Thursday, asking me not to say anything to C——. I
-had not been calling on her more than a week or two before she confessed
-that there was another suitor, a telegraph operator to whom she was
-engaged and who was still calling on her regularly. When she came to our
-house to spend Christmas, she said, it was with no intention of seeking
-a serious flirtation, though in order not to embarrass the sense of
-opportunity we boys might feel she had taken off her engagement ring.
-Also, she confessed to me, she never wore it at the store, for the
-reason that it would create talk and make it seem that she might leave
-soon, when she was by no means sure that she would. In short, she had
-become engaged thus early without being certain that she was in love.
-
-Never were happier hours than those I spent with her, though at the time
-I was in that state of unrest and change which afflicts most youths who
-are endeavoring to discover what they want to do in life. On Christmas
-day my job was gone and the task of finding another was before me, but
-this did not seem so grim now. I felt more confident. True, the manager
-of the _Herald_ had told me to call after the first of the year, and I
-did so, but only to find that his suggestion of something important to
-come later had been merely a ruse to secure eager and industrious
-service for his bureau. When I told him I wanted to become a reporter,
-he said: “But, you see, I have nothing whatsoever to do with that. You
-must see the managing editor on the fourth floor.”
-
-To say this to me was about the same as to say: “You must see God.”
-Nevertheless I made my way to that floor, but at that hour of the
-morning, I found no one at all. Another day, going at three, so complete
-was my ignorance of newspaper hours, I found only a few uncommunicative
-individuals at widely scattered desks in a room labeled “City Room.” One
-of these, after I had asked him how one secured a place as a reporter,
-looked at me quizzically and said: “You want to see the city editor. He
-isn’t here now. The best times to see him are at noon and six. That’s
-the only time he gives out assignments.”
-
-“Aha!” I thought. “‘Assignments’—so that’s what reportorial work is
-called! And I must come at either twelve or six.” So I bustled away, to
-return at six, for I felt that I must get work in this great and
-fascinating field. When I came at six and was directed to a man who bent
-over a desk and was evidently very much concerned about something, he
-exclaimed: “No vacancies. Nothing open. Sorry,” and turned away.
-
-So I went out crestfallen and more overawed than ever. Who was I to
-attempt to venture into such a wonderland as this—I, a mere collector by
-trade? I doubt if any one ever explored the mouth of a cave with more
-feeling of uncertainty. It was all so new, so wonderful, so mysterious.
-I looked at the polished doors and marble floors of this new and
-handsome newspaper building with such a feeling as might have possessed
-an Ethiopian slave examining the walls and the doors of the temple of
-Solomon. How wonderful it must be to work in such a place as this! How
-shrewd and wise must be the men whom I saw working here, able and
-successful and comfortable! How great and interesting the work they did!
-Today they were here, writing at one of these fine desks; tomorrow they
-would be away on some important mission somewhere, taking a train,
-riding in a Pullman car, entering some great home or office and
-interviewing some important citizen. And when they returned they were
-congratulated upon having discovered some interesting fact or story on
-which, having reported to their city editor or managing editor, or
-having written it out, they were permitted to retire in comfort with
-more compliments. Then they resorted to an excellent hotel or
-restaurant, to refresh themselves among interested and interesting
-friends before retiring to rest. Some such hodge-podge as this filled my
-immature brain.
-
-Despite the discouraging reception of my first overture, I visited other
-newspaper offices, only to find the same, and even colder, conditions.
-The offices in most cases were by no means so grand, but the atmosphere
-was equally chill, and the city editor was a difficult man to approach.
-Often I was stopped by an office boy who reported, when I said I was
-looking for work, no vacancies. When I got in at all, nearly all the
-city editors merely gave me a quick glance and said: “No vacancies.” I
-began to feel that the newspaper world must be controlled by a secret
-cult or order until one lithe bony specimen with a pointed green shade
-over his eyes and dusty red hair looked at me much as an eagle might
-look at a pouter pigeon, and asked:
-
-“Ever worked on a paper before?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“How do you know you can write?”
-
-“I don’t; but I think I could learn.”
-
-“Learn? Learn? We haven’t time to teach anybody here! You better try one
-of the little papers—a trade paper, maybe, until you learn how—then come
-back,” and he walked off.
-
-This gave me at least a definite idea as to how I might begin, but just
-the same it did not get me a position.
-
-Meanwhile, looking here and there and not finding anything, I decided,
-since I had had experience as a collector and must live while I was
-making my way into journalism, to return to this work and see if I might
-not in the meantime get a place as a reporter.
-
-Having been previously employed by an easy-payment instalment house, I
-now sought out another, the Corbin Company, in Lake Street, not very far
-from the office of the firm for which I had previously worked. From this
-firm, having been hard pressed for a winter overcoat the preceding fall,
-I had abstracted or held out twenty-five dollars, intending to restore
-it. But before I had been able to manage that a slack up in the work
-occurred, due to the fact that wandering street agents sold less in
-winter than in summer, and I was laid off and had to confess that I was
-short in my account.
-
-The manager and owner, who had seemed to take a fancy to me, said
-nothing other than that I was making a mistake, taking the path that led
-to social hell. I do not recall that he even requested that the money be
-returned. But I was so nervous that I was convinced that some day,
-unless I returned the money, I should be arrested, and to avoid this I
-had written him a letter after leaving promising that I would pay up. He
-never even bothered to answer the letter, and I believe that if I had
-returned in the spring, paid the twenty-five dollars and asked for work
-he would have taken me on again. But I had no such thought in mind. I
-held myself disgraced forever and only wished to get clear of this sort
-of work. It was a vulture game at best, selling trash to the ignorant
-for twelve and fourteen times its value. Now that I was out of it I
-hated to return. I feared that the first thing my proposed employer
-would do would be to inquire of my previous employer, and that being
-informed of my stealing he would refuse to employ me.
-
-With fear and trembling I inquired of the firm in Lake Street and was
-told that there was a place awaiting some one—“the right party.” The
-manager wanted to know if I could give a bond for three hundred dollars;
-they had just had one collector arrested for stealing sixty dollars. I
-told him I thought I could and decided to explain the proposition to my
-father and obtain his advice since I knew little about how a bond was
-secured. When I learned that the bonding company investigated one’s
-past, however, I was terrorized. My father, an honest, worthy and
-defiant German, on being told that a bond was required, scouted the idea
-with much vehemence. Why should any one want a bond from me? he demanded
-to know. Hadn’t I worked for Mr. M—— in the same line? Couldn’t they go
-there and find out? At thought of M—— I shook, and, rather than have an
-investigation, dropped the whole matter, deciding not to go near the
-place again.
-
-But the manager, taken by my guileless look, I presume, called one
-evening at our house. He had taken a fancy to me, he said; I looked to
-be honest and industrious; he liked the neighborhood I lived in. He
-proposed that I should go to one of the local bonding companies and get
-a three hundred dollar bond for ten dollars a year, his company paying
-for the bond out of my first week’s salary, which was to be only twelve
-dollars to start with. This promised to involve explaining about M——,
-but I decided to go to the bonding company and refer only to two other
-men for whom I had worked and see what would happen. For the rest, I
-proposed to say that school and college life had filled my years before
-this. If trouble came over M—— I planned to run away.
-
-But, to my astonishment and delight, my ruse worked admirably. The
-following Sunday afternoon my new manager called and asked me to report
-the following morning for work.
-
-Oh, those singing days in the streets and parks and show-places of
-Chicago, those hours when in bright or thick lowery weather I tramped
-the highways and byways dreaming chaotic dreams. I had all my afternoons
-to myself after one or two o’clock. The speed with which I worked and
-could walk would soon get me over the list of my customers, and then I
-was free to go where I chose. Spring was coming. I was only nineteen.
-Life was all before me, and the feel of plenty of money in my pocket,
-even if it did not belong to me, was comforting. And then youth,
-youth—that lilt and song in one’s very blood! I felt as if I were
-walking on tinted clouds, among the highlands of the dawn.
-
-How shall I do justice to this period, which for perfection of spirit,
-ease of soul, was the very best I had so far known? In the first place,
-because of months of exercise in the open air, my physical condition was
-good. I was certain to get somewhere in the newspaper world, or so I
-thought. The condition of our family was better than it had ever been in
-my time, for we four younger children were working steadily. Our home
-life, in spite of bickerings among several of my brothers and sisters,
-was still pleasing enough. Altogether we were prospering, and my father
-was looking forward to a day when all family debts would be paid and the
-soul of my mother, as well as his own when it passed over, could be
-freed from too prolonged torments in purgatory! For, as a Catholic, he
-believed that until all one’s full debts here on earth were paid one’s
-soul was held in durance on the other side.
-
-For myself, life was at the topmost toss. I was like some bird poised on
-a high twig, teetering and fluttering and ready for flight. Again, I was
-like those flying hawks and buzzards that ride so gracefully on still
-wings above a summer landscape, seeing all the wonders of the world
-below. Again, I was like a song that sings itself, the spirit of happy
-music that by some freak of creation is able to rejoice in its own
-harmonies and rhythms. Joy was ever before me, the sense of some great
-adventure lurking just around the corner.
-
-How I loved the tonic note of even the grinding wheels of the trucks and
-cars, the clang and clatter of cable and electric lines, the surge of
-vehicles in every street! The palls of heavy manufacturing smoke that
-hung low over the city like impending hurricanes; the storms of wintry
-snow or sleety rain; the glow of yellow lights in little shops at
-evening, mile after mile, where people were stirring and bustling over
-potatoes, flour, cabbages—all these things were the substance of songs,
-paintings, poems. I liked the sections where the women of the town were
-still, at noon, sleeping off the debauches of the preceding night, or at
-night were preparing for the gaudy make-believes of their midnight day.
-I liked those sections crowded with great black factories, stock-yards,
-steel works, Pullman yards, where in the midst of Plutonian stress and
-clang men mixed or forged or joined or prepared those delicacies,
-pleasures and perfections for which the world buys and sells itself.
-Life was at its best here, its promise the most glittering. I liked
-those raw neighborhoods where in small, unpainted, tumbledown shanties
-set in grassless, can-strewn yards drunken and lecherous slatterns and
-brawlers were to be found mooning about in a hell of their own. And, for
-contrast, I liked those areas of great mansions set upon the great
-streets of the city in spacious lawns, where liveried servants stood by
-doors and carriages turned in at spacious gates and under heavy
-porte-cochères.
-
-I think I grasped Chicago in its larger material if not in its more
-complicated mental aspects. Its bad was so deliciously bad, its good so
-very good, keen and succulent, reckless, inconsequential, pretentious,
-hopeful, eager, new. People cursed or raved or snarled—the more
-fortunate among them, but they were never heavy or dull or asleep. In
-some neighborhoods the rancidity of dirt, or the stark icy bleakness of
-poverty, fairly shouted, but they were never still, decaying pools of
-misery. On wide bleak stretches of prairie swept by whipping winds one
-could find men who were tanning dog or cat hides but their wives were
-buying yellow plush albums or red silk-shaded lamps or blue and green
-rugs on time, as I could personally testify. Churches with gaudy altars
-and services rose out of mucky masses of shanties and gas-tanks; saloons
-with glistening bars of colored glass and mirrors stood as the centers
-and clubs of drear, bleak masses of huts. There were vice districts and
-wealth districts hung with every enticing luxury that the wit of a
-commonplace or conventional mind could suggest. Such was Chicago.
-
-In the vice districts I had been paid for shabby rugs and lamps, all
-shamelessly overpriced, by plump naked girls striding from bed to
-dresser to get a purse, and then offered certain favors for a dollar, or
-its equivalent—a credit on the contract slip. In the more exclusive
-neighborhoods I was sent around to a side entrance by comfortably
-dressed women who were too proud or too sly to have their neighbors know
-that they were buying on time. Black negresses leered at me from behind
-shuttered windows at noon; plump wives drew me into risqué situations on
-sight; death-bereaved weepers mourned over their late lost in my
-presence—and postponed paying me. But I liked the life. I was crazy
-about it. Chicago was like a great orchestra in a tumult of noble
-harmonies. I was like a guest at a feast, eating and drinking in a
-delirium of ecstasy.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-BUT if I was wrought up by the varying aspects of the city, I was
-equally wrought up by the delights of love, which came for the first
-time fully with the arrival of Alice. Was I in love with her? No, as I
-understand myself now. I doubt that I have ever been in love with any
-one, or with anything save life as a whole. Twice or thrice I have
-developed stirring passions but always there was a voice or thought
-within which seemed to say over and over, like a bell at sea: “What does
-it matter? Beauty is eternal.... Beauty will come again!” But this
-thing, _life_, this picture of effort, this colorful panorama of hope
-and joy and despair—that _did_ matter! Beauty, like a tinkling bell, the
-tintings of the dawn, the whispering of gentle winds and waters in
-summer days and Arcadian places, was in everything and everywhere.
-Indeed the appeal of this local life was its relationship to eternal
-perfect beauty. That it should go! That never again, after a few years,
-might I see it more! That love should pass! That youth should pass! That
-in due time I should stand old and grizzled, contemplating with
-age-filmed eyes joys and wonders whose sting and color I could no longer
-feel or even remember—out on it for a damned tragedy and a mirthless
-joke!
-
-Alice proved to be in love with me. She lived in a two-flat frame house
-in what was then the far middle-south section of the city, a region
-about Fifty-first and Halsted streets. Her foster-father was a railroad
-watchman, and had saved up a few thousand dollars by years of toil. This
-little apartment represented his expenditures plus her taste, such as it
-was: a simple little place, with red plush curtains shielding a pair of
-folding-doors which separated two large rooms front and back. There were
-lace curtains and white shades at the windows, a piano (a most soothing
-luxury for me to contemplate), and then store furniture: a red velvet
-settee, a red plush rocker, several other new badly designed chairs.
-
-Quaint little soul! How cheery and dreamful and pulsating with life she
-was when I met her! Her suitor, as I afterwards came to know, was a
-phlegmatic man of thirty-five, who had found in her all that he desired
-and was eager to marry her, as he eventually did. He was wont to call
-regularly on Wednesday and Sunday evenings, taking her occasionally to a
-theater or to dinner downtown. When I arrived on the scene I must have
-disrupted all this, for after a time, because I manifested some
-opposition, leaving her no choice indeed, Wednesdays and Sundays became
-my evenings, and any others that I chose. Regardless of my numerous and
-no doubt asinine defects, she was in love with me and willing to accept
-me on my own terms.
-
-Yes, Alice saw something she wanted and thought she could hold. She
-wanted to unite with me for this little span of existence, to go with me
-hand in hand into the ultimate nothingness. I think she was a poet in
-her way, but voiceless. When I called the first night she sat primly for
-a little while on one of her red chairs near the window, while I
-occupied a rocker. I had hung up my coat and hat with a flourish and had
-stood about for a while examining everything, with the purpose of
-estimating it and her. It all seemed cozy and pleasing enough and,
-curiously, I felt more at ease on this my first visit than I ever did at
-my Scotch maid’s home. There her thrifty, cautious, religious though
-genial and well-meaning mother, her irritable blind uncle and her more
-attractive young sister disturbed and tended to alienate me. Here, for
-weeks and weeks, I never saw Alice’s foster-parents. When finally I was
-introduced to them, they grated on me not at all. This first night she
-played a little on her piano, then on her banjo, and because she seemed
-especially charming to me I went over and stood behind her chair,
-deciding to take her face in my hands and kiss her. Perhaps a touch of
-remorse and in consequence a bit of indecision now swayed her, for she
-got up before I could do it. On the instant my assurance became less and
-yet my mood hardened, for I thought she was trifling with me. After the
-previous Sunday it seemed to me that she could do no less than permit me
-to embrace her. I was deciding that the evening was about to be a
-failure, when she came up behind me and said: “Don’t you think it’s
-rather nice across there, between those houses?”
-
-Over the way a gap between peaked-roofed houses revealed a long stretch
-of prairie, now covered with snow, gas lamps flickering in orderly rows,
-an occasional frame house glowing in the distance.
-
-“Yes,” I admitted moodily.
-
-“This is a funny neighborhood,” she ventured. “People are always moving
-in and out in that row of houses over there.”
-
-“Are they?” I said, not very much interested now that I felt myself
-defeated. There was a silence and then she laid one hand on my arm.
-
-“You’re not mad at me, Dorse?” she asked, using a name which my sister
-had given me.
-
-The sound of it on her lips, soft and pleading, moved me.
-
-“Oh, no,” I replied loftily. “Why should I be?”
-
-“I was thinking that maybe I oughtn’t to be doing this. There’s been
-some one else up to now, you know.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I guess I don’t care for him any more or I wouldn’t be doing what I
-am.”
-
-“I thought you cared for me. Why did you invite me down here?”
-
-“Oh, Dorse, I do,” she said, placing both her hands on my folded arms
-and looking up into my face with a kind of tenseness. “I know it isn’t
-right but I can’t help it. You have such nice hair and eyes, and you’re
-so tall. Do you care for me at all?”
-
-“Yes,” I said, smiling cynically over my victory. “I think you’re
-beautiful.” I smoothed her cheek with one hand while I held her about
-the waist with the other.
-
-We went over to the red settee and I took her in my arms and held her
-and kissed her mouth and eyes and neck. She clung to me and laughed and
-told me bits about her work and her pompous floor-walker and her social
-companions, and even her fiancé. She danced for me when I asked her,
-doing a running overstep clog, sidewise to and fro, her skirts lifted to
-her shoetops. She was sweetly feminine, in no wise aggressive or bold. I
-stayed until nearly one in the morning. I had nine or ten miles to go by
-owl cars, arriving home at nearly three; but at this time I was not
-working and so my time was my own.
-
-The thing that troubled me was what my Scotch girl would think if she
-found out (which she never would), and how I could extricate myself from
-a situation which, now that I had Alice, was not as interesting as it
-had been.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-AS spring approached this affair moved on apace. The work of the Corbin
-Company was no harder than that of the Lovell Company, and I had more
-time to myself. Because of an ingrowing sense of my personal importance
-and because I thought it such a wonderful thing to be a newspaper man
-and so very much less to be a collector, I lied to Alice as to what I
-was doing. When should I be through with collecting and begin reporting?
-I was eager to know all about music, painting, sculpture, literature,
-and to be in those places where life is at its best. I was regretful now
-that I had not made better use of my school and college days, and so in
-my free hours I read, visited the art gallery and library, went to
-theaters and concerts. The free intellectual churches, or ethical
-schools, were my favorite places on Sunday mornings. I would sometimes
-take Alice or my Scotch girl to the Theodore Thomas concerts, which were
-just beginning at the Auditorium, or to see the best plays and actors:
-Booth, Barrett, Modjeska, Fannie Davenport, Mary Anderson, Joseph
-Jefferson, Nat Goodwin. Thinking of myself as a man with a future, I
-assumed a kind of cavalier attitude toward my two sweethearts, finally
-breaking with N—— on the pretext that she was stubborn and superior and
-did not love me, whereas I really wanted to assume privileges which she,
-with her conventional notions, could not permit and which I was not
-generous enough not to want. As for Alice she was perfectly willing to
-yield, with a view, I have always thought, to moving me to marry her.
-But being deeply touched by her very obvious charm, I did nothing.
-
-Once my work was done of an afternoon, I loitered over many things
-waiting for evening to come, when I should see Alice again. Usually I
-read or visited a gallery or some park. Alice was intensely sweet to me.
-Her eyes were so soft, so liquid, so unprotesting and so unresenting.
-She was usually gay, with at times a suggestion of hidden melancholy. At
-night, in that great world of life which is the business heart of
-Chicago I used to wait for her, and together, once we had found each
-other in the crowds, we would make our way to the great railway station
-at the end of Dearborn Street, where a tall clock-tower held a single
-yellow clock-face. If it chanced to be Tuesday or Thursday I would go
-home with her. On other nights she would sometimes stay down to dine
-with me at some inexpensive place.
-
-I never knew until toward the end of the following summer, when things
-were breaking up for me in Chicago and seemingly greater opportunities
-were calling me elsewhere, that during all this time she had really
-never relinquished her relationship with my predecessor, fearing my
-instability perhaps. By what necessary lies and innocent subterfuges she
-had held him against the time when I might not care for her any more I
-know not. The thing has poignance now. Was she unfaithful? I do not
-think so. At any rate she was tender, clinging and in need of true
-affection. She would take my hand and hold it under her arm or against
-her heart and talk of the little things of the day: the strutting
-customers and managers, the condescending women of social pretensions,
-the other girls, who sometimes spied upon or traitorously betrayed each
-other. Usually her stories were of amusing things, for she had no heart
-for bitter contention. There was a note of melancholy running all
-through her relationship with me, however, for I think she saw the
-unrest and uncertainty of my point of view. Already my mind’s eye was
-scanning a farther horizon, in which neither she nor any other woman had
-a vital part. Fame, applause, power, possibly, these were luring me.
-Once she said to me, her eyes looking longingly into mine:
-
-“Do you really love me, Dorse?”
-
-“Don’t you think I do?” I replied evasively, and yet saying to myself
-that I truly cared for her in my fashion, which was true.
-
-“Yes, I think you do, in your way,” she said, and the correct
-interpretation shocked me. I saw myself a stormy petrel hanging over the
-yellowish-black waves of life and never really resting anywhere. I could
-not; my mind would not let me. I saw too much, felt too much, knew too
-much. What was I, what any one, but a small bit of seaweed on an endless
-sea, flotsam, jetsam, being moved hither and thither—by what
-subterranean tides?
-
-Oh, Alice, dead or living, eternally sleeping or eternally waking,
-listen to these few true words! You were beautiful to me. My heart was
-hungry. I wanted youth, I wanted beauty, I wanted sweetness, I wanted a
-tender smile, wide eyes, loveliness—all these you had and gave.
-
-Peace to you! I do not ask as much for myself.
-
-My determination to leave the Corbin Company was associated with other
-changes equally important and of much more emotional interest. Our home
-life, now that my mother was gone, was most unsatisfactory. What I took
-to be the airs and plotting domination of my sister M——, toward whom I
-had never borne any real affection, had become unbearable. I disliked
-her very much, for though she was no better than the rest of us, or so I
-thought at the time, she was nevertheless inclined to dogmatize as to
-the duty of others. Here she was, married yet living at home and
-traveling at such times and to such places as suited her husband’s
-convenience, obtaining from him scarcely enough to maintain herself in
-the state to which she thought she was entitled, contributing only a
-small portion to the upkeep of the home, and yet setting herself and her
-husband up as superiors whose exemplary social manners might well be
-copied by all. Her whole manner from morning to night, day in and day
-out, was one of superiority. Or, so I thought at the time. “I am Mrs. G.
-A——, if you please,” she seemed to say. “G—— is doing this. I am going
-to do so-and-so. It can scarcely be expected that we, in our high state,
-should have much to do with the rest of you.”
-
-Yet whenever A—— was in or near Chicago he made our home his abiding
-place. Two of the best rooms on the second floor were set aside for his
-and M——’s use. The most stirring preparations were made whenever he was
-coming, the house swept, flowers bought, extra cooking done and what
-not; the moment he had gone things fell to their natural and rather
-careless pace. M—— retired to her rooms and was scarcely seen for days.
-T——, another sister, who despised her heartily, would sulk, and when she
-thought the burden of family work was being shouldered on to her would
-do nothing at all. My father was left to go through a routine of duties
-such as fire-building, care of the furnace, marketing, which should have
-facilitated the housework but which in these quarreling conditions made
-it seem as if he were being put upon. C——, another sister, who was
-anything but a peacemaker, added fuel to the flames by criticizing the
-drift of things to the younger members: A——, E—— and myself.
-
-The thing that had turned me definitely against M—— followed a letter
-which my brother Paul once sent to my mother, enclosing a check for ten
-dollars and intended especially for her. Because it was sent to her
-personally she wanted to keep it secret from the others, and to do this
-she sent me to the general postoffice, on which it was drawn, with her
-signature filled in and myself designated as the proper recipient. I got
-the money and returned it to her, but either because of her increasing
-illness or because she still wanted to keep it a secret, when Paul
-mentioned it in another letter she said she had not received it. Then
-she died and the matter of the money came up. It was proved by inquiry
-at the postoffice that the money had been paid to me. I confirmed this
-and asserted, which was true, that I had given it to mother. M—— alone,
-of all the family, felt called upon to question this. She visited an
-inspector at the general postoffice (a friend of A——’s by the way) and
-persuaded him to make inquiry, with a view no doubt to frightening me.
-The result of this was a formal letter asking me to call at his office.
-When I went and found that he was charging me with the detention of this
-money and demanding its return on pain of my being sent to prison, I
-blazed of course and told him to go to the devil. When I reached home I
-was furious. I called out my sister M—— and told her—well, many things.
-For weeks and even months I had a burning desire to strike her, although
-nothing more was ever done or said concerning it. For over fifteen years
-the memory of this one thing divided us completely, but after that,
-having risen, as I thought, to superior interests and viewpoints, I
-condescended to become friendly.
-
-The first half of 1891 was the period of my greatest bitterness toward
-her, and in consequence, when my sister C—— came to me with her
-complaints and charges we brewed between us a kind of revolution based
-primarily on our opposition to M—— and her airs, but secondarily on the
-inadequate distribution of the family means and the inability of the
-different sisters to agree upon the details of the home management.
-According to C——, who was most bitter in her charges, both M—— and T——
-were lazy and indifferent. As a matter of fact, I cared as little for
-C—— and her woes as I did for any of the others. But the thought of this
-home, dominated by M—— and T—— and supported by us younger ones, with
-father as a kind of pleading watchdog of the treasury, weeping in his
-beard and moaning over the general recklessness of our lives, was too
-much.
-
-Indeed this matter of money, not idleness or domination, was the crux of
-the whole situation, for if there had been plenty of money, or if each
-of us could have retained his own earnings, there would have been little
-grieving. C—— was jealous of M—— and T——, and of the means with which
-their marital relations supplied them, and although she was earning
-eight dollars a week she felt that the three or four which she
-contributed to the household were far too much. A——, who earned ten and
-contributed five, had no complaint to make, and E——, who earned nine and
-supplied four-and-a-half, also had nothing to say. I was earning twelve,
-later fourteen, and gave only six, and very often I begrudged much of
-this. So between us C—— and I brewed a revolution, which ended
-unsatisfactorily for us all.
-
-Late in March, a crisis came because of a bitter quarrel that sprung up
-between M—— and C——. C—— and I now proposed, with the aid of A—— and E——
-if we could get it, either to drive M—— from the house and take charge
-ourselves, or rent a small apartment somewhere, pool our funds and set
-up a rival home of our own, leaving this one to subsist as best it
-might. It was a hard and cold thing to plan, and I still wonder why I
-shared in it; but then it seemed plausible enough.
-
-However that may be, this revolutionary program was worked out to a
-definite conclusion. With C—— as the whip and planner and myself as
-general executive, a small apartment only a few blocks from our home was
-fixed upon, prices of furniture on time studied, cost of food, light,
-entertainment gone into. C——, in her eagerness to bring her rage to a
-cataclysmic conclusion, volunteered to do the cooking and housekeeping
-alone, and still work downtown as before. If each contributed five
-dollars a week, as we said, we would have a fund of over eighty dollars
-a month, which should house and feed us and buy furniture on the
-instalment plan. A—— was consulted as to this and refused, saying, which
-was the decent thing to say and characteristic of him, that we ought to
-stay here and keep the home together for father’s sake, he being old and
-feeble. E——, always a lover of adventure and eager to share in any new
-thing, agreed to go with us. We had to revise our program, but even with
-only sixty dollars a month as a general fund we thought we could get
-along.
-
-And so we three, C—— being the spokesman, had the cheek to announce to
-my father that either M—— should leave and allow us to run the house as
-we wished or we would leave. The ultimatum was not given in any such
-direct way: charges and counter charges were first made; long arguments
-and pleadings were indulged in by one side and the other. Finally,
-seeing that there was no hope of forcing M—— to leave, C—— announced
-that she was going, alone or with others. I said I would follow. E——
-said he was coming—and there you were. I never saw a man more distressed
-than my father, one more harassed by what he knew to be the final
-dissolution of the family. He pleaded, but his pleas fell on youthful,
-inconsiderate ears. I went and rented the flat, had the gas turned on
-and some furniture installed; and then, toward the end of March, in
-blustery weather, we moved.
-
-Never was a man more distrait than my father during these last two or
-three days of our stay. Having completed the details, C——, E—— and I
-were busy marching to and fro at spare moments, carrying clothes, books,
-pictures and the like to the new home. There were open squabbles now
-between C—— and M—— as to the possession of certain things, but these
-were finally adjusted without blows. At last we were ready to leave, and
-then came our last adieux to my father and A——. When my turn came I
-marched out with a hard, cheery, independent look on my face, but I was
-really heavy with a sense of my unfairness and brutality. A—— and my
-father were the two I really preferred. My father was so old and frail.
-
-“Well,” he said with his German accent when I came to say good-by,
-“you’re going, are you? I’m sorry, Dorsch. I done the best I could. The
-girls, they won’t ever agree, it seems. I try, but it don’t seem to do
-any good. I have prayed these last few days.... I hope you don’t ever
-feel sorry. It’s C—— who stirs up all these things.”
-
-He waved his hands in a kind of despairing way and after some pointless
-and insincere phrases I went out. The cold March winds were blowing from
-the West, and it was raw, blowy, sloppy, gray. Tomorrow it would be
-brighter, but tonight——
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-AS April advanced I left the Corbin Company, determined to improve my
-condition. I was tired of collecting—the same districts, the same
-excuses, innocences, subterfuges. By degrees I had come to feel a great
-contempt for the average mind. So many people were so low, so shifty, so
-dirty, so nondescript. They were food for dreams; little more. Owing to
-my experience with the manager of the Lovell Company in the matter of
-taking what did not belong to me I had become very cautious, and this
-meant that I should be compelled to live from week to week on my
-miserable twelve dollars.
-
-In addition, home life had become a horrible burden. The house was badly
-kept and the meals were wretched. Being of a quarrelsome, fault-finding
-disposition and not having M—— or T—— to fight with, C—— now turned her
-attentions to E—— and myself. We did not do this and that; the burden of
-the work was left to her. By degrees I grew into a kind of servant.
-Being told one April Friday of some needs that I must supply, and having
-decided that I could not endure either this abode or my present work, I
-took my fate in my hands and the next day resigned my job, having in my
-possession sixty-five dollars. I was now determined, come what might,
-never to take another job except one of reporting unless I was actually
-driven to it by starvation, and in this mood I came home and announced
-that I had lost my position and that this “home” would therefore have to
-be given up. And how glad I was! Now I should be rid of this dull flat,
-which was so colorless and burdensome. As I see it now, my sister
-sensibly enough from her point of view, perhaps, was figuring that E——
-and I, as dutiful brothers, should support her while she spent all her
-money on clothes. I came to dislike her almost as much as I did M——, and
-told her gladly this same day that we could not live here any longer. In
-consequence the furniture company was notified to come and get the
-furniture. Our lease of the place being only from month to month, it was
-easy enough to depart at once. E—— and I were to share a room at the de
-G——s for a dollar and a half a week each, such meals as I ate there to
-be paid for at the rate of twenty-five cents each.
-
-Then and there, as I have since noted with a kind of fatalistic
-curiosity, the last phase of my rather troublesome youth began. Up to
-and even including this last move to Taylor Street I had been intimately
-identified, in spirit at least, with our family and its concentrated
-home life. During my mother’s life, of course, I had felt that wherever
-she was was home; after her death it was the house in which she had
-lived that held me, quite as much as it was my father and those of us
-who remained together to keep up in some manner the family spirit. When
-the spell of this began to lessen, owing to bitter recrimination and the
-continuous development of individuality in all of us, this new branch
-home established by three of us seemed something of the old place and
-spiritually allied to it; but when it fell, and the old home broke up at
-about the same time, I felt completely adrift.
-
-What was I to do with myself now? I asked. Where go? Here I was, soon
-(in three months) to be twenty-one years old, and yet without trade or
-profession, a sort of nondescript dreamer without the power to earn a
-decent living and yet with all the tastes and proclivities of one
-destined to an independent fortune. My eyes were constantly fixed on
-people in positions far above my own. Those who interested me most were
-bankers, millionaires, artists, executives, leaders, the real rulers of
-the world. Just at this time the nation was being thrown into its
-quadrennial ferment, the presidential election. The newspapers were
-publishing reams upon reams of information and comment. David B. Hill,
-then governor of New York, Grover Cleveland of New York, Thomas B.
-Hendricks of Indiana, and others were being widely and favorably
-discussed by the Democratic party, whose convention was to be held here
-in Chicago the coming June. Among the Republicans, Benjamin Harrison of
-Indiana, James G. Blaine of Maine, Thomas B. Allison of Iowa, and others
-were much to the fore.
-
-If by my devotion to minor matters I have indicated that I was not
-interested in public affairs I have given an inadequate account of
-myself. It is true that life at close range fascinated me, but the
-general progress of Europe and America and Asia and Africa was by no
-means beyond my intellectual inquiry. By now I was a reader of Emerson,
-Carlyle, Macaulay, Froude, John Stuart Mill and others. The existence of
-Nietzsche in Germany, Darwin, Spencer, Wallace and Tyndall in England,
-and what they stood for, was in part at least within the range of my
-intuition, if not my exact knowledge. In America, Washington, Jefferson,
-Jackson, Lincoln, the history of the Civil War and the subsequent drift
-of the nation to monopoly and so to oligarchy, were all within my
-understanding and private philosophizing.
-
-And now this national ferment in regard to political preferment and
-advancement, the swelling tides of wealth and population in Chicago, the
-upward soaring of names and fames, stirred me like whips and goads. I
-wanted to get up—oh, how eagerly! I wanted to shake off the garments of
-the commonplace in which I seemed swathed and step forth into the public
-arena, where I should be seen and understood for what I was. “No common
-man am I,” I was constantly saying to myself, and I would no longer be
-held down to this shabby world of collecting in which I found myself.
-The newspapers—the newspapers—somehow, by their intimacy with everything
-that was going on in the world, seemed to be the swiftest approach to
-all this of which I was dreaming. It seemed to me as if I understood
-already all the processes by which they were made. Reporting, I said to
-myself, must certainly be easy. Something happened—one car ran into
-another; a man was shot; a fire broke out; the reporter ran to the
-scene, observed or inquired the details, got the names and addresses of
-those immediately concerned, and then described it all. To reassure
-myself on this point I went about looking for accidents on my own
-account, or imagining them, and then wrote out what I saw or imagined.
-To me the result, compared with what I found in the daily papers, was
-quite satisfactory. Some paper must give me a place.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-PICTURE a dreamy cub of twenty-one, long, spindling, a pair of
-gold-framed spectacles on his nose, his hair combed _à la pompadour_, a
-new spring suit consisting of light check trousers and bright blue coat
-and vest, a brown fedora hat, new yellow shoes, starting out to force
-his way into the newspaper world of Chicago. At that time, although I
-did not know it, Chicago was in the heyday of its newspaper prestige.
-Some of the nation’s most remarkable editors, publishers and newspaper
-writers were at work there: Melville E. Stone, afterward general manager
-of the Associated Press; Victor F. Lawson, publisher of the _Daily
-News_; Joseph Medill, editor and publisher of the _Tribune_; Eugene
-Field, managing editor of the _Morning Record_; William Penn Nixon,
-editor and publisher of the _Inter-Ocean_; George Ade; Finley Peter
-Dunne; Brand Whitlock; and a score of others subsequently to become well
-known.
-
-Having made up my mind that I must be a newspaper man, I made straight
-for the various offices at noon and at six o’clock each day to ask if
-there was anything I could do. Very soon I succeeded in making my way
-into the presence of the various city and managing editors of all the
-papers in Chicago, with the result that they surveyed me with the
-cynical fishy eye peculiar to newspaper men and financiers and told me
-there was nothing.
-
-One day in the office of the _Daily News_ a tall, shambling,
-awkward-looking man in a brown flannel shirt, without coat or waistcoat,
-suspenders down, was pointed out to me by an office boy who saw him
-slipping past the city editorial door.
-
-“Wanta know who dat is?” he asked.
-
-“Yes,” I replied humbly, grateful even for the attention of office boys.
-
-“Well, dat’s Eugene Field. Heard o’ him, ain’tcha?”
-
-“Sure,” I said, recalling the bundle of incoherent MS. which I had once
-thrust upon him. I surveyed his retreating figure with envy and some
-nervousness, fearing he might psychically detect that I was the
-perpetrator of that unsolicited slush and abuse me then and there.
-
-In spite of my energy, manifested for one solid week between the hours
-of twelve and two at noon and five-thirty and seven at night I got
-nothing. Indeed it seemed to me as I went about these newspaper offices
-that they were the strangest, coldest, most haphazard and impractical of
-places. Gone was that fine ambassadorial quality with which a few months
-before I had invested them. These rooms, as I now saw, were crowded with
-commonplace desks and lamps, the floors strewn with newspapers. Office
-boys and hirelings gazed at you in the most unfriendly manner, asked
-what you wanted and insisted that there was nothing—they who knew
-nothing. By office boys I was told to come after one or two in the
-afternoon or after seven at night, when all assignments had been given
-out, and when I did so I was told that there was nothing and would be
-nothing. I began to feel desperate.
-
-Just about this time I had an inspiration. I determined that, instead of
-trying to see all of the editors each day and missing most of them at
-the vital hour, I would select one paper and see if in some way I could
-not worm myself into the good graces of its editor. I now had the very
-sensible notion that a small paper would probably receive me with more
-consideration than one of the great ones, and out of them all chose the
-_Daily Globe_, a struggling affair financed by one of the Chicago
-politicians for political purposes only.
-
-You have perhaps seen a homeless cat hang about a doorstep for days and
-days meowing to be taken in: that was I. The door in this case was a
-side door and opened upon an alley. Inside was a large, bare room filled
-with a few rows of tables set end to end, with a railing across the
-northern one-fourth, behind which sat the city editor, the dramatic and
-sporting editors, and one editorial writer. Outside this railing, near
-the one window, sat a large, fleshy gelatinous, round-faced round-headed
-young man wearing gold-rimmed spectacles. He had a hard, keen, cynical
-eye, and at first glance seemed to be most vitally opposed to me and
-everybody else. As it turned out, he was the _Daily Globe’s_
-copy-reader. Nothing was said to me at first as I sat in my far corner
-waiting for something to turn up. By degrees some of the reporters began
-to talk to me, thinking I was a member of the staff, which eased my
-position a little during this time. I noticed that as soon as all the
-reporters had gone the city editor became most genial with the one
-editorial writer, who sat next him, and the two often went off together
-for a bite.
-
-Parlous and yet delicious hours! Although I felt all the time as though
-I were on the edge of some great change, still no one seemed to want me.
-The city editor, when I approached after all the others had gone, would
-shake his head and say: “Nothing today. There’s not a thing in sight,”
-but not roughly or harshly, and therein lay my hope. So here I would
-sit, reading the various papers or trying to write out something I had
-seen. I was always on the alert for some accident that I might report to
-this city editor in the hope that he had not seen it, but I encountered
-nothing.
-
-The ways of advancement are strange, so often purely accidental. I did
-not know it, but my mere sitting here in this fashion eventually proved
-a card in my favor. A number of the employed reporters, of whom there
-were eight or nine (the best papers carried from twenty to thirty),
-seeing me sit about from twelve to two and thinking I was employed here
-also, struck up occasional genial and enlightening conversations with
-me. Reporters rarely know the details of staff arrangements or changes.
-Some of them, finding that I was only seeking work, ignored me; others
-gave me a bit of advice. Why didn’t I see Selig of the _Tribune_, or
-Herbst of the _Herald_? It was rumored that staff changes were to be
-made there. One youth learning that I had never written a line for a
-newspaper, suggested that I go to the editor of the City Press
-Association or the United Press, where the most inexperienced beginners
-were put to work at the rate of eight dollars a week. This did not suit
-me at all. I felt that I could write.
-
-Finally, however, my mere sitting about in this fashion brought me into
-contact with that copy-reader I have described, John Maxwell, who
-remarked one day out of mere curiosity:
-
-“Are you doing anything special for the _Globe_?”
-
-“No,” I replied.
-
-“Just looking for work?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Ever work on any paper?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“How do you know you can write?”
-
-“I don’t. I just feel that I can. I want to see if I can’t get a chance
-to try.”
-
-He looked at me, curiously, amusedly, cynically.
-
-“Don’t you ever go around to the other papers?”
-
-“Yes, after I find out there’s nothing here.”
-
-He smiled. “How long have you been coming here like this?”
-
-“Two weeks.”
-
-“Every day?”
-
-“Every day.”
-
-He laughed now, a genial, rolling, fat laugh.
-
-“Why do you pick the _Globe_? Don’t you know it’s the poorest paper in
-Chicago?”
-
-“That’s why I pick it,” I replied innocently. “I thought I might get a
-chance here.”
-
-“Oh, you did!” he laughed. “Well, you may be right at that. Hang around.
-You may get something. Now I’ll tell you something: this National
-Democratic Convention will open in June. They’ll have to take on a few
-new men here then. I can’t see why they shouldn’t give you a chance as
-well as anybody else. But it’s a hell of a business to be wanting to get
-into,” he added.
-
-He began taking off his coat and waistcoat, rolling up his sleeves,
-sharpening his blue pencils and taking up stacks of copy. The while I
-merely stared at him. Every now and then he would look at me through his
-round glasses as though I were some strange animal. I grew restless and
-went out. But after that he greeted me each day in a friendly way, and
-because he seemed inclined to talk I stayed and talked with him.
-
-What it was that finally drew us together in a minor bond of friendship
-I have never been able to discover. I am sure he considered me of little
-intellectual or reportorial import and yet also I gathered that he liked
-me a little. He seemed to take a fancy to me from the moment of our
-first conversation and included me in what I might call the _Globe_
-family spirit. He was interested in politics, literature, and the
-newspaper life of Chicago. Bit by bit he informed me as to the various
-editors, who were the most successful newspaper men, how some reporters
-did police, some politics, and some just general news. From him I
-learned that every paper carried a sporting editor, a society editor, a
-dramatic editor, a political man. There were managing editors, Sunday
-editors, news editors, city editors, copy-readers and editorial writers,
-all of whom seemed to me marvelous—men of the very greatest import. And
-they earned—which was more amazing still—salaries ranging from eighteen
-to thirty-five and even sixty and seventy dollars a week. From him I
-learned that this newspaper world was a seething maelstrom in which
-clever men struggled and fought as elsewhere; that some rose and many
-fell; that there was a roving element among newspaper men that drifted
-from city to city, many drinking themselves out of countenance, others
-settling down somewhere into some fortunate berth. Before long he told
-me that only recently he had been copy-reader on the Chicago _Times_ but
-due to what he characterized as “office politics,” a term the meaning of
-which I in no wise grasped, he had been jockeyed out of his place. He
-seemed to think that by and large newspaper men while interesting and in
-some cases able, were tricky and shifty and above all, disturbingly and
-almost heartlessly inconsiderate of each other. Being young and
-inexperienced this point of view made no impression on me whatsoever. If
-I thought anything I thought that he must be wrong, or that, at any
-rate, this heartlessness would never trouble me in any way, being the
-live and industrious person that I was.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-IT made me happy to know that whether or not I was taken on I had at
-least achieved one friend at court. Maxwell advised me to stick.
-
-“You’ll get on,” he said a day or two later. “I believe you’ve got the
-stuff in you. Maybe I can help you. You’ll probably be like every other
-damned newspaper man once you get a start: an ingrate; but I’ll help you
-just the same. Hang around. That convention will begin in three or four
-weeks now. I’ll speak a good word for you, unless you tie up with some
-other paper before then.”
-
-And to my astonishment really, he was as good as his word. He must have
-spoken to the city editor soon after this, for the latter asked me what
-I had been doing and told me to hang around in case something should
-turn up.
-
-But before a newspaper story appeared for me to do a new situation arose
-which tied me up closer with this prospect than I had hoped for. The
-lone editorial writer previously mentioned, a friend and intimate of the
-city editor, had just completed a small work of fiction which he and the
-city editor in combination had had privately printed, and which they
-were very eager to sell. It was, as I recall it, very badly done, an
-immature imitation of _Tom Sawyer_ without any real charm or human
-interest. The author himself, Mr. Gissel, was a picayune yellow-haired
-person. He spent all his working hours, as I came to know, writing those
-biased, envenomed and bedeviling editorials which are required by purely
-partisan journals. I gathered as much from conversations that were
-openly carried on before me between himself and the city editor, the
-managing editor and an individual who I later learned was the political
-man. They were “out” as I heard the managing editor say, one day “to
-get” some one—on orders from some individual of whom at that time I knew
-nothing, and Mr. Gissel was your true henchman or editorial mercenary, a
-“peanut” or “squeak” writer, penning what he was ordered to pen. Once I
-understood I despised him but at first he amused me though I could not
-like him. Whenever he had concocted some particularly malicious or
-defaming line as I learned in time, he would get up and dance about,
-chortling and cackling in a disconcerting way. So for the first time I
-began to see how party councils and party tendencies were manufactured
-or twisted or belied, and it still further reduced my estimate of
-humanity. Men, as I was beginning to find—all of us—were small,
-irritable, nasty in their struggle for existence. This little editor,
-for instance, was not interested in the Democratic party (which this
-paper was supposed to represent), or indeed in party principles of any
-kind. He did not believe what he wrote, but, receiving forty dollars a
-week, he was anxious to make a workmanlike job of it. Just at this time
-he was engaged in throwing mud at the national Republican
-administration, the mayor and the governor, as well as various local
-politicians, whom the owner of the paper wished him to attack.
-
-What a pitiful thing journalism or our alleged “free press” was, I then
-and there began to gather—dimly enough at first I must admit. What a
-shabby compound of tricky back-room councils, public professions, all
-looking to public favors and fames which should lead again to public
-contracts and financial emoluments! Journalism, like politics, as I was
-now soon to see, was a slough of muck in which men were raking busily
-and filthily for what their wretched rakes might uncover in the way of
-financial, social, political returns. I looked at this dingy office and
-then at this little yellow-haired rat of an editor one afternoon as he
-worked, and it came to me what a desperately subtle and shifty thing
-life was. Here he was, this little runt, scribbling busily, and above
-him were strong, dark, secretive men, never appearing publicly perhaps
-but paying him his little salary privately, dribbling it down to him
-through a publisher and an editor-in-chief and a managing editor, so
-that he might be kept busy misconstruing, lying, intellectually
-cheating.
-
-But the plan he had in regard to his book: The graduating class of the
-Hyde Park High School, of which he had been a member a few years before,
-had numbered about three hundred students. Of these two hundred were
-girls, one hundred and fifty of whom he claimed to have known
-personally. One afternoon as I was preparing to leave after all the
-assignments had been given out, the city editor called me over and, with
-the help of this scheming little editorial writer, began to explain to
-me a plan by which, if I carried it out faithfully, I could connect
-myself with the _Daily Globe_ as a reporter. I was to take a certain
-list of names and addresses and as many copies of _The Adventures of
-Harry Munn_, or some such name, as I could carry and visit each of these
-quondam schoolmates of Mr. Gissel at their homes, where I was to recall
-to their minds that he was an old schoolmate of theirs, that this his
-first book related to scenes with which they were all familiar, and then
-persuade them if possible to buy a copy for one dollar. My reward for
-this was to be ten cents a copy on all copies sold, and in addition (and
-this was the real bait) I was to have a tryout on the _Globe_ as a
-reporter at fifteen dollars a week if I succeeded in selling one hundred
-and twenty copies within the next week or so.
-
-I took the list and gathered up an armful of the thin cloth-covered
-volumes, fired by the desire thus to make certain my entrance into the
-newspaper world. I cannot say that I was very much pleased with my
-mission, but my necessity or aspiration was so great that I was glad to
-do it just the same. I was nervous and shamefaced as I approached the
-first home on my list, and I suffered aches and pains in my vanity and
-my sense of the fitness of things. The only salve I could find in the
-whole thing was that Mr. Gissel actually knew these people and that I
-could say I came personally from him as a friend and fellow-member of
-the _Globe_ staff. It was a thin subterfuge, but apparently it went down
-with a few of those pretty unsophisticated girls. The majority of them
-lived in the best residences of the south side, some of them mansions of
-the truly rich whose democratic parents had insisted upon sending their
-children to the local high school. In each case, upon inquiring for a
-girl, with the remark that I came from Mr. Gissel of the _Globe_, I was
-received in the parlor or reception-room and told to wait. Presently the
-girl would come bustling in and listen to my tactful story, smiling
-contemptuously perhaps at my shabby mission or opening her eyes in
-surprise or curiosity.
-
-“Mr. Gissel? Mr. Gissel?” said one girl inquiringly. “Why, I don’t
-recall any such person——” and she retired, leaving me to make my way out
-as best I might.
-
-Another exclaimed: “Harry Gissel! Has that little snip written a book?
-The nerve—to send you around to sell his book! Why do you do it? I will
-take one, because I am curious to see the kind of thing he has done, but
-I’ll wager right now it’s as silly as he is. He’s invented some scheme
-to get you to do this because he knows he couldn’t sell the book in any
-other way.”
-
-Others remembered him and seemed to like him; others bought the book
-only because he was a member of their class. Some struck up a genial
-conversation with me.
-
-In spite of my distress at having to do this work there were
-compensations. It gave me a last fleeting picture of that new, sunny
-prosperity which was the most marked characteristic of Chicagoans of
-that day, and contrasted so sharply with the scenes of poverty which I
-had recently seen. In this region, for it was June, newly fledged
-collegians, freshly returned from the colleges of the East and Europe,
-were disporting themselves about the lawns and within the open-windowed
-chambers of the houses. Traps and go-carts of many of the financially
-and socially elect filled the south side streets. The lawn tennis suit,
-the tennis game, the lawn party and the family croquet game were
-everywhere in evidence. The new-rich and those most ambitious
-financially at that time were peculiarly susceptible I think to the airs
-and manners of the older and more pretentious regions of the world. They
-were bent upon interpreting their new wealth in terms of luxury as they
-had observed it elsewhere. Hence these strutting youths in English suits
-with turned-up trousers, swagger sticks and flori-colored ties and socks
-intended to suggest the spirit of London, as they imagined it to be;
-hence the high-headed girls in flouncy, lacy dresses, their cheeks and
-eyes bright with color, who no doubt imagined themselves to be great
-ladies, and who carried themselves with an air of remote disdain. The
-whole thing had the quality of a play well staged: really the houses,
-the lawns, the movements of the people, their games and interests all
-harmonizing after the fashion of a play. They saw this as a great end in
-itself, which, perhaps, it is. To me in my life-hungry, love-hungry
-state, this new-rich prosperity with its ease, its pretty women and its
-effort at refinement was quite too much. It set me to riotous dreaming
-and longing made me ache to lounge and pose after this same fashion.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-IN due course of time, I having performed my portion of the contract, it
-became the duty of the two editors to fulfill their agreement with me.
-Every day for ten days I had been turning in the cash for from five to
-fifteen books, thereby establishing my reputation for industry and
-sobriety. Mr. Gissel was very anxious to know at the end of each day
-whom I had seen and how the mention of his name was received. Instead of
-telling him of the many who laughed or sniffed or bought to get rid of
-me gracefully, I gave him flattering reports. Lately, by way of reward I
-presume, he had taken to reading to me the cleverest passages in his
-editorials. Mr. Sullivan, the city editor, confided to me one day that
-he was from a small town in central Illinois not unlike the Warsaw from
-which I hailed, and which I then roughly and jestingly sketched to him,
-and from then on we were on fairly good terms. He dug up a number of
-poems and granted me the favor of reading them. Some of them were almost
-as good as similar ones by Whittier and Bryant, after whom they were
-obviously modeled. Today I know them to be bad, or mediocre; then I
-thought they were excellent and grieved to think that any one should be
-going to make a reputation as a great poet, while I, the only real poet
-extant (although I had done nothing as yet to prove it), remained
-unrecognized.
-
-I did not know until later that I might not have secured a place even
-now, so numerous were the applications of clever and experienced
-newspaper men, had it not been for the influence of my friend Maxwell.
-For one reason or another, my errant youth perhaps, my crazy persistence
-and general ignorance of things journalistic, he had become interested
-in me and seemed fairly anxious to see me get a start. Out of the tail
-of his eye he had been watching. When I arrived of an evening and there
-was no one present he sometimes inquired what I was doing, and by
-degrees, although I had been cautioned not to tell, he extracted the
-whole story of Gissel’s book. I even loaned him a copy of the book,
-which he read and pronounced rot, adding: “They ought to be ashamed of
-themselves, sending you out on a job of this kind. You’re better than
-that.”
-
-As the end of my task drew near and I was dreading another uncertain
-wait, he put in a good word for me. But even then I doubt if I should
-have had a trial had it not been for the convention which was rapidly
-drawing near. On the day the newspapers were beginning to chronicle the
-advance arrival of various leaders from all parts of the country, I was
-taken on at fifteen dollars a week, for a week or two anyhow, and
-assigned to watch the committee rooms in the hotels Palmer, Grand
-Pacific, Auditorium and Richelieu. There was another youth who was set
-to work with me on this, and he gave me some slight instruction. Over us
-was the political man, who commanded other men in different hotels and
-whose presence I had only noted when the convention was nearly over.
-
-If ever a youth was cast adrift and made to realize that he knew nothing
-at all about the thing he was so eager to do, that youth was I. “Cover
-the hotels for political news,” were my complete instructions, but what
-the devil was political news? What did they want me to do, say, write?
-At once I was thoroughly terrified by this opportunity which I had so
-eagerly sought, for now that I had it I did not know how to make
-anything clear.
-
-For the first day or two or three therefore I wandered like a lost soul
-about the corridors and parlor floors and “committee rooms” of these
-hotels which I was supposed to cover, trying to find out where the
-committee rooms were, who and what were the men in them, what they were
-trying to do. No one seemed to want to tell me anything, and, as dull as
-it may seem, I really could not guess. I had no clear idea of what was
-meant by the word “politics” as locally used. Various country
-congressmen and politicians brushed past me in a most secretive manner;
-when I hailed them with the information that I was from the _Globe_ they
-waved me off with: “I am only a delegate; you can’t get anything out of
-me. See the chairman.” Well, what was a chairman? I didn’t know. I did
-not even know that there had been lists published in all the papers, my
-own included, giving the information which I was so anxiously seeking!
-
-I had no real understanding of politics or party doings or organization.
-I doubt if I knew how men came to be nominated, let alone elected. I did
-not know who were the various State leaders, who the prospective
-candidates, why one candidate might be preferred to another. The
-machinations of such an institution as Tammany Hall, or the things
-called property interests, were as yet beyond me. My mind was too much
-concerned with the poetry of life to busy itself with such minor things
-as politics. However, I did know that there was a bitter feud on between
-David Bennett Hill, governor of New York, and Grover Cleveland,
-ex-President of the United States, both candidates for nomination on the
-Democratic ticket, and that the Tammany organization of New York City
-was for Hill and bitterly opposed to Cleveland. I also knew that the
-South was for any good Southerner as opposed to Cleveland or Hill, and
-that a new element in the party was for Richard Bland, better known as
-“Silver Dick,” of Missouri. I also knew by reputation many of the men
-who had been in the first Cleveland administration.
-
-Imagine a raw youth with no knowledge of the political subtleties of
-America trying to gather even an inkling of what was going on! The
-nation and the city were full of dark political trafficking, but of it
-all I was as innocent as a baby. The bars and lobbies were full of
-inconsequential spouting delegates, who drank, swore, sang and orated at
-the top of their lungs. Swinging Southerners and Westerners in their
-long frockcoats and wide-brimmed hats amused me. They were forever
-pulling their whiskers or mustachios, drinking, smoking, talking or
-looking solemn or desperate. In many cases they knew no more of what was
-going on than I did. I was told to watch the movements of Benjamin Ryan
-Tillman, senator from South Carolina, and report any conclusions or
-rumors of conclusions as to how his delegation would vote. I had a hard
-time finding where his committee was located, and where and when if ever
-it deliberated, but once I identified my man I never left him. I dogged
-his steps so persistently that he turned on me one afternoon as he was
-going out of the Palmer House, fixed me with his one fiery eye and said:
-
-“Young man, what do you want of me anyhow?”
-
-“Well, you’re Senator Tillman, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes, sir. I’m Senator Tillman.”
-
-“Well, I’m a reporter from the _Globe_. I’ve been told to learn what
-conclusions your delegation has reached as to how it will vote.”
-
-“You and your editor of the _Globe_ be damned!” he replied irritably.
-“And I want you to quit following me wherever I go. Just now I’m going
-for my laundry, and I have some rights to privacy. The committee will
-decide when it’s good and ready, and it won’t tell the _Globe_ or any
-other paper. Now you let me alone. Follow somebody else.”
-
-I went back to the office the first evening at five-thirty and sat down
-to write, with the wild impression in my mind that I must describe the
-whole political situation not only in Chicago but in the nation. I had
-no notion that there was a supervising political man who, in conjunction
-with the managing editor and editor-in-chief, understood all about
-current political conditions.
-
-“The political pot,” I began exuberantly, “was already beginning to
-seethe yesterday. About the lobbies and corridors of the various hotels
-hundreds upon hundreds of the vanguard of American Democracy—etc, etc.”
-
-I had not scrawled more than eight or nine pages of this mush before the
-city editor, curious as to what I had discovered and wondering why I had
-not reported it to him, came over and picked up the many sheets which I
-had turned face down.
-
-“No, no, no!” he exclaimed. “You mustn’t write on both sides of the
-paper! Don’t you know that? For heaven’s sake. And all this stuff about
-the political pot boiling is as old as the hills. Why, every country
-jake paper for thousands of miles East and West has used it for years
-and years. You’re not to write the general stuff. Here, Maxwell, see if
-you can’t find out what Dreiser has discovered and show him what to do
-with it. I haven’t got time.” And he turned me over to my
-gold-spectacled mentor, who eyed me very severely. He sat down and
-examined my copy with knitted brows. He had a round, meaty, cherubic
-face which seemed all the more ominous because he could scowl fiercely,
-and his eyes could blaze with a cold, examining, mandatory glance.
-
-“This is awful stuff!” he said as he read the first page. “He’s quite
-right. You want to try and remember that you’re not the editor of this
-paper and just consider yourself a plain reporter sent out to cover some
-hotels. Now where’d you go today?”
-
-I told him.
-
-“What’d you see?”
-
-I described as best I could the whirling world in which I had been.
-
-“No, no! I don’t mean that! That might be good for a book or something
-but it’s not news. Did you see any particular man? Did you find out
-anything in connection with any particular committee?”
-
-I confessed that I had tried and failed.
-
-“Very good!” he said. “You haven’t anything to write,” and he tore up my
-precious nine pages and threw them into the waste basket. “You’d better
-sit around here now until the city editor calls you,” he added. “He may
-have something special he wants you to do. If not, watch the hotels for
-celebrities—Democratic celebrities—or committee meetings, and if you
-find any try to find out what’s going on. The great thing is to discover
-beforehand who’s going to be nominated—see? You can’t tell from talking
-to four or five people, but what you find out may help some one else to
-piece out what is to happen. When you come back, see me. And unless you
-get other orders, come back by eleven. And call up two or three times
-between the time you go and eleven.”
-
-Because of these specific instructions I felt somewhat encouraged,
-although my first attempt at writing had been thrown into the waste
-basket. I sat about until nearly seven, when I was given an address and
-told to find John G. Carlisle, ex-Secretary of the Treasury, and see if
-I could get an interview with him. Failing this, I was to “cover” the
-Grand Pacific, Palmer House and Auditorium, and report all important
-arrivals and delegations.
-
-Even if I had secured the desired interview I am sure I should have made
-an awful botch of it, but fortunately I could not get it. Only one thing
-of importance developed for me during the evening, and that was the
-presence of a Democratic United States Supreme Court Justice at the
-Grand Pacific who, upon being intercepted by me as he was going to his
-room for the night and told that I was from the _Globe_, eyed me
-genially and whimsically.
-
-“My boy,” he said, “you’re just a young new reporter, I can see that.
-Otherwise you wouldn’t waste your time on me. But I like reporters: I
-was one myself years ago. Now this hotel and every other is full of
-leaders and statesmen discussing this question of who’s to be President.
-I’m not discussing it, first of all because it wouldn’t become a Justice
-of the United States Supreme Court to do so, and in the next place
-because I don’t have to: my position is for life. I’m just stopping here
-for one day on my way to Denver. You’d better go around to these
-committee rooms and see if they can’t tell you something,” and, smiling
-and laying one hand on my shoulder in a fatherly way, he dismissed me.
-
-“My!” I thought. “What a fine thing it is to be a reporter! All I have
-to do is to say I’m from the _Globe_ and even a Justice of the United
-States Supreme Court is smiling and agreeable to me!”
-
-I hurried to a phone to tell Maxwell, and he said: “He don’t count.
-Write a stick of it if you want to, and I’ll look it over.”
-
-“How much is a stick?” I asked eagerly and curiously.
-
-“About a hundred and fifty words.”
-
-So much for a United States Supreme Court Justice in election days.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-I CANNOT say that I discovered anything of import this night or the next
-or the next, although I secured various interviews which, after much
-wrestling with my spirit and some hard, intelligent, frank statements
-from my friend, were whipped into shape for fillers.
-
-“The trouble with you, Dreiser,” said Maxwell as I was trying to write
-out what the Supreme Court Justice had said to me, “is that you haven’t
-any training and you’re trying to get it now when we haven’t the time.
-Over in the _Tribune_ office they have a sign which reads: WHO OR WHAT?
-HOW? WHEN? WHERE? All those things have to be answered in the first
-paragraph—not in the last paragraph, or the middle paragraph, but in the
-first. Now come here. Gimme that stuff,” and he cut and hacked, running
-thick lines of blue lead through my choicest thoughts and restating in a
-line or two all that I thought required ten. A sardonic smile played
-about his fat mouth, and I saw by his twinkling eyes that he felt that
-it was good for me.
-
-“News is information,” he went on as he worked. “People want it quick,
-sharp, clear—do you hear? Now you probably think I’m a big stiff,
-chopping up your great stuff like this, but if you live and hold this
-job you’ll thank me. As a matter of fact, if it weren’t for me you
-wouldn’t have this job now. Not one copy-reader out of a hundred would
-take the trouble to show you,” and he looked at me with hard, cynical
-and yet warm gray eyes.
-
-I was wretched with the thought that I should be dropped once the
-convention was over, and so I bustled here and there, anxious to find
-something. Of a morning, from six o’clock until noon, I studied all the
-papers, trying to discover what all this fanfare was about and just what
-was expected of me. The one great thing to find out was who was to be
-nominated and which delegations or individuals would support the
-successful candidate. Where could I get the information? The third day I
-talked to Maxwell about it, and as a favor he brought out a paper in
-which a rough augury was made which showed that the choice lay between
-David Bennett Hill and Grover Cleveland, with a third man, Senator
-McEntee, as a dark horse. Southern sentiment seemed to be centering
-about him, and in case no agreement could be reached by the New York
-delegation as to which of its two opposing candidates it would support
-their vote might be thrown to this third man.
-
-Of course this was all very confusing to me. I did my best to get it
-straight. Learning that the Tammany delegation, two thousand strong, was
-to arrive from New York this same day and that the leaders were to be
-quartered at the Auditorium, I made my way there, determined to obtain
-an interview with no less a person than Richard Croker, who, along with
-Bourke Cochran, and a hard-faced, beefy individual by the name of John
-F. Carroll seemed to be the brains and mouthpiece of the Tammany
-organization. In honor of their presence, the Auditorium was decorated
-with flags and banners, some of them crossed with tomahawks or Indian
-feathers. Above the onyx-lined bar was a huge tiger with a stiff
-projecting tail which when pulled downward, as it was every few seconds
-by one bartender and another, caused the _papier-mâché_ image to emit a
-deep growl. This delighted the crowd, and after each growl there was
-another round of drinks. Red-faced men in silk hats and long frockcoats
-slapped each other on the back and bawled out their joy or threats or
-prophecies.
-
-On the first floor above the office of the hotel, were Richard Croker,
-his friend and adviser, Carroll, and Bourke Cochran. They sat in the
-center of a great room on a huge red plush divan, receiving and talking.
-
-As a representative of the _Globe_, a cheap nickel star fastened to one
-of the lapels of my waistcoat and concealed by my coat, my soul stirred
-by being allowed to mingle in affairs of great import, I finally made my
-way to the footstool of this imposing group and ventured to ask for an
-interview with Croker himself. The great man, short, stocky, carefully,
-almost too carefully, dressed, his face the humanized replica of that of
-a tiger, looked at me in a genial, quizzical, condescending way and
-said: “No interviews.” I remember the patent leather button shoes with
-the gray suède tops, the heavy gold ring on one finger, and the heavy
-watch-chain across his chest.
-
-“You won’t say who is to be nominated?” I persisted nervously.
-
-“I wish I could,” he grinned. “I wouldn’t be sitting here trying to find
-out.” He smiled again and repeated my question to one of his companions.
-They all looked at me with smiling condescension and I beat a swift
-retreat.
-
-Defeated though I was, I decided to write out the little scene, largely
-to prove to the city editor that I had actually seen Croker and been
-refused an interview.
-
-I went down to the bar to review the scene being enacted there. While I
-was standing at the bar drinking a lemonade there came a curious lull.
-In the midst of it the voices of two men near me became audible as they
-argued who would be nominated, Cleveland, Hill or some third man, not
-the one I have mentioned. Bursting with my new political knowledge and
-longing to air it, I, at the place where one of the strangers mentioned
-the third man as the most likely choice, solemnly shook my head as much
-as to say: “You are all wrong.”
-
-“Well, then, who do you think?” inquired the stranger, who was short,
-red-faced, intoxicated.
-
-“Senator McEntee, of South Carolina,” I replied, feeling as though I
-were stating an incontrovertible truth.
-
-A tall, fair-complexioned, dark-haired Southerner in a wide-brimmed
-white hat and flaring frockcoat paused at this moment in his hurried
-passage through the room and, looking at the group, exclaimed:
-
-“Who does me the honah to mention my name in connection with the
-Presidency? I am Senator McEntee of South Carolina. No intrusion, I
-hope?”
-
-I and the two others stared in confusion.
-
-“None whatever,” I replied with an air, thinking how interesting it was
-that this man of all people should be passing through the room at this
-time. “These gentlemen were saying that —— of —— would be nominated, and
-I was going to say that sentiment is running more in your favor.”
-
-“Well, now, that is most interesting, my young friend, and I’m glad to
-hear you say it. It’s an honah to be even mentioned in connection with
-so great an office, however small my qualifications. And who are you,
-may I ask?”
-
-“My name in Dreiser. I represent the Chicago _Globe_.”
-
-“Oh, do you? That makes it doubly interesting. Won’t you come along with
-me to my rooms for a moment? You interest me, young man, you really do.
-How long have you been a reporter?”
-
-“Oh, for nearly a year now,” I replied grandly.
-
-“And have you ever worked for any other paper?”
-
-“Yes; I was on the _Herald_ last fall.”
-
-He seemed elated by his discovery. He must have been one of those
-swelling nonentities flattered silly by this chance discussion of his
-name in a national convention atmosphere. An older newspaper man would
-have known that he had not the least chance of being seriously
-considered. Somebody from the South had to be mentioned, as a
-compliment, and this man was fixed upon as one least likely to prove
-disturbing later.
-
-He bustled out to a shady balcony overlooking the lake, ordered two
-cocktails and wanted to know on what I based my calculation. In order to
-not seem a fool I now went over my conversation with Maxwell. I spoke of
-different delegations and their complexions as though these conclusions
-were my own, when as a matter of fact I was quoting Maxwell verbatim. My
-hearer seemed surprised at my intelligence.
-
-“You seem to be very well informed,” he said genially, “but I know
-you’re wrong. The Democratic party will never go to the South for a
-candidate—not for some years anyway. Just the same, since you’ve been
-good enough to champion me in this public fashion, I would like to do
-something for you in return. I suppose your paper is always anxious for
-advance news, and if you bring it in you get the credit. Now at this
-very moment, over in the Hotel Richelieu, Mr. William C. Whitney and
-some of his friends—Mr. Croker has just gone over there—are holding a
-conference. He is the one man who holds the balance of power in this
-convention. He represents the moneyed interests and is heart and soul
-for Grover Cleveland. Now if you want a real beat you’d better go over
-there and hang about. Mr. Whitney is sure to make a statement some time
-today or tomorrow. See his secretary, Mr. ——, and tell him I sent you.
-He will do anything for you he can.”
-
-I thanked him, certain at last I had a real piece of news. This
-conference was the most important event that would or could take place
-in the whole convention. I was so excited that I wanted to jump up and
-run away.
-
-“It will keep,” he said, noting my nervousness. “No other newspaper man
-knows of it yet. Nothing will be given out yet for several hours because
-the conference will not be over before that time.”
-
-“But I’d like to phone my office,” I pleaded.
-
-“All right, but come back.”
-
-I ran to the nearest telephone. I explained my beat to the city editor
-and, anxious lest I be unable to cover it, asked him to inform the head
-political man. He was all excitement at once, congratulated me and told
-me to follow up this conference. Then I ran back to my senator.
-
-“I see,” he said, “that you are a very industrious and eager young man.
-I like to see that. I don’t want to say anything which will set up your
-hopes too much, because things don’t always work out as one would wish,
-but did any one ever suggest to you that you would make a good private
-secretary?”
-
-“No, sir,” I replied, flattered and eager.
-
-“Well, from what I have seen here today I am inclined to think you
-would. Now I don’t know that I shall be returned to the Senate after
-this year—there’s a little dispute in my State—but if I am, and you want
-to write me after next January, I may be able to do something for you.
-I’ve seen a lot of bright young fellows come up in the newspaper
-profession, and I’ve seen a lot go down. If you’re not too much attached
-to it, perhaps you would like this other better.”
-
-He smiled serenely, and I could have kissed his hands. At the same time,
-if you please, I was already debating whether one so promising as myself
-should leave the newspaper profession!
-
-But even more than my good fortune at gleaning this bit of news or beat,
-as it proved, I was impressed by the company I was keeping and the realm
-in which I now moved as if by right—great hotels, a newspaper office
-with which I was connected, this senator, these politicians, the display
-of comfort and luxury on every hand. Only a little while back I was an
-inexperienced, dreaming collector for an “easy-payment” company, and now
-look at me! Here I sat on this grand balcony, the senator to my right, a
-table between us, all the lovely panorama of the lake and Michigan Drive
-below. What a rise! From now on, no doubt, I would do much better. Was I
-not even now being offered the secretaryship to a senator?
-
-In due time I left and ran to the Richelieu, but my brain was seething
-with my great rise and my greater achievement in being the first to know
-of and report to my paper this decisive conference. If that were true I
-should certainly have discovered what my paper and all papers were most
-eager to know.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-WHAT the senator had told me was true. The deciding conference was on,
-and I determined to hang about the corridors of the Richelieu until it
-was over. The secretary, whom I found closeted with others (not
-newspaper men) in a room on the second floor, was good enough to see me
-when I mentioned Senator McEntee’s name, and told me to return at
-six-thirty, when he was sure the conference would be over and a general
-statement be issued to the press. If I wished, I might come back at
-five-thirty. This dampened my joy in the thought that I had something
-exclusive, though I was later cheered by the thought that I had probably
-saved my paper from defeat anyhow for we were too poor to belong to the
-general news service. As a matter of fact, my early information was a
-cause of wonder in the office, the political man himself coming down
-late in the night to find out how I had learned so soon. I spoke of my
-friend Senator McEntee as though I had known him for years. The
-political man merely looked at me and said: “Well, you ought to get
-along in politics on one of the papers, if nowhere else.”
-
-The capture of this one fact, as I rather felt at the time, was my
-making in this newspaper office and hence in the newspaper world at
-large, in so far as I ever was made.
-
-At five-thirty that afternoon I was on hand, and, true to his word, the
-secretary outlined exactly what conclusions the conference had reached.
-Afterward he brought out a type-written statement and read from it such
-facts as he wished me to have. Cleveland was to be nominated. Another
-man, Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, of whom I had never heard, was to be
-nominated for Vice-President. There were other details, so confusing
-that I could scarcely grasp them, but I made some notes and flew to the
-office and tried to write out all I had heard. I know now that I made a
-very bad job of it, but Maxwell worked so hard and so cheerfully that he
-saved me. From one source and another he confirmed or modified my
-statements, wrote an intelligent introduction and turned it in.
-
-“You’re one of the damnedest crack-brained loons I ever saw,” he said at
-one place, cutting out a great slice of my stuff, “but you seem to know
-how to get the news just the same, and you’re going to be able to write.
-If I could just keep you under my thumb for four or five weeks I think I
-could make something out of you.”
-
-At this I ventured to lay one hand over his shoulder in an affectionate
-and yet appealing way, but he looked up frowningly and said: “Cut the
-gentle con work, Theodore. I know you. You’re just like all other
-newspaper men, or will be: grateful when things are coming your way. If
-I were out of a job or in your position you’d do just like all the
-others: pass me up. I know you better than you know yourself. Life is a
-God-damned stinking, treacherous game, and nine hundred and ninety-nine
-men out of every thousand are bastards. I don’t know why I do this for
-you,” and he cut some more of my fine writing, “but I like you. I don’t
-expect to get anything back. I never do. People always trim me when I
-want anything. There’s nobody home if I’m knocking. But I’m such a
-God-damned fool that I like to do it. But don’t think I’m not on, or
-that I’m a genial ass that can be worked by every Tom, Dick and Harry.”
-And after visiting me with that fat superior smile he went on working. I
-stared, nervous, restless, resentful, sorrowful, trying to justify
-myself to life and to him.
-
-“If I had a real chance,” I said, “I would soon show you.”
-
-The convention opened its sessions the next day, and because of my
-seeming cleverness I was given a front seat in the press-stand, where I
-could hear all speeches, observe the crowd, trade ideas with the best
-newspaper men in the city and the country. In a day, if you will believe
-it, and in spite of the fact that I was getting only fifteen dollars a
-week, my stock had risen so that, in this one office at least, I was
-looked upon as a newspaper man of rare talent, an extraordinarily bright
-boy sure to carve out a future for himself, one to be made friends with
-and helped. Here in this press-stand I was now being coached by one
-newspaper man and another in the intricacies of convention life. I was
-introduced to two other members of our staff who were supposed to be
-experienced men, both of them small, clever, practical-minded
-individuals well adapted to the work in hand. One of them, Harry L.
-Dunlap, followed my errant fortunes for years, securing a place through
-me in St. Louis and rising finally to be the confidential adviser of one
-of our Presidents, William Howard Taft—a not very remarkable President
-to be adviser to at that. The other, a small brown-suited soul, Brady by
-name, came into my life for a very little while and then went, I know
-not where.
-
-But this convention, how it thrilled me! To be tossed into the vortex of
-national politics at a time when the country was seething over the
-possible resuscitation of the old Democratic party to strength and power
-was something like living. I listened to the speeches, those dully
-conceived flights and word gymnastics and pyrotechnics whereby backwoods
-statesmen, district leaders and personality-followers seek to foist upon
-the attention of the country their own personalities as well as those of
-the individuals whom they admire. Although it was generally known that
-Cleveland was to be nominated (the money power of America having fixed
-upon him) and it was useless to name any one else, still as many as ten
-different “statesmen” great leaders, saviors were put in nomination.
-Each man so mentioned was the beau ideal of a nation’s dream of a
-leader, a statesman, a patriot, lover of liberty and of the people. This
-in itself was a liberal education and slowly but surely opened my eyes.
-I watched with amazement this love of fanfare and noise, the way in
-which various delegations and individual followers loved to shout and
-walk up and down waving banners and blowing horns. Different States or
-cities had sent large delegations, New York a marching club two thousand
-strong, all of whom had seats in this hall, and all were plainly
-instructed to yell and demonstrate at the mention of a given name.
-
-The one thing I heard which seemed rather important at the time,
-beautiful, because of a man’s voice and gestures, was a speech by Bourke
-Cochran, exhorting the convention to nominate his candidate, David
-Bennett Hill, and save the party from defeat. Indeed his speech, until
-later I heard William Jennings Bryan, seemed to me the best I had ever
-heard, clear, sonorous, forcible, sensible. He had something to say and
-he said it with art and seeming conviction. He had presence too, a sort
-of Herculean, animal-like effrontery. He made his audience sit up and
-pay attention to him, when as a matter of fact it was interested in
-talking privately, one member to another. I tried to take notes of what
-he was saying until one of my associates told me that the full minutes
-of his speech could soon be secured from the shorthand reporters.
-
-Being in this great hall cheek by jowl with the best of the Chicago
-newspaper world thrilled me. “Now,” I said to myself, “I am truly a
-newspaper man. If I can only get interesting things to write about, my
-fortune is made.” At once, as the different forceful reporters of the
-city were pointed out to me (George Ade, Finley Peter Dunne, “Charlie”
-Seymour, Charles d’Almy), my neck swelled as does a dog’s when a rival
-appears on the scene. Already, at mere sight of them, I was anxious to
-try conclusions with them on some important mission and so see which of
-us was the better man. Always, up to the early thirties, I was so human
-as to conceive almost a deadly opposition to any one who even looked as
-though he might be able to try conclusions with me in anything. At that
-time, I was ready for a row, believing, now that I had got thus far,
-that I was destined to become one of the greatest newspaper men that
-ever lived!
-
-But this convention brought me no additional glory. I did write a
-flowery description of the thing as a whole, but only a portion of it
-was used. I did get some details of committee work, which were probably
-incorporated in the political man’s general summary. The next day,
-Cleveland being nominated, interest fell off. Thousands packed their
-bags and departed. I was used for a day or two about hotels gathering
-one bit of news and another, but I could see that there was no import to
-what I was doing and began to grow nervous lest I should be summarily
-dropped. I spoke to Maxwell about it.
-
-“Do you think they’ll drop me?” I asked.
-
-“Not by a damned sight!” he replied contentiously. “You’ve earned a show
-here; it’s been promised you; you’ve made good, and they ought to give
-it to you. Don’t you say anything; just leave it to me. There’s going to
-be a conference here tomorrow as to who’s to be dropped and who kept on,
-and I’ll have my say then. You saved the day for us on that nomination
-stuff, and that ought to get you a show. Leave it to me.”
-
-The conference took place the next day and of the five men who had been
-taken on to do extra work during the convention I and one other were the
-only ones retained, and this at the expense of two former reporters
-dropped. At that, I really believe I should have been sent off if it had
-not been for Maxwell. He had been present during most of the
-transactions concerning Mr. Gissel’s book and thought I deserved work on
-that score alone, to say nothing of my subsequent efforts. I think he
-disliked the little editorial writer very much. At any rate when this
-conference began Maxwell, according to Dunlap who was there and reported
-to me, sat back, a look of contented cynicism on his face not unlike
-that of a fox about to devour a chicken. The names of several of the new
-men were proposed as substitutes for the old ones when, not hearing mine
-mentioned, he inquired:
-
-“Well, what about Dreiser?”
-
-“Well, what about him?” retorted Sullivan, the city editor. “He’s a good
-man, but he lacks training. These other fellows are experienced.”
-
-“I thought you and Gissel sort of agreed to give him a show if he sold
-that book for you?”
-
-“No, I didn’t,” said Sullivan. “I only promised to give him a tryout
-around convention time. I’ve done that.”
-
-“But he’s the best man on the staff today,” insisted Maxwell. “He
-brought in the only piece of news worth having. He’s writing better
-every day.”
-
-He bristled, according to Dunlap, and Sullivan and Gissel, taking the
-hint that the quarrel might be carried higher up or aired
-inconveniently, changed their attitude completely.
-
-“Oh, well,” said Sullivan genially, “let him come on. I’d just as lief
-have him. He may pan out.”
-
-And so on I came, at fifteen dollars a week, and thus my newspaper
-career was begun in earnest.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-THIS change from insecurity to being an accredited newspaper man was
-delightful. For a very little while, a year or so, it seemed to open up
-a clear straight course which if followed energetically must lead me to
-great heights. Of course I found that beginners were very badly paid.
-Salaries ranged from fourteen to twenty-five dollars for reporters; and
-as for those important missions about which I had always been reading,
-they were not even thought of here. The best I could learn of them in
-this office was that they did exist—on some papers. Young men were still
-sent abroad on missions, or to the West or to Africa (as Stanley), but
-they had to be men of proved merit or budding genius and connected with
-papers of the greatest importance. How could one prove oneself to be a
-budding genius?
-
-Salary or no salary, however, I was now a newspaper man, with the
-opportunity eventually to make a name for myself. Having broken with the
-family and with my sister C——, I was now quite alone in the world and
-free to go anywhere and do as I pleased. I found a front room in Ogden
-Place overlooking Union Park (in which area I afterwards placed one of
-my heroines). I could walk from here to the office in a little over
-twenty minutes. My route lay through either Madison Street or Washington
-Boulevard east to the river, and morning and night I had ample
-opportunity to speculate on the rancid or out-at-elbows character of
-much that I saw. Both Washington and Madison, from Halsted east to the
-river, were lined with vile dens and tumbledown yellow and gray frame
-houses, slovenly, rancorous, unsolved and possibly unsolvable misery and
-degeneracy, whole streets of degraded, dejected, miserable souls. Why
-didn’t society do better by them? I often asked of myself then. Why
-didn’t they do better by themselves? Did God, who, as had been drummed
-into me up to that hour was all wise, all merciful, omnipresent and
-omnipotent make people so or did they themselves have something to do
-with it? Was government to blame, or they themselves? Always the
-miseries of the poor, the scandals, corruptions and physical
-deteriorations which trail folly, weakness, uncontrolled passion
-fascinated me. I was never tired of looking at them, but I had no
-solution and was not willing to accept any, suspecting even then that
-man is the victim of forces over which he has no control. As I walked
-here and there through these truly terrible neighborhoods, I peered
-through open doors and patched and broken windows at this wretchedness
-and squalor, much as a man may tread the poisonous paths of a jungle,
-curious and yet fearsome.
-
-It was this nosing and speculative tendency, however, which helped me
-most, as I soon found. Journalism, even in Chicago, was still in that
-discursive stage which loved long-winded yarns upon almost any topic.
-Nearly all news stories were padded to make more of them than they
-deserved, especially as to color and romance. All specials were being
-written in imitation of the great novelists, particularly Charles
-Dickens, who was the ideal of all newspaper men and editors as well as
-magazine special writers (how often have I been told to imitate Charles
-Dickens in thought and manner!). The city editors wanted not so much
-bare facts as feature stories, color, romance; and, although I did not
-see it clearly at the time, I was their man.
-
-Write?
-
-Why, I could write reams upon any topic when at last I discovered that I
-could write at all. One day some one—Maxwell, I suppose—hearing me speak
-of what I was seeing each day as I came to or went from the office to my
-room, suggested that I do an article on Chicago’s vilest slum, which lay
-between Halsted and the river, Madison and Twelfth streets, for the next
-Sunday issue, and this was as good as meat and drink for me. I visited
-this region a few times between one and four in the morning, wandering
-about its clattering boardwalks, its dark alleys, its gloomy mire and
-muck atmosphere. Chicago’s wretchedness was never utterly tame,
-disconsolate or hang-dog, whatever else it might be; rather, it was
-savage, bitter and at times larkish and impish. The vile slovens,
-slatterns, prostitutes, drunkards and drug fiends who infested this
-region all led a strident if beggarly or horrible life. Saloon lights
-and smells and lamps gleaming smokily from behind broken lattices and
-from below wooden sidewalk levels, gave it a shameless and dangerous
-color. Accordions, harmonicas, jew’s-harps, clattering tin-pan pianos
-and stringy violins were forever going; paintless rotting shacks always
-resounded with a noisy blasphemous life between twelve and four; oaths,
-foul phrases; a Hogarthian shamelessness and reconciliation to filth
-everywhere—these were some of the things that characterized it. Although
-there was a closing-hour law there was none here as long as it was
-deemed worth while to keep open. Only at four and five in the morning
-did a heavy peace seem to descend, and this seemed as wretched as the
-heavier vice and degradation which preceded it.
-
-In the face of such a scene or picture as this my mind invariably paused
-in question. I had been reared on dogmatic religious and moral theory,
-or at least had been compelled to listen to it all my life. Here then
-was a part of the work of an omnipotent God, who nevertheless tolerated,
-apparently, a most industrious devil. Why did He do it? Why did nature,
-when left to itself, devise such astounding slums and human muck heaps?
-Harlots in doorways or behind windows or under lamp-posts in these
-areas, smirking and signaling creatures with the dullest or most
-fox-like expression and with heavily smeared lips and cheeks and
-blackened eyebrows, were ready to give themselves for one dollar, or
-even fifty cents, and this in the heart of this budding and prosperous
-West, a land flowing with milk and honey! What had brought that about so
-soon in a new, rich, healthy, forceful land—God? devil? or both working
-together toward a common end? Near at hand were huge and rapidly
-expanding industries. The street-cars and trains, morning and evening,
-were crowded with earnest, careful, saving, seeking, moderately
-well-dressed people who were presumably anxious to work and lay aside a
-competence and own a home. Then why was it that these others lived in
-such a hell? Was God to blame? Or society?
-
-I could not solve it. This matter of being, with its differences, is
-permanently above the understanding of man, I fear.
-
-I smiled as I thought of my father’s attitude to all this. There he was
-out on the west side demanding that all creatures of the world return to
-Christ and the Catholic Church, see clearly, whether they could or not,
-its grave import to their immortal souls; and here were these sows and
-termagants, wretched, filthy, greasy. And the men low-browed, ill-clad,
-rum-soaked, body-racked! Mere bags of bones, many of them, blue-nosed,
-scarlet-splotched, diseased—if God should get them what would He do with
-them? On the other hand, in the so-called better walks of life, there
-were so many strutting, contentious, self-opinionated swine-masters
-whose faces were maps of gross egoism and whose clothes were almost a
-blare of sound.
-
-I think I said a little something of all this in the first newspaper
-special I ever wrote. It seemed to open the eyes of my superiors.
-
-“You know, Theodore,” Maxwell observed to me as he read my copy the next
-morning between one and three, “you have your faults, but you do know
-how to observe. You bring a fresh mind to bear on this stuff; anyhow I
-think maybe you’re cut out to be a writer after all, not just an
-ordinary newspaper man.” He lapsed into silence, and then at periods as
-he read he would exclaim: “Jesus Christ!” or “That’s a hell of a world!”
-Then he would fall foul of some turgid English and with a kind of
-malicious glee would cut and hack and restate and shake his head
-despairingly, until I was convinced that I had written the truckiest rot
-in the world. At the close, however, he arose, dusted his lap, lit a
-pipe and said: “Well, I think you’re nutty, but I believe you’re a
-writer just the same. They ought to let you do more Sunday specials.”
-And then he talked to me about phases of the Chicago he knew,
-contrasting it with a like section in San Francisco, where he had once
-worked.
-
-“A hell of a fine novel is going to be written about some of these
-things one of these days,” he remarked; and from now on he treated me
-with such equality that I thought I must indeed be a very remarkable
-man.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-THIS world of newspaper men who now received me on terms of social
-equality, who saw life from a purely opportunistic, and yet in the main
-sentimentally imaginative, viewpoint broadened me considerably and
-finally liberated me from moralistic and religionistic qualms. So many
-of them were hard, gallant adventurers without the slightest trace of
-the nervousness and terror of fortune which agitated me. They had been
-here, there, everywhere—San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Calcutta,
-London. They knew the ways of the newspaper world and to a limited
-extent the workings of society at large. The conventional-minded would
-have called them harsh, impracticable, impossible, largely because they
-knew nothing of trade, that great American standard of ability and
-force. Most of them, as I soon found, were like John Maxwell, free from
-notions as to how people were to act and what they were to think. To a
-certain extent they were confused by the general American passive
-acceptance of the Sermon on the Mount and the Beatitudes as governing
-principles, but in the main they were nearly all mistrustful of these
-things, and of conventional principles in general.
-
-They did not believe, as I still did, that there was a fixed moral order
-in the world which one contravened at his peril. Heaven only knows where
-they had been or what they had seen, but they misdoubted the motives,
-professed or secret, of nearly every man. No man, apparently, was
-utterly and consistently honest, that is, no man in a powerful or
-dominant position; and but few were kind or generous or truly
-public-spirited. As I sat in the office between assignments, or
-foregathered with them at dinner or at midnight in some one of the many
-small restaurants frequented by newspaper men, I heard tales of all
-sorts of scandals: robberies, murders, fornications, incendiarisms, not
-only in low life but in our so-called high life. Most of these young men
-looked upon life as a fierce, grim struggle in which no quarter was
-either given or taken, and in which all men laid traps, lied,
-squandered, erred through illusion: a conclusion with which I now most
-heartily agree. The one thing I would now add is that the brigandage of
-the world is in the main genial and that in our hour of success we are
-all inclined to be more or less liberal and warm-hearted.
-
-But at this time I was still sniffing about the Sermon on the Mount and
-the Beatitudes, expecting ordinary human flesh and blood to do and be
-those things. Hence the point of view of these men seemed at times a
-little horrific, at other times most tonic.
-
-“People make laws for other people to live up to,” Maxwell once said to
-me, “and in order to protect themselves in what they have. They never
-intend those laws to apply to themselves or to prevent them from doing
-anything they wish to do.”
-
-There was a youth whose wife believed that he did not drink. On two
-occasions within six weeks I was sent as envoy to inform his wife that
-he had suddenly been taken ill with indigestion and would soon be home.
-Then Maxwell and Brady would bundle him into a hack and send him off,
-one or two of us going along to help him into his house. So solemnly was
-all this done and so well did we play our parts that his wife believed
-it for a while—long enough for him to pull himself together a year later
-and give up drinking entirely. Another youth boasted that he was
-syphilitic and was curing himself with mercury; another there was whose
-joy it was to sleep in a house of prostitution every Saturday night, and
-so on. I tell these things not because I rejoice in them but merely to
-indicate the atmosphere into which I was thrown. Neither sobriety nor
-virtue nor continence nor incontinence was either a compelling or
-preventive cause of either success or failure or had anything to do with
-true newspaper ability; rather men succeeded by virtue of something that
-was not intimately related to any of these. If one could do anything
-which the world really wanted it would not trouble itself so much about
-one’s private life.
-
-Another change that was being brought about in me was that which related
-to my personal opinion of myself, the feeling I was now swiftly
-acquiring that after all I amounted to something, was somebody. A
-special or two that I wrote, thanks largely to Maxwell’s careful
-schooling, brought me to the forefront among those of the staff who were
-writing for the Sunday supplement. A few news stories fell to my lot and
-I handled them with a freedom which won me praise on all sides. Not that
-I felt at the time that I was writing them so well or differently as
-that I was most earnestly concerned to state what I saw or felt or
-believed. I even essayed a few parables of my own, mild, poetic
-commentaries on I scarcely recall what, which Maxwell scanned with a
-scowling eye at first but later deigned to publish, affixing the
-signature of Carl Dreiser because he had decided to nickname me “Carl.”
-This grieved me, for I was dying to see my own name in print; but when
-they appeared I had the audacity to call upon the family and show them,
-boasting of my sudden rise in the world and saying that I had used the
-name Carl as a compliment to a nephew.
-
-During this time I was taking a rather lofty hand with Alice because of
-my great success, unmindful of the fact that I had been boasting for
-months that I was connected with one of the best of the local papers and
-telling her that I did not think it so wonderful. But now I began to
-think that I was to be called to much higher realms, and solemnly asked
-myself if I should ever want to marry. A number of things helped to
-formulate this question in me. For one thing, I had no sooner been
-launched into general assignments than one afternoon, in seeking for the
-pictures of a group of girls who had taken part in some summer-night
-festival, I encountered one who seemed to be interested in me, a little
-blonde of about my own age, very sleek and dreamy. She responded to my
-somewhat timid advances when I called on her and condescended to smile
-as she gave me her photograph. I drew close to her and attempted a
-flirtation, to which she was not averse, and on parting I asked if I
-might call some afternoon or evening, hoping to crowd it in with my
-work. She agreed, and for several Sundays and week-nights I was put to
-my utmost resources to keep my engagements and do my work, for the
-newspaper profession that I knew, tolerated neither week-days nor
-Sundays off. I had to take an assignment and shirk it in part or
-telephone that I was delayed and could not come at all. Thus early even
-I began to adopt a cavalier attitude toward this very exacting work.
-Twice I took her to a theater, once to an organ recital, and once for a
-stroll in Jackson Park; by which time she seemed inclined to yield to my
-blandishments to the extent of permitting me to put my arms about her
-and even to kiss her, protesting always that I was wanton and forward
-and that she did not know whether she cared for me so much or not.
-Charming as she was, I did not feel that I should care for her very
-much. She was beautiful but too lymphatic, too carefully reared. Her
-mother, upon hearing of me, looked into the fact of whether I was truly
-connected with the _Globe_ and then cautioned her daughter to be careful
-about making new friends. I saw that I was not welcome at that house and
-thereafter met her slyly. I might have triumphed in this case had I been
-so minded and possessed of a little more courage, but as I feared that I
-should have to undergo a long courtship with marriage at the end of it,
-my ardor cooled. Because she was new to me and comfortably stationed and
-better dressed than either Alice or N—— had ever been, I esteemed her
-more highly, made invidious comparisons from a material point of view,
-and wished that I could marry some such well-placed girl without
-assuming all the stern obligations of matrimony.
-
-During the second month of my work on the _Globe_ there arrived on the
-scene a man who was destined to have a very marked effect on my career.
-He was a tall, dark, broad-shouldered, slender-legged individual of
-about forty-five or fifty, with a shock of curly black hair and a burst
-of smuggler-like whiskers. He was truly your Bret Harte gold-miner type,
-sloven, red-eyed at times, but amazingly intelligent and genial,
-reminding me not a little of my brother Rome in his best hours. He wore
-a long dusty, brownish-black frockcoat and a pair of black trousers
-specked, gummed, shined and worn by tobacco, food, liquor and rough
-usage. His feet were incased in wide-toed shoes of the old
-“boot-leather” variety, and the swirl of Jovian locks and beard was
-surmounted by a wide-brimmed black hat such as Kentucky colonels were
-wont to affect. His nose and cheeks were tinted a fiery red by much
-drinking, the nose having a veinous, bulbous, mottled and strawberry
-texture.
-
-This man was John T. McEnnis, a well-known middle-West newspaper man of
-that day, a truly brilliant writer whose sole fault was that he drank
-too much. Originally from St. Louis, the son of a well-known politician
-there, he had taken up journalism as the most direct avenue to fame and
-fortune. At forty-five he found himself a mere hanger-on in this
-profession, tossed from job to job because of his weakness, his skill
-equaled if not outrivaled by that of younger men! It was commonly said
-that he could drink more and stand it better than any other man in
-Chicago.
-
-“Why, he can’t begin to work unless he’s had three or four drinks to
-limber him up,” Harry Dunlap once said to me. “He has to have six or
-seven more to get through till evening.” He did not say how many were
-required to carry him on until midnight, but I fancy he must have
-consumed at least a half dozen more. He was in a constant state of
-semi-intoxication, which was often skillfully concealed.
-
-During my second month on the _Globe_ McEnnis was made city editor in
-place of Sullivan, who had gone to a better paper. Later he was made
-managing editor. I learned from Maxwell that he was well known in
-Chicago newspaper circles for his wit, his trenchant editorial pen, and
-that once he had been considered the most brilliant newspaper editor in
-St. Louis. He had a small, spare, intellectual wife, very homely and
-very dowdy, who still adored him and had suffered God knows what to be
-permitted to live with him.
-
-The first afternoon I saw him sitting in the city editorial chair I was
-very much afraid of him and of my future. He looked raucous and uncouth,
-and Maxwell had told me that new editors usually brought in new men. As
-it turned out, however, much to my astonishment, he took an almost
-immediate fancy to me which ripened into a kind of fatherly affection
-and even, if you will permit me humbly to state a fact, a kind of
-adoration. Indeed he swelled my head by the genial and hearty manner in
-which almost at once he took me under his guidance and furthered my
-career as rapidly as he could, the while he borrowed as much of my small
-salary as he could. Please do not think that I begrudged this then or
-that I do now. I owe him more than a dozen such salaries borrowed over a
-period of years could ever repay. My one grief is, that I had so little
-to give him in return for the very great deal he did for me.
-
-The incident from which this burst of friendship seemed to take its rise
-was this. One day shortly after he arrived he gave me a small clipping
-concerning a girl on the south side who had run away or had been
-kidnaped from one of the dreariest homes it has ever been my lot to see.
-The girl was a hardy Irish creature of about sixteen. A neighborhood
-street boy had taken her to some wretched dive in South Clark Street and
-seduced her. Her mother, an old, Irish Catholic woman whom I found
-bending over a washtub when I called, was greatly exercised as to what
-had become of her daughter, of whom she had heard nothing since her
-disappearance. The police had been informed, and from clews picked up by
-a detective I learned the facts first mentioned. The mother wept into
-her wash as she told me of the death of her husband a few years before,
-of a boy who had been injured in such a way that he could not work, and
-now this girl, her last hope——
-
-From a newspaper point of view there was nothing much to the story, but
-I decided to follow it to the end. I found the house to which the boy
-had taken the girl, but they had just left. I found the parents of the
-youth, simple, plain working people, who knew nothing of his
-whereabouts. Something about the wretched little homes of both families,
-the tumbledown neighborhoods, the poverty and privation which would ill
-become a pretty sensuous girl, impelled me to write it out as I saw and
-felt it. I hurried back to the office that afternoon and scribbled out a
-kind of slum romance, which in the course of the night seemed to take
-the office by storm. Maxwell, who read it, scowled at first, then said
-it was interesting, and then fine.
-
-“Carl,” he interpolated at one point as he read, “you’re letting your
-youthful romantic mood get the best of you, I see. This will never do,
-Carl. Read Schopenhauer, my boy, read Schopenhauer.”
-
-The city editor picked it up when he returned, intending, I presume, to
-see if there was any sign of interest in the general introduction;
-finding something in it to hold him, he read on carefully to the end, as
-I could see, for I was not a dozen feet away and could see what he was
-reading. When he finished he looked over at me and then called me to
-come to him.
-
-“I want to say to you,” he said, “that you have just done a fine piece
-of writing. I don’t go much on this kind of story, don’t believe in it
-as a rule for a daily paper, but the way you have handled this is fine.
-You’re young yet, and if you just keep yourself well in hand you have a
-future.”
-
-Thereafter he became very friendly, asked me out one lunch-time to have
-a drink, borrowed a dollar and told me of some of the charms and wonders
-of journalistic work in St. Louis and elsewhere. He thought the _Globe_
-was too small a paper for me, that I ought to get on a larger one,
-preferably in another city, and suggested how valuable would be a period
-of work on the St. Louis _Globe-Democrat_, of which he had once been
-city editor.
-
-“You haven’t any idea how much you need all this,” he said. “You’re
-young and inexperienced, and a great paper like the _Globe-Democrat_ or
-the New York _Sun_ starts a boy off right. I would like to see you go
-first to St. Louis, and then to New York. Don’t settle down anywhere
-yet, don’t drink, and don’t get married, whatever you do. A wife will be
-a big handicap to you. You have a future, and I’m going to help you if I
-can.” Then he borrowed another dollar and left me.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-TAKEN up by this man in this way and with Maxwell as my literary guide
-and mentor still, I could not help but prosper to an extent at this
-task, and I did. I cannot recall now all the things that I was called
-upon to do, but one of the things that shortly after the arrival of
-McEnnis was assigned to me and that eventually brought my Chicago
-newspaper career to a close in a sort of blaze of glory as I saw it, at
-least, was a series of articles or rather a campaign to close a group of
-fake auction shops which were daily fleecing hundreds by selling bogus
-watches, jewelry, diamonds and the like, yet which were licensed by the
-city and from which the police were deriving a very handsome revenue.
-Although so new at this work the task was placed in my hands as a
-regular daily assignment by Mr. McEnnis with the comment that I must
-make something out of it, whether or not I thought I could put a news
-punch in it and close these places. That would be a real newspaper
-victory and ought to do me some good with my chief the managing editor.
-Campaigns of this kind are undertaken not in a spirit of righteousness
-as a rule but because of public pressure or a wish to increase
-circulation and popularity; yet in this case no such laudable or
-excusable intent could be alleged.
-
-This paper was controlled by John B. MacDonald, an Irish politician,
-gambler, racer of horses, and the owner of a string of local houses of
-prostitution, saloons and gambling dens, all of which brought him a
-large income and made him influential politically. Recently he had
-fallen on comparatively difficult days. His reputation as a shady
-character had become too widespread. The pharisees and influential men
-generally who had formerly profited by his favor now found it expedient
-to pass by on the other side. Public sentiment against him had been
-aroused by political attacks on the part of one newspaper and another
-that did not belong to his party. The last election having been lost to
-him, the police and other departments of the city were now supposed to
-work in harmony to root out his vile though profitable vice privileges.
-
-Everybody knows how these things work. Some administration attacks were
-made upon his privileges, whereupon, not finding suitable support in the
-papers of his own party in the city, they having axes of their own to
-grind, he had started a paper of his own, the _Globe_. He had brought on
-a capable newspaper man from New York, who was doing his best to make of
-the paper something which would satisfy MacDonald’s desire for
-circulation and influence while he lined his own pockets against a rainy
-day. For this reason, no doubt, our general staff was underpaid, though
-fairly capable. During my stay the police and other departments, under
-the guidance of Republican politicians and newspapers, were making an
-attack on Mr. MacDonald’s preserves; to which he replied by attacking
-through the medium of the _Globe_ anything and everything he thought
-would do his rivals harm. Among these were a large number of these same
-mock auction shops in the downtown section. Evidently the police were
-deriving a direct revenue from these places, for they let them severely
-alone but since the administration was now anti-MacDonald and these were
-not Mr. MacDonald’s property nothing was left undone by us to stop this
-traffic. We charged, and it was true, that though victims daily appeared
-before the police to complain that they had been swindled and to ask for
-restitution, nothing was done by the police.
-
-I cannot now recall what it was about my treatment of these institutions
-that aroused so much interest in the office and made me into a kind of
-_Globe_ hero. I was innocent of all knowledge of the above complications
-which I have just described when I started, and almost as innocent when
-I concluded. Nevertheless now daily at ten in the morning and again in
-the afternoon I went to one or another of these shops, listened to the
-harangue of the noisy barkers, saw tin-gilt jewelry knocked down to
-unsuspecting yokels from the South and West who stood open-mouthed
-watching the hypnotizing movements of the auctioneer’s hands as he waved
-a glistering gem or watch in front of them and expatiated on the
-beauties and perfections of the article he was compelled to part from
-for a song. These places were not only deceptions and frauds in what
-they pretended to sell but also gathering-places for thieves,
-pick-pockets, footpads who, finding some deluded bystander to be
-possessed of a watch, pin or roll of money other than that from which he
-was parted by the auctioneer or his associates, either then and there by
-some legerdemain robbed him or followed him into a dark street and
-knocked him down and did the same. At this time Chicago was notorious
-for this sort of thing, and it was openly charged in the _Globe_ and
-elsewhere that the police connived at and thrived by the transactions.
-
-My descriptions of what was going on, innocent and matter of fact as
-they were at first and devoid of guile or make-believe, so pleased Mr.
-McEnnis beyond anything I had previously done that he was actually
-fulsome and yet at the same time mandatory and restraining in his
-compliments. I have no desire to praise myself at this time. Such things
-and so much that seemed so important then have since become trivial
-beyond words but it is only fair to state that he was seemingly
-immensely pleased and amused as was Maxwell.
-
-“Upon my word,” I once heard him exclaim, as he read one of my daily
-effusions. “The rascals. Who would think that such scamps would be
-allowed to run at large in a city like this! They certainly ought to be
-in jail. Every one of them. And the police along with them.” Then he
-chuckled, slapped his knee and finally came over and made some inquiries
-in regard to a certain dealer whom I had chanced to picture. I was
-cautioned against overstating anything; also against detection and being
-beaten up by those whom I was offending. For I noticed after the first
-day or two that the barkers of some of the shops occasionally studied me
-curiously or ceased their more shameful effronteries in my presence and
-produced something of more value. The facts which my articles presented,
-however, finally began to attract a little attention to the paper.
-Either because the paper sold better or because this was an excellent
-club wherewith to belabor his enemies, the publisher now decided to call
-the attention of the public via the billboards, to what was going on in
-our columns, and McEnnis himself undertook to frighten the police into
-action by swearing out warrants against the different owners of the
-shops and thus compelling them to take action.
-
-I became the center of a semi-literary, semi-public reform hubbub. The
-principal members of the staff assured me that the articles were
-forceful in fact and color and highly amusing. One day, by way of the
-license bureau and with the aid of McEnnis, I secured the names of the
-alleged owners and managers of nearly all of these shops and thereafter
-attacked them by name, describing them just as they were, where they
-lived, how they made their money, etc. In company with a private
-detective and several times with McEnnis, I personally served warrants
-of arrest, accompanied the sharpers to police headquarters, where they
-were immediately released on bail, and then ran to the office to write
-out my impressions of all I had seen, repeating conversations as nearly
-as I could remember, describing uncouth faces and bodies of crooks,
-policemen and detectives, and by sly innuendo indicating what a farce
-and sham was the whole seeming interest of the police.
-
-One day McEnnis and I called on the chief of police, demanding to know
-why he was so indifferent to our crusade and the facts we put before
-him. To my youthful amazement and enlightenment he shook his fist in our
-faces and exclaimed: “You can go to the devil, and so can the _Globe_! I
-know who’s back of this campaign, and why. Well, go on and play your
-little game! Shout all you want to. Who’s going to listen to you? You
-haven’t any circulation. You’re not going to make a mark of me, and
-you’re not going to get me fired out of here for not performing my duty.
-Your paper is only a dirty political rag without any influence.”
-
-“Is it!” taunted McEnnis. “Well, you just wait and see. I think you’ll
-change your mind as to that,” and we stalked solemnly out.
-
-And in the course of time he did change his mind. Some of the fakers had
-to be arrested and fined and their places closed up, and the longer we
-talked and exposed the worse it became for them. Finally a dealer
-approached me one morning and offered me an eighteen-carat gold watch,
-to be selected by me from any jewelry store in the city and paid for by
-him, if I would let his store alone. I refused. Another, a dark, dusty,
-most amusing little Jew, offered me a diamond pin, insisting upon
-sticking it in my cravat, and said: “Go see! Go see! Ask any jeweler
-what he thinks, if that ain’t a real stone! If it ain’t—if he says
-no—bring it back to me and I’ll give you a hundred dollars in cash for
-it. Don’t you mention me no more now. Be a nice young feller now. I’m a
-hard-workin’ man just like anybody else. I run a honest place.”
-
-I carried the pin back to the office and gave it to McEnnis. He stared
-at me in amazement.
-
-“Why did you do this?” he exclaimed. “You shouldn’t have taken this, at
-all. It may get the paper in trouble. They may have had witnesses to
-this—but maybe not. Perhaps this fellow is just trying to protect
-himself. Anyway, we’re going to take this thing back to him and don’t
-take anything more, do you hear, money or anything. You can’t do that
-sort of thing. If I didn’t think you were honest I’d fire you right
-now.”
-
-He took me into the office of the editor-in-chief, who looked at me with
-still, gray-blue eyes and listened to my story. He dismissed me and
-talked with McEnnis for a while. When the latter came out he exclaimed
-triumphantly: “He sees that you’re honest, all right, and he’s tickled
-to death. Now we’ll take this pin back, and then you’ll write out the
-whole story just as it happened.”
-
-On the way we went to a magistrate to swear out a charge of attempted
-bribery against this man, and later in the same day I went with the
-detective to serve the warrant. To myself I seemed to be swimming in a
-delicious sea of life. “What a fine thing life is!” I thought. “Here I
-am getting along famously because I can write. Soon I will get more
-money, and maybe some day people will begin to hear of me. I will get a
-fine reputation in the newspaper world.”
-
-Thanks to this vigorous campaign, of which McEnnis was the inspiration
-and guiding spirit, all these auction shops were eventually closed. In
-so much at least John B. MacDonald had achieved a revenge.
-
-As for myself, I felt that there must be some serious and favorable
-change impending for me; and true enough, within a fortnight after this
-the change came. I had noticed that McEnnis had become more and more
-friendly. He introduced me to his wife one day when she was in the
-office and told her in my presence what splendid work I was doing. Often
-he would take me to lunch or to a saloon for drinks (for which I would
-pay), and would then borrow a dollar or two or three, no part of which
-he ever returned. He lectured me on the subject of study, urging me to
-give myself a general education by reading, attending lectures and the
-like. He wanted me to look into painting, music, sculpture. As he talked
-the blood would swirl in my head, and I kept thinking what a brilliant
-career must be awaiting me. One thing he did was to secure me a place on
-the St. Louis _Globe-Democrat_.
-
-Just at this time a man whose name I have forgotten—Leland, I think—the
-Washington correspondent of the St. Louis _Globe-Democrat_, came to
-Chicago to report the preliminary preparations for the great World’s
-Fair which was to open the following spring. Already the construction of
-a number of great buildings in Jackson Park had been begun, and the
-newspapers throughout the country were on the alert as to its progress.
-Leland, as I may as well call him, a cool, capable observer and writer,
-was an old friend of McEnnis. McEnnis introduced me to him and made an
-impassioned plea in my behalf for an opportunity for me to do some
-writing for the _Globe-Democrat_ in St. Louis under his direction. The
-idea was to get this man to allow me to do some World’s Fair work for
-him, on the side, in addition to my work on the _Globe_, and then later
-to persuade Joseph B. McCullagh of the former paper to make a place for
-me in St. Louis.
-
-“As you see,” he said when he introduced me, “he’s a mere boy without
-any experience, but he has the makings of a first-rate newspaper man.
-I’m sure of it. Now, Henry, as a favor to me, I want you to help him.
-You’re close to Mac” (Joseph B. McCullagh, editor-in-chief of the St.
-Louis _Globe-Democrat_), “and he’s just the man this boy ought to go to
-to get his training. Dreiser has just completed a fine piece of
-journalistic work for me. He’s closed up the fake auction shops here,
-and I want to reward him. He only gets fifteen a week here, and I can’t
-do anything for him in Chicago just now. You write and ask Mac to take
-him on down there, and I’ll write also and tell him how I feel about
-it.”
-
-The upshot of this was that I was immediately taken into the favor of
-Mr. Leland, given some easy gossip writing to do, which netted me
-sixteen dollars the week for three weeks in addition to the fifteen I
-earned on the _Globe_. At the end of that time, some correspondence
-having ensued between the editor of the _Globe-Democrat_ and his two
-Chicago admirers, I one day received a telegram which read:
-
- “You may have reportorial position on this paper at twenty
- dollars a week, beginning next Monday. Wire reply.”
-
-I stood in the dusty little _Globe_ office and stared at this, wondering
-what so great an opportunity portended. Only six months before I had
-been jobless and hanging about this back door; here I was tonight with
-as much as fifty dollars in my pocket, a suit of good clothes on my
-back, good shoes, a good hat and overcoat. I had learned how to write
-and was already classed here as a star reporter. I felt as though life
-were going to do wonderful and beautiful things for me. I thought of
-Alice, that now I should have to leave her and this familiar and now
-comfortable Chicago atmosphere, and then I went over to McEnnis to ask
-him what I ought to do.
-
-When he read the telegram he said: “This is the best chance that could
-possibly come to you. You will be working on one of the greatest papers
-and under one of the greatest editors that ever lived. Make the most of
-your chance. Go? Of course go! Let’s see—it’s Tuesday; our regular week
-ends Friday. You hand in your resignation now, to take effect then, and
-go Sunday. I’ll give you some letters that will help you,” and he at
-once turned to his desk and wrote out a series of instructions and
-recommendations.
-
-That night, and for four days after, until I took the train for St.
-Louis, I walked on air. I was going away. I was going out in the world
-to make my fortune. Withal I was touched by the pathos of the fact that
-life and youth and everything which now glimmered about me so hopefully
-was, for me as well as for every other living individual, insensibly
-slipping away.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-THIS sudden decision to terminate my newspaper life in Chicago involved
-the problem of what to do about Alice. During these spring and summer
-days I had been amusing myself with her, imagining sometimes, because of
-her pretty face and figure and her soft clinging ways, that I was in
-love with her. By the lakes and pagodas of Chicago’s parks, on the lake
-shore at Lincoln Park where the white sails were to be seen, in Alice’s
-cozy little room with the windows open and the lights out, or of a
-Sunday morning when her parents were away visiting and she was preparing
-my breakfast and flouring her nose and chin in the attempt—how happy we
-were! How we frivoled and kissed and made promises to ourselves
-concerning the future! We were like two children at times, and for a
-while I half decided that I would marry her. In a little while we were
-going everywhere together and she was planning her wedding trousseau,
-the little fineries she would have when we were married. We were to live
-on the south side near the lake in a tiny apartment. She described to me
-the costume she would wear, which was to be of satin of an ivory shade,
-with laces, veils, slippers and stockings to match.
-
-But as spring wore on and I grew so restless I began to think not so
-much less of Alice as more of myself. I never saw her as anything but
-beautiful, tender, a delicate, almost perfect creature for some one to
-love and cherish. Once we went hand-in-hand over the lawns of Jackson
-Park of a Sunday afternoon. She was enticing in a new white flannel
-dress and dark blue hat. The day was warm and clear and a convoy of
-swans was sailing grandly about the little lake. We sat down and watched
-them and the ducks, the rowers in green, blue and white boats, with the
-white pagoda in the center of the lake reflected in the water. All was
-colorful, gay.
-
-“Oh, Dorse,” she said at one place, with a little gasping sigh which
-moved me by its pathos, “isn’t it lovely?”
-
-“Beautiful.”
-
-“We are so happy when we are together, aren’t we?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Oh, I wish we were married! If we just had a little place of our own!
-You could come home to me, and I could make you such nice things.”
-
-I promised her happy days to come, but even as I said it I knew it would
-not be. I did not think I could build a life on my salary ... I did not
-know that I wanted to. Life was too wide and full. She seemed to sense
-something of this from the very beginning, and clung close to me now as
-we walked, looking up into my eyes, smiling almost sadly. As the hours
-slipped away into dusk and the hush of evening suggested change and the
-end of many things she sighed again.
-
-“Oh, Dorse,” she said as we reached her doorstep, “if we could just be
-together always and never part!”
-
-“We will be,” I said, but I did not believe my own words.
-
-It was on this spring night that she attempted to persuade me, not by
-words or any great craft but merely by a yielding pressure, to take her
-and make her fully mine. I fancy she thought that if she yielded to me
-physically and found herself with child my sympathy would cause me to
-marry her. We in her own home threw some pillows on the floor, and there
-in my arms she kissed and hugged me, begging me to love her; but I had
-not the wish. I did not think that I ought to do that thing, then.
-
-It was after this that the upward turn of my fortunes began. I was
-involved in the mock auction war for over three weeks and for two weeks
-following that with my buzzing dreams of leaving Chicago. In this rush
-of work, and in paying some attentions to Miss Winstead, I neglected
-Alice shamefully, once for ten days, not calling at her house or store
-or writing her a note. One Sunday morning, troubled about me and no
-doubt heartsick, she attended the ethical culture lecture in the Grand
-Theater, where I often went. On coming out she met me and I greeted her
-affectionately, but she only looked at me with sad and reproachful eyes
-and said: “Oh, Dorse, you don’t really care any more, do you? You’re
-just a little sorry when you see me. Well, you needn’t come any more.
-I’m going back to Harry. I’m only too glad that I can.”
-
-She admitted that, misdoubting me, she had never dropped him entirely
-but had kept him calling occasionally. This angered me and I said to
-myself: “What is she that I should worry over her?” Imagine. And this
-double-dealing, essential as it was then, cut me to the quick, although
-I had been doing as much and more. When I thought it out I knew that she
-was entitled to protect herself against so uncertain a love as mine.
-Even then I could have taken her—she practically asked me to—but I
-offered reasons and excuses for delay. I went away both angry and sad,
-and the following Sunday, having received the telegram from St. Louis, I
-left without notifying her. Indeed I trifled about on this score
-debating with myself until Saturday night, when McEnnis asked me to go
-to dinner with him; afterwards when I hurried to her home she was not
-there. This angered me groundlessly, even though I knew she never
-expected me any more of a Saturday night. I returned to my room,
-disconsolate and gloomy, packed my belongings and then decided that I
-would go back after midnight and knock at her door. Remembering that my
-train left at seven-thirty next morning and having no doubt that she was
-off with my rival, I decided to punish her. After all, I could come back
-if I wished, or she could come to me. I wrote her a note, then went to
-bed and slept fitfully until six-thirty, when I arose and hurried to
-make my train. In a little while I was off, speeding through those wide
-flat yards which lay adjacent to her home, and with my nose pressed
-against the window, a driving rain outside, I could see the very windows
-and steps by which we had so often sat. My heart sank and I ached. I
-decided at once to write her upon my arrival in St. Louis and beg her to
-come—not to become my wife perhaps but my mistress. I brooded gloomily
-all day as I sped southward, picturing myself as a lorn youth without
-money, home, family, love, anything. I tried to be sad, thinking at the
-same time what wonderful things might not be going to befall me. But I
-was leaving Alice! I was leaving Chicago, my home, all that was familiar
-and dear! I felt as though I could not stand it, as though when I
-reached St. Louis I should take the next train and return.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-THE time was November, 1892. St. Louis, as I stepped off the train that
-Sunday evening, after leaving Chicago in cold dreary state, seemed a
-warmer clime. The air was soft, almost balmy; but St. Louis could be
-cold enough too, as I soon discovered. The station, then at Twelfth and
-Poplar (the new Union Station at Eighteenth and Market was then
-building), an antiquated affair of brick and stone, with the tracks
-stretching in rows in front of it and reached by board walks laid at
-right angles to them, seemed unspeakably shabby and inconvenient to me
-after the better ones of Chicago. St. Louis, I said to myself, was not
-as good as Chicago. Chicago was rough, powerful, active; St. Louis was
-sleepy and slow. This was due, however, to the fact that I entered it of
-a Sunday evening and all its central portion was still. Contrasted with
-Chicago it was not a metropolis at all. While rich and successful it was
-a creature of another mood and of slower growth. I learned in time to
-like it very much, but for the things that set it apart from other
-cities, not for the things by which it sought to rival them.
-
-But on that evening how dull and commonplace it seemed—how slow after
-the wave-like pulsation of energy that appeared to shake the very air of
-Chicago.
-
-I made my way to a hotel called The Silver Moon, recommended to me by my
-mentor and sponsor, where one could get a room for a dollar, a meal for
-twenty-five cents. Outside of Joseph B. McCullagh, editor of the
-_Globe-Democrat_, and Edmond O’Neill, former editor of the _Republic_ to
-whom I bore a letter, there was no one to whom I might commend myself. I
-did not care. I was in a strange city at last! I was out in the world
-now really, away from my family. My great interest was in life as a
-spectacle, this singing, rhythmic, mystic state in which I found myself.
-Life, the great sea! Life, the wondrous, colorful riddle!
-
-After eating a bite in the almost darkened restaurant of this hotel I at
-once went out into Pine Street and stared at the street-cars, yellow,
-red, orange, green, brown, labeled Choteau Avenue, Tower Grove,
-Jefferson Avenue, Carondelet. My first business was to find the
-_Globe-Democrat_ building, a prosperous eight-story brownstone and brick
-affair standing at Sixth and Pine. I stared at this building in the
-night, looking through the great plate glass windows at an onyx-lined
-office, and finally went in and bought a Sunday paper.
-
-I went to my room and studied this paper—then slept, thinking of my
-coming introduction in the morning. I was awakened by the clangor of
-countless cars. Going to the stationary washstand I was struck at once
-by the yellowness of the water, a dark yellowish-brown, which deposited
-a yellow sediment in the glass. Was that the best St. Louis could
-afford? I asked myself in youthful derision. I drank it just the same,
-went down to breakfast and then out into the city to see what I should
-see. I bought a _Globe-Democrat_ (a Republican party paper, by the way:
-an anachronism of age and change of ownership) and a _Republic_, the one
-morning Democratic paper, and then walked to Sixth and Pine to have
-another look at the building in which I was to work. I wandered along
-Broadway and Fourth Street, the street of the old courthouse; sought out
-the Mississippi River and stared at it, that vast river lying between
-banks of yellow mud; then I went back to the office of the
-_Globe-Democrat_, for it was nearing the time when its editor-in-chief
-might choose to put in an appearance.
-
-Joseph B. McCullagh (“Little Mac” of Eugene Field’s verse) was a short,
-thick, aggressive, rather pugnacious and defensive person of Irish
-extraction. He was short, sturdy, Napoleonic, ursine rather than
-leonine. I was instantly drawn and thrown back by his stiff reserve. A
-negro elevator boy had waved me along a marble hall on the seventh floor
-to a room at the end, where I was met by an office boy who took in my
-name and then ushered me into the great man’s presence. I found him at a
-roll-top desk in a minute office, and he was almost buried in discarded
-newspapers. I learned afterward that he would never allow these to be
-removed until he was all but crowded out. I was racked with nervousness.
-Whatever high estimate I had conceived of myself had oozed out by the
-time I reached his door. I was now surveyed by keen gray Irish eyes from
-under bushy brows.
-
-“Um, yuss! Um, yuss!” was all he deigned to say. “See Mr. Mitchell in
-the city room, Mr. Mitchell—um, yuss. Your salary will be—um—um—twenty
-dollars to begin with” (he was chewing a cigar and mumbled his words),
-and he turned to his papers.
-
-Not a word, not a sign, that he knew I had ever written a line worth
-while. I returned to the handsome city room, and found only empty desks.
-I sat down and waited fully three-quarters of an hour, examining old
-papers and staring out of the windows over the roofs until Mr. Mitchell
-appeared.
-
-Like his employer, he was thick-set, a bigger man physically but less
-attractive. He had a round, closely-cropped head and a severe and
-scowling expression. He reminded me of Squeers in _Nicholas Nickleby_. A
-savage fat man—can anything be worse? He went to his desk with a quick
-stride when he entered, never noticing me. When I approached and
-explained who I was and why I was there he scarcely gave me a glance.
-
-“The afternoon assignments won’t be ready till twelve-thirty,” he
-commented drily. “Better take a seat in the next room.”
-
-It was then only eleven-thirty, and I went into the next room and
-waited. It was empty but deliciously warm on this chilly day. How
-different from McEnnis, I thought. Evidently being called to a newspaper
-by telegram was not to be interpreted as auguring that one was to lie on
-a bed of roses.
-
-A little bit afraid to leave for this hour, in case he might call, I
-hung about the two windows of this room staring at the new city. How
-wonderful it seemed, now this morning, after the quiet of the night
-before, how strong and forceful in this November air. The streets and
-sky were full of smoke; there was a clangor of street-car gongs below
-and the rumble of endless trucks. A block or two away loomed up a tall
-building of the newer order, twelve stories at least. Most of the
-buildings were small, old family dwellings turned into stores. I
-wondered about the life of the city, its charms, its prospects. What did
-it hold for me? How long would I remain here? Would this paper afford me
-any real advancement? Could I make a great impression and rise?
-
-As I was thus meditating several newspaper men came in. One was a short
-bustling fellow with a golden-brown mustache and a shock of curly brown
-hair, whose name I subsequently learned was Hazard—a fitting name for a
-newspaper reporter. He wore a fedora hat, a short cream-colored overcoat
-which had many wrinkles about the skirts in the back, and striped
-trousers. He came in with a brisk air, slightly skipping his feet as he
-walked, and took a desk, which was nothing more than a segment of one
-long desk fastened to the wall and divided by varnished partitions of
-light oak. As soon as he was seated he opened a drawer and took out a
-pipe, which he briskly filled and lighted, and then began to examine
-some papers he had in his pockets. I liked his looks.
-
-There sauntered in next a pale creature in a steel-gray suit of not too
-new a look, who took a seat directly opposite the first comer. His left
-hand, in a brown glove, hung at his side; apparently it was of wood or
-stuffed leather. Later there arrived a negro of very intellectual
-bearing, who took a seat next the second arrival; then a stout,
-phlegmatic-looking man with dark eyes, dark hair and skin, which gave me
-a feeling of something saturnine in his disposition. The next arrival
-was a small skippity man, bustling about like a little mouse, and having
-somewhat of a mousy look in his eyes, who seemed to be attached to the
-main city editorial room in some capacity.
-
-A curious company gradually filed in, fourteen or fifteen all told. I
-gave up trying to catalogue them and turned to look out the window. The
-little bustling creature came through the room several times, looked at
-me without deigning to speak however, and finally put his head in at the
-door and whispered to the attendant group: “The book’s ready.” At this
-there was an immediate stir, nearly all of the men got up and one by one
-they filed into the next room. Assuming that they were going to consult
-the assignment book, I followed, but my name was not down. In Chicago my
-city editor usually called each individual to him in person; here each
-man was supposed to discover his assignment from a written page. I
-returned to the reporters’ room when I found my name was not down,
-wondering what I should be used for.
-
-The others were not long gone before I was sought by the mouse—Hugh
-Keller Hartung by name—who whispered: “The city editor wants to see
-you”; and then for the second time I faced this gloomy man, whom I had
-already begun not only to dislike but to fear. He was dark and savage,
-in his mood to me at least, whether unconsciously so or not I do not
-know. His broad face, set with a straight full nose and a wide
-thin-lipped mouth, gave him a frozen Cromwellian outline. He seemed a
-queer, unliterary type to be attached to so remarkable a journalist as
-McCullagh.
-
-“There’s been some trouble down at this number,” he said, handing me a
-slip of paper on which an address was written. “A fight, I think. See if
-you can find out anything about it.”
-
-I hurried out, immensely relieved to get into the fresh air of the city.
-I finally made my way to the place, only to find a vacant lot. Thinking
-there might be some mistake, I went to the nearest police station and
-inquired. Nothing was known. Fearing to fall down on my first
-assignment, I returned to the lot, but could learn nothing. Gradually it
-began to dawn upon me that this might be merely a trial assignment, a
-bright idea of the frowning fat man, a bearings-finder. I had already
-conceived a vast contempt for him, a stumbling-block in my path, I
-thought. No wonder he came to hate me, as I learned afterward he did.
-
-I wandered back through the city, looking at the strange little low
-houses (it was the region between the river and North Broadway, about a
-mile above the courthouse), and marveling at the darksome character of
-the stores. Never in my life had I seen such old buildings, all brick
-and all crowded together, with solid wood or iron shutters, modeled
-after those of France from whence its original settlers came and having
-something of the dourness of the poorer quarters of Paris about them,
-and windows composed of very small panes of glass, evidences of the
-influence of France, I am sure. Their interiors seemed so dark, so
-redolent of an old-time life. The streets also appeared old-fashioned
-with their cobblestones, their twists and turns and the very little
-space that lay between the curbs. I felt as though the people must be
-different from those in Chicago, less dynamic, less aggressive.
-
-When I reached the office I found that the city editor, Mr. Mitchell,
-had gone. The little mousy individual was at one of the parti-divisions
-of the wall desk, near Mr. Mitchell’s big one, diving into a mass of
-copy the while he scratched his ear or trifled with his pencil or jumped
-mousily about in his seat.
-
-“Is Mr. Mitchell about?” I inquired.
-
-“No,” replied the other briskly; “he never gets in much before four
-o’clock. Anything you want to know? I’m his assistant.”
-
-He did not dare say “assistant city editor”; his superior would not have
-tolerated one.
-
-“He sent me out to this place, but it’s only a vacant lot.”
-
-“Did you look all around the neighborhood? Sometimes you can get news of
-these things in the neighborhood, you know, when you can’t get it right
-at the spot. I often do that.”
-
-“Yes,” I answered. “I inquired all about there.”
-
-“It would be just like Tobe to send you out there, though,” he went on
-feverishly and timidly, “just to break you in. He does things like that.
-You’re the new man from Chicago, aren’t you—Dreiser?”
-
-“Yes, but how did you know?”
-
-“He said you were coming,” he replied, jerking his left thumb over his
-shoulder. “My name’s Hartung, Hugh Keller Hartung.”
-
-He was so respectful, almost fearsome in his references to his superior
-that I could not help smiling. Now that I had my bearings, I did not
-feel so keenly about Mr. Mitchell. He seemed dull.
-
-“I suppose you’ll find St. Louis a little slower than Chicago,” he went
-on, “but we have some of the biggest newspaper stories here you ever
-saw. You remember the Preller Trunk Mystery, don’t you, and that big
-Missouri-Pacific train robbery last year?”
-
-I recalled both distinctly. “Is that so?” I commented, thinking of my
-career in Chicago and hoping for a duplication of it here.
-
-Heavy steps were heard in the hall just outside, and Mr. Hartung jumped
-to his work like a frightened mouse; on the instant his head was fairly
-pulled down between his shoulders and his nose pressed over his work. He
-seemed to shrivel and shrink, and I wondered why. I went into the next
-room just as Mr. Tobias Mitchell entered. When I explained that the
-address he had given me was a vacant lot he merely looked up at me
-quizzically, suspiciously.
-
-“Couldn’t find it, eh? Somebody must have given me the wrong tip. Wait
-in the next room. I’ll call you when I want you.”
-
-I returned to that empty room, from which I could hear the industrious
-pencil of Mr. Hartung and the occasional throat-clearing cough of Mr.
-Mitchell brooding among his papers.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-THIS reporters’ room, for all its handsome furnishings, never took on an
-agreeable atmosphere to me; it was too gloomy—and solely because of the
-personality next door. The room was empty when I entered, but in a short
-while an old drunken railroad reporter with a red nose came in and sat
-down in a corner seat, taking no notice of me. I read the morning paper
-and waited. The room gradually filled up, and all went at once to their
-desks and began to write industriously. I felt very much out of tune; a
-reporter’s duty at this hour of the night was to write.
-
-However, I made the best of my time reading, and finally went out to
-supper alone, returning as quickly as possible in case there should be
-an assignment for me. When I returned I found my name on the book and I
-set out to interview a Chicago minister who was visiting in the city.
-Evidently this city editor thought it would be easier for me to
-interview a Chicago minister than any other. I found my man, after some
-knocking at wrong doors, and got nothing worth a stick—mere religious
-drive—and returned with my “story,” which was never used.
-
-While I was writing it up, however, the youth of the Jovian curls
-returned from an assignment, hung up his little wrinkled overcoat and
-sat down in great comfort next me. His evening’s work was apparently
-futile for he took out his pipe, rapped it sonorously on his chair,
-lighted it and then picked up an evening paper.
-
-“What’s doing, Jock, up at police headquarters?” called the little man
-over his shoulder.
-
-“Nothing much, Bob,” replied the other, without looking up.
-
-“By jing, you police reporters have a cinch!” jested the first. “All you
-do is sit around up there at headquarters and get the news off the
-police blotters, while we poor devils are chasing all over town. _We_
-have to earn our money.” His voice had a peculiarly healthy, gay and
-bantering ring to it.
-
-“That’s no joke,” put in a long, lean, spectacled individual who was
-sitting in another corner. “I’ve been tramping all over south St. Louis,
-looking for a confounded robbery story.”
-
-“Well, you’ve got long legs, Benson,” retorted the jovial Hazard. “You
-can stand it. Now I’m not so well fixed that way. Bellairs, there, ought
-to be given a chance at that. He wouldn’t be getting so fat, by jing!”
-
-The one called Jock also answered to the name of Bellairs.
-
-“You people don’t do so much,” he replied, grinning cheerfully. “If you
-had my job you wouldn’t be sitting here reading a newspaper. It takes
-work to be a police reporter.”
-
-“Is that so?” queried the little man banteringly. “You’re proof of it, I
-suppose? Why, you never did a good day’s work in your life!”
-
-“Give us a match, Bob, and shut up,” grinned the other. “You’re too
-noisy. I’ve got a lot of work ahead of me yet tonight.”
-
-“I got your work! Is she over sixteen? Wish I had your job.”
-
-Jock folded up some copy paper and put it into his pocket and walked
-into the next room, where the little assistant was toiling away over the
-night’s grist of news.
-
-I still sat there, looking curiously on.
-
-“It’s pretty tough,” said the spirited Hazard, turning to me, “to go out
-on an assignment and then get nothing. I’d rather work hard over a good
-story any day, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“That’s the way I feel about it,” I replied. “It’s not much fun, sitting
-around. By the way, do you know whose desk this is? I’ve been sitting at
-it all evening.”
-
-“It doesn’t belong to anybody at present. You might as well take it if
-you like it. There’s a vacant one over there next to Benson’s, if you
-like that better.” He waved toward the tall awkward scribe in the
-corner.
-
-“This is good enough,” I replied.
-
-“Take your choice. There’s no trouble about desks just now. The staff’s
-way down anyhow. You’re a stranger here, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes; I only came down from Chicago yesterday.”
-
-“What paper’d jeh work on up there?”
-
-“The _Globe_ and _News_,” I answered, lying about the latter in order to
-give myself a better standing than otherwise I might have.
-
-“They’re good papers, aren’t they?”
-
-“Yes, pretty fair. The _News_ has the largest evening circulation.”
-
-“We have some good papers here too. This is one of the biggest. The
-_Post-Dispatch_ is pretty good too; it’s the biggest evening paper.”
-
-“Do you know how much circulation this paper has?” I inquired.
-
-“Oh, about fifty thousand, I should say. That’s not so much, compared to
-Chicago circulation, but it’s pretty big for down here. We have the
-biggest circulation of any paper in the Southwest. McCullagh’s one of
-the greatest editors in this country, outside of Dana in New York, the
-greatest of any. If McCullagh were in New York he’d be bigger than he
-is, by jing!”
-
-“Do you run many big news stories?”
-
-“Sometimes; not often. The _Globe_ goes very light on local news. They
-play up the telegraph on this paper because we go into Texas and
-Arkansas and Louisiana and all these other States around here. We use
-$400,000 worth of telegraph news here every year,” and he said it as
-though he were part owner of the paper. I liked him very much.
-
-I opened my eyes at this news and thought dubiously of it in relation to
-my own work. It did not promise much for a big feature, on which I might
-spread myself.
-
-We talked on, becoming more and more friendly. In spite of the city
-editor, whom I did not like, I now began to like this place, although I
-could feel that these men were more or less browbeaten, held down and
-frozen. The room was much too quiet for a healthy Western reportorial
-room, the atmosphere too chill.
-
-We talked of St. Louis, its size (450,000), its principal hotels, the
-Southern, the Lindell and the La Clede (I learned that its oldest and
-best, the Planter, had recently been torn down and was going to be
-rebuilt some day), what were the chief lines of news. It seemed that
-fires, murders, defalcations, scandals were here as elsewhere the great
-things, far over-shadowing most things of national and international
-import. Recently a tremendous defalcation had occurred, and this new
-acquaintance of mine had been working on it, had “handled it alone,” as
-he said. Like all citizens of an American city he was pro-St. Louis,
-anxious to say a good word for it. The finest portion of it, he told me,
-was in the west end. I should see the wonderful new residences and
-places. There was a great park here, Forrest, over fourteen hundred
-acres in size, a wonderful thing. A new bridge was building in north St.
-Louis and would soon be completed, one that would relieve traffic on the
-Eads Bridge and help St. Louis to grow. There was a small city over the
-river in Illinois, East St. Louis, and a great Terminal Railroad
-Association which controlled all the local railroad facilities and taxed
-each trunk line six dollars a car to enter and each passenger
-twenty-five cents. “It’s a great graft and a damned shame, but what can
-you do?” was his comment. Traffic on the Mississippi was not so much
-now, owing to the railroads that paralleled it, but still it was
-interesting.
-
-The already familiar noise of a roll-top desk broke in upon us from the
-next room, and I noticed a hush fall on the room. What an atmosphere! I
-thought. After a few moments of silence my new friend turned to me and
-whispered very softly:
-
-“That’s Tobe Mitchell, the city editor, coming in. He’s a proper ——, as
-you’ll find.” He smiled wisely and began scribbling again.
-
-“He didn’t look so pleasant to me,” I replied as softly.
-
-“I’ve quit here twice,” he whispered. “The next time I go I won’t come
-back. I don’t have to stay here, and he knows it. I can get a job any
-day on the _Chronicle_, and wouldn’t have to work so hard either. That’s
-an evening paper. I stay here because I like a morning paper better,
-that’s all. There’s more to it. Everything’s so scrappy and kicked
-together on an evening paper. But he doesn’t say much to me any more,
-although he doesn’t like me. You’d think we were a lot of kids, and this
-place a schoolroom.” He frowned.
-
-We dropped into silence again. I did not like this thought of difficulty
-thrust upon me. What a pity a man like McEnnis was not here!
-
-“He doesn’t look like much of a newspaper man to me,” I observed.
-
-“And he isn’t either. McCullagh has him here because he saved his life
-once in a fight somewhere, down in Texas, I think—or that’s what they
-tell me.”
-
-We sat and read; the sound of city life below had died out and one could
-hear the scratching of reporters’ pens. Assignments were written up and
-turned in, and then the reporters idled about, dangling their legs from
-spring-back chairs, smoking pipes and whispering. As the clock
-registered eleven-thirty the round body of Mitchell appeared in the
-doorway, his fair-tinted visage darkened by a faint scowl.
-
-“You boys can go now,” he pronounced solemnly.
-
-All arose, I among them, and went to a closet where were our hats and
-overcoats. I was tired, and this atmosphere had depressed me. What a
-life! Had I come down here for this? The thought of the small news end
-which the local life received depressed me also. I could not see how I
-was to make out.
-
-I went down to a rear elevator, the only one running at this time of
-night, and came out into the dark street, where a carriage was waiting.
-I assumed that this must be for the famous editor. It looked so
-comfortable and sedate, waiting at the door in the darkness for an
-editor who, as I later learned, might not choose to leave until two. I
-went on to my little room at the hotel, filled with ideas of how, some
-day, I should be a great editor and have a carriage waiting for me. Yes;
-I felt that I was destined for a great end. For the present I must be
-content to look around for a modest room where I could sleep and bide my
-time and opportunity.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-I FOUND a room the next morning in Pine Street, only a few doors from
-this hotel and a block from my new office. It was a hall bedroom, one of
-a long series which I was to occupy, dirty and grimy. I recall it still
-with a sickening sense of its ugliness; and yet its cheapness and
-griminess did not then trouble me so much. Did I not have the
-inestimable boon of youth and ambition, which make most material details
-unimportant? Some drab of a woman rented it to me, and outside were
-those red, yellow, blue, green and orange street-cars clanging and
-roaring and wheezing by all night long. Inside were four narrow gray
-walls, a small wooden bed, none too clean sheets and pillow-cases, a
-yellow washstand. I brought over my bag, arranged the few things I
-thought need not be kept under lock and key, and returned to the
-streets. I need not bother about the office until twelve-thirty, when
-the assignments were handed out—or “the book,” as Hartung reverently
-called it, was laid out for our inspection.
-
-And now, spread before me for my survey and entertainment was the great
-city of St. Louis, and life itself as it was manifesting itself to me
-through this city. This was the most important and interesting thing to
-me, not my new position. Work? Well, that was important enough,
-considering the difficulty I had had in securing it. What was more, I
-was always driven by the haunting fear of losing this or any other
-position I had ever had, of not being able to find another (a left-over
-fear, perhaps, due to the impression that poverty had made on me in my
-extreme youth). Just the same, the city came first in my imagination and
-desires, and I now began to examine it with care, its principal streets,
-shops, hotels, its residence district. What a pleasure to walk about, to
-stare, to dream of better days and great things to come.
-
-Just at this time St. Louis seemed to be upon the verge of change and
-improvement. An old section of mansions bordering on the business center
-was rapidly giving way to a rabble of small stores and cheap factories.
-Already several new buildings of the Chicago style of skyscraper were
-either contemplated or in process of construction. There was a new club,
-the Mercantile, the largest in the city, composed entirely of merchants
-in the downtown section, which had just been opened and about which the
-papers were making a great stir. There was a new depot contracted for,
-one of the finest in all the country, so I was told, which was to house
-all the roads entering the city. A new city hall was being talked of, an
-enormous thing-to-be. Out in the west end, where progress seemed the
-most vital, were new streets and truly magnificent residence “places,”
-parked and guarded areas these, in which were ranged many residences of
-the ultra-rich. The first time I saw one of these _places_ I was
-staggered by its exclusive air and the beauty and even grandeur of some
-of the great houses in it—newly manufactured exclusiveness. Here were
-great gray or white or brownstone affairs, bright, almost gaudy, with
-great verandas, astonishing doorways, flights of stone steps, heavily
-and richly draped windows, immense carriage-houses, parked and flowered
-lawns.
-
-By degrees I came to know the trade and poor sections of the city. Here
-were long throbbing wholesale streets, crowded with successful
-companies; along the waterfront was a mill area backed up by wretched
-tenements, as poor and grimy and dingy as any I have ever seen;
-elsewhere were long streets of middle-class families, all alike, all
-with white stone doorsteps or windowsills and tiny front yards.
-
-The atmosphere of the _Globe-Democrat_ after a time came to have a
-peculiar appeal for me because it was dominated so completely by the
-robust personality of McCullagh. He was so natural, unaffected, rugged.
-As time passed he steadily grew in my estimation and by degrees, as I
-read his paper, his powerful, brilliant editorials, and saw how
-systematically and forcefully he managed all things in connection with
-himself and his men, the very air of St. Louis became redolent of him.
-He was a real force, a great man. So famous was he already that men came
-to St. Louis from the Southwest and elsewhere just to see him and his
-office. I often think of him in that small office, sitting waist-deep
-among his papers, his heavy head sunk on his pouter-like chest, his feet
-incased in white socks and low slipper-like shoes, his whole air one of
-complete mental and physical absorption in his work. A few years later
-he committed suicide, out of sheer weariness, I assume, tired of an
-inane world. Yet it was not until long after, when I was much better
-able to judge him and his achievements, that I understood what a really
-big thing he had done: built up a journal of national and even
-international significance in a region which, one would have supposed,
-could never have supported anything more than a mediocre panderer to
-trade interests. As Hazard had proudly informed me, the annual bill for
-telegraph news alone was $400,000: a sum which, in the light of
-subsequent journalistic achievements in America, may seem insignificant
-but which at that time meant a great deal. He seemed to have a desire to
-make the paper not only good (as that word is used in connection with
-newspapers) but great, and from my own memory and impression I can
-testify that it was both. It had catholicity and solidity in editorials
-and news. The whole of Europe, as well as America, was combed and
-reflected in order that his readers might be entertained and retained,
-and each day one could read news of curious as well as of scientific
-interest from all over the world. Its editorials were in the main wise
-and jovial, often beautifully written by McCullagh himself. Of assumed
-Republican tendencies, it was much more a party leader than follower,
-both in national and in State affairs. The rawest of raw youths, I
-barely sensed this at the time, and yet I felt something of the wonder
-and beauty of it all. I knew him to be a great man because I could feel
-it. There was something of dignity and force about all that was
-connected with him. Later it became a fact of some importance to me that
-I had been called to a paper of so much true worth, by a man so wise, so
-truly able.
-
-The only inharmonious note at this time was my intense loneliness. In
-Chicago, in spite of the gradual breaking up of our home and the
-disintegration of the family, I had managed to build up that spiritual
-or imaginative support which comes to all of us from familiarity with
-material objects. I had known Chicago, its newspaper world, its various
-sections, its places of amusement, some dozen or two of newspaper men.
-Here I knew no one at all.
-
-And back in Chicago there had been Alice and N—— and K——, whereas here
-whom had I? Alice was a living pain for years, for in my erratic way I
-was really fond of her. I am of that peculiar disposition, which will
-not let memories of old ties and old pleasures die easily. I suffer for
-things which might not give another a single ache or pain. Alice came
-very close to me, and now she was gone. Without any reasonable
-complaint, save that I was slightly weary, did not care for her as much
-as I had, and that my mind was full of the world outside and my future,
-I had left her. It had not been more than four weeks since I had visited
-her in her little _parlor_ in Chicago, sipping of those delights which
-only youth and ecstatic imagination can conjure; now I was three hundred
-miles away from her kisses and the warmth of her hands. At the same time
-there was this devil or angel of ambition which quite in spite of myself
-was sweeping me onward. I fancied some vast Napoleonic ending for
-myself, which of course was moonshine. I could not have gone back to
-Chicago then if I had wished; it was not spiritually possible. Something
-within kept saying “On—on!” Besides, it would have done no good. The
-reaction would have been more irritating than the pain it satisfied. As
-it was, I could only walk about the city in this chilling November
-weather and speculate about myself and Alice and N—— and K—— and my own
-future. What an odd beginning, I often thought to myself. Scandalous,
-perhaps, in one so young: three girls in as many years, two of them
-deeply and seriously wounded by me.
-
-“I shall write to her,” I thought. “I will ask her to come down here. I
-can’t stand this. She is too lovely and precious to me. It is cruel to
-leave her so.”
-
-There is this to be said for me in regard to my not writing to her: I
-was uncertain as to the financial practicability of it. In Chicago I had
-been telling her of my excellent position, boasting that I was making
-more than I really was. So long as I was there and not married the
-pretense could easily be sustained. Here, three hundred miles away,
-where she would and could not come unless I was prepared to support her,
-it was a different matter. To ask her now meant a financial burden which
-I did not feel able, or at least willing, to assume. No doubt I could
-have starved her on twenty dollars a week; had I been desperately swayed
-by love I would have done so. I could even have had her, had I so
-chosen, on conditions which did not involve marriage; but I could not
-bring myself to do this. I did not think it quite fair. I felt that she
-would have a just claim to my continuing the relation with her.... And
-outside was the wide world. I told myself that I would marry her if I
-had money. If she had not been of a soft yielding type she could easily
-have entrapped me, but she had not chosen to do so. Anyhow, here I was,
-and here I stayed, meditating on the tragedy of it all.
-
-By this time of course it is quite obvious that I was not an ethically
-correct and moral youth, but a sentimental boy of considerable range of
-feeling who, facing the confusing evidences of life, was not prepared to
-accept anything as final. I did not know then whether I believed that
-the morality and right conduct preached by the teachers of the world
-were important or not. The religious and social aphorisms of the day had
-been impressed upon me, but they did not stick. Something whispered to
-me that apart from theory there was another way which the world took and
-which had little in common with the strait and narrow path of the
-doctrinaires. Not all men swindle in little things, or lie or cheat, but
-how few fail to compromise in big ones. Perhaps I would not have
-deliberately lied about anything, at least not in important matters, and
-I would not now under ordinary circumstances after the one experience in
-Chicago have stolen. Beyond this I could not have said how I would have
-acted under given circumstances. Women were not included in my moral
-speculations as among those who were to receive strict justice—not
-pretty women. In that, perhaps, I was right: they did not always wish
-it. I was anxious to meet with many of them, as many as I might, and I
-would have conducted myself as joyously as their own consciences would
-permit. That I was to be in any way punished for this, or that the world
-would severely censure me for it, I did not yet believe. Other boys did
-it; they were constantly talking about it. The world—the world of youth
-at least—seemed to be concerned with libertinage. Why should not I be?
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-NO picture of these my opening days in St. Louis would be of the
-slightest import if I could not give a fairly satisfactory portrait of
-myself and of the blood-moods or so-called spiritual aspirations which
-were animating me. At that time I had already attained my full height,
-six feet one-and-one-half inches, and weighed only one hundred and
-thirty-seven pounds, so you can imagine my figure. Aside from one eye
-(the right) which was turned slightly outward from the line of vision,
-and a set of upper teeth which because of their exceptional size were
-crowded and so stood out too much, I had no particular blemish except a
-general homeliness of feature. It was a source of worry to me all the
-time, because I imagined that it kept me from being interesting to
-women; which, apparently, was not true—not to all women at least.
-
-Spiritually I was what might be called a poetic melancholiac, crossed
-with a vivid materialistic lust of life. I doubt if any human being,
-however poetic or however material, ever looked upon the scenes of this
-world, material or spiritual, so called, with a more covetous eye. My
-body was blazing with sex, as well as with a desire for material and
-social supremacy—to have wealth, to be in society—and yet I was too
-cowardly to make my way with women readily; rather, they made their way
-with me. Love of beauty as such—feminine beauty first and foremost, of
-course—was the dominating characteristic of all my moods: joy in the
-arch of an eyebrow, the color of an eye, the flame of a lip or cheek,
-the romance of a situation, spring, trees, flowers, evening walks, the
-moon, the roundness of an arm or a hip, the delicate turn of an ankle or
-a foot, spring odors, moonlight under trees, a lighted lamp over a dark
-lawn—what tortures have I not endured because of these! My mind was
-riveted on what love could bring me, once I had the prosperity and fame
-which somehow I foolishly fancied commanded love; and at the same time I
-was horribly depressed by the thought that I should never have them,
-never; and that thought, for the most part, has been fulfilled.
-
-In addition to this I was filled with an intense sympathy for the woes
-of others, life in all its helpless degradation and poverty, the
-unsatisfied dreams of people, their sweaty labors, the things they were
-compelled to endure—nameless impositions, curses, brutalities—the things
-they would never have, their hungers, thirsts, half-formed dreams of
-pleasure, their gibbering insanities and beaten resignations at the end.
-I have sobbed dry sobs looking into what I deemed to be broken faces and
-the eyes of human failures. A shabby tumbledown district or doorway, a
-drunken woman being arraigned before a magistrate, a child dying in a
-hospital, a man or woman injured in an accident—the times unbidden tears
-have leaped to my eyes and my throat has become parched and painful over
-scenes of the streets, the hospitals, the jails! I have cried so often
-that I have felt myself to be a weakling; at other times I have been
-proud of them and of my great rages against fate and the blundering,
-inept cruelty of life. If there is a God, conscious and personal, and He
-considers the state of man and the savagery of His laws and His
-indifferences, how He must smile at little insect man’s estimate of Him!
-It is so flattering, so fatuously unreasoning, that only a sardonic
-devil could enjoy it.
-
-I was happy enough in my work although at times despondent lest all the
-pleasures that can come to youth from health, courage, wealth and
-opportunity should fail me while I was working and trying to get
-somewhere. I had health yet I imagined I had not because I was not a
-Sandow, an athlete, and my stomach, due to an undiscovered appendix,
-gave me some trouble. As to courage, when I examined myself in that
-direction I fancied that I had none at all. Would I slip out if a
-dangerous brawl were brewing anywhere? Certainly. Well, then, I was a
-coward. Could I stand up and defend myself against a man of my own
-height and weight? I doubted it, particularly if he were well-trained.
-In consequence, I was again a coward. There was no hope for me among
-decently courageous men. Could I play tennis, baseball, football? No;
-not successfully. Assuredly I was a weakling of the worst kind. Nearly
-everybody could do those things, and nearly all youths were far more
-proficient in all the niceties of life than was I: manners, dancing,
-knowledge of dress and occasions. Hence I was a fool. The dullest
-athlete of the least proficiency could overcome me; the most minute
-society man, if socially correct, was infinitely my superior. Hence what
-had I to hope for? And when it came to wealth and opportunity, how poor
-I seemed! No girl of real beauty and force would have anything to do
-with a man who was not a success; and so there I was, a complete failure
-to begin with.
-
-The aches and pains that went with all this, the amazing depression, all
-but suicidal. How often have I looked into comfortable homes and wished
-that some kindly family would give me shelter! And yet half knowing that
-had it been offered I would have refused it. How often have I looked
-through the windows of some successful business firm and wished I had
-achieved ownership or stewardship, a position similar to that of any of
-the officers and managers inside! To be president or vice-president or
-secretary of something, some great thrashing business of some kind.
-Great God, how sublime it seemed! And yet if I had only known how
-centrally controlling the tool of journalism could be made! It mattered
-not then that I was doing fairly well, that most of my employers had
-been friendly and solicitous as to my welfare, that the few girls I had
-approached had responded freely enough—still I was a failure.
-
-I rapidly became familiar with the city news department of the
-_Globe-Democrat_. Its needs, aside from great emergencies, were simple
-enough: interviews, the doings of conventions of various kinds
-(wholesale grocers, wholesale hardware men, wholesale druggists), the
-plans of city politicians when those could be discovered, the news of
-the courts, jails, city hospitals, police courts, the deaths of
-well-known people, the goings-on in society, special functions of one
-kind and another, fires, robberies, defalcations. For the first few
-weeks nothing of importance happened. I was given the task evenings of
-looking in at the North Seventh Street police station, a slow district,
-to see if anything had happened, and was naturally able to add to my
-depression by contemplating the life about there. Again, I attended
-various churches to hear sermons, interviewed the Irish boss of the
-city, Edward Butler, an amazing person with a head like that of a gnome
-or ogre, who immediately took a great fancy to me and wanted me to come
-and see him again (which I did once).
-
-He has always stuck in my mind as one of the odd experiences of my life.
-He lived in a small red brick family dwelling just beyond the
-prostitution area of St. Louis, which stretched out along Chestnut
-Street between Twelfth and Twenty-second, and was the city’s sole
-garbage contractor (out of which he was supposed to have made countless
-thousands) as well as one of its principal horse-shoers, having many
-blacksmithing shops, and was incidentally its Democratic or Republican
-boss, I forget which, a position he retained until his death.
-
-I first saw him at a political meeting during my first few weeks in St.
-Louis, and the manner in which he arose, the way in which he addressed
-his hearers, the way in which they listened to him, all impressed me.
-Subsequently, being sent to his house, I found him in his small front
-parlor, a yellow plush album on the marble-topped center table,
-horse-hair furniture about the room, a red carpet, crayon enlargements
-of photographs of his mother and father. But what force in the man! What
-innate gentility of manner and speech! He seemed like a prince disguised
-as a blacksmith.
-
-“So ye’ve come to interview me,” he said soothingly. “Ye’re from the
-_Globe-Democrat_—well, that paper’s no particular friend of mine, but ye
-can’t help that, can ye?” and then he told me whatever it was I wanted
-to know, giving me no least true light, you may be sure. At the
-conclusion he offered me a drink, which I refused. As I was about to
-leave he surveyed me pleasantly and tolerantly.
-
-“Ye’re a likely lad,” he said, laying an immense hand on one of my lean
-shoulders, “and ye’re jest startin’ out in life, I can see that. Well,
-be a good boy. Ye’re in the newspaper business, where ye can make
-friends or enemies just as ye choose, and if ye behave yerself right ye
-can just as well make friends. Come an’ see me some time. I like yer
-looks. I’m always here av an evenin’, when I’m not attendin’ a meetin’
-av some kind, right here in this little front room, or in the kitchen
-with me wife. I might be able to do something fer ye sometime—remember
-that. I’ve a good dale av influence here. Ye’ll have to write what ye’re
-told, I know that, so I won’t be offended. So come an’ see me, an’
-remember that I want nothin’ av ye,” and he gently ushered me out and
-closed the door behind me.
-
-But I never went, at least not for anything for myself. The one time I
-asked him for a position for a friend who wanted to work on the local
-street-cars as a conductor he wrote across the letter: “Give this man
-what he wants.” It was wretchedly scrawled (the man brought it back to
-me before presenting it) and was signed “edward butler.” But the man was
-given the place at once.
-
-Although Butler was an earnest Catholic, he was supposed to control and
-tax the vice of the city; which charge may or may not have been true.
-One of his sons owned and managed the leading vaudeville house in the
-city, a vulgar burlesque theater, at which the ticket taker was Frank
-James, brother of the amazing Jesse who terrorized Missouri and the
-Southwest as an outlaw at one time and enriched endless dime novel
-publishers afterward. As dramatic critic of the _Globe-Democrat_ later I
-often saw him. Butler’s son, a more or less stodgy type of Tammany
-politician, popular with a certain element in St. Louis, was later
-elected to Congress.
-
-I wrote up a labor meeting or two, and at one of these saw for the first
-time Terence V. Powderly, the head of the dominant labor
-organization—the Knights of Labor. This meeting was held in a dingy hall
-at Ninth or Tenth and Walnut, a dismal institution known as the
-Workingman’s Club or some such thing as that, which had a single red
-light hanging out over its main entrance. This long, lank leader,
-afterward so much discussed in the so-called “capitalistic press,” was
-sitting on a wretched platform surrounded by local labor leaders and
-discussed in a none too brilliant way, I thought, the need of a closer
-union between all classes of labor.
-
-In regard to all matters relating to the rights of labor and capital I
-was at this time perfectly ignorant. Although I was a laborer myself in
-a fair sense of the word I was more or less out of sympathy with
-laborers, not as a class struggling for their “rights” (I did not know
-what their rights or wrongs were) but merely as individuals. I thought,
-I suppose, that they were not quite as _nice_ as I was, not as refined
-and superior in their aspirations, and therefore not as worthy or at
-least not destined to succeed as well as I. I even then felt dimly what
-subsequently, after many rough disillusionments, I came to accept as a
-fact: that some people are born dull, some shrewd, some wise and some
-undisturbedly ignorant, some tender and some savage, _ad infinitum_.
-Some are silk purses and others sows’ ears and cannot be made the one
-into the other by any accident of either poverty or wealth. At this
-time, however, after listening to Mr. Powderly and taking notes of his
-speech, I came to the conclusion that all laborers had a just right to
-much better pay and living conditions, and in consequence had a great
-cause and ought to stick together. I also saw that Mr. Powderly was a
-very shrewd man and something of a hypocrite, very simple-seeming and
-yet not so. Something he said or did—I believe it was a remark to the
-effect that “I always say a little prayer whenever I have a stitch in my
-side”—irritated me. It was so suave, so English-chapel-people-like; and
-he was an Englishman, as I recall it. Anyhow, I came away disliking him
-and his local labor group, and yet liking his cause and believing in it,
-and wrote as favorable a comment as I dared. The _Globe_ was not
-pro-corporation exactly, at least I did not understand so, and yet it
-was by no means pro-workingman either. If I recall correctly, it merely
-gave the barest facts and let it go at that.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-MY connection with the _Globe-Democrat_ had many aspects, chief among
-which was my rapidly developing consciousness of the significance of
-journalism and its relation to the life of the nation and the state. My
-journalistic career had begun only five months before and preceding that
-I had had no newspaper experience of any kind. The most casual reader of
-a newspaper would have been as good as I in many respects.
-
-But here I rather sensed the significance of it all, the power of a man
-like McCullagh, for instance, for good or evil, the significance of a
-man like Butler in this community. I still had a lot to learn: the
-extent of graft in connection with politics in a city, the power of a
-newspaper to make sentiment in a State and so help to carry it for a
-Governor or a President. The political talk I heard on the part of one
-newspaper man and another “doing politics,” as well as the leading
-editorials in this and other papers, which just at this time were
-concerned with a coming mayoralty fight and a feud in the State between
-rival leaders of the Republican party, completely cleared up the
-situation for me. I listened to all the gossip, read the papers
-carefully, wondered over the personalities and oddities of State
-governments in connection with our national government. Just over the
-river in Illinois everybody was concerned with the administration of
-John P. Altgeld, governor of the State, and whether he would pardon the
-Chicago anarchists whose death sentences, recorded a few years before,
-had been commuted to life imprisonment. On this side of the river
-everybody was interested in the administration of William Joel Stone,
-who was the governor. A man by the name of Cyrus H. Walbridge was
-certain to be the next mayor if the Republicans won, and according to
-the _Globe_, they ought to win because the city needed to be reformed.
-The local Democratic board of aldermen was supposed to be the most
-corrupt in all America (how many cities have yearly thought that, each
-of its governing body, since the nation began!), and Edward Noonan, the
-mayor, was supposed to be the lowest and vilest creature that ever stood
-up in shoes. The chief editorials of the _Globe_ were frequently
-concerned with blazing denunciations of him. As far as I could make out,
-he had joined with various corporations and certain members of council
-to steal from the city, sell its valuable franchises for a song and the
-like. He had also joined with the police in helping bleed the saloons,
-gambling dens and houses of prostitution. Gambling and prostitution were
-never so rampant as now, so our good paper stated. The good people of
-the city should join and help save the city from destruction.
-
-How familiar it all sounds, doesn’t it? Well, this was 1892, and I have
-heard the same song every year since, in every American city in which I
-have ever been. Gambling, prostitution, graft, _et cetera_, must be
-among our national weaknesses, not?
-
-Just the same, in so far as this particular office and the country about
-St. Louis were concerned, Joseph McCullagh was of immense significance
-to his staff and the natives. Plainly he was like a god to many of them,
-the farmers and residents in small towns in States like Texas, Iowa,
-Missouri, Arkansas and in Southern Illinois, where his paper chiefly
-circulated, for they came to the office whenever they were in the city
-merely to get a glimpse of him. He was held in high esteem by his staff,
-and was one of the few editors of his day who really deserved to be.
-Within his office he had an adoring group of followers, which included
-everyone from the managing editor down. “The chief says——,” “The chief
-thinks——,” “The old man looks a little grouchy this morning—what do you
-think?” “Gee, wait’ll the old man hears about that! He’ll be hopping!”
-“That ought to please the old man, don’t you think? He likes a bit of
-good writing.” Yet for all this chatter, “the old man” never seemed to
-notice much of anything or have much to say to any one, except possibly
-to one or two of his leading editorial writers and his telegraph editor.
-If he ever conferred with his stout city editor for more than one moment
-at a time I never saw or heard of it. And if anything seen or heard by
-anybody in connection with him was not whispered about the reporters’
-room before nightfall or daybreak it was a marvel of concealment.
-Occasionally he might be seen ambling down the hall to the lavatory or
-to the room of his telegraph chief, but most always it was merely to
-take his carriage or walk to the Southern Hotel at one o’clock for his
-luncheon or at six for his dinner, his derby hat pulled over his eyes,
-his white socks gleaming, a cane in his hand, a cigar between his lips.
-If he ever had a crony it was not known in the reporters’ room. He was a
-solitary or eccentric, and a few years later, as I have said, he leaped
-to his death from the second story window of his home, where he had
-lived in as much privacy and singularity as a Catholic priest.
-
-There were silent figures slipping about—Captain King, a chief editorial
-writer; Casper S. Yost, a secretary of the corporation, assistant editor
-and what not; several minor editors, artists, reporters, the city
-editor, the business manager—but no one or all of them collectively
-seemed to amount to a hill of beans. Only “the old man” or J. B., as he
-was occasionally referred to, counted. Under him the paper had
-character, succinctness and point, not only in its news but in its
-editorial columns. Although it was among the conventional of the
-conventional of its day (what American newspaper of that period could
-have been otherwise?), still it had an awareness which made one feel
-that “the old man” knew much more than he ever wrote. He seemed to like
-to have it referred to as “the great religious daily” and often quoted
-that phrase, but with the saving grace of humor behind it.
-
-And he seemed to understand just how to supply that region with all it
-desired in the shape of news. Though in the main the paper published
-mere gossip, oddities about storms, accidents, eccentricities, still
-there was something about the way the thing was done, the crisp and
-brief manner in which the material was edited, which made it
-palatable—very much so, I should say, to the small-town store-lounger or
-owner—and nearly all had humor, naïveté or pathos. The drift of things
-politically was always presented in leaders in such a way that even I, a
-mere stripling, began to get a sense of things national and
-international. States, the adjacent ones in particular, which supplied
-the bulk of the _Globe’s_ circulation, were given special attention and
-yet in such a way as not to irritate the general reader, leaving it
-optional with him whether he should read or not. The editorials,
-sometimes informing, sometimes threatening and directive, sometimes mere
-fol-de-rol and foolery, and intended as such, had a delicious whimsy in
-them. Occasionally “the old man” himself wrote one and then everybody
-sat up and took notice. One could easily single it out even if it had
-not been passed around, as it nearly always was. “The old man wrote
-that.” “Have you read the old man’s editorial in this morning’s paper?
-Gee! Read it!” Then you expected brilliant, biting words, a luminous
-phraseology, sentences that cracked like a whip, and you were rarely
-disappointed. The paragraphs exploded at times, burst like a torpedo; at
-others the whole thing ended like music, the deep, sonorous bass of an
-organ. “The old man” could write, there was no doubt of that. He also
-seemed to believe what he wrote, for the time being anyhow. That was why
-his staff, to a man, revered him. He was a real editor, as contrasted
-with your namby-pamby “business man” masquerading as editor. He had been
-a great reporter and war correspondent in his day, one of the men who
-were with Farragut on the Mississippi and with Sherman and others
-elsewhere during the great Civil War.
-
-Wandering about this building at this time was an old red-faced,
-red-nosed German, with a protuberant stomach, very genial, dull and
-apparently unimportant. He was, as I later learned, the real owner of
-the paper, the major portion of the stock being in his name; and yet, as
-every one seemed to understand, he never dared pose as such but must
-slip about, as much overawed as the rest of us. I was a mere underling
-and new to the place, and yet I could see it. A more apologetic mien and
-a more obliging manner was never worn by any mortal, especially when he
-was in the vicinity of McCullagh’s office. His name was Daniel M.
-Hauser. For the most part he wandered about the building like a ghost,
-seeming to wish to be somebody or to say something but absolutely
-without meaning. The short, stout Napoleonic editor ruled supreme.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By degrees I made friends with a number of those that worked here: Bob
-Hazard; Jock Bellairs, son of the Captain Bellairs who presided over the
-city zoo; Charlie Benson, and a long list of others whose names escape
-me now. Of all those on the city staff I was inclined to like Hazard
-most, for he was a personage, a character, quick, gay, intellectual,
-literary, forceful. Why he never came to greater literary fame I do not
-know, for he seemed to have all the flair and feeling necessary for the
-task. He was an only son of some man who had long been a resident of St.
-Louis and was himself well known about town. He lived with a mother and
-sister in southwest St. Louis in a small cottage which always pleased me
-because of its hominess, and supported that mother and sister in loyal
-son-like fashion. I had not been long on the paper before I was invited
-there to dinner, and this in spite of a rivalry which was almost
-immediately and unconsciously set up between us the moment I arrived and
-which endured in a mild way even after our more or less allied literary
-interests had drawn us socially together. At his home I met his sister,
-a mere slip of a tow-headed girl, whom later on I saw in vaudeville as a
-headliner. Hazard I encountered years later as a blasé correspondent in
-Washington, representing a league of papers. He had then but newly
-completed a wild-West thriller, done in cold blood and with an eye to a
-quick sale. Assuming that I had influence with publishers and editors,
-he invoked my aid. I gave him such advice and such letters as I could.
-But only a few months later I read that Robert Hazard, well-known
-newspaper correspondent, living with his wife and child in some
-Washington residence section, had placed a revolver to his temple and
-ended it all. Why, I have often wondered. He was seemingly so well
-fitted mentally and physically to enjoy life.... Or is it mental fitness
-that really kills the taste for life?
-
-I would not dwell on him at such length save for some other things which
-I propose later to narrate. For the moment I wish to turn to another
-individual, “Jock” Bellairs, who impressed me as a most curious compound
-of indifference, wisdom, literary and political sense and a hard social
-cunning. He had a capacity for (as some one in the office once phrased
-it) a “lewd and profane life.” He was the chief police reporter at a
-building known as the “Four Courts,” an institution which housed, among
-other things, four judicial chambers of differing jurisdiction, as well
-as the county jail, the city detention wards, the office of the district
-attorney, the chief of police, chief of detectives, the city attorney,
-and a “reporters’ room” where all the local reporters were permitted to
-gather and were furnished paper, ink, tables.
-
-A more dismal atmosphere than that which prevailed in this building, and
-in similar institutions in all the cities in which I ever worked, would
-be hard to find. In Chicago it was the city hall and county courthouse,
-with its police attachment; in Pittsburgh the county jail; in New York
-the Tombs and Criminal Courts Building, with police headquarters as a
-part of its grim attachment. I know of nothing worse. These places,
-essential as they are, are always low in tone, vile, and defile nearly
-all they touch. They have a corrupting effect upon those with whom they
-come in contact and upon those who are employed to administer law or
-“justice.” Harlots, criminals, murderers, buzzard lawyers, political
-judges, detectives, police agents, and court officials generally—what a
-company! I have never had anything to do with one of these institutions
-in any city as reporter, plaintiff or assisting friend, without sensing
-anew the brutality and horror of legal administration. The petty
-tyrannies that are practiced by underlings and minor officials! The
-“grafting” of low, swinish brains! The tawdry pomp of ignorant
-officials! The cruelty and cunning of agents of justice! “Set a thief to
-catch a thief.” Clothe these officials as you will, in whatsoever
-uniforms of whatsoever splendor or sobriety; give them desks of rosewood
-and walls of flowered damask; entitle them as you choose, High and
-Mightiness This and That—still they remain the degraded things they have
-always been, equals of the criminals and the crimes they are supposed to
-do away with. It cannot be helped; it is a law of chemistry, of
-creation. Offal breeds maggots to take care of it, to nullify its
-stench; carrion has its buzzards, carrion crows and condors. So with
-criminals and those petty officials of the lower courts and jails who
-are set to catch them.
-
-But this is a wandering paragraph and has little to do with “Jock”
-Bellairs, except that he was of and yet not of this particular
-atmosphere. The first time I saw him I felt compelled to study him, for
-he seemed somehow to suggest this atmosphere to which he was appointed
-as reporter. He was in a way, and yet with pleasing reservations, the
-man for this task. He had a sense of humor and a devil-may-care approach
-to all this. Whenever anything of real import broke loose he was always
-the one to be called upon for information or aid, because he was in
-close touch with the police and detectives, who were his cronies and
-ready to aid him. And whenever anything happened that was beyond his
-power to manage he called up the office for aid. On more than one
-occasion, some “mystery” coming up, I was the one delegated to help him,
-the supposition being that it was likely to yield a “big” story, bigger
-than he had time for, being a court fixture. I then sought him out at
-the Four Courts and was given what he knew, whereupon I began
-investigations on my own account. Nearly always I found him lolling
-about with other reporters and detectives, a chair tilted back, possibly
-a game of cards going on between him and the reporters of other papers,
-a bottle of whisky in his pocket—“to save time,” as he once amusingly
-remarked—and a girl or two present, friends of one or other of these
-newspaper men, their “dollies.” He would rise and explain to me just
-what was going on, whisper confidentially in my ear the name of some
-other newspaper man who had been put on the case by one of the other
-papers, perhaps ask me to mention the name of some shabby policeman or
-detective who had been assigned to the case, one who was “a good fellow”
-and who could be depended upon to help us in the future.
-
-I often had to smile, he was so naïve and yet so wise in his position,
-so matter-of-fact and commonplace about it all. Sometimes he would give
-me the most befuddling information as to how the news got out: he and
-John Somebody or Other were down at Maggie Sanders’s place in Chestnut
-Street the other night, where he heard from a detective, who was telling
-somebody else, who told somebody else, and so on. Then, if there was a
-prisoner in the case, he would take me to him, or tell me where some
-individual or the body was to be found if there was a body. Then, after
-I had gone about my labors, he would return to his card-game, his girl
-and his bottle. There were stories afloat of outings with these girls,
-or the using of some empty room in this building for immoral purposes,
-with the consent of complaisant officials. And all about, of course, was
-this atmosphere of detained criminals, cases at trial, hurrying parents
-and members of families, weeping mothers and sisters—a mess.
-
-On an average of twice a month during my stay in St. Louis I was called
-to this building on one errand and another, and always I went with a
-sicky and sinking sensation, and always I came away from it breathing a
-sigh of relief. To me it was a horrible place, a pest-hole of suffering
-and error and trickery, and yet necessary enough, I know.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-I WAS walking down the marble hall of our editorial floor one day not
-long after I arrived when I noted on a door at its extreme end the
-words: “Art Department.” The _Globe_ in Chicago had no art department,
-at least I never discovered it. The mere word _art_, although I had no
-real understanding of it, was fascinating to me. Was it not on every
-tongue? A man who painted or drew was an artist; Doré was one, for
-instance, and Rembrandt. (I classed the two together.) In Chicago I had
-of course known that each paper should have an art department, and that
-interested me in this one. What were artists like? I had never known
-one.
-
-Another day I was on my way to the lavatory when I discovered that I had
-come away without the key, a duplicate of which every department
-possessed. The art department door being nearest, I entered to borrow
-theirs. Behold, three distinctive if not distinguished looking
-individuals at work upon drawings laid upon drawing-boards. Two of these
-looked up, the one nearest me with a look of criticism in his eye, I
-thought. The one who answered me when I asked for the key, and who
-swiftly arose to get it for me, was short and stocky, with bushy,
-tramp-like hair and beard. There was something that savored of opera
-bouffe about him, and yet, as I could see, he took himself seriously
-enough. There was something pleasing in his voice too as he said,
-“Certainly; here it is,” and smiled.
-
-The one who had looked up at first and frowned but made no move was much
-less cheery. I recall the long, thin, sallow face, the coal-black hair,
-long and coarse, which was parted most carefully in the middle and
-slicked down at the sides and back over the ears until it looked as
-though it had been oiled, and the eyes, black and small and querulous
-and petulant, as was the mouth, with drawn lines at each corner, as
-though he had endured much pain. That long, loose, flowing black tie!
-And that soft white or blue or green or brown linen shirt!—would any
-Quartier Latin denizen have been without them? He had thin, pale bony
-hands, long and graceful, and an air of “touch thou me not, O defiled
-one.” The man appealed to and repelled me at a glance, appealing to me
-much more later, and ever remained a human humoresque, something to
-coddle, endure, decipher, laugh at. Surely Dick Wood, or “Richard Wood,
-Artist,” as his card read, might safely be placed in any pantheon of the
-unconventionally ridiculous and delicious.
-
-This visit provided a mere glance, however. When I returned the key I
-was given no encouragement. A little later, my ability to write having
-been fairly established, I was given a rather large order for one so
-new: a double-page spread, with illustrations, for the Sunday issue,
-relating to the new depot then under construction. I was told to see
-that the art department supplied several drawings—one in particular of a
-proposed iron and glass train-shed which was to cover thirty-two tracks.
-Also one of a clock-tower two hundred and thirty-two feet high. This
-assignment seemed a very honorable one, since it was to carry drawings,
-and I went about it with energy and enthusiasm. It was Mitchell who told
-me to look to the art department for suitable illustrations.
-
-Evidently the art department knew all about it before my arrival, for
-upon inquiry I found that P. B. McCord, he of the tramp-like hair and
-whiskers, was scheduled to make the pictures. His manner pleased me. He
-was so cordial, so helpful. Together we visited the depot, and a few
-days later he called upon me in the reportorial room to ask me to come
-and see what he had done. Having in regard to most things the same point
-of view, we were soon the best of friends. A more or less affectionate
-relationship was then and there established, which endured until his
-death sixteen years later. During all of that period we were scarcely
-out of touch with each other, and through him I was destined to achieve
-some of my sanest conceptions of life. (See _Peter_. Twelve Men.)
-
-And the amazing Wood! I have never encountered another like him,
-possibly because for years I have not been associated with young people,
-who are frequently full of eccentricities. A more romantic ass than Wood
-never lived, nor one with better sense in many ways. In regard to
-newspaper drawing he was only a fairly respectable craftsman, if so
-much, but in other ways he was fascinating enough. He and McCord were
-compelled at that time to use the old chalk plate process for much of
-their hurried work, a thing which required the artist to scratch with a
-steel upon a chalk-covered surface, blowing the chalk away from his
-outlines as he made them. This created a dust which both McCord and Wood
-complained of as being disagreeable and “hard on the lungs.” Wood, who
-pretended to be dying of consumption, and did die of it sixteen years
-later within a month of his friend McCord, made an awful row about it,
-although he could easily have done much to mend matters by taking a
-little exercise and keeping out of doors as much as possible; but he
-preferred to hover over a radiator or before a fire. Always, on every
-occasion, he was given to playing the rôle of the martyr.
-
-Spiritually he was morbid, as was I, only he showed it much more in his
-manner. He had much the same desire as I had at the time: to share in
-the splendors of marble halls and palaces and high places generally;
-and, like myself, he had but little chance. Fresh from Bloomington,
-Illinois, a commonplace American town, he was obsessed by the
-commonplace dream of marrying rich and coming into the imaginary
-splendors of that west end life of St. Louis which was so interesting to
-both of us. Far more than myself, I am sure, he seemed to be seething
-with an inward rebellion against the fact that he was poor, not included
-in the exclusive pleasures of the rich. At the same time he was glowing
-with a desire to make other people imagine that he was or soon would be
-of them. What airs! what shades of manner! He, like myself, was forever
-dreaming of some gorgeous maiden, rich, beautiful, socially elect, who
-was to solve all his troubles for him. But there was this difference
-between us, or so I imagined at the time, Dick being an artist, rather
-remote and disdainful in manner and handsome as well as poetic and
-better-positioned than myself, as I fancied, was certain to achieve this
-gilded and crystal state whereas I, not being so handsome, nor an
-artist, nor sufficiently poetic, could hardly aspire to so gorgeous an
-end. I might perchance arrive at some such goal if I sought it eagerly
-enough, but the probabilities were that I should not unless I waited a
-long while, and besides, my dreams and plans varied so swiftly from day
-to day that I couldn’t be sure what I wanted to do, whereas Wood, being
-so stable in this, that and the other (all the things I was not), was
-certain to arrive quickly.
-
-Sometimes around dinner time when I would see him leaving the office
-arrayed in the latest mode, as I assumed—dark blue suit, patent leather
-boots, dark, round, soft felt hat, loose tie blowing idly about his
-neck, neat thin cane in his hand—I was fairly convinced that this
-much-anticipated fortune had already arrived or was about to arrive,
-this very evening perhaps, and that I should never see him more, never
-even be permitted to speak to him. Somewhere (out in the west end, of
-course) was _the_ girl, wondrous, rich, beautiful, with whom he was to
-elope and be forgiven by her wealthy parents. Even now he was on his way
-to her, while I, poor oaf that I was, was moiling here over some trucky
-task. Would my ship never come in, my great day arrive?
-
-And Wood was just the type of person who would take infinite delight in
-creating such an impression. Ten years later, when McCord and I were in
-the East together and Wood was still in St. Louis, we were never weary
-of discussing this histrionic characteristic of his, laughing
-sympathetically with and at him. Later he married—but I shall not
-anticipate. Mentally, at this time, he was living a dream and in so far
-as possible acting it, playing the part of some noble Algernon Charles
-Claude Vere de Vere, heir to or affianced to some maid with an immense
-fortune which was to make them both eternally happy and allow him to
-travel, pose, patronize as he chose. A laudable dream, verily.
-
-But I—I confess that I was bitter with envy. What, never to shine thus?
-Never to be an artist? Never to have beauty in my lap? For me there were
-other stings, in connection with him—stings sharp as serpents’ teeth.
-Dick had a wrist-watch, the envy of my youthful days (oh, wondrous
-watch!) Also a scarf pin made of some strange stone brought from the
-Orient and with a cabalistic sign or word on it (enough in itself to
-entice any heiress)—-and that _boutonnière_ of violets! He was never
-without them.
-
-And along with all this, that sad, wan, reproachful, dying smile! And
-that mysterious something of manner which seemed to say: “My boy! My
-boy! The things you will never know!”
-
-And yet after a time Dick condescended to receive me into his confidence
-and into his “studio,” a very picturesque affair, situated in the heart
-of the downtown district. Also he condescended to bestow upon me some of
-his dreams as well as his friendly presence; a thing which exalted me,
-being so new to this art world. I was _permitted_ (note the word) to
-gather dimly, as neophyte from priest, the faintest outlines of these
-wondrous dreams of his, and to share with him the hope that they might
-be realized. I was so set up by this great favor that I felt certain
-great things must flow from it. Assuredly we three could do great things
-if only we would stick together. But was I worthy? There were already
-rumors of books, plays, stories, poems, to come from a certain mighty
-pen—as a matter of fact, it was already hard upon the task of writing
-them—which were to set the world aflame by-and-by. Certain editors in
-New York were already receiving (and sending back, alas!) certain
-preliminary masterpieces along with carefully worded suggestions in
-regard to slight but necessary changes which would perfect them and so
-inaugurate the new era. Certain writers, certain poets, certain
-playwrights were already better than any that had ever been—the best
-ever, in short. Dick knew, of course, and I was allowed to share this
-knowledge, to be thrilled by it.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-ONCE the ice was broken in this way intimacy with these twain came fast
-enough, although I never became quite as intimate with Dick as I did
-with Peter, largely because I could not think him as important. Wood had
-some feminine characteristics; he could be very jealous of anybody’s
-interest in Peter as well as Peter’s interest in anybody else. He was
-big enough, at times, to see the pettiness of this and try to rise above
-it, but at other times it would show. Years later McCord confided to me
-in the most amused way how, when I first appeared on the scene, Dick at
-once began to belittle me and to resent my obvious desire to “break in,”
-as he phrased it, these two, according to Dick, having established some
-excluding secret union.
-
-But the union was not exclusive, in so far as Peter was concerned.
-Shortly after my arrival young Hartung had begun running into the art
-room (so Peter told me) with amazing tales of the new man, his exploits
-in Chicago. I had been sent for to come to this paper—that was the great
-thing. I was vouched for by no less a person than John T. McEnnis, one
-of the famous newspaper men of St. Louis and a former city editor of
-this same paper; also by a Mr. Somebody (the Washington correspondent of
-the paper), for whom I had worked in Chicago on the World’s Fair. He had
-hurried to the art department with his tales of me, wishing, I fancy, to
-be on friendly and happy terms there. Dick, however, considered
-Hartung’s judgment as less than nothing, himself an upstart, a mere
-office rat; to have him endeavor to introduce anybody was too much. At
-first he received me very coldly, then finding me perhaps better than he
-thought, he hastened to make friends with me.
-
-The halcyon hours with these two that followed. Not infrequently Peter
-and Dick would dine together at some downtown restaurant; or, if a rush
-of work were on and they were compelled to linger, they had a late
-supper in some German saloon. It was Peter who first invited me to one
-of these late séances, and later Wood did the same, but this last was
-based on another development in connection with myself which I should
-narrate here.
-
-The office of the _Globe_ proved a sprouting-bed for incipient literary
-talent. Hazard had, some fifteen or eighteen months before, in company
-with another newspaper man of whom later I heard amazing things, written
-a novel entitled _Theo_, which was plainly a bog-fire kindled by those
-blazing French suns, Zola and Balzac. The scene was laid in Paris
-(imagine two Western newspaper men who had never been out of America
-writing a novel of French life and laying it in Paris!) and had much of
-the atmosphere of Zola’s _Nana_, plus the delicious idealism of Balzac’s
-_The Great Man from the Provinces_. Never having read either of these
-authors at this time, I did not see the similarity, but later I saw it
-plainly. One or both of these men had fed up on the French realists to
-such an extent that they were able to create the illusion of France (for
-me at least) and at the same time to fire me with a desire to create
-something, perhaps a novel of this kind but preferably a play. It seemed
-intensely beautiful to me at the time, this book, with its frank
-pictures of raw, greedy, sensual human nature, and its open pictures of
-self-indulgence and vice.
-
-The way this came about was interesting but I would not relate it save
-that it had such a marked effect on me. I was sitting in the city
-reportorial room later one gloomy December afternoon, having returned
-from a fruitless assignment, when a letter was handed me. It was
-postmarked Chicago and addressed in the handwriting of Alice. Up to then
-I had allowed matters to drift, having, as I have said, written but one
-letter in which I apologized rather indifferently for having come away
-without seeing her. But my conscience had been paining me so much that
-when I saw her writing I started. I tore the letter open and read with a
-sense of shame:
-
- “Dear Theo:
-
- “I got your letter the day you left, but then it was too late. I
- know what you say is true, about your being called away, and I
- don’t blame you. I’m only sorry our quarrel” (there had been
- none save of my making) “didn’t let you come to see me before
- you left. Still, that was my fault too, I guess. I can’t blame
- you entirely for that.
-
- “Anyhow, Theo, that isn’t what I’m writing you for. You know
- that you haven’t been just the same to me as you once were. I
- know how you feel. I have felt it too. I want to know if you
- won’t send me back the letters I wrote you. You won’t want them
- now. Please send them, Theo, and believe I am as ever your
- friend,
-
- “ALICE.”
-
-There was a little blank space on the paper, and then:
-
- “I stood by the window last night and looked out on the street.
- The moon was shining and those dead trees over the way were
- waving in the wind. I saw the moon on that little pool of water
- over in the field. It looked like silver. Oh, Theo, I wish I
- were dead.”
-
-As I read this I jumped up and clutched the letter. The pathos of it cut
-me to the quick. To think I should have left her so! To think I should
-be here and she there! Why hadn’t I written? Why had I shilly-shallied
-these many days? Of course she wished to die. And I—what of me?
-
-I went over the situation and tried to figure out what I should do.
-Should I send for her? Twenty dollars a week was very little for two. My
-legitimate expenses made a total of eleven a week. I wished to keep
-myself looking well, to have a decent room, to eat three fair meals a
-day. And I was in no position to return to Chicago, where I had earned
-less. Then my new friendships with Wood and McCord as well as with other
-newspaper men, nearly all of whom liked to drink, were costing me
-something extra; I could not associate with them without buying an
-occasional drink. I did not see where I was to save much or how I could
-support a wife. In addition, there was the newness of my position here.
-I could not very well leave it now, having just come from Chicago. By
-nature where things material of futurial were concerned I was timid, but
-little inclined to battle for my rights or desires, and consequently not
-often realizing them. I was in a trying situation, for I had, as I have
-said, let it appear to Alice that money was no object. With the vanity
-of youth, I had always talked of my good salary and comfortable
-position, and now that this salary and comfortable position were to be
-put to the test I did not know what to do about it. Honesty would have
-dictated a heartfelt confession, of course.
-
-But I made none. Instead I wavered between two horns of an
-ever-recurring dilemma. Sympathizing with the pain which Alice was
-suffering, and alive to my own loss of honor and happiness, still I
-hesitated to pull down the fine picture of myself which I had so
-artistically built up, to reveal myself as I really was, a man unable to
-marry on his present salary. If I had loved her more, if I had really
-respected her, if I had not looked upon her as one who might be so
-easily put aside, I would have done something about it. My natural
-tendency was to drift, to wait and see, suffering untold agonies in the
-meanwhile. This I was preparing to do now.
-
-These mental stresses were always sufficient, however, to throw me into
-a soulful mood. And now as I looked out of the window on the “fast
-widowing sky” it was with an ache that rivaled in intensity those
-melancholy moods we sometimes find interpreted by music. Indeed my heart
-was torn by the inextricable problems which life seemed ever to present
-and I fairly wrung my hands as I looked into the face of the hurrying
-world. How it was hastening away! How swiftly and insensibly my own life
-was slipping by! The few sweets which I had thus far tasted were always
-accompanied by such bitter repinings. No pleasure was without pain, as I
-had already seen, and life offered no solution. Only silence and the
-grave ended it all.
-
-My body was racked with a fine tremor, my brain ached. I went to my desk
-and took up a pencil. I sat looking into the face of the tangle as one
-might into the gathering front of a storm. Words moved in my brain, then
-bubbled, then marshaled themselves into curious lines and rhythms. I put
-my pencil to paper and wrote line after line.
-
-Presently I saw that I was writing a poem but that it was rough and
-needed modifying and polishing. I was in a great fever to change it and
-did so but more eager to go on with my idea, which was about this tangle
-of life. I became so moved and interested that I almost forgot Alice in
-the process. When I read it over it seemed but a poor reflection of the
-thoughts I had felt, the great sad mood I was in. Then I sat there,
-dissatisfied and unhappy, resolving to write Alice and tell her all.
-
-I took a pen and wrote her that I could not marry her now, that I was in
-no position to do so. Later, if I found myself in better shape
-financially, I would come back. I told her that I did not want to send
-back her letters, that I did not wish to think our love was at an end. I
-had not meant to run away. I closed by saying that I still loved her and
-that the picture she had painted of herself standing at the window in
-the moonlight had torn my heart. But I could not write it as effectually
-as I might have, for I was haunted by the idea that I should never keep
-my word. Something kept telling me that it was not wise, that I didn’t
-really want to.
-
-While I was writing Hazard came into the room and glanced over my
-shoulder to where the poem was lying. “What you doing, Dreiser? Writing
-poetry?”
-
-“Trying to,” I replied a little shamefacedly. “I don’t seem to be able
-to make much of it, though.” The while I was wondering at the novelty of
-being taken for a poet. It seemed such a fine thing to be.
-
-“There’s no money in it,” he observed helpfully. “You can’t sell ’em.
-I’ve written tons of ’em, but it don’t do any good. You’d better be
-putting your time on a book or a play.”
-
-A book or a play! I sat up. To be considered a writer, a dramatist—even
-a possible dramatist—raised me in my own estimation. Why, at this rate I
-might become one—who knows?
-
-“I know it isn’t profitable,” I said. “Still, it might be if I wrote
-them well enough. It would be a great thing to be a great poet.”
-
-Hazard smiled sardonically. From his pinnacle of twenty-six years such
-aspirations seemed ridiculous. I might be a good newspaper man (I think
-he was willing to admit that), but a poet!
-
-The discussion took the turn of book- and play-writing. He had written a
-book in connection with Young, I think his name was. He had lately been
-thinking of writing a play. He expatiated on the money there was to be
-made out of this, the great name some playwrights achieved. Look at
-Augustus Thomas now, who had once worked on the _Star_ here. One of his
-pieces was then running in St. Louis. Look at Henry Blossom, once a St.
-Louis society boy, one of whose books was now in the local bookstore
-windows, a hit. To my excited mind the city was teeming with brilliant
-examples. Eugene Field had once worked here, on this very paper; Mark
-Twain had idled about here for a time, drunk and hopeless; W. C. Brann
-had worked on and gone from this paper; William Marion Reedy the same.
-
-I returned to my desk after a time, greatly stirred by this
-conversation. My gloom was dissipated. Hazard had promised to let me
-read this book. This world was a splendid place for talent, I thought.
-It bestowed success and honor upon those who could succeed. Plays or
-books, or both, were the direct entrance to every joy which the heart
-could desire. Something of the rumored wonder and charm of the lives of
-successful playwrights came to me, their studios, their summer homes and
-the like. Here at last, then, was the equivalent of Dick’s wealthy girl!
-
-I sat thinking about plays somewhat modified in my grief over Alice for
-the nonce, but none the less aware of its tremendous sadness. I read
-over my poem and thought it good, even beautiful. I must be a poet! I
-copied it and put a duplicate in Alice’s letter, and folded my own copy
-and put it in my pocket, close to my heart. It seemed as though I had
-just forged a golden key to a world of beauty and light where sorrow and
-want could never be.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-THE central character of Hazard’s book was an actress, young and very
-beautiful. Her lover was a newspaper man, deeply in love with her and
-yet not faithful, in one instance anyhow. This brought about a Zolaesque
-scene in which she spanked another actress with a hairbrush. There was
-treacherous plotting on the part of somebody in regard to a local
-murder, which brought about the arrest and conviction of the newspaper
-man for something he knew nothing about. This entailed a great struggle
-on the part of Theo to save him, which resulted in her failure and his
-death on the guillotine. A priest figured in it in some way, grim,
-jesuitical.
-
-To this day some of the scenes of this book come back to me as having
-been forcefully done—the fight between the two actresses, for one thing,
-a midnight feast with several managers, the gallows scene, a confession.
-I am not sure of the name of the newspaper man who collaborated with
-Hazard on this work, but the picture of his death in an opium joint
-later, painted for me by Hazard, and the eccentricities of his daily
-life, stand out even now as Poe-like. He must have been blessed or
-cursed with some such temperament as that of Poe, dark, gloomy,
-reckless, poetic, for he was a dope-fiend and died of dope.
-
-Be that as it may, this posthumous work, never published, so far as I
-know, was the opening wedge for me into the realm of realism. Being
-distinctly imitative of Balzac and Zola, the method was new and to me
-impressive. It has always struck me as curious that the first novel
-written by an American that I read in manuscript should have been one
-which by reason of its subject matter and the puritanic character of the
-American mind could never be published. These two youths knew this.
-Hazard handed it to me with the statement: “Of course a thing like this
-could never be published over here. We’d have to get it done abroad.”
-That struck me as odd at the time—the fact that if one wrote a fine
-thing nevertheless because of an American standard I had not even
-thought of before, one might not get it published. How queer, I thought.
-Yet these two incipient artists had already encountered it. They had
-been overawed to the extent of thinking it necessary to write of French,
-not American life in terms of fact. Such things as they felt called upon
-to relate occurred only in France, never here—or at least such things,
-if done here, were never spoken of. I think it nothing less than tragic
-that these men, or boys, fresh, forceful, imbued with a burning desire
-to present life as they saw it, were thus completely overawed by the
-moral hypocrisy of the American mind and did not even dare to think of
-sending their novel to an American publisher. Hazard was deeply
-impressed with the futility of attempting to do anything with a book of
-that kind. The publishers wouldn’t stand for it. You couldn’t write
-about life as it was; you had to write about it as somebody else thought
-it was, the ministers and farmers and dullards of the home. Yet here he
-was, as was I, busy in a profession that was hourly revealing the fact
-that this sweetness and light code, this idea of a perfect world which
-contained neither sin nor shame for any save vile outcasts, criminals
-and vagrants, was the trashiest lie that was ever foisted upon an all
-too human world. Not a day, not an hour, but the pages of the very
-newspaper we were helping to fill with our scribbled observations were
-full of the most incisive pictures of the lack of virtue, honesty,
-kindness, even average human intelligence, not on the part of a few but
-of nearly everybody. Not a business, apparently, not a home, not a
-political or social organization or an individual but in the course of
-time was guilty of an infraction of some kind of this seemingly perfect
-and unbroken social and moral code. But in spite of all this, judging by
-the editorial page, the pulpit and the noble mouthings of the average
-citizen speaking for the benefit of his friends and neighbors, all men
-were honest—only they weren’t; all women were virtuous and without evil
-intent or design—but they weren’t; all mothers were gentle,
-self-sacrificing slaves, sweet pictures for songs and Sunday
-Schools—only they weren’t; all fathers were kind, affectionate, saving,
-industrious—only they weren’t. But when describing actual facts for the
-news columns, you were not allowed to indicate these things. Side by
-side with the most amazing columns of crimes of every kind and
-description would be other amazing columns of sweet mush about love,
-undying and sacrificial, editorials about the perfection of the American
-man, woman, child, his or her sweet deeds, intentions and the like—a
-wonderful dose. And all this last in the face of the other, which was
-supposed to represent the false state of things, merely passing
-indecencies, accidental errors that did not count. If a man like Hazard
-or myself had ventured to transpose a true picture of facts from the
-news columns of the papers, from our own reportorial experiences, into a
-story or novel, what a howl! Ostracism would have followed much more
-swiftly in that day than in this, for today turgid slush approximating
-at least some of the facts is tolerated. Fifteen years later Hazard told
-me he still had his book buried in a trunk somewhere, but by then he had
-turned to adventurous fiction, and a year later, as I have said, be blew
-his brains out.
-
-Just the same the book made a great impression on me! It gave me a great
-respect for Hazard, made me really fond of him. And it fixed my mind
-definitely on this matter of writing—not a novel, curiously, but a play,
-a form which from the first seemed easier for me and which I still
-consider so, one in which I work with greater ease than I do in the
-novel. I mentioned to Wood and McCord that Hazard and another man had
-written a novel and that I had read it. I must have enthused over it for
-both were impressed, and I myself seemed to gain standing, especially
-with Wood. It was generally admitted then that Hazard was one of the
-best reporters in the city, and my being taken into his confidence in
-this fashion seemed to Wood to be a significant thing.
-
-And not long after that I had something else to tell these two which
-carried great weight. There was at that time on the editorial page of
-the paper a column entitled “Heard in the Corridors,” which was nothing
-more than a series of imaginary interviews with passing guests at the
-various hotels, or interviews condensed into short tales, about six to
-the column, one at least being accredited to a guest at each of the
-three principal hotels, the others standing accredited as things heard
-at the Union Station or upon the street somewhere. Previous to my
-arrival this column had been written by various men, the last one having
-been the already famous W. C. Brann, then editor of the brilliant
-_Iconoclast_. By the time I arrived, however, Brann had departed, and
-the column had sagged. Hazard was doing a part of it, Bellairs another,
-but both were tired of it. At first when I considered it (a little extra
-work added to my daily reporting) I was not so pleased; indeed it seemed
-an all but impossible thing to do. Later, however, after a trial, I
-discovered that it gave free rein to my wildest imaginings, which was
-exactly what I wanted. I could write any sort of story I pleased,
-romantic, realistic or lunatic, and credit it to some imaginary guest at
-one of the hotels, and if it was not too improbable it was passed
-without comment. At any rate, when this was assigned to me I went forth
-to get names of personages stopping at the hotels. I inquired for
-celebrities. As a rule, the clerks could give me no information or were
-indifferent, and seemed to take very little interest in having the hotel
-advertised. I returned and racked my brain, decided that I could
-manufacture names as well as stories, and forthwith scribbled six
-marvels, attaching such names as came into my mind. The next day these
-were all duly published and I was told to do the column regularly as
-well as my regular assignments. My asinine ebullience had won me a new
-task without any increase in pay.
-
-However, it seemed an honor to have a whole column assigned to me, and
-this honor I communicated to McCord and Wood. It was then that either
-Wood or McCord informed me that Brann had done it previously and had
-written snake stories for the paper into the bargain. This flattered me,
-for they pictured him for what he was, a rare soul, and I felt myself
-growing. Peter had illustrated some of these tales for him, for, as he
-said with mock dignity: “I am the official snake artist of this paper.”
-That very night, as a reward for my efficiency I was invited by Dick to
-come to his room—_the_ room, the studio—where he inflicted about nine of
-his horrible masterpieces upon me.
-
-I would not make so much of this great honor if it were not for what it
-meant to me then. The room was large and dark, on Broadway between
-Market and Walnut, with the cars jangling below. It contained one great
-white bed, a long table covered with the papers and literary
-compositions of Mr. Richard Wood, and was decorated and reinforced with
-that gentleman’s conception of what constituted literary insignia. On
-the walls hung dusty engravings representing the death of Hamlet and the
-tempting of Faust. In one corner, over a chest of drawers, was the
-jagged blade of a sword-fish, and in another a most curious display of
-oriental coins. The top of the wardrobe was surmounted by a gruesome
-_papier-mâché_ head representing that somewhat demented creature known
-in England as Ally Sloper. A clear space at one corner of the table held
-a tin pail for carrying beer, and the floor, like the walls, was covered
-with some dusty brown material which might once have been a carpet.
-Owing to the darkness of the furnishings and the brightness of the fire,
-the room had a very cheery look.
-
-“Say, Dick, did you see where one of ——’s plays had made a great hit in
-New York?” asked McCord. “He’s made a strike this time.”
-
-“No,” replied Dick solemnly, poking among the coals of the grate and
-drawing up a chair. “Sit down, Dreiser. Pull up a chair, Peter. This
-confounded grate smokes whenever the wind’s from the South. Still
-there’s nothing like a grate fire.”
-
-We drew up chairs. I was revolving in my mind the charm of the room and
-a vision of greatness in play-writing. These two men seemed subtly
-involved with the perfection of the arts. In this atmosphere, with such
-companions, I felt that I could accomplish anything, and soon.
-
-“I’ll tell you how it is with the game of play-writing,” observed Dick
-sententiously. “You have to have imagination and feeling and all that,
-but what’s more important than anything is a little business sense, to
-know how to get in with those fellows. You might have the finest play in
-the world in your pocket, but if you didn’t know how to dispose of it
-what good would it do you? None at all. You got to know that end first.”
-
-He reached over and pulled the coal-scuttle into position as a footrest
-and then looked introspectively at the ceiling.
-
-“The play’s the thing,” put in Peter. “If you could write a real good
-play you wouldn’t need to worry about getting it staged.”
-
-“Aw, wouldn’t I? Listen to that now!” commented Dick irascibly. “I tell
-you, Peter, you don’t know anything about it. You only think you do;
-that’s all. Say, did Campbell have a good play in his pocket or didn’t
-he? You betcher neck he did. Did he get it staged? No, you betcher boots
-he didn’t. Don’t talk to me; I know.”
-
-By his manner you would have thought he had a standing bone to pick with
-Peter, but this was only his way. It made me laugh.
-
-“Well, the play’s the first thing to worry about anyhow,” I observed. “I
-wish I were in a position to write one.”
-
-“Why don’t you try?” suggested McCord. “You ought to be able to do
-something in that line. I bet you could write a good one.”
-
-We fell to discussing dramatists. Peter, with his eye for gorgeous
-effects, costuming and the like, immediately began to describe the
-ballet effects and scenery of a comic opera laid in Algeria which was
-then playing in St. Louis.
-
-“You ought to go and see that, Dreiser,” he urged. “It’s something
-wonderful. The effect of the balconies in the first act, with the
-muezzins crying the prayers from the towers in the distance, is great.
-Then the harmony of the color work in the stones of the buildings is
-something exquisite. You want to see it.”
-
-I felt myself glowing. This intimate conversation with men of such
-marked artistic ability, in a room, too, which was the reflection of an
-artist’s personality, raised my sense of latent ability to the highest
-point. Not that I felt I was not fit to associate with these people—I
-felt that I was more than fit, their equal at every point, conceal it as
-I might—but it was something to come in touch with your own, to find
-real friends to the manner born who were your equals and able to
-sympathize with you and appreciate your every mood. A man who had found
-such friends as these so quickly surely need never worry.
-
-“I’ll tell you what I propose to do, Peter, while you people are
-talking,” observed Dick. “I propose to go over to Frank’s and get a can
-of beer. Then I’ll read you that story.”
-
-This proposal to read a story was new to me; I had not heard Wood had
-written one before. I looked at him more keenly, and a little flame of
-envy leaped to life in me. To be able to write a short story—or any kind
-of a story!
-
-He went to his wardrobe, whence he extracted a medium-length black cape
-of broadcloth, which he threw about his shoulders, and a soft hat which
-he drew rakishly over his eyes, then took the tin pail and a piece of
-money from a plate, after the best fashion of the artistic romances of
-the day, and went out. I gazed admiringly after him, touched by the
-romance of it all. That face, waxen, drawn, sensitive, with deep burning
-eyes, and that frail body! That cape! That hat! That plate of coins!
-Yes, this was Bohemia! I was now a part of that happy middle world which
-was superior to wealth and poverty. I was in that serene realm where
-moved freely talent, artistic ability, noble thought, ingenious action,
-unhampered by conventional thought and conduct. A great man should so
-live, an artist certainly. These two could and did do as they pleased.
-They were not as others, but wise, sensitive, delicately responsive to
-all that was best in life; and as yet the great world was not aware of
-their existence!
-
-Wood came back with the beer and then Peter insisted that he read us the
-story. I noticed that there was something impish in his manner. He
-assured me that all of Dick’s stories were masterpieces, every one; that
-time alone was required for world-wide recognition.
-
-Dick picked up a single manuscript from a heap. “I don’t want to inflict
-this on you, Dreiser,” he said sweetly and apologetically. “We had
-planned to do this before I knew you were coming.”
-
-“That’s the way he always talks,” put in Peter banteringly. “Dick loves
-to stage things. But they’re great stories just the same.”
-
-I leaned back, prepared to be thrilled. Dick drew up his chair to the
-table and adjusted a green-shaded gas lamp close to the table’s edge. He
-then unfolded his MS. and began reading in a low, well-modulated,
-semi-pathetic voice, which seemed very effective in the more sentimental
-passages. Reverently I sat and listened. The tale was nothing, a mere
-daub, but, oh, the wonder of it! Was I not in the presence and
-friendship of artists? Was not this Bohemia? Had I not long heard and
-dreamed of it? Well, then, what difference whether the tales were good
-or bad? They were by one whom I was compelled to admire, an artist,
-pale, sensitive, recessive, one who at the slightest show of inattention
-or lack of appreciation might leave me and never see me more.
-
-I listened to about nine without dying, declaring each and every one to
-be the best I had ever heard—perfect.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-FROM now on, because of this companionship, my life in St. Louis took on
-a much more cheerful aspect. Hitherto, in spite of my work and my
-natural interest in a strange city, I had had intensely gloomy moments.
