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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 #68390 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68390)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Down among men, by Will Levington
-Comfort
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Down among men
-
-Author: Will Levington Comfort
-
-Release Date: June 23, 2022 [eBook #68390]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by University of California
- libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOWN AMONG MEN ***
-
-
-
-
-
- _Down Among Men_
-
- BY
-
- WILL LEVINGTON COMFORT
-
- AUTHOR OF “ROUTLEDGE RIDES ALONE,”
- “FATE KNOCKS AT THE DOOR,” ETC.
-
-
- NEW YORK
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1913
- BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
-TO THE MEN OF THE UPPER ROOM
-
-
-... AND THIS IS THE STORY I TOLD YOU THROUGH THE SEVERAL NIGHTS:
-OF THE MAN WHO CAME UP THROUGH THE DARK AND THE FIGHTING (OFTEN IN
-SUCH A RUCK OF FIGHTING THAT HE COULDN’T HEAR VOICES); HOW HE WAS
-PUNISHED BY MEN, BROKEN BY SELF, AND HEALED BY A WOMAN; INDEED, BUT
-FOR HER, HE MIGHT HAVE CHOSEN THE LONG WAY OF THE BRUTE TO PUT ON HIS
-POWERS AND ATTAIN THE CERTAIN ROYALTY OF THE HUMAN ADULT IN THIS YEAR
-OF OUR LORD. SHE PAID THE PRICE; SHE WAS THE MAN-MAKER; SHE SAW THE
-WORLD-MAN SHINING AHEAD.... IT IS A STORY OF THE PATH AT OUR FEET, OF
-THE COMPASSIONATES WHO DRAW NEAR TO SPEAK, WHEN WE ARE BRAVE ENOUGH
-TO LISTEN, OF THE WOMEN WHO WALK BESIDE US. A TALE OF THE ROAD AS WE
-GO--MANY ARE AHEAD, MANY BEHIND--BUT WE DO NOT TRAVEL THIS STRETCH
-AGAIN.
-
- --_W. L. C._
-
-
-
-
-KAO LIANG
-
-
-_No one thought of kao liang._
-
-_Morning did not mention it in his great story; even Duke Fallows did
-not think of it._
-
-_Kao liang, the millet of China. Inland seas of it are there, green
-in the beginning of its flow, dull gold in its high tide._
-
-_A ruffianly scouring grain. Rice is its little white sister. Millet
-is the strength of the beast, the mash of the world’s poor. A hundred
-millions of acres of Asia are in yield or waiting for kao liang to-day.
-Remember the poor._
-
-_In Manchuria kao liang grows strong and high. Its fox-tails brush
-the brows of the tall Chinese of the north country. It brushed the caps
-of the Russian soldiers one certain Fall._
-
-_The Censurer came with the planting in that year. Kao liang was
-like a soft green mould upon the hills and valleys when he came
-to his battle-fields. He was watching for a browner harvest and a
-ruddier planting. Fall plowing and red planting--for that, he came to
-Liaoyang._
-
-_His soldiers trampled it, devastated the young grain with their
-formations, foraged their beasts upon it. Yet the millet grew, hardened
-and covered the earth--for the poor must be served. Out of flood and
-gale and burning, it waxed great, filling the hills and the hollows,
-closing in on the city, climbing thinly to the Passes._
-
-_Its protest to the invasion was mute as China’s, but it did not
-run. Before the Japanese, it closed in. It was ripe when the brown
-flanker crossed the Taitse. It was ripe when two Slav chiefs took
-their thousands forth to form the anvil upon which the flanker was
-to be broken. The Cossacks had been feeding their beasts upon it for
-many days, and they drank in the deep hollows where the roots of
-kao liang held the rain. It was ripe for the world’s poor, when the
-Sentimentalist strode forth at last--the hammer that was to break the
-spine of the flanker._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- BOOK ONE
- PAGE
- AFIELD 1
-
- BOOK TWO
- THE HILL-CABIN 115
-
- BOOK THREE
- THE BARE-HEADED MAN 239
-
-
-
-
-BOOK I.
-
-AFIELD
-
-
- 1
-
-THE town of Rosario was ahead. The cavalry expected to sup
-and sleep there. Chance of firing presently from the natives was
-pure routine. John Morning, back in the second troop, on the horse
-of a missing soldier, wondered if years of service and exploration
-would make him ever as great a correspondent as Mr. Reever Kennard
-looked. The wide, sloping shoulders of the Personage were to be seen
-occasionally when the trail crooked, far forward and near the General.
-
-The bit of fighting was over before the rear troopers got rightly into
-the skirmish-line (every fourth trooper holding four horses); and
-now the men breathed and smoked cigarettes in one more Luzon town;
-and another _Alcalde’s_ house was turned into headquarters....
-This was a brigade expedition of December, 1899. Two weeks before the
-General had ridden out of Manila. Various pieces of infantry had been
-left to garrison the many towns which would not stay held without pins.
-Two or three days more, then Batangas, and the big ride was over, the
-lower Luzon incision complete, and drainage established.
-
-Morning, with the troopers, had to look to his mount in regulation
-fashion, and did not reach Headquarters until after the others. The
-_Alcalde’s_ house in Rosario as usual stood large among the
-straw-thatched bamboo huts. The little upper room which Morning had
-come to expect through the courtesy of the staff, was easily found.
-The saddle-bags and blanket-rolls of Mr. Kennard and his companion,
-a civilian, named Calvert were already there, each in a corner.
-Morning’s thought was that he would hear these men talk after supper.
-In a third corner he placed his canteen, and shyly tucked away in the
-shadow, the limp haversack.
-
-There was a small table in the room, of black wood worn shiny by the
-hands of the house, as the black wood of the floors was worn shiny by
-the bare feet of servants. Upon the table was a small sheath-knife, the
-brass handle of which was inscribed _Mio Amigo_.
-
-It becomes necessary to explain that the human male is discriminating
-about his loot, by the time he has been afield two weeks in a tropical
-island, especially if he has camped in a fresh town every night. The
-day’s march makes him value every pound that he can throw away, for
-he has already been chafed by each essential button and buckle. A tin
-pail of silver pesos unearthed in a church had passed from hand to
-hand among the soldiers. As the stress of the days increased (and the
-artificial sense of values narrowed to the fundamentals such as food
-and tobacco and sleep), Morning had observed with curious approval that
-the silver hoard leaked out of the command entirely--to return to the
-natives for further offerings to the priests.
-
-So the knife on the table aroused no desire. It was not even a good
-knife, but _Mio Amigo_ took his eye, as if affording a bit of
-insight to the native mind. It could not have been wanted by Mr.
-Kennard or Mr. Calvert, since it lay upon the table. Morning put it
-in his coat, knowing he would toss it away before to-morrow’s sun
-was high. In his hot moist hand the brass-handle sent up a smell of
-verdigris. A little later in the village road, he encountered Mr.
-Reever Kennard in the act of purchasing ancient canned stuff from a
-native-woman, too lame to run before the cavalry. Morning was not
-natural in the Presence.
-
-The great man was broad and round and thick. He criticised generals
-afield, and in Washington when times were dry. He had dined with the
-President and signed the interview. His head dropped forward slightly,
-his chin sunk in its own cushions. He bought the native wares with the
-air of a man who is keeping a city in suspense, and the city deserves
-it. Morning stood by and did not speak. There was no reason for him to
-stay; he did not expect companionship; he had nothing to say; no money
-with which to buy food--and yet, having established himself there, he
-could not withdraw without remark of some kind. At least he felt this;
-also he felt cruelly the cub. He was at home in this service with
-packers and enlisted men, but always as now, officers, and others of
-his own work, made him feel the upstart.
-
-Mr. Kennard now turned to perceive him, his eyes opening in the “Bless
-me--what sort is this?” manner of the straying Englishman; and John
-Morning, quite in a funk, fell to enforcing an absurd interest in the
-native sheath-knife. Kennard was not drawn to such a slight affair,
-but perceiving the menial in Morning, allowed him to carry some of his
-purchases back to Headquarters.
-
-Supper was a serious matter to the boy. He had no money nor provisions.
-In the usual case, money would have been no good--but there were a few
-things left in the shop of the lame woman. The field ration was light;
-and while he would not go hungry if the staff-officers knew, it was a
-delicate matter to make known his grubless state. Morning rambled over
-the town, after helping Mr. Kennard to quarters, and returned empty to
-the upper room. Mr. Calvert was there and appeared to see Morning for
-the first time. Calvert was a slender quiet chap, and believed in what
-he had to say.
-
-“Where did you get that little sheath-knife you showed Mr. Kennard?” he
-asked abruptly.
-
-Morning sickened before the man’s eyes. His life had been fought out in
-dark, rough places. He was as near twenty as twenty-five. He had the
-way of the under-dog, who does not expect to be believed, looking for
-the worst of it, whether guilty or not. He told Calvert he had found
-the knife on this table.
-
-“I thought I put it in my saddle-bags,” Calvert said.
-
-“You are very welcome to it. The _Mio Amigo_ made me look at it
-twice----”
-
-“That’s why I wanted it. Take this for your trouble.”
-
-Calvert placed a bit of paper money on the table between them.
-
-“It was no trouble. I don’t want the money.”
-
-“Take it along. Don’t think of it again.”
-
-Morning didn’t want to appear stubborn. This was the peculiarity of the
-episode. The thought of taking the money repelled him. The connection
-of the money with supper occurred, but not with the strength of his
-dislike to appear perverse or bad-tempered.... He saw all clearly after
-he had accepted the paper, but the matter was then closed. He was very
-miserable. He had proved his inferiority. The little brush with big men
-had been too much for him. He belonged among the enlisted....
-
-He went to the lame woman and bought a bottle of pimientos and a live
-chicken. The latter he traded for a can of bacon with a soldier.
-
-
- 2
-
-IMPERIAL HOTEL, Tokyo, early in March, 1904.... The Japanese
-war office had finally decided to permit six American correspondents
-to accompany each army. The Americans heard the news with gravity.
-There were two men for every place. Only three Japanese armies were
-in conception at this time. The first six Americans were easily
-chosen--names of men that allowed no doubt; and this initial group,
-beside being the first to take the field, was elected to act as a
-committee to appoint the second and third sets of six--twelve places
-and thirty waiting. The work at hand was delicate.
-
-The committee was in session in the room of Mr. Reever Kennard. Five of
-the second list had been settled upon when the name of John Morning (of
-the Open Market) was brought up. It was Duke Fallows of San Francisco,
-who spoke:
-
-“I don’t know John Morning, but I know his stuff. It’s big stuff;
-he’s the big man. We’ve gone too far without him already. He has more
-right to be on the committee than I. He was here before I was. He has
-minded his own business and taken quarters apart. I had no intention of
-breaking into the picture this way, but the fact is, I expected John
-Morning to go in first on the second list. Now that there is only one
-place left, there really can’t be any doubt about the name.”
-
-Mr. Reever Kennard of the _World-News_ now arose and waited for
-silence. He got it. The weight of Mr. Reever Kennard was felt in this
-room. Everything in it had weight--saddle and leggings of pigskin,
-gauntlets, typewriters, cameras, the broadside of riding-breeches,
-and a little arsenal of modern inventions which only stop firing upon
-formal request. Without his hat, Mr. Reever Kennard was different,
-however. Much weight that you granted under the big hat, had left that
-arid country for the crowded arteries of neck and jowl and jaw, or,
-indeed, for the belted cosmic center itself. He said:
-
-“Mr. Fallows talks wide. This Morning is out on a shoe-string; and
-while he may have a bit of force to handle certain kinds of action,
-it isn’t altogether luck--his not getting a good berth. The young
-man hasn’t made good at home. He hasn’t the money backing to stand
-his share of the expense. The War Office suggests that each party of
-correspondents employ a sutler----”
-
-Fallows was still standing and broke in:
-
-“I’m interested in that matter of making good at home. I’ve seen the
-work of most Americans here, and I believe John Morning to be the best
-war-writer sent out from the States. As for the shoe-string, I’ll
-furnish his tooth-brush and dinnercoat--if the sutler insists----”
-
-“We understand very clearly the enthusiasm of Mr. Fallows who wants a
-second column-man for his paper. Doubtless this Morning is open----”
-
-“I hadn’t thought of it, but certainly the _Western States_ would
-profit, if John Morning turned part of his product there. How about
-your _World-News_ on that?”
-
-“I favor Mr. Borden for the sixth place in second column,” Kennard said
-simply.
-
-“Borden reached Tokyo three weeks after Morning--and never campaigned
-before.”
-
-“He’s one of the best of the younger men in New York--a Washington
-correspondent of big influence----”
-
-“I have no objection to him, except as one to take the place that
-belongs to John Morning. I can’t see him there.”
-
-Kennard looked about him. Morning was not well known, having been
-little seen at the _Imperial_ in the last six weeks. Fallows had
-not helped him by saying he was the best war-writer sent out from the
-States; still in a general way he could not be put aside. Kennard saw
-this.
-
-“I wasn’t going to hurt Morning badly, if I could help it,” he said,
-“but Mr. Fallows has rather forced it. This Morning isn’t straight. We
-caught him stealing a sheath-knife from the saddle-bags of Archibald
-Calvert down in Luzon four or five years ago. Morning said he found it
-on a table in the room assigned to us. He took money from Calvert for
-restoring the knife.”
-
-Fallows laughed at this.
-
-“I can’t believe the story,” he said. “The man who did the stuff I’ve
-read, isn’t stealing sheath-knives from another’s saddle-bags.... Oh, I
-don’t mean that it didn’t seem true to you, Kennard----”
-
-Kennard had waited for the last, and was not good to look at until it
-came. He turned quickly to the others. Borden was chosen.
-
-“You’ve still got a place to fill in the first list,” said Fallows.
-
-The committee was now excited. The five faces turned to the Westerner.
-
-“I repeat, Kennard, that your remarks may be within the letter of
-truth, but I wouldn’t campaign in the same army with a man who’d
-bring up a thing like that against a boy--and five years afterward.
-Understand, I have never spoken a word to John Morning----”
-
-“You’re not giving up your place?” said the committee.
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“Then you’ll take Borden’s with the second----?”
-
-“I have nothing against Borden. I wouldn’t spoil the chance of a man
-already chosen.”
-
-“Then first with the third army,” urged the committee.
-
-“I can do better than that,” said Fallows. “Gentlemen, I thank you, and
-beg to withdraw.”
-
-
- 3
-
-JOHN MORNING waved back the rickshaw coolie at the door of the
-little Japanese Inn, where he had been having his own way for several
-weeks, and walked down the Shiba road toward the _Imperial_ hotel.
-He had half-expected to get on the committee, which meant work with the
-first army and a quick start; failing in that, he looked for his name
-to be called early in the second list, and was on the way now to find
-out. Morning shared the passion of the entire company to get afield at
-any cost.
-
-Reasoning, however, did not lift his restlessness and apprehension.
-He had not been on the spot. He had been unable to afford life at the
-_Imperial_; and yet, the costliness of it was not altogether vain,
-since the old hotel had become a center of the world in the matter
-of war-correspondence. Japan reckoned with it as the point of foreign
-civilian force. While his brain could not organize a condition that
-would spoil his chance, Morning’s more unerring inner sense warned him
-that he was not established, as he walked in the rain.
-
-His name was not posted in any of the three groups. The card blurred
-after his first devouring glance, so that he had to read again and a
-third time. For a moment he was out of hand--seething, eruptive. Yet
-there was nothing to fight....
-
-Corydon Tait, a young Englishman with whom he had often talked and
-laughed, was standing by. Tait’s name was not down. Morning controlled
-himself to speak courteously.
-
-The Englishman looked beyond him at the card. A chill settled upon
-Morning’s self-destructive heat. This was new in his world. In the
-momentary misunderstanding, he grasped Tait’s arm.
-
-“Really, old chap, I’d prefer you not to do that,” the other said,
-drawing his arm away. “It must be plain that I don’t know you.”
-
-“I thought you were joking,” said Morning.
-
-
- 4
-
-BACK on Shiba Road in the beginning of dusk, he turned to the
-native inn. The door slid open before his hand touched the latch; his
-figure having been seen through the papered lattice. The proprietor
-bowed to the matting and hissed with prolonged seriousness, hissed
-in fact until the American had removed and exchanged his shoes for
-sandals. The hand-maidens appeared and bowed laughingly. The old
-kitchen drudge emerged from her chimney and ogled. The mother of the
-house took the place beside her lord on the rostrum-of-the-pencils.
-She did not hiss, but it was very clear that the matting under the
-white man’s feet was far above her in worthiness.
-
-There was something of this formality with his every entrance. Morning
-had felt silly during the first days as he passed through the hedge of
-bent backs; the empty cringing and favor-groveling had seemed indecent.
-But now (in the dusk of the house before the candles) a faint touch of
-healing came from it. They had all served him. He had been fearfully
-over-served. They had bothered his work through excessive service--so
-many were the hands and so little to do. The women were really happy
-to work for him. To-night, a queer gladness clung to their welcome.
-He had fallen indeed to sense it. He was starving for reality, for
-some holy thing. They had stripped him at the _Imperial_. In his
-heart he was trying to make a reality now of this mockery of Japanese
-self-extinction.
-
-The bath-boy, wet from steam, with only a loin-cloth about him,
-followed Morning to his room. The American was not allowed to bathe
-alone; would not have been allowed to undress himself, had he not
-insisted upon the privilege. He sat in a tub, three walls of which
-were wood and the fourth of iron. Against the outside of the latter,
-burned a furious fire of charcoal. For the benefits of this bath, he
-was begged to make no haste and to occupy his mind with matters of the
-higher life. A moment or two before the water reached a boiling-point,
-Morning was allowed to escape. Exceeding pressure of business was
-occasionally accepted as precluding the chance of a bath for one day,
-but to miss two days in succession, without proving that he had bathed
-elsewhere, meant a loss of respect, and a start of household whispering.
-
-He was sick to get back to work, turned to it for restoration and
-forgetfulness, as a man to a drug. Moreover, there was need, for he
-was on space. Two or three papers in the Mid-west used what he could
-write, though he had no holding contracts, and had left Chicago with
-such haste to catch a steamer, that there had been no chance to make
-an arrangement, whereby these papers might have used the same story
-simultaneously. And then, there had been a delay of nearly a day
-in Vancouver. This time in Chicago would have been enough for the
-establishment of a central office and an agent on percentage, who
-could have enlarged his market without limit, and cut down his work
-to one letter a day. Instead, he did the same story now, from three
-different angles. It had been this way before. With war in the air,
-Morning was unable to breathe at home. Off he went, without a return
-ticket--tourist cars and dingy second-class steamer passage--but with
-a strange confidence in his power to write irresistibly. It was like a
-mark--this faith of his in the ability to appeal.
-
-All his life he had lived second-class. To-night he wondered if it
-would always be so; if there was not something in the face of John
-Morning, something that others saw at once, which placed him instantly
-among culls and seconds in the mysterious adjustments of the world.
-They had made him feel so at the _Imperial_, before this episode.
-Men who didn’t write ten lines a day were there on big incomes; and
-others, little older than he, with only two or three fingers of his
-ability, on a safe salary and flexible expense account.
-
-The day was brought back to him again and again. The cut of Corydon
-Tait had crippled him. He felt it now crawling swiftly along the nerves
-of his limbs until it reached his brain, and remaining there coldly
-like undigested matter in a sick body. He felt his face queerly. There
-was neither fat nor flabbiness upon it. He could feel the bone. His
-fingers brushed his mouth, and a sort of burn came to him. It was the
-finest thing about John Morning. There was a bit of poetry about it,
-a touch of tenderness, finer than strength. Passion was in the mouth,
-intensity without intentness, not a trace of the boarish, nor bovine.
-It is true you often see the ruin of such a mouth in quiet places where
-those of drugs and drinks are served; but you see as well the finished
-picture upon the faces of those men lit with world’s service, who have
-heard the voice of the human spirit, and are loved by the race, because
-they have forgotten how to love themselves.
-
-Morning knew it only as his weakness. It was the symbol to-night of his
-failure.... Those at the _Imperial_ had seen it; they had dared to
-deny him because of it. The greatest among the war-men were thin-lipped
-and sinewy-jawed--the soldier face.... He knew much about war; none had
-campaigned more joyously than he. In the midst of peril, courage seemed
-altogether obvious and easy; his fearlessness was too natural for him
-to be surprised at it, though it surprised others....
-
-The typewriter buzzed on. Wearily he caught up the trend, but the drive
-was gone, although there was hardly a lull in the registering of the
-keys for two-thirds of a page. Always before, this sort of hackwork had
-been done with a dream of the field ahead. His forces fused. He had
-been denied a column. His hand brushed across his face and John Morning
-was ashamed--ashamed of his poverty, of his work, of his own nature,
-which made a tragedy of the cut of Corydon Tait; ashamed of the heat in
-his veins from the stimulants he had drunk; ashamed because he had not
-instantly demanded his rights at the _Imperial_; ashamed of the
-mess of a man he was, a fool of his volition and vitality, commonness
-stamped on his every feature.
-
-Morning’s affinity for alcohol was peculiar. He worked with it
-successfully. So resilient was his health that he was usually fresh in
-the morning. Often he had finished a long evening of work on pretty
-good terms with himself, the later pages of copy coming in a cloud of
-speed.... The copy-producing seemed to use up the whipping spirit,
-rather than himself; at least, he treasured this illusion. The first
-bottles of rice-beer lasted the longest.... He recalled now that the
-maid-servants had twice heated _sake_ for him at supper; as for
-the rice-beer he had been more than ever thirsty to-night. He glanced
-into the corner where the bottles were and a sense of uncleanness came
-over him--as if his body were flowing with the slow spirit, like a
-sea-marsh at high tide.
-
-... He heard the shafts of a rickshaw grate upon the gravel outside.
-Amoya had come; it was midnight. He opened the papered lattice. The
-runner was bowing by his cart, holding his broad hat with both hands.
-Morning covered his machine, put fresh charcoal in the brazier, caught
-up his hat and overcoat, and shuffled down the stairway, holding
-his slippers on with his toes. The door-boy gave him his shoes and
-opened the way to the street. Morning greeted Amoya with a pat on the
-shoulder, and climbed into the cart.
-
-“Yoshuwara?” the runner asked.
-
-“No, you shameless ruffian!”
-
-“No?” Amoya squeaked pleasantly.
-
-“No--not--no must do.”
-
-Morning waved his arm, signifying solitary and peaceful enjoyment of
-the night air and contemplation of the dark city. These night journeys
-had become the cooling features of his day. Amoya was a living marvel,
-the rickshaw runner incomparable--tireless, eager, very proud of his
-work; too old to be spoiled. He was old; indeed, enough to be Morning’s
-father, but his limbs were young, and his great trunk full of power
-unabated.
-
-The night was dark, damp, no moon nor star. The cold which was almost
-tempted thinly to crust the open drains, was welcome to the man’s
-nostrils. Amoya warmed and gathered speed. Up the broad Shiba Road he
-sped, past the far dim lights of the highway, past Shiba temple, the
-tombs of the Ronins, past the cavalry barracks (by far the best joke on
-Japan), and the last of the known land-marks.
-
-Now Morning suffered strange temptations. Few white men who have lived
-any time in Japan have escaped. A Japanese house with every creature
-comfort was within his resources even now; wholesome food, _sake_,
-rice-beer were cheap; excellent service, even such service as Amoya’s
-was laughably cheap. Why not sink into this life and quit the agony?...
-Why did he think of it as _sinking_ into this life? Why did he
-agonize anyway?... There was always a fresh sore on him somewhere.
-Surely other men did not burn back and forth every day as he did.
-
-The shame came again. He ordered Amoya back within an hour, left him at
-the door of the Inn, drenched with sweat and delighted with his extra
-fare.
-
-Morning slid open the door of his room. Nothing could be seen but the
-glow of the brazier, yet he knew some one was within.... A series of
-mattresses and robes had been taken out from a chest of drawers and
-made up on the matting. The women as usual, had waited for him to go
-out. He lit the lamp.
-
-A little Japanese maid-servant was curled up asleep at the foot of
-his bed. Morning sat down upon the cushion and mused curiously....
-It was thus that Naomi had ordered Ruth to steal into the couch at
-the feet of Boaz. Ruth had found a home, and was not long allowed to
-make herself glad with mere gleanings.... It was this sort of thing
-that made Morning hate Japan. In the eyes of the old, limp-backed
-Inn-keeper, this child was a woman. He would not have dared to delegate
-a mere maid-servant to ply the ancient art with his guest, but there
-were extenuations here: the delicacy and subtlety of the little one’s
-falling asleep, and the child-like freshness of the offering. It was
-this last that stung Morning, because he knew the old Japanese found a
-commercial value in this very adolescence.
-
-He had smiled at this child during the day, and asked her
-name--Moto-san--and repeated it after her, as one might have done the
-name of a child. She had just come in from the fields, reported the
-bath-boy who preëmpted any leakage of English whatsoever, and who was
-frequently on the verge of being understood.... Her hands showed labor,
-and she was not ashen as the Japanese beauties must be, but sweet and
-fragrant--and so little.
-
-“It is the same the world over, when they come in from the fields,”
-he said. “Good God, she ought to be sleeping with her dolls.... Poor
-little bit of a girl in a man’s country ... and they sent you in here
-to keep me from night-riding. One cannot complain of hospitality ...
-Moto-san... Moto-san....”
-
-She stirred, and snuggled deeper. “She is truly asleep,” he thought.
-
-“Moto-san!” he said softly again.
-
-The girl opened her eyes, which suddenly filled with fright. Morning
-patted her shoulder gently. And now she sat up staring at him, and
-remembering.
-
-He leaned his head upon his palm and shut his eyes--sign of falling
-asleep--then pointed her to the door.... Morning could not tell if
-she were pleased. It all seemed very strange to her--her smile was
-frightened. He repeated the gesture. She had slid off the bed to the
-matting upon her knees, facing him. And now she bowed to the floor, and
-backed out so, bowing with frightened smile.... He reflected dismally
-that she had lost value for the eye of the Inn-keeper.
-
-
- 5
-
-MORNING’S idea as he reached the _Imperial_ next forenoon
-was to call the committee together, or a working part of it, and to
-demand why he had been barred from the projected columns.... The
-high and ancient lobby was practically empty. It appeared that the
-correspondents _de rigeur_ and _en masse_ were posing for a
-photograph on the rear balcony, which was reached through the billiard
-room. Morning went there and stood by the window while the picture
-was taken. It required an hour or more. He was passed and re-passed.
-Two or three Americans seemed on the point of asking him to take his
-place with the fifty odd war-men, but they checked themselves before
-speaking. Morning felt vilely marked. Stamina did not form within him.
-He did not realize that something finer than physical courage was
-challenged.
-
-He watched the backs of the formation--the squared shoulders, the
-planted feet. He knew that in the minds of the posing company,
-each was looking at his own. From each individual to his lesser
-or greater circle, the finished picture would go. It would be
-reproduced in the periodicals which sent these men--“_our special
-correspondent_”--designated. Personal friends in each case would
-choose their own from the crowd. The little laughing chap in brown
-corduroys who arranged the group was the best and bravest man in field
-photography. He left the camera now to his assistant, and took place
-with the others. Men of twenty campaigns were there. The dim eyes of
-a certain little old man had looked upon more of war than any other
-living human being. In one brain or another, pictures were coiled from
-every campaign around the world during the past forty years. Never
-before in history had so many famous war-men gathered together. It
-would be a famous picture.... He, John Morning, would hear it in the
-future:
-
-“... Why weren’t you in that picture?”
-
-“I sat in the billiard room behind at a window. I had been barred out
-of a place among the first three columns. I was under a cloud of some
-kind.”
-
-No, that would not be his answer. Various lies occurred.
-
-This little mental activity completed itself without any volition. It
-was finished now, like the picture outside--the materials scattering.
-The idea of the truth merely appeared through a mental habit of looking
-at two sides--a literary habit. It had brought no direct relation to
-John Morning. But the lies had brought their direct relation.
-
-He could not remain at his place by the window, now that the fifty came
-in for drink and play. He was afraid to demand what evil concerning him
-was in the minds of men; afraid something would be uncovered that was
-true. He felt the uncleanness of drink upon him, and a moral softening
-from years of newspaper work, a training begun in glibness, which does
-not recognize the rights of men, but obeys a City Desk. He could not
-organize a contending force; and yet loathed the thought of return to
-the Japanese Inn. He was not ready to face himself alone.
-
-It had never come to him so stirringly as now--the sense of
-_something_ within, utterly weary of imprisonment and forced
-companionship with the visible John Morning. His misery was a silent
-unswerving shame. A feverish impulse almost controlled him to take
-something either to lift him away, or permit him to sink in abandonment
-from the area of pain.
-
-He stood near the desk in the lobby. Duke Fallows was coming. The
-Californian’s legs, in their worn corduroys, were far too lean for the
-big bony knees--a tall man of forty, with tired and sunken eyes and
-sunken mouth. Fallows had a reputation. Its strongly drawing side-issue
-was his general and encompassing, though fastidious, love of women.
-Someone had whispered that even if a man has the heart of a volcano,
-its outpouring must be spread rather thin in places to cover all women.
-He was out for the _Western States_, not only to show war, but to
-show it up. Certainly he loved the under-dog, which is an epigram for
-stating that he was an anarchist.
-
-No anarchist could be gentler to meet, nor more terrible to read.
-Fallows owned a formidable interest in the _Western States_;
-otherwise he would have had to print himself. The rest of that San
-Francisco property was just an excellent newspaper. Its effort was
-to balance Duke Fallows; sometimes it seemed trying to extinguish
-him in order to save itself. It brought sanity and common-sense and
-the group-souled observation of affairs, to say nothing of news and
-advertising--all to cool the occasional column of this sick man. To
-a few, however, on the Pacific Coast, since his new assignment was
-announced--the Russo-Japanese war and Duke Fallows meant the same
-thing. The majority said: “Watch the _Western States_ boom in
-circulation. They are sending Fallows to Asia.”
-
-The two stood together, Fallows looking down. Morning was broad in brow
-and shoulder; slender otherwise and of medium height.
-
-“I’m Fallows.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The tall man’s eyes turned upward so that only the whites were visible.
-He fingered his brow as if to pluck something forth through the bone.
-
-“Come on upstairs.”
-
-Morning followed the large, slow knees. It was less that the knees
-wobbled--rather the frailty of the hangings and pinnings. They did
-the three high flights and began again, finally drawing up in a broad
-roof-room that smelled of new harness and overlooking an especially
-hard-packed part of Tokyo, toward the Ginza. Fallows lit the fire that
-was ready in the grate and sprawled wearily.
-
-“Where did you study religion, Morning?”
-
-“I didn’t.”
-
-“That’s one way to get it.”
-
-The sound of his own laugh came to Morning’s ears and hurt him.
-Fallows’ eyes were shut. There was no trace of a smile around the wan
-mouth.
-
-“You’ll likely be more religious before you’re done. I mean many things
-by being religious--a man’s inability to lie to himself for one; a
-passion for the man who’s down--that’s another.... I’ve read your
-stuff. It’s full of religion----”
-
-Now it seemed to Morning as if he had just entered a fascinating
-wilderness; apart from this, he saw something about the worn,
-distressed mouth of Fallows that made him think of himself last night.
-There was one more effect from this first brush. Something happened in
-Morning’s mind with that sentence about the inability to lie to one’s
-self. It was like a shot in the midst of a flock of quails. A pair of
-birds was down, but the rest of the flock was off and away, like the
-fragments of an explosive.
-
-“I read some of your stuff about the Filipino woman--‘woman of the
-river-banks,’ you called her. Another time you looked into a nipa-shack
-where an old man was dying of _beri-beri_, and an old woman sat at
-bay at the door----”
-
-These brought back the pictures to Morning, and the dimension behind
-the actual light and shade and matter. The healing, too, was that
-someone had seen his work, and seen from it all that he saw,--the
-artist’s true aliment, which praise of the many cannot furnish. It gave
-him heart like an answer to prayer, because he had been very needful.
-
-“You must have come up hard. Did you, boy?” Fallows asked after a
-moment.
-
-“Perhaps you would say so.”
-
-“Farm first?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“And a father who misunderstood?”
-
-“A good deal of the misunderstanding was my own bull-headedness, I see
-now----”
-
-“And the mother, John Morning?”
-
-“I was too little----”
-
-“Ah----”
-
-Morning found himself saying eagerly a little later:
-
-“And then the city streets--selling newspapers, errands, sick all the
-time, though I didn’t know it. Then I got to the horses.... I found
-something in the stables good for me. I liked horses so well that it
-hurt. I learned to sleep nights and eat regularly--but read so much
-rot. Still, it was all right to be a stable-boy. A big race-horse
-man took me on to ship with stock. I’ve been all over America by
-freight with the racers--from track to track. I used to let the tramps
-ride, but they were dangerous--especially the young ones. I had to
-stay awake. An old tramp could come in anytime--and go to sleep--but
-younger ones are bad. They beat you up for a few dimes. I was bad,
-too, bad as hell.... And then I rode--there was money, but it went. I
-got sick keeping light. The pounds over a hundred beat me out of the
-game--except the jumps. I’ve ridden the jumpers in England, too--been
-all broken up. In a fall you can’t always get clear.... All this was
-before I was eighteen--it was my kind of education.”
-
-“I like it,” said Fallows.
-
-“One night in New York I heard a newspaper man talk.... It was in a
-back-room bar on Sixth avenue. I see now he was a bit broken down. He
-looked to me then all that was splendid and sophisticated. I wanted to
-be like him----”
-
-Fallows bent forward, his face tender as a father’s. “You poor little
-chap,” he said, as if he did not see Morning now, but the listening boy
-in the back-room bar.
-
-“You see, I never really got the idea of having money--it went so
-quickly. The idea of a big bundle didn’t get a chance to sink in.
-I’ve had several hundred dollars at once from riding--but the next
-day’s races, or the next, got it. What I’m trying to say is--winnings
-didn’t seem to belong to me. Poverty was a habit. I always think yet
-in nickels and dimes. I seem to belong--steerage. It wasn’t long after
-I listened to that reporter, that I got a newspaper job, chasing
-pictures. A year after that the wars began. I went out first on my
-own hook; in fact, I think you’d call it that now. I seem to get into
-a sort of mania to be off--when the papers begin to report trouble. I
-didn’t know I was poorly fixed this time, until here in Tokyo I saw how
-the others go about it. Dinner-clothes, and all sorts of money invested
-in them--whether the war makes good or not----”
-
-“I was right,” Fallows said finally. He had listened as a forest in a
-drouth listens for rain.
-
-Morning was embarrassed. He had been caught in the current of the
-other’s listening. It was not his way at all to talk so much. He wasn’t
-tamed altogether; and then he had been extra hurt by the night and the
-day. An element of savagery arose, with the suspicion that Fallows
-might be making fun of him.
-
-“What were you right about, Mr. Fallows?”
-
-“You’ve got an especial guardian.”
-
-Morning waited. The fuel was crackling. The Californian watched the
-fire and finally began to talk.
-
-“You’re _one of them_. I saw it in your stuff. Then they told me
-here that you lived in a little Japanese hotel alone. That’s another
-reason. Your kind come up alone--always alone. To-day I saw you
-watching that picture business. You looked tired--as if you had a long
-way yet to swim against the current. You had a fight on--inside and
-out. You’ll keep on fighting inside, long after the world outside has
-called a truce. When you’re as old as I am--maybe before--you’ll have
-peace inside and out.”
-
-Morning was bewildered; and had somewhat braced himself in scepticism,
-as if the other were reading a fortune out of a cup.
-
-“You’re one of them, and you’ve got a guardian--greater than ten of
-these militia press-agents. You don’t know it yet, but your stuff shows
-it; your life shows it. You try to do what _you_ want--and you’re
-forced to do better. You’ll be kept steerage, as you call it,--kept
-down among men--until you see that it’s the place for a white man
-to be, and that all these other things--dinner-coats and expense
-accounts--are but tricks to cover a weakness. You’ll be held down among
-men until you love them, and would be sick away from service with them.
-You won’t be able to rest unless you’re helping. You’ll choke when you
-say ‘Brother.’ You’ll answer their misery and cry from your sleep, ‘I’m
-coming.’ You hear them with your soul now, but the brain won’t listen
-yet. You’ll go it blind for the under-dog--and find out afterwards that
-you were immortally right.”
-
-Morning’s breast was burning. It was more the fiery flood of kindness
-than the words. He had been roughed so thoroughly that he couldn’t take
-words; he needed a sign.
-
-“The time will come when you’ll hear your soul saying, ‘Get down among
-men, John, and help.’ You’ll jump. A storm of hell will follow you if
-you don’t. They’ll throw you overboard and even the whale won’t stomach
-you if you don’t. ‘Get down among men, John’; that’s your orders to
-Nineveh.”
-
-The Californian changed the subject abruptly:
-
-“They were good enough to give me a place with the first column, but
-I can’t see it quite. There’s going to be too much supervision. These
-Japanese are rivet-headed. I like the other end. New Chwang is still
-open. Lowenkampf is in command there. I knew him years ago in Vienna.
-Good man for a soldier--old Lowenkampf. He’ll take us in. Let’s go
-over----”
-
-“I won’t be exactly ‘healed’ for a long stay. My money is coming
-here----”
-
-“Let it pile up. I’ll stake you for the Russian picnic.”
-
-Morning wanted it so intensely that he feared Duke Fallows might die
-before they got to Lowenkampf and New Chwang.... He was terrorized by
-this thought: “Fallows has somehow failed to understand about me not
-getting a column, and not being asked into the picture. When he finds
-out, he’ll change his mind....”
-
-He wanted to speak, gathered strength with violent effort, but Fallows
-just now was restlessly eager to go below.
-
-
- 6
-
-SECOND class, that night, on the Pacific liner _Manchuria_, forward
-among the rough wooden bunks, eating from tin-plates.... It had been
-Morning’s suggestion. Fallows had accepted it laughingly, but as a good
-omen.
-
-“Two can travel cheaply as one,” he said. “I’m quite as comfortable as
-usual.”
-
-Morning realized that his friend was not comfortable at best. He was
-too well himself, too ambitious, quite to realize the other’s illness.
-Morning found a quality of understanding that he had expected vaguely
-to find sometime from some girl, but he could not return the gift in
-kind, nor right sympathy for the big man’s weakness. Fallow’s didn’t
-appear to expect it.
-
-They left the _Manchuria_ at Nagasaki, after the Inland Sea
-passage, found a small ship for Tientsin direct; also a leftover winter
-storm on the Yellow Sea. Morning, at work, typewriter on his knees,
-looked up one night as they neared the mouth of the Pei-ho. An oil-lamp
-swung above them smokily; the tired ship still creaked and wallowed in
-the gale. Fallows has been regarding him thoughtfully from time to time.
-
-“You keep bolstering me up, Duke, and I don’t seem to help you any,”
-Morning said. “Night and day, I worry you with the drum of this
-machine--when you’re too sick to work; and here you are traveling like
-a tramp for me. I’m used to it, but it makes you worse. You staked me
-and made possible a bit of real work this campaign--why won’t you let
-me do some stuff for you?”
-
-“Don’t you worry about what I’ve done--that’s particularly my affair.
-Call it a gamble. Perhaps I chose you as a man chooses his place to
-build a house....”
-
-Morning wondered at times if the other was not half dead with longing
-for a woman.... In the fifteen years which separated the two men in age
-lay all the difference between a soldier and an artist. Morning had to
-grant finally that the Californian had no abiding interest in the war
-they were out to cover; and this was so foreign that the rift could not
-be bridged entirely.
-
-“War--why, I love the thought!” Fallows exclaimed. “The fight’s the
-thing--but this isn’t it. This is just a big butchery of the blind. The
-Japanese aren’t sweet in this passion. We won’t see the real Russia
-out here in Asia. Real Russia is against all this looting and lusting.
-Real Russia is at home singing, writing, giving itself to be hanged.
-Real Russia is glad to die for a dream. This soldier Russia isn’t ready
-to die. Just a stir in the old torpor of decadence--this Russia we’re
-going to. You’ll see it--its stench rising.... I want the other war.
-I want to live to fight in the other war, when the under-dog of this
-world--the under-dog of Russia and England and America, runs no more,
-cowers no more--but stops, turns to fight to the death. I want the
-barricades, the children fired with the spirit, women coming down to
-the ruck, the girls from the factories, harlots from the slums. The
-women won’t stay at home in the war I mean--and you and I, John, must
-be there,--to die every morning----”
-
-Yet Fallows didn’t write this. He lay on his back dreaming about it.
-Always the women came into his thoughts. Morning held hard to the game
-at hand.... Lying on his back--thus the Californian became identified
-in his mind. And strange berths they found, none stranger than the
-one at last in the unspeakable Chinese hotel at New Chwang. Morning
-remembered the date--4/4/’04--for he put it down in the black notebook,
-after smashing a centipede on the wall with it. They were awakened the
-next morning by the passing of a brigade of Russian infantry in full
-song. Each looking for “good-morning” in the eyes of the other, found
-that and tears.
-
-The Chinese house stirred galvanically at mid-day--from the farthest
-chicken-coop to the guest-chamber of the most revered. Lowenkampf,
-commanding the port, in sky-blue uniform, entered with his orderly and
-embraced a certain sick man lying on a rough bench, between his own
-blankets. It was just so and not otherwise, nor were the “European”
-strangers of distinguished appearance. They had come in the night,
-crossing the river in a junk, instead of waiting for the Liao-launch.
-They had not sought the Manchurian hotel, where Europeans of quality
-usually go, but had asked for native quartering. So rarely had this
-happened, that the tradition was forgotten in New Chwang about angels
-appearing unheralded.
-
-It was a great thing to John Morning, this coming of General
-Lowenkampf. He had not dared to trust altogether in the high friend
-of Duke Fallows--nor even in finding such a friend in New Chwang. The
-actual fact meant that they would not be sent out of the zone of war,
-when the Russians evacuated from New Chwang, if Lowenkampf could help
-it; and who could help it if not the commander of the garrison? It
-meant, too, that everything Duke Fallows had said in his quiet and
-unadorned way when speaking of purely mundane affairs had turned out
-true.
-
-Fallows sat up in his bunk to receive the embrace he knew was coming.
-The General was a small man. He must have been fifty. He appeared a
-tired father,--the father who puts his hands to his ears and looks
-terrified when his children approach, but who loves them with secret
-fury and prays for them in their beds at night. He had suffered; he
-had a readiness to tears; he needed much brandy at this particular
-interval, as if his day had not begun well. He spoke of the battle
-of the Yalu and his tears were positive. It was a mistake, a hideous
-mistake. He said this in English, and with the frightened intensity of
-a woman whose lover has died misunderstanding her.... No, they were not
-to stay at New Chwang.... He would make them comfortable.... Yes, he
-had married a woman six years ago.... It murders the soldier in a man
-to marry a woman and find her like other women. You may think on the
-mystery of childbirth a whole life--but when your own woman, in your
-own house, brings you a child, it is all different. A thing to be awed
-at.... It draws the soldier-pith out of one’s spine, as you draw the
-nerve out of a tooth.... You are never the same afterward.
-
-Fallows sank back smiling raptly.
-
-“You’re the same old nervous prince of realizers--Lowenkampf--always
-realizing your own affairs with unprecedented realism. God knows, I’m
-glad to see you.... John Morning, here is a man who can tell you a
-thing you have heard before, in a way that you’ll never forget. It’s
-because he only talks about what he has realized for himself. His
-name is blown in the fabric of all he says.... Lowenkampf, here’s a
-_boy_. I’ve been looking for him, years--ever since I found my own
-failure inevitable. John Morning--Lowenkampf, the General. If you both
-live to get back to your babies--Morning’s are still in the sky, their
-dawn is not yet--you will remember this day--for it is a significant
-Trinity.... General, how many babies have you?”
-
-“Oh, my God--one!”
-
-Fallows seemed unspeakably pleased with that excited remark. Lowenkampf
-glanced at the shut eyes of his old friend, and then out of the window
-to the sordid Chinese street, where the Russian soldiers moved to and
-fro in the unwieldy disquiet of a stage mob in its first formation.
-
-“But they’re all my babies----”
-
-John Morning had a vision of a battle with that sentence. All the rest
-of the day he thrilled with it. Work was so pure in his heart from
-the vision, that he left his machine that night (Duke Fallows seemed
-asleep) and touched the brow of his friend....
-
-
- 7
-
-AUGUST--Liaoyang, the enemy closing in.... There were times
-when John Morning doubted if he had ever been away from the sick man,
-Duke Fallows, and the crowds of Russian soldiery. Individually the days
-were long. Often in mid-afternoon, he stopped to think if some voice or
-picture of to-day’s dawning did not belong to yesterday or last week.
-Yet routine settled upon all that was past, and the days accumulated
-into a quantity of weeks that grew like the continual miracle of a hard
-man’s savings.
-
-Always he missed something. He was hard in health, but felt white
-nowhere, in nor out, so much had he been played upon by sun and wind
-and dust. The Russian officers were continually asking him to try
-new horses--the roughest of the untamed purchases brought in by the
-Chinese. It had become quite the custom among the officers to advise
-with Morning on matters of horse-flesh. Fallows had started it by
-telling Lowenkampf that Morning formerly rode the jumpers in England,
-but the younger man had since earned his reputation in the Russian post.
-
-A sorrel mare had appeared in the city. Rat-tailed and Roman-nosed she
-was, and covered with wounds. They had tried to ride her in from the
-Hun. Her skin was like satin and she had not been saddled decently.
-Just a wild, head-strong young mare in the beginning, but bad handling
-had made her a mankiller. Lieutenant Luban, soft with vodka and
-cigarettes, had dickered for the mare, and drunkenly insisted upon
-mounting at once. Morning caught the bridle after the first fight, and
-Luban slid off in his arms in a state of collapse. Clearly an adult
-devil lived in the sorrel. She was red-eyed in her rage, past pain, and
-walked like a man. She would have gone over backwards with Luban, and
-yet she was lovely to Morning’s eye, perfect as a yellow rose. He knew
-her sort--the kind that runs to courage and not to hair; the kind of
-individual that rarely breeds.
-
-He led her apart, talked to her; knew that she only cared to kill him
-and be free. She was outrage; hate was the breath of her nostrils;
-but she made Morning forget his work.... Thirty officers were
-gathered in the compound. Morning had saddled her afresh; her back
-was easier--yet she was up, striking, pawing. He knew she meant to go
-back. Stirrup-free, he held her around the neck as she stood poised.
-His weight was against her toppling, but sheer deviltry hurled back
-her head, breaking the balance. They saw him push the hot yellow neck
-from him as she fell. He landed on his feet, facing her from the side,
-leaped clear--and then darted forward, catching the bridle-rein before
-she straightened her first front leg. Morning was in the saddle before
-she was up. Then the whole thing was done over again as perfectly as
-one with his hand in repeats a remarkable billiard-shot.
-
-“It’s only a question of time--she’ll kill you,” said Fallows.
-
-“How she hates the Chinese, but she’s the gamest thing in Asia,”
-Morning answered. “I’d like to be away alone with her.”
-
-“You’d need a new continent for a romance like that,” Fallows said, and
-that night, in their room of Lowenkampf’s headquarters, he resumed the
-subject, his eyes lost in the dun ceiling.
-
-“There’s only one name for that sorrel mare, if I’m consulted.”
-
-“Name her,” Morning said.
-
-“The one I’m thinking of--her name is Eve.”
-
-Fallows shivered, and turned the subject, but Morning knew he would
-come back.... They heard the sentries on the stone flags below. It
-was monotonous as the sound of the river. An east wind had blown all
-afternoon. Dust was gritty in the blankets, sore in the rifts of
-lip and nostril caused by the long baking wind. Their eyes felt old
-in the dry heat. Daily the trains had brought more Russians; daily
-more Chinese refugees slipped out behind. Liaoyang was a mass of
-soldiery--heavy and weary with soldiers--dull with its single thought
-of defense. For fifty or more miles, the southern arc of the circle
-about the old walled city was a system of defense--chains of Russian
-redoubts, complicated entanglements, hill emplacements and rifle-pits.
-Beyond this the Japanese gathered openly and prepared. It seemed as if
-the earth itself would scream from the break in the tension when firing
-began....
-
-“John--a man must be alone----” Fallows said abruptly.
-
-“That’s one of the first things you told me--and that a man mustn’t lie
-to himself.”
-
-“It must be thinking about your romance with that sorrel fiend--that
-brings her so close to-night, I mean the real Eve. I had to put the
-ocean between us--and yet she comes. Listen, John, when you are dull
-and tired after a hard day, you take a drink or two of brandy. You,
-especially you, are new and lifted again. That’s what happens to me
-when a woman comes into the room....”
-
-Twice before Morning had been on the verge of this, and something
-spoiled it. He listened now, for Fallows opened his heart. His eyes
-held unblinkingly the dim shadows of the ceiling. The step of the
-sentries sank into the big militant silence--and this was revelation:
-
-“God, how generous women are with their treasures! They are devils
-because of their great-heartedness. So swift, so eager, so delicate in
-their giving. They look up at you, and you are lost. My life has been
-gathering a bouquet--and some flowers fade in your hand.... I hated it,
-but they looked up so wistfully--and it seemed as if I were rending in
-a vacuum.... Always the moment of illusion--that _this_ one is the
-last, that here is completion, that peace will come with _this_
-fragrance; always their giving is different and very beautiful--and
-always the man is deeper in hell for their bestowal.... A day or
-a month--man’s incandescence is gone. Brown eyes, blue eyes--face
-pale or ruddy--lips passionate or pure--their giving momentary or
-immortal--and yet, I could not stay. Always they were hurt--less among
-men, less among their sisters, and no strangers to suffering--and
-always hell accumulated upon my head.... Then she came. There’s a match
-in the world for every man. Her name is Eve. She is the answer of her
-sisterhood to such as I.
-
-“She was made so. She will not have me near. And yet with all her
-passion and mystery she is calling to me. The rolling Pacific isn’t
-broad enough. She has bound me by all that I have given to others, by
-all that I have denied others. She was made to match me, and came to
-her task full-powered, as the sorrel mare came to corral to-day for
-you.... Oh, yes, I honor her.”
-
-There was silence which John Morning could not break. Fallows began to
-talk of death--in terms which the other remembered.
-
-“... For the death of the body makes no difference. In the body here we
-build our heaven or hell. If we have loved possessions of the earth--we
-are weighted with them afterward,--imprisoned among them. If we love
-flesh here, we are held like shadows to fleshly men and women, enmeshed
-in our own prevailing desire. If our life has been one of giving to
-others, of high and holy things--we are at the moment of the body’s
-death, like powerful and splendid birds suddenly hearing the mystic
-call of the South. Death, it is the great cleansing flight into the
-South....”
-
-This from the sick man, was new as the first rustle of Spring to John
-Morning; yet within, he seemed long to have been expectant. There was
-thrill in the spectacle of the other who had learned by losing....
-
-Morning’s mind was like the beleaguered city--desperate with waiting
-and potential disorder, outwardly arrogant, afraid in secret.... Duke
-Fallows was thinking of a woman, as he visioned his lost paradise. The
-younger man left the lamp-light to go to him, and heard as he leaned
-over the cot:
-
-“... Like a lost traveler to the single point of light, John, I shall
-go to her. Eve--the one red light--I will glow red in the desire of
-her. She is my creation. Out of the desire of my strength she was
-created. As they have mastered me in the flesh, this creation of mine
-shall master me afterward--with red perpetual mastery.”
-
-Lowenkampf came in. They saw by his eyes that he was more than
-ever drawn, in the tension and heart-hunger. He always brought his
-intimacies to the Americans. A letter had reached him from Europe in
-the morning, but the army had given him no time to think until now. It
-was not the letter, but something in it, that reminded him of a story.
-So he brought his brandy and the memory:
-
-“... It was two or three evenings before I left Petersburg to come
-here. I had followed him about--my little son who is five years. I had
-followed him about the house all day. Every little while at some door,
-or through some curtain--I would see the mother smiling at us. It was
-new to me--for I had been seldom home in the day-time--this playing
-with one’s little son through the long day. But God, I knew I was no
-longer a soldier. I think the little mother knew. She is braver than
-I. She was the soldier--for not a tear did I see all that day.... And
-that night I lay down with my little son to talk until he fell asleep.
-It was dark in the room, but light was in the hall-way and the door
-open.... You see, he is just five--and very pure and fresh.”
-
-Fallows sat up. He was startling in the shadow.
-
-“... For a long time my little man stirred and talked--of riding
-horses, when his legs were a little longer, and of many things to do.
-He would be a soldier, of course. God pity the little thought. We would
-ride together soon--not in front of my saddle, but on a pony of his
-own--one that would keep up. I was to take him out to swim ... and we
-would walk in the country to see the trees and animals.... My heart
-ached for love of him--and I, the soldier, wished there were no Asia
-in this world, no Asia, nor any war or torment.... He had seen a gray
-pony which he liked, because it had put its head down, as if to listen.
-It didn’t wear any straps nor saddle, but came close, as one knowing a
-friend, and put its head down--thus the child was speaking to me.
-
-“And I heard her step in the hall--the light, quick step. Her figure
-came into the light of the door-way. She looked intently through the
-shadows where we lay, her eyelids lifted, and a smile on her lips. Our
-little son saw her and this is what he said so drowsily:
-
-“‘We are talking about what we will do--when we get to be men.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fallows broke this silence:
-
-“‘When we get to be men.’ Thank you, General. That was good for me....
-Our friend John needed that little white cloud, too. I’ve just been
-leading him among the wilted primroses.”
-
-Morning did not speak.
-
-Lowenkampf said the fighting would begin around the outer position
-to-morrow.... But that had been said before.
-
-
- 8
-
-ON the night of August 31st, for all the planning, the progress of
-the battle was not to the Russian liking. All that day the movements
-of the Russians had mystified John Morning. The broad bend of the
-river to the east of the city had been crowded with troops--seemingly
-an aimless change of pastures. He felt that after all his study of the
-terrain and its possibilities, the big thing was getting away from
-him. When he mentioned this ugly fear to Fallows, the answer was:
-
-“And that’s just what the old man feels.”
-
-Fallows referred to Kuropatkin.
-
-The monster spectacle had blinded Morning. He had to hold hard at times
-to keep his rage from finding words in answer to Duke Fallows’ scorn
-for the big waiting-panorama which had enthralled him utterly--the
-fleeing refugees, singing infantry, the big gun postures, the fluent
-cavalry back along the railroad, the armored hills, the whole marvelous
-atmosphere.... None of this appeared to matter to Fallows. He had
-written little or nothing. God knew why he had come. He would do a
-story, of course.... Morning had written a book--the climax of which
-would be the battle. He had staked all on the majesty of the story. His
-career would be constructed upon it. He would detach himself from all
-this and appear suddenly in America--the one man in America who knew
-Liaoyang. He would be Liaoyang; his mind the whole picture. He knew the
-wall, the Chinese names of the streets, the city and its tenderloin,
-where the Cantonese women were held in hideous bondage. He knew the
-hills and the river--the rapid treachery of the Taitse. He had watched
-the trains come in from Europe with food, horses, guns and men; had
-even learned much Russian and some Chinese. He had studied Lowenkampf,
-Bilderling, Zarubaieff, Mergenthaler; had looked into the eyes of
-Kuropatkin himself....
-
-Duke Fallows said:
-
-“All this is but one idea, John--one dirty little idea multiplied.
-Don’t let a couple of hundred thousand soldiers spoil the fact in your
-mind. Lowenkampf personally isn’t capable of fighting for himself
-on such a rotten basis. Fighting with a stranger on a neighbor’s
-property--that’s the situation. Russia says to Old Man China, ‘Go,
-take a little airing among your hills. A certain enemy of mine is on
-the way here, and I want to kill him from your house. It will be a
-dirty job, but it is important to me that he be killed just so. I’ll
-clean up the door-step afterward, repair all damages, and live in
-your house myself.... And the Japanese have trampled the flowers and
-vegetable-beds of the poor old Widow Korea to get here----’”
-
-Thus the Californian took the substance out of the hundred thousand
-words Morning had written in the past few months. Dozens of small
-articles had been sent out until a fortnight ago through Lowenkampf,
-via Shanghai, but the main fiber of each was kept for this great story,
-which he meant to sell in one piece in America.
-
-_Kuropatkin_--both Morning and Fallows saw him as the mighty
-beam in the world’s eye at this hour. To Morning he was the risen
-master of events; to Fallows merely a figure tossed up from the moil.
-Morning saw him as the source of power to the weak, as a silencer of
-the disputatious and the envious, as the holding selvage to the vast
-Russian garment, worn, stained and ready to ravel, the one structure of
-hope in a field of infinite failures. Fallows saw him as an integral
-part of all this disorder and disruption, one whose vision was
-marvelous only in the detection of excuses for himself in the action
-of others; whose sorrow was a pose and whose _self_ was far too
-imperious for him firmly to grip the throat of a large and vital
-obstacle. What Morning called the mystical somberness of the chief,
-Fallows called the sullen silence of dim comprehension. Somewhere
-between these notations the Commander stood.... They had seen him at
-dusk that day. “He seems to be repressing himself by violent effort,”
-the younger man whispered.
-
-“What would you say he were repressing, John--his appetite?”
-
-The answer was silence, and late that night, (the Russian force was now
-tense and compact as a set spring), Fallows dropped down upon his cot,
-saying:
-
-“You think I’m a scoffer, don’t you?”
-
-“You break a man’s point, that’s all----”
-
-“I know--but we’re not to be together always.... Listen, don’t think me
-a scoffer, even now. These big, bulky things won’t hold you forever.
-Perhaps, if I were a bigger man, I’d keep silent. You’ll write them
-well, no doubt about that.... But don’t get into the habit of thinking
-me a scoffer. There’s such a lot of finer things to fall for. John,
-I wasn’t a scoffer when I first read your stuff--and saw big forces
-moving around you.... A man who knows a little about women, knows a
-whole lot about men.... To be a famous soldier, John, a man can’t have
-any such forces moving around him. He must be an empty back-ground. All
-his strength is the compound of meat and eggs and fish; his strength
-goes to girth and jowl and fist----”
-
-“You’re a wonderful friend to me, Duke.”
-
-“That’s just what I didn’t want you to say.... There’s no excellence on
-my part. Like a good book, I couldn’t riddle you in one reading.”
-
-Morning found himself again, as he wrote on that last night of
-preparation; that last night of summer. It was always the way, when
-the work came well. It brought him liveableness with himself and
-kindness for others. He had his own precious point of view again,
-too. He pictured Kuropatkin ... sitting at his desk, harried by his
-sovereign, tormented by princes, seeing as no other could see the
-weaknesses in the Russian displays of power, and knowing the Japanese
-better than any other; the man who had come up from Plevna fighting,
-who had written his fightings, who was first to say, “We are not
-ready,” and first to gather up the unpreparedness for battle.
-
-Morning felt himself the reporter of the Fates for this great carnage.
-He wanted to see the fighting, to miss no phase of it--to know the
-mechanics, the results, the speed, the power, weakness and every
-rending of this great force. He did not want the morals of it, the evil
-spirit behind, but the brute material action. He wanted the literary
-Kuropatkin, not a possible reality. He wanted the one hundred thousand
-words driven by the one-seeing, master-seeing reporter’s instinct. He
-was Russian in hope and aspiration--but absolutely negative in what
-was to take place. He wanted the illusion of the service; he saw the
-illusion more clearly; so could the public. The illusion bore out every
-line of his work so far. To laugh at the essence of the game destroyed
-its meaning, and the huge effect he planned to make in America.
-
-Morning was sorry now for having lost during the day the sense of fine
-relation with Fallows, but everything he had found admirable--from
-toys and sweets to wars and women--the sick man had found futile and
-betraying; everything that his own mind found good was waylaid and
-diminished by the other. Fallows, in making light of the dramatic
-suspense of the city, had struck at the very roots of his ambition. The
-work of the night had healed this all, however.
-
-The last night of summer--joyously he ended the big picture. Three
-themes ran through entire--Nodzu’s artillery, under which the
-Russians were willingly dislodging from the shoulders and slopes of
-Pensu-marong; the tread of the Russian sentries below, (a real bit of
-Russian bass in the Liaoyang symphony), and the glissando of the rain.
-
-He sat back from his machine at last. There were two hundred and
-seventy sheets altogether of thin tough parchment-copy--400 words
-to the page, and the whole could be folded into an inside pocket.
-It was ready for the battle itself.... All the Morning moods were
-in the work--moments of photographic description, of philosophic
-calm, instant reversals to glowing idealism--then the thrall of the
-spectacle--finally, a touch, just a touch to add age, of Fallows’
-scorn. It was newspaper stuff--what was wanted. He had brought his
-whole instrument up to concert-pitch to-night. The story was ready for
-the bloody artist.
-
-His heart softened emotionally toward Fallows lying on his back over
-in the shadows.... Lowenkampf came in for a queer melting moment....
-Morning looked affectionately at his little traveling type-mill. It
-had never faltered--a hasty, cheap, last-minute purchase in America,
-but it had seen him through. It was like a horse one picks up afield,
-wears out and never takes home, but thinks of many times in the years
-afterward. Good little beast.... And this made him think with a thrill
-of Eve, brooding in the dark below.... She was adjusted to a thought in
-his mind that had to do with the end of the battle. It was a big-bored,
-furious idea. Morning glanced at his watch. Two-fifteen on the morning
-of September. He unlaced one shoe, but the idea intervened again and
-he moved off in the stirring dream of it. It was three o’clock when he
-bent to the other shoe.
-
-
- 9
-
-ALL the next day, Liaoyang was shelled from the south and
-southeast; all day Eve shivered and sweated in the smoky turmoil. At
-dusk, Morning, to whom the mare was far too precious to be worn out in
-halter, rode back to Yentai along the railroad. She operated like a
-perfect toy over that twelve miles of beaten turf. The rain ceased for
-an hour or two, and the dark warmth of the night seemed to poise her
-every spring. The man was electric from her. At the station Morning
-learned that Lowenkampf, with thirteen battalions, already had occupied
-the lofty coal-fields, ten miles to the east on a stub of the railroad.
-He had first supposed the force of Siberians now crowding the station
-to be Lowenkampf’s men; instead it was his reserve. Eve had lathered
-richly, so that an hour passed before she was cool enough for grain or
-water. He rubbed her down, meanwhile, talked to her softly and made
-plans. Her eye flashed red at the candle, as he shut the door of the
-stable. That night on foot he did the ten miles to the collieries,
-joining Fallows and the General at midnight.... Morning was struck with
-the look of Lowenkampf’s face. He wasn’t taking a drink that night; his
-mouth was old and white. A thin bar of pallor stretched obliquely from
-chin to cheek-bone. The chin trembled, too; the eyes were hungerful,
-yet so kind. Desperate incongruity somewhere. This man should have been
-back in Europe with his neighbors about the fire--his comrade tucked in
-up-stairs, the little mother pouring tea. And yet, Lowenkampf--effaced
-with his anguish and dreamy-eyed, as if surveying the distance between
-his heaven and hell--was the brain of the sledge that was to break the
-Flanker’s back-bone to-morrow.
-
-“The Taitse is only ten miles south,” said Fallows, as they turned in.
-“Bilderling is there. Kuroki is supposed to poke his nose in between,
-and Lowenkampf is to smash it against Bilderling. Mergenthaler’s
-Cossacks are here to take the van in the morning, and we’re backed up
-by a big body of Siberians, stretching behind to Yentai station----”
-
-“I saw ’em,” said Morning. “Lowenkampf looks sick with strain.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Day appeared, with just the faintest touch of red showing like a broken
-bit of glass. Rain-clouds, bursting-heavy, immediately rolled over
-it,--a deluge of grays, leisurely stirring with whitish and watery
-spots. Though his troops were taking the field, Lowenkampf had not left
-his quarters in the big freight _go-down_. Commanders hurried in
-and out. Fallows was filling two canteens with diluted tea, when an
-old man entered, weeping. It was Colonel Ritz, bent, red-eyed, nearly
-seventy, who had been ordered, on account of age and decrepitude, to
-remain with the staff. Brokenly, he begged for his command.
-
-“I have always stayed with the line, General. I shall be quick as
-another. Don’t keep an old man, who has always stuck to the line--don’t
-keep one like that back in time of battle.”
-
-Lowenkampf smiled and embraced him--sending him out with his regiment.
-
-Mergenthaler now came in. There was something icy and hateful about
-this Roman-faced giant. His countenance was like a bronze shield--so
-small the black eyes, and so wide and high the cheek-bones. For months
-his Cossacks had done sensational work--small fighting, far scouting,
-desperate service. He despised Lowenkampf; believed he had earned the
-right to be the hammer to-day; and, in truth, he had, but Lowenkampf,
-who ranked him, had been chosen. Bleak and repulsive with rage, the
-Cossack chief made no effort to repress himself. Lowenkampf was
-reminded that he had been policing the streets of Liaoyang for weeks,
-that his outfit was “fat-heeled and duck-livered.”... More was said
-before Mergenthaler stamped out, his jaw set like a stone balcony. It
-seemed as if he tore from the heart of Lowenkampf the remnant of its
-stamina.... For a moment the three were alone in the head-quarters.
-Fallows caught the General by the shoulders and looked down in his face:
-
-“Little Father--you’re the finest and most courageous of them all....
-It will be known and proven--what I say, old friend--‘when we get to be
-men.’”
-
-The masses of Lowenkampf’s infantry, forming on the heights among the
-coal-fields, melted at the outer edges and slid downward. Willingly
-the men went. They did not know that this was the day. They had been
-fearfully expectant of battle at first--ever since Lake Baikal was
-crossed. Battalion after battalion slid off the heights, and were lost
-in the queer lanes running through the rocks and low timber below. The
-general movement was silent. The rain held off; the air was close and
-warm. Lowenkampf, unvaryingly attentive to the two Americans, put them
-in charge of Lieutenant Luban, the young staff officer, whom Morning
-had caught in his arms from the back of the sorrel. Down the ledges
-they went, as the others.
-
-Morning was uneasy, as one who feels he has forgotten something--a
-tugging in his mind to go back. He was strongly convinced that
-Lowenkampf was unsubstantial in a military way. He could not overcome
-the personal element of this dread--as if the General were of his
-house, and he knew better than another that he was ill-prepared for the
-day’s trial.
-
-Fallows welcomed any disaster. As he had scorned the army in its
-waiting, he scorned it now in its strike. He looked very lean and long.
-The knees were in corduroy and unstable, but his nerve could not have
-been steadier had he been called to a tea-party by Kuroki. As one who
-had long since put these things behind him, Fallows appeared; indeed,
-as one sportively called out by the younger set, to whom severing the
-spine of a flanker was fresh and engrossing business.... Morning choked
-with suppressions. Luban talked low and wide. He was in a funk. Both
-saw it. Neither would have objected, except that he monopolized their
-thoughts with his broken English, and to no effect.
-
-Now they went into the _kao liang_--vast, quiet, enfolding. It
-held the heat stale from yesterday. The seasonal rains had filled the
-spongy loam at the roots, with much to spare blackening the lower
-stems.... For an hour and a half they sunk into the several paths and
-lost themselves, Lowenkampf’s untried battalions. The armies of the
-world might have vanished so, only to be seen by the birds, moving like
-vermin in a hide.... Men began to think of food and drink. The heights
-of Yentai, which they had left in bitter hatred so shortly ago, was now
-like hills of rest on the long road home. More and more the resistance
-of men shrunk in the evil magic of this pressure of grain and sky and
-holding earth--a curious, implacable unworldliness it was, that made
-the flesh cry out.
-
-“They should have cut this grain,” Luban said for the third time.
-
-Fallows had said it first. Anyone should have seen the ruin of this
-advance, unless the end of the millet were reached before the beginning
-of battle. They had to recall with effort at last, that there was an
-outer world of cities and seas and plains--anything but this hollow
-country of silence and fatness.
-
-If you have ever jumped at the sudden drumming of a pneumatic hammer,
-as it rivets a bolt against the steel, you have a suggestion of the
-nervous shock from that first far machine-gun of Kuroki’s--just
-a suggestion, because Lowenkampf’s soldiers at the moment were
-suffocating in _kao liang_.... In such a strange and expensive
-way, they cut the crops that day.
-
-Morning trod on the tail of the battalion ahead. It had stopped; he
-had not. The soldier in front whom he bumped turned slowly around
-and looked into his face. The wide, glassy blue eyes then turned to
-Fallows, and after resting a curious interval, finally found Luban.
-
-The face was broad and white as lard. Whatever else was in it, there
-was no denying the fear, the hate, the cunning--all of a rudimentary
-kind. Luban was held by the man’s gaze. The fright in both hearts
-sparked in contact. The stupid face of the soldier suddenly reflected
-the terror of the officer. And this was the result: The wide-staring
-suddenly altered to a squint; the vacant, helpless staring of a
-bewildered child turned into the bright activity of a trapped rodent.
-
-Luban had failed in his great instant. His jaw was loose-hinged, his
-mouth leaked saliva.
-
-Now Morning and Fallows saw other faces--twenty faces in the grain,
-faces searching for the nearest officer. Their eyes roved to Luban;
-necks craned among the fox-tails. There was a slow giving of the line,
-and bumping contacts from ahead like a string of cars.... Morning
-recalled the look of Luban, as he had helped him down from the sorrel.
-He had helped then; he hated now. Fallows was better. He plumped the
-boy on the shoulder and said laughingly:
-
-“Talk to ’em. Get ’em in hand--quick, Luban--or they’ll be off!”
-
-It was all in ten seconds. The nearest soldiers had seen Luban
-fail. Other platoons, doubtless many, formed in similar tableaux
-to the same end. A second machine-gun took up the story. It was
-far-off, and slightly to the left of the Russian line of advance. The
-incomprehensible energy of the thing weakened the Russian column,
-although it drew no blood.
-
-A roar ahead from an unseen battalion-officer--the Russian
-_Forward_. Luban tried to repeat it, but pitifully. A great beast
-rising from the ooze and settling back _against_ the voice--such
-was the answer.
-
-The Thought formed. It was the thought of the day. None was too
-stupid to catch the spirit of it. Certain it was, and pervading as
-the grain. Indeed, it was conceived of _kao liang_. The drum
-of the machine-gun, like a file in a tooth, was but its quickener.
-It flourished under the ghostly grays and whites of the sky. In the
-forward battalions the Thought already clothed itself in action:
-
-To run back--to follow the paths back through the grain--to reach the
-decent heights again. And this was but a miniature of the thought that
-mastered the whole Russian army in Asia--to go back--to rise from the
-ghastly hollows of Asia and turn homeward again.
-
-It leaped like a demon upon the unset volition of the mass.
-Full-formed, it arose from the lull. It effected the perfect turning.
-
-Morning saw it, and wanted the source. He had planned too long to
-be denied now. The rout was big to handle, but he wanted _the
-front_--a glimpse of the actual inimical line. It was not enough
-for him to watch the fright and havoc streaming back. Calling a cheery
-_adieu_ to Fallows, he bowed against the current--alone obeying
-the Russian _Forward_.
-
-
- 10
-
-AT the edge of the trampled lane, often shunted off into the
-standing crop, Morning made his way, running when he could.... The
-pictures were infinite; a lifetime of pictures; hundreds of faces and
-each a picture. Men passed him, heads bowed, arms about their faces,
-like figures in the old Dore paintings, running from the wrath of the
-Lord. Here and there was pale defiance. Nine sheepish soldiers carried
-a single wounded man, the much-handled fallen one looking silly as the
-rest.
-
-The utter ghostliness of it all was in Morning’s mind.... Gasping
-for breath, after many minutes of running, he sank down to rest.
-Soldiers sought to pick him up and carry him back. There were others
-who could not live with themselves after the first panic. They fell
-out of the retreat to join him. Others stopped to fire--a random
-emptying of magazines in the millet. Certain groups huddled when
-they saw him--mistaking a civilian for an officer--and covered their
-faces. Officers begged, prayed for the men to hold, but the torrent
-increased, individuals diving into the thick of the grain and leaking
-around behind. White showed beneath the beards, and white lips moved
-in prayer. The locked bayonets of the Russians had never seemed so
-dreadful as when low-held in the grain.... One beardless boy strode
-back jauntily, his lips puckered in a whistle.
-
-The marvelous complexity of common men--this was the sum of all
-pictures, and the great realization of John Morning. His soul saw much
-that his eyes failed. The day was a marvelous cabinet of gifts--secret
-chambers to be opened in after years.
-
-Now he was running low, having entered the zone of fire. He heard the
-steel in the grain; stems were snapped by invisible fingers; fox-tails
-lopped. He saw the slow leaning of stems half-cut.... Among the fallen,
-on a rising slope, men were crawling back; and here and there, bodies
-had been cast off, the cloth-covered husks of poor driven peasants.
-They had gone back to the soil, these bodies, never really belonging to
-the soldiery. It was only when they writhed that John Morning forgot
-himself and his work. The art of the dead was consummate.
-
-The grain thinned. He had come to the end of Lowenkampf’s infantry. It
-had taken an hour and a half for the command to enter in order; less
-than a half-hour to dissipate. The rout had been like a cloud-burst.
-
-And this was the battle. (Morning had to hold fast to the thought.)
-Long had he waited for this hour; months he had constructed the army
-in his story for this hour of demolition. It was enough to know that
-Lowenkampf had failed. Liaoyang, the battle, was lost.... Old Ritz went
-by weeping--he had been too old, they said; they had not wanted him to
-take his regiment to field. Yet he was perhaps the last to leave the
-field. Only his dead remained, and Colonel Ritz was not weeping for
-them....
-
-Now Morning saw it was _not_ all over. Before gaining the ridge
-swept by Kuroki’s fire, he knew that Mergenthaler was still fighting.
-It came to him with the earthy rumble of cavalry. To the left, in a
-crevasse under the crest of the ridge, he saw a knot of horses with
-empty saddles, and a group of men. Closer to them he crawled, along the
-sheltered side of the ridge, until in the midst of Russian officers, he
-saw that splendid bruising brute, who had stamped out of headquarters
-that morning, draining the heart of Lowenkampf as he went. Mergenthaler
-of the Cossacks--designed merely to be the eyes and fingers of the
-fighting force; yet unsupported, unbodied as it were, he still held the
-ridge.
-
-Kuroki, as yet innocent of the rout, would not otherwise have been
-checked. His ponderous infantry was not the sort to be stopped by these
-light harriers of the Russian army. The Flanker was watching for the
-Hammer, and the Hammer already had been shattered.... Mergenthaler,
-cursing, handled his cavalry squadrons to their death, lightly and
-perfectly as coins in his palm. Every moment that he stayed the
-Japanese, he knew well that he was holding up to the quick scorn of
-the world the foot-soldiers of Lowenkampf, whom he hated. His head was
-lifted above the rocks to watch the field. His couriers came and went,
-slipping up and down through the thicker timber, still farther to the
-left.... Morning crawled up nearby until he saw the field--and now
-action, more abandoned than he had ever dared to dream:
-
-An uncultivated valley strewn with rocks and low timber. Three columns
-of Japanese infantry pouring down from the opposite parallel ridge, all
-smoky with the hideous force of the reserve--machine-guns, and a mile
-of rifles stretching around to the right. (It was this wing’s firing
-that had started the havoc in the grain.)
-
-Three columns of infantry pouring down into the ancient valley, under
-the gray stirring sky--brown columns, very even and unhasting--and
-below, the Cossacks.
-
-Morning lived in the past ages. He lay between two rocks watching,
-having no active sense--but pure receptivity. Time was thrust back....
-Three brown dragons crawling down the slopes in the gray day--knights
-upon horses formed to slay the dragons.
-
-Out of the sheltering rocks and timber they rode--and chose the central
-dragon quite in the classic way. It turned to meet the knights upon
-horses--head lifted, neck swollen like the nuchal ribs of the cobra. In
-the act of striking it was ridden down, but the knights were falling
-upon the smashed head. The mated dragons had attacked from either
-side....
-
-It was a fragment, a moving upon the ground,--that company of knights
-upon horses,--and the Voice of it, all but deadened by the rifles, came
-up spent and pitiful.
-
-Mergenthaler’s thin, high voice was not hushed. He knew how to detach
-another outfit from the rocks and timber-thickets, already found by
-the Japanese on the ridge, already deluged with fire. Out from the
-betraying shelter, the second charge, a new child of disaster, ran
-forth to strike Kuroki’s left.... Parts of the film were elided. The
-cavalrymen fell away by a terrible magic. Again the point thickened
-and drew back, met the charge; again the welter and the thrilling
-back-sweep of the Russian fragment.
-
-Morning missed something. His soul was listening for something.... It
-was comment from Duke Fallows, so long marking time to events.... He
-laughed. He was glad to be free, yet his whole inner life drew back in
-loathing from Mergenthaler--as if to rush to his old companion.... And
-Mergenthaler turned--the brown high-boned cheeks hung with a smile of
-derision. He was climbing far and high on Lowenkampf’s shame.... He
-gained the saddle--this hard, huge Egoist, the staff clinging to him,
-and over the ridge they went to set more traps.
-
-The wide, rocking shoulders of the General sank into the timber--as he
-trotted with his aides down the death-ridden valley. It may have been
-the sight of this little party that started a particular machine-gun
-on the Japanese right.... The sizable bay the chief rode looked like a
-polo-pony under the mighty frame. Morning did not see him fall: only
-the plunging bay with an empty saddle; and then when the timber opened
-a little, the staff carrying the leader up the trail.
-
-It was the mystery which delayed the Japanese, not Mergenthaler. When
-at last Kuroki’s left wing continued to report no aggressive movement
-from Bilderling river-ward; and when continued combing in the north
-raised nothing but bleak hills and grain-valleys hushed between
-showers, he flooded further columns down the ridge, and slew what he
-could of the Russian horsemen who tried with absurd heroism to block
-his way. At two in the afternoon the Flanker fixed his base among the
-very rocks where Morning had lain--and the next position for him to
-take was the coal-hills of Yentai. Only the ghosts of the cavalry stood
-between--and _kao liang_.
-
-Morning turned back a last time to the fields of millet in the early
-dusk. He had been waiting for Mergenthaler to die. The General lay in
-the very _go-down_ where he had outraged Lowenkampf that morning;
-and now the Japanese were driving the Russians from the position....
-Mergenthaler would not die. They carried him to a coal-car, and
-soldiers pushed it on to Yentai, the station.
-
-The Japanese were closing in. They were already in the northern heights
-contending with Stakelberg; they were stretched out bluffing Bilderling
-to the southward. They were locked with Zarubaieff at the southern
-front of Liaoyang. They were in the grain.... Cold and soulless Morning
-felt, as one who has failed in a great temptation; as one who has lived
-to lose, and has not been spared the picture of his own eternal failure.
-
-He looked back a last time at the grain in the closing night. The
-Japanese were there, brown men, native to the grain. The great shadowed
-field had whipped Lowenkampf and lost the battle. It lay in the dusk
-like a woman, trampled, violated, feebly waving. Rain-clouds came with
-darkness to cover the nakedness and bleeding.
-
-
- 11
-
-DUKE Fallows saw but one face.... John Morning studied a
-thousand, mastered the heroism of the Cossacks, filled his brain with
-blood-pictures and the incorrigible mystery of common men. Duke Fallows
-saw but one face. In the beauty and purity of its inspiration, he read
-a vile secret out of the past. To the very apocalypse of this secret,
-he read and understood. The shame of it blackened the heavens for his
-eyes, but out of its night and torment came a Voice uttering the hope
-of the human spirit for coming days.
-
-Morning had left. Luban had put on bluster and roaring. Their place in
-the grain was now broad from trampling; the flight was on in full. It
-meant something to Fallows. It was not that he wanted the Japanese to
-win the battle; the doings of the Japanese were of little concern to
-him. He felt curiously that the Japanese were spiritually estranged
-from the white man. Russia was different; he was close to the heart of
-the real Russia whose battle was at home. Russia’s purpose in Asia was
-black; he was full of scorn for the purpose, but full of love for the
-troops. Strange gladness was upon him--as the men broke away. Reality
-at home would come from this disaster. He constructed the world’s
-battle from it, and sang his song.
-
-One soldier running haltingly for his life looked up to the face of
-Luban of the roaring voice--and laughed. Luban turned, and perceived
-that Fallows had not missed the laugh of the soldier. This incident,
-now closed, was in a way responsible for the next.
-
-... Out of the grain came striding a tall soldier of the ranks. His
-beard was black, his eyes very blue. In his eyes was a certain fire
-that kindled the nature of Duke Fallows as it had never been kindled
-before, not even by the most feminine yielding. The man’s broad
-shoulders were thrust back; his face clean of cowardice, clean as the
-grain and as open to the sky. His head was erect and bare; he carried
-no gun, scorned the pretense of looking for wounded. Had he carried a
-dinner-pail, the picture would have been as complete--a good man going
-home from a full-testing day.
-
-In that moment Fallows saw more than from the whole line before....
-Here was a conscript. He had been taken from his house, forced across
-Europe and Asia to this hour. The reverse of his persecutors had set
-him free. This freedom was the fire in his eyes.... They had torn him
-from his house; they had driven and brutalized him for months. And
-now they had come to dreadful disaster. It was such a disaster as a
-plain man might have prayed for. He _had_ prayed for it in the
-beginning, but in the long, slow gatherings for battle, in the terrible
-displays of power, he had lost his faith to pray. Yet the plain man’s
-God had answered that early prayer. This was the brightness of the
-burning in the blue eyes.
-
-His persecutors had been shamed and undone. He had seen his companions
-dissipate, his sergeants run; seen his captains fail to hold. The
-great force that had tortured him, that had seemed _the world_
-in strength, was now broken before his eyes. Its mighty muscles were
-writhing, their strength running down. The love of God was splendid in
-the ranker’s heart; the breath of home had come. The turning in the
-grain--was a turning homeward.
-
-All this Fallows saw. It was illumination to him--the hour of his great
-reception.
-
-Luban, just insulted by the other infantryman, now faced the big,
-blithe presence, emerging unhurried from the grain. Luban raised his
-voice:
-
-“And what are _you_ sneaking back for?”
-
-“I am not sneaking----”
-
-“Rotten soldier stuff--you should be shot down.”
-
-“I am not a soldier--I am a ploughman.”
-
-“You are here to fight----”
-
-“They forced me to come----”
-
-“Forced you to fight for your Fatherland?”
-
-“This is not my Fatherland, but a strange country----”
-
-“You are here for the Fatherland----”
-
-“I have six children in Russia. The Fatherland is not feeding them. My
-field is not ploughed.”
-
-The talk had crackled; it had required but a few seconds; Luban had
-done it all for Fallows to see and hear--but Fallows was very far from
-observing the pose of that weakling. The Ploughman held him heart and
-soul--as did the infallible and instantly unerring truth of his words.
-The world’s poor, the world’s degraded, had found its voice.
-
-The man was white with truth, like a priest of Melchizedek.
-
-Luban must have broken altogether. Fallows, listening, watching the
-Ploughman with his soul, did not turn.... Now the man’s face changed.
-The lips parted strangely, the eyelids lifting. Whiteness wavered
-between the eyes of the Ploughman and the eyes of Duke Fallows. Luban’s
-pistol crashed and the man fell with a sob.
-
-Fallows was kneeling among the soaked roots of the millet, holding the
-soldier in his arms:
-
-“Living God, to die for you--you, who are so straight and so young....
-Hear me--don’t go yet--I must have your name, Brother.... Luban did
-not know you--he is just a little sick man--he didn’t know you or he
-wouldn’t have done this.... Tell me your name ... and the place of
-your babes, and their mother.... Oh, be sure they shall be fed--glad
-and proud am I to do that easy thing!... You have shown me the Nearer
-God.... They shall be fed, and they shall hear! The world, cities and
-nations, all who suffer, shall hear what the Ploughman said--the soul
-of the Ploughman, who is the hope of the world.... You have spoken for
-Russia.... And now rest--rest, Big Brother--you have done your work.”
-
-The soldier looked up to him. There had been pain and wrenching, the
-vision of a desolated house. Now, his eyes rested upon the American.
-The shadow of death lifted. He saw his brother in the eyes that held
-him--his brother, and it seemed, the Son of Man smiled there behind
-the tears.... He smiled back like a weary child. Peace came to him,
-lustrous from the shadow, for lo! his field was ploughed and children
-sang in his house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fallows had not risen from his knees. He was talking to himself:
-
-“... Out of the grain he came--the soul of the Ploughman. And gently
-he spoke to us ... and this is the day of the battle. I came to
-the battle--and I go to carry his message to the poor--to those who
-labor--to Russia and the America of the future. Luban spoke the thought
-of the world, but the Ploughman spoke for humanity risen. He spoke for
-the women, and for the poor.... Bright he came from the grain--bright
-and unafraid--and those shall hear him, who suffer and are heavy-laden.
-This is the battle!... And his voice came to me--a great and gracious
-voice--for tsars and kings and princes to hear--and I am to carry his
-message....”
-
-Luban laughed feebly at last, and Fallows looked up to him.
-
-“You’ll hear him in your passing, Luban, poor lad. You’ll hear him in
-your hell. Until you are as simple and as pure as this Ploughman--you
-shall hear and see all this again. Though you should hang by the neck
-to-night, Luban,--this picture would go out with you. For this is the
-hour you killed your Christ.”
-
-
- 12
-
-LOWENKAMPF was the name that meant defeat. Lowenkampf--it was
-like the rain that night.... “Lowenkampf started out too soon.”...
-Morning heard it. Fallows heard it. The coughing sentries heard it.
-The whole dismal swamp of drenched, whipped soldiery heard it. Sleek
-History had awakened to grasp it; Kuropatkin had washed his hands....
-Lowenkampf had started out too soon that morning. The Siberians had
-only left Yentai Station proper when Lowenkampf set forth from the
-Coal-heights. Had his supports been in position (very quickly and
-clearly the world’s war-experts would see this) the rout in the grain
-would have been checked.
-
-As it was, many of Lowenkampf’s soldiers had run the entire ten
-miles from the heights to the station, Yentai--after emerging from
-_kao-liang_--evading the Siberian supports as they ran, as chaos
-flies from order. Now in the darkness (with Kuroki bivouacked upon the
-main trophy of the day, the Coal-heights) the shamed battalions of
-Lowenkampf re-formed along the main line in the midst of their unused
-reserves.
-
-The day had been like a month of fever to Morning, but Duke Fallows
-was a younger man, and a stranger that night.... Morning tried to
-work, but he was too close to it all, too tired. It was as if he
-were trying to tell of a misfortune that had no beginning, and whose
-every phase was his own heart’s concern. His weariness was like the
-beginning of death--coldness and pervading _ennui_. Against his
-will he was gathered in the glowing currents of Duke Fallows--watching,
-listening, not pretending even to understand, but borne along. Together
-they went in to the General’s private room. Lowenkampf looked up,
-gathered himself with difficulty and smiled. Fallows turned to Morning,
-asked him to stand by the door, then strode forward and knelt by the
-General’s knees. It did not seem extraordinary to Morning--so much was
-insane.
-
-“You were chosen, old friend. It has been a big day for the
-under-dog----”
-
-“I have lost Liaoyang.”
-
-“That was written.”
-
-“My little boy will hear it in the street. He will hear it in the
-school. Before he is a man--he will hear it.”
-
-“I shall take him upon my knee. I shall tell him of you in a way that
-he shall never forget. And his mother--I shall tell her----”
-
-Lowenkampf rubbed his eyes.
-
-“I have business in Russia. This day I heard what must be done. It is
-almost as if I had gotten to be a man.”
-
-Fallows leaned back laughingly, his arms extended, as if pushing the
-other’s knees from him.
-
-Some inner wall broke, and the General wept. Morning put his foot
-against the door. The thought in his heart was: “This is something I
-cannot write.”...
-
-Morning held the idea coldly now that Fallows was mentally softened
-from the strain. Other things came up to support it.... He, too, had
-seen a soldier shot by an officer. It was discipline. At best, it was
-but one of the thousand pictures. It had happened less because the man
-was retiring without a wound--thousands were doing that--than because
-the man answered back, when the officer spoke. He did not hear what the
-soldier said. This soldier possibly had trans-Baikal children, too. The
-day and his long illness had crazed Fallows, now at the knees of the
-man who had lost the battle.
-
-“... I know what you thought this morning--when you saw your men march
-down into the grain,” Fallows was saying to the General. “You thought
-of your little boy and his mother. You thought of the babes and wives
-and mothers--of those soldiers of yours whom you were sending to the
-front. You didn’t want to send them out. You’re too close to becoming a
-man for that. You wondered if you would not have to suffer for sending
-them out so--and if this particular suffering would not have to do with
-_your_ little boy and his mother----”
-
-“My God, stop, Fallows----”
-
-“You had to think that. You wouldn’t be Lowenkampf if you failed to
-think that.... I love you for it, old friend. Big things will come from
-Lowenkampf, and from the conscript who came to me out of the grain with
-vision and a voice. The battle at home won’t be so hard to win--now
-that this is lost.”
-
-There was a challenge and heavy steps on the platform--and one low,
-hurried voice.
-
-Lowenkampf stood up and wiped his eyes.
-
-“The Commander----” he whispered.
-
-A pair of captains towered above him, a grizzled colonel behind; then
-Morning saw the gray of the short beard, and the dark, dry-burning
-of unblinking eyes, fixed upon Lowenkampf.... The latter’s shoulders
-drooped a little, and his eyes lowered deprecatingly for just an
-instant. Kuropatkin passed in. The soft fullness of his shoulders was
-like a woman’s. Fleshly and failing, he looked, from behind.... The
-Americans waited outside with the colonel and captains. The door was
-shut.
-
-Midnight.... Fallows and Morning had moved in the rain among the
-different commands. The army at Yentai seemed to be emerging from
-prolonged anæsthesia to find itself missing in part and strangely
-disordered. It was afraid to sleep, afraid to think of itself, and
-denied drink. Fallows had told everywhere the story of the Ploughman;
-just now he helped himself to a bundle of Morning’s Chinese parchment,
-and was writing copy in long-hand.
-
-His head was bowed, his eyes expressionless.
-
-“And I alone remain to tell thee!” he muttered at last.
-
-Morning did not answer, but resigned himself to hear more of the
-Messiah who came out of the grain.
-
-“I told one of Mergenthaler’s aides the story,” Fallows said coldly.
-“He said it was quite the proper thing to do--to shoot down a man
-who was leaving the field unwounded. I told Manlewson of the First
-Siberians, who replied that the Russians would begin to win battles
-when they murdered all such, as unflinchingly and instantly as the
-Japanese did, and hospital malingerers as well. I told Bibinoff (who
-is Luban’s captain), and he said: ‘That’s the first good thing I ever
-heard about Luban.’ He was pleased and epigrammatic....”
-
-Fallows stood up--his face was in shadow, so far beneath was the
-odorous lamp.
-
-“Living God--I can’t make them see--I can’t make them see! They’re
-all enchanted. Or else I’m dead and this is hell.... They talk about
-Country. They talk about making a man stand in a place of sure death
-for his Country--in this Twentieth Century--when war has lost its
-last vestige of meaning to the man in the ranks, and his Country is a
-thing of rottenness and moral desolation! What is the Country to the
-man in the ranks? A group of corrupt, inbred undermen who study to
-sate themselves--to tickle and soften themselves--with the property
-and blood and slavery of the poor.... A good man, a clean man, is torn
-from his house to fight, to stand in the fire-pits and die for such
-monsters. Suddenly the poor man sees!
-
-“... He came forth from the grain with vision--smiling and unafraid.
-He is not afraid to fight, but he has found himself on the wrong side
-of the battle. When he fights again it will be for his child, for his
-house, for his brother, for his woman, for his soul. Blood in plenty
-has he for such a war.... Think of it, John Morning, the Empire was
-entrusted to poor little Luban--against this man of vision! He came
-forth smiling from the grain. ‘_I do not belong here, my masters.
-I was torn away from my woman and children, and I must be home for
-the winter ploughing. It is a long way--and I must be off. I am a
-ploughman, not a soldier. I belong to my children and my field. My
-country does not plough my field--does not feed my children...._
-What could Luban do but kill him--little agent of Herod? But the starry
-child lives!...
-
-“And listen, John, to-night--you heard them--we heard these fat-necked,
-vulture-breasted commanders--vain, envy-poisoned, scandal-mongering
-commanders, complaining to each other: ‘See, what stuff has been given
-us to win battles with!... I have told it and they cannot see. They
-are not even good devils; they are not decent devourers. They have
-no humor--that is their deadly sin. An adult, half-human murderer,
-seeing his soldiers leave the field, would cry aloud, ‘Hello, you
-Innocents--so you have wakened up at last!’ But these cannot see.
-Their eyes are stuck together. It is their deadly sin--the sin against
-the Holy Ghost--to lack humor to this extent!”
-
-Morning laughed strangely. “Come on to bed, you old anarchist,” he
-said, though sleep was far from his own eyes.
-
-“That’s it, John. Anarchy. In the name of Fatherland, Russia murders
-a hundred thousand workmen out here in Asia. In answer, a few men and
-women gather together in a Petersburg cellar, saying, ‘We are fools,
-not heroes. When we fight again it will be for _Our_ Country!’ And
-they are anarchists--their cause is Terrorism!”
-
-“We’re all shot to pieces to-night, Duke----”
-
-“We are alive, John. Lowenkampf is alive. But he who spoke to me this
-day, who came forth so blithely to die in my arms (his woman sleeps ill
-to-night in the midst of her babes), and he is lying out in the rain,
-his face turned up to the rain. God damn the fat reptile that calls
-itself Fatherland!... But, I say to you, that we’re come nearly to the
-end of the prince and pauper business on this planet. The soul of the
-Ploughman was heard to-day--as long ago they heard the Soul of the
-Carpenter.... He is lying out there in the millet--his face turned up
-to the rain. Yet I say to you, John, there’s more life in him this hour
-than in his Tsar and all the princes of the blood.”
-
-Fallows covered his face with his hands.
-
-“You’re tired and thick to-night, John, but you are one who must see!”
-he finished passionately. “You must help me tell the story to the
-cellar gatherings in Petersburg, to the secret meetings in all the
-centers of misery, wherever a few are gathered together in the name of
-Brotherhood--in New York, London, Paris, and Berlin.... You must help
-me to make other men see--help me to tell this thing so that the world
-will hear it, and with such power that the world will be unable longer
-to lie to itself.
-
-“I can see it now--how Jesus, the Christ, tried to make men see....
-That was His Gethsemane--that He could not make men see. I tell you it
-is a God’s work--and it came to Jesus, the Christ, at last--‘If they
-crucify me, perhaps, a few will see!’... I’m going over to Russia,
-John, to learn how to tell them better.”
-
-
- 13
-
-THE night of the third of September, and John Morning is off
-for the big adventure. Between the hills, the roads are a-stream....
-All day he had watched different phases of the retreat. Fighting back
-in the city; fighting here and there along the staggering, burdened,
-cruelly-punished line; a sudden breaking-out of fighting in a dozen
-places like hidden fires; rain and wounded and seas of mud; the gray
-intolerable misery of it all; the sick and the dead--Morning was
-glutted with the colossal derangement. And they called it an orderly
-retreat.
-
-He was riding the sorrel Eve out of the zone of war. The battle was
-behind him now, and he breathed the world again. He had something to
-tell. Liaoyang was in his brain. He was off for the ships that sail.
-A month--America--the great story.... He felt the manuscript against
-him. It was in a Chinese belt, with money for the passage home, tight
-against his body, a hundred thousand words done on Chinese parchment
-and wrapped in oil-skin. The book of Liaoyang--he had earned it. He had
-written it against the warping cynicism of Duke Fallows. On the ship he
-could reshape and renew it all into a master-picture.
-
-It had been easier than he thought to break away from Fallows, his
-friend. The latter was whelmed in the soul of the Ploughman. A big
-story, of course, as Fallows saw it--but there were scores of big
-stories. It would ruin it to let an anarchist tell it. Suppose officers
-in general did stop to listen to troops sneaking off the field?
-
-Duke had given him a letter, and a story for the _Western States_.
-The first was not to be read until he was at sea out from Japan. When
-Morning spoke of the money he owed, the other had put the thought
-away. Sometime he would call for it if he needed it; it was a trifle
-anyway.... It hadn’t been a trifle. It had meant everything.
-
-Morning was glad to breathe himself again. Yet there was an ache in
-his heart for Duke Fallows, now off for Europe the western way. He,
-Morning, had not done his part. He hadn’t given as he had taken; had
-not kept close to Duke Fallows at the last. There was a big score that
-money could never settle. Soundly glad to be alone, but in the very
-gladness the picture of Duke Fallows returned--lying on his back, in
-bunks and berths and beds, staring up at the ceiling, accentuating
-his own failures to bring out the hopeful and valorous parts of his
-friend. It was always such a picture to Morning, when Fallows came
-to mind--staring, dreaming, looking up from his back. It had seemed
-sometimes as if he were trying to make of his friend all that he had
-failed to be.... Yet the Duke Fallows of the last twenty-four hours,
-wild, dithyrambic--had been too much.... Again and again, irked and
-heavy with his own limitations, Morning’s brain had seized upon the
-weakness of the other, to condone his own slowness of understanding....
-It may have been Eve, and her relation to the Fallows revelation, or
-it may have been putting hideous militarism behind, that made John
-Morning think of Women now as he rode, and a little differently from
-ever before.... Certain laughing sentences of Duke Fallows came back to
-him presently, with a point he seemed to have missed when they were
-uttered:
-
-“We have our devils, John. You have ambition; Lowenkampf has drink;
-Mergenthaler has slaughter.... You will love a woman; you already
-drink too readily, but Ambition will stand in your house and fight
-from room to room at the last--and over the premises to the last
-ditch. He’s a grand devil--is Ambition.... My devil, John? Well, it
-isn’t the big-jawed male who loves a woman as she dreams to be loved.
-It’s the man with a touch of women in him--just enough to begin upon
-her mystery.... When I hear a certain woman’s voice, or see a certain
-passing figure--something old, very old and wise, stirs within, seems
-to stir and thrill with eternal life. And, John, it isn’t low--the
-thought. I’d tell you if it were. It isn’t low. It’s as regal as Mother
-Nature in a valley, on a long afternoon. It isn’t that I want to hurt
-her; it isn’t that I want something she has. Rather, I want all she
-has! I want her mind; I want her soul; I want her full animations.
-I want to make her yield and give; I want to feel her battle with
-herself, not to yield and give.... Oh, the flesh is nothing. It is the
-cheapest thing in the world--but her giving, her yielding--it’s like
-an ocean tide. It breaks every bond; it laughs at every law. Power
-seems to rush into a woman when she yields! That’s the conquest of my
-heart--to feel that power.... All devils are young compared to that in
-a man’s heart--all but one, and that is the passion to hold spiritual
-dominion over other men.”
-
-Morning’s mind had fallen into the habit of allowing much for the
-other’s sayings--of accepting much as mere facility.... Thus he thought
-as he traveled in the rain, Eve’s swift, springy trot a stimulus to
-deep thinking; and always there was a bigger and finer John Morning
-shadowing him, fathoming his smallnesses, wondering at his puny
-rebellions and vain desires. It was in this fairer John Morning,
-so tragically unexpressed during the past few months, that the pang
-lived--the pang of parting from his friend.
-
-Morning was terrific physically. The thing he was now doing was as
-spectacular a bit of newspaper service as ever correspondent undertook
-in Asia; and yet, to John Morning the high light of achievement
-fell upon the manuscript, not upon the action. It had not occurred
-to him to be afraid. If he could get across the ninety miles to
-Koupangtse--through the _Hun huises_, through the Japanese
-scouting cavalry, across two large and many smaller yellow rivers--and
-reach the railroad, he would quickly get a ship for Japan from
-Tientsin or Tongu--and from Japan--_home_.... He was doing it for
-himself--passionately and with no sense of splendor.
-
-Fallows had been so sure of his friend’s physical courage, that he made
-no point of it, in the expression of attachment.... He had called it
-vision at first, this thing that had drawn him to John Morning--a touch
-of the poet, a touch of the feminine--others might have called it. No
-matter the name, he had seen it, as all artists of the expression of
-the inner life recognize it in one another; and Fallows knew well that
-where the courage of the soldier ends, the courage of the visionary
-begins.
-
-Morning was a trifle peculiar, however. Unless it sank utterly, he
-stuck to a ship, until the horizon revealed another sail.
-
-He had come up through the dark. The world had grounded him deeply in
-illusion. Most brilliant of promises--even Fallows had not seen him
-that first day in too bright a dawn--but he learned hard. And his had
-been close fighting--such desperate fighting that one does not hear
-voices, and one is too deep in the ruck to see the open distance....
-Much as he had been alone--the world had invariably shattered his
-silences. Always he had worked--worked, worked furiously, angrily, for
-himself.... He was taught so. The world had caught him as a child in
-his brief, pitiful tenderness. The world was his Eli. As from sleep, he
-had heard Reality calling. He had risen to answer, but the false Eli
-had spoken--an Eli that did not teach him truly to listen, nor to say,
-when he heard the Voice another time--“Speak, Lord, for thy servant
-heareth.”
-
-
- 14
-
-THE Taitse, of large and ancient establishment, runs westward
-from Liaoyang for twenty-five miles, and in a well-earned bed, portions
-of which are worn in the rock. Morning rode along the north bank,
-thus avoiding altogether a crossing of the Taitse, since his journey
-continued westward from the point where the river took its southward
-bend. From thence it paralleled the Hun in a race to join the Liao. The
-main stem of the latter was beyond the Hun, and these two arteries of
-Asia broke Morning’s trail. Fording streams of such magnitude was out
-of the question, and there was a strong chance of an encounter with the
-_Hun huises_ at the ferries....
-
-Rain, and the sorrel’s round hoofs sucked sharply in the clay. She
-had no shoes to lose in these drawing vacuums. The scent of her came
-up warm and good to the horse-lover. Alone on a road, she had always
-been manageable, hating crowds and noise--soldiers, Chinese, and
-accoutrements. Perhaps, this was merely a biding of time. Eve had a
-fine sense of keeping a strange road. This was not usual, although a
-horse travels a familiar road in the darkness better than a man. These
-two worked well together.
-
-By map the distance from Liaoyang to Koupangtse was seventy miles.
-Morning counted upon ninety, at least. The Manchurian roads are old and
-odd as the Oriental mind.... He passed the southward bend of the big
-river, and at daybreak reached Chiensen, ten miles beyond, on the Hun.
-
-Chiensen, unavoidable on account of the ferry, was a danger-point.
-Japanese cavalry, it was reported, frequently lit there, and the _Hun
-huises_ (Chinese river-pirates and thieves in general, whom Alexieff
-designated well as “the scourge of Manchuria”) were at base in this
-village.... In the gray he found junks, a flat tow and landing.
-
-You never know what Chinese John is going to do. If you have but
-little ground of language between you, he will take his own way, on
-the pretext of misunderstanding. Morning’s idea was to get across
-quickly, without arousing the river-front. He awoke the ferryman,
-placing three silver taels in his hand. (He carried silver, enough
-native currency to get him to Japan, his passport, and the two large
-envelopes Duke Fallows had given him, in the hip-pockets of his riding
-breeches.) The ferryman had no thought of making the first crossing
-without tea. Morning labored with him, and with seeming effect for a
-moment, but the other fell suddenly from grace and aroused his family.
-He was not delicate about it. Morning resigned himself to the delay,
-and was firmly persuading Eve to be moderate, as she drank from the
-river’s edge, when Chinese John suddenly aroused the river population.
-Standing well out on the tow-flat, he trumpeted at some comrade of the
-night before, apparently no less than a hundred yards up the river.
-There were sleepy answers from many junks within range of the voice.
-It was the one hateful thing to John Morning--yet to rough it with the
-ferryman for his point of view would be the only thing worse.
-
-The landing was rickety; its jointure with the tow-boat imperfect.
-The American took off his coat, tossed it over the sorrel’s head,
-tying the sleeves under her throat. She stiffened in rebellion, but
-as the darkness was as yet little broken by the day, she decided to
-accept the situation. Morning felt her growing reluctance, however,
-as she traversed the creaking, springy boards. The crevasse between
-the landing and the craft was bridged; and the latter, grounded on the
-shore-side, did not give. The mare stood in the center of the tow,
-sweating and tense.
-
-Numerous Chinese were now abroad--eager, even insistent, to help. Their
-voices stirred the mare to her old red-eyed insanity. Morning could
-hold himself no longer. Once or twice before in his life this hard,
-bright light had come to his brain. Though the exterior light was
-imperfect, the ferryman saw the fingers close upon the butt of the gun,
-and something of the American’s look. He dropped his tea, sprang to
-the junk and pulled up the bamboo-sail. This was used to hold the tow
-against the current.
-
-Two natives in the flat-boat stood ready with poles. And now the
-ferryman spoke in a surprised and disappointed way as he toiled in
-front. He seemed ready to burst into tears; and the two nearer Morning
-grunted in majors and minors, according to temperament. The American
-considered that it might all be innocent, although the voices were many
-from the town-front. Poling began; the tow drew off from the landing.
-Clear from the grounding of the shore, the craft sank windily to its
-balance in the stream.
-
-This was too much for Eve. Her devil was in the empty saddle. She
-leaped up pawing. The two Chinese at the poles dived over side
-abruptly. Water splashed Eve’s flanks, and she veered about on her
-hind feet--blinded and striking the air in front. The wobble of the
-tow now finished her frenzy--and back she went into the stream. The
-saddle saved her spine from a gash on the edge of the tow. Morning had
-this thought when Eve arose; that he need fear no treachery from the
-Chinese; and this as she fell--a queer, cool, laughing thought--that
-after such a fall she would never walk like a man again.
-
-He had been forced to drop the bridle, but caught it luckily with
-one of the poles as she came up struggling. He beckoned the ferryman
-forward, and Eve, swimming and fighting, was towed across. To Morning
-it was like one of his adventures back in the days of the race-horse
-shipping.
-
-Eve struck the opposite bank--half-strangled from her struggle and the
-blind. The day had come. The nameless little town on this side of the
-Hun was out to meet him. Had he brought a Korean tiger by a string,
-however, he could not have enjoyed more space--as the mare climbed
-from the stream. He talked to her and unbound her eyes. Red and deeply
-baleful they were. She shook her head and parted her jaws. The circle
-of natives widened. Morning straightened the saddle and patted Eve’s
-neck softly, talking modestly of her exploit.... Natives were now
-hailing from mid-stream, so he leaped into the sticky saddle and guided
-the mare out to the main road leading to Tawan on the Liao.... Queerly
-enough, just at this instant, he remembered the hands and the lips of
-the ferryman--a leper.
-
-Ten miles on the map--he could count thirteen by the road--and then
-the Liao crossing.... The mare pounded on until they came to a wild
-hollow, rock-strewn, among deserted hills. Morning drew up, cooled his
-mount and fed the soaked grain strapped to the saddle since the night
-before. Eve was not too cross to eat--nor too tired. She lifted her
-head often and drew in the air with the sound of a bubble-pipe.... Just
-now Morning noted a wrinkle in his saddle blanket. Hot with dread, he
-loosed the girth.
-
-He looked around in terror lest anyone see his own shame and fear. He
-had put the saddle on in the dark, but passed his hand between her
-back and the cloth. Long ago a trainer had whipped him for a bad bit
-of saddling; even at the time he had felt the whipping deserved. He
-lifted the saddle. A pink scalded mouth the size of a twenty-five-cent
-piece was there.... God, if he could only be whipped now. She was
-sensitive as satin; it was only a little wrinkle of the rain-soaked
-blanket.... His voice whimpered as he spoke to her.
-
-Only a horseman could have suffered so. He washed the rub, packed soft
-lint from a Russian first-aid bandage about to ease the pressure; and
-then, since the rain had stopped again, he rubbed her dry and walked
-at her head for hours, despairing at last of the town named Tawan.
-The Liao was visible before the village itself. Morning shook with
-fatigue. He had to gain the saddle for the possible need of swift
-action, but the wound beneath never left his mind. It uncentered his
-self-confidence--a force badly needed now.
-
-And this was the Liao--the last big river, roughly half-way. The end of
-the war-zone, it was, too, but the bright point of peril from _Hun
-huises_.... Morning saw the thin masts of the river junks over
-the bowl of the hill, their tribute flags flying.... To pass was the
-day’s work, to make the ferry with Eve. There was too much misery and
-contrition in his heart for him to handle her roughly. The blind could
-not be used again. She would connect that with the back-fall into the
-Hun. The town was full of voices.
-
-
- 15
-
-CHINESE were gathering. Morning went about his business as if
-all were well, but nothing was good to him about the increase of these
-hard, quick-handed men. They were almost like Japanese. With the tail
-of his eye, he saw shirt signals across the river. The main junk fleet
-was opposite. Trouble--he knew it. The hard, bright light was in his
-brain.
-
-In the gathering of the natives, Eve was roused afresh. His only way
-was to try her without the blind. If she showed fight, he meant to
-mount quickly and ride back through the crowd for one of the lower-town
-crossings.
-
-Without looking back, he led the way to the landing, holding just the
-weight of the bridle-rein. His arm gave with her every hesitation.
-To his amazement she consented to try. The tow-craft was larger
-here--enough for a bullock-pair and cart--and better fitted to the
-landing. Step by step she went with him to her place.
-
-Now Morning saw that in using the blind the first time he had done her
-another injury. She would not have gone back into the Hun but for that.
-She awed him. Something Fallows had said recurred--about her being
-unconquerable, different every day. Also Fallows had said, “She will
-kill you at the last....”
-
-He drove back the Chinese, all but two pole-men, that would have
-gathered on the tow. This was quietly done, but his inflexibility was
-felt. Many signals were sent across, as the tow receded from the shore,
-and numbers increased on the opposite bank.
-
-Eve, breathing audibly, swung forward and back with the craft, as it
-gave to the river. The towing junk, as in the Hun, held the other
-against the current; the rest was poling and paddling.... The junk
-itself slipped out of the way as the tow was warped toward the landing.
-Other junks were stealing in.... Morning already had paid. He felt the
-girth of the saddle, fingered the bridle, tightened his belt. A warm,
-gray day, but he was spent and gaunt and cold. Eve was hushed--mulling
-her bit softly, trembling with hatred for the Chinese.
-
-The road ascended from the river, through a narrow gorge with rocky
-walls. The river-men were woven across the way. While the tow was
-yet fifteen feet from the landing, Morning gained the saddle. The
-ferry-man gestured frantically that this had never been done before;
-that a man’s beast properly should be led across. Morning laughed,
-tightened his knees, and at an early instant loosened the bridle-rein,
-for the mare to jump. The heavy tow shot back as she cleared the
-fissure of stream.
-
-Morning was now caught in the blur of events. The Chinese did not give
-way for the mare, as she trotted across the boards to the rocky shore.
-Up she went striking. Again he had not known Eve. The back-dive into
-the Hun had not cured her. She would walk like a man and pitch back
-into Hell--and do it again.... Someone knifed her from the side and she
-toppled.
-
-The fall was swift and terrible, for the trail sloped behind. Morning’s
-instinct was truer than his brain, but there was no choice of way to
-jump. He could not push the mare from him completely to avoid the
-cliff. He was half-stunned against the wall, and not clear from the
-struggle of her fall. The brain is never able to report this instant
-afterward, even though consciousness is not lost. He was struck,
-trampled; he felt the cold of the rock against his breast, and the burn
-of a knife.
