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+ Episodes before thirty | Project Gutenberg
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76991 ***</div>
+<div class='x-ebookmaker-drop'>
+<figure class="figcenter illowp47" id="cover" style="max-width: 102.0em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Book Cover">
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="section front">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">[i]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h1>
+EPISODES BEFORE THIRTY
+</h1>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="section front">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center mt2 ltsp2 fs250">EPISODES BEFORE</p>
+<p class='center ltsp2 fs250'>THIRTY</p>
+
+<p class="center mt4">By</p>
+<p class='center fs150 mtq xwdsp'>ALGERNON BLACKWOOD</p>
+
+<p class="center mt8 fs120 xwdsp">CASSELL AND COMPANY, LTD</p>
+<p class='center xwdsp'>London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne</p>
+<p class='center'>1923</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[iv]</span></p>
+
+<p class='center fs70 mt8 mb8'><i>Printed in Great Britain</i></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span></p>
+
+<p class='center mt8 blackletter'>To</p>
+<p class='center mth mb8'>ALFRED H. LOUIS</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='toc'>
+<p class='no-indent'>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII</a><br>
+<a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a><br>
+<a href="#Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</a>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='center fs200 mt4 mb2'>
+ EPISODES BEFORE THIRTY
+</p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>A strong</span> emotion, especially if experienced for the
+first time, leaves a vivid memory of the scene
+where it occurred. I see a room in a New York
+boarding-house. I can touch the wooden bed, the two
+gas-brackets beside the looking-glass, the white door of
+the cupboard, the iron “register” in the wall that let
+in heated air, the broken sofa. The view from the dirty
+windows towards the high roof of Tony Pastor’s music
+hall in 14th Street, with a side glimpse of the trees in
+Irving Place, show clearly. The rattle of the Broadway
+cable cars, the clang of their bells, still come to me through
+that stifling August air, when the shade thermometer
+stood at a hundred, with humidity somewhere about 95
+per cent. Thoughts of the sea and mountains, vainly
+indulged within those walls, are easily remembered too.</p>
+
+<p>The room I am writing in now seems less actual than
+the one in the East 19th Street boarding-house, kept by
+Mrs. Bernstein, a German Jewess, whose husband conducted
+his own orchestra in a Second Avenue restaurant.
+Though thirty years ago, it is more clearly defined for
+me than Lady X’s dining-room where I dined last night,
+and where the lady I took in said graciously, “I simply
+loved your <i>Blue Lagoon</i>,” which, naturally, I was able
+to praise unreservedly, while leaving her with the illusion
+as long as possible that she had made friends with
+its gifted author. And this detailed clarity is due, I am
+sure, to the fact that in that New York room I had my
+first experience of three new emotions, each of which,
+separately, held horror.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span></p>
+
+<p>Horror draws its lines deep; its pictures stand out
+in high relief. In my case the horrors were, perhaps
+minor ones, but at the age of twenty-one—an exceptionally
+inexperienced twenty-one—they seemed important;
+and the fact that they were combined entitles them to
+be considered major. They were three in number: the
+horror of loathsome vermin running over my body night
+after night, the horror of hunger, and the horror of living
+at close quarters with a criminal and degraded mind.</p>
+
+<p>All, as I said, came together; all were entirely new
+sensations. “Close quarters,” too, is used advisedly, for
+not only was the room a small one, the cheapest in a cheap
+house, but it was occupied by three of us—three Englishmen
+“on their uppers,” three big Englishmen into the
+bargain, two of us standing 6 feet 2 inches, the other
+6 feet 3 inches in his socks. We shared that room for many
+weeks, taking our turn at sleeping two in the bed, and
+one on the mattress we pulled off and kept hidden in the
+cupboard during the day. Mrs. Bernstein, denying her
+blood, won our affection by charging eight dollars only,
+the price for two, morning coffee included; and Mrs.
+Bernstein’s face, fat, kindly, perspiring, dirty, is more
+vivid in my memory after all these years than that of
+the lady last night who so generously mistook me for
+De Vere Stacpoole. Her voice even rings clear, with its
+Jewish lisp, its guttural German, its nasal twang
+thrown in:</p>
+
+<p>“I ask my hospand. Berhaps he let you stay anozzer
+week.”</p>
+
+<p>What the husband said we never knew. He was
+usually too drunk to say anything coherent. What
+mattered to us was that we were not turned out at the
+moment, and that, in the long run, the good-hearted
+woman received her money.</p>
+
+<p>Certain objects in that room retain exceptional clarity
+in my mind. If thought-pictures could be photographed,
+a perfect print of the bed and gas-bracket could be printed
+from my memory. With the former especially I associate
+the vermin, the hunger, and the rather tawdry criminal.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
+I could describe that bed down to the smallest detail;
+I could draw it accurately, even to the carving; were I
+a carpenter I could make it. All that I suffered in it,
+of physical and mental anguish, the vain longings and
+despair, the hopes and fears, the loneliness, the feverish
+dreams—the entire dread panorama still hangs in the air
+between its stained brown foot and the broken sofa, as
+though of yesterday. I can see a tall man pass the end
+of it, one eye on me and another on the door, opening
+a razor slowly as he went. I see the blue eyes narrowing
+in his white face, the treachery of the coward twisting
+his lip into a smirk. I can see him sleeping like a child
+beside me, touching me. Moving stealthily about the
+room in the darkness too, as, thinking me asleep, he stole on
+bare feet to recover the confession of forgery I had forced
+him to sign, I can still see his dim outline, and even hear
+his tread—a petty scoundrel unwittingly on his way to gaol.</p>
+
+<p>The bed, thus, is vividly present in my memory. By
+contrast with it, not quite so sharp, perhaps, and a
+pleasanter feeling associated with it, another New York
+sleeping-place rises in the mind—a bench in Central Park.
+Here, however, the humour of adventure softens the picture,
+though at the time it did not soften the transverse
+iron arms which made it impossible to stretch out in
+comfort. Nor is there any touch of horror in it. Precise
+and detailed recollection fades. The hoboes who shared
+it with me were companions, even comrades of a sort,
+and one did not feel them necessarily criminal or degraded.
+They were “on their uppers” much as I was, and far
+quicker than I was at the trick of suddenly sitting
+upright when the night policeman’s tread was coming our
+way. What thoughts they indulged in I had no means
+of knowing, but I credited them with flitting backwards
+to a clean room somewhere and a soft white bed, possibly
+to that ridiculous figure of immense authority, a nurse,
+just as my own flashed back to a night nursery in the
+Manor House, Crayford, Kent. That the seats I favoured
+were near the Swings lent possibly another touch to the
+childhood’s picture.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span></p>
+
+<p>The memory, anyhow, is a sweeter one than that of
+the bed in East 19th Street, if less sharply defined. The
+cool fresh air, the dew, the stars, the smell of earth and
+leaves, were all of them clean, and no price asked at
+dawn. Yet the two—the bed and the bench—are somehow
+linked together in my mind, the one invariably
+calling up the other; and, thanks to them probably,
+no bed bothers me now, lumpy or sloping though it be,
+in train, hotel, or lodging. I have slept in strange places
+since—high in the Caucasus, on the shores of the Black
+Sea, on the Egyptian desert, on the banks of the Danube,
+in the Black Forest and Hungary—but each time
+the effort to get comfortable brought back the bed
+and the bench, and sleep soon followed to smother
+both.</p>
+
+<p>The gas-brackets, similarly, rise vividly before my
+eyes, associated with the pain, the weariness of hunger;
+not of true starvation, but of weeks and months of under-nourishment,
+caused by one meal a day. The relation
+between hunger and gas-brackets may seem remote. It
+was on the latter, however, that we learned to fix the
+metal top which made the flame spread in a circle round
+a light tin cooking-pot. We boiled water for milkless tea
+in this way, cooked porridge, and when porridge was not
+to be had we heated water with dried apples in it. I
+remember the day we discovered that it was more economical
+to eat the strips of dried apple first, then drink
+the hot water that made them swell so comfortingly
+inside us. They proved more filling that way, the false
+repletion lasted longer, the sense of bulk was more satisfying,
+the gnawing ceased, and the results, if temporary,
+at least made it possible to fall asleep.</p>
+
+<p>There are other details of that sordid New York room
+which still retain their first disagreeable vividness, each
+with the ghost—a very sturdy ghost—of the emotion
+that printed it indelibly in the mind. These details are
+best mentioned, however, in their proper place and
+sequence. It should first be told how we came to be
+there.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>We</span> arrived in New York towards the end of October,
+coming straight from five months in the Canadian
+backwoods. Before that, to mention myself first,
+there had been a year in Canada, where, even before the
+age of twenty-one, I had made a living of sorts by teaching
+the violin, French, German, and shorthand. Showing no
+special talent for any profession in particular, and having
+no tastes that could be held to indicate a definite career,
+I had come to Canada three years before for a few weeks’
+trip. My father, in an official capacity, had passes from
+Liverpool to Vancouver, and we crossed in the <i>Etruria</i>,
+a Cunarder which my mother had launched. He was
+much fêted and banqueted, and the C.P.R. bigwigs, from
+Lord Strathcona and Sir William van Horne downwards,
+showed him all attention, placing an observation car at
+his disposal. General James, the New York postmaster,
+gave a dinner in his honour at the Union League Club,
+where I made my first and last speech—consisting of
+nine words of horrified thanks for coupling “a chip of
+the old block,” as the proposer called me, with the “Chief
+of the British Postal Service.”</p>
+
+<p>A ludicrous wound to vanity helps it to stick in the
+mind—my father wore no braces, and I copied him, but—well,
+in his case no belt was necessary, whereas I was
+slim. It suddenly dawned on me, as I spluttered my
+brief words, that a line of white was showing between
+my waistcoat and the top of my trousers. The close of
+my speech was hurried, my bow was cautious; I was
+extremely relieved to sit down again.</p>
+
+<p>In the lovely autumn weather, we saw Canada at its
+best, and the trip decided my future. My father welcomed
+it as a happy solution. I came, therefore, to
+Toronto at the age of twenty, with £100 a year allowance,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
+and a small capital to follow when I should have found
+some safe and profitable chance of starting life. With
+me came—in the order of their importance—a fiddle, the
+“Bhagavad Gita,” Shelley, “Sartor Resartus,” Berkeley’s
+“Dialogues,” Patanjali’s “Yoga Aphorisms,” de
+Quincey’s “Confessions,” and—a unique ignorance of
+life.... I served my first literary apprenticeship on
+the <i>Methodist Magazine</i>, a monthly periodical published
+in Toronto, and before that licked stamps in the back
+office of the Temperance and General Life Assurance
+Company, at nothing a week, but with the idea of learning
+the business, so that later I might bring out some English
+insurance company to Canada.</p>
+
+<p>The first taught me that, just as I had no ambition
+to write, so, likewise, I possessed no talent; the second
+merely made articulate the dislike I felt for anything to
+do with Business. It was the three months in the insurance
+office that caused me to accept eagerly the job on
+the <i>Methodist Magazine</i> at four dollars a week, and the
+reaction helped to make the work congenial if not
+stimulating.</p>
+
+<p>The allowance of ten dollars a week was difficult to
+live on, and I had been looking everywhere for employment.
+It was through a daughter of Sir Thomas Galt,
+a friend of my father’s on our previous trip to Canada,
+that I obtained this job—sixteen shillings a week, hours
+ten to four.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Withrow, editor of the leading Methodist magazine,
+and of various Christian Endeavour periodicals for
+children and young people, was a pleasant old gentleman,
+who went about in a frock coat and slippers, had
+a real sense of humour and a nice wife and daughter.
+His editorial den was in his own little house, and my
+duties were to write an article every month for the magazine,
+which was illustrated, and also to write a few
+descriptive lines of letterpress to accompany the full-page
+illustrations for the numerous Christian Endeavour and
+Methodist periodicals for young people and children. He
+taught me the typewriter, and with my shorthand I took
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
+most of his letters at dictation, and certainly earned my
+money. My monthly articles in the magazine were on
+such subjects as Christmas in England, Life at a Moravian
+School, The Black Forest, Travel in the Alps—anything
+that my limited experience enabled me to
+describe at first-hand, and on the whole the old gentleman
+seemed satisfied. The description of the children’s
+pictures, however, always made him chuckle, though he
+never said why, and I wrote dozens of these a day, describing
+the picture of “King Canute and the Sea,” “Elijah
+in a Chariot of Fire,” “A Child Blowing Bubbles,” “The
+Wood-boring Beetle,” etc. etc.</p>
+
+<p>He would dictate some of his articles of travel to me,
+and I would take them down in shorthand, and he often
+made such grotesque mistakes in facts that I quietly
+corrected these as I wrote, and when I read out the sentence
+to him he would notice the alteration and look at
+me over his spectacles and say:</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you. Yes, I was wrong there. The fact is,
+I have so many articles to write that I compose two at
+a time in my mind, and they get muddled up. An editor
+should always be accurate, and Methodist readers are
+cranky and hard to please.” He was a Methodist parson
+himself, which did not prevent him saying exactly what
+he thought. He lunched off dates and bananas, which
+he kept in a bag beside his desk, and that same desk
+was in such disorder that he never could find what he
+wanted, and I was not surprised to learn that, before I
+came, the printers got the wrong papers, and that many
+of the children’s pictures got descriptions underneath that
+did not belong to them—for instance, a boy blowing
+a bubble was published over a few lines describing the
+habits of snakes, “as seen in our illustration,” and so
+forth.</p>
+
+<p>I got on so well with the little Methodist that he
+wanted to come to the evening French classes I was
+giving at fifty cents a lesson to some of the clerks in the
+insurance office, and to bring his daughter with him.
+He said a little more knowledge of French would be very
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
+good for him when he took his conducted tours of Canadian
+Methodists to Switzerland; but I did not rise to this, and
+persuaded him to wait till I could get a more select class
+to meet, perhaps, at his own house, where a girl could
+more suitably attend. For, to tell the truth, some of
+my pupils had a habit of coming slightly drunk—or, as
+they called it, “with a jag on.” He, however, would not
+wait, so I lost two good pupils!... Dr. Withrow, patient
+little man of kindly disposition! His faded black frock-coat,
+his spectacles high on his puckered forehead, his
+carpet slippers, his tobacco-stained white beard, his sincere
+beliefs and his striped trousers of a pattern I have
+always since labelled mentally as “Methodist trousers”—it
+is a gentle little memory tucked away among unkinder
+ones, and I still hear him giving me my first and only
+lesson how to write. His paraphrase of “fatal facility”
+stays with me: “Fluency means dullness, unless the
+mind is packed with thought.” It stays with me because
+the conversation led to my asking if I might write an
+article for the monthly on the subject of Buddhism. Behind
+it lay an ever keener desire to write something on
+Hegel, whose philosophy I felt certain was based on some
+personal experience of genuine mystical kind.</p>
+
+<p>“From what point of view?” he asked, his forehead
+puckering with amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“That of belief,” I said, my mind bursting with an
+eager desire to impart information, if not also to convert.</p>
+
+<p>He passed his hand across his forehead, knocking the
+spectacles off. Then, catching them with a fumbling
+motion which betrayed his perturbation, he inquired:
+“But, of course, Mr. Blackwood, not your <i>own</i>?”</p>
+
+<p>The voice, the eyes, the whole attitude of the body
+made me realize he was prepared to be shocked, if not
+already shocked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I replied truthfully, “my own. I’ve been a
+Buddhist for a long time.”</p>
+
+<p>He stared for some time at me without a word, then
+smiled a kindly, indulgent, rather sceptical smile. “It
+would be hardly suitable,” he mentioned, as I felt his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
+whole being draw away from me as from something dangerous
+and unclean. Possibly, of course, he did not believe
+me; I am sure he prayed for me. Our relations seemed
+less cordial after that; he read most carefully every word
+I wrote in his magazine and children’s pages, but he never
+referred to the matter again.</p>
+
+<p>My Methodist job, none the less, was a happy one;
+this first regular wage I had yet received in life gave me
+the pleasant sensation that I was launched. My connexion
+with Methodism ceased, not because I was dismissed
+or had failed to give satisfaction (indeed, the
+editor had just told me my salary was to be raised!),
+but because all the capital I should ever have was sent
+to me about that time from England—about £2,000—and
+I went into partnership with a farmer outside Toronto
+and bought some forty head of pedigree Jersey cattle.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> Islington Jersey Dairy, Messrs. Cooper and
+Blackwood, started business with a retail office in
+College Street, a number of milk carts bearing our
+names in black lettering upon a yellow background, and
+the supply farm at Islington, a lovely little hamlet on
+the shores of Lake Ontario, some six miles west of the
+city. We sold rich Jersey milk, we sold eggs and butter
+too. I gave picnics at our pretty little farm for customers
+I knew socially. The upper floors of the building
+in College Street we furnished, letting bedrooms at a
+dollar a week to young Englishmen, clerks in offices, and
+others. I engaged an old, motherly Englishwoman, Mrs.
+’Iggins, with a face like a rosy apple, to “do” for us—she
+made the beds and cooked the breakfast—while her
+pretty daughter, in cap and apron, was our dairymaid.
+The plan did not work smoothly—the dairymaid was too
+pretty, perhaps; Mrs. Higgins too voluble. Complaints
+came from all sides; the lodgers, wildish young fellows
+in a free and easy country, made more promises than
+payments. One wanted a stove, another a carpet in his
+bedroom, another complained about his bed. I had my
+first experience of drink and immorality going on under
+my very eyes.... Trouble—though mercifully of another
+kind—spread then to the customers. The milk began to
+go sour; it was too rich; it wouldn’t keep; the telephone
+rang all day long. Cooper, an experienced dairy-farmer,
+was at his wits’ end; every device for scouring the
+bottles, for cooling the milk before bringing it twice a
+day to the city, failed. At dinner parties my hostess
+would draw me tactfully aside. “The milk, I’m afraid,
+Mr. Blackwood,” she would murmur softly, “was sour
+again this morning. Will you speak about it?”</p>
+
+<p>I spoke about it—daily—but Alfred Cooper’s only comment
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
+was, “Say, have you got a bit more capital?
+That’s what we really want.”</p>
+
+<p>That sour milk became a veritable nightmare that
+never left me. I had enough of milk. Yet, later in life,
+I found myself “in milk” again, but that time it was
+dried milk, a profitable business to the owners, though
+it brought me nothing. I worked six years at it for a
+bare living wage. But, at any rate, it couldn’t turn sour.
+It was a powder.</p>
+
+<p>Alfred Cooper was a delightful fellow. I think some
+detail of how our partnership came to be may bear the
+telling. It points a moral if it does not adorn a tale.
+It may, again, prove useful to other young Englishmen
+in Canada similarly waiting with money to invest; but
+on the other hand it may not, since there can be few,
+I imagine, as green as I was then, owing to a strange
+upbringing, or as ignorant of even the simplest worldly
+practices. Of the evangelical training responsible for
+this criminal ignorance I will speak later.</p>
+
+<p>Cooper, then, was a delightful fellow, fitting my ideal
+of a type I had read about—the fearless, iron-muscled
+colonial white man who fought Indians. The way we met
+was quite simply calculated—by a clerk in the bank
+where my English allowance of £100 a year was paid by
+my father. The clerk and I made friends—naturally;
+and one day—also naturally—he suggested a Sunday walk
+to Islington, some six miles down the lake shore. We
+could get tea at a farm he knew. We did. The praises
+of the Cooper family, who owned it, had already been
+sung. I was enchanted. So, doubtless, was the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>The farm was a small one—perhaps eight acres; and
+Cooper lived on it in poverty with his aged mother and
+unmarried sister. It was charmingly situated, the fields
+running down to the water, pine copses dotting the
+meadows to the north, and the little village church standing
+at one corner near the road. Mrs. Cooper, in cap and
+apron, dropping every “h” that came her way, described
+to me how she and her husband had emigrated from
+England sixty years before, in the days of sailing ships.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+Her husband’s grave in the churchyard we could see from
+the window while we sat at tea—an unusually sumptuous
+tea for a farmhouse—and it was evident that she was
+more alive to the memories of half a century ago in the
+“old country,” than to the plans of her ambitious son
+in the new colony.</p>
+
+<p>The son came to tea too, but a little late, having
+obviously brushed himself up a bit for his visitor from
+England. He was about forty years of age, tall, well-built,
+keen-faced, with steel-blue eyes and a hatchet nose,
+and his body was just that combination of leanness,
+strength and nervous alertness which made one think
+of a wolf. He was extremely polite, not to say flattering,
+to me. I thought him delightful, his idyllic farm still
+more delightful; he was so eager, vigorous and hardy,
+a typical pioneer, slaving from dawn to sunset to win a
+living from the soil in order to support the family. I
+trusted him, admired him immensely. Having been
+duly prepared for the picture on our walk out, I was not
+disappointed. He spoke very frankly of the desperate
+work he and his sister were forced to do; also of what he
+might do, and what could be made of the farm, if only he
+had a little capital. I liked him; he liked me; the
+clerk liked us both.</p>
+
+<p>He showed me round the farm after tea, and his few
+Jersey cows came up and nosed his hand. The elderly
+sister, a weaker repetition of himself, joined us. She,
+too, slaved from morning till night. The old mother,
+diminutive, quiet, brave, devoted to her children yet
+with her heart in the old country she would never see
+again, completed a charming picture in my mind. I was
+invited to come again.</p>
+
+<p>Another picture, still more alluring, was set before
+me during the walk back, the picture of what a “little
+capital” could do with that tiny farm. The dairy
+business that could be worked up made me feel a rich
+man before the Toronto spires became visible. The
+desire to put capital into the Islington Jersey Dairy
+became the one hope of my life. Would Cooper agree?
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
+Would he accept me as a partner? The suggestion came
+from myself. The clerk, of course, had never dreamed
+of such a thing. They <i>might</i> welcome me, the clerk
+thought. Very kindly, he said he would sound Cooper
+about it and let me know....</p>
+
+<p>The scheme seemed such a perfect solution of my
+problem of earning a living, that I was afraid up to the
+last moment something must happen to prevent it.
+Cooper would die, or change his mind, or one of my
+influential business friends would warn me not to do it.
+I was so jealous of interference that I sought no advice.
+Without so much as a scratch of the pen between us the
+enterprise started. So heartily did I like and trust my
+partner that when, later, wiser friends inquired about
+my contract with him, it infuriated me. “Contract!
+A contract with Alfred Cooper!”</p>
+
+<p>We did a roaring trade at first. Our Jersey milk
+was beyond all question the best in the town. It was
+honest, unwatered milk, and our cream, without any
+preservative added, was so prized that we soon had
+more orders than we could fill. Why our milk and cream
+soured so readily, losing us trade rapidly later, is a mystery
+to me to this day.</p>
+
+<p>Within a few weeks of our starting business, Cooper
+convinced me that a model dairy building on the farm
+would be a desirable improvement; it would save labour
+in various ways; it was built. The farm belonged to
+his mother, not to him; he kept the building when our
+collapse followed. Next, his sister really must have
+someone to help her, and that someone was provided at
+high wages. Business was good, so good in fact that we
+could not supply orders. Extra milk must therefore be
+bought from neighbouring farmers. This was done, the
+contracts being made by Cooper. I never asked to see
+them. The bills were paid every month without question
+on my part. More grazing fields, with enough artificial
+food to feed at least a hundred cows in addition, these
+too had to be paid for. As for the appetites of our forty
+animals, I marvelled at them long before I became suspicious.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
+Yet when, after much insisting, I saw one of
+the farmer’s bills for extra milk, it left me, naturally, no
+wiser than before, and certainly not a whit more comforted,
+for the less our trade became, the more milk,
+apparently, those farmers sold us!</p>
+
+<p>Six months later the firm of Cooper and Blackwood
+dissolved partnership, Blackwood having got the experience
+and Cooper having got—something quite as
+useful, but more marketable. Cooper’s I.O.U. for five
+hundred dollars, now stuck in an old scrap-book somewhere,
+made me realize a little later how lucky it was
+that I had only a limited amount to lose.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, though it seemed the end of the world to me,
+my capital lost, my enterprise a failure, I recall the curious
+sense of relief with which I saw the last cow knocked
+down to some bidder from up-country. From the very
+beginning I had hated the entire business. I did not
+know a Jersey from a Shorthorn, so to speak. I knew
+nothing about farming, still less about dairy-farming.
+The year spent at Edinburgh University to learn the
+agricultural trade had been wasted, for, instead, I
+attended what interested me far more—the post-mortems,
+operations, lectures on pathology, and the dissecting
+room. My notebooks of Professor Wallace’s lectures,
+crammed as they were, with entries about soil, rotation
+of crops, and drainage, represented no genuine practical
+knowledge. I knew nothing. My father sent me out to
+Canada to farm. I went. I farmed. Cooper and Blackwood
+is carved upon the gravestone. But the gravestone
+cost £2,000, my share of the forced sale being about £600.
+My Canadian experience, anyhow, can be summed up in
+advice, which is, of course, a bromide now: let any
+emigrant young Englishman earn his own living for at
+least five years in any colony before a penny of capital
+is given him to invest.</p>
+
+<p>It was with this £600 I soon after went into partnership
+with another man, but this time an honest one. We
+bought a small hotel in the heart of Toronto. It also
+lasted about six months. When the crash came we lived
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+together from May to October on a small island in a
+thirty-mile lake of the Ontario hinterland; we shared
+a long slice of difficult life together subsequently in New
+York; we shared the horrors of East 19th Street together.
+He failed me only once, missing a train a few years later
+by a couple of minutes. It was the Emigrant Sleeper to
+Duluth on Lake Superior, <i>en route</i> for the Rainy River
+Gold Fields, where four of us had made sudden plans to
+try our fortunes. I was on a New York paper at the
+time, and had secured passes over the first fifteen hundred
+miles. As the train drew out of the Central Station I
+saw my friend racing down the platform, a minute too
+late! From that day to this I have never set eyes on
+him again. It was an abrupt end to a friendship cemented
+by hard times, and my disappointment at losing his companionship
+was rather bitter at the time.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap xkern'><span class='allcaps'>At</span> the time we met, this friend of mine had been out
+from Oxford—New College, I think—a year or so,
+and with a Cambridge man about his own age, had
+been running a sporting goods shop in King Street. They
+sold the paraphernalia of cricket, tennis, boxing and the
+like, but with no marked success. The considerable
+money invested by the pair of them earned no interest.
+John Kay was impatient and dissatisfied; the other
+had leanings towards the brokering trade, as offering
+better opportunities. Both were ready to cut their
+losses, realize, and get out. They did so, remaining
+the best of friends. And it was one day, while these
+preliminary negotiations were being discussed in the
+back office, where they muddled away the day between
+rare sales, that Kay said to me mysteriously: “Look
+here, I say—I’ve got a wonderful scheme. Have you
+got any money left?”</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned the £600.</p>
+
+<p>“I call it a rotten shame,” he went on. “Of course,
+you’ve been swindled. These people look upon us as
+their natural prey”—and he proceeded to describe his
+“scheme”—to buy a small hotel which, owing to its
+bad name, was going cheap; to work up a respectable
+business and a valuable goodwill; then to sell out at
+a top price and retire with a comfortable fortune. Kay was
+twenty-three, two years my senior; to me, then, he seemed
+an experienced man of business, almost elderly. The
+scheme took my breath away. It was very tempting.
+The failure of the dairy farm had left me despondent;
+I felt disgraced; the end of life, it seemed,
+had come. I was ready to grasp at anything that held
+out hopes of a recovery of fortune. But an hotel! I
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I know nothing about running an hotel,” I objected.</p>
+
+<p>“Neither do I—yet,” was the sanguine answer,
+“but we can learn. It’s only common sense and hard
+work. We can hire a good manager and engage a first-class
+cook.”</p>
+
+<p>“How many rooms are there?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only thirteen. It’s the bar where we shall make
+the money.”</p>
+
+<p>“The bar——!”</p>
+
+<p>“There are two bars, one on the main street and
+another on the back. Billy Bingham has made the place
+too hot to hold him. His licence is to be withdrawn.
+He’s got to get out. We can get his licence transferred
+to us all right, if we promise to make the place respectable.
+We’ll have good food, a first-rate lunch counter
+for the business men, we can let the big rooms for club
+dinners and society banquets, and there’s a 100 per
+cent. profit, you know, on liquor. We’ll make the <i>Hub</i>
+the best ‘joint’ in the town. All the fellows will come.
+A year will do it. Then we’ll sell out....”</p>
+
+<p>I was not listening. The word “liquor”—I had
+never touched alcohol in my life—made such a noise
+in my mind that I could hear nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>“My father,” I mentioned in a faint voice, “is a
+public man at home. He’s a great temperance reformer.
+He speaks and writes against drink. He’s brought me
+up that way. It would be a terrible shock to him if his
+son made money out of a bar.” The hotel scheme,
+indeed, seemed to me an impossibility. A picture of the
+Temperance meetings held in our country house flashed
+through my mind. I glanced down at my coat, on
+whose lapel, until recently, there had been a little strip
+of blue ribbon, signifying that I was a member of the
+Band of Hope which included several million avowed
+teetotallers. “Don’t you see, old chap?” I explained
+further. “It would simply break his heart, and my
+mother’s too.”</p>
+
+<p>“He need never know anything about it,” came the
+answer at once. “Why should he? Our names needn’t
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
+appear at all. We’ll call ourselves the ‘Hub Wine Company,
+Limited.’” My head was swimming, my mind
+buzzing with conflicting voices as we walked down King
+Street to inspect the premises. I ached to re-establish
+my position. The prospect of a quick recovery of fortune
+was as sweet a prize as ever tempted a green youth like
+myself. My partner, too, this time would be a “gentleman,”
+a fellow my father might have invited to dine
+and play tennis; it was my appalling ignorance of life
+that gave to his two years’ seniority some imagined
+quality of being a man much older than myself, and one
+who knew what he was about.</p>
+
+<p>The character of the proposed enterprise, of course,
+had no effect at all upon the judgment. To be known
+as a successful hotel proprietor was a legitimate ambition.
+My father’s stern judgment of philanthropists who preached
+temperance while owning distilleries or holding brewery
+shares—I knew it word for word—was quite forgotten.
+Only the little personal point of view was present: “I’ve
+been an ass. I must make good. Here’s a chance, a
+certainty, of getting money. I must take it. It’s my
+Karma.”</p>
+
+<p>We strode down King Street together, past the corner
+of Yonge Street, below the windows of the hated Temperance
+and General Life Assurance Company where I had
+licked stamps, and on towards the Hub Hotel. The
+Toronto air was fresh and sweet, the lake lay blue beyond,
+the sunlight sparkled. Something exhilarating and
+optimistic in the atmosphere gave thought a happy and
+sanguine twist. It was a day of Indian summer, a faint
+perfume of far-distant forest fires adding a pleasant
+touch to the familiar smell of the cedar-wood sidewalks.
+A mood of freedom, liberty, great spaces, fine big enterprises
+in a free country where everything was possible,
+of opportunities seized and waves of fortune taken on
+their crest—I remember this mood as sharply still,
+and the scent of a wood-fire or a cedar pencil recalls
+it as vividly still, as though I had experienced it last
+week.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span></p>
+
+<p>I glanced at my companion. I liked him,
+trusted him. There was a happy light in his frank
+blue eyes. He was a good heavy-weight boxer too.
+The very man, I felt, for a bold enterprise of this
+sort. He talked the whole way. He was describing
+how we might increase the fortune we should draw out
+of our successful venture in a year’s time, when we passed
+Tim Sullivan, standing at the door of his, a rival, saloon,
+and exchanged a nod with him. The Irishman had a
+shadow on his face. “He’s heard about it,” whispered
+Kay, with a chuckle. “He’ll look glummer still
+when he sees all his customers coming across the way
+to us!”</p>
+
+<p>Turning down a narrow side street, the Hub blocked
+the way, a three-story building with a little tower, clean
+windows, and two big swinging doors. It ran through
+to a back street where there was another entrance.</p>
+
+<p>“Here it is,” said Kay, in the eager, happy voice of
+a man who has just inherited a family mansion and come
+to inspect it. “This is the Hub where we shall make
+our fortune.”</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me I had entered an entirely new world.
+Everything was spotless. The rows of bottles and glasses,
+the cash-register and brass taps glittered in the sunlight
+that fell through coloured windows. The perfume of stale
+liquor was not as disagreeable as it sounds. In one sense
+the whole place looked as harmless as the aisle of some
+deserted church. I stood just inside those swing-doors,
+which had closed behind me, with a strange feeling of
+gazing at some den of vice reconstructed in the Chamber
+of Horrors at Madame Tussaud’s. Empty and innocent
+as the bar might appear, however, there was a thrill of
+adventure, even of danger, about it that reached my
+mind, with a definite shock of dread.</p>
+
+<p>“Nice, airy premises, with plenty of room,” Kay’s
+cheery voice came to me from a distance. “This is the
+principal bar. Twenty men could line up easily. It’ll
+want four bar-tenders.... There’s another bar at
+the end. There’ll be a few fights there before we’ve
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+done. The dining-room lies through that archway just
+between the two.”</p>
+
+<p>He walked away, passing along the length of the
+room and down three steps into a narrower, darker bar
+beyond, where the shadows hid him. But his voice still
+reached me: “It’s on the back street, this bar,” he called.
+“This is for the <i>hoi polloi</i>. We shall want a chucker
+out.... Here’s the private door leading to the
+upstairs dining-room we’ll let out for banquets. We’ll
+have our own bedrooms and sitting-room on the first
+floor too....”</p>
+
+<p>His voice roared on; I heard, but did not answer;
+I had not moved an inch from my place against the
+swing-doors. He had not, of course, the faintest idea
+what was passing through my mind at the moment; and,
+had I told him, he would only have laughed good-naturedly
+and talked of the money we should make. The fact was,
+however, that the whole of my early up-bringing just then
+came at me with a concentrated driving-force which made
+the venture seem absolutely impossible.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll call this one the House of Commons,” he
+bawled delightedly; “and that one—the front bar—the
+House of Lords. We shall take 250 dollars a day
+easily!”</p>
+
+<p>The shock, the contrast, the exaggerated effect of
+entering a saloon for the first time in my life, especially
+with the added possibility of shortly becoming its proprietor,
+were natural enough. My unworldliness, even
+at twenty-one, was abnormal. Not only had I never
+smoked tobacco nor touched alcohol of any description,
+but I had never yet set foot inside a theatre; a race-course
+I had never seen, nor held a billiard cue, nor
+touched a card. I did not know one card from another.
+Any game that might involve betting or gambling was
+anathema. In other ways, too, I had been sheltered to
+the point of ignorance. I had never even danced. To
+hold a young woman round the waist was not alone
+immodest but worse than immodest.</p>
+
+<p>This peculiarly sheltered up-bringing, this protected
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+hot-house of boyhood and early youth to which a drinking
+bar was the vestibule of hell, and a music-hall an invention
+of a personal devil, are necessary to understand the reaction
+produced in me as I stood in Billy Bingham’s
+“joint.” I stood, literally, on the brink of “the downward
+path.” I heard my father’s voice, I saw my mother’s
+eyes.... In very definite form I now faced “worldly
+temptation” they had so often warned me against.
+Accompanying an almost audible memory of “Get thee
+behind me, Satan,” drove a crowded kaleidoscope of vivid
+pictures from those sheltered years.</p>
+
+<p>My parents were both people of marked character,
+with intense convictions; my mother, especially, being
+a woman of great individuality, of iron restraint, grim
+humour, yet with a love and tenderness, and a spirit of
+uncommon sacrifice, that never touched weakness. She
+possessed powers of mind and judgment, at the same
+time, of which my father, a public servant—financial
+secretary to the Post Office—availed himself to the full.
+She had great personal beauty. A young widow, her
+first husband having been the 6th Duke of Manchester,
+also of the evangelical persuasion, she met my father at
+Kimbolton soon after his return from the Crimean War,
+where he had undergone that religious change of heart
+known to the movement as “conversion.” From a man
+of fashion, a leader in the social life to which he was born,
+he changed with sudden completeness to a leader in the
+evangelical movement, then approaching its height. He
+renounced the world, the flesh, the devil and all their
+works. The case of “Beauty Blackwood,” to use the
+nickname his unusual handsomeness gained for him, was,
+in its way, notorious. He became a teetotaller and non-smoker,
+wrote devotional books, spoke in public, and held
+drawing-room prayer meetings, the Bible always in his
+pocket, communion with God always in his heart. His
+religion was genuine, unfaltering, consistent and sincere.
+He carried the war into his own late world of fashion. He
+never once looked back. He knew a vivid joy, a wondrous
+peace, his pain being for others only, for those who were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
+not “saved.” The natural, instinctive type he was,
+asserted its claim. He became a genuine saint. Also,
+to the very end, he remained that other delightful thing,
+possible only to simple hearts, a boy.</p>
+
+<p>Both my parents, thus, believed in Jesus, with a faith
+of that simple, unshakable order that could feel no doubts.
+Their lives were consistent and, as must always be the
+case when fine characters are possessed of a perfectly
+sincere faith, they stood out in the world of men and
+women as something strong and beautiful. Edmund
+Gosse, in “Father and Son,” has described the mental
+attitude of the type; William James might, equally,
+have included my father’s case as a typical “conversion”
+in his “Varieties of Religious Experience.”</p>
+
+<p>The effect upon the children—there were five of us—followed
+naturally. My father, apart from incurring
+much public odium owing to his official position, found
+himself, and us with him, cut off from the amenities of
+the social life to which we were otherwise born. Ordinary
+people, “worldly” as he called them, left us alone. A
+house where no wine was served at dinner, where morning
+and evening prayers were <i>de rigueur</i>, a guest even being
+asked to “lead in prayer” perhaps, and where at any
+suitable moment you might be drawn aside and asked
+“Have <i>you</i> given your soul to Jesus?” was not an
+attractive house to stay in. We were ostracized. The
+effect of such disabilities upon us in later life was not
+considered, for it was hoped each and all of us would
+consecrate ourselves to God. We were, thus, kept out
+of the “world” in every possible sense and brought up,
+though with lavish love and kindness, yet in the narrowest
+imaginable evangelical path which scents danger in knowledge
+of any kind not positively helpful to the soul. I,
+personally, at that time, regarded the temptations of the
+world with a remote pity, and with a certainty that I
+should never have the least difficulty in resisting them.