-My favorite pastime, when I was not out on an assignment or otherwise
-busy, was to walk the streets and view the lives and activities of
-others, not thinking so much how I might advantage myself and my affairs
-as how, for some, the lightning of chance was always striking in
-somewhere and disrupting plans, leaving destruction and death in its
-wake, for others luck or fortune. I never was blinded to the gross
-favoritism practiced by nature, and this I resented largely, it may be,
-because it was not, or I thought it was not, practiced in my behalf.
-Later in life I began to suspect that a gross favoritism, in regard to
-certain things at least, was being practiced in my behalf. I was never
-without friends, never without some one to do me a good turn at a
-critical moment, never without love and the sacrifice of beauty on the
-part of some one in my behalf, never without a certain amount of
-applause or repute. Was I worthy of it? I knew I was not and I felt that
-the powers that make and control life did not care two whoops whether I
-was or not.
-
-Life, as I had seen and felt from my earliest thinking period, used
-people, sometimes to their advantage, sometimes not. Occasionally, as I
-could see, I was used to my advantage as well as to that of some one or
-something else. Occasionally I was used, as I thought, to my
-disadvantage. Now and then when I imagined I was being used most
-disadvantageously it was not so at all, as when for a period I found
-myself unable to write and so compelled to turn to other things—a
-turning which resulted in better material later on. At this time,
-however, I felt that whatever the quality of the gifts handed me or the
-favors done me, they were as nothing compared to some; and, again, I was
-honestly and sympathetically interested in the horrible deprivations
-inflicted upon others, their weaknesses of mind and body, afflictions of
-all sizes and sorts, the way so often they helplessly blundered or were
-driven by internal chemic fires, as in the case of the fascinating and
-beautiful-minded John T. McEnnis, to their own undoing. That great
-idealistic soul, that warm, ebullient heart!
-
-The opportunity for indulging in these moods was due to the fact that I
-had plenty of time on my hands, that just at this time I was more
-interested in seeing than in reading, and that the three principal
-hotels here, Southern-fashion, were most hospitable, equipping their
-lobbies and even their flanking sidewalks with comfortable
-rocking-chairs where one might sit and dream or read or view the passing
-scene with idle or analytic eye. My favorite hotel was the Lindell,
-rather large and not impressive but still successful and popular, which
-stood at the northwest corner of Sixth and Washington Avenue. Here I
-would repair whenever I had a little time and rock in peace and watch
-the crowd of strangers amble to and fro. The manager of this hotel, a
-brisk, rather interesting and yet job-centered American, seeing me sit
-about every afternoon between four-thirty and six and knowing that I was
-from the _Globe_, finally began to greet me and ask occasionally if I
-did not want to go up to dinner. (How lonely and forlorn I must have
-looked!) On Thanksgiving and Christmas afternoons of this my first
-season there, seeing me idle and alone, he asked me to be his guest. I
-accepted, not knowing what else to do. To make it seem like a real
-invitation he came in after I was seated at the table and sat down with
-me for a few minutes. He was so charming and the hotel so brisk and
-crowded that I soon felt at home.
-
-The daily routine of my work seemed to provide ample proof of my
-suspicions that life was grim and sad. Regularly it would be a murder, a
-suicide, a failure, a defalcation which I would be assigned to cover,
-and on the same day there would be an important wedding, a business or
-political banquet, a ball or a club entertainment of some kind, which
-would provide just the necessary contrast to prove that life is
-haphazard and casual and cruel; to some lavish, to others niggardly.
-
-Mere money, often unworthily inherited or made by shabby methods, seemed
-to throw commonplace and even wretched souls into such glittering and
-condescending prominence, in this world at least. Many of the business
-men with whom I came in contact were vulgarians, their wives and
-daughters vain and coarse and inconsiderate. I was constantly impressed
-by the airs of the locally prominent, their craving for show and
-pleasure, their insane greed for personal mention, their hearty
-indifference to anything except money plus a keen wish to seem to
-despise it. I remember going one afternoon to an imposing residence
-where some function was in progress. I was met by an ostentatious butler
-who exclaimed most nobly: “My dear sir, who sent you here? The _Globe_
-knows we never give lists to newspaper men. We never admit reporters,”
-and then stiffly closed the door on me. I reported as much to the city
-editor, who remarked meekly, “Well, that’s all right,” and gave me
-something else to do. But the next day a list of the guests at this
-function was published, and in this paper. I made inquiry of Hartung,
-who said: “Oh, the society editor must have turned that in. These
-society women send in their lists beforehand and then say they don’t
-receive reporters.”
-
-Another time it was the residence of the Catholic archbishop of St.
-Louis, a very old but shrewd man whom, so it was rumored in newspaper
-circles, the local priests were plotting to make appear infirm and
-weakminded in order that a favorite of theirs might be made coadjutor. I
-was sent to inquire about his health, to see him if possible. At the
-door I was met by a sleek dark priest who inquired what I wished,
-whereupon he assured me that the archbishop was too feeble to be seen.
-
-“That is exactly why I am here,” I insisted. “The _Globe_ wishes to
-inform the public of his exact condition. There seems to be a belief on
-the part of some that he is not as ill as is given out.”
-
-“What! You accuse us of concealing something in connection with the
-archbishop! This is outrageous!” and he firmly shut me out.
-
-It seemed to me that the straightforward thing would have been to let me
-meet the archbishop. He was a public official, the state of whose health
-was of interest to thousands. But no; official control regulated that.
-Shortly afterward he was declared too feeble to perform his duties and a
-coadjutor was appointed.
-
-Again I was sent to a fashionable west end hotel to interview a visiting
-governor who was attending a reception of some kind and who, as we
-understood, was leaving the next day.
-
-“My dear young fellow,” said a functionary connected with the
-entertainment committee, “you cannot do anything of the sort. This is no
-time to be coming around for anything of this kind.”
-
-“But he is leaving tomorrow....”
-
-“I cannot help that. You cannot see him now.”
-
-“How about taking him my card and asking him about tomorrow?”
-
-“No, no, no! I cannot do anything of the sort. You cannot see him,” and
-once again I was shunted briskly forth.
-
-I recall being sent one evening to attend a great public ball of some
-kind—The Veiled Prophets—which was held in the general selling-room of
-the stock exchange at Third and Walnut, and which followed as a rule
-some huge autumnal parade. The city editor sent me for a general view or
-introduction or pen picture to be used as a lead to the full story,
-which was to be done by others piecemeal. For this occasion I was
-ordered to hire a dress-suit (the first I had ever worn), which cost the
-paper three dollars. I remember being greatly disturbed by my appearance
-once I got in it and feeling very queer and conspicuous. I was greatly
-troubled as to what sort of impression my garb would make on the various
-members of the staff. As to the latter I was not long in doubt.
-
-“Say, look at our friend in the claw-hammer, will you?” this from
-Hazard. “He looks like a real society man to me!”
-
-“Usher, you mean,” called Bellairs. “Who is he? I don’t seem to remember
-him.”
-
-“Those pants come darned near being a fit, don’t they?” this from some
-one who had laid hold of the side lines of the trousers.
-
-I could not make up my mind whether I wanted to fight or laugh or
-whether I was startlingly handsome or a howling freak.
-
-But the thing that weighed on me most was the luxury, tawdry enough
-perhaps to those intimately connected with it, which this ball
-presented, contrasted with my own ignoble state. After spending three
-hours there bustling about examining flowers, decorations, getting
-names, details of costumes, and drinking various drinks with officiating
-floormasters whose sole duty appeared to be to look after the press and
-see that they got all details straight, I returned to the office and
-began to pour forth a glowing account of how beautiful it all was, how
-gorgeous, how perfect the women, how marvelous their costumes, how
-gracious and graceful the men, how oriental or occidental or Arabic, I
-forget which, were the decorations, outdoing the Arabian Nights or the
-fabled splendors of the Caliphate. Who does not recognize this
-indiscriminate newspaper tosh, poured forth from one end of America to
-another for everything from a farmers’ reunion or an I. O. O. F. Ladies’
-Day to an Astor or a Vanderbilt wedding?
-
-As I was writing, my head whirring with the imaginary and impossible
-splendors of the occasion, I was informed by my city editor that when I
-was done I should go to a number in South St. Louis where only an hour
-before a triple or quadruple murder had been committed. I was to go out
-on a street-car and if I could not get back in time by street-car I was
-to get a carriage and drive back at breakneck speed in order to get the
-story into the last edition. The great fear was that the rival paper,
-the _Republic_, would get it or might already have it and we would not.
-And so, my head full of pearls, diamonds, silks, satins, laces, a world
-of flowers and lights, I was now hustled out along the dark, shabby,
-lonely streets of South St. Louis to the humblest of cottages, in the
-humblest of streets where, among unpainted shacks with lean-tos at the
-back for kitchens, was one which contained this story.
-
-An Irish policeman, silent and indifferent, was already at the small
-dark gate in the dark and silent street, guarding it against intruders;
-another was inside the door, which stood partially open, and beyond in
-the roadway in the darkness, their faces all but indistinguishable, a
-few horrified people. A word of explanation and I was admitted. A faint
-glow from a small smoky glass lamp illuminated the front room darkly. It
-turned out that a very honest, simple, religious and good-natured
-Irish-American of about fifty, who had been working by the day in this
-neighborhood, had recently been taken ill with brain fever and had on
-this night arisen from his feverish sickbed, seized a flatiron, crept
-into the front room where his wife and two little children slept and
-brained all three. He had then returned to the rear room, where a grown
-daughter slept on a couch beside him, and had first felled her with the
-iron and then cut her throat with a butcher knife. Murderous as the deed
-seemed, and apparently premeditated, it was the result of fever. The
-policeman at the gate informed me that the father had already been taken
-to the Four Courts and that a hospital ambulance was due any moment.
-
-“But he’s out av his mind,” he insisted blandly. “He’s crazy, sure, or
-sick av the fever. No man in his right sinses would do that. I tried to
-taalk to him but he couldn’t say naathin’, just mumble like.”
-
-After my grand ball this wretched front room presented a sad and ghastly
-contrast. The house and furniture were very poor, the dead wife and
-children homely and seemingly work-worn. I noticed the dim, smoky flame
-cast by the lamp, the cheap bed awry and stained red, the mother and two
-children lying in limp and painful disorder, the bedding dragged half
-off. It was evident that a struggle had taken place, for a chair and
-table were upset, the ironing-board thrown down, a bureau and the bed
-pushed sidewise.
-
-Shocked beyond measure, yet with an eye to color and to the zest of the
-public for picturesque details, I examined the three rooms with care,
-the officer in the house following me. Together we looked at the
-utensils in the kitchen, what was in the cupboard to eat, what in the
-closet to wear. I made notes of the contents of the rooms, their
-cheapness, then went to the neighbors on either hand to learn if they
-had heard anything. Then in a stray owl-car, no carriages being
-available, I hurried to the Four Courts, several miles cityward, to see
-the criminal. I found him, old, pale, sick, thin, walking up and down in
-his small iron cell, plainly out of his mind, a picture of hopeless,
-unconscious misery. His hands trembled idly about his mouth; his shabby
-trousers bagged about his shoes; he was unshaven and weak-looking, and
-all the while he mumbled to himself some unintelligible sounds. I tried
-to talk with him but could get nothing. He seemed not even to know that
-I was there, so brain-sick was he. Then I questioned the jail
-attendants, those dull wiseacres of the law. Had he talked? Did they
-think he was sane? With the usual acumen and delicacy of this tribe,
-they were inclined to think he was shamming.
-
-I hurried through dark streets to the office. It was an almost empty
-reportorial room in which I scribbled my dolorous picture. With the
-impetuosity of youth and curiosity and sorrow and wonder I told it all,
-the terror, the pity, the inexplicability. As I wrote, each page was
-taken up by Hartung, edited and sent up. Then, having done perhaps a
-column and a half (Bellairs having arrived with various police
-theories), I was allowed finally to amble out into a dark street and
-seek my miserable little room with its creaky bed, its dirty coverlets,
-its ragged carpets and stained walls. Nevertheless, I lay down with a
-kind of high pride and satisfaction in my story of the murder and my
-description of the ball, and with my life in consequence! I was not so
-bad. I was getting along. I must be thought an exceptional man to be
-picked for two such difficult tasks in the same evening. Life itself was
-not so bad; it was just higgledy-piggledy, catch-as-catch-can, that was
-all. If one were clever, like myself, it was all right. Next morning,
-when I reached the office, McCord and Hazard and some others pronounced
-my stuff “pretty good,” and I was beside myself with glee. I strolled
-about as though I owned the earth, pretending simplicity and humility
-but actually believing that I was the finest ever, that no one could
-outdo me at this game of reporting.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-THINGS relatively interesting, contrasts nearly as sharp and as well
-calculated to cause one to meditate on the wonder, the beauty, the
-uncertainty, the indifference, the cruelty and the rank favoritism of
-life, were daily if not hourly put before me. Now it would be some such
-murder as this or a social scandal of some kind, often of a gross and
-revolting character, in some ultra-respectable neighborhood, or a
-suicide of peculiarly sad or grim character. Or, again, it would be a
-fine piece of chicane, as when a certain “board-and-feed” stable owner
-of the west end, about to lose his property because of poor business and
-anxious to save himself by securing the insurance, set fire to the
-stable and destroyed seventeen healthy horses as well as one stable
-attendant and “got away with it,” legally anyhow. His plan had probably
-been to save the horses and the man, but the plan miscarried. I gathered
-as much from him when I interviewed him. I put some pertinent questions
-at him but could get no admissions on which to base a charge. He was a
-shrewd, calculating, commercial type, vigorous and semi-savage. He
-evaded me blandly and I had to write the fire up as a sad accident,
-thereby aiding him to get his insurance, the while I was convinced that
-he was guilty, a hard-hearted scoundrel.
-
-Another thing that I sensed very clearly at this time was the fact that
-the average newspaper reporter was a far better detective in his way
-than the legitimate official detective, and not nearly so well paid. The
-average so-called “headquarters man,” was a loathsome thing, as low in
-his ideas and methods as the lowest criminal he was set to trap. The
-criminal was at least shrewd and dynamic enough to plot and execute a
-crime, whereas the detective had no brains at all, merely a low kind of
-cunning. Often red-headed, freckled, with big hands and feet, store
-clothes, squeaky shoes—why does such a picture of the detective come
-back to me? Pop-eyed, with a ridiculous air of mystery and profundity in
-matters requiring neither, dirty, offensive, fish-eyed and merciless,
-the detectives floundered about in different cases without a grain of
-humor; whereas the average reporter was, by contrast anyhow, intelligent
-or shrewd, cleanly nearly always, if at times a little slouchy, inclined
-to drink and sport perhaps but genial, often gentlemanly, a fascinating
-story-teller, a keen psychologist (nearly always one of the best),
-frequently well read, humorous, sympathetic, amusing or gloomy as the
-case might be, but generally to be relied upon in such emergencies for
-truly skillful work. Naturally there was some enmity between the two, a
-contempt on the part of the newspaper man for the detective, a fear and
-dislike and secret opposition on the part of the detective. The reporter
-would go forth on a mystifying case and as a rule, given time enough,
-would solve it, whereas the police detectives would be tramping about
-often trailing the reporters, reading the newspapers to discover what
-had been discovered, and then, when the work had been done and the true
-clew furnished, would step forward at the grand moment to do the
-arresting and get their pictures and names in the papers. The detectives
-were constantly playing into the hands of the police reporters in
-unimportant matters during periods between great cases, doing them
-little favors, helping them in small cases, in order that when a big
-case came along they might have favors done unto them. The most
-important of all these favors, of course, was that of seeing that their
-names were mentioned in the papers as being engaged in solving a mystery
-or having done thus and so, when in all likelihood some newspaper man
-had done it.
-
-Sometimes the tip as to where the criminal was likely to be found would
-be furnished by the papers and later credited to the police. Sometimes
-the newspaper men would lash the police, sometimes flatter them, but
-always they were seeking to make the police aid them to get various
-necessary things done, and not always succeeding. Sometimes the police
-were hand-in-glove with certain crooks or evil-doers, and you could all
-but prove it, but until you did so, and sometimes afterward, they were
-stubborn and would defy you and the papers. But not for long. They loved
-publicity too much; offer them sufficient publicity, and they would act.
-It was nearly always my experience that the newspapers, which meant the
-reporters of course plus an efficient city editor and possibly a
-managing editor, would be the first to worm out the psychology of any
-given case and then point an almost unerring finger at the criminal;
-then the police or detectives would come in and do the arresting and get
-the credit.
-
-Another thing that impressed me greatly at this time was the
-kaleidoscopic character of newspaper work, which, in its personal
-significance to me, cannot be too much emphasized. As I have said, one
-day it would be a crime of a lurid or sensational character that would
-arrest and compel me to think, and the same day, within the hour
-perhaps, it would be a lecturer or religionist with some finespun theory
-of life, some theosophist like Annie Besant, who in passing through St.
-Louis on a lecture tour would be at one of the best hotels, usually the
-Southern, talking transmigration and Nirvana. Again, it would be some
-mountebank or quack of a low order—a spiritualist, let us say, of the
-Eva Fay stripe, or a mindreader like Bishop, or a third-rate religionist
-like the Reverend Sam Jones, who was then in his heyday preaching
-unadulterated hell, or the arrival of a prize-fighter-actor like John L.
-Sullivan, then only recently defeated by Corbett, or a novelist of the
-quack order, such as Hall Caine.
-
-And there were distinguished individuals, including such excellent
-lecturers as Henry Watterson and Henry M. Stanley, or a musician like
-Paderewski, or a scientist of the standing of Nikola Tesla. I was sent
-to interview my share of these, to get their views on something—anything
-or nothing really, for my city editor, Mr. Mitchell, seemed at times a
-little cloudy as to their significance, and certainly I had no clear
-insight into What most of them stood for. I wondered, guessed, made
-vague stabs at what I thought they represented, and in the main took
-them seriously enough. My favorite question was What did they think of
-life, its meaning, since this was uppermost in my mind at the time, and
-I think I asked it of every one of them, from John L. Sullivan to Annie
-Besant. And what a jangle of doctrines! What a noble burst of ideas!
-Annie Besant, in a room at the Southern delicately scented with flowers,
-arrayed in a cool silken gray dress, informed me that the age was
-material, that wealth and show were an illusion based on nothing at all
-(I wrote that down without understanding what she meant), that the Hindu
-Swamis had long since solved all this seeming mystery of living, Madame
-Blavatsky being the most recent and the greatest apostle of wisdom in
-this matter, and that the great thing to do in this world or the next
-was to improve oneself spiritually and so eventually attain to Nirvana,
-nothingness—a word I had to look up afterward. (When I told Dick Wood
-about her he seemed greatly impressed and said: “Oh, there’s more to
-that stuff than you think, Dreiser. You’re just not up on all that yet.
-These mystics see more than we think they do,” and he looked very wise.)
-
-And Henry Watterson—imagine me at the age of twenty-one trying to
-interview him when he was in the heyday of his fame and mental powers!
-Short, stocky, with a protuberant belly, slightly gray hair, gruff and
-simple in his manner and joyously secure in his fame (he had just the
-preceding summer said that Cleveland, Democratic candidate of the hour
-and later elected, was certain to “walk up an alley to a slaughter-house
-and an open grave,” and had of course seen his prediction fail), he was
-convinced that the country was in bad hands, not likely to go to the
-“demnition bow-wows” as yet but in for a bad corporation-materialistic
-spell. And when I asked _him_ what he thought of life——
-
-“My son, when you get as old as I am you probably won’t think so much of
-it, and you won’t be to blame. It’s good enough in its way, but it’s a
-damned ticklish business. You may say that Henry Watterson said that if
-you like. Do the best you can, and don’t crowd the other fellow too
-hard, and you’ll come out as well as anybody, I suppose.”
-
-And then John L. Sullivan, raw, red-faced, big-fisted, broad-shouldered,
-drunken, with gaudy waistcoat and tie, and rings and pins set with
-enormous diamonds and rubies—what an impression he made! Surrounded by
-local sports and politicians of the most rubicund and degraded character
-(he was a great favorite with them), he seemed to me, sitting in his
-suite at the Lindell, to be the apotheosis of the humorously gross and
-vigorous and material. Cigar boxes, champagne buckets, decanters, beer
-bottles, overcoats, collars and shirts littered the floor, and lolling
-back in the midst of it all in ease and splendor his very great self, a
-sort of prizefighting J. P. Morgan.
-
-“Aw, haw! haw! haw!” I can hear him even now when I asked him my
-favorite question about life, his plans, the value of exercise (!), etc.
-“He wants to know about exercise! You’re all right, young fella, kinda
-slim, but you’ll do. Sit down and have some champagne. Have a cigar.
-Give ‘im some cigars, George. These young newspaper men are all all
-right to me. I’m for ’em. Exercise? What I think? Haw! haw! Write any
-damned thing yuh please, young fella, and say that John L. Sullivan said
-so. That’s good enough for me. If they don’t believe it bring it back
-here and I’ll sign it for yuh. But I know it’ll be all right, and I
-won’t stop to read it neither. That suit yuh? Well, all right. Now have
-some more champagne and don’t say I didn’t treat yuh right, ’cause I
-did. I’m ex-champion of the world, defeated by that little dude from
-California, but I’m still John L. Sullivan—ain’t that right? Haw! haw!
-They can’t take that away from me, can they? Haw! haw! Have some more
-champagne, boy.”
-
-I adored him. I would have written anything he asked me to write. I got
-up the very best article I could and published it, and was told
-afterward that it was fine.
-
-Another thing that interested me about newspaper work was its pagan or
-unmoral character, as contrasted with the heavy religionistic and
-moralistic point of view seemingly prevailing in the editorial office
-proper (the editorial page, of course), as well as the world outside.
-While the editorial office might be preparing the most flowery
-moralistic or religionistic editorials regarding the worth of man, the
-value of progress, character, religion, morality, the sanctity of the
-home, charity and the like, the business office and news rooms were
-concerned with no such fine theories. The business office was all
-business, with little or no thought of anything save success, and in the
-city news room the mask was off and life was handled in a
-rough-and-ready manner, without gloves and in a catch-as-catch-can
-fashion. Pretense did not go here. Innate honesty on the part of any one
-was not probable. Charity was a business with something in it for
-somebody. Morality was in the main for public consumption only. “Get the
-news! Get the news!”—that was the great cry in the city editorial room.
-“Don’t worry much over how you get it, but get it, and don’t come back
-without it! Don’t fall down! Don’t let the other newspapers skin us—that
-is, if you value your job! And write—and write well. If any other paper
-writes it better than you do you’re beaten and might as well resign.”
-The public must be entertained by the writing of reporters.
-
-But the methods and the effrontery and the callousness necessary at
-times for the gathering of news—what a shock even though one realized
-that it was conditional with life itself! At most times one needed to be
-hard, cold, jesuitical. For instance, one of the problems that troubled
-me most, and to which there was no solution save to act jesuitically or
-get out, was how to get the facts from a man or woman suspected of some
-misdeed or error without letting him know that you were so doing. In the
-main, if you wanted facts of any kind, especially in connection with the
-suspected, you did not dare tell them that you came as an enemy or were
-bent on exposing them. One had to approach all, even the worst and most
-degraded, as a friend and pretend an interest, perhaps even a sympathy
-one did not feel, to apply the oil of flattery to the soul. To do less
-than this was to lose the news, and while a city editor might readily
-forgive any form of trickery he would never forgive failure. Cheat and
-win and you were all right; be honest and lose and you were fired. To
-appear wise when you were ignorant, dull when you were not,
-disinterested when you were interested, brutal or severe when you might
-be just the reverse—these were the essential tricks of the trade.
-
-And I, being sent out every day and loafing about the corridors of the
-various hotels at different times, soon encountered other newspaper men
-who were as shrewd and wily as ferrets, who had apparently but one
-motive in life: to trim their fellow newspaper men in the matter of
-news, or the public which provided the news. There being only two
-morning papers here (the _Globe_ and the _Republic_), the reporters of
-each loved the others not, even when personally they were inclined to be
-friendly. They did not dare permit their personal likes to affect their
-work. It was every man for himself. Meet a reporter of the _Republic_ or
-the _Globe_ on a story: he might be friendly enough but he would tell
-you nothing. He wished either to shun you or worm your facts out of you.
-Meet him in the lobby of the La Clede, where by common consent, winter
-or summer, most seemed to gather, or at the corner drugstore outside,
-and each would be friendly with the other, trading tales of life, going
-together to a saloon for a drink or to the “beanery,” a famous
-eating-place on Chestnut between Fourth and Broadway, perhaps borrowing
-a dime, a quarter or a dollar until pay day—but never repaying with news
-or tips; quite the reverse, as I soon found. One had to keep an
-absolutely close mouth as to all one might be doing.
-
-The counsel of all of these men was to get the news in any way possible,
-by hook or by crook, and to lose no time in theorizing about it. If a
-document was lying on an official’s table, for instance, and you wanted
-to see it and could not persuade him to give it to you—well, if he
-turned his back it was good business to take it, or at least read it. If
-a photograph was desired and the one concerned would not give it and you
-saw it somewhere, take it of course and let them complain afterward if
-they would; your city editor was supposed to protect you in such
-matters. You might know of certain conditions of which a public official
-was not aware and the knowledge of which would cause him to talk in one
-way, whereas lack of that knowledge would cause him to talk in another.
-Personally you might think it your duty to tell him, but as a newspaper
-man you could not. It was your duty to your paper to sacrifice him. If
-you didn’t some one else would. I was not long in learning all this and
-more, and although I understood the necessity I sometimes resented
-having to do it. There were times when I wanted to treat people better
-than I did or could. Sometimes I told myself that I was better in this
-respect than other newspaper men; but when the test came I found that I
-was like the others, as eager to get the news. Something akin to a dog’s
-lust of the chase would in critical moments seize upon me and in my
-eagerness to win a newspaper battle I would forget or ignore nearly
-every tenet of fairness and get it. Then, victorious, I might sigh over
-the sadness of it all and decide that I was going to get out of the
-business—as I eventually did, and for very much this reason—but at the
-time I was weak or practical enough.
-
-One afternoon I was sent to interview the current Democratic candidate
-for mayor, an amiable soul who conducted a wholesale harness business
-and who was supposed to have an excellent chance of being elected. The
-city had long been sick of Republican misrule, or so our office seemed
-to think. When I entered his place he was in the front part of the store
-discussing with several friends or politicians the character of St.
-Louis, its political and social backwardness, its narrowness, slowness
-and the like, and for some reason, possibly due to the personality of
-his friends, he was very severe. Local religionists, among others, came
-in for a good drubbing. I did not know him but for some unexplainable
-reason I assumed at once that the man talking was the candidate. Again,
-I instinctively knew that if what he was saying were published it would
-create a sensation. The lust of the hunter stalking a wild animal
-immediately took possession of me. What a beat, to take down what this
-man was saying! What a stir it would make! Without seeming to want
-anything in particular, I stood by a showcase and examined the articles
-within. Soon he finished his tirade and came to me.
-
-“Well, sir?”
-
-“I’m from the _Globe_,” I said. “I want to ask you——” and I asked him
-some questions.
-
-When he heard that I was from the _Globe_ he became visibly excited.
-
-“Did you hear what I was saying just now?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Well, you know that I was not speaking for publication....”
-
-“Yes, I know.”
-
-“And you’re not to forget that.”
-
-“I understand.”
-
-Just the same I returned to the office and wrote up the incident just as
-it had occurred. My city editor took it, glanced over it, and departed
-for the front office. I could tell by his manner that he was excited.
-The next day it was published in all its crude reality, and the man was
-ruined politically. There were furious denials in the rival Democratic
-papers. A lying reporter was denounced, not only by Mr. Bannerman, the
-candidate, but by all the other papers editorially. At once I was called
-to the front office to explain to Mr. McCullagh, which I did in detail.
-“He said it all, did he?” he asked, and I insisted that he had. “I know
-it’s true,” he said, “for other people have told me that he has said the
-same things before.”
-
-Next day there was a defiant editorial in the _Globe_ defending me, my
-truthfulness, the fact that the truth of the interview was substantiated
-by previous words and deeds of the candidate. Various editors on the
-paper came forward to congratulate me, to tell me what a beat I had
-made; but to tell the truth I felt shamefaced, dishonest, unkind. I was
-an eavesdropper. I had taken an unfair advantage, and I knew it. Still,
-something in me made me feel that I was fortunate. As a reporter I had
-done the paper a great service. My editor-in-chief, as I could see,
-appreciated it. No other immediate personal reward came to me, but I
-felt that I had strengthened my standing here a little. Yet for that I
-had killed that man politically. Youth, zest, life, the love of the
-chase—that is all that explains it to me now.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-MY standing as a local newspaper man seemed to grow by leaps and
-bounds—I am not exaggerating. Certain almost fortuitous events (how
-often they have occurred in my life!) seemed to assist me, far above my
-willing or even my dreams. Thus, one morning I had come down to the
-_Globe_ city room to get something, a paper or a book I had left, before
-going to my late breakfast, when a tall, broad-shouldered man, wearing a
-slouch hat and looking much like the typical Kentucky colonel, hurried
-into the office and exclaimed:
-
-“Is the city editor here?”
-
-“He isn’t down yet,” I replied. “Anything I can do for you?”
-
-“I just stopped to tell you there’s a big wreck on the road up here near
-Alton. I saw it from the train as I passed coming down from Chicago. A
-half dozen cars are burning. If you people get a man up there right away
-you can get a big lead on this.”
-
-I grabbed a piece of paper, for I felt instinctively that this was
-important. Some one ought to attend to it right away. I looked around to
-see if there was any one to appeal to, but there was no one.
-
-“What did you say the name of the place was?” I inquired.
-
-“Wann,” relied the stranger, “right near Alton. You can’t miss it.
-Better get somebody up there quick. I think it’s something big. I know
-how important these things are to you newspaper boys: I used to be one
-myself, and I owe the _Globe_ a few good turns anyhow.” He smiled and
-bustled out.
-
-I did not wait to see the city editor. I felt that I was taking a big
-risk, going out without orders, but I also felt that something terrible
-had happened and that the occasion warranted it. I had never seen a big
-wreck. It must be wonderful. The newspapers always gave them so much
-space. I wrote a note to the city editor explaining that the wreck was
-reported to be a great one and added that I felt it to be my duty to go
-at once. Perhaps he had better send an artist after me—imagine me
-advising him!
-
-On the way to the depot I thought of what I must do: telegraph for an
-artist if the wreck was really important, and then get my story and get
-back. It was over an hour’s run. I got off at the nearest station to the
-wreck and, walked the remaining distance, which was a little more than a
-mile. As I neared it I saw a crowd of people gathered about what was
-evidently the smoldering embers of a train, and on the same track, not
-more than a hundred feet away, were three oil-tank cars, those evidently
-into which the passenger train had crashed. These cars were also
-surrounded by a crowd, citizens of nearby towns, as it proved, who were
-staring at them as the fire blazed about them. As I learned later, a
-fourth oil-tank car had been smashed and the contents had poured out
-about these others of the oil group as well as the passenger train
-itself. The oil had taken fire and consumed the train, although no
-people were killed.
-
-The significance of the scene had not yet quite dawned upon me, however,
-when for the second time in my life I was privileged to behold one of
-those terrible catastrophes which it is given to few of us to see. The
-oil-tank cars about which the crowd was gathered, having become
-overheated by the burning oil beneath, exploded all at once with a
-muffled report which to me (I was no more than fifteen hundred feet
-away) sounded like a deep breath exhaled by some powerful man. The earth
-trembled, the heavens instantly appeared to be surcharged with flame.
-The crowd, which only a moment before I had seen solidly massed about
-the cars, was now hurled back in confusion, and I beheld men running,
-some toward me, some from me, their bodies on fire or being momentarily
-ignited. I saw flames descending toward me, long, red, licking things,
-and realizing the danger I turned and in a panic ran as fast as I could,
-never stopping until I deemed myself at a safe distance. Then I halted
-and gazed back, hearing at the same time a chorus of pitiful wails and
-screams which tore my heart.
-
-Death is here, I said to myself. I am witnessing a real tragedy, a
-horror. The part of the great mysterious force which makes and unmakes
-our visible scene is here and now magnificently operative. But, first of
-all, I was a newspaper man; I must report this, run to it, not away.
-
-I saw dashing toward me a man whose face I could not make out clearly,
-for at times it was partially covered by his hands, which seemed aflame,
-at other times the hands waved in the air like flails, and were burning.
-His body was being consumed by a rosy flame which partially enveloped
-him. His face, whenever it became visible as he moved his hands to and
-fro, was screwed into a horrible grimace. Unconscious of me as he ran,
-he dashed like a fiery force to the low ditch which paralleled the
-railroad, where he rolled and twisted like a worm.
-
-I could scarcely believe my eyes or my senses. My hair rose on end. My
-hands twitched convulsively. I ran forward, pulling off my coat, and
-threw it over him to smother the spots of flame—but it was of no use—my
-coat began to burn. With my bare hands I tore grass and earth from the
-ditch and piled them upon the sufferer. For the moment I was beside
-myself with terror and misery and grief. Tears came to my eyes and I
-choked with the sense of helpless misery. When I saw my own coat burning
-I snatched it away and stamped the fire out.
-
-The man was burned beyond recovery. The oil had evidently fallen in a
-mass upon the back of his head and shoulders and back and legs. It had
-burnt his clothes and hair and cooked the skin. His hands were scorched
-black, as well as his neck and ears and face. Finally he ceased to
-struggle and lay still, groaning heavily but unconscious. He was alive,
-but that was all.
-
-Oppressed by the horror of it I looked about for help, but seeing many
-others in the same plight I realized the futility of further labor here.
-I could do nothing more. I had stopped the flames in part, the man’s
-rolling in the ditch had done the rest, but to what end! Hope of life
-was ridiculous, I could see that plainly. I turned, like a soldier in
-battle, and looked after the rest of the people.
-
-To this hour I can see it all—some running over the fields in the
-distance away from the now entirely exploded tanks, others approaching
-the fallen victims. A house a little beyond the wreck was burning. A
-small village, not a thousand feet away, was blazing in spots, bits of
-oil having fallen upon the roofs. People were running hither and thither
-like ants, bending over and examining prostrate forms.
-
-My first idea of course when I recovered my senses was that I must get
-in touch with my newspaper and get it to send an artist—Wood, if
-possible—and then get the news. These people here would do as much for
-the injured as I could. Why waste my newspaper’s time on them? I ran to
-a little road-crossing telegraph station a few hundred feet farther on
-where I asked the agent what was being done.
-
-“I’ve sent for a wreck-train,” he replied excitedly. “I’ve telegraphed
-the Alton General Hospital. There ought to be a train and doctor here
-pretty soon, any minute now.” He looked at his watch. “What more can I
-do?”
-
-“Have you any idea how many are killed?”
-
-“I don’t know. You can see for yourself, can’t you?”
-
-“Will you take a message to the _Globe-Democrat_? I want to send for an
-artist.”
-
-“I can’t be bothered with anything like that now,” he replied roughly. I
-felt that an instant antagonism and caution enveloped him. He hurried
-away.
-
-“How am I to do this?” I thought, and then I ran, studying and aiding
-with the victims where aid seemed of the slightest use, wondering how I
-should ever be able to report all this, and awaiting the arrival of the
-hospital and wrecking train.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-IT was not long before the wreck-train arrived, a thing of flat cars,
-box-cars and cabooses of an old pattern, with hospital cots made ready
-en route, and a number of doctors and nurses who scrambled out with the
-air and authority of those used to scenes of this kind. Meanwhile I had
-been wondering how long it would be before the wreck-train would arrive
-and had set about getting my information before the doctors and
-authorities were on the scene, when it might not be so easy. I knew that
-names of the injured and their condition were most important, and I ran
-from one to another of the groups that had formed here and there over
-one dying or dead, asking them who it was, where he lived, what his
-occupation was (curiously, there were no women), and how he came to be
-at the scene of the wreck. Some, I found, were passengers, some
-residents of the nearby village of Wann or Alton who had hurried over to
-see the wreck. Most of the passengers had gone on a train provided for
-them.
-
-I had a hard enough time getting information, even from those who were
-able to talk. Citizens from the nearby town and those who had not been
-injured were too much frightened by the catastrophe or were lending a
-hand to do what they could ... they were not interested in a reporter or
-his needs. A group carrying the injured to the platform resented my
-intrusion, and others searching the meadows for those who had run far
-away until they fell were too busy to bother with me. Still I pressed
-on. I went from one to another asking who they were, receiving in some
-cases mumbled replies, in others merely groans. With those laid out on
-the platform awaiting the arrival of the wreck-train I did not have so
-much trouble: they were helpless and there were none to attend them.
-
-“Oh, can’t you let me alone!” exclaimed one man whose face was a black
-crust. “Can’t you see I’m dying?”
-
-“Isn’t there some one who will want to know?” I asked softly. It struck
-me all at once that this was a duty these people owed to everybody,
-their families and friends included.
-
-“You’re right,” said the man with cracked lips, after a long silence,
-and he gave his name and an account of his experiences.
-
-I went to others and to each who was able to understand I put the same
-question. It won me the toleration of those who were watching me. All
-except the station agent seemed to see that I was entitled to do this,
-and he could have been soothed with a bribe if I had thought of it.
-
-As I have said, however, once the wreck-train rolled in surgeons and
-nurses leaped down, and men brought litters to carry away the wounded.
-In a moment the scene changed; the authorities of the road turned a
-frowning face upon inquiry and I was only too glad that I had thought to
-make my inquiries early. However, I managed in the excitement to install
-myself in the train just as it was leaving so as to reach Alton with the
-injured and dead and witness the transfer. Some died en route, others
-moaned in a soul-racking way. I was beside myself with pity and
-excitement, and yet I could think only of the manner in which I would
-describe, describe, describe, once the time came. Just now I scarcely
-dared to make notes.
-
-At Alton the scene transferred itself gradually to the Alton General
-Hospital, where in spite of the protests of railroad officials I
-demanded as my right that I be allowed to enter and was finally
-admitted. Once in the hospital I completed my canvass, being new
-assisted by doctors and nurses, who seemed to like my appearance and to
-respect my calling, possibly because they saw themselves mentioned in
-the morning paper. Having interviewed every injured man, obtaining his
-name and address where possible, I finally went out, and at the door
-encountered a great throng of people, men, women and children, who were
-weeping and clamoring for information. One glance, and I realized for
-all time what these tragedies of the world really mean to those
-dependent. The white drawn faces, the liquid appealing eyes, tragedy
-written in large human characters.
-
-“Do you know whether my John is in there?” cried one woman.
-
-“Your John?” I replied sympathetically. “Will you tell me who your John
-is?”
-
-“John Taylor. He works on that road. He was over there.”
-
-“Wait a moment,” I said, reaching down in my pocket for my pad and
-reading the names. “No, he isn’t here.”
-
-The woman heaved a great sigh.
-
-Others now crowded about me. In a moment I was the center of a clamoring
-throng. All wanted to know, each before the other.
-
-“Wait a moment,” I said, as an inspiration seized me. I raised my hand,
-and a silence fell over the little group.
-
-“You people want to know who is injured,” I called. “I have a list here
-which I made over at the wreck and here. It is almost complete. If you
-will be quiet I will read it.”
-
-A hush fell over the crowd. I stepped to one side, where there was a
-broad balustrade, mounted it and held up my paper.
-
-“Edward Reeves,” I began, “224 South Elm Street, Alton. Arms, legs and
-face seriously burned. He may die.”
-
-“Oh!” came a cry from a woman in the crowd.
-
-I decided to not say whether any one was seriously injured.
-
-“Charles Wingate, 415 North Tenth Street, St. Louis.”
-
-No voice answered this.
-
-“Richard Shortwood, 193 Thomas Street, Alton.”
-
-No answer.
-
-I read on down the list of forty or more, and at each name there was a
-stir and in some instances cries. As I stepped down two or three people
-drew near and thanked me. A flush of gratification swept over me. For
-once I felt that I had done something of which I could honestly be
-proud.
-
-The rest of the afternoon was spent in gathering outside details. I
-hunted up the local paper, which was getting out an extra, and got
-permission to read its earlier account. I went to the depot to see how
-the trains ran, and by accident ran into Wood. In spite of my inability
-to send a telegram the city editor had seen fit to take my advice and
-send him. He was intensely wrought up over how to illustrate it all, and
-I am satisfied that my description of what had occurred did not ease him
-much. I accompanied him back to the hospital to see if there was
-anything there he wished to illustrate, and then described to him the
-horror as I saw it. Together we visited the morgue of the hospital,
-where already fourteen naked bodies had been laid out in a row, bodies
-from which the flames had eaten great patches of skin, and I saw that
-there was nothing now by which they could be identified. Who were they?
-I asked myself. What had they been, done? The nothingness of man! They
-looked so commonplace, so unimportant, so like dead flies or beetles.
-Curiously enough, the burns which had killed them seemed in some cases
-pitifully small, little patches cut out of the skin as if by a pair of
-shears, revealing the raw muscles beneath. All those dead were stark
-naked, men who had been alive and curiously gaping only two or three
-hours before. For once Dick was hushed; he did not theorize or pretend;
-he was silent, pale. “It’s hell, I tell you,” was all he said.
-
-On the way back on the train I wrote. In my eagerness to give a full
-account I impressed the services of Dick, who wrote for me such phases
-of the thing as he had seen. At the office I reported briefly to
-Mitchell, giving that solemn salamander a short account of what had
-occurred. He told me to write it at full length, as much as I pleased.
-It was about seven in the evening when we reached the office, and at
-eleven I was still writing and not nearly through. I asked Hartung to
-look out for some food for me about midnight, and then went on with my
-work. By that time the whole paper had become aware of the importance of
-the thing I was doing; I was surrounded and observed at times by gossips
-and representatives of out-of-town newspapers, who had come here to get
-transcripts of the tale. The telegraph editor came in from time to time
-to get additional pages of what I was writing in order to answer
-inquiries, and told me he thought it was fine. The night editor called
-to ask questions, and the reporters present sat about and eyed me
-curiously. I was a lion for once. The realization of my importance set
-me up. I wrote with vim, vanity, a fine frenzy.
-
-By one o’clock I was through. Then after it was all over the other
-reporters and newspaper men gathered about me—Hazard, Bellairs, Benson,
-Hartung, David the railroad man, and several others.
-
-“This is going to be a great beat for you,” said Hazard generously.
-“We’ve got the _Post_ licked, all right. They didn’t hear of it until
-three o’clock this afternoon, but they sent five men out there and two
-artists. But the best they can have is a _cold_ account. You _saw_ it.”
-
-“That’s right,” echoed Bellairs. “You’ve got ’em licked. That’ll tickle
-Mac, all right. He loves to beat the other Sunday papers.” It was
-Saturday night.
-
-“Tobe’s tickled sick,” confided Hartung cautiously. “You’ve saved his
-bacon. He hates a big story because he’s always afraid he won’t cover it
-right and it always worries him, but he knows you’ve got ’em beat.
-McCullagh’ll give him credit for it, all right.”
-
-“Oh, that big stiff!” I said scornfully, referring to Tobias.
-
-“Something always saves that big stiff,” said Hazard bitterly. “He plays
-in luck, by George! He hasn’t any brains.”
-
-I went in to report to my superior after a time, and told him very
-humbly that I thought I had written all I could down here but that there
-was considerable more up there which I was sure should be personally
-covered by me and that I ought to go back.
-
-“Very well,” he replied gruffly. “But don’t overdo it.”
-
-“The big stiff!” I thought as I went out.
-
-That night I stayed at a downtown hotel, since I was now charging
-everything to the paper and wanted to be called early, and after a
-feverish sleep arose at six and started out again. I was as excited and
-cheerful as though I had suddenly become a millionaire. I stopped at the
-nearest corner and bought a _Globe_, a _Republic_, and a
-_Post-Dispatch_, and proceeded to contrast the various accounts,
-scanning the columns to see how much my stuff made and theirs, and
-measuring the atmosphere and quality. To me, of course, mine seemed
-infinitely the best. There it was, occupying the whole front page, with
-cuts, and nearly all of the second page, with cuts! I could hardly
-believe my eyes. Dick’s illustrations were atrocious, a mess, no spirit
-or meaning to them, just great blotches of weird machinery and queer
-figures. He had lost himself in an effort to make a picture of the
-original crumpling wreck, and he had done it very badly. At once, and
-for the first time, he began to diminish as an artist in my estimation.
-“Why, this doesn’t look anything like it at all! He hasn’t drawn what I
-would have drawn,” and I began to see or suspect that art might mean
-something besides clothes and manner. “Why didn’t he show those dead
-men, that crowd clamoring about the main entrance of the hospital?” The
-illustrations in the other papers seemed much better.
-
-As for myself, I saw no least flaw in my work. It was all all right,
-especially the amount of space given me. Splendid! “My!” I said to
-myself vainly, “to think I should have written all this, and
-single-handed, between the hours of five and midnight!” It seemed
-astonishing, a fine performance. I picked out the most striking passages
-first and read them, my throat swelling and contracting uncomfortably,
-my heart beating proudly, and then I went over the whole of the article
-word by word. To me in my vain mood it read amazingly well. I felt that
-it was full of fire and pathos and done in the right way, with facts and
-color. And, to cap it all and fill my cup of satisfaction to the brim,
-this same paper contained an editorial calling attention to the facts
-that the _Globe_ had triumphed in the matter of reporting this story and
-that the skill of the _Globe-Democrat_ could always be counted upon in a
-crisis like this to handle such things correctly, and commiserating the
-other poor journals on their helplessness when faced by such trying
-circumstances. The _Globe_ was always best and first, according to this
-statement. I felt that at last I had justified the opinion of the
-editor-in-chief in sending for me.
-
-Bursting with vanity, I returned to Alton. Despite the woes of others I
-could not help glorying in the fact that nearly the whole city, a good
-part of it anyhow, must be reading _my_ account of the wreck. It was
-anonymous, of course, and they could not know who had done it, but just
-the same I had done it whether they knew it or not and I exulted. This
-was the chance, apparently, that I had been longing for, and I had not
-failed.
-
-This second day at Alton was not so important as I had fancied it might
-be, but it had its phases. On my arrival I took one more look at the
-morgue, where by then thirty-one dead bodies were laid out in a row, and
-then began to look after those who were likely to recover. I visited
-some of the families of the afflicted, who talked of damage suits. At my
-leisure I wrote a full account of just how the case stood, and wired it.
-I felt that to finish the thing properly I should stay until another
-day, which really was not necessary, and decided to do so without
-consulting my editor.
-
-But by nightfall, after my copy had been filed, I realized my mistake,
-for I received a telegram to return. The local correspondent could
-attend to the remaining details. On the way back I began to feel a qualm
-of conscience in regard to my conduct. I had been taking a great deal
-for granted, as I knew, in thus attempting to act without orders. My
-city editor might think I was getting a “swelled head,” as no doubt I
-was, and so complain to McCullagh. I knew he did not like me, and this
-gave him a good excuse to complain. Besides, my second day’s story, now
-that it was gone, did not seem to be so important; I might as well have
-carried it in and saved the expense of telegraphing it. I felt that I
-had failed in this; also that mature consideration might decide that I
-had failed on the first story also. I began to think that by my own
-attitude I had worked up all the excitement in the office that Saturday
-night and that my editor-in-chief would realize it now and so be
-disappointed in me. Suppose, I thought, when I reached the office
-McCullagh were dissatisfied and should fire me—then what? Where would I
-go, where get another job as good as this? I thought of my various
-follies and my past work here. Perhaps with this last error my sins were
-now to find me out. “Pride goeth before destruction,” I quoted, “and a
-haughty spirit before a fall.”
-
-By eight o’clock, when I reached the office, I was thoroughly depressed
-and hurried in, expecting the worst. Of course the train had been
-late—had to be on this occasion!—and I did not reach the office in time
-to take an evening assignment. Mitchell was out, which left me nothing
-to do but worry. Only Hartung was there, and he seemed rather glum.
-According to him, Tobe had seemed dissatisfied with my wishing to stay
-up there. Why had I been so bold, I asked myself, so silly, so
-self-hypnotized? I took up an evening paper and retired gloomily to a
-corner to wait. When Mitchell arrived at nine he looked at me but said
-nothing. As I was about to go out to get something to eat Hartung came
-in and said: “Mr. Mitchell wants to speak to you.”
-
-My heart sank. I went in and stood before him.
-
-“You called for me?”
-
-“Yes. Mr. McCullagh wants to see you.”
-
-“It’s all over,” I thought. “I can tell by his manner. What a fool I was
-to build such high hopes on that story!”
-
-I went out to the hall and walked nervously to the office of the chief,
-which was at the front end of the hall. I was so depressed I could have
-cried. To think that all my fine dreams were to have such an end!
-
-That Napoleon-like creature was sitting in his little office, his chin
-on his chest, a sea of papers about him. He did not turn when I entered,
-and my heart grew heavier. He was angry with me! I could see it! He kept
-his back to me, which was to show me that I was not wanted, done for! At
-last he wheeled.
-
-“You called for me, Mr. McCullagh?” I murmured.
-
-“Mmm, yuss, yuss!” he mumbled in his thick, gummy, pursy way. His voice
-always sounded as though it were being obstructed by something leathery
-or woolly. “I wanted to say,” he added, covering me with a single
-glance, “that I liked that story you wrote, very much indeed. A fine
-piece of work, a fine piece of work! I like to recognize a good piece of
-work when I see it. I have raised your salary five dollars, and I would
-like to give you this.” He reached in his pocket, drew out a roll and
-handed over a yellow twenty-dollar bill.
-
-I could have dropped where I stood. The reaction was tremendous after my
-great depression. I felt as though I should burst with joy, but instead
-I stood there, awed by this generosity.
-
-“I’m very much obliged to you, Mr. McCullagh,” I finally managed to say.
-“I thank you very much. I’ll do the best I can.”
-
-“It was a good piece of work,” he repeated mumblingly, “a good piece of
-work,” and then slowly wheeled back to his desk.
-
-I turned and walked briskly out.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-THE fact that I had gained the notice of a man as important as
-McCullagh, a man about whom a contemporaneous poet had written a poem,
-was almost more than I could stand. I walked on air. Yet the next
-morning, returning to work, I found myself listed for only “Hotels” and
-“Heard in the Corridors,” my usual tasks, and was depressed. Why not
-great tasks always? Why not noble hours always? Yet once I had recovered
-from this I walked about the downtown streets convulsively digging my
-fingers into my palms and shaking myself with delight as I thought of
-Saturday, Sunday and Monday. That was something worth talking about. Now
-I was a real newspaper man. I had beaten the whole town, and in a new
-city, a city strange to me!
-
-Having practically nothing to do and my excitement cooling some, I
-returned to the art department this same day to report on what had
-happened. By now I was so set up that I could scarcely conceal my
-delight and told both volubly, not only about my raise in salary but
-also that I had been given a twenty-dollar bill by McCullagh himself—an
-amazing thing, of course. This last was received with mingled feelings
-by the department: McCord was pleased, of course, but Dick naturally was
-inclined to be glum. He was conscious of the fact that his drawings were
-not good, and McCord had been twitting him about them. Dick admitted it
-frankly, saying that he had not been able to collect himself. “You know
-I can’t do those things very well and I shouldn’t have been sent out on
-it. That’s Mitchell for you!” Perhaps it angered him to think that he
-should have been so unfortunate at the very time that I should have been
-so signally rewarded; anyhow he did not show anything save a generous
-side to me at the time although latterly I felt that it was the
-beginning of a renewal of that slight hostility based on his original
-opposition to me. He complimented me, saying: “You’ve done it this time.
-I’m glad you’ve made a hit, old man.”
-
-That night, however, I was not invited to his room, as I had hoped I
-should be, although he and Peter went off somewhere—to his room, as I
-assumed. I applied myself instead to “Heard in the Corridors.” Then the
-days settled down into their old routine for me—petty assignments, minor
-contrasts between one thing and another. Only one thing held me up, and
-that was that Hazard now urged me to do a novel with him, a thing which
-flattered me so much that I felt my career as a great writer was at
-hand. For had he not done a novel already? I considered it seriously for
-a few days, arguing the details of the plot with him at the office and
-after hours, but it came to nothing. Plays rather than novels, as I
-fancied for some reason, were more in my line, and poems—things which I
-thought easier to do. Since writing that first poem a month or so before
-I was busy now from time to time scribbling down the most mediocre
-jingles relative to my depressions and dreams, and imaging them to be
-great verse. Truly, I thought I was to be a great poet, one of the very
-greatest, and so nothing else really mattered for the time being.
-Weren’t poets always lone and lorn, as I was?
-
-It was about this time too that, having received the gift of twenty and
-the raise of five, I began to array myself in manner so ultra-smart, as
-I thought, but fantastic, really, that I grieve to think that I should
-ever have been such a fool. Yet to tell the truth, I do not know whether
-I do or not. A foolish boyhood is as delightful as any. I had now moved
-into Tenth Street, and fortunately or unfortunately for me (fortunately,
-I now think) a change in the personnel of the _Globe’s_ editorial staff
-occurred which had a direct bearing upon my ambitions. A man by the name
-of Carmichael who did the dramatics on the paper had been called to a
-better position in Chicago, and the position he had occupied here was
-therefore temporarily vacant. Hazard was the logical man for the place
-and should have had it because he had held this position before. He was
-older and a much better critic. But I, as may be imagined, was in a very
-appropriate mood for this, having recently been thinking of writing a
-play, and besides, I was crazy for advancement of any kind. Accordingly
-the moment I heard of it I was on the alert, eager to make a plea for
-myself and yet not dreaming that I should ever get it. My sole
-qualification, as I see it now, was that I was an ardent admirer of the
-stage and one who, because of his dramatic instincts (as I conceived
-mine to be), ought to make a good enough critic. I did not know that I
-was neither old nor cold nor experienced enough to do justice to the art
-of any one. Yet I should add in all fairness that for the work here
-required—to write a little two-stick announcement of each new play,
-mostly favorable, and to prepare a weekly announcement of all the new
-performances—I was perhaps not so poorly equipped. At any rate, my
-recent triumph had given me such an excellent opinion of myself, had
-made me think that I stood so well in the eyes of Mr. McCullagh, that I
-decided to try for it. It might not mean any more salary, but think of
-the honor of it! Dramatic Editor of the _Globe-Democrat_ of St. Louis!
-Ha!... I decided to try.
-
-There were two drawbacks to this position, as I learned later: one was
-that although I might be dramatic editor I should still be under the
-domination of Mr. Tobias Mitchell, who ruled this department; the other
-was that I should have to do general reporting along with this other
-work, a thing which irritated me very much and took much of the savor of
-the task away. The department was not deemed important enough to give
-any one man complete control of it. It seemed a poor sort of thing to
-try for, once I learned of this, but still there would be the fact that
-I could still say I was a dramatic editor. It would give me free
-entrance to the theaters also.
-
-Consequently I began to wonder how I should go about getting it.
-Mitchell was so obviously opposed to me that I knew it would be useless
-to appeal to him. McCullagh might give it to me, but how appeal to him?
-I thought of asking him direct, but that would be going over Mitchell’s
-head, and he would never forgive me for that, I was sure. I debated for
-a day or two, and then decided, since my principal relations had been
-with Mr. McCullagh, that I would go to him direct. Why not? He had been
-very kind to me, had sent for me. Let Mitchell be angry if he would. If
-I made good he could not hurt me.
-
-I began to lay my plans or rather to screw up my courage to the point
-where I could force myself to go and see Mr. McCullagh. He was such a
-chill and distant figure. At the same time I felt that this man who was
-the object of so much reverence was one of the loneliest persons
-imaginable. He was not married. Day after day he came to this office
-alone, sat alone, ate alone, went home alone, for he had no friends
-apparently to whom he would condescend to unbend. This touched me. He
-was too big, too lonely.
-
-This realization drew me sympathetically toward him and made me imagine,
-if you please, that he ought to like me. Was I not his protégé? Had he
-not brought me here? Instinctively I felt that I was one who could
-appreciate him, one whom he might secretly like. The only trouble was
-that he was old and famous, whereas I was a mere boy, but he would
-understand that too.
-
-The day after I had made up my mind I began to loiter about the long
-corridor which led to his office, in the hope of encountering him
-accidentally. I had often noticed him shouldering his way along the
-marble wainscoting of this hall, his little Napoleonic frame cloaked in
-a conventional overcoat, his broad, strong, intellectual face crowned by
-a wide-brimmed derby hat which he wore low over his eyes. Invariably he
-was smoking a short fat cigar, and always looked very solemn, even
-forbidding. However, having made up my mind, I lay in wait for him one
-morning, determined to see him, and walking restlessly to the empty
-telegraph room which lay at the other end of the hall from his office
-and then back, but keeping as close as I could to one door or another in
-order to be able to disappear quietly in case my courage failed me. Yet
-so determined was I to see him that I had come down early, before any of
-the others, in order that he should not slip in ahead of me and so rob
-me of this seemingly accidental encounter.
-
-At about eleven he arrived. I was on one of my return trips from the
-telegraph room when I heard the elevator click and dodged into the city
-room only to reappear in time to meet him, ostensibly on my way to the
-toilet. He gave me but one sage glance, then stared straight ahead.
-
-At sight of him I lost my courage. Arriving exactly opposite him,
-however, I halted, controlled by a reckless, eager impulse.
-
-“Mr. McCullagh,” I said without further ado, “I want to know if you
-won’t make me dramatic editor. I hear that Mr. Carmichael has resigned
-and the position is open. I thought maybe you might give it to me.” I
-flushed and hesitated.
-
-“I will,” he replied simply and gruffly. “You’re dramatic editor. Tell
-Mr. Mitchell to let you be it.”
-
-I started to thank him but the stocky little figure moved indifferently
-away. I had only time to say, “I’m very much obliged” before he was
-gone.
-
-I returned to the city editorial room tingling to the fingertips. To
-think that I should have been made dramatic editor, and so quickly, in
-such an offhand, easy way! This great man’s consideration for me was
-certainly portentous, I thought. Plainly he liked me, else why should he
-do this? If only I could now bring myself seriously to this great labor
-what might I not aspire to? Dramatic Editor of the _Globe-Democrat_ of
-the great city of St. Louis, and at the age of twenty-one—well, now,
-that was something, by George! And this great man liked me. He really
-did. He knew me at sight, honored my request, and would no doubt, if I
-behaved myself, make a great newspaper man of me. It was something to be
-the favorite of a great editor-in-chief by jing—a very great thing
-indeed.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-UPON my explaining to Mitchell what had happened he looked at me coldly,
-as much as to say “What the devil is this now that this ass is telling
-me?” Then, thinking, I suppose, that I must have some secret hold on Mr.
-McCullagh or at least stand high in his favor, he gave me a very wry
-smile and said he would have made out for me a letter of introduction to
-the local managers. An hour later this was laid on my desk by Hartung,
-who congratulated me, and there I was: dramatic editor. “Gee!” exclaimed
-Hartung when he came in with the letter. “I bet you could have knocked
-Tobe over with a straw! He doesn’t understand yet, I guess, how well you
-stand with the old man. The chief must like you, eh?” I could see that
-my new honor made a considerable difference in his already excellent
-estimate of me.
-
-Armed with this letter I now visited the managers of the theaters, all
-of whom received me cordially. I can still see myself very gay and
-enthusiastic, sure that I was entering upon a great work of some kind.
-And the dreams I had in connection with the theater, my future as a
-great popular playwright perhaps! It was all such a wonder-world to me,
-the stage, such a fairyland, that I bubbled with joy as I went about
-thinking that now certainly I should come in touch with actors,
-beautiful women! Think of it—dramatic critic!—a person of weight and
-authority!
-
-There were seven or eight theaters in St. Louis, three or four of them
-staging only that better sort of play known as a first-class attraction;
-the others giving melodrama, vaudeville and burlesque. The manager of
-the Grand, a short, thick-set, sandy-complexioned man of most jovial
-mien, was McManus, father of the well-known cartoonist of a later period
-and the prototype of his most humorous character, Mr. Jiggs. He
-exclaimed upon seeing me:
-
-“So you’re the new dramatic editor, are you? Well, they change around
-over there pretty swift, don’t they? What’s happened to Carmichael?
-First it was Hartridge, then Albertson, then Hazard, then Mathewson,
-then Carmichael, and now you, all in my time. Well, Mr. Dreiser, I’m
-glad to see you. You’re always welcome here. I’ll take you out and
-introduce you to our doormen and Mr. —— in the box-office. He’ll always
-recognize you. We’ll give you the best seat in the house if it’s empty
-when you come.”
-
-He smiled humorously and I had to laugh at the way he rattled off this
-welcome. An aura of badinage and humor encircled him, quite the same as
-that which makes Mr. Jiggs delightful. This was the first I had ever
-heard of Hazard having held this position, and now I felt a little
-guilty, as though I had edged him out of something that rightfully
-belonged to him. Still, I didn’t really care, sentimentalize as I might.
-I had won.
-
-“Did Bob Hazard once have this position?” I asked familiarly.
-
-“Yes. That was when he was on the paper the last time. He’s been off and
-on the _Globe_ three or four times, you know.” He smiled clownishly. I
-laughed.
-
-“You and I’ll get along, I guess,” he smiled.
-
-At the other theaters I was received less informally but with uniform
-courtesy; all assured me that I should be welcome at any time and that
-if I ever wished tickets for myself or a friend or anybody on the paper
-I could get them if they had them. “And we’ll make it a point to have
-them,” said one. I felt that this was quite an acquisition of influence.
-It gave me considerable opportunity to be nice to any friends I might
-acquire, and then think of the privilege of seeing any show I chose, to
-walk right into a theater without being stopped, and to be pleasantly
-greeted en route!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The character of the stage of that day, in St. Louis and the rest of
-America at least, as contrasted with what I know of its history in the
-world in general, remains a curious and interesting thing to me. As I
-look back on it now it seems inane, but then it was wonderful. It is
-entirely possible that nations, like plants or individuals, have to grow
-and obtain their full development regardless of the accumulated store of
-wisdom and achievement in other lands, else how otherwise explain the
-vast level of mediocrity which obtains in some countries and many forms
-of effort, and that after so much that has been important elsewhere?
-
-The stage in other lands had already seen a few tremendous periods; even
-here in America the mimetic art was no mystery. A few great things had
-been done, in acting at least, by Booth, Barrett, Macready, Forrest,
-Jefferson, Modjeska, Fanny Davenport, Mary Anderson, to name but a few.
-I was too young at the time to know or judge of their art or the quality
-of the plays they interpreted, aside from those of Shakespeare perhaps,
-but certainly their fame for a high form of production was considerable.
-
-And yet, during the few months that I was dramatic editor, and the
-following year when I was a member of another staff and had entrée to
-these same theaters, I saw only one or two actors worthy the name, only
-one or two performances which I can now deem worth while. Richard
-Mansfield and Felix Morris stand out in my mind as excellent, and Sol
-Smith Russell and Joseph Jefferson as amusing comedians, but who else?
-Comic and light opera, with a heavy inter-mixture of straight melodrama,
-and comedy-dramas, were about the only things that managers ventured to
-essay. Occasionally a serious actor of the caliber of Sir Henry Irving
-or E. S. Willard would appear on the scene, but many of their plays were
-of a more or less melodramatic character, highly sentimental, emotional
-and unreal. In my stay here of about a year and a half I saw Joseph
-Jefferson, Sol Smith Russell, Salvini junior, Wilson Barrett, Fanny
-Davenport, Richard Mansfield, E. S. Willard, Felix Morris, E. H.
-Sothern, Julia Marlowe and a score of others more or less important but
-too numerous to mention; comedians, light-opera singers and the like;
-and although at the time I was entertained and moved by some of them, I
-now realize that in the main they were certainly pale spindling lights.
-And at that, America was but then entering upon its worst period of
-stage sentiment or mush. The movies as such had not yet appeared, but
-“Mr. Frohman presents” was upon us, master of middle-class sweetness and
-sentimentality. I remember staring at the three-sheet lithos and
-thinking how beautiful and perfect they were and what a great thing it
-was to be of the stage. To be an author, an actor, a composer, a
-manager! To have “Mr. Frohman present——”!
-
-The Empire and Lyceum theater companies, with their groups of perfect
-lady and gentleman actors, were then at their height, the zenith of
-stage art—Mr. John Drew, for instance, with his wooden face and manners,
-Mr. Faversham, Miss Opp, Miss Spong, Miss This, Miss That. Such
-excellent actors as Henry E. Dixey, Richard Mansfield or Felix Morris
-could scarcely gain a hearing. I recall sitting one night in Hogan’s
-Theater, at Ninth or Tenth and Pine streets, and hearing Richard
-Mansfield order down the curtain at one of the most critical points in
-his famous play “Baron Chevreuil,” or some such name, and then come
-before it and denounce the audience in anything but measured terms for
-what he considered its ignorance and lack of taste. It had applauded, it
-seems, at the wrong time in that asinine way which only an American
-audience can when it is there solely because it thinks it ought to be.
-By that time Mansfield had already achieved a pseudo if not a real
-artistic following and was slowly but surely becoming a cult. On this
-occasion he explained to that bland gathering that they were fools, that
-American audiences were usually composed of such animals or creatures
-and were in the main dull to the point of ennui, that they were not
-there to see a great actor act but to see a man called Richard
-Mansfield, who was said to be a great actor. He pointed out how
-uniformly American audiences applauded at the wrong time, how truly
-immune they were to all artistic values, how wooden and
-reputation-following. At this some of them arose and left; others seemed
-to consider it a great joke and remained; still others were angry but
-wanted to see the “show.” Having finished his speech he ordered up the
-curtain and proceeded with his act as though nothing had happened, as
-though the audience were really not there. I confess I rather liked him
-for his stand even though I did not quite know whether he was right or
-wrong. But I wrote it up as though he had grossly insulted his audience,
-a body of worthy and respectable St. Louisans. Someone—Hazard, I
-think—suggested that it would be good policy to do so, and I, being
-green to my task, did so.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The saccharine strength of the sentiment and mush which we could gulp
-down at that time, and still can and do to this day, is to me beyond
-belief. And I was one of those who did the gulping; indeed I was one of
-the worst. Those perfect nights, for instance, when as dramatic critic I
-strolled into one theater or another, two or three in an evening
-possibly, and observed (critically, as I thought) the work of those who
-were leaders in dramatic or humorous composition and that of our leading
-actors! It may be that the creative spirit has no particular use for
-intelligence above a mediocre level, or, better yet and far more likely,
-creative intelligence works through supermen whose visions, by which the
-mob is eventually entertained and made wise, must content them.
-Otherwise how explain the vast level of mediocrity, especially in
-connection with the stage, the people’s playhouse, then, today and
-forever, I suppose, until time shall be no more?
-
-I recall, for instance, that I thought Mr. Drew was really a superior
-actor, and also that I thought that most of the plays of Henry Arthur
-Jones, Arthur Wing Pinero, Augustus Thomas, and others (many others),
-were enduring works of art. I confess it: I thought so, or at least I
-heard so and let it go at that. How sound I thought their
-interpretations of life to be! The cruel over-lords of trade in those
-plays, for instance, how cruel they were and how true! The virtues of
-the lowly workingman and the betrayed daughter with her sad, downcast
-expression! The moral splendor of the young minister who denounced
-heartless wealth and immorality and cruelty in high places and reformed
-them then and there or made them confess their errors! I can see him
-yet: slim, simple, perfect, a truly good man. The offhand on-the-spot
-manner in which splendid reforms were effected in an hour or a night,
-the wrongs righted instanter—in plays! You can still see them in any
-movie house in America. To this hour there is no such thing as a
-reckless unmarried girl in any movie exhibited in America. They are all
-married.
-
-But how those St. Louis audiences applauded! _Right_, here in America at
-least, was always appropriately rewarded and left triumphant, wrong was
-quite always properly drummed out. Our better selves invariably got the
-better of our lower selves, and we went home cured, reformed, saved. And
-there was little of evil of any description which went before, in acts
-one and two, which could not be straightened out in the last act.
-
-The spirit of these plays captivated my fancy at that time and elevated
-me into a world of unreality which unfortunately fell in with the
-wildest of my youthful imaginings. Love, as I saw it here set forth in
-all those gorgeous or sentimental trappings, was the only kind of love
-worth while. Fortune also, gilded as only the melodramatic stage can
-gild it and as shown nightly by Mr. Frohman everywhere in America, was
-the only type of fortune worth while. To be rich, elegant, exclusive, as
-in the world of Frohman and Mr. Jones and Mr. Pinero! According to what
-I saw here, love and youth were the only things worth discussing or
-thinking about. The splendor of the Orient, the social flare of New
-York, London and Paris, the excited sex-imaginings of such minds as
-Dumas junior, Oscar Wilde, then in his heyday, Jones, Pinero and a
-number of other current celebrities, seemed all to be built around youth
-and undying love. The dreary humdrum of actual life was carefully shut
-out from these pieces; the simple delights of ordinary living, if they
-were used at all, were exaggerated beyond sensible belief. And
-elsewhere—not here in St. Louis, but in the East, New York, London,
-Paris, Vienna, St. Petersburg—were all the things that were worth while.
-If I really wanted to be happy I must eventually go to those places, of
-course. There were the really fine clothes and the superior
-personalities (physically and socially), and vice and poverty (painted
-in such peculiar colors that they were always divinely sad or repellent)
-existed only in those great cities.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX
-
-
-I BEGAN to dream more than ever of establishing some such perfect
-atmosphere for myself somehow, somewhere—but never in St. Louis, of
-course. That was too common, too Western, too far removed from the real
-wonders of the world. Love and mansions and travel and saccharine
-romance were the great things, but they were afar off, in New York. (It
-was around this time that I was establishing the atmosphere of a
-“studio” in Tenth street.) Nothing could be so wonderful as love in a
-mansion, a palace in some oriental realm such as was indicated in the
-comic operas in which DeWolf Hopper, Thomas Q. Seabrooke, Francis
-Wilson, Eddie Foy and Frank Daniels were then appearing. How often, with
-McCord or Wood as companion, occasionally Hazard or a new friend
-introduced to me by Wood and known as Rodenberger, or Rody (a most
-amazing person, as I will later relate), I responded to these poetic
-stage scenes! With one or other of these I visited as many theaters as I
-could, if for no more than an hour or an act at a time, and consumed
-with wonder and delight such scenes as most appealed to me: the
-denunciation scene, for instance, in _The Middleman_, or the third act
-of nearly any of Henry Arthur Jones’s plays. Also quite all of the light
-operas of Reginald de Koven and Harry B. Smith, as well as those
-compendiums of nondescript color and melody, the extravaganzas _The
-Crystal Slipper_, _Ali Baba_, _Sindbad the Sailor_. Young actresses such
-as Della Fox, Mabel Amber, Edna May, forerunners of a long line of comic
-opera soubrettes, who somehow reminded me of Alice, held me spellbound
-with delight and admiration. Here at last was the kind of maiden I was
-really craving, an actress of this hoyden, airy temperament.
-
-I remember that one night, at the close of one of Mr. Willard’s
-performances at the Olympic—_The Professor’s Love_ _Story_, in which he
-was appearing with a popular leading woman, a very beautiful one—I was
-asked by the manager to wait for a few moments after the performance so
-that he might introduce me. Why, I don’t know. It seemed that he was
-taking them to supper and thought they might like to meet one of the
-local dramatic critics or that I might like to accompany them; an honor
-which I declined, out of fright or bashfulness. When they finally
-appeared in the foyer of the theater, however, the young actress very
-stagy and soft and clinging and dressed most carefully after the manner
-of the stage, I was beside myself with envy and despair. For she
-appeared hanging most tenderly on her star’s arm (she was his mistress,
-I understood) and gazing soulfully about. Such beauty! Such grace! Such
-vivacity! Could anything be so lovely? Think of having such a perfect
-creature love you, hang on your arm! And here was I, poor dub, a mere
-reporter, a nobody, upon whom such a splendid creature would not bend a
-second glance. Mr. Willard was full of the heavy hauteur of the actor,
-which made the scene all the more impressive to me. I think most of us
-like to be up-staged at one time or another by some one. I glanced at
-her bashfully sidewise, pretending to be but little interested, while I
-was really dying of envy. Finally, after a few words and a few
-sweety-sweet smiles cast in my direction, I was urged to come with them
-but instead hurried away, pleading necessity and cursing my stars and my
-fate. Think of being a mere reporter at twenty-five or thirty a week,
-while others, earning thousands, were thus basking in the sunshine of
-success and love! Ah, why might not I have been born rich or famous and
-so able to command so lovely a woman?
-
-If I had been of an ordinary, sensible, everyday turn of mind, with a
-modicum of that practical wisdom which puts moderate place and position
-first and sets great store by the saving of money, I might have
-succeeded fairly well here, much better than I did anywhere else for a
-long period after. Unquestionably Mr. McCullagh liked me; I think he may
-have been fond of me in some amused saturnine way, interested to keep
-such a bounding, high-flown dunce about the place. I might have held
-this place for a year or two and made it a stepping-stone to something
-better. But instead of rejoicing in the work and making it the end and
-aim of my daily labors, I looked upon it as a mere bauble, something I
-had today but might not have tomorrow. And anyhow, there were better
-things than working day by day and living in a small room. Life ought
-certainly to bring me something better, something truly splendid—and
-soon. I deserved it—everything, a great home, fine clothes, pretty
-women, the respect and companionship of famous men. Indeed all my pain
-and misery was plainly caused by just such a lack or lacks as this. Had
-I these things all would be well; without them—well, I was very
-miserable. I was ready to accept socialism if by that I could get what I
-wanted, while not ready to admit that all people were as deserving as I
-by any means. The sad state of the poor workingman was a constant
-thought with me, but nearly always I was the greatest and poorest and
-most deserving of all workingmen.
-
-This view naturally tended to modify the sanity of my work. Granting a
-modicum of imagination and force, still any youth limited as I was at
-that time has a long road to go. Even in that most imaginative of all
-professions, the literary, the possessor of such notions as I then held
-is certainly debarred from accomplishing anything important until he
-passes beyond them. Yet the particular thought or attitude I have
-described appears to reign in youth. Too often it is a condition of many
-minds of the better sort and is retained in its worst form until by
-rough experience it is knocked out of them or they are destroyed utterly
-in the process. But it cannot be got over with quickly. Mine was a sad
-case. One of the things which this point of view did for me was to give
-my writing, at that time, a mushy and melancholy turn which would not go
-in any newspaper of today, I hope. It caused me to paint the ideal as
-not only entirely probable but necessary before life would be what it
-should!—the progress bug, as you see. I could so twist and discolor the
-most commonplace scenes as to make one think that I was writing of
-paradise. Indeed I allowed my imagination to run away with me at times
-and only the good sense of the copy-reader or the indifference of a
-practical-minded public saved the paper from appearing utterly
-ridiculous.
-
-On one occasion, for instance, I went to report a play of mediocre
-quality that was running at the Olympic, and was so impressed with a
-love scene which was a part of it that I was entirely blinded to all the
-faults of construction which the remainder of the play showed, and wrote
-it up in the most glowing colors. And the copy-reader, Hartung, was too
-weary that night or too inattentive to capture it. The next day some of
-the other newspaper men in the office noticed it and commented on it to
-me or to Hartung, saying it was ridiculously high-flown and that the
-play itself was silly, which was true. But did that cure me? Not a bit.
-I was reduced for a day or two by it, but not for long. Seeing other
-plays of the same caliber and with much sweet love mush in them, I raved
-as before.
-
-A little later a negro singer, a young woman of considerable vocal
-ability who was being starred as the Black Patti, was billed to appear
-in St. Louis. The manager of the bureau that was presenting her called
-my attention by letter to her “marvelous” ability, and by means of
-clippings and notices of her work published elsewhere had endeavored to
-impress me favorably. I read these notices, couched in the glowing
-phrases of the press-agent, and then went forth on this evening to cover
-this myself. To make it all the grander, I invited McCord and with him
-proceeded to the theater, where we were assigned a box.
-
-As it turned out, or as I chanced to see or feel it, the young woman was
-a sweet and impressive singer, engaging and magnetic. McCord agreed with
-me that she could sing. We listened to the program of a dozen pieces,
-including such old favorites as _Suwanee River_ and _Comin’ Thro’ the
-Rye_, and then I, being greatly moved, returned to the office and wrote
-an account that was fairly sizzling with the beauty which I thought was
-there. I did not attempt critically to analyze her art—I could not,
-knowing nothing of even the rudiments of music—but plunged at once into
-that wider realm which involved the subtleties of nature itself. “What
-is so beautiful as the sound which the human voice is capable of
-producing,” I wrote in part, “especially when that voice is itself a
-compound of the subtlest things in nature? Here we have a young girl,
-black it is true, fresh from the woods and fields of her native country,
-yet, blessed by some strange chance with that mystic thing, a voice, and
-fittingly interpreting via song all that we hold to be most lovely. The
-purling of the waters, the radiance of the moonlight, the odor of sweet
-flowers, sunlight, storm, the voices and echoes of nature, all are found
-here, thrilling over lips which represent in their youthfulness but a
-few of the years which wisdom and skill would seem to require. Yes, one
-may sit and, in hearing Miss Jones sing, vicariously entertain all these
-things, because of them she is a compound, youthful, vivacious,
-suggestive of the elemental sweetness of nature itself.”
-
-To understand the significance of such a statement in St. Louis one
-would have to look into the social and political conditions of the
-people who dwelt there. To a certain extent they were Southern in
-temperament, representing the vigorous anti-negro spirit which prevailed
-for so many years after the war. Again, they were fairly illuminated
-where music was concerned. Assuming that a bit of idealism such as this
-was sound, it might get by; but when it is remembered that this was
-largely mush and written about a negro, a race more or less alien to
-their sympathy, would it not naturally fall upon hard ears and appear
-somewhat ridiculous? A negro the compound of the subtlest elements in
-nature! And this in their favorite paper!
-
-By chance it went through, Hartung having come to look upon most of my
-stuff as the outpourings of some strange genius who could do about as he
-pleased. Neither Mitchell nor the editor-in-chief saw it perhaps, or if
-they did they gave it no attention, music, the theater and the arts
-being of small import here. But, depend upon it, the editors of the
-various rival papers that were constantly being sniffed at by the
-_Globe_ saw it and knowing the sensitiveness of our editor-in-chief to
-criticism of his own paper at once set to work to make something out of
-it. And of all the editors in the middle West, McCullagh, by reason of
-his force and taste and care in editing his paper, was a shining target
-for a thing like this. He was, as a rule, impeccable and extremely
-conspicuous. Whatever he did or said, good, bad or indifferent, was
-invariably the subject of local newspaper comment, and when any little
-discrepancy or error appeared in the _Globe-Democrat_ it was always
-charged to him personally. And so it was with this furore over the Black
-Patti. It was too good a thing to be lost sight of.
-
-“The erudite editor of the _Globe-Democrat_,” observed the
-_Post-Dispatch_ editorially, “appears to have visited one of our
-principal concert halls last night. It is not often that that ponderous
-intellect can be called down from the heights of international politics
-to contemplate so simple a thing as a singer of songs, a black one at
-that; but when true art beckons even he can be counted upon to answer.
-Apparently the Black Patti beckoned to him last evening, and he was not
-deaf to her call, as the following magnificent bit of word-painting
-fresh from his pen is here to show.” (Then followed the praise in full.)
-“None but the grandiloquent editor of the _Globe-Democrat_ could have
-looked into the subtleties of nature, as represented by the person of
-Miss Sisseretta Jones, and there discovered the wonders of music and
-poetry such as he openly confesses to have done. Indeed we have here at
-last a measure of that great man’s insight and feeling, a love of art,
-music, poetry and the like such as has not previously been indicated by
-him. And we hereby hasten to make representation of our admiration and
-great debt that others too may not be deprived of this great privilege.”
-After this came more of the same gay raillery, with here and there a
-reference to “the great patron of the black arts” and the pure joy that
-must have been his at thus vicariously being able to enjoy within the
-precincts of Exposition Hall “the purling of the waters” bubbling from a
-black throat. It was a gentle satire, not wholly uncalled for since the
-item had appeared in the _Globe_, and directed at the one man who could
-least stand that sort of thing, sensitive as he was to his personal
-dignity.
-
-I was blissfully unaware that any comment had been made on my effusion
-until about five in the afternoon, by which time the afternoon editions
-of the _Post-Dispatch_ had been out several hours. When I entered the
-office at five, comfortable and at peace with myself in my new position,
-excited comment was running about the office as to what “the old man”
-would think and say and do now. He had gone at two, it appeared, to the
-Southern for luncheon and had not returned. Wait until he saw it! Oh me!
-Oh my! Wouldn’t he be hopping! Hartung, who was reasonably nervous as to
-his own share in the matter, was the first to approach and impress me
-with the dreadfulness of it all, how savage “the old man” could be in
-any such instance. “Gee, just wait! Oh, but he’ll be hot, I bet!” As he
-talked the “old man” passed up the hall, a grim and surly figure. I saw
-my dramatic honors going a-glimmering.
-
-“Here,” I said to Hartung, pretending a kind of innocence, even at this
-late hour, “what’s all this about? What’s the row, anyhow?”
-
-“Didn’t you see the editorial in the _Post-Dispatch_?” inquired Hartung
-gloomily. It was his own predicament that was troubling him.
-
-“No. What about?”
-
-“Why, that criticism you wrote about the Black Patti. They’ve made all
-sorts of fun of it. The worst of it is that they’ve charged it all up to
-the old man.”
-
-I smiled a sickly smile. I felt as if I had committed some great crime.
-Why had I attempted to write anything “fine” anyhow? Why couldn’t I have
-been content and rested with a little praise? Had I no sense at all?
-Must I always be trying to do something great? Perhaps this would be the
-end of me.
-
-Hartung brought me the _Post-Dispatch_, and sorrowfully and with falling
-vitals I read it, my toes curling, my stomach seeming gradually to
-retire to my backbone. Why had I done it!
-
-As I was standing there, my eyes glued to the paper, near the door which
-looked into the main city room in which was Tobe scribbling dourly away,
-I heard and then saw McCullagh enter and walk up to the stout city
-editor. He had a copy of the selfsame _Post-Dispatch_ crumpled roughly
-in his hand, and on his face was gathered what seemed to me a dark
-scowl.
-
-“Did you see this, Mr. Mitchell?” I heard him say.
-
-Tobe looked up, then closely and respectfully at the paper.
-
-“Yes,” he said.
-
-“I don’t think a thing like that ought to appear in our paper. It’s a
-little bit too high-flown for our audience. Your reader should have
-modified it.”
-
-“I think so myself,” replied Tobe quietly.
-
-The editor walked out. Tobe waited for his footsteps to die away and
-then growled at Hartung: “Why the devil did you let that stuff go
-through? Haven’t I warned you against that sort of thing? Why can’t you
-watch out?”
-
-I could have fallen through the floor. I had a vision of Hartung burying
-his head in his desk, scared and mute.
-
-After the evening assignments had been given out and Tobe had gone to
-dinner, Hartung crept up to me.
-
-“Gee, the old man was as mad as the devil!” he began. “Tobe gave me
-hell. He won’t say anything to you maybe, but he’ll take it out on me.
-He’s a little afraid of your pull with the old man, but he gives me the
-devil. Can’t you look out for those things?”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
-
-
-IN spite of this little mishap, which did me no great harm, there was a
-marked improvement in my affairs in every way. I had a better room,
-various friends—Wood, McCord, Rodenberger, Hazard, Bellairs, a new
-reporter by the name of Johnson, another by the name of Walden Root, a
-nephew of the senator—and the growing consideration if not admiration of
-many of the newspaper men of the city. Among them I was beginning to be
-looked upon as a man of some importance, and the proof of it was that
-from time to time I found myself being discussed in no mild way. From
-now on I noticed that my noble Wood, whom I had so much looked up to at
-first, began to take me about with him to one or more Chinese
-restaurants of the most beggarly description in the environs of the
-downtown section, which same he had discovered and with the proprietors
-of which he was on the best of terms. They were really hang-outs for
-crooks and thieves and disreputable tenderloin characters generally
-(such was the beginning of the Chinese restaurant in America), but not
-so to Wood. He had the happy faculty of persuading himself that there
-was something vastly mysterious and superior about the entire Chinese
-race, and after introducing me to many of his new laundry friends he
-proceeded to assure me of the existence of some huge Chinese
-organization known as the Six Companies which, so far as I could make
-out from hearing him talk, was slowly but surely (and secretly, of
-course) getting control of the entire habitable globe. It had complete
-control of great financial and constructive ventures here, there and
-everywhere, and supplied on order thousands of Chinese laborers to any
-one who desired them, anywhere. And this organization ruled them with a
-rod of iron, cutting their throats and burying them head down in a
-bucket of rice when they failed to perform their bounden duties and
-transferring their remains quietly to China, in coffins made in China
-and brought here for that purpose. The Chinese who had worked for the
-builders of the Union Pacific had been supplied by this company, so he
-said.
-
-Again, there were the Chinese Free Masons, a society so old and so
-powerful and so mysterious that one might speak of it only in whispers
-for fear of getting into trouble. This indeed was _the_ great
-organization of the world, in China and everywhere else. Kings and
-potentates knew of it and trembled before its power. If it wished it
-could sweep the Chinese Emperor and all European monarchs off their
-thrones tomorrow. There were rites, mysteries, sanctuaries within
-sanctuaries in this great organization. He himself was as yet a mere
-outsider, snooping about, but by degrees, slowly and surely, as I was
-given to understand, was worming its secrets out of these Chinese
-restaurant-keepers and laundrymen, its deepest mysteries, whereby he
-hoped to profit in this way: he was going to study Chinese, then go to
-China. There he would get into this marvelous organization through the
-influence of some of his Chinese friends here. Then he was going to get
-next to some of the officials of the Chinese Government, and being thus
-highly recommended and thought of would come back here eventually as an
-official Chinese interpreter, attached perhaps to the Chinese Legation
-at Washington. How he was to profit so vastly by this I could not see,
-but he seemed to think that he would.
-
-Again, there was his literary world which he was always dreaming about
-and slaving over, his art ambitions, into which I was now by degrees
-permitted to look. He was forging ahead in that realm, and since I was
-doing fairly well as a daily scribbler it might be that I would be able
-to perceive a little of all he was hoping to do. His great dream or
-scheme was to study the underworld life of St. Louis at first hand,
-those horrible, grisly, waterfront saloons and lowest tenderloin dives
-and brothels south of Market and east of Eighth where, listening to the
-patois of thieves and pimps and lechers and drug-fiends and murderers
-and outlaws generally, he was to extract from them, aside from their
-stories, some bizarre originality of phrase and scene that was to stand
-him in good stead in the composition of his tales. Just now, so he told
-me, he was content with making notes, jotting down scraps of
-conversation heard at bars, in sloppy urinals, cheap dance-halls, and I
-know not what. With a little more time and a little more of that slowly
-arriving sanity which comes to most of us eventually, I am inclined to
-think that he might have made something out of all this; he was so much
-in earnest, so patient; only, as I saw it, he was filled with an almost
-impossible idealism and romance which threw nearly everything out of
-proportion. He naturally inclined to the arabesque and the grotesque,
-but in no balanced way. His dreams were too wild, his mood at nearly all
-times too utterly romantic, his deductions far beyond what a sane
-contemplation of the facts warranted.
-
-And relative to this period I could other tales unfold. He and Peter,
-long before I had arrived on the scene, had surrounded themselves with a
-company of wayfarers of their own: down-and-out English army officers
-and grafting younger sons of good families, a Frenchman or two, one of
-whom was a poet, several struggling artists who grafted on them, and a
-few weird and disreputable characters so degraded and nondescript that I
-could never make out just what their charm was. At least two of these
-had suitable rooms, where, in addition to Dick’s and mine, we were
-accustomed to meet. There were parties, Sunday and evening walks or
-trips, dinners. Poems, on occasion, were read, original, first-hand
-compositions; Dick’s stories, as Peter invariably insisted, were
-“inflicted,” the “growler” or “duck” (a tin bucket of good size) was
-“rushed” for beer, and cheese and crackers and hot crawfish, sold by old
-ambling negroes on the streets after midnight, were bought and consumed
-with gusto. Captain Simons, Captain Seller, Toussaint, Benèt—these are
-names of figures that are now so dim as to be mere wraiths, ranged about
-a smoky, dimly lighted room in some downtown rooming-house. Both Dick
-and Peter had reached that distinguished state where they were the
-center of attraction as well as supports and props to these others, and
-between them got up weird entertainments, knockabout Dutch comedian
-acts, which they took down to some wretched dance-hall and staged, each
-“doing a turn.” The glee over the memory of these things as they now
-narrated them to me!
-
-Wood was so thin physically and so vigorous mentally that he was
-fascinating to look at. He had an idea that this bohemianism and his
-story work were of the utmost importance; and so they were if they had
-been but a prelude to something more serious, or if his dreams could
-only have been reduced to paper and print. There was something that lay
-in his eye, a ray. There was an aroma to his spirit which was delicious.
-As I get him now, he was a rather underdone Poe or de Maupassant or
-Manet, and assuredly a portion of the makings was certainly there. For
-at times the moods he could evoke in me were poignant, and he saw beauty
-and romance in many and strange ways and places. I have seen him enter a
-dirty, horrible saloon in one of St. Louis’s lowest dive regions with
-the air of a Prince Charming and there seat himself at some sloppy
-table, his patent leather low-quarters scraping the sanded or sawdusted
-floor, order beer and then, smiling genially upon all, begin to
-transcribe from memory whole sections of conversations he had heard
-somewhere, in the street perhaps, all the while racking his brain to
-recall the exact word and phrase. Unlike myself, he had a knack of
-making friends with these shabby levee and underworld characters,
-syphilitic, sodden, blue-nosed bums mostly, whom he picked up from
-Heaven knows where. And how he seemed to prize their vile language,
-their lies and their viler thoughts!
-
-And there was McCord, bless his enthusiastic, materialistic heart, who
-seemed to take fire from this joint companionship and was determined to
-do something, he scarcely knew what—draw, paint, write,
-collect—anything. His mind was so wrought up by the rich pattern which
-life was weaving before his eyes that he could scarcely sleep at nights.
-He was for prowling about with us these winter and spring days, looking
-at the dark city after work hours, or investigating these wretched dives
-with Dick and myself. Or, the three of us would take a banjo, a mandolin
-and a flute (McCord could perform on the flute and Dick on the mandolin)
-and go to Forrest Park or one of the minor parks on the south side, and
-there proceed to make the night hideous with our carolings until some
-solid policeman, assuming that the public had rights, would interfere
-and bid us depart. Our invariable retort on all such occasions was that
-we were newspaper men and artists and as such entitled to courtesies
-from the police, which the thick-soled minion of the law would
-occasionally admit. Sometimes we would go to Dick’s room or mine and
-chatter and sing until dawn, when, somewhat subdued, we would seek out
-some German saloon-keeper whom either Peter or Wood knew, rouse him out
-of his slumbers and demand that he come down and supply us with ham and
-eggs and beer.
-
-My stage critical work having vivified my desire to write a play or
-comic opera on the order of _Wang_ or _The Isle of Champagne_, two of
-the reigning successes of that day, or the pleasing _Robin Hood_ of de
-Koven, I set about this task as best I might, scribbling scenes, bits of
-humor, phases of character. In this idea I was aided and abetted not
-only by Wood and McCord, both of whom by now seemed to think I might do
-something, but by the fact that the atmosphere of the _Globe_ office, as
-well as of St. Louis itself, was, for me at least, inspirational and
-creative. I liked the world in which I now found myself. There were
-about me and in the city so many who seemed destined to do great
-things—Wood, McCord, Hazard, a man by the name of Bennett who was
-engaged in sociologic propaganda of one kind and another, William Marion
-Reedy, already editing the _Mirror_, Albert Johnson, a most brilliant
-reporter who had, preceding my coming, resigned from the _Globe_ and
-gone over to the _Chronicle_, Alfred Robyn, composer of _Answer_ and
-_Marizanillo_, one of whose operas was even then being given a local
-tryout. I have mentioned the wonderful W. C. Brann who preceded me in
-writing “Heard in the Corridors” and who later stirred America with the
-_Iconoclast_.
-
-All this, plus the fact that Augustus Thomas had come from here, a
-reporter on the _Post-Dispatch_, and that I was now seeing one of his
-plays, _In Missouri_, moved me to the point where I finally thought out
-what I considered a fairly humorous plot for a comic opera, which was to
-be called _Jeremiah I_. It was based on the idea of transporting, by
-reason of his striking accidentally a mythical Aztec stone on his farm,
-an old Indiana farmer of a most cantankerous and inquisitive disposition
-from the era in which he then was back into that of the Aztecs of
-Mexico, where, owing to a religious invocation then being indulged in
-with a view to discovering a new ruler, he was assumed to be the answer.
-Beginning as a cowardly refugee in fear for his life, he was slowly
-changed into an amazing despot, having at one time as many as three
-hundred ex-advisers or Aztec secretaries of state in one pen awaiting
-poisoning. He was to be dissuaded from carrying out this plan by his
-desire for a certain Aztec maiden, who was to avoid him until he
-repented of his crimes. She eventually persuaded him to change the form
-of government from that of a despotism to that of a republic, with
-himself as candidate for President.
-
-There was nothing much to it. Its only humor lay in the thought or sight
-of a cranky, curious, critical farmer super-imposed upon ancient
-architecture and forms of worship. Having once thought it out, however,
-and being pleased with it, I worked at it feverishly nights when I was
-not on assignments, and in a week or less had a rough outline of it,
-lyrics and all. I told McCord and Wood about it. And so great was their
-youthful encouragement that at once I saw this as the way out of my
-difficulties, the path to that great future I desired. I would become
-the author of comic opera books. Already I saw myself in New York, rich,
-famous.
-
-But at that time I could not possibly write without constant
-encouragement, and having roughed out the opera I now burned for
-assistance in developing it in detail. At last I went to Peter and told
-him of my difficulty, my inability to go ahead. He seemed to relish the
-whole idea hugely, so much so that he made the thing seem far more
-plausible and easy for me to do and urged me to go ahead, not to faint
-or get cold feet. Enamored of costumes and gorgeous settings, he even
-went so far as to first suggest and then later work out in water color,
-suggestions for costumes and color schemes which I thought wonderful. I
-was lifted to the seventh heaven. To think that I had worked out
-something which he considered interesting!
-
-Later that evening, at Peter’s suggestion I outlined portions of it to
-Wood. He also seemed to believe that it was good. He insisted that there
-must be an evening at his room or mine when I would read it all to them.
-Accordingly a week later I read it in Dick’s room, to much partial
-applause of course. What else could they do? Peter even went so far as
-to suggest that he would love to act the part of Jeremiah I, and
-forthwith began to give us imitations of the prospective king’s
-mannerisms and characteristics. Whatever the merit of the manuscript
-itself, certainly we imagined Peter’s characterizations to be funny.
-Later he brought me as many as fifty designs of costumes and scenes in
-color, which appealed to me as having novelty as well as beauty. He had
-evidently worked for weeks, nights after hours and mornings before
-coming to the office and on Sundays. By this I was so thrilled that I
-could scarcely believe my eyes. To think that I had written the book of
-a real comic opera that should be deemed worthy of this, and that it was
-within the range of possibility that it would some day be produced!
-
-I began to feel myself a personage, although at bottom I mistrusted the
-reality of it all. Fate could not be that kind, not so swift. I should
-never get it produced ... and yet, like the man in the Arabian fable who
-kicked over his tray of glassware, dreaming great dreams, I was tending
-toward the same thing. There was always in me the saving grace of doubt
-or self-mistrust. I was never quite sure that I should be able to do all
-that at times I was inclined to hope I might, and so was usually
-inclined to go about my work as nervously and as enthusiastically as
-ever, hoping that I might have some of the good fortune of which I
-dreamed, but never seriously depending on it.
-
-Perhaps it would have been better for me had I.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
-
-
-WHILE I rejoiced in the thought that I might now, and so easily, become
-a successful comic opera librettist, and a poet besides, still I found
-myself for the most part in a very gloomy frame of mind. One of the
-things that grieved me intensely, as I have said, was the sight of
-bitter poverty and failure, and the fact that I personally was not one
-of those solid commercial figures of which St. Louis was full at this
-time. They filled the great hotels, the clubs, the mansions, the social
-positions of importance. They were free, as I foolishly thought, to
-indulge in all those luxuries and pleasures which, as I so sadly saw,
-the poor were not privileged to enjoy, myself included. Just about that
-time there was something about a commercial institution—its exterior
-simplicity and bareness, the thrash of its inward life, its suggestion
-of energy, force, compulsion and need—which invariably held me
-spellbound. Despite my literary and artistic ambitions, I still
-continued to think it essential, to me, and to all men for that matter
-if they were to have any force and dignity in this world, that each and
-every one should be in control of something of this kind, something
-commercially and financially successful. And what was I—a pale sprout of
-a newspaper man, possibly an editor or author in the future, but what
-more?
-
-At times this state of mind tended to make me irritable and even savage
-instead of sad. I thought that my very generous benefactor, the great
-McCullagh, ought to see what an important man I was and give me at once
-the dramatic editorship free and clear of any other work, or at least
-combine it with something better than mere reporting. I ought to be
-allowed to do editorials or special work. Again, my mind, although
-largely freed of Catholic and religious dogma generally and the belief
-in the workability of the Christian ideals as laid down in the Sermon on
-the Mount, was still swashing around among the idealistic maxims of
-Christ and the religionists and moralists generally, contrasting them
-hourly, as it were, with the selfish materialism of the day as I saw it.
-Look at the strong men at the top, I was constantly saying to myself, so
-comfortable, so indifferent, so cruelly dull. How I liked to flail them
-with maxims excerpted from Christ! Those large districts south of the
-business heart, along the river and elsewhere, which nightly or weekly
-Wood, McCord and myself were investigating and which were crowded with
-the unfit, the unsuccessful, the unhappy—how they haunted me and how I
-attempted (in my mind, of course) to indict society and comfort them
-with the poetic if helpless words of the Beatitudes and the Sermon on
-the Mount: “Blessed are the poor,” etc. Betimes, interviewing one
-important citizen and another, I gained the impression that they truly
-despised any one who was poor, that they did not give him or his fate a
-second thought; and betimes I was right—other times wrong. But having
-been reared on maxims relative to Christian duty I thought they should
-devote their all to the poor. This failure on their part seemed terrible
-to me, for having been taught to believe in the Sermon on the Mount I
-thought they—not myself, for instance—were the ones to make it work out.
-Mr. McCullagh had begun sending me out of town on various news stories,
-which was in itself the equivalent of a traveling correspondentship and
-might readily have led to my being officially recognized as such if I
-had remained there long enough. Trials of murder cases in St. Joseph and
-Hannibal, threatened floods in lower Illinois, and train robberies
-(common occurrences in this region, either between St. Louis and Kansas
-City, or St. Louis and Louisville) made it necessary for me to make
-arrangements with Hazard or Wood to carry on my dramatic work while I
-went about these tasks; a necessity which I partly relished and partly
-disliked, being uncertain as to which was the more important task to me.
-
-However, I was far from satisfied. I was too restless and dissatisfied.
-Life, life, life, its contrasts, disappointments, lacks, enticements,
-was always prodding me. The sun might shine brightly, the winds of
-fortune blow favorably. Nevertheless, though I might enjoy both, there
-was always this undertone of something that was not happiness. I was not
-placed right. I was not this, I was not that. Life was slipping away
-fast (and I was twenty-one!). I could see the tiny sands of my little
-life’s hourglass sifting down, and what was I achieving? Soon the
-strength time, the love time, the gay time, of color and romance, would
-be gone, and if I had not spent it fully, joyously, richly what would
-there be left for me then? The joys of a mythical heaven or hereafter
-played no part in my calculations. When one was dead one was dead for
-all time. Hence the reason for the heartbreak over failure here and now;
-the awful tragedy of a love lost, a youth never properly enjoyed. Think
-of living and yet not living in so thrashing a world as this, the best
-of one’s hours passing unused or not properly used. Think of seeing this
-tinkling phantasmagoria of pain and pleasure, beauty and all its sweets,
-go by, and yet being compelled to be a bystander, a mere onlooker,
-enhungered but never satisfied! In this mood I worked on, doing
-sometimes good work because I was temporarily fascinated and
-entertained, at other times grumbling and dawdling and moaning over what
-seemed to me the horrible humdrum of it all.
-
-One day, in just such a mood as this, I received the following final
-letter from Alice, from whom I had not heard now in months:
-
- “Dear Theo,
-
- “Tomorrow is my wedding-day. Tomorrow at twelve. This may strike
- you as strange. Well, I have waited—I don’t know how long—it has
- seemed like years to me—for some word, but I knew it was not to
- be. Your last letter showed me that. I knew that you did not
- intend to return, and so I went back to Mr. ——. I had to. What
- else have I to look forward to? You know how unhappy I am here
- with my family, now that you are gone, in spite of how much they
- care for me.
-
- “Oh, Theo, you must think me foolish for writing this. I am
- ashamed of myself. Still, I wanted to let you know, and to say
- good-bye, for although you have been indifferent I cannot bear
- any hard feelings toward you. I will make Mr. —— a good wife. He
- understands I do not love him, but that I appreciate him.
- Tomorrow I will marry him, unless—unless something happens. You
- ought not to have told me that you loved me, Theo, unless you
- could have stayed with me. You have caused me so much pain.
-
- “But I must say good-bye. This is the last letter I shall ever
- write you. Don’t send my letters now—tear them up. It is too
- late. Oh, if you only knew how hard it has been to bring myself
- to this!
-
- “ALICE.”
-
-I sat and stared at the floor after reading this. The pain I had caused
-was a heavy weight. The implication that if I would come to Chicago
-before noon of this day, or telegraph for her to delay, was too much.
-What if I should go to Chicago and get her—then what? To her it would be
-a beautiful thing, the height of romance, saving her from a cruel or
-dreary fate; but what of me? Should I be happy? Was my profession or my
-present restless and uncertain state of mind anything to base a marriage
-on? I knew it was not.... I also knew that Alice, in spite of my great
-sadness and affection for her, was really nothing more to me than a
-passing bit of beauty, charming in itself but of no great import to me.
-I was sad for her and for myself, saddest because of that chief
-characteristic of mine and of life which will not let anything endure
-permanently: love, wealth, fame. I was too restless, too changeful.
-There rose before me a picture of my finances as compared with what they
-ought to be, and of any future in marriage based on it. Actually, as I
-looked at it then, it was more the fault of life than mine.
-
-These thoughts, balancing with the wish I had for greater advancement,
-caused me as usual to hesitate. But I was in no danger of doing anything
-impulsive: there was no great impelling passion in this. It was mere
-sentiment, growing more and more roseate and less and less operative. I
-groaned inwardly, but night came and the next day, and I had not
-answered. At noon Alice had been married, as she afterward told me—years
-afterward, when the fire was all gone and this romance was ended
-forever.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-
-THUS it was that I dawdled about the city wondering what would become of
-me. My dramatic work, interesting as it was, was still so trivial in so
-far as the space given it and the public’s interest in it were concerned
-as to make it all but worthless. The great McCullagh was not interested
-in the stage; the proof of it was that he entrusted this interesting
-department to me. But circumstances were bringing about an onward if not
-upward step. I was daily becoming so restless and unhappy that it would
-have been strange if something had not happened. To think that there was
-no more to this dramatic work for me than now appeared, and that in
-addition Mr. McCullagh was allowing Mr. Mitchell to give me afternoon
-and night or out-of-town assignments when I had important theatrical
-performances to report! As a matter of fact they were not important, but
-Mitchell had no consideration for my critical work. He continued to give
-me two or three things to do on nights when, as he knew or I thought he
-should, I should spend the evening witnessing a single performance. This
-was to pay me out, so I thought, for going over his head. I grew more
-and more resentful, and finally a catastrophe occurred.
-
-It happened that one Sunday night late in April three shows were
-scheduled to arrive in the city, each performance being worthy of
-special attention. Nearly all new shows opened in St. Louis on Sunday
-night and it was impossible for me to attend them all in one evening. I
-might have given both Dick and Peter tickets and asked them to help me,
-but I decided, since this was a custom practiced by my predecessor at
-times, to write up the notices beforehand, the facts being culled from
-various press-agent accounts already in my hands, and then comment more
-fully on the plays in some notes which I published mid-week. It
-happened, however, that on this particular evening Mr. Mitchell had
-other plans for me. Without consulting me or my theatrical duties he
-handed me at about seven in the evening a slip of paper containing a
-notice of a street-car hold-up in the far western suburbs of the city. I
-was about to protest that my critical work demanded my presence
-elsewhere but concluded to hold my tongue. He would merely advise me to
-write up the notices of the shows, as I had planned, or, worse yet, tell
-me to let other people do them. I thought once of going to McCullagh and
-protesting, but finally went my way determined to do the best I could
-and protest later. I would hurry up on this assignment and then come
-back and visit the theaters.
-
-When I reached the scene of the supposed hold-up there was nothing to
-guide me. The people at the car-barns did not know anything about it and
-the crew that had been held up was not present. I visited a far outlying
-police station but the sergeant in charge could tell me nothing more
-than that the crime was not very important, a few dollars stolen. I went
-to the exact spot but there were no houses in the neighborhood, only a
-barren stretch of track lying out in a rain-soaked plain. It was a
-gloomy, wet night, and I decided to return to the city. When I reached a
-car-line it was late, too late for me to do even a part of my critical
-work; the long distance out and the walks to the car-barn and the police
-station had consumed much time. As I neared the city I found that it was
-eleven o’clock. What chance had I to visit the theaters then? I asked
-myself angrily. How was I to know if the shows had even arrived? There
-had been heavy rains all over the West for the last week and there had
-been many wash-outs.
-
-I finally got off in front of the nearest theater and went up to the
-door; it was silent and dark. I thought of asking the drugman who
-occupied a corner of the building, but that seemed a silly thing to be
-doing at this hour and I let it go. I thought of telephoning to the
-rival paper, the _Republic_, when I reached the office, but when I got
-there I had first to report to Mitchell, who was just leaving, and then,
-irritated and indifferent, I put it off for the moment. Perhaps Hartung
-would know.
-
-“Do you know what time the first edition goes to press here, Hugh?” I
-asked him at a quarter after twelve.
-
-“Twelve-thirty, I think. The telegraph man can tell you.”
-
-“Do you know whether the dramatic stuff I sent up this afternoon gets in
-that?”
-
-“Sure—at least I think it does. You’d better ask the foreman of the
-composing-room about it, though.”
-
-I went upstairs. Instead of calling up the _Republic_ at once, or any of
-the managers of the theaters, or knocking out the notices entirely, I
-inquired how matters stood with the first edition. I was not sure that
-there was any reason for worrying about the shows not arriving, but
-something kept telling me to make sure.
-
-At last I found that the first edition had been closed, with the notices
-in it, and went to the telephone to call up the _Republic_. Then the
-dramatic editor of that paper had gone and I could not find the address
-of a single manager. I tried to reach one of the theaters, but there was
-no response. The clock registered twelve-thirty by then, and I weakly
-concluded that things must be all right or that if they weren’t I
-couldn’t help it. I then went home and to bed and slept poorly, troubled
-by the thought that something might be wrong and wishing now that I had
-not been so lackadaisical about it all. Why couldn’t I attend to things
-at the proper time instead of dawdling about in this fashion? I sighed
-and tried to sleep.
-
-The next morning I arose and went through the two morning papers without
-losing any time. To my horror and distress, there in the _Republic_ was
-an announcement on the first page to the effect that owing to various
-wash-outs in several States none of the three shows had arrived the
-night before. And in my own paper, to my great pain was a full account
-of the performances and the agreeable reception accorded them!
-
-“Oh, Lord!” I groaned. “What will McCullagh say? What will the other
-papers say? Three shows reviewed, and not one here!” And in connection
-with one I had written: “A large and enthusiastic audience received Mr.
-Sol Smith Russell” at the Grand. And in connection with another that the
-gallery of Pope’s Theater “was top-heavy.” The perspiration burst from
-my forehead. Remembering Sisseretta Jones and my tendency to draw the
-lightning of public observation and criticism, I began to speculate as
-to what newspaper criticism would follow this last _faux pas_. “Great
-God!” I thought. “Wait till he sees this!” and I was ready to weep. At
-once I saw myself not only the laughing-stock of the town but discharged
-as well. Think of being discharged now, after all my fine dreams as to
-the future!
-
-Without delay I proceeded to the office and removed my few belongings,
-resolved to be prepared for the worst. With the feeling that I owed Mr.
-McCullagh an explanation I sat down and composed a letter to him in
-which I explained, from my point of view, just how the thing had
-happened. I did not attack Mr. Mitchell or seek to shield myself but
-merely illustrated how I had been expected to handle my critical work in
-this office. I also added how kind I thought he had been, how much I
-valued his personal regard, and asked him not to think too ill of me.
-This letter I placed in an envelope addressed to “Mr. Joseph B.
-McCullagh, Personal,” and going into his private office before any
-others had come down laid it on his desk. Then I retired to my room to
-await the afternoon papers and think.
-
-They were not long in appearing, and neither of the two leading
-afternoon papers had failed to notice the blunder. With the most
-delicate, laughing raillery they had seized upon this latest error of
-the great _Globe_ as a remarkable demonstration of what they affected to
-believe was its editor’s lately acquired mediumistic and psychic powers.
-The _Globe_ was regularly writing up various séances, slate-writing
-demonstrations and the like, in St. Louis and elsewhere, things which
-Mr. McCullagh was interested in or considered good circulation builders,
-and this was now looked upon as a fresh demonstration of his development
-in that line. “Oh, Lord! Oh, Lord!” I groaned when I read the following:
-
-“To see three shows at once,” observed the _Post-Dispatch_, “and those
-three widely separated by miles of country and washed-out sections of
-railroad in three different States (Illinois, Iowa and Missouri), is
-indeed a triumph; but also to see them as having arrived, or as they
-would have been had they arrived, and displaying their individual
-delights to three separate audiences of varying proportions assembled
-for that purpose is truly amazing, one of the finest demonstrations of
-mediumship—or perhaps we had better say materialization—yet known to
-science. Great, indeed, is McCullagh. Great the _G.-D._ Indeed, now that
-we think of it, it is an achievement so astounding that even the _Globe_
-may well be proud of it—one of the finest flights of which the human
-mind or the great editor’s psychic strength is capable. We venture to
-say that no spiritualist or materializing medium has ever outrivaled it.
-We have always known that Mr. McCullagh is a great man. The illuminating
-charm of his editorial page is sufficient proof of that. But this latest
-essay of his into the realm of combined dramatic criticism, supernatural
-insight, and materialization, is one of the most perfect things of its
-kind and can only be attributed to genius in the purest form. It is
-psychic, supernatural, spooky.”
-
-The _Evening Chronicle_ for its part troubled to explain how ably and
-interestedly the spirit audiences and actors, although they might as
-well have been resting, the actors at least not having any contract
-which compelled their subconscious or psychic selves to work, had
-conducted themselves, doing their parts without a murmur. It was also
-here hinted that in future it would not be necessary for the _Globe_ to
-carry a dramatic critic, seeing that the psychic mind of its chief was
-sufficient. Anyhow it was plain that the race was fast reaching that
-place where it could perceive in advance that which was about to take
-place; in proof of this it pointed of course to the noble mind which now
-occupied the editorial chair of the _Globe-Democrat_, seeing all this
-without moving from his office.
-
-I was agonized. Sweat rolled from my forehead; my nerves twitched. And
-to think that this was the second time within no more than a month that
-I had made my great benefactor the laughing-stock of the city! What must
-he think of me? I could see him at that moment reading these
-editorials.... He would discharge me....
-
-Not knowing what to do, I sat and brooded. Gone were all my fine dreams,
-my great future, my standing in the eyes of men and of this paper! What
-was to become of me now? I saw myself returning to Chicago—to do what?
-What would Peter, Dick, Hazard, Johnson, Bellairs, all my new found
-friends, think? Instead of going boldly to the office and seeing my
-friends, who were still fond of me if laughing at my break, or Mr.
-McCullagh, I slipped about the city meditating on my fate and wondering
-what I was to do.
-
-For at least a week, during the idlest hours of the morning and evening,
-I would slip out and get a little something to eat or loiter in an old
-but little-frequented book-store in Walnut Street, hoping to keep myself
-out of sight and out of mind. In a spirit of intense depression I picked
-up a few old books, deciding to read more, to make myself more fit for
-life. I also decided to leave St. Louis, since no one would have me
-here, and began to think of Chicago, whether I could stand it to return
-there, or whether I had better drift on to a strange place. But how
-should I live or travel, since I had very little money—having wasted it,
-as I now thought, on riotous living! The unhappy end of a spendthrift!
-
-Finally, after mooning about for a day or two more I concluded that I
-should have to leave my fine room and try to earn some money here so as
-to be able to leave. And so one morning, without venturing near the
-_Globe_ and giving the principal meeting-places of reporters and friends
-a wide berth, I went into the office of the St. Louis _Republic_, then
-thriving fairly well in an old building at Third and Chestnut streets.
-Here with a heavy heart, I awaited the coming of the city editor, H. B.
-Wandell, of whom I had heard a great deal but whom I had never seen.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-
-THE _Republic_ was in a tumbledown old building in a fairly deserted
-neighborhood in that region near the waterfront from which the city
-proper had been steadily growing away for years. This paper, if I am not
-mistaken, was founded in 1808.
-
-The office was so old and rattletrap that it was discouraging. The
-elevator was a slow and wheezy box, bumping and creaking and suggesting
-immediate collapse. The boards of the entrance-hall and the city
-editorial room squeaked under one’s feet. The city reportorial room,
-where I should work if I secured a place, was larger than that of the
-_Globe_ and higher-ceiled, but beyond that it had no advantage. The
-windows were tall but cracked and patched with faded yellow copy-paper;
-the desks, some fifteen or twenty all told, were old, dusty,
-knife-marked, smeared with endless ages of paste and ink. There was
-waste paper and rubbish on the floor. There was no sign of either paint
-or wallpaper. The windows facing east looked out upon a business court
-or alley where trucks and vans creaked all day but which at night was
-silent as the grave, as was this entire wholesale neighborhood. The
-buildings directly opposite were decayed wholesale houses of some
-unimportant kind where in slimsy rags of dresses or messy trousers and
-shirts girls and boys of from fourteen to twenty worked all day, the
-girls’ necks in summer time open to their breasts and their sleeves
-rolled to their shoulders, the boys in sleeveless undershirts and
-tight-belted trousers and with tousled hair. What their work was I
-forget, but flirting with each other or with the reporters and printers
-of this paper occupied a great deal of their time.
-
-The city editor, H. B. Wandell, was one of those odd, forceful
-characters who because of my youth and extreme impressionability perhaps
-and his own vigor and point of view succeeded in making a deep
-impression on me at once. He was such a queer little man, so different
-from Mitchell and McCullagh, nervous, jumpy, restless, vigorous, with
-eyes so piercing that they reminded one of a hawk’s and a skin so
-swarthy that it was Italian in quality and made all the more emphatic by
-a large, humped, protruding nose pierced by big nostrils. His hands were
-wrinkled and claw-like, and he had large yellowish teeth which showed
-rather fully when he laughed. And that laugh! I can hear it yet, a cross
-between a yelp and a cackle. It always seemed to me to be a mirthless
-laugh, insincere, and yet also it had an element of appreciation in it.
-He could see a point at which others ought to laugh without apparently
-enjoying it himself. He was at once a small and yet a large man
-mentally, wise and incisive in many ways, petty and even venomous in
-others, a man to coddle and placate if you were beholden to him, one to
-avoid if you were not, but on the whole a man above the average in
-ability.
-
-And he had the strangest, fussiest, bossiest love of great literature of
-any one I have ever known, especially in the realm of the newspapers.
-Zola at this time was apparently his ideal of what a writer should be,
-and after him Balzac and Loti. He seemed to know them well and to admire
-and even love them, after his fashion. He was always calling upon me to
-imitate Zola’s vivid description of the drab and the gross and the
-horrible if I could, assuming that I had read him, which I had not, but
-I did not say so. And Balzac’s and Loti’s sure handling of the sensual
-and the poignant! How often have I heard him refer to them with
-admiration, giving me the line and phrase of certain stark pictures, and
-yet at the same time there was a sneaking bending of the knee to the
-middle West conventions of which he was a part, a kind of horror of
-having it known that he approved of these things. He was a Shriner and
-very proud of it, as he was of various other local organizations to
-which he belonged. He had the reputation of being one of the best city
-editors in the city, far superior to my late master. Previously he had
-been city editor of the _Globe_ itself for many years and was still
-favorably spoken of in that office. After I left St. Louis he returned
-to the _Globe_ for a time and once more became its guide in local news.
-
-But that is neither here nor there save as it illustrates what is a
-cardinal truth of the newspaper world: that the best of newspaper men
-are occasionally to be found on the poorest of papers, and vice versa.
-Just at this time, as I understood, he was here because the _Republic_
-was making a staggering effort to build itself up in popular esteem,
-which it finally succeeded in doing after McCullagh’s death, becoming
-once more the leading morning paper as it had been before the _Globe_,
-under McCullagh, arose to power. Just now, however, in my despondent
-mood, it seemed an exceedingly sad affair.
-
-Mr. Wandell, as I now learned, had heard of me and my recent _faux pas_,
-as well as some of the other things I had been doing.
-
-“Been working on the _Globe_, haven’t you?” he commented when I
-approached him. “What did they pay you?”
-
-I told him.
-
-“When did you leave there?”
-
-“About a week ago.”
-
-“Why did you leave?”
-
-“Perhaps you saw those notices of three shows that didn’t come to town?
-I’m the man who wrote them up.”
-
-“Oho! ho! ho!” and he began eyeing me drily and slapping his knee. “I
-saw those. Ha! ha! ha! Ha! ha! ha! Yes, that was very funny—very. We had
-an editorial on it. And so McCullagh fired you, did he?”
-
-“No, sir,” I replied indignantly. “I quit. I thought he might want to,
-and I put a letter on his desk and left.”
-
-“Ha! ha! ha! Quite right! That’s very funny! I know just how they do
-over there. I was city editor there myself once. They write them up in
-advance sometimes. We do here. Where do you come from?”
-
-I told him. He meditated awhile, as though he were uncertain whether he
-needed any one.
-
-“You say you got thirty dollars there? I couldn’t pay anybody that much
-here—not to begin with. We never give more than eighteen to begin with.
-Besides, I have a full staff just now, and it’s summer. I might use
-another man if eighteen would be enough. You might think it over and
-come in and see me again some time.”
-
-Although my spirits fell at so great a drop in salary I hastened to
-explain that I would be glad to accept eighteen. I needed to be at work
-again.
-
-“Whatever you would consider fair would suit me,” I said.
-
-He smiled. “The newspaper market is low just now. If your work proves
-satisfactory I may raise you a little later on.” He must have seen that
-he had a soft and more or less unsophisticated boy to deal with.
-
-“Suppose you write me a little article about something, just to show me
-what you can do,” he added.
-
-I went away insulted by this last request. In spite of all he said I
-could feel that he wanted me; but I had no skill in manipulating my own
-affairs. To drop from thirty dollars as dramatic editor to eighteen as a
-mere reporter was terrible. With a grain of philosophic melancholy I
-faced it, however, feeling that if I worked hard I might yet get a start
-in some way or other. I must work and save some money and if I did not
-better myself I would leave St. Louis. My ability must be worth
-something somewhere; it had been on the _Globe_.
-
-I went home and wrote the article (a mere nothing about some street
-scene), went back to the office and left it. Next day I called again.
-
-“All right,” he said. “You can go to work.”
-
-I went back into that large shabby room and took a seat. In a few
-minutes the place filled up with the staff, most of whom I knew and all
-of whom eyed me curiously—reporters, special editors, the city editor
-and his assistant, Mr. Williams of blessed memory, one-eyed, sad,
-impressive, intelligent, who had nothing but kind things to say of what
-I wrote and who was friendly and helpful until the day I left.
-
-In a little while the assignment book was put out, with the task I was
-to undertake. Before I left I was called in and advised concerning it. I
-went and looked into it (I have forgotten what it was) and reported
-later in the day. What I wrote I turned over to Mr. Williams, and later
-in the day when I asked him if it was all right he said: “Yes, quite all
-right. It reads all right to me,” and then gave me a kindly, one-eyed
-smile. I liked him from the first day; he was a better editor than
-Wandell, with more taste and discrimination, and later rose to a higher
-position elsewhere.
-
-Meanwhile I strolled about thinking of my great fall. It seemed as
-though I should never get over this. But in a few days I was back in my
-old reportorial routine, depressed but secure, convinced that I could
-write as well as ever, and for any newspaper.
-
-For the romance of my own youth was still upon me, my ambitions and my
-dreams coloring it all. Does the gull sense the terrors of the deep, or
-the butterfly the traps and snares of the woods and fields? Roaming this
-keen, new, ambitious mid-Western city, life-hungry and love-hungry and
-underpaid, eager and ambitious, I still found so much in the worst to
-soothe, so much in the best to torture me. In every scene of ease or
-pleasure was both a lure and a reproach; in every aspect of tragedy or
-poverty was a threat or a warning. I was never tired of looking at the
-hot, hungry, weary slums, any more than I was of looking at the glories
-of the mansions of the west end. Both had their lure, their charm; one
-because it was a state worse than my own, the other because it was a
-better—unfairly so, I thought. Amid it all I hurried, writing and
-dreaming, half-laughing and half-crying, with now a tale to move me to
-laughter and now another to send me to bottomless despairs. But always
-youth, youth, and the crash of the presses in the basement and a fresh
-damp paper laid on my desk of a morning with “the news” and my own petty
-achievements or failures to cheer or disappoint me; so it went, day in
-and day out.
-
-The _Republic_, while not so successful as the _Globe-Democrat_, was a
-much better paper for me to work on. For one thing, it took me from
-under the domination of Mr. Mitchell (one can hate some people most
-persistently), and placed me under one who, whatever may have been his
-defects, provided me with far greater opportunities for my pen than ever
-the _Globe_ had and supplied a better judgment as to what constituted a
-story and a news feature. Now that I think of him, Wandell was far and
-away the best judge of news, from a dramatic or story point of view, of
-any for whom I ever worked.
-
-“A good story, is it?” I can see him smirking and rubbing his hands
-miser or gourmet fashion, as over a pot of gold or a fine dish. “She
-said that, did she? Ha! ha! That’s excellent, excellent! You saw him
-yourself, did you? And the brother too? By George, we’ll make a story of
-that! Be careful how you write that now. All the facts you know, just as
-far as they will carry you; but we don’t want any libel suits, remember.
-We don’t want you to say anything we can’t substantiate, but I don’t
-want you to be afraid either. Write it strong, clear, definite. Get in
-all the touches of local color you can. And remember Zola and Balzac, my
-boy, remember Zola and Balzac. Bare facts are what are needed in cases
-like this, with lots of color as to the scenery or atmosphere, the room,
-the other people, the street, and all that. You get me?”
-
-And quite truly I got him, as he was pleased to admit, even though I got
-but little cash out of it. I always felt, perhaps unjustly, that he made
-but small if any effort to advantage me in any way except that of
-writing. But what of it? He was nearly always enthusiastic over my work,
-in a hard, bright, waspish way, nearly always excited about the
-glittering realistic facts which one might dig up and which he was quite
-determined that his paper should present. The stories! The scandals!
-That hard, cruel cackle of his when he had any one cornered! He must
-have known what a sham and a fake most of these mid-Western pretensions
-to sanctity and purity were, and yet if he did and was irritated by them
-he said little to me. Like most Americans of the time, he was probably
-confused by the endless clatter concerning personal perfection, the
-Christ ideal, as opposed to the actual details of life. He could not
-decide for himself which was true and which false, the Christ theory or
-that of Zola, but he preferred Zola when interpreting the news. When
-things were looking up from a news point of view and great realistic
-facts were coming to the surface regardless of local sentiment, facts
-which utterly contradicted all the noble fol-de-rol of the puritans and
-the religionists, he was positively transformed. In those hours when the
-loom of life seemed to be weaving brilliant dramatic or tragic patterns
-of a realistic, Zolaesque character he was beside himself with gayety,
-trotting to and fro in the local room, leaning over the shoulders of
-scribbling scribes and interrupting them to ask details or to caution
-them as to certain facts which they must or must not include, beaming at
-the ceiling or floor, whistling, singing, rubbing his hands—a veritable
-imp or faun of pleasure and enthusiasm. Deaths, murders, great social or
-political scandals or upheavals, those things which presented the rough,
-raw facts of life, as well as its tenderer aspects, seemed to throw him
-into an ecstasy—not over the woes of others but over the fact that he
-was to have an interesting paper tomorrow.
-
-“Ah, it was a terrible thing, was it? He killed her in cold blood, you
-say? There was a great crowd out there, was there? Well, well, write it
-all up. Write it all up. It looks like a pretty good story to me—doesn’t
-it to you? Write a good strong introduction for it, you know, all the
-facts in the first paragraph, and then go on and tell your story. You
-can have as much space for it as you want—a column, a column and a half,
-two—just as it runs. Let me look at it before you turn it in, though.”
-Then he would begin whistling or singing, or would walk up and down in
-the city room rubbing his hands in obvious satisfaction.
-
-And how that reportorial room seemed to thrill or sing between the hours
-of five and seven in the evening, when the stories of the afternoon were
-coming in, or between ten-thirty and midnight, when the full grist of
-the day was finally being ground out. How it throbbed with human life
-and thought, quite like a mill room full of looms or a counting house in
-which endless records and exchanges are being made. Those reporters,
-eighteen or twenty of them, bright, cheerful, interesting, forceful
-youths, each bent upon making a name for himself, each working hard,
-each here bending over his desk scratching his head or ear and thinking,
-his mind lost in the mazes of arrangement and composition.
-
-Wandell had no tolerance for any but the best of newspaper reporters and
-would discharge a man promptly for falling down on a story, especially
-if he could connect it with the feeling that he was not as good a
-newspaper man as he should be. He hated commonplace men, and once I had
-become familiar with the office and with him, he would often ask me in a
-spirit of unrest if I knew of an especially good one anywhere with whom
-he could replace some one else whom he did not like; a thought which
-jarred me but which did not prevent me from telling him. Somehow I had
-an eye and a taste for exceptional men myself, and I wanted his staff to
-be as good as any. So it was not long before he began to rely on me to
-supply him with suitable men, so much so that I soon had the reputation
-of being a local arbiter of jobs, one who could get men in or keep them
-out—a thing which made me some enemies later. And it really was not true
-for I could not have kept any good man out.
-
-In the meantime, while he was trying me out to suit himself, he had been
-giving me only routine work: the North Seventh Street police station
-afternoons and evenings, where one or two interesting stories might be
-expected every day, crimes or sordid romances of one kind or another. Or
-if there was nothing much doing there I might be sent out on an
-occasional crime story elsewhere. Once I had handled a few of these for
-him, and to his satisfaction, I was pushed into the topnotch class and
-given only the most difficult stories, those which might be called
-feature crimes and sensations, which I was expected to unravel,
-sometimes single-handed, and to which always I was expected to write the
-lead. This realistic method of his plus a keen desire to unload all the
-heavy assignments on me was in no wise bad for me. He liked me, and this
-was his friendly way of showing it.
-
-Indeed, with a ruthless inconsiderateness, as I then thought, he piled
-on story after story, until I was a little infuriated at first, seeing
-how little I was being paid. When nothing of immediate importance was to
-be had, he proceeded to create news, studying out interesting phases of
-past romances or crimes which he thought might be worth while to work up
-and publish on Sunday, and handing them to me to do over. He even
-created stories when the general news was dull, throwing me into the
-most delicate and dangerous fields of arson, murder, theft, marital
-unhappiness, and tragedies of all kinds, things not public but which by
-clever detective work could be made so, and where libel and other suits
-and damages lurked on either hand. Without cessation, Sunday and every
-other day, he called upon me to display sentiment, humor or cold, hard,
-descriptive force, as the case might be, quoting now Hugo, now Balzac,
-now Dickens, and now Zola to me to show me just what was to be done. In
-a little while, despite my reduced salary and the fact that I had lost
-my previous place in disgrace and was not likely to get a raise here
-soon, I was as much your swaggering newspaper youth as ever, strolling
-about the city with the feeling that I was somebody and looking up all
-my old friends, with the idea of letting them know that I was by no
-means such a failure as they might imagine. Dick and Peter of course,
-seeing me ambling in on them late one hot night, received me with open
-arms.
-
-“Well, you’re a good one!” yelped Dick in his high, almost falsetto
-voice when I came in. I could see that he had been sitting before his
-open window, which commanded Broadway, where he had been no doubt
-meditating—your true romancer. “Where the hell have you been keeping
-yourself? You’re a dandy? We’ve been looking for you for weeks. We’ve
-been down to your place a dozen times, but you wouldn’t let us in.
-You’re a dandy, you are! McCord has some more of those opera cartoons
-done. Why didn’t you ever come around, anyhow?”
-
-“I’m working down on the _Republic_ now,” I replied, blushing, “and I’ve
-been busy.”
-
-“Oho!” laughed Dick, slapping his knees. “That’s a good one on you! I
-heard about it. Those shows written up, and not one in town! Oho! That’s
-good!” He coughed a consumptive cough or two and relaxed.
-
-I laughed with him. “It wasn’t really all my fault,” I said
-apologetically.
-
-“I know it wasn’t. Don’t I know the _Globe_? Didn’t Carmichael get me to
-work the same racket for him? Ask Hazard. It wasn’t your fault. Sit
-down. Peter’ll be here in a little while; then we’ll go out and get
-something.”
-
-We fell to discussing the attitude of the people on the _Globe_ after I
-had left. Wood insisted that he had not heard much. He knew
-instinctively that Mitchell was glad I was gone, as he might well have
-been. Hartung had reported to him that McCullagh had raised Cain with
-Mitchell and that two or three of the boys on the staff had manifested
-relief.
-
-“You know who they’d be,” continued Wood. “The fellows who can’t do what
-you can but would like to.”
-
-I smiled. “I know about who they are,” I said.
-
-We talked about the world in general—literature, the drama, current
-celebrities, the state of politics, all seen through the medium of youth
-and aspiration and inexperience. While we were talking McCord came in.
-He had been to his home in South St. Louis, where he preferred to live
-in spite of his zest for Bohemia, and the ground had all to be gone over
-with him. We settled down to an evening’s enjoyment: Dick went for beer;
-Peter lit a rousing pipe. Accumulated short stories were produced and
-plans for new ones recounted. At one point Peter exclaimed: “You know
-what I’m going to do, Dreiser?”
-
-“Well, what?”
-
-“I’m going to study for the leading rôle in that opera of yours. I can
-play that, and I’m going to if you don’t object—do you?”
-
-“Object? Why should I object?” I replied, doubtful however of the wisdom
-of this. Peter had never struck me as quite the actor type. “I’d like to
-see you do it if you can, Peter.”
-
-“Oh, I can, all right. That old rube appeals to me. I bet that if I ever
-get on the stage I can get away with that.” He eyed Dick for
-confirmation.
-
-“I’ll bet you could,” said Dick loyally. “Peter makes a dandy rube. Oh,
-will you ever forget the time we went down to the old Nickelodeon and
-did a turn, Peter? Oho!”
-
-Later the three of us left for a bite and I could see that I was as high
-in their favor as ever, which restored me not a little. Peter seemed to
-think that my escapades and mishaps, coupled with the attention and
-discussion which my name evoked among local newspaper men, were doing me
-good, making me an interesting figure. I could scarcely believe that but
-I was inclined to believe that I had not fallen as low as at first I had
-imagined.
-
-
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-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV
-
-
-THE LaClede, as I have indicated, was the center of all gossiping
-newspaper life at this time, at least that part of it of which I knew
-anything. Here, in idling groups, during the course of a morning,
-afternoon or evening, might appear Dick or Peter, Body, Clark, Hazard,
-Johnson, Root, Johns Daws, a long company of excellent newspaper men who
-worked on the different papers of the city from time to time and who,
-because of a desire for companionship in this helter-skelter world and
-the certainty of finding it here, hung about this corner. Here one could
-get in on a highly intellectual or diverting conversation of one kind or
-another at almost any time. So many of these men had come from distant
-cities and knew them much better than they did St. Louis. As a rule,
-being total strangers and here only for a short while, they were
-inclined to sniff at conditions as they found them here and to boast of
-those elsewhere, especially the men who came from New York, Boston, San
-Francisco and Chicago. I was one of those who, knowing Chicago and St.
-Louis only and wishing to appear wise in these matters, boasted
-vigorously of the superlative importance of Chicago as a city, whereas
-such men as Root of New York, Johnson of Boston, Ware of New Orleans,
-and a few others, merely looked at me and smiled.
-
-“All I have to say to you, young fellow,” young Root once observed to me
-genially if roughly after one of these heated and senseless arguments,
-“is wait till you go to New York and see for yourself. I’ve been to
-Chicago, and it’s a way-station in comparison. It’s the only other city
-you’ve seen, and that’s why you think it’s so great.” There was a
-certain amount of kindly toleration in his voice which infuriated me.
-
-“Ah, you’re crazy,” I replied. “You’re like all New Yorkers: you think
-you know it all. You won’t admit you’re beaten when you are.”
-
-The argument proceeded through all the different aspects of the two
-cities until finally we called each other damned fools and left in a
-huff. Years later, however, having seen New York, I wanted to apologize
-if ever I met him again. The two cities, as I then learned, each
-individual and wonderful in its way, were not to be contrasted. But how
-sure I was of my point of view then!
-
-Nearly all of these young men, as I now saw, presented a sharp contrast
-to those I had known in Chicago, or perhaps the character of the work in
-this city and my own changing viewpoint made them seem different.
-Chicago at that time had seemed to be full of exceptional young men in
-the reportorial world, men who in one way or another had already
-achieved considerable local repute as writers and coming men: Finley
-Peter Dunne, George Ade, Brand Whitlock, Ben King, Charles Stewart, and
-many others, some of whom even in that day were already signing their
-names to some of their contributions; whereas here in St. Louis, few if
-any of us had achieved any local distinction of any kind. No one of us
-had as yet created a personal or literary following. We could not, here,
-apparently; the avenues were not the same. And none of us was hailed as
-certain to attract attention in the larger world outside. We formed
-little more than a weak scholastic brotherhood or union, recognizing
-each other genially enough as worthy fellow-craftsmen but not offering
-each other much consolation in our rough state beyond a mere class or
-professional recognition as working newspaper men. Yet at times this
-LaClede was a kind of tonic bear garden, or mental wrestling-place,
-where unless one were very guarded and sure of oneself one might come by
-a quick and hard fall, as when once in some argument in regard to a
-current political question, and without knowing really what I was
-talking about, I made the statement that palaeontology indicated
-so-and-so, whereupon one of my sharp confrères suddenly took me up with:
-“Say, what is palaeontology, anyhow? Do you know?”
-
-I was completely stumped, for I didn’t. It was a comparatively new word,
-outside the colleges, being used here and there in arguments and
-editorials, and I had glibly taken it over. I floundered about and
-finally had to confess that I did not know what it was, whereupon I
-endured a laugh for my pains. I was thereafter wiser and more cautious.
-
-But this, in my raw, ignorant state, was a very great help to me. Many
-of these men were intelligent and informed to the cutting point in
-regard to many facts of life of which I was extremely ignorant. Many of
-them had not only read more but seen more, and took my budding local
-pretensions to being somebody with a very large grain of salt. At many
-of the casual meetings, where at odd moments reporters and sometimes
-editors were standing or sitting about and discussing one phase of life
-and another, I received a back-handed slap which sometimes jarred my
-pride but invariably widened my horizon.
-
-One of the most interesting things in my life at this time was that same
-North Seventh Street police station previously mentioned, to which I
-went daily and which was a center for a certain kind of news at
-least—rapes, riots, murders, fantastic family complications of all
-kinds, so common to very poor and highly congested neighborhoods. This
-particular station was the very center of a mixed ghetto, slum and negro
-life, which even at this time was still appalling to me in some of its
-aspects. It was all so dirty, so poor, so stuffy, so starveling. There
-were in it all sorts of streets—Jewish, negro, and run-down American, or
-plain slum, the first crowded with long-bearded Jews and their fat
-wives, so greasy, smelly and generally offensive that they sickened me:
-rag-pickers, chicken-dealers and feather-sorters all. In their streets
-the smell of these things, picked or crated chickens, many of them
-partially decayed, decayed meats and vegetables, half-sorted dirty
-feathers and rags and I know not what else, was sickening in hot
-weather. In the negro streets—or rather alleys, for they never seemed to
-occupy any general thoroughfare—were rows or one-, two-, three-and
-four-story shacks or barns of frame or brick crowded into back yards and
-with thousands of blacks of the most shuffling and idle character
-hanging about. In these hot days of June, July and August they seemed to
-do little save sit or lie in the shade of buildings in this vicinity and
-swap yarns or contemplate the world with laughter or in silence.
-Occasionally there was a fight, a murder or a low love affair among them
-which justified my time here. In addition, there were those other
-streets of soggy, decayed Americans—your true slum—filled with as low
-and cantankerous a population of whites as one would find anywhere, a
-type of animal dangerous to the police themselves, for they could riot
-and kill horribly and were sullen at best. Invariably the police
-traveled here in pairs, and whenever an alarm from some policeman on his
-beat was turned in from this region a sergeant and all the officers in
-the station at the time would set forth to the rescue, sometimes as many
-as eight or ten in a police wagon, with orders, as I myself have heard
-them given, “to club the —— heads off them” or “break their —— bones,
-but bring them in here. I’ll fix ’em”; in response to which all the
-stolid Irish huskies would go forth to battle, returning frequently with
-a whole vanload of combatants or alleged combatants, all much the worse
-for the contest.
-
-There was an old fat Irish sergeant of about fifty or fifty-five, James
-King by name, who used to amuse me greatly. He ruled here like a
-potentate under the captain, whom I rarely saw. The latter had an office
-to himself in the front of the station and rarely came out, seeming
-always to be busy with bigwigs of one type and another. With the
-sergeant, however, I became great friends. His place was behind the
-central desk, in the front of which were two light standards and on the
-surface of which were his blotter and reports of different kinds. Behind
-the desk was his big tilted swivel chair, with himself in it, stout,
-perspiring, coatless, vestless, collarless, his round head and fat neck
-beady with sweat, his fat arms and hands moist and laid heavily over his
-protuberant stomach. According to him, he had been at this work exactly
-eight years, and before that he had “beat the sidewalk,” as he said, or
-traveled a beat.
-
-“Yes, yes, ‘tis a waarm avenin’,” he would begin whenever I arrived and
-he was not busy, which usually he was not, “an’ there’s naathin’ for ye,
-me lad. But ye might just as well take a chair an’ make yerself
-comfortable. It may be that something will happen, an’ again maybe it
-won’t. Ye must hope fer the best, as the sayin’ is. ’Tis a bad time fer
-any trouble to be breakin’ out though, in all this hot weather,” and
-then he would elevate a large palmleaf fan which he kept near and begin
-to fan himself, or swig copiously from a pitcher of ice-water.
-
-Here then he would sit, answering telephone calls from headquarters or
-marking down reports from the men on their beats or answering the
-complaints of people who came in hour after hour to announce that they
-had been robbed or their homes had been broken into or that some
-neighbor was making a nuisance of himself or their wives or husbands or
-sons or daughters wouldn’t obey them or stay in at night.
-
-“Yes, an’ what’s the matter now?” he would begin when one of these would
-put in an appearance.
-
-Perhaps it was a man who would be complaining that his wife or daughter
-would not stay in at night, or a woman complaining so of her husband,
-son or daughter.
-
-“Well, me good woman, I can’t be helpin’ ye with that. This is no court
-av laaw. If yer husband don’t support ye, er yer son don’t come in av
-nights an’ he’s a minor, ye can get an order from the judge at the Four
-Courts compellin’ him. Then if he don’t mind ye and ye waant him
-arrested er locked up, I can help ye that way, but not otherwise. Go to
-the Four Courts.”
-
-Sometimes, in the case of a parent complaining of a daughter’s or son’s
-disobedience, he would relent a little and say: “See if ye can bring him
-around here. Tell him that the captain waants to see him. Then if he
-comes I’ll see what I can do fer ye. Maybe I can scare him a bit.”
-
-Let us say they came, a shabby, overworked mother or father leading a
-recalcitrant boy or girl. King would assume a most ferocious air and
-after listening to the complaint of the parent as if it were all news to
-him would demand: “What’s ailin’ ye? Why can’t ye stay in nights? What’s
-the matter with ye that ye can’t obey yer mother? Don’t ye know it’s
-agin the laaw fer a minor to be stayin’ out aafter ten at night? Ye
-don’t? Well, it is, an’ I’m tellin’ ye now. D’ye waant me t’lock ye up?
-Is that what ye’re looking fer? There’s a lot av good iron cells back
-there waitin’ fer ye if ye caan’t behave yerself. What’re ye goin’ t’do
-about it?”
-
-Possibly the one in error would relent a little and begin arguing with
-the parent, charging unfairness, cruelty and the like.
-
-“Here now, don’t ye be taalkin’ to yer mother like that! Ye’re not old
-enough to be doin’ that. An’ what’s more, don’t let me ketch ye out on
-the streets er her complainin’ to me again. If ye do I’ll send one av me
-men around to bring ye in. This is the last now. D’ye waant to spend a
-few nights in a cell? Well, then! Now be gettin’ out av here an’ don’t
-let me hear any more about ye. Not a word. I’ve had enough now. Out with
-ye!”
-
-And he would glower and grow red and pop-eyed and fairly roar, shoving
-them tempestuously out—only, after the victim had gone, he would lean
-back in his chair and wipe his forehead and sigh: “’Tis tough, the
-bringin’ up av childern, hereabouts especially. Ye can’t be blamin’ them
-fer waantin’ to be out on the streets, an’ yet ye can’t let ’em out
-aither, exactly. It’s hard to tell what to do with ’em. I’ve been
-taalkin’ like that fer years now to one an’ another. ’Tis all the good
-it does. Ye can’t do much fer ’em hereabouts.”
-
-It was during this period, this summer time and fall, that I came in
-contact with some of the most interesting characters, newspaper men
-especially, flotsam and jetsam who drifted in here from other newspaper
-centers and then drifted out again, newspaper men so intelligent and
-definite in some respects that they seemed worthy of any position or
-station in life and yet so indifferent and errant or so poorly placed in
-spite of their efforts and capacities as to cause me to despair for the
-reward of merit anywhere—intellectual merit, I mean. For some of these
-men while fascinating were the rankest kind of failures, drunkards, drug
-fiends, hypochondriacs. Many of them had stayed too long in the
-profession, which is a young man’s game at best, and others had wasted
-their opportunities dreaming of a chance fortune no doubt and then had
-taken to drink or drugs. Still others, young men like myself, drifters
-and uncertain as to their future, were just finding out how unprofitable
-the newspaper game was and in consequence were cynical, waspish and
-moody.
-
-I am not familiar with many professions and so cannot say whether any of
-the others abound in this same wealth of eccentric capacity and
-understanding, or offer as little reward. Certainly all the newspaper
-offices I have ever known sparkled with these exceptional men, few of
-whom ever seemed to do very well, and no paper I ever worked on paid
-wages anywhere near equal to the services rendered or the hours exacted.
-It was always a hard, driving game, with the ash-heap as the reward for
-the least weakening of energy or ability; and at the same time these
-newspapers were constantly spouting editorially about kindness, justice,
-charity, a full reward for labor, and were getting up fresh-air funds
-and so on for those not half as deserving as their employees, but—and
-this is the point—likely to bring them increased circulation. In the
-short while I was in the newspaper profession I met many men who seemed
-to be thoroughly sound intellectually, quite free, for the most part,
-from the narrow, cramping conventions of their day, and yet they never
-seemed to get on very well.
-
-I remember one man in particular, Clark I think his name was, who
-arrived on the scene just about this time and who fascinated me. He was
-so able and sure of touch mentally and from an editorial point of view,
-and yet financially and in every material way he was such a failure. He
-came from Kansas City or Omaha while I was on the _Republic_ and had
-worked in many, many places before that. He was a stocky, dark, clerkly
-figure, with something of the manager or owner or leader about him, a
-most shrewd and capable-looking person. And when he first came to the
-_Republic_ he seemed destined to rise rapidly and never to want for
-anything, so much self-control and force did he appear to have. He was a
-hard worker, quiet, unostentatious, and once I had gained his
-confidence, he gradually revealed a tale of past position and comfort
-which, verified as it was by Wandell and Williams, was startling when
-contrasted with his present position. Although he was not much over
-forty he had been editor or managing editor of several important papers
-in the West but had lost them through some primary disaster which had
-caused him to take to drink—his wife’s unfaithfulness, I believe—and his
-inability in recent years to stay sober for more than three months at a
-stretch. In some other city he had been an important factor in politics.
-Here he was, still clean and spruce apparently (when I first saw him, at
-any rate), going about his work with a great deal of energy, writing the
-most satisfactory newspaper stories; and then, once two or three months
-of such labor had gone by, disappearing. When I inquired of Williams and
-Wandell as to his whereabouts the former stared at me with his one eye
-and smiled, then lifted his fingers in the shape of a glass to his
-mouth. Wandell merely remarked: “Drink, I think. He may show up and he
-may not. He had a few weeks’ wages when he left.”
-
-I did not hear anything more of him for some weeks, when suddenly one
-day, in that wretched section of St. Louis beloved of Dick and Peter as
-a source of literary material, I was halted by a figure which I assumed
-to be one of the lowest of the low. A short, matted, dirty black beard
-concealed a face that bore no resemblance to Clark. A hat that looked as
-though it might have been lifted out of an ash-barrel was pulled
-slouchily and defiantly over long uncombed black hair. His face was
-filthy, as were his clothes and shoes, slimy even. An old brown coat
-(how come by, I wonder?) was marked by a greenish slime across the back
-and shoulders, slime that could only have come from a gutter.
-
-“Don’t you know me, Dreiser?” he queried in a deep, rasping voice, a
-voice so rusty that it sounded as though it had not been used for years
-“—Clark, Clark of the _Republic_. You know me——” and then when I stared
-in amazement he added shrewdly: “I’ve been sick and in a hospital. You
-haven’t a dollar about you, have you? I have to rest a little and get
-myself in shape again before I can go to work.”
-
-“Well, of all things!” I exclaimed in amazement, and then: “I’ll be
-damned!” I could not help laughing: he looked so queer, impossible
-almost. A stage tramp could scarcely have done better. I gave him the
-dollar. “What in the world are you doing—drinking?” and then, overawed
-by the memory of his past efficiency and force I could not go on. It was
-too astonishing.
-
-“Yes, I’ve been drinking,” he admitted, a little defiantly, I thought,
-“but I’ve been sick too, just getting out now. I got pneumonia there in
-the summer and couldn’t work. I’ll be all right after a while. What’s
-news at the _Republic_?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-He mumbled something about having played in bad luck, that he would soon
-be all right again, then ambled up the wretched rickety street and
-disappeared.
-
-I hustled out of that vicinity as fast as I could. I was so startled and
-upset by this that I hurried back to the lobby of the Southern Hotel (my
-favorite cure for all despondent days), where all was brisk,
-comfortable, gay. Here I purchased a newspaper and sat down in a
-rocking-chair. Here at least was no sign of poverty or want. In order to
-be rid of that sense of failure and degradation which had crept over me
-I took a drink or two myself. That any one as capable as Clark could
-fall so low in so short a time was quite beyond me. The still strongly
-puritan and moralistic streak in me was shocked beyond measure, and for
-days I could do little but contrast the figure of the man I had seen
-about the _Republic_ office with that I had met in that street of
-degraded gin-mills and tumbledown tenements. Could people really vary so
-greatly and in so short a time? What must be the nature of their minds
-if they could do that? Was mine like that? Would it become so? For days
-thereafter I was wandering about in spirit with this man from gin-mill
-to gin-mill and lodging-house to lodging-house, seeing him drink at
-scummy bars and lying down at night on a straw pallet in some wretched
-hole.
-
-And then there was Rodenberger, strange, amazing Rodenberger, poet,
-editorial writer and what not, who when I first met him had a little
-weekly editorial paper for which he raised the money somehow (I have
-forgotten its name) and in which he poured forth his views on life and
-art and nature in no uncertain terms. How he could write! (He was
-connected with some drug company, by birth or marriage, which may have
-helped to sustain him. I never knew anything definite concerning his
-private life.) As I view him now, Rodenberger was a man in whom
-imagination and logic existed in such a confusing, contesting way as to
-augur fatalism and (from a worldly or material point of view) failure.
-He was constantly varying between a state of extreme sobriety and
-Vigorous mental energy, and debauches which lasted for weeks and which
-included drink, houses of prostitution, morphine, and I know not what
-else.
-
-One sunny summer morning in July or August, I found him standing at the
-corner of Sixth and Chestnut outside the LaClede drugstore quite
-stupefied with drink or something.
-
-“Hello, Rody,” I called when I saw him. “What’s ailing you? You’re not
-drunk again, are you?”
-
-“Drunk,” he replied with a slight sardonic motion of the hand and an
-equally faint curl of the lip, “and what’s more, I’m glad of it. I don’t
-have to think about myself, or St. Louis, or you, when I’m drunk. And
-what’s more,” and here he interjected another slight motion of the hand
-and hiccoughed, “I’m taking dope, and I’m glad of that. I got all the
-dope I want now, right here in my little old vest pocket, and I’m going
-to take all I want of it,” and he tapped the pocket significantly. Then,
-in a boasting, contentious spirit, he drew forth a white pillbox and
-slowly opened it and revealed to my somewhat astonished gaze some thirty
-or forty small while pills, two or three of which he proceeded to lift
-toward his mouth.
-
-In my astonishment and sympathy and horror I decided to save him if I
-could, so I struck his hand a smart blow, knocking the pills all over
-the sidewalk. Without a word of complaint save a feeble “Zat so?” he
-dropped to his hands and knees and began crawling here and there after
-them as fast as he could, picking them up and putting them in his mouth,
-while I, equally determined, began jumping here and there and crushing
-them under my heels.
-
-“Rody, for God’s sake! Aren’t you ashamed of yourself? Get up!”
-
-“I’ll show you!” he cried determinedly if somewhat recklessly. “I’ll eat
-’em all! I’ll eat ’em all! G—— D—— you!” and he swallowed all that he
-had thus far been able to collect.
-
-I saw him dead before me in no time at all, or thought I did.
-
-“Here, Johnson,” I called to another of our friends who came up just
-then, “help me with Rody, will you? He’s drunk, and he’s got a box of
-morphine pills and he’s trying to take them. I knocked them out of his
-hand and now he’s eaten a lot of them.”
-
-“Here, Rody,” he said, pulling him to his feet and holding him against
-the wall, “stop this! What the hell’s the matter with you?” and then he
-turned to me: “Maybe they’re not morphine. Why don’t you ask the
-druggist? If they are we’d better be getting him to the hospital.”
-
-“They’re morphine all right,” gurgled the victim. “Dont-cha worry—I know
-morphine all right, and I’ll eat ’em all,” and he began struggling with
-Johnson.
-
-At the latter’s suggestion I hurried into the drugstore, the proprietor
-and clerk of which were friends to all of us, and inquired. They assured
-me that they were morphine and when I told them that Rodenberger had
-swallowed about a dozen they insisted that we bring him in and then call
-an ambulance, while they prepared an emetic of some kind. It happened
-that the head physician of the St. Louis City Hospital, Dr. Heinie
-Marks, was also a friend of all newspaper men (what free advertising we
-used to give him!), and to him I now turned for aid, calling him on the
-telephone.
-
-“Bring him out! Bring him out!” he said. Then: “Wait; I’ll send the
-wagon.”
-
-By this time Johnson, with the aid of the clerk and the druggist, had
-brought Rodenberger inside and caused him to drink a quantity of
-something, whereupon we gazed upon him for signs of his approaching
-demise. By now he was very pale and limp and seemed momentarily to grow
-more so. To our intense relief, however, the city ambulance soon came
-and a smart young interne in white took charge. Then we saw Rodenberger
-hauled away, to be pumped out later and detained for days. I was told
-afterward by the doctor that he had taken enough of the pills to end him
-had he not been thoroughly pumped out and treated. Yet within a week or
-so he was once more up and around, fate, in the shape of myself and
-Johnson, having intervened. And many a time thereafter he turned up at
-this selfsame corner as sound and smiling as ever.
-
-Once, when I ventured to reproach him for this and other follies, he
-merely said:
-
-“All in the day’s wash, my boy, all in the day’s wash. If I was so
-determined to go you should have let me alone. Heaven only knows what
-trouble you have stored up for me now by keeping me here when I wanted
-to go. That may have been a divine call! But—Kismet! Allah is Allah!
-Let’s go and have a drink!” And we adjourned to Phil Hackett’s bar,
-where we were soon surrounded by fellow-bibbers who spent most of their
-time looking out through the cool green lattices of that rest room upon
-the hot street outside.
-
-I may add that Rodenberger’s end was not such as might be expected by
-the moralists. Ten years later he had completely reformed his habits and
-entered the railroad business, having attained to a considerable
-position in one of the principal roads running out of St. Louis.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-
-FOR years past during the summer months the _Republic_ had been
-conducting a summer charity of some kind, a fresh-air fund, in support
-of which it attempted every summer to invent and foster some quick
-money-raising scheme. This year it had taken the form of that musty old
-chestnut, a baseball game, to be played between two local fraternities,
-the fattest men of one called the Owls and the leanest of another known
-as the Elks. The hope of the _Republic_ was to work up interest in this
-startling novelty by a humorous handling of it so as to draw a large
-crowd to the baseball grounds. Before I had even heard of it this task
-had been assigned to two or three others, a new man each day, in the
-hope of extracting fresh bits of humor, but so far with but indifferent
-results.
-
-One day, then, I was handed a clipping concerning this proposed game
-that had been written the preceding day by another member of the staff
-and which was headed “Blood on the Moon.” It purported to narrate the
-preliminary mutterings and grumblings of those who were to take part in
-the contest. It was not so much an amusing picture as a news item, and I
-did not think very much of it; but since I had been warned by Williams
-that I was about to be called upon to produce the next day’s burst, and
-that it must be humorous, I was by no means inclined to judge it too
-harshly.... The efforts of one’s predecessor always appear more forceful
-as one’s own threaten to prove inadequate. A little later Wandell
-proceeded to outline to me most of the conditions which surrounded this
-contest. “See if you can’t get some fun into it. You must do it. Some
-one has to. I depend on you for this. Make us laugh,” and he smiled a
-dry, almost frosty smile. “Laugh!” I thought. “Good Lord, how am I to
-make anybody laugh? I never wrote anything funny in my life!”
-
-Nevertheless, being put to it for this afternoon (he had given me no
-other assignment, fancying no doubt that I might have a hard time with
-this), and being the soul of duty, I went to my desk to think it over.
-Not an idea came to me. It seemed to me that nothing could be duller
-than this, a baseball game between fat and lean men; yet if I didn’t
-write something it would be a black mark against me and if I did and it
-proved a piece of trash I should sink equally low in the estimation of
-my superior. I took my pencil and began scribbling a possible
-introduction, wondering how one achieved humor when one had it not.
-After writing aimlessly for a half-hour or so I finally re-examined the
-texts of my predecessors of previous days and then sought to take the
-same tack. Only, instead of describing the aspirations and oppositions
-of the two rival organizations in general terms, I assumed a specific
-interest and plotting on the part of certain of their chief officers,
-who even now, as I proceeded to assert and with names and places given
-in different parts of the city, were spending days and nights devising
-ways and means of outwitting the enemy. Thoughts of rubber baseball
-bats, baskets and nets in which flies might be caught, secret electric
-wiring under the diamond between the bases to put “pep” into the fat
-runners, seemed to have some faint trace of humor in them, and these I
-now introduced as being feverishly worked out in various secret places
-in order that the great game might not be lost. As I wrote, building up
-purely imaginary characteristics for each one involved (I did not know
-any of them), I myself began to grow interested and amused. It all
-seemed so ridiculous, such trash, and yet the worse I made it the better
-it seemed. At last I finished it, but upon re-reading it I was disturbed
-by the coarse horse-play of it all. “This will never get by,” I thought.
-“Wandell will think it’s rotten.” But having by now come to a rather
-friendly understanding with Williams, I decided to take it over and ask
-him so that in case I had failed I might try again.
-
-Wearily he eyed me with his one eye, for already he had been editing
-this for days, then leaned back in his chair and began to read it over.
-At first he did not seem to be much interested, but after the first
-paragraph, which he examined with a blank expression, he smiled and
-finally chortled: “This is pretty good, yes. You needn’t worry about it;
-I think it’ll do. Leave it with me.” Then he began to edit it. Later in
-the afternoon when Wandell had come in to give out the evening
-assignments I saw Williams gather it up and go in to him. After a time
-he came out smiling, and in a little While Wandell called me in.
-
-“Not bad, not bad,” he said, tapping the manuscript lightly. “You’ve got
-the right idea, I think. I’ll let you do that for a while afternoons
-until we get up on it. You needn’t do anything else—just that, if you do
-it well enough.”
-
-I was pleased, for judging by the time it had taken to do this (not more
-than two hours) I should have most of my afternoons to myself. I saw
-visions of a late breakfast, idling in my room, walks after I had done
-with my work and before I returned to the office. Curiously enough, this
-trivial thing, undertaken at first in great doubt and with no sense of
-ability and with no real equipment for it, nevertheless proved for me
-the most fortunate thing I had thus far done. It was not so much that it
-was brilliant, or even especially well done, as that what I did fell in
-with the idle summer mood of the city or with the contesting
-organizations and the readers of the _Republic_. Congratulatory letters
-began to arrive. Pleased individuals whose names had been humorously
-mentioned began to call up the city editor, or the managing editor, or
-even the editor-in-chief, and voice their approval. In a trice and
-almost before I knew it, I was a personage, especially in newspaper
-circles.
-
-“We’ve got the stuff now, all right,” Wandell cackled most violently one
-evening, at the same time slapping me genially on the shoulder. “This’ll
-do it, I’m sure. A few weeks, and we’ll get a big crowd and a lot of
-publicity. Just you stick to the way you’re doing this now. Don’t change
-your style. We’ve got ’em coming now.”
-
-I was really amazed.
-
-And to add to it, Wandell’s manner toward me changed. Hitherto, despite
-his but poorly concealed efforts, he had been distant, brusque,
-dictatorial, superior. Now of a sudden he was softer, more confidential.
-
-“I have a friend up the street here—Frank Hewe, an awfully nice fellow.
-He’s the second assistant of this or that or the other such company. In
-one of these comic blurbs of yours don’t you think you could ring him in
-in some way? He’s an Elk and I’m sure the mention would tickle him to
-death.”
-
-I saw the point of Mr. Wandell’s good nature. He was handing round some
-favors on his own account.
-
-But since it was easy for me to do it and could not injure the text in
-any way, and seemed to popularize the paper and myself immensely, I was
-glad to do it. Each evening, when at six or seven I chose to amble in,
-having spent the afternoon at my room or elsewhere idling, my text all
-done in an hour as a rule, my small chief would beam on me most
-cordially.
-
-“Whatcha got there? Another rib-tickler? Let’s see. Well, go get your
-dinner, and if you don’t want to come back go and see a show. There’s
-not much doing tonight anyhow, and I’d like to keep you fresh. Don’t
-stay up too late, and turn me in another good one tomorrow.”
-
-So it went.
-
-In a trice and as if by magic I was lifted into an entirely different
-realm. The ease of those hours! Citizens of local distinction wanted to
-meet me. I was asked by Wandell one afternoon to come to the Southern
-bar in order that Colonel So-and-So, the head of this, that or the other
-thing, as well as some others, might meet me. I was told that this, that
-and the other person here thought I must be clever, a fool, or a genius.
-I was invited to a midnight smoker at some country club. The local
-newspaper men who gathered at the LaClede daily all knew, and finding me
-in high favor with Phil Hackett, the lessee of the hotel bar whose name
-I had mentioned once, now laughed with me and drank at my expense—or
-rather at that of the proprietor, for I was grandly told by him that I
-“could pay for no drinks there,” which kept me often from going there at
-all. As the days went on I was assured that owing to my efforts the game
-was certain to be a big success, that it was the most successful stunt
-the _Republic_ had ever pulled and that it would net the fund several
-thousand dollars.
-
-For four or five weeks then it seemed to me as though I were walking on
-air. Life was so different, so pleasant these hot, bright days, with
-everybody pleased with me and my name as a clever man—a humorist!—being
-bandied about. Some of my new admirers were so pleased with me that they
-asked me to come to their homes to see them. I was becoming a personage.
-Hackett of the LaClede having asked me casually one day where I lived, I
-was surprised that night in my room by a large wicker hamper containing
-champagne, whiskey and cordials. I transferred it to the office of the
-_Republic_ for the reportorial staff, with my compliments.
-
-My handling of the fat-lean baseball game having established me as a
-feature writer of some ability, the _Republic_ decided to give me
-another feature assignment. There had been in progress a voting contest
-which embraced the whole State and which was to decide which of many
-hundreds of school-teachers, the favorites out of how many districts in
-the State I cannot now recall, were to be sent to Chicago to see the
-World’s Fair for two or more weeks at the _Republic’s_ expense. In
-addition, a reporter or traveling correspondent was to be sent with the
-party to report its daily doings and that reporter’s comments were to be
-made a daily news feature; and that reporter was to be myself. I was not
-seeking it, had not even heard of it, but according to Wandell, who was
-selecting the man for the management, I was the one most likely to give
-a satisfactory picture of the life at the great Fair as well as render
-the _Republic_ a service in picturing the doings of these teachers. An
-agent of the business manager was also going along to look after the
-practical details, and also the city superintendent of schools. I
-welcomed this opportunity to see the World’s Fair, which was then in its
-heyday and filling the newspapers.
-
-“I don’t mind telling you,” Wandell observed to me a few days before the
-final account of the baseball game was to be written, “that your work on
-this ball game has been good. Everybody is pleased. Now, there’s a
-little excursion we’re going to send up to Chicago, and I’m going to
-send you along on that for a rest. Mr. ——, our business manager, will
-tell you all about it. You see him about transportation and expenses.”
-
-“When am I to go?” I asked.
-
-“Thursday. Thursday night.”
-
-“Then I don’t have to see the ball game?”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right. You’ve done the important part of that. Let some
-one else write it up.”
-
-I smiled at the compliment. I went downstairs and had somebody explain
-to me what it was the paper was going to do and congratulated myself.
-Now I was to have a chance to visit the World’s Fair, which had not yet
-opened when I left Chicago. I could look up my father, whom I had
-neglected since my mother’s death, as well as such other members of the
-family as were still living in Chicago; but, most important, I could go
-around to the _Globe_ there and “blow” to my old confrères about my
-present success. All I had to do was to go along and observe what the
-girls did and how they enjoyed themselves and then write it up.
-
-I went up the street humming and rejoicing, and finally landed in the
-“art department” of my friends.
-
-“I’m being sent to Chicago to the World’s Fair,” I said gleefully.
-
-“Bully for you,” was the unanimous return. “Let’s hope you have a good
-time.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-
-AS the time drew near, though, the thought of being a sort of literary
-chaperon to a lot of school-teachers, probably all of them homely and
-uninteresting, was not as cheering as it might have been. I wondered how
-I should manage to be civil and interesting to so many, how I was to
-extract news out of them. Yet the attitude of the business manager and
-the managing editor, as well as the editor-in-chief or publisher, Mr.
-Knapp, to whom I was now introduced by my city editor, was enough to
-convince me that whatever I thought of it I was plainly rising in their
-esteem. Although no word was said about any increase in pay, which I
-still consider the limit of beggarly, pennywise policy, these
-magnificoes were most cordial, smiled and congratulated me on my work
-and then turned me over to the man who had the financing of the trip in
-charge. He reminded me a good deal of a banker or church elder, small,
-dark, full-whiskered, solemn, affable, and assured me that he was glad
-that I had been appointed, that I was the ideal man for the place, and
-that he would see to it that anything I needed to make my trip pleasant
-would be provided. I could scarcely believe that I was so important.
-
-After asking me to go and see the superintendent of schools, also of the
-party as guest of the _Republic_, he said he would send to me a Mr.
-Dean, who would be his agent en route to look after everything—baggage,
-fares, hotels, meals. The latter came and at once threw a wet blanket
-over me: he was so utterly dull and commonplace. His clothes, his shoes,
-his loud tie and his muddy, commonplace intellect all irritated me
-beyond measure. Something he said—“Now, of course, we all want to do
-everything we can to please these ladies and make them happy”—irritated
-me. The usual pastoral, supervisory stuff, I thought, and I at once
-decided that I did not want him to bother me in any way. “What! Did this
-horrible bounder assume that he was regulating my conduct on this trip,
-or that I was going out of my way to accommodate myself to him and his
-theory of how the trip should be conducted, or to accept him as a social
-equal? ‘We must’ indeed!—I, Theodore Dreiser, the well-known newspaper
-writer of St. Louis! The effrontery! Well, he would get scant attention
-from me, and the more he let me alone the better it would be for him and
-all of us!”
-
-And now Wandell also began to irritate me by attempting to give me
-minute instructions as to just what was wanted and how I was to write
-it, although, as I understood it, I was now working for the managing
-editor who was to have the material edited in the telegraph department.
-Besides, I thought that I was now entitled to a little leeway and
-discretion in the choice of what I should report. The idea of making it
-all advertising for the _Republic_ and myself a literary wet-nurse to a
-school party was a little too much.
-
-However, I bustled down to the train that was waiting to carry this
-party of damsels to Chicago and the World’s Fair, a solid Pullman train
-which left St. Louis at dusk and arrived in Chicago early the next
-morning. The fifth of the Pullmans was reserved to carry the
-school-teachers and their chaperons, Mr. Soldan, superintendent of
-schools, Mr. Dean, the business-manager-representative, and myself. I
-entered the car wondering of course what the result of such a temporary
-companionship with so many girls might be. They were all popular, hence
-beautiful, prize-winners, as I had heard; but my pessimistic mind had
-registered a somewhat depressing conception of the ordinary
-school-mistress and I did not expect much.
-
-For once in my life I was agreeably disappointed. These were young,
-buxom Missouri school-teachers and as attractive as that profession will
-permit. I was no sooner seated in a gaudy car than one of the end doors
-opened and there was ushered in by the porter a pretty, rosy-cheeked,
-black-haired girl of perhaps twenty-four. This was a good beginning.
-Immediately thereafter there came in a tall, fair girl with light brown
-hair and blue eyes. Others now entered, blondes and brunettes, stout and
-slender, with various intermediate grades or types. Instead of a
-mounting contempt I suddenly began to suffer from a sickening sense of
-inability to hold my own in the face of so many pretty girls. What could
-I do with twenty girls? How write about them? Maybe the
-business-manager-representative or the superintendent would not come on
-this train and I should be left to introduce these girls to each other!
-God! I should have to find out their names, and I had not thought to
-inquire at the office!
-
-Fortunately for my peace of mind a large, rather showily dressed man
-with big soft ruddy hands decorated with several rings and a full oval
-face tinted with health, now entered by the front door and beamed
-cheerfully upon all.
-
-“Ah, here we are now,” he began with the impressive air of one in
-authority, going up to the first maiden he saw. “I see you have arrived
-safely, Miss—ah—C——. I’m glad to see you again. How are you?” We went on
-to another: “And here is Miss W——! Well, I am glad. I read in the
-_Republic_ that you had won.”
-
-I realized that this was the Professor Soldan so earnestly recommended
-to me, the superintendent of schools and one upon whom I was to comment.
-I rather liked him.
-
-An engine went puffing and clanging by on a neighboring track. I gazed
-out of the window. It seemed essential for me to begin doing something
-but I did not know how to begin. Suddenly the large jeweled hand was
-laid on my shoulder and the professor stood over me. “This must be Mr.
-Dreiser, of the _Republic_. Your business manager, Mr. ——, phoned me
-this morning that you were coming. You must let me introduce you to all
-these young ladies. We want to get the formalities over and be on easy
-terms.”
-
-I bowed heavily for I felt as though I were turning to stone. The
-prettiness and sparkle of these girls all chatting and laughing had
-fairly done for me. I followed the professor as one marches to the
-gallows and he began at one end of the car and introduced me to one girl
-after another as though it were a state affair of some kind. I felt like
-a boob. I was flustered and yet delighted by his geniality and the fact
-that he was helping me over a very ticklish situation. I envied him his
-case and self-possession. He soon betook himself elsewhere, leaving me
-to converse as best I might with a pretty black-haired Irish girl whose
-eyes made me wish to be agreeable. And now, idiot, I struggled
-desperately for bright things to say. How did one entertain a pretty
-girl, anyhow? The girl came to my rescue by commenting on the nature of
-the contest and the difficulties she had had. She hadn’t thought she
-would win at all. Some others joined in, and before I knew it the train
-was out of the station and on its way. The porter was closing the
-windows for the long tunnel, the girls were sinking into comfortable
-attitudes, and there was a general air of relaxation and good nature.
-Before East St. Louis was reached a general conversation was in
-progress, and by the time the train was a half-hour out a party of
-familiars had gathered in the little bridal chamber, which was at the
-rear of the car, laughing and gesticulating. But I was not of it, nor
-was the girl with whom I was chatting.
-
-“Why don’t you come back here, Myra?” called a voice.
-
-“Having lots of fun up there?” called another.
-
-“Do come back, for goodness’ sake! Don’t try to monopolize one whole
-man.”
-
-I felt my legs going from under me. Could this be true? Must I now go
-back there and try to face six or seven? Stumblingly I followed Myra,
-and at the door stopped and looked in. It was full of pretty girls, my
-partner of the moment before now chattering lightly among them. “I’m
-gone,” I thought. “It’s all off. Now for the grand collapse and silence!
-Which way shall I turn? To whom?”
-
-“There’s room for one more here,” said a Juney blonde, making a place
-for me.
-
-I could not refuse this challenge. “I’m the one,” I said weakly, and
-sank heavily beside her. She looked at me encouragingly, as did the
-others, and at a vast expense of energy and will power I managed to
-achieve a smile. It was pathetic.
-
-“Isn’t train-riding just glorious?” exclaimed one of these bright-faced
-imps exuberantly. “I bet I haven’t been on a train twice before in all
-my life, and just look at me! I do it all right, don’t I? I’d just love
-to travel. I wish I could travel all the time.”
-
-“Oh, don’t you, though!” echoed the girl who was sitting beside me and
-whom up to now I had scarcely noticed. “Do you think she looks so nice
-riding?”
-
-I cannot recall what I answered. It may have been witty—if so it was an
-accident.
-
-“What do you call the proper surroundings?” put in a new voice in answer
-to something that was said, which same drew my attention to limpid blue
-eyes, a Cupid’s bow mouth and a wealth of corn-colored hair.
-
-“These,” I finally achieved gallantly, gazing about the compartment and
-at my companions. A burst of applause followed. I was coming to. Yet I
-was still bewildered by the bouquet of faces about me. Already the idea
-of the dreary school-teachers had been dissipated: these were
-prize-winners. Look where I would I seemed to see a new type of
-prettiness confronting me. It was like being in the toils of those
-nymphs in the Ring of the Nibelungen, yet I had no desire to escape,
-wishing to stay now and see how I could “make out” as a Lothario. Indeed
-at this I worked hard. I did my best to gaze gayly and captivatingly
-into pretty eyes of various colors. They all gazed amusedly back. I was
-almost the only man; they were out for a lark. What would you?
-
-“If I had my wishes now I’d wish for just one thing,” I volunteered,
-expecting to arouse curiosity.
-
-“Which one?” asked the girl with the brown eyes and piquant little face
-who wished to travel forever. Her look was significant.
-
-“This one,” I said, running my finger around in a circle to include them
-all and yet stopping at none.
-
-“We’re not won yet, though,” said the girl smirkily.
-
-“Couldn’t you be?” I asked smartly.
-
-“Not all at once, anyhow. Could we?” she asked, speaking for the crowd.
-
-I found myself poor at repartee. “It will seem all at once, though, when
-it happens, won’t it?” I finally managed to return. “Isn’t it always ‘so
-sudden’?” I was surprising myself.
-
-“Aren’t you smart!” said the blue-eyed girl beside me.
-
-“Oh, that’s clever, isn’t it?” said the girl with the corn-colored hair.
-
-I gazed in her direction. Beside her sat a maiden whom I had but dimly
-noticed. She was in white, with a mass of sunny red hair. Her eyes were
-almond-shaped, liquid and blue-gray. Her nose was straight and fine, her
-lips sweetly curved. She seemed bashful and retiring. At her bosom was a
-bouquet of pink roses, but one had come loose.
-
-“Oh, your flowers!” I exclaimed.
-
-“Let me give you one,” she replied, laughing. I had not heard her voice
-before and I liked it.
-
-“Certainly,” I said. Then to the others: “You see, I’ll take anything I
-can get.” She drew a rose from her bosom and held it out toward me.
-“Won’t you put it on?” I asked smartly.
-
-She leaned over and began to fasten it. She worked a moment and then
-looked at me, making, as I thought, a sheep’s eye at me.
-
-“You may have my place,” said the girl next me, feigning to help her,
-and she took it.
-
-The conversation waxed even freer after this, although for me I felt
-that it had now taken a definite turn.... I was talking for her benefit.
-We were still in the midst of this when the conductor passed through and
-after him Mr. Dean, middle-aged, dusty, assured, advisory.
-
-“These are the people,” he said. “They are all in one party.” He called
-me aside and we sat down, he explaining cheerfully and volubly the
-trouble he was having keeping everything in order. I could have murdered
-him.
-
-“I’m looking out for the baggage and the hotel bills and all,” he
-insisted. “In the morning we’ll be met by a tally-ho and ride out to the
-hotel.”
-
-I was thinking of my splendid bevy of girls and the delightful time I
-had been having.
-
-“Well, that’ll be fine, won’t it?” I said wearily. “Is that all?”
-
-“Oh, we have it all planned out,” he went on. “It’s going to be a fine
-trip.”
-
-I did my best to show that I had no desire to talk, but still he kept
-on. He wanted to meet the teachers and I had to introduce him.
-Fortunately he became interested in one small group and I sidled
-away—only to find my original group considerably reduced. Some had gone
-to the dressingroom, others were arranging their parcels about their
-unmade berths. The porter came in and began to make them up. I looked
-ruefully about me.
-
-“Well, our little group has broken up,” I said at last to the girl of my
-choice as I came up to where she was sitting.
-
-“Yes. It’s getting late. But I’m not sleepy yet.”
-
-We dropped into an easy conversation, and I learned that she was from
-Missouri and taught in a little town not far from St. Louis. She
-explained to me how she had come to win, and I told her how ignorant I
-had been of the whole affair up to four days ago. She said that friends
-had bought hundreds of _Republics_ in order to get the coupons. It
-seemed a fine thing to me for a girl to be so popular.
-
-“You’ve never been to Chicago, then?” I asked.
-
-“Oh no. I’ve never been anywhere really. I’m just a simple country girl,
-you know. I’ve always wanted to go, though.”
-
-She fascinated me. She seemed so direct, truthful, sympathetic.
-
-“You’ll enjoy it,” I said. “It’s worth seeing. I was in Chicago when the
-Fair was being built. My home is there.”
-
-“Then you’ll stay with your home-folks, won’t you?” she asked, using a
-word for family to which I was not accustomed. It touched a chord of
-sympathy. I was not very much in touch with my family any more but the
-way she seemed to look on hers made me wish that I were.
-
-“Well, not exactly. They live over on the west side. I’ll go to see
-them, though.”
-
-I was thinking that now I had her out of that sparkling group she seemed
-more agreeable than before, much more interesting, more subdued and
-homelike.
-
-She arose to leave me. “I want to get some of my things before the
-porter puts them away,” she explained.
-
-I stepped out of her way. She tripped up the aisle and I looked after
-her, fascinated. Of a sudden she seemed quite the most interesting of
-all those here, simple, pretty, vigorous and with a kind of tact and
-grace that was impressive. Also I felt an intense something about her
-that was concealed by an air of supreme innocence and maidenly reserve.
-I went out to the smokingroom, where I sat alone looking out of the
-window.
-
-“What a delightful girl,” I thought, with a feeling of intense
-satisfaction. “And I have the certainty of seeing her again in the
-morning!”
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-The next morning I was awake early, stirred by the thoughts of Chicago,
-the Fair, Miss W—— (my favorite), as well as the group of attractive
-creatures who now formed a sort of background for her. One of the
-characteristics of my very youthful temperament at that time was the
-power to invest every place I had ever left with a romance and
-strangeness such as might have attached to something abandoned, say, a
-thousand or two years before and which I was now revisiting for the
-first time to find it nearly all done over. So it was now in my attitude
-toward Chicago. I had been away for only eight or nine months, and still
-I expected—what did I not expect?—the whole skyline and landscape to be
-done over, or all that I had known done away with. Going into Chicago I
-studied every street and crossing and house and car. How sad to think I
-had ever had to leave it, to leave Alice, my home, my father, all my
-relatives and old friends! Where was E——, A——, T——, my father? At
-thought of the latter I was deeply moved, for had I not left him about a
-year before and without very much ceremony at the time I had chosen to
-follow the fortunes of my sister C——? Now that I looked back on it all
-from the vantage point of a year’s work I was much chastened and began
-to think how snippy and unkind I had been. Poor, tottering, broken soul,
-I thought. I could see him then as he really was, a warm, generous and
-yet bigoted and ignorant soul, led captive in his childhood to a
-brainless theory and having no power within himself to break that chain,
-and now wandering distrait and forlorn amid a storm of difficulties:
-age, the death of his wife, the flight of his children, doubt as to
-their salvation, poverty, a declining health.
-
-I can see him now, a thin grasshopper of a man, brooding wearily with
-those black-brown Teutonic eyes of his, as sad as failure itself. What
-thoughts! What moods! He was very much like one of those old men whom
-Rembrandt has portrayed, wrinkled, sallow, leathery. My father’s
-peculiarly German hair and beard were always carefully combed and
-brushed, the hair back over his forehead like Nietzsche’s, the beard
-resting reddishly on his chest. His clothes were always loose and
-ill-fitting, being bought for durability, not style, or made over from
-abandoned clothes of some one—my brother Paul or my sister M——’s
-husband. He always wore an old and very carefully preserved black derby
-hat, very wide of brim and out of style, which he pulled low over his
-deep-set weary eyes. I always wondered where and when he had bought it.
-On this trip I offered to buy him a new one, but he preferred to use the
-money for a mass for the repose of my good mother’s soul! Under his arm
-or in one of his capacious pockets was always a Catholic prayerbook from
-which he read prayers as familiar to him as his own hands, yet from the
-mumbling repetition of which he extracted some comfort, as does the
-Hindu from meditating upon space or time. In health he was always
-fluttering to one or another of a score of favorite Catholic churches,
-each as commonplace as the other, and there, before some trashy plaster
-image of some saint or virgin as dead or helpless as his own past,
-making supplication for what?—peace in death, the reconversion and right
-conduct of his children, the salvation of his own and my mother’s soul?
-Debts were his great misery, as I had always known. If one died and left
-unpaid an old bill of some kind one had to stay in purgatory so much
-longer!
-
-Riding into Chicago this morning I speculated as to the thinness of his
-hands as I had known them, the tremulousness of his inquiries, the
-appeal in his sad resigned eyes, whence all power to compel or convince
-had long since gone. In the vast cosmic flight of force, flowing from
-what heart we know not but in which as little corks our suns and planets
-float, it is possible that there may be some care, an equation, a
-balancing of the scales of suffering and pleasure. I hope so. If not I
-know not the reason for tears or those emotions with which so many of us
-salve the memory of seemingly immedicable ills. If immedicable, why cry?
-
-I sought Miss W——, who was up before me and sitting beside her section
-window. I was about to go and talk with her when my attention was
-claimed by other girls. This bevy could not very well afford to see the
-attention of the only man on board so easily monopolized. There were so
-many pretty faces among them that I wavered. I talked idly among them,
-interested to see what overtures and how much of an impression I might
-make. My natural love of womankind made them all inviting.
-
-When the train drew into Chicago we were met by a tally-ho, which the
-obliging Mr. Dean had been kind enough to announce to each and every one
-of us as the train stopped. The idea of riding to the World’s Fair in
-such a thing and with this somewhat conspicuous party of school-teachers
-went very much against the grain. Being very conscious of my personal
-dignity in the presence of others and knowing the American and
-middle-West attitude toward all these new and persistently derided toys
-and pleasures of the effete East and England, I was inclined to look
-upon this one as out of place in Chicago. Besides, a canvas strip on the
-coach advertising the nature of this expedition infuriated me and seemed
-spiritually involved with the character of Mr. Dean. That bounder had
-done this, I was sure. I wondered whether the sophisticated and
-well-groomed superintendent of schools would lend himself to any such
-thing when plainly it was to be written up in the _Republic_, but since
-he did not seem to mind it I was mollified; in fact, he took it all with
-a charming gayety and grace which eventually succeeded in putting my own
-silly provincialism and pride to rout. He sat up in front with me and
-the driver discussing philosophy, education, the Fair, a dozen things,
-during which I made a great pretense at wise deductions and a wider
-reading than I had ever had.
-
-Once clear of the depot and turning into Adams Street, we were off
-behind six good horses through as interesting a business section as one
-might wish to see, its high buildings (the earliest and most numerous in
-America) and its mass of congested traffic making a brisk summer morning
-scene. I was reëngaged by Michigan Avenue, that splendid boulevard with
-its brief vista of the lake, which was whipped to cotton-tops this
-bright morning by a fresh wind, and then the long residence-lined avenue
-to the south with its wealth of new and pretentious homes, its smart
-paving and lighting, its crush of pleasure traffic hurrying townward or
-to the Fair. Within an hour we were assigned rooms in a comfortable
-hotel near the Fair grounds, one of those hastily and yet fairly well
-constructed buildings which later were changed into flats or apartments.
-One wall of this hotel, as I now discovered, the side on which my room
-was, faced a portion of the Fair grounds, and from my windows I could
-see some of its classic façades, porticoes, roofs, domes, lagoons. All
-at once and out of nothing in this dingy city of six or seven hundred
-thousand which but a few years before had been a wilderness of wet grass
-and mud flats, and by this lake which but a hundred years before was a
-lone silent waste, had now been reared this vast and harmonious
-collection of perfectly constructed and snowy buildings, containing in
-their delightful interiors the artistic, mechanical and scientific
-achievements of the world. Greece, Italy, India, Egypt, Japan, Germany,
-South America, the West and East Indies, the Arctics—all represented! I
-have often thought since how those pessimists who up to that time had
-imagined that nothing of any artistic or scientific import could
-possibly be brought to fruition in America, especially in the middle
-West, must have opened their eyes as I did mine at the sight of this
-realized dream of beauty, this splendid picture of the world’s own hope
-for itself. I have long marveled at it and do now as I recall it, its
-splendid Court of Honor, with its monumental stateliness and simple
-grandeur; the peristyle with its amazing grace of columns and sculptured
-figures; the great central arch with its triumphal quadriga; the dome of
-the Administration Building with its daring nudes; the splendid
-groupings on the Agricultural Building, as well as those on the
-Manufacturers’ and Women’s buildings. It was not as if many minds had
-labored toward this great end, or as if the great raw city which did not
-quite understand itself as yet had endeavored to make a great show, but
-rather as though some brooding spirit of beauty, inherent possibly in
-some directing over-soul, had waved a magic wand quite as might have
-Prospero in _The Tempest_ or Queen Mab in _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_,
-and lo, this fairyland.
-
-In the morning when I came down from my room I fell in with Miss W—— in
-the diningroom and was thrilled by the contact. She was so gay,
-good-natured, smiling, unaffected. And with her now was a younger sister
-of whom I had not heard and who had come to Chicago by a different route
-to join her. I was promptly introduced, and we sat down at the same
-table. It was not long before we were joined by the others, and then I
-could see by the exchange of glances that it was presumed that I had
-fallen a victim to this charmer of the night before. But already the
-personality of the younger sister was appealing to me quite as much as
-the elder. She was so radiant of humor, freckled, plump, laughing and
-with such an easy and natural mode of address. Somehow she struck me as
-knowing more of life than her sister, being more sophisticated and yet
-quite as innocent.
-
-After breakfast the company broke up into groups of two and three. Each
-had plans for the day and began talking them over.
-
-We started off finally for the Fair gate and on the way I had an
-opportunity to study some of the other members of the party and make up
-my mind as to whether I really preferred her above all. Despite my
-leaning toward Miss W—— I now discovered that there was a number whose
-charms, if not superior to those of Miss W——, were greater than I had
-imagined, while some of those who had attracted me the night before were
-being modified by little traits of character or mannerism which I did
-not like. Among them was one rosy black-haired Irish girl whose solid
-beauty attracted me very much. She was young and dark and robust, with
-the air of a hoyden. I looked at her, quite taken by her snapping black
-eyes, but nothing came of it for the moment: we were all becoming
-interested in the Fair.
-
-Together, then, we drifted for an hour or more in this world of glorious
-sights, an hour or more of dreaming over the arches, the reflections in
-the water, the statues, the shadowy throngs by the steps of the lagoons
-moving like figures in a dream. Was it real? I sometimes wonder, for it
-is all gone. Gone the summer days and nights, the air, the color, the
-form, the mood. In its place is a green park by a lake, still beautiful
-but bereft, a city that grows and grows, ever larger, but harder,
-colder, grayer.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-
-POSSIBLY it was the brightness and freshness of this first day, the
-romance of an international fair in America, the snowy whiteness of the
-buildings against the morning sun, a blue sky and a bluer lake, the
-lagoons weaving in and out, achieving a lightness and an airiness wholly
-at war with anything that this Western world had as yet presented, which
-caused me to be swept into a dream from which I did not recover for
-months. I walked away a little space with my friend of the night before,
-learning more of her home and environment. As I saw her now, she seemed
-more and more natural, winsome, inviting. Humor seemed a part of her,
-and romance, as well as understanding and patience, a quiet and restful
-and undisturbed patience. I liked her immensely. She seemed from the
-first to offer me an understanding and a sympathy which I had never yet
-realized in any one. She smiled at my humor, appreciated my moods.
-Returning to my room late in the afternoon I was conscious of a
-difficult task, what to write that was worth while, and yet so deeply
-moved by it all that I could have clapped my hands for joy. I wanted to
-versify or describe it—a mood which youth will understand and maturity
-smile at, which causes the mind to sing, to set forth on fantastic
-pilgrimages.
-
-But if I wrote anything worth while I cannot now recall it. I was too
-eager to loaf and dream and do nothing at all, almost too idle to
-concentrate on what I had been called upon to do. I sent off something,
-a thousand or so words of drivel or rapture, and then settled to my real
-task of seeing the Fair by night and by day. Now that I was here I was
-cheered by the thought that very soon, within a day or two at most, I
-should be able to seek out and crow over all my old familiars, Maxwell,
-Dunlap, Brady, Hutchinson, a considerable group of newspaper men, as
-well as my brothers A—— and E——, who were here employed somewhere, and
-my father and several sisters.
-
-For my father, who was now seventy-two years of age, I had, all of a
-sudden, as I have indicated above, the greatest sympathy. At home, up to
-my seventeenth or eighteenth birthday, before I got out in the world and
-began to make my own way, I had found him fussy, cranky, dosed with too
-much religion; but in spite of all this and the quarrels and bickerings
-which arose because of it there had always been something tender in his
-views, charming, poetic and appreciative. Now I felt sorry for him. A
-little while before and after my mother’s death it had seemed to me that
-he had become unduly wild on the subject of the church and the
-hereafter, was annoying us all with his persistent preachments
-concerning duty, economy and the like, the need of living a clean,
-saving, religious life. Now, after a year out in the world, with a
-broadening knowledge of very different things, I saw him in an entirely
-different light. While realizing that he was irritable, crotchety,
-domineering, I suddenly saw him as just a broken old man whose hopes and
-ambitions had come to nothing, whose religion, impossible as it was to
-me, was still a comfort and a blessing to him. Here he was, alone, his
-wife dead, his children scattered and not very much interested in him
-any more.
-
-Now that I was here in the city again, I decided that as soon as I could
-arrange my other affairs I would go over on the west side and look him
-up and bring him to see the Fair, which of course he had not seen. For I
-knew that with his saving, worrying, almost penurious disposition he
-would not be able to bring himself to endure the expense, even though
-tickets were provided him, of visiting the Fair alone. He had had too
-much trouble getting enough to live on in these latter years to permit
-him to enjoy anything which cost money. I could hear him saying: “No,
-no. I cannot afford it. We have too many debts.” He had not always been
-so but time and many troubles had made the saving of money almost a
-mania with him.
-
-The next morning, therefore, I journeyed to the west side and finally
-found him quite alone, as it chanced, the other members of the family
-then living with him having gone out. I shall never forget how old he
-looked after my year’s absence, how his eyelids twitched. After a
-slightly quizzical and attempted hard examining glance at me his lips
-twitched and tears welled to his eyes. He was so utterly done for, as he
-knew, and dependent on the courtesy of his children and life. I cried
-myself and rubbed his hands and his hair, then told him that I was doing
-well and had come to take him to see the Fair, that I had tickets—a
-passbook, no less—and that it shouldn’t cost him a penny. Naturally he
-was surprised and glad to see me, so anxious to know if I still adhered
-to the Catholic faith and went to confession and communion regularly. In
-the old days this had been the main bone of contention between us.
-
-“Tell me, Dorsch,” he said not two minutes after I arrived, “do you
-still keep up your church duties?”
-
-When I hesitated for a moment, uncertain what to say, he went on: “You
-ought to do that, you know. If you should die in a state of mortal
-sin——”
-
-“Yes, yes,” I interrupted, making up my mind to give him peace on this
-score if I never did another thing in this world, “I always go right
-along, once every month or six weeks.”
-
-“You really do that, do you?” he asked, eyeing me more in appeal than
-doubt, though judging by my obstinate past he must have doubted.
-
-“Yes,” I insisted, “sure. I always go regularly.”
-
-“I’m glad of that,” he went on hopefully. “I worry so. I think of you
-and the rest of the children so much. You’re a young man now and out in
-the world, and if you neglect your religious duties——” and he paused as
-if in a grave quandary. “When you’re out like that I know it’s hard to
-think of the church and your duties, but you shouldn’t neglect them——”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” I thought. “Now he’s off again! This is the same old
-story—religion, religion, religion!”
-
-“But I do go,” I insisted. “You mustn’t worry about me.”
-
-“I know,” he said, with a sudden catch in his voice, “but I can’t help
-it. You know how it is with the other children: they don’t always do
-right in that respect. Paul is away on the stage; I don’t know whether
-he goes to church any more. A—— and E—— are here, but they don’t come
-here much—I haven’t seen them in I don’t know how long—months——”
-
-I resolved to plead with E—— and A—— when I saw them.
-
-He was sitting in a big armchair facing a rear window, and now he took
-my hand again and held it. Soon I felt hot tears on it.
-
-“Pop,” I said, pulling his head against me and smoothing it, “you
-mustn’t cry. Things aren’t so bad as all that. The children are all
-right. We’ll probably be able to do better and more for you than we’ve
-ever done.”
-
-“I know, I know,” he said after a little while, overcoming his emotion,
-“but I’m getting so old, and I don’t sleep much any more—just an hour or
-two. I lie there and think. In the morning I get up at four sometimes
-and make my coffee. Then the days are so long.”
-
-I cried too. The long days ... the fading interests ... Mother gone and
-the family broken up....
-
-“I know,” I said. “I haven’t acted just right—none of us have. I’ll
-write you from now on when I’m away, and send you some money once in a
-while. I’m going to get you a big overcoat for next winter. And now I
-want you to come over with me to the Fair. I’ve tickets, and you’ll
-enjoy it. I’m a press representative now, a traveling correspondent.
-I’ll show you everything.”
-
-After due persuasion he got his hat and stick and came with me. We took
-a car and an elevated road, which finally landed us at the gate, and
-then, for as long as his strength would endure, we wandered about
-looking at the enormous buildings, the great Ferris Wheel, the caravels
-_Nina_, _Pinta_ and _Santa Maria_ in which Columbus sailed to America,
-the convent of La Rabida (which, because it related to the Trappists,
-fascinated him), and finally the German Village on the Midway, as German
-and _ordentlich_ as ever a German would wish, where we had coffee and
-little German cakes with caraway seeds on them and some pot cheese with
-red pepper and onions. He was so interested and amused by the vast
-spectacle that he could do little save exclaim: “By crackie!” “This is
-now beautiful!” or “That is now wonderful!” In the German village he
-fell into a conversation with a buxom German _frau_ who had a stand
-there and who hailed from some part of Germany about which he seemed to
-know, and then all was well indeed. It was long before I could get him
-away. These delightful visits were repeated only about four times during
-my stay of two weeks, when he admitted that it was tiring and he had
-seen enough.
-
-Another morning when I had not too much to do I looked up my brother
-E——, who was driving a laundry wagon somewhere on the south side, and
-got him to come out evenings and Sundays, as well as A——, who was
-connected with an electric plant as assistant of some kind. I recall
-now, with an odd feeling as to the significance of relationship and
-family ties generally, how keenly important his and E——’s interests were
-to me then and how I suffered because I thought they were not getting
-along as well as they should. Looking in a shoe window in Pittsburgh a
-year or two later, I actually choked with emotion because I thought that
-maybe E—— did not earn enough to keep himself looking well. A—— always
-seemed more or less thwarted in his ambitions, and whenever I saw him I
-felt sad because, like so many millions of others in this grinding
-world, he had never had a real chance. Life is so casual, and luck comes
-to many who sleep and flies from those who try. I always felt that under
-more advantageous circumstances A—— would have done well. He was so
-wise, if slightly cynical, full of a laughing humor. His taste for
-literature and artistic things in general was high, although entirely
-untrained. Like myself he had a turn for the problems of nature,
-constantly wondering as to the why of this or that and seeking the
-answer in a broader knowledge. But long hours of work and poor pay
-seemed to handicap him in his search. I was sad beyond words about his
-condition, and urged him to come to St. Louis and try his luck there,
-which he subsequently did.
-
-Another thing I did was to visit the old _Globe_ office in Fifth Avenue
-downtown, only to find things in a bad way there. Although Brady,
-Hutchinson and Dunlap were still there the paper was not paying, was, in
-fact, in danger of immediate collapse. John B. MacDonald, its financial
-backer or angel, having lost a fortune in trying to make it pay and win
-an election with it, was about ready to quit and the paper was on its
-last legs. Could I get them jobs in St. Louis? Maxwell had gone to the
-_Tribune_ and was now a successful copy-reader there.... In my new
-summer suit and straw hat and with my various credentials, I felt myself
-to be quite a personage. How much better I had done than these men who
-had been in the business longer than I had! Certainly I would see what I
-could do. They must write me. They could find me now at such-and-such a
-hotel.
-
-The sweets of success!
-
-In the Newspaper Press Association offices in the great Administration
-Building several of my friends from the press showed up and here we
-foregathered to talk. Daily in this building at eight or nine or ten at
-night I filed a report or message about one thousand words long and was
-pleased to see by the papers that arrived that my text was used about as
-I wrote it. Loving the grounds of the Fair so much, I browsed there
-nearly all day long and all evening, escorting now one girl and now
-another, but principally Miss W—— and her sister. Almost unconsciously I
-was being fascinated by these two, with my Miss W—— the more; and yet I
-was not content to confine myself to her but was constantly looking here
-and there, being lured by a number of the others.
-
-Thus one afternoon, after I had visited the Administration Building and
-filed my dispatch rather early, Miss W—— having been unable to be with
-me at the Fair, I returned to the hotel, a little weary of sightseeing,
-and finding an upper balcony which faced the Fair sat there in a rocker
-awaiting the return of some of the party. Presently, as I was resting
-and humming to myself, there came down to the parlor, which adjoined
-this balcony, that rosy Irish girl, Miss Ginity, who had attracted me
-the very first morning. She seemed to be seeking that room in order to
-sing and play, there being a piano here. She was dressed in a
-close-fitting suit of white linen, which set off her robust little
-figure to perfection. Her heavy, oily black hair was parted severely in
-the middle and hung heavily over her white temples. She had a
-rich-blooded, healthy, aggressive look, not unmarked by desire.
-
-I was looking through the window when she came in and was wondering if
-she would discover me, when she did. She smiled, and I waved to her to
-come out. We talked about the Fair and my duties in connection with it.
-When I explained the nature of my dispatches she wanted to know if I had
-mentioned her name yet. I assured her that I had, and this pleased her.
-I had the feeling that she liked me and that I could influence her if I
-chose.
-
-“What has become of your friend Miss W——?” she finally asked with a
-touch of malice when I looked at her too kindly.
-
-“I don’t know. I haven’t seen her since yesterday or the day before,”
-which was not true. “What makes you ask that?”
-
-“Oh, I thought you rather liked her,” she said boldly, throwing up her
-chin and smiling.
-
-“And what made you think it?” I asked calmly. It was in my mind that I
-could master and deceive her as to this, and I proposed to try.
-
-“Oh, I just thought so. You seemed to like her company.”
-
-“Not any more than I do that of others,” I insisted with great
-assurance. “She’s interesting, that’s all. I didn’t think I was showing
-any preference.”
-
-“Oh, I’m just joking,” she laughed. “I really don’t think anything about
-it. One of the other girls made the remark.”
-
-“Well, she’s wrong,” I said indifferently.
-
-But I could see that she wasn’t joking. I could also see that I had
-relieved her mind. My pose of indifference had quelled her feeling that
-I was not wholly free. We sat and talked until dinner, and then I asked
-her if she would like to go for a stroll in the park, to which she
-agreed. By now we were obviously drifting toward each other emotionally,
-and I thought how fine it would be to idle and dream with this girl in
-the moonlight.
-
-After dinner, when we started out, the air was soft and balmy and the
-moon was just rising over the treetops in the East. A faint odor of
-fresh flowers and fresh leaves was abroad and the night seemed to rest
-in a soothing stillness. From the Midway came the sounds of muffled
-drums and flutes, vibrant with the passion of the East. Before us were
-the wide stretches of the park, dark and suggestive of intrigue where
-groups of trees were gathered in silent, motionless array, in others
-silvered by a fairy brightness which suggested a world of romance and
-feeling.
-
-I walked silently on with her, flooded with a voiceless feeling of
-ecstasy. Now I was surely proving to myself that I was not entirely
-helpless in the presence of girls. This time of idleness and moonlight
-was in such smooth consonance with my most romantic wishes. She was not
-so romantic, but the ardent luxury of her nature appeared to answer to
-the romantic call of mine.
-
-“Isn’t this wonderful?” I said at last, seeking to interest her.
-
-“Yes,” she replied, almost practically. “I’ve been wondering why some of
-the girls don’t come over here at night. It’s so wonderful. But I
-suppose they’re tired.”
-
-“They’re not as strong as you, that’s it. You’re so vigorous. I was
-thinking today how healthy you look.”
-
-“Were you? And I was just thinking what my mother would say if she knew
-I was out here with a total stranger.”
-
-“You told me you lived in St. Louis, I think?” I said.
-
-“Yes, out in the north end. Near O’Fallon Park.”
-
-“Well, then, I’ll get to see you when you go back,” I laughed.
-
-“Oh, will you?” she returned coquettishly. “How do you know?”
-
-“Well, won’t I?”
-
-The thought flashed across my mind that once I had been in this selfsame
-park with Alice several years before; we had sat under a tree not so
-very far from here, near a pagoda silvered by the moon, and had listened
-to music played in the distance. I remembered how I had whispered sweet
-nothings and kissed her to my heart’s content.
-
-“Well, you may if you’re good,” she replied.
-
-I began jesting with her now. I deliberately descended from the ordinary
-reaches of my intelligence, anxious to match her own interests with some
-which would seem allied. I wanted her to like me, although I felt all
-the while that we were by no means suited temperamentally. She was too
-commonplace and unimaginative, although so attractive physically.
-
-We sat in silence for a time, and I slipped my hand down and laid hold
-of her fingers. She did not stir, pretending not to notice, but I felt
-that she was thrilling also.
-
-“You asked about Miss W——,” I said. “What made you do that?”
-
-“Oh, I thought you liked her. Why shouldn’t I?”
-
-“It never occurred to you that I might like some one else?”
-
-“Certainly not. Why should I?”
-
-I pressed her fingers softly. She turned on me all at once a face so
-white and tense that it showed fully the feeling that now gripped her.
-It was almost as if she were breaking under an intense nervous strain
-which she was attempting to conceal.
-
-“I thought you might,” I replied daringly. “There is some one, you
-know.” I was surprising myself.
-
-“Is there?” Her voice sounded weak. She did not attempt to look at me
-now, and I was wondering how far I would go.
-
-“You couldn’t guess, of course?”
-
-“No. Why should I?”
-
-“Look at me,” I said quietly.
-
-“All right,” she said with a little indifferent shrug. “I’ll look at
-you. There now; what of it?”
-
-Again that intense, nervous, strained look. Her lips were parted in a
-shy frightened smile, showing her pretty teeth. Her eyes were touched
-with points of light where the moonlight, falling over my shoulder,
-shone upon them. It gave her whole face an eerie, almost spectral
-paleness, something mystical and insubstantial, which spoke of the
-brevity and non-endurance of all these things. She was far more
-wonderful here than ever she could have been in clear daylight.
-
-“You have beautiful eyes,” I remarked.
-
-“Oh,” she shrugged disdainfully, “is that all?”
-
-“No. You have beautiful teeth and hair—such hair!”
-
-“You mustn’t grow sentimental,” she commented, not removing her hand.
-
-I slipped my arm about her waist and she moved nervously.
-
-“And you still can’t guess who?” I said finally.
-
-“No,” she replied, keeping her face from me.
-
-“Then I’ll tell you,” and putting my free hand to her cheek I turned her
-face to me.
-
-I studied her closely, and then in a moment the last shred of reluctance
-and coquetry in her seemed to evaporate. At the touch of my hand on her
-cheek she seemed to change: the whole power of her ardent nature was
-rising. At last she seemed to be yielding completely, and I put my lips
-to hers and kissed her warmly, then pressed her close and held her.
-
-“Now do you know?” I asked after a time.
-
-“Yes,” she nodded, and for a proffered kiss returned an ardent one of
-her own.
-
-I was beside myself with astonishment and delight. For the life of me I
-could not explain to myself how it was that I had achieved this result
-so swiftly. Something in the idyllic atmosphere, something in our
-temperaments, I fancied, made this quick spiritual and material
-understanding possible, but I wanted to know how. For a time we sat thus
-in the moonlight, I holding her hand and pressing her waist. Yet I could
-not feel that I liked her beyond the charm of her physical appearance,
-but that was enough at present. Physical beauty, with not too much
-grossness, was all I asked then—youth, a measure of innocence, and
-beauty. I pretended to have a real feeling for her and to be struck by
-her beauty, which was not wholly untrue. My feelings, however, as I well
-knew, were of so light and variable a character that it seemed almost a
-shame to lure her in this fashion. Why had I done it? It was decidedly
-unfortunate for her, I now thought, that we two should now meet under
-the same roof, with Miss W—— and others, perhaps making a third, fourth,
-or fifth possibly, but I anticipated no troublesome results. I might
-keep them apart. Anyhow, if I could not, my relationship in either case
-had not become earnest enough to cause me to worry. I hoped, however, to
-make it so in the case of Miss W——; Miss Ginity I knew from the first to
-be only a momentary flame.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL
-
-
-AS I hoped, there were no ill effects from this little diversion, but by
-now I was so interested in Miss W—— that I felt a little unfair to her.
-As I look back on it I can imagine no greater error of mind or
-temperament than that which drew me to her, considering my own variable
-tendencies and my naturally freedom-loving point of view. But since we
-are all blind victims of chance and given to far better hind-sight than
-fore-sight I have no complaint to make. It is quite possible that this
-was all a part of my essential destiny or development, one of those
-storm-breeding mistakes by which one grows. Life seems thus often
-casually to thrust upon one an experience which is to prove illuminating
-or disastrous.