-
-The Chinese struck at him as he rose. The mare was up, facing him, but
-dragging him upward, as a dog with a bone. His left hand found the
-pistol. He cleared the Chinese from him, emptying the chambers.... Eve
-let him come to her. He must have gained the saddle as she swung around
-in the narrow gorge to begin her run. The wind rushed coldly across
-his breast and abdomen. His shirt had been cut and pulled free. It was
-covered with blood. He tried to hold the mare, but either his strength
-was gone or she was past feeling the bit. It was her hour. All Morning
-could do was to keep the road.
-
-He was all but knocked out. He had mounted as a fighter gets up under
-the count--and fights on without exactly knowing. The mare was running
-head down. He tried his strength again. The reins were rigid; she had
-the bit and meant to end the game.... He loved her wild heart; mourned
-for her; called her name; told her of wrongs he had done. Again and
-again, the light went from him; sometimes he drooped forward to her
-thin, short mane, and clung there, but the heat of her made him ill.
-They came into hills, passed tiny villages. It was all strange and
-terrible--a hurtling from high heaven.... Eve was like a furnace....
-
-And now she was weaving on the road--running drunkenly, unless his eyes
-betrayed.... The rushing wind was cold upon his breast. His coat was
-gone; his shirt had been cut. He tried to pull the blood-soaked ends
-together. At this moment the blow fell.
-
-These Chinese had been quick-handed, and they knew where to search for
-a man’s goods. He was coldly sane in an instant, for the rending of his
-whole nature; then came the quick zeal for death--the intolerableness
-of living an instant. The wallet--the big story--some hundreds of tales
-in paper! It was the passing of these from next his body that had left
-him cold.... Fury must have come to his arms. The mare lifted her head
-under his sudden attack.
-
-Yes, he could manage her now. The bloody mouth and the blind-mad head
-came up to him--her front legs giving like a colt’s. Down they went
-together. Morning took his fall limply, with something of supremely
-organized indifference, and turned in the mud to the mare.
-
-She was dead. The gray of pearl was in her eyes where red life had
-been.... No, she raised herself forward, seemed to be searching for
-him, her muzzle sickly relaxed. She could not stir behind. Holding
-there for a second--John Morning forgot the big story.
-
-Eve fell again. He crawled to her--tried to lift her head. It was heavy
-as a sheet-anchor to his arms.... Her heart had broken. She had died on
-her feet--the last rising was but a galvanism.... He looked up into the
-gray sky where the clouds stirred sleepily. He wanted to ask something
-from something there.... He could not think of what he wanted.... Oh,
-yes, his book of Liaoyang.
-
-And now his eye roved over the mare.... Her hind legs were sheeted with
-fresh blood and clotted with dry.... Desperately he craned about to see
-further. Entrails were protruding from a knife wound. The inner tissues
-were not cut, but the opened gash had let them sag horribly. She had
-run from Tawan with that wound.... He had worn her to the quick in
-night; blinded her for the Hun crossing, when she would have done nobly
-with eyes uncovered.... He had not been able to keep her from killing
-herself.... John Morning, the horseman.... He had left a gaping wound
-in the spirit of Duke Fallows.... All that he had done was failure and
-loss; all that he had planned so passionately, so brutally, indeed,
-that the needs and the offerings of others had not reached his heart,
-because of the iron self-purpose weighed there.
-
-Luban, Lowenkampf, Mergenthaler, even the Commander-in-chief, looked
-strangely in through the darkened windows of his mind. The moral
-suffocation of the grain-fields surged over him again.... He caught a
-glimpse of that last moment in the ravine, but not the taking of the
-wallet.... Was it just a dream that a native leaped forward to grasp
-his stirrup, and that he leaned down to fire? He seemed to recall the
-altered brow.
-
-The pictures came too fast. The sky did not change. The something did
-not answer.... Eve was lying in the mud. She looked darker and huddled.
-He kissed her face, and as he gained his feet, the thought came
-queerly that _he_ might be dead, as she was. He held the thought
-of action to his limbs and made them move.
-
-When he could think more clearly, he scorned the pain and protest of
-his limbs. He would not be less than Eve. If he were not dead, he would
-die straight up, and on the road to Koupangtse.
-
-
- 16
-
-THIRTY-SIX hours after Morning left Eve, an English correspondent
-at Shanhaikwan added the following to a long descriptive letter
-made up of refugee tales, and the edges and hearsay of the
-war-zone:
-
- Night of Sept. 5.... An American whose name by passport is John
- Morning reached here to-night on the _Chinese Eastern_, having
- left Koupangtse this morning. According to his story, he was with the
- Russians, now in retreat from Liaoyang, on the night of Sept. 3, only
- forty-eight hours from this writing.
-
- Morning was in an unconscious condition upon arrival. His passage
- had been fourth-class for the journey, and he was packed among the
- coolies and refugees on an open flat-car so crowded that all but the
- desperately fatigued had room only to stand. This white man had fallen
- to the floor of the car, among the bare feet of the surging Oriental
- crowd, beneath their foul garments.
-
- ... He was lifted forth from the car by the Chinese--a spectacle
- abjectly human, covered with filth; moreover, his body was incredibly
- bruised, his left puttee legging torn by a deep knife-wound that began
- at the knee, and traversed a distance of eight inches downward--the
- whole was gummed and black with blood; another knife-wound in his side
- was in an angry condition, and his clothing was stiffened from flow of
- it.
-
- A few _taels_ in paper and silver were found upon him; the
- passport, an unopened letter addressed to himself; also a manuscript
- addressed to a San Francisco paper, and to be delivered by John
- Morning. The natives reported that he had reached Koupangtse an hour
- before the arrival of the _Chinese Eastern_; had employed a
- native to buy him fourth-class passage, paying the native also to
- help him aboard. He had collapsed, however, until actually among the
- Chinese on the flat-car. He had tasted neither food nor drink during
- the long day’s journey, nor in Koupangtse during the wait. The natives
- affirm that he crawled part of the distance up to the railway station;
- and that there were no English or Americans there.
-
- Upon reaching here, Morning was revived with stimulants, his wounds
- bathed and dressed, fresh clothing provided. His extraordinary
- vitality and courage indicate that he will overcome the shocks and
- exhaustion of a journey hardly paralleled anywhere, if his story be
- true. He asserts that he must be on his way to Tientsin to-morrow
- morning--but that, of course, is impossible.... He is not in condition
- to answer questions, although undoubtedly much is in his dazed and
- stricken brain for which the world is at this moment waiting.
-
- In his half-delirium, Morning seems occupied with the loss of a
- certain sorrel mare. He also reports the loss of his complete story
- of the battle, the preliminary fighting, the generals in character
- sketch, the terrain and all, covering a period of four months up to
- the moment of General Zarubaieff’s withdrawal from the city proper.
- This manuscript, said to contain over a hundred thousand words done on
- Chinese parchment, was in a wallet with the writer’s money, and was
- cut from him in the struggle on the bank of the Liao, when the wounds
- were received. His assailants were doubtless _Hun huises_.
-
- Whatever can be said about the irrational parts of his story, the
- young man appears to know the story of the battle from the Russian
- standpoint. He brings the peculiar point of view that it was the
- millet that defeated the Russians, although the superiority of the
- Japanese in _morale_, markmanship, fluidity, is well known, etc.
-
-... Morning lay in a decent room at the Rest House in Shanhaikwan.
-There seemed an ivory finger in his brain pointing to the sea--to
-Japan, to the States. So long as he was walking, riding, entrained,
-all was well enough, and the rest was mere body that had to obey--but
-when he stopped, the ivory finger grew hot or icy by turns; and as now,
-he watched in agony for the day and the departure of the train for
-Tientsin.
-
-He would require help. Below the waist he was excruciating wreckage
-that for the present would not answer his will.... They were good to
-him here. The Chinese coolies had been good to him on the open car....
-Lowenkampf, Fallows, good to him--so his thoughts ran--the sorrel
-Eve was his own heart’s mate. He loved her running, dying, striking.
-She had run until her heart broke. He could not do less. She had run
-until she was past pain--he must do that--and go on after that....
-Was it still in his brain--the great story? Would it clear and write
-itself--the great story?
-
-That was the question. All was well if he could get Liaoyang out in
-words. He would do it all over again on the ship. Every day the ship
-would be carrying him closer to the States. He was still on schedule.
-He would reach America on the first possible ship after the battle of
-Liaoyang--possibly, ahead of mails. On the voyage he would re-do the
-book--twenty days--five thousand words a day. He might do it better.
-It might come up clean out of the journey, the battle itself and the
-pictures strengthened, brightened, impregnated with fresh power....
-Three weeks--every moment sailing to the States--the first and fastest
-ship!... The driving devil in his brain would be at rest. The big story
-would clear, as he began to write. The days of labor at first would
-change to days of pure instrumentation. He would drive at first--then
-the task would drive him.... But he must not miss a possible day to
-Japan--to Nagasaki.... He had not money for the passage to America. At
-this very moment he could not get out of bed--but these two were mere
-pups compared to the wolves he had met....
-
-They found him on the floor drawing on his clothes in the morning--an
-hour before the train. His wounds were bleeding, but he laughed at that.
-
-“You see, I’ve got to make it. You’ve been very kind. I’ll heal on the
-way--not here. I’ve got the big story. I’ve got to keep moving to think
-it out. I can’t think here. I’ll get on--thank you.”
-
-And he was on. That night his train stopped for ten minutes at Tongu,
-the town near the Taku Forts, at the mouth of the Pei-ho.... All day
-he had considered the chance of getting ship here, without going on
-to Tientsin, seventy miles up-river. The larger ships lightered their
-traffic from Tongu; he might catch a steamer sailing to-night for
-Japan, or at least for Chifu.... It was getting dark.
-
-The face that looked through the barred window at the Englishman in
-charge of the station at Tongu unsettled the latter’s evening and many
-evenings afterward.
-
-“Is there a ship from the river-mouth to-night?”
-
-Morning repeated his question, and perceived that the agent had dropped
-his eyes to the two hands holding the ticket-shelf. Morning’s nails
-were tight in the wood; he would wobble if he let go.
-
-“Yes, there’s the little _Tungsheng_. She goes off to-night----”
-
-“For Japan?”
-
-“Yes, but she doesn’t carry passengers--that is--unless the Captain
-gives up his quarters, and he has already done that this trip.”
-
-“Deck passengers----”
-
-“Sure, all carry coolies out of here--best freight we have.”
-
-“Do you sell the tickets?”
-
-“Who’s going?”
-
-“My servant.... I won’t go on to Tientsin if I can get--get him on
-to-night----”
-
-“The launch and lighter are supposed to be down shortly from
-Tientsin--that’s all I can say. It’s blowing a bit. She may not clear.”
-
-“She’ll clear if any does?”
-
-“Yes, Himmelhock has taken her out of here worse than this. You’d
-better decide--I’ve got to go out now. The train’s leaving.”
-
-Seventy miles up the river, he thought,--the wrong way if he stuck
-to the train. Every mile that ivory finger would torture him. His
-brain now seemed holding back an avalanche. If he chose falsely, he
-would tumble down the blackness with the rocks and glaciers.... This
-Englishman looked a gamester--he might help. Perhaps he wasn’t a corpse.
-
-“I’ll stay,” he said, and the story and all his purpose wobbled and
-grew black.... He mustn’t forget. He mustn’t fall.... So he stood there
-holding fast to the ticket-shelf, which he could not feel--held and
-held, and the train clattered, grew silent, and it was dark.
-
-“Where’s your servant?”
-
-Morning’s lips moved.
-
-“Where is your servant?”
-
-“I am my servant.”
-
-“I can’t give a white man deck passage. It’s not only against the
-rules--but against reason.”
-
-Morning groped for his arm. “Take me into the light,” he said.
-
-The man obeyed.
-
-“What day is this?”
-
-“Night of September six.”
-
-“I left Liaoyang the night of the third. I rode a good horse to
-death--along the Taitse, over the Hun and the Liao. I rode through the
-_Hun huises_ twice. I was all cut up and beaten--the horse went
-over backward in the Hun, and in the gut on the bank of the Liao....
-I was in Liaoyang for the battle. I was there four months waiting for
-the battle. They took my story--hundred thousand words--the _Hun
-huises_ did, in the fight on the Liao bank. The horse killed herself
-running with me ... but I’ve got it all in my head--the story. I’ll get
-to the States with it before any mail--before any other man. It’s all
-in my head--the whole Russian-end. I can write it again on the ship to
-the States in three weeks.... I’ve got to get off to-night. You’re the
-one to help me.... See these----”
-
-Morning opened his shirt and then started to undo his legging.
-
-“For God’s sake--don’t.... But you’ll die on the deck----”
-
-“No, the only way to kill me would be to wall me up--so I couldn’t keep
-moving.”
-
-“I’ll go down to the river with you in a few minutes.”
-
-And then he had John Morning sobbing on his shoulder.
-
-
- 17
-
-THE Englishman at Tongu was a small, sallow man, with the face
-of one who is used to getting the worst of it. Tongu, as a post, was no
-exception from an outsider’s point of view. Morning saw this face in
-odd lights during the days that followed. It came to the chamber of
-images--and always he wanted to break down, and his hands went out for
-the shoulder.... He remembered a pitching junk in the windy blackness
-at the mouth of the Pei-ho. (He had seen the low mud-flats of the Taku
-forts from here in another service.)... The _Tungsheng_ looked
-little--not much bigger than the junk, and she was wooden. There was
-chill and a slap of rain in the blackness.
-
-“Hul-lo, who is dere?” The slow, juicy voice came from the door of the
-pilot-house.
-
-“Endicott. I’ve got a deck passenger----”
-
-“Huh--dere dick as meggots alretty----”
-
-“This is a kitchen coolie of mine--he must go. Send someone down to
-make a place and take his transportation----”
-
-The grumbling that followed was a matter of habit rather than of
-effectiveness. Morning seemed to see the lower lip from which the voice
-came, a thick and loppy member.... The mate came down, stepping from
-shoulder to back, across the complaining natives. They were three deep
-on the deck. He kicked clear a hole in the lee of the cabin.... Morning
-sank in, and Endicott bent to whisper:
-
-“Put the grub-basket between your knees and don’t take your hands
-off it.... Put the blanket over it. It’s a thick, good blanket. I
-could give you a better passage, but they wouldn’t take you--honest,
-they wouldn’t. If they see you’re white, tell old Himmelhock you’re
-Endicott’s house-coolie. He can’t do anything now.... If you live,
-write and send the big story to Endicott at Tongu.”
-
-Morning was sinking to sleep. He felt the warmth of the blanket, a
-thick, rough blanket Endicott had donated. Its warmth was like the
-man’s heart.... Morning’s hands went out. A coolie growled at him....
-There was no worry now. It was the night of the sixth, and he was
-sailing. He could do no more; the ivory finger in his brain neither
-froze nor burned.... The pitching did not rouse him--nor the men
-of sewers and fields--sick where they sat--woven, matted together,
-trusting to the animal heat of the mass to keep from dying of exposure.
-John Morning lay in the midst of them--John Morning whose body would
-not die.
-
-The days and nights rushed together....
-
-Sometimes he wondered if he were not back at the shipping--in some
-stock-car with the horses--but horses were so clean compared to
-this.... When he could think, he put clean lint to his wounds. He
-scorned pain, for he was on his way; and much was merciful coma.
-
-There was rain, deluges; and though the air rose heavy as amber
-afterward, the freshness at the time was salvation. He learned as it
-is probable no other American ever learned, what it means to live in
-the muck of men. All one at the beginning and at the ending, it is
-marvelous how men separate their lives in the interval--how little they
-know of one another, and how easily foolish noses turn up. Here was a
-man alive--dreaming of the baths he had missed, of Japanese Inn baths
-most of all.
-
-“Who am I?” he asked.... “John Morning,” would whip back to him from
-somewhere. “And who in hell is John Morning to revolt at the sufferings
-of other men?”
-
-He had seen the coolies in the steerage of many ships--even these
-massed deck passages of the Yellow and China Seas and the Coasting
-trade. He had looked at them before as one looks into a cage
-of animals. Now he was one of those who looked out, one of the
-_slumees_. Once he asked, “Is this the bottom of the human drain,
-and if not--must I sink to it?”
-
-The Chinese did steal his food that first night, but fed him
-occasionally from their own stock. Finding him white, they fouled him,
-but kept him warm.... The _Tungsheng_ ran into Chifu harbor to
-avoid a storm, and a full day was lost. John Morning had no philosophy
-then--a hell-minded male full of sickness--not good to view, even
-through the bars of a cage. But at best to sit five hours, where he sat
-more than five days and nights, would condemn the mind of any white man
-or woman to chaos, or else restore it to the fine sanity of Brotherhood.
-
-And then the day when the breeze turned warm and the Islands were
-green!... Coolies were men that hour, men with eyes that melted to
-ineffable softness. It was like Jesus coming toward them on the
-sea--the green hills of Japan. Their hearts broke with emotion; they
-wept and loved one another--this mass all molten and integrated into
-one. It was like the Savior coming to meet them through the warm bright
-air. He would make them clean; their eyes would follow Him always....
-
-Morning was not the only one who had to be carried ashore at
-Shimoneseki, after the quarantine officer had finished with the herd.
-His passport saved him. “I had to come. It was the first ship out
-of Tongu. Deck passage was the only way they would take me,” was
-the simple story. He was fevered, but strangely subdued that day.
-Himmelhock was at the door of the pilot-house, when Morning looked up
-from the shore a last time, and his native sailors, bare to the thigh,
-were sluicing the decks.
-
-The bath was heaven. He was able to walk afterward. The officials
-burned his clothing, but made it possible for him to buy a few light
-things. The wound in his leg was healing; the bruises fading away. The
-wound in his side did not heal; it was angry as a feline mouth.
-
-He had bandages, but no stockings; clean canvas clothing, but no
-underwear.... He found that he had to wait before answering when anyone
-spoke; and then he was not quite sure if he had answered, and would
-try again--until they stopped him. Somewhere long ago there was a
-parrot whose eyes were rimmed--with red-brown, and of stony opaqueness.
-He couldn’t recall where the parrot was, but it had something to do
-with him when he was little, almost beyond memory. His eyes now felt
-just as the parrot’s had looked.
-
-It was a night run back to Nagasaki by rail--his thought was of ships,
-ships, ships. He could stand off from the world and see the ships--all
-the lines of tossing, steaming ships. Then he would go down to the deck
-of one--and below and aft where Asiatics were crowded together. To the
-darkest and thickest place among them he would go, and there lie and
-rest until the finger in his brain roused him. Then he would find that
-the train had stopped. It was the halt that awakened him.
-
-There were two ships, all but ready to clear for the States, lying
-in the harbor of Nagasaki that morning. The first was the liner
-_Coptic_, but she had to go north first, a day at Kobe, and
-two days at Yokohama, before taking the long southeastern slide to
-Honolulu. She was faster than the American transport, _Sickles_
-(with a light load of sick and insane from the Islands), but the latter
-was clearing for Honolulu at sundown and would reach San Francisco at
-least one day earlier than the liner. Moreover, the _Coptic_ would
-have recent mails; the _Sickles_ would beat the mails.
-
-Money was waiting for him at Tokyo, less than an hour’s journey from
-Yokohama; he would have good care and a comfortable passage home on the
-old liner, but his brain burned at the thought. Four days north--not
-homeward.... The _Sickles_ was clipper-built--she was white and
-clean-lined, lying out in the harbor, in the midst of black collier
-babies. She was off for Home to-night. He had traveled home once before
-on a transport. He was American and she--the flag was there, run
-together a bit in the vivid light, but the flag was there! And to-night
-he would be at sea--pulling himself together for the big story, alone
-with the big story--the ship never stopping--unless they stopped in
-ocean to drop the dead....
-
-The actual cost of the transport passage is very little, merely a
-computation for food and berth; the difficulty is to obtain the
-permit. As it was, he had not enough money, barely enough to get up
-to Yokohama, second class on the _Coptic_; and yet, this hardly
-entered. It was like a home city, this American ship, to one who had
-been in the alien heart of the Chinese country so long. He would know
-someone, and a telegram from ’Frisco would bring money to him. He had a
-mighty reliance from the big story.
-
-The U. S. quartermaster at Nagasaki was a tired old man. He advised
-Morning to cable to Manila for permission. Morning did not say that
-he lacked money for this, but repeated his wish to go. The old man
-thought a minute and then referred him to Ferry, the _Sickles_
-quartermaster. He had been doing this for thirty years, referring
-others to others so that all matters merely struck and glanced from
-him. Thus he kept an open mind. Morning wanted something to take
-from this office to Ferry of the _Sickles_. The resistance he
-encountered heated him. The smell of the deck-passage was in his
-nostrils; it seemed in his veins, and made him afraid that others
-caught the taint. The old quartermaster did not help him. Morning could
-hear his own voice, but could not hold in mind what he said.... The
-officer did not seem to be interested in Liaoyang. This disturbed him.
-It made him ask if he had not gone mad after all--if he could be wrong
-on this main trend, that he had something the world wanted.
-
-He took a _sampan_ at the harbor-front and went aboard the
-transport. Ferry, the _Sickles_ quartermaster, was a tall, lean
-man with a shut smile that drooped. The face was a pinched and
-diminished Mergenthaler, and brought out the clouds and the manias of
-Morning’s mind.
-
-Were all quartermasters the same? What had become of men? Had the world
-lost interest in monster heroisms? Ferry did not help him--on the
-contrary, stood looking down with the insolence of superior inches.
-Morning found himself telling about the sorrel mare. That would not do.
-He returned to the main fact that he had the big story and must get
-across the Pacific with it.
-
-“I can’t take you----”
-
-Morning heard it, but couldn’t believe. He tried to tell about
-the _Hun huises_ and the loss of the manuscript, the walk to
-Koupangtse----
-
-“Really--it’s no affair of mine. I can’t take you on.... The
-_Coptic_ is sailing----”
-
-And just now Mr. Reever Kennard appeared on the deck. The summer had
-added portliness. He was in flannels--a spectacle for children and
-animals.... The insignificance of all about was quickened when Mr.
-Reever Kennard appeared. The decks were less white, sailors, soldiers
-more enlisted. John Morning became an integer of the _Tungsheng’s_
-deck-passage again, and the lining of his nostrils retained the reek of
-it.
-
-“How do you do, Mr. Kennard?” he said. His back was different. He felt
-a leniency there, very new or very ancient, as he turned to Ferry,
-adding: “This gentleman knows me. We parted in Tokyo this Spring, when
-I went over with the Russians. I met him long ago in the Philippine
-service. He will tell you----”
-
-Ferry’s face grew suddenly saturnine, his eyes held in the glance of
-the famous correspondent’s.
-
-“You’ll please count it closed--I can’t take you.”
-
-Morning now turned to Kennard, who was sealing with his tongue a little
-flap of cigar-wrapper which may have prevented the perfect draught.
-Morning bowed and moved aft, where the dust of the coaling was thick,
-and the scores of natives, women and men, who handled the baskets, were
-a distraction which kept the reality from stifling him. Presently he
-went ashore and it was noon.... He could not understand Kennard; could
-not believe in an American doing what Ferry had done, to a man who had
-the big story of Liaoyang. It was some hideous mistake; he had not been
-able to make himself understood.
-
-The _Sickles_ launch was leaving the pier at two. Morning was
-there and took a seat. He was holding himself--the avalanche again--and
-rehearsing in his mind what he should say to Ferry. His brain was
-afire; the wound in his side had scalded him so long that his voice had
-a whimper in it. He had not eaten--the thought was repulsive--but he
-had bought drink in the thought of clearing his brain and deadening his
-hurt....
-
-His brain was clearer on the launch, but the gin fumed out of him as he
-approached the upper deck, where Ferry’s quarters were.
-
-The Quartermaster saw him, but was speaking to an infantry captain.
-Morning waited by the rail. Many times he thought--if he could only
-begin to speak _now_. Yet he feared in his heart when Ferry
-turned to him, he would fail. It was something little and testy in the
-man--something so different from what he had known in the great strains
-of Liaoyang--except for Luban. Yes, Ferry was like Luban, when Luban
-was in the presence of a fancied inferior.... They talked on--Morning
-thought of murder at last. A peculiar wiry strength gathered about the
-idea of murder in its connection with Ferry’s dark, mean face. He felt
-all the old strength in his hands, and more from days of pain--days of
-holding one’s self--will, body, brain.
-
-“Well----” Ferry had turned to him suddenly.
-
-Morning’s thoughts winged away with a swarm of details of the
-crime.... “I could tell you something of the Story--I could show you
-how they cut me on the Liao--the _Hun huises_----”
-
-“If you come to this deck again--I’ll send you ashore in irons.”
-
-At four that afternoon Morning saw the _Coptic_ draw up her chains
-and slide out of the harbor, with the swift ease of a river-ferry....
-He could not count himself whipped on the _Sickles_--and this is
-the real beginning of John Morning. He was Fate-driven. The man who
-did not have the courage to ask his rights in Tokyo--to inquire the
-reason of his disbarment, was not through with the American transport
-_Sickles_. A full day ahead of the mails in San Francisco--and he
-was waiting for the dusk. The fight had been brought to him. He was
-dull to the idea of being whipped.
-
-Three enlisted men were drinking in the little apothecary shop which
-Morning had used for the day’s headquarters. They belonged to the
-_Sickles_. They had been taking just one more drink for many
-minutes. He told them he was sailing on the transport and joined
-them in a _sampan_ to the ship when it was dark. The harbor was
-still as a dream; the dark blending with the water.... They touched
-the bellying white plates of the ship. Morning seemed to come up from
-infinite depths.... The men were very drunk; they had ordered rapidly
-toward the end; the effect caught up as swiftly now. They helped
-each other officiously. Morning put on the fallen hat of one who had
-become unconscious.... The watch was of them, a corporal, who was
-no trouble-maker. He blustered profusely and hurried them below....
-Morning was bewildered. He had spoken no word, but helped the others
-carry the body, a wobbly deputation, down among the hammocks.... He
-heard the voices of those maimed in mind.... He placed his end of the
-soldier’s body down, left his companions, and made his way forward, to
-where the hammocks were farther apart. Early years had given him a
-sort of enlisted man’s consciousness of things; and he knew now not to
-take another’s place. He chose one from a pile of hammocks and slung
-it forward, close to the bulk-head of the bedlam, and well out of the
-lights.... He lay across his only baggage, a package containing a
-thousand sheets of Chinese parchment. He lay rigid, trying to remember
-if out-going ships took a pilot out of Nagasaki.
-
-He heard the anchor-chain. He was very close to it. The voices of the
-sun-struck and vino-maddened men from the Islands were deadened by the
-hideous grating of the links in the socket.... It was not too late for
-him to be put ashore even now; since it was war-time. Of course there
-would be a pilot, for the harbor was mined.... He drew the canvas about
-his ears, but the voices of the brain-dead men reached him.... Cats,
-pirates, and river-reptiles terrified them; one man was still lost in
-a jungle set with bolo-traps; the emptiness of others was filled by
-strange abominations glad of the flesh again.
-
-
- 18
-
-HE had been listening to Duke Fallows for a long time--Duke’s
-voice blended with war and storm and a woman’s laugh.... Then he
-reverted to the idea of murdering Ferry. Finally someone said:
-
-“He’s a new one from Nagasaki. He’s got the fevers----”
-
-And then:
-
-“Who in hell is he?”
-
-They began to ask questions. Morning answered nothing. Day had come.
-He heard the throb of the engines, felt the swell of the sea, but the
-strength of yesterday’s concentration was still upon him. It had built
-a wall around him, holding the life of his mind there; as a life of low
-desires imprisons the spirit to its own vile region after death.... He
-did not speak, but looked from face to face for Ferry.
-
-They ceased to expect an answer from him.... A young doctor appeared.
-His eyes rolled queerly; his cheek folded over his mouth, as if he were
-beyond words from drink, and tremendously pleased with his prowess.
-They called him Nevin. He prepared himself profoundly for speech.
-Morning now realized the nimbleness of Nevin’s hands, unwinding the
-filthy bandages. Presently, the Doctor straightened up, passed his hand
-over his brow, tongued the other cheek, and after a sweating suspense
-ordered:
-
-“Take him to the hospital.”
-
-A white room.... The Doctor came again. They took his clothing and
-bathed him.... He heard and smelled the sea through an open port ...
-glad, but utterly weary ... waiting for Ferry.
-
-“My God--not only cut, but trampled----” a voice said.
-
-Morning felt if he were alone with Nevin he could have said
-something.... The Doctor looked like a jockey he had once known. It
-wasn’t that, however, that gave him heart, but the quick, gentle
-hands.... More and more as he watched the dusty face with its ineffable
-gravity, he saw bright humanity burning like a forge-fire behind the
-mask. This brought tears to his own eyes. Nevin, seeing them, became
-altogether nervous to look at, seemed to have a walnut in his mouth.
-
-And now John Morning felt himself breaking--he was brittle, hard like
-glass--and his last idea concerned the package of Chinese parchment
-which they had not brought from the hammock.... Six days afterward he
-asked for it.
-
-For a short while each day, during the interval, he just touched
-the main idea and sank back to sleep. He suffered very little. The
-after-effects of his journey from Liaoyang tried to murder him in
-various ways, but relaxation, nourishment, good air and care worked as
-a sort of continuous anæsthesia. On this sixth day the Doctor appeared
-to ignore his question about the package of paper, but leaned forward,
-glanced to the right and left, as if to communicate a plan to scuttle
-the ship, and said:
-
-“You’re one more little man. You’ve had a new one each day--pneumonia,
-sclerosis, brain-fever.... My hospital report on your case will drive
-the Major-Surgeon into permanent retirement.... What did you say was
-the matter to-day--Chinese parchment?”
-
-“I’ve got so much to do, Doctor?... What day is this?”
-
-“Morning of the nineteenth.”
-
-The color swept into Morning’s face, terror into his eyes.
-
-“I didn’t think it was so bad as that--I can’t lay up any more--twelve
-days left.... Two weeks and two days since I rode out of Liaoyang----”
-
-“I’ll have to let ’em put you in the forward hutch--if you begin to
-talk Liaoyang, now that your fever’s down. There wasn’t any Americans
-in that fighting----”
-
-“I’m not a soldier----”
-
-Nevin wrung his hands. A thought recurred to Morning.
-
-“There was a couple of letters in my clothes--one addressed to a paper
-in ’Frisco, and one to me.”
-
-The other was curious enough to send an orderly to search.
-
-“Have him bring the package of paper, too,” Morning said. When all was
-brought in good order, he added: “This letter to me I’ll read later.
-The larger package is Duke Fallows’ first hurried story of the battle
-of Liaoyang. I won’t read that either, because I’ve got to do one of
-my own. I did one, you know--ten times as long as this--but the _Hun
-huises_ got it on the Liao-crossing, from Tawan--that’s where I got
-cut up. Morning of the fourth, it was.... The sorrel mare did fifteen
-miles with her guts sticking out, and I walked thirty to Koupangtse,
-with these wounds and smashed from a couple of falls--before the
-morning of the fifth.... You can look at Duke Fallows’ story, Doctor,
-and I’ll take a little doze----”
-
-Fallows’ battle was done clearly as a football game, and as briskly,
-to the withdrawal of the Russian lines upon the inner positions of the
-city and the flanking movement of Kuroki. A dramatic pause then to
-survey the Russian force on the eve of disaster, from which the reader
-drew the big moral sickness. After that Lowenkampf, the millet and the
-Ploughman. In quite a remarkable way Fallows turned the reader now from
-the mass to the individual. In a little trampled place in the grain the
-battle was lost by the Russians and won by Japan.... The Doctor was
-interrupted several times, but no force was missed. It was a new voice
-to him. He wondered if Fallows would make the world hear it. It seemed
-to compel a reckoning.
-
-The Fallows story laughed all the way. One did not have to look twice
-at a sentence to understand, yet two readings did not wear it out, nor
-would it leave one alone. All the time the Doctor read, matters he had
-heard in delirium from the lips of John Morning came back.
-
-Nevin remembered the tears on the first morning, the choke in his own
-throat; the first sight of the wounds, the queer, extra zeal he had put
-into this case. Finally he could hardly wait to learn the rest--chiefly
-how John Morning had happened to be lying in the darkest end of the
-hammock-hole, over against the insane compartment.... Yet he did not
-wake up his patient. When Morning finally opened his eyes, it was time
-for nourishment. Nevin brought a glass of extra wine before inquiring.
-“First, tell me--has Ferry seen me?”
-
-“Captain Ferry, the quartermaster?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I’d rather think not. He’s about occasionally--but his truck with the
-sick men is mostly transportation and nourishment----”
-
-“The second time I came to ask him to take me across that
-afternoon--the second time,” Morning said slowly, “he told me that if
-I appeared on his deck again he’d send me ashore in irons. You see the
-_Sickles_ is to beat the _Coptic_ in. I had to come. Why, the
-mails couldn’t beat me through from Liaoyang.... I finally got aboard
-with some soldiers--but I would have leeched to the anchor.... And,
-say, I think I knew you that morning. It seemed as if I could let go
-when I felt your hands----”
-
-The two were quiet. The Doctor looked obliquely at an open port with
-one eye shut, as if he were not sure of the count....
-
-Accompanying the manuscript was a letter to Noyes, editor of _Western
-States_, which chiefly concerned John Morning. Many brave things
-were said.... Nevin, deeply stirred with the whole business, saw
-the Ploughman coming forth from the millet--saw the Ploughman
-going home. That little drama so dear to Fallows’ heart _was_
-greater than Liaoyang. Nevin saw that such things are deathless....
-Deathless--that’s the word. They look little at the time in the midst
-of thunder and carnage; but the thunder dies away and the rains come
-and clean the stains--and the spirit of it all lives in one deed or in
-one sentence. A woman nurses the sick at Scutari, and the Crimean war
-is known for the angel of its battlefield, by the many who do not know
-who fought, nor what for.... Nevin felt the big forces throbbing in the
-world--the work of the world. It had come to him distantly before. It
-had pulled him out of the comfort and ease of his home town to serve
-the sick at sea and in the Islands.
-
-The mystery of service. He had never dared tell anyone. His voice broke
-so easily. He had covered the weakness in leers and impediments, so the
-world would not see. He had talked of his rights and his wages, the
-dusty-faced little man. Mystery of Service--and men were ashamed when
-it touched them.
-
-But Fallows, laughing and so powerful, this boy’s man-friend, wasn’t
-afraid. Was the boy afraid? What had driven him? Did the boy know what
-had driven him? What, in God’s name, had driven this human engine that
-would not stop--that threw off poisons and readjusted itself against
-the individual and collective organizations of death?
-
-Nevin was shaken by the whole story--it girded, girdled him.... Let
-Ferry come. Ferry was one of those bleak despoilers of human effort,
-whose presence consumed the reality in another. What was Ferry anyway
-and Ferry’s sort--a spoiled child or an ancient decadent principle? Was
-it merely a child-soul with a universe ahead, or was he very old and
-very ill--incorrigible self-love on its road back to nothing?... But
-the Ploughman lived, Fallows lived, the boy Morning lived--their work
-was marching on.
-
-The Doctor did not speak, because his voice would break. He went about
-his work instead--swift magnetic hands.... At least, he could stand
-between Morning and the quartermaster--if there were need.
-
-When he came back Morning was at work, a hard bright look of tension
-about him, and a line of white under the strange young beard....
-
-“I think I can get it going now. I think it is beginning to come
-again,” he said in a hushed tone. The Doctor arranged the pillows
-better, sharpened an extra pencil and went out.
-
-“I may have to do those first pages again,” he said an hour later.
-“It’s hard to get out of the hospital--you know, what I mean--a man’s
-bath is so important to one lying-up that it shuts out a battle-line.
-What a fool a sick man is. But I’ll get it----”
-
-He fell asleep in the dusk before the candles came. The Doctor found
-him cool, his breathing normal.... The next day Morning worked until
-Nevin remonstrated.
-
-“You’ll die, if you go on----”
-
-“I’ll die, if I don’t,” said Morning. The Doctor knew in his heart
-that it was true. Still they compromised. That night, as Morning
-dropped down into an abyss of exhaustion, he mumbled the whole story of
-Eve--the sorrel mare. “She rose to her feet--white death in her eyes,”
-he finished....
-
-Nothing attracts the eye on ship-board like a man at work. All idle
-ones are caught in the current and come to pay their devoirs to the
-man mastered by a strong task.... The Doctor had Morning taken to an
-extra berth in his own state-room. The door had a spring lock, for many
-medicines and stores were there. Ferry was not likely to happen in
-the Doctor’s quarters. The latter even doubted if he would recognize
-Morning. He came and went, as the task drove on. Once Morning stopped
-to tell him about the deck passage on the _Tungsheng_, and
-another time about his brush with the _Hun huises_ in the ravine
-across the river from Tawan.... The Doctor saw that Morning had made
-a wonderful instrument of himself; he studied how the passion of an
-artist works on the body of man. The other found that so long as he ate
-regularly and fell asleep without a struggle--he was allowed to go on.
-
-The _Sickles_ was swinging down into the warmth. The sick man had
-a bad day, lying in the harbor at Honolulu.
-
-“It isn’t the work, Doctor--it’s the ship’s stopping,” Morning said,
-squirming in the berth. “It makes my head hot. I see steamy and all
-that. I had it when the _Tungsheng_ lay up for a day in Chifu
-on account of the blow.... I had it that day in Nagasski when Ferry
-wouldn’t take me on. I’ll be all right to-night.... Give me a little
-touch of that gin and lime juice----”
-
-“Just lime juice when heads get hot.... You’re a clever little
-drunkard. I’ve been wondering how far you’d go.... Yes, we’ll clear
-to-night.... Ferry’s ashore. Come out and see the black boys dive for
-pennies.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“There’s something doing with this knife-wound--it doesn’t heal,” the
-Doctor said, mid-way between the Islands and the Farallonnes. “The
-leg’s all right. Organs and all the little organs seem to thrive on
-work. That is, they’re no worse. The leg heals--but this one--you seem
-to have established a permanent drain----”
-
-“Fifty pages yesterday--two hundred words a page,” Morning muttered.
-
-“Yes--and the day before--and to-morrow--and the night we left
-Honolulu.... If a man worked that way for money, he’d be as dead as
-Ferry inside of a month.... Have you read your friend Fallows’ story
-yet?”
-
-“No, I don’t dare--a sick man isn’t all himself. And _this_ story
-is me. It’s got to be me. It’s better in places than the other, the
-one I lost.... I haven’t read Duke’s letter to me yet. He’s strong
-medicine. He keeps coming back to me, as it is. I want to get off alone
-when the work is done and think. You can’t see him all, when he’s in a
-room with you.... He was like you, in being a friend to me.... Yet, I
-seem to know you better. You’ve helped me so. I’m pretty happy the way
-the story is coming----”
-
-“See how long you can go without a drink to-day.”
-
-“It starts me off, you see. It doesn’t seem to touch me--just steams
-right off with the work----”
-
-“That’s rotten sophistry. I’m watching you----”
-
-Nevin had never seen a body so driven by will. Morning appeared no
-worse; certainly he was no better; his brain was in absolute abeyance;
-his will crashed through clouds of enervation and irresolution. There
-were times when Nevin believed Morning would collapse, when he was
-finished with Liaoyang, but he was not so sure now. He was sure,
-however, that he must not interfere except in extremity.... This was
-part of the big work. Somehow he trusted in Duke Fallows--who had
-allowed the boy to write the detailed battle-end, and gone back to
-Europe to feed the babes of the Ploughman. That last made him want to
-doctor the whole world....
-
-Morning had done the story and re-written the lead. The _Sickles_
-would enter the Gate at daylight.
-
-“There’s seventy-five or eighty thousand words of it. It’s good--unless
-I’m crazy. It’s good, unless this is all a dream. God, I’m thirsty.”
-
-With the work done for the day, however, he asked for lime juice and
-water. His temperature was less than two points above normal; nothing
-had broken; yet the voyage had not replenished Morning’s body. He could
-hardly stand.
-
-“To-night I’ll read the Fallows’ stuff--and the letters.... Doctor, can
-you get me ashore early?”
-
-“Think a minute--you don’t know what you ask----”
-
-“Quarantine----”
-
-Nevin nodded. “There’s extra attention to a ship like this--they’ll
-have to see that running wound of yours for instance----”
-
-“Not if you don’t report it----”
-
-The Doctor’s lower jaw reached down, and to the right, finding the
-walnut. “You wouldn’t even read Duke Fallows’ story before you wrote
-yours. A man can’t lie in his own work----”
-
-“You’ve been so good,” Morning said huskily. “I begin to expect
-miracles----”
-
-“You can get messages--telegrams, letters--ashore.... And then it may
-only take a couple of hours. There isn’t any contagion here that I know
-of.”
-
-Morning first read Fallows’ letter to Noyes, editor _Western
-States_. It told of the story accompanying--but more of the bearer.
-Laughing, loving-hearted, eloquent--Fallows was all through it, and
-fine gifts of the man’s thinking. There was suggestion to Noyes to use
-Morning’s story and get it across simultaneously in New York. “The boy
-has never yet, so far as I can see, found time to arrange a decent
-payment for his work. Please observe that unless some one, equally as
-capable, gets into Port Arthur, Morning’s story will be the biggest
-feature of the war in a newspaper way. I’m going on to Europe on the
-Ploughman story. Let Morning do the big battle--I’ll begin to crackle
-later.”
-
-And then Morning read the story.... His voice trailed up finally from
-the shadows of lower berth. “It’s good,” he said to the Doctor after
-midnight.
-
-“It’s dam’ good. It’s better than mine.... He was alive with it--I
-mean with the _Ploughman_. It’s the way he did it. He tried to
-get it across before we separated. He told me from every angle--told
-Lowenkampf--told them all at the station at Yentai. None of us could
-see.... He was crazed about it--that we couldn’t see. We were all
-choked with blood and death that night. He said Kuropatkin and the
-others would see that the Ploughman was right--if they had a sense
-of humor. Such density to humor, he called the sin against the Holy
-Ghost----”
-
-After they had talked many minutes, Morning broke the seal to his own
-letter and learned why he had been barred from the earlier Japanese
-armies.
-
-
- 19
-
-THE fineness of Fallows, of Nevin, of Endicott, the station-agent
-at Tongu, the risen humanity of the Ploughman--Morning’s soul to
-sense these men was empty within him. All that he knew was
-blood and blow and force and mass and hate. He lay panting and
-possessed. As he had plotted in delirium how to kill Ferry, dwelling
-upon the process and the death; so Reever Kennard came in now for a
-hatred as perfect and destructive. The letter had called up something
-of the same force which had driven John Morning from Liaoyang, over or
-through every barrier to the present hour in which the _Sickles_
-lay off the entrance of the Golden Gate waiting for dawn, thirty-six
-hours ahead of the _Coptic_.
-
-His work was diminished in his own mind; the value of his story was
-lost, the zest to market it, the sense of the world’s waiting. He was
-a thief in the eyes of men. A man cannot steal. They believed him a
-thief.... He thought of moving about the halls of the _Imperial_
-that day--of his thoughts as he had watched from the window in the
-billiard-room while the picture was taken. He had been tranced in
-terror.... Had he but known, he would have made a hell in that house.
-He saw Reever Kennard again on the deck of the _Sickles_--his
-turning to Kennard for help--unparalleled shame.... The thing he
-desired with such terrible zeal now was enacted in his brain. That
-hour on the deck of the _Sickles_ was repeated, but this time he
-knew what Kennard had done. He called him to the lie in imagination.
-The jowl was heavy with scorn and the small slow eyes were bright with
-fear--yet they took nothing back and Morning moved closer and closer
-demanding, until the devil broke from him, and his knotted hand sank
-into the soft center of the man. He watched the writhing of that clean
-flanneled liar, watched him arise. The hand sank once more ... the
-vile play romping through his mind again and again--hideous fighting
-of a man brought up among stable and race-track and freight-route
-ruffians--the fighting that feels no pain and only a knockout can
-stop....
-
-“Wow--it’s hot as hell in here,” came from Nevin in the upper bunk.
-
-A little before dawn, utterly ravaged by the poison of his thinking,
-Morning was struck by the big idea. He turned on the light, steadied
-himself to paper and pencil and wrote to Noyes of the _Western
-States_:
-
- Inclosed find (I) Duke Fallows’ first story of Liaoyang; (II)
- his letter to you, containing among other things information
- concerning the bearer; (III) the first ten thousand words of my
- eighty-thousand-word story of the battle fought a month ago to an
- hour--including sketches of Kuropatkin, and others, covering exactly
- terrain, the entire position, strategy, and finally the cause of
- the Russian disaster, with word-picture of the retreat, done on
- the day when it was at its height. The writer left the field and
- made the journey to Koupangtse alone, nearly one hundred miles to
- the railroad. This is the only American eye-witness story besides
- Fallows’. The mails of the second-hand reports will not reach here
- before the arrival of the _Coptic_.... I will sell this story
- to the _Western States_ on condition that it appear in the
- _World-News_, New York, simultaneously--the story to be run in
- not less than seven installments, beginning by telegraph to-morrow. I
- insist on the _World-News_, but have no objection to the general
- syndicating of the story by the _Western States_, my price for
- the American newspaper rights being $1,800 and transportation to New
- York.
-
-“In God’s name, are you doing another book?” Nevin demanded, letting
-himself down from the berth. “What’s the matter--you’re on fire?”
-
-Morning was counting off the large first installment of his manuscript.
-He placed it upon the table, with the Fallows’ story and the two
-letters to Noyes.... Then he put an empty water-pitcher on it,
-restoring the balance of his story to its place under his pillow.
-
-“Listen” he said, clutching Nevin’s arm, “here’s the whole thing--if
-I’m sick to-morrow. Give it to the reporter from the _Western
-States_--make him see it is life-blood. Make him rush with it to
-Noyes. It’s the whole business.... He’ll get it--before the quarantine
-is lifted, if you--oh, if you can! It’s all there.... You do this for
-me?”
-
-“And where will you be all this time----”
-
-“Oh, Nevin--Nevin--for God’s sake put me to sleep! I’m full of burning
-and devils! Fill up that needle business and put me to sleep!... I
-can’t wait to get across in the New York _World-News_. That’s
-Reever Kennard’s own paper.”
-
-
- 20
-
-THE voices sounded far and muted--voices one might hear when
-swimming under water. It was easier for him to stay down than rise and
-answer. He seemed carried in the strong flow of a river, and preserved
-a consciousness, very vague, that it meant death to go down with the
-stream. At last, opening his eyes, he saw the city over the pier-sheds.
-
-The rest of the manuscript was still under the pillow, but the
-water-pitcher rested upon the bare wood of the table. It was after
-twelve. His deadly fury had burned itself out. The thought of the
-_World-News_ taking the story, steadied his weakness. It was much
-harder to dress than usual, however. He had no shore clothes, but Nevin
-would see to that for him. With a glad thrill, he realized that the
-_Sickles_ had passed the quarantine, or she wouldn’t be in the
-slip. His mind turned to Nevin again, and when he was thinking about
-this deep-rooted habit the voyage had inculcated, the Doctor himself
-entered.
-
-“Well, you gave me a night.”
-
-“You’ll have some rest now.”
-
-“I’ve brought some clothes for you to go ashore with.... The _Western
-States_ got your story two hours ago. Ferry has gone ashore.”
-
-“Did the reporter take it here--or from across the harbor in
-quarantine?”
-
-“He was waiting with others--for us to be turned loose. I gave him the
-stuff as we were putting about. He didn’t come aboard, I saw his launch
-reach landing. I told him to put the stuff into the hands of Noyes and
-to hurry back. All of which he did----”
-
-“Why to hurry back?”
-
-The little man’s mouth gave way to strange twistings, and he answered
-grudgingly, “Well, I had a story to give him.”
-
-Morning took a room at the Armory, refusing a loan from the Doctor.
-“I’ll have it shortly--plenty, I think. I’ll lie up there until I hear
-from Noyes. I may hurry East----”
-
-The process was not clear exactly, but the old story of _Mio
-Amigo_ had given him a terror of borrowing. The Armory was nearby.
-It was clean and cheap. This little decision of choosing the Armory, a
-result of _Mio Amigo_, too, is the most important so far.... The
-Doctor went with him. The two were hushed and sick with things to say.
-Nevin felt he was losing the throb of great service; that he could not
-hold it all after this power-house of a man went his way. It was not
-only Morning, but Morning was attached to the large, quiet doings and
-seeings of the stranger named Duke Fallows.
-
-Morning loved the Doctor. Nevin did not tower; Nevin was instantly in
-his comprehension. Their throats tightened.... Nevin saw him to the
-light little room, and said as he was leaving:
-
-“I’ve been all over Chinatown, looking up a formula for that wound that
-won’t heal. It’s this--full directions inclosed. You’ll have to get
-settled before you try it out.”
-
-He disappeared saying he would be back. Morning put the envelope in
-a wallet, which he had carried afield.... It was not yet two in the
-afternoon. There was a timorous rap at the door. Morning’s head dropped
-over drowsily. The door opened just a little and a voice said:
-
-“Is there a sick American soldier in here?”
-
-It was low and timorous like the tapping, but there was a laugh in it,
-and something that drove the wildness out of his heart.
-
-“Yes,” he said.
-
-“And may I come in?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-She was slight and young and pale. She passed between the window and
-his eyes. Her brown hair seemed half-transparent. The day was bright,
-but not yellow; its soft gray luster was exactly the woman’s tone.
-There was a curious unreality about the whole figure. The light in
-her eyes was like the light in the window; gray eyes and very deep.
-So quietly, she came, and the day was quiet, the house--a queer hush
-everywhere.
-
-“There are a few of us who meet the transports--and call on the sick
-soldiers. We talk to them--write letters or telegrams. Sometimes they
-are very glad. All we want is to help. I haven’t tried many times
-before----”
-
-Someone had told him once of a woman in London, who met the human
-drift in from the far tides of chance--and made their passing or their
-healing dear as heaven. He had always kept the picture. He scarcely
-heard all that this young woman was saying.
-
-She was not beautiful, not even pretty. You would see her last in a
-room full of women. Under her eyes--he could not tell just where--there
-was a line or shadow of strange charm; and where the corner of her
-eye-lids folded into the temple a delicate perfection lived; her frail
-back had a line of beauty--again, he could not describe this. The
-straightness of the figure was that of lightness, of aspiration....
-Sometimes she seemed just a girl. Her underlip pursed a little; it was
-not red.... She seemed waiting with the lightness of a thistle--waiting
-and listening in the lull before a wind.
-
-“My name is Betty Berry.”
-
-“Mine is John Morning.”
-
-She told him that she was a musician, and that San Francisco was her
-home, although she was much away. He saw her with something that Duke
-Fallows had given him. The hush deepened with the thought. Had he taken
-from that tired breast a certain age and clear-eyedness and judgment
-of the ways of love-women? There might have been reality in this;
-certainly there was reality in his not having seen a white girl in many
-months. He was changed; his work done for the moment; he was very tired
-and hungry for something she brought.... “Betty Berry.”
-
-He _was_ changed. This Western world was new to him. He seemed
-old to the East--old, much-traveled, and very weary; here was faith
-and tenderness and reality. Duke Fallows’ city--Duke had strangely
-intrenched himself here; and this wraith of an angel who came to him
-ministering!... Malice and ambition--reprisal and murder were gone.
-What a dirty little man he had been--how rotten with self, how furious
-and unspeakable. Why had he not seen it? Why had he rejected Duke
-Fallows with his brain and accepted him with his soul? The soul--what
-queer place in a man is this? Duke Fallows, Lowenkampf--were in and
-out, and Nevin, even the Ploughman now; and this little gray hushed
-spirit of a girl had come straight to his soul. Why could one not
-always feel these Presences? Would such destroying and malignant hatred
-return as that for Reever Kennard last night? Was it because he had
-been so passionate for self--that until now, (when he was resting and
-she came), decency, delight, nor vision had been able to break through
-the deadly self-turned currents?... This was like his finer self coming
-into the room.
-
-“How did you know that boys coming home--need to see you?” he asked.
-He had to be very careful and arrange what he meant to say briskly and
-short. Most of his thoughts would not do at all to speak.
-
-“Women know. So many boys come home--like those on the _Sickles_
-whom one is not allowed to see. I have watched them going out, too.
-They don’t know why they go. They don’t expect to find a new country,
-and yet it seems as if they must go and look. And many come home so
-numbed with loneliness that they have forgotten what they need.”
-
-“Then women know what boys--men are?”
-
-She smiled, and seemed listening--her lips pursed, her eyes like a
-cloudy dawn, turned from him slightly. What did she hear continually
-that did not come to him?
-
-“I mean the men,” he added, “whom the world calls its bravest--the
-gaunt explorers and fighters--do women know what boys they are?”
-
-“I don’t know those whom the world calls its bravest.”
-
-“I think I needed to have you come,” he said, “but I didn’t know it.”
-
-The hush was in the room again. Morning felt like a little boy--and as
-if she were a child with braids behind. They felt wonderful things, but
-could only talk sillinesses.... There was something different about her
-every time he looked. It seemed if she were gone; he could not summon
-her face to mind. He did not understand it then.
-
-It had grown quite a little darker before they noticed. The far rumble
-of thunder finally made them see a storm gathering.
-
-“You won’t go until it’s over?”
-
-“It might be better for me to go now--before it begins.”
-
-“Do you live far?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then stay--please.”
-
-She drew her chair closer. They tried to tell each other of what they
-had been, but this didn’t prosper. The peculiar thing was that their
-history seemed to begin from now--all was far and unimportant but
-this. Morning, moreover, did not mean to spoil the primary idea in her
-mind of his being an American soldier; though all his recent history
-impinged upon the one fact that he wasn’t.... He tried to hold her face
-in his mind with shut eyes, but it was a forced and unfair picture when
-mentally dragged there.... The thunder increased and the rain.
-
-“Once when I was little,” she said, “I was alone in the house when a
-storm came, and I was so frightened that day--that I never could be
-since, in just the same way.”
-
-Perfect revelation. Something in him wished she were pretty. She was
-such a shy and shadowy creature. He called to mind the girls he had
-known--coarse and tawdry lot, poor things. Betty Berry was all that
-they were not; yet some of them were prettier. He could see their faces
-quite distinctly, and this startled him, because shutting his eyes from
-full gaze at this girl, he could not see her twice the same.... The
-weather cleared. They were together in silence for moments at a time.
-She became more and more like a wraith when the natural dusk thickened.
-
-“Was it hard for you to knock and speak--that first moment?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Do--do any of the soldiers ever misunderstand?”
-
-“No----”
-
-“That’s fine of them,” he granted.
-
-“They couldn’t when one has no thought, only to be kind to them----”
-
-“You think they see that at once?”
-
-“They must.”
-
-“A man doesn’t know all about soldiers simply because he ‘soldiers’
-with them,” Morning said.
-
-“And then----”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“They look at me and it’s very plain that I come just to be good to
-them.... They think of me in the same way as a Salvation Army lassie or
-a missionary----”
-
-“Now, that’s queer,” said he. “It didn’t occur to me at all. It would
-never come to me to ask you to leave a tract.”
-
-“And I didn’t feel like a missionary, either.... Now it’s all cleared
-again. I must go.”
-
-There was a pang.... Where was Nevin? Why had Noyes or someone from
-the _Western States_ not come to him? Coming back to these things
-pained.... A boy in the halls called the afternoon papers in a modified
-voice.
-
-“Will you get me the papers--especially the _Western States_?”
-
-She hurried to call the boy. He saw the huge picture of Duke Fallows on
-the sheet toward him, as she re-entered.
-
-“This is what I want,” he said hoarsely, taking the _Western
-States_....
-
-“John Morning,” she whispered.
-
-In inch letters across the top--there it was:
-
- JOHN MORNING BRINGS IN THE FIRST FALLOWS STORY.
-
- Full Day Ahead of _Coptic_ Mails.... Morning Leaves Fallows on
- the Field Beyond Liaoyang, Night of September 3rd.... Two Americans
- Alone See Great Battle.... The Incomparable Fallows’ Story Printed in
- Full in the _Western States_ To-day.... John Morning’s Detail
- Picture--a Book in Itself--Begins in the _Western States_
- To-morrow--Biggest Newspaper Feature of the Year’s Campaign.... Read
- To-day How John Morning Brought in the News--a Story of Unparalleled
- Daring and Superhuman Endurance....
-
-Such was the head and the big-print captions. Morning’s riding forth
-from Liaoyang on the night of the third--the sorrel mare--the Hun
-Crossing--the Liao Crossing and the fight with the river-bandits--the
-runaway of the sorrel and her broken heart--his journey dazed and
-delirious, covered with wounds, thirty miles to Koupangtse--Tongu--the
-battle to get aboard the _Sickles_, first, second, and third
-attempts--redoing the great story on shipboard--all this in form of an
-interview and printed as a local story, ran ahead of the Duke Fallows
-article.
-
-A great moment, and John Morning, forgetting all else, even forgetting
-the girl who glanced at him with awed and troubled eyes, held hard for
-a moment to the one realization: Noyes would not have printed, “Begins
-in the _Western States_ to-morrow,” had he not arranged for
-publication in Reever Kennard’s _World-News_....
-
-Her chair was farther away. She waited for him--as one expecting to be
-called. He turned; their eyes met full.
-
-“You are not an American soldier----”
-
-“I am an American. I have had a hard time, almost as hard as any
-soldier could----”
-
-“I wouldn’t have come--the whole city will serve you----”
-
-“That’s why I didn’t speak. No soldier could have gotten more good.”
-
-Her eyes turned downward. The room was almost dark. A knock at the door.
-
-“I must go----”
-
-He held out his hand. “Won’t you come again?”
-
-“It doesn’t seem----”
-
-He would not let her hand go. “Oh, won’t you come again?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Thank you.”
-
-Betty Berry opened the door for Noyes and another, and she passed out.
-
-
- 21
-
-NOYES said lightly:
-
-“The young lady doesn’t need to go on our account----”
-
-“But she’s gone,” Morning muttered. The walls gave him back the words.
-
-“If it’s any interest to you, Morning, I’ve followed directions in your
-letter,” the editor said presently.
-
-“The _World-News_----”
-
-“That’s what I waited for--before coming here. They’re using Field’s
-local story to-morrow morning. It’s on the wire to them now. This is
-Field.”
-
-“I had the pleasure of bringing in your manuscript from the
-_Sickles_ rather early this morning,” said the latter. “Also I did
-the story that Doctor Nevin told me.”
-
-“I wish he would come,” said Morning.
-
-“Nevin?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“He’s on his toes where you are concerned,” said Field.
-
-“He has done much for me----”
-
-“Friend Fallows is rather strong for you, too, I should say,” Noyes
-offered.
-
-He was a pale, soft, middle-aged man who gave the impression of being
-more forceful than he looked.
-
-“I owe everything to him,” said Morning.
-
-“By the way, Morning, what were you mad at, when you wrote that
-letter of directions to me? I followed it carefully as you
-said--price--_World-News_--everything. We’ll have a lot of other
-papers beside the _World-News_--but that letter made me hot under
-the collar every time I glanced at it----”
-
-“I was just about to break. I was very sick of words. Every sentence
-was like drawing a rusty chain in one ear and out the other.”
-
-“Of course you know you’ve got the world by the tail on this Russian
-end--this Liaoyang story,” Noyes observed.
-
-“I’ve written the story. The big part of the copy is here for you.”
-
-“You’re not going to quit now. Are you down and out physically?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Why, Morning,” Field broke in, “you ought to make ten thousand dollars
-in the next thirty days. You’ve got a big feature for every magazine in
-America--and then the book.”
-
-“The chance doesn’t come but once in a life time--and then only to
-God’s chosen few, who work like hell,” said Noyes, and he sat back to
-review this particularly finished remark.
-
-“What would you do?” Morning asked.
-
-“I’d start for New York to-night. Field’s story about you--the one
-we run to-night at the head of Fallows’ story--will start the game.
-A couple of installments of your big yarn will have appeared in the
-_World-News_ when you reach New York. If it ends as good as it
-begins, you’ll have the big town groggy within a week. You’ll receive
-the magazine editors in your hotel, contract to furnish so much--and
-talk off same to expert typists. That’s the way things are done. You’ve
-got the goods. New York serves a man like that. It’s nothing to me, but
-I know the game--even if I never cornered a Liaoyang story. Fallows
-said you have done more work for less money than any man in America.
-He’s one of our owners----”
-
-So Noyes rambled on; Field breaking in with fresh and timely zest.
-Morning had not looked beyond the main story. He saw separate articles
-now in every phase. It would work out.... Four days of rest--looking
-out of the car-window. He would land in New York once and for all--land
-hard--do it all at once. Then he would rest.... He was seething
-again.... With this advantage he could break into the markets that
-would stand aloof from his ordinary product for years. All day his
-devil had slept, and now was awake for rough play in the dusk. His
-dreams organized--the big markets--breaking out of the newspapers into
-the famous publications! He had the stuff. It would be as Noyes said.
-He would have thought of it for another man.
-
-“How soon can I start?” he said.
-
-“Four or five hours.”
-
-“I’m obliged to you.... Fallows seems still with me,” he said
-strangely.... “I must see Nevin----”
-
-There was a ringing in his brain at some unused door, but he did not
-answer. He was driven again. Harrowing the idea of waiting a single day
-... in these modern hours when world-events are so swiftly forgotten.
-
-Everything was settled. Morning was taken from place to place in a
-cab. Noyes not only was conscientious about seeing to every detail for
-Friend Fallows--but he made it very clear that he was not accustomed to
-spend his evenings down-town. From time to time, he dropped hints of
-what he would be doing at home at this hour. Down-town nights were all
-put away for him, he declared.
-
-The balance of the manuscript was locked in the safe at the _Western
-States_ to be set up to-morrow, and proofs sent out. The second
-and possibly third installments of the story would go to the
-_World-News_ by telegraph, the rest follow by mail.
-
-“To-morrow morning, out in the mountains, you’ll have the satisfaction
-of knowing that New York is reading Field’s story which we ran to-day.
-Is that stuff the Doctor gave us, right, Morning?”
-
-“Huh?”
-
-“Did you dream about that sorrel mare--entrails out--walking like a
-man--white death in her eyes?” Noyes pursued.
-
-“God, I wonder if I did? Did I dream that I did the big story
-twice?----”
-
-He was in pain; there was lameness in his mind at being driven again.
-He wished Noyes would go home.... Messengers were back and forth to the
-_Sickles_ trying to get Nevin. Transportation to New York was the
-newspaper’s affair; when it was handed him, something went from Morning
-that he could not get again. There was much to drink. Noyes had put all
-this from him so long that he found the novelty humorous--and yet, what
-a bore it was after all! Field was a steaming geyser of enthusiasms.
-Both talked. Others talked. Morning was sick with words. He had not
-had words drummed into his brain in so long. He half-realized that his
-impatience for all these things was disgust at himself, but all his
-past years, and their one-pointed aim held him now. This was his great
-chance.... He wanted Nevin.
-
-These city men gave him everything, and disappointed him. Had he
-been forced to battle with them for markets; had he been forced to
-accept the simple column rate, he could not have seen them as now.
-Because they had become his servants, he touched their weakness. And
-what giants he had known--Fallows and Nevin--and Endicott, the little
-Englishman at Tongu.... You must answer a man’s need when that need is
-desperate--to make a heart-hold. A man makes his friends before his
-world capitulates.
-
-He was waiting in the bar of the _Polander_.... Nevin had not
-been found. Morning was clothed, expensed; his order upon New York for
-the price of the story would not be touched until he reached there. He
-had won already; he had the world by the tail.... Nevin did not come.
-There was no bite in the drink for Morning. He was in pain; others
-made a night of it. He struggled in the pits of self, that sleepless,
-never-forgetting self. There was a calling, a calling deep within, but
-the outer noise spoiled the meaning. Men drank with single aim; they
-drank like Russian officers--to get drunk. They were drunk; all was
-rich and free. Noyes knew many whom he saw every day, and many whom
-he had seen long ago. He called them forward to meet Morning, who had
-brought in the story.... Morning who knew Duke Fallows--Morning who had
-the big story of the year, beginning to-morrow.... And always when they
-passed, Noyes remarked that the down-town stuff was silly as the devil.
-White and clerical, his oaths were effective. He drank hard and well
-as men go. Field drank well--his impulses becoming more gusty, but not
-evil.... Once Morning would have called this a night of triumph. Every
-one looked at him--talked respectfully--whispered, pointed.... Twenty
-minutes left--the crowd grew denser in the _Polander_ bar. There
-was a voice in the arch to the hotel. Ferry entered in the midst of
-men. He was talking high, his eyes dancing madly.
-
-“Why, the son of ... threw me--that’s all. He’s done with the
-_Sickles_.... Who? Why, Nevin, the squint-eyed son of a.... He
-threw me.... I thought this Morning was some drunken remittance man
-wanting passage. Reever Kennard said he was a thief.... Nevin might
-have come to me.... Why, Morning didn’t even pay his commutation for
-rations----”
-
-“I would have mailed it to you, Ferry--except for this meeting,” said
-Morning, his voice raised a little to carry.
-
-An important moment to him, and one of the strangest of his life. This
-was the man whom he had dreamed of murdering, the man who had made
-him suffer as only the gods should make men suffer. And yet Ferry was
-like an unpleasant child; and Morning, troubled by greater things,
-had no hate now, no time nor inclination to hate. The face that had
-seemed dark and pitiless on the deck in Nagasaki harbor--was only weak
-and undone--an unpleasant child crying, refusing to be quieted--an
-annoyance to the house. Such was the devil of the _Sickles_,
-the man who had stood between him and America, the man who had tried
-to make him miss beating the _Coptic_ mails.... They faced each
-other, the quartermaster, wincing and shrunken.
-
-“I had to get across, Ferry. I was too sick to make you see. Kennard
-always says that. He seems to know that best--but it isn’t true.... I
-was bad to look at. You see, I had come a long way. I was off my head
-and eyes----”
-
-“I didn’t know,” Ferry blurted, “and now Nevin has thrown me. I wasn’t
-supposed to take civilians----”
-
-“I know it--only I had to get across.... I don’t know what I’d have
-done but for Nevin. He was mother and father on the voyage. I can give
-you the commutation now----”
-
-“You were a stowaway----”
-
-“That’s what made it delicate to pay for the passage----”
-
-Ferry was broken-nerved. He suggested buying a drink, as a child who
-has learned a fancied trick of men.
-
-And Morning drank. Noyes glanced at Field, who had suddenly become pale
-and anxious with a story-idea. He was at work--drink-clouds shoved
-back and all the exterior enthusiasm--fresh as after a night’s rest. He
-was on a new story.
-
-Ferry went away and Morning looked at the clock. Only five minutes
-of his life had been used in this important transaction. Nevin had
-not come--Nevin who had lost his berth, thrown over his own work for
-him.... There would be no more _Nevin_ on the _Sickles_.
-Would he come East?
-
-“Oh, I say, Field--drop the Ferry end of the story,” Morning said.
-
-“Sure,” said Field glibly.
-
-“Nothing to it,” said Noyes.
-
-Morning was too tired to go further, though he felt their lie.
-
-“But, Nevin,” he said to Noyes.
-
-“I’ll have him found to-morrow. That’s the big local thing to-morrow.”
-
-“Tell him----”
-
-When Morning stopped telling Noyes and Field what to tell Nevin for
-him, it was time to go for the ferry. The _Polander_ slipped
-out of Morning’s mind like a dream--smoke, voices, glasses, indecent
-praise. Noyes reached across the bar for a package. That last seemed
-quite as important as anything.
-
-They left him at the ferry--these men of the _Western States_--servants
- of his action and his friends.... And somewhere in the city was little
-Nevin, who had done his work and who had not come for his pay; somewhere
-in the city, but apart from voices and adulation--the man who had
-forgotten himself in telling the story of how the news was brought
-in.... It was all desperately unfinished. It hurt him every moment.
-
-In the Pullman berth he opened the package Noyes had given him; the
-porter brought a glass. Afterward, he lay in the darkness. It was very
-still when he had become accustomed to the wheels. The going always had
-soothed him. In the still train and the peace of the road, he heard
-at last that ringing again at the new door of his life, and opened to
-Betty Berry, who had promised to come.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK II.
-
-THE HILL-CABIN
-
-
- 1
-
-MORNING sat in the yielding leather of the _Boabdil_ library,
-quite as if he had passed his youth in the midst of people who
-talk of doing things. Liaoyang had been written, even the abandoned
-impediments of retreat covered. It had all come to pass quite
-according to the early ideas of Noyes and Field. John Morning was
-Liaoyang in America. His book _Liaoyang_, magazine and newspaper
-articles gathered together, was established as important authority in
-encyclopædic and other reference books. The most captious must grant
-that living man can do no more than this.
-
-Morning had dined with the president. One after another he had made
-every magazine of note, and much money. He had done his own story of
-the journey, which proved more of a comment maker than the battle
-description; and his article on the deck passages of the Chinese
-coolies will always be an incentive to foreign missions. New York had
-waited upon him, had exploited him, given him bewildering payments, and
-called him everything, even Hugoesque and Tolstoianic. It was very hard
-for Morning to retain the conviction that there wasn’t ten pages of all
-this copy that ranked in sheer value with the ten pages of Fallows’
-_Ploughman_. He didn’t for awhile.
-
-Liaoyang was on in full magazine blast in America, while Mukden and
-Sha River were being fought across the world. At this time Morning
-spent an hour a day, as war-expert for a particularly incessant daily
-newspaper of New York. So all people knew what the campaign was about,
-and what certain generals might do, from past grooves of their wearing
-in history. Also German gentlemen of military pasts wrote letters
-disputing the prophecies. Morning had certainly arrived.
-
-The condition or place of arrival was slippery. The peace of Portsmouth
-had been protocoled.... Liaoyang, deep in the valley of desuetude, was
-without even the interest of perspective. The name, Liaoyang, made the
-mind of the world lame.... Even in the heat of arrival, the thing had
-puzzled him. Money ceased to gladden him after a few mails; did not
-spare him from the nearest irritation. Plainly he was quite the same
-John Morning after appearing in the great magazines as before; and the
-people whom he had interested were mainly of the same sort that had
-come forward in the _Polander_ bar.
-
-He had been a sick man since the Hun Crossing. When the big New York
-task was finished, and it was done with something of the same drive
-of will that characterized the second writing of the main story on
-board the _Sickles_, he was again ready to break, body and
-brain. Running down entirely, he had reached that condition which has
-an aversion to any task. His productive motors had long lain in the
-dark, covered from the dust. This was the time he clubbed about. The
-_Boabdil_ was a favorite, but even here, men drew up their chairs
-from time to time, day and night, dispatching the waiter for drink and
-saying:
-
-“Those Japs are pretty good fighters, aren’t they?” or, “What do you
-consider will become of China in the event of----” or, very cheerily,
-“Well, Mr. Morning, are you waiting for another war?”
-
-He slept ill; drank a very great deal; the wound in his side had not
-healed and he had made no great friends. He thought of these four
-things on this particular mid-day in the _Boabdil_ library....
-Nearby was old Conrad with the morning papers, summoning the strength
-to dine. It was usually late in the afternoon, before he arose to
-the occasion, but with each stimulant, he informed the nearest
-fellow-member that he was going to eat something presently. The old
-man stopped reading to think about it. After much conning, he decided
-that he had better have just one more touch of this with a dash of
-that--which he took slowly, listening for comment from within....
-After dinner he would smoke himself to sleep and begin preparing for
-the following morning’s chops. “Eat twice a day, sir--no more--not for
-years.”
-
-Conrad in his life had done one great thing. In war-time, before the
-high duty was put on, he had accumulated a vast cellar full of whiskey.
-That had meant his hour. Riches, a half century of rich dinners,
-clean collars and deep leather chairs--all from that whiskey sale....
-“Picturesque,” they said of Conrad at the _Boabdil_. “What would
-the club do without him?”...
-
-Morning watching him now, remembered an old man who used to sit at a
-certain table in a Sixth avenue bar. The high price of whiskey had
-reversed conditions in this case, and a changed collar meant funeral or
-festivity. Forty years ago this old man had bred a colt that became a
-champion. That was his hour, his answer for living. After all, Morning
-concluded, having seen Conrad fall asleep one night, the old horseman
-was less indecent.
-
-Finally Morning thought of the little Englishman at Tongu and the
-blanket; then of Fallows and Nevin--Fallows saying, “Come on upstairs,”
-that day of their first meeting at the _Imperial_, and Nevin
-saying, “Well, you gave me a night----” .... Morning began to laugh.
-“Picturesque, what-would-we-do-without Conrad”--sitting five days and
-nights on the deck passage from the mouth of the Pei-ho to the lowest
-port of Japan....
-
-He hadn’t thought much of Nevin and Fallows and the Tongu Endicott in
-the months that followed his arrival from San Francisco, when the work
-went with a rush. And Betty Berry--there were times when he was half
-sure she--name, Armory and all--formed but an added dream that Nevin
-had injected hypodermically the night before.
-
-Morning could think about all these now. The editors had begun to tell
-what _they_ wanted. He had sent in stuff which did not meet their
-needs. He was linked to war in their minds. Moreover, plentiful money
-had brought to the surface again his unfinished passion to gamble,
-as his present distaste for work had increased the consumption of
-alcohol.... It was _Reverses_ that reminded him of Fallows and
-Nevin and the Tongu blanket and the angel he had entertained in the
-Armory room.
-
-Editors didn’t care for his fiction. “A good war story is all right
-any time,” they said, but apparently his were not, for five or six
-trials didn’t take. He had a tendency to remember Fallows when he
-wrote fiction. The story of the Ploughman came curiously back to mind,
-when he was turned loose from straight narrative, and he was “balled”
-between planes.... He thought of a play....
-
-Varce now came into the library and drew up a chair. Varce had
-one of his stories; Varce edited a magazine that sold several
-million every two weeks. Long ago, with great effort, and by paying
-prodigiously, Varce had secured from Morning one of the final tiles
-of the great Liaoyang mosaic.... Varce was tall, a girl’s dream of
-poet-knight--black, wavy hair, straight excellent features, a figure
-lean enough for modern clothes.
-
-“Morning,” he said, “do you know the fighting game?”
-
-“You mean pugilistically?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I used to do fights.”
-
-Varce went on presently:
-
-“A great series of articles is to be written on the boyhood and general
-atmosphere of the men who have made great ring history--big stuff, you
-know--well written--from a man who can see the natural phenomena of
-these bruisers--how they are bred and all that. Now three things go
-into the fighter--punch, endurance, but, most of all, instinct--the
-stuff that doesn’t let him ‘lay down’ when the going is rough, and
-doesn’t keep him from putting the wallop on a groggy opponent. Many a
-good fighter has missed championship because he was too tender-hearted
-to knock-out a helpless----”
-
-“Do you like that story of mine you have, Varce?” Morning asked yawning.
-
-“Oh, it’s a good enough story--a bit socialistic--what are you trying
-to get at?”
-
-“No need of me furnishing diagrams, if the manuscript leaves you that
-way,” Morning said. “You were just saying about the last touch to a
-beating--yes, I’ve heard about those three things----”
-
-“Do you want the series?”
-
-“No, I’m doing a play.”
-
-... After Varce had gone, Morning thought it all out again. Varce was
-living a particularly unmitigated lie. Five years ago he had done
-some decent verse. He had a touch of the real poetic vision, and he
-had turned it to trade. He was using it now to catch the crowd. An
-especially sensational prostitution, this--one that would make the
-devil scratch his head.... And Varce could do without him. Liaoyang had
-not made the name of John Morning imperative. Moreover, he himself was
-living rotten. He wished he had told Varce what he thought of him and
-his multi-millionaire subscription.... He hadn’t; he had merely spoken
-of his play. The bridges were not burned behind him. He might be very
-glad to do a series of “pug” stories for Varce. There were good stories
-in these fighters--but the good stories, as he saw them, were not what
-Varce saw in the assignment.
-
-It summed up that he was just beginning over again; that he must beat
-the game all over again in a different and larger dimension--or else
-quit.... He ordered a drink.... He could always see himself. That was a
-Morning faculty, the literary third eye. He saw himself doing a series
-of the fighters--saw it even to the red of the magazine covers, and the
-stuff of the announcements.... John Morning, the man who did fifty-mile
-fronts at Liaoyang, putting all his unparalleled battle color in the
-action of a 24-foot ring. Then the challenge to the reader: “Can
-you stand a descriptive force of this calibre? If you can, read the
-story of the great battle between Ambi Viles and Two-pill Terry in
-next issue.”... He would have to tell seriously before the battle
-description, however, how Ambi was a perfect gentleman and the sole
-support of his mother, an almost human English gentlewoman. It is well
-to be orthodox.
-
-Somebody spoke of whiskey in the far end of the library, insisting
-on a certain whiskey, and old Conrad cocked up his ears out of a
-meaty dream.... Morning closed his eyes. He felt the warmth of a ship
-beneath, the drive of the cold rain on deck and the heaving of the
-sea. There was something almost sterile-clean about that deck-passage,
-compared to this.... Then he remembered again the men he had known,
-and the woman who came to the Armory room--and the long breath his
-soul took, with her coming.... Finally he saw himself years hence,
-as if he had quit the fight now and taken New York and Varce as they
-meant to use him.... He was sunk in leather, blown up like an inner
-tube and showing red, stalled in some club library, and forcing the
-world to remember Liaoyang, bringing down the encyclopædia to show his
-name, when extra drunk.... No, he would be hanging precariously to some
-porter job on Sixth avenue, trying to make the worn and tattered edges
-of his world believe how he had once carried the news from Liaoyang to
-Koupangtse....
-
-A saddle-horse racked by on the asphalt, and turned into the park.
-Morning arose. There was stabbing and scalding from the unhealed wound
-in his side. The pain reminded him of the giants he had once known and
-of the woman who came to the Armory room. It had always been so; always
-something about him unsound, something that would not heal. He had
-accepted eagerly, but ever his giving had been paltry. And he had to
-be pulled down, out of the shine of fortune, before he remembered how
-great other men had been to him.
-
-
- 2
-
-THAT night he dreamed that he had passed through death.... He was
-standing upon a cliff, between the Roaming Country and a valley of
-living earth. He did not want the spirit region; in his dream he turned
-his back upon it. He did not want the stars. Illusion or not, he wanted
-the earth. He looked down upon it through the summer night, down
-through the tree-tops into a valley that lay in the soft warm dusk. He
-watched with the passion and longing of a newly-dead mother, who hears
-her child crying for her, and senses the desolation of her mate....
-The breath of earth came up to him through the exhaling leaves--leaves
-that whispered in the mist. He could have kissed the soil below for
-sheer love of it. He wanted the cool, damp earth in his hands, and the
-thick leaf-mould under his feet, and the calm wide listening of the
-trees.... Stars were near enough, but earth was not. He wanted to be
-down, down in the drip of the night. He would wait in ardor for the
-rain of the valley.... Looking down through the tree-tops, he sensed
-the earth passion, the lovely sadness of it--and desired it, even if he
-must die again.... There was an ache in the desire--like the ache of
-thirst that puts all other thoughts away, and turns the dream and the
-picture to running water.
-
-He awoke, and went to his window in the dark. He saw New York and
-realized that he was dying for the country. His eyes smarted to tears,
-when he remembered rides and journeys and walks he had taken over the
-earth, so thoughtlessly, without knowing their boon and beauty and
-privilege.... While he was standing there, that which he had conceived
-as To-morrow, became To-day, and appeared over the rim of the opposite
-gorge of apartments. The first light of it sank far down into the tarry
-stuffiness of the pavement, but the dew that fell with the dawn-light
-was pure as heaven to his nostrils.
-
-That day he crossed the river, and at the end of a car-line beyond
-Hackensack, walked for a half-hour. It was thus that Morning found his
-hill. Just a lifted corner of a broad meadow, with a mixed company of
-fine trees atop. He bought it before dusk. The dairyman’s farmhouse was
-a quarter-mile distant; the road, a hundred and fifty yards from the
-crest of the hill, with trees thinly intervening. The south was open to
-even wider fields; in the far distance to the west across the meadows,
-the sky was sharpened by a low ribbon of woods and hill-land. In the
-east was the suspended silence of the Hudson.
-
-“I want a pump and a cabin, and possibly a shed for a horse,” he said,
-drinking a glass of buttermilk, at the dairyman’s door.
-
-He was directed to Hackensack.
-
-With the falling darkness again upon the hills, he saw that certain
-crowded, mid-growth trees were better down. The fine thought of
-building his cabin of them occurred. By the time he reached Hackensack,
-the house of logs was so dear in thought, that he wanted nothing short
-of a cabinet-joiner for such a precious task. That night he met Jake
-Robin, who was sick of nailing at houses in rows, a job that had long
-since ceased to afford deep breaths to his capacity.
-
-The next day Morning moved to Hackensack, and Jake was at work....
-Three thousand he had lost gambling ... he wished he had it now.
-Much more had been lost, and not so cleanly, in reaching the final
-_Boabdil_ realization, but he had enough. Presently he was helping
-Jake, and there was joy in it.
-
-They tapped a spring some thirty feet beneath the humped shoulder of
-the hill; built a shed for the horse he had not yet found, and then
-fitted the cabin to the fire-place of concrete and valley stone. One
-sizeable room it was, that faced the open south from the brow of the
-hill.
-
-A fine unfolding--this love of Morning’s for wood itself, and woods.
-Over a half-hundred trees were his own--elm, beech, hickory, oak,
-ash, and maple--and like a fine clean colony of idealists they stood
-meditating.... One never knows the quality of wood until one builds
-his own house. Opening the timbers for the big mortices--each was a
-fresh and fragrant discovery. Jake and he lingered long, after the
-cabin was roofed, over the heavy oak flooring, and the finishing of
-windows and doors and frames. They built some furniture together of
-hickory, which is a wood a man should handle with reverence, for it is
-fine in its way as wheat and grapes and honey and wild olives. Hickory
-answers graciously to the work of the hand, and, like a good dog,
-flourishes with men.... They built a table and bed-frame and a chest
-of drawers; and Morning at last went to Hackensack for pots, kettles,
-and tea things. Jake Robin, like one who has built a ship, was loath to
-leave without trying the cabin. Morning kept him busy in the clearing,
-long after he was in the mood to start work on the play. There was a
-platform to build for the pump; also a certain rustic bench. The shed
-needed tinkering; an extra cabinet for books was indispensable--and
-screens.... No one had ever let Jake play before in his life....
-Moreover, he was paid for the extra hour required to walk to and from
-town. All Hack heard about it.
-
-“You’ll need a chicken-coop----”
-
-“No,” said Morning. The look on Jake’s face was like old Amoya’s in
-Tokyo, when the rickshaw-runner was forbidden to take him to the
-Yoshuwara.
-
-“I can fit you up a little ice-box near the spring--so’s you’ll pump it
-full of water, and keep your vittles----”
-
-Morning wanted the stillness for the play, but he couldn’t refuse. Two
-days more. Then Jake scratched his head.
-
-“You’ll be wantin’ a vine on the cabin,” he ventured. “I know the man
-who has the little ivies.”
-
-This was irresistible. “Can you see me owning a vine?” asked Morning.
-Yet there was significance in the idea together with the play.
-
-“And I’ll build a bit of a trainer to start it. By the end of
-summer----”
-
-“Bring it on, Jake----”
-
-“An’ I’ll fetch a couple of rose vines, and dreen them with broken
-crockery from the holler----”
-
-The vine prospered and the play; and the roses began to feel for Jake’s
-trellis. The tool-box was still there.
-
-“You’ll be needin’ fire-wood for the winter. To be sure, you can buy
-it, but what’s the good, with dead stuff to be knocked down and small
-trees to be thinned out, and the shed gapin’ open for the saddle-horse
-you’re not sure of findin’? It’s wood you ought to have in there----”
-
-In fact, it was no small task to break Jake of the hill-habit. Morning
-grew accustomed to the ax, and the crashing of branches, many of which
-would have been sacrificed to the strong winds of the Fall. Meanwhile,
-the shed had come into its own, and there were piles of firewood
-seasoning in the sun and shade.
-
-He was alone with the nights; sitting there in his doorway when it was
-fine, studying the far lights of the city.... City lights meant Varce
-and Conrad, not his great friends. Every hour that he looked, he liked
-better the wind about the doorway and the open southern fields.
-
-One night he felt his first twinge of sorrow for the big city.
-Hatred, it had been before. Other men were tortured as he had been,
-but somehow, the way didn’t get into their dreams and drive them
-forth, as he had been driven. They were really not to blame for
-_Boabdilling_; they sank into the cushions and lost the sense of
-reality. And then the thousands in the hall-bedrooms and worse, to whom
-_Boabdil_ was heaven’s farthest pavilion! Morning seemed to have
-something to say to those thousands, but wasn’t ready yet.
-
-He longed for Fallows, whom he saw more clearly every day--especially
-since the _Ploughman_ had crept into the play.... He wanted to
-wait upon the big sick man; to have him here, to prepare food for him,
-and sit with him in these silences. He wanted Endicott at Tongu, too,
-and Nevin--oh, yes, Nevin. It was like a prayer that he sent out some
-nights--for the unearthing of these giants from their hiding--so that
-he could listen to them, and serve them and make them glad for their
-giving to him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A deep summer night. The purple of the north seemed washed and thinned
-in ether, (nothing else could bring out the heavenly lustre of it),
-and the black, fragile top-foliage of the woods leaned against it,
-listening, feminine. Darkness only on the ground; yet he loved it, the
-heart of the dusk that throbbed there. He loved the earth and the water
-that mingled in the hollows. He breathed with strange delight the air
-that brushed the grass and the clover-scent that came to him around the
-hill.... And this was the momentary passion--that he was going from all
-this. He loved it as one who was passing beyond. It was like the dream
-after all. Just as Mother Earth was unfolding, he was called. She was
-like a woman long lived-with, but unknown, until the sudden revelation
-of parting.... He touched the stones with his hand.
-
-In the hush, waiting for a katydid to answer, that night, Morning fell
-asleep.... He had climbed to his cabin, as if it were a room on an
-upper floor. Before he opened the door, he knew someone was within.
-Before the light, it was clear that someone was curled up asleep on the
-foot of his hard bed.... Yes, it was she who had restored his soul,
-that day at the Armory--and there she lay sleeping.... He did not call
-her, as he had called Moto-san; there was no thought to waken her, for
-everything was so pure and lovely about it. He stood there, and watched
-her gratefully--it seemed a long time--until the katydid answered.
-
-
- 3
-
-AFTER Markheim had kept the play three months--it was now
-November--Morning crossed to the city to force the decision.
-The producer was prevailed upon to see him.
-
-“It will be read once more,” said Markheim. “It will go or not. We like
-it, but we are afraid of it. To-morrow we will know or not.”
-
-“What are you afraid of?”
-
-“I don’t know. I do not read plays.”
-
-“To-morrow?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Markheim bought his opinions, and was attentive to those which cost the
-most....
-
-Morning drew a napkin the size of a doll’s handkerchief from a pile. A
-plate of eggs and bacon rung, as if hitting a bull’s-eye upon the white
-marble before him. He was still wondering what Markheim was afraid of.
-He didn’t like the feel of it. The Lowenkampf of Duke Fallows’ had
-crept into the play--Lowenkampf, whose heart was pulled across the
-world by the mother and child. How they had broken his concentration on
-the eve of the great battle.
-
-At the time, he had seen the tragic sentimentalist as one caught in a
-master weakness, but all that was gone. Lowenkampf still moved white in
-his fancy, while the other generals, even Mergenthaler, had become like
-the dim mounds in his little woodland.... And what a dramatic thing, to
-have a woman and a child breaking in upon the poised force of a vast
-Russian army. It was like Judith going down into the valley-camp of the
-Assyrians and smiting the neck of Holofernes with his own fauchion.
-Morning’s mind trailed away in the fascination of Fallows, and in the
-dimension he had been unable to grasp in those black hours of blood....
-So many things were different after this summer alone; yet he had never
-seemed quite rested, neither in mind nor body.... He had been all but
-unkillable like the sorrel Eve before that journey from Liaoyang to New
-York. Now, even after the ease and moral healing of the summer alone,
-his wound was unhealed....
-
-The telephone-miss in Markheim’s reception-room was very busy when
-he called the next afternoon.... Something about her reminded him
-of _Mio Amigo_. She was a good deal sharper. Was it the brass
-handle?... To hear her, one would think that she had come in late, and
-that New York needed scolding, even spanking, which exigencies of time
-and space deferred for the present. Her words were like the ‘spat,
-spat, spat,’ of a spanking.... She was like an angry robin, too, at one
-end of a worm. She bent and pulled, but the worm had a strangle-hold on
-a stone. It gave, but would not break.... Morning saw the manuscript
-at this point on her side-table, and the fun of the thing was done....
-She looked up, trailed a soft _arpeggio_ on the lower-right of her
-board, grasped the manuscript firmly, and shoved it to him.
-
-“Mr. Morning to see Mr. Markheim,” he said.
-
-“Mr. Markheim is----”
-
-But the husky voice of the producer just now reached them from within.
-
-“Busy----” she finished with a cough.... New York was at it again.
-_Stuyvesant_ especially had a devil, and _Bryant_ was the
-last word.
-
-“... You can’t see Mr. Markheim. This is your message----”
-
-“Oh, it really isn’t. This is just an incident. I hesitate to trouble
-you, but I must see Mr. Markheim.”
-
-The play was wrapped in the identical paper in which it had been
-brought.
-
-She must have touched something, for a boy came in--a younger brother,
-past doubt--but so bewildered, as to have become habitually staring.
-
-“Tell Mr. Markheim, Mr. Morning insists on seeing him.”
-
-The boy seemed on the point of falling to his knees to beg for mercy.
-Morning’s personal distemper subsided. Here was a drama, too--the great
-American stage.... One word came out to him from Markheim:
-
-“In-zists!”
-
-“How do you do, Mr. Morning--good afternoon.”
-
-Markheim had his hand in a near drawer, and was smiling with something
-the same expression that old Conrad used when listening for the dinner
-notice.
-
-“You see we do not want it--we are afraid,” he began, and becoming
-suddenly hopeful, since Morning drew forth no bomb, he added, “You have
-a girl’s idea of war, Mr. Morning--good afternoon.”
-
-He liked his joke on the name. “We were in doubt about the war
-part--afraid--and so we consulted an expert--one who was on the spot,”
-he said pleasantly.
-
-Morning’s mind was searching New York; his idea was fateful.
-
-“We are not bermidded to divulge who the expert is, but we did not
-spare money----”
-
-Morning’s eye was held to the desk over the shoulder of Markheim, to a
-large square envelope, eminent in blue, upon the corner of which was
-the name “Reever Kennard.”
-
-“I’m sure you did not. He was always a high-priced man,” he said
-idly.... And so this was the long-delayed answer to his appearance in
-the _World-News_ to the extent of eighty thousand words. He had
-heard that Mr. Reever Kennard was back on finance and politics....
-Markheim had not followed his mind nor caught the sentence. Morning
-passed out through the hush. He paused at the door to give the
-office-boy a present--a goodly present to be divided with the sister,
-just now occupied with a fresh outbreak of obstreperousness on the part
-of _Gramercy_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Morning had moments of something like the old rage; but the extreme
-naturalness of the thing, and its touch of humor, helped him over for
-the next hour or so. Apparently, the opportunity had fallen into the
-lap of Mr. Reever Kennard; come to him with homing familiarity. The
-war-expert had spoken, not as one offering his values gratuitously,
-but as one called and richly paid. Morning reflected that the summer
-alone on his hill must have subdued him. As a matter of fact, he was
-doubtful about the play; not because Markheim was afraid; not by any
-means because Mr. Reever Kennard had spoken, but because it had not
-come easily, and the three incidents which made the three acts did
-not stand up in his mind as the exact trinity for the integration of
-results. But one cannot finally judge his own work.
-
-He wandered straight east from that particular theatre of Markheim’s
-where the offices were and passed Fourth Avenue. He never went quite
-that way again, but remembered that there was an iron picket-fence of
-an old residence to lean against; and at the corner of it, nearer town,
-the sidewalk sank into a smoky passage where lobsters, chops, and a
-fowl or two were tossed together in front. It was all but dark. He was
-averse to taking his present mood across the river. It wasn’t fair to
-the cabin. _Mio Amigo_ recurred queerly and often to mind....
-
-“Look--there’s Mr. Morning----”
-
-“Sh-sh--oh, Charley--sh-sh!”
-
-Morning was compelled. Could this little shrinking creature, beside
-whom the under-sized brother now appeared hulking, be the same who had
-bossed Manhattan to a peak in his presence such a little while ago? She
-seemed terrified, all pointed for escape, sick from the strain of the
-street.
-
-“Why, hello!” Morning said.
-
-She pulled her brother on, saying with furious effort of will, “I’m
-sure we’re much obliged for your present----”
-
-“I had forgotten that,” Morning said.
-
-“We’re going to take in the show,” the boy remarked, drawing back. At
-large, thus, he was much better to look upon.
-
-“Come on, Charley--we mustn’t detain----”
-
-Morning had an idea, and looked at the sister as he said, “Won’t you
-have supper with me somewhere? I have nothing----”
-
-Her face was livid--as if all the fears of a lifetime had culminated
-into the dreadful impendings of this moment. She tried to speak....
-Then it came to Morning in a belated way that she thought she was
-accosted; that she connected his gift with this meeting. He couldn’t
-let her go now--and yet, it was hard for him to know what to say.
-
-“I mean we three,” he began hastily. “This play being refused rather
-knocked me out, and I didn’t know what to do with the evening. I don’t
-live in New York, you know. I thought you and your brother--that we
-might have supper together----”
-
-He spoke on desperately, trying to stir to life the little magpie
-sharpness again. It was more to her brother she yielded. New York
-must have frightened her terribly.... Morning managed to get down to
-the pair that night. He was clumsy at it, however, for it was a new
-emprise. Mostly John Morning had been wrapped and sealed in his own
-ideas. The boy was won with the first tales of war, but the sister
-remained apart with her terrors. No one had taught her that kindness
-may be a motive in itself.
-
-And now Morning was coping with what seemed a real idea: What was the
-quality of the switch-board that harnessed her character? Here she was
-wild and disordered--like a creature denied her drug. With that mystic
-rumble of angry New York in her ears--the essential buzz of a million
-desires passing through her--she was a force, flying and valuable
-force. Was she lain open to obsession now because she was removed from
-that slavery? Was that maddening vibration the lost key to her poise?
-
-He tried hard, not daring to be attentive in the least. She would have
-fled, if he had. He was boyishly kind to her brother. That awed, and
-was beginning to hold her.
-
-Morning saw clearly that she stood like a stretched wing between her
-brother’s little soul and the world. She could be brave in sheltering
-Charley. The boy was really alive. He ate and answered and listened
-and lived, the show ahead.... In the midst of it, Morning awoke to the
-fact that he was having a good time; and here was the mystery--with
-the last two people in New York he would have chosen; a two, his
-whole life-business had taught him to employ thoughtlessly, as other
-metropolitan adjuncts--pavements, elevators, messengers. Here was life
-in all its terror and complication, the same struggles he had known;
-yet he had always seen himself as a sort of Titan alone in the great
-destroying elements. The joke was on him.
-
-Charley left them for just a moment. The sister said, as if thinking
-aloud:
-
-“... And yet, he cries every morning because he has to go to the
-office. Oh, he wouldn’t go there without me----”
-
-A world of meaning in that. They were sitting in the dark of the
-_Charity Union_ play-house, with Charley between them. The aims
-and auspices of the performance were still indefinite to Morning, who
-had not ceased to grapple with his joke--the seriousness with which he
-had habitually regarded John Morning, his house, his play, his unhealed
-wound, his moral debility....
-
-For fifteen minutes a giant had marvelously manhandled his companion.
-The curtain dropped an instant, and in the place where the giant had
-performed now stood a ’cello and a chair.... She came on like the
-wraith of an angel--and sat down and played.... How long she played
-Morning never knew, but somewhere in it he caught his breath as one
-who had come back to life.... And then she was gone. The audience was
-mildly applauding. He turned to the sister leaning on the knees of the
-boy:
-
-“I know her. She is very dear to me. If you don’t mind, I’ll leave you
-now. You are safe with Charley--and some time again I’ll come. I thank
-you very much. I really want to do this again--we three----”
-
-Even though his own joy was bewildering, he saw the sudden happiness
-of Charley’s sister, who, in spite of all, had been haunted by the
-dread of the _afterward_. Now that was gone from her. Relief was
-in her face. It was all so much better than she had dared to hope. He
-had wanted nothing--except to be kind--and now he was going. She gave
-her hand impulsively.... Charley did, too, and was ordered to call a
-carriage for his sister if he wished; at all events, the means was
-attended.... Then they saw him making his way forward--putting money
-into the hands of ushers, and inquiring the way to the stage.... And
-she was there, playing again.
-
-
- 4
-
-SHE was making the people like her. Her effect was gradual.
-They had been held by more obvious displays. The instrument seemed
-very big for her, but the people liked her all the better for this....
-He could not be one with the audience, but the old watching literary
-eye--the third eye--caught the sense of the people’s growing delight.
-She made them feel that she belonged to them; as if she said:
-
-“I have come back to you. I will do just what you ask. Everything I
-have is yours----”
-
-It was different and dearer to John Morning than anything he had ever
-known. The picture came clearly to him as he walked around behind....
-This was the hour of her return. She had gone from the hearts of her
-people long ago to bring back music. It was the beautiful old story
-of their sacrifice to send her away. How splendidly she had learned;
-how thrillingly they remembered her beginnings. And she had never
-forgotten; she would always love and thank them--indeed, she was
-happier than any now.... Morning was lost for a moment in his story.
-
-She was approaching, but did not see him yet. The house was pleased
-with her, not noisily, but pleasantly. She turned to bow to the
-people--and then back toward the wings. She saw him standing there.
-Her arms went out to him, though she had not quitted the stage.... The
-gesture was new to the people.... It was different from her coming to
-him at the Armory.... They were standing together.
-
-“Why don’t you go on again?” a voice said, and with a queer irritation
-in the tone.
-
-... She was playing again--and with dash and power.
-
-Morning had to shut his eyes now, really to hear; and yet, he could
-not summon her face to mind when his eyes were shut. He thought with
-a quick burn of shame that he had once wished her prettier. Sadness
-followed, for, it seemed to him, their meeting had been broken. She
-belonged to the people and not to him. They loved her.... She was
-different. He saw it now. The audience, so pleased and joyous, lifted
-her in a way perhaps that he could never do.
-
-It was everywhere--the music. It filled the high, brick-walled stage,
-vibrated in the spiral stairways, moved mysteriously in the upper
-darkness and immensity. Behind the far wings a man was moving up and
-down in a sort of enchantment--no, he was memorizing something. A few
-of the far front rows were visible from where Morning stood, and the
-forward boxes opposite....
-
-Morning was wandering in a weird land, a hollow land. The woman’s
-playing was between him and the world of men; half for them, half for
-him. The Memorizer was but another phantom, wandering with the ghost of
-a manuscript. Between Morning and the player was only the frail, fluent
-current of music. This was a suspense of centuries.... Would she go to
-_Them_, or return to Him? The tall, dim canvases were fields of
-emptiness and silence, in which he wandered listening, tortured with
-tension; and the loft was sunless, moonless, unearthly....
-
-The music ceased. He heard the calling of the other world to her. He
-was apart in the shadows. Would she go to them, or would she remember
-him, waiting?... She was coming. He heard her step behind the wings.
-It was light as a gloved hand upon a table. He was hungry and athirst
-and breathless. For the first time he saw that her throat and arms
-were bare.... They were standing together again, but the Other Phantom
-intercepted.
-
-It was the Memorizing Man. He came forward in an agony of excitement.
-“You’ll have to prompt me,” he said to Betty Berry, speaking roughly in
-his tension. “It’s my first time with this new dope. I thought I had
-it, but I ain’t--and there’s a barrel of it.”
-
-The stage was slightly changed. Morning was thinking how hideous the
-work of some men. The Phantom was scourged with the fear of one who was
-to do imperfectly what another had written. The woman had carried a
-small table and chair to the wings, out of view of the audience and as
-near as possible to the Memorizer.... Morning found something soft and
-fragrant in his hands. Betty Berry’s wrap, which she had given to him
-before going to the table. And now the monologue had begun.... It was
-to be humorous.
-
-Betty Berry, standing beside the table, raised her eyes from the paper,
-and beckoned to Morning. His first thought was that he might disturb
-her prompting, and he hesitated. She looked up again. Then he thought
-she might want her wrap. He tiptoed forward and put it around her
-shoulders.
-
-“It wasn’t that,” she whispered, her eyes upon the paper. “I wanted you
-to keep me company. This is long. Sit down.”
-
-“Won’t _you_--sit down?” he said from behind, very close to her
-hair.
-
-She shook her head.... It was peculiar--she standing, and he in the
-chair. The soft wrap winged out, and her arm beneath slid across his
-shoulder; the hollow of her left arm against his cheek. He kissed it,
-and his face burned against its coolness.
-
-She shivered slightly, but did not take her arm away. Now he looked
-up into her face--her eyelids drawn, her lips compressed, her gaze
-steadily held to the manuscript. The Phantom was carried on by the
-alien humor. Laughter was beginning to crackle here and there through
-the house. Betty Berry followed with her eyes--just the words.
-
-“I was so glad to find you,” Morning whispered.
-
-Her lips moved.
-
-Matters tumbled over each other in his mind to say to her; he was
-thinking sentences rather than words. He knew that it was not well
-to talk now, but there seemed so much to say, and so little time. He
-caught himself promising to give her understanding, and he told her
-that she seemed everything he wanted to know. His cheek was burning as
-never before....
-
-The remotest happened. The Phantom faltered in a climax, and covered
-the difficulty with a trick--awaiting the line from the wings. Betty
-Berry had become rigid. Her eyes would not see the page.
-
-Morning spoke a sentence in a low, carrying way. He had plucked it from
-the page painfully near his own eyes. It may be that the Memorizer
-righted himself, or that the prompted line was what he needed. Anyway,
-he was going again, and rising to the end....
-
- * * * * *
-
-The two stood together while the house laughed, recalling the performer.
-
-“Thanks. I caught it fine,” the Phantom said hastily. “Not even the
-front rows knew. I was listening for Miss Berry--and your cue came----”
-
-“It went all right,” said Morning.
-
-The other took the manuscript and passed on, rolling a cigarette....
-For just a moment, the two were alone. Into each other’s arms they
-went, with the superb thoughtlessness of children ... and then they
-heard steps and voices.... He wondered that Betty Berry could laugh and
-reply to those who spoke to her.... He wanted to escape with her. Never
-had he wanted anything so much. He was exhausted, humbled, inspired. To
-be out in the street with her--it seemed almost too good to be.... She
-was saying good-night and good-bye. He followed, carrying the ’cello.
-
-
- 5
-
-MORNING remembered that he had thought of her once before as having
-braids down behind--as if they were boy and girl together, and now it
-seemed as if they were wandering through some Holland street. He had
-never been in a Holland street, but the sense of it came to him--as he
-walked with her, carrying her instrument. His primary instinct was to
-turn away from the noise of the cars, and where the lights were less
-glaring. Moreover, now that they were alone, the impulse to say many
-things had left him.
-
-“We must hurry to the ferry--there is only a few minutes----”
-
-He had known somehow that she was going away--perhaps from something
-she had said to the others at the theatre.
-
-“You’re not going way back to--to the Armory?”
-
-“No, to Europe just for a few weeks. I sail to-morrow morning from
-Baltimore. All we have to do is to catch the ferry and train. I have
-sleeper-tickets--and berth and all----”
-
-“I’ll--I’ll go across on the ferry with you,” he said huskily.
-
-She felt his suffering by her own, and said:
-
-“My old master is there. I am to meet him--I think in Paris--I shall
-know when I reach London. There is to be just a few private concerts
-and some lessons further from him. For two years we’ve planned to do
-this. I go to Baltimore, because it is cheaper to sail from there----”
-
-“And you’ll be back--when?”
-
-“By the first of March--just a few days over three months----”
-
-He was silent for a time, and then asked: “Do you think this is just
-like a chance meeting to me--as one meets an old friend in New York?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“I was in a whirl when I saw you,” he said desperately. “It was such a
-pretty thing, too--the way I happened to come to the theatre ... and
-now you’re going away----”
-
-“Yes--yes--but it’s only a little while----”
-
-“Did you know I was here in New York?”
-
-“I knew you had been. I saw your work----”
-
-“But anywhere my work appears--a letter sent in care of the paper or
-magazine would find me----”
-
-“We--I mean women--do not write that way----”
-
-“I know--I know.... But _I_ didn’t have anything but the name,
-‘Betty Berry’----”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It seemed that night after I left you at the Armory everyone was
-talking about John Morning. And to think I supposed you just a
-soldier. Everywhere, it was what John Morning had done, and what he
-had endured--and I had spent the afternoon with you. I started to read
-that story about your journey, but I couldn’t go on. It seemed that I
-would die before I was half through your sufferings.... I would try
-to think of the things we said, but they didn’t come back. I couldn’t
-rest. I was glad you asked me to come again. I could hardly wait for
-the morning--to go back to the Armory----”
-
-He had no answer. They were in a cross-town car.
-
-“But I think I understand. We won’t say anything of that again....”
-
-“You went back to the Armory that next morning?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“Oh, but I wasn’t ready,” he said at last, as if goaded by pain. “I had
-so much to learn. Why, I had to learn this--how little this means----”
-
-He pointed out of the windows to the city streets.
-
-“You mean New York?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“It really seems as if men must learn that, first of all. You have done
-well to learn so soon.”
-
-“It’s so different now. I must have been half-unconscious that day when
-you came. You were like an angel. I didn’t know until afterward what
-it really meant to me.... You remember the men who came--newspaper
-men? They showed me what I could do in New York--how I could make the
-magazines and the big markets. I was knocked-out. You must see it--all
-I wanted to do in coming years--to make what seemed the real literary
-markets--all was to be done in a few weeks.... It was not until I was
-on the train that night that I remembered you were a living woman, and
-had come to me.... Then I didn’t know what to do.... But ever since I
-have thought of that afternoon, every day....”
-
-They boarded the ferry and moved away from the rest of the people.
-
-“I hate to have you go,” he said. The words were wrung from him. They
-were such poor and common words, but his every process of thought
-repeated them. He looked back the years, and found a single afternoon
-in the midst of passionate waste--the single afternoon in which she
-came.... She was everything to him. He wanted to go on and on this way,
-carrying her ’cello. He could ask no more than to have her beside him.
-He had learned the rest--it was trash and suffering. He wanted to tell
-her all he knew--not in the tension of this momentary parting--but
-during days and years, to tell his story and have her sanction upon
-what was done, and to be done. She was dear; peace was with her.... She
-would tell him all that was mysterious; together they would be One Who
-Knew. Together they would work--do the things that counted, and learn
-faith....
-
-She took the ’cello from him, so that he could carry to the Pullman her
-large case checked in the Jersey station.... It was very quiet and dark
-in the coach. All the berths were made up but one, in which they sat
-down.... They were alone. It was perfect.
-
-“I can’t go back now. I’ll go on with you to Trenton.... I have thought
-so much of meeting you.... When the men came that day to the Armory
-they showed me everything that seemed good then--fame and money waiting
-in New York. It seemed that it couldn’t wait another day--that I must
-go that night.... When the train started (it was like this in Oakland)
-I thought of you--of you, back in ’Frisco and coming to the Armory in
-the morning. It broke me. But I wasn’t right--not normal. I had worked
-like a madman--wounds and all. I worked like a madman in New York----”
-
-She put her hand on his. Her listening centered him. That was it--as if
-he had not been whirling true before.... Her hand, her listening, and
-he was himself--eager to give her all that was real.
-
-“It’s so good to have you here,” she said in a low, satisfied way.
-“Will you be able to get a train back all right?”
-
-“Yes.” Now he thought of Charley and his sister.
-
-“It was such a good little thing that brought me to you,” he said.
-“One of the little things that I never thought of before,” he told her
-hurriedly.
-
-“They are very wonderful--those little things, as you call them.... A
-person is so safe in doing them----”
-
-“I must tell Duke Fallows about that,” he added. “About that word
-‘safe,’ as you just said it.... Did you read his story?”
-
-“About the _Ploughman_?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Oh, it was wonderful!” Betty Berry said. “He made me see it. It was
-almost worth a war to make people see that----”
-
-She stopped strangely. He was bending close, watching her.
-
-“Do you know you are a love-woman?”
-
-“You mean something different?” she asked queerly.
-
-“I mean you are everything--don’t you see? You know everything at once
-that I have to get bruised and tortured to know. And when you are here,
-I know where I am. It’s different from any kind of resting to be here
-with you. It’s kind of being made over. And then you are so--tender----”
-
-“You make the tears come, John Morning.”
-
-Now, it was very dark where they were; the real silences began. He knew
-the most wonderful thing about her--her listening.... Sometimes, she
-seemed hardly there. Sometimes the love for her and the sweet quality
-of it all--shut his throat, and he stared away in the dark. It came to
-him that Betty Berry--left to herself--would be infallible. She might
-do wrong, through the will of someone else, but her own impulses were
-unerringly right. There was delicacy, perhaps, from the long summer
-alone, in this sense that he must not impose his will. She would be
-unable to refuse anything possible. If ever Betty Berry were forced to
-refuse anything he asked, they would never be the same together. And
-so he studied her. Her nature was like something that enfolded. It was
-like an atmosphere--his own element.
-
-“Betty----”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Betty----”
-
-“Yes-----”
-
-And then she laughed and kissed him. He was saying her name in the very
-hush of contemplation; so real that the name was all....
-
-
- 6
-
-THE Pullman conductor passing through after Trenton gave
-Morning further passage, and moved on with a smile. A wonderful old
-darkey was the porter, very huge, past seventy, with a voice purringly
-kind, and the genial deference of the Old South. Morning was thinking
-there couldn’t be better hands in which to leave the Betty Berry....
-Fifteen minutes at Philadelphia; they hurried out for a cup of coffee.
-As one of the big station clocks marked the minutes, Morning felt havoc
-with a new and different force.
-
-“I can’t go back now,” he said.
-
-“You look so tired--the long night journey back----” she faltered.
-
-“Would you like to have me go farther--to Wilmington--to Baltimore?”
-
-“Oh, yes.”
-
-“And you won’t mind staying up?”
-
-Betty Berry covered her eyes.... “I never rested in quite the same way
-as to-night,” she said. “It has been happy--so happy, unexpected. I
-shall have nine days at sea to think of it--to play and think of it,
-moment by moment.”
-
-“I’ll go with you clear through to the ship then.”
-
-The clock ceased its torment.
-
-“Have you plenty of money to get back--and all?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Are you sure--because I could loan you some?”
-
-He told her again, but the thought held a comradeship that gripped him.
-It happened that he was plentifully supplied; though he would have
-walked back rather than confess otherwise--a peculiar stupidity. The
-beaming of the old porter made the moment at the steps of the coach so
-fine, Morning found himself explaining:
-
-“The lady is sailing from Baltimore in the morning. I’ve decided to go
-clear through to the pier.”
-
-This was an extraordinary thing for him to explain.
-
-They sat in silence until the train moved, and they could forget the
-snoring.... The coach grew colder, and Betty unpacked a steamer rug
-which they used for a lap-robe. Even the old darkey went to sleep after
-Wilmington.
-
-“Letters--” she said at last. “I have been thinking about that....
-There’s no way to tell where I am to be. I won’t know until London,
-where I am to meet my old master. Perhaps then I could tell you--but
-I daren’t think of letters and risk disappointment.... You must wait
-until I write you----”
-
-Morning began to count the days, and she knew what was in his mind.