+Men who smoked and drank and were immoral, who
+gambled, went to theatres and music-halls and race-meetings,
+belonged to the submerged and unworthy
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
+portion of mankind. I, in this respect at least, was of the
+elect, quite sure that the weakness of their world could
+never stain me personally.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I never shared the beliefs of my parents with
+anything like genuine pleasure. I was <i>afraid</i> they were
+true, not glad.</p>
+
+<p>Without wholeheartedly sharing my father’s faith,
+however, his religious and emotional temperament, with
+its imperious need of believing <i>something</i>, he certainly
+bequeathed to me.... The evangelical and revivalist
+movement, at any rate, was the dominant influence in
+my boyhood’s years. People were sharply divided into
+souls that were saved and those that were—not saved.
+Moody and Sankey, the American Revivalists, stayed in
+our house.</p>
+
+<p>I was particularly influenced in this direction by a
+group of young ’Varsity men who worked with Moody,
+and who were manly fellows, good cricketers, like the
+Studd brothers, or Stanley Smith and Montague Beauchamp,
+men who had rowed in their University boats,
+and who were far removed from anything effeminate. Of
+course I thought that what these men did could not be
+otherwise than fine and worth copying, and I lost no time
+in attacking everyone I met and asking the most impertinent
+questions about their souls and fallen natures.
+By some lucky chance no one kicked me to death—probably
+because most of my evangelizing work was done
+at home!</p>
+
+<p>My old nurse I implored to yield herself up to the
+Saviour, and I felt my results were very poor in her case
+because I only got affectionate caresses and smiles, and
+even observations about the holes in my clothes, in return.
+The fat butler (I assured him) was going headlong down
+the kitchen stairs to everlasting fire because he showed
+no symptoms of ecstasy when he met my pleadings with
+“O, I’m sure ’E died for me all right, Master Algie. I
+don’t feel a bit afraid!”</p>
+
+<p>But all this was genuine so far as I was concerned, and
+it lasted a considerable time, to my father’s great joy,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
+though not so much, I think, to my mother’s. She read
+far deeper into things....</p>
+
+<p>In a short time I came to look upon the whole
+phenomena of “conversion,” so far as my type of mind
+and character was concerned, with distrust and weariness.
+Only the very topmost layer of my personality
+was affected; evidently, there was no peace or happiness
+for me that way!</p>
+
+<p>None the less, I had one or two terrible moments;
+one (I was reading with a private tutor in Somerset for
+Edinburgh University) when I woke in the very early
+morning with a choking sensation in my throat, and
+thought I was going to die. It must have been merely
+acute indigestion, but I was convinced my last moment
+had come, and fell into a sweating agony of fear and
+weakness. I prayed as hard as ever I could, swearing
+to consecrate myself to God if He would pull me through.
+I even vowed I would become a missionary and work
+among the heathen, than which, I was always told, there
+was no higher type of manhood. But the pain and
+choking did not pass, and in despair I got up and swallowed
+half a bottle of pilules of aconite which my mother, an
+ardent homœopathist, always advised me to take after
+sneezing or cold shivers. They were sweet and very
+nice, and the pain certainly began to pass away, but only
+to leave me with a remorse that I had allowed a mere
+human medicine to accomplish naturally what God
+wished to accomplish by His grace. He had been so
+slow about it, however, that I felt also a kind of anger
+that He could torture me so long, and as it was the aconite
+that cured me, and not His grace, I was certainly released
+from my promise to become a missionary and work
+among the heathen. And for this small mercy I was
+duly thankful, though the escape had been a rather
+narrow one.</p>
+
+<p>A year and a half in a school of the Moravian Brotherhood
+in the Black Forest, though it showed me another
+aspect of the same general line of belief, did not wholly
+obliterate my fear of hell, with its correlated desire for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
+salvation. The poetry of the semi-religious life in that
+remote village set among ancient haunted forests, gave
+to natural idealistic tendencies another turn. The masters,
+whom we termed Brother, were strenuous, devoted,
+self-sacrificing men, all later to go forth as Missionaries
+to Labrador. Humbug, comfort, personal ambition
+played no part in their lives. The <i>Liebesmahl</i> in their
+little wooden church, for all its odd simplicity, was a
+genuine and impressive ceremony that touched something
+in me no church service at home, with Sankey’s hymns
+on a bad harmonium, had ever reached. At this Communion
+Service, or Love Feast, sweet, weak tea in big
+white thick cups, followed by a clothes-basket filled
+with rolls, were handed round, first to the women, who
+sat on one side of the building, and then to the men and
+boys on the other side. There was a collective reality
+about the little ceremony that touched its sincerity
+with beauty. Similarly was Easter morning beautiful,
+when we marched in the early twilight towards the little
+cemetery among the larch trees and stood with our hats
+off round an open grave, waiting in silence for the sunrise.
+The air was cool and scented, our mood devotional and
+solemn. There was a sense of wonder among us. Then,
+as the sun slipped up above the leagues of forest,
+the Eight Brothers, singing in parts, led the ninety
+boys in the great German hymn, “<i>Christus ist auferstanden</i>....”</p>
+
+<p>The surroundings, too, of the school influenced me
+greatly. Those leagues of Black Forest rolling over distant
+mountains, velvet-coloured, leaping to the sky in
+grey cliffs, or passing quietly like the sea in immense
+waves, always singing in the winds, haunted by elves
+and dwarfs and peopled by charming legends—those
+forest glades, deep in moss and covered in springtime
+with wild lily-of-the-valley; those tumbling streams
+that ran for miles unseen, then emerged to serve the
+peasants by splashing noisily over the clumsy water-wheel
+of a brown old sawmill before they again lost themselves
+among the mossy pine roots; those pools where water-pixies
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
+dwelt, and those little red and brown villages
+where we slept in our long walks—the whole setting of
+this Moravian school was so beautifully simple that it
+lent just the proper atmosphere for lives consecrated
+without flourish of trumpets to God. It all left upon
+me an impression of grandeur, of loftiness, and of real
+religion ... and of a Deity not specially active on
+Sundays only.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>These</span> notes aim at describing merely certain
+surface episodes, and would leave unmentioned
+of set purpose those inner activities which pertain
+to the intimate struggles of a growing soul. There is
+a veil of privacy which only in rarest cases of exceptional
+value should be lifted. That honesty, moreover, which is
+an essential of such value, seems almost unattainable.
+Only a diary, written at the actual time and intended
+for no one’s eye, can hope to achieve the naked sincerity,
+which could make it useful to lift that veil.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, even with these surface episodes, something of
+the background against which they danced and vanished
+must be sketched; to understand them, something of the
+individual who experienced them must be known. This
+apology for so much use of the personal pronoun is made
+once for all.</p>
+
+<p>The failure of the evangelical Christian teaching
+either to attract deeply or to convince, has been indicated.
+An eager, impressionable mind lay empty and unstimulated.
+It fed upon insipid stuff, such as Longfellow, Mrs. Hemans,
+goody-goody stories, and thousands of religious tracts.
+It was the days of yellow-backs in three volumes, of Ouida
+especially, of Miss Braddon, and Wilkie Collins; but novels
+were strictly forbidden in the house. Lewis Carroll,
+which my father often read aloud, and Foxe’s “Book of
+Martyrs,” which made every Roman Catholic priest
+seem ominous, were our imaginative fiction. But my
+chief personal delight was Hebrew poetry, the Psalms,
+the Song of Solomon, above all the Book of Job (which
+I devoured alone)—these moved me in a different way
+and far more deeply.</p>
+
+<p>The mind, meanwhile, without being consciously
+aware of it, was searching with eager if unrewarded zeal,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
+until one day Fate threw a strange book in its way—Patanjali’s
+“Yoga Aphorisms,” a translation from the
+Sanskrit. I was about seventeen then, just home from a
+year and a half in the Moravian Brotherhood School in
+the Black Forest.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget that golden September day when
+the slight volume, bound in blue, first caught my eye.
+It was lying beside a shiny black bag on the hall table,
+and the bag belonged, I knew, to a Mr. Scott, who had come
+to spend a week with us and to hold a series of meetings
+under my father’s auspices in the village hall. Mr.
+Scott was an ardent revivalist. He was also—this I
+grasped even at the time—a cadaverous mass of religious
+affectations. He was writing a brochure, I learned later,
+to warn England that Satan was bringing dangerous
+Eastern teachings to the West, and this book was a first
+proof of the Fiend’s diabolical purpose.</p>
+
+<p>I opened it and read a few paragraphs in the hall. I
+did not understand them, though they somehow held my
+mind and produced a curious sense of familiarity, half of
+wonder, half of satisfaction. A deeper feeling than I
+had yet known woke in me. I was fascinated.... My
+father’s voice calling me to tennis interrupted my reading,
+and I dropped the book, noticing that it fell behind the
+table. Hours later, though the bag was gone, the book
+lay where it had fallen. I stole it. I took it to bed
+with me and read it through from cover to cover. I read
+it twice, three times; bits of it I copied out; I did not
+understand a word of it, but a shutter rushed up in my
+mind, interest and joy were in me, a big troubling emotion,
+a conviction that I had found something I had been
+seeking hungrily for a long time, something I needed,
+something that, in an odd way, almost seemed familiar.</p>
+
+<p>I repeat—I did not understand a word of it, while yet
+the meaningless phrases caught me with a revolutionary
+power. As I read and re-read till my candles guttered,
+there rose in me a dim consciousness, becoming more and
+more a growing certainty, that what I read was not entirely
+new. So strong was this that it demanded audible
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
+expression. In that silent bedroom, dawn not far away,
+I can hear myself saying aloud: “But I’ve known all
+this before—only I’ve forgotten it.” Even the Sanskrit
+words, given phonetically in brackets, had a familiar
+look.</p>
+
+<p>Shutter after shutter rose, “lifting a veil and a darkness,”
+letting in glimpses of a radiant and exciting light.
+Though the mind was too untaught to grasp the full
+significance of these electric flashes, too unformed to be
+even intelligently articulate about them, there certainly
+rushed over my being a singular conviction of the unity
+of life everywhere and in everything—of its <i>one-ness</i>.
+That objects, the shifting appearance of phenomena,
+were but a veil concealing some intensely beautiful
+reality—the beauty shining and divine, the reality bitingly,
+terrifically actual—this poured over me with a sense of
+being not so much dis-covered as re-covered. Ignorant
+as I was, without facts or arguments or reason to support
+me, this I <i>knew</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible the awakening consciousness fringed
+some state of ecstasy during that long communing with
+ancient things.... The house, at any rate, was still
+dark, but sunrise not long to come, when at length I
+stole down into the deserted hall and replaced the little
+book upon the table.</p>
+
+<p>Those Yoga aphorisms of a long-dead Hindu sage,
+set between a golden September evening and a guttering
+candle, marked probably the opening of my mind....
+The entire paraphernalia of my evangelical teaching
+thenceforth began to withdraw. Though my father’s
+beliefs had cut deep enough to influence me for many
+years to come, their dread, with the terror of a personal
+Satan and an actual Hell, grew less from that moment.
+The reality of the dogmas was impaired. Here was another
+outlook upon life, another explanation of the world;
+caprice was eliminated and justice entered; the present
+was the result of the past, the future determined by the
+present; I must reap what I had sown, but, also, I could
+sow what I wished to reap. Hope was born. Apart from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
+this was that curious deep sense of familiarity with these
+Eastern teachings, as with something I understood and
+in which I felt at home....</p>
+
+<p>Cautiously, I put indirect questions to my father,
+who at once—the clumsy questions betraying me—detected
+Satan’s subtle handiwork. He was grave and
+troubled. With affectionate solicitude he told me, finally,
+a story of naïve horror, intended to point the warning.
+A young man, who suffered from repeated epileptic fits,
+had tried every doctor and specialist in vain, when, as a
+last resort, he followed some friend’s counsel of despair,
+and consulted a medium. The medium, having conferred
+with his familiar, handed the patient a little locket which
+he was to wear day and night about his neck, but never
+on any account to open. The spell that would save him
+from a repetition of his fits lay inside, but he must resist
+to the death the curiosity to read it. To the subsequent
+delight and amazement of everybody, the fits abruptly
+ceased; the man was cured; until one day, after years
+of obedience, curiosity overcame him; he opened the brief
+inscription, and fell down in a fit—dead. The wording,
+minutely written in red ink, ran as follows: “Let him
+alone till he drop into Hell!”</p>
+
+<p>The warning, above all the story, acted as a stimulus
+instead of the reverse. Yet another strange door was set
+ajar; my eyes, big with wonder and questions, peered
+through. “Earth’s Earliest Ages,” by G. H. Pember,
+an evangelical, but an imaginative evangelical, was placed
+in my hands, accompanied by further solemn warnings.
+Pember, a writer of the prophetic school, had style,
+imagination, a sense of the marvellous, a touch of genuine
+drama too; he used suggestion admirably, his English
+was good, he had proportion, he knew where to stop.
+As a novelist of fantastic kind—an evangelical Wells,
+a “converted” Dunsany—he might have become a best-seller.
+He had, moreover, a theme of high imaginative
+possibilities, based upon a sentence in Genesis (vi. 2)—“The
+Sons of God saw the Daughters of men that they
+were fair ... and took to themselves wives from among
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+them ... and there were giants in the earth in those
+days....” These Sons of God were some kind of higher
+beings, mighty spirits, angels of a sort; but rather fallen
+angels; their progeny formed a race apart from humans;
+for some reason, now slipped from my memory, Pember was
+convinced that this unlawful procreation was being resumed
+in modern days. The Nephilim, as he called them,
+were aiming at control of the world, Anti-Christ, a gorgeous
+but appalling figure, naturally, at their head.</p>
+
+<p>It was a magnificent theme; he treated it, within the
+limits he set himself, with ingenious conviction. The
+danger was imminent; the human race, while shuddering,
+must be on its guard. In the night, in the twinkling of
+an eye, the catastrophe might come. Signs the Nephilim
+brought with them were spiritualism, theosophy, the development
+of secret powers latent in man, a new and awful
+type of consciousness, magic, and all the rest of the
+“occult” movement that was beginning to show its hydra
+head about this time.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment Moody went to the bottom of the class,
+and Pember reigned in his stead. By hook or by crook I
+obtained the books that Pember signalled as so dangerously
+subversive of the truth: “Magic Black and White”
+by Dr. Franz Hartmann; “The Perfect Way,” by Anna
+Kingsford and Edward Maitland; “Esoteric Buddhism,”
+by A. P. Sinnett; “Voice of the Silence,” by Mabel Collins;
+“The Bhagavad Gita,” from the Upanishads; and Emma
+Hardinge Britten’s “History of American Spiritualism.”
+My first delicious alarm lest the sky might fall any moment,
+and Satan appear with the great and terrible Nephilim
+princes to rule the world, became less threatening....
+Soon afterwards, too, I happened upon my first novel,
+Laurence Oliphant’s “Massollam,” followed, a good deal
+later, by his “Scientific Religion” and his “Sympneumata.”
+This history of his amazing subservience to
+Thomas Luke Harris helped to peel another thin skin
+from my eyes; Oliphant seemed a hero, but Harris a vile
+humbug. By this time other books had brought grist to the
+mill as well: Amiel’s “Journal Intime”; Drummond’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
+“Natural Law in the Spiritual World”—I knew Professor
+Drummond later, when he came to stay with us,
+and also when he lectured to the students at Edinburgh
+on Sunday nights, coming from his Glasgow Chair for the
+purpose: I can still see his large, glowing, far-seeing eyes—Cahagnet’s
+“Arcanes de la Vie Future”; and “Animal
+Magnetism,” by Binet and Féré. The experiments of
+Braid, and Dr. Esdaille in India, had also come my way.</p>
+
+<p>Such one-sided reading, of course, fed the growing
+sense of wonder, naturally strong in any case; Shelley
+coloured it; and nothing offered itself at the time to curb,
+shape or qualify it. Spiritualism, apart from the exciting
+phenomena it promised with such confident volubility,
+left me rather unstirred, but theosophy, of course, I
+swallowed whole, with its Mahatmas, development of
+latent powers, memory of past lives, astral consciousness,
+and description of other beings both superior and inferior
+to man. It was some years before scientific reading came
+to check and guide a too exuberant imagination; but,
+even so I have always taken ideas where I found them,
+regardless of their propounders; if Tibet and its shining
+Mahatmas faded, the theories of Karma and reincarnation
+were older than any modern movement, and the belief in
+extension of consciousness to some <i>n</i>th degree, with its
+correlative of greater powers and new faculties, have not
+only remained with me, but have justified themselves.
+The “Gita,” too, remains the profoundest world-scripture
+I have ever read.</p>
+
+<p>An immediate, happy result of this odd reading, at
+any rate, I recall with pleasure: my father’s Christianity
+became splendid in my eyes. I realized, even then,
+that it satisfied his particular and individual vision of
+truth, while the fact that he lived up to his beliefs nobly
+and consistently woke a new respect and admiration in
+me....</p>
+
+<p>By far the strongest influence in my life, however,
+was Nature; it betrayed itself early, growing in intensity
+with every year. Bringing comfort, companionship, inspiration,
+joy, the spell of Nature has remained dominant,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
+a truly magical spell. Always immense and potent,
+the years have strengthened it. The early feeling that
+everything was alive, a dim sense that some kind of consciousness
+struggled through every form, even that a
+sort of inarticulate communication with this “other
+life” was possible, could I but discover the way—these
+moods coloured its opening wonder. Nature, at any rate,
+produced effects in me that only something living could
+produce; though not till I read Fechner’s “Zend-Avesta,”
+and, later still, James’s “Pluralistic Universe,” and
+Dr. R. M. Bucke’s “Cosmic Consciousness” did a possible
+meaning come to shape my emotional disorder. Fairy
+tales, in the meanwhile bored me. Real facts were what
+I sought. That these existed, that I had once known them
+but had now forgotten them, was thus an early imaginative
+conviction.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>This tendency showed itself even in childhood. We
+had left the Manor House, Crayford, and now lived in
+a delightful house at Shortlands, in those days semi-country.
+It was the time of my horrible private schools—I
+went to four or five—but the holidays afforded opportunities....</p>
+
+<p>I was a dreamy boy, frequently in tears about nothing
+except a vague horror of the practical world, full of wild
+fancies and imagination and a great believer in ghosts,
+communings with spirits and dealings with charms and
+amulets, which latter I invented and consecrated myself
+by the dozen. This was long before I had read a single
+book.</p>
+
+<p>I loved to climb out of the windows at night with a
+ladder, and creep among the shadows of the kitchen garden,
+past the rose trees and under the fruit-tree wall, and so
+on to the pond where I could launch the boat and practise
+my incantations in the very middle among the floating
+weeds that covered the surface in great yellow-green
+patches. Trees grew closely round the banks, and even
+on clear nights the stars could hardly pierce through,
+and all sorts of beings watched me silently from the shore,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
+crowding among the tree stems, and whispering to themselves
+about what I was doing.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot say I ever believed actually that my spells
+would produce any results, but it pleased and thrilled me
+to think that they might do so; that the scum of weeds
+might slowly part to show the face of a water-nixie, or
+that the forms hovering on the banks might flit across to
+me and let me see their outline against the stars.</p>
+
+<p>Everything I did and felt in this way was evolved out
+of my inner consciousness, and even after I had passed
+into long trousers I loved the night, the shadows, empty
+rooms and haunted woods.</p>
+
+<p>On returning from these nightly expeditions to
+the pond, the sight of the old country-house against
+the sky always excited me strangely. Three cedars
+of Lebanon flanked it on the side I climbed out,
+towering aloft with their great funereal branches, and
+I thought of all the people asleep in their silent rooms,
+and wondered how they could be so dull and unenterprising,
+when out here they could see these sweeping
+branches and hear the wind sighing so beautifully among
+the needles. These people, it seemed to me at such
+moments, belonged to a different race. I had nothing
+in common with them. Night and stars and trees and wind
+and rain were the things I had to do with and wanted.
+They were alive and personal, stirring my depths within,
+full of messages and meanings, whereas my parents and
+sisters and brother, all indoors and asleep, were mere
+accidents, and apart from my real life and self. My friend
+the under-gardener always took the ladder away early in
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes an elder sister accompanied me on these
+excursions. She, too, loved mystery, and the peopled
+darkness, but she was also practical. On returning to her
+room in the early morning we always found eggs ready to
+boil, cake and cold plum-pudding perhaps, or some such
+satisfying morsels to fill the void. She was always wonderful
+to me in those days. Very handsome, dark, with
+glowing eyes and a keen interest in the undertaking, she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
+came down the ladder and stepped along the garden paths
+more like a fairy being than a mortal, and I always
+enjoyed the event twice as much when she accompanied
+me. In the day-time she faded back into the dull elder
+sister and seemed a different person altogether. I never
+reconcile the two.</p>
+
+<p>This childish manifestation of an overpowering passion
+changed later, in form, of course, but not essentially much
+in spirit. Forests, mountains, desolate places, especially
+perhaps open spaces like the prairies or the desert, but even,
+too, the simple fields, the lanes, and little hills, offered an
+actual sense of companionship no human intercourse
+could possibly provide. In times of trouble, as equally
+in times of joy, it was to Nature I ever turned instinctively.
+In those moments of deepest feeling when individuals
+must necessarily be alone, yet stand at the same time in
+most urgent need of understanding companionship, it was
+Nature and Nature only that could comfort me. When
+the cable came, suddenly announcing my father’s death,
+I ran straight into the woods.... This call sounded above
+all other calls, music coming so far behind it as to seem
+an “also ran.” Even in those few, rare times of later life,
+when I fancied myself in love, this spell would operate—a
+sound of rain, a certain touch of colour in the sky, the
+scent of a wood-fire smoke, the lovely cry of some singing
+wind against the walls or window—and the human appeal
+would fade in me, or, at least, its transitory character
+become pitifully revealed. The strange sense of a oneness
+with Nature was an imperious and royal spell that over-mastered
+all other spells, nor can the hint of comedy
+lessen its reality. Its religious origin appears, perhaps,
+in the fact that sometimes, during its fullest manifestation,
+a desire stirred in me to leave a practical, utilitarian
+world I loathed and become—a monk!</p>
+
+<p>Another effect, in troubled later years especially, was
+noticeable; its dwarfing effect upon the events, whatever
+they might be, of daily life. So intense, so flooding, was
+the elation of joy Nature brought, that after such moments
+even the gravest worldly matters, as well as the people
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
+concerned in these, seemed trivial and insignificant.
+Nature introduced a vaster scale of perspective against
+which a truer proportion appeared. There lay in the
+experience some cosmic touch of glory that, by contrast,
+left all else commonplace and unimportant. The great
+gods of wind and fire and earth and water swept by on
+flaming stars, and the ordinary life of the little planet
+seemed very small, man with his tiny passions and few
+years of struggle and vain longings, almost futile. One’s
+own troubles, seen in this new perspective, disappeared,
+while, at the same time, the heart filled with an immense
+understanding love and charity towards all the world—which,
+alas, also soon disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to put into intelligible, convincing words
+the irresistible character of this Nature-spell that invades
+heart and brain like a drenching sea, and produces a
+sense of rapture, of ecstasy, compared to which the highest
+conceivable worldly joy becomes merely insipid....
+Heat from this magical source was always more or less
+present in my mind from a very early age, though, of
+course, no attempt to analyse or explain it was then possible;
+but, in bitter years to come, the joy and comfort Nature
+gave became a real and only solace. When possession
+was at its full height, the ordinary world, and my particular
+little troubles with it, fell away like so much dust;
+the whole fabric of men and women, commerce and politics,
+even the destinies of nations, became a passing show
+of shadows, while the visible and tangible world showed
+itself as but a temporary and limited representation of a
+real world elsewhere whose threshold I had for a moment
+touched.</p>
+
+<p>Others, of course, have known similar experiences,
+but, being better equipped, have understood how to
+correlate them to ordinary life. Richard Jefferies explained
+them. Whitman tasted expansion of consciousness
+in many ways; Fechner made a grandiose system of them;
+Edward Carpenter deliberately welcomed them; Jacob
+Boehme, Plotinus, and many others have tried to fix their
+nature and essence in terms, respectively, of religion and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
+philosophy; and William James has reviewed them with
+an insight as though he had had experienced them himself.
+Whatever their value, they remain authentic, the sense
+of oneness of life their common denominator, a conviction
+of consciousness pervading all forms everywhere
+their inseparable characteristic.</p>
+
+<p>If Kentish gardens saw the birth of this delight, the
+Black Forest offered further opportunities for its enjoyment,
+and a year in a village of the Swiss Jura Mountains
+to learn French—I often wandered all night in the big
+pine forests without my tutor, a bee-keeping pasteur,
+at Bôle, near Neuchâtel, discovering my absence—intensified
+it. Without it something starved in me. It was
+a persistent craving, often a wasting <i>nostalgia</i>, that cried
+for satisfaction as the whole body cries for covering when
+cold, and Nature provided a companionship, a joy, a
+bliss, that no human intercourse has ever approached,
+much less equalled. It remains the keenest, deepest
+sensation of its kind I have known....</p>
+
+<p>Here, in Toronto, opportunities multiplied, and just
+when they were needed: in times of difficulty and trouble
+the call of Nature became paramount; during the vicissitudes
+of dairy and hotel the wild hinterland behind the
+town, with its lakes and forests, were a haven often sought.
+Among my friends were many, of course, who enjoyed a
+day “in the country,” but one man only who understood
+a little the feelings I have tried to describe, even if he did
+not wholly share them. This was Arnold Haultain, a
+married man, tied to an office all day long, private secretary
+to Goldwin Smith (whose life, I think, he subsequently
+wrote), and editor of a weekly periodical called <i>The Week</i>.
+He was my senior by many years.... At three in the
+morning, sometimes, he would call for me at the dairy in
+College Street, and we would tramp out miles to enjoy
+the magic of sunrise in a wood north of the city. And
+such an effort was only possible to a soul to whom it was
+a necessity.... The intensity of early dreams and aspirations,
+what energy lies in them! In later life, though they
+may have solidified and become part of the character,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
+that original fiery energy is gone. A dreadful doggerel
+I wrote at this time, Haultain used in his paper, and its
+revealing betrayal of inner tendencies is the excuse for
+its reproduction here. It appeared the same week its
+author bought the Hub Hotel and started business with
+Kay, as “The Hub Wine Company.”</p>
+
+
+<p class='center mt1h'>LINES TO A DREAMER</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">O change all this thinking, imagining, hoping to be;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Change dreaming to action and work; there’s a God in your will.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Self-mastery and courage and confidence make a man free,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And doing is stronger than dreaming for good or for ill.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Then make a beginning; don’t lie like an infant and weep.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Begin with the dearest and crush some delight-giving sin</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Right out of your life, with a purpose of death before sleep;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">A passion controlled is an index of power within.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Some hard self-denial; let no one suspect it at all.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">With ruthless self-torture continue, nor half an inch yield,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Step fearless and bravely; hold on and believe—you won’t fall;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Companions you’ve none but the best on this grim battlefield.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Stagnation means death. If you cannot advance you retreat;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Steel purpose maintain; let it be the first aim of your life;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Beware of those mushroom resolves as impulsive as fleet,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And remember, the nobler the end the more deadly the strife.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">For the hope that another may save you is coward and vain,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And the ladder, by which you must climb to yon far starry height,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Is of cast-iron rungs from the furnace of suffering and pain.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Then forward; and courage! from darkness to truth’s golden light.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> pictures that have occupied two chapters,
+flashed and vanished, lasting a few moments only.
+It was Kay’s voice that interrupted them:</p>
+
+<p>“This is my partner, Mr. Blackwood,” he was saying,
+as he came from the dining-room door, accompanied by an
+undersized little man with sharp, beady eyes set in a face
+like a rat’s, with deep lines upon a skin as white as paper.
+I shook hands with Billy Bingham, proprietor of the Hub,
+the man whose disreputable character had made it a disgrace
+to the City of Churches.</p>
+
+<p>Of the conversation that followed, though I heard
+every word of it, only a blurred memory remained when
+we left the building half an hour later. I was in two
+worlds—innocent Kent and up-to-date Toronto—while
+Kay and Bingham talked. Mysterious phrases chased
+pregnant business terms in quick succession: Goodwill,
+stock in hand, buying liquor at thirty days, cash value
+of the licence, and heaven knows what else besides. Kay
+was marvellous, I thought. The sporting goods business
+had apparently taught him everything. Two hundred
+per cent. profit, rapid turn over, sell out at top price, were
+other vivid sentences I caught in part, while I stared and
+listened, feigning no doubt a comprehension that was not
+mine. The glow of immense success to come, at any rate,
+shone somehow about the nasty face of that cunning little
+Billy Bingham, as he painted our future in radiant colours.
+Kay was beaming.</p>
+
+<p>“A short period of horror,” I remember thinking, for
+the sanguine fires lit me too, “and we shall be independent
+men! It’s probably worth it. Canada’s a free country.
+What’s impossible at home is possible here. Opportunities
+must be seized...!”</p>
+
+<p>Then Bingham’s white face retreated, his beady eyes
+became twin points of glittering light, and another picture
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
+slid noiselessly before them. Euston Station a few short
+months ago, myself tightly wedged in a crowded third-class
+carriage, the train to Liverpool slowly moving out,
+and my father’s tall figure standing on the platform—this
+picture hid the Hub and Bingham and John Kay.
+The serious blue eyes, fixed on mine with love and tenderness,
+could not conceal the deep anxiety they betrayed for
+my future. Behind them, though actually at the Manor
+House, Crayford, fixed on a page of the Bible, or perhaps
+closed in earnest prayer, the eyes of my mother rose up
+too.... The train moved faster, the upright figure and
+the grave, sad face, though lit by a momentary smile of
+encouragement, were hidden slowly by the edge of the
+carriage window. I was too shy to wave my hand, and
+far too sensitive of what the carriage-full of men would
+think if I moved to the window and spoke, or worse, gave
+the good-bye kiss I burned to give. So the straight line
+of that implacable wooden sash slid across both face and
+figure, cutting our stare cruelly in the middle.</p>
+
+<p>It was the last time I saw my father; a year later he
+was dead; and ten years were to pass before I saw my
+mother again. Before this—to look ahead for a second—some
+enterprising Toronto friend, with evangelical tact,
+wrote to my father ... “your son is keeping a tavern,”
+and my father, calling my brother into his study where
+he laid all problems before his God with prayer, told him
+in a broken voice and with tears in his eyes: “He is lost;
+his soul is lost. Algie has gone to—Hell!”...</p>
+
+<p>My vision faded. My broad-shouldered friend and
+his little rat-faced companion stood with their elbows on
+the bar. I saw six small glasses and a big dark bottle.
+Three of the former were filled to the brim with neat rye
+whisky, the other three, “the chasers” as they were called,
+held soda-water.</p>
+
+<p>“Drink hearty,” rasped Bingham’s grating voice, as
+he tossed down his liquor at a gulp, Kay doing the same,
+then swallowing the soda-water.</p>
+
+<p>I moved to the swing-doors. I had never touched
+spirits, and loathed the mere smell of them. I cannot
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
+pretend that any principle was involved; it was simply
+that the mere idea of swallowing raw whisky gave me
+nausea. I saw Kay give me a quick look. “He’ll be
+offended if you don’t take something,” it said plainly. I
+was, besides, familiar with the customs of the country,
+at any rate in theory.</p>
+
+<p>“Have something else,” invited Bingham, “if you
+don’t like it straight.”</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head, mumbling something about it’s being
+too early in the day, and I shall never forget the look that
+came into that cunning little face. But he was not offended.
+He put his hand on Kay’s arm. “Now, see here,” he
+said with seriousness, “that’s dead right. That’s good
+business every time. Never drink yourselves, and you’ll
+make it a success. Your partner’s got the right idea, and
+I tell you straight: never touch a drop of liquor till after
+closing hours. You’ll be asked to drink all day long.
+Everybody will want to drink with the new management.
+Every customer that walks in will say ‘What’s yours?’
+before you even know his name. Now, see here, boys,
+listen to me—you <i>can’t</i> do it! You’ll be blind to the world
+before eleven o’clock. <i>I</i> tell you, and I <i>know</i>!”</p>
+
+<p>“How are you to refuse?” asked Kay.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll give you a tip: drink tea!”</p>
+
+<p>“Tea!”</p>
+
+<p>“Have your bottle of tea. Tell your bar-tenders.
+It’s the same colour as rye whisky. No one’ll ever know.
+The boss can always have his own private bottle. Well,
+yours is tea. See?” And he winked with a leer like some
+intelligent reptile.</p>
+
+<p>We shook hands, as he saw us into the street.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll take a cheque, I suppose?” I heard Kay say
+just before we moved off.</p>
+
+<p>“A marked cheque, yes,” was the reply. The phrase
+meant that the bank marked the cheque as good for the
+amount.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all fixed then,” returned Kay.</p>
+
+<p>“All fixed,” said Bingham, and the swing-doors closed
+upon his unpleasant face as we went out into the street.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> influences that decided the purchase of the Hub
+were emotional, at any rate, not rational; there
+lay some reaction in me, as of revolt. “You can
+do things out here you could not do at home,” ran like
+a song through the heart all day long, and life seemed to
+hold its arms wide open. Fortunes were quickly made.
+Speculation was rife. Pork went up and wheat went
+down, and thousands were made or lost in a few hours.
+No enterprise was despised, provided it succeeded. All
+this had its effect upon an impressionable and ignorant
+youth whose mind now touched so-called real life for the
+first time. The example of others had its influence,
+too. The town was sprinkled with young Englishmen,
+but untrained Englishmen the country did not need,
+though it needed their money; and this money they speedily
+exchanged, just as I had done, for experience—and then
+tried to find work.</p>
+
+<p>The pathos of it all was, though, that for an average
+young Englishman to find a decent job was impossible.
+I was among the unsuccessful ones. Kay was another,
+but Kay and myself were now—we thought—to prove
+the exception.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll show ’em!” was the way Kay’s sanguine
+twenty-three years phrased it. We both knew men of
+splendid education and real ability, earning precarious
+livings in positions that would have been ludicrous if they
+were not so pathetic. Men from Oxford and Cambridge,
+with first rate classical training, were slinging drinks behind
+bars, or running about the country persuading the farmers
+to insure their stacks and outhouses; others with knowledge
+of languages and pronounced literary talent were adding
+figures in subordinate positions in brokers’ offices. But
+by far the greater number were working as common
+labourers for small farmers all over the country.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span></p>
+
+<p>“They missed their chance when it came,” Kay repeated.
+“We won’t miss ours. A chance like the Hub
+won’t come twice.” A year of disagreeable, uncongenial
+work and then—success! Retire! Off to the primeval
+woods, canoes, Indians, camp fires, books ... a dozen
+dreams flamed up.</p>
+
+<p>Within a month we had completed the purchase, and
+the Hub opened with flying colours and high hopes;
+the newspapers gave us what they called a “send off”;
+both “House of Lords” and “House of Commons”
+were packed; the cash-registers clicked and rang all day,
+and the Hub, swept and garnished, fairly sparkled with
+the atmosphere of success, congratulations, and promise
+of good business. Billy Bingham’s association with it
+was a thing of the past; it became the most respectable
+place of its kind in the whole town.</p>
+
+<p>All day long the shoal of customers flocked in and
+rattled their money across the busy counters. Each
+individual wanted a word with the proprietors. Buyers
+and brewery agents poured in too, asking for orders, and
+newspaper reporters took notes for descriptive articles
+which duly appeared next morning. The dining-room
+did a roaring trade and every stool at the long lunch counter
+had its occupant. How easy it all seemed! And no one
+the worse for liquor! Everybody was beaming, and,
+as a partner in the Hub Wine Company, I already felt
+that my failure in the dairy farm was forgotten, an unlucky
+incident at most; a boyish episode due to inexperience,
+but now atoned for.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Dufferin, a few years before, had been Governor-General
+of Canada, and a huge framed photograph of him
+hung above the cold meat, game pies and salads of the
+lunch counter. A connexion of my father’s, the newspapers
+had insisted upon a closer relationship, and while
+some thought he would do better as a first cousin, others
+preferred him as my uncle. As an exceedingly popular
+Governor-General, his place above the good Canadian food
+seemed appropriate at any rate, and the number of customers,
+both known and unknown, who congratulated me
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+upon our distinguished framed patron, gave me the odd
+feeling that somehow the shock to my father was thereby
+lessened. The stories of what Dufferin and his wife had
+done for Tom, Dick and Harry, for their wives and their
+children or their dogs, told to me beside our House of
+Lords’ bar that opening day proved good for business.
+I had come to the colony somewhat overburdened with
+distinguished relations of heavy calibre who, to extend
+the simile a little, neither now nor later, ever fired a single
+shot on my behalf. The mere inertia of their names,
+indeed, weighed down my subsequent New York days
+with the natural suspicion that a young man so well born
+must have done something dreadful at home to be forced
+to pose to artists for a living. Why, otherwise, should he
+suffer exile in the underworld of a city across the seas?
+Lord Dufferin’s photograph augustly throned above the
+Hub luncheon counter, certainly, however, fired a shot
+on my behalf, making the cash-registers clink frequently.