-
-To pick up the thread of my narrative, I saw Miss Ginity at breakfast,
-but she showed no sign that we had been out together the previous
-evening. Instead, she went on her way briskly as though nothing had
-happened, and this made her rather alluring again in my eyes. When Miss
-W—— came down I suffered a slight revulsion of feeling: she was so fresh
-and innocent, so spiritually and mentally above any such quick and
-compromising relationship as that which I and my new acquaintance had
-established the night before. I planned to be more circumspect in my
-relations with Miss Ginity and to pay more attention to Miss W——.
-
-This plan was facilitated by the way in which the various members of the
-party now grouped and adjusted themselves. Miss W—— and her sister
-seemed to prefer to go about together, with me as an occasional third,
-and Miss Ginity and several of her new acquaintances made a second
-company, with whom I occasionally walked. Thus the distribution of my
-attentions was in no danger of immediate detection and I went gayly on.
-
-A peculiar characteristic at this time and later was that I never really
-expected any of these relationships to endure. Marriage might be well
-enough for the average man but it never seemed to me that I should
-endure in it, that it would permanently affect my present free
-relationship with the world. I might be greatly grieved at times in a
-high emotional way because they could not last, but that was rising to
-heights of sentiment which puzzled even myself. One of the things which
-troubled and astonished me was that I could like two, three, and even
-more women at the same time, like them very much indeed. It seemed
-strange that I could yearn over them, now one and now another. A good
-man, I told myself, would not do this. The thought would never occur to
-him, or if it did he would repress it sternly. Obviously, if not
-profoundly evil I was a freak and had best keep my peculiar thoughts and
-desires to myself if I wanted to have anything to do with good people. I
-should be entirely alone, perhaps even seized upon by the law.
-
-During the next two weeks I saw much of both Miss W—— and Miss Ginity.
-By day I usually accompanied Miss W—— and her sister from place to place
-about the grounds and of an evening strolled with Miss Ginity, all the
-while wondering if Miss W—— really liked me, whether her present feeling
-was likely to turn to something deeper. I felt a very definite point of
-view in her, very different from mine. In her was none of the
-variability that troubled me: if ever a person was fixed in conventional
-views it was she. One life, one love would have answered for her
-exactly. She could have accepted any condition, however painful or even
-degrading, providing she was bolstered up by what she considered the
-moral law. “To have and to hold, in sickness and in health, in poverty
-and in riches, until death do us part.” I think the full force of these
-laws must have been imbibed with her mother’s milk.
-
-As for Miss Ginity, although she was conventional enough, I did feel
-that she might be persuaded to relax the moral rule in favor of one at
-least, and so was congratulating myself upon having achieved an
-affectional triumph. She may not have been deeply impressed by my
-physical attraction but there was something about me nevertheless which
-seemed to hold her. After a few days she left the hotel to visit some
-friends or relatives, to whom she had to pay considerable attention, but
-in my box nights or mornings, if by any chance I had not seen her, I
-would find notes explaining where she could be found in the evening,
-usually at a drugstore near the park or her new apartment, and we would
-take a few minutes’ stroll in the park. Such a fever of emotion as she
-displayed at times! “Oh dear!” she would exclaim in an intense hungry
-way upon seeing me. “Oh, I could hardly wait!” And once in the park she
-would throw her strong young arms about me and kiss me in a fiery,
-hungry way. There was one last transport the night before she left for
-Michigan for a visit, when if I had been half the Don Juan I longed to
-be we might have passed the boundary line; but lack of courage on my
-part and inexperience on hers kept us apart.
-
-When I saw her again in St. Louis——
-
-But that is still another story.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI
-
-
-THUS these days sped swiftly and ecstatically by. For once in my life I
-seemed to be truly and consistently happy, and that in this very city
-where but a year or two before I had suffered such keen distress. Toward
-the middle of the second week Miss Ginity left for Michigan, and then I
-had Miss W—— all to myself. By now I had come to feel an intense
-interest in her, an elation over the mere thought of being with her. In
-addition to this joy my mind and body seemed to be responding in some
-ecstatic fashion to Chicago and the Fair as a whole, the romance and
-color of it all, the winelike quality of the air, the raw, fresh, young
-force of the city, so vividly manifested in its sounding streets, its
-towering new buildings, its far-flung lines of avenues and boulevards,
-and, by way of contrast, its vast regions of middle and lower class
-poor. When we lived here as a family I had always thought that poverty
-was no great hardship. The poor were poor enough, in all conscience, but
-oh, the singing hope of the city itself! Up, up, and to work! Here were
-tasks for a million hands. In spite of my attachment to the Fair and
-Miss Ginity and Miss W—— I was still lured cityward, to visit the
-streets in which we had once lived or where I had walked so much in the
-old days, mere journeys of remembrance.
-
-But as I wandered about I realized that the city was not my city any
-more, that life was a baseless, shifting thing, its seeming ties
-uncertain and unstable and that that which one day we held dear was
-tomorrow gone, to come no more. How plain it was, I thought and with
-some surprise, so ignorant is youth, that even seemingly brisk
-organizations such as the _Globe_ here in Chicago and some others with
-which I had been connected could wither or disappear completely, one’s
-commercial as well as one’s family life be scattered to the four Winds.
-Sensing this, I now felt an intense sense of loneliness and
-homesickness, for what I could scarcely say: for each and every one of
-past pleasant moments, I presume, our abandoned home in Flournoy Street,
-now rented to another; my old desk at the _Globe_, now occupied by
-another; Alice’s former home on this south side; N——’s in Indiana
-Street. I was gloomy over having no fixed abode, no intimates worthy the
-name here who could soothe and comfort me in such an hour as this.
-Curiously enough, at such moments I felt an intense leaning toward Miss
-W——, who seemed to answer with something stable and abiding. I am at a
-loss even now to describe it but so it was, and it was more than
-anything else a sense of peace and support which I found in her
-presence, a something that suggested durability and warmth—possibly the
-Whole closely-knit family atmosphere which was behind her and upon which
-she relied. She would listen, apparently with interest, to all my
-youthful and no doubt bragging accounts of my former newspaper
-experiences here as well as in St. Louis, which I painted in high colors
-with myself as a newspaper man deep in the councils of my paper. Walking
-about the Fair grounds one night I wished to take her hand but so
-overawed was I by her personality that I could scarcely muster up the
-courage to do it. When I at last did she shyly withdrew her hand,
-pretending not to notice.
-
-The same thing happened an evening or two later when I persuaded her and
-her sister to accompany me and a fellow-reporter whom I met in Chicago,
-to Lincoln Park, where was a band concert and the playing of a colored
-fountain given by the late C. T. Yerkes, then looked upon as one of the
-sights of the city. I recall how warm and clear was the evening, our
-trip northward on the newly-built “Alley L,” so-called because no public
-thoroughfare could be secured for it, how when we got off at Congress
-Street, where the enormous store of Siegel, Cooper & Company had only
-recently been opened, we there took a surface cable to Lincoln Park. It
-was barely dusk when we reached the park, and the fountain did not play
-until nine; but pending its colored wonders, we walked along the shore
-of the lake in the darkness, alone, her sister and my friend having been
-swallowed up in the great crowd.
-
-Once near the lake shore we were alone. I found myself desperately
-interested without knowing how to proceed. It was a state of hypnosis, I
-fancy, in which I felt myself to be rapturously happy because more or
-less convinced of her feeling for me, and yet gravely uncertain as to
-whether she would ever permit herself to be ensnared in love. She was so
-poised and serene, so stable and yet so tender. I felt foolish,
-unworthy. Were not the crude brutalities of love too much for her? She
-might like me now, but the slightest error on my part in word or deed
-would no doubt drive her away and I should never see her again. I wanted
-to put my arm about her waist or hold her hand, but it was all beyond me
-then. She seemed too remote, a little unreal.
-
-Finally, moved by the idyllic quality of it all, I left her and strolled
-down to the very edge of the lake where the water was lapping the sand.
-I had the feeling that if she really cared for me she would follow me,
-but she did not. She waited sedately on the rise above, but I felt all
-the while that she was drawing toward me intensely and holding me as in
-a vise. Half-angry but still fascinated, I returned, anything but the
-master of this situation. In truth, she had me as completely in tow as
-any woman could wish and was able, consciously or unconsciously, to
-regulate the progress of this affair to suit herself.
-
-But nothing came of this except a deeper feeling of her exceptional
-charm. I was more than ever moved by her grace and force. What sobriety!
-What delicacy of feature! Her big eyes, soft and appealing, her small
-red mouth, her abundance of red hair, a constant enticement.
-
-Before she left for her home, one of the inland counties about ninety
-miles from St. Louis, all that was left of the party, which was not
-many, paid a visit to St. Joe on the Michigan shore, opposite Chicago.
-It was a deliciously bright and warm Sunday. The steamers were
-comfortable and the beach at St. Joe perfect, a long coast of lovely
-white sand with the blue waves breaking over it. En route, because of
-the size of the party and the accidental arrangement of friends, I was
-thrown in with R——, the sister of my adored one, and in spite of myself,
-I found myself being swiftly drawn to her, desperately so, and that in
-the face of the strong attachment for her sister. There was something so
-cheering and whole-souled about her point of view, something so
-provoking and elusive, a veritable sprite of gayety and humor. For some
-reason, both on the boat and in the water, she devoted herself to me,
-until she seemed suddenly to realize what was happening to us both. Then
-she desisted and I saw her no more, or very little of her; but the
-damage had been done. I was intensely moved by her, even dreaming of
-changing my attentions; but she was too fond of her sister to allow
-anything like that. From then on she avoided me, with the sole intent,
-as I could see, of not injuring her sister.
-
-We returned at night, I with the most troubled feelings about the whole
-affair, and it was only after I had returned to St. Louis that the old
-feeling for S—— came back and I began to see and think of her as I had
-that night in Lincoln Park. Then her charm seemed to come with full
-force and for days I could think of nothing else: the Fair, the hotel,
-the evening walks, and what she was doing now; but even this was shot
-through with the most jumbled thoughts of her sister and Miss Ginity....
-I leave it to those who can to solve this mystery of the affections.
-Miss W——, as I understood it, was not to come back to St. Louis until
-the late autumn, when she could be found in an aristocratic suburb about
-twenty miles out, teaching of course, whereas Miss Ginity was little
-more than a half-hour’s ride from my room.
-
-But, as I now ruefully thought, I had not troubled to look up Alice,
-although once she had meant so much of Chicago and happiness to me. What
-kind of man was I to become thus indifferent and then grieve over it?
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII
-
-
-TO return and take up the ordinary routine of reporting after these
-crystal days of beauty and romance was anything but satisfactory. Gone
-was the White City with its towers and pinnacles and the wide blue wash
-of lake at its feet. After the Fair and the greater city, St. Louis
-seemed prosaic indeed. Still, I argued, I was getting along here better
-than I had in Chicago. When I went down to the office I found Wandell
-poring as usual over current papers. He was always scribbling and
-snipping, like a little old leathery Punch, in his mussy office. The
-mere sight of him made me wish that I were through with the newspaper
-business forever: it brought back all the regularity of the old days.
-When should I get out of it? I now began to ask myself for the first
-time. What was my real calling in life? Should I ever again have my
-evenings to myself? When should I be able to idle and dawdle as I had
-seen other people doing? I did not then realize how few the leisure
-class really comprises; I was always taking the evidence of one or two
-passing before my gaze as indicating a vast company. _I_ was one of the
-unfortunates who were shut out; _I_ was one whose life was to be a
-wretched tragedy for want of means to enjoy it now when I had youth and
-health!
-
-“Well, did you have a good time?” asked Wandell.
-
-“Yes,” I replied dolefully. “That’s a great show up there. It’s
-beautiful.”
-
-“Any of the girls fall in love with you?” he croaked good-humoredly.
-
-“Oh, it wasn’t as bad as that.”
-
-“Well, I suppose you’re ready to settle down now to hard work. I’ve got
-a lot of things here for you to do.”
-
-I cannot say that I was cheered by this. It was hard to have to settle
-down to ordinary reporting after all these recent glories. It seemed to
-me as though an idyllic chapter of my life had been closed forever.
-Thereafter, I undertook one interesting assignment and another but
-without further developing my education as to the workings of life. I
-was beginning to tire of reporting, and one more murder or political or
-social mystery aided me in no way.
-
-I recall, however, taking on a strange murder mystery over in Illinois
-which kept me stationed in a small countyseat for days, and all the time
-there was nothing save a sense of hard work about it all. Again, there
-was a train robbery that took me into the heart of a rural region where
-were nothing but farmers and small towns. Again there was a change of
-train service which permitted the distribution of St. Louis newspapers
-earlier than the Chicago papers in territory which was somehow disputed
-between them and because of which I was called upon to make a trip
-between midnight and dawn, riding for hours in the mailcar, and then
-describing fully this supposedly wonderful special newspaper service
-which was to make all the inhabitants of this region wiser, kinder,
-richer because they could get the St. Louis papers before they could
-those of Chicago! I really did not think much of it, although I was
-congratulated upon having penned a fine picture.
-
-One thing really did interest me: A famous mindreader having come to
-town and wishing to advertise his skill, he requested the _Republic_ to
-appoint a man or a committee to ride with him in a carriage through the
-crowded downtown streets while he, blindfolded but driving, followed the
-directing thoughts of the man who should sit on the seat beside him. I
-was ordered to get up this committee, which I did—Dick, Peter,
-Rodenberger and myself were my final choice, I sitting on the front seat
-and doing the thinking while the mindreader raced in and out between
-cars and wagons, turning sharp corners, escaping huge trucks by a hair
-only, to wind up finally at Dick’s door, dash up the one flight of
-stairs and into the room (the door being left open for this), and then
-climb up on a chair placed next to a wardrobe and, as per my thought,
-all decided on beforehand, take down that peculiar head of Alley Sloper
-and hand it to me.
-
-Now this thing, when actually worked out under my very eyes and with
-myself doing the thinking, astounded me and caused me to ponder the
-mysteries of life more than ever. How could another man read my mind
-like that? What was it that perceived and interpreted my thoughts? It
-gave me an immense kick mentally, one that stays by me to this day, and
-set me off eventually on the matters of psychology and chemic mysteries
-generally. When this was written up as true, as it was, it made a
-splendid story and attracted a great deal of attention. Once and for
-all, it cleared up my thoughts as to the power of mind over so-called
-matter and caused this “committee” to enter upon experiments of its own
-with hypnotists, spiritualists and the like, until we were fairly well
-satisfied as to the import of these things. I myself stood on the
-stomach of a thin hypnotized boy of not more than seventeen years of
-age, while his head was placed on one chair, his feet on another and no
-brace of any kind was put under his body. Yet his stomach held me up.
-But, having established the truth of such things for ourselves, we found
-no method of doing anything with our knowledge. It was practically
-useless in this region, and decidedly taboo.
-
-Another individual who interested me quite as might a book or story was
-a Spiritualist, a fat, sluglike Irish type, who came to town about this
-time and proved to be immensely successful in getting up large meetings,
-entrance to which he charged. Soon there were ugly rumors as to the
-orgiastic character of his séances, especially at his home where he
-advertised to receive interested spiritualists in private. One day my
-noble and nosy city editor set me to the task of ferreting out all this,
-with the intention of _sicking_ the moralists on the gentleman and so
-driving him out of town. Was it because Mr. Wandell, interested in
-morals or at least responding to the local sentiment for a moral city,
-considered this man a real menace to St. Louis and so wished to be rid
-of him? Not at all. Mr. Wandell cared no more for Mr. Mooney or the
-public or its subsurface morals than he cared for the politics of
-Beluchistan. In the heart of St. Louis at this very time, in Chestnut
-Street, was a large district devoted to just such orgies as this
-stranger was supposed to be perpetrating; but this area was never in the
-public eye, and you could not, for your life, put it there. The public
-apparently did not want it attacked, or if it did there were forces
-sufficiently powerful to keep it from obtaining its wishes. The police
-were supposed to extract regular payments from one and all in this area,
-as Rodenberger, in the little paper he ran, frequently charged, but this
-paper had no weight. The most amazing social complications occasionally
-led directly to one or another of these houses, as I myself had seen,
-but no comment was ever made on the peculiarity of the area as a whole
-or its persistence in the face of so much moral sentiment. The vice
-crusaders never troubled it, neither did the papers or the churches or
-anybody else. But when it came to Mr. Mooney—well, here was an
-individual who could be easily and safely attacked, and so—
-
-Mr. Mooney had a large following and many defenders whose animosity or
-gullibility led them to look upon him as a personage of great import. He
-was unquestionably a shrewd and able manipulator, one of the finest
-quacks I ever saw. He would race up and down among the members of his
-large audience in his spiritualistic “church meetings,” his fat waxy
-eyelids closed, his immense white shirt-front shining, his dress
-coattails flying like those of a bustling butler or head-waiter, the
-while he exclaimed: “Is there any one here by the name of Peter? Is
-there any one here by the name of Augusta? There is an old white-bearded
-man here who says he has something to say to Augusta. And Peter—Peter,
-your sister says not to marry, that everything now troubling you will
-soon come out all right.”
-
-He would open these meetings with spiritual invocations of one kind and
-another and pretend the profoundest religiosity and spirituality when as
-a matter of fact he was a faker of the most brazen stamp. As Wandell
-afterward showed me by clippings and police reports from other cities,
-he had been driven from one city to another, cities usually very far
-apart so that the news of his troubles might not spread too quickly. His
-last resting-place had been Norfolk, Virginia, and before that he had
-been in such widely scattered spots as Liverpool, San Francisco, Sydney,
-New South Wales. Always he had been immensely successful, drawing large
-crowds, taking up collections and doing a private séance business which
-must have netted him a tidy sum. Indeed in private life, as I soon
-found, he was a gourmet, a sybarite and a riant amorist, laughing in his
-sleeve at all his touts and followers.
-
-For some time I was unable to gather any evidence that would convict him
-of anything in a direct way. Once he found the _Republic_ to be
-unfavorable, he became pugnacious and threatened to assault me if I ever
-came near him or his place or attempted to write up anything about him
-which was not true! On the other hand, Wandell, being equally determined
-to catch him, insisted upon my following him up and exposing him. My
-task was not easy. I was compelled to hang about his meetings, trying to
-find some one who would tell me something definite against him.
-
-Going to his rooms one day when he was absent, I managed to meet his
-landlady who, when I told her that I was from the _Republic_ and wanted
-to know something about Mr. Mooney’s visitors, his private conduct and
-so forth, asked me to come in. At once I sensed something definite and
-important, for I had been there before and had been turned away by this
-same woman. But today, for some reason she escorted me very secretly to
-a room on the second floor where she closed and locked the door and then
-began a long story concerning the peculiar relations which existed
-between Mr. Mooney and some of his male and female disciples, especially
-the female ones. She finally admitted that she had been watching Mr.
-Mooney’s rooms through a keyhole. For weeks past there had been various
-visitors whose comings and goings had meant little to her until they
-became “so regular,” as she said, and Mr. Mooney so particularly engaged
-with them. Then, since Mr. Mooney’s fame had been spreading and the
-_Republic_ had begun to attack him, she had become most watchful and
-now, as she told me, he was “carrying on” most shamefully with one and
-another of his visitors, male and female. Just what these relations were
-she at first refused to state, but when I pointed out to her that unless
-she could furnish me with other and more convincing proof than her mere
-word or charge it would all be of small value, she unbent sufficiently
-to fix on one particular woman, whose card and a note addressed to Mr.
-Mooney she had evidently purloined from his room. These she produced and
-turned over to me with a rousing description of the nature of the
-visits.
-
-Armed with the card and note, I immediately proceeded to the west end
-where I soon found the house of the lady, determined to see whether she
-would admit this soft impeachment, whether I could make her admit it. I
-was a little uncertain then as to how I was to go about it. Suppose I
-should run into the lady’s husband, I thought, or suppose they should
-come down together when I sent in my card? Or suppose that I charged her
-with what I knew and she called some one to her aid and had me thrown
-out or beaten up? Nevertheless I went nervously up the steps and rang
-the bell, whereupon a footman opened the door.
-
-“Who is it you wish to see?”
-
-I told him.
-
-“Have you an appointment with her?”
-
-“No, but I’m from the _Republic_, and you tell her that it is very
-important for her to see me. We have an article about her and a certain
-Mr. Mooney which we propose to print in the morning, and I think she
-will want to see me about it.” I stared at him with a great deal of
-effrontery. He finally closed the door, leaving me outside, but soon
-returned and said: “You may come in.”
-
-I walked into a large, heavily furnished reception-room, representing
-the best Western taste of the time, in which I nosed about thinking how
-fine it all was and wondering how I was to proceed about all this once
-she appeared. Suppose she proved to be a fierce and contentious soul
-well able to hold her own, or suppose there was some mistake about this
-letter or the statement of the landlady! As I was walking up and down,
-quite troubled as to just what I should say, I heard the rustle of silk
-skirts. I turned just as a vigorous and well-dressed woman of thirty-odd
-swept into the room. She was rather smart, bronze-haired, pink-fleshed,
-not in the least nervous or disturbed.
-
-“You wish to see me?”
-
-“Yes, ma’am.”
-
-“About what, please?”
-
-“I am from the _Republic_,” I began. “We have a rather startling story
-about you and Mr. Mooney. It appears that his place has been watched and
-that you——”
-
-“A story about me?” she interrupted with an air of hauteur, seeming to
-have no idea of what I was driving at. “And about a Mr. Who? Mooney, you
-say? What kind of a story is it? Why do you come to me about it? Why, I
-don’t even know the man!”
-
-“Oh, but I think you do,” I replied, thinking of the letter and card in
-my pocket. “As a matter of fact, I know that you do. At the office right
-now we have a card and a letter of yours to Mr. Mooney, which the
-_Republic_ proposes to publish along with some other matter unless some
-satisfactory explanation as to why it should not be printed can be made.
-We are conducting a campaign against Mr. Mooney, as you probably know.”
-
-I have often thought of this scene as a fine illustration of the crass,
-rough force of life, its queer non-moral tangles, bluster, bluff, lies,
-make-believe. Beginning by accusing me of attempted blackmail, and
-adding that she would inform her husband and that I must leave the house
-at once or be thrown out, she glared until I replied that I would leave
-but that I had her letter to Mr. Mooney, that there were witnesses who
-would testify as to what had happened between her and Mr. Mooney and
-that unless she proceeded to see my city editor at once the whole thing
-would be written up for the next day’s paper. Then of a sudden she
-collapsed. Her face blanched, her body trembled, and she, a healthy,
-vigorous woman, dropped to her knees before me, seized my hands and coat
-and began pleading with me in an agonized voice.
-
-“But you wouldn’t do that! My husband! My home! My social position! My
-children! My God, you wouldn’t have me driven out of my own home! If he
-came here now! Oh, my God, tell me what I am to do! Tell me that you
-won’t do anything—that the _Republic_ won’t! I’ll give you anything you
-want. Oh, you couldn’t be so heartless! Maybe I have done wrong—but
-think of what will happen to me if you do this!”
-
-I stared at her in amazement. Never had I been the center of such an
-astonishing scene. On the instant I felt a mingled sense of triumph and
-extreme pity. Thoughts as to whether I should tell the _Republic_ what I
-knew, whether if I did it would have the cruelty to expose this woman,
-whether she would or could be made to pay blackmail by any one raced
-through my mind. I was sorry and yet amused. Always this thought of
-blackmail, of which I heard considerable in newspaper work but of which
-I never had any proof, troubled me. If I exposed her, what then? Would
-Wandell hound her? If I did not would he discover that I was suppressing
-the news and so discharge me? Pity for her was plainly mingled with a
-sense of having achieved another newspaper beat. Now, assuredly, the
-_Republic_ could make this erratic individual move on. To her I
-proceeded to make plain that I personally was helpless, a mere reporter
-who of himself could do nothing. If she wished she could see Mr.
-Wandell, who could help her if he chose, and I gave her his home
-address, knowing that he would not be at his office at this time of day,
-but hoping to see him myself before she did. Weeping and moaning, she
-raced upstairs, leaving me to make my way out as best I might. Once out
-I meditated on this effrontery and the hard, cold work I was capable of
-doing. Surely this was a dreadful thing to have done. Had I the right?
-Was it fair? Suppose I had been the victim? Still I congratulated myself
-upon having done a very clever piece of work for which I should be
-highly complimented.
-
-The lady must have proceeded at once to my city editor for when I
-returned to the office he was there; he called me to him at once.
-
-“Great God! What have you been doing now? Of all men I have ever known,
-you can get me into more trouble in a half-hour than any other man could
-in a year! Here I was, sitting peacefully at home, and up comes my wife
-telling me there’s a weeping woman in the parlor who had just driven up
-to see me. Down I go and she grabs my hands, falls on her knees and
-begins telling me about some letters we have, that her life will be
-ruined if we publish them. Do you want to get me sued for divorce?” he
-went on, cackling and chortling in his impish way. “What the hell are
-those letters, anyhow? Where are they? What’s this story you’ve dug up
-now? Who is this woman? You’re the damnedest man I ever saw!” and he
-cackled some more. I handed over the letter and he proceeded to look it
-over with considerable gusto. As I could see, he was pleased beyond
-measure.
-
-I told my story, and he was intensely interested but seemed to meditate
-on its character for some time. What happened after that between him and
-the woman I was never able to make out. But one thing is sure: the story
-was never published, not this incident. An hour or two later, seeing me
-enter the office after my dinner, he called me in and began:
-
-“You leave this with me now and drop the story for the present. There
-are other ways to get Mooney,” and sure enough, in a few days Mr. Mooney
-suddenly left town. It was a curious procedure to me, but at least Mr.
-Mooney was soon gone—and——
-
-But figure it out for yourself.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIII
-
-
-TWO other incidents in connection with my newspaper work at this time
-threw a clear light on social crimes and conditions which cannot always
-be discussed or explained. One of these related to an old man of about
-sixty-five years of age who was in the coffee and spice business in one
-of those old streets which bordered on the waterfront. One afternoon in
-mid-August, when there was little to do in the way of reporting and I
-was hanging about the office waiting for something to turn up, Wandell
-received a telephone message and handed me a slip of paper. “You go down
-to this address and see what you can find out. There’s been a fight or
-something. A crowd has been beating up an old man and the police have
-arrested him—to save him, I suppose.”
-
-I took a car and soon reached the scene, a decayed and tumbledown region
-of small family dwellings now turned into tenements of even a poorer
-character. St. Louis had what so large a center as New York has not:
-alleys or rear passage-ways to all houses by which trade parcels, waste
-and the like are delivered or removed. And facing these were old barns,
-sheds, and tumbledown warrens of houses and flats occupied by poor
-whites or blacks, or both. In an old decayed and vacant brick barn in
-one of these alleys there had been only a few hours before a furious
-scene, although when I arrived it was all over, everything was still and
-peaceful. All that I could learn was that several hours before an old
-man had been found in this barn with a little girl of eight or nine
-years. The child’s parents or friends were informed and a chase ensued.
-The criminal had been surrounded by a group of irate citizens who
-threatened to kill him. Then the police arrived and escorted him to the
-station at North Seventh, where supposedly he was locked up.
-
-On my arrival at the station, however, nothing was known of this case.
-My noble King knew nothing and when I looked on the “blotter,” which
-supposedly contained a public record of all arrests and charges made,
-and which it was my privilege as well as that of every other newspaper
-man to look over, there was no evidence of any such offense having been
-committed or of any such prisoner having been brought here.
-
-“What became of that attempted assault in K Street?” I inquired of King,
-who was drowsily reading a newspaper. “I was just over there and they
-told me the man had been brought here.”
-
-He looked up at me wearily, seemingly not interested. “What case? It
-must be down if it came in here. What case are ye taalkin’ about? Maybe
-it didn’t come here.”
-
-I looked at him curiously, struck all at once by an air of concealment.
-He was not as friendly as usual.
-
-“That’s funny,” I said. “I’ve just come from there and they told me he
-was here. It would be on the blotter, wouldn’t it? Were you here an hour
-or two ago?”
-
-For the first time since I had been coming here he grew a bit truculent.
-“Sure. If it’s not on there it’s not on there, and that’s all I know. If
-you want to know more than that you’ll have to see the captain.”
-
-At thought of the police attempting to conceal a thing like this in the
-face of my direct knowledge I grew irritable and bold myself.
-
-“Where’s the captain?” I asked.
-
-“He’s out now. He’ll be back at four, I think.”
-
-I sat down and waited, then decided to call up the office for further
-instructions. Wandell was in. He advised me to call up Edmonstone at the
-Four Courts and see if it was recorded, which I did, but nothing was
-known. When I returned I found the captain in. He was a taciturn man and
-had small use for reporters at any time.
-
-“Yes, yes, yes,” he kept reiterating as I asked him about the case.
-“Well, I’ll tell you,” he said after a long pause, seeing that I was
-determined to know, “he’s not here now. I let him go. No one saw him
-commit the crime. He’s an old man with a big wholesale business in
-Second Street, never arrested before, and he has a wife and grown sons
-and daughters. Of course he oughtn’t to be doin’ anything of that
-kind—still, he claims that he wasn’t. Anyhow, no good can come of
-writin’ it up in the papers now. Here’s his name and address,” and he
-opened a small book which he drew out of his pocket and showed me that
-and no more. “Now you can go and talk to him yourself if you want to,
-but if you take my advice you’ll let him alone. I see no good in pullin’
-him down if it’s goin’ to hurt his family. But that’s as you newspaper
-men see it.”
-
-I could have sympathized with this stocky Irishman more if we had not
-all been suspicious of the police. I decided to see this old man myself,
-curiosity and the desire for a good story controlling me. I hurried to a
-car and rode out to the west end, where, in a well-built street and a
-house of fair proportions I found my man sitting on his front porch no
-doubt awaiting some such disastrous onslaught as this and anxious to
-keep it from his family. The moment he saw me he walked to his gate and
-stopped me. He was tall and angular, with a grizzled, short, round beard
-and a dull, unimportant face, a kind of Smith Brothers-coughdrop type.
-Apparently he was well into that period where one is supposed to settle
-down into a serene old age and forget all one ever knew of youth. I
-inquired whether a Mr. So-and-So lived there, and he replied that he was
-Mr. So-and-So.
-
-“I’m from the _Republic_,” I began, “and we have a story regarding a
-charge that has been made against you today in one of the police
-stations.”
-
-He eyed me with a nervous uncertainty that was almost tremulous. He did
-not seem to be able to speak at first but chewed on something, a bit of
-tobacco possibly.
-
-“Not so loud,” he said. “Come out here. I’ll give you ten dollars if you
-won’t say anything about this,” and he began to fumble in one of his
-waistcoat pockets.
-
-“No, no,” I said, with an air of profound virtue. “I can’t take money
-for anything like that. I can’t stop anything the paper may want to say.
-You’ll have to see the editor.”
-
-All the while I was thinking how like an old fox he was and that if one
-did have the power to suppress a story of this kind here was a fine
-opportunity for blackmail. He might have been made to pay a thousand or
-more. At the same time I could not help sympathizing with him a little,
-considering his age and his unfortunate predicament. Of late I had been
-getting a much clearer light on my own character and idiosyncrasies as
-well as on those of many others, and was beginning to see how few there
-were who could afford to cast the stone of righteousness or superior
-worth. Nearly all were secretly doing one thing and another which they
-would publicly denounce and which, if exposed, would cause them to be
-shunned or punished. Sex vagaries were not as uncommon as the majority
-supposed and perhaps were not to be given too sharp a punishment if
-strict justice were to be done to all. Yet here was I at this moment
-yelping at the heels of this errant, who had been found out. At the same
-time I cannot say that I was very much moved by the personality of the
-man: he looked to be narrow and close-fisted. I wondered how a business
-man of any acumen could be connected with so shabby an affair, or being
-caught could be so dull as to offer any newspaper man so small a sum as
-ten dollars to hush it up. And how about the other papers, the other
-reporters who might hear of it—did he expect to buy them all off for ten
-dollars each? The fact that he had admitted the truth of the charges
-left nothing to say. I felt myself grow nervous and incoherent and
-finally left rather discomfited and puzzled as to what I should do. When
-I returned to the office and told Wandell he seemed to be rather dubious
-also and more or less disgusted.
-
-“You can’t make much out of a case of that kind,” he said. “We couldn’t
-print it if you did; the public wouldn’t stand for it. And if you attack
-the police for concealing it then they’ll be down on us. He ought to be
-exposed, I suppose, but—well——Write it out and I’ll see.”
-
-I therefore wrote it up in a wary and guarded way, telling what had
-happened and how the police had not entered the charge, but the story
-never appeared. Somehow, I was rather glad of it, although I thought the
-man should be punished.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIV
-
-
-WHILE I was on the _Globe-Democrat_ there was a sort of race-track tout,
-gambler, amateur detective and political and police hanger-on generally,
-who was a purveyor of news not only to our police and political men but
-to the sporting and other editors, a sort of Jack-of-all-news or
-tipster. To me he was both ridiculous and disgusting, loud, bold,
-uncouth, the kind of creature that begins as bootblack or newsboy and
-winds up as the president of a racing association or ball team. He
-claimed to be Irish, having a freckled face, red hair, gray eyes, and
-rather large hands and feet. In reality he was one of those South
-Russian Jews who looked so much like the Irish as to be frequently
-mistaken for them. He had the wit to see that it would be of more
-advantage to him to be thought Irish than Jewish, and so had changed his
-name of Shapirowitz to Galvin—“Red” Galvin. One of the most offensive
-things about him was that his clothes were loud, just such clothes as
-touts and gamblers affect, hard, bright-checked suits, bright yellow
-shoes, ties of the most radiant hues, hats of a clashing sonorousness,
-and rings and pins and cuff-links glistening with diamonds or rubies—the
-kind of man who is convinced that clothes and a little money make the
-man, as they quite do in such instances.
-
-Galvin had the social and moral point of view of both the hawk and the
-buzzard. According to Wood, who early made friends with him quite as he
-did with the Chinese and others for purposes of study, he was identified
-with some houses of prostitution in which he had a small financial
-interest, as well as various political schemes then being locally
-fostered by one and another group of low politicians who were constantly
-getting up one scheme and another to mulct the city in some underhanded
-way. He was a species of political and social grafter, having all the
-high ideals of a bagnio detective: he began to interest Mr. Tobias
-Mitchell, who was a creature of an allied if slightly higher type, and
-the pair became reasonably good friends. Mitchell used him as an
-assistant to Hazard, Bellairs, Bennett, Hartung and myself: he supplied
-the paper with stories which we would rewrite. I used to laugh at him,
-more or less to his face, as being a freak, which of course generated
-only the kindliest of feelings between us. He always suggested to me the
-type of detective or plain-clothes man who would take money from
-street-girls, prey on them, as indeed I suspected him of doing.
-
-I wondered how he could make anything out of this newspaper connection
-since, as Hartung and others told me, he could not write. It was
-necessary to rewrite his stuff almost entirely. But his great
-recommendation to Mitchell and others was that he could get news of
-things where other reporters could not, among the police, detectives and
-politicians, with whom he was evidently hand-in-hand. By reason of his
-underworld connections many amazing details as to one form and another
-of political and social jobbery came to light, which doubtless made him
-invaluable to a city editor.
-
-When some of his stories were given to me to rewrite we were thrown into
-immediate and clashing contact. Because of his leers and bravado, when
-he knew he could not write two good sentences in order, I frequently
-wanted to brain him but took it out in smiles and dry cynical comments.
-His favorite expressions were “See?” and “I sez tuh him” or “He sez tuh
-me,” always accompanied by a contemptuous wave of a hand or a
-pugnaciously protruded chin. One of the chief reasons why I hated him
-was that Dick Wood told me he had once remarked that newspaper work was
-a beggar’s game at best and that _writers grew on trees_, meaning that
-they were so numerous as to be negligible and not worth considering.
-
-I made the best of these trying situations when I had to do over a story
-of his, extracting all the information I could and then writing it out,
-which resulted in some of his stories receiving excellent space in the
-day’s news and made him all the more pugnacious and sure of himself. And
-at the same time these made him of more value to the paper. However, in
-due time I left the _Globe-Democrat_, and one day, greatly to my
-astonishment and irritation, he appeared at the North Seventh Street
-station as a full-fledged reporter, having been given a regular position
-by Mitchell and set to doing police work—out of which task at the Four
-Courts, if I remember rightly, he finally ousted Jock Bellairs, who was
-given to too much drinking.
-
-To my surprise and chagrin I noticed at once that he was, as if by
-reason of past intimacies of which I had not the slightest idea, far
-more en rapport with the sergeants and the captain than I had ever
-dreamed of being. It was “Charlie” here and “Cap” there. But what roiled
-me most was that he gave himself all the airs of a newspaper man,
-swaggering about and talking of this, that and the other story he had
-written (I having done some of them myself!). The crowning blow was that
-he was soon closeted with the captain in his room, strolling in and out
-of that sanctum as if it were his private demesne and giving me the
-impression of being in touch with realms and deeds of which I was never
-to have the slightest knowledge. This made me apprehensive lest in these
-intimacies tales and mysteries should be unfolded that would have their
-first light in the pages of the _Globe-Democrat_ and so leave me to be
-laughed at as one who could not get the news. I watched the
-_Globe-Democrat_ more closely than ever before for evidence of such
-treachery on the part of the police as would result in a “scoop” for
-him, at the same time redoubling my interest in such items as might
-appear. The consequence was that on more than one occasion I made good
-stories out of things which Mr. Galvin had evidently dismissed as
-worthless; and now and then a case into which I had inquired at the
-stationhouse appeared in the _Globe-Democrat_ with details which I had
-not been able to obtain and concerning which the police had insisted
-they knew nothing.
-
-For a long time, by dint of energy and a rather plain indication to all
-concerned that I would not tolerate false dealing, I managed not only to
-hold my own but occasionally to give my confrère a good beating—as when,
-for one instance, a negro girl in one of those crowded alleys was cut
-almost to shreds by an ex-lover armed with a razor, for reasons which,
-as my investigation proved, were highly romantic. Some seven or eight
-months before, this girl and her assailant had been living together in
-Cairo, Illinois, and the lover, who was wildly fond of her, became
-suspicious and finally satisfying himself that she was faithless set a
-trap to catch her. He was a coal passer or stevedore, working now on one
-boat and now on another plying the Mississippi between New Orleans and
-St. Louis. And one day when she thought he was on a river steamer for a
-week or two he burst in upon her and found her with another man. Death
-would have been her portion, as well as that of her lover, had it not
-been for the interference of friends which permitted the pair to escape.
-
-The man returned to his task as stevedore, working his way from one
-river city to another. When he came to Memphis, Natchez, New Orleans,
-Vicksburg or St. Louis, he disguised himself as a peddler selling
-trinkets and charms and in this capacity walked the crowded negro
-sections of these cities calling his wares. One of these trips finally
-brought him to St. Louis, and here on a late August afternoon, ambling
-up this stifling little alley calling out his charms and trinkets, he
-had finally encountered her. The girl put her head out of the doorway.
-Dropping his tray he drew a razor and slashed her cheeks and lips, arms,
-legs, back and sides, so that when I arrived at the City Hospital she
-was unconscious and her life despaired of. The lover, abandoning his
-tray of cheap jewelry, which was later brought to the stationhouse and
-exhibited, had made good his escape and was not captured, during my stay
-in St. Louis at least. Her present paramour had also gone his way,
-leaving her to suffer alone.
-
-Owing possibly to Galvin’s underestimate of its romance, this story
-received only a scant stick as a low dive cutting affray in the
-_Globe-Democrat_, while in the _Republic_ I had turned it into a negro
-romance which filled all of a column. Into it I had tried to put the hot
-river waterfronts of the different cities which the lover had visited,
-the crowded negro quarters of Memphis, New Orleans, Cairo, the bold
-negro life which two truants such as the false mistress and her lover
-might enjoy. I had tried to suggest the sing-song sleepiness of the
-levee boat-landings, the stevedores at their lazy labors, the idle,
-dreamy character of the slow-moving boats. Even an old negro refrain
-appropriate to a trinket peddler had been introduced:
-
-“Eyah—Rings, Pins, Buckles, Ribbons!”
-
-The barbaric character of the alley in which it occurred, lined with
-rickety curtain-hung shacks and swarming with the idle, crooning,
-shuffling negro life of the South, appealed to me. An old black mammy
-with a yellow-dotted kerchief over her head, who kept talking of “disha
-Gawge” and “disha Sam” and “disha Maquatia” (the girl), moved me to a
-poetic frenzy. From a crowd of blacks that hung about the vacated shack
-of the lovers after the girl had been taken away I picked up the main
-thread of the story, the varying characteristics of the girl and her
-lover, and then having visited the hospital and seen the victim I
-hurried to the office and endeavored to convince Wandell that I had an
-important story. At first he was not inclined to think so, negro life
-being a little too low for local consumption, but after I had entered
-upon some of the details he told me to go ahead. I wrote it out as well
-as I could, and it went in on the second page. The next day, meeting
-Galvin, having first examined the _Globe_ to see what had been done
-there, I beamed on him cheerfully and was met with a snarl of rage.
-
-“You think you’re a hell of a feller, dontcha, because yuh can sling a
-little ink? Yuh think yuh’ve pulled off sompin swell. Well, say, yuh’re
-not near as much as yuh think yuh are. Wait an’ see. I’ve been up
-against wordy boys like yuh before, an’ I can work all around ’em. All
-you guys do is to get a few facts an’ then pad ’em up. Yuh never get the
-real stuff, never,” and he snapped his fingers under my nose. “Wait’ll
-we get a real case sometime, you an’ me, an’ I’ll show yuh sompin.”
-
-He glared at me with hard, revengeful eyes, and he then and there put a
-fear into me from which I never recovered, although at the time I merely
-smiled.
-
-“Is that so? That’s easy enough to say, now that you’re trimmed, but I
-guess I’ll be right there when the time comes.”
-
-“Aw, go to hell!” he snarled, and I walked off smiling but beginning to
-wonder nervously just what it was he was going to do to me, and how
-soon.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLV
-
-
-SOME time before this (when I was still working for the
-_Globe-Democrat_), there had occurred on the Missouri Pacific, about one
-hundred and fifty miles west of St. Louis a hold-up, the story of which
-interested me, although I had nothing to do with it. According to the
-reports, seven lusty and daring bandits, all heavily armed and
-desperate, had held up an eight-car Pullman and baggage express train
-between one and two of the morning at a lonely spot, and after overawing
-the passengers, had compelled the engineer and fireman to dismount,
-uncouple the engine and run it a hundred paces ahead, then return and
-help break open the door of the express car. This they did, using a
-stick of dynamite or giant powder handed them by one of the bandits. And
-then both were made to enter the express car, where, under the eye of
-one of the bandits and despite the presence of the express messenger,
-who was armed yet overawed, they were compelled to blow open the safe
-and carry forth between twenty and thirty thousand dollars in bills and
-coin, which they deposited on the ground in sacks and packages for the
-bandits. Then, if you please, they were compelled to re-enter their
-engine, back it up and couple it to the train and proceed upon their
-journey, leaving the bandits to gather up their booty and depart.
-
-Naturally such a story was of great interest to St. Louis, as well as to
-all the other cities near at hand. It smacked of the lawlessness of the
-’forties. All banks, express companies, railroads and financial
-institutions generally were intensely interested. The whole front page
-was given to this deed, and it was worth it, although during my short
-career in journalism in this region no less than a dozen amazing train
-robberies took place in as many months in the region bounded by the
-Mississippi and the Rockies, the Canadian line and the Gulf. Four or
-five of them occurred within a hundred miles of St. Louis.
-
-The truth about this particular robbery was that there had not been
-seven bandits but just one, an ex-railroad hand, turned robber for this
-occasion only, and armed, as subsequent developments proved, with but a
-brace of revolvers, each containing six shots, and a few sticks of
-fuse-prepared giant powder! Despite the glowing newspaper account which
-made of this a most desperate and murderous affair, there had been no
-prowling up and down the aisles of the cars by bandits armed to the
-teeth, as a number of passengers insisted (among whom was the Governor
-of the State, his Lieutenant-Governor, several officers of his staff,
-all returning from a military banquet or feast somewhere). Nor was there
-any shooting at passengers who ventured to peer out into the darkness.
-Just this one lone bandit, who was very busy up in the front attending
-to the robbing. What made this story all the more ridiculous in the
-light of later developments was that at the time the train stopped in
-the darkness and the imaginary bandits began to shout and fire shots,
-and even to rob the passengers of their watches, pins, purses, these
-worthies of the State, or so it was claimed in guffawing newspaper
-circles afterward, crawled under their seats or into their berths and
-did not emerge until the train was well on its way once more. Long
-before the true story of the lone bandit came out, the presence of the
-Governor and his staff was well known and had lent luster to the deed
-and strengthened the interest which later attached to the story of the
-real bandit.
-
-The St. Louis newspaper files for 1893 will show whether or not I am
-correct. This lone bandit, as it was later indisputably proved, was
-nothing more than an ex-farm hand turned railroad hand and then
-“baggage-smasher” at a small station. Owing to love and poverty he had
-plotted this astounding coup, which, once all its details were revealed,
-fascinated the American public from coast to coast. That a lone
-individual should undertake such an astounding task was uppermost in
-everybody’s mind, including that of our city editors, and to the task of
-unraveling it they now bent their every effort.
-
-When the robbery occurred I was working for the _Globe-Democrat_; later,
-when it was discovered by detectives working for the railroad and the
-express company who the star robber was, I was connected with the
-_Republic_. Early one afternoon I was shown a telegram from some
-backwoods town in Missouri—let us say Bald Knob, just for a name’s
-sake—that Lem Rollins (that name will do as well as any other), an
-ex-employee of the Missouri Pacific, had been arrested by detectives for
-the road and express company for the crime, and that upon searching his
-room they had found most of the stolen money. Also, because of other
-facts with which he had been confronted he had confessed that he and he
-alone had been guilty of the express robbery. The dispatch added that he
-had shown the detectives where the remainder of the money lay hidden,
-and that this very afternoon he would be en route to St. Louis,
-scheduled to arrive over the St. Louis & San Francisco, and that he
-would be confined in the county jail here. Imagine the excitement. The
-burglar had not told how he had accomplished this great feat, and here
-he was now en route to St. Louis, and might be met and interviewed on
-the train. From a news point of view the story was immense.
-
-When I came in Wandell exclaimed: “I’ll tell you what you do,
-Dreiser—Lord! I thought you wouldn’t come back in time! Here’s a St.
-Louis & San Francisco time-table; according to it you can take a local
-that leaves here at two-fifteen and get as far as this place, Pacific,
-where the incoming express stops. It’s just possible that the _Globe_
-and the other papers haven’t got hold of this yet—maybe they have, but
-whatever happens, we won’t get licked, and that’s the main thing.”
-
-I hurried down to the Union Station, but when I asked for a ticket to
-Pacific, the ticket agent asked “Which road?”
-
-“Are there two?”
-
-“Sure, Missouri Pacific, and St. Louis & San Francisco.”
-
-“They both go to the same place, do they?”
-
-“Yes; they meet there.”
-
-“Which train leaves first?”
-
-“St. Louis & San Francisco. It’s waiting now.”
-
-I hurried to it, but the thought of this other road in from Pacific
-troubled me. Suppose the bandit should be on the other train instead of
-on this! I consulted with the conductor when he came for my ticket and
-was told that Pacific was the only place at which these two roads met,
-one going west and the other southwest from there. “Good,” I thought.
-“Then he is certain to be on this line.”
-
-But now another thought came to me: supposing reporters from other
-papers were aboard, especially the _Globe-Democrat_! I rose and walked
-forward to the smoker, and there, to my great disgust and nervous
-dissatisfaction, was Galvin, red-headed, serene, a cigar between his
-teeth, slumped low in his seat smoking and reading a paper as calmly as
-though he were bent upon the most unimportant task in the world.
-
-“How now?” I asked myself. “The _Globe_ has sent that swine! Here he is,
-and these country detectives and railroad men will be sure, on the
-instant, to make friends with him and do their best to serve him. They
-like that sort of man. They may even give him details which they will
-refuse to give me. I shall have to interview my man in front of him, and
-he will get the benefit of all my questions! At his request they may
-even refuse to let me interview him!”
-
-I returned to my seat nervous and much troubled, all the more so because
-I now recalled Galvin’s threat. But I was determined to give him the
-tussle of his life. Now we would see whether he could beat me or
-not—not, if fair play were exercised; of that I felt confident. Why, he
-could not even write a decent line! Why should I be afraid of him?...
-But I was, just the same.
-
-As the dreary local drew near Pacific I became more and more nervous.
-When we drew up at the platform I jumped down, all alive with the
-determination not to be outdone. I saw Galvin leap out, and on the
-instant he spied me. I never saw a face change more quickly from an
-expression of ease and assurance to one of bristling opposition and
-distrust. How he hated me. He looked about to see who else might
-dismount, then, seeing no one, he bustled up to the station agent to see
-when the train from the west was due. I decided not to trail, and sought
-information from the conductor, who assured me that the eastbound
-express would probably be on time, five minutes later.
-
-“It always stops here, does it?” I inquired anxiously.
-
-“It always stops.”
-
-As we talked Galvin came back to the platform and stood looking up the
-track. Our train now pulled out, and a few minutes later the whistle of
-the express was heard. Now for a real contest, I thought. Somewhere in
-one of those cars would be the bandit surrounded by detectives, and my
-duty was to get to him first, to explain who I was and begin my
-questioning, overawing Galvin perhaps with the ease with which I should
-take charge. Maybe the bandit would not want to talk; if so I must make
-him, cajole him or his captors, or both. No doubt, since I was the
-better interviewer, or so I thought, I should have to do all the
-talking, and this wretch would make notes or make a deal with the
-detectives while I was talking. In a few moments the train was rolling
-into the station, and then I saw my friend Galvin leap aboard and with
-that iron effrontery and savageness which I always hated in him, begin
-to race through the cars. I was about to follow him when I saw the
-conductor stepping down beside me.
-
-“Is that train robber they are bringing in from Bald Knob on here? I’m
-from the _Republic_, and I’ve been sent out here to interview him.”
-
-“You’re on the wrong road, brother,” he smiled. “He’s not on here.
-They’re bringing him in over the Missouri Pacific. They took him across
-from Bald Knob to Denton and caught the train there—but I’ll tell you,”
-and he consulted his watch, “you might be able to catch that yet if you
-run for it. It’s only across the field here. You see that little yellow
-station over there? Well, that’s the Missouri Pacific depot. I don’t
-know whether it stops here or not, but it may. It’s due now, but
-sometimes it’s a little late. You’ll have to run for it though; you
-haven’t a minute to spare.”
-
-“You wouldn’t fool me about a thing like this, would you?” I pleaded.
-
-“Not for anything. I know how you feel. If you can get on that train
-you’ll find him, unless they’ve taken him off somewhere else.”
-
-I don’t remember if I even stopped to thank him. Instead of following
-Galvin into the cars I now leaped to the little path which cut
-diagonally across this long field, evidently well worn by human feet. As
-I ran I looked back once or twice to see if my enemy was following me,
-but apparently he had not seen me. I now looked forward eagerly toward
-this other station, but, as I ran, I saw the semaphore arm, which stood
-at right angles opposite the station, lower for a clear track for some
-train. At the same time I spied a mail-bag hanging out on an express
-arm, indicating that whatever this train was it was not going to stop
-here. I turned, still uncertain as to whether I had made a mistake in
-not searching the other train after all. Supposing the conductor had
-fooled me.... Supposing the burglar were on there, and Galvin was
-already beginning to question him! Oh, Lord, what a beat! And what would
-happen to me then? Was it another case of three shows and no critic? I
-slowed up in my running, chill beads of sweat bursting through my pores,
-but as I did so I saw the St. Louis & San Francisco train begin to move
-and from it, as if shot out of it, leaped Galvin.
-
-“Ha!” I thought. “Then the robber is not on there! Galvin has just
-discovered it! He knows now that he is coming in on this line”——for I
-could see him running along the path. “Oh, kind Heaven, if I can beat
-him to it! If I can only get on and leave him behind! He has all of a
-thousand feet still to run, and I am here!”
-
-Desperately I ran into the station, thrust my head in at the open office
-window and called:
-
-“When is this St. Louis express due here?”
-
-“Now,” he replied surlily.
-
-“Does it stop?”
-
-“No, it don’t stop.”
-
-“Can it be stopped?”
-
-“It can _not_!”
-
-“You mean that you have no right to stop it?”
-
-“I mean I won’t stop it!”
-
-Even as he said this there came the shriek of a whistle in the distance.
-
-“Oh, Lord,” I thought. “Here it comes, and he won’t let me on, and
-Galvin will be here any minute!” For the moment I was even willing that
-Galvin should catch it too, if only I could get on. Think of what
-Wandell would think if I missed it!
-
-“Will five dollars stop it?” I asked desperately, diving into my pocket.
-
-“No.”
-
-“Will ten?”
-
-“It might,” he replied crustily.
-
-“Stop it,” I urged and handed over the bill.
-
-The agent took it, grabbed a tablet of yellow order blanks which lay
-before him, scribbled something on the face of one and ran out to the
-track. At the same time he called to me:
-
-“Run on down the track. Run after it. She won’t stop here. She can’t.
-Run on. She’ll go a thousand feet before she can slow up.”
-
-I ran, while he stood there holding up this thin sheet of yellow paper.
-As I ran I heard the express rushing up behind me. On the instant it was
-alongside and past, its wheels grinding and emitting sparks. It was
-stopping! I should get on, and oh, glory be! Galvin would not! Fine! I
-could hear the gritty screech of the wheels against the brakes as the
-train came to a full stop. Now I would make it, and what a victory! I
-came up to it and climbed aboard, but, looking back, I saw to my horror
-that my rival had almost caught up and was now close at hand, not a
-hundred feet behind. He had seen the signal, had seen me running, and
-instead of running to the station had taken a diagonal tack and followed
-me. I saw that he would make the train. I tried to signal the agent
-behind to let the train go, but he had already done so. The conductor
-came out on the rear platform and I appealed to him.
-
-“Let her go!” I pleaded. “Let her go! It’s all right! Go on!”
-
-“Don’t that other fellow want to get on too?” he asked curiously.
-
-“No, no, no! Don’t let him on!” I pleaded. “I arranged to stop this
-train! I’m from the _Republic_! He’s nobody! He’s no right on here!” But
-even as I spoke up came Galvin, breathless and perspiring, and crawled
-eagerly on, a leer of mingled triumph and joy at my discomfiture written
-all over his face. If I had had more courage I would have beaten him
-off. As it was, I merely groaned. To think that I should have done all
-this for him!
-
-“Is that so?” he sneered. “You think you’ll leave me behind, do you?
-Well, I fooled you this trip, didn’t I?” and his lip curled.
-
-I was beaten. It was an immensely painful moment for me, to lose when I
-had everything in my own hands. My spirits fell so for the moment that I
-did not even trouble to inquire whether the robber was on the train. I
-ambled in after my rival, who had proceeded on his eager way, satisfied
-that I should have to beat him in the quality of the interview.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVI
-
-
-FOLLOWING Galvin forward through the train, I soon discovered the
-detectives and their prisoner in one of the forward cars. The prisoner
-was a most unpromising specimen for so unique a deed, short,
-broad-shouldered, heavy-limbed, with a squarish, unexpressive, dull
-face, blue-gray eyes, dark brown hair, big, lumpy, rough hands—just the
-hands one would expect to find on a railroad or baggage smasher—and a
-tanned and seamed skin. He had on the cheap nondescript clothes of a
-laborer; a blue hickory shirt, blackish-gray trousers, brown coat and a
-red bandanna handkerchief tied about his neck. On his head was a small
-round brown hat, pulled down over his eyes. He had the still,
-indifferent expression of a captive bird, and when I came up after
-Galvin and sat down he scarcely looked at me or at Galvin.
-
-Between him and the car window, to foil any attempt at escape in that
-direction, and fastened to him by a pair of handcuffs, was the sheriff
-of the county in which he had been taken, a big, bland, inexperienced
-creature whose sense of his own importance was plainly enhanced by his
-task. Facing him was one of the detectives of the road or express
-company, a short, canny, vulture-like person, and opposite them, across
-the aisle, sat still another “detective.” There may have been still
-others, but I failed to inquire. I was so incensed at the mere presence
-of Galvin and his cheap and coarse methods of ingratiating himself into
-any company, and especially one like this, that I could scarcely speak.
-“What!” I thought. “When the utmost finesse would be required to get the
-true inwardness of all this, to send a cheap pig like this to thrust
-himself forward and muddle what might otherwise prove a fine story! Why,
-if it hadn’t been for me and my luck and my money, he wouldn’t be here
-at all. And he was posing as a reporter—the best man of the _Globe_!”
-
-He had the detective-politician-gambler’s habit of simulating an intense
-interest and enthusiasm which he did not feel, his face wreathing itself
-into a cheery smile the while his eyes followed one like those of a
-basilisk, attempting all the while to discover whether his assumed
-friendship was being accepted at the value he wished.
-
-“Gee, sport,” he began familiarly in my presence, patting the burglar on
-the knee and fixing him with that basilisk gaze, “that was a great trick
-you pulled off. The papers’ll be crazy to find out how you did it. My
-paper, the _Globe-Democrat_, wants a whole page of it. It wants your
-picture too. Did you really do it all alone? Gee! Well, that’s what I
-call swell work, eh, Cap?” and now he turned his ingratiating leer on
-the county sheriff and the other detectives. In a moment or two more he
-was telling the latter what an intimate friend he was of “Billy”
-Desmond, the chief of detectives of St. Louis, and Mr. So-and-So, the
-chief of police, as well as various other detectives and policemen.
-
-“The dull stuff!” I thought. “And this is what he considers place in
-this world! And he wants a whole page for the _Globe_! He’d do well if
-he wrote a paragraph alone!”
-
-Still, to my intense chagrin, I could see that he was making headway,
-not only with the sheriff and the detectives but with the burglar
-himself. The latter smiled a raw, wry smile and looked at him as if he
-might possibly understand such a person. Galvin’s good clothes, always
-looking like new, his bright yellow shoes, sparkling rings and pins and
-gaudy tie, seemed to impress them all. So this was the sort of thing
-these people liked—and they took him for a real newspaper man from a
-great newspaper!
-
-Indeed the only time that I seemed to obtain the least grip on this
-situation or to impress myself on the minds of the prisoner and his
-captors, was when it came to those finer shades of questioning which
-concerned just why, for what ulterior reasons, he had attempted this
-deed alone; and then I noticed that my confrère was all ears and making
-copious notes. He knew enough to take from others what he could not work
-out for himself. In regard to the principal or general points, I found
-that my Irish-Jewish friend was as swift at ferreting out facts as any
-one, and as eager to know how and why. And always, to my astonishment
-and chagrin, the prisoner as well as the detectives paid more attention
-to him than to me. They turned to him as to a lamp and seemed to be
-immensely more impressed with him than with me, although the main lines
-of questioning fell to me. All at once I found him whispering to one or
-other of the detectives while I was developing some thought, but when I
-turned up anything new, or asked a question he had not thought of, he
-was all ears again and back to resume the questioning on his own
-account. In truth, he irritated me frightfully, and appeared to be
-intensely happy in doing so. My contemptuous looks and remarks did not
-disturb him in the least. By now I was so dour and enraged that I could
-think of but one thing that would have really satisfied me, and that was
-to attack him physically and give him a good beating—although I
-seriously questioned whether I could do that, he was so contentious,
-cynical and savage.
-
-However the story was finally extracted, and a fine tale it made. It
-appeared that up to seven or eight months preceding the robbery, this
-robber had been first a freight brakeman or yard hand on this road,
-later being promoted to the position of superior switchman and assistant
-freight handler. Previous to this he had been a livery stable helper in
-the town in which he was eventually taken, and before that a farm hand
-in that neighborhood. About a year before the crime this road, along
-with many others, had laid off a large number of men, including himself,
-and reduced the wages of all others by as much as ten per cent.
-Naturally a great deal of labor discontent ensued. A number of train
-robberies, charged and traced to dismissed and dissatisfied
-ex-employees, now followed. The methods of successful train robbing were
-so clearly set forth by the newspapers that nearly any one so inclined
-could follow them. Among other things, while working as a freight
-handler, Lem Rollins had heard of the many money shipments made by the
-express companies and the manner in which they were guarded. The
-Missouri Pacific, for which he worked, was a very popular route for
-money shipments, both West and East, bullion and bills being in transit
-all the while between St. Louis and the East, and Kansas City and the
-West, and although express messengers even at this time, owing to
-numerous train robberies which had been occurring in the West lately
-were always well armed, still these assaults had not been without
-success. The death of firemen, engineers, messengers, conductors and
-even passengers who ventured to protest, as well as the fact that much
-money had recently been stolen and never recovered, had not only
-encouraged the growth of banditry everywhere but had put such an
-unreasoning fear into most employees of the road as well as its
-passengers, who had no occasion for risking their lives in defense of
-the roads, that but few even of those especially picked guards ventured
-to give the marauders battle. I myself during the short time I had been
-in St. Louis had helped report three such robberies in its immediate
-vicinity, in all of which cases the bandits had escaped unharmed.
-
-But the motives which eventually resulted in the amazing singlehanded
-attempt of this particular robber were not so much that he was a
-discharged and poor railroad hand unable to find any other form of
-employment as that in his idleness, having wandered back to his native
-region, he had fallen in love with a young girl. Here, being hard
-pressed for cash and unable to make her such presents as he desired, he
-had first begun to think seriously of some method of raising money, and
-later, another ex—railroad hand showing up and proposing to rob a train,
-he had at first rejected it as not feasible, not wishing to tie himself
-up in a crime, especially with others; still later, his condition
-becoming more pressing, he had begun to think of robbing a train on his
-own account.
-
-Why alone—that was the point we were all most anxious to find
-out—singlehanded, and with all the odds against him? Neither Galvin nor
-myself could induce him to make this point clear, although, once I
-raised it, we were both most eager to solve it. “Didn’t he know that he
-could not expect to overcome engineer and fireman, baggage-man and
-mail-man, to say nothing of the express messenger, the conductor and the
-passengers?”
-
-Yes, he knew, only he had thought he could do it. Other bandits (so few
-as three in one case of which he had read) had held up large trains; why
-not one? Revolver shots fired about a train easily overawed all
-passengers, as well as the trainmen apparently. It was a life and death
-job either way, and it would be better for him if he worked it out alone
-instead of with others. Often, he said, other men “squealed” or they had
-girls who told on them. I looked at him, intensely interested and moved
-to admiration by the sheer animal courage of it all, the “gall,” the
-grit, or what you will, imbedded somewhere in this stocky frame.
-
-And how came he to fix on this particular train? I asked. Well, it was
-this way: Every Thursday and Friday a limited running west at midnight
-carried larger shipments of money than on other days. This was due to
-exchanges being made between Eastern and Western banks; but he did not
-know that. Having decided on one of these trains, he proceeded by
-degrees to secure first a small handbag, from which he had scraped all
-evidence of the maker’s name, then later, from other distant places, so
-as to avoid all chance of detection, six or seven fused sticks of giant
-powder such as farmers use to blow up stumps, and still later, two
-revolvers holding six cartridges each, some cartridges, and cord and
-cloth out of which he proposed to make bundles of the money. Placing all
-this in his bag, he eventually visited a small town nearest the spot
-which, because of its loneliness, he had fixed on as the ideal place for
-his crime, and then, reconnoitering it and its possibilities, finally
-arranged all his plans to a nicety.
-
-Here, as he now told us, just at the outskirts of this hamlet, stood a
-large water-tank at which this express as well as nearly all other
-trains stopped for water. Beyond it, about five miles, was a wood with a
-marsh somewhere in its depths, an ideal place to bury his booty quickly.
-The express was due at this tank at about one in the morning. The
-nearest town beyond the wood was all of five miles away, a mere hamlet
-like this one. His plan was to conceal himself near this tank and when
-the train stopped, and just before it started again, to slip in between
-the engine tender and the front baggage car, which was “blind” at both
-ends. Another arrangement, carefully executed beforehand, was to take
-his handbag (without the revolvers and sticks of giant powder, which he
-would carry), and place it along the track just opposite that point in
-the wood where he wished the train to stop. Here, once he had concealed
-himself between the engine and the baggage car, and the train having
-resumed its journey, he would keep watch until the headlight of the
-engine revealed this bag lying beside the track, when he would rise up
-and compel the engineer to stop the train. So far, so good.
-
-However, as it turned out, two slight errors, one of forgetfulness and
-one of eyesight, caused him finally to lose the fruit of his plan. On
-the night in question, between eight and nine, he arrived on the scene
-of action and did as he had planned. He put the bag in place and boarded
-the train. However, on reaching the spot where he felt sure the bag
-should be, he could not see it. Realizing that he was where he wished to
-work he rose up, covered the two men in the cab, drove them before him
-to the rear of the engine, where under duress they were made to uncouple
-it, then conducted them to the express car door, where he presented them
-with a stick of giant powder and, ordered them to blow it open. This
-they did, the messenger within having first refused so to do. They were
-driven into the car and made to ‘blow open the safe, throwing out the
-packages of bills and coin as he commanded. But during this time,
-realizing the danger of either trainmen or passengers climbing down from
-the cars in the rear and coming forward, he had fired a few shots toward
-the passenger coaches, calling to imaginary companions to keep watch
-there. At the same time, to throw the fear of death into the minds of
-both engineer and fireman, he pretended to be calling to imaginary
-confrères on the other side of the train to “keep watch over there.”
-
-“Don’t kill anybody unless you have to, boys,” he had said, or “That’ll
-be all right, Frank. Stay over there. Watch that side. I’ll take care of
-these two.” And then he would fire a few more shots.
-
-Once the express car door and safe had been blown open and the money
-handed out, he had compelled the engineer and fireman to come down,
-recouple the engine, and pull away. Only after the train had safely
-disappeared did he venture to gather up the various packages, rolling
-them in his coat, since he had lost his bag, and with this over his
-shoulder he had staggered off into the night, eventually succeeding in
-concealing it in the swamp, and then making off for safety himself.
-
-The two things which finally caused his discovery were, first, the loss
-of the bag, which, after concealing the money, he attempted to find but
-without success; and, second (and this he did not even know at the
-time), that in the bag which he had lost he had placed some time before
-and then forgotten apparently a small handkerchief containing the
-initials of his love in one corner. Why he might have wished to carry
-the handkerchief about with him was understandable enough, but why he
-should have put it into the bag and then forgot it was not clear, even
-to himself. From the detectives we now learned that the next day at noon
-the bag was found by other detectives and citizens just where he had
-placed it, and that the handkerchief had given them their first clue.
-The Wood was searched, without success however, save that foot-prints
-were discovered in various places and measured. Again, experts
-meditating on the crime decided that, owing to the hard times and the
-laying-off and discharging of employees, some of these might have had a
-hand in it; and so in due time the whereabouts and movements of each and
-every one of those who had worked for the road were gone into. It was
-finally discovered that this particular ex-helper had returned to his
-native town and had been going with a certain girl, and was about to be
-married to her. Next, it was discovered that her initials corresponded
-to those on the handkerchief. Presto, Mr. Rollins was arrested, a search
-of his room made, and nearly all of the money recovered. Then, being
-“caught with the goods,” he confessed, and here he was being hurried to
-St. Louis to be jailed and sentenced, while we harpies of the press and
-the law were gathered about him to make capital of his error.
-
-The only thing that consoled me, however, as I rode toward St. Louis and
-tried to piece the details of his crime together, was that if I had
-failed to make it impossible for Galvin to get the story at all, still,
-when it came to the narration of it, I should unquestionably write a
-better story, for he would have to tell his story to some one else,
-while I should be able to write my own, putting in such touches as I
-chose. Only one detail remained to be arranged for, and that was the
-matter of a picture. Why neither Wandell nor myself, nor the editor of
-the _Globe_, had thought to include an artist on this expedition was
-more a fault of the time than anything else, illustrations for news
-stories being by no means as numerous as they are today, and the
-peripatetic photographer having not yet been invented. As we neared St.
-Louis Galvin began to see the import of this very clearly, and suddenly
-began to comment on it, saying he “guessed” we’d have to send to the
-Four Courts afterward and have one made. Suddenly his eyes filled with a
-shrewd cunning, and he turned to me and said:
-
-“How would it be, old man, if we took him up to the _Globe_ office and
-let the boys make a picture of him—your friends, Wood and McCord? Then
-both of us could get one right away. I’d say take him to the _Republic_,
-only the _Globe_ is so much nearer, and we have that new flashlight
-machine, you know” (which was true, the _Republic_ being very poorly
-equipped in this respect). He added a friendly aside to the effect that
-of course this depended on whether the prisoner and the officers in
-charge were willing.
-
-“Not on your life,” I replied suspiciously and resentfully, “not to the
-_Globe_, anyhow. If you want to bring him down to the _Republic_, all
-right; we’ll have them make pictures and you can have one.”
-
-“But why not the _Globe_?” he went on. “Wood and McCord are your friends
-more’n they are mine. Think of the difference in the distance. We want
-to save time, don’t we? Here it is nearly six-thirty, and by the time we
-get down there and have a picture taken and I get back to the office
-it’ll be half past seven or eight. It’s all right for you, I suppose,
-because you can write faster, but look at me. I’d just as lief go down
-there as not, but what’s the difference? Besides, the _Globe’s_ got a
-much better plant, and you know it. Either Wood or McCord’ll make a fine
-picture, and when we explain to ’em how it is you’ll be sure to get one,
-the same as us—just the same picture. Ain’t that all right?”
-
-“No it’s not,” I replied truculently, “and I won’t do it, that’s all.
-It’s all right about Dick and Peter—I know what they’ll do for me if the
-paper will let them, but I know the paper won’t let them, and besides,
-you’re not going to be able to claim in the morning that this man was
-brought to the _Globe_ first. I know you. Don’t begin to try to put
-anything over on me, because I won’t stand for it, see? And if these
-people do it anyhow I’ll make a kick at headquarters, that’s all.”
-
-For a moment he appeared to be quieted by this and to decide to abandon
-his project, but later he took it up again, seemingly in the most
-conciliatory spirit in the world. At the same time, and from now on, he
-kept boring me with his eyes, a thing which I had never known him to do
-before. He was always too hang-dog in looking at me; but now of a sudden
-there was something bold and friendly as well as tolerant and cynical in
-his gaze.
-
-“Aw, come on,” he argued. He was amazingly aggressive. “What’s the use
-being small about it? The _Globe’s_ nearer. Think what a fine picture
-it’ll make. If you don’t we’ll have to go clear to the office and send
-an artist down to the jail. You can’t take any good pictures down there
-tonight.”
-
-“Cut it,” I replied. “I won’t do it, that’s all,” but even as he talked
-a strange feeling of uncertainty or confusion began to creep over me.
-For the first time since knowing him, in spite of all my opposition of
-this afternoon and before, I found myself not quite hating him but
-feeling as though he weren’t such an utterly bad sort after all. What
-was so wrong about this _Globe_ idea anyhow, I began suddenly to ask
-myself, in the most insane and yet dreamy way imaginable. Why wouldn’t
-it be all right to do that? Inwardly or downwardly, or somewhere within
-me, something was telling me that it was all wrong and that I was making
-a big mistake even to think about it. I felt half asleep or surrounded
-by clouds which made everything he said seem all right. Still, I wasn’t
-asleep, and now I didn’t believe a word he said, but——
-
-“To the _Globe_, sure,” I found myself saying to myself in spite of
-myself, in a dumb, half-numb way. “That wouldn’t be so bad. It’s nearer.
-What’s wrong with that? Dick or Peter will make a good picture, and then
-I can take it along,” only at the same time I was also thinking, “I
-shouldn’t really do that. He’ll claim the credit for having brought this
-man to the _Globe_ office. I’ll be making a big mistake. The _Republic_
-or nothing. Let him come down to the _Republic_.”
-
-In the meantime we were entering St. Louis and the station. By then,
-somehow, he had not only convinced the sheriff and the other officers,
-but the prisoner. They liked him and were willing to do what he said. I
-could even see the rural love of show and parade gleaming in the eyes of
-the sheriff and the two detectives. Plainly, the office of the _Globe_
-was the great place in their estimation for such an exhibition. At the
-same time, between looking at me and the prisoner and the officers, he
-had knitted a fine mental net from which I seemed unable to escape. Even
-as I rose with these others to leave the train I cried: “No, I won’t
-come in on this! It’s all right if you want to bring him down to the
-_Republic_, or you can take him to the Four Courts, but I’m not going to
-let you get away with this. You hear now, don’t you?” But then it was
-too late.
-
-Once outside, Galvin laid hold of my arm in an amazingly genial fashion
-and hung on it. In spite of me, he seemed to be master of the situation
-and to realize it. Once more he began to plead, and getting in front of
-me he seemed to do his best to keep my optical attention. From that
-point on and from that day to this, I have never been able to explain to
-myself what did happen. All at once, and much more clearly than before,
-I seemed to see that his plan in regard to the _Globe_ was the best. It
-would save time, and besides, he kept repeating in an almost sing-song
-way that we would go first to the _Globe_ and then to the _Republic_.
-“You come up with me to the _Globe_, and then I’ll go down with you to
-the _Republic_,” he kept saying. “We’ll just let Wood or McCord take one
-picture, and then we’ll all go down to your place—see?”
-
-Although I didn’t see I went. For the time, nothing seemed important. If
-he had stayed by me I think he could have prevented my writing any story
-at all. As it was he was so eager to achieve this splendid triumph of
-introducing the celebrated bandit into the editorial rooms of the
-_Globe_ first and there having him photographed and introduced to my old
-chief, that he hailed a carriage, and, the six of us crowding into it,
-we were bustled off in a trice to the door of the _Globe_, where, once I
-reached it, and seeing him and the detectives and the bandit hurrying
-across the sidewalk, I suddenly awoke to the asininity of it all.
-
-“Wait!” I called. “Say, hold on! Cut this! I won’t do it! I don’t agree
-to this!” but it was too late. In a trice the prisoner and the rest of
-them were up the two or three low steps of the main entrance and into
-the hall, and I was left outside to meditate on the insanity of the
-thing I had done.
-
-“Great God!” I suddenly exclaimed to myself. “What have I let that
-fellow do to me? I’ve been hypnotized, that’s what it is! I’ve allowed
-him to take a prisoner whom I had in my own hands at one time into the
-office of our great rival to be photographed! He’s put it all over me on
-this job—and I had him beaten! I had him where I could have shoved him
-off the train—and now I let him do this to me, and tomorrow there’ll be
-a long editorial in the _Globe_ telling how this fellow was brought
-there first and photographed, and his picture to prove it!” I swore and
-groaned for blocks as I walked towards the _Republic_, wondering what I
-should do.
-
-Distinct as was my failure, it was so easy, even when practically
-admitting the whole truth, to make it seem as though the police had
-deliberately worked against the _Republic_. I did not even have to do
-that but merely recited my protests, without admitting or insisting upon
-hypnotism, which Wandell would not have believed anyhow. On the instant
-he burst into a great rage against the police department, seeing
-apparently no fault in anything I had done, and vowing vengeance. They
-were always doing this; they did it to the _Republic_ when he was on the
-_Globe_. Wait—he would get even with them yet! Rushing a photographer to
-the jail, he had various pictures made, all of which appeared with my
-story, but to no purpose. The _Globe_ had us beaten. Although I had
-slaved over the text, given it the finest turns I could, still there on
-the front page of the _Globe_ was a large picture of the bandit, seated
-in the sanctum sanctorum of the great G-D, a portion of the figure,
-although not the head, of its great chief standing in the background,
-and over it all, in extra large type, the caption:
-
- “LONE TRAIN ROBBER VISITS OFFICE OF GLOBE
- TO PAY HIS RESPECTS”
-
-and underneath in italics a full account of how he had willingly and
-gladly come there.
-
-I suffered tortures, not only for days but for weeks and months,
-absolute tortures. Whenever I thought of Galvin I wanted to kill him. To
-think, I said to myself, that I had thought of the two trains and then
-run across the meadow and paid the agent for stopping the train, which
-permitted Galvin to see the burglar at all, and then to be done in this
-way! And, what was worse, he was so gayly and cynically conscious of
-having done me. When we met on the street one day, his lip curled with
-the old undying hatred and contempt.
-
-“These swell reporters!” he sneered. “These high-priced ink-slingers!
-Say, who got the best of the train robber story, eh?”
-
-And I replied——
-
-But never mind what I replied. No publisher would print it.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVII
-
-
-THINGS like these taught me not to depend too utterly on my own skill. I
-might propose and believe, but there were things above my planning or
-powers, and creatures I might choose to despise were not so helpless
-after all. It fixed my thoughts permanently on the weakness of the human
-mind as a directing organ. One might think till doomsday in terms of
-human ideas, but apparently over and above ideas there were forces which
-superseded or controlled them.... My own fine contemptuous ideas might
-be superseded or set at naught by the raw animal or psychic force of a
-man like Galvin.
-
-During the next few months a number of things happened which seemed to
-broaden my horizon considerably. For one thing, my trip to Chicago
-having revived interest in me in the minds of a number of newspaper men
-there, and having seemingly convinced them of my success here, I was
-bombarded with letters from one and another wanting to know whether or
-not they could obtain work here and whether I could and would aid them.
-At the close of the Fair in Chicago in October hard times were expected
-in newspaper circles there, so many men being released from work. I had
-letters from at least four, one of whom was a hanger-on by the name of
-Michaelson, of whom more anon, who had attached himself to me largely
-because I was the stronger and he expected aid of me. I have often
-thought how frequently this has happened to me—one of my typical
-experiences, as it is of every one who begins to get along. It is so
-much easier for the strong to tolerate the weak than the strong.
-Strength craves sycophancy. We want only those who will swing the censer
-before our ambitions and desires. Michaelson, or “Mich,” was a poor hack
-who had been connected with a commercial agency where daily reports had
-to be written out as to the financial and social condition of John Smith
-the butcher, or George Jones the baker. This led Mich, who was a
-farm-boy to begin with, to imagine that he could write and that he would
-like to run a country paper, only he thought to get some experience in
-the city first. By some process, of which I forget the steps, he fixed
-on me; and through myself and McEnnis, who was then so friendly to me,
-had secured a tryout on the _Globe_ in Chicago. After I left McEnnis
-quickly tired of him, and I heard of him next as working for the City
-Press, an organization which served all newspapers, and paid next to
-nothing. Next I heard that he was married (having succeeded so well!),
-and still later he began to bombard me with pleas for aid in getting a
-place in St. Louis. Also there were letters from much better men: H. L.
-Dunlap, afterwards chief press advisor of President Taft; an excellent
-reporter by the name of Brady, whom I have previously mentioned; and a
-little later, John Maxwell.
-
-Meanwhile, in spite of my great failure in connection with Galvin, my
-standing with Wandell seemed to rise rather than sink. Believe it or no,
-I became a privileged character about this institution or its city room,
-a singular thing in the newspaper profession. Because of specials I was
-constantly writing for the Sunday paper, I was taken up by the sporting
-editor, who wanted my occasional help in his work; the dramatic editor,
-who wanted my help on his dramatic page, asking me to see plays from
-time to time; and the managing editor himself, a small, courteous,
-soft-spoken, red-headed man from Kansas City, who began to invite me to
-lunch or dinner and talk to me as though I knew much (or ought to) about
-the world he represented. I was so unfitted for all this intellectually,
-my hour of stability and feeling for organization and control having not
-yet arrived, that I scarcely knew how to manage it. I was nervous, shy,
-poorly spoken, at least in their presence, while inwardly I was blazing
-with ambition, vanity and self-confidence. I wanted nothing so much as
-to be alone with my own desires and labors even though I believed all
-the while that I did not and that I was lonely and neglected!
-
-Unsophisticated as I really was, I began to see Wandell as but a minor
-figure in this journalistic world, or but one of many, likely to be here
-and gone tomorrow, and I swaggered about, taking liberties which months
-before I should never have dreamed of taking. He talked to me too freely
-and showed me that he relied on my advice and judgment and admired my
-work. All out-of-town assignments of any importance were given to me.
-Occasionally at seven in the evening he would say that he would buy me a
-drink if I would wait a minute, a not very wise thing to do. Later,
-after completing one big assignment or another, I would stroll out of
-the office at, say, eight-thirty or nine without a word or a
-by-your-leave, and so respectful had he become that instead of calling
-me down in person he began writing me monitory letters, couched in the
-most diplomatic language but insisting that I abide by the rules which
-governed other reporters. But by now I had grown so in my own estimation
-that I smiled confidently, knowing very well that he would not fire me;
-my salary was too small. Besides, I knew that he really needed me or
-some one like me and I saw no immediate rival anywhere, one who would
-work as hard and for as little. Still I would reform for a time, or
-would plead that the managing or the dramatic editor had asked me to do
-thus and so.
-
-“To hell with the managing editor!” he one day exclaimed in a rage.
-“This is my department. If he wants you to sit around with him let him
-come to me, or else you first see that you have my consent.”
-
-At the same time he remained most friendly and would sit and chat over
-proposed stories, getting my advice as to how to do them, and as one man
-after another left him or he wanted to enlarge his staff he would ask me
-if I knew any one who would make a satisfactory addition. Having had
-these appeals from Dunlap, Brady and several others still in Chicago, I
-named first Dunlap (because I felt so sure of his merit), and then these
-others. To my surprise, he had me write Dunlap to come to work, and when
-he came and made good, Wandell asked me to bring still others to him.
-This flattered me very much. I felt myself becoming a power. The result
-was that after a time five men, three from Chicago and two from other
-papers in St. Louis, were transferred to the staff of the _Republic_ by
-reason of my recommendation, and that with full knowledge of the fact
-that I was the one to whom they owed their opportunity. You may imagine
-the airs which I assumed.
-
-About this time still another thing occurred which lifted me still more
-in my own esteem. Strolling into the Southern Hotel one evening I
-chanced to see my old chief, McCullagh, sitting as was his custom near
-one of the pillars of the lobby reading his evening paper. It had always
-been such a pleasing and homelike thing in my days at the _Globe_ to
-walk into the lobby around dinner time and see this great chief in his
-low shoes and white socks sitting and reading here as though he were in
-his own home. It took away a bit of the loneliness of the city for me
-for he appeared to have no other home than this and he was my chief. And
-now, for the first time since I had so ignominiously retired from the
-_Globe_, I saw him as before, smoking and reading. Hitherto I had
-carefully avoided this and every other place at such hours as I was
-likely to encounter him. But now I had grown so conceited that I was not
-quite so much afraid of him; he was still wonderful to me but I was
-beginning to feel that I had a future of my own and that I could achieve
-it, regardless perhaps of the error that had so pained me then. Still I
-felt to the full all that old allegiance, respect and affection which
-had dominated me while I was on the _Globe_. He was my big editor, my
-chief, and there was none other like him anywhere for me, and there
-never was afterward. Nearing the newsstand, for which I made at sight of
-him in the hope that I should escape unseen, I saw him get up and come
-forward, perhaps to secure a cigar or another paper. I flushed guiltily
-and looked wildly about for some place to hide. It was not to be.
-
-“Good evening, Mr. McCullagh,” I said politely as he neared me.
-
-“How d’ do?” he returned gutturally but with such an air of sociability
-as I had never noticed in him before. “How d’ do? Well, you’re still
-about, I see. You’re on the _Republic_, I believe?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” I said. I was so pleased and flattered to think that he
-should trouble to talk to me at all or to indicate that he knew where I
-was that I could scarcely contain myself. I wanted to thank him, to
-apologize, to tell him how wonderful he was to me and what a fool I was
-in my own estimation, but I couldn’t. My tongue was thick.
-
-“You like it over there?”
-
-“Yes, sir. Fairly well, sir.” I was as humble in his presence as a
-jackie is before an officer. He seemed always so forceful and
-commanding.
-
-“That little matter of those theaters,” he began after a pause, turning
-and walking back to his chair, I following, “—Um! um! I don’t think you
-understand quite how I felt about that. I was sorry to see you go. Um!
-um!” and he cleared his throat. “It was an unfortunate mistake all
-around. I want you to know that I did not blame you so much. Um! You
-might have been relieved of other work. I don’t want to take you away
-from any other paper, but—um!—I want you to know that if you are ever
-free and want to come back you can. There is no prejudice in my mind
-against you.”
-
-I don’t know of anything that ever moved me more. It was wonderful,
-thrilling. I could have cried from sheer delight. He, my chief, saying
-this to me! And after all those wretched hours! What a fool I was, I now
-thought, not to have gone to him personally then and asked his
-consideration. However, as I saw it, it was too late. Why change now and
-go back? But I was so excited that I could scarcely speak, and probably
-would not have known what to say if I had tried. I stood there, and
-finally blurted out:
-
-“I’m very sorry, Mr. McCullagh. I didn’t mean to do what I did. It was a
-mistake. I had that extra assignment and—”
-
-“O-oh, that’s all right—that’s all right,” he insisted gruffly and as if
-he wished to be done with it once and for all. “No harm done. I didn’t
-mind that so much. But you needn’t have left—that’s what I wish you to
-understand. You could have stayed if you had wanted to.”
-
-As I viewed it afterward, my best opportunity for a secure position in
-St. Louis was here. If I had only known it, or, knowing, had been quick
-to take advantage of it, I might have profited greatly. Mr. McCullagh’s
-mood was plainly warm toward me; he probably looked upon me as a foolish
-and excitable but fairly capable boy whom it would have been his
-pleasure to assist in the world. He had brought me from Chicago; perhaps
-he wished me to remain under his eye.... Plainly, a word, and I could
-have returned, I am sure of it, perhaps never to leave. As it was,
-however, I was so nervous and excited that I took no advantage of it.
-Possibly he noticed my embarrassment and was pleased. At any rate, as I
-mumbled my thanks and gratitude for all he had done for me, saying that
-if I were doing things over I should try to do differently, he
-interrupted me with:
-
-“Just a moment. It may be that you have some young friend whom you want
-to help to a position here in St. Louis. If you have, send him to me.
-I’ll do anything I can for him. I’m always glad to do anything I can for
-young men.”
-
-I smiled and flushed and thanked him, but for the life of me I could
-think of nothing else to say. It was so strange, so tremendous, that
-this man should want to do anything for me after all the ridiculous
-things I had done under him that I could only hurry away, out of his
-sight. Once in the shielding darkness outside I felt better but sad. It
-seemed as if I had made a mistake, as if I should have asked him to take
-me back.
-
-“Why, he as much as offered to!” I said to myself. “I can go back there
-any time I wish, or he’ll give me a place for some one else—think of it!
-Then he doesn’t consider me a fool, as I thought he did!”
-
-For days thereafter I went about my work trying to decide whether I
-should resign from the _Republic_ and return to him, only now I seemed
-so very important here, to myself at least, that it did not seem wise.
-Wasn’t I getting along? Would returning to work under Mitchell be an
-advantage? I decided not. Also, that I had no real excuse for leaving
-the _Republic_ at present; so I did nothing, waiting to be absolutely
-sure what I wanted to do. There was a feeling growing in me at this time
-that I really did not want to stay in St. Louis at all, that perhaps it
-would be better for me if I should move on elsewhere. McEnnis, as I
-recalled, had cautioned me to that effect. Another newspaper man writing
-me from Chicago and asking for a place (a friend of Dunlap’s, by the
-way), I recommended him and he was put to work on the _Globe-Democrat_.
-And so my reputation for influence in local newspaper affairs grew.
-
-And in the meantime still other things had been happening to me which
-seemed to complicate my life here and make me almost a fixture in St.
-Louis. For one thing, worrying over the well-being of my two brothers,
-E—— and A——, who were still in Chicago, and wishing to do something to
-improve their condition, I thought that St. Louis would be as good a
-place for them as any in which to try their fortunes anew. Both had
-seemed rather unhappy in Chicago and since I was getting along here I
-felt that it would be only decent in me to give them a helping hand if I
-could. The blood-tie was rather strong in me then. I have always had a
-weakness for members of our family regardless of their deserts or mine
-or what I thought they had done to me. I had a comfortable floor with
-ample room for them if I chose to invite them, and I thought that my
-advice and aid and enthusiasm might help them to do better. There was in
-me then, and has remained (though in a fading form, I am sorry to say),
-a sort of home-longing (the German _Heimweh_, no doubt) which made me
-look back on everything in connection with our troubled lives with a
-sadness, an ache, a desire to remedy or repair if possible some of the
-ills and pains that had beset us all. We had not always been unhappy
-together; what family ever has been? We had quarreled over trivial
-things, but there had been many happy hours. And now we were separated,
-and these two brothers were not doing as well as I.
-
-I say it in faint extenuation of all the many hard unkind things I have
-done in my time, that at the thought of the possible misery some of my
-brothers and sisters might be enduring, the lacks from which they might
-be hopelessly suffering, my throat often tightened and my heart ached.
-Life bears so hard on us all, on many so terribly. What, E—— or A——
-longing for something and not being able to afford it! It hurt me far
-more than any lack of my own ever could. It never occurred to me that
-they might be wishing to help me; it was always I, hard up or otherwise,
-wishing that I might do something for them. And this longing in the face
-of no complaint on their part and no means on mine to translate it into
-anything much better than wishes and dreams made it all the more painful
-at times.
-
-My plan was to bring them here and give them a little leisure to look
-about for some way to better themselves, and then—well, then I should
-not need to worry about them so much. With this in mind I wrote first to
-E—— and then A——, and the former, younger and more restless and always
-more attracted to me than any of the others, soon came on; while A——
-required a little more time to think. However, in the course of time he
-too appeared, and then we three were installed in my rooms, the
-harboring of my brothers costing me five additional dollars. Here we
-kept bachelor’s hall, gay enough while it lasted but more or less
-clouded over all the while by their need of finding work.
-
-I had forgotten, or did not know, or the fact did not make a
-sufficiently sharp impression on me, that this was a panic year (1893)
-and that there were hundreds of thousands of men out of work, the
-country over. Indeed, trade was at a standstill, or nearly so. When I
-first went on the _Republic_, if I had only stopped to remember, many
-factories were closing down or slowing up, discharging men or issuing
-scrip of their own wherewith to pay them until times should be better,
-and some shops and stores were failing entirely. It had been my first
-experience of a panic and should have made a deep impression on me had I
-been of a practical turn, for one of my earliest assignments had been to
-visit some of the owners of factories and stores and shops and ask the
-cause of their decline and whether better times were in sight.
-Occasionally even then I read long editorials in the _Republic_ or the
-_Globe_ on the subject, yet I could take no interest in them. They were
-too heavy, as I thought. Yet I can remember the gloom hanging over
-streets and shops and how solemnly some of the manufacturers spoke of
-the crisis and the hard times yet in store. There were to be hard times
-for a year or more.
-
-I recall one old man at this time, very prosy and stiff and
-conventional, “one of our best business men,” who had had a large iron
-factory on the south side for fifty years and who now in his old age had
-to shut down for good. Being sent out to interview him, I found him
-after a long search in one of the silent wings of his empty foundry,
-walking about alone examining some machinery which also was still. I
-asked him what the trouble was and if he would resume work soon again.
-
-“Just say that I’m done,” he replied. “This panic has finished me. I
-could go on later, I suppose, but I’m too old to begin all over again. I
-haven’t any money now, and that’s all there is to it.”
-
-I left him meditating over some tool he was trying to adjust.
-
-In the face of this imagine my gayly inviting my two brothers to this
-difficult scene and then expecting them to get along in some way,
-persuading them to throw up whatever places or positions they had in
-Chicago! Yet in so doing I satisfied an emotional or psychic longing to
-have them near me and to do something for them, and beyond that I did
-not think.
-
-In fact it took me years and years to get one thing straight in my poor
-brain, and that was this: that aside from the economic or practical
-possibility of translating one’s dreams into reality, the less one
-broods over them the better. Here I was now, earning the very inadequate
-stipend of eighteen dollars—or it may have been twenty or twenty-two,
-for I have a dim recollection of having been given at least one raise in
-pay—yet with no more practical sense than to undertake a burden which I
-could not possibly sustain. For despite my good intentions I had no
-surplus wherewith to sustain my brothers, assuming that their efforts
-proved even temporarily unavailing. All this dream of doing something
-for them was based on good will and a totally inadequate income. In
-consequence it could not but fail, as it did, seeing that St. Louis was
-far less commercially active than Chicago. It was not growing much and
-there was an older and much more European theory of apprenticeship and
-continuity in place and type of work than prevailed at that time in the
-windy city. Work was really very hard to get, especially in
-manufacturing and commercial lines, and in consequence my two brothers,
-after only a week or two of pleasuring, which was all I could afford,
-were compelled to hunt here and there, early and late, without finding
-anything to do. True, I tried to help them in one way and another with
-advice as to institutions, lines of work and the like, but to no end.
-
-But before and after they came, how enthusiastically and no doubt
-falsely I painted the city of St. Louis, its large size, opportunities,
-beauties, etc., and once they were here I put myself to the task of
-showing them its charms; but to no avail. We went about together to
-restaurants, parks, theaters, outlying places. As long as it was new and
-they felt that there was some hope of finding work they were gay enough
-and interested and we spent a number of delightful hours together. But
-as time wore on and fading summer days proved that their dreams and mine
-were hopeless and they could do no better here than in Chicago if as
-well, their moods changed, as did mine. The burden of expense was
-considerable. While paying gayly enough for food and rent, and even
-laundry, for the three, I began to wonder whether I should be able to
-endure the strain much longer. Love them as I might in their absence,
-and happy as I was with them, still it was not possible for me to keep
-up this pace. I was depriving myself of bare necessities, and I think
-they saw it. I said nothing, of that I am positive, but after a month or
-six weeks of trial and failure they themselves saw the point and became
-unhappy over it. Our morning and evening hours, whenever I could see
-them in the evening, became less and less gay. Finally A——, with his
-usual eye for the sensible, announced that he was tired of searching
-here and was about to return to Chicago. He did not like St. Louis
-anyhow; it was a “hell of a place,” a third-rate city. He was going back
-where he could get work. And E——, perhaps recalling past joys of which I
-knew nothing, said he was going also. And so once more I was alone.
-
-Yet even this rough experience had no marked effect on me. It taught me
-little if anything in regard to the economic struggle. I know now that
-these two must have had a hard time replacing themselves in Chicago at
-that time, but the meaning of it did not get to me then. As for E——,
-some years later I persuaded him to join me in New York, where I managed
-to keep him by me that time until he became self-supporting.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII
-
-
-BECAUSE Miss W—— lived some distance from the city and would remain
-there until her school season opened, I neglected to write to her; but
-once September had come and the day of her return was near I began to
-think of her and soon was as keenly interested as ever. Her simplicity
-and charm came back to me with great force, and I one day sat down and
-wrote her a brief letter recalling our Chicago days and asking her how
-long it would be before she would be returning to St. Louis. I was
-rather nervous now lest she should not answer.
-
-In due time, however, a note came in which she told me that she expected
-to be at Florissant, about twenty or twenty-five miles out of St. Louis,
-by September fifteenth, when her school work would begin, and that she
-would be in St. Louis shortly afterward to visit an aunt and hoped to
-see me. There was something about the letter so simple, direct and yet
-artful that it touched me deeply. As I have said, I really knew nothing
-of the conditions which surrounded her, and yet from the time I received
-this letter I sensed something that appealed to me: a rurality and
-simplicity plus a certain artful daintiness—the power, I suppose, to
-pose under my glance and yet evade—which held me as in a vise. Beside
-her, all others seemed harder, holder, or of coarser fiber.
-
-It does not matter now but as I look back on it there seems to have been
-more of pure, exalted or frenetic romance in this thing (at first, and
-even a year or so afterward), than in any mating experience of which I
-have any recollection, with the possible exception of Alice. Unlike most
-of my other affairs, this (in the beginning at least) seemed more a
-matter of pure romance or poetry, a desire to see and be near her.
-Indeed I could only think of her as a part of some idyllic country
-scene, of walking or riding with her along some leafy country lane, of
-rowing a little boat on a stream, of sitting with her under trees in a
-hammock, of watching her play tennis, of being with her where grass,
-flowers, trees and a blue sky were. In that idyllic world of the Fair
-she had seemed well-placed. This must be a perfect love, I thought. Here
-was your truly sweet, pure girl who inspired a man with a nobler passion
-than mere lust. I began to picture myself with her in a home somewhere,
-possibly here in St. Louis, of going with her to church even, for I
-fancied she was of a strict religious bent, of pushing a baby
-carriage—indeed, of leading a thoroughly domestic life, and being happy
-in it!
-
-We fell into a correspondence which swiftly took on a regular form and
-resulted, on my part, in a most extended correspondence, letters so long
-that they surprised even myself. I found myself in the grip of a
-letter-writing fever such as hitherto had never possessed me, writing
-long, personal, intimate accounts of my own affairs, my work, my dreams,
-what not, as well as what I thought of her, of the beauty of life as I
-had seen it with her in Chicago, my theories and imaginings in regard to
-everything. As I see it now, this was perhaps my first and easiest
-attempt at literary expression, the form being negligible and yet
-sufficient to encompass and embody without difficulty all the surging
-and seething emotions and ideas which had hitherto been locked up in me,
-bubbling and steaming to the explosion point. Indeed the newspaper forms
-to which I was daily compelled to confine myself offered no outlet, and
-in addition, in Miss W—— I had found a seemingly sympathetic and
-understanding soul, one which required and inspired all the best that
-was in me. I was now, as I told myself, on the verge of something
-wonderful, a new life. I must work, save, advance myself and better my
-condition generally, so as to be worthy of her.... At the very same time
-I was still able to see beauty in other women and the cloying delights
-of those who would never be able to be as good as she! They might be
-good enough for me but far beneath her whose eyes were “too pure to
-behold evil.”
-
-In the latter part of September she came to St. Louis and gave me my
-first delighted sight of her since we had left Chicago. At this time I
-was at the topmost toss of my adventures in St. Louis. I was, as I now
-assumed, somebody. By now also I had found a new room in the very heart
-of the city, on Broadway near the Southern, and was leading a bachelor
-existence under truly metropolitan circumstances. This room was on the
-third floor rear of a building which looked out over some nondescript
-music hall whose glass roof was just below and from whence nightly, and
-frequently in the afternoon, issued all sorts of garish music hall
-clatter, including music and singing and voices in monologue or
-dialogue. One block south were the Southern Hotel, Faust’s Restaurant,
-and the Olympic Theater. In the block north were the courthouse and
-Dick’s old room, which by now he had abandoned, having in spite of all
-his fine dreams of a resplendent heiress married a girl whom together we
-had met in the church some months before—a circus-rider! Thereafter he
-had removed to a prosaic flat on the south side, an institution which
-seemed to me but a crude and rather pathetic attempt at worthless
-domesticity.
-
-I should like to report here that something over a year later this first
-marriage of his terminated in the death of his wife. Later—some two or
-three years—he indulged in a second most prosaic and inartistic
-romance—wedding finally, on this occasion, the daughter of a carpenter.
-And her name—Sopheronisby Boanerga Watkins. And a year or two after this
-she was burned to death by an exploding oil stove. And this was the man
-who was bent on capturing an heiress.
-
-In my new room therefore, because it was more of a center, I had already
-managed to set up a kind of garret salon, which was patronized by Dick
-and Peter, Rodenberger, Dunlap, Brady and a number of other
-acquaintances. No sooner was I settled here than Michaelson, whose
-affairs I had straightened out by getting him a place on the _Republic_,
-put in an appearance, and also John Maxwell, who because of untoward
-conditions in Chicago had come to St. Louis to better his fortunes. But
-more of that later.
-
-In spite of all these friends and labors and attempts at aiding others,
-it was my affair with Miss W—— which now completely engrossed me. So
-seriously had I taken this new adventure to heart that I was scarcely
-able to eat or sleep. Once I knew definitely that she was inclined to
-like me, as her letters proved, and the exact day of her arrival had
-been fixed, I walked on air. I had not been able to save much money
-since I had been on the _Republic_ (possibly a hundred dollars all told,
-and that since my brothers had left), but of that I took forty or fifty
-and bought a new fall suit of a most pronounced if not startling
-pattern, the coat being extra long and of no known relation to any
-current style (an idea of my own), to say nothing of such extras as
-patent leather shoes, ties, collars, a new pearl-gray hat—all purchased
-in view of this expected visit for her especial delectation! Although I
-had little money for what I considered the essentials of
-courtship—theater boxes, dinners and suppers at the best restaurants,
-flowers, candy—still I hoped to make an impression. Why shouldn’t I?
-Being a newspaper man and an ex-dramatic editor, to say nothing of my
-rather close friendship with the present _Republic_ critic, I could
-easily obtain theater tickets, although the exigencies of my work often
-prevented, as I discovered afterward, my accompanying her for more than
-an hour at a time.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIX
-
-
-ON the day of her arrival I arrayed myself in my best, armed myself with
-flowers, candy and two tickets for the theater, and made my way out to
-her aunt’s in one of the simpler home streets in the west end. I was so
-fearful that my afternoon assignment should prove a barrier to my seeing
-her that day that I went to her as early as ten-thirty, intending to
-offer her the tickets and arrange to stop for her afterwards at the
-theater; or, failing that, to see her for a little while in the evening
-if my assignments permitted. I was so vain of my standing in her eyes,
-so anxious to make a good impression, that I was ashamed to confess that
-my reportorial duties made it difficult for me to see her at all. After
-my free days in Chicago I wanted her to think that I was more than a
-mere reporter, a sort of traveling correspondent and feature man, which
-in a way I was, only my superiors were determined to keep me for some
-reason in the ordinary reportorial class taking daily assignments as
-usual. Instead of confessing my difficulties I made a great show of
-freedom.
-
-I found her in a small tree-shaded, cool-looking brick house, with a
-brick sidewalk before it and a space of grass on one side. Never did
-place seem more charming. I stared at it as one might at a shrine. Here
-at last was the temporary home of my beloved, and she was within!
-
-I knocked, and an attractive slip of a girl (her niece, as I learned)
-answered. I was shown into a long, dustless, darkened parlor. After
-giving me time to weigh the taste and affluence of her relatives
-according to my standards, she arrived, the beloved, the beautiful. In
-view of many later sadder things, it seems that here at least I might
-attempt to do her full justice. She seemed exquisite to me then, a trim,
-agreeable sylph of a girl, with a lovely oval face, stark red hair
-braided and coiled after the fashion of a Greek head, a clear pink skin,
-long, narrow, almond-shaped, gray-blue eyes, delicate, graceful hands, a
-perfect figure, small well-formed feet. There was something of the wood
-or water nymph about her, a seeking in her eyes, a breath of wild winds
-in her hair, a scarlet glory to her mouth. And yet she was so obviously
-a simple and inexperienced country girl, caught firm and fast in
-American religious and puritanic traditions and with no hint in her mind
-of all the wild, mad ways of the world. Sometimes I have grieved that
-she ever met me, or that I so little understood myself as to have sought
-her out.
-
-I first saw her, after this long time, framed in a white doorway, and
-she made a fascinating picture. Here, as in Chicago, she seemed shy,
-innocent, questioning, as one who might fly at the first sound. I gazed
-in admiration. Despite a certain something in her letters which had
-indirectly assured me of her affection or her desire for mine, still she
-held aloof, extending a cool hand and asking me to sit down, smiling
-tenderly and graciously. I felt odd, out of place, and yet wonderfully
-drawn to her, passionately interested. What followed by way of
-conversation I cannot remember now—talk of the Fair, I suppose, some of
-those we had known, her summer, mine. She took my roses and pinned some
-of them on, placing the rest in a jar. There was a piano here, and after
-a time she consented to play. In a moment, it seemed, it was
-twelve-thirty, and I had to go.
-
-I walked on air. It seemed to me that I had never seen any one more
-beautiful—and I doubt now that I had. There was no reason to be applied
-to the thing: it was plain infatuation, a burning, consuming desire for
-her. If I had lost her then and there, or any time within a year
-thereafter, I should have deemed it the most amazing affair of my life.
-
-I returned to the office and took some assignment, which I cut short at
-three-thirty in order to get back to the Grand Opera House to sit beside
-her. The play was an Irish love drama, with Chauncey Olcott, the singing
-comedian, in the title rôle. With her beside me I thought it perfect.
-Love! Ah, love! When the performance was ended I was ready to weep over
-the torturing beauty of life. Outside we found the matinée crowds, the
-carriages, the sense of autumn gayety and show in the air. A nearby
-ice-cream and candy store was crowded to suffocation. Young girls of the
-better families hummed like bees. Because of my poverty and uncertain
-station I felt depressed, at the same time pretending to a station which
-I felt to be most unreal. The mixture of ambition and uncertainty,
-pride, a gay coaxing in the air, added to the need to return to
-conventional toil—how these tortured me! Nothing surprises me now more
-than my driving emotions all through this period. I was as one
-possessed.
-
-We parted at a street-car—when I wanted a carriage! We met at her aunt’s
-home at eight-thirty, because I saw an opportunity of deliberately
-evading an assignment. In this simple parlor I dreamed the wildest, the
-most fantastic dreams. She was the be-all and the end-all of my
-existence. Now I must work for her, wait for her, succeed for her! Her
-mediocre piano technique seemed perfect, her voice ideal! Never was such
-beauty, such color. St. Louis took on a glamour which it had never
-before possessed.... If only this love affair could have gone on to a
-swift fruition it would have been perfect, blinding.
-
-But all the formalities, traditions, beliefs, of a conventional and
-puritanic region were in the way. Love, as it is in most places, and
-despite its consuming blaze, was a slow process. There must be many such
-visits, I knew, before I could even place an arm about her. I was to be
-permitted to take her to church, to concerts, the theater, a restaurant
-occasionally, but nothing more.
-
-The next morning I went to church with her; the next afternoon
-unavoidable work kept me from her, but that night I shirked and stayed
-with her until eleven. The next morning, since she had to catch an early
-train for Florissant, I slept late, but during the next two weeks (she
-could not come oftener, having to spend one Sunday with her “folks,” as
-she referred to them) I poured forth my amazement and delight on reams
-of thin paper. I wonder now where they are. Once there was a trunk full.
-
-Perhaps the most interesting effect of this sudden fierce passion was
-the heightened color it lent to everything. Never before had I realized
-quite so clearly the charm of life as life, its wondrous singing, its
-intense appeal. I remember witnessing a hanging about this time,
-standing beside the murderer when the trap was sprung, and being
-horrified, sickened to death, yet when I returned to the office and
-there was a letter from her—the world was perfect once more, no evil or
-pain in it! I followed up the horrors of a political catastrophe, in
-which a city treasurer shot himself to escape the law—but a letter from
-her, and the world was beautiful. A negro in an outlying county
-assaulted a girl, and I arrived in time to see him lynched, but walking
-in the wood afterward, away from the swinging body, I thought of her—and
-life contained not a single ill. Such is infatuation. If I had been
-alive before, now I was more than alive. I tingled all over with longing
-and aspiration—to be an editor, a publisher, a playwright—I know not
-what. The simple homes I had dreamed over before as representing all
-that was charming and soothing and shielding were now twice as
-attractive. Love, all its possibilities, paraded before my eyes, a
-gorgeous, fantastic procession. Love! Love! The charm of a home in which
-it would find its most appropriate setting! The brooding tenderness of
-it! Its healing force against the blows of ordinary life! To be married,
-to have your beloved with you, to have a charming home to which to
-return of an evening, or at any hour, sick or well! I was young, in good
-health and spirits. In a few years I should be neither so young nor so
-vital. Age would descend, cold, gray, thin, passionless. This glorious,
-glorious period of love, desire, would be gone, and then what? Ah, and
-then what! If I did not achieve now and soon all that I desired in the
-way of tenderness, fortune, beauty—now when I was young and could enjoy
-it—my chance would once and for all be over. I should be helpless. Youth
-would come no more! Love would come no more! But now—now—life was
-sounding, singing, urging, teasing; but also it was running away fast,
-and what was I doing about it? What could I do?
-
-The five months which followed were a period of just such color and
-mood, the richest period of rank romanticism I have ever endured. At
-times I could laugh, at others sigh, over the incidents of this period,
-for there is as little happiness in love as there is out of it, at least
-in my case. If I had only known myself I might have seen, and that
-plainly, that it was not any of the charming conventional things which
-this girl represented but her charming physical self that I craved. The
-world, as I see it now, has trussed itself up too helplessly with too
-many strings of convention, religion, dogma. It has accepted too many
-rules, all calculated for the guidance of individuals in connection with
-the propagation and rearing of children, the conquest and development of
-this planet. This is all very well for those who are interested in that,
-but what of those who are not? Is it everybody’s business to get married
-and accept all the dictates of conventional society—that is, bear and
-rear children according to a given social or religious theory? Cannot
-the world have too much of mere breeding? Are two billion wage slaves,
-for instance, more advantageous than one billion, or one billion more
-than five hundred million? Or is an unconquered planet less interesting
-than a conquered one? Isn’t the mere _contact of love_, if it produces
-ideas, experiences, tragedies even, as important as raising a few
-hundred thousand coal miners, railroad hands or heroes destined to be
-eventually ground or shot in some contest with autocratic or
-capitalistic classes? And, furthermore, I am inclined to suspect that
-the monogamous standard to which the world has been tethered much too
-harshly for a thousand years or more now is entirely wrong. I do not
-believe that it is Nature’s only or ultimate way of continuing or
-preserving itself. Nor am I inclined to accept the belief that it
-produces the highest type of citizen. The ancient world knew little of
-strict monogamy, and some countries today are still without it. Even in
-our religious or moralistic day we are beginning to see less and less of
-its strict enforcement. (Fifty thousand divorces in one State in one
-year is but a straw.) It is a product, I suspect, of intellectual
-lethargy or dullness, a mental incapacity for individuality. What we
-have achieved is a vast ruthless machine for the propagation of people
-far beyond the world’s need, even its capacity to support decently. In
-special cases, where the strong find themselves, we see more of secret
-polygamy and polyandry than is suspected by the dull and the ignorant.
-Economic opportunity, plus love or attraction, arranges all this, all
-the churches, laws, disasters to the contrary notwithstanding. Love or
-desire, where economic conditions permit, will and does find a way.
-
-Here I was dreaming of all the excellencies of which the
-conventionalists prate in connection with home, peace, stability and the
-like, anxious to put my neck under that yoke, when in reality what I
-really wanted, and the only thing that my peculiarly erratic and
-individual disposition would permit, was mental and personal freedom. I
-did not really want any such conventional girl at all, and if I had
-clearly understood what it all meant I might have been only too glad to
-give her up. What I wanted was the joy of possessing her without any of
-the hindrances or binding chains of convention and monogamy, but she
-would none of it. This unsatisfied desire, added to a huge world-sorrow
-over life itself, the richness and promise of the visible scene, the
-sting and urge of its beauty, the briefness of our days, the uncertainty
-of our hopes, the smallness of our capacity to achieve or consume where
-so much is, produced an intense ache and urge which endured until I left
-St. Louis. I was so staggered by the promise and the possibilities of
-life, at the same time growing more and more doubtful of my capacity to
-achieve anything, that I was falling into a profound sadness. Yet I was
-only twenty-two, and between these thoughts would come intense waves of
-do and dare: I was to be all that I fancied, achieve all that I dreamed.
-As a contrast to all these thoughts, fancies, and depressions, I
-indulged in a heavy military coat of the most disturbing length, a
-wide-brimmed Stetson hat, Southern style, gloves, a cane, soft pleated
-shirts—a most _outré_ equipment for all occasions including those on
-which I could call upon her or take her to a theater or restaurant. I
-remember one Saturday morning, when I was on my way to see my lady love
-and had stopped at the Olympic to secure two seats, meeting a dapper,
-rather flashy newspaper man. I had on the military coat, and the hat, a
-pair of bright yellow gloves, narrow-toed patent leather shoes, a ring,
-a pin, a suit brighter than his own, a cane, and I was carrying a
-bouquet of roses. I was about to take a street-car out to her place, not
-being prosperous enough to hire a carriage.
-
-“Well, for sake, old man, what’s up?” he called, seizing me by the arm.
-“You’re not getting married, are you?”
-
-“Aw, cut the comedy!” I replied, or words to that effect. “Can’t a
-fellow put on any decent clothes in this town without exciting the
-natives? What’s wrong?”
-
-“Nothing, nothing,” he replied apologetically. “You look swell. You got
-on more dog than ever I see a newspaper man around here pull. You must
-be getting along! How are things at the _Republic_, anyhow?”
-
-We now conversed more affably. He touched the coat gingerly and with
-interest, felt of the quality of the cloth, looked me up and down,
-seemingly with admiration—more likely with amazement—shook his head
-approvingly and said: “Some class, I must say. You’re right there,
-sport, with the raiment,” and walked off.
-
-It was in this style that I prosecuted my quest. For my ordinary day’s
-labor I wore other clothes, but sometimes, when stealing a march on my
-city editor Saturday afternoons or Sundays or evenings, I had to perform
-a lightning change act in order to get into my finery, pay my visit, and
-still get back to the office between eleven and twelve, or before
-six-thirty, in my ordinary clothes. Sometimes I changed as many as three
-times in one afternoon or evening. My room being near here facilitated
-this. A little later, when I was more experienced, I aided myself to
-this speed by wearing all but the coat and hat, an array in which I
-never presumed to enter the office. Even my ultra impressive suit and my
-shoes, shirts and ties attracted attention.
-
-“Gee whiz, Mr. Dreiser!” my pet office boy at the _Republic_ once
-remarked to me as I entered in this array, “you certainly look as though
-you ought to own the paper! The boss don’t look like you.”
-
-Wandell, Williams, the sporting editor, the religious editor, the
-dramatic editor, all eyed me with evident curiosity. “You certainly are
-laying it on thick these days,” Williams genially remarked, beaming on
-me with his one eye.
-
-As for my lady love—well, I reached the place where I could hold her
-hand, put my arms about her, kiss her, but never could I induce her to
-sit upon my lap. That was reserved for a much later date.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER L
-
-
-ALL love transports contain an element of the ridiculous, I presume, but
-to each how very important. I will pass mine over with what I have
-already said, save this: that each little variation in her costume,
-however slight, in her coiffure, or the way she looked or walked amid
-new surroundings, all seemed to re-emphasize the perfection that I had
-discovered and was so fortunate as to possess. She gave me her
-photograph, which I framed in silver and hung in my room. I begged for a
-lock of her hair, and finding a bit of blue ribbon that I knew belonged
-to her purloined that. She would not allow me to visit at Florissant,
-where she taught, being bashful about confessing this new relationship,
-but nevertheless, on several Sundays when she was at her home “up the
-State” I visited this glorious region, hallowed by her presence, and
-tried to decide for myself just where she lived and taught—her sacred
-rooms! A little later an exposition or State Fair was held in the
-enormous exposition building at Fourteenth and Olive streets, and here,
-when the Sousa concerts were first on, and later when the gay Veiled
-Prophets festivities began (a sort of Roman Harvest rejoicing, winding
-up with a great parade and ball), I saw more of her than ever before. It
-was during this time, in a letter, that she confessed that she loved me.
-Before this, however, seeing that I made no progress in any other way,
-being allowed no intimacy beyond an occasional stolen kiss, I had
-proposed to her and been accepted with a kind of morbid formalism. I had
-had to ask her in the most definite way and be formally accepted as her
-affianced husband. Thereafter I squandered my last cent to purchase a
-diamond ring at wholesale, secured through a friend on the _Globe_, and
-then indeed I felt myself set up in the world, as one who was destined
-to tread the conventional and peaceful ways of the majority.
-
-Yet in Spite of my profound infatuation I was still able to see beauty
-in other women and be moved by it. The chemical attractions and
-repulsions which draw us away from one and to another are beginning to
-be more clearly understood in these days and to undermine our more
-formal notions of stability and order, but even at that time this
-variation in myself might have taught me to look with suspicion on my
-own emotions. I think I did imagine that I was a scoundrel in harboring
-lusts after other women, when I was so deeply involved with this one,
-but I told myself that I must be peculiarly afflicted in this way, that
-all men were not so, that I myself should and probably would hold myself
-in check eventually, etc.; all of which merely proves how disjointed and
-non-self-understanding can be the processes of the human mind. Not only
-do we fail to see ourselves as others see us but we have not the
-faintest conception of ourselves as we really are.
-
-An incident which might have proved to me how shallow was the depth of
-my supposed feeling, and that it was nothing more than a strong
-sex-desire, was this: One night about twelve a telephone message to the
-_Republic_ stated that on a branch extension of one of the car lines,
-about seven or eight miles from the city, a murder had just been
-committed. Three negroes entering a lone “Owl” car, which ran from the
-city terminus to a small village had shot and killed the conductor and
-fired on the motorman. A young girl who had been on board, the only
-passenger, had escaped by the front door and had not since been heard
-of—or so the telephone message stated. As I happened to be in the office
-at the time, the story was assigned to me.
-
-By good luck I managed to catch a twelve o’clock theater car and arrived
-at the end of the line at twelve forty, where I learned that the body of
-the dead man had been transferred to his home at some point farther out,
-and that a posse of male residents of the region had already been
-organized and were now helping the police to search this country round
-for the negroes. When I asked about the girl who had been on board one
-of the men at the barn exclaimed: “Sure, she’s a wonder! You want to
-tell about her. She hunted up a house, borrowed a horse, and notified
-everybody along the route. She’s the one that first phoned the news.”
-
-Here was a story indeed. Midnight, a murder, dark woods, lonely country.
-A girl flees from three murderous, drunken negroes, borrows a horse, and
-tells all the countryside. What more could a newspaper man want? I was
-all ears. Now if she were only good-looking!
-
-I now realized that my first duty was not so much to see the body of the
-dead man and interview his wife, although that was an item not to be
-neglected, or the motorman who had escaped with his life, although he
-was here and told me all that had happened quite accurately, but this
-girl, this heroine, who, they said, was no more than seventeen or
-eighteen.
-
-The car in which the murder had been committed was here in the barn. The
-blood-stains of the victim were still to be seen on the floor. I took
-this car, which was now carrying a group of detectives, a doctor and
-some other officials, to the dead man’s house, or to the house of the
-girl, I forget which. When I arrived there I discovered that a large
-comfortable residence some little distance beyond the home of the dead
-man was the scene of all news and activity, for here it was that the
-body of the conductor had been carried, and from here the girl had taken
-a horse and ridden far and wide to call others to her aid. When I
-hurried up to the door she had returned and was holding a sort of levee.
-The large livingroom was crowded, and in the center, under the flare of
-a hanging lamp, was this maiden, rather pretty, with her hair brushed
-straight back from her forehead, and her face alight with the intensity
-of her recent experiences and actions. I drew near and surveyed her over
-the shoulders of the others as she talked, finally getting close enough
-to engage her in direct conversation, as was my duty. She was very
-simple in manner and speech—not quite the dashing heroine I had imagined
-yet attractive enough. For my benefit, and possibly for the dozenth
-time, she narrated all that had befallen her from the time she boarded
-the car until she had leaped from the front step after the shot and hid
-in the wood, finding her way to this house eventually and borrowing a
-horse to notify others, because, for one thing, there was no telephone
-here, and for another there was no man at home at the time who could
-have gone for her. With a kind of naïf enthusiasm she explained to me
-that once the shot had been fired and the conductor had fallen face down
-in the car (he had come in to rebuke these boisterous blacks, who were
-addressing bold remarks to her), she was cold with fright, but that
-after she had left the car she felt calmer and determined to do
-something to aid in the capture of the murderers. Hiding behind bushes,
-she had seen the negroes dash out of the rear door of the car and run
-back along the track into the darkness, and had then hurried in the
-other direction, coming to this house and summoning aid.... It was a
-fine story, her ride in the darkness and how people rose to come out and
-help her. I made copious notes in my mind, took her name and address,
-visited the conductor’s wife, who was a little distance away, and then
-hurried to the nearest telephone to communicate my news.
-
-During this conversation with the girl I made an impression on her. As
-we talked I had drawn quite close and my enthusiasm for her deed had
-drawn forth various approving smiles and exclamations. When I took her
-address I said I should like to know more of her, and she smiled and
-said: “Well, you can see me any time tomorrow.” This was Saturday night.
-
-The _Republic_ at this time had instituted what it called a “reward for
-heroism” medal to be given to whosoever should perform a truly heroic
-deed during the current year within the city or its immediate suburbs.
-Thinking over this girl’s deed as I went along, and wondering how I
-should proceed in the matter of retaining her interest, I thought of
-this medal and asked myself why it should not be given to her. She was
-certainly worthy of it. Plainly she was a hero, riding thus in the
-darkness and in the face of such a crime—and good-looking too!—and
-eighteen! After I had reached the office and written a most glowing
-account of all this for the late edition, I decided to speak to Wandell
-the next day, and did. He fell in with the idea at once.
-
-“A fine idea,” he squeaked shrilly. “Bully—we’ll do that! You’ll have to
-go back, though, and see whether she’ll accept it. Sometimes these
-people won’t stand for all this notoriety stuff, you know. But if she
-does——By the way,” he asked quickly, “is she good-looking?”
-
-“Sure,” I replied enthusiastically. “She’s very good-looking—a beauty, I
-think.”
-
-“Well, if that’s the case all the better. She must be made to give you a
-picture. Don’t let her crawl out of that, even if you have to bring her
-down here or take her to a photographer. If she accepts I’ll order the
-medal tomorrow, and you can write the whole thing up. It’ll make a fine
-Sunday feature, eh? Dreiser’s girl hero! What!”
-
-This medal idea was just the thing to take me back to her, the excuse I
-needed and one that ought to bring her close to me if anything could.
-For the time being, I had forgotten all about Miss W—— and her charms.
-She came into my mind, but it was so all-important for me to follow up
-this new interest—one that I could manage quite as well as not, along
-with the other. I dressed in my very best clothes the next morning,
-excluding the amazing coat, and sallied forth to find my heroine. After
-considerable difficulty I managed to place her in a very simple home on
-what had once been a farm. Her father, who opened the door, was a German
-of the most rigid and austere mien—a Lutheran, I think—her mother a
-simple and pleasant-looking fat _hausfrau_. In the garish noon light my
-heroine was neither so melodramatic nor so poignant as she had seemed
-the night before. There was something less alive and less delicate in
-her composition, mental and physical, and yet she was by no means dull.
-Perhaps she lacked the excitement and the crowd. She had a peculiar
-mouth, a little wide but sweet, and a most engaging smile. Incidentally,
-it now developed that she had a younger sister, darker, more graceful,
-almost more attractive than herself.
-
-The two of them, as I soon found upon entering into conversation,
-offered that same problem in American life that so many children of
-foreign-born parents do. Although by no means poor, they were restless,
-if not unhappy, in their state. The old German father was one of those
-stern religionists and moralists who plainly had always held, or tried
-to hold, his two children in severest check. At the same time, as was
-obvious, this keen strident American life was calling to them as never
-had his fatherland to him. They were both intensely alive and eager for
-adventure. Never before, apparently, had they seen a reporter, never
-been so close to a really truly thrilling tragedy. And Gunda—that was my
-heroine’s name—had actually been a part of it—how, she could now
-scarcely think. Her parents were not at all stirred by her triumph or
-the publicity that attached to it. In spite of the fact that her father
-owned this property and was sufficiently well-placed to maintain her in
-school or idleness (American style), she was already a clerk in one of
-the great stores of the city, and her sister was also preparing to go to
-work, having just left school.
-
-I cannot tell how, but in a few moments we three were engaged in a most
-ardent conversation. There was an old fire-place in this house with some
-blazing wood in it, and before this we sat and laughed and chattered,
-while I explained just what was wanted. Their mother and father did not
-even remain in the room. I could see that the younger sister was for
-urging Gunda on to any gayety or flirtation, and was herself eager to
-share in one. It ended by my suggesting that they both come down to
-dinner with me some evening—a suggestion which they welcomed with
-enthusiasm but explained that it would have to be done under the rose.
-Their father was so old-fashioned that he would not allow them to take
-up with any one so swiftly, would not even allow them to have any beaux
-in the house. But they could meet me, and stay in town all night with
-friends. Gunda laughed, and the younger sister clapped her hands for
-joy.
-
-I made a most solemn statement of what was wanted to the parents,
-secured two photographs of Gunda, and departed, having arranged to see
-them the following Wednesday at seven at one of the prominent corners of
-the city.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LI
-
-
-CONCERNING these two girls and their odd, unsophisticated, daring point
-of view and love of life, I have always had the most confused feelings.
-They were crazy and starving for something different from what they
-knew. What had become of all the staid and dull sobriety of their
-parents in this queer American atmosphere? The old people had no
-interest in or patience with any such restlessness. As for their two
-girls, it would have been as easy to seduce one or both of them, in the
-happy, seeking mood in which they met me, as to step off a car. Plainly
-they liked me, both of them. My conquest was so easy that it detracted
-from the charm. The weaker sex, in youth at least, has to be sought to
-be worth while. I began to question whether I should proceed in this
-matter as fast as they seemed to wish.
-
-Now that they had made friends with me, I liked them both. When we met
-the following Wednesday evening, and I had taken them to a commonplace
-restaurant, I was a little puzzled to know what to do with them, rarely
-having a whole evening to myself. Finally I invited them to my room,
-wondering if they would come. It seemed a great adventure to me, most
-daring, but I could not quite make up my mind which of the two I
-preferred. Just the same they came with me, looking on the proceeding as
-a great and delicious adventure. As we came along Broadway in the dark
-after dinner they hung on my arms, laughing and jesting at what their
-parents would think, and when we went up the dimly lighted stair, an
-old, wide, squeaky flight, they chortled over the fun and mystery of it
-all. The room was nothing much—the same old books, hangings and other
-trifles—but it seemed to please them greatly. What pleased them most was
-the fact that one could go and come without attracting any attention.
-They browsed about at first, and I, never having been confronted by just
-this situation before and being still backward, did little or nothing
-save discuss generalities. The one I had most favored (the heroine) was
-more retiring than the younger, less feverish but still gay. I could
-only be with them from seven to ten-thirty, but they intimated that they
-would come again when they could stay as late as I chose. The suggestion
-was too obvious and I lost interest. Soon I told them I had to go back
-to the office and took them to a car. A few days later I took the medal
-to Gunda at the store, where she received it with much pleasure, asking
-where I had been and when she was to see me again. I made an appointment
-for another day, which I never kept. It meant, as I reasoned it out,
-that I should have to go further with her and her sister, but not being
-sufficiently impelled or courageous I dropped the whole matter. Then,
-because Miss W—— now seemed more significant than ever, I returned to
-her with a fuller devotion than ever before.
-
-Owing to a driving desire to get on, to do something, to be more than I
-was and have all the pleasures I craved at once, there now set in a
-period of mental dissatisfaction and unrest which eventually took me out
-of St. Louis and the West, and resulted in a period of stress and
-distress. Sometimes I really believe that certain lives are predestined
-to undergo a given group of experiences, else why the unconscionable
-urge to move and be away which drives some people like the cuts of a
-lash? Aside from the question of salary, there was, as I see it now,
-little reason for the fierce and gnawing pains that assailed me, and
-toward the last even this question of salary was not a factor; for my
-employers, learning that I was about to leave, were quick enough to
-offer me more money as well as definite advancement. By then, however,
-my self-dissatisfaction had become so great that nothing short of a
-larger salary and higher position than they could afford to give me
-would have detained me. Toward the last I seemed to be obsessed by the
-idea of leaving St. Louis and going East. New York—or, at least other
-cities east of this one, seemed to call me far more than anything the
-West had to offer.
-
-And now, curiously, various things seemed to combine to drive or lure me
-forth, things as clear in retrospect as they were indistinguishable and
-meaningless then. One of these forces, aside from that of being worthy
-of my new love and lifting her to some high estate which then possessed
-me, was John Maxwell who had done me such an inestimable service in
-Chicago when I was trying to break into the newspaper business, and who
-had now arrived on the scene with the hope of connecting with St. Louis
-journalism. Fat, cynical, Cyclopean John! Was ever a more Nietzschean
-mind in a more amiable body! His doctrine of ruthless progress, as I now
-clearly saw, was so tall and strident, whereas his personal modus
-operandi was so compellingly genial, human, sympathetic. He was forever
-talking about burning, slaying, shoving people out of one’s path, doing
-the best thing by oneself and the like, while at the same time actually
-extending a helping hand to almost everybody and doing as little to
-advantage himself personally as any man I ever knew. It was all theory,
-plus an inherent desire to expound. His literary admirations were of a
-turgidly sentimental or romantic character, as, for instance, Jean
-Valjean of _Les Misérables_, and the good bishop; _Père Goriot_,
-_Camille_, poor Smike in _Nicholas Nickleby_; and, of all things, and
-yet quite like him in judgment, the various novels of Hall Caine (_The
-Bondman_, _The Christian_, _The Deemster_).
-
-“My boy!” he used to say to me, with a fat and yet wholly impressive
-vehemence that I could not help admiring whether I agreed with him or
-not, “that character of Jean Valjean is one of the greatest in the
-world—a masterpiece—and I’ll tell you why—” and he would then begin to
-enlarge upon the moral beauty of Valjean carrying the wounded Marius
-through the sewer, his taking up and caring for the poor degraded
-mother, abandoned by the students of Paris, his gentle and forgiving
-attitude toward all poverty and crime.
-
-The amusing thing about all this was, of course, that in the next breath
-he would reiterate that all men were dogs and thieves, that in all cases
-one had to press one’s advantage to the limit and trust nobody, that one
-must burn, cut, slay, if one wished to succeed. Once I said to him,
-still under the delusion that the world might well be full of
-tenderness, charity, honesty and the like: “John, you don’t really
-believe all that. You’re not as hard as you say.”
-
-“The hell I’m not! The trouble with you is that you don’t know me.
-You’re just a cub yet, Theodore,” and his face wore that adorable, fat,
-cynical smirk, “full of college notions of virtue and charity, and all
-that guff. You think that because I helped you a little in Chicago all
-men are honest, kind, and true. Well, you’ll have to stow that pretty
-soon. You’re getting along now, and whatever you think other people
-ought to do you’ll find it won’t be very convenient to do it
-yourself—see?” And he smirked angelically once more. To me, in spite of
-what he said, he seemed anything but hard or mean.
-
-Being in hard lines, he had come to St. Louis, not at my suggestion but
-at that of Dunlap and Brady, both of whom no doubt assured him that I
-could secure him a position instanter. I began to think what if anything
-I could do to help him, but so overawed was I still by his personality
-that I felt that nothing would do for him less than a place as
-copy-reader or assistant city editor—and that was a very difficult
-matter indeed, really beyond my local influence. I was too young and too
-inexperienced to recommend anybody for such a place, although my Chicago
-friends had come to imagine that I could do anything here. I had the
-foolish notion that John would speak to me about it, but so sensitive
-was he, I presume, on the subject of what was due from me to him that he
-thought (I am merely guessing) that I should bestir myself without any
-direct word. He had been here for days, I later learned, without even
-coming near me. He had gone to a hotel, and in a few days sent word by
-Dunlap, with whom he was now on the most intimate terms, that he was in
-town and looking for a place. I assume now that it was but the part of
-decency for me to have hurried to call on him, but so different was my
-position now and so hurried was I with a number of things that I never
-even thought of doing it at once. I fancied that he would come to the
-office with Dunlap, or that a day or two would make no difference. At
-the end of the second day after Dunlap spoke to me of his being here the
-latter said: “Don’t you want to come along with me and see John?”
-
-I was delighted at the invitation and that same evening followed Dunlap
-to John’s hotel room. It was a curious meeting, full of an odd
-diffidence on my part and I know not what on his. From others he had
-gathered the idea that I was successful here and therefore in a position
-to be uppish, whereas I was really in a most humble and affectionate
-frame of mind toward him. He met me with a most cynical, leering
-expression, which by no means put me at case. He seemed at once
-reproachful, antagonistic and contemptuous.
-
-“Well,” he began at once, “I hear you’re making a big hit down here,
-Theodore. Everything’s coming your way now, eh?”
-
-“Oh, not so good as that, John,” I said. “I don’t think I’ve done so
-wonderfully well. I hear you want to stay here; have you found anything
-yet?”
-
-“Not a thing,” he smiled. “I haven’t been trying very hard, I guess.”
-
-I told him what I knew of St. Louis, how things went generally, and
-offered to give him letters or personal introductions to McCullagh, a
-managing editor on the _Chronicle_, to Wandell, and several others. He
-thanked me, and then I invited him to come and live in my room, which he
-declined at the time, taking instead a room next door to mine on the
-same floor—largely because it was inexpensive and central and not, I am
-sure, because it was near me. Here he stayed nearly a month, during
-which time he doubtless made efforts to find something to do, which I
-also did. Suddenly he was gone, and a little later, and much to my
-astonishment, Dunlap informed me that he had concluded that I had been
-instrumental in keeping him from obtaining work here! This he had
-deduced not so much from anything he knew or had heard, but by some
-amazing process of reversal; since I was much beholden to him and in a
-position to assist him, I, by some perversion of nature, would resent
-his coming and would do everything in my power to keep him out!
-
-No event in my life ever gave me a queerer sense of being misunderstood
-and defeated. Of all the people I knew, I would rather have aided
-Maxwell than any one else. Because I felt so sure that I could not
-recommend him for anything good enough for him, I felt ashamed to try. I
-did the little I could, but after a while he left without bidding me
-good-by.
-
-But before he went there were many gatherings in his room or mine, and
-always he assumed the same condescending and bantering tone toward me
-that he had used in Chicago, which made me feel as though he thought my
-present standing a little too good for me. And yet at times, in his more
-cheerful moods, he seemed the same old John, tender, ranting, filled
-with a sincere desire for the welfare of any untutored beginner, and
-only so restless and irritable now because he was meshed in financial
-difficulties.
-
-At that, he attempted to do me one more service, which, although I did
-not resent it very much, I completely misunderstood. This was in regard
-to Miss W——, whose photograph he now saw and whose relation to me he
-gathered to be serious, although what he said related more to my whole
-future than to her. One day he walked into my room and saw the picture
-of my love hanging on the wall. He paused first to examine it.
-
-“Who’s this?” he inquired curiously.
-
-I can see him yet, without coat or waistcoat, suspenders down, his fat
-stomach pulled in tightly by the waistband of his trousers, his fat face
-pink with health, his hair tousled on his fine round head.
-
-“That’s the girl I’m engaged to,” I announced proudly. “I’m going to
-marry her one of these days when I get on my feet.” Then, lover-like, I
-began to expatiate on her charms, while he continued to study the
-photograph.
-
-“Have you any idea how old she is?” he queried, looking up with that
-queer, cynical, unbelieving look of his.
-
-“Oh, about my age.”
-
-“Oh hell!” he said roughly. “She’s older than that. She’s five or six
-years older than you. What do you want to get married for anyhow? You’re
-just a kid yet. Everything’s before you. You’re only now getting a
-start. Now you want to go and tie yourself up so you can’t move!”
-
-He ambled over to the window and stared out. Then he sank comfortably
-into one of my chairs, while I uttered some fine romantic bosh about
-love, a home, not wanting to wander around the world all my days alone.
-As I talked he contemplated me with one of those audacious smirky leers
-of his, as irritating and disconcerting an expression as I have seen on
-any face.
-
-“Oh hell, Theodore!” he remarked finally, as if to sweep away all I had
-said. Then after a time he added, as if addressing the world in general:
-“If there’s a bigger damn fool than a young newspaper man in or out of
-love, let me know. Here you are, just twenty-one, just starting out. You
-come down here from Chicago and get a little start, and the first thing
-you want to do is to load yourself up with a wife, and in a year or so
-two or three kids. Now I know damned well,” he went on, no doubt noting
-the look of easy toleration on my part, “that what I’m going to say
-won’t make you like me any better, but I’m going to say it anyhow.
-You’re like all these young newspaper scouts: the moment you get a start
-you think you know it all. Well, Theodore, you’ve got a long time to
-live and a lot of things to learn. I had something to do with getting
-you into this game, and that’s the only reason I’m talking to you now.
-I’d like to see you go on and not make a mistake. In the first place
-you’re too young to get married, and in the second, as I said before,
-that girl is five years older than you if she’s a day. I think she’s
-older,” and he went over and re-examined the picture, while I
-spluttered, insisting that he was crazy, that she was no more than two
-years older if so much. “Along with this,” he went on, completely
-ignoring my remarks, “she’s one of these middle-West girls, all right
-for life out here but no good for the newspaper game or you. I’ve been
-through all that myself. Just remember, my boy, that I’m ten years older
-than you. She belongs to some church, I suppose?”
-
-“Methodist,” I replied ruefully.
-
-“I knew it! But I’m not knocking her; I’m not saying that she isn’t
-pretty and virtuous, but I do say that she’s older than you, and narrow.
-Why, man, you don’t know your own mind yet. You don’t know where you’ll
-want to go or what you’ll want to do. In ten years from now you’ll be
-thirty-two, and she’ll be thirty-seven or more, believing and feeling
-things that will make you tired. You’ll never agree with her—or if you
-do, so much the worse for you. What she wants is a home and children and
-a steady provider, and what you really want is freedom to go and do as
-you please, only you don’t know it.
-
-“Now I’ve watched you, Theodore, and I hear what people down here say
-about you, and I think you have something ahead of you if you don’t make
-a fool of yourself. But if you marry now—and a conventional and narrow
-woman at that, one older than you—you’re gone. She’ll cause you endless
-trouble. In three or four years you’ll have children, and you’ll get a
-worried, irritated point of view. Take my advice. Run with girls if you
-want to, but don’t marry. Now I’ve said my say, and you can do as you
-damned please.”
-
-He smirked genially and condescendingly once more, and I felt very much
-impressed and put down. After all, I feared, in spite of my slushy mood,
-that what he said was true, that it would be best for me to devote
-myself solely to work and study and let women alone. But also I knew
-that I couldn’t.
-
-The next time my beloved came to the city I decided to sound her on the
-likelihood of my changing, differing. We were walking along a
-leaf-strewn street, the red, brown, yellow and green leaves thick on the
-brick walk, of a gray November afternoon.
-
-“And what would you do then?” I asked, referring to my fear of changing,
-not caring for her any longer.
-
-She meditated for a while, kicking the leaves and staring at the ground
-without looking up. Finally she surveyed me with clear appealing
-blue-gray eyes.
-
-“But you won’t,” she said. “Let’s not think of anything like that any
-more. We won’t, will we?”
-
-Her tone was so tender and appealing that it moved me tremendously. She
-had this power over me, and retained it for years, of appealing to my
-deepest emotions. I felt so sorry for her—for life—even then. It was as
-if all that Maxwell had said was really true. She was different, older;
-she might never understand me. But this craving for her—what to do about
-that? All love, the fiercest passions, might cool and die out, but how
-did that help me then? In the long future before me should I not regret
-having given her up, never to have carried to fruition this delicious
-fever? I thought so.
-
-For weeks thereafter my thoughts were colored by the truth of all John
-had said. She would never give herself to me without marriage, and here
-I was, lonely and financially unable to take her, and spiritually unable
-to justify my marriage to her even if I were. The tangle of life, its
-unfairness and indifference to the moods and longings of any individual,
-swept over me once more, weighing me down far beyond the power of
-expression. I felt like one condemned to carry a cross, and very
-unwilling and unhappy in doing it. The delirious painful meetings went
-on and on. I suffered untold tortures from my desires and my dreams. And
-they were destined never to be fulfilled.... Glorious fruit that hangs
-upon the vine too long, and then decays!
-
-Another thing that happened at this time and made a great impression,
-tending more firmly than even Maxwell’s remarks to alter my point of
-view and make me feel that I must leave St. Louis and go on, was the
-arrival in the city of my brother Paul, who, as the star of a claptrap
-melodrama entitled “The Danger Signal,” now put in an appearance. He was
-one of my four brothers now out in the world making their own way and of
-them all by far the most successful. I had not seen him since my
-newspaper days in Chicago two years before. He was then in another play,
-“The Tin Soldier,” by the reigning farceur, Hoyt. _His_ had not been the
-leading rôle at that time, but somehow his skill as a comedian had
-pushed him into that rôle. Previously he had leading parts in such
-middle-class plays as “A Midnight Bell,” “The Two Johns” and other
-things of that sort, as well as being an end man in several famous
-minstrel shows.
-
-Now in this late November or early December, walking along South Sixth
-Street in the region of the old Havlin Theater, where all the standard
-melodramas of the time played, I was startled to see his face and name
-staring at me from a billboard. “Ah,” I thought, “my famous brother! Now
-these people will know whether our family amounts to anything or not!
-Wait’ll they hear he is my brother!”
-
-His picture on the billboard recalled so many pleasant memories of him,
-his visits home, his kindness to and intense love for my mother, how in
-my tenth year he had talked of my being a writer (Heaven only knows
-why), and how once on one of his visits home, when I was fourteen, he
-had set me to the task of composing a humorous essay which he felt sure
-I could write! Willingly and singingly I essayed it, but when I chose
-the ancient topic of the mule and its tendency to kick his face fell,
-and he tried to show me in the gentlest way possible how hackneyed that
-was and to put me on the track of doing something original.... Now after
-all this time, and scarcely knowing whether or not he knew I was here, I
-was to see him once more, to make clear to him my worldly improvement. I
-do not say it to boast, but I honestly think there was more joy in the
-mere thought of seeing him again than there was in showing him off and
-getting a little personal credit because of his success.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LII
-
-
-AS I look back upon my life now I realize clearly that of all the
-members of our family subsequent to my mother’s death, the only one who,
-without quite understanding me, still sympathized with my intellectual
-and artistic point of view—and that most helpfully and at times
-practically—was my brother Paul. Despite the fact that all my other
-brothers were much better able intellectually than he to appreciate the
-kind of thing I was tending toward mentally, his was the sympathy that
-buoyed me up. I do not think he understood, even in later years (long
-after I had written _Sister Carrie_, for instance), what I was driving
-at. His world was that of the popular song, the middle-class actor or
-comedian, the middle-class comedy, and such humorous esthetes of the
-writing world as Bill Nye, Petroleum V. Nasby, and the authors of the
-_Spoopendyke Papers_ and _Samantha at Saratoga_. As far as I could make
-out—and I say this in no lofty, condescending spirit—he was full of
-simple middle-class romance, middle-class humor, middle-class
-tenderness, and middle-class grossness—all of which I am very free to
-say I admire. After all, we cannot all be artists, statesmen, generals,
-thieves or financiers. Some of us, the large majority, have to be just
-plain everyday middle-class, and a very comfortable state it is under
-any decent form of government.
-
-But there is so very much more to be said of him, things which
-persistently lift him in my memory to a height far more appealing and
-important than hundreds of greater and surer fame. For my brother was a
-humorist of so tender and delicate a mold that to speak of him as a mere
-middle-class artist or middle-class thinker and composer, would be to do
-him a gross injustice and miss the entire significance and flavor of his
-being. His tenderness and sympathy, a very human appreciation of the
-weakness and errors as well as the toils and tribulations of most of us,
-was his most outstanding and engaging quality and gave him a very
-definite force and charm. Admitting that he had an intense, possibly an
-undue fondness for women (I have never been able to discover just where
-the dividing line is to be drawn in such matters), a frivolous,
-childish, horse-play sense of humor at times, still he had other
-qualities that were positively adorable. That sunny disposition, that
-vigorous, stout body and nimble mind, those smiling sweet blue eyes,
-that air of gayety and well-being that was with him nearly all the time,
-even at the most trying times! Life seemed to bubble in him. Hope sprang
-upward like a fountain. You felt in him a capacity to do (in his limited
-field), an ability to achieve, whether he was succeeding at the moment
-or not. Never having the least power to interpret anything in a high
-musical way, still he was always full of music of a tender, sometimes
-sad, sometimes gay kind, the ballad-maker of a nation. For myself, I was
-always fascinated by this skill of his, the lovable art that attempts to
-interpret sorrow and pleasure in terms of song, however humble. And on
-the stage, how, in a crude way, by mere smile and gesture, he could make
-an audience laugh! I have seen houses crowded to the ceiling with
-middle- or lower-class people, shop girls and boys, factory hands and
-the like, who tittered continuously at his every move. He seemed to
-radiate a kind of comforting sunshine and humor without a sharp edge or
-sting (satire was entirely beyond him), a kind of wilding asininity,
-your true clown in cap and bells, which caused even my morbid soul to
-chortle by the hour. Already he was a composer of a certain type of
-melodramatic and tearful yet land-sweeping songs (_The Letter That Never
-Came_, _The Pardon Came Too Late_, _I Believe It for My Mother Told Me
-So_, _The Bowery_). (Let those who wish to know him better read of him
-in _Twelve Men: My Brother Paul_.)
-
-Well, this was my brother Paul, the same whom I have described as stout,
-gross, sensual, and all of these qualities went hand-in-hand. I have no
-time here for more than the briefest glimpse, the faintest echo. I
-should like to write a book about him—the wonderful, the tender! But now
-he was coming to St. Louis, and in my youthful, vainglorious way I was
-determined to show him what I was. He should be introduced to Peter,
-Dick and Rodenberger, my cronies. I would have a feast in my room after
-the theater in his honor. I would give another, a supper at Faust’s,
-then the leading restaurant of St. Louis, of a gay Bohemian character,
-and invite Wandell, Dunlap, my managing editor (I can never think of his
-name), Bassford, the dramatic editor, and Peter, Dick and Rodenberger. I
-proposed to bring my love to his theater some afternoon or evening and
-introduce him to her.
-
-I hurried to the office of the _Globe_ to find Dick and Peter and tell
-them my news and plans. They were very much for whatever it was I wanted
-to do, and eager to meet Paul of course. Also, within the next
-twenty-four hours I had written to Miss W——, and told Wandell, Bassford,
-the managing editor and nearly everybody else. I dropped in at Faust’s
-to get an estimate on the kind of dinner I thought he would like, having
-the head-waiter plan it for me, and then eagerly awaited his arrival.
-
-Sunday morning came, and I called at the theater at about eleven, and
-found him on the stage of this old theater entirely surrounded by trunks
-and scenery. There was with him at the moment a very petite actress, the
-female star of the company, who, as I later learned, was one of his
-passing flames. He was stout as ever, and dressed in the most engaging
-Broadway fashion: a suit of good cloth and smart cut, a fur coat, a high
-hat and a gold-headed cane—in short, all the earmarks of prosperity and
-comfort. What a wonderful thing he and this stage world, even this world
-of claptrap melodrama, seemed to me at the time. I felt on the instant
-somehow as though I were better established in the world than I thought,
-to be thus connected with one who traveled all over the country. The
-whole world seemed to come closer because of him.
-
-“Hello!” he called, plainly astonished. “Where’d you come from?” and
-then seeing that I was better dressed and poised mentally than he had
-ever known me, he looked me over in an odd, slightly doubting way, as a
-stranger might, and then introduced me to his friend. Seeing him
-apparently pleased by my arrival and eager to talk with me, she quickly
-excused herself, saying she had to go on to her hotel; then he fell to
-asking me questions as to how I came to be here, how I was getting
-along. I am sure he was slightly puzzled and possibly disturbed by my
-sharp change from a shy, retiring boy to one who examined him with the
-chill and weighing eye of the newspaper man. To me, all of a sudden, he
-was not merely one whom I had to like because he was my brother or one
-who knew more about life than I—rather less, I now thought, quickly
-gathering his intellectual import, but because of his character solely.
-I might like or dislike that as I chose. He reminded me now a great deal
-of my mother, and I could not help recalling how loving and generous he
-had always been with her. Instantly he appealed to me as the simple,
-home-loving mother-boy that he was. It brought him so close to me that I
-was definitely and tenderly drawn to him. I could feel how fine and
-generous he really was. Even then although I doubt very much whether he
-liked me at first, finding me so brash and self-sufficient, still, so
-simple and communistic were the laws by which his charming mind worked,
-he at once accepted me as a part of the family and so of himself, a
-brother, one of mother’s boys. How often have I heard him say in regard
-to some immediate relative concerning whom an acrimonious debate might
-be going forward, “After all, he’s your brother, isn’t he?” or “She’s
-your sister,” as though mere consanguinity should dissolve all
-dissatisfactions and rages! Isn’t there something humanly sweet about
-that, in the face of all the cold, decisive conclusions of this world?
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIII
-
-
-WELL, such was my brother Paul and now he was here. Never before was he
-so much my dear brother as now. So generally admirable was he that I
-should have liked him quite as much had he been no relative. After a few
-moments of explanation as to my present state I offered to share my room
-with him for the period of his stay, but he declined. Then I offered to
-take him to lunch, but he was too hurried or engaged. He agreed to come
-to my room after the show, however, and offered me a box for myself and
-my new friends. So much faith did I have in the good sense of Peter,
-Dick and Rodenberger, their certainty of appreciating the charm of a man
-like Paul, that I brought them to the theater this same night, although
-I knew the show itself must be a mess. There was a scenic engine in this
-show, with a heroine lying across the rails! My dear brother was a comic
-switchman or engineer in this act, evoking roars of low-brow laughter by
-his antics and jokes.
-
-I shall never forget how my three friends took all this. Now that he was
-actually here they were good enough to take him into their affectionate
-consideration on my account, almost as though he belonged to them. He
-was “Dreiser’s brother Paul,” even “Dear old Paul” afterwards. Because
-working conditions favored us that night we all three descended on the
-Havlin together, sitting in the box while the show was in progress but
-spending all the intermissions in Paul’s dressingroom or on the back of
-the stage. Having overcome his first surprise and possibly dislike of my
-brash newspaper manner, he was now all smiles and plainly delighted with
-my friends, Rodenberger and Peter, especially the latter, appealing to
-him as characters not unlike himself, individuals whom he could
-understand. And in later years, when I was in New York, he was always
-asking after them and singing their praises. Dick also came in for a
-share of his warm affection, but in a slower way. He thought Dick
-amusing but queer, like a strange animal of some kind. On subsequent
-tours which took him to St. Louis he was always in touch with these
-three. Above all things, the waggish grotesqueries of McCord’s mind
-moved him immensely. Peter’s incisive personality and daring
-unconventionality seemed to fascinate Paul. “Wonderful boy, that,” he
-used to say to me, almost as though he were confiding a deep secret.
-“You’ll hear from him yet, mark my word. You can’t lose a kid like
-that.” And time proved quite plainly that he was right.
-
-During the play Paul sang one of his own compositions, _The Bowery_. It
-was an exceptional comic song, quite destructive of the good name of the
-Bowery forever, so much so that ten years later the merchants and
-property owners of that famous thoroughfare petitioned to have the name
-of the street changed, on the ground that the jibes involved in the song
-had destroyed its character as an honest business street forever. So
-much for the import of a silly ballad, and the passing song—writer. What
-are the really powerful things in this world anyhow?
-
-After the show we all adjourned to some scowsy music hall in the
-vicinity of this old theater, which Dick insisted by reason of its very
-wretchedness would amuse Paul, although I am sure it did not (he was
-never a satirist). And thence to my room, where I had the man who
-provided the midnight lunch for the workers at the _Globe_ spread a
-small feast. I had no piano, but Paul sang, and Peter gave an imitation
-of a street player who could manipulate at one and the same time a drum,
-mouth-organ and accordion. We had to beat my good brother on the back to
-keep him from choking.
-
-But it was during a week of breakfasts together that the first
-impressive conversations in regard to New York occurred, conversations
-that finally imbued me with the feeling that I should never be quite
-satisfied until I had reached there. Whether this was due to the fact
-that I now told him about my present state and ambitions or dreams and
-my somewhat remarkable success here, or that he was now coming to the
-place where he was able to suggest ways and means and at the same time
-indulge the somewhat paternalistic streak in himself, I do not know, but
-during the week he persisted in the most florid descriptions of New York
-and my duty to go there, its import to me intellectually and otherwise;
-and finally he convinced me that I should never reach my true
-intellectual stature unless I did. Other places might be very good, he
-insisted, they all had their value, but there was only one place where
-one might live in a keen and vigorous way, and that was New York. It was
-_the_ city, the only cosmopolitan city, a wonder-world in itself. It was
-great, wonderful, marvelous, the size, the color, the tang, the beauty.
-
-He went on to explain that the West was narrow, slow, not really alive.
-In New York one might always do, think and act more freely than anywhere
-else. The air itself was tonic. All really ambitious people, people who
-were destined to do or be anything, eventually drifted there—editors,
-newspaper men, actors, playwrights, song-writers, musicians,
-money-makers. He pointed to himself as a case in point, how he had
-ventured there, a gawky stripling doing a monologue, and how one Harry
-Minor, now of antique “Bowery Theater” fame, had seized on him, carried
-him along and forwarded him in every way. Some one was certain to do as
-much for me, for any one of ability. In passing, he now confided that
-only recently, from having been the star song-writer for a well-known
-New York music publisher (Willis Woodward), he had succeeded, with two
-other men, in organizing a music publishing company in which he had a
-third interest, and which was to publish his songs as well as those of
-others and was pledged to pay him an honest royalty (a thing which he
-insisted had not so far been done) as well as a full share as partner.
-In addition, under the friendly urging of an ambitious manager, he was
-now writing a play, to be known as “The Green Goods Man,” in which
-within a year or two he would appear as star. Also he reminded me that
-our sister E——, who had long since moved to New York (as early as 1885),
-was now living in West Fifteenth Street, where she would be glad to
-receive me. He was always in New York in the summer, living with this
-sister. “Why not come down there next summer when I am there off the
-road, and look it over?”
-
-As he talked, New York came nearer than ever it had before, and I could
-see the light of conviction and enthusiasm in his eye. It was plain, now
-that he had seen me again, that he wanted me to succeed. My friends had
-already sung my praises to him, although he himself could see that I was
-fast emerging from my too shy youth. St. Louis might be well enough, and
-Chicago—but New York! New York! One who had not seen it but who was
-eager to see the world could not help but sniff and prick up his ears.
-
-It was during this week that I gave the supper previously mentioned, and
-took my fiancée to meet my brother. I am satisfied that she liked him,
-or was rather amused by him, not understanding the least detail of his
-life or the character of the stage, while the sole comment that I could
-get out of him was that she was charming but that if he were in my place
-he would not think of marrying yet—a statement which had more light
-thrown on it years later by his persistent indifference to if not
-dislike of her, although he was always too courteous and mindful of
-others to express himself openly to me.... All of which is neither here
-nor there.
-
-My glorious supper turned out to be somewhat of a failure. Without
-knowing it, I was trying to harmonize elements which would not mix, at
-least not on such a short notice. The true Bohemianism and at the same
-time exclusive camaraderie of such youths as Peter, Dick and
-Rodenberger, and the rather stilted intellectual sufficiency of my
-editorial friends and superiors of the _Republic_, and the utter
-innocence and naïveté of Paul himself, proved too much. The dinner was
-stilted, formal, boring. My dear brother was as barren of intellectual
-interests as a child. No current problem such as might have interested
-these editorial men had the smallest interest for him or had ever been
-weighed by him. He could not discuss them, although I fancy if we had
-turned to prize-fighters or baseball heroes or comic characters in
-general he would have done well enough. Indeed his and their thoughts
-were so far apart that they found him all but dull. On the other hand,
-Peter, Dick and Rodenberger finding Paul delightful were not in the
-least interested in the others, looking upon them as executives and of
-no great import. Between these groups I was lost, not knowing how to
-harmonize them. Struck all at once by the ridiculousness and futility of
-my attempt, I could not talk gayly or naturally, and the more I tried to
-bring things round the worse they became. Finally I was on pins and
-needles, until the whole thing was saved by Wandell remembering early
-that he had something to do at the office. Seizing their opportunity,
-the managing editor and the dramatic editor went with him. The others
-and I now attempted to rally, but it was too late. A half-hour later we
-broke up, and I accompanied my brother to his hotel door. He made none
-but pleasant comments, but it was all such a fizzle that I could have
-wept.
-
-By Sunday morning he was gone again, and then my life settled into its
-old routine, apparently—only it did not. Now more than ever I felt
-myself to be a flitting figure in this interesting but humdrum local
-world, comfortable enough perhaps but with no significant future for me.
-The idea of New York as a great and glowing center had taken root.
-
-Some other things tended to move me from St. Louis. Only recently
-Michaelson, who had come to St. Louis to obtain my aid in securing a
-place, had been harping on the advantage of being a country editor, the
-ease of the life, its security. He was out of work and eager to leave
-the city. I think he was convinced that I was financially in a position
-to buy a half interest in some fairly successful country paper (which I
-was not), while he took the other half interest on time. Anyway I had
-been thinking of this as a way of getting out of the horrible grind of
-newspaperdom; only this mood of my brother seemed to reach down to the
-very depths of my being, depths hitherto not plumbed by anything, and
-put New York before me as a kind of ultimate certainty. I must go there
-at some time or other! meanwhile it might be a good thing for me to run
-a country paper. It might make me some money, give me station and
-confidence....
-
-At the same time, in the face of my growing estimate of myself, backed
-by the plaudits of such men as Peter and Dick (who were receiving twice
-my salary), to say nothing of the assurance of my brother that I had
-that mysterious thing, personality, I was always cramped for cash, and
-there was no sign on the part of my employers that I would ever be worth
-very much more to them. Toward the very last, as I have said, they
-changed, but then it was too late. I might write and write, page
-specials every week, assignments of all kinds, theatrical and sport
-reviews at times—and still, after all the evidence that I could be of
-exceptional service to them, twenty-two or -three dollars was all I
-could get. And dogging my heels was Michaelson, a cheerful, comforting
-soul in the main, but a burden. It has always been a matter of great
-interest to me to observe how certain types, parasites, barnacles,
-decide that they are to be aided or strengthened by another, and without
-a “by-your-leave” or any other form or courtesy to “edge in,” bring
-their trunk, and make themselves at home. Although I never really liked
-Michaelson very much, here he was, idling about, worrying about a job or
-his future, living in my room toward the last, eating his meals (at
-least his breakfasts) with me, and talking about the country, the charm,
-ease and profit of editing a country newspaper!
-
-Now, of all the people in this dusty world, I can imagine no one less
-fitted than myself, temperamentally or in any other way, to edit a
-country paper. The intellectual limitations of such a world! My own
-errant disposition and ideas, my contempt for and revolt against the
-standardized and clock-work motions and notions of the average man and
-woman! In six months I should have been arrested or drummed out by the
-preacher, the elders, and all the other worthies for miles around. Let
-sleeping dogs lie. The louder all conventionalists snore the better—for
-me anyhow.
-
-But here I was listening to Michaelson’s silly drivel and wondering if a
-country newspaper might not offer an escape from the humdrum and
-clamlike existence into which I seemed to have fallen. From December on
-this cheerful mediocrity, of about the warmth and intelligence of a
-bright collie, was telling me daily how wonderful I was and that I
-“ought to get out of here and into something which would really profit
-me and get me somewhere”—into the editorship of a country weekly!
-
-What jocular fates trifled with my sense of the reasonable or the
-ridiculous at this time I do not know, but I was interested—largely, I
-presume, because I was too wandering and nebulous to think of anything
-else to do. This cheerful soul finally ended by indicating a paper—the
-Weekly Something of Grand Rapids, Ohio (not Michigan), near his father’s
-farm (see pp. 247-255, _A Hoosier Holiday_), which, according to him,
-was just the thing and should offer a complete solution for all our
-material and social aspirations in this world. By way of this paper, or
-some other of its kind, one might rise to any height, political or
-social, state or national. I might become a state assemblyman from my
-county, a senator, a congressman, or United States senator! When you
-owned a country paper you were an independent person (imagine the editor
-of a country paper being independent of the conventions of his
-community!), not a poor harried scribe on a city paper, uncertain from
-week to week whether you were to be retained any longer. There were the
-delights of a country life, the sweet simplicity of a country town, away
-from the noise and streets and gaudy, shabby nothingness of a great
-city. ... As I listened to the picture of his native town, his father’s
-farm, the cows, pigs, chickens, how we could go there and live for a
-while, my imagination mounted to a heaven of unadulterated success,
-peace, joy. In my mind I had already rented or bought a small vine-clad
-cottage in Grand Rapids, Ohio, where, according to Michaelson, was a
-wonderful sparkling rapids to be seen glimmering in the moonlight, a
-railroad which went into Toledo within an hour, fertile farmland all
-about, both gas and oil recently struck, making the farmers prosperous
-and therefore in the mood for a first-class newspaper such as we would
-edit. Imagine sparkling rapids glimmering in the moonlight listed as a
-financial asset of a country paper!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIV
-
-
-MY thoughts being now turned, if vaguely, to the idea of rural life and
-editing a country newspaper, although I really did not believe that I
-could succeed at that, I talked and talked, to Michaelson, to my future
-wife, to Dick and Peter, in a roundabout, hinting way, developing all
-sorts of theories as to the possible future that awaited me. To buoy up
-my faith in myself, I tried to make Miss W—— feel that I was a personage
-and would do great things.... How nature would ever get on without total
-blindness, or at least immense credulity on the part of its creatures, I
-cannot guess. Certainly if women in their love period had any more sense
-than the men they would not be impressed with the boshy dreams of such
-swains as myself. Either they cannot help themselves or they must want
-to believe. Nature must want them to believe. How the woman who married
-me could have been impressed by my faith in myself at this period is
-beyond my reasoning, and yet she was impressed, or saw nothing better in
-store for her than myself.
-
-That she was so impressed, and that I, moved by her affection for me or
-my own desire to possess her, was impelled to do something to better my
-condition, was obvious. Hints thrown out at the _Republic_ office, to my
-sponsor Wandell in particular, that I might leave producing nothing, I
-decided sometime during January and February, 1893, to take up
-Michaelson’s proposition, although I did not see how, other than by
-gross luck, it could come to anything. Neither of us had any money to
-speak of, and yet we were planning to buy a country newspaper. For a few
-days before starting we debated this foolish matter and then I sent him
-to his home town to look over the field there and report, which he
-immediately did, writing most glowing accounts of an absolutely
-worthless country paper there, which he was positive we could secure for
-a song and turn into a paying proposition at once. I cannot say that I
-believed this, and yet I went because I felt the need of something
-different. And all the time the tug of that immense physical desire
-toward my beloved which, were there any such thing as sanity in life,
-might have been satisfied without any great blow to society, was holding
-me as by hooks of steel. It was this conflict between the need to go and
-the wish to stay that tortured me. Yet I went. I had the pain of
-separating from her in this mood, realizing that youth was slipping
-away, that in the uncertainty of all things there might never be a happy
-fruition to our love (and there was not). And yet I went.
-
-I bade her a final farewell the Sunday night before my departure. I
-hinted at all sorts of glorious achievements as well as all possible
-forms of failure. Lover-wise, I was tremendously impressed with the
-sterling worth and connections of this girl, the homely, conventional
-and prosaic surroundings. My unfitness for fulfilling her dreams
-tortured me. As I could plainly see, she was for life as it had been
-lived by billions, by those who interpret it as a matter of duty,
-simplicity, care and thrift. I think she saw before her a modest home in
-which would be children, enough money to clothe them decently, enough
-money to entertain a few friends, and eventually to die and be buried
-respectably. On the other hand, I was little more than a pulsing force,
-with no convictions, no definite theories or plans. In my sky the latest
-cloud of thought or plan was the great thing. Not I but destiny, over
-which I had no control, had me in hand. I felt, or thought I felt, the
-greatest love ... while within me was a voice which said: “What a liar!
-What a pretender! You will satisfy yourself, make your own way as best
-you can. Each new day will be a clean slate for you, no least picture of
-the past thereon—none, at least, which might not be quickly wiped away.
-Any beautiful woman would satisfy you.” Still I suffered torture for her
-and myself, and left the next day, lacerated by the postponement, the
-defeated desire for happiness in love.
-
-My attitude on leaving the _Republic_ was one of complete indifference,
-coupled with a kind of satisfaction at the last moment that, after
-having seemed previously totally indifferent to my worth, the city
-editor, the managing editor, and even the publisher, seemed suddenly to
-feel that if I could be induced to stay I might prove of greater value
-to them than thus far I had—from a cash point of view. And so they made
-a hearty if belated effort to detain me. Indeed on my very sudden
-announcement only a few days before my departure that I was going, my
-city editor expressed great regret, asked me not to act hastily, told me
-he proposed to speak to the editor-in-chief. But this did not interest
-me any more. I was down on the _Republic_ for the way it had treated me.
-Why hadn’t they done something for me months ago? That afternoon as I
-was leaving the building on an assignment, the managing editor caught me
-and wanted to know of my plans, said if I would stay he believed that
-soon a better place in the editorial department could be made for me.
-Having already written Michaelson that I would soon join him, however, I
-now felt it impossible not to leave. The truth is I really wanted to go
-and now that I had brought myself to this point, I did not want to
-retreat. Besides, there was a satisfaction in refusing these belated
-courtesies. The editor said that if I were really going the publisher
-would be glad to give me a general letter of introduction which might
-stand me in good stead in other cities. True enough, on the Monday on
-which I left, having gone to the office to say farewell, I was met by
-the publisher, who handed me a letter of introduction. It was of the “To
-whom it might concern” variety and related my labors and capacities in
-no vague words. I might have used this letter to advantage in many a
-strait, but never did. Rather, by some queer inversion of thought, I
-concluded that it was somewhat above my capacity, said more for me than
-I deserved, and might secure for me some place which I could not fill.
-For over a year I carried it about in my pocket, often when I was
-without a job and with only a few dollars in my pockets, and still I did
-not use it. Why, I have often wondered since. Little as I should
-understand such a thing in another, so little do I now understand this
-in myself.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LV
-
-
-THAT evening at seven I carried my bags down to the great Union Station,
-feeling that I was a failure. Other men had money; they need not thus go
-jerking about the world seeking a career. So many youths and maids had
-all that was needful to their case and comfort arranged from the
-beginning. They did not need to fret about the making of a bare living.
-The ugly favoritism of life which piles comforts in the laps of some
-while snatching the smallest crumb of satisfaction from the lips of
-others was never more apparent to me. I was in a black despair, and made
-short work of getting into my berth. For a long time I stared at dark
-fields flashing by, punctuated by lamps in scattered cottages, the
-gloomy and lonely little towns of Illinois and Indiana. Then I slept.
-
-I was aroused by a ray of sunshine in my eyes. I lifted one of my blinds
-and saw the cornfields of Northern Ohio, the brown stumps of last year’s
-crop protruding through the snow. Commonplace little towns, the small
-brown or red railway stations with the adjoining cattle-runs, and tall
-gas-well derricks protruding out of dirty, snowless soil, made me
-realize that I was approaching the end of my journey. I found that I had
-ample time to shave, dress and breakfast in the adjoining buffet—a thing
-I proposed to do if it proved the last pretentious, liberal, courageous
-deed of my life.
-
-For I was not too well provided with cash, and was I not leaving
-civilization? Though I had but a hundred dollars, might not my state
-soon be much worse? I have often smiled since over the awe in which I
-then held the Pullman car, its porter, conductor, and all that went with
-it. To my inexperienced soul it seemed to be the acme of elegance and
-grandeur. Could life offer anything more than the privilege of riding
-about the world in these mobile palaces? And here was I this sunny
-winter morning with enough money to indulge in a breakfast in one of
-these grand ambling chambers, though if I kept up this reckless pace
-there was no telling where I should end.
-
-I selected a table adjoining one at which sat two drummers who talked of
-journeys far and wide, of large sales of binders and reapers and the
-condition of trade. They seemed to me to be among the most fortunate of
-men, high up in the world as positions go, able to steer straight and
-profitable courses for themselves. Because they had half a broiled
-spring chicken, I had one, and coffee and rolls and French fried
-potatoes, as did they, feeling all the while that I was indulging in
-limitless grandeur. At one station at which the train stopped some
-poor-looking farmer boys in jeans and “galluses” and wrinkled hats
-looking up at me with interest as I ate, I stared down at them, hoping
-that I should be taken for a millionaire to whom this was little more
-than a wearisome commonplace. I felt fully capable of playing the part
-and so gave the boys a cold and repressive glance, as much as to say,
-Behold! I assured myself that the way to establish my true worth was to
-make every one else feel small by comparison.
-
-The town of Grand Rapids lay in the extreme northwestern portion of Ohio
-on the Maumee, a little stream which begins somewhere west of Fort
-Wayne, Indiana, and runs northeast to Toledo, emptying into Lake Erie.
-The town was traversed by this one railroad, which began at St. Louis
-and ended at Toledo, and consisted of a number of small frame houses and
-stores, with a few brick structures of one and two stories. I had not
-arranged with Michaelson that he should meet me at any given time,
-having been uncertain as to the time of my departure from St. Louis, and
-so I had to look him up. As I stepped down at the little depot. I noted
-the small houses with snow-covered yards, the bare trees and the glimpse
-of rolling country which I caught through the open spaces between. There
-was the river, wide and shallow, flowing directly through the heart of
-the town and tumbling rapidly and picturesquely over gray stones. I was
-far more concerned as to whether I should sometime be able to write a
-poem or a story about this river than I was to know if a local weekly
-could subsist here. And after the hurry and bustle of St. Louis, the
-town did not impress me. I felt now that I had made a dreadful mistake
-and wondered why I had been so foolish as to give up the opportunities
-suggested by my friends on the _Republic_, and my sweetheart, when I
-might have remained and married her under the new editorial conditions
-proffered me.
-
-Yet I walked on to the main corner and inquired where my friend lived,
-then out a country road indicated to me as leading toward his home. I
-found an old rambling frame house, facing the Maumee River, with a
-lean-to and kitchen and springhouse, corncribs, a barn twice the size of
-the house, and smaller buildings, all resting comfortably on a rise of
-ground. Apple and pear trees surrounded it, now leafless in the wind. A
-curl of smoke rose from the lean-to and told me where the cookstove was.
-As I entered the front gate I felt the joy of a country home. It told of
-simple and plain things, food, warmth, comfort, minds content with
-routine. Michaelson appeared at the door and greeted me most
-enthusiastically. He introduced me to his family with the exuberant
-youthfulness of a schoolboy.
-
-I met the father, a little old dried-up quizzical man, who looked at me
-over his glasses in a wondering way and rubbed his mouth with the back
-of his hand. I met the mother, small, wizened, middle-aged, looking as
-though she had gone through a thousand worries. Then I met Michaelson’s
-wife, a dark, chubby, brown-skinned woman, stocky and not
-over-intelligent. They asked me to make myself at home, listened to an
-account of my experiences in getting there, and then Michaelson
-volunteered to show me about the place.
-
-My mind revolted at the thought of such a humdrum life as this for
-myself, though I was constantly touched by its charm—for others. I
-followed the elder Mrs. Michaelson into the lean-to and watched her
-cook, went with Michaelson to the barn to look over the live stock and
-returned to talk with Michaelson senior about the prospects of the
-Republican party in Ohio. He was much interested in a man named
-McKinley, a politician of Ohio, who had been a congressman for years and
-who was now being talked of as the next candidate of the Republican
-party for the Presidency. I had scarcely heard of him up to that time,
-but I gave my host my opinion, such as it was. We sat about the big drum
-sheet-iron stove, heated by natural gas, then but newly discovered and
-piped in that region. After dinner I proposed to my friend that we go
-into the village and inspect the printing plant which he had said was
-for sale. We walked along the road discussing the possibilities, and it
-seemed to me as we walked that he was not as enthusiastic as he had been
-in St. Louis.
-
-“I’ve been looking at this fellow’s plant,” he said vaguely, “and I
-don’t know whether I want to give him two hundred down for it. He hasn’t
-got anything. That old press he has is in pretty bad shape, and his type
-is all worn down.”
-
-“Can we get it for two hundred?” I asked innocently.
-
-“Sure, two hundred down. I wouldn’t think of giving him more. All he
-wants now is enough to get out of here, some one to take it off his
-hands. He can’t run it.”
-
-We went to the office of the _Herald_, a long dark loft over a feed
-store, and found there a press and some stands of type, and a table
-before the two front windows, which looked west. The place was unlighted
-except by these windows and two in the back, and contained no provision
-for artificial light except two or three tin kerosene lamps. Slazey, the
-youthful editor, was not in. We walked about and examined the contents
-of the room, all run down. The town was small and slow, and even an
-idealist could see that there was small room here for a career.
-
-Presently the proprietor returned, and I saw a sad specimen of the
-country editor of those days: sleepy, sickly-looking, with a spare,
-gaunt face and a head which had the appearance of an egg with the point
-turned to the back. His hair was long and straight and thin, the back
-part of it growing down over his dusty coat-collar. He wore a pair of
-baggy trousers of no shape or distinguishable color, and his coat and
-waistcoat were greasy. He extended a damp, indifferent hand to me.
-
-“I hear you want to sell out,” I said.
-
-“Yes, I’m willing to sell,” he replied sadly.
-
-“Do you mind showing us what you have here?”
-
-He went about mechanically, and pointed out the press and type and some
-paper he had on hand.
-
-“Let me see that list of subscribers you showed me the other day,” said
-Michaelson, who now seemed eager to convince himself that there might be
-something in this affair.
-
-Slazey brought it out from an old drawer and together we examined it,
-spreading it out on the dusty table and looking at the names checked off
-as paid. There were not more than a thousand. Some of them had another
-mark beside the check, and this excited my curiosity.
-
-“What’s this cross here for?”
-
-“That’s the one that’s paid for this year.”
-
-“Isn’t this this year’s list?”
-
-“No. I just thought I’d check up the new payments on the old list. I
-haven’t had time to make out a new one.”
-
-Our faces fell. The names checked with a cross did not aggregate five
-hundred.
-
-“I’ll tell you what we’d better do,” observed Michaelson heavily,
-probably feeling that I had become suddenly depressed. “Suppose we go
-around and see some of the merchants and ask them if they’ll support us
-with advertising?”
-
-I agreed, feeling all the while that the whole venture was ridiculous,
-and together we went about among the silent stores, talking with
-conservative men, who represented all that was discouraging and
-wearisome in life. Here they stood all day long calculating in pennies
-and dimes, whereas the city merchant counted in hundreds and thousands.
-It was dispiriting. Think of living in a place like this, among such
-people!
-
-“I might give a good paper my support,” said one, a long, lean,
-sanctimonious man who looked as though he had narrow notions and a firm
-determination to rule in his small world. “But it’s mighty hard to make
-a paper that would suit this community. We’re religious and hard-working
-here, and we like the things that interest religious and hard-working
-people. Course if it was run right it might pay pretty well, but I dunno
-as ’twould neither. You never can tell.”
-
-I saw that he would be one hard customer to deal with anyhow. If there
-were many like him—— The poor, thin-blooded, calculating world which he
-represented frightened me.
-
-“How much advertising do you think you could give to a paper that was
-‘run’ right?”
-
-“Well, that depends,” he said gloomily and disinterestedly. “I’d have to
-see how it was run first. Some weeks I might give more than others.”
-
-Michaelson nudged me and we left.
-
-“I forgot to tell you,” he said, “that he’s a Baptist and a Republican.
-He’d expect you to run it in favor of those institutions if you got his
-support. But all the men around town won’t feel that way.”
-
-In the dusty back room of a drugstore we found a chemist who did not
-know whether a weekly newspaper was of any value to him, and could not
-contribute more than fifty cents a week in advertising if it were. The
-proprietor of the village hotel, a thick-set, red-faced man with the air
-of a country evil-doer, said that he did not see that a local newspaper
-was particularly valuable to him. He might advertise, but it would be
-more as a favor than anything else.
-
-I began to sum up the difficulties of our position. We should be
-handicapped, to begin with, by a wretched printing outfit. We should be
-beholden to a company of small, lean-living, narrow men who would take
-offense at the least show of individuality and cut us off entirely from
-support. We should have to busy ourselves gathering trivial items of
-news, dunning hard-working, indifferent farmers for small amounts of
-money, and reduce all our thoughts and ambitions to the measure of this
-narrow world. I saw myself dying by inches. It gave me the creeps. Youth
-and hope were calling.
-
-“I don’t see this,” I said to myself. “It’s horrible. I should die.” To
-Michaelson I said: “Suppose we give up our canvassing for today?”
-
-“We might as well,” he replied. “There’s a paper over at Bowling Green
-for sale, and it’s a better paper. We might go over in a day or two and
-look at it. We might as well go home now.”
-
-I agreed, and we turned down a street that led to the road, meditating.
-I knew nothing of my destiny, but I knew that it had little to do with
-this. These great wide fields, many of them already sown to wheat under
-the snow, these hundreds of oil or gas-well derricks promising a new
-source of profit to many, the cleanly farmhouses and neatly divided
-farms all appealed to me, but this world was not for me. I was thinking
-of something different, richer, more poignant, less worthy possibly,
-more terrible, more fruitful for the moods and the emotions. What could
-these bleak fields offer? I thought of St. Louis, the crowded streets,
-the vital offices of the great papers, their thrashing presses, the
-hotels, the theaters, the trains. What, bury myself here? I thought of
-the East—New York possibly, at least Cleveland, Buffalo, Pittsburgh,
-Philadelphia.
-
-“I like the country, but it’s a hard place to make a living, isn’t it?”
-I finally said.
-
-“Yes,” he assented gloomily. “I’ve never been able to get anything out
-of it—but I haven’t done very well in the city either.”
-
-I sensed the mood of an easily defeated man.
-
-“I’m so used to the noise and bustle of the streets that these fields
-seem lonely,” I said.
-
-“Yes, but you might get over that in time, don’t you think?”
-
-Never, I thought, but did not say so; instead I said: “That’s a
-beautiful sky, isn’t it?” and he looked blankly to where a touch of
-purple was creeping into the background of red and gold.
-
-We reached the house at dusk. Going through the gate I said: “I don’t
-see how I can go into this with you, Mich. There isn’t enough in it.”
-
-“Well, don’t worry about it any more tonight. I’d rather the girl
-wouldn’t know. We’ll talk it over in the morning.”
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVI
-
-
-DISHEARTENING as this village and country life might seem as a permanent
-field of endeavor, it was pleasing enough as a spectacle or as the scene
-of a vacation. Although it was late February when I came and there was
-snow on the ground, a warm wind came in a day or two and drove most of
-it away. A full moon rose every night in the east and there was a sense
-of approaching Spring. Before the charming old farmhouse flowed the
-wonderful little Maumee River, dimpling over stones and spreading out
-wide, as though it wished to appear much more than it was. There is
-madness in moonlight, and there is madness in that chemical compound
-which is youth. Here in this simple farming region, once free of the
-thought that by any chance I might be compelled to remain here, I felt
-strangely renewed and free as a bird, though at the same time there was
-an undercurrent of sadness, not only for myself but for life itself, the
-lapse and decay of things, the impossibility of tasting or knowing more
-than a fraction of the glories and pleasures that are everywhere
-outspread. Although I had not had a vacation in years, I was eager to be
-at work. The greatness of life, its possibilities, the astounding dreams
-of supremacy which might come true, were calling to me. I wanted to be
-on, to find what life had in store for me; and yet I wanted to stay here
-for a while.
-
-Mich’s father, as well as his mother and wife, interested me intensely,
-for they were simple, industrious, believing. They were good Baptists or
-Methodists or Presbyterians. The grizzled little old farmer who had
-built up this place or inherited a part and added the rest, was exactly
-like all the other farmers I have ever known: genial, kindly, fairly
-tolerant, curious as to the wonders of the world without, full of a
-great faith in America and its destiny, sure that it is the greatest
-country in the world, and that there has never been one other like it.
-That first night at supper, and the next morning at breakfast, and all
-my other days here, the old man questioned me as to life, its ways, my
-beliefs or theories, and I am positive that he was delighted to have me
-there, for it was winter and he had little to do besides read his paper.
-
-The newspaper of largest circulation in this region was the _Blade_ of
-Toledo, which he read assiduously. The mother and daughter-in-law did
-most of the work. The mother was forever busy cooking breakfast or
-dinner, cleaning the rooms, milking, making butter and cheese, gathering
-eggs from a nearby hennery. Her large cellar was stocked with jellies,
-preserved fruit, apples, potatoes and other vegetables. There was an
-ample store of bacon, salt pork and beef. I found that no fresh meat
-other than chicken was served, but the meals were delightful and
-plentiful, delicious biscuits and jelly, fresh butter, eggs, ham, bacon,
-salt pork or cured beef, and the rarely absent fried chicken, as well as
-some rabbits which Mich shot. During my stay he did nothing but idle
-about the barn, practicing on a cornet which he said had saved his lungs
-at a time when he was threatened with consumption. But his playing! I
-wonder the cure did not prove fatal. I noted the intense interest of
-Mich’s father in what the discovery of gas in this region would do for
-it. He was almost certain that all small towns hereabout would now
-become prosperous manufacturing centers. There would be work for all.
-Wages would go up. Many people would soon come here and become rich.
-This of course never came true at all. The flow of natural gas soon gave
-out and the oil strikes were not even rivals of some nearby fields.
-
-All this talk was alien to my thoughts. I could not fix my interest on
-trade and what it held in store for anybody. I knew it must be so and
-that America was destined to grow materially, but somehow the thing did
-not interest me. My thoughts leaped to the artistic spectacle such
-material prosperity might subsequently present, not to the purely
-material phase of the prosperity itself. Indeed I could never think of
-the work being done in any factory or institution without passing from
-that work to the lives behind it, the crowds of commonplace workers, the
-great streets which they filled, the bare homes, and the separate and
-distinct dramas of their individual lives. I was tremendously interested
-by the rise of various captains of industry then already bestriding
-America, their opportunities and pleasures, the ease and skill with
-which they organized “trusts” and combinations, their manipulations of
-the great railroads, oil and coal fields, their control of the telegraph
-and the telephone, their sharp and watchful domination of American
-politics; but only as drama. Grover Cleveland was President, and his
-every deed was paining the Republicans quite as much as it was
-gratifying the Democrats, but I could already see that the lot of the
-underdog varied little with the much-heralded changes of
-administration—and it was the underdog that always interested me more
-than the upper one, his needs, his woes, his simplicities. Here, as
-elsewhere, I could see by talking to Mich and his father, men became
-vastly excited, paraded and all but wept over the results of one
-election or another, city, State or national, but when all was said and
-done and America had been “saved,” or the Constitution “defended” or
-“wrecked,” the condition of the average man, myself included, was about
-as it had been before.
-
-The few days I spent here represented an interlude between an old and a
-new life. I have always felt that in leaving St. Louis I put my youth
-behind me; that which followed was both sobering and broadening. But on
-this farm, beside this charming river, I paused for a few days and took
-stock of my life thus far, and it certainly seemed pointless and
-unpromising. I thought constantly and desperately of my future, the
-uncertainty of it, and yet all the while my eye was fixed not upon any
-really practical solution for me but rather upon the pleasures and
-luxuries of life as enjoyed by others, the fine houses, the fine
-clothes, the privilege of traveling, of sharing in the amusements of the
-rich and the clever. Here I was, at the foot of the ladder, with not the
-least skill for making money, compelled to make my way upward as best I
-might, and yet thinking in terms of millions always. However much I
-might earn in journalism, I had sense enough to know that it would yield
-me little or nothing. After some thought, I decided that I would move on
-to some other city, where I would get into the newspaper business for a
-while and then see what I should see.
-
-Indeed I never saw Mich but once again.
-
-But Toledo. This was my first free and unaided flight into the unknown.
-I found here a city far more agreeable than St. Louis, which, being much
-greater in size, had districts which were positively appalling for their
-poverty and vice; whereas here was a city of not quite 100,000, as clean
-and fresh as any city could be. I recall being struck with clean asphalt
-pavements, a canal or waterway in which many lake vessels were riding,
-and houses and stores, frame for the most part, which seemed clean if
-not quite new. The first papers I bought, the _Blade_ and the _Bee_,
-were full of the usual American small city bluster together with columns
-and columns about American politics and business.
-
-Before seeking work I decided to investigate the town. I was intensely
-interested in America and its cities, and wondered, in spite of my
-interest in New York, which I would select for my permanent
-resting-place. When was I to have a home of my own? Would it be as
-pleasing as one of these many which here and elsewhere I saw in quiet
-rows shaded by trees, many of them with spacious lawns and suggestive of
-that security and comfort so dear to the mollusc-like human heart? For,
-after security, nothing seems to be so important or so desirable to the
-human organism as rest, or at least ease. The one thing that the life
-force seems to desire to escape is work, or at any rate strife. One
-would think that man had been invented against his will by some malign
-power and was being harried along ways and to tasks against which his
-soul revolted and to which his strength was not equal.
-
-As I walked about the streets of this city my soul panted for the
-seeming comfort and luxury of them. The well-kept lawns, the shuttered
-and laced windows! The wonder of evening fires in winter! The open, cool
-and shadowy doors in summer! Swings and hammocks on lawns and porches!
-The luxury of the book and rocker! Somehow in the stress of my disturbed
-youth I had missed most of this.
-
-After a day of looking about the city I applied to the city editor of
-the leading morning paper, and encountered one of the intellectual
-experiences of my life. At the city editorial desk in a small and not
-too comfortable room sat a small cherubic individual, with a complexion
-of milk and cream, light brown hair and a serene blue eye, who looked me
-over quizzically, as much as to say: “Look what the latest breeze has
-wafted in.” His attitude was neither antagonistic nor welcoming. He was
-so assured that I half-detected on sight the speculative thinker and
-dreamer. Yet in the rôle of city editor in a mid-West manufacturing town
-one must have an air if not the substance of commercial understanding
-and ability, and so my young city editor seemed to breathe a
-determination to be very executive and forceful.
-
-“You’re a St. Louis newspaper man, eh?” he said, eyeing me casually.
-“Never worked in a town of this size, though? Well, the conditions are
-very different. We pay much attention to small items—make a good deal
-out of nothing,” and he smiled. “But there isn’t a thing I can see now,
-nothing beyond a three- or four-day job which you wouldn’t want, I’m
-sure.”
-
-“How do you know I wouldn’t?”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you about it. There’s a street-car strike on and I
-could use a man who had nerve enough to ride around on the cars the
-company is attempting to run and report how things are. But I’ll tell
-you frankly: it’s dangerous. You may be shot or hit with a brick.”
-
-I indicated my willingness to undertake this and he looked at me in a
-mock serious and yet approving way. He took me on and I went about the
-city on one car-line and another, studying the strange streets,
-expecting and fearing every moment that a brick might be shied at me
-through the window or that a gang of irate workingmen would board the
-car and beat me up. But nothing happened, not a single threatening
-workman anywhere; I so reported and was told to write it up and make as
-much of the “story” as possible. Without knowing anything of the merits
-of the case, my sympathies were all with the workingmen. I had seen
-enough of strikes, and of poverty, and of the quarrels between the
-money-lords and the poor, to be all on one side. As was the custom in
-all newspaper offices with which I ever had anything to do, where labor
-and capital were concerned I was told to be neutral and not antagonize
-either side. I wrote my “story” and it was published in the first
-edition. Then, at the order of this same youth, I visited some charity
-bazaar, where all the important paintings owned in the city were being
-exhibited, and wrote an account which was headed, “As in Old Toledo,”
-with all the silly chaff about “gallants and ladies gay,” after which I
-spread my feet under a desk, being interested to talk more with the
-smiling if indifferent youth who had employed me.
-
-The opportunity soon came, for apparently he was as much interested in
-me as I in him. He came over after I had submitted my second bit of copy
-and announced that it was entirely satisfactory. A man from the
-composing-room entered and commented on the fact that James Whitcomb
-Riley and Eugene Field were billed to lecture in the city soon. I
-remarked that I had once seen Field in the office of the News in
-Chicago, which brought out the fact that my city editor had once worked
-in Chicago, had been a member of the Whitechapel Club, knew Field,
-Finley Peter Dunne, Brand Whitlock, Ben King and others. At mention of
-the magic name of Ben King, author of “If I Should Die Tonight” and
-“Jane Jones,” the atmosphere of Chicago of the time of the Whitechapel
-Club and Eugene Field and Ben King returned. At once we fell into a
-varied and gay exchange of intimacies.
-
-It resulted in an enduring and yet stormy and disillusioning friendship.
-If he had been a girl I would have married him, of course. It would have
-been inevitable. We were intellectual affinities. Our dreams were
-practically identical, though we approached them from different angles.
-He was the sentimentalist in thought, though the realist in action; I
-was the realist in thought and the sentimentalist in action. He took me
-out to lunch, and we stayed nearly three hours. He took me to dinner,
-and to do so was compelled to call up his wife and say he had to stay in
-town. He had dreams of becoming a poet and novelist, I of becoming a
-playwright. Before the second day had gone he had shown me a book of
-fairy-tales and some poems. I became enamored of him, the victim of a
-delightful illusion.
-
-Because he liked me he wanted me to stay on. There was no immediate
-place, he said, but one might open at any time. Having very little
-money, I could not see my way to that, but I did try to get a place on
-the rival paper. That failing, he suggested that although I wander on
-toward Cleveland and Buffalo I stand ready to come back if he
-telegraphed for me. Meanwhile we reveled in that wonderful possession,
-intellectual affection. I thought him wonderful, perfect, great; he
-thought—well, I have heard him tell in after years what he thought. Even
-now at times he fixes me with hungry, welcoming eyes.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVII
-
-
-WHETHER I should go East or West suddenly became a question with me. I
-had the feeling that I might do better in Detroit or some point west of
-Chicago, only the nearness of such cities as Cleveland, Buffalo,
-Pittsburgh and those farther east deterred me; the cost of reaching them
-was small, and all the while I should be moving toward my brother in New
-York. And so, after making inquiry at the office of the _Bee_ for a
-possible opening and finding none, and learning from several newspaper
-men that Detroit was not considered a live journalistic town, I decided
-to travel eastward, and bought a ticket to Cleveland.
-
-Riding in sight of the tumbling waves of Lake Erie, I was taken back in
-thought to my days in Chicago and all those who had already dropped out
-of my life forever. What a queer, haphazard, disconnected thing this
-living was! Where should I be tomorrow, what doing—the next year—the
-year after that? Should I ever have any money, any standing, any
-friends? So I tortured myself. Arriving in Cleveland at the close of a
-smoky gray afternoon, I left my bag at the station and sought a room,
-then walked out to see what I should see. I knew no one. Not a friend
-anywhere within five hundred miles. My sole resource my little skill as
-a newspaper worker. Buying the afternoon and morning papers, I examined
-them with care, copying down their editorial room addresses, then betook
-me to a small beanery for food.
-
-The next morning I was up early, determined to see as much as I could,
-to visit the offices of the afternoon papers before noon, then to look
-in upon the city editors of the two or three morning papers. The latter
-proved not very friendly and there appeared to be no opening anywhere.
-But I determined to remain here for a few days studying the city as a
-city and visiting the same editors each day or as often as they would
-endure me. If nothing came of it within a week, and no telegram came
-from my friend H—— in Toledo calling me back, I proposed to move on; to
-which city I had not as yet made up my mind.
-
-The thing that interested me most about Cleveland then was that it was
-so raw, dark, dirty, smoky, and yet possessed of one thing: force,
-raucous, clattering, semi-intelligent force. America was then so new
-industrially, in the furnace stage of its existence. Everything was in
-the making: fortunes, art, social and commercial life. The most
-impressive things were its rich men, their homes, factories, clubs,
-office buildings and institutions of commerce and pleasure generally;
-and this was as true of Cleveland as of any other city in America.
-
-Indeed the thing which held my attention, after I had been in Cleveland
-a day or two and had established myself in a somber room in a somber
-neighborhood once occupied by the very rich, were those great and new
-residences in Euclid Avenue, with wide lawns and iron or stone statues
-of stags and dogs and deer, which were occupied by such rich men as John
-D. Rockefeller, Tom Johnson, and Henry M. Flagler. Rockefeller only a
-year or two before had given millions to revivify the almost defunct
-University of Chicago, then a small Baptist college, and was accordingly
-being hailed as one of the richest men of America. He and his satellites
-and confreres were already casting a luster over Cleveland. They were
-all living here in Euclid Avenue, and I was interested to look up their
-homes, envying them their wealth of course and wishing that I were
-famous or a member of a wealthy family, and that I might some day meet
-one of the beautiful girls I thought must be here and have her fall in
-love with and make me rich. Physically or artistically or materially,
-there was nothing to see but business: a few large hotels, like those of
-every American city, and these few great houses. Add a few theaters and
-commonplace churches. All American cities and all the inhabitants were
-busy with but one thing: commerce. They ate, drank and slept trade. In
-my wanderings I found a huge steel works and a world of low, smoky,
-pathetic little hovels about it. Although I was not as yet given to
-reasoning about the profound delusion of equality under democracy, this
-evidence of the little brain toiling for the big one struck me with
-great force and produced a good deal of speculative thought later on.
-
-The paper with which I was eventually connected was the Cleveland
-_Leader_, which represented all that was conservative in the local life.
-Wandering into its office on the second or third day of my stay, I was
-met at the desk of the city editor by a small, boyish-looking person of
-a ferret-like countenance, who wanted to know what I was after. I told
-him, and he said there was nothing, but on hearing of the papers with
-which I had been connected and the nature of the work I had done he
-suggested that possibly I might be able to do something for the Sunday
-edition. The Sunday editor proved to be a tall, melancholy man with sad
-eyes, a sallow face, sunken cheeks, narrow shoulders and a general air
-of weariness and depression.
-
-“What is it, now, you want?” he asked slowly, looking up from his musty
-roll-top desk.
-
-“Your city editor suggested that possibly you might have some Sunday
-work for me to do. I’ve had experience in this line in Chicago and St.
-Louis.”
-
-“Yes,” he said not asking me to sit down. “Well, now, what do you think
-you could write about?”
-
-This was a poser. Being new to the city I had not thought of any
-particular thing, and could not at this moment. I told him this.
-
-“There’s one thing you might write about if you could. Did you ever hear
-of a new-style grain-boat they are putting on the Lakes called——”
-
-“Turtle-back?” I interrupted.
-
-“Turtle-back?” went on the editor indifferently. “Well, there’s one here
-now in the harbor. It’s the first one to come here. Do you think you
-could get up something on that?”
-
-“I’m sure I could. I’d like to try. Do you use pictures?”
-
-“You might get a photo or two; we could have drawings made from them.”
-
-I started for the door, eager to be about this, when he said: “We don’t
-pay very much: three dollars a column.”
-
-That was discouraging, but I was filled with the joy of doing something.
-On my way out I stopped at the business office and bought a copy of the
-last Sunday issue, which proved to be a poor makeshift composed of a
-half dozen articles on local enterprises and illustrated with a few
-crude drawings. I read one or two of them, and then looked up my
-waterfront boat. I found it tied up at a dock adjoining an immense
-railroad yard and near an imposing grain elevator. Finding nobody about,
-I nosed out the bookkeeper of the grain elevator, who told me that the
-captain of the boat had gone to the company’s local office in a nearby
-street. I hastened to the place, and there found a bluff old lake
-captain in blue, short, stout, ruddy, coarse, who volunteered, almost
-with a “Heigh!” and a “Ho!” to tell me something about it.
-
-“I think I ought to know a little something about ’em—I sailed the first
-one that was ever sailed out of the port of Chicago.”
-
-I listened with open ears. I caught a disjointed story of plans and
-specifications, Sault Ste. Marie, the pine woods of Northern Michigan,
-the vast grain business of Chicago and other lake ports, early
-navigation on the lakes, the theory of a bilge keel and a turtle-back
-top, and all strung together with numerous “y’sees” and “so nows.” I
-made notes, on backs of envelopes, scraps of paper, and finally on a pad
-furnished me by the generous bookkeeper. I carried my notes back to the
-paper.
-
-The Sunday editor was out. I waited patiently until half-past four, and
-then, the light fading, gave up the idea of going with a photographer to
-the boat. I went to a faded green baize-covered table and began to write
-my story. I had no sooner done a paragraph or two than the Sunday editor
-returned, bringing with him an atmosphere of lassitude and indifference.
-I went to him to explain what I had done.
-
-“Well, write it up, write it up. We’ll see,” and he turned away to his
-papers.
-
-I labored hard at my story, and by seven or eight o’clock had ground out
-two thousand words of description which had more of the bluff old
-captain in it than of the boat. The Sunday editor took it when I was
-through, and shoved it into a pigeon-hole, telling me to call in a day
-or two and he would let me know. I thought this strange. It seemed to me
-that if I were working for a Sunday paper I should work every day. I
-called the next day, but Mr. Loomis had not read it. The next day he
-said the story was well enough written, though very long. “You don’t
-want to write so loosely. Stick to your facts closer.”
-
-This day I suggested a subject of my own, “the beauty of some of the new
-suburbs,” but he frowned at this as offering a lot of free advertising
-to real estate men who ought to be made to pay. Then I proposed an
-article on the magnificence of Euclid Avenue, which was turned down as
-old. I then spoke of a great steel works which was but then coming into
-the city, but as this offered great opportunity to all the papers he
-thought poorly of it. He compromised a day or two later by allowing me
-to write up a chicken-farm which lay outside the city.
-
-Of course this made a poor showing for me at the cashier’s desk. At the
-end of the second week I was allowed to put in a bill for seven dollars
-and a half. I had not realized that I was wasting so much time. I
-appealed to all the editors again for a regular staff position, but was
-told there was no opening. It began to look as if I should have to leave
-Cleveland soon, and I wondered where I should go next—Buffalo or
-Pittsburgh, both equally near.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVIII
-
-
-FINDING Cleveland hopeless for me, I one day picked up and left. Then
-came Buffalo, which I reached toward the end of March. Aside from the
-Falls I found it a little tame, no especial snap to it—not as much as I
-had felt to be characteristic of Cleveland. What interest there was for
-me I provided myself, wandering about in odd drear neighborhoods, about
-grain elevators and soap factories and railroad yards and manufacturing
-districts. Here, as in Cleveland, I could not help but see that in spite
-of our boasted democracy and equality of opportunity there was as much
-misery and squalor and as little decent balancing of opportunity against
-energy as anywhere else in the world. The little homes, the poor,
-shabby, colorless, drear, drab little homes with their grassless
-“yards,” their unpaved streets, their uncollected garbage, their
-fluttering, thin-flamed gas-lamps, the crowds of ragged, dirty,
-ill-cared-for children! Near at hand was always the inevitable and
-wretched saloon, not satisfying a need for pleasure in a decent way but
-pandering to the lowest and most conniving and most destroying instincts
-of the lowest politicians and heelers and grafters and crooks, while the
-huge financial and manufacturing magnates at the top with their lust for
-power and authority used the very flesh of the weaker elements for
-purposes of their own. It was the saloon, not liquor, which brought
-about the prohibition folly. I used to listen, as a part of my
-reportorial duties, to the blatherings of thin-minded, thin-blooded,
-thin-experienced religionists as well as to those of kept editorial
-writers, about the merits and blessings and opportunities of our noble
-and bounteous land; but whenever I encountered such regions as this I
-knew well enough that there was something wrong with their noble
-maunderings. Shout as they might, there was here displayed before my
-very eyes ample evidence that somewhere there was a screw loose in the
-“Fatherhood of Man—Brotherhood of God” machinery.
-
-After I had placed myself in a commonplace neighborhood near the
-business center, I canvassed the newspaper offices and their editors.
-Although I had in my pocket that letter from the publisher of the St.
-Louis _Republic_ extolling my virtues as a reporter and correspondent,
-so truly vagrom was my mood and practical judgment that I did not
-present it to any one. Instead I merely mooned into one office after
-another (there were only four papers here), convinced before entering
-that I should not get anything—and I did not. One young city editor,
-seeming to take at least an interest in me, assured me that if I would
-remain in Buffalo for six weeks he could place me; but since I had not
-enough money to sustain myself so long I decided not to wait. Ten days
-spent in reconnoitering these offices daily, and I concluded that it was
-useless to remain longer. Yet before I went I determined to see at least
-one thing more: the Falls.
-
-Therefore one day I traveled by trolley to Niagara and looked at that
-tumbling flood, then not chained or drained by turbine water-power
-sluices. I was impressed, but not quite so much as I had thought I
-should be. Standing out on a rock near the greatest volume of water
-under a gray sky, I was awed by the downpour and then became dizzy and
-felt as though I were being carried along whether I would or not.
-Farther upstream I stared at the water as it gathered force and speed,
-wondering how I should feel if I were in a small canoe and fighting it
-for my life. Behind the falls were great stalagmites and stalactites of
-ice and snow still standing from the cold of weeks before. I recalled
-that Blondel, a famous French swimmer of his day, had ten years before
-swum these fierce and angry waters below the Falls. I wondered how he
-had done it, so wildly did they leap, huge wheels of water going round
-and round and whitecaps leaping and spitting and striking at each other.
-
-When I returned to Buffalo I congratulated myself that if I had got
-nothing else out of my visit to Buffalo, at least I had gained this.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIX
-
-
-I NOW decided that Pittsburgh would be as good a field as any, and one
-morning seeing a sign outside a cut-rate ticket-broker’s window reading
-“Pittsburgh, $5.75,” I bought a ticket, returned to my small room to
-pack my bag, and departed. I arrived at Pittsburgh at six or seven that
-same evening.
-
-Of all the cities in which I ever worked or lived Pittsburgh was the
-most agreeable. Perhaps it was due to the fact that my stay included
-only spring, summer and fall, or that I found a peculiarly easy
-newspaper atmosphere, or that the city was so different physically from
-any I had thus far seen; but whether owing to one thing or another
-certainly no other newspaper work I ever did seemed so pleasant, no
-other city more interesting. What a city for a realist to work and dream
-in! The wonder to me is that it has not produced a score of writers,
-poets, painters and sculptors, instead of—well, how many? And who are
-they?
-
-I came down to it through the brown-blue mountains of Western
-Pennsylvania, and all day long we had been winding at the base of one or
-another of them, following the bed of a stream or turning out into a
-broad smooth valley, crossing directly at the center of it, or climbing
-some low ridge with a puff-puff-puff and then clattering almost
-recklessly down the other slope. I had never before seen any mountains.
-The sight of sooty-faced miners at certain places, their little oil and
-tow tin lamps fastened to their hats, their tin dinner-pails on their
-arms, impressed me as something new and faintly reminiscent of the one
-or two small coal mines about Sullivan, Indiana, where I had lived when
-I was a boy of seven. Along the way I saw a heavy-faced and heavy-bodied
-type of peasant woman, with a black or brown or blue or green skirt and
-a waist of a contrasting color, a headcloth or neckerchief of still
-another, trailed by a few children of equally solid proportions, hanging
-up clothes or doing something else about their miserable places. These
-were the much-maligned hunkies just then being imported by the large
-manufacturing and mining and steel-making industries of the country to
-take the place of the restless and less docile American working man and
-woman. I marveled at their appearance and number, and assumed,
-American-fashion, that in their far-off and unhappy lands they had heard
-of the wonderful American Constitution, its guaranty of life, liberty
-and the pursuit of happiness, as well as of the bounteous opportunities
-afforded by this great land, and that they had forsaken their miseries
-to come all this distance to enjoy these greater blessings.
-
-I did not then know of the manufacturers’ foreign labor agent with his
-lying propaganda among ignorant and often fairly contented peasants,
-painting America as a country rolling in wealth and opportunity, and
-then bringing them here to take the places of more restless and greatly
-underpaid foreigners who, having been brought over by the same gay
-pictures, were becoming irritated and demanded more pay. I did not then
-know of the padrone, the labor spy, the company store, five cents an
-hour for breaker children, the company stockade, all in full operation
-at this time. All I knew was that there had been a great steel strike in
-Pittsburgh recently, that Andrew Carnegie, as well as other steel
-manufacturers (the Olivers, for one), had built fences and strung them
-with electrified barbed wire in order to protect themselves against the
-“lawless” attacks of “lawless” workingmen.
-
-I also knew that a large number of State or county or city paid deputy
-sheriffs and mounted police and city policemen had been sworn in and set
-to guarding the company’s property and that H. C. Frick, a leading steel
-manager for Mr. Carnegie, had been slightly wounded by a desperado named
-Alexander Berkman, who was inflaming these workingmen, all foreigners of
-course, lawless and unappreciative of the great and prosperous steel
-company which was paying them reasonable wages and against which they
-had no honest complaint.