-
-“That’s just it--one gets to lean on letters. One’s letters are never
-one’s self. I know that extended writing throws one out from the true
-idea of another. I shall think of to-night during the weeks.... It
-seems, we forgot the world to-night. There--behind the scenes--how
-wonderful.... There was no thought about it. I just found myself in
-your arms----”
-
-“Then I am not to write--until I hear from you?” he asked. It had not
-occurred to him before that she could have any deeper reason than an
-uncertain itinerary.
-
-“That will be best.... Don’t you see, writing is your work. It will
-make you turn your training upon me. Something tells me the peril of
-that. As to-night dimmed away--you would force the picture.... Trained
-as you, one writes to what he wishes one to be, not to what one is....
-You would make me all over to suit--and when I came, there would be a
-shock.... And then think if some night--very eager and heart-thumping,
-I should reach a city--so lonely and hungry for my letter--and it
-shouldn’t be there.... No, to-night must do for me. I shall go on my
-way playing and biding my time, until the return steamer. Then some
-morning, about the first of March, you shall hear that I am back--and
-that I am waiting for my real letter----”
-
-“And where did you learn all this--about a man writing himself out of
-the real?” John Morning asked wonderingly.
-
-“If I were to be in one place to receive your letters, I might not have
-thought of it--yet it is true.... Then, my letters are nothing. Perhaps
-I am a little afraid to write to you. I think with the ’cello----”
-
-“All that seems very old and wise, beyond my kind of thinking,” he said.
-
-For a long time she was listening. It was like that first afternoon....
-What did Betty Berry hear continually? It gave him a conception of
-what receptivity meant--that quiescence of all that is common, that
-abatement of the world and the worldly self, that quality purely
-feminine. It was like a valley receiving the afternoon sunlight. He
-realized vaguely at first that the mastery of self, necessary for such
-listening, is the very state of being saints pray for, and practice
-continually to attain.... Perhaps, he thought, this is the way great
-powers come--from such listening--the listening of the soul; perhaps
-such power would come again and again, if only the strength of it were
-turned into service for men; perhaps it was a kind of prayer.... It was
-all too vague for him to speak....
-
-She was first to whisper that the dawn had come.
-
-“I love you,” he said.
-
-He saw her eyes with the daylight, as he had not seen them since that
-first afternoon--gray eyes, very deep. The same strange hush came to
-him from them. And there was a soft gray lustre with the morning about
-her traveling-coat; and her brown hair seemed half-transparent against
-the panes. No one was yet abroad in the coach.
-
-“I don’t seem to belong at all--except that I love you,” he whispered.
-
-“Tell me--what that means--oh, please----”
-
-“When I think of what I am, and who I am, and what I have been--and
-what common things I have done in the stupidity of thinking they were
-good,” he explained with a rush of words: “when I think of the dozen
-turnings in my life, when little things said or done by another have
-kept me from greater shame and nothingness--oh, it doesn’t seem to me
-that I belong at all to such a night as this! But when I feel myself
-here, and see you, and how dear you are to me, how you wait for my
-words, and what happiness this is together--then it comes to me that
-I don’t belong to those other things, but only to this--that I could
-never be a part of those old thoughts and ways, if you were always
-near----”
-
-“And I have waited a long time.... The world has said again and again,
-‘He will never come,’ but something deeper of me--something deeper
-than plays the ’cello, kept waiting on and on. That deeper me seemed to
-know all the time.”
-
-Talking and listening carried them on. John Morning had the different
-phases of self segregated in an astonishing way. He spoke of himself
-as man can only with a woman--making pictures of certain moments, as a
-writer does. Volumes of emotion, they burned, talking and listening,
-leaning upon each other’s words and thoughts. They were one, in a very
-deep sense of joy and replenishment. They touched for moments the plane
-of unity in which they looked with calm upon the parting, but the woman
-alone poised herself there. They left the old darkey--a blessing in
-his voice and smile. Such passages of the days’ journeys were always
-important to Betty Berry.
-
-Morning fell often from the heights to contemplate the journey’s
-end and the dividing sea. In spite of his words, in spite of his
-belief--his giving was not of her quality of giving. His replenishment
-was less therefore.... They moved about the streets of Baltimore in
-early morning. The baggage went on to the ship. An hour remained.
-Sounds and passing people distracted him. The woman was fresher than
-when he had seen her last night, but Morning was haggard and full of
-needs.... She was a continual miracle, unlike anything that the world
-held--different in every word and nestling and intonation. Much of her
-was the child--yet from this _naive_ sweetness, her mood would
-change to a womanhood which enfolded and completed him, so that they
-were as a globe together. In such instants she brought vision to his
-substance; mind to his brain, intuition to his logic, divination to his
-reason, affinity to each element--enveloping him as water an island.
-The touch of her hand was a kiss; and of her kiss itself, passion was
-but the atmosphere; there was earth below and sky above.... She took
-him to the state-room where she was to be, “so you will know where I
-am when you think of me.”... They heard the knock of heels on the deck
-above....
-
-He could not think. He heard them calling for visitors to go ashore....
-He thought once it was too late, and when he was really below on the
-wharf and she above, and he realized that the wild hope of being taken
-away with her, (his own will not entering, as the serpent entered
-Eden,) he could hardly see her for the blur--not of tears, but of his
-natural rending. Her voice was but one of many good-byes to the shore,
-yet it came to him out of the tumult of voices and whistles--as a ewe
-to find her own.
-
-
- 7
-
-MORNING heard some one nearby say that so-and-so had not
-really sailed, but was just going down the bay.... It was thus he
-learned that he might have passed the forenoon with Betty Berry on
-the Chesapeake. In fact, there was no reason for him not taking the
-voyage.... In a quick rush of thinking, as he stood there on the
-piers, all his weaknesses paraded before him, each with its particular
-deformity. The sorry pageant ended with a flourish, and he was left
-alone with the throb of the unhealed wound in his side.
-
-Betty Berry would not have agreed to let him take the voyage, just for
-the sake of being with her. He knew this instinctively, but perhaps it
-might have been managed.... To think he had missed the chance of the
-forenoon.... The liner was sliding down the passage, already forgotten
-by the lower city.... Morning found himself looking into the window of
-a drink-shop. Bottles and cases of wine in their dust and straw-coats
-were corded in the window, which had an English dimness and look of
-age. A quiet place; the signs attested that ales were drawn from
-the wood and that many whiskeys of quality were within. Something
-of attraction for the spirituous imagination was in the sweet woody
-breath that reached him when he opened the door. A series of race-horse
-pictures took his mind from himself to better things.
-
-These influences played merely upon the under-surfaces of an
-intelligence whose thoughts followed the steamer down the Chesapeake
-as certainly as the flock of gulls.... It was that quiet time in the
-morning, after the floors are washed. The day was bright, with just a
-touch of cold in the air.
-
-... A drink improved him generally. He examined the string of horses
-again, and talked to the man behind. The man declared it was his law
-not to drink oftener than once in the half-hour, during the forenoon;
-he stated that it paid to exert this self-control, as his appetite was
-better and he was less liable to “slop over” in the afternoon. Morning
-was then informed that oysters were particularly good just now, and
-that a man with a weak stomach could live on oysters.... There was just
-one little flange of an oyster that was indigestible. The man knew
-this because drink makes one dainty about his eating, and one can tell
-what agrees with him or otherwise. Furthermore, one could detach the
-indigestible flange in one’s mouth before swallowing--anyone could with
-practice. The man glanced frequently at the clock.... Well, he would
-break over, just once, and make up later. A half hour was sometimes a
-considerable portage.... They became companionable.
-
-Morning started back for New York at noon. The particular train he
-caught was one of the best of its kind. The buffet, the quality of
-service and patronage had a different, an intimate appeal to-day.
-He sat there until dark--in that sort of intensive thinking which
-seemed very measured and effective to Morning. His chief trend was
-a contemplation, of course, of the night before. Aspects appeared
-that did not obtrude at all with the woman by him. Considering the
-opportunity, he had kissed her very rarely, as he came to think of
-it....
-
-His fellow-passengers let him alone. He reflected that he could always
-get along with the lower orders of men--with sailors, soldiers,
-bartenders; with the Jakes, Jethros, and Jerries of the world. Duke
-Fallows had remarked this.... Duke Fallows ... the old Liaoyang
-adventure came back more clearly than it had for months.... That
-_was_ a big set of doings. Certainly there was a thrill about
-those days, when one stopped to think.
-
-At dinner time, approaching the end of the journey, Morning met a
-pronounced disinclination to stay on the Jersey side. The little cabin
-on the hill was certainly not for this condition of mind. He had
-to stop and think that it was only yesterday noon when he left the
-cabin. A period of time that flies rapidly, appears strangely long
-when regarded from the moments of its closing. The period of the past
-thirty hours since he had left the hill was like a sea-voyage. The
-lights across the river had a surprising attraction. When he realized
-the old steam of alcohol, his mind glibly explained that it was merely
-an episode of a sick and overwrought body; that the real John Morning,
-of altruism and aspiration, was away at sea with the love-woman, much
-cherished, the very soul of him.
-
-More than a half-year before he had fled to the country, weary
-to nausea of men in chairs and buffets. The animalism of it had
-utterly penetrated him at last; the Conrad study was but one of many
-revelations. He had hated the _Boabdil_; and hated more the
-processes of his own mind when alcohol impelled. Only yesterday morning
-he had hated the whole vanity of New York leisure, with the same
-freshness that had characterized his first month of cleanliness. Yet
-he found novelty in the present adventure; the prevailing illusion of
-which was that he was wrong yesterday rather than now. That night he
-sought his old haunts. There was a gladness about it.
-
-“One mustn’t be too much alone,” he decided, “especially if he
-is to write.... I must have got cocky sitting there alone by the
-cabin-door.... These fellows aren’t so bad....”
-
-Presently he was telling the old story of Liaoyang. That roused him
-a little and pulled upon mental fibers still lame.... Was he to be
-identified always with that?... A week later he was telling the story
-of breaking away from the Russians at Liaoyang and making the journey
-alone to Koupangtse. This was in a strangely quiet bar on Eighth
-Avenue, in the Forties. A peculiarity about this particular telling of
-the story was that he remembered the ferryman on the Hun--the one who
-had wakened the river-front as he led Eve down to drink--the ferryman
-who was a leper....
-
-As days passed he went down deeper than ever before. “I must have had
-this coming----” he would say, and refused to cross the river to rest.
-There were moments when he felt too unutterably dirty to go to the
-cabin. One day, he kept saying, “I’m going to see this through.” And
-on another day he reflected continually (conscious of the cleverness
-of the thought) that this drink passage was like the journey to
-Koupangtse.... Then there was the occasion when it broke upon him
-suddenly that he was being avoided at the _Boabdil_. He never went
-back.... One morning he joined some sailors who had breezed in from
-afar. They brought him memories and parlances; their ways were his
-ways all that day, whose long drift finally brought them to Franey’s
-_Lobelia_, as tough and tight a little bar as you would ask any
-modern metropolis to furnish. The sailors were down and done-for now,
-but Morning stood by for the end, enjoying the place and the wide
-bleakness of it.... A slumming party came in about midnight--young men
-and women of richness and variety, trying to see bottom by looking
-straight down--as if one could see through such dirty water.
-
-The city’s dregs about him--a fabric of idiocy and perversion and
-murder--did not look so fatuous nor wicked to Morning’s eye, as did
-this perfumed company. They thought they were seeing life, but, deeper
-than brain, they knew better; their laughter and their voices were
-off the key, because they were not being true to themselves. Franey’s
-regulars were glad for the extra drinks, but Morning had a fury. His
-shame for the party was akin to the shame he had held for Lowenkampf on
-the eve of battle long ago. He arose, short and flaming, yet conscious
-even in his rage of the brilliance of his idea.
-
-“You people make me sick,” he said, lurching out. “You’d have to be
-_slumee_ to see how silly you look----”
-
-They tried to detain him--to laugh at him--but one woman knew better.
-Her low voice of rebuke to her companions was a far greater rebuke to
-John Morning at the door.
-
-... Finally he began to wonder how long they would keep on giving him
-money at the bank. He turned up every day. No matter what he drew it
-was always gone. Sometimes a holiday tricked him, and he suffered. He
-watched for Sundays, after he learned.... The banking business was a
-hard process, because he had to emerge; had to come right up to the
-window and speak to a clean, white man--who had known him before. It
-became the sole ascent of Morning’s day--a torturing one. He washed and
-shaved for it, when possible, and after a time managed frequently to
-save enough to steady his nerves for the ordeal. Then he had to write
-his name, and always a blue eye was leveled at him, and he felt the
-dirt in his throat.... So he drifted for six weeks, and it was winter.
-
-His descent was abrupt and deep. He tried to get back, and found his
-will treacherous. He was prey at times to abominable fears. His body
-was unmanageable from illness. There were times when it would have
-meant death or insanity not to drink. For the first time in his life
-he encountered an inertia that could not be whipped to the point of
-reconstructivity. His thoughts cloyed all fine things; his expression
-made them mawkish and teary; his emotions overflowed on small matters.
-Betty Berry, around whom all this brooding revolved, hardly reached
-a plane worthy of interpretation. Morning’s conception of the woman
-on the afternoon she came to the Armory, or on the night-trip to
-Baltimore, contrasted with this mental apparition of the sixth week:
-
-“She is a professional musician, making her own way in the world, and
-taking, as many a man would, the things that please her as she passes.
-This is not the great thing to her that it is to me. Other men have
-doubtless interested her suddenly and rousingly, and have gone their
-way.... Had she been a stranger to a man’s sudden loving she would
-never have beckoned me to the chair in the wings that night. She would
-never have come to my arms--as I went to hers----”
-
-Sweat broke from him. The savage and abandoned company of thoughts
-had ridden down all else, like a troop of raiders, destroying as they
-went.... The troop was gone; the shouting died away--but he was left
-more lewd and low than the worst. He had defiled the image of the
-woman who had given herself so eagerly. He recalled how he had talked
-of understanding, how he had praised her in his thoughts because she
-was brave enough to be natural, and to act as a natural woman who has
-found her own, after years of repression. The other side of the shield
-was turned to torture him--the sweet, low-leaning, human tenderness of
-Betty Berry, her patience, her endless and ever-varying bestowals. She
-had called his the voice of reality, and become silent before it; had
-proved great enough to remain undestroyed in a man’s world; her faith
-and spirit arose above centuries of lineage in a man’s world--and she
-was Betty Berry who knew her lover’s presence, though they were almost
-strangers to each other, and opened her arms to him....
-
-It was a hell that he vividly reviewed for seven weeks, and with no
-Virgil to guide. A scene or two from the final day is enough:
-
-... He had come from the bank about one in the afternoon, and had taken
-a chair in the bar of the _Van Antwerp_. He was neither limp
-nor sprawling, but in a condition of queer detachment from exterior
-influences. He knew that it was daylight; heard voices but no words,
-and carried himself with the rigid effort of one whose limbs are
-habitually flippant. Perhaps it was because he was so very generous
-to the waiter that he was allowed to close his eyes without being
-molested. In any event, his consciousness betrayed him, and away he
-went in the darkness of dream: The Ferryman of the Hun was poling
-away at the stream and he, John Morning, was but one of a company in
-passage. It was not the Hun river this time; the sorrel Eve was not
-there. Not alone the Ferryman, but all on board were lepers--he, John
-Morning in the midst of them, a leper. The old wound was witness to
-this.... They tried to land at the little towns but natives came forth
-and drove them away. Down, down stream they went and always natives
-came forth to warn them as they neared the land.... Even when they drew
-in to the marshes and the waste-places natives appeared and stoned them
-away.... And so they went down--to the ocean and the storm and Morning
-opened his eyes.
-
-Opposite, his back to the marble bar, his elbows braced against the
-rail, stood Mr. Reever Kennard, watching him, and the look upon the
-face of the famous correspondent was that of scornful pity--as if there
-was a truce to an old enmity, no longer worth while.
-
-Still later on that day, over on Second Avenue, Morning almost bumped
-into a small yellow sign at the elevator entrance to the Metal Workers’
-Hall, to the effect that Duke Fallows was to address a gathering there
-that night.
-
-
- 8
-
-A FLASH of love came to his heart for Duke Fallows at the
-sight of the name. There was nothing maudlin about this; rather, a
-decent bit of stamina in the midst of sentimental overflows. It was
-the actual inside relation, having nothing to do with the old surface
-irritation.... Morning took care of himself as well as he could during
-the day. He meant to mix with the crowd at the meeting, but not to make
-himself known until he was free from vileness. He would keep track of
-the other’s place and movements in New York. When he was fit--there
-would be final restoration in the meeting. His heart thumped in
-anticipation. The yellow poster had turned the corner for him. These
-first thoughts of the upward trend are interesting:
-
-He meant to cross the river and build a big fire in the cabin. There
-he would fight it out and cleanse the place meanwhile, in preparation.
-He pictured the cabin-door open, water on the floor, the fire burning,
-the smell of soap. He would heat water, wash his blankets, put them out
-in the sun; polish his kettles with water and sand. Every detail was
-important, and how strangely his mind welcomed the freshness of these
-simple thoughts. The glass of the windows would flash in the morning,
-and the door of oak would gleam with its oil.... Finally he would bring
-Duke there.
-
-This was the triumph of it all. He would bring the sick man home;
-tend the fire for him, go to the dairyman’s for milk and eggs. They
-could call Jake and talk to him--seeing the heart of a simple man....
-They would talk and work together ... the sick man looking up at the
-ceiling, and he, Morning, at the machine as in the old days. Spring
-would come, the big trees would break their buds and sprinkle the
-refuse down--and, God, it would be green again--all this rot ended....
-So the days would pass quickly until Betty Berry came.... Duke would be
-glad to hear of her.
-
-... That night Morning went in with the workers to their Hall and sat
-far back. The meeting had been arranged under socialistic auspices;
-seven hundred men at least were present. Through the haze of pipe,
-cigarette, and cigars, Duke Fallows came forth.
-
-And this was no sick man. His knees were strong, and there was a
-lightness of shoulder that did away with the huddle of old times. His
-eyes shone bright under the hanging lamp, and his laugh was as far as
-Asia from scorn. There was brown upon him; his hands, when they fell
-idle, were curved as if to fit a broad-ax, and “I’m glad to be with
-you, men,” he said.
-
-“... I have come to tell you a story--my story. Every man has one. I
-never tell mine twice the same, but some time I shall tell it just
-right, and then the answer shall come.”
-
-Power augmented in the silence of the smoky hall. The gathering
-recognized the artist that had come down to them, because he loved
-the many and belonged with them. They gave him instinctively the rare
-homage of uncritical attention. Fallows told of Liaoyang--of the whole
-preparation--of the Russian singing, the generals, the systems by
-which men were called to service. Always the theme that played through
-this prelude was the millet of Manchuria. He told of the great grain
-fields, the feeding troop-horses, the hollows between the hills--how
-the ancient Chinese city stood in a bend of the river--of the outer
-fighting, the rains, the mass of men, the Chinese.
-
-This new Duke Fallows hated no man; had no scorn for the Russian
-chiefs. His ideas of service and humanity concerned Russia rather than
-Japan--and not the imperialistic Russia, but the real spirit--the
-toiler, the dreamer, the singer, the home-maker--the Russia that was
-ready, perhaps as ready as any people in the world, to put away envy,
-hatred, war; to cease lying to itself, and to grasp the reality that
-there is something immortal about simplicity of life and service for
-others. What concerned this Russia, Fallows declared, concerned the
-very soul of the western world.
-
-He placed the field for the battle in a large way--the silent, watery
-skies, all-receiving _kao-liang_, and the moist earth that held
-the deluges. Morning choked at the picture; the action came back again
-as Fallows spoke--Lowenkampf himself--the infantry of Lowenkampf
-slipping down the ledges into the grain--Luban, machine-guns, rout--the
-little open place in the millet where the Fallows part of the battle
-was fought.
-
-“... He was a young Russian peasant. If he came into this hall now,
-we would all know instinctively that he belonged to us. He was fine
-to look upon that day, coming out of the grain--earnest, glad, his
-heart turned homeward. His enemy was not Japan, but Imperialism, and
-defeat was upon it. This defeat meant to him, as it did to hundreds
-of soldiers in that hour--the beginning of the road home. Luban was
-burning with the shame of detected cowardice. A common soldier had
-commented upon it in passing. And now this young Russian peasant met
-the eyes of Luban, and the two began to speak, and I was there to
-listen.
-
-“The peasant said that this was not his war; that he had been forced
-to come; that it meant nothing to him if Russia took Manchuria; but
-that it meant a very great deal to him--this being away--because his
-six babies were not being fed by the Fatherland, and his field was not
-being ploughed.
-
-“It was very simple. You see it all. The Fatherland forced starvation
-upon a man’s children, while his field remained unploughed. Only a
-simple man could say it. You must be straight as a child to speak such
-epics. It is what you men have thought in your hearts.
-
-“Of course, Luban only knew he was an officer and the man was not.
-Machine-guns were drumming in the distance, and the grain was hot and
-breathless all about. The forward ranks were terribly broken--the
-soldiers streaming back past us. Luban, who opened the discussion, was
-getting the worst of it, and his best reply was murder. He handled the
-little automatic gun better than the cause of the Fatherland--shot the
-_Ploughman_ through the breast. I thrust him back to take the
-falling one in my arms....
-
-“We seemed alone together. There was power upon me. Even in the
-swiftness and tumult of the passing I made the good man see that I
-would father his babes, look to the ploughing of his field, and be
-the son of his mother. His passing made all clear to me. His message
-was straight from the heart of the world’s suffering poor, from the
-heavy-laden. He spoke to kings and generals, and to all who have and
-are blind. There in the havoc of the retreat, dying in my arms--he
-made it vivid as the smiting sun of Saul--that this hideous disorder
-of militia was not his Fatherland. He would have fought for the real
-Fatherland. He was a son in spirit, and a state-builder; he would have
-fought for that; he was not afraid to die....
-
-“Love for him had come strangely to my heart, men. I said to him--words
-I cannot remember now--something I had never been able to write,
-because I had not written for men before, but for some fancied elect.
-I made him know that he had done well, that his field would bring
-forth, and that his house would glow red with firelight.... I think my
-Ploughman felt as I did even before his heart was still--that there is
-something beyond death in the love of men for one another.... It was
-wonderful. We forgot the battle. We forgot Luban and the firing. We
-were one. His spirit was upon me--and the good God gave him peace.
-
-“I tell you quietly, but don’t you see--this that I bring so quietly
-is the message from the Ploughman who passed--the message of Liaoyang?
-And this is the sentence of it: Where there is a real Fatherland--there
-will be Brotherhood.
-
-“The world is so full of pallor and agony and sickness and stealing.
-First, it is because of the Lubans. The Lubans are sick for power--sick
-with their desires. Having no self-mastery, they are lost and full of
-fear. They fear the whip, they fear poverty and denial; theirs is a
-continual fear of being stripped to the nakedness of what they are--as
-old Mother Death strips a man. In the terror of all these things they
-seek to turn the whip upon others, to reinforce their emptiness with
-exterior possessions. Because their souls are dying, and because they
-feel the terror of sheer mortality, they seek to kill the virtue in
-other men. Because they cannot master themselves, they rise in passion
-to master others. They could not live but for the herds.
-
-“We who labor are the strength of the world. I say to you, men, poverty
-is the God’s gift to His elect. It is to us who have only ourselves
-to master--that the dream of Brotherhood can come true. It is alone
-to us, who have nothing, that these possessions can come, which old
-Mother Death is powerless to take away. And we who labor and are
-heavy-laden are making our colossal error to-day. We are the muttering
-herds. Standing with the many we may not know ourselves. We look upon
-the cowardice and emptiness of the Lubans and call it Power. We see
-the ways of the Herd-drivers--and dream of driving others, instead of
-ourselves. We look upon the Herd-drivers--and turn upon them the same
-thoughts of envy and hatred and cruelty--which cuts them off from
-every source of power and leaves them empty and cowardly indeed.
-
-“These are the thoughts of the herds--and yet down in the muscling
-mass men are not to blame. It takes room for a man to be himself--it
-takes room for a man to love his neighbor and to master himself.
-Terrified, whipped, packed, sick with the struggle and the strain of it
-all--how can men, turning to one another, find brotherhood in the eyes
-of their fellows. Living the life of the laboring herds in the great
-cities--why, it would take Gods to love men so!... The world is so full
-of pallor and agony and sickness and stealing--first, because of the
-Lubans, and, second, because of the City.... And after Liaoyang, I went
-straight to the Ploughman’s house--for I had given my word. And now I
-will tell you what I found on the little hill-farm up in the Schwarenka
-district among the toes of the Bosk mountains, a still country.”
-
-
- 9
-
-“I REMEMBER the soldiers at Liaoyang, the last thing, the many
-who had grasped at the hope that defeat meant the end of the war. They
-were learning differently as I left. Hundreds gave up from the great
-loneliness.... I carried the name of my Ploughman across the brown
-country, and the northern autumn was trying to hold out against the
-frosts. Asia is desolate. We who are white men, and who know a bit of
-the loveliness of life--even though we labor at that which is not our
-life--we must grant that the Northern Chinese have learned this: To
-suffer quietly.
-
-“Baikal was crossed at last. On and on by train into the West--until I
-came to the little village that he had said. For days it had been like
-following a dream. Sometimes it seemed to me so wonderful--that young
-man coming out of the millet, and what he said--that I thought it must
-have come to me in a vision, that I was mad to look for his town and
-the actual house in the country beyond. Yet they knew his name in the
-little town, and said that early next morning I could get a wagon to
-take me to the cabin, which was some _versts_ away.
-
-“I had known so much of cities. For weeks I had been in the noises
-of the Liaoyang fighting and in trains. Moreover, I had been ill
-for a long time, too--a crawling, deadly illness. But that night my
-soul breathed. I ate black bread by candle-light and drank milk. The
-sharpness of mid-October was in the air. You will laugh when I say it
-seemed to me, an American, as if I had come home. In the morning early
-I looked away to the East, from whence I had come, and where the sun
-was rising. (The ceiling of the little room was so low I had to bend my
-head.) To the north the mountains were sharp in the morning light and
-shining like amethyst.... I left the wagon at the first sight of the
-hut in the distance, and I reached there in the warmth of the morning.
-
-“An old man was sitting in the sun. He asked me to have bread, and said
-they had some sausage for the coming Sunday. This was mid-week. A child
-brought good water. Then I heard the cane of the old woman, and saw
-her hand first, as it thrust the cane out from the door--all brown and
-palsied, the hand, its veins raised and the knuckles twisted from the
-weight that bent her fingers against the curve of the stick. The rest
-was so pure. She had been a tall woman--very thin and bent and white
-now. When I looked into that face I saw the soul of the Ploughman. I
-can tell you I wanted to be there. It was very strange.... I can see
-her now, looking up at me, as the old do from their leaning. It was
-like the purity and distance of the morning. I trembled, too, before
-this old wife, for the fact in my mind about her son. I tell you, old
-mother-birds are wise.
-
-“It was as if my garments smelled of the fighting. She knew whence I
-had come; she looked into my soul and found the death of her son. Her
-soul knew it, but not her brain yet. She may have found my love for
-him, too--the deep bond between us.
-
-“‘Ask the stranger to stay. We will have sausage by the Sunday,’ said
-the old man. His thought was held by hunger.
-
-“‘Hush, Jan--he comes from our son----’
-
-“‘And where are the children and the young mother?’ I asked.
-
-“‘They are out for faggots in the bush--they will come----’
-
-“I had thought, as I traveled, (the thoughts of the weeks on the road,)
-to do many things; to give them plentifully of money; to arrange for
-someone to do the late fall and winter work. I had intended to go on,
-when sure that everything was at hand to make them comfortable. I
-tell you, men, it was all too living for that. One could not perform
-unstudied benefits for the mother of the Ploughman. There was more than
-money wanted there.
-
-“‘We would like to have you stay with us,’ the mother said, ‘but our
-poverty is keen, and we have not bread enough now for the winter.... He
-was taken long before the harvest, and it is long until the grain comes
-again----’
-
-“‘But if he were here--what would be done, Mother?’
-
-“‘Ah, if he came,’ she said strangely. ‘If he came----’
-
-“The father now spoke:
-
-“‘He would cut wood for our neighbors this winter--when the ploughing
-was finished. That would provide food--good food. Oh, he would know
-what to do--our Jan would know----’
-
-“I won’t soon forget that high, wavering voice of the old man--‘Oh, he
-would know what to do--our Jan is a good son----’ and the shake of his
-head.
-
-“‘But may I not do some of the things that he would do?’
-
-“I had to say it twice, for I spoke their language poorly. I had
-understood the son at Liaoyang--but all moments were not like those in
-which he spoke to me.
-
-“‘And then,’ I added hastily, ‘he sent you some money----’
-
-“I dared not offer much with that pure old face looking at me. The
-silver and gold that was in my purse I put in her lap.
-
-“‘Oh, it is very much--the good God brought you from him, did he not?’
-
-“‘And we will not need to wait until Sunday for----’
-
-“‘Hush--Jan--no, we will not need to wait.’
-
-“... And then the young mother came. I saw her steps quicken when
-yet she was far off. The little ones were about her--all carrying
-something. The older children were laughing a little, but the others
-were quiet in their haste and effort to keep up.... There was one
-little boy, but I will tell you afterward of the littlest Jan.... There
-was a pallor over the brood. Their health was pure, and their blood
-strong, but that pallor had come. Men, it was hunger already. Here were
-the fields, and the Fatherland had taken him before the harvest. This
-thing, the shocking truth of it; that this actually could be; that
-a country could do such a thing--made me forget everything else for
-the moment. Then I realized that I must keep the truth from the young
-mother. Before I spoke at all they told her that I had come from her
-husband.
-
-“Her lips were white, her breasts wasted. She was lean from hunger,
-lean from her bearing. Young she was for the six, but much had she
-labored, and there was a mountain wildness in her eyes. She was
-stilled, as the old mother had been, by the fear of hearing her man’s
-death. She dared not ask. She accepted what was said--that I had come
-from him, that I had brought money, and wished to stay for a little....
-She leaned against the door, the smaller children gathering at her
-knees, the others putting away the wood. Her single skirt hung square,
-and her arms seemed very long, nearly to her knees; her hands loose
-and tired. Her hair was yellow; the wind had tossed it. You know how
-a horse that has been listening, suddenly catches his breath again.
-The same sound came from her as she started to breathe again.... One
-of the smaller children laughed, and I looked down. It was the little
-four-year-old, the third Jan of that house, and he was close to my
-knees, looking up at me ... and we were all together.
-
-“I loved the world better after that look of the child into my eyes....
-I took him on my shoulder. We went to the village together. That night
-the wagon brought us back; there was much food.... And that was my
-house. I looked out on the mountains the next day, and for many days to
-come, and, men--their grand sky-wide simplicity poured into my heart. I
-took the old horse out, and we ploughed during the few days remaining.
-There was not much land--but we ploughed it together to the end, when
-the frost made the upturned clods ring. Then I strawed up the shed for
-the old horse to pass his winter in warmth, and brought blankets for
-him. I respected that old horse. Health and good-fellowship had come
-to me as we worked together. I remember the sharp turning of the early
-afternoons from yellow to gray and to dark.... Then we went into the
-bush together in the early winter days. The ax rang, and the snow-bolt
-was piled high each day with wood. The smell of the wood-smoke in the
-morning air had a zest for my nostrils I had never known before, and
-at night the cabin windows were red with fire-light. We were all one
-together. And I think the spirit of the Ploughman was there in the
-happiness.
-
-“Sometimes in the night when I would get up to replenish the fire--the
-mystery of plain goodness would come to me. I would see the children
-and others all around. Then at the frosty window, shading the fire
-from my eyes, I looked out upon the snows. I was unable to contain the
-simple grandeurs that had unfolded to me day by day.... And then I
-would go back to the blankets where the little boy lay--his hand always
-fumbling for me as I crept in. The love that I felt for this child was
-beyond all fear. We could stand together against any fate. And one
-night it came to me that from much loving of one a man learns to love
-the many, and that I would really be a man when I learned to love the
-world with the same patience and passion that I loved the little boy.
-The Ploughman came along in a dream that night and said it was all
-quite true.
-
-“And that was the winter.... I wish you could have seen this sick
-man who had come. I had lain on my back for months, except when some
-great effort aroused me. I had that coming on, men, which makes a man
-walk--as a circus bear turns and totters on his back feet. The house,
-the field, the plough, the horse, woods, winter, and mountains, love
-for the child, love for all the others--the much that my hands found to
-do and the heart found to give--these things made me new again. These
-simple sound and holy things.
-
-“I had been a sick man mentally and morally, too, sick with ego and
-intellect--a nasty sickness. But one could not look, feeling the joy
-in which I lived, upon the snows of the foothills, nor afar through
-the yellow winter noons to the gilded summits of the Bosks; one could
-not look into the eyes of the children, the last vestige of hunger
-pallor gone from them; one could not talk of tobacco-and-sausage with
-the old man by his fireside; nor watch the mysterious great givings
-of the two mothers--their whole lives giving--pure instruments of
-giving--passionate givers, they were; givers of life and preservers of
-life--I say, men, one could not live in this purity and not put away
-such evil and cruel things.... As the sickness of the blood went from
-me--so that sickness of mind.... And, I tell you, we were ready as a
-house could be, when the news came officially that our Ploughman was
-among the missing from the battle of Liaoyang.
-
-“It was sharper than any winter night. We stood in the cabin and
-wept together. Then in the hush--the real thought of it all came
-to one--to whom, do you think?... She was on her knees--_the old
-mother_--praying for the other peasant cabins in Russia--the
-thousands of others from which a son and husband was gone--‘cabins to
-which the good God has not sent such a friend.’... I tell you, men,
-all the evil of past days seemed washed from me in that hour.... And
-that is my home. (The old horse and I opened the fields again in the
-springtime.)
-
-“After that I went down to Petersburg to tell my story, and to Moscow.
-I have told it in cellars and stables--in Berlin, in Paris, and London.
-I am making the great circle--to tell it here--and on, when we are
-finished, to Chicago, to Denver and San Francisco--and then the long
-sail homeward, following the first journey to the foothills of the Bosk
-range. I will go to my old mother there, and to the little boy, who
-looked up into my eyes--as if we were born to play and talk and sleep
-together.
-
-“The days of the conscript gangs are over here, men. Such days are
-numbered, even in Russia. They don’t come to your door in this country
-and take you away from your work to fight across the world--but the
-Lubans are here--and the cities are full of horror. It is in the
-cities where the herds are, where the little Lubans whip, and the
-bigger Lubans thrive. In the pressure and heaviness of the cities--the
-thought that comes to the herd is the old hideous conception of the
-multitude--that the way of the Lubans is the way of life.... It isn’t
-the way. The way of life has nothing to do with greed, nor with envy,
-nor with schemes against the bread of other men. It is a way of peace
-and affiliation--of standing together. And you who have little can go
-that way; you who labor can go that way--because you are the strength
-of the world. Don’t resist your enemies, men--leave them. The Master
-of us all told us that. And when the herds break, and this modern hell
-of the city is diminished--the Lubans will follow you out--whining and
-bereft, they will follow you out, as the lepers of Peking follow the
-caravans to the gates and beyond.... I have told you of my home--the
-little cabin that came to me from the beginnings of compassion. And
-there is such a home for every man of you--in the still countries where
-the voice of God may be heard.”
-
-Morning, desperately ill, rose to leave the hall. In the momentary
-hush, as he reached the door, the voice of Duke Fallows was raised
-again, calling his name.
-
-
- 10
-
-“JOHN----” a second time.
-
-Morning turned, his arms lifted despairingly.
-
-“Wait, John, I’ll join you!”
-
-Fallows came down.... The man who gently held the door shut smiled with
-strange kindness. There was a shining of kindness in men’s faces....
-Morning did not feel that he belonged. He was broken and shamed.... The
-big man was upon him--the long arms tossed about him.
-
-“I’ve been looking and listening for you too long, John, to let you go.”
-
-“... I just wanted to hear you. I’m shot to pieces, Duke; I’ll get a
-few drinks and wait for you. Then, you’ll see, I’m all out of range of
-the man you are----”
-
-There was no answer. Morning looked up to find the long bronzed face
-laughing, the eye gleaming. Fallows turned to the doorman and another,
-saying:
-
-“Both of you go with him. He needs a drink or two, and one of you come
-back to show me the way to him--when I’m through here.... This is a
-great night for us, John.”
-
-The three went down in the elevator.... And so the sick man had not
-come back--the dithyrambic Duke Fallows was gone for good. The sick
-man was strong; the impassioned phrase-maker had risen to the simple
-testimony of service. From scorn and emotion, from judgment and
-selection, he had risen to the plane of loving kindness.... The air in
-the street refreshed him a little. Morning found a bar.
-
-“I’ve been drinking,” he said to the men. “Fallows is a king. I
-was there with him at Liaoyang.... Maybe you saw my story in the
-_World-News_.... He stayed in the grain with Luban. I went on to
-see the cavalry fight.... I came back home to do the story. He went on
-to Russia on the _Ploughman_ story----”
-
-“Is he a preacher?” said one of the men.
-
-“Yes--but he learned about war and women first.”
-
-“I’ll take a soft drink and go back. You stay here, and I’ll bring him
-to you,” the same one went on.
-
-The other drank with Morning and agreed that they would not leave until
-Fallows came.
-
-“And so he learned about war and women first,” he said queerly, when
-they were alone. “But he has been a laboring man----”
-
-“Yes. You heard him.”
-
-“But before that farm in Russia----”
-
-“Oh, yes; he was a laborer.”
-
-“Well, he certainly got the crowd with him,” the man acknowledged.
-
-“You know why, don’t you?” Morning said impressively.
-
-“No.”
-
-“He’s _for_ the crowd. People feel it.”
-
-“Oh, I knew that.”
-
-There was quiet, and then the face turned to Morning:
-
-“Say, how did you get such a start as this? This kind means weeks----”
-
-“It got away from me before I knew it. I must have got to gambling with
-myself to see how far I could go.”
-
-“Are you going to quit?”
-
-A mist filled Morning’s mind. The question seemed an infringement. Then
-it occurred to him how he had fallen to lying to himself.
-
-“He’ll make you quit, but don’t let him stop you too short. You’d be a
-wreck in a few hours. You see how you needed these two or three drinks?”
-
-... Fallows entered with several of the committee. He had promised to
-speak to them again.
-
-“It’s what I came for,” he was saying. “So long as I am wanted I’ll
-stay.... Yes, I’m a socialist.... Yes, I believe in fighting, but when
-our kind of men stand together, there won’t be anything big enough to
-give us a fight. When our kind of men look into one another’s eyes and
-find service instead of covetousness--there’s nothing in the world to
-stand against us.”
-
-Fallows and Morning were in a steam-room together two hours afterward.
-Morning was limp and light-headed. He had told of some of the
-things that had happened since Baltimore--of men he had met--of the
-slummers--of harrowing nights and waiting for the bank to open.
-
-“You had to have it, John?”
-
-There was something in the way Fallows spoke the word, _John_,
-that made Morning weaker and filled his throat. He had to speak loudly
-for the hissing of the steam.
-
-“Why, if you didn’t get humble and stay humble after such a
-training--you’d be the poorest human experiment ever undertaken by
-the Master. But you can’t fail. It isn’t in the cards to fail. You’ve
-ridden several monsters--Drink, Ambition, Literature--but they won’t
-get you down. Why, even the sorrel mare didn’t kill you, as I promised
-aforetime. I saw a lot in that story. You loved her to the last. You
-left her dead and hunched on an alien road. You’ve loved these others
-long enough. You’ll leave them dead--even that big fame stuff. I think
-you’ve ridden that pompous fool to death already. They are all passages
-on the way to Initiation. Your training for service is a veritable
-inspiration--and you’ll write to men--down among men. I love that
-idea--you’ll write the story of Compassion--down among men----”
-
-Fallows’ face came closer through the steam. He scrutinized the wound
-that wouldn’t heal. “Did you ever hear about Saint Paul’s thorn in the
-flesh?... ‘And lest I be exalted above measure through the abundance of
-revelations, there was given me a thorn in the flesh--?’ It all works
-out. You’ll have to excuse me. The Bible was the only book I had with
-me up in the Bosk country. I found it all I wanted. I would take it
-again.... Yes, John, it’s all right with you.”
-
-Morning was telling of that afternoon at the Armory. He passed over
-quickly the period of worldly achievement in New York to the quiet
-blessedness he had hit upon, finding the hill and the elms.
-
-“That’s the formula--to get alone and listen----”
-
-“That’s what you preached to-night, wasn’t it?”... Presently he was
-back to Betty Berry again--finding her at the ’cello--the wonderful
-ride to Baltimore--which brought him to the drink chapter once
-more.... He couldn’t see Duke’s face as he spoke of the woman. There
-was a peculiar need of the other saying something when he had finished.
-This only was offered:
-
-“We won’t talk about that now, John.... You’d better take another
-little drink. Your voice is down.... You’ll be through after a day or
-two, and I’ll stay with you----”
-
-“We’ll go over to the cabin to-morrow,” said Morning.
-
-They were lying cot by cot in the cooling-room, and the talk for a time
-concerned Lowenkampf, his court-martial and discharge.
-
-“Do you know how I thought of you coming back, Duke?” Morning whispered
-afterward.
-
-“Tell me.”
-
-“I always thought of you coming back a sick man--staring at the ceiling
-as you used to--sometimes talking to me, sometimes listening to what
-I had written. But the main thought was how I would like to take care
-of you. I was rotten before. I wanted you sick, so I could show you
-better.”
-
-The huge hand stretched across from cot to cot.
-
-“It was afterward--that all the things you said in Liaoyang came back
-to me right.... We were lying in ’Frisco waiting for quarantine, and my
-stuff was finished the second time, before I read your letter to me and
-the one to Noyes--and the Ploughman story. That was the first time I
-really saw it right. There was a little doctor with me--Nevin--who got
-it all from the first reading. At Liaoyang we were down too low among
-the fighting to get it. That Ploughman story made my big yarn look like
-a death-mask of the campaign. Betty Berry got it too.... It was the
-same to-night--why, you got those men, body and soul.”
-
-“I’d like to think so, John; but I’m afraid you’re wrong. It was just
-a seed to-night. Men need to be cultivated every day in a thousand
-ways.... Women get things quicker; they can listen better.... The last
-night before Jesus was taken by the Roman soldiers, he told the Eleven
-that he could be sure only of them. He knew that of the multitude that
-heard him--most would sink back. He counted on just the Eleven, and
-built his church on the weakest, upon the most unstable--counting only
-on the strength of the weakest link.... The fact is, John, I’m only
-counting on you. I’ve got to count on you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Less than five weeks had elapsed, and yet the worst seemed as far
-back, in some of Morning’s moments, as the deck-passage out of China.
-He had suffered abominably. Fallows stood by night and day at first.
-He brought back a certain quality from the Russian farm that was pure
-inspiration to the other. They spoke about the Play. Morning was more
-than ever glad that Markheim had refused it. They sat long by the
-fire. More happened than modern America would believe off-hand--for
-John Morning began to learn to listen. Fallows was happy. His presence
-in the room was like the fire-light. Twice more he went across to the
-Metal Workers’ Hall, and still the New York group would not let him
-go. The Socialists brought him their ideas. He was in the heart of
-threatening upheavals. He reiterated that they must be united in one
-thing first; they must have faith in one another. They must not answer
-greed with greed. They must be sure of themselves; they must have
-a pure voice; they must know first what was wanted, and follow the
-vision.... Duke Fallows knew that it was all the matter of a leader....
-He told them of the men and women in Russia who have put off self.
-Finally Duke appeared to see that his work was done, and he retired
-from them.
-
-“It is delicate business,” he said to Morning. “There’s fine stuff
-in the crowd--then there’s the rest. If I should show common just
-once--all my work would be spoiled, and even the blessed few would
-forget the punch of my little story. They think I’ve gone on west.”
-
-Still he didn’t leave the cabin on the hill.
-
-It was only when Morning undertook to touch upon the love story--that
-Fallows looked away.... Morning tried to comprehend this. Something
-had happened. The big man who had stared at so many ceilings of Asia,
-breaking out from time to time in strange utterances all colored with
-desire; the man who had met his Eve, and talked of being controlled by
-her even after death--shuddered now at the mention of Betty Berry....
-Morning even had a suspicion at last that the other construed a
-relation between the woman’s influence and the excess of alcohol. These
-moments dismayed him.
-
-There is a dark spot in every man’s radiance--and this was the
-Californian’s, Morning concluded. In the transformation which the
-journey to Russia had effected, his particular weakness seemed hardened
-into a crust of exceptional austerity. The only women he ever spoke
-of in the remotest personal fashion belonged to the peasant family of
-the Ploughman. His audiences were unmixed by his own arrangement. In
-tearing out his central weakness, a certain madness on the subject had
-rushed in, a hatred that knew no quarter, and a zeal in denial that
-only one who has touched the rim of ruin can know.
-
-On the last night of February they talked and read late. The reading
-was from Saint Paul in the different letters. Fallows seemed
-impassioned with the figure.
-
-“I understand him,” he said.
-
-“He was afraid of women. Sometimes he seems to hate women,” Morning
-remarked. Certain lines of Paul’s on the subject had broken the
-perfection of the message for him.
-
-A strange look came to Fallows. The finger that was turning a page
-drew in with the others, and the hand that rested upon the book was
-clenched.... “Paul knew women,” he muttered.
-
-“You think before he took that road to Damascus--he knew women?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“Even the Paul who stood by holding the garments of the stoners of
-Stephen?”
-
-“He was a boy then. He learned afterward, I think.”
-
-“He couldn’t have known the saints among them,” said Morning, who was
-smiling in his heart.
-
-“Perhaps some saint among them was the one who made him afraid. You
-know women won’t have men going alone--not even the saints among
-women.... There may have been one who refused to be dimmed altogether
-even by that great light.”
-
-“But he went alone----”
-
-“In that way she wouldn’t be the Thorn,” Fallows said slowly. “She
-would be greater power for him. Yes, Saint Paul went alone. We wouldn’t
-be reading him to-night--had he turned back to her.”
-
-That hurt. Morning was no longer smiling within. “I didn’t learn
-women--even as a boy,” he said.
-
-Fallows was unable to speak. He had never loved Morning as at this
-moment. He was tender enough to catch the strange pathos of it, which
-the younger man could not feel.
-
-“You’re a natural drunkard, John,” he said presently. “You are by
-nature ambitious, as it is intimated Cæsar was; but you are naturally a
-monk, too. I say it with awe.”
-
-“You are wrong,” Morning said with strength. “When this woman came into
-the room at the Armory that first day--it was as if she brought with
-her the better part of myself----”
-
-“You said that same before. You were sick. You were torn by exhaustion
-and by that letter of mine about Reever Kennard. It was the peace and
-mystery a woman always brings to a sick man.... _Your_ woman
-is your genius, John. Any rival will stifle and defame it. It’s the
-woman in a man that makes him a prophet or a great artist. Your ego is
-masculine; your soul is feminine. When you learn to keep the ego out
-of the brain, and use the soul, you will become an instrument, more or
-less perfect, for eternal utterances. When you achieve the union of the
-man and woman in you--that will be your illumination. You will have
-emerged into the larger consciousness. You are not so far as you think
-from that high noon-light. If you should take a woman in the human
-way, you will not achieve in this life the higher marriage, of which
-the union of two is but a symbol. That would be turning back, with the
-spiritual glory in your eyes--back to the shadow of flesh.”
-
-“How do you know that?” Morning asked coldly.
-
-“Because of the invisible restraints that have kept you from women so
-far.... I believe you are prepared to tell men something about the
-devils of drink and ambition--having met them?”
-
-“It is possible.”
-
-“I speak with the same authority.”
-
-Morning did not accept this authority, but was long disturbed after the
-light was out.... Her ship had been six days at sea.
-
-They opened the door wide to the first morning of March. Snow was upon
-the hill, but there was a promise in the air, even in the sharpness
-of it. The wind came in, searched among the papers of the table,
-disordered the draughts of the chimney, filling the room with a faint
-flavor of wood-smoke, that perfect incense. They stood there, testing
-the day, and each was thinking of the things of the night before.
-Fallows said:
-
-“John, you didn’t build this cabin with the idea of a woman coming?”
-
-“No; it was built before I found her the second time. It was my
-escape from _Boabdil_.... But I thought of her coming, many
-times afterward--just as I thought of you coming back to stare at the
-rafters----”
-
-Fallows looked down intently at him for a moment, and said:
-
-“John, you’ve got about all your equipment now. You can’t stand much
-more tearing down. My road is not for you. You were given balance
-against that. Don’t venture into what is alien ground for you. You will
-get back your health. Even the wound will heal. Then will come to you
-those gracious ideals of singleness, plainness of house and fare, of
-purity and solitude and the integration of the greater dimension of
-force.... You are through looking--you must listen now. The blessedness
-you told me of this last summer was but a breath of what you will
-get....
-
-“You are a natural monk. If you were in a monastery, the laws
-restraining you would be gross and material, compared with those bonds
-which nature has put upon you. The cowl, the cell, and the solitude
-are but symbols again of the inner monasticism a few rare souls have
-known. You need no exterior bonds, vows, nor threatenings--no walls,
-no brandishing threats of damnation. But, if you should betray the
-invisible restraints that have held you for so many years, the sin
-would be far deadlier than breaking any vows made to a church or to an
-order. Vows are for half-men, John; vows are but the crutches of an
-unfinished integrity.”
-
-
- 11
-
-ON the morning of the Third, at ten, her call came to him.
-Shortly after twelve he was across the river and far uptown in
-the hallway of an apartment-house. Even as he spoke her name, his
-was called from the head of the stairs. He always remembered the
-intonation.... A fire was burning in the grate. The ’cello was there.
-She left the hall-door of the room open, but they heard voices, and it
-was draughty.... She went to close it and returned to Morning, who was
-still standing.
-
-“What is the matter? You are not well,” she said.... It was hard for
-him to realize that this was only the third time he had seen her. He
-was trying to adjust her in the other meetings with this--the angel who
-had come helping to the Armory; the concert Betty Berry, her nature
-flung wide to expression, bringing her gift with love to her people.
-The Armory was one; but the Betty Berry of the concert-night was many:
-she who had come forth from the stage to his arms (and that was the
-kiss of all time); the listening Betty Berry in the dimness of the
-Pullman car; holding fast to his hand as a child might, while they
-watched the dawn of morning together; the Betty Berry who had led him
-to her berth on the ship--that kiss and this....
-
-The room had disordered him at the first moment. It was so particularly
-a New York apartment room. But the ’cello helped it; the grate-fire
-was good, and after she had shut the door--there was something eternal
-about the sweetness of that--it was quite the place for them to be.
-
-He was animate with emotions--and yet they were defined, sharp, of
-their own natures, no soft overflow of sentiment, each with a fineness
-of its own, like breaths of forest and sea and meadow lands. These
-were great things which came to him; but they were not passions.... He
-saw her with fear, too. Simply being here, had the impressiveness of a
-miracle. It was less that he did not deserve to be with her, than that
-the world he knew was hardly the place for such blessedness. He was
-listening to her, in gladness and humility:
-
-“... I asked myself again and again after you were gone, ‘Is it a
-dream?’ ... I moved about the decks waiting for the night, as one in a
-deep dream.... You were gone so quickly after that voice. Oh, I was all
-right. I was full of you. It would have seemed sacrilege to ask for you
-again.... Yet I seemed to expect you with every knock or step or bell.
-They asked me to play on shipboard, and I could hardly believe you were
-not among those who listened.... That first night at sea, the moon was
-under a hazy mass. I don’t know why I speak of it, but I remember how I
-stood watching it--perhaps hours--and out of it all I only realized at
-last that my hands were so small for the things I wanted to do for you,
-and for everybody.”
-
-That was the quality of her--as if between every sentence, hours of
-exterior influences had intervened.... He began to realize that Betty
-Berry never explained. All that afternoon, in different ways, his
-comprehension augmented on how fine a thing this is. She was glad
-always to abide by what she said or did. Even on that night, when she
-came from her playing to the wings where he stood, came to his arms,
-while the people praised her--she never made light of that acceptance.
-Many would have diminished it, by saying that they were not accountable
-in the excitement and enthusiasm of a sympathetic audience. It was
-so to-day when the door was closed. It seemed to Morning as if human
-adults should be as fine as this--above all guile and fear.
-
-He was in a risen world that afternoon. Often he wished he could make
-the world see her as he did. But that was the literary habit, and a
-tribute to her. Certainly it was not for the writing. He was clay
-beside her, but happy to be clay.... She did not know it, he thought,
-but she was free.
-
-That was his thought of the day. Betty Berry was free. The door of the
-cage was open for her. She did not have to stay, but she did stay for
-love of the weaker-winged.
-
-“Will all our meetings be so different and lovely?” she asked in the
-early dusk. “Please tell me about yourself very long ago--the little
-boy, before he went away.”
-
-It was queer for her to ask that. He had expected her to inquire at
-once about the three months since their parting in Baltimore. He had
-determined to tell if she asked, but it was hard even to think of his
-descents, with her sitting by the fire so near. Such things seemed
-to have nothing to do with him now--especially when he was with her.
-They were like old and vile garments cast off; and without relation to
-him, unless he went back and put them on again. Little matters like
-Charley and his sister had a relation, for they were without taint.
-His thoughts to-day were thoughts of doing well for men, as in fine
-moments with Duke Fallows--of going out _with her_ into the world
-to help--of writing and giving, of laughing and lifting.... It was
-surprising how he remembered the very long ago days--the silent, solid,
-steadily-resisting little chap. Many things came back, and with a
-clearness that he had not known for years. The very palms of her hands
-were upturned in her listening; it seemed as if the valves of her heart
-must be open.
-
-“I can see him--the dear little boy----”
-
-He laughed at her tenderness.... They went out late to dinner; and by
-the time he had walked back to the house it was necessary for him to
-leave, if he caught the last car to Hackensack. Duke Fallows would be
-expecting him at the cabin....
-
-It came to him suddenly, and with a new force, on the ferry, that he
-had once wished she were pretty. He suffered for it again. He could
-never recall her face exactly. She came to him in countless ways--with
-poise for his restlessness, with faith and stamina that made all his
-former endurings common--but never in fixed feature. It was the same
-with her sayings. He remembered the spirit and the lustre of them, but
-never the words.... She was a saint moving unobserved about the world,
-playing--adrift on the world, and so pure.
-
-He realized also that he had spoken of Betty Berry for the last
-time to Duke Fallows. There was no doubt in his mind now that
-Fallows had replaced his old weakness with what might be called, in
-kindness--fanaticism.... The thought was unspeakable that Betty Berry
-could spoil his work in the world--he, John Morning, a living hatch of
-scars from his errors ... and so arrogant and imperious he had been in
-evil-doing! This trend made him think of her first words to-day: “You
-are not well.” It was true that he had been astonished often of late by
-a series of physical disturbances, so much so that he had begun to ask
-himself, in his detached fashion, what would come next. He could not
-accept Fallows’ promise that he would get altogether right in health
-again. He was certainly not so good as he had been. These things made
-him ashamed.
-
-Now that he was away from her, the sense obtained that he had not been
-square in withholding the facts of the wastrel period. It didn’t seem
-quite the same now, as when she was sitting opposite. He would have to
-tell her some time, and of that certain mental treachery to her, and of
-the wound, too.... He saw the light of the hill cabin. A touch of the
-old irritation of Liaoyang had recurred of late. Morning could master
-it better now. Still so many things that Fallows had said in Asia had
-come true. Climbing up the hill, he laughed uneasily at the idea of
-his being temperamentally a monk.... He had not strayed much among
-women; he had been too busy. Now he had met his own. He would go to
-her to-morrow. His love for her was the one right thing in the world.
-Fallows nor the world could alter that....
-
-The resistance which these thoughts had built in his mind was all
-smoothed away by the spontaneous affection of the greeting. They sat
-down together before the fire, but neither spoke of the woman who had
-come between.
-
-
- 12
-
-ON the way to Betty Berry the second day, Morning could not
-quite hold the altitude of yesterday. There was much of the boy left
-in the manner of his love for her. The woman that the world saw, and
-which he saw with physical eyes, was only one of her mysteries. The
-important thing was that he saw her really, and as she was not seen by
-another.... They had been together an hour when this was said:
-
-“There comes a time--a certain day--when a little girl realizes what
-beauty is, and something of what it means in the world. That day came
-to me and it was hard. I fought it out all at once. I was not exactly
-sure what I wanted, but I knew that beauty could never help me in any
-way. I learned to play better when I realized this fully. I have said
-to myself a million times, ‘Expect nothing. No one will love you.
-You must do without that,’ I believed it firmly.... So you see when
-I went back to the Armory that next morning I had something to fall
-back upon.... I would not have thought about it except you made me
-forget--that afternoon. Why, I forget it now when you come; but when
-you go, I force myself to remember----”
-
-“Why do you do that?”
-
-She was looking into the fire. The day was stormy, and they were glad
-to be kept in.
-
-“Why do you do that?” he repeated.
-
-“Because I can’t feel quite at rest about our being together always. It
-seems too wonderful. You must understand--it’s only because it is so
-dear a thing----”
-
-She had spoken hastily, seeing the fear and rebellion in his eyes.
-
-“Betty Berry.... We’re not afraid of being poor. Why not go out and get
-married to-day--now?”
-
-Her hand went out to him.
-
-“That wouldn’t be fine in us,” she said intensely. “I would feel that
-we couldn’t be trusted--if we did anything like that.... Oh, that
-would never keep us together--_that_ is not the great thing. And
-to-day--what a gray day and bleak. We shall know if that day comes.
-It will be one such as the butterfly chooses for her emerging. It
-must not be planned. Such a day comes of itself.... Why, it would be
-like seizing something precious from another’s hand--before it is
-offered----”
-
-“And you think you are not beautiful?” he said.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-He tried to tell her how she seemed to him when they were apart--how
-differently and perfectly the phases of her came.
-
-“It makes me silent,” he went on. “I try to tell just where it is. And
-sometimes when I am away--I wonder what is so changed and cleansed and
-buoyant in my heart--and then I know it is you--sustaining.”
-
-“It doesn’t seem to belong to me--what you say,” she answered. “I don’t
-dare to think of it as mine.... Please don’t think of me as above other
-women. I am not apart nor above. I am just Betty Berry, who comes and
-goes and plays--dull in so many ways--as yet, a little afraid to be
-happy. When you tempt me as now to be happy--it seems I must go and
-find someone very miserable and do something perfect for him.... But,
-it is true, I fear nothing so much as that you should believe me more
-than I am.”
-
-A little afterward she was saying in her queer, unjointed way, as if
-she spoke only here and there a sentence from the thoughts running
-swiftly through her mind:
-
-“... And once, (it was only a few weeks after the Armory, and I was
-playing eastward) I heard your name mentioned among some musicians.
-They had been talking about your war, and they had seen the great
-story.... I couldn’t tell them that I know you?... It was known you
-were in New York, and one of the musicians spoke of an early Broadway
-engagement--of starting for New York that very night. It was the most
-common thing to say--but I went to my room and cried. Going to New
-York--where you were. Can you understand--that it didn’t seem right
-for him, just to take a train like that? And I had to go eastward
-so slowly. For a while after that, traveling out there, I couldn’t
-hold you so clearly; but as we neared New York--whether I wished it
-or not--I began to feel you again, to expect you at every turning.
-Sometimes as I played--it was uncanny, the sense that came to me, that
-you were in the audience, and that we were working together.... And
-then you came.”
-
-Her picture changed now. Morning grew restless. It was almost as if
-there were a suggestion from Duke Fallows in her sentences:
-
-“I thought of you always as alone.... You have gone so many ways alone.
-Perhaps the thought came from your work. I never could read the places
-where you suffered so--but I mean from the tone and theme of it. You
-were down among the terrors and miseries--but always alone.... You
-will go back to them--alone, but carrying calmness and cheer. You will
-be different.... It’s hard for me to say, but if we should clutch at
-something for ourselves--greedily because we want something now--and
-you should not be able to do your work so well because of me--I
-think--I think I should never cease to suffer.”
-
-A dozen things to say had risen with hostility in his mind to check
-this faltering expression, the purport of which he knew so well in its
-every aspect. He hated the thought of others seeing his future and
-not considering him. He hated the fear that came to him. There had
-been fruits to all that Fallows had said before. He had plucked them
-afterward. And now Betty Berry was one with Fallows in this hideous and
-solitary conception of him. And there she sat, lovely and actual--the
-very essence of all the good that he might do. He was so tired of what
-she meant; and it was all so huge and unbreakable, that he grew calm
-before he spoke, from the very inexorability of it.
-
-“There is no place for me to go--that you could not go with me. Every
-one seems to see great service for me, but I see it with you. Surely we
-could go together to people who suffer.... I have been much alone, but
-I spent most of the time serving myself. I have slaved for myself. If
-Duke Fallows had left me alone, I should have been greedy and ambitious
-and common. I see you now identified with all the good of the future.
-You came bringing the good with you to the Armory that day, but I was
-so clouded with hatred and self-serving, that I really didn’t know it
-until afterward.... All the dreams of being real and fine, of doing
-good in work, and with hands and thoughts, of sometime really being
-a good man who knows no happiness but service for others--that means
-you--you! You must come with me. We will be good together. We will
-serve together. Everybody will be better for us. We will do it because
-we love so much--and can’t help it----”
-
-“Oh, don’t say any more--please--please! It is too much for me. Go
-away--won’t you?”
-
-She had risen and clung to him, her face imploring.
-
-“Do you really want me to go away?” he said.
-
-“Yes--I have prayed for one to come saying such things--of two going
-forth to help--prayed without faith.... I cannot bear another word to
-be said to-day.... I want to sit here and live with it----”
-
-He was bewildered. He bent to kiss her brow--but refrained.... Her face
-shone; her eyes were filled with tears.... He was in the street trying
-to recall what he had said.
-
-
- 13
-
-HE did not cross the river, but wandered about the city....
-She had starved her heart always, put away the idea of a lover, and
-sought to carry out her dreams of service alone. Then he had come. In
-the midst of mental tossing and disorder to-day, he had stumbled upon
-an expression of her highest idea of earth-life: for man and woman to
-serve together--God loving the world through their everyday lives....
-And she had been unable to bear him longer near her. It was the same
-with her heart, as with one who has starved the body, and must begin
-with morsels.
-
-He was in the hotel writing-room--filling pages to her. He did not mean
-to send the pages. It was to pass the time until evening. He lacked
-even the beginnings of strength to stay away from her until to-morrow.
-He would have telephoned, but she had not given him the number, or the
-name of the woman who kept the house. The writing held his thoughts
-from the momentarily recurring impulse to go back. The city was just a
-vibration. Moments of the writing brought her magically near. In spite
-of her prayer for him not to, his whole nature idealized her now. His
-mind was swept again and again with gusts of her attraction. Thoughts
-of hers came to him almost stinging with reality ... and to see her
-again--to see her again. Once in the intensity of his outpouring, he
-halted as if she had called--as if she had called to him to come up to
-her out of the hollows and the vagueness of light.
-
-It was nightfall. He gave way suddenly--to that double-crossing of
-temptation which forces upon the tempted one the conviction that what
-he desires is the right thing.... He would be a fool not to go. She
-would expect him.... He arose and set out for her house.
-
-But as he neared the corner something within felt itself betrayed.
-
-“And so I cannot be content with her happiness,” he thought. “I cannot
-be content with the little mysteries that make her the _one_ Betty
-Berry. I am not brave enough to be happy alone--as she is. I must have
-the woman....”
-
-He was hot with the shame of it. He saw her bountifulness; her capacity
-to wait. Clearly he saw that all these complications and conflicts of
-his own mind were not indications of a large nature, but the failures
-of one unfinished. She did not torture herself with thoughts; she
-obeyed a heart unerringly true and real. She shone as never before;
-fearless, yet with splendid zeal for giving; free to the sky, yet eager
-to linger low and tenderly where her heart was in harmony; a stranger
-to all, save one or two in the world, pitilessly hungry to be known,
-and yet asking so little.... Compared with her, he saw himself as a
-littered house, wind blowing through broken windows.
-
-... That night, sitting with Duke Fallows before the fire, brooding
-on his own furious desires, he thought of the other John Morning who
-had brooded over the story of Liaoyang in so many rooms with the
-same companion. All that former brooding had only forced the world
-to a show-down. He knew, forever, how pitifully little the world can
-give.... A cabin on the hill and a name that meant a call in the next
-war....
-
-The face of the other cooled and stilled him. Duke was troubled; Duke,
-who wasn’t afraid of kings or armies or anything that the world might
-do; who didn’t seem even afraid now of the old Eve violence, whoever
-she was--was afraid to speak of Betty Berry to his best friend....
-Morning wondered at this. Had Duke given up--or was he afraid of mixing
-things more if he expressed himself? The fire-lit face was tense.
-One after another of the man’s splendid moments and performances ran
-through Morning’s mind--the enveloping compassion--in Tokyo, Liaoyang,
-in the grain, in the ploughed lands--the Lowenkampf friend, the friend
-of the peasant house, the friend of men in Metal Workers’ Hall, his
-own friend in a score of places and ways--the man’s consummate art in
-friendliness....
-
-“Duke, there’s a lot to think about in just plain living, isn’t there?”
-
-The other started. “Hello,” he said. “I didn’t think you were in my
-world.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Betty Berry was waiting at the stairs the next morning.
-
-“Did you get my letter?” she whispered, when the door had swung to.
-
-“No.... Mailed last night?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I left the cabin two hours before the mail. It’s rural delivery, you
-know. Jethro reaches my box late in the forenoon----”
-
-“I wrote it about dark, but didn’t mail it until later. I thought you
-would come----”
-
-He told her how he had written, how he had come to her house, and
-turned away. They were very happy.
-
-“To think that you came so far. I couldn’t sit still, I was so
-expectant at that very time.... But it was good for us----”
-
-“I understood after a while.”
-
-“Of course, you understood.... I was--oh, so happy yesterday. Yet,
-aren’t we strange? Before it was night, I wanted you to come back....
-I didn’t go out last night. I couldn’t practice. To-night, there are
-some friends whom I must see----”
-
-Morning, in a troubled way, reckoned the hours until evening.... She
-was here and there about the room. The place already reflected her. She
-had never been so blithe before.... It was an hour afterward that he
-picked up a little tuning-fork from the dresser, and twanged it with
-his nail. She started and turned to him, her thumb pressed against her
-lips--her whole attitude that of a frightened child.
-
-“I wonder if I could tell you?” she said hesitatingly. “It would
-make many things clear. You told me about little boy--you. It was my
-father’s----”
-
-He waited without speaking.
-
-“... He used to lead the singing in a city church,” she said. “Always
-he carried the tuning-fork. He would twang it upon a cup or a piece
-of wood, and put it to his ear--taking the tone. He had a soft tenor
-voice. There was never another just like it, and always he was
-humming.... I remember his lips moving through the long sermons, as he
-conned the hymn-book, one song after another, tapping his fork upon
-a signet ring. How I remember the tiny twanging, the light hum of an
-insect that came from him, from song to song, his finger keeping time,
-his lips pursed over the words.
-
-“He never heard the preacher. There was no organ allowed, but he led
-the hymns. He loved it. He held the time and tone for the people--but
-never sang a hymn twice the same, bringing in the strangest variations,
-but always true, his face flaming with pleasure.
-
-“For years and years we lived alone. As a little girl, I was lifted to
-the stool to play his accompaniments. As a young woman, I supported
-him, giving music lessons. The neighbors thought him an invalid.... All
-his viciousness was secret from the world, but common property between
-us from my babyhood. I pitied him and covered him, fed him when he
-might have fed himself, waited upon him when he might have helped me.
-He would hold my mind with little devilish things and thoughts--as
-natural to him as the tuning-fork.... He would despoil the little stock
-of food while I was away, and nail the windows down. My whole life, I
-marveled at the ingenuity of his lies. He was so little and helpless. I
-never expected to be treated as a decent creature, from those who had
-heard his tales. They looked askance at me.
-
-“For years, he told me that he was dying, and I sat with him in the
-nights, or played or read aloud. If any one came, he lay white and
-peaceful, with a look of martyrdom.... And then at the last, I fell
-asleep beside him. It was late, but the lamp was burning. I felt him
-touch me before morning--the little old white thing, his lips pursed.
-The tuning-fork dropped with a twang to the floor. I could not believe
-I was free--but cried and cried. At the funeral, when the church people
-spoke of ‘our pain-racked and martyred brother’----”
-
-She did not finish.
-
-Morning left her side. “I never thought of a little girl that way,” he
-said, standing apart. “Why, you have given me the spirit of her, Betty.
-It is what you have passed through that has made you perfect.... And I
-was fighting for myself, and for silly things all the time----”
-
-But he had not expressed what was really in his mind--of the beauty and
-tenderness of unknown women everywhere, in whose hearts the sufferings
-of others find arable ground. Surely, these women are the grace of the
-world. His mother must have been weathered by such perfect refinements,
-otherwise he would not have been able to appreciate it in Betty Berry.
-It was all too dreamy to put into words yet, but he felt it very
-important in his life--this that had come to him from Betty’s story,
-and from Betty standing there--woman’s power, her bounty, her mystic
-valor, all from the unconscious high behavior of a child.
-
-She had given him something that the _Ploughman_ gave Duke
-Fallows. He wanted to make the child live in the world’s thoughts, as
-Duke was making the _Ploughman_ live.
-
-It was these things--common, beautiful, passed-by things, that revealed
-to Morning, as he began to be ready--the white flood of spirit that
-drives the world, that is pressing always against hearts that are pure.
-
-He went nearer to her.
-
-“Everything I think is love for you, Betty,” he said.
-
-The air was light about her, and delicate as from woodlands.
-
-
- 14
-
-THE horse and phaeton--both very old--of the rural-carrier could
-be seen from the hill-cabin. Duke Fallows walked down to the fence
-to say “Hello” to Jethro whom he admired. He returned bearing very
-thoughtfully a letter addressed to John Morning. It was from across the
-river; the name, street, and number of the sender were written upon the
-envelope.... Fallows sat down before the fire again, staring at the
-letter. He thought of the woman who had written this, (just the few
-little things that Morning had said) and then he thought of the gaunt
-peasant woman in Russia, the mate of the _Ploughman_, and of the
-mother of the _Ploughman_. He thought of the little boy, Jan--the
-one little boy of the six, that had his heart, and whom he longed for.
-
-He thought of this little boy on one hand--and the world on the other.
-
-Then he thought of Morning again, and of the woman.
-
-He loved the world; he loved the little boy. Sometimes it seemed to
-him when he was very happy--that he loved the world and the little boy
-with almost the same compassion--the weakness, fineness, and innocence
-of the races of men seeming almost like the child’s.
-
-He thought of John Morning differently. He had loved him at first,
-because he was down and fighting grimly. He thought of him of late as
-an instrument, upon which might be played a message of mercy and power
-to all who suffered--to the world and to the little boy alike.
-
-And now Fallows was afraid for the instrument. Many things had maimed
-it, but this is the way of men; and these maimings had left their
-revelations from the depths. Such may measure into the equipment of
-a big man, destined to meet the many face to face. Fallows saw this
-instrument in danger of being taken over by a woman--to be played upon
-by colorful and earthly seductions. No man could grant more readily
-than he, that such interpretations are good for most men; that the
-highest harmony of the average man is the expression of love for his
-one woman and his children. But to John Morning, Fallows believed such
-felicity would close for life the great work which he had visioned from
-the beginning.
-
-He did not want lyrical singing from John Morning, he wanted prophetic
-thunderings.
-
-He wanted this maimed young man to rise up from the dregs and tell his
-story and the large meaning of it. He wanted him to burn with a white
-light before the world. He wanted the Koupangtse courage to drive into
-the hearts of men; a pure reformative spirit to leap forth from the
-capaciousness where ambition had been; he wanted John Morning to ignite
-alone. He believed the cabin in which he now sat was built blindly from
-the boy’s standpoint, but intelligently from the spirit of the boy,
-to become the place of ignition. He believed this of Morning’s to be
-a celibate spirit that could be finally maimed only by a woman. He
-believed that Morning was perfecting a marvelous instrument, one that
-would alter all society for the better, if he gave his heart to the
-world.
-
-Fallows even asked himself if he did not have his own desperate
-pursuits among women in too close consideration.... It would be easy
-to withdraw. So often he had faltered before the harder way, and found
-afterward that the easy one was evil.... He left it this way: If he
-could gain audience with Betty Berry alone this evening he would speak;
-if Morning were with her, he would find an excuse for joining them and
-quickly depart. Last night Morning had returned to the cabin early;
-the night before by the last car. It was less than an even chance....
-Fallows crossed the river, thinking, if the woman were common it
-would be easy. The way it turned out left no doubt as to what he must
-do. Approaching the number, on the street named on the corner of the
-envelope, he passed John Morning, head down in contemplation. He was
-admitted to the house. Betty Berry appeared, led him to a small upper
-parlor, and excused herself for a moment.
-
-Fallows sat back and closed his eyes. He was suffering. All his fancied
-hostility was gone. He saw a woman very real, and to him magical; he
-saw that this was bloody business.... She came back, the full terror of
-him in her eyes. She did not need to be so sensitive to know that he
-had not come as a cup-bearer.... He was saying to himself, “I will not
-struggle with her....”
-
-“Have I time to tell my story?”
-
-“I was going out.... John Morning just went away because I was to meet
-old friends. But, if this is so very important, of course----”
-
-“It is about him.”
-
-“I think you must tell your story.”
-
-Fallows talked of Morning’s work, of what he had first seen from
-Luzon, and of the man he found in Tokyo. He spoke of the days and
-nights in Liaoyang, as he had watched Morning at his work.
-
-“He’s at his best at the type-writer. When the work is really coming
-right for him, he seems to be used by a larger, finer force than he
-shows at other times.... It is good to talk to you, Miss Berry. You are
-a real listener. You seem to know what I am to say next----”
-
-“Go on,” she said.
-
-“When a man with a developed power of expression stops writing what
-the world is saying, and learns to listen to that larger, finer force
-within him--indeed, when he has a natural genius for such listening,
-and cultivates a better receptivity, always a finer and more sensitive
-surface for its messages--such a man becomes in time the medium between
-man and the energy that drives the world----”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“Some call this energy that drives the world the Holy Spirit, and
-some call it the Absolute. I call it love of God. A few powerful men
-of every race are prepared to express it. These individuals come up
-like the others through the dark, often through viler darkness. They
-suffer as others cannot dream of suffering. They are put in terrible
-places--each of which leaves its impress upon the instrument--the
-mind. You have read part of John Morning’s story. Perhaps he has told
-you other parts. His mind is furrowed and transcribed with terrible
-miseries.
-
-“Until recently his capacity was stretched by the furious passion of
-ambition. It seemed in Asia as if he couldn’t die, unexpressed; as if
-the world couldn’t kill him. You saw him at the Armory just after he
-had passed through thirty days hard enough to slay six men. Ambition
-held him up--and hate and all the powers of the ego.
-
-“This is what I want to tell you: ‘When the love of God fills that
-furious capacity which ambition has made ready; when the love of God
-floods over the broadened surfaces of his mind, furrowed and sensitized
-by suffering, filling the matrix which the dreadful experiences have
-marked so deeply--John Morning will be a wonderful instrument of
-interpretation between God and his race.’
-
-“I can make my story very short for you, Miss Berry. Your listening
-makes it clearer than ever to me. I see what men mean when they say
-they can write to women. Yes, I see it.... John Morning has made ready
-his cup. It will be filled with the water of life--to be carried to
-men. But John Morning must feel first the torture of the thirst of men.
-
-“Every misery he has known has brought him nearer to this realization;
-days here among the dregs of the city; days of hideous light and
-shadow; days on the China Sea, sitting with coolies crowded so they
-could not move; days afield, and the perils; days alone in his little
-cabin on the hill; sickness, failures, hatreds from men, the answering
-hatred of his fleshly heart--all these have knit him with men and
-brought him understanding.
-
-“He has been down among men. Suffering has graven his mind with
-the mysteries of the fallen. You must have understanding to have
-compassion. In John Morning, the love of God will pass through human
-deeps to men. Deep calls to deep. He will meet the lowest face to face.
-He will bring to the deepest down man the only authority such a man can
-recognize--that of having been there in the body. And the thrill of
-rising will be told. Those who listen and read will know that he has
-been there, and see that he is risen. He will tell how the water of
-life came to him--and flooded over him, and healed his miseries and his
-pains. The splendid shining authority of it will rise from his face and
-from his book.
-
-“And men won’t be the same after reading and listening; (nor women who
-receive more quickly and passionately)--women won’t be the same. Women
-will see that those who suffer most are the real elect of this world.
-It’s wonderful to make women listen, Miss Berry, for their children
-bring back the story.
-
-“It isn’t that John Morning must turn to love God. I don’t mean that.
-He must love men. He must receive the love of God--and give it to
-men. To be able to listen and to receive with a trained instrument of
-expression, and then to turn the message to the service of men--that’s
-a World-Man’s work. John Morning will do it--if he loves humanity
-enough. He’s the only living man I know who has a chance. He will
-achieve almost perfect instrumentation. He will express what men need
-most to know in terms of art and action. The love of God must have man
-to manifest it, and that’s John Morning’s work--if he loves humanity
-enough to make her his bride.”
-
-Fallows was conscious now of really seeing her. She had not risen, but
-seemed nearer--as if the chair, in which she slowly rocked, had crept
-nearer as he talked. Her palms resting upon her knees were turned
-upward toward him:
-
-“And you think John Morning is nearly ready for that crown of
-Compassion?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“You think he will receive the Compassion--and give it to men in terms
-of art and action?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“You think if he loves me--if he turns his love to me, as he is
-doing--he cannot receive that greater love which he must give men?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“And you think it would be a good woman’s part to turn him from her?”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-“And you came to tell me this?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I think it is true----”
-
-“Oh, listen--listen----” he cried, rising and bending over her--“a good
-woman’s part--it would be that! It would be something more--something
-greater than even he could ever do.... What a vision you have given me!”
-
-She stood before him, her face half-turned to the window. Yet she
-seemed everywhere in the room--her presence filling it. He could not
-speak again. He turned to go. Her words reached him as he neared the
-door.
-
-“Oh, if I only had my little baby--to take away!”
-
-
- 15
-
-FALLOWS stood forward on the ferry that night and considered
-the whole New York episode. He had done his work. He had told the
-_Ploughman_ story five times. It was just the sowing. He might
-possibly come back for the harvest.... He had another story to tell
-now. Could he ever tell it without breaking?... He had tortured his
-brain to make things clear for Morning and for men. He realized that
-a man who implants a complete concept in another intelligence and
-prevents it from withering until roots are formed and fruitage is
-assured, performs a miracle, no less; because, if the soil were ready,
-the concept would come of itself. He had driven his brain by every
-torment to make words perform this miracle on a large scale.
-
-And this little listening creature he had just left--she had taken
-his idea, finished it for him, and involved it in action. To her it
-was the Cross. She had carried it to Golgotha, and sunk upon it with
-outstretched palms.... There was an excellence about Betty Berry that
-amazed him, in that it was in the world.... He had not called such
-women to him, because such women were not the answer to his desires.
-He realized with shame that a man only knows the women who answer in
-part the desires of his life. Those who had come to him were fitted
-to the plane of sensation upon which he had lived so many years. He
-had condemned all women because, in the weariness of the flesh, he had
-suddenly risen to perceive the falsity of his affinities of the flesh.
-“What boys we are!” he whispered, “in war and women and work--what
-boys!”
-
-Betty Berry had taught him a lesson, quite as enormous to his nature as
-the _Ploughman’s_. A man who thinks of women only in sensuousness
-encounters but half-women. He had learned it late, but well, that
-a man in this world may rise to heights far above his fellows in
-understanding, but that groups of women are waiting on all the higher
-slopes of consciousness for their sons and brothers and lovers to come
-up. They pass their time weaving laurel-leaves for the brows of delayed
-valiants....
-
-Duke thought of the men he had seen afield, the gravity with which
-these men did their great fighting business, the world talking about
-them. Then he thought of the little visionary in her room accepting her
-tragedy....
-
-Even now, in the hush and back-swing of the pendulum, it seemed very
-true what he had said. She had seen it. It is dangerous business to
-venture to change the current of other lives; no one knew it better
-than Fallows. But he considered Morning. Morning, as it were, had been
-left on his door-step. Morning would be alone now--alone to listen and
-receive his powers.... Fallows looked up from the black water to the
-far-apart pickets of the wintry night. He was going home.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The cabin was lit. Fallows climbed the hill wearily. There was a
-certain sharpness as of treachery from his night’s work, but to that
-larger region of mind, open to selfishness and the passion to serve
-men, peace had come. He was going home, first to San Francisco--then to
-the Bosks and the little boy.
-
-Morning arose quickly at the sound of the step on the hard ground, and
-opened the door wide. He had been reading her letter, which Fallows had
-left upon the table. The letter had been like an added hour with her.
-It was full of shy joy, full of their perfect accord, remote from the
-world--its road and stone-piles and evasions.... Fallows saw that he
-looked white and wasted. The red of the firelight did not mislead his
-eye. Its glow was not Morning’s and did not blend with the pallor.
-
-“I’m going on to-morrow, John,” he said.
-
-“’Frisco?”
-
-“Yes--and then----”
-
-“You’ll come back here?”
-
-“No, I’ll keep on into the west to _my_ cabin----”
-
-“It would be nearer this way. I planned to see you after ’Frisco.”
-
-“I’ll come back,” Fallows’ thought repeated, “for the harvest.”
-
-“And so you are going to make the big circle again?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You haven’t finished this first one, until you reach Noyes and your
-desk in the _Western States_.”
-
-“The next journey won’t take so long.”
-
-“You’ve been the good angel to me again, Duke. It’s quite a wonder, how
-you turn up in disaster of mine.... I wonder if I shall ever come to
-you--but you won’t get down. You wouldn’t even stay ill.”
-
-“You won’t get down again, John, at least, in none of the ways you know
-about----”
-
-Both men seemed spent beyond words.... Morning saw in the other’s
-departure the last bit of resistance lifted from his heart’s quest.
-Betty Berry had come between them. Morning’s conviction had never
-faltered on the point that Fallows was structurally weak on this one
-matter.... And so he was going. All that was illustrious in their
-friendship returned. They needed few words, but sat late before turning
-in. The cabin cooled and freshened. Each had the thought, before
-finally falling asleep, that they were at sea again.... And in the
-morning the thing that lived from their parting was this, from Duke
-Fallows:
-
-“Whatever you do, John--don’t forget your own--the deepest down man. He
-is yours--go after him--get him!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-... She was at the top of the stairs when he called the next morning;
-and he was only half-way up when he saw that she had on her hat and
-coat and gloves. The day was bitter like the others. He had thought of
-her fire, and the quiet of her presence. He meant to tell her all about
-Duke Fallows and the going. It was his thought--that she might find in
-this (not through words, but through his sense of release from Duke’s
-antagonism) a certain quickening toward their actual life together. He
-wanted to talk of bringing her to the cabin--at least, for her to come
-for a day.
-
-“You will go with me to get the tickets and things. I must start west
-at once.”
-
-It was quite dark in the upper hallway. Morning reached out and turned
-her by the elbow, back toward the door of her room. There in the light,
-he looked into her face. She was calm, her eyes bright. Whatever the
-night had brought--if weakness it was mastered, if exaltation it was
-controlled. But she was holding very hard. There was a tightness about
-her mouth that terrified him. It was not as it had been with them; he
-was not one with her.
-
-“You mean that you are going away--for some time?”
-
-“Yes.... Oh, you must not mind. We are road people. We have been
-wonderfully happy. You must not look so tragic----”
-
-It wasn’t like her at all. “We are not road people,” he thought....
-“You must not look so tragic,”--that was just like a thing road people
-might say.
-
-He sat down. The weakness of his limbs held his mind. It seemed to him,
-if he could forget his body, words might come. At first the thought
-of her going away was intolerable, but that had dwindled. It was the
-change in her--the something that had happened--the flippancy of her
-words.... He looked up suddenly. It seemed as if her arms had been
-stretched toward him, her face ineffably tender. So quickly it had
-happened that he could not be sure. He wanted this very thing so much
-that his mind might have formed the illusion. He let it pass. He did
-not want her to say it was not so.
-
-Words of her letter came back to him. Neither the letter nor yesterday
-had anything to do with this day.... “You are drawing closer all the
-time. I have been so happy to-day that I had to write. You must know
-that I sent you away because I could not bear more happiness....”
-
-Where was it? What had happened? He was fevered. Something was
-destroying him.... Betty Berry did not suffer for herself--it was with
-pity for him. The mother in her was tortured. It was her own life--this
-love of his for her--the only child she would ever have. She had loved
-its awakenings, its diffidences, the faltering steps of its expression.
-The man was not hers, but his love for her was her very own.... She had
-not thought of its death, when Fallows talked the night before. She had
-thought of _her_ giving up for his sake, but not of the anguish
-and the slaying of his love for her. And this was taking place now.
-
-“You will let me write to you?” he said, still thinking of the letter.
-
-“Oh, yes.”
-
-“And you will write to me?”
-
-She remembered now what she had written.... The fullness of her heart
-had gone into that. She could not write like that again. Yet he was
-asking for her letters, as a child might ask for a drink.... She could
-not refuse. It wasn’t in nature to see his face, and refuse.... Surely
-if she remained apart it was all any one could ask.
-
-“Yes, I will write sometimes.”
-
-He stood in the center of the room, his head bowed slightly, his eyes
-upon the wall. He was ill, bewildered, his mind turning here and there
-only to find fresh distress.... Suddenly he remembered that he had not
-told her of his drinking.... That must be it. Some one else had told
-her, and she was hurt and broken.
-
-“I meant always to tell you,” he said. “Only it really did not seem
-to signify by the time you came back. And when I was with you--oh, I
-seemed very far from that. I don’t understand it now----”
-
-She did not know what he meant; did not care, could not ask. It was
-something he clutched--in the disintegration.... He looked less
-death-like in his thinking of it.
-
-“It doesn’t greatly matter,” she said. “I have to go west.... Won’t you
-come with me to get the tickets?”
-
-“I can’t go out into the street yet. If there is anything more I have
-done--won’t you let me know?”
-
-Suddenly he realized her side, that he was detaining her; that it
-wasn’t easy for her to speak. It was not his way to impose his will
-upon anyone; his natural shyness now arose, and he fingered his hat.
-
-“Dear John Morning--you haven’t done anything. You have made me happy.
-I must go away to my work--and you, to yours.... It is hard for me,
-but I see it as the way. I have promised to write----”
-
-The words came forth like birds escaping--thin, evasive, vain words.
-That which she had seen so clearly the night before, (and which she
-seemed utterly to have lost the meaning of) was a lock upon every real
-utterance now. She had not counted upon this tragedy of her mother
-instinct--this slaying of the perfect thing in him, which she had loved
-to life.
-
-He arose, and sat down; he swallowed, started to speak, but could not.
-He was like a boy--this man who had seen so much, just a bewildered
-boy, his suffering too deep for words--the sweetest part of him to
-her, dying before her eyes. And the dream of their service together,
-their hand-in-hand going out to the world, their poverty and purity and
-compassion together--these were lost jewels.... It was all madness,
-the world--all madness and devilishness. Beauty and virtue and loving
-kindness were gone, the world turned insane.... The thought came to
-tell _him_ she was insane; a better lie still, that she was not
-a pure woman. She started to speak, but his eyes came up to her....
-She tried it again, but his eyes came up to her. He fingered his hat
-boyishly. The mother in her breast could not.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Their dreadful night. The winter darkness was coming on swiftly. Her
-train was leaving.
-
-“But you said you were not going to work for the present. You have been
-working so hard all winter----”
-
-He had said it all before.
-
-“Yes--but there is much for me to do--days of study and practice--and
-thinking. You will understand.... Everything will come clear and you
-will understand. You see, to-day--this isn’t a day for words with
-us.... One must have one’s own secret place. You must say of me, ‘She
-suddenly remembered something--and had to go away.’...”
-
-“‘She suddenly remembered something and had to hurry away,’” he
-repeated, trying to smile. “But she will write to me. I will
-work--work--and when you let me, I will come to you----”
-
-“Yes----”
-
-He had to leave.... He kissed her again. There was something like death
-about it.
-
-“If we _were_ only dead,” she said, “and were going away
-together----”
-
- * * * * *
-
-... A man stepped up to him, regarded him intently. Morning realized
-that he must get alone. He had been shaking his head wearily,
-and unseeingly--standing in the main corridor of the station in
-Jersey--shaking his head.... It was full night outside. He forgot that
-he did not have to recross the river--and was on the ferry back to New
-York before he remembered....
-
-He gained the hill to his cabin long afterward. That reminded him that
-Duke Fallows had gone, too--and that very morning.
-
-It seemed farther back in his life than Liaoyang.
-
-
- 16
-
-BETTY BERRY’S journey was ten hours west by the limited
-trains--straight to the heart of her one tried friend, Helen Quiston, a
-city music teacher. Her first thought, and the one buoy, was that she
-would be able to tell everything.... She could not make Helen Quiston
-feel the pressure that his Guardian Spirit (she always thought of Duke
-Fallows so) invoked in that half-hour of his call, but with a day or a
-night she could make her friend know what had happened, and something
-of the extent of force which had led to her sacrifice. Helen would tell
-her if she were mad. All through that night she prayed that her friend
-would call her mad--would force her to see that the thing she had done
-was viciously insane.
-
-She was engulfed. For the first time, her spirit failed to right itself
-in any way. She was more dependent upon Helen Quiston than she had
-conceived possible, since the little girl had fought out the different
-cruel presentations of the days, during the early life with her father.
-
-Throughout the night _en route_ she thought of the letter she had
-promised to write to John Morning. The day with him had brought the
-letter from a vague promise to an immediate duty upon her reaching
-the studio.... She was to write first, and at once. Already she was
-making trials in her mind, but none would do. He would penetrate
-every affectation. The wonder and dreadfulness of it--was that she
-must not tell the truth, for he would be upon her, furiously human,
-disavowing all separateness from the race, as one with a message must
-be; disavowing the last vestige of the dream of compassion which his
-Guardian Spirit had pictured.... She knew his love for her. She had
-seen it suffer. Would Helen Quiston show her that she must bring it
-back--that the Guardian Spirit was evil? There was a fixture about it,
-a whispering of the negative deep within.
-
-She could not write of the memories. Not the least linger of perfume
-from that night at the theatre must touch her communication. Yet it
-was the arch of all. As she knew her soul and his, they had been as
-pure as children that night--even before a word was spoken. It had been
-so natural--such a rest and joy.... She had learned well to put love
-away, before he came. From the few who approached, she had laughed
-and withdrawn. The world had daubed them. In her heart toward other
-men, she was as a consecrated nun. And this was like her Lord who had
-come.... She had made her way in the world among men. She knew them,
-worked among them, pitied them. Her father had been as weak, as evil,
-as passionate, as pitiable. In the beginning she had learned the world
-through him--all its bitter, brutal lessons. As she knew the ’cello and
-its literature, she knew the world and the cheap artifices it would
-call arts.... She had even put away judgments; she had covered her
-eyes; accustomed her ears to patterings; made her essential happiness
-of little things; she had labored truly, and lived on, wondering why.
-And he had come at last with understanding. She had seen in Morning
-potentially all that a woman loves, and cannot be. He had made her mind
-and heart fruitful and flourishing again. Then his Guardian Spirit had
-appeared and spoken. As of old there had been talk of a serpent. As of
-old the serpent was of woman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Helen Quiston was just leaving for a forenoon’s work away from the
-studio. She sat down for a moment holding the other in her arms; then
-she made tea and toast, and hastened off to return as quickly as
-possible.... For a long time Betty Berry stood by the piano. The day
-was gray and cold, but the studio was softly shining. All the woods
-of it were dark, approximately the black of the grand piano; floors
-and walls and picture frames were dark, but the openings were broad,
-and naked trees stirred outside the back windows.... She did not look
-the illness that was upon her. She was a veteran in suffering.... She
-forgot to breathe, until the need of air suddenly caught and shook
-her throat. It was often so when the hidden beauty of certain music
-unfolded to her for the first time.
-
-She went to the rear windows, gradually realizing that it would soon
-be spring-time. There was a swift, tangible hurt in this that brought
-tears. There had been no tears for the inner desolation.... “Poor dear
-John Morning,” she whispered.
-
-The reproduction of a wonderful painting of the meeting of Beatrice and
-Dante held her eye for a long time.... The blight was upon her as she
-tried a last time to write. It spread over her hand and the table, the
-room, the day. There was a hurt for him in everything she wanted to
-say. She was hot and ill--her back, her brain, her eyes, from trying.
-She could not hurt him any more. He had done nothing but give her
-healing and visions. His Guardian had done nothing but tell the truth,
-which she had seen at the time. This agony of hers had existed. It was
-like everything else in the world.
-
-She wrote at last of their service in the world. They needed, she
-said, the strong air of solitude to think out the perfect way. It was
-very hard for her, who had fared so long on dreams and denials and
-loneliness. He must remember that. “Great things come to those who
-love at a distance,” she wrote bravely. Tears started when she saw
-the sentence standing so dauntlessly upon the page of her torture....
-It would make them kinder, make their ideals live--and how young they
-were!... She said that she was afraid to be so happy as he had made her
-in certain moments. Often she found herself staring at the picture of
-Beatrice and Dante.
-
-The thought that broke in upon this brave writing was that she was
-denied the thrill of great doing, as it had come to her while Fallows
-had spoken.... It would have lived on, had she gone that night, without
-seeing Morning again. Moreover, her way was different from that which
-she had pictured, as his Guardian talked. She did not see then that her
-action made a kind of lie of all her giving up to that hour; and that
-there could be no united sacrifice. It was pure, voiceless sacrifice
-for her--and blind murdering for him....
-
-From the choke of this, her mind would turn to the song of triumph her
-spirit had sung as his Guardian told the story.... She had seemed to
-live in a vast eternal life, as she listened; and this which she was
-asked to do--was just to attend a temporary flesh sickness. She had the
-strange blessedness that comes with the conviction that immortality is
-here and now, as those few men and women of the world have known in
-their highest moments.
-
-She could get back nothing of that exaltation. It would never come
-again. The spirit it had played upon was broken.... She had been
-rushing away on her thoughts. It was afternoon, the letter unfinished,
-the ’cello staring at her from the corner. It had stood by her in
-all her sorrows of the years, but was empty as a fugue now--endless
-variations upon the one theme of misery.... Happiness does not come
-back to the little things--after one has once known the breath of
-life.... She closed the narrow way of the letter, which she had filled
-with words--no past nor future, only the darkness that had come in to
-mingle with the dark hangings of the room of her friend.... She kissed
-the pages and sent them back the way she had come in the night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The qualities that had brought her the friend, Helen Quiston, and which
-had made the friendship so real, were the qualities of Betty Berry.
-She had come to the last woman to be told of her madness, or to find
-admonition toward breaking down the thing she had begun.... They had
-talked for hours that night.
-
-“I know it is lovely, dear Betty. Why, you look lovelier this instant
-than I ever dreamed you could be. Loving a man seems to do that to
-a woman--but the privilege of the greater thing! Oh, you _are_
-privileged. That’s the way of the great love. I should like sometime
-to know that Guardian. How did mere man grasp the beauty and mystery of
-service like that?... Stay with me. I will serve you, hands and feet.
-It is enough for me to touch the garment’s hem.... You are already
-gone from us, dearest. You have loved a man. You do love a man. He is
-worthy. You have not found him wanting. What matters getting him--when
-you have found your faith? Think of us--think of the gray sisterhood
-you once belonged to--nuns of the world--who go about their work
-helping, and who say softly to each other as they pass, ‘No, I have not
-been able to find him yet.’”
-
-
- 17
-
-MORNING awoke in the gray of the winter morning. The place was
-cold and impure. He had fallen asleep without the accustomed blasts of
-hill-sweeping wind from window to window. He had not started the fire
-the night before; had merely dropped upon his cot, dazed with suffering
-and not knowing his weariness. He was reminded of places he had
-awakened in other times when he could not remember how he got to bed.
-Beyond the chairs and table lay the open fire-place, the ashes hooded
-in white.
-
-The blackness of yesterday returned, but with a hot resentment against
-himself that he had not known before. He had followed Betty Berry about
-for hours, and had not penetrated the hollow darkness with a single
-ray of intelligence. This dreadful business was his, yet he had been
-stricken; had scarcely found his speech. There was no doubt of Betty
-Berry now, though a dozen evasions of hers during the day returned.
-She was doing something hard, but something she thought best to do.
-The real truth, however, was rightly his property.... To-day she would
-write. To-morrow her letter would come. If it did not contain some
-reality upon which he might stand through the present desolation, he
-would go to her.... Yes, he would go to her.
-
-His side was hurting. He was used to that; it had no new relation now.
-Everything was flat and wretched. Distaste for himself and this nest
-in which he had lain, was but another of the miserable adjuncts of the
-morning. He stood forth shivering from the cot; struck a match and held
-it to some waste paper. Kindling was ready in the fire-place, but the
-paper flared out and fell to ashes, as he watched his left hand. He
-went to the window and examined his hand closer. The nails were broken
-and dry; there were whitish spots on the joints. He had seen something
-of this before, but his physical reactions had been so various and
-peculiar, in the past six weeks, that he had refused to be disturbed.
-
-Just now his mind was clamoring with memories. He had the sense that
-as soon as an opening was forced in his mind, a torrent would rush in.
-He felt his heart striking hard and with rapidity. The floor heaved
-windily, or was it the lightness of his limbs? He went about the things
-to do with strange zeal, as if to keep his brain from a contemplation
-so hideous that it could not be borne.
-
-He lit another paper, placed kindling upon it, poked the charred stubs
-of wood free from the thick covering of white, and brought fresh fuel.
-Then, as the fire kindled, he opened the door and windows, and swept
-and swept.... But it encroached upon him.... The open wound was no
-longer a mystery.... His dream of the river and the boat that was not
-allowed to land; his dream of the cliff, and looking down into the life
-of earth through the tree-tops ... the ferry-man of the Hun ... and now
-yesterday with its two relations to the old cause.
-
-His whole nature was prepared for the revelation; yet it seemed to
-require years in coming. Like the loss of the manuscript in the Liao
-ravine, it was done before he knew.
-
-“Of course, they had to rush away, when they found out,” he mumbled.
-“Of course, they couldn’t stay. Of course, they couldn’t be the ones to
-tell me.”
-
-It might have been anywhere in China; the ferryman on the Hun ...
-during the deck-passage.... It did not greatly matter. Some contact of
-the Orient had started the slow virus on its long course in his veins.
-He knew that it required from three to five years to reach the stage of
-revealing itself as now. He saw it as the source of his various recent
-indispositions, and realized that he could not remain in his cabin
-indefinitely. It would be well for a while. Neither Duke Fallows nor
-Betty Berry would tell. He could keep his secret, and then--to die in
-some island quarantine? None of that. This was his life. He was master
-of it. He should die when he pleased, and where.
-
-... Yes, she had her gloves on, when he came. She had not removed them
-all day, not even at the very last.... How strange and frightened she
-had been--how pitiful and hard for her! She could not have told him.
-She had loved him--and had suddenly learned.... She had seen that he
-did not know.... It must have come to her in the night--after the last
-day of happiness. Perhaps the processes of its coming to her were like
-his. He was sorry for Betty Berry.
-
-And he could not see her again; he could not see her again. He passed
-the rest of the day with this repetition.... His life was over. That’s
-what it amounted to. Of course, he would not let them segregate him.
-His cabin would do for a while, until the secret threatened to reveal
-itself, and then he would finish the business.... The two great issues
-leaned on each other: The discovery of his mortal taint took the stress
-from the tragedy of yesterday; and that he could not see Betty Berry
-again kept madness away from the abominable death.... The worst of it
-all was that the love-mating was ended. This brought him to the end of
-the first day, when he began to think of the Play.
-
-The literary instinct, of almost equal disorder with dramatic instinct,
-and which he had come to despise during the past year, returned with
-the easy conformity of an undesirable acquaintance--that reportorial
-sentence-making faculty, strong as death, and as uncentering to
-the soul of man. Morning saw himself searching libraries for data
-on leprosy, being caught by officials--the subject of nation-wide
-newspaper articles and magazine specials, the pathos of his case
-variously appearing--Liaoyang recalled--his own story--Reever Kennard
-relating afresh the story of the stealing of _Mio Amigo_. What
-a back-wash from days of commonness! The ego and the public eye--two
-Dromios--equal in monkey-mindedness and rapacity.
-
-Morning was too shattered to cope with this ancient dissipation at
-first.
-
-After the warring and onrushing of different faculties, a sort of
-coma fell upon the evil part, and the ways of the woman came back to
-him. He sat by his fire that night, the wound in his side forgotten,
-the essence of Asia’s foulness in his veins, forgotten--and meditated
-upon the sweetness of Betty Berry. He approached her image with a good
-humility. He saw her with something of the child upon her--as if he
-had suddenly become full of years. “How beautiful she was!” he would
-whisper; and then he would smile sadly at the poor blind boy he had
-been, not to see her beautiful at first.... To think, only three days
-before, she had sent him away, because she could not endure, except
-alone, the visitation of happiness that came to her. People of such
-inner strength must have their secret times and places, for their
-strength comes to them alone. To think that he had not understood this
-at once.... He had been eloquent and did not know it.
-
-“Hell,” he said, “that’s the only way one can say the right thing--when
-he doesn’t plan it.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-... If his illness had been any common thing she would not have been
-frightened away. He was sure of this. It took Asia’s horror--to
-frighten her away. He saw her now, how she must have fought with it.
-He shuddered for her suffering on that day.... That day--why it was
-only the day before yesterday.... He never realized before how the
-illusion, Time, is only measurable by man’s feeling.... He was a little
-surprised at Duke Fallows. He himself wouldn’t have been driven off,
-if Duke had suddenly uncovered a leprous condition. He had been driven
-off by Duke’s ideas, but no fear of contagion could do it. Yet Duke
-was the bravest man he had ever known--in such deep and astonishing
-ways courageous. Yet he had been brought up soft. He wasn’t naturally
-a man-mingler. It had been too much for him. It was a staggerer--this.
-Fallows was a Prince anyway. Every man to his own fear.... This was the
-second morning.
-
-Old Jethro, the rural delivery carrier, drove by that morning
-without stopping. She could not have mailed her letter until last
-night--another day to wait for it. Morning tried to put away the
-misery. Women never think of mail-closing times. They put a letter in
-the box and consider it delivered.... He puzzled on, regarding the
-action of Duke Fallows, in the light of what he would have done. No
-understanding came.
-
-All thoughts returned in the course of the hours, his mind milling over
-and over again the different phases, but each day had its especial
-theme. The first was that he would not see Betty Berry again; that
-Duke Fallows had been frightened away, the second; and on the third
-morning, before dawn, he began to reckon with physical death, as if
-this day’s topic had been assigned to him.
-
-Sister Death--she had been in the shadows before. Occasionally he had
-shivered afterward, when he thought of some close brush with her. She
-was all right, only he had thought of her as an alien before. It really
-wasn’t so--a blood sister now.... He recalled scenes in the walled
-cities of China.... She had certainly put over a tough one on him....
-It would be in this room. He wouldn’t wait until his appearance was
-a revelation.... He would do the play. Something that he could take,
-would free him from the present inertia, so he could work for a while,
-a few hours a day. When the play was done--the Sister would come at
-his bidding.... He had always thought of her as feminine. A line from
-somewhere seemed to seize upon her very image--this time not sister,
-but----
-
-_Dark mother, always gliding near, with soft feet----_
-
-He faced her out on that third morning. Physically there was but a
-tremor about the coming. Not the suffering, but a certain touch and
-shake of the heart, heaved him a little--the tough little pump stopped,
-its fine incentive and its life business broken.... But that was only
-the rattle of the door-knob of death.
-
-It was all right. He wasn’t afraid. The devil, Ambition, was pretty
-well strangled. There must be something that lasts, in his late-found
-sense of the utter unimportance of anything the world can give--the
-world which appreciates only the boyish part of a real man’s work. So
-he would take out with him a reality of the emptiness of the voice
-of the crowd. Then the unclean desire for drink was finished--none
-of that would cling to him; moreover, no fighting passion to live on
-would hold him down to the body of things.... But he would pass the
-door with the love of Betty Berry--strong, young, imperious, almost
-untried.... Would that come back with him? Does a matter of such
-dimension die? Does one come back at all?...
-
-Probably in this room....
-
-Then he thought of the play that must be done in this room; and
-curiously with it, identifying itself with the play and the re-forming
-part of it, was the favorite word of Duke Fallows’--_Compassion_.
-What a title for the play! Duke’s word and Duke’s idea.... All this
-brought him to the thought of Service, as he had pictured it for Betty
-Berry--a life together doing things for men--loving each other so much
-that there were volumes to spare for the world--down among men--to the
-deepest down man.
-
-His throat tightened suddenly. He arose. A sob came from him.... His
-control broke all at once.... How a little run of thoughts could tear
-down a man’s will! It wasn’t fear at all--but the same depiction
-running in his mind that had so affected Betty Berry when she begged to
-be alone....
-
-“The deepest down man--the deepest down man.... It is I, Duke!...
-Surely you must have meant me all the time!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-But it passed quickly, properly whipped and put away with other
-matters--all but a certain relating together of the strange trinity,
-Death, Service, and Betty Berry--which he did not venture to play
-with, for fear of relapse.... He had been eating nothing. He must go
-to Hackensack. The little glass showed him a haggard and unshaven John
-Morning, but there was nothing of the uncleanness about the face in
-reflection.... He heard the “giddap” of Jethro far on the road. The old
-rig was coming.... It stopped at his box. He hurried down the hill.
-
-
- 18
-
-TWO letters; one from Duke Fallows. Morning opened this on
-the way up the slope. He was afraid of the other. He wanted to be in
-the cabin with the door shut--when that other was opened.... Fallows
-was joyous and tender--just a few lines written on the way west:
-“... I won’t be long in ’Frisco. I know that already. The _Western
-States_ does very well without me.... Soon on the long road to Asia
-and Russia. I must look up Lowenkampf again before going home. He was
-good to us, wasn’t he, John?... And you, this old heart thrills for
-you. You are coming on. I don’t know anything more you need. I say you
-are coming on. You’ll do the Play and the Book.... John, you ought to
-write the book of the world’s heart.... And then you will get so full
-of the passion to serve men that writing won’t be enough. You will have
-to go down among them again--and labor and lift among men. Things have
-formed about you for this.... We are friends.... I am coming back for
-the harvest.”
-
-The sun had come out. Morning was standing in the doorway as he
-finished. The lemon-colored light fell upon the paper.... It wasn’t
-like Duke to write in this vein--after running away. He repeated aloud
-a sentence to this effect. Then he went in, shut the door, and, almost
-suffocating from the tension, read the letter of Betty Berry.
-
-It was just such a letter as would have sent him to her, before his
-realization of the illness.... He saw her torture to be kind, and yet
-not to lift his hopes. It was different from Fallows’, in that it
-fitted exactly to what he now knew about himself. And he had to believe
-from the pages that she loved him. There was an eternal equality to
-that.... The air seemed full of service. Two letters from his finest
-human relations, each stirring him to service. He did not see this
-just now with the touch of bitterness that might have flavored it all
-another time.... What was there about him that made them think of him
-so? If they only knew how meager and tainted so much of his thinking
-was. Some men can never make the world see how little they are.
-
-He wrote to Betty Berry. Calm came to him, and much the best moments
-that he had known in the three days. He was apt to be a bit lyrical
-as a letter-lover--he whose words were so faltering face to face with
-the woman. Thoughts of the play came to his writing. He was really in
-touch with himself again. He would never lose that. He would work every
-day. When a man’s work comes well--he can face anything.... The play
-was begun the fourth day, and, on the fifth, another letter from Betty
-Berry. This was almost all about his work. She had seized upon this
-subject, and her letters lifted his inspiration. She could share his
-work. There was real union in that....
-
-He was forgetting his devil for an hour at a time. There were moments
-of actual peace and well-being. He did not suffer more than the pain he
-had been accustomed to so long. And then, a real spring day breathed
-over the hill.
-
-That morning, without any heat of producing, and without any elation
-from a fresh letter from the woman, he found that in his mind to say
-aloud:
-
-“I’m ready for what comes.”
-
-By a really dramatic coincidence, within ten minutes after this
-fruitage of fine spirit, John Morning found an old unopened envelope
-from Nevin, the little doctor of the _Sickles_. He had recalled
-some data on Liaoyang while inspecting the morning--something that
-might prove valuable for the play, in the old wallet he had carried
-afield. Looking for this in the moulded leather, he found the letter
-Nevin had left in the Armory, before departing--just a little before
-Betty Berry came that day.... Nevin had not come back. But Noyes and
-Field had come.
-
-Morning remembered that Nevin had spoken that morning of finding
-something for the wound that would not heal.... The remedy was Chinese.
-The Doctor knew of its existence, but had procured the name with great
-difficulty in the Chinese quarter.... Morning was to fast ten days
-while taking the treatment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He went about it with a laugh. The message had renewed his deep
-affection for Nevin. It had come forth from the hidden place where
-Nevin now toiled, (secretly trying, doubtless, to cover every
-appearance of his humanity).... He remembered how Nevin had studied
-the wound that refused to heal. The last thing had been his report on
-that. When there was nothing more to be offered but felicities--he had
-vanished.
-
-Morning did not leap into any expectancy that he was to be healed,
-but thoughts of Nevin gave him another desire after the play and the
-book--to trace the great-hearted little man before the end. Nevin would
-be found somewhere out among the excessive desolations. If it may be
-understood, the idea of mortal sickness remained in Morning’s mind at
-this time, mainly as a barrier between him and Betty Berry.
-
-Nevin’s drug was procured in New York. Hackensack failed utterly in
-this.... On the third day, Morning suffered keenly for the need of
-food. A paragraph from Betty Berry on the subject of the fasting at
-this time completely astonished him; indeed, shook the basic conviction
-as to the meaning of her departure:
-
-“... I have often thought you did not seem so well after I returned
-from Europe, as you were when we parted. But the ten days will do for
-you, something that makes whatever might happen in the body seem so
-little and unavailing.... Don’t you see, you are doing what every
-one, destined to be a world-teacher, has done?... What amazes me
-continually, is that you seem to be brought, one by one, to these
-things by exterior processes, rather than through any will of your
-own.... The Hebrew prophets were all called upon to do this in order to
-listen better. Recall, too, the coming forth from the Wilderness of the
-Baptist, and the forty days in the wilderness of the Master Himself.
-Why, it is part of the formula! You will do more than improve the
-physical health; you will hear your message more clearly.... I sit and
-think--in the very hush of expectancy for you.”
-
-As the evidences came, so they vanished. She could not have fled
-from him in the fear of leprosy and written in this way; nor could
-Duke Fallows, who was first of all unafraid of fleshly things. The
-conviction of his taint, and of its incurableness, daily weakened.
-Before the ten days passed, the last vestige of the horror was cleaned
-away. Illusion--and yet the mental battle through which he had passed,
-and which, through three terrible days, had shaken him body and soul,
-was just as real in the graving of its experience upon the fabric of
-his being as was the journey to Koupangtse, done hand and foot and
-horse. He perceived that man, farther advanced in the complications of
-self-consciousness, covers ground in three days and masters a lesson
-that would require a life to learn in the dimness and leisure of simple
-consciousness.