+His effect on our bar-trade, innocently uncalculated,
+deserves this word of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>There were three white-coated bar-tenders in the House
+of Lords, Jimmy Martin, their principal, in charge of it;
+a couple managed the House of Commons trade in the
+lower bar, down a step and through an arch; and here,
+too, were tables and chairs, rooms curtained off, and other
+facilities for back-street customers who wanted to sit and
+talk over their beer. Between the two, a door in the wall
+led to my own quarters upstairs by means of a private
+staircase. Sharp on eleven we closed our doors that first
+night, and proceeded, with Jimmy Martin’s aid, to open
+the cash-registers and count up our takings. There was
+just under 250 dollars, or £50 in English money. Then,
+having said good night to our chief bar-tender, we spent
+a happy hour making calculations for the future. The
+first day, of course, could not be taken as an average,
+but prospects, we assured ourselves, were brilliant.
+Later we were to discover things that were to prove a
+source of endless trouble and vexation of spirit to us both—daily
+worries we both learned to dread. At the moment,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
+however, it was in sanguine mood that I went to bed that
+night of our opening day. The money was locked away,
+ready for me to take to the bank next morning—our first
+deposit. Before that I must be at the market to buy
+provisions—six o’clock—and Kay was to be in attendance
+in the bars at nine-thirty.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a go all right,” were his good-night words, as he
+thumped down my private staircase and let himself into
+the street with his latch-key.</p>
+
+<p>Lucky beggar! He hadn’t got to write home and explain
+to evangelical and teetotal parents what he was doing!</p>
+
+<p>Some customers, I discovered, arrived early. That
+a man should want to swallow raw spirits at 9 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> amazed
+me. Some of these were men we knew socially; with one
+of them, who arrived regularly at 9.15, I often dined in his
+cosy little bungalow beside the lake. His wife was charming,
+I played with his children. He was a lawyer. He
+came for what he called an “eye-opener.” Another of
+this early brigade was a stockbroker, who later made a
+fortune speculating in wheat on margin, lost it again, and
+disappeared mysteriously across the border into the States.
+His manner of taking his “eye-opener” was peculiar,
+puzzling me for a long time. I had never seen it before.
+It made me laugh heartily the first morning, for I thought
+he was doing it to amuse me—till his injured expression
+corrected me. Producing a long silk handkerchief, he
+flung it round his neck, one end held by the hand that also
+held his brimming glass. With the free hand he then
+pulled the other end very slowly round his collar, levering
+thus the shaking glass to his lips. Unless he used
+this pulley, the glass shook and rattled so violently against
+his teeth that its contents would be spilt before he could
+get it into his mouth. The horror of it suddenly dawned
+on me. I was appalled. The stuff that poisoned this
+nervous wreck was sold by myself and partner at 100
+per cent. profit!</p>
+
+<p>“If he doesn’t get it here,” said Kay, “he’ll go to
+Tim Sullivan’s across the way, and get bad liquor. Ours
+at least is pure.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span></p>
+
+<p>During the long twelve hours that the Hub was open
+either Kay or myself was always on duty, talking to customers,
+keeping an eye (as we hoped!) on the bar-tenders,
+showing ourselves with an air of authority in the House of
+Commons when, as usually, it became too rowdy—Kay
+enjoying the occasional “chucking out.” At lunch time
+and from four to half-past six or seven o’clock, the bars
+were invariably crowded. The amount of milkless tea
+we drank ought to have poisoned us both, but we never
+fell from grace in this respect, and we kept faithfully,
+too, to Jimmy Martin’s advice never to “put ’em up”
+for others.</p>
+
+<p>Days were long and arduous. Though we soon closed
+the dining room after lunch, doing no supper trade, there
+were public dinners once or twice a week for Masonic
+societies, football clubs and the like, and at these one or
+other of the proprietors was expected to show himself.
+To my great relief, Kay rather enjoyed this light duty.
+His talent for acting was often in demand too; he would
+don his Henry Irving wig and give the company an imitation
+of the great actor in “The Bells.”</p>
+
+<p>Kay was very successful at these “banquets,”
+and sometimes a Society would engage the room on the
+condition that he performed for them after dinner. What
+annoyed him was that “the silly idiots always order
+champagne!” There was no profit worth mentioning
+in “wine,” as it was called. The profit was in beer and
+“liquor.” The histrionic talent, at any rate, was an
+accomplishment that proved useful later in our difficult
+New York days, when Kay not only got a job on the stage
+himself, but provided me with a part as well.</p>
+
+<p>The shadow of that East 19th Street boarding-house
+was already drawing nearer ... and another customer
+of the Hub who was to share it with us was Louis B——,
+a voluble, high-strung fat little Frenchman, of mercurial
+temperament and great musical gifts. When a Hub
+banquet had seen enough of the Irving wig, and expressed
+a wish to hear the other proprietor, it was always Louis
+B—— who accompanied my fiddle on the piano. Raff’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
+“Cavatina” was tolerated, the “Berçeuse” from
+“Jocelyn” enjoyed, but the popular songs of the day,
+Louis extemporizing all accompaniments with his perfect
+touch, it was these that were good for “business.” The
+fat, good-natured little man, with his bright dark eyes
+and crisp curly black hair, demanded several absinthes
+before he would play. He was a born musician. He loved,
+in the order mentioned, music, horses, his wife, and from
+the last he always had to obtain permission to “play at
+the Hub.” Towards midnight he would dash to the telephone
+and say pleadingly to his wife: “They want me
+to play one more piece—only one. Do you mind? I
+shan’t be long!”</p>
+
+<p>The Hub Wine Company, camouflaging the saloon
+business of two foolish young idiots, passed through its
+phases towards the inevitable collapse. Business declined;
+credit grew difficult; prompt payment for supplies more
+difficult still. We closed the Dining Room, then the
+House of Commons. The Banquets ceased. Selling out
+at “top price” became a dream, loss of all my capital
+a fact. Those were funereal days. To me it was a
+six months’ horror. The impulsive purchase was paid for
+dearly. It was not only the declining business, the approaching
+loss of my small capital, the prospect of presently
+working for some farmer at a dollar a day and green tea—it
+was not these things I chiefly felt. It was, rather,
+the fact that I had taken a step downhill, betrayed some
+imagined ideal in me, shown myself willing to “sell my
+soul” for filthy lucre. The price, though not paid in
+lucre, was certainly paid in mental anguish, and the letters
+from home, though patient, generously forgiving, even
+understanding, increased this tenfold....</p>
+
+<p>My own nature, meanwhile, wholly apart from any
+other influence, sought what relief it could. My heart
+had never really been in the venture, my body now kept
+out of it as much as possible. The loathing I had felt
+for the place from the very beginning was quite apart from
+any question of success or failure. I hated the very atmosphere,
+the faces of the staff, the sound of voices as I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
+approached the swinging doors. While attending strictly
+to business, never shortening my hours on duty by five
+minutes, and eagerly helping Kay in our efforts to get in
+another partner with money, my relief when once outside
+the actual building was immense. We had engaged a
+new manager, whose popularity in the town—he was a
+great cricketer—brought considerable fresh custom, but
+whose chief value in my eyes lay in the fact that I need
+not be present quite as much as before. Collins, who
+weighed twenty stone, was a character. Known for some
+reason as “the Duke,” he had no other title to nobility.
+He helped trade for a few brief weeks, but also helped
+himself at the same time, and his exit, not unlike that of
+Jimmy—who was “fired” for the same reason—was
+attended by threats of a slander suit, which also, like
+Jimmy’s, was set down in the Greek kalends.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>One</span> effect of these long, unhappy months, anyhow,
+was to emphasize another, and that the principal
+side, of my nature. The daily effort of forcing
+myself to do what I hated so intensely, was succeeded by
+the equal and opposite reaction of enjoying tremendously
+my free hours of relaxation. When the swing-doors
+closed behind me, my mind closed too upon all memory
+of the hated Hub. It was shut out, forgotten, non-existent.
+I flew instinctively to what comforted and
+made me happy. Gorged with the reading of poetry and
+of idealistic, mystical books, an insatiable sense of wonder
+with a childish love of the marvellous added to it, my
+disappointing experience of practical realities demanded
+compensation as a safety-valve, if as nothing more. I
+found these in Nature, music, and in the companionship
+of a few people I will presently describe. Out of those
+prison-like swing-doors I invariably went, either with the
+fiddle-case in my hand, or with food in my pocket and a
+light cloak as blanket for sleeping out. Concerts and
+organ recitals were not enough; more than to listen, I
+wanted to play myself; and Louis B—— was usually as
+enthusiastic as I. The music was a deep delight to me,
+but the sleeping under the stars I enjoyed most.</p>
+
+<p>Those lonely little camp fires have left vivid pictures
+in the mind. An East-bound tram soon took one beyond
+the city, where the shores of Lake Ontario stretched
+their deserted sands for miles. There was always fresh
+water to be found for boiling tea, lots of driftwood lying
+about, and the sand made a comfortable bed. Many a
+night of that sweet Indian summer I saw the moon rise
+or set over the water, and lay watching the stars until the
+sunrise came. One spot in particular was a favourite
+with me, because, just over the high loam cliffs that lined
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
+the shore, there was an enormous field of tomatoes, and
+while Jimmy was helping himself to the Hub cash under
+Kay’s eyes in the city, I helped myself to half a dozen
+of the farmer’s ripe tomatoes. The Hub, however, of set
+purpose, formed no part of my thoughts, my reveries
+and dreams being of a very different, and far more interesting,
+kind....</p>
+
+<p>A night in the woods, though distance made it more
+difficult, comforted me even more than the Lake expeditions.
+I kept the woods usually for Saturday night,
+when the next day left me free as well.</p>
+
+<p>A pine forest beyond Rosedale was my favourite
+haunt, for it was (in those days) quite deserted and several
+miles from the nearest farm, and in the heart of it lay a
+secluded little lake with reedy shores and deep blue
+water. Here I lay and communed, the world of hotels,
+insurance, even of Methodists, very far away. The hum
+of the city could not reach me, though its glare was faintly
+visible in the sky. There were no signs of men; no sounds
+of human life; not even a dog’s bark—nothing but a sighing
+wind and lapping water and a sort of earth-murmur
+under the trees, and I used to think that God, whatever He
+was, or the great spiritual forces that I believed lay behind
+all phenomena, and perhaps were the moving life of the
+elements themselves, must be nearer to one’s consciousness
+in places like this than among the bustling of men
+in the towns and houses. As the material world faded
+away among the shadows, I felt dimly the real spiritual
+world behind shining through ... I meditated on the
+meaning of these dreams till the veil over outer things
+seemed very thin; diving down into my inner consciousness
+as deeply as I could till a stream of tremendous
+yearning for the realities that lay beyond appearances
+poured out of me into the night.... The hours passed
+with magical swiftness, and my dreaming usually ended
+in sleep, for I often woke in the chilly time just before
+the dawn, lying sideways on the pine needles, and saw
+the trees outlined sharply against the Eastern sky, and
+the lake water still and clear, and heard the dawn-wind
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
+just beginning to sing overhead. The laughter of a loon
+would sound, the call of an owl, the cry of a whip-poor-will;
+and then—the sun was up.</p>
+
+<p>Thought ran, on these lonely nights, to everything
+except to present or recent happenings. Life, already
+half over as, at twenty-one, it then seemed to me, had
+proved a failure; my few trivial experiences appeared
+gigantic and oppressive. I felt very old. Present conditions,
+being unhappy and promising to become more
+unhappy still, I left aside. I had “accepted” them as
+Karma, I must go through with them, but there was no
+need to intensify or prolong unhappiness by dwelling on
+them. I therefore dismissed them, thought wandering
+to other things. All was coloured, shaped, directed by
+those Eastern teachings in which I was then entirely
+absorbed ... and the chief problem in my mind at the
+time, was to master the method of accepting, facing,
+exhausting, whatever life might bring, while being, as the
+Bhagavad Gita described, “indifferent to results,” unaffected,
+that is, by the “fruits of action.” Detachment,
+yet without shirking, was the nearest equivalent phrase
+I could find; a state, anyhow, stronger than the Christian
+“resignation,” which woke contempt in me....</p>
+
+<p>Unhappiness, though it may seem trivial now, both as to
+cause and quality, was very deep in me at the time. It
+had wakened an understanding of certain things I had
+read—as in the stolen “Patanjali” years before—without
+then grasping what they meant. These things I now was
+beginning to reach by an inner experience of them, rather
+than by an intellectual comprehension merely.... And,
+as thought ran backwards, escaping the unpleasant
+Hub and Dairy, to earlier days in the Black Forest School,
+to the Jura Mountains village, to family holidays among the
+Alps or on the west coast of Scotland, it reached in due
+course the year spent at Edinburgh University just before
+I left for Canada, and so to individuals there who had
+strongly influenced me:</p>
+
+<p>I recalled Dr. H——, who used hypnotism in his practice,
+taught me various methods of using it, and often
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
+admitted me to private experiments in his study. He
+explained many a text-book for me. He had urged
+me to give up the idea of farming in Canada, and to read
+for medicine and become a doctor. “Specialize,” he
+said (in 1883). “By the time you are qualified Suggestion
+will be a recognized therapeutic agent, accepted by all,
+and accomplishing marvellous results. Become a mental
+specialist.”</p>
+
+<p>I lay under my pine trees, wondering if it were still too
+late ... but speculating, further and chiefly, about those
+other states of consciousness, since called “subliminal,”
+which his experiments had convinced me were of untold
+importance, both to the individual and to the race.
+Any lawful method of extending the field of consciousness,
+of increasing its scope, of developing latent faculties, with
+its corollary of greater knowledge and greater powers,
+excited and interested me more than the immediate
+prospect of making a million....</p>
+
+<p>This doctor’s family were sincere and convinced spiritualists.
+He let them be, paying no attention to them,
+yet pointing out to me privately the “secondary” state
+into which his wife, as the medium, could throw herself
+at will. His son had an Amati violin; we played together;
+I was invited to many séances. The power of reading
+a “sitter’s” mind I often witnessed, my own unuttered
+thoughts often being announced as the communication
+from some “guide” or “spirit friend.” But for the
+doctor’s private exposition, I might doubtless have been
+otherwise persuaded and shared my hostess’s convictions.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the “communications” came back in memory,
+none the less, as I lay beside the little lake and watched
+the firelight reflected with the stars: “There is an Indian
+here; he says he comes for you. He is a medicine man.
+He says you are one, too. You have great healing power.
+He keeps repeating the word ‘scratch.’” The dubious
+word meant “write”; I was to become a writer, a prophesy
+that woke no interest in me at all.... Another
+communication delved into the past: “You have been an
+Indian in a recent life, and you will go back to their country
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
+to work off certain painful Karma. You were Aztec,
+Inca, Egyptian, and, before that again, Atlantean. With
+the world to-day you have nothing in common, for none
+of the souls you knew have come back with you. Nature
+means more to you than human beings. Beware!”
+The last word alarmed me a good deal until the doctor’s
+humorous exposition killed any malefic suggestion. The
+horoscope his wife cast and read for me, however, he
+refused to be bothered with; he could not, therefore,
+comfort me by explaining away a disturbing sentence:
+“All your planets are beneficent, but were just below the
+horizon at the hour of your birth. This means that you
+will come very near to success in all you undertake, yet
+never quite achieve it.”</p>
+
+<p>These memories slipped in their series across my mind,
+as the embers of my fire faded and the night drew on.
+Swiftly they came and passed, each leaving its little trail
+of dust, its faint emotion, yet leading always to a stronger
+ghost whose memory still bulked largely in my mind—the
+ghost of a Hindu student. He was a fourth-year
+man, about to become a qualified doctor, and I met him
+first in the dissecting room, where occasionally I played
+at studying anatomy. We first became intimate friends
+over the dissection of a leg. It was he who explained
+“Patanjali” to me. He was a very gifted and unusual
+being. He showed me strange methods of breathing, of
+concentration, of meditation. He made clear a thousand
+half-conscious dreams and memories in me. He was
+mysterious but sincere, living his theories in practice.
+We went for great walks along the Forth, watching the
+Forth Bridge then being built; down the coast to St.
+Abb’s Head and Coldingham; deep into the recesses of
+the Pentlands, where, more than once, we slept in the
+open. We made curious and interesting experiments
+together.... Years later—he is still alive—I drew upon
+a fraction of his personality in two books, “John Silence”
+and “Julius Le Vallon.”...</p>
+
+<p>Much that he explained and taught me, much that he
+believed and practised, came back vividly during these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
+nightly vigils in the woods, while I listened to the weird
+laughter of the loons like the voices of women far away,
+and watched the Northern Lights flash in their strange
+majesty from the horizon to mid-heaven. Unhappiness
+was making my real life sink deeper. No boy, I am sure,
+sought for what he believed would prove the realities
+with more passionate intensity than I did. It is curious
+now to look back upon those grave experiments first taught
+me by my Hindu friend, who assured me that the way to rob
+emotions of their power was to refuse to identify one’s
+“self” with them, this real “self” merely looking on as
+a spectator, apart, detached; and that the outer events
+of life had small importance, what mattered being solely
+one’s inner attitude to them, one’s interpretation of
+them....</p>
+
+<p>From these hours spent alone with Nature, as also
+from the hours of music with Louis B—— I returned, at
+any rate, refreshed and invigorated to my loathsome bars.
+Personal troubles seemed less important, less oppressive;
+they were, after all, but brief episodes in a single life;
+as Karma, they had to be faced, gone through with;
+they had something to teach, and I must learn the lesson,
+or else miss one of the objects of my being. Watching
+the starry heavens through hours of imaginative reflection
+brought a bigger perspective in which individual
+worries found reduced proportion. My thoughts introduced
+a yet vaster perspective still. The difficulty was
+to keep the point of view when the mood that encouraged
+it was gone. After a few hours in the House of Lords
+perspective was apt to dwindle again....</p>
+
+<p>When the winter months made sleeping out impossible,
+and Louis B—— was not available, my precious hours
+of freedom would be spent with a young agnostic doctor
+dying of consumption; with the Professor of History in
+Toronto University—a sterling, sympathetic man, a true
+Christian of intellectual type, and a big, genuine soul who
+never thought of himself in the real help he gave me unfailingly
+with both hands; or, lastly, with an enthusiast
+who shared my quest for what we called “the Realities.”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
+With all three I had made close friends during the first
+prosperous days of the Dairy; the Professor’s family had
+been customers for milk and eggs; the young doctor,
+living in my boarding-house, had been a pupil in my
+French and German class.</p>
+
+<p>The third was a Scotsman, fairly well educated,
+about thirty years of age, who, while fully in sympathy
+with my line of thinking, had succeeded in reducing his
+dreams to some sort of order so that they did not interfere
+with his ordinary, practical career and yet were the
+guiding rule of his life.</p>
+
+<p>He was in the cement business, and his clothes, even
+on Sunday, were always covered with a fine white dust,
+for he was unmarried and lived alone in a single room.
+He made a bare living at his work, but was thoroughly
+conscientious and devoted to the interests of his employer,
+and all he asked was steady work and fair remuneration
+for the rest of his life. He was a real mystic by temperament,
+though he belonged to no particular tradition.
+The world for him was but a show of false appearances
+that the senses gathered; the realities behind were spiritual.
+He believed that his soul had existed for ever and would
+never cease to exist, and that his ego would continue to
+expand and develop according to the life he led, and shaped
+by his thoughts and acts (but especially by his thoughts)
+to all eternity. This world for him was a schoolroom, a
+place of difficult discipline and learning, and the lessons
+he was learning were determined logically and justly by
+his previous living and previous mistakes. Talents or
+disabilities, equally, were the results of former action....</p>
+
+<p>But to the ordinary man he appeared simply as a rather
+dull everyday worker, without any worldly ambition,
+absolutely honest and trustworthy, and always occupying
+a subordinate position in practical affairs.</p>
+
+<p>In the “old country” he had belonged to some sort
+of society that kept alive traditions of teaching methods
+of spiritual development, and he told me much concerning
+their theories that immense latent powers lay in the depths
+of one’s being and could be educed by suitable living,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
+and the period in the “schoolroom of this world,” as he
+called it, could be shortened and the progress of one’s
+real development hastened. It all lay, with him, in learning
+how to concentrate the faculties on this inner life,
+without neglecting the duties of the position one held to
+family or employer, and thus reducing the life of the body
+and the senses to the minimum that was consistent with
+health and ordinary duty. In this way he believed new
+forces would awaken to life, and new parts of one’s being
+be stimulated into activity, and in due course one would
+become conscious of a new spiritual region with the
+spiritual senses adapted to it. It amounted, of course,
+to an expansion of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>All this, naturally, interested me very much indeed,
+and I spent hours talking with this cement maker, and
+many more hours reading the books he lent me and thinking
+about them. My friend helped in this extension.
+Carl du Prel’s “Philosophy of Mysticism” was a book to
+injure no one.</p>
+
+<p>He had published one or two volumes of minor poetry,
+and his verse, though poor in form, caught all through it
+the elusive quality of genuine mystical poetry, unearthly,
+touching the stars, and wakening in the reader the note
+of yearning for the highest things. I took him with me
+several times to my little private grove, and he would
+recite these verses to me in a way that made them sound
+very different from my own reading of them. And as he
+lay beside the lake and I heard his reedy voice mingling
+with the wind in the trees, and watched his watery blue
+eyes shine across the smoke of our fire, I realized that
+the value of his poems lay in the fact that they were a
+perfectly true expression of his self—of his small, mystical,
+unselfish and oddly elemental soul searching after the God
+that should finally absorb him up into something greater.
+I do not wish to criticize him, but only to picture what
+I saw. His attenuated body, and long thin fingers, his
+shabby clothes covered with white dust lying by my side
+under the stars, his eyes looking beyond the world, and
+the sound of his thin voice that lost half its words somewhere
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
+in the wind—the picture is complete in every detail
+in my mind to this day. His reasoning powers were slight,
+for like all true mystics he believed in the intuitive perception
+of truth; but, coming into my life just at this time,
+he came with influence and a good deal of stimulus too.
+From the “House of Commons” to his dream-laden
+atmosphere provided a contrast that brought relief, at
+any rate.</p>
+
+<p>This mystical minor poet in the cement business had
+several friends like himself, but no one of them possessed
+his value, because no one of them practised their beliefs.
+They talked well and were sincere up to a point, but not
+to the point of making sacrifices for their faith. It was
+always with them a future hope. One, however, must be
+excepted—a woman. She was over sixty and always
+dressed in black, with crêpe scattered all over her, and a
+large white face, and shining eyes, and great bags under
+them. She had been a vegetarian for years. In spite
+of her size she looked so ethereal that a puff of wind
+might have blown her across the street. All her friends
+and relations had “passed over,” and her thoughts were
+evidently centred in the beyond, so far as she herself
+was concerned. She had means of her own, but spent
+most of them in helping others. There was no humbug
+about her. She claimed to have what she called “continuous
+consciousness,” and at night, when her body
+lay down and the brain slept, she focused her Self in
+some spiritual region of her being, and never lost consciousness.
+She saw her body lying there, and knew the brain
+was asleep, but she meanwhile became active elsewhere,
+for she declared a spirit could never sleep, and it was only
+the body that became too weary at the end of the day to
+answer to the spirit’s requirements. In sleep the body,
+left empty by the spirit, slept, and memory, being in the
+brain, became inactive. But as soon as one had learned
+to realize one’s spirit, sleep involved no loss of consciousness
+and memory was continuous.</p>
+
+<p>Her accounts of her experiences in the night thrilled
+me.... While she talked her face grew so white that it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
+almost shone. It was a beaming, good, loving face, and
+the woman was honest, even if deluded. She radiated
+kindness and sympathy from her person. She had a way
+of screwing up her eyes when speaking, stepping back a few
+paces, and then coming suddenly forward again as though she
+meant to jump across the room, her voice ringing, and her
+eyes opened so wide that I thought the bags underneath
+them must burst with a pop.</p>
+
+<p>The young doctor living in the boarding-house also
+interested me, reviving indeed my desire to follow his own
+profession myself. He was about twenty-six years old
+and very poor; the exact antithesis of myself, being clear-minded,
+practical, cynical and a thorough sceptic on the
+existence of a soul and God and immortality. He was
+well-read and had the true scientific temperament,
+spending hours with his microscope and books. The fact
+of his being at the opposite pole to myself attracted me
+to him, and we had long talks in his consulting-room on
+the ground floor back—where everything was prepared
+for the reception of patients, but where no patient ever
+came. Our worlds were so far apart, and it was so hard
+to establish a mutual coinage of words that our talks were
+somewhat futile. He was logical, absorbed in his dream
+of original research; he used words in their exact
+meaning and jumped to no conclusions rashly, and never
+allowed his judgment to be influenced by his emotions;
+whereas I talked, no doubt, like a child, building vast
+erections upon inadequate premises, indulging in my
+religious dreams about God and the soul, speculative and
+visionary. He argued me out of my boots every time,
+and towards the end of our talks grew impatient and
+almost angry with my vague mind and “transcendental
+tommy-rot,” as he called it; but at the same time he
+liked me, and was always glad to talk and discuss
+with me.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing he said, though much of it was cogent and unanswerable,
+ever influenced my opinions in the least degree,
+because I felt he was fundamentally wrong, and was trying
+to find by scalpel and microscope the things of the spirit.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+I felt a profound pity for him, and he felt a contemptuous
+pity for me. But one night my pity almost changed to
+love, and after this particular conversation, in the course
+of which he made me deep confidences of his early privations
+in order that he might study for his profession, and
+of his unquenchable desire for knowledge for its own sake,
+I felt so tenderly towards him, that I never tried to argue
+again, but only urged him to believe in a soul and in a
+future life. For he told me that he was already so far
+gone in consumption that at most he had but a year or
+two to live, and he knew that in the time at his disposal
+he could not accomplish the very smallest part of his
+great dream. I then understood why his eyes were so
+burning bright and why he had always glowing red spots
+in his cheeks, and looked so terribly thin and emaciated.</p>
+
+<p>The hours spent with him did not refresh or invigorate
+me as the woods and music did; I re-entered the swing
+doors of my prison—as I came to regard the Hub—with
+no new stimulus. His example impressed me, but his
+atmosphere and outlook both depressed. Only my admiration
+for his courage, strong will, and consistent attitude
+remained, while I drank “tea” with my unpleasant
+customers, or listened to complaints from the staff.
+Before the swing-doors closed for the last time, however,
+the thin, keen-faced doctor with the hectic flush and the
+bright burning eyes had succumbed to his terrible malady.
+His end made a great impression on me. For several
+months he went about like a living skeleton. His cough
+was ghastly. He had less and less money, and I seemed to
+be the only friend he turned to, or indeed possessed at all,
+for I was the only person he allowed to help him, and the
+little help I could give was barely enough to prevent the
+landlady turning him out for rent and board unpaid.</p>
+
+<p>To the last his will burned in him like a flame. He
+talked and studied, and dreamed his long dream of scientific
+achievement even when he knew his time was measured
+by weeks, and he was utterly scornful of death and a Deity
+that could devise such a poor scheme of existence, so full
+of failure, pain, and abortive effort. But I was full of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
+admiration for the way he kept going full speed to the very
+end, starting new books and fresh experiments even when
+he knew he would not have time to get half-way through
+with them, and discussing high schemes just as though he
+expected years in which to carry them out—instead of
+days.</p>
+
+<p>Here was a man absolutely without faith, or any belief
+in God or future life, who walked straight up to a miserable
+death under full steam, with nothing to console or buoy
+him up, and without friends to sympathize, and who never
+for a single instant flinched or whimpered. There burned
+in his heart the fire of a really strong will. It was the
+first time I had realized at close quarters what this meant,
+and when I went to his funeral I felt full of real sorrow,
+and have never forgotten the scene at his death-bed
+when the keen set face relaxed nothing of its decision to
+the very last.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap xkern'><span class='allcaps'>At</span> length the bitter, sparkling winter was over, the
+sleigh-bells silent, the covered skating-rinks all
+closed. The last remnants of the piled-up snow
+had melted, and the sweet spring winds were blowing
+freshly down the cedar-paved streets. On the lake shores
+the boat-houses were being opened; canoes, skiffs and cat-boats
+being repainted. Tents and camping kit were
+being overhauled. The talk everywhere was of picnics,
+expeditions, trips into the backwoods, and plans for
+summer holidays. Crystal sunlight flooded the world.
+The Canadian spring intoxicated the brain and sent the
+blood dancing to wild, happy measures.</p>
+
+<p>The Hub was now in the hands of a Receiver; Adams
+and Burns, the wholesale house, controlled it. Kay and
+I had to pay cash for everything—the Hub Wine Company
+was “bust.”</p>
+
+<p>Yielding to my father’s impatient surprise that after
+all these months I was still a partner, I had assigned my
+interest a short time before to Kay, and had sent home
+the printed announcement in the newspapers. It was a
+nominal assignment only, for I had nothing to assign.
+My last penny of capital was lost. Kay, for his part, had
+lost everything too. Vultures, in the form of bailiffs
+with blue writs in their claws, haunted our last week;
+by good luck rather than good management I owed
+nothing, but Kay had small outstanding accounts all
+over the town.</p>
+
+<p>It was a hectic last week. Our friends came in crowds
+to sympathize, to offer advice, to suggest new plans, and
+all considered a liquid farewell necessary. This etiquette
+was strict. A private word with the Receiver brought
+back our tea bottle. The Upper House did a fair business
+again, while Louis B—— bursting with new schemes,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
+new enterprises, that should restore our fortunes, was for
+ever at the piano in the upstairs room. We played together
+while our little Rome was burning—Tchaikowsky,
+Chopin, Wagner, and the latest songs with choruses.
+Kay donned his Irving wig from time to time and roared
+his “Bells” and “Suicide.” Our last days rattled by.</p>
+
+<p>The pain of the failure was mitigated for me personally
+by the intense relief I felt to be free of the nightmare
+at last. Whatever might be in store, nothing could be
+worse than that six months’ horror. Besides, failure in
+Canada was never final. It held the seeds of success to
+follow. From its ashes new life rose with wings and
+singing. The electric air of spring encouraged brave hopes
+of a thousand possibilities, and while I felt the disaster
+overwhelmingly, our brains at the same time already
+hummed with every imaginable fresh scheme. What
+these schemes were it is difficult now to recall, beyond
+that they included all possibilities of enterprise that a
+vast young country could suggest to penniless adventurous
+youth.</p>
+
+<p>What memory still holds sharply, however, is the face
+of a young lawyer of our acquaintance, as he looked at
+me across the fiddle and said casually: “You can live
+on my island in Lake Rosseau if you like!” Without a
+moment’s hesitation we accepted the lawyer’s offer of
+his ten-acre island in the northern lakes. The idea of
+immediate new enterprise faded. Kay was easily persuaded
+into a plan that promised a few weeks’ pleasant
+leisure to think things over, living meanwhile for next to
+nothing. “I shall go to New York later,” he announced,
+“and get on the stage. I’ll take Shakespeare up to the
+island and study it.” He packed his Irving wig. It
+was the camping-out which caught me with irresistible
+attraction: the big woods, an open air life, sun, wind and
+water.... “I’ll come up and join you later,” promised
+the sanguine Louis B——. “I’ll come with some new
+plan we can talk over round your camp-fire.” He agreed
+to pack up our few belongings and keep them for us till
+we went later to New York. “We’ll all go to the States,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
+he urged. “Canada is a one-horse place. There are far
+more chances across the line.”</p>
+
+<p>We kept secret our date of leaving, only Louis knowing
+it. On the morning of May 24th, the Queen’s birthday,
+he came to fetch us and our luggage, the latter reduced to
+a minimum. There were no good-byes. But this excitable
+little Frenchman, who loved a touch of the picturesque,
+did not come quite as we expected. He arrived two hours
+before his time, with a wagonette and two prancing horses,
+his fat figure on the box, flicking his long whip and shouting
+up at our windows. His idea, he explained as we climbed
+in, was to avoid the main station, where we should be bound
+to see a dozen people we knew. He proposed, instead, to
+drive us twenty miles to a small station, where the train
+stopped on its way north. There was no time to argue.
+I sat beside him on the box with the precious fiddle, Kay
+got behind with our two bags, and Louis drove us and his
+spanking pair along King Street and then up Yonge Street.
+Scores recognized us, wondering what it meant, for these
+were the principal streets of the town, but Louis flourished
+his whip, gave the horses their head, and raced along the
+interminable Yonge Street till at length the houses disappeared,
+and the empty reaches of the hinterland took
+their place. He saw us into the train with our luggage
+and our few dollars, waving his whip in farewell as the
+engine started. We did not see him again till he arrived,
+thin, worried, anxious and gabbling, in the East 19th
+Street boarding-house the following autumn.</p>
+
+<p>My Toronto episodes were over. I had been eighteen
+months in the country and was close upon twenty-two;
+my capital I had lost, but I had gained at least a little
+experience in exchange. I no longer trusted every one
+at sight. The green paint had worn thin in patches, if
+not all over. The collapse of the Dairy made me feel old,
+the Hub disaster made me a Methuselah. My home life
+seemed more and more remote, I had broken with it finally,
+I could never return to the old country, nor show my face
+in the family circle again. Thus I felt, at least. The
+pain and unhappiness in me seemed incurably deep, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
+my shame was very real. In my heart was a secret wish
+to live in the backwoods for evermore, a broken man,
+feeding on lost illusions and vanished dreams. The lighthearted
+plans that Louis B—— and Kay so airily discussed
+I could not understand. My heart sank each time I
+recognized my father’s handwriting on an envelope. I
+felt a kind of final misery that only my belief in Karma
+mitigated.</p>
+
+<p>This mood of exaggerated intensity soon passed, of
+course, but for a time life was very bitter. It was hard at
+first to “accept” these fruits of former lives, this harvest
+of misfortune whose seeds I assuredly had sown myself
+long, long ago. The “detachment” I was trying to learn,
+with its attitude of somehow being “indifferent to the
+fruits of action,” was not acquired in a day.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it interests me now to look back down the vista
+of thirty years, and to realize that this first test of my line
+of thought—whether it was a pretty fancy merely, or
+whether a real conviction—did not find me wanting. It
+was, I found, a genuine belief; neither then, nor in the
+severer tests that followed, did it ever fail me for a single
+moment. I understood, similarly, how my father’s faith,
+equally sincere though in such different guise to mine,
+could give him strength and comfort, no matter what
+life might bring....</p>
+
+<p>As our train went northwards through the hinterland
+towards Gravenhurst and the enchanted island where we
+were to spend five months of a fairyland existence, I
+grasped that a chapter of my life was closed, and a new one
+opening. The mind looked back, of course. Toronto,
+whose Indian name means Place of Meeting, I saw only
+once or twice again. I never stayed there. At the end
+of our happy island-life, we rushed through it on our way
+to fresh adventures in New York, Kay hiding his face in
+an overcoat lest some creditor catch a glimpse of him
+and serve a blue writ before the train’s few minutes’ pause
+in the station ended. The following winter, indeed, this
+happened, though in a theatre and not in a railway
+carriage. The travelling company, of which he formed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
+a member, was giving its Toronto week, and a creditor in
+the audience recognized him on the stage, though not this
+time in his Irving wig. The blue writ was served, the
+bailiff standing in the wings until the amount was paid.</p>
+
+<p>In the mood of reflection a train journey engenders,
+a sense of perspective slipped behind the eighteen months
+just over. Shot forth from my evangelical hot-house into
+colonial life, it now seemed to me rather wonderful that
+my utter ignorance had not landed me in yet worse
+muddles ... even in gaol.... One incident, oddly
+enough, stood out more clearly than the rest. But for
+my ridiculous inexperience of the common conditions of
+living, my complete want of <i>savoir faire</i>, my unacquaintance
+even with the ways of normal social behaviour, I
+might have now been in very different circumstances. A
+quite different career might easily have opened for me,
+a career in a railway, in the Canadian Pacific Railway, in
+fact, on one of whose trains we were then travelling.</p>
+
+<p>But for my stupid ignorance, an opening in the C.P.R.
+would certainly have been found for me, whether it led
+to a future or not. The incident, slight and trivial
+though it was, throws a characteristic light on the results
+of my upbringing. It happened in this way:</p>
+
+<p>Among my father’s acquaintance were the bigwigs
+of the Canadian Pacific Railway, who had shown him
+much courtesy on our earlier visit. The relationship this
+time was not of a religious kind; he was Financial Secretary
+to the Post Office; the C.P.R. carried the mails.
+Sir George Stephen and Sir Donald Stewart had not at that
+time received their peerages as My Lords Mount-Stephen
+and Strathcona; Sir William van Horne was still alive.
+To all of these I bore letters, though I delivered—by post
+to Montreal—only the one to Sir George, as President of
+the line. It met with the kindest possible response, and
+for several weeks I had been awaiting the return of T.,
+an important official in Toronto, to whom my case had
+been explained, but who was away at the time, touring
+the west in his special car. The moment I returned, I
+felt reasonably sure that he would find me a place of some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
+sort or other where I could at least make a start. He had,
+in fact, been asked to do so. With influence, too, in high
+quarters behind me, I had every reason to hope. The
+return of Mr. T. I awaited eagerly. He was a young
+man, I learned, of undoubted ability, but was at the same
+time a petty fellow, very pushing, very conceited, and a
+social snob of the most flagrant type. I was rather
+frightened, indeed, by what I heard, for a colonial social
+snob can be a very terrible creature, as I had already
+discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. T.’s return chanced to coincide with a big race meeting,
+to be followed by a ball at Government House. Sir
+Alexander Campbell was Governor of Ontario at the time.
+It was the event of the season, and of course Mr. T. came
+back in time to attend it and be in evidence. With a
+party of friends I drove to my first race meeting (oh, how
+the clothes, the talk, the rushing horses, all looking exactly
+alike, bored me!) with an invitation to the grand stand
+box of the Governor General, Lord Aberdeen, also a friend
+of my father’s, and was thus introduced to the railway
+official under the best possible auspices. My heart beat
+high when I saw how he took trouble to be nice to me and
+begged me to call upon him next day at his office, saying
+that “something could no doubt be arranged for me
+<i>at once</i>.” I was so delighted that I felt inclined to cable
+home at once “Got work”; but I resisted this temptation
+and simply let my imagination play round the nature
+of the position I should soon be holding in a very big
+company, with excellent chances of promotion and salary.