-
-Our mid-Western papers, up to the day of Cleveland’s election in 1892
-and for some time after, had been full of the merits of this labor
-dispute, with long and didactic editorials, intended in the main to
-prove that the workingman was not so greatly underpaid, considering the
-type of labor he performed and the intelligence he brought to his task;
-that the public was not in the main vastly interested in labor disputes,
-both parties to the dispute being unduly selfish; that it would be a
-severe blow to the prosperity of the country if labor disputes were too
-long continued; that unless labor was reasonable in its demands capital
-would become disheartened and leave the country. I had not made up my
-mind that the argument was all on one side, although I knew that the
-average man in America, despite its great and boundless opportunities,
-was about as much put upon and kicked about and underpaid as any other.
-This growing labor problem or the general American dissatisfaction with
-poor returns upon efforts made crystallized three years later in the
-Free Silver campaign and the “gold parades.” The “full dinner-pail” was
-then invented as a slogan to counteract the vast economic unrest, and
-the threat to close down and so bring misery to the entire country
-unless William McKinley was elected was also freely posted. Henry
-George, Father McGlynn, Herr Most, Emma Goldman, and a score of others
-were abroad voicing the woes of hundreds of thousands who were supposed
-to have no woes.
-
-At that time, as I see it now, America was just entering upon the most
-lurid phase of that vast, splendid, most lawless and most savage period
-in which the great financiers were plotting and conniving at the
-enslavement of the people and belaboring each other. Those crude parvenu
-dynasties which now sit enthroned in our democracy, threatening its very
-life with their pretensions and assumptions, were then in their very
-beginning. John D. Rockefeller was still in Cleveland; Flagler, William
-Rockefeller, H. H. Rogers, were still comparatively young and secret
-agents; Carnegie was still in Pittsburgh, an iron master, and of all his
-brood of powerful children only Frick had appeared; William H.
-Vanderbilt and Jay Gould had only recently died; Cleveland was
-President, and Mark Hanna was an unknown business man in Cleveland. The
-great struggles of the railroads, the coal companies, the gas companies,
-to overawe and tax the people were still in abeyance, or just being
-born. The multi-millionaire had arrived, it is true, but not the
-billionaire. On every hand were giants plotting, fighting, dreaming; and
-yet in Pittsburgh there was still something of a singing spirit.
-
-When I arrived here and came out of the railway station, which was
-directly across the Monongahela River from the business center, I was
-impressed by the huge walls of hills that arose on every hand, a great
-black sheer ridge rising to a height of five or six hundred feet to my
-right and enclosing this river, on the bosom of which lay steamboats of
-good size. From the station a pleasingly designed bridge of fair size
-led to the city beyond, and across it trundled in unbroken lines
-street-cars and wagons and buggies of all sizes and descriptions. The
-city itself was already smartly outlined by lights, a galaxy climbing
-the hills in every direction, and below me as I walked out upon this
-bridge was an agate stream reflecting the lights from either shore.
-Below this was another bridge, and upstream another. The whole river for
-a mile or more was suddenly lit to a rosy glow, a glow which, as I saw
-upon turning, came from the tops of some forty or fifty stacks belching
-a deep orange-red flame. At the same time an enormous pounding and
-crackling came from somewhere, as though titans were at work upon
-subterranean anvils. I stared and admired. I felt that I was truly
-adventuring into a new and strange world. I was glad now that I had not
-found work in Toledo or Cleveland or Buffalo.
-
-The city beyond the river proved as interesting as the river cliffs and
-forges about the station. As I walked along I discovered the name of the
-street (Smithfield), which began at the bridge’s end and was lined with
-buildings of not more than three or four stories although it was one of
-the principal streets of the business center. At the bridge-head on the
-city side stood a large smoke-colored stone building, which later I
-discovered was the principal hotel, the Monongahela, and beyond that was
-a most attractive and unusual postoffice building. I came to a cross
-street finally (Fifth Avenue), brightly lighted and carrying unusual
-traffic, and turned into it. I found this central region to be most
-puzzlingly laid out, and did not attempt to solve its mysteries.
-Instead, I entered a modest restaurant in a side street. Later I hunted
-up a small hotel, where I paid a dollar for a room for the night. I
-retired, speculating as to how I should make out here. Something about
-the city drew me intensely. I wished I might remain for a time. The next
-morning I was up bright and early to look up the morning papers and find
-out the names of the afternoon papers. I found that there were four: the
-_Dispatch_ and _Times_, morning papers, and the GAZETTE-TELEGRAPH and
-_Leader_, afternoon. I thought them most interesting and different from
-those of other cities in which I had worked.
-
- “Andy Pastor had his right hand lacerated while at work in the
- 23-inch mill yesterday.”
-
- “John Kristoff had his right wrist sprained while at work in the
- 140-inch mill yesterday.”
-
- “Joseph Novic is suffering from contused wounds of the left
- wrist received while at work in the 23-inch mill yesterday.”
-
- “A train of hot metal, being hauled from a mixing-house to open
- hearth No. 2, was side-swiped by a yard engine near the 48-inch
- mill. The impact tilted the ladles of some of the cars and the
- hot metal spilled in a pool of water along the track. Antony
- Brosak, Constantine Czernik and Kafros Maskar were seriously
- wounded by the exploding metal.”
-
-Such items arrested my attention at once; and then such names as
-Squirrel Hill, Sawmill Run, Moon Run, Hazelwood, Wind Gap Road,
-Braddock, McKeesport, Homestead, Swissvale, somehow made me wish to know
-more of this region.
-
-The _Dispatch_ was Republican, the _Times_ Democratic. Both were
-evidently edited with much conservatism as to local news. I made haste
-to visit the afternoon newspaper offices, only to discover that they
-were fully equipped with writers. I then proceeded in search of a room
-and finally found one in Wylie Avenue, a curious street that climbed a
-hill to its top and then stopped. Here, almost at the top of this hill,
-in an old yellow stonefront house the rear rooms of which commanded a
-long and deep canyon or “run,” I took a room for a week. The family of
-this house rented rooms to several others, clerks who looked and proved
-to be a genial sort, holding a kind of court on the front steps of an
-evening.
-
-I now turned to the morning papers, going first to the _Times_, which
-had its offices in a handsome building, one of the two or three high
-office buildings in the city. The city editor received me graciously but
-could promise nothing. At the _Dispatch_, which was published in a
-three-story building at Smithfield and Diamond streets, I found a man
-who expressed much more interest. He was a slender, soft-spoken,
-one-handed man. On very short acquaintance I found him to be shrewd and
-canny, gracious always, exceedingly reticent and uncommunicative and an
-excellent judge of news, and plainly holding his job not so much by
-reason of what he put into his paper as by what he kept out of it. He
-wanted to know where I had worked before I came to Pittsburgh, whether I
-had been connected with any paper here, whether I had ever done feature
-stuff. I described my experiences as nearly as I could, and finally he
-said that there was nothing now but he was expecting a vacancy to occur
-soon. If I could come around in the course of a week or ten days (I
-drooped sadly)—well, then, in three or four days, he thought he might do
-something for me. The salary would not be more than eighteen the week.
-My spirits fell at that, but his manner was so agreeable and his hope
-for me so keen that I felt greatly encouraged and told him I would wait
-a few days anyhow. My friend in Toledo had promised me that he would
-wire me at the first opening, and I was now expecting some word from
-him. This I told to this city editor, and he said: “Well, you might wait
-until you hear from him anyhow.” A thought of my possible lean purse did
-not seem to occur to him, and I marveled at the casual manner in which
-he assumed that I could wait.
-
-Thereafter I roamed the city and its environs, and to my delight found
-it to be one of the most curious and fascinating places I had ever seen.
-From a stationery store I first secured a map and figured out the lay of
-the town. At a glance I saw that the greater part of it stretched
-eastward along the tongue of land that was between the Allegheny and the
-Monongahela, and that this was Pittsburgh proper. Across the Allegheny,
-on the north side, was the city of Allegheny, an individual municipality
-but so completely connected with Pittsburgh as to be identical with it,
-and connected with it by many bridges. Across the Monongahela, on the
-south side, were various towns: Mt. Washington, Duquesne, Homestead. I
-was interested especially in Homestead because of the long and bitter
-contest between the steel-workers and the Carnegie Company, which for
-six months and more in 1892 had occupied space on the front page of
-every newspaper in America.
-
-Having studied my map I explored, going first across the river into
-Allegheny. Here I found a city built about the base of high granite
-hills or between ridges in hollows called “gaps” or “runs” with a street
-or car-line clambering and twisting directly over them. A charming park
-and boulevard system had been laid out, with the city hall, a public
-market and a Carnegie public library as a center. The place had large
-dry-goods and business houses.
-
-On another day I crossed to the south side and ascended by an inclined
-plane, such as later I discovered to be one of the transportation
-features of Pittsburgh, the hill called Mt. Washington, from the top of
-which, walking along an avenue called Grand View Boulevard which skirted
-the brow of the hill, I had the finest view of a city I have ever seen.
-In later years I looked down upon New York from the heights of the
-Palisades and the hills of Staten Island; on Rome from the Pincian
-Gardens; on Florence from San Miniato; and on Pasadena and Los Angeles
-from the slopes of Mt. Lowe; but never anywhere have I seen a scene
-which impressed me more than this: the rugged beauty of the mountains,
-which encircle the city, the three rivers that run as threads of bright
-metal, dividing it into three parts, the several cities joined as one,
-their clambering streets presenting a checkered pattern emphasized here
-and there by the soot-darkened spires of churches and the walls of the
-taller and newer and cleaner office buildings.
-
-As in most American cities of any size, the skyscraper was just being
-introduced and being welcomed as full proof of the growth and wealth and
-force of the city. No city was complete without at least one: the more,
-of course, the grander.
-
-Pittsburgh had a better claim to the skyscraper as a commercial
-necessity than any other American city that I know. The tongue of land
-which lies between the Allegheny and the Monongahela, very likely not
-more than two or three square miles in extent, is still the natural
-heart of the commercial life for fifty, a hundred miles about. Here meet
-the three large rivers, all navigable. Here, again, the natural runs and
-gaps of the various hills about, as well as the levels which pursue the
-banks of the streams and which are the natural vents or routes for
-railroad lines, street-cars and streets, come to a common center.
-Whether by bridges from Allegheny, the south bank of the Ohio or the
-Monongahela, or along the shores of the Allegheny or Monongahela within
-the city of Pittsburgh itself, all meet somewhere in this level tongue;
-and here, of necessity, is the business center. So without the tall
-building, I cannot see how one-tenth of the business which would and
-should be normally transacted here would ever come about.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LX
-
-
-BARRING two or three tall buildings, the city of Pittsburgh was then of
-a simple and homelike aspect. A few blackened church spires, a small
-dark city hall and an old market-place, a long stretch of blast
-furnaces, black as night, and the lightly constructed bridges over the
-rivers, gave it all an airy grace and charm.
-
-Since the houses up here were very simple, mostly working-men’s
-cottages, and the streets back followed the crests of hills twisting and
-winding as they went and providing in consequence the most startling and
-effective views of green hills and mountains beyond, I decided that
-should I be so fortunate as to secure work I would move over here. It
-would be like living in a mountain resort, and most inexpensively.
-
-I descended and took a car which followed the Monongahela upstream to
-Homestead, and here for the first time had a view of that enormous steel
-plant which only recently (June to December, 1892) had played such a
-great part in the industrial drama of America. The details of the
-quarrel were fairly fresh in my mind: how the Carnegie Steel Company had
-planned, with the technicalities of a wage-scale readjustment as an
-excuse, to break the power of the Amalgamated Steel Workers, who were
-becoming too forceful and who were best organized in their plant, and
-how the Amalgamated, resenting the introduction of three hundred
-Pinkerton guards to “protect” the plant, had attacked them, killing
-several and injuring others, and so permitting the introduction of the
-State militia, which speedily and permanently broke the power of the
-strikers. They could only wait then and starve, and so they had waited
-and starved for six months, when they finally returned to work, such of
-them as would be received. When I reached there in April, 1894, the
-battle was already fifteen months past, but the feeling was still alive.
-I did not then know what it was about this town of Homestead that was so
-depressing, but in the six months of my stay here I found that it was a
-compound of a sense of defeat and sullen despair. The men had not
-forgotten. Even then the company was busy, and had been for months,
-importing Poles, Hungarians, Lithuanians, to take the places of the
-ousted strikers. Whole colonies were already here, housed under the most
-unsatisfactory conditions, and more were coming. Hence the despair of
-those who had been defeated.
-
-Along the river sprawled for a quarter of a mile or more the huge low
-length of the furnaces, great black bottle-like affairs with rows of
-stacks and long low sheds or buildings paralleling them, sheds from
-which came a continuous hammering and sputtering and the glow of red
-fire. The whole was shrouded by a pall of gray smoke, even in the bright
-sunshine. Above the plant, on a slope which rose steeply behind it, were
-a few moderately attractive dwellings grouped about two small parks, the
-trees of which were languishing for want of air. Behind and to the sides
-of these were the spires of several churches, those soporifics against
-failure and despair. Turning up side streets one found, invariably,
-uniform frame houses, closely built and dulled by smoke and grime, and
-below, on the flats behind the mill, were cluttered alleys so unsightly
-and unsanitary as to shock me into the belief that I was once more
-witnessing the lowest phases of Chicago slum-life, the worst I had ever
-seen. The streets were mere mud-tracks. Where there were trees (and
-there were few) they were dwarfed and their foliage withered by a
-metallic fume which was over all. Though the sun was bright at the top
-of the hill, down here it was gray, almost cloudy, at best a filtered
-dull gold haze.
-
-The place held me until night. I browsed about its saloons, of which
-there was a large number, most of them idle during the drift of the
-afternoon. The open gates of the mill held my interest also, for through
-them I could see furnaces, huge cranes, switching engines, cars of
-molten iron being hauled to and fro, and mountains of powdered iron ore
-and scrap iron piled here and there awaiting the hour of new birth in
-the smelting vats. When the sun had gone down, and I had watched a shift
-of men coming out with their buckets and coats over their arms, and
-other hundreds entering in a rush, I returned to the city with a sense
-of the weight and breadth and depth of huge effort. Here bridges and
-rail and plate steel were made for all the world. But of all these units
-that dwelt and labored here scarce a fraction seemed even to sense a
-portion of the meaning of all they did. I knew that Carnegie had become
-a multi-millionaire, as had Phipps and others, and that he was beginning
-to give libraries, that Phipps had already given several floral
-conservatories, and that their “lobbies” in Congress were even then
-bartering for the patronage of the government on their terms; but the
-poor units in these hovels at Homestead—what did they know?
-
-On another day I explored the east end of Pittsburgh, which was the
-exclusive residence section of the city and a contrast to such hovels
-and deprivations as I had witnessed at Homestead and among the shacks
-across the Monongahela and below Mt. Washington. Never in my life,
-neither before nor since, in New York, Chicago or elsewhere, was the
-vast gap which divides the rich from the poor in America so vividly and
-forcefully brought home to me. I had seen on my map a park called
-Schenley, and thinking that it might be interesting I made my way out a
-main thoroughfare called (quite appropriately, I think) Fifth Avenue,
-lined with some of the finest residences of the city. Never did the mere
-possession of wealth impress me so keenly. Here were homes of the most
-imposing character, huge, verandaed, tree-shaded, with immense lawns,
-great stone or iron or hedge fences and formal gardens and walks of a
-most ornate character. It was a region of well-curbed, well-drained and
-well-paved thoroughfares. Even the street-lamps were of a better design
-than elsewhere, so eager was a young and democratic municipality to see
-that superior living conditions were provided for the rich. There were
-avenues lined with well-cropped trees, and at every turn one encountered
-expensive carriages, their horses jingling silver or gold-gilt harness,
-their front seats occupied by one or two footmen in livery, while
-reclining was Madam or Sir, or both, gazing condescendingly upon the all
-too comfortable world about them.
-
-In Schenley Park was a huge and interesting arboretum or botanical
-garden under glass, a most oriental affair given by Phipps of the
-Carnegie Company. A large graceful library of white limestone, perhaps
-four or five times the size of the one in Allegheny, given by Andrew
-Carnegie, was in process of construction. And he was another of the
-chief beneficiaries of Homestead, the possessor of a great house in this
-region, another in New York and still another in Scotland, a man for
-whom the unwitting “Pinkertons” and contending strikers had been killed.
-Like huge ribbons of fire these and other names of powerful steel
-men—the Olivers, Thaws, Fricks, Thompsons—seemed to rise and band the
-sky. It seemed astonishing to me that some men could thus rise and soar
-about the heavens like eagles, while others, drab sparrows all, could
-only pick among the offal of the hot ways below. What were these things
-called democracy and equality about which men prated? Had they any basis
-in fact? There was constant palaver about the equality of opportunity
-which gave such men as these their chance, but I could not help
-speculating as to the lack of equality of opportunity these men created
-for others once their equality at the top had made them. If equality of
-opportunity had been so excellent for them why not for others,
-especially those in their immediate care? True, all men had not the
-brains to seize upon and make use of that which was put before them, but
-again, not all men of brains had the blessing of opportunity as had
-these few men. Strength, as I felt, should not be too arrogant or too
-forgetful of the accident or chance by which it had arrived. It might do
-something for the poor—pay them decent living wages, for instance. Were
-these giants planning to subject their sons and daughters to the same
-“equality of opportunity” which had confronted them at the start and
-which they were so eager to recommend to the attention of others? Not at
-all. In this very neighborhood I passed an exclusive private school for
-girls, with great grounds and a beautiful wall—another sample of
-equality of opportunity.
-
-On the fourth day of my stay here I called again at the _Dispatch_
-office and was given a position, but only after the arrival of a
-telegram from Toledo offering me work at eighteen a week. Now I had long
-since passed out of the eighteen-dollar stage of reporting, and this was
-by no means a comforting message. If I could show it to the _Dispatch_
-city editor, I reasoned, it would probably hasten his decision to accept
-me, but also he might consider eighteen dollars as a rate of pay
-acceptable to me and would offer no more. I decided not to use it just
-then but to go first and see if anything had come about in my favor.
-
-“Nothing yet,” he said on seeing me. “Drop around tomorrow or Saturday.
-I’m sure to know then one way or the other.”
-
-I went out and in the doorway below stood and meditated. What was I to
-do? If I delayed too long my friend in Toledo would not be able to do
-anything for me, and if I showed this message it would fix my salary at
-a place below that which I felt I deserved. I finally hit upon the idea
-of changing the eighteen to twenty-five and went to a telegraph office
-to find some girl to rewrite it for me. Not seeing a girl I would be
-willing to approach, I worked over it myself, carefully erasing and
-changing until the twenty-five, while a little forced and scraggly,
-looked fairly natural. With this in my pocket I returned to the
-_Dispatch_ this same afternoon, and told the city editor with as great
-an air of assurance as I could achieve that I had just received this
-message and was a little uncertain as to what to do about it. “The fact
-is,” I said, “I have started from the West to go East. New York is my
-eventual goal, unless I find a good place this side of it. But I’m up
-against it now and unless I can do something here I might as well go
-back there for the present. I wouldn’t show you this except that I must
-answer it tonight.”
-
-He read it and looked at me uncertainly. Finally he got up, told me to
-wait a minute, and went through a nearby door. In a minute or two he
-returned and said: “Well, that’s all right. We can do as well as that,
-anyhow, if you want to stay at that rate.”
-
-“All right,” I replied as nonchalantly as I could. “When do I start?”
-
-“Come around tomorrow at twelve. I may not have anything for you, but
-I’ll carry you for a day or two until I have.”
-
-I trotted down the nearby steps as fast as my feet would carry me,
-anxious to get out of his sight so that I might congratulate myself
-freely. I hurried to a telegraph office to reject my friend’s offer. To
-celebrate my cleverness and success I indulged in a good meal at one of
-the best restaurants. Here I sat, and to prepare myself for my work
-examined that day’s _Dispatch_, as well as the other papers, with a view
-to unraveling their method of treating a feature or a striking piece of
-news, also to discover what they considered a feature. By nine or ten I
-had solved that mystery as well as I could, and then to quiet my excited
-nerves I walked about the business section, finally crossing to Mt.
-Washington so as to view the lighted city at night from this great
-height. It was radiantly clear up there, and a young moon shining, and I
-had the pleasure of looking down upon as wonderful a night panorama as I
-have ever seen, a winking and fluttering field of diamonds that
-outrivaled the sky itself. As far as the eye could see were these lamps
-blinking and winking, and overhead was another glistering field of
-stars. Below was that enormous group of stacks with their red tongues
-waving in the wind. Far up the Monongahela, where lay Homestead and
-McKeesport and Braddock and Swissvale, other glows of red fire indicated
-where huge furnaces were blazing and boiling in the night. I thought of
-the nest of slums I had seen at Homestead, of those fine houses in the
-east end, and of Carnegie with his libraries, of Phipps with his glass
-conservatories. How to get up in the world and be somebody was my own
-thought now, and yet I knew that wealth was not for me. The best I
-should ever do was to think and dream, standing aloof as a spectator.
-
-The next day I began work on the _Dispatch_ and for six months was a
-part of it, beginning with ordinary news reporting, but gradually taking
-up the task of preparing original column features, first for the daily
-and later for the Sunday issue. Still later, not long before I left, I
-was by way of being an unpaid assistant to the dramatic editor, and a
-traveling correspondent.
-
-What impressed me most was the peculiar character of the city and the
-newspaper world here, the more or less somnolent nature of its
-population (apart from the steel companies and their employees) and the
-genial and sociable character of the newspaper men. Never had I
-encountered more intelligent or helpful or companionable albeit cynical
-men than I found here. They knew the world, and their opportunities for
-studying public as well as private impulses and desires and contrasting
-them with public and private performances were so great as to make them
-puzzled if not always accurate judges of affairs and events. One can
-always talk to a newspaper man, I think, with the full confidence that
-one is talking to a man who is at least free of moralistic mush. Nearly
-everything in connection with those trashy romances of justice, truth,
-mercy, patriotism, public profession of all sorts, is already and
-forever gone if they have been in the business for any length of time.
-The religionist is seen by them for what he is: a swallower of romance
-or a masquerader looking to profit and preferment. Of the politician,
-they know or believe but one thing: that he is out for himself, a
-trickster artfully juggling with the moods and passions and ignorance of
-the public. Judges are men who have by some chance or other secured good
-positions and are careful to trim their sails according to the moods and
-passions of the strongest element in any community or nation in which
-they chance to be. The arts are in the main to be respected, when they
-are not frankly confessed to be enigmas.
-
-In a very little while I came to be on friendly terms with the men of
-this and some other papers, men who, because of their intimate contact
-with local political and social conditions, were well fitted to
-enlighten me as to the exact economic and political conditions here. Two
-in particular, the political and labor men of this paper were most
-helpful. The former, a large, genial, commercial-drummer type, who might
-also have made an excellent theatrical manager or promoter, provided me
-with a clear insight into the general cleavage of local and State
-politics and personalities. I liked him very much. The other, the labor
-man, was a slow, silent, dark, square-shouldered and almost
-square-headed youth, who drifted in and out of the office irregularly.
-He it was who attended, when permitted by the working people themselves,
-all labor meetings in the city or elsewhere, as far east at times as the
-hard coal regions about Wilkes-Barre and Scranton. As he himself told
-me, he was the paper’s sole authority for such comments or assertions as
-it dared to make in connection with the mining of coal and the
-manufacture of steel. He was an intense sympathizer with labor, but not
-so much with organized as with unorganized workers. He believed that
-labor here had two years before lost a most important battle, one which
-would show in its contests with money in the future: which was true. He
-pretended to know that there was a vast movement on foot among the
-moneyed elements in America to cripple if not utterly destroy organized
-labor, and to that end he assured me once that all the great steel and
-coal and oil magnates were in a conspiracy to flood the country with
-cheap foreign labor, which they had lured or were luring here by all
-sorts of dishonest devices; once here, these immigrants were to be used
-to break the demand of better-paid and more intelligent labor. He
-pretended to know that in the coal and steel regions thousands had
-already been introduced and more were on their way, and that all such
-devices as showy churches and schools for defectives, etc., were used to
-keep ignorant and tame those already here.
-
-“But you can’t say anything about it in Pittsburgh,” he said to me. “If
-I should talk I’d have to get out of here. The papers here won’t use a
-thing unfavorable to the magnates in any of these fields. I write all
-sorts of things, but they never get in.”
-
-He read the _Congressional Record_ daily, as well as various radical
-papers from different parts of the country, and was constantly calling
-my attention to statistics and incidents which proved that the
-workingman was being most unjustly put upon and undermined; but he never
-did it in any urgent or disturbed manner. Rather, he seemed to be
-profoundly convinced that the cause of the workers everywhere in America
-was hopeless. They hadn’t the subtlety and the force and the innate
-cruelty of those who ruled them. They were given to religious and
-educational illusions, the parochial school and church paper, which left
-them helpless. In the course of time, because I expressed interest in
-and sympathy for these people, he took me into various mill slums in and
-near the city to see how they lived.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXI
-
-
-I WENT with him first to Homestead, then to some tenements there, later
-to some other mill districts nearer Pittsburgh, the name of which I have
-forgotten. What astonished me, in so far as the steel mills were
-concerned, was the large number of furnaces going at once, the piles,
-mountains, of powdered iron ore ready to be smelted, the long lines of
-cars, flat, box and coal cars, and the nature and size and force of the
-machinery used to roll steel. The work, as he or his friends the bosses
-showed me, was divided between the “front” and the “back.” Those working
-at the front of the furnace took care of the molten ore and slag which
-was being “puddled.” The men at the back, the stock and yard men, filled
-huge steel buckets or “skips” suspended from traveling cranes with ore,
-fuel and limestone, all of which was piled near at hand; this material
-was then trundled to a point over the mouth of the melting-vats, as they
-were called, and “released” via a movable bottom. At this particular
-plant I was told that the machinery for handling all this was better
-than elsewhere, the company being richer and more progressive. In some
-of the less progressive concerns the men filled carts with raw material
-and then trundled them around to the front of a hoist, which was at the
-back of the furnace, where they were lifted and dumped into the
-furnaces. But in this mill all a man had to do to fill a steel bucket
-with raw material was to push one of those steel buckets suspended from
-a trolley under a chute and pull a rod, when the “stock” tumbled into
-it. From these it was trundled, by machinery, to a point over the
-furnace. The furnaces were charged or fed constantly by feeders working
-in twelve-hour shifts, so that there was little chance to rest from
-their labors. Their pay was not more than half of that paid to the men
-at the “front” because it was neither so hard nor so skillful, although
-it looked hard enough to me.
-
-The men at the front, the puddlers, were the labor princes of this realm
-and yet among the hardest worked. A puddling or blast furnace was a
-brick structure like an oven, about seven feet high and six feet square,
-with two compartments, one a receptacle into which pigiron was thrown,
-the other a fuel chamber where the melting heat was generated. The
-drafts were so arranged that the flame swept from the fuel chamber
-directly upon the surface of the iron. From five to six hundred pounds
-of pigiron were put into each furnace at one time, after which it was
-closed and sufficient heat applied to melt down the iron. Then the
-puddler began to work it with an iron rod through a hole in the furnace
-door, so as to stir up the liquid and bring it in contact with the air.
-As the impurities became separated from the iron and rose to the top as
-slag, they were tipped out through a center notch. As it became freer
-from impurities, a constantly higher temperature was required to keep
-the iron in a liquid condition. Gradually it began to solidify in
-granules, much as butter forms in churning. Later it took on or was
-worked into large malleable balls or lumps or rolls like butter, three
-to any given “charge” or furnace. Then, while still in a comparatively
-soft but not molten condition, these were taken out and thrown across a
-steel floor to a “taker” to be worked by other machinery and other
-processes.
-
-Puddling was a full-sized man’s job. There were always two, and
-sometimes three, to a single furnace, and they took turns at working the
-metal, as a rule ten minutes to a turn. No man could stand before a
-furnace and perform that back-breaking toil continually. Even when
-working by spells a man was often nearly exhausted at the end of his
-spell. As a rule he had to go outside and sit on a bench, the
-perspiration running off him. The intensity of the heat in those days
-(1893) was not as yet relieved by the device of shielding the furnace
-with water-cooled plates. The wages of these men was in the neighborhood
-of three dollars a day, the highest then paid. Before the great strike
-it had been more.
-
-But the men who most fascinated me were the “roughers” who, once the
-puddler had done his work and thrown his lump of red-hot iron out upon
-an open hearth, and another man had taken it and thrown it to a
-“rougher,” fed it into a second machine which rolled or beat it into a
-more easily handled and workable form. The exact details of the process
-escape me now, but I remember the picture they presented in those hot,
-fire-lighted, noisy and sputtering rooms. Agility and even youth were at
-a premium, and a false step possibly meant death. I remember watching
-two men in the mill below Mt. Washington, one who pulled out billet
-after billet from furnace after furnace and threw them along the steel
-floor to the “rougher,” and the latter, who, dressed only in trousers
-and a sleeveless flannel shirt, the sweat pouring from his body and his
-muscles standing out in knots, took these same and, with the skill and
-agility of a tight-rope performer, tossed them into the machine. He was
-constantly leaping about thrusting the red billets which came almost in
-a stream into or between the first pair of rolls for which they were
-intended. And yet before he could turn back there was always another on
-the floor behind him. The rolls into which he fed these billets were
-built in a train, side by side in line, and as they went through one
-pair they had to be seized by a “catcher” and shoved back through the
-next. Back and forth, back and forth they went at an ever increasing
-speed, until the catcher at the next to the last pair of rolls, seizing
-the end of the rod as it came through, still red-hot, described with it
-a fiery circle bending it back again to enter the last roll, from which
-it passed into water. It was wonderful.
-
-And yet these men were not looked upon as anything extraordinary. While
-the places in which they worked were metal infernos and their toil of
-the most intense and exacting character, they were not allowed to
-organize to better their condition. The recent great victory of the
-steel magnates had settled that. In that very city and elsewhere, these
-magnates were rolling in wealth. Their profits were tumbling in so fast
-that they scarcely knew what to do with them. Vast libraries and
-universities were being built with their gifts. Immense mansions were
-crowded with art and historic furniture. Their children were being sent
-to special schools to be taught how to be ladies and gentlemen in a
-democracy which they contemned; and on the other hand, these sweating
-men were being denied an additional five or ten cents an hour and the
-right to organize. If they protested or attempted to drive out imported
-strike-breakers they were fired and State or Federal troops were called
-in to protect the mills. They could not organize then, and they are not
-organized now.
-
-My friend Martyn, who was intensely sympathetic toward them, was still
-more sympathetic toward the men who were not so skillful, mere day
-laborers who received from one dollar to one-sixty-five at a time when
-two a day was too little to support any one. He grew melodramatic as he
-told me where these men lived and how they lived, and finally took me in
-order that I might see for myself. Afterward, in the course of my
-reportorial work, I came upon some of these neighborhoods and
-individuals, and since they are all a part of the great fortune-building
-era, and illustrate how democracy works in America, and how some great
-fortunes were built, I propose to put down here a few pictures of things
-that I saw. Wages varied from one to one-sixty-five a day for the
-commonest laborer, three and even four a day for the skilled worker.
-Rents, or what the cheaper workers, who constituted by far the greater
-number, were able to pay, varied from two-fifteen per week, or
-eight-sixty per month, to four-seventy-two per week, or twenty per
-month.
-
-And the type of places they could secure for this! I recall visiting a
-two-room tenement in a court, the character of which first opened my
-eyes to the type of home these workers endured. This court consisted of
-four sides with an open space in the center. Three of these sides were
-smoke-grimed wooden houses three stories in height; the fourth was an
-ancient and odorous wooden stable, where the horses of a contractor were
-kept. In the center of this court stood a circular wooden building or
-lavatory with ten triangular compartments, each opening into one vault
-or cesspool. Near this was one hydrant, the only water-supply for all
-these homes or rooms. These two conveniences served twenty families,
-Polish, Hungarian, Slavonic, Jewish, Negro, of from three to five people
-each, living in the sixty-three rooms which made up the three grimy
-sides above mentioned. There were twenty-seven children in these rooms,
-for whom this court was their only playground. For twenty housewives
-this was the only place where they could string their wash-lines. For
-twenty tired, sweaty, unwashed husbands this was, aside from the saloon,
-the only near and neighborly recreation and companionship center. Here
-of a sweltering summer night, after playing cards and drinking beer,
-they would frequently stretch themselves to sleep.
-
-But this was not all. As waste pipes were wanting in the houses, heavy
-tubs of water had to be carried in and out, and this in a smoky town
-where a double amount of washing and cleaning was necessary. When the
-weather permitted, the heavy washes were done in the yard. Then the
-pavement of this populous court, covered with tubs, wringers, clothes
-baskets and pools of soapy water, made a poor playground for children.
-In addition to this, these lavatories must be used, and in consequence a
-situation was created which may be better imagined than explained. Many
-of the front windows of these apartments looked down on this center,
-which was only a few yards from the kitchen windows, creating a neat,
-sanitary and uplifting condition. While usually only two families used
-one of these compartments, in some other courts three or four families
-were compelled to use one, giving rise to indifference and a sense of
-irresponsibility for their condition. While all the streets had sewers
-and by borough ordinance these outside vaults must be connected with
-them, still most of them were flushed only by waste water, which flowed
-directly into them from the yard faucet. When conditions became
-unbearable the vaults were washed out with a hose attached to the
-hydrant, but in winter, when there was danger of freezing, this was not
-always possible. There was not one indoor closet in any of these courts.
-
-But to return to the apartment in question. The kitchen was steaming
-with vapor from a big washtub set on a chair in the middle of the room.
-The mother, who had carried the water in, was trying to wash and at the
-same time keep the older of her two babies from tumbling into the tub of
-scalding water that was standing on the floor. On one side of the room
-was a huge puffy bed, with one feather tick to sleep on and another for
-covering. Near the window was a sewing-machine, in a corner a melodeon,
-and of course there was the inevitable cookstove, upon which was
-simmering a pot of soup. To the left, in the second room, were one
-boarder and the man of the house asleep. Two boarders, so I learned,
-were at work, but at night would be home to sleep in the bed now
-occupied by one boarder and the man of the house. The little family and
-their boarders, taken to help out on the rent, worked and lived so in
-order that Mr. Carnegie might give the world one or two extra libraries
-with his name plastered on the front, and Mr. Frick a mansion on Fifth
-Avenue.
-
-It was to Martyn and his interest that I owed still other views. He took
-me one day to a boardinghouse in which lived twenty-four people, all in
-two rooms, and yet, to my astonishment and confusion, it was not so bad
-as that other court, so great apparently is the value of intimate human
-contact. Few of the very poor day laborers, as Martyn explained to me,
-who were young and unmarried, cared how they lived so long as they lived
-cheaply and could save a little. This particular boardinghouse in
-Homestead was in a court such as I have described, and consisted of two
-rooms, one above the other, each measuring perhaps 12 × 20. In the
-kitchen at the time was the wife of the boarding boss cooking dinner.
-Along one side of the room was an oilcloth-covered table with a plank
-bench on each side; above it was a rack holding a long row of white
-cups, and a shelf with tin knives and forks. Near the up-to-date range,
-the only real piece of furniture in the room, hung the buckets in which
-all mill men carried their noon or midnight meals. A crowd of men were
-lounging cheerfully about, talking, smoking and enjoying life, one of
-them playing a concertina. They were making the most of a brief spell
-before their meal and departure for work. In the room above, as the
-landlord cheerfully showed us, were double iron bedsteads set close
-together and on them comfortables neatly laid.
-
-In these two rooms lived, besides the boarding boss and his wife, both
-stalwart Bulgarians, and their two babies, twenty men. They were those
-Who handled steel billets and bars, unloaded and loaded trains, worked
-in cinder pits, filled steel buckets with stock, and what not. They all
-worked twelve hours a day, and their reward was this and what they could
-save over and above it out of nine-sixty per week. Martyn said a good
-thing about them at the time: “I don’t know how it is. I know these
-people are exploited and misused. The mill-owners pay them the lowest
-wages, the landlords exploit these boardinghouse keepers as well as
-their boarders, and the community which they make by their work don’t
-give a damn for them, and yet they are happy, and I’ll be hanged if they
-don’t make me happy. It must be that just work is happiness,” and I
-agreed with him. Plenty of work, something to do, the ability to avoid
-the ennui of idleness and useless, pensive, futile thought!
-
-There was another side that I thought was a part of all this, and that
-was the “vice” situation. There were so many girls who walked the
-streets here, and back of the _Dispatch_ and postoffice buildings, as
-well as in the streets ranged along the Monongahela below Smithfield
-(Water, First and Second), were many houses of disrepute, as large and
-flourishing an area as I had seen in any city. As I learned from the
-political and police man, the police here as elsewhere “protected” vice,
-or in other words preyed upon it.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXII
-
-
-IN the meantime I was going about my general work, and an easy task it
-proved. My city editor, cool, speculative, diplomatic soul, soon
-instructed me as to the value of news and its limitations here. “We
-don’t touch on labor conditions except through our labor man,” he told
-me, “and he knows what to say. There’s nothing to be said about the rich
-or religious in a derogatory sense: they’re all right in so far as we
-know. We don’t touch on scandals in high life. The big steel men here
-just about own the place, so we can’t. Some papers out West and down in
-New York go in for sensationalism, but we don’t. I’d rather have some
-simple little feature any time, a story about some old fellow with
-eccentric habits, than any of these scandals or tragedies. Of course we
-do cover them when we have to, but we have to be mighty careful what we
-say.”
-
-So much for a free press in Pittsburgh, A.D. 1893!
-
-And I found that the city itself, possibly by reason of the recent
-defeat administered to organized labor and the soft pedal of the
-newspapers, presented a most quiescent and somnolent aspect. There was
-little local news. Suicides, occasional drownings, a wedding or death in
-high society, a brawl in a saloon, the enlargement of a steel plant, the
-visit of a celebrity or the remarks of some local pastor, provided the
-pabulum on which the local readers were fed. Sometimes an outside event,
-such as the organization by General Coxey, of Canton, Ohio, of his
-“hobo” army, at that time moving toward Washington to petition congress
-against the doings of the trusts; or the dictatorial and impossible
-doings of Grover Cleveland, opposition President to the dominant party
-of the State; or the manner in which the moribund Democratic party of
-this region was attempting to steal an office or share in the
-spoils—these and the grand comments of gentlemen in high financial
-positions here and elsewhere as to the outlook for prosperity in the
-nation or the steel mills or the coal fields, occupied the best places
-in the newspapers. For a great metropolis as daring, forceful,
-economically and socially restless as this, it seemed unbelievable that
-it could be so quiescent or say so little about the colossal ambitions
-animating the men at the top. But when it came to labor or the unions,
-their restlessness or unholy anarchistic demands, or the trashy views of
-a third-rate preacher complaining of looseness in dress or morals, or an
-actor voicing his views on art, or a politician commenting on some
-unimportant phase of our life, it was a very different matter. These
-papers were then free enough to say their say.
-
-I recall that Thomas B. Reed, then Speaker of the House, once passed
-through the city and stopped off to visit some friendly steel magnate. I
-was sent to interview him and obtain his views as to “General” Coxey’s
-army, a band of poor mistaken theorists who imagined that by marching to
-Washington and protesting to Congress they could compel a trust-dictated
-American Senate and House to take cognizance of their woes. This able
-statesman—and he was no fool, being at the time in the councils and
-favor of the money power and looked upon as the probable Republican
-Presidential nominee—pretended to me to believe that a vast national
-menace lay in such a movement and protest.
-
-“Why, it’s the same as revolution!” he ranted, washing his face in his
-suite at the Monongahela, his suspenders swaying loosely about his fat
-thighs. “It’s an unheard-of proceeding. For a hundred years the American
-people have had a fixed and constitutional and democratic method of
-procedure. They have their county and State and national conventions,
-and their power of instructing delegates to the same. They can write any
-plank they wish into any party platform, and compel its enforcement by
-their votes. Now comes along a man who finds something that doesn’t just
-suit his views, and instead of waiting and appealing to the regular
-party councils, he organizes an army and proceeds to march on
-Washington.”
-
-“But he has been able to muster only three or four hundred men all
-told,” I suggested mildly. “He doesn’t seem to be attracting many
-followers.”
-
-“The number of his followers isn’t the point,” he insisted. “If one man
-can gather an army of five hundred, another can gather an army of ten or
-five hundred thousand. That means revolution.”
-
-“Yes,” I ventured. “But what about the thing of which they are
-complaining?”
-
-“It doesn’t matter what their grievance is,” he said somewhat testily.
-“This is a government of law and prescribed political procedure. Our
-people must abide by that.”
-
-I was ready to agree, only I was thinking of the easy manner in which
-delegates and elected representatives everywhere were ignoring the
-interests if not the mandates of the body politic at large and listening
-to the advice and needs of financiers and trust-builders. Already the
-air was full of complaints against monopoly. Trusts and combinations of
-every kind were being organized, and the people were being taxed
-accordingly. All property, however come by, was sacred in America. The
-least protest of the mass anywhere was revolutionary, or at least the
-upwellings of worthless and never-to-be-countenanced malcontents. I
-could not believe this. I firmly believed then, as I do now, that the
-chains wherewith a rapidly developing financial oligarchy or autocracy
-meant to bind a liberty-deluded mass were then and there being forged. I
-felt then, as I do now, that the people of that day should have been
-more alive to their interests, that they should have compelled, at
-Washington or elsewhere, by peaceable political means if possible, by
-dire and threatening uprisings if necessary, a more careful concern for
-their interests than any congressman or senator or governor or
-President, at that time or since, was giving them. As I talked to this
-noble chairman of the House my heart was full of these sentiments, only
-I did not deem it of any avail to argue with him. I was a mere cub
-reporter and he was the Speaker of the House of Representatives, but I
-had a keen contempt for the enthusiasm he manifested for law. When it
-came to what the money barons wished, the manufacturers and trust
-organizers hiding behind a huge and extortionate tariff wall, he was one
-of their chief guards and political and congressional advocates. If you
-doubt it look up his record.
-
-But it was owing to this very careful interpretation of what was and
-what was not news that I experienced some of the most delightful
-newspaper hours of my life. Large features being scarce, I was assigned
-to do “city hall and police, Allegheny,” as the assignment book used to
-read, and with this mild task ahead of me I was in the habit of crossing
-the Allegheny River into the city of Allegheny, where, ensconced in a
-chair in the reporters’ room of the combined city hall and central
-police station or in the Carnegie Public Library over the way, or in the
-cool, central, shaded court of the Allegheny General Hospital, with the
-head interne of which I soon made friends, I waited for something to
-turn up. As is usual with all city and police and hospital officials
-everywhere, the hope of favorable and often manufactured publicity
-animating them, I was received most cordially. All I had to do was to
-announce that I was from the _Dispatch_ and assigned to this bailiwick,
-and I was informed as to anything of importance that had come to the
-surface during the last ten or twelve hours. If there was nothing—and
-usually there was not—I sat about with several other reporters or with
-the head interne of the hospital, or, having no especial inquiry to
-make, I crossed the street to Squire Daniels, whose office was in the
-tree-shaded square facing this civic center, and here (a squire being
-the equivalent of a petty police magistrate), inquired if anything had
-come to his notice.
-
-Squire Daniels, a large, bald, pink-faced individual of three
-hundredweight, used of a sunny afternoon these warm Spring days to sit
-out in front of his office, his chair tilted against his office wall or
-a tree, and, with three or four cronies, retail the most delicious
-stories of old-time political characters and incidents. He was a mine of
-this sort of thing and an immense favorite in consequence with all the
-newspaper men and politicians. I was introduced to him on my third or
-fourth day in Allegheny as he was sitting out on his tilted chair, and
-he surveyed me with a smile.
-
-“From the _Dispatch_, eh? Well, take a chair if you can find one; if you
-can’t, sit on the curb or in the doorway. Many’s the man I seen from the
-_Dispatch_ in my time. Your boss, Harry Gaither, used to come around
-here before he got to be city editor. So did your Sunday man, Funger.
-There ain’t much news I can give you, but whatever there is you’re
-welcome to it. I always treat all the boys alike,” and he smiled. Then
-he proceeded with his tale, something about an old alderman or
-politician who had painted a pig once in order to bring it up to certain
-prize specifications and so won the prize, only to be found out later
-because the “specifications” wore off. He had such a zestful way of
-telling his stories as to compel laughter.
-
-And then directly across the street to the east from the city hall was
-the Allegheny Carnegie library, a very handsome building which
-contained, in addition to the library, an auditorium in which had been
-placed the usual “one of the largest” if not “the largest” pipe organ in
-the world. This organ had one advantage: it was supplied with a paid
-city organist, who on Sundays, Wednesdays and Saturdays entertained the
-public with free recitals, and so capable was he that seats were at a
-premium and standing-room only the rule unless one arrived far ahead of
-time. This manifestation of interest on the part of the public pleased
-me greatly and somehow qualified, if it did not atone for, Mr.
-Carnegie’s indifference to the welfare of his employees.
-
-But I was most impressed with the forty or fifty thousand volumes so
-conveniently arranged that one could walk from stack to stack, looking
-at the labels and satisfying one’s interest by browsing in the books.
-The place had most comfortable window-nooks and chairs between stacks
-and in alcoves. One afternoon, having nothing else to do, I came here
-and by the merest chance picked up a volume entitled _The Wild Ass’s
-Skin_ by the writer who so fascinated Wandell—Honoré de Balzac. I
-examined it curiously, reading a preface which shimmered with his
-praise. He was the great master of France. His _Comédie Humaine_ covered
-every aspect of the human welter. His interpretations of character were
-exhaustive and exact. His backgrounds were abundant, picturesque,
-gorgeous. In Paris his home had been turned into a museum, and contained
-his effects as they were at the time of his death.
-
-I turned to the first page and began reading, and from then on until
-dusk I sat in this charming alcove reading. A new and inviting door to
-life had been suddenly thrown open to me. Here was one who saw, thought,
-felt. Through him I saw a prospect so wide that it left me
-breathless—all Paris, all France, all life through French eyes. Here was
-one who had a tremendous and sensitive grasp of life, philosophic,
-tolerant, patient, amused. At once I was personally identified with his
-Raphael, his Rastignac, his Bixiou, his Bianchon. With Raphael I entered
-the gaming-house in the Palais Royal, looked despairingly down into the
-waters of the Seine from the Pont Royal, turned from it to the shop of
-the dealer in antiques, was ignored by the perfect young lady before the
-shop of the print-seller, attended the Taillefer banquet, suffered
-horrors over the shrinking skin. The lady without a heart was all too
-real. It was for me a literary revolution. Not only for the brilliant
-and incisive manner with which Balzac grasped life and invented themes
-whereby to present it, but for the fact that the types he handled with
-most enthusiasm and skill—the brooding, seeking, ambitious beginner in
-life’s social, political, artistic and commercial affairs (Rastignac,
-Raphael, de Rubempre, Bianchon)—were, I thought, so much like myself.
-Indeed, later taking up and consuming almost at a sitting _The Great Man
-from the Provinces_, _Père Goriot_, _Cousin Pons_, _Cousin Bette_, it
-was so easy to identify myself with the young and seeking aspirants. The
-brilliant and intimate pictures of Parisian life, the exact flavor of
-its politics, arts, sciences, religions, social goings to and fro
-impressed me so as to accomplish for me what his imaginary magic skin
-had done for his Raphael: transfer me bodily and without defect or lack
-to the center as well as the circumference of the world which he was
-describing. I knew his characters as well as he did, so magical was his
-skill. His grand and somewhat pompous philosophical deductions, his easy
-and offhand disposition of all manner of critical, social, political,
-historical, religious problems, the manner in which he assumed as by
-right of genius intimate and irrefutable knowledge of all subjects,
-fascinated and captured me as the true method of the seer and the
-genius. Oh, to possess an insight such as this! To know and be a part of
-such a cosmos as Paris, to be able to go there, to work, to study,
-suffer, rise, and even end in defeat if need be, so fascinatingly alive
-were all the journeys of his puppets! What was Pittsburgh, what St.
-Louis, what Chicago?—and yet, in spite of myself, while I adored his
-Paris, still I was obtaining a new and more dramatic light on the world
-in which I found myself. Pittsburgh was not Paris, America was not
-France, but in truth they were something, and Pittsburgh at least had
-aspects which somehow suggested Paris. These charming rivers, these many
-little bridges, the sharp contrasts presented by the east end and the
-mill regions, the huge industries here and their importance to the world
-at large, impressed me more vividly than before. I was in a workaday,
-begrimed, and yet vivid Paris. Taillefer, Nucingen, Valentin were no
-different from some of the immense money magnets here, in their case,
-luxury, power, at least the possibilities which they possessed.
-
-Coming out of the library this day, and day after day thereafter, the
-while I rendered as little reportorial service as was consistent with
-even a show of effort, I marveled at the physical similarity of the two
-cities as I conceived it, at the chance for pictures here as well as
-there. American pictures here, as opposed to French pictures there. And
-all the while I was riding with Lucien to Paris, with his mistress,
-courting Madame Nucingen with Rastignac, brooding over the horror of the
-automatically contracting skin with Raphael, poring over his miseries
-with Goriot, practicing the horrible art of prostitution with Madame
-Marneffe. For a period of four or five months I ate, slept, dreamed,
-lived him and his characters and his views and his city. I cannot
-imagine a greater joy and inspiration than I had in Balzac these Spring
-and Summer days in Pittsburgh. Idyllic days, dreamy days, poetic days,
-wonderful days, the while I ostensibly did “police and city hall” in
-Allegheny.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIII
-
-
-IT would be unfair to myself not to indicate that I rendered an adequate
-return for the stipend paid me. As a matter of fact, owing to the
-peculiar character of the local news conditions, as well as my own
-creative if poorly equipped literary instincts at the time, I was able
-to render just such service as my employers craved, and that with
-scarcely a wrench to my mental ease. For what they craved, more than
-news of a dramatic or disturbing character, was some sort of idle
-feature stuff which they could use in place of news and still interest
-their readers. The Spring time, Balzac, the very picturesque city
-itself, my own idling and yet reflective disposition, caused me finally
-to attempt a series of mood or word-pictures about the most trivial
-matters—a summer storm, a spring day, a visit to a hospital, the death
-of an old switchman’s dog, the arrival of the first mosquito—which gave
-me my first taste of what it means to be a creative writer.
-
-The city editor asked me one day if I could not invent some kind of
-feature, and I sat down and thought of one theme and another. Finally I
-thought of the fly as a possible subject for an idle skit. Being young
-and ambitious, and having just crawled out of a breeding-pit somewhere,
-he alighted on the nearest fence or windowsill, brushed his head and
-wings reflectively and meditated on the chances of a livelihood or a
-career. What would be open to a young and ambitious fly in a world all
-too crowded with flies? There were barns, of course, and kitchens and
-horses and cows and pigs, but these fields were overrun, and this was a
-sensitive and cleanly and meditative fly. Flying about here and there to
-inspect the world, he encountered within a modest and respectable home a
-shiny pate which seemed to offer a rather polished field of effort and
-so on.
-
-This idle thing which took me not more than three-quarters of an hour to
-write and which I was almost afraid to submit, produced a remarkable
-change in the attitude of the office, as well as in my life and career.
-We had at this time as assistant city editor a small, retiring,
-sentimental soul, Jim Israels, who was one of the most gracious and
-approachable and lovable men I have ever known. He it was to whom I
-turned over my skit. He took it with an air of kindly consideration and
-helpfulness.
-
-“Trying to help us out, are you?” he said with a smile, and then added
-when I predicated its worthlessness: “Well, it’s not such an easy thing
-to turn out that stuff. I hope it’s something the chief will like.”
-
-He took it and, as I noticed, for I hung about to see, read it at once,
-and I saw him begin to smile and finally chuckle.
-
-“This thing’s all right,” he called. “You needn’t worry. Gaither’ll be
-pleased with this, I know,” and he began to edit it.
-
-I went out to walk and think, for I had nothing to do except wander over
-to Allegheny to find out if anything had turned up.
-
-When I returned at six I was greeted by my city editor with a smile and
-told that if I would I could do that sort of thing as much as I liked.
-“Try and get up something for tomorrow, will you?” I said I would try.
-The next day, a Spring rain descending with wonderful clouds and a
-magnificent electrical display, I described how the city, dry and smoky
-and dirty, lay panting in the deadening heat and how out of the west
-came, like an answer to a prayer, this sudden and soothing storm,
-battalion upon battalion of huge clouds riven with great silvery flashes
-of light, darkening the sun as they came; and how suddenly, while
-shutters clapped and papers flew and office windows and doors had to be
-closed and signs squeaked and swung and people everywhere ran to cover,
-the thousands upon thousands who had been enduring the heat heaved a
-sigh of gratitude. I described how the steel tenements, the homes of the
-rich, the office buildings, the factories, the hospitals and jails
-changed under these conditions. and then ventured to give specific
-incidents and pictures of animals and men.
-
-This was received with congratulations, especially from the assistant
-editor, who was more partial to anything sentimental than his chief. But
-I, feeling that I had hit upon a vein of my own, was not inclined to
-favor the moods of either but to write such things as appealed to me
-most. This I did from day to day, wandering out into the country or into
-strange neighborhoods for ideas and so varying my studies as my mood
-dictated. I noticed, however, that my more serious attempts were not so
-popular as the lighter and sillier things. This might have been a guide
-to me, had I been so inclined, leading to an easy and popular success;
-but by instinct and observation I was inclined to be interested in the
-larger and more tragic phases of life. Mere humor, such as I could
-achieve when I chose, seemed always to require for its foundation the
-most trivial of incidents, whereas huge and massive conditions underlay
-tragedy and all the more forceful aspects of life.
-
-But what pleased and surprised me was the manner in which these lighter
-as well as the more serious things were received and the change they
-made in my standing. Hitherto I was merely a newcomer being tested and
-by no means secure in my hold on this position. Now, of a sudden, my
-status was entirely changed. I was a feature man, one who had succeeded
-where others apparently had failed, and so I was made more than welcome.
-To my surprise, my city editor one day asked me whether I had had my
-lunch. I gladly availed myself of a chance to talk to him, and he told
-me a little something of local journalistic life, who the publisher of
-this paper was, his politics and views. The assistant editor asked me to
-dinner. The Sunday editor, the chief political reporter, the chief city
-hall and police man grew friendly; I went to lunch or dinner with one or
-the other, was taken to the Press Club after midnight, and occasionally
-to a theater by the dramatic man. Finally I was asked to contribute
-something to the Sunday papers, and later still asked to help the
-dramatic man with criticisms.
-
-I was a little puzzled and made quite nervous though not vain by this
-sudden change. The managing editor came to talk familiarly with me, and
-after him the son of the publisher, fresh from a European trip. But when
-he told me how interested he was in the kind of thing I was doing and
-that he wished he “could write like that,” I remember feeling a little
-envious of him, with his fine clothes and easy manner. An invitation to
-dine at his home soothed me in no way. I never went. There was some talk
-of sending me to report a proposed commercial conference (at Buffalo, I
-believe), looking to the construction of a ship canal from Erie or
-Buffalo to Pittsburgh, but it interested me not at all. I had no
-interest in those things, really not in newspaper work, and yet I
-scarcely knew what I wanted to do if not that. One thing is sure: I had
-no commercial sense whereby I might have profited by all this. After the
-second or third sketch had been published there was a decided list in my
-direction, and I might have utilized my success. Instead, I merely
-mooned and dreamed as before, reading at the Carnegie Library, going out
-on assignments or writing one of these sketches and then going home
-again or to the Press Club. I gathered all sorts of data as to the steel
-magnates—Carnegie, Phipps and Frick especially—their homes, their clubs,
-their local condescensions and superiorities. The people of Pittsburgh
-were looked upon as vassals by some of these, and their interviews on
-returning from the seashore or the mountains partook of the nature of a
-royal return.
-
-I remember being sent once to the Duquesne Club to interview Andrew
-Carnegie, fresh from his travels abroad, and being received by a
-secretary who allowed me to stand in the back of a room in which Mr.
-Carnegie, short, stocky, bandy-legged, a grand air of authority
-investing him, was addressing the élite of the city on the subject of
-America and its political needs. No note-taking was permitted, but I was
-later handed a typewritten address to the people of Pittsburgh and told
-that the _Dispatch_ would be allowed to publish that. And it did. I
-smiled then, and I smile now, at the attitude of press, pulpit,
-officials of this amazing city of steel and iron where one and all
-seemed so genuflective and boot-licking, and yet seemed not to profit to
-any great degree by the presence of these magnates, who were constantly
-hinting at removing elsewhere unless they were treated thus and so—as
-though the life of a great and forceful metropolis depended on them
-alone.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIV
-
-
-IT was about this time that I began to establish cordial relations with
-the short, broad-shouldered, sad-faced labor reporter whom I have
-previously mentioned. At first he appeared to be a little shy of me, but
-as time passed and I seemed to have established myself in the favor of
-the paper, he became more friendly. He was really a radical at heart,
-but did not dare let it be known here. Often of a morning he would spend
-as much as two hours with me, discussing the nature of coal-mining and
-steel-making, the difficulty of arranging wage conditions which would
-satisfy all the men and not cause friction; but in the main he commented
-on the shrewd and cunning way in which the bosses were more and more
-overreaching their employees, preying upon their prejudices by religious
-and political dodges, and at the same time misusing them shamefully
-through the company store, the short ton, the cost of mining materials,
-rent. At first, knowing nothing about the situation, I was inclined to
-doubt whether he was as sound in these matters as he seemed to be.
-Later, as I grew in personal knowledge, I thought he might be too
-conservative, so painful did many of the things seem which I saw with my
-own eyes and his aid.
-
- * * * * *
-
-About this time several things conspired to stir up my feelings in
-regard to New York. The Pittsburgh papers gave great space to New York
-events and affairs, much more than did most of the mid-Western papers.
-There was a millionaire steel colony here which was trying to connect
-itself with the so-called “Four Hundred” of New York, as well as the
-royal social atmosphere of England and France; and the comings and
-goings and doings of these people at Newport, New York, Bar Harbor,
-London and Paris were fully chronicled. Occasionally I was sent to one
-or another of these great homes to ask about the details of certain
-marriages or proposed trips, and would find the people in the midst of
-the most luxurious preparations. One night, for instance, I was sent to
-ask a certain steel man about the rumored resumption or extension of
-work in one of the mills. His house was but a dot on a great estate, the
-reaching of which was very difficult. I found him about ten o’clock at
-night stepping into a carriage to be driven to the local station, which
-was at the foot of the grounds. Although I was going to the same station
-in order to catch a local back to the city, he did not ask me to
-accompany him. Instead he paused on the step of his carriage to say that
-he could not say definitely whether the work would be done or not. He
-was entirely surrounded by bags, a gun, a fishing basket and other
-paraphernalia, after which of course a servant was looking. When he was
-gone I walked along the same road to the same station, and saw him
-standing there. Another man came up and greeted him.
-
-“Going down to New York, George?” he inquired.
-
-“No, to the Chesapeake. My lodge man tells me ducks are plentiful there
-now, and I thought I’d run down and get a few.”
-
-The through train, which had been ordered to stop for him, rolled in and
-he was gone. I waited for my smoky local, marveling at the comfort and
-ease which had been already attained by a man of not more than
-forty-five years of age.
-
-But there were other things which seemed always to talk to me of New
-York, New York. I picked up a new weekly, the _Standard_, one evening,
-and found a theatrical paper of the most pornographic and alluring
-character which pretended to report with accuracy all the gayeties of
-the stage, the clubs, the tenderloins or white-light districts, as well
-as society of the racier and more spendthrift character. This paper
-spoke only of pleasure: yacht parties, midnight suppers, dances, scenes
-behind the stage and of blissful young stars of the theatrical, social
-and money worlds. Here were ease and luxury! In New York, plainly, was
-all this, and I might go there and by some fluke of chance taste of it.
-I studied this paper by the hour, dreaming of all it suggested.
-
-And there was _Munsey’s_, the first and most successful of all the
-ten-cent magazines then coming into existence and being fed to the
-public by the ton. I saw it first piled in high stacks before a news and
-book store in Pittsburgh. The size of the pile of magazines and the
-price induced a cursory examination, although I had never even heard of
-it before. Poor as it was intellectually—and it was poor—it contained an
-entire section of highly-coated paper devoted to actresses, the stage
-and scenes from plays, and still another carrying pictures of beauties
-in society in different cities, and still another devoted to successful
-men in Wall Street. It breathed mostly of New York, its social doings,
-its art and literary colonies. It fired me with an ambition to see New
-York.
-
-A third paper, _Town Topics_, was the best of all, a paper most
-brilliantly edited by a man of exceptional literary skill (C. M. S.
-McLellan). It related to exclusive society in New York, London and
-Paris, the houses, palaces, yachts, restaurants and hotels, the goings
-and comings of the owners; and although it really poked fun at all this
-and other forms of existence elsewhere, still there was an element of
-envy and delight in it also which fitted my mood. It gave one the
-impression that there existed in New York, Newport and elsewhere (London
-principally) a kind of Elysian realm in which forever basked the elect
-of fortune. Here was neither want nor care.
-
-How I brooded over all this, the marriages and rumors of marriages, the
-travels, engagements, feasts such as a score of facile novelists
-subsequently succeeded in picturizing to the entertainment and
-disturbance of rural America. For me this realm was all flowers,
-sunshine, smart restaurants, glistering ballrooms, ease, comfort, beauty
-arrayed as only enchantment or a modern newspaper Sunday supplement can
-array it. And while I knew that back of it must be the hard contentions
-and realities such as everywhere hold and characterize life, still I
-didn’t know. In reading these papers I refused to allow myself to cut
-through to the reality. Life must hold some such realm as this, and
-spiritually I belonged to it. But I was already twenty-three, and what
-had I accomplished? I wished most of all now to go to New York and enter
-the realm pictured by these papers. Why not? I might bag an heiress or
-capture fortune in some other way. I must save some money, I told
-myself. Then, financially fortified, against starvation at least, I
-might reconnoiter the great city and—who knows?—perhaps conquer.
-Balzac’s heroes had seemed to do so, why not I? It is written of the
-Dragon God of China that in the beginning it swallowed the world.
-
-And to cap it all about this time I had a letter from my good brother,
-in which he asked me how long I would be “piking” about the West when I
-ought to be in New York. I should come this summer, when New York was at
-its best. He would show me Broadway, Manhattan Beach, a dozen worlds. He
-would introduce me to some New York newspaper men who would introduce me
-to the managers of the _World_ and the _Sun_. (The mere mention of these
-papers, so overawed was I by the fames of Dana and Pulitzer, frightened
-me.) I ought to be on a paper like the _Sun_, he said, since to him Dana
-was the greatest editor in New York. I meditated over this, deciding
-that I would go when I had more money. I then and there started a bank
-account, putting in as much as ten or twelve dollars each week, and in a
-month or two began to feel that sense of security which a little money
-gives one.
-
-Another thing which had a strange psychologic effect on me at the time,
-as indeed it appeared to have on most of the intelligentsia of America,
-was the publication in _Harper’s_ this spring and summer of George Du
-Maurier’s _Trilby_. I have often doubted the import of novel-writing in
-general, but viewing the effect of that particular work on me as well as
-on others one might as well doubt the import of power or fame or emotion
-of any kind. The effect of this book was not so much one of great
-reality and insight such as Balzac at times managed to convey, but
-rather of an exotic mood or perfume of memory and romance conveyed by
-some one who is in love with that memory and improvising upon it as
-musicians do upon a theme. Instanter I saw Paris and Trilby and the Jew
-with his marvelous eyes. Trilby being hypnotized and carried away from
-Little Billee seemed to me then of the essence of great tragedy. I
-myself fairly suffered, walking about and dreaming, the while I awaited
-the one or two final portions. I was lost in the beauty of Paris, the
-delight of studio life, and resented more than ever, as one might a
-great deprivation, the need of living in a land where there was nothing
-but work.
-
-And yet America and this city were fascinating enough to me. But because
-of the preponderant influence of foreign letters on American life it
-seemed that Paris and London must be so much better since every one
-wrote about them. Like Balzac’s _Great Man from the Provinces_, this
-book seemed to connect itself with my own life and the tragedy of not
-having the means to marry at this time, and of being compelled to wander
-about in this way unable to support a wife. At last I became so wrought
-up that I was quite beside myself. I pictured myself as a Little Billee
-who would eventually lose by poverty, as he by trickery, the thing I
-most craved: my Western sweetheart. Meditating on this I vented some of
-my misery in the form of sentimental vaporizings in my feature articles,
-which were all liked well enough but which seemed merely to heighten my
-misery. Finally, some sentimental letters being exchanged between myself
-and my love, I felt an uncontrollable impulse to return and see her and
-St. Louis before I went farther away perhaps never to return. The sense
-of an irrecoverable past which had pervaded _Trilby_ had, I think,
-something to do with this, so interfused and interfusing are all
-thoughts and moods. At any rate, having by now considerable influence
-with this paper, I proposed a short vacation, and the city editor,
-wishing no doubt to propitiate me, suggested that the paper would be
-glad to provide me with transportation both ways. So I made haste to
-announce a grand return, not only to my intended but to McCord, Wood and
-several others who were still in St. Louis.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXV
-
-
-AS one looks back on youth so much of it appears ridiculous and
-maundering and without an essential impulse or direction, and yet as I
-look at life itself I am not sure but that indirection or unimportant
-idlings are a part of life’s method. We often think we are doing some
-vastly important thing, whereas in reality we are merely marking time.
-At other times, when we appear to be marking time we are growing or
-achieving at a great rate; and so it may have been with me. Instead of
-pushing on to New York, I chose to return to St. Louis and grasp one
-more hour of exquisite romance, drink one more cup of love. And whether
-it profited me save as pleasure is profit I cannot tell. Only, may not
-pleasure be the ultimate profit?
-
-This trip to St. Louis was for me a most pivotal and deranging thing,
-probably a great mistake. At that time, of course, I could not see that.
-Instead, I was completely lost in the grip of a passion that
-subsequently proved detrimental or devastating. The reality which I was
-seeking to establish was a temporary contact only. Any really beautiful
-girl or any idyllic scene could have done for me all the things that
-this particular girl and scene could do, only thus far I had chanced to
-meet no other who could displace her. And in a way I knew this then,
-only I realized also that one beautiful specimen was as good a key to
-the lock of earthly delights as another.... Only there were so many
-locks or chambers to which one key would fit, and how sad, in youth at
-least, not to have all the locks, or at least a giant illusion as to
-one!
-
- * * * * *
-
-This return began with a long hot trip in July to St. Louis, and then a
-quick change in the Union Station there at evening which brought me by
-midnight to the small town in the backwoods of Missouri, near which she
-lived. It was hot. I recall the wide hot fields and small wooden towns
-of Southern Ohio and Indiana and this Missouri landscape in the
-night—the frogs, the katydids, the summer stars. I ached and yearned,
-not so much over her as over youth and love and the evanescence of all
-material fires. The spirit of youth cried and sang at the same time.
-
-The little cottages with their single yellow light shining in the fields
-through which this dusty train ran! The perfumed winds!
-
-At last the train stopped and left me standing at midnight on a wooden
-platform with no one to greet me. The train was late. A liveryman who
-was supposed to look after me did not. At a lone window sat the
-telegraph operator, station-master, baggage-agent all in one, a green
-shield shading his eyes. Otherwise the station was bare and silent save
-for the katydids in some weeds near at hand and some chirping
-tree-toads. The agent told me that a hotel was a part of this station,
-run by this railroad. Upstairs, over the baggage and other rooms, were a
-few large barn-like sleeping chambers, carpetless, dusty, cindery, the
-windows curtainless and broken in places, and save for some all but
-slatless shutters unshielded from the world and the night. I placed a
-chair against my door, my purse under my pillow, my bag near at hand.
-During the night several long freights thundered by, their headlights
-lighting the room; yet, lying on a mattress of straw and listening to
-the frogs and katydids outside, I slept just the same. The next morning
-I tied a handkerchief over my eyes and slept some more, arising about
-ten to continue my journey.
-
-The home to which I was going was part of an old decayed village, once a
-point on a trail or stage-coach route, once the prospective capital of
-the State, but now nothing. A courthouse and some quaint tree-shaded
-homes were all but lost or islanded in a sea of corn. I rode out a long,
-hot, dusty road and finally up a long tree-shaded lane to its very end,
-where I passed through a gate and at the far end came upon a worn,
-faded, rain-rotted house facing a row of trees in a wide lawn. I felt
-that never before had I been so impressed with a region and a home. It
-was all so simple. The house, though old and decayed, was exquisite. The
-old French windows—copied from where and by whom?—reaching to the grass;
-the long graceful rooms, the cool hall, the veranda before it, so very
-Southern in quality, the flowers about every window and door! I found a
-home in which lived a poverty-stricken and yet spiritually impressive
-patriarch, a mother who might serve as an American tradition so simple
-and gracious was she, sisters and brothers who were reared in an
-atmosphere which somehow induced a gracious, sympathetic idealism and
-consideration. Poor as they were, they were the best of the families
-here. The father had been an office-holder and one of the district
-leaders in his day, and one of his sons still held an office. A
-son-in-law was the district master of this entire congressional
-district, which included seven counties, and could almost make or break
-a congressman. All but three daughters were married, and I was engaged
-to one of the remaining ones. Another, too beautiful and too hoyden to
-think of any one in particular, was teaching school, or playing at it. A
-farm of forty acres to the south of the house was tilled by the father
-and two sons.
-
-Elsewhere I have indicated this atmosphere, but here I like to touch on
-it again. We Americans have home traditions or ideals, created as much
-by song and romance as anything else: _My Old Kentucky Home_, _Suwanee
-River_. Despite any willing on my part, this home seemed to fulfill the
-spirit of those songs. There was something so sadly romantic about it.
-The shade of the great trees moved across the lawn in stately and
-lengthening curves. A stream at the foot of the slope leading down from
-the west side of the house dimpled and whimpered in the sun. Birds sang,
-and there were golden bees about the flowers and wasps under the eaves
-of the house. Hammocks of barrel—staves, and others of better texture,
-were strung between the trees. In a nearby barn of quaint design were
-several good horses, and there were cows in the field adjoining. Ducks
-and geese solemnly padded to and fro between the house and the stream.
-The air was redolent of corn, wheat, clover, timothy, flowers.
-
-To me it seemed that all the spirit of rural America, its idealism, its
-dreams, the passion of a Brown, the courage and patience and sadness of
-a Lincoln, the dreams and courage of a Lee or a Jackson, were all here.
-The very soil smacked of American idealism and faith, a fixedness in
-sentimental and purely imaginative American tradition, in which I, alas!
-could not share. I was enraptured. Out of its charms and sentiments I
-might have composed an elegy or an epic, but I could not believe that it
-was more than a frail flower of romance. I had seen Pittsburgh.... I had
-seen Lithuanians and Hungarians in their “courts” and hovels. I had seen
-the girls of that city walking the streets at night. This profound faith
-in God, in goodness, in virtue and duty that I saw here in no wise
-squared with the craft, the cruelty, the brutality and the envy that I
-saw everywhere else. These parents were gracious and God-fearing, but to
-me they seemed asleep. They did not know life—could not. These boys and
-girls, as I soon found, respected love and marriage and duty and other
-things which the idealistic American still clings to.
-
-Outside was all this other life that I had seen of which apparently
-these people knew nothing. They were as if suspended in dreams, lotus
-eaters, and my beloved was lost in this same romance. I was thinking of
-her beauty, her wealth of hair, the color of her cheeks, the beauty of
-her figure, of what she might be to me. She might have been thinking of
-the same thing, possibly more indirectly, but also she was thinking of
-the dignity and duty and sanctity of marriage. For her, marriage and one
-love were for life. For myself, whether I admitted it or not, love was a
-thing much less stable. Indeed I was not thinking of marriage at all,
-but rather whether I could be happy here and now, and how much I could
-extract out of love. Or perhaps, to be just to myself, I was as much a
-victim of passion and romance as she was, only to the two of us it did
-not mean the same thing. Unconsciously I identified her with the beauty
-of all I saw, and at the same time felt that it was all so different
-from anything I knew or believed that I wondered how she would fit in
-with the kind of life toward which I was moving. How overcome this
-rigidity in duty and truth?
-
-Both of us being inflamed, it was the most difficult thing for me to
-look upon her and not crave her physically, and, as she later admitted,
-she felt the same yearning toward me. At the time, however, she was all
-but horrified at a thought which ran counter to all the principles
-impressed upon her since early youth. There was thus set up between us
-in this delightful atmosphere a conflict between tradition and desire.
-The hot faint breezes about the house and in the trees seemed to whisper
-of secret and forbidden contact. The perfumes of the thickly grown beds
-of flowers, the languorous sultry heat of the afternoon and night, the
-ripening and blooming fields beyond, the drowsy, still, starry nights
-with their hum of insects and croak of frogs and the purrs and whimpers
-and barks of animals, seemed to call for but one thing. There was about
-her an intense delight in living. No doubt she longed as much to be
-seized as I to seize her, and yet there was a moral elusiveness which
-added even more to the chase. I wished to take her then and not wait,
-but the prejudices of a most careful rearing frightened and deterred
-her. And yet I shall always feel that the impulse was better than the
-forces which confuted and subsequently defeated it. For then was the
-time to unite, not years later when, however much the economic and
-social and religious conditions which are supposed to surround and
-safeguard such unions had been fulfilled, my zest for her, and no doubt
-hers in part for me, had worn away.
-
-Love should act in its heat, not when its bank account is heavy. The
-chemic formula which works to reproduce the species, and the most vital
-examples at that, is not concerned with the petty local and social
-restraints which govern all this. Life if it wants anything wants
-children, and healthy ones, and the weighing and binding rules which
-govern their coming and training may easily become too restrictive.
-Nature’s way is correct, her impulses sound. The delight of possessing
-my fiancée then would have repaid her for her fears. and me for
-ruthlessness if I had taken her. A clearer and a better grasp of life
-would have been hers and mine. The coward sips little of life, the
-strong man drinks deep. Old prejudices must always fall, and life must
-always change. It is the law.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVI
-
-
-AND so this romance ended for me. At the time, of course, I did not know
-it; on leaving her I was under the impression that I was more than ever
-attached to her. In the face of this postponement, life took on a grayer
-and more disappointing aspect. To be forced to wait when at that moment,
-if ever, was the time!
-
-And yet I told myself that better days were surely in store. I would
-return East and in some way place myself so that soon we might be
-reunited. It was a figment of hope. By the time I was finally capable of
-maintaining her economically, my earlier mood had changed. That hour
-which we had known, or might have known, had gone forever. I had seen
-more of life, more of other women, and although even then she was by no
-means unattractive the original yearning had vanished. She was now but
-one of many, and there were those who were younger and more
-sophisticated, even more attractive.
-
-And yet, before I left her, what days! The sunshine! The lounging under
-the trees! The drowsy summer heat! The wishing for what might not be!
-Having decided that her wish was genuine and my impulse to comply with
-it wise, I stood by it, wishing that it might be otherwise. I consoled
-myself thinly with the thought that the future must bring us together,
-and then left, journeying first to St. Louis and later to New York. For
-while I was here that letter from my brother which urged me once more to
-come to New York was forwarded to me. Just before leaving Pittsburgh I
-had sent him a collection of those silly “features” I had been writing,
-and he also was impressed. I must come to New York. Some metropolitan
-paper was the place for me and my material. Anyhow, I would enjoy
-visiting there in the summer time more than later. I wired him that I
-would arrive at a certain time, and then set out for St. Louis and a
-visit among my old newspaper friends there.
-
-I do not know how most people take return visits, but I have often noted
-that it has only been as I have grown older and emotionally less mobile
-that they have become less and less significant to me. In my earlier
-years nothing could have been more poignant or more melancholy than my
-thoughts on any of these occasions. Whenever I returned to any place in
-which I had once lived and found things changed, as they always were, I
-was fairly transfixed by the oppressive sense of the evanescence of
-everything; a mood so hurtful and dark and yet with so rich if sullen a
-luster that I was left wordless with pain. I was all but crucified at
-realizing how unimportant I was, how nothing stayed but all changed.
-Scenes passed, never to be recaptured. Moods came and friendships and
-loves, and were gone forever. Life was perpetually moving on. The
-beautiful pattern of which each of us, but more especially myself, was a
-part, was changing from day to day, so that things which were an anchor
-and a comfort and delight yesterday were tomorrow no more. And though
-perhaps innately I desired change, or at least appropriate and agreeable
-changes for myself, I did not wish this other, this exterior world to
-shift, and that under my very eyes.
-
-The most haunting and disturbing thought always was that hourly I was
-growing older. Life was so brief, such a very little cup at best, and so
-soon, whatever its miserable amount or character, it would be gone. Some
-had strength or capacity or looks or fortune, or all, at their command,
-and then all the world was theirs to travel over and explore. Beauty and
-ease were theirs, and love perhaps, and the companionship of interesting
-and capable people; but I, poor waif, with no definite or arresting
-skill of any kind, not even that of commerce, must go fumbling about
-looking in upon life from the outside, as it were. Beautiful women, or
-so I argued, were drawn to any but me. The great opportunities of the
-day in trade and commerce were for any but me. I should never have a
-fraction of the means to do as I wished or to share in the life that I
-most craved. I was an Ishmael, a wanderer.
-
-In St. Louis I was oppressed beyond words. Of the newspaper men who had
-been living on the same floor with me in Broadway there was not one
-left. At the _Globe-Democrat_ already reigned a new city editor. My two
-friends, Wood and McCord, while delighted to see me, told me of those
-who had already gone and seemed immersed in many things that had arisen
-since I had gone and were curious as to why I should have returned at
-all. I hung about for a day or two, wondering all the while why I did
-so, and then took the train going East.
-
-Of all my journeys thus far this to New York was the most impressive. It
-took on at once, the moment I left St. Louis, the character of a great
-adventure, for it was all unknown and enticing. For years my mind had
-been centered on it. True to the law of gravitation, its pull was in
-proportion to its ever increasing size. As a boy in Indiana, and later
-in Chicago, I had read daily papers sent on from New York by my sister
-E——, who lived there. In Chicago, owing to a rivalry which existed on
-Chicago’s part (not on New York’s, I am sure), the papers were studded
-with invidious comments which, like all poorly based criticism, only
-served to emphasize the salient and impressive features of the greater
-city. It had an elevated road that ran through its long streets on
-stilts of steel and carried hundreds of thousands if not millions in the
-miniature trains drawn by small engines. It was a long, heavily
-populated island surrounded by great rivers, and was America’s ocean
-door to Europe. It had the great Brooklyn Bridge, then unparalleled
-anywhere, Wall Street, Jay Gould, Cornelius Vanderbilt, a huge company
-of millionaires. It had Tammany Hall, the Statue of Liberty, unveiled
-not so many years before (when I was a boy in Southern Indiana), Madison
-Square Garden, the Metropolitan Opera House, the Horse Show. It was the
-center and home of fashionable society, of all fixed and itinerant
-actors and actresses. All great theatrical successes began there. Of
-papers of largest circulation and greatest fame, it had nearly all. As
-an ignorant understrapper I had often contended, and that noisily, with
-various passing atoms of New York, as condescending as I was ignorant
-and stubborn, as to the relative merits of New York and Chicago, New
-York and St. Louis! There could not be so much difference! There were
-many great things in these minor places! Some day, surely, Chicago would
-outstrip New York!... Well, I lived to see many changes and things, but
-not that. Instead I saw the great city grow and grow, until it stood
-unrivaled, for size and force and wealth at least, anywhere.
-
-And now after all these tentative adventurings I was at last to enter
-it. Although I was moderately well-placed in Pittsburgh and not coming
-as a homeless, penniless seeker, still even now I was dreadfully afraid
-of it—why, I cannot say. Perhaps it was because it was so immense and
-mentally so much more commanding. Still I consoled myself with the
-thought that this was only a visit and I was to have a chance to explore
-it without feeling that I had to make my way then and there.
-
-I recall clearly the hot late afternoon in July when, after stopping off
-at Pittsburgh to refresh myself and secure a change of clothing, I took
-the train for New York. I noted with eager, hungry eyes a succession of
-dreary forge and mining towns, miles of blazing coke ovens paralleling
-the track and lighting these regions with a lurid glow after dusk, huge
-dark hills occasionally twinkling with a feeble light or two. I spent a
-half-wakeful night in the berth, dreaming and meditating in a nervous
-chemic way. Before dawn I was awake and watching our passage through
-Philadelphia, then Trenton, New Brunswick, Metuchen, Menlo Park, Rahway,
-Elizabeth and Newark. Of all of these, save only Menlo Park, the home of
-Edison, who was then invariably referred to by journalists and
-paragraphers as “The Wizard of Menlo Park,” I knew nothing.
-
-As we neared New York at seven the sky was overcast, and at Newark it
-began to drizzle. When I stepped down it was pouring, and there at the
-end of a long train-shed, the immense steel and glass affair that once
-stood in Jersey City opposite Cortlandt Street of New York, awaited my
-fat and smiling brother, as sweet-faced and gay and hopeful as a child.
-At once, he began as was his way, a patter of jests and inquiries as to
-my trip, then led me to a ferry entrance, one of a half dozen in a row,
-through which, as through the proscenium arch of a stage, I caught my
-first glimpse of the great Hudson. A heavy mist of rain was suspended
-over it through which might be seen dimly the walls of the great city
-beyond. Puffing and squatty tugs, as graceful as fat ducks, attended by
-overhanging plumes of smoke, chugged noisily in the foreground of water.
-At the foot of the outline of the city beyond, only a few skyscrapers
-having as yet appeared, lay a fringe of ships and docks and ferry
-houses. No ferry boat being present, we needs must wait for one labeled
-Desbrosses, as was labeled the slip in which we stood.
-
-But I was talking to my brother and learning of his life here and of
-that of my sister E——, with whom he was living. The ferry boat
-eventually came into the slip and discharged a large crowd, and we,
-along with a vast company of commuters and travelers, entered it. Its
-center, as I noted, was stuffed with vehicles of all sizes and
-descriptions, those carrying light merchandise as well as others
-carrying coal and stone and lumber and beer. I can recall to this hour
-the odor of ammonia and saltpeter so characteristic of the ferry boats
-and ferry houses, the crowd in the ferry house on the New York side
-waiting to cross over once we arrived there, and the miserable little
-horse-cars, then still trundling along West Street and between
-Fourteenth and Broadway and the ferries, and Gansevoort Market. These
-were drawn by one horse, and you deposited your fare yourself.
-
-And this in the city of elevated roads!
-
-But the car which we boarded had two horses. We traveled up West Street
-from Desbrosses to Christopher and thence along that shabby old
-thoroughfare to Sixth Avenue and Fourteenth Street, where we changed. At
-first, aside from the sea and the boats and the sense of hugeness which
-goes with immense populations everywhere, I was disappointed by the
-seeming meanness of the streets. Many of them were still paved with
-cobblestones, like the oldest parts of St. Louis and Pittsburgh. The
-buildings, houses and stores alike, were for the most part of a shabby
-red in color and varying in height from one to six stories, most of them
-of an aged and contemptible appearance. This was, as I soon learned from
-my serene and confident brother, an old and shabby portion of the city.
-These horse-cars, in fact, were one of the jokes of the city, but they
-added to its variety. “Don’t think that they haven’t anything else. This
-is just the New York way. It has the new and the old mixed. Wait’ll
-you’re here a little while. You’ll be like everybody else—there’ll be
-just one place: New York.”
-
-And so it proved after a time.
-
-The truth was that the city then, for the first time in a half century
-if not longer, was but beginning to emerge from a frightful period of
-misrule at the hands of as evil a band of mercenaries as ever garroted a
-body politic. It was still being looted and preyed upon in a most
-shameful manner. Graft and vice stalked hand-in-hand. Although Tammany
-Hall, the head and center of all the graft and robbery and vice and
-crime protection, had been delivered a stunning blow by a reform wave
-which had temporarily ousted it and placed reform officials over the
-city, still the grip of that organization had not relaxed. The police
-and all minor officials, as well as the workmen of all departments were
-still, under the very noses of the newly elected officials, perhaps with
-their aid, collecting graft and tribute. The Reverend Doctor Parkhurst
-was preaching, like Savonarola, the destruction of these corruptions of
-the city.
-
-When I arrived, the streets were not cleaned or well-lighted, their ways
-not adequately protected or regulated as to traffic. Uncollected garbage
-lay in piles, the while the city was paying enormous sums for its
-collection; small and feeble gas-jets fluttered, when in other cities
-the arc-light had for fifteen years been a commonplace. As we dragged
-on, on this slow-moving car, the bells on the necks of the horses
-tinkling rhythmically, I stared and commented.
-
-“Well, you can’t say that this is very much.”
-
-“My boy,” cautioned my good and cheerful brother, “you haven’t seen
-anything yet. This is just an old part of New York. Wait’ll you see
-Broadway and Fifth Avenue. We’re just coming this way because it’s the
-quickest way home.”
-
-When we reached Fourteenth Street and Sixth Avenue I was very
-differently impressed. We had traveled for a little way under an
-elevated road over which trains thundered, and as we stepped down I
-beheld an impressively wide thoroughfare, surging even at this hour in
-the morning with people. Here was Macy’s, and northward stretched an
-area which I was told was the shopping center of the vast metropolis:
-Altman’s, Ehrich’s, O’Neill’s, Adams’, Simpson-Crawford’s, all huge
-stores and all in a row lining the west side of the street. We made our
-way across Fifteenth Street to the entrance of a narrow brownstone
-apartment house and ascended two flights, waiting in a rather
-poorly-lighted hall for an answer to our ring. The door was eventually
-opened by my sister, whom I had not seen since my mother’s death four
-years before. She had become stout. The trim beauty for which a very few
-years before she had been notable had entirely disappeared. I was
-disappointed at first, but was soon reassured and comforted by an
-inherently kindly and genial disposition, which expressed itself in much
-talking and laughing.
-
-“Why, Theodore, I’m so glad to see you! Take off your things. Did you
-have a pleasant trip? George, here’s Theodore. This is my husband,
-Theodore. Come on back, you and Paul,” so she rattled on.
-
-I studied her husband, whom I had not seen before, a dark and shrewd and
-hawklike person who seemed to be always following me with his eyes. He
-was an American of middle-Western extraction but with a Latin complexion
-and Latin eyes.
-
-E——’s two children were brought forward, a boy and a girl four and two
-years of age respectively. A breakfast table was waiting, at which Paul
-had already seated himself.
-
-“Now, my boy,” he began, “this is where you eat real food once more. No
-jerkwater hotels about this! No Pittsburgh newspaper restaurants about
-this! Ah, look at the biscuit! Look at the biscuit!” as a maid brought
-in a creamy plateful. “And here’s steak—steak and brown gravy and
-biscuit! Steak and brown gravy and biscuit!” He rubbed his hands in joy.
-“I’ll bet you haven’t seen anything like this since you left home. Ah,
-good old steak and gravy!” His interest in food was always intense.
-
-“It’s been many a day since I’ve had such biscuit and gravy, E——,” I
-observed.
-
-“‘It’s been many a day since I’ve had such biscuit and gravy, E——,’”
-mocked my brother.
-
-“Get out, you!” chimed in my sister. “Just listen to him, the old
-snooks! I can’t get him out of the kitchen, can I, George? He’s always
-eating. ‘It’s been many a day——’ Ho! Ho!”
-
-“I thought you were dieting?” I inquired.
-
-“So I am, but you don’t expect me not to eat this morning, do you? I’m
-doing this to welcome you.”
-
-“Some welcome!” I scoffed.
-
-Our chatter became more serious as the first glow of welcome wore off.
-During it all I was never free of a sense of the hugeness and
-strangeness of the city and the fact that at last I was here. And in
-this immense and far-flung thing my sister had this minute nook. From
-where I sat I could hear strange moanings and blowings which sounded
-like foghorns.
-
-“What is that noise?” I finally asked, for to me it was eerie.
-
-“Boats—tugs and vessels in the harbor. There’s a fog on,” explained H——,
-E——’s husband.
-
-I listened to the variety of sounds, some far, some near, some mellow,
-some hoarse. “How far away are they?”
-
-“Anywhere from one to ten miles.”
-
-I stopped and listened again. Suddenly the full majesty of the sea
-sweeping about this island at this point caught me. The entire city was
-surrounded by water. Its great buildings and streets were all washed
-about by that same sea-green salty flood which I had seen coming over
-from Jersey City, and beyond were the miles and miles of dank salt
-meadows, traversed by railroads. Huge liners from abroad were even now
-making their way here. At its shores were ranged in rows great vessels
-from Europe and all other parts of the world, all floating quietly upon
-the bosom of this great river. There were tugs and small boats and
-sailing vessels, and beyond all these, eastward, the silence, the
-majesty, the deadly earnestness of the sea.
-
-“Do you ever think how wonderful it is to have the sea so close?” I
-asked.
-
-“No, I can’t say that I do,” replied my brother-in-law.
-
-“Nor I,” said my sister. “You get used to all those things here, you
-know.”
-
-“It’s wonderful, my boy,” said my brother, as usual helpfully
-interested. He invariably seemed to approve of all my moods and
-approaches to sentiment, and, like a mother who admires and spoils a
-child, was anxious to encourage and indulge me. “Great subject, the
-sea.”
-
-I could not help smiling, he was so naïf and simple and intellectually
-innocent and sweet.
-
-“It’s a great city,” I said suddenly, the full import of it all sweeping
-over me. “I think I’d like to live here.”
-
-“Didn’t I tell you! Didn’t I tell you!” exclaimed my brother gayly.
-“They all fall for it! Now it’s the ocean vessels that get him. You take
-my advice, my boy, and move down here. The quicker the better for you.”
-
-I replied that I might, and then tried to forget the vessels and their
-sirens, but could not. The sea! The sea! And this great city! Never
-before was I so anxious to explore a city, and never before so much in
-awe of one either. It seemed so huge and powerful and terrible. There
-was something about it which made me seem useless and trivial. Whatever
-one might have been elsewhere, what could one be here?
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVII
-
-
-MY sister’s husband having something to do with this narrative, I will
-touch upon his history as well as that of my sister. In her youth E——
-was one of the most attractive of the girls in our family. She never had
-any intellectual or artistic interests of any kind; if she ever read a
-book I never heard of it. But as for geniality, sympathy, industry,
-fair-mindedness and an unchanging and self-sacrificing devotion to her
-children, I have never known any one who could rival her. With no
-adequate intellectual training, save such as is provided by the
-impossible theories and teachings of the Catholic Church, she was but
-thinly capacitated to make her way in the world.
-
-At eighteen or nineteen she had run away and gone to Chicago, where she
-had eventually met H——, who had apparently fallen violently in love with
-her. He was fifteen years older than she and moderately well versed in
-the affairs of this world. At the time she met him he was the rather
-successful manager of a wholesale drug company, reasonably well-placed
-socially, married and the father of two or three children, the latter
-all but grown to maturity. They eloped, going direct to New York.
-
-This was a great shock to my mother, who managed to conceal it from my
-father although it was a three-days’ wonder in the journalistic or
-scandal world of Chicago. Nothing more was heard of her for several
-years, when a dangerous illness overtook my mother in Warsaw and E——
-came hurrying back for a few days’ visit. This was followed by another
-silence, which was ended by the last illness and death of my mother in
-Chicago, and she again appeared, a distrait and hysteric soul. I never
-knew any one to yield more completely to her emotions than she did on
-this occasion; she was almost fantastic in her grief. During all this
-time she had been living in New York, and she and her husband were
-supposed to be well off. Later, talking to Paul in St. Louis, I gathered
-that H——, while not so successful since he had gone East, was not a bad
-sort and that he had managed to connect himself with politics in some
-way, and that they were living comfortably in Fifteenth Street. But when
-I arrived there I found that they were by no means comfortable. The
-Tammany administration, under which a year or two before he had held an
-inspectorship of some kind, had been ended by the investigations of the
-Lexow Committee, and he was now without work of any kind. Also, instead
-of having proved a faithful and loving husband, he had long since
-wearied of his wife and strayed elsewhere. Now, having fallen from his
-success, he was tractable. Until the arrival of my brother Paul, who for
-reasons of sympathy had agreed to share the expenses here during the
-summer season, he had induced E—— to rent rooms, but for this summer
-this had been given up. With the aid of my brother and some occasional
-work H—— still did they were fairly comfortable. My sister if not quite
-happy was still the devoted slave of her children and a most
-pathetically dependent housewife. Whatever fires or vanities of her
-youth had compelled her to her meteoric career, she had now settled down
-and was content to live for her children. Her youth was over, love gone.
-And yet she managed to convey an atmosphere of cheer and hopefulness.
-
-My brother Paul was in the best of spirits. He held a fair position as
-an actor, being the star in a road comedy and planning to go out the
-ensuing fall in a new one which he had written for himself and which
-subsequently enjoyed many successful seasons on the road. In addition,
-he was by way of becoming more and more popular nationally as a
-song-writer. Also as I have said, he had connected himself as a third
-partner in a song-publishing business which was to publish his own and
-other songs, and this, despite its smallness, was showing unmistakable
-signs of success.
-
-The first thing he did this morning was to invite me to come and see
-this place, and about noon we walked across Fifteenth Street and up
-Sixth Avenue, then the heart of the shopping district, to Twentieth
-Street and thence east to between Fifth Avenue and Broadway, where in a
-one-time fashionable but now decayed dwelling, given over to small
-wholesale ventures, his concern was housed on the third floor. This was
-almost the center of a world of smart shops near several great hotels:
-the Continental, Bartholdi, and the Fifth Avenue. Next door were Lord &
-Taylor. Below this, on the next corner, at Nineteenth and Broadway, was
-the Gorham Company, and below that the Ditson Company, a great music
-house, Arnold, Constable & Company and others. There were excellent
-restaurants and office buildings crowding out an older world of fashion.
-I remember being impressed with the great number of severe brownstone
-houses with their wide flights of stone steps, conservatories and
-porte-cochères. Fifth Avenue and Twentieth Street were filled with
-handsome victorias and coaches.
-
-Going into my brother’s office I saw a sign on the door which read:
-_Howley, Haviland & Company_, and underneath, _Wing & Sons, Pianos_.
-
-“Are you the agent for a piano?” I inquired.
-
-“Huh-uh. They let us have a practice piano in return for that sign.”
-
-When I met his partners I was impressed with the probability of success
-which they seemed to suggest and which came true. The senior member,
-Howley, was a young, small, goggle-eyed hunchback with a mouthful of
-protruding teeth, and hair as black as a crow, and piercing eyes. He had
-long thin arms and legs which, because of his back, made him into a kind
-of Spider of a man, and he went about spider-wise, laughing and talking,
-yet always with a heavy “Scutch” burr.
-
-“We’re joost aboot gettin’ un our feet here nu,” he said to me, his
-queer twisted face screwed up into a grimace of satisfaction and pride,
-“end we hevn’t ez yet s’mutch to show ye. But wuth a lettle time I’m
-a-theenkin’ ye’ll be seem’ theengs a-lookin’ a leetle bether.”
-
-I laughed. “Say,” I said to Paul when Howley had gone about some work,
-“how could you fail with him around? He’s as smart as a whip, and
-they’re all good luck anyhow.” I was referring to the superstition which
-counts all hunchbacks as lucky to others.
-
-“Yes,” said my brother. “I know they’re lucky, and he’s as straight and
-honest as they make ’em. I’ll always get a square deal here,” and then
-he began to tell me how his old publisher, by whom Howley had been
-employed, had “trimmed” him, and how this youth had put him wise. Then
-and there had begun this friendship which had resulted in this
-partnership.
-
-The space this firm occupied was merely one square room, twenty by
-twenty, and in one corner of this was placed the free “tryout” piano. In
-another, between two windows, two tables stood back to back, piled high
-with correspondence. A longer table was along one side of a wall and was
-filled with published music, which was being wrapped and shipped. On the
-walls were some wooden racks or bins containing “stock,” the few songs
-thus far published. Although only a year old, this firm already had
-several songs which were beginning to attract attention, one of them
-entitled _On the Sidewalks of New York_. By the following summer this
-song was being sung and played all over the country and in England, an
-international “hit.” This office, in this very busy center, cost them
-only twenty dollars a month, and their “overhead expeenses,” as Howley
-pronounced it, were “juist nexta nothin’.” I could see that my good
-brother was in competent hands for once.
-
-And the second partner, who arrived just as we were sitting down at a
-small table in a restaurant nearby for lunch, was an equally interesting
-youth whose personality seemed to spell success. At this time he was
-still connected as “head of stock,” whatever that may mean, with that
-large wholesale and retail music house the Ditson Company, at Broadway
-and Eighteenth Street. Although a third partner in this new concern, he
-had not yet resigned his connection with the other and was using it,
-secretly of course, to aid him and his firm in disposing of some of
-their wares. He was quite young, not more than twenty-seven, very quick
-and alert in manner, very short of speech, avid and handsome, a most
-attractive and clean-looking man. He shot out questions and replies as
-one might bullets out of a gun. “Didy’seeDrake?” “What ‘d’esay?”
-“AnynewsfromBaker?” “Thedevily’say!” “Y’ don’tmeanit!”
-
-I was moved to study him with the greatest care. Out of many anywhere, I
-told myself, I would have selected him as a pushing and promising and
-very self-centered person, but by no means disagreeable. Speaking of him
-later, as well as of Howley, my brother once said: “Y’see, Thee, New
-York’s the only place you could do a thing like this. This is the only
-place you could get fellows with their experience. Howley used to be
-with my old publisher, Woodward, and he’s the one that put me wise to
-the fact that Woodward was trimming me. And Haviland was a friend of
-his, working for Ditson.”
-
-From the first, I had the feeling that this firm of which my brother was
-a part would certainly be successful. There was something about it, a
-spirit of victory and health and joy in work and life, which convinced
-me that these three would make a go of it. I could see them ending in
-wealth, as they did before disasters of their own invention overtook
-them. But that was still years away and after they had at least eaten of
-the fruits of victory.
-
-As a part of this my initiation into the wonders of the city Paul led me
-into what he insisted was one of the wealthiest and most ornate of the
-Roman Churches in New York, St. Francis Xavier in Sixteenth Street, from
-which he was subsequently buried. Standing in this, he told me of some
-Jesuit priest there, a friend of his, who was comfortably berthed and “a
-good sport into the bargain, Thee, a bird.” However, having had my fill
-of Catholicism and its ways, I was not so much impressed, either by his
-friend or his character. But Sixth Avenue in this sunshine did impress
-me. It was the crowded center of nearly all the great stores, at least
-five, each a block in length, standing in one immense line on one side
-of the street. The carriages! The well-dressed people! Paul pointed out
-to me the windows of Altman’s on the west side of the street at
-Eighteenth and said it was the most exclusive store in America, that
-Marshall Field & Company of Chicago was as nothing, and I had the
-feeling from merely looking at it that this was true; it was so
-well-arranged and spacious. Its windows, in which selected materials
-were gracefully draped and contrasted, bore out this impression. There
-were many vehicles of the better sort constantly pausing at its doors to
-put down most carefully dressed women and girls. I marveled at the size
-and wealth of a city which could support so many great stores all in a
-row.
-
-Because of the heat my brother insisted upon calling a hansom cab to
-take us to Fourteenth and Broadway, where we were to begin our northward
-journey. Just south of Union Square at Thirteenth Street was the old
-Star Theater of which he said: “There you have it. That used to be
-Lester Wallack’s Theater twenty years ago—the great Lester Wallack.
-There was an actor, my boy, a great actor! They talk about Mansfield and
-Barrett and Irving and Willard and all these other people today. All
-good, my boy, all good, but not in it with him, Theodore, not in it.
-This man was a genius. And he packed ’em too. Many a time I’ve passed
-this place when you couldn’t get by the door for the crowd.” And he
-proceeded to relate that in the old days, when he first came to New
-York, all the best part of the theatrical district was still about and
-below Union Square—Niblo’s, the old London on the Bowery, and what not.
-
-I listened. What had been had been. It might all have been very
-wonderful but it was so no longer, all done and gone. I was new and
-strange, and wished to see only what was new and wonderful now. The sun
-was bright on Union Square now. This was a newer world in which we were
-living, he and I, this day. The newest wave of the sea invariably
-obliterates the one that has gone before. And that was only twenty years
-ago and it has all changed again.
-
-North of this was the newer Broadway—the Broadway of the current actor,
-manager and the best theaters—and fresh, smart, gay, pruned of almost
-every trace of poverty or care. Tiffany’s was at Fifteenth and Broadway,
-its windows glittering with jewels; Brentano’s, the booksellers, were at
-Sixteenth on the west side of Union Square; and Sarony, the
-photographer, was between Fifteenth and Sixteenth, a great gold replica
-of his signature indicating his shop. The Century Company, to which my
-brother called my attention as an institution I might some day be
-connected with, so great was his optimism and faith in me, stood on the
-north side of Union Square at Seventeenth. At Nineteenth and Broadway
-were the Gorham Company, and Arnold, Constable & Company. At Twentieth
-was Lord & Taylor’s great store, adjoining the old building in which was
-housed my brother’s firm. Also, at this street, stood the old
-Continental Hotel, a popular and excellent restaurant occupying a large
-portion of its lower floor which became a part of my daily life later.
-At Twenty-first Street was then standing one of the three great stores
-of Park & Tilford. At Twenty-third, on the east side of the street,
-facing Madison Square, was another successful hotel, the Bartholdi, and
-opposite it, on the west side, was the site of the Flatiron Building.
-
-Across Madison Square, its delicate golden-brown tower soaring aloft and
-alone, no huge buildings then as now to dwarf it, stood Madison Square
-Garden, Diana, her arrow pointed to the wind, giving naked chase to a
-mythic stag, her mythic dogs at her heels, high in the blue air above.
-The west side of Broadway, between Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth, was
-occupied by the Fifth Avenue Hotel, the home, as my brother was quick to
-inform me, of Senator Platt, the Republican boss of the State, who with
-Croker divided the political control of the State and who here held open
-court, the famous “Amen Corner,” where his political henchmen were
-allowed to ratify all his suggestions. It was somewhere within. Between
-Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth on the same side of the street were two
-more hotels, the Albemarle and the Hoffman House. Just north of this, at
-Twenty-seventh and Broadway, on the east side of the street and running
-through to Fifth Avenue, was Delmonico’s. Into this we now ventured, my
-good brother hailing genially some acquaintance who happened to be in
-charge of the floor at the moment. The waiter who served us greeted him
-familiarly. I stared in awe at its pretentious and ornate furniture, its
-noble waiters and the something about it which seemed to speak of wealth
-and power. How easily five cents crooks the knee to five million!
-
-A block or two north of this was the old Fifth Avenue Theater, then a
-theater of the first class but later devoted to vaudeville. At
-Twenty-ninth was the Gilsey House, one of the earliest homes of this my
-Rialto-loving brother. At Thirtieth and Broadway, on the east side,
-stood Palmer’s Theater, famous for its musical and beauty shows. At
-Thirty-first and Broadway, on the west side of the street, stood
-Augustus Daly’s famous playhouse, its façade suggestive of older homes
-remodeled to this new use. And already it was coming to be _passé_.
-Weber & Fields’ had not even appeared. And in my short span it appeared
-and disappeared and became a memory! Between Twenty-eighth and
-Thirty-fourth were several more important hotels: The Grand, The
-Imperial; and between Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth streets, in Sixth
-Avenue, was the old Manhattan Theater, at that time the home of many
-successes, but also, like Daly’s, drawing to the end of a successful
-career.
-
-In Thirty-fourth, west of Broadway (later a part of the Macy store
-site), was Koster & Bial’s Music Hall, managed by a man who subsequently
-was to become widely known but who was then only beginning to rise,
-Oscar Hammerstein. And around the corner, in Broadway at Thirty-fifth,
-was a very successful theater, the Herald Square, facing the unique and
-beautiful _Herald_ building. Beyond that in Thirty-fifth, not many feet
-east of Sixth Avenue, was the Garrick, or the Lyceum as it was then
-known, managed by Daniel Frohman. Above these, at Thirty-sixth, on the
-west side, was the Marlborough, at which later, in his heyday, my
-brother chose to live. At Thirty-eighth, on the southeast corner, stood
-the popular and exclusive Normandie, one of the newer hotels, and at the
-northeast corner of this same intersection, the new and imposing
-Knickerbocker Theater. At Thirty-ninth was the far-famed Casino, with
-its choruses of girls, the Mecca of all night-loving Johnnies and
-rowdies; and between Thirty-ninth and Fortieth, on the west side, the
-world-famed Metropolitan Opera House, still unchanged save for a
-restaurant in its northern corner. At Fortieth over the way stood the
-Empire Theater, with its stock company, which included the Drews,
-Favershams and what not; and in this same block was the famous Browne’s
-Chop House, a resort for Thespians and night-lovers. At Forty-second and
-Broadway, the end of all Rialto-dom for my brother, and from which he
-turned sadly and said: “Well, here’s the end,” stood that Mecca of
-Meccas, the new Hotel Metropole, with its restaurant opening on three
-streets, its leathern seats backed to its walls, its high open windows,
-an air of super-wisdom as to all matters pertaining to sport and the
-theater pervading it. This indeed was the extreme northern limit of the
-white-light district, and here we paused for a drink and to see and be
-seen.
-
-How well I remember it all—the sense of ease and well-being that was
-over this place, and over all Broadway; the loud clothes, the bright
-straw hats, the canes, the diamonds, the hot socks, the air of security
-and well-being, assumed by those who had won an all-too-brief hour in
-that pretty, petty world of make-believe and pleasure and fame. And here
-my good brother was at his best. It was “Paul” here and “Paul” there.
-Already known for several songs of great fame, as well as for his stage
-work and genial personality, he was welcomed everywhere.
-
-And then, ambling down the street in the comforting shade of its west
-wall, what amazing personalities, male and female, and so very many of
-them, pausing to take him by the hand, slap him on the back, pluck
-familiarly at his coat lapel and pour into his ear or his capacious
-bosom magnificent tales of successes, of great shows, of fights and
-deaths and love affairs and tricks and scandals. And all the time my
-good brother smiled, laughed, sympathized. There were moments with
-prizefighters, with long-haired Thespians down on their luck and looking
-for a dime or a dollar, and bright petty upstarts of the vaudeville
-world. Retired miners and ranchmen out of the West, here to live and
-recount their tales of hardships endured, battles won, or of marvelous
-winnings at cards, trickeries in racing, prizefighting and what not, now
-ambled by or stopped and exchanged news or stories. There was talk of
-what “dogs” or “swine” some people were, what liars, scoundrels,
-ingrates; as well as the magnificent, magnanimous, “God’s own salt” that
-others were. The oaths! The stories of women! My brother seemed to know
-them all. I was amazed. What a genial, happy, well-thought-of successful
-man!
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVIII
-
-
-ALL this while of course there had been much talk as to the character of
-those we met, the wealth and fashion that purchased at Tiffany’s or at
-Brentano’s, those who loafed at the Fifth Avenue, the Hoffman House, the
-Gilsey, the Normandie. My brother had friends in many of these hotels
-and bars. A friend of his was the editor of the _Standard_, Roland Burke
-Hennessy, and he would take me up and introduce me. Another was the
-political or sporting man of the _Sun_ or _World_ or _Herald_. Here came
-one who was the manager of the Casino or the Gilsey! One was a writer, a
-playwright, a song-writer or a poet! A man of facile friendships, my
-brother! As we passed Twenty-third Street he made it plain that here was
-a street which had recently begun to replace the older and more colossal
-Sixth Avenue, some of the newer and much smarter stores—Best’s, Le
-Boutillier’s, McCreery’s, Stern Brothers’—having built here.
-
-“This is really the smart street now, Thee, this and a part of Fifth
-Avenue about Twenty-third. The really exclusive stores are coming in
-here. If you ever work in New York, as you will, you’ll want to know
-about these things. You’ll see more smart women in here than in any
-other shopping street,” and he called my attention to the lines of
-lacquered and be-furred and beplushed carriages, the harness of the
-horses aglitter with nickel and gilt.
-
-Passing Daly’s he said: “Now here, my boy, is a manager. He makes
-actors, he don’t hire them. He takes ’em and trains ’em. All these young
-fellows and girls who are making a stir,” and he named a dozen, among
-whom I noted such names as those of Maude Adams, Willie Collier, Drew
-and Faversham, “worked for him. And he don’t allow any nonsense. There’s
-none of that upstage stuff with him, you bet. When you work for him
-you’re just an ordinary employee and you do what he tells you, not the
-way you think you ought to do. I’ve watched him rehearse, and I know,
-and all these fellows tell the same story about him. But he’s a
-gentleman, my boy, and a manager. Everybody knows that when he finishes
-with a man or a woman they can act.”
-
-At Thirty-third Street he waved his hand in the direction of the
-Waldorf, which was then but the half of its later size.
-
-“Down there’s the Waldorf. That’s the place. That’s the last word for
-the rich. That’s where they give the biggest balls and dinners, there
-and at Delmonico’s and the Netherland.” And after a pause he continued:
-“Some time you ought to write about these things, Thee. They’re the
-limit for extravagance and show. The people out West don’t know yet
-what’s going on, but the rich are getting control. They’ll own the
-country pretty soon. A writer like you could make ’em see that. You
-ought to show up some of these things so they’d know.”
-
-Youthful, inexperienced, unlettered, the whole scroll of this earthly
-wallow a mere guess, I accepted that as an important challenge. Maybe it
-ought to be shown up.... As though picturing or indicating life has ever
-yet changed it! But he, the genial and hopeful, always fancied that it
-might be so—and I with him.
-
-When he left me this day at three or four, his interest ended because
-the wonders of Broadway had been exhausted, I found myself with all the
-great strange city still to be explored. Making inquiry as to directions
-and distances, I soon found myself in Fifth Avenue at Forty-second
-Street. Here, represented by mansions at least, was that agglomeration
-of wealth which, as I then imagined, solved all earthly ills. Beauty was
-here, of course, and ease and dignity and security, that most wonderful
-and elusive thing in life. I saw, I admired, and I resented, being
-myself poor and seeking.
-
-Fifth Avenue then lacked a few of the buildings which since have added
-somewhat to its impressiveness—the Public Library, the Metropolitan
-Museum façade at Eighty-second Street, as well as most of the great
-houses which now face Central Park north of Fifty-ninth Street. But in
-their place was something that has since been lost and never will be
-again: a line of quiet and unpretentious brownstone residences which,
-crowded together on spaces of land no wider than twenty-five feet, still
-had about them an air of exclusiveness which caused one to hesitate and
-take note. Between Forty-second and Fifty-ninth Street there was
-scarcely a suggestion of that coming invasion of trade which
-subsequently, in a period of less than twenty years, changed its
-character completely. Instead there were clubs, residences, huge quiet
-and graceful hotels such as the old Plaza and the Windsor, long since
-destroyed, and the very graceful Cathedral of St. Patrick. All the cross
-streets in this area were lined uniformly with brownstone or red brick
-houses of the same height and general appearance, a high flight of steps
-leading to the front door, a side gate and door for servants under the
-steps. Nearly all of these houses were closely boarded up for the
-summer. There was scarcely a trace of life anywhere save here or there
-where a servant lounged idly at a side gate or on the front steps
-talking to a policeman or a cabman.
-
-At Fiftieth Street the great church on its platform was as empty as a
-drum. At Fifty-ninth, where stood the Savoy, the Plaza, and the
-Netherland, as well as the great home of Cornelius Vanderbilt, it was
-all bare as a desert. Lonely handsome cabs plupped dismally to and fro,
-and the father or mother of the present Fifth Avenue bus, an overgrown
-closed carriage, rolled lonesomely between Washington Square and One
-Hundred and Tenth Street. Central Park had most of the lovely walks and
-lakes which grace it today, but no distant skyline. Central Park West as
-such had not even appeared. That huge wall that breaks the western sky
-now was wanting. Along this dismal thoroughfare there trundled a dismal
-yellow horse-car trailing up a cobble-paved street bare of anything save
-a hotel or two and some squatter shanties on rocks, with their attendant
-goats.
-
-But for all that, keeping on as far north as the Museum, I was steadily
-more and more impressed. It was not beautiful, but perhaps, as I
-thought, it did not need to be. The congestion of the great city and the
-power of a number of great names were sufficient to excuse it. And ever
-and anon would come a something—the Gould home at Sixty-first, the
-Havemeyer and Astor residences at Sixty-sixth and Sixty-eighth, the
-Lenox Library at Seventy-second—which redeemed it. Even the old red
-brick and white stone Museum, now but the central core of the much
-larger building, with its attendant obelisk, had charm and dignity. So
-far I wandered, then took the bus and returned to my sister’s apartment
-in Fifteenth Street.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If I have presented all this mildly it was by no means a mild experience
-for me. Sensitive to the brevity of life and what one may do in a given
-span, vastly interested in the city itself, I was swiftly being
-hypnotized by a charm more elusive than real, more of the mind than the
-eye perhaps, which seized upon and held me so tensely nevertheless that
-soon I was quite unable to judge sanely of all this and saw its
-commonplace and even mean face in a most roseate light. The beauty, the
-hope, the possibilities that were here! It was not a handsome city. As I
-look back on it now, there was much that was gross and soggy and even
-repulsive about it. It had too many hard and treeless avenues and cross
-streets, bare of anything save stone walls and stone or cobble pavements
-and wretched iron lamp-posts. There were regions that were painfully
-crowded with poverty, dirt, despair. The buildings were too uniformly
-low, compact, squeezed. Outside the exclusive residence and commercial
-areas there was no sense of length or space.
-
-But having seen Broadway and this barren section of Fifth Avenue, I
-could not think of it in a hostile way, the magnetism of large bodies
-over small ones holding me. Its barrenness did not now appall me, nor
-its lack of beauty irritate. There was something else here, a quality of
-life and zest and security and ease for some, cheek by jowl with poverty
-and longing and sacrifice, which gives to life everywhere its keenest
-most pathetic edge. Here was none of that eager clattering snap so
-characteristic of many of our Western cities, which, while it arrests at
-first, eventually palls. No city that I had ever seen had exactly what
-this had. As a boy, of course, I had invested Chicago with immense color
-and force, and it was there, ignorant, American, semi-conscious,
-seeking, inspiring. But New York was entirely different. It had the
-feeling of gross and blissful and parading self-indulgence. It was as if
-self-indulgence whispered to you that here was its true home; as if, for
-the most part, it was here secure. Life here was harder perhaps, for
-some more aware, more cynical and ruthless and brazen and shameless, and
-yet more alluring for these very reasons. Wherever one turned one felt a
-consciousness of ease and gluttony, indifference to ideals, however low
-or high, and coupled with a sense of power that had found itself and was
-not easily to be dislodged, of virtue that has little idealism and is
-willing to yield for a price. Here, as one could feel, were huge dreams
-and lusts and vanities being gratified hourly. I wanted to know the
-worst and the best of it.
-
-During the few days that I was permitted to remain here, I certainly had
-an excellent sip. My brother, while associated with the other two as a
-partner, was so small a factor so far as his firm’s internal economy was
-concerned that he was not needed as more than a hand-shaker on Broadway,
-one who went about among vaudeville and stage singers and actors and
-song-composers and advertised by his agreeable personality the existence
-of his firm and its value to them. And it was that quality of geniality
-in him which so speedily caused his firm to grow and prosper. Indeed he
-was its very breath and life. I always think of him as idling along
-Broadway in the summer time, seeing men and women who could sing songs
-and writers who could write them, and inducing them by the compelling
-charm of his personality, to resort to his firm. He had a way with
-people, affectionate, reassuring, intimate. He was a magnet which drew
-the young and the old, the sophisticated and the unsophisticated, to his
-house Gradually, and because of him and his fame, it prospered mightily,
-and yet I doubt if ever his partners understood how much he meant to
-them. His house was young and unimportant, yet within a year or two it
-had forged its way to the front, and this was due to him and none other.
-The rest was merely fair commercial management of what he provided in
-great abundance.
-
-While he waited for his regular theatrical season to resume, he was most
-excellently prepared to entertain one who might be interested to see
-Broadway. This night, after dinner at my sister’s, he said, “Come on,
-sport,” and together, after promising faithfully to be back by midnight,
-we ambled forth, strolling across Fifteenth Street to Sixth Avenue and
-then taking a car to Thirty-third Street, the real center of all things
-theatrical at the time. Here, at Broadway and Thirty-fifth, opposite the
-_Herald_ building and the Herald Square Theater, stood the Hotel Aulic,
-a popular rendezvous for actors and singers, with whom my brother was
-most concerned. And here they were in great number, the sidewalks on two
-sides of the building alive with them, a world of glittering, spinning
-flies. I recall the agreeable summer evening air, the bright comforting
-lights, the open doors and windows, the showy clothes, the laughter, the
-jesting, the expectorating, the back-slapping geniality. It was
-wonderful, the spirit and the sense of happiness and ease. Men do at
-times attain to happiness, paradise even, in this shabby, noisome,
-worthless, evanescent, make-believe world. I have seen it with mine own
-eyes.
-
-And here, as in that more pretentious institution at Forty-second
-Street, the Metropole, my brother was at ease. His was by no means the
-trade way of a drummer but rather that of one who, like these others,
-was merely up and down the street seeing what he might. He drank, told
-idle tales, jested unwearyingly. But all the while, as he told me later,
-he was really looking for certain individuals who could sing or play and
-whom in this roundabout and casual way he might interest in the
-particular song or instrumental composition he was then furthering. “And
-you never can tell,” he said. “You might run into some fellow who would
-be just the one to write a song or sing one for you.”
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIX
-
-
-THE next day I was left to myself, and visited City Hall, Brooklyn
-Bridge, Wall Street and the financial and commercial sections.
-
-I, having no skill for making money and intensely hungry for the things
-that money would buy, stared at Wall Street, a kind of cloudy Olympus in
-which foregathered all the gods of finance, with the eyes of one who
-hopes to extract something by mere observation. Physically it was not
-then, as it is today, the center of a sky-crowded world. There were few
-if any high buildings below City Hall, few higher than ten stories. Wall
-Street was curved, low-fronted, like Oxford Street in London. It began,
-as some one had already pointed out, at a graveyard and ended at a
-river. The house of J. P. Morgan was just then being assailed for its
-connection with a government gold bond issue. The offices of Russell
-Sage and George Gould (the son), as well as those of the Standard Oil
-Company below Wall in Broadway, and those of a whole company of now
-forgotten magnates, could have been pointed out by any messenger boy,
-postman or policeman. What impressed me was that the street was vibrant
-with something which, though far from pleasing, craft, greed, cunning,
-niggardliness, ruthlessness, a smart swaggering ease on the part of
-some, and hopeless, bedraggled or beaten aspect on the part of others,
-held my interest as might a tiger or a snake. I had never seen such a
-world. It was so busy and paper-bestrewn, messenger and broker
-bestridden, as to make one who had nothing to do there feel dull and
-commonplace. One thought only of millions made in stocks over night, of
-yachts, orgies, travels, fames and what not else. Since that time Wall
-Street has become much tamer, less significant, but then one had a
-feeling that if only one had a tip or a little skill one might become
-rich; or that, on the other hand, one might be torn to bits and that
-here was no mercy.
-
-I arrived a little before noon, and the ways were alive with messenger
-boys and young clerks and assistants. On the ground was a mess of
-papers, torn telegrams and letters. Near Broad and Wall streets the air
-was filled with a hum of voices and typewriter clicks issuing from open
-windows. Just then, as with the theatrical business later, and still
-later with the motion picture industry, it had come to be important to
-be in the street, however thin one’s connection. To say “I am in Wall
-Street” suggested a world of prospects and possibilities. The fact that
-at this time, and for twenty years after, the news columns were all but
-closed to suicides and failures in Wall Street, so common were they,
-illustrates how vagrant and unfounded were the dreams of many.
-
-But the end of Wall Street as the seat of American money domination
-might even then have been foretold. The cities of the nation were
-growing. New and by degrees more or less independent centers of finance
-were being developed. In the course of fifteen years it had become the
-boast of some cities that they could do without New York in the matter
-of loans, and it was true. They could; and today many enterprises go
-west, not east, for their cash. In the main, Wall Street has degenerated
-into a second-rate gamblers’ paradise. What significant Wall Street
-figures are there today?
-
-On one of my morning walks in New York I had wandered up Broadway to the
-_Herald_ Building and looked into its windows, where were visible a
-number of great presses in full operation, much larger than any I had
-seen in the West, and my brother had recalled to me the fact that James
-Gordon Bennett, owner and editor of the _Herald_, had once commissioned
-Henry M. Stanley, at that time a reporter on the paper, to go to Africa
-to find Livingstone. And my good brother, who romanticized all things,
-my supposed abilities and possibilities included, was inclined to think
-that if I came to New York some such great thing might happen to me.
-
-On another day I went to Printing House Square, where I stared at the
-_Sun_ and _World_ and _Times_ and _Tribune_ buildings, all facing City
-Hall Park, sighing for the opportunities that they represented. But I
-did not act. Something about them overawed me, especially the _World_,
-the editor of which had begun his career in St. Louis years before.
-Compared with the Western papers with which I had been connected, all
-New York papers seemed huge, the tasks they represented editorially and
-reportorially much more difficult. True, a brother of a famous
-playwright with whom I had worked in St. Louis had come East and
-connected himself with the _World_, and I might have called upon him and
-spied out the land. He had fortified himself with a most favorable
-record in the West, as had I, only I did not look upon mine as so
-favorable somehow. Again, a city editor once of St. Louis was now here,
-city editor of one of the city’s great papers, the _Recorder_, and
-another man, a Sunday editor of Pittsburgh, had become the Sunday editor
-of the _Press_ here. But these appeared to me to be exceptional cases. I
-reconnoitered these large and in the main rather dull institutions with
-the eye of one who seeks to take a fortress. The editorial pages of all
-of these papers, as I had noticed in the West, bristled with cynical and
-condescending remarks about that region, and their voices representing
-great circulation and wealth gave them amazing weight in my eyes.
-Although I knew what I knew about the subservience of newspapers to
-financial interests, their rat-like fear of religionists and moralists,
-their shameful betrayal of the ordinary man at every point at which he
-could possibly be betrayed yet still having the power, by weight of lies
-and pretense and make-believe, to stir him up to his own detriment and
-destruction, I was frightened by this very power, which in subsequent
-years I have come to look upon as the most deadly anD forceful of all in
-nature: the power to masquerade and by.
-
-There was about these papers an air of assurance and righteousness and
-authority and superiority which overawed and frightened me. To work on
-the _Sun_, the _Herald_, the _World_! How many cubs, from how many
-angles of our national life, were constantly and hopefully eyeing them
-from the very same sidewalks or benches in City Hall Park, as the
-ultimate solution of all their literary, commercial, social, political
-problems and ambitions. The thousands of pipe-smoking collegians who
-have essayed the _Sun_ alone, the scullion Danas, embryo Greeleys and
-Bennetts!
-
-I decided that it would be best for me to return to Pittsburgh and save
-a little money before I took one of these frowning editorial offices by
-storm, and I did return, but in what a reduced mood! Pittsburgh, after
-New York and all I had seen there! And in this darkly brooding and
-indifferent spirit I now resumed my work. A sum of money sufficient to
-sustain me for a period in New York was all that I wished now.
-
-And in the course of the next four months I did save two hundred and
-forty dollars, enduring deprivations which I marvel at even
-now—breakfast consisting of a cruller and a cup of coffee; dinners that
-cost no more than a quarter, sometimes no more than fifteen cents. In
-the meantime I worked as before only to greater advantage, because I was
-now more sure of myself. My study of Balzac and these recent adventures
-in the great city had so fired my ambition that nothing could have kept
-me in Pittsburgh. I lived on so little that I think I must have done
-myself some physical harm which told against me later in the struggle
-for existence in New York.
-
-At this time I had the fortune to discover Huxley and Tyndall and
-Herbert Spencer, whose introductory volume to his _Synthetic Philosophy_
-(_First Principles_) quite blew me, intellectually, to bits. Hitherto,
-until I had read Huxley, I had some lingering filaments of Catholicism
-trailing about me, faith in the existence of Christ, the soundness of
-his moral and sociologic deductions, the brotherhood of man. But on
-reading _Science and Hebrew Tradition_ and _Science and Christian
-Tradition_, and finding both the Old and New Testaments to be not
-compendiums of revealed truth but mere records of religious experiences,
-and very erroneous ones at that, and then taking up _First Principles_
-and discovering that all I deemed substantial—man’s place in nature, his
-importance in the universe, this too, too solid earth, man’s very
-identity save as an infinitesimal speck of energy or a “suspended
-equation” drawn or blown here and there by larger forces in which he
-moved quite unconsciously as an atom—all questioned and dissolved into
-other and less understandable things, I was completely thrown down in my
-conceptions or non-conceptions of life.
-
-Up to this time there had been in me a blazing and unchecked desire to
-get on and the feeling that in doing so we did get somewhere; now in its
-place was the definite conviction that spiritually one got nowhere, that
-there was no hereafter, that one lived and had his being because one had
-to, and that it was of no importance. Of one’s ideals, struggles,
-deprivations, sorrows and joys, it could only be said that they were
-chemic compulsions, something which for some inexplicable but
-unimportant reason responded to and resulted from the hope of pleasure
-and the fear of pain. Man was a mechanism, undevised and uncreated, and
-a badly and carelessly driven one at that.
-
-I fear that I cannot make you feel how these things came upon me in the
-course of a few weeks’ reading and left me numb, my gravest fears as to
-the unsolvable disorder and brutality of life eternally verified. I felt
-as low and hopeless at times as a beggar of the streets. There was of
-course this other matter of necessity, internal chemical compulsion, to
-which I had to respond whether I would or no. I was daily facing a round
-of duties which now more than ever verified all that I had suspected and
-that these books proved. With a gloomy eye I began to watch how the
-chemical—and their children, the mechanical—forces operated through man
-and outside him, and this under my very eyes. Suicides seemed sadder
-since there was no care for them; failures the same. One of those
-periodic scandals breaking out in connection with the care of prisoners
-in some local or state jail, I saw how self-interest, the hope of
-pleasure or the fear of pain caused jailers or wardens or a sheriff to
-graft on prisoners, feed them rotten meat, torture them into silence and
-submission, and then, politics interfering (the hope of pleasure again
-and the fear of pain on the part of some), the whole thing hushed up, no
-least measure of the sickening truth breaking out in the subservient
-papers. Life could or would do nothing for those whom it so shamefully
-abused.
-
-Again, there was a poor section, one street in the East Pittsburgh
-district, shut off by a railroad at one end (the latter erecting a high
-fence to protect itself from trespass) and by an arrogant property owner
-at the other end; those within were actually left without means of
-ingress and egress. Yet instead of denouncing either or both, the
-railroads being so powerful and the citizen prosperous and within his
-“rights,” I was told to write a humorous article but not to “hurt
-anybody’s feelings.” Also before my eyes were always those regions of
-indescribable poverty and indescribable wealth previously mentioned,
-which were always carefully kept separate by the local papers, all the
-favors and compliments and commercial and social aids going to those who
-had, all the sniffs and indifferences and slights going to those who had
-not; and when I read Spencer I could only sigh. All I could think of was
-that since nature would not or could not do anything for man, he must,
-if he could, do something for himself; and of this I saw no prospect, he
-being a product of these selfsame accidental, indifferent and bitterly
-cruel forces.
-
-And so I went on from day to day, reading, thinking, doing fairly
-acceptable work, but always withdrawing more and more into myself. As I
-saw it then, the world could not understand me, nor I it, nor men each
-other very well. Then a little later I turned and said that since the
-whole thing was hopeless I might as well forget it and join the narrow,
-heartless, indifferent scramble, but I could not do that either, lacking
-the temperament and the skill. All I could do was think, and since no
-paper such as I knew was interested in any of the things about which I
-was thinking, I was hopeless indeed. Finally, in late November, having
-two hundred and forty dollars saved, I decided to leave this dismal
-scene and seek the charm of the great city beyond, hoping that there I
-might succeed at something, be eased and rested by some important work
-of some kind.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXX
-
-
-MY departure was accelerated by a conversation I had one day with the
-political reporter of whom I have spoken but whose name I have
-forgotten. By now I had come to be on agreeable social terms with all
-the men on our staff, and at midnight it was my custom to drift around
-to the Press Club, where might be found a goodly company of men who
-worked on the different papers. I found this political man here one
-night. He said: “I can’t understand why you stay here. Now I wouldn’t
-say that to any one else in the game for fear he’d think I was plotting
-to get him out of his job, but with you it’s different. There’s no great
-chance here, and you have too much ability to waste your time on this
-town. They won’t let you do anything. The steel people have this town
-sewed up tight. The papers are muzzled. All you can do is to write what
-the people at the top want you to write, and that’s very little. With
-your talent you could go down to New York and make a place for yourself.
-I’ve been there myself, but had to come back on account of my family.
-The conditions were too uncertain for me, and I have to have a regular
-income. But with you it’s different. You’re young, and apparently you
-haven’t any one dependent on you. If you do strike it down there you’ll
-make a lot of money, and what’s more you might make a name for yourself.
-Don’t you think it’s foolish for you to stay here? Don’t think it’s
-anything to me whether you go or stay. I haven’t any ax to grind, but I
-really wonder why you stay.”
-
-I explained that I had been drifting, that I was really on my way to New
-York but taking my time about it. Only a few days before I had been
-reading of a certain Indo-English newspaper man, fresh out of India with
-his books and short stories, who was making a great stir. His name was
-Rudyard Kipling, and the enthusiasm with which he was being received
-made me not jealous but wishful for a career for myself. The tributes to
-his brilliance were so unanimous, and he was a mere youth as yet, not
-more than twenty-seven or -eight. He was coming to America, or was even
-then on his way, and the wonder of such a success filled my mind. I
-decided then and there that I would go, must go, and accordingly gave
-notice of my intention. My city editor merely looked at me as much as to
-say, “Well, I thought so,” then said: “Well, I think you’ll do better
-there myself, but I’m not glad to have you go. You can refer to us any
-time you want to.”
-
-On Saturday I drew my pay at noon and by four o’clock had once more
-boarded the express which deposited me in New York the following morning
-at seven. My brother had long since left New York and would not be back
-until the following Spring. I had exchanged a word or two with my sister
-and found that she was not prospering. Since Paul had left she had been
-forced to resort to letting rooms, H—— not having found anything to do.
-I wired her that I was coming, and walked in on her the next morning.
-
-My sister, on seeing me again, was delighted. I did not know then, and
-perhaps if I had I should not have been so pleased, that I was looked
-upon by her as the possible way out of a very difficult and trying
-crisis which she and her two children were then facing. For H——, from
-being a one-time fairly resourceful and successful and aggressive man,
-had slipped into a most disconcerting attitude of weakness and all but
-indifference before the onslaughts of the great city.
-
-My brother Paul, being away, saw no reason why he should be called upon
-to help them, since H—— was as physically able as himself. Aside from
-renting their rooms there was apparently no other source of income here,
-at least none which H—— troubled to provide. He appeared to be done for,
-played out. Like so many who have fought a fair battle and then lost, he
-had wearied of the game and was drifting. And my sister, like so many of
-the children of ordinary families the world over, had received no
-practical education or training and knew nothing other than housework,
-that profitless trade. In consequence, within a very short time after my
-arrival, I found myself faced by one of two alternatives: that of
-retiring and leaving her to shift as best she might (a step which, in
-view of what followed, would have been wiser but which my unreasoning
-sympathy would not permit me to do), or of assisting her with what means
-I had. But this would be merely postponing the day of reckoning for all
-of them and bringing a great deal of trouble upon myself. For, finding
-me willing to pay for my room and board here, and in addition to advance
-certain sums which had nothing to do with my obligations, H—— felt that
-he could now drift a little while longer and so did, accepting through
-his wife such doles as I was willing to make. My sister, fumbling,
-impractical soul, flowing like water into any crevice of opportunity,
-accepted this sacrifice on my part.
-
-But despite these facts, which developed very slowly, I was very much
-alive to the possibilities which the city then held for me. At last I
-was here. I told myself I had a comfortable place to stay and would
-remain, and from this vantage point I could now sally forth and
-reconnoiter the city at my leisure. And as in all previous instances, I
-devoted a day or two to rambling about, surveying the world which I was
-seeking to manipulate to my advantage, and then on the second or third
-afternoon began to investigate those newspaper offices with which I was
-most anxious to connect.
-
-I can never forget the shock I received when on entering first the
-_World_, then the _Sun_, and later the _Herald_, I discovered that one
-could not so much as get in to see the city editor, that worthy being
-guarded by lobby or anteroom, in which were posted as lookouts and
-buffers or men-at-arms as cynical and contemptuous a company of youths
-and hall boys as it has ever been my lot to meet. They were not only
-self-sufficient, but supercilious, scoffing and ribald. Whenever I
-entered one of these offices there were two or three on guard, sometimes
-four or five in the _World_ office, wrestling for the possession of an
-ink-well or a pencil or an apple, or slapping each other on the back.
-But let a visitor arrive with an inquiry of some kind, and these young
-banditti would cease their personal brawling long enough at least to
-place themselves as a barricade between the newcomer and the door to the
-editorial sanctum, whereupon would ensue the following routine formula,
-each and every one of them chewing gum or eating an apple.
-
-“Whoja wanta see?”
-
-“The city editor.”
-
-“Wha’ja wanta see him about?”
-
-“A job.”
-
-“No vacancies. No; no vacancies today. He says to say no vacancies
-today, see? You can’t go in there. He says no vacancies.”
-
-“But can’t I even see him?”
-
-“No; he don’t wanta see anybody. No vacancies.”
-
-“Well, how about taking my name in to him?”
-
-“Not if you’re lookin’ for a job. He says no vacancies.”
-
-The tone and the manner were most disconcerting. To me, new to the city
-and rather overawed by the size of the buildings as well as the
-reputation of the editors and the publications themselves, this was all
-but final. For a little while after each rebuff I did not quite see how
-I was to overcome this difficulty. Plainly they were overrun with
-applicants, and in so great a city why would they not be? But what was I
-to do? One must get in or write or call up on the telephone, but would
-any city editor worthy the name discuss a man’s fitness or attempt to
-judge him by a telephone conversation or a letter?
-
-Rather dourly and speculatively, therefore, after I had visited four or
-five of these offices with exactly the same result in each instance, I
-went finally to City Hall Park, which fronted the majority of them—the
-_Sun_, the _Tribune_, the _Times_, the _World_, the _Press_—and stared
-at their great buildings. About me was swirling the throng which has
-always made that region so interesting, the vast mass that bubbles
-upward from the financial district and the regions south of it and
-crosses the plaza to Brooklyn Bridge and the elevated roads (the subways
-had not come yet). About me on the benches of the park was, even in this
-gray, chill December weather, that large company of bums, loafers,
-tramps, idlers, the flotsam and jetsam of the great city’s whirl and
-strife to be seen there today. I presume I looked at them and then
-considered myself and these great offices, and it was then that the idea
-of _Hurstwood_ was born. The city seemed so huge and cruel. I recalled
-gay Broadway of the preceding summer, and the baking, isolated,
-exclusive atmosphere of Fifth Avenue, all boarded up. And now I was here
-and it was winter, with this great newspaper world to be conquered, and
-I did not see how it was to be done. At four in the afternoon I
-dubiously turned my steps northward along the great, bustling, solidly
-commercial Broadway to Fifteenth Street, walking all the way and staring
-into the shops. Those who recall _Sister Carrie’s_ wanderings may find a
-taste of it here. In Union Square, before Tiffany’s, I stared at an
-immense Christmas throng. Then in the darkness I wandered across to my
-sister’s apartment, and in the warmth and light there set me down
-thinking what to do. My sister noticed my mood and after a little while
-said:
-
-“You’re worrying, aren’t you?”
-
-“Oh no, I’m not,” I said rather pretentiously.
-
-“Oh yes, you are too. You’re wondering how you’re going to get along. I
-know how you are. We’re all that way. But you mustn’t worry. Paul says
-you can write wonderfully. You’ve only been here a day or two. You must
-wait until you’ve tried a little while and then see. You’re sure to get
-along. New York isn’t so bad, only you have to get started.”
-
-I decided that this was true enough and proposed to give myself time to
-think.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXI
-
-
-BUT the next day, and the next, and the next brought me no solution to
-the problem. The weather had turned cold and for a time there was a
-slushy snow on the ground, which made the matter of job-hunting all the
-worse. Those fierce youths in the anterooms were no more kindly on the
-second and fifth days than they had been on the first. But by now, in
-addition to becoming decidedly dour, I was becoming a little angry. It
-seemed to me to be the height of discourtesy, not to say rank brutality,
-for newspapers, and especially those which boasted a social and
-humanitarian leadership of their fellows in American life, to place such
-unsophisticated and blatant and ill-trained upstarts between themselves
-and the general public, men and women of all shades and degrees of
-intelligence who might have to come in contact with them. H. L. Mencken
-has written: “The average American newspaper, especially the so-called
-better sort, has the intelligence of a Baptist evangelist, the courage
-of a rat, the fairness of a prohibitionist boob-bumper, the information
-of a high-school janitor, the taste of a designer of celluloid
-valentines, and the honor of a police-station lawyer.” Judging by some
-of my experiences and observations, I would be willing to subscribe to
-this. The unwarranted and unnecessary airs! The grand assumption of
-wisdom! The heartless and brutal nature of their internal economies,
-their pandering to the cheapest of all public instincts and tendencies
-in search of circulation!
-
-After several days I made up my mind to see the city editor of these
-papers, regardless of hall boys. And so, going one day at one o’clock to
-the _World_, I started to walk right in, but, being intercepted as
-usual, lost my courage and retreated. However, as I have since thought,
-perhaps this was fortunate, for going downstairs I meditated most
-grievously as to my failure, my lack of skill and courage in carrying
-out my intention. So thoroughly did I castigate myself that I recovered
-my nerve and returned. I reëntered the small office, and finding two of
-the youths still on hand and waiting to intercept me, brushed them both
-aside as one might flies, opened the much-guarded door and walked in.
-
-To my satisfaction, while they followed me and by threats and force
-attempted to persuade me to retreat, I gazed upon one of the most
-interesting city reportorial and editorial rooms that I have ever
-beheld. It was forty or fifty feet wide by a hundred or more deep, and
-lighted, even by day in this gray weather, by a blaze of lights. The
-entire space from front to back was filled with desks. A varied company
-of newspaper men, most of them in shirt-sleeves, were hard at work. In
-the forward part of the room, near the door by which I had entered, and
-upon a platform, were several desks, at which three or four men were
-seated—the throne, as I quickly learned, of the city editor and his
-assistants. Two of these, as I could see, were engaged in reading and
-marking papers. A third, who looked as though he might be the city
-editor, was consulting with several men at his desk. Copy boys were
-ambling to and fro. From somewhere came the constant click-click-click
-of telegraph instruments and the howl of “Coppee!” I think I should have
-been forced to retire had it not been for the fact that as I was
-standing there, threatened and pleaded with by my two adversaries, a
-young man (since distinguished in the journalistic world, Arthur
-Brisbane) who was passing through the room looked at me curiously and
-inquired courteously:
-
-“What is it you want?”
-
-“I want,” I said, half-angered by the spectacle I was making and that
-was being made of me, “a job.”
-
-“Where do you come from?”
-
-“The West.”
-
-“Wait a moment,” he said, and the youths, seeing that I had attracted
-his attention, immediately withdrew. He went toward the man at the desk
-whom I had singled out as the city editor, and turned and pointed to me.
-“This young man wants a job. I wish you would give him one.”
-
-The man nodded, and my remarkable interrogator, turning to me, said,
-“Just wait here,” and disappeared.
-
-I did not know quite what to think, so astonished was I, but with each
-succeeding moment my spirits rose, and by the time the city editor chose
-to motion me to him I was in a very exalted state indeed. So much for
-courage, I told myself. Surely I was fortunate, for had I not been
-dreaming for months—years—of coming to New York and after great
-deprivation and difficulty perhaps securing a position? And now of a
-sudden here I was thus swiftly vaulted into the very position which of
-all others I had most craved. Surely this must be the influence of a
-star of fortune. Surely now if I had the least trace of ability, I
-should be in a better position than I had ever been in before. I looked
-about the great room, as I waited patiently and delightedly, and saw
-pasted on the walls at intervals printed cards which read: _Accuracy,
-Accuracy, Accuracy! Who? What? Where? When? How? The Facts—The Color—The
-Facts!_ I knew what those signs meant: the proper order for beginning a
-newspaper story. Another sign insisted upon _Promptness, Courtesy,
-Geniality!_ Most excellent traits, I thought, but not as easy to put
-into execution as comfortable publishers and managing editors might
-suppose.
-
-Presently I was called over and told to take a seat, after being told:
-“I’ll have an assignment for you after a while.” That statement meant
-work, an opportunity, a salary. I felt myself growing apace, only the
-eye and the glance of my immediate superior was by no means cheering or
-genial. This man was holding a difficult position, one of the most
-difficult in newspaperdom in America at the time, and under one of the
-most eccentric and difficult of publishers, Joseph Pulitzer.
-
-This same Pulitzer, whom Alleyne Ireland subsequently characterized in
-so brilliant a fashion as to make this brief sketch trivial and
-unimportant save for its service here as a link in this tale, was a
-brilliant and eccentric Magyar Jew, long since famous for his
-journalistic genius. At that time he must have been between fifty-five
-and sixty years of age, semi-dyspeptic and half-blind, having almost
-wrecked himself physically, or so I understood, in a long and grueling
-struggle to ascend to preeminence in the American newspaper world. He
-was the chief owner, as I understood, of not only the New York _World_
-but the St. Louis _Post-Dispatch_, the then afternoon paper of largest
-circulation and influence in that city. While I was in St. Louis the air
-of that newspaper world was surcharged or still rife with this
-remarkable publisher’s past exploits—how once, when he was starting in
-the newspaper world as a publisher, he had been horsewhipped by some
-irate citizen for having published some derogatory item, and, having
-tamely submitted to the castigation, had then rushed into his sanctum
-and given orders that an extra should be issued detailing the attack in
-order that the news value might not be lost to the counting-room.
-Similarly, one of his St. Louis city or managing editors (one Colonel
-Cockerill by name, who at this very time or a very little later was
-still one of the managing editors of the New York _World_) had, after
-conducting some campaign of exposure against a local citizen by order of
-his chief, and being confronted in his office by the same, evidently
-come to punish him, drawn a revolver and killed him.
-
-That was a part of what might have been called the makings of this great
-newspaper figure. Here in New York, after his arrival on the scene in
-1884, at which time he had taken over a moribund journal called the
-_World_, he had literally succeeded in turning things upside down, much
-as did William Randolph Hearst after him, and as had Charles A. Dana and
-others before him. Like all aggressive newspaper men worthy the name, he
-had seized upon every possible vital issue and attacked, attacked,
-attacked—Tammany Hall, Wall Street (then defended by the _Sun_ and the
-_Herald_), the house of Morgan, some phases of society, and many other
-features and conditions of the great city. For one thing, he had cut the
-price of his paper to one cent, a move which was reported to have
-infuriated his conservative and quiescent rivals, who were getting two,
-three and five and who did not wish to be disturbed in their peaceful
-pursuits. The _Sun_ in particular, which had been _made_ by the
-brilliant and daring eccentricity of Dana and his earlier radicalism,
-and the _Herald_, which originally owed its growth and fame to the
-monopoly-fighting skill of Bennett, were now both grown conservative and
-mutually attacked him as low, vulgar, indecent and the like, an upstart
-Jew whose nose was in every putrescent dunghill, ratting out filth for
-the consumption of the dregs of society. But is it not always so when
-any one arises who wishes to break through from submersion or
-nothingness into the white light of power and influence? Do not the
-resultant quakes always infuriate those who have ceased growing or are
-at least comfortably quiescent and who do not wish to be disturbed?
-
-Just the same, this man, because of his vital, aggressive, restless,
-working mood, and his vaulting ambition to be all that there was to be
-of journalistic force in America, was making a veritable hell of his
-paper and the lives of those who worked for him. And although he himself
-was not present at the time but was sailing around the world on a yacht,
-or living in a villa on the Riviera, or at Bar Harbor, or in his town
-house in New York or London, you could feel the feverish and disturbing
-and distressing ionic tang of his presence in this room as definitely as
-though he were there in the flesh. Air fairly sizzled with the ionic
-rays of this black star. Of secretaries to this editor-publisher and
-traveling with him at the time but coming back betimes to nose about the
-paper and cause woe to others, there were five. Of sons, by no means in
-active charge but growing toward eventual control, two. Of managing
-editors, all slipping about and, as the newspaper men seemed to think,
-spying on each other, at one time as many as seven. He had so little
-faith in his fellow-man, and especially such of his fellow-men as were
-so unfortunate as to have to work for him, that he played off one
-against another as might have the council of the Secret Ten in Venice,
-or as did the devils who ruled in the Vatican in the Middle Ages. Every
-man’s hand, as I came to know in the course of time, was turned against
-that of every other. All were thoroughly distrustful of each other and
-feared the incessant spying that was going on. Each, as I was told and
-as to a certain extent one could feel, was made to believe that he was
-the important one, or might be, presuming that he could prove that the
-others were failures or in error. Proposed editorials, suggestions for
-news features, directions as to policy and what not, were coming in from
-him every hour via cable or telegraph. Nearly every issue of any
-importance was being submitted to him by the same means. He was, as
-described by this same Alleyne Ireland, undoubtedly semi-neurasthenic, a
-disease-demonized soul, who could scarcely control himself in anything,
-a man who was fighting an almost insane battle with life itself, trying
-to be omnipotent and what not else, and never to die.
-
-But in regard to the men working here how sharp a sword of disaster
-seemed suspended above them by a thread, the sword of dismissal or of
-bitter reprimand or contempt. They had a kind of nervous, resentful
-terror in their eyes as have animals when they are tortured. All were
-either scribbling busily or hurrying in or out. Every man was for
-himself. If you had asked a man a question, as I ventured to do while
-sitting here, not knowing anything of how things were done here, he
-looked at you as though you were a fool, or as though you were trying to
-take something away from him or cause him trouble of some kind. In the
-main they hustled by or went on with their work without troubling to pay
-the slightest attention to you. I had never encountered anything like it
-before, and only twice afterwards in my life did I find anything which
-even partially approximated it, and both times in New York. After the
-peace and ease of Pittsburgh—God! But it was immense, just the
-same—terrific.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXII
-
-
-AFTER I had waited an hour or so, a boy came up and said: “The city
-editor wants to see you.” I hurried forward to the desk of that Poohbah,
-who merely handed me a small clipping from another paper giving an
-account of some extra-terrestrial manifestations that had been taking
-place in a graveyard near Elizabeth, and told me to “see what there is
-in that.” Unsophisticated as I was as to the ways of the metropolis, and
-assuming, Western-fashion, that I might ask a question of my new chief,
-I ventured a feeble “Where is that?” For my pains I received as
-contemptuous a look as it is possible for one human being to give
-another.
-
-“Back of the directory! Back of the directory!” came the semi-savage
-reply, and not quite realizing what was meant by that I retired
-precipitately, trying to think it out.
-
-Almost mechanically I went to the directory, but fumbling through that
-part of it which relates to streets and their numbers I began to realize
-that Elizabeth was a town and not a street. At a desk near the directory
-I noticed a stout man of perhaps forty, rotund and agreeable, who seemed
-to be less fierce and self-centered than some of the others. He had
-evidently only recently entered, for he had kicked off a pair of
-overshoes and laid a greatcoat over a chair beside him and was
-scribbling.
-
-“Can you tell me how I can get to Elizabeth?” I inquired of him.
-
-“Sure,” he said, looking up and beginning to chuckle. “I haven’t been in
-the city very long myself, but I know where that is. It’s on the Jersey
-Central, about twelve miles out. You’ll catch a local by going down to
-the Liberty Street ferry. I heard him tell you ‘Back of the directory,’”
-he added genially. “You mustn’t mind that—that’s what they always tell
-you here, these smart alecks,” and he chuckled, very much like my friend
-McCord. “They’re the most inconsiderate lot I ever went up against, but
-you have to get used to it. Out where I came from they’ll give you a
-civil answer once in a while, but here it’s ‘Back of the directory,’”
-and he chuckled again.
-
-“And where do you come from?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, Pittsburgh originally,” he said, which same gave me a spiritual
-lift, “but I haven’t been in the game for several years. I’ve been doing
-press agent work for a road show, one of my own,” and he chuckled again.
-“I’m not a stranger to New York exactly, but I am to this paper and this
-game down here.”
-
-I wanted to stay longer and talk to him, but I had to hurry on this my
-first assignment in New York. “Is this your desk?” I asked.
-
-“No; they haven’t deigned to give me one yet,” and he chuckled again.
-“But I suppose I will get one eventually—if they don’t throw me out.”
-
-“I hope I’ll see you when I get back.”
-
-“Oh, I’ll be around here, if I’m not out in the snow. It’s tough, isn’t
-it?” and he turned to his work again. I bustled out through that same
-anteroom where I had been restrained, and observed to my pestiferous
-opponents: “Now just take notice, Eddie. I belong here, see? I work
-here. And I’ll be back in a little while.”
-
-“Oh, dat’s all right,” he replied with a grin. “We gotta do dat. We
-gotta keep mosta dese hams outa here, dough. Dat’s de orders we got.”
-
-“Hams?” I thought. “They let these little snips speak of strangers as
-hams! That’s New York for you!”
-
-I made the short dreary commuters’ trip to Elizabeth. When I found my
-graveyard and the caretaker thereof, he said there was no truth in the
-story. No man by the name of the dead man mentioned had ever been buried
-there. No noises or appearances of any kind had been recorded. “They’re
-always publishing things like that about New Jersey,” he said. “I wish
-they’d quit it. Some newspaper fellow just wanted to earn a little
-money, that’s all.”
-
-I tramped back, caught a train and reached the office at eight. Already
-most of the assignments had been given out. The office was comparatively
-empty. The city editor had gone to dinner. At a desk along a wall was a
-long, lean, dyspeptic-looking man, his eyes shaded by a green shield,
-whom I took to be the night editor, so large was the pile of “copy”
-beside him, but when I ventured to approach him he merely glared sourly.
-“The city desk’s not closed yet,” he growled. “Wait’ll they come back.”
-
-I retired, rebuffed again.
-
-Presently one of the assistants reappeared and I reported to him.
-“Nothing to it, eh?” he observed. “But there ought to be some kind of a
-josh to it.” I did not get him. He told me to wait around, and I sought
-out an empty desk and sat down. The thing that was interesting me was
-how much I should be paid per week. In the meanwhile I contented myself
-with counting the desks and wondering about the men who occupied them,
-who they were, and what they were doing. To my right, against the north
-wall, were two roll-top desks, at one of which was seated a dapper
-actor-like man writing and posting. He was arrayed in a close-fitting
-gray suit, with a bright vest and an exceedingly high collar. Because of
-some theatrical programs which I saw him examining, I concluded that he
-must be connected with the dramatic department, probably _the_ dramatic
-critic. I was interested and a little envious. The dramatic department
-of a great daily in New York seemed a wonderful thing to me.
-
-After a time also there entered another man who opened the desk next the
-dramatic critic. He was medium tall and stocky, with a mass of loose
-wavy hair hanging impressively over his collar, not unlike the advance
-agent of a cure-all or a quack Messiah. His body was encased in a huge
-cape-coat which reached to his knees after the best manner of a
-tragedian. He wore a large, soft-brimmed felt, which he now doffed
-rather grandiosely, and stood a big cane in the corner. He had, the look
-and attitude of a famous musician, the stage-type, and evidently took
-himself very seriously. I put him down as the musical critic at least,
-some great authority of whom I should hear later.
-
-Time went by, and I waited. Through the windows from where I was sitting
-I could see the tops of one or two buildings, one holding a clock-face
-lighted with a green light. Being weary of sitting, I ventured to leave
-my seat and look out to the south. Then for the first time I saw that
-great night panorama of the East River and the bay with its ships and
-docks, and the dark mass of buildings in between, many of them still
-lighted. It was a great scene, and a sense of awe came over me. New York
-was so vast, so varied, so rich, so hard. How was one to make one’s way
-here? I had so little to offer, merely a gift of scribbling; and money,
-as I could see, was not to be made in that way.
-
-The city editor returned and told me to attend a meeting of some
-committee which looked to the better lighting and cleaning of a certain
-district. It was all but too late, as I knew, and if reported would be
-given no more than an inch of space. I took it rather dejectedly. Then
-fell the worst blow of all. “Wait a minute,” he said, as I moved to
-depart. “I wanted to tell you. I can’t make you a reporter yet—there is
-no vacancy on our regular staff. But I’ll put you on space, and you can
-charge up whatever you get in at seven-and-a-half a column. We allow
-fifty cents an hour for time. Show up tomorrow at eleven, and I’ll see
-if anything turns up.”
-
-My heart sank to my shoes. No reportorial staff with which I had ever
-been connected had been paid by space. I went to the meeting and found
-that it was of no importance, and made but one inch, as I discovered
-next morning by a careful examination of the paper. And a column of the
-paper measured exactly twenty-one inches! So my efforts this day,
-allowing for time charged for my first trip, had resulted in a total of
-one dollar and eighty-six cents, or a little less than street-sweepers
-and snow-shovelers were receiving.
-
-But this was not all. Returning about eleven with this item, I ventured
-to say to the night editor now in charge: “When does a man leave here?”
-
-“You’re a new space man, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“You have the late watch tonight.”
-
-“And how late is that?”
-
-“Until after the first edition is on the press,” he growled.
-
-Not knowing when that was I still did not venture to question him but
-returned to another reporter working near at hand, who told me I should
-have to stay until three. At that time my green-shaded mentor called,
-“You might as well go now,” and I made my way to the Sixth Avenue L and
-so home, having been here since one o’clock of the preceding day. The
-cheerful face of my sister sleepily admitting me was quite the best
-thing that this brisk day in the great city had provided.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXIII
-
-
-THE next morning, coming down at eleven I encountered my friend of the
-day before, whom I found looking through the paper and checking up such
-results as he had been able to achieve. “Tst! Tst!” he clicked to
-himself as he went over the pages, looking high and low for a minute
-squib which he had managed to get in. Looking around and seeing me near
-at hand, he said: “Positively, this is the worst paper in New York. I’ve
-always heard it was, and now I know it. This damned crowd plays
-favorites. They have an inside ring, a few pets, who get all the cream,
-and fellows like you and me get the short ends. Take me yesterday: I was
-sent out on four lousy little stories, and not one amounted to anything.
-I tramped and rode all over town in the snow, listened to a lot of fools
-spout, and this morning I have just three little items. Look at that—and
-that—and that!” and he pointed to checkmarks on different pages. They
-made a total of, say, seven or eight inches, the equivalent in cash of
-less than three dollars. “And I’m supposed to live on that,” he went on,
-“and I have a boy and a girl in school! How do they figure that a man is
-to get along?”
-
-I had no consolation to offer him. After a time he resumed: “What they
-do is to get strangers like us, or any of these down-and-out newspaper
-men always walking up and down Park Row looking for a job, and get us to
-work on space because it sounds bigger to a greenhorn. Sure they have
-space-men here who amount to something, fellows who get big money, but
-they’re not like us. They make as much as seventy-five and a hundred
-dollars a week. But they’re rewrite men, old reporters who have too big
-a pull and who are too sure of themselves to stand for the low salaries
-they pay here. But they’re at the top. We little fellows are told that
-stuff about space, but all we get is leg-work. If you or I should get
-hold of a good story don’t you ever think they’d let us write it. I know
-that much. They’d take it away and give it to one of these rewrite
-fellows. There’s one now,” and he pointed to a large comfortable man in
-a light brown overcoat and brown hat who was but now ambling in. “He
-rewrote one of my stories just the other day. If they wanted you for
-regular work they’d make you take a regular salary for fear you’d get
-too much of space. They just keep us little fellows as extras to follow
-up such things as they wouldn’t waste a good man on. And they’re always
-firing a crowd of men every three or four months to keep up the zip of
-the staff, to keep ’em worried and working hard. I hate the damned
-business. I told myself in Pittsburgh that I never would get back in it
-again, but here I am!”
-
-This revelation made me a little sick. So this was my grand job! A long
-period of drudgery for little or nothing, my hard-earned money
-exhausted—and then what?
-
-“Just now,” he went on, “there’s nothing doing around the town or I
-wouldn’t be here. I’m only staying on until I can get something better.
-It’s a dog’s life. There’s nothing in it. I worked here all last week,
-and what do you think I made? Twelve dollars and seventy-five cents for
-the whole week, time included. Twelve dollars and seventy-five cents!
-It’s an outrage!”
-
-I agreed with him. “What is this time they allow?” I asked. “How do they
-figure—expenses and all?”
-
-“Sure, they allow expenses, and I’m going to figure mine more liberally
-from now on. It’s a little bonus they allow you for the time you work,
-but you don’t get anything anyhow. I’ll double any railroad fare I pay.
-If they don’t like it they can get somebody else. But they won’t let you
-do too much of it, and if you can’t make a little salary on small stuff
-they won’t keep you even then.” He grinned. “Anything big goes to the
-boys on a salary, and if it’s real big the space-men, who are on salary
-and space also, get the cream. I went out on a story the other afternoon
-and tramped around in the rain and got all the facts, and just as I was
-going to sit down and write it—well, I hadn’t really got started—one of
-the managing editors—there are about twenty around here—came up and took
-it away from me and gave it to somebody else to write. All I got was
-‘time.’ Gee, I was sore! But I don’t care,” he added with a chuckle.
-“I’ll be getting out of here one of these days.”
-
-Being handed this dose of inspiring information, I was in no mood for
-what followed; although I decided that this series of ills that were now
-befalling him was due to the fact that he was older than myself and
-maybe not very efficient, whereas in my case, being young, efficient,
-etc., etc—the usual mental bonus youth hands itself—I should do better.
-But when it came to my assignments this day and the next and the next,
-and in addition I was “handed” the late watch, my cock sureness began to
-evaporate. Each day I was given unimportant rumors or verification
-tales, which came to nothing. So keen was the competition between the
-papers, especially between the _World_ and the _Sun_, or the _World_ and
-the _Herald_, that almost everything suggested by one was looked into
-and criticized by the others. The items assigned to me this second day
-were: to visit the city morgue and there look up the body of a young and
-beautiful girl who was supposed to have drowned herself or been drowned
-and see if this was true, as another paper had said (and of course she
-was not beautiful at all); to visit a certain hotel to find out what I
-could about a hotel beat who had been arrested (this item, although
-written, was never used); to visit a Unitarian conference called to
-debate some supposed changes in faith or method of church development,
-the date for which however had been changed without notice to the
-papers, for which I was allowed time and carfare. My time, setting aside
-the long and wearisome hours in which I sat in the office awaiting my
-turn for an assignment, netted me the handsome sum of two dollars and
-fifty cents. And all the time in this very paper, I could read the
-noblest and most elevating discourses about duty, character, the need of
-a higher sense of citizenship, and what not. I used to frown at the
-shabby pecksniffery of it, the cheap buncombe that would allow a great
-publisher to bleed and drive his employees at one end of his house and
-deliver exordiums as to virtue, duty, industry, thrift, honesty at the
-other.
-
-However, despite these little setbacks and insights, I was not to be
-discouraged. The fact that I had succeeded elsewhere made me feel that
-somehow I should succeed here. Nevertheless, in spite of this sense of
-efficiency, I was strangely overawed and made more than ordinarily
-incompetent by the hugeness and force and heartlessness of the great
-city, its startling contrasts of wealth and poverty, the air of
-ruthlessness and indifference and disillusion that everywhere prevailed.
-Only recently there had been a disgusting exposure of the putrescence
-and heartlessness and brutality which underlay the social structure of
-the city. There had been the Lexow Investigation with its sickening
-revelations of graft and corruption, and the protection and
-encouragement of vice and crime in every walk of political and police
-life. The most horrible types of brothels had been proved to be not only
-winked at but preyed upon by the police and the politicians by a fixed
-and graded monthly tax in which the patrolman, the “roundsman,” the
-captain and the inspector, to say nothing of the district leader,
-shared. There was undeniable proof that the police and the politicians,
-even the officials, of the city were closely connected with all sorts of
-gambling and wire-tapping and bunco-steering, and even the subornation
-of murder. To the door of every house of prostitution and transient
-rooming-house the station police captain’s man, the _roundsman_, came as
-regularly as the rent or the gas man, and took more away. “Squealers”
-had been murdered in cold blood for their squealing. A famous chief of
-police, Byrnes by name, reputed at that time, far and wide, for his
-supposed skill in unraveling mysteries, being faced by a saturnalia of
-crime which he could not solve, had finally in self-defense caused to be
-arrested, tried, convicted and electrocuted, all upon suborned
-testimony, an old, helpless, half-witted bum known as Old Shakespeare,
-whose only crime was that he was worthless and defenseless. But the
-chief had thereby saved his “reputation.” Not far from the region in
-which my sister lived, although it was respectable enough in its way,
-tramped countless girls by night and by day looking for men, the great
-business of New York, and all preyed upon by the police. On several
-occasions, coming home from work after midnight, I found men lying
-hatless, coatless, trousers pockets pulled out, possibly their skulls
-fractured, so inadequate or indifferent or conniving was the so-called
-police protection.
-
-Nowhere before had I seen such a lavish show of wealth, or, such bitter
-poverty. In my reporting rounds I soon came upon the East Side; the
-Bowery, with its endless line of degraded and impossible lodging-houses,
-a perfect whorl of bums and failures; the Brooklyn waterfront, parts of
-it terrible in its degradation; and then by way of contrast again the
-great hotels, the mansions along Fifth Avenue, the smart shops and clubs
-and churches. When I went into Wall Street, the Tenderloin, the Fifth
-Avenue district, the East and West sides, I seemed everywhere to sense
-either a terrifying desire for lust or pleasure or wealth, accompanied
-by a heartlessness which was freezing to the soul, or a dogged
-resignation to deprivation and misery. Never had I seen so many
-down-and-out men—in the parks, along the Bowery and in the
-lodging-houses which lined that pathetic street. They slept over
-gratings anywhere from which came a little warm air, or in doorways or
-cellar-ways. At a half dozen points in different parts of the city I
-came upon those strange charities which supply a free meal to a man or
-lodging for the night, providing that he came at a given hour and waited
-long enough.
-
-And never anywhere had I seen so much show and luxury. Nearly all of the
-houses along upper Fifth Avenue and its side streets boasted their
-liveried footmen. Wall Street was a sea of financial trickery and
-legerdemain, a realm so crowded with sharklike geniuses of finance that
-one’s poor little arithmetic intelligence was entirely discounted and
-made ridiculous. How was a sniveling scribbler to make his way in such a
-world? Nothing but chance and luck, as I saw it, could further the
-average man or lift him out of his rut, and since when had it been
-proved that I was a favorite of fortune? A crushing sense of
-incompetence and general in-efficiency seemed to settle upon me, and I
-could not shake it off. Whenever I went out on an assignment—and I was
-always being sent upon those trivial, shoe-wearing affairs—I carried
-with me this sense of my unimportance.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXIV
-
-
-IT is entirely possible that, due to some physical or mental defect of
-my own, I was in no way fitted to contemplate so huge and ruthless a
-spectacle as New York then presented, or that I had too keen a
-conception of it at any rate. After a few days of work here I came in
-touch with several newspaper men from the West—a youth by the name of
-Graves, another by the name of Elliott, both formerly of Chicago, and a
-third individual who had once been in St. Louis, Wynne Thomas, brother
-of the famous playwright, Augustus. All were working on this paper, two
-of them in the same capacity as myself, the third a staff man. At night
-we used to sit about doing the late watch and spin all sorts of
-newspaper tales. These men had wandered from one place to another, and
-had seen—heavens, what had they not seen! They were completely
-disillusioned. Here, as in newspaper offices everywhere, one could hear
-the most disconcerting tales of human depravity and cruelty. I think
-that in the hours I spent with these men I learned as much about New
-York and its difficulties and opportunities, its different social
-strata, its outstanding figures social and political, as I might have
-learned in months of reporting and reading. They seemed to know every
-one likely to figure in the public eye. By degrees they introduced me to
-others, and all confirmed the conclusions which I was reaching. New York
-was difficult and revolting. The police and politicians were a menace;
-vice was rampant; wealth was shamelessly showy, cold and brutal. In New
-York the outsider or beginner had scarcely any chance at all, save as a
-servant. The city was overrun with hungry, loafing men of all
-descriptions, newspaper writers included.
-
-After a few weeks of experimenting, however, I had no need of
-confirmation from any source. An assignment or two having developed well
-under my handling, and I having reported my success to the city editor,
-I was allowed to begin to write it, then given another assignment and
-told to turn my story over to the large gentleman with the gold-headed
-cane. This infuriated and discouraged me, but I said nothing. I thought
-it might be due to the city editor’s conviction, so far not disturbed by
-any opportunity I had had, that I could not write.
-
-But one night, a small item about a fight in a tenement house having
-been given me to investigate, I went to the place in question and found
-that it was a cheap beer-drinking brawl on the upper East Side which had
-its origin in the objection of one neighbor to the noise made by
-another. I constructed a ridiculous story of my own to the effect that
-the first irritated neighbor was a musician who had been attempting at
-midnight to construct a waltz, into which the snores, gurgles, moans and
-gasps of his slumberous next-door neighbor would not fit. Becoming
-irritated and unable by calls and knocking to arouse his friend and so
-bring him to silence, he finally resorted to piano banging and
-glass-breaking of such a terrible character as to arouse the entire
-neighborhood and cause the sending in of a riot call by a policeman, who
-thought that a tenement war had broken out. Result: broken heads and an
-interesting parade to the nearest police station. Somewhere in the text
-I used the phrase “sawing somnolent wood.”
-
-Finding no one in charge of the city editor’s desk when I returned, I
-handed my account to the night city editor. The next morning, lo and
-behold, there it was on the first page consuming at least a fourth of a
-column! To my further surprise and gratification, once the city editor
-appeared I noticed a change of attitude in him. While waiting for an
-assignment, I caught his eye on me, and finally he came over, paper in
-hand, and pointing to the item said: “You wrote this, didn’t you?” I
-began to think that I might have made a mistake in creating this bit of
-news and that it had been investigated and found to be a fiction. “Yes,”
-I replied. Instead of berating me he smiled and said: “Well, it’s rather
-well done. I may be able to make a place for you after a while. I’ll see
-if I can’t find an interesting story for you somewhere.”
-
-And true to his word, he gave me another story on this order. In the
-Hoffman House bar, one of the show-places of the city, there had been a
-brawl the day before, a fight between a well-known society youth of
-great wealth who owed the hotel money and would not pay as speedily as
-it wished, and a manager or assistant manager who had sent him some form
-of disturbing letter. All the details, as I discovered on reading the
-item (which had been clipped from the _Herald_), had been fully covered
-by that paper, and all that remained for me twenty-four hours later was
-to visit the principals and extract some comments or additions to the
-tale, which plainly I was expected to revamp in a humorous fashion.
-
-As I have said, humor had never been wholly in my line, and in addition
-I had by no means overcome my awe of the city and its imposing and
-much-advertised “Four Hundred.” Now to be called upon to invade one of
-its main hostelries and beard the irate and lofty manager in his den, to
-say nothing of this young Vanderbilt or Goelet—well——I told myself that
-when I reached this hotel the manager would doubtless take a very lofty
-tone and refuse to discuss the matter—which was exactly what happened.
-He was infuriated to think that he had been reported as fighting.
-Similarly, should I succeed in finding this society youth’s apartment, I
-should probably be snubbed or shunted off in some cavalier fashion—which
-was exactly what happened. I was told that my Mr. X. was not there.
-Then, as a conscientious newspaper man, I knew I should return to the
-hotel and by cajolery or bribery see if I could not induce some
-barkeeper or waiter who had witnessed the fight to describe some phase
-of it that I might use.
-
-But I was in no mood for this, and besides, I was afraid of these New
-York waiters and managers and society people. Suppose they complained of
-my tale and denounced me as a faker? I returned to the hotel, but its
-onyx lobby and bar and its heavy rococo decorations and furniture took
-my courage away. I lingered about but could not begin my inquiries, and
-finally walked out. Then I went back to the apartment house in which my
-youth lived, but still he was not in and I could extract no news from
-the noble footman who kept the door. I did not see how I was to conjure
-up humor from the facts in hand. Finally I dropped it as unworthy of me
-and returned to the office. In doing so I had the feeling that I was
-turning aside an item by which, had I chosen to fake, I could have
-furthered myself. I knew now that what my city editor wanted was not
-merely “accuracy, accuracy, accuracy,” but a kind of flair for the
-ridiculous or the remarkable even though it had to be invented, so that
-the pages of the paper, and life itself, might not seem so dull. Also I
-realized that a more experienced man, one used to the ways of the city
-and acquainted with its interesting and eccentric personalities, might
-make something out of this and not come to grief; but not I. And so I
-let it go, realizing that I was losing an excellent opportunity.
-
-And I think that my city editor thought so too. When I returned and told
-him that I could not find anything interestingly new in connection with
-this he looked at me as much as to say, “Well, I’ll be damned!” and
-threw the clipping on his desk. I am satisfied that if any reporter had
-succeeded in uncovering any aspect of this case not previously used I
-should have been dropped forthwith. As it turned out, however, nothing
-more developed, and for a little time anyhow I was permitted to drag on
-as before, but with no further favors.
-
-One day, being given a part of a “badger” case to unravel, a man and
-woman working together to divest a hotel man of a check for five
-thousand dollars, and I having cajoled the lady in the case (then under
-arrest) into making some interesting remarks as to her part in the
-affair and badgering in general, I was not allowed to write it but had
-to content myself with seeing my very good yarn incorporated in another
-man’s story while I took “time.” Another day, having developed another
-excellent tale of a runaway marriage, the girl being of a family of some
-standing, I was not allowed to write it. I was beginning to see that I
-was a hopeless failure as a reporter here.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXV
-
-
-THE things which most contributed to my want of newspaper success in New
-York and eventually drove me, though much against my will and
-understanding, into an easier and more agreeable phase of life were,
-first, that awe of the grinding and almost disgusting forces of life
-itself which I found in Spencer and Huxley and Balzac and which now
-persistently haunted me and, due possibly to a depressed physical
-condition at this time, made it impossible for me to work with any of
-the zest that had characterized my work in the West. Next, there was
-that astounding contrast between wealth and poverty, here more sharply
-emphasized than anywhere else in America, which gave the great city a
-gross and cruel and mechanical look, and this was emphasized not only by
-the papers themselves, with their various summaries of investigations
-and exposures, but also by my own hourly contact with it—a look so harsh
-and indifferent at times as to leave me a little numb. Again, there was
-something disillusioning in the sharp contrast between the professed
-ideals and preachments of such a constantly moralizing journal as the
-_World_ and the heartless and savage aspect of its internal economy. Men
-such as myself were mere machines or privates in an ill-paid army to be
-thrown into any breach. There was no time off for the space-men, unless
-it was for all time. One was expected to achieve the results desired or
-get out; and if one did achieve them the reward was nothing.
-
-One day I met an acquaintance and asked about an ex-city editor from St.
-Louis who had come to New York, and his answer staggered me.
-
-“Oh, Cliff? Didn’t you hear? Why, he committed suicide down here in a
-West Street hotel.”
-
-“What was the trouble?” I asked.
-
-“Tired of the game, I guess,” he replied. “He didn’t get along down here
-as well as he had out there. I guess he felt that he was going
-downhill.”
-
-I walked away, meditating. He had been an excellent newspaper man, as
-brisk and self-centered as one need be to prosper. The last time I had
-seen him he was in good physical condition, and yet, after something
-like a year in New York, he had killed himself.
-
-However, my mood was not that of one who runs away from a grueling
-contest. I had no notion of leaving New York, whatever happened,
-although I constantly speculated as to what I should do when all my
-money was gone. I had no trade or profession beyond this reporting, and
-yet I was convinced that there must be something else that I could do.
-Come what might, I was determined that I would ask no favor of my
-brother, and as for my sister, who was now a burden on my hands, I was
-determined that as soon as this burden became too great I would take up
-her case with my brother Paul, outline all that had been done and ask
-him to shoulder the difference until such time as I could find myself in
-whatever work I was destined to do.
-
-But what was it?
-
-One of the things which oppressed me was the fact that on the _World_,
-as well as on the other papers, were men as young as myself who were
-apparently of a very different texture, mentally if not physically. Life
-and this fierce contest which I was taking so much to heart seemed in no
-wise to disturb them. By reason of temperament and insight perhaps,
-possibly the lack of it, or, what was more likely, certain fortunate
-circumstances attending their youth and upbringing, they were part of
-that oncoming host of professional optimists and yea-sayers, chorus-like
-in character, which for thirty years or more thereafter in American life
-was constantly engaged in the pleasing task of emphasizing the
-possibilities of success, progress, strength and what not for all, in
-America and elsewhere, while at the same time they were humbly and
-sycophantically genuflecting before the strong, the lucky, the
-prosperous. On the _World_ alone at this time, to say nothing of the
-other papers, were at least a dozen, swaggering about in the best of
-clothes, their manners those of a graduate of Yale or Harvard or
-Princeton, their minds stuffed with all the noble maxims of the
-uplifters. There was nothing wrong with the world that could not be
-easily and quickly righted, once the honest, just, true, kind,
-industrious turned their giant and selected brains to the task. This
-newest type of young newspaper man was to have no traffic with evil in
-any form; he was to concern himself with the Good, the True, the
-Beautiful. Many of these young men pretended to an intimate working
-knowledge of many things: society, politics, finance and what not else.
-Several had evidently made themselves indispensable as ship reporters,
-interviewers of arriving and departing celebrities, and these were now
-pointed out to me as men worthy of envy and emulation. One of them had,
-at the behest of the _World_, crossed the ocean more than once seeking
-to expose the principals in a growing ship-gambling and bunco scandal.
-There were those who were in the confidence of the mayor, the governor,
-and some of the lights in Wall Street. One, a scion of one of the best
-families, was the paper’s best adviser as to social events and scandals.
-The grand air with which they swung in and out of the office set me
-beside myself with envy.
-
-And all the time the condition of my personal affairs tended to make me
-anything but optimistic. I was in very serious financial straits. I
-sometimes think that I was too new to the city, too green to its
-psychology and subtlety, to be of any use to a great metropolitan daily;
-and yet, seeing all I had seen, I should have been worth something. I
-was only five years distant from the composition of _Sister Carrie_, to
-say nothing of many short stories and magazine articles. Yet I was
-haunted by the thought that I was a misfit, that I might really have to
-give up and return to the West, where in some pathetic humdrum task I
-should live out a barren and pointless life.
-
-With this probable end staring me in the face, I began to think that I
-must not give up but must instead turn to letters, the art of
-short-story writing; only just how to do this I could not see. One of
-the things that prompted me to try this was the fact that on the _World_
-at this time were several who had succeeded—David Graham Phillips, James
-Creelman, then a correspondent for the paper in the war which had broken
-out between China and Japan, to say nothing of George Cary Eggleston and
-Reginald de Koven, the latter on the staff as chief musical critic.
-There was another young man, whose name I have forgotten, who was
-pointed out to me as a rapidly growing favorite in the office of the
-_Century_. Then there were those new arrivals in the world of letters:
-Kipling, Richard Harding Davis, Stephen Crane and some others, whose
-success fascinated me.
-
-All this was but an irritant to a bubbling chemistry which as yet had
-found no solution, and was not likely to find one for some time to come.
-My reading of Spencer and Huxley in no wise tended to clarify and impel
-my mind in the direction of fiction, or even philosophy. But now, in a
-kind of ferment or fever due to my necessities and desperation, I set to
-examining the current magazines and the fiction and articles to be found
-therein: _Century_, _Scribner’s_, _Harper’s_. I was never more
-confounded than by the discrepancy existing between my own observations
-and those displayed here, the beauty and peace and charm to be found in
-everything, the almost complete absence of any reference to the coarse
-and the vulgar and the cruel and the terrible. How did it happen that
-these remarkable persons—geniuses of course, one and all—saw life in
-this happy roseate way? Was it so, and was I all wrong? Love was almost
-invariably rewarded in these tales. Almost invariably one’s dreams came
-true, in the magazines. Most of these bits of fiction, delicately
-phrased, flowed so easily, with such an air of assurance, omniscience
-and condescension, that I was quite put out by my own lacks and defects.
-They seemed to deal with phases of sweetness and beauty and success and
-goodness such as I rarely encountered. There were so many tales of the
-old South reeking with a poetry which was poetry and little more (George
-W. Cable; Thomas Nelson Page). In _Harper’s_ I found such assured
-writers as William Dean Howells, Charles Dudley Warner, Frank R.
-Stockton, Mrs. Humphry Ward, and a score of others, all of whom wrote of
-nobility of character and sacrifice and the greatness of ideals and joy
-in simple things.
-
-But as I viewed the strenuous world about me, all that I read seemed not
-to have so very much to do with it. Perhaps, as I now thought, life as I
-saw it, the darker phases, was never to be written about. Maybe such
-things were not the true province of fiction anyhow. I read and read,
-but all I could gather was that I had no such tales to tell, and,
-however much I tried, I could not think of any. The kind of thing I was
-witnessing no one would want as fiction. These writers seemed far above
-the world of which I was a part. Indeed I began to picture them as
-creatures of the greatest luxury and culture, gentlemen and ladies all,
-comfortably housed, masters of servants, possessing estates, or at least
-bachelor quarters, having horses and carriages, and received here, there
-and everywhere with nods of recognition and smiles of approval.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXVI
-
-
-AND then after a little while, being assigned to do routine work in
-connection with the East Twenty-seventh Street police station, Bellevue
-Hospital, and the New York Charities Department, which included branches
-that looked after the poor-farm, the morgue, an insane asylum or two, a
-workhouse and what not else, I was called upon daily to face as
-disagreeable and depressing a series of scenes as it is possible for a
-human being to witness and which quite finished me. I was compelled to
-inquire of fat, red-faced sergeants, and door-keepers who reigned in
-police stations and hospital registry rooms what was new, and, by being
-as genial and agreeable as possible and so earning their favor, to get
-an occasional tip as to the most unimportant of brawls. Had I been in a
-different mental state the thickness and incommunicability of some of
-these individuals would not have been proof against my arts. I could
-have devised or manufactured something.
-
-But as it was the nature of this world depressed me so that I could not
-have written anything very much worth while if I had wanted to. There
-was the morgue, for instance—that horrible place! Daily from the
-ever-flowing waters about New York there were recaptured or washed up in
-all stages and degrees of decomposition the flotsam and jetsam of the
-great city, its offal, its victims—its what? I came here often (it stood
-at the foot of East Twenty-sixth Street near Bellevue Hospital) and
-invariably I found the same old brown-denimed caretaker in charge, a
-creature so thick and so lethargic and so mentally incompetent generally
-that it was all I could do to extract a grunt of recognition out of him.
-Yet, if handed a cigar occasionally or a bag of tobacco, he would
-trouble to get out of his chair and let you look over a book or ledger
-containing the roughly jotted down police descriptions, all done in an
-amazing scrawl, of the height, weight, color of clothes if any,
-complexion of hair and eyes where these were still distinguishable,
-probable length of time in water, contents of pockets, jewelry or money
-if any, etc., which same were to be noted in connection with any mystery
-or disappearance of a person. And there was always some one “turning up
-missing.” And I noticed, with considerable cynicism, that rarely if ever
-was there any money or jewelry reported as found by the police. That
-would be too much to expect.
-
-Being further persuaded via blandishments or tips of one kind and
-another, this caretaker would lead the way to a shelf of drawers
-reaching from the floor to the chest-height of a man or higher and
-running about two sides of the room, and opening those containing the
-latest arrivals, supposing you were interested to look, would allow you
-to gaze upon the last of that strange chemical formula which once
-functioned as a human being here on earth. The faces! The decay! The
-clothing! I stared in sad horror and promised myself that I would never
-again look, but duty to the paper compelled me so to do again and again.
-
-And then there was Bellevue itself, that gray-black collection of brick
-and stone with connecting bridges of iron, which faced, in winter time
-at least, the gray, icy waters of the East River. I have never been able
-to forget it, so drear and bleak was it all. The hobbling ghouls of
-caretakers in their baggy brown cotton suits to be seen wandering here
-and there or hovering over stoves; the large number of half-well charity
-patients idling about in gray-green denim, their faces sunken and
-pinched, their hair poorly combed! And the chipper and yet often coarse
-and vulgar and always overbearing young doctors and nurses and paid
-attendants generally! One need but remember that it was the heyday of
-the most corrupt period of Tammany Hall’s shameless political control of
-New York, Mr. Croker being still in charge. Quite all of those old
-buildings have since been replaced and surrounded by a tall iron fence
-and bordered with an attractive lawn. In those days it was a little
-different: there was the hospital proper, with its various wards, its
-detention hospital for the criminal or insane, or both, the morgue and a
-world of smaller pavilions stretching along the riverfront and connected
-by walks or covered hallways or iron bridges, but lacking the dignity
-and care of the later structures. There was, too, the dark psychology
-which attends any badly or foully managed institution, that something
-which hovers as a cloud over all. And Bellevue at that time had that air
-and that psychology. It smacked more of a jail and a poor-house combined
-than of a hospital, and so it was, I think. At that time it was a
-seething world of medical and political and social graft, a kind of
-human hell or sty. Those poor fish who live in comfortable and protected
-homes and find their little theories and religious beliefs ready-made
-for them in some overawing church or social atmosphere, should be
-permitted to take an occasional peep into a world such as this was then.
-At this very time there was an investigation and an exposure on in
-connection with this institution, which had revealed not only the murder
-of helpless patients but the usual graft in connection with food, drugs,
-clothing, etc., furnished to the patients called charity. Grafting
-officials and medics and brutes of nurses and attendants abounded, of
-course. The number of “drunks” and obstreperous or complaining or
-troublesome patients doped or beaten or thrown out and even killed, and
-the number and quality of operations conducted by incompetent or
-indifferent surgeons, was known and shown to be large. One need only
-return to the legislative investigations of that date to come upon the
-truth of this.
-
-But the place was so huge and crowded that it was like a city in itself.
-For one thing, it was a dumping-ground for all the offal gathered by the
-police and the charity departments, to say nothing of being a realm of
-“soft snaps” for political pensioners of all kinds. On such days as
-relatives and friends of charity patients or those detained by the
-police were permitted to call, the permit room fairly swarmed with
-people who were pushed and shunted here and there like cattle, and
-always browbeaten like slaves. I myself, visiting as a stranger
-subsequently, was often so treated. “Who? What’s his name? What? Whendee
-come? When? Talk a little louder, can’t you? Whatsy matter with your
-tongue? Over there! Over there! Out that door there!” So we came,
-procured our little cards, and passed in or out.
-
-And the wretched creatures who were “cured” or written down well enough
-to walk, and so, before a serious illness had been properly treated and
-because they were not able to pay, were shunted out into the world of
-the well and the strong with whom they were supposed to compete once
-more and make their way. I used to see them coming and going and have
-talked to scores, men and women who had never had a dollar above their
-meager needs and who, once illness overtook them, had been swept into
-this limbo, only to be turned out again at the end of a few weeks or
-months to make their way as best they might, and really worse off than
-when they came, for now they were in a weak condition physically as well
-as penniless, and sometimes, as I noticed, on the day of their going the
-weather was most inclement. And the old, wrinkled, washed-out clothing
-doled out to them in which they were to once more wander back to the
-tenements—to do what? There was a local charity organization at the
-time, as there is today, but if it acted in behalf of any of these I
-never saw it. They wandered away west on Twenty-sixth Street and along
-First and Second Avenue, those drear, dismal, underdog streets—to where?
-
-But by far the most irritating of all the phases of this institution, to
-me at least, were the various officials and dancing young medics and
-nurses in their white uniforms, the latter too often engaged in flirting
-with one another or tennis-playing or reading in some warm room, their
-feet planted upon a desk the while they smoked and the while the great
-institution with all its company of miserables wagged its indifferent
-way. When not actually visiting their patients one could always find
-them so ensconced somewhere, reading or smoking or talking or flirting.
-In spite of the world of misery that was thrashing about them they were
-as comfortable as may be, and to me, when bent upon unraveling the
-details of some particular case, they always seemed heartless. “Oh, that
-old nut? What’s interesting about him? Surely you don’t expect to dig up
-anything interesting about him, do you? He’s been here three weeks now.
-No; we don’t know anything about him. Don’t the records show?” Or,
-supposing he had died: “I knew he couldn’t live. We couldn’t give him
-the necessary attention here. He didn’t have any money, and there’s too
-many here as it is. Wanta see an interesting case?” And then one might
-be led in to some wretch who was out of his mind or had an illusion of
-some kind. “Funny old duck, eh? But there’s no hope. He’ll be dead in a
-week or so.”
-
-I think the most sickening thing I ever saw was cash gambling among two
-young medics and a young nurse in charge of the receiving ward as to
-whether the next patient to be brought in by the ambulance, which had
-been sent out on a hurry accident call, would arrive alive or dead.
-
-“Fifty that he’s dead!”
-
-“Fifty that he isn’t!”
-
-“I say alive!”
-
-“I say dead!”
-
-“Well, hand me that stethoscope. I’m not going to be fooled by looks
-this time!”
-
-Tearing in came the ambulance, its bell clanging, the hubs of the wheels
-barely missing the walls of the entryway, and as the stretcher was
-pulled out and set down on the stone step under the archway the three
-pushed about and hung over, feeling the heart and looking at the eyes
-and lips, now pale blue as in death, quite as one might crowd about a
-curious specimen of plant or animal.
-
-“He’s alive!”
-
-“He’s dead!”
-
-“I say he’s alive! Look at his eyes!” to illustrate which one eye was
-forced open.
-
-“Aw, what’s eatin’ you! Listen to his heart! Haven’t I got the stetho on
-it? Listen for yourself!”
-
-The man was dead, but the jangle lasted a laughing minute or more, the
-while he lay there; then he was removed to the morgue and the loser
-compelled to “come across” or “fork over.”
-
-One of the internes who occasionally went out “on the wagon,” as the
-ambulance was called, told me that once, having picked up a badly
-injured man who had been knocked down by a car, this same ambulance on
-racing with this man to the hospital had knocked down another and all
-but killed him.
-
-“And what did you do about him?” I asked.
-
-“Stopped the boat and chucked him into it, of course.”
-
-“On top of the other one?”
-
-“Side by side, sure. It was a little close, though.”
-
-“Well, did he die?”
-
-“Yep. But the other one was all right. We couldn’t help it, though. It
-was a life or death case for the first one.”
-
-“A fine deal for the merry bystander,” was all I could say.
-
-The very worst of all in connection with this great hospital, and I do
-not care to dwell on it at too great length since it has all been
-exposed before and the records are available, was this: about the
-hospital, in the capacity of orderlies, doormen, gatemen, errand boys,
-gardeners, and what not, were a number of down-and-out ex-patients or
-pensioners of politicians so old and feeble and generally decrepit
-mentally and physically as to be fit for little more than the
-scrap-heap. Their main desire, in so far as I could see, was to sit in
-the sun or safely within the warmth of a room and do nothing at all. If
-you asked them a question their first impulse and greatest delight was
-to say “Don’t know” or refer you to some one else. They were accused by
-the half dozen reporters who daily foregathered here to be of the
-lowest, so low indeed that they could be persuaded to do anything for a
-little money. And in pursuance of this theory there was one day
-propounded by a little red-headed Irish police reporter who used to hang
-about there that he would bet anybody five dollars that for the sum of
-fifteen dollars he could hire old Gansmuder, who was one of the
-shabbiest and vilest-looking of the hospital orderlies, to kill a man.
-According to him, and he had his information from one of the policemen
-stationed in the hospital, Gansmuder was an ex-convict who had done ten
-years’ time for a similar crime. Now old and penniless, he was here
-finishing up a shameful existence, the pensioner of some politician to
-whom he had rendered a service perhaps.
-
-At any rate here he was, and, as one of several who heard the boast in
-the news-room near the gate, I joined in the shout of derision that went
-up. “Rot!” “What stuff!” “Well, you’re the limit, Mickey!” However, as
-events proved, it was not so much talk as fact. I was not present at the
-negotiations but from amazed accounts by other newspaper men I learned
-that Gansmuder, being approached by Finn and one other (Finn first, then
-the two of them together), agreed for the sum of twenty-five dollars, a
-part of it to be paid in advance, to lie in wait at a certain street
-corner in Brooklyn for an individual of a given description and there to
-strike him in such a way as to dispose of him. Of course the
-negotiations went no further than this, but somehow, true or no, this
-one incident has always typified the spirit of that hospital, and indeed
-of all political New York, to me. It was a period of orgy and crime, and
-Bellevue and the charities department constituted the back door which
-gave onto the river, the asylums, the potter’s field, and all else this
-side of complete chemic dissolution.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXVII
-
-
-WHETHER due to a naturally weak and incompetent physique or a mind which
-unduly tortures itself with the evidences of a none-too-smooth working
-of the creative impulse and its machinery, or whether I had merely had
-my fill of reportorial work as such and could endure no more, or
-whatever else might have been the cause, I finally determined to get out
-of the newspaper profession entirely, come what might and cost what it
-might, although just what I was to do once I was out I could not guess.
-I had no trade or profession other than this, and the thought of editing
-or writing for anything save a newspaper was as far from me as
-engineering or painting. I did not think I could write anything beyond
-newspaper news items, and with this conclusion many will no doubt be
-glad to agree with me even unto this day.
-
-Yet out of this messy and heartless world in which I was now working I
-did occasionally extract a tale that was printable, only so low was my
-credit that I rarely won the privilege of writing it myself. Had I
-imagined that I could write I might easily have built up stories out of
-what I saw which would have shocked the souls of the magazine editors
-and writers, but they would never have been published. They would have
-been too low, gruesome, drab, horrible, and so beyond the view of any
-current magazine or its clientele.
-
-Life at that time, outside the dark picture of it presented by the daily
-papers, must, as I have shown, be all sweetness and gayety and humor. We
-must discuss only our better selves, and arrive at a happy ending; or if
-perchance this realer world must be referred to it must be indicated in
-some cloudy manner which would give it more the charm of shadow than of
-fact, something used to enhance the values of the lighter and more
-perfect and beautiful things with which our lives must concern
-themselves. Marriage, if I read the current magazines correctly, was a
-sweet and delicate affair, never marred by the slightest erratic conduct
-of any kind. Love was made in heaven and lasted forever. Ministers,
-doctors, lawyers and merchants, were all good men, rarely if ever guilty
-of the shams and subterfuges and trashy aspects of humanity. If a man
-did an evil thing it was due to his lower nature, which really had
-nothing to do with his higher—and it was a great concession for the
-intelligentsia of that day (maybe of this) to admit that he had two
-natures, one of which was not high. Most of us had only the higher one,
-our better nature.... When I think of the literary and social snobbery
-and bosh of that day, its utter futility and profound faith in its own
-goodness, as opposed to facts of its own visible life, I have to smile.
-
-But it never occurred to me that I could write, in the literary sense,
-and as for editing, I never even thought of it. And yet that was the
-very next thing I did. I wandered about thinking what I was to do,
-deciding each day that if I had the courage of a rat I would no longer
-endure this time-consuming game of reporting, for the pitiful sum which
-I was allowed to draw. What more could it do for me? I asked myself over
-and over. Make me more aware of the brutality, subtlety, force, charm,
-selfishness of life? It could not if I worked a hundred years.
-Essentially, as I even then saw, it was a boy’s game, and I was slowly
-but surely passing out of the boy stage. Yet in desperation because I
-saw disappearing the amount which I had saved up in Pittsburgh, and I
-had not one other thing in sight, I visited other newspaper offices to
-see if I could not secure, temporarily at least, a better regular
-salary. But no. Whenever I could get in to see a city or managing
-editor, which was rare, no one seemed to want me. At the offices of the
-_Herald_, _Times_, _Tribune_, _Sun_, and elsewhere the same outer office
-system worked to keep me out, and I was by now too indifferent to the
-reportorial work and too discouraged really to wish to force myself in
-or to continue as a reporter at all. Indeed I went about this matter of
-inquiry more or less perfunctorily, not really believing in either
-myself or my work. If I had secured a well-paying position I presume
-that I should have continued. Fortunately or unfortunately, as one
-chooses to look at such things, I did not; but it seemed far from
-fortunate then to me.
-
-Finally one Saturday afternoon, having brought in a story which related
-to a missing girl whose body was found at the morgue and being told to
-“give the facts to —— and let him write it,” I summoned up sufficient
-courage to say to the assistant who ordered me to do this:
-
-“I don’t see why I should always have to do this. I’m not a beginner in
-this game. I wrote stories, and big ones, before ever I came to this
-paper.”
-
-“Maybe you did,” he replied rather sardonically, “but we have the
-feeling that you haven’t proved to be of much use to us.”
-
-After this there was nothing to say and but one thing to do. I could not
-say that I had had no opportunities; but just the same I was terribly
-hurt in my pride. Without knowing what to do or where to go, I there and
-then decided that, come what might, this was the end of newspaper
-reporting for me. Never again, if I died in the fight, would I
-condescend to be a reporter on any paper. I might starve, but if so—I
-would starve. Either I was going to get something different, something
-more profitable to my mind, or I was going to starve or get out of New
-York.
-
-I went to the assistant and turned over my data, then got my hat and
-went out. I felt that I should be dismissed eventually anyhow for
-incompetence and insubordination, so dark was my mood in regard to all
-of it, and so out I went. One thing I did do; I visited the man who had
-first ordered the city editor to put me on and submitted to him various
-clippings of work done in Pittsburgh with the request that he advise me
-as to where I might turn for work.
-
-“Better try the _Sun_,” was his sane advice. “It’s a great school, and
-you might do well over there.”
-
-But although I tried I could not get on the _Sun_—not, at least, before
-I had managed to do something else.
-
-Thus ended my newspaper experiences, which I never resumed save as a
-writer of Sunday specials, and then under entirely different
-conditions—but that was ten years later. In the meantime I was now
-perforce turning toward a world which had never seemed to contain any
-future for me, and I was doing it without really knowing it. But that is
-another story. It might be related under some such title as _Literary
-Experiences_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_N.B._ Four years later, having by then established myself sufficiently
-to pay the rent of an apartment, secure furniture and convince myself
-that I could make a living for two, I undertook that perilous adventure
-with the lady of my choice—and that, of course, after the first flare of
-love had thinned down to the pale flame of duty. Need anything more be
-said? The first law of convention had been obeyed, whereas the governing
-forces of temperament had been overridden—and with what results
-eventually you may well suspect. So much for romance.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-● Transcriber’s note:
-
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
-
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
-
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
-
- ○ The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in
- the public domain.
-
-
-
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Book About Myself, by Theodore Dreiser</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: A Book About Myself</p>
-<p>Author: Theodore Dreiser</p>
-<p>Release Date: August 24, 2020 [eBook #62995]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by ellinora, Barry Abrahamsen,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/bookaboutmyself00drei">
- https://archive.org/details/bookaboutmyself00drei</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='small'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF</h1>
-</div>
-<p class='c002'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div>
-
-<div class='figright id002'>
-<img src='images/publogo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c002'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<p class='c002'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='box2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Books by</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>THEODORE DREISER</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c004' />
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>SISTER CARRIE</div>
- <div class='line'>JENNIE GERHARDT</div>
- <div class='line'>THE FINANCIER</div>
- <div class='line'>THE TITAN</div>
- <div class='line'>THE GENIUS</div>
- <div class='line'>A TRAVELER AT FORTY</div>
- <div class='line'>A HOOSIER HOLIDAY</div>
- <div class='line'>PLAYS OF THE NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL</div>
- <div class='line'>THE HAND OF THE POTTER</div>
- <div class='line'>FREE AND OTHER STORIES</div>
- <div class='line'>TWELVE MEN</div>
- <div class='line'>HEY RUB-A-DUB-DUB</div>
- <div class='line'>A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>.&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='c007'>A BOOK ABOUT</span></div>
- <div><span class='c007'>MYSELF</span></div>
- <div class='c008'><span class='c009'>THEODORE DREISER</span></div>
- <div class='c008'><span class='c009'>BONI AND LIVERIGHT</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>PUBLISHERS NEW YORK</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='large'><span class='sc'>Copyright, 1922, by</span></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>BONI AND LIVERIGHT, <span class='sc'>Inc.</span></span></div>
- <div>——————</div>
- <div><i>All rights reserved</i></div>
- <div class='c011'><i>First edition</i> <i>November, 1922</i></div>
- <div><i>Second edition</i> <i>December, 1922</i></div>
- <div class='c010'><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c010' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>A BOOK ABOUT MYSELF</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER I</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>During</span> the year 1890 I had been formulating my first dim
-notion as to what it was I wanted to do in life. For two
-years and more I had been reading Eugene Field’s “Sharps
-and Flats,” a column he wrote daily for the Chicago <i>Daily
-News</i>, and through this, the various phases of life which
-he suggested in a humorous though at times romantic way,
-I was beginning to suspect, vaguely at first, that I wanted
-to write, possibly something like that. Nothing else that
-I had so far read—novels, plays, poems, histories—gave me
-quite the same feeling for constructive thought as did the
-matter of his daily notes, poems, and aphorisms, which were
-of Chicago principally, whereas nearly all others dealt with
-foreign scenes and people.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this comment on local life here and now, these trenchant
-bits on local street scenes, institutions, characters, functions,
-all moved me as nothing hitherto had. To me Chicago
-at this time seethed with a peculiarly human or realistic atmosphere.
-It is given to some cities, as to some lands, to suggest
-romance, and to me Chicago did that hourly. It sang, I
-thought, and in spite of what I deemed my various troubles—small
-enough as I now see them—I was singing with it.
-These seemingly drear neighborhoods through which I walked
-each day, doing collecting for an easy-payment furniture
-company, these ponderous regions of large homes where new-wealthy
-packers and manufacturers dwelt, these curiously
-foreign neighborhoods of almost all nationalities; and, lastly,
-that great downtown area, surrounded on two sides by the
-river, on the east by the lake, and on the south by railroad
-yards and stations, the whole set with these new tall
-buildings, the wonder of the western world, fascinated me. Chicago
-was so young, so blithe, so new, I thought. Florence
-in its best days must have been something like this to young
-Florentines, or Venice to the young Venetians.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Here was a city which had no traditions but was making
-them, and this was the very thing that every one seemed to
-understand and rejoice in. Chicago was like no other city
-in the world, so said they all. Chicago would outstrip every
-other American city, New York included, and become the
-first of all American, if not European or world, cities.... This
-dream many hundreds of thousands of its citizens held dear.
-Chicago would be first in wealth, first in beauty, first in art
-achievement. A great World’s Fair was even then being
-planned that would bring people from all over the world.
-The Auditorium, the new Great Northern Hotel, the amazing
-(for its day) Masonic Temple twenty-two stories high, a score
-of public institutions, depots, theaters and the like, were being
-constructed. It is something wonderful to witness a world
-metropolis springing up under one’s very eyes, and this is
-what was happening here before me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nosing about the city in an inquiring way and dreaming
-half-formed dreams of one and another thing I would like
-to do, it finally came to me, dimly, like a bean that strains
-at its enveloping shell, that I would like to write of these
-things. It would be interesting, so I thought, to describe
-a place like Goose Island in the Chicago River, a mucky and
-neglected realm then covered with shanties made of upturned
-boats sawed in two, and yet which seemed to me the height
-of the picturesque; also a building like the Auditorium or
-the Masonic Temple, that vast wall of masonry twenty-two
-stories high and at that time actually the largest building
-in the world; or a seething pit like that of the Board of
-Trade, which I had once visited and which astonished and
-fascinated me as much as anything ever had. That roaring,
-yelling, screaming whirlpool of life! And then the lake,
-with its pure white sails and its blue water; the Chicago
-River, with its black, oily water, its tall grain elevators and
-black coal pockets; the great railroad yards, covering miles
-and miles of space with their cars.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How wonderful it all was! As I walked from place to place
-collecting I began betimes to improvise rhythmic, vaguely
-formulated word-pictures or rhapsodies anent these same
-and many other things—free verse, I suppose we should call
-it now—which concerned everything and nothing but somehow
-expressed the seething poetry of my soul and this thing
-to me. Indeed I was crazy with life, a little demented or
-frenzied with romance and hope. I wanted to sing, to
-dance, to eat, to love. My word-dreams and maunderings
-concerned my day, my age, poverty, hope, beauty, which I
-mouthed to myself, chanting aloud at times. Sometimes, because
-on a number of occasions I had heard the Reverend
-Frank W. Gunsaulus and his like spout rocket-like sputterings
-on the subjects of life and religion, I would orate, pleading
-great causes as I went. I imagined myself a great orator
-with thousands of people before me, my gestures and enunciation
-and thought perfect, poetic, and all my hearers moved
-to tears or demonstrations of wild delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After a time I ventured to commit some of these things
-to paper, scarcely knowing what they were, and in a fever
-for self-advancement I bundled them up and sent them to
-Eugene Field. In his column and elsewhere I had read
-about geniuses being occasionally discovered by some chance
-composition or work noted by one in authority. I waited for
-a time, with great interest but no vast depression, to see
-what my fate would be. But no word came and in time I
-realized that they must have been very bad and had been
-dropped into the nearest waste basket. But this did not
-give me pause nor grieve me. I seethed to express myself.
-I bubbled. I dreamed. And I had a singing feeling,
-now that I had done this much, that some day I should really
-write and be very famous into the bargain.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But how? How? My feeling was that I ought to get into
-newspaper work, and yet this feeling was so nebulous that I
-thought it would never come to pass. I saw mention in the
-papers of reporters calling to find out this, or being sent
-to do that, and so the idea of becoming a reporter gradually
-formulated itself in my mind, though how I was to get such
-a place I had not the slightest idea. Perhaps reporters had
-to have a special training of some kind; maybe they had to
-begin as clerks behind a counter, and this made me very
-somber, for those glowing business offices always seemed so
-far removed from anything to which I could aspire. Most of
-them were ornate, floreate, with onyx or chalcedony wall trimmings,
-flambeaux of bronze or copper on the walls, imitation
-mother-of-pearl lights in the ceilings—in short, all the
-gorgeousness of a sultan’s court brought to the outer counter
-where people subscribed or paid for ads. Because the newspapers
-were always dealing with signs and wonders, great
-functions, great commercial schemes, great tragedies and pleasures,
-I began to conceive of them as wonderlands in which
-all concerned were prosperous and happy. I painted reporters
-and newspaper men generally as receiving fabulous
-salaries, being sent on the most urgent and interesting missions.