-
-There was no way of missing this added fact: He, John Morning, was not
-designed to lean. He had been whipped and spurred through another dark
-hollow in the valley of the shadow, to show him again, and finally,
-that he was not intended for leaning upon others, yet must have an
-instant appreciation of the suffering of others. He had been forced to
-fight his own way to a certain poise, through what was to him, at the
-time, actual abandonment in distress, by the woman and the friend he
-loved. Moreover, he had accepted death; resignation to death in its
-most horrible form had been driven into his soul--an important life
-lesson, which whole races of men have died to learn.
-
-He was seeing very clearly.... He bathed continually both in water and
-sunlight, lying in the open doorway as the Spring took root on his hill
-and below. Often he mused away the hours, with Betty Berry’s letters
-in his hand--too weak almost to stir at last, but filled with ease and
-well-being, such as he had never known. Water from the Spring was all
-he needed, and the activity of mind was pure and unerring, as if he
-were lifted above the enveloping mists of the senses, through which he
-had formerly regarded life.
-
-Everything now was large and clear. Life was like a coast of splendid
-altitude, from which he viewed the mighty distances of gilded and
-cloud-shadowed sea, birds sailing vast-pinioned and pure, the breakers
-sounding a part of the majestic harmony of granite and sea and sky; the
-sun God-like, and the stars vast and pure like the birds.
-
-When he actually looked with his eyes, it was as if he had come back,
-a man, to some haunt of childhood. The little hill was just as lovely,
-a human delight in the unbudded elms, a soft and childish familiarity
-in the new greens of the sun-slope grass. The yellow primrose was
-first to come, for yellow answers the thinnest, farthest sunlight. The
-little cabin was like a cocoon. He was but half-out. Soon the stronger
-sunlight would set him free--then to the wings.... One afternoon he
-stared across to the haze of the great city. His eyes smarted with the
-thought of the Charleys and the sisters, of the _Boabdils_ and the
-slums.... Then, at last, he thought of Betty Berry waiting and thinking
-of him ... “in the very hush of expectancy.” The world was very dear
-and wonderful, and his love for her was in it all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was the ninth day that the bandage slipped from him, as clean as
-when he put it on the day before, and when he opened the door of the
-cabin he heard the first robin.... There was a sweeping finality in
-the way it had come from Nevin, and the quality of the man lived in
-Morning’s appreciation. His friends were always gone before he knew how
-fine they were.
-
-He was slow to realize that the days of earth-life were plentiful for
-him, in the usual course. A man is never the same after he has accepted
-death.... And it had all come in order.... He could look into her eyes
-and say, “Betty Berry, whatever you want, is right for me, but I think
-it would be best for you to tell me everything. We are strong--and if
-we are not to be one together, we should talk it over and understand
-perfectly.”...
-
-How strange he had missed this straight way. There had been so much
-illusion before. His body was utterly weak, but his mind saw more
-clearly and powerfully than ever.
-
-The Play was conceived as a whole that ninth day. The sun came warmly
-in, while he wrote at length of the work, as he finally saw it.... On
-the tenth day he drank a little milk and slept in his chair by the
-doorway.... There was one difficult run that the robin went over a
-hundred and fifty times, at least.
-
-
- 19
-
-BETTY BERRY watched the progress of the fasting with a mothering
-intensity. She saw that which had been lyrical and impassioned
-give way to the workman, the deeper-seeing artist. He was not
-less human; his humanity was broadened. From one of his pages,
-she read how he had looked across at the higher lights of New York
-one clear March night. His mind had been suddenly startled by a swift
-picture of the fighting fool he had been, and of the millions there,
-beating themselves and each other to death for vain things.... She
-saw his Play come on in the days that followed the fasting. There
-was freshness in his voice. She did not know that he had accepted
-death, but she saw that he was beginning to accept her will in their
-separation.
-
-And this is what she had tried to bring about, but her heart was
-breaking. Dully she wondered if her whole life were not breaking. The
-something implacable which she had always felt in being a woman, held
-her like a matrix of iron now. Her life story had been a classic of
-suffering, yet she had never suffered before.
-
-A letter from him, (frequently twice a day, they came) and it was
-her instant impulse to answer, almost as if he had spoken. And when
-she wrote--all the woman’s life of her had to be cut from it--cut
-again and again--until was left only what another might say.... She
-was forced to learn the terrible process of elimination which only
-the greater artists realize, and which they learn only through years
-of travail--that selection of the naked absolute, according to their
-vision, all the senses chiseled away. His work, his health, especially
-the clear-seeing that came from purifying of the body, the detachment
-of his thoughts from physical emotions--of these, which were clear to
-her as the impulses of instinct--she allowed herself to write. But
-the woman’s heart of flesh, which had fasted so long for love, so
-often found its way to her pages, and forced them to be done again....
-Certain of his paragraphs dismayed her, as:
-
-“Does it astonish you,” he asked, almost joyously, “when I say there is
-something about Betty Berry beyond question--such a luxurious sense
-of truth?... I feel your silences and your listenings between every
-sentence. It is not what you say, though in words you seem to know what
-I am to-day, and what I shall be to-morrow--but all about the words,
-are _you_--those perfect hesitations, the things which I seemed
-to know at first, but could not express. They were much too fine for a
-medium of expression which knew only wars, horses, and the reporting of
-words and deeds of men.... Why, the best thing in my heart is its trust
-for you, Betty Berry. Looking back upon our hours together, I can see
-now that all the misunderstandings were mine and all the truth yours.
-When it seems to me that we should be together, and the memories come
-piling back--those perfect hours--I say, because of this trust, ‘Though
-it is not as I would have it, her way is better. And I know I shall
-come to see it, because she cannot be wrong.’”
-
-So she could not hide her heart from him, even though she put down what
-seemed to her unworthiness and evasion, and decided through actual
-brain-process what was best to say. A new conduct of life was not
-carrying Betty Berry up into the coolness beyond the senses. Fasting
-would never bring that to her. Fasting of the body was so simple
-compared to the fasting of the heart which had been her whole life. Nor
-could she ever rise long from the sense of the serpent in woman which
-she had realized from the words of his Guardian--not a serpent to the
-usual man, but to the man who was destined to love the many instead of
-one.... She loved him as a woman loves--the boy, the lover, the man of
-him--the kisses, the whispers, the arms of strength, the rapture of
-nearness....
-
-He must have been close to the spirit of that night at the theatre,
-when this was written:
-
-“The letter to-day, with the plaintive note in it, has brought you
-even closer. I never think of you as one who can be tried seriously;
-always as one finished, with infinite patience, and no regard at all
-for the encompassing common. Of course, I know differently, know that
-you must suffer, you who are so keenly and exquisitely animate--but you
-have an un-American poise.... You played amazingly. I loved that at
-once. There was a gleam about it. Betty Berry’s gleaming. I faced you
-from the wings that night. I wanted to come up behind you. You were all
-music.... But I love even better the instrument of emotions you have
-become. That must be what music is for--to sensitize one’s life, to
-make it more and more responsive....”
-
-Then in a different vein:
-
-“... The long forenoons, wherein we grow.... Yes, I knew you were a
-tree-lover; that the sound of running water was dear to you ... and
-the things you dream of ... work and play and forest scents and the
-wind in the branches.... Sometimes it seems to me--is it a saying of
-lovers?--that we should be boy and girl together.... Why, I’ve only
-just now learned to be a boy. There was so much of crudity and desire
-and anguish-to-do-greatly-at-any-cost--until just a little ago. But
-I’ve never had a boyhood that could have known you. I wasn’t ready for
-such loveliness in the beginning.... I’ve wanted terribly to go to you,
-but that is put away for the time.”
-
-These lines wrung her heart. “Oh, no,” she cried, “you have not learned
-how to become a boy. There was never a time you were not ready--until
-now! You are becoming a man--and the little girl--oh, she is a little
-girl in her heart....”
-
-Everything his Guardian had promised was coming to be. He was changing
-into a man. That would take him from her at the last--even letters,
-this torrent of his thoughts of life and work. She saw the first
-process of it--as the Play grasped him finally--the old tragedy of a
-man turning from a woman to his work....
-
-She built the play from the flying sparks.... He was thronged with
-illusions of production. How badly he had done it before, he said, and
-how perfect had proved the necessity to wait, and to do it a second
-time.... Even the most unimaginative audience must build the great
-battle picture from the headquarters scene; then the trampled arena of
-the Ploughman, deep in the hollow of that valley, and his coming forth
-through the millet....
-
-“... It’s so simple,” he wrote in fierce haste. “You see, I remember
-how hard it was for me to grasp that first night, when Fallows brought
-in the story to the Russian headquarters.... I have remembered that. I
-have made it _so that I could see it then_. And I was woven in and
-fibred over with coarseness, from months of life in Liaoyang and from
-the day’s hideous brutality. I have measured my slowness and written
-to quicken such slowness as that. The mystery is, it is not spoiled by
-such clearness. It is better--it never lets you alone. It won’t let you
-lie to yourself. You can’t be the same after reading it.... And it goes
-after the deepest down man.... Every line is involved in action.
-
-“The third act--sometime we’ll see it together--how the main character
-leaves the field and goes out in search of the Ploughman’s hut, across
-Asia and Europe; how he reaches there--the old father and mother, the
-six children, the one little boy, who has the particular answer for
-the man’s lonely love--the mother of the six, common, silent, angular,
-her skirt hanging square, as Duke put it--but she is big enough for
-every one to get into her heart. You will see the fear of her man’s
-death, which the stranger’s presence brings to her, though he leaves it
-to Russia to inform the family. You will see the beautiful mystery of
-compassion that he brings, too. That’s the whole shine of the piece.
-And it came from the ministry of pain.
-
-... “I’m not praising _my_ Play--it isn’t. It’s Duke’s almost
-every word of it--every thought, the work of Duke’s disciple. I
-have merely felt it all and made it clear--clear. You see it all.
-Many thousands must see, and see what the name means. It’s the most
-wonderful word in the world to me, _Compassion_.”
-
-Then came the break for a day, and the flash that his work on the Play
-was finished. “The cabin will be harder for me now. The new work is
-only a dream so far--and this goes to Markheim to-day.... It is very
-queer that I should go back to Markheim, but somehow I want to pick up
-that failure. There are other reasons.... I shall tell him that he can
-have five days. I’m just getting ready to go across the River.... My
-health was almost never better. I’m not tired. The work has seemed to
-replenish me, as your letters do. But that last letter--yesterday’s--it
-seems to come from behind a screen, where other voices were--the loved
-tones troubled and crowded out by others. It left me restless and more
-than ever longing to see you. It is as if there were centuries all
-unintelligible, to be made clear only by being with you. The world and
-the other voices drown yours----”
-
-She felt the instinct of centuries to hold out her arms to him--arms
-of the woman, after man’s task in the world--home at evening with the
-prize of the hunt and battle. The world for the day, the woman for the
-night--that is man’s way. She seemed to know it now from past eternity.
-And for woman--day and night the man of her thoughts.... She was afraid
-of her every written word now. Her heart answered every thrill of his;
-the murmuring and wrestling resistance of his against the miles, was
-hers ten-fold.... The days of the fasting had not been like this, nor
-the two weeks that followed in which he had completed the play....
-April had come. She was ill. Her music was neglected altogether. Her
-friend, Helen Quiston, never faltered in her conception of the beauty
-and the mystery of the separation. With all her will, Helen sustained
-her against the relinquishing of the lofty ideal of sacrifice, and
-tried to distract her impassioned turning to the east.... She would
-hold to the death; Betty Berry knew this.
-
-“It’s harder now that the play is done,” Betty repeated. “He can’t be
-driven instantly to work again. I can’t lie to him. He doesn’t fight
-me--he thinks I’m right--that’s the unspeakable part of it. There is
-nothing for me to write about except his work....”
-
-And Helen Quiston found her, a half-hour afterward, staring out of
-the window, exactly as she had left--her hands in her lap exactly the
-same.... Betty Berry was thinking unutterable things, having to do with
-adorable meetings in the theatre-wings--of wonderful night journeys,
-all night talking--of waiting in a little room, and at the head of the
-stairs. There was an invariable coming back to the first kiss in the
-wings of the theatre.
-
-“We were real--we were true to each other that night--true as little
-children. We needed no words,” this was her secret story.... “Oh, I
-waited so long for him ... and we could have gone out together and
-served in a little way. But they would not let us alone.”
-
-He had been across to New York.... The second morning after the play
-was finished, she received a letter with a rather indescribable ending.
-He told her of fears and strangeness, of intolerable longing for
-something to happen that would bring them together.... The rest is here:
-
-“I’m a bit excited by the thought that just came to me. And another,
-but I won’t tell you yet, for fear.... I don’t quite understand myself.
-I seem afraid. I think I would ask more of myself than I would of
-another man just now. There seem all about me invisible restraints.
-Something deep within recognizes the greatness and finality of your
-meaning to me.... It is true, you do not leave the strength to me.
-Did you ever--? No, I won’t ask that.... This letter isn’t kind to
-you--unsettling, strange, full of an intensity to see and be with
-you....”
-
-Moments afterwards, as she was standing at the piano--the letter
-trailing from her hand--the telephone in the inner room startled her
-like a human cry.
-
-
- 20
-
-IT was Morning. She did not remember his words nor her answers--only
-that she had told him he might come up-town to her. He had dropped
-the receiver then, as if it burned him.
-
-So, it was a matter of minutes. Nothing was ready. Least of all, was
-she ready. She could hardly stand. She had forgotten at first, and it
-had required courage, of late, to look in the mirror. She would have
-given up, before what she saw now, but a robin was singing in the
-foliage by the rear windows. She went out to open the studio door into
-the hall, then retired to the inner room again.... “He can heal you,
-and bring back the music,” her heart whispered, but her mind cowered
-before herself, and this mate of herself, Helen Quiston, and before his
-Guardian.... She heard his step on the stair ... called to him to wait
-in the studio. He was pacing to and fro.
-
-Morning felt the light resistance in her arms. His kiss fell upon her
-cheek. He held her at arm’s length, looking into her face.
-
-She laughed, repeating that she was not ill.... She was always thinner
-in summer, she said. In her withholding, there was destructiveness for
-the zeal he had brought; and that which she set herself resolutely to
-impart--the sense of their separateness--found its lodgment in his
-nature. It would always be there now, she thought; it would augment,
-like ice about a spring in early winter, until the frost sealed the
-running altogether. The lover was stayed, though his mind would not yet
-believe.
-
-“Is it really possible,” he said, sitting before her restlessly, “that
-I am here in your house, and that I can stay, and talk with you, and
-see you and hear you play? I have thought about it so much that it’s
-hard to realize.”
-
-“It is quite what a lover would say,” she thought.... She had to watch
-her words. Her heart went out to him, but her mind remembered the work
-to do.... Self-consciousness, and a weighing of words--how horrible
-between _them_!
-
-“And what made you come? I had just read your letter, when the
-telephone rang----”
-
-“I shouldn’t have sent that letter,” he answered. “I must have sent it
-because of the things I thought, and didn’t write.... The night before,
-I had come home to the cabin--after Markheim and the city. It was
-dreadful--with the work gone. Yesterday was too much for me--the Spring
-day--alone--not ready to begin again--you here.... I got to thinking
-about you so fast--and the shame of it, for us to be apart--that I
-couldn’t endure it.... I thought of going to you in a month--in a
-week; and then when the letter was mailed, I thought of it being with
-you this morning.... A thousand things poured into my mind. It seemed
-finally as if everything was wrong between us; as if I had already
-remained too long from you. It was like fighting devils.... And then I
-tried to beat the letter to you, but it got here by an earlier train
-this morning.”
-
-He was like a child to her, telling about something that had frightened
-him.
-
-Their silences were strained. His eyes had a sleepless look. Betty
-saw it working upon him--the repulsion that had gone from her. She
-wished she might go to his arms and die. It suddenly came over her--the
-uselessness of it all--the uselessness of being a woman, of waiting, of
-final comprehension--all for this rending.... Yet she saw what would
-happen if she followed her heart. He would take her. There would be a
-radiant season, for the lover within him was not less because his work
-was for other men. But there was also within him (his Guardian had
-made her believe it) her rival, a solitary stranger come to the world
-for service, who would not delay long to show him how he had betrayed
-his real work, how he had caged his greater self, his splendid pinions
-useless.... Morning would hear the world calling for work he could not
-do.
-
-“_There seem all about me invisible restraints._”
-
-This from the letter of the morning--alone remained with her. It
-expressed it all. The sentence uprose in her mind. It was more dominant
-to her than if a father had forbade his coming, or even if by his
-coming another was violated.
-
-All the forbiddings that Society can bring against desire are but
-symbols compared to the invisible restraints of a full man’s nature.
-Men who are held by symbols, ruled by exterior voices and fears, are
-not finished enough to be a law unto themselves.... It wasn’t the
-terror of these thoughts, but tenderness in answer to his hurried
-tumble of explanation regarding his coming, that had filled Betty’s
-eyes. He caught the sparkle of a tear in profile, and came to her.
-
-“It’s like creating--visibly, without hands, but with thoughts--creating
-a masterpiece--to see the tears come like that----”
-
-He drew a chair to the bench where she sat, her back to the piano.
-Helen Quiston was away, as usual, for the forenoon.
-
-“It is creating--another world,” she answered steadily.
-
-He stared at her. She saw again that sleepless look.
-
-“You’ve been a whole month on a lofty ridge--just think of it--fasting
-and pure expression of self--spiritual self-revelation----”
-
-It seemed to him there was a suggestion in what she said for the new
-book.
-
-“And now you are down in the meadows again,” she finished.
-
-“The earth-sweet meadows--with you.”
-
-He could not know what the words meant to her; that there was no
-quarter in them for her. She did not belong to his ascents.
-
-“Somehow I always think of you as belonging best to the evenings, the
-hushed earth, the sweetness of the rest-time. You make me remember what
-to do, and how to do it well. Why, just now you made me see clearly for
-a second what I must do next. You make me love people better--when I am
-close to you.”
-
-She was not to be carried away by these givings which would have made
-many a woman content.
-
-“Remember, I have had your letters every day. You are very dear to me
-up there. You have been down in the meadows--and in the caverns--much.
-You are not ready to return--even for the evenings. You stand now for
-austere purity--for plain, ancient, mother’s knee ideals. You must not
-delude yourself. A man must be apart in order to see. You did not begin
-really to live--until you drew apart.”
-
-He felt her stripping his heart. His face lifted in agony, and his
-eyes caught the picture on the wall of the meeting of Beatrice and
-Dante. The Florentine woman seemed not to touch the earth; the poet was
-awed, mystic in the fusion of their united powers. It was fateful that
-Morning saw the picture at this instant.
-
-“Look,” he said, “what the world has from the meeting of that man and
-woman--an immortal poem!”
-
-“But Beatrice passed on----”
-
-“She became identified with his greater power, Betty. She was one with
-it----”
-
-“By passing on!”
-
-He arose and lifted her to her feet, and his arms did not relinquish
-her.
-
-“And you mean that you would pass on?... You must not. You must not. We
-would both be broken and bewildered. I love you. I have come to you.
-I want to be near--and work with you. I know you all, and shall love
-you always. I have come to you, and I must stay--or you must come with
-me----”
-
-Her resistance was broken for the moment. An icy burden fell from her.
-She clung to him, and tears helped her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They were together again in the studio that afternoon. Betty Berry was
-making tea, her strength renewed. Helen Quiston had come and gone.
-Morning had been away for an hour.
-
-“Strange man,” she said, “let us reason together.... You are working
-now for men. That is right, but when you are full of power, when you
-come really into the finished man you are to be, and all these hard
-years have healed beyond the last ache--you will work for women. Does
-it sound strange from me, that the inspiration of the world to-day is
-with the women? Why, it seems to me that men are caught in the very
-science of cruelty. And then, the women of to-day represent the men of
-the future. When one of the preparers of the way brings his gospel to
-women, he kindles the inspiration of the next generation. But this fire
-can only come from the solitary heights--never from the earth-sweet
-meadows----”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“The men who have done the most beautiful verses and stories about
-children--have had no children of their own. A man cannot be the father
-of his country and the father of a house. The man who must do the
-greatest work for women must hunger for the _vision_ of Woman, and
-not be yoked with one.... It is so clear. It is always so.”
-
-“All that you say makes me love you more, Betty----”
-
-“Don’t, dear. Don’t make it harder for me.... It is not I that thrills
-you. It is my speaking of your work that fills your heart with
-gladness--the things you feel to do----”
-
-“They are from you----”
-
-“Don’t say that. It is not true.”
-
-“But I never saw so clearly----”
-
-“Then go away with the vision. Oh, John Morning, you cannot listen to
-yourself--with a woman in the room!”
-
-He lifted his shoulders, drawing her face to his. “I was going to
-say, you are my wings,” he whispered. “But that is not it. You are my
-fountain. I would come to you and drink----”
-
-“But not remain----”
-
-“I love your thoughts, Betty, your eyes and lips----”
-
-“Because you are athirst----”
-
-“I shall always be athirst!”
-
-“That is not nature.”
-
-He shuddered.
-
-“Do men, however athirst--remain at the oases? Men of strength--would
-they not long to go? Would they not remember the far cities and the
-long, blinding ways of the sun?”
-
-“But you could go with me--” he exclaimed.
-
-“That is not nature!”
-
-He was the weaker. “But you have gone alone to the far cities, and the
-long, blinding ways of the sun----”
-
-“Yes, alone. But with you--a time would come when I could not. We are
-man and woman. There would be little children. I would stay--and you
-could not leave them.... Oh, they are not for you, dear. They would
-weaken your courage. You would love them. At the end of the day, you
-would want them, and the mother again.... The far cities would not hear
-you; the long, blinding ways of the sun would know you no more----”
-
-“Betty,” he whispered passionately, “how wonderfully sweet that would
-be!”
-
-“Yes ... to the mother ... but _you_--I can see it in your eyes.
-You would remember Nineveh, that great city....”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Darkness was about them.
-
-“Betty Berry--you would rather I wouldn’t take the train to you
-again--not even when it seems I cannot stay longer away?”
-
-She did not answer.
-
-“Betty----”
-
-“Yes....”
-
-She left him and crossed to the far window.
-
-“Would you not have me come to you again--at all?”
-
-She could not hold the sentence, and her answer. The room was terrible.
-It seemed filled with presences that suffocated her--that cared nothing
-for her. All day they had inspired her to speak and answer--and now
-they wanted her death. She moved to the ’cello. Her hands fluttered
-along the strings--old, familiar ways--but making hardly a sound.... If
-she did not soon speak, he would come to her. She would fail again--the
-touch of him, and she would fail.
-
-“Betty, is there never to be--the fountain at evening?”
-
-“You know--you know--” she cried out. Words stuck after that. She had
-not a thought to drive them.
-
-He arose.
-
-“Don’t,” she implored. “Don’t come to me! I cannot bear it.”
-
-... It was his final rebellion.
-
-“I am not a preparer of the way. I have not a message. I am sick of the
-thought. I am just a man--and I love you!”
-
-At last she made her stand, and on a different position. “I could not
-love you--if that were true.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-She heard him speak, but not the words. She heard the crackling and
-whirring of flames. He did not cross the room.... She had risen, her
-arms groping toward him. She felt him approach, and the flames were
-farther.... She must not speak of flames.
-
-“You will go away soon--won’t you?” she whispered, as he took her.
-
-“Yes, to-night----”
-
-“Yes--to-night,” she repeated.
-
-She was lying upon the couch in the studio, and his chair was beside
-her.
-
-“No, don’t light anything--no light!... It is just an hour.... I could
-not think of food until you go. But you may bring me a drink of water.
-On the way to the train, you can have your supper.... I will play--play
-in the dark, and think of you--as you go----”
-
-She talked evenly, a pause between sentences. There was a tensity in
-the formation of words, for the whirring and crackling distracted,
-dismayed her. Her heart was breaking. This she knew. When it was
-finished, he would be free.... The flames were louder and nearer, as he
-left for the drink of water. She called to him to light a match, if he
-wished, in the other room.... He was in her room. She knew each step,
-just where. He was there. It was as if he were finally materialized
-from her thoughts in the night, her dreaming and writing to him. His
-hand touched her dresser. She heard the running water ... and then it
-was all red and rending and breathless, until she felt the water to her
-lips. Always, as he came near, the flames receded.
-
-And out of all the chaos, the figure of the craftsman had returned
-to him. The world had revealed itself to him as never before in the
-passage of time. She had given him her very spirit that day, and the
-strength of all her volition from the month of brooding upon the
-conception of his Guardian. Literally on that day the new Book was
-conceived, as many a man’s valorous work has begun to be, in a woman’s
-house--her blood and spirit, its bounty.
-
-“This is a holy place to me, this room,” he said, the agonies of
-silence broken. “I can feel the white floods of spirit that drive the
-world.”
-
-She did not need to answer. She held fast to herself, lest something
-betray her. Darkness was salvation. All that his Guardian had asked was
-in her work. John Morning told it off, sentence by sentence. It took
-her life, but he must not know. She thought she would die immediately
-after he was gone--but, strangely, now the suffering was abated.... She
-was helping.... Was not that the meaning of life--to give, to help, to
-love?... Someone had said so.
-
-He lifted her, carried her in his arms, talked and praised her.
-
-“There’s something deathlessly bright about you, Betty Berry!” he
-whispered. “I am going--but we are one! Don’t you feel it? You are
-loving the world from my heart!”
-
-To the door, but not to the light, she walked with him.... Up the
-stairs he strode a last time to take her in his arms.
-
-“We are one--a world-loving one--remember that!”
-
-She did not know why, but as he kissed her--she thought of the pitcher
-broken at the fountain.
-
-It was all strange light and singing flame.... She was lost in the
-hall. She laughed strangely.... She must play him on his way....
-Someone helped her through the raining light--until she could feel the
-strings.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK III.
-
-THE BARE-HEADED MAN
-
-
- 1
-
-THE red head of the little telephone-miss bowed over the
-switch-board when Morning entered Markheim’s. She colored, smiled; all
-metropolitan outrages of service forgotten. Charley waved furtively
-from afar; the door to the inner office opened.
-
-“Well?” said the manager.
-
-“Well, Mr. Markheim?”
-
-“You have come too soon.”
-
-“I said--five days.”
-
-“We read no play in five days.”
-
-“It was left here on that basis.”
-
-“Nonsense.”
-
-“You can give it to me now.”
-
-“It is being read now. Your title is rotten. The old one was better.”
-
-“That title will grow on you,” said Morning, who began to like the
-interview. “I shall come to take the play to-morrow--unless you decide
-to keep it and bring it out this Fall----”
-
-“Why did you come to Markheim again? Have you tried all the rest?”
-
-“There was something unfinished about our former brush--I didn’t like
-the feel of it.... My play is done over better. Neither copy has been
-submitted--except to Markheim.”
-
-“Your play may be as bad as before.”
-
-“Yes. It looks better to me, however.”
-
-“You’ve got a war play again----”
-
-“That first and second act.”
-
-“You can’t write war. This is not war----”
-
-Morning did not realize the change that had come over him until he
-recalled the shame and rebellion that had risen in his mind when
-Markheim had said this before.... Something had come to him from Duke
-Fallows, or from Betty Berry, or from the hill silences. He was a new
-creature.... Must one be detached somewhat from the world in order to
-use it? This was his sense at the moment: that he could compel the mind
-before him, reinforced as it was by distaste for everything decent,
-and manifesting the opinions of other men, including Reever Kennard’s.
-There was no irritation whatsoever; no pride in being a war-writer,
-good or bad. Markheim’s denial had no significance in the world above
-or water beneath. He saw, however, that he must change Markheim’s idea,
-and that he must do it by beating Markheim in his own particular zone
-of activity.
-
-There was a certain fun in this. He arose and stood by the other’s
-chair. The eye-balls showed wider and rolled heavily. The pistol or
-bomb was never far from his mind. Morning looked down at him, saying
-quietly:
-
-“You said something like that before, and it wasn’t your opinion--it
-was Reever Kennard’s. I don’t object to it exactly, but I want to show
-you something. You know Reever Kennard’s paper?”
-
-Markheim nodded.
-
-“You know the _World-News_ sent him out to the Russo-Japanese
-war--big expense account, helpers, dress-suits, and all that?”
-
-“I know he was there.”
-
-“The same managing editor who sent Reever Kennard out is still on the
-desk. He should be in the office now. The number is----”
-
-Morning found it for him hastily, and added: “You call him now.”
-
-“I don’t want to call him up----”
-
-“But you’d better. Twice you said something that someone told you--and
-it’s troublesome. The short way out is to call him now----”
-
-Morning was tapping the desk lightly. Markheim reached for the
-extension ’phone. Luckily, the thing was managed--luckily, and through
-the name of Markheim.
-
-“Ask him who did the story of the battle of Liaoyang for the
-_World-News_?” Morning ordered.
-
-The question was asked and the answer came back.
-
-“Ask him if it was a good story--and how long.”
-
-It was asked and answered.
-
-“Ask him if it was conceded to be the best story of the war published
-in America.”
-
-The talk was extended this time, Markheim explaining why he asked.
-
-“What did he say?” Morning asked.
-
-“He said it was all right,” Markheim granted pertly. “Only that there
-was a very good story from another man on Port Arthur--afterward.”
-
-“That is true. There was a heady little chap got into Port Arthur--and
-came out strong.... Now, look here----”
-
-Morning went to the case where a particularly recent encyclopædia
-was drawn forth. He referred to the war, but especially to the final
-paragraph of the article, captioned “Bibliography.”... His own name and
-the name of his book was cited as the principal American reference....
-It was all laughable. No one knew better than Morning that such action
-would be silly among real people.
-
-“You don’t see Reever Kennard referred to, do you--as authority
-of war-stuff?... The point is that you play people get so much
-counterfeit color and office-setting--that you naturally can’t look
-authoritatively on the real thing.... However, the fact that I know
-more about the battle of Liaoyang than any other man in America would
-never make a good play. There’s a lot beside in this play--a lot more
-than at first----”
-
-“They have your play out now--reading it,” Markheim observed.
-
-Morning added: “It’s clear to you, isn’t it, why Mr. Reever Kennard
-didn’t care for the John Morning play----?”
-
-Markheim’s eyes gleamed. This was pure business. “You had the goods and
-delivered it in his own office----”
-
-“Exactly----”
-
-“You bother me too much about this play. The title is rotten----”
-
-“You’ll like that, when you see Markheim with it. There’s a
-peculiar thing about the word--it doesn’t die. It never rests. It’s
-human--divine, too. There’s a cry in it--to some happiness, to some
-sorrow--to the many, hope.... It sings. I would rather have it than
-glory.... Listen, ‘_Markheim Offers Compassion_’--why, that’s a
-God’s business--offering compassion----”
-
-“You feel like a song-bird this afternoon, Mr. Morning----”
-
-“I’ll be back to-morrow----”
-
-“Too soon----”
-
-“Can’t help it. It’s ready. It will be the big word this Winter. You
-can read it in an hour. I’m off to-morrow--from Markheim. The Winter
-will clear my slate in this office, whether you take it or not----”
-
-“Come back at noon----”
-
-Charley’s sister looked up from her pad. Her swift change of expression
-to a certain shyness and pleasure, too, in a sort of mutual secret,
-added to Morning’s merriment as he left the building.... He wondered
-continually that afternoon what had come over him. He had not been
-able to do this sort of thing before. The astonishing thing was his
-detachment from any tensity of interest. It was all right either way,
-according to his condition of mind. The question was important: Must a
-man be aloof from the fogging ruck of accepted activities in order to
-see them, and to manage best among things as they are?
-
-There was the new book, too. Betty Berry had given him the new task.
-A splendor had come to life--even with the unspeakable sadness of the
-ending of that day. The beauty of that day would never die. Every phase
-of her sacrifice revealed a subtle, almost superhuman, faith in him.
-Was it this--her faith in him--that made him so new and so strong;
-that made him know in his heart that if the Play were right--it would
-go in spite of Markheim, in spite of all New York? And if it were not
-right, certainly he did not want it to go.... Markheim and New York--he
-regarded them that night from his doorstep; then turned his back to the
-city, and faced the west and the woman.
-
-It broke upon him. She was mothering him. She was bringing to his
-action all that was real and powerful--fighting for it, against every
-desire and passion of her own. Her wish for his good was superior to
-her own wish for happiness. She gave him his work and his dreams. He
-knew not what mystery of prayer and concentration she poured upon
-him.... This place in which she had never been was filled with her. The
-little frail creature was playing upon him, as upon her instrument.
-Moments were his in which she seemed a mighty artist.
-
-And then he saw men everywhere--just instruments--but played upon by
-forces of discord and illusion.... He saw these men clearly, because
-he had been of them. Such forces had played upon him.... He had been
-buffeted and whipped along the rough ways. He had looked up to the
-slaughterers of the wars as unto men of greatness. He had been played
-upon by the thirsts and the sufferings, by greed and ambition. He had
-hated men. He had fumed at bay before imagined wrongs; and yet no one
-had nor could wrong him, but himself.
-
-One by one he had been forced to fight it out with his own devils--to
-the last ditch. There they had quit--vanished like puffs of nasty
-smoke. He had stood beneath Reever Kennard, almost poisoning himself
-to death with hatred. Pure acknowledgment this, that his life moved
-in the same scope of evil.... He had accepted the power of Markheim,
-feared it, and suffered over the display of it. Now he found it puny
-and laughable. He had worked for himself, and it had brought him only
-madness and shattering of force. He had been brought to death, had
-accepted it in its most hideous form--and risen over it.... His hill
-was calm and sweet in the dusk. Though his heart was lonely--and though
-all this clear-seeing seemed not so wonderful as it would be to have
-the woman with him in the cabin--yet it was all very good. He felt
-strong, his fighting force not abated.
-
-He had his work. She had shown him that. He would write every line to
-her. His work would lift him up, as the days of the Play had lifted
-him--out of the senses and the usual needs of man. He would be with
-her, in that finer communion of instrument and artist.... The world
-was very old and dear. Men’s hearts were troubled, but men’s evils
-were very trifling, when all was understood. He would never forget his
-lessons. He would tell everyone what miracles are performed in the
-ministry of pain.... He looked into the dark of the west and loved her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Well, you are on time,” said Markheim the following noon.
-
-“Yes,” Morning said with calmness and cheer.
-
-“We will take the play. I have had it read.... We can do no more than
-bust.”
-
-“This Fall--the production?”
-
-“I will give it the _Markheim_ in November.”
-
-He seemed to be surprised that Morning did not emotionalize in some
-way. He had expected at least to be informed that “bust” was out of the
-question, and missed this mannerism of the playwright, now that the
-thing was his and not the other’s.... Moreover, Markheim was pleased
-with the way he had reached the decision. He wanted Morning to know.
-
-“There was that difference of opinion.... Do you know what I did?”
-
-Morning couldn’t imagine.
-
-“Well,” said Markheim, sitting back, hands patting his girth, “those
-who have nothing but opinions--read your play. They like it; they
-like it not. It will pay. It will not pay. It is ‘revolutionary,’
-‘artistic,’ ‘well-knit,’ ‘good second act’--much rot it is, and is not.
-Who do you think settled the question?”
-
-“Yourself?”
-
-“Not me--I have no opinion.”
-
-“Who then?”
-
-“The friend of no man.” It was said with grandeur.
-
-Morning waited.
-
-Markheim leaned forward, beaming not unkindly, and whispered:
-
-“The little one at the switch-board outside the door. She said it was
-‘lovely.’... Oh, she’s a sharp little spider.”
-
-
- 2
-
-HERE is an extra bit of the fabric, that goes along with the garment
-for mending.... Mid-May, and never a sign of the old wound’s reopening.
-Something of Morning’s former robustness had spent itself, but he had
-all the strength a man needs, and that light unconsciousness of the
-flesh which is delightful to those who produce much from within. The
-balance of his forces of development had turned from restoring his body
-to a higher replenishment.
-
-The mystery of work broke upon him more and more, and the thrall of
-it; its relation to man at his best; the cleansing of a man’s daily
-life for the improvement of his particular expression in the world’s
-service; the ordering of his daily life in pure-mindedness, the power
-of the will habitually turned to the achieving of this pure-mindedness.
-He saw that man is only true and at peace when played upon from
-the spiritual source of life; therefore, all that perfects a man’s
-instrumentation is vital, and all that does not is destructive. Most
-important of all, he perceived that a real worker has nothing whatever
-to do beyond the daily need, with the result of his work in a worldly
-way; that any deep relation to worldly results of a man’s work is
-contamination.
-
-He lost the habit and inclination to think what he wanted to say. He
-listened. He became sceptical of all work that came from brain, in
-the sense of having its origin in something he had actually learned.
-He remembered how Fallows had spoken of this long ago; (he had not
-listened truly enough to understand then); how a man’s brain is at his
-best when used purely to receive--as a little finer instrument than the
-typewriter.
-
-Except for certain moments on the borderland of sleep, Betty Berry
-was closest to him during his work. His every page was for her eye--a
-beloved revelation of his flesh and mind and spirit. And the thing had
-to be plain, plain, plain. That was the law.
-
-How Fallows had fought for that. “Don’t forget the deepest down man,
-John!”... Betty Berry and Fallows and Nevin were his angels--his cabin,
-a place of continual outpouring to them. Few evils were powerful
-enough to stem such a current, and penetrate the gladness of giving.
-
-He slept lightly, and was on the verge again and again, almost nightly,
-in fact, of surprising his own greater activity that does not sleep.
-He often brought back just the murmur of these larger doings; and on
-the borderlands he sometimes felt himself in the throb of that larger
-consciousness which moves about its meditations and voyagings, saying
-to the body, “Sleep on.” It was this larger consciousness that used
-him as he used the typewriter, when he was writing at his best and his
-listening was pure.... He had been held so long to the ruck that he
-would never forget the parlance of the people--and not fall to writing
-for visionaries.
-
-... One night he dreamed he went to Betty Berry.... He was ascending
-the stairs to her. She seemed smaller, frailer. Though he was a step
-or two down, his eyes met hers equally. She was lovelier than anything
-he had ever known or conceived in woman. Her smile was so wistful
-and sweet and compassionate--that the hush and fervor of it seemed
-everywhere in the world. There was a shyness in her lips and in the
-turn of her head. Some soft single garment was about her--as if she had
-come from a fountain in the evening.... And suddenly there was a great
-tumult within him. He was lost in the battle of two selves--the man who
-loved and destroyed, and the man who loved and sustained.
-
-The greater love only asked her there--loved her there, exquisite,
-apart, found in her a theme for infinite contemplation, as she stood
-smiling.... The other was the love of David, when he looked across
-the house-tops at Bathsheba, bathing, and made her a widow to mother
-Solomon. This human love was strong in the dream, for he caught her in
-his arms, and kissed, and would not let her go, until her voice at last
-reached his understanding.
-
-“_Oh, why did you spoil it all? Oh, why--when I thought it was safe
-to come?_”
-
-He had no words, but her message was not quite ended:
-
-“_I should have come to you as before--and not this way--but you
-seemed so strong and so pure.... It is my fault--all my fault._”
-
-She was Betty Berry--but lovelier than all the earth--the spirit of
-all his ideals in woman. The marvelous thing about it was that he knew
-after the dream that this was the Betty Berry that would live in spite
-of anything that could happen to the Betty Berry in the world. He knew
-that she waited for him--for the greater lover, John Morning, whose
-love did not destroy, but sustained.... She who regarded him in “the
-hush of expectancy” from the distance of a night’s journey, and he
-who labored here stoutly in the work of the world, were but names and
-symbols of the real creatures above the illusion of time.... So he came
-to love death--not with eagerness, but as an ideal consummation. Such
-a result were impossible had he not faced death as an empty darkness
-first, and overcome the fear of it.
-
-These many preparations for real life on earth in the flesh he was to
-put in his book--not his adventures, but the fruits of them--how he had
-reached to-day, and its decent polarity in service. He had been hurled
-like a top into the midst of men. After the seething of wild energy
-and the wobblings, he had risen to a certain singing and aspiring
-rhythm--the whir of harmony. He told the story in order, day by day.
-Though it was done with the I’s, there was no self-exploitation.
-John Morning was merely the test-tube, containing from time to time
-different compounds of experience. And he did it plainly, plainly,
-plainly, as is the writer’s business.
-
-As he watched for Jethro, one morning early in June, he perceived
-a second figure in the old rig. At the box, the stranger got out
-and followed Jethro’s arm, directed up the hill toward the cabin,
-disappeared for a moment in the swail-thicket by the fence, and
-presently began the ascent, bringing Morning’s papers and letters....
-The stranger was tall and tanned, wore a wide hat and approached with a
-slim ease of movement. Morning knew he had seen him before, but could
-not remember until the voice called:
-
-“Hullo--that you, John Morning?”
-
-It was Archibald Calvert, last met during the night-halt in Rosario,
-Luzon, the correspondent who had ridden with Reever Kennard, and who
-had lost _Mio Amigo_. He had always thought rather pleasantly of
-Archibald Calvert when he thought at all.
-
-“Say--what are you getting set for out here?”
-
-“It’s better and cheaper than a hall-bedroom,” Morning answered.
-
-“That sounds good.... Well, I spent all day yesterday looking for
-you--first clue, Boabdil--second at Markheim’s from a little red-haired
-girl.... The rural man picked me up----”
-
-“I’ve got some cold buttermilk----”
-
-“Pure asceticism--also a pearl of an idea----”
-
-They sat down together.
-
-“So you made ten thousand dollars out of Liaoyang after you came
-back.... I looked up the story. It was--say, it was a bride, Morning!”
-
-“Thanks. Duke Fallows did a better one in one-tenth the space. The
-pay-end didn’t mean much. I’m not a good bed for money culture. Tell me
-where you’ve been, Mr. Calvert.”
-
-“Oh, I’ve been around. Didn’t get up to the Russ-Jap stuff. I was down
-among the Pacific Islands. You know I’m a better tramp than writer.
-It’s five years since I hit New York.... They say old Reever Kennard is
-doing politics. He’ll be back from Washington to-night----”
-
-“Politics, and an occasional dramatic criticism,” said Morning.
-
-“You know that never sat easy--that day in Rosario----”
-
-“Didn’t it?”
-
-“I was down to Batangas three days later--unpacking saddle-bags, and
-found _Mio Amigo_ No. 1. Deeper down I found its mate.... They’re
-common in Luzon as old Barlow knives when we were kids.... I made a
-scene about that knife--with my own deep down in my own duffel.... I
-suppose you’ve forgotten.”
-
-“No--I haven’t.”
-
-“You were pretty decent about it. It was a nasty thing--even to
-speak about it as I did. You see, the inscription rather appealed to
-kid-intelligence in my case, and I thought it was unique, instead of
-the popular idea of a cheap Filipino knife.”
-
-“Kennard took it seriously, didn’t he?” said Morning.
-
-“You mean at the time?... Yes, I couldn’t understand that exactly.”
-
-Morning decided not to speak of that day’s relation to Tokyo five years
-later.
-
-“Well,” said Calvert, after a pause, “I hunted you up to say I was an
-ass, and to give you back your knife. The pair have been smelling up my
-things around the world for a long time.”
-
-Morning grasped it eagerly.
-
-Some time afterward, when Calvert arose to go, Morning ventured this
-much:
-
-“And so you’re going to see Reever Kennard?”
-
-“Yes, to-night.... I suppose you two and the others game together from
-time to time?”
-
-“The fact is, New York isn’t very good anchorage for that sort of
-thing,” Morning said.
-
-“... I was glad when they told me you had put over that big Liaoyang
-stuff, Morning----”
-
-Morning smiled and took the quick brown hand of the other. Calvert
-appealed to him, but it couldn’t be shown in any way. Calvert was like
-a good horse, gladly giving evidence of fine feeling, but embarrassed
-when made much of.... He went away blithely--off, for God knows
-where--but fearlessly on his way.
-
-Morning held the little knife in his hand.
-
-He thought of that hard Philippine service which had seemed so big
-at the time; of that day when he watched the fat shoulders of Reever
-Kennard in the forward sets of horse, Kennard seeming all that
-greatness can be. He thought of the halt in Rosario, of the lame woman.
-He looked at the little knife again.... He had not really wanted it
-then, and yet it had cut the strings of his Fates, turning them loose
-upon him. It had knocked him out of the second Japanese column five
-years afterward, and given him instead Duke Fallows and Liaoyang. It
-had given him that great battle, Lowenkampf, the Ploughman, Eve, the
-sorrel mare--the journey to Koupangtse--the blanket at Tongu--the
-deck-passage--the _Sickles_, Ferry--and Nevin--even Noyes and
-Field.
-
-It had given him the Armory, and Betty Berry.
-
-He held it fast.
-
-It had given him money, fame, and New York for a day--the opinion
-from Kennard that killed the first writing of _Compassion_--the
-mood to see Charley and his sister at the switch-board, which brought
-him to Betty Berry again.... Out of these had come all that was real
-and true of this hour. It had given him the slums and the leper
-conflict--Nevin’s cure and the fasting--the real Ploughman--the better
-_Compassion_--the cabin in which he sat, his place of Initiation.
-It had given him the triumph over death--the illumination of love and
-labor--the listening life of the soul, and the vision of its superb
-immortality.
-
-He held it fast and looked hard at the little friend. The brass handle
-sent up a smell of verdi-gris from his hot hand.
-
-
- 3
-
-THIS was John Morning’s splendid summer. He was up often at
-two or three in the morning. Thoughts and sentences of yesterday,
-now cleared and improved, thronged his mind, as he made coffee. He
-learned that a man may write the first half of a book, but be used as
-a mere slave of the last half. And yet, to be the instrument of a rush
-of life and ideas, the latter becoming every hour more coherent and
-effective, was a privilege to make a man sing. And to increase, at the
-same time, in the realization of the courage and tenderness and faith
-of a woman who waited; to feel the power of her in the work; to work
-for her; to put his love for her in the work, all the strength of her
-attraction--this was living the life of depth and fullness.
-
-Times when he looked out of the doorway, and the elms were shaping
-against the flowery purple of daybreak, and the robin beginning
-thirstily--his eyes smarted with tears at the beauty of it all, the
-privilege of work, and the absolute rightness of the whole creation,
-in which a man can’t possibly lose, after he has heard his real self
-speak. He loved life and death in such moments, and knew there was a
-Betty Berry in the waiting studio, and another over the Crossing. (Had
-he not glimpsed her in his dream at the top of the stairway?)
-
-So his book prospered, enfolding the common man. It had something
-for every man who had not come so far as he. He was _of_ them,
-in every understanding among them, different only in that it was his
-business to write by the way. His old failures furnished the studies of
-distintegrating forces. Personally, he was detached from them, as his
-writing showed, except for an intellectual familiarity--as detached as
-from the worn clothing he had left here and there around the world. One
-by one, the constructive and destructive principles of the average man
-were shown divided against each other in the arena of mind--and how the
-friends and loves had come to the balance. Nevin was in the fabric, the
-little Englishman at Tongu, Fallows and the Woman--not in name, (there
-was no name but John Morning’s), but they were all there, lifting and
-laughing and drawing, as friends and loves do in the life of a man.
-Again and again he cried out that the peace and sweet reason of things
-he had found was of their bringing--that without them he would have
-been lost again and again by the way.
-
-... The Summer days passed magically. Markheim was beginning to talk
-rehearsals. He had found the right man to play the Ploughman....
-Late-September. The letters from Betty Berry were rarer, thinner.
-They troubled him.... One morning he watched Jethro’s rig approach--a
-golden morning, and the cattle were feeding down in the meadow. He had
-seen the picture a thousand times--the cattle on the slope--yet it was
-never so real to him, nor had he hungered for the face of Betty Berry
-as now.... Jethro stopped at his box, and he hurried down. There was a
-letter from her--and one from Russia, too. The first did not free his
-mind from sorrow--though the effort was plain to do this very thing....
-The letter from Fallows filled the day:
-
-“... I knew, John, if I sat down to write, it would set free all my
-longing to go back to you. So I have put it off from week to week....
-From the _Western States_ I followed our old trail to Tokyo, then
-via Peking, to Shanhaikwan, Koupangtse, Liaoyang.... I stopped there,
-and went around by the coal-fields, where the millet had been planted
-all over again. I talked over the battle with the Japanese. They are
-just as interested as ever in what the other man knows. Though the
-big battle seemed like another life to me, it was their immediate
-yesterday. They would do it all over again. The Ploughman seemed to
-walk with me; the rest was boyish babble.... I found Lowenkampf--white
-and quiet--but the woman loves him, if Russia does not. The little boy
-is a man-soul. That’s the story--except that he sent his love to you.
-The three are off to South America, and all is well.... Up in the Bosk
-hills, I followed the Summer. The old man is gone. He had his sausages
-at the last....
-
-“I was needed, but the little farm was all right. The neighbor had
-done his part. There was enough for all.... How simple, one little
-vanity of a man such as I am, and this family has enough and to spare;
-food and firelight, good-will, their hope of heaven brought down to
-comprehension again--all for so little, John. If men only knew the joy
-of it--how it lasts and augments, how it sustains the man who does
-it--to weave a mesh of happiness for the poor. The fact is, he has to
-watch very carefully, or he’ll get caught in the mesh himself.
-
-“The little boy came running to meet me. I think he ran to meet me
-somewhere before. He is different from all the others--except for that
-touch of the old mother which he has, and that something about the
-Ploughman. He was white and all eyes when I picked him up. They said
-he wasn’t well, but in three days he was sound again--color breaking
-through. To think that my coming could do that for any living soul--I.
-
-“The old Mother.... She was just waiting for me--lingering until I
-came--watching down the road in the sunlight. We talked a little. She
-spoke softly of her soldier-son. It was only a few days.... It all
-came from her, John--the battle of Liaoyang so far as its meaning to
-me. She was the light on the Ploughman’s brow that made a different
-man of me. He never dreamed of messages to the world of men, nor the
-passion to serve men--but he had his mother’s faith and something of
-her vision. That made him different from other Russian soldiers, so
-that I could see. The little boy Jan will bring it to life again. Your
-play goes straight back to her. There’s everlasting quality in being a
-mother like that. I think it was the fourth morning--that I suddenly
-began to listen attentively to what she was saying. It was about us
-all--intimately about her soldier-son.... The younger mother came
-in--her sad, weary face different.... She went out, and returned with
-her shoes on.... Suddenly I knew that the old sweet flower was passing.
-Why, she was gone before I knew it--smiling up at the saints from my
-arms.... I heard the little boy coming quickly--knew his step as I
-would know yours, John. I seemed to wait for his hand upon the door.
-I saw him, and he saw us--came forward on tip-toe, and we were all
-together----”
-
-Morning didn’t read the rest just then. It seemed one of the finest
-things he had ever known--Duke Fallows preserving the old mother and
-the others in their conviction that he was just a peasant like the
-Ploughman.
-
-
- 4
-
-FROM that April night after Morning left, when Helen Quiston
-found her wandering in the halls, and asking in a childish way to be
-taken to the ’cello (saying that her father had hidden it from her in
-a strange place), until now in mid-September, Betty Berry had not left
-the studio-apartment. The real break-down had begun a month before
-the high day in which Morning came; perhaps on the very night his
-Guardian had called. She had scarcely played or practiced since then;
-she read nothing, talked to no one except Helen. Morning had noted her
-anxiously early on the day of his call at the studio, but such power
-had come in the flashes of those hours, and so high was she enthroned
-and illumined in his own mind at the end, (in which she had kept to the
-darkness), that he had not realized the blight that had touched her
-life.
-
-Helen Quiston had long loved the woman. She knew much that the Doctor
-did not. It was she who read the letters which in certain moments of
-the day Betty hastily penned. It was as if for a moment in a long
-gray day, a ray of watery sunlight broke through the cloud-banks. In
-the momentary shining of her mind, Betty would write to Morning. Many
-of the letters were impossible. Certain of these letters would have
-brought the lover by the first train. Even Betty had a sense of this
-and relied upon the music-teacher. Here and there among the notes, too,
-was a wisp of the old sweet spirit. It was a wonderful conception to
-Helen Quiston: that all but these had gone to replenish the creative
-fire of a lover who knew well what his lady had given, but not what it
-meant to her. Just as surely as the Hindoo woman offers herself upon
-the funeral pyre with the body of her mate, Betty Berry had given her
-spirit to the living. A hundred times the singing teacher had heard
-these words from white lips that smiled:
-
-“_We are one--a deathless, world-loving one!_”
-
-And often she heard this queer verse from the Persian:
-
- “_Four eyes met. There were changes in two souls.
- And now I cannot remember whether he is a man and I a woman,
- Or he a woman and I a man. All I know is,
- There were two: Love came, and there is one...._”
-
-“Don’t forget to remind me that I must tell him I am happy,” Betty
-would say.... When a letter was finally finished and sealed, she
-would lean back, shutting her eyes with a sigh, saying: “Now read me
-his that came to-day and yesterday.”... And afterward: “Isn’t it
-wonderful, Helen, dear? Isn’t it quite wonderful? You are so dear to
-understand.”
-
-“Self-destruction is the first danger,” the Doctor had said in
-the early days. “That’s why she should be in a sanatorium under
-professional vigilance. Each case is individual. She might take a
-sudden dislike to the saintliest of nurses--even to you. The fever
-will not last, but it is a long battle. Shock, overwork, a terrible
-disappointment--such are the causes. Singular sweetness of disposition,
-as in this case, is very rare. The thing that goes with this usually is
-‘the frozen stare’--hours motionless, looking at the wall----”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Morning’s letters were like white-hot fragments from his forge--roughly
-fashioned, but still seething with force. Helen Quiston felt that
-there was a splendid singing in that forge; that a man’s voice attuned
-with God and the world was raised in the morning; that silence drew on
-as the concentration of the task deepened; that there was singing in
-the evening again. Aliment for the soul of the music teacher, these
-letters. She would have fought to obey Betty Berry against the will of
-the Doctor and nurse had it been necessary.
-
-One of these September-morning letters was particularly joyous with
-enthusiasm for Betty Berry’s gift to him. He told again how it wove
-into, beautified and energized his work.
-
-“Literally I thank the stars for you,” Helen Quiston read. “Sometimes
-it comes to me--as if straight from you--strength that I feel with my
-limbs, strength that means health. It surges through my veins like
-magic--so that my eyes smart with tears. I speak your name again and
-again in thankfulness for love fresh every day, and for the pity for
-men in my heart----”
-
-Betty was not following. It was frequently so in the first reading.
-
-“Free,” she repeated softly, from a thought of yesterday’s letter. “He
-said I was free. He said I never explained----”
-
-“Yes, dear, he was writing of that night he came to the theatre. I’ll
-get the letter for you to-night. He said that you belonged to the risen
-world, the woman’s world--that you trusted your vision--did not seek
-to explain, but rejoiced. He said you had no guile, that you asked
-nothing, and were unafraid. He means to give the world a portrait of
-the risen woman--a portrait of you.”
-
-Betty Berry did not answer. Mention of that night at the theatre
-invariably affected her to silence.
-
-“I must hurry away for a little while, but I will finish this,” Helen
-added, reading on:
-
-“In the evenings, the greater power of you comes over my life like a
-spiritual rain. I remember the art of your hands, the sweet mystery of
-your lips; the tenderness of your eyes and words; but over it all--the
-inner power of you, strong as truth, pure as truth, wise as the East,
-and sweet as the South. It is the spirit of you that has come to
-me--your singing, winging, feminine spirit. It has made me whole....
-Do you know, I used to think the world would be made better by force,
-by arraignment, by revelation of evil. You have shown me the better
-way of making the world better by loving it. That’s woman’s way, the
-Christ’s way.... And when I think that you have given me this blessed
-thing, this finest fruit of earth--your love, created out of trial and
-loneliness, your love, so pure and true and valorous--when I think
-that it is mine, and how you fought through the long day to give me
-this, _and only this_--when I think of the splendor of that day’s
-work of yours, I kneel to you, and to the spirit of the world--in the
-wood, in the hut, before the door, under my elms, under the stars,--I
-kneel to you and the Source of you. The peace that comes, and the
-power--this, is my passionate wish for you! I would restore it to you
-magnified.”
-
-Helen Quiston read all this a second time that September morning,
-although her pupils were waiting.... It was to her like the song from a
-strong man’s house.
-
-“You are rich and elect, Betty!” she cried. “You have been a woman and
-_wanted_ love. You have finished your work at night, alone, and
-realized that there was no one--your arms tired, your throat tired,
-your brain and soul tired and heart-lonely--and there was no one. How
-rich you are now! I think a woman is rich who can say: ‘In London or
-Tokyo or New South Wales there is one who loves me--who may be thinking
-at this moment about me--who wishes I were there, or he were here;
-whose heart’s warmth stretches across the distance and makes the world
-a home, because he is in the world.... It would seem to me that I
-should be exultant to-day--if there was such a one for me. It seems--if
-I could see him in a year, even if I could not see him at all, _and
-he were somewhere_--I should be all new and radiant, born again....
-But you, Betty dear--oh, think what you have--what you are giving!”
-
-Betty’s eyes were shut. There was a gray line around the faint color of
-the lips, and she was pale as a candle-flame in the morning sun.
-
-“I wish you could stay with me, dearest,” she whispered. “It is too
-much for me--when I am alone. But when you are here, what you say and
-what you see--makes me believe.... And you must tell me what to write
-in answer to this--to satisfy him. I shall hold it in my hand, and
-rest----”
-
-“I’ll come back this afternoon. We’ll have supper, and the letter will
-be mailed. You’ll know what to say then----”
-
-She hurried away, lest her heart break. The tired, emotionless
-voice trailed after her. And all day she heard Betty’s voice among
-the unfinished voices, and saw the spiritless clay of her heart’s
-friend sitting in deathly labor below, tormented by the phantom of a
-will--like a once glorious empire become desolate, a foolish scion upon
-the throne.
-
-
- 5
-
-HELEN QUISTON was the brain of the studio, the eyes and fingers--even,
-in part, the spirit of the place that John Morning loved. It was a
-letter of hers that John Morning answered with this paragraph:
-
-“I shut my eyes after the first reading--and it seemed to me I went
-sailing. There were many voyagers and many islands--but I found _my
-Island_. It called to me and I knew it was for me. The voyagers
-sailed on past the curving inlets and the arrowed points--but I sailed
-home. I found the fountains, the crags, the echoes, the virgin springs,
-the mysterious meeting places of the land and sea, the enchanted forest
-where the fairies are--and the sun was rising. It was thus I answered
-the calling mystery of your spirit....”
-
-She was glad that his mind turned to the actual memory picture of Betty
-Berry, as he finished:
-
-“I do love the woman that moves about the world, the woman others
-see--the lips that tremble, the eyes that fill with tears so swiftly
-over some loveliness, and so rarely over her own sorrow; the
-instant-enfolding mind, the listening and the vitality--but it seems
-that I love in a greater way the heart that called to its lover without
-words--who fared forth to meet her lover and gave her soul.”
-
-More and more Helen Quiston perceived that John Morning was becoming
-sufficient unto himself--the larger lover, loving the world through
-his lady, and needing less, even in thought, her hands and kisses and
-emotions. She saw steadily that which Duke Fallows had made Betty
-Berry see for a night. She did not see it as clearly as Betty Berry saw
-it that night, but she beheld an enduring radiance from it, because
-her body was not in the wreck of sacrifice. She had a woman’s sense of
-the large relation of things, and a woman’s faith. The misery of life
-as she had met it, the disorder, monotony, and gray sorrow of it all,
-was her profound assurance of another and brilliant side to the shield.
-She wanted nothing for herself in these particular instances. For Betty
-Berry she saw a swift transfer to a certain indefinite perfection, no
-less attractive because it was unlimned in her mind. Her own happiness,
-her great privilege, was to be third in this miracle of a man and woman
-passing beyond in a truly royal way. There was a mystic quality that
-suited her mind in the coming of the Guardian to Betty Berry’s room,
-and in the fact that John Morning would never know of this. It was
-like the coming of some Michael or Gabriel. From what she knew of John
-Morning’s work, she could believe in the planetary promise that the
-Guardian seemed to see; indeed, she could have believed in it with less
-evidence, because the Guardian said so.... Her particular dream was for
-the man to appear who would make women see what it was in their hands
-and hearts to do for the coming race. She dreamed of a man to come with
-words to women that would be reflected upon the brows of children to
-be, that would help to fashion the latent dreams into great children.
-She believed it was the agony of being childless that put this dream
-into her own mind, and she believed that the world-ignition could only
-come from a man who knew the same agony.... So she listened raptly to
-the singing from the forge; and more and more, with almost unspeakable
-excitement, she realized that the voice of John Morning was slowly and
-surely taking to itself the authority and harmony which his Guardian
-had promised.
-
-He wrote often now of the rehearsals of _Compassion_, of his
-large fears and small satisfactions in them. He was always glad to
-get back to the cabin and the Book.... That book--some of her own
-inner life would be in it. She had given in the letters everything she
-dared. Her tears were all shed; there was dry burning in her eyes,
-for what Betty Berry had given to that Book.... Now in mid-September
-it was done, all but a month’s chiseling and polishing. It would
-be given to the publisher two weeks before the first appearance of
-_Compassion_ at the _Markheim_ the first week in November....
-She dared not think what would happen when the Book was done, and the
-destiny of the play established.... A letter from Morning at this time
-contained for Helen Quiston one winged, triumphant sentence. She was
-reading aloud to Betty Berry:
-
-“It was straight, clean going, right to the end of the book.... It
-is hard-held. It is kind. It laughs. It goes after the deepest-down
-man.... You have to reach almost self-effacement to associate with fine
-ideas and to get to the front in service.... How hard it was to make me
-see that the real world is not over there among writers and publishers
-and drama-producers, but everywhere among the hearts of the poor!
-
-“And, oh, Betty Berry, it isn’t the book--it’s the life that counts.
-You have made me live. You earned your strength alone--suffering alone
-through the years. That’s the highest honor that can come to man or
-woman in this world--to be chosen for such years as you have known. It
-comes only to the strong--the strength to stand alone. The world bows
-sooner or later before such character. Men feel it, though their eyes
-be shut.
-
-“There is a certain excellence in the honor of standing alone. Alone,
-man or woman is either ahead or behind the crowd. In the latter case,
-he is imbecile or defective, and God is with him.... God is in the
-forward solitudes, too. What a splendor about standing in the full
-light! The crowd cannot get it. The crowd keeps the light from itself.
-There the maiming is, the suffering, the cruelty; there the light is
-divided, and the warmth is the low heat of men, not the grand primal
-vitality of the Sun. There in the crowd, Apparition and Appearance take
-the place of the Real.... Now and then, in the torturing passage of the
-crowd, the landmark of some pioneer is reached, and the cry goes up,
-‘We are on the right road, for that man passed here!’ The name of the
-pioneer becomes part of the crowd’s impedimenta. Perhaps he smiles from
-the Other Side, not because the crowd has found _his_ trail--he
-may have wanted that once, though not long--but looking back upon his
-greater birth, he smiles--the place where he emerged and stood alone on
-the grand frontier.... You have made me strong enough to believe that
-you and I may go away up into the coolness beyond the senses--even in
-this life----”
-
-Helen Quiston stopped. That last was the final sanction. The Guardian
-knew, when he chose John Morning. It was the one thought she had hardly
-dared formulate for him, and which she had awaited ardently during the
-late weeks.
-
-“He means that a woman can go, too!” she cried, trembling, forgetful
-even of Betty Berry; “he is on the path--higher, higher--and yet, he
-says that women, too, can go that way alone----”
-
-Betty Berry frowned. “What does he mean by going alone--about a man and
-a woman going alone?” She was suffering to understand, angry that the
-other understood.
-
-“He says that the woman may also go alone to that Eminence! No man--no
-human man--has ever said that before. Men think of _men passing_
-upward. People caught in their desires have forever lied to themselves,
-trying to believe that man and woman can go _together_.... He says
-here----” her eye darted on to read:
-
-“‘Men and women gain their strength to reach that Eminence by being
-alone--by loving alone!’ You taught him that.... Don’t you see,
-dearest, it is the beginning of his real message? You gave it to
-him--and what a message it is for you and for--even for me----”
-
-“But woman is the serpent,” Betty Berry muttered.
-
-Helen arose to turn on a wall light. Her hand fumbled. Her eyes could
-not be brought down from that lofty plateau. A strange peace had come
-into the loneliness of her life. She wanted to tell it everywhere--to
-Nuns of the World.... It had been a man’s world so long--that this
-thought had never come. Always in the world’s thought and art--the
-flesh of woman had kept her down in the dusks and valleys. Sons
-climbed; lovers left their maids to climb ... but only the Gods knew
-all the time _that daughters could go_.
-
-Betty was silent. It had become the habit of her life not to speak when
-the mists thickened.... The picture of Dante and Beatrice was in the
-light. Helen pointed to it:
-
-“Who would think of saying that Beatrice, who was the Way--did not
-share the vision and the consciousness?” she asked softly.
-
-Betty shut her eyes. The other returned with eager love and sat down
-at her knees. “And now I will read the last. Just think how clearly he
-sees:
-
-“‘The world is so dear to me because of you. I am so freshly conscious
-of its roundness, of the profile of its coasts as seen from above; of
-its light and darkness, the sharpness of sun in the retreating gray,
-of its skies and its peaks, the last to darken and the first to answer
-the morn.... I put the candle away just now, and in the darkness I saw
-the Earth from above--not from afar, but from some space nearer than
-the moon. I saw it all at once. The moon shining upon one side, the
-sun shining upon the other--a golden side, a silver side.... And I saw
-you afterward--not as you are in the studio, but as a shadowed, quiet
-figure among moonlit ruins. You were calm, and moved silently here and
-there. Ruins were about you, yet you seemed to know the things to do.’
-What does it mean?”
-
-“What does it mean, Helen?” Betty repeated.
-
-The other’s eyes filled with tears. The question might have come from a
-little old lady of eighty, whose house of life was locked, all but the
-sitting-room.
-
-“It’s just a dream, dear,” she whispered.
-
-“There are no ruins about me--when you are here,” Betty said.
-
-“Ruins, dearest?... No, gardens and living temples----”
-
-Betty arose, and moved slowly up and down the studio, then stood by
-her chair. The impulse even to lift her hand was unusual. She moved
-now with difficulty, but was not conscious of it. The room was dark,
-except for the one wall-light. Helen went to her side, helped her at
-last to the chair. Betty’s face was deathly, but there was a mournful
-reasonableness in her eyes, a faint grasp of actuality, that the other
-had not seen for weeks. The old enemies, memory and hope, were in
-feeble conflict.
-
-“Do you think he means that I am not well?”
-
-“He was only expressing a dream-picture.... I’m sure he hasn’t
-interpreted it----”
-
-“But he will. That comes afterward----”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Betty was either better or worse.... The Doctor came. As he was
-leaving, Helen walked to the stairs with him.
-
-“Yes, there is a change,” he said.
-
-“You think it is good?”
-
-“Yes.... It’s been nearly six months. Yes, I think it is good. She
-would have been dead without you, Miss Quiston. I don’t know what you
-do--but you keep her from the engrossing mania.”
-
-“She has some strength, Doctor?”
-
-“It is all a matter of will at this stage. All along we have battled to
-keep her somehow nourished.”
-
-Helen went back to the studio. Betty was on her feet again. The nurse
-was at hand, but she had never been able to involve herself in the
-patient’s understanding. She left the room now, anticipating the
-inevitable request.
-
-“Do you think, Helen--that as he finishes his work--more and more--the
-ruins will come back to mind?”
-
-
- 6
-
-THE Summer was done; the book had been ten days out of Morning’s
-hand; the final rehearsals were engrossing and painful, and the
-letters from the hill-cabin, though buoyant, were not so frequent....
-Service for men--service for men! The words seemed integrated into
-the life of the man. There was something herculean in his striving.
-The long Summer had ripened the harvest. Conceptions which had been
-vague and dreamy in the first letters were ready at his hand now,
-daily expressions of his work. Helen Quiston, so long dream-fed,
-trembled at the thought that she had something to do with a giant’s
-making.
-
-It never occurred to her that the things so real in her mind were at
-least an age distant from the interests of the world. She did not stop
-to think that the drama so vital and amazing to her would be out of
-the comprehension even of the decent doctor who came to the studio day
-after day. Not once did it enter her mind that the world would regard
-her as heartless and fanatic for her strength in so ruthlessly holding
-her closest friend to the sacrifice. Her problem now was what to do
-with John Morning after the first night of the play, and the report
-upon his book was in. She was afraid he would come. He would see Betty
-Berry--see what her giving had done. He would learn that it was she,
-Helen Quiston, who had given him the peace in which to find the larger
-consciousness; her letters, in Betty Berry’s hand, that had filled the
-distances with peace for him.
-
-She had no thought for John Morning except as an instrument. It was
-something the way Duke Fallows had thought of him at the last. Either
-one would have sacrificed themselves, but they were not called. Only
-Betty Berry loved him for himself, and to her was the altar. They loved
-him for the future, and guarded him as the worker-bees guard the queen
-because she is potentially the coming race.
-
-And this was the miracle: John Morning at his work had passed the need
-of the kiss of woman. He had been tided over the grand crossing by the
-love of Betty Berry. Receiving it now, he did not hold it for himself,
-but gave it forth in service to men.... There was something cosmic
-about this to Helen Quiston.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Breathless expectancy in the studio on the early November evening
-of _Compassion’s_ first performance at the _Markheim_. Though nothing
-of the sort had been arranged, Helen Quiston expected a telegram
-after the Play. It was not yet cold, but an east wind had been rising
-since dark, and there was tension in the sounds and shaking everywhere.
-Betty had, for her, a very keen sense of the importance of the night
-to the man in New York.
-
-“I feel as if I had lived, Betty,” her friend whispered. “Oh, what must
-it be to you?”
-
-“I feel that I have died,” the other murmured.
-
-Though she rested better and accepted food with less reluctance, (the
-doctor declaring himself satisfied with the progress of the past six
-weeks), it had been the hardest period for Helen Quiston. Something
-was in Betty’s mind that was not confided. Often in the evening she
-showed a preference for being alone. Helen feared for a time that the
-other might write a letter without her supervision, but as there was
-no change in the tenor of Morning’s replies, the outpouring of his
-thankfulness in no way diminished, the only conclusion was that Betty
-at least had not mailed such a one. She had taken sudden dislikes to
-several different nurses in turn. When she wanted anything there was a
-terrible concentration about it. Helen and the doctor and all concerned
-were drawn into the vortex.
-
-“It’s the way she used to practice,” her friend said.
-
-“Miss Quiston----” began the doctor.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Oh, it doesn’t matter. I was just thinking--are you so real to all
-your friends?”
-
-“I have no friend like Betty.”
-
-“That eases my mind.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“A few friends like that and there wouldn’t be any singing teacher.”
-
-Helen Quiston realized fully for the first time that the doctor was
-exactly a human being, having the various features of the species.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They were startled by a crash in the inner room. The nurse entered
-quickly to announce that a flower-pot containing a fuchsia had fallen
-from the window-sill.
-
-“The plant is in ruins,” she said.
-
-Betty rose immediately. _Ruins_--the word was a fiery stimulant
-to her. In a few moments she ceased her pacing, saying that she was
-utterly weary. Helen, though leaving for the room she occupied, a
-flight above, could but remark upon the gleaming intensity of Betty’s
-eyes, and the restless leaping of her hands....
-
-The nurse came to her. Betty went with her into the inner room. In the
-next fifteen minutes, the patient was more or less alone, while the
-studio couch, upon which the nurse was accustomed to rest, was being
-prepared. Unwatched, her movements quickened, a queer, furtive smile
-played upon her lips, and certain actions altogether uncommon occupied
-her concentrated attention. The key was quietly removed from the door
-between the studio and the living-room; a large bundle was carried
-from a closet-shelf to the rear window and tossed out. From behind
-the books in a small case near the reading-lamp a purse was produced;
-and finally, when the nurse was at the farthest end of the studio,
-Betty drew a large, sharp knife from the same hiding-place, and with
-astonishing quiet and force severed the telephone wires just beneath
-the bell-box, fastened to the wall close to the floor. The knife was
-returned to its hiding-place. The nurse joined her, and Betty, at the
-studio door, suddenly sank into a chair with a cry of exhaustion. The
-other ran to her.
-
-“It is nothing! Bring some water----”
-
-The nurse had not reached the medicine-case in the bath, when the
-patient sprang up and locked the intervening door of the apartment,
-leaving the woman inside with a “dead” telephone.
-
-For the first time in half a year, Betty left the studio, carefully
-closing the main door. Out the back way, she found her parcel, and in
-the windy darkness put on the rain-coat, traveling hat, veil, gloves
-and shoes it had contained, departing breathlessly through the alley
-gate.
-
-For a long time the hammering upon floors and walls could not
-be located in the studio-building. The outer floor of Betty’s
-apartment was tried, but found locked; and since there was no
-response to the bell, nothing came of the offerings of the earlier
-Samaritans. Much time was occupied by the nurse in trying to call the
-telephone-exchange. A stranger in the street was finally persuaded,
-from the upper window, to find the janitor of the building and send him
-to the Quiston studio. Master keys set the nurse free.
-
-Helen Quiston first notified the Doctor, who came hastily. The story
-of the nurse was explicit as a hospital report.
-
-“Is your car here, Doctor?” Miss Quiston asked presently.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Will you take me down-town? I’ll be ready in a moment.”
-
-“Gladly.”
-
-The Doctor was informed in a tense but controlled voice that the
-patient was doubtless at this moment upon a certain east-bound train.
-“Betty left here a few minutes after nine,” Helen added. “The train I’m
-thinking of left at ten-five. It is now eleven.... Oh, I wonder what
-she had on? She was dressed when I left her--shirt-waist, black skirt,
-house-slippers----”
-
-Five minutes’ search and thinking on the part of Miss Quiston uncovered
-the fact that Betty’s rain-coat and a certain small traveling hat were
-missing.... Nothing was positively established at the station.
-
-“I must send a telegram, Doctor,” Helen said.
-
-It was to Morning at his rural-delivery address. Her heart sank with
-fear lest the message fail to reach him, until it was finally handled
-by the post-office.
-
-“There’s nothing further to do,” she said hopelessly.
-
-Night brought no news, nor the early morning. At nine-thirty o’clock,
-Helen Quiston was leaving the studio for the morning’s work, when
-she heard a light, swift step on the stairs--someone coming up at
-least three steps at a time. The hall-door was half-swung. Helen
-stood waiting.... Now a stranger was at the doorway, hesitating, yet
-expectant. His brow was tanned, as if he had walked bare-headed in the
-sun. His gray eyes were remarkably clear and very kind. For a second or
-two they stood face to face, forgetting to speak.
-
-“Where is Betty Berry?” It was a demand, yet gently spoken.
-
-“Are you--are you John Morning?” “Yes.... Where is she?”
-
-“I think she has gone to you--I do not know, but I think she has gone
-to the hill-cabin----”
-
-“Are you her friend?”
-
-“Yes--I am Miss Quiston.”
-
-“When did she go?”
-
-“Last night. I telegraphed you----”
-
-He came close to her. His hand upon her shoulder drew her to a chair,
-and he brought another near. “I will not stop to ask questions,” he
-said heavily. “You tell me all----”
-
-“What of the play?”
-
-“I don’t know--I left before it was done to come here.... She is
-ill--go on----”
-
-The story faltered at first, but the gray eyes steadied her. Toward the
-end she talked swiftly, coherently. She winged over the one certain
-cause of Betty’s illness.... When she stopped, it seemed to her that
-some mighty machinery was whirring below, its vibrations in the floor
-and walls.
-
-He arose, stood beside her--all the light and reason gone from his
-face. For several seconds he stood there, his left hand swiftly tapping
-her shoulder. The powers of the man were afar--miles away upon his
-hill. This was just a tapping blind man in the room....
-
-“I must go. I have no words now.... She is there. It must be nearly ten
-now. I must hurry to her.”
-
-The engines in the house flagged and were silent.
-
-The woman stood where he had left her, smiling.
-
-
- 7
-
-BETTY held her purse tightly in her hand, and certain thoughts
-were held as tightly in her brain, as she pressed against the wind....
-It was something like going to a distant concert engagement in the
-night.... Her limbs were uncertain, and there was a constant winging
-in her breast, as though it were the cage of a frantic bird. She did
-not mind. She could forget it--if only her eyes remained true. For the
-first time in months she was on her own strength, her own will. There
-was a sharp distress in the responsibility, but also an awakening of
-force.
-
-The wind whipped her breath away, yet she liked the wild freedom of
-it--if only she could continue to see and remember what to say. The
-studio was a hideous blackness that drove her from behind. This was a
-new and consuming hatred. The two squares to the large uptown hotel
-where a cab was readily obtainable were long as a winter night; and
-the tension to remember seemed destroying her by the time she found a
-driver. She told him the station and the train.
-
-“Plenty of time, Ma’am,” he said.
-
-Her eyes filled with tears. It was true, then, that there was such a
-station, such a train, that there was time, and nothing had betrayed
-her. “I must not speak; I must not speak,” kept warning in her mind;
-“but he is so good to me!”
-
-Now she felt the cold, as she rested a moment before the new ordeal at
-the station--destination, tickets, the Pullman, not to fall, not to
-speak any but the exact words.... The driver helped her out. Everything
-was familiar, but miraculously large.... She gave the man extra money,
-and the faintest, humblest “Thank you!” escaped her. He whistled a
-porter for her.
-
-“The ticket window,” she said. And now she need only follow. It was
-warmer. It would be warm in the Pullman.... She took the young colored
-man’s arm. He turned with good nature.
-
-“I have been ill,” she said. It was frightened from her lips.
-
-“There is plenty of time, Miss. I’ll see you through to the berth--the
-ten-five--yes’m.”
-
-The quick tears started again, and an aching lump in her throat. She
-wanted to cry out her thankfulness. She wanted to be told again and
-again--that all this was not a dream, from which she would awaken
-in that place of death. The value of her veil awed her; and it was
-_she_ who had thought of it. Could it really be true that she had
-forgotten nothing? Would she actually arrive at her journey’s end?
-
-The porter procured berth and tickets, and now he assured her that her
-train was ready. She followed him through interminable distances, down
-countless stairs; she watched and listened critically, as he delivered
-both tickets to the Pullman conductor. All she had to do was to follow,
-to say nothing and to pay. With what thankfulness did she pay; and with
-what warming courtesy were her gifts received. Surely the world was
-changed. It had become so dear and good.... She had a far-off vision of
-a peremptory Betty Berry of another world, striding to and fro among
-men and trains and cities, giving her commands, expecting obedience,
-conferring gratuities according to rigid principle.
-
-The car-porter was more wonderful than any--an old Southern darkey,
-with little patches of gray beard, absurdly distributed. A homing
-gentleness was in his voice, and his smile was from a better world....
-There had been another porter like him somewhere.
-
-“She goes clear through,” the station porter said, “and she’s been
-sick.”
-
-“Ah’ll see the young Miss clar’ through,” the old man drawled. “Just
-depen’ on me, Miss. Sit right down here--berth’ll be ready right smaht.”
-
-She did not sleep, but she was warm and not uncomfortable. She dared
-think a little of the end of the journey, but there was so much to do
-in the morning, so much to keep in mind. She held fast to her purse.
-In her dependence, the magic of it was like a strange discovery. In
-the early morning, the porter brought her coffee with some hot milk and
-toast. The wind had long since been left behind, but a cold rain was
-falling. She would be cold. The terminal was reached. The old man bore
-her forth. There was something merciful and restoring in his gentle
-gratitude. A station porter led her to the Hackensack car.
-
-She thought of breakfast on the way, but forgot it again upon reaching
-Hackensack, where she was directed to the post-office.
-
-She wrote the address of John Morning and asked shiveringly at the
-stamp window if there was any way in which she could be delivered there.
-
-The clerk could not see if she were laughing under the veil.
-
-“The rural carrier knows the way,” she added. “I’d be willing to pay
-well--”
-
-The clerk craned his head back through the office, and called:
-
-“Jethro!”
-
-A large, dusty man came forward with the air of having just
-breakfasted. He took the slip containing the address from her hand.
-
-“The lady wants to go with you, Jethro----”
-
-The rural carrier tilted his spectacles benignly to regard her.
-
-“Bless me--ever been there?”
-
-“No--but letters go safely----”
-
-“I rather think they do--since I take ’em. Is this your writing?”
-
-The place was darkening, suffocating to her. “Yes ... if you would only
-take me. Five, ten dollars--oh, I should be so glad to pay anything I
-have----”
-
-The carrier penetrated the veil.
-
-“Just sit down by the heater, Lady,” he said in a lowered tone. “We’ll
-get there, and it won’t cost you five or ten dollars, neither. I know
-where you want to go, and I know who you are, if I’m not mistaken.
-Lizzie and I will get you there----”
-
-She turned quickly, for the tears were coming.... Could it really be
-that she had remembered everything? Was she really going to him, and
-this the last stage of the journey? The heart of the large, dusty man
-had radiated so suddenly upon her. She was not afraid of him, but she
-must not faint nor speak until she was away from the others. Very still
-she sat by the heater, praying for strength, praying that it was not
-all a dream....
-
-“Miss Betty Berry!”
-
-There was an instant in which the call had but a vague meaning; then
-shot home to her the hideous fear of being taken back. She was close to
-screaming, yet it was only the rural-carrier coming.
-
-“Yes?” she said, clearing her throat.
-
-“I thought I couldn’t be wrong,” he said. “I’ve brought a good many
-letters addressed to you back to town from the place you’re going, and
-carried a good many out yonder in this writing of yours.... Lizzie and
-me are ready, Miss.”
-
-As they stepped out the rear door, he touched her arm reflectively,
-and re-entered to bring a hairy black robe. The vehicle, of a vanished
-type, was gray even in the rain, and cocked to one side from the
-sagging of years, where the carrier sat. Betty’s weight did not
-visibly impress the high side. He tucked the hairy robe about her, the
-mail-bags at her feet, picked up the lines, and lo! they moved.
-
-“Lizzie ain’t very showy on knee action, Miss Berry,” he said, “but
-along about half-past eleven, when we get there, you’ll remark she’s
-stiddy.”
-
-It was only ten now.... Mud and miles and mail-boxes; dragging moments,
-and miles and cold rain.... She had to talk a little. The journey of
-the night was nearest, and she told how good the train-men had been to
-her.
-
-“You haven’t traveled much, Miss, I take it?” he said softly.
-
-“Oh, no.” Then distantly again she remembered a Betty Berry of concert
-seasons--on the wing from city to city. It was all too remote for
-speech. At one house a woman came forth with tea and sandwiches. Betty
-was grateful for the warm drink and wanted to pay, but the carrier
-pushed back her hand and tucked her in again.
-
-“Guess this is going to be a surprise for the bare-headed man?” he
-asked.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“He’s your young man, then?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-He seemed relieved. “He won’t be staying out here much longer--not
-likely--though we do have a spell of good weather in November mostly.”
-
-Often she lost every sense of distance and identity. The lapses grew
-longer toward the end, and when she did not answer, Jethro thought she
-had fallen asleep.... A long stretch at last, barren of mail-boxes....
-When he finally drew up, she followed his eyes to her lover’s name upon
-the tin by the roadside. Then he pointed beyond the low near trees and
-hollows. It was all desolate; the Fall tints subdued in the pervading
-gray. She saw a clump of greater trees in the upper middle distance.
-
-“’Bout a thousand feet straight in. Miss--and up--under them big trees.
-You’ll see his shanty before you’re half-way. Just keep your eye on
-them elms. He’d be down here if it was any kind of weather. Guess
-you’re glad. D’ruther go alone and find him there, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“Yes.... And now I want to give you this, please.”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-She could not leave him so. “For Lizzie--she’s so steady. I’m rich ...
-and I’ll be much happier--going to the bare-headed man. Please--for
-me----”
-
-“Don’t you take that robe off!” he said suddenly. “I don’t want
-it--jumpin’ in and out. I never take it out of the office till snow
-flies. He’ll bring it down to the box, when I’m passin’ to-morrow. Why,
-you’d get all soaked, Miss--a-goin’ up to him.... Well, I’ll take the
-money for Lizzie--if you’re rich--but it’s ridiculous much, and I’d
-have fetched you for nothin’.”
-
-She pressed his hand in both of hers and turned away through the break
-in the fence.... It seemed darker; and when the grinding of the tires
-on the wet gravel died away, the dripping silence came home to her,
-alien and fearful.... She had seen the name; soon she would see his
-house--but this was no man’s land, an after-death land; this was ‘the
-hollows and the vagueness of light,’ of which he had written....
-
-She saw the house and faltered on. She had not the strength to call....
-On the slope to the great trees the burden of the heavy robe would
-have borne her to the ground, had she not let it fall from her.... She
-could not believe the padlock on the door, felt it with her hands, the
-weight and the brass of it. It was hard for her to understand the cruel
-cold of it--as for a child that has never been hurt intentionally. She
-sank to her knees and prayed that it was not there.... But it was. The
-reality entered her brain, the thick icy metal of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Betty Berry--Betty Berry, I am coming!”
-
-She lifted her head in the rain. His call was like a thought of her
-own, but sharper, truer. This was his door. He was coming. It was still
-light. She wanted to sleep again, but the death-like cold warned her.
-She would die before he came....
-
-She raised herself against the door. The black heap of the fur-robe on
-the slope held her eyes.... On the way to it she fainted again; again
-the cold rain roused her.... Always on the borders of the rousing, she
-heard it:
-
-“Betty Berry--Betty Berry, I am coming!”
-
-She knelt in the wet leaves beside the robe ... her thoughts turned
-back to the night--the goodness of the men, their tender voices....
-There was a calling up in the dusk among the trees. Yes, she must lie
-at his door. Men were good; the lock alone had hurt her. His Guardian
-had put it there.... Upward she crawled, dragging the robe.
-
-“Yes, you are coming!” she answered. Always when the cold rain roused
-her, she would answer, and crawl a little farther with the robe. At the
-door at last, she lay down beneath it....
-
-Still again his calling roused her. It was darker--but not yet night....
-
-“Betty Berry--Betty Berry, I am coming!”
-
-It was nearer.
-
-“I knew you would let me in,” she tried to say, and then--voices.... It
-seemed as if the porter of the Old South had come.... His voice lulled
-her, and his smile was the glow of the home-hearth.
-
-
- 8
-
-SHE was lying upon the single narrow bed.... Something long
-ago had been premonitive of this. Morning’s mind, too, caught up the
-remembrance of Moto-san and the Japanese Inn.... He watched. Sometimes
-he said with all his will that she must not die. She could not die,
-when his will was dominant, but he was exhausted; his will-power
-flagged frequently.
-
-All day yesterday in the train he had held her in his mind--sent
-his calls to her across the miles. From different stations he had
-telegraphed to Jake at Hackensack, to Jethro at the post-office, and to
-his neighbor, the dairyman, who had a telephone. Jethro had been the
-first to reach the cabin, but it was nearly dusk then. The others were
-quick to appear. Jethro found her at the door, partly covered in the
-furry robe. That robe crowned him in Morning’s mind. They had broken in
-the door, and lit the fire. Morning reached the cabin at nine. Jethro
-spoke of a doctor.
-
-“I’m the doctor,” Morning said. The three had left him.
-
-It was now after midnight. She had not aroused. Old scenes quivered
-across the surface of her consciousness, starting a faintly mumbled
-sentence now and then: The Armory, the first kiss, the road to
-Baltimore, letters, hurried journeys, the Guardian; and much about the
-latest journey--from cab to station, from porter to Pullman, from car
-to clerk to carrier. He saw how the night and the day had used her
-final strength. Always the Guardian intervened to break her will, and
-Morning did not understand. There were other enemies; the studio, the
-nurse, the padlock, and the rain. After brief hushes, she would speak
-of his coming, or answer his calling.
-
-It was the one theme of his life even now--the great thing Betty Berry
-had done. It awed and chilled him to realize how coarse-fibered he
-had been, so utterly impervious, not to sense the nature of the force
-that had upheld him, nor the quality of the bestowals.... There was a
-rending about it, and yet it was all so quiet now. It seemed to him
-that a man’s life is husk after husk of illusion, that the illusions
-are endless. He had torn them away, one after another, thinking each
-time that he had come to the grain.... And what was the sum of his
-finding so far? That good is eternal; that man loves God best by
-serving men; that greatness is in the working, not in the result; that
-a man who has found his work has found the soul’s sunlight, and that
-service for men is its rain. Surely, these are not husks.... It had
-been a hard, weary way. He was like a tired child now, and here was the
-little mother--wearied with him unto death.... He had been so perverse
-and headstrong. She had given him her love and guidance until her last
-strength was spent. He must be the man now.... He wondered if his heart
-would break, when he realized fully his own evil and her unfathomable
-sweetness?... Must a woman always fall spent and near to death--before
-a man can be finished? Or is it because her work is done that she falls?
-
-He knelt beside her. Sometimes, in the lamplight, she looked as he had
-seen her at the Armory; again, as if she were playing; now, it was as
-she had been to him in the dark of the Pullman seat.... Who was the
-Guardian?
-
-... And this was what had come to her from teaching him the miracle
-of listening alone.... It was true. He belonged to that life, as Duke
-Fallows had always said. She had made him see it by going from him. He
-would never be the same, after having tasted the greater love, in which
-man and woman are one in the spirit of service, having renounced the
-emblem of it. And with all her vision and leading--the glory of it had
-not come to her as to him. It had all but killed her. She had come to
-him--a forgotten purpose, a broken vessel.
-
-He would love her back to life. That was his work now. Everything
-must stop for that--even truth.... He halted. If he loved her back to
-full and perfect health again, would she not be the same as she had
-been? Would she not take up her Cross again?... No, he would not let
-her. He would destroy the results of his work if necessary. He would
-force himself to forget, even in the spirit--this taste of the mystic
-oneness that had come to him. He would show his need for her every
-hour. That would make her happy--his leaning upon her word and thought
-and action. He would show her his need of her presence in the long,
-excellent forenoons, in the very processes of his task--and in the
-evenings, her hands, her kisses, her step, her voice; he would make her
-see that these were his perfect essentials.
-
-“I’ve talked and written a lot about how a man should live--in the past
-six months,” he said grimly. “I’ve got to do a bit of real living in
-the world now. God knows I love her--as I used to. That seemed enough
-then!”
-
-He looked up from her face. The ghost of day had come softly to the
-South. He arose, took the lamp across the room and blew it out. Then he
-opened the door. The mingled night and dawn came in, a cool dimness,
-but the rain had ceased. He replenished the fire, left the door open,
-and returned to her. She had become quiet since the lamp had been taken
-away.... A sense of the man and woman together, and of her strength
-returning crept upon him. He welcomed it, though the deeps cried out.
-
-“When you are yourself, you will want to go away again--the long,
-blinding ways of the sun,” he whispered. “But I will say, ‘I cannot
-spare you, Betty Berry. This is the place for two to be. We will begin
-again----’”
-
-His thought of what she would answer brought back to mind the play,
-_Compassion_, and the Book of John Morning.... He smiled. He had
-almost forgotten. Night before last, at the beginning of the third
-act, he had left the _Markheim_. He had given way suddenly to
-the thought that had pulled at him all day--to take the train to
-Betty Berry that night.... The play had seemed good. Even to him
-there had been moments of thrilling joy. It had been surprisingly
-different, sitting in front with the audience, from the rehearsals. Of
-yesterday’s notices he had not seen a single one. It was a far thought
-to him even now of the play’s failure, but if it did fail, how easy
-to say to Betty Berry, “You see, how mad I was alone--how mad in my
-exaltation--how terribly out of tune? I needed you here. I need you
-now----”
-
-Then he thought of the bigger thing--the Book. There wasn’t a chance
-for that to fail. It would find its own. What would he say about
-that?... He would say, “I love you, Betty Berry. It was loving you that
-made the book. And when it was done--how I longed for you!”
-
-That was true--true now.... He kissed her shut eyelids. There was
-blessedness in her being here--even shattered and so close to
-death--blessedness and a dreadful fear. That fear was ever winging
-around, but did not come home to him and fold its wings. He was not
-himself.... “My God!” he cried out, “what folds upon folds and phases
-upon phases of experience a man must pass to learn to live----”
-
-For an instant it all came back--that taste of the open road and larger
-dimension of man--the listening, the labor, the sharpened senses, scant
-diet, tireless service, ‘the great companions’--love of the world and
-unfailing compassion.... It was as they had said. He had belonged
-everywhere but in a woman’s arms....
-
-It came clear as a vision, and he put it from him as an evil thing--and
-all the voices. The red dawn was staring into his eyes, and afar off a
-horse nickered. He held his hands against the light, as if to destroy
-it.
-
-“I have said it in the Book, ‘We have all eternity to play in,’ and if
-that is not a lie--this Call will come to me again!”
-
-And this was his renunciation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Her stillness troubled him.
-
-“I am your lover,” he whispered. “I will not let you go, Betty Berry.
-Don’t you hear--I love you?”
-
-He lifted her, walked to and fro between the fire and the cot. She
-was so very little.... The day came up with a mystic shining, and the
-warmth returned. These were the first hours of that fleeting Indian
-summer, the year’s illumination--the serene and conscious death of
-Summer.... The door was wide open to the light.... Morning put down his
-burden, but could not be still. He brought water and scrubbed the floor
-and door-step. The wood shone white as it dried--white as the square
-table which was an attraction of daylight. He tossed the water away
-down the hollow, drew more and washed as the countrymen do, lifting
-handfuls to his head. Then he brought basin, soap, and towels--bathed
-her face and hands, afterward carrying her forth to the sunlight. The
-thin shade of the elms was far down the meadow, for the day was not
-high.
-
-“I love you, Betty Berry,” he continued to repeat, as he turned again
-and again to the cot. There was an hypnotic effect in the words; and
-there was a certain numbed surface in his brain that refused to cope
-with the immediate stresses in the room.
-
-Jethro came early, and was not content to leave the mail at the box.
-He brought letters, a paper, and a large package. Jethro looked at the
-face on the cot and at the bare-headed man. Words failed him to whom
-words were so easy. He ventured to mention the name of a doctor, and
-was answered furiously:
-
-“I am the doctor.”
-
-Jethro lingered. Morning turned suddenly to look at the cot, and
-it seemed to the carrier that his eyes would have frightened away
-death.... Morning caught him by the shoulders:
-
-“You’re a good man, Jethro,” he said hastily. “When I think of that fur
-robe--it seems as if I’ve got to do something for you with my hands.”
-
-The carrier went his way.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This he found in the newspaper--a “follow” paragraph apparently to the
-dramatic notice of the day before:
-
- “The second performance of _Compassion_ last night to a
- fairly filled house is interesting in its relation to the fear
- frankly expressed in this column yesterday, to the effect that
- _Compassion_ is too good a play to get on well. The fear was well
- founded upon experience; and yet we may have before us an exception--a
- quality of excellence that will not be subdued. It is too much to hope
- for, that at any other time this season we will be equally glad to
- find our fear for a play’s future ill-founded.”
-
-Morning had not known of the doubt; and this was the rise of the
-tide again from the doubt.... He glanced at the package. There was
-a spreading cold in his vitals. It was from the publisher he had
-chosen--the Book of John Morning returned.
-
-He was hostile for an instant--an old vindictive self resenting
-this touch upon his gift of self-revelation. The protecting thought
-followed quickly that the book was in no way changed by this accident
-of encountering the wrong publisher. The really important part of the
-incident followed these insignificant thoughts: Above all things, this
-letter would help to prove to Betty Berry his need for her. He would
-not send it out again at once. This refusal would weigh more than
-anything he could say, to prove that loneliness had been too much, too
-strong for him--that it had thrown his work out of reality, instead of
-into it.... He was bending over her. A step at the door, and he turned
-to find Helen Quiston there.
-
-
- 9
-
-SHE entered and went to the cot, without words, but pressed
-his hand as she passed....
-
-“You were there--and you let her get so low as this.”
-
-Helen turned to search his face. “Yes,” she said.
-
-“Who is this--Guardian?”
-
-“Some angel that came to her, I think.”
-
-“He seems very real to her----”
-
-“Angels are real.”
-
-“Angels do not make saints suffer----”
-
-“On the contrary, that appears to be the life-business of saints----”
-
-“She will never go back to that!” he said with low vehemence.
-
-Helen regarded her old comrade for a moment, kissed her reverently, and
-then turned to the man.
-
-“You poor boy,” she said.
-
-There was something cold and rock-like about this slave of the future,
-looking over and beyond the imminent tragedy. He was helpless,
-maddened....
-
-“She always said you loved her--that you were the one woman absolutely
-true. How could you let her destroy herself?”
-
-“I knew her before you came, and loved her. I gave her my house. I
-waited upon her night and morning. I love Betty Berry. You are torn and
-tortured, but you will see----”
-
-“She will not be away from me again!... Bah! what is work--to this?”
-
-Helen smiled. “Do you think she would have come if she had been the
-real Betty Berry?”
-
-“Do you think I would have been duped--had I been the real John
-Morning?”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“I mean a man is mad when he is doing a book. He may call it happiness,
-but it is a kind of devil’s madness. He is open for anything to rush
-in.... I am a common man. I do not belong to that visionary thing----”
-
-“You are caught in your emotions. I know your work----”
-
-He drew her to the door, saying excitedly:
-
-“_Compassion_ threatens to fail. My book has come back,” he said
-triumphantly. “Look at this----”
-
-He gave her the publisher’s letter.
-
-“Your play has not failed,” she said.... “And this--why, this is just
-a bit of the world. John Morning at thirty-three--talks of failure.
-Let us talk over this day, when you are fifty-three.... What an empty
-victory for her--if you failed now----”
-
-She was looking back at the cot. Morning whispered his reiteration:
-
-“I love her. I shall have her here. I shall make her see that I love
-her. _That_ is my service. You are all mad conspirators against
-us. We are man and woman. Our world is each other. She shall see and
-believe this--if I write drivel----”
-
-Helen did not seem quite to hear him. She drew away from him as if
-called in a trance to the bedside.
-
-“My little dearest--oh, Betty Berry--you have done so well. You have
-paid the price for a World-Man----”
-
-Morning followed her.... Betty’s eyes were opened--fixed upon Helen
-Quiston.
-
-“What did you say?” she questioned wonderingly.
-
-“God love you, Betty. I said you had paid the price for a World-Man----”
-
-She raised on her elbow alone, her eyes now looking beyond the woman to
-Morning.
-
-“He is there,” she whispered. “He is there. He has come.”
-
-Her hand stretched toward him, and sank slowly to his brow as he knelt.
-
-“My love,” she said.... “It is all right. I see it all once more. It is
-so good and right--just as your Guardian told me.... It was only the
-birth-pangs I suffered. They were hard.... Birth is hard, but death is
-easy. Don’t you see, Helen, he was my little baby?... Oh, you came so
-hard, John Morning--and, oh, I love you so!”
-
-He saw the fact of her passing, but the deeper realization was slow. It
-was much to him, for the instant, that she spoke and looked into his
-eyes.
-
-“I love you, Betty Berry,” he said, his voice lifting. “I love you as a
-saint, as a mother--as a child!”
-
-“But not as a woman,” she whispered.
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
- --On page 9, oustide has been changed to outside.
- --On page 28, redouts has been changed to redoubts.
- --On page 43, foxtails has been changed to fox-tails.
- --On page 60, Koupangtze has been changed to Koupangtse.
- --On page 91, Nagaski has been changed to Nagasaki.
- --On page 110, story--idea has been changed to story-idea.
- --On page 126, “the the” has eliminated the second word.
- --On page 191, altar has been changed to alter.
- --On page 206, sorows has been changed to sorrows.
- --On page 245, settle has been changed to settled.
- --On page 246, wordly has been changed to worldly.
- --On page 274, even has been changed to ever.
- --On page 276, elums has been changed to elms.
- --On page 279, cousciousness has been changed to consciousness.
- --All other hyphenation and spelling has been retained.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Down among men, by Will Levington Comfort</p>
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Down among men</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Will Levington Comfort</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 23, 2022 [eBook #68390]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOWN AMONG MEN ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide" style="width: 35%">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1><i>Down Among<br />
-Men</i></h1></div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent p4">BY</p>
-
-<p class="ph3 nobreak">WILL LEVINGTON COMFORT</p>
-
-<p class="p6b center no-indent"><small>AUTHOR OF “ROUTLEDGE RIDES ALONE,”<br />
-“FATE KNOCKS AT THE DOOR,” ETC.</small></p>
-
-<p class="ph3 p6">NEW YORK<br />
-GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"><p class="center no-indent"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1913<br />
-By George H. Doran Company</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">TO THE MEN OF THE UPPER ROOM</p></div>
-
-<p>... <span class="allsmcap">And this is the story I told you through the
-several nights: of the man who came up through
-the dark and the fighting (often in such a ruck
-of fighting that he couldn’t hear voices); how
-he was punished by men, broken by self, and healed
-by a woman; indeed, but for her, he might have
-chosen the long way of the brute to put on his
-powers and attain the certain royalty of the
-human adult in this year of our Lord. She paid
-the price; she was the man-maker; she saw the
-World-Man shining ahead.... It is a story of
-the path at our feet, of the Compassionates who
-draw near to speak, when we are brave enough to
-listen, of the women who walk beside us. A tale
-of the road as we go&mdash;many are ahead, many behind&mdash;but
-we do not travel this stretch again.</span></p>
-
-<p class="right">&mdash;<i>W. L. C.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class=" ph2 nobreak" id="KAO_LIANG">KAO LIANG</p></div>
-
-<p><i>No one thought of kao liang.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Morning did not mention it in his great story; even
-Duke Fallows did not think of it.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Kao liang, the millet of China. Inland seas of it are
-there, green in the beginning of its flow, dull gold in its
-high tide.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>A ruffianly scouring grain. Rice is its little white sister.
-Millet is the strength of the beast, the mash of the
-world’s poor. A hundred millions of acres of Asia are
-in yield or waiting for kao liang to-day. Remember the
-poor.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>In Manchuria kao liang grows strong and high. Its
-fox-tails brush the brows of the tall Chinese of the north
-country. It brushed the caps of the Russian soldiers
-one certain Fall.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>The Censurer came with the planting in that year. Kao
-liang was like a soft green mould upon the hills and valleys
-when he came to his battle-fields. He was watching
-for a browner harvest and a ruddier planting. Fall
-plowing and red planting&mdash;for that, he came to Liaoyang.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>His soldiers trampled it, devastated the young grain with
-their formations, foraged their beasts upon it. Yet the
-millet grew, hardened and covered the earth&mdash;for the
-poor must be served. Out of flood and gale and burning,
-it waxed great, filling the hills and the hollows, closing
-in on the city, climbing thinly to the Passes.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Its protest to the invasion was mute as China’s, but it
-did not run. Before the Japanese, it closed in. It was
-ripe when the brown flanker crossed the Taitse. It
-was ripe when two Slav chiefs took their thousands forth
-to form the anvil upon which the flanker was to be
-broken. The Cossacks had been feeding their beasts
-upon it for many days, and they drank in the deep hollows
-where the roots of kao liang held the rain. It was
-ripe for the world’s poor, when the Sentimentalist strode
-forth at last&mdash;the hammer that was to break the spine
-of the flanker.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</p></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="CONTENTS">
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="tdc">BOOK ONE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">AFIELD</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="tdc">BOOK TWO</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">THE HILL-CABIN</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="tdc">BOOK THREE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">THE BARE-HEADED MAN</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_I"><span class="smaller not-bold">BOOK I.</span><br />
-AFIELD</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph3">1</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> town of Rosario was ahead. The cavalry expected
-to sup and sleep there. Chance of firing
-presently from the natives was pure routine. John
-Morning, back in the second troop, on the horse of a
-missing soldier, wondered if years of service and exploration
-would make him ever as great a correspondent as
-Mr. Reever Kennard looked. The wide, sloping shoulders
-of the Personage were to be seen occasionally when
-the trail crooked, far forward and near the General.</p>
-
-<p>The bit of fighting was over before the rear troopers
-got rightly into the skirmish-line (every fourth trooper
-holding four horses); and now the men breathed and
-smoked cigarettes in one more Luzon town; and another
-<i>Alcalde’s</i> house was turned into headquarters....
-This was a brigade expedition of December, 1899. Two
-weeks before the General had ridden out of Manila.
-Various pieces of infantry had been left to garrison the
-many towns which would not stay held without pins.
-Two or three days more, then Batangas, and the big ride
-was over, the lower Luzon incision complete, and drainage
-established.</p>
-
-<p>Morning, with the troopers, had to look to his mount
-in regulation fashion, and did not reach Headquarters
-until after the others. The <i>Alcalde’s</i> house in Rosario
-as usual stood large among the straw-thatched bamboo
-huts. The little upper room which Morning had come to
-expect through the courtesy of the staff, was easily
-found. The saddle-bags and blanket-rolls of Mr. Kennard
-and his companion, a civilian, named Calvert were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>already there, each in a corner. Morning’s thought was
-that he would hear these men talk after supper. In a
-third corner he placed his canteen, and shyly tucked away
-in the shadow, the limp haversack.</p>
-
-<p>There was a small table in the room, of black wood
-worn shiny by the hands of the house, as the black wood
-of the floors was worn shiny by the bare feet of servants.
-Upon the table was a small sheath-knife, the brass handle
-of which was inscribed <i>Mio Amigo</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It becomes necessary to explain that the human male
-is discriminating about his loot, by the time he has been
-afield two weeks in a tropical island, especially if he has
-camped in a fresh town every night. The day’s march
-makes him value every pound that he can throw away,
-for he has already been chafed by each essential button
-and buckle. A tin pail of silver pesos unearthed in a
-church had passed from hand to hand among the soldiers.
-As the stress of the days increased (and the artificial
-sense of values narrowed to the fundamentals such as
-food and tobacco and sleep), Morning had observed with
-curious approval that the silver hoard leaked out of the
-command entirely&mdash;to return to the natives for further
-offerings to the priests.</p>
-
-<p>So the knife on the table aroused no desire. It was
-not even a good knife, but <i>Mio Amigo</i> took his eye, as
-if affording a bit of insight to the native mind. It could
-not have been wanted by Mr. Kennard or Mr. Calvert,
-since it lay upon the table. Morning put it in his coat,
-knowing he would toss it away before to-morrow’s sun
-was high. In his hot moist hand the brass-handle sent
-up a smell of verdigris. A little later in the village road,
-he encountered Mr. Reever Kennard in the act of purchasing
-ancient canned stuff from a native-woman, too
-lame to run before the cavalry. Morning was not natural
-in the Presence.</p>
-
-<p>The great man was broad and round and thick. He
-criticised generals afield, and in Washington when times
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>were dry. He had dined with the President and signed
-the interview. His head dropped forward slightly, his
-chin sunk in its own cushions. He bought the native
-wares with the air of a man who is keeping a city in
-suspense, and the city deserves it. Morning stood by and
-did not speak. There was no reason for him to stay;
-he did not expect companionship; he had nothing to say;
-no money with which to buy food&mdash;and yet, having established
-himself there, he could not withdraw without remark
-of some kind. At least he felt this; also he felt
-cruelly the cub. He was at home in this service with
-packers and enlisted men, but always as now, officers,
-and others of his own work, made him feel the upstart.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kennard now turned to perceive him, his eyes
-opening in the “Bless me&mdash;what sort is this?” manner of
-the straying Englishman; and John Morning, quite in a
-funk, fell to enforcing an absurd interest in the native
-sheath-knife. Kennard was not drawn to such a slight
-affair, but perceiving the menial in Morning, allowed
-him to carry some of his purchases back to Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>Supper was a serious matter to the boy. He had no
-money nor provisions. In the usual case, money would
-have been no good&mdash;but there were a few things left in
-the shop of the lame woman. The field ration was light;
-and while he would not go hungry if the staff-officers
-knew, it was a delicate matter to make known his grubless
-state. Morning rambled over the town, after helping
-Mr. Kennard to quarters, and returned empty to the
-upper room. Mr. Calvert was there and appeared to see
-Morning for the first time. Calvert was a slender quiet
-chap, and believed in what he had to say.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get that little sheath-knife you
-showed Mr. Kennard?” he asked abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>Morning sickened before the man’s eyes. His life
-had been fought out in dark, rough places. He was as
-near twenty as twenty-five. He had the way of the
-under-dog, who does not expect to be believed, looking
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>for the worst of it, whether guilty or not. He told Calvert
-he had found the knife on this table.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I put it in my saddle-bags,” Calvert said.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very welcome to it. The <i>Mio Amigo</i> made
-me look at it twice&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I wanted it. Take this for your trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>Calvert placed a bit of paper money on the table between
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“It was no trouble. I don’t want the money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take it along. Don’t think of it again.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning didn’t want to appear stubborn. This was
-the peculiarity of the episode. The thought of taking
-the money repelled him. The connection of the money
-with supper occurred, but not with the strength of his
-dislike to appear perverse or bad-tempered.... He
-saw all clearly after he had accepted the paper, but the
-matter was then closed. He was very miserable. He had
-proved his inferiority. The little brush with big men
-had been too much for him. He belonged among the
-enlisted....</p>
-
-<p>He went to the lame woman and bought a bottle of
-pimientos and a live chicken. The latter he traded for
-a can of bacon with a soldier.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">2</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>mperial Hotel</span>, Tokyo, early in March, 1904....
-The Japanese war office had finally decided
-to permit six American correspondents to accompany
-each army. The Americans heard the news with gravity.
-There were two men for every place. Only three Japanese
-armies were in conception at this time. The first
-six Americans were easily chosen&mdash;names of men that
-allowed no doubt; and this initial group, beside being the
-first to take the field, was elected to act as a committee
-to appoint the second and third sets of six&mdash;twelve places
-and thirty waiting. The work at hand was delicate.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-<p>The committee was in session in the room of Mr.
-Reever Kennard. Five of the second list had been settled
-upon when the name of John Morning (of the Open
-Market) was brought up. It was Duke Fallows of San
-Francisco, who spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know John Morning, but I know his stuff.
-It’s big stuff; he’s the big man. We’ve gone too far without
-him already. He has more right to be on the committee
-than I. He was here before I was. He has
-minded his own business and taken quarters apart. I had
-no intention of breaking into the picture this way, but
-the fact is, I expected John Morning to go in first on the
-second list. Now that there is only one place left, there
-really can’t be any doubt about the name.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Reever Kennard of the <i>World-News</i> now arose
-and waited for silence. He got it. The weight of Mr.
-Reever Kennard was felt in this room. Everything in
-it had weight&mdash;saddle and leggings of pigskin, gauntlets,
-typewriters, cameras, the broadside of riding-breeches,
-and a little arsenal of modern inventions which
-only stop firing upon formal request. Without his hat,
-Mr. Reever Kennard was different, however. Much
-weight that you granted under the big hat, had left that
-arid country for the crowded arteries of neck and jowl
-and jaw, or, indeed, for the belted cosmic center itself.
-He said:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Fallows talks wide. This Morning is out on a
-shoe-string; and while he may have a bit of force to handle
-certain kinds of action, it isn’t altogether luck&mdash;his
-not getting a good berth. The young man hasn’t made
-good at home. He hasn’t the money backing to stand
-his share of the expense. The War Office suggests that
-each party of correspondents employ a sutler&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows was still standing and broke in:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m interested in that matter of making good at
-home. I’ve seen the work of most Americans here, and
-I believe John Morning to be the best war-writer sent
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>out from the States. As for the shoe-string, I’ll furnish
-his tooth-brush and dinnercoat&mdash;if the sutler insists&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We understand very clearly the enthusiasm of Mr.
-Fallows who wants a second column-man for his paper.