+I was too young to be bothered by the man’s patronizing
+manner and did not care a straw about his condescension
+and self-importance, because I thought only of getting
+work and a start.</p>
+
+<p>The ball filled me with intense shyness and alarm,
+however, for I had never learned to dance, or been inside
+a ballroom, and it was merely by chance I found out that
+white gloves and a white tie (not a black one as I had always
+worn at home for dinner) were the proper things. In a
+colony, too, an Englishman, who pretends to any
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
+standing, cannot be too careful about social details; for
+everything, and more besides, is expected of him.</p>
+
+<p>The ball was even worse than I had anticipated. I
+was nervous and uncomfortable. Ignorant of the little
+observances that would have been known to any man
+brought up differently, I found nothing to say to the
+numerous pretty Canadian girls, unconventional and
+natural, who were introduced to me, and I had not the
+slightest idea that the correct and polite thing to do was
+to ask each young lady for the “pleasure of a dance.”</p>
+
+<p>What people must have thought of my manners I
+cannot imagine, but the climax was undoubtedly reached
+when the railway official swaggered up to me in the middle
+of the room and said he wished to introduce me to his
+sister. This was duly accomplished, but—I could think
+of nothing to say. We stood side by side, with the official
+beaming upon us, I fingering my empty programme and
+the girl waiting to be asked for a dance. But the request
+was not forthcoming, and after a few minutes of terrible
+awkwardness and half silence, the purple-faced official
+marched his sister off again, highly insulted, to introduce
+her to men who would appreciate their luck better than
+I had done.</p>
+
+<p>To him, of course, my manners must have seemed hopelessly
+rude. He felt angry that I had not thought his
+sister worth even the ordinary politeness of a dance;
+and to a Canadian, who learns dancing with his bottle,
+and dances indoors and out on every possible occasion,
+the omission must have seemed incredibly ill-mannered,
+and the snub an unforgivable one. I cannot blame him.
+I remained in complete ignorance however of my crime,
+and, beyond feeling nervously foolish, out of place, and
+generally not much of a success, I had no idea I had given
+cause for offence until, long afterwards, I heard stories
+about myself and my behaviour which made me realize
+that I had done unpardonable things and left undone
+all that was best and correct.</p>
+
+<p>At the time, however, I had no realization that I had
+offended at all; and in the morning I went down according
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
+to appointment to call upon the railway official in
+his fine offices and hear the joyful news of my appointment
+to a lucrative and honourable position in the
+Company.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a little strange to me that I was kept waiting
+exactly an hour in the outer office, but I was so sure of a
+pleasant interview with a practical result that when at
+last the clerk summoned me to the official’s sanctum, I
+went in with a smiling face and goodwill and happiness in
+my heart.</p>
+
+<p>The general manager, as I will call him, though this
+title disguises his actual position, greeted me, however,
+without a word. He was talking to a man who stood
+beside his desk, and though he must have heard my name
+announced, he did not so much as turn his head. I stood
+looking at the framed photographs on the wall for several
+moments before the man went out, and then, when the
+door was closed, I advanced with outstretched hand
+and cordial manner across the room to greet my future
+employer.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at me frigidly, and, without even rising
+from his chair, gave me a stiff bow and said in a voice of
+the utmost formality:</p>
+
+<p>“Well, sir, and what can I do for you?”</p>
+
+<p>The words fell into my brain like so many particles of
+ice, and froze my tongue. Such a reception I had never
+dreamed of receiving. What had I done wrong? How in
+the world had I offended? Not even a word of apology
+for keeping me waiting an hour; and not even a seat
+offered me. I stood there foolishly for a moment, completely
+puzzled. Surely there must be a mistake. The
+man had forgotten me, or took me for somebody else.</p>
+
+<p>“I had an appointment with you at eleven o’clock,
+Mr. T.,” I said nervously, but trying to smile pleasantly.
+“You remember you were kind enough to say yesterday
+you thought you might find work for me to do in—in the
+railway offices.”</p>
+
+<p>The man’s eyes flashed, just as though he were angry,
+his face turned red, and I could not help suddenly noticing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
+what a bad, weak chin he had and how common and coarse
+the lines of his face were. The flush seemed to emphasize
+all its bad points.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you want work?” he said with a distinct sneer,
+looking me up and down as if I were an animal to be judged.
+“You want work, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>My nervousness began to melt away before his offensive
+manner, and I felt the blood mounting, but trying to
+keep my temper and to believe still there must be some
+mistake, I again reminded him of our previous interview
+at the races and in the ballroom.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, to be sure, yes, now I remember,” he said
+casually, and turned to take up pencil and paper on his
+desk. I looked about for a chair, but there was none near,
+so I remained standing, feeling something like a suspected
+man about to be examined by a magistrate.</p>
+
+<p>“What can you do?” he asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” I stammered, utterly surprised at his rudeness
+and manner, “I’ve not had much experience yet, of course,
+but I’m willing to begin at the bottom and work up.
+I’ll do anything for a beginning.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s what everyone says. ‘Doing anything’ is
+no good to me. I want to know what you <i>can</i> do. All
+my clerks here write shorthand——”</p>
+
+<p>“I can write shorthand accurately and fast,” I hastened
+to interrupt, evidently to his surprise, as though he
+had not expected to find me thus equipped.</p>
+
+<p>“But at present,” he hastened to add, “there are no
+vacancies on my staff, and I fear I can offer you nothing
+unless——” he hesitated a moment and then looked me
+full in the face. This time there could be no mistake.
+I saw blood in his eye and I realized he was savagely
+angry with me for some reason, and was determined to
+make the interview as unpleasant for me as possible.</p>
+
+<p>“——unless you care to sling baggage on a side station
+up the line,” he finished sneeringly.</p>
+
+<p>The blood rushed to my face, and I understood in a
+flash that the interview was a farce and his only object
+to humiliate me. I had so far swallowed my temper on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
+the chance of getting a position, but I knew that a post
+under such a man, who evidently hated me, would be worse
+than nothing. So I gave him one look from head to foot
+and turned to leave the room. I could have struck him
+in the jaw with the greatest pleasure in the world.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I understand you have no vacancies,” I said
+quietly as soon as I got to the door. “I will write and
+thank Sir George Stephen and tell him about your kindness
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>I said this because it was the only thing that occurred
+to me to say, and not with the object of making him uncomfortable.
+I had no intention of putting my words into
+effect, I had no idea my stray shot would hit the mark.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it did. The official, purple, and dismayed, got
+up hastily, and called me to stay a moment and he would
+see if something was not possible. Hurried sentences
+followed me to the passage, but I merely bowed and went
+out, knowing perfectly well that nothing could come of
+further conversation.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Gradually</span>, thus, contact with ordinary people
+and experiences with certain facets, at least, of
+practical life had begun to give me what is called
+a knowledge of the world. The hot-house upbringing
+made this acquisition difficult as well as painful; there still
+remained a feeling that I was “peculiar”; ignorance of
+things that to other youths of twenty-one were commonplaces
+still gave me little shocks. Knowledge that comes
+at the wrong time is apt to produce exaggerated effects;
+and only those who have shared the childlike shelter
+afforded by a strict evangelical enclosure in early years
+can appreciate the absurd want of proportion which is one
+of these effects. Knowledge of “natural” human kinds,
+withheld at the right moment, and acquired later, has its
+dangers....</p>
+
+<p>Two things, moreover, about people astonished me in
+particular, I remember; they astonish me even more to-day.
+Being, in both cases, merely individual reactions,
+to the herd, they are easily understandable, and are mentioned
+here because, being entirely personal, they reveal
+the individual whose adventures are described.</p>
+
+<p>The first—it astonished me daily, hourly—was the
+indifference of almost everybody to the great questions
+Whence, Why, Whither. The few who asked these
+questions seemed cranks of one sort or another; the
+immense majority of people showed no interest whatever.
+Creatures of extraordinary complexity, powers, faculties,
+set down for a given period, without being consulted
+apparently, upon a little planet amid countless numbers of
+majestic, terrifying suns ... few showed even the
+faintest interest in the purpose, origin and goal of their
+existence. Of these few, again, by far the majority were
+eager to prove that soul and spirit were chemical reactions,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
+results of some fortuitous concourse of dead atoms, to rob
+life, in a word, of all its wonder. These problems of paramount,
+if insoluble, interest, were taken as a matter of
+course. There was, indeed, no sense of wonder.</p>
+
+<p>It astonished me, doubtless, because in my own case
+this was the only kind of knowledge I desired, and desired
+passionately. To me it was the only real knowledge, the
+only thing worth knowing.... And I was ever getting
+little shocks on discovering gradually that not only was
+such knowledge not wanted, but that to talk of its possibility
+constituted one a dreamer, if not a bore. How anybody
+in possession of ordinary faculties could look, say,
+at the night sky of stars, and not know the wondrous
+flood of divine curiosity about his own personal relation
+to the universe drench his being—this never ceased to
+perplex me. Yet with almost everybody, the few exceptions
+being usually “odd,” conversation rapidly flattened
+out as though such things were of no importance, while
+stocks and shares, some kind of practical “market-value,”
+at any rate, quickly became again the topic of real value.
+Not only, however, did this puzzle me; it emphasized
+at this time one’s sense of being peculiar; it sketched a
+growing loneliness in more definite outline. No one wanted
+to make some money more than I did, but these other things—one
+reason, doubtless, why I never did make money—came
+indubitably first.</p>
+
+<p>The second big and daily astonishment of those
+awakening years, which also has persisted, if not actually
+intensified, concerned the blank irresponsiveness to beauty
+of almost everybody I had to do with. Exceptions, again,
+were either cranks or useless, unpractical people, failures
+to a man. Many liked “scenery,” either perceiving it
+for themselves, or on having it pointed out to them;
+but very few, as with myself, knew their dominant mood of
+the day influenced—well, by a gleam of light upon the lake
+at dawn, a faint sound of music in the pines, a sudden strip
+of blue on a day of storm, the great piled coloured clouds
+at evening—“such clouds as flit, like splendour-winged
+moths about a taper, round the red west when the sun dies
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
+in it.” These things had an effect of intoxication upon me,
+for it was the wonder and beauty of Nature that touched
+me most; something like the delight of ecstasy swept over
+me when I read of sunrise in the Indian Caucasus....
+“The point of one white star is quivering still, deep in
+the orange light of widening morn beyond the purple
+mountains ...” and it was a genuine astonishment to
+me that so few, so very few, felt the slightest response,
+or even noticed, a thousand and one details in sky and
+earth that delighted me with haunting joy for hours at a
+stretch.</p>
+
+<p>With Kay, my late “partner in booze,” as I had
+heard him called, there was sufficient response in these
+two particulars to make him a sympathetic companion.
+If these things were not of dominant importance to him,
+they were at least important. Humour and courage
+being likewise his, he proved a delightful comrade during
+our five months of lonely island life. What his view of
+myself may have been is hard to say; luckily perhaps,
+Kay was not a scribbler.... He will agree, I think,
+that we were certainly very happy in our fairyland of
+peace and loveliness amid the Muskoka Lakes of Northern
+Ontario.</p>
+
+<p>Our island, one of many in Lake Rosseau, was about
+ten acres in extent, irregularly shaped, overgrown with
+pines, its western end running out to a sharp ridge we called
+Sunset Point, its eastern end facing the dawn in a high
+rocky bluff. It rose in the centre to perhaps a hundred
+feet, it had little secret bays, pools of deep water beneath
+the rocky bluff for high diving, sandy nooks, and a sheltered
+cove where a boat could ride at anchor in all weathers.
+Close to the shore, but hidden by the pines, was a one-roomed
+hut with two camp-beds, a big table, a wide balcony,
+and a tiny kitchen in a shack adjoining. A canoe
+and rowing-boat went with the island, a diminutive wharf
+as well. On the mainland, a mile and a half to the north,
+was an English settler named Woods who had cleared the
+forest some twenty-five years before, and turned the wilderness
+into a more or less productive farm. Milk, eggs
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
+and vegetables we obtained from time to time. To the
+south and east and west lay open water for several miles,
+dotted by similar islands with summer camps and bungalows
+on them. The three big lakes—Rosseau, Muskoka
+and Joseph—form the letter Y, our island being where
+the three strokes joined.</p>
+
+<p>To me it was paradise, the nearest approach to a dream
+come true I had yet known. The climate was dry, sunny
+and bracing, the air clear as crystal, the nights cool. In
+moonlight the islands seemed to float upon the water,
+and when there was no moon the reflection of the stars
+had an effect of phosphorescence in some southern sea.
+Dawns and sunsets, too, were a constant delight, and before
+we left in late September we had watched through half
+the night the strange spectacle of the Northern Lights in
+all their rather awful splendour.</p>
+
+<p>The day we arrived—May 24th—a Scotch mist veiled
+all distant views, the island had a lonely and deserted air,
+a touch of melancholy about its sombre pines; and when
+the small steamer had deposited us with our luggage on
+the slippery wharf and vanished into the mist, I remember
+Kay’s disconsolate expression as he remarked gravely:
+“We shan’t stay <i>here</i> long!” Our first supper deepened
+his conviction, for, though there were lamps, we had forgotten
+to bring oil, and we devoured bread and porridge
+quickly before night set in. It was certainly a contrast
+to the brilliantly lit corner of the Hub dining-room where
+we had eaten our last dinner.... But the following
+morning at six o’clock, after a bathe in the cool blue water,
+while a dazzling sun shone in a cloudless sky, he had already
+changed his mind. Our immediate past seemed hardly
+credible now. Jimmy Martin, the “Duke,” the
+Methodist woodcuts, the life insurance offices, to say
+nothing of the sporting goods emporium, red-bearded
+bailiffs, Alfred Cooper, and a furious half-intoxicated Irish
+cook—all faded into the atmosphere of some half-forgotten,
+ugly dream.</p>
+
+<p>We at once set our house in order. We had saved a
+small sum in cash from the general wreck; a little went a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
+long way; pickerel were to be caught for the trouble of
+trolling a spoon-bait round the coast, and we soon discovered
+where the black bass hid under rocky ledges of
+certain pools. In a few weeks, too, we had learned to
+manage a canoe to the point of upsetting it far from shore,
+shaking it half-empty while treading water, then climbing
+in again—the point where safety, according to the Canadians,
+is attained. Even in these big lakes, it was rare
+that the water was too rough for going out, once the craft
+was mastered; a “Rice Lake” or “Peterborough,” as
+they were called, could face anything; a turn of the wrist
+could “lift” them; they answered the paddle like a
+living thing; a chief secret of control being that the
+kneeling occupant should feel himself actually a part of
+his canoe. This trifling knowledge, gained during our
+idle holiday, came in useful years later when taking a
+canoe down the Danube, from its source in the Black
+Forest, to Budapest.</p>
+
+<p>Time certainly never hung heavy on our hands.
+Before July, when the Canadians came up to their summer
+camps, we had explored every bay and inlet of the lakes,
+had camped out on many an enchanted island, and had
+made longer expeditions of several days at a time into the
+great region of backwoods that began due north. These
+trips, westward to Georgian Bay with its thousand
+islands, on Lake Huron, or northward beyond French
+River, where the primeval backwoods begin their unbroken
+stretch to James Bay and the Arctic, were a source
+of keen joy. Our cooking was perhaps primitive, but we
+kept well on it. With books, a fiddle, expeditions, to
+say nothing of laundry and commissariat work, the days
+passed rapidly. Kay was very busy, too, “preparing
+for the stage,” as he called it, and Shakespeare was always
+in his hand or pocket. The eastern end of the island was
+reserved for these rehearsals, while the Sunset Point end
+was my especial part, and while I was practising the fiddle
+or deep in my Eastern books, Kay, at the other point of the
+island, high on his rocky bluff, could be heard sometimes
+booming “The world is out of joint. Oh cursed fate that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
+I was born to set it right,” and I was convinced that he
+wore his Irving wig, no matter what lines he spouted. In
+the evenings, as we lay after supper at Sunset Point,
+watching the colours fade and the stars appear, it was the
+exception if he did not murmur to himself “... the
+stars came out, over that summer sea,” and then declaim
+in his great voice the whole of “The <i>Revenge</i>”
+which ends “I, Sir Richard Grenville, die!”—his tall
+figure silhouetted against the sunset, his voice echoing
+among the pines behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Considerations for the future were deliberately shelved;
+we lived in the present, as wise men should; New York,
+we knew, lay waiting for us, but we agreed to let it wait.
+My father’s suggestion—“your right course is to return
+to Toronto, find work, and live down your past”—was
+a counsel of perfection I disregarded. New York, the
+busy, strenuous, go-ahead United States, offered the irresistible
+lure of a promised land, and we both meant to try
+our fortunes there. How we should reach it, or what we
+should do when we did reach it, were problems whose
+solution was postponed.</p>
+
+<p>On looking back I can only marvel at the patience
+with which neither tired of the other. Perhaps it was
+perfect health that made squabbles so impossible. Nor
+was there any hint of monotony, strange to say. We had
+many an escape, upsetting in wild weather, losing our way
+in the trackless forests of the mainland, climbing or felling
+trees, but some Pan-like deity looked after us.... The
+spirit of Shelley, of course, haunted me day and night;
+“Prometheus Unbound,” pages of which I knew by heart,
+lit earth and sky, peopled the forests, turned stream and
+lake alive, and made every glade and sandy bay a floor
+for dancing silvery feet: “Oh, follow, follow, through
+the caverns hollow; As the song floats thou pursue,
+Where the wild bee never flew....” I still hear Kay’s
+heavy voice, a little out of tune, singing to my fiddle the
+melody I made for it. And how he used to laugh!
+Always at himself, but also at and with most other things,
+an infectious, jolly wholesome laughter, inspired by details
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
+of our care-free island life, from his beard and Shakespeare
+rehearsals to my own whiskers and uncut hair, my
+Shelley moods and my intense Yoga experiments....</p>
+
+<p>Much of the charm of our lonely life vanished when,
+with high summer, the people came up to their camps
+and houses on the other islands. The solitude was then
+disturbed by canoes, sailing-boats, steam-launches; singing
+and shouting broke the deep silences; camp-fires in a
+dozen directions blazed at night. Many of these people
+we had known well in Toronto, but no one called on us.
+Sometimes we would paddle to some distant camp-fire,
+lying on the water just outside the circle of light, and
+recognizing acquaintances, even former customers of Hub
+and Dairy and the Sporting Goods Emporium, but never
+letting ourselves be seen. Everybody knew we were
+living on the island; yet avoidance was mutual. We were
+in disgrace, it seemed, and chiefly because of the Hub—not
+because of our conduct with regard to it, but, apparently,
+because we had left the town suddenly without
+saying good-bye to all and sundry. This abrupt disappearance
+had argued something wrong, something we
+were ashamed of. All manner of wild tales reached us,
+most of them astonishingly remote from the truth.</p>
+
+<p>This capacity for invention and imaginative detail of
+most ingenious sort, using the tiniest insignificant item of
+truth as starting point, suggests that even the dullest
+people must have high artistic faculties tucked away somewhere
+in them. Many of these tales we traced to their
+source—usually a person the world considered devoid of
+fancy, even dull. Here, evidently, possessing genuine
+creative power, were unpublished novelists with distinct
+gifts of romance and fantasy who had missed their real
+vocation. The truth about us was, indeed, far from glorious,
+but these wild tales made us feel almost supermen.
+Many years later I met other instances of this power that
+dull, even stupid people could keep carefully hidden till
+the right opportunity for production offers—I was credited,
+to name the best, with superhuman powers of Black Magic,
+whatever that may be, and of sorcery. It was soon after
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
+a book of mine, “John Silence,” had appeared. A story
+reached my ears, the name of its author boldly given, to
+the effect that, for the purposes of this Black Magic, I
+had stolen the vases from the communion altar of St.
+Paul’s Cathedral and used their consecrated content in
+some terrible orgy called the Black Mass. Young children,
+too, were somehow involved in this ceremony of sacrilegious
+sorcery, and I was going to be arrested. The author
+of this novelette was well known to me, connected even
+by blood ties, a person I had always conceived to be without
+the faintest of imaginative gifts, though a credulous
+reader, evidently, of the mediæval tales concerning the
+monstrous Gilles de Rais. Absurd as it sounds, a solicitor’s
+letter was necessary finally to limit the author’s
+prolific output, although pirated editions continued to sell
+for a considerable time. There is a poet hidden, as Stevenson
+observed, in most of us!</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, summer began to wane; we considered
+plans for attacking New York; hope rose strongly in us
+both; disappointments and failures were forgotten. In
+so big a city we were certain to find work. We had a hundred
+dollars laid aside for the journey and to tide us over
+the first few days until employment came. We could not
+hide for ever in fairyland. Life called to us.... Late
+in September, just when the lakes were beginning to recover
+their first solitude again, we packed up to leave.
+Though the sun was still hot at midday, the mornings and
+evenings were chill, and cold winds had begun to blow.
+The famous fall colouring had set fire to the woods;
+the sumach blazed a gorgeous red, the maples were crimson
+and gold, half of the mainland seemed in flame.
+Sorrowfully, yet with eager anticipation in our hearts, we
+poured water on our camp-fire that had served us for five
+months without relighting, locked the door of the shanty,
+handed over to Woods the canoe and boat, and caught
+the little steamer on one of its last trips to Gravenhurst
+where the train would take us, <i>via</i> Toronto, to New York.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a delightful experience; I had seen and
+known at last the primeval woods; I had even seen Red
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
+Indians by the dozen in their pathetic Reservations, and
+if they did not, like the spirit of the Medicine Man in
+Edinburgh, advise me to “scratch,” they certainly made
+up for the omission by constantly scratching themselves.
+It seems curious to me now that, during those months of
+happy leisure, the desire to write never once declared itself.
+It never occurred to me to write even a description
+of our picturesque way of living, much less to attempt
+an essay or a story. Nor did plans for finding work in
+New York—we discussed them by the score—include in
+their wonderful variety any suggestion of a pen and paper.
+At the age of twenty-two, literary ambition did not exist
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>The Muskoka interlude remained for me a sparkling,
+radiant memory, alight with the sunshine of unclouded
+skies, with the gleam of stars in a blue-black heaven,
+swept by forest winds, and set against a background of
+primeval forests that stretched without a break for six
+hundred miles of lonely and untrodden beauty.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Kay</span> and I arrived in New York on a crisp, sunny
+afternoon with sixty dollars in hand out of the
+original hundred set by for the purpose, and took
+a room in the Imperial Hotel, Broadway, which someone
+had recommended. We knew no one, had no letters of
+introduction. We were tanned the colour of Red Indians,
+in perfect physical condition, but with a very scanty wardrobe.</p>
+
+<p>The furious turmoil of the noisy city, boiling with
+irrepressible energies, formed an odd contrast to the peace
+and stillness of the forests. There was indifference in
+both cases, but whereas there it was tolerant and kindly,
+here it seemed intolerant and aggressive. “Get a hustle
+on, or get out,” was the note. Nature welcomed, while
+human nature resented, the intrusion of two new atoms.
+Nostalgia for the woods swept over me vehemently, but
+at the same time an eager anticipation to get work.
+We studied the papers at once for rooms, choosing a boarding
+house in East 19th Street, between Broadway and
+4th Avenue. Something in the wording caught us. An
+hour after our arrival we interviewed Mrs. Bernstein and
+engaged the third floor back, breakfast included, for eight
+dollars a week. It was cheap. The slovenly, emotional,
+fat Jewess, with her greasy locks, jewellery, and tawdry
+finery, had something motherly about her that appealed.
+She smiled. She did not ask for payment in advance.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s your work,” she inquired, gazing up at me.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m going on the newspapers,” I said offhand,
+taking the first idea that offered, but little dreaming it
+was to prove true.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall be on the stage,” Kay promptly added, “as
+soon as my arrangements are made.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernstein smiled. She knew the power of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
+Press and favoured reporters. “My hospand,” she informed
+Kay sympathetically, “is an artist too, a moosician.
+He has his own orghestra.”</p>
+
+<p>While Kay studied the theatrical papers, I took the
+elevated railway down-town. I wanted to stand on
+Brooklyn Bridge again. Since first seeing it with my
+father a few years before, and again on my arrival
+eighteen months ago, <i>en route</i> for Toronto, the place had
+held my imagination. Something sentimental lay in this
+third journey, for I wanted to go alone.</p>
+
+<p>Halfway across, at the highest point, I stood looking
+down upon the great waterway between the two cities of
+the new world, and the feeling of a fresh chapter in life,
+with its inevitable comparisons, rose in me.... The
+sun was sinking behind the hills of New Jersey, and the
+crowded bay lay a sheet of golden shimmer. Huge, double-ended
+ferry boats, plying between the wooded shores of
+Staten and Manhattan Islands and Brooklyn, rushed to
+and fro with great snortings and hootings; little tugs
+dashed in every direction with vast importance; sailboats,
+yachts, schooners and cat-boats dotted the water
+like a thousand living things; and threading majestically
+through them all steamed one or two impressive Atlantic
+liners, immense and castle-like, towering above all else,
+as they moved slowly out toward the open sea. The deep
+poetry which ever frames the most prosaic things, lending
+them their real significance, came over me with the wind
+from that open sea.</p>
+
+<p>I stood watching the fading lights beyond the bay, while
+behind me the crowded trains, at the rate of one a minute,
+passed thundering across the bridge, and thousands upon
+thousands of tired workers thronged to their Brooklyn homes
+after their day in the bigger city. The great bridge swayed
+and throbbed as the dense masses of pedestrians climbed
+uphill to the centre, then swarmed in a thick black river
+down the nether slope. I had never seen such numbers,
+or such speed of nervous movement, and the eager, tense
+faces, usually strained, white, drawn as well, touched an
+unpleasant note. New York, I felt, was not to be trifled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
+with; the human element was strenuously keen; no loafing
+or dreaming here; work to the last ounce, or the city
+would make cat’s meat of one! Whereupon, by contrast,
+stole back again the deep enchantment of the silent woods,
+and the longing for the great, still places rose; I saw our
+little island floating beneath glittering stars; a loon was
+laughing farther out; the Northern Lights went flashing
+to mid-heaven; there was a sound of wind among the
+pines. The huge structure that reared above me seemed
+unreal; the river of men and women slipped past like
+silent shadows; the trains and boats became remote
+and hushed; and the ugly outer world about me merged
+in the substance of a dream and was forgotten....</p>
+
+<p>I turned and looked out over New York. I saw its
+lofty spires, its massed buildings, gigantic in the sky; I
+saw the opening of the great Hudson River, and the darkening
+water of the bay; I heard, like a sinister multiple
+voice out of the future, the strident cry of this wonderful
+and terrible capital of the New World, and the deep
+pulsings of its engines of frantic haste and untiring energy.
+The general note, I remember, was alarming rather; a
+touch of loneliness, of my own stupid incompetence to
+deal with its aggressive spirit, in which gleamed something
+merciless, almost cruel—this was the response it stirred
+in me. I suddenly realized I had no trade, no talents to
+sell, no weapons with which to fight. My heart sank a
+little. Among these teeming millions, with their tearing
+speed, their frenzied energy, their appalling practical
+knowledge, I possessed but one friend, Kay, and some
+sixty dollars between us. New York would eat me up
+unless I “got a hustle on.”</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, our capital much reduced, we moved
+into the lodging house. The idea of sharing a bed, in
+view of our size and the narrowness of the bed, amused us,
+but without enthusiasm. The sofa was too small to sleep
+on. “We’ll move,” announced Kay, “as soon as we get
+jobs.” A telegram was sent to Toronto giving our address,
+and a few days later a packing case arrived with our
+Toronto possessions, and ten dollars to pay out of our
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
+small total. We found close at hand, in 20th Street,
+a cheap clean German restaurant—Krisch’s—where a meal
+of sorts could be had for 30 cents, tip 5 cents; it had a
+sanded floor and was half <i>bier-stube</i>, and one of its
+smiling waiters, Otto—he came from the Black Forest
+where I had been to school—proved a true friend later,
+allowing us occasional credit at his own risk; a Chinese
+laundry was looked up in Fourth Avenue; I spent one of
+our precious dollars in a small store of fiddle strings against
+a possible evil day—a string meant more to me than a
+steak—and we were then ready for our campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Not a minute was lost. Kay, in very sanguine mood,
+the Irving wig, I shrewdly suspected, in his pocket, went
+out to interview managers; while I took a train down-town
+to interview Harper’s, as being the most important publishing
+house I knew. This step was the result of many
+discussions with Kay, who said he was sure I could write.
+The Red Indian advice of the Edinburgh “spirit” had
+impressed him. “That’s your line,” he assured me.
+“Try the magazines.” I felt no similar assurance, no
+desire to write was in me; we had worked ourselves up to
+a conviction that bold, immediate action was the first
+essential of our position; to get pupils for my two languages
+or shorthand seemed impossible in a city like New York;
+therefore I hurried down, with vague intentions but a
+high heart, to Harper’s.</p>
+
+<p>There was the <i>Magazine</i>, the <i>Weekly</i>, and <i>Harper’s
+Young People</i>. One of them surely would listen to my
+tale. I chose the <i>Weekly</i> for some unknown reason.
+For some equally unknown reason I was admitted to the
+editor’s sanctum, and, still more strange, Richard Harding
+Davis listened to my tale. His success as a novelist had
+just begun; he had left the <i>Evening Sun</i>, where his “Van
+Bibber” stories had made him first known; his popularity
+was rising fast, though I had never heard of him.</p>
+
+<p>My tale was brief, having been rehearsed in the train.
+It took, perhaps, three minutes at most to rattle it off—my
+parentage, my farm and hotel, my interest in Eastern
+Thought, my present destitution, and I remember adding,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
+“You see, I cannot possibly go home to England again
+until I have made good somehow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you written anything?” he asked, after listening
+patiently with raised eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>“Well—no, I haven’t, not yet, I’m afraid.” I explained
+that I wanted to begin, though what I really wanted was
+only paid employment.</p>
+
+<p>The author of “Van Bibber” and “A Soldier of Fortune”
+looked me up and down and then chuckled.
+After a moment’s silence, he got up, led me across the
+hall to another door, opened it without knocking and
+said to a man who was seated at a table smothered in
+papers:</p>
+
+<p>“This is Mr. Blackwood, an Englishman, who wants
+to write something for you. He is prepared to write anything—from
+Eastern philosophy to ‘How to run a hotel in
+Canada.’”</p>
+
+<p>The door closed behind me, with no word of farewell,
+and I learned that the man facing me was the editor of
+<i>Harper’s Young People</i>. His name, if I remember rightly,
+was Storey, and he was an Englishman, who, curiously
+enough, almost at once mentioned my father. He had
+been an employé of the G.P.O. in London. He was
+unpleasant, supercilious, patronizing and off-hand, proud
+of his editorial power. He gave me, however, my first
+assignment—to write a short, descriptive article about
+a cargo of wild animals that had just arrived for the New
+York “Zoo.” I hurried off to the steamer, bought some
+paper, wrote the article in a pew of Trinity Church in
+Lower Broadway, and returned three hours later to submit
+it. Storey read it and said without enthusiasm it would
+do, but when I asked “Is it good?” he shook his head
+with the comment “Well—some men would have made
+more of it perhaps.” It was printed, however, and in due
+course I got ten dollars for it. I inquired if I could do
+something else. He took my address. No further results
+followed. Evidently, I realized, writing was not my line,
+and both Kay and the Red Indian Medicine Man were
+mistaken.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span></p>
+
+<p>Kay’s report of his luck, when we met again that evening
+was meagre; he had met an English Shakespearean
+actor, Bob Mantell, and a Toronto acquaintance, the
+“Duke.” The actor, however, had given him an introduction
+or two, and the Duke had asked us to play next
+day in a cricket match on Staten Island. It was an
+eleven of Actors <i>v.</i> the Staten Island Club, and Kay would
+meet useful people. In sanguine mood we agreed to go.
+It proved a momentous match for me.</p>
+
+<p>Before it came off, however, something else had happened
+that may seem very small beer, but that provided me with
+a recurrent horror for many months to come, a horror
+perhaps disproportionate to its cause. It filled me, at
+any rate, with a peculiar loathing as of some hideous nightmare.
+I had never seen the things before; their shape,
+their ungainly yet rapid movement, their uncanny power
+of disappearing in a second, their number, their dirty
+colour, above all their smell, now gave me the sensations
+of acute nausea. Kay’s laughter, though he too felt
+disgust and indignation, brought no comfort. We eventually
+got up and lit the gas. We caught it. I had my
+first view of the beast. We stared at each other in horror.
+Then Kay sniffed the air. “That explains it,” he said,
+referring to a faint odour of oil we had both noticed when
+engaging the room. “They put it in the woodwork to
+kill them,” he added. “It’s the only thing. But it
+never really gets rid of them, I’m afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>The anger of Mrs. Bernstein when we accused her in
+the morning, her indignant denials, her bluster about
+“insoults,” and that “never had sooch a t’ing been said
+of her house pefore,” were not half as comic as her expression
+when I suddenly produced the soap-dish with its
+damning evidence—17 all told.</p>
+
+<p>She stared, held her breath a second, then very quietly
+said “Ach, Ach! If you stay, chentelmen, I take von
+tollar off the price.”</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible not to laugh with her; there was
+something kind and motherly, something good and honest
+and decent about her we both liked; she would do her best,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
+we believed; possibly she really would exterminate the
+other tenants. We stayed on.</p>
+
+<p>Of the cricket match on Staten Island, beyond the
+pretty ground with its big trees, and that we got a good
+lunch without paying for it, no memory remains. What
+stands out vividly is the tall figure of Arthur Glyn Boyde,
+a fast bowler and a good bat, and one of the most entertaining
+and sympathetic companions I had ever met.
+His clothes were shabby, but his graceful manners, his voice,
+his smile, everything about him, in fact, betrayed the
+English gentleman. He was about thirty years of age,
+of the most frank and engaging appearance, with kindly,
+honest blue eyes, in one of which he wore an eyeglass.
+I remember the little fact that he, Kay and myself were
+measured for a bet after the match, and that he, like Kay,
+was six feet two inches, being one inch shorter than myself.</p>
+
+<p>I took to him at once, and he to me. His real name
+was a distinguished one which he shared, it turned out,
+with some cousins of my own. We were, therefore, related.
+The bond was deepened. Times had gone hard with him,
+it seemed, but at the moment he was on the stage, being
+understudy to Morton Selton as Merivale in “Captain
+Lettarblair,” which E. H. Sothern’s company was then
+playing. In “The Disreputable Mr. Reagen,” by, I
+think, Richard Harding Davis he had also played the
+rôle of the detective. He was waiting, however, for a
+much better post, as huntsman to the Rockaway Hunt,
+a Long Island fashionable club, and this post, oddly enough,
+was in the gift, he told me, of Davis. It had been practically
+promised to him, he might hear any day....
+The story of his many jobs and wanderings interested us,
+and his theatre work promised to be helpful in many ways
+to what was called my “room-mate.” Boyde’s experience
+of New York generally was invaluable to us both,
+and the fact that he had nowhere to sleep that night
+(having been turned out by his landlady) gave us the opportunity
+to invite him to our humble quarters. We mentioned
+the other tenants, but he said that made no difference,
+he would sleep on the sofa. He dined with us at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
+Krisch’s; he was extremely hard up; luckily, we still had
+enough to invite a friend. His only luggage was a small
+bag, for he told us, with a rueful smile, that his clothes
+were all in pawn. I had an extra suit or two which, being
+of about my size, he was able to wear.</p>
+
+<p>I felt immensely drawn to him, and his story touched
+my pity as well as stirred my admiration. It was a happy
+evening we all spent in the little bedroom, for he was not
+only well-read—he knew my various “Eastern books”
+and could talk about them interestingly—but had a
+fine tenor voice into the bargain. My fiddle came out of
+its case, and if the other lodgers disliked our duets, they
+did not, at any rate, complain. Boyde sang, he further
+told us, in the choir of the 2nd Avenue Baptist Church,
+and was assistant organist there as well, but made little out
+of this latter job, as he was only called upon when the
+other man was unable to attend. He even taught sometimes
+in the Sunday School—“to keep in the pastor’s
+good books,” as he explained with a laugh. But the chief
+thing he told us that night was the heartening information
+that, when all other chances failed, there was always a
+fair living to be earned by posing to artists at 50 cents an
+hour, or a dollar and a half for a full sitting of three hours.
+It was easy work and not difficult to get. He would gladly
+introduce us to the various studios, as soon as they opened,
+most of the artists being still in the country.</p>
+
+<p>The search for work was a distressing business, when
+to the inevitable question “What can you do?” the only
+possible, but quite futile, reply was, “I’ll do anything.”
+I had collected the ten dollars from <i>Harper’s Young People</i>,
+but a letter to Storey for more work brought no reply.
+The payment for the Toronto packing-case and for a
+week’s rent of the rooms had reduced the exchequer so
+seriously that in a few days there was only the <i>Harper’s</i>
+money in hand. Boyde, who stayed on at our urgent
+invitation, shared all he earned, and taught us, besides,
+the trick of using the free lunch-counters in hotels and
+saloons. For a glass of beer at five cents, a customer
+could eat such snacks as salted chip-potatoes, strips of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
+spiced liver sausage, small squares of bread, and pungent
+almonds, all calculated to stimulate unnatural thirst.
+The hotels provided more sumptuous dishes, though the
+price of drink was higher, and the calm way Boyde would
+help himself deliberately to a plate and fork, with an ample
+supply of the best food he could find, then carry it all back
+to his glass of lager under the bar-tender’s very nose,
+was an ideal we could only hope to achieve by practice
+as long as his own. It was a question of nerve. Our
+midday meal was now invariably of this kind. The
+free lunch brigade, to which we belonged, was tolerantly
+treated by the majority of bar-tenders. A thirty cents
+dinner at Krisch’s in the evening, choosing the most bulky
+dishes, ended the long tiring day of disappointing search.