-I think I confused, inextricably, reporters with ambassadors
-and prominent men generally. Their lives were laid
-among great people, the rich, the famous, the powerful; and
-because of their position and facility of expression and mental
-force they were received everywhere as equals. Think of me,
-new, young, poor, being received in that way!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Imagine then my intense delight one day, when, scanning
-the “Help Wanted: Male” columns of the Chicago <i>Herald</i>,
-I encountered an advertisement which ran (in substance):</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Wanted: A number of bright young men to assist in the business
-department during the Christmas holidays. Promotion possible. Apply
-to Business Manager between 9 and 10 a.m.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>“Here,” I thought as I read it, “is just the thing I am
-looking for. Here is this great paper, one of the most prosperous
-in Chicago, and here is an opening for me. If I can
-only get this my fortune is made. I shall rise rapidly.” I
-conceived of myself as being sent off the same day, as it were,
-on some brilliant mission and returning, somehow, covered
-with glory.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried to the office of the <i>Herald</i>, in Washington Street
-near Fifth Avenue, this same morning, and asked to see
-the business manager. After a short wait I was permitted
-to enter the sanctuary of this great person, who to me, because
-of the material splendor of the front office, seemed
-to be the equal of a millionaire at least. He was tall, graceful,
-dark, his full black whiskers parted aristocratically in
-the middle of his chin, his eyes vague pools of subtlety. “See
-what a wonderful thing it is to be connected with the newspaper
-business!” I told myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I saw your ad in this morning’s paper,” I said hopefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, I did want a half dozen young men,” he replied,
-beaming upon me reassuringly, “but I think I have nearly
-enough. Most of the young men that come here seem to
-think they are to be connected with the <i>Herald</i> direct, but
-the fact is we want them only for clerks in our free Christmas
-gift bureau. They have to judge whether or not the applicants
-are impostors and keep people from imposing on the
-paper. The work will only be for a week or ten days, but
-you will probably earn ten or twelve dollars in that time——”
-My heart sank. “After the first of the year, if you take it,
-you may come around to see me. I may have something
-for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When he spoke of the free Christmas gift bureau I vaguely
-understood what he meant. For weeks past, the <i>Herald</i> had
-been conducting a campaign for gifts for the poorest children
-of the city. It had been importuning the rich and the moderately
-comfortable to give, through the medium of its scheme,
-which was a bureau for the free distribution of all such
-things as could be gathered via cash or direct donation of
-supplies: toys, clothing, even food, for children.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But I wanted to become a reporter if I could,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well,” he said, with a wave of his hand, “this is as good
-a way as any other. When this is over I may be able to
-introduce you to our city editor.” The title, “city editor,”
-mystified and intrigued me. It sounded so big and significant.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This offer was far from what I anticipated, but I took it
-joyfully. Thus to step from one job to another, however
-brief, and one with such prospects, seemed the greatest luck
-in the world. For by now I was nearly hypochondriacal on
-the subjects of poverty, loneliness, the want of the creature
-comforts and pleasures of life. The mere thought of having
-enough to eat and to wear and to do had something of paradise
-about it. Some previous long and fruitless searches for work
-had marked me with a horror of being without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I bustled about to the <i>Herald’s</i> Christmas Annex, as it was
-called, a building standing in Fifth Avenue between Madison
-and Monroe, and reported to a brisk underling in charge
-of the doling out of these pittances to the poor. Without a
-word he put me behind the single long counter which ran
-across the front of the room and over which were handled
-all those toys and Christmas pleasure pieces which a loud
-tomtoming concerning the dire need of the poor and the
-proper Christmas spirit had produced.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Life certainly offers some amusing paradoxes at times, and
-that with that gay insouciance which life alone can muster
-and achieve when it is at its worst anachronistically. Here
-was I, a victim of what Socialists would look upon as wage
-slavery and economic robbery, quite as worthy, I am sure,
-of gifts as any other, and yet lined up with fifteen or twenty
-other economic victims, ragamuffin souls like myself, all out
-of jobs, many of them out at elbows, and all of them doling
-out gifts from eight-thirty in the morning until eleven and
-twelve at night to people no worse off than themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wish you might have seen this chamber as I saw it for
-eight or nine days just preceding and including Christmas
-day itself. (Yes; we worked from eight a.m. to five-thirty
-p.m. on Christmas day, and very glad to get the money,
-thank you.) There poured in here from the day the bureau
-opened, which was the morning I called, and until it closed
-Christmas night, as diverse an assortment of alleged poverty-stricken
-souls as one would want to see. I do not say that
-many of them were not deserving; I am willing to believe
-that most of them were; but, deserving or no, they were still
-worthy of all they received here. Indeed when I think of
-the many who came miles, carrying slips of paper on which
-had been listed, as per the advice of this paper, all they
-wished Santa Claus to bring them or their children, and then
-recall that, for all their pains in having their minister or
-doctor or the <i>Herald</i> itself visé their request, they received
-only a fraction of what they sought, I am inclined to think
-that all were even more deserving than their reward indicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the whole scheme, as I soon found in talking with others
-and seeing for myself how it worked, was most loosely managed.
-Endless varieties of toys and comforts had been talked
-about in the paper, but only a few of the things promised,
-or vaguely indicated, were here to give—for the very good
-reason that no one would give them for nothing to the <i>Herald</i>.
-Nor had any sensible plan been devised for checking up either
-the gifts given or the persons who had received them, and
-so the same person, as some of these recipients soon discovered,
-could come over and over, bearing different lists of
-toys, and get them, or at least a part of them, until some
-clerk with a better eye for faces than another would chance
-to recognize the offender and point him or her out. Jews,
-the fox-like Slavic type of course, and the poor Irish, were
-the worst offenders in this respect. The <i>Herald</i> was supposed
-to have kept all applications written by children to Santa
-Claus, but it had not done so, and so hundreds claimed that
-they had written letters and received no answer. At the end
-of the second or third day before Christmas it was found necessary,
-because of the confusion and uncertainty, to throw
-the doors wide open and give to all and sundry who looked
-worthy of whatever was left or “handy,” we, the ragamuffin
-clerks, being the judges.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now the clerks themselves, seeing that no records
-were kept and how without plan the whole thing was, notified
-poor relatives and friends, and these descended upon us with
-baskets, expecting candy, turkeys, suits of clothing and the
-like, but receiving instead only toy wagons, toy stoves, baby
-brooms, Noah’s Arks, story books—the shabbiest mess of cheap
-things one could imagine. For the newspaper, true to that
-canon of commerce which demands the most for the least, the
-greatest show for the least money, had gathered all the odds
-and ends and left-overs of toy bargain sales and had dumped
-them into the large lofts above, to be doled out as best we
-could. We could not give a much-desired article to any one
-person because, supposing it were there, which was rarely
-the case, we could not get at it or find it; yet later another
-person might apply and receive the very thing the other had
-wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And we clerks, going out to lunch or dinner (save the
-mark!), would seek some scrubby little restaurant and eat
-ham and beans, or crullers and coffee, or some other tasteless
-dish, at ten or fifteen cents per head. Hard luck stories,
-comments on what a botch the <i>Herald</i> gift bureau was, on
-the strange characters that showed up—the hooded Niobes and
-dusty Priams, with eyes too sunken and too dry for tears—were
-the order of the day. Here I met a young newspaper
-man, gloomy, out at elbows, who told me what a wretched,
-pathetic struggle the newspaper world presented, but I did
-not believe him although he had worked in Chicago, Denver,
-St. Paul.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A poor failure,” I thought, “some one who can’t write
-and who now whines and wastes his substance in riotous
-living when he has it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So much for the sympathy of the poor for the poor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the <i>Herald</i> was doing very well. Daily it was filling
-its pages with the splendid results of its charity, the poor relieved,
-the darkling homes restored to gayety and bliss....
-Can you beat it? But it was good advertising, and that was
-all the <i>Herald</i> wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Hey, Rub-a-dub! Hey, Rub-a-dub-dub!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>On</span> Christmas Eve there came to our home to spend the
-next two days, which chanced to be Saturday and Sunday,
-Alice Kane, a friend and fellow-clerk of one of my sisters
-in a department store. Because the store kept open until
-ten-thirty or eleven that Christmas Eve, and my labors at
-the <i>Herald</i> office detained me until the same hour, we three
-arrived at the house at nearly the same time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I should say here that the previous year, my mother having
-died and the home being in dissolution, I had ventured into
-the world on my own. Several sisters, two brothers and my
-father were still together, but it was a divided and somewhat
-colorless home at best. Our mother was gone. I was already
-wondering, in great sadness, how long it could endure, for she
-had made of it something as sweet as dreams. That temperament,
-that charity and understanding and sympathy! We
-who were left were like fledglings, trying our wings but fearful
-of the world. My practical experience was slight. I was a
-creature of slow and uncertain response to anything practical,
-having an eye single to color, romance, beauty. I was but a
-half-baked poet, romancer, dreamer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I was hurrying upstairs to take a bath and then see
-what pleasures were being arranged for the morrow, I was
-intercepted by my sister with a “Hurry now and come down.
-I have a friend here and I want you to meet her. She’s awful
-nice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the mere thought of meeting a girl I brightened, for
-my thoughts were always on the other sex and I was forever
-complaining to myself of my lack of opportunity, and of
-lack of courage when I had the opportunity, to do the one
-thing I most craved to do: shine as a lover. Although at her
-suggestion of a girl I pretended to sniff and be superior, still
-I bustled to the task of embellishing myself. On coming
-into the general livingroom, where a fire was burning brightly,
-I beheld a pretty dark-haired girl of medium height, smooth-cheeked
-and graceful, who seemed and really was guileless,
-good-natured and sympathetic. For a while after meeting her
-I felt stiff and awkward, for the mere presence of so pretty
-a girl was sufficient to make me nervous and self-conscious.
-My brother, E——, had gone off early in the evening to
-join the family of some girl in whom he was interested; another
-brother, A——, was out on some Christmas Eve lark
-with a group of fellow-employees; so here I was alone with
-C—— and this stranger, doing my best to appear gallant
-and clever.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall now the sense of sympathy and interest which I
-felt for this girl from the start. It must have been clear
-to my sister, for before the night was over she had explained,
-by way of tantalizing me, that Miss Kane had a beau. Later
-I learned that Alice was an orphan adopted by a fairly comfortable
-Irish couple, who loved her dearly and gave her as
-many pleasures and as much liberty as their circumstances
-would permit. They had made the mistake, however, of telling
-her that she was only an adopted child. This gave her a
-sense of forlornness and a longing for a closer and more enduring
-love.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Such a mild and sweet little thing she was! I never knew
-a more attractive or clinging temperament. She could play
-the banjo and guitar. I remember marveling at the dexterity
-of her fingers as they raced up and down the frets and across
-the strings. She was wearing a dark green blouse and brown
-corduroy skirt, with a pale brown ribbon about her neck;
-her hair was parted on one side, and this gave her a sort of
-maidenish masculinity. I found her looking at me slyly now
-and then, and smiling at one or another of my affected remarks
-as though she were pleased. I recounted the nature
-of the work I was doing, but deliberately attempted to confuse
-it in her mind and my sister’s with the idea that I was
-regularly employed by the <i>Herald</i> as a newspaper man and
-that this was merely a side task. Subsequently, out of sheer
-vanity and a desire to appear more than I was, I allowed
-her to believe that I was a reporter on this paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was snowing. We could see great flakes fluttering about
-the gas lamps outside. In the cottage of an Irish family
-across the street a party of merrymakers was at play. I
-proposed that we go out and buy chestnuts and popcorn and
-roast them, and that we make snow punch out of milk, sugar
-and snow. How gay I felt, how hopeful! In a fit of great
-daring I took one hand of each of my companions and ran,
-trying to slide with them over the snow. Alice’s screams
-and laughter were disturbingly musical, and as she ran her
-little feet twinkled under her skirts. At one corner, where
-the stores were brightly lighted, she stopped and did a graceful
-little dance under the electric light.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, if I could have a girl like this—if I could just have
-her!” I thought, forgetting that I was nightly telling a Scotch
-girl that she was the sweetest thing I had ever known or
-wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Bedtime came, with laughter and gayety up to the last
-moment. Alice was to sleep with my sister, and preceded me
-upstairs, saying she was going to eat salt on New Year’s Eve
-so that she would dream of her coming lover. That night I
-lay and thought of her, and next morning hurried downstairs
-hoping to find her, but she had not come down yet. There
-were Christmas stockings to be examined, of course, which
-brought her, but before eight-thirty I had to leave in order to
-be at work at nine o’clock. I waved them all a gay farewell
-and looked forward eagerly toward evening, for she was to
-remain this night and the next day.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Through with my work at five-thirty, I hurried home, and
-then it was that I learned—and to my great astonishment
-and gratification—that she liked me. For when I arrived,
-dressed, as I had been all day, in my very best, E—— and
-A—— were there endeavoring to entertain her, E——, my
-younger brother, attempting to make love to her. His method
-was to press her toe in an open foolish way, which because of
-the jealousy it waked in me seemed to me out of the depths
-of dullness. From the moment I entered I fancied that
-Alice had been waiting for me. Her winning smile as I
-entered reassured me, and yet she was very quiet when I was
-near, gazing romantically into the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the evening I studied her, admiring every detail
-of her dress, which was a bit different from that of the day
-before and more attractive. She seemed infinitely sweet, and
-I flattered myself that I was preferred over my two brothers.
-During the evening, we two being left together for some
-reason, she arose and went into the large front room and
-standing before one of the three large windows looked out
-in silence on the homelike scene that our neighborhood presented.
-The snow had ceased and a full moon was brightening
-everything. The little cottages and flat-buildings nearby
-glowed romantically through their drawn blinds, a red-ribboned
-Christmas wreath in every window. I pumped up my
-courage to an unusual point and, heart in mouth, followed and
-stood beside her. It was a great effort on my part.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She pressed her nose to the pane and then breathed on it,
-making a misty screen between herself and the outside upon
-which she wrote my initials, rubbed them out, then breathed
-on the window again and wrote her own. Her face was like
-a small wax flower in the moonlight. I had drawn so close,
-moved by her romantic call, that my body almost touched
-hers. Then I slipped an arm about her waist and was about
-to kiss her when I heard my sister’s voice:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Now, Al and Theo, you come back!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We must go,” she said shamefacedly, and as she started
-I ventured to touch her hand. She looked at me and smiled,
-and we went back to the other room. I waited eagerly for
-other solitary moments.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Because the festivities were too general and inclusive there
-was no other opportunity that evening, but the next morning,
-church claiming some and sleep others, there was a half-hour
-or more in which I was alone with her in the front room,
-looking over the family album. I realized that by now she
-was as much drawn to me as I to her, and that, as in the
-case of my Scotch maid, I was master if I chose so to be. I
-was so wrought up in the face of this opportunity, however,
-that I scarcely had courage to do that which I earnestly
-believed I could do. As we stood over the album looking
-at the pictures I toyed first with the strings of her apron
-and then later, finding no opposition, allowed my hand to rest
-gently at her waist. Still no sign of opposition or even consciousness.
-I thrilled from head to toe. Then I closed my
-arm gently about her waist, and when it became noticeably
-tight she looked up and smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’d better watch out,” she said. “Some one may
-come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you like me a little?” I pleaded, almost choking.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I think so. I think you’re very nice, anyhow. But you
-mustn’t,” she said. “Some one may come in,” and as I
-drew her to me she pretended to resist, maneuvering her
-cheek against my mouth as she pulled away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She was just in time, for C—— came into the back parlor
-and said: “Oh, there you are! I wondered where you were.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I was just looking over your album,” Alice said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I added, “I was showing it to her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh yes,” laughed my sister sarcastically. “You and Al—I
-know what you two were trying to do. You!” she exclaimed,
-giving me a push. “And Al, the silly! She has a
-beau already!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She laughed and went off, but I, hugely satisfied with myself,
-swaggered into the adjoining room. Beau or no beau,
-Alice belonged to me. Youthful vanity was swelling my
-chest. I was more of a personage for having had it once more
-proved to me that I was not unattractive to girls.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>When</span> I asked Alice when I should see her again she
-suggested the following Tuesday or Thursday, asking me not
-to say anything to C——. I had not been calling on her
-more than a week or two before she confessed that there was
-another suitor, a telegraph operator to whom she was engaged
-and who was still calling on her regularly. When she came
-to our house to spend Christmas, she said, it was with no intention
-of seeking a serious flirtation, though in order not to
-embarrass the sense of opportunity we boys might feel she
-had taken off her engagement ring. Also, she confessed to
-me, she never wore it at the store, for the reason that it
-would create talk and make it seem that she might leave
-soon, when she was by no means sure that she would. In short,
-she had become engaged thus early without being certain
-that she was in love.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Never were happier hours than those I spent with her,
-though at the time I was in that state of unrest and change
-which afflicts most youths who are endeavoring to discover
-what they want to do in life. On Christmas day my job
-was gone and the task of finding another was before me, but
-this did not seem so grim now. I felt more confident. True,
-the manager of the <i>Herald</i> had told me to call after the
-first of the year, and I did so, but only to find that his suggestion
-of something important to come later had been merely
-a ruse to secure eager and industrious service for his bureau.
-When I told him I wanted to become a reporter, he said:
-“But, you see, I have nothing whatsoever to do with that.
-You must see the managing editor on the fourth floor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To say this to me was about the same as to say: “You must
-see God.” Nevertheless I made my way to that floor, but
-at that hour of the morning, I found no one at all. Another
-day, going at three, so complete was my ignorance of newspaper
-hours, I found only a few uncommunicative individuals
-at widely scattered desks in a room labeled “City Room.”
-One of these, after I had asked him how one secured a place
-as a reporter, looked at me quizzically and said: “You want
-to see the city editor. He isn’t here now. The best times to
-see him are at noon and six. That’s the only time he gives
-out assignments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aha!” I thought. “‘Assignments’—so that’s what reportorial
-work is called! And I must come at either twelve
-or six.” So I bustled away, to return at six, for I felt that
-I must get work in this great and fascinating field. When I
-came at six and was directed to a man who bent over a desk
-and was evidently very much concerned about something, he
-exclaimed: “No vacancies. Nothing open. Sorry,” and
-turned away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So I went out crestfallen and more overawed than ever.
-Who was I to attempt to venture into such a wonderland as
-this—I, a mere collector by trade? I doubt if any one
-ever explored the mouth of a cave with more feeling of uncertainty.
-It was all so new, so wonderful, so mysterious. I
-looked at the polished doors and marble floors of this new
-and handsome newspaper building with such a feeling as
-might have possessed an Ethiopian slave examining the walls
-and the doors of the temple of Solomon. How wonderful it
-must be to work in such a place as this! How shrewd and
-wise must be the men whom I saw working here, able and
-successful and comfortable! How great and interesting the
-work they did! Today they were here, writing at one of these
-fine desks; tomorrow they would be away on some important
-mission somewhere, taking a train, riding in a Pullman car,
-entering some great home or office and interviewing some important
-citizen. And when they returned they were congratulated
-upon having discovered some interesting fact or
-story on which, having reported to their city editor or managing
-editor, or having written it out, they were permitted
-to retire in comfort with more compliments. Then they resorted
-to an excellent hotel or restaurant, to refresh themselves
-among interested and interesting friends before retiring
-to rest. Some such hodge-podge as this filled my immature
-brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Despite the discouraging reception of my first overture, I
-visited other newspaper offices, only to find the same, and
-even colder, conditions. The offices in most cases were by no
-means so grand, but the atmosphere was equally chill, and
-the city editor was a difficult man to approach. Often I was
-stopped by an office boy who reported, when I said I was looking
-for work, no vacancies. When I got in at all, nearly all
-the city editors merely gave me a quick glance and said:
-“No vacancies.” I began to feel that the newspaper world
-must be controlled by a secret cult or order until one lithe
-bony specimen with a pointed green shade over his eyes and
-dusty red hair looked at me much as an eagle might look at
-a pouter pigeon, and asked:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ever worked on a paper before?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How do you know you can write?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t; but I think I could learn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Learn? Learn? We haven’t time to teach anybody here!
-You better try one of the little papers—a trade paper, maybe,
-until you learn how—then come back,” and he walked off.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This gave me at least a definite idea as to how I might begin,
-but just the same it did not get me a position.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Meanwhile, looking here and there and not finding anything,
-I decided, since I had had experience as a collector and must
-live while I was making my way into journalism, to return to
-this work and see if I might not in the meantime get a place
-as a reporter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Having been previously employed by an easy-payment instalment
-house, I now sought out another, the Corbin Company,
-in Lake Street, not very far from the office of the
-firm for which I had previously worked. From this firm, having
-been hard pressed for a winter overcoat the preceding
-fall, I had abstracted or held out twenty-five dollars, intending
-to restore it. But before I had been able to manage that a
-slack up in the work occurred, due to the fact that wandering
-street agents sold less in winter than in summer, and
-I was laid off and had to confess that I was short in my
-account.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The manager and owner, who had seemed to take a fancy
-to me, said nothing other than that I was making a mistake,
-taking the path that led to social hell. I do not recall that he
-even requested that the money be returned. But I was so
-nervous that I was convinced that some day, unless I returned
-the money, I should be arrested, and to avoid this
-I had written him a letter after leaving promising that I
-would pay up. He never even bothered to answer the letter,
-and I believe that if I had returned in the spring, paid the
-twenty-five dollars and asked for work he would have taken
-me on again. But I had no such thought in mind. I held
-myself disgraced forever and only wished to get clear of this
-sort of work. It was a vulture game at best, selling trash to
-the ignorant for twelve and fourteen times its value. Now
-that I was out of it I hated to return. I feared that the first
-thing my proposed employer would do would be to inquire
-of my previous employer, and that being informed of my
-stealing he would refuse to employ me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>With fear and trembling I inquired of the firm in Lake
-Street and was told that there was a place awaiting some
-one—“the right party.” The manager wanted to know if
-I could give a bond for three hundred dollars; they had just
-had one collector arrested for stealing sixty dollars. I told
-him I thought I could and decided to explain the proposition
-to my father and obtain his advice since I knew little about
-how a bond was secured. When I learned that the bonding
-company investigated one’s past, however, I was terrorized.
-My father, an honest, worthy and defiant German, on being
-told that a bond was required, scouted the idea with much
-vehemence. Why should any one want a bond from me? he
-demanded to know. Hadn’t I worked for Mr. M—— in the
-same line? Couldn’t they go there and find out? At thought
-of M—— I shook, and, rather than have an investigation,
-dropped the whole matter, deciding not to go near the place
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the manager, taken by my guileless look, I presume,
-called one evening at our house. He had taken a fancy to
-me, he said; I looked to be honest and industrious; he liked
-the neighborhood I lived in. He proposed that I should go to
-one of the local bonding companies and get a three hundred
-dollar bond for ten dollars a year, his company paying for
-the bond out of my first week’s salary, which was to be only
-twelve dollars to start with. This promised to involve explaining
-about M——, but I decided to go to the bonding
-company and refer only to two other men for whom I had
-worked and see what would happen. For the rest, I proposed
-to say that school and college life had filled my years before
-this. If trouble came over M—— I planned to run away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But, to my astonishment and delight, my ruse worked admirably.
-The following Sunday afternoon my new manager
-called and asked me to report the following morning for
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Oh, those singing days in the streets and parks and show-places
-of Chicago, those hours when in bright or thick lowery
-weather I tramped the highways and byways dreaming chaotic
-dreams. I had all my afternoons to myself after one or two
-o’clock. The speed with which I worked and could walk
-would soon get me over the list of my customers, and then
-I was free to go where I chose. Spring was coming. I was
-only nineteen. Life was all before me, and the feel of plenty
-of money in my pocket, even if it did not belong to me, was
-comforting. And then youth, youth—that lilt and song in
-one’s very blood! I felt as if I were walking on tinted clouds,
-among the highlands of the dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How shall I do justice to this period, which for perfection
-of spirit, ease of soul, was the very best I had so far known?
-In the first place, because of months of exercise in the open air,
-my physical condition was good. I was certain to get somewhere
-in the newspaper world, or so I thought. The condition
-of our family was better than it had ever been in my time, for
-we four younger children were working steadily. Our home
-life, in spite of bickerings among several of my brothers and
-sisters, was still pleasing enough. Altogether we were prospering,
-and my father was looking forward to a day when all
-family debts would be paid and the soul of my mother, as
-well as his own when it passed over, could be freed from too
-prolonged torments in purgatory! For, as a Catholic, he
-believed that until all one’s full debts here on earth were paid
-one’s soul was held in durance on the other side.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For myself, life was at the topmost toss. I was like some
-bird poised on a high twig, teetering and fluttering and ready
-for flight. Again, I was like those flying hawks and buzzards
-that ride so gracefully on still wings above a summer landscape,
-seeing all the wonders of the world below. Again, I was
-like a song that sings itself, the spirit of happy music that by
-some freak of creation is able to rejoice in its own harmonies
-and rhythms. Joy was ever before me, the sense of some
-great adventure lurking just around the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How I loved the tonic note of even the grinding wheels
-of the trucks and cars, the clang and clatter of cable and
-electric lines, the surge of vehicles in every street! The palls
-of heavy manufacturing smoke that hung low over the city
-like impending hurricanes; the storms of wintry snow or
-sleety rain; the glow of yellow lights in little shops at evening,
-mile after mile, where people were stirring and bustling
-over potatoes, flour, cabbages—all these things were the substance
-of songs, paintings, poems. I liked the sections where
-the women of the town were still, at noon, sleeping off the
-debauches of the preceding night, or at night were preparing
-for the gaudy make-believes of their midnight day. I
-liked those sections crowded with great black factories, stock-yards,
-steel works, Pullman yards, where in the midst of Plutonian
-stress and clang men mixed or forged or joined or prepared
-those delicacies, pleasures and perfections for which the
-world buys and sells itself. Life was at its best here, its promise
-the most glittering. I liked those raw neighborhoods where
-in small, unpainted, tumbledown shanties set in grassless, can-strewn
-yards drunken and lecherous slatterns and brawlers
-were to be found mooning about in a hell of their own. And,
-for contrast, I liked those areas of great mansions set upon
-the great streets of the city in spacious lawns, where liveried
-servants stood by doors and carriages turned in at spacious
-gates and under heavy porte-cochères.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think I grasped Chicago in its larger material if not in
-its more complicated mental aspects. Its bad was so deliciously
-bad, its good so very good, keen and succulent, reckless,
-inconsequential, pretentious, hopeful, eager, new. People
-cursed or raved or snarled—the more fortunate among them,
-but they were never heavy or dull or asleep. In some neighborhoods
-the rancidity of dirt, or the stark icy bleakness
-of poverty, fairly shouted, but they were never still, decaying
-pools of misery. On wide bleak stretches of prairie swept by
-whipping winds one could find men who were tanning dog
-or cat hides but their wives were buying yellow plush albums
-or red silk-shaded lamps or blue and green rugs on time, as I
-could personally testify. Churches with gaudy altars and
-services rose out of mucky masses of shanties and gas-tanks;
-saloons with glistening bars of colored glass and mirrors stood
-as the centers and clubs of drear, bleak masses of huts. There
-were vice districts and wealth districts hung with every enticing
-luxury that the wit of a commonplace or conventional
-mind could suggest. Such was Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the vice districts I had been paid for shabby rugs and
-lamps, all shamelessly overpriced, by plump naked girls striding
-from bed to dresser to get a purse, and then offered certain
-favors for a dollar, or its equivalent—a credit on the contract
-slip. In the more exclusive neighborhoods I was sent around
-to a side entrance by comfortably dressed women who were too
-proud or too sly to have their neighbors know that they were
-buying on time. Black negresses leered at me from behind
-shuttered windows at noon; plump wives drew me into risqué
-situations on sight; death-bereaved weepers mourned over
-their late lost in my presence—and postponed paying me. But
-I liked the life. I was crazy about it. Chicago was like a
-great orchestra in a tumult of noble harmonies. I was like
-a guest at a feast, eating and drinking in a delirium of ecstasy.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>But</span> if I was wrought up by the varying aspects of the
-city, I was equally wrought up by the delights of love, which
-came for the first time fully with the arrival of Alice. Was
-I in love with her? No, as I understand myself now. I
-doubt that I have ever been in love with any one, or with
-anything save life as a whole. Twice or thrice I have developed
-stirring passions but always there was a voice or thought
-within which seemed to say over and over, like a bell at sea:
-“What does it matter? Beauty is eternal.... Beauty will come
-again!” But this thing, <i>life</i>, this picture of effort, this colorful
-panorama of hope and joy and despair—that <i>did</i> matter!
-Beauty, like a tinkling bell, the tintings of the dawn, the
-whispering of gentle winds and waters in summer days and
-Arcadian places, was in everything and everywhere. Indeed
-the appeal of this local life was its relationship to eternal
-perfect beauty. That it should go! That never again, after a
-few years, might I see it more! That love should pass! That
-youth should pass! That in due time I should stand old and
-grizzled, contemplating with age-filmed eyes joys and wonders
-whose sting and color I could no longer feel or even
-remember—out on it for a damned tragedy and a mirthless
-joke!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Alice proved to be in love with me. She lived in a two-flat
-frame house in what was then the far middle-south section
-of the city, a region about Fifty-first and Halsted streets. Her
-foster-father was a railroad watchman, and had saved up a
-few thousand dollars by years of toil. This little apartment
-represented his expenditures plus her taste, such as it was: a
-simple little place, with red plush curtains shielding a pair
-of folding-doors which separated two large rooms front and
-back. There were lace curtains and white shades at the windows,
-a piano (a most soothing luxury for me to contemplate),
-and then store furniture: a red velvet settee, a red
-plush rocker, several other new badly designed chairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Quaint little soul! How cheery and dreamful and pulsating
-with life she was when I met her! Her suitor, as I afterwards
-came to know, was a phlegmatic man of thirty-five, who
-had found in her all that he desired and was eager to marry
-her, as he eventually did. He was wont to call regularly
-on Wednesday and Sunday evenings, taking her occasionally
-to a theater or to dinner downtown. When I arrived on the
-scene I must have disrupted all this, for after a time, because
-I manifested some opposition, leaving her no choice indeed,
-Wednesdays and Sundays became my evenings, and any
-others that I chose. Regardless of my numerous and no doubt
-asinine defects, she was in love with me and willing to accept
-me on my own terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yes, Alice saw something she wanted and thought she
-could hold. She wanted to unite with me for this little
-span of existence, to go with me hand in hand into the ultimate
-nothingness. I think she was a poet in her way, but
-voiceless. When I called the first night she sat primly for a
-little while on one of her red chairs near the window, while
-I occupied a rocker. I had hung up my coat and hat with
-a flourish and had stood about for a while examining everything,
-with the purpose of estimating it and her. It all
-seemed cozy and pleasing enough and, curiously, I felt more
-at ease on this my first visit than I ever did at my Scotch
-maid’s home. There her thrifty, cautious, religious though
-genial and well-meaning mother, her irritable blind uncle and
-her more attractive young sister disturbed and tended to alienate
-me. Here, for weeks and weeks, I never saw Alice’s foster-parents.
-When finally I was introduced to them, they grated
-on me not at all. This first night she played a little on her
-piano, then on her banjo, and because she seemed especially
-charming to me I went over and stood behind her chair, deciding
-to take her face in my hands and kiss her. Perhaps a
-touch of remorse and in consequence a bit of indecision now
-swayed her, for she got up before I could do it. On the
-instant my assurance became less and yet my mood hardened,
-for I thought she was trifling with me. After the previous
-Sunday it seemed to me that she could do no less than permit
-me to embrace her. I was deciding that the evening was
-about to be a failure, when she came up behind me and said:
-“Don’t you think it’s rather nice across there, between those
-houses?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Over the way a gap between peaked-roofed houses revealed
-a long stretch of prairie, now covered with snow, gas lamps
-flickering in orderly rows, an occasional frame house glowing
-in the distance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I admitted moodily.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This is a funny neighborhood,” she ventured. “People
-are always moving in and out in that row of houses over
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Are they?” I said, not very much interested now that
-I felt myself defeated. There was a silence and then she laid
-one hand on my arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re not mad at me, Dorse?” she asked, using a name
-which my sister had given me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The sound of it on her lips, soft and pleading, moved
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, no,” I replied loftily. “Why should I be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I was thinking that maybe I oughtn’t to be doing this.
-There’s been some one else up to now, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I guess I don’t care for him any more or I wouldn’t be
-doing what I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I thought you cared for me. Why did you invite me
-down here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Dorse, I do,” she said, placing both her hands on my
-folded arms and looking up into my face with a kind of
-tenseness. “I know it isn’t right but I can’t help it. You
-have such nice hair and eyes, and you’re so tall. Do you care
-for me at all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I said, smiling cynically over my victory. “I
-think you’re beautiful.” I smoothed her cheek with one
-hand while I held her about the waist with the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We went over to the red settee and I took her in my arms
-and held her and kissed her mouth and eyes and neck. She
-clung to me and laughed and told me bits about her work
-and her pompous floor-walker and her social companions, and
-even her fiancé. She danced for me when I asked her, doing
-a running overstep clog, sidewise to and fro, her skirts lifted
-to her shoetops. She was sweetly feminine, in no wise aggressive
-or bold. I stayed until nearly one in the morning.
-I had nine or ten miles to go by owl cars, arriving home at
-nearly three; but at this time I was not working and so my
-time was my own.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The thing that troubled me was what my Scotch girl would
-think if she found out (which she never would), and how I
-could extricate myself from a situation which, now that I had
-Alice, was not as interesting as it had been.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> spring approached this affair moved on apace. The
-work of the Corbin Company was no harder than that of
-the Lovell Company, and I had more time to myself. Because
-of an ingrowing sense of my personal importance and
-because I thought it such a wonderful thing to be a newspaper
-man and so very much less to be a collector, I lied to
-Alice as to what I was doing. When should I be through with
-collecting and begin reporting? I was eager to know all about
-music, painting, sculpture, literature, and to be in those
-places where life is at its best. I was regretful now that I
-had not made better use of my school and college days, and
-so in my free hours I read, visited the art gallery and library,
-went to theaters and concerts. The free intellectual
-churches, or ethical schools, were my favorite places on Sunday
-mornings. I would sometimes take Alice or my Scotch
-girl to the Theodore Thomas concerts, which were just beginning
-at the Auditorium, or to see the best plays and actors:
-Booth, Barrett, Modjeska, Fannie Davenport, Mary Anderson,
-Joseph Jefferson, Nat Goodwin. Thinking of myself as a man
-with a future, I assumed a kind of cavalier attitude toward
-my two sweethearts, finally breaking with N—— on the
-pretext that she was stubborn and superior and did not love
-me, whereas I really wanted to assume privileges which she,
-with her conventional notions, could not permit and which
-I was not generous enough not to want. As for Alice she
-was perfectly willing to yield, with a view, I have always
-thought, to moving me to marry her. But being deeply
-touched by her very obvious charm, I did nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once my work was done of an afternoon, I loitered over
-many things waiting for evening to come, when I should see
-Alice again. Usually I read or visited a gallery or some park.
-Alice was intensely sweet to me. Her eyes were so soft, so
-liquid, so unprotesting and so unresenting. She was usually
-gay, with at times a suggestion of hidden melancholy. At
-night, in that great world of life which is the business heart
-of Chicago I used to wait for her, and together, once we had
-found each other in the crowds, we would make our way to
-the great railway station at the end of Dearborn Street,
-where a tall clock-tower held a single yellow clock-face. If it
-chanced to be Tuesday or Thursday I would go home with
-her. On other nights she would sometimes stay down to
-dine with me at some inexpensive place.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I never knew until toward the end of the following summer,
-when things were breaking up for me in Chicago and
-seemingly greater opportunities were calling me elsewhere,
-that during all this time she had really never relinquished
-her relationship with my predecessor, fearing my instability
-perhaps. By what necessary lies and innocent subterfuges
-she had held him against the time when I might not care for
-her any more I know not. The thing has poignance now.
-Was she unfaithful? I do not think so. At any rate she was
-tender, clinging and in need of true affection. She would take
-my hand and hold it under her arm or against her heart and
-talk of the little things of the day: the strutting customers
-and managers, the condescending women of social pretensions,
-the other girls, who sometimes spied upon or traitorously
-betrayed each other. Usually her stories were of amusing
-things, for she had no heart for bitter contention. There was
-a note of melancholy running all through her relationship
-with me, however, for I think she saw the unrest and uncertainty
-of my point of view. Already my mind’s eye was scanning
-a farther horizon, in which neither she nor any other
-woman had a vital part. Fame, applause, power, possibly,
-these were luring me. Once she said to me, her eyes looking
-longingly into mine:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you really love me, Dorse?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Don’t you think I do?” I replied evasively, and yet
-saying to myself that I truly cared for her in my fashion,
-which was true.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, I think you do, in your way,” she said, and the
-correct interpretation shocked me. I saw myself a stormy
-petrel hanging over the yellowish-black waves of life and
-never really resting anywhere. I could not; my mind would
-not let me. I saw too much, felt too much, knew too much.
-What was I, what any one, but a small bit of seaweed on an
-endless sea, flotsam, jetsam, being moved hither and thither—by
-what subterranean tides?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Oh, Alice, dead or living, eternally sleeping or eternally
-waking, listen to these few true words! You were beautiful
-to me. My heart was hungry. I wanted youth, I wanted
-beauty, I wanted sweetness, I wanted a tender smile, wide
-eyes, loveliness—all these you had and gave.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Peace to you! I do not ask as much for myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My determination to leave the Corbin Company was associated
-with other changes equally important and of much
-more emotional interest. Our home life, now that my mother
-was gone, was most unsatisfactory. What I took to be the
-airs and plotting domination of my sister M——, toward whom
-I had never borne any real affection, had become unbearable.
-I disliked her very much, for though she was no better than
-the rest of us, or so I thought at the time, she was nevertheless
-inclined to dogmatize as to the duty of others. Here she was,
-married yet living at home and traveling at such times and to
-such places as suited her husband’s convenience, obtaining
-from him scarcely enough to maintain herself in the state
-to which she thought she was entitled, contributing only a
-small portion to the upkeep of the home, and yet setting herself
-and her husband up as superiors whose exemplary social
-manners might well be copied by all. Her whole manner
-from morning to night, day in and day out, was one of superiority.
-Or, so I thought at the time. “I am Mrs. G. A——,
-if you please,” she seemed to say. “G—— is doing this. I
-am going to do so-and-so. It can scarcely be expected that
-we, in our high state, should have much to do with the rest
-of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet whenever A—— was in or near Chicago he made our
-home his abiding place. Two of the best rooms on the second
-floor were set aside for his and M——’s use. The most stirring
-preparations were made whenever he was coming, the
-house swept, flowers bought, extra cooking done and what not;
-the moment he had gone things fell to their natural and
-rather careless pace. M—— retired to her rooms and was
-scarcely seen for days. T——, another sister, who despised
-her heartily, would sulk, and when she thought the burden
-of family work was being shouldered on to her would do
-nothing at all. My father was left to go through a routine
-of duties such as fire-building, care of the furnace, marketing,
-which should have facilitated the housework but which
-in these quarreling conditions made it seem as if he were
-being put upon. C——, another sister, who was anything but
-a peacemaker, added fuel to the flames by criticizing the drift
-of things to the younger members: A——, E—— and myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The thing that had turned me definitely against M——
-followed a letter which my brother Paul once sent to my
-mother, enclosing a check for ten dollars and intended especially
-for her. Because it was sent to her personally she
-wanted to keep it secret from the others, and to do this she
-sent me to the general postoffice, on which it was drawn, with
-her signature filled in and myself designated as the proper
-recipient. I got the money and returned it to her, but either
-because of her increasing illness or because she still wanted
-to keep it a secret, when Paul mentioned it in another letter
-she said she had not received it. Then she died and the matter
-of the money came up. It was proved by inquiry at the
-postoffice that the money had been paid to me. I confirmed
-this and asserted, which was true, that I had given it to
-mother. M—— alone, of all the family, felt called upon to
-question this. She visited an inspector at the general postoffice
-(a friend of A——’s by the way) and persuaded him
-to make inquiry, with a view no doubt to frightening me.
-The result of this was a formal letter asking me to call at
-his office. When I went and found that he was charging me
-with the detention of this money and demanding its return on
-pain of my being sent to prison, I blazed of course and told
-him to go to the devil. When I reached home I was furious.
-I called out my sister M—— and told her—well, many things.
-For weeks and even months I had a burning desire to strike
-her, although nothing more was ever done or said concerning
-it. For over fifteen years the memory of this one thing divided
-us completely, but after that, having risen, as I thought,
-to superior interests and viewpoints, I condescended to become
-friendly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The first half of 1891 was the period of my greatest bitterness
-toward her, and in consequence, when my sister C——
-came to me with her complaints and charges we brewed between
-us a kind of revolution based primarily on our opposition
-to M—— and her airs, but secondarily on the inadequate
-distribution of the family means and the inability of the different
-sisters to agree upon the details of the home management.
-According to C——, who was most bitter in her
-charges, both M—— and T—— were lazy and indifferent. As
-a matter of fact, I cared as little for C—— and her woes as
-I did for any of the others. But the thought of this home,
-dominated by M—— and T—— and supported by us younger
-ones, with father as a kind of pleading watchdog of the
-treasury, weeping in his beard and moaning over the general
-recklessness of our lives, was too much.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Indeed this matter of money, not idleness or domination,
-was the crux of the whole situation, for if there had been
-plenty of money, or if each of us could have retained his own
-earnings, there would have been little grieving. C—— was
-jealous of M—— and T——, and of the means with which
-their marital relations supplied them, and although she was
-earning eight dollars a week she felt that the three or four
-which she contributed to the household were far too much.
-A——, who earned ten and contributed five, had no complaint
-to make, and E——, who earned nine and supplied
-four-and-a-half, also had nothing to say. I was earning
-twelve, later fourteen, and gave only six, and very often I
-begrudged much of this. So between us C—— and I brewed
-a revolution, which ended unsatisfactorily for us all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Late in March, a crisis came because of a bitter quarrel
-that sprung up between M—— and C——. C—— and I
-now proposed, with the aid of A—— and E—— if we could
-get it, either to drive M—— from the house and take charge
-ourselves, or rent a small apartment somewhere, pool our
-funds and set up a rival home of our own, leaving this one
-to subsist as best it might. It was a hard and cold thing
-to plan, and I still wonder why I shared in it; but then it
-seemed plausible enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However that may be, this revolutionary program was
-worked out to a definite conclusion. With C—— as the
-whip and planner and myself as general executive, a small
-apartment only a few blocks from our home was fixed upon,
-prices of furniture on time studied, cost of food, light, entertainment
-gone into. C——, in her eagerness to bring her
-rage to a cataclysmic conclusion, volunteered to do the cooking
-and housekeeping alone, and still work downtown as before.
-If each contributed five dollars a week, as we said,
-we would have a fund of over eighty dollars a month, which
-should house and feed us and buy furniture on the instalment
-plan. A—— was consulted as to this and refused, saying,
-which was the decent thing to say and characteristic of him,
-that we ought to stay here and keep the home together for
-father’s sake, he being old and feeble. E——, always a lover
-of adventure and eager to share in any new thing, agreed to
-go with us. We had to revise our program, but even with
-only sixty dollars a month as a general fund we thought we
-could get along.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And so we three, C—— being the spokesman, had the
-cheek to announce to my father that either M—— should
-leave and allow us to run the house as we wished or we would
-leave. The ultimatum was not given in any such direct way:
-charges and counter charges were first made; long arguments
-and pleadings were indulged in by one side and the other.
-Finally, seeing that there was no hope of forcing M—— to
-leave, C—— announced that she was going, alone or with
-others. I said I would follow. E—— said he was coming—and
-there you were. I never saw a man more distressed than
-my father, one more harassed by what he knew to be the final
-dissolution of the family. He pleaded, but his pleas fell on
-youthful, inconsiderate ears. I went and rented the flat, had
-the gas turned on and some furniture installed; and then,
-toward the end of March, in blustery weather, we moved.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Never was a man more distrait than my father during these
-last two or three days of our stay. Having completed the
-details, C——, E—— and I were busy marching to and fro
-at spare moments, carrying clothes, books, pictures and the
-like to the new home. There were open squabbles now between
-C—— and M—— as to the possession of certain things,
-but these were finally adjusted without blows. At last we
-were ready to leave, and then came our last adieux to my
-father and A——. When my turn came I marched out with a
-hard, cheery, independent look on my face, but I was really
-heavy with a sense of my unfairness and brutality. A——
-and my father were the two I really preferred. My father was
-so old and frail.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well,” he said with his German accent when I came to
-say good-by, “you’re going, are you? I’m sorry, Dorsch. I
-done the best I could. The girls, they won’t ever agree, it
-seems. I try, but it don’t seem to do any good. I have prayed
-these last few days.... I hope you don’t ever feel sorry. It’s
-C—— who stirs up all these things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He waved his hands in a kind of despairing way and after
-some pointless and insincere phrases I went out. The cold
-March winds were blowing from the West, and it was raw,
-blowy, sloppy, gray. Tomorrow it would be brighter, but
-tonight——</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> April advanced I left the Corbin Company, determined
-to improve my condition. I was tired of collecting—the same
-districts, the same excuses, innocences, subterfuges. By degrees
-I had come to feel a great contempt for the average
-mind. So many people were so low, so shifty, so dirty, so
-nondescript. They were food for dreams; little more. Owing
-to my experience with the manager of the Lovell Company
-in the matter of taking what did not belong to me I had become
-very cautious, and this meant that I should be compelled to
-live from week to week on my miserable twelve dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition, home life had become a horrible burden. The
-house was badly kept and the meals were wretched. Being
-of a quarrelsome, fault-finding disposition and not having
-M—— or T—— to fight with, C—— now turned her attentions
-to E—— and myself. We did not do this and that; the
-burden of the work was left to her. By degrees I grew into a
-kind of servant. Being told one April Friday of some needs
-that I must supply, and having decided that I could not endure
-either this abode or my present work, I took my fate in
-my hands and the next day resigned my job, having in my
-possession sixty-five dollars. I was now determined, come
-what might, never to take another job except one of reporting
-unless I was actually driven to it by starvation, and in this
-mood I came home and announced that I had lost my position
-and that this “home” would therefore have to be given up.
-And how glad I was! Now I should be rid of this dull flat,
-which was so colorless and burdensome. As I see it now, my
-sister sensibly enough from her point of view, perhaps, was
-figuring that E—— and I, as dutiful brothers, should support
-her while she spent all her money on clothes. I came
-to dislike her almost as much as I did M——, and told
-her gladly this same day that we could not live here any
-longer. In consequence the furniture company was notified
-to come and get the furniture. Our lease of the place being
-only from month to month, it was easy enough to depart at
-once. E—— and I were to share a room at the de G——s for
-a dollar and a half a week each, such meals as I ate there
-to be paid for at the rate of twenty-five cents each.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Then and there, as I have since noted with a kind of fatalistic
-curiosity, the last phase of my rather troublesome youth
-began. Up to and even including this last move to Taylor
-Street I had been intimately identified, in spirit at least, with
-our family and its concentrated home life. During my
-mother’s life, of course, I had felt that wherever she was was
-home; after her death it was the house in which she had lived
-that held me, quite as much as it was my father and those of
-us who remained together to keep up in some manner the
-family spirit. When the spell of this began to lessen, owing
-to bitter recrimination and the continuous development of
-individuality in all of us, this new branch home established
-by three of us seemed something of the old place and spiritually
-allied to it; but when it fell, and the old home broke
-up at about the same time, I felt completely adrift.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>What was I to do with myself now? I asked. Where go?
-Here I was, soon (in three months) to be twenty-one years
-old, and yet without trade or profession, a sort of nondescript
-dreamer without the power to earn a decent living and yet
-with all the tastes and proclivities of one destined to an independent
-fortune. My eyes were constantly fixed on people
-in positions far above my own. Those who interested me
-most were bankers, millionaires, artists, executives, leaders,
-the real rulers of the world. Just at this time the nation
-was being thrown into its quadrennial ferment, the presidential
-election. The newspapers were publishing reams upon
-reams of information and comment. David B. Hill, then
-governor of New York, Grover Cleveland of New York,
-Thomas B. Hendricks of Indiana, and others were being widely
-and favorably discussed by the Democratic party, whose convention
-was to be held here in Chicago the coming June.
-Among the Republicans, Benjamin Harrison of Indiana, James
-G. Blaine of Maine, Thomas B. Allison of Iowa, and others
-were much to the fore.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If by my devotion to minor matters I have indicated that
-I was not interested in public affairs I have given an inadequate
-account of myself. It is true that life at close range
-fascinated me, but the general progress of Europe and
-America and Asia and Africa was by no means beyond my
-intellectual inquiry. By now I was a reader of Emerson,
-Carlyle, Macaulay, Froude, John Stuart Mill and others. The
-existence of Nietzsche in Germany, Darwin, Spencer, Wallace
-and Tyndall in England, and what they stood for, was in
-part at least within the range of my intuition, if not my exact
-knowledge. In America, Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln,
-the history of the Civil War and the subsequent drift of
-the nation to monopoly and so to oligarchy, were all within
-my understanding and private philosophizing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now this national ferment in regard to political preferment
-and advancement, the swelling tides of wealth and
-population in Chicago, the upward soaring of names and
-fames, stirred me like whips and goads. I wanted to get up—oh,
-how eagerly! I wanted to shake off the garments of the
-commonplace in which I seemed swathed and step forth into
-the public arena, where I should be seen and understood for
-what I was. “No common man am I,” I was constantly saying
-to myself, and I would no longer be held down to this shabby
-world of collecting in which I found myself. The newspapers—the
-newspapers—somehow, by their intimacy with everything
-that was going on in the world, seemed to be the swiftest
-approach to all this of which I was dreaming. It seemed to
-me as if I understood already all the processes by which they
-were made. Reporting, I said to myself, must certainly be
-easy. Something happened—one car ran into another; a man
-was shot; a fire broke out; the reporter ran to the scene, observed
-or inquired the details, got the names and addresses of
-those immediately concerned, and then described it all. To
-reassure myself on this point I went about looking for accidents
-on my own account, or imagining them, and then wrote
-out what I saw or imagined. To me the result, compared
-with what I found in the daily papers, was quite satisfactory.
-Some paper must give me a place.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Picture</span> a dreamy cub of twenty-one, long, spindling, a
-pair of gold-framed spectacles on his nose, his hair combed
-<i>à la pompadour</i>, a new spring suit consisting of light check
-trousers and bright blue coat and vest, a brown fedora hat,
-new yellow shoes, starting out to force his way into the newspaper
-world of Chicago. At that time, although I did not
-know it, Chicago was in the heyday of its newspaper prestige.
-Some of the nation’s most remarkable editors, publishers and
-newspaper writers were at work there: Melville E. Stone,
-afterward general manager of the Associated Press; Victor F.
-Lawson, publisher of the <i>Daily News</i>; Joseph Medill, editor
-and publisher of the <i>Tribune</i>; Eugene Field, managing editor
-of the <i>Morning Record</i>; William Penn Nixon, editor and
-publisher of the <i>Inter-Ocean</i>; George Ade; Finley Peter
-Dunne; Brand Whitlock; and a score of others subsequently
-to become well known.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Having made up my mind that I must be a newspaper man,
-I made straight for the various offices at noon and at six
-o’clock each day to ask if there was anything I could do. Very
-soon I succeeded in making my way into the presence of the
-various city and managing editors of all the papers in
-Chicago, with the result that they surveyed me with the
-cynical fishy eye peculiar to newspaper men and financiers
-and told me there was nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day in the office of the <i>Daily News</i> a tall, shambling,
-awkward-looking man in a brown flannel shirt, without coat or
-waistcoat, suspenders down, was pointed out to me by an
-office boy who saw him slipping past the city editorial door.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wanta know who dat is?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I replied humbly, grateful even for the attention
-of office boys.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, dat’s Eugene Field. Heard o’ him, ain’tcha?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure,” I said, recalling the bundle of incoherent MS.
-which I had once thrust upon him. I surveyed his retreating
-figure with envy and some nervousness, fearing he might
-psychically detect that I was the perpetrator of that unsolicited
-slush and abuse me then and there.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In spite of my energy, manifested for one solid week between
-the hours of twelve and two at noon and five-thirty and
-seven at night I got nothing. Indeed it seemed to me as I
-went about these newspaper offices that they were the
-strangest, coldest, most haphazard and impractical of places.
-Gone was that fine ambassadorial quality with which a few
-months before I had invested them. These rooms, as I now
-saw, were crowded with commonplace desks and lamps, the
-floors strewn with newspapers. Office boys and hirelings
-gazed at you in the most unfriendly manner, asked what you
-wanted and insisted that there was nothing—they who knew
-nothing. By office boys I was told to come after one or two in
-the afternoon or after seven at night, when all assignments
-had been given out, and when I did so I was told that there
-was nothing and would be nothing. I began to feel desperate.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just about this time I had an inspiration. I determined
-that, instead of trying to see all of the editors each day and
-missing most of them at the vital hour, I would select one
-paper and see if in some way I could not worm myself into
-the good graces of its editor. I now had the very sensible
-notion that a small paper would probably receive me with
-more consideration than one of the great ones, and out of them
-all chose the <i>Daily Globe</i>, a struggling affair financed by one
-of the Chicago politicians for political purposes only.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>You have perhaps seen a homeless cat hang about a doorstep
-for days and days meowing to be taken in: that was I. The
-door in this case was a side door and opened upon an alley.
-Inside was a large, bare room filled with a few rows of tables
-set end to end, with a railing across the northern one-fourth,
-behind which sat the city editor, the dramatic and sporting
-editors, and one editorial writer. Outside this railing, near
-the one window, sat a large, fleshy gelatinous, round-faced
-round-headed young man wearing gold-rimmed spectacles.
-He had a hard, keen, cynical eye, and at first glance seemed
-to be most vitally opposed to me and everybody else. As it
-turned out, he was the <i>Daily Globe’s</i> copy-reader. Nothing
-was said to me at first as I sat in my far corner waiting for
-something to turn up. By degrees some of the reporters began
-to talk to me, thinking I was a member of the staff, which eased
-my position a little during this time. I noticed that as soon
-as all the reporters had gone the city editor became most
-genial with the one editorial writer, who sat next him, and
-the two often went off together for a bite.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Parlous and yet delicious hours! Although I felt all the
-time as though I were on the edge of some great change, still
-no one seemed to want me. The city editor, when I approached
-after all the others had gone, would shake his head
-and say: “Nothing today. There’s not a thing in sight,”
-but not roughly or harshly, and therein lay my hope. So
-here I would sit, reading the various papers or trying to write
-out something I had seen. I was always on the alert for some
-accident that I might report to this city editor in the hope that
-he had not seen it, but I encountered nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The ways of advancement are strange, so often purely accidental.
-I did not know it, but my mere sitting here in this
-fashion eventually proved a card in my favor. A number of
-the employed reporters, of whom there were eight or nine
-(the best papers carried from twenty to thirty), seeing me sit
-about from twelve to two and thinking I was employed here
-also, struck up occasional genial and enlightening conversations
-with me. Reporters rarely know the details of staff arrangements
-or changes. Some of them, finding that I was
-only seeking work, ignored me; others gave me a bit of
-advice. Why didn’t I see Selig of the <i>Tribune</i>, or Herbst of
-the <i>Herald</i>? It was rumored that staff changes were to be
-made there. One youth learning that I had never written a
-line for a newspaper, suggested that I go to the editor of the
-City Press Association or the United Press, where the most inexperienced
-beginners were put to work at the rate of eight
-dollars a week. This did not suit me at all. I felt that I
-could write.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Finally, however, my mere sitting about in this fashion
-brought me into contact with that copy-reader I have described,
-John Maxwell, who remarked one day out of mere
-curiosity:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Are you doing anything special for the <i>Globe</i>?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No,” I replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Just looking for work?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ever work on any paper?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How do you know you can write?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t. I just feel that I can. I want to see if I can’t
-get a chance to try.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He looked at me, curiously, amusedly, cynically.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Don’t you ever go around to the other papers?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, after I find out there’s nothing here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He smiled. “How long have you been coming here like
-this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Two weeks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Every day?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Every day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He laughed now, a genial, rolling, fat laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why do you pick the <i>Globe</i>? Don’t you know it’s the
-poorest paper in Chicago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s why I pick it,” I replied innocently. “I thought
-I might get a chance here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, you did!” he laughed. “Well, you may be right
-at that. Hang around. You may get something. Now I’ll
-tell you something: this National Democratic Convention will
-open in June. They’ll have to take on a few new men here
-then. I can’t see why they shouldn’t give you a chance as
-well as anybody else. But it’s a hell of a business to be
-wanting to get into,” he added.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He began taking off his coat and waistcoat, rolling up his
-sleeves, sharpening his blue pencils and taking up stacks of
-copy. The while I merely stared at him. Every now and
-then he would look at me through his round glasses as though
-I were some strange animal. I grew restless and went out.
-But after that he greeted me each day in a friendly way,
-and because he seemed inclined to talk I stayed and talked
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>What it was that finally drew us together in a minor bond
-of friendship I have never been able to discover. I am sure
-he considered me of little intellectual or reportorial import
-and yet also I gathered that he liked me a little. He seemed
-to take a fancy to me from the moment of our first conversation
-and included me in what I might call the <i>Globe</i> family
-spirit. He was interested in politics, literature, and the newspaper
-life of Chicago. Bit by bit he informed me as to the
-various editors, who were the most successful newspaper men,
-how some reporters did police, some politics, and some just
-general news. From him I learned that every paper carried
-a sporting editor, a society editor, a dramatic editor, a political
-man. There were managing editors, Sunday editors,
-news editors, city editors, copy-readers and editorial writers,
-all of whom seemed to me marvelous—men of the very greatest
-import. And they earned—which was more amazing still—salaries
-ranging from eighteen to thirty-five and even sixty
-and seventy dollars a week. From him I learned that this
-newspaper world was a seething maelstrom in which clever
-men struggled and fought as elsewhere; that some rose and
-many fell; that there was a roving element among newspaper
-men that drifted from city to city, many drinking themselves
-out of countenance, others settling down somewhere into some
-fortunate berth. Before long he told me that only recently
-he had been copy-reader on the Chicago <i>Times</i> but due to
-what he characterized as “office politics,” a term the meaning
-of which I in no wise grasped, he had been jockeyed out of his
-place. He seemed to think that by and large newspaper men
-while interesting and in some cases able, were tricky and
-shifty and above all, disturbingly and almost heartlessly inconsiderate
-of each other. Being young and inexperienced
-this point of view made no impression on me whatsoever. If
-I thought anything I thought that he must be wrong, or that,
-at any rate, this heartlessness would never trouble me in any
-way, being the live and industrious person that I was.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>It</span> made me happy to know that whether or not I was taken
-on I had at least achieved one friend at court. Maxwell advised
-me to stick.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’ll get on,” he said a day or two later. “I believe
-you’ve got the stuff in you. Maybe I can help you. You’ll
-probably be like every other damned newspaper man once
-you get a start: an ingrate; but I’ll help you just the same.
-Hang around. That convention will begin in three or four
-weeks now. I’ll speak a good word for you, unless you tie
-up with some other paper before then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And to my astonishment really, he was as good as his word.
-He must have spoken to the city editor soon after this, for the
-latter asked me what I had been doing and told me to hang
-around in case something should turn up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But before a newspaper story appeared for me to do a new
-situation arose which tied me up closer with this prospect
-than I had hoped for. The lone editorial writer previously
-mentioned, a friend and intimate of the city editor, had just
-completed a small work of fiction which he and the city
-editor in combination had had privately printed, and which
-they were very eager to sell. It was, as I recall it, very badly
-done, an immature imitation of <i>Tom Sawyer</i> without any real
-charm or human interest. The author himself, Mr. Gissel, was
-a picayune yellow-haired person. He spent all his working
-hours, as I came to know, writing those biased, envenomed and
-bedeviling editorials which are required by purely partisan
-journals. I gathered as much from conversations that were
-openly carried on before me between himself and the city
-editor, the managing editor and an individual who I later
-learned was the political man. They were “out” as I heard the
-managing editor say, one day “to get” some one—on orders
-from some individual of whom at that time I knew nothing,
-and Mr. Gissel was your true henchman or editorial mercenary,
-a “peanut” or “squeak” writer, penning what he was ordered
-to pen. Once I understood I despised him but at first he
-amused me though I could not like him. Whenever he had
-concocted some particularly malicious or defaming line as I
-learned in time, he would get up and dance about, chortling
-and cackling in a disconcerting way. So for the first time
-I began to see how party councils and party tendencies were
-manufactured or twisted or belied, and it still further reduced
-my estimate of humanity. Men, as I was beginning to find—all
-of us—were small, irritable, nasty in their struggle for
-existence. This little editor, for instance, was not interested
-in the Democratic party (which this paper was supposed to
-represent), or indeed in party principles of any kind. He did
-not believe what he wrote, but, receiving forty dollars a week,
-he was anxious to make a workmanlike job of it. Just at this
-time he was engaged in throwing mud at the national Republican
-administration, the mayor and the governor, as well as
-various local politicians, whom the owner of the paper wished
-him to attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>What a pitiful thing journalism or our alleged “free press”
-was, I then and there began to gather—dimly enough at first
-I must admit. What a shabby compound of tricky back-room
-councils, public professions, all looking to public favors and
-fames which should lead again to public contracts and
-financial emoluments! Journalism, like politics, as I was now
-soon to see, was a slough of muck in which men were raking
-busily and filthily for what their wretched rakes might uncover
-in the way of financial, social, political returns. I looked
-at this dingy office and then at this little yellow-haired rat
-of an editor one afternoon as he worked, and it came to me
-what a desperately subtle and shifty thing life was. Here
-he was, this little runt, scribbling busily, and above him were
-strong, dark, secretive men, never appearing publicly perhaps
-but paying him his little salary privately, dribbling it down to
-him through a publisher and an editor-in-chief and a managing
-editor, so that he might be kept busy misconstruing, lying,
-intellectually cheating.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the plan he had in regard to his book: The graduating
-class of the Hyde Park High School, of which he had been a
-member a few years before, had numbered about three hundred
-students. Of these two hundred were girls, one hundred
-and fifty of whom he claimed to have known personally. One
-afternoon as I was preparing to leave after all the assignments
-had been given out, the city editor called me over and, with
-the help of this scheming little editorial writer, began to explain
-to me a plan by which, if I carried it out faithfully, I
-could connect myself with the <i>Daily Globe</i> as a reporter. I
-was to take a certain list of names and addresses and as many
-copies of <i>The Adventures of Harry Munn</i>, or some such name,
-as I could carry and visit each of these quondam schoolmates
-of Mr. Gissel at their homes, where I was to recall to their
-minds that he was an old schoolmate of theirs, that this his
-first book related to scenes with which they were all familiar,
-and then persuade them if possible to buy a copy for one
-dollar. My reward for this was to be ten cents a copy on all
-copies sold, and in addition (and this was the real bait) I was
-to have a tryout on the <i>Globe</i> as a reporter at fifteen dollars
-a week if I succeeded in selling one hundred and twenty
-copies within the next week or so.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I took the list and gathered up an armful of the thin cloth-covered
-volumes, fired by the desire thus to make certain my
-entrance into the newspaper world. I cannot say that I was
-very much pleased with my mission, but my necessity or
-aspiration was so great that I was glad to do it just the same.
-I was nervous and shamefaced as I approached the first home
-on my list, and I suffered aches and pains in my vanity and
-my sense of the fitness of things. The only salve I could find
-in the whole thing was that Mr. Gissel actually knew these
-people and that I could say I came personally from him as a
-friend and fellow-member of the <i>Globe</i> staff. It was a thin
-subterfuge, but apparently it went down with a few of those
-pretty unsophisticated girls. The majority of them lived in
-the best residences of the south side, some of them mansions
-of the truly rich whose democratic parents had insisted upon
-sending their children to the local high school. In each case,
-upon inquiring for a girl, with the remark that I came from
-Mr. Gissel of the <i>Globe</i>, I was received in the parlor or reception-room
-and told to wait. Presently the girl would come
-bustling in and listen to my tactful story, smiling contemptuously
-perhaps at my shabby mission or opening her eyes in
-surprise or curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Mr. Gissel? Mr. Gissel?” said one girl inquiringly.
-“Why, I don’t recall any such person——” and she retired,
-leaving me to make my way out as best I might.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another exclaimed: “Harry Gissel! Has that little snip
-written a book? The nerve—to send you around to sell his
-book! Why do you do it? I will take one, because I am
-curious to see the kind of thing he has done, but I’ll wager
-right now it’s as silly as he is. He’s invented some scheme to
-get you to do this because he knows he couldn’t sell the book
-in any other way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Others remembered him and seemed to like him; others
-bought the book only because he was a member of their class.
-Some struck up a genial conversation with me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In spite of my distress at having to do this work there were
-compensations. It gave me a last fleeting picture of that new,
-sunny prosperity which was the most marked characteristic of
-Chicagoans of that day, and contrasted so sharply with the
-scenes of poverty which I had recently seen. In this region, for
-it was June, newly fledged collegians, freshly returned from
-the colleges of the East and Europe, were disporting themselves
-about the lawns and within the open-windowed chambers
-of the houses. Traps and go-carts of many of the financially
-and socially elect filled the south side streets. The lawn tennis
-suit, the tennis game, the lawn party and the family croquet
-game were everywhere in evidence. The new-rich and those
-most ambitious financially at that time were peculiarly susceptible
-I think to the airs and manners of the older and more
-pretentious regions of the world. They were bent upon interpreting
-their new wealth in terms of luxury as they had
-observed it elsewhere. Hence these strutting youths in English
-suits with turned-up trousers, swagger sticks and flori-colored
-ties and socks intended to suggest the spirit of London,
-as they imagined it to be; hence the high-headed girls in
-flouncy, lacy dresses, their cheeks and eyes bright with color,
-who no doubt imagined themselves to be great ladies, and who
-carried themselves with an air of remote disdain. The whole
-thing had the quality of a play well staged: really the houses,
-the lawns, the movements of the people, their games and
-interests all harmonizing after the fashion of a play. They
-saw this as a great end in itself, which, perhaps, it is. To
-me in my life-hungry, love-hungry state, this new-rich prosperity
-with its ease, its pretty women and its effort at refinement
-was quite too much. It set me to riotous dreaming and
-longing made me ache to lounge and pose after this same
-fashion.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>In</span> due course of time, I having performed my portion of
-the contract, it became the duty of the two editors to fulfill
-their agreement with me. Every day for ten days I had been
-turning in the cash for from five to fifteen books, thereby
-establishing my reputation for industry and sobriety. Mr.
-Gissel was very anxious to know at the end of each day whom
-I had seen and how the mention of his name was received.
-Instead of telling him of the many who laughed or sniffed
-or bought to get rid of me gracefully, I gave him flattering
-reports. Lately, by way of reward I presume, he had taken
-to reading to me the cleverest passages in his editorials. Mr.
-Sullivan, the city editor, confided to me one day that he was
-from a small town in central Illinois not unlike the Warsaw
-from which I hailed, and which I then roughly and jestingly
-sketched to him, and from then on we were on fairly good
-terms. He dug up a number of poems and granted me the
-favor of reading them. Some of them were almost as good
-as similar ones by Whittier and Bryant, after whom they were
-obviously modeled. Today I know them to be bad, or
-mediocre; then I thought they were excellent and grieved to
-think that any one should be going to make a reputation as
-a great poet, while I, the only real poet extant (although I
-had done nothing as yet to prove it), remained unrecognized.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did not know until later that I might not have secured a
-place even now, so numerous were the applications of clever
-and experienced newspaper men, had it not been for the
-influence of my friend Maxwell. For one reason or another,
-my errant youth perhaps, my crazy persistence and general
-ignorance of things journalistic, he had become interested in
-me and seemed fairly anxious to see me get a start. Out
-of the tail of his eye he had been watching. When I arrived
-of an evening and there was no one present he sometimes
-inquired what I was doing, and by degrees, although I had
-been cautioned not to tell, he extracted the whole story of
-Gissel’s book. I even loaned him a copy of the book, which
-he read and pronounced rot, adding: “They ought to be
-ashamed of themselves, sending you out on a job of this kind.
-You’re better than that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As the end of my task drew near and I was dreading another
-uncertain wait, he put in a good word for me. But even then
-I doubt if I should have had a trial had it not been for the
-convention which was rapidly drawing near. On the day the
-newspapers were beginning to chronicle the advance arrival
-of various leaders from all parts of the country, I was taken
-on at fifteen dollars a week, for a week or two anyhow, and
-assigned to watch the committee rooms in the hotels Palmer,
-Grand Pacific, Auditorium and Richelieu. There was another
-youth who was set to work with me on this, and he gave me
-some slight instruction. Over us was the political man, who
-commanded other men in different hotels and whose presence
-I had only noted when the convention was nearly over.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If ever a youth was cast adrift and made to realize that he
-knew nothing at all about the thing he was so eager to do, that
-youth was I. “Cover the hotels for political news,” were my
-complete instructions, but what the devil was political news?
-What did they want me to do, say, write? At once I was
-thoroughly terrified by this opportunity which I had so eagerly
-sought, for now that I had it I did not know how to make
-anything clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the first day or two or three therefore I wandered like
-a lost soul about the corridors and parlor floors and “committee
-rooms” of these hotels which I was supposed to cover,
-trying to find out where the committee rooms were, who and
-what were the men in them, what they were trying to do. No
-one seemed to want to tell me anything, and, as dull as it may
-seem, I really could not guess. I had no clear idea of what
-was meant by the word “politics” as locally used. Various
-country congressmen and politicians brushed past me in a
-most secretive manner; when I hailed them with the information
-that I was from the <i>Globe</i> they waved me off with: “I
-am only a delegate; you can’t get anything out of me. See
-the chairman.” Well, what was a chairman? I didn’t know.
-I did not even know that there had been lists published in all
-the papers, my own included, giving the information which
-I was so anxiously seeking!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I had no real understanding of politics or party doings or
-organization. I doubt if I knew how men came to be nominated,
-let alone elected. I did not know who were the various
-State leaders, who the prospective candidates, why one candidate
-might be preferred to another. The machinations of
-such an institution as Tammany Hall, or the things called
-property interests, were as yet beyond me. My mind was too
-much concerned with the poetry of life to busy itself with
-such minor things as politics. However, I did know that
-there was a bitter feud on between David Bennett Hill, governor
-of New York, and Grover Cleveland, ex-President of the
-United States, both candidates for nomination on the Democratic
-ticket, and that the Tammany organization of New York
-City was for Hill and bitterly opposed to Cleveland. I also
-knew that the South was for any good Southerner as opposed
-to Cleveland or Hill, and that a new element in the party
-was for Richard Bland, better known as “Silver Dick,” of
-Missouri. I also knew by reputation many of the men who
-had been in the first Cleveland administration.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Imagine a raw youth with no knowledge of the political
-subtleties of America trying to gather even an inkling of
-what was going on! The nation and the city were full of
-dark political trafficking, but of it all I was as innocent as a
-baby. The bars and lobbies were full of inconsequential
-spouting delegates, who drank, swore, sang and orated at the
-top of their lungs. Swinging Southerners and Westerners in
-their long frockcoats and wide-brimmed hats amused me.
-They were forever pulling their whiskers or mustachios, drinking,
-smoking, talking or looking solemn or desperate. In many
-cases they knew no more of what was going on than I did.
-I was told to watch the movements of Benjamin Ryan Tillman,
-senator from South Carolina, and report any conclusions or
-rumors of conclusions as to how his delegation would vote. I
-had a hard time finding where his committee was located, and
-where and when if ever it deliberated, but once I identified my
-man I never left him. I dogged his steps so persistently that
-he turned on me one afternoon as he was going out of the
-Palmer House, fixed me with his one fiery eye and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Young man, what do you want of me anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you’re Senator Tillman, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir. I’m Senator Tillman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, I’m a reporter from the <i>Globe</i>. I’ve been told to
-learn what conclusions your delegation has reached as to
-how it will vote.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You and your editor of the <i>Globe</i> be damned!” he replied
-irritably. “And I want you to quit following me wherever I
-go. Just now I’m going for my laundry, and I have some
-rights to privacy. The committee will decide when it’s good
-and ready, and it won’t tell the <i>Globe</i> or any other paper.
-Now you let me alone. Follow somebody else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went back to the office the first evening at five-thirty and
-sat down to write, with the wild impression in my mind that
-I must describe the whole political situation not only in
-Chicago but in the nation. I had no notion that there was
-a supervising political man who, in conjunction with the
-managing editor and editor-in-chief, understood all about current
-political conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The political pot,” I began exuberantly, “was already
-beginning to seethe yesterday. About the lobbies and corridors
-of the various hotels hundreds upon hundreds of the
-vanguard of American Democracy—etc, etc.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I had not scrawled more than eight or nine pages of this
-mush before the city editor, curious as to what I had discovered
-and wondering why I had not reported it to him,
-came over and picked up the many sheets which I had turned
-face down.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, no, no!” he exclaimed. “You mustn’t write on both
-sides of the paper! Don’t you know that? For heaven’s sake.
-And all this stuff about the political pot boiling is as old as the
-hills. Why, every country jake paper for thousands of miles
-East and West has used it for years and years. You’re not
-to write the general stuff. Here, Maxwell, see if you can’t
-find out what Dreiser has discovered and show him what to
-do with it. I haven’t got time.” And he turned me over to
-my gold-spectacled mentor, who eyed me very severely. He
-sat down and examined my copy with knitted brows. He
-had a round, meaty, cherubic face which seemed all the more
-ominous because he could scowl fiercely, and his eyes could
-blaze with a cold, examining, mandatory glance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This is awful stuff!” he said as he read the first page.
-“He’s quite right. You want to try and remember that you’re
-not the editor of this paper and just consider yourself a
-plain reporter sent out to cover some hotels. Now where’d
-you go today?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What’d you see?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I described as best I could the whirling world in which I
-had been.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, no! I don’t mean that! That might be good for a
-book or something but it’s not news. Did you see any particular
-man? Did you find out anything in connection with any
-particular committee?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I confessed that I had tried and failed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Very good!” he said. “You haven’t anything to write,”
-and he tore up my precious nine pages and threw them into
-the waste basket. “You’d better sit around here now until
-the city editor calls you,” he added. “He may have something
-special he wants you to do. If not, watch the hotels
-for celebrities—Democratic celebrities—or committee meetings,
-and if you find any try to find out what’s going on. The
-great thing is to discover beforehand who’s going to be nominated—see?
-You can’t tell from talking to four or five people,
-but what you find out may help some one else to piece out
-what is to happen. When you come back, see me. And unless
-you get other orders, come back by eleven. And call up two
-or three times between the time you go and eleven.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Because of these specific instructions I felt somewhat
-encouraged, although my first attempt at writing had been
-thrown into the waste basket. I sat about until nearly seven,
-when I was given an address and told to find John G. Carlisle,
-ex-Secretary of the Treasury, and see if I could get an interview
-with him. Failing this, I was to “cover” the Grand
-Pacific, Palmer House and Auditorium, and report all important
-arrivals and delegations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Even if I had secured the desired interview I am sure I
-should have made an awful botch of it, but fortunately I
-could not get it. Only one thing of importance developed for
-me during the evening, and that was the presence of a Democratic
-United States Supreme Court Justice at the Grand
-Pacific who, upon being intercepted by me as he was going to
-his room for the night and told that I was from the <i>Globe</i>,
-eyed me genially and whimsically.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My boy,” he said, “you’re just a young new reporter, I
-can see that. Otherwise you wouldn’t waste your time on me.
-But I like reporters: I was one myself years ago. Now this
-hotel and every other is full of leaders and statesmen discussing
-this question of who’s to be President. I’m not discussing
-it, first of all because it wouldn’t become a Justice of
-the United States Supreme Court to do so, and in the next
-place because I don’t have to: my position is for life. I’m
-just stopping here for one day on my way to Denver. You’d
-better go around to these committee rooms and see if they
-can’t tell you something,” and, smiling and laying one hand
-on my shoulder in a fatherly way, he dismissed me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My!” I thought. “What a fine thing it is to be a reporter!
-All I have to do is to say I’m from the <i>Globe</i> and even a
-Justice of the United States Supreme Court is smiling and
-agreeable to me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried to a phone to tell Maxwell, and he said: “He
-don’t count. Write a stick of it if you want to, and I’ll
-look it over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How much is a stick?” I asked eagerly and curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“About a hundred and fifty words.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So much for a United States Supreme Court Justice in
-election days.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I cannot</span> say that I discovered anything of import this night
-or the next or the next, although I secured various interviews
-which, after much wrestling with my spirit and some hard,
-intelligent, frank statements from my friend, were whipped
-into shape for fillers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The trouble with you, Dreiser,” said Maxwell as I was
-trying to write out what the Supreme Court Justice had said
-to me, “is that you haven’t any training and you’re trying
-to get it now when we haven’t the time. Over in the <i>Tribune</i>
-office they have a sign which reads: WHO OR WHAT?
-HOW? WHEN? WHERE? All those things have to be
-answered in the first paragraph—not in the last paragraph,
-or the middle paragraph, but in the first. Now come here.
-Gimme that stuff,” and he cut and hacked, running thick
-lines of blue lead through my choicest thoughts and restating
-in a line or two all that I thought required ten. A sardonic
-smile played about his fat mouth, and I saw by his twinkling
-eyes that he felt that it was good for me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“News is information,” he went on as he worked. “People
-want it quick, sharp, clear—do you hear? Now you probably
-think I’m a big stiff, chopping up your great stuff like this,
-but if you live and hold this job you’ll thank me. As a
-matter of fact, if it weren’t for me you wouldn’t have this
-job now. Not one copy-reader out of a hundred would take
-the trouble to show you,” and he looked at me with hard,
-cynical and yet warm gray eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was wretched with the thought that I should be dropped
-once the convention was over, and so I bustled here and there,
-anxious to find something. Of a morning, from six o’clock
-until noon, I studied all the papers, trying to discover what
-all this fanfare was about and just what was expected of me.
-The one great thing to find out was who was to be nominated
-and which delegations or individuals would support the successful
-candidate. Where could I get the information? The
-third day I talked to Maxwell about it, and as a favor he
-brought out a paper in which a rough augury was made which
-showed that the choice lay between David Bennett Hill and
-Grover Cleveland, with a third man, Senator McEntee, as a
-dark horse. Southern sentiment seemed to be centering about
-him, and in case no agreement could be reached by the New
-York delegation as to which of its two opposing candidates it
-would support their vote might be thrown to this third man.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of course this was all very confusing to me. I did my best
-to get it straight. Learning that the Tammany delegation,
-two thousand strong, was to arrive from New York this same
-day and that the leaders were to be quartered at the Auditorium,
-I made my way there, determined to obtain an interview
-with no less a person than Richard Croker, who, along
-with Bourke Cochran, and a hard-faced, beefy individual by
-the name of John F. Carroll seemed to be the brains and
-mouthpiece of the Tammany organization. In honor of their
-presence, the Auditorium was decorated with flags and banners,
-some of them crossed with tomahawks or Indian feathers.
-Above the onyx-lined bar was a huge tiger with a stiff projecting
-tail which when pulled downward, as it was every
-few seconds by one bartender and another, caused the <i>papier-mâché</i>
-image to emit a deep growl. This delighted the crowd,
-and after each growl there was another round of drinks.
-Red-faced men in silk hats and long frockcoats slapped each
-other on the back and bawled out their joy or threats or
-prophecies.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the first floor above the office of the hotel, were Richard
-Croker, his friend and adviser, Carroll, and Bourke Cochran.
-They sat in the center of a great room on a huge red plush
-divan, receiving and talking.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As a representative of the <i>Globe</i>, a cheap nickel star fastened
-to one of the lapels of my waistcoat and concealed by
-my coat, my soul stirred by being allowed to mingle in affairs
-of great import, I finally made my way to the footstool of this
-imposing group and ventured to ask for an interview with
-Croker himself. The great man, short, stocky, carefully, almost
-too carefully, dressed, his face the humanized replica
-of that of a tiger, looked at me in a genial, quizzical, condescending
-way and said: “No interviews.” I remember the
-patent leather button shoes with the gray suède tops, the
-heavy gold ring on one finger, and the heavy watch-chain
-across his chest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You won’t say who is to be nominated?” I persisted nervously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I wish I could,” he grinned. “I wouldn’t be sitting here
-trying to find out.” He smiled again and repeated my question
-to one of his companions. They all looked at me with
-smiling condescension and I beat a swift retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Defeated though I was, I decided to write out the little
-scene, largely to prove to the city editor that I had actually
-seen Croker and been refused an interview.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went down to the bar to review the scene being enacted
-there. While I was standing at the bar drinking a lemonade
-there came a curious lull. In the midst of it the voices of
-two men near me became audible as they argued who would
-be nominated, Cleveland, Hill or some third man, not the one
-I have mentioned. Bursting with my new political knowledge
-and longing to air it, I, at the place where one of the
-strangers mentioned the third man as the most likely choice,
-solemnly shook my head as much as to say: “You are all
-wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, then, who do you think?” inquired the stranger, who
-was short, red-faced, intoxicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Senator McEntee, of South Carolina,” I replied, feeling
-as though I were stating an incontrovertible truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A tall, fair-complexioned, dark-haired Southerner in a wide-brimmed
-white hat and flaring frockcoat paused at this moment
-in his hurried passage through the room and, looking at
-the group, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Who does me the honah to mention my name in connection
-with the Presidency? I am Senator McEntee of South Carolina.
-No intrusion, I hope?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I and the two others stared in confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“None whatever,” I replied with an air, thinking how interesting
-it was that this man of all people should be passing
-through the room at this time. “These gentlemen were saying
-that —— of —— would be nominated, and I was going
-to say that sentiment is running more in your favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, now, that is most interesting, my young friend, and
-I’m glad to hear you say it. It’s an honah to be even mentioned
-in connection with so great an office, however small my
-qualifications. And who are you, may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My name in Dreiser. I represent the Chicago <i>Globe</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, do you? That makes it doubly interesting. Won’t
-you come along with me to my rooms for a moment? You
-interest me, young man, you really do. How long have you
-been a reporter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, for nearly a year now,” I replied grandly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And have you ever worked for any other paper?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes; I was on the <i>Herald</i> last fall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He seemed elated by his discovery. He must have been
-one of those swelling nonentities flattered silly by this chance
-discussion of his name in a national convention atmosphere.
-An older newspaper man would have known that he had
-not the least chance of being seriously considered. Somebody
-from the South had to be mentioned, as a compliment, and
-this man was fixed upon as one least likely to prove disturbing
-later.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He bustled out to a shady balcony overlooking the lake,
-ordered two cocktails and wanted to know on what I based
-my calculation. In order to not seem a fool I now went over
-my conversation with Maxwell. I spoke of different delegations
-and their complexions as though these conclusions were
-my own, when as a matter of fact I was quoting Maxwell
-verbatim. My hearer seemed surprised at my intelligence.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You seem to be very well informed,” he said genially,
-“but I know you’re wrong. The Democratic party will never
-go to the South for a candidate—not for some years anyway.
-Just the same, since you’ve been good enough to champion
-me in this public fashion, I would like to do something for
-you in return. I suppose your paper is always anxious for
-advance news, and if you bring it in you get the credit. Now
-at this very moment, over in the Hotel Richelieu, Mr. William
-C. Whitney and some of his friends—Mr. Croker has just
-gone over there—are holding a conference. He is the one
-man who holds the balance of power in this convention. He
-represents the moneyed interests and is heart and soul for
-Grover Cleveland. Now if you want a real beat you’d better
-go over there and hang about. Mr. Whitney is sure to make
-a statement some time today or tomorrow. See his secretary,
-Mr. ——, and tell him I sent you. He will do anything
-for you he can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I thanked him, certain at last I had a real piece of
-news. This conference was the most important event that
-would or could take place in the whole convention. I was
-so excited that I wanted to jump up and run away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It will keep,” he said, noting my nervousness. “No other
-newspaper man knows of it yet. Nothing will be given out
-yet for several hours because the conference will not be over
-before that time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But I’d like to phone my office,” I pleaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All right, but come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I ran to the nearest telephone. I explained my beat to the
-city editor and, anxious lest I be unable to cover it, asked
-him to inform the head political man. He was all excitement
-at once, congratulated me and told me to follow up this
-conference. Then I ran back to my senator.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I see,” he said, “that you are a very industrious and eager
-young man. I like to see that. I don’t want to say anything
-which will set up your hopes too much, because things don’t
-always work out as one would wish, but did any one ever suggest
-to you that you would make a good private secretary?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, sir,” I replied, flattered and eager.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, from what I have seen here today I am inclined
-to think you would. Now I don’t know that I shall be returned
-to the Senate after this year—there’s a little dispute
-in my State—but if I am, and you want to write me after
-next January, I may be able to do something for you. I’ve
-seen a lot of bright young fellows come up in the newspaper
-profession, and I’ve seen a lot go down. If you’re not too
-much attached to it, perhaps you would like this other better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He smiled serenely, and I could have kissed his hands. At
-the same time, if you please, I was already debating whether
-one so promising as myself should leave the newspaper profession!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But even more than my good fortune at gleaning this bit
-of news or beat, as it proved, I was impressed by the company
-I was keeping and the realm in which I now moved as
-if by right—great hotels, a newspaper office with which I was
-connected, this senator, these politicians, the display of comfort
-and luxury on every hand. Only a little while back I
-was an inexperienced, dreaming collector for an “easy-payment”
-company, and now look at me! Here I sat on this
-grand balcony, the senator to my right, a table between us,
-all the lovely panorama of the lake and Michigan Drive below.
-What a rise! From now on, no doubt, I would do much
-better. Was I not even now being offered the secretaryship
-to a senator?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In due time I left and ran to the Richelieu, but my brain
-was seething with my great rise and my greater achievement
-in being the first to know of and report to my paper this
-decisive conference. If that were true I should certainly have
-discovered what my paper and all papers were most eager to
-know.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>What</span> the senator had told me was true. The deciding conference
-was on, and I determined to hang about the corridors
-of the Richelieu until it was over. The secretary, whom
-I found closeted with others (not newspaper men) in a room
-on the second floor, was good enough to see me when I mentioned
-Senator McEntee’s name, and told me to return at
-six-thirty, when he was sure the conference would be over
-and a general statement be issued to the press. If I wished,
-I might come back at five-thirty. This dampened my joy in
-the thought that I had something exclusive, though I was
-later cheered by the thought that I had probably saved my
-paper from defeat anyhow for we were too poor to belong
-to the general news service. As a matter of fact, my early
-information was a cause of wonder in the office, the political
-man himself coming down late in the night to find out how I
-had learned so soon. I spoke of my friend Senator McEntee
-as though I had known him for years. The political man
-merely looked at me and said: “Well, you ought to get
-along in politics on one of the papers, if nowhere else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The capture of this one fact, as I rather felt at the time,
-was my making in this newspaper office and hence in the
-newspaper world at large, in so far as I ever was made.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At five-thirty that afternoon I was on hand, and, true to his
-word, the secretary outlined exactly what conclusions the
-conference had reached. Afterward he brought out a type-written
-statement and read from it such facts as he wished
-me to have. Cleveland was to be nominated. Another man,
-Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, of whom I had never heard, was
-to be nominated for Vice-President. There were other details,
-so confusing that I could scarcely grasp them, but I made
-some notes and flew to the office and tried to write out all I
-had heard. I know now that I made a very bad job of it, but
-Maxwell worked so hard and so cheerfully that he saved
-me. From one source and another he confirmed or modified
-my statements, wrote an intelligent introduction and turned
-it in.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re one of the damnedest crack-brained loons I ever
-saw,” he said at one place, cutting out a great slice of my
-stuff, “but you seem to know how to get the news just the
-same, and you’re going to be able to write. If I could
-just keep you under my thumb for four or five weeks I think
-I could make something out of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At this I ventured to lay one hand over his shoulder in an
-affectionate and yet appealing way, but he looked up frowningly
-and said: “Cut the gentle con work, Theodore. I know
-you. You’re just like all other newspaper men, or will be:
-grateful when things are coming your way. If I were out of a
-job or in your position you’d do just like all the others: pass
-me up. I know you better than you know yourself. Life is
-a God-damned stinking, treacherous game, and nine hundred
-and ninety-nine men out of every thousand are bastards. I
-don’t know why I do this for you,” and he cut some more of
-my fine writing, “but I like you. I don’t expect to get anything
-back. I never do. People always trim me when I
-want anything. There’s nobody home if I’m knocking. But
-I’m such a God-damned fool that I like to do it. But don’t
-think I’m not on, or that I’m a genial ass that can be worked
-by every Tom, Dick and Harry.” And after visiting me with
-that fat superior smile he went on working. I stared, nervous,
-restless, resentful, sorrowful, trying to justify myself to life
-and to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“If I had a real chance,” I said, “I would soon show you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The convention opened its sessions the next day, and because
-of my seeming cleverness I was given a front seat in the
-press-stand, where I could hear all speeches, observe the crowd,
-trade ideas with the best newspaper men in the city and the
-country. In a day, if you will believe it, and in spite of
-the fact that I was getting only fifteen dollars a week, my
-stock had risen so that, in this one office at least, I was looked
-upon as a newspaper man of rare talent, an extraordinarily
-bright boy sure to carve out a future for himself, one to be
-made friends with and helped. Here in this press-stand I
-was now being coached by one newspaper man and another in
-the intricacies of convention life. I was introduced to two
-other members of our staff who were supposed to be experienced
-men, both of them small, clever, practical-minded individuals
-well adapted to the work in hand. One of them,
-Harry L. Dunlap, followed my errant fortunes for years,
-securing a place through me in St. Louis and rising finally
-to be the confidential adviser of one of our Presidents, William
-Howard Taft—a not very remarkable President to be adviser
-to at that. The other, a small brown-suited soul, Brady by
-name, came into my life for a very little while and then
-went, I know not where.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this convention, how it thrilled me! To be tossed into
-the vortex of national politics at a time when the country
-was seething over the possible resuscitation of the old Democratic
-party to strength and power was something like living.
-I listened to the speeches, those dully conceived flights
-and word gymnastics and pyrotechnics whereby backwoods
-statesmen, district leaders and personality-followers seek to
-foist upon the attention of the country their own personalities
-as well as those of the individuals whom they admire.
-Although it was generally known that Cleveland was to be
-nominated (the money power of America having fixed upon
-him) and it was useless to name any one else, still as many
-as ten different “statesmen” great leaders, saviors were put
-in nomination. Each man so mentioned was the beau ideal
-of a nation’s dream of a leader, a statesman, a patriot, lover of
-liberty and of the people. This in itself was a liberal education
-and slowly but surely opened my eyes. I watched with
-amazement this love of fanfare and noise, the way in which
-various delegations and individual followers loved to shout
-and walk up and down waving banners and blowing horns.
-Different States or cities had sent large delegations, New York
-a marching club two thousand strong, all of whom had seats
-in this hall, and all were plainly instructed to yell and demonstrate
-at the mention of a given name.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The one thing I heard which seemed rather important at
-the time, beautiful, because of a man’s voice and gestures,
-was a speech by Bourke Cochran, exhorting the convention to
-nominate his candidate, David Bennett Hill, and save the
-party from defeat. Indeed his speech, until later I heard
-William Jennings Bryan, seemed to me the best I had ever
-heard, clear, sonorous, forcible, sensible. He had something to
-say and he said it with art and seeming conviction. He had
-presence too, a sort of Herculean, animal-like effrontery. He
-made his audience sit up and pay attention to him, when as
-a matter of fact it was interested in talking privately, one
-member to another. I tried to take notes of what he was
-saying until one of my associates told me that the full minutes
-of his speech could soon be secured from the shorthand reporters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Being in this great hall cheek by jowl with the best of the
-Chicago newspaper world thrilled me. “Now,” I said to
-myself, “I am truly a newspaper man. If I can only get interesting
-things to write about, my fortune is made.” At
-once, as the different forceful reporters of the city were
-pointed out to me (George Ade, Finley Peter Dunne,
-“Charlie” Seymour, Charles d’Almy), my neck swelled as
-does a dog’s when a rival appears on the scene. Already,
-at mere sight of them, I was anxious to try conclusions with
-them on some important mission and so see which of us was
-the better man. Always, up to the early thirties, I was
-so human as to conceive almost a deadly opposition to any
-one who even looked as though he might be able to try conclusions
-with me in anything. At that time, I was ready
-for a row, believing, now that I had got thus far, that I was
-destined to become one of the greatest newspaper men that
-ever lived!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this convention brought me no additional glory. I did
-write a flowery description of the thing as a whole, but only
-a portion of it was used. I did get some details of committee
-work, which were probably incorporated in the political man’s
-general summary. The next day, Cleveland being nominated,
-interest fell off. Thousands packed their bags and departed.
-I was used for a day or two about hotels gathering one bit
-of news and another, but I could see that there was no import
-to what I was doing and began to grow nervous lest I should
-be summarily dropped. I spoke to Maxwell about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you think they’ll drop me?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not by a damned sight!” he replied contentiously.
-“You’ve earned a show here; it’s been promised you; you’ve
-made good, and they ought to give it to you. Don’t you
-say anything; just leave it to me. There’s going to be a conference
-here tomorrow as to who’s to be dropped and who
-kept on, and I’ll have my say then. You saved the day for
-us on that nomination stuff, and that ought to get you a
-show. Leave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The conference took place the next day and of the five men
-who had been taken on to do extra work during the convention
-I and one other were the only ones retained, and this
-at the expense of two former reporters dropped. At that,
-I really believe I should have been sent off if it had not been
-for Maxwell. He had been present during most of the
-transactions concerning Mr. Gissel’s book and thought I deserved
-work on that score alone, to say nothing of my subsequent
-efforts. I think he disliked the little editorial writer
-very much. At any rate when this conference began Maxwell,
-according to Dunlap who was there and reported to me,
-sat back, a look of contented cynicism on his face not unlike
-that of a fox about to devour a chicken. The names of several
-of the new men were proposed as substitutes for the old
-ones when, not hearing mine mentioned, he inquired:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, what about Dreiser?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, what about him?” retorted Sullivan, the city editor.
-“He’s a good man, but he lacks training. These other
-fellows are experienced.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I thought you and Gissel sort of agreed to give him a show
-if he sold that book for you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, I didn’t,” said Sullivan. “I only promised to give
-him a tryout around convention time. I’ve done that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But he’s the best man on the staff today,” insisted Maxwell.
-“He brought in the only piece of news worth having.
-He’s writing better every day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He bristled, according to Dunlap, and Sullivan and Gissel,
-taking the hint that the quarrel might be carried higher up
-or aired inconveniently, changed their attitude completely.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, well,” said Sullivan genially, “let him come on. I’d
-just as lief have him. He may pan out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And so on I came, at fifteen dollars a week, and thus my
-newspaper career was begun in earnest.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>This</span> change from insecurity to being an accredited newspaper
-man was delightful. For a very little while, a year or
-so, it seemed to open up a clear straight course which if
-followed energetically must lead me to great heights. Of
-course I found that beginners were very badly paid. Salaries
-ranged from fourteen to twenty-five dollars for reporters;
-and as for those important missions about which I had always
-been reading, they were not even thought of here. The best
-I could learn of them in this office was that they did exist—on
-some papers. Young men were still sent abroad on missions,
-or to the West or to Africa (as Stanley), but they
-had to be men of proved merit or budding genius and connected
-with papers of the greatest importance. How could one
-prove oneself to be a budding genius?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Salary or no salary, however, I was now a newspaper man,
-with the opportunity eventually to make a name for myself.
-Having broken with the family and with my sister C——, I
-was now quite alone in the world and free to go anywhere
-and do as I pleased. I found a front room in Ogden Place
-overlooking Union Park (in which area I afterwards placed
-one of my heroines). I could walk from here to the office
-in a little over twenty minutes. My route lay through either
-Madison Street or Washington Boulevard east to the river,
-and morning and night I had ample opportunity to speculate
-on the rancid or out-at-elbows character of much that I saw.
-Both Washington and Madison, from Halsted east to the
-river, were lined with vile dens and tumbledown yellow and
-gray frame houses, slovenly, rancorous, unsolved and possibly
-unsolvable misery and degeneracy, whole streets of degraded,
-dejected, miserable souls. Why didn’t society do better by
-them? I often asked of myself then. Why didn’t they do
-better by themselves? Did God, who, as had been drummed
-into me up to that hour was all wise, all merciful, omnipresent
-and omnipotent make people so or did they themselves have
-something to do with it? Was government to blame, or they
-themselves? Always the miseries of the poor, the scandals,
-corruptions and physical deteriorations which trail folly,
-weakness, uncontrolled passion fascinated me. I was never
-tired of looking at them, but I had no solution and was not
-willing to accept any, suspecting even then that man is the
-victim of forces over which he has no control. As I walked
-here and there through these truly terrible neighborhoods, I
-peered through open doors and patched and broken windows
-at this wretchedness and squalor, much as a man may tread
-the poisonous paths of a jungle, curious and yet fearsome.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was this nosing and speculative tendency, however, which
-helped me most, as I soon found. Journalism, even in Chicago,
-was still in that discursive stage which loved long-winded
-yarns upon almost any topic. Nearly all news stories were
-padded to make more of them than they deserved, especially
-as to color and romance. All specials were being written in
-imitation of the great novelists, particularly Charles Dickens,
-who was the ideal of all newspaper men and editors as well
-as magazine special writers (how often have I been told to
-imitate Charles Dickens in thought and manner!). The city
-editors wanted not so much bare facts as feature stories, color,
-romance; and, although I did not see it clearly at the time,
-I was their man.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Write?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Why, I could write reams upon any topic when at last I
-discovered that I could write at all. One day some one—Maxwell,
-I suppose—hearing me speak of what I was seeing
-each day as I came to or went from the office to my room, suggested
-that I do an article on Chicago’s vilest slum, which lay
-between Halsted and the river, Madison and Twelfth streets,
-for the next Sunday issue, and this was as good as meat and
-drink for me. I visited this region a few times between one
-and four in the morning, wandering about its clattering
-boardwalks, its dark alleys, its gloomy mire and muck atmosphere.
-Chicago’s wretchedness was never utterly tame, disconsolate
-or hang-dog, whatever else it might be; rather, it
-was savage, bitter and at times larkish and impish. The vile
-slovens, slatterns, prostitutes, drunkards and drug fiends who
-infested this region all led a strident if beggarly or horrible
-life. Saloon lights and smells and lamps gleaming smokily
-from behind broken lattices and from below wooden sidewalk
-levels, gave it a shameless and dangerous color. Accordions,
-harmonicas, jew’s-harps, clattering tin-pan pianos and stringy
-violins were forever going; paintless rotting shacks always resounded
-with a noisy blasphemous life between twelve and
-four; oaths, foul phrases; a Hogarthian shamelessness and reconciliation
-to filth everywhere—these were some of the things
-that characterized it. Although there was a closing-hour law
-there was none here as long as it was deemed worth while to
-keep open. Only at four and five in the morning did a heavy
-peace seem to descend, and this seemed as wretched as the
-heavier vice and degradation which preceded it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the face of such a scene or picture as this my mind invariably
-paused in question. I had been reared on dogmatic
-religious and moral theory, or at least had been compelled
-to listen to it all my life. Here then was a part of the work
-of an omnipotent God, who nevertheless tolerated, apparently,
-a most industrious devil. Why did He do it? Why did
-nature, when left to itself, devise such astounding slums and
-human muck heaps? Harlots in doorways or behind windows
-or under lamp-posts in these areas, smirking and signaling
-creatures with the dullest or most fox-like expression and with
-heavily smeared lips and cheeks and blackened eyebrows, were
-ready to give themselves for one dollar, or even fifty cents, and
-this in the heart of this budding and prosperous West, a land
-flowing with milk and honey! What had brought that about
-so soon in a new, rich, healthy, forceful land—God? devil?
-or both working together toward a common end? Near at
-hand were huge and rapidly expanding industries. The street-cars
-and trains, morning and evening, were crowded with earnest,
-careful, saving, seeking, moderately well-dressed people
-who were presumably anxious to work and lay aside a competence
-and own a home. Then why was it that these others
-lived in such a hell? Was God to blame? Or society?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could not solve it. This matter of being, with its differences,
-is permanently above the understanding of man, I fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I smiled as I thought of my father’s attitude to all this.
-There he was out on the west side demanding that all creatures
-of the world return to Christ and the Catholic Church,
-see clearly, whether they could or not, its grave import to
-their immortal souls; and here were these sows and termagants,
-wretched, filthy, greasy. And the men low-browed,
-ill-clad, rum-soaked, body-racked! Mere bags of bones, many
-of them, blue-nosed, scarlet-splotched, diseased—if God should
-get them what would He do with them? On the other hand,
-in the so-called better walks of life, there were so many
-strutting, contentious, self-opinionated swine-masters whose
-faces were maps of gross egoism and whose clothes were almost
-a blare of sound.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think I said a little something of all this in the first newspaper
-special I ever wrote. It seemed to open the eyes of my
-superiors.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You know, Theodore,” Maxwell observed to me as he read
-my copy the next morning between one and three, “you have
-your faults, but you do know how to observe. You bring a
-fresh mind to bear on this stuff; anyhow I think maybe you’re
-cut out to be a writer after all, not just an ordinary newspaper
-man.” He lapsed into silence, and then at periods as he read
-he would exclaim: “Jesus Christ!” or “That’s a hell of a
-world!” Then he would fall foul of some turgid English and
-with a kind of malicious glee would cut and hack and restate
-and shake his head despairingly, until I was convinced that
-I had written the truckiest rot in the world. At the close,
-however, he arose, dusted his lap, lit a pipe and said: “Well,
-I think you’re nutty, but I believe you’re a writer just the
-same. They ought to let you do more Sunday specials.” And
-then he talked to me about phases of the Chicago he knew,
-contrasting it with a like section in San Francisco, where he
-had once worked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A hell of a fine novel is going to be written about some
-of these things one of these days,” he remarked; and from
-now on he treated me with such equality that I thought I
-must indeed be a very remarkable man.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>This</span> world of newspaper men who now received me on
-terms of social equality, who saw life from a purely opportunistic,
-and yet in the main sentimentally imaginative, viewpoint
-broadened me considerably and finally liberated me from
-moralistic and religionistic qualms. So many of them were
-hard, gallant adventurers without the slightest trace of the
-nervousness and terror of fortune which agitated me. They
-had been here, there, everywhere—San Francisco, Los Angeles,
-New York, Calcutta, London. They knew the ways of
-the newspaper world and to a limited extent the workings of
-society at large. The conventional-minded would have called
-them harsh, impracticable, impossible, largely because they
-knew nothing of trade, that great American standard of ability
-and force. Most of them, as I soon found, were like John
-Maxwell, free from notions as to how people were to act and
-what they were to think. To a certain extent they were confused
-by the general American passive acceptance of the Sermon
-on the Mount and the Beatitudes as governing principles,
-but in the main they were nearly all mistrustful of these
-things, and of conventional principles in general.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>They did not believe, as I still did, that there was a fixed
-moral order in the world which one contravened at his peril.
-Heaven only knows where they had been or what they had
-seen, but they misdoubted the motives, professed or secret,
-of nearly every man. No man, apparently, was utterly and
-consistently honest, that is, no man in a powerful or dominant
-position; and but few were kind or generous or truly public-spirited.
-As I sat in the office between assignments, or foregathered
-with them at dinner or at midnight in some one
-of the many small restaurants frequented by newspaper men,
-I heard tales of all sorts of scandals: robberies, murders,
-fornications, incendiarisms, not only in low life but in our so-called
-high life. Most of these young men looked upon life
-as a fierce, grim struggle in which no quarter was either given
-or taken, and in which all men laid traps, lied, squandered,
-erred through illusion: a conclusion with which I now most
-heartily agree. The one thing I would now add is that the
-brigandage of the world is in the main genial and that in our
-hour of success we are all inclined to be more or less liberal
-and warm-hearted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But at this time I was still sniffing about the Sermon on the
-Mount and the Beatitudes, expecting ordinary human flesh
-and blood to do and be those things. Hence the point of view
-of these men seemed at times a little horrific, at other times
-most tonic.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“People make laws for other people to live up to,” Maxwell
-once said to me, “and in order to protect themselves in what
-they have. They never intend those laws to apply to themselves
-or to prevent them from doing anything they wish to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was a youth whose wife believed that he did not
-drink. On two occasions within six weeks I was sent as envoy
-to inform his wife that he had suddenly been taken ill with indigestion
-and would soon be home. Then Maxwell and Brady
-would bundle him into a hack and send him off, one or two
-of us going along to help him into his house. So solemnly
-was all this done and so well did we play our parts that his
-wife believed it for a while—long enough for him to pull himself
-together a year later and give up drinking entirely. Another
-youth boasted that he was syphilitic and was curing
-himself with mercury; another there was whose joy it was to
-sleep in a house of prostitution every Saturday night, and so
-on. I tell these things not because I rejoice in them but merely
-to indicate the atmosphere into which I was thrown. Neither
-sobriety nor virtue nor continence nor incontinence was either
-a compelling or preventive cause of either success or failure
-or had anything to do with true newspaper ability; rather
-men succeeded by virtue of something that was not intimately
-related to any of these. If one could do anything which the
-world really wanted it would not trouble itself so much about
-one’s private life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another change that was being brought about in me was
-that which related to my personal opinion of myself, the feeling
-I was now swiftly acquiring that after all I amounted to
-something, was somebody. A special or two that I wrote,
-thanks largely to Maxwell’s careful schooling, brought me to
-the forefront among those of the staff who were writing for
-the Sunday supplement. A few news stories fell to my lot
-and I handled them with a freedom which won me praise on
-all sides. Not that I felt at the time that I was writing them
-so well or differently as that I was most earnestly concerned
-to state what I saw or felt or believed. I even essayed a
-few parables of my own, mild, poetic commentaries on I
-scarcely recall what, which Maxwell scanned with a scowling
-eye at first but later deigned to publish, affixing the signature
-of Carl Dreiser because he had decided to nickname me
-“Carl.” This grieved me, for I was dying to see my own
-name in print; but when they appeared I had the audacity to
-call upon the family and show them, boasting of my sudden
-rise in the world and saying that I had used the name Carl
-as a compliment to a nephew.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During this time I was taking a rather lofty hand with
-Alice because of my great success, unmindful of the fact that
-I had been boasting for months that I was connected with one
-of the best of the local papers and telling her that I did not
-think it so wonderful. But now I began to think that I was
-to be called to much higher realms, and solemnly asked myself
-if I should ever want to marry. A number of things helped
-to formulate this question in me. For one thing, I had no
-sooner been launched into general assignments than one afternoon,
-in seeking for the pictures of a group of girls who
-had taken part in some summer-night festival, I encountered
-one who seemed to be interested in me, a little blonde of about
-my own age, very sleek and dreamy. She responded to my
-somewhat timid advances when I called on her and condescended
-to smile as she gave me her photograph. I drew close
-to her and attempted a flirtation, to which she was not averse,
-and on parting I asked if I might call some afternoon or evening,
-hoping to crowd it in with my work. She agreed, and
-for several Sundays and week-nights I was put to my utmost
-resources to keep my engagements and do my work, for the
-newspaper profession that I knew, tolerated neither week-days
-nor Sundays off. I had to take an assignment and shirk it in
-part or telephone that I was delayed and could not come at all.
-Thus early even I began to adopt a cavalier attitude toward
-this very exacting work. Twice I took her to a theater, once to
-an organ recital, and once for a stroll in Jackson Park; by
-which time she seemed inclined to yield to my blandishments
-to the extent of permitting me to put my arms about her and
-even to kiss her, protesting always that I was wanton and
-forward and that she did not know whether she cared for me
-so much or not. Charming as she was, I did not feel that I
-should care for her very much. She was beautiful but too
-lymphatic, too carefully reared. Her mother, upon hearing of
-me, looked into the fact of whether I was truly connected with
-the <i>Globe</i> and then cautioned her daughter to be careful about
-making new friends. I saw that I was not welcome at that
-house and thereafter met her slyly. I might have triumphed
-in this case had I been so minded and possessed of a little
-more courage, but as I feared that I should have to undergo
-a long courtship with marriage at the end of it, my ardor
-cooled. Because she was new to me and comfortably stationed
-and better dressed than either Alice or N—— had ever been,
-I esteemed her more highly, made invidious comparisons from
-a material point of view, and wished that I could marry
-some such well-placed girl without assuming all the stern obligations
-of matrimony.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the second month of my work on the <i>Globe</i> there
-arrived on the scene a man who was destined to have a very
-marked effect on my career. He was a tall, dark, broad-shouldered,
-slender-legged individual of about forty-five or
-fifty, with a shock of curly black hair and a burst of smuggler-like
-whiskers. He was truly your Bret Harte gold-miner type,
-sloven, red-eyed at times, but amazingly intelligent and genial,
-reminding me not a little of my brother Rome in his best
-hours. He wore a long dusty, brownish-black frockcoat and a
-pair of black trousers specked, gummed, shined and worn by
-tobacco, food, liquor and rough usage. His feet were incased
-in wide-toed shoes of the old “boot-leather” variety, and the
-swirl of Jovian locks and beard was surmounted by a wide-brimmed
-black hat such as Kentucky colonels were wont to
-affect. His nose and cheeks were tinted a fiery red by much
-drinking, the nose having a veinous, bulbous, mottled and
-strawberry texture.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This man was John T. McEnnis, a well-known middle-West
-newspaper man of that day, a truly brilliant writer whose
-sole fault was that he drank too much. Originally from St.
-Louis, the son of a well-known politician there, he had taken
-up journalism as the most direct avenue to fame and fortune.
-At forty-five he found himself a mere hanger-on in this profession,
-tossed from job to job because of his weakness, his skill
-equaled if not outrivaled by that of younger men! It was
-commonly said that he could drink more and stand it better
-than any other man in Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why, he can’t begin to work unless he’s had three or
-four drinks to limber him up,” Harry Dunlap once said to
-me. “He has to have six or seven more to get through till
-evening.” He did not say how many were required to carry
-him on until midnight, but I fancy he must have consumed
-at least a half dozen more. He was in a constant state of
-semi-intoxication, which was often skillfully concealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During my second month on the <i>Globe</i> McEnnis was made
-city editor in place of Sullivan, who had gone to a better
-paper. Later he was made managing editor. I learned from
-Maxwell that he was well known in Chicago newspaper circles
-for his wit, his trenchant editorial pen, and that once he had
-been considered the most brilliant newspaper editor in St.
-Louis. He had a small, spare, intellectual wife, very homely
-and very dowdy, who still adored him and had suffered God
-knows what to be permitted to live with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The first afternoon I saw him sitting in the city editorial
-chair I was very much afraid of him and of my future. He
-looked raucous and uncouth, and Maxwell had told me that
-new editors usually brought in new men. As it turned out,
-however, much to my astonishment, he took an almost immediate
-fancy to me which ripened into a kind of fatherly
-affection and even, if you will permit me humbly to state a
-fact, a kind of adoration. Indeed he swelled my head by the
-genial and hearty manner in which almost at once he took
-me under his guidance and furthered my career as rapidly
-as he could, the while he borrowed as much of my small
-salary as he could. Please do not think that I begrudged this
-then or that I do now. I owe him more than a dozen such
-salaries borrowed over a period of years could ever repay.
-My one grief is, that I had so little to give him in return
-for the very great deal he did for me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The incident from which this burst of friendship seemed
-to take its rise was this. One day shortly after he arrived
-he gave me a small clipping concerning a girl on the south
-side who had run away or had been kidnaped from one of
-the dreariest homes it has ever been my lot to see. The
-girl was a hardy Irish creature of about sixteen. A neighborhood
-street boy had taken her to some wretched dive in South
-Clark Street and seduced her. Her mother, an old, Irish
-Catholic woman whom I found bending over a washtub when
-I called, was greatly exercised as to what had become of her
-daughter, of whom she had heard nothing since her disappearance.
-The police had been informed, and from clews
-picked up by a detective I learned the facts first mentioned.
-The mother wept into her wash as she told me of the death
-of her husband a few years before, of a boy who had been
-injured in such a way that he could not work, and now this
-girl, her last hope——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>From a newspaper point of view there was nothing much
-to the story, but I decided to follow it to the end. I found
-the house to which the boy had taken the girl, but they had
-just left. I found the parents of the youth, simple, plain
-working people, who knew nothing of his whereabouts. Something
-about the wretched little homes of both families, the
-tumbledown neighborhoods, the poverty and privation which
-would ill become a pretty sensuous girl, impelled me to write
-it out as I saw and felt it. I hurried back to the office that
-afternoon and scribbled out a kind of slum romance, which
-in the course of the night seemed to take the office by storm.
-Maxwell, who read it, scowled at first, then said it was interesting,
-and then fine.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Carl,” he interpolated at one point as he read, “you’re
-letting your youthful romantic mood get the best of you,
-I see. This will never do, Carl. Read Schopenhauer, my boy,
-read Schopenhauer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The city editor picked it up when he returned, intending,
-I presume, to see if there was any sign of interest in the
-general introduction; finding something in it to hold him, he
-read on carefully to the end, as I could see, for I was not a
-dozen feet away and could see what he was reading. When
-he finished he looked over at me and then called me to come
-to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I want to say to you,” he said, “that you have just done a
-fine piece of writing. I don’t go much on this kind of story,
-don’t believe in it as a rule for a daily paper, but the way
-you have handled this is fine. You’re young yet, and if
-you just keep yourself well in hand you have a future.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thereafter he became very friendly, asked me out one
-lunch-time to have a drink, borrowed a dollar and told me
-of some of the charms and wonders of journalistic work in
-St. Louis and elsewhere. He thought the <i>Globe</i> was too small
-a paper for me, that I ought to get on a larger one, preferably
-in another city, and suggested how valuable would be a period
-of work on the St. Louis <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, of which he had
-once been city editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You haven’t any idea how much you need all this,” he
-said. “You’re young and inexperienced, and a great paper
-like the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> or the New York <i>Sun</i> starts a boy
-off right. I would like to see you go first to St. Louis, and
-then to New York. Don’t settle down anywhere yet, don’t
-drink, and don’t get married, whatever you do. A wife
-will be a big handicap to you. You have a future, and I’m
-going to help you if I can.” Then he borrowed another
-dollar and left me.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Taken</span> up by this man in this way and with Maxwell as my
-literary guide and mentor still, I could not help but prosper
-to an extent at this task, and I did. I cannot recall now
-all the things that I was called upon to do, but one of the
-things that shortly after the arrival of McEnnis was assigned
-to me and that eventually brought my Chicago newspaper
-career to a close in a sort of blaze of glory as I saw it, at least,
-was a series of articles or rather a campaign to close a group of
-fake auction shops which were daily fleecing hundreds by selling
-bogus watches, jewelry, diamonds and the like, yet which
-were licensed by the city and from which the police were
-deriving a very handsome revenue. Although so new at this
-work the task was placed in my hands as a regular daily
-assignment by Mr. McEnnis with the comment that I must
-make something out of it, whether or not I thought I could
-put a news punch in it and close these places. That would
-be a real newspaper victory and ought to do me some good
-with my chief the managing editor. Campaigns of this kind
-are undertaken not in a spirit of righteousness as a rule but
-because of public pressure or a wish to increase circulation
-and popularity; yet in this case no such laudable or excusable
-intent could be alleged.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This paper was controlled by John B. MacDonald, an Irish
-politician, gambler, racer of horses, and the owner of a string
-of local houses of prostitution, saloons and gambling dens, all
-of which brought him a large income and made him influential
-politically. Recently he had fallen on comparatively difficult
-days. His reputation as a shady character had become too
-widespread. The pharisees and influential men generally who
-had formerly profited by his favor now found it expedient to
-pass by on the other side. Public sentiment against him had
-been aroused by political attacks on the part of one newspaper
-and another that did not belong to his party. The last election
-having been lost to him, the police and other departments
-of the city were now supposed to work in harmony to root
-out his vile though profitable vice privileges.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Everybody knows how these things work. Some administration
-attacks were made upon his privileges, whereupon, not
-finding suitable support in the papers of his own party in
-the city, they having axes of their own to grind, he had
-started a paper of his own, the <i>Globe</i>. He had brought
-on a capable newspaper man from New York, who was doing
-his best to make of the paper something which would satisfy
-MacDonald’s desire for circulation and influence while he
-lined his own pockets against a rainy day. For this reason,
-no doubt, our general staff was underpaid, though fairly capable.
-During my stay the police and other departments, under
-the guidance of Republican politicians and newspapers,
-were making an attack on Mr. MacDonald’s preserves; to
-which he replied by attacking through the medium of the
-<i>Globe</i> anything and everything he thought would do his
-rivals harm. Among these were a large number of these same
-mock auction shops in the downtown section. Evidently the
-police were deriving a direct revenue from these places, for
-they let them severely alone but since the administration was
-now anti-MacDonald and these were not Mr. MacDonald’s
-property nothing was left undone by us to stop this traffic.
-We charged, and it was true, that though victims daily appeared
-before the police to complain that they had been swindled
-and to ask for restitution, nothing was done by the police.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I cannot now recall what it was about my treatment of these
-institutions that aroused so much interest in the office and
-made me into a kind of <i>Globe</i> hero. I was innocent of all
-knowledge of the above complications which I have just described
-when I started, and almost as innocent when I concluded.
-Nevertheless now daily at ten in the morning and
-again in the afternoon I went to one or another of these shops,
-listened to the harangue of the noisy barkers, saw tin-gilt
-jewelry knocked down to unsuspecting yokels from the South
-and West who stood open-mouthed watching the hypnotizing
-movements of the auctioneer’s hands as he waved a glistering
-gem or watch in front of them and expatiated on the beauties
-and perfections of the article he was compelled to part from
-for a song. These places were not only deceptions and frauds
-in what they pretended to sell but also gathering-places for
-thieves, pick-pockets, footpads who, finding some deluded bystander
-to be possessed of a watch, pin or roll of money other
-than that from which he was parted by the auctioneer or his
-associates, either then and there by some legerdemain robbed
-him or followed him into a dark street and knocked him
-down and did the same. At this time Chicago was notorious
-for this sort of thing, and it was openly charged in the
-<i>Globe</i> and elsewhere that the police connived at and thrived
-by the transactions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My descriptions of what was going on, innocent and matter
-of fact as they were at first and devoid of guile or make-believe,
-so pleased Mr. McEnnis beyond anything I had previously
-done that he was actually fulsome and yet at the same
-time mandatory and restraining in his compliments. I have no
-desire to praise myself at this time. Such things and so much
-that seemed so important then have since become trivial
-beyond words but it is only fair to state that he was seemingly
-immensely pleased and amused as was Maxwell.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Upon my word,” I once heard him exclaim, as he read one
-of my daily effusions. “The rascals. Who would think that
-such scamps would be allowed to run at large in a city like
-this! They certainly ought to be in jail. Every one of them.
-And the police along with them.” Then he chuckled, slapped
-his knee and finally came over and made some inquiries in
-regard to a certain dealer whom I had chanced to picture.
-I was cautioned against overstating anything; also against detection
-and being beaten up by those whom I was offending.
-For I noticed after the first day or two that the barkers of
-some of the shops occasionally studied me curiously or ceased
-their more shameful effronteries in my presence and produced
-something of more value. The facts which my articles
-presented, however, finally began to attract a little attention
-to the paper. Either because the paper sold better or because
-this was an excellent club wherewith to belabor his enemies,
-the publisher now decided to call the attention of the public
-via the billboards, to what was going on in our columns, and
-McEnnis himself undertook to frighten the police into action
-by swearing out warrants against the different owners of the
-shops and thus compelling them to take action.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I became the center of a semi-literary, semi-public reform
-hubbub. The principal members of the staff assured me that
-the articles were forceful in fact and color and highly amusing.
-One day, by way of the license bureau and with the aid
-of McEnnis, I secured the names of the alleged owners and
-managers of nearly all of these shops and thereafter attacked
-them by name, describing them just as they were, where they
-lived, how they made their money, etc. In company with a
-private detective and several times with McEnnis, I personally
-served warrants of arrest, accompanied the sharpers to
-police headquarters, where they were immediately released
-on bail, and then ran to the office to write out my impressions
-of all I had seen, repeating conversations as nearly as I
-could remember, describing uncouth faces and bodies of
-crooks, policemen and detectives, and by sly innuendo indicating
-what a farce and sham was the whole seeming interest
-of the police.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day McEnnis and I called on the chief of police, demanding
-to know why he was so indifferent to our crusade
-and the facts we put before him. To my youthful amazement
-and enlightenment he shook his fist in our faces and exclaimed:
-“You can go to the devil, and so can the <i>Globe</i>! I know
-who’s back of this campaign, and why. Well, go on and
-play your little game! Shout all you want to. Who’s going
-to listen to you? You haven’t any circulation. You’re not
-going to make a mark of me, and you’re not going to get me
-fired out of here for not performing my duty. Your paper
-is only a dirty political rag without any influence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is it!” taunted McEnnis. “Well, you just wait and see.
-I think you’ll change your mind as to that,” and we stalked
-solemnly out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And in the course of time he did change his mind. Some
-of the fakers had to be arrested and fined and their places
-closed up, and the longer we talked and exposed the worse
-it became for them. Finally a dealer approached me one
-morning and offered me an eighteen-carat gold watch, to be
-selected by me from any jewelry store in the city and paid
-for by him, if I would let his store alone. I refused. Another,
-a dark, dusty, most amusing little Jew, offered me a
-diamond pin, insisting upon sticking it in my cravat, and
-said: “Go see! Go see! Ask any jeweler what he thinks,
-if that ain’t a real stone! If it ain’t—if he says no—bring it
-back to me and I’ll give you a hundred dollars in cash for
-it. Don’t you mention me no more now. Be a nice young
-feller now. I’m a hard-workin’ man just like anybody else.
-I run a honest place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I carried the pin back to the office and gave it to McEnnis.
-He stared at me in amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why did you do this?” he exclaimed. “You shouldn’t
-have taken this, at all. It may get the paper in trouble.
-They may have had witnesses to this—but maybe not. Perhaps
-this fellow is just trying to protect himself. Anyway,
-we’re going to take this thing back to him and don’t take
-anything more, do you hear, money or anything. You can’t
-do that sort of thing. If I didn’t think you were honest I’d
-fire you right now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He took me into the office of the editor-in-chief, who looked
-at me with still, gray-blue eyes and listened to my story.
-He dismissed me and talked with McEnnis for a while. When
-the latter came out he exclaimed triumphantly: “He sees
-that you’re honest, all right, and he’s tickled to death. Now
-we’ll take this pin back, and then you’ll write out the whole
-story just as it happened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the way we went to a magistrate to swear out a charge
-of attempted bribery against this man, and later in the same
-day I went with the detective to serve the warrant. To myself
-I seemed to be swimming in a delicious sea of life. “What
-a fine thing life is!” I thought. “Here I am getting along
-famously because I can write. Soon I will get more money,
-and maybe some day people will begin to hear of me. I will
-get a fine reputation in the newspaper world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thanks to this vigorous campaign, of which McEnnis was
-the inspiration and guiding spirit, all these auction shops were
-eventually closed. In so much at least John B. MacDonald
-had achieved a revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As for myself, I felt that there must be some serious and
-favorable change impending for me; and true enough, within
-a fortnight after this the change came. I had noticed that
-McEnnis had become more and more friendly. He introduced
-me to his wife one day when she was in the office and told
-her in my presence what splendid work I was doing. Often he
-would take me to lunch or to a saloon for drinks (for which I
-would pay), and would then borrow a dollar or two or three,
-no part of which he ever returned. He lectured me on the
-subject of study, urging me to give myself a general education
-by reading, attending lectures and the like. He wanted me
-to look into painting, music, sculpture. As he talked the blood
-would swirl in my head, and I kept thinking what a brilliant
-career must be awaiting me. One thing he did was to secure
-me a place on the St. Louis <i>Globe-Democrat</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just at this time a man whose name I have forgotten—Leland,
-I think—the Washington correspondent of the St.
-Louis <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, came to Chicago to report the preliminary
-preparations for the great World’s Fair which was to
-open the following spring. Already the construction of a
-number of great buildings in Jackson Park had been begun,
-and the newspapers throughout the country were on the alert
-as to its progress. Leland, as I may as well call him, a cool,
-capable observer and writer, was an old friend of McEnnis.
-McEnnis introduced me to him and made an impassioned plea
-in my behalf for an opportunity for me to do some writing for
-the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> in St. Louis under his direction. The idea
-was to get this man to allow me to do some World’s Fair work
-for him, on the side, in addition to my work on the <i>Globe</i>,
-and then later to persuade Joseph B. McCullagh of the former
-paper to make a place for me in St. Louis.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“As you see,” he said when he introduced me, “he’s a mere
-boy without any experience, but he has the makings of a
-first-rate newspaper man. I’m sure of it. Now, Henry, as
-a favor to me, I want you to help him. You’re close to
-Mac” (Joseph B. McCullagh, editor-in-chief of the St. Louis
-<i>Globe-Democrat</i>), “and he’s just the man this boy ought to
-go to to get his training. Dreiser has just completed a fine
-piece of journalistic work for me. He’s closed up the fake
-auction shops here, and I want to reward him. He only gets
-fifteen a week here, and I can’t do anything for him in Chicago
-just now. You write and ask Mac to take him on down there,
-and I’ll write also and tell him how I feel about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The upshot of this was that I was immediately taken into
-the favor of Mr. Leland, given some easy gossip writing
-to do, which netted me sixteen dollars the week for three weeks
-in addition to the fifteen I earned on the <i>Globe</i>. At the end
-of that time, some correspondence having ensued between the
-editor of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> and his two Chicago admirers, I
-one day received a telegram which read:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“You may have reportorial position on this paper at twenty dollars
-a week, beginning next Monday. Wire reply.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>I stood in the dusty little <i>Globe</i> office and stared at this,
-wondering what so great an opportunity portended. Only
-six months before I had been jobless and hanging about this
-back door; here I was tonight with as much as fifty dollars
-in my pocket, a suit of good clothes on my back, good shoes,
-a good hat and overcoat. I had learned how to write and was
-already classed here as a star reporter. I felt as though life
-were going to do wonderful and beautiful things for me. I
-thought of Alice, that now I should have to leave her and this
-familiar and now comfortable Chicago atmosphere, and then
-I went over to McEnnis to ask him what I ought to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When he read the telegram he said: “This is the best
-chance that could possibly come to you. You will be working
-on one of the greatest papers and under one of the greatest
-editors that ever lived. Make the most of your chance. Go?
-Of course go! Let’s see—it’s Tuesday; our regular week ends
-Friday. You hand in your resignation now, to take effect
-then, and go Sunday. I’ll give you some letters that will help
-you,” and he at once turned to his desk and wrote out a series
-of instructions and recommendations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That night, and for four days after, until I took the train
-for St. Louis, I walked on air. I was going away. I was going
-out in the world to make my fortune. Withal I was touched
-by the pathos of the fact that life and youth and everything
-which now glimmered about me so hopefully was, for me as
-well as for every other living individual, insensibly slipping
-away.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>This</span> sudden decision to terminate my newspaper life in
-Chicago involved the problem of what to do about Alice. During
-these spring and summer days I had been amusing myself
-with her, imagining sometimes, because of her pretty face and
-figure and her soft clinging ways, that I was in love with her.
-By the lakes and pagodas of Chicago’s parks, on the lake
-shore at Lincoln Park where the white sails were to be seen,
-in Alice’s cozy little room with the windows open and the
-lights out, or of a Sunday morning when her parents were
-away visiting and she was preparing my breakfast and flouring
-her nose and chin in the attempt—how happy we were!
-How we frivoled and kissed and made promises to ourselves
-concerning the future! We were like two children at times,
-and for a while I half decided that I would marry her. In a
-little while we were going everywhere together and she
-was planning her wedding trousseau, the little fineries she
-would have when we were married. We were to live on the
-south side near the lake in a tiny apartment. She described to
-me the costume she would wear, which was to be of satin of
-an ivory shade, with laces, veils, slippers and stockings to
-match.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But as spring wore on and I grew so restless I began to
-think not so much less of Alice as more of myself. I never saw
-her as anything but beautiful, tender, a delicate, almost
-perfect creature for some one to love and cherish. Once we
-went hand-in-hand over the lawns of Jackson Park of a Sunday
-afternoon. She was enticing in a new white flannel dress
-and dark blue hat. The day was warm and clear and a convoy
-of swans was sailing grandly about the little lake. We
-sat down and watched them and the ducks, the rowers in
-green, blue and white boats, with the white pagoda in the
-center of the lake reflected in the water. All was colorful,
-gay.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Dorse,” she said at one place, with a little gasping
-sigh which moved me by its pathos, “isn’t it lovely?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We are so happy when we are together, aren’t we?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I wish we were married! If we just had a little place
-of our own! You could come home to me, and I could make
-you such nice things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I promised her happy days to come, but even as I said it
-I knew it would not be. I did not think I could build a life
-on my salary ... I did not know that I wanted to. Life was
-too wide and full. She seemed to sense something of this from
-the very beginning, and clung close to me now as we walked,
-looking up into my eyes, smiling almost sadly. As the hours
-slipped away into dusk and the hush of evening suggested
-change and the end of many things she sighed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Dorse,” she said as we reached her doorstep, “if we
-could just be together always and never part!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We will be,” I said, but I did not believe my own words.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was on this spring night that she attempted to persuade
-me, not by words or any great craft but merely by a yielding
-pressure, to take her and make her fully mine. I fancy she
-thought that if she yielded to me physically and found herself
-with child my sympathy would cause me to marry her. We in
-her own home threw some pillows on the floor, and there in my
-arms she kissed and hugged me, begging me to love her; but
-I had not the wish. I did not think that I ought to do that
-thing, then.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was after this that the upward turn of my fortunes
-began. I was involved in the mock auction war for over
-three weeks and for two weeks following that with my buzzing
-dreams of leaving Chicago. In this rush of work, and in paying
-some attentions to Miss Winstead, I neglected Alice shamefully,
-once for ten days, not calling at her house or store
-or writing her a note. One Sunday morning, troubled about
-me and no doubt heartsick, she attended the ethical culture
-lecture in the Grand Theater, where I often went. On coming
-out she met me and I greeted her affectionately, but she only
-looked at me with sad and reproachful eyes and said: “Oh,
-Dorse, you don’t really care any more, do you? You’re just
-a little sorry when you see me. Well, you needn’t come any
-more. I’m going back to Harry. I’m only too glad that I
-can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She admitted that, misdoubting me, she had never dropped
-him entirely but had kept him calling occasionally. This
-angered me and I said to myself: “What is she that I should
-worry over her?” Imagine. And this double-dealing, essential
-as it was then, cut me to the quick, although I had been
-doing as much and more. When I thought it out I knew that
-she was entitled to protect herself against so uncertain a love
-as mine. Even then I could have taken her—she practically
-asked me to—but I offered reasons and excuses for delay. I
-went away both angry and sad, and the following Sunday,
-having received the telegram from St. Louis, I left without
-notifying her. Indeed I trifled about on this score debating
-with myself until Saturday night, when McEnnis asked me to
-go to dinner with him; afterwards when I hurried to her
-home she was not there. This angered me groundlessly, even
-though I knew she never expected me any more of a Saturday
-night. I returned to my room, disconsolate and gloomy,
-packed my belongings and then decided that I would go back
-after midnight and knock at her door. Remembering that my
-train left at seven-thirty next morning and having no doubt
-that she was off with my rival, I decided to punish her. After
-all, I could come back if I wished, or she could come to me.
-I wrote her a note, then went to bed and slept fitfully until
-six-thirty, when I arose and hurried to make my train. In a
-little while I was off, speeding through those wide flat yards
-which lay adjacent to her home, and with my nose pressed
-against the window, a driving rain outside, I could see the very
-windows and steps by which we had so often sat. My heart
-sank and I ached. I decided at once to write her upon my
-arrival in St. Louis and beg her to come—not to become my
-wife perhaps but my mistress. I brooded gloomily all day as
-I sped southward, picturing myself as a lorn youth without
-money, home, family, love, anything. I tried to be sad, thinking
-at the same time what wonderful things might not be going
-to befall me. But I was leaving Alice! I was leaving Chicago,
-my home, all that was familiar and dear! I felt as though
-I could not stand it, as though when I reached St. Louis I
-should take the next train and return.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> time was November, 1892. St. Louis, as I stepped off
-the train that Sunday evening, after leaving Chicago in cold
-dreary state, seemed a warmer clime. The air was soft, almost
-balmy; but St. Louis could be cold enough too, as I soon discovered.
-The station, then at Twelfth and Poplar (the
-new Union Station at Eighteenth and Market was then building),
-an antiquated affair of brick and stone, with the tracks
-stretching in rows in front of it and reached by board walks
-laid at right angles to them, seemed unspeakably shabby and
-inconvenient to me after the better ones of Chicago. St. Louis,
-I said to myself, was not as good as Chicago. Chicago was
-rough, powerful, active; St. Louis was sleepy and slow. This
-was due, however, to the fact that I entered it of a Sunday
-evening and all its central portion was still. Contrasted with
-Chicago it was not a metropolis at all. While rich and successful
-it was a creature of another mood and of slower growth.
-I learned in time to like it very much, but for the things
-that set it apart from other cities, not for the things by which
-it sought to rival them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But on that evening how dull and commonplace it seemed—how
-slow after the wave-like pulsation of energy that appeared
-to shake the very air of Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I made my way to a hotel called The Silver Moon, recommended
-to me by my mentor and sponsor, where one could
-get a room for a dollar, a meal for twenty-five cents. Outside
-of Joseph B. McCullagh, editor of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, and
-Edmond O’Neill, former editor of the <i>Republic</i> to whom I
-bore a letter, there was no one to whom I might commend myself.
-I did not care. I was in a strange city at last! I was
-out in the world now really, away from my family. My great
-interest was in life as a spectacle, this singing, rhythmic, mystic
-state in which I found myself. Life, the great sea! Life,
-the wondrous, colorful riddle!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After eating a bite in the almost darkened restaurant of
-this hotel I at once went out into Pine Street and stared at
-the street-cars, yellow, red, orange, green, brown, labeled
-Choteau Avenue, Tower Grove, Jefferson Avenue, Carondelet.
-My first business was to find the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> building, a
-prosperous eight-story brownstone and brick affair standing
-at Sixth and Pine. I stared at this building in the night, looking
-through the great plate glass windows at an onyx-lined
-office, and finally went in and bought a Sunday paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went to my room and studied this paper—then slept,
-thinking of my coming introduction in the morning. I was
-awakened by the clangor of countless cars. Going to the stationary
-washstand I was struck at once by the yellowness of
-the water, a dark yellowish-brown, which deposited a yellow
-sediment in the glass. Was that the best St. Louis could
-afford? I asked myself in youthful derision. I drank it just
-the same, went down to breakfast and then out into the city
-to see what I should see. I bought a <i>Globe-Democrat</i> (a
-Republican party paper, by the way: an anachronism of age
-and change of ownership) and a <i>Republic</i>, the one morning
-Democratic paper, and then walked to Sixth and Pine to have
-another look at the building in which I was to work. I wandered
-along Broadway and Fourth Street, the street of the
-old courthouse; sought out the Mississippi River and stared
-at it, that vast river lying between banks of yellow mud; then
-I went back to the office of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, for it was
-nearing the time when its editor-in-chief might choose to put
-in an appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Joseph B. McCullagh (“Little Mac” of Eugene Field’s
-verse) was a short, thick, aggressive, rather pugnacious and
-defensive person of Irish extraction. He was short, sturdy,
-Napoleonic, ursine rather than leonine. I was instantly drawn
-and thrown back by his stiff reserve. A negro elevator boy
-had waved me along a marble hall on the seventh floor to a
-room at the end, where I was met by an office boy who took
-in my name and then ushered me into the great man’s presence.
-I found him at a roll-top desk in a minute office, and he
-was almost buried in discarded newspapers. I learned afterward
-that he would never allow these to be removed until he
-was all but crowded out. I was racked with nervousness.
-Whatever high estimate I had conceived of myself had oozed
-out by the time I reached his door. I was now surveyed by
-keen gray Irish eyes from under bushy brows.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Um, yuss! Um, yuss!” was all he deigned to say. “See
-Mr. Mitchell in the city room, Mr. Mitchell—um, yuss. Your
-salary will be—um—um—twenty dollars to begin with” (he
-was chewing a cigar and mumbled his words), and he turned
-to his papers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Not a word, not a sign, that he knew I had ever written a
-line worth while. I returned to the handsome city room, and
-found only empty desks. I sat down and waited fully three-quarters
-of an hour, examining old papers and staring out of
-the windows over the roofs until Mr. Mitchell appeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Like his employer, he was thick-set, a bigger man physically
-but less attractive. He had a round, closely-cropped head and
-a severe and scowling expression. He reminded me of Squeers
-in <i>Nicholas Nickleby</i>. A savage fat man—can anything be
-worse? He went to his desk with a quick stride when he
-entered, never noticing me. When I approached and explained
-who I was and why I was there he scarcely gave me a
-glance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The afternoon assignments won’t be ready till twelve-thirty,”
-he commented drily. “Better take a seat in the
-next room.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was then only eleven-thirty, and I went into the next room
-and waited. It was empty but deliciously warm on this chilly
-day. How different from McEnnis, I thought. Evidently
-being called to a newspaper by telegram was not to be interpreted
-as auguring that one was to lie on a bed of roses.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A little bit afraid to leave for this hour, in case he might
-call, I hung about the two windows of this room staring at
-the new city. How wonderful it seemed, now this morning,
-after the quiet of the night before, how strong and forceful
-in this November air. The streets and sky were full of smoke;
-there was a clangor of street-car gongs below and the rumble
-of endless trucks. A block or two away loomed up a tall
-building of the newer order, twelve stories at least. Most of
-the buildings were small, old family dwellings turned into
-stores. I wondered about the life of the city, its charms, its
-prospects. What did it hold for me? How long would I remain
-here? Would this paper afford me any real advancement?
-Could I make a great impression and rise?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I was thus meditating several newspaper men came in.
-One was a short bustling fellow with a golden-brown mustache
-and a shock of curly brown hair, whose name I subsequently
-learned was Hazard—a fitting name for a newspaper
-reporter. He wore a fedora hat, a short cream-colored overcoat
-which had many wrinkles about the skirts in the back,
-and striped trousers. He came in with a brisk air, slightly
-skipping his feet as he walked, and took a desk, which was
-nothing more than a segment of one long desk fastened to the
-wall and divided by varnished partitions of light oak. As soon
-as he was seated he opened a drawer and took out a pipe,
-which he briskly filled and lighted, and then began to examine
-some papers he had in his pockets. I liked his looks.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There sauntered in next a pale creature in a steel-gray suit
-of not too new a look, who took a seat directly opposite the
-first comer. His left hand, in a brown glove, hung at his side;
-apparently it was of wood or stuffed leather. Later there arrived
-a negro of very intellectual bearing, who took a seat next
-the second arrival; then a stout, phlegmatic-looking man with
-dark eyes, dark hair and skin, which gave me a feeling of
-something saturnine in his disposition. The next arrival
-was a small skippity man, bustling about like a little mouse,
-and having somewhat of a mousy look in his eyes, who seemed
-to be attached to the main city editorial room in some capacity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A curious company gradually filed in, fourteen or fifteen
-all told. I gave up trying to catalogue them and turned to
-look out the window. The little bustling creature came
-through the room several times, looked at me without deigning
-to speak however, and finally put his head in at the door and
-whispered to the attendant group: “The book’s ready.” At
-this there was an immediate stir, nearly all of the men got
-up and one by one they filed into the next room. Assuming
-that they were going to consult the assignment book, I followed,
-but my name was not down. In Chicago my city
-editor usually called each individual to him in person; here
-each man was supposed to discover his assignment from a
-written page. I returned to the reporters’ room when I found
-my name was not down, wondering what I should be used
-for.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The others were not long gone before I was sought by the
-mouse—Hugh Keller Hartung by name—who whispered:
-“The city editor wants to see you”; and then for the second
-time I faced this gloomy man, whom I had already begun not
-only to dislike but to fear. He was dark and savage, in his
-mood to me at least, whether unconsciously so or not I do not
-know. His broad face, set with a straight full nose and a
-wide thin-lipped mouth, gave him a frozen Cromwellian outline.
-He seemed a queer, unliterary type to be attached to
-so remarkable a journalist as McCullagh.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“There’s been some trouble down at this number,” he said,
-handing me a slip of paper on which an address was written.
-“A fight, I think. See if you can find out anything about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried out, immensely relieved to get into the fresh air
-of the city. I finally made my way to the place, only to find
-a vacant lot. Thinking there might be some mistake, I went
-to the nearest police station and inquired. Nothing was
-known. Fearing to fall down on my first assignment, I returned
-to the lot, but could learn nothing. Gradually it began
-to dawn upon me that this might be merely a trial assignment,
-a bright idea of the frowning fat man, a bearings-finder. I
-had already conceived a vast contempt for him, a stumbling-block
-in my path, I thought. No wonder he came to hate me,
-as I learned afterward he did.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wandered back through the city, looking at the strange
-little low houses (it was the region between the river and
-North Broadway, about a mile above the courthouse), and
-marveling at the darksome character of the stores. Never in
-my life had I seen such old buildings, all brick and all
-crowded together, with solid wood or iron shutters, modeled
-after those of France from whence its original settlers came
-and having something of the dourness of the poorer quarters
-of Paris about them, and windows composed of very
-small panes of glass, evidences of the influence of France, I
-am sure. Their interiors seemed so dark, so redolent of an
-old-time life. The streets also appeared old-fashioned with
-their cobblestones, their twists and turns and the very little
-space that lay between the curbs. I felt as though the people
-must be different from those in Chicago, less dynamic, less
-aggressive.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I reached the office I found that the city editor, Mr.
-Mitchell, had gone. The little mousy individual was at one
-of the parti-divisions of the wall desk, near Mr. Mitchell’s big
-one, diving into a mass of copy the while he scratched his ear
-or trifled with his pencil or jumped mousily about in his
-seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is Mr. Mitchell about?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No,” replied the other briskly; “he never gets in much
-before four o’clock. Anything you want to know? I’m his
-assistant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He did not dare say “assistant city editor”; his superior
-would not have tolerated one.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He sent me out to this place, but it’s only a vacant lot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Did you look all around the neighborhood? Sometimes
-you can get news of these things in the neighborhood, you
-know, when you can’t get it right at the spot. I often do
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I answered. “I inquired all about there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It would be just like Tobe to send you out there, though,”
-he went on feverishly and timidly, “just to break you in.
-He does things like that. You’re the new man from Chicago,
-aren’t you—Dreiser?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, but how did you know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He said you were coming,” he replied, jerking his left
-thumb over his shoulder. “My name’s Hartung, Hugh Keller
-Hartung.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He was so respectful, almost fearsome in his references
-to his superior that I could not help smiling. Now that I had
-my bearings, I did not feel so keenly about Mr. Mitchell. He
-seemed dull.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I suppose you’ll find St. Louis a little slower than Chicago,”
-he went on, “but we have some of the biggest newspaper
-stories here you ever saw. You remember the Preller
-Trunk Mystery, don’t you, and that big Missouri-Pacific train
-robbery last year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recalled both distinctly. “Is that so?” I commented,
-thinking of my career in Chicago and hoping for a duplication
-of it here.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Heavy steps were heard in the hall just outside, and Mr.
-Hartung jumped to his work like a frightened mouse; on the
-instant his head was fairly pulled down between his shoulders
-and his nose pressed over his work. He seemed to shrivel
-and shrink, and I wondered why. I went into the next room
-just as Mr. Tobias Mitchell entered. When I explained that
-the address he had given me was a vacant lot he merely
-looked up at me quizzically, suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Couldn’t find it, eh? Somebody must have given me the
-wrong tip. Wait in the next room. I’ll call you when I
-want you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I returned to that empty room, from which I could hear the
-industrious pencil of Mr. Hartung and the occasional throat-clearing
-cough of Mr. Mitchell brooding among his papers.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>This</span> reporters’ room, for all its handsome furnishings,
-never took on an agreeable atmosphere to me; it was too
-gloomy—and solely because of the personality next door. The
-room was empty when I entered, but in a short while an old
-drunken railroad reporter with a red nose came in and sat
-down in a corner seat, taking no notice of me. I read the
-morning paper and waited. The room gradually filled up, and
-all went at once to their desks and began to write industriously.
-I felt very much out of tune; a reporter’s duty at this
-hour of the night was to write.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, I made the best of my time reading, and finally
-went out to supper alone, returning as quickly as possible
-in case there should be an assignment for me. When I returned
-I found my name on the book and I set out to interview
-a Chicago minister who was visiting in the city. Evidently
-this city editor thought it would be easier for me to
-interview a Chicago minister than any other. I found my
-man, after some knocking at wrong doors, and got nothing
-worth a stick—mere religious drive—and returned with my
-“story,” which was never used.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While I was writing it up, however, the youth of the Jovian
-curls returned from an assignment, hung up his little wrinkled
-overcoat and sat down in great comfort next me. His evening’s
-work was apparently futile for he took out his pipe,
-rapped it sonorously on his chair, lighted it and then picked
-up an evening paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What’s doing, Jock, up at police headquarters?” called
-the little man over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nothing much, Bob,” replied the other, without looking
-up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“By jing, you police reporters have a cinch!” jested the
-first. “All you do is sit around up there at headquarters
-and get the news off the police blotters, while we poor devils
-are chasing all over town. <i>We</i> have to earn our money.”
-His voice had a peculiarly healthy, gay and bantering ring
-to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s no joke,” put in a long, lean, spectacled individual
-who was sitting in another corner. “I’ve been tramping all
-over south St. Louis, looking for a confounded robbery story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you’ve got long legs, Benson,” retorted the jovial
-Hazard. “You can stand it. Now I’m not so well fixed that
-way. Bellairs, there, ought to be given a chance at that.
-He wouldn’t be getting so fat, by jing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The one called Jock also answered to the name of Bellairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You people don’t do so much,” he replied, grinning
-cheerfully. “If you had my job you wouldn’t be sitting
-here reading a newspaper. It takes work to be a police reporter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is that so?” queried the little man banteringly. “You’re
-proof of it, I suppose? Why, you never did a good day’s work
-in your life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Give us a match, Bob, and shut up,” grinned the other.
-“You’re too noisy. I’ve got a lot of work ahead of me yet
-tonight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I got your work! Is she over sixteen? Wish I had
-your job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Jock folded up some copy paper and put it into his pocket
-and walked into the next room, where the little assistant was
-toiling away over the night’s grist of news.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I still sat there, looking curiously on.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It’s pretty tough,” said the spirited Hazard, turning to
-me, “to go out on an assignment and then get nothing. I’d
-rather work hard over a good story any day, wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s the way I feel about it,” I replied. “It’s not much
-fun, sitting around. By the way, do you know whose desk this
-is? I’ve been sitting at it all evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It doesn’t belong to anybody at present. You might as
-well take it if you like it. There’s a vacant one over there
-next to Benson’s, if you like that better.” He waved toward
-the tall awkward scribe in the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This is good enough,” I replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Take your choice. There’s no trouble about desks just
-now. The staff’s way down anyhow. You’re a stranger here,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes; I only came down from Chicago yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What paper’d jeh work on up there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The <i>Globe</i> and <i>News</i>,” I answered, lying about the latter
-in order to give myself a better standing than otherwise I
-might have.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“They’re good papers, aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, pretty fair. The <i>News</i> has the largest evening circulation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We have some good papers here too. This is one of the
-biggest. The <i>Post-Dispatch</i> is pretty good too; it’s the biggest
-evening paper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you know how much circulation this paper has?” I
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, about fifty thousand, I should say. That’s not so
-much, compared to Chicago circulation, but it’s pretty big
-for down here. We have the biggest circulation of any paper
-in the Southwest. McCullagh’s one of the greatest editors in
-this country, outside of Dana in New York, the greatest of any.
-If McCullagh were in New York he’d be bigger than he is, by
-jing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you run many big news stories?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sometimes; not often. The <i>Globe</i> goes very light on local
-news. They play up the telegraph on this paper because we
-go into Texas and Arkansas and Louisiana and all these other
-States around here. We use $400,000 worth of telegraph news
-here every year,” and he said it as though he were part owner
-of the paper. I liked him very much.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I opened my eyes at this news and thought dubiously of it
-in relation to my own work. It did not promise much for a big
-feature, on which I might spread myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We talked on, becoming more and more friendly. In spite
-of the city editor, whom I did not like, I now began to like this
-place, although I could feel that these men were more or less
-browbeaten, held down and frozen. The room was much too
-quiet for a healthy Western reportorial room, the atmosphere
-too chill.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We talked of St. Louis, its size (450,000), its principal
-hotels, the Southern, the Lindell and the La Clede (I learned
-that its oldest and best, the Planter, had recently been torn
-down and was going to be rebuilt some day), what were the
-chief lines of news. It seemed that fires, murders, defalcations,
-scandals were here as elsewhere the great things, far over-shadowing
-most things of national and international import.
-Recently a tremendous defalcation had occurred, and this new
-acquaintance of mine had been working on it, had “handled
-it alone,” as he said. Like all citizens of an American city he
-was pro-St. Louis, anxious to say a good word for it. The
-finest portion of it, he told me, was in the west end. I should
-see the wonderful new residences and places. There was a
-great park here, Forrest, over fourteen hundred acres in size,
-a wonderful thing. A new bridge was building in north St.
-Louis and would soon be completed, one that would relieve
-traffic on the Eads Bridge and help St. Louis to grow. There
-was a small city over the river in Illinois, East St. Louis, and
-a great Terminal Railroad Association which controlled all the
-local railroad facilities and taxed each trunk line six dollars
-a car to enter and each passenger twenty-five cents. “It’s a
-great graft and a damned shame, but what can you do?” was
-his comment. Traffic on the Mississippi was not so much now,
-owing to the railroads that paralleled it, but still it was interesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The already familiar noise of a roll-top desk broke in upon
-us from the next room, and I noticed a hush fall on the room.
-What an atmosphere! I thought. After a few moments of
-silence my new friend turned to me and whispered very softly:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s Tobe Mitchell, the city editor, coming in. He’s a
-proper ——, as you’ll find.” He smiled wisely and began
-scribbling again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He didn’t look so pleasant to me,” I replied as softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ve quit here twice,” he whispered. “The next time I go
-I won’t come back. I don’t have to stay here, and he knows it.
-I can get a job any day on the <i>Chronicle</i>, and wouldn’t have to
-work so hard either. That’s an evening paper. I stay here
-because I like a morning paper better, that’s all. There’s more
-to it. Everything’s so scrappy and kicked together on an evening
-paper. But he doesn’t say much to me any more,
-although he doesn’t like me. You’d think we were a lot of
-kids, and this place a schoolroom.” He frowned.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We dropped into silence again. I did not like this thought
-of difficulty thrust upon me. What a pity a man like McEnnis
-was not here!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He doesn’t look like much of a newspaper man to me,” I
-observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And he isn’t either. McCullagh has him here because he
-saved his life once in a fight somewhere, down in Texas, I think—or
-that’s what they tell me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We sat and read; the sound of city life below had died out
-and one could hear the scratching of reporters’ pens. Assignments
-were written up and turned in, and then the reporters
-idled about, dangling their legs from spring-back chairs, smoking
-pipes and whispering. As the clock registered eleven-thirty
-the round body of Mitchell appeared in the doorway,
-his fair-tinted visage darkened by a faint scowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You boys can go now,” he pronounced solemnly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All arose, I among them, and went to a closet where were our
-hats and overcoats. I was tired, and this atmosphere had
-depressed me. What a life! Had I come down here for this?
-The thought of the small news end which the local life received
-depressed me also. I could not see how I was to make
-out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went down to a rear elevator, the only one running at this
-time of night, and came out into the dark street, where a carriage
-was waiting. I assumed that this must be for the
-famous editor. It looked so comfortable and sedate, waiting
-at the door in the darkness for an editor who, as I later
-learned, might not choose to leave until two. I went on to my
-little room at the hotel, filled with ideas of how, some day, I
-should be a great editor and have a carriage waiting for me.
-Yes; I felt that I was destined for a great end. For the present
-I must be content to look around for a modest room where I
-could sleep and bide my time and opportunity.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I found</span> a room the next morning in Pine Street, only a few
-doors from this hotel and a block from my new office. It was
-a hall bedroom, one of a long series which I was to occupy,
-dirty and grimy. I recall it still with a sickening sense of its
-ugliness; and yet its cheapness and griminess did not then
-trouble me so much. Did I not have the inestimable boon of
-youth and ambition, which make most material details unimportant?
-Some drab of a woman rented it to me, and outside
-were those red, yellow, blue, green and orange street-cars
-clanging and roaring and wheezing by all night long. Inside
-were four narrow gray walls, a small wooden bed, none too
-clean sheets and pillow-cases, a yellow washstand. I brought
-over my bag, arranged the few things I thought need not be
-kept under lock and key, and returned to the streets. I need
-not bother about the office until twelve-thirty, when the assignments
-were handed out—or “the book,” as Hartung reverently
-called it, was laid out for our inspection.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now, spread before me for my survey and entertainment
-was the great city of St. Louis, and life itself as it was
-manifesting itself to me through this city. This was the most
-important and interesting thing to me, not my new position.
-Work? Well, that was important enough, considering the
-difficulty I had had in securing it. What was more, I was
-always driven by the haunting fear of losing this or any other
-position I had ever had, of not being able to find another (a
-left-over fear, perhaps, due to the impression that poverty had
-made on me in my extreme youth). Just the same, the city
-came first in my imagination and desires, and I now began to
-examine it with care, its principal streets, shops, hotels, its
-residence district. What a pleasure to walk about, to stare, to
-dream of better days and great things to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just at this time St. Louis seemed to be upon the verge of
-change and improvement. An old section of mansions bordering
-on the business center was rapidly giving way to a rabble
-of small stores and cheap factories. Already several new
-buildings of the Chicago style of skyscraper were either contemplated
-or in process of construction. There was a new
-club, the Mercantile, the largest in the city, composed entirely
-of merchants in the downtown section, which had just been
-opened and about which the papers were making a great stir.
-There was a new depot contracted for, one of the finest in all
-the country, so I was told, which was to house all the roads
-entering the city. A new city hall was being talked of, an
-enormous thing-to-be. Out in the west end, where progress
-seemed the most vital, were new streets and truly magnificent
-residence “places,” parked and guarded areas these, in which
-were ranged many residences of the ultra-rich. The first time
-I saw one of these <i>places</i> I was staggered by its exclusive air
-and the beauty and even grandeur of some of the great houses
-in it—newly manufactured exclusiveness. Here were great
-gray or white or brownstone affairs, bright, almost gaudy,
-with great verandas, astonishing doorways, flights of stone
-steps, heavily and richly draped windows, immense carriage-houses,
-parked and flowered lawns.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By degrees I came to know the trade and poor sections of
-the city. Here were long throbbing wholesale streets,
-crowded with successful companies; along the waterfront
-was a mill area backed up by wretched tenements, as poor
-and grimy and dingy as any I have ever seen; elsewhere
-were long streets of middle-class families, all alike, all with
-white stone doorsteps or windowsills and tiny front yards.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The atmosphere of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> after a time came to
-have a peculiar appeal for me because it was dominated so
-completely by the robust personality of McCullagh. He was
-so natural, unaffected, rugged. As time passed he steadily
-grew in my estimation and by degrees, as I read his paper,
-his powerful, brilliant editorials, and saw how systematically
-and forcefully he managed all things in connection with himself
-and his men, the very air of St. Louis became redolent of
-him. He was a real force, a great man. So famous was he
-already that men came to St. Louis from the Southwest and
-elsewhere just to see him and his office. I often think of him
-in that small office, sitting waist-deep among his papers, his
-heavy head sunk on his pouter-like chest, his feet incased in
-white socks and low slipper-like shoes, his whole air one of
-complete mental and physical absorption in his work. A
-few years later he committed suicide, out of sheer weariness,
-I assume, tired of an inane world. Yet it was not until long
-after, when I was much better able to judge him and his
-achievements, that I understood what a really big thing
-he had done: built up a journal of national and even international
-significance in a region which, one would have supposed,
-could never have supported anything more than a
-mediocre panderer to trade interests. As Hazard had proudly
-informed me, the annual bill for telegraph news alone was
-$400,000: a sum which, in the light of subsequent journalistic
-achievements in America, may seem insignificant but which
-at that time meant a great deal. He seemed to have a desire
-to make the paper not only good (as that word is used in
-connection with newspapers) but great, and from my own
-memory and impression I can testify that it was both. It
-had catholicity and solidity in editorials and news. The
-whole of Europe, as well as America, was combed and reflected
-in order that his readers might be entertained and
-retained, and each day one could read news of curious as
-well as of scientific interest from all over the world. Its
-editorials were in the main wise and jovial, often beautifully
-written by McCullagh himself. Of assumed Republican tendencies,
-it was much more a party leader than follower, both
-in national and in State affairs. The rawest of raw youths,
-I barely sensed this at the time, and yet I felt something of
-the wonder and beauty of it all. I knew him to be a great man
-because I could feel it. There was something of dignity and
-force about all that was connected with him. Later it became
-a fact of some importance to me that I had been called to a
-paper of so much true worth, by a man so wise, so truly able.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The only inharmonious note at this time was my intense
-loneliness. In Chicago, in spite of the gradual breaking up of
-our home and the disintegration of the family, I had managed
-to build up that spiritual or imaginative support which comes
-to all of us from familiarity with material objects. I had
-known Chicago, its newspaper world, its various sections, its
-places of amusement, some dozen or two of newspaper men.
-Here I knew no one at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And back in Chicago there had been Alice and N—— and
-K——, whereas here whom had I? Alice was a living pain
-for years, for in my erratic way I was really fond of her. I
-am of that peculiar disposition, which will not let memories of
-old ties and old pleasures die easily. I suffer for things which
-might not give another a single ache or pain. Alice came
-very close to me, and now she was gone. Without any reasonable
-complaint, save that I was slightly weary, did not care
-for her as much as I had, and that my mind was full of the
-world outside and my future, I had left her. It had not been
-more than four weeks since I had visited her in her little <i>parlor</i>
-in Chicago, sipping of those delights which only youth and
-ecstatic imagination can conjure; now I was three hundred
-miles away from her kisses and the warmth of her hands. At
-the same time there was this devil or angel of ambition which
-quite in spite of myself was sweeping me onward. I fancied
-some vast Napoleonic ending for myself, which of course was
-moonshine. I could not have gone back to Chicago then if
-I had wished; it was not spiritually possible. Something
-within kept saying “On—on!” Besides, it would have done
-no good. The reaction would have been more irritating
-than the pain it satisfied. As it was, I could only walk about
-the city in this chilling November weather and speculate about
-myself and Alice and N—— and K—— and my own future.
-What an odd beginning, I often thought to myself. Scandalous,
-perhaps, in one so young: three girls in as many years,
-two of them deeply and seriously wounded by me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I shall write to her,” I thought. “I will ask her to come
-down here. I can’t stand this. She is too lovely and precious
-to me. It is cruel to leave her so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There is this to be said for me in regard to my not writing
-to her: I was uncertain as to the financial practicability of it.
-In Chicago I had been telling her of my excellent position,
-boasting that I was making more than I really was. So long as
-I was there and not married the pretense could easily be sustained.
-Here, three hundred miles away, where she would and
-could not come unless I was prepared to support her, it was a
-different matter. To ask her now meant a financial burden
-which I did not feel able, or at least willing, to assume. No
-doubt I could have starved her on twenty dollars a week;
-had I been desperately swayed by love I would have done so.
-I could even have had her, had I so chosen, on conditions which
-did not involve marriage; but I could not bring myself to do
-this. I did not think it quite fair. I felt that she would have
-a just claim to my continuing the relation with her.... And
-outside was the wide world. I told myself that I would marry
-her if I had money. If she had not been of a soft yielding type
-she could easily have entrapped me, but she had not chosen to
-do so. Anyhow, here I was, and here I stayed, meditating on
-the tragedy of it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By this time of course it is quite obvious that I was not an
-ethically correct and moral youth, but a sentimental boy of
-considerable range of feeling who, facing the confusing evidences
-of life, was not prepared to accept anything as final. I
-did not know then whether I believed that the morality and
-right conduct preached by the teachers of the world were important
-or not. The religious and social aphorisms of the day
-had been impressed upon me, but they did not stick. Something
-whispered to me that apart from theory there was another
-way which the world took and which had little in common
-with the strait and narrow path of the doctrinaires.
-Not all men swindle in little things, or lie or cheat, but how
-few fail to compromise in big ones. Perhaps I would not have
-deliberately lied about anything, at least not in important matters,
-and I would not now under ordinary circumstances after
-the one experience in Chicago have stolen. Beyond this I
-could not have said how I would have acted under given circumstances.
-Women were not included in my moral speculations
-as among those who were to receive strict justice—not
-pretty women. In that, perhaps, I was right: they did not
-always wish it. I was anxious to meet with many of them, as
-many as I might, and I would have conducted myself as joyously
-as their own consciences would permit. That I was to be
-in any way punished for this, or that the world would severely
-censure me for it, I did not yet believe. Other boys did it;
-they were constantly talking about it. The world—the world
-of youth at least—seemed to be concerned with libertinage.
-Why should not I be?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>No</span> picture of these my opening days in St. Louis would be
-of the slightest import if I could not give a fairly satisfactory
-portrait of myself and of the blood-moods or so-called spiritual
-aspirations which were animating me. At that time I had
-already attained my full height, six feet one-and-one-half
-inches, and weighed only one hundred and thirty-seven
-pounds, so you can imagine my figure. Aside from one eye
-(the right) which was turned slightly outward from the line
-of vision, and a set of upper teeth which because of their exceptional
-size were crowded and so stood out too much, I had
-no particular blemish except a general homeliness of feature.
-It was a source of worry to me all the time, because I imagined
-that it kept me from being interesting to women; which,
-apparently, was not true—not to all women at least.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Spiritually I was what might be called a poetic melancholiac,
-crossed with a vivid materialistic lust of life. I doubt
-if any human being, however poetic or however material, ever
-looked upon the scenes of this world, material or spiritual, so
-called, with a more covetous eye. My body was blazing with
-sex, as well as with a desire for material and social supremacy—to
-have wealth, to be in society—and yet I was too cowardly
-to make my way with women readily; rather, they made their
-way with me. Love of beauty as such—feminine beauty first
-and foremost, of course—was the dominating characteristic of
-all my moods: joy in the arch of an eyebrow, the color of an
-eye, the flame of a lip or cheek, the romance of a situation,
-spring, trees, flowers, evening walks, the moon, the roundness
-of an arm or a hip, the delicate turn of an ankle or a foot,
-spring odors, moonlight under trees, a lighted lamp over a
-dark lawn—what tortures have I not endured because of
-these! My mind was riveted on what love could bring me,
-once I had the prosperity and fame which somehow I foolishly
-fancied commanded love; and at the same time I was horribly
-depressed by the thought that I should never have them,
-never; and that thought, for the most part, has been fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In addition to this I was filled with an intense sympathy for
-the woes of others, life in all its helpless degradation and
-poverty, the unsatisfied dreams of people, their sweaty labors,
-the things they were compelled to endure—nameless impositions,
-curses, brutalities—the things they would never have,
-their hungers, thirsts, half-formed dreams of pleasure, their
-gibbering insanities and beaten resignations at the end. I
-have sobbed dry sobs looking into what I deemed to be broken
-faces and the eyes of human failures. A shabby tumbledown
-district or doorway, a drunken woman being arraigned before
-a magistrate, a child dying in a hospital, a man or woman
-injured in an accident—the times unbidden tears have leaped
-to my eyes and my throat has become parched and painful
-over scenes of the streets, the hospitals, the jails! I have cried
-so often that I have felt myself to be a weakling; at other times
-I have been proud of them and of my great rages against fate
-and the blundering, inept cruelty of life. If there is a God,
-conscious and personal, and He considers the state of man and
-the savagery of His laws and His indifferences, how He must
-smile at little insect man’s estimate of Him! It is so flattering,
-so fatuously unreasoning, that only a sardonic devil could
-enjoy it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was happy enough in my work although at times despondent
-lest all the pleasures that can come to youth from health,
-courage, wealth and opportunity should fail me while I was
-working and trying to get somewhere. I had health yet I
-imagined I had not because I was not a Sandow, an athlete,
-and my stomach, due to an undiscovered appendix, gave me
-some trouble. As to courage, when I examined myself in that
-direction I fancied that I had none at all. Would I slip out
-if a dangerous brawl were brewing anywhere? Certainly.
-Well, then, I was a coward. Could I stand up and defend
-myself against a man of my own height and weight? I
-doubted it, particularly if he were well-trained. In consequence,
-I was again a coward. There was no hope for me
-among decently courageous men. Could I play tennis, baseball,
-football? No; not successfully. Assuredly I was a
-weakling of the worst kind. Nearly everybody could do those
-things, and nearly all youths were far more proficient in all
-the niceties of life than was I: manners, dancing, knowledge
-of dress and occasions. Hence I was a fool. The dullest athlete
-of the least proficiency could overcome me; the most
-minute society man, if socially correct, was infinitely my
-superior. Hence what had I to hope for? And when it came
-to wealth and opportunity, how poor I seemed! No girl of
-real beauty and force would have anything to do with a man
-who was not a success; and so there I was, a complete failure
-to begin with.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The aches and pains that went with all this, the amazing
-depression, all but suicidal. How often have I looked into
-comfortable homes and wished that some kindly family would
-give me shelter! And yet half knowing that had it been
-offered I would have refused it. How often have I looked
-through the windows of some successful business firm and
-wished I had achieved ownership or stewardship, a position
-similar to that of any of the officers and managers inside!
-To be president or vice-president or secretary of something,
-some great thrashing business of some kind. Great God, how
-sublime it seemed! And yet if I had only known how centrally
-controlling the tool of journalism could be made! It
-mattered not then that I was doing fairly well, that most of
-my employers had been friendly and solicitous as to my welfare,
-that the few girls I had approached had responded freely
-enough—still I was a failure.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I rapidly became familiar with the city news department of
-the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>. Its needs, aside from great emergencies,
-were simple enough: interviews, the doings of conventions of
-various kinds (wholesale grocers, wholesale hardware men,
-wholesale druggists), the plans of city politicians when those
-could be discovered, the news of the courts, jails, city hospitals,
-police courts, the deaths of well-known people, the goings-on
-in society, special functions of one kind and another, fires,
-robberies, defalcations. For the first few weeks nothing of importance
-happened. I was given the task evenings of looking
-in at the North Seventh Street police station, a slow district,
-to see if anything had happened, and was naturally able to
-add to my depression by contemplating the life about there.
-Again, I attended various churches to hear sermons, interviewed
-the Irish boss of the city, Edward Butler, an amazing
-person with a head like that of a gnome or ogre, who immediately
-took a great fancy to me and wanted me to come and
-see him again (which I did once).</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He has always stuck in my mind as one of the odd experiences
-of my life. He lived in a small red brick family dwelling
-just beyond the prostitution area of St. Louis, which
-stretched out along Chestnut Street between Twelfth and
-Twenty-second, and was the city’s sole garbage contractor
-(out of which he was supposed to have made countless thousands)
-as well as one of its principal horse-shoers, having
-many blacksmithing shops, and was incidentally its Democratic
-or Republican boss, I forget which, a position he
-retained until his death.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I first saw him at a political meeting during my first few
-weeks in St. Louis, and the manner in which he arose, the way
-in which he addressed his hearers, the way in which they
-listened to him, all impressed me. Subsequently, being sent
-to his house, I found him in his small front parlor, a yellow
-plush album on the marble-topped center table, horse-hair
-furniture about the room, a red carpet, crayon enlargements
-of photographs of his mother and father. But what force in
-the man! What innate gentility of manner and speech! He
-seemed like a prince disguised as a blacksmith.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“So ye’ve come to interview me,” he said soothingly.
-“Ye’re from the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>—well, that paper’s no particular
-friend of mine, but ye can’t help that, can ye?” and
-then he told me whatever it was I wanted to know, giving me
-no least true light, you may be sure. At the conclusion he
-offered me a drink, which I refused. As I was about to leave
-he surveyed me pleasantly and tolerantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ye’re a likely lad,” he said, laying an immense hand on
-one of my lean shoulders, “and ye’re jest startin’ out in life,
-I can see that. Well, be a good boy. Ye’re in the newspaper
-business, where ye can make friends or enemies just as ye
-choose, and if ye behave yerself right ye can just as well make
-friends. Come an’ see me some time. I like yer looks. I’m
-always here av an evenin’, when I’m not attendin’ a meetin’
-av some kind, right here in this little front room, or in the
-kitchen with me wife. I might be able to do something fer ye
-sometime—remember that. I’ve a good dale av influence
-here. Ye’ll have to write what ye’re told, I know that, so I
-won’t be offended. So come an’ see me, an’ remember that
-I want nothin’ av ye,” and he gently ushered me out and
-closed the door behind me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I never went, at least not for anything for myself. The
-one time I asked him for a position for a friend who wanted
-to work on the local street-cars as a conductor he wrote across
-the letter: “Give this man what he wants.” It was wretchedly
-scrawled (the man brought it back to me before presenting
-it) and was signed “edward butler.” But the man was given
-the place at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although Butler was an earnest Catholic, he was supposed
-to control and tax the vice of the city; which charge may or
-may not have been true. One of his sons owned and managed
-the leading vaudeville house in the city, a vulgar burlesque
-theater, at which the ticket taker was Frank James, brother of
-the amazing Jesse who terrorized Missouri and the Southwest
-as an outlaw at one time and enriched endless dime novel
-publishers afterward. As dramatic critic of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>
-later I often saw him. Butler’s son, a more or less
-stodgy type of Tammany politician, popular with a certain element
-in St. Louis, was later elected to Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wrote up a labor meeting or two, and at one of these saw
-for the first time Terence V. Powderly, the head of the dominant
-labor organization—the Knights of Labor. This meeting
-was held in a dingy hall at Ninth or Tenth and Walnut, a
-dismal institution known as the Workingman’s Club or some
-such thing as that, which had a single red light hanging out
-over its main entrance. This long, lank leader, afterward so
-much discussed in the so-called “capitalistic press,” was
-sitting on a wretched platform surrounded by local labor
-leaders and discussed in a none too brilliant way, I thought,
-the need of a closer union between all classes of labor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In regard to all matters relating to the rights of labor and
-capital I was at this time perfectly ignorant. Although I was
-a laborer myself in a fair sense of the word I was more or
-less out of sympathy with laborers, not as a class struggling
-for their “rights” (I did not know what their rights or
-wrongs were) but merely as individuals. I thought, I suppose,
-that they were not quite as <i>nice</i> as I was, not as refined
-and superior in their aspirations, and therefore not as worthy
-or at least not destined to succeed as well as I. I even then felt
-dimly what subsequently, after many rough disillusionments,
-I came to accept as a fact: that some people are born dull, some
-shrewd, some wise and some undisturbedly ignorant, some tender
-and some savage, <i>ad infinitum</i>. Some are silk purses and
-others sows’ ears and cannot be made the one into the other
-by any accident of either poverty or wealth. At this time,
-however, after listening to Mr. Powderly and taking notes of
-his speech, I came to the conclusion that all laborers had a just
-right to much better pay and living conditions, and in consequence
-had a great cause and ought to stick together. I also
-saw that Mr. Powderly was a very shrewd man and something
-of a hypocrite, very simple-seeming and yet not so. Something
-he said or did—I believe it was a remark to the effect
-that “I always say a little prayer whenever I have a stitch in
-my side”—irritated me. It was so suave, so English-chapel-people-like;
-and he was an Englishman, as I recall it. Anyhow,
-I came away disliking him and his local labor group, and
-yet liking his cause and believing in it, and wrote as favorable
-a comment as I dared. The <i>Globe</i> was not pro-corporation
-exactly, at least I did not understand so, and yet it was by no
-means pro-workingman either. If I recall correctly, it merely
-gave the barest facts and let it go at that.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>My</span> connection with the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> had many aspects,
-chief among which was my rapidly developing consciousness
-of the significance of journalism and its relation to the life of
-the nation and the state. My journalistic career had begun
-only five months before and preceding that I had had no
-newspaper experience of any kind. The most casual reader
-of a newspaper would have been as good as I in many respects.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But here I rather sensed the significance of it all, the power
-of a man like McCullagh, for instance, for good or evil, the
-significance of a man like Butler in this community. I still
-had a lot to learn: the extent of graft in connection with politics
-in a city, the power of a newspaper to make sentiment in
-a State and so help to carry it for a Governor or a President.
-The political talk I heard on the part of one newspaper man
-and another “doing politics,” as well as the leading editorials
-in this and other papers, which just at this time were
-concerned with a coming mayoralty fight and a feud in the
-State between rival leaders of the Republican party, completely
-cleared up the situation for me. I listened to all the
-gossip, read the papers carefully, wondered over the personalities
-and oddities of State governments in connection with
-our national government. Just over the river in Illinois everybody
-was concerned with the administration of John P. Altgeld,
-governor of the State, and whether he would pardon the
-Chicago anarchists whose death sentences, recorded a few
-years before, had been commuted to life imprisonment. On
-this side of the river everybody was interested in the administration
-of William Joel Stone, who was the governor. A man
-by the name of Cyrus H. Walbridge was certain to be the next
-mayor if the Republicans won, and according to the <i>Globe</i>,
-they ought to win because the city needed to be reformed. The
-local Democratic board of aldermen was supposed to be the
-most corrupt in all America (how many cities have yearly
-thought that, each of its governing body, since the nation began!),
-and Edward Noonan, the mayor, was supposed to
-be the lowest and vilest creature that ever stood up in shoes.
-The chief editorials of the <i>Globe</i> were frequently concerned
-with blazing denunciations of him. As far as I could make
-out, he had joined with various corporations and certain members
-of council to steal from the city, sell its valuable franchises
-for a song and the like. He had also joined with the
-police in helping bleed the saloons, gambling dens and houses
-of prostitution. Gambling and prostitution were never so
-rampant as now, so our good paper stated. The good people
-of the city should join and help save the city from destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How familiar it all sounds, doesn’t it? Well, this was 1892,
-and I have heard the same song every year since, in every
-American city in which I have ever been. Gambling, prostitution,
-graft, <i>et cetera</i>, must be among our national weaknesses,
-not?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just the same, in so far as this particular office and the
-country about St. Louis were concerned, Joseph McCullagh
-was of immense significance to his staff and the natives.
-Plainly he was like a god to many of them, the farmers and
-residents in small towns in States like Texas, Iowa, Missouri,
-Arkansas and in Southern Illinois, where his paper chiefly circulated,
-for they came to the office whenever they were in the
-city merely to get a glimpse of him. He was held in high esteem
-by his staff, and was one of the few editors of his day
-who really deserved to be. Within his office he had an adoring
-group of followers, which included everyone from the
-managing editor down. “The chief says——,” “The chief
-thinks——,” “The old man looks a little grouchy this morning—what
-do you think?” “Gee, wait’ll the old man hears
-about that! He’ll be hopping!” “That ought to please the
-old man, don’t you think? He likes a bit of good writing.”
-Yet for all this chatter, “the old man” never seemed to notice
-much of anything or have much to say to any one, except possibly
-to one or two of his leading editorial writers and his telegraph
-editor. If he ever conferred with his stout city editor
-for more than one moment at a time I never saw or heard of it.
-And if anything seen or heard by anybody in connection with
-him was not whispered about the reporters’ room before nightfall
-or daybreak it was a marvel of concealment. Occasionally
-he might be seen ambling down the hall to the lavatory or to
-the room of his telegraph chief, but most always it was merely
-to take his carriage or walk to the Southern Hotel at one
-o’clock for his luncheon or at six for his dinner, his derby hat
-pulled over his eyes, his white socks gleaming, a cane in his
-hand, a cigar between his lips. If he ever had a crony it
-was not known in the reporters’ room. He was a solitary or
-eccentric, and a few years later, as I have said, he leaped
-to his death from the second story window of his home, where
-he had lived in as much privacy and singularity as a Catholic
-priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There were silent figures slipping about—Captain King, a
-chief editorial writer; Casper S. Yost, a secretary of the corporation,
-assistant editor and what not; several minor editors,
-artists, reporters, the city editor, the business manager—but
-no one or all of them collectively seemed to amount to a hill
-of beans. Only “the old man” or J. B., as he was occasionally
-referred to, counted. Under him the paper had character,
-succinctness and point, not only in its news but in its editorial
-columns. Although it was among the conventional of the
-conventional of its day (what American newspaper of that
-period could have been otherwise?), still it had an awareness
-which made one feel that “the old man” knew much
-more than he ever wrote. He seemed to like to have it
-referred to as “the great religious daily” and often quoted
-that phrase, but with the saving grace of humor behind it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And he seemed to understand just how to supply that
-region with all it desired in the shape of news. Though in the
-main the paper published mere gossip, oddities about storms,
-accidents, eccentricities, still there was something about the
-way the thing was done, the crisp and brief manner in which
-the material was edited, which made it palatable—very
-much so, I should say, to the small-town store-lounger or
-owner—and nearly all had humor, naïveté or pathos. The
-drift of things politically was always presented in leaders in
-such a way that even I, a mere stripling, began to get a sense
-of things national and international. States, the adjacent ones
-in particular, which supplied the bulk of the <i>Globe’s</i> circulation,
-were given special attention and yet in such a way as not
-to irritate the general reader, leaving it optional with him
-whether he should read or not. The editorials, sometimes
-informing, sometimes threatening and directive, sometimes
-mere fol-de-rol and foolery, and intended as such, had a
-delicious whimsy in them. Occasionally “the old man” himself
-wrote one and then everybody sat up and took notice. One
-could easily single it out even if it had not been passed around,
-as it nearly always was. “The old man wrote that.” “Have
-you read the old man’s editorial in this morning’s paper? Gee!
-Read it!” Then you expected brilliant, biting words, a luminous
-phraseology, sentences that cracked like a whip, and you
-were rarely disappointed. The paragraphs exploded at times,
-burst like a torpedo; at others the whole thing ended like
-music, the deep, sonorous bass of an organ. “The old man”
-could write, there was no doubt of that. He also seemed to
-believe what he wrote, for the time being anyhow. That was
-why his staff, to a man, revered him. He was a real editor,
-as contrasted with your namby-pamby “business man” masquerading
-as editor. He had been a great reporter and war
-correspondent in his day, one of the men who were with Farragut
-on the Mississippi and with Sherman and others elsewhere
-during the great Civil War.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wandering about this building at this time was an old red-faced,
-red-nosed German, with a protuberant stomach, very
-genial, dull and apparently unimportant. He was, as I later
-learned, the real owner of the paper, the major portion of the
-stock being in his name; and yet, as every one seemed to understand,
-he never dared pose as such but must slip about, as
-much overawed as the rest of us. I was a mere underling and
-new to the place, and yet I could see it. A more apologetic
-mien and a more obliging manner was never worn by any mortal,
-especially when he was in the vicinity of McCullagh’s
-office. His name was Daniel M. Hauser. For the most part he
-wandered about the building like a ghost, seeming to wish to be
-somebody or to say something but absolutely without meaning.
-The short, stout Napoleonic editor ruled supreme.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>By degrees I made friends with a number of those that
-worked here: Bob Hazard; Jock Bellairs, son of the Captain
-Bellairs who presided over the city zoo; Charlie Benson, and
-a long list of others whose names escape me now. Of all those
-on the city staff I was inclined to like Hazard most, for he was
-a personage, a character, quick, gay, intellectual, literary,
-forceful. Why he never came to greater literary fame I do not
-know, for he seemed to have all the flair and feeling necessary
-for the task. He was an only son of some man who had long
-been a resident of St. Louis and was himself well known about
-town. He lived with a mother and sister in southwest St.
-Louis in a small cottage which always pleased me because of
-its hominess, and supported that mother and sister in loyal
-son-like fashion. I had not been long on the paper before I
-was invited there to dinner, and this in spite of a rivalry which
-was almost immediately and unconsciously set up between us
-the moment I arrived and which endured in a mild way even
-after our more or less allied literary interests had drawn us
-socially together. At his home I met his sister, a mere slip
-of a tow-headed girl, whom later on I saw in vaudeville as a
-headliner. Hazard I encountered years later as a blasé correspondent
-in Washington, representing a league of papers. He
-had then but newly completed a wild-West thriller, done in
-cold blood and with an eye to a quick sale. Assuming that I
-had influence with publishers and editors, he invoked my aid.
-I gave him such advice and such letters as I could. But only
-a few months later I read that Robert Hazard, well-known
-newspaper correspondent, living with his wife and child in
-some Washington residence section, had placed a revolver to
-his temple and ended it all. Why, I have often wondered. He
-was seemingly so well fitted mentally and physically to enjoy
-life.... Or is it mental fitness that really kills the taste for life?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I would not dwell on him at such length save for some
-other things which I propose later to narrate. For the moment
-I wish to turn to another individual, “Jock” Bellairs, who
-impressed me as a most curious compound of indifference, wisdom,
-literary and political sense and a hard social cunning.
-He had a capacity for (as some one in the office once phrased
-it) a “lewd and profane life.” He was the chief police reporter
-at a building known as the “Four Courts,” an institution
-which housed, among other things, four judicial
-chambers of differing jurisdiction, as well as the county jail,
-the city detention wards, the office of the district attorney,
-the chief of police, chief of detectives, the city attorney, and
-a “reporters’ room” where all the local reporters were permitted
-to gather and were furnished paper, ink, tables.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A more dismal atmosphere than that which prevailed in
-this building, and in similar institutions in all the cities in
-which I ever worked, would be hard to find. In Chicago it
-was the city hall and county courthouse, with its police attachment;
-in Pittsburgh the county jail; in New York the
-Tombs and Criminal Courts Building, with police headquarters
-as a part of its grim attachment. I know of nothing
-worse. These places, essential as they are, are always low in
-tone, vile, and defile nearly all they touch. They have a
-corrupting effect upon those with whom they come in contact
-and upon those who are employed to administer law or “justice.”
-Harlots, criminals, murderers, buzzard lawyers, political
-judges, detectives, police agents, and court officials generally—what
-a company! I have never had anything to do
-with one of these institutions in any city as reporter, plaintiff
-or assisting friend, without sensing anew the brutality and
-horror of legal administration. The petty tyrannies that are
-practiced by underlings and minor officials! The “grafting”
-of low, swinish brains! The tawdry pomp of ignorant officials!
-The cruelty and cunning of agents of justice! “Set
-a thief to catch a thief.” Clothe these officials as you will,
-in whatsoever uniforms of whatsoever splendor or sobriety;
-give them desks of rosewood and walls of flowered damask;
-entitle them as you choose, High and Mightiness This and
-That—still they remain the degraded things they have always
-been, equals of the criminals and the crimes they are supposed
-to do away with. It cannot be helped; it is a law of chemistry,
-of creation. Offal breeds maggots to take care of it, to
-nullify its stench; carrion has its buzzards, carrion crows
-and condors. So with criminals and those petty officials of
-the lower courts and jails who are set to catch them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this is a wandering paragraph and has little to do with
-“Jock” Bellairs, except that he was of and yet not of this
-particular atmosphere. The first time I saw him I felt compelled
-to study him, for he seemed somehow to suggest this
-atmosphere to which he was appointed as reporter. He was
-in a way, and yet with pleasing reservations, the man for this
-task. He had a sense of humor and a devil-may-care approach
-to all this. Whenever anything of real import broke
-loose he was always the one to be called upon for information
-or aid, because he was in close touch with the police and
-detectives, who were his cronies and ready to aid him. And
-whenever anything happened that was beyond his power to
-manage he called up the office for aid. On more than one
-occasion, some “mystery” coming up, I was the one delegated
-to help him, the supposition being that it was likely to yield
-a “big” story, bigger than he had time for, being a court
-fixture. I then sought him out at the Four Courts and
-was given what he knew, whereupon I began investigations
-on my own account. Nearly always I found him lolling
-about with other reporters and detectives, a chair tilted
-back, possibly a game of cards going on between him and
-the reporters of other papers, a bottle of whisky in his pocket—“to
-save time,” as he once amusingly remarked—and a girl
-or two present, friends of one or other of these newspaper
-men, their “dollies.” He would rise and explain to me
-just what was going on, whisper confidentially in my ear the
-name of some other newspaper man who had been put on
-the case by one of the other papers, perhaps ask me to mention
-the name of some shabby policeman or detective who had been
-assigned to the case, one who was “a good fellow” and
-who could be depended upon to help us in the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I often had to smile, he was so naïve and yet so wise in his
-position, so matter-of-fact and commonplace about it all.
-Sometimes he would give me the most befuddling information
-as to how the news got out: he and John Somebody or Other
-were down at Maggie Sanders’s place in Chestnut Street
-the other night, where he heard from a detective, who was
-telling somebody else, who told somebody else, and so on.
-Then, if there was a prisoner in the case, he would take me
-to him, or tell me where some individual or the body was
-to be found if there was a body. Then, after I had gone about
-my labors, he would return to his card-game, his girl and his
-bottle. There were stories afloat of outings with these girls,
-or the using of some empty room in this building for immoral
-purposes, with the consent of complaisant officials. And all
-about, of course, was this atmosphere of detained criminals,
-cases at trial, hurrying parents and members of families,
-weeping mothers and sisters—a mess.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On an average of twice a month during my stay in St. Louis
-I was called to this building on one errand and another, and
-always I went with a sicky and sinking sensation, and always
-I came away from it breathing a sigh of relief. To me it was
-a horrible place, a pest-hole of suffering and error and
-trickery, and yet necessary enough, I know.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I was</span> walking down the marble hall of our editorial floor
-one day not long after I arrived when I noted on a door at
-its extreme end the words: “Art Department.” The <i>Globe</i>
-in Chicago had no art department, at least I never discovered
-it. The mere word <i>art</i>, although I had no real understanding
-of it, was fascinating to me. Was it not on every tongue?
-A man who painted or drew was an artist; Doré was one,
-for instance, and Rembrandt. (I classed the two together.)
-In Chicago I had of course known that each paper should
-have an art department, and that interested me in this one.
-What were artists like? I had never known one.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another day I was on my way to the lavatory when I discovered
-that I had come away without the key, a duplicate
-of which every department possessed. The art department
-door being nearest, I entered to borrow theirs. Behold, three
-distinctive if not distinguished looking individuals at work
-upon drawings laid upon drawing-boards. Two of these
-looked up, the one nearest me with a look of criticism in his
-eye, I thought. The one who answered me when I asked for
-the key, and who swiftly arose to get it for me, was short
-and stocky, with bushy, tramp-like hair and beard. There
-was something that savored of opera bouffe about him, and
-yet, as I could see, he took himself seriously enough. There
-was something pleasing in his voice too as he said, “Certainly;
-here it is,” and smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The one who had looked up at first and frowned but made
-no move was much less cheery. I recall the long, thin, sallow
-face, the coal-black hair, long and coarse, which was parted
-most carefully in the middle and slicked down at the sides
-and back over the ears until it looked as though it had been
-oiled, and the eyes, black and small and querulous and petulant,
-as was the mouth, with drawn lines at each corner, as
-though he had endured much pain. That long, loose, flowing
-black tie! And that soft white or blue or green or brown
-linen shirt!—would any Quartier Latin denizen have been
-without them? He had thin, pale bony hands, long and
-graceful, and an air of “touch thou me not, O defiled one.”
-The man appealed to and repelled me at a glance, appealing
-to me much more later, and ever remained a human humoresque,
-something to coddle, endure, decipher, laugh at. Surely
-Dick Wood, or “Richard Wood, Artist,” as his card read,
-might safely be placed in any pantheon of the unconventionally
-ridiculous and delicious.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This visit provided a mere glance, however. When I returned
-the key I was given no encouragement. A little later,
-my ability to write having been fairly established, I was given
-a rather large order for one so new: a double-page spread,
-with illustrations, for the Sunday issue, relating to the new
-depot then under construction. I was told to see that the art
-department supplied several drawings—one in particular of
-a proposed iron and glass train-shed which was to cover
-thirty-two tracks. Also one of a clock-tower two hundred
-and thirty-two feet high. This assignment seemed a very
-honorable one, since it was to carry drawings, and I went
-about it with energy and enthusiasm. It was Mitchell who
-told me to look to the art department for suitable illustrations.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Evidently the art department knew all about it before my
-arrival, for upon inquiry I found that P. B. McCord, he of
-the tramp-like hair and whiskers, was scheduled to make the
-pictures. His manner pleased me. He was so cordial, so
-helpful. Together we visited the depot, and a few days later
-he called upon me in the reportorial room to ask me to come
-and see what he had done. Having in regard to most things
-the same point of view, we were soon the best of friends.
-A more or less affectionate relationship was then and there
-established, which endured until his death sixteen years later.
-During all of that period we were scarcely out of touch with
-each other, and through him I was destined to achieve some of
-my sanest conceptions of life. (See <i>Peter</i>. Twelve Men.)</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And the amazing Wood! I have never encountered another
-like him, possibly because for years I have not been associated
-with young people, who are frequently full of eccentricities.
-A more romantic ass than Wood never lived, nor one with
-better sense in many ways. In regard to newspaper drawing
-he was only a fairly respectable craftsman, if so much, but
-in other ways he was fascinating enough. He and McCord
-were compelled at that time to use the old chalk plate process
-for much of their hurried work, a thing which required the
-artist to scratch with a steel upon a chalk-covered surface,
-blowing the chalk away from his outlines as he made them.
-This created a dust which both McCord and Wood complained
-of as being disagreeable and “hard on the lungs.”
-Wood, who pretended to be dying of consumption, and did die
-of it sixteen years later within a month of his friend McCord,
-made an awful row about it, although he could easily have
-done much to mend matters by taking a little exercise and
-keeping out of doors as much as possible; but he preferred
-to hover over a radiator or before a fire. Always, on every
-occasion, he was given to playing the rôle of the martyr.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Spiritually he was morbid, as was I, only he showed it
-much more in his manner. He had much the same desire as
-I had at the time: to share in the splendors of marble halls
-and palaces and high places generally; and, like myself, he
-had but little chance. Fresh from Bloomington, Illinois, a
-commonplace American town, he was obsessed by the commonplace
-dream of marrying rich and coming into the imaginary
-splendors of that west end life of St. Louis which was so
-interesting to both of us. Far more than myself, I am sure,
-he seemed to be seething with an inward rebellion against
-the fact that he was poor, not included in the exclusive pleasures
-of the rich. At the same time he was glowing with
-a desire to make other people imagine that he was or soon
-would be of them. What airs! what shades of manner! He,
-like myself, was forever dreaming of some gorgeous maiden,
-rich, beautiful, socially elect, who was to solve all his troubles
-for him. But there was this difference between us, or so I
-imagined at the time, Dick being an artist, rather remote and
-disdainful in manner and handsome as well as poetic and
-better-positioned than myself, as I fancied, was certain to
-achieve this gilded and crystal state whereas I, not being
-so handsome, nor an artist, nor sufficiently poetic, could
-hardly aspire to so gorgeous an end. I might perchance
-arrive at some such goal if I sought it eagerly enough, but
-the probabilities were that I should not unless I waited a
-long while, and besides, my dreams and plans varied so
-swiftly from day to day that I couldn’t be sure what I
-wanted to do, whereas Wood, being so stable in this, that
-and the other (all the things I was not), was certain to arrive
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes around dinner time when I would see him
-leaving the office arrayed in the latest mode, as I assumed—dark
-blue suit, patent leather boots, dark, round, soft felt
-hat, loose tie blowing idly about his neck, neat thin cane in his
-hand—I was fairly convinced that this much-anticipated fortune
-had already arrived or was about to arrive, this very
-evening perhaps, and that I should never see him more, never
-even be permitted to speak to him. Somewhere (out in the
-west end, of course) was <i>the</i> girl, wondrous, rich, beautiful,
-with whom he was to elope and be forgiven by her wealthy
-parents. Even now he was on his way to her, while I, poor
-oaf that I was, was moiling here over some trucky task.
-Would my ship never come in, my great day arrive?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And Wood was just the type of person who would take infinite
-delight in creating such an impression. Ten years later,
-when McCord and I were in the East together and Wood was
-still in St. Louis, we were never weary of discussing this
-histrionic characteristic of his, laughing sympathetically with
-and at him. Later he married—but I shall not anticipate.
-Mentally, at this time, he was living a dream and in so
-far as possible acting it, playing the part of some noble
-Algernon Charles Claude Vere de Vere, heir to or affianced to
-some maid with an immense fortune which was to make them
-both eternally happy and allow him to travel, pose, patronize
-as he chose. A laudable dream, verily.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I—I confess that I was bitter with envy. What, never
-to shine thus? Never to be an artist? Never to have beauty
-in my lap? For me there were other stings, in connection
-with him—stings sharp as serpents’ teeth. Dick had a wrist-watch,
-the envy of my youthful days (oh, wondrous watch!)
-Also a scarf pin made of some strange stone brought from the
-Orient and with a cabalistic sign or word on it (enough in
-itself to entice any heiress)—-and that <i>boutonnière</i> of violets!
-He was never without them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And along with all this, that sad, wan, reproachful, dying
-smile! And that mysterious something of manner which
-seemed to say: “My boy! My boy! The things you will
-never know!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet after a time Dick condescended to receive me into
-his confidence and into his “studio,” a very picturesque
-affair, situated in the heart of the downtown district. Also
-he condescended to bestow upon me some of his dreams as
-well as his friendly presence; a thing which exalted me, being
-so new to this art world. I was <i>permitted</i> (note the word) to
-gather dimly, as neophyte from priest, the faintest outlines of
-these wondrous dreams of his, and to share with him the
-hope that they might be realized. I was so set up by this
-great favor that I felt certain great things must flow from it.
-Assuredly we three could do great things if only we would
-stick together. But was I worthy? There were already rumors
-of books, plays, stories, poems, to come from a certain
-mighty pen—as a matter of fact, it was already hard upon the
-task of writing them—which were to set the world aflame by-and-by.
-Certain editors in New York were already receiving
-(and sending back, alas!) certain preliminary masterpieces
-along with carefully worded suggestions in regard to
-slight but necessary changes which would perfect them and
-so inaugurate the new era. Certain writers, certain poets,
-certain playwrights were already better than any that had
-ever been—the best ever, in short. Dick knew, of course,
-and I was allowed to share this knowledge, to be thrilled by it.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Once</span> the ice was broken in this way intimacy with these
-twain came fast enough, although I never became quite as
-intimate with Dick as I did with Peter, largely because I could
-not think him as important. Wood had some feminine characteristics;
-he could be very jealous of anybody’s interest
-in Peter as well as Peter’s interest in anybody else. He
-was big enough, at times, to see the pettiness of this and
-try to rise above it, but at other times it would show. Years
-later McCord confided to me in the most amused way how,
-when I first appeared on the scene, Dick at once began to
-belittle me and to resent my obvious desire to “break in,”
-as he phrased it, these two, according to Dick, having established
-some excluding secret union.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the union was not exclusive, in so far as Peter was
-concerned. Shortly after my arrival young Hartung had
-begun running into the art room (so Peter told me) with
-amazing tales of the new man, his exploits in Chicago. I had
-been sent for to come to this paper—that was the great thing.
-I was vouched for by no less a person than John T. McEnnis,
-one of the famous newspaper men of St. Louis and a former
-city editor of this same paper; also by a Mr. Somebody (the
-Washington correspondent of the paper), for whom I had
-worked in Chicago on the World’s Fair. He had hurried to
-the art department with his tales of me, wishing, I fancy,
-to be on friendly and happy terms there. Dick, however, considered
-Hartung’s judgment as less than nothing, himself an
-upstart, a mere office rat; to have him endeavor to introduce
-anybody was too much. At first he received me very coldly,
-then finding me perhaps better than he thought, he hastened
-to make friends with me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The halcyon hours with these two that followed. Not infrequently
-Peter and Dick would dine together at some downtown
-restaurant; or, if a rush of work were on and they were
-compelled to linger, they had a late supper in some German
-saloon. It was Peter who first invited me to one of
-these late séances, and later Wood did the same, but this
-last was based on another development in connection with
-myself which I should narrate here.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The office of the <i>Globe</i> proved a sprouting-bed for incipient
-literary talent. Hazard had, some fifteen or eighteen months
-before, in company with another newspaper man of whom
-later I heard amazing things, written a novel entitled <i>Theo</i>,
-which was plainly a bog-fire kindled by those blazing French
-suns, Zola and Balzac. The scene was laid in Paris (imagine
-two Western newspaper men who had never been out of America
-writing a novel of French life and laying it in Paris!)
-and had much of the atmosphere of Zola’s <i>Nana</i>, plus the
-delicious idealism of Balzac’s <i>The Great Man from the Provinces</i>.
-Never having read either of these authors at this time,
-I did not see the similarity, but later I saw it plainly. One
-or both of these men had fed up on the French realists to
-such an extent that they were able to create the illusion of
-France (for me at least) and at the same time to fire me
-with a desire to create something, perhaps a novel of this
-kind but preferably a play. It seemed intensely beautiful to
-me at the time, this book, with its frank pictures of raw,
-greedy, sensual human nature, and its open pictures of self-indulgence
-and vice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The way this came about was interesting but I would not
-relate it save that it had such a marked effect on me. I was
-sitting in the city reportorial room later one gloomy December
-afternoon, having returned from a fruitless assignment, when
-a letter was handed me. It was postmarked Chicago and
-addressed in the handwriting of Alice. Up to then I had
-allowed matters to drift, having, as I have said, written but
-one letter in which I apologized rather indifferently for having
-come away without seeing her. But my conscience had
-been paining me so much that when I saw her writing I
-started. I tore the letter open and read with a sense of
-shame:</p>
-
-<p class='c017'>“Dear Theo:</p>
-<p class='c018'>“I got your letter the day you left, but then it was too late. I
-know what you say is true, about your being called away, and I don’t
-blame you. I’m only sorry our quarrel” (there had been none save
-of my making) “didn’t let you come to see me before you left. Still,
-that was my fault too, I guess. I can’t blame you entirely for that.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Anyhow, Theo, that isn’t what I’m writing you for. You know that
-you haven’t been just the same to me as you once were. I know
-how you feel. I have felt it too. I want to know if you won’t send
-me back the letters I wrote you. You won’t want them now. Please
-send them, Theo, and believe I am as ever your friend,</p>
-<div class='c019'>“<span class='sc'>Alice</span>.”</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>There was a little blank space on the paper, and then:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I stood by the window last night and looked out on the street. The
-moon was shining and those dead trees over the way were waving in
-the wind. I saw the moon on that little pool of water over in the
-field. It looked like silver. Oh, Theo, I wish I were dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>As I read this I jumped up and clutched the letter. The
-pathos of it cut me to the quick. To think I should have left
-her so! To think I should be here and she there! Why
-hadn’t I written? Why had I shilly-shallied these many
-days? Of course she wished to die. And I—what of me?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went over the situation and tried to figure out what I
-should do. Should I send for her? Twenty dollars a week
-was very little for two. My legitimate expenses made a total
-of eleven a week. I wished to keep myself looking well, to
-have a decent room, to eat three fair meals a day. And I was
-in no position to return to Chicago, where I had earned less.
-Then my new friendships with Wood and McCord as well
-as with other newspaper men, nearly all of whom liked to
-drink, were costing me something extra; I could not associate
-with them without buying an occasional drink. I did not
-see where I was to save much or how I could support a wife.
-In addition, there was the newness of my position here. I
-could not very well leave it now, having just come from Chicago.
-By nature where things material of futurial were concerned
-I was timid, but little inclined to battle for my rights
-or desires, and consequently not often realizing them. I was
-in a trying situation, for I had, as I have said, let it appear to
-Alice that money was no object. With the vanity of youth, I
-had always talked of my good salary and comfortable position,
-and now that this salary and comfortable position were to
-be put to the test I did not know what to do about it. Honesty
-would have dictated a heartfelt confession, of course.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I made none. Instead I wavered between two horns
-of an ever-recurring dilemma. Sympathizing with the pain
-which Alice was suffering, and alive to my own loss of
-honor and happiness, still I hesitated to pull down the fine picture
-of myself which I had so artistically built up, to reveal
-myself as I really was, a man unable to marry on his
-present salary. If I had loved her more, if I had really
-respected her, if I had not looked upon her as one who might
-be so easily put aside, I would have done something about it.
-My natural tendency was to drift, to wait and see, suffering
-untold agonies in the meanwhile. This I was preparing to do
-now.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These mental stresses were always sufficient, however, to
-throw me into a soulful mood. And now as I looked out of
-the window on the “fast widowing sky” it was with an ache
-that rivaled in intensity those melancholy moods we sometimes
-find interpreted by music. Indeed my heart was torn
-by the inextricable problems which life seemed ever to present
-and I fairly wrung my hands as I looked into the face of the
-hurrying world. How it was hastening away! How swiftly
-and insensibly my own life was slipping by! The few sweets
-which I had thus far tasted were always accompanied by such
-bitter repinings. No pleasure was without pain, as I had already
-seen, and life offered no solution. Only silence and the
-grave ended it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My body was racked with a fine tremor, my brain ached.
-I went to my desk and took up a pencil. I sat looking
-into the face of the tangle as one might into the gathering
-front of a storm. Words moved in my brain, then bubbled,
-then marshaled themselves into curious lines and rhythms.
-I put my pencil to paper and wrote line after line.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Presently I saw that I was writing a poem but that it was
-rough and needed modifying and polishing. I was in a great
-fever to change it and did so but more eager to go on with
-my idea, which was about this tangle of life. I became so
-moved and interested that I almost forgot Alice in the process.
-When I read it over it seemed but a poor reflection of
-the thoughts I had felt, the great sad mood I was in. Then
-I sat there, dissatisfied and unhappy, resolving to write Alice
-and tell her all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I took a pen and wrote her that I could not marry her
-now, that I was in no position to do so. Later, if I found
-myself in better shape financially, I would come back. I
-told her that I did not want to send back her letters, that I
-did not wish to think our love was at an end. I had not
-meant to run away. I closed by saying that I still loved
-her and that the picture she had painted of herself standing
-at the window in the moonlight had torn my heart. But I
-could not write it as effectually as I might have, for I was
-haunted by the idea that I should never keep my word. Something
-kept telling me that it was not wise, that I didn’t really
-want to.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While I was writing Hazard came into the room and glanced
-over my shoulder to where the poem was lying. “What you
-doing, Dreiser? Writing poetry?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Trying to,” I replied a little shamefacedly. “I don’t
-seem to be able to make much of it, though.” The while I
-was wondering at the novelty of being taken for a poet. It
-seemed such a fine thing to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“There’s no money in it,” he observed helpfully. “You
-can’t sell ’em. I’ve written tons of ’em, but it don’t do any
-good. You’d better be putting your time on a book or a
-play.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A book or a play! I sat up. To be considered a writer, a
-dramatist—even a possible dramatist—raised me in my own
-estimation. Why, at this rate I might become one—who
-knows?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I know it isn’t profitable,” I said. “Still, it might be
-if I wrote them well enough. It would be a great thing to
-be a great poet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Hazard smiled sardonically. From his pinnacle of twenty-six
-years such aspirations seemed ridiculous. I might be a
-good newspaper man (I think he was willing to admit that),
-but a poet!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The discussion took the turn of book- and play-writing. He
-had written a book in connection with Young, I think his
-name was. He had lately been thinking of writing a play.
-He expatiated on the money there was to be made out of
-this, the great name some playwrights achieved. Look at
-Augustus Thomas now, who had once worked on the <i>Star</i>
-here. One of his pieces was then running in St. Louis. Look
-at Henry Blossom, once a St. Louis society boy, one of whose
-books was now in the local bookstore windows, a hit. To my
-excited mind the city was teeming with brilliant examples.
-Eugene Field had once worked here, on this very paper; Mark
-Twain had idled about here for a time, drunk and hopeless;
-W. C. Brann had worked on and gone from this paper; William
-Marion Reedy the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I returned to my desk after a time, greatly stirred by this
-conversation. My gloom was dissipated. Hazard had promised
-to let me read this book. This world was a splendid place
-for talent, I thought. It bestowed success and honor upon
-those who could succeed. Plays or books, or both, were the
-direct entrance to every joy which the heart could desire.
-Something of the rumored wonder and charm of the lives
-of successful playwrights came to me, their studios, their
-summer homes and the like. Here at last, then, was the
-equivalent of Dick’s wealthy girl!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I sat thinking about plays somewhat modified in my grief
-over Alice for the nonce, but none the less aware of its
-tremendous sadness. I read over my poem and thought it
-good, even beautiful. I must be a poet! I copied it and
-put a duplicate in Alice’s letter, and folded my own copy and
-put it in my pocket, close to my heart. It seemed as though
-I had just forged a golden key to a world of beauty and
-light where sorrow and want could never be.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> central character of Hazard’s book was an actress,
-young and very beautiful. Her lover was a newspaper man,
-deeply in love with her and yet not faithful, in one instance
-anyhow. This brought about a Zolaesque scene in which
-she spanked another actress with a hairbrush. There was
-treacherous plotting on the part of somebody in regard to a
-local murder, which brought about the arrest and conviction
-of the newspaper man for something he knew nothing about.