-Doubtless this Morning is open&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t thought of it, but certainly the <i>Western
-States</i> would profit, if John Morning turned part of his
-product there. How about your <i>World-News</i> on that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I favor Mr. Borden for the sixth place in second
-column,” Kennard said simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Borden reached Tokyo three weeks after Morning&mdash;and
-never campaigned before.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s one of the best of the younger men in New
-York&mdash;a Washington correspondent of big influence&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no objection to him, except as one to take the
-place that belongs to John Morning. I can’t see him
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>Kennard looked about him. Morning was not well
-known, having been little seen at the <i>Imperial</i> in the last
-six weeks. Fallows had not helped him by saying he
-was the best war-writer sent out from the States; still
-in a general way he could not be put aside. Kennard
-saw this.</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t going to hurt Morning badly, if I could help
-it,” he said, “but Mr. Fallows has rather forced it. This
-Morning isn’t straight. We caught him stealing a
-sheath-knife from the saddle-bags of Archibald Calvert
-down in Luzon four or five years ago. Morning said he
-found it on a table in the room assigned to us. He took
-money from Calvert for restoring the knife.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows laughed at this.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t believe the story,” he said. “The man who
-did the stuff I’ve read, isn’t stealing sheath-knives from
-another’s saddle-bags.... Oh, I don’t mean that it
-didn’t seem true to you, Kennard&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Kennard had waited for the last, and was not good
-to look at until it came. He turned quickly to the others.
-Borden was chosen.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-<p>“You’ve still got a place to fill in the first list,” said
-Fallows.</p>
-
-<p>The committee was now excited. The five faces
-turned to the Westerner.</p>
-
-<p>“I repeat, Kennard, that your remarks may be within
-the letter of truth, but I wouldn’t campaign in the same
-army with a man who’d bring up a thing like that against
-a boy&mdash;and five years afterward. Understand, I have
-never spoken a word to John Morning&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not giving up your place?” said the committee.</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’ll take Borden’s with the second&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing against Borden. I wouldn’t spoil
-the chance of a man already chosen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then first with the third army,” urged the committee.</p>
-
-<p>“I can do better than that,” said Fallows. “Gentlemen,
-I thank you, and beg to withdraw.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">3</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>ohn Morning</span> waved back the rickshaw coolie at
-the door of the little Japanese Inn, where he had
-been having his own way for several weeks, and walked
-down the Shiba road toward the <i>Imperial</i> hotel. He had
-half-expected to get on the committee, which meant work
-with the first army and a quick start; failing in that, he
-looked for his name to be called early in the second list,
-and was on the way now to find out. Morning shared
-the passion of the entire company to get afield at any
-cost.</p>
-
-<p>Reasoning, however, did not lift his restlessness and
-apprehension. He had not been on the spot. He had
-been unable to afford life at the <i>Imperial</i>; and yet, the
-costliness of it was not altogether vain, since the old
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>hotel had become a center of the world in the matter of
-war-correspondence. Japan reckoned with it as the point
-of foreign civilian force. While his brain could not organize
-a condition that would spoil his chance, Morning’s
-more unerring inner sense warned him that he was
-not established, as he walked in the rain.</p>
-
-<p>His name was not posted in any of the three groups.
-The card blurred after his first devouring glance, so that
-he had to read again and a third time. For a moment
-he was out of hand&mdash;seething, eruptive. Yet there was
-nothing to fight....</p>
-
-<p>Corydon Tait, a young Englishman with whom he
-had often talked and laughed, was standing by. Tait’s
-name was not down. Morning controlled himself to
-speak courteously.</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman looked beyond him at the card. A
-chill settled upon Morning’s self-destructive heat. This
-was new in his world. In the momentary misunderstanding,
-he grasped Tait’s arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, old chap, I’d prefer you not to do that,” the
-other said, drawing his arm away. “It must be plain
-that I don’t know you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you were joking,” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">4</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>ack</span> on Shiba Road in the beginning of dusk, he
-turned to the native inn. The door slid open before
-his hand touched the latch; his figure having been
-seen through the papered lattice. The proprietor bowed
-to the matting and hissed with prolonged seriousness,
-hissed in fact until the American had removed and exchanged
-his shoes for sandals. The hand-maidens appeared
-and bowed laughingly. The old kitchen drudge
-emerged from her chimney and ogled. The mother of
-the house took the place beside her lord on the rostrum-of-the-pencils.<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-She did not hiss, but it was very clear
-that the matting under the white man’s feet was far
-above her in worthiness.</p>
-
-<p>There was something of this formality with his every
-entrance. Morning had felt silly during the first days
-as he passed through the hedge of bent backs; the empty
-cringing and favor-groveling had seemed indecent. But
-now (in the dusk of the house before the candles) a
-faint touch of healing came from it. They had all served
-him. He had been fearfully over-served. They had
-bothered his work through excessive service&mdash;so many
-were the hands and so little to do. The women were
-really happy to work for him. To-night, a queer gladness
-clung to their welcome. He had fallen indeed to
-sense it. He was starving for reality, for some holy
-thing. They had stripped him at the <i>Imperial</i>. In his
-heart he was trying to make a reality now of this mockery
-of Japanese self-extinction.</p>
-
-<p>The bath-boy, wet from steam, with only a loin-cloth
-about him, followed Morning to his room. The American
-was not allowed to bathe alone; would not have been
-allowed to undress himself, had he not insisted upon the
-privilege. He sat in a tub, three walls of which were
-wood and the fourth of iron. Against the outside of
-the latter, burned a furious fire of charcoal. For the
-benefits of this bath, he was begged to make no haste
-and to occupy his mind with matters of the higher life.
-A moment or two before the water reached a boiling-point,
-Morning was allowed to escape. Exceeding pressure
-of business was occasionally accepted as precluding
-the chance of a bath for one day, but to miss two days
-in succession, without proving that he had bathed elsewhere,
-meant a loss of respect, and a start of household
-whispering.</p>
-
-<p>He was sick to get back to work, turned to it for
-restoration and forgetfulness, as a man to a drug. Moreover,
-there was need, for he was on space. Two or three
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>papers in the Mid-west used what he could write, though
-he had no holding contracts, and had left Chicago with
-such haste to catch a steamer, that there had been no
-chance to make an arrangement, whereby these papers
-might have used the same story simultaneously. And
-then, there had been a delay of nearly a day in Vancouver.
-This time in Chicago would have been enough
-for the establishment of a central office and an agent on
-percentage, who could have enlarged his market without
-limit, and cut down his work to one letter a day. Instead,
-he did the same story now, from three different
-angles. It had been this way before. With war in the
-air, Morning was unable to breathe at home. Off he
-went, without a return ticket&mdash;tourist cars and dingy
-second-class steamer passage&mdash;but with a strange confidence
-in his power to write irresistibly. It was like a
-mark&mdash;this faith of his in the ability to appeal.</p>
-
-<p>All his life he had lived second-class. To-night he
-wondered if it would always be so; if there was not
-something in the face of John Morning, something that
-others saw at once, which placed him instantly among
-culls and seconds in the mysterious adjustments of the
-world. They had made him feel so at the <i>Imperial</i>, before
-this episode. Men who didn’t write ten lines a day
-were there on big incomes; and others, little older than
-he, with only two or three fingers of his ability, on a
-safe salary and flexible expense account.</p>
-
-<p>The day was brought back to him again and again.
-The cut of Corydon Tait had crippled him. He felt it
-now crawling swiftly along the nerves of his limbs until
-it reached his brain, and remaining there coldly like undigested
-matter in a sick body. He felt his face queerly.
-There was neither fat nor flabbiness upon it. He could
-feel the bone. His fingers brushed his mouth, and a sort
-of burn came to him. It was the finest thing about John
-Morning. There was a bit of poetry about it, a touch
-of tenderness, finer than strength. Passion was in the
-mouth, intensity without intentness, not a trace of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>boarish, nor bovine. It is true you often see the ruin
-of such a mouth in quiet places where those of drugs
-and drinks are served; but you see as well the finished
-picture upon the faces of those men lit with world’s
-service, who have heard the voice of the human spirit,
-and are loved by the race, because they have forgotten
-how to love themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Morning knew it only as his weakness. It was the
-symbol to-night of his failure.... Those at the
-<i>Imperial</i> had seen it; they had dared to deny him because
-of it. The greatest among the war-men were thin-lipped
-and sinewy-jawed&mdash;the soldier face.... He knew
-much about war; none had campaigned more joyously
-than he. In the midst of peril, courage seemed altogether
-obvious and easy; his fearlessness was too natural
-for him to be surprised at it, though it surprised
-others....</p>
-
-<p>The typewriter buzzed on. Wearily he caught up the
-trend, but the drive was gone, although there was hardly
-a lull in the registering of the keys for two-thirds of a
-page. Always before, this sort of hackwork had been
-done with a dream of the field ahead. His forces
-fused. He had been denied a column. His hand
-brushed across his face and John Morning was ashamed&mdash;ashamed
-of his poverty, of his work, of his own nature,
-which made a tragedy of the cut of Corydon Tait;
-ashamed of the heat in his veins from the stimulants he
-had drunk; ashamed because he had not instantly demanded
-his rights at the <i>Imperial</i>; ashamed of the mess
-of a man he was, a fool of his volition and vitality, commonness
-stamped on his every feature.</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s affinity for alcohol was peculiar. He
-worked with it successfully. So resilient was his health
-that he was usually fresh in the morning. Often he
-had finished a long evening of work on pretty good terms
-with himself, the later pages of copy coming in a cloud
-of speed.... The copy-producing seemed to use
-up the whipping spirit, rather than himself; at least, he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>treasured this illusion. The first bottles of rice-beer
-lasted the longest.... He recalled now that the
-maid-servants had twice heated <i>sake</i> for him at supper;
-as for the rice-beer he had been more than ever thirsty
-to-night. He glanced into the corner where the bottles
-were and a sense of uncleanness came over him&mdash;as if
-his body were flowing with the slow spirit, like a sea-marsh
-at high tide.</p>
-
-<p>... He heard the shafts of a rickshaw grate upon
-the gravel outside. Amoya had come; it was midnight.
-He opened the papered lattice. The runner was bowing
-by his cart, holding his broad hat with both hands.
-Morning covered his machine, put fresh charcoal in the
-brazier, caught up his hat and overcoat, and shuffled
-down the stairway, holding his slippers on with his toes.
-The door-boy gave him his shoes and opened the way
-to the street. Morning greeted Amoya with a pat on the
-shoulder, and climbed into the cart.</p>
-
-<p>“Yoshuwara?” the runner asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, you shameless ruffian!”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” Amoya squeaked pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;not&mdash;no must do.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning waved his arm, signifying solitary and
-peaceful enjoyment of the night air and contemplation
-of the dark city. These night journeys had become the
-cooling features of his day. Amoya was a living marvel,
-the rickshaw runner incomparable&mdash;tireless, eager,
-very proud of his work; too old to be spoiled. He was
-old; indeed, enough to be Morning’s father, but his limbs
-were young, and his great trunk full of power unabated.</p>
-
-<p>The night was dark, damp, no moon nor star. The
-cold which was almost tempted thinly to crust the open
-drains, was welcome to the man’s nostrils. Amoya
-warmed and gathered speed. Up the broad Shiba Road
-he sped, past the far dim lights of the highway, past
-Shiba temple, the tombs of the Ronins, past the cavalry
-barracks (by far the best joke on Japan), and the last of
-the known land-marks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now Morning suffered strange temptations. Few
-white men who have lived any time in Japan have escaped.
-A Japanese house with every creature comfort
-was within his resources even now; wholesome food,
-<i>sake</i>, rice-beer were cheap; excellent service, even such
-service as Amoya’s was laughably cheap. Why not sink
-into this life and quit the agony?... Why did he
-think of it as <i>sinking</i> into this life? Why did he agonize
-anyway?... There was always a fresh sore on him
-somewhere. Surely other men did not burn back and
-forth every day as he did.</p>
-
-<p>The shame came again. He ordered Amoya back
-within an hour, left him at the door of the Inn, drenched
-with sweat and delighted with his extra fare.</p>
-
-<p>Morning slid open the door of his room. Nothing
-could be seen but the glow of the brazier, yet he knew
-some one was within.... A series of mattresses
-and robes had been taken out from a chest of drawers
-and made up on the matting. The women as usual, had
-waited for him to go out. He lit the lamp.</p>
-
-<p>A little Japanese maid-servant was curled up asleep
-at the foot of his bed. Morning sat down upon the
-cushion and mused curiously.... It was thus that
-Naomi had ordered Ruth to steal into the couch at the
-feet of Boaz. Ruth had found a home, and was not
-long allowed to make herself glad with mere gleanings....
-It was this sort of thing that made Morning hate
-Japan. In the eyes of the old, limp-backed Inn-keeper,
-this child was a woman. He would not have dared to
-delegate a mere maid-servant to ply the ancient art with
-his guest, but there were extenuations here: the delicacy
-and subtlety of the little one’s falling asleep, and the
-child-like freshness of the offering. It was this last that
-stung Morning, because he knew the old Japanese found
-a commercial value in this very adolescence.</p>
-
-<p>He had smiled at this child during the day, and asked
-her name&mdash;Moto-san&mdash;and repeated it after her, as one
-might have done the name of a child. She had just come
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>in from the fields, reported the bath-boy who preëmpted
-any leakage of English whatsoever, and who was frequently
-on the verge of being understood.... Her
-hands showed labor, and she was not ashen as the Japanese
-beauties must be, but sweet and fragrant&mdash;and so
-little.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the same the world over, when they come in
-from the fields,” he said. “Good God, she ought to be
-sleeping with her dolls.... Poor little bit of a girl
-in a man’s country ... and they sent you in here to
-keep me from night-riding. One cannot complain of
-hospitality ... Moto-san... Moto-san....”</p>
-
-<p>She stirred, and snuggled deeper. “She is truly
-asleep,” he thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Moto-san!” he said softly again.</p>
-
-<p>The girl opened her eyes, which suddenly filled with
-fright. Morning patted her shoulder gently. And now
-she sat up staring at him, and remembering.</p>
-
-<p>He leaned his head upon his palm and shut his eyes&mdash;sign
-of falling asleep&mdash;then pointed her to the door....
-Morning could not tell if she were pleased. It all seemed
-very strange to her&mdash;her smile was frightened. He repeated
-the gesture. She had slid off the bed to the matting
-upon her knees, facing him. And now she bowed
-to the floor, and backed out so, bowing with frightened
-smile.... He reflected dismally that she had lost
-value for the eye of the Inn-keeper.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">5</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>orning’s</span> idea as he reached the <i>Imperial</i> next
-forenoon was to call the committee together, or a
-working part of it, and to demand why he had been barred
-from the projected columns.... The high and ancient
-lobby was practically empty. It appeared that the
-correspondents <i>de rigeur</i> and <i>en masse</i> were posing for
-a photograph on the rear balcony, which was reached
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>through the billiard room. Morning went there and
-stood by the window while the picture was taken. It required
-an hour or more. He was passed and re-passed.
-Two or three Americans seemed on the point of asking
-him to take his place with the fifty odd war-men, but they
-checked themselves before speaking. Morning felt vilely
-marked. Stamina did not form within him. He did not
-realize that something finer than physical courage was
-challenged.</p>
-
-<p>He watched the backs of the formation&mdash;the squared
-shoulders, the planted feet. He knew that in the minds of
-the posing company, each was looking at his own. From
-each individual to his lesser or greater circle, the finished
-picture would go. It would be reproduced in the periodicals
-which sent these men&mdash;“<i>our special correspondent</i>”&mdash;designated.
-Personal friends in each case would choose
-their own from the crowd. The little laughing chap in
-brown corduroys who arranged the group was the best
-and bravest man in field photography. He left the camera
-now to his assistant, and took place with the others.
-Men of twenty campaigns were there. The dim eyes of
-a certain little old man had looked upon more of war than
-any other living human being. In one brain or another,
-pictures were coiled from every campaign around the
-world during the past forty years. Never before in history
-had so many famous war-men gathered together. It
-would be a famous picture.... He, John Morning,
-would hear it in the future:</p>
-
-<p>“... Why weren’t you in that picture?”</p>
-
-<p>“I sat in the billiard room behind at a window. I
-had been barred out of a place among the first three
-columns. I was under a cloud of some kind.”</p>
-
-<p>No, that would not be his answer. Various lies occurred.</p>
-
-<p>This little mental activity completed itself without
-any volition. It was finished now, like the picture outside&mdash;the
-materials scattering. The idea of the truth
-merely appeared through a mental habit of looking at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>two sides&mdash;a literary habit. It had brought no direct
-relation to John Morning. But the lies had brought
-their direct relation.</p>
-
-<p>He could not remain at his place by the window, now
-that the fifty came in for drink and play. He was afraid
-to demand what evil concerning him was in the minds of
-men; afraid something would be uncovered that was
-true. He felt the uncleanness of drink upon him, and a
-moral softening from years of newspaper work, a training
-begun in glibness, which does not recognize the
-rights of men, but obeys a City Desk. He could not
-organize a contending force; and yet loathed the thought
-of return to the Japanese Inn. He was not ready to face
-himself alone.</p>
-
-<p>It had never come to him so stirringly as now&mdash;the
-sense of <i>something</i> within, utterly weary of imprisonment
-and forced companionship with the visible John
-Morning. His misery was a silent unswerving shame.
-A feverish impulse almost controlled him to take something
-either to lift him away, or permit him to sink in
-abandonment from the area of pain.</p>
-
-<p>He stood near the desk in the lobby. Duke Fallows
-was coming. The Californian’s legs, in their worn corduroys,
-were far too lean for the big bony knees&mdash;a tall
-man of forty, with tired and sunken eyes and sunken
-mouth. Fallows had a reputation. Its strongly drawing
-side-issue was his general and encompassing, though fastidious,
-love of women. Someone had whispered that
-even if a man has the heart of a volcano, its outpouring
-must be spread rather thin in places to cover all women.
-He was out for the <i>Western States</i>, not only to show
-war, but to show it up. Certainly he loved the under-dog,
-which is an epigram for stating that he was an anarchist.</p>
-
-<p>No anarchist could be gentler to meet, nor more terrible
-to read. Fallows owned a formidable interest in the
-<i>Western States</i>; otherwise he would have had to print
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>himself. The rest of that San Francisco property was
-just an excellent newspaper. Its effort was to balance
-Duke Fallows; sometimes it seemed trying to extinguish
-him in order to save itself. It brought sanity and common-sense
-and the group-souled observation of affairs,
-to say nothing of news and advertising&mdash;all to cool the
-occasional column of this sick man. To a few, however,
-on the Pacific Coast, since his new assignment was announced&mdash;the
-Russo-Japanese war and Duke Fallows
-meant the same thing. The majority said: “Watch the
-<i>Western States</i> boom in circulation. They are sending
-Fallows to Asia.”</p>
-
-<p>The two stood together, Fallows looking down.
-Morning was broad in brow and shoulder; slender otherwise
-and of medium height.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Fallows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>The tall man’s eyes turned upward so that only the
-whites were visible. He fingered his brow as if to pluck
-something forth through the bone.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on upstairs.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning followed the large, slow knees. It was less
-that the knees wobbled&mdash;rather the frailty of the hangings
-and pinnings. They did the three high flights and
-began again, finally drawing up in a broad roof-room
-that smelled of new harness and overlooking an especially
-hard-packed part of Tokyo, toward the Ginza.
-Fallows lit the fire that was ready in the grate and
-sprawled wearily.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you study religion, Morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s one way to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>The sound of his own laugh came to Morning’s ears
-and hurt him. Fallows’ eyes were shut. There was no
-trace of a smile around the wan mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll likely be more religious before you’re done.
-I mean many things by being religious&mdash;a man’s inability
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>to lie to himself for one; a passion for the man who’s
-down&mdash;that’s another.... I’ve read your stuff.
-It’s full of religion&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Now it seemed to Morning as if he had just entered
-a fascinating wilderness; apart from this, he saw something
-about the worn, distressed mouth of Fallows that
-made him think of himself last night. There was one
-more effect from this first brush. Something happened
-in Morning’s mind with that sentence about the inability
-to lie to one’s self. It was like a shot in the midst of a
-flock of quails. A pair of birds was down, but the rest
-of the flock was off and away, like the fragments of an
-explosive.</p>
-
-<p>“I read some of your stuff about the Filipino woman&mdash;‘woman
-of the river-banks,’ you called her. Another
-time you looked into a nipa-shack where an old man was
-dying of <i>beri-beri</i>, and an old woman sat at bay at the
-door&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>These brought back the pictures to Morning, and the
-dimension behind the actual light and shade and matter.
-The healing, too, was that someone had seen his work,
-and seen from it all that he saw,&mdash;the artist’s true aliment,
-which praise of the many cannot furnish. It gave
-him heart like an answer to prayer, because he had been
-very needful.</p>
-
-<p>“You must have come up hard. Did you, boy?”
-Fallows asked after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you would say so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Farm first?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And a father who misunderstood?”</p>
-
-<p>“A good deal of the misunderstanding was my own
-bull-headedness, I see now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And the mother, John Morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was too little&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning found himself saying eagerly a little later:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
-<p>“And then the city streets&mdash;selling newspapers,
-errands, sick all the time, though I didn’t know it. Then
-I got to the horses.... I found something in the
-stables good for me. I liked horses so well that it hurt.
-I learned to sleep nights and eat regularly&mdash;but read so
-much rot. Still, it was all right to be a stable-boy. A
-big race-horse man took me on to ship with stock. I’ve
-been all over America by freight with the racers&mdash;from
-track to track. I used to let the tramps ride, but they
-were dangerous&mdash;especially the young ones. I had to
-stay awake. An old tramp could come in anytime&mdash;and
-go to sleep&mdash;but younger ones are bad. They beat you
-up for a few dimes. I was bad, too, bad as hell....
-And then I rode&mdash;there was money, but it went. I got
-sick keeping light. The pounds over a hundred beat me
-out of the game&mdash;except the jumps. I’ve ridden the
-jumpers in England, too&mdash;been all broken up. In a fall
-you can’t always get clear.... All this was before
-I was eighteen&mdash;it was my kind of education.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like it,” said Fallows.</p>
-
-<p>“One night in New York I heard a newspaper man
-talk.... It was in a back-room bar on Sixth avenue.
-I see now he was a bit broken down. He looked
-to me then all that was splendid and sophisticated. I
-wanted to be like him&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows bent forward, his face tender as a father’s.
-“You poor little chap,” he said, as if he did not see Morning
-now, but the listening boy in the back-room bar.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, I never really got the idea of having money&mdash;it
-went so quickly. The idea of a big bundle didn’t
-get a chance to sink in. I’ve had several hundred dollars
-at once from riding&mdash;but the next day’s races, or the
-next, got it. What I’m trying to say is&mdash;winnings didn’t
-seem to belong to me. Poverty was a habit. I always
-think yet in nickels and dimes. I seem to belong&mdash;steerage.
-It wasn’t long after I listened to that reporter,
-that I got a newspaper job, chasing pictures. A year
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>after that the wars began. I went out first on my own
-hook; in fact, I think you’d call it that now. I seem to
-get into a sort of mania to be off&mdash;when the papers
-begin to report trouble. I didn’t know I was poorly fixed
-this time, until here in Tokyo I saw how the others go
-about it. Dinner-clothes, and all sorts of money invested
-in them&mdash;whether the war makes good or not&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I was right,” Fallows said finally. He had listened
-as a forest in a drouth listens for rain.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was embarrassed. He had been caught in
-the current of the other’s listening. It was not his way
-at all to talk so much. He wasn’t tamed altogether; and
-then he had been extra hurt by the night and the day.
-An element of savagery arose, with the suspicion that
-Fallows might be making fun of him.</p>
-
-<p>“What were you right about, Mr. Fallows?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got an especial guardian.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning waited. The fuel was crackling. The Californian
-watched the fire and finally began to talk.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re <i>one of them</i>. I saw it in your stuff. Then
-they told me here that you lived in a little Japanese hotel
-alone. That’s another reason. Your kind come up alone&mdash;always
-alone. To-day I saw you watching that picture
-business. You looked tired&mdash;as if you had a long way
-yet to swim against the current. You had a fight on&mdash;inside
-and out. You’ll keep on fighting inside, long after
-the world outside has called a truce. When you’re as
-old as I am&mdash;maybe before&mdash;you’ll have peace inside and
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning was bewildered; and had somewhat braced
-himself in scepticism, as if the other were reading a fortune
-out of a cup.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re one of them, and you’ve got a guardian&mdash;greater
-than ten of these militia press-agents. You don’t
-know it yet, but your stuff shows it; your life shows it.
-You try to do what <i>you</i> want&mdash;and you’re forced to do
-better. You’ll be kept steerage, as you call it,&mdash;kept
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>down among men&mdash;until you see that it’s the place for
-a white man to be, and that all these other things&mdash;dinner-coats
-and expense accounts&mdash;are but tricks to cover
-a weakness. You’ll be held down among men until you
-love them, and would be sick away from service with
-them. You won’t be able to rest unless you’re helping.
-You’ll choke when you say ‘Brother.’ You’ll answer
-their misery and cry from your sleep, ‘I’m coming.’ You
-hear them with your soul now, but the brain won’t listen
-yet. You’ll go it blind for the under-dog&mdash;and find out
-afterwards that you were immortally right.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s breast was burning. It was more the fiery
-flood of kindness than the words. He had been roughed
-so thoroughly that he couldn’t take words; he needed a
-sign.</p>
-
-<p>“The time will come when you’ll hear your soul saying,
-‘Get down among men, John, and help.’ You’ll
-jump. A storm of hell will follow you if you don’t.
-They’ll throw you overboard and even the whale won’t
-stomach you if you don’t. ‘Get down among men,
-John’; that’s your orders to Nineveh.”</p>
-
-<p>The Californian changed the subject abruptly:</p>
-
-<p>“They were good enough to give me a place with the
-first column, but I can’t see it quite. There’s going to
-be too much supervision. These Japanese are rivet-headed.
-I like the other end. New Chwang is still
-open. Lowenkampf is in command there. I knew him
-years ago in Vienna. Good man for a soldier&mdash;old
-Lowenkampf. He’ll take us in. Let’s go over&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t be exactly ‘healed’ for a long stay. My
-money is coming here&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Let it pile up. I’ll stake you for the Russian
-picnic.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning wanted it so intensely that he feared Duke
-Fallows might die before they got to Lowenkampf and
-New Chwang.... He was terrorized by this
-thought: “Fallows has somehow failed to understand
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>about me not getting a column, and not being asked into
-the picture. When he finds out, he’ll change his
-mind....”</p>
-
-<p>He wanted to speak, gathered strength with violent
-effort, but Fallows just now was restlessly eager to go
-below.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">6</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S</span>econd</span> class, that night, on the Pacific liner <i>Manchuria</i>,
-forward among the rough wooden bunks,
-eating from tin-plates.... It had been Morning’s
-suggestion. Fallows had accepted it laughingly, but as
-a good omen.</p>
-
-<p>“Two can travel cheaply as one,” he said. “I’m quite
-as comfortable as usual.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning realized that his friend was not comfortable
-at best. He was too well himself, too ambitious, quite
-to realize the other’s illness. Morning found a quality
-of understanding that he had expected vaguely to find
-sometime from some girl, but he could not return the
-gift in kind, nor right sympathy for the big man’s weakness.
-Fallow’s didn’t appear to expect it.</p>
-
-<p>They left the <i>Manchuria</i> at Nagasaki, after the Inland
-Sea passage, found a small ship for Tientsin direct;
-also a leftover winter storm on the Yellow Sea. Morning,
-at work, typewriter on his knees, looked up one
-night as they neared the mouth of the Pei-ho. An oil-lamp
-swung above them smokily; the tired ship still
-creaked and wallowed in the gale. Fallows has been
-regarding him thoughtfully from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>“You keep bolstering me up, Duke, and I don’t seem
-to help you any,” Morning said. “Night and day, I
-worry you with the drum of this machine&mdash;when you’re
-too sick to work; and here you are traveling like a tramp
-for me. I’m used to it, but it makes you worse. You
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>staked me and made possible a bit of real work this campaign&mdash;why
-won’t you let me do some stuff for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you worry about what I’ve done&mdash;that’s particularly
-my affair. Call it a gamble. Perhaps I chose
-you as a man chooses his place to build a house....”</p>
-
-<p>Morning wondered at times if the other was not half
-dead with longing for a woman.... In the fifteen
-years which separated the two men in age lay all the
-difference between a soldier and an artist. Morning had
-to grant finally that the Californian had no abiding interest
-in the war they were out to cover; and this was
-so foreign that the rift could not be bridged entirely.</p>
-
-<p>“War&mdash;why, I love the thought!” Fallows exclaimed.
-“The fight’s the thing&mdash;but this isn’t it. This is just a
-big butchery of the blind. The Japanese aren’t sweet
-in this passion. We won’t see the real Russia out here
-in Asia. Real Russia is against all this looting and lusting.
-Real Russia is at home singing, writing, giving
-itself to be hanged. Real Russia is glad to die for a
-dream. This soldier Russia isn’t ready to die. Just a
-stir in the old torpor of decadence&mdash;this Russia we’re
-going to. You’ll see it&mdash;its stench rising.... I
-want the other war. I want to live to fight in the other
-war, when the under-dog of this world&mdash;the under-dog
-of Russia and England and America, runs no more,
-cowers no more&mdash;but stops, turns to fight to the death.
-I want the barricades, the children fired with the spirit,
-women coming down to the ruck, the girls from the factories,
-harlots from the slums. The women won’t stay
-at home in the war I mean&mdash;and you and I, John, must
-be there,&mdash;to die every morning&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Yet Fallows didn’t write this. He lay on his back
-dreaming about it. Always the women came into his
-thoughts. Morning held hard to the game at hand....
-Lying on his back&mdash;thus the Californian became
-identified in his mind. And strange berths they found,
-none stranger than the one at last in the unspeakable
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>Chinese hotel at New Chwang. Morning remembered
-the date&mdash;4/4/’04&mdash;for he put it down in the black notebook,
-after smashing a centipede on the wall with it.
-They were awakened the next morning by the passing of
-a brigade of Russian infantry in full song. Each looking
-for “good-morning” in the eyes of the other, found
-that and tears.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinese house stirred galvanically at mid-day&mdash;from
-the farthest chicken-coop to the guest-chamber of
-the most revered. Lowenkampf, commanding the port,
-in sky-blue uniform, entered with his orderly and embraced
-a certain sick man lying on a rough bench, between
-his own blankets. It was just so and not otherwise,
-nor were the “European” strangers of distinguished
-appearance. They had come in the night, crossing
-the river in a junk, instead of waiting for the Liao-launch.
-They had not sought the Manchurian hotel,
-where Europeans of quality usually go, but had asked
-for native quartering. So rarely had this happened, that
-the tradition was forgotten in New Chwang about angels
-appearing unheralded.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great thing to John Morning, this coming of
-General Lowenkampf. He had not dared to trust altogether
-in the high friend of Duke Fallows&mdash;nor even in
-finding such a friend in New Chwang. The actual fact
-meant that they would not be sent out of the zone of
-war, when the Russians evacuated from New Chwang,
-if Lowenkampf could help it; and who could help it if
-not the commander of the garrison? It meant, too, that
-everything Duke Fallows had said in his quiet and unadorned
-way when speaking of purely mundane affairs
-had turned out true.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows sat up in his bunk to receive the embrace he
-knew was coming. The General was a small man. He
-must have been fifty. He appeared a tired father,&mdash;the
-father who puts his hands to his ears and looks terrified
-when his children approach, but who loves them with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>secret fury and prays for them in their beds at night.
-He had suffered; he had a readiness to tears; he needed
-much brandy at this particular interval, as if his day
-had not begun well. He spoke of the battle of the Yalu
-and his tears were positive. It was a mistake, a hideous
-mistake. He said this in English, and with the frightened
-intensity of a woman whose lover has died misunderstanding
-her.... No, they were not to stay at
-New Chwang.... He would make them comfortable....
-Yes, he had married a woman six years
-ago.... It murders the soldier in a man to marry
-a woman and find her like other women. You may
-think on the mystery of childbirth a whole life&mdash;but when
-your own woman, in your own house, brings you a child,
-it is all different. A thing to be awed at.... It
-draws the soldier-pith out of one’s spine, as you draw
-the nerve out of a tooth.... You are never the
-same afterward.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows sank back smiling raptly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the same old nervous prince of realizers&mdash;Lowenkampf&mdash;always
-realizing your own affairs with
-unprecedented realism. God knows, I’m glad to see you....
-John Morning, here is a man who can tell you
-a thing you have heard before, in a way that you’ll never
-forget. It’s because he only talks about what he has
-realized for himself. His name is blown in the fabric of
-all he says.... Lowenkampf, here’s a <i>boy</i>. I’ve
-been looking for him, years&mdash;ever since I found my own
-failure inevitable. John Morning&mdash;Lowenkampf, the
-General. If you both live to get back to your babies&mdash;Morning’s
-are still in the sky, their dawn is not yet&mdash;you
-will remember this day&mdash;for it is a significant Trinity....
-General, how many babies have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my God&mdash;one!”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows seemed unspeakably pleased with that excited
-remark. Lowenkampf glanced at the shut eyes of
-his old friend, and then out of the window to the sordid
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>Chinese street, where the Russian soldiers moved to and
-fro in the unwieldy disquiet of a stage mob in its first
-formation.</p>
-
-<p>“But they’re all my babies&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>John Morning had a vision of a battle with that sentence.
-All the rest of the day he thrilled with it. Work
-was so pure in his heart from the vision, that he left his
-machine that night (Duke Fallows seemed asleep) and
-touched the brow of his friend....</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">7</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>ugust</span>&mdash;Liaoyang, the enemy closing in....
-There were times when John Morning doubted if
-he had ever been away from the sick man, Duke Fallows,
-and the crowds of Russian soldiery. Individually
-the days were long. Often in mid-afternoon, he stopped
-to think if some voice or picture of to-day’s dawning
-did not belong to yesterday or last week. Yet routine
-settled upon all that was past, and the days accumulated
-into a quantity of weeks that grew like the continual
-miracle of a hard man’s savings.</p>
-
-<p>Always he missed something. He was hard in health,
-but felt white nowhere, in nor out, so much had he been
-played upon by sun and wind and dust. The Russian
-officers were continually asking him to try new horses&mdash;the
-roughest of the untamed purchases brought in by the
-Chinese. It had become quite the custom among the
-officers to advise with Morning on matters of horse-flesh.
-Fallows had started it by telling Lowenkampf
-that Morning formerly rode the jumpers in England,
-but the younger man had since earned his reputation in
-the Russian post.</p>
-
-<p>A sorrel mare had appeared in the city. Rat-tailed
-and Roman-nosed she was, and covered with wounds.
-They had tried to ride her in from the Hun. Her skin
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>was like satin and she had not been saddled decently.
-Just a wild, head-strong young mare in the beginning,
-but bad handling had made her a mankiller. Lieutenant
-Luban, soft with vodka and cigarettes, had dickered for
-the mare, and drunkenly insisted upon mounting at once.
-Morning caught the bridle after the first fight, and Luban
-slid off in his arms in a state of collapse. Clearly an
-adult devil lived in the sorrel. She was red-eyed in her
-rage, past pain, and walked like a man. She would have
-gone over backwards with Luban, and yet she was lovely
-to Morning’s eye, perfect as a yellow rose. He knew
-her sort&mdash;the kind that runs to courage and not to hair;
-the kind of individual that rarely breeds.</p>
-
-<p>He led her apart, talked to her; knew that she only
-cared to kill him and be free. She was outrage; hate
-was the breath of her nostrils; but she made Morning
-forget his work.... Thirty officers were gathered
-in the compound. Morning had saddled her afresh; her
-back was easier&mdash;yet she was up, striking, pawing. He
-knew she meant to go back. Stirrup-free, he held her
-around the neck as she stood poised. His weight was
-against her toppling, but sheer deviltry hurled back her
-head, breaking the balance. They saw him push the hot
-yellow neck from him as she fell. He landed on his
-feet, facing her from the side, leaped clear&mdash;and then
-darted forward, catching the bridle-rein before she
-straightened her first front leg. Morning was in the
-saddle before she was up. Then the whole thing was
-done over again as perfectly as one with his hand in
-repeats a remarkable billiard-shot.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only a question of time&mdash;she’ll kill you,” said
-Fallows.</p>
-
-<p>“How she hates the Chinese, but she’s the gamest
-thing in Asia,” Morning answered. “I’d like to be away
-alone with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d need a new continent for a romance like
-that,” Fallows said, and that night, in their room of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>Lowenkampf’s headquarters, he resumed the subject, his
-eyes lost in the dun ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s only one name for that sorrel mare, if I’m
-consulted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Name her,” Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>“The one I’m thinking of&mdash;her name is Eve.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows shivered, and turned the subject, but Morning
-knew he would come back.... They heard the
-sentries on the stone flags below. It was monotonous
-as the sound of the river. An east wind had blown all
-afternoon. Dust was gritty in the blankets, sore in the
-rifts of lip and nostril caused by the long baking wind.
-Their eyes felt old in the dry heat. Daily the trains
-had brought more Russians; daily more Chinese refugees
-slipped out behind. Liaoyang was a mass of soldiery&mdash;heavy
-and weary with soldiers&mdash;dull with its single
-thought of defense. For fifty or more miles, the southern
-arc of the circle about the old walled city was a
-system of defense&mdash;chains of Russian redoubts, complicated
-entanglements, hill emplacements and rifle-pits.
-Beyond this the Japanese gathered openly and prepared.
-It seemed as if the earth itself would scream from the
-break in the tension when firing began....</p>
-
-<p>“John&mdash;a man must be alone&mdash;&mdash;” Fallows said
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s one of the first things you told me&mdash;and that
-a man mustn’t lie to himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be thinking about your romance with that
-sorrel fiend&mdash;that brings her so close to-night, I mean
-the real Eve. I had to put the ocean between us&mdash;and
-yet she comes. Listen, John, when you are dull and
-tired after a hard day, you take a drink or two of
-brandy. You, especially you, are new and lifted again.
-That’s what happens to me when a woman comes into
-the room....”</p>
-
-<p>Twice before Morning had been on the verge of this,
-and something spoiled it. He listened now, for Fallows
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>opened his heart. His eyes held unblinkingly the dim
-shadows of the ceiling. The step of the sentries sank
-into the big militant silence&mdash;and this was revelation:</p>
-
-<p>“God, how generous women are with their treasures!
-They are devils because of their great-heartedness. So
-swift, so eager, so delicate in their giving. They look
-up at you, and you are lost. My life has been gathering
-a bouquet&mdash;and some flowers fade in your hand....
-I hated it, but they looked up so wistfully&mdash;and it seemed
-as if I were rending in a vacuum.... Always the
-moment of illusion&mdash;that <i>this</i> one is the last, that here
-is completion, that peace will come with <i>this</i> fragrance;
-always their giving is different and very beautiful&mdash;and
-always the man is deeper in hell for their bestowal....
-A day or a month&mdash;man’s incandescence is gone.
-Brown eyes, blue eyes&mdash;face pale or ruddy&mdash;lips passionate
-or pure&mdash;their giving momentary or immortal&mdash;and
-yet, I could not stay. Always they were hurt&mdash;less
-among men, less among their sisters, and no strangers
-to suffering&mdash;and always hell accumulated upon my
-head.... Then she came. There’s a match in the
-world for every man. Her name is Eve. She is the
-answer of her sisterhood to such as I.</p>
-
-<p>“She was made so. She will not have me near. And
-yet with all her passion and mystery she is calling to
-me. The rolling Pacific isn’t broad enough. She has
-bound me by all that I have given to others, by all that
-I have denied others. She was made to match me, and
-came to her task full-powered, as the sorrel mare came
-to corral to-day for you.... Oh, yes, I honor her.”</p>
-
-<p>There was silence which John Morning could not
-break. Fallows began to talk of death&mdash;in terms which
-the other remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“... For the death of the body makes no difference.
-In the body here we build our heaven or hell.
-If we have loved possessions of the earth&mdash;we are
-weighted with them afterward,&mdash;imprisoned among
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>them. If we love flesh here, we are held like shadows
-to fleshly men and women, enmeshed in our own prevailing
-desire. If our life has been one of giving to others,
-of high and holy things&mdash;we are at the moment of the
-body’s death, like powerful and splendid birds suddenly
-hearing the mystic call of the South. Death, it is the
-great cleansing flight into the South....”</p>
-
-<p>This from the sick man, was new as the first rustle
-of Spring to John Morning; yet within, he seemed long
-to have been expectant. There was thrill in the spectacle
-of the other who had learned by losing....</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s mind was like the beleaguered city&mdash;desperate
-with waiting and potential disorder, outwardly
-arrogant, afraid in secret.... Duke Fallows was
-thinking of a woman, as he visioned his lost paradise.
-The younger man left the lamp-light to go to him, and
-heard as he leaned over the cot:</p>
-
-<p>“... Like a lost traveler to the single point of
-light, John, I shall go to her. Eve&mdash;the one red light&mdash;I
-will glow red in the desire of her. She is my creation.
-Out of the desire of my strength she was created. As
-they have mastered me in the flesh, this creation of mine
-shall master me afterward&mdash;with red perpetual mastery.”</p>
-
-<p>Lowenkampf came in. They saw by his eyes that
-he was more than ever drawn, in the tension and heart-hunger.
-He always brought his intimacies to the Americans.
-A letter had reached him from Europe in the
-morning, but the army had given him no time to think
-until now. It was not the letter, but something in it,
-that reminded him of a story. So he brought his brandy
-and the memory:</p>
-
-<p>“... It was two or three evenings before I left
-Petersburg to come here. I had followed him about&mdash;my
-little son who is five years. I had followed him about
-the house all day. Every little while at some door, or
-through some curtain&mdash;I would see the mother smiling
-at us. It was new to me&mdash;for I had been seldom home
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>in the day-time&mdash;this playing with one’s little son through
-the long day. But God, I knew I was no longer a soldier.
-I think the little mother knew. She is braver than
-I. She was the soldier&mdash;for not a tear did I see all that
-day.... And that night I lay down with my little
-son to talk until he fell asleep. It was dark in the room,
-but light was in the hall-way and the door open....
-You see, he is just five&mdash;and very pure and fresh.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows sat up. He was startling in the shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“... For a long time my little man stirred and
-talked&mdash;of riding horses, when his legs were a little
-longer, and of many things to do. He would be a soldier,
-of course. God pity the little thought. We would
-ride together soon&mdash;not in front of my saddle, but on a
-pony of his own&mdash;one that would keep up. I was to
-take him out to swim ... and we would walk in
-the country to see the trees and animals.... My
-heart ached for love of him&mdash;and I, the soldier, wished
-there were no Asia in this world, no Asia, nor any war
-or torment.... He had seen a gray pony which he
-liked, because it had put its head down, as if to listen.
-It didn’t wear any straps nor saddle, but came close, as
-one knowing a friend, and put its head down&mdash;thus the
-child was speaking to me.</p>
-
-<p>“And I heard her step in the hall&mdash;the light, quick
-step. Her figure came into the light of the door-way.
-She looked intently through the shadows where we lay,
-her eyelids lifted, and a smile on her lips. Our little son
-saw her and this is what he said so drowsily:</p>
-
-<p>“‘We are talking about what we will do&mdash;when we
-get to be men.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fallows broke this silence:</p>
-
-<p>“‘When we get to be men.’ Thank you, General.
-That was good for me.... Our friend John
-needed that little white cloud, too. I’ve just been leading
-him among the wilted primroses.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span></p>
-<p>Morning did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>Lowenkampf said the fighting would begin around the
-outer position to-morrow.... But that had been
-said before.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">8</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">O</span>n</span> the night of August 31st, for all the planning, the
-progress of the battle was not to the Russian liking.
-All that day the movements of the Russians had
-mystified John Morning. The broad bend of the river to
-the east of the city had been crowded with troops&mdash;seemingly
-an aimless change of pastures. He felt that
-after all his study of the terrain and its possibilities, the
-big thing was getting away from him. When he mentioned
-this ugly fear to Fallows, the answer was:</p>
-
-<p>“And that’s just what the old man feels.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows referred to Kuropatkin.</p>
-
-<p>The monster spectacle had blinded Morning. He had
-to hold hard at times to keep his rage from finding words
-in answer to Duke Fallows’ scorn for the big waiting-panorama
-which had enthralled him utterly&mdash;the fleeing
-refugees, singing infantry, the big gun postures, the
-fluent cavalry back along the railroad, the armored hills,
-the whole marvelous atmosphere.... None of this
-appeared to matter to Fallows. He had written little or
-nothing. God knew why he had come. He would do
-a story, of course.... Morning had written a book&mdash;the
-climax of which would be the battle. He had
-staked all on the majesty of the story. His career would
-be constructed upon it. He would detach himself from
-all this and appear suddenly in America&mdash;the one man in
-America who knew Liaoyang. He would be Liaoyang;
-his mind the whole picture. He knew the wall, the Chinese
-names of the streets, the city and its tenderloin,
-where the Cantonese women were held in hideous bondage.
-He knew the hills and the river&mdash;the rapid treachery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-of the Taitse. He had watched the trains come in
-from Europe with food, horses, guns and men; had even
-learned much Russian and some Chinese. He had
-studied Lowenkampf, Bilderling, Zarubaieff, Mergenthaler;
-had looked into the eyes of Kuropatkin himself....</p>
-
-<p>Duke Fallows said:</p>
-
-<p>“All this is but one idea, John&mdash;one dirty little idea
-multiplied. Don’t let a couple of hundred thousand soldiers
-spoil the fact in your mind. Lowenkampf personally
-isn’t capable of fighting for himself on such a rotten
-basis. Fighting with a stranger on a neighbor’s property&mdash;that’s
-the situation. Russia says to Old Man China,
-‘Go, take a little airing among your hills. A certain
-enemy of mine is on the way here, and I want to kill
-him from your house. It will be a dirty job, but it is
-important to me that he be killed just so. I’ll clean up
-the door-step afterward, repair all damages, and live in
-your house myself.... And the Japanese have
-trampled the flowers and vegetable-beds of the poor old
-Widow Korea to get here&mdash;&mdash;’”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Californian took the substance out of the
-hundred thousand words Morning had written in the
-past few months. Dozens of small articles had been sent
-out until a fortnight ago through Lowenkampf, via
-Shanghai, but the main fiber of each was kept for this
-great story, which he meant to sell in one piece in
-America.</p>
-
-<p><i>Kuropatkin</i>&mdash;both Morning and Fallows saw him as
-the mighty beam in the world’s eye at this hour. To
-Morning he was the risen master of events; to Fallows
-merely a figure tossed up from the moil. Morning saw
-him as the source of power to the weak, as a silencer of
-the disputatious and the envious, as the holding selvage
-to the vast Russian garment, worn, stained and ready to
-ravel, the one structure of hope in a field of infinite failures.
-Fallows saw him as an integral part of all this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>disorder and disruption, one whose vision was marvelous
-only in the detection of excuses for himself in the action
-of others; whose sorrow was a pose and whose <i>self</i> was
-far too imperious for him firmly to grip the throat of a
-large and vital obstacle. What Morning called the mystical
-somberness of the chief, Fallows called the sullen
-silence of dim comprehension. Somewhere between these
-notations the Commander stood.... They had seen
-him at dusk that day. “He seems to be repressing himself
-by violent effort,” the younger man whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“What would you say he were repressing, John&mdash;his
-appetite?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer was silence, and late that night, (the
-Russian force was now tense and compact as a set
-spring), Fallows dropped down upon his cot, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“You think I’m a scoffer, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You break a man’s point, that’s all&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know&mdash;but we’re not to be together always....
-Listen, don’t think me a scoffer, even now.
-These big, bulky things won’t hold you forever. Perhaps,
-if I were a bigger man, I’d keep silent. You’ll
-write them well, no doubt about that.... But don’t
-get into the habit of thinking me a scoffer. There’s such
-a lot of finer things to fall for. John, I wasn’t a scoffer
-when I first read your stuff&mdash;and saw big forces moving
-around you.... A man who knows a little about
-women, knows a whole lot about men.... To be
-a famous soldier, John, a man can’t have any such forces
-moving around him. He must be an empty back-ground.
-All his strength is the compound of meat and eggs and
-fish; his strength goes to girth and jowl and fist&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a wonderful friend to me, Duke.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just what I didn’t want you to say....
-There’s no excellence on my part. Like a good book, I
-couldn’t riddle you in one reading.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning found himself again, as he wrote on that
-last night of preparation; that last night of summer. It
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>was always the way, when the work came well. It
-brought him liveableness with himself and kindness for
-others. He had his own precious point of view again,
-too. He pictured Kuropatkin ... sitting at his desk,
-harried by his sovereign, tormented by princes, seeing
-as no other could see the weaknesses in the Russian displays
-of power, and knowing the Japanese better than
-any other; the man who had come up from Plevna fighting,
-who had written his fightings, who was first to say,
-“We are not ready,” and first to gather up the unpreparedness
-for battle.</p>
-
-<p>Morning felt himself the reporter of the Fates for
-this great carnage. He wanted to see the fighting, to
-miss no phase of it&mdash;to know the mechanics, the results,
-the speed, the power, weakness and every rending of this
-great force. He did not want the morals of it, the evil
-spirit behind, but the brute material action. He wanted
-the literary Kuropatkin, not a possible reality. He
-wanted the one hundred thousand words driven by the
-one-seeing, master-seeing reporter’s instinct. He was
-Russian in hope and aspiration&mdash;but absolutely negative
-in what was to take place. He wanted the illusion of the
-service; he saw the illusion more clearly; so could the
-public. The illusion bore out every line of his work so
-far. To laugh at the essence of the game destroyed its
-meaning, and the huge effect he planned to make in
-America.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was sorry now for having lost during the
-day the sense of fine relation with Fallows, but everything
-he had found admirable&mdash;from toys and sweets to
-wars and women&mdash;the sick man had found futile and
-betraying; everything that his own mind found good
-was waylaid and diminished by the other. Fallows, in
-making light of the dramatic suspense of the city, had
-struck at the very roots of his ambition. The work of
-the night had healed this all, however.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
-<p>The last night of summer&mdash;joyously he ended the big
-picture. Three themes ran through entire&mdash;Nodzu’s
-artillery, under which the Russians were willingly dislodging
-from the shoulders and slopes of Pensu-marong;
-the tread of the Russian sentries below, (a real bit of
-Russian bass in the Liaoyang symphony), and the glissando
-of the rain.</p>
-
-<p>He sat back from his machine at last. There were
-two hundred and seventy sheets altogether of thin tough
-parchment-copy&mdash;400 words to the page, and the whole
-could be folded into an inside pocket. It was ready for
-the battle itself.... All the Morning moods were
-in the work&mdash;moments of photographic description, of
-philosophic calm, instant reversals to glowing idealism&mdash;then
-the thrall of the spectacle&mdash;finally, a touch, just a
-touch to add age, of Fallows’ scorn. It was newspaper
-stuff&mdash;what was wanted. He had brought his whole instrument
-up to concert-pitch to-night. The story was
-ready for the bloody artist.</p>
-
-<p>His heart softened emotionally toward Fallows lying
-on his back over in the shadows.... Lowenkampf
-came in for a queer melting moment.... Morning
-looked affectionately at his little traveling type-mill. It
-had never faltered&mdash;a hasty, cheap, last-minute purchase
-in America, but it had seen him through. It was like a
-horse one picks up afield, wears out and never takes
-home, but thinks of many times in the years afterward.
-Good little beast.... And this made him think
-with a thrill of Eve, brooding in the dark below....
-She was adjusted to a thought in his mind that had to
-do with the end of the battle. It was a big-bored,
-furious idea. Morning glanced at his watch. Two-fifteen
-on the morning of September. He unlaced one
-shoe, but the idea intervened again and he moved off in
-the stirring dream of it. It was three o’clock when he
-bent to the other shoe.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">9</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>ll</span> the next day, Liaoyang was shelled from the
-south and southeast; all day Eve shivered and
-sweated in the smoky turmoil. At dusk, Morning, to
-whom the mare was far too precious to be worn out in
-halter, rode back to Yentai along the railroad. She operated
-like a perfect toy over that twelve miles of beaten
-turf. The rain ceased for an hour or two, and the dark
-warmth of the night seemed to poise her every spring.
-The man was electric from her. At the station Morning
-learned that Lowenkampf, with thirteen battalions,
-already had occupied the lofty coal-fields, ten miles to
-the east on a stub of the railroad. He had first supposed
-the force of Siberians now crowding the station
-to be Lowenkampf’s men; instead it was his reserve.
-Eve had lathered richly, so that an hour passed before
-she was cool enough for grain or water. He rubbed her
-down, meanwhile, talked to her softly and made plans.
-Her eye flashed red at the candle, as he shut the door of
-the stable. That night on foot he did the ten miles to
-the collieries, joining Fallows and the General at midnight....
-Morning was struck with the look of
-Lowenkampf’s face. He wasn’t taking a drink that
-night; his mouth was old and white. A thin bar of pallor
-stretched obliquely from chin to cheek-bone. The
-chin trembled, too; the eyes were hungerful, yet so kind.
-Desperate incongruity somewhere. This man should
-have been back in Europe with his neighbors about the
-fire&mdash;his comrade tucked in up-stairs, the little mother
-pouring tea. And yet, Lowenkampf&mdash;effaced with his
-anguish and dreamy-eyed, as if surveying the distance
-between his heaven and hell&mdash;was the brain of the sledge
-that was to break the Flanker’s back-bone to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“The Taitse is only ten miles south,” said Fallows,
-as they turned in. “Bilderling is there. Kuroki is supposed
-to poke his nose in between, and Lowenkampf is to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>smash it against Bilderling. Mergenthaler’s Cossacks
-are here to take the van in the morning, and we’re backed
-up by a big body of Siberians, stretching behind to Yentai
-station&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw ’em,” said Morning. “Lowenkampf looks sick
-with strain.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Day appeared, with just the faintest touch of red
-showing like a broken bit of glass. Rain-clouds, bursting-heavy,
-immediately rolled over it,&mdash;a deluge of grays,
-leisurely stirring with whitish and watery spots. Though
-his troops were taking the field, Lowenkampf had not
-left his quarters in the big freight <i>go-down</i>. Commanders
-hurried in and out. Fallows was filling two canteens
-with diluted tea, when an old man entered, weeping. It
-was Colonel Ritz, bent, red-eyed, nearly seventy, who had
-been ordered, on account of age and decrepitude, to remain
-with the staff. Brokenly, he begged for his command.</p>
-
-<p>“I have always stayed with the line, General. I shall
-be quick as another. Don’t keep an old man, who has
-always stuck to the line&mdash;don’t keep one like that back
-in time of battle.”</p>
-
-<p>Lowenkampf smiled and embraced him&mdash;sending him
-out with his regiment.</p>
-
-<p>Mergenthaler now came in. There was something
-icy and hateful about this Roman-faced giant. His countenance
-was like a bronze shield&mdash;so small the black eyes,
-and so wide and high the cheek-bones. For months his
-Cossacks had done sensational work&mdash;small fighting, far
-scouting, desperate service. He despised Lowenkampf;
-believed he had earned the right to be the hammer to-day;
-and, in truth, he had, but Lowenkampf, who ranked
-him, had been chosen. Bleak and repulsive with rage,
-the Cossack chief made no effort to repress himself.
-Lowenkampf was reminded that he had been policing the
-streets of Liaoyang for weeks, that his outfit was “fat-heeled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-and duck-livered.”... More was said before
-Mergenthaler stamped out, his jaw set like a stone
-balcony. It seemed as if he tore from the heart of Lowenkampf
-the remnant of its stamina.... For a
-moment the three were alone in the head-quarters. Fallows
-caught the General by the shoulders and looked
-down in his face:</p>
-
-<p>“Little Father&mdash;you’re the finest and most courageous
-of them all.... It will be known and proven&mdash;what
-I say, old friend&mdash;‘when we get to be men.’”</p>
-
-<p>The masses of Lowenkampf’s infantry, forming on
-the heights among the coal-fields, melted at the outer
-edges and slid downward. Willingly the men went.
-They did not know that this was the day. They had
-been fearfully expectant of battle at first&mdash;ever since
-Lake Baikal was crossed. Battalion after battalion slid
-off the heights, and were lost in the queer lanes running
-through the rocks and low timber below. The general
-movement was silent. The rain held off; the air was
-close and warm. Lowenkampf, unvaryingly attentive
-to the two Americans, put them in charge of Lieutenant
-Luban, the young staff officer, whom Morning had
-caught in his arms from the back of the sorrel. Down
-the ledges they went, as the others.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was uneasy, as one who feels he has forgotten
-something&mdash;a tugging in his mind to go back.
-He was strongly convinced that Lowenkampf was unsubstantial
-in a military way. He could not overcome the
-personal element of this dread&mdash;as if the General were of
-his house, and he knew better than another that he was
-ill-prepared for the day’s trial.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows welcomed any disaster. As he had scorned
-the army in its waiting, he scorned it now in its strike.
-He looked very lean and long. The knees were in corduroy
-and unstable, but his nerve could not have been
-steadier had he been called to a tea-party by Kuroki.
-As one who had long since put these things behind him,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>Fallows appeared; indeed, as one sportively called out by
-the younger set, to whom severing the spine of a flanker
-was fresh and engrossing business.... Morning
-choked with suppressions. Luban talked low and wide.
-He was in a funk. Both saw it. Neither would have
-objected, except that he monopolized their thoughts with
-his broken English, and to no effect.</p>
-
-<p>Now they went into the <i>kao liang</i>&mdash;vast, quiet, enfolding.
-It held the heat stale from yesterday. The seasonal
-rains had filled the spongy loam at the roots, with
-much to spare blackening the lower stems.... For
-an hour and a half they sunk into the several paths and
-lost themselves, Lowenkampf’s untried battalions. The
-armies of the world might have vanished so, only to be
-seen by the birds, moving like vermin in a hide....
-Men began to think of food and drink. The heights of
-Yentai, which they had left in bitter hatred so shortly
-ago, was now like hills of rest on the long road home.
-More and more the resistance of men shrunk in the evil
-magic of this pressure of grain and sky and holding
-earth&mdash;a curious, implacable unworldliness it was, that
-made the flesh cry out.</p>
-
-<p>“They should have cut this grain,” Luban said for the
-third time.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows had said it first. Anyone should have seen
-the ruin of this advance, unless the end of the millet were
-reached before the beginning of battle. They had to recall
-with effort at last, that there was an outer world of
-cities and seas and plains&mdash;anything but this hollow country
-of silence and fatness.</p>
-
-<p>If you have ever jumped at the sudden drumming of
-a pneumatic hammer, as it rivets a bolt against the steel,
-you have a suggestion of the nervous shock from that
-first far machine-gun of Kuroki’s&mdash;just a suggestion,
-because Lowenkampf’s soldiers at the moment were suffocating
-in <i>kao liang</i>.... In such a strange and expensive
-way, they cut the crops that day.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span></p>
-<p>Morning trod on the tail of the battalion ahead. It
-had stopped; he had not. The soldier in front whom
-he bumped turned slowly around and looked into his
-face. The wide, glassy blue eyes then turned to Fallows,
-and after resting a curious interval, finally found
-Luban.</p>
-
-<p>The face was broad and white as lard. Whatever else
-was in it, there was no denying the fear, the hate, the
-cunning&mdash;all of a rudimentary kind. Luban was held by
-the man’s gaze. The fright in both hearts sparked in
-contact. The stupid face of the soldier suddenly reflected
-the terror of the officer. And this was the result:
-The wide-staring suddenly altered to a squint; the vacant,
-helpless staring of a bewildered child turned into the
-bright activity of a trapped rodent.</p>
-
-<p>Luban had failed in his great instant. His jaw was
-loose-hinged, his mouth leaked saliva.</p>
-
-<p>Now Morning and Fallows saw other faces&mdash;twenty
-faces in the grain, faces searching for the nearest officer.
-Their eyes roved to Luban; necks craned among the fox-tails.
-There was a slow giving of the line, and bumping
-contacts from ahead like a string of cars....
-Morning recalled the look of Luban, as he had helped
-him down from the sorrel. He had helped then; he
-hated now. Fallows was better. He plumped the boy
-on the shoulder and said laughingly:</p>
-
-<p>“Talk to ’em. Get ’em in hand&mdash;quick, Luban&mdash;or
-they’ll be off!”</p>
-
-<p>It was all in ten seconds. The nearest soldiers had
-seen Luban fail. Other platoons, doubtless many,
-formed in similar tableaux to the same end. A second
-machine-gun took up the story. It was far-off, and
-slightly to the left of the Russian line of advance. The
-incomprehensible energy of the thing weakened the Russian
-column, although it drew no blood.</p>
-
-<p>A roar ahead from an unseen battalion-officer&mdash;the
-Russian <i>Forward</i>. Luban tried to repeat it, but pitifully.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>A great beast rising from the ooze and settling back
-<i>against</i> the voice&mdash;such was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>The Thought formed. It was the thought of the day.
-None was too stupid to catch the spirit of it. Certain it
-was, and pervading as the grain. Indeed, it was conceived
-of <i>kao liang</i>. The drum of the machine-gun, like
-a file in a tooth, was but its quickener. It flourished
-under the ghostly grays and whites of the sky. In the
-forward battalions the Thought already clothed itself in
-action:</p>
-
-<p>To run back&mdash;to follow the paths back through the
-grain&mdash;to reach the decent heights again. And this
-was but a miniature of the thought that mastered the
-whole Russian army in Asia&mdash;to go back&mdash;to rise from
-the ghastly hollows of Asia and turn homeward
-again.</p>
-
-<p>It leaped like a demon upon the unset volition of the
-mass. Full-formed, it arose from the lull. It effected
-the perfect turning.</p>
-
-<p>Morning saw it, and wanted the source. He had
-planned too long to be denied now. The rout was big
-to handle, but he wanted <i>the front</i>&mdash;a glimpse of the
-actual inimical line. It was not enough for him to watch
-the fright and havoc streaming back. Calling a cheery
-<i>adieu</i> to Fallows, he bowed against the current&mdash;alone
-obeying the Russian <i>Forward</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">10</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>t</span> the edge of the trampled lane, often shunted off
-into the standing crop, Morning made his way,
-running when he could.... The pictures were infinite;
-a lifetime of pictures; hundreds of faces and each
-a picture. Men passed him, heads bowed, arms about
-their faces, like figures in the old Dore paintings, running
-from the wrath of the Lord. Here and there was
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>pale defiance. Nine sheepish soldiers carried a single
-wounded man, the much-handled fallen one looking silly
-as the rest.</p>
-
-<p>The utter ghostliness of it all was in Morning’s mind....
-Gasping for breath, after many minutes of running,
-he sank down to rest. Soldiers sought to pick him
-up and carry him back. There were others who could
-not live with themselves after the first panic. They fell
-out of the retreat to join him. Others stopped to fire&mdash;a
-random emptying of magazines in the millet. Certain
-groups huddled when they saw him&mdash;mistaking a civilian
-for an officer&mdash;and covered their faces. Officers begged,
-prayed for the men to hold, but the torrent increased,
-individuals diving into the thick of the grain and leaking
-around behind. White showed beneath the beards, and
-white lips moved in prayer. The locked bayonets of the
-Russians had never seemed so dreadful as when low-held
-in the grain.... One beardless boy strode back
-jauntily, his lips puckered in a whistle.</p>
-
-<p>The marvelous complexity of common men&mdash;this was
-the sum of all pictures, and the great realization of John
-Morning. His soul saw much that his eyes failed. The
-day was a marvelous cabinet of gifts&mdash;secret chambers
-to be opened in after years.</p>
-
-<p>Now he was running low, having entered the zone of
-fire. He heard the steel in the grain; stems were
-snapped by invisible fingers; fox-tails lopped. He saw the
-slow leaning of stems half-cut.... Among the
-fallen, on a rising slope, men were crawling back; and
-here and there, bodies had been cast off, the cloth-covered
-husks of poor driven peasants. They had gone back to
-the soil, these bodies, never really belonging to the soldiery.
-It was only when they writhed that John Morning
-forgot himself and his work. The art of the dead
-was consummate.</p>
-
-<p>The grain thinned. He had come to the end of Lowenkampf’s
-infantry. It had taken an hour and a half
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>for the command to enter in order; less than a half-hour
-to dissipate. The rout had been like a cloud-burst.</p>
-
-<p>And this was the battle. (Morning had to hold fast
-to the thought.) Long had he waited for this hour;
-months he had constructed the army in his story for this
-hour of demolition. It was enough to know that Lowenkampf
-had failed. Liaoyang, the battle, was lost....
-Old Ritz went by weeping&mdash;he had been too old,
-they said; they had not wanted him to take his regiment
-to field. Yet he was perhaps the last to leave the field.
-Only his dead remained, and Colonel Ritz was not weeping
-for them....</p>
-
-<p>Now Morning saw it was <i>not</i> all over. Before gaining
-the ridge swept by Kuroki’s fire, he knew that Mergenthaler
-was still fighting. It came to him with the
-earthy rumble of cavalry. To the left, in a crevasse
-under the crest of the ridge, he saw a knot of horses
-with empty saddles, and a group of men. Closer to them
-he crawled, along the sheltered side of the ridge, until in
-the midst of Russian officers, he saw that splendid bruising
-brute, who had stamped out of headquarters that
-morning, draining the heart of Lowenkampf as he went.
-Mergenthaler of the Cossacks&mdash;designed merely to be
-the eyes and fingers of the fighting force; yet unsupported,
-unbodied as it were, he still held the ridge.</p>
-
-<p>Kuroki, as yet innocent of the rout, would not otherwise
-have been checked. His ponderous infantry was
-not the sort to be stopped by these light harriers of the
-Russian army. The Flanker was watching for the Hammer,
-and the Hammer already had been shattered....
-Mergenthaler, cursing, handled his cavalry
-squadrons to their death, lightly and perfectly as coins
-in his palm. Every moment that he stayed the Japanese,
-he knew well that he was holding up to the quick scorn
-of the world the foot-soldiers of Lowenkampf, whom he
-hated. His head was lifted above the rocks to watch the
-field. His couriers came and went, slipping up and down
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>through the thicker timber, still farther to the left....
-Morning crawled up nearby until he saw the
-field&mdash;and now action, more abandoned than he had ever
-dared to dream:</p>
-
-<p>An uncultivated valley strewn with rocks and low
-timber. Three columns of Japanese infantry pouring
-down from the opposite parallel ridge, all smoky with
-the hideous force of the reserve&mdash;machine-guns, and a
-mile of rifles stretching around to the right. (It was this
-wing’s firing that had started the havoc in the grain.)</p>
-
-<p>Three columns of infantry pouring down into the
-ancient valley, under the gray stirring sky&mdash;brown columns,
-very even and unhasting&mdash;and below, the Cossacks.</p>
-
-<p>Morning lived in the past ages. He lay between two
-rocks watching, having no active sense&mdash;but pure receptivity.
-Time was thrust back.... Three brown
-dragons crawling down the slopes in the gray day&mdash;knights
-upon horses formed to slay the dragons.</p>
-
-<p>Out of the sheltering rocks and timber they rode&mdash;and
-chose the central dragon quite in the classic way.
-It turned to meet the knights upon horses&mdash;head lifted,
-neck swollen like the nuchal ribs of the cobra. In the
-act of striking it was ridden down, but the knights were
-falling upon the smashed head. The mated dragons had
-attacked from either side....</p>
-
-<p>It was a fragment, a moving upon the ground,&mdash;that
-company of knights upon horses,&mdash;and the Voice of it,
-all but deadened by the rifles, came up spent and pitiful.</p>
-
-<p>Mergenthaler’s thin, high voice was not hushed. He
-knew how to detach another outfit from the rocks and
-timber-thickets, already found by the Japanese on the
-ridge, already deluged with fire. Out from the betraying
-shelter, the second charge, a new child of disaster,
-ran forth to strike Kuroki’s left.... Parts of the
-film were elided. The cavalrymen fell away by a terrible
-magic. Again the point thickened and drew back, met
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>the charge; again the welter and the thrilling back-sweep
-of the Russian fragment.</p>
-
-<p>Morning missed something. His soul was listening
-for something.... It was comment from Duke
-Fallows, so long marking time to events.... He
-laughed. He was glad to be free, yet his whole inner
-life drew back in loathing from Mergenthaler&mdash;as if to
-rush to his old companion.... And Mergenthaler
-turned&mdash;the brown high-boned cheeks hung with a smile
-of derision. He was climbing far and high on Lowenkampf’s
-shame.... He gained the saddle&mdash;this
-hard, huge Egoist, the staff clinging to him, and over the
-ridge they went to set more traps.</p>
-
-<p>The wide, rocking shoulders of the General sank into
-the timber&mdash;as he trotted with his aides down the death-ridden
-valley. It may have been the sight of this little
-party that started a particular machine-gun on the Japanese
-right.... The sizable bay the chief rode
-looked like a polo-pony under the mighty frame. Morning
-did not see him fall: only the plunging bay with an
-empty saddle; and then when the timber opened a little,
-the staff carrying the leader up the trail.</p>
-
-<p>It was the mystery which delayed the Japanese, not
-Mergenthaler. When at last Kuroki’s left wing continued
-to report no aggressive movement from Bilderling
-river-ward; and when continued combing in the north
-raised nothing but bleak hills and grain-valleys hushed
-between showers, he flooded further columns down the
-ridge, and slew what he could of the Russian horsemen
-who tried with absurd heroism to block his way. At two
-in the afternoon the Flanker fixed his base among the
-very rocks where Morning had lain&mdash;and the next position
-for him to take was the coal-hills of Yentai. Only
-the ghosts of the cavalry stood between&mdash;and <i>kao liang</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Morning turned back a last time to the fields of millet
-in the early dusk. He had been waiting for Mergenthaler
-to die. The General lay in the very <i>go-down</i>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>where he had outraged Lowenkampf that morning; and
-now the Japanese were driving the Russians from the
-position.... Mergenthaler would not die. They
-carried him to a coal-car, and soldiers pushed it on to
-Yentai, the station.</p>
-
-<p>The Japanese were closing in. They were already in
-the northern heights contending with Stakelberg; they
-were stretched out bluffing Bilderling to the southward.
-They were locked with Zarubaieff at the southern front
-of Liaoyang. They were in the grain.... Cold
-and soulless Morning felt, as one who has failed in a
-great temptation; as one who has lived to lose, and has
-not been spared the picture of his own eternal failure.</p>
-
-<p>He looked back a last time at the grain in the closing
-night. The Japanese were there, brown men, native to
-the grain. The great shadowed field had whipped Lowenkampf
-and lost the battle. It lay in the dusk like a
-woman, trampled, violated, feebly waving. Rain-clouds
-came with darkness to cover the nakedness and bleeding.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">11</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">D</span>uke</span> Fallows saw but one face....
-John Morning studied a thousand, mastered the
-heroism of the Cossacks, filled his brain with blood-pictures
-and the incorrigible mystery of common men.
-Duke Fallows saw but one face. In the beauty and
-purity of its inspiration, he read a vile secret out of the
-past. To the very apocalypse of this secret, he read and
-understood. The shame of it blackened the heavens for
-his eyes, but out of its night and torment came a Voice
-uttering the hope of the human spirit for coming days.</p>
-
-<p>Morning had left. Luban had put on bluster and
-roaring. Their place in the grain was now broad from
-trampling; the flight was on in full. It meant something
-to Fallows. It was not that he wanted the Japanese to
-win the battle; the doings of the Japanese were of little
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>concern to him. He felt curiously that the Japanese
-were spiritually estranged from the white man. Russia
-was different; he was close to the heart of the real Russia
-whose battle was at home. Russia’s purpose in Asia
-was black; he was full of scorn for the purpose, but full
-of love for the troops. Strange gladness was upon him&mdash;as
-the men broke away. Reality at home would come
-from this disaster. He constructed the world’s battle
-from it, and sang his song.</p>
-
-<p>One soldier running haltingly for his life looked up
-to the face of Luban of the roaring voice&mdash;and laughed.
-Luban turned, and perceived that Fallows had not missed
-the laugh of the soldier. This incident, now closed, was
-in a way responsible for the next.</p>
-
-<p>... Out of the grain came striding a tall soldier
-of the ranks. His beard was black, his eyes very blue.
-In his eyes was a certain fire that kindled the nature of
-Duke Fallows as it had never been kindled before, not
-even by the most feminine yielding. The man’s broad
-shoulders were thrust back; his face clean of cowardice,
-clean as the grain and as open to the sky. His head
-was erect and bare; he carried no gun, scorned the pretense
-of looking for wounded. Had he carried a dinner-pail,
-the picture would have been as complete&mdash;a good
-man going home from a full-testing day.</p>
-
-<p>In that moment Fallows saw more than from the
-whole line before.... Here was a conscript. He
-had been taken from his house, forced across Europe and
-Asia to this hour. The reverse of his persecutors had
-set him free. This freedom was the fire in his eyes....
-They had torn him from his house; they had
-driven and brutalized him for months. And now they
-had come to dreadful disaster. It was such a disaster as
-a plain man might have prayed for. He <i>had</i> prayed
-for it in the beginning, but in the long, slow gatherings
-for battle, in the terrible displays of power, he had lost
-his faith to pray. Yet the plain man’s God had answered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-that early prayer. This was the brightness of the
-burning in the blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>His persecutors had been shamed and undone. He
-had seen his companions dissipate, his sergeants run;
-seen his captains fail to hold. The great force that had
-tortured him, that had seemed <i>the world</i> in strength, was
-now broken before his eyes. Its mighty muscles were
-writhing, their strength running down. The love of God
-was splendid in the ranker’s heart; the breath of home
-had come. The turning in the grain&mdash;was a turning
-homeward.</p>
-
-<p>All this Fallows saw. It was illumination to him&mdash;the
-hour of his great reception.</p>
-
-<p>Luban, just insulted by the other infantryman, now
-faced the big, blithe presence, emerging unhurried from
-the grain. Luban raised his voice:</p>
-
-<p>“And what are <i>you</i> sneaking back for?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sneaking&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Rotten soldier stuff&mdash;you should be shot down.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not a soldier&mdash;I am a ploughman.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are here to fight&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“They forced me to come&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Forced you to fight for your Fatherland?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is not my Fatherland, but a strange country&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You are here for the Fatherland&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I have six children in Russia. The Fatherland is
-not feeding them. My field is not ploughed.”</p>
-
-<p>The talk had crackled; it had required but a few
-seconds; Luban had done it all for Fallows to see and
-hear&mdash;but Fallows was very far from observing the pose
-of that weakling. The Ploughman held him heart and
-soul&mdash;as did the infallible and instantly unerring truth
-of his words. The world’s poor, the world’s degraded,
-had found its voice.</p>
-
-<p>The man was white with truth, like a priest of Melchizedek.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span></p>
-<p>Luban must have broken altogether. Fallows, listening,
-watching the Ploughman with his soul, did not turn....
-Now the man’s face changed. The lips parted
-strangely, the eyelids lifting. Whiteness wavered between
-the eyes of the Ploughman and the eyes of Duke Fallows.
-Luban’s pistol crashed and the man fell with a
-sob.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows was kneeling among the soaked roots of the
-millet, holding the soldier in his arms:</p>
-
-<p>“Living God, to die for you&mdash;you, who are so straight
-and so young.... Hear me&mdash;don’t go yet&mdash;I must
-have your name, Brother.... Luban did not know
-you&mdash;he is just a little sick man&mdash;he didn’t know you or
-he wouldn’t have done this.... Tell me your name ...
-and the place of your babes, and their mother....
-Oh, be sure they shall be fed&mdash;glad and proud
-am I to do that easy thing!... You have shown me
-the Nearer God.... They shall be fed, and they
-shall hear! The world, cities and nations, all who suffer,
-shall hear what the Ploughman said&mdash;the soul of the
-Ploughman, who is the hope of the world.... You
-have spoken for Russia.... And now rest&mdash;rest,
-Big Brother&mdash;you have done your work.”</p>
-
-<p>The soldier looked up to him. There had been pain
-and wrenching, the vision of a desolated house. Now,
-his eyes rested upon the American. The shadow of death
-lifted. He saw his brother in the eyes that held him&mdash;his
-brother, and it seemed, the Son of Man smiled there
-behind the tears.... He smiled back like a weary
-child. Peace came to him, lustrous from the shadow,
-for lo! his field was ploughed and children sang in his
-house.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fallows had not risen from his knees. He was talking
-to himself:</p>
-
-<p>“... Out of the grain he came&mdash;the soul of the
-Ploughman. And gently he spoke to us ... and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>this is the day of the battle. I came to the battle&mdash;and
-I go to carry his message to the poor&mdash;to those who
-labor&mdash;to Russia and the America of the future. Luban
-spoke the thought of the world, but the Ploughman spoke
-for humanity risen. He spoke for the women, and for
-the poor.... Bright he came from the grain&mdash;bright
-and unafraid&mdash;and those shall hear him, who suffer
-and are heavy-laden. This is the battle!...
-And his voice came to me&mdash;a great and gracious voice&mdash;for
-tsars and kings and princes to hear&mdash;and I am to
-carry his message....”</p>
-
-<p>Luban laughed feebly at last, and Fallows looked up
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear him in your passing, Luban, poor lad.
-You’ll hear him in your hell. Until you are as simple
-and as pure as this Ploughman&mdash;you shall hear and see
-all this again. Though you should hang by the neck to-night,
-Luban,&mdash;this picture would go out with you. For
-this is the hour you killed your Christ.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">12</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">L</span>owenkampf</span> was the name that meant defeat.
-Lowenkampf&mdash;it was like the rain that night....
-“Lowenkampf started out too soon.”...
-Morning heard it. Fallows heard it. The coughing sentries
-heard it. The whole dismal swamp of drenched,
-whipped soldiery heard it. Sleek History had awakened
-to grasp it; Kuropatkin had washed his hands....
-Lowenkampf had started out too soon that morning. The
-Siberians had only left Yentai Station proper when Lowenkampf
-set forth from the Coal-heights. Had his supports
-been in position (very quickly and clearly the
-world’s war-experts would see this) the rout in the grain
-would have been checked.</p>
-
-<p>As it was, many of Lowenkampf’s soldiers had run
-the entire ten miles from the heights to the station, Yentai&mdash;after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-emerging from <i>kao-liang</i>&mdash;evading the Siberian
-supports as they ran, as chaos flies from order.
-Now in the darkness (with Kuroki bivouacked upon the
-main trophy of the day, the Coal-heights) the shamed
-battalions of Lowenkampf re-formed along the main line
-in the midst of their unused reserves.</p>
-
-<p>The day had been like a month of fever to Morning,
-but Duke Fallows was a younger man, and a stranger
-that night.... Morning tried to work, but he was
-too close to it all, too tired. It was as if he were trying
-to tell of a misfortune that had no beginning, and whose
-every phase was his own heart’s concern. His weariness
-was like the beginning of death&mdash;coldness and pervading
-<i>ennui</i>. Against his will he was gathered in the glowing
-currents of Duke Fallows&mdash;watching, listening, not pretending
-even to understand, but borne along. Together
-they went in to the General’s private room. Lowenkampf
-looked up, gathered himself with difficulty and smiled.
-Fallows turned to Morning, asked him to stand by the
-door, then strode forward and knelt by the General’s
-knees. It did not seem extraordinary to Morning&mdash;so
-much was insane.</p>
-
-<p>“You were chosen, old friend. It has been a big day
-for the under-dog&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I have lost Liaoyang.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was written.”</p>
-
-<p>“My little boy will hear it in the street. He will hear
-it in the school. Before he is a man&mdash;he will hear it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall take him upon my knee. I shall tell him of
-you in a way that he shall never forget. And his mother&mdash;I
-shall tell her&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Lowenkampf rubbed his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I have business in Russia. This day I heard what
-must be done. It is almost as if I had gotten to be a
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows leaned back laughingly, his arms extended,
-as if pushing the other’s knees from him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some inner wall broke, and the General wept. Morning
-put his foot against the door. The thought in his
-heart was: “This is something I cannot write.”...</p>
-
-<p>Morning held the idea coldly now that Fallows was
-mentally softened from the strain. Other things came up
-to support it.... He, too, had seen a soldier shot
-by an officer. It was discipline. At best, it was but one of
-the thousand pictures. It had happened less because the
-man was retiring without a wound&mdash;thousands were doing
-that&mdash;than because the man answered back, when the
-officer spoke. He did not hear what the soldier said.
-This soldier possibly had trans-Baikal children, too. The
-day and his long illness had crazed Fallows, now at the
-knees of the man who had lost the battle.</p>
-
-<p>“... I know what you thought this morning&mdash;when
-you saw your men march down into the grain,”
-Fallows was saying to the General. “You thought of
-your little boy and his mother. You thought of the
-babes and wives and mothers&mdash;of those soldiers of yours
-whom you were sending to the front. You didn’t want
-to send them out. You’re too close to becoming a man
-for that. You wondered if you would not have to suffer
-for sending them out so&mdash;and if this particular suffering
-would not have to do with <i>your</i> little boy and his
-mother&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“My God, stop, Fallows&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You had to think that. You wouldn’t be Lowenkampf
-if you failed to think that.... I love you
-for it, old friend. Big things will come from Lowenkampf,
-and from the conscript who came to me out of
-the grain with vision and a voice. The battle at home
-won’t be so hard to win&mdash;now that this is lost.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a challenge and heavy steps on the platform&mdash;and
-one low, hurried voice.</p>
-
-<p>Lowenkampf stood up and wiped his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“The Commander&mdash;&mdash;” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>A pair of captains towered above him, a grizzled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>colonel behind; then Morning saw the gray of the short
-beard, and the dark, dry-burning of unblinking eyes,
-fixed upon Lowenkampf.... The latter’s shoulders
-drooped a little, and his eyes lowered deprecatingly
-for just an instant. Kuropatkin passed in. The soft
-fullness of his shoulders was like a woman’s. Fleshly
-and failing, he looked, from behind.... The Americans
-waited outside with the colonel and captains. The
-door was shut.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight.... Fallows and Morning had moved
-in the rain among the different commands. The army
-at Yentai seemed to be emerging from prolonged anæsthesia
-to find itself missing in part and strangely disordered.
-It was afraid to sleep, afraid to think of itself,
-and denied drink. Fallows had told everywhere the
-story of the Ploughman; just now he helped himself to
-a bundle of Morning’s Chinese parchment, and was writing
-copy in long-hand.</p>
-
-<p>His head was bowed, his eyes expressionless.</p>
-
-<p>“And I alone remain to tell thee!” he muttered at
-last.</p>
-
-<p>Morning did not answer, but resigned himself to hear
-more of the Messiah who came out of the grain.</p>
-
-<p>“I told one of Mergenthaler’s aides the story,” Fallows
-said coldly. “He said it was quite the proper thing
-to do&mdash;to shoot down a man who was leaving the field
-unwounded. I told Manlewson of the First Siberians,
-who replied that the Russians would begin to win battles
-when they murdered all such, as unflinchingly and instantly
-as the Japanese did, and hospital malingerers as
-well. I told Bibinoff (who is Luban’s captain), and he
-said: ‘That’s the first good thing I ever heard about
-Luban.’ He was pleased and epigrammatic....”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows stood up&mdash;his face was in shadow, so far beneath
-was the odorous lamp.</p>
-
-<p>“Living God&mdash;I can’t make them see&mdash;I can’t
-make them see! They’re all enchanted. Or else I’m
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>dead and this is hell.... They talk about Country.
-They talk about making a man stand in a place of sure
-death for his Country&mdash;in this Twentieth Century&mdash;when
-war has lost its last vestige of meaning to the man in the
-ranks, and his Country is a thing of rottenness and moral
-desolation! What is the Country to the man in the
-ranks? A group of corrupt, inbred undermen who study
-to sate themselves&mdash;to tickle and soften themselves&mdash;with
-the property and blood and slavery of the poor....
-A good man, a clean man, is torn from his house to
-fight, to stand in the fire-pits and die for such monsters.
-Suddenly the poor man sees!</p>
-
-<p>“... He came forth from the grain with vision&mdash;smiling
-and unafraid. He is not afraid to fight, but he
-has found himself on the wrong side of the battle. When
-he fights again it will be for his child, for his house, for
-his brother, for his woman, for his soul. Blood in plenty
-has he for such a war.... Think of it, John Morning,
-the Empire was entrusted to poor little Luban&mdash;against
-this man of vision! He came forth smiling from
-the grain. ‘<i>I do not belong here, my masters. I was
-torn away from my woman and children, and I must be
-home for the winter ploughing. It is a long way&mdash;and
-I must be off. I am a ploughman, not a soldier. I
-belong to my children and my field. My country does
-not plough my field&mdash;does not feed my children....</i>
-What could Luban do but kill him&mdash;little agent of
-Herod? But the starry child lives!...</p>
-
-<p>“And listen, John, to-night&mdash;you heard them&mdash;we
-heard these fat-necked, vulture-breasted commanders&mdash;vain,
-envy-poisoned, scandal-mongering commanders,
-complaining to each other: ‘See, what stuff has been
-given us to win battles with!... I have told it and
-they cannot see. They are not even good devils; they
-are not decent devourers. They have no humor&mdash;that is
-their deadly sin. An adult, half-human murderer, seeing
-his soldiers leave the field, would cry aloud, ‘Hello, you
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>Innocents&mdash;so you have wakened up at last!’ But these
-cannot see. Their eyes are stuck together. It is their
-deadly sin&mdash;the sin against the Holy Ghost&mdash;to lack
-humor to this extent!”</p>
-
-<p>Morning laughed strangely. “Come on to bed, you
-old anarchist,” he said, though sleep was far from his
-own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it, John. Anarchy. In the name of Fatherland,
-Russia murders a hundred thousand workmen out
-here in Asia. In answer, a few men and women gather
-together in a Petersburg cellar, saying, ‘We are fools, not
-heroes. When we fight again it will be for <i>Our</i> Country!’
-And they are anarchists&mdash;their cause is Terrorism!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all shot to pieces to-night, Duke&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We are alive, John. Lowenkampf is alive. But he
-who spoke to me this day, who came forth so blithely to
-die in my arms (his woman sleeps ill to-night in the
-midst of her babes), and he is lying out in the rain, his
-face turned up to the rain. God damn the fat reptile
-that calls itself Fatherland!... But, I say to you,
-that we’re come nearly to the end of the prince and
-pauper business on this planet. The soul of the Ploughman
-was heard to-day&mdash;as long ago they heard the Soul
-of the Carpenter.... He is lying out there in the
-millet&mdash;his face turned up to the rain. Yet I say to you,
-John, there’s more life in him this hour than in his Tsar
-and all the princes of the blood.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows covered his face with his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re tired and thick to-night, John, but you are
-one who must see!” he finished passionately. “You must
-help me tell the story to the cellar gatherings in Petersburg,
-to the secret meetings in all the centers of misery,
-wherever a few are gathered together in the name of
-Brotherhood&mdash;in New York, London, Paris, and Berlin....
-You must help me to make other men see&mdash;help
-me to tell this thing so that the world will hear it, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>with such power that the world will be unable longer
-to lie to itself.</p>
-
-<p>“I can see it now&mdash;how Jesus, the Christ, tried to
-make men see.... That was His Gethsemane&mdash;that
-He could not make men see. I tell you it is a God’s
-work&mdash;and it came to Jesus, the Christ, at last&mdash;‘If they
-crucify me, perhaps, a few will see!’... I’m going
-over to Russia, John, to learn how to tell them better.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">13</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> night of the third of September, and John
-Morning is off for the big adventure. Between
-the hills, the roads are a-stream.... All day he
-had watched different phases of the retreat. Fighting
-back in the city; fighting here and there along the staggering,
-burdened, cruelly-punished line; a sudden breaking-out
-of fighting in a dozen places like hidden fires;
-rain and wounded and seas of mud; the gray intolerable
-misery of it all; the sick and the dead&mdash;Morning was
-glutted with the colossal derangement. And they called
-it an orderly retreat.</p>
-
-<p>He was riding the sorrel Eve out of the zone of war.
-The battle was behind him now, and he breathed the
-world again. He had something to tell. Liaoyang was
-in his brain. He was off for the ships that sail. A month&mdash;America&mdash;the
-great story.... He felt the manuscript
-against him. It was in a Chinese belt, with money
-for the passage home, tight against his body, a hundred
-thousand words done on Chinese parchment and wrapped
-in oil-skin. The book of Liaoyang&mdash;he had earned it.
-He had written it against the warping cynicism of Duke
-Fallows. On the ship he could reshape and renew it
-all into a master-picture.</p>
-
-<p>It had been easier than he thought to break away
-from Fallows, his friend. The latter was whelmed in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>the soul of the Ploughman. A big story, of course, as
-Fallows saw it&mdash;but there were scores of big stories.
-It would ruin it to let an anarchist tell it. Suppose
-officers in general did stop to listen to troops sneaking
-off the field?</p>
-
-<p>Duke had given him a letter, and a story for the
-<i>Western States</i>. The first was not to be read until he
-was at sea out from Japan. When Morning spoke of
-the money he owed, the other had put the thought away.
-Sometime he would call for it if he needed it; it was a
-trifle anyway.... It hadn’t been a trifle. It had
-meant everything.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was glad to breathe himself again. Yet
-there was an ache in his heart for Duke Fallows, now
-off for Europe the western way. He, Morning, had not
-done his part. He hadn’t given as he had taken; had
-not kept close to Duke Fallows at the last. There was
-a big score that money could never settle. Soundly glad
-to be alone, but in the very gladness the picture of Duke
-Fallows returned&mdash;lying on his back, in bunks and berths
-and beds, staring up at the ceiling, accentuating his own
-failures to bring out the hopeful and valorous parts of
-his friend. It was always such a picture to Morning,
-when Fallows came to mind&mdash;staring, dreaming, looking
-up from his back. It had seemed sometimes as if he
-were trying to make of his friend all that he had failed
-to be.... Yet the Duke Fallows of the last
-twenty-four hours, wild, dithyrambic&mdash;had been too
-much.... Again and again, irked and heavy with
-his own limitations, Morning’s brain had seized upon the
-weakness of the other, to condone his own slowness of
-understanding.... It may have been Eve, and
-her relation to the Fallows revelation, or it may have
-been putting hideous militarism behind, that made John
-Morning think of Women now as he rode, and a little
-differently from ever before.... Certain laughing
-sentences of Duke Fallows came back to him presently,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>with a point he seemed to have missed when they were
-uttered:</p>
-
-<p>“We have our devils, John. You have ambition;
-Lowenkampf has drink; Mergenthaler has slaughter....
-You will love a woman; you already drink too
-readily, but Ambition will stand in your house and fight
-from room to room at the last&mdash;and over the premises
-to the last ditch. He’s a grand devil&mdash;is Ambition....
-My devil, John? Well, it isn’t the big-jawed
-male who loves a woman as she dreams to be loved.
-It’s the man with a touch of women in him&mdash;just enough
-to begin upon her mystery.... When I hear a certain
-woman’s voice, or see a certain passing figure&mdash;something
-old, very old and wise, stirs within, seems to
-stir and thrill with eternal life. And, John, it isn’t low&mdash;the
-thought. I’d tell you if it were. It isn’t low. It’s
-as regal as Mother Nature in a valley, on a long afternoon.
-It isn’t that I want to hurt her; it isn’t that I
-want something she has. Rather, I want all she has!
-I want her mind; I want her soul; I want her full animations.
-I want to make her yield and give; I want to
-feel her battle with herself, not to yield and give....
-Oh, the flesh is nothing. It is the cheapest thing in the
-world&mdash;but her giving, her yielding&mdash;it’s like an ocean
-tide. It breaks every bond; it laughs at every law.
-Power seems to rush into a woman when she yields!
-That’s the conquest of my heart&mdash;to feel that power....
-All devils are young compared to that in a man’s
-heart&mdash;all but one, and that is the passion to hold spiritual
-dominion over other men.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s mind had fallen into the habit of allowing
-much for the other’s sayings&mdash;of accepting much as
-mere facility.... Thus he thought as he traveled
-in the rain, Eve’s swift, springy trot a stimulus to deep
-thinking; and always there was a bigger and finer John
-Morning shadowing him, fathoming his smallnesses,
-wondering at his puny rebellions and vain desires. It
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>was in this fairer John Morning, so tragically unexpressed
-during the past few months, that the pang lived&mdash;the
-pang of parting from his friend.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was terrific physically. The thing he was
-now doing was as spectacular a bit of newspaper service
-as ever correspondent undertook in Asia; and yet, to
-John Morning the high light of achievement fell upon
-the manuscript, not upon the action. It had not occurred
-to him to be afraid. If he could get across the ninety
-miles to Koupangtse&mdash;through the <i>Hun huises</i>, through
-the Japanese scouting cavalry, across two large and
-many smaller yellow rivers&mdash;and reach the railroad, he
-would quickly get a ship for Japan from Tientsin or
-Tongu&mdash;and from Japan&mdash;<i>home</i>.... He was doing
-it for himself&mdash;passionately and with no sense of
-splendor.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows had been so sure of his friend’s physical
-courage, that he made no point of it, in the expression
-of attachment.... He had called it vision at first,
-this thing that had drawn him to John Morning&mdash;a touch
-of the poet, a touch of the feminine&mdash;others might have
-called it. No matter the name, he had seen it, as all
-artists of the expression of the inner life recognize it in
-one another; and Fallows knew well that where the
-courage of the soldier ends, the courage of the visionary
-begins.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was a trifle peculiar, however. Unless it
-sank utterly, he stuck to a ship, until the horizon revealed
-another sail.</p>
-
-<p>He had come up through the dark. The world had
-grounded him deeply in illusion. Most brilliant of promises&mdash;even
-Fallows had not seen him that first day in
-too bright a dawn&mdash;but he learned hard. And his had
-been close fighting&mdash;such desperate fighting that one does
-not hear voices, and one is too deep in the ruck to see the
-open distance.... Much as he had been alone&mdash;the
-world had invariably shattered his silences. Always
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>he had worked&mdash;worked, worked furiously, angrily, for
-himself.... He was taught so. The world had
-caught him as a child in his brief, pitiful tenderness.
-The world was his Eli. As from sleep, he had heard
-Reality calling. He had risen to answer, but the false
-Eli had spoken&mdash;an Eli that did not teach him truly to
-listen, nor to say, when he heard the Voice another time&mdash;“Speak,
-Lord, for thy servant heareth.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">14</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> Taitse, of large and ancient establishment, runs
-westward from Liaoyang for twenty-five miles,
-and in a well-earned bed, portions of which are worn
-in the rock. Morning rode along the north bank, thus
-avoiding altogether a crossing of the Taitse, since his
-journey continued westward from the point where the
-river took its southward bend. From thence it paralleled
-the Hun in a race to join the Liao. The main stem of
-the latter was beyond the Hun, and these two arteries of
-Asia broke Morning’s trail. Fording streams of such
-magnitude was out of the question, and there was a
-strong chance of an encounter with the <i>Hun huises</i> at
-the ferries....</p>
-
-<p>Rain, and the sorrel’s round hoofs sucked sharply in
-the clay. She had no shoes to lose in these drawing
-vacuums. The scent of her came up warm and good to
-the horse-lover. Alone on a road, she had always been
-manageable, hating crowds and noise&mdash;soldiers, Chinese,
-and accoutrements. Perhaps, this was merely a biding
-of time. Eve had a fine sense of keeping a strange road.
-This was not usual, although a horse travels a familiar
-road in the darkness better than a man. These two
-worked well together.</p>
-
-<p>By map the distance from Liaoyang to Koupangtse
-was seventy miles. Morning counted upon ninety, at
-least. The Manchurian roads are old and odd as the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>Oriental mind.... He passed the southward bend
-of the big river, and at daybreak reached Chiensen, ten
-miles beyond, on the Hun.</p>
-
-<p>Chiensen, unavoidable on account of the ferry, was
-a danger-point. Japanese cavalry, it was reported, frequently
-lit there, and the <i>Hun huises</i> (Chinese river-pirates
-and thieves in general, whom Alexieff designated
-well as “the scourge of Manchuria”) were at base in
-this village.... In the gray he found junks, a flat
-tow and landing.</p>
-
-<p>You never know what Chinese John is going to do.
-If you have but little ground of language between you,
-he will take his own way, on the pretext of misunderstanding.
-Morning’s idea was to get across quickly,
-without arousing the river-front. He awoke the ferryman,
-placing three silver taels in his hand. (He carried
-silver, enough native currency to get him to Japan, his
-passport, and the two large envelopes Duke Fallows had
-given him, in the hip-pockets of his riding breeches.)
-The ferryman had no thought of making the first crossing
-without tea. Morning labored with him, and with
-seeming effect for a moment, but the other fell suddenly
-from grace and aroused his family. He was not
-delicate about it. Morning resigned himself to the delay,
-and was firmly persuading Eve to be moderate, as
-she drank from the river’s edge, when Chinese John
-suddenly aroused the river population. Standing well
-out on the tow-flat, he trumpeted at some comrade of
-the night before, apparently no less than a hundred yards
-up the river. There were sleepy answers from many
-junks within range of the voice. It was the one hateful
-thing to John Morning&mdash;yet to rough it with the ferryman
-for his point of view would be the only thing worse.</p>
-
-<p>The landing was rickety; its jointure with the tow-boat
-imperfect. The American took off his coat, tossed
-it over the sorrel’s head, tying the sleeves under her
-throat. She stiffened in rebellion, but as the darkness
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>was as yet little broken by the day, she decided to accept
-the situation. Morning felt her growing reluctance,
-however, as she traversed the creaking, springy boards.
-The crevasse between the landing and the craft was
-bridged; and the latter, grounded on the shore-side, did
-not give. The mare stood in the center of the tow,
-sweating and tense.</p>
-
-<p>Numerous Chinese were now abroad&mdash;eager, even insistent,
-to help. Their voices stirred the mare to her
-old red-eyed insanity. Morning could hold himself no
-longer. Once or twice before in his life this hard, bright
-light had come to his brain. Though the exterior light
-was imperfect, the ferryman saw the fingers close upon
-the butt of the gun, and something of the American’s
-look. He dropped his tea, sprang to the junk and pulled
-up the bamboo-sail. This was used to hold the tow
-against the current.</p>
-
-<p>Two natives in the flat-boat stood ready with poles.
-And now the ferryman spoke in a surprised and disappointed
-way as he toiled in front. He seemed ready to
-burst into tears; and the two nearer Morning grunted
-in majors and minors, according to temperament. The
-American considered that it might all be innocent, although
-the voices were many from the town-front. Poling
-began; the tow drew off from the landing. Clear
-from the grounding of the shore, the craft sank windily
-to its balance in the stream.</p>
-
-<p>This was too much for Eve. Her devil was in the
-empty saddle. She leaped up pawing. The two Chinese
-at the poles dived over side abruptly. Water
-splashed Eve’s flanks, and she veered about on her hind
-feet&mdash;blinded and striking the air in front. The wobble
-of the tow now finished her frenzy&mdash;and back she went
-into the stream. The saddle saved her spine from a
-gash on the edge of the tow. Morning had this thought
-when Eve arose; that he need fear no treachery from the
-Chinese; and this as she fell&mdash;a queer, cool, laughing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>thought&mdash;that after such a fall she would never walk like
-a man again.</p>
-
-<p>He had been forced to drop the bridle, but caught it
-luckily with one of the poles as she came up struggling.
-He beckoned the ferryman forward, and Eve, swimming
-and fighting, was towed across. To Morning it was like
-one of his adventures back in the days of the race-horse
-shipping.</p>
-
-<p>Eve struck the opposite bank&mdash;half-strangled from
-her struggle and the blind. The day had come. The
-nameless little town on this side of the Hun was out to
-meet him. Had he brought a Korean tiger by a string,
-however, he could not have enjoyed more space&mdash;as the
-mare climbed from the stream. He talked to her and
-unbound her eyes. Red and deeply baleful they were.
-She shook her head and parted her jaws. The circle of
-natives widened. Morning straightened the saddle and
-patted Eve’s neck softly, talking modestly of her exploit....
-Natives were now hailing from mid-stream, so
-he leaped into the sticky saddle and guided the mare
-out to the main road leading to Tawan on the Liao....
-Queerly enough, just at this instant, he remembered
-the hands and the lips of the ferryman&mdash;a leper.</p>
-
-<p>Ten miles on the map&mdash;he could count thirteen by
-the road&mdash;and then the Liao crossing.... The
-mare pounded on until they came to a wild hollow, rock-strewn,
-among deserted hills. Morning drew up, cooled
-his mount and fed the soaked grain strapped to the saddle
-since the night before. Eve was not too cross to
-eat&mdash;nor too tired. She lifted her head often and drew
-in the air with the sound of a bubble-pipe....
-Just now Morning noted a wrinkle in his saddle blanket.
-Hot with dread, he loosed the girth.</p>
-
-<p>He looked around in terror lest anyone see his own
-shame and fear. He had put the saddle on in the dark,
-but passed his hand between her back and the cloth.
-Long ago a trainer had whipped him for a bad bit of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>saddling; even at the time he had felt the whipping deserved.
-He lifted the saddle. A pink scalded mouth
-the size of a twenty-five-cent piece was there....
-God, if he could only be whipped now. She was sensitive
-as satin; it was only a little wrinkle of the rain-soaked
-blanket.... His voice whimpered as he
-spoke to her.</p>
-
-<p>Only a horseman could have suffered so. He washed
-the rub, packed soft lint from a Russian first-aid bandage
-about to ease the pressure; and then, since the rain
-had stopped again, he rubbed her dry and walked at her
-head for hours, despairing at last of the town named
-Tawan. The Liao was visible before the village itself.
-Morning shook with fatigue. He had to gain the saddle
-for the possible need of swift action, but the wound
-beneath never left his mind. It uncentered his self-confidence&mdash;a
-force badly needed now.</p>
-
-<p>And this was the Liao&mdash;the last big river, roughly
-half-way. The end of the war-zone, it was, too, but the
-bright point of peril from <i>Hun huises</i>.... Morning
-saw the thin masts of the river junks over the bowl
-of the hill, their tribute flags flying.... To pass
-was the day’s work, to make the ferry with Eve. There
-was too much misery and contrition in his heart for him
-to handle her roughly. The blind could not be used
-again. She would connect that with the back-fall into
-the Hun. The town was full of voices.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">15</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">C</span>hinese</span> were gathering. Morning went about his
-business as if all were well, but nothing was good
-to him about the increase of these hard, quick-handed
-men. They were almost like Japanese. With the tail
-of his eye, he saw shirt signals across the river. The
-main junk fleet was opposite. Trouble&mdash;he knew it.
-The hard, bright light was in his brain.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
-<p>In the gathering of the natives, Eve was roused
-afresh. His only way was to try her without the blind.
-If she showed fight, he meant to mount quickly and ride
-back through the crowd for one of the lower-town
-crossings.</p>
-
-<p>Without looking back, he led the way to the landing,
-holding just the weight of the bridle-rein. His arm
-gave with her every hesitation. To his amazement she
-consented to try. The tow-craft was larger here&mdash;enough
-for a bullock-pair and cart&mdash;and better fitted to
-the landing. Step by step she went with him to her
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Now Morning saw that in using the blind the first
-time he had done her another injury. She would not
-have gone back into the Hun but for that. She awed
-him. Something Fallows had said recurred&mdash;about her
-being unconquerable, different every day. Also Fallows
-had said, “She will kill you at the last....”</p>
-
-<p>He drove back the Chinese, all but two pole-men, that
-would have gathered on the tow. This was quietly done,
-but his inflexibility was felt. Many signals were sent
-across, as the tow receded from the shore, and numbers
-increased on the opposite bank.</p>
-
-<p>Eve, breathing audibly, swung forward and back with
-the craft, as it gave to the river. The towing junk, as
-in the Hun, held the other against the current; the rest
-was poling and paddling.... The junk itself
-slipped out of the way as the tow was warped toward
-the landing. Other junks were stealing in....
-Morning already had paid. He felt the girth of the
-saddle, fingered the bridle, tightened his belt. A warm,
-gray day, but he was spent and gaunt and cold. Eve
-was hushed&mdash;mulling her bit softly, trembling with
-hatred for the Chinese.</p>
-
-<p>The road ascended from the river, through a narrow
-gorge with rocky walls. The river-men were woven
-across the way. While the tow was yet fifteen feet from
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>the landing, Morning gained the saddle. The ferry-man
-gestured frantically that this had never been done before;
-that a man’s beast properly should be led across.
-Morning laughed, tightened his knees, and at an early
-instant loosened the bridle-rein, for the mare to jump.
-The heavy tow shot back as she cleared the fissure of
-stream.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was now caught in the blur of events. The
-Chinese did not give way for the mare, as she trotted
-across the boards to the rocky shore. Up she went striking.
-Again he had not known Eve. The back-dive into
-the Hun had not cured her. She would walk like a man
-and pitch back into Hell&mdash;and do it again....
-Someone knifed her from the side and she toppled.</p>
-
-<p>The fall was swift and terrible, for the trail sloped
-behind. Morning’s instinct was truer than his brain,
-but there was no choice of way to jump. He could not
-push the mare from him completely to avoid the cliff.
-He was half-stunned against the wall, and not clear
-from the struggle of her fall. The brain is never able
-to report this instant afterward, even though consciousness
-is not lost. He was struck, trampled; he felt the
-cold of the rock against his breast, and the burn of a
-knife.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinese struck at him as he rose. The mare
-was up, facing him, but dragging him upward, as a dog
-with a bone. His left hand found the pistol. He cleared
-the Chinese from him, emptying the chambers....
-Eve let him come to her. He must have gained the
-saddle as she swung around in the narrow gorge to begin
-her run. The wind rushed coldly across his
-breast and abdomen. His shirt had been cut and pulled
-free. It was covered with blood. He tried to hold the
-mare, but either his strength was gone or she was past
-feeling the bit. It was her hour. All Morning could
-do was to keep the road.</p>
-
-<p>He was all but knocked out. He had mounted as a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>fighter gets up under the count&mdash;and fights on without
-exactly knowing. The mare was running head down.
-He tried his strength again. The reins were rigid; she
-had the bit and meant to end the game.... He
-loved her wild heart; mourned for her; called her name;
-told her of wrongs he had done. Again and again, the
-light went from him; sometimes he drooped forward to
-her thin, short mane, and clung there, but the heat of
-her made him ill. They came into hills, passed tiny villages.
-It was all strange and terrible&mdash;a hurtling from
-high heaven.... Eve was like a furnace....</p>
-
-<p>And now she was weaving on the road&mdash;running
-drunkenly, unless his eyes betrayed.... The rushing
-wind was cold upon his breast. His coat was gone;
-his shirt had been cut. He tried to pull the blood-soaked
-ends together. At this moment the blow
-fell.</p>
-
-<p>These Chinese had been quick-handed, and they knew
-where to search for a man’s goods. He was coldly sane
-in an instant, for the rending of his whole nature; then
-came the quick zeal for death&mdash;the intolerableness of
-living an instant. The wallet&mdash;the big story&mdash;some hundreds
-of tales in paper! It was the passing of these
-from next his body that had left him cold.... Fury
-must have come to his arms. The mare lifted her head
-under his sudden attack.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, he could manage her now. The bloody mouth
-and the blind-mad head came up to him&mdash;her front legs
-giving like a colt’s. Down they went together. Morning
-took his fall limply, with something of supremely
-organized indifference, and turned in the mud to the
-mare.</p>
-
-<p>She was dead. The gray of pearl was in her eyes
-where red life had been.... No, she raised herself
-forward, seemed to be searching for him, her muzzle
-sickly relaxed. She could not stir behind. Holding
-there for a second&mdash;John Morning forgot the big story.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span></p>
-<p>Eve fell again. He crawled to her&mdash;tried to lift her
-head. It was heavy as a sheet-anchor to his arms....
-Her heart had broken. She had died on her
-feet&mdash;the last rising was but a galvanism.... He
-looked up into the gray sky where the clouds stirred
-sleepily. He wanted to ask something from something
-there.... He could not think of what he wanted....
-Oh, yes, his book of Liaoyang.</p>
-
-<p>And now his eye roved over the mare.... Her
-hind legs were sheeted with fresh blood and clotted with
-dry.... Desperately he craned about to see further.
-Entrails were protruding from a knife wound.
-The inner tissues were not cut, but the opened gash had
-let them sag horribly. She had run from Tawan with
-that wound.... He had worn her to the quick in
-night; blinded her for the Hun crossing, when she would
-have done nobly with eyes uncovered.... He had
-not been able to keep her from killing herself....
-John Morning, the horseman.... He had left a
-gaping wound in the spirit of Duke Fallows....
-All that he had done was failure and loss; all that he
-had planned so passionately, so brutally, indeed, that
-the needs and the offerings of others had not reached his
-heart, because of the iron self-purpose weighed there.</p>
-
-<p>Luban, Lowenkampf, Mergenthaler, even the Commander-in-chief,
-looked strangely in through the darkened
-windows of his mind. The moral suffocation of
-the grain-fields surged over him again.... He
-caught a glimpse of that last moment in the ravine, but
-not the taking of the wallet.... Was it just a
-dream that a native leaped forward to grasp his stirrup,
-and that he leaned down to fire? He seemed to recall
-the altered brow.</p>
-
-<p>The pictures came too fast. The sky did not change.
-The something did not answer.... Eve was lying
-in the mud. She looked darker and huddled. He kissed
-her face, and as he gained his feet, the thought came
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>queerly that <i>he</i> might be dead, as she was. He held the
-thought of action to his limbs and made them move.</p>
-
-<p>When he could think more clearly, he scorned the
-pain and protest of his limbs. He would not be less
-than Eve. If he were not dead, he would die straight
-up, and on the road to Koupangtse.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">16</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>hirty-six</span> hours after Morning left Eve, an
-English correspondent at Shanhaikwan added the
-following to a long descriptive letter made up of refugee
-tales, and the edges and hearsay of the war-zone:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Night of Sept. 5.... An American whose
-name by passport is John Morning reached here to-night
-on the <i>Chinese Eastern</i>, having left Koupangtse
-this morning. According to his story, he was with
-the Russians, now in retreat from Liaoyang, on the
-night of Sept. 3, only forty-eight hours from this
-writing.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was in an unconscious condition upon
-arrival. His passage had been fourth-class for the
-journey, and he was packed among the coolies and
-refugees on an open flat-car so crowded that all but
-the desperately fatigued had room only to stand.
-This white man had fallen to the floor of the car,
-among the bare feet of the surging Oriental crowd,
-beneath their foul garments.</p>
-
-<p>... He was lifted forth from the car by the
-Chinese&mdash;a spectacle abjectly human, covered with
-filth; moreover, his body was incredibly bruised, his
-left puttee legging torn by a deep knife-wound that
-began at the knee, and traversed a distance of eight
-inches downward&mdash;the whole was gummed and black
-with blood; another knife-wound in his side was in
-an angry condition, and his clothing was stiffened
-from flow of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p>A few <i>taels</i> in paper and silver were found upon
-him; the passport, an unopened letter addressed to
-himself; also a manuscript addressed to a San Francisco
-paper, and to be delivered by John Morning.