+Boyde also made us buy oatmeal, with tin pot and fixture
+for cooking over the gas-jet. He was invaluable in a dozen
+ways, always cheery, already on the right side of Mrs.
+Bernstein, and turning up every evening with a dollar
+or two he had earned during the day.</p>
+
+<p>He further taught us—the moment had come, he
+thought—to pawn. The packing-case in the basement
+was opened and rummaged through (a half-used cheque-book
+from Toronto days was a pathetic relic!) for things on
+which Ikey of 3rd Avenue might offer a few dollars. The
+tennis cups, won at little Canadian tournaments, seemed
+attractive, he thought, but our English overcoats would
+fetch most money. The weather was still comfortable ...
+we sallied forth, hoping Mrs. Bernstein would not see us,
+carrying two tennis cups and a couple of good overcoats.
+Everybody stared and grinned, it seemed, though actually
+of course, no one gave us a glance. Boyde, humming
+Lohengrin, was absolutely nonchalant. For me, the
+pawnbroker’s door provided sensations similar to those I
+knew when first entering the Hub just a year before.</p>
+
+<p>“I want ten dollars on these,” said Boyde, in a firm
+voice. “What’ll you give? I shall take ’em out next
+week.”</p>
+
+<p>The Jew behind the counter gave one glance at the
+tennis cups, then pushed them contemptuously aside;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
+the overcoats he examined carefully, holding them up to
+the light for holes or threadbare patches, feeling the linings,
+turning the sleeves inside out.</p>
+
+<p>“Good English cloth,” mentioned Boyde. “Hardly
+used at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“A dollar each,” said the man, laying them down as
+though the deal was finished. He turned to make out the
+tickets. He had not looked at us once yet.</p>
+
+<p>Boyde picked them up and turned to go. “Two
+dollars,” he said flatly, “I can get five in 4th Avenue.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go ged it,” was the reply, the man’s back still turned
+on us.</p>
+
+<p>Boyde gave a cheery laugh. “Make it three dollars
+for the two,” he suggested in an off-hand manner, “with
+another couple for the cups. They’re prizes. We wouldn’t
+lose them for worlds.”</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at us for the first time; we were fairly
+well dressed, obviously English, three hulking customers
+of a type he was not used to. Perhaps he really believed
+we might redeem the cups one day. “Worth less than
+nozzing,” he said in his Yiddish accent. The keen,
+appraising look he gave us made me feel even less than
+that.</p>
+
+<p>“Worth a lot to us, though,” came Boyde’s quick
+comment.</p>
+
+<p>“Name?” queried the man, bending over a table
+with his back turned again.</p>
+
+<p>“John Doe,” came promptly, and a moment later,
+with the ticket, the Jew handed out four dirty dollar bills
+and fifty cents in coin. The interest was twelve per cent.
+per month, and the articles could be redeemed any time
+up to the end of a year.</p>
+
+<p>“Never ask more than you really need at the moment,”
+was Boyde’s advice as we came out into the street. “I
+could have raised him a few dollars probably, but, remember,
+you’ll have to get the coats out again before long.”</p>
+
+<p>When we got back to the room a Western Union
+telegram lay on the table for him; it was from Davis:
+“Please call to-morrow 3 o’clock without fail <i>re</i> Rockaway,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
+it read. And hope ran high. That night we spent
+half of our new money at Krisch’s, giving a tip of thirty
+cents to Otto....</p>
+
+<p>Some ten days to a fortnight had passed, and October
+with its cooler winds had come, though life was still possible
+without overcoats. Our dress-clothes were now in Ikey’s,
+moth-balls beside them. The Chinese laundry had been
+paid, but not the second week’s rent, for money was very
+low and dinners of the smallest. Practice at the free
+lunch counters had improved our methods of strolling up
+absent-mindedly, perceiving the food apparently for the
+first time, then picking up with quick fingers the maximum
+quantity. Kay, meanwhile, had secured a part in a
+touring company which was to start out for a series of
+one-night stands in about three weeks, his salary of fifteen
+dollars to begin with the first night. He was already rehearsing.
+My own efforts had produced nothing. Boyde,
+too, had not yet landed his huntsman job, which was to
+include comfortable quarters as well as a good salary.
+I had been down with him when he went to see Davis,
+waiting in the street till he came out, and the interview,
+though reassuring, he told me, involved a little further
+delay still. He, therefore, continued his odd jobs, calling
+at the theatre every night and matinée to see if he was
+wanted, playing the organ in church occasionally, and
+getting a small fee for singing in the choir. He shared with
+us as we shared with him; he slept on the sofa in our room;
+he was welcome to wear my extra suits of clothes—until
+Ikey might care to see them.</p>
+
+<p>Then, quite suddenly, fate played a luckier card.</p>
+
+<p>Kay and I were at the free lunch counter of the Fifth
+Avenue Hotel, Boyde having been called away to do
+something at his Baptist church, when Bob Mantell
+strolled up, bringing a tall, grey-haired man with him.
+The next minute he was introducing me to Cecil Clay,
+with a remark to the effect that he must surely have known
+my father, and that I surely must know Mr. Clay’s famous
+book on whist. Cecil Clay, anyhow, was a kindly old
+Englishman, and evidently was aware how the land lay
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
+with us, for a few minutes later he had given me a card
+to Laffan, manager of the <i>New York Sun</i>. “Go and see
+him the day after to-morrow,” he said. “Meanwhile I’ll
+write him a line about you.”</p>
+
+<p>Had it been possible to go then and there I should have
+felt more confidence and less nervousness than when
+I called at the appointed hour. The interval, with its
+hopeful anticipation and alternate dread, was a bad
+preparation for appearing at my best. After a few
+questions, however, Mr. Laffan, a man of very powerful
+position in the newspaper world, a great art collector
+and connoisseur, head, too, of the Laffan News Bureau,
+said that Mr. McCloy, managing editor of the <i>Evening
+Sun</i>, would give me a trial as a reporter, and I could start
+next Monday—four days away—at fifteen dollars a week.
+I had mentioned that I knew French and German, and
+could write shorthand. He spoke to me in both languages,
+but, luckily, he did not think of testing the speed and
+accuracy of my self-taught Pitman.</p>
+
+<p>On the staff of a great New York newspaper! That
+it was anti-British and pro-Tammany did not bother me.
+A reporter! A starting salary of £3 a week that might
+grow! I wrote the news to my father that very afternoon,
+and that night Kay, Boyde and I had almost a
+festive dinner at Krisch’s restaurant—that is, we ended with
+sweets and coffee. The following day I spent practising
+my rusty shorthand, about 90 words a minute being my
+best speed consistent with legibility. Would it be fast
+enough? I might have spared myself the trouble for all
+the use shorthand was to me on the <i>Evening Sun</i> during the
+two years I remained with it. Only once—much later,
+when I was with the <i>New York Times</i>, did it prove of
+value, securing for me on that occasion an increase of
+salary.... The slogan of the <i>Sun</i>, printed on each copy
+was, “If you See it in the <i>Sun</i> it is so!” accuracy the strong
+point. The <i>Times</i> preferred a moral tinge: “All the
+News that’s Fit to Print.” Both mottoes were faithfully
+observed and rigidly practised.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>If</span> any young man learning values wants to know the
+quickest way to study the seamy side of life, to understand
+the darkest aspects of human nature, and
+incidentally, to risk the loss of every illusion he ever had,
+let him become a reporter on an up-to-date New York
+newspaper. Within six months he will be apt to believe
+that every man has his price; he will become acquainted
+with vice, crime, horror, terror, and every kind of human
+degradation; theft, murder, arson will seem commonplaces,
+forgery a very ordinary affair; men and women,
+it may even seem to him, “go straight,” not because of
+any inherent principle of goodness in them, but because
+that degree of temptation which constitutes their particular
+“price” has not yet offered itself.</p>
+
+<p>Passion of every type, abnormal, often incredible,
+will be his daily study; if he reflects a little he will probably
+reach the conclusion that either jealousy in some
+form, or greed for money, lie at the root of every crime
+that is ever committed. The overwhelming power of
+these two passions will startle him, at any rate, and his
+constant association with only one aspect of life, and that
+the worst and lowest, will probably produce the conviction
+that, given only the opportunity, everybody is bad. His
+conception of women may suffer in particular. The experience,
+contrariwise, may widen his tolerance and
+deepen his charity; also, it may leave him as it left me,
+with an ineradicable contempt for those who, born in
+ease, protected from the temptations due to poverty and
+misery, so carelessly condemn the weak, the criminal and
+the outcast.</p>
+
+<p>With bigger experience may come, in time, a better
+view; equally, it may never come. Proportion is not so
+easily recovered, for the mind, at an impressionable age,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
+has been deeply marked. The good, the beautiful, the
+lovely, in a New York paper, is very rarely “news”;
+it is considered as fake, bunkum, humbug, a pose; it is
+looked at askance, regarded with suspicion, as assumed
+by someone for the purpose of a “deal”; it is rarely
+worth its space, at any rate. A reporter finds himself in
+a cynical school; he is lucky if he escape in the end with
+a single rag of illusion to his back. If he has believed,
+up to the age of twenty-one, as I did, that the large
+majority of people are decent, kindly, honest folk, he will
+probably lose even that last single rag. On the <i>Evening
+Sun</i>, certainly, it was not the good, the beautiful, the
+clean, that constituted the most interesting news and got
+scare headlines and extra editions. I give, of course,
+merely the impression made upon my own mind and type,
+coloured as these were, some thirty years ago, by a characteristically
+ignorant and innocent upbringing....</p>
+
+<p>The important newspapers, in those days, were all
+“down town,” grouped about Park Row, and the shabby,
+tumble-down building of the <i>Sun</i> was not imposing.
+The World and Times towered above it; the <i>Morning
+Advertiser</i>, the <i>Evening Telegram</i>, even the <i>Recorder</i> were
+better housed; the <i>Journal</i> had not yet brought W. R.
+Hearst’s methods from San Francisco. For all its humble
+offices, the <i>Sun</i> was, perhaps, the greatest power in the
+city. It was openly Tammany; it had a grand, courageous
+editor, Charles A. Dana. “Charles A.” was an
+imposing figure, a man of immense ability, a “crank”
+perhaps in certain ways, but a respected chief of outstanding
+character and fearless policy.... My own
+chief, however, was W. C. McCloy, and the offices where
+he reigned as managing editor were housed on the top
+floor of the rickety building, with the machinery making
+such a din and roar and clatter that we had to shout to
+make ourselves heard at all. Metal sheets that clanged
+and pinged as we walked on them covered the floors. It
+was amid this pandemonium I had my first interview with
+him. An iron spiral staircase led from the quiet workrooms
+of the <i>Morning Sun</i>, on the first floor, to the dark,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
+low-ceilinged space, where the whirring printing presses
+were not even partitioned off from the tables of editorial
+departments or reporters. It was like a factory going at
+full speed. Hours were 8.30 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> to 6.30 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>, or later
+if an extra—a 6th or 7th—edition was called for. I
+arrived at 8.15.</p>
+
+<p>In a dark corner of this machinery shop I introduced
+myself with trepidation to McCloy, mentioning Mr.
+Laffan’s name, and saw the blank look come and go, as
+he stared at me with “Blackwood, Blackwood?...
+Oh, yes, I remember! You’re fifteen dollars a week. A
+Britisher from Canada.... Well, you’ll have to look
+lively here!” He seemed so intensely busy and preoccupied,
+his mind so charged with a sort of electric
+activity, that I wondered he had time to open and shut
+his mouth. A small, thin man, with the slightest of
+frail bodies, nervous, delicately shaped hands, gimlet
+eyes that pierced, a big head with protruding forehead, a
+high-pitched, twanging voice that penetrated easily above
+the roar of the machinery, and a general air of such lightning
+speed and such popping, spitting energy that I felt
+he might any moment flash into flame or burst with a
+cracking report into a thousand pieces—this was the man
+on whom my living depended for many months to come.
+The phrase “New York hustler,” darted across my mind;
+it stood in the flesh before me; he lived on wires. Buried
+among this mechanic perfection, however, I caught, odd
+to relate, an incongruous touch—of kindness, even of
+tenderness. There were gentle lines in that electric face.
+He had a smile I liked.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you out here for? Where have you come
+from? What have you been doing? What d’you
+know?” he asked with the rapidity of a machine-gun.
+The shorthand rate must have been 400 words per minute.</p>
+
+<p>I never talked so quickly in my life as in my brief
+reply. I watched the smile come and go. While he
+listened, he was shouting instructions to reporters then
+streaming in, to office boys, to printers, to sub-editors;
+but his eyes never left my face, and when I had finished
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
+my lightning sketch, the machine-gun crackled with its
+deadliest aim again: “Only <i>one</i> thing counts here; get
+the news and get it <i>quick</i>; method of no consequence.
+Get the news and get it <i>first</i>!” He darted off, for the
+first edition went to press at 10.30. As he went, however,
+he turned his head a moment. “Write a story,” he backfired
+at me. “Write your experiences—From Methodism
+to Running a Saloon,”—and he vanished amid the whirling
+machinery in the back of the great room.</p>
+
+<p>I have the pleasantest recollections of W. C. McCloy;
+he was just, fair, sympathetic, too, when time permitted;
+he showed me many little kindnesses; he was Presbyterian,
+his parents Scotch; he was also—sober. I proved
+a poor reporter, and my salary remained at fifteen dollars
+all the time I was with the paper, yet once he kept a place
+open for me for many weeks; he even took me back when
+the consideration was hardly deserved.</p>
+
+<p>That first day, however, I spent on tenterhooks, fully
+expecting to be “fired” at its end. I found a corner at
+the big reporters’ table, and, having seized some “copy”
+paper from the general pile, I sat down to write “From
+Methodism to Running a Saloon,” without the faintest
+idea of how to do it. A dozen reporters sat scribbling
+near me, but no one paid me the smallest attention.
+They came and went; at another table Cooper, the City
+Editor (anglice news-editor) issued the assignments; the
+editorial writers arrived and sat at their little desks
+apart; the roar and pandemonium were indescribable;
+the first edition was going to press, with McCloy in a
+dozen places at once, but chiefly watching the make-up
+over the shoulders of the type-setters in the back of the
+room.... I wrote on and on; I believed it was rather
+good; no one came to stop me, no one looked at my
+“copy” or told me what length was wanted; once or
+twice, McCloy, flashing by, caught my eye, but with a
+glance that suggested he didn’t know who I was, why I
+was there at all, or what I was writing.... The hours
+passed; the first edition was already out; the reporters
+were reading hurriedly their own work in print, delighted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
+if it was on the front page; the space-men were measuring
+the columns to see how much they had earned; and the
+make-up for the second edition, out at noon, was being
+hastened on behind the buzzing machinery in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>By this time I must have written two columns at
+least, and I began to wonder. Perhaps I was to appear
+in the principal final edition at six o’clock! On the front
+page! The article, evidently, was considered important!
+The notion that I was making a fool of myself, being
+made a fool of, rather, also occurred to me. I wrote on
+and on ... it was hunger finally that stopped me. I
+was famished. I turned to an albino reporter next me,
+a mere boy, whose peculiarity had earned him the nickname
+“Whitey.” Was I allowed to go out for lunch?
+“Just tell Cooper you’re going,” he replied. “Come out
+with me,” he added, “if you’ve finished your story. I’m
+going in a moment.” I finished my “story” then and
+there, putting the circle with three dots in it which, he
+explained, meant <i>finis</i> to the printers. “Just hand it
+in to Cooper, and we’ll get right out,” he said. I obeyed,
+Cooper taking my pile of “copy” with a grin, and merely
+nodding his head when I mentioned lunch. He was a
+young man with thick curly black hair, big spectacles
+that magnified his good-natured eyes, only slightly less
+rapid and electric than McCloy, but yet so unsure of himself
+that the reporters soon found him out—and treated
+him accordingly. I saw my precious “copy” shoved
+to one side of his desk, but I never saw it again, either in
+print or elsewhere. No mention was ever made of it.
+It was, doubtless, two columns of the dullest rubbish
+ever scribbled in that office.</p>
+
+<p>“I guess Mac only wanted to see what you could do,”
+explained the albino, as we swallowed “sinkers” (heavy
+dough scones) and gulped down coffee at Childs’ Cheap
+Lunch Counter round the corner. Whitey had invited
+me to lunch; he “put me wise” about a thousand
+things; showed me how to make a bit on my weekly
+expense-account, if I wanted to; how one could “sneak
+off” about five o’clock, if one knew the way; and, most
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
+useful of all, warned me as to accuracy in my facts and
+the right way to present them. A “story” whether it
+was the weather story or a murder story, should give in
+a brief first paragraph the essential facts—this satisfied
+the busy man who had no time to read more; the second
+paragraph should amplify these facts—for those who
+wanted to know more; afterwards—for those interested
+personally in the story—should come “any stuff you can
+pick up.” An item that seemed exclusive—a “scoop”
+or “beat” he called it—should come in the very beginning,
+so as to justify the headlines.</p>
+
+<p>“Whitey” was always a good friend to me. “Make
+friends with the reporters on other papers,” he advised,
+“then you won’t get badly left on the story you’re all
+‘covering.’ Most of ’em give up all right.” He gave
+me names of sundry who never “gave up,” skunks he
+called them.</p>
+
+<p>As we hurried back to the office half an hour later, he
+dived into a drug store on the ground floor. The way
+most of the reporters frequented this drug store puzzled
+me for a time, till I learned that whisky was to be had
+there in a little back room. The chemist had no license,
+but by paying a monthly sum to the ward man of the
+district—part of immense revenues paid to Tammany by
+every form of law-breaking, from gambling-halls and disorderly
+houses to far graver things—he was allowed to
+dispense liquor. It was a pretty system, marvellously
+organized down to the lowest detail; cash to the ward
+man opened most doors; a policeman paid $300 before
+he even got a nomination on the force; vice paid gigantic
+tribute; but the people liked a Tammany Government
+because “they knew where they were” with it, though
+the <i>Sun</i>, my paper, was the only journal that boldly
+supported it—for which Charles A. Dana was forever being
+attacked. I acquired much inside experience of the secret
+workings of Tammany Hall before my newspaper days
+came to an end.... It appalled me.</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, I had two assignments, and failed
+badly in both. The first was to find a company promoter
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
+who had got into trouble, and to ask him “all about it.”
+I could not find him; his house, his office, his club knew
+him not. After two hours’ frantic search, I returned
+crestfallen, expecting to be dismissed there and then.
+Cooper, however, cut short my lengthy explanations with
+a shrug of the shoulders, and sent me up to the Fort Lee
+woods, across the Hudson River, to find out “all about”
+a suicide whose body had just been discovered under the
+trees. “Get his name right, why he did it, and what the
+relatives have to say,” were his parting words. The Fort
+Lee woods were miles away, I saw the body—an old man
+with a bullet hole in his temple, I found his son at the
+police station, and asked him what his tears and grief
+made permissible, the answer being that “he had no
+troubles and we can’t think what made him do it.” Then
+I telephoned these few facts to the office. On getting back
+myself at half-past six when the last edition was already
+on the streets, Cooper showed me the final edition of the
+<i>Evening World</i>. It had a column on the front page with
+big head-lines. The suicide was a defaulter, and the reporter
+gave a complete story of his gambling life. Cooper
+offered no comment. The <i>Evening World</i> had got “a
+beat”; and I had failed badly. I sat down at the reporters’
+table and wondered what would happen, and then
+saw, lying before me, our own last edition with exactly
+the same story, similar big headlines, and all the important
+facts complete. An interview with the company promoter
+was also in print. I was at a loss to understand what had
+happened until Whitey, on the way into the drug-store
+a little later, explained things: the United Press, a news
+agency that “covered” everything, had sent the story.
+The “flimsy” men, so called because they wrote on thin
+paper that made six copies at once, were very valuable.
+“Make friends with them,” said Whitey, “and no one
+will ever get a beat on you. They’re paid a salary and
+don’t care. It’s only the space-men, as a rule, who won’t
+give up.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap xkern'><span class='allcaps'>As</span> a new “bum reporter,” however, I had a hectic
+life, but rapidly made friends with the other
+men, and a mutual loathing of the work brought
+us easily together. Friday was pay-day; by Wednesday
+everybody was trying to borrow money—one dollar,
+usually—from everybody else, the debts being always faithfully
+repaid when the little envelopes were collected at the
+cashier’s office downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>My first week’s reporting passed in a whirl of feverish
+excitement. Assignments of every possible kind were
+hurled at me. I raced and flew about. The “Britisher,”
+the “English accent,” were a source of amusement to the
+staff, but there was no ill-nature. Cooper seemed to like
+me; he chuckled; he even gave me hints. “Well, Mr.
+Britisher, did you get it this time?” Few of my first
+efforts were used, the flimsy report being printed instead,
+but a divorce case in special sessions, and interviews
+with the principals in it, brought me into notice, the story
+being put in the front page of the first edition. When I
+came down on the following Monday, McCloy whipped up
+to me like a steel spring released. “You can cover the
+Tombs this morning,” he rattled. “Anything big must
+be in by ten at the latest. Use judgment and pick out
+the best stories. Don’t let anyone get a beat on you.”
+He flashed away, and I tore down to the Tombs Police
+Court.</p>
+
+<p>The Tombs—I can smell to-day its peculiar mixture
+of extremely dirty humanity, cheap scent, very old clothes,
+Chinese opium, stale liquor, iodoform, and a tinge of nameless
+disinfectant. In winter the hot-air which was the means
+of heating the court whose windows were never opened,
+and in summer the stifling, humid atmosphere, to say
+nothing of the added flavour of acid perspiration, were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
+equally abominable. The building, with its copy of
+Egyptian architecture, vies in gloom with the prison in
+Venice, though the former takes unpleasant precedence—a
+veritable Hall of Eblis, with thick walls, impressive
+portals, a general air of hopeless and portentous doom
+about even its exterior. There was a grimness in its dark
+passages that made the heart sink, truly an awe-ful
+building. The interior was spick and span and clean as a
+hospital ward, but the horror of that repellent outside
+leaked through somehow. Both inside and outside,
+the Tombs Prison became as familiar to me as my room
+in East 19th Street; many a prisoner I interviewed in his
+cell, many a wretch I talked with through the bars of his
+last earthly cage in Murderers’ Row; I never entered the
+forbidding place without a shudder, nor stepped into the
+open air again without relief.</p>
+
+<p>The routine of the police court, too, became mechanical
+as the months went by. The various reporters acted in
+concert; we agreed which stories we would use, and in this
+way no paper got a “beat” on the others. The man on
+duty stood beside the Tammany magistrate, making his
+notes as each case came up. It was a depressing, often a
+painful, business.</p>
+
+<p>The cases rattled by very quickly—arson, burglary,
+forgery, gambling, opium dens, street women, all came up,
+but it was from assaults that we usually culled our morning
+assortment for the first edition. Negroes used a razor,
+Italians a stiletto, white men a knife, a pistol, a club or a
+sandbag. Women used hatpins mostly.</p>
+
+<p>It was, of course, some particular feature, either
+picturesque or horrible, that lent value to a case. Gradually
+my “nose for news” was sharpened. It was a friendly
+little German Jew, named Freytag, who taught me how to
+make the commonest police story readable. I had just
+“given up” the facts about a Syrian girl who had been
+stabbed by a jealous lover, and the reporters all round me
+were jotting down the details. Freytag, who worked for
+Hermann Ridder’s <i>Staatszeitung</i>, looked over my shoulder.
+“That’s no good,” he said. “Don’t begin ‘Miriam so-and-so,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
+living at such a place, was stabbed at two o’clock
+this morning by Whatshisname....’ That’s not interesting.
+Begin like this: ‘A mysterious crime with an
+exotic touch about it was committed in the early hours
+this morning when all worthy New Yorkers were enjoying
+their beauty sleep.... Far away, where the snows of
+the Taurus Mountains gleam to heaven, the victim, a
+lovely Syrian maid, once had her home....’” I followed
+his advice, though my version was severely blue-pencilled,
+but his point—selecting a picturesque angle of
+attack—was sound and useful.</p>
+
+<p>The police court work was over by half-past ten, and
+I was then generally sent on to report the trials in Special
+or General Sessions. These, naturally, were of every sort
+and kind. Divorce, alienation of affection and poison
+trials were usually the best news. My hair often stood on
+end, and some of the people were very unpleasant to interview.
+The final talk before a man went to the Chair
+was worst of all. If the case was an important one, I had
+to get an interview in the Tombs Prison cell before the day’s
+trial—there was no <i>sub judice</i> prohibition in New York.
+Inevitably, I formed my own opinion as to a man’s innocence
+or guilt; the faces, gazing at me through bars, would
+often haunt me for days. Carlyle Harris, calm, indifferent,
+cold as ice, I still see, as he peered past the iron in Murderers’
+Row, protesting his innocence with his steely blue
+eyes fixed on mine; he was a young medical student
+accused of poisoning his wife with morphia; he was electrocuted
+... and Lizzie Borden ... though this was in
+Providence, Rhode Island—who took all her clothes off,
+lest the stains of blood betray her, before killing her father
+and mother in their sleep....</p>
+
+<p>Some of the cases made a lasting and horrible impression;
+some even terrified. The behaviour of individuals,
+especially of different races, when sentence was given
+also left vivid memories; negroes, appealing hysterically
+to God and using the most extraordinary, invented words,
+the longer the better; the stolid, unemotional Chinamen;
+the voluble Italian; the white man, as a rule, quiet,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
+controlled, insisting merely in a brief sentence that he
+was innocent. In a story, years later (<i>Max Hensig,
+Bacteriologist and Murderer</i>), the facts were taken direct
+from life. It needed more than fifteen years to dim
+their memory. I remained the Tombs reporter for
+the best part of a loathed, distressing, horror-laden
+year.</p>
+
+<p>There were pleasanter intervals, of course. The French
+paper, <i>Le Courier des Etats Unis</i>, published a short story
+every Monday, and one day I translated an exceptionally
+clever one, and submitted it to McCloy. It was printed;
+subsequently, I was allowed an afternoon off weekly,
+provided I translated a story each time, and though no
+money was paid for these, I secured a good many free
+hours to myself. These hours I spent in the free library
+in Lafayette Place, devouring the Russians, as well as
+every kind of book I could find on psychology; or else in
+going out to Bronx Park, a long tram journey, where I
+found trees and lovely glades and water. Bronx Park,
+not yet the home of the New York “Zoo,” was a paradise
+to me, the nearest approach to the woods that I could
+find. Every Sunday, wet or fine, I went there. In a
+<i>cache</i> I hid a teapot, and would make a tiny fire and drink
+milkless tea. I could hear the wind and see the stars
+and taste the smell of earth and leaves, the clean, sweet
+things....</p>
+
+<p>One morning in the second week of my apprenticeship,
+I interviewed a lion.</p>
+
+<p>“Afraid of wild animals, Mr. Britisher?” inquired
+Cooper, looking at me quizzically. I stared, wondering
+what he meant. It was my duty to have read the morning
+paper thoroughly, but there had been no mention of any
+wild animal. I replied that I thought I didn’t mind wild
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>“Take your gun,” said Cooper, “and get up to East
+20th Street, between Third and Fourth Avenues. Bostock’s
+Circus came to town last night late. Their lion’s escaped.
+They’ve chased it into a stable. Killed a valuable horse.
+Neighbourhood’s paralysed with terror. It’s a man-eater.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
+Send down bulletins about it. Now, better get
+a move on!”</p>
+
+<p>On leaving the elevated train at East 18th Street,
+the streets were black with people, they even pressed
+up the front steps of the houses. The word “lion” was
+in everybody’s mouth. Something about Cooper’s voice
+and eyes had made me suspect a “fake.” As I forced my
+way through towards 20th Street, there came a roar that
+set the air trembling even above the din of voices. It
+was certainly no fake.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching 20th Street, the cordon of police, with
+pistols ready, keeping the crowd in order, showed plainly
+where the stable was. Gradually I bored a way through.
+The stable stood back from the road, a courtyard in front
+of it. A ladder, crowded already with reporters climbing
+up, led to a hayloft just above. I met the <i>Evening Telegram</i>
+man, whom I knew, half-way up this ladder. “Got
+a messenger boy? No! Then you can share mine,” he
+offered good-naturedly. The only occupants of the yard
+were a dozen of these messenger boys, waiting to take
+the “copy” to the various newspaper offices. It was
+8.30 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span></p>
+
+<p>I noticed to my surprise that the <i>Evening Telegram</i>
+man was a star reporter; three rungs above him, to my
+still greater surprise, climbed Richard Harding Davis.
+My vanity was stirred. This was a big story, yet Cooper
+had chosen me! As I squeezed up the ladder, my hands
+stuffed with paper, the lion below gave forth an awe-inspiring
+roar; it was a dreadful sound. The great doors of wood
+seemed matchwood easily burst through. The crowd
+swayed back a moment, then, with a cheer, swayed
+forward again.</p>
+
+<p>In the loft I found some twenty reporters; each time
+the brute gave its terrible roar they scuttled into corners,
+behind the hay, even up into the rafters of the darkened
+loft. Pistol shots accompanied every roar, and the added
+terror lest a bullet from below might pierce the boards
+on which we stood, made us all jump about like dervishes.
+One man wrote his story, perched in the dark on the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
+highest rafter, from which he never once moved. I
+scribbled away, and threw down my “stuff” to the boy
+below.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the circus officials were doing their best to
+force the great beast into a cage. This cage stood ready
+against the outside doors in the yard, and at the right
+moment these doors would be swiftly opened. On being
+driven into the stable, the animal had found, and quickly
+killed, a trotting horse, valued at $2,000, standing in its
+stall. This detail I at first disbelieved, but when my turn
+came to kneel and peer through the trap-door for feeding
+the hay down into the dark stable below, I found it was
+all true. In the centre of the floor the great lion was plainly
+visible, not six feet below my own face, lying with two paws
+stretched upon the carcass of a torn, dead horse. The
+smell of flesh and blood rose to my nostrils. In a dim
+corner perched on a refrigerator, sat one of the trainers,
+a pistol in his hand. In another corner, but invisible
+from my peephole, crouched another circus man, also with
+his pistol, and each time the lion made an ugly move,
+both men fired off their weapons.... I wrote more
+“bulletins,” and dropped them down to a messenger boy
+in the yard. He hurried off, then returned to fetch more
+“copy”; I sent at least a column for the first edition.
+I felt a very proud reporter.</p>
+
+<p>After two hours of thrills and scares, the news spread
+that the Strong Man of the circus was on his way down,
+a fearless Samson of a fellow who lifted great weights.
+The news proved true. A prolonged cheer greeted him.
+He acknowledged it with a sweeping bow. He wore
+diamonds and a top hat. Swaggering up among the
+reporters, he announced in a loud voice: “Boys! I’m
+going to fix that lion, and I’m going to fix it right
+away!”</p>
+
+<p>The boastful bluff received no believing cheer in response,
+but to my amazement, the fellow proved as good as
+his talk. He said no further word, he just lifted the trap-door
+in the floor and began to squeeze himself through—straight
+down onto the very spot where the lion lay,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
+crouching below on the dead horse. He dropped. We
+heard the thud. We also heard the appalling roar that
+followed, the quick pistol shots, the shouts, the excited
+cries—then silence. The reporter at the trap-door called
+out to us what was happening.... That Strong Man
+was a hero.</p>
+
+<p>Ten or fifteen minutes later, the big stable-doors
+swung open, and the cage, with the lion safely inside it,
+emerged on a high-wheeled truck into full view of the
+cheering crowd. On the top of the cage, sweeping his
+shiny top hat about, bowing, waving his free hand with
+modest dignity to the admiring thousands, the Strong
+Man sat enthroned, cross-legged, proud and smiling.
+The procession through the streets of the city was a triumphal
+progress that lasted most of the day. That
+night Bostock’s Circus opened to the public.</p>
+
+<p>I hurried back to the office, and had the joy of
+seeing the first edition hawked and cried about the
+streets, even before I got there. Big head-lines about a
+“Man-eating Lion,” a “Two Thousand Dollar Trotting
+Horse,” “Heroic Rescuer,” and the rest, met my eye
+everywhere. Cooper, however, made no remark or comment,
+sending me on at once to report a murder trial
+at special sessions, and in half an hour the gruesome
+thrills of a horrible poison case made the lion and the
+strong man fade away.</p>
+
+<p>“Read your morning paper?” Cooper asked, when I
+appeared next morning. I nodded. The lion story, I
+had noticed, filled only half a stick of print. “Read
+the advertisements?” he asked next. I saw a twinkle in
+his eye, and quickly scanned the circus advertisements
+about the man-eating lion that had killed a trotting horse,
+and a strong man whose courage had done this and that,
+saving numerous lives ... but I was still puzzled by
+Cooper’s twinkling eye. He offered no word of explanation;
+I learned the truth from someone else later. The
+toothless, aged lion, gorged with food and doped as well,
+had been pushed into the stable overnight, the carcass
+of a horse, valued at $10, had been dragged in after it.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
+The newspapers had been notified, and the long advertisements,
+of course, were paid for in the ordinary way, but
+the free advertisement obtained was of a kind that mere
+dollars could not buy.</p>
+
+<p>Occasional interludes of this sort certainly brightened
+the sordid daily routine, but they were rare. A big fire
+was a thrilling experience, a metal badge pinned to the
+coat allowing the reporter to go as near as he liked and
+to run what risks he pleased. Such work became, with
+time, mechanical in a sense, it occurred so often, arson,
+too, being very frequent, especially among the Jews of
+the East side. Even in those days the story of the two
+Jews was a “chestnut”: “I’m thorry your blace of
+business got burnt down last Tuesday,” says Ikey. To
+which Moses replies: “Hush! It’s next Tuesday!”</p>
+
+<p>The rôle of the reporter in New York, of course, was an
+accepted one; publicity and advertisement were admittedly
+desirable; the reporter as a rule was welcomed; privacy
+was very rare; a reporter could, and was expected to,
+intrude into personal family affairs where, in England,
+he would be flung into the street.... Other interviews
+were of a pleasanter kind; I remember Henry Irving
+and Ellen Terry in their special train, Sarah Bernhardt,
+at the Hoffman House hotel, and many a distinguished
+foreigner I was sent to interview because I could speak
+their languages. The trip to meet the Atlantic steamer
+at Quarantine I regarded as a day off: it could be made
+to last for hours. I saw the coast, moreover, and smelt
+the sea....</p>
+
+<p>Most of my work on the <i>Evening Sun</i>, at any rate,
+took me among the criminal and outcast sections of the
+underworld. In those days the police, as a whole, were
+corrupt, brutal, heartless; I saw innocent men against
+whom they had a grudge, or whom they wanted out of
+the way for some reason, “railroaded to gaol” on cooked-up
+evidence; sickening and dreadful scenes I witnessed....
+The valueless character of human evidence I learned
+daily in the trials I reported, so that even a man who was
+trying to tell the truth seemed unable to achieve it.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
+Tammany had its slimy tentacles everywhere and graft
+was the essence of success in every branch of public
+life. A police captain had his town and country house,
+perhaps his yacht as well.... The story of Tammany
+has been told again and again. It is too well known for
+repetition. I watched its vile methods from the inside
+with a vengeance; its loathsome soul I saw face to face.
+The city, too, I soon knew inside out, especially its darker,
+unclean quarters. Chinatown, Little Africa, where, after
+dark, it was best to walk in the middle of the street,
+“Italy,” the tenement life of the overcrowded, reeking
+East side.... I made friends with strange people,
+feeling myself even in touch with them, something of an
+outcast like themselves. My former life became more and
+more remote, it seemed unreal; the world I now lived in
+seemed the only world; these evil, depraved, tempted,
+unhappy devils were not only the majority, but the real,
+ordinary humanity that stocked the world. More and
+more the under-dog appealed to me. The rich, the luxurious,
+the easily-placed, the untempted and inexperienced,
+these I was beginning to find it in me to look down on,
+even to despise. <i>Mutatis mutandis</i>, I thought to myself,
+daily, hourly, where would <i>they</i> be?... Where would <i>I</i>
+myself be...?</p>
+
+<p>Bronx Park, Shelley, the violin, the free library,
+organ recitals in churches, my Eastern books, and meetings
+of the Theosophical Society, provided meanwhile the few
+beauty hours to which I turned by way of relief and relaxation.
+One and all fed my inner dreams, gave me intense
+happiness, offered a way of escape from a daily atmosphere
+I loathed like poison. Sometimes, sitting in court,
+reporting a trial of absorbing interest, my eye would catch
+through the dirty window a patch of blue between the
+clouds ... and instantly would sweep up the power of the
+woods, the strange joy of clean solitary places in the wilderness,
+the glamour of a secret little lake where loons
+were calling and waves splashing on deserted, lonely shores.
+I heard the pines, saw the silvery moonlight, felt the keen
+wind of open and untainted spaces, I smelt the very earth
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
+and the perfume of the forests.... A serious gap would
+follow in my report, so that I would have to borrow from
+the flimsy man, or from another reporter, what had happened
+in the interval. In this connexion there comes back
+to me a picture of a <i>World</i> man whose work constituted him
+a star reporter, but who could write nothing unless he was
+really drunk. With glazed eyes he would catch the witness
+and listen to question and answer, while with a pencil he
+could scarcely direct, he scribbled in immense writing
+three or four sloping lines to each page of “copy” paper.