-This entailed a great struggle on the part of Theo to save
-him, which resulted in her failure and his death on the
-guillotine. A priest figured in it in some way, grim, jesuitical.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To this day some of the scenes of this book come back
-to me as having been forcefully done—the fight between the
-two actresses, for one thing, a midnight feast with several
-managers, the gallows scene, a confession. I am not sure
-of the name of the newspaper man who collaborated with
-Hazard on this work, but the picture of his death in an opium
-joint later, painted for me by Hazard, and the eccentricities
-of his daily life, stand out even now as Poe-like. He must
-have been blessed or cursed with some such temperament as
-that of Poe, dark, gloomy, reckless, poetic, for he was a dope-fiend
-and died of dope.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Be that as it may, this posthumous work, never published,
-so far as I know, was the opening wedge for me into the realm
-of realism. Being distinctly imitative of Balzac and Zola,
-the method was new and to me impressive. It has always
-struck me as curious that the first novel written by an American
-that I read in manuscript should have been one which
-by reason of its subject matter and the puritanic character of
-the American mind could never be published. These two
-youths knew this. Hazard handed it to me with the statement:
-“Of course a thing like this could never be published
-over here. We’d have to get it done abroad.” That struck
-me as odd at the time—the fact that if one wrote a fine
-thing nevertheless because of an American standard I had
-not even thought of before, one might not get it published.
-How queer, I thought. Yet these two incipient artists had
-already encountered it. They had been overawed to the extent
-of thinking it necessary to write of French, not American life
-in terms of fact. Such things as they felt called upon to relate
-occurred only in France, never here—or at least such things,
-if done here, were never spoken of. I think it nothing less
-than tragic that these men, or boys, fresh, forceful, imbued
-with a burning desire to present life as they saw it, were thus
-completely overawed by the moral hypocrisy of the American
-mind and did not even dare to think of sending their novel
-to an American publisher. Hazard was deeply impressed
-with the futility of attempting to do anything with a book
-of that kind. The publishers wouldn’t stand for it. You
-couldn’t write about life as it was; you had to write about it
-as somebody else thought it was, the ministers and farmers
-and dullards of the home. Yet here he was, as was I, busy in
-a profession that was hourly revealing the fact that this
-sweetness and light code, this idea of a perfect world which
-contained neither sin nor shame for any save vile outcasts,
-criminals and vagrants, was the trashiest lie that was ever
-foisted upon an all too human world. Not a day, not an hour,
-but the pages of the very newspaper we were helping to
-fill with our scribbled observations were full of the most
-incisive pictures of the lack of virtue, honesty, kindness, even
-average human intelligence, not on the part of a few but of
-nearly everybody. Not a business, apparently, not a home,
-not a political or social organization or an individual but in
-the course of time was guilty of an infraction of some kind
-of this seemingly perfect and unbroken social and moral code.
-But in spite of all this, judging by the editorial page, the
-pulpit and the noble mouthings of the average citizen speaking
-for the benefit of his friends and neighbors, all men were
-honest—only they weren’t; all women were virtuous and without
-evil intent or design—but they weren’t; all mothers were
-gentle, self-sacrificing slaves, sweet pictures for songs and
-Sunday Schools—only they weren’t; all fathers were kind,
-affectionate, saving, industrious—only they weren’t. But
-when describing actual facts for the news columns, you were
-not allowed to indicate these things. Side by side with the
-most amazing columns of crimes of every kind and description
-would be other amazing columns of sweet mush about love,
-undying and sacrificial, editorials about the perfection of
-the American man, woman, child, his or her sweet deeds, intentions
-and the like—a wonderful dose. And all this last
-in the face of the other, which was supposed to represent the
-false state of things, merely passing indecencies, accidental
-errors that did not count. If a man like Hazard or myself
-had ventured to transpose a true picture of facts from the
-news columns of the papers, from our own reportorial experiences,
-into a story or novel, what a howl! Ostracism would
-have followed much more swiftly in that day than in this,
-for today turgid slush approximating at least some of the
-facts is tolerated. Fifteen years later Hazard told me he
-still had his book buried in a trunk somewhere, but by then
-he had turned to adventurous fiction, and a year later, as I
-have said, be blew his brains out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just the same the book made a great impression on me! It
-gave me a great respect for Hazard, made me really fond of
-him. And it fixed my mind definitely on this matter of writing—not
-a novel, curiously, but a play, a form which from the
-first seemed easier for me and which I still consider so, one in
-which I work with greater ease than I do in the novel. I mentioned
-to Wood and McCord that Hazard and another man had
-written a novel and that I had read it. I must have enthused
-over it for both were impressed, and I myself seemed to gain
-standing, especially with Wood. It was generally admitted
-then that Hazard was one of the best reporters in the city,
-and my being taken into his confidence in this fashion seemed
-to Wood to be a significant thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And not long after that I had something else to tell these
-two which carried great weight. There was at that time on
-the editorial page of the paper a column entitled “Heard in
-the Corridors,” which was nothing more than a series of
-imaginary interviews with passing guests at the various hotels,
-or interviews condensed into short tales, about six to
-the column, one at least being accredited to a guest at each
-of the three principal hotels, the others standing accredited as
-things heard at the Union Station or upon the street somewhere.
-Previous to my arrival this column had been written
-by various men, the last one having been the already famous
-W. C. Brann, then editor of the brilliant <i>Iconoclast</i>. By the
-time I arrived, however, Brann had departed, and the column
-had sagged. Hazard was doing a part of it, Bellairs another,
-but both were tired of it. At first when I considered it (a
-little extra work added to my daily reporting) I was not
-so pleased; indeed it seemed an all but impossible thing to
-do. Later, however, after a trial, I discovered that it gave
-free rein to my wildest imaginings, which was exactly what
-I wanted. I could write any sort of story I pleased, romantic,
-realistic or lunatic, and credit it to some imaginary guest at
-one of the hotels, and if it was not too improbable it was
-passed without comment. At any rate, when this was assigned
-to me I went forth to get names of personages stopping
-at the hotels. I inquired for celebrities. As a rule, the clerks
-could give me no information or were indifferent, and seemed
-to take very little interest in having the hotel advertised. I
-returned and racked my brain, decided that I could manufacture
-names as well as stories, and forthwith scribbled six
-marvels, attaching such names as came into my mind. The
-next day these were all duly published and I was told to do
-the column regularly as well as my regular assignments. My
-asinine ebullience had won me a new task without any increase
-in pay.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, it seemed an honor to have a whole column
-assigned to me, and this honor I communicated to McCord
-and Wood. It was then that either Wood or McCord informed
-me that Brann had done it previously and had written
-snake stories for the paper into the bargain. This flattered
-me, for they pictured him for what he was, a rare soul, and I
-felt myself growing. Peter had illustrated some of these tales
-for him, for, as he said with mock dignity: “I am the official
-snake artist of this paper.” That very night, as a reward for
-my efficiency I was invited by Dick to come to his room—<i>the</i>
-room, the studio—where he inflicted about nine of his
-horrible masterpieces upon me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I would not make so much of this great honor if it were
-not for what it meant to me then. The room was large and
-dark, on Broadway between Market and Walnut, with the cars
-jangling below. It contained one great white bed, a long
-table covered with the papers and literary compositions of
-Mr. Richard Wood, and was decorated and reinforced with
-that gentleman’s conception of what constituted literary insignia.
-On the walls hung dusty engravings representing the
-death of Hamlet and the tempting of Faust. In one corner,
-over a chest of drawers, was the jagged blade of a
-sword-fish, and in another a most curious display of oriental
-coins. The top of the wardrobe was surmounted by a gruesome
-<i>papier-mâché</i> head representing that somewhat demented
-creature known in England as Ally Sloper. A clear
-space at one corner of the table held a tin pail for carrying
-beer, and the floor, like the walls, was covered with some dusty
-brown material which might once have been a carpet. Owing
-to the darkness of the furnishings and the brightness of the
-fire, the room had a very cheery look.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Say, Dick, did you see where one of ——’s plays had
-made a great hit in New York?” asked McCord. “He’s made
-a strike this time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No,” replied Dick solemnly, poking among the coals of
-the grate and drawing up a chair. “Sit down, Dreiser. Pull
-up a chair, Peter. This confounded grate smokes whenever
-the wind’s from the South. Still there’s nothing like a grate
-fire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We drew up chairs. I was revolving in my mind the charm
-of the room and a vision of greatness in play-writing. These
-two men seemed subtly involved with the perfection of the
-arts. In this atmosphere, with such companions, I felt that I
-could accomplish anything, and soon.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ll tell you how it is with the game of play-writing,” observed
-Dick sententiously. “You have to have imagination
-and feeling and all that, but what’s more important than anything
-is a little business sense, to know how to get in with
-those fellows. You might have the finest play in the world
-in your pocket, but if you didn’t know how to dispose of it
-what good would it do you? None at all. You got to know
-that end first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He reached over and pulled the coal-scuttle into position
-as a footrest and then looked introspectively at the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The play’s the thing,” put in Peter. “If you could write
-a real good play you wouldn’t need to worry about getting it
-staged.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, wouldn’t I? Listen to that now!” commented Dick
-irascibly. “I tell you, Peter, you don’t know anything about
-it. You only think you do; that’s all. Say, did Campbell have
-a good play in his pocket or didn’t he? You betcher neck
-he did. Did he get it staged? No, you betcher boots he
-didn’t. Don’t talk to me; I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By his manner you would have thought he had a standing
-bone to pick with Peter, but this was only his way. It made
-me laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, the play’s the first thing to worry about anyhow,”
-I observed. “I wish I were in a position to write one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why don’t you try?” suggested McCord. “You ought to
-be able to do something in that line. I bet you could write
-a good one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We fell to discussing dramatists. Peter, with his eye for
-gorgeous effects, costuming and the like, immediately began
-to describe the ballet effects and scenery of a comic opera
-laid in Algeria which was then playing in St. Louis.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You ought to go and see that, Dreiser,” he urged. “It’s
-something wonderful. The effect of the balconies in the first
-act, with the muezzins crying the prayers from the towers
-in the distance, is great. Then the harmony of the color work
-in the stones of the buildings is something exquisite. You
-want to see it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I felt myself glowing. This intimate conversation with men
-of such marked artistic ability, in a room, too, which was
-the reflection of an artist’s personality, raised my sense of
-latent ability to the highest point. Not that I felt I was not
-fit to associate with these people—I felt that I was more than
-fit, their equal at every point, conceal it as I might—but it was
-something to come in touch with your own, to find real friends
-to the manner born who were your equals and able to sympathize
-with you and appreciate your every mood. A man
-who had found such friends as these so quickly surely need
-never worry.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ll tell you what I propose to do, Peter, while you people
-are talking,” observed Dick. “I propose to go over to
-Frank’s and get a can of beer. Then I’ll read you that story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This proposal to read a story was new to me; I had not
-heard Wood had written one before. I looked at him more
-keenly, and a little flame of envy leaped to life in me. To be
-able to write a short story—or any kind of a story!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He went to his wardrobe, whence he extracted a medium-length
-black cape of broadcloth, which he threw about his
-shoulders, and a soft hat which he drew rakishly over his
-eyes, then took the tin pail and a piece of money from a
-plate, after the best fashion of the artistic romances of the
-day, and went out. I gazed admiringly after him, touched
-by the romance of it all. That face, waxen, drawn, sensitive,
-with deep burning eyes, and that frail body! That cape!
-That hat! That plate of coins! Yes, this was Bohemia! I
-was now a part of that happy middle world which was superior
-to wealth and poverty. I was in that serene realm where
-moved freely talent, artistic ability, noble thought, ingenious
-action, unhampered by conventional thought and conduct. A
-great man should so live, an artist certainly. These two could
-and did do as they pleased. They were not as others, but
-wise, sensitive, delicately responsive to all that was best in
-life; and as yet the great world was not aware of their
-existence!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wood came back with the beer and then Peter insisted that
-he read us the story. I noticed that there was something
-impish in his manner. He assured me that all of Dick’s
-stories were masterpieces, every one; that time alone was
-required for world-wide recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Dick picked up a single manuscript from a heap. “I don’t
-want to inflict this on you, Dreiser,” he said sweetly and
-apologetically. “We had planned to do this before I knew
-you were coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s the way he always talks,” put in Peter banteringly.
-“Dick loves to stage things. But they’re great stories
-just the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I leaned back, prepared to be thrilled. Dick drew up his
-chair to the table and adjusted a green-shaded gas lamp close
-to the table’s edge. He then unfolded his MS. and began
-reading in a low, well-modulated, semi-pathetic voice, which
-seemed very effective in the more sentimental passages. Reverently
-I sat and listened. The tale was nothing, a mere daub,
-but, oh, the wonder of it! Was I not in the presence and
-friendship of artists? Was not this Bohemia? Had I not
-long heard and dreamed of it? Well, then, what difference
-whether the tales were good or bad? They were by one whom
-I was compelled to admire, an artist, pale, sensitive, recessive,
-one who at the slightest show of inattention or lack of appreciation
-might leave me and never see me more.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I listened to about nine without dying, declaring each and
-every one to be the best I had ever heard—perfect.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>From</span> now on, because of this companionship, my life in
-St. Louis took on a much more cheerful aspect. Hitherto, in
-spite of my work and my natural interest in a strange city,
-I had had intensely gloomy moments. My favorite pastime,
-when I was not out on an assignment or otherwise busy, was
-to walk the streets and view the lives and activities of others,
-not thinking so much how I might advantage myself and
-my affairs as how, for some, the lightning of chance was always
-striking in somewhere and disrupting plans, leaving
-destruction and death in its wake, for others luck or fortune.
-I never was blinded to the gross favoritism practiced by nature,
-and this I resented largely, it may be, because it was
-not, or I thought it was not, practiced in my behalf. Later
-in life I began to suspect that a gross favoritism, in regard
-to certain things at least, was being practiced in my behalf.
-I was never without friends, never without some one to do
-me a good turn at a critical moment, never without love and
-the sacrifice of beauty on the part of some one in my behalf,
-never without a certain amount of applause or repute. Was
-I worthy of it? I knew I was not and I felt that the powers
-that make and control life did not care two whoops whether
-I was or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Life, as I had seen and felt from my earliest thinking
-period, used people, sometimes to their advantage, sometimes
-not. Occasionally, as I could see, I was used to my advantage
-as well as to that of some one or something else. Occasionally
-I was used, as I thought, to my disadvantage. Now and then
-when I imagined I was being used most disadvantageously it
-was not so at all, as when for a period I found myself unable
-to write and so compelled to turn to other things—a turning
-which resulted in better material later on. At this time,
-however, I felt that whatever the quality of the gifts handed
-me or the favors done me, they were as nothing compared
-to some; and, again, I was honestly and sympathetically
-interested in the horrible deprivations inflicted upon others,
-their weaknesses of mind and body, afflictions of all sizes and
-sorts, the way so often they helplessly blundered or were
-driven by internal chemic fires, as in the case of the fascinating
-and beautiful-minded John T. McEnnis, to their own
-undoing. That great idealistic soul, that warm, ebullient
-heart!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The opportunity for indulging in these moods was due to
-the fact that I had plenty of time on my hands, that just
-at this time I was more interested in seeing than in reading,
-and that the three principal hotels here, Southern-fashion,
-were most hospitable, equipping their lobbies and even their
-flanking sidewalks with comfortable rocking-chairs where one
-might sit and dream or read or view the passing scene with
-idle or analytic eye. My favorite hotel was the Lindell, rather
-large and not impressive but still successful and popular,
-which stood at the northwest corner of Sixth and Washington
-Avenue. Here I would repair whenever I had a little time
-and rock in peace and watch the crowd of strangers amble to
-and fro. The manager of this hotel, a brisk, rather interesting
-and yet job-centered American, seeing me sit about every
-afternoon between four-thirty and six and knowing that I
-was from the <i>Globe</i>, finally began to greet me and ask occasionally
-if I did not want to go up to dinner. (How lonely
-and forlorn I must have looked!) On Thanksgiving and
-Christmas afternoons of this my first season there, seeing
-me idle and alone, he asked me to be his guest. I accepted,
-not knowing what else to do. To make it seem like a real
-invitation he came in after I was seated at the table and
-sat down with me for a few minutes. He was so charming
-and the hotel so brisk and crowded that I soon felt at home.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The daily routine of my work seemed to provide ample proof
-of my suspicions that life was grim and sad. Regularly it
-would be a murder, a suicide, a failure, a defalcation which
-I would be assigned to cover, and on the same day there would
-be an important wedding, a business or political banquet, a
-ball or a club entertainment of some kind, which would provide
-just the necessary contrast to prove that life is haphazard and
-casual and cruel; to some lavish, to others niggardly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mere money, often unworthily inherited or made by shabby
-methods, seemed to throw commonplace and even wretched
-souls into such glittering and condescending prominence, in
-this world at least. Many of the business men with whom
-I came in contact were vulgarians, their wives and daughters
-vain and coarse and inconsiderate. I was constantly impressed
-by the airs of the locally prominent, their craving for show
-and pleasure, their insane greed for personal mention, their
-hearty indifference to anything except money plus a keen
-wish to seem to despise it. I remember going one afternoon
-to an imposing residence where some function was in progress.
-I was met by an ostentatious butler who exclaimed
-most nobly: “My dear sir, who sent you here? The <i>Globe</i>
-knows we never give lists to newspaper men. We never admit
-reporters,” and then stiffly closed the door on me. I reported
-as much to the city editor, who remarked meekly, “Well,
-that’s all right,” and gave me something else to do. But
-the next day a list of the guests at this function was published,
-and in this paper. I made inquiry of Hartung, who
-said: “Oh, the society editor must have turned that in. These
-society women send in their lists beforehand and then say
-they don’t receive reporters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another time it was the residence of the Catholic archbishop
-of St. Louis, a very old but shrewd man whom, so it was
-rumored in newspaper circles, the local priests were plotting
-to make appear infirm and weakminded in order that a
-favorite of theirs might be made coadjutor. I was sent to
-inquire about his health, to see him if possible. At the door
-I was met by a sleek dark priest who inquired what I wished,
-whereupon he assured me that the archbishop was too feeble
-to be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That is exactly why I am here,” I insisted. “The <i>Globe</i>
-wishes to inform the public of his exact condition. There
-seems to be a belief on the part of some that he is not as
-ill as is given out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What! You accuse us of concealing something in connection
-with the archbishop! This is outrageous!” and he
-firmly shut me out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It seemed to me that the straightforward thing would have
-been to let me meet the archbishop. He was a public official,
-the state of whose health was of interest to thousands. But
-no; official control regulated that. Shortly afterward he was
-declared too feeble to perform his duties and a coadjutor was
-appointed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again I was sent to a fashionable west end hotel to interview
-a visiting governor who was attending a reception of
-some kind and who, as we understood, was leaving the next
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My dear young fellow,” said a functionary connected
-with the entertainment committee, “you cannot do anything
-of the sort. This is no time to be coming around for anything
-of this kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But he is leaving tomorrow....”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I cannot help that. You cannot see him now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How about taking him my card and asking him about
-tomorrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, no, no! I cannot do anything of the sort. You cannot
-see him,” and once again I was shunted briskly forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall being sent one evening to attend a great public ball
-of some kind—The Veiled Prophets—which was held in the
-general selling-room of the stock exchange at Third and Walnut,
-and which followed as a rule some huge autumnal parade.
-The city editor sent me for a general view or introduction or
-pen picture to be used as a lead to the full story, which was
-to be done by others piecemeal. For this occasion I was
-ordered to hire a dress-suit (the first I had ever worn), which
-cost the paper three dollars. I remember being greatly disturbed
-by my appearance once I got in it and feeling very
-queer and conspicuous. I was greatly troubled as to what
-sort of impression my garb would make on the various
-members of the staff. As to the latter I was not long in
-doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Say, look at our friend in the claw-hammer, will you?”
-this from Hazard. “He looks like a real society man to
-me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Usher, you mean,” called Bellairs. “Who is he? I don’t
-seem to remember him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Those pants come darned near being a fit, don’t they?”
-this from some one who had laid hold of the side lines of the
-trousers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could not make up my mind whether I wanted to fight or
-laugh or whether I was startlingly handsome or a howling
-freak.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the thing that weighed on me most was the luxury,
-tawdry enough perhaps to those intimately connected with it,
-which this ball presented, contrasted with my own ignoble
-state. After spending three hours there bustling about examining
-flowers, decorations, getting names, details of costumes,
-and drinking various drinks with officiating floormasters whose
-sole duty appeared to be to look after the press and see that
-they got all details straight, I returned to the office and began
-to pour forth a glowing account of how beautiful it all was,
-how gorgeous, how perfect the women, how marvelous their
-costumes, how gracious and graceful the men, how oriental or
-occidental or Arabic, I forget which, were the decorations,
-outdoing the Arabian Nights or the fabled splendors of the
-Caliphate. Who does not recognize this indiscriminate newspaper
-tosh, poured forth from one end of America to another
-for everything from a farmers’ reunion or an I. O. O. F.
-Ladies’ Day to an Astor or a Vanderbilt wedding?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I was writing, my head whirring with the imaginary
-and impossible splendors of the occasion, I was informed by
-my city editor that when I was done I should go to a number
-in South St. Louis where only an hour before a triple or
-quadruple murder had been committed. I was to go out on a
-street-car and if I could not get back in time by street-car
-I was to get a carriage and drive back at breakneck speed in
-order to get the story into the last edition. The great fear
-was that the rival paper, the <i>Republic</i>, would get it or might
-already have it and we would not. And so, my head full of
-pearls, diamonds, silks, satins, laces, a world of flowers and
-lights, I was now hustled out along the dark, shabby, lonely
-streets of South St. Louis to the humblest of cottages, in
-the humblest of streets where, among unpainted shacks with
-lean-tos at the back for kitchens, was one which contained this
-story.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>An Irish policeman, silent and indifferent, was already at
-the small dark gate in the dark and silent street, guarding it
-against intruders; another was inside the door, which stood
-partially open, and beyond in the roadway in the darkness,
-their faces all but indistinguishable, a few horrified people.
-A word of explanation and I was admitted. A faint glow from
-a small smoky glass lamp illuminated the front room darkly.
-It turned out that a very honest, simple, religious and good-natured
-Irish-American of about fifty, who had been working
-by the day in this neighborhood, had recently been taken ill
-with brain fever and had on this night arisen from his feverish
-sickbed, seized a flatiron, crept into the front room where
-his wife and two little children slept and brained all three.
-He had then returned to the rear room, where a grown
-daughter slept on a couch beside him, and had first felled her
-with the iron and then cut her throat with a butcher knife.
-Murderous as the deed seemed, and apparently premeditated,
-it was the result of fever. The policeman at the gate informed
-me that the father had already been taken to the
-Four Courts and that a hospital ambulance was due any
-moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But he’s out av his mind,” he insisted blandly. “He’s
-crazy, sure, or sick av the fever. No man in his right sinses
-would do that. I tried to taalk to him but he couldn’t say
-naathin’, just mumble like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After my grand ball this wretched front room presented a
-sad and ghastly contrast. The house and furniture were very
-poor, the dead wife and children homely and seemingly work-worn.
-I noticed the dim, smoky flame cast by the lamp, the
-cheap bed awry and stained red, the mother and two children
-lying in limp and painful disorder, the bedding dragged half
-off. It was evident that a struggle had taken place, for a chair
-and table were upset, the ironing-board thrown down, a bureau
-and the bed pushed sidewise.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Shocked beyond measure, yet with an eye to color and to
-the zest of the public for picturesque details, I examined the
-three rooms with care, the officer in the house following me.
-Together we looked at the utensils in the kitchen, what was in
-the cupboard to eat, what in the closet to wear. I made notes
-of the contents of the rooms, their cheapness, then went to
-the neighbors on either hand to learn if they had heard anything.
-Then in a stray owl-car, no carriages being available,
-I hurried to the Four Courts, several miles cityward, to see
-the criminal. I found him, old, pale, sick, thin, walking up
-and down in his small iron cell, plainly out of his mind, a
-picture of hopeless, unconscious misery. His hands trembled
-idly about his mouth; his shabby trousers bagged about his
-shoes; he was unshaven and weak-looking, and all the while
-he mumbled to himself some unintelligible sounds. I tried
-to talk with him but could get nothing. He seemed not
-even to know that I was there, so brain-sick was he. Then I
-questioned the jail attendants, those dull wiseacres of the
-law. Had he talked? Did they think he was sane? With
-the usual acumen and delicacy of this tribe, they were inclined
-to think he was shamming.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried through dark streets to the office. It was an almost
-empty reportorial room in which I scribbled my dolorous
-picture. With the impetuosity of youth and curiosity and
-sorrow and wonder I told it all, the terror, the pity, the
-inexplicability. As I wrote, each page was taken up by Hartung,
-edited and sent up. Then, having done perhaps a
-column and a half (Bellairs having arrived with various police
-theories), I was allowed finally to amble out into a dark street
-and seek my miserable little room with its creaky bed, its dirty
-coverlets, its ragged carpets and stained walls. Nevertheless,
-I lay down with a kind of high pride and satisfaction in
-my story of the murder and my description of the ball, and
-with my life in consequence! I was not so bad. I was getting
-along. I must be thought an exceptional man to be picked for
-two such difficult tasks in the same evening. Life itself was
-not so bad; it was just higgledy-piggledy, catch-as-catch-can,
-that was all. If one were clever, like myself, it was all right.
-Next morning, when I reached the office, McCord and Hazard
-and some others pronounced my stuff “pretty good,” and
-I was beside myself with glee. I strolled about as though I
-owned the earth, pretending simplicity and humility but actually
-believing that I was the finest ever, that no one could
-outdo me at this game of reporting.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Things</span> relatively interesting, contrasts nearly as sharp and
-as well calculated to cause one to meditate on the wonder, the
-beauty, the uncertainty, the indifference, the cruelty and the
-rank favoritism of life, were daily if not hourly put before
-me. Now it would be some such murder as this or a social
-scandal of some kind, often of a gross and revolting character,
-in some ultra-respectable neighborhood, or a suicide
-of peculiarly sad or grim character. Or, again, it would be
-a fine piece of chicane, as when a certain “board-and-feed”
-stable owner of the west end, about to lose his property
-because of poor business and anxious to save himself by
-securing the insurance, set fire to the stable and destroyed
-seventeen healthy horses as well as one stable attendant and
-“got away with it,” legally anyhow. His plan had probably
-been to save the horses and the man, but the plan miscarried.
-I gathered as much from him when I interviewed him. I put
-some pertinent questions at him but could get no admissions
-on which to base a charge. He was a shrewd, calculating,
-commercial type, vigorous and semi-savage. He evaded me
-blandly and I had to write the fire up as a sad accident, thereby
-aiding him to get his insurance, the while I was convinced
-that he was guilty, a hard-hearted scoundrel.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing that I sensed very clearly at this time was
-the fact that the average newspaper reporter was a far better
-detective in his way than the legitimate official detective, and
-not nearly so well paid. The average so-called “headquarters
-man,” was a loathsome thing, as low in his ideas and methods
-as the lowest criminal he was set to trap. The criminal was
-at least shrewd and dynamic enough to plot and execute a
-crime, whereas the detective had no brains at all, merely a
-low kind of cunning. Often red-headed, freckled, with big
-hands and feet, store clothes, squeaky shoes—why does such a
-picture of the detective come back to me? Pop-eyed, with a
-ridiculous air of mystery and profundity in matters requiring
-neither, dirty, offensive, fish-eyed and merciless, the detectives
-floundered about in different cases without a grain of humor;
-whereas the average reporter was, by contrast anyhow, intelligent
-or shrewd, cleanly nearly always, if at times a little
-slouchy, inclined to drink and sport perhaps but genial, often
-gentlemanly, a fascinating story-teller, a keen psychologist
-(nearly always one of the best), frequently well read, humorous,
-sympathetic, amusing or gloomy as the case might be,
-but generally to be relied upon in such emergencies for truly
-skillful work. Naturally there was some enmity between the
-two, a contempt on the part of the newspaper man for the
-detective, a fear and dislike and secret opposition on the
-part of the detective. The reporter would go forth on a
-mystifying case and as a rule, given time enough, would solve
-it, whereas the police detectives would be tramping about
-often trailing the reporters, reading the newspapers to discover
-what had been discovered, and then, when the work had
-been done and the true clew furnished, would step forward at
-the grand moment to do the arresting and get their pictures
-and names in the papers. The detectives were constantly
-playing into the hands of the police reporters in unimportant
-matters during periods between great cases, doing them little
-favors, helping them in small cases, in order that when a
-big case came along they might have favors done unto them.
-The most important of all these favors, of course, was that
-of seeing that their names were mentioned in the papers as
-being engaged in solving a mystery or having done thus and
-so, when in all likelihood some newspaper man had done it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes the tip as to where the criminal was likely to be
-found would be furnished by the papers and later credited
-to the police. Sometimes the newspaper men would lash the
-police, sometimes flatter them, but always they were seeking
-to make the police aid them to get various necessary things
-done, and not always succeeding. Sometimes the police were
-hand-in-glove with certain crooks or evil-doers, and you could
-all but prove it, but until you did so, and sometimes afterward,
-they were stubborn and would defy you and the papers.
-But not for long. They loved publicity too much; offer them
-sufficient publicity, and they would act. It was nearly always
-my experience that the newspapers, which meant the reporters
-of course plus an efficient city editor and possibly a managing
-editor, would be the first to worm out the psychology of any
-given case and then point an almost unerring finger at the
-criminal; then the police or detectives would come in and do
-the arresting and get the credit.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing that impressed me greatly at this time was
-the kaleidoscopic character of newspaper work, which, in its
-personal significance to me, cannot be too much emphasized.
-As I have said, one day it would be a crime of a lurid or sensational
-character that would arrest and compel me to think,
-and the same day, within the hour perhaps, it would be a lecturer
-or religionist with some finespun theory of life, some
-theosophist like Annie Besant, who in passing through St.
-Louis on a lecture tour would be at one of the best hotels,
-usually the Southern, talking transmigration and Nirvana.
-Again, it would be some mountebank or quack of a low order—a
-spiritualist, let us say, of the Eva Fay stripe, or a mindreader
-like Bishop, or a third-rate religionist like the Reverend
-Sam Jones, who was then in his heyday preaching unadulterated
-hell, or the arrival of a prize-fighter-actor like
-John L. Sullivan, then only recently defeated by Corbett, or
-a novelist of the quack order, such as Hall Caine.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And there were distinguished individuals, including such
-excellent lecturers as Henry Watterson and Henry M. Stanley,
-or a musician like Paderewski, or a scientist of the standing
-of Nikola Tesla. I was sent to interview my share of
-these, to get their views on something—anything or nothing
-really, for my city editor, Mr. Mitchell, seemed at times a
-little cloudy as to their significance, and certainly I had no
-clear insight into What most of them stood for. I wondered,
-guessed, made vague stabs at what I thought they represented,
-and in the main took them seriously enough. My favorite question
-was What did they think of life, its meaning, since this
-was uppermost in my mind at the time, and I think I asked it
-of every one of them, from John L. Sullivan to Annie Besant.
-And what a jangle of doctrines! What a noble burst of ideas!
-Annie Besant, in a room at the Southern delicately scented
-with flowers, arrayed in a cool silken gray dress, informed
-me that the age was material, that wealth and show were
-an illusion based on nothing at all (I wrote that down without
-understanding what she meant), that the Hindu Swamis had
-long since solved all this seeming mystery of living, Madame
-Blavatsky being the most recent and the greatest apostle of
-wisdom in this matter, and that the great thing to do in this
-world or the next was to improve oneself spiritually and so
-eventually attain to Nirvana, nothingness—a word I had
-to look up afterward. (When I told Dick Wood about her he
-seemed greatly impressed and said: “Oh, there’s more to
-that stuff than you think, Dreiser. You’re just not up on all
-that yet. These mystics see more than we think they do,”
-and he looked very wise.)</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And Henry Watterson—imagine me at the age of twenty-one
-trying to interview him when he was in the heyday of
-his fame and mental powers! Short, stocky, with a protuberant
-belly, slightly gray hair, gruff and simple in his
-manner and joyously secure in his fame (he had just the
-preceding summer said that Cleveland, Democratic candidate
-of the hour and later elected, was certain to “walk up an
-alley to a slaughter-house and an open grave,” and had of
-course seen his prediction fail), he was convinced that the
-country was in bad hands, not likely to go to the “demnition
-bow-wows” as yet but in for a bad corporation-materialistic
-spell. And when I asked <i>him</i> what he thought of life——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My son, when you get as old as I am you probably won’t
-think so much of it, and you won’t be to blame. It’s good
-enough in its way, but it’s a damned ticklish business. You
-may say that Henry Watterson said that if you like. Do the
-best you can, and don’t crowd the other fellow too hard, and
-you’ll come out as well as anybody, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And then John L. Sullivan, raw, red-faced, big-fisted, broad-shouldered,
-drunken, with gaudy waistcoat and tie, and rings
-and pins set with enormous diamonds and rubies—what an
-impression he made! Surrounded by local sports and politicians
-of the most rubicund and degraded character (he was a
-great favorite with them), he seemed to me, sitting in his
-suite at the Lindell, to be the apotheosis of the humorously
-gross and vigorous and material. Cigar boxes, champagne
-buckets, decanters, beer bottles, overcoats, collars and shirts
-littered the floor, and lolling back in the midst of it all in
-ease and splendor his very great self, a sort of prizefighting
-J. P. Morgan.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, haw! haw! haw!” I can hear him even now when I
-asked him my favorite question about life, his plans, the value
-of exercise (!), etc. “He wants to know about exercise!
-You’re all right, young fella, kinda slim, but you’ll do. Sit
-down and have some champagne. Have a cigar. Give ‘im
-some cigars, George. These young newspaper men are all
-all right to me. I’m for ’em. Exercise? What I think?
-Haw! haw! Write any damned thing yuh please, young fella,
-and say that John L. Sullivan said so. That’s good enough for
-me. If they don’t believe it bring it back here and I’ll sign
-it for yuh. But I know it’ll be all right, and I won’t stop
-to read it neither. That suit yuh? Well, all right. Now
-have some more champagne and don’t say I didn’t treat yuh
-right, ’cause I did. I’m ex-champion of the world, defeated by
-that little dude from California, but I’m still John L. Sullivan—ain’t
-that right? Haw! haw! They can’t take that
-away from me, can they? Haw! haw! Have some more
-champagne, boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I adored him. I would have written anything he asked
-me to write. I got up the very best article I could and published
-it, and was told afterward that it was fine.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing that interested me about newspaper work
-was its pagan or unmoral character, as contrasted with the
-heavy religionistic and moralistic point of view seemingly
-prevailing in the editorial office proper (the editorial page,
-of course), as well as the world outside. While the editorial
-office might be preparing the most flowery moralistic or religionistic
-editorials regarding the worth of man, the value
-of progress, character, religion, morality, the sanctity of the
-home, charity and the like, the business office and news
-rooms were concerned with no such fine theories. The business
-office was all business, with little or no thought of anything
-save success, and in the city news room the mask was off and
-life was handled in a rough-and-ready manner, without gloves
-and in a catch-as-catch-can fashion. Pretense did not go
-here. Innate honesty on the part of any one was not probable.
-Charity was a business with something in it for somebody.
-Morality was in the main for public consumption only.
-“Get the news! Get the news!”—that was the great cry in
-the city editorial room. “Don’t worry much over how you
-get it, but get it, and don’t come back without it! Don’t
-fall down! Don’t let the other newspapers skin us—that is,
-if you value your job! And write—and write well. If any
-other paper writes it better than you do you’re beaten and
-might as well resign.” The public must be entertained by
-the writing of reporters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the methods and the effrontery and the callousness
-necessary at times for the gathering of news—what a shock
-even though one realized that it was conditional with life
-itself! At most times one needed to be hard, cold, jesuitical.
-For instance, one of the problems that troubled me most, and
-to which there was no solution save to act jesuitically or get
-out, was how to get the facts from a man or woman suspected
-of some misdeed or error without letting him know that you
-were so doing. In the main, if you wanted facts of any
-kind, especially in connection with the suspected, you did
-not dare tell them that you came as an enemy or were bent
-on exposing them. One had to approach all, even the worst
-and most degraded, as a friend and pretend an interest, perhaps
-even a sympathy one did not feel, to apply the oil of
-flattery to the soul. To do less than this was to lose the
-news, and while a city editor might readily forgive any
-form of trickery he would never forgive failure. Cheat and
-win and you were all right; be honest and lose and you were
-fired. To appear wise when you were ignorant, dull when
-you were not, disinterested when you were interested, brutal
-or severe when you might be just the reverse—these were
-the essential tricks of the trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I, being sent out every day and loafing about the
-corridors of the various hotels at different times, soon encountered
-other newspaper men who were as shrewd and
-wily as ferrets, who had apparently but one motive in life:
-to trim their fellow newspaper men in the matter of news, or
-the public which provided the news. There being only two
-morning papers here (the <i>Globe</i> and the <i>Republic</i>), the reporters
-of each loved the others not, even when personally
-they were inclined to be friendly. They did not dare permit
-their personal likes to affect their work. It was every man
-for himself. Meet a reporter of the <i>Republic</i> or the <i>Globe</i>
-on a story: he might be friendly enough but he would tell
-you nothing. He wished either to shun you or worm your
-facts out of you. Meet him in the lobby of the La Clede, where
-by common consent, winter or summer, most seemed to gather,
-or at the corner drugstore outside, and each would be friendly
-with the other, trading tales of life, going together to a saloon
-for a drink or to the “beanery,” a famous eating-place on
-Chestnut between Fourth and Broadway, perhaps borrowing
-a dime, a quarter or a dollar until pay day—but never repaying
-with news or tips; quite the reverse, as I soon found.
-One had to keep an absolutely close mouth as to all one might
-be doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The counsel of all of these men was to get the news in
-any way possible, by hook or by crook, and to lose no time
-in theorizing about it. If a document was lying on an official’s
-table, for instance, and you wanted to see it and could
-not persuade him to give it to you—well, if he turned his
-back it was good business to take it, or at least read it. If a
-photograph was desired and the one concerned would not
-give it and you saw it somewhere, take it of course and let
-them complain afterward if they would; your city editor
-was supposed to protect you in such matters. You might
-know of certain conditions of which a public official was not
-aware and the knowledge of which would cause him to talk
-in one way, whereas lack of that knowledge would cause him
-to talk in another. Personally you might think it your duty
-to tell him, but as a newspaper man you could not. It was
-your duty to your paper to sacrifice him. If you didn’t some
-one else would. I was not long in learning all this and more,
-and although I understood the necessity I sometimes resented
-having to do it. There were times when I wanted to treat
-people better than I did or could. Sometimes I told myself
-that I was better in this respect than other newspaper men;
-but when the test came I found that I was like the others,
-as eager to get the news. Something akin to a dog’s lust of
-the chase would in critical moments seize upon me and in
-my eagerness to win a newspaper battle I would forget or
-ignore nearly every tenet of fairness and get it. Then, victorious,
-I might sigh over the sadness of it all and decide that
-I was going to get out of the business—as I eventually did,
-and for very much this reason—but at the time I was weak
-or practical enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One afternoon I was sent to interview the current Democratic
-candidate for mayor, an amiable soul who conducted
-a wholesale harness business and who was supposed to have
-an excellent chance of being elected. The city had long been
-sick of Republican misrule, or so our office seemed to think.
-When I entered his place he was in the front part of the
-store discussing with several friends or politicians the character
-of St. Louis, its political and social backwardness, its
-narrowness, slowness and the like, and for some reason, possibly
-due to the personality of his friends, he was very severe.
-Local religionists, among others, came in for a good drubbing.
-I did not know him but for some unexplainable reason I assumed
-at once that the man talking was the candidate. Again,
-I instinctively knew that if what he was saying were published
-it would create a sensation. The lust of the hunter stalking a
-wild animal immediately took possession of me. What a
-beat, to take down what this man was saying! What a stir
-it would make! Without seeming to want anything in particular,
-I stood by a showcase and examined the articles within.
-Soon he finished his tirade and came to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m from the <i>Globe</i>,” I said. “I want to ask you——”
-and I asked him some questions.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When he heard that I was from the <i>Globe</i> he became visibly
-excited.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Did you hear what I was saying just now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you know that I was not speaking for publication....”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And you’re not to forget that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I understand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just the same I returned to the office and wrote up the
-incident just as it had occurred. My city editor took it,
-glanced over it, and departed for the front office. I could tell
-by his manner that he was excited. The next day it was published
-in all its crude reality, and the man was ruined politically.
-There were furious denials in the rival Democratic
-papers. A lying reporter was denounced, not only by Mr.
-Bannerman, the candidate, but by all the other papers editorially.
-At once I was called to the front office to explain
-to Mr. McCullagh, which I did in detail. “He said it all,
-did he?” he asked, and I insisted that he had. “I know it’s
-true,” he said, “for other people have told me that he has
-said the same things before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Next day there was a defiant editorial in the <i>Globe</i> defending
-me, my truthfulness, the fact that the truth of the interview
-was substantiated by previous words and deeds of the
-candidate. Various editors on the paper came forward to
-congratulate me, to tell me what a beat I had made; but
-to tell the truth I felt shamefaced, dishonest, unkind. I was
-an eavesdropper. I had taken an unfair advantage, and I
-knew it. Still, something in me made me feel that I was
-fortunate. As a reporter I had done the paper a great service.
-My editor-in-chief, as I could see, appreciated it. No other
-immediate personal reward came to me, but I felt that I had
-strengthened my standing here a little. Yet for that I had
-killed that man politically. Youth, zest, life, the love of the
-chase—that is all that explains it to me now.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>My</span> standing as a local newspaper man seemed to grow by
-leaps and bounds—I am not exaggerating. Certain almost
-fortuitous events (how often they have occurred in my life!)
-seemed to assist me, far above my willing or even my dreams.
-Thus, one morning I had come down to the <i>Globe</i> city room to
-get something, a paper or a book I had left, before going to my
-late breakfast, when a tall, broad-shouldered man, wearing a
-slouch hat and looking much like the typical Kentucky colonel,
-hurried into the office and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is the city editor here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He isn’t down yet,” I replied. “Anything I can do for
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I just stopped to tell you there’s a big wreck on the road
-up here near Alton. I saw it from the train as I passed
-coming down from Chicago. A half dozen cars are burning.
-If you people get a man up there right away you can get a
-big lead on this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I grabbed a piece of paper, for I felt instinctively that this
-was important. Some one ought to attend to it right away.
-I looked around to see if there was any one to appeal to, but
-there was no one.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What did you say the name of the place was?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wann,” relied the stranger, “right near Alton. You can’t
-miss it. Better get somebody up there quick. I think it’s
-something big. I know how important these things are to
-you newspaper boys: I used to be one myself, and I owe the
-<i>Globe</i> a few good turns anyhow.” He smiled and bustled
-out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did not wait to see the city editor. I felt that I was
-taking a big risk, going out without orders, but I also felt
-that something terrible had happened and that the occasion
-warranted it. I had never seen a big wreck. It must be wonderful.
-The newspapers always gave them so much space. I
-wrote a note to the city editor explaining that the wreck
-was reported to be a great one and added that I felt it to be
-my duty to go at once. Perhaps he had better send an artist
-after me—imagine me advising him!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the way to the depot I thought of what I must do: telegraph
-for an artist if the wreck was really important, and
-then get my story and get back. It was over an hour’s run.
-I got off at the nearest station to the wreck and, walked the
-remaining distance, which was a little more than a mile. As
-I neared it I saw a crowd of people gathered about what was
-evidently the smoldering embers of a train, and on the same
-track, not more than a hundred feet away, were three oil-tank
-cars, those evidently into which the passenger train had
-crashed. These cars were also surrounded by a crowd, citizens
-of nearby towns, as it proved, who were staring at them
-as the fire blazed about them. As I learned later, a fourth
-oil-tank car had been smashed and the contents had poured
-out about these others of the oil group as well as the passenger
-train itself. The oil had taken fire and consumed the train,
-although no people were killed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The significance of the scene had not yet quite dawned upon
-me, however, when for the second time in my life I was privileged
-to behold one of those terrible catastrophes which it is
-given to few of us to see. The oil-tank cars about which the
-crowd was gathered, having become overheated by the burning
-oil beneath, exploded all at once with a muffled report which
-to me (I was no more than fifteen hundred feet away) sounded
-like a deep breath exhaled by some powerful man. The earth
-trembled, the heavens instantly appeared to be surcharged
-with flame. The crowd, which only a moment before I had
-seen solidly massed about the cars, was now hurled back in
-confusion, and I beheld men running, some toward me,
-some from me, their bodies on fire or being momentarily ignited.
-I saw flames descending toward me, long, red, licking
-things, and realizing the danger I turned and in a panic ran
-as fast as I could, never stopping until I deemed myself at a
-safe distance. Then I halted and gazed back, hearing at the
-same time a chorus of pitiful wails and screams which tore
-my heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Death is here, I said to myself. I am witnessing a real
-tragedy, a horror. The part of the great mysterious force
-which makes and unmakes our visible scene is here and now
-magnificently operative. But, first of all, I was a newspaper
-man; I must report this, run to it, not away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I saw dashing toward me a man whose face I could not
-make out clearly, for at times it was partially covered by his
-hands, which seemed aflame, at other times the hands waved
-in the air like flails, and were burning. His body was being
-consumed by a rosy flame which partially enveloped him. His
-face, whenever it became visible as he moved his hands to and
-fro, was screwed into a horrible grimace. Unconscious of
-me as he ran, he dashed like a fiery force to the low ditch
-which paralleled the railroad, where he rolled and twisted like
-a worm.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could scarcely believe my eyes or my senses. My hair rose
-on end. My hands twitched convulsively. I ran forward,
-pulling off my coat, and threw it over him to smother the
-spots of flame—but it was of no use—my coat began to burn.
-With my bare hands I tore grass and earth from the ditch
-and piled them upon the sufferer. For the moment I was
-beside myself with terror and misery and grief. Tears came
-to my eyes and I choked with the sense of helpless misery.
-When I saw my own coat burning I snatched it away and
-stamped the fire out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The man was burned beyond recovery. The oil had evidently
-fallen in a mass upon the back of his head and
-shoulders and back and legs. It had burnt his clothes and hair
-and cooked the skin. His hands were scorched black, as well
-as his neck and ears and face. Finally he ceased to struggle
-and lay still, groaning heavily but unconscious. He was
-alive, but that was all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Oppressed by the horror of it I looked about for help, but
-seeing many others in the same plight I realized the futility of
-further labor here. I could do nothing more. I had stopped
-the flames in part, the man’s rolling in the ditch had done the
-rest, but to what end! Hope of life was ridiculous, I could
-see that plainly. I turned, like a soldier in battle, and looked
-after the rest of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To this hour I can see it all—some running over the fields in
-the distance away from the now entirely exploded tanks, others
-approaching the fallen victims. A house a little beyond the
-wreck was burning. A small village, not a thousand feet away,
-was blazing in spots, bits of oil having fallen upon the roofs.
-People were running hither and thither like ants, bending over
-and examining prostrate forms.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My first idea of course when I recovered my senses was that
-I must get in touch with my newspaper and get it to send an
-artist—Wood, if possible—and then get the news. These
-people here would do as much for the injured as I could. Why
-waste my newspaper’s time on them? I ran to a little road-crossing
-telegraph station a few hundred feet farther on where
-I asked the agent what was being done.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ve sent for a wreck-train,” he replied excitedly. “I’ve
-telegraphed the Alton General Hospital. There ought to be a
-train and doctor here pretty soon, any minute now.” He
-looked at his watch. “What more can I do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Have you any idea how many are killed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t know. You can see for yourself, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Will you take a message to the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>? I want to
-send for an artist.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I can’t be bothered with anything like that now,” he replied
-roughly. I felt that an instant antagonism and caution
-enveloped him. He hurried away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How am I to do this?” I thought, and then I ran, studying
-and aiding with the victims where aid seemed of the slightest
-use, wondering how I should ever be able to report all this,
-and awaiting the arrival of the hospital and wrecking train.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>It</span> was not long before the wreck-train arrived, a thing of
-flat cars, box-cars and cabooses of an old pattern, with hospital
-cots made ready en route, and a number of doctors and nurses
-who scrambled out with the air and authority of those used to
-scenes of this kind. Meanwhile I had been wondering how
-long it would be before the wreck-train would arrive and had
-set about getting my information before the doctors and authorities
-were on the scene, when it might not be so easy. I
-knew that names of the injured and their condition were most
-important, and I ran from one to another of the groups that
-had formed here and there over one dying or dead, asking
-them who it was, where he lived, what his occupation was
-(curiously, there were no women), and how he came to be at
-the scene of the wreck. Some, I found, were passengers,
-some residents of the nearby village of Wann or Alton who
-had hurried over to see the wreck. Most of the passengers
-had gone on a train provided for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I had a hard enough time getting information, even from
-those who were able to talk. Citizens from the nearby town
-and those who had not been injured were too much frightened
-by the catastrophe or were lending a hand to do what
-they could ... they were not interested in a reporter or his
-needs. A group carrying the injured to the platform resented
-my intrusion, and others searching the meadows for those who
-had run far away until they fell were too busy to bother with
-me. Still I pressed on. I went from one to another asking
-who they were, receiving in some cases mumbled replies, in
-others merely groans. With those laid out on the platform
-awaiting the arrival of the wreck-train I did not have so much
-trouble: they were helpless and there were none to attend
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, can’t you let me alone!” exclaimed one man whose
-face was a black crust. “Can’t you see I’m dying?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Isn’t there some one who will want to know?” I asked
-softly. It struck me all at once that this was a duty these
-people owed to everybody, their families and friends included.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re right,” said the man with cracked lips, after a
-long silence, and he gave his name and an account of his
-experiences.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went to others and to each who was able to understand I
-put the same question. It won me the toleration of those who
-were watching me. All except the station agent seemed to
-see that I was entitled to do this, and he could have been
-soothed with a bribe if I had thought of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I have said, however, once the wreck-train rolled in surgeons
-and nurses leaped down, and men brought litters to
-carry away the wounded. In a moment the scene changed;
-the authorities of the road turned a frowning face upon inquiry
-and I was only too glad that I had thought to make my
-inquiries early. However, I managed in the excitement to
-install myself in the train just as it was leaving so as to reach
-Alton with the injured and dead and witness the transfer.
-Some died en route, others moaned in a soul-racking way. I
-was beside myself with pity and excitement, and yet I could
-think only of the manner in which I would describe, describe,
-describe, once the time came. Just now I scarcely dared to
-make notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Alton the scene transferred itself gradually to the Alton
-General Hospital, where in spite of the protests of railroad officials
-I demanded as my right that I be allowed to enter and
-was finally admitted. Once in the hospital I completed my
-canvass, being new assisted by doctors and nurses, who seemed
-to like my appearance and to respect my calling, possibly because
-they saw themselves mentioned in the morning paper.
-Having interviewed every injured man, obtaining his name
-and address where possible, I finally went out, and at the door
-encountered a great throng of people, men, women and children,
-who were weeping and clamoring for information. One
-glance, and I realized for all time what these tragedies of the
-world really mean to those dependent. The white drawn faces,
-the liquid appealing eyes, tragedy written in large human
-characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you know whether my John is in there?” cried one
-woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Your John?” I replied sympathetically. “Will you tell
-me who your John is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“John Taylor. He works on that road. He was over
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wait a moment,” I said, reaching down in my pocket for
-my pad and reading the names. “No, he isn’t here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The woman heaved a great sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Others now crowded about me. In a moment I was the
-center of a clamoring throng. All wanted to know, each before
-the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wait a moment,” I said, as an inspiration seized me. I
-raised my hand, and a silence fell over the little group.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You people want to know who is injured,” I called. “I
-have a list here which I made over at the wreck and here. It
-is almost complete. If you will be quiet I will read it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A hush fell over the crowd. I stepped to one side, where there
-was a broad balustrade, mounted it and held up my paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Edward Reeves,” I began, “224 South Elm Street, Alton.
-Arms, legs and face seriously burned. He may die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh!” came a cry from a woman in the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I decided to not say whether any one was seriously injured.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Charles Wingate, 415 North Tenth Street, St. Louis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No voice answered this.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Richard Shortwood, 193 Thomas Street, Alton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I read on down the list of forty or more, and at each name
-there was a stir and in some instances cries. As I stepped
-down two or three people drew near and thanked me. A flush
-of gratification swept over me. For once I felt that I had done
-something of which I could honestly be proud.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The rest of the afternoon was spent in gathering outside
-details. I hunted up the local paper, which was getting out
-an extra, and got permission to read its earlier account. I
-went to the depot to see how the trains ran, and by accident
-ran into Wood. In spite of my inability to send a telegram
-the city editor had seen fit to take my advice and send him.
-He was intensely wrought up over how to illustrate it all, and
-I am satisfied that my description of what had occurred did not
-ease him much. I accompanied him back to the hospital to
-see if there was anything there he wished to illustrate, and
-then described to him the horror as I saw it. Together we
-visited the morgue of the hospital, where already fourteen
-naked bodies had been laid out in a row, bodies from which
-the flames had eaten great patches of skin, and I saw that there
-was nothing now by which they could be identified. Who
-were they? I asked myself. What had they been, done? The
-nothingness of man! They looked so commonplace, so unimportant,
-so like dead flies or beetles. Curiously enough, the
-burns which had killed them seemed in some cases pitifully
-small, little patches cut out of the skin as if by a pair of shears,
-revealing the raw muscles beneath. All those dead were
-stark naked, men who had been alive and curiously gaping
-only two or three hours before. For once Dick was hushed;
-he did not theorize or pretend; he was silent, pale. “It’s hell,
-I tell you,” was all he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the way back on the train I wrote. In my eagerness to
-give a full account I impressed the services of Dick, who
-wrote for me such phases of the thing as he had seen. At the
-office I reported briefly to Mitchell, giving that solemn salamander
-a short account of what had occurred. He told me
-to write it at full length, as much as I pleased. It was
-about seven in the evening when we reached the office, and
-at eleven I was still writing and not nearly through. I
-asked Hartung to look out for some food for me about midnight,
-and then went on with my work. By that time the
-whole paper had become aware of the importance of the thing
-I was doing; I was surrounded and observed at times by gossips
-and representatives of out-of-town newspapers, who had
-come here to get transcripts of the tale. The telegraph editor
-came in from time to time to get additional pages of what I
-was writing in order to answer inquiries, and told me he
-thought it was fine. The night editor called to ask questions,
-and the reporters present sat about and eyed me curiously. I
-was a lion for once. The realization of my importance set
-me up. I wrote with vim, vanity, a fine frenzy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By one o’clock I was through. Then after it was all over
-the other reporters and newspaper men gathered about me—Hazard,
-Bellairs, Benson, Hartung, David the railroad man,
-and several others.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This is going to be a great beat for you,” said Hazard
-generously. “We’ve got the <i>Post</i> licked, all right. They
-didn’t hear of it until three o’clock this afternoon, but they
-sent five men out there and two artists. But the best they can
-have is a <i>cold</i> account. You <i>saw</i> it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s right,” echoed Bellairs. “You’ve got ’em licked.
-That’ll tickle Mac, all right. He loves to beat the other
-Sunday papers.” It was Saturday night.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Tobe’s tickled sick,” confided Hartung cautiously.
-“You’ve saved his bacon. He hates a big story because he’s
-always afraid he won’t cover it right and it always worries
-him, but he knows you’ve got ’em beat. McCullagh’ll give
-him credit for it, all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, that big stiff!” I said scornfully, referring to Tobias.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Something always saves that big stiff,” said Hazard bitterly.
-“He plays in luck, by George! He hasn’t any brains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went in to report to my superior after a time, and told
-him very humbly that I thought I had written all I could down
-here but that there was considerable more up there which I
-was sure should be personally covered by me and that I ought
-to go back.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Very well,” he replied gruffly. “But don’t overdo it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The big stiff!” I thought as I went out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That night I stayed at a downtown hotel, since I was now
-charging everything to the paper and wanted to be called
-early, and after a feverish sleep arose at six and started out
-again. I was as excited and cheerful as though I had suddenly
-become a millionaire. I stopped at the nearest corner
-and bought a <i>Globe</i>, a <i>Republic</i>, and a <i>Post-Dispatch</i>, and
-proceeded to contrast the various accounts, scanning the columns
-to see how much my stuff made and theirs, and measuring
-the atmosphere and quality. To me, of course, mine
-seemed infinitely the best. There it was, occupying the whole
-front page, with cuts, and nearly all of the second page, with
-cuts! I could hardly believe my eyes. Dick’s illustrations
-were atrocious, a mess, no spirit or meaning to them, just
-great blotches of weird machinery and queer figures. He had
-lost himself in an effort to make a picture of the original
-crumpling wreck, and he had done it very badly. At once,
-and for the first time, he began to diminish as an artist in
-my estimation. “Why, this doesn’t look anything like it at
-all! He hasn’t drawn what I would have drawn,” and I began
-to see or suspect that art might mean something besides
-clothes and manner. “Why didn’t he show those dead
-men, that crowd clamoring about the main entrance of the
-hospital?” The illustrations in the other papers seemed
-much better.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As for myself, I saw no least flaw in my work. It was all
-all right, especially the amount of space given me. Splendid!
-“My!” I said to myself vainly, “to think I should have
-written all this, and single-handed, between the hours of
-five and midnight!” It seemed astonishing, a fine performance.
-I picked out the most striking passages first and read
-them, my throat swelling and contracting uncomfortably, my
-heart beating proudly, and then I went over the whole of the
-article word by word. To me in my vain mood it read amazingly
-well. I felt that it was full of fire and pathos and done
-in the right way, with facts and color. And, to cap it all
-and fill my cup of satisfaction to the brim, this same paper
-contained an editorial calling attention to the facts that the
-<i>Globe</i> had triumphed in the matter of reporting this story and
-that the skill of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> could always be counted
-upon in a crisis like this to handle such things correctly, and
-commiserating the other poor journals on their helplessness
-when faced by such trying circumstances. The <i>Globe</i> was always
-best and first, according to this statement. I felt that
-at last I had justified the opinion of the editor-in-chief in
-sending for me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Bursting with vanity, I returned to Alton. Despite the woes
-of others I could not help glorying in the fact that nearly
-the whole city, a good part of it anyhow, must be reading <i>my</i>
-account of the wreck. It was anonymous, of course, and they
-could not know who had done it, but just the same I had
-done it whether they knew it or not and I exulted. This was
-the chance, apparently, that I had been longing for, and I
-had not failed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This second day at Alton was not so important as I had
-fancied it might be, but it had its phases. On my arrival I
-took one more look at the morgue, where by then thirty-one
-dead bodies were laid out in a row, and then began to look
-after those who were likely to recover. I visited some of the
-families of the afflicted, who talked of damage suits. At my
-leisure I wrote a full account of just how the case stood, and
-wired it. I felt that to finish the thing properly I should stay
-until another day, which really was not necessary, and decided
-to do so without consulting my editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But by nightfall, after my copy had been filed, I realized
-my mistake, for I received a telegram to return. The local
-correspondent could attend to the remaining details. On
-the way back I began to feel a qualm of conscience in regard
-to my conduct. I had been taking a great deal for
-granted, as I knew, in thus attempting to act without orders.
-My city editor might think I was getting a “swelled head,”
-as no doubt I was, and so complain to McCullagh. I knew
-he did not like me, and this gave him a good excuse to complain.
-Besides, my second day’s story, now that it was gone,
-did not seem to be so important; I might as well have carried
-it in and saved the expense of telegraphing it. I felt that
-I had failed in this; also that mature consideration might
-decide that I had failed on the first story also. I began to
-think that by my own attitude I had worked up all the excitement
-in the office that Saturday night and that my editor-in-chief
-would realize it now and so be disappointed in me.
-Suppose, I thought, when I reached the office McCullagh were
-dissatisfied and should fire me—then what? Where would I
-go, where get another job as good as this? I thought of my
-various follies and my past work here. Perhaps with this
-last error my sins were now to find me out. “Pride goeth before
-destruction,” I quoted, “and a haughty spirit before
-a fall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By eight o’clock, when I reached the office, I was thoroughly
-depressed and hurried in, expecting the worst. Of
-course the train had been late—had to be on this occasion!—and
-I did not reach the office in time to take an evening assignment.
-Mitchell was out, which left me nothing to do
-but worry. Only Hartung was there, and he seemed rather
-glum. According to him, Tobe had seemed dissatisfied with
-my wishing to stay up there. Why had I been so bold, I
-asked myself, so silly, so self-hypnotized? I took up an
-evening paper and retired gloomily to a corner to wait.
-When Mitchell arrived at nine he looked at me but said
-nothing. As I was about to go out to get something to eat
-Hartung came in and said: “Mr. Mitchell wants to speak
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My heart sank. I went in and stood before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You called for me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes. Mr. McCullagh wants to see you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It’s all over,” I thought. “I can tell by his manner.
-What a fool I was to build such high hopes on that story!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went out to the hall and walked nervously to the office
-of the chief, which was at the front end of the hall. I was
-so depressed I could have cried. To think that all my fine
-dreams were to have such an end!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That Napoleon-like creature was sitting in his little office,
-his chin on his chest, a sea of papers about him. He did not
-turn when I entered, and my heart grew heavier. He was
-angry with me! I could see it! He kept his back to me,
-which was to show me that I was not wanted, done for! At
-last he wheeled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You called for me, Mr. McCullagh?” I murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Mmm, yuss, yuss!” he mumbled in his thick, gummy,
-pursy way. His voice always sounded as though it were being
-obstructed by something leathery or woolly. “I wanted to
-say,” he added, covering me with a single glance, “that I
-liked that story you wrote, very much indeed. A fine piece
-of work, a fine piece of work! I like to recognize a good
-piece of work when I see it. I have raised your salary five
-dollars, and I would like to give you this.” He reached in
-his pocket, drew out a roll and handed over a yellow twenty-dollar
-bill.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could have dropped where I stood. The reaction was tremendous
-after my great depression. I felt as though I should
-burst with joy, but instead I stood there, awed by this generosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m very much obliged to you, Mr. McCullagh,” I finally
-managed to say. “I thank you very much. I’ll do the best
-I can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It was a good piece of work,” he repeated mumblingly,
-“a good piece of work,” and then slowly wheeled back to
-his desk.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I turned and walked briskly out.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> fact that I had gained the notice of a man as important
-as McCullagh, a man about whom a contemporaneous poet
-had written a poem, was almost more than I could stand. I
-walked on air. Yet the next morning, returning to work, I
-found myself listed for only “Hotels” and “Heard in the
-Corridors,” my usual tasks, and was depressed. Why not
-great tasks always? Why not noble hours always? Yet once
-I had recovered from this I walked about the downtown
-streets convulsively digging my fingers into my palms and
-shaking myself with delight as I thought of Saturday, Sunday
-and Monday. That was something worth talking about.
-Now I was a real newspaper man. I had beaten the whole
-town, and in a new city, a city strange to me!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Having practically nothing to do and my excitement cooling
-some, I returned to the art department this same day to
-report on what had happened. By now I was so set up that
-I could scarcely conceal my delight and told both volubly, not
-only about my raise in salary but also that I had been given
-a twenty-dollar bill by McCullagh himself—an amazing
-thing, of course. This last was received with mingled feelings
-by the department: McCord was pleased, of course, but Dick
-naturally was inclined to be glum. He was conscious of the
-fact that his drawings were not good, and McCord had been
-twitting him about them. Dick admitted it frankly, saying
-that he had not been able to collect himself. “You know I
-can’t do those things very well and I shouldn’t have been
-sent out on it. That’s Mitchell for you!” Perhaps it angered
-him to think that he should have been so unfortunate
-at the very time that I should have been so signally rewarded;
-anyhow he did not show anything save a generous
-side to me at the time although latterly I felt that it was
-the beginning of a renewal of that slight hostility based on his
-original opposition to me. He complimented me, saying:
-“You’ve done it this time. I’m glad you’ve made a hit, old
-man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That night, however, I was not invited to his room, as I had
-hoped I should be, although he and Peter went off somewhere—to
-his room, as I assumed. I applied myself instead
-to “Heard in the Corridors.” Then the days settled down
-into their old routine for me—petty assignments, minor contrasts
-between one thing and another. Only one thing held
-me up, and that was that Hazard now urged me to do a novel
-with him, a thing which flattered me so much that I felt my
-career as a great writer was at hand. For had he not done
-a novel already? I considered it seriously for a few days,
-arguing the details of the plot with him at the office and after
-hours, but it came to nothing. Plays rather than novels,
-as I fancied for some reason, were more in my line, and poems—things
-which I thought easier to do. Since writing that
-first poem a month or so before I was busy now from time to
-time scribbling down the most mediocre jingles relative to my
-depressions and dreams, and imaging them to be great verse.
-Truly, I thought I was to be a great poet, one of the very
-greatest, and so nothing else really mattered for the time
-being. Weren’t poets always lone and lorn, as I was?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was about this time too that, having received the gift of
-twenty and the raise of five, I began to array myself in manner
-so ultra-smart, as I thought, but fantastic, really, that I
-grieve to think that I should ever have been such a fool. Yet
-to tell the truth, I do not know whether I do or not. A foolish
-boyhood is as delightful as any. I had now moved into Tenth
-Street, and fortunately or unfortunately for me (fortunately,
-I now think) a change in the personnel of the <i>Globe’s</i> editorial
-staff occurred which had a direct bearing upon my ambitions.
-A man by the name of Carmichael who did the
-dramatics on the paper had been called to a better position
-in Chicago, and the position he had occupied here was therefore
-temporarily vacant. Hazard was the logical man for the
-place and should have had it because he had held this position
-before. He was older and a much better critic. But I, as
-may be imagined, was in a very appropriate mood for this,
-having recently been thinking of writing a play, and besides,
-I was crazy for advancement of any kind. Accordingly
-the moment I heard of it I was on the alert, eager to
-make a plea for myself and yet not dreaming that I should
-ever get it. My sole qualification, as I see it now, was that
-I was an ardent admirer of the stage and one who, because
-of his dramatic instincts (as I conceived mine to be), ought
-to make a good enough critic. I did not know that I was
-neither old nor cold nor experienced enough to do justice to
-the art of any one. Yet I should add in all fairness that for
-the work here required—to write a little two-stick announcement
-of each new play, mostly favorable, and to prepare a
-weekly announcement of all the new performances—I was perhaps
-not so poorly equipped. At any rate, my recent triumph
-had given me such an excellent opinion of myself, had made
-me think that I stood so well in the eyes of Mr. McCullagh,
-that I decided to try for it. It might not mean any more
-salary, but think of the honor of it! Dramatic Editor of the
-<i>Globe-Democrat</i> of St. Louis! Ha!... I decided to try.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There were two drawbacks to this position, as I learned
-later: one was that although I might be dramatic editor I
-should still be under the domination of Mr. Tobias Mitchell,
-who ruled this department; the other was that I should have
-to do general reporting along with this other work, a thing
-which irritated me very much and took much of the savor
-of the task away. The department was not deemed important
-enough to give any one man complete control of it. It seemed
-a poor sort of thing to try for, once I learned of this, but
-still there would be the fact that I could still say I was a
-dramatic editor. It would give me free entrance to the theaters
-also.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Consequently I began to wonder how I should go about
-getting it. Mitchell was so obviously opposed to me that I
-knew it would be useless to appeal to him. McCullagh might
-give it to me, but how appeal to him? I thought of asking
-him direct, but that would be going over Mitchell’s head, and
-he would never forgive me for that, I was sure. I debated
-for a day or two, and then decided, since my principal relations
-had been with Mr. McCullagh, that I would go to him
-direct. Why not? He had been very kind to me, had sent
-for me. Let Mitchell be angry if he would. If I made good
-he could not hurt me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I began to lay my plans or rather to screw up my courage
-to the point where I could force myself to go and see Mr. McCullagh.
-He was such a chill and distant figure. At the
-same time I felt that this man who was the object of so much
-reverence was one of the loneliest persons imaginable. He
-was not married. Day after day he came to this office alone,
-sat alone, ate alone, went home alone, for he had no friends
-apparently to whom he would condescend to unbend. This
-touched me. He was too big, too lonely.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This realization drew me sympathetically toward him and
-made me imagine, if you please, that he ought to like me. Was
-I not his protégé? Had he not brought me here? Instinctively
-I felt that I was one who could appreciate him, one
-whom he might secretly like. The only trouble was that he
-was old and famous, whereas I was a mere boy, but he would
-understand that too.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The day after I had made up my mind I began to loiter
-about the long corridor which led to his office, in the hope of
-encountering him accidentally. I had often noticed him
-shouldering his way along the marble wainscoting of this hall,
-his little Napoleonic frame cloaked in a conventional overcoat,
-his broad, strong, intellectual face crowned by a wide-brimmed
-derby hat which he wore low over his eyes. Invariably he
-was smoking a short fat cigar, and always looked very solemn,
-even forbidding. However, having made up my mind, I lay
-in wait for him one morning, determined to see him, and
-walking restlessly to the empty telegraph room which lay at
-the other end of the hall from his office and then back, but
-keeping as close as I could to one door or another in order to
-be able to disappear quietly in case my courage failed me.
-Yet so determined was I to see him that I had come down
-early, before any of the others, in order that he should not
-slip in ahead of me and so rob me of this seemingly accidental
-encounter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At about eleven he arrived. I was on one of my return
-trips from the telegraph room when I heard the elevator click
-and dodged into the city room only to reappear in time to
-meet him, ostensibly on my way to the toilet. He gave me
-but one sage glance, then stared straight ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At sight of him I lost my courage. Arriving exactly opposite
-him, however, I halted, controlled by a reckless, eager
-impulse.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Mr. McCullagh,” I said without further ado, “I want to
-know if you won’t make me dramatic editor. I hear that
-Mr. Carmichael has resigned and the position is open. I
-thought maybe you might give it to me.” I flushed and
-hesitated.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I will,” he replied simply and gruffly. “You’re dramatic
-editor. Tell Mr. Mitchell to let you be it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I started to thank him but the stocky little figure moved indifferently
-away. I had only time to say, “I’m very much
-obliged” before he was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I returned to the city editorial room tingling to the fingertips.
-To think that I should have been made dramatic editor,
-and so quickly, in such an offhand, easy way! This great
-man’s consideration for me was certainly portentous, I
-thought. Plainly he liked me, else why should he do this?
-If only I could now bring myself seriously to this great labor
-what might I not aspire to? Dramatic Editor of the
-<i>Globe-Democrat</i> of the great city of St. Louis, and at the age
-of twenty-one—well, now, that was something, by George!
-And this great man liked me. He really did. He knew me at
-sight, honored my request, and would no doubt, if I behaved
-myself, make a great newspaper man of me. It was something
-to be the favorite of a great editor-in-chief by jing—a
-very great thing indeed.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> my explaining to Mitchell what had happened he
-looked at me coldly, as much as to say “What the devil is
-this now that this ass is telling me?” Then, thinking, I suppose,
-that I must have some secret hold on Mr. McCullagh or
-at least stand high in his favor, he gave me a very wry smile
-and said he would have made out for me a letter of introduction
-to the local managers. An hour later this was laid on
-my desk by Hartung, who congratulated me, and there I was:
-dramatic editor. “Gee!” exclaimed Hartung when he came
-in with the letter. “I bet you could have knocked Tobe over
-with a straw! He doesn’t understand yet, I guess, how well
-you stand with the old man. The chief must like you, eh?”
-I could see that my new honor made a considerable difference
-in his already excellent estimate of me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Armed with this letter I now visited the managers of the
-theaters, all of whom received me cordially. I can still see
-myself very gay and enthusiastic, sure that I was entering
-upon a great work of some kind. And the dreams I had in
-connection with the theater, my future as a great popular
-playwright perhaps! It was all such a wonder-world to me,
-the stage, such a fairyland, that I bubbled with joy as I
-went about thinking that now certainly I should come in
-touch with actors, beautiful women! Think of it—dramatic
-critic!—a person of weight and authority!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There were seven or eight theaters in St. Louis, three or
-four of them staging only that better sort of play known as a
-first-class attraction; the others giving melodrama, vaudeville
-and burlesque. The manager of the Grand, a short, thick-set,
-sandy-complexioned man of most jovial mien, was McManus,
-father of the well-known cartoonist of a later period
-and the prototype of his most humorous character, Mr. Jiggs.
-He exclaimed upon seeing me:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“So you’re the new dramatic editor, are you? Well, they
-change around over there pretty swift, don’t they? What’s
-happened to Carmichael? First it was Hartridge, then Albertson,
-then Hazard, then Mathewson, then Carmichael, and
-now you, all in my time. Well, Mr. Dreiser, I’m glad to see
-you. You’re always welcome here. I’ll take you out and introduce
-you to our doormen and Mr. —— in the box-office.
-He’ll always recognize you. We’ll give you the best
-seat in the house if it’s empty when you come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He smiled humorously and I had to laugh at the way he
-rattled off this welcome. An aura of badinage and humor
-encircled him, quite the same as that which makes Mr. Jiggs
-delightful. This was the first I had ever heard of Hazard
-having held this position, and now I felt a little guilty, as
-though I had edged him out of something that rightfully belonged
-to him. Still, I didn’t really care, sentimentalize as
-I might. I had won.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Did Bob Hazard once have this position?” I asked familiarly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes. That was when he was on the paper the last time.
-He’s been off and on the <i>Globe</i> three or four times, you know.”
-He smiled clownishly. I laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You and I’ll get along, I guess,” he smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the other theaters I was received less informally but
-with uniform courtesy; all assured me that I should be welcome
-at any time and that if I ever wished tickets for myself
-or a friend or anybody on the paper I could get them
-if they had them. “And we’ll make it a point to have them,”
-said one. I felt that this was quite an acquisition of influence.
-It gave me considerable opportunity to be nice to any
-friends I might acquire, and then think of the privilege of
-seeing any show I chose, to walk right into a theater without
-being stopped, and to be pleasantly greeted en route!</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>The character of the stage of that day, in St. Louis and the
-rest of America at least, as contrasted with what I know of
-its history in the world in general, remains a curious and
-interesting thing to me. As I look back on it now it seems
-inane, but then it was wonderful. It is entirely possible
-that nations, like plants or individuals, have to grow and
-obtain their full development regardless of the accumulated
-store of wisdom and achievement in other lands, else how
-otherwise explain the vast level of mediocrity which obtains
-in some countries and many forms of effort, and that after so
-much that has been important elsewhere?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The stage in other lands had already seen a few tremendous
-periods; even here in America the mimetic art was no
-mystery. A few great things had been done, in acting at least,
-by Booth, Barrett, Macready, Forrest, Jefferson, Modjeska,
-Fanny Davenport, Mary Anderson, to name but a few. I was
-too young at the time to know or judge of their art or the
-quality of the plays they interpreted, aside from those of
-Shakespeare perhaps, but certainly their fame for a high form
-of production was considerable.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet, during the few months that I was dramatic editor,
-and the following year when I was a member of another
-staff and had entrée to these same theaters, I saw only one or
-two actors worthy the name, only one or two performances
-which I can now deem worth while. Richard Mansfield and
-Felix Morris stand out in my mind as excellent, and Sol
-Smith Russell and Joseph Jefferson as amusing comedians,
-but who else? Comic and light opera, with a heavy inter-mixture
-of straight melodrama, and comedy-dramas, were
-about the only things that managers ventured to essay.
-Occasionally a serious actor of the caliber of Sir Henry Irving
-or E. S. Willard would appear on the scene, but many
-of their plays were of a more or less melodramatic character,
-highly sentimental, emotional and unreal. In my stay here
-of about a year and a half I saw Joseph Jefferson, Sol Smith
-Russell, Salvini junior, Wilson Barrett, Fanny Davenport,
-Richard Mansfield, E. S. Willard, Felix Morris, E. H. Sothern,
-Julia Marlowe and a score of others more or less important
-but too numerous to mention; comedians, light-opera
-singers and the like; and although at the time I was entertained
-and moved by some of them, I now realize that in the
-main they were certainly pale spindling lights. And at that,
-America was but then entering upon its worst period of stage
-sentiment or mush. The movies as such had not yet appeared,
-but “Mr. Frohman presents” was upon us, master of
-middle-class sweetness and sentimentality. I remember staring
-at the three-sheet lithos and thinking how beautiful and
-perfect they were and what a great thing it was to be of the
-stage. To be an author, an actor, a composer, a manager!
-To have “Mr. Frohman present——”!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Empire and Lyceum theater companies, with their
-groups of perfect lady and gentleman actors, were then at
-their height, the zenith of stage art—Mr. John Drew, for instance,
-with his wooden face and manners, Mr. Faversham,
-Miss Opp, Miss Spong, Miss This, Miss That. Such excellent
-actors as Henry E. Dixey, Richard Mansfield or Felix Morris
-could scarcely gain a hearing. I recall sitting one night in
-Hogan’s Theater, at Ninth or Tenth and Pine streets, and
-hearing Richard Mansfield order down the curtain at one of
-the most critical points in his famous play “Baron Chevreuil,”
-or some such name, and then come before it and denounce
-the audience in anything but measured terms for
-what he considered its ignorance and lack of taste. It had
-applauded, it seems, at the wrong time in that asinine way
-which only an American audience can when it is there solely
-because it thinks it ought to be. By that time Mansfield had
-already achieved a pseudo if not a real artistic following and
-was slowly but surely becoming a cult. On this occasion he
-explained to that bland gathering that they were fools, that
-American audiences were usually composed of such animals
-or creatures and were in the main dull to the point of ennui,
-that they were not there to see a great actor act but to see a
-man called Richard Mansfield, who was said to be a great
-actor. He pointed out how uniformly American audiences
-applauded at the wrong time, how truly immune they were
-to all artistic values, how wooden and reputation-following.
-At this some of them arose and left; others seemed to consider
-it a great joke and remained; still others were angry but
-wanted to see the “show.” Having finished his speech he
-ordered up the curtain and proceeded with his act as though
-nothing had happened, as though the audience were really
-not there. I confess I rather liked him for his stand even
-though I did not quite know whether he was right or wrong.
-But I wrote it up as though he had grossly insulted his audience,
-a body of worthy and respectable St. Louisans. Someone—Hazard,
-I think—suggested that it would be good policy
-to do so, and I, being green to my task, did so.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>The saccharine strength of the sentiment and mush which
-we could gulp down at that time, and still can and do to this
-day, is to me beyond belief. And I was one of those who did
-the gulping; indeed I was one of the worst. Those perfect
-nights, for instance, when as dramatic critic I strolled into
-one theater or another, two or three in an evening possibly,
-and observed (critically, as I thought) the work of those who
-were leaders in dramatic or humorous composition and that of
-our leading actors! It may be that the creative spirit has no
-particular use for intelligence above a mediocre level, or, better
-yet and far more likely, creative intelligence works through
-supermen whose visions, by which the mob is eventually entertained
-and made wise, must content them. Otherwise how
-explain the vast level of mediocrity, especially in connection
-with the stage, the people’s playhouse, then, today and forever,
-I suppose, until time shall be no more?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall, for instance, that I thought Mr. Drew was really
-a superior actor, and also that I thought that most of the
-plays of Henry Arthur Jones, Arthur Wing Pinero, Augustus
-Thomas, and others (many others), were enduring
-works of art. I confess it: I thought so, or at least I
-heard so and let it go at that. How sound I thought their
-interpretations of life to be! The cruel over-lords of trade
-in those plays, for instance, how cruel they were and how
-true! The virtues of the lowly workingman and the betrayed
-daughter with her sad, downcast expression! The
-moral splendor of the young minister who denounced heartless
-wealth and immorality and cruelty in high places and
-reformed them then and there or made them confess their
-errors! I can see him yet: slim, simple, perfect, a truly good
-man. The offhand on-the-spot manner in which splendid
-reforms were effected in an hour or a night, the wrongs
-righted instanter—in plays! You can still see them in any
-movie house in America. To this hour there is no such thing
-as a reckless unmarried girl in any movie exhibited in America.
-They are all married.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But how those St. Louis audiences applauded! <i>Right</i>, here
-in America at least, was always appropriately rewarded and
-left triumphant, wrong was quite always properly drummed
-out. Our better selves invariably got the better of our lower
-selves, and we went home cured, reformed, saved. And there
-was little of evil of any description which went before, in acts
-one and two, which could not be straightened out in the last
-act.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The spirit of these plays captivated my fancy at that time
-and elevated me into a world of unreality which unfortunately
-fell in with the wildest of my youthful imaginings.
-Love, as I saw it here set forth in all those gorgeous or sentimental
-trappings, was the only kind of love worth while.
-Fortune also, gilded as only the melodramatic stage can gild
-it and as shown nightly by Mr. Frohman everywhere in America,
-was the only type of fortune worth while. To be rich,
-elegant, exclusive, as in the world of Frohman and Mr. Jones
-and Mr. Pinero! According to what I saw here, love and
-youth were the only things worth discussing or thinking
-about. The splendor of the Orient, the social flare of New
-York, London and Paris, the excited sex-imaginings of such
-minds as Dumas junior, Oscar Wilde, then in his heyday,
-Jones, Pinero and a number of other current celebrities,
-seemed all to be built around youth and undying love. The
-dreary humdrum of actual life was carefully shut out from
-these pieces; the simple delights of ordinary living, if they
-were used at all, were exaggerated beyond sensible belief.
-And elsewhere—not here in St. Louis, but in the East, New
-York, London, Paris, Vienna, St. Petersburg—were all the
-things that were worth while. If I really wanted to be happy
-I must eventually go to those places, of course. There were
-the really fine clothes and the superior personalities (physically
-and socially), and vice and poverty (painted in such
-peculiar colors that they were always divinely sad or repellent)
-existed only in those great cities.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I began</span> to dream more than ever of establishing some such
-perfect atmosphere for myself somehow, somewhere—but
-never in St. Louis, of course. That was too common, too
-Western, too far removed from the real wonders of the world.
-Love and mansions and travel and saccharine romance were
-the great things, but they were afar off, in New York. (It
-was around this time that I was establishing the atmosphere
-of a “studio” in Tenth street.) Nothing could be so wonderful
-as love in a mansion, a palace in some oriental realm
-such as was indicated in the comic operas in which DeWolf
-Hopper, Thomas Q. Seabrooke, Francis Wilson, Eddie Foy
-and Frank Daniels were then appearing. How often, with
-McCord or Wood as companion, occasionally Hazard or a
-new friend introduced to me by Wood and known as Rodenberger,
-or Rody (a most amazing person, as I will later relate),
-I responded to these poetic stage scenes! With one or
-other of these I visited as many theaters as I could, if for no
-more than an hour or an act at a time, and consumed with
-wonder and delight such scenes as most appealed to me: the
-denunciation scene, for instance, in <i>The Middleman</i>, or the
-third act of nearly any of Henry Arthur Jones’s plays. Also
-quite all of the light operas of Reginald de Koven and Harry
-B. Smith, as well as those compendiums of nondescript color
-and melody, the extravaganzas <i>The Crystal Slipper</i>, <i>Ali Baba</i>,
-<i>Sindbad the Sailor</i>. Young actresses such as Della Fox, Mabel
-Amber, Edna May, forerunners of a long line of comic opera
-soubrettes, who somehow reminded me of Alice, held me spellbound
-with delight and admiration. Here at last was the
-kind of maiden I was really craving, an actress of this hoyden,
-airy temperament.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I remember that one night, at the close of one of Mr. Willard’s
-performances at the Olympic—<i>The Professor’s Love</i>
-<i>Story</i>, in which he was appearing with a popular leading
-woman, a very beautiful one—I was asked by the manager
-to wait for a few moments after the performance so that he
-might introduce me. Why, I don’t know. It seemed that
-he was taking them to supper and thought they might like to
-meet one of the local dramatic critics or that I might like to
-accompany them; an honor which I declined, out of fright or
-bashfulness. When they finally appeared in the foyer of the
-theater, however, the young actress very stagy and soft and
-clinging and dressed most carefully after the manner of the
-stage, I was beside myself with envy and despair. For she
-appeared hanging most tenderly on her star’s arm (she was
-his mistress, I understood) and gazing soulfully about. Such
-beauty! Such grace! Such vivacity! Could anything be so
-lovely? Think of having such a perfect creature love you,
-hang on your arm! And here was I, poor dub, a mere
-reporter, a nobody, upon whom such a splendid creature
-would not bend a second glance. Mr. Willard was full of
-the heavy hauteur of the actor, which made the scene all
-the more impressive to me. I think most of us like to be up-staged
-at one time or another by some one. I glanced at
-her bashfully sidewise, pretending to be but little interested,
-while I was really dying of envy. Finally, after a few words
-and a few sweety-sweet smiles cast in my direction, I was
-urged to come with them but instead hurried away, pleading
-necessity and cursing my stars and my fate. Think of being
-a mere reporter at twenty-five or thirty a week, while others,
-earning thousands, were thus basking in the sunshine of success
-and love! Ah, why might not I have been born rich or
-famous and so able to command so lovely a woman?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>If I had been of an ordinary, sensible, everyday turn of
-mind, with a modicum of that practical wisdom which puts
-moderate place and position first and sets great store by
-the saving of money, I might have succeeded fairly well here,
-much better than I did anywhere else for a long period after.
-Unquestionably Mr. McCullagh liked me; I think he may
-have been fond of me in some amused saturnine way, interested
-to keep such a bounding, high-flown dunce about the
-place. I might have held this place for a year or two and
-made it a stepping-stone to something better. But instead of
-rejoicing in the work and making it the end and aim of my
-daily labors, I looked upon it as a mere bauble, something I
-had today but might not have tomorrow. And anyhow,
-there were better things than working day by day and living
-in a small room. Life ought certainly to bring me something
-better, something truly splendid—and soon. I deserved it—everything,
-a great home, fine clothes, pretty women, the
-respect and companionship of famous men. Indeed all my
-pain and misery was plainly caused by just such a lack or
-lacks as this. Had I these things all would be well; without
-them—well, I was very miserable. I was ready to accept
-socialism if by that I could get what I wanted, while not
-ready to admit that all people were as deserving as I by any
-means. The sad state of the poor workingman was a constant
-thought with me, but nearly always I was the greatest and
-poorest and most deserving of all workingmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This view naturally tended to modify the sanity of my
-work. Granting a modicum of imagination and force, still any
-youth limited as I was at that time has a long road to go.
-Even in that most imaginative of all professions, the literary,
-the possessor of such notions as I then held is certainly debarred
-from accomplishing anything important until he passes
-beyond them. Yet the particular thought or attitude I have
-described appears to reign in youth. Too often it is a condition
-of many minds of the better sort and is retained in its
-worst form until by rough experience it is knocked out of
-them or they are destroyed utterly in the process. But it
-cannot be got over with quickly. Mine was a sad case.
-One of the things which this point of view did for me was to
-give my writing, at that time, a mushy and melancholy turn
-which would not go in any newspaper of today, I hope. It
-caused me to paint the ideal as not only entirely probable
-but necessary before life would be what it should!—the progress
-bug, as you see. I could so twist and discolor the most
-commonplace scenes as to make one think that I was writing
-of paradise. Indeed I allowed my imagination to run away
-with me at times and only the good sense of the copy-reader
-or the indifference of a practical-minded public saved the
-paper from appearing utterly ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On one occasion, for instance, I went to report a play of
-mediocre quality that was running at the Olympic, and was
-so impressed with a love scene which was a part of it that
-I was entirely blinded to all the faults of construction which
-the remainder of the play showed, and wrote it up in the
-most glowing colors. And the copy-reader, Hartung, was too
-weary that night or too inattentive to capture it. The next
-day some of the other newspaper men in the office noticed it
-and commented on it to me or to Hartung, saying it was
-ridiculously high-flown and that the play itself was silly,
-which was true. But did that cure me? Not a bit. I was
-reduced for a day or two by it, but not for long. Seeing other
-plays of the same caliber and with much sweet love mush in
-them, I raved as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A little later a negro singer, a young woman of considerable
-vocal ability who was being starred as the Black Patti, was
-billed to appear in St. Louis. The manager of the bureau that
-was presenting her called my attention by letter to her “marvelous”
-ability, and by means of clippings and notices of her
-work published elsewhere had endeavored to impress me
-favorably. I read these notices, couched in the glowing
-phrases of the press-agent, and then went forth on this evening
-to cover this myself. To make it all the grander, I invited
-McCord and with him proceeded to the theater, where we
-were assigned a box.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As it turned out, or as I chanced to see or feel it, the young
-woman was a sweet and impressive singer, engaging and
-magnetic. McCord agreed with me that she could sing. We
-listened to the program of a dozen pieces, including such old
-favorites as <i>Suwanee River</i> and <i>Comin’ Thro’ the Rye</i>, and
-then I, being greatly moved, returned to the office and wrote
-an account that was fairly sizzling with the beauty which I
-thought was there. I did not attempt critically to analyze her
-art—I could not, knowing nothing of even the rudiments of
-music—but plunged at once into that wider realm which
-involved the subtleties of nature itself. “What is so beautiful
-as the sound which the human voice is capable of producing,”
-I wrote in part, “especially when that voice is itself a compound
-of the subtlest things in nature? Here we have a
-young girl, black it is true, fresh from the woods and fields
-of her native country, yet, blessed by some strange chance
-with that mystic thing, a voice, and fittingly interpreting via
-song all that we hold to be most lovely. The purling of the
-waters, the radiance of the moonlight, the odor of sweet flowers,
-sunlight, storm, the voices and echoes of nature, all are
-found here, thrilling over lips which represent in their youthfulness
-but a few of the years which wisdom and skill would
-seem to require. Yes, one may sit and, in hearing Miss Jones
-sing, vicariously entertain all these things, because of them
-she is a compound, youthful, vivacious, suggestive of the elemental
-sweetness of nature itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To understand the significance of such a statement in St.
-Louis one would have to look into the social and political conditions
-of the people who dwelt there. To a certain extent
-they were Southern in temperament, representing the vigorous
-anti-negro spirit which prevailed for so many years after the
-war. Again, they were fairly illuminated where music was
-concerned. Assuming that a bit of idealism such as this was
-sound, it might get by; but when it is remembered that this
-was largely mush and written about a negro, a race more
-or less alien to their sympathy, would it not naturally fall
-upon hard ears and appear somewhat ridiculous? A negro
-the compound of the subtlest elements in nature! And this
-in their favorite paper!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By chance it went through, Hartung having come to look
-upon most of my stuff as the outpourings of some strange
-genius who could do about as he pleased. Neither Mitchell
-nor the editor-in-chief saw it perhaps, or if they did they gave
-it no attention, music, the theater and the arts being of small
-import here. But, depend upon it, the editors of the various
-rival papers that were constantly being sniffed at by the <i>Globe</i>
-saw it and knowing the sensitiveness of our editor-in-chief
-to criticism of his own paper at once set to work to make something
-out of it. And of all the editors in the middle West,
-McCullagh, by reason of his force and taste and care in
-editing his paper, was a shining target for a thing like this.
-He was, as a rule, impeccable and extremely conspicuous.
-Whatever he did or said, good, bad or indifferent, was invariably
-the subject of local newspaper comment, and when any
-little discrepancy or error appeared in the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>
-it was always charged to him personally. And so it was with
-this furore over the Black Patti. It was too good a thing to be
-lost sight of.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The erudite editor of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>,” observed the
-<i>Post-Dispatch</i> editorially, “appears to have visited one of
-our principal concert halls last night. It is not often that
-that ponderous intellect can be called down from the heights
-of international politics to contemplate so simple a thing as a
-singer of songs, a black one at that; but when true art beckons
-even he can be counted upon to answer. Apparently the
-Black Patti beckoned to him last evening, and he was not
-deaf to her call, as the following magnificent bit of word-painting
-fresh from his pen is here to show.” (Then followed
-the praise in full.) “None but the grandiloquent editor
-of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> could have looked into the subtleties
-of nature, as represented by the person of Miss Sisseretta
-Jones, and there discovered the wonders of music and poetry
-such as he openly confesses to have done. Indeed we have here
-at last a measure of that great man’s insight and feeling, a love
-of art, music, poetry and the like such as has not previously
-been indicated by him. And we hereby hasten to make representation
-of our admiration and great debt that others too
-may not be deprived of this great privilege.” After this
-came more of the same gay raillery, with here and there a
-reference to “the great patron of the black arts” and the pure
-joy that must have been his at thus vicariously being able to
-enjoy within the precincts of Exposition Hall “the purling of
-the waters” bubbling from a black throat. It was a gentle
-satire, not wholly uncalled for since the item had appeared
-in the <i>Globe</i>, and directed at the one man who could least
-stand that sort of thing, sensitive as he was to his personal
-dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was blissfully unaware that any comment had been
-made on my effusion until about five in the afternoon, by
-which time the afternoon editions of the <i>Post-Dispatch</i> had
-been out several hours. When I entered the office at five,
-comfortable and at peace with myself in my new position,
-excited comment was running about the office as to what “the
-old man” would think and say and do now. He had gone at
-two, it appeared, to the Southern for luncheon and had not
-returned. Wait until he saw it! Oh me! Oh my! Wouldn’t
-he be hopping! Hartung, who was reasonably nervous as to
-his own share in the matter, was the first to approach and
-impress me with the dreadfulness of it all, how savage “the
-old man” could be in any such instance. “Gee, just wait!
-Oh, but he’ll be hot, I bet!” As he talked the “old man”
-passed up the hall, a grim and surly figure. I saw my dramatic
-honors going a-glimmering.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Here,” I said to Hartung, pretending a kind of innocence,
-even at this late hour, “what’s all this about? What’s
-the row, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Didn’t you see the editorial in the <i>Post-Dispatch</i>?” inquired
-Hartung gloomily. It was his own predicament that
-was troubling him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No. What about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why, that criticism you wrote about the Black Patti.
-They’ve made all sorts of fun of it. The worst of it is that
-they’ve charged it all up to the old man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I smiled a sickly smile. I felt as if I had committed some
-great crime. Why had I attempted to write anything “fine”
-anyhow? Why couldn’t I have been content and rested with
-a little praise? Had I no sense at all? Must I always be trying
-to do something great? Perhaps this would be the end of
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Hartung brought me the <i>Post-Dispatch</i>, and sorrowfully
-and with falling vitals I read it, my toes curling, my stomach
-seeming gradually to retire to my backbone. Why had I
-done it!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I was standing there, my eyes glued to the paper, near
-the door which looked into the main city room in which was
-Tobe scribbling dourly away, I heard and then saw McCullagh
-enter and walk up to the stout city editor. He had a copy of
-the selfsame <i>Post-Dispatch</i> crumpled roughly in his hand,
-and on his face was gathered what seemed to me a dark scowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Did you see this, Mr. Mitchell?” I heard him say.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Tobe looked up, then closely and respectfully at the paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t think a thing like that ought to appear in our
-paper. It’s a little bit too high-flown for our audience. Your
-reader should have modified it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I think so myself,” replied Tobe quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The editor walked out. Tobe waited for his footsteps to
-die away and then growled at Hartung: “Why the devil did
-you let that stuff go through? Haven’t I warned you against
-that sort of thing? Why can’t you watch out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could have fallen through the floor. I had a vision of
-Hartung burying his head in his desk, scared and mute.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After the evening assignments had been given out and Tobe
-had gone to dinner, Hartung crept up to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Gee, the old man was as mad as the devil!” he began.
-“Tobe gave me hell. He won’t say anything to you maybe,
-but he’ll take it out on me. He’s a little afraid of your pull
-with the old man, but he gives me the devil. Can’t you look
-out for those things?”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>In</span> spite of this little mishap, which did me no great harm,
-there was a marked improvement in my affairs in every way.
-I had a better room, various friends—Wood, McCord, Rodenberger,
-Hazard, Bellairs, a new reporter by the name of
-Johnson, another by the name of Walden Root, a nephew of
-the senator—and the growing consideration if not admiration
-of many of the newspaper men of the city. Among them I
-was beginning to be looked upon as a man of some importance,
-and the proof of it was that from time to time I found myself
-being discussed in no mild way. From now on I noticed that
-my noble Wood, whom I had so much looked up to at first,
-began to take me about with him to one or more Chinese
-restaurants of the most beggarly description in the environs of
-the downtown section, which same he had discovered and with
-the proprietors of which he was on the best of terms. They
-were really hang-outs for crooks and thieves and disreputable
-tenderloin characters generally (such was the beginning of
-the Chinese restaurant in America), but not so to Wood. He
-had the happy faculty of persuading himself that there was
-something vastly mysterious and superior about the entire
-Chinese race, and after introducing me to many of his new
-laundry friends he proceeded to assure me of the existence
-of some huge Chinese organization known as the Six Companies
-which, so far as I could make out from hearing him
-talk, was slowly but surely (and secretly, of course) getting
-control of the entire habitable globe. It had complete control
-of great financial and constructive ventures here, there and
-everywhere, and supplied on order thousands of Chinese
-laborers to any one who desired them, anywhere. And this
-organization ruled them with a rod of iron, cutting their
-throats and burying them head down in a bucket of rice when
-they failed to perform their bounden duties and transferring
-their remains quietly to China, in coffins made in China and
-brought here for that purpose. The Chinese who had worked
-for the builders of the Union Pacific had been supplied by this
-company, so he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again, there were the Chinese Free Masons, a society so old
-and so powerful and so mysterious that one might speak of it
-only in whispers for fear of getting into trouble. This indeed
-was <i>the</i> great organization of the world, in China and everywhere
-else. Kings and potentates knew of it and trembled
-before its power. If it wished it could sweep the Chinese
-Emperor and all European monarchs off their thrones tomorrow.
-There were rites, mysteries, sanctuaries within sanctuaries
-in this great organization. He himself was as yet a
-mere outsider, snooping about, but by degrees, slowly and
-surely, as I was given to understand, was worming its secrets
-out of these Chinese restaurant-keepers and laundrymen, its
-deepest mysteries, whereby he hoped to profit in this way:
-he was going to study Chinese, then go to China. There he
-would get into this marvelous organization through the influence
-of some of his Chinese friends here. Then he was going
-to get next to some of the officials of the Chinese Government,
-and being thus highly recommended and thought of would
-come back here eventually as an official Chinese interpreter,
-attached perhaps to the Chinese Legation at Washington.
-How he was to profit so vastly by this I could not see, but he
-seemed to think that he would.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again, there was his literary world which he was always
-dreaming about and slaving over, his art ambitions, into
-which I was now by degrees permitted to look. He was forging
-ahead in that realm, and since I was doing fairly well
-as a daily scribbler it might be that I would be able to perceive
-a little of all he was hoping to do. His great dream
-or scheme was to study the underworld life of St. Louis at
-first hand, those horrible, grisly, waterfront saloons and
-lowest tenderloin dives and brothels south of Market and east
-of Eighth where, listening to the patois of thieves and pimps
-and lechers and drug-fiends and murderers and outlaws generally,
-he was to extract from them, aside from their stories,
-some bizarre originality of phrase and scene that was to stand
-him in good stead in the composition of his tales. Just now,
-so he told me, he was content with making notes, jotting
-down scraps of conversation heard at bars, in sloppy urinals,
-cheap dance-halls, and I know not what. With a little more
-time and a little more of that slowly arriving sanity which
-comes to most of us eventually, I am inclined to think that
-he might have made something out of all this; he was so
-much in earnest, so patient; only, as I saw it, he was filled
-with an almost impossible idealism and romance which threw
-nearly everything out of proportion. He naturally inclined
-to the arabesque and the grotesque, but in no balanced way.
-His dreams were too wild, his mood at nearly all times too
-utterly romantic, his deductions far beyond what a sane contemplation
-of the facts warranted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And relative to this period I could other tales unfold. He
-and Peter, long before I had arrived on the scene, had surrounded
-themselves with a company of wayfarers of their
-own: down-and-out English army officers and grafting
-younger sons of good families, a Frenchman or two, one of
-whom was a poet, several struggling artists who grafted on
-them, and a few weird and disreputable characters so degraded
-and nondescript that I could never make out just what
-their charm was. At least two of these had suitable rooms,
-where, in addition to Dick’s and mine, we were accustomed
-to meet. There were parties, Sunday and evening walks or
-trips, dinners. Poems, on occasion, were read, original, first-hand
-compositions; Dick’s stories, as Peter invariably insisted,
-were “inflicted,” the “growler” or “duck” (a tin
-bucket of good size) was “rushed” for beer, and cheese
-and crackers and hot crawfish, sold by old ambling negroes
-on the streets after midnight, were bought and consumed with
-gusto. Captain Simons, Captain Seller, Toussaint, Benèt—these
-are names of figures that are now so dim as to be mere
-wraiths, ranged about a smoky, dimly lighted room in some
-downtown rooming-house. Both Dick and Peter had reached
-that distinguished state where they were the center of attraction
-as well as supports and props to these others, and
-between them got up weird entertainments, knockabout Dutch
-comedian acts, which they took down to some wretched dance-hall
-and staged, each “doing a turn.” The glee over the
-memory of these things as they now narrated them to me!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wood was so thin physically and so vigorous mentally that
-he was fascinating to look at. He had an idea that this
-bohemianism and his story work were of the utmost importance;
-and so they were if they had been but a prelude to
-something more serious, or if his dreams could only have
-been reduced to paper and print. There was something that
-lay in his eye, a ray. There was an aroma to his spirit which
-was delicious. As I get him now, he was a rather underdone
-Poe or de Maupassant or Manet, and assuredly a portion
-of the makings was certainly there. For at times the moods
-he could evoke in me were poignant, and he saw beauty and
-romance in many and strange ways and places. I have seen
-him enter a dirty, horrible saloon in one of St. Louis’s lowest
-dive regions with the air of a Prince Charming and there
-seat himself at some sloppy table, his patent leather low-quarters
-scraping the sanded or sawdusted floor, order beer and
-then, smiling genially upon all, begin to transcribe from memory
-whole sections of conversations he had heard somewhere,
-in the street perhaps, all the while racking his brain to recall
-the exact word and phrase. Unlike myself, he had a
-knack of making friends with these shabby levee and underworld
-characters, syphilitic, sodden, blue-nosed bums mostly,
-whom he picked up from Heaven knows where. And how he
-seemed to prize their vile language, their lies and their viler
-thoughts!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And there was McCord, bless his enthusiastic, materialistic
-heart, who seemed to take fire from this joint companionship
-and was determined to do something, he scarcely knew what—draw,
-paint, write, collect—anything. His mind was so
-wrought up by the rich pattern which life was weaving before
-his eyes that he could scarcely sleep at nights. He was for
-prowling about with us these winter and spring days, looking
-at the dark city after work hours, or investigating these
-wretched dives with Dick and myself. Or, the three of us
-would take a banjo, a mandolin and a flute (McCord could
-perform on the flute and Dick on the mandolin) and go to
-Forrest Park or one of the minor parks on the south side,
-and there proceed to make the night hideous with our carolings
-until some solid policeman, assuming that the public
-had rights, would interfere and bid us depart. Our invariable
-retort on all such occasions was that we were newspaper men
-and artists and as such entitled to courtesies from the police,
-which the thick-soled minion of the law would occasionally
-admit. Sometimes we would go to Dick’s room or mine and
-chatter and sing until dawn, when, somewhat subdued, we
-would seek out some German saloon-keeper whom either Peter
-or Wood knew, rouse him out of his slumbers and demand
-that he come down and supply us with ham and eggs and
-beer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My stage critical work having vivified my desire to write
-a play or comic opera on the order of <i>Wang</i> or <i>The Isle of
-Champagne</i>, two of the reigning successes of that day, or
-the pleasing <i>Robin Hood</i> of de Koven, I set about this task
-as best I might, scribbling scenes, bits of humor, phases of
-character. In this idea I was aided and abetted not only by
-Wood and McCord, both of whom by now seemed to think I
-might do something, but by the fact that the atmosphere
-of the <i>Globe</i> office, as well as of St. Louis itself, was, for me
-at least, inspirational and creative. I liked the world in
-which I now found myself. There were about me and in the
-city so many who seemed destined to do great things—Wood,
-McCord, Hazard, a man by the name of Bennett who was
-engaged in sociologic propaganda of one kind and another,
-William Marion Reedy, already editing the <i>Mirror</i>, Albert
-Johnson, a most brilliant reporter who had, preceding my
-coming, resigned from the <i>Globe</i> and gone over to the <i>Chronicle</i>,
-Alfred Robyn, composer of <i>Answer</i> and <i>Marizanillo</i>, one
-of whose operas was even then being given a local tryout.
-I have mentioned the wonderful W. C. Brann who preceded
-me in writing “Heard in the Corridors” and who later
-stirred America with the <i>Iconoclast</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All this, plus the fact that Augustus Thomas had come
-from here, a reporter on the <i>Post-Dispatch</i>, and that I was
-now seeing one of his plays, <i>In Missouri</i>, moved me to the
-point where I finally thought out what I considered a fairly
-humorous plot for a comic opera, which was to be called
-<i>Jeremiah I</i>. It was based on the idea of transporting, by
-reason of his striking accidentally a mythical Aztec stone on
-his farm, an old Indiana farmer of a most cantankerous and
-inquisitive disposition from the era in which he then was
-back into that of the Aztecs of Mexico, where, owing to a
-religious invocation then being indulged in with a view to discovering
-a new ruler, he was assumed to be the answer.
-Beginning as a cowardly refugee in fear for his life, he was
-slowly changed into an amazing despot, having at one time
-as many as three hundred ex-advisers or Aztec secretaries of
-state in one pen awaiting poisoning. He was to be dissuaded
-from carrying out this plan by his desire for a certain Aztec
-maiden, who was to avoid him until he repented of his
-crimes. She eventually persuaded him to change the form
-of government from that of a despotism to that of a republic,
-with himself as candidate for President.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was nothing much to it. Its only humor lay in the
-thought or sight of a cranky, curious, critical farmer super-imposed
-upon ancient architecture and forms of worship.
-Having once thought it out, however, and being pleased with
-it, I worked at it feverishly nights when I was not on assignments,
-and in a week or less had a rough outline of it, lyrics
-and all. I told McCord and Wood about it. And so great
-was their youthful encouragement that at once I saw this as
-the way out of my difficulties, the path to that great future
-I desired. I would become the author of comic opera books.
-Already I saw myself in New York, rich, famous.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But at that time I could not possibly write without constant
-encouragement, and having roughed out the opera I
-now burned for assistance in developing it in detail. At last
-I went to Peter and told him of my difficulty, my inability
-to go ahead. He seemed to relish the whole idea hugely, so
-much so that he made the thing seem far more plausible and
-easy for me to do and urged me to go ahead, not to faint or
-get cold feet. Enamored of costumes and gorgeous settings,
-he even went so far as to first suggest and then later work
-out in water color, suggestions for costumes and color schemes
-which I thought wonderful. I was lifted to the seventh
-heaven. To think that I had worked out something which he
-considered interesting!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Later that evening, at Peter’s suggestion I outlined portions
-of it to Wood. He also seemed to believe that it was
-good. He insisted that there must be an evening at his
-room or mine when I would read it all to them. Accordingly
-a week later I read it in Dick’s room, to much partial applause
-of course. What else could they do? Peter even went so
-far as to suggest that he would love to act the part of Jeremiah
-I, and forthwith began to give us imitations of the prospective
-king’s mannerisms and characteristics. Whatever
-the merit of the manuscript itself, certainly we imagined
-Peter’s characterizations to be funny. Later he brought me
-as many as fifty designs of costumes and scenes in color, which
-appealed to me as having novelty as well as beauty. He had
-evidently worked for weeks, nights after hours and mornings
-before coming to the office and on Sundays. By this I
-was so thrilled that I could scarcely believe my eyes. To
-think that I had written the book of a real comic opera that
-should be deemed worthy of this, and that it was within the
-range of possibility that it would some day be produced!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I began to feel myself a personage, although at bottom I
-mistrusted the reality of it all. Fate could not be that kind,
-not so swift. I should never get it produced ... and yet,
-like the man in the Arabian fable who kicked over his tray of
-glassware, dreaming great dreams, I was tending toward the
-same thing. There was always in me the saving grace of
-doubt or self-mistrust. I was never quite sure that I should be
-able to do all that at times I was inclined to hope I might, and
-so was usually inclined to go about my work as nervously
-and as enthusiastically as ever, hoping that I might have
-some of the good fortune of which I dreamed, but never seriously
-depending on it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Perhaps it would have been better for me had I.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>While</span> I rejoiced in the thought that I might now, and so
-easily, become a successful comic opera librettist, and a poet
-besides, still I found myself for the most part in a very
-gloomy frame of mind. One of the things that grieved me
-intensely, as I have said, was the sight of bitter poverty and
-failure, and the fact that I personally was not one of those
-solid commercial figures of which St. Louis was full at this
-time. They filled the great hotels, the clubs, the mansions,
-the social positions of importance. They were free, as I
-foolishly thought, to indulge in all those luxuries and pleasures
-which, as I so sadly saw, the poor were not privileged
-to enjoy, myself included. Just about that time there was
-something about a commercial institution—its exterior simplicity
-and bareness, the thrash of its inward life, its suggestion
-of energy, force, compulsion and need—which invariably
-held me spellbound. Despite my literary and artistic
-ambitions, I still continued to think it essential, to me, and
-to all men for that matter if they were to have any force
-and dignity in this world, that each and every one should
-be in control of something of this kind, something commercially
-and financially successful. And what was I—a pale
-sprout of a newspaper man, possibly an editor or author in
-the future, but what more?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At times this state of mind tended to make me irritable
-and even savage instead of sad. I thought that my very generous
-benefactor, the great McCullagh, ought to see what an
-important man I was and give me at once the dramatic editorship
-free and clear of any other work, or at least combine
-it with something better than mere reporting. I ought
-to be allowed to do editorials or special work. Again, my mind,
-although largely freed of Catholic and religious dogma generally
-and the belief in the workability of the Christian ideals
-as laid down in the Sermon on the Mount, was still swashing
-around among the idealistic maxims of Christ and the religionists
-and moralists generally, contrasting them hourly, as
-it were, with the selfish materialism of the day as I saw it.
-Look at the strong men at the top, I was constantly saying
-to myself, so comfortable, so indifferent, so cruelly dull. How
-I liked to flail them with maxims excerpted from Christ!
-Those large districts south of the business heart, along the
-river and elsewhere, which nightly or weekly Wood, McCord
-and myself were investigating and which were crowded with
-the unfit, the unsuccessful, the unhappy—how they haunted
-me and how I attempted (in my mind, of course) to indict
-society and comfort them with the poetic if helpless words
-of the Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount: “Blessed
-are the poor,” etc. Betimes, interviewing one important citizen
-and another, I gained the impression that they truly
-despised any one who was poor, that they did not give him
-or his fate a second thought; and betimes I was right—other
-times wrong. But having been reared on maxims relative
-to Christian duty I thought they should devote their
-all to the poor. This failure on their part seemed terrible to
-me, for having been taught to believe in the Sermon on the
-Mount I thought they—not myself, for instance—were the
-ones to make it work out. Mr. McCullagh had begun sending
-me out of town on various news stories, which was in itself
-the equivalent of a traveling correspondentship and might
-readily have led to my being officially recognized as such
-if I had remained there long enough. Trials of murder cases
-in St. Joseph and Hannibal, threatened floods in lower Illinois,
-and train robberies (common occurrences in this region,
-either between St. Louis and Kansas City, or St. Louis
-and Louisville) made it necessary for me to make arrangements
-with Hazard or Wood to carry on my dramatic work
-while I went about these tasks; a necessity which I partly
-relished and partly disliked, being uncertain as to which
-was the more important task to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, I was far from satisfied. I was too restless and
-dissatisfied. Life, life, life, its contrasts, disappointments,
-lacks, enticements, was always prodding me. The sun might
-shine brightly, the winds of fortune blow favorably. Nevertheless,
-though I might enjoy both, there was always this
-undertone of something that was not happiness. I was not
-placed right. I was not this, I was not that. Life was
-slipping away fast (and I was twenty-one!). I could see
-the tiny sands of my little life’s hourglass sifting down, and
-what was I achieving? Soon the strength time, the love time,
-the gay time, of color and romance, would be gone, and if I
-had not spent it fully, joyously, richly what would there be
-left for me then? The joys of a mythical heaven or hereafter
-played no part in my calculations. When one was dead
-one was dead for all time. Hence the reason for the heartbreak
-over failure here and now; the awful tragedy of a love lost, a
-youth never properly enjoyed. Think of living and yet not
-living in so thrashing a world as this, the best of one’s hours
-passing unused or not properly used. Think of seeing this
-tinkling phantasmagoria of pain and pleasure, beauty and all
-its sweets, go by, and yet being compelled to be a bystander, a
-mere onlooker, enhungered but never satisfied! In this
-mood I worked on, doing sometimes good work because I was
-temporarily fascinated and entertained, at other times grumbling
-and dawdling and moaning over what seemed to me the
-horrible humdrum of it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day, in just such a mood as this, I received the
-following final letter from Alice, from whom I had not heard
-now in months:</p>
-
-<p class='c017'>“Dear Theo,</p>
-<p class='c018'>“Tomorrow is my wedding-day. Tomorrow at twelve. This may
-strike you as strange. Well, I have waited—I don’t know how long—it
-has seemed like years to me—for some word, but I knew it was
-not to be. Your last letter showed me that. I knew that you did not
-intend to return, and so I went back to Mr. ——. I had to. What
-else have I to look forward to? You know how unhappy I am here
-with my family, now that you are gone, in spite of how much they
-care for me.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Oh, Theo, you must think me foolish for writing this. I am
-ashamed of myself. Still, I wanted to let you know, and to say good-bye,
-for although you have been indifferent I cannot bear any hard feelings
-toward you. I will make Mr. —— a good wife. He understands I
-do not love him, but that I appreciate him. Tomorrow I will marry
-him, unless—unless something happens. You ought not to have told
-me that you loved me, Theo, unless you could have stayed with me. You
-have caused me so much pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“But I must say good-bye. This is the last letter I shall ever write
-you. Don’t send my letters now—tear them up. It is too late. Oh,
-if you only knew how hard it has been to bring myself to this!</p>
-<div class='c019'>“<span class='sc'>Alice.</span>”</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>I sat and stared at the floor after reading this. The pain
-I had caused was a heavy weight. The implication that if I
-would come to Chicago before noon of this day, or telegraph
-for her to delay, was too much. What if I should go to
-Chicago and get her—then what? To her it would be a
-beautiful thing, the height of romance, saving her from a
-cruel or dreary fate; but what of me? Should I be happy?
-Was my profession or my present restless and uncertain state
-of mind anything to base a marriage on? I knew it was not....
-I also knew that Alice, in spite of my great sadness and
-affection for her, was really nothing more to me than a
-passing bit of beauty, charming in itself but of no great
-import to me. I was sad for her and for myself, saddest because
-of that chief characteristic of mine and of life which
-will not let anything endure permanently: love, wealth, fame.
-I was too restless, too changeful. There rose before me a picture
-of my finances as compared with what they ought to be,
-and of any future in marriage based on it. Actually, as I
-looked at it then, it was more the fault of life than mine.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>These thoughts, balancing with the wish I had for greater
-advancement, caused me as usual to hesitate. But I was in
-no danger of doing anything impulsive: there was no great
-impelling passion in this. It was mere sentiment, growing
-more and more roseate and less and less operative. I groaned
-inwardly, but night came and the next day, and I had not answered.
-At noon Alice had been married, as she afterward
-told me—years afterward, when the fire was all gone and this
-romance was ended forever.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Thus</span> it was that I dawdled about the city wondering what
-would become of me. My dramatic work, interesting as it
-was, was still so trivial in so far as the space given it
-and the public’s interest in it were concerned as to make
-it all but worthless. The great McCullagh was not interested
-in the stage; the proof of it was that he entrusted this
-interesting department to me. But circumstances were
-bringing about an onward if not upward step. I was daily
-becoming so restless and unhappy that it would have been
-strange if something had not happened. To think that there
-was no more to this dramatic work for me than now appeared,
-and that in addition Mr. McCullagh was allowing
-Mr. Mitchell to give me afternoon and night or out-of-town
-assignments when I had important theatrical performances
-to report! As a matter of fact they were not important, but
-Mitchell had no consideration for my critical work. He
-continued to give me two or three things to do on nights
-when, as he knew or I thought he should, I should spend the
-evening witnessing a single performance. This was to pay
-me out, so I thought, for going over his head. I grew more
-and more resentful, and finally a catastrophe occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It happened that one Sunday night late in April three
-shows were scheduled to arrive in the city, each performance
-being worthy of special attention. Nearly all new shows
-opened in St. Louis on Sunday night and it was impossible
-for me to attend them all in one evening. I might have
-given both Dick and Peter tickets and asked them to help
-me, but I decided, since this was a custom practiced by my
-predecessor at times, to write up the notices beforehand,
-the facts being culled from various press-agent accounts already
-in my hands, and then comment more fully on the
-plays in some notes which I published mid-week. It happened,
-however, that on this particular evening Mr. Mitchell
-had other plans for me. Without consulting me or my theatrical
-duties he handed me at about seven in the evening a
-slip of paper containing a notice of a street-car hold-up in
-the far western suburbs of the city. I was about to protest
-that my critical work demanded my presence elsewhere but
-concluded to hold my tongue. He would merely advise me to
-write up the notices of the shows, as I had planned, or, worse
-yet, tell me to let other people do them. I thought once of
-going to McCullagh and protesting, but finally went my way
-determined to do the best I could and protest later. I would
-hurry up on this assignment and then come back and visit
-the theaters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I reached the scene of the supposed hold-up there
-was nothing to guide me. The people at the car-barns did
-not know anything about it and the crew that had been
-held up was not present. I visited a far outlying police station
-but the sergeant in charge could tell me nothing more
-than that the crime was not very important, a few dollars
-stolen. I went to the exact spot but there were no houses
-in the neighborhood, only a barren stretch of track lying out
-in a rain-soaked plain. It was a gloomy, wet night, and I
-decided to return to the city. When I reached a car-line it
-was late, too late for me to do even a part of my critical work;
-the long distance out and the walks to the car-barn and the
-police station had consumed much time. As I neared the city
-I found that it was eleven o’clock. What chance had I to
-visit the theaters then? I asked myself angrily. How was I
-to know if the shows had even arrived? There had been
-heavy rains all over the West for the last week and there
-had been many wash-outs.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I finally got off in front of the nearest theater and went up
-to the door; it was silent and dark. I thought of asking the
-drugman who occupied a corner of the building, but that
-seemed a silly thing to be doing at this hour and I let it go.
-I thought of telephoning to the rival paper, the <i>Republic</i>,
-when I reached the office, but when I got there I had first
-to report to Mitchell, who was just leaving, and then, irritated
-and indifferent, I put it off for the moment. Perhaps
-Hartung would know.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you know what time the first edition goes to press
-here, Hugh?” I asked him at a quarter after twelve.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Twelve-thirty, I think. The telegraph man can tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you know whether the dramatic stuff I sent up this
-afternoon gets in that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure—at least I think it does. You’d better ask the
-foreman of the composing-room about it, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went upstairs. Instead of calling up the <i>Republic</i> at
-once, or any of the managers of the theaters, or knocking out
-the notices entirely, I inquired how matters stood with the
-first edition. I was not sure that there was any reason
-for worrying about the shows not arriving, but something
-kept telling me to make sure.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At last I found that the first edition had been closed, with
-the notices in it, and went to the telephone to call up the
-<i>Republic</i>. Then the dramatic editor of that paper had gone
-and I could not find the address of a single manager. I tried
-to reach one of the theaters, but there was no response. The
-clock registered twelve-thirty by then, and I weakly concluded
-that things must be all right or that if they weren’t I couldn’t
-help it. I then went home and to bed and slept poorly, troubled
-by the thought that something might be wrong and wishing
-now that I had not been so lackadaisical about it all.
-Why couldn’t I attend to things at the proper time instead
-of dawdling about in this fashion? I sighed and tried to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next morning I arose and went through the two morning
-papers without losing any time. To my horror and distress,
-there in the <i>Republic</i> was an announcement on the
-first page to the effect that owing to various wash-outs in
-several States none of the three shows had arrived the night
-before. And in my own paper, to my great pain was a
-full account of the performances and the agreeable reception
-accorded them!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Lord!” I groaned. “What will McCullagh say?
-What will the other papers say? Three shows reviewed, and
-not one here!” And in connection with one I had written:
-“A large and enthusiastic audience received Mr. Sol Smith
-Russell” at the Grand. And in connection with another that
-the gallery of Pope’s Theater “was top-heavy.” The perspiration
-burst from my forehead. Remembering Sisseretta
-Jones and my tendency to draw the lightning of public observation
-and criticism, I began to speculate as to what newspaper
-criticism would follow this last <i>faux pas</i>. “Great
-God!” I thought. “Wait till he sees this!” and I was ready
-to weep. At once I saw myself not only the laughing-stock
-of the town but discharged as well. Think of being discharged
-now, after all my fine dreams as to the future!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Without delay I proceeded to the office and removed my few
-belongings, resolved to be prepared for the worst. With the
-feeling that I owed Mr. McCullagh an explanation I sat
-down and composed a letter to him in which I explained,
-from my point of view, just how the thing had happened. I
-did not attack Mr. Mitchell or seek to shield myself but merely
-illustrated how I had been expected to handle my critical
-work in this office. I also added how kind I thought he had
-been, how much I valued his personal regard, and asked him
-not to think too ill of me. This letter I placed in an envelope
-addressed to “Mr. Joseph B. McCullagh, Personal,”
-and going into his private office before any others had come
-down laid it on his desk. Then I retired to my room to await
-the afternoon papers and think.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>They were not long in appearing, and neither of the two
-leading afternoon papers had failed to notice the blunder.
-With the most delicate, laughing raillery they had seized upon
-this latest error of the great <i>Globe</i> as a remarkable demonstration
-of what they affected to believe was its editor’s
-lately acquired mediumistic and psychic powers. The <i>Globe</i>
-was regularly writing up various séances, slate-writing demonstrations
-and the like, in St. Louis and elsewhere, things
-which Mr. McCullagh was interested in or considered good
-circulation builders, and this was now looked upon as a fresh
-demonstration of his development in that line. “Oh, Lord!
-Oh, Lord!” I groaned when I read the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“To see three shows at once,” observed the <i>Post-Dispatch</i>,
-“and those three widely separated by miles of country and
-washed-out sections of railroad in three different States (Illinois,
-Iowa and Missouri), is indeed a triumph; but also to
-see them as having arrived, or as they would have been had
-they arrived, and displaying their individual delights to three
-separate audiences of varying proportions assembled for that
-purpose is truly amazing, one of the finest demonstrations
-of mediumship—or perhaps we had better say materialization—yet
-known to science. Great, indeed, is McCullagh.
-Great the <i>G.-D.</i> Indeed, now that we think of it, it is an
-achievement so astounding that even the <i>Globe</i> may well be
-proud of it—one of the finest flights of which the human mind
-or the great editor’s psychic strength is capable. We venture
-to say that no spiritualist or materializing medium has ever
-outrivaled it. We have always known that Mr. McCullagh
-is a great man. The illuminating charm of his editorial
-page is sufficient proof of that. But this latest essay of his
-into the realm of combined dramatic criticism, supernatural
-insight, and materialization, is one of the most perfect things
-of its kind and can only be attributed to genius in the purest
-form. It is psychic, supernatural, spooky.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The <i>Evening Chronicle</i> for its part troubled to explain how
-ably and interestedly the spirit audiences and actors, although
-they might as well have been resting, the actors at least not
-having any contract which compelled their subconscious or
-psychic selves to work, had conducted themselves, doing their
-parts without a murmur. It was also here hinted that in
-future it would not be necessary for the <i>Globe</i> to carry a
-dramatic critic, seeing that the psychic mind of its chief was
-sufficient. Anyhow it was plain that the race was fast reaching
-that place where it could perceive in advance that which
-was about to take place; in proof of this it pointed of course
-to the noble mind which now occupied the editorial chair of
-the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, seeing all this without moving from his
-office.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was agonized. Sweat rolled from my forehead; my nerves
-twitched. And to think that this was the second time within
-no more than a month that I had made my great benefactor
-the laughing-stock of the city! What must he think of
-me? I could see him at that moment reading these editorials....
-He would discharge me....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Not knowing what to do, I sat and brooded. Gone were all
-my fine dreams, my great future, my standing in the eyes
-of men and of this paper! What was to become of me now?
-I saw myself returning to Chicago—to do what? What
-would Peter, Dick, Hazard, Johnson, Bellairs, all my new
-found friends, think? Instead of going boldly to the office
-and seeing my friends, who were still fond of me if laughing
-at my break, or Mr. McCullagh, I slipped about the city
-meditating on my fate and wondering what I was to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For at least a week, during the idlest hours of the morning
-and evening, I would slip out and get a little something to
-eat or loiter in an old but little-frequented book-store in Walnut
-Street, hoping to keep myself out of sight and out of
-mind. In a spirit of intense depression I picked up a few
-old books, deciding to read more, to make myself more fit
-for life. I also decided to leave St. Louis, since no one would
-have me here, and began to think of Chicago, whether I could
-stand it to return there, or whether I had better drift on to a
-strange place. But how should I live or travel, since I had
-very little money—having wasted it, as I now thought, on
-riotous living! The unhappy end of a spendthrift!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Finally, after mooning about for a day or two more I
-concluded that I should have to leave my fine room and try
-to earn some money here so as to be able to leave. And so
-one morning, without venturing near the <i>Globe</i> and giving
-the principal meeting-places of reporters and friends a wide
-berth, I went into the office of the St. Louis <i>Republic</i>, then
-thriving fairly well in an old building at Third and Chestnut
-streets. Here with a heavy heart, I awaited the coming of the
-city editor, H. B. Wandell, of whom I had heard a great deal
-but whom I had never seen.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> <i>Republic</i> was in a tumbledown old building in a fairly
-deserted neighborhood in that region near the waterfront
-from which the city proper had been steadily growing away
-for years. This paper, if I am not mistaken, was founded
-in 1808.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The office was so old and rattletrap that it was discouraging.
-The elevator was a slow and wheezy box, bumping and
-creaking and suggesting immediate collapse. The boards of
-the entrance-hall and the city editorial room squeaked under
-one’s feet. The city reportorial room, where I should work if
-I secured a place, was larger than that of the <i>Globe</i> and
-higher-ceiled, but beyond that it had no advantage. The windows
-were tall but cracked and patched with faded yellow
-copy-paper; the desks, some fifteen or twenty all told, were
-old, dusty, knife-marked, smeared with endless ages of paste
-and ink. There was waste paper and rubbish on the floor.
-There was no sign of either paint or wallpaper. The windows
-facing east looked out upon a business court or alley where
-trucks and vans creaked all day but which at night was silent
-as the grave, as was this entire wholesale neighborhood. The
-buildings directly opposite were decayed wholesale houses
-of some unimportant kind where in slimsy rags of dresses
-or messy trousers and shirts girls and boys of from fourteen
-to twenty worked all day, the girls’ necks in summer time
-open to their breasts and their sleeves rolled to their
-shoulders, the boys in sleeveless undershirts and tight-belted
-trousers and with tousled hair. What their work was I forget,
-but flirting with each other or with the reporters and
-printers of this paper occupied a great deal of their time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The city editor, H. B. Wandell, was one of those odd,
-forceful characters who because of my youth and extreme
-impressionability perhaps and his own vigor and point of view
-succeeded in making a deep impression on me at once. He
-was such a queer little man, so different from Mitchell and
-McCullagh, nervous, jumpy, restless, vigorous, with eyes so
-piercing that they reminded one of a hawk’s and a skin so
-swarthy that it was Italian in quality and made all the more
-emphatic by a large, humped, protruding nose pierced by big
-nostrils. His hands were wrinkled and claw-like, and he had
-large yellowish teeth which showed rather fully when he
-laughed. And that laugh! I can hear it yet, a cross between
-a yelp and a cackle. It always seemed to me to be a mirthless
-laugh, insincere, and yet also it had an element of appreciation
-in it. He could see a point at which others ought to laugh
-without apparently enjoying it himself. He was at once a
-small and yet a large man mentally, wise and incisive in many
-ways, petty and even venomous in others, a man to coddle and
-placate if you were beholden to him, one to avoid if you were
-not, but on the whole a man above the average in ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And he had the strangest, fussiest, bossiest love of great
-literature of any one I have ever known, especially in the
-realm of the newspapers. Zola at this time was apparently
-his ideal of what a writer should be, and after him Balzac and
-Loti. He seemed to know them well and to admire and even
-love them, after his fashion. He was always calling upon me
-to imitate Zola’s vivid description of the drab and the gross
-and the horrible if I could, assuming that I had read him,
-which I had not, but I did not say so. And Balzac’s and
-Loti’s sure handling of the sensual and the poignant! How
-often have I heard him refer to them with admiration, giving
-me the line and phrase of certain stark pictures, and yet at
-the same time there was a sneaking bending of the knee to the
-middle West conventions of which he was a part, a kind of
-horror of having it known that he approved of these things.
-He was a Shriner and very proud of it, as he was of various
-other local organizations to which he belonged. He had the
-reputation of being one of the best city editors in the city,
-far superior to my late master. Previously he had been city
-editor of the <i>Globe</i> itself for many years and was still favorably
-spoken of in that office. After I left St. Louis he returned
-to the <i>Globe</i> for a time and once more became its
-guide in local news.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But that is neither here nor there save as it illustrates what
-is a cardinal truth of the newspaper world: that the best of
-newspaper men are occasionally to be found on the poorest
-of papers, and vice versa. Just at this time, as I understood,
-he was here because the <i>Republic</i> was making a staggering
-effort to build itself up in popular esteem, which it finally
-succeeded in doing after McCullagh’s death, becoming once
-more the leading morning paper as it had been before the
-<i>Globe</i>, under McCullagh, arose to power. Just now, however,
-in my despondent mood, it seemed an exceedingly sad
-affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mr. Wandell, as I now learned, had heard of me and my
-recent <i>faux pas</i>, as well as some of the other things I had
-been doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Been working on the <i>Globe</i>, haven’t you?” he commented
-when I approached him. “What did they pay you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“When did you leave there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“About a week ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why did you leave?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Perhaps you saw those notices of three shows that didn’t
-come to town? I’m the man who wrote them up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oho! ho! ho!” and he began eyeing me drily and
-slapping his knee. “I saw those. Ha! ha! ha! Ha! ha! ha!
-Yes, that was very funny—very. We had an editorial on it.
-And so McCullagh fired you, did he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, sir,” I replied indignantly. “I quit. I thought he
-might want to, and I put a letter on his desk and left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ha! ha! ha! Quite right! That’s very funny! I know
-just how they do over there. I was city editor there myself
-once. They write them up in advance sometimes. We do here.
-Where do you come from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told him. He meditated awhile, as though he were uncertain
-whether he needed any one.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You say you got thirty dollars there? I couldn’t pay
-anybody that much here—not to begin with. We never give
-more than eighteen to begin with. Besides, I have a full
-staff just now, and it’s summer. I might use another man
-if eighteen would be enough. You might think it over and
-come in and see me again some time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although my spirits fell at so great a drop in salary I hastened
-to explain that I would be glad to accept eighteen. I
-needed to be at work again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Whatever you would consider fair would suit me,” I
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He smiled. “The newspaper market is low just now. If
-your work proves satisfactory I may raise you a little later
-on.” He must have seen that he had a soft and more or less
-unsophisticated boy to deal with.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Suppose you write me a little article about something,
-just to show me what you can do,” he added.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went away insulted by this last request. In spite of all
-he said I could feel that he wanted me; but I had no skill
-in manipulating my own affairs. To drop from thirty dollars
-as dramatic editor to eighteen as a mere reporter was terrible.
-With a grain of philosophic melancholy I faced it, however,
-feeling that if I worked hard I might yet get a start in some
-way or other. I must work and save some money and if I
-did not better myself I would leave St. Louis. My ability
-must be worth something somewhere; it had been on the
-<i>Globe</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went home and wrote the article (a mere nothing about
-some street scene), went back to the office and left it. Next
-day I called again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All right,” he said. “You can go to work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went back into that large shabby room and took a seat.
-In a few minutes the place filled up with the staff, most of
-whom I knew and all of whom eyed me curiously—reporters,
-special editors, the city editor and his assistant, Mr. Williams
-of blessed memory, one-eyed, sad, impressive, intelligent, who
-had nothing but kind things to say of what I wrote and who
-was friendly and helpful until the day I left.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a little while the assignment book was put out, with the
-task I was to undertake. Before I left I was called in and
-advised concerning it. I went and looked into it (I have forgotten
-what it was) and reported later in the day. What I
-wrote I turned over to Mr. Williams, and later in the day
-when I asked him if it was all right he said: “Yes, quite all
-right. It reads all right to me,” and then gave me a kindly,
-one-eyed smile. I liked him from the first day; he was a
-better editor than Wandell, with more taste and discrimination,
-and later rose to a higher position elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Meanwhile I strolled about thinking of my great fall. It
-seemed as though I should never get over this. But in a few
-days I was back in my old reportorial routine, depressed but
-secure, convinced that I could write as well as ever, and for
-any newspaper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the romance of my own youth was still upon me, my
-ambitions and my dreams coloring it all. Does the gull
-sense the terrors of the deep, or the butterfly the traps and
-snares of the woods and fields? Roaming this keen, new,
-ambitious mid-Western city, life-hungry and love-hungry and
-underpaid, eager and ambitious, I still found so much in the
-worst to soothe, so much in the best to torture me. In every
-scene of ease or pleasure was both a lure and a reproach;
-in every aspect of tragedy or poverty was a threat or a warning.
-I was never tired of looking at the hot, hungry, weary
-slums, any more than I was of looking at the glories of the
-mansions of the west end. Both had their lure, their charm;
-one because it was a state worse than my own, the other because
-it was a better—unfairly so, I thought. Amid it all I
-hurried, writing and dreaming, half-laughing and half-crying,
-with now a tale to move me to laughter and now another
-to send me to bottomless despairs. But always youth, youth,
-and the crash of the presses in the basement and a fresh damp
-paper laid on my desk of a morning with “the news” and my
-own petty achievements or failures to cheer or disappoint
-me; so it went, day in and day out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The <i>Republic</i>, while not so successful as the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>,
-was a much better paper for me to work on. For one
-thing, it took me from under the domination of Mr. Mitchell
-(one can hate some people most persistently), and placed
-me under one who, whatever may have been his defects, provided
-me with far greater opportunities for my pen than
-ever the <i>Globe</i> had and supplied a better judgment as to
-what constituted a story and a news feature. Now that I
-think of him, Wandell was far and away the best judge of
-news, from a dramatic or story point of view, of any for
-whom I ever worked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A good story, is it?” I can see him smirking and rubbing
-his hands miser or gourmet fashion, as over a pot of gold or
-a fine dish. “She said that, did she? Ha! ha! That’s
-excellent, excellent! You saw him yourself, did you? And
-the brother too? By George, we’ll make a story of that!
-Be careful how you write that now. All the facts you know,
-just as far as they will carry you; but we don’t want any
-libel suits, remember. We don’t want you to say anything
-we can’t substantiate, but I don’t want you to be afraid
-either. Write it strong, clear, definite. Get in all the touches
-of local color you can. And remember Zola and Balzac, my
-boy, remember Zola and Balzac. Bare facts are what are
-needed in cases like this, with lots of color as to the scenery
-or atmosphere, the room, the other people, the street, and all
-that. You get me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And quite truly I got him, as he was pleased to admit,
-even though I got but little cash out of it. I always felt,
-perhaps unjustly, that he made but small if any effort to
-advantage me in any way except that of writing. But what
-of it? He was nearly always enthusiastic over my work,
-in a hard, bright, waspish way, nearly always excited about
-the glittering realistic facts which one might dig up and which
-he was quite determined that his paper should present. The
-stories! The scandals! That hard, cruel cackle of his when
-he had any one cornered! He must have known what a
-sham and a fake most of these mid-Western pretensions to
-sanctity and purity were, and yet if he did and was irritated
-by them he said little to me. Like most Americans of the
-time, he was probably confused by the endless clatter concerning
-personal perfection, the Christ ideal, as opposed to
-the actual details of life. He could not decide for himself
-which was true and which false, the Christ theory or that of
-Zola, but he preferred Zola when interpreting the news.
-When things were looking up from a news point of view and
-great realistic facts were coming to the surface regardless
-of local sentiment, facts which utterly contradicted all the
-noble fol-de-rol of the puritans and the religionists, he was
-positively transformed. In those hours when the loom of life
-seemed to be weaving brilliant dramatic or tragic patterns
-of a realistic, Zolaesque character he was beside himself with
-gayety, trotting to and fro in the local room, leaning over the
-shoulders of scribbling scribes and interrupting them to ask
-details or to caution them as to certain facts which they must
-or must not include, beaming at the ceiling or floor, whistling,
-singing, rubbing his hands—a veritable imp or faun of pleasure
-and enthusiasm. Deaths, murders, great social or political
-scandals or upheavals, those things which presented the
-rough, raw facts of life, as well as its tenderer aspects, seemed
-to throw him into an ecstasy—not over the woes of others
-but over the fact that he was to have an interesting paper
-tomorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ah, it was a terrible thing, was it? He killed her in
-cold blood, you say? There was a great crowd out there, was
-there? Well, well, write it all up. Write it all up. It looks
-like a pretty good story to me—doesn’t it to you? Write a
-good strong introduction for it, you know, all the facts in
-the first paragraph, and then go on and tell your story.
-You can have as much space for it as you want—a column,
-a column and a half, two—just as it runs. Let me look at
-it before you turn it in, though.” Then he would begin
-whistling or singing, or would walk up and down in the city room
-rubbing his hands in obvious satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And how that reportorial room seemed to thrill or sing
-between the hours of five and seven in the evening, when the
-stories of the afternoon were coming in, or between ten-thirty
-and midnight, when the full grist of the day was finally being
-ground out. How it throbbed with human life and thought,
-quite like a mill room full of looms or a counting house in
-which endless records and exchanges are being made. Those
-reporters, eighteen or twenty of them, bright, cheerful, interesting,
-forceful youths, each bent upon making a name for
-himself, each working hard, each here bending over his desk
-scratching his head or ear and thinking, his mind lost in the
-mazes of arrangement and composition.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wandell had no tolerance for any but the best of newspaper
-reporters and would discharge a man promptly for
-falling down on a story, especially if he could connect it
-with the feeling that he was not as good a newspaper man
-as he should be. He hated commonplace men, and once I
-had become familiar with the office and with him, he would
-often ask me in a spirit of unrest if I knew of an especially
-good one anywhere with whom he could replace some one
-else whom he did not like; a thought which jarred me but
-which did not prevent me from telling him. Somehow I had
-an eye and a taste for exceptional men myself, and I wanted
-his staff to be as good as any. So it was not long before he
-began to rely on me to supply him with suitable men, so much
-so that I soon had the reputation of being a local arbiter of
-jobs, one who could get men in or keep them out—a thing
-which made me some enemies later. And it really was not
-true for I could not have kept any good man out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the meantime, while he was trying me out to suit
-himself, he had been giving me only routine work: the North
-Seventh Street police station afternoons and evenings, where
-one or two interesting stories might be expected every day,
-crimes or sordid romances of one kind or another. Or if
-there was nothing much doing there I might be sent out on
-an occasional crime story elsewhere. Once I had handled a
-few of these for him, and to his satisfaction, I was pushed
-into the topnotch class and given only the most difficult
-stories, those which might be called feature crimes and sensations,
-which I was expected to unravel, sometimes single-handed,
-and to which always I was expected to write the
-lead. This realistic method of his plus a keen desire to
-unload all the heavy assignments on me was in no wise bad for
-me. He liked me, and this was his friendly way of showing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Indeed, with a ruthless inconsiderateness, as I then thought,
-he piled on story after story, until I was a little infuriated
-at first, seeing how little I was being paid. When nothing of
-immediate importance was to be had, he proceeded to create
-news, studying out interesting phases of past romances or
-crimes which he thought might be worth while to work up and
-publish on Sunday, and handing them to me to do over.
-He even created stories when the general news was dull,
-throwing me into the most delicate and dangerous fields of
-arson, murder, theft, marital unhappiness, and tragedies of
-all kinds, things not public but which by clever detective
-work could be made so, and where libel and other suits and
-damages lurked on either hand. Without cessation, Sunday
-and every other day, he called upon me to display sentiment,
-humor or cold, hard, descriptive force, as the case might be,
-quoting now Hugo, now Balzac, now Dickens, and now Zola
-to me to show me just what was to be done. In a little while,
-despite my reduced salary and the fact that I had lost my
-previous place in disgrace and was not likely to get a raise
-here soon, I was as much your swaggering newspaper youth
-as ever, strolling about the city with the feeling that I was
-somebody and looking up all my old friends, with the idea
-of letting them know that I was by no means such a failure
-as they might imagine. Dick and Peter of course, seeing
-me ambling in on them late one hot night, received me with
-open arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you’re a good one!” yelped Dick in his high, almost
-falsetto voice when I came in. I could see that he had been
-sitting before his open window, which commanded Broadway,
-where he had been no doubt meditating—your true romancer.
-“Where the hell have you been keeping yourself? You’re
-a dandy? We’ve been looking for you for weeks. We’ve
-been down to your place a dozen times, but you wouldn’t let
-us in. You’re a dandy, you are! McCord has some more of
-those opera cartoons done. Why didn’t you ever come
-around, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m working down on the <i>Republic</i> now,” I replied,
-blushing, “and I’ve been busy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oho!” laughed Dick, slapping his knees. “That’s a good
-one on you! I heard about it. Those shows written up, and
-not one in town! Oho! That’s good!” He coughed a consumptive
-cough or two and relaxed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I laughed with him. “It wasn’t really all my fault,” I said
-apologetically.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I know it wasn’t. Don’t I know the <i>Globe</i>? Didn’t
-Carmichael get me to work the same racket for him? Ask
-Hazard. It wasn’t your fault. Sit down. Peter’ll be here
-in a little while; then we’ll go out and get something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We fell to discussing the attitude of the people on the
-<i>Globe</i> after I had left. Wood insisted that he had not heard
-much. He knew instinctively that Mitchell was glad I was
-gone, as he might well have been. Hartung had reported to
-him that McCullagh had raised Cain with Mitchell and that
-two or three of the boys on the staff had manifested relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You know who they’d be,” continued Wood. “The fellows
-who can’t do what you can but would like to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I smiled. “I know about who they are,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We talked about the world in general—literature, the
-drama, current celebrities, the state of politics, all seen
-through the medium of youth and aspiration and inexperience.
-While we were talking McCord came in. He had been
-to his home in South St. Louis, where he preferred to live
-in spite of his zest for Bohemia, and the ground had all to
-be gone over with him. We settled down to an evening’s
-enjoyment: Dick went for beer; Peter lit a rousing pipe. Accumulated
-short stories were produced and plans for new
-ones recounted. At one point Peter exclaimed: “You know
-what I’m going to do, Dreiser?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m going to study for the leading rôle in that opera of
-yours. I can play that, and I’m going to if you don’t object—do
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Object? Why should I object?” I replied, doubtful however
-of the wisdom of this. Peter had never struck me as
-quite the actor type. “I’d like to see you do it if you can,
-Peter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I can, all right. That old rube appeals to me. I
-bet that if I ever get on the stage I can get away with that.”
-He eyed Dick for confirmation.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ll bet you could,” said Dick loyally. “Peter makes a
-dandy rube. Oh, will you ever forget the time we went
-down to the old Nickelodeon and did a turn, Peter? Oho!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Later the three of us left for a bite and I could see that I
-was as high in their favor as ever, which restored me not a
-little. Peter seemed to think that my escapades and mishaps,
-coupled with the attention and discussion which my name
-evoked among local newspaper men, were doing me good,
-making me an interesting figure. I could scarcely believe that
-but I was inclined to believe that I had not fallen as low as at
-first I had imagined.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> LaClede, as I have indicated, was the center of all
-gossiping newspaper life at this time, at least that part of
-it of which I knew anything. Here, in idling groups, during
-the course of a morning, afternoon or evening, might appear
-Dick or Peter, Body, Clark, Hazard, Johnson, Root, Johns
-Daws, a long company of excellent newspaper men who worked
-on the different papers of the city from time to time and who,
-because of a desire for companionship in this helter-skelter
-world and the certainty of finding it here, hung about this corner.
-Here one could get in on a highly intellectual or diverting
-conversation of one kind or another at almost any time.
-So many of these men had come from distant cities and knew
-them much better than they did St. Louis. As a rule, being
-total strangers and here only for a short while, they were inclined
-to sniff at conditions as they found them here and to
-boast of those elsewhere, especially the men who came from
-New York, Boston, San Francisco and Chicago. I was
-one of those who, knowing Chicago and St. Louis only and
-wishing to appear wise in these matters, boasted vigorously of
-the superlative importance of Chicago as a city, whereas
-such men as Root of New York, Johnson of Boston, Ware of
-New Orleans, and a few others, merely looked at me and
-smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All I have to say to you, young fellow,” young Root
-once observed to me genially if roughly after one of these
-heated and senseless arguments, “is wait till you go to
-New York and see for yourself. I’ve been to Chicago, and it’s
-a way-station in comparison. It’s the only other city you’ve
-seen, and that’s why you think it’s so great.” There was
-a certain amount of kindly toleration in his voice which infuriated
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ah, you’re crazy,” I replied. “You’re like all New
-Yorkers: you think you know it all. You won’t admit you’re
-beaten when you are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The argument proceeded through all the different aspects
-of the two cities until finally we called each other damned
-fools and left in a huff. Years later, however, having seen
-New York, I wanted to apologize if ever I met him again.
-The two cities, as I then learned, each individual and wonderful
-in its way, were not to be contrasted. But how sure I
-was of my point of view then!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nearly all of these young men, as I now saw, presented a
-sharp contrast to those I had known in Chicago, or perhaps
-the character of the work in this city and my own changing
-viewpoint made them seem different. Chicago at that time
-had seemed to be full of exceptional young men in the reportorial
-world, men who in one way or another had already
-achieved considerable local repute as writers and coming men:
-Finley Peter Dunne, George Ade, Brand Whitlock, Ben King,
-Charles Stewart, and many others, some of whom even in that
-day were already signing their names to some of their contributions;
-whereas here in St. Louis, few if any of us had
-achieved any local distinction of any kind. No one of us had
-as yet created a personal or literary following. We could not,
-here, apparently; the avenues were not the same. And none
-of us was hailed as certain to attract attention in the larger
-world outside. We formed little more than a weak scholastic
-brotherhood or union, recognizing each other genially enough
-as worthy fellow-craftsmen but not offering each other much
-consolation in our rough state beyond a mere class or professional
-recognition as working newspaper men. Yet at times
-this LaClede was a kind of tonic bear garden, or mental wrestling-place,
-where unless one were very guarded and sure of
-oneself one might come by a quick and hard fall, as when once
-in some argument in regard to a current political question,
-and without knowing really what I was talking about, I made
-the statement that palaeontology indicated so-and-so, whereupon
-one of my sharp confrères suddenly took me up with:
-“Say, what is palaeontology, anyhow? Do you know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was completely stumped, for I didn’t. It was a comparatively
-new word, outside the colleges, being used here
-and there in arguments and editorials, and I had glibly taken
-it over. I floundered about and finally had to confess that I
-did not know what it was, whereupon I endured a laugh for
-my pains. I was thereafter wiser and more cautious.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this, in my raw, ignorant state, was a very great help to
-me. Many of these men were intelligent and informed to the
-cutting point in regard to many facts of life of which I was
-extremely ignorant. Many of them had not only read more
-but seen more, and took my budding local pretensions to being
-somebody with a very large grain of salt. At many of the
-casual meetings, where at odd moments reporters and sometimes
-editors were standing or sitting about and discussing
-one phase of life and another, I received a back-handed slap
-which sometimes jarred my pride but invariably widened
-my horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One of the most interesting things in my life at this time
-was that same North Seventh Street police station previously
-mentioned, to which I went daily and which was a center for
-a certain kind of news at least—rapes, riots, murders, fantastic
-family complications of all kinds, so common to very
-poor and highly congested neighborhoods. This particular
-station was the very center of a mixed ghetto, slum and negro
-life, which even at this time was still appalling to me in some
-of its aspects. It was all so dirty, so poor, so stuffy, so starveling.
-There were in it all sorts of streets—Jewish, negro, and
-run-down American, or plain slum, the first crowded with
-long-bearded Jews and their fat wives, so greasy, smelly and
-generally offensive that they sickened me: rag-pickers,
-chicken-dealers and feather-sorters all. In their streets the
-smell of these things, picked or crated chickens, many of
-them partially decayed, decayed meats and vegetables, half-sorted
-dirty feathers and rags and I know not what else, was
-sickening in hot weather. In the negro streets—or rather
-alleys, for they never seemed to occupy any general thoroughfare—were
-rows or one-, two-, three-and four-story shacks
-or barns of frame or brick crowded into back yards and with
-thousands of blacks of the most shuffling and idle character
-hanging about. In these hot days of June, July and August
-they seemed to do little save sit or lie in the shade of buildings
-in this vicinity and swap yarns or contemplate the world
-with laughter or in silence. Occasionally there was a fight,
-a murder or a low love affair among them which justified
-my time here. In addition, there were those other streets of
-soggy, decayed Americans—your true slum—filled with as
-low and cantankerous a population of whites as one would
-find anywhere, a type of animal dangerous to the police
-themselves, for they could riot and kill horribly and were
-sullen at best. Invariably the police traveled here in pairs,
-and whenever an alarm from some policeman on his beat was
-turned in from this region a sergeant and all the officers in
-the station at the time would set forth to the rescue, sometimes
-as many as eight or ten in a police wagon, with orders, as I
-myself have heard them given, “to club the —— heads off
-them” or “break their —— bones, but bring them in here.
-I’ll fix ’em”; in response to which all the stolid Irish huskies
-would go forth to battle, returning frequently with a whole
-vanload of combatants or alleged combatants, all much the
-worse for the contest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was an old fat Irish sergeant of about fifty or fifty-five,
-James King by name, who used to amuse me greatly. He
-ruled here like a potentate under the captain, whom I rarely
-saw. The latter had an office to himself in the front of the
-station and rarely came out, seeming always to be busy with
-bigwigs of one type and another. With the sergeant, however,
-I became great friends. His place was behind the central
-desk, in the front of which were two light standards and on
-the surface of which were his blotter and reports of different
-kinds. Behind the desk was his big tilted swivel chair, with
-himself in it, stout, perspiring, coatless, vestless, collarless,
-his round head and fat neck beady with sweat, his fat arms
-and hands moist and laid heavily over his protuberant
-stomach. According to him, he had been at this work exactly
-eight years, and before that he had “beat the sidewalk,” as
-he said, or traveled a beat.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, yes, ‘tis a waarm avenin’,” he would begin whenever
-I arrived and he was not busy, which usually he was not,
-“an’ there’s naathin’ for ye, me lad. But ye might just as
-well take a chair an’ make yerself comfortable. It may be that
-something will happen, an’ again maybe it won’t. Ye must
-hope fer the best, as the sayin’ is. ’Tis a bad time fer any
-trouble to be breakin’ out though, in all this hot weather,”
-and then he would elevate a large palmleaf fan which he
-kept near and begin to fan himself, or swig copiously from
-a pitcher of ice-water.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Here then he would sit, answering telephone calls from
-headquarters or marking down reports from the men on their
-beats or answering the complaints of people who came in hour
-after hour to announce that they had been robbed or their
-homes had been broken into or that some neighbor was
-making a nuisance of himself or their wives or husbands or
-sons or daughters wouldn’t obey them or stay in at night.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, an’ what’s the matter now?” he would begin when
-one of these would put in an appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Perhaps it was a man who would be complaining that his
-wife or daughter would not stay in at night, or a woman
-complaining so of her husband, son or daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, me good woman, I can’t be helpin’ ye with that.
-This is no court av laaw. If yer husband don’t support ye,
-er yer son don’t come in av nights an’ he’s a minor, ye can
-get an order from the judge at the Four Courts compellin’
-him. Then if he don’t mind ye and ye waant him arrested
-er locked up, I can help ye that way, but not otherwise. Go
-to the Four Courts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sometimes, in the case of a parent complaining of a
-daughter’s or son’s disobedience, he would relent a little and
-say: “See if ye can bring him around here. Tell him that
-the captain waants to see him. Then if he comes I’ll see what
-I can do fer ye. Maybe I can scare him a bit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Let us say they came, a shabby, overworked mother or
-father leading a recalcitrant boy or girl. King would assume
-a most ferocious air and after listening to the complaint of
-the parent as if it were all news to him would demand:
-“What’s ailin’ ye? Why can’t ye stay in nights? What’s
-the matter with ye that ye can’t obey yer mother? Don’t ye
-know it’s agin the laaw fer a minor to be stayin’ out aafter
-ten at night? Ye don’t? Well, it is, an’ I’m tellin’ ye
-now. D’ye waant me t’lock ye up? Is that what ye’re looking
-fer? There’s a lot av good iron cells back there waitin’ fer
-ye if ye caan’t behave yerself. What’re ye goin’ t’do
-about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Possibly the one in error would relent a little and begin
-arguing with the parent, charging unfairness, cruelty and the
-like.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Here now, don’t ye be taalkin’ to yer mother like that!
-Ye’re not old enough to be doin’ that. An’ what’s more, don’t
-let me ketch ye out on the streets er her complainin’ to me
-again. If ye do I’ll send one av me men around to bring
-ye in. This is the last now. D’ye waant to spend a few
-nights in a cell? Well, then! Now be gettin’ out av here
-an’ don’t let me hear any more about ye. Not a word. I’ve
-had enough now. Out with ye!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And he would glower and grow red and pop-eyed and fairly
-roar, shoving them tempestuously out—only, after the victim
-had gone, he would lean back in his chair and wipe his forehead
-and sigh: “’Tis tough, the bringin’ up av childern,
-hereabouts especially. Ye can’t be blamin’ them fer waantin’
-to be out on the streets, an’ yet ye can’t let ’em out aither,
-exactly. It’s hard to tell what to do with ’em. I’ve been
-taalkin’ like that fer years now to one an’ another. ’Tis
-all the good it does. Ye can’t do much fer ’em hereabouts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was during this period, this summer time and fall, that
-I came in contact with some of the most interesting characters,
-newspaper men especially, flotsam and jetsam who
-drifted in here from other newspaper centers and then drifted
-out again, newspaper men so intelligent and definite in some
-respects that they seemed worthy of any position or station
-in life and yet so indifferent and errant or so poorly placed
-in spite of their efforts and capacities as to cause me to
-despair for the reward of merit anywhere—intellectual merit,
-I mean. For some of these men while fascinating were the
-rankest kind of failures, drunkards, drug fiends, hypochondriacs.
-Many of them had stayed too long in the profession,
-which is a young man’s game at best, and others had wasted
-their opportunities dreaming of a chance fortune no doubt and
-then had taken to drink or drugs. Still others, young men
-like myself, drifters and uncertain as to their future, were
-just finding out how unprofitable the newspaper game was
-and in consequence were cynical, waspish and moody.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I am not familiar with many professions and so cannot say
-whether any of the others abound in this same wealth of
-eccentric capacity and understanding, or offer as little reward.
-Certainly all the newspaper offices I have ever known
-sparkled with these exceptional men, few of whom ever
-seemed to do very well, and no paper I ever worked on paid
-wages anywhere near equal to the services rendered or the
-hours exacted. It was always a hard, driving game, with the
-ash-heap as the reward for the least weakening of energy or
-ability; and at the same time these newspapers were constantly
-spouting editorially about kindness, justice, charity, a
-full reward for labor, and were getting up fresh-air funds and
-so on for those not half as deserving as their employees, but—and
-this is the point—likely to bring them increased circulation.
-In the short while I was in the newspaper profession
-I met many men who seemed to be thoroughly sound
-intellectually, quite free, for the most part, from the narrow,
-cramping conventions of their day, and yet they never
-seemed to get on very well.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I remember one man in particular, Clark I think his name
-was, who arrived on the scene just about this time and who
-fascinated me. He was so able and sure of touch mentally
-and from an editorial point of view, and yet financially and
-in every material way he was such a failure. He came from
-Kansas City or Omaha while I was on the <i>Republic</i> and had
-worked in many, many places before that. He was a stocky,
-dark, clerkly figure, with something of the manager or owner
-or leader about him, a most shrewd and capable-looking person.
-And when he first came to the <i>Republic</i> he seemed destined
-to rise rapidly and never to want for anything, so much
-self-control and force did he appear to have. He was a hard
-worker, quiet, unostentatious, and once I had gained his confidence,
-he gradually revealed a tale of past position and
-comfort which, verified as it was by Wandell and Williams,
-was startling when contrasted with his present position. Although
-he was not much over forty he had been editor or
-managing editor of several important papers in the West
-but had lost them through some primary disaster which had
-caused him to take to drink—his wife’s unfaithfulness, I
-believe—and his inability in recent years to stay sober for
-more than three months at a stretch. In some other city he
-had been an important factor in politics. Here he was, still
-clean and spruce apparently (when I first saw him, at any
-rate), going about his work with a great deal of energy,
-writing the most satisfactory newspaper stories; and then,
-once two or three months of such labor had gone by, disappearing.
-When I inquired of Williams and Wandell as
-to his whereabouts the former stared at me with his one
-eye and smiled, then lifted his fingers in the shape of a
-glass to his mouth. Wandell merely remarked: “Drink, I
-think. He may show up and he may not. He had a few
-weeks’ wages when he left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did not hear anything more of him for some weeks, when
-suddenly one day, in that wretched section of St. Louis beloved
-of Dick and Peter as a source of literary material, I
-was halted by a figure which I assumed to be one of the
-lowest of the low. A short, matted, dirty black beard concealed
-a face that bore no resemblance to Clark. A hat that
-looked as though it might have been lifted out of an ash-barrel
-was pulled slouchily and defiantly over long uncombed black
-hair. His face was filthy, as were his clothes and shoes,
-slimy even. An old brown coat (how come by, I wonder?)
-was marked by a greenish slime across the back and shoulders,
-slime that could only have come from a gutter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Don’t you know me, Dreiser?” he queried in a deep,
-rasping voice, a voice so rusty that it sounded as though it
-had not been used for years “—Clark, Clark of the <i>Republic</i>.
-You know me——” and then when I stared in amazement he
-added shrewdly: “I’ve been sick and in a hospital. You
-haven’t a dollar about you, have you? I have to rest a little
-and get myself in shape again before I can go to work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, of all things!” I exclaimed in amazement, and
-then: “I’ll be damned!” I could not help laughing: he
-looked so queer, impossible almost. A stage tramp could
-scarcely have done better. I gave him the dollar. “What
-in the world are you doing—drinking?” and then, overawed
-by the memory of his past efficiency and force I could not go
-on. It was too astonishing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, I’ve been drinking,” he admitted, a little defiantly,
-I thought, “but I’ve been sick too, just getting out now. I
-got pneumonia there in the summer and couldn’t work. I’ll
-be all right after a while. What’s news at the <i>Republic</i>?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He mumbled something about having played in bad luck,
-that he would soon be all right again, then ambled up the
-wretched rickety street and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hustled out of that vicinity as fast as I could. I was so
-startled and upset by this that I hurried back to the lobby
-of the Southern Hotel (my favorite cure for all despondent
-days), where all was brisk, comfortable, gay. Here I purchased
-a newspaper and sat down in a rocking-chair. Here at least
-was no sign of poverty or want. In order to be rid of that
-sense of failure and degradation which had crept over me I
-took a drink or two myself. That any one as capable as
-Clark could fall so low in so short a time was quite beyond
-me. The still strongly puritan and moralistic streak in me
-was shocked beyond measure, and for days I could do little
-but contrast the figure of the man I had seen about the
-<i>Republic</i> office with that I had met in that street of degraded
-gin-mills and tumbledown tenements. Could people really
-vary so greatly and in so short a time? What must be the
-nature of their minds if they could do that? Was mine
-like that? Would it become so? For days thereafter I was
-wandering about in spirit with this man from gin-mill to gin-mill
-and lodging-house to lodging-house, seeing him drink at
-scummy bars and lying down at night on a straw pallet in
-some wretched hole.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And then there was Rodenberger, strange, amazing Rodenberger,
-poet, editorial writer and what not, who when I first
-met him had a little weekly editorial paper for which he
-raised the money somehow (I have forgotten its name) and
-in which he poured forth his views on life and art and nature
-in no uncertain terms. How he could write! (He was connected
-with some drug company, by birth or marriage, which
-may have helped to sustain him. I never knew anything definite
-concerning his private life.) As I view him now, Rodenberger
-was a man in whom imagination and logic existed in
-such a confusing, contesting way as to augur fatalism and
-(from a worldly or material point of view) failure. He was
-constantly varying between a state of extreme sobriety and
-Vigorous mental energy, and debauches which lasted for weeks
-and which included drink, houses of prostitution, morphine,
-and I know not what else.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One sunny summer morning in July or August, I found
-him standing at the corner of Sixth and Chestnut outside
-the LaClede drugstore quite stupefied with drink or something.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Hello, Rody,” I called when I saw him. “What’s ailing
-you? You’re not drunk again, are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Drunk,” he replied with a slight sardonic motion of the
-hand and an equally faint curl of the lip, “and what’s more,
-I’m glad of it. I don’t have to think about myself, or St.
-Louis, or you, when I’m drunk. And what’s more,” and here
-he interjected another slight motion of the hand and hiccoughed,
-“I’m taking dope, and I’m glad of that. I got all
-the dope I want now, right here in my little old vest pocket,
-and I’m going to take all I want of it,” and he tapped the
-pocket significantly. Then, in a boasting, contentious spirit,
-he drew forth a white pillbox and slowly opened it and revealed
-to my somewhat astonished gaze some thirty or forty
-small while pills, two or three of which he proceeded to lift
-toward his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In my astonishment and sympathy and horror I decided to
-save him if I could, so I struck his hand a smart blow, knocking
-the pills all over the sidewalk. Without a word of complaint
-save a feeble “Zat so?” he dropped to his hands and
-knees and began crawling here and there after them as fast
-as he could, picking them up and putting them in his mouth,
-while I, equally determined, began jumping here and there
-and crushing them under my heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Rody, for God’s sake! Aren’t you ashamed of yourself?
-Get up!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ll show you!” he cried determinedly if somewhat recklessly.
-“I’ll eat ’em all! I’ll eat ’em all! G—— D—— you!”
-and he swallowed all that he had thus far been able to
-collect.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I saw him dead before me in no time at all, or thought I
-did.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Here, Johnson,” I called to another of our friends who
-came up just then, “help me with Rody, will you? He’s
-drunk, and he’s got a box of morphine pills and he’s trying
-to take them. I knocked them out of his hand and now he’s
-eaten a lot of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Here, Rody,” he said, pulling him to his feet and holding
-him against the wall, “stop this! What the hell’s the matter
-with you?” and then he turned to me: “Maybe they’re not
-morphine. Why don’t you ask the druggist? If they are
-we’d better be getting him to the hospital.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“They’re morphine all right,” gurgled the victim. “Dont-cha
-worry—I know morphine all right, and I’ll eat ’em all,”
-and he began struggling with Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the latter’s suggestion I hurried into the drugstore, the
-proprietor and clerk of which were friends to all of us, and
-inquired. They assured me that they were morphine and
-when I told them that Rodenberger had swallowed about a
-dozen they insisted that we bring him in and then call an
-ambulance, while they prepared an emetic of some kind.
-It happened that the head physician of the St. Louis City
-Hospital, Dr. Heinie Marks, was also a friend of all newspaper
-men (what free advertising we used to give him!),
-and to him I now turned for aid, calling him on the telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Bring him out! Bring him out!” he said. Then: “Wait;
-I’ll send the wagon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By this time Johnson, with the aid of the clerk and the
-druggist, had brought Rodenberger inside and caused him to
-drink a quantity of something, whereupon we gazed upon
-him for signs of his approaching demise. By now he was
-very pale and limp and seemed momentarily to grow more
-so. To our intense relief, however, the city ambulance soon
-came and a smart young interne in white took charge. Then
-we saw Rodenberger hauled away, to be pumped out later and
-detained for days. I was told afterward by the doctor that
-he had taken enough of the pills to end him had he not been
-thoroughly pumped out and treated. Yet within a week
-or so he was once more up and around, fate, in the shape of
-myself and Johnson, having intervened. And many a time
-thereafter he turned up at this selfsame corner as sound and
-smiling as ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once, when I ventured to reproach him for this and other
-follies, he merely said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All in the day’s wash, my boy, all in the day’s wash. If
-I was so determined to go you should have let me alone.
-Heaven only knows what trouble you have stored up for me
-now by keeping me here when I wanted to go. That may
-have been a divine call! But—Kismet! Allah is Allah!
-Let’s go and have a drink!” And we adjourned to Phil
-Hackett’s bar, where we were soon surrounded by fellow-bibbers
-who spent most of their time looking out through
-the cool green lattices of that rest room upon the hot street
-outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I may add that Rodenberger’s end was not such as might
-be expected by the moralists. Ten years later he had completely
-reformed his habits and entered the railroad business,
-having attained to a considerable position in one of the
-principal roads running out of St. Louis.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>For</span> years past during the summer months the <i>Republic</i> had
-been conducting a summer charity of some kind, a fresh-air
-fund, in support of which it attempted every summer to
-invent and foster some quick money-raising scheme. This
-year it had taken the form of that musty old chestnut, a baseball
-game, to be played between two local fraternities, the
-fattest men of one called the Owls and the leanest of another
-known as the Elks. The hope of the <i>Republic</i> was to work up
-interest in this startling novelty by a humorous handling of
-it so as to draw a large crowd to the baseball grounds. Before
-I had even heard of it this task had been assigned to two or
-three others, a new man each day, in the hope of extracting
-fresh bits of humor, but so far with but indifferent results.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day, then, I was handed a clipping concerning this
-proposed game that had been written the preceding day by
-another member of the staff and which was headed “Blood
-on the Moon.” It purported to narrate the preliminary mutterings
-and grumblings of those who were to take part in the
-contest. It was not so much an amusing picture as a news
-item, and I did not think very much of it; but since I had
-been warned by Williams that I was about to be called upon
-to produce the next day’s burst, and that it must be humorous,
-I was by no means inclined to judge it too harshly....
-The efforts of one’s predecessor always appear more forceful
-as one’s own threaten to prove inadequate. A little later
-Wandell proceeded to outline to me most of the conditions
-which surrounded this contest. “See if you can’t get some
-fun into it. You must do it. Some one has to. I depend on
-you for this. Make us laugh,” and he smiled a dry, almost
-frosty smile. “Laugh!” I thought. “Good Lord, how am I
-to make anybody laugh? I never wrote anything funny in
-my life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nevertheless, being put to it for this afternoon (he had
-given me no other assignment, fancying no doubt that I might
-have a hard time with this), and being the soul of duty, I
-went to my desk to think it over. Not an idea came to me. It
-seemed to me that nothing could be duller than this, a baseball
-game between fat and lean men; yet if I didn’t write something
-it would be a black mark against me and if I did and
-it proved a piece of trash I should sink equally low in the
-estimation of my superior. I took my pencil and began scribbling
-a possible introduction, wondering how one achieved
-humor when one had it not. After writing aimlessly for a
-half-hour or so I finally re-examined the texts of my predecessors
-of previous days and then sought to take the same
-tack. Only, instead of describing the aspirations and oppositions
-of the two rival organizations in general terms, I
-assumed a specific interest and plotting on the part of certain
-of their chief officers, who even now, as I proceeded to assert
-and with names and places given in different parts of the
-city, were spending days and nights devising ways and means
-of outwitting the enemy. Thoughts of rubber baseball bats,
-baskets and nets in which flies might be caught, secret electric
-wiring under the diamond between the bases to put “pep”
-into the fat runners, seemed to have some faint trace of humor
-in them, and these I now introduced as being feverishly
-worked out in various secret places in order that the great
-game might not be lost. As I wrote, building up purely imaginary
-characteristics for each one involved (I did not know
-any of them), I myself began to grow interested and amused.
-It all seemed so ridiculous, such trash, and yet the worse I
-made it the better it seemed. At last I finished it, but upon
-re-reading it I was disturbed by the coarse horse-play of it all.
-“This will never get by,” I thought. “Wandell will think
-it’s rotten.” But having by now come to a rather friendly
-understanding with Williams, I decided to take it over and
-ask him so that in case I had failed I might try again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wearily he eyed me with his one eye, for already he had
-been editing this for days, then leaned back in his chair and
-began to read it over. At first he did not seem to be much
-interested, but after the first paragraph, which he examined
-with a blank expression, he smiled and finally chortled:
-“This is pretty good, yes. You needn’t worry about it; I
-think it’ll do. Leave it with me.” Then he began to edit it.
-Later in the afternoon when Wandell had come in to give out
-the evening assignments I saw Williams gather it up and go
-in to him. After a time he came out smiling, and in a little
-While Wandell called me in.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not bad, not bad,” he said, tapping the manuscript
-lightly. “You’ve got the right idea, I think. I’ll let you do
-that for a while afternoons until we get up on it. You needn’t
-do anything else—just that, if you do it well enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was pleased, for judging by the time it had taken to do
-this (not more than two hours) I should have most of my
-afternoons to myself. I saw visions of a late breakfast, idling
-in my room, walks after I had done with my work and before
-I returned to the office. Curiously enough, this trivial thing,
-undertaken at first in great doubt and with no sense of ability
-and with no real equipment for it, nevertheless proved for
-me the most fortunate thing I had thus far done. It was not
-so much that it was brilliant, or even especially well done, as
-that what I did fell in with the idle summer mood of the city
-or with the contesting organizations and the readers of the
-<i>Republic</i>. Congratulatory letters began to arrive. Pleased
-individuals whose names had been humorously mentioned
-began to call up the city editor, or the managing editor, or
-even the editor-in-chief, and voice their approval. In a trice
-and almost before I knew it, I was a personage, especially in
-newspaper circles.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We’ve got the stuff now, all right,” Wandell cackled most
-violently one evening, at the same time slapping me genially
-on the shoulder. “This’ll do it, I’m sure. A few weeks, and
-we’ll get a big crowd and a lot of publicity. Just you stick
-to the way you’re doing this now. Don’t change your style.
-We’ve got ’em coming now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was really amazed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And to add to it, Wandell’s manner toward me changed.
-Hitherto, despite his but poorly concealed efforts, he had been
-distant, brusque, dictatorial, superior. Now of a sudden he
-was softer, more confidential.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I have a friend up the street here—Frank Hewe, an
-awfully nice fellow. He’s the second assistant of this or that
-or the other such company. In one of these comic blurbs of
-yours don’t you think you could ring him in in some way?
-He’s an Elk and I’m sure the mention would tickle him to
-death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I saw the point of Mr. Wandell’s good nature. He was
-handing round some favors on his own account.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But since it was easy for me to do it and could not injure
-the text in any way, and seemed to popularize the paper and
-myself immensely, I was glad to do it. Each evening, when
-at six or seven I chose to amble in, having spent the afternoon
-at my room or elsewhere idling, my text all done in an hour
-as a rule, my small chief would beam on me most cordially.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Whatcha got there? Another rib-tickler? Let’s see.
-Well, go get your dinner, and if you don’t want to come back
-go and see a show. There’s not much doing tonight anyhow,
-and I’d like to keep you fresh. Don’t stay up too late, and
-turn me in another good one tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So it went.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a trice and as if by magic I was lifted into an entirely
-different realm. The ease of those hours! Citizens of local
-distinction wanted to meet me. I was asked by Wandell one
-afternoon to come to the Southern bar in order that Colonel
-So-and-So, the head of this, that or the other thing, as well as
-some others, might meet me. I was told that this, that and
-the other person here thought I must be clever, a fool, or a
-genius. I was invited to a midnight smoker at some country
-club. The local newspaper men who gathered at the LaClede
-daily all knew, and finding me in high favor with Phil
-Hackett, the lessee of the hotel bar whose name I had mentioned
-once, now laughed with me and drank at my expense—or
-rather at that of the proprietor, for I was grandly told by
-him that I “could pay for no drinks there,” which kept me
-often from going there at all. As the days went on I was
-assured that owing to my efforts the game was certain to be
-a big success, that it was the most successful stunt the <i>Republic</i>
-had ever pulled and that it would net the fund several
-thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For four or five weeks then it seemed to me as though I were
-walking on air. Life was so different, so pleasant these hot,
-bright days, with everybody pleased with me and my name as
-a clever man—a humorist!—being bandied about. Some of
-my new admirers were so pleased with me that they asked me
-to come to their homes to see them. I was becoming a personage.
-Hackett of the LaClede having asked me casually one
-day where I lived, I was surprised that night in my room by a
-large wicker hamper containing champagne, whiskey and
-cordials. I transferred it to the office of the <i>Republic</i> for the
-reportorial staff, with my compliments.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My handling of the fat-lean baseball game having established
-me as a feature writer of some ability, the <i>Republic</i>
-decided to give me another feature assignment. There had
-been in progress a voting contest which embraced the whole
-State and which was to decide which of many hundreds of
-school-teachers, the favorites out of how many districts in the
-State I cannot now recall, were to be sent to Chicago to see
-the World’s Fair for two or more weeks at the <i>Republic’s</i>
-expense. In addition, a reporter or traveling correspondent
-was to be sent with the party to report its daily doings and
-that reporter’s comments were to be made a daily news
-feature; and that reporter was to be myself. I was not seeking
-it, had not even heard of it, but according to Wandell,
-who was selecting the man for the management, I was the one
-most likely to give a satisfactory picture of the life at the
-great Fair as well as render the <i>Republic</i> a service in picturing
-the doings of these teachers. An agent of the business
-manager was also going along to look after the practical
-details, and also the city superintendent of schools. I welcomed
-this opportunity to see the World’s Fair, which was
-then in its heyday and filling the newspapers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t mind telling you,” Wandell observed to me a few
-days before the final account of the baseball game was to be
-written, “that your work on this ball game has been good.
-Everybody is pleased. Now, there’s a little excursion we’re
-going to send up to Chicago, and I’m going to send you along
-on that for a rest. Mr. ——, our business manager, will tell
-you all about it. You see him about transportation and expenses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“When am I to go?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Thursday. Thursday night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Then I don’t have to see the ball game?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, that’s all right. You’ve done the important part of
-that. Let some one else write it up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I smiled at the compliment. I went downstairs and had
-somebody explain to me what it was the paper was going to
-do and congratulated myself. Now I was to have a chance to
-visit the World’s Fair, which had not yet opened when I left
-Chicago. I could look up my father, whom I had neglected
-since my mother’s death, as well as such other members of
-the family as were still living in Chicago; but, most important,
-I could go around to the <i>Globe</i> there and “blow” to my old
-confrères about my present success. All I had to do was to
-go along and observe what the girls did and how they enjoyed
-themselves and then write it up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went up the street humming and rejoicing, and finally
-landed in the “art department” of my friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m being sent to Chicago to the World’s Fair,” I said
-gleefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Bully for you,” was the unanimous return. “Let’s hope
-you have a good time.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> the time drew near, though, the thought of being a sort
-of literary chaperon to a lot of school-teachers, probably
-all of them homely and uninteresting, was not as cheering
-as it might have been. I wondered how I should manage to
-be civil and interesting to so many, how I was to extract news
-out of them. Yet the attitude of the business manager and the
-managing editor, as well as the editor-in-chief or publisher,
-Mr. Knapp, to whom I was now introduced by my city editor,
-was enough to convince me that whatever I thought of
-it I was plainly rising in their esteem. Although no word was
-said about any increase in pay, which I still consider the limit
-of beggarly, pennywise policy, these magnificoes were most
-cordial, smiled and congratulated me on my work and then
-turned me over to the man who had the financing of the trip
-in charge. He reminded me a good deal of a banker or
-church elder, small, dark, full-whiskered, solemn, affable, and
-assured me that he was glad that I had been appointed, that
-I was the ideal man for the place, and that he would see to
-it that anything I needed to make my trip pleasant would be
-provided. I could scarcely believe that I was so important.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After asking me to go and see the superintendent of schools,
-also of the party as guest of the <i>Republic</i>, he said he would
-send to me a Mr. Dean, who would be his agent en route
-to look after everything—baggage, fares, hotels, meals. The
-latter came and at once threw a wet blanket over me: he was
-so utterly dull and commonplace. His clothes, his shoes, his
-loud tie and his muddy, commonplace intellect all irritated me
-beyond measure. Something he said—“Now, of course, we
-all want to do everything we can to please these ladies and
-make them happy”—irritated me. The usual pastoral, supervisory
-stuff, I thought, and I at once decided that I did not
-want him to bother me in any way. “What! Did this
-horrible bounder assume that he was regulating my conduct
-on this trip, or that I was going out of my way to accommodate
-myself to him and his theory of how the trip should
-be conducted, or to accept him as a social equal? ‘We
-must’ indeed!—I, Theodore Dreiser, the well-known newspaper
-writer of St. Louis! The effrontery! Well, he would
-get scant attention from me, and the more he let me alone
-the better it would be for him and all of us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now Wandell also began to irritate me by attempting
-to give me minute instructions as to just what was wanted and
-how I was to write it, although, as I understood it, I was now
-working for the managing editor who was to have the material
-edited in the telegraph department. Besides, I thought that
-I was now entitled to a little leeway and discretion in the
-choice of what I should report. The idea of making it all
-advertising for the <i>Republic</i> and myself a literary wet-nurse
-to a school party was a little too much.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, I bustled down to the train that was waiting to
-carry this party of damsels to Chicago and the World’s Fair,
-a solid Pullman train which left St. Louis at dusk and arrived
-in Chicago early the next morning. The fifth of the
-Pullmans was reserved to carry the school-teachers and their
-chaperons, Mr. Soldan, superintendent of schools, Mr. Dean,
-the business-manager-representative, and myself. I entered
-the car wondering of course what the result of such a temporary
-companionship with so many girls might be. They
-were all popular, hence beautiful, prize-winners, as I had
-heard; but my pessimistic mind had registered a somewhat
-depressing conception of the ordinary school-mistress and I
-did not expect much.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For once in my life I was agreeably disappointed. These
-were young, buxom Missouri school-teachers and as attractive
-as that profession will permit. I was no sooner seated
-in a gaudy car than one of the end doors opened and there
-was ushered in by the porter a pretty, rosy-cheeked, black-haired
-girl of perhaps twenty-four. This was a good beginning.
-Immediately thereafter there came in a tall, fair girl
-with light brown hair and blue eyes. Others now entered,
-blondes and brunettes, stout and slender, with various intermediate
-grades or types. Instead of a mounting contempt I
-suddenly began to suffer from a sickening sense of inability
-to hold my own in the face of so many pretty girls.
-What could I do with twenty girls? How write about
-them? Maybe the business-manager-representative or the
-superintendent would not come on this train and I should
-be left to introduce these girls to each other! God!
-I should have to find out their names, and I had not thought
-to inquire at the office!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Fortunately for my peace of mind a large, rather showily
-dressed man with big soft ruddy hands decorated with several
-rings and a full oval face tinted with health, now entered by
-the front door and beamed cheerfully upon all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ah, here we are now,” he began with the impressive air
-of one in authority, going up to the first maiden he saw. “I
-see you have arrived safely, Miss—ah—C——. I’m glad to
-see you again. How are you?” We went on to another:
-“And here is Miss W——! Well, I am glad. I read in the
-<i>Republic</i> that you had won.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I realized that this was the Professor Soldan so earnestly
-recommended to me, the superintendent of schools and one
-upon whom I was to comment. I rather liked him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>An engine went puffing and clanging by on a neighboring
-track. I gazed out of the window. It seemed essential for
-me to begin doing something but I did not know how to begin.
-Suddenly the large jeweled hand was laid on my shoulder and
-the professor stood over me. “This must be Mr. Dreiser, of
-the <i>Republic</i>. Your business manager, Mr. ——, phoned
-me this morning that you were coming. You must let me
-introduce you to all these young ladies. We want to get the
-formalities over and be on easy terms.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I bowed heavily for I felt as though I were turning to stone.
-The prettiness and sparkle of these girls all chatting and
-laughing had fairly done for me. I followed the professor as
-one marches to the gallows and he began at one end of the
-car and introduced me to one girl after another as though it
-were a state affair of some kind. I felt like a boob. I was
-flustered and yet delighted by his geniality and the fact that
-he was helping me over a very ticklish situation. I envied him
-his case and self-possession. He soon betook himself elsewhere,
-leaving me to converse as best I might with a pretty
-black-haired Irish girl whose eyes made me wish to be agreeable.
-And now, idiot, I struggled desperately for bright
-things to say. How did one entertain a pretty girl, anyhow?
-The girl came to my rescue by commenting on the nature of
-the contest and the difficulties she had had. She hadn’t
-thought she would win at all. Some others joined in, and
-before I knew it the train was out of the station and on its
-way. The porter was closing the windows for the long tunnel,
-the girls were sinking into comfortable attitudes, and there
-was a general air of relaxation and good nature. Before East
-St. Louis was reached a general conversation was in progress,
-and by the time the train was a half-hour out a party of
-familiars had gathered in the little bridal chamber, which
-was at the rear of the car, laughing and gesticulating. But
-I was not of it, nor was the girl with whom I was chatting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why don’t you come back here, Myra?” called a voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Having lots of fun up there?” called another.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do come back, for goodness’ sake! Don’t try to monopolize
-one whole man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I felt my legs going from under me. Could this be true?
-Must I now go back there and try to face six or seven?
-Stumblingly I followed Myra, and at the door stopped and
-looked in. It was full of pretty girls, my partner of the
-moment before now chattering lightly among them. “I’m
-gone,” I thought. “It’s all off. Now for the grand collapse
-and silence! Which way shall I turn? To whom?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“There’s room for one more here,” said a Juney blonde,
-making a place for me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could not refuse this challenge. “I’m the one,” I said
-weakly, and sank heavily beside her. She looked at me encouragingly,
-as did the others, and at a vast expense of energy
-and will power I managed to achieve a smile. It was pathetic.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Isn’t train-riding just glorious?” exclaimed one of these
-bright-faced imps exuberantly. “I bet I haven’t been on a
-train twice before in all my life, and just look at me! I do it
-all right, don’t I? I’d just love to travel. I wish I could
-travel all the time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, don’t you, though!” echoed the girl who was sitting
-beside me and whom up to now I had scarcely noticed. “Do
-you think she looks so nice riding?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I cannot recall what I answered. It may have been witty—if
-so it was an accident.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What do you call the proper surroundings?” put in a
-new voice in answer to something that was said, which same
-drew my attention to limpid blue eyes, a Cupid’s bow mouth
-and a wealth of corn-colored hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“These,” I finally achieved gallantly, gazing about the
-compartment and at my companions. A burst of applause
-followed. I was coming to. Yet I was still bewildered by the
-bouquet of faces about me. Already the idea of the dreary
-school-teachers had been dissipated: these were prize-winners.
-Look where I would I seemed to see a new type of prettiness
-confronting me. It was like being in the toils of those nymphs
-in the Ring of the Nibelungen, yet I had no desire to escape,
-wishing to stay now and see how I could “make out” as a
-Lothario. Indeed at this I worked hard. I did my best to
-gaze gayly and captivatingly into pretty eyes of various colors.
-They all gazed amusedly back. I was almost the only man;
-they were out for a lark. What would you?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“If I had my wishes now I’d wish for just one thing,”
-I volunteered, expecting to arouse curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Which one?” asked the girl with the brown eyes and
-piquant little face who wished to travel forever. Her look
-was significant.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This one,” I said, running my finger around in a circle
-to include them all and yet stopping at none.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We’re not won yet, though,” said the girl smirkily.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Couldn’t you be?” I asked smartly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not all at once, anyhow. Could we?” she asked, speaking
-for the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I found myself poor at repartee. “It will seem all at once,
-though, when it happens, won’t it?” I finally managed to
-return. “Isn’t it always ‘so sudden’?” I was surprising
-myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aren’t you smart!” said the blue-eyed girl beside me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, that’s clever, isn’t it?” said the girl with the corn-colored
-hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I gazed in her direction. Beside her sat a maiden whom I
-had but dimly noticed. She was in white, with a mass of
-sunny red hair. Her eyes were almond-shaped, liquid and
-blue-gray. Her nose was straight and fine, her lips sweetly
-curved. She seemed bashful and retiring. At her bosom was
-a bouquet of pink roses, but one had come loose.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, your flowers!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Let me give you one,” she replied, laughing. I had not
-heard her voice before and I liked it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Certainly,” I said. Then to the others: “You see, I’ll
-take anything I can get.” She drew a rose from her bosom
-and held it out toward me. “Won’t you put it on?” I asked
-smartly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She leaned over and began to fasten it. She worked a
-moment and then looked at me, making, as I thought, a sheep’s
-eye at me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You may have my place,” said the girl next me, feigning
-to help her, and she took it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The conversation waxed even freer after this, although for
-me I felt that it had now taken a definite turn.... I
-was talking for her benefit. We were still in the midst of this
-when the conductor passed through and after him Mr. Dean,
-middle-aged, dusty, assured, advisory.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“These are the people,” he said. “They are all in one
-party.” He called me aside and we sat down, he explaining
-cheerfully and volubly the trouble he was having keeping
-everything in order. I could have murdered him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m looking out for the baggage and the hotel bills and
-all,” he insisted. “In the morning we’ll be met by a tally-ho
-and ride out to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was thinking of my splendid bevy of girls and the delightful
-time I had been having.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, that’ll be fine, won’t it?” I said wearily. “Is
-that all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, we have it all planned out,” he went on. “It’s going
-to be a fine trip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did my best to show that I had no desire to talk, but
-still he kept on. He wanted to meet the teachers and I had
-to introduce him. Fortunately he became interested in one
-small group and I sidled away—only to find my original
-group considerably reduced. Some had gone to the dressingroom,
-others were arranging their parcels about their
-unmade berths. The porter came in and began to make them
-up. I looked ruefully about me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, our little group has broken up,” I said at last to
-the girl of my choice as I came up to where she was sitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes. It’s getting late. But I’m not sleepy yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We dropped into an easy conversation, and I learned that
-she was from Missouri and taught in a little town not far
-from St. Louis. She explained to me how she had come to win,
-and I told her how ignorant I had been of the whole affair
-up to four days ago. She said that friends had bought hundreds
-of <i>Republics</i> in order to get the coupons. It seemed a
-fine thing to me for a girl to be so popular.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’ve never been to Chicago, then?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh no. I’ve never been anywhere really. I’m just a
-simple country girl, you know. I’ve always wanted to go,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She fascinated me. She seemed so direct, truthful, sympathetic.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’ll enjoy it,” I said. “It’s worth seeing. I was in
-Chicago when the Fair was being built. My home is there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Then you’ll stay with your home-folks, won’t you?” she
-asked, using a word for family to which I was not accustomed.
-It touched a chord of sympathy. I was not very much in
-touch with my family any more but the way she seemed to look
-on hers made me wish that I were.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, not exactly. They live over on the west side. I’ll
-go to see them, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was thinking that now I had her out of that sparkling
-group she seemed more agreeable than before, much more
-interesting, more subdued and homelike.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She arose to leave me. “I want to get some of my things
-before the porter puts them away,” she explained.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I stepped out of her way. She tripped up the aisle and
-I looked after her, fascinated. Of a sudden she seemed quite
-the most interesting of all those here, simple, pretty, vigorous
-and with a kind of tact and grace that was impressive. Also
-I felt an intense something about her that was concealed by
-an air of supreme innocence and maidenly reserve. I went
-out to the smokingroom, where I sat alone looking out of the
-window.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What a delightful girl,” I thought, with a feeling of intense
-satisfaction. “And I have the certainty of seeing her
-again in the morning!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>CHAPTER XXXVIII</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next morning I was awake early, stirred by the thoughts
-of Chicago, the Fair, Miss W—— (my favorite), as well as
-the group of attractive creatures who now formed a sort of
-background for her. One of the characteristics of my very
-youthful temperament at that time was the power to invest
-every place I had ever left with a romance and strangeness
-such as might have attached to something abandoned, say,
-a thousand or two years before and which I was now revisiting
-for the first time to find it nearly all done over. So it was
-now in my attitude toward Chicago. I had been away for only
-eight or nine months, and still I expected—what did I not expect?—the
-whole skyline and landscape to be done over, or
-all that I had known done away with. Going into Chicago
-I studied every street and crossing and house and car. How
-sad to think I had ever had to leave it, to leave Alice, my
-home, my father, all my relatives and old friends! Where
-was E——, A——, T——, my father? At thought of the latter
-I was deeply moved, for had I not left him about a year
-before and without very much ceremony at the time I had
-chosen to follow the fortunes of my sister C——? Now that
-I looked back on it all from the vantage point of a year’s work
-I was much chastened and began to think how snippy and
-unkind I had been. Poor, tottering, broken soul, I thought.
-I could see him then as he really was, a warm, generous and
-yet bigoted and ignorant soul, led captive in his childhood
-to a brainless theory and having no power within himself to
-break that chain, and now wandering distrait and forlorn
-amid a storm of difficulties: age, the death of his wife, the
-flight of his children, doubt as to their salvation, poverty, a
-declining health.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I can see him now, a thin grasshopper of a man, brooding
-wearily with those black-brown Teutonic eyes of his, as sad
-as failure itself. What thoughts! What moods! He was
-very much like one of those old men whom Rembrandt has
-portrayed, wrinkled, sallow, leathery. My father’s peculiarly
-German hair and beard were always carefully combed and
-brushed, the hair back over his forehead like Nietzsche’s, the
-beard resting reddishly on his chest. His clothes were always
-loose and ill-fitting, being bought for durability, not style, or
-made over from abandoned clothes of some one—my brother
-Paul or my sister M——’s husband. He always wore an old
-and very carefully preserved black derby hat, very wide of
-brim and out of style, which he pulled low over his deep-set
-weary eyes. I always wondered where and when he had
-bought it. On this trip I offered to buy him a new one, but
-he preferred to use the money for a mass for the repose of
-my good mother’s soul! Under his arm or in one of his
-capacious pockets was always a Catholic prayerbook from
-which he read prayers as familiar to him as his own hands,
-yet from the mumbling repetition of which he extracted some
-comfort, as does the Hindu from meditating upon space or
-time. In health he was always fluttering to one or another
-of a score of favorite Catholic churches, each as commonplace
-as the other, and there, before some trashy plaster image of
-some saint or virgin as dead or helpless as his own past, making
-supplication for what?—peace in death, the reconversion
-and right conduct of his children, the salvation of his own
-and my mother’s soul? Debts were his great misery, as I
-had always known. If one died and left unpaid an old bill
-of some kind one had to stay in purgatory so much longer!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Riding into Chicago this morning I speculated as to the
-thinness of his hands as I had known them, the tremulousness
-of his inquiries, the appeal in his sad resigned eyes, whence
-all power to compel or convince had long since gone. In the
-vast cosmic flight of force, flowing from what heart we know
-not but in which as little corks our suns and planets float,
-it is possible that there may be some care, an equation, a balancing
-of the scales of suffering and pleasure. I hope so. If
-not I know not the reason for tears or those emotions with
-which so many of us salve the memory of seemingly immedicable
-ills. If immedicable, why cry?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I sought Miss W——, who was up before me and sitting
-beside her section window. I was about to go and talk with
-her when my attention was claimed by other girls. This
-bevy could not very well afford to see the attention of the
-only man on board so easily monopolized. There were so many
-pretty faces among them that I wavered. I talked idly among
-them, interested to see what overtures and how much of an
-impression I might make. My natural love of womankind
-made them all inviting.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When the train drew into Chicago we were met by a tally-ho,
-which the obliging Mr. Dean had been kind enough to
-announce to each and every one of us as the train stopped.
-The idea of riding to the World’s Fair in such a thing and
-with this somewhat conspicuous party of school-teachers went
-very much against the grain. Being very conscious of my
-personal dignity in the presence of others and knowing the
-American and middle-West attitude toward all these new
-and persistently derided toys and pleasures of the effete
-East and England, I was inclined to look upon this one
-as out of place in Chicago. Besides, a canvas strip on the
-coach advertising the nature of this expedition infuriated
-me and seemed spiritually involved with the character of
-Mr. Dean. That bounder had done this, I was sure. I wondered
-whether the sophisticated and well-groomed superintendent
-of schools would lend himself to any such thing when
-plainly it was to be written up in the <i>Republic</i>, but since
-he did not seem to mind it I was mollified; in fact, he took
-it all with a charming gayety and grace which eventually succeeded
-in putting my own silly provincialism and pride to
-rout. He sat up in front with me and the driver discussing
-philosophy, education, the Fair, a dozen things, during which
-I made a great pretense at wise deductions and a wider reading
-than I had ever had.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once clear of the depot and turning into Adams Street,
-we were off behind six good horses through as interesting a
-business section as one might wish to see, its high buildings
-(the earliest and most numerous in America) and its mass of
-congested traffic making a brisk summer morning scene. I
-was reëngaged by Michigan Avenue, that splendid boulevard
-with its brief vista of the lake, which was whipped to cotton-tops
-this bright morning by a fresh wind, and then the long
-residence-lined avenue to the south with its wealth of new
-and pretentious homes, its smart paving and lighting, its
-crush of pleasure traffic hurrying townward or to the Fair.
-Within an hour we were assigned rooms in a comfortable hotel
-near the Fair grounds, one of those hastily and yet fairly
-well constructed buildings which later were changed into flats
-or apartments. One wall of this hotel, as I now discovered,
-the side on which my room was, faced a portion of the Fair
-grounds, and from my windows I could see some of its classic
-façades, porticoes, roofs, domes, lagoons. All at once and out
-of nothing in this dingy city of six or seven hundred thousand
-which but a few years before had been a wilderness of wet
-grass and mud flats, and by this lake which but a hundred
-years before was a lone silent waste, had now been reared this
-vast and harmonious collection of perfectly constructed and
-snowy buildings, containing in their delightful interiors the
-artistic, mechanical and scientific achievements of the world.
-Greece, Italy, India, Egypt, Japan, Germany, South America,
-the West and East Indies, the Arctics—all represented! I
-have often thought since how those pessimists who up to that
-time had imagined that nothing of any artistic or scientific
-import could possibly be brought to fruition in America,
-especially in the middle West, must have opened their eyes
-as I did mine at the sight of this realized dream of beauty, this
-splendid picture of the world’s own hope for itself. I have
-long marveled at it and do now as I recall it, its splendid Court
-of Honor, with its monumental stateliness and simple grandeur;
-the peristyle with its amazing grace of columns and
-sculptured figures; the great central arch with its triumphal
-quadriga; the dome of the Administration Building with its
-daring nudes; the splendid groupings on the Agricultural
-Building, as well as those on the Manufacturers’ and Women’s
-buildings. It was not as if many minds had labored toward
-this great end, or as if the great raw city which did not quite
-understand itself as yet had endeavored to make a great show,
-but rather as though some brooding spirit of beauty, inherent
-possibly in some directing over-soul, had waved a magic
-wand quite as might have Prospero in <i>The Tempest</i> or Queen
-Mab in <i>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</i>, and lo, this fairyland.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the morning when I came down from my room I fell
-in with Miss W—— in the diningroom and was thrilled by the
-contact. She was so gay, good-natured, smiling, unaffected.
-And with her now was a younger sister of whom I had not
-heard and who had come to Chicago by a different route to
-join her. I was promptly introduced, and we sat down at
-the same table. It was not long before we were joined by the
-others, and then I could see by the exchange of glances that
-it was presumed that I had fallen a victim to this charmer of
-the night before. But already the personality of the younger
-sister was appealing to me quite as much as the elder. She
-was so radiant of humor, freckled, plump, laughing and with
-such an easy and natural mode of address. Somehow she
-struck me as knowing more of life than her sister, being more
-sophisticated and yet quite as innocent.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After breakfast the company broke up into groups of two
-and three. Each had plans for the day and began talking
-them over.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We started off finally for the Fair gate and on the way I
-had an opportunity to study some of the other members of
-the party and make up my mind as to whether I really preferred
-her above all. Despite my leaning toward Miss W——
-I now discovered that there was a number whose charms, if
-not superior to those of Miss W——, were greater than I had
-imagined, while some of those who had attracted me the night
-before were being modified by little traits of character or
-mannerism which I did not like. Among them was one rosy
-black-haired Irish girl whose solid beauty attracted me very
-much. She was young and dark and robust, with the air of
-a hoyden. I looked at her, quite taken by her snapping black
-eyes, but nothing came of it for the moment: we were all
-becoming interested in the Fair.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Together, then, we drifted for an hour or more in this
-world of glorious sights, an hour or more of dreaming over
-the arches, the reflections in the water, the statues, the
-shadowy throngs by the steps of the lagoons moving like
-figures in a dream. Was it real? I sometimes wonder, for it
-is all gone. Gone the summer days and nights, the air, the
-color, the form, the mood. In its place is a green park by
-a lake, still beautiful but bereft, a city that grows and grows,
-ever larger, but harder, colder, grayer.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Possibly</span> it was the brightness and freshness of this first
-day, the romance of an international fair in America, the
-snowy whiteness of the buildings against the morning sun,
-a blue sky and a bluer lake, the lagoons weaving in and out,
-achieving a lightness and an airiness wholly at war with
-anything that this Western world had as yet presented, which
-caused me to be swept into a dream from which I did not
-recover for months. I walked away a little space with my
-friend of the night before, learning more of her home and
-environment. As I saw her now, she seemed more and more
-natural, winsome, inviting. Humor seemed a part of her,
-and romance, as well as understanding and patience, a quiet
-and restful and undisturbed patience. I liked her immensely.
-She seemed from the first to offer me an understanding and a
-sympathy which I had never yet realized in any one. She
-smiled at my humor, appreciated my moods. Returning to my
-room late in the afternoon I was conscious of a difficult task,
-what to write that was worth while, and yet so deeply moved
-by it all that I could have clapped my hands for joy. I
-wanted to versify or describe it—a mood which youth will
-understand and maturity smile at, which causes the mind to
-sing, to set forth on fantastic pilgrimages.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But if I wrote anything worth while I cannot now recall it.
-I was too eager to loaf and dream and do nothing at all, almost
-too idle to concentrate on what I had been called upon to do.
-I sent off something, a thousand or so words of drivel or
-rapture, and then settled to my real task of seeing the Fair
-by night and by day. Now that I was here I was cheered
-by the thought that very soon, within a day or two at most,
-I should be able to seek out and crow over all my old familiars,
-Maxwell, Dunlap, Brady, Hutchinson, a considerable group
-of newspaper men, as well as my brothers A—— and E——,
-who were here employed somewhere, and my father and
-several sisters.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For my father, who was now seventy-two years of age, I
-had, all of a sudden, as I have indicated above, the greatest
-sympathy. At home, up to my seventeenth or eighteenth
-birthday, before I got out in the world and began to make
-my own way, I had found him fussy, cranky, dosed with too
-much religion; but in spite of all this and the quarrels and
-bickerings which arose because of it there had always been
-something tender in his views, charming, poetic and appreciative.
-Now I felt sorry for him. A little while before and
-after my mother’s death it had seemed to me that he had become
-unduly wild on the subject of the church and the hereafter,
-was annoying us all with his persistent preachments
-concerning duty, economy and the like, the need of living a
-clean, saving, religious life. Now, after a year out in the
-world, with a broadening knowledge of very different things,
-I saw him in an entirely different light. While realizing that
-he was irritable, crotchety, domineering, I suddenly saw him
-as just a broken old man whose hopes and ambitions had
-come to nothing, whose religion, impossible as it was to me,
-was still a comfort and a blessing to him. Here he was, alone,
-his wife dead, his children scattered and not very much interested
-in him any more.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now that I was here in the city again, I decided that
-as soon as I could arrange my other affairs I would go over
-on the west side and look him up and bring him to see the
-Fair, which of course he had not seen. For I knew that with
-his saving, worrying, almost penurious disposition he would
-not be able to bring himself to endure the expense, even
-though tickets were provided him, of visiting the Fair
-alone. He had had too much trouble getting enough to live
-on in these latter years to permit him to enjoy anything
-which cost money. I could hear him saying: “No, no. I cannot
-afford it. We have too many debts.” He had not always
-been so but time and many troubles had made the saving of
-money almost a mania with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next morning, therefore, I journeyed to the west side
-and finally found him quite alone, as it chanced, the
-other members of the family then living with him having
-gone out. I shall never forget how old he looked after my
-year’s absence, how his eyelids twitched. After a slightly
-quizzical and attempted hard examining glance at me his
-lips twitched and tears welled to his eyes. He was so utterly
-done for, as he knew, and dependent on the courtesy of his
-children and life. I cried myself and rubbed his hands and
-his hair, then told him that I was doing well and had come
-to take him to see the Fair, that I had tickets—a passbook,
-no less—and that it shouldn’t cost him a penny. Naturally
-he was surprised and glad to see me, so anxious to know if
-I still adhered to the Catholic faith and went to confession and
-communion regularly. In the old days this had been the
-main bone of contention between us.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Tell me, Dorsch,” he said not two minutes after I arrived,
-“do you still keep up your church duties?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I hesitated for a moment, uncertain what to say, he
-went on: “You ought to do that, you know. If you should
-die in a state of mortal sin——”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, yes,” I interrupted, making up my mind to give him
-peace on this score if I never did another thing in this world,
-“I always go right along, once every month or six weeks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You really do that, do you?” he asked, eyeing me more
-in appeal than doubt, though judging by my obstinate past
-he must have doubted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I insisted, “sure. I always go regularly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m glad of that,” he went on hopefully. “I worry so. I
-think of you and the rest of the children so much. You’re
-a young man now and out in the world, and if you neglect
-your religious duties——” and he paused as if in a grave
-quandary. “When you’re out like that I know it’s hard to
-think of the church and your duties, but you shouldn’t
-neglect them——”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Lord!” I thought. “Now he’s off again! This is the
-same old story—religion, religion, religion!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But I do go,” I insisted. “You mustn’t worry about me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I know,” he said, with a sudden catch in his voice, “but
-I can’t help it. You know how it is with the other children:
-they don’t always do right in that respect. Paul is away on
-the stage; I don’t know whether he goes to church any more.
-A—— and E—— are here, but they don’t come here much—I
-haven’t seen them in I don’t know how long—months——”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I resolved to plead with E—— and A—— when I saw
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He was sitting in a big armchair facing a rear window, and
-now he took my hand again and held it. Soon I felt hot tears
-on it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Pop,” I said, pulling his head against me and smoothing
-it, “you mustn’t cry. Things aren’t so bad as all that. The
-children are all right. We’ll probably be able to do better and
-more for you than we’ve ever done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I know, I know,” he said after a little while, overcoming
-his emotion, “but I’m getting so old, and I don’t sleep much
-any more—just an hour or two. I lie there and think. In the
-morning I get up at four sometimes and make my coffee. Then
-the days are so long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I cried too. The long days ... the fading interests
-... Mother gone and the family broken up....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I know,” I said. “I haven’t acted just right—none of us
-have. I’ll write you from now on when I’m away, and send
-you some money once in a while. I’m going to get you a big
-overcoat for next winter. And now I want you to come over
-with me to the Fair. I’ve tickets, and you’ll enjoy it. I’m
-a press representative now, a traveling correspondent. I’ll
-show you everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After due persuasion he got his hat and stick and came
-with me. We took a car and an elevated road, which finally
-landed us at the gate, and then, for as long as his strength
-would endure, we wandered about looking at the enormous
-buildings, the great Ferris Wheel, the caravels <i>Nina</i>, <i>Pinta</i>
-and <i>Santa Maria</i> in which Columbus sailed to America, the
-convent of La Rabida (which, because it related to the Trappists,
-fascinated him), and finally the German Village on the
-Midway, as German and <i>ordentlich</i> as ever a German would
-wish, where we had coffee and little German cakes with caraway
-seeds on them and some pot cheese with red pepper and
-onions. He was so interested and amused by the vast spectacle
-that he could do little save exclaim: “By crackie!” “This
-is now beautiful!” or “That is now wonderful!” In the
-German village he fell into a conversation with a buxom
-German <i>frau</i> who had a stand there and who hailed from some
-part of Germany about which he seemed to know, and then
-all was well indeed. It was long before I could get him away.