-The natives reported that he had reached Koupangtse
-an hour before the arrival of the <i>Chinese Eastern</i>;
-had employed a native to buy him fourth-class passage,
-paying the native also to help him aboard. He
-had collapsed, however, until actually among the Chinese
-on the flat-car. He had tasted neither food nor
-drink during the long day’s journey, nor in Koupangtse
-during the wait. The natives affirm that he
-crawled part of the distance up to the railway station;
-and that there were no English or Americans
-there.</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching here, Morning was revived with
-stimulants, his wounds bathed and dressed, fresh
-clothing provided. His extraordinary vitality and
-courage indicate that he will overcome the shocks
-and exhaustion of a journey hardly paralleled anywhere,
-if his story be true. He asserts that he must
-be on his way to Tientsin to-morrow morning&mdash;but
-that, of course, is impossible.... He is not in
-condition to answer questions, although undoubtedly
-much is in his dazed and stricken brain for which
-the world is at this moment waiting.</p>
-
-<p>In his half-delirium, Morning seems occupied with
-the loss of a certain sorrel mare. He also reports
-the loss of his complete story of the battle, the preliminary
-fighting, the generals in character sketch,
-the terrain and all, covering a period of four months
-up to the moment of General Zarubaieff’s withdrawal
-from the city proper. This manuscript, said to contain
-over a hundred thousand words done on Chinese
-parchment, was in a wallet with the writer’s money,
-and was cut from him in the struggle on the bank of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>the Liao, when the wounds were received. His assailants
-were doubtless <i>Hun huises</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever can be said about the irrational parts
-of his story, the young man appears to know the
-story of the battle from the Russian standpoint. He
-brings the peculiar point of view that it was the
-millet that defeated the Russians, although the superiority
-of the Japanese in <i>morale</i>, markmanship,
-fluidity, is well known, etc.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>... Morning lay in a decent room at the Rest
-House in Shanhaikwan. There seemed an ivory finger
-in his brain pointing to the sea&mdash;to Japan, to the States.
-So long as he was walking, riding, entrained, all was
-well enough, and the rest was mere body that had to
-obey&mdash;but when he stopped, the ivory finger grew hot
-or icy by turns; and as now, he watched in agony for
-the day and the departure of the train for Tientsin.</p>
-
-<p>He would require help. Below the waist he was excruciating
-wreckage that for the present would not answer
-his will.... They were good to him here.
-The Chinese coolies had been good to him on the open
-car.... Lowenkampf, Fallows, good to him&mdash;so
-his thoughts ran&mdash;the sorrel Eve was his own heart’s
-mate. He loved her running, dying, striking. She had
-run until her heart broke. He could not do less. She
-had run until she was past pain&mdash;he must do that&mdash;and
-go on after that.... Was it still in his brain&mdash;the
-great story? Would it clear and write itself&mdash;the great
-story?</p>
-
-<p>That was the question. All was well if he could get
-Liaoyang out in words. He would do it all over again
-on the ship. Every day the ship would be carrying him
-closer to the States. He was still on schedule. He
-would reach America on the first possible ship after the
-battle of Liaoyang&mdash;possibly, ahead of mails. On the
-voyage he would re-do the book&mdash;twenty days&mdash;five
-thousand words a day. He might do it better. It might
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>come up clean out of the journey, the battle itself and
-the pictures strengthened, brightened, impregnated with
-fresh power.... Three weeks&mdash;every moment sailing
-to the States&mdash;the first and fastest ship!...
-The driving devil in his brain would be at rest. The big
-story would clear, as he began to write. The days of
-labor at first would change to days of pure instrumentation.
-He would drive at first&mdash;then the task would drive
-him.... But he must not miss a possible day to Japan&mdash;to
-Nagasaki.... He had not money for the
-passage to America. At this very moment he could not
-get out of bed&mdash;but these two were mere pups compared
-to the wolves he had met....</p>
-
-<p>They found him on the floor drawing on his clothes
-in the morning&mdash;an hour before the train. His wounds
-were bleeding, but he laughed at that.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, I’ve got to make it. You’ve been very
-kind. I’ll heal on the way&mdash;not here. I’ve got the big
-story. I’ve got to keep moving to think it out. I can’t
-think here. I’ll get on&mdash;thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>And he was on. That night his train stopped for
-ten minutes at Tongu, the town near the Taku Forts, at
-the mouth of the Pei-ho.... All day he had considered
-the chance of getting ship here, without going
-on to Tientsin, seventy miles up-river. The larger ships
-lightered their traffic from Tongu; he might catch a
-steamer sailing to-night for Japan, or at least for Chifu....
-It was getting dark.</p>
-
-<p>The face that looked through the barred window at
-the Englishman in charge of the station at Tongu unsettled
-the latter’s evening and many evenings afterward.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there a ship from the river-mouth to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>Morning repeated his question, and perceived that
-the agent had dropped his eyes to the two hands holding
-the ticket-shelf. Morning’s nails were tight in the wood;
-he would wobble if he let go.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there’s the little <i>Tungsheng</i>. She goes off to-night&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“For Japan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but she doesn’t carry passengers&mdash;that is&mdash;unless
-the Captain gives up his quarters, and he has
-already done that this trip.”</p>
-
-<p>“Deck passengers&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, all carry coolies out of here&mdash;best freight we
-have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you sell the tickets?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s going?”</p>
-
-<p>“My servant.... I won’t go on to Tientsin if
-I can get&mdash;get him on to-night&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“The launch and lighter are supposed to be down
-shortly from Tientsin&mdash;that’s all I can say. It’s blowing
-a bit. She may not clear.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll clear if any does?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Himmelhock has taken her out of here worse
-than this. You’d better decide&mdash;I’ve got to go out now.
-The train’s leaving.”</p>
-
-<p>Seventy miles up the river, he thought,&mdash;the wrong
-way if he stuck to the train. Every mile that ivory finger
-would torture him. His brain now seemed holding
-back an avalanche. If he chose falsely, he would tumble
-down the blackness with the rocks and glaciers....
-This Englishman looked a gamester&mdash;he might help.
-Perhaps he wasn’t a corpse.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll stay,” he said, and the story and all his purpose
-wobbled and grew black.... He mustn’t forget.
-He mustn’t fall.... So he stood there holding fast
-to the ticket-shelf, which he could not feel&mdash;held and
-held, and the train clattered, grew silent, and it was
-dark.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your servant?”</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s lips moved.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is your servant?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am my servant.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I can’t give a white man deck passage. It’s not
-only against the rules&mdash;but against reason.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning groped for his arm. “Take me into the
-light,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The man obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>“What day is this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Night of September six.”</p>
-
-<p>“I left Liaoyang the night of the third. I rode a good
-horse to death&mdash;along the Taitse, over the Hun and the
-Liao. I rode through the <i>Hun huises</i> twice. I was all
-cut up and beaten&mdash;the horse went over backward in the
-Hun, and in the gut on the bank of the Liao.... I
-was in Liaoyang for the battle. I was there four months
-waiting for the battle. They took my story&mdash;hundred
-thousand words&mdash;the <i>Hun huises</i> did, in the fight on the
-Liao bank. The horse killed herself running with me
-... but I’ve got it all in my head&mdash;the story. I’ll
-get to the States with it before any mail&mdash;before any
-other man. It’s all in my head&mdash;the whole Russian-end.
-I can write it again on the ship to the States in three
-weeks.... I’ve got to get off to-night. You’re the
-one to help me.... See these&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning opened his shirt and then started to undo
-his legging.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake&mdash;don’t.... But you’ll die on
-the deck&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No, the only way to kill me would be to wall me
-up&mdash;so I couldn’t keep moving.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go down to the river with you in a few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>And then he had John Morning sobbing on his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">17</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> Englishman at Tongu was a small, sallow man,
-with the face of one who is used to getting the
-worst of it. Tongu, as a post, was no exception from
-an outsider’s point of view. Morning saw this face in
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>odd lights during the days that followed. It came to the
-chamber of images&mdash;and always he wanted to break
-down, and his hands went out for the shoulder....
-He remembered a pitching junk in the windy blackness
-at the mouth of the Pei-ho. (He had seen the low mud-flats
-of the Taku forts from here in another service.)...
-The <i>Tungsheng</i> looked little&mdash;not much bigger
-than the junk, and she was wooden. There was chill
-and a slap of rain in the blackness.</p>
-
-<p>“Hul-lo, who is dere?” The slow, juicy voice came
-from the door of the pilot-house.</p>
-
-<p>“Endicott. I’ve got a deck passenger&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh&mdash;dere dick as meggots alretty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“This is a kitchen coolie of mine&mdash;he must go. Send
-someone down to make a place and take his transportation&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The grumbling that followed was a matter of habit
-rather than of effectiveness. Morning seemed to see the
-lower lip from which the voice came, a thick and loppy
-member.... The mate came down, stepping from
-shoulder to back, across the complaining natives. They
-were three deep on the deck. He kicked clear a hole
-in the lee of the cabin.... Morning sank in, and
-Endicott bent to whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“Put the grub-basket between your knees and don’t
-take your hands off it.... Put the blanket over it.
-It’s a thick, good blanket. I could give you a better
-passage, but they wouldn’t take you&mdash;honest, they
-wouldn’t. If they see you’re white, tell old Himmelhock
-you’re Endicott’s house-coolie. He can’t do anything
-now.... If you live, write and send the big story
-to Endicott at Tongu.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning was sinking to sleep. He felt the warmth
-of the blanket, a thick, rough blanket Endicott had donated.
-Its warmth was like the man’s heart....
-Morning’s hands went out. A coolie growled at him....
-There was no worry now. It was the night of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>the sixth, and he was sailing. He could do no more;
-the ivory finger in his brain neither froze nor burned....
-The pitching did not rouse him&mdash;nor the men of
-sewers and fields&mdash;sick where they sat&mdash;woven, matted
-together, trusting to the animal heat of the mass to keep
-from dying of exposure. John Morning lay in the midst
-of them&mdash;John Morning whose body would not die.</p>
-
-<p>The days and nights rushed together....</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he wondered if he were not back at the
-shipping&mdash;in some stock-car with the horses&mdash;but horses
-were so clean compared to this.... When he could
-think, he put clean lint to his wounds. He scorned pain,
-for he was on his way; and much was merciful coma.</p>
-
-<p>There was rain, deluges; and though the air rose
-heavy as amber afterward, the freshness at the time was
-salvation. He learned as it is probable no other American
-ever learned, what it means to live in the muck of
-men. All one at the beginning and at the ending, it is
-marvelous how men separate their lives in the interval&mdash;how
-little they know of one another, and how easily
-foolish noses turn up. Here was a man alive&mdash;dreaming
-of the baths he had missed, of Japanese Inn baths
-most of all.</p>
-
-<p>“Who am I?” he asked.... “John Morning,”
-would whip back to him from somewhere. “And who
-in hell is John Morning to revolt at the sufferings of
-other men?”</p>
-
-<p>He had seen the coolies in the steerage of many ships&mdash;even
-these massed deck passages of the Yellow and
-China Seas and the Coasting trade. He had looked at
-them before as one looks into a cage of animals. Now
-he was one of those who looked out, one of the <i>slumees</i>.
-Once he asked, “Is this the bottom of the human drain,
-and if not&mdash;must I sink to it?”</p>
-
-<p>The Chinese did steal his food that first night, but
-fed him occasionally from their own stock. Finding him
-white, they fouled him, but kept him warm....
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>The <i>Tungsheng</i> ran into Chifu harbor to avoid a storm,
-and a full day was lost. John Morning had no philosophy
-then&mdash;a hell-minded male full of sickness&mdash;not
-good to view, even through the bars of a cage. But at
-best to sit five hours, where he sat more than five days
-and nights, would condemn the mind of any white man
-or woman to chaos, or else restore it to the fine sanity of
-Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p>And then the day when the breeze turned warm and
-the Islands were green!... Coolies were men that
-hour, men with eyes that melted to ineffable softness.
-It was like Jesus coming toward them on the sea&mdash;the
-green hills of Japan. Their hearts broke with emotion;
-they wept and loved one another&mdash;this mass all molten
-and integrated into one. It was like the Savior coming
-to meet them through the warm bright air. He would
-make them clean; their eyes would follow Him
-always....</p>
-
-<p>Morning was not the only one who had to be carried
-ashore at Shimoneseki, after the quarantine officer had
-finished with the herd. His passport saved him. “I
-had to come. It was the first ship out of Tongu. Deck
-passage was the only way they would take me,” was the
-simple story. He was fevered, but strangely subdued
-that day. Himmelhock was at the door of the pilot-house,
-when Morning looked up from the shore a last
-time, and his native sailors, bare to the thigh, were
-sluicing the decks.</p>
-
-<p>The bath was heaven. He was able to walk afterward.
-The officials burned his clothing, but made it
-possible for him to buy a few light things. The wound
-in his leg was healing; the bruises fading away. The
-wound in his side did not heal; it was angry as a feline
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>He had bandages, but no stockings; clean canvas
-clothing, but no underwear.... He found that he
-had to wait before answering when anyone spoke; and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>then he was not quite sure if he had answered, and
-would try again&mdash;until they stopped him. Somewhere
-long ago there was a parrot whose eyes were rimmed&mdash;with
-red-brown, and of stony opaqueness. He couldn’t
-recall where the parrot was, but it had something to do
-with him when he was little, almost beyond memory.
-His eyes now felt just as the parrot’s had looked.</p>
-
-<p>It was a night run back to Nagasaki by rail&mdash;his
-thought was of ships, ships, ships. He could stand off
-from the world and see the ships&mdash;all the lines of tossing,
-steaming ships. Then he would go down to the deck of
-one&mdash;and below and aft where Asiatics were crowded
-together. To the darkest and thickest place among
-them he would go, and there lie and rest until the finger
-in his brain roused him. Then he would find that
-the train had stopped. It was the halt that awakened
-him.</p>
-
-<p>There were two ships, all but ready to clear for the
-States, lying in the harbor of Nagasaki that morning.
-The first was the liner <i>Coptic</i>, but she had to go north
-first, a day at Kobe, and two days at Yokohama, before
-taking the long southeastern slide to Honolulu. She was
-faster than the American transport, <i>Sickles</i> (with a light
-load of sick and insane from the Islands), but the latter
-was clearing for Honolulu at sundown and would reach
-San Francisco at least one day earlier than the liner.
-Moreover, the <i>Coptic</i> would have recent mails; the
-<i>Sickles</i> would beat the mails.</p>
-
-<p>Money was waiting for him at Tokyo, less than an
-hour’s journey from Yokohama; he would have good
-care and a comfortable passage home on the old liner,
-but his brain burned at the thought. Four days north&mdash;not
-homeward.... The <i>Sickles</i> was clipper-built&mdash;she
-was white and clean-lined, lying out in the harbor,
-in the midst of black collier babies. She was off for
-Home to-night. He had traveled home once before on a
-transport. He was American and she&mdash;the flag was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>there, run together a bit in the vivid light, but the flag
-was there! And to-night he would be at sea&mdash;pulling
-himself together for the big story, alone with the big
-story&mdash;the ship never stopping&mdash;unless they stopped in
-ocean to drop the dead....</p>
-
-<p>The actual cost of the transport passage is very little,
-merely a computation for food and berth; the difficulty
-is to obtain the permit. As it was, he had not enough
-money, barely enough to get up to Yokohama, second
-class on the <i>Coptic</i>; and yet, this hardly entered. It was
-like a home city, this American ship, to one who had
-been in the alien heart of the Chinese country so long.
-He would know someone, and a telegram from ’Frisco
-would bring money to him. He had a mighty reliance
-from the big story.</p>
-
-<p>The U. S. quartermaster at Nagasaki was a tired old
-man. He advised Morning to cable to Manila for permission.
-Morning did not say that he lacked money
-for this, but repeated his wish to go. The old man
-thought a minute and then referred him to Ferry, the
-<i>Sickles</i> quartermaster. He had been doing this for thirty
-years, referring others to others so that all matters
-merely struck and glanced from him. Thus he kept an
-open mind. Morning wanted something to take from
-this office to Ferry of the <i>Sickles</i>. The resistance he
-encountered heated him. The smell of the deck-passage
-was in his nostrils; it seemed in his veins, and made him
-afraid that others caught the taint. The old quartermaster
-did not help him. Morning could hear his own
-voice, but could not hold in mind what he said....
-The officer did not seem to be interested in Liaoyang.
-This disturbed him. It made him ask if he had not
-gone mad after all&mdash;if he could be wrong on this main
-trend, that he had something the world wanted.</p>
-
-<p>He took a <i>sampan</i> at the harbor-front and went
-aboard the transport. Ferry, the <i>Sickles</i> quartermaster,
-was a tall, lean man with a shut smile that drooped.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>The face was a pinched and diminished Mergenthaler,
-and brought out the clouds and the manias of Morning’s
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>Were all quartermasters the same? What had become
-of men? Had the world lost interest in monster heroisms?
-Ferry did not help him&mdash;on the contrary, stood
-looking down with the insolence of superior inches.
-Morning found himself telling about the sorrel mare.
-That would not do. He returned to the main fact that
-he had the big story and must get across the Pacific
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t take you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning heard it, but couldn’t believe. He tried to
-tell about the <i>Hun huises</i> and the loss of the manuscript,
-the walk to Koupangtse&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Really&mdash;it’s no affair of mine. I can’t take you on....
-The <i>Coptic</i> is sailing&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>And just now Mr. Reever Kennard appeared on the
-deck. The summer had added portliness. He was in
-flannels&mdash;a spectacle for children and animals....
-The insignificance of all about was quickened when Mr.
-Reever Kennard appeared. The decks were less white,
-sailors, soldiers more enlisted. John Morning became
-an integer of the <i>Tungsheng’s</i> deck-passage again, and
-the lining of his nostrils retained the reek of it.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Mr. Kennard?” he said. His back
-was different. He felt a leniency there, very new or very
-ancient, as he turned to Ferry, adding: “This gentleman
-knows me. We parted in Tokyo this Spring, when I
-went over with the Russians. I met him long ago in the
-Philippine service. He will tell you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Ferry’s face grew suddenly saturnine, his eyes held in
-the glance of the famous correspondent’s.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll please count it closed&mdash;I can’t take you.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning now turned to Kennard, who was sealing
-with his tongue a little flap of cigar-wrapper which may
-have prevented the perfect draught. Morning bowed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>and moved aft, where the dust of the coaling was thick,
-and the scores of natives, women and men, who handled
-the baskets, were a distraction which kept the reality
-from stifling him. Presently he went ashore and it was
-noon.... He could not understand Kennard; could
-not believe in an American doing what Ferry had done,
-to a man who had the big story of Liaoyang. It was
-some hideous mistake; he had not been able to make
-himself understood.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sickles</i> launch was leaving the pier at two.
-Morning was there and took a seat. He was holding
-himself&mdash;the avalanche again&mdash;and rehearsing in his
-mind what he should say to Ferry. His brain was afire;
-the wound in his side had scalded him so long that his
-voice had a whimper in it. He had not eaten&mdash;the
-thought was repulsive&mdash;but he had bought drink in the
-thought of clearing his brain and deadening his
-hurt....</p>
-
-<p>His brain was clearer on the launch, but the gin
-fumed out of him as he approached the upper deck,
-where Ferry’s quarters were.</p>
-
-<p>The Quartermaster saw him, but was speaking to an
-infantry captain. Morning waited by the rail. Many
-times he thought&mdash;if he could only begin to speak <i>now</i>.
-Yet he feared in his heart when Ferry turned to him,
-he would fail. It was something little and testy in the
-man&mdash;something so different from what he had known in
-the great strains of Liaoyang&mdash;except for Luban. Yes,
-Ferry was like Luban, when Luban was in the presence
-of a fancied inferior.... They talked on&mdash;Morning
-thought of murder at last. A peculiar wiry strength
-gathered about the idea of murder in its connection with
-Ferry’s dark, mean face. He felt all the old strength
-in his hands, and more from days of pain&mdash;days of holding
-one’s self&mdash;will, body, brain.</p>
-
-<p>“Well&mdash;&mdash;” Ferry had turned to him suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s thoughts winged away with a swarm of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>details of the crime.... “I could tell you something
-of the Story&mdash;I could show you how they cut me
-on the Liao&mdash;the <i>Hun huises</i>&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“If you come to this deck again&mdash;I’ll send you ashore
-in irons.”</p>
-
-<p>At four that afternoon Morning saw the <i>Coptic</i> draw
-up her chains and slide out of the harbor, with the swift
-ease of a river-ferry.... He could not count himself
-whipped on the <i>Sickles</i>&mdash;and this is the real beginning
-of John Morning. He was Fate-driven. The man
-who did not have the courage to ask his rights in Tokyo&mdash;to
-inquire the reason of his disbarment, was not
-through with the American transport <i>Sickles</i>. A full
-day ahead of the mails in San Francisco&mdash;and he was
-waiting for the dusk. The fight had been brought to
-him. He was dull to the idea of being whipped.</p>
-
-<p>Three enlisted men were drinking in the little apothecary
-shop which Morning had used for the day’s headquarters.
-They belonged to the <i>Sickles</i>. They had been
-taking just one more drink for many minutes. He told
-them he was sailing on the transport and joined them
-in a <i>sampan</i> to the ship when it was dark. The harbor
-was still as a dream; the dark blending with the water....
-They touched the bellying white plates of the
-ship. Morning seemed to come up from infinite depths....
-The men were very drunk; they had ordered
-rapidly toward the end; the effect caught up as swiftly
-now. They helped each other officiously. Morning put
-on the fallen hat of one who had become unconscious....
-The watch was of them, a corporal, who was no
-trouble-maker. He blustered profusely and hurried
-them below.... Morning was bewildered. He had
-spoken no word, but helped the others carry the body, a
-wobbly deputation, down among the hammocks....
-He heard the voices of those maimed in mind....
-He placed his end of the soldier’s body down, left his
-companions, and made his way forward, to where the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>hammocks were farther apart. Early years had given
-him a sort of enlisted man’s consciousness of things; and
-he knew now not to take another’s place. He chose one
-from a pile of hammocks and slung it forward, close to
-the bulk-head of the bedlam, and well out of the lights....
-He lay across his only baggage, a package containing
-a thousand sheets of Chinese parchment. He
-lay rigid, trying to remember if out-going ships took a
-pilot out of Nagasaki.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the anchor-chain. He was very close to it.
-The voices of the sun-struck and vino-maddened men
-from the Islands were deadened by the hideous grating
-of the links in the socket.... It was not too late
-for him to be put ashore even now; since it was war-time.
-Of course there would be a pilot, for the harbor
-was mined.... He drew the canvas about his ears,
-but the voices of the brain-dead men reached him....
-Cats, pirates, and river-reptiles terrified them;
-one man was still lost in a jungle set with bolo-traps;
-the emptiness of others was filled by strange abominations
-glad of the flesh again.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">18</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e</span> had been listening to Duke Fallows for a long
-time&mdash;Duke’s voice blended with war and storm
-and a woman’s laugh.... Then he reverted to the
-idea of murdering Ferry. Finally someone said:</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a new one from Nagasaki. He’s got the
-fevers&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>And then:</p>
-
-<p>“Who in hell is he?”</p>
-
-<p>They began to ask questions. Morning answered
-nothing. Day had come. He heard the throb of the
-engines, felt the swell of the sea, but the strength of
-yesterday’s concentration was still upon him. It had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>built a wall around him, holding the life of his mind
-there; as a life of low desires imprisons the spirit to its
-own vile region after death.... He did not speak,
-but looked from face to face for Ferry.</p>
-
-<p>They ceased to expect an answer from him....
-A young doctor appeared. His eyes rolled queerly; his
-cheek folded over his mouth, as if he were beyond
-words from drink, and tremendously pleased with his
-prowess. They called him Nevin. He prepared himself
-profoundly for speech. Morning now realized the nimbleness
-of Nevin’s hands, unwinding the filthy bandages.
-Presently, the Doctor straightened up, passed
-his hand over his brow, tongued the other cheek, and
-after a sweating suspense ordered:</p>
-
-<p>“Take him to the hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>A white room.... The Doctor came again.
-They took his clothing and bathed him.... He
-heard and smelled the sea through an open port ...
-glad, but utterly weary ... waiting for Ferry.</p>
-
-<p>“My God&mdash;not only cut, but trampled&mdash;&mdash;” a voice
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Morning felt if he were alone with Nevin he could
-have said something.... The Doctor looked like
-a jockey he had once known. It wasn’t that, however,
-that gave him heart, but the quick, gentle hands....
-More and more as he watched the dusty face with its
-ineffable gravity, he saw bright humanity burning like
-a forge-fire behind the mask. This brought tears to his
-own eyes. Nevin, seeing them, became altogether nervous
-to look at, seemed to have a walnut in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>And now John Morning felt himself breaking&mdash;he
-was brittle, hard like glass&mdash;and his last idea concerned
-the package of Chinese parchment which they had not
-brought from the hammock.... Six days afterward
-he asked for it.</p>
-
-<p>For a short while each day, during the interval, he
-just touched the main idea and sank back to sleep. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>suffered very little. The after-effects of his journey
-from Liaoyang tried to murder him in various ways, but
-relaxation, nourishment, good air and care worked as a
-sort of continuous anæsthesia. On this sixth day the
-Doctor appeared to ignore his question about the package
-of paper, but leaned forward, glanced to the right and
-left, as if to communicate a plan to scuttle the ship, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re one more little man. You’ve had a new one
-each day&mdash;pneumonia, sclerosis, brain-fever....
-My hospital report on your case will drive the Major-Surgeon
-into permanent retirement.... What
-did you say was the matter to-day&mdash;Chinese parchment?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got so much to do, Doctor?... What day
-is this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Morning of the nineteenth.”</p>
-
-<p>The color swept into Morning’s face, terror into his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t think it was so bad as that&mdash;I can’t lay up
-any more&mdash;twelve days left.... Two weeks and
-two days since I rode out of Liaoyang&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have to let ’em put you in the forward hutch&mdash;if
-you begin to talk Liaoyang, now that your fever’s
-down. There wasn’t any Americans in that fighting&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not a soldier&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Nevin wrung his hands. A thought recurred to
-Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“There was a couple of letters in my clothes&mdash;one
-addressed to a paper in ’Frisco, and one to me.”</p>
-
-<p>The other was curious enough to send an orderly to
-search.</p>
-
-<p>“Have him bring the package of paper, too,” Morning
-said. When all was brought in good order, he added:
-“This letter to me I’ll read later. The larger package is
-Duke Fallows’ first hurried story of the battle of Liaoyang.
-I won’t read that either, because I’ve got to do
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>one of my own. I did one, you know&mdash;ten times as long
-as this&mdash;but the <i>Hun huises</i> got it on the Liao-crossing,
-from Tawan&mdash;that’s where I got cut up. Morning of
-the fourth, it was.... The sorrel mare did fifteen
-miles with her guts sticking out, and I walked thirty to
-Koupangtse, with these wounds and smashed from a
-couple of falls&mdash;before the morning of the fifth....
-You can look at Duke Fallows’ story, Doctor, and I’ll
-take a little doze&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows’ battle was done clearly as a football game,
-and as briskly, to the withdrawal of the Russian lines
-upon the inner positions of the city and the flanking
-movement of Kuroki. A dramatic pause then to survey
-the Russian force on the eve of disaster, from which
-the reader drew the big moral sickness. After that
-Lowenkampf, the millet and the Ploughman. In quite a
-remarkable way Fallows turned the reader now from
-the mass to the individual. In a little trampled place
-in the grain the battle was lost by the Russians and won
-by Japan.... The Doctor was interrupted several
-times, but no force was missed. It was a new voice to
-him. He wondered if Fallows would make the world
-hear it. It seemed to compel a reckoning.</p>
-
-<p>The Fallows story laughed all the way. One did not
-have to look twice at a sentence to understand, yet two
-readings did not wear it out, nor would it leave one
-alone. All the time the Doctor read, matters he had
-heard in delirium from the lips of John Morning came
-back.</p>
-
-<p>Nevin remembered the tears on the first morning,
-the choke in his own throat; the first sight of the wounds,
-the queer, extra zeal he had put into this case. Finally
-he could hardly wait to learn the rest&mdash;chiefly how John
-Morning had happened to be lying in the darkest end
-of the hammock-hole, over against the insane compartment....
-Yet he did not wake up his patient.
-When Morning finally opened his eyes, it was time for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>nourishment. Nevin brought a glass of extra wine before
-inquiring. “First, tell me&mdash;has Ferry seen me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Ferry, the quartermaster?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather think not. He’s about occasionally&mdash;but
-his truck with the sick men is mostly transportation and
-nourishment&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“The second time I came to ask him to take me
-across that afternoon&mdash;the second time,” Morning said
-slowly, “he told me that if I appeared on his deck again
-he’d send me ashore in irons. You see the <i>Sickles</i> is to
-beat the <i>Coptic</i> in. I had to come. Why, the mails
-couldn’t beat me through from Liaoyang.... I
-finally got aboard with some soldiers&mdash;but I would have
-leeched to the anchor.... And, say, I think I
-knew you that morning. It seemed as if I could let go
-when I felt your hands&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The two were quiet. The Doctor looked obliquely at
-an open port with one eye shut, as if he were not sure of
-the count....</p>
-
-<p>Accompanying the manuscript was a letter to Noyes,
-editor of <i>Western States</i>, which chiefly concerned John
-Morning. Many brave things were said....
-Nevin, deeply stirred with the whole business, saw the
-Ploughman coming forth from the millet&mdash;saw the
-Ploughman going home. That little drama so dear to
-Fallows’ heart <i>was</i> greater than Liaoyang. Nevin saw
-that such things are deathless.... Deathless&mdash;that’s
-the word. They look little at the time in the midst
-of thunder and carnage; but the thunder dies away and
-the rains come and clean the stains&mdash;and the spirit of it
-all lives in one deed or in one sentence. A woman nurses
-the sick at Scutari, and the Crimean war is known for
-the angel of its battlefield, by the many who do not know
-who fought, nor what for.... Nevin felt the big
-forces throbbing in the world&mdash;the work of the world.
-It had come to him distantly before. It had pulled him
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>out of the comfort and ease of his home town to serve
-the sick at sea and in the Islands.</p>
-
-<p>The mystery of service. He had never dared tell
-anyone. His voice broke so easily. He had covered
-the weakness in leers and impediments, so the world
-would not see. He had talked of his rights and his
-wages, the dusty-faced little man. Mystery of Service&mdash;and
-men were ashamed when it touched them.</p>
-
-<p>But Fallows, laughing and so powerful, this boy’s
-man-friend, wasn’t afraid. Was the boy afraid? What
-had driven him? Did the boy know what had driven
-him? What, in God’s name, had driven this human
-engine that would not stop&mdash;that threw off poisons and
-readjusted itself against the individual and collective
-organizations of death?</p>
-
-<p>Nevin was shaken by the whole story&mdash;it girded,
-girdled him.... Let Ferry come. Ferry was one
-of those bleak despoilers of human effort, whose presence
-consumed the reality in another. What was Ferry
-anyway and Ferry’s sort&mdash;a spoiled child or an ancient
-decadent principle? Was it merely a child-soul with a
-universe ahead, or was he very old and very ill&mdash;incorrigible
-self-love on its road back to nothing?...
-But the Ploughman lived, Fallows lived, the boy Morning
-lived&mdash;their work was marching on.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor did not speak, because his voice would
-break. He went about his work instead&mdash;swift magnetic
-hands.... At least, he could stand between
-Morning and the quartermaster&mdash;if there were need.</p>
-
-<p>When he came back Morning was at work, a hard
-bright look of tension about him, and a line of white
-under the strange young beard....</p>
-
-<p>“I think I can get it going now. I think it is beginning
-to come again,” he said in a hushed tone. The
-Doctor arranged the pillows better, sharpened an extra
-pencil and went out.</p>
-
-<p>“I may have to do those first pages again,” he said
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>an hour later. “It’s hard to get out of the hospital&mdash;you
-know, what I mean&mdash;a man’s bath is so important
-to one lying-up that it shuts out a battle-line. What a
-fool a sick man is. But I’ll get it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He fell asleep in the dusk before the candles came.
-The Doctor found him cool, his breathing normal....
-The next day Morning worked until Nevin remonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll die, if you go on&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll die, if I don’t,” said Morning. The Doctor
-knew in his heart that it was true. Still they compromised.
-That night, as Morning dropped down into
-an abyss of exhaustion, he mumbled the whole story of
-Eve&mdash;the sorrel mare. “She rose to her feet&mdash;white
-death in her eyes,” he finished....</p>
-
-<p>Nothing attracts the eye on ship-board like a man
-at work. All idle ones are caught in the current and
-come to pay their devoirs to the man mastered by a
-strong task.... The Doctor had Morning taken
-to an extra berth in his own state-room. The door had
-a spring lock, for many medicines and stores were there.
-Ferry was not likely to happen in the Doctor’s quarters.
-The latter even doubted if he would recognize Morning.
-He came and went, as the task drove on. Once Morning
-stopped to tell him about the deck passage on the
-<i>Tungsheng</i>, and another time about his brush with the
-<i>Hun huises</i> in the ravine across the river from Tawan....
-The Doctor saw that Morning had made a wonderful
-instrument of himself; he studied how the passion
-of an artist works on the body of man. The other
-found that so long as he ate regularly and fell asleep
-without a struggle&mdash;he was allowed to go on.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sickles</i> was swinging down into the warmth.
-The sick man had a bad day, lying in the harbor at
-Honolulu.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t the work, Doctor&mdash;it’s the ship’s stopping,”
-Morning said, squirming in the berth. “It makes my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>head hot. I see steamy and all that. I had it when the
-<i>Tungsheng</i> lay up for a day in Chifu on account of the
-blow.... I had it that day in Nagasski when Ferry
-wouldn’t take me on. I’ll be all right to-night....
-Give me a little touch of that gin and lime juice&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Just lime juice when heads get hot.... You’re
-a clever little drunkard. I’ve been wondering how far
-you’d go.... Yes, we’ll clear to-night....
-Ferry’s ashore. Come out and see the black boys dive
-for pennies.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“There’s something doing with this knife-wound&mdash;it
-doesn’t heal,” the Doctor said, mid-way between the Islands
-and the Farallonnes. “The leg’s all right. Organs
-and all the little organs seem to thrive on work. That
-is, they’re no worse. The leg heals&mdash;but this one&mdash;you
-seem to have established a permanent drain&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty pages yesterday&mdash;two hundred words a page,”
-Morning muttered.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;and the day before&mdash;and to-morrow&mdash;and the
-night we left Honolulu.... If a man worked that
-way for money, he’d be as dead as Ferry inside of a
-month.... Have you read your friend Fallows’
-story yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t dare&mdash;a sick man isn’t all himself. And
-<i>this</i> story is me. It’s got to be me. It’s better in places
-than the other, the one I lost.... I haven’t read
-Duke’s letter to me yet. He’s strong medicine. He keeps
-coming back to me, as it is. I want to get off alone when
-the work is done and think. You can’t see him all, when
-he’s in a room with you.... He was like you, in
-being a friend to me.... Yet, I seem to know you
-better. You’ve helped me so. I’m pretty happy the way
-the story is coming&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“See how long you can go without a drink to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“It starts me off, you see. It doesn’t seem to touch
-me&mdash;just steams right off with the work&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span></p>
-<p>“That’s rotten sophistry. I’m watching you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Nevin had never seen a body so driven by will.
-Morning appeared no worse; certainly he was no better;
-his brain was in absolute abeyance; his will crashed
-through clouds of enervation and irresolution. There
-were times when Nevin believed Morning would collapse,
-when he was finished with Liaoyang, but he was
-not so sure now. He was sure, however, that he must
-not interfere except in extremity.... This was
-part of the big work. Somehow he trusted in Duke
-Fallows&mdash;who had allowed the boy to write the detailed
-battle-end, and gone back to Europe to feed the
-babes of the Ploughman. That last made him want to
-doctor the whole world....</p>
-
-<p>Morning had done the story and re-written the lead.
-The <i>Sickles</i> would enter the Gate at daylight.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s seventy-five or eighty thousand words of it.
-It’s good&mdash;unless I’m crazy. It’s good, unless this is
-all a dream. God, I’m thirsty.”</p>
-
-<p>With the work done for the day, however, he asked
-for lime juice and water. His temperature was less
-than two points above normal; nothing had broken; yet
-the voyage had not replenished Morning’s body. He
-could hardly stand.</p>
-
-<p>“To-night I’ll read the Fallows’ stuff&mdash;and the
-letters.... Doctor, can you get me ashore
-early?”</p>
-
-<p>“Think a minute&mdash;you don’t know what you ask&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Quarantine&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Nevin nodded. “There’s extra attention to a ship like
-this&mdash;they’ll have to see that running wound of yours
-for instance&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you don’t report it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor’s lower jaw reached down, and to the
-right, finding the walnut. “You wouldn’t even read
-Duke Fallows’ story before you wrote yours. A man
-can’t lie in his own work&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been so good,” Morning said huskily. “I
-begin to expect miracles&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You can get messages&mdash;telegrams, letters&mdash;ashore....
-And then it may only take a couple of hours.
-There isn’t any contagion here that I know of.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning first read Fallows’ letter to Noyes, editor
-<i>Western States</i>. It told of the story accompanying&mdash;but
-more of the bearer. Laughing, loving-hearted, eloquent&mdash;Fallows
-was all through it, and fine gifts of the man’s
-thinking. There was suggestion to Noyes to use Morning’s
-story and get it across simultaneously in New York.
-“The boy has never yet, so far as I can see, found time
-to arrange a decent payment for his work. Please observe
-that unless some one, equally as capable, gets into
-Port Arthur, Morning’s story will be the biggest feature
-of the war in a newspaper way. I’m going on to Europe
-on the Ploughman story. Let Morning do the big battle&mdash;I’ll
-begin to crackle later.”</p>
-
-<p>And then Morning read the story.... His
-voice trailed up finally from the shadows of lower
-berth. “It’s good,” he said to the Doctor after midnight.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s dam’ good. It’s better than mine.... He
-was alive with it&mdash;I mean with the <i>Ploughman</i>. It’s the
-way he did it. He tried to get it across before we separated.
-He told me from every angle&mdash;told Lowenkampf&mdash;told
-them all at the station at Yentai. None of us
-could see.... He was crazed about it&mdash;that we
-couldn’t see. We were all choked with blood and death
-that night. He said Kuropatkin and the others would
-see that the Ploughman was right&mdash;if they had a sense
-of humor. Such density to humor, he called the sin
-against the Holy Ghost&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>After they had talked many minutes, Morning
-broke the seal to his own letter and learned why
-he had been barred from the earlier Japanese
-armies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">19</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> fineness of Fallows, of Nevin, of Endicott, the
-station-agent at Tongu, the risen humanity of the
-Ploughman&mdash;Morning’s soul to sense these men was
-empty within him. All that he knew was blood and
-blow and force and mass and hate. He lay panting and
-possessed. As he had plotted in delirium how to kill
-Ferry, dwelling upon the process and the death; so
-Reever Kennard came in now for a hatred as perfect and
-destructive. The letter had called up something of the
-same force which had driven John Morning from Liaoyang,
-over or through every barrier to the present hour
-in which the <i>Sickles</i> lay off the entrance of the Golden
-Gate waiting for dawn, thirty-six hours ahead of the
-<i>Coptic</i>.</p>
-
-<p>His work was diminished in his own mind; the value
-of his story was lost, the zest to market it, the sense of
-the world’s waiting. He was a thief in the eyes of men.
-A man cannot steal. They believed him a thief....
-He thought of moving about the halls of the <i>Imperial</i>
-that day&mdash;of his thoughts as he had watched from the
-window in the billiard-room while the picture was taken.
-He had been tranced in terror.... Had he but
-known, he would have made a hell in that house. He
-saw Reever Kennard again on the deck of the <i>Sickles</i>&mdash;his
-turning to Kennard for help&mdash;unparalleled shame....
-The thing he desired with such terrible zeal
-now was enacted in his brain. That hour on the deck
-of the <i>Sickles</i> was repeated, but this time he knew what
-Kennard had done. He called him to the lie in imagination.
-The jowl was heavy with scorn and the small
-slow eyes were bright with fear&mdash;yet they took nothing
-back and Morning moved closer and closer demanding,
-until the devil broke from him, and his knotted hand
-sank into the soft center of the man. He watched the
-writhing of that clean flanneled liar, watched him arise.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>The hand sank once more ... the vile play romping
-through his mind again and again&mdash;hideous fighting
-of a man brought up among stable and race-track and
-freight-route ruffians&mdash;the fighting that feels no pain
-and only a knockout can stop....</p>
-
-<p>“Wow&mdash;it’s hot as hell in here,” came from Nevin in
-the upper bunk.</p>
-
-<p>A little before dawn, utterly ravaged by the poison
-of his thinking, Morning was struck by the big idea. He
-turned on the light, steadied himself to paper and pencil
-and wrote to Noyes of the <i>Western States</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Inclosed find (I) Duke Fallows’ first story of
-Liaoyang; (II) his letter to you, containing among
-other things information concerning the bearer;
-(III) the first ten thousand words of my eighty-thousand-word
-story of the battle fought a month
-ago to an hour&mdash;including sketches of Kuropatkin,
-and others, covering exactly terrain, the entire position,
-strategy, and finally the cause of the Russian
-disaster, with word-picture of the retreat, done on
-the day when it was at its height. The writer left
-the field and made the journey to Koupangtse alone,
-nearly one hundred miles to the railroad. This is the
-only American eye-witness story besides Fallows’.
-The mails of the second-hand reports will not reach
-here before the arrival of the <i>Coptic</i>.... I will
-sell this story to the <i>Western States</i> on condition that
-it appear in the <i>World-News</i>, New York, simultaneously&mdash;the
-story to be run in not less than seven
-installments, beginning by telegraph to-morrow. I
-insist on the <i>World-News</i>, but have no objection to
-the general syndicating of the story by the <i>Western
-States</i>, my price for the American newspaper rights
-being $1,800 and transportation to New York.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“In God’s name, are you doing another book?”
-Nevin demanded, letting himself down from the berth.
-“What’s the matter&mdash;you’re on fire?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span></p>
-<p>Morning was counting off the large first installment
-of his manuscript. He placed it upon the table, with the
-Fallows’ story and the two letters to Noyes....
-Then he put an empty water-pitcher on it, restoring the
-balance of his story to its place under his pillow.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen” he said, clutching Nevin’s arm, “here’s the
-whole thing&mdash;if I’m sick to-morrow. Give it to the reporter
-from the <i>Western States</i>&mdash;make him see it is life-blood.
-Make him rush with it to Noyes. It’s the whole
-business.... He’ll get it&mdash;before the quarantine
-is lifted, if you&mdash;oh, if you can! It’s all there....
-You do this for me?”</p>
-
-<p>“And where will you be all this time&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Nevin&mdash;Nevin&mdash;for God’s sake put me to sleep!
-I’m full of burning and devils! Fill up that needle
-business and put me to sleep!... I can’t wait to
-get across in the New York <i>World-News</i>. That’s Reever
-Kennard’s own paper.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">20</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> voices sounded far and muted&mdash;voices one
-might hear when swimming under water. It was
-easier for him to stay down than rise and answer. He
-seemed carried in the strong flow of a river, and preserved
-a consciousness, very vague, that it meant death
-to go down with the stream. At last, opening his eyes,
-he saw the city over the pier-sheds.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the manuscript was still under the pillow,
-but the water-pitcher rested upon the bare wood of
-the table. It was after twelve. His deadly fury had
-burned itself out. The thought of the <i>World-News</i> taking
-the story, steadied his weakness. It was much
-harder to dress than usual, however. He had no shore
-clothes, but Nevin would see to that for him. With a
-glad thrill, he realized that the <i>Sickles</i> had passed the
-quarantine, or she wouldn’t be in the slip. His mind
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>turned to Nevin again, and when he was thinking about
-this deep-rooted habit the voyage had inculcated, the
-Doctor himself entered.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you gave me a night.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have some rest now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve brought some clothes for you to go ashore
-with.... The <i>Western States</i> got your story two
-hours ago. Ferry has gone ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the reporter take it here&mdash;or from across the
-harbor in quarantine?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was waiting with others&mdash;for us to be turned
-loose. I gave him the stuff as we were putting about.
-He didn’t come aboard, I saw his launch reach landing.
-I told him to put the stuff into the hands of Noyes and
-to hurry back. All of which he did&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Why to hurry back?”</p>
-
-<p>The little man’s mouth gave way to strange twistings,
-and he answered grudgingly, “Well, I had a story
-to give him.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning took a room at the Armory, refusing a loan
-from the Doctor. “I’ll have it shortly&mdash;plenty, I think.
-I’ll lie up there until I hear from Noyes. I may hurry
-East&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The process was not clear exactly, but the old story
-of <i>Mio Amigo</i> had given him a terror of borrowing.
-The Armory was nearby. It was clean and cheap. This
-little decision of choosing the Armory, a result of <i>Mio
-Amigo</i>, too, is the most important so far.... The
-Doctor went with him. The two were hushed and sick
-with things to say. Nevin felt he was losing the throb
-of great service; that he could not hold it all after this
-power-house of a man went his way. It was not only
-Morning, but Morning was attached to the large, quiet
-doings and seeings of the stranger named Duke Fallows.</p>
-
-<p>Morning loved the Doctor. Nevin did not tower;
-Nevin was instantly in his comprehension. Their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>throats tightened.... Nevin saw him to the light
-little room, and said as he was leaving:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been all over Chinatown, looking up a formula
-for that wound that won’t heal. It’s this&mdash;full directions
-inclosed. You’ll have to get settled before you try
-it out.”</p>
-
-<p>He disappeared saying he would be back. Morning
-put the envelope in a wallet, which he had carried afield....
-It was not yet two in the afternoon. There
-was a timorous rap at the door. Morning’s head dropped
-over drowsily. The door opened just a little and a voice
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Is there a sick American soldier in here?”</p>
-
-<p>It was low and timorous like the tapping, but there
-was a laugh in it, and something that drove the wildness
-out of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“And may I come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>She was slight and young and pale. She passed between
-the window and his eyes. Her brown hair seemed
-half-transparent. The day was bright, but not yellow;
-its soft gray luster was exactly the woman’s tone. There
-was a curious unreality about the whole figure. The
-light in her eyes was like the light in the window; gray
-eyes and very deep. So quietly, she came, and the day
-was quiet, the house&mdash;a queer hush everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“There are a few of us who meet the transports&mdash;and
-call on the sick soldiers. We talk to them&mdash;write
-letters or telegrams. Sometimes they are very glad. All
-we want is to help. I haven’t tried many times
-before&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Someone had told him once of a woman in London,
-who met the human drift in from the far tides of chance&mdash;and
-made their passing or their healing dear as heaven.
-He had always kept the picture. He scarcely heard all
-that this young woman was saying.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
-
-<p>She was not beautiful, not even pretty. You would
-see her last in a room full of women. Under her eyes&mdash;he
-could not tell just where&mdash;there was a line or shadow
-of strange charm; and where the corner of her eye-lids
-folded into the temple a delicate perfection lived; her
-frail back had a line of beauty&mdash;again, he could not
-describe this. The straightness of the figure was that of
-lightness, of aspiration.... Sometimes she seemed
-just a girl. Her underlip pursed a little; it was not red....
-She seemed waiting with the lightness of a
-thistle&mdash;waiting and listening in the lull before a wind.</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Betty Berry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine is John Morning.”</p>
-
-<p>She told him that she was a musician, and that San
-Francisco was her home, although she was much away.
-He saw her with something that Duke Fallows had
-given him. The hush deepened with the thought. Had
-he taken from that tired breast a certain age and clear-eyedness
-and judgment of the ways of love-women?
-There might have been reality in this; certainly there
-was reality in his not having seen a white girl in many
-months. He was changed; his work done for the moment;
-he was very tired and hungry for something she
-brought.... “Betty Berry.”</p>
-
-<p>He <i>was</i> changed. This Western world was new to
-him. He seemed old to the East&mdash;old, much-traveled,
-and very weary; here was faith and tenderness and reality.
-Duke Fallows’ city&mdash;Duke had strangely intrenched
-himself here; and this wraith of an angel who came to
-him ministering!... Malice and ambition&mdash;reprisal
-and murder were gone. What a dirty little man he
-had been&mdash;how rotten with self, how furious and unspeakable.
-Why had he not seen it? Why had he rejected
-Duke Fallows with his brain and accepted him
-with his soul? The soul&mdash;what queer place in a man
-is this? Duke Fallows, Lowenkampf&mdash;were in and out,
-and Nevin, even the Ploughman now; and this little gray
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>hushed spirit of a girl had come straight to his soul.
-Why could one not always feel these Presences? Would
-such destroying and malignant hatred return as that for
-Reever Kennard last night? Was it because he had been
-so passionate for self&mdash;that until now, (when he was
-resting and she came), decency, delight, nor vision had
-been able to break through the deadly self-turned currents?...
-This was like his finer self coming into
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that boys coming home&mdash;need
-to see you?” he asked. He had to be very careful and
-arrange what he meant to say briskly and short. Most
-of his thoughts would not do at all to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Women know. So many boys come home&mdash;like
-those on the <i>Sickles</i> whom one is not allowed to see. I
-have watched them going out, too. They don’t know why
-they go. They don’t expect to find a new country, and
-yet it seems as if they must go and look. And many
-come home so numbed with loneliness that they have forgotten
-what they need.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then women know what boys&mdash;men are?”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled, and seemed listening&mdash;her lips pursed,
-her eyes like a cloudy dawn, turned from him slightly.
-What did she hear continually that did not come to
-him?</p>
-
-<p>“I mean the men,” he added, “whom the world calls
-its bravest&mdash;the gaunt explorers and fighters&mdash;do women
-know what boys they are?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know those whom the world calls its
-bravest.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I needed to have you come,” he said, “but
-I didn’t know it.”</p>
-
-<p>The hush was in the room again. Morning felt like
-a little boy&mdash;and as if she were a child with braids behind.
-They felt wonderful things, but could only talk
-sillinesses.... There was something different about
-her every time he looked. It seemed if she were gone;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>he could not summon her face to mind. He did not
-understand it then.</p>
-
-<p>It had grown quite a little darker before they noticed.
-The far rumble of thunder finally made them see
-a storm gathering.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t go until it’s over?”</p>
-
-<p>“It might be better for me to go now&mdash;before it
-begins.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you live far?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then stay&mdash;please.”</p>
-
-<p>She drew her chair closer. They tried to tell each
-other of what they had been, but this didn’t prosper.
-The peculiar thing was that their history seemed to begin
-from now&mdash;all was far and unimportant but this.
-Morning, moreover, did not mean to spoil the primary
-idea in her mind of his being an American soldier;
-though all his recent history impinged upon the one fact
-that he wasn’t.... He tried to hold her face in his
-mind with shut eyes, but it was a forced and unfair picture
-when mentally dragged there.... The thunder
-increased and the rain.</p>
-
-<p>“Once when I was little,” she said, “I was alone in
-the house when a storm came, and I was so frightened
-that day&mdash;that I never could be since, in just the same
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>Perfect revelation. Something in him wished she
-were pretty. She was such a shy and shadowy creature.
-He called to mind the girls he had known&mdash;coarse and
-tawdry lot, poor things. Betty Berry was all that they
-were not; yet some of them were prettier. He could see
-their faces quite distinctly, and this startled him, because
-shutting his eyes from full gaze at this girl, he
-could not see her twice the same.... The weather
-cleared. They were together in silence for moments at
-a time. She became more and more like a wraith when
-the natural dusk thickened.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Was it hard for you to knock and speak&mdash;that first
-moment?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do&mdash;do any of the soldiers ever misunderstand?”</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s fine of them,” he granted.</p>
-
-<p>“They couldn’t when one has no thought, only to be
-kind to them&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You think they see that at once?”</p>
-
-<p>“They must.”</p>
-
-<p>“A man doesn’t know all about soldiers simply because
-he ‘soldiers’ with them,” Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>“And then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“They look at me and it’s very plain that I come just
-to be good to them.... They think of me in the
-same way as a Salvation Army lassie or a missionary&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, that’s queer,” said he. “It didn’t occur to me
-at all. It would never come to me to ask you to leave
-a tract.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I didn’t feel like a missionary, either....
-Now it’s all cleared again. I must go.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pang.... Where was Nevin?
-Why had Noyes or someone from the <i>Western States</i>
-not come to him? Coming back to these things pained....
-A boy in the halls called the afternoon papers
-in a modified voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you get me the papers&mdash;especially the <i>Western
-States</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>She hurried to call the boy. He saw the huge picture
-of Duke Fallows on the sheet toward him, as she re-entered.</p>
-
-<p>“This is what I want,” he said hoarsely, taking the
-<i>Western States</i>....</p>
-
-<p>“John Morning,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>In inch letters across the top&mdash;there it was:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span></p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center no-indent">JOHN MORNING BRINGS IN THE FIRST FALLOWS
-STORY.</p>
-
-<p>Full Day Ahead of <i>Coptic</i> Mails.... Morning
-Leaves Fallows on the Field Beyond Liaoyang, Night of
-September 3rd.... Two Americans Alone See
-Great Battle.... The Incomparable Fallows’
-Story Printed in Full in the <i>Western States</i> To-day....
-John Morning’s Detail Picture&mdash;a Book in Itself&mdash;Begins
-in the <i>Western States</i> To-morrow&mdash;Biggest
-Newspaper Feature of the Year’s Campaign....
-Read To-day How John Morning Brought in the News&mdash;a
-Story of Unparalleled Daring and Superhuman
-Endurance....</p></div>
-
-<p>Such was the head and the big-print captions.
-Morning’s riding forth from Liaoyang on the night of
-the third&mdash;the sorrel mare&mdash;the Hun Crossing&mdash;the Liao
-Crossing and the fight with the river-bandits&mdash;the runaway
-of the sorrel and her broken heart&mdash;his journey
-dazed and delirious, covered with wounds, thirty miles to
-Koupangtse&mdash;Tongu&mdash;the battle to get aboard the
-<i>Sickles</i>, first, second, and third attempts&mdash;redoing the
-great story on shipboard&mdash;all this in form of an interview
-and printed as a local story, ran ahead of the Duke
-Fallows article.</p>
-
-<p>A great moment, and John Morning, forgetting all
-else, even forgetting the girl who glanced at him with
-awed and troubled eyes, held hard for a moment to the
-one realization: Noyes would not have printed, “Begins
-in the <i>Western States</i> to-morrow,” had he not arranged
-for publication in Reever Kennard’s <i>World-News</i>....</p>
-
-<p>Her chair was farther away. She waited for him&mdash;as
-one expecting to be called. He turned; their eyes
-met full.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not an American soldier&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am an American. I have had a hard time, almost
-as hard as any soldier could&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t have come&mdash;the whole city will serve
-you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I didn’t speak. No soldier could have
-gotten more good.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes turned downward. The room was almost
-dark. A knock at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He held out his hand. “Won’t you come again?”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He would not let her hand go. “Oh, won’t you come
-again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry opened the door for Noyes and another,
-and she passed out.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">21</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">N</span>oyes</span> said lightly:</p>
-
-<p>“The young lady doesn’t need to go on our
-account&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But she’s gone,” Morning muttered. The walls gave
-him back the words.</p>
-
-<p>“If it’s any interest to you, Morning, I’ve followed
-directions in your letter,” the editor said presently.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>World-News</i>&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I waited for&mdash;before coming here.
-They’re using Field’s local story to-morrow morning.
-It’s on the wire to them now. This is Field.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had the pleasure of bringing in your manuscript
-from the <i>Sickles</i> rather early this morning,” said the latter.
-“Also I did the story that Doctor Nevin told me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish he would come,” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“Nevin?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s on his toes where you are concerned,” said
-Field.</p>
-
-<p>“He has done much for me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Friend Fallows is rather strong for you, too, I
-should say,” Noyes offered.</p>
-
-<p>He was a pale, soft, middle-aged man who gave the
-impression of being more forceful than he looked.</p>
-
-<p>“I owe everything to him,” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Morning, what were you mad at, when
-you wrote that letter of directions to me? I followed
-it carefully as you said&mdash;price&mdash;<i>World-News</i>&mdash;everything.
-We’ll have a lot of other papers beside the
-<i>World-News</i>&mdash;but that letter made me hot under the
-collar every time I glanced at it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I was just about to break. I was very sick of
-words. Every sentence was like drawing a rusty chain
-in one ear and out the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you know you’ve got the world by the
-tail on this Russian end&mdash;this Liaoyang story,” Noyes
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve written the story. The big part of the copy
-is here for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not going to quit now. Are you down and
-out physically?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Morning,” Field broke in, “you ought to make
-ten thousand dollars in the next thirty days. You’ve
-got a big feature for every magazine in America&mdash;and
-then the book.”</p>
-
-<p>“The chance doesn’t come but once in a life time&mdash;and
-then only to God’s chosen few, who work like hell,”
-said Noyes, and he sat back to review this particularly
-finished remark.</p>
-
-<p>“What would you do?” Morning asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d start for New York to-night. Field’s story about
-you&mdash;the one we run to-night at the head of Fallows’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>story&mdash;will start the game. A couple of installments of
-your big yarn will have appeared in the <i>World-News</i>
-when you reach New York. If it ends as good as it begins,
-you’ll have the big town groggy within a week.
-You’ll receive the magazine editors in your hotel, contract
-to furnish so much&mdash;and talk off same to expert
-typists. That’s the way things are done. You’ve got
-the goods. New York serves a man like that. It’s
-nothing to me, but I know the game&mdash;even if I never
-cornered a Liaoyang story. Fallows said you have done
-more work for less money than any man in America.
-He’s one of our owners&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>So Noyes rambled on; Field breaking in with fresh
-and timely zest. Morning had not looked beyond the
-main story. He saw separate articles now in every
-phase. It would work out.... Four days of rest&mdash;looking
-out of the car-window. He would land in
-New York once and for all&mdash;land hard&mdash;do it all at
-once. Then he would rest.... He was seething
-again.... With this advantage he could break into
-the markets that would stand aloof from his ordinary
-product for years. All day his devil had slept, and now
-was awake for rough play in the dusk. His dreams
-organized&mdash;the big markets&mdash;breaking out of the newspapers
-into the famous publications! He had the stuff.
-It would be as Noyes said. He would have thought of
-it for another man.</p>
-
-<p>“How soon can I start?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Four or five hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m obliged to you.... Fallows seems still
-with me,” he said strangely.... “I must see
-Nevin&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>There was a ringing in his brain at some unused
-door, but he did not answer. He was driven again.
-Harrowing the idea of waiting a single day ... in
-these modern hours when world-events are so swiftly
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span></p>
-
-<p>Everything was settled. Morning was taken from
-place to place in a cab. Noyes not only was conscientious
-about seeing to every detail for Friend Fallows&mdash;but
-he made it very clear that he was not accustomed to
-spend his evenings down-town. From time to time, he
-dropped hints of what he would be doing at home at
-this hour. Down-town nights were all put away for
-him, he declared.</p>
-
-<p>The balance of the manuscript was locked in the safe
-at the <i>Western States</i> to be set up to-morrow, and proofs
-sent out. The second and possibly third installments of
-the story would go to the <i>World-News</i> by telegraph,
-the rest follow by mail.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow morning, out in the mountains, you’ll
-have the satisfaction of knowing that New York is reading
-Field’s story which we ran to-day. Is that stuff the
-Doctor gave us, right, Morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“Huh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you dream about that sorrel mare&mdash;entrails
-out&mdash;walking like a man&mdash;white death in her eyes?”
-Noyes pursued.</p>
-
-<p>“God, I wonder if I did? Did I dream that I did the
-big story twice?&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He was in pain; there was lameness in his mind at
-being driven again. He wished Noyes would go home....
-Messengers were back and forth to the <i>Sickles</i>
-trying to get Nevin. Transportation to New York was
-the newspaper’s affair; when it was handed him, something
-went from Morning that he could not get again.
-There was much to drink. Noyes had put all this from
-him so long that he found the novelty humorous&mdash;and
-yet, what a bore it was after all! Field was a steaming
-geyser of enthusiasms. Both talked. Others talked.
-Morning was sick with words. He had not had words
-drummed into his brain in so long. He half-realized
-that his impatience for all these things was disgust at
-himself, but all his past years, and their one-pointed aim
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>held him now. This was his great chance.... He
-wanted Nevin.</p>
-
-<p>These city men gave him everything, and disappointed
-him. Had he been forced to battle with them for
-markets; had he been forced to accept the simple column
-rate, he could not have seen them as now. Because they
-had become his servants, he touched their weakness.
-And what giants he had known&mdash;Fallows and Nevin&mdash;and
-Endicott, the little Englishman at Tongu....
-You must answer a man’s need when that need is desperate&mdash;to
-make a heart-hold. A man makes his friends
-before his world capitulates.</p>
-
-<p>He was waiting in the bar of the <i>Polander</i>....
-Nevin had not been found. Morning was clothed, expensed;
-his order upon New York for the price of the
-story would not be touched until he reached there. He
-had won already; he had the world by the tail....
-Nevin did not come. There was no bite in the drink for
-Morning. He was in pain; others made a night of it.
-He struggled in the pits of self, that sleepless, never-forgetting
-self. There was a calling, a calling deep
-within, but the outer noise spoiled the meaning. Men
-drank with single aim; they drank like Russian officers&mdash;to
-get drunk. They were drunk; all was rich and free.
-Noyes knew many whom he saw every day, and many
-whom he had seen long ago. He called them forward to
-meet Morning, who had brought in the story....
-Morning who knew Duke Fallows&mdash;Morning who had
-the big story of the year, beginning to-morrow....
-And always when they passed, Noyes remarked that the
-down-town stuff was silly as the devil. White and clerical,
-his oaths were effective. He drank hard and well
-as men go. Field drank well&mdash;his impulses becoming
-more gusty, but not evil.... Once Morning would
-have called this a night of triumph. Every one looked
-at him&mdash;talked respectfully&mdash;whispered, pointed....
-Twenty minutes left&mdash;the crowd grew denser in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span><i>Polander</i> bar. There was a voice in the arch to the
-hotel. Ferry entered in the midst of men. He was talking
-high, his eyes dancing madly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the son of ... threw me&mdash;that’s all.
-He’s done with the <i>Sickles</i>.... Who? Why,
-Nevin, the squint-eyed son of a.... He threw me....
-I thought this Morning was some drunken remittance
-man wanting passage. Reever Kennard said
-he was a thief.... Nevin might have come to me....
-Why, Morning didn’t even pay his commutation
-for rations&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I would have mailed it to you, Ferry&mdash;except for
-this meeting,” said Morning, his voice raised a little to
-carry.</p>
-
-<p>An important moment to him, and one of the strangest
-of his life. This was the man whom he had dreamed
-of murdering, the man who had made him suffer as
-only the gods should make men suffer. And yet Ferry
-was like an unpleasant child; and Morning, troubled by
-greater things, had no hate now, no time nor inclination
-to hate. The face that had seemed dark and pitiless
-on the deck in Nagasaki harbor&mdash;was only weak
-and undone&mdash;an unpleasant child crying, refusing to be
-quieted&mdash;an annoyance to the house. Such was the
-devil of the <i>Sickles</i>, the man who had stood between him
-and America, the man who had tried to make him miss
-beating the <i>Coptic</i> mails.... They faced each
-other, the quartermaster, wincing and shrunken.</p>
-
-<p>“I had to get across, Ferry. I was too sick to make
-you see. Kennard always says that. He seems to know
-that best&mdash;but it isn’t true.... I was bad to look
-at. You see, I had come a long way. I was off my
-head and eyes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know,” Ferry blurted, “and now Nevin has
-thrown me. I wasn’t supposed to take civilians&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it&mdash;only I had to get across.... I
-don’t know what I’d have done but for Nevin. He was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>mother and father on the voyage. I can give you the
-commutation now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You were a stowaway&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what made it delicate to pay for the
-passage&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Ferry was broken-nerved. He suggested buying a
-drink, as a child who has learned a fancied trick of
-men.</p>
-
-<p>And Morning drank. Noyes glanced at Field, who
-had suddenly become pale and anxious with a story-idea.
-He was at work&mdash;drink-clouds shoved back and all
-the exterior enthusiasm&mdash;fresh as after a night’s rest.
-He was on a new story.</p>
-
-<p>Ferry went away and Morning looked at the clock.
-Only five minutes of his life had been used in this important
-transaction. Nevin had not come&mdash;Nevin who
-had lost his berth, thrown over his own work for him....
-There would be no more <i>Nevin</i> on the <i>Sickles</i>.
-Would he come East?</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say, Field&mdash;drop the Ferry end of the story,”
-Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Field glibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to it,” said Noyes.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was too tired to go further, though he felt
-their lie.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Nevin,” he said to Noyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have him found to-morrow. That’s the big
-local thing to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>When Morning stopped telling Noyes and Field what
-to tell Nevin for him, it was time to go for the ferry.
-The <i>Polander</i> slipped out of Morning’s mind like a
-dream&mdash;smoke, voices, glasses, indecent praise. Noyes
-reached across the bar for a package. That last seemed
-quite as important as anything.</p>
-
-<p>They left him at the ferry&mdash;these men of the <i>Western
-States</i>&mdash;servants of his action and his friends....
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111-4]</span>And somewhere in the city was little Nevin, who had
-done his work and who had not come for his pay; somewhere
-in the city, but apart from voices and adulation&mdash;the
-man who had forgotten himself in telling the story
-of how the news was brought in.... It was all
-desperately unfinished. It hurt him every moment.</p>
-
-<p>In the Pullman berth he opened the package Noyes
-had given him; the porter brought a glass. Afterward,
-he lay in the darkness. It was very still when he had
-become accustomed to the wheels. The going always
-had soothed him. In the still train and the peace of the
-road, he heard at last that ringing again at the new door
-of his life, and opened to Betty Berry, who had promised
-to come.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_II"><span class="smaller not-bold">BOOK II.</span><br />
-THE HILL-CABIN</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">1</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>orning</span> sat in the yielding leather of the <i>Boabdil</i>
-library, quite as if he had passed his youth in the
-midst of people who talk of doing things. Liaoyang had
-been written, even the abandoned impediments of retreat
-covered. It had all come to pass quite according to the
-early ideas of Noyes and Field. John Morning was
-Liaoyang in America. His book <i>Liaoyang</i>, magazine
-and newspaper articles gathered together, was established
-as important authority in encyclopædic and other
-reference books. The most captious must grant that
-living man can do no more than this.</p>
-
-<p>Morning had dined with the president. One after
-another he had made every magazine of note, and much
-money. He had done his own story of the journey,
-which proved more of a comment maker than the battle
-description; and his article on the deck passages of the
-Chinese coolies will always be an incentive to foreign
-missions. New York had waited upon him, had exploited
-him, given him bewildering payments, and called
-him everything, even Hugoesque and Tolstoianic. It
-was very hard for Morning to retain the conviction that
-there wasn’t ten pages of all this copy that ranked in
-sheer value with the ten pages of Fallows’ <i>Ploughman</i>.
-He didn’t for awhile.</p>
-
-<p>Liaoyang was on in full magazine blast in America,
-while Mukden and Sha River were being fought across
-the world. At this time Morning spent an hour a day,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>as war-expert for a particularly incessant daily newspaper
-of New York. So all people knew what the campaign
-was about, and what certain generals might do,
-from past grooves of their wearing in history. Also
-German gentlemen of military pasts wrote letters disputing
-the prophecies. Morning had certainly arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The condition or place of arrival was slippery. The
-peace of Portsmouth had been protocoled.... Liaoyang,
-deep in the valley of desuetude, was without
-even the interest of perspective. The name, Liaoyang,
-made the mind of the world lame.... Even in the
-heat of arrival, the thing had puzzled him. Money ceased
-to gladden him after a few mails; did not spare him
-from the nearest irritation. Plainly he was quite the
-same John Morning after appearing in the great magazines
-as before; and the people whom he had interested
-were mainly of the same sort that had come forward
-in the <i>Polander</i> bar.</p>
-
-<p>He had been a sick man since the Hun Crossing.
-When the big New York task was finished, and it was
-done with something of the same drive of will that characterized
-the second writing of the main story on board
-the <i>Sickles</i>, he was again ready to break, body and brain.
-Running down entirely, he had reached that condition
-which has an aversion to any task. His productive motors
-had long lain in the dark, covered from the dust.
-This was the time he clubbed about. The <i>Boabdil</i> was a
-favorite, but even here, men drew up their chairs from
-time to time, day and night, dispatching the waiter for
-drink and saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Those Japs are pretty good fighters, aren’t they?”
-or, “What do you consider will become of China in the
-event of&mdash;&mdash;” or, very cheerily, “Well, Mr. Morning,
-are you waiting for another war?”</p>
-
-<p>He slept ill; drank a very great deal; the wound in
-his side had not healed and he had made no great friends.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>He thought of these four things on this particular mid-day
-in the <i>Boabdil</i> library.... Nearby was old
-Conrad with the morning papers, summoning the
-strength to dine. It was usually late in the afternoon,
-before he arose to the occasion, but with each stimulant,
-he informed the nearest fellow-member that he was going
-to eat something presently. The old man stopped
-reading to think about it. After much conning, he decided
-that he had better have just one more touch of
-this with a dash of that&mdash;which he took slowly, listening
-for comment from within.... After dinner
-he would smoke himself to sleep and begin preparing for
-the following morning’s chops. “Eat twice a day, sir&mdash;no
-more&mdash;not for years.”</p>
-
-<p>Conrad in his life had done one great thing. In
-war-time, before the high duty was put on, he had accumulated
-a vast cellar full of whiskey. That had meant
-his hour. Riches, a half century of rich dinners, clean
-collars and deep leather chairs&mdash;all from that whiskey
-sale.... “Picturesque,” they said of Conrad at
-the <i>Boabdil</i>. “What would the club do without
-him?”...</p>
-
-<p>Morning watching him now, remembered an old man
-who used to sit at a certain table in a Sixth avenue bar.
-The high price of whiskey had reversed conditions in
-this case, and a changed collar meant funeral or festivity.
-Forty years ago this old man had bred a colt that
-became a champion. That was his hour, his answer for
-living. After all, Morning concluded, having seen Conrad
-fall asleep one night, the old horseman was less
-indecent.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Morning thought of the little Englishman
-at Tongu and the blanket; then of Fallows and Nevin&mdash;Fallows
-saying, “Come on upstairs,” that day of their
-first meeting at the <i>Imperial</i>, and Nevin saying, “Well,
-you gave me a night&mdash;&mdash;” .... Morning began to
-laugh. “Picturesque, what-would-we-do-without Conrad”&mdash;sitting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-five days and nights on the deck passage
-from the mouth of the Pei-ho to the lowest port of
-Japan....</p>
-
-<p>He hadn’t thought much of Nevin and Fallows and
-the Tongu Endicott in the months that followed his
-arrival from San Francisco, when the work went with
-a rush. And Betty Berry&mdash;there were times when he
-was half sure she&mdash;name, Armory and all&mdash;formed but
-an added dream that Nevin had injected hypodermically
-the night before.</p>
-
-<p>Morning could think about all these now. The editors
-had begun to tell what <i>they</i> wanted. He had sent
-in stuff which did not meet their needs. He was linked
-to war in their minds. Moreover, plentiful money had
-brought to the surface again his unfinished passion to
-gamble, as his present distaste for work had increased
-the consumption of alcohol.... It was <i>Reverses</i>
-that reminded him of Fallows and Nevin and the Tongu
-blanket and the angel he had entertained in the Armory
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Editors didn’t care for his fiction. “A good war
-story is all right any time,” they said, but apparently
-his were not, for five or six trials didn’t take. He had a
-tendency to remember Fallows when he wrote fiction.
-The story of the Ploughman came curiously back to
-mind, when he was turned loose from straight narrative,
-and he was “balled” between planes.... He
-thought of a play....</p>
-
-<p>Varce now came into the library and drew up a chair.
-Varce had one of his stories; Varce edited a magazine
-that sold several million every two weeks. Long ago,
-with great effort, and by paying prodigiously, Varce had
-secured from Morning one of the final tiles of the great
-Liaoyang mosaic.... Varce was tall, a girl’s
-dream of poet-knight&mdash;black, wavy hair, straight excellent
-features, a figure lean enough for modern
-clothes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Morning,” he said, “do you know the fighting
-game?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean pugilistically?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I used to do fights.”</p>
-
-<p>Varce went on presently:</p>
-
-<p>“A great series of articles is to be written on the
-boyhood and general atmosphere of the men who have
-made great ring history&mdash;big stuff, you know&mdash;well
-written&mdash;from a man who can see the natural phenomena
-of these bruisers&mdash;how they are bred and all that. Now
-three things go into the fighter&mdash;punch, endurance, but,
-most of all, instinct&mdash;the stuff that doesn’t let him ‘lay
-down’ when the going is rough, and doesn’t keep him
-from putting the wallop on a groggy opponent. Many
-a good fighter has missed championship because he was
-too tender-hearted to knock-out a helpless&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you like that story of mine you have, Varce?”
-Morning asked yawning.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s a good enough story&mdash;a bit socialistic&mdash;what
-are you trying to get at?”</p>
-
-<p>“No need of me furnishing diagrams, if the manuscript
-leaves you that way,” Morning said. “You were
-just saying about the last touch to a beating&mdash;yes, I’ve
-heard about those three things&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want the series?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m doing a play.”</p>
-
-<p>... After Varce had gone, Morning thought it all
-out again. Varce was living a particularly unmitigated
-lie. Five years ago he had done some decent verse. He
-had a touch of the real poetic vision, and he had turned
-it to trade. He was using it now to catch the crowd.
-An especially sensational prostitution, this&mdash;one that
-would make the devil scratch his head.... And
-Varce could do without him. Liaoyang had not made
-the name of John Morning imperative. Moreover, he
-himself was living rotten. He wished he had told Varce
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>what he thought of him and his multi-millionaire subscription....
-He hadn’t; he had merely spoken of
-his play. The bridges were not burned behind him. He
-might be very glad to do a series of “pug” stories for
-Varce. There were good stories in these fighters&mdash;but
-the good stories, as he saw them, were not what Varce
-saw in the assignment.</p>
-
-<p>It summed up that he was just beginning over again;
-that he must beat the game all over again in a different
-and larger dimension&mdash;or else quit.... He ordered
-a drink.... He could always see himself.
-That was a Morning faculty, the literary third eye. He
-saw himself doing a series of the fighters&mdash;saw it even
-to the red of the magazine covers, and the stuff of the
-announcements.... John Morning, the man who
-did fifty-mile fronts at Liaoyang, putting all his unparalleled
-battle color in the action of a 24-foot ring.
-Then the challenge to the reader: “Can you stand a descriptive
-force of this calibre? If you can, read the story
-of the great battle between Ambi Viles and Two-pill
-Terry in next issue.”... He would have to tell
-seriously before the battle description, however, how
-Ambi was a perfect gentleman and the sole support of
-his mother, an almost human English gentlewoman. It
-is well to be orthodox.</p>
-
-<p>Somebody spoke of whiskey in the far end of the
-library, insisting on a certain whiskey, and old Conrad
-cocked up his ears out of a meaty dream....
-Morning closed his eyes. He felt the warmth of a ship
-beneath, the drive of the cold rain on deck and the
-heaving of the sea. There was something almost sterile-clean
-about that deck-passage, compared to this....
-Then he remembered again the men he had known, and
-the woman who came to the Armory room&mdash;and the
-long breath his soul took, with her coming....
-Finally he saw himself years hence, as if he had quit
-the fight now and taken New York and Varce as they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>meant to use him.... He was sunk in leather,
-blown up like an inner tube and showing red, stalled in
-some club library, and forcing the world to remember
-Liaoyang, bringing down the encyclopædia to show his
-name, when extra drunk.... No, he would be
-hanging precariously to some porter job on Sixth avenue,
-trying to make the worn and tattered edges of his world
-believe how he had once carried the news from Liaoyang
-to Koupangtse....</p>
-
-<p>A saddle-horse racked by on the asphalt, and turned
-into the park. Morning arose. There was stabbing and
-scalding from the unhealed wound in his side. The pain
-reminded him of the giants he had once known and of
-the woman who came to the Armory room. It had always
-been so; always something about him unsound,
-something that would not heal. He had accepted
-eagerly, but ever his giving had been paltry. And he
-had to be pulled down, out of the shine of fortune, before
-he remembered how great other men had been to
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">2</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>hat</span> night he dreamed that he had passed through
-death.... He was standing upon a cliff, between
-the Roaming Country and a valley of living earth.
-He did not want the spirit region; in his dream he turned
-his back upon it. He did not want the stars. Illusion
-or not, he wanted the earth. He looked down upon it
-through the summer night, down through the tree-tops
-into a valley that lay in the soft warm dusk. He
-watched with the passion and longing of a newly-dead
-mother, who hears her child crying for her, and senses
-the desolation of her mate.... The breath of earth
-came up to him through the exhaling leaves&mdash;leaves
-that whispered in the mist. He could have kissed the
-soil below for sheer love of it. He wanted the cool,
-damp earth in his hands, and the thick leaf-mould under
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>his feet, and the calm wide listening of the trees....
-Stars were near enough, but earth was not. He wanted
-to be down, down in the drip of the night. He would
-wait in ardor for the rain of the valley.... Looking
-down through the tree-tops, he sensed the earth passion,
-the lovely sadness of it&mdash;and desired it, even if he
-must die again.... There was an ache in the desire&mdash;like
-the ache of thirst that puts all other thoughts
-away, and turns the dream and the picture to running
-water.</p>
-
-<p>He awoke, and went to his window in the dark. He
-saw New York and realized that he was dying for the
-country. His eyes smarted to tears, when he remembered
-rides and journeys and walks he had taken over
-the earth, so thoughtlessly, without knowing their boon
-and beauty and privilege.... While he was standing
-there, that which he had conceived as To-morrow,
-became To-day, and appeared over the rim of the opposite
-gorge of apartments. The first light of it sank far
-down into the tarry stuffiness of the pavement, but the
-dew that fell with the dawn-light was pure as heaven
-to his nostrils.</p>
-
-<p>That day he crossed the river, and at the end of a
-car-line beyond Hackensack, walked for a half-hour. It
-was thus that Morning found his hill. Just a lifted corner
-of a broad meadow, with a mixed company of fine
-trees atop. He bought it before dusk. The dairyman’s
-farmhouse was a quarter-mile distant; the road, a hundred
-and fifty yards from the crest of the hill, with
-trees thinly intervening. The south was open to even
-wider fields; in the far distance to the west across the
-meadows, the sky was sharpened by a low ribbon of
-woods and hill-land. In the east was the suspended
-silence of the Hudson.</p>
-
-<p>“I want a pump and a cabin, and possibly a shed for
-a horse,” he said, drinking a glass of buttermilk, at the
-dairyman’s door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
-
-<p>He was directed to Hackensack.</p>
-
-<p>With the falling darkness again upon the hills, he
-saw that certain crowded, mid-growth trees were better
-down. The fine thought of building his cabin of them
-occurred. By the time he reached Hackensack, the house
-of logs was so dear in thought, that he wanted nothing
-short of a cabinet-joiner for such a precious task. That
-night he met Jake Robin, who was sick of nailing at
-houses in rows, a job that had long since ceased to afford
-deep breaths to his capacity.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Morning moved to Hackensack, and
-Jake was at work.... Three thousand he had lost
-gambling ... he wished he had it now. Much
-more had been lost, and not so cleanly, in reaching the
-final <i>Boabdil</i> realization, but he had enough. Presently
-he was helping Jake, and there was joy in it.</p>
-
-<p>They tapped a spring some thirty feet beneath the
-humped shoulder of the hill; built a shed for the horse
-he had not yet found, and then fitted the cabin to the
-fire-place of concrete and valley stone. One sizeable
-room it was, that faced the open south from the brow
-of the hill.</p>
-
-<p>A fine unfolding&mdash;this love of Morning’s for wood
-itself, and woods. Over a half-hundred trees were his
-own&mdash;elm, beech, hickory, oak, ash, and maple&mdash;and like
-a fine clean colony of idealists they stood meditating....
-One never knows the quality of wood until one
-builds his own house. Opening the timbers for the big
-mortices&mdash;each was a fresh and fragrant discovery. Jake
-and he lingered long, after the cabin was roofed, over
-the heavy oak flooring, and the finishing of windows
-and doors and frames. They built some furniture together
-of hickory, which is a wood a man should handle
-with reverence, for it is fine in its way as wheat and
-grapes and honey and wild olives. Hickory answers
-graciously to the work of the hand, and, like a good dog,
-flourishes with men.... They built a table and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>bed-frame and a chest of drawers; and Morning at last
-went to Hackensack for pots, kettles, and tea things.
-Jake Robin, like one who has built a ship, was loath to
-leave without trying the cabin. Morning kept him busy
-in the clearing, long after he was in the mood to start
-work on the play. There was a platform to build for the
-pump; also a certain rustic bench. The shed needed
-tinkering; an extra cabinet for books was indispensable&mdash;and
-screens.... No one had ever let Jake play
-before in his life.... Moreover, he was paid for
-the extra hour required to walk to and from town. All
-Hack heard about it.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll need a chicken-coop&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Morning. The look on Jake’s face was
-like old Amoya’s in Tokyo, when the rickshaw-runner
-was forbidden to take him to the Yoshuwara.</p>
-
-<p>“I can fit you up a little ice-box near the spring&mdash;so’s
-you’ll pump it full of water, and keep your vittles&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning wanted the stillness for the play, but he
-couldn’t refuse. Two days more. Then Jake scratched
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be wantin’ a vine on the cabin,” he ventured.
-“I know the man who has the little ivies.”</p>
-
-<p>This was irresistible. “Can you see me owning a
-vine?” asked Morning. Yet there was significance in the
-idea together with the play.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ll build a bit of a trainer to start it. By the
-end of summer&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring it on, Jake&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I’ll fetch a couple of rose vines, and dreen them
-with broken crockery from the holler&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The vine prospered and the play; and the roses began
-to feel for Jake’s trellis. The tool-box was still there.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be needin’ fire-wood for the winter. To be
-sure, you can buy it, but what’s the good, with dead stuff
-to be knocked down and small trees to be thinned out,
-and the shed gapin’ open for the saddle-horse you’re not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>sure of findin’? It’s wood you ought to have in
-there&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>In fact, it was no small task to break Jake of the hill-habit.
-Morning grew accustomed to the ax, and the
-crashing of branches, many of which would have been
-sacrificed to the strong winds of the Fall. Meanwhile,
-the shed had come into its own, and there were piles
-of firewood seasoning in the sun and shade.</p>
-
-<p>He was alone with the nights; sitting there in his
-doorway when it was fine, studying the far lights of the
-city.... City lights meant Varce and Conrad, not
-his great friends. Every hour that he looked, he liked
-better the wind about the doorway and the open southern
-fields.</p>
-
-<p>One night he felt his first twinge of sorrow for the
-big city. Hatred, it had been before. Other men were
-tortured as he had been, but somehow, the way didn’t
-get into their dreams and drive them forth, as he had
-been driven. They were really not to blame for <i>Boabdilling</i>;
-they sank into the cushions and lost the sense of
-reality. And then the thousands in the hall-bedrooms
-and worse, to whom <i>Boabdil</i> was heaven’s farthest pavilion!
-Morning seemed to have something to say to
-those thousands, but wasn’t ready yet.</p>
-
-<p>He longed for Fallows, whom he saw more clearly
-every day&mdash;especially since the <i>Ploughman</i> had crept
-into the play.... He wanted to wait upon the big
-sick man; to have him here, to prepare food for him,
-and sit with him in these silences. He wanted Endicott
-at Tongu, too, and Nevin&mdash;oh, yes, Nevin. It was like
-a prayer that he sent out some nights&mdash;for the unearthing
-of these giants from their hiding&mdash;so that he could
-listen to them, and serve them and make them glad for
-their giving to him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A deep summer night. The purple of the north
-seemed washed and thinned in ether, (nothing else could
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>bring out the heavenly lustre of it), and the black, fragile
-top-foliage of the woods leaned against it, listening, feminine.
-Darkness only on the ground; yet he loved it, the
-heart of the dusk that throbbed there. He loved the
-earth and the water that mingled in the hollows. He
-breathed with strange delight the air that brushed the
-grass and the clover-scent that came to him around the
-hill.... And this was the momentary passion&mdash;that
-he was going from all this. He loved it as one who
-was passing beyond. It was like the dream after all.
-Just as Mother Earth was unfolding, he was called. She
-was like a woman long lived-with, but unknown, until
-the sudden revelation of parting.... He touched
-the stones with his hand.</p>
-
-<p>In the hush, waiting for a katydid to answer, that
-night, Morning fell asleep.... He had climbed to
-his cabin, as if it were a room on an upper floor. Before
-he opened the door, he knew someone was within.
-Before the light, it was clear that someone was curled
-up asleep on the foot of his hard bed.... Yes, it
-was she who had restored his soul, that day at the
-Armory&mdash;and there she lay sleeping.... He did
-not call her, as he had called Moto-san; there was no
-thought to waken her, for everything was so pure and
-lovely about it. He stood there, and watched her gratefully&mdash;it
-seemed a long time&mdash;until the katydid answered.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">3</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>fter</span> Markheim had kept the play three months&mdash;it
-was now November&mdash;Morning crossed to
-the city to force the decision. The producer was prevailed
-upon to see him.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be read once more,” said Markheim. “It
-will go or not. We like it, but we are afraid of it. To-morrow
-we will know or not.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
-<p>“What are you afraid of?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I do not read plays.”</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Markheim bought his opinions, and was attentive to
-those which cost the most....</p>
-
-<p>Morning drew a napkin the size of a doll’s handkerchief
-from a pile. A plate of eggs and bacon rung, as
-if hitting a bull’s-eye upon the white marble before him.
-He was still wondering what Markheim was afraid of.
-He didn’t like the feel of it. The Lowenkampf of Duke
-Fallows’ had crept into the play&mdash;Lowenkampf, whose
-heart was pulled across the world by the mother and
-child. How they had broken his concentration on the
-eve of the great battle.</p>
-
-<p>At the time, he had seen the tragic sentimentalist as
-one caught in a master weakness, but all that was gone.
-Lowenkampf still moved white in his fancy, while the
-other generals, even Mergenthaler, had become like the
-dim mounds in his little woodland.... And what
-a dramatic thing, to have a woman and a child breaking
-in upon the poised force of a vast Russian army.
-It was like Judith going down into the valley-camp of the
-Assyrians and smiting the neck of Holofernes with his
-own fauchion. Morning’s mind trailed away in the
-fascination of Fallows, and in the dimension he had
-been unable to grasp in those black hours of blood....
-So many things were different after this summer
-alone; yet he had never seemed quite rested, neither
-in mind nor body.... He had been all but unkillable
-like the sorrel Eve before that journey from
-Liaoyang to New York. Now, even after the ease and
-moral healing of the summer alone, his wound was unhealed....</p>
-
-<p>The telephone-miss in Markheim’s reception-room
-was very busy when he called the next afternoon....
-Something about her reminded him of <i>Mio
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>Amigo</i>. She was a good deal sharper. Was it the brass
-handle?... To hear her, one would think that she
-had come in late, and that New York needed scolding,
-even spanking, which exigencies of time and space deferred
-for the present. Her words were like the ‘spat,
-spat, spat,’ of a spanking.... She was like an
-angry robin, too, at one end of a worm. She bent and
-pulled, but the worm had a strangle-hold on a stone.
-It gave, but would not break.... Morning saw the
-manuscript at this point on her side-table, and the fun
-of the thing was done.... She looked up, trailed
-a soft <i>arpeggio</i> on the lower-right of her board, grasped
-the manuscript firmly, and shoved it to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Morning to see Mr. Markheim,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Markheim is&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>But the husky voice of the producer just now reached
-them from within.</p>
-
-<p>“Busy&mdash;&mdash;” she finished with a cough.... New
-York was at it again. <i>Stuyvesant</i> especially had a devil,
-and <i>Bryant</i> was the last word.</p>
-
-<p>“... You can’t see Mr. Markheim. This is your
-message&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it really isn’t. This is just an incident. I hesitate
-to trouble you, but I must see Mr. Markheim.”</p>
-
-<p>The play was wrapped in the identical paper in which
-it had been brought.</p>
-
-<p>She must have touched something, for a boy came in&mdash;a
-younger brother, past doubt&mdash;but so bewildered, as
-to have become habitually staring.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell Mr. Markheim, Mr. Morning insists on seeing
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy seemed on the point of falling to his knees
-to beg for mercy. Morning’s personal distemper subsided.
-Here was a drama, too&mdash;the great American
-stage.... One word came out to him from Markheim:</p>
-
-<p>“In-zists!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Mr. Morning&mdash;good afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>Markheim had his hand in a near drawer, and was
-smiling with something the same expression that old
-Conrad used when listening for the dinner notice.</p>
-
-<p>“You see we do not want it&mdash;we are afraid,” he began,
-and becoming suddenly hopeful, since Morning
-drew forth no bomb, he added, “You have a girl’s idea
-of war, Mr. Morning&mdash;good afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>He liked his joke on the name. “We were in doubt
-about the war part&mdash;afraid&mdash;and so we consulted an
-expert&mdash;one who was on the spot,” he said pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s mind was searching New York; his idea
-was fateful.</p>
-
-<p>“We are not bermidded to divulge who the expert is,
-but we did not spare money&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning’s eye was held to the desk over the shoulder
-of Markheim, to a large square envelope, eminent in
-blue, upon the corner of which was the name “Reever
-Kennard.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure you did not. He was always a high-priced
-man,” he said idly.... And so this was the long-delayed
-answer to his appearance in the <i>World-News</i> to
-the extent of eighty thousand words. He had heard that
-Mr. Reever Kennard was back on finance and politics....
-Markheim had not followed his mind nor caught
-the sentence. Morning passed out through the hush.
-He paused at the door to give the office-boy a present&mdash;a
-goodly present to be divided with the sister, just now
-occupied with a fresh outbreak of obstreperousness on
-the part of <i>Gramercy</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Morning had moments of something like the old
-rage; but the extreme naturalness of the thing, and its
-touch of humor, helped him over for the next hour or
-so. Apparently, the opportunity had fallen into the lap
-of Mr. Reever Kennard; come to him with homing
-familiarity. The war-expert had spoken, not as one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>offering his values gratuitously, but as one called and
-richly paid. Morning reflected that the summer alone
-on his hill must have subdued him. As a matter of fact,
-he was doubtful about the play; not because Markheim
-was afraid; not by any means because Mr. Reever Kennard
-had spoken, but because it had not come easily, and
-the three incidents which made the three acts did not
-stand up in his mind as the exact trinity for the integration
-of results. But one cannot finally judge his own
-work.</p>
-
-<p>He wandered straight east from that particular theatre
-of Markheim’s where the offices were and passed
-Fourth Avenue. He never went quite that way again,
-but remembered that there was an iron picket-fence of
-an old residence to lean against; and at the corner of it,
-nearer town, the sidewalk sank into a smoky passage
-where lobsters, chops, and a fowl or two were tossed together
-in front. It was all but dark. He was averse
-to taking his present mood across the river. It wasn’t
-fair to the cabin. <i>Mio Amigo</i> recurred queerly and
-often to mind....</p>
-
-<p>“Look&mdash;there’s Mr. Morning&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Sh-sh&mdash;oh, Charley&mdash;sh-sh!”</p>
-
-<p>Morning was compelled. Could this little shrinking
-creature, beside whom the under-sized brother now appeared
-hulking, be the same who had bossed Manhattan
-to a peak in his presence such a little while ago? She
-seemed terrified, all pointed for escape, sick from the
-strain of the street.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, hello!” Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>She pulled her brother on, saying with furious effort
-of will, “I’m sure we’re much obliged for your present&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten that,” Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re going to take in the show,” the boy remarked,
-drawing back. At large, thus, he was much better to
-look upon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Charley&mdash;we mustn’t detain&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning had an idea, and looked at the sister as he
-said, “Won’t you have supper with me somewhere? I
-have nothing&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Her face was livid&mdash;as if all the fears of a lifetime
-had culminated into the dreadful impendings of this
-moment. She tried to speak.... Then it came to
-Morning in a belated way that she thought she was
-accosted; that she connected his gift with this meeting.
-He couldn’t let her go now&mdash;and yet, it was hard for
-him to know what to say.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean we three,” he began hastily. “This play being
-refused rather knocked me out, and I didn’t know
-what to do with the evening. I don’t live in New York,
-you know. I thought you and your brother&mdash;that we
-might have supper together&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke on desperately, trying to stir to life the
-little magpie sharpness again. It was more to her
-brother she yielded. New York must have frightened
-her terribly.... Morning managed to get down
-to the pair that night. He was clumsy at it, however,
-for it was a new emprise. Mostly John Morning had
-been wrapped and sealed in his own ideas. The boy
-was won with the first tales of war, but the sister remained
-apart with her terrors. No one had taught her
-that kindness may be a motive in itself.</p>
-
-<p>And now Morning was coping with what seemed a
-real idea: What was the quality of the switch-board that
-harnessed her character? Here she was wild and disordered&mdash;like
-a creature denied her drug. With that
-mystic rumble of angry New York in her ears&mdash;the
-essential buzz of a million desires passing through her&mdash;she
-was a force, flying and valuable force. Was she
-lain open to obsession now because she was removed
-from that slavery? Was that maddening vibration the
-lost key to her poise?</p>
-
-<p>He tried hard, not daring to be attentive in the least.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>She would have fled, if he had. He was boyishly kind
-to her brother. That awed, and was beginning to hold
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Morning saw clearly that she stood like a stretched
-wing between her brother’s little soul and the world.
-She could be brave in sheltering Charley. The boy was
-really alive. He ate and answered and listened and lived,
-the show ahead.... In the midst of it, Morning
-awoke to the fact that he was having a good time; and
-here was the mystery&mdash;with the last two people in New
-York he would have chosen; a two, his whole life-business
-had taught him to employ thoughtlessly, as other
-metropolitan adjuncts&mdash;pavements, elevators, messengers.
-Here was life in all its terror and complication,
-the same struggles he had known; yet he had always
-seen himself as a sort of Titan alone in the great destroying
-elements. The joke was on him.</p>
-
-<p>Charley left them for just a moment. The sister
-said, as if thinking aloud:</p>
-
-<p>“... And yet, he cries every morning because
-he has to go to the office. Oh, he wouldn’t go there
-without me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>A world of meaning in that. They were sitting in
-the dark of the <i>Charity Union</i> play-house, with Charley
-between them. The aims and auspices of the performance
-were still indefinite to Morning, who had not ceased
-to grapple with his joke&mdash;the seriousness with which he
-had habitually regarded John Morning, his house, his
-play, his unhealed wound, his moral debility....</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen minutes a giant had marvelously manhandled
-his companion. The curtain dropped an instant,
-and in the place where the giant had performed now
-stood a ’cello and a chair.... She came on like
-the wraith of an angel&mdash;and sat down and played....
-How long she played Morning never knew, but
-somewhere in it he caught his breath as one who had
-come back to life.... And then she was gone.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>The audience was mildly applauding. He turned to the
-sister leaning on the knees of the boy:</p>
-
-<p>“I know her. She is very dear to me. If you don’t
-mind, I’ll leave you now. You are safe with Charley&mdash;and
-some time again I’ll come. I thank you very much.
-I really want to do this again&mdash;we three&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Even though his own joy was bewildering, he saw the
-sudden happiness of Charley’s sister, who, in spite of
-all, had been haunted by the dread of the <i>afterward</i>.
-Now that was gone from her. Relief was in her face.
-It was all so much better than she had dared to hope.
-He had wanted nothing&mdash;except to be kind&mdash;and now
-he was going. She gave her hand impulsively....
-Charley did, too, and was ordered to call a carriage
-for his sister if he wished; at all events, the means
-was attended.... Then they saw him making his
-way forward&mdash;putting money into the hands of ushers,
-and inquiring the way to the stage.... And she
-was there, playing again.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">4</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S</span>he</span> was making the people like her. Her effect was
-gradual. They had been held by more obvious displays.
-The instrument seemed very big for her, but the
-people liked her all the better for this.... He
-could not be one with the audience, but the old watching
-literary eye&mdash;the third eye&mdash;caught the sense of the people’s
-growing delight. She made them feel that she belonged
-to them; as if she said:</p>
-
-<p>“I have come back to you. I will do just what you
-ask. Everything I have is yours&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>It was different and dearer to John Morning than
-anything he had ever known. The picture came clearly
-to him as he walked around behind.... This was
-the hour of her return. She had gone from the hearts
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>of her people long ago to bring back music. It was the
-beautiful old story of their sacrifice to send her away.
-How splendidly she had learned; how thrillingly they
-remembered her beginnings. And she had never forgotten;
-she would always love and thank them&mdash;indeed,
-she was happier than any now.... Morning was
-lost for a moment in his story.</p>
-
-<p>She was approaching, but did not see him yet. The
-house was pleased with her, not noisily, but pleasantly.
-She turned to bow to the people&mdash;and then back toward
-the wings. She saw him standing there. Her arms went
-out to him, though she had not quitted the stage....
-The gesture was new to the people.... It was
-different from her coming to him at the Armory....
-They were standing together.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you go on again?” a voice said, and with
-a queer irritation in the tone.</p>
-
-<p>... She was playing again&mdash;and with dash and
-power.</p>
-
-<p>Morning had to shut his eyes now, really to hear; and
-yet, he could not summon her face to mind when his
-eyes were shut. He thought with a quick burn of shame
-that he had once wished her prettier. Sadness followed,
-for, it seemed to him, their meeting had been broken.
-She belonged to the people and not to him. They loved
-her.... She was different. He saw it now. The
-audience, so pleased and joyous, lifted her in a way perhaps
-that he could never do.</p>
-
-<p>It was everywhere&mdash;the music. It filled the high,
-brick-walled stage, vibrated in the spiral stairways,
-moved mysteriously in the upper darkness and immensity.
-Behind the far wings a man was moving up and
-down in a sort of enchantment&mdash;no, he was memorizing
-something. A few of the far front rows were visible
-from where Morning stood, and the forward boxes
-opposite....</p>
-
-<p>Morning was wandering in a weird land, a hollow
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>land. The woman’s playing was between him and the
-world of men; half for them, half for him. The Memorizer
-was but another phantom, wandering with the
-ghost of a manuscript. Between Morning and the player
-was only the frail, fluent current of music. This was a
-suspense of centuries.... Would she go to <i>Them</i>,
-or return to Him? The tall, dim canvases were fields
-of emptiness and silence, in which he wandered listening,
-tortured with tension; and the loft was sunless,
-moonless, unearthly....</p>
-
-<p>The music ceased. He heard the calling of the other
-world to her. He was apart in the shadows. Would
-she go to them, or would she remember him, waiting?...
-She was coming. He heard her step behind the
-wings. It was light as a gloved hand upon a table. He
-was hungry and athirst and breathless. For the first
-time he saw that her throat and arms were bare....
-They were standing together again, but the Other Phantom
-intercepted.</p>
-
-<p>It was the Memorizing Man. He came forward in
-an agony of excitement. “You’ll have to prompt me,”
-he said to Betty Berry, speaking roughly in his tension.
-“It’s my first time with this new dope. I thought I had
-it, but I ain’t&mdash;and there’s a barrel of it.”</p>
-
-<p>The stage was slightly changed. Morning was thinking
-how hideous the work of some men. The Phantom
-was scourged with the fear of one who was to do imperfectly
-what another had written. The woman had carried
-a small table and chair to the wings, out of view
-of the audience and as near as possible to the Memorizer....
-Morning found something soft and
-fragrant in his hands. Betty Berry’s wrap, which she
-had given to him before going to the table. And now
-the monologue had begun.... It was to be humorous.</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry, standing beside the table, raised her
-eyes from the paper, and beckoned to Morning. His
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>first thought was that he might disturb her prompting,
-and he hesitated. She looked up again. Then he thought
-she might want her wrap. He tiptoed forward and put
-it around her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t that,” she whispered, her eyes upon the
-paper. “I wanted you to keep me company. This is
-long. Sit down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t <i>you</i>&mdash;sit down?” he said from behind, very
-close to her hair.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.... It was peculiar&mdash;she
-standing, and he in the chair. The soft wrap winged
-out, and her arm beneath slid across his shoulder; the
-hollow of her left arm against his cheek. He kissed it,
-and his face burned against its coolness.</p>
-
-<p>She shivered slightly, but did not take her arm away.
-Now he looked up into her face&mdash;her eyelids drawn, her
-lips compressed, her gaze steadily held to the manuscript.
-The Phantom was carried on by the alien humor.
-Laughter was beginning to crackle here and there
-through the house. Betty Berry followed with her eyes&mdash;just
-the words.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so glad to find you,” Morning whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Her lips moved.</p>
-
-<p>Matters tumbled over each other in his mind to say
-to her; he was thinking sentences rather than words.
-He knew that it was not well to talk now, but there
-seemed so much to say, and so little time. He caught
-himself promising to give her understanding, and he
-told her that she seemed everything he wanted to know.
-His cheek was burning as never before....</p>
-
-<p>The remotest happened. The Phantom faltered in
-a climax, and covered the difficulty with a trick&mdash;awaiting
-the line from the wings. Betty Berry had become
-rigid. Her eyes would not see the page.</p>
-
-<p>Morning spoke a sentence in a low, carrying way.
-He had plucked it from the page painfully near his own
-eyes. It may be that the Memorizer righted himself, or
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>that the prompted line was what he needed. Anyway,
-he was going again, and rising to the end....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The two stood together while the house laughed, recalling
-the performer.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. I caught it fine,” the Phantom said hastily.
-“Not even the front rows knew. I was listening for
-Miss Berry&mdash;and your cue came&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It went all right,” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p>The other took the manuscript and passed on, rolling
-a cigarette.... For just a moment, the two
-were alone. Into each other’s arms they went, with the
-superb thoughtlessness of children ... and then
-they heard steps and voices.... He wondered
-that Betty Berry could laugh and reply to those who
-spoke to her.... He wanted to escape with her.
-Never had he wanted anything so much. He was exhausted,
-humbled, inspired. To be out in the street with
-her&mdash;it seemed almost too good to be.... She was
-saying good-night and good-bye. He followed, carrying
-the ’cello.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">5</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>orning</span> remembered that he had thought of her
-once before as having braids down behind&mdash;as if
-they were boy and girl together, and now it seemed as
-if they were wandering through some Holland street.
-He had never been in a Holland street, but the sense of
-it came to him&mdash;as he walked with her, carrying her
-instrument. His primary instinct was to turn away
-from the noise of the cars, and where the lights were
-less glaring. Moreover, now that they were alone, the
-impulse to say many things had left him.</p>
-
-<p>“We must hurry to the ferry&mdash;there is only a few
-minutes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He had known somehow that she was going away&mdash;perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-from something she had said to the others at
-the theatre.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not going way back to&mdash;to the Armory?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, to Europe just for a few weeks. I sail to-morrow
-morning from Baltimore. All we have to do is
-to catch the ferry and train. I have sleeper-tickets&mdash;and
-berth and all&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll&mdash;I’ll go across on the ferry with you,” he said
-huskily.</p>
-
-<p>She felt his suffering by her own, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“My old master is there. I am to meet him&mdash;I think
-in Paris&mdash;I shall know when I reach London. There is
-to be just a few private concerts and some lessons further
-from him. For two years we’ve planned to do this.
-I go to Baltimore, because it is cheaper to sail from
-there&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’ll be back&mdash;when?”</p>
-
-<p>“By the first of March&mdash;just a few days over three
-months&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent for a time, and then asked: “Do you
-think this is just like a chance meeting to me&mdash;as one
-meets an old friend in New York?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was in a whirl when I saw you,” he said desperately.
-“It was such a pretty thing, too&mdash;the way I happened
-to come to the theatre ... and now you’re
-going away&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;but it’s only a little while&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know I was here in New York?”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you had been. I saw your work&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But anywhere my work appears&mdash;a letter sent in
-care of the paper or magazine would find me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We&mdash;I mean women&mdash;do not write that way&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know&mdash;I know.... But <i>I</i> didn’t have anything
-but the name, ‘Betty Berry’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“It seemed that night after I left you at the Armory
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>everyone was talking about John Morning. And to
-think I supposed you just a soldier. Everywhere, it was
-what John Morning had done, and what he had endured&mdash;and
-I had spent the afternoon with you. I started to
-read that story about your journey, but I couldn’t go on.
-It seemed that I would die before I was half through
-your sufferings.... I would try to think of the
-things we said, but they didn’t come back. I couldn’t
-rest. I was glad you asked me to come again. I could
-hardly wait for the morning&mdash;to go back to the
-Armory&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He had no answer. They were in a cross-town car.</p>
-
-<p>“But I think I understand. We won’t say anything
-of that again....”</p>
-
-<p>“You went back to the Armory that next morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but I wasn’t ready,” he said at last, as if goaded
-by pain. “I had so much to learn. Why, I had to learn
-this&mdash;how little this means&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He pointed out of the windows to the city streets.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean New York?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It really seems as if men must learn that, first of all.
-You have done well to learn so soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so different now. I must have been half-unconscious
-that day when you came. You were like an angel.
-I didn’t know until afterward what it really meant to
-me.... You remember the men who came&mdash;newspaper
-men? They showed me what I could do in New
-York&mdash;how I could make the magazines and the big
-markets. I was knocked-out. You must see it&mdash;all I
-wanted to do in coming years&mdash;to make what seemed
-the real literary markets&mdash;all was to be done in a few
-weeks.... It was not until I was on the train that
-night that I remembered you were a living woman, and
-had come to me.... Then I didn’t know what to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>do.... But ever since I have thought of that afternoon,
-every day....”</p>
-
-<p>They boarded the ferry and moved away from the
-rest of the people.</p>
-
-<p>“I hate to have you go,” he said. The words were
-wrung from him. They were such poor and common
-words, but his every process of thought repeated them.
-He looked back the years, and found a single afternoon
-in the midst of passionate waste&mdash;the single afternoon
-in which she came.... She was everything to him.
-He wanted to go on and on this way, carrying her ’cello.
-He could ask no more than to have her beside him. He
-had learned the rest&mdash;it was trash and suffering. He
-wanted to tell her all he knew&mdash;not in the tension of this
-momentary parting&mdash;but during days and years, to tell
-his story and have her sanction upon what was done, and
-to be done. She was dear; peace was with her....
-She would tell him all that was mysterious; together
-they would be One Who Knew. Together they would
-work&mdash;do the things that counted, and learn faith....</p>
-
-<p>She took the ’cello from him, so that he could carry
-to the Pullman her large case checked in the Jersey station....
-It was very quiet and dark in the coach.
-All the berths were made up but one, in which they sat
-down.... They were alone. It was perfect.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t go back now. I’ll go on with you to Trenton....
-I have thought so much of meeting you....
-When the men came that day to the Armory
-they showed me everything that seemed good then&mdash;fame
-and money waiting in New York. It seemed that
-it couldn’t wait another day&mdash;that I must go that night....
-When the train started (it was like this in Oakland)
-I thought of you&mdash;of you, back in ’Frisco and
-coming to the Armory in the morning. It broke me.
-But I wasn’t right&mdash;not normal. I had worked like a
-madman&mdash;wounds and all. I worked like a madman in
-New York&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span></p>
-
-<p>She put her hand on his. Her listening centered him.
-That was it&mdash;as if he had not been whirling true before....
-Her hand, her listening, and he was himself&mdash;eager
-to give her all that was real.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so good to have you here,” she said in a low,
-satisfied way. “Will you be able to get a train back all
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” Now he thought of Charley and his sister.</p>
-
-<p>“It was such a good little thing that brought me to
-you,” he said. “One of the little things that I never
-thought of before,” he told her hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p>“They are very wonderful&mdash;those little things, as
-you call them.... A person is so safe in doing
-them&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I must tell Duke Fallows about that,” he added.
-“About that word ‘safe,’ as you just said it....
-Did you read his story?”</p>
-
-<p>“About the <i>Ploughman</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it was wonderful!” Betty Berry said. “He
-made me see it. It was almost worth a war to make
-people see that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She stopped strangely. He was bending close,
-watching her.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know you are a love-woman?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean something different?” she asked queerly.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean you are everything&mdash;don’t you see? You
-know everything at once that I have to get bruised and
-tortured to know. And when you are here, I know
-where I am. It’s different from any kind of resting to
-be here with you. It’s kind of being made over. And
-then you are so&mdash;tender&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You make the tears come, John Morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, it was very dark where they were; the real
-silences began. He knew the most wonderful thing
-about her&mdash;her listening.... Sometimes, she
-seemed hardly there. Sometimes the love for her and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>the sweet quality of it all&mdash;shut his throat, and he stared
-away in the dark. It came to him that Betty Berry&mdash;left
-to herself&mdash;would be infallible. She might do
-wrong, through the will of someone else, but her own
-impulses were unerringly right. There was delicacy,
-perhaps, from the long summer alone, in this sense that
-he must not impose his will. She would be unable to
-refuse anything possible. If ever Betty Berry were
-forced to refuse anything he asked, they would never be
-the same together. And so he studied her. Her nature
-was like something that enfolded. It was like an atmosphere&mdash;his
-own element.</p>
-
-<p>“Betty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Betty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;-”</p>
-
-<p>And then she laughed and kissed him. He was saying
-her name in the very hush of contemplation; so real
-that the name was all....</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">6</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> Pullman conductor passing through after
-Trenton gave Morning further passage, and
-moved on with a smile. A wonderful old darkey was the
-porter, very huge, past seventy, with a voice purringly
-kind, and the genial deference of the Old South. Morning
-was thinking there couldn’t be better hands in which
-to leave the Betty Berry.... Fifteen minutes at
-Philadelphia; they hurried out for a cup of coffee. As
-one of the big station clocks marked the minutes, Morning
-felt havoc with a new and different force.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t go back now,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You look so tired&mdash;the long night journey back&mdash;&mdash;”
-she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to have me go farther&mdash;to Wilmington&mdash;to
-Baltimore?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
-<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you won’t mind staying up?”</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry covered her eyes.... “I never
-rested in quite the same way as to-night,” she said. “It
-has been happy&mdash;so happy, unexpected. I shall have
-nine days at sea to think of it&mdash;to play and think of it,
-moment by moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go with you clear through to the ship then.”</p>
-
-<p>The clock ceased its torment.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you plenty of money to get back&mdash;and all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure&mdash;because I could loan you some?”</p>
-
-<p>He told her again, but the thought held a comradeship
-that gripped him. It happened that he was plentifully
-supplied; though he would have walked back
-rather than confess otherwise&mdash;a peculiar stupidity. The
-beaming of the old porter made the moment at the steps
-of the coach so fine, Morning found himself explaining:</p>
-
-<p>“The lady is sailing from Baltimore in the morning.
-I’ve decided to go clear through to the pier.”</p>
-
-<p>This was an extraordinary thing for him to explain.</p>
-
-<p>They sat in silence until the train moved, and they
-could forget the snoring.... The coach grew
-colder, and Betty unpacked a steamer rug which they
-used for a lap-robe. Even the old darkey went to sleep
-after Wilmington.</p>
-
-<p>“Letters&mdash;” she said at last. “I have been thinking
-about that.... There’s no way to tell where I am
-to be. I won’t know until London, where I am to meet
-my old master. Perhaps then I could tell you&mdash;but I
-daren’t think of letters and risk disappointment....
-You must wait until I write you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning began to count the days, and she knew what
-was in his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just it&mdash;one gets to lean on letters. One’s
-letters are never one’s self. I know that extended writing
-throws one out from the true idea of another. I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>shall think of to-night during the weeks.... It
-seems, we forgot the world to-night. There&mdash;behind
-the scenes&mdash;how wonderful.... There was no
-thought about it. I just found myself in your arms&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I am not to write&mdash;until I hear from you?”