+It always astonished me that such work could be any
+good, but once I made a shorthand note of several of his
+pages, and found them printed verbatim in the next
+edition, without a single blue-pencil alteration. When
+this man sat next me, my intervals of absent-mindedness
+did not matter. His big writing enabled me to crib easily
+all I had missed.</p>
+
+<p>Other compensating influences, too, I found with my
+“room-mates,” especially with Boyde, to whom I had
+become devotedly attached. I was uncommonly lucky
+to have such friends, I thought. Talking with Boyde,
+playing the fiddle to his singing, sharing my troubles with
+his subtle, sympathetic, well-read mind, was an unfailing
+pleasure, that made me look forward intensely to our
+evenings together, and helped me to get through many
+a day of repulsive and distasteful work. Compared with
+the charm and variety of Boyde, Kay seemed stolid, even
+unresponsive sometimes.</p>
+
+<p>To live consciously is to register impressions; some
+receive many more of these per second than others, and
+thus enjoy an intenser and more varied life. The two-per-second
+mind finds the two-per-minute one slow, dull
+and stupid. Kay, anyhow, didn’t “mind” things much,
+circumstances never troubled him, whereas Boyde and I
+minded them acutely. I envied Kay’s power of sleeping
+calmly in that bed, careless of night-attacks until they
+actually came. The horror of New York, similarly, that
+was creeping into my blood had hardly touched him,
+though it certainly had infected Boyde. In my own make-up
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
+lay something ultra-sensitive that took impressions
+far too easily. Not only did it vibrate with unnecessary
+eagerness to every change in sky and sea, but to every shade
+of attitude and manner in my fellows as well. I seemed
+covered with sore and tender places into which New York
+rubbed salt and acid every hour of the day. It wounded,
+not alone because I felt unhappy, but of itself. It hit me
+where it pleased. The awful city, with its torrential,
+headlong life, held for me something of the monstrous.
+Everything about it was exaggerated. Its racing speed,
+its roofs amid the clouds with the canyon gulfs below, its
+gaudy avenues dripping gold that ran almost arm in arm
+with streets little better than sewers of human decay and
+misery, its frantic noise, both of voices and mechanism,
+its lavishly organized charity and boastful splendour,
+and its deep corruption in the grip of a heartless and
+degraded Tammany—it was all this that painted the horror
+into my imagination as of something monstrous, non-human,
+almost unearthly. It became, for me, a scab on the
+skin of the planet, brilliant with the hues of fever, moving
+all over with its teeming microbes. I felt it, indeed, but
+half civilized.</p>
+
+<p>This note of how I felt in these—my early years—rose
+up again the other day, as I read what O. Henry wrote
+to his outlaw friend from the Ohio Penitentiary about it.
+Al Jennings had just been pardoned. O. Henry had finished
+his terms some years before. They met again in a
+West 26th Street hotel, not far from my own room in Mrs.
+Bernstein’s house. They talked of their terrible prison
+days.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s good you’ve been there,” said O. Henry. “It’s
+the proper vestibule to this city of Damned Souls. The
+crooks there are straight compared with the business thieves
+here. If you’ve got $2 on you, invest it now or they’ll
+take it away from you before morning.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>In</span> the East 19th Street room, meanwhile, things were
+going from bad to worse. Kay’s touring company
+delayed its starting, and consequently his salary.
+Boyde’s huntsman’s job, equally, was postponed for
+various reasons, while his income from posing, from
+churchly activities, from the theatre as well, was reduced
+to a very few dollars a week. These he shared faithfully,
+but my $15 every Friday (usually $13 net when office
+loans had been repaid) were our only certain source of
+revenue.</p>
+
+<p>After paying something on the room, the laundry in
+full, and buying oatmeal, dried apples, and condensed
+milk for the week to come, there remained barely enough
+for one man’s meals, much less for the food of three,
+during the ensuing seven days. Boyde’s contribution
+brought the budget to, perhaps, twenty dollars all told.
+Something, too, had to be allowed daily to car-fares
+for Kay, while my own expenses in getting about after
+assignments, only recoverable at the end of the week,
+were considerable. The weather was turning colder at
+the same time, for it was now past mid-October. Our
+overcoats had to be redeemed. Boyde’s wisdom in
+obtaining only the strictly necessary became evident.
+We redeemed the overcoats out of my second week’s pay.
+Boyde himself had no overcoat at all. As we were all
+about the same height and build, clothes were interchangeable.
+There was a discussion every morning, when I left
+the other two, in bed and on the sofa respectively, as to
+who should wear what.</p>
+
+<p>We had now pawned with Ikey various items: a
+Gladstone bag, two top hats, some underwear, and two
+pairs of boots. These were on separate tickets, by Boyde’s
+advice. Tennis trousers, and several summer shirts were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
+together on another ticket. All that winter Kay and I
+wore no underwear but a vest. The bag and top hats
+were taken out and put in again regularly every week
+for many months. There was only one article that,
+selfishly, I could never pawn or sell—the fiddle.</p>
+
+<p>Dried apples and hot water—with expensive oatmeal
+we had to be very sparing—constituted our dinner for
+four nights out of the week; coffee and bread and butter
+for breakfast, coffee and “sinkers” for lunch completed
+my dietary. Occasionally Boyde or Kay, having been
+invited to a meal, brought home something in their
+pockets, but not often. We felt hunger every day, only
+the evening dried apples and hot water giving a sense of
+repletion that yet did not really allay the pangs of appetite,
+though it stopped the dull gnawing until sleep finally
+obliterated it. Kay and I, but never Boyde, oddly enough,
+had vivid and amusing dreams of food, and one invariable
+topic of conversation every night as we dined at
+Krisch’s, or gobbled apples and oatmeal, was the menu
+we would order when things improved.... But Krisch’s,
+after a time, we found too difficult and tempting, with the
+good smells, the sight of people eating at other tables, the
+lager beer, the perfume of cigars; and many a time,
+with the price of a dinner in our pockets, we preferred
+to eat in our room.</p>
+
+<p>Another topic of conversation was our plan, myself
+its enthusiastic creator, to take up land in Canada and
+lead the life of settlers in the backwoods, which by contrast
+to our present conditions seemed to promise a
+paradise. Occasionally Kay spouted bits of Shakespeare,
+or rehearsed a rôle in one of the plays his touring company
+was to give. But it was the talks with Boyde about
+Eastern ideas and philosophy that were my keenest
+pleasure, for his appreciation and sympathetic understanding
+were a delight I thought about with anticipatory
+eagerness even during the day. My attachment to him
+deepened into affection.</p>
+
+<p>The weeks went by; we scraped along somehow;
+Mrs. Bernstein was kept quiet—a relative term—by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
+cajoling, promises and bluff. We bullied her. When
+Kay’s lordly talk of free seats at theatres failed to materialize,
+and Boyde’s trick of leaving about telegrams
+received from Davis and others, especially one from
+August Belmont, the great banker, inviting him to lunch
+at a fashionable club—when these devices lost their
+“pull,” I resorted to the power of the Press. Her husband’s
+position, his orchestra, offered vulnerable points
+of attack; the vermin-infested room, for instance, might
+be unpleasantly described....</p>
+
+<p>For weeks we had paid nothing, everything worth
+fifty cents was pawned, Boyde’s contribution had grown
+smaller and smaller, and the only addition to my salary
+had been a few dollars Kay had earned by posing
+to Smedley, one of Harper’s illustrators. Things looked
+pretty dark, when luck turned suddenly; Kay received
+word from Gilmour, the organizer of his company, that
+he was to start touring on November 15th, and Boyde
+had a telegram from Davis—“Appointment confirmed,
+duties begin December 1st.” This did not increase our
+cash in hand, but it increased our hope and raised our
+spirits. Kay and Boyde would both soon repay their
+share of past expenses. We should all three be in jobs
+a few weeks later. Early in November Kay actually left
+on his tour of one night stands in New York State, and
+Boyde left the mattress on the floor for the bed. A week
+after Kay sent us half his first salary, $7.50, which we
+gave to Mrs. Bernstein forthwith. The letter containing
+it was opened by Boyde, and dealt with while I was out.</p>
+
+<p>It was a few days later, when I was alone one evening,
+that an Englishman who had played with us in the cricket
+match called to see me. I hardly remembered him, he
+had to introduce himself, the apologies to explain his
+sudden call were very voluble. He was well dressed and
+well fed, I noticed, a singer and concert accompanist; he
+annoyed me from the start by his hesitations, his endless
+humming and hawing. It was, he kept telling me, rather
+an intrusion; it was, he felt, of course, no concern of
+his; but “New York was a strange place, and—and—er—er—well,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
+after much reflection, I really felt it my
+duty—I decided to take the risk, that is, to—er——”</p>
+
+<p>“To what?” I asked bluntly at last. “For heaven’s
+sake, tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>I was beginning to feel uneasy. My threats to Mrs.
+Bernstein, perhaps, had gone too far. Besides, the effect
+of the apples was passing and I longed for bed.</p>
+
+<p>He took a gulp. “To warn you,” he said, with a
+grave and ominous expression.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long-winded business before I got him to
+the point, and even then the point was not really explicit.
+New York, he kept repeating, was a dangerous place for
+inexperience, there were strange and desperate characters
+in it. In the end, I think, my manners exasperated him
+as much as his vagueness exasperated me, for when he
+told me he came about “someone very close to you,”
+and I asked point-blank, “Is it someone sharing this room
+with me?” his final word was a most decided “Yes”—with
+nothing more. This “someone,” I gathered, at
+any rate, was fooling me, was up to all sorts of tricks,
+was even “dangerous.”</p>
+
+<p>I was infuriated, though I felt a certain sinking of the
+heart as well. He was attacking either Kay or Boyde,
+my only friends, both of whom I trusted to the last cent,
+for both of whom I had sincere affection. If he knew
+anything definite or really important, why couldn’t he
+say it and be done with it? I put this to him.</p>
+
+<p>“I prefer not to be more explicit,” he replied with an
+air. He was offended. His patronizing offer of advice
+and sympathy, his pride, were wounded. “I would
+rather not mention names. It’s true all the same,” he
+added. And my patience then gave way. I got up and
+opened the door. He went without a word, but just as
+I was about to slam the door after him, he turned.</p>
+
+<p>“Remember,” he said, half angrily, half gravely,
+“I’ve warned you. He’s a real crook. He’s already
+been in gaol.”</p>
+
+<p>I banged the door behind him. I felt angry but uncomfortable,
+and as the anger subsided my uneasiness
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
+increased. The horrible feeling that there was truth in
+the warning harassed me. When Boyde came in an
+hour or so later, I pretended to be asleep. I told him
+nothing of my visitor, but through half-closed eyes I
+watched him as he moved about the room very quietly,
+lest he disturb my sleep. His delightful, kind expression,
+his frank blue eyes, the refinement and gentleness of
+his gestures, I noted them all for the hundredth time.
+His acts, too, I remembered; how he always shared his
+earnings, gave his help unstintingly, advice, a thousand
+hints, the value of his own sad and bitter experience.
+My heart ached a little. No, I reflected, it was certainly
+not Boyde who was the crook. My thoughts turned to
+Kay, who had just sent us half his salary. It was equally
+incredible. I wished I had treated my visitor differently.
+I wished I had kicked him out, instead of telling him to
+go. Sneak! A sneak with some evil motive into the
+bargain!</p>
+
+<p>Things began to move now with a strange rapidity. It
+was as though someone who had been winding up machinery
+suddenly released the spring. Item by item,
+preparations had been completed—then, let her go!
+She went....</p>
+
+<p>The weeks that followed seemed as many months. I
+was alone with Boyde in a filthy, verminous room, food
+and money scarce, rent owing, Kay away, clothes negligible,
+my single asset being a job. I lost that job owing to illness
+that kept me for weeks in bed—in that bed.... And as
+“she went” I had the curious feeling that someone
+watched her going, someone other than myself. It was
+an odd obsession. Someone looked on and smiled. Certain
+practices, gathered from my “Eastern” reading,
+were no doubt responsible for this uncanny feeling, for
+with it ran also a parallel idea: that only a portion of
+my being suffered while another portion, untouched, serene
+and confident, accepting all that came with a kind of
+indifferent resignation, stood entirely apart, playing,
+equally, the rôle of a spectator. This detached spectator
+watched “her going” with close attention, even
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
+with something of satisfaction. “Take it all,” was its
+attitude; “avoid nothing; it is your due; for it is
+merely reaping what you sowed long ago. Face it to the
+very dregs. Only in this way shall you pay a just debt
+and exhaust it.” So vital was this attitude in all that
+followed that it must be honestly mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>A stabbing in the side had been bothering me for some
+days, making walking difficult and painful. A blow
+received while diving from our island—I hit a rock—began
+to ache and throb. I came home in the evenings,
+weary to the bone. There were headaches, and a touch
+of fever. The pain increased. There was a swelling.
+I went to bed. Boyde took down a letter to McCloy,
+asking for a day off, which was granted. The next day
+I turned up at 8.30, but had to come back to bed after
+the midday coffee and sinkers. “See a doctor,” snapped
+McCloy, in his best maxim-firing manner, “and come
+back when you’re fixed up again.”</p>
+
+<p>But there wasn’t enough money for a doctor’s fee of
+from two to five dollars. I lay up for three days, hoping
+for improvement which did not come. The pain and
+fever grew. Mrs. Bernstein, upset and even disagreeable,
+sent me bread and soup in the evening as well as the
+morning coffee. Boyde brought a few extras late at night.
+He was chasing a new post just then—organist to a church
+in Patterson, N.J.—and rarely got home before eleven,
+sometimes later. He brought long rolls of Vienna bread,
+a few white Spanish grapes, a tin of condensed milk. He
+slept peaceably beside me. His manner, once or twice,
+seemed different. I smelt liquor. “Someone stood me
+a drink,” he explained, “and by God, I needed it. I’m
+fagged out.” He was kind and sympathetic, doing all
+he could, all that his position allowed. He was very
+much in love at the moment with the daughter of the
+pastor of the Second Avenue Baptist Church, where
+he sang in the choir, and he confided his hopes and
+troubles about the affair to me.... It all gave me
+a queer feeling of unreality somewhere. In my feverish
+state I knew an occasional unaccustomed shiver. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
+long day in bed, alone with my thoughts, waiting for
+Boyde’s return, was wearisome to endlessness, by no
+means free from new, unpleasant reflections, yet when
+at last the door opened softly, and he came back, his
+arms full of the little extras mentioned, there was disappointment
+in me somewhere. It was not quite as I
+expected. Accompanying the disappointment were these
+new, faint twinges of uneasiness as well. I kept the gas
+burning all night. I watched Boyde’s face, as he slept
+calmly beside me in that narrow bed, his expression of
+innocence and kindliness increased my feelings of gratitude,
+even of tenderness, towards him. There were deep lines,
+however, that sleep did not smooth out. “Poor devil,
+he’s been through the mill!” This habit of watching
+him grew.</p>
+
+<p>There was delay and trouble about the Rockaway
+Hunt post; studio sittings were scarce; the Baptist
+church organist was never unable to officiate; Morton
+Selton never missed a performance; and Boyde, as a
+result, though he still contributed what he could, earned
+next to nothing. If I was puzzled by his late hours, his
+explanations invariably cleared away my wonder. He
+always had a plausible excuse, one, too, that woke my
+sympathy. It was just at this time, moreover, that Kay
+wrote. The Canadian tour was such a failure that Gilmour
+was taking his troupe to the States, where they anticipated
+better houses. No salaries had been paid. They were
+now off to Pittsburg. Kay hoped to send some money
+before long.</p>
+
+<p>I spent the weary hours reading.... On the third
+day, my symptoms worse, the door opened suddenly
+without a knock, and I saw an old man with a white
+moustache and spectacles peering round the edge at me.
+I laid down my “Gita” and stared back at him.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you Mr. Blackwood?” he asked, with a marked
+German accent.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.” I had not the faintest idea who he was.</p>
+
+<p>He closed the door, took off his slouch hat, crossed
+the room, laid his small black bag on the sofa, then came
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
+and stood beside my bed. He was extremely deliberate.
+I watched him anxiously. He said no word for some
+time, while we stared at one another.</p>
+
+<p>He was of medium height, about sixty-five years old,
+with white hair, dark eyes behind magnifying spectacles,
+the strong face deeply lined, voice and manner stern to
+the point of being forbidding—but when I saw it rarely—a
+most winning smile. Except for the spectacles, he
+was like a small edition of Bismarck.</p>
+
+<p>“I am a doctor,” he said, after a prolonged silent
+inspection, “and I live down the street. Your friend, an
+Englishman, asked me to call. Are <i>you</i> English?” I
+told him I was a reporter on the <i>Evening Sun</i>, adding that
+I had no money at the moment. The suspicion his manner
+had not attempted to hide at once showed itself plainly.
+His manner and voice were brusque to offensiveness, as
+he said flatly: “I expect to be paid. I have a wife and
+child.” He stood there, staring at me, hard and cold.
+I repeated that I had nothing to pay him with, and I
+lay back in bed, wishing he would go, for I felt uncomfortable
+and ashamed, annoyed as well by his unsympathetic
+attitude. “Humph!” he grunted, still staring
+without moving. There was an awkward silence I thought
+would never end. “Humph!” he grunted again presently.
+“I egsamine you anyhow. How old are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-two,” I said, “and a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” he repeated, as he examined me rather
+roughly. “You’re very thin. Too thin!”</p>
+
+<p>He hurt me, and I did not answer.</p>
+
+<p>“Not eating enough,” he added, and then gave his
+verdict. It was an abscess, I must keep my bed for a
+month or six weeks, an operation might be necessary....</p>
+
+<p>I asked how much I owed him. “Two dollars,” he
+said. He gave me his address, and I replied that I would
+bring the money to him as soon as I could, but that he
+need not call again. He stared severely at me with
+those magnified eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Haven’t you got two dollars even?” he asked curtly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve told you the truth. And, anyhow, I didn’t
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
+send for you. I didn’t ask my friend to fetch you
+either.”</p>
+
+<p>I could think of nothing else to say. His verdict had
+flattened me out. I was angry, besides, with Boyde, for
+not consulting me first, though I knew he had done the
+right thing. Another period of awkward silence followed,
+during which the doctor never moved, but stood gazing
+down at me. Suddenly his eye rested on the book I had
+been reading. He put out a hand and picked it up. He
+glanced through the pages of the “Gita,” then began to
+read more carefully. A few minutes passed. He became
+absorbed.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>You</i> read this?” he asked presently. “<i>Ach was!</i>”
+There was a look of keen astonishment in his eyes; his
+gaze searched me as though I were some strange animal.
+I told him enough by way of reply to explain my interest.
+He listened, without a word, then presently picked up his
+bag and hat and moved away. At the door he turned a
+moment. “I come again to-morrow,” he said gruffly,
+and he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>In this way Otto Huebner, with his poignant tragedy,
+came into my life.</p>
+
+<p>That evening, with the bread and soup, there was a
+plate of chicken; it was not repeated often, but he had
+spoken to Mrs. Bernstein, I discovered, for her attitude,
+too, became slightly pleasanter. I spent the long evening
+composing a letter to McCloy, which Boyde could take
+down next day.... I lay thinking of that curious
+gruff, rude old German, whose brusqueness, I felt sure,
+covered a big good heart. There was mystery about him,
+something unusual, something pathetic and very lovable.
+There was power in his quietness. Despite his bluntness,
+there was in his atmosphere a warm kindness, a sincerity
+that drew me to him. Also there was a darkness, a sense
+of tragedy somewhere that intrigued me because I could
+not explain it.</p>
+
+<p>It was after he was gone that I felt all this. While
+he was in the room I had been too troubled and upset by
+his manner to feel anything but annoyance. Now that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
+he was gone his face and eyes and voice haunted me.
+His bleak honesty, I think, showed me, without my
+recognizing it, another standard.</p>
+
+<p>Was it this, I wonder, that made me start a little
+when, about two in the morning, I heard a stealthy
+tread coming upstairs, and presently saw Boyde enter
+the room—carrying his boots in his hand? Was it this,
+again, that made me feign to be asleep, and a couple of
+hours later still, when I woke with a shiver, notice, for
+the first time, a new expression in the face that lay so
+calmly asleep beside me?</p>
+
+<p>Behind the kindly innocence, I thought, there lay a
+darker look. It was like a shadow on the features. It
+increased my feelings of uneasiness, though as yet no
+definite thought had formulated itself in my mind.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Next</span> day there was a racing west wind that sent the
+clouds scudding across a bright blue sky. The
+doctor was to come at 3 o’clock. Boyde, in very
+optimistic mood, had gone out early, taking my letter to
+McCloy. He had a studio sitting; he was going to
+Patterson too; he would return as early as he could.
+The shadow of the night before had vanished; I no
+longer believed in it; I ascribed it to fever and nerves.
+He sang cheerily while he dressed in my thick brown
+suit, the only one not in pawn (everything else, now that
+I was in bed, had gone to Ikey), and his voice sounded
+delightful. In the afternoon he came back with the
+news that McCloy had read my letter and said “That’s
+right. Tell him to be good to himself. He can come
+back.” Also he had agreed to use translations of the
+French stories at five dollars each. Boyde brought a
+<i>Courier</i> in with him. Two letters from home arrived too.
+Both my father and mother, though having no idea what
+was going on, never missed a single week. My own
+letters were difficult to write. I had come to New York
+against my father’s advice. I wrote home what I thought
+best.</p>
+
+<p>At 3 o’clock the doctor came. My heart sank as I
+heard his step. I was in considerable pain. What would
+he be like? Would an operation be necessary? Would
+he speak about money again? Mrs. Bernstein, oily and
+respectful, a little awed as well, announced him. Without
+a word, without a glance in my direction, he walked
+over in his slow, deliberate way, and laid hat and bag
+upon the sofa. Then he turned and looked steadily at
+himself in the mirror for a period I thought would never
+end. After that he turned and looked at me.</p>
+
+<p>He was an angel. His face was wreathed in smiles.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
+It beamed with good-nature, kindness, sympathy. He
+at once said something that was gentle, soothing, like
+music to me. My heart suddenly expanded in a most
+uncomfortable way. I believe a lump came up in my
+throat. This was all so contrary to what I had expected.
+He was not only an angel, he was a womanly angel. I
+must have been in a very weak state, for it was all I could
+do to keep my tears back. The same instant his eye fell
+on my fiddle case. He looked at it, then at me, then
+back again at the fiddle.</p>
+
+<p>“You play?” he asked, with a twinkle in his big
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“I ought to pawn it,” I said, “but——”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t,” he answered with decision. He added an
+odd sentence: “It’s an esgape from self.” I remember
+that I couldn’t say a word to this. His kindness melted
+me. The struggle to keep my eyes from betraying me
+seemed the most idiotic yet bitter I had ever known.
+I could have kissed the old man’s hand, when he examined
+me then at once, but with a gentleness, even a
+tenderness, that both astonished me, yet did not astonish
+me at all. I felt, too, already the support of his mind
+and character, of his whole personality, of a rugged power
+in him, of generosity, true goodness, above all, of sympathy.
+I think he had made up his mind to treat me for nothing.
+No reference, in any case, was made to money; nor did
+I dare even to mention it myself. An operation, moreover,
+of any big kind, was not necessary; he thought he
+could save me that; he performed a small one then and
+there, for he had brought all that was required for it.
+The pain seemed nothing, his kindness made me indifferent
+to it. “You are brave,” he said, with a smile that seemed
+to me really beautiful, when it was over. “That hurt,
+I know.” He promised to come daily to drain the wound
+and so forth; he bandaged me up; a month to six weeks
+would see me out of bed, he hoped; he packed up his bag,
+but, instead of leaving the room, he then sat down deliberately
+and began to talk.</p>
+
+<p>I was too surprised, too happy, to wonder why he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
+stayed. His talk was food and drink to me. He picked
+up my few books, and sat reading quietly to himself when
+he saw I was getting tired. De Quincey’s “Confessions”
+interested him especially, and he asked if he might borrow
+it. He took also “Sartor Resartus.” I slipped into
+German, to his keen delight, and told him about the
+Moravian Brotherhood School in the Black Forest. A
+sketch of the recent past I gave him too. He listened
+with great attention, asking occasional questions, but
+always with real tact, and never allowing me to tire
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>Though it was obvious, even to my stupidity, that he
+regarded me rather as a “specimen” of some sort, there
+was heart in all he said and did. Otto Huebner poured
+balm into all my little wounds that afternoon, but about
+himself he told me hardly anything. While he drew me
+out, with skill and sympathy, he hid himself behind that
+impenetrable mystery I had already noted the previous
+day. I say purposely that of himself he told me “hardly
+anything,” because one detail did escape him inadvertently.
+An hour later, as he was leaving, he turned his smile on
+me from the door. “I send you something,” he said
+shortly. “My vife makes goot broth. I cannot do
+much. I have not got it.”</p>
+
+<p>One other thing I noticed about his visit, when towards
+the end, Boyde came in unexpectedly, bringing a small
+bunch of the yellow Spanish grapes. In his best, most
+charming manner he spoke with the doctor. The doctor’s
+face, however, darkened instantly. His features, it
+seemed to me, froze. His manner was curt. He scarcely
+replied. And when he left a little later he did not include
+my friend in his good-bye. It puzzled me. It added to
+my uneasiness as well.</p>
+
+<p>Boyde, who apparently had noticed nothing, explained
+that he had to go out again to an appointment with
+Davis about the Rockaway Hunt post; he did not return
+that night at all.</p>
+
+<p>I listened to the city clocks striking midnight, one,
+two, three ... he did not come. I listened to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
+howling wind as well. Imagination tried feebly to construct
+a happier state, lovelier conditions, a world nearer
+to the heart’s desire. While waiting for midnight to
+strike, I said to myself, thinking of yesterday and to-morrow,
+with all the one had meant and the other might
+mean to me:</p>
+
+<p>“Yesterday is now twenty-four hours away, but in a
+minute it will be only one minute away.”</p>
+
+<p>I treated the hidden to-morrow similarly. I imagined,
+the world being old and creaky, ill-fitting too, that a
+crack existed between the two days. Anyone who was
+thin enough might slip through! I, certainly, was thin
+enough. I slipped through.... I entered a region out of
+time, a region where everything came true. And the first
+thing I saw was a wondrous streaming vision of the wind,
+the wind that howled outside my filthy windows....
+I saw the winds, changing colours as they rose and fell,
+attached to the trees, in tenuous ribands of gold and blue
+and scarlet as they swept to and fro.... I little
+dreamed that these fancies would appear fifteen years
+later in a book of my own, “The Education of Uncle
+Paul.” That crack, at any rate, became for me, like the
+fiddle, a means of escape from unkind reality into a state
+of inner bliss and wonder “where everything came
+true.”...</p>
+
+<p>It was after twelve o’clock next day when Boyde
+returned—with a black eye, my one thick suit stained
+and soiled, and a long involved story that utterly confused
+me. There had been a fight; he had protected a woman;
+a false charge had been laid against him owing to misunderstanding,
+owing also to the fact that he had no
+money to tip the policeman, and he had spent the night
+in a cell at Jefferson Market police station. In the morning
+the magistrate had discharged him with many compliments
+upon his “gallantry and courage.” It did not
+ring true. I knew the Tammany magistrates better than
+that. He contradicted himself too, in saying that a Mr.
+Beattie, a friend of his mother’s, who occasionally gave
+him a little money she sent from England, had bailed him
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
+out. He had been bailed out, discharged with compliments,
+had slept in a cell, and not been fined! I smelt
+spirits too. It all made me miserable.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve been drunk and they locked you up,” I
+reproached him. “Why do you lie to me?” The
+copious explanations that followed I hardly listened to.
+I lay in bed, saying nothing, but the warning of my
+visitor came back.</p>
+
+<p>“I went down to the <i>Evening Sun</i>,” Boyde said
+presently, when my silence made his explanations end
+of their own accord. “I’ve just come back with this.
+McCloy asked after you and sent it on account of the
+French stories.” He handed me five dollars, in single
+bills, which we divided equally then and there.</p>
+
+<p>He had been gone hardly ten minutes when the door
+opened again, and another visitor came in, an actor out
+of a job, Grant, an Englishman of perhaps twenty-five,
+one of the cricket team I had met in Staten Island a few
+weeks before. He had run across Boyde, he explained, and
+had heard I was ill. As one Englishman to another “in
+this awful city” he wanted to see if he could help in any
+way. He did then a wonderful thing. We had met but
+once, he scarcely knew me, he might never see me again,
+but when he realized the state of affairs he said he thought
+he could get a little money for me, and before I could say
+a word he vanished from the room. His shyness, his lame
+manner of speech, something hesitating and awkward about
+him generally, had embarrassed me as much as, evidently,
+he was embarrassed himself; and I was convinced his
+plea of getting money was only an excuse to disappear
+quickly. I rather hoped it was; certainly I thought it
+unlikely he would come back—which, nevertheless, he did,
+in about a quarter of an hour. He came in breathlessly,
+a shamefaced air about him; flung down some dollar bills
+on the bed, and vanished the second time. Three dollars
+lay on the counterpane. It was only a little later, as
+reflection brought up details, that I remembered he had
+worn an overcoat when he first came in, and that on his
+second visit he wore none. He had pawned it. Another
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
+detail rose to the surface: that he had called, really, upon
+quite another errand, and that there was something he
+wanted to tell me that he had not the courage to put into
+words. Later he admitted it was true....</p>
+
+<p>Anticipating Otto Huebner’s visits was now a keen
+pleasure; the one event of a long weary day.</p>
+
+<p>During the next fortnight or so, he missed no single
+afternoon. His moods varied amazingly. One day he
+seemed an angel, the next a devil. I was completely
+puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>The talks we had on his good days were an enjoyment
+I can hardly describe. I realized how much I depended
+on them, as well as on the man who made them possible.
+I realized also how much I depended on my other friend—on
+Boyde. The latter’s curious and unsatisfactory
+behaviour, mysterious still to my blind ignorant eyes,
+made no difference to my feelings for him, but, if anything,
+tended to strengthen the attachment. My affection
+deepened. There lay now a certain pity in me too, an
+odd feeling that he was in my charge, and that, for all
+his greater knowledge and experience of life, his seniority
+as well, I could—I must—somehow help him. Upon the
+German doctor and Boyde, at any rate, Kay being far
+away, my mind rested with security, if of different degrees.
+To lose either of them in my lonely situation would have
+been catastrophic.</p>
+
+<p>The old German would settle himself on the sofa,
+drawn up close to the bed, and talk. He was saturated
+in his native philosophy, but Hegel was his king....
+“Sartor Resartus” enthralled him. Of De Quincey’s
+struggle against opium he was never tired. Of Vedantic
+and Hindu philosophy, too, he was understanding and
+tolerant, though not enamoured. Regarding me still as
+a “specimen” evidently, he also treated me as though
+I were a boy, discerning of course at once my emptiness
+of mind and experience.</p>
+
+<p>How patiently he listened to my eager exposition of
+life’s mysteries, my chaotic theories, my fanciful speculations....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span></p>
+
+<p>“We <i>know</i>—nothing, you must remember. <i>Nothing</i>,”
+he would say with emphasis. “Nor can we know anything,
+<i>ever</i>. We label, classify, examine certain <i>results</i>—that’s
+all. Of causes we remain completely ignorant.
+Speculation is not proof. The fact that a theory fits all
+the facts gets us no further.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, but with close attention, while I plunged
+again into a description of my beliefs. The tobacco smoke
+curled up about his genial face. I had no fear of him in
+this mood. I could say all my thoughts without shyness.
+I made full confession.</p>
+
+<p>“Interesting, logical, possibly true,” he replied, “and
+most certainly as good an explanation as any other, better
+even than most, but”—he shrugged his shoulders—“always
+a theory only, and nothing else. There is no
+proof of anything. The higher states of consciousness you
+mention are nebulous, probably pathogenic. Those who
+experience them cannot, in any case, report their content
+intelligibly to us who have not experienced them—because
+no words exist. They are of no value to the race, and
+that condemns them. Men of action, not dreamers, are
+what the world needs.”</p>
+
+<p>“Men of action only carry out what has first been
+dreamed,” I ventured.</p>
+
+<p>“True,” replied the old man, “true very often. Men
+of action rarely have much vision. The poet is the highest
+type.... I am with you in this too—that the only <i>real</i>
+knowledge is the knowledge of man, the study of consciousness.
+<i>Gnothi seauton</i> is still the shortest, as well as the
+most pregnant, sermon in the world. Before we can get
+new knowledge, <i>different</i> knowledge—yes, there I am
+with you—consciousness itself must change and become
+different first ... <i>but</i> ... the people who get
+that <i>different</i> knowledge cannot describe it to us because
+there is no language.” Wise, thoughtful things the old
+man said, while I listened eagerly. “One thing is certain,”
+he declared with his usual emphasis: “If there is another
+state after the destruction of the body, it cannot be merely
+an extension, an idealization, of the one we know. <i>That</i>
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
+is excluded. Without senses, without brain or nerves,
+without physical reactions of any kind—since there is
+no body—how shall we be aware of things about us?
+Another state can only be—<i>different</i>, yet so different that
+it is useless to talk of it. The Heaven of the spiritualists,
+the elaborate constructions of a Swedenborg, are nothing
+but coloured idealizations of the state we already know
+...”—he snorted contemptuously—“obviously self-created.
+A different state of consciousness would show
+us a universe so totally different from anything we know
+that it must be—indescribable.”</p>
+
+<p>Of my own future, too, he liked to talk. The newspaper
+reporting he disapproved; it could lead to little;
+it was “<i>unersprechlich gemein</i>”; the New York press was
+a cesspool; it might serve a temporary purpose, but no
+self-respecting man should stay too long in it. He urged
+me to become a doctor, saying I should be a success,
+advising me to specialize in nerves and mental cases.
+Being an Englishman would help very much; in time I
+should have an enormous practice; he would assist me
+in all manner of ways, so that my course need not be
+longer than two years, or three at the most. He would
+coach me, rush me through in half the normal time.
+Later I could get a foreign degree, which would be an
+additional asset.... He never tired of this topic, and
+his enthusiasm was certainly sincere.</p>
+
+<p>Of stars, too, he loved to talk, of space, of possible
+other dimensions even. His exposition of a fourth
+dimension always delighted me. That the universe,
+indeed, was really four-dimensional, and that all we perceived
+of it was that sectional aspect, a portion as it were,
+that is projected into our three-dimensional world, was
+a theme that positively made him red in the face, as his
+big eyes focused on me, his concentrated mind working
+vehemently behind them.... Certainly, my knowledge
+of German improved considerably.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as Boyde came in, the light would die out of his
+eyes, his face would harden and grow dark—he had a way of
+making it seem frozen—and with a stiff bow to Boyde that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
+only just acknowledged his presence, he would get up and
+leave the room.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, I sold two more French stories, and Boyde
+bought back the ten dollars paid for them; three others
+were “not suitable,” according to McCloy. I told the
+doctor all I earned. “Later,” he said, “you pay me,
+if you want to. I take nothing—now.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> days passed; I grew slowly better; the wound
+still had to be drained and bandaged, and the
+doctor kept me to my bed. Kay, writing from
+Toronto, had contrived to send us ten dollars. More
+French translations had gone to McCloy, but only one
+or two had been used.</p>
+
+<p>If the loneliness of the long days was dismal, the
+feverish nights were worse. I knew my few books by
+heart; Shelley and the “Gita” were indeed inexhaustible,
+but I longed for something new. To play the fiddle was
+too tiring. There was endless time for reflection ...
+and, thank heaven, through the two dirty windows I
+could watch the sky. Many a story I published fifteen
+years later had its germ in the apparently dead moments
+of those wearisome hours, although at the time it never
+once occurred to me to try and write, not even the desire
+being in me.</p>
+
+<p>It was the interminable nights that were most haunted.
+In the daylight there was colour in the changing clouds
+and sky, a touch of pink, a flame of sunset gold that
+opened the narrow crack through which I slipped into
+some strange interior state of happiness. There were the
+visits of the beloved, mysterious doctor, too. But the
+night was otherwise. The gas I left burning till Boyde
+woke and turned it out in the morning, made it impossible
+to see the stars. I could never settle down until he was
+comfortably asleep beside me. He kept late hours
+always. I reproached and scolded, yet in the end I always
+forgave. It was a comfort to know him within reach
+of my hand, while at the same time I dreaded his coming.
+My mixed feelings had reached that stage—I feared his
+coming and yet longed for it.</p>
+
+<p>I lay waiting, listening for his step. Far below I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
+would hear it, down in the well of the sleeping house,
+even on the first flight of stairs. It mounted, mounted,
+stealthy, cautious, coming nearer and nearer, but always
+at the same steady pace. It never hastened. As it
+approached, rising through the stillness of the night, my
+heart would begin to beat; I dreaded the moment when
+our landing would be reached, still more the actual opening
+of our door. I listened, smothering my breath, trying to
+lessen the loud thumping against my ribs. The steps
+<i>might</i> not be his, after all; it might be someone else; that
+stealthy tread might pass my door without opening it
+and go upstairs. Then, when at last the handle rattled
+faintly, the door opened, and I saw him slowly enter,
+carrying his boots in his hand, my first instinct always
+was to—scream. Then he would smile, the eye-glass
+would drop from his eye, he would begin his explanations
+and excuses, and my dread soon evaporated in the friendliest
+of intimate talk.</p>
+
+<p>So well, at last, did I learn to recognize his approach,
+that I knew the moment he opened the front door three
+flights below. The sound of the handle with its clink of
+metal, the dull thud as the big thing closed—I was never
+once mistaken. In my fitful snatches of sleep these
+sounds stole in, shaping my dreams, determining both
+cause and climax of incessant nightmares which, drawing
+upon present things and recent memories, and invariably
+including the personality of Boyde, made those waiting
+hours a recurrent horror. I would fight in vain to keep
+awake. Only when he was safely asleep at my side did
+the nightmares cease.</p>
+
+<p>I had once seen Dixon, a Toronto photographer, walk
+across the Niagara river, just below the Falls; he used
+Blondin’s old tight-rope; he lay down on his back half
+way over, turned round, knelt, hovered on one foot,
+using an immense balancing pole. Thousands watched
+him from both shores on a day of baking sunshine; his
+background was the massive main waterfall, slowly
+rolling down and over; below him swirled and boiled the
+awful rapids. Dixon now came walking, walking in my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
+dream again. I could hear his soft tread as his stockinged
+feet gripped the cable that swayed slightly as it sagged
+to the centre half way across. The sound, the figure
+came nearer; it came at me; it—was not Dixon after
+all. It was Boyde.... Then, as he moved with slow,
+creeping tread, nearer, ever nearer, I perceived suddenly
+that the rope was gone. There was no rope. He walked
+on empty air towards me—towards—<i>me</i>. I was appalled,
+speechless, paralyzed. That figure walking on space,
+walking towards me, walking remorselessly nearer was
+terrible.... The next second the door opened and
+Boyde stood peering at me round the edge, his boots in
+his hands.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, tired of learning the “Witch of Islam”
+by heart, I leaned over the bed, and something in the
+waste-paper basket close beside it caught my eye; a
+scrap of coloured paper—several scraps—pink. Looking
+nearer, I saw it was a torn-up cheque. Without any
+particular interest at first I stared at the unfamiliar thing,
+wondering vaguely how it came to be there. Only after
+this casual inspection did it occur to me as being rather
+odd. A cheque! What was it? Whose was it? How
+did it come to be there, torn up in <i>my</i> waste-paper basket?