-These delightful visits were repeated only about four times
-during my stay of two weeks, when he admitted that it was
-tiring and he had seen enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another morning when I had not too much to do I looked
-up my brother E——, who was driving a laundry wagon somewhere
-on the south side, and got him to come out evenings
-and Sundays, as well as A——, who was connected with an
-electric plant as assistant of some kind. I recall now, with
-an odd feeling as to the significance of relationship and
-family ties generally, how keenly important his and E——’s
-interests were to me then and how I suffered because I thought
-they were not getting along as well as they should. Looking
-in a shoe window in Pittsburgh a year or two later, I actually
-choked with emotion because I thought that maybe E——
-did not earn enough to keep himself looking well. A——
-always seemed more or less thwarted in his ambitions, and
-whenever I saw him I felt sad because, like so many millions
-of others in this grinding world, he had never had a real
-chance. Life is so casual, and luck comes to many who sleep
-and flies from those who try. I always felt that under more
-advantageous circumstances A—— would have done well.
-He was so wise, if slightly cynical, full of a laughing humor.
-His taste for literature and artistic things in general was high,
-although entirely untrained. Like myself he had a turn for
-the problems of nature, constantly wondering as to the why
-of this or that and seeking the answer in a broader knowledge.
-But long hours of work and poor pay seemed to handicap
-him in his search. I was sad beyond words about his condition,
-and urged him to come to St. Louis and try his luck
-there, which he subsequently did.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing I did was to visit the old <i>Globe</i> office in
-Fifth Avenue downtown, only to find things in a bad way
-there. Although Brady, Hutchinson and Dunlap were still
-there the paper was not paying, was, in fact, in danger of
-immediate collapse. John B. MacDonald, its financial backer
-or angel, having lost a fortune in trying to make it pay and
-win an election with it, was about ready to quit and the paper
-was on its last legs. Could I get them jobs in St. Louis?
-Maxwell had gone to the <i>Tribune</i> and was now a successful
-copy-reader there.... In my new summer suit and
-straw hat and with my various credentials, I felt myself
-to be quite a personage. How much better I had done than
-these men who had been in the business longer than I had!
-Certainly I would see what I could do. They must write me.
-They could find me now at such-and-such a hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The sweets of success!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the Newspaper Press Association offices in the great
-Administration Building several of my friends from the press
-showed up and here we foregathered to talk. Daily in this
-building at eight or nine or ten at night I filed a report or
-message about one thousand words long and was pleased to
-see by the papers that arrived that my text was used about
-as I wrote it. Loving the grounds of the Fair so much, I
-browsed there nearly all day long and all evening, escorting
-now one girl and now another, but principally Miss W——
-and her sister. Almost unconsciously I was being fascinated
-by these two, with my Miss W—— the more; and yet I was
-not content to confine myself to her but was constantly looking
-here and there, being lured by a number of the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus one afternoon, after I had visited the Administration
-Building and filed my dispatch rather early, Miss W——
-having been unable to be with me at the Fair, I returned
-to the hotel, a little weary of sightseeing, and finding an upper
-balcony which faced the Fair sat there in a rocker awaiting
-the return of some of the party. Presently, as I was resting
-and humming to myself, there came down to the parlor,
-which adjoined this balcony, that rosy Irish girl, Miss Ginity,
-who had attracted me the very first morning. She seemed
-to be seeking that room in order to sing and play, there being
-a piano here. She was dressed in a close-fitting suit of white
-linen, which set off her robust little figure to perfection. Her
-heavy, oily black hair was parted severely in the middle and
-hung heavily over her white temples. She had a rich-blooded,
-healthy, aggressive look, not unmarked by desire.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was looking through the window when she came in and
-was wondering if she would discover me, when she did. She
-smiled, and I waved to her to come out. We talked about
-the Fair and my duties in connection with it. When I explained
-the nature of my dispatches she wanted to know if I
-had mentioned her name yet. I assured her that I had,
-and this pleased her. I had the feeling that she liked me
-and that I could influence her if I chose.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What has become of your friend Miss W——?” she finally
-asked with a touch of malice when I looked at her too kindly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t know. I haven’t seen her since yesterday or the
-day before,” which was not true. “What makes you ask
-that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I thought you rather liked her,” she said boldly,
-throwing up her chin and smiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And what made you think it?” I asked calmly. It was
-in my mind that I could master and deceive her as to this,
-and I proposed to try.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I just thought so. You seemed to like her company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not any more than I do that of others,” I insisted with
-great assurance. “She’s interesting, that’s all. I didn’t think
-I was showing any preference.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I’m just joking,” she laughed. “I really don’t
-think anything about it. One of the other girls made the
-remark.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, she’s wrong,” I said indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I could see that she wasn’t joking. I could also see
-that I had relieved her mind. My pose of indifference had
-quelled her feeling that I was not wholly free. We sat and
-talked until dinner, and then I asked her if she would like
-to go for a stroll in the park, to which she agreed. By now
-we were obviously drifting toward each other emotionally,
-and I thought how fine it would be to idle and dream with
-this girl in the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After dinner, when we started out, the air was soft and
-balmy and the moon was just rising over the treetops in the
-East. A faint odor of fresh flowers and fresh leaves was
-abroad and the night seemed to rest in a soothing stillness.
-From the Midway came the sounds of muffled drums and
-flutes, vibrant with the passion of the East. Before us were
-the wide stretches of the park, dark and suggestive of intrigue
-where groups of trees were gathered in silent, motionless
-array, in others silvered by a fairy brightness which suggested
-a world of romance and feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I walked silently on with her, flooded with a voiceless feeling
-of ecstasy. Now I was surely proving to myself that I was
-not entirely helpless in the presence of girls. This time of
-idleness and moonlight was in such smooth consonance with
-my most romantic wishes. She was not so romantic, but the
-ardent luxury of her nature appeared to answer to the romantic
-call of mine.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Isn’t this wonderful?” I said at last, seeking to interest
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” she replied, almost practically. “I’ve been wondering
-why some of the girls don’t come over here at night.
-It’s so wonderful. But I suppose they’re tired.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“They’re not as strong as you, that’s it. You’re so vigorous.
-I was thinking today how healthy you look.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Were you? And I was just thinking what my mother
-would say if she knew I was out here with a total stranger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You told me you lived in St. Louis, I think?” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, out in the north end. Near O’Fallon Park.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, then, I’ll get to see you when you go back,” I
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, will you?” she returned coquettishly. “How do you
-know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, won’t I?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The thought flashed across my mind that once I had been
-in this selfsame park with Alice several years before; we
-had sat under a tree not so very far from here, near a pagoda
-silvered by the moon, and had listened to music played in
-the distance. I remembered how I had whispered sweet
-nothings and kissed her to my heart’s content.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you may if you’re good,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I began jesting with her now. I deliberately descended
-from the ordinary reaches of my intelligence, anxious to
-match her own interests with some which would seem allied.
-I wanted her to like me, although I felt all the while that we
-were by no means suited temperamentally. She was too
-commonplace and unimaginative, although so attractive
-physically.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We sat in silence for a time, and I slipped my hand down
-and laid hold of her fingers. She did not stir, pretending not
-to notice, but I felt that she was thrilling also.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You asked about Miss W——,” I said. “What made you
-do that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I thought you liked her. Why shouldn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It never occurred to you that I might like some one else?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Certainly not. Why should I?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I pressed her fingers softly. She turned on me all at once
-a face so white and tense that it showed fully the feeling
-that now gripped her. It was almost as if she were breaking
-under an intense nervous strain which she was attempting
-to conceal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I thought you might,” I replied daringly. “There is
-some one, you know.” I was surprising myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is there?” Her voice sounded weak. She did not attempt
-to look at me now, and I was wondering how far I would go.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You couldn’t guess, of course?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No. Why should I?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Look at me,” I said quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All right,” she said with a little indifferent shrug. “I’ll
-look at you. There now; what of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again that intense, nervous, strained look. Her lips were
-parted in a shy frightened smile, showing her pretty teeth.
-Her eyes were touched with points of light where the moonlight,
-falling over my shoulder, shone upon them. It gave her
-whole face an eerie, almost spectral paleness, something mystical
-and insubstantial, which spoke of the brevity and non-endurance
-of all these things. She was far more wonderful
-here than ever she could have been in clear daylight.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You have beautiful eyes,” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh,” she shrugged disdainfully, “is that all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No. You have beautiful teeth and hair—such hair!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You mustn’t grow sentimental,” she commented, not removing
-her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I slipped my arm about her waist and she moved nervously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And you still can’t guess who?” I said finally.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No,” she replied, keeping her face from me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Then I’ll tell you,” and putting my free hand to her cheek
-I turned her face to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I studied her closely, and then in a moment the last shred
-of reluctance and coquetry in her seemed to evaporate. At
-the touch of my hand on her cheek she seemed to change: the
-whole power of her ardent nature was rising. At last she
-seemed to be yielding completely, and I put my lips to hers
-and kissed her warmly, then pressed her close and held her.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Now do you know?” I asked after a time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” she nodded, and for a proffered kiss returned an
-ardent one of her own.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was beside myself with astonishment and delight. For
-the life of me I could not explain to myself how it was that I
-had achieved this result so swiftly. Something in the idyllic
-atmosphere, something in our temperaments, I fancied, made
-this quick spiritual and material understanding possible, but
-I wanted to know how. For a time we sat thus in the moonlight,
-I holding her hand and pressing her waist. Yet I could
-not feel that I liked her beyond the charm of her physical
-appearance, but that was enough at present. Physical beauty,
-with not too much grossness, was all I asked then—youth, a
-measure of innocence, and beauty. I pretended to have a real
-feeling for her and to be struck by her beauty, which was not
-wholly untrue. My feelings, however, as I well knew, were of
-so light and variable a character that it seemed almost a shame
-to lure her in this fashion. Why had I done it? It was decidedly
-unfortunate for her, I now thought, that we two
-should now meet under the same roof, with Miss W—— and
-others, perhaps making a third, fourth, or fifth possibly, but
-I anticipated no troublesome results. I might keep them
-apart. Anyhow, if I could not, my relationship in either case
-had not become earnest enough to cause me to worry. I hoped,
-however, to make it so in the case of Miss W——; Miss
-Ginity I knew from the first to be only a momentary flame.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XL</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> I hoped, there were no ill effects from this little
-diversion, but by now I was so interested in Miss W——
-that I felt a little unfair to her. As I look back on it I can
-imagine no greater error of mind or temperament than that
-which drew me to her, considering my own variable tendencies
-and my naturally freedom-loving point of view. But since
-we are all blind victims of chance and given to far better
-hind-sight than fore-sight I have no complaint to make. It
-is quite possible that this was all a part of my essential destiny
-or development, one of those storm-breeding mistakes by
-which one grows. Life seems thus often casually to thrust
-upon one an experience which is to prove illuminating or
-disastrous.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To pick up the thread of my narrative, I saw Miss Ginity
-at breakfast, but she showed no sign that we had been out
-together the previous evening. Instead, she went on her way
-briskly as though nothing had happened, and this made her
-rather alluring again in my eyes. When Miss W—— came
-down I suffered a slight revulsion of feeling: she was so fresh
-and innocent, so spiritually and mentally above any such
-quick and compromising relationship as that which I and
-my new acquaintance had established the night before. I
-planned to be more circumspect in my relations with Miss
-Ginity and to pay more attention to Miss W——.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This plan was facilitated by the way in which the various
-members of the party now grouped and adjusted themselves.
-Miss W—— and her sister seemed to prefer to go about
-together, with me as an occasional third, and Miss Ginity
-and several of her new acquaintances made a second company,
-with whom I occasionally walked. Thus the distribution
-of my attentions was in no danger of immediate detection
-and I went gayly on.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A peculiar characteristic at this time and later was that
-I never really expected any of these relationships to endure.
-Marriage might be well enough for the average man but it
-never seemed to me that I should endure in it, that it would
-permanently affect my present free relationship with the
-world. I might be greatly grieved at times in a high emotional
-way because they could not last, but that was rising to heights
-of sentiment which puzzled even myself. One of the things
-which troubled and astonished me was that I could like two,
-three, and even more women at the same time, like them very
-much indeed. It seemed strange that I could yearn over them,
-now one and now another. A good man, I told myself, would
-not do this. The thought would never occur to him, or if
-it did he would repress it sternly. Obviously, if not profoundly
-evil I was a freak and had best keep my peculiar
-thoughts and desires to myself if I wanted to have anything
-to do with good people. I should be entirely alone, perhaps
-even seized upon by the law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the next two weeks I saw much of both Miss W——
-and Miss Ginity. By day I usually accompanied Miss W——
-and her sister from place to place about the grounds and of
-an evening strolled with Miss Ginity, all the while wondering
-if Miss W—— really liked me, whether her present feeling
-was likely to turn to something deeper. I felt a very
-definite point of view in her, very different from mine. In her
-was none of the variability that troubled me: if ever a person
-was fixed in conventional views it was she. One life, one love
-would have answered for her exactly. She could have accepted
-any condition, however painful or even degrading,
-providing she was bolstered up by what she considered
-the moral law. “To have and to hold, in sickness and in
-health, in poverty and in riches, until death do us part.” I
-think the full force of these laws must have been imbibed
-with her mother’s milk.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As for Miss Ginity, although she was conventional enough,
-I did feel that she might be persuaded to relax the moral
-rule in favor of one at least, and so was congratulating myself
-upon having achieved an affectional triumph. She may
-not have been deeply impressed by my physical attraction
-but there was something about me nevertheless which seemed
-to hold her. After a few days she left the hotel to visit some
-friends or relatives, to whom she had to pay considerable
-attention, but in my box nights or mornings, if by any chance
-I had not seen her, I would find notes explaining where
-she could be found in the evening, usually at a drugstore near
-the park or her new apartment, and we would take a few
-minutes’ stroll in the park. Such a fever of emotion as
-she displayed at times! “Oh dear!” she would exclaim in
-an intense hungry way upon seeing me. “Oh, I could hardly
-wait!” And once in the park she would throw her strong
-young arms about me and kiss me in a fiery, hungry way.
-There was one last transport the night before she left for
-Michigan for a visit, when if I had been half the Don Juan
-I longed to be we might have passed the boundary line; but
-lack of courage on my part and inexperience on hers kept
-us apart.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I saw her again in St. Louis——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But that is still another story.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Thus</span> these days sped swiftly and ecstatically by. For once
-in my life I seemed to be truly and consistently happy, and
-that in this very city where but a year or two before I had
-suffered such keen distress. Toward the middle of the second
-week Miss Ginity left for Michigan, and then I had Miss
-W—— all to myself. By now I had come to feel an intense
-interest in her, an elation over the mere thought of being with
-her. In addition to this joy my mind and body seemed to
-be responding in some ecstatic fashion to Chicago and the
-Fair as a whole, the romance and color of it all, the winelike
-quality of the air, the raw, fresh, young force of the city, so
-vividly manifested in its sounding streets, its towering new
-buildings, its far-flung lines of avenues and boulevards, and,
-by way of contrast, its vast regions of middle and lower class
-poor. When we lived here as a family I had always thought
-that poverty was no great hardship. The poor were poor
-enough, in all conscience, but oh, the singing hope of the
-city itself! Up, up, and to work! Here were tasks for a
-million hands. In spite of my attachment to the Fair and Miss
-Ginity and Miss W—— I was still lured cityward, to visit
-the streets in which we had once lived or where I had walked
-so much in the old days, mere journeys of remembrance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But as I wandered about I realized that the city was not
-my city any more, that life was a baseless, shifting thing,
-its seeming ties uncertain and unstable and that that which
-one day we held dear was tomorrow gone, to come no more.
-How plain it was, I thought and with some surprise, so
-ignorant is youth, that even seemingly brisk organizations
-such as the <i>Globe</i> here in Chicago and some others with which
-I had been connected could wither or disappear completely,
-one’s commercial as well as one’s family life be scattered to
-the four Winds. Sensing this, I now felt an intense sense of
-loneliness and homesickness, for what I could scarcely say:
-for each and every one of past pleasant moments, I presume,
-our abandoned home in Flournoy Street, now rented
-to another; my old desk at the <i>Globe</i>, now occupied by another;
-Alice’s former home on this south side; N——’s in
-Indiana Street. I was gloomy over having no fixed abode,
-no intimates worthy the name here who could soothe and
-comfort me in such an hour as this. Curiously enough, at such
-moments I felt an intense leaning toward Miss W——, who
-seemed to answer with something stable and abiding. I am
-at a loss even now to describe it but so it was, and it was
-more than anything else a sense of peace and support which
-I found in her presence, a something that suggested durability
-and warmth—possibly the Whole closely-knit family atmosphere
-which was behind her and upon which she relied. She
-would listen, apparently with interest, to all my youthful
-and no doubt bragging accounts of my former newspaper
-experiences here as well as in St. Louis, which I painted in
-high colors with myself as a newspaper man deep in the
-councils of my paper. Walking about the Fair grounds one
-night I wished to take her hand but so overawed was I by
-her personality that I could scarcely muster up the courage
-to do it. When I at last did she shyly withdrew her hand,
-pretending not to notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The same thing happened an evening or two later when
-I persuaded her and her sister to accompany me and a
-fellow-reporter whom I met in Chicago, to Lincoln Park,
-where was a band concert and the playing of a colored
-fountain given by the late C. T. Yerkes, then looked upon as
-one of the sights of the city. I recall how warm and clear
-was the evening, our trip northward on the newly-built “Alley
-L,” so-called because no public thoroughfare could be secured
-for it, how when we got off at Congress Street, where the
-enormous store of Siegel, Cooper &amp; Company had only recently
-been opened, we there took a surface cable to Lincoln Park.
-It was barely dusk when we reached the park, and the fountain
-did not play until nine; but pending its colored wonders,
-we walked along the shore of the lake in the darkness, alone,
-her sister and my friend having been swallowed up in the
-great crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once near the lake shore we were alone. I found myself
-desperately interested without knowing how to proceed. It
-was a state of hypnosis, I fancy, in which I felt myself to
-be rapturously happy because more or less convinced of her
-feeling for me, and yet gravely uncertain as to whether she
-would ever permit herself to be ensnared in love. She was
-so poised and serene, so stable and yet so tender. I felt
-foolish, unworthy. Were not the crude brutalities of love
-too much for her? She might like me now, but the slightest
-error on my part in word or deed would no doubt drive her
-away and I should never see her again. I wanted to put my
-arm about her waist or hold her hand, but it was all beyond
-me then. She seemed too remote, a little unreal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Finally, moved by the idyllic quality of it all, I left her
-and strolled down to the very edge of the lake where the
-water was lapping the sand. I had the feeling that if she
-really cared for me she would follow me, but she did not. She
-waited sedately on the rise above, but I felt all the while that
-she was drawing toward me intensely and holding me as in
-a vise. Half-angry but still fascinated, I returned, anything
-but the master of this situation. In truth, she had me as
-completely in tow as any woman could wish and was able,
-consciously or unconsciously, to regulate the progress of this
-affair to suit herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But nothing came of this except a deeper feeling of her
-exceptional charm. I was more than ever moved by her
-grace and force. What sobriety! What delicacy of feature!
-Her big eyes, soft and appealing, her small red mouth, her
-abundance of red hair, a constant enticement.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Before she left for her home, one of the inland counties
-about ninety miles from St. Louis, all that was left of the
-party, which was not many, paid a visit to St. Joe on the
-Michigan shore, opposite Chicago. It was a deliciously
-bright and warm Sunday. The steamers were comfortable
-and the beach at St. Joe perfect, a long coast of lovely white
-sand with the blue waves breaking over it. En route, because
-of the size of the party and the accidental arrangement of
-friends, I was thrown in with R——, the sister of my adored
-one, and in spite of myself, I found myself being swiftly
-drawn to her, desperately so, and that in the face of the
-strong attachment for her sister. There was something so
-cheering and whole-souled about her point of view, something
-so provoking and elusive, a veritable sprite of gayety and
-humor. For some reason, both on the boat and in the water,
-she devoted herself to me, until she seemed suddenly to realize
-what was happening to us both. Then she desisted and I
-saw her no more, or very little of her; but the damage had
-been done. I was intensely moved by her, even dreaming of
-changing my attentions; but she was too fond of her sister
-to allow anything like that. From then on she avoided me,
-with the sole intent, as I could see, of not injuring her sister.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We returned at night, I with the most troubled feelings
-about the whole affair, and it was only after I had returned to
-St. Louis that the old feeling for S—— came back and I began
-to see and think of her as I had that night in Lincoln Park.
-Then her charm seemed to come with full force and for days
-I could think of nothing else: the Fair, the hotel, the evening
-walks, and what she was doing now; but even this was shot
-through with the most jumbled thoughts of her sister and
-Miss Ginity.... I leave it to those who can to solve this
-mystery of the affections. Miss W——, as I understood it,
-was not to come back to St. Louis until the late autumn, when
-she could be found in an aristocratic suburb about twenty
-miles out, teaching of course, whereas Miss Ginity was little
-more than a half-hour’s ride from my room.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But, as I now ruefully thought, I had not troubled to look
-up Alice, although once she had meant so much of Chicago
-and happiness to me. What kind of man was I to become thus
-indifferent and then grieve over it?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>To</span> return and take up the ordinary routine of reporting
-after these crystal days of beauty and romance was anything
-but satisfactory. Gone was the White City with its towers and
-pinnacles and the wide blue wash of lake at its feet. After
-the Fair and the greater city, St. Louis seemed prosaic indeed.
-Still, I argued, I was getting along here better than I had
-in Chicago. When I went down to the office I found Wandell
-poring as usual over current papers. He was always scribbling
-and snipping, like a little old leathery Punch, in his
-mussy office. The mere sight of him made me wish that I
-were through with the newspaper business forever: it brought
-back all the regularity of the old days. When should I get
-out of it? I now began to ask myself for the first time.
-What was my real calling in life? Should I ever again have
-my evenings to myself? When should I be able to idle and
-dawdle as I had seen other people doing? I did not then
-realize how few the leisure class really comprises; I was always
-taking the evidence of one or two passing before my gaze
-as indicating a vast company. <i>I</i> was one of the unfortunates
-who were shut out; <i>I</i> was one whose life was to be a wretched
-tragedy for want of means to enjoy it now when I had youth
-and health!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, did you have a good time?” asked Wandell.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I replied dolefully. “That’s a great show up
-there. It’s beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Any of the girls fall in love with you?” he croaked good-humoredly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, it wasn’t as bad as that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, I suppose you’re ready to settle down now to hard
-work. I’ve got a lot of things here for you to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I cannot say that I was cheered by this. It was hard to
-have to settle down to ordinary reporting after all these recent
-glories. It seemed to me as though an idyllic chapter of my
-life had been closed forever. Thereafter, I undertook one
-interesting assignment and another but without further developing
-my education as to the workings of life. I was beginning
-to tire of reporting, and one more murder or political
-or social mystery aided me in no way.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall, however, taking on a strange murder mystery over
-in Illinois which kept me stationed in a small countyseat for
-days, and all the time there was nothing save a sense of
-hard work about it all. Again, there was a train robbery that
-took me into the heart of a rural region where were nothing
-but farmers and small towns. Again there was a change of
-train service which permitted the distribution of St. Louis
-newspapers earlier than the Chicago papers in territory which
-was somehow disputed between them and because of which I
-was called upon to make a trip between midnight and dawn,
-riding for hours in the mailcar, and then describing fully
-this supposedly wonderful special newspaper service which
-was to make all the inhabitants of this region wiser, kinder,
-richer because they could get the St. Louis papers before
-they could those of Chicago! I really did not think much of
-it, although I was congratulated upon having penned a fine
-picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One thing really did interest me: A famous mindreader
-having come to town and wishing to advertise his skill, he
-requested the <i>Republic</i> to appoint a man or a committee to
-ride with him in a carriage through the crowded downtown
-streets while he, blindfolded but driving, followed the directing
-thoughts of the man who should sit on the seat beside
-him. I was ordered to get up this committee, which I did—Dick,
-Peter, Rodenberger and myself were my final choice, I
-sitting on the front seat and doing the thinking while the
-mindreader raced in and out between cars and wagons, turning
-sharp corners, escaping huge trucks by a hair only, to
-wind up finally at Dick’s door, dash up the one flight of stairs
-and into the room (the door being left open for this), and
-then climb up on a chair placed next to a wardrobe and, as
-per my thought, all decided on beforehand, take down that
-peculiar head of Alley Sloper and hand it to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now this thing, when actually worked out under my very
-eyes and with myself doing the thinking, astounded me and
-caused me to ponder the mysteries of life more than ever.
-How could another man read my mind like that? What was
-it that perceived and interpreted my thoughts? It gave me
-an immense kick mentally, one that stays by me to this day,
-and set me off eventually on the matters of psychology and
-chemic mysteries generally. When this was written up as
-true, as it was, it made a splendid story and attracted a great
-deal of attention. Once and for all, it cleared up my thoughts
-as to the power of mind over so-called matter and caused
-this “committee” to enter upon experiments of its own with
-hypnotists, spiritualists and the like, until we were fairly well
-satisfied as to the import of these things. I myself stood on
-the stomach of a thin hypnotized boy of not more than
-seventeen years of age, while his head was placed on one
-chair, his feet on another and no brace of any kind was put
-under his body. Yet his stomach held me up. But, having
-established the truth of such things for ourselves, we found no
-method of doing anything with our knowledge. It was practically
-useless in this region, and decidedly taboo.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another individual who interested me quite as might a
-book or story was a Spiritualist, a fat, sluglike Irish type, who
-came to town about this time and proved to be immensely
-successful in getting up large meetings, entrance to which he
-charged. Soon there were ugly rumors as to the orgiastic
-character of his séances, especially at his home where he advertised
-to receive interested spiritualists in private. One day
-my noble and nosy city editor set me to the task of ferreting
-out all this, with the intention of <i>sicking</i> the moralists on the
-gentleman and so driving him out of town. Was it because
-Mr. Wandell, interested in morals or at least responding to
-the local sentiment for a moral city, considered this man a
-real menace to St. Louis and so wished to be rid of him?
-Not at all. Mr. Wandell cared no more for Mr. Mooney or
-the public or its subsurface morals than he cared for the
-politics of Beluchistan. In the heart of St. Louis at this
-very time, in Chestnut Street, was a large district devoted to
-just such orgies as this stranger was supposed to be perpetrating;
-but this area was never in the public eye, and you could
-not, for your life, put it there. The public apparently did
-not want it attacked, or if it did there were forces sufficiently
-powerful to keep it from obtaining its wishes. The police
-were supposed to extract regular payments from one and all
-in this area, as Rodenberger, in the little paper he ran, frequently
-charged, but this paper had no weight. The most
-amazing social complications occasionally led directly to one
-or another of these houses, as I myself had seen, but no
-comment was ever made on the peculiarity of the area as a
-whole or its persistence in the face of so much moral sentiment.
-The vice crusaders never troubled it, neither did the
-papers or the churches or anybody else. But when it came to
-Mr. Mooney—well, here was an individual who could be easily
-and safely attacked, and so—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mr. Mooney had a large following and many defenders
-whose animosity or gullibility led them to look upon him as
-a personage of great import. He was unquestionably a shrewd
-and able manipulator, one of the finest quacks I ever saw.
-He would race up and down among the members of his
-large audience in his spiritualistic “church meetings,” his fat
-waxy eyelids closed, his immense white shirt-front shining, his
-dress coattails flying like those of a bustling butler or head-waiter,
-the while he exclaimed: “Is there any one here by
-the name of Peter? Is there any one here by the name of
-Augusta? There is an old white-bearded man here who says
-he has something to say to Augusta. And Peter—Peter, your
-sister says not to marry, that everything now troubling you
-will soon come out all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He would open these meetings with spiritual invocations of
-one kind and another and pretend the profoundest religiosity
-and spirituality when as a matter of fact he was a faker of
-the most brazen stamp. As Wandell afterward showed me by
-clippings and police reports from other cities, he had been
-driven from one city to another, cities usually very far apart
-so that the news of his troubles might not spread too quickly.
-His last resting-place had been Norfolk, Virginia, and before
-that he had been in such widely scattered spots as Liverpool,
-San Francisco, Sydney, New South Wales. Always he had
-been immensely successful, drawing large crowds, taking up
-collections and doing a private séance business which must
-have netted him a tidy sum. Indeed in private life, as I
-soon found, he was a gourmet, a sybarite and a riant amorist,
-laughing in his sleeve at all his touts and followers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For some time I was unable to gather any evidence that
-would convict him of anything in a direct way. Once he
-found the <i>Republic</i> to be unfavorable, he became pugnacious
-and threatened to assault me if I ever came near him or his
-place or attempted to write up anything about him which was
-not true! On the other hand, Wandell, being equally determined
-to catch him, insisted upon my following him up and
-exposing him. My task was not easy. I was compelled to
-hang about his meetings, trying to find some one who would
-tell me something definite against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Going to his rooms one day when he was absent, I managed
-to meet his landlady who, when I told her that I was from
-the <i>Republic</i> and wanted to know something about Mr.
-Mooney’s visitors, his private conduct and so forth, asked me
-to come in. At once I sensed something definite and important,
-for I had been there before and had been turned away
-by this same woman. But today, for some reason she escorted
-me very secretly to a room on the second floor where
-she closed and locked the door and then began a long story
-concerning the peculiar relations which existed between Mr.
-Mooney and some of his male and female disciples, especially
-the female ones. She finally admitted that she had been
-watching Mr. Mooney’s rooms through a keyhole. For weeks
-past there had been various visitors whose comings and goings
-had meant little to her until they became “so regular,” as
-she said, and Mr. Mooney so particularly engaged with them.
-Then, since Mr. Mooney’s fame had been spreading and the
-<i>Republic</i> had begun to attack him, she had become most
-watchful and now, as she told me, he was “carrying on”
-most shamefully with one and another of his visitors, male
-and female. Just what these relations were she at first refused
-to state, but when I pointed out to her that unless she
-could furnish me with other and more convincing proof than
-her mere word or charge it would all be of small value, she
-unbent sufficiently to fix on one particular woman, whose
-card and a note addressed to Mr. Mooney she had evidently
-purloined from his room. These she produced and turned
-over to me with a rousing description of the nature of the
-visits.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Armed with the card and note, I immediately proceeded to
-the west end where I soon found the house of the lady,
-determined to see whether she would admit this soft impeachment,
-whether I could make her admit it. I was a little uncertain
-then as to how I was to go about it. Suppose I
-should run into the lady’s husband, I thought, or suppose
-they should come down together when I sent in my card? Or
-suppose that I charged her with what I knew and she called
-some one to her aid and had me thrown out or beaten up?
-Nevertheless I went nervously up the steps and rang the bell,
-whereupon a footman opened the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Who is it you wish to see?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Have you an appointment with her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, but I’m from the <i>Republic</i>, and you tell her that it
-is very important for her to see me. We have an article
-about her and a certain Mr. Mooney which we propose to
-print in the morning, and I think she will want to see me
-about it.” I stared at him with a great deal of effrontery.
-He finally closed the door, leaving me outside, but soon returned
-and said: “You may come in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I walked into a large, heavily furnished reception-room,
-representing the best Western taste of the time, in which I
-nosed about thinking how fine it all was and wondering how
-I was to proceed about all this once she appeared. Suppose
-she proved to be a fierce and contentious soul well able to
-hold her own, or suppose there was some mistake about this
-letter or the statement of the landlady! As I was walking up
-and down, quite troubled as to just what I should say, I
-heard the rustle of silk skirts. I turned just as a vigorous and
-well-dressed woman of thirty-odd swept into the room. She
-was rather smart, bronze-haired, pink-fleshed, not in the least
-nervous or disturbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You wish to see me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“About what, please?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I am from the <i>Republic</i>,” I began. “We have a rather
-startling story about you and Mr. Mooney. It appears that
-his place has been watched and that you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A story about me?” she interrupted with an air of
-hauteur, seeming to have no idea of what I was driving at.
-“And about a Mr. Who? Mooney, you say? What kind of
-a story is it? Why do you come to me about it? Why, I
-don’t even know the man!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, but I think you do,” I replied, thinking of the letter
-and card in my pocket. “As a matter of fact, I know that
-you do. At the office right now we have a card and a letter
-of yours to Mr. Mooney, which the <i>Republic</i> proposes to publish
-along with some other matter unless some satisfactory
-explanation as to why it should not be printed can be made.
-We are conducting a campaign against Mr. Mooney, as you
-probably know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I have often thought of this scene as a fine illustration of the
-crass, rough force of life, its queer non-moral tangles, bluster,
-bluff, lies, make-believe. Beginning by accusing me of attempted
-blackmail, and adding that she would inform her
-husband and that I must leave the house at once or be
-thrown out, she glared until I replied that I would leave but
-that I had her letter to Mr. Mooney, that there were witnesses
-who would testify as to what had happened between her and
-Mr. Mooney and that unless she proceeded to see my city
-editor at once the whole thing would be written up for the
-next day’s paper. Then of a sudden she collapsed. Her face
-blanched, her body trembled, and she, a healthy, vigorous
-woman, dropped to her knees before me, seized my hands and
-coat and began pleading with me in an agonized voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But you wouldn’t do that! My husband! My home! My
-social position! My children! My God, you wouldn’t have
-me driven out of my own home! If he came here now! Oh,
-my God, tell me what I am to do! Tell me that you won’t do
-anything—that the <i>Republic</i> won’t! I’ll give you anything
-you want. Oh, you couldn’t be so heartless! Maybe I have
-done wrong—but think of what will happen to me if you do
-this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I stared at her in amazement. Never had I been the center
-of such an astonishing scene. On the instant I felt a mingled
-sense of triumph and extreme pity. Thoughts as to whether
-I should tell the <i>Republic</i> what I knew, whether if I did it
-would have the cruelty to expose this woman, whether she
-would or could be made to pay blackmail by any one raced
-through my mind. I was sorry and yet amused. Always this
-thought of blackmail, of which I heard considerable in newspaper
-work but of which I never had any proof, troubled me.
-If I exposed her, what then? Would Wandell hound her?
-If I did not would he discover that I was suppressing the news
-and so discharge me? Pity for her was plainly mingled with
-a sense of having achieved another newspaper beat. Now, assuredly,
-the <i>Republic</i> could make this erratic individual move
-on. To her I proceeded to make plain that I personally was
-helpless, a mere reporter who of himself could do nothing.
-If she wished she could see Mr. Wandell, who could help her
-if he chose, and I gave her his home address, knowing that
-he would not be at his office at this time of day, but hoping
-to see him myself before she did. Weeping and moaning,
-she raced upstairs, leaving me to make my way out as best I
-might. Once out I meditated on this effrontery and the
-hard, cold work I was capable of doing. Surely this was a
-dreadful thing to have done. Had I the right? Was it fair?
-Suppose I had been the victim? Still I congratulated myself
-upon having done a very clever piece of work for which I
-should be highly complimented.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The lady must have proceeded at once to my city editor for
-when I returned to the office he was there; he called me to
-him at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Great God! What have you been doing now? Of all men
-I have ever known, you can get me into more trouble in a
-half-hour than any other man could in a year! Here I was,
-sitting peacefully at home, and up comes my wife telling me
-there’s a weeping woman in the parlor who had just driven
-up to see me. Down I go and she grabs my hands, falls
-on her knees and begins telling me about some letters we
-have, that her life will be ruined if we publish them. Do you
-want to get me sued for divorce?” he went on, cackling and
-chortling in his impish way. “What the hell are those letters,
-anyhow? Where are they? What’s this story you’ve dug
-up now? Who is this woman? You’re the damnedest man
-I ever saw!” and he cackled some more. I handed over the
-letter and he proceeded to look it over with considerable
-gusto. As I could see, he was pleased beyond measure.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told my story, and he was intensely interested but seemed
-to meditate on its character for some time. What happened
-after that between him and the woman I was never able to
-make out. But one thing is sure: the story was never published,
-not this incident. An hour or two later, seeing me
-enter the office after my dinner, he called me in and began:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You leave this with me now and drop the story for the
-present. There are other ways to get Mooney,” and sure
-enough, in a few days Mr. Mooney suddenly left town. It
-was a curious procedure to me, but at least Mr. Mooney was
-soon gone—and——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But figure it out for yourself.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Two</span> other incidents in connection with my newspaper work
-at this time threw a clear light on social crimes and conditions
-which cannot always be discussed or explained. One
-of these related to an old man of about sixty-five years of age
-who was in the coffee and spice business in one of those old
-streets which bordered on the waterfront. One afternoon
-in mid-August, when there was little to do in the way of
-reporting and I was hanging about the office waiting for
-something to turn up, Wandell received a telephone message
-and handed me a slip of paper. “You go down to this address
-and see what you can find out. There’s been a fight or something.
-A crowd has been beating up an old man and the police
-have arrested him—to save him, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I took a car and soon reached the scene, a decayed and
-tumbledown region of small family dwellings now turned into
-tenements of even a poorer character. St. Louis had what
-so large a center as New York has not: alleys or rear passage-ways
-to all houses by which trade parcels, waste and the like
-are delivered or removed. And facing these were old barns,
-sheds, and tumbledown warrens of houses and flats occupied
-by poor whites or blacks, or both. In an old decayed and vacant
-brick barn in one of these alleys there had been only a
-few hours before a furious scene, although when I arrived it
-was all over, everything was still and peaceful. All that I
-could learn was that several hours before an old man had
-been found in this barn with a little girl of eight or nine years.
-The child’s parents or friends were informed and a chase
-ensued. The criminal had been surrounded by a group of
-irate citizens who threatened to kill him. Then the police
-arrived and escorted him to the station at North Seventh,
-where supposedly he was locked up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On my arrival at the station, however, nothing was known
-of this case. My noble King knew nothing and when I looked
-on the “blotter,” which supposedly contained a public record
-of all arrests and charges made, and which it was my privilege
-as well as that of every other newspaper man to look
-over, there was no evidence of any such offense having been
-committed or of any such prisoner having been brought here.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What became of that attempted assault in K Street?”
-I inquired of King, who was drowsily reading a newspaper.
-“I was just over there and they told me the man had been
-brought here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He looked up at me wearily, seemingly not interested.
-“What case? It must be down if it came in here. What case
-are ye taalkin’ about? Maybe it didn’t come here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I looked at him curiously, struck all at once by an air of
-concealment. He was not as friendly as usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s funny,” I said. “I’ve just come from there and
-they told me he was here. It would be on the blotter, wouldn’t
-it? Were you here an hour or two ago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For the first time since I had been coming here he grew a
-bit truculent. “Sure. If it’s not on there it’s not on there,
-and that’s all I know. If you want to know more than that
-you’ll have to see the captain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At thought of the police attempting to conceal a thing like
-this in the face of my direct knowledge I grew irritable and
-bold myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Where’s the captain?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He’s out now. He’ll be back at four, I think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I sat down and waited, then decided to call up the office
-for further instructions. Wandell was in. He advised me
-to call up Edmonstone at the Four Courts and see if it was
-recorded, which I did, but nothing was known. When I returned
-I found the captain in. He was a taciturn man and
-had small use for reporters at any time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, yes, yes,” he kept reiterating as I asked him about
-the case. “Well, I’ll tell you,” he said after a long pause,
-seeing that I was determined to know, “he’s not here now.
-I let him go. No one saw him commit the crime. He’s
-an old man with a big wholesale business in Second Street,
-never arrested before, and he has a wife and grown sons
-and daughters. Of course he oughtn’t to be doin’ anything
-of that kind—still, he claims that he wasn’t. Anyhow, no
-good can come of writin’ it up in the papers now. Here’s his
-name and address,” and he opened a small book which he
-drew out of his pocket and showed me that and no more.
-“Now you can go and talk to him yourself if you want to,
-but if you take my advice you’ll let him alone. I see no good
-in pullin’ him down if it’s goin’ to hurt his family. But
-that’s as you newspaper men see it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could have sympathized with this stocky Irishman more
-if we had not all been suspicious of the police. I decided to
-see this old man myself, curiosity and the desire for a good
-story controlling me. I hurried to a car and rode out to the
-west end, where, in a well-built street and a house of fair
-proportions I found my man sitting on his front porch no
-doubt awaiting some such disastrous onslaught as this and
-anxious to keep it from his family. The moment he saw me
-he walked to his gate and stopped me. He was tall and
-angular, with a grizzled, short, round beard and a dull, unimportant
-face, a kind of Smith Brothers-coughdrop type. Apparently
-he was well into that period where one is supposed
-to settle down into a serene old age and forget all one ever
-knew of youth. I inquired whether a Mr. So-and-So lived
-there, and he replied that he was Mr. So-and-So.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m from the <i>Republic</i>,” I began, “and we have a story
-regarding a charge that has been made against you today
-in one of the police stations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He eyed me with a nervous uncertainty that was almost
-tremulous. He did not seem to be able to speak at first but
-chewed on something, a bit of tobacco possibly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not so loud,” he said. “Come out here. I’ll give you
-ten dollars if you won’t say anything about this,” and he
-began to fumble in one of his waistcoat pockets.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, no,” I said, with an air of profound virtue. “I can’t
-take money for anything like that. I can’t stop anything the
-paper may want to say. You’ll have to see the editor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All the while I was thinking how like an old fox he was and
-that if one did have the power to suppress a story of this
-kind here was a fine opportunity for blackmail. He might
-have been made to pay a thousand or more. At the same
-time I could not help sympathizing with him a little, considering
-his age and his unfortunate predicament. Of late I
-had been getting a much clearer light on my own character
-and idiosyncrasies as well as on those of many others, and
-was beginning to see how few there were who could afford
-to cast the stone of righteousness or superior worth. Nearly
-all were secretly doing one thing and another which they
-would publicly denounce and which, if exposed, would cause
-them to be shunned or punished. Sex vagaries were not as
-uncommon as the majority supposed and perhaps were not
-to be given too sharp a punishment if strict justice were to be
-done to all. Yet here was I at this moment yelping at the
-heels of this errant, who had been found out. At the same
-time I cannot say that I was very much moved by the personality
-of the man: he looked to be narrow and close-fisted.
-I wondered how a business man of any acumen could be
-connected with so shabby an affair, or being caught could be so
-dull as to offer any newspaper man so small a sum as ten
-dollars to hush it up. And how about the other papers, the
-other reporters who might hear of it—did he expect to buy
-them all off for ten dollars each? The fact that he had
-admitted the truth of the charges left nothing to say. I felt
-myself grow nervous and incoherent and finally left rather
-discomfited and puzzled as to what I should do. When I
-returned to the office and told Wandell he seemed to be
-rather dubious also and more or less disgusted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You can’t make much out of a case of that kind,” he said.
-“We couldn’t print it if you did; the public wouldn’t stand
-for it. And if you attack the police for concealing it then
-they’ll be down on us. He ought to be exposed, I suppose,
-but—well——Write it out and I’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I therefore wrote it up in a wary and guarded way, telling
-what had happened and how the police had not entered the
-charge, but the story never appeared. Somehow, I was rather
-glad of it, although I thought the man should be punished.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>While</span> I was on the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> there was a sort of
-race-track tout, gambler, amateur detective and political and
-police hanger-on generally, who was a purveyor of news not
-only to our police and political men but to the sporting and
-other editors, a sort of Jack-of-all-news or tipster. To me he
-was both ridiculous and disgusting, loud, bold, uncouth, the
-kind of creature that begins as bootblack or newsboy and
-winds up as the president of a racing association or ball team.
-He claimed to be Irish, having a freckled face, red hair, gray
-eyes, and rather large hands and feet. In reality he was one
-of those South Russian Jews who looked so much like the
-Irish as to be frequently mistaken for them. He had the wit
-to see that it would be of more advantage to him to be
-thought Irish than Jewish, and so had changed his name of
-Shapirowitz to Galvin—“Red” Galvin. One of the most
-offensive things about him was that his clothes were loud, just
-such clothes as touts and gamblers affect, hard, bright-checked
-suits, bright yellow shoes, ties of the most radiant hues, hats
-of a clashing sonorousness, and rings and pins and cuff-links
-glistening with diamonds or rubies—the kind of man who is
-convinced that clothes and a little money make the man, as
-they quite do in such instances.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Galvin had the social and moral point of view of both
-the hawk and the buzzard. According to Wood, who early
-made friends with him quite as he did with the Chinese and
-others for purposes of study, he was identified with some
-houses of prostitution in which he had a small financial interest,
-as well as various political schemes then being locally
-fostered by one and another group of low politicians who
-were constantly getting up one scheme and another to mulct
-the city in some underhanded way. He was a species of
-political and social grafter, having all the high ideals of a
-bagnio detective: he began to interest Mr. Tobias Mitchell,
-who was a creature of an allied if slightly higher type, and
-the pair became reasonably good friends. Mitchell used him
-as an assistant to Hazard, Bellairs, Bennett, Hartung and
-myself: he supplied the paper with stories which we would rewrite.
-I used to laugh at him, more or less to his face, as
-being a freak, which of course generated only the kindliest
-of feelings between us. He always suggested to me the type
-of detective or plain-clothes man who would take money from
-street-girls, prey on them, as indeed I suspected him of doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wondered how he could make anything out of this newspaper
-connection since, as Hartung and others told me, he
-could not write. It was necessary to rewrite his stuff almost
-entirely. But his great recommendation to Mitchell and
-others was that he could get news of things where other
-reporters could not, among the police, detectives and politicians,
-with whom he was evidently hand-in-hand. By reason
-of his underworld connections many amazing details as to one
-form and another of political and social jobbery came to
-light, which doubtless made him invaluable to a city editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When some of his stories were given to me to rewrite we
-were thrown into immediate and clashing contact. Because of
-his leers and bravado, when he knew he could not write two
-good sentences in order, I frequently wanted to brain him but
-took it out in smiles and dry cynical comments. His favorite
-expressions were “See?” and “I sez tuh him” or “He sez tuh
-me,” always accompanied by a contemptuous wave of a hand
-or a pugnaciously protruded chin. One of the chief reasons
-why I hated him was that Dick Wood told me he had once
-remarked that newspaper work was a beggar’s game at best
-and that <i>writers grew on trees</i>, meaning that they were so
-numerous as to be negligible and not worth considering.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I made the best of these trying situations when I had
-to do over a story of his, extracting all the information I
-could and then writing it out, which resulted in some of his
-stories receiving excellent space in the day’s news and made
-him all the more pugnacious and sure of himself. And at the
-same time these made him of more value to the paper. However,
-in due time I left the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, and one day,
-greatly to my astonishment and irritation, he appeared at the
-North Seventh Street station as a full-fledged reporter, having
-been given a regular position by Mitchell and set to doing
-police work—out of which task at the Four Courts, if I remember
-rightly, he finally ousted Jock Bellairs, who was
-given to too much drinking.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To my surprise and chagrin I noticed at once that he was,
-as if by reason of past intimacies of which I had not the
-slightest idea, far more en rapport with the sergeants and
-the captain than I had ever dreamed of being. It was
-“Charlie” here and “Cap” there. But what roiled me most
-was that he gave himself all the airs of a newspaper man,
-swaggering about and talking of this, that and the other story
-he had written (I having done some of them myself!). The
-crowning blow was that he was soon closeted with the captain
-in his room, strolling in and out of that sanctum as if it were
-his private demesne and giving me the impression of being
-in touch with realms and deeds of which I was never to have
-the slightest knowledge. This made me apprehensive lest in
-these intimacies tales and mysteries should be unfolded that
-would have their first light in the pages of the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>
-and so leave me to be laughed at as one who could not get
-the news. I watched the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> more closely than
-ever before for evidence of such treachery on the part of
-the police as would result in a “scoop” for him, at the same
-time redoubling my interest in such items as might appear.
-The consequence was that on more than one occasion I made
-good stories out of things which Mr. Galvin had evidently
-dismissed as worthless; and now and then a case into which I
-had inquired at the stationhouse appeared in the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>
-with details which I had not been able to obtain and
-concerning which the police had insisted they knew nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For a long time, by dint of energy and a rather plain indication
-to all concerned that I would not tolerate false dealing,
-I managed not only to hold my own but occasionally to
-give my confrère a good beating—as when, for one instance,
-a negro girl in one of those crowded alleys was cut almost
-to shreds by an ex-lover armed with a razor, for reasons
-which, as my investigation proved, were highly romantic.
-Some seven or eight months before, this girl and her assailant
-had been living together in Cairo, Illinois, and the lover,
-who was wildly fond of her, became suspicious and finally
-satisfying himself that she was faithless set a trap to catch
-her. He was a coal passer or stevedore, working now on one
-boat and now on another plying the Mississippi between New
-Orleans and St. Louis. And one day when she thought he was
-on a river steamer for a week or two he burst in upon her
-and found her with another man. Death would have been
-her portion, as well as that of her lover, had it not been for
-the interference of friends which permitted the pair to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The man returned to his task as stevedore, working his
-way from one river city to another. When he came to Memphis,
-Natchez, New Orleans, Vicksburg or St. Louis, he disguised
-himself as a peddler selling trinkets and charms and in
-this capacity walked the crowded negro sections of these
-cities calling his wares. One of these trips finally brought
-him to St. Louis, and here on a late August afternoon, ambling
-up this stifling little alley calling out his charms and trinkets,
-he had finally encountered her. The girl put her head out of
-the doorway. Dropping his tray he drew a razor and slashed
-her cheeks and lips, arms, legs, back and sides, so that when
-I arrived at the City Hospital she was unconscious and her
-life despaired of. The lover, abandoning his tray of cheap
-jewelry, which was later brought to the stationhouse and
-exhibited, had made good his escape and was not captured,
-during my stay in St. Louis at least. Her present paramour
-had also gone his way, leaving her to suffer alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Owing possibly to Galvin’s underestimate of its romance,
-this story received only a scant stick as a low dive cutting
-affray in the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>, while in the <i>Republic</i> I had
-turned it into a negro romance which filled all of a column.
-Into it I had tried to put the hot river waterfronts of the
-different cities which the lover had visited, the crowded negro
-quarters of Memphis, New Orleans, Cairo, the bold negro
-life which two truants such as the false mistress and her
-lover might enjoy. I had tried to suggest the sing-song
-sleepiness of the levee boat-landings, the stevedores at their
-lazy labors, the idle, dreamy character of the slow-moving
-boats. Even an old negro refrain appropriate to a trinket
-peddler had been introduced:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Eyah—Rings, Pins, Buckles, Ribbons!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The barbaric character of the alley in which it occurred,
-lined with rickety curtain-hung shacks and swarming with
-the idle, crooning, shuffling negro life of the South, appealed
-to me. An old black mammy with a yellow-dotted kerchief
-over her head, who kept talking of “disha Gawge” and
-“disha Sam” and “disha Maquatia” (the girl), moved me
-to a poetic frenzy. From a crowd of blacks that hung about
-the vacated shack of the lovers after the girl had been taken
-away I picked up the main thread of the story, the varying
-characteristics of the girl and her lover, and then having
-visited the hospital and seen the victim I hurried to the
-office and endeavored to convince Wandell that I had an
-important story. At first he was not inclined to think so,
-negro life being a little too low for local consumption, but
-after I had entered upon some of the details he told me to go
-ahead. I wrote it out as well as I could, and it went in on
-the second page. The next day, meeting Galvin, having first
-examined the <i>Globe</i> to see what had been done there, I beamed
-on him cheerfully and was met with a snarl of rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You think you’re a hell of a feller, dontcha, because
-yuh can sling a little ink? Yuh think yuh’ve pulled off
-sompin swell. Well, say, yuh’re not near as much as yuh
-think yuh are. Wait an’ see. I’ve been up against wordy
-boys like yuh before, an’ I can work all around ’em. All
-you guys do is to get a few facts an’ then pad ’em up. Yuh
-never get the real stuff, never,” and he snapped his fingers
-under my nose. “Wait’ll we get a real case sometime, you
-an’ me, an’ I’ll show yuh sompin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He glared at me with hard, revengeful eyes, and he then
-and there put a fear into me from which I never recovered,
-although at the time I merely smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is that so? That’s easy enough to say, now that you’re
-trimmed, but I guess I’ll be right there when the time
-comes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, go to hell!” he snarled, and I walked off smiling but
-beginning to wonder nervously just what it was he was going
-to do to me, and how soon.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Some</span> time before this (when I was still working for the
-<i>Globe-Democrat</i>), there had occurred on the Missouri Pacific,
-about one hundred and fifty miles west of St. Louis a hold-up,
-the story of which interested me, although I had nothing
-to do with it. According to the reports, seven lusty and
-daring bandits, all heavily armed and desperate, had held up
-an eight-car Pullman and baggage express train between one
-and two of the morning at a lonely spot, and after overawing
-the passengers, had compelled the engineer and fireman to dismount,
-uncouple the engine and run it a hundred paces ahead,
-then return and help break open the door of the express
-car. This they did, using a stick of dynamite or giant powder
-handed them by one of the bandits. And then both were
-made to enter the express car, where, under the eye of one of
-the bandits and despite the presence of the express messenger,
-who was armed yet overawed, they were compelled to blow
-open the safe and carry forth between twenty and thirty thousand
-dollars in bills and coin, which they deposited on the
-ground in sacks and packages for the bandits. Then, if you
-please, they were compelled to re-enter their engine, back it
-up and couple it to the train and proceed upon their journey,
-leaving the bandits to gather up their booty and depart.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Naturally such a story was of great interest to St. Louis,
-as well as to all the other cities near at hand. It smacked
-of the lawlessness of the ’forties. All banks, express companies,
-railroads and financial institutions generally were
-intensely interested. The whole front page was given to
-this deed, and it was worth it, although during my short
-career in journalism in this region no less than a dozen amazing
-train robberies took place in as many months in the region
-bounded by the Mississippi and the Rockies, the Canadian
-line and the Gulf. Four or five of them occurred within a
-hundred miles of St. Louis.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The truth about this particular robbery was that there had
-not been seven bandits but just one, an ex-railroad hand,
-turned robber for this occasion only, and armed, as subsequent
-developments proved, with but a brace of revolvers, each
-containing six shots, and a few sticks of fuse-prepared giant
-powder! Despite the glowing newspaper account which made
-of this a most desperate and murderous affair, there had
-been no prowling up and down the aisles of the cars by
-bandits armed to the teeth, as a number of passengers insisted
-(among whom was the Governor of the State, his Lieutenant-Governor,
-several officers of his staff, all returning from a
-military banquet or feast somewhere). Nor was there any
-shooting at passengers who ventured to peer out into the darkness.
-Just this one lone bandit, who was very busy up in the
-front attending to the robbing. What made this story all the
-more ridiculous in the light of later developments was that
-at the time the train stopped in the darkness and the imaginary
-bandits began to shout and fire shots, and even to rob
-the passengers of their watches, pins, purses, these worthies
-of the State, or so it was claimed in guffawing newspaper circles
-afterward, crawled under their seats or into their berths
-and did not emerge until the train was well on its way once
-more. Long before the true story of the lone bandit came
-out, the presence of the Governor and his staff was well
-known and had lent luster to the deed and strengthened the
-interest which later attached to the story of the real bandit.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The St. Louis newspaper files for 1893 will show whether
-or not I am correct. This lone bandit, as it was later indisputably
-proved, was nothing more than an ex-farm hand
-turned railroad hand and then “baggage-smasher” at a small
-station. Owing to love and poverty he had plotted this astounding
-coup, which, once all its details were revealed, fascinated
-the American public from coast to coast. That a lone
-individual should undertake such an astounding task was
-uppermost in everybody’s mind, including that of our city
-editors, and to the task of unraveling it they now bent their
-every effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When the robbery occurred I was working for the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>;
-later, when it was discovered by detectives working
-for the railroad and the express company who the star robber
-was, I was connected with the <i>Republic</i>. Early one afternoon
-I was shown a telegram from some backwoods town in
-Missouri—let us say Bald Knob, just for a name’s sake—that
-Lem Rollins (that name will do as well as any other),
-an ex-employee of the Missouri Pacific, had been arrested
-by detectives for the road and express company for the
-crime, and that upon searching his room they had found most
-of the stolen money. Also, because of other facts with which
-he had been confronted he had confessed that he and he
-alone had been guilty of the express robbery. The dispatch
-added that he had shown the detectives where the remainder
-of the money lay hidden, and that this very afternoon he
-would be en route to St. Louis, scheduled to arrive over the
-St. Louis &amp; San Francisco, and that he would be confined
-in the county jail here. Imagine the excitement. The burglar
-had not told how he had accomplished this great feat,
-and here he was now en route to St. Louis, and might be met
-and interviewed on the train. From a news point of view
-the story was immense.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I came in Wandell exclaimed: “I’ll tell you what
-you do, Dreiser—Lord! I thought you wouldn’t come back in
-time! Here’s a St. Louis &amp; San Francisco time-table; according
-to it you can take a local that leaves here at two-fifteen
-and get as far as this place, Pacific, where the incoming express
-stops. It’s just possible that the <i>Globe</i> and the other
-papers haven’t got hold of this yet—maybe they have, but
-whatever happens, we won’t get licked, and that’s the main
-thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried down to the Union Station, but when I asked for
-a ticket to Pacific, the ticket agent asked “Which road?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Are there two?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure, Missouri Pacific, and St. Louis &amp; San Francisco.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“They both go to the same place, do they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes; they meet there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Which train leaves first?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“St. Louis &amp; San Francisco. It’s waiting now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried to it, but the thought of this other road in from
-Pacific troubled me. Suppose the bandit should be on the
-other train instead of on this! I consulted with the conductor
-when he came for my ticket and was told that Pacific was the
-only place at which these two roads met, one going west and
-the other southwest from there. “Good,” I thought. “Then
-he is certain to be on this line.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But now another thought came to me: supposing reporters
-from other papers were aboard, especially the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>!
-I rose and walked forward to the smoker, and there,
-to my great disgust and nervous dissatisfaction, was Galvin,
-red-headed, serene, a cigar between his teeth, slumped low in
-his seat smoking and reading a paper as calmly as though
-he were bent upon the most unimportant task in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How now?” I asked myself. “The <i>Globe</i> has sent that
-swine! Here he is, and these country detectives and railroad
-men will be sure, on the instant, to make friends with him
-and do their best to serve him. They like that sort of man.
-They may even give him details which they will refuse to
-give me. I shall have to interview my man in front of him,
-and he will get the benefit of all my questions! At his request
-they may even refuse to let me interview him!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I returned to my seat nervous and much troubled, all the
-more so because I now recalled Galvin’s threat. But I was
-determined to give him the tussle of his life. Now we would
-see whether he could beat me or not—not, if fair play were
-exercised; of that I felt confident. Why, he could not even
-write a decent line! Why should I be afraid of him?...
-But I was, just the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As the dreary local drew near Pacific I became more and
-more nervous. When we drew up at the platform I jumped
-down, all alive with the determination not to be outdone. I
-saw Galvin leap out, and on the instant he spied me. I
-never saw a face change more quickly from an expression of
-ease and assurance to one of bristling opposition and distrust.
-How he hated me. He looked about to see who else might
-dismount, then, seeing no one, he bustled up to the station agent
-to see when the train from the west was due. I decided
-not to trail, and sought information from the conductor,
-who assured me that the eastbound express would probably
-be on time, five minutes later.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It always stops here, does it?” I inquired anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It always stops.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As we talked Galvin came back to the platform and stood
-looking up the track. Our train now pulled out, and a few
-minutes later the whistle of the express was heard. Now for
-a real contest, I thought. Somewhere in one of those cars
-would be the bandit surrounded by detectives, and my duty
-was to get to him first, to explain who I was and begin my
-questioning, overawing Galvin perhaps with the ease with
-which I should take charge. Maybe the bandit would not
-want to talk; if so I must make him, cajole him or his captors,
-or both. No doubt, since I was the better interviewer, or so
-I thought, I should have to do all the talking, and this wretch
-would make notes or make a deal with the detectives while I
-was talking. In a few moments the train was rolling into the
-station, and then I saw my friend Galvin leap aboard and
-with that iron effrontery and savageness which I always hated
-in him, begin to race through the cars. I was about to follow
-him when I saw the conductor stepping down beside me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is that train robber they are bringing in from Bald Knob
-on here? I’m from the <i>Republic</i>, and I’ve been sent out here
-to interview him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re on the wrong road, brother,” he smiled. “He’s
-not on here. They’re bringing him in over the Missouri
-Pacific. They took him across from Bald Knob to Denton
-and caught the train there—but I’ll tell you,” and he consulted
-his watch, “you might be able to catch that yet if you
-run for it. It’s only across the field here. You see that little
-yellow station over there? Well, that’s the Missouri Pacific
-depot. I don’t know whether it stops here or not, but it may.
-It’s due now, but sometimes it’s a little late. You’ll have to
-run for it though; you haven’t a minute to spare.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You wouldn’t fool me about a thing like this, would you?”
-I pleaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not for anything. I know how you feel. If you can get
-on that train you’ll find him, unless they’ve taken him off
-somewhere else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I don’t remember if I even stopped to thank him. Instead
-of following Galvin into the cars I now leaped to the little
-path which cut diagonally across this long field, evidently well
-worn by human feet. As I ran I looked back once or twice
-to see if my enemy was following me, but apparently he
-had not seen me. I now looked forward eagerly toward this
-other station, but, as I ran, I saw the semaphore arm, which
-stood at right angles opposite the station, lower for a clear
-track for some train. At the same time I spied a mail-bag
-hanging out on an express arm, indicating that whatever this
-train was it was not going to stop here. I turned, still uncertain
-as to whether I had made a mistake in not searching
-the other train after all. Supposing the conductor had fooled
-me.... Supposing the burglar were on there, and Galvin was
-already beginning to question him! Oh, Lord, what a beat!
-And what would happen to me then? Was it another case
-of three shows and no critic? I slowed up in my running,
-chill beads of sweat bursting through my pores, but as I did
-so I saw the St. Louis &amp; San Francisco train begin to move
-and from it, as if shot out of it, leaped Galvin.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ha!” I thought. “Then the robber is not on there!
-Galvin has just discovered it! He knows now that he is
-coming in on this line”——for I could see him running along
-the path. “Oh, kind Heaven, if I can beat him to it! If I
-can only get on and leave him behind! He has all of a thousand
-feet still to run, and I am here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Desperately I ran into the station, thrust my head in at the
-open office window and called:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“When is this St. Louis express due here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Now,” he replied surlily.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Does it stop?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, it don’t stop.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Can it be stopped?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It can <i>not</i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You mean that you have no right to stop it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I mean I won’t stop it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Even as he said this there came the shriek of a whistle in
-the distance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Lord,” I thought. “Here it comes, and he won’t
-let me on, and Galvin will be here any minute!” For the
-moment I was even willing that Galvin should catch it too,
-if only I could get on. Think of what Wandell would think
-if I missed it!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Will five dollars stop it?” I asked desperately, diving
-into my pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Will ten?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It might,” he replied crustily.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Stop it,” I urged and handed over the bill.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The agent took it, grabbed a tablet of yellow order blanks
-which lay before him, scribbled something on the face of
-one and ran out to the track. At the same time he called to
-me:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Run on down the track. Run after it. She won’t stop
-here. She can’t. Run on. She’ll go a thousand feet before
-she can slow up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I ran, while he stood there holding up this thin sheet of
-yellow paper. As I ran I heard the express rushing up behind
-me. On the instant it was alongside and past, its
-wheels grinding and emitting sparks. It was stopping! I
-should get on, and oh, glory be! Galvin would not! Fine!
-I could hear the gritty screech of the wheels against the brakes
-as the train came to a full stop. Now I would make it, and
-what a victory! I came up to it and climbed aboard, but,
-looking back, I saw to my horror that my rival had almost
-caught up and was now close at hand, not a hundred feet
-behind. He had seen the signal, had seen me running, and
-instead of running to the station had taken a diagonal tack
-and followed me. I saw that he would make the train. I
-tried to signal the agent behind to let the train go, but he
-had already done so. The conductor came out on the rear
-platform and I appealed to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Let her go!” I pleaded. “Let her go! It’s all right!
-Go on!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Don’t that other fellow want to get on too?” he asked
-curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, no, no! Don’t let him on!” I pleaded. “I arranged
-to stop this train! I’m from the <i>Republic</i>! He’s nobody!
-He’s no right on here!” But even as I spoke up came
-Galvin, breathless and perspiring, and crawled eagerly on, a
-leer of mingled triumph and joy at my discomfiture written
-all over his face. If I had had more courage I would have
-beaten him off. As it was, I merely groaned. To think that
-I should have done all this for him!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Is that so?” he sneered. “You think you’ll leave me
-behind, do you? Well, I fooled you this trip, didn’t I?” and
-his lip curled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was beaten. It was an immensely painful moment for
-me, to lose when I had everything in my own hands. My
-spirits fell so for the moment that I did not even trouble to
-inquire whether the robber was on the train. I ambled in
-after my rival, who had proceeded on his eager way, satisfied
-that I should have to beat him in the quality of the
-interview.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Following</span> Galvin forward through the train, I soon discovered
-the detectives and their prisoner in one of the forward
-cars. The prisoner was a most unpromising specimen
-for so unique a deed, short, broad-shouldered, heavy-limbed,
-with a squarish, unexpressive, dull face, blue-gray eyes, dark
-brown hair, big, lumpy, rough hands—just the hands one
-would expect to find on a railroad or baggage smasher—and a
-tanned and seamed skin. He had on the cheap nondescript
-clothes of a laborer; a blue hickory shirt, blackish-gray trousers,
-brown coat and a red bandanna handkerchief tied about
-his neck. On his head was a small round brown hat, pulled
-down over his eyes. He had the still, indifferent expression
-of a captive bird, and when I came up after Galvin and sat
-down he scarcely looked at me or at Galvin.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Between him and the car window, to foil any attempt at
-escape in that direction, and fastened to him by a pair of
-handcuffs, was the sheriff of the county in which he had
-been taken, a big, bland, inexperienced creature whose sense
-of his own importance was plainly enhanced by his task.
-Facing him was one of the detectives of the road or express
-company, a short, canny, vulture-like person, and opposite
-them, across the aisle, sat still another “detective.” There
-may have been still others, but I failed to inquire. I was
-so incensed at the mere presence of Galvin and his cheap and
-coarse methods of ingratiating himself into any company,
-and especially one like this, that I could scarcely speak.
-“What!” I thought. “When the utmost finesse would be
-required to get the true inwardness of all this, to send a
-cheap pig like this to thrust himself forward and muddle
-what might otherwise prove a fine story! Why, if it hadn’t
-been for me and my luck and my money, he wouldn’t be here
-at all. And he was posing as a reporter—the best man of the
-<i>Globe</i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He had the detective-politician-gambler’s habit of simulating
-an intense interest and enthusiasm which he did not feel,
-his face wreathing itself into a cheery smile the while his eyes
-followed one like those of a basilisk, attempting all the while
-to discover whether his assumed friendship was being accepted
-at the value he wished.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Gee, sport,” he began familiarly in my presence, patting
-the burglar on the knee and fixing him with that basilisk
-gaze, “that was a great trick you pulled off. The papers’ll
-be crazy to find out how you did it. My paper, the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>,
-wants a whole page of it. It wants your picture
-too. Did you really do it all alone? Gee! Well, that’s
-what I call swell work, eh, Cap?” and now he turned his
-ingratiating leer on the county sheriff and the other detectives.
-In a moment or two more he was telling the latter what
-an intimate friend he was of “Billy” Desmond, the chief of
-detectives of St. Louis, and Mr. So-and-So, the chief of police,
-as well as various other detectives and policemen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The dull stuff!” I thought. “And this is what he considers
-place in this world! And he wants a whole page
-for the <i>Globe</i>! He’d do well if he wrote a paragraph alone!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Still, to my intense chagrin, I could see that he was making
-headway, not only with the sheriff and the detectives but
-with the burglar himself. The latter smiled a raw, wry smile
-and looked at him as if he might possibly understand such a
-person. Galvin’s good clothes, always looking like new, his
-bright yellow shoes, sparkling rings and pins and gaudy tie,
-seemed to impress them all. So this was the sort of thing these
-people liked—and they took him for a real newspaper man
-from a great newspaper!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Indeed the only time that I seemed to obtain the least grip
-on this situation or to impress myself on the minds of the
-prisoner and his captors, was when it came to those finer
-shades of questioning which concerned just why, for what
-ulterior reasons, he had attempted this deed alone; and then
-I noticed that my confrère was all ears and making copious
-notes. He knew enough to take from others what he could
-not work out for himself. In regard to the principal or general
-points, I found that my Irish-Jewish friend was as
-swift at ferreting out facts as any one, and as eager to know
-how and why. And always, to my astonishment and chagrin,
-the prisoner as well as the detectives paid more attention
-to him than to me. They turned to him as to a lamp and
-seemed to be immensely more impressed with him than with
-me, although the main lines of questioning fell to me. All at
-once I found him whispering to one or other of the detectives
-while I was developing some thought, but when I turned
-up anything new, or asked a question he had not thought of,
-he was all ears again and back to resume the questioning on
-his own account. In truth, he irritated me frightfully, and
-appeared to be intensely happy in doing so. My contemptuous
-looks and remarks did not disturb him in the least. By now
-I was so dour and enraged that I could think of but one thing
-that would have really satisfied me, and that was to attack
-him physically and give him a good beating—although I seriously
-questioned whether I could do that, he was so contentious,
-cynical and savage.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However the story was finally extracted, and a fine tale it
-made. It appeared that up to seven or eight months preceding
-the robbery, this robber had been first a freight
-brakeman or yard hand on this road, later being promoted to
-the position of superior switchman and assistant freight
-handler. Previous to this he had been a livery stable helper
-in the town in which he was eventually taken, and before
-that a farm hand in that neighborhood. About a year before
-the crime this road, along with many others, had laid off a
-large number of men, including himself, and reduced the
-wages of all others by as much as ten per cent. Naturally
-a great deal of labor discontent ensued. A number of train
-robberies, charged and traced to dismissed and dissatisfied
-ex-employees, now followed. The methods of successful train
-robbing were so clearly set forth by the newspapers that
-nearly any one so inclined could follow them. Among other
-things, while working as a freight handler, Lem Rollins had
-heard of the many money shipments made by the express
-companies and the manner in which they were guarded. The
-Missouri Pacific, for which he worked, was a very popular
-route for money shipments, both West and East, bullion and
-bills being in transit all the while between St. Louis and
-the East, and Kansas City and the West, and although express
-messengers even at this time, owing to numerous train
-robberies which had been occurring in the West lately were
-always well armed, still these assaults had not been without
-success. The death of firemen, engineers, messengers, conductors
-and even passengers who ventured to protest, as well
-as the fact that much money had recently been stolen and
-never recovered, had not only encouraged the growth of banditry
-everywhere but had put such an unreasoning fear into
-most employees of the road as well as its passengers, who
-had no occasion for risking their lives in defense of the roads,
-that but few even of those especially picked guards ventured
-to give the marauders battle. I myself during the short time
-I had been in St. Louis had helped report three such robberies
-in its immediate vicinity, in all of which cases the bandits had
-escaped unharmed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the motives which eventually resulted in the amazing
-singlehanded attempt of this particular robber were not so
-much that he was a discharged and poor railroad hand unable
-to find any other form of employment as that in his idleness,
-having wandered back to his native region, he had fallen in
-love with a young girl. Here, being hard pressed for cash and
-unable to make her such presents as he desired, he had first
-begun to think seriously of some method of raising money,
-and later, another ex—railroad hand showing up and proposing
-to rob a train, he had at first rejected it as not feasible, not
-wishing to tie himself up in a crime, especially with others;
-still later, his condition becoming more pressing, he had
-begun to think of robbing a train on his own account.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Why alone—that was the point we were all most anxious
-to find out—singlehanded, and with all the odds against him?
-Neither Galvin nor myself could induce him to make this
-point clear, although, once I raised it, we were both most
-eager to solve it. “Didn’t he know that he could not expect
-to overcome engineer and fireman, baggage-man and mail-man,
-to say nothing of the express messenger, the conductor
-and the passengers?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yes, he knew, only he had thought he could do it. Other
-bandits (so few as three in one case of which he had read)
-had held up large trains; why not one? Revolver shots fired
-about a train easily overawed all passengers, as well as the
-trainmen apparently. It was a life and death job either way,
-and it would be better for him if he worked it out alone instead
-of with others. Often, he said, other men “squealed” or they
-had girls who told on them. I looked at him, intensely interested
-and moved to admiration by the sheer animal courage
-of it all, the “gall,” the grit, or what you will, imbedded
-somewhere in this stocky frame.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And how came he to fix on this particular train? I asked.
-Well, it was this way: Every Thursday and Friday a
-limited running west at midnight carried larger shipments of
-money than on other days. This was due to exchanges being
-made between Eastern and Western banks; but he did not
-know that. Having decided on one of these trains, he proceeded
-by degrees to secure first a small handbag, from which
-he had scraped all evidence of the maker’s name, then later,
-from other distant places, so as to avoid all chance of detection,
-six or seven fused sticks of giant powder such as
-farmers use to blow up stumps, and still later, two revolvers
-holding six cartridges each, some cartridges, and cord and
-cloth out of which he proposed to make bundles of the money.
-Placing all this in his bag, he eventually visited a small town
-nearest the spot which, because of its loneliness, he had fixed
-on as the ideal place for his crime, and then, reconnoitering
-it and its possibilities, finally arranged all his plans to a
-nicety.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Here, as he now told us, just at the outskirts of this hamlet,
-stood a large water-tank at which this express as well as nearly
-all other trains stopped for water. Beyond it, about five miles,
-was a wood with a marsh somewhere in its depths, an ideal
-place to bury his booty quickly. The express was due at
-this tank at about one in the morning. The nearest town
-beyond the wood was all of five miles away, a mere hamlet
-like this one. His plan was to conceal himself near this
-tank and when the train stopped, and just before it started
-again, to slip in between the engine tender and the front
-baggage car, which was “blind” at both ends. Another arrangement,
-carefully executed beforehand, was to take his
-handbag (without the revolvers and sticks of giant powder,
-which he would carry), and place it along the track just opposite
-that point in the wood where he wished the train to
-stop. Here, once he had concealed himself between the engine
-and the baggage car, and the train having resumed its journey,
-he would keep watch until the headlight of the engine
-revealed this bag lying beside the track, when he would rise
-up and compel the engineer to stop the train. So far, so
-good.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, as it turned out, two slight errors, one of forgetfulness
-and one of eyesight, caused him finally to lose
-the fruit of his plan. On the night in question, between eight
-and nine, he arrived on the scene of action and did as he had
-planned. He put the bag in place and boarded the train.
-However, on reaching the spot where he felt sure the bag
-should be, he could not see it. Realizing that he was where
-he wished to work he rose up, covered the two men in the
-cab, drove them before him to the rear of the engine, where
-under duress they were made to uncouple it, then conducted
-them to the express car door, where he presented them with a
-stick of giant powder and, ordered them to blow it open.
-This they did, the messenger within having first refused so to
-do. They were driven into the car and made to ‘blow open
-the safe, throwing out the packages of bills and coin as he
-commanded. But during this time, realizing the danger of
-either trainmen or passengers climbing down from the cars in
-the rear and coming forward, he had fired a few shots toward
-the passenger coaches, calling to imaginary companions to
-keep watch there. At the same time, to throw the fear of
-death into the minds of both engineer and fireman, he pretended
-to be calling to imaginary confrères on the other side
-of the train to “keep watch over there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Don’t kill anybody unless you have to, boys,” he had said,
-or “That’ll be all right, Frank. Stay over there. Watch
-that side. I’ll take care of these two.” And then he would
-fire a few more shots.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once the express car door and safe had been blown open
-and the money handed out, he had compelled the engineer
-and fireman to come down, recouple the engine, and pull
-away. Only after the train had safely disappeared did he venture
-to gather up the various packages, rolling them in his
-coat, since he had lost his bag, and with this over his shoulder
-he had staggered off into the night, eventually succeeding
-in concealing it in the swamp, and then making off for safety
-himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The two things which finally caused his discovery were,
-first, the loss of the bag, which, after concealing the money,
-he attempted to find but without success; and, second (and
-this he did not even know at the time), that in the bag which
-he had lost he had placed some time before and then forgotten
-apparently a small handkerchief containing the initials of
-his love in one corner. Why he might have wished to carry
-the handkerchief about with him was understandable enough,
-but why he should have put it into the bag and then forgot
-it was not clear, even to himself. From the detectives we
-now learned that the next day at noon the bag was found by
-other detectives and citizens just where he had placed it, and
-that the handkerchief had given them their first clue. The
-Wood was searched, without success however, save that foot-prints
-were discovered in various places and measured.
-Again, experts meditating on the crime decided that, owing to
-the hard times and the laying-off and discharging of employees,
-some of these might have had a hand in it; and so
-in due time the whereabouts and movements of each and
-every one of those who had worked for the road were gone
-into. It was finally discovered that this particular ex-helper
-had returned to his native town and had been going with a
-certain girl, and was about to be married to her. Next, it
-was discovered that her initials corresponded to those on
-the handkerchief. Presto, Mr. Rollins was arrested, a search
-of his room made, and nearly all of the money recovered.
-Then, being “caught with the goods,” he confessed, and here
-he was being hurried to St. Louis to be jailed and sentenced,
-while we harpies of the press and the law were gathered about
-him to make capital of his error.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The only thing that consoled me, however, as I rode toward
-St. Louis and tried to piece the details of his crime together,
-was that if I had failed to make it impossible for Galvin
-to get the story at all, still, when it came to the narration of
-it, I should unquestionably write a better story, for he would
-have to tell his story to some one else, while I should be able
-to write my own, putting in such touches as I chose. Only
-one detail remained to be arranged for, and that was the
-matter of a picture. Why neither Wandell nor myself, nor
-the editor of the <i>Globe</i>, had thought to include an artist on
-this expedition was more a fault of the time than anything
-else, illustrations for news stories being by no means as numerous
-as they are today, and the peripatetic photographer
-having not yet been invented. As we neared St. Louis Galvin
-began to see the import of this very clearly, and suddenly
-began to comment on it, saying he “guessed” we’d have to
-send to the Four Courts afterward and have one made. Suddenly
-his eyes filled with a shrewd cunning, and he turned to
-me and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How would it be, old man, if we took him up to the
-<i>Globe</i> office and let the boys make a picture of him—your
-friends, Wood and McCord? Then both of us could get one
-right away. I’d say take him to the <i>Republic</i>, only the <i>Globe</i>
-is so much nearer, and we have that new flashlight machine,
-you know” (which was true, the <i>Republic</i> being very poorly
-equipped in this respect). He added a friendly aside to the
-effect that of course this depended on whether the prisoner
-and the officers in charge were willing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not on your life,” I replied suspiciously and resentfully,
-“not to the <i>Globe</i>, anyhow. If you want to bring him down
-to the <i>Republic</i>, all right; we’ll have them make pictures and
-you can have one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But why not the <i>Globe</i>?” he went on. “Wood and McCord
-are your friends more’n they are mine. Think of the
-difference in the distance. We want to save time, don’t we?
-Here it is nearly six-thirty, and by the time we get down there
-and have a picture taken and I get back to the office it’ll
-be half past seven or eight. It’s all right for you, I suppose,
-because you can write faster, but look at me. I’d just as lief
-go down there as not, but what’s the difference? Besides, the
-<i>Globe’s</i> got a much better plant, and you know it. Either
-Wood or McCord’ll make a fine picture, and when we explain
-to ’em how it is you’ll be sure to get one, the same as us—just
-the same picture. Ain’t that all right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No it’s not,” I replied truculently, “and I won’t do it,
-that’s all. It’s all right about Dick and Peter—I know what
-they’ll do for me if the paper will let them, but I know the
-paper won’t let them, and besides, you’re not going to be able
-to claim in the morning that this man was brought to the
-<i>Globe</i> first. I know you. Don’t begin to try to put anything
-over on me, because I won’t stand for it, see? And if these
-people do it anyhow I’ll make a kick at headquarters, that’s
-all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For a moment he appeared to be quieted by this and to
-decide to abandon his project, but later he took it up again,
-seemingly in the most conciliatory spirit in the world. At
-the same time, and from now on, he kept boring me with
-his eyes, a thing which I had never known him to do before.
-He was always too hang-dog in looking at me; but now of a
-sudden there was something bold and friendly as well as
-tolerant and cynical in his gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, come on,” he argued. He was amazingly aggressive.
-“What’s the use being small about it? The <i>Globe’s</i> nearer.
-Think what a fine picture it’ll make. If you don’t we’ll
-have to go clear to the office and send an artist down to the
-jail. You can’t take any good pictures down there tonight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Cut it,” I replied. “I won’t do it, that’s all,” but even
-as he talked a strange feeling of uncertainty or confusion
-began to creep over me. For the first time since knowing
-him, in spite of all my opposition of this afternoon and before,
-I found myself not quite hating him but feeling as though
-he weren’t such an utterly bad sort after all. What was so
-wrong about this <i>Globe</i> idea anyhow, I began suddenly to
-ask myself, in the most insane and yet dreamy way imaginable.
-Why wouldn’t it be all right to do that? Inwardly
-or downwardly, or somewhere within me, something was
-telling me that it was all wrong and that I was making a big
-mistake even to think about it. I felt half asleep or surrounded
-by clouds which made everything he said seem
-all right. Still, I wasn’t asleep, and now I didn’t believe
-a word he said, but——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“To the <i>Globe</i>, sure,” I found myself saying to myself in
-spite of myself, in a dumb, half-numb way. “That wouldn’t
-be so bad. It’s nearer. What’s wrong with that? Dick or
-Peter will make a good picture, and then I can take it along,”
-only at the same time I was also thinking, “I shouldn’t really
-do that. He’ll claim the credit for having brought this man
-to the <i>Globe</i> office. I’ll be making a big mistake. The <i>Republic</i>
-or nothing. Let him come down to the <i>Republic</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the meantime we were entering St. Louis and the station.
-By then, somehow, he had not only convinced the
-sheriff and the other officers, but the prisoner. They liked him
-and were willing to do what he said. I could even see the
-rural love of show and parade gleaming in the eyes of the
-sheriff and the two detectives. Plainly, the office of the
-<i>Globe</i> was the great place in their estimation for such an
-exhibition. At the same time, between looking at me and
-the prisoner and the officers, he had knitted a fine mental net
-from which I seemed unable to escape. Even as I rose with
-these others to leave the train I cried: “No, I won’t come in
-on this! It’s all right if you want to bring him down to
-the <i>Republic</i>, or you can take him to the Four Courts, but
-I’m not going to let you get away with this. You hear now,
-don’t you?” But then it was too late.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Once outside, Galvin laid hold of my arm in an amazingly
-genial fashion and hung on it. In spite of me, he seemed to
-be master of the situation and to realize it. Once more he
-began to plead, and getting in front of me he seemed to do his
-best to keep my optical attention. From that point on and
-from that day to this, I have never been able to explain to
-myself what did happen. All at once, and much more clearly
-than before, I seemed to see that his plan in regard to the
-<i>Globe</i> was the best. It would save time, and besides, he kept
-repeating in an almost sing-song way that we would go first
-to the <i>Globe</i> and then to the <i>Republic</i>. “You come up with
-me to the <i>Globe</i>, and then I’ll go down with you to the <i>Republic</i>,”
-he kept saying. “We’ll just let Wood or McCord
-take one picture, and then we’ll all go down to your place—see?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Although I didn’t see I went. For the time, nothing seemed
-important. If he had stayed by me I think he could have
-prevented my writing any story at all. As it was he was so
-eager to achieve this splendid triumph of introducing the
-celebrated bandit into the editorial rooms of the <i>Globe</i> first
-and there having him photographed and introduced to my old
-chief, that he hailed a carriage, and, the six of us crowding
-into it, we were bustled off in a trice to the door of the
-<i>Globe</i>, where, once I reached it, and seeing him and the
-detectives and the bandit hurrying across the sidewalk, I
-suddenly awoke to the asininity of it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wait!” I called. “Say, hold on! Cut this! I won’t
-do it! I don’t agree to this!” but it was too late. In a trice
-the prisoner and the rest of them were up the two or three
-low steps of the main entrance and into the hall, and I was
-left outside to meditate on the insanity of the thing I had
-done.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Great God!” I suddenly exclaimed to myself. “What
-have I let that fellow do to me? I’ve been hypnotized, that’s
-what it is! I’ve allowed him to take a prisoner whom I had
-in my own hands at one time into the office of our great
-rival to be photographed! He’s put it all over me on this
-job—and I had him beaten! I had him where I could have
-shoved him off the train—and now I let him do this to me,
-and tomorrow there’ll be a long editorial in the <i>Globe</i> telling
-how this fellow was brought there first and photographed, and
-his picture to prove it!” I swore and groaned for blocks
-as I walked towards the <i>Republic</i>, wondering what I should
-do.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Distinct as was my failure, it was so easy, even when practically
-admitting the whole truth, to make it seem as though
-the police had deliberately worked against the <i>Republic</i>. I
-did not even have to do that but merely recited my protests,
-without admitting or insisting upon hypnotism, which Wandell
-would not have believed anyhow. On the instant he
-burst into a great rage against the police department, seeing
-apparently no fault in anything I had done, and vowing
-vengeance. They were always doing this; they did it to the
-<i>Republic</i> when he was on the <i>Globe</i>. Wait—he would get
-even with them yet! Rushing a photographer to the jail,
-he had various pictures made, all of which appeared with my
-story, but to no purpose. The <i>Globe</i> had us beaten. Although
-I had slaved over the text, given it the finest turns I could,
-still there on the front page of the <i>Globe</i> was a large picture
-of the bandit, seated in the sanctum sanctorum of the great
-G-D, a portion of the figure, although not the head, of its great
-chief standing in the background, and over it all, in extra
-large type, the caption:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“LONE TRAIN ROBBER VISITS OFFICE OF GLOBE</div>
- <div>TO PAY HIS RESPECTS”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>and underneath in italics a full account of how he had willingly
-and gladly come there.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I suffered tortures, not only for days but for weeks and
-months, absolute tortures. Whenever I thought of Galvin I
-wanted to kill him. To think, I said to myself, that I had
-thought of the two trains and then run across the meadow
-and paid the agent for stopping the train, which permitted
-Galvin to see the burglar at all, and then to be done in this
-way! And, what was worse, he was so gayly and cynically
-conscious of having done me. When we met on the street one
-day, his lip curled with the old undying hatred and contempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“These swell reporters!” he sneered. “These high-priced
-ink-slingers! Say, who got the best of the train robber
-story, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I replied——</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But never mind what I replied. No publisher would print
-it.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Things</span> like these taught me not to depend too utterly on
-my own skill. I might propose and believe, but there were
-things above my planning or powers, and creatures I might
-choose to despise were not so helpless after all. It fixed my
-thoughts permanently on the weakness of the human mind as
-a directing organ. One might think till doomsday in terms
-of human ideas, but apparently over and above ideas there
-were forces which superseded or controlled them.... My
-own fine contemptuous ideas might be superseded or set at
-naught by the raw animal or psychic force of a man like
-Galvin.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the next few months a number of things happened
-which seemed to broaden my horizon considerably. For one
-thing, my trip to Chicago having revived interest in me in the
-minds of a number of newspaper men there, and having seemingly
-convinced them of my success here, I was bombarded
-with letters from one and another wanting to know whether
-or not they could obtain work here and whether I could and
-would aid them. At the close of the Fair in Chicago in
-October hard times were expected in newspaper circles there,
-so many men being released from work. I had letters from
-at least four, one of whom was a hanger-on by the name of
-Michaelson, of whom more anon, who had attached himself
-to me largely because I was the stronger and he expected aid
-of me. I have often thought how frequently this has happened
-to me—one of my typical experiences, as it is of every
-one who begins to get along. It is so much easier for the
-strong to tolerate the weak than the strong. Strength craves
-sycophancy. We want only those who will swing the censer
-before our ambitions and desires. Michaelson, or “Mich,”
-was a poor hack who had been connected with a commercial
-agency where daily reports had to be written out as to the
-financial and social condition of John Smith the butcher, or
-George Jones the baker. This led Mich, who was a farm-boy
-to begin with, to imagine that he could write and that he
-would like to run a country paper, only he thought to get some
-experience in the city first. By some process, of which I
-forget the steps, he fixed on me; and through myself and
-McEnnis, who was then so friendly to me, had secured a tryout
-on the <i>Globe</i> in Chicago. After I left McEnnis quickly
-tired of him, and I heard of him next as working for the City
-Press, an organization which served all newspapers, and paid
-next to nothing. Next I heard that he was married (having
-succeeded so well!), and still later he began to bombard me
-with pleas for aid in getting a place in St. Louis. Also there
-were letters from much better men: H. L. Dunlap, afterwards
-chief press advisor of President Taft; an excellent reporter
-by the name of Brady, whom I have previously mentioned;
-and a little later, John Maxwell.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Meanwhile, in spite of my great failure in connection with
-Galvin, my standing with Wandell seemed to rise rather than
-sink. Believe it or no, I became a privileged character about
-this institution or its city room, a singular thing in the newspaper
-profession. Because of specials I was constantly writing
-for the Sunday paper, I was taken up by the sporting
-editor, who wanted my occasional help in his work; the dramatic
-editor, who wanted my help on his dramatic page, asking
-me to see plays from time to time; and the managing editor
-himself, a small, courteous, soft-spoken, red-headed man from
-Kansas City, who began to invite me to lunch or dinner and
-talk to me as though I knew much (or ought to) about the
-world he represented. I was so unfitted for all this intellectually,
-my hour of stability and feeling for organization and
-control having not yet arrived, that I scarcely knew how to
-manage it. I was nervous, shy, poorly spoken, at least in their
-presence, while inwardly I was blazing with ambition, vanity
-and self-confidence. I wanted nothing so much as to be alone
-with my own desires and labors even though I believed all the
-while that I did not and that I was lonely and neglected!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Unsophisticated as I really was, I began to see Wandell
-as but a minor figure in this journalistic world, or but one
-of many, likely to be here and gone tomorrow, and I swaggered
-about, taking liberties which months before I should
-never have dreamed of taking. He talked to me too freely
-and showed me that he relied on my advice and judgment and
-admired my work. All out-of-town assignments of any importance
-were given to me. Occasionally at seven in the evening
-he would say that he would buy me a drink if I would
-wait a minute, a not very wise thing to do. Later, after completing
-one big assignment or another, I would stroll out of
-the office at, say, eight-thirty or nine without a word or a by-your-leave,
-and so respectful had he become that instead of
-calling me down in person he began writing me monitory
-letters, couched in the most diplomatic language but insisting
-that I abide by the rules which governed other reporters. But
-by now I had grown so in my own estimation that I smiled
-confidently, knowing very well that he would not fire me; my
-salary was too small. Besides, I knew that he really needed
-me or some one like me and I saw no immediate rival anywhere,
-one who would work as hard and for as little. Still
-I would reform for a time, or would plead that the managing
-or the dramatic editor had asked me to do thus and so.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“To hell with the managing editor!” he one day exclaimed
-in a rage. “This is my department. If he wants you to
-sit around with him let him come to me, or else you first see
-that you have my consent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the same time he remained most friendly and would sit
-and chat over proposed stories, getting my advice as to how to
-do them, and as one man after another left him or he wanted
-to enlarge his staff he would ask me if I knew any one who
-would make a satisfactory addition. Having had these appeals
-from Dunlap, Brady and several others still in Chicago,
-I named first Dunlap (because I felt so sure of his merit),
-and then these others. To my surprise, he had me write
-Dunlap to come to work, and when he came and made
-good, Wandell asked me to bring still others to him. This
-flattered me very much. I felt myself becoming a power. The
-result was that after a time five men, three from Chicago and
-two from other papers in St. Louis, were transferred to the
-staff of the <i>Republic</i> by reason of my recommendation, and
-that with full knowledge of the fact that I was the one to
-whom they owed their opportunity. You may imagine the airs
-which I assumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>About this time still another thing occurred which lifted
-me still more in my own esteem. Strolling into the Southern
-Hotel one evening I chanced to see my old chief, McCullagh,
-sitting as was his custom near one of the pillars of the lobby
-reading his evening paper. It had always been such a pleasing
-and homelike thing in my days at the <i>Globe</i> to walk into the
-lobby around dinner time and see this great chief in his low
-shoes and white socks sitting and reading here as though he
-were in his own home. It took away a bit of the loneliness
-of the city for me for he appeared to have no other home than
-this and he was my chief. And now, for the first time since
-I had so ignominiously retired from the <i>Globe</i>, I saw him as
-before, smoking and reading. Hitherto I had carefully
-avoided this and every other place at such hours as I was
-likely to encounter him. But now I had grown so conceited
-that I was not quite so much afraid of him; he was still wonderful
-to me but I was beginning to feel that I had a future
-of my own and that I could achieve it, regardless perhaps of
-the error that had so pained me then. Still I felt to the full
-all that old allegiance, respect and affection which had dominated
-me while I was on the <i>Globe</i>. He was my big editor, my
-chief, and there was none other like him anywhere for me,
-and there never was afterward. Nearing the newsstand, for
-which I made at sight of him in the hope that I should escape
-unseen, I saw him get up and come forward, perhaps to
-secure a cigar or another paper. I flushed guiltily and looked
-wildly about for some place to hide. It was not to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Good evening, Mr. McCullagh,” I said politely as he
-neared me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How d’ do?” he returned gutturally but with such an air
-of sociability as I had never noticed in him before. “How d’
-do? Well, you’re still about, I see. You’re on the <i>Republic</i>,
-I believe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir,” I said. I was so pleased and flattered to think
-that he should trouble to talk to me at all or to indicate that
-he knew where I was that I could scarcely contain myself. I
-wanted to thank him, to apologize, to tell him how wonderful
-he was to me and what a fool I was in my own estimation,
-but I couldn’t. My tongue was thick.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You like it over there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir. Fairly well, sir.” I was as humble in his
-presence as a jackie is before an officer. He seemed always
-so forceful and commanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That little matter of those theaters,” he began after a
-pause, turning and walking back to his chair, I following,
-“—Um! um! I don’t think you understand quite how I felt
-about that. I was sorry to see you go. Um! um!” and he
-cleared his throat. “It was an unfortunate mistake all around.
-I want you to know that I did not blame you so much. Um!
-You might have been relieved of other work. I don’t want to
-take you away from any other paper, but—um!—I want you
-to know that if you are ever free and want to come back you
-can. There is no prejudice in my mind against you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I don’t know of anything that ever moved me more. It
-was wonderful, thrilling. I could have cried from sheer delight.
-He, my chief, saying this to me! And after all those
-wretched hours! What a fool I was, I now thought, not to
-have gone to him personally then and asked his consideration.
-However, as I saw it, it was too late. Why change now and
-go back? But I was so excited that I could scarcely speak,
-and probably would not have known what to say if I had
-tried. I stood there, and finally blurted out:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m very sorry, Mr. McCullagh. I didn’t mean to do what
-I did. It was a mistake. I had that extra assignment and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“O-oh, that’s all right—that’s all right,” he insisted
-gruffly and as if he wished to be done with it once and for all.
-“No harm done. I didn’t mind that so much. But you
-needn’t have left—that’s what I wish you to understand.
-You could have stayed if you had wanted to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I viewed it afterward, my best opportunity for a secure
-position in St. Louis was here. If I had only known it, or,
-knowing, had been quick to take advantage of it, I might have
-profited greatly. Mr. McCullagh’s mood was plainly warm
-toward me; he probably looked upon me as a foolish and
-excitable but fairly capable boy whom it would have been
-his pleasure to assist in the world. He had brought me from
-Chicago; perhaps he wished me to remain under his eye....
-Plainly, a word, and I could have returned, I am sure of it,
-perhaps never to leave. As it was, however, I was so nervous
-and excited that I took no advantage of it. Possibly he
-noticed my embarrassment and was pleased. At any rate, as
-I mumbled my thanks and gratitude for all he had done for
-me, saying that if I were doing things over I should try to do
-differently, he interrupted me with:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Just a moment. It may be that you have some young
-friend whom you want to help to a position here in St. Louis.
-If you have, send him to me. I’ll do anything I can for him.
-I’m always glad to do anything I can for young men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I smiled and flushed and thanked him, but for the life of
-me I could think of nothing else to say. It was so strange,
-so tremendous, that this man should want to do anything for
-me after all the ridiculous things I had done under him that
-I could only hurry away, out of his sight. Once in the
-shielding darkness outside I felt better but sad. It seemed
-as if I had made a mistake, as if I should have asked him to
-take me back.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why, he as much as offered to!” I said to myself. “I
-can go back there any time I wish, or he’ll give me a place
-for some one else—think of it! Then he doesn’t consider me
-a fool, as I thought he did!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For days thereafter I went about my work trying to decide
-whether I should resign from the <i>Republic</i> and return to
-him, only now I seemed so very important here, to myself
-at least, that it did not seem wise. Wasn’t I getting along?
-Would returning to work under Mitchell be an advantage?
-I decided not. Also, that I had no real excuse for leaving the
-<i>Republic</i> at present; so I did nothing, waiting to be absolutely
-sure what I wanted to do. There was a feeling growing
-in me at this time that I really did not want to stay in
-St. Louis at all, that perhaps it would be better for me if I
-should move on elsewhere. McEnnis, as I recalled, had cautioned
-me to that effect. Another newspaper man writing
-me from Chicago and asking for a place (a friend of Dunlap’s,
-by the way), I recommended him and he was put to
-work on the <i>Globe-Democrat</i>. And so my reputation for
-influence in local newspaper affairs grew.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And in the meantime still other things had been happening
-to me which seemed to complicate my life here and make me
-almost a fixture in St. Louis. For one thing, worrying over the
-well-being of my two brothers, E—— and A——, who were
-still in Chicago, and wishing to do something to improve
-their condition, I thought that St. Louis would be as good a
-place for them as any in which to try their fortunes anew.
-Both had seemed rather unhappy in Chicago and since I was
-getting along here I felt that it would be only decent in me
-to give them a helping hand if I could. The blood-tie was
-rather strong in me then. I have always had a weakness for
-members of our family regardless of their deserts or mine or
-what I thought they had done to me. I had a comfortable
-floor with ample room for them if I chose to invite them, and
-I thought that my advice and aid and enthusiasm might help
-them to do better. There was in me then, and has remained
-(though in a fading form, I am sorry to say), a sort of
-home-longing (the German <i>Heimweh</i>, no doubt) which made
-me look back on everything in connection with our troubled
-lives with a sadness, an ache, a desire to remedy or repair
-if possible some of the ills and pains that had beset us all.
-We had not always been unhappy together; what family ever
-has been? We had quarreled over trivial things, but there
-had been many happy hours. And now we were separated,
-and these two brothers were not doing as well as I.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I say it in faint extenuation of all the many hard unkind
-things I have done in my time, that at the thought of the
-possible misery some of my brothers and sisters might be enduring,
-the lacks from which they might be hopelessly suffering,
-my throat often tightened and my heart ached. Life
-bears so hard on us all, on many so terribly. What, E——
-or A—— longing for something and not being able to afford
-it! It hurt me far more than any lack of my own ever
-could. It never occurred to me that they might be wishing
-to help me; it was always I, hard up or otherwise, wishing
-that I might do something for them. And this longing in the
-face of no complaint on their part and no means on mine to
-translate it into anything much better than wishes and dreams
-made it all the more painful at times.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My plan was to bring them here and give them a little
-leisure to look about for some way to better themselves, and
-then—well, then I should not need to worry about them so
-much. With this in mind I wrote first to E—— and then
-A——, and the former, younger and more restless and always
-more attracted to me than any of the others, soon came on;
-while A—— required a little more time to think. However,
-in the course of time he too appeared, and then we three
-were installed in my rooms, the harboring of my brothers
-costing me five additional dollars. Here we kept bachelor’s
-hall, gay enough while it lasted but more or less clouded over
-all the while by their need of finding work.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I had forgotten, or did not know, or the fact did not make
-a sufficiently sharp impression on me, that this was a panic
-year (1893) and that there were hundreds of thousands of
-men out of work, the country over. Indeed, trade was at a
-standstill, or nearly so. When I first went on the <i>Republic</i>,
-if I had only stopped to remember, many factories were
-closing down or slowing up, discharging men or issuing scrip
-of their own wherewith to pay them until times should be
-better, and some shops and stores were failing entirely. It
-had been my first experience of a panic and should have made
-a deep impression on me had I been of a practical turn, for one
-of my earliest assignments had been to visit some of the owners
-of factories and stores and shops and ask the cause of their
-decline and whether better times were in sight. Occasionally
-even then I read long editorials in the <i>Republic</i> or the <i>Globe</i>
-on the subject, yet I could take no interest in them. They
-were too heavy, as I thought. Yet I can remember the gloom
-hanging over streets and shops and how solemnly some of the
-manufacturers spoke of the crisis and the hard times yet in
-store. There were to be hard times for a year or more.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall one old man at this time, very prosy and stiff and
-conventional, “one of our best business men,” who had had
-a large iron factory on the south side for fifty years and who
-now in his old age had to shut down for good. Being sent out
-to interview him, I found him after a long search in one of
-the silent wings of his empty foundry, walking about alone
-examining some machinery which also was still. I asked him
-what the trouble was and if he would resume work soon
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Just say that I’m done,” he replied. “This panic has finished
-me. I could go on later, I suppose, but I’m too old to
-begin all over again. I haven’t any money now, and that’s
-all there is to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I left him meditating over some tool he was trying to
-adjust.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the face of this imagine my gayly inviting my two
-brothers to this difficult scene and then expecting them to get
-along in some way, persuading them to throw up whatever
-places or positions they had in Chicago! Yet in so doing
-I satisfied an emotional or psychic longing to have them near
-me and to do something for them, and beyond that I did not
-think.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In fact it took me years and years to get one thing straight
-in my poor brain, and that was this: that aside from the
-economic or practical possibility of translating one’s dreams
-into reality, the less one broods over them the better. Here I
-was now, earning the very inadequate stipend of eighteen
-dollars—or it may have been twenty or twenty-two, for I have
-a dim recollection of having been given at least one raise in
-pay—yet with no more practical sense than to undertake a
-burden which I could not possibly sustain. For despite my
-good intentions I had no surplus wherewith to sustain my
-brothers, assuming that their efforts proved even temporarily
-unavailing. All this dream of doing something for them was
-based on good will and a totally inadequate income. In consequence
-it could not but fail, as it did, seeing that St. Louis
-was far less commercially active than Chicago. It was not
-growing much and there was an older and much more European
-theory of apprenticeship and continuity in place and
-type of work than prevailed at that time in the windy city.
-Work was really very hard to get, especially in manufacturing
-and commercial lines, and in consequence my two brothers,
-after only a week or two of pleasuring, which was all I could
-afford, were compelled to hunt here and there, early and late,
-without finding anything to do. True, I tried to help them in
-one way and another with advice as to institutions, lines of
-work and the like, but to no end.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But before and after they came, how enthusiastically
-and no doubt falsely I painted the city of St. Louis, its large
-size, opportunities, beauties, etc., and once they were here I
-put myself to the task of showing them its charms; but to no
-avail. We went about together to restaurants, parks, theaters,
-outlying places. As long as it was new and they felt that
-there was some hope of finding work they were gay enough
-and interested and we spent a number of delightful hours
-together. But as time wore on and fading summer days
-proved that their dreams and mine were hopeless and they
-could do no better here than in Chicago if as well, their moods
-changed, as did mine. The burden of expense was considerable.
-While paying gayly enough for food and rent,
-and even laundry, for the three, I began to wonder whether
-I should be able to endure the strain much longer. Love them
-as I might in their absence, and happy as I was with them,
-still it was not possible for me to keep up this pace. I was
-depriving myself of bare necessities, and I think they saw it.
-I said nothing, of that I am positive, but after a month or
-six weeks of trial and failure they themselves saw the point
-and became unhappy over it. Our morning and evening
-hours, whenever I could see them in the evening, became less
-and less gay. Finally A——, with his usual eye for the sensible,
-announced that he was tired of searching here and was
-about to return to Chicago. He did not like St. Louis anyhow;
-it was a “hell of a place,” a third-rate city. He was
-going back where he could get work. And E——, perhaps
-recalling past joys of which I knew nothing, said he was
-going also. And so once more I was alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet even this rough experience had no marked effect on me.
-It taught me little if anything in regard to the economic
-struggle. I know now that these two must have had a hard
-time replacing themselves in Chicago at that time, but the
-meaning of it did not get to me then. As for E——, some
-years later I persuaded him to join me in New York, where
-I managed to keep him by me that time until he became self-supporting.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Because</span> Miss W—— lived some distance from the city and
-would remain there until her school season opened, I neglected
-to write to her; but once September had come and the day
-of her return was near I began to think of her and soon was
-as keenly interested as ever. Her simplicity and charm
-came back to me with great force, and I one day sat down
-and wrote her a brief letter recalling our Chicago days and
-asking her how long it would be before she would be returning
-to St. Louis. I was rather nervous now lest she should
-not answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In due time, however, a note came in which she told me that
-she expected to be at Florissant, about twenty or twenty-five
-miles out of St. Louis, by September fifteenth, when her
-school work would begin, and that she would be in St. Louis
-shortly afterward to visit an aunt and hoped to see me. There
-was something about the letter so simple, direct and yet artful
-that it touched me deeply. As I have said, I really knew
-nothing of the conditions which surrounded her, and yet
-from the time I received this letter I sensed something that
-appealed to me: a rurality and simplicity plus a certain artful
-daintiness—the power, I suppose, to pose under my glance
-and yet evade—which held me as in a vise. Beside her, all
-others seemed harder, holder, or of coarser fiber.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It does not matter now but as I look back on it there seems
-to have been more of pure, exalted or frenetic romance in
-this thing (at first, and even a year or so afterward), than in
-any mating experience of which I have any recollection, with
-the possible exception of Alice. Unlike most of my other
-affairs, this (in the beginning at least) seemed more a matter
-of pure romance or poetry, a desire to see and be near her.
-Indeed I could only think of her as a part of some idyllic
-country scene, of walking or riding with her along some
-leafy country lane, of rowing a little boat on a stream, of
-sitting with her under trees in a hammock, of watching her
-play tennis, of being with her where grass, flowers, trees and a
-blue sky were. In that idyllic world of the Fair she had
-seemed well-placed. This must be a perfect love, I thought.
-Here was your truly sweet, pure girl who inspired a man
-with a nobler passion than mere lust. I began to picture myself
-with her in a home somewhere, possibly here in St.
-Louis, of going with her to church even, for I fancied she
-was of a strict religious bent, of pushing a baby carriage—indeed,
-of leading a thoroughly domestic life, and being happy
-in it!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We fell into a correspondence which swiftly took on a
-regular form and resulted, on my part, in a most extended
-correspondence, letters so long that they surprised even myself.
-I found myself in the grip of a letter-writing fever
-such as hitherto had never possessed me, writing long, personal,
-intimate accounts of my own affairs, my work, my
-dreams, what not, as well as what I thought of her, of the
-beauty of life as I had seen it with her in Chicago, my theories
-and imaginings in regard to everything. As I see it now,
-this was perhaps my first and easiest attempt at literary expression,
-the form being negligible and yet sufficient to encompass
-and embody without difficulty all the surging and seething
-emotions and ideas which had hitherto been locked up
-in me, bubbling and steaming to the explosion point. Indeed
-the newspaper forms to which I was daily compelled
-to confine myself offered no outlet, and in addition, in Miss
-W—— I had found a seemingly sympathetic and understanding
-soul, one which required and inspired all the best that
-was in me. I was now, as I told myself, on the verge of
-something wonderful, a new life. I must work, save, advance
-myself and better my condition generally, so as to be worthy
-of her.... At the very same time I was still able to
-see beauty in other women and the cloying delights of those
-who would never be able to be as good as she! They might
-be good enough for me but far beneath her whose eyes were
-“too pure to behold evil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the latter part of September she came to St. Louis and
-gave me my first delighted sight of her since we had left
-Chicago. At this time I was at the topmost toss of my adventures
-in St. Louis. I was, as I now assumed, somebody.
-By now also I had found a new room in the very heart of
-the city, on Broadway near the Southern, and was leading
-a bachelor existence under truly metropolitan circumstances.
-This room was on the third floor rear of a building
-which looked out over some nondescript music hall whose
-glass roof was just below and from whence nightly, and
-frequently in the afternoon, issued all sorts of garish music
-hall clatter, including music and singing and voices in monologue
-or dialogue. One block south were the Southern Hotel,
-Faust’s Restaurant, and the Olympic Theater. In the block
-north were the courthouse and Dick’s old room, which by
-now he had abandoned, having in spite of all his fine dreams
-of a resplendent heiress married a girl whom together we had
-met in the church some months before—a circus-rider! Thereafter
-he had removed to a prosaic flat on the south side, an institution
-which seemed to me but a crude and rather pathetic
-attempt at worthless domesticity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I should like to report here that something over a year
-later this first marriage of his terminated in the death of his
-wife. Later—some two or three years—he indulged in a
-second most prosaic and inartistic romance—wedding finally,
-on this occasion, the daughter of a carpenter. And her
-name—Sopheronisby Boanerga Watkins. And a year or two
-after this she was burned to death by an exploding oil stove.
-And this was the man who was bent on capturing an heiress.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In my new room therefore, because it was more of a center,
-I had already managed to set up a kind of garret salon,
-which was patronized by Dick and Peter, Rodenberger, Dunlap,
-Brady and a number of other acquaintances. No sooner
-was I settled here than Michaelson, whose affairs I had
-straightened out by getting him a place on the <i>Republic</i>, put
-in an appearance, and also John Maxwell, who because of
-untoward conditions in Chicago had come to St. Louis to better
-his fortunes. But more of that later.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In spite of all these friends and labors and attempts at
-aiding others, it was my affair with Miss W—— which now
-completely engrossed me. So seriously had I taken this new
-adventure to heart that I was scarcely able to eat or sleep.
-Once I knew definitely that she was inclined to like me, as
-her letters proved, and the exact day of her arrival had
-been fixed, I walked on air. I had not been able to save
-much money since I had been on the <i>Republic</i> (possibly a
-hundred dollars all told, and that since my brothers had left),
-but of that I took forty or fifty and bought a new fall suit of
-a most pronounced if not startling pattern, the coat being
-extra long and of no known relation to any current style (an
-idea of my own), to say nothing of such extras as patent
-leather shoes, ties, collars, a new pearl-gray hat—all purchased
-in view of this expected visit for her especial delectation!
-Although I had little money for what I considered the
-essentials of courtship—theater boxes, dinners and suppers at
-the best restaurants, flowers, candy—still I hoped to make an
-impression. Why shouldn’t I? Being a newspaper man and
-an ex-dramatic editor, to say nothing of my rather close
-friendship with the present <i>Republic</i> critic, I could easily
-obtain theater tickets, although the exigencies of my work
-often prevented, as I discovered afterward, my accompanying
-her for more than an hour at a time.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER XLIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>On</span> the day of her arrival I arrayed myself in my best,
-armed myself with flowers, candy and two tickets for the
-theater, and made my way out to her aunt’s in one of the
-simpler home streets in the west end. I was so fearful that
-my afternoon assignment should prove a barrier to my seeing
-her that day that I went to her as early as ten-thirty, intending
-to offer her the tickets and arrange to stop for her afterwards
-at the theater; or, failing that, to see her for a little
-while in the evening if my assignments permitted. I was so
-vain of my standing in her eyes, so anxious to make a good
-impression, that I was ashamed to confess that my reportorial
-duties made it difficult for me to see her at all. After my
-free days in Chicago I wanted her to think that I was more
-than a mere reporter, a sort of traveling correspondent and
-feature man, which in a way I was, only my superiors were
-determined to keep me for some reason in the ordinary reportorial
-class taking daily assignments as usual. Instead of
-confessing my difficulties I made a great show of freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I found her in a small tree-shaded, cool-looking brick house,
-with a brick sidewalk before it and a space of grass on one
-side. Never did place seem more charming. I stared at it
-as one might at a shrine. Here at last was the temporary
-home of my beloved, and she was within!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I knocked, and an attractive slip of a girl (her niece, as I
-learned) answered. I was shown into a long, dustless, darkened
-parlor. After giving me time to weigh the taste and
-affluence of her relatives according to my standards, she arrived,
-the beloved, the beautiful. In view of many later
-sadder things, it seems that here at least I might attempt to
-do her full justice. She seemed exquisite to me then, a trim,
-agreeable sylph of a girl, with a lovely oval face, stark red
-hair braided and coiled after the fashion of a Greek head,
-a clear pink skin, long, narrow, almond-shaped, gray-blue
-eyes, delicate, graceful hands, a perfect figure, small well-formed
-feet. There was something of the wood or water
-nymph about her, a seeking in her eyes, a breath of wild
-winds in her hair, a scarlet glory to her mouth. And yet
-she was so obviously a simple and inexperienced country
-girl, caught firm and fast in American religious and puritanic
-traditions and with no hint in her mind of all the wild, mad
-ways of the world. Sometimes I have grieved that she ever
-met me, or that I so little understood myself as to have sought
-her out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I first saw her, after this long time, framed in a white
-doorway, and she made a fascinating picture. Here, as in
-Chicago, she seemed shy, innocent, questioning, as one who
-might fly at the first sound. I gazed in admiration. Despite
-a certain something in her letters which had indirectly assured
-me of her affection or her desire for mine, still she
-held aloof, extending a cool hand and asking me to sit down,
-smiling tenderly and graciously. I felt odd, out of place, and
-yet wonderfully drawn to her, passionately interested. What
-followed by way of conversation I cannot remember now—talk
-of the Fair, I suppose, some of those we had known, her
-summer, mine. She took my roses and pinned some of them
-on, placing the rest in a jar. There was a piano here, and
-after a time she consented to play. In a moment, it seemed,
-it was twelve-thirty, and I had to go.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I walked on air. It seemed to me that I had never seen
-any one more beautiful—and I doubt now that I had. There
-was no reason to be applied to the thing: it was plain infatuation,
-a burning, consuming desire for her. If I had lost her
-then and there, or any time within a year thereafter, I should
-have deemed it the most amazing affair of my life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I returned to the office and took some assignment, which I
-cut short at three-thirty in order to get back to the Grand
-Opera House to sit beside her. The play was an Irish love
-drama, with Chauncey Olcott, the singing comedian, in the
-title rôle. With her beside me I thought it perfect. Love!
-Ah, love! When the performance was ended I was ready
-to weep over the torturing beauty of life. Outside we found
-the matinée crowds, the carriages, the sense of autumn gayety
-and show in the air. A nearby ice-cream and candy store
-was crowded to suffocation. Young girls of the better families
-hummed like bees. Because of my poverty and uncertain
-station I felt depressed, at the same time pretending to a
-station which I felt to be most unreal. The mixture of ambition
-and uncertainty, pride, a gay coaxing in the air, added
-to the need to return to conventional toil—how these tortured
-me! Nothing surprises me now more than my driving emotions
-all through this period. I was as one possessed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We parted at a street-car—when I wanted a carriage! We
-met at her aunt’s home at eight-thirty, because I saw an
-opportunity of deliberately evading an assignment. In this
-simple parlor I dreamed the wildest, the most fantastic dreams.
-She was the be-all and the end-all of my existence. Now I
-must work for her, wait for her, succeed for her! Her mediocre
-piano technique seemed perfect, her voice ideal! Never
-was such beauty, such color. St. Louis took on a glamour
-which it had never before possessed.... If only this love
-affair could have gone on to a swift fruition it would have been
-perfect, blinding.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But all the formalities, traditions, beliefs, of a conventional
-and puritanic region were in the way. Love, as it is
-in most places, and despite its consuming blaze, was a slow
-process. There must be many such visits, I knew, before I
-could even place an arm about her. I was to be permitted
-to take her to church, to concerts, the theater, a restaurant
-occasionally, but nothing more.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next morning I went to church with her; the next afternoon
-unavoidable work kept me from her, but that night
-I shirked and stayed with her until eleven. The next morning,
-since she had to catch an early train for Florissant, I
-slept late, but during the next two weeks (she could not come
-oftener, having to spend one Sunday with her “folks,” as
-she referred to them) I poured forth my amazement and
-delight on reams of thin paper. I wonder now where they
-are. Once there was a trunk full.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Perhaps the most interesting effect of this sudden fierce
-passion was the heightened color it lent to everything. Never
-before had I realized quite so clearly the charm of life as
-life, its wondrous singing, its intense appeal. I remember
-witnessing a hanging about this time, standing beside the murderer
-when the trap was sprung, and being horrified, sickened
-to death, yet when I returned to the office and there was a
-letter from her—the world was perfect once more, no evil or
-pain in it! I followed up the horrors of a political catastrophe,
-in which a city treasurer shot himself to escape the
-law—but a letter from her, and the world was beautiful. A
-negro in an outlying county assaulted a girl, and I arrived
-in time to see him lynched, but walking in the wood afterward,
-away from the swinging body, I thought of her—and life
-contained not a single ill. Such is infatuation. If I had
-been alive before, now I was more than alive. I tingled all
-over with longing and aspiration—to be an editor, a publisher,
-a playwright—I know not what. The simple homes I had
-dreamed over before as representing all that was charming
-and soothing and shielding were now twice as attractive.
-Love, all its possibilities, paraded before my eyes, a gorgeous,
-fantastic procession. Love! Love! The charm of a home
-in which it would find its most appropriate setting! The
-brooding tenderness of it! Its healing force against the
-blows of ordinary life! To be married, to have your beloved
-with you, to have a charming home to which to return of an
-evening, or at any hour, sick or well! I was young, in good
-health and spirits. In a few years I should be neither so
-young nor so vital. Age would descend, cold, gray, thin, passionless.
-This glorious, glorious period of love, desire, would
-be gone, and then what? Ah, and then what! If I did not
-achieve now and soon all that I desired in the way of tenderness,
-fortune, beauty—now when I was young and could enjoy
-it—my chance would once and for all be over. I should
-be helpless. Youth would come no more! Love would come
-no more! But now—now—life was sounding, singing, urging,
-teasing; but also it was running away fast, and what was I
-doing about it? What could I do?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The five months which followed were a period of just such
-color and mood, the richest period of rank romanticism I have
-ever endured. At times I could laugh, at others sigh, over
-the incidents of this period, for there is as little happiness
-in love as there is out of it, at least in my case. If I had
-only known myself I might have seen, and that plainly, that
-it was not any of the charming conventional things which this
-girl represented but her charming physical self that I craved.
-The world, as I see it now, has trussed itself up too helplessly
-with too many strings of convention, religion, dogma. It has
-accepted too many rules, all calculated for the guidance of
-individuals in connection with the propagation and rearing
-of children, the conquest and development of this planet.
-This is all very well for those who are interested in that, but
-what of those who are not? Is it everybody’s business to
-get married and accept all the dictates of conventional society—that
-is, bear and rear children according to a given
-social or religious theory? Cannot the world have too much
-of mere breeding? Are two billion wage slaves, for instance,
-more advantageous than one billion, or one billion more than
-five hundred million? Or is an unconquered planet less
-interesting than a conquered one? Isn’t the mere <i>contact of
-love</i>, if it produces ideas, experiences, tragedies even, as important
-as raising a few hundred thousand coal miners, railroad
-hands or heroes destined to be eventually ground or shot
-in some contest with autocratic or capitalistic classes? And,
-furthermore, I am inclined to suspect that the monogamous
-standard to which the world has been tethered much too
-harshly for a thousand years or more now is entirely wrong. I
-do not believe that it is Nature’s only or ultimate way of continuing
-or preserving itself. Nor am I inclined to accept the
-belief that it produces the highest type of citizen. The ancient
-world knew little of strict monogamy, and some countries
-today are still without it. Even in our religious or moralistic
-day we are beginning to see less and less of its strict enforcement.
-(Fifty thousand divorces in one State in one year is
-but a straw.) It is a product, I suspect, of intellectual lethargy
-or dullness, a mental incapacity for individuality. What
-we have achieved is a vast ruthless machine for the propagation
-of people far beyond the world’s need, even its capacity
-to support decently. In special cases, where the strong find
-themselves, we see more of secret polygamy and polyandry
-than is suspected by the dull and the ignorant. Economic
-opportunity, plus love or attraction, arranges all this, all the
-churches, laws, disasters to the contrary notwithstanding.
-Love or desire, where economic conditions permit, will and
-does find a way.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Here I was dreaming of all the excellencies of which the
-conventionalists prate in connection with home, peace, stability
-and the like, anxious to put my neck under that yoke,
-when in reality what I really wanted, and the only thing
-that my peculiarly erratic and individual disposition would
-permit, was mental and personal freedom. I did not really
-want any such conventional girl at all, and if I had clearly
-understood what it all meant I might have been only too glad
-to give her up. What I wanted was the joy of possessing her
-without any of the hindrances or binding chains of convention
-and monogamy, but she would none of it. This unsatisfied
-desire, added to a huge world-sorrow over life itself, the
-richness and promise of the visible scene, the sting and urge
-of its beauty, the briefness of our days, the uncertainty of our
-hopes, the smallness of our capacity to achieve or consume
-where so much is, produced an intense ache and urge which
-endured until I left St. Louis. I was so staggered by the
-promise and the possibilities of life, at the same time growing
-more and more doubtful of my capacity to achieve anything,
-that I was falling into a profound sadness. Yet I was only
-twenty-two, and between these thoughts would come intense
-waves of do and dare: I was to be all that I fancied, achieve
-all that I dreamed. As a contrast to all these thoughts, fancies,
-and depressions, I indulged in a heavy military coat
-of the most disturbing length, a wide-brimmed Stetson hat,
-Southern style, gloves, a cane, soft pleated shirts—a most <i>outré</i>
-equipment for all occasions including those on which I could
-call upon her or take her to a theater or restaurant. I remember
-one Saturday morning, when I was on my way to see
-my lady love and had stopped at the Olympic to secure two
-seats, meeting a dapper, rather flashy newspaper man. I had
-on the military coat, and the hat, a pair of bright yellow
-gloves, narrow-toed patent leather shoes, a ring, a pin, a suit
-brighter than his own, a cane, and I was carrying a bouquet
-of roses. I was about to take a street-car out to her place,
-not being prosperous enough to hire a carriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, for sake, old man, what’s up?” he called, seizing
-me by the arm. “You’re not getting married, are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, cut the comedy!” I replied, or words to that effect.
-“Can’t a fellow put on any decent clothes in this town without
-exciting the natives? What’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nothing, nothing,” he replied apologetically. “You look
-swell. You got on more dog than ever I see a newspaper
-man around here pull. You must be getting along! How are
-things at the <i>Republic</i>, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We now conversed more affably. He touched the coat gingerly
-and with interest, felt of the quality of the cloth, looked
-me up and down, seemingly with admiration—more likely
-with amazement—shook his head approvingly and said:
-“Some class, I must say. You’re right there, sport, with
-the raiment,” and walked off.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was in this style that I prosecuted my quest. For my
-ordinary day’s labor I wore other clothes, but sometimes,
-when stealing a march on my city editor Saturday afternoons
-or Sundays or evenings, I had to perform a lightning change
-act in order to get into my finery, pay my visit, and still get
-back to the office between eleven and twelve, or before six-thirty,
-in my ordinary clothes. Sometimes I changed as many
-as three times in one afternoon or evening. My room being
-near here facilitated this. A little later, when I was more
-experienced, I aided myself to this speed by wearing all but
-the coat and hat, an array in which I never presumed to
-enter the office. Even my ultra impressive suit and my shoes,
-shirts and ties attracted attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Gee whiz, Mr. Dreiser!” my pet office boy at the <i>Republic</i>
-once remarked to me as I entered in this array, “you certainly
-look as though you ought to own the paper! The boss don’t
-look like you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Wandell, Williams, the sporting editor, the religious editor,
-the dramatic editor, all eyed me with evident curiosity. “You
-certainly are laying it on thick these days,” Williams genially
-remarked, beaming on me with his one eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As for my lady love—well, I reached the place where I
-could hold her hand, put my arms about her, kiss her, but
-never could I induce her to sit upon my lap. That was reserved
-for a much later date.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER L</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>All</span> love transports contain an element of the ridiculous, I
-presume, but to each how very important. I will pass mine
-over with what I have already said, save this: that each little
-variation in her costume, however slight, in her coiffure, or
-the way she looked or walked amid new surroundings, all
-seemed to re-emphasize the perfection that I had discovered
-and was so fortunate as to possess. She gave me her photograph,
-which I framed in silver and hung in my room. I
-begged for a lock of her hair, and finding a bit of blue ribbon
-that I knew belonged to her purloined that. She would not
-allow me to visit at Florissant, where she taught, being bashful
-about confessing this new relationship, but nevertheless,
-on several Sundays when she was at her home “up the State”
-I visited this glorious region, hallowed by her presence, and
-tried to decide for myself just where she lived and taught—her
-sacred rooms! A little later an exposition or State Fair
-was held in the enormous exposition building at Fourteenth
-and Olive streets, and here, when the Sousa concerts were
-first on, and later when the gay Veiled Prophets festivities
-began (a sort of Roman Harvest rejoicing, winding up with a
-great parade and ball), I saw more of her than ever before.
-It was during this time, in a letter, that she confessed that she
-loved me. Before this, however, seeing that I made no progress
-in any other way, being allowed no intimacy beyond an
-occasional stolen kiss, I had proposed to her and been accepted
-with a kind of morbid formalism. I had had to ask her in the
-most definite way and be formally accepted as her affianced
-husband. Thereafter I squandered my last cent to purchase a
-diamond ring at wholesale, secured through a friend on the
-<i>Globe</i>, and then indeed I felt myself set up in the world, as
-one who was destined to tread the conventional and peaceful
-ways of the majority.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet in Spite of my profound infatuation I was still able to
-see beauty in other women and be moved by it. The chemical
-attractions and repulsions which draw us away from one and
-to another are beginning to be more clearly understood in
-these days and to undermine our more formal notions of stability
-and order, but even at that time this variation in myself
-might have taught me to look with suspicion on my own emotions.
-I think I did imagine that I was a scoundrel in harboring
-lusts after other women, when I was so deeply involved
-with this one, but I told myself that I must be peculiarly
-afflicted in this way, that all men were not so, that I
-myself should and probably would hold myself in check eventually,
-etc.; all of which merely proves how disjointed and
-non-self-understanding can be the processes of the human
-mind. Not only do we fail to see ourselves as others see us
-but we have not the faintest conception of ourselves as we
-really are.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>An incident which might have proved to me how shallow
-was the depth of my supposed feeling, and that it was nothing
-more than a strong sex-desire, was this: One night about
-twelve a telephone message to the <i>Republic</i> stated that on a
-branch extension of one of the car lines, about seven or eight
-miles from the city, a murder had just been committed. Three
-negroes entering a lone “Owl” car, which ran from the city
-terminus to a small village had shot and killed the conductor
-and fired on the motorman. A young girl who had been on
-board, the only passenger, had escaped by the front door and
-had not since been heard of—or so the telephone message
-stated. As I happened to be in the office at the time, the
-story was assigned to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By good luck I managed to catch a twelve o’clock theater
-car and arrived at the end of the line at twelve forty, where
-I learned that the body of the dead man had been transferred
-to his home at some point farther out, and that a posse of male
-residents of the region had already been organized and were
-now helping the police to search this country round for the
-negroes. When I asked about the girl who had been on
-board one of the men at the barn exclaimed: “Sure, she’s a
-wonder! You want to tell about her. She hunted up a house,
-borrowed a horse, and notified everybody along the route.
-She’s the one that first phoned the news.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Here was a story indeed. Midnight, a murder, dark woods,
-lonely country. A girl flees from three murderous, drunken
-negroes, borrows a horse, and tells all the countryside. What
-more could a newspaper man want? I was all ears. Now if
-she were only good-looking!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I now realized that my first duty was not so much to see
-the body of the dead man and interview his wife, although
-that was an item not to be neglected, or the motorman who
-had escaped with his life, although he was here and told me
-all that had happened quite accurately, but this girl, this
-heroine, who, they said, was no more than seventeen or
-eighteen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The car in which the murder had been committed was here
-in the barn. The blood-stains of the victim were still to be
-seen on the floor. I took this car, which was now carrying a
-group of detectives, a doctor and some other officials, to the
-dead man’s house, or to the house of the girl, I forget which.
-When I arrived there I discovered that a large comfortable
-residence some little distance beyond the home of the dead
-man was the scene of all news and activity, for here it was that
-the body of the conductor had been carried, and from here
-the girl had taken a horse and ridden far and wide to call
-others to her aid. When I hurried up to the door she had
-returned and was holding a sort of levee. The large livingroom
-was crowded, and in the center, under the flare of a
-hanging lamp, was this maiden, rather pretty, with her hair
-brushed straight back from her forehead, and her face alight
-with the intensity of her recent experiences and actions. I
-drew near and surveyed her over the shoulders of the others
-as she talked, finally getting close enough to engage her in
-direct conversation, as was my duty. She was very simple
-in manner and speech—not quite the dashing heroine I had
-imagined yet attractive enough. For my benefit, and possibly
-for the dozenth time, she narrated all that had befallen
-her from the time she boarded the car until she had leaped
-from the front step after the shot and hid in the wood, finding
-her way to this house eventually and borrowing a horse to
-notify others, because, for one thing, there was no telephone
-here, and for another there was no man at home at the time
-who could have gone for her. With a kind of naïf enthusiasm
-she explained to me that once the shot had been fired and the
-conductor had fallen face down in the car (he had come in to
-rebuke these boisterous blacks, who were addressing bold remarks
-to her), she was cold with fright, but that after
-she had left the car she felt calmer and determined to do something
-to aid in the capture of the murderers. Hiding behind
-bushes, she had seen the negroes dash out of the rear door
-of the car and run back along the track into the darkness, and
-had then hurried in the other direction, coming to this house
-and summoning aid.... It was a fine story, her ride
-in the darkness and how people rose to come out and help
-her. I made copious notes in my mind, took her name and
-address, visited the conductor’s wife, who was a little distance
-away, and then hurried to the nearest telephone to communicate
-my news.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During this conversation with the girl I made an impression
-on her. As we talked I had drawn quite close and my
-enthusiasm for her deed had drawn forth various approving
-smiles and exclamations. When I took her address I said I
-should like to know more of her, and she smiled and said:
-“Well, you can see me any time tomorrow.” This was Saturday
-night.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The <i>Republic</i> at this time had instituted what it called a
-“reward for heroism” medal to be given to whosoever
-should perform a truly heroic deed during the current year
-within the city or its immediate suburbs. Thinking over this
-girl’s deed as I went along, and wondering how I should proceed
-in the matter of retaining her interest, I thought of this
-medal and asked myself why it should not be given to her.
-She was certainly worthy of it. Plainly she was a hero, riding
-thus in the darkness and in the face of such a crime—and
-good-looking too!—and eighteen! After I had reached the
-office and written a most glowing account of all this for the
-late edition, I decided to speak to Wandell the next day, and
-did. He fell in with the idea at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A fine idea,” he squeaked shrilly. “Bully—we’ll do that!
-You’ll have to go back, though, and see whether she’ll accept
-it. Sometimes these people won’t stand for all this notoriety
-stuff, you know. But if she does——By the way,” he asked
-quickly, “is she good-looking?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure,” I replied enthusiastically. “She’s very good-looking—a
-beauty, I think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, if that’s the case all the better. She must be made
-to give you a picture. Don’t let her crawl out of that, even
-if you have to bring her down here or take her to a photographer.
-If she accepts I’ll order the medal tomorrow, and you
-can write the whole thing up. It’ll make a fine Sunday feature,
-eh? Dreiser’s girl hero! What!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This medal idea was just the thing to take me back to her,
-the excuse I needed and one that ought to bring her close to
-me if anything could. For the time being, I had forgotten all
-about Miss W—— and her charms. She came into my mind,
-but it was so all-important for me to follow up this new interest—one
-that I could manage quite as well as not, along
-with the other. I dressed in my very best clothes the next
-morning, excluding the amazing coat, and sallied forth to
-find my heroine. After considerable difficulty I managed to
-place her in a very simple home on what had once been a
-farm. Her father, who opened the door, was a German of the
-most rigid and austere mien—a Lutheran, I think—her mother
-a simple and pleasant-looking fat <i>hausfrau</i>. In the garish
-noon light my heroine was neither so melodramatic nor so
-poignant as she had seemed the night before. There was
-something less alive and less delicate in her composition,
-mental and physical, and yet she was by no means dull. Perhaps
-she lacked the excitement and the crowd. She had a
-peculiar mouth, a little wide but sweet, and a most engaging
-smile. Incidentally, it now developed that she had a younger
-sister, darker, more graceful, almost more attractive than
-herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The two of them, as I soon found upon entering into conversation,
-offered that same problem in American life that
-so many children of foreign-born parents do. Although by
-no means poor, they were restless, if not unhappy, in their
-state. The old German father was one of those stern religionists
-and moralists who plainly had always held, or tried to
-hold, his two children in severest check. At the same time, as
-was obvious, this keen strident American life was calling to
-them as never had his fatherland to him. They were both
-intensely alive and eager for adventure. Never before, apparently,
-had they seen a reporter, never been so close to a
-really truly thrilling tragedy. And Gunda—that was my
-heroine’s name—had actually been a part of it—how, she
-could now scarcely think. Her parents were not at all stirred
-by her triumph or the publicity that attached to it. In spite
-of the fact that her father owned this property and was
-sufficiently well-placed to maintain her in school or idleness
-(American style), she was already a clerk in one of the
-great stores of the city, and her sister was also preparing to go
-to work, having just left school.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I cannot tell how, but in a few moments we three were engaged
-in a most ardent conversation. There was an old fire-place
-in this house with some blazing wood in it, and before
-this we sat and laughed and chattered, while I explained
-just what was wanted. Their mother and father did not
-even remain in the room. I could see that the younger sister
-was for urging Gunda on to any gayety or flirtation, and was
-herself eager to share in one. It ended by my suggesting that
-they both come down to dinner with me some evening—a
-suggestion which they welcomed with enthusiasm but explained
-that it would have to be done under the rose. Their
-father was so old-fashioned that he would not allow them to
-take up with any one so swiftly, would not even allow them
-to have any beaux in the house. But they could meet me, and
-stay in town all night with friends. Gunda laughed, and the
-younger sister clapped her hands for joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I made a most solemn statement of what was wanted to the
-parents, secured two photographs of Gunda, and departed,
-having arranged to see them the following Wednesday at
-seven at one of the prominent corners of the city.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Concerning</span> these two girls and their odd, unsophisticated,
-daring point of view and love of life, I have always had the
-most confused feelings. They were crazy and starving for
-something different from what they knew. What had become
-of all the staid and dull sobriety of their parents in this queer
-American atmosphere? The old people had no interest in
-or patience with any such restlessness. As for their two girls,
-it would have been as easy to seduce one or both of them, in
-the happy, seeking mood in which they met me, as to step
-off a car. Plainly they liked me, both of them. My conquest
-was so easy that it detracted from the charm. The weaker
-sex, in youth at least, has to be sought to be worth while. I
-began to question whether I should proceed in this matter
-as fast as they seemed to wish.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now that they had made friends with me, I liked them
-both. When we met the following Wednesday evening, and I
-had taken them to a commonplace restaurant, I was a little
-puzzled to know what to do with them, rarely having a whole
-evening to myself. Finally I invited them to my room, wondering
-if they would come. It seemed a great adventure to
-me, most daring, but I could not quite make up my mind
-which of the two I preferred. Just the same they came with
-me, looking on the proceeding as a great and delicious adventure.
-As we came along Broadway in the dark after dinner
-they hung on my arms, laughing and jesting at what their
-parents would think, and when we went up the dimly lighted
-stair, an old, wide, squeaky flight, they chortled over the fun
-and mystery of it all. The room was nothing much—the same
-old books, hangings and other trifles—but it seemed to please
-them greatly. What pleased them most was the fact that
-one could go and come without attracting any attention.
-They browsed about at first, and I, never having been confronted
-by just this situation before and being still backward,
-did little or nothing save discuss generalities. The one I
-had most favored (the heroine) was more retiring than the
-younger, less feverish but still gay. I could only be with
-them from seven to ten-thirty, but they intimated that they
-would come again when they could stay as late as I chose.
-The suggestion was too obvious and I lost interest. Soon I
-told them I had to go back to the office and took them to a
-car. A few days later I took the medal to Gunda at the store,
-where she received it with much pleasure, asking where I had
-been and when she was to see me again. I made an appointment
-for another day, which I never kept. It meant, as I
-reasoned it out, that I should have to go further with her and
-her sister, but not being sufficiently impelled or courageous I
-dropped the whole matter. Then, because Miss W—— now
-seemed more significant than ever, I returned to her with a
-fuller devotion than ever before.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Owing to a driving desire to get on, to do something, to
-be more than I was and have all the pleasures I craved at once,
-there now set in a period of mental dissatisfaction and unrest
-which eventually took me out of St. Louis and the West, and
-resulted in a period of stress and distress. Sometimes I
-really believe that certain lives are predestined to undergo
-a given group of experiences, else why the unconscionable
-urge to move and be away which drives some people like the
-cuts of a lash? Aside from the question of salary, there was,
-as I see it now, little reason for the fierce and gnawing pains
-that assailed me, and toward the last even this question of
-salary was not a factor; for my employers, learning that I
-was about to leave, were quick enough to offer me more money
-as well as definite advancement. By then, however, my
-self-dissatisfaction had become so great that nothing short of
-a larger salary and higher position than they could afford to
-give me would have detained me. Toward the last I seemed
-to be obsessed by the idea of leaving St. Louis and going
-East. New York—or, at least other cities east of this one,
-seemed to call me far more than anything the West had to
-offer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now, curiously, various things seemed to combine to
-drive or lure me forth, things as clear in retrospect as they
-were indistinguishable and meaningless then. One of these
-forces, aside from that of being worthy of my new love and
-lifting her to some high estate which then possessed me, was
-John Maxwell who had done me such an inestimable service in
-Chicago when I was trying to break into the newspaper business,
-and who had now arrived on the scene with the hope of
-connecting with St. Louis journalism. Fat, cynical, Cyclopean
-John! Was ever a more Nietzschean mind in a more amiable
-body! His doctrine of ruthless progress, as I now clearly
-saw, was so tall and strident, whereas his personal modus
-operandi was so compellingly genial, human, sympathetic. He
-was forever talking about burning, slaying, shoving people
-out of one’s path, doing the best thing by oneself and the like,
-while at the same time actually extending a helping hand
-to almost everybody and doing as little to advantage himself
-personally as any man I ever knew. It was all theory, plus
-an inherent desire to expound. His literary admirations
-were of a turgidly sentimental or romantic character, as, for
-instance, Jean Valjean of <i>Les Misérables</i>, and the good bishop;
-<i>Père Goriot</i>, <i>Camille</i>, poor Smike in <i>Nicholas Nickleby</i>; and,
-of all things, and yet quite like him in judgment, the various
-novels of Hall Caine (<i>The Bondman</i>, <i>The Christian</i>, <i>The
-Deemster</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My boy!” he used to say to me, with a fat and yet wholly
-impressive vehemence that I could not help admiring whether
-I agreed with him or not, “that character of Jean Valjean
-is one of the greatest in the world—a masterpiece—and I’ll
-tell you why—” and he would then begin to enlarge upon the
-moral beauty of Valjean carrying the wounded Marius
-through the sewer, his taking up and caring for the poor
-degraded mother, abandoned by the students of Paris, his
-gentle and forgiving attitude toward all poverty and crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The amusing thing about all this was, of course, that in
-the next breath he would reiterate that all men were dogs
-and thieves, that in all cases one had to press one’s advantage
-to the limit and trust nobody, that one must burn, cut,
-slay, if one wished to succeed. Once I said to him, still under
-the delusion that the world might well be full of tenderness,
-charity, honesty and the like: “John, you don’t really believe
-all that. You’re not as hard as you say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The hell I’m not! The trouble with you is that you don’t
-know me. You’re just a cub yet, Theodore,” and his face
-wore that adorable, fat, cynical smirk, “full of college notions
-of virtue and charity, and all that guff. You think that because
-I helped you a little in Chicago all men are honest,
-kind, and true. Well, you’ll have to stow that pretty soon.
-You’re getting along now, and whatever you think other
-people ought to do you’ll find it won’t be very convenient
-to do it yourself—see?” And he smirked angelically once
-more. To me, in spite of what he said, he seemed anything
-but hard or mean.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Being in hard lines, he had come to St. Louis, not at my
-suggestion but at that of Dunlap and Brady, both of whom no
-doubt assured him that I could secure him a position instanter.
-I began to think what if anything I could do to help him, but
-so overawed was I still by his personality that I felt that
-nothing would do for him less than a place as copy-reader or
-assistant city editor—and that was a very difficult matter
-indeed, really beyond my local influence. I was too young
-and too inexperienced to recommend anybody for such a place,
-although my Chicago friends had come to imagine that I
-could do anything here. I had the foolish notion that John
-would speak to me about it, but so sensitive was he, I presume,
-on the subject of what was due from me to him that he
-thought (I am merely guessing) that I should bestir myself
-without any direct word. He had been here for days, I later
-learned, without even coming near me. He had gone to a hotel,
-and in a few days sent word by Dunlap, with whom he was
-now on the most intimate terms, that he was in town and
-looking for a place. I assume now that it was but the part of
-decency for me to have hurried to call on him, but so different
-was my position now and so hurried was I with a number of
-things that I never even thought of doing it at once. I fancied
-that he would come to the office with Dunlap, or that a day or
-two would make no difference. At the end of the second day
-after Dunlap spoke to me of his being here the latter said:
-“Don’t you want to come along with me and see John?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was delighted at the invitation and that same evening
-followed Dunlap to John’s hotel room. It was a curious meeting,
-full of an odd diffidence on my part and I know not what
-on his. From others he had gathered the idea that I was
-successful here and therefore in a position to be uppish,
-whereas I was really in a most humble and affectionate frame
-of mind toward him. He met me with a most cynical, leering
-expression, which by no means put me at case. He seemed
-at once reproachful, antagonistic and contemptuous.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well,” he began at once, “I hear you’re making a big hit
-down here, Theodore. Everything’s coming your way
-now, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, not so good as that, John,” I said. “I don’t think I’ve
-done so wonderfully well. I hear you want to stay here; have
-you found anything yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not a thing,” he smiled. “I haven’t been trying very
-hard, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I told him what I knew of St. Louis, how things went generally,
-and offered to give him letters or personal introductions
-to McCullagh, a managing editor on the <i>Chronicle</i>, to
-Wandell, and several others. He thanked me, and then I invited
-him to come and live in my room, which he declined at
-the time, taking instead a room next door to mine on the same
-floor—largely because it was inexpensive and central and
-not, I am sure, because it was near me. Here he stayed nearly
-a month, during which time he doubtless made efforts to find
-something to do, which I also did. Suddenly he was gone,
-and a little later, and much to my astonishment, Dunlap informed
-me that he had concluded that I had been instrumental
-in keeping him from obtaining work here! This he
-had deduced not so much from anything he knew or had
-heard, but by some amazing process of reversal; since I was
-much beholden to him and in a position to assist him, I, by
-some perversion of nature, would resent his coming and
-would do everything in my power to keep him out!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>No event in my life ever gave me a queerer sense of being
-misunderstood and defeated. Of all the people I knew, I
-would rather have aided Maxwell than any one else. Because
-I felt so sure that I could not recommend him for anything
-good enough for him, I felt ashamed to try. I did the little
-I could, but after a while he left without bidding me good-by.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But before he went there were many gatherings in his
-room or mine, and always he assumed the same condescending
-and bantering tone toward me that he had used in Chicago,
-which made me feel as though he thought my present standing
-a little too good for me. And yet at times, in his more
-cheerful moods, he seemed the same old John, tender, ranting,
-filled with a sincere desire for the welfare of any untutored
-beginner, and only so restless and irritable now because he was
-meshed in financial difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At that, he attempted to do me one more service, which,
-although I did not resent it very much, I completely misunderstood.
-This was in regard to Miss W——, whose photograph
-he now saw and whose relation to me he gathered to
-be serious, although what he said related more to my whole
-future than to her. One day he walked into my room and
-saw the picture of my love hanging on the wall. He paused
-first to examine it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Who’s this?” he inquired curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I can see him yet, without coat or waistcoat, suspenders
-down, his fat stomach pulled in tightly by the waistband of
-his trousers, his fat face pink with health, his hair tousled on
-his fine round head.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s the girl I’m engaged to,” I announced proudly.
-“I’m going to marry her one of these days when I get on
-my feet.” Then, lover-like, I began to expatiate on her
-charms, while he continued to study the photograph.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Have you any idea how old she is?” he queried, looking up
-with that queer, cynical, unbelieving look of his.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, about my age.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh hell!” he said roughly. “She’s older than that. She’s
-five or six years older than you. What do you want to get
-married for anyhow? You’re just a kid yet. Everything’s
-before you. You’re only now getting a start. Now you want
-to go and tie yourself up so you can’t move!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He ambled over to the window and stared out. Then he
-sank comfortably into one of my chairs, while I uttered some
-fine romantic bosh about love, a home, not wanting to wander
-around the world all my days alone. As I talked he contemplated
-me with one of those audacious smirky leers of his,
-as irritating and disconcerting an expression as I have seen
-on any face.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh hell, Theodore!” he remarked finally, as if to sweep
-away all I had said. Then after a time he added, as if addressing
-the world in general: “If there’s a bigger damn fool
-than a young newspaper man in or out of love, let me know.
-Here you are, just twenty-one, just starting out. You come
-down here from Chicago and get a little start, and the first
-thing you want to do is to load yourself up with a wife, and
-in a year or so two or three kids. Now I know damned well,”
-he went on, no doubt noting the look of easy toleration on
-my part, “that what I’m going to say won’t make you like
-me any better, but I’m going to say it anyhow. You’re like
-all these young newspaper scouts: the moment you get a start
-you think you know it all. Well, Theodore, you’ve got a
-long time to live and a lot of things to learn. I had something
-to do with getting you into this game, and that’s the only
-reason I’m talking to you now. I’d like to see you go on and
-not make a mistake. In the first place you’re too young to get
-married, and in the second, as I said before, that girl is five
-years older than you if she’s a day. I think she’s older,”
-and he went over and re-examined the picture, while I spluttered,
-insisting that he was crazy, that she was no more than
-two years older if so much. “Along with this,” he went on,
-completely ignoring my remarks, “she’s one of these middle-West
-girls, all right for life out here but no good for the newspaper
-game or you. I’ve been through all that myself. Just
-remember, my boy, that I’m ten years older than you. She
-belongs to some church, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Methodist,” I replied ruefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I knew it! But I’m not knocking her; I’m not saying
-that she isn’t pretty and virtuous, but I do say that she’s older
-than you, and narrow. Why, man, you don’t know your own
-mind yet. You don’t know where you’ll want to go or what
-you’ll want to do. In ten years from now you’ll be thirty-two,
-and she’ll be thirty-seven or more, believing and feeling things
-that will make you tired. You’ll never agree with her—or if
-you do, so much the worse for you. What she wants is a home
-and children and a steady provider, and what you really
-want is freedom to go and do as you please, only you don’t
-know it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Now I’ve watched you, Theodore, and I hear what people
-down here say about you, and I think you have something
-ahead of you if you don’t make a fool of yourself. But if
-you marry now—and a conventional and narrow woman at
-that, one older than you—you’re gone. She’ll cause you endless
-trouble. In three or four years you’ll have children, and
-you’ll get a worried, irritated point of view. Take my advice.
-Run with girls if you want to, but don’t marry. Now I’ve
-said my say, and you can do as you damned please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He smirked genially and condescendingly once more, and
-I felt very much impressed and put down. After all, I feared,
-in spite of my slushy mood, that what he said was true, that it
-would be best for me to devote myself solely to work and
-study and let women alone. But also I knew that I couldn’t.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next time my beloved came to the city I decided to
-sound her on the likelihood of my changing, differing. We
-were walking along a leaf-strewn street, the red, brown, yellow
-and green leaves thick on the brick walk, of a gray November
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And what would you do then?” I asked, referring to my
-fear of changing, not caring for her any longer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>She meditated for a while, kicking the leaves and staring at
-the ground without looking up. Finally she surveyed me with
-clear appealing blue-gray eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But you won’t,” she said. “Let’s not think of anything
-like that any more. We won’t, will we?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Her tone was so tender and appealing that it moved me
-tremendously. She had this power over me, and retained it
-for years, of appealing to my deepest emotions. I felt so
-sorry for her—for life—even then. It was as if all that
-Maxwell had said was really true. She was different, older;
-she might never understand me. But this craving for her—what
-to do about that? All love, the fiercest passions, might
-cool and die out, but how did that help me then? In the
-long future before me should I not regret having given her up,
-never to have carried to fruition this delicious fever? I
-thought so.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For weeks thereafter my thoughts were colored by the truth
-of all John had said. She would never give herself to me without
-marriage, and here I was, lonely and financially unable
-to take her, and spiritually unable to justify my marriage to
-her even if I were. The tangle of life, its unfairness and indifference
-to the moods and longings of any individual, swept
-over me once more, weighing me down far beyond the power
-of expression. I felt like one condemned to carry a cross, and
-very unwilling and unhappy in doing it. The delirious painful
-meetings went on and on. I suffered untold tortures
-from my desires and my dreams. And they were destined
-never to be fulfilled.... Glorious fruit that hangs upon
-the vine too long, and then decays!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing that happened at this time and made a
-great impression, tending more firmly than even Maxwell’s
-remarks to alter my point of view and make me feel that I
-must leave St. Louis and go on, was the arrival in the city
-of my brother Paul, who, as the star of a claptrap melodrama
-entitled “The Danger Signal,” now put in an appearance.
-He was one of my four brothers now out in the world making
-their own way and of them all by far the most successful. I
-had not seen him since my newspaper days in Chicago two
-years before. He was then in another play, “The Tin Soldier,”
-by the reigning farceur, Hoyt. <i>His</i> had not been
-the leading rôle at that time, but somehow his skill as a
-comedian had pushed him into that rôle. Previously he had
-leading parts in such middle-class plays as “A Midnight
-Bell,” “The Two Johns” and other things of that sort, as
-well as being an end man in several famous minstrel shows.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now in this late November or early December, walking
-along South Sixth Street in the region of the old Havlin
-Theater, where all the standard melodramas of the time
-played, I was startled to see his face and name staring at
-me from a billboard. “Ah,” I thought, “my famous brother!
-Now these people will know whether our family amounts to
-anything or not! Wait’ll they hear he is my brother!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>His picture on the billboard recalled so many pleasant memories
-of him, his visits home, his kindness to and intense love
-for my mother, how in my tenth year he had talked of my
-being a writer (Heaven only knows why), and how once on
-one of his visits home, when I was fourteen, he had set me
-to the task of composing a humorous essay which he felt sure
-I could write! Willingly and singingly I essayed it, but when
-I chose the ancient topic of the mule and its tendency to kick
-his face fell, and he tried to show me in the gentlest way possible
-how hackneyed that was and to put me on the track of
-doing something original.... Now after all this time,
-and scarcely knowing whether or not he knew I was here, I
-was to see him once more, to make clear to him my worldly
-improvement. I do not say it to boast, but I honestly think
-there was more joy in the mere thought of seeing him again
-than there was in showing him off and getting a little personal
-credit because of his success.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> I look back upon my life now I realize clearly that of all
-the members of our family subsequent to my mother’s death,
-the only one who, without quite understanding me, still sympathized
-with my intellectual and artistic point of view—and
-that most helpfully and at times practically—was my brother
-Paul. Despite the fact that all my other brothers were much
-better able intellectually than he to appreciate the kind of
-thing I was tending toward mentally, his was the sympathy
-that buoyed me up. I do not think he understood, even in
-later years (long after I had written <i>Sister Carrie</i>, for instance),
-what I was driving at. His world was that of the
-popular song, the middle-class actor or comedian, the middle-class
-comedy, and such humorous esthetes of the writing world
-as Bill Nye, Petroleum V. Nasby, and the authors of the
-<i>Spoopendyke Papers</i> and <i>Samantha at Saratoga</i>. As far as I
-could make out—and I say this in no lofty, condescending
-spirit—he was full of simple middle-class romance, middle-class
-humor, middle-class tenderness, and middle-class grossness—all
-of which I am very free to say I admire. After all,
-we cannot all be artists, statesmen, generals, thieves or financiers.
-Some of us, the large majority, have to be just plain
-everyday middle-class, and a very comfortable state it is under
-any decent form of government.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But there is so very much more to be said of him, things
-which persistently lift him in my memory to a height far
-more appealing and important than hundreds of greater and
-surer fame. For my brother was a humorist of so tender and
-delicate a mold that to speak of him as a mere middle-class
-artist or middle-class thinker and composer, would be to do
-him a gross injustice and miss the entire significance and
-flavor of his being. His tenderness and sympathy, a very
-human appreciation of the weakness and errors as well as the
-toils and tribulations of most of us, was his most outstanding
-and engaging quality and gave him a very definite force and
-charm. Admitting that he had an intense, possibly an undue
-fondness for women (I have never been able to discover just
-where the dividing line is to be drawn in such matters), a
-frivolous, childish, horse-play sense of humor at times, still
-he had other qualities that were positively adorable. That
-sunny disposition, that vigorous, stout body and nimble mind,
-those smiling sweet blue eyes, that air of gayety and well-being
-that was with him nearly all the time, even at the most
-trying times! Life seemed to bubble in him. Hope sprang
-upward like a fountain. You felt in him a capacity to do (in
-his limited field), an ability to achieve, whether he was succeeding
-at the moment or not. Never having the least power
-to interpret anything in a high musical way, still he was
-always full of music of a tender, sometimes sad, sometimes
-gay kind, the ballad-maker of a nation. For myself, I was
-always fascinated by this skill of his, the lovable art that
-attempts to interpret sorrow and pleasure in terms of song,
-however humble. And on the stage, how, in a crude way, by
-mere smile and gesture, he could make an audience laugh!
-I have seen houses crowded to the ceiling with middle- or
-lower-class people, shop girls and boys, factory hands and
-the like, who tittered continuously at his every move. He
-seemed to radiate a kind of comforting sunshine and humor
-without a sharp edge or sting (satire was entirely beyond
-him), a kind of wilding asininity, your true clown in cap and
-bells, which caused even my morbid soul to chortle by the hour.
-Already he was a composer of a certain type of melodramatic
-and tearful yet land-sweeping songs (<i>The Letter That Never
-Came</i>, <i>The Pardon Came Too Late</i>, <i>I Believe It for My
-Mother Told Me So</i>, <i>The Bowery</i>). (Let those who wish to
-know him better read of him in <i>Twelve Men: My Brother
-Paul</i>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Well, this was my brother Paul, the same whom I have
-described as stout, gross, sensual, and all of these qualities
-went hand-in-hand. I have no time here for more than the
-briefest glimpse, the faintest echo. I should like to write
-a book about him—the wonderful, the tender! But now he
-was coming to St. Louis, and in my youthful, vainglorious
-way I was determined to show him what I was. He should
-be introduced to Peter, Dick and Rodenberger, my cronies.
-I would have a feast in my room after the theater in his honor.
-I would give another, a supper at Faust’s, then the leading
-restaurant of St. Louis, of a gay Bohemian character, and
-invite Wandell, Dunlap, my managing editor (I can never
-think of his name), Bassford, the dramatic editor, and Peter,
-Dick and Rodenberger. I proposed to bring my love to his
-theater some afternoon or evening and introduce him to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I hurried to the office of the <i>Globe</i> to find Dick and Peter
-and tell them my news and plans. They were very much for
-whatever it was I wanted to do, and eager to meet Paul of
-course. Also, within the next twenty-four hours I had written
-to Miss W——, and told Wandell, Bassford, the managing
-editor and nearly everybody else. I dropped in at Faust’s
-to get an estimate on the kind of dinner I thought he would
-like, having the head-waiter plan it for me, and then eagerly
-awaited his arrival.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Sunday morning came, and I called at the theater at about
-eleven, and found him on the stage of this old theater entirely
-surrounded by trunks and scenery. There was with him at the
-moment a very petite actress, the female star of the company,
-who, as I later learned, was one of his passing flames. He
-was stout as ever, and dressed in the most engaging Broadway
-fashion: a suit of good cloth and smart cut, a fur coat, a high
-hat and a gold-headed cane—in short, all the earmarks of
-prosperity and comfort. What a wonderful thing he and this
-stage world, even this world of claptrap melodrama, seemed
-to me at the time. I felt on the instant somehow as though
-I were better established in the world than I thought, to be
-thus connected with one who traveled all over the country.
-The whole world seemed to come closer because of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Hello!” he called, plainly astonished. “Where’d you
-come from?” and then seeing that I was better dressed and
-poised mentally than he had ever known me, he looked me
-over in an odd, slightly doubting way, as a stranger might,
-and then introduced me to his friend. Seeing him apparently
-pleased by my arrival and eager to talk with me, she quickly
-excused herself, saying she had to go on to her hotel; then
-he fell to asking me questions as to how I came to be here, how
-I was getting along. I am sure he was slightly puzzled and
-possibly disturbed by my sharp change from a shy, retiring
-boy to one who examined him with the chill and weighing eye
-of the newspaper man. To me, all of a sudden, he was not
-merely one whom I had to like because he was my brother
-or one who knew more about life than I—rather less, I now
-thought, quickly gathering his intellectual import, but because
-of his character solely. I might like or dislike that as
-I chose. He reminded me now a great deal of my mother,
-and I could not help recalling how loving and generous he had
-always been with her. Instantly he appealed to me as the
-simple, home-loving mother-boy that he was. It brought him
-so close to me that I was definitely and tenderly drawn
-to him. I could feel how fine and generous he really was.
-Even then although I doubt very much whether he liked me
-at first, finding me so brash and self-sufficient, still, so simple
-and communistic were the laws by which his charming mind
-worked, he at once accepted me as a part of the family and
-so of himself, a brother, one of mother’s boys. How often
-have I heard him say in regard to some immediate relative concerning
-whom an acrimonious debate might be going forward,
-“After all, he’s your brother, isn’t he?” or “She’s your sister,”
-as though mere consanguinity should dissolve all dissatisfactions
-and rages! Isn’t there something humanly
-sweet about that, in the face of all the cold, decisive conclusions
-of this world?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Well</span>, such was my brother Paul and now he was here.
-Never before was he so much my dear brother as now. So
-generally admirable was he that I should have liked him
-quite as much had he been no relative. After a few moments
-of explanation as to my present state I offered to share my
-room with him for the period of his stay, but he declined.
-Then I offered to take him to lunch, but he was too hurried
-or engaged. He agreed to come to my room after the show,
-however, and offered me a box for myself and my new friends.
-So much faith did I have in the good sense of Peter, Dick
-and Rodenberger, their certainty of appreciating the charm
-of a man like Paul, that I brought them to the theater this
-same night, although I knew the show itself must be a mess.
-There was a scenic engine in this show, with a heroine lying
-across the rails! My dear brother was a comic switchman or
-engineer in this act, evoking roars of low-brow laughter by
-his antics and jokes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I shall never forget how my three friends took all this.
-Now that he was actually here they were good enough to take
-him into their affectionate consideration on my account, almost
-as though he belonged to them. He was “Dreiser’s
-brother Paul,” even “Dear old Paul” afterwards. Because
-working conditions favored us that night we all three descended
-on the Havlin together, sitting in the box while the
-show was in progress but spending all the intermissions in
-Paul’s dressingroom or on the back of the stage. Having
-overcome his first surprise and possibly dislike of my brash
-newspaper manner, he was now all smiles and plainly delighted
-with my friends, Rodenberger and Peter, especially the latter,
-appealing to him as characters not unlike himself, individuals
-whom he could understand. And in later years,
-when I was in New York, he was always asking after them
-and singing their praises. Dick also came in for a share of
-his warm affection, but in a slower way. He thought Dick
-amusing but queer, like a strange animal of some kind. On
-subsequent tours which took him to St. Louis he was always
-in touch with these three. Above all things, the waggish
-grotesqueries of McCord’s mind moved him immensely.
-Peter’s incisive personality and daring unconventionality
-seemed to fascinate Paul. “Wonderful boy, that,” he used
-to say to me, almost as though he were confiding a deep secret.
-“You’ll hear from him yet, mark my word. You can’t lose a
-kid like that.” And time proved quite plainly that he was
-right.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the play Paul sang one of his own compositions,
-<i>The Bowery</i>. It was an exceptional comic song, quite destructive
-of the good name of the Bowery forever, so much so that
-ten years later the merchants and property owners of that
-famous thoroughfare petitioned to have the name of the
-street changed, on the ground that the jibes involved in the
-song had destroyed its character as an honest business street
-forever. So much for the import of a silly ballad, and the
-passing song—writer. What are the really powerful things
-in this world anyhow?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After the show we all adjourned to some scowsy music
-hall in the vicinity of this old theater, which Dick insisted
-by reason of its very wretchedness would amuse Paul, although
-I am sure it did not (he was never a satirist). And thence to
-my room, where I had the man who provided the midnight
-lunch for the workers at the <i>Globe</i> spread a small feast. I
-had no piano, but Paul sang, and Peter gave an imitation of
-a street player who could manipulate at one and the same time
-a drum, mouth-organ and accordion. We had to beat my good
-brother on the back to keep him from choking.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But it was during a week of breakfasts together that the
-first impressive conversations in regard to New York occurred,
-conversations that finally imbued me with the feeling
-that I should never be quite satisfied until I had reached
-there. Whether this was due to the fact that I now told him
-about my present state and ambitions or dreams and my somewhat
-remarkable success here, or that he was now coming to
-the place where he was able to suggest ways and means and at
-the same time indulge the somewhat paternalistic streak in
-himself, I do not know, but during the week he persisted in
-the most florid descriptions of New York and my duty to go
-there, its import to me intellectually and otherwise; and finally
-he convinced me that I should never reach my true intellectual
-stature unless I did. Other places might be very good, he
-insisted, they all had their value, but there was only one place
-where one might live in a keen and vigorous way, and that
-was New York. It was <i>the</i> city, the only cosmopolitan city,
-a wonder-world in itself. It was great, wonderful, marvelous,
-the size, the color, the tang, the beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He went on to explain that the West was narrow, slow, not
-really alive. In New York one might always do, think and act
-more freely than anywhere else. The air itself was tonic.
-All really ambitious people, people who were destined to do
-or be anything, eventually drifted there—editors, newspaper
-men, actors, playwrights, song-writers, musicians, money-makers.
-He pointed to himself as a case in point, how he had
-ventured there, a gawky stripling doing a monologue, and
-how one Harry Minor, now of antique “Bowery Theater”
-fame, had seized on him, carried him along and forwarded him
-in every way. Some one was certain to do as much for me,
-for any one of ability. In passing, he now confided that only
-recently, from having been the star song-writer for a well-known
-New York music publisher (Willis Woodward), he had
-succeeded, with two other men, in organizing a music publishing
-company in which he had a third interest, and which
-was to publish his songs as well as those of others and was
-pledged to pay him an honest royalty (a thing which he insisted
-had not so far been done) as well as a full share as
-partner. In addition, under the friendly urging of an ambitious
-manager, he was now writing a play, to be known as
-“The Green Goods Man,” in which within a year or two he
-would appear as star. Also he reminded me that our sister
-E——, who had long since moved to New York (as early as
-1885), was now living in West Fifteenth Street, where she
-would be glad to receive me. He was always in New York
-in the summer, living with this sister. “Why not come down
-there next summer when I am there off the road, and look it
-over?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As he talked, New York came nearer than ever it had before,
-and I could see the light of conviction and enthusiasm
-in his eye. It was plain, now that he had seen me again, that
-he wanted me to succeed. My friends had already sung my
-praises to him, although he himself could see that I was fast
-emerging from my too shy youth. St. Louis might be well
-enough, and Chicago—but New York! New York! One who
-had not seen it but who was eager to see the world could not
-help but sniff and prick up his ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was during this week that I gave the supper previously
-mentioned, and took my fiancée to meet my brother. I am
-satisfied that she liked him, or was rather amused by him, not
-understanding the least detail of his life or the character of
-the stage, while the sole comment that I could get out of him
-was that she was charming but that if he were in my place
-he would not think of marrying yet—a statement which had
-more light thrown on it years later by his persistent indifference
-to if not dislike of her, although he was always too courteous
-and mindful of others to express himself openly to me....
-All of which is neither here nor there.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My glorious supper turned out to be somewhat of a failure.
-Without knowing it, I was trying to harmonize elements which
-would not mix, at least not on such a short notice. The true
-Bohemianism and at the same time exclusive camaraderie of
-such youths as Peter, Dick and Rodenberger, and the rather
-stilted intellectual sufficiency of my editorial friends and
-superiors of the <i>Republic</i>, and the utter innocence and naïveté
-of Paul himself, proved too much. The dinner was stilted,
-formal, boring. My dear brother was as barren of intellectual
-interests as a child. No current problem such as might have
-interested these editorial men had the smallest interest for
-him or had ever been weighed by him. He could not discuss
-them, although I fancy if we had turned to prize-fighters or
-baseball heroes or comic characters in general he would have
-done well enough. Indeed his and their thoughts were so far
-apart that they found him all but dull. On the other hand,
-Peter, Dick and Rodenberger finding Paul delightful were
-not in the least interested in the others, looking upon them as
-executives and of no great import. Between these groups I
-was lost, not knowing how to harmonize them. Struck all at
-once by the ridiculousness and futility of my attempt, I could
-not talk gayly or naturally, and the more I tried to bring
-things round the worse they became. Finally I was on pins
-and needles, until the whole thing was saved by Wandell remembering
-early that he had something to do at the office.
-Seizing their opportunity, the managing editor and the dramatic
-editor went with him. The others and I now attempted
-to rally, but it was too late. A half-hour later we broke up,
-and I accompanied my brother to his hotel door. He made
-none but pleasant comments, but it was all such a fizzle that I
-could have wept.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>By Sunday morning he was gone again, and then my life
-settled into its old routine, apparently—only it did not. Now
-more than ever I felt myself to be a flitting figure in this interesting
-but humdrum local world, comfortable enough perhaps
-but with no significant future for me. The idea of New York
-as a great and glowing center had taken root.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Some other things tended to move me from St. Louis. Only
-recently Michaelson, who had come to St. Louis to obtain my
-aid in securing a place, had been harping on the advantage
-of being a country editor, the ease of the life, its security. He
-was out of work and eager to leave the city. I think he was
-convinced that I was financially in a position to buy a half
-interest in some fairly successful country paper (which I
-was not), while he took the other half interest on time. Anyway
-I had been thinking of this as a way of getting out of
-the horrible grind of newspaperdom; only this mood of my
-brother seemed to reach down to the very depths of my being,
-depths hitherto not plumbed by anything, and put New York
-before me as a kind of ultimate certainty. I must go there
-at some time or other! meanwhile it might be a good thing
-for me to run a country paper. It might make me some
-money, give me station and confidence....</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At the same time, in the face of my growing estimate of
-myself, backed by the plaudits of such men as Peter and
-Dick (who were receiving twice my salary), to say nothing of
-the assurance of my brother that I had that mysterious thing,
-personality, I was always cramped for cash, and there was
-no sign on the part of my employers that I would ever be
-worth very much more to them. Toward the very last, as I
-have said, they changed, but then it was too late. I might
-write and write, page specials every week, assignments of all
-kinds, theatrical and sport reviews at times—and still, after
-all the evidence that I could be of exceptional service to them,
-twenty-two or -three dollars was all I could get. And dogging
-my heels was Michaelson, a cheerful, comforting soul in
-the main, but a burden. It has always been a matter of
-great interest to me to observe how certain types, parasites,
-barnacles, decide that they are to be aided or strengthened
-by another, and without a “by-your-leave” or any other form
-or courtesy to “edge in,” bring their trunk, and make themselves
-at home. Although I never really liked Michaelson
-very much, here he was, idling about, worrying about a job
-or his future, living in my room toward the last, eating his
-meals (at least his breakfasts) with me, and talking about
-the country, the charm, ease and profit of editing a country
-newspaper!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Now, of all the people in this dusty world, I can imagine no
-one less fitted than myself, temperamentally or in any other
-way, to edit a country paper. The intellectual limitations of
-such a world! My own errant disposition and ideas, my contempt
-for and revolt against the standardized and clock-work
-motions and notions of the average man and woman! In six
-months I should have been arrested or drummed out by the
-preacher, the elders, and all the other worthies for miles
-around. Let sleeping dogs lie. The louder all conventionalists
-snore the better—for me anyhow.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But here I was listening to Michaelson’s silly drivel and
-wondering if a country newspaper might not offer an escape
-from the humdrum and clamlike existence into which I
-seemed to have fallen. From December on this cheerful mediocrity,
-of about the warmth and intelligence of a bright collie,
-was telling me daily how wonderful I was and that I “ought
-to get out of here and into something which would really
-profit me and get me somewhere”—into the editorship of a
-country weekly!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>What jocular fates trifled with my sense of the reasonable
-or the ridiculous at this time I do not know, but I was interested—largely,
-I presume, because I was too wandering and
-nebulous to think of anything else to do. This cheerful soul
-finally ended by indicating a paper—the Weekly Something
-of Grand Rapids, Ohio (not Michigan), near his father’s farm
-(see pp. 247-255, <i>A Hoosier Holiday</i>), which, according to
-him, was just the thing and should offer a complete solution
-for all our material and social aspirations in this world. By
-way of this paper, or some other of its kind, one might rise
-to any height, political or social, state or national. I might
-become a state assemblyman from my county, a senator, a
-congressman, or United States senator! When you owned a
-country paper you were an independent person (imagine the
-editor of a country paper being independent of the conventions
-of his community!), not a poor harried scribe on a city
-paper, uncertain from week to week whether you were to be
-retained any longer. There were the delights of a country life,
-the sweet simplicity of a country town, away from the noise
-and streets and gaudy, shabby nothingness of a great city.
-... As I listened to the picture of his native town, his
-father’s farm, the cows, pigs, chickens, how we could go there
-and live for a while, my imagination mounted to a heaven
-of unadulterated success, peace, joy. In my mind I had already
-rented or bought a small vine-clad cottage in Grand
-Rapids, Ohio, where, according to Michaelson, was a wonderful
-sparkling rapids to be seen glimmering in the moonlight,
-a railroad which went into Toledo within an hour, fertile farmland
-all about, both gas and oil recently struck, making the
-farmers prosperous and therefore in the mood for a first-class
-newspaper such as we would edit. Imagine sparkling
-rapids glimmering in the moonlight listed as a financial asset
-of a country paper!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>My</span> thoughts being now turned, if vaguely, to the idea of
-rural life and editing a country newspaper, although I really
-did not believe that I could succeed at that, I talked and
-talked, to Michaelson, to my future wife, to Dick and Peter, in
-a roundabout, hinting way, developing all sorts of theories as
-to the possible future that awaited me. To buoy up my faith
-in myself, I tried to make Miss W—— feel that I was a personage
-and would do great things.... How nature
-would ever get on without total blindness, or at least immense
-credulity on the part of its creatures, I cannot guess. Certainly
-if women in their love period had any more sense than
-the men they would not be impressed with the boshy dreams
-of such swains as myself. Either they cannot help themselves
-or they must want to believe. Nature must want them to
-believe. How the woman who married me could have been
-impressed by my faith in myself at this period is beyond my
-reasoning, and yet she was impressed, or saw nothing better
-in store for her than myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That she was so impressed, and that I, moved by her affection
-for me or my own desire to possess her, was impelled to
-do something to better my condition, was obvious. Hints
-thrown out at the <i>Republic</i> office, to my sponsor Wandell in
-particular, that I might leave producing nothing, I decided
-sometime during January and February, 1893, to take up
-Michaelson’s proposition, although I did not see how, other
-than by gross luck, it could come to anything. Neither of us
-had any money to speak of, and yet we were planning to buy
-a country newspaper. For a few days before starting we debated
-this foolish matter and then I sent him to his home town
-to look over the field there and report, which he immediately
-did, writing most glowing accounts of an absolutely worthless
-country paper there, which he was positive we could
-secure for a song and turn into a paying proposition at
-once. I cannot say that I believed this, and yet I went
-because I felt the need of something different. And all
-the time the tug of that immense physical desire toward my
-beloved which, were there any such thing as sanity in life,
-might have been satisfied without any great blow to society,
-was holding me as by hooks of steel. It was this conflict between
-the need to go and the wish to stay that tortured me.
-Yet I went. I had the pain of separating from her in this
-mood, realizing that youth was slipping away, that in the
-uncertainty of all things there might never be a happy fruition
-to our love (and there was not). And yet I went.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I bade her a final farewell the Sunday night before my
-departure. I hinted at all sorts of glorious achievements as
-well as all possible forms of failure. Lover-wise, I was tremendously
-impressed with the sterling worth and connections
-of this girl, the homely, conventional and prosaic surroundings.
-My unfitness for fulfilling her dreams tortured me. As
-I could plainly see, she was for life as it had been lived by
-billions, by those who interpret it as a matter of duty, simplicity,
-care and thrift. I think she saw before her a modest
-home in which would be children, enough money to clothe
-them decently, enough money to entertain a few friends, and
-eventually to die and be buried respectably. On the other
-hand, I was little more than a pulsing force, with no convictions,
-no definite theories or plans. In my sky the latest cloud
-of thought or plan was the great thing. Not I but destiny,
-over which I had no control, had me in hand. I felt, or
-thought I felt, the greatest love ... while within me was
-a voice which said: “What a liar! What a pretender! You
-will satisfy yourself, make your own way as best you can.
-Each new day will be a clean slate for you, no least picture of
-the past thereon—none, at least, which might not be quickly
-wiped away. Any beautiful woman would satisfy you.”
-Still I suffered torture for her and myself, and left the next
-day, lacerated by the postponement, the defeated desire for
-happiness in love.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My attitude on leaving the <i>Republic</i> was one of complete
-indifference, coupled with a kind of satisfaction at the last
-moment that, after having seemed previously totally indifferent
-to my worth, the city editor, the managing editor, and
-even the publisher, seemed suddenly to feel that if I could be
-induced to stay I might prove of greater value to them than
-thus far I had—from a cash point of view. And so they
-made a hearty if belated effort to detain me. Indeed on my
-very sudden announcement only a few days before my departure
-that I was going, my city editor expressed great regret,
-asked me not to act hastily, told me he proposed to speak to
-the editor-in-chief. But this did not interest me any more. I
-was down on the <i>Republic</i> for the way it had treated me.
-Why hadn’t they done something for me months ago? That
-afternoon as I was leaving the building on an assignment, the
-managing editor caught me and wanted to know of my plans,
-said if I would stay he believed that soon a better place in
-the editorial department could be made for me. Having
-already written Michaelson that I would soon join him, however,
-I now felt it impossible not to leave. The truth is I
-really wanted to go and now that I had brought myself to this
-point, I did not want to retreat. Besides, there was a satisfaction
-in refusing these belated courtesies. The editor said
-that if I were really going the publisher would be glad to give
-me a general letter of introduction which might stand me in
-good stead in other cities. True enough, on the Monday on
-which I left, having gone to the office to say farewell, I was
-met by the publisher, who handed me a letter of introduction.
-It was of the “To whom it might concern” variety and related
-my labors and capacities in no vague words. I might have
-used this letter to advantage in many a strait, but never did.
-Rather, by some queer inversion of thought, I concluded that it
-was somewhat above my capacity, said more for me than I
-deserved, and might secure for me some place which I could
-not fill. For over a year I carried it about in my pocket, often
-when I was without a job and with only a few dollars in my
-pockets, and still I did not use it. Why, I have often wondered
-since. Little as I should understand such a thing in
-another, so little do I now understand this in myself.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>That</span> evening at seven I carried my bags down to the great
-Union Station, feeling that I was a failure. Other men had
-money; they need not thus go jerking about the world seeking
-a career. So many youths and maids had all that was
-needful to their case and comfort arranged from the beginning.
-They did not need to fret about the making of a bare living.
-The ugly favoritism of life which piles comforts in the laps
-of some while snatching the smallest crumb of satisfaction
-from the lips of others was never more apparent to me. I was
-in a black despair, and made short work of getting into my
-berth. For a long time I stared at dark fields flashing by,
-punctuated by lamps in scattered cottages, the gloomy and
-lonely little towns of Illinois and Indiana. Then I slept.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was aroused by a ray of sunshine in my eyes. I lifted
-one of my blinds and saw the cornfields of Northern Ohio, the
-brown stumps of last year’s crop protruding through the snow.
-Commonplace little towns, the small brown or red railway
-stations with the adjoining cattle-runs, and tall gas-well derricks
-protruding out of dirty, snowless soil, made me realize
-that I was approaching the end of my journey. I found that
-I had ample time to shave, dress and breakfast in the adjoining
-buffet—a thing I proposed to do if it proved the last pretentious,
-liberal, courageous deed of my life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>For I was not too well provided with cash, and was I not
-leaving civilization? Though I had but a hundred dollars,
-might not my state soon be much worse? I have often smiled
-since over the awe in which I then held the Pullman car, its
-porter, conductor, and all that went with it. To my inexperienced
-soul it seemed to be the acme of elegance and grandeur.
-Could life offer anything more than the privilege of riding
-about the world in these mobile palaces? And here was I this
-sunny winter morning with enough money to indulge in a
-breakfast in one of these grand ambling chambers, though if
-I kept up this reckless pace there was no telling where I
-should end.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I selected a table adjoining one at which sat two drummers
-who talked of journeys far and wide, of large sales of binders
-and reapers and the condition of trade. They seemed to me to
-be among the most fortunate of men, high up in the world as
-positions go, able to steer straight and profitable courses for
-themselves. Because they had half a broiled spring chicken,
-I had one, and coffee and rolls and French fried potatoes, as
-did they, feeling all the while that I was indulging in limitless
-grandeur. At one station at which the train stopped some
-poor-looking farmer boys in jeans and “galluses” and
-wrinkled hats looking up at me with interest as I ate, I
-stared down at them, hoping that I should be taken for a
-millionaire to whom this was little more than a wearisome
-commonplace. I felt fully capable of playing the part and
-so gave the boys a cold and repressive glance, as much as to
-say, Behold! I assured myself that the way to establish my
-true worth was to make every one else feel small by comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The town of Grand Rapids lay in the extreme northwestern
-portion of Ohio on the Maumee, a little stream which begins
-somewhere west of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and runs northeast
-to Toledo, emptying into Lake Erie. The town was traversed
-by this one railroad, which began at St. Louis and ended at
-Toledo, and consisted of a number of small frame houses and
-stores, with a few brick structures of one and two stories. I
-had not arranged with Michaelson that he should meet me at
-any given time, having been uncertain as to the time of my
-departure from St. Louis, and so I had to look him up. As
-I stepped down at the little depot. I noted the small houses
-with snow-covered yards, the bare trees and the glimpse of
-rolling country which I caught through the open spaces between.
-There was the river, wide and shallow, flowing directly
-through the heart of the town and tumbling rapidly and picturesquely
-over gray stones. I was far more concerned as to
-whether I should sometime be able to write a poem or a story
-about this river than I was to know if a local weekly could
-subsist here. And after the hurry and bustle of St. Louis, the
-town did not impress me. I felt now that I had made a
-dreadful mistake and wondered why I had been so foolish as
-to give up the opportunities suggested by my friends on the
-<i>Republic</i>, and my sweetheart, when I might have remained
-and married her under the new editorial conditions proffered
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet I walked on to the main corner and inquired where my
-friend lived, then out a country road indicated to me as leading
-toward his home. I found an old rambling frame house,
-facing the Maumee River, with a lean-to and kitchen and
-springhouse, corncribs, a barn twice the size of the house, and
-smaller buildings, all resting comfortably on a rise of ground.
-Apple and pear trees surrounded it, now leafless in the wind.
-A curl of smoke rose from the lean-to and told me where the
-cookstove was. As I entered the front gate I felt the joy of
-a country home. It told of simple and plain things, food,
-warmth, comfort, minds content with routine. Michaelson
-appeared at the door and greeted me most enthusiastically.
-He introduced me to his family with the exuberant youthfulness
-of a schoolboy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I met the father, a little old dried-up quizzical man, who
-looked at me over his glasses in a wondering way and rubbed
-his mouth with the back of his hand. I met the mother, small,
-wizened, middle-aged, looking as though she had gone through
-a thousand worries. Then I met Michaelson’s wife, a dark,
-chubby, brown-skinned woman, stocky and not over-intelligent.
-They asked me to make myself at home, listened to an account
-of my experiences in getting there, and then Michaelson volunteered
-to show me about the place.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My mind revolted at the thought of such a humdrum life
-as this for myself, though I was constantly touched by its
-charm—for others. I followed the elder Mrs. Michaelson
-into the lean-to and watched her cook, went with Michaelson
-to the barn to look over the live stock and returned to talk
-with Michaelson senior about the prospects of the Republican
-party in Ohio. He was much interested in a man named
-McKinley, a politician of Ohio, who had been a congressman
-for years and who was now being talked of as the next candidate
-of the Republican party for the Presidency. I had
-scarcely heard of him up to that time, but I gave my host my
-opinion, such as it was. We sat about the big drum sheet-iron
-stove, heated by natural gas, then but newly discovered and
-piped in that region. After dinner I proposed to my friend
-that we go into the village and inspect the printing plant
-which he had said was for sale. We walked along the road
-discussing the possibilities, and it seemed to me as we walked
-that he was not as enthusiastic as he had been in St. Louis.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ve been looking at this fellow’s plant,” he said vaguely,
-“and I don’t know whether I want to give him two hundred
-down for it. He hasn’t got anything. That old press he has
-is in pretty bad shape, and his type is all worn down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Can we get it for two hundred?” I asked innocently.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure, two hundred down. I wouldn’t think of giving him
-more. All he wants now is enough to get out of here, some one
-to take it off his hands. He can’t run it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We went to the office of the <i>Herald</i>, a long dark loft over
-a feed store, and found there a press and some stands of type,
-and a table before the two front windows, which looked west.
-The place was unlighted except by these windows and two in
-the back, and contained no provision for artificial light except
-two or three tin kerosene lamps. Slazey, the youthful editor,
-was not in. We walked about and examined the contents of
-the room, all run down. The town was small and slow, and
-even an idealist could see that there was small room here for
-a career.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Presently the proprietor returned, and I saw a sad specimen
-of the country editor of those days: sleepy, sickly-looking,
-with a spare, gaunt face and a head which had the appearance
-of an egg with the point turned to the back. His hair
-was long and straight and thin, the back part of it growing
-down over his dusty coat-collar. He wore a pair of baggy
-trousers of no shape or distinguishable color, and his coat and
-waistcoat were greasy. He extended a damp, indifferent hand
-to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I hear you want to sell out,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, I’m willing to sell,” he replied sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you mind showing us what you have here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He went about mechanically, and pointed out the press and
-type and some paper he had on hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Let me see that list of subscribers you showed me the
-other day,” said Michaelson, who now seemed eager to convince
-himself that there might be something in this affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Slazey brought it out from an old drawer and together we
-examined it, spreading it out on the dusty table and looking
-at the names checked off as paid. There were not more than
-a thousand. Some of them had another mark beside the check,
-and this excited my curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What’s this cross here for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“That’s the one that’s paid for this year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Isn’t this this year’s list?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No. I just thought I’d check up the new payments on
-the old list. I haven’t had time to make out a new one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Our faces fell. The names checked with a cross did not aggregate
-five hundred.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’ll tell you what we’d better do,” observed Michaelson
-heavily, probably feeling that I had become suddenly depressed.
-“Suppose we go around and see some of the merchants
-and ask them if they’ll support us with advertising?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I agreed, feeling all the while that the whole venture was
-ridiculous, and together we went about among the silent
-stores, talking with conservative men, who represented all that
-was discouraging and wearisome in life. Here they stood all
-day long calculating in pennies and dimes, whereas the city
-merchant counted in hundreds and thousands. It was dispiriting.
-Think of living in a place like this, among such people!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I might give a good paper my support,” said one, a long,
-lean, sanctimonious man who looked as though he had narrow
-notions and a firm determination to rule in his small world.
-“But it’s mighty hard to make a paper that would suit this
-community. We’re religious and hard-working here, and we
-like the things that interest religious and hard-working people.
-Course if it was run right it might pay pretty well, but I
-dunno as ’twould neither. You never can tell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I saw that he would be one hard customer to deal with
-anyhow. If there were many like him—— The poor, thin-blooded,
-calculating world which he represented frightened me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How much advertising do you think you could give to a
-paper that was ‘run’ right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, that depends,” he said gloomily and disinterestedly.
-“I’d have to see how it was run first. Some weeks I might
-give more than others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Michaelson nudged me and we left.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I forgot to tell you,” he said, “that he’s a Baptist and a
-Republican. He’d expect you to run it in favor of those
-institutions if you got his support. But all the men around
-town won’t feel that way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In the dusty back room of a drugstore we found a chemist
-who did not know whether a weekly newspaper was of any
-value to him, and could not contribute more than fifty cents
-a week in advertising if it were. The proprietor of the village
-hotel, a thick-set, red-faced man with the air of a country
-evil-doer, said that he did not see that a local newspaper was
-particularly valuable to him. He might advertise, but it
-would be more as a favor than anything else.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I began to sum up the difficulties of our position. We should
-be handicapped, to begin with, by a wretched printing outfit.
-We should be beholden to a company of small, lean-living,
-narrow men who would take offense at the least show of
-individuality and cut us off entirely from support. We should
-have to busy ourselves gathering trivial items of news, dunning
-hard-working, indifferent farmers for small amounts of money,
-and reduce all our thoughts and ambitions to the measure of
-this narrow world. I saw myself dying by inches. It gave
-me the creeps. Youth and hope were calling.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t see this,” I said to myself. “It’s horrible. I
-should die.” To Michaelson I said: “Suppose we give up
-our canvassing for today?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We might as well,” he replied. “There’s a paper over
-at Bowling Green for sale, and it’s a better paper. We might
-go over in a day or two and look at it. We might as well go
-home now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I agreed, and we turned down a street that led to the road,
-meditating. I knew nothing of my destiny, but I knew that
-it had little to do with this. These great wide fields, many of
-them already sown to wheat under the snow, these hundreds
-of oil or gas-well derricks promising a new source of profit
-to many, the cleanly farmhouses and neatly divided farms
-all appealed to me, but this world was not for me. I was
-thinking of something different, richer, more poignant, less
-worthy possibly, more terrible, more fruitful for the moods
-and the emotions. What could these bleak fields offer? I
-thought of St. Louis, the crowded streets, the vital offices of
-the great papers, their thrashing presses, the hotels, the
-theaters, the trains. What, bury myself here? I thought of
-the East—New York possibly, at least Cleveland, Buffalo,
-Pittsburgh, Philadelphia.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I like the country, but it’s a hard place to make a living,
-isn’t it?” I finally said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” he assented gloomily. “I’ve never been able to
-get anything out of it—but I haven’t done very well in the
-city either.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I sensed the mood of an easily defeated man.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m so used to the noise and bustle of the streets that these
-fields seem lonely,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, but you might get over that in time, don’t you
-think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Never, I thought, but did not say so; instead I said: “That’s
-a beautiful sky, isn’t it?” and he looked blankly to where a
-touch of purple was creeping into the background of red
-and gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>We reached the house at dusk. Going through the gate I
-said: “I don’t see how I can go into this with you, Mich.
-There isn’t enough in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, don’t worry about it any more tonight. I’d rather
-the girl wouldn’t know. We’ll talk it over in the morning.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Disheartening</span> as this village and country life might seem
-as a permanent field of endeavor, it was pleasing enough as
-a spectacle or as the scene of a vacation. Although it was
-late February when I came and there was snow on the
-ground, a warm wind came in a day or two and drove most
-of it away. A full moon rose every night in the east and
-there was a sense of approaching Spring. Before the charming
-old farmhouse flowed the wonderful little Maumee River,
-dimpling over stones and spreading out wide, as though it
-wished to appear much more than it was. There is madness
-in moonlight, and there is madness in that chemical compound
-which is youth. Here in this simple farming region,
-once free of the thought that by any chance I might be compelled
-to remain here, I felt strangely renewed and free as a
-bird, though at the same time there was an undercurrent of
-sadness, not only for myself but for life itself, the lapse and
-decay of things, the impossibility of tasting or knowing more
-than a fraction of the glories and pleasures that are everywhere
-outspread. Although I had not had a vacation in years,
-I was eager to be at work. The greatness of life, its possibilities,
-the astounding dreams of supremacy which might
-come true, were calling to me. I wanted to be on, to find
-what life had in store for me; and yet I wanted to stay here
-for a while.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Mich’s father, as well as his mother and wife, interested me
-intensely, for they were simple, industrious, believing. They
-were good Baptists or Methodists or Presbyterians. The
-grizzled little old farmer who had built up this place or inherited
-a part and added the rest, was exactly like all the
-other farmers I have ever known: genial, kindly, fairly tolerant,
-curious as to the wonders of the world without, full of a
-great faith in America and its destiny, sure that it is the
-greatest country in the world, and that there has never been
-one other like it. That first night at supper, and the next
-morning at breakfast, and all my other days here, the old
-man questioned me as to life, its ways, my beliefs or theories,
-and I am positive that he was delighted to have me there, for
-it was winter and he had little to do besides read his paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The newspaper of largest circulation in this region was the
-<i>Blade</i> of Toledo, which he read assiduously. The mother and
-daughter-in-law did most of the work. The mother was forever
-busy cooking breakfast or dinner, cleaning the rooms,
-milking, making butter and cheese, gathering eggs from a
-nearby hennery. Her large cellar was stocked with jellies,
-preserved fruit, apples, potatoes and other vegetables. There
-was an ample store of bacon, salt pork and beef. I found that
-no fresh meat other than chicken was served, but the meals
-were delightful and plentiful, delicious biscuits and jelly,
-fresh butter, eggs, ham, bacon, salt pork or cured beef, and
-the rarely absent fried chicken, as well as some rabbits which
-Mich shot. During my stay he did nothing but idle about
-the barn, practicing on a cornet which he said had saved his
-lungs at a time when he was threatened with consumption.
-But his playing! I wonder the cure did not prove fatal. I
-noted the intense interest of Mich’s father in what the discovery
-of gas in this region would do for it. He was almost
-certain that all small towns hereabout would now become prosperous
-manufacturing centers. There would be work for all.
-Wages would go up. Many people would soon come here and
-become rich. This of course never came true at all. The flow
-of natural gas soon gave out and the oil strikes were not even
-rivals of some nearby fields.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All this talk was alien to my thoughts. I could not fix my
-interest on trade and what it held in store for anybody. I
-knew it must be so and that America was destined to grow
-materially, but somehow the thing did not interest me. My
-thoughts leaped to the artistic spectacle such material prosperity
-might subsequently present, not to the purely material
-phase of the prosperity itself. Indeed I could never think of
-the work being done in any factory or institution without
-passing from that work to the lives behind it, the crowds of
-commonplace workers, the great streets which they filled, the
-bare homes, and the separate and distinct dramas of their
-individual lives. I was tremendously interested by the rise
-of various captains of industry then already bestriding America,
-their opportunities and pleasures, the ease and skill with
-which they organized “trusts” and combinations, their manipulations
-of the great railroads, oil and coal fields, their control
-of the telegraph and the telephone, their sharp and watchful
-domination of American politics; but only as drama. Grover
-Cleveland was President, and his every deed was paining the
-Republicans quite as much as it was gratifying the Democrats,
-but I could already see that the lot of the underdog varied
-little with the much-heralded changes of administration—and
-it was the underdog that always interested me more than
-the upper one, his needs, his woes, his simplicities. Here, as
-elsewhere, I could see by talking to Mich and his father, men
-became vastly excited, paraded and all but wept over the
-results of one election or another, city, State or national, but
-when all was said and done and America had been “saved,”
-or the Constitution “defended” or “wrecked,” the condition
-of the average man, myself included, was about as it had been
-before.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The few days I spent here represented an interlude between
-an old and a new life. I have always felt that in leaving St.
-Louis I put my youth behind me; that which followed was
-both sobering and broadening. But on this farm, beside this
-charming river, I paused for a few days and took stock of my
-life thus far, and it certainly seemed pointless and unpromising.
-I thought constantly and desperately of my future, the
-uncertainty of it, and yet all the while my eye was fixed not
-upon any really practical solution for me but rather upon
-the pleasures and luxuries of life as enjoyed by others, the
-fine houses, the fine clothes, the privilege of traveling, of
-sharing in the amusements of the rich and the clever. Here I
-was, at the foot of the ladder, with not the least skill for making
-money, compelled to make my way upward as best I
-might, and yet thinking in terms of millions always. However
-much I might earn in journalism, I had sense enough to
-know that it would yield me little or nothing. After some
-thought, I decided that I would move on to some other city,
-where I would get into the newspaper business for a while
-and then see what I should see.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Indeed I never saw Mich but once again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But Toledo. This was my first free and unaided flight into
-the unknown. I found here a city far more agreeable than
-St. Louis, which, being much greater in size, had districts
-which were positively appalling for their poverty and vice;
-whereas here was a city of not quite 100,000, as clean and
-fresh as any city could be. I recall being struck with clean asphalt
-pavements, a canal or waterway in which many lake
-vessels were riding, and houses and stores, frame for the most
-part, which seemed clean if not quite new. The first papers
-I bought, the <i>Blade</i> and the <i>Bee</i>, were full of the usual American
-small city bluster together with columns and columns
-about American politics and business.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Before seeking work I decided to investigate the town. I
-was intensely interested in America and its cities, and wondered,
-in spite of my interest in New York, which I would
-select for my permanent resting-place. When was I to have
-a home of my own? Would it be as pleasing as one of these
-many which here and elsewhere I saw in quiet rows shaded
-by trees, many of them with spacious lawns and suggestive of
-that security and comfort so dear to the mollusc-like human
-heart? For, after security, nothing seems to be so important
-or so desirable to the human organism as rest, or at least ease.
-The one thing that the life force seems to desire to escape is
-work, or at any rate strife. One would think that man had
-been invented against his will by some malign power and was
-being harried along ways and to tasks against which his soul
-revolted and to which his strength was not equal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I walked about the streets of this city my soul panted
-for the seeming comfort and luxury of them. The well-kept
-lawns, the shuttered and laced windows! The wonder of evening
-fires in winter! The open, cool and shadowy doors in
-summer! Swings and hammocks on lawns and porches! The
-luxury of the book and rocker! Somehow in the stress of
-my disturbed youth I had missed most of this.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After a day of looking about the city I applied to the city
-editor of the leading morning paper, and encountered one of
-the intellectual experiences of my life. At the city editorial
-desk in a small and not too comfortable room sat a small
-cherubic individual, with a complexion of milk and cream,
-light brown hair and a serene blue eye, who looked me over
-quizzically, as much as to say: “Look what the latest breeze
-has wafted in.” His attitude was neither antagonistic nor
-welcoming. He was so assured that I half-detected on sight
-the speculative thinker and dreamer. Yet in the rôle of city
-editor in a mid-West manufacturing town one must have an
-air if not the substance of commercial understanding and
-ability, and so my young city editor seemed to breathe a determination
-to be very executive and forceful.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re a St. Louis newspaper man, eh?” he said, eyeing
-me casually. “Never worked in a town of this size, though?
-Well, the conditions are very different. We pay much attention
-to small items—make a good deal out of nothing,” and
-he smiled. “But there isn’t a thing I can see now, nothing
-beyond a three- or four-day job which you wouldn’t want,
-I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“How do you know I wouldn’t?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, I’ll tell you about it. There’s a street-car strike
-on and I could use a man who had nerve enough to ride around
-on the cars the company is attempting to run and report how
-things are. But I’ll tell you frankly: it’s dangerous. You
-may be shot or hit with a brick.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I indicated my willingness to undertake this and he looked
-at me in a mock serious and yet approving way. He took me
-on and I went about the city on one car-line and another,
-studying the strange streets, expecting and fearing every
-moment that a brick might be shied at me through the window
-or that a gang of irate workingmen would board the car and
-beat me up. But nothing happened, not a single threatening
-workman anywhere; I so reported and was told to write it up
-and make as much of the “story” as possible. Without knowing
-anything of the merits of the case, my sympathies were all
-with the workingmen. I had seen enough of strikes, and of
-poverty, and of the quarrels between the money-lords and the
-poor, to be all on one side. As was the custom in all newspaper
-offices with which I ever had anything to do, where
-labor and capital were concerned I was told to be neutral
-and not antagonize either side. I wrote my “story” and it
-was published in the first edition. Then, at the order of this
-same youth, I visited some charity bazaar, where all the important
-paintings owned in the city were being exhibited,
-and wrote an account which was headed, “As in Old Toledo,”
-with all the silly chaff about “gallants and ladies gay,” after
-which I spread my feet under a desk, being interested to talk
-more with the smiling if indifferent youth who had employed
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The opportunity soon came, for apparently he was as much
-interested in me as I in him. He came over after I had submitted
-my second bit of copy and announced that it was entirely
-satisfactory. A man from the composing-room entered
-and commented on the fact that James Whitcomb Riley and
-Eugene Field were billed to lecture in the city soon. I
-remarked that I had once seen Field in the office of the News
-in Chicago, which brought out the fact that my city editor
-had once worked in Chicago, had been a member of the Whitechapel
-Club, knew Field, Finley Peter Dunne, Brand Whitlock,
-Ben King and others. At mention of the magic name
-of Ben King, author of “If I Should Die Tonight” and “Jane
-Jones,” the atmosphere of Chicago of the time of the Whitechapel
-Club and Eugene Field and Ben King returned. At
-once we fell into a varied and gay exchange of intimacies.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It resulted in an enduring and yet stormy and disillusioning
-friendship. If he had been a girl I would have married
-him, of course. It would have been inevitable. We were intellectual
-affinities. Our dreams were practically identical,
-though we approached them from different angles. He was the
-sentimentalist in thought, though the realist in action; I was
-the realist in thought and the sentimentalist in action. He
-took me out to lunch, and we stayed nearly three hours. He
-took me to dinner, and to do so was compelled to call up his
-wife and say he had to stay in town. He had dreams of becoming
-a poet and novelist, I of becoming a playwright. Before
-the second day had gone he had shown me a book of fairy-tales
-and some poems. I became enamored of him, the victim
-of a delightful illusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Because he liked me he wanted me to stay on. There was
-no immediate place, he said, but one might open at any time.
-Having very little money, I could not see my way to that,
-but I did try to get a place on the rival paper. That failing,
-he suggested that although I wander on toward Cleveland
-and Buffalo I stand ready to come back if he telegraphed for
-me. Meanwhile we reveled in that wonderful possession, intellectual
-affection. I thought him wonderful, perfect, great;
-he thought—well, I have heard him tell in after years what
-he thought. Even now at times he fixes me with hungry,
-welcoming eyes.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Whether</span> I should go East or West suddenly became a question
-with me. I had the feeling that I might do better in Detroit
-or some point west of Chicago, only the nearness of such
-cities as Cleveland, Buffalo, Pittsburgh and those farther east
-deterred me; the cost of reaching them was small, and all the
-while I should be moving toward my brother in New York.
-And so, after making inquiry at the office of the <i>Bee</i> for a possible
-opening and finding none, and learning from several
-newspaper men that Detroit was not considered a live journalistic
-town, I decided to travel eastward, and bought a ticket
-to Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Riding in sight of the tumbling waves of Lake Erie, I
-was taken back in thought to my days in Chicago and all those
-who had already dropped out of my life forever. What a queer,
-haphazard, disconnected thing this living was! Where should
-I be tomorrow, what doing—the next year—the year after
-that? Should I ever have any money, any standing, any
-friends? So I tortured myself. Arriving in Cleveland at the
-close of a smoky gray afternoon, I left my bag at the station
-and sought a room, then walked out to see what I should see.
-I knew no one. Not a friend anywhere within five hundred
-miles. My sole resource my little skill as a newspaper worker.
-Buying the afternoon and morning papers, I examined them
-with care, copying down their editorial room addresses, then
-betook me to a small beanery for food.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next morning I was up early, determined to see as much
-as I could, to visit the offices of the afternoon papers before
-noon, then to look in upon the city editors of the two or three
-morning papers. The latter proved not very friendly and
-there appeared to be no opening anywhere. But I determined
-to remain here for a few days studying the city as a city and
-visiting the same editors each day or as often as they would
-endure me. If nothing came of it within a week, and no telegram
-came from my friend H—— in Toledo calling me back, I
-proposed to move on; to which city I had not as yet made up
-my mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The thing that interested me most about Cleveland then
-was that it was so raw, dark, dirty, smoky, and yet possessed
-of one thing: force, raucous, clattering, semi-intelligent force.
-America was then so new industrially, in the furnace stage
-of its existence. Everything was in the making: fortunes, art,
-social and commercial life. The most impressive things were
-its rich men, their homes, factories, clubs, office buildings and
-institutions of commerce and pleasure generally; and this was
-as true of Cleveland as of any other city in America.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Indeed the thing which held my attention, after I had been
-in Cleveland a day or two and had established myself in a
-somber room in a somber neighborhood once occupied by the
-very rich, were those great and new residences in Euclid Avenue,
-with wide lawns and iron or stone statues of stags and
-dogs and deer, which were occupied by such rich men as John
-D. Rockefeller, Tom Johnson, and Henry M. Flagler. Rockefeller
-only a year or two before had given millions to revivify
-the almost defunct University of Chicago, then a small Baptist
-college, and was accordingly being hailed as one of the richest
-men of America. He and his satellites and confreres were
-already casting a luster over Cleveland. They were all living
-here in Euclid Avenue, and I was interested to look up their
-homes, envying them their wealth of course and wishing that
-I were famous or a member of a wealthy family, and that I
-might some day meet one of the beautiful girls I thought must
-be here and have her fall in love with and make me rich.
-Physically or artistically or materially, there was nothing to
-see but business: a few large hotels, like those of every American
-city, and these few great houses. Add a few theaters
-and commonplace churches. All American cities and all the
-inhabitants were busy with but one thing: commerce. They
-ate, drank and slept trade. In my wanderings I found a huge
-steel works and a world of low, smoky, pathetic little hovels
-about it. Although I was not as yet given to reasoning about
-the profound delusion of equality under democracy, this evidence
-of the little brain toiling for the big one struck me
-with great force and produced a good deal of speculative
-thought later on.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The paper with which I was eventually connected was the
-Cleveland <i>Leader</i>, which represented all that was conservative
-in the local life. Wandering into its office on the second or
-third day of my stay, I was met at the desk of the city editor
-by a small, boyish-looking person of a ferret-like countenance,
-who wanted to know what I was after. I told him, and he
-said there was nothing, but on hearing of the papers with
-which I had been connected and the nature of the work I had
-done he suggested that possibly I might be able to do something
-for the Sunday edition. The Sunday editor proved to
-be a tall, melancholy man with sad eyes, a sallow face, sunken
-cheeks, narrow shoulders and a general air of weariness and
-depression.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What is it, now, you want?” he asked slowly, looking up
-from his musty roll-top desk.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Your city editor suggested that possibly you might have
-some Sunday work for me to do. I’ve had experience in this
-line in Chicago and St. Louis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” he said not asking me to sit down. “Well, now,
-what do you think you could write about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This was a poser. Being new to the city I had not thought
-of any particular thing, and could not at this moment. I told
-him this.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“There’s one thing you might write about if you could.
-Did you ever hear of a new-style grain-boat they are putting
-on the Lakes called——”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Turtle-back?” I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Turtle-back?” went on the editor indifferently. “Well,
-there’s one here now in the harbor. It’s the first one to come
-here. Do you think you could get up something on that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I’m sure I could. I’d like to try. Do you use pictures?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You might get a photo or two; we could have drawings
-made from them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I started for the door, eager to be about this, when he said:
-“We don’t pay very much: three dollars a column.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That was discouraging, but I was filled with the joy of
-doing something. On my way out I stopped at the business
-office and bought a copy of the last Sunday issue, which proved
-to be a poor makeshift composed of a half dozen articles on
-local enterprises and illustrated with a few crude drawings.