-he asked. It had not occurred to him before that she
-could have any deeper reason than an uncertain itinerary.</p>
-
-<p>“That will be best.... Don’t you see, writing is
-your work. It will make you turn your training upon
-me. Something tells me the peril of that. As to-night
-dimmed away&mdash;you would force the picture....
-Trained as you, one writes to what he wishes one
-to be, not to what one is.... You would make me
-all over to suit&mdash;and when I came, there would be a
-shock.... And then think if some night&mdash;very
-eager and heart-thumping, I should reach a city&mdash;so
-lonely and hungry for my letter&mdash;and it shouldn’t be
-there.... No, to-night must do for me. I shall
-go on my way playing and biding my time, until the
-return steamer. Then some morning, about the first of
-March, you shall hear that I am back&mdash;and that I am
-waiting for my real letter&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And where did you learn all this&mdash;about a man
-writing himself out of the real?” John Morning asked
-wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“If I were to be in one place to receive your letters,
-I might not have thought of it&mdash;yet it is true....
-Then, my letters are nothing. Perhaps I am a little
-afraid to write to you. I think with the ’cello&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“All that seems very old and wise, beyond my kind
-of thinking,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time she was listening. It was like that
-first afternoon.... What did Betty Berry hear
-continually? It gave him a conception of what receptivity
-meant&mdash;that quiescence of all that is common, that
-abatement of the world and the worldly self, that quality
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>purely feminine. It was like a valley receiving the afternoon
-sunlight. He realized vaguely at first that the
-mastery of self, necessary for such listening, is the very
-state of being saints pray for, and practice continually
-to attain.... Perhaps, he thought, this is the way
-great powers come&mdash;from such listening&mdash;the listening
-of the soul; perhaps such power would come again and
-again, if only the strength of it were turned into service
-for men; perhaps it was a kind of prayer.... It
-was all too vague for him to speak....</p>
-
-<p>She was first to whisper that the dawn had come.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He saw her eyes with the daylight, as he had not
-seen them since that first afternoon&mdash;gray eyes, very
-deep. The same strange hush came to him from them.
-And there was a soft gray lustre with the morning about
-her traveling-coat; and her brown hair seemed half-transparent
-against the panes. No one was yet abroad
-in the coach.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t seem to belong at all&mdash;except that I love
-you,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me&mdash;what that means&mdash;oh, please&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“When I think of what I am, and who I am, and
-what I have been&mdash;and what common things I have done
-in the stupidity of thinking they were good,” he explained
-with a rush of words: “when I think of the
-dozen turnings in my life, when little things said or done
-by another have kept me from greater shame and nothingness&mdash;oh,
-it doesn’t seem to me that I belong at all
-to such a night as this! But when I feel myself here,
-and see you, and how dear you are to me, how you wait
-for my words, and what happiness this is together&mdash;then
-it comes to me that I don’t belong to those other things,
-but only to this&mdash;that I could never be a part of those
-old thoughts and ways, if you were always near&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And I have waited a long time.... The world
-has said again and again, ‘He will never come,’ but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>something deeper of me&mdash;something deeper than plays
-the ’cello, kept waiting on and on. That deeper me
-seemed to know all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>Talking and listening carried them on. John Morning
-had the different phases of self segregated in an
-astonishing way. He spoke of himself as man can only
-with a woman&mdash;making pictures of certain moments, as a
-writer does. Volumes of emotion, they burned, talking
-and listening, leaning upon each other’s words and
-thoughts. They were one, in a very deep sense of joy
-and replenishment. They touched for moments the
-plane of unity in which they looked with calm upon the
-parting, but the woman alone poised herself there. They
-left the old darkey&mdash;a blessing in his voice and smile.
-Such passages of the days’ journeys were always important
-to Betty Berry.</p>
-
-<p>Morning fell often from the heights to contemplate
-the journey’s end and the dividing sea. In spite of his
-words, in spite of his belief&mdash;his giving was not of her
-quality of giving. His replenishment was less therefore....
-They moved about the streets of Baltimore in
-early morning. The baggage went on to the ship. An
-hour remained. Sounds and passing people distracted
-him. The woman was fresher than when he had seen
-her last night, but Morning was haggard and full of
-needs.... She was a continual miracle, unlike
-anything that the world held&mdash;different in every word
-and nestling and intonation. Much of her was the
-child&mdash;yet from this <i>naive</i> sweetness, her mood would
-change to a womanhood which enfolded and completed
-him, so that they were as a globe together. In such instants
-she brought vision to his substance; mind to his
-brain, intuition to his logic, divination to his reason,
-affinity to each element&mdash;enveloping him as water an
-island. The touch of her hand was a kiss; and of her
-kiss itself, passion was but the atmosphere; there was
-earth below and sky above.... She took him to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>the state-room where she was to be, “so you will know
-where I am when you think of me.”... They
-heard the knock of heels on the deck above....</p>
-
-<p>He could not think. He heard them calling for visitors
-to go ashore.... He thought once it was too
-late, and when he was really below on the wharf and she
-above, and he realized that the wild hope of being taken
-away with her, (his own will not entering, as the serpent
-entered Eden,) he could hardly see her for the
-blur&mdash;not of tears, but of his natural rending. Her voice
-was but one of many good-byes to the shore, yet it came
-to him out of the tumult of voices and whistles&mdash;as a ewe
-to find her own.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">7</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>orning</span> heard some one nearby say that so-and-so
-had not really sailed, but was just going down the
-bay.... It was thus he learned that he might have
-passed the forenoon with Betty Berry on the Chesapeake.
-In fact, there was no reason for him not taking
-the voyage.... In a quick rush of thinking, as he
-stood there on the piers, all his weaknesses paraded before
-him, each with its particular deformity. The sorry
-pageant ended with a flourish, and he was left alone with
-the throb of the unhealed wound in his side.</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry would not have agreed to let him take
-the voyage, just for the sake of being with her. He
-knew this instinctively, but perhaps it might have been
-managed.... To think he had missed the chance
-of the forenoon.... The liner was sliding down
-the passage, already forgotten by the lower city....
-Morning found himself looking into the window of a
-drink-shop. Bottles and cases of wine in their dust and
-straw-coats were corded in the window, which had an
-English dimness and look of age. A quiet place; the
-signs attested that ales were drawn from the wood and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>that many whiskeys of quality were within. Something
-of attraction for the spirituous imagination was in the
-sweet woody breath that reached him when he opened
-the door. A series of race-horse pictures took his mind
-from himself to better things.</p>
-
-<p>These influences played merely upon the under-surfaces
-of an intelligence whose thoughts followed the
-steamer down the Chesapeake as certainly as the flock
-of gulls.... It was that quiet time in the morning,
-after the floors are washed. The day was bright, with
-just a touch of cold in the air.</p>
-
-<p>... A drink improved him generally. He examined
-the string of horses again, and talked to the man
-behind. The man declared it was his law not to drink
-oftener than once in the half-hour, during the forenoon;
-he stated that it paid to exert this self-control, as his appetite
-was better and he was less liable to “slop over”
-in the afternoon. Morning was then informed that oysters
-were particularly good just now, and that a man with
-a weak stomach could live on oysters.... There
-was just one little flange of an oyster that was indigestible.
-The man knew this because drink makes one dainty
-about his eating, and one can tell what agrees with him
-or otherwise. Furthermore, one could detach the indigestible
-flange in one’s mouth before swallowing&mdash;anyone
-could with practice. The man glanced frequently at the
-clock.... Well, he would break over, just once,
-and make up later. A half hour was sometimes a considerable
-portage.... They became companionable.</p>
-
-<p>Morning started back for New York at noon. The
-particular train he caught was one of the best of its kind.
-The buffet, the quality of service and patronage had a
-different, an intimate appeal to-day. He sat there until
-dark&mdash;in that sort of intensive thinking which seemed
-very measured and effective to Morning. His chief
-trend was a contemplation, of course, of the night before.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>Aspects appeared that did not obtrude at all with the
-woman by him. Considering the opportunity, he had
-kissed her very rarely, as he came to think of it....</p>
-
-<p>His fellow-passengers let him alone. He reflected
-that he could always get along with the lower orders of
-men&mdash;with sailors, soldiers, bartenders; with the Jakes,
-Jethros, and Jerries of the world. Duke Fallows had
-remarked this.... Duke Fallows ... the old
-Liaoyang adventure came back more clearly than it had
-for months.... That <i>was</i> a big set of doings. Certainly
-there was a thrill about those days, when one
-stopped to think.</p>
-
-<p>At dinner time, approaching the end of the journey,
-Morning met a pronounced disinclination to stay on the
-Jersey side. The little cabin on the hill was certainly not
-for this condition of mind. He had to stop and think that
-it was only yesterday noon when he left the cabin. A
-period of time that flies rapidly, appears strangely long
-when regarded from the moments of its closing. The
-period of the past thirty hours since he had left the hill
-was like a sea-voyage. The lights across the river had
-a surprising attraction. When he realized the old steam
-of alcohol, his mind glibly explained that it was merely
-an episode of a sick and overwrought body; that the real
-John Morning, of altruism and aspiration, was away at
-sea with the love-woman, much cherished, the very soul
-of him.</p>
-
-<p>More than a half-year before he had fled to the country,
-weary to nausea of men in chairs and buffets. The
-animalism of it had utterly penetrated him at last; the
-Conrad study was but one of many revelations. He had
-hated the <i>Boabdil</i>; and hated more the processes of his
-own mind when alcohol impelled. Only yesterday morning
-he had hated the whole vanity of New York leisure,
-with the same freshness that had characterized his first
-month of cleanliness. Yet he found novelty in the present
-adventure; the prevailing illusion of which was that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>he was wrong yesterday rather than now. That night
-he sought his old haunts. There was a gladness about it.</p>
-
-<p>“One mustn’t be too much alone,” he decided, “especially
-if he is to write.... I must have got cocky
-sitting there alone by the cabin-door.... These
-fellows aren’t so bad....”</p>
-
-<p>Presently he was telling the old story of Liaoyang.
-That roused him a little and pulled upon mental fibers
-still lame.... Was he to be identified always with
-that?... A week later he was telling the story of
-breaking away from the Russians at Liaoyang and making
-the journey alone to Koupangtse. This was in a
-strangely quiet bar on Eighth Avenue, in the Forties. A
-peculiarity about this particular telling of the story was
-that he remembered the ferryman on the Hun&mdash;the one
-who had wakened the river-front as he led Eve down
-to drink&mdash;the ferryman who was a leper....</p>
-
-<p>As days passed he went down deeper than ever before.
-“I must have had this coming&mdash;&mdash;” he would say,
-and refused to cross the river to rest. There were moments
-when he felt too unutterably dirty to go to the
-cabin. One day, he kept saying, “I’m going to see this
-through.” And on another day he reflected continually
-(conscious of the cleverness of the thought) that this
-drink passage was like the journey to Koupangtse....
-Then there was the occasion when it broke upon
-him suddenly that he was being avoided at the <i>Boabdil</i>.
-He never went back.... One morning he joined
-some sailors who had breezed in from afar. They
-brought him memories and parlances; their ways were
-his ways all that day, whose long drift finally brought
-them to Franey’s <i>Lobelia</i>, as tough and tight a little bar
-as you would ask any modern metropolis to furnish. The
-sailors were down and done-for now, but Morning stood
-by for the end, enjoying the place and the wide bleakness
-of it.... A slumming party came in about
-midnight&mdash;young men and women of richness and variety,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-trying to see bottom by looking straight down&mdash;as
-if one could see through such dirty water.</p>
-
-<p>The city’s dregs about him&mdash;a fabric of idiocy and
-perversion and murder&mdash;did not look so fatuous nor
-wicked to Morning’s eye, as did this perfumed company.
-They thought they were seeing life, but, deeper than
-brain, they knew better; their laughter and their voices
-were off the key, because they were not being true to
-themselves. Franey’s regulars were glad for the extra
-drinks, but Morning had a fury. His shame for the
-party was akin to the shame he had held for Lowenkampf
-on the eve of battle long ago. He arose, short and
-flaming, yet conscious even in his rage of the brilliance
-of his idea.</p>
-
-<p>“You people make me sick,” he said, lurching out.
-“You’d have to be <i>slumee</i> to see how silly you look&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>They tried to detain him&mdash;to laugh at him&mdash;but one
-woman knew better. Her low voice of rebuke to her
-companions was a far greater rebuke to John Morning
-at the door.</p>
-
-<p>... Finally he began to wonder how long they
-would keep on giving him money at the bank. He turned
-up every day. No matter what he drew it was always
-gone. Sometimes a holiday tricked him, and he suffered.
-He watched for Sundays, after he learned....
-The banking business was a hard process, because
-he had to emerge; had to come right up to the
-window and speak to a clean, white man&mdash;who had
-known him before. It became the sole ascent of Morning’s
-day&mdash;a torturing one. He washed and shaved for
-it, when possible, and after a time managed frequently to
-save enough to steady his nerves for the ordeal. Then
-he had to write his name, and always a blue eye was
-leveled at him, and he felt the dirt in his throat....
-So he drifted for six weeks, and it was winter.</p>
-
-<p>His descent was abrupt and deep. He tried to get
-back, and found his will treacherous. He was prey at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>times to abominable fears. His body was unmanageable
-from illness. There were times when it would have
-meant death or insanity not to drink. For the first time
-in his life he encountered an inertia that could not be
-whipped to the point of reconstructivity. His thoughts
-cloyed all fine things; his expression made them mawkish
-and teary; his emotions overflowed on small matters.
-Betty Berry, around whom all this brooding revolved,
-hardly reached a plane worthy of interpretation. Morning’s
-conception of the woman on the afternoon she came
-to the Armory, or on the night-trip to Baltimore, contrasted
-with this mental apparition of the sixth week:</p>
-
-<p>“She is a professional musician, making her own way
-in the world, and taking, as many a man would, the
-things that please her as she passes. This is not the great
-thing to her that it is to me. Other men have doubtless
-interested her suddenly and rousingly, and have gone
-their way.... Had she been a stranger to a man’s
-sudden loving she would never have beckoned me to
-the chair in the wings that night. She would never have
-come to my arms&mdash;as I went to hers&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Sweat broke from him. The savage and abandoned
-company of thoughts had ridden down all else, like a
-troop of raiders, destroying as they went.... The
-troop was gone; the shouting died away&mdash;but he was left
-more lewd and low than the worst. He had defiled the
-image of the woman who had given herself so eagerly.
-He recalled how he had talked of understanding, how
-he had praised her in his thoughts because she was brave
-enough to be natural, and to act as a natural woman who
-has found her own, after years of repression. The other
-side of the shield was turned to torture him&mdash;the sweet,
-low-leaning, human tenderness of Betty Berry, her patience,
-her endless and ever-varying bestowals. She had
-called his the voice of reality, and become silent before
-it; had proved great enough to remain undestroyed in a
-man’s world; her faith and spirit arose above centuries
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>of lineage in a man’s world&mdash;and she was Betty Berry
-who knew her lover’s presence, though they were almost
-strangers to each other, and opened her arms to
-him....</p>
-
-<p>It was a hell that he vividly reviewed for seven weeks,
-and with no Virgil to guide. A scene or two from the
-final day is enough:</p>
-
-<p>... He had come from the bank about one in the
-afternoon, and had taken a chair in the bar of the <i>Van
-Antwerp</i>. He was neither limp nor sprawling, but in a
-condition of queer detachment from exterior influences.
-He knew that it was daylight; heard voices but no
-words, and carried himself with the rigid effort of one
-whose limbs are habitually flippant. Perhaps it was because
-he was so very generous to the waiter that he was
-allowed to close his eyes without being molested. In
-any event, his consciousness betrayed him, and away he
-went in the darkness of dream: The Ferryman of the
-Hun was poling away at the stream and he, John Morning,
-was but one of a company in passage. It was not
-the Hun river this time; the sorrel Eve was not there.
-Not alone the Ferryman, but all on board were lepers&mdash;he,
-John Morning in the midst of them, a leper. The
-old wound was witness to this.... They tried to
-land at the little towns but natives came forth and drove
-them away. Down, down stream they went and always
-natives came forth to warn them as they neared the land....
-Even when they drew in to the marshes and the
-waste-places natives appeared and stoned them away....
-And so they went down&mdash;to the ocean and the
-storm and Morning opened his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Opposite, his back to the marble bar, his elbows
-braced against the rail, stood Mr. Reever Kennard,
-watching him, and the look upon the face of the famous
-correspondent was that of scornful pity&mdash;as if there was
-a truce to an old enmity, no longer worth while.</p>
-
-<p>Still later on that day, over on Second Avenue,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>Morning almost bumped into a small yellow sign at the
-elevator entrance to the Metal Workers’ Hall, to the effect
-that Duke Fallows was to address a gathering there
-that night.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">8</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span> flash</span> of love came to his heart for Duke Fallows
-at the sight of the name. There was nothing
-maudlin about this; rather, a decent bit of stamina in
-the midst of sentimental overflows. It was the actual inside
-relation, having nothing to do with the old surface
-irritation.... Morning took care of himself as
-well as he could during the day. He meant to mix with
-the crowd at the meeting, but not to make himself known
-until he was free from vileness. He would keep track
-of the other’s place and movements in New York. When
-he was fit&mdash;there would be final restoration in the meeting.
-His heart thumped in anticipation. The yellow
-poster had turned the corner for him. These first
-thoughts of the upward trend are interesting:</p>
-
-<p>He meant to cross the river and build a big fire in
-the cabin. There he would fight it out and cleanse the
-place meanwhile, in preparation. He pictured the cabin-door
-open, water on the floor, the fire burning, the smell
-of soap. He would heat water, wash his blankets, put
-them out in the sun; polish his kettles with water and
-sand. Every detail was important, and how strangely
-his mind welcomed the freshness of these simple
-thoughts. The glass of the windows would flash in the
-morning, and the door of oak would gleam with its oil....
-Finally he would bring Duke there.</p>
-
-<p>This was the triumph of it all. He would bring the
-sick man home; tend the fire for him, go to the dairyman’s
-for milk and eggs. They could call Jake and talk
-to him&mdash;seeing the heart of a simple man....
-They would talk and work together ... the sick
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>man looking up at the ceiling, and he, Morning, at the
-machine as in the old days. Spring would come, the
-big trees would break their buds and sprinkle the refuse
-down&mdash;and, God, it would be green again&mdash;all this rot
-ended.... So the days would pass quickly until
-Betty Berry came.... Duke would be glad to hear
-of her.</p>
-
-<p>... That night Morning went in with the workers
-to their Hall and sat far back. The meeting had
-been arranged under socialistic auspices; seven hundred
-men at least were present. Through the haze of pipe,
-cigarette, and cigars, Duke Fallows came forth.</p>
-
-<p>And this was no sick man. His knees were strong,
-and there was a lightness of shoulder that did away with
-the huddle of old times. His eyes shone bright under
-the hanging lamp, and his laugh was as far as Asia from
-scorn. There was brown upon him; his hands, when
-they fell idle, were curved as if to fit a broad-ax, and
-“I’m glad to be with you, men,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“... I have come to tell you a story&mdash;my story.
-Every man has one. I never tell mine twice the same,
-but some time I shall tell it just right, and then the answer
-shall come.”</p>
-
-<p>Power augmented in the silence of the smoky hall.
-The gathering recognized the artist that had come down
-to them, because he loved the many and belonged with
-them. They gave him instinctively the rare homage of
-uncritical attention. Fallows told of Liaoyang&mdash;of the
-whole preparation&mdash;of the Russian singing, the generals,
-the systems by which men were called to service. Always
-the theme that played through this prelude was the millet
-of Manchuria. He told of the great grain fields, the
-feeding troop-horses, the hollows between the hills&mdash;how
-the ancient Chinese city stood in a bend of the river&mdash;of
-the outer fighting, the rains, the mass of men, the
-Chinese.</p>
-
-<p>This new Duke Fallows hated no man; had no scorn
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>for the Russian chiefs. His ideas of service and humanity
-concerned Russia rather than Japan&mdash;and not the
-imperialistic Russia, but the real spirit&mdash;the toiler, the
-dreamer, the singer, the home-maker&mdash;the Russia that
-was ready, perhaps as ready as any people in the world,
-to put away envy, hatred, war; to cease lying to itself,
-and to grasp the reality that there is something immortal
-about simplicity of life and service for others. What
-concerned this Russia, Fallows declared, concerned the
-very soul of the western world.</p>
-
-<p>He placed the field for the battle in a large way&mdash;the
-silent, watery skies, all-receiving <i>kao-liang</i>, and the moist
-earth that held the deluges. Morning choked at the picture;
-the action came back again as Fallows spoke&mdash;Lowenkampf
-himself&mdash;the infantry of Lowenkampf
-slipping down the ledges into the grain&mdash;Luban, machine-guns,
-rout&mdash;the little open place in the millet where the
-Fallows part of the battle was fought.</p>
-
-<p>“... He was a young Russian peasant. If he
-came into this hall now, we would all know instinctively
-that he belonged to us. He was fine to look upon that
-day, coming out of the grain&mdash;earnest, glad, his heart
-turned homeward. His enemy was not Japan, but Imperialism,
-and defeat was upon it. This defeat meant to
-him, as it did to hundreds of soldiers in that hour&mdash;the
-beginning of the road home. Luban was burning with
-the shame of detected cowardice. A common soldier had
-commented upon it in passing. And now this young
-Russian peasant met the eyes of Luban, and the two
-began to speak, and I was there to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“The peasant said that this was not his war; that he
-had been forced to come; that it meant nothing to him
-if Russia took Manchuria; but that it meant a very great
-deal to him&mdash;this being away&mdash;because his six babies
-were not being fed by the Fatherland, and his field was
-not being ploughed.</p>
-
-<p>“It was very simple. You see it all. The Fatherland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-forced starvation upon a man’s children, while his
-field remained unploughed. Only a simple man could say
-it. You must be straight as a child to speak such epics.
-It is what you men have thought in your hearts.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, Luban only knew he was an officer and
-the man was not. Machine-guns were drumming in the
-distance, and the grain was hot and breathless all about.
-The forward ranks were terribly broken&mdash;the soldiers
-streaming back past us. Luban, who opened the discussion,
-was getting the worst of it, and his best reply was
-murder. He handled the little automatic gun better than
-the cause of the Fatherland&mdash;shot the <i>Ploughman</i>
-through the breast. I thrust him back to take the falling
-one in my arms....</p>
-
-<p>“We seemed alone together. There was power upon
-me. Even in the swiftness and tumult of the passing I
-made the good man see that I would father his babes,
-look to the ploughing of his field, and be the son of his
-mother. His passing made all clear to me. His message
-was straight from the heart of the world’s suffering
-poor, from the heavy-laden. He spoke to kings and generals,
-and to all who have and are blind. There in the
-havoc of the retreat, dying in my arms&mdash;he made it vivid
-as the smiting sun of Saul&mdash;that this hideous disorder
-of militia was not his Fatherland. He would have fought
-for the real Fatherland. He was a son in spirit, and a
-state-builder; he would have fought for that; he was
-not afraid to die....</p>
-
-<p>“Love for him had come strangely to my heart, men.
-I said to him&mdash;words I cannot remember now&mdash;something
-I had never been able to write, because I had not
-written for men before, but for some fancied elect. I
-made him know that he had done well, that his field
-would bring forth, and that his house would glow red
-with firelight.... I think my Ploughman felt as I
-did even before his heart was still&mdash;that there is something
-beyond death in the love of men for one another....
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>It was wonderful. We forgot the battle.
-We forgot Luban and the firing. We were one. His
-spirit was upon me&mdash;and the good God gave him
-peace.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you quietly, but don’t you see&mdash;this that I
-bring so quietly is the message from the Ploughman who
-passed&mdash;the message of Liaoyang? And this is the sentence
-of it: Where there is a real Fatherland&mdash;there
-will be Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p>“The world is so full of pallor and agony and sickness
-and stealing. First, it is because of the Lubans.
-The Lubans are sick for power&mdash;sick with their desires.
-Having no self-mastery, they are lost and full of fear.
-They fear the whip, they fear poverty and denial; theirs
-is a continual fear of being stripped to the nakedness
-of what they are&mdash;as old Mother Death strips a man. In
-the terror of all these things they seek to turn the whip
-upon others, to reinforce their emptiness with exterior
-possessions. Because their souls are dying, and because
-they feel the terror of sheer mortality, they seek to kill
-the virtue in other men. Because they cannot master
-themselves, they rise in passion to master others. They
-could not live but for the herds.</p>
-
-<p>“We who labor are the strength of the world. I say
-to you, men, poverty is the God’s gift to His elect. It is
-to us who have only ourselves to master&mdash;that the dream
-of Brotherhood can come true. It is alone to us, who
-have nothing, that these possessions can come, which old
-Mother Death is powerless to take away. And we who
-labor and are heavy-laden are making our colossal error
-to-day. We are the muttering herds. Standing with the
-many we may not know ourselves. We look upon the
-cowardice and emptiness of the Lubans and call it Power.
-We see the ways of the Herd-drivers&mdash;and dream of
-driving others, instead of ourselves. We look upon the
-Herd-drivers&mdash;and turn upon them the same thoughts
-of envy and hatred and cruelty&mdash;which cuts them off
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>from every source of power and leaves them empty and
-cowardly indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“These are the thoughts of the herds&mdash;and yet down
-in the muscling mass men are not to blame. It takes
-room for a man to be himself&mdash;it takes room for a man
-to love his neighbor and to master himself. Terrified,
-whipped, packed, sick with the struggle and the strain of
-it all&mdash;how can men, turning to one another, find brotherhood
-in the eyes of their fellows. Living the life of the
-laboring herds in the great cities&mdash;why, it would take
-Gods to love men so!... The world is so full of
-pallor and agony and sickness and stealing&mdash;first, because
-of the Lubans, and, second, because of the City....
-And after Liaoyang, I went straight to the
-Ploughman’s house&mdash;for I had given my word. And
-now I will tell you what I found on the little hill-farm
-up in the Schwarenka district among the toes of the Bosk
-mountains, a still country.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">9</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“I</span> remember</span> the soldiers at Liaoyang, the last
-thing, the many who had grasped at the hope that
-defeat meant the end of the war. They were learning
-differently as I left. Hundreds gave up from the great
-loneliness.... I carried the name of my Ploughman
-across the brown country, and the northern autumn
-was trying to hold out against the frosts. Asia is desolate.
-We who are white men, and who know a bit of the
-loveliness of life&mdash;even though we labor at that which
-is not our life&mdash;we must grant that the Northern Chinese
-have learned this: To suffer quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Baikal was crossed at last. On and on by train into
-the West&mdash;until I came to the little village that he had
-said. For days it had been like following a dream.
-Sometimes it seemed to me so wonderful&mdash;that young
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>man coming out of the millet, and what he said&mdash;that I
-thought it must have come to me in a vision, that I was
-mad to look for his town and the actual house in the
-country beyond. Yet they knew his name in the little
-town, and said that early next morning I could get a
-wagon to take me to the cabin, which was some <i>versts</i>
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“I had known so much of cities. For weeks I had
-been in the noises of the Liaoyang fighting and in trains.
-Moreover, I had been ill for a long time, too&mdash;a crawling,
-deadly illness. But that night my soul breathed. I
-ate black bread by candle-light and drank milk. The
-sharpness of mid-October was in the air. You will
-laugh when I say it seemed to me, an American, as if
-I had come home. In the morning early I looked away
-to the East, from whence I had come, and where the
-sun was rising. (The ceiling of the little room was so
-low I had to bend my head.) To the north the mountains
-were sharp in the morning light and shining like
-amethyst.... I left the wagon at the first sight of
-the hut in the distance, and I reached there in the warmth
-of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“An old man was sitting in the sun. He asked me to
-have bread, and said they had some sausage for the
-coming Sunday. This was mid-week. A child brought
-good water. Then I heard the cane of the old woman,
-and saw her hand first, as it thrust the cane out from
-the door&mdash;all brown and palsied, the hand, its veins
-raised and the knuckles twisted from the weight that bent
-her fingers against the curve of the stick. The rest was
-so pure. She had been a tall woman&mdash;very thin and bent
-and white now. When I looked into that face I saw
-the soul of the Ploughman. I can tell you I wanted to
-be there. It was very strange.... I can see her
-now, looking up at me, as the old do from their leaning.
-It was like the purity and distance of the morning. I
-trembled, too, before this old wife, for the fact in my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>mind about her son. I tell you, old mother-birds are
-wise.</p>
-
-<p>“It was as if my garments smelled of the fighting.
-She knew whence I had come; she looked into
-my soul and found the death of her son. Her
-soul knew it, but not her brain yet. She may have
-found my love for him, too&mdash;the deep bond between
-us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ask the stranger to stay. We will have sausage
-by the Sunday,’ said the old man. His thought was held
-by hunger.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hush, Jan&mdash;he comes from our son&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And where are the children and the young mother?’
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“‘They are out for faggots in the bush&mdash;they will
-come&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“I had thought, as I traveled, (the thoughts of the
-weeks on the road,) to do many things; to give them
-plentifully of money; to arrange for someone to do the
-late fall and winter work. I had intended to go on,
-when sure that everything was at hand to make them
-comfortable. I tell you, men, it was all too living for
-that. One could not perform unstudied benefits for the
-mother of the Ploughman. There was more than money
-wanted there.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We would like to have you stay with us,’ the
-mother said, ‘but our poverty is keen, and we have not
-bread enough now for the winter.... He was
-taken long before the harvest, and it is long until the
-grain comes again&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But if he were here&mdash;what would be done,
-Mother?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ah, if he came,’ she said strangely. ‘If he
-came&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“The father now spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“‘He would cut wood for our neighbors this winter&mdash;when
-the ploughing was finished. That would provide
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>food&mdash;good food. Oh, he would know what to do&mdash;our
-Jan would know&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t soon forget that high, wavering voice of
-the old man&mdash;‘Oh, he would know what to do&mdash;our Jan
-is a good son&mdash;&mdash;’ and the shake of his head.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But may I not do some of the things that he
-would do?’</p>
-
-<p>“I had to say it twice, for I spoke their language
-poorly. I had understood the son at Liaoyang&mdash;but all
-moments were not like those in which he spoke to me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And then,’ I added hastily, ‘he sent you some
-money&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“I dared not offer much with that pure old face looking
-at me. The silver and gold that was in my purse
-I put in her lap.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, it is very much&mdash;the good God brought you
-from him, did he not?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And we will not need to wait until Sunday for&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hush&mdash;Jan&mdash;no, we will not need to wait.’</p>
-
-<p>“... And then the young mother came. I saw
-her steps quicken when yet she was far off. The little
-ones were about her&mdash;all carrying something. The older
-children were laughing a little, but the others were quiet
-in their haste and effort to keep up.... There was
-one little boy, but I will tell you afterward of the littlest
-Jan.... There was a pallor over the brood. Their
-health was pure, and their blood strong, but that pallor
-had come. Men, it was hunger already. Here were the
-fields, and the Fatherland had taken him before the harvest.
-This thing, the shocking truth of it; that this actually
-could be; that a country could do such a thing&mdash;made
-me forget everything else for the moment. Then
-I realized that I must keep the truth from the young
-mother. Before I spoke at all they told her that I had
-come from her husband.</p>
-
-<p>“Her lips were white, her breasts wasted. She was
-lean from hunger, lean from her bearing. Young she
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>was for the six, but much had she labored, and there
-was a mountain wildness in her eyes. She was stilled,
-as the old mother had been, by the fear of hearing
-her man’s death. She dared not ask. She accepted what
-was said&mdash;that I had come from him, that I had brought
-money, and wished to stay for a little.... She
-leaned against the door, the smaller children gathering
-at her knees, the others putting away the wood. Her
-single skirt hung square, and her arms seemed very
-long, nearly to her knees; her hands loose and tired.
-Her hair was yellow; the wind had tossed it. You know
-how a horse that has been listening, suddenly catches his
-breath again. The same sound came from her as she
-started to breathe again.... One of the smaller
-children laughed, and I looked down. It was the little
-four-year-old, the third Jan of that house, and he was
-close to my knees, looking up at me ... and we
-were all together.</p>
-
-<p>“I loved the world better after that look of the child
-into my eyes.... I took him on my shoulder. We
-went to the village together. That night the wagon
-brought us back; there was much food.... And
-that was my house. I looked out on the mountains the
-next day, and for many days to come, and, men&mdash;their
-grand sky-wide simplicity poured into my heart. I took
-the old horse out, and we ploughed during the few days
-remaining. There was not much land&mdash;but we ploughed
-it together to the end, when the frost made the upturned
-clods ring. Then I strawed up the shed for the old horse
-to pass his winter in warmth, and brought blankets for
-him. I respected that old horse. Health and good-fellowship
-had come to me as we worked together. I
-remember the sharp turning of the early afternoons from
-yellow to gray and to dark.... Then we went into
-the bush together in the early winter days. The ax rang,
-and the snow-bolt was piled high each day with wood.
-The smell of the wood-smoke in the morning air had a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>zest for my nostrils I had never known before, and at
-night the cabin windows were red with fire-light. We
-were all one together. And I think the spirit of the
-Ploughman was there in the happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes in the night when I would get up to replenish
-the fire&mdash;the mystery of plain goodness would
-come to me. I would see the children and others all
-around. Then at the frosty window, shading the fire
-from my eyes, I looked out upon the snows. I was unable
-to contain the simple grandeurs that had unfolded
-to me day by day.... And then I would go back
-to the blankets where the little boy lay&mdash;his hand always
-fumbling for me as I crept in. The love that I felt
-for this child was beyond all fear. We could stand together
-against any fate. And one night it came to me
-that from much loving of one a man learns to love the
-many, and that I would really be a man when I learned
-to love the world with the same patience and passion
-that I loved the little boy. The Ploughman came along
-in a dream that night and said it was all quite true.</p>
-
-<p>“And that was the winter.... I wish you could
-have seen this sick man who had come. I had lain on
-my back for months, except when some great effort
-aroused me. I had that coming on, men, which makes a
-man walk&mdash;as a circus bear turns and totters on his
-back feet. The house, the field, the plough, the horse,
-woods, winter, and mountains, love for the child, love for
-all the others&mdash;the much that my hands found to do and
-the heart found to give&mdash;these things made me new
-again. These simple sound and holy things.</p>
-
-<p>“I had been a sick man mentally and morally, too,
-sick with ego and intellect&mdash;a nasty sickness. But one
-could not look, feeling the joy in which I lived, upon the
-snows of the foothills, nor afar through the yellow winter
-noons to the gilded summits of the Bosks; one could
-not look into the eyes of the children, the last vestige of
-hunger pallor gone from them; one could not talk of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>tobacco-and-sausage with the old man by his fireside; nor
-watch the mysterious great givings of the two mothers&mdash;their
-whole lives giving&mdash;pure instruments of giving&mdash;passionate
-givers, they were; givers of life and preservers
-of life&mdash;I say, men, one could not live in this purity
-and not put away such evil and cruel things....
-As the sickness of the blood went from me&mdash;so that
-sickness of mind.... And, I tell you, we were ready
-as a house could be, when the news came officially that
-our Ploughman was among the missing from the battle
-of Liaoyang.</p>
-
-<p>“It was sharper than any winter night. We stood in
-the cabin and wept together. Then in the hush&mdash;the
-real thought of it all came to one&mdash;to whom, do you
-think?... She was on her knees&mdash;<i>the old mother</i>&mdash;praying
-for the other peasant cabins in Russia&mdash;the
-thousands of others from which a son and husband was
-gone&mdash;‘cabins to which the good God has not sent such a
-friend.’... I tell you, men, all the evil of past
-days seemed washed from me in that hour....
-And that is my home. (The old horse and I opened the
-fields again in the springtime.)</p>
-
-<p>“After that I went down to Petersburg to tell my
-story, and to Moscow. I have told it in cellars and
-stables&mdash;in Berlin, in Paris, and London. I am making
-the great circle&mdash;to tell it here&mdash;and on, when we are
-finished, to Chicago, to Denver and San Francisco&mdash;and
-then the long sail homeward, following the first journey
-to the foothills of the Bosk range. I will go to my old
-mother there, and to the little boy, who looked up into
-my eyes&mdash;as if we were born to play and talk and sleep
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“The days of the conscript gangs are over here, men.
-Such days are numbered, even in Russia. They don’t
-come to your door in this country and take you away
-from your work to fight across the world&mdash;but the Lubans
-are here&mdash;and the cities are full of horror. It is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>in the cities where the herds are, where the little Lubans
-whip, and the bigger Lubans thrive. In the pressure
-and heaviness of the cities&mdash;the thought that comes to the
-herd is the old hideous conception of the multitude&mdash;that
-the way of the Lubans is the way of life....
-It isn’t the way. The way of life has nothing to do
-with greed, nor with envy, nor with schemes against the
-bread of other men. It is a way of peace and affiliation&mdash;of
-standing together. And you who have little
-can go that way; you who labor can go that way&mdash;because
-you are the strength of the world. Don’t resist
-your enemies, men&mdash;leave them. The Master of us all
-told us that. And when the herds break, and this modern
-hell of the city is diminished&mdash;the Lubans will follow
-you out&mdash;whining and bereft, they will follow you out,
-as the lepers of Peking follow the caravans to the gates
-and beyond.... I have told you of my home&mdash;the
-little cabin that came to me from the beginnings of
-compassion. And there is such a home for every man
-of you&mdash;in the still countries where the voice of God
-may be heard.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning, desperately ill, rose to leave the hall. In
-the momentary hush, as he reached the door, the voice
-of Duke Fallows was raised again, calling his name.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">10</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“J</span>ohn</span>&mdash;&mdash;” a second time.</p>
-
-<p>Morning turned, his arms lifted despairingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, John, I’ll join you!”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows came down.... The man who gently
-held the door shut smiled with strange kindness. There
-was a shining of kindness in men’s faces....
-Morning did not feel that he belonged. He was broken
-and shamed.... The big man was upon him&mdash;the
-long arms tossed about him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been looking and listening for you too long,
-John, to let you go.”</p>
-
-<p>“... I just wanted to hear you. I’m shot to pieces,
-Duke; I’ll get a few drinks and wait for you. Then,
-you’ll see, I’m all out of range of the man you are&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer. Morning looked up to find
-the long bronzed face laughing, the eye gleaming. Fallows
-turned to the doorman and another, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“Both of you go with him. He needs a drink or two,
-and one of you come back to show me the way to him&mdash;when
-I’m through here.... This is a great night
-for us, John.”</p>
-
-<p>The three went down in the elevator.... And so
-the sick man had not come back&mdash;the dithyrambic Duke
-Fallows was gone for good. The sick man was strong;
-the impassioned phrase-maker had risen to the simple
-testimony of service. From scorn and emotion, from
-judgment and selection, he had risen to the plane of loving
-kindness.... The air in the street refreshed
-him a little. Morning found a bar.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been drinking,” he said to the men. “Fallows
-is a king. I was there with him at Liaoyang....
-Maybe you saw my story in the <i>World-News</i>....
-He stayed in the grain with Luban. I went on to see the
-cavalry fight.... I came back home to do the story.
-He went on to Russia on the <i>Ploughman</i> story&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he a preacher?” said one of the men.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;but he learned about war and women first.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take a soft drink and go back. You stay here,
-and I’ll bring him to you,” the same one went on.</p>
-
-<p>The other drank with Morning and agreed that they
-would not leave until Fallows came.</p>
-
-<p>“And so he learned about war and women first,” he
-said queerly, when they were alone. “But he has been a
-laboring man&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. You heard him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But before that farm in Russia&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes; he was a laborer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he certainly got the crowd with him,” the man
-acknowledged.</p>
-
-<p>“You know why, don’t you?” Morning said impressively.</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s <i>for</i> the crowd. People feel it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I knew that.”</p>
-
-<p>There was quiet, and then the face turned to Morning:</p>
-
-<p>“Say, how did you get such a start as this? This
-kind means weeks&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It got away from me before I knew it. I must
-have got to gambling with myself to see how far I
-could go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to quit?”</p>
-
-<p>A mist filled Morning’s mind. The question seemed
-an infringement. Then it occurred to him how he had
-fallen to lying to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll make you quit, but don’t let him stop you too
-short. You’d be a wreck in a few hours. You see how
-you needed these two or three drinks?”</p>
-
-<p>... Fallows entered with several of the committee.
-He had promised to speak to them again.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what I came for,” he was saying. “So long as I
-am wanted I’ll stay.... Yes, I’m a socialist....
-Yes, I believe in fighting, but when our kind of
-men stand together, there won’t be anything big enough
-to give us a fight. When our kind of men look into one
-another’s eyes and find service instead of covetousness&mdash;there’s
-nothing in the world to stand against us.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows and Morning were in a steam-room together
-two hours afterward. Morning was limp and light-headed.
-He had told of some of the things that had
-happened since Baltimore&mdash;of men he had met&mdash;of the
-slummers&mdash;of harrowing nights and waiting for the bank
-to open.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You had to have it, John?”</p>
-
-<p>There was something in the way Fallows spoke the
-word, <i>John</i>, that made Morning weaker and filled his
-throat. He had to speak loudly for the hissing of the
-steam.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, if you didn’t get humble and stay humble after
-such a training&mdash;you’d be the poorest human experiment
-ever undertaken by the Master. But you can’t fail.
-It isn’t in the cards to fail. You’ve ridden several
-monsters&mdash;Drink, Ambition, Literature&mdash;but they won’t
-get you down. Why, even the sorrel mare didn’t kill
-you, as I promised aforetime. I saw a lot in that story.
-You loved her to the last. You left her dead and hunched
-on an alien road. You’ve loved these others long enough.
-You’ll leave them dead&mdash;even that big fame stuff. I
-think you’ve ridden that pompous fool to death already.
-They are all passages on the way to Initiation. Your
-training for service is a veritable inspiration&mdash;and you’ll
-write to men&mdash;down among men. I love that idea&mdash;you’ll
-write the story of Compassion&mdash;down among men&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows’ face came closer through the steam. He
-scrutinized the wound that wouldn’t heal. “Did you ever
-hear about Saint Paul’s thorn in the flesh?...
-‘And lest I be exalted above measure through the abundance
-of revelations, there was given me a thorn in the
-flesh&mdash;?’ It all works out. You’ll have to excuse me.
-The Bible was the only book I had with me up in the
-Bosk country. I found it all I wanted. I would take
-it again.... Yes, John, it’s all right with you.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning was telling of that afternoon at the Armory.
-He passed over quickly the period of worldly achievement
-in New York to the quiet blessedness he had hit
-upon, finding the hill and the elms.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the formula&mdash;to get alone and listen&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what you preached to-night, wasn’t it?”...
-Presently he was back to Betty Berry again&mdash;finding
-her at the ’cello&mdash;the wonderful ride to Baltimore&mdash;which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-brought him to the drink chapter once
-more.... He couldn’t see Duke’s face as he spoke
-of the woman. There was a peculiar need of the other
-saying something when he had finished. This only was
-offered:</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t talk about that now, John....
-You’d better take another little drink. Your voice is
-down.... You’ll be through after a day or two,
-and I’ll stay with you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll go over to the cabin to-morrow,” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p>They were lying cot by cot in the cooling-room, and
-the talk for a time concerned Lowenkampf, his court-martial
-and discharge.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know how I thought of you coming back,
-Duke?” Morning whispered afterward.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I always thought of you coming back a sick man&mdash;staring
-at the ceiling as you used to&mdash;sometimes talking
-to me, sometimes listening to what I had written. But
-the main thought was how I would like to take care of
-you. I was rotten before. I wanted you sick, so I could
-show you better.”</p>
-
-<p>The huge hand stretched across from cot to cot.</p>
-
-<p>“It was afterward&mdash;that all the things you said in
-Liaoyang came back to me right.... We were lying
-in ’Frisco waiting for quarantine, and my stuff was
-finished the second time, before I read your letter to me
-and the one to Noyes&mdash;and the Ploughman story. That
-was the first time I really saw it right. There was a
-little doctor with me&mdash;Nevin&mdash;who got it all from the
-first reading. At Liaoyang we were down too low
-among the fighting to get it. That Ploughman story
-made my big yarn look like a death-mask of the campaign.
-Betty Berry got it too.... It was the same
-to-night&mdash;why, you got those men, body and soul.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to think so, John; but I’m afraid you’re
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>wrong. It was just a seed to-night. Men need to be cultivated
-every day in a thousand ways.... Women
-get things quicker; they can listen better.... The
-last night before Jesus was taken by the Roman soldiers,
-he told the Eleven that he could be sure only of them.
-He knew that of the multitude that heard him&mdash;most
-would sink back. He counted on just the Eleven, and
-built his church on the weakest, upon the most unstable&mdash;counting
-only on the strength of the weakest link....
-The fact is, John, I’m only counting on you.
-I’ve got to count on you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Less than five weeks had elapsed, and yet the worst
-seemed as far back, in some of Morning’s moments, as
-the deck-passage out of China. He had suffered abominably.
-Fallows stood by night and day at first. He
-brought back a certain quality from the Russian farm
-that was pure inspiration to the other. They spoke
-about the Play. Morning was more than ever glad that
-Markheim had refused it. They sat long by the fire.
-More happened than modern America would believe off-hand&mdash;for
-John Morning began to learn to listen. Fallows
-was happy. His presence in the room was like the
-fire-light. Twice more he went across to the Metal
-Workers’ Hall, and still the New York group would not
-let him go. The Socialists brought him their ideas. He
-was in the heart of threatening upheavals. He reiterated
-that they must be united in one thing first; they must
-have faith in one another. They must not answer greed
-with greed. They must be sure of themselves; they
-must have a pure voice; they must know first what was
-wanted, and follow the vision.... Duke Fallows
-knew that it was all the matter of a leader.... He
-told them of the men and women in Russia who have put
-off self. Finally Duke appeared to see that his work was
-done, and he retired from them.</p>
-
-<p>“It is delicate business,” he said to Morning. “There’s
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>fine stuff in the crowd&mdash;then there’s the rest. If I should
-show common just once&mdash;all my work would be spoiled,
-and even the blessed few would forget the punch of my
-little story. They think I’ve gone on west.”</p>
-
-<p>Still he didn’t leave the cabin on the hill.</p>
-
-<p>It was only when Morning undertook to touch upon
-the love story&mdash;that Fallows looked away....
-Morning tried to comprehend this. Something had happened.
-The big man who had stared at so many ceilings
-of Asia, breaking out from time to time in strange utterances
-all colored with desire; the man who had met
-his Eve, and talked of being controlled by her even
-after death&mdash;shuddered now at the mention of Betty
-Berry.... Morning even had a suspicion at last
-that the other construed a relation between the woman’s
-influence and the excess of alcohol. These moments dismayed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>There is a dark spot in every man’s radiance&mdash;and
-this was the Californian’s, Morning concluded. In the
-transformation which the journey to Russia had effected,
-his particular weakness seemed hardened into a crust of
-exceptional austerity. The only women he ever spoke
-of in the remotest personal fashion belonged to the peasant
-family of the Ploughman. His audiences were unmixed
-by his own arrangement. In tearing out his central
-weakness, a certain madness on the subject had
-rushed in, a hatred that knew no quarter, and a zeal in
-denial that only one who has touched the rim of ruin
-can know.</p>
-
-<p>On the last night of February they talked and read
-late. The reading was from Saint Paul in the different
-letters. Fallows seemed impassioned with the figure.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand him,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“He was afraid of women. Sometimes he seems
-to hate women,” Morning remarked. Certain lines of
-Paul’s on the subject had broken the perfection of the
-message for him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<p>A strange look came to Fallows. The finger that
-was turning a page drew in with the others, and the
-hand that rested upon the book was clenched....
-“Paul knew women,” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>“You think before he took that road to Damascus&mdash;he
-knew women?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Even the Paul who stood by holding the garments
-of the stoners of Stephen?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was a boy then. He learned afterward, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“He couldn’t have known the saints among them,”
-said Morning, who was smiling in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps some saint among them was the one who
-made him afraid. You know women won’t have men
-going alone&mdash;not even the saints among women....
-There may have been one who refused to be dimmed
-altogether even by that great light.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he went alone&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“In that way she wouldn’t be the Thorn,” Fallows
-said slowly. “She would be greater power for him.
-Yes, Saint Paul went alone. We wouldn’t be reading
-him to-night&mdash;had he turned back to her.”</p>
-
-<p>That hurt. Morning was no longer smiling within.
-“I didn’t learn women&mdash;even as a boy,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows was unable to speak. He had never loved
-Morning as at this moment. He was tender enough to
-catch the strange pathos of it, which the younger man
-could not feel.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a natural drunkard, John,” he said presently.
-“You are by nature ambitious, as it is intimated Cæsar
-was; but you are naturally a monk, too. I say it with
-awe.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are wrong,” Morning said with strength.
-“When this woman came into the room at the Armory
-that first day&mdash;it was as if she brought with her the better
-part of myself&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You said that same before. You were sick. You
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>were torn by exhaustion and by that letter of mine about
-Reever Kennard. It was the peace and mystery a woman
-always brings to a sick man.... <i>Your</i> woman is
-your genius, John. Any rival will stifle and defame it.
-It’s the woman in a man that makes him a prophet or a
-great artist. Your ego is masculine; your soul is feminine.
-When you learn to keep the ego out of the brain,
-and use the soul, you will become an instrument, more
-or less perfect, for eternal utterances. When you achieve
-the union of the man and woman in you&mdash;that will be
-your illumination. You will have emerged into the
-larger consciousness. You are not so far as you think
-from that high noon-light. If you should take a woman
-in the human way, you will not achieve in this life the
-higher marriage, of which the union of two is but a symbol.
-That would be turning back, with the spiritual
-glory in your eyes&mdash;back to the shadow of flesh.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know that?” Morning asked coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Because of the invisible restraints that have kept
-you from women so far.... I believe you are prepared
-to tell men something about the devils of drink and
-ambition&mdash;having met them?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“I speak with the same authority.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning did not accept this authority, but was long
-disturbed after the light was out.... Her ship had
-been six days at sea.</p>
-
-<p>They opened the door wide to the first morning of
-March. Snow was upon the hill, but there was a promise
-in the air, even in the sharpness of it. The wind
-came in, searched among the papers of the table, disordered
-the draughts of the chimney, filling the room
-with a faint flavor of wood-smoke, that perfect incense.
-They stood there, testing the day, and each was thinking
-of the things of the night before. Fallows said:</p>
-
-<p>“John, you didn’t build this cabin with the idea of a
-woman coming?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No; it was built before I found her the second time.
-It was my escape from <i>Boabdil</i>.... But I thought
-of her coming, many times afterward&mdash;just as I thought
-of you coming back to stare at the rafters&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows looked down intently at him for a moment,
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>“John, you’ve got about all your equipment now.
-You can’t stand much more tearing down. My road is
-not for you. You were given balance against that.
-Don’t venture into what is alien ground for you. You
-will get back your health. Even the wound will heal.
-Then will come to you those gracious ideals of singleness,
-plainness of house and fare, of purity and solitude
-and the integration of the greater dimension of force....
-You are through looking&mdash;you must listen now.
-The blessedness you told me of this last summer was
-but a breath of what you will get....</p>
-
-<p>“You are a natural monk. If you were in a monastery,
-the laws restraining you would be gross and material,
-compared with those bonds which nature has put
-upon you. The cowl, the cell, and the solitude are but
-symbols again of the inner monasticism a few rare souls
-have known. You need no exterior bonds, vows, nor
-threatenings&mdash;no walls, no brandishing threats of damnation.
-But, if you should betray the invisible restraints
-that have held you for so many years, the sin would
-be far deadlier than breaking any vows made to a church
-or to an order. Vows are for half-men, John; vows are
-but the crutches of an unfinished integrity.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">11</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">O</span>n</span> the morning of the Third, at ten, her call came to
-him. Shortly after twelve he was across the river
-and far uptown in the hallway of an apartment-house.
-Even as he spoke her name, his was called from the head
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>of the stairs. He always remembered the intonation....
-A fire was burning in the grate. The ’cello was
-there. She left the hall-door of the room open, but they
-heard voices, and it was draughty.... She went to
-close it and returned to Morning, who was still standing.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter? You are not well,” she said....
-It was hard for him to realize that this was
-only the third time he had seen her. He was trying to
-adjust her in the other meetings with this&mdash;the angel
-who had come helping to the Armory; the concert Betty
-Berry, her nature flung wide to expression, bringing her
-gift with love to her people. The Armory was one;
-but the Betty Berry of the concert-night was many: she
-who had come forth from the stage to his arms (and
-that was the kiss of all time); the listening Betty Berry
-in the dimness of the Pullman car; holding fast to his
-hand as a child might, while they watched the dawn
-of morning together; the Betty Berry who had led him
-to her berth on the ship&mdash;that kiss and this....</p>
-
-<p>The room had disordered him at the first moment. It
-was so particularly a New York apartment room. But
-the ’cello helped it; the grate-fire was good, and after
-she had shut the door&mdash;there was something eternal about
-the sweetness of that&mdash;it was quite the place for them
-to be.</p>
-
-<p>He was animate with emotions&mdash;and yet they were
-defined, sharp, of their own natures, no soft overflow
-of sentiment, each with a fineness of its own, like breaths
-of forest and sea and meadow lands. These were great
-things which came to him; but they were not passions....
-He saw her with fear, too. Simply being
-here, had the impressiveness of a miracle. It was less
-that he did not deserve to be with her, than that the
-world he knew was hardly the place for such blessedness.
-He was listening to her, in gladness and humility:</p>
-
-<p>“... I asked myself again and again after you
-were gone, ‘Is it a dream?’ ... I moved about the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>decks waiting for the night, as one in a deep dream....
-You were gone so quickly after that voice. Oh,
-I was all right. I was full of you. It would have seemed
-sacrilege to ask for you again.... Yet I seemed to
-expect you with every knock or step or bell. They asked
-me to play on shipboard, and I could hardly believe you
-were not among those who listened.... That first
-night at sea, the moon was under a hazy mass. I don’t
-know why I speak of it, but I remember how I stood
-watching it&mdash;perhaps hours&mdash;and out of it all I only
-realized at last that my hands were so small for the
-things I wanted to do for you, and for everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>That was the quality of her&mdash;as if between every
-sentence, hours of exterior influences had intervened....
-He began to realize that Betty Berry never explained.
-All that afternoon, in different ways, his comprehension
-augmented on how fine a thing this is. She
-was glad always to abide by what she said or did. Even
-on that night, when she came from her playing to the
-wings where he stood, came to his arms, while the people
-praised her&mdash;she never made light of that acceptance.
-Many would have diminished it, by saying that
-they were not accountable in the excitement and enthusiasm
-of a sympathetic audience. It was so to-day when
-the door was closed. It seemed to Morning as if human
-adults should be as fine as this&mdash;above all guile and fear.</p>
-
-<p>He was in a risen world that afternoon. Often he
-wished he could make the world see her as he did. But
-that was the literary habit, and a tribute to her. Certainly
-it was not for the writing. He was clay beside
-her, but happy to be clay.... She did not know it,
-he thought, but she was free.</p>
-
-<p>That was his thought of the day. Betty Berry was
-free. The door of the cage was open for her. She did
-not have to stay, but she did stay for love of the weaker-winged.</p>
-
-<p>“Will all our meetings be so different and lovely?”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>she asked in the early dusk. “Please tell me about yourself
-very long ago&mdash;the little boy, before he went away.”</p>
-
-<p>It was queer for her to ask that. He had expected
-her to inquire at once about the three months since their
-parting in Baltimore. He had determined to tell if she
-asked, but it was hard even to think of his descents, with
-her sitting by the fire so near. Such things seemed to
-have nothing to do with him now&mdash;especially when he
-was with her. They were like old and vile garments cast
-off; and without relation to him, unless he went back and
-put them on again. Little matters like Charley and his
-sister had a relation, for they were without taint. His
-thoughts to-day were thoughts of doing well for men, as
-in fine moments with Duke Fallows&mdash;of going out <i>with
-her</i> into the world to help&mdash;of writing and giving, of
-laughing and lifting.... It was surprising how
-he remembered the very long ago days&mdash;the silent, solid,
-steadily-resisting little chap. Many things came back,
-and with a clearness that he had not known for years.
-The very palms of her hands were upturned in her
-listening; it seemed as if the valves of her heart must be
-open.</p>
-
-<p>“I can see him&mdash;the dear little boy&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed at her tenderness.... They went
-out late to dinner; and by the time he had walked back
-to the house it was necessary for him to leave, if he
-caught the last car to Hackensack. Duke Fallows would
-be expecting him at the cabin....</p>
-
-<p>It came to him suddenly, and with a new force, on
-the ferry, that he had once wished she were pretty. He
-suffered for it again. He could never recall her face
-exactly. She came to him in countless ways&mdash;with poise
-for his restlessness, with faith and stamina that made
-all his former endurings common&mdash;but never in fixed
-feature. It was the same with her sayings. He remembered
-the spirit and the lustre of them, but never the
-words.... She was a saint moving unobserved
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>about the world, playing&mdash;adrift on the world, and so
-pure.</p>
-
-<p>He realized also that he had spoken of Betty Berry
-for the last time to Duke Fallows. There was no doubt
-in his mind now that Fallows had replaced his old weakness
-with what might be called, in kindness&mdash;fanaticism....
-The thought was unspeakable that Betty Berry
-could spoil his work in the world&mdash;he, John Morning,
-a living hatch of scars from his errors ... and
-so arrogant and imperious he had been in evil-doing!
-This trend made him think of her first words to-day:
-“You are not well.” It was true that he had been astonished
-often of late by a series of physical disturbances,
-so much so that he had begun to ask himself,
-in his detached fashion, what would come next.
-He could not accept Fallows’ promise that he would
-get altogether right in health again. He was certainly
-not so good as he had been. These things made him
-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>Now that he was away from her, the sense obtained
-that he had not been square in withholding the facts
-of the wastrel period. It didn’t seem quite the same
-now, as when she was sitting opposite. He would have
-to tell her some time, and of that certain mental treachery
-to her, and of the wound, too.... He saw
-the light of the hill cabin. A touch of the old irritation
-of Liaoyang had recurred of late. Morning could master
-it better now. Still so many things that Fallows had
-said in Asia had come true. Climbing up the hill, he
-laughed uneasily at the idea of his being temperamentally
-a monk.... He had not strayed much among
-women; he had been too busy. Now he had met his
-own. He would go to her to-morrow. His love for her
-was the one right thing in the world. Fallows nor the
-world could alter that....</p>
-
-<p>The resistance which these thoughts had built in his
-mind was all smoothed away by the spontaneous affection<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-of the greeting. They sat down together before
-the fire, but neither spoke of the woman who had come
-between.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">12</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">O</span>n</span> the way to Betty Berry the second day, Morning
-could not quite hold the altitude of yesterday.
-There was much of the boy left in the manner of his love
-for her. The woman that the world saw, and which he saw
-with physical eyes, was only one of her mysteries. The
-important thing was that he saw her really, and as she
-was not seen by another.... They had been together
-an hour when this was said:</p>
-
-<p>“There comes a time&mdash;a certain day&mdash;when a little
-girl realizes what beauty is, and something of what it
-means in the world. That day came to me and it was
-hard. I fought it out all at once. I was not exactly sure
-what I wanted, but I knew that beauty could never help
-me in any way. I learned to play better when I realized
-this fully. I have said to myself a million times, ‘Expect
-nothing. No one will love you. You must do without
-that,’ I believed it firmly.... So you see when
-I went back to the Armory that next morning I had
-something to fall back upon.... I would not have
-thought about it except you made me forget&mdash;that afternoon.
-Why, I forget it now when you come; but when
-you go, I force myself to remember&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you do that?”</p>
-
-<p>She was looking into the fire. The day was stormy,
-and they were glad to be kept in.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you do that?” he repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I can’t feel quite at rest about our being
-together always. It seems too wonderful. You must
-understand&mdash;it’s only because it is so dear a thing&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She had spoken hastily, seeing the fear and rebellion
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Betty Berry.... We’re not afraid of being
-poor. Why not go out and get married to-day&mdash;now?”</p>
-
-<p>Her hand went out to him.</p>
-
-<p>“That wouldn’t be fine in us,” she said intensely. “I
-would feel that we couldn’t be trusted&mdash;if we did anything
-like that.... Oh, that would never keep us
-together&mdash;<i>that</i> is not the great thing. And to-day&mdash;what
-a gray day and bleak. We shall know if that day
-comes. It will be one such as the butterfly chooses for
-her emerging. It must not be planned. Such a day
-comes of itself.... Why, it would be like seizing
-something precious from another’s hand&mdash;before it is
-offered&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And you think you are not beautiful?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>He tried to tell her how she seemed to him when
-they were apart&mdash;how differently and perfectly the
-phases of her came.</p>
-
-<p>“It makes me silent,” he went on. “I try to tell just
-where it is. And sometimes when I am away&mdash;I wonder
-what is so changed and cleansed and buoyant in my
-heart&mdash;and then I know it is you&mdash;sustaining.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem to belong to me&mdash;what you say,”
-she answered. “I don’t dare to think of it as mine....
-Please don’t think of me as above other women.
-I am not apart nor above. I am just Betty Berry, who
-comes and goes and plays&mdash;dull in so many ways&mdash;as yet,
-a little afraid to be happy. When you tempt me as now
-to be happy&mdash;it seems I must go and find someone very
-miserable and do something perfect for him....
-But, it is true, I fear nothing so much as that you should
-believe me more than I am.”</p>
-
-<p>A little afterward she was saying in her queer, unjointed
-way, as if she spoke only here and there a sentence
-from the thoughts running swiftly through her
-mind:</p>
-
-<p>“... And once, (it was only a few weeks after
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>the Armory, and I was playing eastward) I heard your
-name mentioned among some musicians. They had been
-talking about your war, and they had seen the great
-story.... I couldn’t tell them that I know you?...
-It was known you were in New York, and one
-of the musicians spoke of an early Broadway engagement&mdash;of
-starting for New York that very night. It was
-the most common thing to say&mdash;but I went to my room
-and cried. Going to New York&mdash;where you were. Can
-you understand&mdash;that it didn’t seem right for him, just
-to take a train like that? And I had to go eastward so
-slowly. For a while after that, traveling out there, I
-couldn’t hold you so clearly; but as we neared New York&mdash;whether
-I wished it or not&mdash;I began to feel you again,
-to expect you at every turning. Sometimes as I played&mdash;it
-was uncanny, the sense that came to me, that you
-were in the audience, and that we were working together....
-And then you came.”</p>
-
-<p>Her picture changed now. Morning grew restless.
-It was almost as if there were a suggestion from Duke
-Fallows in her sentences:</p>
-
-<p>“I thought of you always as alone.... You
-have gone so many ways alone. Perhaps the thought
-came from your work. I never could read the places
-where you suffered so&mdash;but I mean from the tone and
-theme of it. You were down among the terrors and
-miseries&mdash;but always alone.... You will go back
-to them&mdash;alone, but carrying calmness and cheer. You
-will be different.... It’s hard for me to say, but
-if we should clutch at something for ourselves&mdash;greedily
-because we want something now&mdash;and you should not be
-able to do your work so well because of me&mdash;I think&mdash;I
-think I should never cease to suffer.”</p>
-
-<p>A dozen things to say had risen with hostility in his
-mind to check this faltering expression, the purport of
-which he knew so well in its every aspect. He hated the
-thought of others seeing his future and not considering
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>him. He hated the fear that came to him. There had
-been fruits to all that Fallows had said before. He had
-plucked them afterward. And now Betty Berry was one
-with Fallows in this hideous and solitary conception of
-him. And there she sat, lovely and actual&mdash;the very
-essence of all the good that he might do. He was so
-tired of what she meant; and it was all so huge and unbreakable,
-that he grew calm before he spoke, from the
-very inexorability of it.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no place for me to go&mdash;that you could not
-go with me. Every one seems to see great service for
-me, but I see it with you. Surely we could go together
-to people who suffer.... I have been much alone,
-but I spent most of the time serving myself. I have
-slaved for myself. If Duke Fallows had left me alone,
-I should have been greedy and ambitious and common.
-I see you now identified with all the good of the future.
-You came bringing the good with you to the Armory
-that day, but I was so clouded with hatred and self-serving,
-that I really didn’t know it until afterward....
-All the dreams of being real and fine, of doing
-good in work, and with hands and thoughts, of sometime
-really being a good man who knows no happiness
-but service for others&mdash;that means you&mdash;you! You must
-come with me. We will be good together. We will serve
-together. Everybody will be better for us. We
-will do it because we love so much&mdash;and can’t help
-it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t say any more&mdash;please&mdash;please! It is too
-much for me. Go away&mdash;won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>She had risen and clung to him, her face imploring.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really want me to go away?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;I have prayed for one to come saying such
-things&mdash;of two going forth to help&mdash;prayed without
-faith.... I cannot bear another word to be
-said to-day.... I want to sit here and live
-with it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span></p>
-<p>He was bewildered. He bent to kiss her brow&mdash;but
-refrained.... Her face shone; her eyes were filled
-with tears.... He was in the street trying to recall
-what he had said.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">13</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">H</span>e</span> did not cross the river, but wandered about the
-city.... She had starved her heart always,
-put away the idea of a lover, and sought to carry out her
-dreams of service alone. Then he had come. In the
-midst of mental tossing and disorder to-day, he had
-stumbled upon an expression of her highest idea of
-earth-life: for man and woman to serve together&mdash;God
-loving the world through their everyday lives....
-And she had been unable to bear him longer near her.
-It was the same with her heart, as with one who has
-starved the body, and must begin with morsels.</p>
-
-<p>He was in the hotel writing-room&mdash;filling pages to
-her. He did not mean to send the pages. It was to
-pass the time until evening. He lacked even the beginnings
-of strength to stay away from her until to-morrow.
-He would have telephoned, but she had not given him
-the number, or the name of the woman who kept the
-house. The writing held his thoughts from the momentarily
-recurring impulse to go back. The city was
-just a vibration. Moments of the writing brought her
-magically near. In spite of her prayer for him not to,
-his whole nature idealized her now. His mind was
-swept again and again with gusts of her attraction.
-Thoughts of hers came to him almost stinging with
-reality ... and to see her again&mdash;to see her again.
-Once in the intensity of his outpouring, he halted as if
-she had called&mdash;as if she had called to him to come
-up to her out of the hollows and the vagueness of
-light.</p>
-
-<p>It was nightfall. He gave way suddenly&mdash;to that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>double-crossing of temptation which forces upon the
-tempted one the conviction that what he desires is the
-right thing.... He would be a fool not to go. She
-would expect him.... He arose and set out for
-her house.</p>
-
-<p>But as he neared the corner something within felt
-itself betrayed.</p>
-
-<p>“And so I cannot be content with her happiness,” he
-thought. “I cannot be content with the little mysteries
-that make her the <i>one</i> Betty Berry. I am not brave
-enough to be happy alone&mdash;as she is. I must have the
-woman....”</p>
-
-<p>He was hot with the shame of it. He saw her
-bountifulness; her capacity to wait. Clearly he saw that
-all these complications and conflicts of his own mind
-were not indications of a large nature, but the failures
-of one unfinished. She did not torture herself with
-thoughts; she obeyed a heart unerringly true and real.
-She shone as never before; fearless, yet with splendid
-zeal for giving; free to the sky, yet eager to linger low
-and tenderly where her heart was in harmony; a stranger
-to all, save one or two in the world, pitilessly hungry
-to be known, and yet asking so little.... Compared
-with her, he saw himself as a littered house, wind
-blowing through broken windows.</p>
-
-<p>... That night, sitting with Duke Fallows before
-the fire, brooding on his own furious desires, he
-thought of the other John Morning who had brooded
-over the story of Liaoyang in so many rooms with the
-same companion. All that former brooding had only
-forced the world to a show-down. He knew, forever,
-how pitifully little the world can give.... A cabin
-on the hill and a name that meant a call in the next
-war....</p>
-
-<p>The face of the other cooled and stilled him. Duke
-was troubled; Duke, who wasn’t afraid of kings or
-armies or anything that the world might do; who didn’t
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>seem even afraid now of the old Eve violence, whoever
-she was&mdash;was afraid to speak of Betty Berry to his best
-friend.... Morning wondered at this. Had Duke
-given up&mdash;or was he afraid of mixing things more if he
-expressed himself? The fire-lit face was tense. One
-after another of the man’s splendid moments and performances
-ran through Morning’s mind&mdash;the enveloping
-compassion&mdash;in Tokyo, Liaoyang, in the grain, in the
-ploughed lands&mdash;the Lowenkampf friend, the friend of
-the peasant house, the friend of men in Metal Workers’
-Hall, his own friend in a score of places and ways&mdash;the
-man’s consummate art in friendliness....</p>
-
-<p>“Duke, there’s a lot to think about in just plain living,
-isn’t there?”</p>
-
-<p>The other started. “Hello,” he said. “I didn’t think
-you were in my world.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Betty Berry was waiting at the stairs the next
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you get my letter?” she whispered, when the
-door had swung to.</p>
-
-<p>“No.... Mailed last night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I left the cabin two hours before the mail. It’s
-rural delivery, you know. Jethro reaches my box late in
-the forenoon&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I wrote it about dark, but didn’t mail it until later.
-I thought you would come&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He told her how he had written, how he had come
-to her house, and turned away. They were very happy.</p>
-
-<p>“To think that you came so far. I couldn’t sit still,
-I was so expectant at that very time.... But it
-was good for us&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I understood after a while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, you understood.... I was&mdash;oh, so
-happy yesterday. Yet, aren’t we strange? Before it
-was night, I wanted you to come back.... I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>didn’t go out last night. I couldn’t practice. To-night,
-there are some friends whom I must see&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning, in a troubled way, reckoned the hours until
-evening.... She was here and there about the
-room. The place already reflected her. She had never
-been so blithe before.... It was an hour afterward
-that he picked up a little tuning-fork from the
-dresser, and twanged it with his nail. She started and
-turned to him, her thumb pressed against her lips&mdash;her
-whole attitude that of a frightened child.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if I could tell you?” she said hesitatingly.
-“It would make many things clear. You told me about
-little boy&mdash;you. It was my father’s&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He waited without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“... He used to lead the singing in a city
-church,” she said. “Always he carried the tuning-fork.
-He would twang it upon a cup or a piece of wood, and
-put it to his ear&mdash;taking the tone. He had a soft tenor
-voice. There was never another just like it, and always
-he was humming.... I remember his lips moving
-through the long sermons, as he conned the hymn-book,
-one song after another, tapping his fork upon a signet
-ring. How I remember the tiny twanging, the light hum
-of an insect that came from him, from song to song,
-his finger keeping time, his lips pursed over the
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“He never heard the preacher. There was no organ
-allowed, but he led the hymns. He loved it. He held
-the time and tone for the people&mdash;but never sang a hymn
-twice the same, bringing in the strangest variations, but
-always true, his face flaming with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“For years and years we lived alone. As a little girl,
-I was lifted to the stool to play his accompaniments. As
-a young woman, I supported him, giving music lessons.
-The neighbors thought him an invalid.... All his
-viciousness was secret from the world, but common property
-between us from my babyhood. I pitied him and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>covered him, fed him when he might have fed himself,
-waited upon him when he might have helped me. He
-would hold my mind with little devilish things and
-thoughts&mdash;as natural to him as the tuning-fork....
-He would despoil the little stock of food while I was
-away, and nail the windows down. My whole life, I
-marveled at the ingenuity of his lies. He was so little
-and helpless. I never expected to be treated as a decent
-creature, from those who had heard his tales. They
-looked askance at me.</p>
-
-<p>“For years, he told me that he was dying, and I sat
-with him in the nights, or played or read aloud. If any
-one came, he lay white and peaceful, with a look of
-martyrdom.... And then at the last, I fell asleep
-beside him. It was late, but the lamp was burning. I
-felt him touch me before morning&mdash;the little old white
-thing, his lips pursed. The tuning-fork dropped with a
-twang to the floor. I could not believe I was free&mdash;but
-cried and cried. At the funeral, when the church people
-spoke of ‘our pain-racked and martyred brother’&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She did not finish.</p>
-
-<p>Morning left her side. “I never thought of a little
-girl that way,” he said, standing apart. “Why, you have
-given me the spirit of her, Betty. It is what you have
-passed through that has made you perfect.... And
-I was fighting for myself, and for silly things all the
-time&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>But he had not expressed what was really in his
-mind&mdash;of the beauty and tenderness of unknown women
-everywhere, in whose hearts the sufferings of others find
-arable ground. Surely, these women are the grace of
-the world. His mother must have been weathered by
-such perfect refinements, otherwise he would not have
-been able to appreciate it in Betty Berry. It was all too
-dreamy to put into words yet, but he felt it very important
-in his life&mdash;this that had come to him from
-Betty’s story, and from Betty standing there&mdash;woman’s
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>power, her bounty, her mystic valor, all from the unconscious
-high behavior of a child.</p>
-
-<p>She had given him something that the <i>Ploughman</i>
-gave Duke Fallows. He wanted to make the child live
-in the world’s thoughts, as Duke was making the <i>Ploughman</i>
-live.</p>
-
-<p>It was these things&mdash;common, beautiful, passed-by
-things, that revealed to Morning, as he began to be ready&mdash;the
-white flood of spirit that drives the world, that is
-pressing always against hearts that are pure.</p>
-
-<p>He went nearer to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything I think is love for you, Betty,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The air was light about her, and delicate as from
-woodlands.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">14</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> horse and phaeton&mdash;both very old&mdash;of the rural-carrier
-could be seen from the hill-cabin. Duke
-Fallows walked down to the fence to say “Hello” to
-Jethro whom he admired. He returned bearing very
-thoughtfully a letter addressed to John Morning. It
-was from across the river; the name, street, and number
-of the sender were written upon the envelope....
-Fallows sat down before the fire again, staring
-at the letter. He thought of the woman who had written
-this, (just the few little things that Morning had
-said) and then he thought of the gaunt peasant woman
-in Russia, the mate of the <i>Ploughman</i>, and of the mother
-of the <i>Ploughman</i>. He thought of the little boy, Jan&mdash;the
-one little boy of the six, that had his heart, and
-whom he longed for.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of this little boy on one hand&mdash;and the
-world on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Then he thought of Morning again, and of the
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>He loved the world; he loved the little boy. Sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-it seemed to him when he was very happy&mdash;that
-he loved the world and the little boy with almost the
-same compassion&mdash;the weakness, fineness, and innocence
-of the races of men seeming almost like the child’s.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of John Morning differently. He had
-loved him at first, because he was down and fighting
-grimly. He thought of him of late as an instrument,
-upon which might be played a message of mercy and
-power to all who suffered&mdash;to the world and to the little
-boy alike.</p>
-
-<p>And now Fallows was afraid for the instrument.
-Many things had maimed it, but this is the way of men;
-and these maimings had left their revelations from the
-depths. Such may measure into the equipment of a big
-man, destined to meet the many face to face. Fallows
-saw this instrument in danger of being taken over by a
-woman&mdash;to be played upon by colorful and earthly seductions.
-No man could grant more readily than he,
-that such interpretations are good for most men; that
-the highest harmony of the average man is the expression
-of love for his one woman and his children. But
-to John Morning, Fallows believed such felicity would
-close for life the great work which he had visioned from
-the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>He did not want lyrical singing from John Morning,
-he wanted prophetic thunderings.</p>
-
-<p>He wanted this maimed young man to rise up from
-the dregs and tell his story and the large meaning of it.
-He wanted him to burn with a white light before the
-world. He wanted the Koupangtse courage to drive into
-the hearts of men; a pure reformative spirit to leap forth
-from the capaciousness where ambition had been; he
-wanted John Morning to ignite alone. He believed the
-cabin in which he now sat was built blindly from the
-boy’s standpoint, but intelligently from the spirit of the
-boy, to become the place of ignition. He believed this
-of Morning’s to be a celibate spirit that could be finally
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>maimed only by a woman. He believed that Morning
-was perfecting a marvelous instrument, one that would
-alter all society for the better, if he gave his heart to
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows even asked himself if he did not have his
-own desperate pursuits among women in too close consideration....
-It would be easy to withdraw. So
-often he had faltered before the harder way, and found
-afterward that the easy one was evil.... He left
-it this way: If he could gain audience with Betty Berry
-alone this evening he would speak; if Morning were with
-her, he would find an excuse for joining them and
-quickly depart. Last night Morning had returned to the
-cabin early; the night before by the last car. It was
-less than an even chance.... Fallows crossed the
-river, thinking, if the woman were common it would be
-easy. The way it turned out left no doubt as to what
-he must do. Approaching the number, on the street
-named on the corner of the envelope, he passed John
-Morning, head down in contemplation. He was admitted
-to the house. Betty Berry appeared, led him to
-a small upper parlor, and excused herself for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>Fallows sat back and closed his eyes. He was suffering.
-All his fancied hostility was gone. He saw a woman
-very real, and to him magical; he saw that this was
-bloody business.... She came back, the full terror
-of him in her eyes. She did not need to be so sensitive
-to know that he had not come as a cup-bearer....
-He was saying to himself, “I will not struggle
-with her....”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I time to tell my story?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was going out.... John Morning just went
-away because I was to meet old friends. But, if this is
-so very important, of course&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It is about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you must tell your story.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows talked of Morning’s work, of what he had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>first seen from Luzon, and of the man he found in Tokyo.
-He spoke of the days and nights in Liaoyang, as he had
-watched Morning at his work.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s at his best at the type-writer. When the work
-is really coming right for him, he seems to be used by a
-larger, finer force than he shows at other times....
-It is good to talk to you, Miss Berry. You are a real
-listener. You seem to know what I am to say next&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“When a man with a developed power of expression
-stops writing what the world is saying, and learns to
-listen to that larger, finer force within him&mdash;indeed,
-when he has a natural genius for such listening, and
-cultivates a better receptivity, always a finer and more
-sensitive surface for its messages&mdash;such a man becomes
-in time the medium between man and the energy that
-drives the world&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Some call this energy that drives the world the
-Holy Spirit, and some call it the Absolute. I call it
-love of God. A few powerful men of every race are
-prepared to express it. These individuals come up like
-the others through the dark, often through viler darkness.
-They suffer as others cannot dream of suffering.
-They are put in terrible places&mdash;each of which leaves its
-impress upon the instrument&mdash;the mind. You have read
-part of John Morning’s story. Perhaps he has told you
-other parts. His mind is furrowed and transcribed with
-terrible miseries.</p>
-
-<p>“Until recently his capacity was stretched by the furious
-passion of ambition. It seemed in Asia as if he
-couldn’t die, unexpressed; as if the world couldn’t kill
-him. You saw him at the Armory just after he had
-passed through thirty days hard enough to slay six men.
-Ambition held him up&mdash;and hate and all the powers of
-the ego.</p>
-
-<p>“This is what I want to tell you: ‘When the love of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>God fills that furious capacity which ambition has made
-ready; when the love of God floods over the broadened
-surfaces of his mind, furrowed and sensitized by suffering,
-filling the matrix which the dreadful experiences
-have marked so deeply&mdash;John Morning will be a wonderful
-instrument of interpretation between God and his
-race.’</p>
-
-<p>“I can make my story very short for you, Miss
-Berry. Your listening makes it clearer than ever to me.
-I see what men mean when they say they can write to
-women. Yes, I see it.... John Morning has made
-ready his cup. It will be filled with the water of life&mdash;to
-be carried to men. But John Morning must feel first
-the torture of the thirst of men.</p>
-
-<p>“Every misery he has known has brought him nearer
-to this realization; days here among the dregs of the
-city; days of hideous light and shadow; days on the
-China Sea, sitting with coolies crowded so they could not
-move; days afield, and the perils; days alone in his little
-cabin on the hill; sickness, failures, hatreds from men,
-the answering hatred of his fleshly heart&mdash;all these have
-knit him with men and brought him understanding.</p>
-
-<p>“He has been down among men. Suffering has
-graven his mind with the mysteries of the fallen. You
-must have understanding to have compassion. In John
-Morning, the love of God will pass through human
-deeps to men. Deep calls to deep. He will meet the
-lowest face to face. He will bring to the deepest down
-man the only authority such a man can recognize&mdash;that
-of having been there in the body. And the thrill of rising
-will be told. Those who listen and read will know
-that he has been there, and see that he is risen. He will
-tell how the water of life came to him&mdash;and flooded over
-him, and healed his miseries and his pains. The splendid
-shining authority of it will rise from his face and from
-his book.</p>
-
-<p>“And men won’t be the same after reading and listening;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-(nor women who receive more quickly and passionately)&mdash;women
-won’t be the same. Women will
-see that those who suffer most are the real elect of this
-world. It’s wonderful to make women listen, Miss
-Berry, for their children bring back the story.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t that John Morning must turn to love God.
-I don’t mean that. He must love men. He must receive
-the love of God&mdash;and give it to men. To be able
-to listen and to receive with a trained instrument of
-expression, and then to turn the message to the service
-of men&mdash;that’s a World-Man’s work. John Morning will
-do it&mdash;if he loves humanity enough. He’s the only living
-man I know who has a chance. He will achieve
-almost perfect instrumentation. He will express what
-men need most to know in terms of art and action. The
-love of God must have man to manifest it, and that’s
-John Morning’s work&mdash;if he loves humanity enough to
-make her his bride.”</p>
-
-<p>Fallows was conscious now of really seeing her.
-She had not risen, but seemed nearer&mdash;as if the chair,
-in which she slowly rocked, had crept nearer as he
-talked. Her palms resting upon her knees were turned
-upward toward him:</p>
-
-<p>“And you think John Morning is nearly ready for
-that crown of Compassion?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You think he will receive the Compassion&mdash;and give
-it to men in terms of art and action?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You think if he loves me&mdash;if he turns his love to me,
-as he is doing&mdash;he cannot receive that greater love which
-he must give men?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And you think it would be a good woman’s part to
-turn him from her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And you came to tell me this?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span></p>
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think it is true&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, listen&mdash;listen&mdash;&mdash;” he cried, rising and bending
-over her&mdash;“a good woman’s part&mdash;it would be that! It
-would be something more&mdash;something greater than even
-he could ever do.... What a vision you have
-given me!”</p>
-
-<p>She stood before him, her face half-turned to the
-window. Yet she seemed everywhere in the room&mdash;her
-presence filling it. He could not speak again. He turned
-to go. Her words reached him as he neared the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if I only had my little baby&mdash;to take away!”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">15</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">F</span>allows</span> stood forward on the ferry that night
-and considered the whole New York episode. He
-had done his work. He had told the <i>Ploughman</i> story
-five times. It was just the sowing. He might possibly
-come back for the harvest.... He had another
-story to tell now. Could he ever tell it without breaking?...
-He had tortured his brain to make things
-clear for Morning and for men. He realized that a man
-who implants a complete concept in another intelligence
-and prevents it from withering until roots are formed
-and fruitage is assured, performs a miracle, no less; because,
-if the soil were ready, the concept would come of
-itself. He had driven his brain by every torment to
-make words perform this miracle on a large scale.</p>
-
-<p>And this little listening creature he had just left&mdash;she
-had taken his idea, finished it for him, and involved
-it in action. To her it was the Cross. She had carried
-it to Golgotha, and sunk upon it with outstretched
-palms.... There was an excellence about Betty
-Berry that amazed him, in that it was in the world....
-He had not called such women to him, because
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>such women were not the answer to his desires. He
-realized with shame that a man only knows the women
-who answer in part the desires of his life. Those who
-had come to him were fitted to the plane of sensation
-upon which he had lived so many years. He had condemned
-all women because, in the weariness of the
-flesh, he had suddenly risen to perceive the falsity of
-his affinities of the flesh. “What boys we are!” he
-whispered, “in war and women and work&mdash;what boys!”</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry had taught him a lesson, quite as enormous
-to his nature as the <i>Ploughman’s</i>. A man who
-thinks of women only in sensuousness encounters but
-half-women. He had learned it late, but well, that a
-man in this world may rise to heights far above his
-fellows in understanding, but that groups of women are
-waiting on all the higher slopes of consciousness for
-their sons and brothers and lovers to come up. They
-pass their time weaving laurel-leaves for the brows of
-delayed valiants....</p>
-
-<p>Duke thought of the men he had seen afield, the
-gravity with which these men did their great fighting
-business, the world talking about them. Then he thought
-of the little visionary in her room accepting her
-tragedy....</p>
-
-<p>Even now, in the hush and back-swing of the pendulum,
-it seemed very true what he had said. She had
-seen it. It is dangerous business to venture to change
-the current of other lives; no one knew it better than
-Fallows. But he considered Morning. Morning, as it
-were, had been left on his door-step. Morning would
-be alone now&mdash;alone to listen and receive his powers....
-Fallows looked up from the black water to the
-far-apart pickets of the wintry night. He was going
-home.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The cabin was lit. Fallows climbed the hill wearily.
-There was a certain sharpness as of treachery from his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>night’s work, but to that larger region of mind, open
-to selfishness and the passion to serve men, peace had
-come. He was going home, first to San Francisco&mdash;then
-to the Bosks and the little boy.</p>
-
-<p>Morning arose quickly at the sound of the step on the
-hard ground, and opened the door wide. He had been
-reading her letter, which Fallows had left upon the
-table. The letter had been like an added hour with her.
-It was full of shy joy, full of their perfect accord, remote
-from the world&mdash;its road and stone-piles and
-evasions.... Fallows saw that he looked white
-and wasted. The red of the firelight did not mislead
-his eye. Its glow was not Morning’s and did not blend
-with the pallor.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going on to-morrow, John,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“’Frisco?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;and then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll come back here?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’ll keep on into the west to <i>my</i> cabin&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be nearer this way. I planned to see you
-after ’Frisco.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come back,” Fallows’ thought repeated, “for the
-harvest.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so you are going to make the big circle again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t finished this first one, until you reach
-Noyes and your desk in the <i>Western States</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“The next journey won’t take so long.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been the good angel to me again, Duke.
-It’s quite a wonder, how you turn up in disaster of
-mine.... I wonder if I shall ever come to you&mdash;but
-you won’t get down. You wouldn’t even stay ill.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t get down again, John, at least, in none of
-the ways you know about&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Both men seemed spent beyond words....
-Morning saw in the other’s departure the last bit of
-resistance lifted from his heart’s quest. Betty Berry had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>come between them. Morning’s conviction had never
-faltered on the point that Fallows was structurally weak
-on this one matter.... And so he was going. All
-that was illustrious in their friendship returned. They
-needed few words, but sat late before turning in. The
-cabin cooled and freshened. Each had the thought, before
-finally falling asleep, that they were at sea again....
-And in the morning the thing that lived from
-their parting was this, from Duke Fallows:</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever you do, John&mdash;don’t forget your own&mdash;the
-deepest down man. He is yours&mdash;go after him&mdash;get
-him!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>... She was at the top of the stairs when he
-called the next morning; and he was only half-way up
-when he saw that she had on her hat and coat and
-gloves. The day was bitter like the others. He had
-thought of her fire, and the quiet of her presence. He
-meant to tell her all about Duke Fallows and the going.
-It was his thought&mdash;that she might find in this (not
-through words, but through his sense of release from
-Duke’s antagonism) a certain quickening toward their
-actual life together. He wanted to talk of bringing her
-to the cabin&mdash;at least, for her to come for a day.</p>
-
-<p>“You will go with me to get the tickets and things.
-I must start west at once.”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite dark in the upper hallway. Morning
-reached out and turned her by the elbow, back toward
-the door of her room. There in the light, he looked into
-her face. She was calm, her eyes bright. Whatever
-the night had brought&mdash;if weakness it was mastered, if
-exaltation it was controlled. But she was holding very
-hard. There was a tightness about her mouth that terrified
-him. It was not as it had been with them; he was
-not one with her.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that you are going away&mdash;for some
-time?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes.... Oh, you must not mind. We are
-road people. We have been wonderfully happy. You
-must not look so tragic&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t like her at all. “We are not road people,”
-he thought.... “You must not look so tragic,”&mdash;that
-was just like a thing road people might say.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down. The weakness of his limbs held his
-mind. It seemed to him, if he could forget his body,
-words might come. At first the thought of her going
-away was intolerable, but that had dwindled. It was the
-change in her&mdash;the something that had happened&mdash;the
-flippancy of her words.... He looked up suddenly.
-It seemed as if her arms had been stretched toward him,
-her face ineffably tender. So quickly it had happened
-that he could not be sure. He wanted this very thing so
-much that his mind might have formed the illusion. He
-let it pass. He did not want her to say it was not so.</p>
-
-<p>Words of her letter came back to him. Neither the
-letter nor yesterday had anything to do with this day....
-“You are drawing closer all the time. I have
-been so happy to-day that I had to write. You must
-know that I sent you away because I could not bear
-more happiness....”</p>
-
-<p>Where was it? What had happened? He was fevered.
-Something was destroying him.... Betty
-Berry did not suffer for herself&mdash;it was with pity for
-him. The mother in her was tortured. It was her own
-life&mdash;this love of his for her&mdash;the only child she would
-ever have. She had loved its awakenings, its diffidences,
-the faltering steps of its expression. The man was not
-hers, but his love for her was her very own....
-She had not thought of its death, when Fallows talked
-the night before. She had thought of <i>her</i> giving up
-for his sake, but not of the anguish and the slaying of
-his love for her. And this was taking place now.</p>
-
-<p>“You will let me write to you?” he said, still thinking
-of the letter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you will write to me?”</p>
-
-<p>She remembered now what she had written....
-The fullness of her heart had gone into that. She could
-not write like that again. Yet he was asking for her
-letters, as a child might ask for a drink.... She
-could not refuse. It wasn’t in nature to see his face,
-and refuse.... Surely if she remained apart it was
-all any one could ask.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I will write sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood in the center of the room, his head bowed
-slightly, his eyes upon the wall. He was ill, bewildered,
-his mind turning here and there only to find fresh distress....
-Suddenly he remembered that he had not
-told her of his drinking.... That must be it.
-Some one else had told her, and she was hurt and
-broken.</p>
-
-<p>“I meant always to tell you,” he said. “Only it
-really did not seem to signify by the time you came
-back. And when I was with you&mdash;oh, I seemed very far
-from that. I don’t understand it now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She did not know what he meant; did not care,
-could not ask. It was something he clutched&mdash;in the
-disintegration.... He looked less death-like in his
-thinking of it.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t greatly matter,” she said. “I have to go
-west.... Won’t you come with me to get the
-tickets?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t go out into the street yet. If there is
-anything more I have done&mdash;won’t you let me
-know?”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he realized her side, that he was detaining
-her; that it wasn’t easy for her to speak. It was not
-his way to impose his will upon anyone; his natural
-shyness now arose, and he fingered his hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear John Morning&mdash;you haven’t done anything.
-You have made me happy. I must go away to my work&mdash;and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-you, to yours.... It is hard for me, but I see
-it as the way. I have promised to write&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The words came forth like birds escaping&mdash;thin,
-evasive, vain words. That which she had seen so clearly
-the night before, (and which she seemed utterly to have
-lost the meaning of) was a lock upon every real utterance
-now. She had not counted upon this tragedy of her
-mother instinct&mdash;this slaying of the perfect thing in him,
-which she had loved to life.</p>
-
-<p>He arose, and sat down; he swallowed, started to
-speak, but could not. He was like a boy&mdash;this man who
-had seen so much, just a bewildered boy, his suffering
-too deep for words&mdash;the sweetest part of him to her,
-dying before her eyes. And the dream of their service
-together, their hand-in-hand going out to the world,
-their poverty and purity and compassion together&mdash;these
-were lost jewels.... It was all madness, the world&mdash;all
-madness and devilishness. Beauty and virtue and
-loving kindness were gone, the world turned insane....
-The thought came to tell <i>him</i> she was insane;
-a better lie still, that she was not a pure woman. She
-started to speak, but his eyes came up to her....
-She tried it again, but his eyes came up to her. He
-fingered his hat boyishly. The mother in her breast
-could not.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Their dreadful night. The winter darkness was coming
-on swiftly. Her train was leaving.</p>
-
-<p>“But you said you were not going to work for the
-present. You have been working so hard all winter&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He had said it all before.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;but there is much for me to do&mdash;days of study
-and practice&mdash;and thinking. You will understand....
-Everything will come clear and you will understand.
-You see, to-day&mdash;this isn’t a day for words with
-us.... One must have one’s own secret place.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>You must say of me, ‘She suddenly remembered something&mdash;and
-had to go away.’...”</p>
-
-<p>“‘She suddenly remembered something and had to
-hurry away,’” he repeated, trying to smile. “But she
-will write to me. I will work&mdash;work&mdash;and when you
-let me, I will come to you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He had to leave.... He kissed her again.
-There was something like death about it.</p>
-
-<p>“If we <i>were</i> only dead,” she said, “and were going
-away together&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>... A man stepped up to him, regarded him intently.
-Morning realized that he must get alone. He
-had been shaking his head wearily, and unseeingly&mdash;standing
-in the main corridor of the station in Jersey&mdash;shaking
-his head.... It was full night outside.
-He forgot that he did not have to recross the river&mdash;and
-was on the ferry back to New York before he
-remembered....</p>
-
-<p>He gained the hill to his cabin long afterward. That
-reminded him that Duke Fallows had gone, too&mdash;and
-that very morning.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed farther back in his life than Liaoyang.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">16</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>etty Berry’s</span> journey was ten hours west by
-the limited trains&mdash;straight to the heart of her
-one tried friend, Helen Quiston, a city music teacher.
-Her first thought, and the one buoy, was that she would
-be able to tell everything.... She could not make
-Helen Quiston feel the pressure that his Guardian
-Spirit (she always thought of Duke Fallows so) invoked
-in that half-hour of his call, but with a day or a night
-she could make her friend know what had happened, and
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>something of the extent of force which had led to her
-sacrifice. Helen would tell her if she were mad. All
-through that night she prayed that her friend would call
-her mad&mdash;would force her to see that the thing she had
-done was viciously insane.</p>
-
-<p>She was engulfed. For the first time, her spirit
-failed to right itself in any way. She was more dependent
-upon Helen Quiston than she had conceived
-possible, since the little girl had fought out the different
-cruel presentations of the days, during the early life with
-her father.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the night <i>en route</i> she thought of the
-letter she had promised to write to John Morning. The
-day with him had brought the letter from a vague promise
-to an immediate duty upon her reaching the studio....
-She was to write first, and at once. Already
-she was making trials in her mind, but none would do.
-He would penetrate every affectation. The wonder and
-dreadfulness of it&mdash;was that she must not tell the truth,
-for he would be upon her, furiously human, disavowing
-all separateness from the race, as one with a message
-must be; disavowing the last vestige of the dream of
-compassion which his Guardian Spirit had pictured....
-She knew his love for her. She had seen it
-suffer. Would Helen Quiston show her that she must
-bring it back&mdash;that the Guardian Spirit was evil? There
-was a fixture about it, a whispering of the negative deep
-within.</p>
-
-<p>She could not write of the memories. Not the least
-linger of perfume from that night at the theatre must
-touch her communication. Yet it was the arch of all.
-As she knew her soul and his, they had been as pure as
-children that night&mdash;even before a word was spoken. It
-had been so natural&mdash;such a rest and joy.... She
-had learned well to put love away, before he came. From
-the few who approached, she had laughed and withdrawn.
-The world had daubed them. In her heart toward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-other men, she was as a consecrated nun. And this
-was like her Lord who had come.... She had
-made her way in the world among men. She knew them,
-worked among them, pitied them. Her father had been
-as weak, as evil, as passionate, as pitiable. In the beginning
-she had learned the world through him&mdash;all its
-bitter, brutal lessons. As she knew the ’cello and its
-literature, she knew the world and the cheap artifices it
-would call arts.... She had even put away judgments;
-she had covered her eyes; accustomed her ears
-to patterings; made her essential happiness of little
-things; she had labored truly, and lived on, wondering
-why. And he had come at last with understanding. She
-had seen in Morning potentially all that a woman loves,
-and cannot be. He had made her mind and heart fruitful
-and flourishing again. Then his Guardian Spirit
-had appeared and spoken. As of old there had been
-talk of a serpent. As of old the serpent was of
-woman.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Helen Quiston was just leaving for a forenoon’s
-work away from the studio. She sat down for a moment
-holding the other in her arms; then she made tea
-and toast, and hastened off to return as quickly as possible....
-For a long time Betty Berry stood by
-the piano. The day was gray and cold, but the studio
-was softly shining. All the woods of it were dark,
-approximately the black of the grand piano; floors and
-walls and picture frames were dark, but the openings
-were broad, and naked trees stirred outside the back
-windows.... She did not look the illness that was
-upon her. She was a veteran in suffering.... She
-forgot to breathe, until the need of air suddenly caught
-and shook her throat. It was often so when the hidden
-beauty of certain music unfolded to her for the first
-time.</p>
-
-<p>She went to the rear windows, gradually realizing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>that it would soon be spring-time. There was a swift,
-tangible hurt in this that brought tears. There had been
-no tears for the inner desolation.... “Poor dear
-John Morning,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>The reproduction of a wonderful painting of the
-meeting of Beatrice and Dante held her eye for a long
-time.... The blight was upon her as she tried a
-last time to write. It spread over her hand and the table,
-the room, the day. There was a hurt for him in everything
-she wanted to say. She was hot and ill&mdash;her back,
-her brain, her eyes, from trying. She could not hurt
-him any more. He had done nothing but give her healing
-and visions. His Guardian had done nothing but
-tell the truth, which she had seen at the time. This
-agony of hers had existed. It was like everything else
-in the world.</p>
-
-<p>She wrote at last of their service in the world. They
-needed, she said, the strong air of solitude to think out
-the perfect way. It was very hard for her, who had
-fared so long on dreams and denials and loneliness. He
-must remember that. “Great things come to those who
-love at a distance,” she wrote bravely. Tears started
-when she saw the sentence standing so dauntlessly upon
-the page of her torture.... It would make them
-kinder, make their ideals live&mdash;and how young they
-were!... She said that she was afraid to be so
-happy as he had made her in certain moments. Often
-she found herself staring at the picture of Beatrice and
-Dante.</p>
-
-<p>The thought that broke in upon this brave writing
-was that she was denied the thrill of great doing, as it
-had come to her while Fallows had spoken.... It
-would have lived on, had she gone that night, without
-seeing Morning again. Moreover, her way was different
-from that which she had pictured, as his Guardian
-talked. She did not see then that her action made a kind
-of lie of all her giving up to that hour; and that there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>could be no united sacrifice. It was pure, voiceless sacrifice
-for her&mdash;and blind murdering for him....</p>
-
-<p>From the choke of this, her mind would turn to the
-song of triumph her spirit had sung as his Guardian told
-the story.... She had seemed to live in a vast
-eternal life, as she listened; and this which she was
-asked to do&mdash;was just to attend a temporary flesh sickness.
-She had the strange blessedness that comes with
-the conviction that immortality is here and now, as those
-few men and women of the world have known in their
-highest moments.</p>
-
-<p>She could get back nothing of that exaltation. It
-would never come again. The spirit it had played upon
-was broken.... She had been rushing away on her
-thoughts. It was afternoon, the letter unfinished, the
-’cello staring at her from the corner. It had stood by
-her in all her sorrows of the years, but was empty as a
-fugue now&mdash;endless variations upon the one theme of
-misery.... Happiness does not come back to the
-little things&mdash;after one has once known the breath of
-life.... She closed the narrow way of the letter,
-which she had filled with words&mdash;no past nor future,
-only the darkness that had come in to mingle with the
-dark hangings of the room of her friend.... She
-kissed the pages and sent them back the way she had
-come in the night.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The qualities that had brought her the friend, Helen
-Quiston, and which had made the friendship so real,
-were the qualities of Betty Berry. She had come to the
-last woman to be told of her madness, or to find admonition
-toward breaking down the thing she had begun....
-They had talked for hours that night.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it is lovely, dear Betty. Why, you look
-lovelier this instant than I ever dreamed you could be.
-Loving a man seems to do that to a woman&mdash;but the
-privilege of the greater thing! Oh, you <i>are</i> privileged.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>That’s the way of the great love. I should like sometime
-to know that Guardian. How did mere man grasp
-the beauty and mystery of service like that?...
-Stay with me. I will serve you, hands and feet. It is
-enough for me to touch the garment’s hem....
-You are already gone from us, dearest. You have loved
-a man. You do love a man. He is worthy. You have
-not found him wanting. What matters getting him&mdash;when
-you have found your faith? Think of us&mdash;think
-of the gray sisterhood you once belonged to&mdash;nuns of the
-world&mdash;who go about their work helping, and who say
-softly to each other as they pass, ‘No, I have not been
-able to find him yet.’”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">17</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>orning</span> awoke in the gray of the winter morning.
-The place was cold and impure. He had
-fallen asleep without the accustomed blasts of hill-sweeping
-wind from window to window. He had not started
-the fire the night before; had merely dropped upon his
-cot, dazed with suffering and not knowing his weariness.
-He was reminded of places he had awakened in other
-times when he could not remember how he got to bed.
-Beyond the chairs and table lay the open fire-place, the
-ashes hooded in white.</p>
-
-<p>The blackness of yesterday returned, but with a hot
-resentment against himself that he had not known before.
-He had followed Betty Berry about for hours, and
-had not penetrated the hollow darkness with a single
-ray of intelligence. This dreadful business was his, yet
-he had been stricken; had scarcely found his speech.
-There was no doubt of Betty Berry now, though a dozen
-evasions of hers during the day returned. She was doing
-something hard, but something she thought best to
-do. The real truth, however, was rightly his property....
-To-day she would write. To-morrow her letter
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>would come. If it did not contain some reality upon
-which he might stand through the present desolation, he
-would go to her.... Yes, he would go to her.</p>
-
-<p>His side was hurting. He was used to that; it had
-no new relation now. Everything was flat and wretched.
-Distaste for himself and this nest in which he had lain,
-was but another of the miserable adjuncts of the morning.
-He stood forth shivering from the cot; struck a
-match and held it to some waste paper. Kindling was
-ready in the fire-place, but the paper flared out and fell
-to ashes, as he watched his left hand. He went to the
-window and examined his hand closer. The nails were
-broken and dry; there were whitish spots on the joints.
-He had seen something of this before, but his physical
-reactions had been so various and peculiar, in the past six
-weeks, that he had refused to be disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Just now his mind was clamoring with memories.
-He had the sense that as soon as an opening was forced
-in his mind, a torrent would rush in. He felt his heart
-striking hard and with rapidity. The floor heaved
-windily, or was it the lightness of his limbs? He went
-about the things to do with strange zeal, as if to keep
-his brain from a contemplation so hideous that it could
-not be borne.</p>
-
-<p>He lit another paper, placed kindling upon it, poked
-the charred stubs of wood free from the thick covering
-of white, and brought fresh fuel. Then, as the fire
-kindled, he opened the door and windows, and swept and
-swept.... But it encroached upon him....
-The open wound was no longer a mystery.... His
-dream of the river and the boat that was not allowed to
-land; his dream of the cliff, and looking down into the
-life of earth through the tree-tops ... the ferry-man
-of the Hun ... and now yesterday with its
-two relations to the old cause.</p>
-
-<p>His whole nature was prepared for the revelation;
-yet it seemed to require years in coming. Like the loss
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>of the manuscript in the Liao ravine, it was done before
-he knew.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, they had to rush away, when they found
-out,” he mumbled. “Of course, they couldn’t stay. Of
-course, they couldn’t be the ones to tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>It might have been anywhere in China; the ferryman
-on the Hun ... during the deck-passage....
-It did not greatly matter. Some contact of the Orient
-had started the slow virus on its long course in his veins.
-He knew that it required from three to five years to
-reach the stage of revealing itself as now. He saw it as
-the source of his various recent indispositions, and realized
-that he could not remain in his cabin indefinitely.
-It would be well for a while. Neither Duke Fallows nor
-Betty Berry would tell. He could keep his secret, and
-then&mdash;to die in some island quarantine? None of that.
-This was his life. He was master of it. He should die
-when he pleased, and where.</p>
-
-<p>... Yes, she had her gloves on, when he came.
-She had not removed them all day, not even at the very
-last.... How strange and frightened she had
-been&mdash;how pitiful and hard for her! She could not have
-told him. She had loved him&mdash;and had suddenly learned....
-She had seen that he did not know.... It
-must have come to her in the night&mdash;after the last
-day of happiness. Perhaps the processes of its coming
-to her were like his. He was sorry for Betty
-Berry.</p>
-
-<p>And he could not see her again; he could not see
-her again. He passed the rest of the day with this
-repetition.... His life was over. That’s what it
-amounted to. Of course, he would not let them segregate
-him. His cabin would do for a while, until the
-secret threatened to reveal itself, and then he would
-finish the business.... The two great issues leaned
-on each other: The discovery of his mortal taint took
-the stress from the tragedy of yesterday; and that he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>could not see Betty Berry again kept madness away
-from the abominable death.... The worst of it
-all was that the love-mating was ended. This brought
-him to the end of the first day, when he began to think
-of the Play.</p>
-
-<p>The literary instinct, of almost equal disorder with
-dramatic instinct, and which he had come to despise during
-the past year, returned with the easy conformity of
-an undesirable acquaintance&mdash;that reportorial sentence-making
-faculty, strong as death, and as uncentering to
-the soul of man. Morning saw himself searching libraries
-for data on leprosy, being caught by officials&mdash;the
-subject of nation-wide newspaper articles and magazine
-specials, the pathos of his case variously appearing&mdash;Liaoyang
-recalled&mdash;his own story&mdash;Reever Kennard relating
-afresh the story of the stealing of <i>Mio Amigo</i>.
-What a back-wash from days of commonness! The ego
-and the public eye&mdash;two Dromios&mdash;equal in monkey-mindedness
-and rapacity.</p>
-
-<p>Morning was too shattered to cope with this ancient
-dissipation at first.</p>
-
-<p>After the warring and onrushing of different faculties,
-a sort of coma fell upon the evil part, and the
-ways of the woman came back to him. He sat by his fire
-that night, the wound in his side forgotten, the essence
-of Asia’s foulness in his veins, forgotten&mdash;and meditated
-upon the sweetness of Betty Berry. He approached
-her image with a good humility. He saw her with
-something of the child upon her&mdash;as if he had suddenly
-become full of years. “How beautiful she was!” he
-would whisper; and then he would smile sadly at the
-poor blind boy he had been, not to see her beautiful at
-first.... To think, only three days before, she
-had sent him away, because she could not endure, except
-alone, the visitation of happiness that came to her. People
-of such inner strength must have their secret times
-and places, for their strength comes to them alone. To
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>think that he had not understood this at once....
-He had been eloquent and did not know it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hell,” he said, “that’s the only way one can say
-the right thing&mdash;when he doesn’t plan it.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>... If his illness had been any common thing
-she would not have been frightened away. He was sure
-of this. It took Asia’s horror&mdash;to frighten her away.
-He saw her now, how she must have fought with it. He
-shuddered for her suffering on that day.... That
-day&mdash;why it was only the day before yesterday....
-He never realized before how the illusion, Time, is only
-measurable by man’s feeling.... He was a little
-surprised at Duke Fallows. He himself wouldn’t have
-been driven off, if Duke had suddenly uncovered a leprous
-condition. He had been driven off by Duke’s ideas,
-but no fear of contagion could do it. Yet Duke was the
-bravest man he had ever known&mdash;in such deep and astonishing
-ways courageous. Yet he had been brought up
-soft. He wasn’t naturally a man-mingler. It had been
-too much for him. It was a staggerer&mdash;this. Fallows
-was a Prince anyway. Every man to his own fear....
-This was the second morning.</p>
-
-<p>Old Jethro, the rural delivery carrier, drove by that
-morning without stopping. She could not have mailed
-her letter until last night&mdash;another day to wait for it.
-Morning tried to put away the misery. Women never
-think of mail-closing times. They put a letter in the
-box and consider it delivered.... He puzzled on,
-regarding the action of Duke Fallows, in the light
-of what he would have done. No understanding
-came.</p>
-
-<p>All thoughts returned in the course of the hours, his
-mind milling over and over again the different phases,
-but each day had its especial theme. The first was that
-he would not see Betty Berry again; that Duke Fallows
-had been frightened away, the second; and on the third
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>morning, before dawn, he began to reckon with physical
-death, as if this day’s topic had been assigned to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Sister Death&mdash;she had been in the shadows before.
-Occasionally he had shivered afterward, when he thought
-of some close brush with her. She was all right, only he
-had thought of her as an alien before. It really wasn’t
-so&mdash;a blood sister now.... He recalled scenes in
-the walled cities of China.... She had certainly
-put over a tough one on him.... It would be in
-this room. He wouldn’t wait until his appearance was
-a revelation.... He would do the play. Something
-that he could take, would free him from the present
-inertia, so he could work for a while, a few
-hours a day. When the play was done&mdash;the Sister
-would come at his bidding.... He had always
-thought of her as feminine. A line from somewhere
-seemed to seize upon her very image&mdash;this time not sister,
-but&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Dark mother, always gliding near, with soft
-feet&mdash;&mdash;</i></p>
-
-<p>He faced her out on that third morning. Physically
-there was but a tremor about the coming. Not the
-suffering, but a certain touch and shake of the heart,
-heaved him a little&mdash;the tough little pump stopped, its
-fine incentive and its life business broken....
-But that was only the rattle of the door-knob of
-death.</p>
-
-<p>It was all right. He wasn’t afraid. The devil, Ambition,
-was pretty well strangled. There must be something
-that lasts, in his late-found sense of the utter unimportance
-of anything the world can give&mdash;the world
-which appreciates only the boyish part of a real man’s
-work. So he would take out with him a reality of the
-emptiness of the voice of the crowd. Then the unclean
-desire for drink was finished&mdash;none of that would cling
-to him; moreover, no fighting passion to live on would
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>hold him down to the body of things.... But he
-would pass the door with the love of Betty Berry&mdash;strong,
-young, imperious, almost untried....
-Would that come back with him? Does a matter of such
-dimension die? Does one come back at all?...</p>
-
-<p>Probably in this room....</p>
-
-<p>Then he thought of the play that must be done in
-this room; and curiously with it, identifying itself with
-the play and the re-forming part of it, was the favorite
-word of Duke Fallows’&mdash;<i>Compassion</i>. What a title for
-the play! Duke’s word and Duke’s idea.... All
-this brought him to the thought of Service, as he had
-pictured it for Betty Berry&mdash;a life together doing things
-for men&mdash;loving each other so much that there were
-volumes to spare for the world&mdash;down among men&mdash;to
-the deepest down man.</p>
-
-<p>His throat tightened suddenly. He arose. A sob
-came from him.... His control broke all at once....
-How a little run of thoughts could tear down
-a man’s will! It wasn’t fear at all&mdash;but the same depiction
-running in his mind that had so affected Betty Berry
-when she begged to be alone....</p>
-
-<p>“The deepest down man&mdash;the deepest down man....
-It is I, Duke!... Surely you must have
-meant me all the time!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But it passed quickly, properly whipped and put away
-with other matters&mdash;all but a certain relating together of
-the strange trinity, Death, Service, and Betty Berry&mdash;which
-he did not venture to play with, for fear of relapse....
-He had been eating nothing. He must
-go to Hackensack. The little glass showed him a haggard
-and unshaven John Morning, but there was nothing
-of the uncleanness about the face in reflection....
-He heard the “giddap” of Jethro far on the road. The
-old rig was coming.... It stopped at his box. He
-hurried down the hill.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">18</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>wo</span> letters; one from Duke Fallows. Morning
-opened this on the way up the slope. He was
-afraid of the other. He wanted to be in the cabin with
-the door shut&mdash;when that other was opened....