+It was a long time since I had seen such a thing as a
+cheque; and idly, with no more curiosity than this, I
+lay gazing at the scraps of coloured paper.</p>
+
+<p>The basket lay within easy reach; I stretched out an
+arm and picked it up; I emptied the contents on the white
+counterpane; I sorted out the coloured scraps from
+among the general litter. The scraps were small, and the
+puzzle amused me. It was a long business. Bit by bit
+the cheque took shape. The word “Toronto” was the
+first detail that caught my attention closer. Presently,
+fitting three tiny scraps together, I saw to my surprise
+a name in full—Arthur Glyn Boyde. Another little group
+made “Kay.” A third read “Seventy Five Dollars.”
+My interest increased with every moment, till at last the
+complete cheque lay pieced together before my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It was drawn by Kay on my old Toronto bank for the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
+sum mentioned, and it was payable to Boyde. The date
+was—three days before.</p>
+
+<p>I lay and stared at it in blank bewilderment. Fitting
+the scraps together on the counterpane was nothing compared
+to my difficulty in fitting the pieces together in my
+mind. I could make neither head nor tail of it. Kay
+had, indeed, been acting in Toronto on the date given,
+but—a bank account...! And why was the cheque
+torn up? It must have been delivered with a letter—yesterday.
+Boyde had not mentioned it. I felt as confused
+as though it were a problem in arithmetic; but a
+problem in arithmetic would not have stirred the feeling
+of pain and dread that rose in me. Something I had
+long feared and hated, had deliberately hidden from
+myself, had cloaked and draped so that I need not recognize
+it, now at last stared me in the face.</p>
+
+<p>The chief item in the puzzle, however, remained.
+That it was not Kay’s real signature, I saw plainly, it was
+a reasonably good copy; but why was the cheque torn
+up? It had been taken from my old book in the packing-case
+downstairs, of course; but why was it destroyed?
+A forgery! The word terrified me.</p>
+
+<p>It was while trying to find the meaning that my
+fingers played with the rest of the littered paper ...
+and presently pieced together a letter in the same writing
+as the signature; a letter, written from Toronto, with
+Islington Jersey Dairy as address, and bearing the same
+date as the cheque—a letter from Kay to Boyde. It had
+been also torn into little bits.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear B.,” it ran, “I am awfully sorry to hear poor
+Blackwood is so ill still, and that he has no money. I
+enclose my cheque for $75 to help him out, but, for God’s
+sake, see that he doesn’t waste it in dissipation, as he did
+the last I sent. I know I can trust you in this”....
+A page and a half of news followed. A postscript came
+at the end: “Better not let him know how much I’ve
+sent. I’ll send another cheque later if you let me know
+it’s really needed.”</p>
+
+<p>With these two documents spread on the counterpane
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
+before me, I lay back thinking, thinking, while an icy
+feeling spread slowly over me that for a long time made
+clear thought impossible. The word “dissipation” made
+me smile, but all I knew in those first moments was an
+aching, dull emotion, shot through from time to time by
+stabs of keenest pain. There was horror too, there was
+anger, pity ... as, one by one, recent events dropped
+the masks I had so deliberately pinned on them. These
+thin disguises that too sanguine self-deception had helped
+me to lay over a hideousness that hurt and frightened
+me, fell one by one. My anger passed; horror and pity
+remained. I cannot explain it quite; an intense sorrow,
+an equally intense desire to help and save, were in me.
+Affection, no doubt, was deep and real....</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, the shock numbed something in
+me; the abrupt collapse of a friendship that meant so
+much to my loneliness bowled me over. What exactly
+had happened I did not know, I could not understand;
+treachery, falsity, double-dealing, lies—these were obvious,
+but the <i>modus operandi</i> was not clear. Why was the
+cheque torn up and so carelessly flung away? There
+was a mist of confusion over my mind. I thought over
+my police court experience, the criminal tricks and practices
+I already knew, but these threw no helpful light.
+Was Kay, too, involved? Did the warning of a few
+weeks ago include him as well? There had been forgery,
+yet again—why was the cheque torn up? The mystery
+of it all increased the growing sense of dread, of fear, of
+creeping horror. My newspaper work had given me the
+general feeling that everyone had his price ... but
+between friends in adversity, Englishmen, gentlemen as
+well ... was it then true literally of <i>everybody</i>?</p>
+
+<p>After a time I collected the two documents and pieced
+them together again between the pages of a book, lest
+someone might enter and discover them. The doctor
+was not coming that day, but there might be other visitors.
+Then it suddenly dawned on me—why hadn’t this occurred
+to me before?—that the whole thing must be a joke after
+all. Of course ... why not? It might even have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
+something to do with the rôle of understudy in the Sothern
+Play. It could easily be—oh, surely!—a bit of stupid
+fun on Kay’s part. The carelessness too! Throwing the
+scraps in the basket under my very nose, where anybody
+could easily see them, where Mrs. Bernstein might find
+them, or the woman who came in twice a week to do the
+room. This was certainly against criminal intent.</p>
+
+<p>The most far-fetched explanations poured through my
+mind, invited by hope, dressed up by eager desire, then
+left hanging in mid-air, with not the faintest probability
+to support them. I deliberately recalled the kind actions,
+the solicitude, the sharing of receipts, a thousand favourable
+details, even to the innocent expression and the frank
+blue eyes, only to find these routed utterly by two other
+details; one negative, one vague, yet both insistent;
+the doctor’s silence and the shadow noticed recently on the
+sleeping face.</p>
+
+<p>It was eleven o’clock; Boyde had said he would
+return about four; I expected him, for the doctor, whom
+he avoided, was not coming. There were five hours of
+waiting to endure first.</p>
+
+<p>The situation which another might have tossed aside
+with a wry laugh at himself for having been a guileless
+fool, to me seemed portentous with pain and horror.</p>
+
+<p>I had no plan, however, when the door opened at
+half-past three, long before I expected it. There was in
+me no faintest idea of what I was going to say or do.
+The book lay on my knee, with the documents concealed
+between the pages. I had heard no footstep, the rattle
+of the handle was the first sound I caught. Yet the door
+opened differently—not quite as Boyde opened it. There
+was hesitation in the movement. In that hesitation of
+a mere second there again flashed across my mind a sudden
+happy certainty; the documents could be explained, it
+was all a joke somewhere. He had done nothing wrong,
+he would clear up the whole thing in a moment! Of
+course! It was my weak, feverish condition that had raised
+a bogey. A few words from him were now going to
+destroy it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span></p>
+
+<p>Then, instead of Boyde, I saw Grant standing shyly
+on the threshold, the young actor who had pawned his
+overcoat. This time he wore it.</p>
+
+<p>The relief I felt at seeing him betrayed me to myself.</p>
+
+<p>I welcomed him so heartily that his shyness disappeared.
+He had dropped in by chance, he told me.
+I gave him an account of my discovery, and he bent over
+me to see the cheque and letter, asking if the writing was
+really Kay’s. He looked very grave.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not unlike it, but it isn’t his,” I replied. “What
+do you make of it? Why are they torn up?” I was
+burning to hear what he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer for a moment. He asked instead
+a number of questions about Boyde, listening closely to
+my account of him, which mentioned the good with the
+bad. He went down to examine the packing-case and
+returned with the report that my cheque-book was not
+there. I asked him again what he made of it all, waiting
+with nervous anxiety for his verdict, but again he put
+me off. He wanted to know when I last heard from
+Kay. Eight days ago, I told him, from Toronto. He
+asked numerous questions. He seemed as puzzled as I
+was.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you think it means?” I begged. “What’s
+he been doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you <i>quite</i> positive it’s not Kay’s writing,” he
+urged, “even, for instance, if he was—” he hesitated—“a
+bit tight at the time?”</p>
+
+<p>I clung to the faint hope. “Well, of course—I really
+couldn’t say. I’ve never seen his writing when he was
+tight. I suppose——”</p>
+
+<p>“Because if it isn’t,” interrupted Grant decisively, “it
+means that Boyde has been getting money from him and
+using it for himself.”</p>
+
+<p>I realized then that he was trying to make things
+less grave than they really were, trying to make it easier
+for me in the best way he could. The torn-up cheque
+proved his suggestion foolish.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think he’s an absolute scoundrel?” I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
+asked point blank, unable to bear the suspense any longer.
+“Really a criminal—is he?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to tell you the other day,” he said quickly.
+“Only you were too ill. I thought it would upset you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Criminal? Tell me at once. He may be in any
+minute. I must know.”</p>
+
+<p>“His reputation is bad,” was the reply, “as bad as
+it could be. I’ve heard things about him. He’s already
+been in gaol. He’s supposed to be a bit dangerous.”</p>
+
+<p>I was listening for the sound of a step on the stairs.
+I lowered my voice a little. It was clear to me that
+Grant did not want to tell me all he knew.</p>
+
+<p>“So—what do you make, then, of this?” I asked
+in a half whisper, pointing to the documents.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me hard a moment, then gave his reply,
+also in an undertone:</p>
+
+<p>“Practising—I think.”</p>
+
+<p>I did not understand him. The uncertainty of his
+meaning, the queer suggestion in the word he used, gave
+my imagination a horrid twist. I asked again, my heart
+banging against my ribs:</p>
+
+<p>“Practising—what?”</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t think it a successful—copy—so he tore it
+up,” Grant explained.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean—forgery?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think so. That is—I’m afraid so.”</p>
+
+<p>I think the universe changed for me in that moment;
+something I had been standing on for years collapsed; I
+was left hanging in space without a platform, without a
+rudder. An odd helplessness came over me. Grant, of
+course, had only confirmed my own suspicions, had merely
+put into words what, actually, I had known for a long
+time; but it was just this hearing the verdict spoken by
+another that hurt so abominably. Grant had quietly
+torn off me the last veil of self-deception. I could no
+longer pretend to myself. It seems absurdly out of proportion
+now on looking back; at the time the shock was
+appalling.</p>
+
+<p>We talked together, we tried to devise some plan of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
+action, we reached no settled conclusion. The minutes
+passed. I never ceased listening for the familiar footstep
+on the stairs. Of one thing only was I perfectly sure:
+whatever happened, I intended to take charge of it all
+myself. I would deal with Boyde in my own way. The
+principle lay clear and decided in me; I meant to frighten
+Boyde as severely as I possibly could, then to give him
+another chance. Anticipation made the minutes crawl.
+Grant talked a good deal.</p>
+
+<p>“He spotted you and Kay from the start,” I heard
+Grant saying. “He saw your ignorance of the town,
+your inexperience, your generosity. He felt sure of free
+lodging anyhow, perhaps a good deal more——”</p>
+
+<p>A faint thud sounded from downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>“There he is,” I said instantly. “That’s the front
+door banging. He’s coming. Keep quiet.”</p>
+
+<p>I told Grant to get into the cupboard and hide. He
+was only just concealed in the deep cupboard and the
+door drawn to, when the other door opened quietly and
+Boyde came in.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Boyde</span> was in cheerful, smiling mood. He put
+some grapes on the bed, asked how I felt, and
+told me about his trip to Patterson and his failure
+to get the organist job. “It’s bitterly cold,” he said.
+“I <i>was</i> glad of your overcoat. You <i>have</i> been a brick,”
+he added, “but I’ll make it all up to you when my luck
+turns.” He crossed over to the sofa and sat down,
+stretching himself, obviously tired out.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind, old chap; we shall get along somehow.
+Probably Kay will send us something more before long.
+He’s always faithful. Let’s see,” I went on casually,
+“when was it we heard from him last?”</p>
+
+<p>“A week ago,” said Boyde quite naturally. “Toronto,
+wasn’t it? Or Buffalo—no, no, Toronto.”</p>
+
+<p>We laughed together. “So it was,” I agreed carelessly.
+Then I pretended to hesitate. “But that was nearly
+a fortnight ago,” I suddenly corrected my memory;
+“surely we’ve heard since that. Only the other day—or
+did I dream it?”</p>
+
+<p>Boyde stared at me lazily through the cigarette smoke.
+“No, I think not,” he said quietly. “There was only the
+one letter.” He showed no sign of disturbance.</p>
+
+<p>I lay still, pretending to think back a bit, then heaved
+myself slowly up in bed.</p>
+
+<p>“But, Boyde, I remember the letter,” I exclaimed
+with conviction, staring into his face, “I’m certain I do—another
+letter. Why, of course! I remember your
+showing it to me. There was a cheque in it—a cheque
+for seventy-five dollars!”</p>
+
+<p>His easy laugh, his voice and manner, the perfect
+naturalness of his reply made me feel sure that I was in
+the wrong. He knew absolutely nothing of the cheque
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
+and letter. He was innocent. It was not <i>his</i> doing, at
+any rate.</p>
+
+<p>“You must have been dreaming,” he said, looking me
+full in the face with his big, honest blue eyes. “It’s too
+good to be true.” He gave a wry little chuckle that only
+a clear conscience could have made possible.</p>
+
+<p>I lay back in bed and laughed with him, partly from
+weakness, partly to hide my shaking, which I was terrified
+he would notice. I changed the subject a moment later,
+as he said nothing more; then, still acting on impulse and
+with no preconceived plan or idea of my next move, I sat
+bolt upright in bed and fixed him with my eyes. I assumed
+a very convinced and serious tone. I felt serious
+and convinced. The mood of horror had rushed suddenly
+up in me:</p>
+
+<p>“Boyde, I remember it all now.” I spoke with great
+emphasis. “It was not a dream at all. You came to this
+bedside and showed me the letter. You held it out for me
+to read. It was dated from my old Toronto Dairy three
+days ago. <i>You showed me the cheque too.</i> It was for
+seventy-five dollars, signed by Kay, and made out to your
+order. I remember every single detail of it suddenly.
+And—<i>so do you</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>He gazed at me as a little child might gaze. He made
+no movement. His eyes neither dropped nor flinched.
+He merely gazed—with a puzzled, innocent, guileless
+stare. A pained expression then stole across his face.</p>
+
+<p>“Blackwood, what on earth do you mean? It’s
+not likely I should forget it if seventy-five dollars came, is
+it?” he went on quickly in his most sympathetic voice,
+an aggrieved note in it that stirred all my affection instantly.
+“The most he has sent so far is ten dollars.
+I should have given you the money at once. And <i>you
+know it</i>, Blackwood.” He got up and walked quietly to
+and fro.</p>
+
+<p>It was the way he uttered those last four words that
+sent ice down my spine and brought the mood of horror
+back. Why this was so, I cannot explain. Perhaps the
+phrase rang false; perhaps its over-emphasis failed. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
+only know that my hesitation vanished. That prepared
+plan so strangely matured, yet hidden so deeply that it
+emerged only step by step as it was needed, pushed up
+another move into my upper mind.</p>
+
+<p>I got slowly out of bed. Perspiration broke out all
+over me. I felt very weak. The wound stretched.
+Straight before me, a long way off it seemed, was the sofa.
+Boyde stood watching my every move. He stood like a
+statue.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had taken a couple of slow, small steps,
+crawling round the edge of the bed, he did two quick things
+that in a flash brought final conviction to me, so that I
+knew beyond any doubt the hideous thing was true:
+he moved suddenly across the room, passing in front of
+me, though not near enough to touch; three rapid strides
+and he was against the window—with his back to the light.
+It was dusk. He wished to conceal his face from me.
+His left arm hung at his side, the hand on a level with the
+dressing-table, and I saw his fingers feeling along its surface,
+though his eyes never left my own. I saw them find,
+then grip, the white-handled razor, and pull it slowly
+towards him. These were the two things that betrayed
+him, but chiefly, I think, the first of them—concealing
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>At the same instant there was a faint sound on my left.
+I had completely forgotten the existence of my visitor;
+I now remembered him, for that sound came from inside
+the cupboard, and Grant, evidently, was ready to leap out.
+But I did not want Grant. I intended the whole matter
+to be between Boyde and myself. A flash of understanding
+had given me complete assurance. Boyde, I now knew,
+was a coward, a sneak, a cheat, a liar, and worse besides.
+In spite of my physical weakness I had the upper hand.
+I was about to give him the fright of his life, though
+still with no clear idea exactly how this was to be accomplished.
+All I knew was that I meant to terrify him,
+then forgive—and save him from himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet!” I called out, yet so quickly, and with so
+little apparent meaning, that Boyde, I think, hardly heard
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
+me, and certainly did not understand. Grant, however,
+understood. He told me later it was just in time to prevent
+his coming out.</p>
+
+<p>With one hand supporting me on the edge of the dressing-table,
+I was now close to Boyde, bent double in front of
+him, staring up into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Give me that razor,” I said, and he obeyed, as I felt
+sure he would. That is, his fingers moved away from it,
+and I quickly pushed it out of his reach. With my other
+hand I seized his arm. I raised my face to his as much as
+my wound allowed.</p>
+
+<p>“Boyde,” I said, “I know <i>everything</i>!”</p>
+
+<p>If I expected a collapse, as I think was the case, I was
+disappointed. Nothing happened. He did not move.
+Not a muscle, not even an eyelash flickered. He stared
+down into my upturned face without a word, waiting for
+what was coming; control of the features, of mouth and
+eyes in particular, was absolute. And it was this silence,
+this calm assurance, giving me no help, even making it
+more difficult for me, that, I think, combined to set me
+going. I was fairly wound up; I saw red. The words
+poured out, hot, bitter, scathing.</p>
+
+<p>The moment I ended, he smiled, as he said very
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know <i>what</i> you’re talking about. You are
+fearfully excited and you will regret your words. I do
+wish you would get back into bed. All this is awfully bad
+for you in your weak condition.”</p>
+
+<p>I was flabbergasted. All the wind had been taken
+from my sails. A touch would have sent me to the floor,
+but he did not touch me. He merely gazed into my face
+with an air of calm patience that had pity in it, a hint
+even of contempt.</p>
+
+<p>There was a little silence after he had spoken. For
+a moment I had no notion what to do or say. Then,
+quite suddenly, up flashed my plan. I was less excited
+now, my voice was well under control.</p>
+
+<p>“Boyde,” I said, “now, at last, I’ve caught you in a
+worse thing still. You have forged a letter and a signature.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
+You have forged a cheque as well. And you will
+have to go to prison for it. There is a headquarters
+detective outside waiting for me to call him in. You are
+going to be arrested.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of taut suspense I can never forget.
+He stared down at me, obviously at first incredulous.
+A slight twitch ran across his face, nothing more; beyond
+a trifling extra bend of the head, he made no movement.
+He was judging me, weighing my words, wondering if
+they were true. The next second I saw that he believed
+me.</p>
+
+<p>What happened then to his face I had never seen before,
+though I was often to see it afterwards in other faces
+during my criminal experience. The skin slowly blanched
+to the hue of flour; the cheeks sagged; the mouth opened;
+the look in his eyes was dreadful. The whole face disintegrated,
+as it were. He had the air of a hunted animal
+at bay. At the same time there was a convulsive movement
+of his entire body that frightened me. I did not
+know what he was going to do. It was really made up of
+several movements, one starting after another. First,
+his knees gave way and he nearly collapsed. Then, evidently,
+he considered the possibility of knocking me down
+and dashing out of the room. His eyes ran swiftly over
+everything at once, it seemed, noticing the razor certainly,
+but finding me awkwardly between him and the end of
+the table where it lay. He half turned in the direction
+of the window behind him, thinking doubtless of escape
+by the leads outside. He gave finally a sort of lurch
+towards me, but this I did not actually see, for I had turned
+away and was crawling painfully over to the door. It
+was Grant who supplied this detail of description later.
+His idea, probably, was to knock me down and make a
+bolt for it. But, whatever it was he really intended to
+do, in the end he did nothing, for at this second Grant
+emerged suddenly from his cupboard.</p>
+
+<p>I was already leaning with my back against the door
+and caught the look of terror and blank amazement that
+came into Boyde’s face, as he saw another man whom he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
+certainly took at first for the detective. He stood stock
+still like a petrified figure. A moment later he recognized
+him as the Englishman he had met at the cricket match.
+He subsided backwards, half on to the window-sill and
+half against the dressing-table. The drama of the scene
+suddenly occurred to me for the first time, as I watched
+Grant walk over and put the razor in his pocket, and then
+sit down quietly on the sofa. He spoke no single word.
+He merely sat and watched.</p>
+
+<p>With my back against the door I then went on talking
+quickly. Yet behind my anger and disgust, I felt
+the old pity surge up; already I was sorry for him; I
+would presently forgive him. But, first, there was
+something else to be done. The plan lay quite clear in
+my mind.</p>
+
+<p>Closely watched by Grant and myself, Boyde had
+meanwhile moved out into the room, still without speaking
+a single word, and flung himself on the bed where he began
+to cry like a child. He sobbed convulsively, though
+whether the tears were of sorrow or of fear, I could not
+tell. We watched him for some time in silence. It was
+some minutes later that he sat up, still shaking with sobs,
+and tried to speak. In an utterly broken voice he begged
+for mercy, not for himself—he swore he didn’t “care a
+damn” about his “worthless self”—but for his mother’s
+sake. It would break her heart, if she heard about it;
+it would kill her. He implored me for another chance.
+His flow of words never ceased. If I would let him off
+this time, he begged, he would do anything I wished,
+anything, anything in the world. He would leave New
+York, he would go home and enlist ... but forgery
+meant years in gaol. “I am only thirty, and the sentence
+would mean the end of my life....”</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps instinct warned me he was lying, perhaps he
+over-acted, I cannot say; but the entire scene, the sobs,
+the impassioned language, the anguish in the broken voice,
+the ruin of the face I had once thought innocent, all left
+me without emotion. I was exhausted too. I had
+witnessed similar scenes between detectives and their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
+prisoners, the former not only unmoved, but bored and
+even angry. I understood now how they felt. But there
+was the balance of my plan to be carried out; my original
+principle had never wavered; I believed the terror he had
+felt would make him run straight in future; the moment
+had now come, I thought, to tell him he was forgiven.
+So I left the door—he screamed, thinking I was going to
+open it—and crawled slowly over to him. Putting my
+hand on his shoulder, and using the gentlest, kindest voice
+I could find, I told him he should have another chance,
+but only one. All excitement had died out of me, I felt
+real pity, the old affection rose, I urged and begged him
+to “run straight” from this moment....</p>
+
+<p>“But—there is a condition,” I finished my sermon.</p>
+
+<p>“Anything, Blackwood. I’ll do anything you say.”
+The tears were still hanging on his cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>“You will sit down and write what I dictate.”</p>
+
+<p>We found a sheet of foolscap, and he sat down at the
+little desk, while I stood over him and dictated the words
+of a full confession. In writing it, Boyde’s hand was as
+steady as that of a clerk making an unimportant entry
+in an office book. He came to the end and looked up at
+me enquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>“Now write a duplicate,” I said, “in your other handwriting,
+the one you meant to be a copy of Kay’s.”</p>
+
+<p>He did this too; to an inexperienced eye the difference
+was extraordinary. I asked Grant to witness it with me,
+and when this was finished I waved the document in
+the other’s face. “I shall keep this,” I told him gravely,
+“and if ever you go wrong again, it will mean twenty
+years in prison.” I do not think he knew what I knew at
+that moment; <i>viz.</i> that a confession signed “under duress”
+was not evidence in a court of law. He said very simply,
+gazing into my eyes: “You’ve saved my life, Blackwood.
+I shall never forget this day. My temptations have been
+awful, but from this moment I mean to run straight,
+perfectly straight.” Words of gratitude followed in a
+flood. He shook my hand, begging to be allowed to help
+me back into bed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I must first tell the detective I’ve withdrawn the
+charge,” I said. “I must send him away. He doesn’t
+know your name.” Boyde thanked me volubly again,
+as I crawled to the door, closed it again, and stood in the
+cold passage a minute or two. “The man’s gone,” I said,
+when I came back.</p>
+
+<p>“When—when am I to leave this room?” he asked
+quietly. I told him he could stay. The matter was
+forgiven and forgotten. He began to cry again....</p>
+
+<p>For some time after Grant had gone, we were alone.
+Boyde talked a little, repeating his gratitude. I asked
+him one question only: had he been in gaol before? “I
+would rather not answer that, if you don’t mind,” he
+said. I did not press him, for he had answered it. “I
+shall never, never go wrong again,” he kept repeating.
+And all the time he talked—I learned this later—there lay
+in his coat pocket, that was my coat pocket, the sum of
+ten dollars which belonged to me. He had sold two of
+my translations to McCloy, telling me McCloy had refused
+them.</p>
+
+<p>I have a vague recollection of that evening and of our
+talk, for complete exhaustion had come over me from the
+moment I got back into bed. It was not unconsciousness,
+but probably half unconsciousness. I was only dimly
+aware of what was going on. I remember Boyde going
+out to eat something at Krisch’s, then coming back. I
+woke in darkness with a sudden start. The gas was
+out, and I wondered why. There was a noise close
+beside me—something swishing. My mind cleared in a
+flash.</p>
+
+<p>“Put it back, Boyde,” I called out. “Put it back at
+once.”</p>
+
+<p>A thin summer coat hung on the door, too thin and
+shabby to wear, too ragged to pawn. I had placed the
+confession in the inside pocket, and it was this coat I
+now heard swishing faintly against the wood.</p>
+
+<p>No answer came, but I plainly heard the soft tread of
+bare feet along the carpet. I got up and lit the gas.
+Boyde lay apparently sleeping soundly on the floor.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
+I noticed how well-nourished his body looked. <i>He</i>, at
+any rate, had not been starving. Then I moved to the
+door, found the confession, took it out, and crawled back
+into bed. From that moment the paper never left me; it
+was with me when later the doctor allowed me out, and at
+night it lay under my pillow while I slept. I kept the
+torn scraps of the cheque and letter with it, and I hid
+the razor. Boyde never shaved himself in that room
+again.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> episode, though far from being finished, had a
+shattering effect upon me. If a friend, so close
+to me by ties of affection and gratitude, could act
+like this, how would others, less intimately related, behave?
+My trust in people was killed. A sense of deep
+loneliness was added to the other miseries of that bed.</p>
+
+<p>Only my books comforted and helped ... they did
+not fail ... their teachings stood stiff and firm like a
+steel rod that never bent or shifted, much less broke.
+Since these notes tell merely the superficial episodes of
+my early years, further mention of what the books meant
+to me is unnecessary; enough—more than enough, probably—has
+already been told to show the background
+which explains motive and conduct. The main stream
+of my life, at any rate, ran deeper and ever deeper, its
+centre of gravity far below anything that could possibly
+come to me in the ordinary world or outward happenings.
+Big dreams were in me at white heat, burning, burning
+... and all external events were coloured by them.</p>
+
+<p>There followed now a more peaceful though short
+period, during which Boyde behaved well, with kindness
+and signs of true penitence. Grant warned me this was
+acting, and that I had been a fool to forgive and let him
+stay on, but I would not listen, and followed my own principle.
+I did not trust him, but never let him know it,
+showing him full confidence, with all the former intimacy
+and affection. I felt sure this was the right and only
+way. His attitude to me had something of a dog’s devotion
+in it. I fully believed he was “running straight”
+again. I watched him closely, while hiding suspicion
+carefully away.</p>
+
+<p>November drew to a close; Kay sent no more money;
+the debt to Mrs. Bernstein grew; income became smaller
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
+and smaller. I wrote to McCloy, who replied with a brief
+word that I could come back when I was well again.</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving my bed, however, at the end of the
+month, another incident occurred that shocked me far
+more than the first.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon about a week after the confession,
+there came a knock at the door, and to my complete surprise,
+in walked a banker, who had often stayed in our
+house in England. I was startled and annoyed, for I
+feared he would write home and tell the truth that my
+letters so carefully concealed. It was a couple of years
+since I had seen him. How had he found me out?
+His first sentence told me: “But this is dreadful.
+I knew nothing about your being ill. I didn’t know you
+were in New York even. An Englishman named Boyde
+came to my office yesterday and told me.” He looked
+me over with anxiety. “But your bones are showing!
+Have you been very bad? Why on earth didn’t you let
+me know, my dear fellow?”</p>
+
+<p>I had spoken of this acquaintance in Boyde’s presence,
+and he had evidently made a note of name and address.
+I explained quickly that I had not been seriously ill, that
+I was nearly well and had a good doctor, and that I was
+on the staff of the <i>Evening Sun</i> and doing well. I told him
+briefly about my Canadian career as well. The banker
+was a very decent fellow. His visit was brief, but he was
+very kind, well-meaning and sympathetic—only—I did
+not want him! He promised, anyhow, he would not write
+to my father—was glad, I think, to be relieved of the
+necessity—and before going he absolutely insisted on
+leaving some money with me. I refused and refused again.
+But my own exhaustion and his persistence resulted in
+his leaving all he had on him at the moment—$32. Months
+later I discovered that Boyde had obtained other sums
+from him on the plea that I needed a specialist, and there
+may have been yet further amounts of similar kind for
+all I knew.</p>
+
+<p>On coming in, Boyde took his scolding with a smile;
+he had “acted for the best....” We discussed how the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
+money should be spent, agreeing upon $10 to Mrs. Bernstein,
+$10 to the doctor next day, $3 to redeem Kay’s
+overcoat, which we would send to him, and the balance in
+hand, after laying in a store of dried apples, oatmeal and
+condensed milk, as our supplies were now exhausted.
+Next morning, when he left at eight o’clock for a studio
+appointment and choir rehearsal, I gave him the money
+for the landlady and a dollar he asked for himself. The
+balance he put back in the drawer of the little desk beside
+my bed.</p>
+
+<p>It was a happier morning than I had known for long;
+the feeling that I had something to give to the doctor
+made the hours pass quickly, and when he arrived at
+three, in his very best mood, he was obviously pleased
+on hearing that I could easily spare $10. The relief
+was written on his beaming face. He thanked me
+warmly. “I do really need it,” he said with emphasis,
+“or I couldn’t take it from you.” We passed a delightful
+hour or two; I was strong enough to play the fiddle to
+him; we talked ... the happiest afternoon I had yet
+known in that room came to an end; he prepared to go.
+Pointing to the drawer, I asked him to take the money
+out. He did so. At least he opened the drawer. He
+opened all four drawers. The money was not there.</p>
+
+<p>The most painful part of it, I think, was the look on his
+face as he presently went out. He did not believe me.
+I had found it impossible to mention Boyde. I had been
+speechless. I had no explanation to give. By the expression
+on the old German’s face as he left the room I
+could see he thought I was lying to him. His disappointment
+in me was greater than his disappointment over the
+money. It was a bitter moment—even more bitter than
+the further treachery of my companion....</p>
+
+<p>I was alone with my thoughts and feelings. I was alone
+for four days—and four nights. Boyde, that is, did not
+return till four days had passed, while the doctor stayed
+away three days. Whether either of them had said anything
+to Mrs. Bernstein on their way out, Boyde promising
+payment perhaps, the doctor letting fall something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
+derogatory, I did not know. Mrs. Bernstein, anyhow,
+was very unpleasant during those four awful days. Boyde
+had not even given her the $10. She paid me dreadful
+visits, she threatened to sell my things (what? I wondered),
+to turn me out; she sent up hardly any food....</p>
+
+<p>Waiting for Boyde’s step, listening all day, all night
+... I needed my books, my dreams, my inner crack,
+as I had never needed them before during those horrible
+four days. They seemed an eternity. The long nights, of
+course, were by far the worse; the dreams, the expectancy,
+for ever anticipating the familiar tread of stockinged feet
+on the stairs, wondering what in the world had happened,
+how things would end.... Had he been arrested, perhaps
+for something terrible? They were haunted nights
+that made me dread the first sign of coming dusk. It
+seemed like weeks, an incalculable time altogether had
+passed since I had seen him.... Then the spider took
+the place of the other vermin. I have always particularly
+disliked spiders, and this one was the father of them all;
+though it was the horror of him, not the physical presence,
+that haunted my nights so persistently. He was, I am
+sure, the Spider Idea. He originated in a room in Toronto,
+where a friend foolishly let his prototype, a tarantula,
+escape, and where it hid all night. It was my room.
+He came from Florida with a case of bananas. He was
+very big, if sluggish, his swollen body and hairy black
+legs the nastiest I had ever seen. I spent the night with
+this monster on the loose, and the first thing in the morning
+I saw him, low down on the wall, quite close to me.
+He had crept for warmth to a pipe near the hot air register.</p>
+
+<p>This spider now came at me, stirred into life by the
+chance activity of some memory cell. He came crawling
+across the leads, dragging his bulging body slowly, then
+feeling over the smooth glass with his legs that were like
+black brushes a chimney sweep might use. Up the stairs
+he came too, but sideways there, being too large to move
+in his usual way; first three legs on one side, then three
+legs on the other, heaving himself along, the mass of his
+body between them sloping like a boat at sea. The fat
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
+body was derived, I’m sure, from the shock of noticing
+Boyde’s well-fed appearance.... There were other things
+besides the spider, the mind, doubtless, being a little overwrought.</p>
+
+<p>One of these “other things” was real—a yellow-haired
+woman who aired what the papers called her
+“shapely legs” in silk tights for a living. Pauline M——
+was her name, and she was leading lady in the “Night
+Owls Company,” then playing at Tony Pastor’s Music
+Hall in 14th Street, or, perhaps, it was at Koster and
+Biel’s Hall further up town. I have forgotten. In any
+case, Boyde had mentioned the Company to me in
+some connexion or other. He knew her.</p>
+
+<p>Her visit to me has always seemed vague and hazy;
+shrouded in mist of some kind, the mist of my suffering
+mind, I imagine. There lies a feverish touch of fantasy
+all over it. It was on the evening of the second day since
+Boyde had disappeared, though I could have sworn that
+at least a week’s loneliness had intervened. It <i>was</i> the
+second day, I know, because the doctor came on the fourth.
+During the afternoon an unintelligible telegram had come,
+sent from a Broadway office: “<i>Don’t be anxious—have
+surprising news for you—no drinking—home this afternoon.——B.</i>”
+There was not much comfort in it, though
+at least I knew then he had not been arrested, but an hour
+or so later a second telegram had arrived, sent from an
+office above 42nd Street: “<i>Married Pauline this afternoon.——B.</i>”
+It all mystified, confused and troubled me
+extremely, and the strain on nerves and emotions had been
+so prolonged that, I think, I was half stupefied with it all,
+half stupid certainly.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, the visit always seemed a sort of unreal
+visit, veiled as it were, and shadowy. Two thoughts were
+in my mind when the knock sounded on the door: food
+and Boyde. I was always listening intently for his tread,
+but I was also listening for Mrs. Bernstein’s footstep with
+a possible tray. It was after six o’clock; since coffee
+and bread at 8.30 in the morning I had eaten nothing,
+for our own supplies were finished. Instead of Boyde or
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
+the tray, however, in walked the woman with yellow
+hair and statuesque figure. She wore furs, she was over-dressed
+and painted, she reeked of scent. To me it was a
+kind of nightmare vision.</p>
+
+<p>Details of her long visit I remember but very few.
+She at once announced herself—“I am Pauline M——”
+and asked excitedly, “Are you Blackwood?” She
+was in a “state.” Her great figure filled the little
+room. She poured out a torrent of words in a cockney
+voice. Her face was flaming red beneath the paint.
+Occasionally she swept about. The name of Boyde
+recurred frequently. She was attacking me, I gathered.
+Boyde had said this and that about me. I understood
+less than nothing. I remember asking her to sit down,
+and that she refused, and that presently I asked something
+else: “Has he married you?” and that she suddenly
+caught sight of the telegrams lying on my bed—I had
+pointed—then picked them up and read them. She came
+closer to me while she did this, so that I caught the stink
+of spirits.</p>
+
+<p>It was all very muddled and confused to me, and I made
+no attempt to talk. I heard her begging me to “give
+him back” to her, that she loved him, that I had “poisoned
+his mind” against her—threats and beseeching
+oddly mingled. But the telegrams seemed to sober her
+a little, for I remember her becoming abruptly more
+quiet, almost maudlin, and pouring out an endless story
+about Boyde who was, apparently, “full of money ...
+full of liquor” ... and full of anger against me because
+<i>he</i> had been “supporting” me and I had shown “base
+ingratitude.”... I was too bewildered to feel much.
+It numbed me. I couldn’t make sense of it. I couldn’t
+realize how Boyde had deliberately left me alone so long.
+Something monstrous and inhuman touched it all.</p>
+
+<p>She went away eventually in a calmer state, though
+leaving me in a condition that was far from calm. She
+went, begging me to “send him back” to her when he
+came home, but half realizing, I gathered, that the boot
+was on the other leg, so far as Boyde and myself were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
+concerned. She was still angry with me in a vague unjust
+sort of way, not knowing whom to believe probably,
+nor exactly what had happened. She flounced out of the
+room in a whirl of excitement and cockney sentences, and
+I never saw her again. My tray arrived within a few
+minutes of her welcome departure.... I spent an appalling
+night. Boyde, the yellow-haired woman, Mrs. Bernstein,
+the old German, the spider, steps on the stairs a hundred
+times that came to nothing.... I wished once or twice
+that I were dead.... The door did not open....</p>
+
+<p>It never rains but it pours. Two days later the doctor
+came in the afternoon, in the blackest mood I had yet
+encountered. I rather expected his visit, and though
+dreading it, I also longed for it, longed to see someone—a
+human being. He came sharp at three, attended
+to me, and left again. The visit lasted perhaps ten
+or fifteen minutes, and during the whole time he spoke
+no single word, not even greeting me when he entered,
+or saying good-bye when he went out. His face was
+black, aged, terrible in the suffering it wore. I had
+meant to tell him at last about Boyde, unable any
+longer to keep it to myself. I simply <i>must</i> tell someone.