-I read one or two of them, and then looked up my waterfront
-boat. I found it tied up at a dock adjoining an immense railroad
-yard and near an imposing grain elevator. Finding nobody
-about, I nosed out the bookkeeper of the grain elevator,
-who told me that the captain of the boat had gone to the company’s
-local office in a nearby street. I hastened to the place,
-and there found a bluff old lake captain in blue, short, stout,
-ruddy, coarse, who volunteered, almost with a “Heigh!” and
-a “Ho!” to tell me something about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I think I ought to know a little something about ’em—I
-sailed the first one that was ever sailed out of the port of
-Chicago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I listened with open ears. I caught a disjointed story of
-plans and specifications, Sault Ste. Marie, the pine woods of
-Northern Michigan, the vast grain business of Chicago and
-other lake ports, early navigation on the lakes, the theory of
-a bilge keel and a turtle-back top, and all strung together with
-numerous “y’sees” and “so nows.” I made notes, on backs of
-envelopes, scraps of paper, and finally on a pad furnished me
-by the generous bookkeeper. I carried my notes back to the
-paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Sunday editor was out. I waited patiently until half-past
-four, and then, the light fading, gave up the idea of
-going with a photographer to the boat. I went to a faded
-green baize-covered table and began to write my story. I had
-no sooner done a paragraph or two than the Sunday editor
-returned, bringing with him an atmosphere of lassitude and
-indifference. I went to him to explain what I had done.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, write it up, write it up. We’ll see,” and he turned
-away to his papers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I labored hard at my story, and by seven or eight o’clock
-had ground out two thousand words of description which
-had more of the bluff old captain in it than of the boat. The
-Sunday editor took it when I was through, and shoved it into
-a pigeon-hole, telling me to call in a day or two and he
-would let me know. I thought this strange. It seemed to me
-that if I were working for a Sunday paper I should work every
-day. I called the next day, but Mr. Loomis had not read it.
-The next day he said the story was well enough written, though
-very long. “You don’t want to write so loosely. Stick to
-your facts closer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This day I suggested a subject of my own, “the beauty
-of some of the new suburbs,” but he frowned at this as offering
-a lot of free advertising to real estate men who ought to be
-made to pay. Then I proposed an article on the magnificence
-of Euclid Avenue, which was turned down as old. I then
-spoke of a great steel works which was but then coming into
-the city, but as this offered great opportunity to all the
-papers he thought poorly of it. He compromised a day or
-two later by allowing me to write up a chicken-farm which lay
-outside the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of course this made a poor showing for me at the cashier’s
-desk. At the end of the second week I was allowed to put in a
-bill for seven dollars and a half. I had not realized that I was
-wasting so much time. I appealed to all the editors again for
-a regular staff position, but was told there was no opening.
-It began to look as if I should have to leave Cleveland soon,
-and I wondered where I should go next—Buffalo or Pittsburgh,
-both equally near.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Finding</span> Cleveland hopeless for me, I one day picked up
-and left. Then came Buffalo, which I reached toward the end
-of March. Aside from the Falls I found it a little tame, no
-especial snap to it—not as much as I had felt to be characteristic
-of Cleveland. What interest there was for me I provided
-myself, wandering about in odd drear neighborhoods, about
-grain elevators and soap factories and railroad yards and manufacturing
-districts. Here, as in Cleveland, I could not help
-but see that in spite of our boasted democracy and equality of
-opportunity there was as much misery and squalor and as
-little decent balancing of opportunity against energy as anywhere
-else in the world. The little homes, the poor, shabby,
-colorless, drear, drab little homes with their grassless “yards,”
-their unpaved streets, their uncollected garbage, their fluttering,
-thin-flamed gas-lamps, the crowds of ragged, dirty, ill-cared-for
-children! Near at hand was always the inevitable
-and wretched saloon, not satisfying a need for pleasure in a
-decent way but pandering to the lowest and most conniving
-and most destroying instincts of the lowest politicians and
-heelers and grafters and crooks, while the huge financial and
-manufacturing magnates at the top with their lust for power
-and authority used the very flesh of the weaker elements
-for purposes of their own. It was the saloon, not liquor,
-which brought about the prohibition folly. I used to listen,
-as a part of my reportorial duties, to the blatherings of thin-minded,
-thin-blooded, thin-experienced religionists as well
-as to those of kept editorial writers, about the merits and blessings
-and opportunities of our noble and bounteous land; but
-whenever I encountered such regions as this I knew well
-enough that there was something wrong with their noble
-maunderings. Shout as they might, there was here displayed
-before my very eyes ample evidence that somewhere there
-was a screw loose in the “Fatherhood of Man—Brotherhood
-of God” machinery.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After I had placed myself in a commonplace neighborhood
-near the business center, I canvassed the newspaper offices
-and their editors. Although I had in my pocket that letter
-from the publisher of the St. Louis <i>Republic</i> extolling my
-virtues as a reporter and correspondent, so truly vagrom
-was my mood and practical judgment that I did not present it
-to any one. Instead I merely mooned into one office after
-another (there were only four papers here), convinced before
-entering that I should not get anything—and I did not. One
-young city editor, seeming to take at least an interest in me,
-assured me that if I would remain in Buffalo for six weeks
-he could place me; but since I had not enough money to sustain
-myself so long I decided not to wait. Ten days spent in
-reconnoitering these offices daily, and I concluded that it was
-useless to remain longer. Yet before I went I determined to
-see at least one thing more: the Falls.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Therefore one day I traveled by trolley to Niagara and
-looked at that tumbling flood, then not chained or drained by
-turbine water-power sluices. I was impressed, but not quite
-so much as I had thought I should be. Standing out on a
-rock near the greatest volume of water under a gray sky, I
-was awed by the downpour and then became dizzy and felt as
-though I were being carried along whether I would or not.
-Farther upstream I stared at the water as it gathered force
-and speed, wondering how I should feel if I were in a small
-canoe and fighting it for my life. Behind the falls were
-great stalagmites and stalactites of ice and snow still standing
-from the cold of weeks before. I recalled that Blondel,
-a famous French swimmer of his day, had ten years before
-swum these fierce and angry waters below the Falls. I wondered
-how he had done it, so wildly did they leap, huge wheels
-of water going round and round and whitecaps leaping and
-spitting and striking at each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I returned to Buffalo I congratulated myself that if
-I had got nothing else out of my visit to Buffalo, at least I
-had gained this.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I now</span> decided that Pittsburgh would be as good a field as
-any, and one morning seeing a sign outside a cut-rate ticket-broker’s
-window reading “Pittsburgh, $5.75,” I bought a
-ticket, returned to my small room to pack my bag, and departed.
-I arrived at Pittsburgh at six or seven that same evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of all the cities in which I ever worked or lived Pittsburgh
-was the most agreeable. Perhaps it was due to the fact that
-my stay included only spring, summer and fall, or that I
-found a peculiarly easy newspaper atmosphere, or that the
-city was so different physically from any I had thus far seen;
-but whether owing to one thing or another certainly no other
-newspaper work I ever did seemed so pleasant, no other city
-more interesting. What a city for a realist to work and dream
-in! The wonder to me is that it has not produced a score of
-writers, poets, painters and sculptors, instead of—well, how
-many? And who are they?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I came down to it through the brown-blue mountains of
-Western Pennsylvania, and all day long we had been winding
-at the base of one or another of them, following the bed of a
-stream or turning out into a broad smooth valley, crossing
-directly at the center of it, or climbing some low ridge with
-a puff-puff-puff and then clattering almost recklessly down
-the other slope. I had never before seen any mountains. The
-sight of sooty-faced miners at certain places, their little oil
-and tow tin lamps fastened to their hats, their tin dinner-pails
-on their arms, impressed me as something new and
-faintly reminiscent of the one or two small coal mines about
-Sullivan, Indiana, where I had lived when I was a boy of
-seven. Along the way I saw a heavy-faced and heavy-bodied
-type of peasant woman, with a black or brown or blue or
-green skirt and a waist of a contrasting color, a headcloth
-or neckerchief of still another, trailed by a few children of
-equally solid proportions, hanging up clothes or doing something
-else about their miserable places. These were the much-maligned
-hunkies just then being imported by the large
-manufacturing and mining and steel-making industries of
-the country to take the place of the restless and less docile
-American working man and woman. I marveled at their
-appearance and number, and assumed, American-fashion, that
-in their far-off and unhappy lands they had heard of the
-wonderful American Constitution, its guaranty of life, liberty
-and the pursuit of happiness, as well as of the bounteous opportunities
-afforded by this great land, and that they had
-forsaken their miseries to come all this distance to enjoy these
-greater blessings.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did not then know of the manufacturers’ foreign labor
-agent with his lying propaganda among ignorant and often
-fairly contented peasants, painting America as a country rolling
-in wealth and opportunity, and then bringing them here
-to take the places of more restless and greatly underpaid
-foreigners who, having been brought over by the same gay pictures,
-were becoming irritated and demanded more pay. I
-did not then know of the padrone, the labor spy, the company
-store, five cents an hour for breaker children, the company
-stockade, all in full operation at this time. All I knew was
-that there had been a great steel strike in Pittsburgh recently,
-that Andrew Carnegie, as well as other steel manufacturers
-(the Olivers, for one), had built fences and strung them
-with electrified barbed wire in order to protect themselves
-against the “lawless” attacks of “lawless” workingmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I also knew that a large number of State or county or city
-paid deputy sheriffs and mounted police and city policemen
-had been sworn in and set to guarding the company’s property
-and that H. C. Frick, a leading steel manager for Mr.
-Carnegie, had been slightly wounded by a desperado named
-Alexander Berkman, who was inflaming these workingmen, all
-foreigners of course, lawless and unappreciative of the great
-and prosperous steel company which was paying them reasonable
-wages and against which they had no honest complaint.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Our mid-Western papers, up to the day of Cleveland’s election
-in 1892 and for some time after, had been full of the
-merits of this labor dispute, with long and didactic editorials,
-intended in the main to prove that the workingman was not
-so greatly underpaid, considering the type of labor he performed
-and the intelligence he brought to his task; that the
-public was not in the main vastly interested in labor disputes,
-both parties to the dispute being unduly selfish; that it would
-be a severe blow to the prosperity of the country if labor disputes
-were too long continued; that unless labor was reasonable
-in its demands capital would become disheartened and
-leave the country. I had not made up my mind that the
-argument was all on one side, although I knew that the average
-man in America, despite its great and boundless opportunities,
-was about as much put upon and kicked about and
-underpaid as any other. This growing labor problem or the
-general American dissatisfaction with poor returns upon
-efforts made crystallized three years later in the Free Silver
-campaign and the “gold parades.” The “full dinner-pail”
-was then invented as a slogan to counteract the vast economic
-unrest, and the threat to close down and so bring misery to
-the entire country unless William McKinley was elected was
-also freely posted. Henry George, Father McGlynn, Herr
-Most, Emma Goldman, and a score of others were abroad
-voicing the woes of hundreds of thousands who were supposed
-to have no woes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At that time, as I see it now, America was just entering
-upon the most lurid phase of that vast, splendid, most lawless
-and most savage period in which the great financiers were
-plotting and conniving at the enslavement of the people and
-belaboring each other. Those crude parvenu dynasties which
-now sit enthroned in our democracy, threatening its very life
-with their pretensions and assumptions, were then in their
-very beginning. John D. Rockefeller was still in Cleveland;
-Flagler, William Rockefeller, H. H. Rogers, were still comparatively
-young and secret agents; Carnegie was still in
-Pittsburgh, an iron master, and of all his brood of powerful
-children only Frick had appeared; William H. Vanderbilt
-and Jay Gould had only recently died; Cleveland was President,
-and Mark Hanna was an unknown business man in
-Cleveland. The great struggles of the railroads, the coal
-companies, the gas companies, to overawe and tax the people
-were still in abeyance, or just being born. The multi-millionaire
-had arrived, it is true, but not the billionaire. On every
-hand were giants plotting, fighting, dreaming; and yet in
-Pittsburgh there was still something of a singing spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I arrived here and came out of the railway station,
-which was directly across the Monongahela River from the
-business center, I was impressed by the huge walls of hills
-that arose on every hand, a great black sheer ridge rising to
-a height of five or six hundred feet to my right and enclosing
-this river, on the bosom of which lay steamboats of good size.
-From the station a pleasingly designed bridge of fair size led
-to the city beyond, and across it trundled in unbroken lines
-street-cars and wagons and buggies of all sizes and descriptions.
-The city itself was already smartly outlined by lights,
-a galaxy climbing the hills in every direction, and below me as
-I walked out upon this bridge was an agate stream reflecting
-the lights from either shore. Below this was another bridge,
-and upstream another. The whole river for a mile or more
-was suddenly lit to a rosy glow, a glow which, as I saw upon
-turning, came from the tops of some forty or fifty stacks
-belching a deep orange-red flame. At the same time an enormous
-pounding and crackling came from somewhere, as though
-titans were at work upon subterranean anvils. I stared and
-admired. I felt that I was truly adventuring into a new and
-strange world. I was glad now that I had not found work in
-Toledo or Cleveland or Buffalo.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The city beyond the river proved as interesting as the river
-cliffs and forges about the station. As I walked along I discovered
-the name of the street (Smithfield), which began at
-the bridge’s end and was lined with buildings of not more
-than three or four stories although it was one of the principal
-streets of the business center. At the bridge-head on the city
-side stood a large smoke-colored stone building, which later
-I discovered was the principal hotel, the Monongahela, and
-beyond that was a most attractive and unusual postoffice building.
-I came to a cross street finally (Fifth Avenue), brightly
-lighted and carrying unusual traffic, and turned into it. I
-found this central region to be most puzzlingly laid out, and
-did not attempt to solve its mysteries. Instead, I entered
-a modest restaurant in a side street. Later I hunted up a
-small hotel, where I paid a dollar for a room for the night. I
-retired, speculating as to how I should make out here. Something
-about the city drew me intensely. I wished I might
-remain for a time. The next morning I was up bright and
-early to look up the morning papers and find out the names of
-the afternoon papers. I found that there were four: the
-<i>Dispatch</i> and <i>Times</i>, morning papers, and the <span class='sc'>Gazette-Telegraph</span>
-and <i>Leader</i>, afternoon. I thought them most interesting
-and different from those of other cities in which I had
-worked.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Andy Pastor had his right hand lacerated while at work in the
-23-inch mill yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“John Kristoff had his right wrist sprained while at work in the
-140-inch mill yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Joseph Novic is suffering from contused wounds of the left wrist
-received while at work in the 23-inch mill yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“A train of hot metal, being hauled from a mixing-house to open
-hearth No. 2, was side-swiped by a yard engine near the 48-inch mill.
-The impact tilted the ladles of some of the cars and the hot metal
-spilled in a pool of water along the track. Antony Brosak, Constantine
-Czernik and Kafros Maskar were seriously wounded by the exploding
-metal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Such items arrested my attention at once; and then such
-names as Squirrel Hill, Sawmill Run, Moon Run, Hazelwood,
-Wind Gap Road, Braddock, McKeesport, Homestead, Swissvale,
-somehow made me wish to know more of this region.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The <i>Dispatch</i> was Republican, the <i>Times</i> Democratic. Both
-were evidently edited with much conservatism as to local news.
-I made haste to visit the afternoon newspaper offices, only to
-discover that they were fully equipped with writers. I then
-proceeded in search of a room and finally found one in Wylie
-Avenue, a curious street that climbed a hill to its top and
-then stopped. Here, almost at the top of this hill, in an old
-yellow stonefront house the rear rooms of which commanded
-a long and deep canyon or “run,” I took a room for a week.
-The family of this house rented rooms to several others, clerks
-who looked and proved to be a genial sort, holding a kind of
-court on the front steps of an evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I now turned to the morning papers, going first to the
-<i>Times</i>, which had its offices in a handsome building, one of the
-two or three high office buildings in the city. The city editor
-received me graciously but could promise nothing. At the
-<i>Dispatch</i>, which was published in a three-story building at
-Smithfield and Diamond streets, I found a man who expressed
-much more interest. He was a slender, soft-spoken, one-handed
-man. On very short acquaintance I found him to be
-shrewd and canny, gracious always, exceedingly reticent and
-uncommunicative and an excellent judge of news, and plainly
-holding his job not so much by reason of what he put into his
-paper as by what he kept out of it. He wanted to know where
-I had worked before I came to Pittsburgh, whether I had been
-connected with any paper here, whether I had ever done
-feature stuff. I described my experiences as nearly as I could,
-and finally he said that there was nothing now but he was
-expecting a vacancy to occur soon. If I could come around in
-the course of a week or ten days (I drooped sadly)—well,
-then, in three or four days, he thought he might do something
-for me. The salary would not be more than eighteen the week.
-My spirits fell at that, but his manner was so agreeable and
-his hope for me so keen that I felt greatly encouraged and
-told him I would wait a few days anyhow. My friend in
-Toledo had promised me that he would wire me at the first
-opening, and I was now expecting some word from him. This
-I told to this city editor, and he said: “Well, you might wait
-until you hear from him anyhow.” A thought of my possible
-lean purse did not seem to occur to him, and I marveled at the
-casual manner in which he assumed that I could wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thereafter I roamed the city and its environs, and to my
-delight found it to be one of the most curious and fascinating
-places I had ever seen. From a stationery store I first secured
-a map and figured out the lay of the town. At a glance I
-saw that the greater part of it stretched eastward along the
-tongue of land that was between the Allegheny and the
-Monongahela, and that this was Pittsburgh proper. Across
-the Allegheny, on the north side, was the city of Allegheny,
-an individual municipality but so completely connected with
-Pittsburgh as to be identical with it, and connected with it
-by many bridges. Across the Monongahela, on the south side,
-were various towns: Mt. Washington, Duquesne, Homestead.
-I was interested especially in Homestead because of the long
-and bitter contest between the steel-workers and the Carnegie
-Company, which for six months and more in 1892 had occupied
-space on the front page of every newspaper in America.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Having studied my map I explored, going first across the
-river into Allegheny. Here I found a city built about the base
-of high granite hills or between ridges in hollows called
-“gaps” or “runs” with a street or car-line clambering and
-twisting directly over them. A charming park and boulevard
-system had been laid out, with the city hall, a public market
-and a Carnegie public library as a center. The place had large
-dry-goods and business houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On another day I crossed to the south side and ascended by
-an inclined plane, such as later I discovered to be one of the
-transportation features of Pittsburgh, the hill called Mt.
-Washington, from the top of which, walking along an avenue
-called Grand View Boulevard which skirted the brow of the
-hill, I had the finest view of a city I have ever seen. In
-later years I looked down upon New York from the heights of
-the Palisades and the hills of Staten Island; on Rome from
-the Pincian Gardens; on Florence from San Miniato; and on
-Pasadena and Los Angeles from the slopes of Mt. Lowe; but
-never anywhere have I seen a scene which impressed me more
-than this: the rugged beauty of the mountains, which encircle
-the city, the three rivers that run as threads of bright metal,
-dividing it into three parts, the several cities joined as one,
-their clambering streets presenting a checkered pattern emphasized
-here and there by the soot-darkened spires of
-churches and the walls of the taller and newer and cleaner
-office buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As in most American cities of any size, the skyscraper was
-just being introduced and being welcomed as full proof of the
-growth and wealth and force of the city. No city was complete
-without at least one: the more, of course, the grander.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Pittsburgh had a better claim to the skyscraper as a commercial
-necessity than any other American city that I know.
-The tongue of land which lies between the Allegheny and the
-Monongahela, very likely not more than two or three square
-miles in extent, is still the natural heart of the commercial
-life for fifty, a hundred miles about. Here meet the three
-large rivers, all navigable. Here, again, the natural runs and
-gaps of the various hills about, as well as the levels which
-pursue the banks of the streams and which are the natural
-vents or routes for railroad lines, street-cars and streets, come
-to a common center. Whether by bridges from Allegheny,
-the south bank of the Ohio or the Monongahela, or along the
-shores of the Allegheny or Monongahela within the city of
-Pittsburgh itself, all meet somewhere in this level tongue;
-and here, of necessity, is the business center. So without the
-tall building, I cannot see how one-tenth of the business which
-would and should be normally transacted here would ever
-come about.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Barring</span> two or three tall buildings, the city of Pittsburgh
-was then of a simple and homelike aspect. A few blackened
-church spires, a small dark city hall and an old market-place,
-a long stretch of blast furnaces, black as night, and the lightly
-constructed bridges over the rivers, gave it all an airy grace
-and charm.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Since the houses up here were very simple, mostly working-men’s
-cottages, and the streets back followed the crests of hills
-twisting and winding as they went and providing in consequence
-the most startling and effective views of green hills
-and mountains beyond, I decided that should I be so fortunate
-as to secure work I would move over here. It would be like
-living in a mountain resort, and most inexpensively.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I descended and took a car which followed the Monongahela
-upstream to Homestead, and here for the first time had
-a view of that enormous steel plant which only recently (June
-to December, 1892) had played such a great part in the industrial
-drama of America. The details of the quarrel were fairly
-fresh in my mind: how the Carnegie Steel Company had
-planned, with the technicalities of a wage-scale readjustment
-as an excuse, to break the power of the Amalgamated Steel
-Workers, who were becoming too forceful and who were best
-organized in their plant, and how the Amalgamated, resenting
-the introduction of three hundred Pinkerton guards to
-“protect” the plant, had attacked them, killing several and
-injuring others, and so permitting the introduction of the
-State militia, which speedily and permanently broke the power
-of the strikers. They could only wait then and starve, and
-so they had waited and starved for six months, when they
-finally returned to work, such of them as would be received.
-When I reached there in April, 1894, the battle was already
-fifteen months past, but the feeling was still alive. I did not
-then know what it was about this town of Homestead that
-was so depressing, but in the six months of my stay here I
-found that it was a compound of a sense of defeat and sullen
-despair. The men had not forgotten. Even then the company
-was busy, and had been for months, importing Poles, Hungarians,
-Lithuanians, to take the places of the ousted strikers.
-Whole colonies were already here, housed under the most
-unsatisfactory conditions, and more were coming. Hence the
-despair of those who had been defeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Along the river sprawled for a quarter of a mile or more
-the huge low length of the furnaces, great black bottle-like
-affairs with rows of stacks and long low sheds or buildings
-paralleling them, sheds from which came a continuous hammering
-and sputtering and the glow of red fire. The whole
-was shrouded by a pall of gray smoke, even in the bright sunshine.
-Above the plant, on a slope which rose steeply behind
-it, were a few moderately attractive dwellings grouped about
-two small parks, the trees of which were languishing for want
-of air. Behind and to the sides of these were the spires of
-several churches, those soporifics against failure and despair.
-Turning up side streets one found, invariably, uniform frame
-houses, closely built and dulled by smoke and grime, and below,
-on the flats behind the mill, were cluttered alleys so
-unsightly and unsanitary as to shock me into the belief that
-I was once more witnessing the lowest phases of Chicago slum-life,
-the worst I had ever seen. The streets were mere mud-tracks.
-Where there were trees (and there were few) they
-were dwarfed and their foliage withered by a metallic fume
-which was over all. Though the sun was bright at the top of
-the hill, down here it was gray, almost cloudy, at best a filtered
-dull gold haze.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The place held me until night. I browsed about its saloons,
-of which there was a large number, most of them idle during
-the drift of the afternoon. The open gates of the mill held
-my interest also, for through them I could see furnaces, huge
-cranes, switching engines, cars of molten iron being hauled
-to and fro, and mountains of powdered iron ore and scrap
-iron piled here and there awaiting the hour of new birth in
-the smelting vats. When the sun had gone down, and I had
-watched a shift of men coming out with their buckets and
-coats over their arms, and other hundreds entering in a rush,
-I returned to the city with a sense of the weight and breadth
-and depth of huge effort. Here bridges and rail and plate
-steel were made for all the world. But of all these units that
-dwelt and labored here scarce a fraction seemed even to sense
-a portion of the meaning of all they did. I knew that Carnegie
-had become a multi-millionaire, as had Phipps and
-others, and that he was beginning to give libraries, that Phipps
-had already given several floral conservatories, and that their
-“lobbies” in Congress were even then bartering for the
-patronage of the government on their terms; but the poor
-units in these hovels at Homestead—what did they know?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On another day I explored the east end of Pittsburgh,
-which was the exclusive residence section of the city and a
-contrast to such hovels and deprivations as I had witnessed
-at Homestead and among the shacks across the Monongahela
-and below Mt. Washington. Never in my life, neither before
-nor since, in New York, Chicago or elsewhere, was the vast
-gap which divides the rich from the poor in America so vividly
-and forcefully brought home to me. I had seen on my map a
-park called Schenley, and thinking that it might be interesting
-I made my way out a main thoroughfare called (quite
-appropriately, I think) Fifth Avenue, lined with some of the
-finest residences of the city. Never did the mere possession
-of wealth impress me so keenly. Here were homes of the most
-imposing character, huge, verandaed, tree-shaded, with immense
-lawns, great stone or iron or hedge fences and formal
-gardens and walks of a most ornate character. It was a region
-of well-curbed, well-drained and well-paved thoroughfares.
-Even the street-lamps were of a better design than elsewhere,
-so eager was a young and democratic municipality to see that
-superior living conditions were provided for the rich. There
-were avenues lined with well-cropped trees, and at every turn
-one encountered expensive carriages, their horses jingling
-silver or gold-gilt harness, their front seats occupied by one
-or two footmen in livery, while reclining was Madam or Sir,
-or both, gazing condescendingly upon the all too comfortable
-world about them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In Schenley Park was a huge and interesting arboretum or
-botanical garden under glass, a most oriental affair given by
-Phipps of the Carnegie Company. A large graceful library
-of white limestone, perhaps four or five times the size of the
-one in Allegheny, given by Andrew Carnegie, was in process
-of construction. And he was another of the chief beneficiaries
-of Homestead, the possessor of a great house in this region,
-another in New York and still another in Scotland, a man for
-whom the unwitting “Pinkertons” and contending strikers
-had been killed. Like huge ribbons of fire these and other
-names of powerful steel men—the Olivers, Thaws, Fricks,
-Thompsons—seemed to rise and band the sky. It seemed
-astonishing to me that some men could thus rise and soar
-about the heavens like eagles, while others, drab sparrows all,
-could only pick among the offal of the hot ways below. What
-were these things called democracy and equality about which
-men prated? Had they any basis in fact? There was constant
-palaver about the equality of opportunity which gave such
-men as these their chance, but I could not help speculating as
-to the lack of equality of opportunity these men created for
-others once their equality at the top had made them. If
-equality of opportunity had been so excellent for them why
-not for others, especially those in their immediate care? True,
-all men had not the brains to seize upon and make use of that
-which was put before them, but again, not all men of brains
-had the blessing of opportunity as had these few men.
-Strength, as I felt, should not be too arrogant or too forgetful
-of the accident or chance by which it had arrived. It might
-do something for the poor—pay them decent living wages, for
-instance. Were these giants planning to subject their sons
-and daughters to the same “equality of opportunity” which
-had confronted them at the start and which they were so
-eager to recommend to the attention of others? Not at all.
-In this very neighborhood I passed an exclusive private
-school for girls, with great grounds and a beautiful wall—another
-sample of equality of opportunity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On the fourth day of my stay here I called again at the
-<i>Dispatch</i> office and was given a position, but only after the
-arrival of a telegram from Toledo offering me work at eighteen
-a week. Now I had long since passed out of the eighteen-dollar
-stage of reporting, and this was by no means a comforting
-message. If I could show it to the <i>Dispatch</i> city editor, I
-reasoned, it would probably hasten his decision to accept me,
-but also he might consider eighteen dollars as a rate of pay
-acceptable to me and would offer no more. I decided not to
-use it just then but to go first and see if anything had come
-about in my favor.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nothing yet,” he said on seeing me. “Drop around tomorrow
-or Saturday. I’m sure to know then one way or
-the other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went out and in the doorway below stood and meditated.
-What was I to do? If I delayed too long my friend in Toledo
-would not be able to do anything for me, and if I showed this
-message it would fix my salary at a place below that which
-I felt I deserved. I finally hit upon the idea of changing the
-eighteen to twenty-five and went to a telegraph office to find
-some girl to rewrite it for me. Not seeing a girl I would be
-willing to approach, I worked over it myself, carefully erasing
-and changing until the twenty-five, while a little forced and
-scraggly, looked fairly natural. With this in my pocket I
-returned to the <i>Dispatch</i> this same afternoon, and told the city
-editor with as great an air of assurance as I could achieve that
-I had just received this message and was a little uncertain as
-to what to do about it. “The fact is,” I said, “I have started
-from the West to go East. New York is my eventual goal,
-unless I find a good place this side of it. But I’m up against
-it now and unless I can do something here I might as well
-go back there for the present. I wouldn’t show you this except
-that I must answer it tonight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He read it and looked at me uncertainly. Finally he got up,
-told me to wait a minute, and went through a nearby door.
-In a minute or two he returned and said: “Well, that’s all
-right. We can do as well as that, anyhow, if you want to stay
-at that rate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“All right,” I replied as nonchalantly as I could. “When
-do I start?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Come around tomorrow at twelve. I may not have anything
-for you, but I’ll carry you for a day or two until I
-have.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I trotted down the nearby steps as fast as my feet would
-carry me, anxious to get out of his sight so that I might
-congratulate myself freely. I hurried to a telegraph office to
-reject my friend’s offer. To celebrate my cleverness and success
-I indulged in a good meal at one of the best restaurants.
-Here I sat, and to prepare myself for my work examined that
-day’s <i>Dispatch</i>, as well as the other papers, with a view to
-unraveling their method of treating a feature or a striking
-piece of news, also to discover what they considered a feature.
-By nine or ten I had solved that mystery as well as I could,
-and then to quiet my excited nerves I walked about the business
-section, finally crossing to Mt. Washington so as to view
-the lighted city at night from this great height. It was
-radiantly clear up there, and a young moon shining, and I
-had the pleasure of looking down upon as wonderful a night
-panorama as I have ever seen, a winking and fluttering field
-of diamonds that outrivaled the sky itself. As far as the eye
-could see were these lamps blinking and winking, and overhead
-was another glistering field of stars. Below was that
-enormous group of stacks with their red tongues waving in the
-wind. Far up the Monongahela, where lay Homestead and
-McKeesport and Braddock and Swissvale, other glows of red
-fire indicated where huge furnaces were blazing and boiling
-in the night. I thought of the nest of slums I had seen at
-Homestead, of those fine houses in the east end, and of Carnegie
-with his libraries, of Phipps with his glass conservatories.
-How to get up in the world and be somebody was my
-own thought now, and yet I knew that wealth was not for me.
-The best I should ever do was to think and dream, standing
-aloof as a spectator.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The next day I began work on the <i>Dispatch</i> and for six
-months was a part of it, beginning with ordinary news reporting,
-but gradually taking up the task of preparing original
-column features, first for the daily and later for the
-Sunday issue. Still later, not long before I left, I was by way
-of being an unpaid assistant to the dramatic editor, and a
-traveling correspondent.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>What impressed me most was the peculiar character of the
-city and the newspaper world here, the more or less somnolent
-nature of its population (apart from the steel companies and
-their employees) and the genial and sociable character of the
-newspaper men. Never had I encountered more intelligent or
-helpful or companionable albeit cynical men than I found
-here. They knew the world, and their opportunities for
-studying public as well as private impulses and desires and
-contrasting them with public and private performances were
-so great as to make them puzzled if not always accurate judges
-of affairs and events. One can always talk to a newspaper
-man, I think, with the full confidence that one is talking to
-a man who is at least free of moralistic mush. Nearly everything
-in connection with those trashy romances of justice,
-truth, mercy, patriotism, public profession of all sorts, is already
-and forever gone if they have been in the business for
-any length of time. The religionist is seen by them for what
-he is: a swallower of romance or a masquerader looking to
-profit and preferment. Of the politician, they know or believe
-but one thing: that he is out for himself, a trickster artfully
-juggling with the moods and passions and ignorance of the
-public. Judges are men who have by some chance or other
-secured good positions and are careful to trim their sails
-according to the moods and passions of the strongest element
-in any community or nation in which they chance to be. The
-arts are in the main to be respected, when they are not frankly
-confessed to be enigmas.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In a very little while I came to be on friendly terms with
-the men of this and some other papers, men who, because of
-their intimate contact with local political and social conditions,
-were well fitted to enlighten me as to the exact economic
-and political conditions here. Two in particular, the political
-and labor men of this paper were most helpful. The former,
-a large, genial, commercial-drummer type, who might also
-have made an excellent theatrical manager or promoter, provided
-me with a clear insight into the general cleavage of
-local and State politics and personalities. I liked him very
-much. The other, the labor man, was a slow, silent, dark,
-square-shouldered and almost square-headed youth, who
-drifted in and out of the office irregularly. He it was who
-attended, when permitted by the working people themselves,
-all labor meetings in the city or elsewhere, as far east at
-times as the hard coal regions about Wilkes-Barre and Scranton.
-As he himself told me, he was the paper’s sole authority
-for such comments or assertions as it dared to make in connection
-with the mining of coal and the manufacture of steel.
-He was an intense sympathizer with labor, but not so much
-with organized as with unorganized workers. He believed
-that labor here had two years before lost a most important
-battle, one which would show in its contests with money
-in the future: which was true. He pretended to know
-that there was a vast movement on foot among the moneyed
-elements in America to cripple if not utterly destroy organized
-labor, and to that end he assured me once that all the
-great steel and coal and oil magnates were in a conspiracy to
-flood the country with cheap foreign labor, which they had
-lured or were luring here by all sorts of dishonest devices;
-once here, these immigrants were to be used to break the
-demand of better-paid and more intelligent labor. He pretended
-to know that in the coal and steel regions thousands
-had already been introduced and more were on their way,
-and that all such devices as showy churches and schools for
-defectives, etc., were used to keep ignorant and tame those
-already here.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But you can’t say anything about it in Pittsburgh,” he
-said to me. “If I should talk I’d have to get out of here.
-The papers here won’t use a thing unfavorable to the magnates
-in any of these fields. I write all sorts of things, but
-they never get in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He read the <i>Congressional Record</i> daily, as well as various
-radical papers from different parts of the country, and was
-constantly calling my attention to statistics and incidents
-which proved that the workingman was being most unjustly
-put upon and undermined; but he never did it in any urgent
-or disturbed manner. Rather, he seemed to be profoundly convinced
-that the cause of the workers everywhere in America
-was hopeless. They hadn’t the subtlety and the force and
-the innate cruelty of those who ruled them. They were given
-to religious and educational illusions, the parochial school
-and church paper, which left them helpless. In the course of
-time, because I expressed interest in and sympathy for these
-people, he took me into various mill slums in and near the city
-to see how they lived.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>I went</span> with him first to Homestead, then to some tenements
-there, later to some other mill districts nearer Pittsburgh, the
-name of which I have forgotten. What astonished me, in so
-far as the steel mills were concerned, was the large number of
-furnaces going at once, the piles, mountains, of powdered iron
-ore ready to be smelted, the long lines of cars, flat, box and
-coal cars, and the nature and size and force of the machinery
-used to roll steel. The work, as he or his friends the bosses
-showed me, was divided between the “front” and the “back.”
-Those working at the front of the furnace took care of the
-molten ore and slag which was being “puddled.” The men
-at the back, the stock and yard men, filled huge steel buckets
-or “skips” suspended from traveling cranes with ore, fuel
-and limestone, all of which was piled near at hand; this
-material was then trundled to a point over the mouth of the
-melting-vats, as they were called, and “released” via a movable
-bottom. At this particular plant I was told that the
-machinery for handling all this was better than elsewhere, the
-company being richer and more progressive. In some of the
-less progressive concerns the men filled carts with raw material
-and then trundled them around to the front of a hoist,
-which was at the back of the furnace, where they were lifted
-and dumped into the furnaces. But in this mill all a man
-had to do to fill a steel bucket with raw material was to push
-one of those steel buckets suspended from a trolley under a
-chute and pull a rod, when the “stock” tumbled into it.
-From these it was trundled, by machinery, to a point over the
-furnace. The furnaces were charged or fed constantly by
-feeders working in twelve-hour shifts, so that there was little
-chance to rest from their labors. Their pay was not more than
-half of that paid to the men at the “front” because it was
-neither so hard nor so skillful, although it looked hard
-enough to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The men at the front, the puddlers, were the labor princes
-of this realm and yet among the hardest worked. A puddling
-or blast furnace was a brick structure like an oven, about seven
-feet high and six feet square, with two compartments, one a
-receptacle into which pigiron was thrown, the other a fuel
-chamber where the melting heat was generated. The drafts
-were so arranged that the flame swept from the fuel chamber
-directly upon the surface of the iron. From five to six hundred
-pounds of pigiron were put into each furnace at one
-time, after which it was closed and sufficient heat applied to
-melt down the iron. Then the puddler began to work it with
-an iron rod through a hole in the furnace door, so as to stir
-up the liquid and bring it in contact with the air. As the impurities
-became separated from the iron and rose to the top
-as slag, they were tipped out through a center notch. As it
-became freer from impurities, a constantly higher temperature
-was required to keep the iron in a liquid condition.
-Gradually it began to solidify in granules, much as butter
-forms in churning. Later it took on or was worked into
-large malleable balls or lumps or rolls like butter, three to
-any given “charge” or furnace. Then, while still in a comparatively
-soft but not molten condition, these were taken
-out and thrown across a steel floor to a “taker” to be worked
-by other machinery and other processes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Puddling was a full-sized man’s job. There were always
-two, and sometimes three, to a single furnace, and they took
-turns at working the metal, as a rule ten minutes to a turn.
-No man could stand before a furnace and perform that back-breaking
-toil continually. Even when working by spells a
-man was often nearly exhausted at the end of his spell. As a
-rule he had to go outside and sit on a bench, the perspiration
-running off him. The intensity of the heat in those days
-(1893) was not as yet relieved by the device of shielding the
-furnace with water-cooled plates. The wages of these men
-was in the neighborhood of three dollars a day, the highest
-then paid. Before the great strike it had been more.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the men who most fascinated me were the “roughers”
-who, once the puddler had done his work and thrown his lump
-of red-hot iron out upon an open hearth, and another man
-had taken it and thrown it to a “rougher,” fed it into a second
-machine which rolled or beat it into a more easily handled
-and workable form. The exact details of the process escape
-me now, but I remember the picture they presented in those
-hot, fire-lighted, noisy and sputtering rooms. Agility and
-even youth were at a premium, and a false step possibly meant
-death. I remember watching two men in the mill below Mt.
-Washington, one who pulled out billet after billet from
-furnace after furnace and threw them along the steel floor to
-the “rougher,” and the latter, who, dressed only in trousers
-and a sleeveless flannel shirt, the sweat pouring from his body
-and his muscles standing out in knots, took these same and,
-with the skill and agility of a tight-rope performer, tossed
-them into the machine. He was constantly leaping about
-thrusting the red billets which came almost in a stream into
-or between the first pair of rolls for which they were intended.
-And yet before he could turn back there was always another
-on the floor behind him. The rolls into which he fed these
-billets were built in a train, side by side in line, and as they
-went through one pair they had to be seized by a “catcher”
-and shoved back through the next. Back and forth, back and
-forth they went at an ever increasing speed, until the catcher
-at the next to the last pair of rolls, seizing the end of the rod
-as it came through, still red-hot, described with it a fiery
-circle bending it back again to enter the last roll, from which
-it passed into water. It was wonderful.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet these men were not looked upon as anything extraordinary.
-While the places in which they worked were
-metal infernos and their toil of the most intense and exacting
-character, they were not allowed to organize to better their
-condition. The recent great victory of the steel magnates had
-settled that. In that very city and elsewhere, these magnates
-were rolling in wealth. Their profits were tumbling
-in so fast that they scarcely knew what to do with them. Vast
-libraries and universities were being built with their gifts.
-Immense mansions were crowded with art and historic furniture.
-Their children were being sent to special schools to
-be taught how to be ladies and gentlemen in a democracy
-which they contemned; and on the other hand, these sweating
-men were being denied an additional five or ten cents an
-hour and the right to organize. If they protested or attempted
-to drive out imported strike-breakers they were fired and State
-or Federal troops were called in to protect the mills. They
-could not organize then, and they are not organized now.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My friend Martyn, who was intensely sympathetic toward
-them, was still more sympathetic toward the men who were not
-so skillful, mere day laborers who received from one dollar to
-one-sixty-five at a time when two a day was too little to
-support any one. He grew melodramatic as he told me where
-these men lived and how they lived, and finally took me in
-order that I might see for myself. Afterward, in the course
-of my reportorial work, I came upon some of these neighborhoods
-and individuals, and since they are all a part of the
-great fortune-building era, and illustrate how democracy
-works in America, and how some great fortunes were built, I
-propose to put down here a few pictures of things that I
-saw. Wages varied from one to one-sixty-five a day for the
-commonest laborer, three and even four a day for the skilled
-worker. Rents, or what the cheaper workers, who constituted
-by far the greater number, were able to pay, varied from two-fifteen
-per week, or eight-sixty per month, to four-seventy-two
-per week, or twenty per month.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And the type of places they could secure for this! I recall
-visiting a two-room tenement in a court, the character of
-which first opened my eyes to the type of home these workers
-endured. This court consisted of four sides with an open
-space in the center. Three of these sides were smoke-grimed
-wooden houses three stories in height; the fourth was an
-ancient and odorous wooden stable, where the horses of a
-contractor were kept. In the center of this court stood a
-circular wooden building or lavatory with ten triangular compartments,
-each opening into one vault or cesspool. Near
-this was one hydrant, the only water-supply for all these
-homes or rooms. These two conveniences served twenty families,
-Polish, Hungarian, Slavonic, Jewish, Negro, of from
-three to five people each, living in the sixty-three rooms which
-made up the three grimy sides above mentioned. There were
-twenty-seven children in these rooms, for whom this court
-was their only playground. For twenty housewives this was
-the only place where they could string their wash-lines. For
-twenty tired, sweaty, unwashed husbands this was, aside from
-the saloon, the only near and neighborly recreation and companionship
-center. Here of a sweltering summer night, after
-playing cards and drinking beer, they would frequently
-stretch themselves to sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this was not all. As waste pipes were wanting in the
-houses, heavy tubs of water had to be carried in and out, and
-this in a smoky town where a double amount of washing and
-cleaning was necessary. When the weather permitted, the
-heavy washes were done in the yard. Then the pavement of
-this populous court, covered with tubs, wringers, clothes
-baskets and pools of soapy water, made a poor playground for
-children. In addition to this, these lavatories must be used,
-and in consequence a situation was created which may be
-better imagined than explained. Many of the front windows
-of these apartments looked down on this center, which was
-only a few yards from the kitchen windows, creating a neat,
-sanitary and uplifting condition. While usually only two
-families used one of these compartments, in some other courts
-three or four families were compelled to use one, giving rise
-to indifference and a sense of irresponsibility for their condition.
-While all the streets had sewers and by borough ordinance
-these outside vaults must be connected with them, still
-most of them were flushed only by waste water, which flowed
-directly into them from the yard faucet. When conditions
-became unbearable the vaults were washed out with a hose
-attached to the hydrant, but in winter, when there was danger
-of freezing, this was not always possible. There was not one
-indoor closet in any of these courts.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But to return to the apartment in question. The kitchen
-was steaming with vapor from a big washtub set on a chair
-in the middle of the room. The mother, who had carried the
-water in, was trying to wash and at the same time keep the
-older of her two babies from tumbling into the tub of scalding
-water that was standing on the floor. On one side of the
-room was a huge puffy bed, with one feather tick to sleep on
-and another for covering. Near the window was a sewing-machine,
-in a corner a melodeon, and of course there was
-the inevitable cookstove, upon which was simmering a pot of
-soup. To the left, in the second room, were one boarder and
-the man of the house asleep. Two boarders, so I learned, were
-at work, but at night would be home to sleep in the bed now
-occupied by one boarder and the man of the house. The little
-family and their boarders, taken to help out on the rent,
-worked and lived so in order that Mr. Carnegie might give the
-world one or two extra libraries with his name plastered on
-the front, and Mr. Frick a mansion on Fifth Avenue.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>It was to Martyn and his interest that I owed still other
-views. He took me one day to a boardinghouse in which
-lived twenty-four people, all in two rooms, and yet, to my
-astonishment and confusion, it was not so bad as that other
-court, so great apparently is the value of intimate human
-contact. Few of the very poor day laborers, as Martyn explained
-to me, who were young and unmarried, cared how
-they lived so long as they lived cheaply and could save a
-little. This particular boardinghouse in Homestead was in
-a court such as I have described, and consisted of two rooms,
-one above the other, each measuring perhaps 12 × 20. In the
-kitchen at the time was the wife of the boarding boss cooking
-dinner. Along one side of the room was an oilcloth-covered
-table with a plank bench on each side; above it was a rack
-holding a long row of white cups, and a shelf with tin knives
-and forks. Near the up-to-date range, the only real piece of
-furniture in the room, hung the buckets in which all mill men
-carried their noon or midnight meals. A crowd of men were
-lounging cheerfully about, talking, smoking and enjoying life,
-one of them playing a concertina. They were making the most
-of a brief spell before their meal and departure for work.
-In the room above, as the landlord cheerfully showed us, were
-double iron bedsteads set close together and on them comfortables
-neatly laid.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In these two rooms lived, besides the boarding boss and his
-wife, both stalwart Bulgarians, and their two babies, twenty
-men. They were those Who handled steel billets and bars,
-unloaded and loaded trains, worked in cinder pits, filled steel
-buckets with stock, and what not. They all worked twelve
-hours a day, and their reward was this and what they could
-save over and above it out of nine-sixty per week. Martyn
-said a good thing about them at the time: “I don’t know how
-it is. I know these people are exploited and misused. The
-mill-owners pay them the lowest wages, the landlords exploit
-these boardinghouse keepers as well as their boarders, and
-the community which they make by their work don’t give a
-damn for them, and yet they are happy, and I’ll be hanged if
-they don’t make me happy. It must be that just work is
-happiness,” and I agreed with him. Plenty of work, something
-to do, the ability to avoid the ennui of idleness and
-useless, pensive, futile thought!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was another side that I thought was a part of all
-this, and that was the “vice” situation. There were so many
-girls who walked the streets here, and back of the <i>Dispatch</i>
-and postoffice buildings, as well as in the streets ranged along
-the Monongahela below Smithfield (Water, First and Second),
-were many houses of disrepute, as large and flourishing an
-area as I had seen in any city. As I learned from the political
-and police man, the police here as elsewhere “protected”
-vice, or in other words preyed upon it.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>In</span> the meantime I was going about my general work, and
-an easy task it proved. My city editor, cool, speculative,
-diplomatic soul, soon instructed me as to the value of news
-and its limitations here. “We don’t touch on labor conditions
-except through our labor man,” he told me, “and he knows
-what to say. There’s nothing to be said about the rich or
-religious in a derogatory sense: they’re all right in so far
-as we know. We don’t touch on scandals in high life. The
-big steel men here just about own the place, so we can’t.
-Some papers out West and down in New York go in for sensationalism,
-but we don’t. I’d rather have some simple little
-feature any time, a story about some old fellow with eccentric
-habits, than any of these scandals or tragedies. Of course we
-do cover them when we have to, but we have to be mighty
-careful what we say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>So much for a free press in Pittsburgh, A.D. 1893!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I found that the city itself, possibly by reason of the
-recent defeat administered to organized labor and the soft
-pedal of the newspapers, presented a most quiescent and
-somnolent aspect. There was little local news. Suicides, occasional
-drownings, a wedding or death in high society, a
-brawl in a saloon, the enlargement of a steel plant, the visit of
-a celebrity or the remarks of some local pastor, provided the
-pabulum on which the local readers were fed. Sometimes an
-outside event, such as the organization by General Coxey, of
-Canton, Ohio, of his “hobo” army, at that time moving toward
-Washington to petition congress against the doings of the
-trusts; or the dictatorial and impossible doings of Grover
-Cleveland, opposition President to the dominant party of the
-State; or the manner in which the moribund Democratic party
-of this region was attempting to steal an office or share in the
-spoils—these and the grand comments of gentlemen in high
-financial positions here and elsewhere as to the outlook for
-prosperity in the nation or the steel mills or the coal fields,
-occupied the best places in the newspapers. For a great
-metropolis as daring, forceful, economically and socially restless
-as this, it seemed unbelievable that it could be so quiescent
-or say so little about the colossal ambitions animating the men
-at the top. But when it came to labor or the unions, their
-restlessness or unholy anarchistic demands, or the trashy views
-of a third-rate preacher complaining of looseness in dress or
-morals, or an actor voicing his views on art, or a politician
-commenting on some unimportant phase of our life, it was
-a very different matter. These papers were then free enough
-to say their say.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall that Thomas B. Reed, then Speaker of the House,
-once passed through the city and stopped off to visit some
-friendly steel magnate. I was sent to interview him and obtain
-his views as to “General” Coxey’s army, a band of poor
-mistaken theorists who imagined that by marching to Washington
-and protesting to Congress they could compel a trust-dictated
-American Senate and House to take cognizance of
-their woes. This able statesman—and he was no fool, being
-at the time in the councils and favor of the money power and
-looked upon as the probable Republican Presidential nominee—pretended
-to me to believe that a vast national menace lay
-in such a movement and protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why, it’s the same as revolution!” he ranted, washing his
-face in his suite at the Monongahela, his suspenders swaying
-loosely about his fat thighs. “It’s an unheard-of proceeding.
-For a hundred years the American people have had a fixed
-and constitutional and democratic method of procedure. They
-have their county and State and national conventions, and
-their power of instructing delegates to the same. They can
-write any plank they wish into any party platform, and compel
-its enforcement by their votes. Now comes along a man
-who finds something that doesn’t just suit his views, and
-instead of waiting and appealing to the regular party councils,
-he organizes an army and proceeds to march on Washington.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But he has been able to muster only three or four hundred
-men all told,” I suggested mildly. “He doesn’t seem
-to be attracting many followers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The number of his followers isn’t the point,” he insisted.
-“If one man can gather an army of five hundred, another can
-gather an army of ten or five hundred thousand. That means
-revolution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” I ventured. “But what about the thing of which
-they are complaining?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It doesn’t matter what their grievance is,” he said somewhat
-testily. “This is a government of law and prescribed
-political procedure. Our people must abide by that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was ready to agree, only I was thinking of the easy manner
-in which delegates and elected representatives everywhere
-were ignoring the interests if not the mandates of the body
-politic at large and listening to the advice and needs of
-financiers and trust-builders. Already the air was full of complaints
-against monopoly. Trusts and combinations of every
-kind were being organized, and the people were being taxed accordingly.
-All property, however come by, was sacred in
-America. The least protest of the mass anywhere was
-revolutionary, or at least the upwellings of worthless and
-never-to-be-countenanced malcontents. I could not believe
-this. I firmly believed then, as I do now, that the chains
-wherewith a rapidly developing financial oligarchy or autocracy
-meant to bind a liberty-deluded mass were then and
-there being forged. I felt then, as I do now, that the people
-of that day should have been more alive to their interests, that
-they should have compelled, at Washington or elsewhere, by
-peaceable political means if possible, by dire and threatening
-uprisings if necessary, a more careful concern for their interests
-than any congressman or senator or governor or President,
-at that time or since, was giving them. As I talked to
-this noble chairman of the House my heart was full of these
-sentiments, only I did not deem it of any avail to argue with
-him. I was a mere cub reporter and he was the Speaker of
-the House of Representatives, but I had a keen contempt for
-the enthusiasm he manifested for law. When it came to what
-the money barons wished, the manufacturers and trust organizers
-hiding behind a huge and extortionate tariff wall, he
-was one of their chief guards and political and congressional
-advocates. If you doubt it look up his record.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But it was owing to this very careful interpretation of
-what was and what was not news that I experienced some of
-the most delightful newspaper hours of my life. Large features
-being scarce, I was assigned to do “city hall and police,
-Allegheny,” as the assignment book used to read, and with
-this mild task ahead of me I was in the habit of crossing the
-Allegheny River into the city of Allegheny, where, ensconced
-in a chair in the reporters’ room of the combined city hall and
-central police station or in the Carnegie Public Library over
-the way, or in the cool, central, shaded court of the Allegheny
-General Hospital, with the head interne of which I soon made
-friends, I waited for something to turn up. As is usual with
-all city and police and hospital officials everywhere, the hope
-of favorable and often manufactured publicity animating
-them, I was received most cordially. All I had to do was to
-announce that I was from the <i>Dispatch</i> and assigned to this
-bailiwick, and I was informed as to anything of importance
-that had come to the surface during the last ten or twelve
-hours. If there was nothing—and usually there was not—I
-sat about with several other reporters or with the head interne
-of the hospital, or, having no especial inquiry to make, I
-crossed the street to Squire Daniels, whose office was in the
-tree-shaded square facing this civic center, and here (a squire
-being the equivalent of a petty police magistrate), inquired
-if anything had come to his notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Squire Daniels, a large, bald, pink-faced individual of three
-hundredweight, used of a sunny afternoon these warm Spring
-days to sit out in front of his office, his chair tilted against
-his office wall or a tree, and, with three or four cronies, retail
-the most delicious stories of old-time political characters and
-incidents. He was a mine of this sort of thing and an immense
-favorite in consequence with all the newspaper men and
-politicians. I was introduced to him on my third or fourth
-day in Allegheny as he was sitting out on his tilted chair, and
-he surveyed me with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“From the <i>Dispatch</i>, eh? Well, take a chair if you can
-find one; if you can’t, sit on the curb or in the doorway.
-Many’s the man I seen from the <i>Dispatch</i> in my time. Your
-boss, Harry Gaither, used to come around here before he got
-to be city editor. So did your Sunday man, Funger. There
-ain’t much news I can give you, but whatever there is you’re
-welcome to it. I always treat all the boys alike,” and he
-smiled. Then he proceeded with his tale, something about an
-old alderman or politician who had painted a pig once in
-order to bring it up to certain prize specifications and so won
-the prize, only to be found out later because the “specifications”
-wore off. He had such a zestful way of telling his
-stories as to compel laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And then directly across the street to the east from the
-city hall was the Allegheny Carnegie library, a very handsome
-building which contained, in addition to the library, an auditorium
-in which had been placed the usual “one of the
-largest” if not “the largest” pipe organ in the world. This
-organ had one advantage: it was supplied with a paid city
-organist, who on Sundays, Wednesdays and Saturdays entertained
-the public with free recitals, and so capable was he
-that seats were at a premium and standing-room only the rule
-unless one arrived far ahead of time. This manifestation of
-interest on the part of the public pleased me greatly and
-somehow qualified, if it did not atone for, Mr. Carnegie’s
-indifference to the welfare of his employees.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I was most impressed with the forty or fifty thousand
-volumes so conveniently arranged that one could walk from
-stack to stack, looking at the labels and satisfying one’s interest
-by browsing in the books. The place had most comfortable
-window-nooks and chairs between stacks and in alcoves.
-One afternoon, having nothing else to do, I came here
-and by the merest chance picked up a volume entitled <i>The
-Wild Ass’s Skin</i> by the writer who so fascinated Wandell—Honoré
-de Balzac. I examined it curiously, reading a preface
-which shimmered with his praise. He was the great master of
-France. His <i>Comédie Humaine</i> covered every aspect of the
-human welter. His interpretations of character were exhaustive
-and exact. His backgrounds were abundant, picturesque,
-gorgeous. In Paris his home had been turned into a museum,
-and contained his effects as they were at the time of his death.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I turned to the first page and began reading, and from then
-on until dusk I sat in this charming alcove reading. A new
-and inviting door to life had been suddenly thrown open to
-me. Here was one who saw, thought, felt. Through him I
-saw a prospect so wide that it left me breathless—all Paris,
-all France, all life through French eyes. Here was one who
-had a tremendous and sensitive grasp of life, philosophic, tolerant,
-patient, amused. At once I was personally identified
-with his Raphael, his Rastignac, his Bixiou, his Bianchon.
-With Raphael I entered the gaming-house in the Palais Royal,
-looked despairingly down into the waters of the Seine from
-the Pont Royal, turned from it to the shop of the dealer in
-antiques, was ignored by the perfect young lady before the
-shop of the print-seller, attended the Taillefer banquet, suffered
-horrors over the shrinking skin. The lady without a
-heart was all too real. It was for me a literary revolution.
-Not only for the brilliant and incisive manner with which
-Balzac grasped life and invented themes whereby to present
-it, but for the fact that the types he handled with most
-enthusiasm and skill—the brooding, seeking, ambitious beginner
-in life’s social, political, artistic and commercial affairs
-(Rastignac, Raphael, de Rubempre, Bianchon)—were, I
-thought, so much like myself. Indeed, later taking up and
-consuming almost at a sitting <i>The Great Man from the Provinces</i>,
-<i>Père Goriot</i>, <i>Cousin Pons</i>, <i>Cousin Bette</i>, it was so easy
-to identify myself with the young and seeking aspirants. The
-brilliant and intimate pictures of Parisian life, the exact flavor
-of its politics, arts, sciences, religions, social goings to and
-fro impressed me so as to accomplish for me what his imaginary
-magic skin had done for his Raphael: transfer me
-bodily and without defect or lack to the center as well as the
-circumference of the world which he was describing. I knew
-his characters as well as he did, so magical was his skill. His
-grand and somewhat pompous philosophical deductions, his
-easy and offhand disposition of all manner of critical, social,
-political, historical, religious problems, the manner in which
-he assumed as by right of genius intimate and irrefutable
-knowledge of all subjects, fascinated and captured me as the
-true method of the seer and the genius. Oh, to possess an
-insight such as this! To know and be a part of such a cosmos
-as Paris, to be able to go there, to work, to study, suffer, rise,
-and even end in defeat if need be, so fascinatingly alive were
-all the journeys of his puppets! What was Pittsburgh, what
-St. Louis, what Chicago?—and yet, in spite of myself, while
-I adored his Paris, still I was obtaining a new and more
-dramatic light on the world in which I found myself. Pittsburgh
-was not Paris, America was not France, but in truth
-they were something, and Pittsburgh at least had aspects
-which somehow suggested Paris. These charming rivers, these
-many little bridges, the sharp contrasts presented by the east
-end and the mill regions, the huge industries here and their
-importance to the world at large, impressed me more vividly
-than before. I was in a workaday, begrimed, and yet vivid
-Paris. Taillefer, Nucingen, Valentin were no different from
-some of the immense money magnets here, in their case, luxury,
-power, at least the possibilities which they possessed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Coming out of the library this day, and day after day thereafter,
-the while I rendered as little reportorial service as was
-consistent with even a show of effort, I marveled at the physical
-similarity of the two cities as I conceived it, at the chance
-for pictures here as well as there. American pictures here,
-as opposed to French pictures there. And all the while I was
-riding with Lucien to Paris, with his mistress, courting Madame
-Nucingen with Rastignac, brooding over the horror of
-the automatically contracting skin with Raphael, poring over
-his miseries with Goriot, practicing the horrible art of prostitution
-with Madame Marneffe. For a period of four or five
-months I ate, slept, dreamed, lived him and his characters
-and his views and his city. I cannot imagine a greater joy
-and inspiration than I had in Balzac these Spring and Summer
-days in Pittsburgh. Idyllic days, dreamy days, poetic
-days, wonderful days, the while I ostensibly did “police and
-city hall” in Allegheny.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>It</span> would be unfair to myself not to indicate that I rendered
-an adequate return for the stipend paid me. As a matter of
-fact, owing to the peculiar character of the local news conditions,
-as well as my own creative if poorly equipped literary
-instincts at the time, I was able to render just such service as
-my employers craved, and that with scarcely a wrench to
-my mental ease. For what they craved, more than news of a
-dramatic or disturbing character, was some sort of idle feature
-stuff which they could use in place of news and still interest
-their readers. The Spring time, Balzac, the very picturesque
-city itself, my own idling and yet reflective disposition, caused
-me finally to attempt a series of mood or word-pictures about
-the most trivial matters—a summer storm, a spring day, a
-visit to a hospital, the death of an old switchman’s dog, the
-arrival of the first mosquito—which gave me my first taste of
-what it means to be a creative writer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The city editor asked me one day if I could not invent some
-kind of feature, and I sat down and thought of one theme
-and another. Finally I thought of the fly as a possible subject
-for an idle skit. Being young and ambitious, and having
-just crawled out of a breeding-pit somewhere, he alighted on
-the nearest fence or windowsill, brushed his head and wings
-reflectively and meditated on the chances of a livelihood or a
-career. What would be open to a young and ambitious fly
-in a world all too crowded with flies? There were barns, of
-course, and kitchens and horses and cows and pigs, but these
-fields were overrun, and this was a sensitive and cleanly
-and meditative fly. Flying about here and there to inspect
-the world, he encountered within a modest and respectable
-home a shiny pate which seemed to offer a rather polished field
-of effort and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This idle thing which took me not more than three-quarters
-of an hour to write and which I was almost afraid to submit,
-produced a remarkable change in the attitude of the office,
-as well as in my life and career. We had at this time as
-assistant city editor a small, retiring, sentimental soul, Jim
-Israels, who was one of the most gracious and approachable
-and lovable men I have ever known. He it was to whom I
-turned over my skit. He took it with an air of kindly consideration
-and helpfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Trying to help us out, are you?” he said with a smile, and
-then added when I predicated its worthlessness: “Well, it’s
-not such an easy thing to turn out that stuff. I hope it’s
-something the chief will like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>He took it and, as I noticed, for I hung about to see, read
-it at once, and I saw him begin to smile and finally chuckle.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This thing’s all right,” he called. “You needn’t worry.
-Gaither’ll be pleased with this, I know,” and he began to
-edit it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went out to walk and think, for I had nothing to do except
-wander over to Allegheny to find out if anything had turned
-up.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I returned at six I was greeted by my city editor
-with a smile and told that if I would I could do that sort of
-thing as much as I liked. “Try and get up something for
-tomorrow, will you?” I said I would try. The next day, a
-Spring rain descending with wonderful clouds and a magnificent
-electrical display, I described how the city, dry and
-smoky and dirty, lay panting in the deadening heat and how
-out of the west came, like an answer to a prayer, this sudden
-and soothing storm, battalion upon battalion of huge clouds
-riven with great silvery flashes of light, darkening the sun
-as they came; and how suddenly, while shutters clapped and
-papers flew and office windows and doors had to be closed and
-signs squeaked and swung and people everywhere ran to
-cover, the thousands upon thousands who had been enduring
-the heat heaved a sigh of gratitude. I described how the steel
-tenements, the homes of the rich, the office buildings, the factories,
-the hospitals and jails changed under these conditions.
-and then ventured to give specific incidents and pictures of
-animals and men.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This was received with congratulations, especially from the
-assistant editor, who was more partial to anything sentimental
-than his chief. But I, feeling that I had hit upon a vein of my
-own, was not inclined to favor the moods of either but to write
-such things as appealed to me most. This I did from day to
-day, wandering out into the country or into strange neighborhoods
-for ideas and so varying my studies as my mood dictated.
-I noticed, however, that my more serious attempts
-were not so popular as the lighter and sillier things. This
-might have been a guide to me, had I been so inclined, leading
-to an easy and popular success; but by instinct and observation
-I was inclined to be interested in the larger and more
-tragic phases of life. Mere humor, such as I could achieve
-when I chose, seemed always to require for its foundation the
-most trivial of incidents, whereas huge and massive conditions
-underlay tragedy and all the more forceful aspects of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But what pleased and surprised me was the manner in which
-these lighter as well as the more serious things were received
-and the change they made in my standing. Hitherto I was
-merely a newcomer being tested and by no means secure in
-my hold on this position. Now, of a sudden, my status was
-entirely changed. I was a feature man, one who had succeeded
-where others apparently had failed, and so I was made more
-than welcome. To my surprise, my city editor one day asked
-me whether I had had my lunch. I gladly availed myself of a
-chance to talk to him, and he told me a little something of
-local journalistic life, who the publisher of this paper was,
-his politics and views. The assistant editor asked me to dinner.
-The Sunday editor, the chief political reporter, the chief
-city hall and police man grew friendly; I went to lunch or
-dinner with one or the other, was taken to the Press Club after
-midnight, and occasionally to a theater by the dramatic man.
-Finally I was asked to contribute something to the Sunday
-papers, and later still asked to help the dramatic man with
-criticisms.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was a little puzzled and made quite nervous though not
-vain by this sudden change. The managing editor came to
-talk familiarly with me, and after him the son of the publisher,
-fresh from a European trip. But when he told me how
-interested he was in the kind of thing I was doing and that he
-wished he “could write like that,” I remember feeling a little
-envious of him, with his fine clothes and easy manner. An
-invitation to dine at his home soothed me in no way. I never
-went. There was some talk of sending me to report a proposed
-commercial conference (at Buffalo, I believe), looking to the
-construction of a ship canal from Erie or Buffalo to Pittsburgh,
-but it interested me not at all. I had no interest in
-those things, really not in newspaper work, and yet I scarcely
-knew what I wanted to do if not that. One thing is sure:
-I had no commercial sense whereby I might have profited by
-all this. After the second or third sketch had been published
-there was a decided list in my direction, and I might have
-utilized my success. Instead, I merely mooned and dreamed
-as before, reading at the Carnegie Library, going out on assignments
-or writing one of these sketches and then going
-home again or to the Press Club. I gathered all sorts of data
-as to the steel magnates—Carnegie, Phipps and Frick especially—their
-homes, their clubs, their local condescensions and
-superiorities. The people of Pittsburgh were looked upon as
-vassals by some of these, and their interviews on returning
-from the seashore or the mountains partook of the nature
-of a royal return.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I remember being sent once to the Duquesne Club to interview
-Andrew Carnegie, fresh from his travels abroad, and
-being received by a secretary who allowed me to stand in the
-back of a room in which Mr. Carnegie, short, stocky, bandy-legged,
-a grand air of authority investing him, was addressing
-the élite of the city on the subject of America and its political
-needs. No note-taking was permitted, but I was later handed
-a typewritten address to the people of Pittsburgh and told
-that the <i>Dispatch</i> would be allowed to publish that. And it
-did. I smiled then, and I smile now, at the attitude of press,
-pulpit, officials of this amazing city of steel and iron where
-one and all seemed so genuflective and boot-licking, and yet
-seemed not to profit to any great degree by the presence of
-these magnates, who were constantly hinting at removing
-elsewhere unless they were treated thus and so—as though the
-life of a great and forceful metropolis depended on them alone.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>It</span> was about this time that I began to establish cordial relations
-with the short, broad-shouldered, sad-faced labor reporter
-whom I have previously mentioned. At first he appeared
-to be a little shy of me, but as time passed and I seemed
-to have established myself in the favor of the paper, he became
-more friendly. He was really a radical at heart, but
-did not dare let it be known here. Often of a morning he
-would spend as much as two hours with me, discussing the
-nature of coal-mining and steel-making, the difficulty of arranging
-wage conditions which would satisfy all the men and
-not cause friction; but in the main he commented on the
-shrewd and cunning way in which the bosses were more and
-more overreaching their employees, preying upon their prejudices
-by religious and political dodges, and at the same time
-misusing them shamefully through the company store, the
-short ton, the cost of mining materials, rent. At first, knowing
-nothing about the situation, I was inclined to doubt
-whether he was as sound in these matters as he seemed to
-be. Later, as I grew in personal knowledge, I thought he
-might be too conservative, so painful did many of the things
-seem which I saw with my own eyes and his aid.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>About this time several things conspired to stir up my
-feelings in regard to New York. The Pittsburgh papers gave
-great space to New York events and affairs, much more than
-did most of the mid-Western papers. There was a millionaire
-steel colony here which was trying to connect itself with the
-so-called “Four Hundred” of New York, as well as the royal
-social atmosphere of England and France; and the comings
-and goings and doings of these people at Newport, New York,
-Bar Harbor, London and Paris were fully chronicled. Occasionally
-I was sent to one or another of these great homes
-to ask about the details of certain marriages or proposed trips,
-and would find the people in the midst of the most luxurious
-preparations. One night, for instance, I was sent to ask a
-certain steel man about the rumored resumption or extension
-of work in one of the mills. His house was but a dot on a
-great estate, the reaching of which was very difficult. I found
-him about ten o’clock at night stepping into a carriage to be
-driven to the local station, which was at the foot of the
-grounds. Although I was going to the same station in order
-to catch a local back to the city, he did not ask me to accompany
-him. Instead he paused on the step of his carriage to
-say that he could not say definitely whether the work would
-be done or not. He was entirely surrounded by bags, a gun,
-a fishing basket and other paraphernalia, after which of
-course a servant was looking. When he was gone I walked
-along the same road to the same station, and saw him standing
-there. Another man came up and greeted him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Going down to New York, George?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, to the Chesapeake. My lodge man tells me ducks are
-plentiful there now, and I thought I’d run down and get a
-few.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The through train, which had been ordered to stop for
-him, rolled in and he was gone. I waited for my smoky local,
-marveling at the comfort and ease which had been already
-attained by a man of not more than forty-five years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But there were other things which seemed always to talk to
-me of New York, New York. I picked up a new weekly, the
-<i>Standard</i>, one evening, and found a theatrical paper of the
-most pornographic and alluring character which pretended
-to report with accuracy all the gayeties of the stage, the clubs,
-the tenderloins or white-light districts, as well as society of
-the racier and more spendthrift character. This paper spoke
-only of pleasure: yacht parties, midnight suppers, dances,
-scenes behind the stage and of blissful young stars of the
-theatrical, social and money worlds. Here were ease and
-luxury! In New York, plainly, was all this, and I might
-go there and by some fluke of chance taste of it. I studied this
-paper by the hour, dreaming of all it suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And there was <i>Munsey’s</i>, the first and most successful of
-all the ten-cent magazines then coming into existence and being
-fed to the public by the ton. I saw it first piled in high
-stacks before a news and book store in Pittsburgh. The size
-of the pile of magazines and the price induced a cursory
-examination, although I had never even heard of it before.
-Poor as it was intellectually—and it was poor—it contained
-an entire section of highly-coated paper devoted to actresses,
-the stage and scenes from plays, and still another carrying
-pictures of beauties in society in different cities, and still
-another devoted to successful men in Wall Street. It breathed
-mostly of New York, its social doings, its art and literary
-colonies. It fired me with an ambition to see New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A third paper, <i>Town Topics</i>, was the best of all, a paper
-most brilliantly edited by a man of exceptional literary skill
-(C. M. S. McLellan). It related to exclusive society in New
-York, London and Paris, the houses, palaces, yachts, restaurants
-and hotels, the goings and comings of the owners; and although
-it really poked fun at all this and other forms of existence
-elsewhere, still there was an element of envy and delight
-in it also which fitted my mood. It gave one the impression
-that there existed in New York, Newport and elsewhere (London
-principally) a kind of Elysian realm in which forever
-basked the elect of fortune. Here was neither want nor care.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How I brooded over all this, the marriages and rumors of
-marriages, the travels, engagements, feasts such as a score
-of facile novelists subsequently succeeded in picturizing to
-the entertainment and disturbance of rural America. For me
-this realm was all flowers, sunshine, smart restaurants, glistering
-ballrooms, ease, comfort, beauty arrayed as only enchantment
-or a modern newspaper Sunday supplement can
-array it. And while I knew that back of it must be the hard
-contentions and realities such as everywhere hold and characterize
-life, still I didn’t know. In reading these papers I
-refused to allow myself to cut through to the reality. Life
-must hold some such realm as this, and spiritually I belonged
-to it. But I was already twenty-three, and what had I accomplished?
-I wished most of all now to go to New York
-and enter the realm pictured by these papers. Why not? I
-might bag an heiress or capture fortune in some other way.
-I must save some money, I told myself. Then, financially
-fortified, against starvation at least, I might reconnoiter the
-great city and—who knows?—perhaps conquer. Balzac’s
-heroes had seemed to do so, why not I? It is written of
-the Dragon God of China that in the beginning it swallowed
-the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And to cap it all about this time I had a letter from my
-good brother, in which he asked me how long I would be
-“piking” about the West when I ought to be in New York.
-I should come this summer, when New York was at its best.
-He would show me Broadway, Manhattan Beach, a dozen
-worlds. He would introduce me to some New York newspaper
-men who would introduce me to the managers of the <i>World</i>
-and the <i>Sun</i>. (The mere mention of these papers, so overawed
-was I by the fames of Dana and Pulitzer, frightened me.)
-I ought to be on a paper like the <i>Sun</i>, he said, since to him
-Dana was the greatest editor in New York. I meditated over
-this, deciding that I would go when I had more money. I
-then and there started a bank account, putting in as much
-as ten or twelve dollars each week, and in a month or two
-began to feel that sense of security which a little money gives
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Another thing which had a strange psychologic effect on me
-at the time, as indeed it appeared to have on most of the
-intelligentsia of America, was the publication in <i>Harper’s</i> this
-spring and summer of George Du Maurier’s <i>Trilby</i>. I have
-often doubted the import of novel-writing in general, but
-viewing the effect of that particular work on me as well as
-on others one might as well doubt the import of power or
-fame or emotion of any kind. The effect of this book was
-not so much one of great reality and insight such as Balzac
-at times managed to convey, but rather of an exotic mood or
-perfume of memory and romance conveyed by some one who
-is in love with that memory and improvising upon it as musicians
-do upon a theme. Instanter I saw Paris and Trilby and
-the Jew with his marvelous eyes. Trilby being hypnotized
-and carried away from Little Billee seemed to me then of the
-essence of great tragedy. I myself fairly suffered, walking
-about and dreaming, the while I awaited the one or two
-final portions. I was lost in the beauty of Paris, the delight
-of studio life, and resented more than ever, as one might a
-great deprivation, the need of living in a land where there
-was nothing but work.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet America and this city were fascinating enough to
-me. But because of the preponderant influence of foreign
-letters on American life it seemed that Paris and London
-must be so much better since every one wrote about them.
-Like Balzac’s <i>Great Man from the Provinces</i>, this book seemed
-to connect itself with my own life and the tragedy of not
-having the means to marry at this time, and of being compelled
-to wander about in this way unable to support a wife. At last
-I became so wrought up that I was quite beside myself. I
-pictured myself as a Little Billee who would eventually lose
-by poverty, as he by trickery, the thing I most craved: my
-Western sweetheart. Meditating on this I vented some of
-my misery in the form of sentimental vaporizings in my
-feature articles, which were all liked well enough but which
-seemed merely to heighten my misery. Finally, some sentimental
-letters being exchanged between myself and my love,
-I felt an uncontrollable impulse to return and see her and
-St. Louis before I went farther away perhaps never to return.
-The sense of an irrecoverable past which had pervaded <i>Trilby</i>
-had, I think, something to do with this, so interfused and
-interfusing are all thoughts and moods. At any rate, having
-by now considerable influence with this paper, I proposed a
-short vacation, and the city editor, wishing no doubt to propitiate
-me, suggested that the paper would be glad to provide
-me with transportation both ways. So I made haste to announce
-a grand return, not only to my intended but to McCord,
-Wood and several others who were still in St. Louis.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>As</span> one looks back on youth so much of it appears ridiculous
-and maundering and without an essential impulse or direction,
-and yet as I look at life itself I am not sure but that
-indirection or unimportant idlings are a part of life’s method.
-We often think we are doing some vastly important thing,
-whereas in reality we are merely marking time. At other
-times, when we appear to be marking time we are growing or
-achieving at a great rate; and so it may have been with me.
-Instead of pushing on to New York, I chose to return to St.
-Louis and grasp one more hour of exquisite romance, drink
-one more cup of love. And whether it profited me save as
-pleasure is profit I cannot tell. Only, may not pleasure be the
-ultimate profit?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This trip to St. Louis was for me a most pivotal and deranging
-thing, probably a great mistake. At that time, of
-course, I could not see that. Instead, I was completely lost
-in the grip of a passion that subsequently proved detrimental
-or devastating. The reality which I was seeking to establish
-was a temporary contact only. Any really beautiful girl or
-any idyllic scene could have done for me all the things that
-this particular girl and scene could do, only thus far I had
-chanced to meet no other who could displace her. And in a
-way I knew this then, only I realized also that one beautiful
-specimen was as good a key to the lock of earthly delights
-as another.... Only there were so many locks or chambers
-to which one key would fit, and how sad, in youth at
-least, not to have all the locks, or at least a giant illusion as
-to one!</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>This return began with a long hot trip in July to St. Louis,
-and then a quick change in the Union Station there at evening
-which brought me by midnight to the small town in the backwoods
-of Missouri, near which she lived. It was hot. I recall
-the wide hot fields and small wooden towns of Southern Ohio
-and Indiana and this Missouri landscape in the night—the
-frogs, the katydids, the summer stars. I ached and yearned,
-not so much over her as over youth and love and the evanescence
-of all material fires. The spirit of youth cried and
-sang at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The little cottages with their single yellow light shining in
-the fields through which this dusty train ran! The perfumed
-winds!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At last the train stopped and left me standing at midnight
-on a wooden platform with no one to greet me. The train was
-late. A liveryman who was supposed to look after me did
-not. At a lone window sat the telegraph operator, station-master,
-baggage-agent all in one, a green shield shading his
-eyes. Otherwise the station was bare and silent save for the
-katydids in some weeds near at hand and some chirping tree-toads.
-The agent told me that a hotel was a part of this
-station, run by this railroad. Upstairs, over the baggage and
-other rooms, were a few large barn-like sleeping chambers,
-carpetless, dusty, cindery, the windows curtainless and broken
-in places, and save for some all but slatless shutters unshielded
-from the world and the night. I placed a chair against my
-door, my purse under my pillow, my bag near at hand.
-During the night several long freights thundered by, their
-headlights lighting the room; yet, lying on a mattress of straw
-and listening to the frogs and katydids outside, I slept just the
-same. The next morning I tied a handkerchief over my eyes
-and slept some more, arising about ten to continue my journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The home to which I was going was part of an old decayed
-village, once a point on a trail or stage-coach route, once the
-prospective capital of the State, but now nothing. A courthouse
-and some quaint tree-shaded homes were all but lost or
-islanded in a sea of corn. I rode out a long, hot, dusty road
-and finally up a long tree-shaded lane to its very end, where
-I passed through a gate and at the far end came upon a
-worn, faded, rain-rotted house facing a row of trees in a wide
-lawn. I felt that never before had I been so impressed with
-a region and a home. It was all so simple. The house, though
-old and decayed, was exquisite. The old French windows—copied
-from where and by whom?—reaching to the grass; the
-long graceful rooms, the cool hall, the veranda before it, so
-very Southern in quality, the flowers about every window and
-door! I found a home in which lived a poverty-stricken and
-yet spiritually impressive patriarch, a mother who might serve
-as an American tradition so simple and gracious was she,
-sisters and brothers who were reared in an atmosphere which
-somehow induced a gracious, sympathetic idealism and consideration.
-Poor as they were, they were the best of the families
-here. The father had been an office-holder and one of the
-district leaders in his day, and one of his sons still held an
-office. A son-in-law was the district master of this entire congressional
-district, which included seven counties, and could
-almost make or break a congressman. All but three daughters
-were married, and I was engaged to one of the remaining
-ones. Another, too beautiful and too hoyden to think of
-any one in particular, was teaching school, or playing at it.
-A farm of forty acres to the south of the house was tilled by
-the father and two sons.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Elsewhere I have indicated this atmosphere, but here I like
-to touch on it again. We Americans have home traditions
-or ideals, created as much by song and romance as anything
-else: <i>My Old Kentucky Home</i>, <i>Suwanee River</i>. Despite any
-willing on my part, this home seemed to fulfill the spirit of
-those songs. There was something so sadly romantic about
-it. The shade of the great trees moved across the lawn in
-stately and lengthening curves. A stream at the foot of the
-slope leading down from the west side of the house dimpled
-and whimpered in the sun. Birds sang, and there were golden
-bees about the flowers and wasps under the eaves of the house.
-Hammocks of barrel—staves, and others of better texture, were
-strung between the trees. In a nearby barn of quaint design
-were several good horses, and there were cows in the field
-adjoining. Ducks and geese solemnly padded to and fro
-between the house and the stream. The air was redolent of
-corn, wheat, clover, timothy, flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To me it seemed that all the spirit of rural America, its
-idealism, its dreams, the passion of a Brown, the courage and
-patience and sadness of a Lincoln, the dreams and courage of
-a Lee or a Jackson, were all here. The very soil smacked
-of American idealism and faith, a fixedness in sentimental
-and purely imaginative American tradition, in which I, alas!
-could not share. I was enraptured. Out of its charms and
-sentiments I might have composed an elegy or an epic, but
-I could not believe that it was more than a frail flower of
-romance. I had seen Pittsburgh.... I had seen Lithuanians
-and Hungarians in their “courts” and hovels. I had
-seen the girls of that city walking the streets at night. This
-profound faith in God, in goodness, in virtue and duty that I
-saw here in no wise squared with the craft, the cruelty, the
-brutality and the envy that I saw everywhere else. These parents
-were gracious and God-fearing, but to me they seemed
-asleep. They did not know life—could not. These boys and
-girls, as I soon found, respected love and marriage and duty
-and other things which the idealistic American still clings to.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Outside was all this other life that I had seen of which
-apparently these people knew nothing. They were as if suspended
-in dreams, lotus eaters, and my beloved was lost in
-this same romance. I was thinking of her beauty, her wealth
-of hair, the color of her cheeks, the beauty of her figure, of
-what she might be to me. She might have been thinking
-of the same thing, possibly more indirectly, but also she was
-thinking of the dignity and duty and sanctity of marriage.
-For her, marriage and one love were for life. For myself,
-whether I admitted it or not, love was a thing much less
-stable. Indeed I was not thinking of marriage at all, but rather
-whether I could be happy here and now, and how much I
-could extract out of love. Or perhaps, to be just to myself,
-I was as much a victim of passion and romance as she was,
-only to the two of us it did not mean the same thing. Unconsciously
-I identified her with the beauty of all I saw, and
-at the same time felt that it was all so different from anything
-I knew or believed that I wondered how she would fit in with
-the kind of life toward which I was moving. How overcome
-this rigidity in duty and truth?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Both of us being inflamed, it was the most difficult thing for
-me to look upon her and not crave her physically, and, as she
-later admitted, she felt the same yearning toward me. At the
-time, however, she was all but horrified at a thought which
-ran counter to all the principles impressed upon her since
-early youth. There was thus set up between us in this delightful
-atmosphere a conflict between tradition and desire.
-The hot faint breezes about the house and in the trees seemed
-to whisper of secret and forbidden contact. The perfumes
-of the thickly grown beds of flowers, the languorous sultry
-heat of the afternoon and night, the ripening and blooming
-fields beyond, the drowsy, still, starry nights with their hum
-of insects and croak of frogs and the purrs and whimpers
-and barks of animals, seemed to call for but one thing. There
-was about her an intense delight in living. No doubt she
-longed as much to be seized as I to seize her, and yet there
-was a moral elusiveness which added even more to the chase.
-I wished to take her then and not wait, but the prejudices of
-a most careful rearing frightened and deterred her. And yet
-I shall always feel that the impulse was better than the
-forces which confuted and subsequently defeated it. For then
-was the time to unite, not years later when, however much
-the economic and social and religious conditions which are
-supposed to surround and safeguard such unions had been
-fulfilled, my zest for her, and no doubt hers in part for me,
-had worn away.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Love should act in its heat, not when its bank account is
-heavy. The chemic formula which works to reproduce the
-species, and the most vital examples at that, is not concerned
-with the petty local and social restraints which govern all
-this. Life if it wants anything wants children, and healthy
-ones, and the weighing and binding rules which govern their
-coming and training may easily become too restrictive. Nature’s
-way is correct, her impulses sound. The delight of possessing
-my fiancée then would have repaid her for her fears.
-and me for ruthlessness if I had taken her. A clearer and a
-better grasp of life would have been hers and mine. The
-coward sips little of life, the strong man drinks deep. Old
-prejudices must always fall, and life must always change. It
-is the law.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>And</span> so this romance ended for me. At the time, of course,
-I did not know it; on leaving her I was under the impression
-that I was more than ever attached to her. In the face of
-this postponement, life took on a grayer and more disappointing
-aspect. To be forced to wait when at that moment, if
-ever, was the time!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet I told myself that better days were surely in store.
-I would return East and in some way place myself so that
-soon we might be reunited. It was a figment of hope. By the
-time I was finally capable of maintaining her economically, my
-earlier mood had changed. That hour which we had known,
-or might have known, had gone forever. I had seen more of
-life, more of other women, and although even then she was
-by no means unattractive the original yearning had vanished.
-She was now but one of many, and there were those who were
-younger and more sophisticated, even more attractive.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And yet, before I left her, what days! The sunshine! The
-lounging under the trees! The drowsy summer heat! The
-wishing for what might not be! Having decided that her wish
-was genuine and my impulse to comply with it wise, I stood
-by it, wishing that it might be otherwise. I consoled myself
-thinly with the thought that the future must bring us together,
-and then left, journeying first to St. Louis and later to New
-York. For while I was here that letter from my brother
-which urged me once more to come to New York was forwarded
-to me. Just before leaving Pittsburgh I had sent him
-a collection of those silly “features” I had been writing, and
-he also was impressed. I must come to New York. Some
-metropolitan paper was the place for me and my material.
-Anyhow, I would enjoy visiting there in the summer time
-more than later. I wired him that I would arrive at a certain
-time, and then set out for St. Louis and a visit among my old
-newspaper friends there.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I do not know how most people take return visits, but I
-have often noted that it has only been as I have grown older
-and emotionally less mobile that they have become less and
-less significant to me. In my earlier years nothing could have
-been more poignant or more melancholy than my thoughts on
-any of these occasions. Whenever I returned to any place in
-which I had once lived and found things changed, as they
-always were, I was fairly transfixed by the oppressive sense
-of the evanescence of everything; a mood so hurtful and
-dark and yet with so rich if sullen a luster that I was left
-wordless with pain. I was all but crucified at realizing how
-unimportant I was, how nothing stayed but all changed.
-Scenes passed, never to be recaptured. Moods came and
-friendships and loves, and were gone forever. Life was perpetually
-moving on. The beautiful pattern of which each of
-us, but more especially myself, was a part, was changing
-from day to day, so that things which were an anchor and a
-comfort and delight yesterday were tomorrow no more. And
-though perhaps innately I desired change, or at least appropriate
-and agreeable changes for myself, I did not wish this
-other, this exterior world to shift, and that under my very
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The most haunting and disturbing thought always was
-that hourly I was growing older. Life was so brief, such a
-very little cup at best, and so soon, whatever its miserable
-amount or character, it would be gone. Some had strength
-or capacity or looks or fortune, or all, at their command, and
-then all the world was theirs to travel over and explore.
-Beauty and ease were theirs, and love perhaps, and the companionship
-of interesting and capable people; but I, poor
-waif, with no definite or arresting skill of any kind, not even
-that of commerce, must go fumbling about looking in upon
-life from the outside, as it were. Beautiful women, or so I
-argued, were drawn to any but me. The great opportunities
-of the day in trade and commerce were for any but me. I
-should never have a fraction of the means to do as I wished or
-to share in the life that I most craved. I was an Ishmael, a
-wanderer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In St. Louis I was oppressed beyond words. Of the newspaper
-men who had been living on the same floor with me in
-Broadway there was not one left. At the <i>Globe-Democrat</i> already
-reigned a new city editor. My two friends, Wood and
-McCord, while delighted to see me, told me of those who had
-already gone and seemed immersed in many things that had
-arisen since I had gone and were curious as to why I should
-have returned at all. I hung about for a day or two, wondering
-all the while why I did so, and then took the train going
-East.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Of all my journeys thus far this to New York was the most
-impressive. It took on at once, the moment I left St. Louis,
-the character of a great adventure, for it was all unknown
-and enticing. For years my mind had been centered on it.
-True to the law of gravitation, its pull was in proportion to
-its ever increasing size. As a boy in Indiana, and later in
-Chicago, I had read daily papers sent on from New York by
-my sister E——, who lived there. In Chicago, owing to a
-rivalry which existed on Chicago’s part (not on New York’s,
-I am sure), the papers were studded with invidious comments
-which, like all poorly based criticism, only served to emphasize
-the salient and impressive features of the greater city. It had
-an elevated road that ran through its long streets on stilts of
-steel and carried hundreds of thousands if not millions in
-the miniature trains drawn by small engines. It was a long,
-heavily populated island surrounded by great rivers, and was
-America’s ocean door to Europe. It had the great Brooklyn
-Bridge, then unparalleled anywhere, Wall Street, Jay Gould,
-Cornelius Vanderbilt, a huge company of millionaires. It
-had Tammany Hall, the Statue of Liberty, unveiled not so
-many years before (when I was a boy in Southern Indiana),
-Madison Square Garden, the Metropolitan Opera House, the
-Horse Show. It was the center and home of fashionable
-society, of all fixed and itinerant actors and actresses. All
-great theatrical successes began there. Of papers of largest
-circulation and greatest fame, it had nearly all. As an ignorant
-understrapper I had often contended, and that noisily,
-with various passing atoms of New York, as condescending
-as I was ignorant and stubborn, as to the relative merits of
-New York and Chicago, New York and St. Louis! There could
-not be so much difference! There were many great things
-in these minor places! Some day, surely, Chicago would outstrip
-New York!... Well, I lived to see many changes
-and things, but not that. Instead I saw the great city grow
-and grow, until it stood unrivaled, for size and force and
-wealth at least, anywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And now after all these tentative adventurings I was at last
-to enter it. Although I was moderately well-placed in Pittsburgh
-and not coming as a homeless, penniless seeker, still
-even now I was dreadfully afraid of it—why, I cannot say.
-Perhaps it was because it was so immense and mentally so
-much more commanding. Still I consoled myself with the
-thought that this was only a visit and I was to have a chance
-to explore it without feeling that I had to make my way then
-and there.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I recall clearly the hot late afternoon in July when, after
-stopping off at Pittsburgh to refresh myself and secure a
-change of clothing, I took the train for New York. I noted
-with eager, hungry eyes a succession of dreary forge and mining
-towns, miles of blazing coke ovens paralleling the track
-and lighting these regions with a lurid glow after dusk, huge
-dark hills occasionally twinkling with a feeble light or two.
-I spent a half-wakeful night in the berth, dreaming and meditating
-in a nervous chemic way. Before dawn I was awake
-and watching our passage through Philadelphia, then Trenton,
-New Brunswick, Metuchen, Menlo Park, Rahway, Elizabeth
-and Newark. Of all of these, save only Menlo Park, the
-home of Edison, who was then invariably referred to by journalists
-and paragraphers as “The Wizard of Menlo Park,”
-I knew nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As we neared New York at seven the sky was overcast, and
-at Newark it began to drizzle. When I stepped down it was
-pouring, and there at the end of a long train-shed, the immense
-steel and glass affair that once stood in Jersey City
-opposite Cortlandt Street of New York, awaited my fat and
-smiling brother, as sweet-faced and gay and hopeful as a
-child. At once, he began as was his way, a patter of jests and
-inquiries as to my trip, then led me to a ferry entrance, one
-of a half dozen in a row, through which, as through the proscenium
-arch of a stage, I caught my first glimpse of the great
-Hudson. A heavy mist of rain was suspended over it through
-which might be seen dimly the walls of the great city beyond.
-Puffing and squatty tugs, as graceful as fat ducks, attended
-by overhanging plumes of smoke, chugged noisily in the foreground
-of water. At the foot of the outline of the city
-beyond, only a few skyscrapers having as yet appeared, lay a
-fringe of ships and docks and ferry houses. No ferry boat
-being present, we needs must wait for one labeled Desbrosses,
-as was labeled the slip in which we stood.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I was talking to my brother and learning of his life
-here and of that of my sister E——, with whom he was living.
-The ferry boat eventually came into the slip and discharged a
-large crowd, and we, along with a vast company of commuters
-and travelers, entered it. Its center, as I noted, was stuffed
-with vehicles of all sizes and descriptions, those carrying
-light merchandise as well as others carrying coal and stone
-and lumber and beer. I can recall to this hour the odor of
-ammonia and saltpeter so characteristic of the ferry boats
-and ferry houses, the crowd in the ferry house on the New
-York side waiting to cross over once we arrived there, and the
-miserable little horse-cars, then still trundling along West
-Street and between Fourteenth and Broadway and the ferries,
-and Gansevoort Market. These were drawn by one horse,
-and you deposited your fare yourself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And this in the city of elevated roads!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the car which we boarded had two horses. We traveled
-up West Street from Desbrosses to Christopher and thence
-along that shabby old thoroughfare to Sixth Avenue and
-Fourteenth Street, where we changed. At first, aside from
-the sea and the boats and the sense of hugeness which goes
-with immense populations everywhere, I was disappointed by
-the seeming meanness of the streets. Many of them were
-still paved with cobblestones, like the oldest parts of St.
-Louis and Pittsburgh. The buildings, houses and stores alike,
-were for the most part of a shabby red in color and varying
-in height from one to six stories, most of them of an aged
-and contemptible appearance. This was, as I soon learned
-from my serene and confident brother, an old and shabby
-portion of the city. These horse-cars, in fact, were one of
-the jokes of the city, but they added to its variety. “Don’t
-think that they haven’t anything else. This is just the New
-York way. It has the new and the old mixed. Wait’ll you’re
-here a little while. You’ll be like everybody else—there’ll
-be just one place: New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And so it proved after a time.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The truth was that the city then, for the first time in a half
-century if not longer, was but beginning to emerge from a
-frightful period of misrule at the hands of as evil a band
-of mercenaries as ever garroted a body politic. It was still
-being looted and preyed upon in a most shameful manner.
-Graft and vice stalked hand-in-hand. Although Tammany
-Hall, the head and center of all the graft and robbery and
-vice and crime protection, had been delivered a stunning
-blow by a reform wave which had temporarily ousted it and
-placed reform officials over the city, still the grip of that
-organization had not relaxed. The police and all minor
-officials, as well as the workmen of all departments were
-still, under the very noses of the newly elected officials, perhaps
-with their aid, collecting graft and tribute. The Reverend
-Doctor Parkhurst was preaching, like Savonarola, the destruction
-of these corruptions of the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I arrived, the streets were not cleaned or well-lighted,
-their ways not adequately protected or regulated as to traffic.
-Uncollected garbage lay in piles, the while the city was paying
-enormous sums for its collection; small and feeble gas-jets
-fluttered, when in other cities the arc-light had for fifteen
-years been a commonplace. As we dragged on, on this slow-moving
-car, the bells on the necks of the horses tinkling rhythmically,
-I stared and commented.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, you can’t say that this is very much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My boy,” cautioned my good and cheerful brother, “you
-haven’t seen anything yet. This is just an old part of New
-York. Wait’ll you see Broadway and Fifth Avenue. We’re
-just coming this way because it’s the quickest way home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When we reached Fourteenth Street and Sixth Avenue I
-was very differently impressed. We had traveled for a little
-way under an elevated road over which trains thundered,
-and as we stepped down I beheld an impressively wide
-thoroughfare, surging even at this hour in the morning with
-people. Here was Macy’s, and northward stretched an area
-which I was told was the shopping center of the vast metropolis:
-Altman’s, Ehrich’s, O’Neill’s, Adams’, Simpson-Crawford’s,
-all huge stores and all in a row lining the west side
-of the street. We made our way across Fifteenth Street
-to the entrance of a narrow brownstone apartment house and
-ascended two flights, waiting in a rather poorly-lighted hall
-for an answer to our ring. The door was eventually opened
-by my sister, whom I had not seen since my mother’s death
-four years before. She had become stout. The trim beauty
-for which a very few years before she had been notable had
-entirely disappeared. I was disappointed at first, but was
-soon reassured and comforted by an inherently kindly and
-genial disposition, which expressed itself in much talking and
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Why, Theodore, I’m so glad to see you! Take off your
-things. Did you have a pleasant trip? George, here’s Theodore.
-This is my husband, Theodore. Come on back, you
-and Paul,” so she rattled on.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I studied her husband, whom I had not seen before, a
-dark and shrewd and hawklike person who seemed to be always
-following me with his eyes. He was an American of
-middle-Western extraction but with a Latin complexion and
-Latin eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>E——’s two children were brought forward, a boy and a
-girl four and two years of age respectively. A breakfast
-table was waiting, at which Paul had already seated himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Now, my boy,” he began, “this is where you eat real
-food once more. No jerkwater hotels about this! No Pittsburgh
-newspaper restaurants about this! Ah, look at the biscuit!
-Look at the biscuit!” as a maid brought in a creamy
-plateful. “And here’s steak—steak and brown gravy and biscuit!
-Steak and brown gravy and biscuit!” He rubbed his
-hands in joy. “I’ll bet you haven’t seen anything like this
-since you left home. Ah, good old steak and gravy!” His
-interest in food was always intense.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It’s been many a day since I’ve had such biscuit and
-gravy, E——,” I observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“‘It’s been many a day since I’ve had such biscuit and
-gravy, E——,’” mocked my brother.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Get out, you!” chimed in my sister. “Just listen to him,
-the old snooks! I can’t get him out of the kitchen, can I,
-George? He’s always eating. ‘It’s been many a day——’
-Ho! Ho!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I thought you were dieting?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“So I am, but you don’t expect me not to eat this morning,
-do you? I’m doing this to welcome you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Some welcome!” I scoffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Our chatter became more serious as the first glow of welcome
-wore off. During it all I was never free of a sense
-of the hugeness and strangeness of the city and the fact that at
-last I was here. And in this immense and far-flung thing
-my sister had this minute nook. From where I sat I could
-hear strange moanings and blowings which sounded like foghorns.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What is that noise?” I finally asked, for to me it was
-eerie.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Boats—tugs and vessels in the harbor. There’s a fog on,”
-explained H——, E——’s husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I listened to the variety of sounds, some far, some near,
-some mellow, some hoarse. “How far away are they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Anywhere from one to ten miles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I stopped and listened again. Suddenly the full majesty
-of the sea sweeping about this island at this point caught
-me. The entire city was surrounded by water. Its great
-buildings and streets were all washed about by that same
-sea-green salty flood which I had seen coming over from
-Jersey City, and beyond were the miles and miles of dank
-salt meadows, traversed by railroads. Huge liners from
-abroad were even now making their way here. At its shores
-were ranged in rows great vessels from Europe and all other
-parts of the world, all floating quietly upon the bosom of this
-great river. There were tugs and small boats and sailing
-vessels, and beyond all these, eastward, the silence, the majesty,
-the deadly earnestness of the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Do you ever think how wonderful it is to have the sea
-so close?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No, I can’t say that I do,” replied my brother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Nor I,” said my sister. “You get used to all those things
-here, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It’s wonderful, my boy,” said my brother, as usual helpfully
-interested. He invariably seemed to approve of all my
-moods and approaches to sentiment, and, like a mother who
-admires and spoils a child, was anxious to encourage and
-indulge me. “Great subject, the sea.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I could not help smiling, he was so naïf and simple and
-intellectually innocent and sweet.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“It’s a great city,” I said suddenly, the full import of
-it all sweeping over me. “I think I’d like to live here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Didn’t I tell you! Didn’t I tell you!” exclaimed my
-brother gayly. “They all fall for it! Now it’s the ocean
-vessels that get him. You take my advice, my boy, and move
-down here. The quicker the better for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I replied that I might, and then tried to forget the vessels
-and their sirens, but could not. The sea! The sea! And
-this great city! Never before was I so anxious to explore a
-city, and never before so much in awe of one either. It seemed
-so huge and powerful and terrible. There was something
-about it which made me seem useless and trivial. Whatever
-one might have been elsewhere, what could one be here?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>My</span> sister’s husband having something to do with this narrative,
-I will touch upon his history as well as that of my
-sister. In her youth E—— was one of the most attractive
-of the girls in our family. She never had any intellectual or
-artistic interests of any kind; if she ever read a book I never
-heard of it. But as for geniality, sympathy, industry, fair-mindedness
-and an unchanging and self-sacrificing devotion
-to her children, I have never known any one who could rival
-her. With no adequate intellectual training, save such as is
-provided by the impossible theories and teachings of the
-Catholic Church, she was but thinly capacitated to make her
-way in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At eighteen or nineteen she had run away and gone to
-Chicago, where she had eventually met H——, who had apparently
-fallen violently in love with her. He was fifteen years
-older than she and moderately well versed in the affairs of
-this world. At the time she met him he was the rather successful
-manager of a wholesale drug company, reasonably
-well-placed socially, married and the father of two or three
-children, the latter all but grown to maturity. They eloped,
-going direct to New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This was a great shock to my mother, who managed to conceal
-it from my father although it was a three-days’ wonder
-in the journalistic or scandal world of Chicago. Nothing
-more was heard of her for several years, when a dangerous
-illness overtook my mother in Warsaw and E—— came hurrying
-back for a few days’ visit. This was followed by another
-silence, which was ended by the last illness and death of my
-mother in Chicago, and she again appeared, a distrait and
-hysteric soul. I never knew any one to yield more completely
-to her emotions than she did on this occasion; she was almost
-fantastic in her grief. During all this time she had been
-living in New York, and she and her husband were supposed
-to be well off. Later, talking to Paul in St. Louis, I gathered
-that H——, while not so successful since he had gone East,
-was not a bad sort and that he had managed to connect himself
-with politics in some way, and that they were living comfortably
-in Fifteenth Street. But when I arrived there I
-found that they were by no means comfortable. The Tammany
-administration, under which a year or two before he had
-held an inspectorship of some kind, had been ended by the
-investigations of the Lexow Committee, and he was now without
-work of any kind. Also, instead of having proved a faithful
-and loving husband, he had long since wearied of his wife
-and strayed elsewhere. Now, having fallen from his success,
-he was tractable. Until the arrival of my brother Paul, who
-for reasons of sympathy had agreed to share the expenses
-here during the summer season, he had induced E—— to
-rent rooms, but for this summer this had been given up. With
-the aid of my brother and some occasional work H—— still
-did they were fairly comfortable. My sister if not quite happy
-was still the devoted slave of her children and a most
-pathetically dependent housewife. Whatever fires or vanities
-of her youth had compelled her to her meteoric career, she had
-now settled down and was content to live for her children.
-Her youth was over, love gone. And yet she managed to
-convey an atmosphere of cheer and hopefulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My brother Paul was in the best of spirits. He held a fair
-position as an actor, being the star in a road comedy and
-planning to go out the ensuing fall in a new one which he had
-written for himself and which subsequently enjoyed many
-successful seasons on the road. In addition, he was by way of
-becoming more and more popular nationally as a song-writer.
-Also as I have said, he had connected himself as a third partner
-in a song-publishing business which was to publish his
-own and other songs, and this, despite its smallness, was showing
-unmistakable signs of success.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The first thing he did this morning was to invite me to come
-and see this place, and about noon we walked across Fifteenth
-Street and up Sixth Avenue, then the heart of the shopping
-district, to Twentieth Street and thence east to between Fifth
-Avenue and Broadway, where in a one-time fashionable but
-now decayed dwelling, given over to small wholesale ventures,
-his concern was housed on the third floor. This was almost
-the center of a world of smart shops near several great hotels:
-the Continental, Bartholdi, and the Fifth Avenue. Next
-door were Lord &amp; Taylor. Below this, on the next corner, at
-Nineteenth and Broadway, was the Gorham Company, and
-below that the Ditson Company, a great music house, Arnold,
-Constable &amp; Company and others. There were excellent restaurants
-and office buildings crowding out an older world of
-fashion. I remember being impressed with the great number
-of severe brownstone houses with their wide flights of stone
-steps, conservatories and porte-cochères. Fifth Avenue and
-Twentieth Street were filled with handsome victorias and
-coaches.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Going into my brother’s office I saw a sign on the door
-which read: <i>Howley, Haviland &amp; Company</i>, and underneath,
-<i>Wing &amp; Sons, Pianos</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Are you the agent for a piano?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Huh-uh. They let us have a practice piano in return for
-that sign.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When I met his partners I was impressed with the probability
-of success which they seemed to suggest and which came
-true. The senior member, Howley, was a young, small, goggle-eyed
-hunchback with a mouthful of protruding teeth, and
-hair as black as a crow, and piercing eyes. He had long thin
-arms and legs which, because of his back, made him into a
-kind of Spider of a man, and he went about spider-wise, laughing
-and talking, yet always with a heavy “Scutch” burr.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“We’re joost aboot gettin’ un our feet here nu,” he said to
-me, his queer twisted face screwed up into a grimace of satisfaction
-and pride, “end we hevn’t ez yet s’mutch to show ye.
-But wuth a lettle time I’m a-theenkin’ ye’ll be seem’ theengs
-a-lookin’ a leetle bether.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I laughed. “Say,” I said to Paul when Howley had gone
-about some work, “how could you fail with him around? He’s
-as smart as a whip, and they’re all good luck anyhow.” I
-was referring to the superstition which counts all hunchbacks
-as lucky to others.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes,” said my brother. “I know they’re lucky, and he’s
-as straight and honest as they make ’em. I’ll always get a
-square deal here,” and then he began to tell me how his old
-publisher, by whom Howley had been employed, had
-“trimmed” him, and how this youth had put him wise. Then
-and there had begun this friendship which had resulted in this
-partnership.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The space this firm occupied was merely one square room,
-twenty by twenty, and in one corner of this was placed the
-free “tryout” piano. In another, between two windows, two
-tables stood back to back, piled high with correspondence. A
-longer table was along one side of a wall and was filled with
-published music, which was being wrapped and shipped. On
-the walls were some wooden racks or bins containing “stock,”
-the few songs thus far published. Although only a year old,
-this firm already had several songs which were beginning to
-attract attention, one of them entitled <i>On the Sidewalks of
-New York</i>. By the following summer this song was being
-sung and played all over the country and in England, an
-international “hit.” This office, in this very busy center,
-cost them only twenty dollars a month, and their “overhead
-expeenses,” as Howley pronounced it, were “juist nexta
-nothin’.” I could see that my good brother was in competent
-hands for once.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And the second partner, who arrived just as we were sitting
-down at a small table in a restaurant nearby for lunch, was
-an equally interesting youth whose personality seemed to spell
-success. At this time he was still connected as “head of
-stock,” whatever that may mean, with that large wholesale
-and retail music house the Ditson Company, at Broadway
-and Eighteenth Street. Although a third partner in this new
-concern, he had not yet resigned his connection with the other
-and was using it, secretly of course, to aid him and his firm
-in disposing of some of their wares. He was quite young,
-not more than twenty-seven, very quick and alert in manner,
-very short of speech, avid and handsome, a most attractive
-and clean-looking man. He shot out questions and replies as
-one might bullets out of a gun. “Didy’seeDrake?” “What
-‘d’esay?” “AnynewsfromBaker?” “Thedevily’say!” “Y’
-don’tmeanit!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I was moved to study him with the greatest care. Out of
-many anywhere, I told myself, I would have selected him as
-a pushing and promising and very self-centered person, but
-by no means disagreeable. Speaking of him later, as well as
-of Howley, my brother once said: “Y’see, Thee, New York’s
-the only place you could do a thing like this. This is the only
-place you could get fellows with their experience. Howley
-used to be with my old publisher, Woodward, and he’s the one
-that put me wise to the fact that Woodward was trimming me.
-And Haviland was a friend of his, working for Ditson.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>From the first, I had the feeling that this firm of which
-my brother was a part would certainly be successful. There
-was something about it, a spirit of victory and health and joy
-in work and life, which convinced me that these three would
-make a go of it. I could see them ending in wealth, as they
-did before disasters of their own invention overtook them.
-But that was still years away and after they had at least eaten
-of the fruits of victory.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As a part of this my initiation into the wonders of the city
-Paul led me into what he insisted was one of the wealthiest
-and most ornate of the Roman Churches in New York, St.
-Francis Xavier in Sixteenth Street, from which he was subsequently
-buried. Standing in this, he told me of some Jesuit
-priest there, a friend of his, who was comfortably berthed and
-“a good sport into the bargain, Thee, a bird.” However, having
-had my fill of Catholicism and its ways, I was not so much
-impressed, either by his friend or his character. But Sixth
-Avenue in this sunshine did impress me. It was the crowded
-center of nearly all the great stores, at least five, each a block
-in length, standing in one immense line on one side of the
-street. The carriages! The well-dressed people! Paul
-pointed out to me the windows of Altman’s on the west side
-of the street at Eighteenth and said it was the most exclusive
-store in America, that Marshall Field &amp; Company of Chicago
-was as nothing, and I had the feeling from merely looking
-at it that this was true; it was so well-arranged and spacious.
-Its windows, in which selected materials were gracefully
-draped and contrasted, bore out this impression. There were
-many vehicles of the better sort constantly pausing at its doors
-to put down most carefully dressed women and girls. I
-marveled at the size and wealth of a city which could support
-so many great stores all in a row.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Because of the heat my brother insisted upon calling a hansom
-cab to take us to Fourteenth and Broadway, where we
-were to begin our northward journey. Just south of Union
-Square at Thirteenth Street was the old Star Theater of
-which he said: “There you have it. That used to be Lester
-Wallack’s Theater twenty years ago—the great Lester Wallack.
-There was an actor, my boy, a great actor! They talk
-about Mansfield and Barrett and Irving and Willard and all
-these other people today. All good, my boy, all good, but not
-in it with him, Theodore, not in it. This man was a genius.
-And he packed ’em too. Many a time I’ve passed this place
-when you couldn’t get by the door for the crowd.” And he
-proceeded to relate that in the old days, when he first came
-to New York, all the best part of the theatrical district was
-still about and below Union Square—Niblo’s, the old London
-on the Bowery, and what not.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I listened. What had been had been. It might all have been
-very wonderful but it was so no longer, all done and gone.
-I was new and strange, and wished to see only what was new
-and wonderful now. The sun was bright on Union Square
-now. This was a newer world in which we were living, he
-and I, this day. The newest wave of the sea invariably obliterates
-the one that has gone before. And that was only
-twenty years ago and it has all changed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>North of this was the newer Broadway—the Broadway of
-the current actor, manager and the best theaters—and fresh,
-smart, gay, pruned of almost every trace of poverty or care.
-Tiffany’s was at Fifteenth and Broadway, its windows glittering
-with jewels; Brentano’s, the booksellers, were at Sixteenth
-on the west side of Union Square; and Sarony, the
-photographer, was between Fifteenth and Sixteenth, a great
-gold replica of his signature indicating his shop. The Century
-Company, to which my brother called my attention as an
-institution I might some day be connected with, so great was
-his optimism and faith in me, stood on the north side of Union
-Square at Seventeenth. At Nineteenth and Broadway were
-the Gorham Company, and Arnold, Constable &amp; Company.
-At Twentieth was Lord &amp; Taylor’s great store, adjoining the
-old building in which was housed my brother’s firm. Also, at
-this street, stood the old Continental Hotel, a popular and
-excellent restaurant occupying a large portion of its lower
-floor which became a part of my daily life later. At Twenty-first
-Street was then standing one of the three great stores of
-Park &amp; Tilford. At Twenty-third, on the east side of the
-street, facing Madison Square, was another successful hotel,
-the Bartholdi, and opposite it, on the west side, was the site
-of the Flatiron Building.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Across Madison Square, its delicate golden-brown tower
-soaring aloft and alone, no huge buildings then as now to
-dwarf it, stood Madison Square Garden, Diana, her arrow
-pointed to the wind, giving naked chase to a mythic stag, her
-mythic dogs at her heels, high in the blue air above. The
-west side of Broadway, between Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth,
-was occupied by the Fifth Avenue Hotel, the home,
-as my brother was quick to inform me, of Senator Platt, the
-Republican boss of the State, who with Croker divided the
-political control of the State and who here held open court,
-the famous “Amen Corner,” where his political henchmen
-were allowed to ratify all his suggestions. It was somewhere
-within. Between Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth on the same
-side of the street were two more hotels, the Albemarle and
-the Hoffman House. Just north of this, at Twenty-seventh
-and Broadway, on the east side of the street and running
-through to Fifth Avenue, was Delmonico’s. Into this we
-now ventured, my good brother hailing genially some acquaintance
-who happened to be in charge of the floor at the
-moment. The waiter who served us greeted him familiarly.
-I stared in awe at its pretentious and ornate furniture, its
-noble waiters and the something about it which seemed to
-speak of wealth and power. How easily five cents crooks the
-knee to five million!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>A block or two north of this was the old Fifth Avenue
-Theater, then a theater of the first class but later devoted to
-vaudeville. At Twenty-ninth was the Gilsey House, one of
-the earliest homes of this my Rialto-loving brother. At Thirtieth
-and Broadway, on the east side, stood Palmer’s Theater,
-famous for its musical and beauty shows. At Thirty-first
-and Broadway, on the west side of the street, stood Augustus
-Daly’s famous playhouse, its façade suggestive of older homes
-remodeled to this new use. And already it was coming to be
-<i>passé</i>. Weber &amp; Fields’ had not even appeared. And in my
-short span it appeared and disappeared and became a memory!
-Between Twenty-eighth and Thirty-fourth were several more
-important hotels: The Grand, The Imperial; and between
-Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth streets, in Sixth Avenue,
-was the old Manhattan Theater, at that time the home of
-many successes, but also, like Daly’s, drawing to the end of
-a successful career.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>In Thirty-fourth, west of Broadway (later a part of the
-Macy store site), was Koster &amp; Bial’s Music Hall, managed
-by a man who subsequently was to become widely known but
-who was then only beginning to rise, Oscar Hammerstein.
-And around the corner, in Broadway at Thirty-fifth, was a
-very successful theater, the Herald Square, facing the unique
-and beautiful <i>Herald</i> building. Beyond that in Thirty-fifth,
-not many feet east of Sixth Avenue, was the Garrick, or the
-Lyceum as it was then known, managed by Daniel Frohman.
-Above these, at Thirty-sixth, on the west side, was the Marlborough,
-at which later, in his heyday, my brother chose to live.
-At Thirty-eighth, on the southeast corner, stood the popular
-and exclusive Normandie, one of the newer hotels, and at the
-northeast corner of this same intersection, the new and imposing
-Knickerbocker Theater. At Thirty-ninth was the far-famed
-Casino, with its choruses of girls, the Mecca of all
-night-loving Johnnies and rowdies; and between Thirty-ninth
-and Fortieth, on the west side, the world-famed Metropolitan
-Opera House, still unchanged save for a restaurant in its
-northern corner. At Fortieth over the way stood the Empire
-Theater, with its stock company, which included the Drews,
-Favershams and what not; and in this same block was the famous
-Browne’s Chop House, a resort for Thespians and night-lovers.
-At Forty-second and Broadway, the end of all Rialto-dom
-for my brother, and from which he turned sadly and said:
-“Well, here’s the end,” stood that Mecca of Meccas, the new
-Hotel Metropole, with its restaurant opening on three streets,
-its leathern seats backed to its walls, its high open windows,
-an air of super-wisdom as to all matters pertaining to sport
-and the theater pervading it. This indeed was the extreme
-northern limit of the white-light district, and here we paused
-for a drink and to see and be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>How well I remember it all—the sense of ease and well-being
-that was over this place, and over all Broadway; the
-loud clothes, the bright straw hats, the canes, the diamonds,
-the hot socks, the air of security and well-being, assumed by
-those who had won an all-too-brief hour in that pretty, petty
-world of make-believe and pleasure and fame. And here my
-good brother was at his best. It was “Paul” here and “Paul”
-there. Already known for several songs of great fame, as well
-as for his stage work and genial personality, he was welcomed
-everywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And then, ambling down the street in the comforting shade
-of its west wall, what amazing personalities, male and female,
-and so very many of them, pausing to take him by the hand,
-slap him on the back, pluck familiarly at his coat lapel and
-pour into his ear or his capacious bosom magnificent tales of
-successes, of great shows, of fights and deaths and love affairs
-and tricks and scandals. And all the time my good brother
-smiled, laughed, sympathized. There were moments with
-prizefighters, with long-haired Thespians down on their luck
-and looking for a dime or a dollar, and bright petty upstarts
-of the vaudeville world. Retired miners and ranchmen out
-of the West, here to live and recount their tales of hardships
-endured, battles won, or of marvelous winnings at cards, trickeries
-in racing, prizefighting and what not, now ambled by or
-stopped and exchanged news or stories. There was talk of
-what “dogs” or “swine” some people were, what liars, scoundrels,
-ingrates; as well as the magnificent, magnanimous,
-“God’s own salt” that others were. The oaths! The stories
-of women! My brother seemed to know them all. I was
-amazed. What a genial, happy, well-thought-of successful
-man!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>All</span> this while of course there had been much talk as to the
-character of those we met, the wealth and fashion that purchased
-at Tiffany’s or at Brentano’s, those who loafed at
-the Fifth Avenue, the Hoffman House, the Gilsey, the Normandie.
-My brother had friends in many of these hotels and
-bars. A friend of his was the editor of the <i>Standard</i>, Roland
-Burke Hennessy, and he would take me up and introduce me.
-Another was the political or sporting man of the <i>Sun</i> or
-<i>World</i> or <i>Herald</i>. Here came one who was the manager of the
-Casino or the Gilsey! One was a writer, a playwright, a song-writer
-or a poet! A man of facile friendships, my brother!
-As we passed Twenty-third Street he made it plain that here
-was a street which had recently begun to replace the older
-and more colossal Sixth Avenue, some of the newer and much
-smarter stores—Best’s, Le Boutillier’s, McCreery’s, Stern
-Brothers’—having built here.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This is really the smart street now, Thee, this and a part
-of Fifth Avenue about Twenty-third. The really exclusive
-stores are coming in here. If you ever work in New York, as
-you will, you’ll want to know about these things. You’ll see
-more smart women in here than in any other shopping street,”
-and he called my attention to the lines of lacquered and be-furred
-and beplushed carriages, the harness of the horses
-aglitter with nickel and gilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Passing Daly’s he said: “Now here, my boy, is a manager.
-He makes actors, he don’t hire them. He takes ’em and trains
-’em. All these young fellows and girls who are making a
-stir,” and he named a dozen, among whom I noted such names
-as those of Maude Adams, Willie Collier, Drew and Faversham,
-“worked for him. And he don’t allow any nonsense.
-There’s none of that upstage stuff with him, you bet. When
-you work for him you’re just an ordinary employee and you
-do what he tells you, not the way you think you ought to do.
-I’ve watched him rehearse, and I know, and all these fellows
-tell the same story about him. But he’s a gentleman, my boy,
-and a manager. Everybody knows that when he finishes with
-a man or a woman they can act.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Thirty-third Street he waved his hand in the direction
-of the Waldorf, which was then but the half of its later size.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Down there’s the Waldorf. That’s the place. That’s
-the last word for the rich. That’s where they give the biggest
-balls and dinners, there and at Delmonico’s and the Netherland.”
-And after a pause he continued: “Some time you
-ought to write about these things, Thee. They’re the limit
-for extravagance and show. The people out West don’t know
-yet what’s going on, but the rich are getting control. They’ll
-own the country pretty soon. A writer like you could make
-’em see that. You ought to show up some of these things so
-they’d know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Youthful, inexperienced, unlettered, the whole scroll of
-this earthly wallow a mere guess, I accepted that as an important
-challenge. Maybe it ought to be shown up....
-As though picturing or indicating life has ever yet changed
-it! But he, the genial and hopeful, always fancied that it
-might be so—and I with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>When he left me this day at three or four, his interest ended
-because the wonders of Broadway had been exhausted, I
-found myself with all the great strange city still to be explored.
-Making inquiry as to directions and distances, I soon
-found myself in Fifth Avenue at Forty-second Street. Here,
-represented by mansions at least, was that agglomeration of
-wealth which, as I then imagined, solved all earthly ills.
-Beauty was here, of course, and ease and dignity and security,
-that most wonderful and elusive thing in life. I saw, I admired,
-and I resented, being myself poor and seeking.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Fifth Avenue then lacked a few of the buildings which
-since have added somewhat to its impressiveness—the Public
-Library, the Metropolitan Museum façade at Eighty-second
-Street, as well as most of the great houses which now face
-Central Park north of Fifty-ninth Street. But in their place
-was something that has since been lost and never will be again:
-a line of quiet and unpretentious brownstone residences which,
-crowded together on spaces of land no wider than twenty-five
-feet, still had about them an air of exclusiveness which caused
-one to hesitate and take note. Between Forty-second and
-Fifty-ninth Street there was scarcely a suggestion of that
-coming invasion of trade which subsequently, in a period of
-less than twenty years, changed its character completely. Instead
-there were clubs, residences, huge quiet and graceful
-hotels such as the old Plaza and the Windsor, long since destroyed,
-and the very graceful Cathedral of St. Patrick. All
-the cross streets in this area were lined uniformly with brownstone
-or red brick houses of the same height and general appearance,
-a high flight of steps leading to the front door, a
-side gate and door for servants under the steps. Nearly all
-of these houses were closely boarded up for the summer.
-There was scarcely a trace of life anywhere save here or there
-where a servant lounged idly at a side gate or on the front
-steps talking to a policeman or a cabman.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At Fiftieth Street the great church on its platform was as
-empty as a drum. At Fifty-ninth, where stood the Savoy,
-the Plaza, and the Netherland, as well as the great home of
-Cornelius Vanderbilt, it was all bare as a desert. Lonely
-handsome cabs plupped dismally to and fro, and the father or
-mother of the present Fifth Avenue bus, an overgrown closed
-carriage, rolled lonesomely between Washington Square and
-One Hundred and Tenth Street. Central Park had most of
-the lovely walks and lakes which grace it today, but no distant
-skyline. Central Park West as such had not even appeared.
-That huge wall that breaks the western sky now was wanting.
-Along this dismal thoroughfare there trundled a dismal yellow
-horse-car trailing up a cobble-paved street bare of anything
-save a hotel or two and some squatter shanties on rocks, with
-their attendant goats.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But for all that, keeping on as far north as the Museum, I
-was steadily more and more impressed. It was not beautiful,
-but perhaps, as I thought, it did not need to be. The congestion
-of the great city and the power of a number of great
-names were sufficient to excuse it. And ever and anon would
-come a something—the Gould home at Sixty-first, the Havemeyer
-and Astor residences at Sixty-sixth and Sixty-eighth,
-the Lenox Library at Seventy-second—which redeemed it.
-Even the old red brick and white stone Museum, now but the
-central core of the much larger building, with its attendant
-obelisk, had charm and dignity. So far I wandered, then
-took the bus and returned to my sister’s apartment in Fifteenth
-Street.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'>If I have presented all this mildly it was by no means a mild
-experience for me. Sensitive to the brevity of life and what
-one may do in a given span, vastly interested in the city itself,
-I was swiftly being hypnotized by a charm more elusive than
-real, more of the mind than the eye perhaps, which seized upon
-and held me so tensely nevertheless that soon I was quite unable
-to judge sanely of all this and saw its commonplace and
-even mean face in a most roseate light. The beauty, the hope,
-the possibilities that were here! It was not a handsome city.
-As I look back on it now, there was much that was gross and
-soggy and even repulsive about it. It had too many hard
-and treeless avenues and cross streets, bare of anything save
-stone walls and stone or cobble pavements and wretched iron
-lamp-posts. There were regions that were painfully crowded
-with poverty, dirt, despair. The buildings were too uniformly
-low, compact, squeezed. Outside the exclusive residence and
-commercial areas there was no sense of length or space.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But having seen Broadway and this barren section of Fifth
-Avenue, I could not think of it in a hostile way, the magnetism
-of large bodies over small ones holding me. Its barrenness
-did not now appall me, nor its lack of beauty irritate. There
-was something else here, a quality of life and zest and security
-and ease for some, cheek by jowl with poverty and longing and
-sacrifice, which gives to life everywhere its keenest most
-pathetic edge. Here was none of that eager clattering snap
-so characteristic of many of our Western cities, which, while
-it arrests at first, eventually palls. No city that I had ever
-seen had exactly what this had. As a boy, of course, I had
-invested Chicago with immense color and force, and it was
-there, ignorant, American, semi-conscious, seeking, inspiring.
-But New York was entirely different. It had the feeling of
-gross and blissful and parading self-indulgence. It was as
-if self-indulgence whispered to you that here was its
-true home; as if, for the most part, it was here secure. Life
-here was harder perhaps, for some more aware, more cynical
-and ruthless and brazen and shameless, and yet more alluring
-for these very reasons. Wherever one turned one felt a
-consciousness of ease and gluttony, indifference to ideals, however
-low or high, and coupled with a sense of power that
-had found itself and was not easily to be dislodged, of virtue
-that has little idealism and is willing to yield for a price.
-Here, as one could feel, were huge dreams and lusts and
-vanities being gratified hourly. I wanted to know the worst
-and the best of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>During the few days that I was permitted to remain here,
-I certainly had an excellent sip. My brother, while associated
-with the other two as a partner, was so small a factor so far
-as his firm’s internal economy was concerned that he was not
-needed as more than a hand-shaker on Broadway, one who
-went about among vaudeville and stage singers and actors and
-song-composers and advertised by his agreeable personality
-the existence of his firm and its value to them. And it was
-that quality of geniality in him which so speedily caused his
-firm to grow and prosper. Indeed he was its very breath and
-life. I always think of him as idling along Broadway in the
-summer time, seeing men and women who could sing songs
-and writers who could write them, and inducing them by the
-compelling charm of his personality, to resort to his firm. He
-had a way with people, affectionate, reassuring, intimate. He
-was a magnet which drew the young and the old, the sophisticated
-and the unsophisticated, to his house Gradually, and
-because of him and his fame, it prospered mightily, and yet I
-doubt if ever his partners understood how much he meant to
-them. His house was young and unimportant, yet within a
-year or two it had forged its way to the front, and this was due
-to him and none other. The rest was merely fair commercial
-management of what he provided in great abundance.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>While he waited for his regular theatrical season to resume,
-he was most excellently prepared to entertain one who might
-be interested to see Broadway. This night, after dinner at
-my sister’s, he said, “Come on, sport,” and together, after
-promising faithfully to be back by midnight, we ambled forth,
-strolling across Fifteenth Street to Sixth Avenue and then
-taking a car to Thirty-third Street, the real center of all things
-theatrical at the time. Here, at Broadway and Thirty-fifth,
-opposite the <i>Herald</i> building and the Herald Square Theater,
-stood the Hotel Aulic, a popular rendezvous for actors and
-singers, with whom my brother was most concerned. And
-here they were in great number, the sidewalks on two sides
-of the building alive with them, a world of glittering, spinning
-flies. I recall the agreeable summer evening air, the bright
-comforting lights, the open doors and windows, the showy
-clothes, the laughter, the jesting, the expectorating, the back-slapping
-geniality. It was wonderful, the spirit and the sense
-of happiness and ease. Men do at times attain to happiness,
-paradise even, in this shabby, noisome, worthless, evanescent,
-make-believe world. I have seen it with mine own eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And here, as in that more pretentious institution at Forty-second
-Street, the Metropole, my brother was at ease. His
-was by no means the trade way of a drummer but rather that
-of one who, like these others, was merely up and down the
-street seeing what he might. He drank, told idle tales, jested
-unwearyingly. But all the while, as he told me later, he was
-really looking for certain individuals who could sing or play
-and whom in this roundabout and casual way he might interest
-in the particular song or instrumental composition he was then
-furthering. “And you never can tell,” he said. “You might
-run into some fellow who would be just the one to write a
-song or sing one for you.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> next day I was left to myself, and visited City Hall,
-Brooklyn Bridge, Wall Street and the financial and commercial
-sections.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I, having no skill for making money and intensely hungry
-for the things that money would buy, stared at Wall Street,
-a kind of cloudy Olympus in which foregathered all the gods
-of finance, with the eyes of one who hopes to extract something
-by mere observation. Physically it was not then, as it is
-today, the center of a sky-crowded world. There were few
-if any high buildings below City Hall, few higher than ten
-stories. Wall Street was curved, low-fronted, like Oxford
-Street in London. It began, as some one had already pointed
-out, at a graveyard and ended at a river. The house of J. P.
-Morgan was just then being assailed for its connection with
-a government gold bond issue. The offices of Russell Sage and
-George Gould (the son), as well as those of the Standard Oil
-Company below Wall in Broadway, and those of a whole
-company of now forgotten magnates, could have been pointed
-out by any messenger boy, postman or policeman. What impressed
-me was that the street was vibrant with something
-which, though far from pleasing, craft, greed, cunning, niggardliness,
-ruthlessness, a smart swaggering ease on the part
-of some, and hopeless, bedraggled or beaten aspect on the
-part of others, held my interest as might a tiger or a snake.
-I had never seen such a world. It was so busy and paper-bestrewn,
-messenger and broker bestridden, as to make one
-who had nothing to do there feel dull and commonplace. One
-thought only of millions made in stocks over night, of yachts,
-orgies, travels, fames and what not else. Since that time Wall
-Street has become much tamer, less significant, but then one
-had a feeling that if only one had a tip or a little skill one
-might become rich; or that, on the other hand, one might be
-torn to bits and that here was no mercy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I arrived a little before noon, and the ways were alive
-with messenger boys and young clerks and assistants. On
-the ground was a mess of papers, torn telegrams and letters.
-Near Broad and Wall streets the air was filled with a hum
-of voices and typewriter clicks issuing from open windows.
-Just then, as with the theatrical business later, and still later
-with the motion picture industry, it had come to be important
-to be in the street, however thin one’s connection. To say “I
-am in Wall Street” suggested a world of prospects and possibilities.
-The fact that at this time, and for twenty years after,
-the news columns were all but closed to suicides and failures
-in Wall Street, so common were they, illustrates how vagrant
-and unfounded were the dreams of many.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the end of Wall Street as the seat of American money
-domination might even then have been foretold. The cities of
-the nation were growing. New and by degrees more or less
-independent centers of finance were being developed. In the
-course of fifteen years it had become the boast of some cities
-that they could do without New York in the matter of loans,
-and it was true. They could; and today many enterprises go
-west, not east, for their cash. In the main, Wall Street has
-degenerated into a second-rate gamblers’ paradise. What
-significant Wall Street figures are there today?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On one of my morning walks in New York I had wandered
-up Broadway to the <i>Herald</i> Building and looked into its
-windows, where were visible a number of great presses in full
-operation, much larger than any I had seen in the West, and
-my brother had recalled to me the fact that James Gordon
-Bennett, owner and editor of the <i>Herald</i>, had once commissioned
-Henry M. Stanley, at that time a reporter on the paper,
-to go to Africa to find Livingstone. And my good brother,
-who romanticized all things, my supposed abilities and possibilities
-included, was inclined to think that if I came to New
-York some such great thing might happen to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On another day I went to Printing House Square, where I
-stared at the <i>Sun</i> and <i>World</i> and <i>Times</i> and <i>Tribune</i> buildings,
-all facing City Hall Park, sighing for the opportunities
-that they represented. But I did not act. Something about
-them overawed me, especially the <i>World</i>, the editor of which
-had begun his career in St. Louis years before. Compared
-with the Western papers with which I had been connected,
-all New York papers seemed huge, the tasks they represented
-editorially and reportorially much more difficult. True, a
-brother of a famous playwright with whom I had worked in
-St. Louis had come East and connected himself with the
-<i>World</i>, and I might have called upon him and spied out the
-land. He had fortified himself with a most favorable record in
-the West, as had I, only I did not look upon mine as so favorable
-somehow. Again, a city editor once of St. Louis was now
-here, city editor of one of the city’s great papers, the <i>Recorder</i>,
-and another man, a Sunday editor of Pittsburgh, had become
-the Sunday editor of the <i>Press</i> here. But these appeared to
-me to be exceptional cases. I reconnoitered these large and in
-the main rather dull institutions with the eye of one who seeks
-to take a fortress. The editorial pages of all of these papers,
-as I had noticed in the West, bristled with cynical and condescending
-remarks about that region, and their voices representing
-great circulation and wealth gave them amazing
-weight in my eyes. Although I knew what I knew about the
-subservience of newspapers to financial interests, their rat-like
-fear of religionists and moralists, their shameful betrayal
-of the ordinary man at every point at which he could possibly
-be betrayed yet still having the power, by weight of lies and
-pretense and make-believe, to stir him up to his own detriment
-and destruction, I was frightened by this very power,
-which in subsequent years I have come to look upon as the
-most deadly anD forceful of all in nature: the power to masquerade
-and by.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>There was about these papers an air of assurance and righteousness
-and authority and superiority which overawed and
-frightened me. To work on the <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Herald</i>, the <i>World</i>!
-How many cubs, from how many angles of our national life,
-were constantly and hopefully eyeing them from the very
-same sidewalks or benches in City Hall Park, as the ultimate
-solution of all their literary, commercial, social, political problems
-and ambitions. The thousands of pipe-smoking collegians
-who have essayed the <i>Sun</i> alone, the scullion Danas, embryo
-Greeleys and Bennetts!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I decided that it would be best for me to return to Pittsburgh
-and save a little money before I took one of these
-frowning editorial offices by storm, and I did return, but in
-what a reduced mood! Pittsburgh, after New York and all I
-had seen there! And in this darkly brooding and indifferent
-spirit I now resumed my work. A sum of money sufficient to
-sustain me for a period in New York was all that I wished
-now.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And in the course of the next four months I did save two
-hundred and forty dollars, enduring deprivations which I
-marvel at even now—breakfast consisting of a cruller and a
-cup of coffee; dinners that cost no more than a quarter, sometimes
-no more than fifteen cents. In the meantime I worked
-as before only to greater advantage, because I was now more
-sure of myself. My study of Balzac and these recent adventures
-in the great city had so fired my ambition that nothing
-could have kept me in Pittsburgh. I lived on so little that I
-think I must have done myself some physical harm which
-told against me later in the struggle for existence in New
-York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At this time I had the fortune to discover Huxley and Tyndall
-and Herbert Spencer, whose introductory volume to his
-<i>Synthetic Philosophy</i> (<i>First Principles</i>) quite blew me, intellectually,
-to bits. Hitherto, until I had read Huxley, I
-had some lingering filaments of Catholicism trailing about me,
-faith in the existence of Christ, the soundness of his moral
-and sociologic deductions, the brotherhood of man. But on
-reading <i>Science and Hebrew Tradition</i> and <i>Science and Christian
-Tradition</i>, and finding both the Old and New Testaments
-to be not compendiums of revealed truth but mere records of
-religious experiences, and very erroneous ones at that, and
-then taking up <i>First Principles</i> and discovering that all I
-deemed substantial—man’s place in nature, his importance in
-the universe, this too, too solid earth, man’s very identity save
-as an infinitesimal speck of energy or a “suspended equation”
-drawn or blown here and there by larger forces in which he
-moved quite unconsciously as an atom—all questioned and
-dissolved into other and less understandable things, I was completely
-thrown down in my conceptions or non-conceptions
-of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Up to this time there had been in me a blazing and unchecked
-desire to get on and the feeling that in doing so we
-did get somewhere; now in its place was the definite conviction
-that spiritually one got nowhere, that there was no hereafter,
-that one lived and had his being because one had to, and
-that it was of no importance. Of one’s ideals, struggles, deprivations,
-sorrows and joys, it could only be said that they
-were chemic compulsions, something which for some inexplicable
-but unimportant reason responded to and resulted from
-the hope of pleasure and the fear of pain. Man was a mechanism,
-undevised and uncreated, and a badly and carelessly
-driven one at that.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I fear that I cannot make you feel how these things came
-upon me in the course of a few weeks’ reading and left me
-numb, my gravest fears as to the unsolvable disorder and
-brutality of life eternally verified. I felt as low and hopeless
-at times as a beggar of the streets. There was of course this
-other matter of necessity, internal chemical compulsion, to
-which I had to respond whether I would or no. I was daily
-facing a round of duties which now more than ever verified
-all that I had suspected and that these books proved. With
-a gloomy eye I began to watch how the chemical—and their
-children, the mechanical—forces operated through man and
-outside him, and this under my very eyes. Suicides seemed
-sadder since there was no care for them; failures the same.
-One of those periodic scandals breaking out in connection with
-the care of prisoners in some local or state jail, I saw how
-self-interest, the hope of pleasure or the fear of pain caused
-jailers or wardens or a sheriff to graft on prisoners, feed them
-rotten meat, torture them into silence and submission, and
-then, politics interfering (the hope of pleasure again and the
-fear of pain on the part of some), the whole thing hushed up,
-no least measure of the sickening truth breaking out in the
-subservient papers. Life could or would do nothing for those
-whom it so shamefully abused.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Again, there was a poor section, one street in the East Pittsburgh
-district, shut off by a railroad at one end (the latter
-erecting a high fence to protect itself from trespass) and by
-an arrogant property owner at the other end; those within
-were actually left without means of ingress and egress. Yet
-instead of denouncing either or both, the railroads being so
-powerful and the citizen prosperous and within his “rights,”
-I was told to write a humorous article but not to “hurt anybody’s
-feelings.” Also before my eyes were always those
-regions of indescribable poverty and indescribable wealth
-previously mentioned, which were always carefully kept separate
-by the local papers, all the favors and compliments and
-commercial and social aids going to those who had, all the
-sniffs and indifferences and slights going to those who had not;
-and when I read Spencer I could only sigh. All I could think
-of was that since nature would not or could not do anything
-for man, he must, if he could, do something for himself; and
-of this I saw no prospect, he being a product of these selfsame
-accidental, indifferent and bitterly cruel forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And so I went on from day to day, reading, thinking, doing
-fairly acceptable work, but always withdrawing more and
-more into myself. As I saw it then, the world could not understand
-me, nor I it, nor men each other very well. Then
-a little later I turned and said that since the whole thing was
-hopeless I might as well forget it and join the narrow, heartless,
-indifferent scramble, but I could not do that either, lacking
-the temperament and the skill. All I could do was think,
-and since no paper such as I knew was interested in any of
-the things about which I was thinking, I was hopeless indeed.
-Finally, in late November, having two hundred and forty dollars
-saved, I decided to leave this dismal scene and seek the
-charm of the great city beyond, hoping that there I might succeed
-at something, be eased and rested by some important
-work of some kind.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>My</span> departure was accelerated by a conversation I had one
-day with the political reporter of whom I have spoken but
-whose name I have forgotten. By now I had come to be on
-agreeable social terms with all the men on our staff, and at
-midnight it was my custom to drift around to the Press Club,
-where might be found a goodly company of men who worked
-on the different papers. I found this political man here one
-night. He said: “I can’t understand why you stay here. Now
-I wouldn’t say that to any one else in the game for fear he’d
-think I was plotting to get him out of his job, but with you
-it’s different. There’s no great chance here, and you have
-too much ability to waste your time on this town. They won’t
-let you do anything. The steel people have this town sewed
-up tight. The papers are muzzled. All you can do is to
-write what the people at the top want you to write, and that’s
-very little. With your talent you could go down to New York
-and make a place for yourself. I’ve been there myself, but
-had to come back on account of my family. The conditions
-were too uncertain for me, and I have to have a regular income.
-But with you it’s different. You’re young, and apparently
-you haven’t any one dependent on you. If you do
-strike it down there you’ll make a lot of money, and what’s
-more you might make a name for yourself. Don’t you think
-it’s foolish for you to stay here? Don’t think it’s anything to
-me whether you go or stay. I haven’t any ax to grind, but I
-really wonder why you stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I explained that I had been drifting, that I was really on
-my way to New York but taking my time about it. Only a
-few days before I had been reading of a certain Indo-English
-newspaper man, fresh out of India with his books and short
-stories, who was making a great stir. His name was Rudyard
-Kipling, and the enthusiasm with which he was being received
-made me not jealous but wishful for a career for myself. The
-tributes to his brilliance were so unanimous, and he was a
-mere youth as yet, not more than twenty-seven or -eight. He
-was coming to America, or was even then on his way, and
-the wonder of such a success filled my mind. I decided then
-and there that I would go, must go, and accordingly gave
-notice of my intention. My city editor merely looked at me
-as much as to say, “Well, I thought so,” then said: “Well,
-I think you’ll do better there myself, but I’m not glad to have
-you go. You can refer to us any time you want to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>On Saturday I drew my pay at noon and by four o’clock
-had once more boarded the express which deposited me in New
-York the following morning at seven. My brother had long
-since left New York and would not be back until the following
-Spring. I had exchanged a word or two with my sister and
-found that she was not prospering. Since Paul had left she
-had been forced to resort to letting rooms, H—— not having
-found anything to do. I wired her that I was coming, and
-walked in on her the next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My sister, on seeing me again, was delighted. I did not
-know then, and perhaps if I had I should not have been so
-pleased, that I was looked upon by her as the possible way out
-of a very difficult and trying crisis which she and her two
-children were then facing. For H——, from being a one-time
-fairly resourceful and successful and aggressive man, had
-slipped into a most disconcerting attitude of weakness and
-all but indifference before the onslaughts of the great city.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My brother Paul, being away, saw no reason why he should
-be called upon to help them, since H—— was as physically
-able as himself. Aside from renting their rooms there was
-apparently no other source of income here, at least none
-which H—— troubled to provide. He appeared to be done
-for, played out. Like so many who have fought a fair battle
-and then lost, he had wearied of the game and was drifting.
-And my sister, like so many of the children of ordinary
-families the world over, had received no practical education
-or training and knew nothing other than housework, that
-profitless trade. In consequence, within a very short time
-after my arrival, I found myself faced by one of two alternatives:
-that of retiring and leaving her to shift as best she
-might (a step which, in view of what followed, would have
-been wiser but which my unreasoning sympathy would not
-permit me to do), or of assisting her with what means I had.
-But this would be merely postponing the day of reckoning for
-all of them and bringing a great deal of trouble upon myself.
-For, finding me willing to pay for my room and board here,
-and in addition to advance certain sums which had nothing
-to do with my obligations, H—— felt that he could now drift
-a little while longer and so did, accepting through his wife
-such doles as I was willing to make. My sister, fumbling, impractical
-soul, flowing like water into any crevice of opportunity,
-accepted this sacrifice on my part.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But despite these facts, which developed very slowly, I
-was very much alive to the possibilities which the city then
-held for me. At last I was here. I told myself I had a comfortable
-place to stay and would remain, and from this vantage
-point I could now sally forth and reconnoiter the city at my
-leisure. And as in all previous instances, I devoted a day or
-two to rambling about, surveying the world which I was seeking
-to manipulate to my advantage, and then on the second or
-third afternoon began to investigate those newspaper offices
-with which I was most anxious to connect.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I can never forget the shock I received when on entering
-first the <i>World</i>, then the <i>Sun</i>, and later the <i>Herald</i>, I discovered
-that one could not so much as get in to see the city
-editor, that worthy being guarded by lobby or anteroom, in
-which were posted as lookouts and buffers or men-at-arms as
-cynical and contemptuous a company of youths and hall boys
-as it has ever been my lot to meet. They were not only self-sufficient,
-but supercilious, scoffing and ribald. Whenever I
-entered one of these offices there were two or three on guard,
-sometimes four or five in the <i>World</i> office, wrestling for the
-possession of an ink-well or a pencil or an apple, or slapping
-each other on the back. But let a visitor arrive with an
-inquiry of some kind, and these young banditti would cease
-their personal brawling long enough at least to place themselves
-as a barricade between the newcomer and the door to
-the editorial sanctum, whereupon would ensue the following
-routine formula, each and every one of them chewing gum or
-eating an apple.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Whoja wanta see?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The city editor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wha’ja wanta see him about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No vacancies. No; no vacancies today. He says to say
-no vacancies today, see? You can’t go in there. He says no
-vacancies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“But can’t I even see him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No; he don’t wanta see anybody. No vacancies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, how about taking my name in to him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Not if you’re lookin’ for a job. He says no vacancies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The tone and the manner were most disconcerting. To me,
-new to the city and rather overawed by the size of the buildings
-as well as the reputation of the editors and the publications
-themselves, this was all but final. For a little while after
-each rebuff I did not quite see how I was to overcome this
-difficulty. Plainly they were overrun with applicants, and in
-so great a city why would they not be? But what was I to
-do? One must get in or write or call up on the telephone,
-but would any city editor worthy the name discuss a man’s
-fitness or attempt to judge him by a telephone conversation or
-a letter?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Rather dourly and speculatively, therefore, after I had
-visited four or five of these offices with exactly the same result
-in each instance, I went finally to City Hall Park, which
-fronted the majority of them—the <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Tribune</i>, the
-<i>Times</i>, the <i>World</i>, the <i>Press</i>—and stared at their great buildings.
-About me was swirling the throng which has always
-made that region so interesting, the vast mass that bubbles
-upward from the financial district and the regions south of
-it and crosses the plaza to Brooklyn Bridge and the elevated
-roads (the subways had not come yet). About me on the
-benches of the park was, even in this gray, chill December
-weather, that large company of bums, loafers, tramps, idlers,
-the flotsam and jetsam of the great city’s whirl and strife to
-be seen there today. I presume I looked at them and then
-considered myself and these great offices, and it was then that
-the idea of <i>Hurstwood</i> was born. The city seemed so huge
-and cruel. I recalled gay Broadway of the preceding summer,
-and the baking, isolated, exclusive atmosphere of Fifth Avenue,
-all boarded up. And now I was here and it was winter,
-with this great newspaper world to be conquered, and I did
-not see how it was to be done. At four in the afternoon I
-dubiously turned my steps northward along the great, bustling,
-solidly commercial Broadway to Fifteenth Street, walking
-all the way and staring into the shops. Those who recall
-<i>Sister Carrie’s</i> wanderings may find a taste of it here. In
-Union Square, before Tiffany’s, I stared at an immense Christmas
-throng. Then in the darkness I wandered across to my
-sister’s apartment, and in the warmth and light there set me
-down thinking what to do. My sister noticed my mood and
-after a little while said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re worrying, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh no, I’m not,” I said rather pretentiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh yes, you are too. You’re wondering how you’re going
-to get along. I know how you are. We’re all that way. But
-you mustn’t worry. Paul says you can write wonderfully.
-You’ve only been here a day or two. You must wait until
-you’ve tried a little while and then see. You’re sure to get
-along. New York isn’t so bad, only you have to get started.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I decided that this was true enough and proposed to give
-myself time to think.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>But</span> the next day, and the next, and the next brought me
-no solution to the problem. The weather had turned cold and
-for a time there was a slushy snow on the ground, which made
-the matter of job-hunting all the worse. Those fierce youths
-in the anterooms were no more kindly on the second and fifth
-days than they had been on the first. But by now, in addition
-to becoming decidedly dour, I was becoming a little angry. It
-seemed to me to be the height of discourtesy, not to say rank
-brutality, for newspapers, and especially those which boasted
-a social and humanitarian leadership of their fellows in American
-life, to place such unsophisticated and blatant and ill-trained
-upstarts between themselves and the general public,
-men and women of all shades and degrees of intelligence who
-might have to come in contact with them. H. L. Mencken has
-written: “The average American newspaper, especially the
-so-called better sort, has the intelligence of a Baptist evangelist,
-the courage of a rat, the fairness of a prohibitionist
-boob-bumper, the information of a high-school janitor, the
-taste of a designer of celluloid valentines, and the honor of a
-police-station lawyer.” Judging by some of my experiences
-and observations, I would be willing to subscribe to this.
-The unwarranted and unnecessary airs! The grand assumption
-of wisdom! The heartless and brutal nature of their
-internal economies, their pandering to the cheapest of all
-public instincts and tendencies in search of circulation!</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After several days I made up my mind to see the city editor
-of these papers, regardless of hall boys. And so, going one
-day at one o’clock to the <i>World</i>, I started to walk right in, but,
-being intercepted as usual, lost my courage and retreated.
-However, as I have since thought, perhaps this was fortunate,
-for going downstairs I meditated most grievously as to my
-failure, my lack of skill and courage in carrying out my intention.
-So thoroughly did I castigate myself that I recovered
-my nerve and returned. I reëntered the small office, and finding
-two of the youths still on hand and waiting to intercept
-me, brushed them both aside as one might flies, opened the
-much-guarded door and walked in.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>To my satisfaction, while they followed me and by threats
-and force attempted to persuade me to retreat, I gazed upon
-one of the most interesting city reportorial and editorial rooms
-that I have ever beheld. It was forty or fifty feet wide by a
-hundred or more deep, and lighted, even by day in this gray
-weather, by a blaze of lights. The entire space from front to
-back was filled with desks. A varied company of newspaper
-men, most of them in shirt-sleeves, were hard at work. In the
-forward part of the room, near the door by which I had entered,
-and upon a platform, were several desks, at which three
-or four men were seated—the throne, as I quickly learned, of
-the city editor and his assistants. Two of these, as I could
-see, were engaged in reading and marking papers. A third,
-who looked as though he might be the city editor, was consulting
-with several men at his desk. Copy boys were ambling to
-and fro. From somewhere came the constant click-click-click
-of telegraph instruments and the howl of “Coppee!” I think
-I should have been forced to retire had it not been for the
-fact that as I was standing there, threatened and pleaded with
-by my two adversaries, a young man (since distinguished in
-the journalistic world, Arthur Brisbane) who was passing
-through the room looked at me curiously and inquired courteously:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What is it you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I want,” I said, half-angered by the spectacle I was making
-and that was being made of me, “a job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Where do you come from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The West.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Wait a moment,” he said, and the youths, seeing that I had
-attracted his attention, immediately withdrew. He went
-toward the man at the desk whom I had singled out as the
-city editor, and turned and pointed to me. “This young man
-wants a job. I wish you would give him one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The man nodded, and my remarkable interrogator, turning
-to me, said, “Just wait here,” and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I did not know quite what to think, so astonished was I,
-but with each succeeding moment my spirits rose, and by the
-time the city editor chose to motion me to him I was in a very
-exalted state indeed. So much for courage, I told myself.
-Surely I was fortunate, for had I not been dreaming for
-months—years—of coming to New York and after great deprivation
-and difficulty perhaps securing a position? And
-now of a sudden here I was thus swiftly vaulted into the very
-position which of all others I had most craved. Surely this
-must be the influence of a star of fortune. Surely now if I
-had the least trace of ability, I should be in a better position
-than I had ever been in before. I looked about the great
-room, as I waited patiently and delightedly, and saw pasted
-on the walls at intervals printed cards which read: <i>Accuracy,
-Accuracy, Accuracy! Who? What? Where? When?
-How? The Facts—The Color—The Facts!</i> I knew what those
-signs meant: the proper order for beginning a newspaper
-story. Another sign insisted upon <i>Promptness, Courtesy,
-Geniality!</i> Most excellent traits, I thought, but not as easy
-to put into execution as comfortable publishers and managing
-editors might suppose.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Presently I was called over and told to take a seat, after
-being told: “I’ll have an assignment for you after a while.”
-That statement meant work, an opportunity, a salary. I felt
-myself growing apace, only the eye and the glance of my
-immediate superior was by no means cheering or genial.
-This man was holding a difficult position, one of the most
-difficult in newspaperdom in America at the time, and under
-one of the most eccentric and difficult of publishers, Joseph
-Pulitzer.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This same Pulitzer, whom Alleyne Ireland subsequently
-characterized in so brilliant a fashion as to make this brief
-sketch trivial and unimportant save for its service here as
-a link in this tale, was a brilliant and eccentric Magyar Jew,
-long since famous for his journalistic genius. At that time
-he must have been between fifty-five and sixty years of age,
-semi-dyspeptic and half-blind, having almost wrecked himself
-physically, or so I understood, in a long and grueling struggle
-to ascend to preeminence in the American newspaper world.
-He was the chief owner, as I understood, of not only the New
-York <i>World</i> but the St. Louis <i>Post-Dispatch</i>, the then afternoon
-paper of largest circulation and influence in that city.
-While I was in St. Louis the air of that newspaper world was
-surcharged or still rife with this remarkable publisher’s past
-exploits—how once, when he was starting in the newspaper
-world as a publisher, he had been horsewhipped by some irate
-citizen for having published some derogatory item, and, having
-tamely submitted to the castigation, had then rushed into
-his sanctum and given orders that an extra should be issued
-detailing the attack in order that the news value might not be
-lost to the counting-room. Similarly, one of his St. Louis city
-or managing editors (one Colonel Cockerill by name, who at
-this very time or a very little later was still one of the managing
-editors of the New York <i>World</i>) had, after conducting
-some campaign of exposure against a local citizen by order of
-his chief, and being confronted in his office by the same, evidently
-come to punish him, drawn a revolver and killed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>That was a part of what might have been called the makings
-of this great newspaper figure. Here in New York, after his
-arrival on the scene in 1884, at which time he had taken
-over a moribund journal called the <i>World</i>, he had literally
-succeeded in turning things upside down, much as did William
-Randolph Hearst after him, and as had Charles A. Dana
-and others before him. Like all aggressive newspaper men
-worthy the name, he had seized upon every possible vital issue
-and attacked, attacked, attacked—Tammany Hall, Wall Street
-(then defended by the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i>), the house of
-Morgan, some phases of society, and many other features and
-conditions of the great city. For one thing, he had cut the
-price of his paper to one cent, a move which was reported to
-have infuriated his conservative and quiescent rivals, who
-were getting two, three and five and who did not wish to be
-disturbed in their peaceful pursuits. The <i>Sun</i> in particular,
-which had been <i>made</i> by the brilliant and daring eccentricity
-of Dana and his earlier radicalism, and the <i>Herald</i>, which
-originally owed its growth and fame to the monopoly-fighting
-skill of Bennett, were now both grown conservative and mutually
-attacked him as low, vulgar, indecent and the like, an
-upstart Jew whose nose was in every putrescent dunghill,
-ratting out filth for the consumption of the dregs of society.
-But is it not always so when any one arises who wishes to
-break through from submersion or nothingness into the white
-light of power and influence? Do not the resultant quakes
-always infuriate those who have ceased growing or are at least
-comfortably quiescent and who do not wish to be disturbed?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Just the same, this man, because of his vital, aggressive,
-restless, working mood, and his vaulting ambition to be all
-that there was to be of journalistic force in America, was
-making a veritable hell of his paper and the lives of those
-who worked for him. And although he himself was not present
-at the time but was sailing around the world on a yacht,
-or living in a villa on the Riviera, or at Bar Harbor, or in
-his town house in New York or London, you could feel the
-feverish and disturbing and distressing ionic tang of his presence
-in this room as definitely as though he were there in the
-flesh. Air fairly sizzled with the ionic rays of this black
-star. Of secretaries to this editor-publisher and traveling
-with him at the time but coming back betimes to nose about
-the paper and cause woe to others, there were five. Of sons,
-by no means in active charge but growing toward eventual
-control, two. Of managing editors, all slipping about and,
-as the newspaper men seemed to think, spying on each other,
-at one time as many as seven. He had so little faith in his
-fellow-man, and especially such of his fellow-men as were so
-unfortunate as to have to work for him, that he played off one
-against another as might have the council of the Secret Ten
-in Venice, or as did the devils who ruled in the Vatican in
-the Middle Ages. Every man’s hand, as I came to know in
-the course of time, was turned against that of every other.
-All were thoroughly distrustful of each other and feared the
-incessant spying that was going on. Each, as I was told and
-as to a certain extent one could feel, was made to believe that
-he was the important one, or might be, presuming that he
-could prove that the others were failures or in error. Proposed
-editorials, suggestions for news features, directions as
-to policy and what not, were coming in from him every hour
-via cable or telegraph. Nearly every issue of any importance
-was being submitted to him by the same means. He was,
-as described by this same Alleyne Ireland, undoubtedly semi-neurasthenic,
-a disease-demonized soul, who could scarcely
-control himself in anything, a man who was fighting an almost
-insane battle with life itself, trying to be omnipotent and what
-not else, and never to die.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But in regard to the men working here how sharp a sword
-of disaster seemed suspended above them by a thread, the
-sword of dismissal or of bitter reprimand or contempt. They
-had a kind of nervous, resentful terror in their eyes as have
-animals when they are tortured. All were either scribbling
-busily or hurrying in or out. Every man was for himself. If
-you had asked a man a question, as I ventured to do while
-sitting here, not knowing anything of how things were done
-here, he looked at you as though you were a fool, or as though
-you were trying to take something away from him or cause
-him trouble of some kind. In the main they hustled by or
-went on with their work without troubling to pay the slightest
-attention to you. I had never encountered anything like
-it before, and only twice afterwards in my life did I find
-anything which even partially approximated it, and both
-times in New York. After the peace and ease of Pittsburgh—God!
-But it was immense, just the same—terrific.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>After</span> I had waited an hour or so, a boy came up and said:
-“The city editor wants to see you.” I hurried forward to
-the desk of that Poohbah, who merely handed me a small
-clipping from another paper giving an account of some extra-terrestrial
-manifestations that had been taking place in a
-graveyard near Elizabeth, and told me to “see what there is
-in that.” Unsophisticated as I was as to the ways of the
-metropolis, and assuming, Western-fashion, that I might ask
-a question of my new chief, I ventured a feeble “Where is
-that?” For my pains I received as contemptuous a look as
-it is possible for one human being to give another.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Back of the directory! Back of the directory!” came
-the semi-savage reply, and not quite realizing what was
-meant by that I retired precipitately, trying to think it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Almost mechanically I went to the directory, but fumbling
-through that part of it which relates to streets and their
-numbers I began to realize that Elizabeth was a town and not
-a street. At a desk near the directory I noticed a stout man
-of perhaps forty, rotund and agreeable, who seemed to be less
-fierce and self-centered than some of the others. He had evidently
-only recently entered, for he had kicked off a pair of
-overshoes and laid a greatcoat over a chair beside him and
-was scribbling.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Can you tell me how I can get to Elizabeth?” I inquired
-of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure,” he said, looking up and beginning to chuckle. “I
-haven’t been in the city very long myself, but I know where
-that is. It’s on the Jersey Central, about twelve miles out.
-You’ll catch a local by going down to the Liberty Street ferry.
-I heard him tell you ‘Back of the directory,’” he added
-genially. “You mustn’t mind that—that’s what they always
-tell you here, these smart alecks,” and he chuckled, very much
-like my friend McCord. “They’re the most inconsiderate lot
-I ever went up against, but you have to get used to it. Out
-where I came from they’ll give you a civil answer once in a
-while, but here it’s ‘Back of the directory,’” and he chuckled
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And where do you come from?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Pittsburgh originally,” he said, which same gave me
-a spiritual lift, “but I haven’t been in the game for several
-years. I’ve been doing press agent work for a road show, one
-of my own,” and he chuckled again. “I’m not a stranger to
-New York exactly, but I am to this paper and this game
-down here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I wanted to stay longer and talk to him, but I had to hurry
-on this my first assignment in New York. “Is this your
-desk?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“No; they haven’t deigned to give me one yet,” and he
-chuckled again. “But I suppose I will get one eventually—if
-they don’t throw me out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I hope I’ll see you when I get back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, I’ll be around here, if I’m not out in the snow. It’s
-tough, isn’t it?” and he turned to his work again. I bustled
-out through that same anteroom where I had been restrained,
-and observed to my pestiferous opponents: “Now just take
-notice, Eddie. I belong here, see? I work here. And I’ll be
-back in a little while.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, dat’s all right,” he replied with a grin. “We gotta
-do dat. We gotta keep mosta dese hams outa here, dough.
-Dat’s de orders we got.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Hams?” I thought. “They let these little snips speak
-of strangers as hams! That’s New York for you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I made the short dreary commuters’ trip to Elizabeth.
-When I found my graveyard and the caretaker thereof, he
-said there was no truth in the story. No man by the name
-of the dead man mentioned had ever been buried there. No
-noises or appearances of any kind had been recorded.
-“They’re always publishing things like that about New Jersey,”
-he said. “I wish they’d quit it. Some newspaper
-fellow just wanted to earn a little money, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I tramped back, caught a train and reached the office at
-eight. Already most of the assignments had been given out.
-The office was comparatively empty. The city editor had
-gone to dinner. At a desk along a wall was a long, lean,
-dyspeptic-looking man, his eyes shaded by a green shield,
-whom I took to be the night editor, so large was the pile of
-“copy” beside him, but when I ventured to approach him he
-merely glared sourly. “The city desk’s not closed yet,” he
-growled. “Wait’ll they come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I retired, rebuffed again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Presently one of the assistants reappeared and I reported
-to him. “Nothing to it, eh?” he observed. “But there ought
-to be some kind of a josh to it.” I did not get him. He told
-me to wait around, and I sought out an empty desk and sat
-down. The thing that was interesting me was how much I
-should be paid per week. In the meanwhile I contented
-myself with counting the desks and wondering about the men
-who occupied them, who they were, and what they were doing.
-To my right, against the north wall, were two roll-top desks,
-at one of which was seated a dapper actor-like man writing
-and posting. He was arrayed in a close-fitting gray suit, with
-a bright vest and an exceedingly high collar. Because of
-some theatrical programs which I saw him examining, I concluded
-that he must be connected with the dramatic department,
-probably <i>the</i> dramatic critic. I was interested and a
-little envious. The dramatic department of a great daily in
-New York seemed a wonderful thing to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After a time also there entered another man who opened
-the desk next the dramatic critic. He was medium tall and
-stocky, with a mass of loose wavy hair hanging impressively
-over his collar, not unlike the advance agent of a cure-all or
-a quack Messiah. His body was encased in a huge cape-coat
-which reached to his knees after the best manner of a tragedian.
-He wore a large, soft-brimmed felt, which he now
-doffed rather grandiosely, and stood a big cane in the corner.
-He had, the look and attitude of a famous musician, the stage-type,
-and evidently took himself very seriously. I put him
-down as the musical critic at least, some great authority of
-whom I should hear later.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Time went by, and I waited. Through the windows from
-where I was sitting I could see the tops of one or two buildings,
-one holding a clock-face lighted with a green light.
-Being weary of sitting, I ventured to leave my seat and look
-out to the south. Then for the first time I saw that great night
-panorama of the East River and the bay with its ships and
-docks, and the dark mass of buildings in between, many of
-them still lighted. It was a great scene, and a sense of awe
-came over me. New York was so vast, so varied, so rich, so
-hard. How was one to make one’s way here? I had so little
-to offer, merely a gift of scribbling; and money, as I could
-see, was not to be made in that way.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The city editor returned and told me to attend a meeting
-of some committee which looked to the better lighting and
-cleaning of a certain district. It was all but too late, as I
-knew, and if reported would be given no more than an inch
-of space. I took it rather dejectedly. Then fell the worst
-blow of all. “Wait a minute,” he said, as I moved to depart.
-“I wanted to tell you. I can’t make you a reporter yet—there
-is no vacancy on our regular staff. But I’ll put you on space,
-and you can charge up whatever you get in at seven-and-a-half
-a column. We allow fifty cents an hour for time. Show
-up tomorrow at eleven, and I’ll see if anything turns up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>My heart sank to my shoes. No reportorial staff with which
-I had ever been connected had been paid by space. I went to
-the meeting and found that it was of no importance, and
-made but one inch, as I discovered next morning by a careful
-examination of the paper. And a column of the paper measured
-exactly twenty-one inches! So my efforts this day, allowing
-for time charged for my first trip, had resulted in a total
-of one dollar and eighty-six cents, or a little less than street-sweepers
-and snow-shovelers were receiving.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But this was not all. Returning about eleven with this item,
-I ventured to say to the night editor now in charge: “When
-does a man leave here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You’re a new space man, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“You have the late watch tonight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And how late is that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Until after the first edition is on the press,” he growled.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Not knowing when that was I still did not venture to question
-him but returned to another reporter working near at
-hand, who told me I should have to stay until three. At that
-time my green-shaded mentor called, “You might as well
-go now,” and I made my way to the Sixth Avenue L and
-so home, having been here since one o’clock of the preceding
-day. The cheerful face of my sister sleepily admitting me was
-quite the best thing that this brisk day in the great city had
-provided.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> next morning, coming down at eleven I encountered my
-friend of the day before, whom I found looking through the
-paper and checking up such results as he had been able to
-achieve. “Tst! Tst!” he clicked to himself as he went over
-the pages, looking high and low for a minute squib which he
-had managed to get in. Looking around and seeing me near
-at hand, he said: “Positively, this is the worst paper in New
-York. I’ve always heard it was, and now I know it. This
-damned crowd plays favorites. They have an inside ring, a
-few pets, who get all the cream, and fellows like you and me
-get the short ends. Take me yesterday: I was sent out on four
-lousy little stories, and not one amounted to anything. I
-tramped and rode all over town in the snow, listened to a lot
-of fools spout, and this morning I have just three little items.
-Look at that—and that—and that!” and he pointed to checkmarks
-on different pages. They made a total of, say, seven or
-eight inches, the equivalent in cash of less than three dollars.
-“And I’m supposed to live on that,” he went on, “and I have
-a boy and a girl in school! How do they figure that a man is
-to get along?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I had no consolation to offer him. After a time he resumed:
-“What they do is to get strangers like us, or
-any of these down-and-out newspaper men always walking up
-and down Park Row looking for a job, and get us to work on
-space because it sounds bigger to a greenhorn. Sure they have
-space-men here who amount to something, fellows who get big
-money, but they’re not like us. They make as much as
-seventy-five and a hundred dollars a week. But they’re rewrite
-men, old reporters who have too big a pull and who are
-too sure of themselves to stand for the low salaries they pay
-here. But they’re at the top. We little fellows are told that
-stuff about space, but all we get is leg-work. If you or I
-should get hold of a good story don’t you ever think they’d
-let us write it. I know that much. They’d take it away and
-give it to one of these rewrite fellows. There’s one now,”
-and he pointed to a large comfortable man in a light brown
-overcoat and brown hat who was but now ambling in. “He
-rewrote one of my stories just the other day. If they wanted
-you for regular work they’d make you take a regular salary
-for fear you’d get too much of space. They just keep us
-little fellows as extras to follow up such things as they
-wouldn’t waste a good man on. And they’re always firing a
-crowd of men every three or four months to keep up the zip of
-the staff, to keep ’em worried and working hard. I hate the
-damned business. I told myself in Pittsburgh that I never
-would get back in it again, but here I am!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>This revelation made me a little sick. So this was my grand
-job! A long period of drudgery for little or nothing, my
-hard-earned money exhausted—and then what?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Just now,” he went on, “there’s nothing doing around
-the town or I wouldn’t be here. I’m only staying on until I
-can get something better. It’s a dog’s life. There’s nothing
-in it. I worked here all last week, and what do you think I
-made? Twelve dollars and seventy-five cents for the whole
-week, time included. Twelve dollars and seventy-five cents!
-It’s an outrage!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I agreed with him. “What is this time they allow?” I
-asked. “How do they figure—expenses and all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Sure, they allow expenses, and I’m going to figure mine
-more liberally from now on. It’s a little bonus they allow
-you for the time you work, but you don’t get anything anyhow.
-I’ll double any railroad fare I pay. If they don’t like
-it they can get somebody else. But they won’t let you do too
-much of it, and if you can’t make a little salary on small stuff
-they won’t keep you even then.” He grinned. “Anything
-big goes to the boys on a salary, and if it’s real big the space-men,
-who are on salary and space also, get the cream. I went
-out on a story the other afternoon and tramped around in the
-rain and got all the facts, and just as I was going to sit down
-and write it—well, I hadn’t really got started—one of the
-managing editors—there are about twenty around here—came
-up and took it away from me and gave it to somebody else
-to write. All I got was ‘time.’ Gee, I was sore! But I don’t
-care,” he added with a chuckle. “I’ll be getting out of here
-one of these days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Being handed this dose of inspiring information, I was in
-no mood for what followed; although I decided that this series
-of ills that were now befalling him was due to the fact that he
-was older than myself and maybe not very efficient, whereas
-in my case, being young, efficient, etc., etc—the usual mental
-bonus youth hands itself—I should do better. But when it
-came to my assignments this day and the next and the next,
-and in addition I was “handed” the late watch, my cock sureness
-began to evaporate. Each day I was given unimportant
-rumors or verification tales, which came to nothing. So
-keen was the competition between the papers, especially between
-the <i>World</i> and the <i>Sun</i>, or the <i>World</i> and the <i>Herald</i>,
-that almost everything suggested by one was looked into and
-criticized by the others. The items assigned to me this second
-day were: to visit the city morgue and there look up the body
-of a young and beautiful girl who was supposed to have
-drowned herself or been drowned and see if this was true, as
-another paper had said (and of course she was not beautiful
-at all); to visit a certain hotel to find out what I could about
-a hotel beat who had been arrested (this item, although written,
-was never used); to visit a Unitarian conference called
-to debate some supposed changes in faith or method of church
-development, the date for which however had been changed
-without notice to the papers, for which I was allowed time and
-carfare. My time, setting aside the long and wearisome hours
-in which I sat in the office awaiting my turn for an assignment,
-netted me the handsome sum of two dollars and fifty cents.
-And all the time in this very paper, I could read the noblest
-and most elevating discourses about duty, character, the need
-of a higher sense of citizenship, and what not. I used to
-frown at the shabby pecksniffery of it, the cheap buncombe
-that would allow a great publisher to bleed and drive his
-employees at one end of his house and deliver exordiums as
-to virtue, duty, industry, thrift, honesty at the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, despite these little setbacks and insights, I was not
-to be discouraged. The fact that I had succeeded elsewhere
-made me feel that somehow I should succeed here. Nevertheless,
-in spite of this sense of efficiency, I was strangely overawed
-and made more than ordinarily incompetent by the hugeness
-and force and heartlessness of the great city, its startling
-contrasts of wealth and poverty, the air of ruthlessness and
-indifference and disillusion that everywhere prevailed. Only
-recently there had been a disgusting exposure of the putrescence
-and heartlessness and brutality which underlay the social
-structure of the city. There had been the Lexow Investigation
-with its sickening revelations of graft and corruption,
-and the protection and encouragement of vice and crime in
-every walk of political and police life. The most horrible
-types of brothels had been proved to be not only winked at
-but preyed upon by the police and the politicians by a fixed
-and graded monthly tax in which the patrolman, the “roundsman,”
-the captain and the inspector, to say nothing of the
-district leader, shared. There was undeniable proof that the
-police and the politicians, even the officials, of the city were
-closely connected with all sorts of gambling and wire-tapping
-and bunco-steering, and even the subornation of murder. To
-the door of every house of prostitution and transient rooming-house
-the station police captain’s man, the <i>roundsman</i>, came
-as regularly as the rent or the gas man, and took more away.
-“Squealers” had been murdered in cold blood for their
-squealing. A famous chief of police, Byrnes by name, reputed
-at that time, far and wide, for his supposed skill in unraveling
-mysteries, being faced by a saturnalia of crime which he could
-not solve, had finally in self-defense caused to be arrested,
-tried, convicted and electrocuted, all upon suborned testimony,
-an old, helpless, half-witted bum known as Old Shakespeare,
-whose only crime was that he was worthless and
-defenseless. But the chief had thereby saved his “reputation.”
-Not far from the region in which my sister lived,
-although it was respectable enough in its way, tramped countless
-girls by night and by day looking for men, the great
-business of New York, and all preyed upon by the police. On
-several occasions, coming home from work after midnight, I
-found men lying hatless, coatless, trousers pockets pulled out,
-possibly their skulls fractured, so inadequate or indifferent
-or conniving was the so-called police protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Nowhere before had I seen such a lavish show of wealth,
-or, such bitter poverty. In my reporting rounds I soon came
-upon the East Side; the Bowery, with its endless line of
-degraded and impossible lodging-houses, a perfect whorl of
-bums and failures; the Brooklyn waterfront, parts of it terrible
-in its degradation; and then by way of contrast again the
-great hotels, the mansions along Fifth Avenue, the smart
-shops and clubs and churches. When I went into Wall Street,
-the Tenderloin, the Fifth Avenue district, the East and West
-sides, I seemed everywhere to sense either a terrifying desire
-for lust or pleasure or wealth, accompanied by a heartlessness
-which was freezing to the soul, or a dogged resignation to
-deprivation and misery. Never had I seen so many down-and-out
-men—in the parks, along the Bowery and in the lodging-houses
-which lined that pathetic street. They slept over
-gratings anywhere from which came a little warm air, or in
-doorways or cellar-ways. At a half dozen points in different
-parts of the city I came upon those strange charities which
-supply a free meal to a man or lodging for the night, providing
-that he came at a given hour and waited long
-enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And never anywhere had I seen so much show and luxury.
-Nearly all of the houses along upper Fifth Avenue and its
-side streets boasted their liveried footmen. Wall Street was a
-sea of financial trickery and legerdemain, a realm so crowded
-with sharklike geniuses of finance that one’s poor little
-arithmetic intelligence was entirely discounted and made
-ridiculous. How was a sniveling scribbler to make his way
-in such a world? Nothing but chance and luck, as I saw
-it, could further the average man or lift him out of his rut,
-and since when had it been proved that I was a favorite of
-fortune? A crushing sense of incompetence and general in-efficiency
-seemed to settle upon me, and I could not shake
-it off. Whenever I went out on an assignment—and I was
-always being sent upon those trivial, shoe-wearing affairs—I
-carried with me this sense of my unimportance.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXIV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>It</span> is entirely possible that, due to some physical or mental
-defect of my own, I was in no way fitted to contemplate so
-huge and ruthless a spectacle as New York then presented,
-or that I had too keen a conception of it at any rate. After
-a few days of work here I came in touch with several newspaper
-men from the West—a youth by the name of Graves,
-another by the name of Elliott, both formerly of Chicago,
-and a third individual who had once been in St. Louis, Wynne
-Thomas, brother of the famous playwright, Augustus. All
-were working on this paper, two of them in the same capacity
-as myself, the third a staff man. At night we used to sit
-about doing the late watch and spin all sorts of newspaper
-tales. These men had wandered from one place to another,
-and had seen—heavens, what had they not seen! They were
-completely disillusioned. Here, as in newspaper offices everywhere,
-one could hear the most disconcerting tales of human
-depravity and cruelty. I think that in the hours I spent with
-these men I learned as much about New York and its difficulties
-and opportunities, its different social strata, its outstanding
-figures social and political, as I might have learned
-in months of reporting and reading. They seemed to know
-every one likely to figure in the public eye. By degrees they
-introduced me to others, and all confirmed the conclusions
-which I was reaching. New York was difficult and revolting.
-The police and politicians were a menace; vice was rampant;
-wealth was shamelessly showy, cold and brutal. In New York
-the outsider or beginner had scarcely any chance at all, save
-as a servant. The city was overrun with hungry, loafing
-men of all descriptions, newspaper writers included.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After a few weeks of experimenting, however, I had no need
-of confirmation from any source. An assignment or two
-having developed well under my handling, and I having reported
-my success to the city editor, I was allowed to begin
-to write it, then given another assignment and told to turn
-my story over to the large gentleman with the gold-headed
-cane. This infuriated and discouraged me, but I said nothing.
-I thought it might be due to the city editor’s conviction,
-so far not disturbed by any opportunity I had had, that
-I could not write.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But one night, a small item about a fight in a tenement
-house having been given me to investigate, I went to the
-place in question and found that it was a cheap beer-drinking
-brawl on the upper East Side which had its origin in the
-objection of one neighbor to the noise made by another. I
-constructed a ridiculous story of my own to the effect that
-the first irritated neighbor was a musician who had been attempting
-at midnight to construct a waltz, into which the
-snores, gurgles, moans and gasps of his slumberous next-door
-neighbor would not fit. Becoming irritated and unable by
-calls and knocking to arouse his friend and so bring him to
-silence, he finally resorted to piano banging and glass-breaking
-of such a terrible character as to arouse the entire neighborhood
-and cause the sending in of a riot call by a policeman,
-who thought that a tenement war had broken out. Result:
-broken heads and an interesting parade to the nearest police
-station. Somewhere in the text I used the phrase “sawing
-somnolent wood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Finding no one in charge of the city editor’s desk when I
-returned, I handed my account to the night city editor.
-The next morning, lo and behold, there it was on the first
-page consuming at least a fourth of a column! To my further
-surprise and gratification, once the city editor appeared I
-noticed a change of attitude in him. While waiting for an
-assignment, I caught his eye on me, and finally he came over,
-paper in hand, and pointing to the item said: “You wrote
-this, didn’t you?” I began to think that I might have made
-a mistake in creating this bit of news and that it had been
-investigated and found to be a fiction. “Yes,” I replied.
-Instead of berating me he smiled and said: “Well, it’s rather
-well done. I may be able to make a place for you after a
-while. I’ll see if I can’t find an interesting story for you
-somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And true to his word, he gave me another story on this
-order. In the Hoffman House bar, one of the show-places
-of the city, there had been a brawl the day before, a fight
-between a well-known society youth of great wealth who owed
-the hotel money and would not pay as speedily as it wished,
-and a manager or assistant manager who had sent him some
-form of disturbing letter. All the details, as I discovered
-on reading the item (which had been clipped from the
-<i>Herald</i>), had been fully covered by that paper, and all that
-remained for me twenty-four hours later was to visit the
-principals and extract some comments or additions to the
-tale, which plainly I was expected to revamp in a humorous
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>As I have said, humor had never been wholly in my line,
-and in addition I had by no means overcome my awe of the
-city and its imposing and much-advertised “Four Hundred.”
-Now to be called upon to invade one of its main hostelries
-and beard the irate and lofty manager in his den, to say
-nothing of this young Vanderbilt or Goelet—well——I told
-myself that when I reached this hotel the manager would
-doubtless take a very lofty tone and refuse to discuss the
-matter—which was exactly what happened. He was infuriated
-to think that he had been reported as fighting. Similarly,
-should I succeed in finding this society youth’s apartment,
-I should probably be snubbed or shunted off in some cavalier
-fashion—which was exactly what happened. I was told that
-my Mr. X. was not there. Then, as a conscientious newspaper
-man, I knew I should return to the hotel and by cajolery or
-bribery see if I could not induce some barkeeper or waiter
-who had witnessed the fight to describe some phase of it that
-I might use.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But I was in no mood for this, and besides, I was afraid
-of these New York waiters and managers and society people.
-Suppose they complained of my tale and denounced me as a
-faker? I returned to the hotel, but its onyx lobby and bar
-and its heavy rococo decorations and furniture took my courage
-away. I lingered about but could not begin my inquiries,
-and finally walked out. Then I went back to the apartment
-house in which my youth lived, but still he was not in and
-I could extract no news from the noble footman who kept
-the door. I did not see how I was to conjure up humor
-from the facts in hand. Finally I dropped it as unworthy
-of me and returned to the office. In doing so I had the feeling
-that I was turning aside an item by which, had I chosen to
-fake, I could have furthered myself. I knew now that what
-my city editor wanted was not merely “accuracy, accuracy,
-accuracy,” but a kind of flair for the ridiculous or the remarkable
-even though it had to be invented, so that the pages
-of the paper, and life itself, might not seem so dull. Also
-I realized that a more experienced man, one used to the
-ways of the city and acquainted with its interesting and eccentric
-personalities, might make something out of this and
-not come to grief; but not I. And so I let it go, realizing
-that I was losing an excellent opportunity.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And I think that my city editor thought so too. When I
-returned and told him that I could not find anything interestingly
-new in connection with this he looked at me as much
-as to say, “Well, I’ll be damned!” and threw the clipping
-on his desk. I am satisfied that if any reporter had succeeded
-in uncovering any aspect of this case not previously used I
-should have been dropped forthwith. As it turned out, however,
-nothing more developed, and for a little time anyhow I
-was permitted to drag on as before, but with no further
-favors.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day, being given a part of a “badger” case to unravel,
-a man and woman working together to divest a hotel man
-of a check for five thousand dollars, and I having cajoled the
-lady in the case (then under arrest) into making some interesting
-remarks as to her part in the affair and badgering in
-general, I was not allowed to write it but had to content myself
-with seeing my very good yarn incorporated in another
-man’s story while I took “time.” Another day, having developed
-another excellent tale of a runaway marriage, the girl
-being of a family of some standing, I was not allowed to
-write it. I was beginning to see that I was a hopeless failure
-as a reporter here.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The</span> things which most contributed to my want of newspaper
-success in New York and eventually drove me, though
-much against my will and understanding, into an easier and
-more agreeable phase of life were, first, that awe of the grinding
-and almost disgusting forces of life itself which I found
-in Spencer and Huxley and Balzac and which now persistently
-haunted me and, due possibly to a depressed physical condition
-at this time, made it impossible for me to work with any
-of the zest that had characterized my work in the West. Next,
-there was that astounding contrast between wealth and poverty,
-here more sharply emphasized than anywhere else in America,
-which gave the great city a gross and cruel and mechanical
-look, and this was emphasized not only by the papers
-themselves, with their various summaries of investigations
-and exposures, but also by my own hourly contact with it—a
-look so harsh and indifferent at times as to leave me a little
-numb. Again, there was something disillusioning in the sharp
-contrast between the professed ideals and preachments of such
-a constantly moralizing journal as the <i>World</i> and the heartless
-and savage aspect of its internal economy. Men such as
-myself were mere machines or privates in an ill-paid army to
-be thrown into any breach. There was no time off for the
-space-men, unless it was for all time. One was expected to
-achieve the results desired or get out; and if one did achieve
-them the reward was nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One day I met an acquaintance and asked about an ex-city
-editor from St. Louis who had come to New York, and his
-answer staggered me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Oh, Cliff? Didn’t you hear? Why, he committed suicide
-down here in a West Street hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“What was the trouble?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Tired of the game, I guess,” he replied. “He didn’t
-get along down here as well as he had out there. I guess he
-felt that he was going downhill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I walked away, meditating. He had been an excellent newspaper
-man, as brisk and self-centered as one need be to prosper.
-The last time I had seen him he was in good physical
-condition, and yet, after something like a year in New York,
-he had killed himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>However, my mood was not that of one who runs away
-from a grueling contest. I had no notion of leaving New
-York, whatever happened, although I constantly speculated
-as to what I should do when all my money was gone. I
-had no trade or profession beyond this reporting, and yet I
-was convinced that there must be something else that I could
-do. Come what might, I was determined that I would ask
-no favor of my brother, and as for my sister, who was now
-a burden on my hands, I was determined that as soon as this
-burden became too great I would take up her case with my
-brother Paul, outline all that had been done and ask him
-to shoulder the difference until such time as I could find myself
-in whatever work I was destined to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But what was it?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One of the things which oppressed me was the fact that on
-the <i>World</i>, as well as on the other papers, were men as young
-as myself who were apparently of a very different texture,
-mentally if not physically. Life and this fierce contest which
-I was taking so much to heart seemed in no wise to disturb
-them. By reason of temperament and insight perhaps, possibly
-the lack of it, or, what was more likely, certain fortunate
-circumstances attending their youth and upbringing, they
-were part of that oncoming host of professional optimists and
-yea-sayers, chorus-like in character, which for thirty years
-or more thereafter in American life was constantly engaged
-in the pleasing task of emphasizing the possibilities of success,
-progress, strength and what not for all, in America and
-elsewhere, while at the same time they were humbly and
-sycophantically genuflecting before the strong, the lucky, the
-prosperous. On the <i>World</i> alone at this time, to say nothing
-of the other papers, were at least a dozen, swaggering about
-in the best of clothes, their manners those of a graduate of
-Yale or Harvard or Princeton, their minds stuffed with all
-the noble maxims of the uplifters. There was nothing wrong
-with the world that could not be easily and quickly righted,
-once the honest, just, true, kind, industrious turned their
-giant and selected brains to the task. This newest type of
-young newspaper man was to have no traffic with evil in
-any form; he was to concern himself with the Good, the True,
-the Beautiful. Many of these young men pretended to an
-intimate working knowledge of many things: society, politics,
-finance and what not else. Several had evidently made themselves
-indispensable as ship reporters, interviewers of arriving
-and departing celebrities, and these were now pointed out to
-me as men worthy of envy and emulation. One of them
-had, at the behest of the <i>World</i>, crossed the ocean more than
-once seeking to expose the principals in a growing ship-gambling
-and bunco scandal. There were those who were in
-the confidence of the mayor, the governor, and some of the
-lights in Wall Street. One, a scion of one of the best families,
-was the paper’s best adviser as to social events and scandals.
-The grand air with which they swung in and out of the office
-set me beside myself with envy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And all the time the condition of my personal affairs tended
-to make me anything but optimistic. I was in very serious
-financial straits. I sometimes think that I was too new to the
-city, too green to its psychology and subtlety, to be of any
-use to a great metropolitan daily; and yet, seeing all I had
-seen, I should have been worth something. I was only five
-years distant from the composition of <i>Sister Carrie</i>, to say
-nothing of many short stories and magazine articles. Yet I
-was haunted by the thought that I was a misfit, that I might
-really have to give up and return to the West, where in some
-pathetic humdrum task I should live out a barren and pointless
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>With this probable end staring me in the face, I began to
-think that I must not give up but must instead turn to letters,
-the art of short-story writing; only just how to do this I could
-not see. One of the things that prompted me to try this was
-the fact that on the <i>World</i> at this time were several who had
-succeeded—David Graham Phillips, James Creelman, then a
-correspondent for the paper in the war which had broken
-out between China and Japan, to say nothing of George Cary
-Eggleston and Reginald de Koven, the latter on the staff as
-chief musical critic. There was another young man, whose
-name I have forgotten, who was pointed out to me as a
-rapidly growing favorite in the office of the <i>Century</i>. Then
-there were those new arrivals in the world of letters: Kipling,
-Richard Harding Davis, Stephen Crane and some others,
-whose success fascinated me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>All this was but an irritant to a bubbling chemistry which
-as yet had found no solution, and was not likely to find one
-for some time to come. My reading of Spencer and Huxley
-in no wise tended to clarify and impel my mind in the direction
-of fiction, or even philosophy. But now, in a kind of
-ferment or fever due to my necessities and desperation, I set
-to examining the current magazines and the fiction and articles
-to be found therein: <i>Century</i>, <i>Scribner’s</i>, <i>Harper’s</i>. I was
-never more confounded than by the discrepancy existing between
-my own observations and those displayed here, the
-beauty and peace and charm to be found in everything, the
-almost complete absence of any reference to the coarse and
-the vulgar and the cruel and the terrible. How did it happen
-that these remarkable persons—geniuses of course, one and
-all—saw life in this happy roseate way? Was it so, and was
-I all wrong? Love was almost invariably rewarded in these
-tales. Almost invariably one’s dreams came true, in the magazines.
-Most of these bits of fiction, delicately phrased, flowed
-so easily, with such an air of assurance, omniscience and
-condescension, that I was quite put out by my own lacks and
-defects. They seemed to deal with phases of sweetness and
-beauty and success and goodness such as I rarely encountered.
-There were so many tales of the old South reeking with a
-poetry which was poetry and little more (George W. Cable;
-Thomas Nelson Page). In <i>Harper’s</i> I found such assured
-writers as William Dean Howells, Charles Dudley Warner,
-Frank R. Stockton, Mrs. Humphry Ward, and a score of
-others, all of whom wrote of nobility of character and sacrifice
-and the greatness of ideals and joy in simple things.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But as I viewed the strenuous world about me, all that I
-read seemed not to have so very much to do with it. Perhaps,
-as I now thought, life as I saw it, the darker phases,
-was never to be written about. Maybe such things were not
-the true province of fiction anyhow. I read and read, but all
-I could gather was that I had no such tales to tell, and, however
-much I tried, I could not think of any. The kind of
-thing I was witnessing no one would want as fiction. These
-writers seemed far above the world of which I was a part.
-Indeed I began to picture them as creatures of the greatest
-luxury and culture, gentlemen and ladies all, comfortably
-housed, masters of servants, possessing estates, or at least
-bachelor quarters, having horses and carriages, and received
-here, there and everywhere with nods of recognition and
-smiles of approval.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>And</span> then after a little while, being assigned to do routine
-work in connection with the East Twenty-seventh Street police
-station, Bellevue Hospital, and the New York Charities Department,
-which included branches that looked after the
-poor-farm, the morgue, an insane asylum or two, a workhouse
-and what not else, I was called upon daily to face as disagreeable
-and depressing a series of scenes as it is possible
-for a human being to witness and which quite finished me.
-I was compelled to inquire of fat, red-faced sergeants, and
-door-keepers who reigned in police stations and hospital registry
-rooms what was new, and, by being as genial and agreeable
-as possible and so earning their favor, to get an occasional tip
-as to the most unimportant of brawls. Had I been in a different
-mental state the thickness and incommunicability of
-some of these individuals would not have been proof against
-my arts. I could have devised or manufactured something.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But as it was the nature of this world depressed me so that
-I could not have written anything very much worth while if
-I had wanted to. There was the morgue, for instance—that
-horrible place! Daily from the ever-flowing waters about
-New York there were recaptured or washed up in all stages
-and degrees of decomposition the flotsam and jetsam of the
-great city, its offal, its victims—its what? I came here often
-(it stood at the foot of East Twenty-sixth Street near
-Bellevue Hospital) and invariably I found the same old
-brown-denimed caretaker in charge, a creature so thick and so
-lethargic and so mentally incompetent generally that it was
-all I could do to extract a grunt of recognition out of him.
-Yet, if handed a cigar occasionally or a bag of tobacco, he
-would trouble to get out of his chair and let you look over a
-book or ledger containing the roughly jotted down police descriptions,
-all done in an amazing scrawl, of the height,
-weight, color of clothes if any, complexion of hair and eyes
-where these were still distinguishable, probable length of time
-in water, contents of pockets, jewelry or money if any, etc.,
-which same were to be noted in connection with any mystery
-or disappearance of a person. And there was always some
-one “turning up missing.” And I noticed, with considerable
-cynicism, that rarely if ever was there any money or jewelry
-reported as found by the police. That would be too much
-to expect.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Being further persuaded via blandishments or tips of one
-kind and another, this caretaker would lead the way to a shelf
-of drawers reaching from the floor to the chest-height of a
-man or higher and running about two sides of the room, and
-opening those containing the latest arrivals, supposing you
-were interested to look, would allow you to gaze upon the
-last of that strange chemical formula which once functioned
-as a human being here on earth. The faces! The decay!
-The clothing! I stared in sad horror and promised myself
-that I would never again look, but duty to the paper compelled
-me so to do again and again.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And then there was Bellevue itself, that gray-black collection
-of brick and stone with connecting bridges of iron, which
-faced, in winter time at least, the gray, icy waters of the
-East River. I have never been able to forget it, so drear and
-bleak was it all. The hobbling ghouls of caretakers in their
-baggy brown cotton suits to be seen wandering here and there
-or hovering over stoves; the large number of half-well charity
-patients idling about in gray-green denim, their faces
-sunken and pinched, their hair poorly combed! And the
-chipper and yet often coarse and vulgar and always overbearing
-young doctors and nurses and paid attendants generally!
-One need but remember that it was the heyday of the most
-corrupt period of Tammany Hall’s shameless political control
-of New York, Mr. Croker being still in charge. Quite all
-of those old buildings have since been replaced and surrounded
-by a tall iron fence and bordered with an attractive lawn.
-In those days it was a little different: there was the hospital
-proper, with its various wards, its detention hospital for
-the criminal or insane, or both, the morgue and a world of
-smaller pavilions stretching along the riverfront and connected
-by walks or covered hallways or iron bridges, but lacking
-the dignity and care of the later structures. There
-was, too, the dark psychology which attends any badly
-or foully managed institution, that something which hovers
-as a cloud over all. And Bellevue at that time had that air
-and that psychology. It smacked more of a jail and a poor-house
-combined than of a hospital, and so it was, I think.
-At that time it was a seething world of medical and political
-and social graft, a kind of human hell or sty. Those poor
-fish who live in comfortable and protected homes and find
-their little theories and religious beliefs ready-made for them
-in some overawing church or social atmosphere, should be
-permitted to take an occasional peep into a world such as this
-was then. At this very time there was an investigation and
-an exposure on in connection with this institution, which had
-revealed not only the murder of helpless patients but the
-usual graft in connection with food, drugs, clothing, etc.,
-furnished to the patients called charity. Grafting officials and
-medics and brutes of nurses and attendants abounded, of
-course. The number of “drunks” and obstreperous or complaining
-or troublesome patients doped or beaten or thrown
-out and even killed, and the number and quality of operations
-conducted by incompetent or indifferent surgeons, was known
-and shown to be large. One need only return to the legislative
-investigations of that date to come upon the truth of
-this.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But the place was so huge and crowded that it was like
-a city in itself. For one thing, it was a dumping-ground for
-all the offal gathered by the police and the charity departments,
-to say nothing of being a realm of “soft snaps” for
-political pensioners of all kinds. On such days as relatives
-and friends of charity patients or those detained by the police
-were permitted to call, the permit room fairly swarmed with
-people who were pushed and shunted here and there like
-cattle, and always browbeaten like slaves. I myself, visiting
-as a stranger subsequently, was often so treated. “Who?
-What’s his name? What? Whendee come? When? Talk
-a little louder, can’t you? Whatsy matter with your tongue?
-Over there! Over there! Out that door there!” So we
-came, procured our little cards, and passed in or out.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>And the wretched creatures who were “cured” or written
-down well enough to walk, and so, before a serious illness
-had been properly treated and because they were not able
-to pay, were shunted out into the world of the well and the
-strong with whom they were supposed to compete once more
-and make their way. I used to see them coming and going
-and have talked to scores, men and women who had never had
-a dollar above their meager needs and who, once illness overtook
-them, had been swept into this limbo, only to be turned
-out again at the end of a few weeks or months to make their
-way as best they might, and really worse off than when they
-came, for now they were in a weak condition physically as
-well as penniless, and sometimes, as I noticed, on the day of
-their going the weather was most inclement. And the old,
-wrinkled, washed-out clothing doled out to them in which
-they were to once more wander back to the tenements—to do
-what? There was a local charity organization at the time,
-as there is today, but if it acted in behalf of any of these I
-never saw it. They wandered away west on Twenty-sixth
-Street and along First and Second Avenue, those drear, dismal,
-underdog streets—to where?</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But by far the most irritating of all the phases of this
-institution, to me at least, were the various officials and dancing
-young medics and nurses in their white uniforms, the
-latter too often engaged in flirting with one another or tennis-playing
-or reading in some warm room, their feet planted
-upon a desk the while they smoked and the while the great
-institution with all its company of miserables wagged its
-indifferent way. When not actually visiting their patients
-one could always find them so ensconced somewhere, reading
-or smoking or talking or flirting. In spite of the world of
-misery that was thrashing about them they were as comfortable
-as may be, and to me, when bent upon unraveling the
-details of some particular case, they always seemed heartless.
-“Oh, that old nut? What’s interesting about him? Surely
-you don’t expect to dig up anything interesting about him, do
-you? He’s been here three weeks now. No; we don’t know
-anything about him. Don’t the records show?” Or, supposing
-he had died: “I knew he couldn’t live. We couldn’t give
-him the necessary attention here. He didn’t have any money,
-and there’s too many here as it is. Wanta see an interesting
-case?” And then one might be led in to some wretch who
-was out of his mind or had an illusion of some kind. “Funny
-old duck, eh? But there’s no hope. He’ll be dead in a week
-or so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I think the most sickening thing I ever saw was cash gambling
-among two young medics and a young nurse in charge
-of the receiving ward as to whether the next patient to be
-brought in by the ambulance, which had been sent out on a
-hurry accident call, would arrive alive or dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Fifty that he’s dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Fifty that he isn’t!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I say alive!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I say dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, hand me that stethoscope. I’m not going to be
-fooled by looks this time!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Tearing in came the ambulance, its bell clanging, the hubs
-of the wheels barely missing the walls of the entryway, and
-as the stretcher was pulled out and set down on the stone
-step under the archway the three pushed about and hung over,
-feeling the heart and looking at the eyes and lips, now pale
-blue as in death, quite as one might crowd about a curious
-specimen of plant or animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He’s alive!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“He’s dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I say he’s alive! Look at his eyes!” to illustrate which
-one eye was forced open.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Aw, what’s eatin’ you! Listen to his heart! Haven’t I
-got the stetho on it? Listen for yourself!”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The man was dead, but the jangle lasted a laughing minute
-or more, the while he lay there; then he was removed to the
-morgue and the loser compelled to “come across” or “fork over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>One of the internes who occasionally went out “on the
-wagon,” as the ambulance was called, told me that once, having
-picked up a badly injured man who had been knocked
-down by a car, this same ambulance on racing with this man
-to the hospital had knocked down another and all but killed
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“And what did you do about him?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Stopped the boat and chucked him into it, of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“On top of the other one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Side by side, sure. It was a little close, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Well, did he die?”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Yep. But the other one was all right. We couldn’t help
-it, though. It was a life or death case for the first one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“A fine deal for the merry bystander,” was all I could
-say.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The very worst of all in connection with this great hospital,
-and I do not care to dwell on it at too great length since
-it has all been exposed before and the records are available,
-was this: about the hospital, in the capacity of orderlies, doormen,
-gatemen, errand boys, gardeners, and what not, were a
-number of down-and-out ex-patients or pensioners of politicians
-so old and feeble and generally decrepit mentally and
-physically as to be fit for little more than the scrap-heap.
-Their main desire, in so far as I could see, was to sit in the
-sun or safely within the warmth of a room and do nothing
-at all. If you asked them a question their first impulse and
-greatest delight was to say “Don’t know” or refer you to
-some one else. They were accused by the half dozen reporters
-who daily foregathered here to be of the lowest, so low indeed
-that they could be persuaded to do anything for a little
-money. And in pursuance of this theory there was one day
-propounded by a little red-headed Irish police reporter who
-used to hang about there that he would bet anybody five
-dollars that for the sum of fifteen dollars he could hire old
-Gansmuder, who was one of the shabbiest and vilest-looking
-of the hospital orderlies, to kill a man. According to him,
-and he had his information from one of the policemen stationed
-in the hospital, Gansmuder was an ex-convict who had
-done ten years’ time for a similar crime. Now old and penniless,
-he was here finishing up a shameful existence, the pensioner
-of some politician to whom he had rendered a service
-perhaps.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>At any rate here he was, and, as one of several who heard
-the boast in the news-room near the gate, I joined in the
-shout of derision that went up. “Rot!” “What stuff!”
-“Well, you’re the limit, Mickey!” However, as events
-proved, it was not so much talk as fact. I was not present
-at the negotiations but from amazed accounts by other newspaper
-men I learned that Gansmuder, being approached by
-Finn and one other (Finn first, then the two of them together),
-agreed for the sum of twenty-five dollars, a part
-of it to be paid in advance, to lie in wait at a certain street
-corner in Brooklyn for an individual of a given description
-and there to strike him in such a way as to dispose of him.
-Of course the negotiations went no further than this, but
-somehow, true or no, this one incident has always typified
-the spirit of that hospital, and indeed of all political New
-York, to me. It was a period of orgy and crime, and Bellevue
-and the charities department constituted the back door which
-gave onto the river, the asylums, the potter’s field, and all
-else this side of complete chemic dissolution.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CHAPTER LXXVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Whether</span> due to a naturally weak and incompetent physique
-or a mind which unduly tortures itself with the evidences
-of a none-too-smooth working of the creative impulse and its
-machinery, or whether I had merely had my fill of reportorial
-work as such and could endure no more, or whatever else
-might have been the cause, I finally determined to get out
-of the newspaper profession entirely, come what might and
-cost what it might, although just what I was to do once I
-was out I could not guess. I had no trade or profession
-other than this, and the thought of editing or writing for
-anything save a newspaper was as far from me as engineering
-or painting. I did not think I could write anything beyond
-newspaper news items, and with this conclusion many will no
-doubt be glad to agree with me even unto this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Yet out of this messy and heartless world in which I
-was now working I did occasionally extract a tale that was
-printable, only so low was my credit that I rarely won the
-privilege of writing it myself. Had I imagined that I could
-write I might easily have built up stories out of what I saw
-which would have shocked the souls of the magazine editors
-and writers, but they would never have been published. They
-would have been too low, gruesome, drab, horrible, and so
-beyond the view of any current magazine or its clientele.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Life at that time, outside the dark picture of it presented
-by the daily papers, must, as I have shown, be all sweetness
-and gayety and humor. We must discuss only our better
-selves, and arrive at a happy ending; or if perchance this
-realer world must be referred to it must be indicated in some
-cloudy manner which would give it more the charm of shadow
-than of fact, something used to enhance the values of the
-lighter and more perfect and beautiful things with which our
-lives must concern themselves. Marriage, if I read the current
-magazines correctly, was a sweet and delicate affair,
-never marred by the slightest erratic conduct of any kind.
-Love was made in heaven and lasted forever. Ministers,
-doctors, lawyers and merchants, were all good men, rarely
-if ever guilty of the shams and subterfuges and trashy aspects
-of humanity. If a man did an evil thing it was due to his
-lower nature, which really had nothing to do with his higher—and
-it was a great concession for the intelligentsia of that
-day (maybe of this) to admit that he had two natures, one
-of which was not high. Most of us had only the higher one,
-our better nature.... When I think of the literary and
-social snobbery and bosh of that day, its utter futility and
-profound faith in its own goodness, as opposed to facts of its
-own visible life, I have to smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But it never occurred to me that I could write, in the literary
-sense, and as for editing, I never even thought of it.
-And yet that was the very next thing I did. I wandered about
-thinking what I was to do, deciding each day that if I had
-the courage of a rat I would no longer endure this time-consuming
-game of reporting, for the pitiful sum which I was
-allowed to draw. What more could it do for me? I asked
-myself over and over. Make me more aware of the brutality,
-subtlety, force, charm, selfishness of life? It could not if I
-worked a hundred years. Essentially, as I even then saw,
-it was a boy’s game, and I was slowly but surely passing out
-of the boy stage. Yet in desperation because I saw disappearing
-the amount which I had saved up in Pittsburgh,
-and I had not one other thing in sight, I visited other
-newspaper offices to see if I could not secure, temporarily at
-least, a better regular salary. But no. Whenever I could get
-in to see a city or managing editor, which was rare, no one
-seemed to want me. At the offices of the <i>Herald</i>, <i>Times</i>,
-<i>Tribune</i>, <i>Sun</i>, and elsewhere the same outer office system
-worked to keep me out, and I was by now too indifferent to
-the reportorial work and too discouraged really to wish to
-force myself in or to continue as a reporter at all. Indeed
-I went about this matter of inquiry more or less perfunctorily,
-not really believing in either myself or my work. If I had
-secured a well-paying position I presume that I should have
-continued. Fortunately or unfortunately, as one chooses to
-look at such things, I did not; but it seemed far from fortunate
-then to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Finally one Saturday afternoon, having brought in a story
-which related to a missing girl whose body was found at the
-morgue and being told to “give the facts to —— and let him
-write it,” I summoned up sufficient courage to say to the
-assistant who ordered me to do this:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“I don’t see why I should always have to do this. I’m
-not a beginner in this game. I wrote stories, and big ones,
-before ever I came to this paper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Maybe you did,” he replied rather sardonically, “but we
-have the feeling that you haven’t proved to be of much use
-to us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>After this there was nothing to say and but one thing to
-do. I could not say that I had had no opportunities; but
-just the same I was terribly hurt in my pride. Without knowing
-what to do or where to go, I there and then decided that,
-come what might, this was the end of newspaper reporting
-for me. Never again, if I died in the fight, would I condescend
-to be a reporter on any paper. I might starve, but
-if so—I would starve. Either I was going to get something
-different, something more profitable to my mind, or I was
-going to starve or get out of New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>I went to the assistant and turned over my data, then got
-my hat and went out. I felt that I should be dismissed eventually
-anyhow for incompetence and insubordination, so dark
-was my mood in regard to all of it, and so out I went. One
-thing I did do; I visited the man who had first ordered the
-city editor to put me on and submitted to him various clippings
-of work done in Pittsburgh with the request that he advise
-me as to where I might turn for work.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Better try the <i>Sun</i>,” was his sane advice. “It’s a great
-school, and you might do well over there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>But although I tried I could not get on the <i>Sun</i>—not, at
-least, before I had managed to do something else.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Thus ended my newspaper experiences, which I never resumed
-save as a writer of Sunday specials, and then under
-entirely different conditions—but that was ten years later.
-In the meantime I was now perforce turning toward a world
-which had never seemed to contain any future for me, and I
-was doing it without really knowing it. But that is another
-story. It might be related under some such title as <i>Literary
-Experiences</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c013'><i>N.B.</i> Four years later, having by then established myself
-sufficiently to pay the rent of an apartment, secure furniture
-and convince myself that I could make a living for two, I
-undertook that perilous adventure with the lady of my choice—and
-that, of course, after the first flare of love had thinned
-down to the pale flame of duty. Need anything more be
-said? The first law of convention had been obeyed, whereas
-the governing forces of temperament had been overridden—and
-with what results eventually you may well suspect. So
-much for romance.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c005' />
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c005'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Note:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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