-Fallows was joyous and tender&mdash;just a few lines written
-on the way west: “... I won’t be long in ’Frisco.
-I know that already. The <i>Western States</i> does very
-well without me.... Soon on the long road to
-Asia and Russia. I must look up Lowenkampf again before
-going home. He was good to us, wasn’t he, John?...
-And you, this old heart thrills for you. You
-are coming on. I don’t know anything more you need.
-I say you are coming on. You’ll do the Play and the
-Book.... John, you ought to write the book of the
-world’s heart.... And then you will get so full of
-the passion to serve men that writing won’t be enough.
-You will have to go down among them again&mdash;and
-labor and lift among men. Things have formed about
-you for this.... We are friends.... I am
-coming back for the harvest.”</p>
-
-<p>The sun had come out. Morning was standing in the
-doorway as he finished. The lemon-colored light fell
-upon the paper.... It wasn’t like Duke to write in
-this vein&mdash;after running away. He repeated aloud a
-sentence to this effect. Then he went in, shut the door,
-and, almost suffocating from the tension, read the letter
-of Betty Berry.</p>
-
-<p>It was just such a letter as would have sent him to
-her, before his realization of the illness.... He
-saw her torture to be kind, and yet not to lift his hopes.
-It was different from Fallows’, in that it fitted exactly to
-what he now knew about himself. And he had to believe
-from the pages that she loved him. There was an eternal
-equality to that.... The air seemed full of
-service. Two letters from his finest human relations,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>each stirring him to service. He did not see this just
-now with the touch of bitterness that might have flavored
-it all another time.... What was there about
-him that made them think of him so? If they only
-knew how meager and tainted so much of his thinking
-was. Some men can never make the world see how little
-they are.</p>
-
-<p>He wrote to Betty Berry. Calm came to him, and
-much the best moments that he had known in the three
-days. He was apt to be a bit lyrical as a letter-lover&mdash;he
-whose words were so faltering face to face with the
-woman. Thoughts of the play came to his writing. He
-was really in touch with himself again. He would never
-lose that. He would work every day. When a man’s
-work comes well&mdash;he can face anything.... The
-play was begun the fourth day, and, on the fifth, another
-letter from Betty Berry. This was almost all about his
-work. She had seized upon this subject, and her letters
-lifted his inspiration. She could share his work. There
-was real union in that....</p>
-
-<p>He was forgetting his devil for an hour at a time.
-There were moments of actual peace and well-being. He
-did not suffer more than the pain he had been accustomed
-to so long. And then, a real spring day breathed
-over the hill.</p>
-
-<p>That morning, without any heat of producing, and
-without any elation from a fresh letter from the woman,
-he found that in his mind to say aloud:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ready for what comes.”</p>
-
-<p>By a really dramatic coincidence, within ten minutes
-after this fruitage of fine spirit, John Morning found an
-old unopened envelope from Nevin, the little doctor of
-the <i>Sickles</i>. He had recalled some data on Liaoyang
-while inspecting the morning&mdash;something that might
-prove valuable for the play, in the old wallet he had
-carried afield. Looking for this in the moulded leather,
-he found the letter Nevin had left in the Armory, before
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>departing&mdash;just a little before Betty Berry came that day....
-Nevin had not come back. But Noyes and Field
-had come.</p>
-
-<p>Morning remembered that Nevin had spoken that
-morning of finding something for the wound that
-would not heal.... The remedy was Chinese. The
-Doctor knew of its existence, but had procured the name
-with great difficulty in the Chinese quarter....
-Morning was to fast ten days while taking the treatment.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He went about it with a laugh. The message had
-renewed his deep affection for Nevin. It had come
-forth from the hidden place where Nevin now toiled,
-(secretly trying, doubtless, to cover every appearance of
-his humanity).... He remembered how Nevin
-had studied the wound that refused to heal. The last
-thing had been his report on that. When there was
-nothing more to be offered but felicities&mdash;he had
-vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Morning did not leap into any expectancy that he
-was to be healed, but thoughts of Nevin gave him another
-desire after the play and the book&mdash;to trace the great-hearted
-little man before the end. Nevin would be found
-somewhere out among the excessive desolations. If it
-may be understood, the idea of mortal sickness remained
-in Morning’s mind at this time, mainly as a barrier between
-him and Betty Berry.</p>
-
-<p>Nevin’s drug was procured in New York. Hackensack
-failed utterly in this.... On the third day,
-Morning suffered keenly for the need of food. A paragraph
-from Betty Berry on the subject of the fasting at
-this time completely astonished him; indeed, shook the
-basic conviction as to the meaning of her departure:</p>
-
-<p>“... I have often thought you did not seem so
-well after I returned from Europe, as you were when
-we parted. But the ten days will do for you, something
-that makes whatever might happen in the body seem so
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>little and unavailing.... Don’t you see, you are
-doing what every one, destined to be a world-teacher,
-has done?... What amazes me continually, is that
-you seem to be brought, one by one, to these things by
-exterior processes, rather than through any will of your
-own.... The Hebrew prophets were all called
-upon to do this in order to listen better. Recall, too, the
-coming forth from the Wilderness of the Baptist, and the
-forty days in the wilderness of the Master Himself.
-Why, it is part of the formula! You will do more than
-improve the physical health; you will hear your message
-more clearly.... I sit and think&mdash;in the very hush
-of expectancy for you.”</p>
-
-<p>As the evidences came, so they vanished. She could
-not have fled from him in the fear of leprosy and written
-in this way; nor could Duke Fallows, who was first
-of all unafraid of fleshly things. The conviction of his
-taint, and of its incurableness, daily weakened. Before
-the ten days passed, the last vestige of the horror was
-cleaned away. Illusion&mdash;and yet the mental battle
-through which he had passed, and which, through three
-terrible days, had shaken him body and soul, was just
-as real in the graving of its experience upon the fabric
-of his being as was the journey to Koupangtse, done
-hand and foot and horse. He perceived that man, farther
-advanced in the complications of self-consciousness, covers
-ground in three days and masters a lesson that would
-require a life to learn in the dimness and leisure of
-simple consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>There was no way of missing this added fact: He,
-John Morning, was not designed to lean. He had been
-whipped and spurred through another dark hollow in
-the valley of the shadow, to show him again, and finally,
-that he was not intended for leaning upon others, yet
-must have an instant appreciation of the suffering of
-others. He had been forced to fight his own way to a
-certain poise, through what was to him, at the time,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>actual abandonment in distress, by the woman and the
-friend he loved. Moreover, he had accepted death; resignation
-to death in its most horrible form had been driven
-into his soul&mdash;an important life lesson, which whole
-races of men have died to learn.</p>
-
-<p>He was seeing very clearly.... He bathed continually
-both in water and sunlight, lying in the open
-doorway as the Spring took root on his hill and below.
-Often he mused away the hours, with Betty Berry’s letters
-in his hand&mdash;too weak almost to stir at last, but
-filled with ease and well-being, such as he had never
-known. Water from the Spring was all he needed,
-and the activity of mind was pure and unerring, as
-if he were lifted above the enveloping mists of the
-senses, through which he had formerly regarded
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Everything now was large and clear. Life was like
-a coast of splendid altitude, from which he viewed the
-mighty distances of gilded and cloud-shadowed sea, birds
-sailing vast-pinioned and pure, the breakers sounding
-a part of the majestic harmony of granite and sea and
-sky; the sun God-like, and the stars vast and pure like
-the birds.</p>
-
-<p>When he actually looked with his eyes, it was as if
-he had come back, a man, to some haunt of childhood.
-The little hill was just as lovely, a human delight in the
-unbudded elms, a soft and childish familiarity in the
-new greens of the sun-slope grass. The yellow primrose
-was first to come, for yellow answers the thinnest, farthest
-sunlight. The little cabin was like a cocoon. He was
-but half-out. Soon the stronger sunlight would set him
-free&mdash;then to the wings.... One afternoon he
-stared across to the haze of the great city. His eyes
-smarted with the thought of the Charleys and the sisters,
-of the <i>Boabdils</i> and the slums.... Then, at
-last, he thought of Betty Berry waiting and thinking of
-him ... “in the very hush of expectancy.” The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>world was very dear and wonderful, and his love for her
-was in it all.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was the ninth day that the bandage slipped from
-him, as clean as when he put it on the day before, and
-when he opened the door of the cabin he heard the first
-robin.... There was a sweeping finality in the
-way it had come from Nevin, and the quality of the man
-lived in Morning’s appreciation. His friends were always
-gone before he knew how fine they were.</p>
-
-<p>He was slow to realize that the days of earth-life
-were plentiful for him, in the usual course. A man is
-never the same after he has accepted death....
-And it had all come in order.... He could look
-into her eyes and say, “Betty Berry, whatever you want,
-is right for me, but I think it would be best for you to
-tell me everything. We are strong&mdash;and if we are not
-to be one together, we should talk it over and understand
-perfectly.”...</p>
-
-<p>How strange he had missed this straight way. There
-had been so much illusion before. His body was utterly
-weak, but his mind saw more clearly and powerfully than
-ever.</p>
-
-<p>The Play was conceived as a whole that ninth day.
-The sun came warmly in, while he wrote at length of
-the work, as he finally saw it.... On the tenth
-day he drank a little milk and slept in his chair by the
-doorway.... There was one difficult run that the
-robin went over a hundred and fifty times, at least.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">19</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>etty Berry</span> watched the progress of the fasting
-with a mothering intensity. She saw that
-which had been lyrical and impassioned give way to the
-workman, the deeper-seeing artist. He was not less
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>human; his humanity was broadened. From one of his
-pages, she read how he had looked across at the higher
-lights of New York one clear March night. His mind
-had been suddenly startled by a swift picture of the
-fighting fool he had been, and of the millions there,
-beating themselves and each other to death for vain
-things.... She saw his Play come on in the days
-that followed the fasting. There was freshness in his
-voice. She did not know that he had accepted death,
-but she saw that he was beginning to accept her will in
-their separation.</p>
-
-<p>And this is what she had tried to bring about, but
-her heart was breaking. Dully she wondered if her
-whole life were not breaking. The something implacable
-which she had always felt in being a woman, held her
-like a matrix of iron now. Her life story had been a
-classic of suffering, yet she had never suffered before.</p>
-
-<p>A letter from him, (frequently twice a day, they
-came) and it was her instant impulse to answer, almost
-as if he had spoken. And when she wrote&mdash;all
-the woman’s life of her had to be cut from it&mdash;cut again
-and again&mdash;until was left only what another might say....
-She was forced to learn the terrible process of
-elimination which only the greater artists realize, and
-which they learn only through years of travail&mdash;that
-selection of the naked absolute, according to their vision,
-all the senses chiseled away. His work, his health,
-especially the clear-seeing that came from purifying of
-the body, the detachment of his thoughts from physical
-emotions&mdash;of these, which were clear to her as the impulses
-of instinct&mdash;she allowed herself to write. But
-the woman’s heart of flesh, which had fasted so long
-for love, so often found its way to her pages, and forced
-them to be done again.... Certain of his paragraphs
-dismayed her, as:</p>
-
-<p>“Does it astonish you,” he asked, almost joyously,
-“when I say there is something about Betty Berry beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-question&mdash;such a luxurious sense of truth?...
-I feel your silences and your listenings between every
-sentence. It is not what you say, though in words you
-seem to know what I am to-day, and what I shall be
-to-morrow&mdash;but all about the words, are <i>you</i>&mdash;those perfect
-hesitations, the things which I seemed to know at
-first, but could not express. They were much too fine
-for a medium of expression which knew only wars,
-horses, and the reporting of words and deeds of men....
-Why, the best thing in my heart is its trust for
-you, Betty Berry. Looking back upon our hours together,
-I can see now that all the misunderstandings
-were mine and all the truth yours. When it seems to me
-that we should be together, and the memories come piling
-back&mdash;those perfect hours&mdash;I say, because of this
-trust, ‘Though it is not as I would have it, her way is
-better. And I know I shall come to see it, because she
-cannot be wrong.’”</p>
-
-<p>So she could not hide her heart from him, even
-though she put down what seemed to her unworthiness
-and evasion, and decided through actual brain-process
-what was best to say. A new conduct of life was not
-carrying Betty Berry up into the coolness beyond the
-senses. Fasting would never bring that to her. Fasting
-of the body was so simple compared to the fasting
-of the heart which had been her whole life. Nor could
-she ever rise long from the sense of the serpent in woman
-which she had realized from the words of his
-Guardian&mdash;not a serpent to the usual man, but to the
-man who was destined to love the many instead of one....
-She loved him as a woman loves&mdash;the boy, the
-lover, the man of him&mdash;the kisses, the whispers, the
-arms of strength, the rapture of nearness....</p>
-
-<p>He must have been close to the spirit of that night
-at the theatre, when this was written:</p>
-
-<p>“The letter to-day, with the plaintive note in it, has
-brought you even closer. I never think of you as one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>who can be tried seriously; always as one finished, with
-infinite patience, and no regard at all for the encompassing
-common. Of course, I know differently, know that
-you must suffer, you who are so keenly and exquisitely
-animate&mdash;but you have an un-American poise....
-You played amazingly. I loved that at once. There was
-a gleam about it. Betty Berry’s gleaming. I faced you
-from the wings that night. I wanted to come up behind
-you. You were all music.... But I love even better
-the instrument of emotions you have become. That
-must be what music is for&mdash;to sensitize one’s life, to
-make it more and more responsive....”</p>
-
-<p>Then in a different vein:</p>
-
-<p>“... The long forenoons, wherein we grow....
-Yes, I knew you were a tree-lover; that the
-sound of running water was dear to you ... and
-the things you dream of ... work and play and
-forest scents and the wind in the branches....
-Sometimes it seems to me&mdash;is it a saying of lovers?&mdash;that
-we should be boy and girl together.... Why,
-I’ve only just now learned to be a boy. There was so
-much of crudity and desire and anguish-to-do-greatly-at-any-cost&mdash;until
-just a little ago. But I’ve never had a
-boyhood that could have known you. I wasn’t ready for
-such loveliness in the beginning.... I’ve wanted
-terribly to go to you, but that is put away for the time.”</p>
-
-<p>These lines wrung her heart. “Oh, no,” she cried,
-“you have not learned how to become a boy. There was
-never a time you were not ready&mdash;until now! You are
-becoming a man&mdash;and the little girl&mdash;oh, she is a little
-girl in her heart....”</p>
-
-<p>Everything his Guardian had promised was coming
-to be. He was changing into a man. That would take
-him from her at the last&mdash;even letters, this torrent of
-his thoughts of life and work. She saw the first process
-of it&mdash;as the Play grasped him finally&mdash;the old tragedy
-of a man turning from a woman to his work....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p>
-
-<p>She built the play from the flying sparks....
-He was thronged with illusions of production. How
-badly he had done it before, he said, and how perfect
-had proved the necessity to wait, and to do it a second
-time.... Even the most unimaginative audience
-must build the great battle picture from the headquarters
-scene; then the trampled arena of the Ploughman, deep
-in the hollow of that valley, and his coming forth through
-the millet....</p>
-
-<p>“... It’s so simple,” he wrote in fierce haste.
-“You see, I remember how hard it was for me to grasp
-that first night, when Fallows brought in the story to the
-Russian headquarters.... I have remembered
-that. I have made it <i>so that I could see it then</i>. And I
-was woven in and fibred over with coarseness, from
-months of life in Liaoyang and from the day’s hideous
-brutality. I have measured my slowness and written to
-quicken such slowness as that. The mystery is, it is not
-spoiled by such clearness. It is better&mdash;it never lets you
-alone. It won’t let you lie to yourself. You can’t be the
-same after reading it.... And it goes after the
-deepest down man.... Every line is involved in
-action.</p>
-
-<p>“The third act&mdash;sometime we’ll see it together&mdash;how
-the main character leaves the field and goes out in search
-of the Ploughman’s hut, across Asia and Europe; how
-he reaches there&mdash;the old father and mother, the six
-children, the one little boy, who has the particular answer
-for the man’s lonely love&mdash;the mother of the six,
-common, silent, angular, her skirt hanging square, as
-Duke put it&mdash;but she is big enough for every one to get
-into her heart. You will see the fear of her man’s
-death, which the stranger’s presence brings to her, though
-he leaves it to Russia to inform the family. You will see
-the beautiful mystery of compassion that he brings, too.
-That’s the whole shine of the piece. And it came from
-the ministry of pain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
-
-<p>... “I’m not praising <i>my</i> Play&mdash;it isn’t. It’s
-Duke’s almost every word of it&mdash;every thought, the work
-of Duke’s disciple. I have merely felt it all and made it
-clear&mdash;clear. You see it all. Many thousands must see,
-and see what the name means. It’s the most wonderful
-word in the world to me, <i>Compassion</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Then came the break for a day, and the flash that
-his work on the Play was finished. “The cabin will be
-harder for me now. The new work is only a dream so
-far&mdash;and this goes to Markheim to-day.... It is
-very queer that I should go back to Markheim, but somehow
-I want to pick up that failure. There are other
-reasons.... I shall tell him that he can have five
-days. I’m just getting ready to go across the River....
-My health was almost never better. I’m not
-tired. The work has seemed to replenish me, as your
-letters do. But that last letter&mdash;yesterday’s&mdash;it seems
-to come from behind a screen, where other voices were&mdash;the
-loved tones troubled and crowded out by others. It
-left me restless and more than ever longing to see you.
-It is as if there were centuries all unintelligible, to be
-made clear only by being with you. The world and the
-other voices drown yours&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She felt the instinct of centuries to hold out her arms
-to him&mdash;arms of the woman, after man’s task in the
-world&mdash;home at evening with the prize of the hunt and
-battle. The world for the day, the woman for the night&mdash;that
-is man’s way. She seemed to know it now from
-past eternity. And for woman&mdash;day and night the man
-of her thoughts.... She was afraid of her every
-written word now. Her heart answered every thrill of
-his; the murmuring and wrestling resistance of his
-against the miles, was hers ten-fold.... The days
-of the fasting had not been like this, nor the two weeks
-that followed in which he had completed the play....
-April had come. She was ill. Her music was
-neglected altogether. Her friend, Helen Quiston, never
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>faltered in her conception of the beauty and the mystery
-of the separation. With all her will, Helen sustained her
-against the relinquishing of the lofty ideal of sacrifice,
-and tried to distract her impassioned turning to the east....
-She would hold to the death; Betty Berry knew
-this.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s harder now that the play is done,” Betty repeated.
-“He can’t be driven instantly to work again. I
-can’t lie to him. He doesn’t fight me&mdash;he thinks I’m
-right&mdash;that’s the unspeakable part of it. There is nothing
-for me to write about except his work....”</p>
-
-<p>And Helen Quiston found her, a half-hour afterward,
-staring out of the window, exactly as she had left&mdash;her
-hands in her lap exactly the same.... Betty Berry
-was thinking unutterable things, having to do with adorable
-meetings in the theatre-wings&mdash;of wonderful night
-journeys, all night talking&mdash;of waiting in a little room,
-and at the head of the stairs. There was an invariable
-coming back to the first kiss in the wings of the theatre.</p>
-
-<p>“We were real&mdash;we were true to each other that
-night&mdash;true as little children. We needed no words,”
-this was her secret story.... “Oh, I waited so
-long for him ... and we could have gone out together
-and served in a little way. But they would not
-let us alone.”</p>
-
-<p>He had been across to New York.... The
-second morning after the play was finished, she received
-a letter with a rather indescribable ending. He told her
-of fears and strangeness, of intolerable longing for something
-to happen that would bring them together.... The rest is here:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a bit excited by the thought that just came to
-me. And another, but I won’t tell you yet, for fear....
-I don’t quite understand myself. I seem afraid.
-I think I would ask more of myself than I would of
-another man just now. There seem all about me invisible
-restraints. Something deep within recognizes the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>greatness and finality of your meaning to me....
-It is true, you do not leave the strength to me. Did you
-ever&mdash;? No, I won’t ask that.... This letter isn’t
-kind to you&mdash;unsettling, strange, full of an intensity to
-see and be with you....”</p>
-
-<p>Moments afterwards, as she was standing at the
-piano&mdash;the letter trailing from her hand&mdash;the telephone
-in the inner room startled her like a human cry.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">20</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>t</span> was Morning. She did not remember his words nor
-her answers&mdash;only that she had told him he might
-come up-town to her. He had dropped the receiver then,
-as if it burned him.</p>
-
-<p>So, it was a matter of minutes. Nothing was ready.
-Least of all, was she ready. She could hardly stand.
-She had forgotten at first, and it had required courage,
-of late, to look in the mirror. She would have given up,
-before what she saw now, but a robin was singing in
-the foliage by the rear windows. She went out to open
-the studio door into the hall, then retired to the inner
-room again.... “He can heal you, and bring back
-the music,” her heart whispered, but her mind cowered
-before herself, and this mate of herself, Helen Quiston,
-and before his Guardian.... She heard his step
-on the stair ... called to him to wait in the studio.
-He was pacing to and fro.</p>
-
-<p>Morning felt the light resistance in her arms. His
-kiss fell upon her cheek. He held her at arm’s length,
-looking into her face.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed, repeating that she was not ill....
-She was always thinner in summer, she said. In her
-withholding, there was destructiveness for the zeal he
-had brought; and that which she set herself resolutely
-to impart&mdash;the sense of their separateness&mdash;found its
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>lodgment in his nature. It would always be there now,
-she thought; it would augment, like ice about a spring
-in early winter, until the frost sealed the running altogether.
-The lover was stayed, though his mind would
-not yet believe.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it really possible,” he said, sitting before her restlessly,
-“that I am here in your house, and that I can stay,
-and talk with you, and see you and hear you play? I
-have thought about it so much that it’s hard to realize.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is quite what a lover would say,” she thought....
-She had to watch her words. Her heart went
-out to him, but her mind remembered the work to do....
-Self-consciousness, and a weighing of words&mdash;how
-horrible between <i>them</i>!</p>
-
-<p>“And what made you come? I had just read your
-letter, when the telephone rang&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I shouldn’t have sent that letter,” he answered. “I
-must have sent it because of the things I thought, and
-didn’t write.... The night before, I had come home
-to the cabin&mdash;after Markheim and the city. It was
-dreadful&mdash;with the work gone. Yesterday was too much
-for me&mdash;the Spring day&mdash;alone&mdash;not ready to begin
-again&mdash;you here.... I got to thinking about you
-so fast&mdash;and the shame of it, for us to be apart&mdash;that
-I couldn’t endure it.... I thought of going to
-you in a month&mdash;in a week; and then when the
-letter was mailed, I thought of it being with you this
-morning.... A thousand things poured into my
-mind. It seemed finally as if everything was wrong between
-us; as if I had already remained too long from
-you. It was like fighting devils.... And then I
-tried to beat the letter to you, but it got here by an
-earlier train this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>He was like a child to her, telling about something
-that had frightened him.</p>
-
-<p>Their silences were strained. His eyes had a sleepless
-look. Betty saw it working upon him&mdash;the repulsion
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>that had gone from her. She wished she might go to
-his arms and die. It suddenly came over her&mdash;the uselessness
-of it all&mdash;the uselessness of being a woman, of
-waiting, of final comprehension&mdash;all for this rending....
-Yet she saw what would happen if she followed
-her heart. He would take her. There would be a radiant
-season, for the lover within him was not less because
-his work was for other men. But there was also
-within him (his Guardian had made her believe it) her
-rival, a solitary stranger come to the world for service,
-who would not delay long to show him how he had betrayed
-his real work, how he had caged his greater self,
-his splendid pinions useless.... Morning would
-hear the world calling for work he could not do.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>There seem all about me invisible restraints.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>This from the letter of the morning&mdash;alone remained
-with her. It expressed it all. The sentence uprose in
-her mind. It was more dominant to her than if a father
-had forbade his coming, or even if by his coming another
-was violated.</p>
-
-<p>All the forbiddings that Society can bring against
-desire are but symbols compared to the invisible restraints
-of a full man’s nature. Men who are held by
-symbols, ruled by exterior voices and fears, are not finished
-enough to be a law unto themselves.... It
-wasn’t the terror of these thoughts, but tenderness in
-answer to his hurried tumble of explanation regarding
-his coming, that had filled Betty’s eyes. He caught the
-sparkle of a tear in profile, and came to her.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like creating&mdash;visibly, without hands, but with
-thoughts&mdash;creating a masterpiece&mdash;to see the tears come
-like that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He drew a chair to the bench where she sat, her back
-to the piano. Helen Quiston was away, as usual, for the
-forenoon.</p>
-
-<p>“It is creating&mdash;another world,” she answered
-steadily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span></p>
-
-<p>He stared at her. She saw again that sleepless look.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been a whole month on a lofty ridge&mdash;just
-think of it&mdash;fasting and pure expression of self&mdash;spiritual
-self-revelation&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him there was a suggestion in what she
-said for the new book.</p>
-
-<p>“And now you are down in the meadows again,” she
-finished.</p>
-
-<p>“The earth-sweet meadows&mdash;with you.”</p>
-
-<p>He could not know what the words meant to her;
-that there was no quarter in them for her. She did not
-belong to his ascents.</p>
-
-<p>“Somehow I always think of you as belonging best
-to the evenings, the hushed earth, the sweetness of the
-rest-time. You make me remember what to do, and how
-to do it well. Why, just now you made me see clearly
-for a second what I must do next. You make me love
-people better&mdash;when I am close to you.”</p>
-
-<p>She was not to be carried away by these givings
-which would have made many a woman content.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember, I have had your letters every day. You
-are very dear to me up there. You have been down in
-the meadows&mdash;and in the caverns&mdash;much. You are not
-ready to return&mdash;even for the evenings. You stand now
-for austere purity&mdash;for plain, ancient, mother’s knee
-ideals. You must not delude yourself. A man must be
-apart in order to see. You did not begin really to live&mdash;until
-you drew apart.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt her stripping his heart. His face lifted in
-agony, and his eyes caught the picture on the wall of
-the meeting of Beatrice and Dante. The Florentine
-woman seemed not to touch the earth; the poet was
-awed, mystic in the fusion of their united powers. It
-was fateful that Morning saw the picture at this instant.</p>
-
-<p>“Look,” he said, “what the world has from the meeting
-of that man and woman&mdash;an immortal poem!”</p>
-
-<p>“But Beatrice passed on&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
-<p>“She became identified with his greater power, Betty.
-She was one with it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“By passing on!”</p>
-
-<p>He arose and lifted her to her feet, and his arms did
-not relinquish her.</p>
-
-<p>“And you mean that you would pass on?... You
-must not. You must not. We would both be broken
-and bewildered. I love you. I have come to you. I
-want to be near&mdash;and work with you. I know you all,
-and shall love you always. I have come to you, and
-I must stay&mdash;or you must come with me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Her resistance was broken for the moment. An icy
-burden fell from her. She clung to him, and tears helped
-her.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They were together again in the studio that afternoon.
-Betty Berry was making tea, her strength renewed.
-Helen Quiston had come and gone. Morning
-had been away for an hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Strange man,” she said, “let us reason together....
-You are working now for men. That is right,
-but when you are full of power, when you come really
-into the finished man you are to be, and all these hard
-years have healed beyond the last ache&mdash;you will work
-for women. Does it sound strange from me, that the
-inspiration of the world to-day is with the women?
-Why, it seems to me that men are caught in the very
-science of cruelty. And then, the women of to-day represent
-the men of the future. When one of the preparers
-of the way brings his gospel to women, he kindles
-the inspiration of the next generation. But this fire can
-only come from the solitary heights&mdash;never from the
-earth-sweet meadows&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“The men who have done the most beautiful verses
-and stories about children&mdash;have had no children of their
-own. A man cannot be the father of his country and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>the father of a house. The man who must do the greatest
-work for women must hunger for the <i>vision</i> of
-Woman, and not be yoked with one.... It is so
-clear. It is always so.”</p>
-
-<p>“All that you say makes me love you more,
-Betty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, dear. Don’t make it harder for me....
-It is not I that thrills you. It is my speaking of your
-work that fills your heart with gladness&mdash;the things you
-feel to do&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“They are from you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that. It is not true.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I never saw so clearly&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Then go away with the vision. Oh, John Morning,
-you cannot listen to yourself&mdash;with a woman in the
-room!”</p>
-
-<p>He lifted his shoulders, drawing her face to his. “I
-was going to say, you are my wings,” he whispered.
-“But that is not it. You are my fountain. I would
-come to you and drink&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But not remain&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I love your thoughts, Betty, your eyes and lips&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you are athirst&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall always be athirst!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is not nature.”</p>
-
-<p>He shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>“Do men, however athirst&mdash;remain at the oases?
-Men of strength&mdash;would they not long to go? Would
-they not remember the far cities and the long, blinding
-ways of the sun?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you could go with me&mdash;” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“That is not nature!”</p>
-
-<p>He was the weaker. “But you have gone alone to
-the far cities, and the long, blinding ways of the
-sun&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, alone. But with you&mdash;a time would come
-when I could not. We are man and woman. There
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>would be little children. I would stay&mdash;and you could
-not leave them.... Oh, they are not for you, dear.
-They would weaken your courage. You would love
-them. At the end of the day, you would want them,
-and the mother again.... The far cities would not
-hear you; the long, blinding ways of the sun would
-know you no more&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Betty,” he whispered passionately, “how wonderfully
-sweet that would be!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes ... to the mother ... but <i>you</i>&mdash;I
-can see it in your eyes. You would remember Nineveh,
-that great city....”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Darkness was about them.</p>
-
-<p>“Betty Berry&mdash;you would rather I wouldn’t take the
-train to you again&mdash;not even when it seems I cannot stay
-longer away?”</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Betty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes....”</p>
-
-<p>She left him and crossed to the far window.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you not have me come to you again&mdash;at
-all?”</p>
-
-<p>She could not hold the sentence, and her answer.
-The room was terrible. It seemed filled with presences
-that suffocated her&mdash;that cared nothing for her. All day
-they had inspired her to speak and answer&mdash;and now
-they wanted her death. She moved to the ’cello. Her
-hands fluttered along the strings&mdash;old, familiar ways&mdash;but
-making hardly a sound.... If she did not soon
-speak, he would come to her. She would fail again&mdash;the
-touch of him, and she would fail.</p>
-
-<p>“Betty, is there never to be&mdash;the fountain at evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know&mdash;you know&mdash;” she cried out. Words
-stuck after that. She had not a thought to drive them.</p>
-
-<p>He arose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t,” she implored. “Don’t come to me! I cannot
-bear it.”</p>
-
-<p>... It was his final rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not a preparer of the way. I have not a message.
-I am sick of the thought. I am just a man&mdash;and
-I love you!”</p>
-
-<p>At last she made her stand, and on a different position.
-“I could not love you&mdash;if that were true.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She heard him speak, but not the words. She heard
-the crackling and whirring of flames. He did not cross
-the room.... She had risen, her arms groping toward
-him. She felt him approach, and the flames were
-farther.... She must not speak of flames.</p>
-
-<p>“You will go away soon&mdash;won’t you?” she whispered,
-as he took her.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, to-night&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;to-night,” she repeated.</p>
-
-<p>She was lying upon the couch in the studio, and his
-chair was beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“No, don’t light anything&mdash;no light!... It is
-just an hour.... I could not think of food until
-you go. But you may bring me a drink of water. On the
-way to the train, you can have your supper.... I
-will play&mdash;play in the dark, and think of you&mdash;as you
-go&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She talked evenly, a pause between sentences. There
-was a tensity in the formation of words, for the whirring
-and crackling distracted, dismayed her. Her heart
-was breaking. This she knew. When it was finished,
-he would be free.... The flames were louder and
-nearer, as he left for the drink of water. She called
-to him to light a match, if he wished, in the other room....
-He was in her room. She knew each step, just
-where. He was there. It was as if he were finally materialized
-from her thoughts in the night, her dreaming
-and writing to him. His hand touched her dresser. She
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>heard the running water ... and then it was all
-red and rending and breathless, until she felt the water
-to her lips. Always, as he came near, the flames receded.</p>
-
-<p>And out of all the chaos, the figure of the craftsman
-had returned to him. The world had revealed itself to
-him as never before in the passage of time. She had
-given him her very spirit that day, and the strength of all
-her volition from the month of brooding upon the conception
-of his Guardian. Literally on that day the new
-Book was conceived, as many a man’s valorous work
-has begun to be, in a woman’s house&mdash;her blood and
-spirit, its bounty.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a holy place to me, this room,” he said, the
-agonies of silence broken. “I can feel the white floods
-of spirit that drive the world.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not need to answer. She held fast to herself,
-lest something betray her. Darkness was salvation.
-All that his Guardian had asked was in her work. John
-Morning told it off, sentence by sentence. It took her
-life, but he must not know. She thought she would
-die immediately after he was gone&mdash;but, strangely, now
-the suffering was abated.... She was helping....
-Was not that the meaning of life&mdash;to give, to
-help, to love?... Someone had said so.</p>
-
-<p>He lifted her, carried her in his arms, talked and
-praised her.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something deathlessly bright about you,
-Betty Berry!” he whispered. “I am going&mdash;but we are
-one! Don’t you feel it? You are loving the world from
-my heart!”</p>
-
-<p>To the door, but not to the light, she walked with
-him.... Up the stairs he strode a last time to take
-her in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“We are one&mdash;a world-loving one&mdash;remember that!”</p>
-
-<p>She did not know why, but as he kissed her&mdash;she
-thought of the pitcher broken at the fountain.</p>
-
-<p>It was all strange light and singing flame....
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235-8]</span>She was lost in the hall. She laughed strangely....
-She must play him on his way.... Someone helped
-her through the raining light&mdash;until she could feel the
-strings.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_III"><span class="smaller not-bold">BOOK III.</span><br />
-THE BARE-HEADED MAN</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">1</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> red head of the little telephone-miss bowed
-over the switch-board when Morning entered
-Markheim’s. She colored, smiled; all metropolitan outrages
-of service forgotten. Charley waved furtively
-from afar; the door to the inner office opened.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” said the manager.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Markheim?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have come too soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I said&mdash;five days.”</p>
-
-<p>“We read no play in five days.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was left here on that basis.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can give it to me now.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is being read now. Your title is rotten. The old
-one was better.”</p>
-
-<p>“That title will grow on you,” said Morning, who
-began to like the interview. “I shall come to take the
-play to-morrow&mdash;unless you decide to keep it and bring
-it out this Fall&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you come to Markheim again? Have you
-tried all the rest?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was something unfinished about our former
-brush&mdash;I didn’t like the feel of it.... My play is
-done over better. Neither copy has been submitted&mdash;except
-to Markheim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your play may be as bad as before.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It looks better to me, however.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got a war play again&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That first and second act.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t write war. This is not war&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning did not realize the change that had come
-over him until he recalled the shame and rebellion that
-had risen in his mind when Markheim had said this before....
-Something had come to him from Duke
-Fallows, or from Betty Berry, or from the hill silences.
-He was a new creature.... Must one be detached
-somewhat from the world in order to use it? This was
-his sense at the moment: that he could compel the mind
-before him, reinforced as it was by distaste for everything
-decent, and manifesting the opinions of other men,
-including Reever Kennard’s. There was no irritation
-whatsoever; no pride in being a war-writer, good or
-bad. Markheim’s denial had no significance in the world
-above or water beneath. He saw, however, that he must
-change Markheim’s idea, and that he must do it by
-beating Markheim in his own particular zone of activity.</p>
-
-<p>There was a certain fun in this. He arose and stood
-by the other’s chair. The eye-balls showed wider and
-rolled heavily. The pistol or bomb was never far from
-his mind. Morning looked down at him, saying quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“You said something like that before, and it wasn’t
-your opinion&mdash;it was Reever Kennard’s. I don’t object
-to it exactly, but I want to show you something. You
-know Reever Kennard’s paper?”</p>
-
-<p>Markheim nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“You know the <i>World-News</i> sent him out to the
-Russo-Japanese war&mdash;big expense account, helpers,
-dress-suits, and all that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he was there.”</p>
-
-<p>“The same managing editor who sent Reever Kennard
-out is still on the desk. He should be in the office
-now. The number is&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span></p>
-<p>Morning found it for him hastily, and added: “You
-call him now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to call him up&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’d better. Twice you said something that
-someone told you&mdash;and it’s troublesome. The short way
-out is to call him now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning was tapping the desk lightly. Markheim
-reached for the extension ’phone. Luckily, the thing
-was managed&mdash;luckily, and through the name of Markheim.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him who did the story of the battle of Liaoyang
-for the <i>World-News</i>?” Morning ordered.</p>
-
-<p>The question was asked and the answer came back.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him if it was a good story&mdash;and how long.”</p>
-
-<p>It was asked and answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him if it was conceded to be the best story of
-the war published in America.”</p>
-
-<p>The talk was extended this time, Markheim explaining
-why he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?” Morning asked.</p>
-
-<p>“He said it was all right,” Markheim granted pertly.
-“Only that there was a very good story from another
-man on Port Arthur&mdash;afterward.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true. There was a heady little chap got
-into Port Arthur&mdash;and came out strong.... Now,
-look here&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning went to the case where a particularly recent
-encyclopædia was drawn forth. He referred to the war,
-but especially to the final paragraph of the article, captioned
-“Bibliography.”... His own name and the
-name of his book was cited as the principal American
-reference.... It was all laughable. No one knew
-better than Morning that such action would be silly
-among real people.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t see Reever Kennard referred to, do you&mdash;as
-authority of war-stuff?... The point is that
-you play people get so much counterfeit color and office-setting&mdash;that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-you naturally can’t look authoritatively on
-the real thing.... However, the fact that I know
-more about the battle of Liaoyang than any other man
-in America would never make a good play. There’s a
-lot beside in this play&mdash;a lot more than at first&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“They have your play out now&mdash;reading it,” Markheim
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>Morning added: “It’s clear to you, isn’t it, why Mr.
-Reever Kennard didn’t care for the John Morning
-play&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>Markheim’s eyes gleamed. This was pure business.
-“You had the goods and delivered it in his own
-office&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You bother me too much about this play. The title
-is rotten&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll like that, when you see Markheim with it.
-There’s a peculiar thing about the word&mdash;it doesn’t die.
-It never rests. It’s human&mdash;divine, too. There’s a cry
-in it&mdash;to some happiness, to some sorrow&mdash;to the many,
-hope.... It sings. I would rather have it than
-glory.... Listen, ‘<i>Markheim Offers Compassion</i>’&mdash;why,
-that’s a God’s business&mdash;offering compassion&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You feel like a song-bird this afternoon, Mr. Morning&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be back to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Too soon&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t help it. It’s ready. It will be the big word
-this Winter. You can read it in an hour. I’m off to-morrow&mdash;from
-Markheim. The Winter will clear my
-slate in this office, whether you take it or not&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Come back at noon&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Charley’s sister looked up from her pad. Her swift
-change of expression to a certain shyness and pleasure,
-too, in a sort of mutual secret, added to Morning’s merriment
-as he left the building.... He wondered continually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
-that afternoon what had come over him. He
-had not been able to do this sort of thing before. The
-astonishing thing was his detachment from any tensity
-of interest. It was all right either way, according to
-his condition of mind. The question was important:
-Must a man be aloof from the fogging ruck of accepted
-activities in order to see them, and to manage best
-among things as they are?</p>
-
-<p>There was the new book, too. Betty Berry had given
-him the new task. A splendor had come to life&mdash;even
-with the unspeakable sadness of the ending of that day.
-The beauty of that day would never die. Every phase
-of her sacrifice revealed a subtle, almost superhuman,
-faith in him. Was it this&mdash;her faith in him&mdash;that made
-him so new and so strong; that made him know in his
-heart that if the Play were right&mdash;it would go in spite
-of Markheim, in spite of all New York? And if it
-were not right, certainly he did not want it to go....
-Markheim and New York&mdash;he regarded them that night
-from his doorstep; then turned his back to the city, and
-faced the west and the woman.</p>
-
-<p>It broke upon him. She was mothering him. She
-was bringing to his action all that was real and powerful&mdash;fighting
-for it, against every desire and passion of her
-own. Her wish for his good was superior to her own
-wish for happiness. She gave him his work and his
-dreams. He knew not what mystery of prayer and concentration
-she poured upon him.... This place in
-which she had never been was filled with her. The little
-frail creature was playing upon him, as upon her instrument.
-Moments were his in which she seemed a mighty
-artist.</p>
-
-<p>And then he saw men everywhere&mdash;just instruments&mdash;but
-played upon by forces of discord and illusion....
-He saw these men clearly, because he had been
-of them. Such forces had played upon him....
-He had been buffeted and whipped along the rough ways.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>He had looked up to the slaughterers of the wars as
-unto men of greatness. He had been played upon by
-the thirsts and the sufferings, by greed and ambition. He
-had hated men. He had fumed at bay before imagined
-wrongs; and yet no one had nor could wrong him, but
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>One by one he had been forced to fight it out with
-his own devils&mdash;to the last ditch. There they had quit&mdash;vanished
-like puffs of nasty smoke. He had stood beneath
-Reever Kennard, almost poisoning himself to
-death with hatred. Pure acknowledgment this, that his
-life moved in the same scope of evil.... He had
-accepted the power of Markheim, feared it, and suffered
-over the display of it. Now he found it puny and
-laughable. He had worked for himself, and it had
-brought him only madness and shattering of force. He
-had been brought to death, had accepted it in its most
-hideous form&mdash;and risen over it.... His hill was
-calm and sweet in the dusk. Though his heart was
-lonely&mdash;and though all this clear-seeing seemed not so
-wonderful as it would be to have the woman with him
-in the cabin&mdash;yet it was all very good. He felt strong,
-his fighting force not abated.</p>
-
-<p>He had his work. She had shown him that. He
-would write every line to her. His work would lift him
-up, as the days of the Play had lifted him&mdash;out of the
-senses and the usual needs of man. He would be with
-her, in that finer communion of instrument and artist....
-The world was very old and dear. Men’s hearts
-were troubled, but men’s evils were very trifling, when
-all was understood. He would never forget his lessons.
-He would tell everyone what miracles are performed in
-the ministry of pain.... He looked into the dark
-of the west and loved her.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Well, you are on time,” said Markheim the following
-noon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Morning said with calmness and cheer.</p>
-
-<p>“We will take the play. I have had it read....
-We can do no more than bust.”</p>
-
-<p>“This Fall&mdash;the production?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will give it the <i>Markheim</i> in November.”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be surprised that Morning did not
-emotionalize in some way. He had expected at least to
-be informed that “bust” was out of the question, and
-missed this mannerism of the playwright, now that the
-thing was his and not the other’s.... Moreover,
-Markheim was pleased with the way he had reached the
-decision. He wanted Morning to know.</p>
-
-<p>“There was that difference of opinion.... Do
-you know what I did?”</p>
-
-<p>Morning couldn’t imagine.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Markheim, sitting back, hands patting
-his girth, “those who have nothing but opinions&mdash;read
-your play. They like it; they like it not. It will pay.
-It will not pay. It is ‘revolutionary,’ ‘artistic,’ ‘well-knit,’
-‘good second act’&mdash;much rot it is, and is not. Who
-do you think settled the question?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me&mdash;I have no opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who then?”</p>
-
-<p>“The friend of no man.” It was said with grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>Morning waited.</p>
-
-<p>Markheim leaned forward, beaming not unkindly,
-and whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“The little one at the switch-board outside the door.
-She said it was ‘lovely.’... Oh, she’s a sharp little
-spider.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">2</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">H</span>ere</span> is an extra bit of the fabric, that goes along
-with the garment for mending.... Mid-May,
-and never a sign of the old wound’s reopening.
-Something of Morning’s former robustness had spent
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>itself, but he had all the strength a man needs, and that
-light unconsciousness of the flesh which is delightful to
-those who produce much from within. The balance of
-his forces of development had turned from restoring his
-body to a higher replenishment.</p>
-
-<p>The mystery of work broke upon him more and
-more, and the thrall of it; its relation to man at his best;
-the cleansing of a man’s daily life for the improvement
-of his particular expression in the world’s service; the
-ordering of his daily life in pure-mindedness, the power
-of the will habitually turned to the achieving of this
-pure-mindedness. He saw that man is only true and at
-peace when played upon from the spiritual source of
-life; therefore, all that perfects a man’s instrumentation
-is vital, and all that does not is destructive. Most important
-of all, he perceived that a real worker has nothing
-whatever to do beyond the daily need, with the result
-of his work in a worldly way; that any deep relation to
-worldly results of a man’s work is contamination.</p>
-
-<p>He lost the habit and inclination to think what he
-wanted to say. He listened. He became sceptical of
-all work that came from brain, in the sense of having
-its origin in something he had actually learned. He remembered
-how Fallows had spoken of this long ago;
-(he had not listened truly enough to understand then);
-how a man’s brain is at his best when used purely to
-receive&mdash;as a little finer instrument than the typewriter.</p>
-
-<p>Except for certain moments on the borderland of
-sleep, Betty Berry was closest to him during his work.
-His every page was for her eye&mdash;a beloved revelation
-of his flesh and mind and spirit. And the thing had to
-be plain, plain, plain. That was the law.</p>
-
-<p>How Fallows had fought for that. “Don’t forget the
-deepest down man, John!”... Betty Berry and
-Fallows and Nevin were his angels&mdash;his cabin, a place of
-continual outpouring to them. Few evils were powerful
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>enough to stem such a current, and penetrate the gladness
-of giving.</p>
-
-<p>He slept lightly, and was on the verge again and
-again, almost nightly, in fact, of surprising his own
-greater activity that does not sleep. He often brought
-back just the murmur of these larger doings; and on
-the borderlands he sometimes felt himself in the throb
-of that larger consciousness which moves about its meditations
-and voyagings, saying to the body, “Sleep on.”
-It was this larger consciousness that used him as he
-used the typewriter, when he was writing at his best and
-his listening was pure.... He had been held so
-long to the ruck that he would never forget the parlance
-of the people&mdash;and not fall to writing for visionaries.</p>
-
-<p>... One night he dreamed he went to Betty
-Berry.... He was ascending the stairs to her.
-She seemed smaller, frailer. Though he was a step or
-two down, his eyes met hers equally. She was lovelier
-than anything he had ever known or conceived in
-woman. Her smile was so wistful and sweet and compassionate&mdash;that
-the hush and fervor of it seemed everywhere
-in the world. There was a shyness in her lips
-and in the turn of her head. Some soft single garment
-was about her&mdash;as if she had come from a fountain in
-the evening.... And suddenly there was a great
-tumult within him. He was lost in the battle of two
-selves&mdash;the man who loved and destroyed, and the man
-who loved and sustained.</p>
-
-<p>The greater love only asked her there&mdash;loved her
-there, exquisite, apart, found in her a theme for infinite
-contemplation, as she stood smiling.... The other
-was the love of David, when he looked across the house-tops
-at Bathsheba, bathing, and made her a widow to
-mother Solomon. This human love was strong in the
-dream, for he caught her in his arms, and kissed, and
-would not let her go, until her voice at last reached his
-understanding.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Oh, why did you spoil it all? Oh, why&mdash;when I
-thought it was safe to come?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>He had no words, but her message was not quite
-ended:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I should have come to you as before&mdash;and not this
-way&mdash;but you seemed so strong and so pure....
-It is my fault&mdash;all my fault.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>She was Betty Berry&mdash;but lovelier than all the earth&mdash;the
-spirit of all his ideals in woman. The marvelous
-thing about it was that he knew after the dream that
-this was the Betty Berry that would live in spite of anything
-that could happen to the Betty Berry in the world.
-He knew that she waited for him&mdash;for the greater lover,
-John Morning, whose love did not destroy, but sustained....
-She who regarded him in “the hush of
-expectancy” from the distance of a night’s journey, and
-he who labored here stoutly in the work of the world,
-were but names and symbols of the real creatures above
-the illusion of time.... So he came to love death&mdash;not
-with eagerness, but as an ideal consummation.
-Such a result were impossible had he not faced
-death as an empty darkness first, and overcome the fear
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>These many preparations for real life on earth in the
-flesh he was to put in his book&mdash;not his adventures, but
-the fruits of them&mdash;how he had reached to-day, and its
-decent polarity in service. He had been hurled like a
-top into the midst of men. After the seething of wild
-energy and the wobblings, he had risen to a certain singing
-and aspiring rhythm&mdash;the whir of harmony. He
-told the story in order, day by day. Though it was done
-with the I’s, there was no self-exploitation. John Morning
-was merely the test-tube, containing from time to
-time different compounds of experience. And he did it
-plainly, plainly, plainly, as is the writer’s business.</p>
-
-<p>As he watched for Jethro, one morning early in June,
-he perceived a second figure in the old rig. At the box,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>the stranger got out and followed Jethro’s arm, directed
-up the hill toward the cabin, disappeared for a moment
-in the swail-thicket by the fence, and presently began
-the ascent, bringing Morning’s papers and letters....
-The stranger was tall and tanned, wore a wide
-hat and approached with a slim ease of movement.
-Morning knew he had seen him before, but could not
-remember until the voice called:</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo&mdash;that you, John Morning?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Archibald Calvert, last met during the night-halt
-in Rosario, Luzon, the correspondent who had ridden
-with Reever Kennard, and who had lost <i>Mio Amigo</i>.
-He had always thought rather pleasantly of Archibald
-Calvert when he thought at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Say&mdash;what are you getting set for out here?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s better and cheaper than a hall-bedroom,” Morning
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds good.... Well, I spent all day
-yesterday looking for you&mdash;first clue, Boabdil&mdash;second at
-Markheim’s from a little red-haired girl.... The
-rural man picked me up&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got some cold buttermilk&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pure asceticism&mdash;also a pearl of an idea&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>They sat down together.</p>
-
-<p>“So you made ten thousand dollars out of Liaoyang
-after you came back.... I looked up the story.
-It was&mdash;say, it was a bride, Morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. Duke Fallows did a better one in one-tenth
-the space. The pay-end didn’t mean much. I’m
-not a good bed for money culture. Tell me where you’ve
-been, Mr. Calvert.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve been around. Didn’t get up to the Russ-Jap
-stuff. I was down among the Pacific Islands. You
-know I’m a better tramp than writer. It’s five years
-since I hit New York.... They say old Reever
-Kennard is doing politics. He’ll be back from Washington
-to-night&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Politics, and an occasional dramatic criticism,” said
-Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“You know that never sat easy&mdash;that day in Rosario&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was down to Batangas three days later&mdash;unpacking
-saddle-bags, and found <i>Mio Amigo</i> No. 1. Deeper
-down I found its mate.... They’re common in
-Luzon as old Barlow knives when we were kids....
-I made a scene about that knife&mdash;with my own deep
-down in my own duffel.... I suppose you’ve forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were pretty decent about it. It was a nasty thing&mdash;even
-to speak about it as I did. You see, the inscription
-rather appealed to kid-intelligence in my case, and I
-thought it was unique, instead of the popular idea of a
-cheap Filipino knife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kennard took it seriously, didn’t he?” said Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean at the time?... Yes, I couldn’t understand
-that exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning decided not to speak of that day’s relation
-to Tokyo five years later.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Calvert, after a pause, “I hunted you up
-to say I was an ass, and to give you back your knife.
-The pair have been smelling up my things around the
-world for a long time.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning grasped it eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>Some time afterward, when Calvert arose to go,
-Morning ventured this much:</p>
-
-<p>“And so you’re going to see Reever Kennard?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, to-night.... I suppose you two and the
-others game together from time to time?”</p>
-
-<p>“The fact is, New York isn’t very good anchorage
-for that sort of thing,” Morning said.</p>
-
-<p>“... I was glad when they told me you had put
-over that big Liaoyang stuff, Morning&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
-
-<p>Morning smiled and took the quick brown hand of the
-other. Calvert appealed to him, but it couldn’t be
-shown in any way. Calvert was like a good horse,
-gladly giving evidence of fine feeling, but embarrassed
-when made much of.... He went away blithely&mdash;off,
-for God knows where&mdash;but fearlessly on his
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Morning held the little knife in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of that hard Philippine service which had
-seemed so big at the time; of that day when he watched
-the fat shoulders of Reever Kennard in the forward sets
-of horse, Kennard seeming all that greatness can be. He
-thought of the halt in Rosario, of the lame woman. He
-looked at the little knife again.... He had not
-really wanted it then, and yet it had cut the strings of
-his Fates, turning them loose upon him. It had knocked
-him out of the second Japanese column five years afterward,
-and given him instead Duke Fallows and Liaoyang.
-It had given him that great battle, Lowenkampf,
-the Ploughman, Eve, the sorrel mare&mdash;the journey to
-Koupangtse&mdash;the blanket at Tongu&mdash;the deck-passage&mdash;the
-<i>Sickles</i>, Ferry&mdash;and Nevin&mdash;even Noyes and
-Field.</p>
-
-<p>It had given him the Armory, and Betty Berry.</p>
-
-<p>He held it fast.</p>
-
-<p>It had given him money, fame, and New York for a
-day&mdash;the opinion from Kennard that killed the first writing
-of <i>Compassion</i>&mdash;the mood to see Charley and his sister
-at the switch-board, which brought him to Betty
-Berry again.... Out of these had come all that
-was real and true of this hour. It had given him the
-slums and the leper conflict&mdash;Nevin’s cure and the fasting&mdash;the
-real Ploughman&mdash;the better <i>Compassion</i>&mdash;the
-cabin in which he sat, his place of Initiation. It had
-given him the triumph over death&mdash;the illumination of
-love and labor&mdash;the listening life of the soul, and the
-vision of its superb immortality.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p>
-<p>He held it fast and looked hard at the little friend.
-The brass handle sent up a smell of verdi-gris from his
-hot hand.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">3</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>his</span> was John Morning’s splendid summer. He
-was up often at two or three in the morning.
-Thoughts and sentences of yesterday, now cleared and
-improved, thronged his mind, as he made coffee. He
-learned that a man may write the first half of a book,
-but be used as a mere slave of the last half. And yet,
-to be the instrument of a rush of life and ideas, the latter
-becoming every hour more coherent and effective,
-was a privilege to make a man sing. And to increase,
-at the same time, in the realization of the courage and
-tenderness and faith of a woman who waited; to feel the
-power of her in the work; to work for her; to put his
-love for her in the work, all the strength of her attraction&mdash;this
-was living the life of depth and fullness.</p>
-
-<p>Times when he looked out of the doorway, and the
-elms were shaping against the flowery purple of daybreak,
-and the robin beginning thirstily&mdash;his eyes
-smarted with tears at the beauty of it all, the privilege
-of work, and the absolute rightness of the whole creation,
-in which a man can’t possibly lose, after he has
-heard his real self speak. He loved life and death in
-such moments, and knew there was a Betty Berry in the
-waiting studio, and another over the Crossing. (Had
-he not glimpsed her in his dream at the top of the stairway?)</p>
-
-<p>So his book prospered, enfolding the common man.
-It had something for every man who had not come so
-far as he. He was <i>of</i> them, in every understanding
-among them, different only in that it was his business to
-write by the way. His old failures furnished the studies
-of distintegrating forces. Personally, he was detached
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>from them, as his writing showed, except for an intellectual
-familiarity&mdash;as detached as from the worn clothing
-he had left here and there around the world. One
-by one, the constructive and destructive principles of the
-average man were shown divided against each other in
-the arena of mind&mdash;and how the friends and loves had
-come to the balance. Nevin was in the fabric, the little
-Englishman at Tongu, Fallows and the Woman&mdash;not in
-name, (there was no name but John Morning’s), but
-they were all there, lifting and laughing and drawing,
-as friends and loves do in the life of a man. Again and
-again he cried out that the peace and sweet reason of
-things he had found was of their bringing&mdash;that without
-them he would have been lost again and again by
-the way.</p>
-
-<p>... The Summer days passed magically. Markheim
-was beginning to talk rehearsals. He had found
-the right man to play the Ploughman.... Late-September.
-The letters from Betty Berry were rarer,
-thinner. They troubled him.... One morning he
-watched Jethro’s rig approach&mdash;a golden morning, and
-the cattle were feeding down in the meadow. He had
-seen the picture a thousand times&mdash;the cattle on the slope&mdash;yet
-it was never so real to him, nor had he hungered
-for the face of Betty Berry as now.... Jethro
-stopped at his box, and he hurried down. There was a
-letter from her&mdash;and one from Russia, too. The first
-did not free his mind from sorrow&mdash;though the effort
-was plain to do this very thing.... The letter from
-Fallows filled the day:</p>
-
-<p>“... I knew, John, if I sat down to write, it
-would set free all my longing to go back to you. So I
-have put it off from week to week.... From the
-<i>Western States</i> I followed our old trail to Tokyo, then
-via Peking, to Shanhaikwan, Koupangtse, Liaoyang....
-I stopped there, and went around by the coal-fields,
-where the millet had been planted all over again.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>I talked over the battle with the Japanese. They are
-just as interested as ever in what the other man knows.
-Though the big battle seemed like another life to me, it
-was their immediate yesterday. They would do it all
-over again. The Ploughman seemed to walk with me;
-the rest was boyish babble.... I found Lowenkampf&mdash;white
-and quiet&mdash;but the woman loves him, if
-Russia does not. The little boy is a man-soul. That’s
-the story&mdash;except that he sent his love to you. The
-three are off to South America, and all is well....
-Up in the Bosk hills, I followed the Summer. The old
-man is gone. He had his sausages at the last....</p>
-
-<p>“I was needed, but the little farm was all right. The
-neighbor had done his part. There was enough for all....
-How simple, one little vanity of a man such as
-I am, and this family has enough and to spare; food and
-firelight, good-will, their hope of heaven brought down
-to comprehension again&mdash;all for so little, John. If men
-only knew the joy of it&mdash;how it lasts and augments, how
-it sustains the man who does it&mdash;to weave a mesh of
-happiness for the poor. The fact is, he has to watch
-very carefully, or he’ll get caught in the mesh himself.</p>
-
-<p>“The little boy came running to meet me. I think
-he ran to meet me somewhere before. He is different
-from all the others&mdash;except for that touch of the old
-mother which he has, and that something about the
-Ploughman. He was white and all eyes when I picked
-him up. They said he wasn’t well, but in three days he
-was sound again&mdash;color breaking through. To think
-that my coming could do that for any living soul&mdash;I.</p>
-
-<p>“The old Mother.... She was just waiting for
-me&mdash;lingering until I came&mdash;watching down the road in
-the sunlight. We talked a little. She spoke softly of
-her soldier-son. It was only a few days.... It all
-came from her, John&mdash;the battle of Liaoyang so far as
-its meaning to me. She was the light on the Ploughman’s
-brow that made a different man of me. He never
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>dreamed of messages to the world of men, nor the passion
-to serve men&mdash;but he had his mother’s faith and
-something of her vision. That made him different from
-other Russian soldiers, so that I could see. The little
-boy Jan will bring it to life again. Your play goes
-straight back to her. There’s everlasting quality in being
-a mother like that. I think it was the fourth morning&mdash;that
-I suddenly began to listen attentively to what she
-was saying. It was about us all&mdash;intimately about her
-soldier-son.... The younger mother came in&mdash;her
-sad, weary face different.... She went out, and
-returned with her shoes on.... Suddenly I knew
-that the old sweet flower was passing. Why, she was
-gone before I knew it&mdash;smiling up at the saints from
-my arms.... I heard the little boy coming quickly&mdash;knew
-his step as I would know yours, John. I seemed
-to wait for his hand upon the door. I saw him, and he
-saw us&mdash;came forward on tip-toe, and we were all together&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning didn’t read the rest just then. It seemed
-one of the finest things he had ever known&mdash;Duke Fallows
-preserving the old mother and the others in their
-conviction that he was just a peasant like the Ploughman.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">4</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">F</span>rom</span> that April night after Morning left, when
-Helen Quiston found her wandering in the halls,
-and asking in a childish way to be taken to the ’cello
-(saying that her father had hidden it from her in a
-strange place), until now in mid-September, Betty Berry
-had not left the studio-apartment. The real break-down
-had begun a month before the high day in which Morning
-came; perhaps on the very night his Guardian had
-called. She had scarcely played or practiced since then;
-she read nothing, talked to no one except Helen. Morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-had noted her anxiously early on the day of his call
-at the studio, but such power had come in the flashes of
-those hours, and so high was she enthroned and illumined
-in his own mind at the end, (in which she had kept to the
-darkness), that he had not realized the blight that had
-touched her life.</p>
-
-<p>Helen Quiston had long loved the woman. She knew
-much that the Doctor did not. It was she who read the
-letters which in certain moments of the day Betty hastily
-penned. It was as if for a moment in a long gray day, a
-ray of watery sunlight broke through the cloud-banks.
-In the momentary shining of her mind, Betty would
-write to Morning. Many of the letters were impossible.
-Certain of these letters would have brought the lover
-by the first train. Even Betty had a sense of this and
-relied upon the music-teacher. Here and there among
-the notes, too, was a wisp of the old sweet spirit. It
-was a wonderful conception to Helen Quiston: that all
-but these had gone to replenish the creative fire of a
-lover who knew well what his lady had given, but not
-what it meant to her. Just as surely as the Hindoo
-woman offers herself upon the funeral pyre with the body
-of her mate, Betty Berry had given her spirit to the living.
-A hundred times the singing teacher had heard
-these words from white lips that smiled:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>We are one&mdash;a deathless, world-loving one!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>And often she heard this queer verse from the Persian:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“<i>Four eyes met. There were changes in two souls.</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>And now I cannot remember whether he is a man and I a woman,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Or he a woman and I a man. All I know is,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>There were two: Love came, and there is one....</i>”</div>
- </div></div></div>
-
-<p>“Don’t forget to remind me that I must tell him I
-am happy,” Betty would say.... When a letter
-was finally finished and sealed, she would lean back, shutting
-her eyes with a sigh, saying: “Now read me his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>that came to-day and yesterday.”... And afterward:
-“Isn’t it wonderful, Helen, dear? Isn’t it quite
-wonderful? You are so dear to understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Self-destruction is the first danger,” the Doctor had
-said in the early days. “That’s why she should be in a
-sanatorium under professional vigilance. Each case is
-individual. She might take a sudden dislike to the saintliest
-of nurses&mdash;even to you. The fever will not last, but
-it is a long battle. Shock, overwork, a terrible disappointment&mdash;such
-are the causes. Singular sweetness of
-disposition, as in this case, is very rare. The thing that
-goes with this usually is ‘the frozen stare’&mdash;hours motionless,
-looking at the wall&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Morning’s letters were like white-hot fragments from
-his forge&mdash;roughly fashioned, but still seething with
-force. Helen Quiston felt that there was a splendid
-singing in that forge; that a man’s voice attuned with
-God and the world was raised in the morning; that
-silence drew on as the concentration of the task deepened;
-that there was singing in the evening again. Aliment
-for the soul of the music teacher, these letters. She
-would have fought to obey Betty Berry against the will
-of the Doctor and nurse had it been necessary.</p>
-
-<p>One of these September-morning letters was particularly
-joyous with enthusiasm for Betty Berry’s gift
-to him. He told again how it wove into, beautified and
-energized his work.</p>
-
-<p>“Literally I thank the stars for you,” Helen Quiston
-read. “Sometimes it comes to me&mdash;as if straight from
-you&mdash;strength that I feel with my limbs, strength that
-means health. It surges through my veins like magic&mdash;so
-that my eyes smart with tears. I speak your name
-again and again in thankfulness for love fresh every day,
-and for the pity for men in my heart&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Betty was not following. It was frequently so in the
-first reading.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Free,” she repeated softly, from a thought of yesterday’s
-letter. “He said I was free. He said I never
-explained&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, dear, he was writing of that night he came to
-the theatre. I’ll get the letter for you to-night. He
-said that you belonged to the risen world, the woman’s
-world&mdash;that you trusted your vision&mdash;did not seek to
-explain, but rejoiced. He said you had no guile, that
-you asked nothing, and were unafraid. He means to
-give the world a portrait of the risen woman&mdash;a portrait
-of you.”</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry did not answer. Mention of that
-night at the theatre invariably affected her to silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I must hurry away for a little while, but I will finish
-this,” Helen added, reading on:</p>
-
-<p>“In the evenings, the greater power of you comes
-over my life like a spiritual rain. I remember the art of
-your hands, the sweet mystery of your lips; the tenderness
-of your eyes and words; but over it all&mdash;the inner
-power of you, strong as truth, pure as truth, wise as the
-East, and sweet as the South. It is the spirit of you
-that has come to me&mdash;your singing, winging, feminine
-spirit. It has made me whole.... Do you know,
-I used to think the world would be made better by force,
-by arraignment, by revelation of evil. You have shown
-me the better way of making the world better by loving
-it. That’s woman’s way, the Christ’s way.... And
-when I think that you have given me this blessed thing,
-this finest fruit of earth&mdash;your love, created out of trial
-and loneliness, your love, so pure and true and valorous&mdash;when
-I think that it is mine, and how you fought
-through the long day to give me this, <i>and only this</i>&mdash;when
-I think of the splendor of that day’s work of yours,
-I kneel to you, and to the spirit of the world&mdash;in the
-wood, in the hut, before the door, under my elms, under
-the stars,&mdash;I kneel to you and the Source of you. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>peace that comes, and the power&mdash;this, is my passionate
-wish for you! I would restore it to you magnified.”</p>
-
-<p>Helen Quiston read all this a second time that September
-morning, although her pupils were waiting....
-It was to her like the song from a strong man’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p>“You are rich and elect, Betty!” she cried. “You
-have been a woman and <i>wanted</i> love. You have finished
-your work at night, alone, and realized that there was
-no one&mdash;your arms tired, your throat tired, your brain
-and soul tired and heart-lonely&mdash;and there was no one.
-How rich you are now! I think a woman is rich who can
-say: ‘In London or Tokyo or New South Wales there is
-one who loves me&mdash;who may be thinking at this moment
-about me&mdash;who wishes I were there, or he were here;
-whose heart’s warmth stretches across the distance and
-makes the world a home, because he is in the world....
-It would seem to me that I should be exultant
-to-day&mdash;if there was such a one for me. It seems&mdash;if
-I could see him in a year, even if I could not see him at
-all, <i>and he were somewhere</i>&mdash;I should be all new and
-radiant, born again.... But you, Betty dear&mdash;oh,
-think what you have&mdash;what you are giving!”</p>
-
-<p>Betty’s eyes were shut. There was a gray line around
-the faint color of the lips, and she was pale as a candle-flame
-in the morning sun.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you could stay with me, dearest,” she whispered.
-“It is too much for me&mdash;when I am alone. But
-when you are here, what you say and what you see&mdash;makes
-me believe.... And you must tell me what
-to write in answer to this&mdash;to satisfy him. I shall hold
-it in my hand, and rest&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come back this afternoon. We’ll have supper,
-and the letter will be mailed. You’ll know what to say
-then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She hurried away, lest her heart break. The tired,
-emotionless voice trailed after her. And all day she
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>heard Betty’s voice among the unfinished voices, and saw
-the spiritless clay of her heart’s friend sitting in deathly
-labor below, tormented by the phantom of a will&mdash;like a
-once glorious empire become desolate, a foolish scion
-upon the throne.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">5</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">H</span>elen Quiston</span> was the brain of the studio, the
-eyes and fingers&mdash;even, in part, the spirit of the
-place that John Morning loved. It was a letter of hers
-that John Morning answered with this paragraph:</p>
-
-<p>“I shut my eyes after the first reading&mdash;and it seemed
-to me I went sailing. There were many voyagers and
-many islands&mdash;but I found <i>my Island</i>. It called to me
-and I knew it was for me. The voyagers sailed on past
-the curving inlets and the arrowed points&mdash;but I sailed
-home. I found the fountains, the crags, the echoes, the
-virgin springs, the mysterious meeting places of the land
-and sea, the enchanted forest where the fairies are&mdash;and
-the sun was rising. It was thus I answered the calling
-mystery of your spirit....”</p>
-
-<p>She was glad that his mind turned to the actual memory
-picture of Betty Berry, as he finished:</p>
-
-<p>“I do love the woman that moves about the world,
-the woman others see&mdash;the lips that tremble, the eyes
-that fill with tears so swiftly over some loveliness, and
-so rarely over her own sorrow; the instant-enfolding
-mind, the listening and the vitality&mdash;but it seems that I
-love in a greater way the heart that called to its lover
-without words&mdash;who fared forth to meet her lover and
-gave her soul.”</p>
-
-<p>More and more Helen Quiston perceived that John
-Morning was becoming sufficient unto himself&mdash;the
-larger lover, loving the world through his lady, and needing
-less, even in thought, her hands and kisses and emotions.
-She saw steadily that which Duke Fallows had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>made Betty Berry see for a night. She did not see it
-as clearly as Betty Berry saw it that night, but she beheld
-an enduring radiance from it, because her body was
-not in the wreck of sacrifice. She had a woman’s sense
-of the large relation of things, and a woman’s faith.
-The misery of life as she had met it, the disorder, monotony,
-and gray sorrow of it all, was her profound assurance
-of another and brilliant side to the shield. She
-wanted nothing for herself in these particular instances.
-For Betty Berry she saw a swift transfer to a certain
-indefinite perfection, no less attractive because it was
-unlimned in her mind. Her own happiness, her great
-privilege, was to be third in this miracle of a man and
-woman passing beyond in a truly royal way. There was
-a mystic quality that suited her mind in the coming of
-the Guardian to Betty Berry’s room, and in the fact that
-John Morning would never know of this. It was like
-the coming of some Michael or Gabriel. From what she
-knew of John Morning’s work, she could believe in the
-planetary promise that the Guardian seemed to see; indeed,
-she could have believed in it with less evidence,
-because the Guardian said so.... Her particular
-dream was for the man to appear who would make
-women see what it was in their hands and hearts to do
-for the coming race. She dreamed of a man to come
-with words to women that would be reflected upon the
-brows of children to be, that would help to fashion the
-latent dreams into great children. She believed it was
-the agony of being childless that put this dream into her
-own mind, and she believed that the world-ignition could
-only come from a man who knew the same agony....
-So she listened raptly to the singing from the
-forge; and more and more, with almost unspeakable excitement,
-she realized that the voice of John Morning
-was slowly and surely taking to itself the authority and
-harmony which his Guardian had promised.</p>
-
-<p>He wrote often now of the rehearsals of <i>Compassion</i>,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>of his large fears and small satisfactions in them. He
-was always glad to get back to the cabin and the Book....
-That book&mdash;some of her own inner life would
-be in it. She had given in the letters everything she
-dared. Her tears were all shed; there was dry burning
-in her eyes, for what Betty Berry had given to that Book....
-Now in mid-September it was done, all but a
-month’s chiseling and polishing. It would be given to
-the publisher two weeks before the first appearance of
-<i>Compassion</i> at the <i>Markheim</i> the first week in November....
-She dared not think what would happen
-when the Book was done, and the destiny of the play
-established.... A letter from Morning at this time
-contained for Helen Quiston one winged, triumphant
-sentence. She was reading aloud to Betty Berry:</p>
-
-<p>“It was straight, clean going, right to the end of the
-book.... It is hard-held. It is kind. It laughs.
-It goes after the deepest-down man.... You have
-to reach almost self-effacement to associate with fine
-ideas and to get to the front in service.... How
-hard it was to make me see that the real world is not
-over there among writers and publishers and drama-producers,
-but everywhere among the hearts of the poor!</p>
-
-<p>“And, oh, Betty Berry, it isn’t the book&mdash;it’s the life
-that counts. You have made me live. You earned your
-strength alone&mdash;suffering alone through the years.
-That’s the highest honor that can come to man or woman
-in this world&mdash;to be chosen for such years as you have
-known. It comes only to the strong&mdash;the strength to
-stand alone. The world bows sooner or later before
-such character. Men feel it, though their eyes be shut.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a certain excellence in the honor of standing
-alone. Alone, man or woman is either ahead or behind
-the crowd. In the latter case, he is imbecile or defective,
-and God is with him.... God is in the
-forward solitudes, too. What a splendor about standing
-in the full light! The crowd cannot get it. The crowd
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>keeps the light from itself. There the maiming is, the
-suffering, the cruelty; there the light is divided, and the
-warmth is the low heat of men, not the grand primal
-vitality of the Sun. There in the crowd, Apparition and
-Appearance take the place of the Real.... Now
-and then, in the torturing passage of the crowd, the landmark
-of some pioneer is reached, and the cry goes up,
-‘We are on the right road, for that man passed here!’
-The name of the pioneer becomes part of the crowd’s
-impedimenta. Perhaps he smiles from the Other Side,
-not because the crowd has found <i>his</i> trail&mdash;he may have
-wanted that once, though not long&mdash;but looking back
-upon his greater birth, he smiles&mdash;the place where he
-emerged and stood alone on the grand frontier....
-You have made me strong enough to believe that you
-and I may go away up into the coolness beyond the
-senses&mdash;even in this life&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Helen Quiston stopped. That last was the final sanction.
-The Guardian knew, when he chose John Morning.
-It was the one thought she had hardly dared formulate
-for him, and which she had awaited ardently during the
-late weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“He means that a woman can go, too!” she cried,
-trembling, forgetful even of Betty Berry; “he is on the
-path&mdash;higher, higher&mdash;and yet, he says that women, too,
-can go that way alone&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Betty Berry frowned. “What does he mean by going
-alone&mdash;about a man and a woman going alone?” She
-was suffering to understand, angry that the other understood.</p>
-
-<p>“He says that the woman may also go alone to that
-Eminence! No man&mdash;no human man&mdash;has ever said that
-before. Men think of <i>men passing</i> upward. People
-caught in their desires have forever lied to themselves,
-trying to believe that man and woman can go <i>together</i>....
-He says here&mdash;&mdash;” her eye darted on to read:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Men and women gain their strength to reach that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>Eminence by being alone&mdash;by loving alone!’ You taught
-him that.... Don’t you see, dearest, it is the beginning
-of his real message? You gave it to him&mdash;and
-what a message it is for you and for&mdash;even for me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But woman is the serpent,” Betty Berry muttered.</p>
-
-<p>Helen arose to turn on a wall light. Her hand fumbled.
-Her eyes could not be brought down from that
-lofty plateau. A strange peace had come into the loneliness
-of her life. She wanted to tell it everywhere&mdash;to
-Nuns of the World.... It had been a man’s world
-so long&mdash;that this thought had never come. Always in
-the world’s thought and art&mdash;the flesh of woman had
-kept her down in the dusks and valleys. Sons climbed;
-lovers left their maids to climb ... but only the
-Gods knew all the time <i>that daughters could go</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Betty was silent. It had become the habit of her life
-not to speak when the mists thickened.... The
-picture of Dante and Beatrice was in the light. Helen
-pointed to it:</p>
-
-<p>“Who would think of saying that Beatrice, who was
-the Way&mdash;did not share the vision and the consciousness?”
-she asked softly.</p>
-
-<p>Betty shut her eyes. The other returned with eager
-love and sat down at her knees. “And now I will read
-the last. Just think how clearly he sees:</p>
-
-<p>“‘The world is so dear to me because of you. I am
-so freshly conscious of its roundness, of the profile of its
-coasts as seen from above; of its light and darkness, the
-sharpness of sun in the retreating gray, of its skies and
-its peaks, the last to darken and the first to answer the
-morn.... I put the candle away just now, and in
-the darkness I saw the Earth from above&mdash;not from
-afar, but from some space nearer than the moon. I saw
-it all at once. The moon shining upon one side, the sun
-shining upon the other&mdash;a golden side, a silver side....
-And I saw you afterward&mdash;not as you are in the
-studio, but as a shadowed, quiet figure among moonlit
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>ruins. You were calm, and moved silently here and there.
-Ruins were about you, yet you seemed to know the things
-to do.’ What does it mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“What does it mean, Helen?” Betty repeated.</p>
-
-<p>The other’s eyes filled with tears. The question
-might have come from a little old lady of eighty, whose
-house of life was locked, all but the sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just a dream, dear,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“There are no ruins about me&mdash;when you are here,”
-Betty said.</p>
-
-<p>“Ruins, dearest?... No, gardens and living
-temples&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Betty arose, and moved slowly up and down the studio,
-then stood by her chair. The impulse even to lift
-her hand was unusual. She moved now with difficulty,
-but was not conscious of it. The room was dark, except
-for the one wall-light. Helen went to her side, helped
-her at last to the chair. Betty’s face was deathly, but
-there was a mournful reasonableness in her eyes, a faint
-grasp of actuality, that the other had not seen for weeks.
-The old enemies, memory and hope, were in feeble
-conflict.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think he means that I am not well?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was only expressing a dream-picture....
-I’m sure he hasn’t interpreted it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But he will. That comes afterward&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Betty was either better or worse.... The Doctor
-came. As he was leaving, Helen walked to the stairs
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is a change,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You think it is good?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.... It’s been nearly six months. Yes, I
-think it is good. She would have been dead without you,
-Miss Quiston. I don’t know what you do&mdash;but you keep
-her from the engrossing mania.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has some strength, Doctor?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-<p>“It is all a matter of will at this stage. All along we
-have battled to keep her somehow nourished.”</p>
-
-<p>Helen went back to the studio. Betty was on her
-feet again. The nurse was at hand, but she had never
-been able to involve herself in the patient’s understanding.
-She left the room now, anticipating the inevitable
-request.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think, Helen&mdash;that as he finishes his work&mdash;more
-and more&mdash;the ruins will come back to mind?”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">6</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> Summer was done; the book had been ten days
-out of Morning’s hand; the final rehearsals were
-engrossing and painful, and the letters from the hill-cabin,
-though buoyant, were not so frequent....
-Service for men&mdash;service for men! The words seemed
-integrated into the life of the man. There was something
-herculean in his striving. The long Summer had
-ripened the harvest. Conceptions which had been vague
-and dreamy in the first letters were ready at his hand
-now, daily expressions of his work. Helen Quiston, so
-long dream-fed, trembled at the thought that she had
-something to do with a giant’s making.</p>
-
-<p>It never occurred to her that the things so real in
-her mind were at least an age distant from the interests
-of the world. She did not stop to think that the drama so
-vital and amazing to her would be out of the comprehension
-even of the decent doctor who came to the studio
-day after day. Not once did it enter her mind that the
-world would regard her as heartless and fanatic for her
-strength in so ruthlessly holding her closest friend to
-the sacrifice. Her problem now was what to do with
-John Morning after the first night of the play, and the
-report upon his book was in. She was afraid he would
-come. He would see Betty Berry&mdash;see what her giving
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>had done. He would learn that it was she, Helen Quiston,
-who had given him the peace in which to find the
-larger consciousness; her letters, in Betty Berry’s hand,
-that had filled the distances with peace for him.</p>
-
-<p>She had no thought for John Morning except as an
-instrument. It was something the way Duke Fallows
-had thought of him at the last. Either one would have
-sacrificed themselves, but they were not called. Only
-Betty Berry loved him for himself, and to her was the
-altar. They loved him for the future, and guarded him
-as the worker-bees guard the queen because she is potentially
-the coming race.</p>
-
-<p>And this was the miracle: John Morning at his work
-had passed the need of the kiss of woman. He had been
-tided over the grand crossing by the love of Betty Berry.
-Receiving it now, he did not hold it for himself, but
-gave it forth in service to men.... There was
-something cosmic about this to Helen Quiston.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Breathless expectancy in the studio on the early November
-evening of <i>Compassion’s</i> first performance at
-the <i>Markheim</i>. Though nothing of the sort had been
-arranged, Helen Quiston expected a telegram after the
-Play. It was not yet cold, but an east wind had been
-rising since dark, and there was tension in the sounds
-and shaking everywhere. Betty had, for her, a very
-keen sense of the importance of the night to the man in
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel as if I had lived, Betty,” her friend whispered.
-“Oh, what must it be to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel that I have died,” the other murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Though she rested better and accepted food with less
-reluctance, (the doctor declaring himself satisfied with
-the progress of the past six weeks), it had been the hardest
-period for Helen Quiston. Something was in Betty’s
-mind that was not confided. Often in the evening she
-showed a preference for being alone. Helen feared for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>a time that the other might write a letter without her
-supervision, but as there was no change in the tenor of
-Morning’s replies, the outpouring of his thankfulness in
-no way diminished, the only conclusion was that Betty
-at least had not mailed such a one. She had taken sudden
-dislikes to several different nurses in turn. When she
-wanted anything there was a terrible concentration about
-it. Helen and the doctor and all concerned were drawn
-into the vortex.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the way she used to practice,” her friend said.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Quiston&mdash;&mdash;” began the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it doesn’t matter. I was just thinking&mdash;are you
-so real to all your friends?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no friend like Betty.”</p>
-
-<p>“That eases my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“A few friends like that and there wouldn’t be any
-singing teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>Helen Quiston realized fully for the first time that
-the doctor was exactly a human being, having the various
-features of the species.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They were startled by a crash in the inner room. The
-nurse entered quickly to announce that a flower-pot containing
-a fuchsia had fallen from the window-sill.</p>
-
-<p>“The plant is in ruins,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Betty rose immediately. <i>Ruins</i>&mdash;the word was a fiery
-stimulant to her. In a few moments she ceased her pacing,
-saying that she was utterly weary. Helen, though
-leaving for the room she occupied, a flight above, could
-but remark upon the gleaming intensity of Betty’s eyes,
-and the restless leaping of her hands....</p>
-
-<p>The nurse came to her. Betty went with her into
-the inner room. In the next fifteen minutes, the patient
-was more or less alone, while the studio couch, upon
-which the nurse was accustomed to rest, was being prepared.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
-Unwatched, her movements quickened, a queer,
-furtive smile played upon her lips, and certain actions
-altogether uncommon occupied her concentrated attention.
-The key was quietly removed from the door between
-the studio and the living-room; a large bundle
-was carried from a closet-shelf to the rear window and
-tossed out. From behind the books in a small case near
-the reading-lamp a purse was produced; and finally, when
-the nurse was at the farthest end of the studio, Betty
-drew a large, sharp knife from the same hiding-place,
-and with astonishing quiet and force severed the telephone
-wires just beneath the bell-box, fastened to the
-wall close to the floor. The knife was returned to its
-hiding-place. The nurse joined her, and Betty, at the
-studio door, suddenly sank into a chair with a cry of
-exhaustion. The other ran to her.</p>
-
-<p>“It is nothing! Bring some water&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The nurse had not reached the medicine-case in the
-bath, when the patient sprang up and locked the intervening
-door of the apartment, leaving the woman inside
-with a “dead” telephone.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in half a year, Betty left the studio,
-carefully closing the main door. Out the back way, she
-found her parcel, and in the windy darkness put on the
-rain-coat, traveling hat, veil, gloves and shoes it had
-contained, departing breathlessly through the alley gate.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time the hammering upon floors and walls
-could not be located in the studio-building. The outer
-floor of Betty’s apartment was tried, but found locked;
-and since there was no response to the bell, nothing came
-of the offerings of the earlier Samaritans. Much time
-was occupied by the nurse in trying to call the telephone-exchange.
-A stranger in the street was finally persuaded,
-from the upper window, to find the janitor of
-the building and send him to the Quiston studio. Master
-keys set the nurse free.</p>
-
-<p>Helen Quiston first notified the Doctor, who came
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>hastily. The story of the nurse was explicit as a hospital
-report.</p>
-
-<p>“Is your car here, Doctor?” Miss Quiston asked presently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take me down-town? I’ll be ready in a
-moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gladly.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was informed in a tense but controlled
-voice that the patient was doubtless at this moment upon
-a certain east-bound train. “Betty left here a few minutes
-after nine,” Helen added. “The train I’m thinking
-of left at ten-five. It is now eleven.... Oh, I
-wonder what she had on? She was dressed when I left
-her&mdash;shirt-waist, black skirt, house-slippers&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes’ search and thinking on the part of Miss
-Quiston uncovered the fact that Betty’s rain-coat and a
-certain small traveling hat were missing.... Nothing
-was positively established at the station.</p>
-
-<p>“I must send a telegram, Doctor,” Helen said.</p>
-
-<p>It was to Morning at his rural-delivery address. Her
-heart sank with fear lest the message fail to reach him,
-until it was finally handled by the post-office.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing further to do,” she said hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p>Night brought no news, nor the early morning. At
-nine-thirty o’clock, Helen Quiston was leaving the studio
-for the morning’s work, when she heard a light, swift
-step on the stairs&mdash;someone coming up at least three steps
-at a time. The hall-door was half-swung. Helen stood
-waiting.... Now a stranger was at the doorway,
-hesitating, yet expectant. His brow was tanned, as if
-he had walked bare-headed in the sun. His gray eyes
-were remarkably clear and very kind. For a second or
-two they stood face to face, forgetting to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Betty Berry?” It was a demand, yet
-gently spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you&mdash;are you John Morning?”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>“Yes.... Where is she?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think she has gone to you&mdash;I do not know, but I
-think she has gone to the hill-cabin&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you her friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;I am Miss Quiston.”</p>
-
-<p>“When did she go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Last night. I telegraphed you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He came close to her. His hand upon her shoulder
-drew her to a chair, and he brought another near. “I
-will not stop to ask questions,” he said heavily. “You
-tell me all&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What of the play?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know&mdash;I left before it was done to come
-here.... She is ill&mdash;go on&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The story faltered at first, but the gray eyes steadied
-her. Toward the end she talked swiftly, coherently. She
-winged over the one certain cause of Betty’s illness....
-When she stopped, it seemed to her that some
-mighty machinery was whirring below, its vibrations in
-the floor and walls.</p>
-
-<p>He arose, stood beside her&mdash;all the light and reason
-gone from his face. For several seconds he stood there,
-his left hand swiftly tapping her shoulder. The powers
-of the man were afar&mdash;miles away upon his hill. This
-was just a tapping blind man in the room....</p>
-
-<p>“I must go. I have no words now.... She is
-there. It must be nearly ten now. I must hurry to
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>The engines in the house flagged and were silent.</p>
-
-<p>The woman stood where he had left her, smiling.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">7</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">B</span>etty</span> held her purse tightly in her hand, and certain
-thoughts were held as tightly in her brain, as
-she pressed against the wind.... It was something
-like going to a distant concert engagement in the night....
-<span class="pagenum2" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>Her limbs were uncertain, and there was a constant
-winging in her breast, as though it were the cage
-of a frantic bird. She did not mind. She could forget
-it&mdash;if only her eyes remained true. For the first time in
-months she was on her own strength, her own will.
-There was a sharp distress in the responsibility, but also
-an awakening of force.</p>
-
-<p>The wind whipped her breath away, yet she liked the
-wild freedom of it&mdash;if only she could continue to see and
-remember what to say. The studio was a hideous blackness
-that drove her from behind. This was a new and
-consuming hatred. The two squares to the large uptown
-hotel where a cab was readily obtainable were long
-as a winter night; and the tension to remember seemed
-destroying her by the time she found a driver. She told
-him the station and the train.</p>
-
-<p>“Plenty of time, Ma’am,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes filled with tears. It was true, then, that
-there was such a station, such a train, that there was
-time, and nothing had betrayed her. “I must not speak;
-I must not speak,” kept warning in her mind; “but he is
-so good to me!”</p>
-
-<p>Now she felt the cold, as she rested a moment before
-the new ordeal at the station&mdash;destination, tickets, the
-Pullman, not to fall, not to speak any but the exact
-words.... The driver helped her out. Everything
-was familiar, but miraculously large.... She gave
-the man extra money, and the faintest, humblest “Thank
-you!” escaped her. He whistled a porter for her.</p>
-
-<p>“The ticket window,” she said. And now she need
-only follow. It was warmer. It would be warm in the
-Pullman.... She took the young colored man’s
-arm. He turned with good nature.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been ill,” she said. It was frightened from
-her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“There is plenty of time, Miss. I’ll see you through
-to the berth&mdash;the ten-five&mdash;yes’m.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<p>The quick tears started again, and an aching lump in
-her throat. She wanted to cry out her thankfulness.
-She wanted to be told again and again&mdash;that all this was
-not a dream, from which she would awaken in that place
-of death. The value of her veil awed her; and it was
-<i>she</i> who had thought of it. Could it really be true that
-she had forgotten nothing? Would she actually arrive
-at her journey’s end?</p>
-
-<p>The porter procured berth and tickets, and now he
-assured her that her train was ready. She followed him
-through interminable distances, down countless stairs;
-she watched and listened critically, as he delivered both
-tickets to the Pullman conductor. All she had to do was
-to follow, to say nothing and to pay. With what thankfulness
-did she pay; and with what warming courtesy
-were her gifts received. Surely the world was changed.
-It had become so dear and good.... She had a
-far-off vision of a peremptory Betty Berry of another
-world, striding to and fro among men and trains and
-cities, giving her commands, expecting obedience, conferring
-gratuities according to rigid principle.</p>
-
-<p>The car-porter was more wonderful than any&mdash;an
-old Southern darkey, with little patches of gray beard,
-absurdly distributed. A homing gentleness was in his
-voice, and his smile was from a better world....
-There had been another porter like him somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>“She goes clear through,” the station porter said,
-“and she’s been sick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah’ll see the young Miss clar’ through,” the old
-man drawled. “Just depen’ on me, Miss. Sit right down
-here&mdash;berth’ll be ready right smaht.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not sleep, but she was warm and not uncomfortable.
-She dared think a little of the end of the journey,
-but there was so much to do in the morning, so much
-to keep in mind. She held fast to her purse. In her dependence,
-the magic of it was like a strange discovery.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>In the early morning, the porter brought her coffee with
-some hot milk and toast. The wind had long since been
-left behind, but a cold rain was falling. She would be
-cold. The terminal was reached. The old man bore her
-forth. There was something merciful and restoring in
-his gentle gratitude. A station porter led her to the
-Hackensack car.</p>
-
-<p>She thought of breakfast on the way, but forgot it
-again upon reaching Hackensack, where she was directed
-to the post-office.</p>
-
-<p>She wrote the address of John Morning and asked
-shiveringly at the stamp window if there was any way
-in which she could be delivered there.</p>
-
-<p>The clerk could not see if she were laughing under
-the veil.</p>
-
-<p>“The rural carrier knows the way,” she added. “I’d
-be willing to pay well&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The clerk craned his head back through the office,
-and called:</p>
-
-<p>“Jethro!”</p>
-
-<p>A large, dusty man came forward with the air of
-having just breakfasted. He took the slip containing
-the address from her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“The lady wants to go with you, Jethro&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The rural carrier tilted his spectacles benignly to regard
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Bless me&mdash;ever been there?”</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;but letters go safely&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I rather think they do&mdash;since I take ’em. Is this
-your writing?”</p>
-
-<p>The place was darkening, suffocating to her. “Yes
-... if you would only take me. Five, ten
-dollars&mdash;oh, I should be so glad to pay anything I
-have&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The carrier penetrated the veil.</p>
-
-<p>“Just sit down by the heater, Lady,” he said in a lowered
-tone. “We’ll get there, and it won’t cost you five
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>or ten dollars, neither. I know where you want to go,
-and I know who you are, if I’m not mistaken. Lizzie
-and I will get you there&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She turned quickly, for the tears were coming....
-Could it really be that she had remembered
-everything? Was she really going to him, and this the
-last stage of the journey? The heart of the large, dusty
-man had radiated so suddenly upon her. She was not
-afraid of him, but she must not faint nor speak until she
-was away from the others. Very still she sat by the
-heater, praying for strength, praying that it was not all
-a dream....</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Betty Berry!”</p>
-
-<p>There was an instant in which the call had but a vague
-meaning; then shot home to her the hideous fear of being
-taken back. She was close to screaming, yet it was
-only the rural-carrier coming.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” she said, clearing her throat.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I couldn’t be wrong,” he said. “I’ve
-brought a good many letters addressed to you back to
-town from the place you’re going, and carried a good
-many out yonder in this writing of yours.... Lizzie
-and me are ready, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p>As they stepped out the rear door, he touched her arm
-reflectively, and re-entered to bring a hairy black robe.
-The vehicle, of a vanished type, was gray even in the
-rain, and cocked to one side from the sagging of years,
-where the carrier sat. Betty’s weight did not visibly
-impress the high side. He tucked the hairy robe about
-her, the mail-bags at her feet, picked up the lines, and
-lo! they moved.</p>
-
-<p>“Lizzie ain’t very showy on knee action, Miss Berry,”
-he said, “but along about half-past eleven, when we get
-there, you’ll remark she’s stiddy.”</p>
-
-<p>It was only ten now.... Mud and miles and
-mail-boxes; dragging moments, and miles and cold rain....
-She had to talk a little. The journey of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>night was nearest, and she told how good the train-men
-had been to her.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t traveled much, Miss, I take it?” he said
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no.” Then distantly again she remembered a
-Betty Berry of concert seasons&mdash;on the wing from city
-to city. It was all too remote for speech. At one house
-a woman came forth with tea and sandwiches. Betty
-was grateful for the warm drink and wanted to pay, but
-the carrier pushed back her hand and tucked her in
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Guess this is going to be a surprise for the bare-headed
-man?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s your young man, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed relieved. “He won’t be staying out here
-much longer&mdash;not likely&mdash;though we do have a spell of
-good weather in November mostly.”</p>
-
-<p>Often she lost every sense of distance and identity.
-The lapses grew longer toward the end, and when she
-did not answer, Jethro thought she had fallen asleep....
-A long stretch at last, barren of mail-boxes....
-When he finally drew up, she followed his eyes
-to her lover’s name upon the tin by the roadside. Then
-he pointed beyond the low near trees and hollows. It
-was all desolate; the Fall tints subdued in the pervading
-gray. She saw a clump of greater trees in the upper
-middle distance.</p>
-
-<p>“’Bout a thousand feet straight in. Miss&mdash;and up&mdash;under
-them big trees. You’ll see his shanty before
-you’re half-way. Just keep your eye on them elms.
-He’d be down here if it was any kind of weather. Guess
-you’re glad. D’ruther go alone and find him there,
-wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.... And now I want to give you this,
-please.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span></p>
-
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>She could not leave him so. “For Lizzie&mdash;she’s so
-steady. I’m rich ... and I’ll be much happier&mdash;going
-to the bare-headed man. Please&mdash;for me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you take that robe off!” he said suddenly. “I
-don’t want it&mdash;jumpin’ in and out. I never take it out
-of the office till snow flies. He’ll bring it down to the
-box, when I’m passin’ to-morrow. Why, you’d get all
-soaked, Miss&mdash;a-goin’ up to him.... Well, I’ll
-take the money for Lizzie&mdash;if you’re rich&mdash;but it’s ridiculous
-much, and I’d have fetched you for nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p>She pressed his hand in both of hers and turned away
-through the break in the fence.... It seemed
-darker; and when the grinding of the tires on the wet
-gravel died away, the dripping silence came home to her,
-alien and fearful.... She had seen the name; soon
-she would see his house&mdash;but this was no man’s land, an
-after-death land; this was ‘the hollows and the vagueness
-of light,’ of which he had written....</p>
-
-<p>She saw the house and faltered on. She had not the
-strength to call.... On the slope to the great trees
-the burden of the heavy robe would have borne her to
-the ground, had she not let it fall from her.... She
-could not believe the padlock on the door, felt it with her
-hands, the weight and the brass of it. It was hard for
-her to understand the cruel cold of it&mdash;as for a child
-that has never been hurt intentionally. She sank to her
-knees and prayed that it was not there.... But it
-was. The reality entered her brain, the thick icy metal
-of it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Betty Berry&mdash;Betty Berry, I am coming!”</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her head in the rain. His call was like a
-thought of her own, but sharper, truer. This was his
-door. He was coming. It was still light. She wanted
-to sleep again, but the death-like cold warned her. She
-would die before he came....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span></p>
-
-<p>She raised herself against the door. The black heap
-of the fur-robe on the slope held her eyes.... On
-the way to it she fainted again; again the cold rain roused
-her.... Always on the borders of the rousing, she
-heard it:</p>
-
-<p>“Betty Berry&mdash;Betty Berry, I am coming!”</p>
-
-<p>She knelt in the wet leaves beside the robe ...
-her thoughts turned back to the night&mdash;the goodness of
-the men, their tender voices.... There was a calling
-up in the dusk among the trees. Yes, she must lie
-at his door. Men were good; the lock alone had hurt
-her. His Guardian had put it there.... Upward
-she crawled, dragging the robe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are coming!” she answered. Always when
-the cold rain roused her, she would answer, and crawl a
-little farther with the robe. At the door at last, she lay
-down beneath it....</p>
-
-<p>Still again his calling roused her. It was darker&mdash;but
-not yet night....</p>
-
-<p>“Betty Berry&mdash;Betty Berry, I am coming!”</p>
-
-<p>It was nearer.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you would let me in,” she tried to say, and
-then&mdash;voices.... It seemed as if the porter of the
-Old South had come.... His voice lulled her, and
-his smile was the glow of the home-hearth.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">8</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">She</span> was lying upon the single narrow bed....
-Something long ago had been premonitive of this.
-Morning’s mind, too, caught up the remembrance of
-Moto-san and the Japanese Inn.... He watched.
-Sometimes he said with all his will that she must not die.
-She could not die, when his will was dominant, but he
-was exhausted; his will-power flagged frequently.</p>
-
-<p>All day yesterday in the train he had held her in his
-mind&mdash;sent his calls to her across the miles. From different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-stations he had telegraphed to Jake at Hackensack,
-to Jethro at the post-office, and to his neighbor,
-the dairyman, who had a telephone. Jethro had been
-the first to reach the cabin, but it was nearly dusk then.
-The others were quick to appear. Jethro found her at
-the door, partly covered in the furry robe. That robe
-crowned him in Morning’s mind. They had broken in
-the door, and lit the fire. Morning reached the cabin at
-nine. Jethro spoke of a doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m the doctor,” Morning said. The three had left
-him.</p>
-
-<p>It was now after midnight. She had not aroused.
-Old scenes quivered across the surface of her consciousness,
-starting a faintly mumbled sentence now and then:
-The Armory, the first kiss, the road to Baltimore, letters,
-hurried journeys, the Guardian; and much about the
-latest journey&mdash;from cab to station, from porter to Pullman,
-from car to clerk to carrier. He saw how the night
-and the day had used her final strength. Always the
-Guardian intervened to break her will, and Morning did
-not understand. There were other enemies; the studio,
-the nurse, the padlock, and the rain. After brief hushes,
-she would speak of his coming, or answer his calling.</p>
-
-<p>It was the one theme of his life even now&mdash;the great
-thing Betty Berry had done. It awed and chilled him
-to realize how coarse-fibered he had been, so utterly impervious,
-not to sense the nature of the force that had
-upheld him, nor the quality of the bestowals....
-There was a rending about it, and yet it was all so quiet
-now. It seemed to him that a man’s life is husk after
-husk of illusion, that the illusions are endless. He had
-torn them away, one after another, thinking each time
-that he had come to the grain.... And what was
-the sum of his finding so far? That good is eternal; that
-man loves God best by serving men; that greatness is
-in the working, not in the result; that a man who has
-found his work has found the soul’s sunlight, and that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>service for men is its rain. Surely, these are not husks....
-It had been a hard, weary way. He was like
-a tired child now, and here was the little mother&mdash;wearied
-with him unto death.... He had been so
-perverse and headstrong. She had given him her love
-and guidance until her last strength was spent. He must
-be the man now.... He wondered if his heart
-would break, when he realized fully his own evil and her
-unfathomable sweetness?... Must a woman always
-fall spent and near to death&mdash;before a man can be
-finished? Or is it because her work is done that she falls?</p>
-
-<p>He knelt beside her. Sometimes, in the lamplight, she
-looked as he had seen her at the Armory; again, as if
-she were playing; now, it was as she had been to him
-in the dark of the Pullman seat.... Who was the
-Guardian?</p>
-
-<p>... And this was what had come to her from
-teaching him the miracle of listening alone.... It
-was true. He belonged to that life, as Duke Fallows
-had always said. She had made him see it by going
-from him. He would never be the same, after having
-tasted the greater love, in which man and woman are
-one in the spirit of service, having renounced the emblem
-of it. And with all her vision and leading&mdash;the glory
-of it had not come to her as to him. It had all but killed
-her. She had come to him&mdash;a forgotten purpose, a
-broken vessel.</p>
-
-<p>He would love her back to life. That was his work
-now. Everything must stop for that&mdash;even truth....
-He halted. If he loved her back to full and
-perfect health again, would she not be the same as she
-had been? Would she not take up her Cross again?...
-No, he would not let her. He would destroy
-the results of his work if necessary. He would force
-himself to forget, even in the spirit&mdash;this taste of the
-mystic oneness that had come to him. He would show
-his need for her every hour. That would make her
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>happy&mdash;his leaning upon her word and thought and
-action. He would show her his need of her presence in
-the long, excellent forenoons, in the very processes of
-his task&mdash;and in the evenings, her hands, her kisses, her
-step, her voice; he would make her see that these were
-his perfect essentials.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve talked and written a lot about how a man should
-live&mdash;in the past six months,” he said grimly. “I’ve got
-to do a bit of real living in the world now. God knows
-I love her&mdash;as I used to. That seemed enough then!”</p>
-
-<p>He looked up from her face. The ghost of day had
-come softly to the South. He arose, took the lamp
-across the room and blew it out. Then he opened the
-door. The mingled night and dawn came in, a cool dimness,
-but the rain had ceased. He replenished the fire,
-left the door open, and returned to her. She had become
-quiet since the lamp had been taken away....
-A sense of the man and woman together, and of her
-strength returning crept upon him. He welcomed it,
-though the deeps cried out.</p>
-
-<p>“When you are yourself, you will want to go away
-again&mdash;the long, blinding ways of the sun,” he whispered.
-“But I will say, ‘I cannot spare you, Betty Berry.
-This is the place for two to be. We will begin
-again&mdash;&mdash;’”</p>
-
-<p>His thought of what she would answer brought back
-to mind the play, <i>Compassion</i>, and the Book of John
-Morning.... He smiled. He had almost forgotten.
-Night before last, at the beginning of the third act,
-he had left the <i>Markheim</i>. He had given way suddenly
-to the thought that had pulled at him all day&mdash;to take the
-train to Betty Berry that night.... The play had
-seemed good. Even to him there had been moments of
-thrilling joy. It had been surprisingly different, sitting
-in front with the audience, from the rehearsals. Of yesterday’s
-notices he had not seen a single one. It was a
-far thought to him even now of the play’s failure, but if
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>it did fail, how easy to say to Betty Berry, “You see, how
-mad I was alone&mdash;how mad in my exaltation&mdash;how terribly
-out of tune? I needed you here. I need you
-now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Then he thought of the bigger thing&mdash;the Book.
-There wasn’t a chance for that to fail. It would find its
-own. What would he say about that?... He
-would say, “I love you, Betty Berry. It was loving you
-that made the book. And when it was done&mdash;how I
-longed for you!”</p>
-
-<p>That was true&mdash;true now.... He kissed her
-shut eyelids. There was blessedness in her being here&mdash;even
-shattered and so close to death&mdash;blessedness and a
-dreadful fear. That fear was ever winging around, but
-did not come home to him and fold its wings. He was
-not himself.... “My God!” he cried out, “what
-folds upon folds and phases upon phases of experience
-a man must pass to learn to live&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>For an instant it all came back&mdash;that taste of the open
-road and larger dimension of man&mdash;the listening, the
-labor, the sharpened senses, scant diet, tireless service,
-‘the great companions’&mdash;love of the world and unfailing
-compassion.... It was as they had said. He had
-belonged everywhere but in a woman’s arms....</p>
-
-<p>It came clear as a vision, and he put it from him as
-an evil thing&mdash;and all the voices. The red dawn was
-staring into his eyes, and afar off a horse nickered. He
-held his hands against the light, as if to destroy it.</p>
-
-<p>“I have said it in the Book, ‘We have all eternity to
-play in,’ and if that is not a lie&mdash;this Call will come to
-me again!”</p>
-
-<p>And this was his renunciation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Her stillness troubled him.</p>
-
-<p>“I am your lover,” he whispered. “I will not let you
-go, Betty Berry. Don’t you hear&mdash;I love you?”</p>
-
-<p>He lifted her, walked to and fro between the fire and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>the cot. She was so very little.... The day came
-up with a mystic shining, and the warmth returned.
-These were the first hours of that fleeting Indian summer,
-the year’s illumination&mdash;the serene and conscious
-death of Summer.... The door was wide open to
-the light.... Morning put down his burden, but
-could not be still. He brought water and scrubbed the
-floor and door-step. The wood shone white as it dried&mdash;white
-as the square table which was an attraction of
-daylight. He tossed the water away down the hollow,
-drew more and washed as the countrymen do, lifting
-handfuls to his head. Then he brought basin, soap, and
-towels&mdash;bathed her face and hands, afterward carrying
-her forth to the sunlight. The thin shade of the elms
-was far down the meadow, for the day was not high.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you, Betty Berry,” he continued to repeat, as
-he turned again and again to the cot. There was an
-hypnotic effect in the words; and there was a certain
-numbed surface in his brain that refused to cope with
-the immediate stresses in the room.</p>
-
-<p>Jethro came early, and was not content to leave the
-mail at the box. He brought letters, a paper, and a large
-package. Jethro looked at the face on the cot and at the
-bare-headed man. Words failed him to whom words
-were so easy. He ventured to mention the name of a
-doctor, and was answered furiously:</p>
-
-<p>“I am the doctor.”</p>
-
-<p>Jethro lingered. Morning turned suddenly to look at
-the cot, and it seemed to the carrier that his eyes would
-have frightened away death.... Morning caught
-him by the shoulders:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a good man, Jethro,” he said hastily.
-“When I think of that fur robe&mdash;it seems as if I’ve got
-to do something for you with my hands.”</p>
-
-<p>The carrier went his way.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This he found in the newspaper&mdash;a “follow” paragraph<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-apparently to the dramatic notice of the day before:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The second performance of <i>Compassion</i> last
-night to a fairly filled house is interesting in its relation
-to the fear frankly expressed in this column yesterday,
-to the effect that <i>Compassion</i> is too good a
-play to get on well. The fear was well founded upon
-experience; and yet we may have before us an exception&mdash;a
-quality of excellence that will not be subdued.
-It is too much to hope for, that at any other
-time this season we will be equally glad to find our
-fear for a play’s future ill-founded.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Morning had not known of the doubt; and this was
-the rise of the tide again from the doubt.... He
-glanced at the package. There was a spreading cold in
-his vitals. It was from the publisher he had chosen&mdash;the
-Book of John Morning returned.</p>
-
-<p>He was hostile for an instant&mdash;an old vindictive self
-resenting this touch upon his gift of self-revelation.
-The protecting thought followed quickly that the book
-was in no way changed by this accident of encountering
-the wrong publisher. The really important part of the
-incident followed these insignificant thoughts: Above all
-things, this letter would help to prove to Betty Berry his
-need for her. He would not send it out again at once.
-This refusal would weigh more than anything he could
-say, to prove that loneliness had been too much, too
-strong for him&mdash;that it had thrown his work out of
-reality, instead of into it.... He was bending over
-her. A step at the door, and he turned to find Helen
-Quiston there.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">9</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">S</span>he</span> entered and went to the cot, without words, but
-pressed his hand as she passed....</p>
-
-<p>“You were there&mdash;and you let her get so low as
-this.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
-
-<p>Helen turned to search his face. “Yes,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this&mdash;Guardian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some angel that came to her, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems very real to her&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Angels are real.”</p>
-
-<p>“Angels do not make saints suffer&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, that appears to be the life-business
-of saints&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“She will never go back to that!” he said with low
-vehemence.</p>
-
-<p>Helen regarded her old comrade for a moment, kissed
-her reverently, and then turned to the man.</p>
-
-<p>“You poor boy,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>There was something cold and rock-like about this
-slave of the future, looking over and beyond the imminent
-tragedy. He was helpless, maddened....</p>
-
-<p>“She always said you loved her&mdash;that you were the
-one woman absolutely true. How could you let her destroy
-herself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew her before you came, and loved her. I gave
-her my house. I waited upon her night and morning.
-I love Betty Berry. You are torn and tortured, but you
-will see&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“She will not be away from me again!...
-Bah! what is work&mdash;to this?”</p>
-
-<p>Helen smiled. “Do you think she would have come
-if she had been the real Betty Berry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think I would have been duped&mdash;had I
-been the real John Morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean a man is mad when he is doing a book. He
-may call it happiness, but it is a kind of devil’s madness.
-He is open for anything to rush in.... I am a
-common man. I do not belong to that visionary
-thing&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You are caught in your emotions. I know your
-work&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span></p>
-
-<p>He drew her to the door, saying excitedly:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Compassion</i> threatens to fail. My book has come
-back,” he said triumphantly. “Look at this&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He gave her the publisher’s letter.</p>
-
-<p>“Your play has not failed,” she said.... “And
-this&mdash;why, this is just a bit of the world. John Morning
-at thirty-three&mdash;talks of failure. Let us talk over this
-day, when you are fifty-three.... What an empty
-victory for her&mdash;if you failed now&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She was looking back at the cot. Morning whispered
-his reiteration:</p>
-
-<p>“I love her. I shall have her here. I shall make her
-see that I love her. <i>That</i> is my service. You are all
-mad conspirators against us. We are man and woman.
-Our world is each other. She shall see and believe this&mdash;if
-I write drivel&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Helen did not seem quite to hear him. She
-drew away from him as if called in a trance to
-the bedside.</p>
-
-<p>“My little dearest&mdash;oh, Betty Berry&mdash;you have done
-so well. You have paid the price for a World-Man&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Morning followed her.... Betty’s eyes were
-opened&mdash;fixed upon Helen Quiston.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?” she questioned wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“God love you, Betty. I said you had paid the price
-for a World-Man&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She raised on her elbow alone, her eyes now looking
-beyond the woman to Morning.</p>
-
-<p>“He is there,” she whispered. “He is there. He has
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>Her hand stretched toward him, and sank slowly to
-his brow as he knelt.</p>
-
-<p>“My love,” she said.... “It is all right. I see
-it all once more. It is so good and right&mdash;just as your
-Guardian told me.... It was only the birth-pangs
-I suffered. They were hard.... Birth is hard,
-but death is easy. Don’t you see, Helen, he was my little
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>baby?... Oh, you came so hard, John Morning&mdash;and,
-oh, I love you so!”</p>
-
-<p>He saw the fact of her passing, but the deeper realization
-was slow. It was much to him, for the instant,
-that she spoke and looked into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you, Betty Berry,” he said, his voice lifting.
-“I love you as a saint, as a mother&mdash;as a child!”</p>
-
-<p>“But not as a woman,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2"><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Notes:</span></p>
-
-<p>On page 9, oustide has been changed to outside.</p>
-
-<p>On page 28, redouts has been changed to redoubts.</p>
-
-<p>On page 43, foxtails has been changed to fox-tails.</p>
-
-<p>On page 60, Koupangtze has been changed to Koupangtse.</p>
-
-<p>On page 91, Nagaski has been changed to Nagasaki.</p>
-
-<p>On page 110, story--idea has been changed to story-idea.</p>
-
-<p>On page 126, “the the” has eliminated the second word.</p>
-
-<p>On page 191, altar has been changed to alter.</p>
-
-<p>On page 206, sorows has been changed to sorrows.</p>
-
-<p>On page 245, settle has been changed to settled.</p>
-
-<p>On page 246, wordly has been changed to worldly.</p>
-
-<p>On page 274, even has been changed to ever.</p>
-
-<p>On page 276, elums has been changed to elms.</p>
-
-<p>On page 279, cousciousness has been changed to consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>All other hyphenation and spelling has been retained.</p></div></div>
-
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