+But not a syllable could I get out. When the old
+German had gone, however, I felt sure it was his own
+mysterious suffering, and not any feeling against myself,
+that caused his strange behaviour. I knew, too, that he
+would come again, and thus I got some comfort from
+his silent, rapid visit. This was on the fourth day
+since Boyde deserted; it was the day on which he came
+back.</p>
+
+<p>He came back; his money had given out; he had nowhere
+to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>It was night, somewhere about ten o’clock. I was falling
+into an uneasy doze, the kind of doze that introduced
+the spider, when the door opened softly. There was no
+knock. I had heard no footstep. The door just opened
+and he came in.</p>
+
+<p>Every nerve in me became alert. Truth to tell, there
+was no emotion in me of any sort or kind. I was numb,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
+exhausted to the bone. I lay still and stared at him. He
+looked sleek and even prosperous. He looked gorged with
+food. His face was a little swollen. The big blue eyes
+were clear. He let the eyeglass fall, gazing at me, while a
+smile broke over his face. I was so glad to see him, so
+relieved to have him back, that, though no emotion beyond
+that of suspense ended was in me, I felt, as once before
+with the doctor, a lump rise in my throat. His bloated
+expression distressed me vaguely. At first he said nothing,
+but walked across the room on tiptoe, as though pretending
+I was asleep and he feared to wake me.</p>
+
+<p>My tongue loosened suddenly. The very words I
+have not forgotten. A matter that had not lain in my
+mind for days came uppermost:</p>
+
+<p>“Did you send off the overcoat to Kay?”</p>
+
+<p>He nodded, but without looking at me. It was a lie,
+I knew. My eyes followed him round, as he began to
+undress. For several minutes I said nothing. Then
+other words came to me:</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been alone four days and nights.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence.</p>
+
+<p>“Without food—or anybody.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence, but he turned his back to me.</p>
+
+<p>“Without money.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence. He stood quite motionless.</p>
+
+<p>“I might have died. I might have gone crazy.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s been awful—the loneliness and wondering——”</p>
+
+<p>He half turned, but instantly turned back again. No
+sound escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been thinking about you—and wondering day
+and night. Are you really married? Pauline’s been
+here—this afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>His silence was broken by a sort of gulp, and he bent
+over. My mistake about the date of the woman’s visit
+was intentional—I thought it might open his lips; I did
+not correct it. He half turned to look at me, but again
+instantly hid his face as before. Then he abruptly sat
+down on the sofa, leaning against the back, his head in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
+his hands. I raised myself in bed, never taking my eyes
+off him.</p>
+
+<p>“I got your telegrams. Have you nothing to say?
+No explanation? Have you brought any food, any money?
+You have had money—all this time.”</p>
+
+<p>Silence, broken only by another gulp.</p>
+
+<p>“I saw you take the money out of the drawer. I said
+nothing because I thought you were going to get me things.
+I <i>trusted</i> you.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned all at once and faced me, though keeping
+his eyes always steadily on the floor. The tears were
+streaming down his face like rain.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you tired?” I asked. “You’d better lie down
+and go to sleep. You can talk to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>It was this that finished him. He had reached the
+breaking point.</p>
+
+<p>There is no heroism in me; it was simply that I needed
+him, rotten as he was, heartless, cruel, vile as well; I
+funked another spell of that awful loneliness; I knew him
+now for a coward and a beast, but I could not face another
+night alone. That complete loneliness had been too
+horrible. A wild animal was better than that. Boyde
+was of the hyena type, but a hyena was better than a
+spider. It was neither generosity nor nobility that made
+me listen to his ridiculous and lying story of an “awful
+and terrible temptation,” of a “fearful experience with
+a woman” who had drugged him.... The tale spun itself
+far into the night, the razor and the confession were under
+my pillow, I fell asleep, dead with exhaustion, while he was
+still explaining something about a “woman named
+Pauline M——” who had “deceived me in a most extraordinary
+way....”</p>
+
+<p>The following day, in the morning—Dr. Huebner
+came unexpectedly. Boyde had gone out before I woke.
+This time he was a radiant Dr. Jekyll, and I told him the
+whole story. His only comment, looking severely at me
+through the big spectacles, was: “I expected it. He is a
+confidence man. I knew it the first time I saw him.
+You have kicked the devil out, of course?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span></p>
+
+<p>A violent disagreement that was almost a quarrel
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>“I simply do not understand you,” he said at last,
+in complete disgust. It was only the wondrous, beaming
+happy mood he was in that prevented his being really angry.
+He threw his hands up and snorted. “You are either
+a fool or a saint, and—I’m sure you’re not a saint.” He
+was very much upset.</p>
+
+<p>I did not yield. There was something in me that
+persuaded me to forgive Boyde and to give him yet another
+chance. I told Boyde this in very plain language. I
+claim no credit—I have never felt the smallest credit—for
+what I did. It was simply that somehow it seemed
+impossible <i>not</i> to forgive him—anything. But the time
+was near, though the feeling of forgiveness still held true
+in me, when my forgiveness took another form. Thirty
+years ago these little incidents occurred. It seems like
+thirty days.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>It</span> is a mercy one cannot see the future. In that
+New York misery, present and to follow, had I
+known that some fifteen years later I should be my
+own master, living more or less “like a gentleman,”
+earning my livelihood, though a very bare one, by writing,
+I could never have faced what I did face. Any value that
+may have lain in the experiences would certainly have
+been missed, at any rate. If one knew that the future
+promised better things, there is no patience in human
+beings that could hold and wait for it; if, on the other
+hand, it promised worse, I have met no courage that could
+bear the present. Those who preach “live in the present
+only” have common sense on their side.</p>
+
+<p>With the memory of the past, similarly, such folk
+show wisdom. Reincarnation is an interesting theory
+to many; yet to recall past lives could have but one effect—to
+render one ineffective now. To recall the failures of
+a mere forty years is bad enough; to look back over a
+hundred lives would be disastrous: one could only sit
+down and cry.</p>
+
+<p>December had come with its cold and bitter winds,
+and the doctor, ever faithful, had let me up. I went for
+my first little walk, leaning on Boyde’s arm. Round
+Gramercy Park we crawled slowly, and that first taste
+of fresh air, the sound of wind in the leafless trees, a faint
+hint of the sea that reaches even the city streets, gave me
+an unforgettable happiness and yearning. The plan to
+settle in the backwoods again obsessed me. A little later
+I had almost persuaded the doctor, and Kay in my letters,
+to take up a claim north of the Muskoka Lakes where we
+had spent such a happy summer. Boyde was to come too—“as
+a sort of excitement, I suppose!” was the doctor’s
+bitter comment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span></p>
+
+<p>I grew gradually stronger. Reporting was still impossible,
+but, introduced by Boyde, I earned something
+by posing in the studios. A “sitting” was three hours.
+Some artists paid by the hour, but Charles Dana Gibson,
+then drawing his weekly cartoons in <i>Life</i>, always paid
+for a full sitting, though he might use his model for
+an hour only. He was a rapid worker, and a good
+fellow; he never forgot to ask if one was tired of any
+particular attitude; my first pose to him was for a broken-down
+actor leaning against a hoarding covered with advertisements,
+the joke being something about a bill-board
+and a board-bill. I was thrilled when it appeared in
+<i>Life</i>. There was always a great rush among the models
+for Gibson’s studio. The only other poses I remember
+are swinging a golf club and sitting for a bishop’s arms
+and hands. I wore big sleeves. These, however, were
+not in Gibson’s studio.</p>
+
+<p>My memory of this work is dim; it was not unpleasant;
+only its uncertainty against it, though a good week might
+bring in as much as fifteen dollars. Smedley, who illustrated
+for <i>Harper’s Magazine</i>, was the painter we all disliked
+most; Cox, son of Bishop Cox, Cleveland Cox being
+his full name, I think, was a favourite: he was a gentleman.
+There was Zogbaum too, another illustrator, and
+there was Lynwood Palmer, the horse-painter, and leading
+artist on <i>The Rider and Driver</i>, a first-class weekly of that
+day. “Artist Palmer,” as the papers called him later,
+was a character. His kindness to me stands out. He had
+very great talent—for getting the likeness of a horse.
+We called him “The Horse.” He made a success at his
+work, painted the “King’s Horses and Men” in subsequent
+years, and settled down eventually—he was an Englishman—I
+believe, at Heston, Hounslow. His New York
+studio was in Fifth Avenue. Many a time he gave me
+food there.</p>
+
+<p>“Artist Palmer” was self-taught. I forget the whole
+story, but he had known his hard times. Looking at my
+dirty boots the first time I called, he said: “When I
+drove a cab here, my boots were better cleaned than any
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
+man’s on the rank.” I was not partial to Dr. Smiles’
+“Self Help.” A “shine” moreover, cost 5 cents, and
+5 cents meant a glass of beer and a meal at a free lunch
+counter—our invariable lunch at that time.</p>
+
+<p>Artist Palmer knew Boyde as a bad lot, and told me
+that Boyde was lying about me behind my back everywhere,
+saying that he was supporting me, paying for my
+illness, and while borrowing money in my name, explaining
+that I spent all he gave me in dissipation! His method
+was to present a forged cheque to some good-natured
+friend after banking hours, obtain the money, and spend
+it on himself. A tale of woe, with crocodile tears, saved
+him from subsequent arrest. No one ever prosecuted him.</p>
+
+<p>All this I kept to myself, though I watched Boyde
+more and more closely. I knew his studio appointments
+and made him hand over what he earned. I did also an
+idiotic thing: I went down and warned the pastor’s
+daughter about him. Palmer’s words and my own feeling
+persuaded me to this fatal action. She was a beautiful
+girl. I received from her the same kind of treatment that
+I had shown to the man who first warned me. Boyde,
+of course, soon knew about it. We had a scene. I saw
+for the first time anger in his face, black hatred too. He
+never forgave me my stupid indiscretion.... The way
+he explained my action to the girl herself was characteristic
+of him, but I only learned later how he managed it.
+In a voluntary confession he wrote a few weeks afterwards,
+a confession he judged might convince me he
+was genuinely repentant, and at the same time save
+him from a grave impending fate, he described it—honestly:
+“I told her,” he said, “she was to pay no attention to
+your warnings, because you wanted me to marry one of
+your sisters.”</p>
+
+<p>The way I lost Boyde temporarily comes a little later
+in his story, but may be told here because it marked the
+close of a definite little chapter in his career with me.</p>
+
+<p>It was the first week in December. I came home—from
+the doctor’s house—at two in the morning. The
+gas was burning, but the room was not too well lit by the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
+single burner. Boyde lay asleep on the floor as usual.
+I moved softly so as not to wake him. I glanced down.
+What I saw startled me; more, it gave me a horrid turn.
+The figure on the mattress was another man. It was not
+Boyde. Then, as I cautiously looked closer, I discovered
+my mistake. It <i>was</i> Boyde after all, but without his
+moustache.</p>
+
+<p>I stared for some minutes in amazement, for the face
+was completely altered. The drooping, rather heavy
+moustache had always hidden his lips and mouth. I now
+saw that mouth. And it was a cruel, brutal mouth, hard,
+sensual, with ugly thickish lips, contradicting the kindly
+blue eyes completely. A sentence of detective-sergeant
+Heidelberg, a headquarters man, came back to me, himself
+a brutal, heartless type, if ever there was one, but with
+years of criminal experience behind him: “Watch the
+mouth and hands and feet,” he told me once in court.
+“They can fake the eyes dead easy, but they can’t fake
+the mouth hell give ’em. They forgit their hands and
+feet. Watch their mouth and hands and feet—the way
+these fidgit. That give ’em away every time.”</p>
+
+<p>Why had Boyde done this thing? He was a handsome
+man, the light graceful moustache was a distinct asset
+in his appearance. Why had he shaved suddenly? I
+stared at the new horrid face for a long time. He lay
+sleeping like a child.</p>
+
+<p>I turned to examine the room, as changes might be
+there too. All seemed as usual, I saw no difference anywhere.
+Then my eyes fell on the cupboard with its half-opened
+door. Boyde’s coat, that was my own coat, the
+only thick one we had between us, hung down from the
+hook. And, for the first time, the sight of that coat stirred
+a dim, painful memory of the place where I had first worn
+it. Naturally it was old, but it was also English. The
+house in Kent rose up—the lime trees on the lawn, the
+tennis courts, my father’s study, his face, my mother’s
+face, their voices even, the very smell and atmosphere
+and feelings of happy days that now seemed for ever lost.
+The whole machinery of association worked suddenly at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
+full pressure. It was like a blow. I realized vividly the
+awful gap between those days and these, between myself
+as I had been and as I was. A whiff of perfume, a smell,
+produces this kind of evocation in most cases; with me,
+just then, it was my old English coat.</p>
+
+<p>I remember the strong emotion in me, and that, while
+still held and gripped by it, my eye caught sight of an
+envelope sticking out of the inside breast pocket. The coat
+hung by chance in a way that made it visible. It might
+easily fall out altogether. I moved over and stretched
+out a hand to put it safely back and then saw that the
+writing on the envelope was my own. It was a letter.
+I took it out. The address was the house in Kent, whose
+atmosphere still hung about my thoughts. The name was
+my mother’s name. There were other letters, all my own;
+one to my father; two to my brother, the one being in the
+world I really loved, the only one of the family to whom
+I had given vague hints of the real state of affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the letters were two weeks, three weeks old.
+In each case the five-cent stamp had been torn off. Five
+cents meant a glass of lager and a meal at a free lunch
+counter.</p>
+
+<p>There was no reflection. Holding the letters in my
+hand, I moved across to the mattress. There was an
+anger in me that made me afraid, afraid of myself. I
+wanted to kill, I thought I was going to kill, I understood
+easily how a man <i>can</i> kill. In my mind was a vivid
+picture of my brother’s face—it was he, not my parents,
+who moved with me. But I was not excited; ice was in
+me, not fire. Something else, too, at that moment was
+in my veins, a drug ... a strong dose, too! Five minutes
+before my entire being had been in a state of utter bliss,
+of radiant kindness, of tolerance, of charity to everybody in
+the world. I would have given away my last cent, I
+would have forgiven anybody anything. All this was swept
+away in an instant. I felt a cold, white anger that wanted
+to kill.</p>
+
+<p>Boyde had not heard my footstep; he lay sound
+asleep. I tore the blanket off. He lay half naked before
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
+me, sleek, well-nourished, over-fed, loathsome, horrible
+beyond anything I had known. He turned with a jump
+and sat up. I held the letters against his face, but he
+was still dazed with sleep and only stared stupidly, first
+at the letters, then into my face.</p>
+
+<p>I kicked him; I had my boots on.</p>
+
+<p>“Get up!” I said. And, as he got up, rather heavily,
+trying to protect himself, I kicked him again and again, till
+at last he stood upright, but at some distance from me, over
+towards the window. He understood by this time; he
+saw the letters in my hand. The terror in his face sickened
+me even in my anger. I saw the evil almost visibly leap
+out. The unfamiliarity, now that the moustache was gone,
+the cruelty of the naked lips and mouth, the shrinking of
+the coward in him, these made an unforgettable picture.
+He did not utter a syllable.</p>
+
+<p>My own utterance, what words I used, I cannot remember.
+I did not remember them even ten minutes
+afterwards, certainly not the next day, when I told the
+doctor what had happened. Two sentences only remain
+accurate: “Come close to me. I’m going to kill you,”
+and the other: “Get ready! I’m going to beat you like
+an animal!”</p>
+
+<p>He stood before me, wearing his short day-shirt
+without a collar, his hair untidy, his face white, his half-naked
+body shaking. He dropped to his knees, he got
+up again and tried to hide, he cringed and whined like a
+terrified dog, his blue eyes were ghastly. In myself were
+feelings I had never dreamed I possessed, but whose
+evidence Boyde must, plainly, have read in my expression.
+What he could not read, nor ever knew of course, was the
+fight, the fight of terror, I was having with myself. I
+felt that once I touched him I should not stop till I had
+gone too far.</p>
+
+<p>I did not touch him once. Instead, I told him to put
+on his clothes, his own clothes, and go. He had no clothes
+of his own. He did not go.... I eventually let him
+wait till morning, when he could find enough rags of sorts
+to wear in the street.... He explained that he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
+shaved his moustache because the Rockaway Hunt demanded
+it.</p>
+
+<p>He had said hardly a word during the entire scene.
+Half an hour after it was over he was sleeping soundly
+again. I, too, thanks to the drug, slept deeply. I woke
+in the morning to find the mattress on the floor unoccupied.
+Boyde had gone. With him had gone, too, my one thick
+suit and, in addition, every possible article of pawnable
+or other value that had been in the room or in the
+packing-case downstairs. Only the razor and the confession
+had he left behind because they were beneath
+my pillow.</p>
+
+<p>The next time we met was in even more painful and
+dramatic circumstances. I decided it was time to act.</p>
+
+<p>I went down that same morning to police headquarters
+in Mulberry Street, and swore out a warrant for his arrest
+on two charges; forgery and petit larceny. A theft of
+more than $25 was grand larceny, a conviction, of course,
+carrying heavier punishment. I reduced his theft of
+my $32, therefore, by seven dollars, so that, if caught
+and convicted, his sentence might be as short as possible.</p>
+
+<p>But for the fact that I was a reporter on a Tammany
+newspaper, nothing would have happened. As it was, no
+bribe being available, the police refused to take any steps
+in the matter. The confession, they knew, was worthless;
+it was a small case; no praise in the press, no advertisement,
+lay in it. “Find out where he is,” Detective Lawler said,
+“and let us know. Just telephone and I’ll come up and
+take him. But <i>you</i> do the huntin’. See? <i>I</i> don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>This was Detective Lawler, who, under another name
+came into a story years later—“Max Hensig,” in “The
+Listener.”</p>
+
+<p>The determination to put Boyde where he could no
+longer harm himself or others held as firm in me as,
+formerly, the determination to forgive had held. The hunt,
+however, comes a little later in the story. There was first
+the explanation of the doctor’s secret. The doctor was
+my companion in the dreadful hunt.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>It</span> was, perhaps, the undigested horror of those days,
+as also their unsatisfied yearnings after beauty, that
+tried to find expression fifteen years later in writing.
+Once they were over I hid them away, those
+dreadful weeks, trying to forget them. But nothing is
+ever forgotten, nor is anything finally suppressed in the
+sense that it is done with. Expression, sooner or later,
+in one form or another, inevitably crops up.</p>
+
+<p>“Writing,” declared the old doctor, after a talk about
+De Quincey, “is functional.” He had many pet theories
+or hobbies on which he loved to expatiate. “Writing is
+as much a function of the system as breathing or excretion.
+What the body takes in and cannot use, it
+discards. What the mind takes in and cannot use, it,
+similarly, excretes. A sensitive, impressionable mind
+receives an incessant bombardment, often an intense,
+terrific bombardment of impressions. Two-thirds of such
+impressions are never digested, much less used. The
+artist-temperament whose sensitiveness accumulates a
+vast store, uses them; the real artist, of course, shapes
+them at the same time. The ordinary man, the <i>Dutzend
+Mensch</i>, made in bundles by the dozen, gets few impressions,
+and needs, naturally, no outlet.... Writing
+is purely functional....” It was one of his numerous
+pet theories.</p>
+
+<p>I went to his house now every night; he gave me his
+professional care, he gave me sympathy, he gave me food.
+Pathetic, wonderful old German! His tenderness was
+a woman’s, his temper a demon’s. I felt a giant in him
+somewhere. At close daily quarters his alternate moods
+perplexed me utterly. He had an Irish wife, a kind,
+motherly, but quite uneducated woman of about forty-five,
+and a little girl of eight or nine, whose white face
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
+looked as old as her mother’s, and whose diminutive figure
+seemed to me unusual somewhere. Was it not stunted?
+Her intelligence, her odd ways, her brilliant eyes captivated
+me. She called me “Uncle Diedel.” She talked,
+like her mother, broken German. Supper, an extremely
+simple meal, but a feast to me, was always in the basement
+kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>The tiny wooden house, owning something akin to
+squatter’s rights which prevented its demolition, stood
+in the next block to my own, hemmed in by “brownstone
+fronts,” but with a miniature garden. New York,
+that burns anthracite coal, has no blacks and smuts; the
+trees and shrubs were really green; the earth smelt
+sweet. The little house, standing back from the road,
+was a paradise to me. Its one ground-floor apartment
+was divided by folding doors into consulting- and waiting-rooms.
+But no patients came, or came so rarely that it
+was an event when the door-bell rang. The doctor had
+the greatest difficulty in keeping himself and family alive.
+At supper I used to eat as little as possible. He seemed
+a competent physician. I wondered greatly. As well
+as real human kindness, there was courage in that little
+building; there was also a great tragedy I sensed long
+before I discovered its solution. The strange innocence
+and ignorance of my up-bringing still clung to me.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment, the poverty, the alternating moods,
+as I said, puzzled me; I was aware of a whole life hidden
+away from my observation. They were so poor that dinner
+was the meal of a workman, they could not even keep a
+servant. There were worrying debts as well. Often the
+doctor was so bearish and irritable that I dared not say a
+word, his wife got curses and abuse, he would almost kick
+the child, finding fault with such sneers and rudeness that
+I vowed to myself I would never eat his food again. Then,
+after a momentary absence in his workshop upstairs,
+where he kept a lathe and made beautiful chessmen, he
+would come slowly stumbling down again, and the door
+would open to a wholly different being. Bent, as always,
+but well poised and vigorous, with bright smiling eyes,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
+benevolent yet rugged face, every gesture full of gentle
+kindness, he would pat his old wife on the shoulder and
+take the child upon his knee, and beg me to play the fiddle
+to him or to draw my chair up for an intimate talk. He
+would light his great meerschaum pipe and beam upon
+the world through the blue smoke like some old jolly idol.
+The change seemed miraculous.</p>
+
+<p>His talk seemed, at the time, wonderful to me. He
+would discourse on Kant, Novalis, Heine, on music, science,
+astronomy—“when your troubles seem at their worst,”
+he would say, “look up at the stars for half an hour, <i>with
+imagination</i>, and you’ll see your troubles in a new perspective”—on
+religion, literature and life, on anything
+and everything, while downstairs his kindly old wife
+prepared the Frankfurters and sauerkraut and coffee.</p>
+
+<p>Neither mother nor child, I noticed, paid much attention
+to his attacks. The little girl, who called her father
+“Otto,” sat up with us night after night till two in the
+morning, and hated going to bed. She listened spellbound
+to the stream of talk. I still see the dingy, lamp-lit room
+in the heart of the roaring city, the white-haired old doctor,
+pipe in mouth, the operating chair in the middle of the
+floor, the little pale-faced child with her odd expression
+of maturity as she looked from him to me, then
+led me by the hand to our late meal in the gloomy
+basement. I often waited achingly for that meal, having
+eaten nothing since breakfast. Would he never stop
+talking...?</p>
+
+<p>We talked of Boyde—his face. The doctor’s reading
+of Boyde’s face was that it was a bad, deceitful, clever
+face, evil, brutal and cruel. I mentioned the man’s
+various acts of kindness. “Bait,” he exclaimed, with a
+scornful snort, “mere bait! He wanted a free lodging.
+He had plenty of money all along, but the free bed gave
+him more—to spend on himself while you starved.”</p>
+
+<p>He talked on about faces.... Handsome ones he
+either disliked or distrusted, handsome features like
+Boyde’s were too often a cloak that helped to hide and
+deceive. Behind such faces, as a rule, lay either badness
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
+or vacuity; good looks were the most misleading thing
+in the world. Expression rarely accompanied good looks,
+good features. He was off on a pet hobby, he waxed
+eloquent. Beautiful women—he spoke of good features
+chiefly—were almost invariably wicked, or else empty.
+Of “Society Beauties” he was particularly contemptuous.
+“Regular features, fine eyes, perfect skin, but no expression—no
+soul within. The deer-like eyes, the calm,
+proud loveliness people rave about is mere vacancy.
+Pfui!”</p>
+
+<p>His habit of staring into the mirror came back to me,
+and I ventured a question. He hesitated a moment,
+then got up and led me to the glass, where, without a
+word, he began to gaze at his own reflection, making the
+familiar grimaces, smiling, screwing up his eyes, stretching
+his lips, raising his eyebrows, pulling his moustache about
+until, at last, I burst into laughter I could control no
+longer.</p>
+
+<p>He turned in astonishment. He examined my own
+face closely for some time. “You are too young still,”
+he said. “You have no lines. In my face, you see, lies
+all my past, layer below layer, skin behind skin, my face
+of middle age, of early manhood, of youth, of childhood.
+It carries me right back.”</p>
+
+<p>He began showing me again, pointing to his reflection
+as he did so. “That’s middle age ... that’s youth.... Ach!
+and there’s the boy’s face, look!”</p>
+
+<p>I did not dare to look, for explosions of laughter were
+in my throat, and I should have hurt his feelings dreadfully.
+I understood what he meant, however.</p>
+
+<p>“With the face of each period,” he explained, “rise
+the memories, feelings and emotions of that particular
+period, its point of view, its fears, ambitions—<i>hopes</i>. I
+live again momentarily in it. I am a young man again,
+a boy, a child. I am, at any rate, no longer myself—<i>as
+I now am</i>.” The way he spoke these four words was very
+grave and sad. “Now,” he went on with a sigh, “you
+understand the charm of the mirror. It means escape
+from self. This is the ultimate teaching of all religion—to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
+escape from Self.” He chuckled. “The mirror is
+my Religion.”</p>
+
+<p>During this odd little scene I felt closer to his secret
+than ever before. There was something fine and lovely
+in him, something big, but it lay in ruins. Had my
+attitude been a little different, had I not laughed for instance,
+I think he would have taken me into his confidence
+there and then. But the opportunity was lost this time.
+He asked, instead, for music, old, simple German songs
+being what he liked most. He would lean back in his big
+chair, puff his great pipe, close his eyes, and hum the
+melodies softly to himself while I played. It was easy
+to vamp a sort of accompaniment with double stopping.
+He dreamed of old days, I suppose; it was a variant of
+the mirror game. Tschaikowsky, Meyer-Helmund, Massenet
+he also liked, but it was Schubert, Schumann, even
+Mendelssohn he always hummed to. Of “<i>Ich grolle-nicht,
+auch wenn das Herz mir bricht</i>,” he never tired. The
+little child would dart up from the basement at the first
+sound of the fiddle, show her old, white face at the door,
+then creep in, sit in a corner, and never take her eyes
+from “the orchestra.” When it stopped playing, she
+was off again in a second.</p>
+
+<p>One item, while speaking of the music, stands out—chanting
+to the fiddle a certain passage from De Quincey.
+The “Confessions” fascinated him; the description of
+the privations in London, the scenes with Anne when she
+first brought him out of her scanty money the reviving
+glass of port, her abrupt disappearance finally and his
+pathetic faithful search, the lonely hours in the empty
+house in Greek Street, but particularly his prolonged
+fight against the drug. It was the Invocation to Opium,
+a passage of haunting beauty, however, he loved so much
+that he chanted it over and over to himself. The first
+time he did this I invented a soft running accompaniment
+on the lower strings, using double stopping. The mute
+was on. My voice added the bass. It was a curious composition
+of which he never tired; it moved him very
+deeply; I have even seen tears trickling down his cheeks
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
+when it was over. He always left his chair for this performance,
+walking slowly to and fro while he chanted
+the rhythmical, sonorous sentences:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“O just, subtle and mighty opium! that, to the hearts of
+rich and poor alike, for the wounds that will never heal, and for
+the pangs of grief that tempt the spirit to rebel, bringest an
+assuaging balm;—eloquent opium! that with thy potent
+rhetoric stealest away the purposes of wrath.... Thou buildest
+upon the bosom of darkness, out of the fantastic imagery of
+the brain, cities and temples, beyond the art of Phidias and
+Praxiteles, beyond the splendours of Babylon and Hekatompylos;
+... and hast the keys of Paradise, O just, subtle and mighty
+opium...!”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>“<i>Ach! wie prachtvoll!</i>” he would cry a moment
+later, “<i>wie wunderschoen!</i>” and then would recite a
+translation he had made into his own tongue, and a very
+fine one too. Quite delighted, he would repeat the passage
+over and over again, pausing to compare the two versions,
+fixing me with his big eyes in order to increase his own
+pleasure in the music by witnessing the evidence of my
+own.</p>
+
+<p>Truly he was a Jekyll and Hyde.</p>
+
+<p>It was only during the Jekyll mood this kind of scene
+took place; in the Jekyll happy humour, too, that I
+had told him about my strange up-bringing. “Now I
+understand better,” he said, “why you are still so young
+and know so little of life, and why you are so foolishly
+good to Boyde”—which annoyed me, because I considered
+myself now quite old and a thorough man of the world
+as well.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this mood, too, that we discussed my own
+theories and beliefs ... a life in the woods as well.
+Kay, himself and his family, Boyde and I were to settle
+in the backwoods ... perhaps I was as eloquent as I
+was earnest; he listened attentively; sometimes he
+seemed almost ready to consent; he understood, at any
+rate, the deep spell that Nature had for me. But he only
+smiled when I said I was a failure and an outcast. My
+life had hardly begun yet! No man was a failure who
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
+had an object and worked for it, even though he never
+got within miles of accomplishment. “A life for a man
+is a life <i>among</i> men,” he would say with emphasis. “The
+woods are all right as an interlude, but not as a career.”
+He was very sympathetic, but he shook his head violently.
+“In action lies a man’s safety in life,” he growled at me.
+“The world needs men of action, not dreamers,” he repeated
+and repeated, “and Buddhism has never yet produced
+a man of action. Do <i>something</i>, even if it prove
+the wrong thing. Dreaming, without action, is the
+quickest way of self-corruption I know.” And he would
+then urge me again to become a doctor, after which he
+would proceed to dream himself for an hour or two ...
+showing that all his life he had been far more of a dreamer
+than a man of action....</p>
+
+<p>It was chance that suddenly led me into the doctor’s
+secret. He became for me, from that moment, the most
+pathetic and tragic of human beings. My own troubles
+seemed insignificant.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon early in December, gloomy, very cold,
+a studio appointment failed, and I decided to go to the
+wooden house. It was that or the public library, but I
+wanted a talk, I wanted also to get really warm. I had
+no overcoat; the doctor’s room was always like an oven.
+The vermin I had grown accustomed to and hardly noticed
+them. An idea of food, too, was in my mind, for the free
+lunch glass of beer and salt chip-potatoes was all I had eaten
+since breakfast. Seven o’clock, however, was my usual
+hour of visit, I had never been in the afternoon before.
+A memorable visit; we were alone; he told me his secret
+very quietly.</p>
+
+<p>I found him in his most awful mood, rude, his nerves
+unbearably on edge. He said he had not expected me,
+but when I tried to go, he became angry and begged me
+to stay, saying that I helped him more than I could ever
+know. Had I brought the fiddle? I said I would run
+up the street and get it. “No,” he implored, “don’t go
+now. You can go later—before supper. <i>Please</i> do not
+leave me—<i>please</i>!” He then said he would tell me
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
+something no one else knew, no one except his wife. I
+wondered what was coming, and felt strangely touched
+and moved at his treating me with such confidence. His
+manner was so pathetic, and he seemed suddenly to have
+become weak and helpless, and somehow or other it was
+in my power to do him a service. I was thrilled and full
+of expectation.</p>
+
+<p>But, before he began to tell me, he went up to a little
+cabinet with a glass door and took out a small bottle full
+of a white powder, bearing the word, the magical word
+“Majendie”—a word I can never forget as long as I live—and
+took some of the powder and made a solution and
+then sucked some of it up with a needle and turned to me.
+His face was swollen and looked terrible, for the eyes
+glowed so hotly, and the skin was so red and white in
+patches. Then he began to open his waistcoat and shirt
+till his chest was bare. “Look,” he said, for I half
+moved aside, and when I looked I saw he was covered
+with hundreds of small red sores.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently my face betrayed shrinking and horror, for
+the old man laughed and said “Oh, I’m not a leper.
+They’re only blisters,” and then finding a little clear
+space on his skin, put the needle of his syringe through
+the flesh and injected the fluid into his body. He next
+quickly put his finger over the spot and rubbed to and
+fro for about a minute, staring steadily at me while he
+did so.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s morphine,” he said in a dead voice, “and
+the rubbing is necessary to prevent a blister forming.”</p>
+
+<p>I knew nothing about morphine except the name, and
+I was disappointed rather than thrilled, but the next
+minute he gave me all the thrill I wanted, and more
+besides:</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been fighting it for two years,” he said quietly
+in German, still rubbing the spot and staring hard at me,
+“and I am slowly getting the better of it. If I don’t
+succeed, it means I die.” A cold grim smile that made
+me shudder stole over his swollen face. “<i>Death</i>,” he
+added.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span></p>
+
+<p>I felt his despair, the despair of doubt, as he said this,
+and in his eyes blazed suddenly all the suppressed depths
+of suffering and emotion that he usually kept hidden.
+Such a flood of sympathy for the old man rose in me that
+I did not know what to say. Of drugs and their power
+I knew nothing. I stood and stared in silence, but his
+voice and manner made me realize one thing: that here
+was an awful battle, a struggle between human courage,
+will and endurance, on the one hand, and some tremendous
+power on the other—a struggle to the death. The word
+“morphine” seemed to me some sort of demon.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down in his armchair, lit his pipe, pulled up
+the operating chair for me to lie on beside him, and then
+told me very quietly why he took it. Already his face
+looked different, as the morphine circulated through the
+blood, and he smiled and wore a genial happy air of benevolence
+that made him at once a different man.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall have peace now for several hours,” he said,
+“but I don’t take morphine for pleasure. I take it
+because it is the only way to keep myself alive and to
+keep my wife and child from starving. If I can gradually
+wean myself from it I shall live for years. If not, and
+I cannot make the dose less and less, it will kill me very
+soon. I am old, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>He told me very simply, but very graphically, speaking
+in German as he loved to do, that three years ago he
+had enjoyed a good and lucrative practice. But he had
+embarked upon some experiments in his leg—I never
+understood exactly what and did not dare to ask—and
+to observe these properly he was obliged to use the knife
+without taking any anæsthetic. His wife stood beside
+him and staunched the blood, but the pain and shock
+proved more than he was equal to, being an old man, and
+a collapse followed. All his patients left him, for he could
+not attend to them, and in order to be in a fit condition
+to see even chance callers he had to inject morphine. Thus
+the habit began, and before he knew where he was the
+thing had him by the throat. He was a man of great
+natural strength of will and he began to stop it, but the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
+fight was far harder than he had imagined, and his nerves
+seemed to have gone to pieces. Unless he had the support
+of a dose, he was so brutal, irritable and rude that no one
+could stay in his presence, and no patient would come
+near him. He never got his practice back again, and
+whenever a stray patient called now he had to take an
+injection, or he would be sure to behave in such a way
+that the man or woman would never return. He used
+atropine to mix with his morphine, and thus tried gradually
+to cure himself, and lately had succeeded in reducing the
+quantity very considerably, but it was an awful fight,
+and he admitted the end was uncertain. He said I
+helped him to bear the strain. My presence, he said, the
+music too, gave him some sort of comfort and strength,
+and he was always glad to see me. When I was there he
+could hold out longer than when he was alone, and one
+reason he was telling me all this intimate history—telling
+it to a comparative stranger—was because he wished me
+to try and help him more.</p>
+
+<p>I stammered some words in broken German about
+being eager and willing to help, and he smiled and
+said he thanked me and “we would make the fight
+together.”</p>
+
+<p>“The charm is very powerful,” he went on, “especially
+to a nature like mine, for when I take this stuff the
+world becomes full of wonder and mystery again, just as it
+was for me sixty years ago when I was a boy with burning
+hopes and high dreams. But far more than that, I <i>believe
+in people</i> again. That makes more difference in your life
+than anything else, for to lose faith in men makes life unbearable.
+Bitter experiences have shaken my trust and
+belief in my fellow creatures. But with this stuff in me
+I find it again and feel at peace with the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is why you sometimes approve and at other
+times disapprove of my attitude towards Boyde?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, with a most benign and delightful
+expression in his eyes. “Give him every chance. There’s
+lots of good in him. He feels, no doubt, that everyone
+who knows about him distrusts him. Weak men will
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
+always try more or less to live up to what is expected of
+them, for they are easily hypnotised. If they feel every
+one expects only evil from them their chief incentive is
+lost.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I ought never to let him think I’ve lost belief
+in him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Never. Frighten him, kick him, urge him along
+with violence, anything to make him move of himself
+towards being decent; but never suggest he <i>cannot</i> be,
+and <i>is not</i>, decent and straight.”</p>
+
+<p>How we talked that night—and how I suffered from
+hunger, for when morphine was in him the old doctor ate
+little, and this time he was full of ideas and ideals, and
+had so sympathetic a listener, that he forgot I might want
+food, and it was not till after one in the morning that he
+began to flag and thought of coffee. We went down into
+the kitchen, and there we found the patient wife dozing on
+the wooden chair, and the child reading a book—“Undine”—on
+the deal table, with her eyes so bright I thought
+they were going to shoot out flame. She looked up and
+stared at us for a long time before she got herself back
+from that enchanted region of woods and pools and moonlight....
+Strange supper parties they were, in that
+quiet, basement-kitchen between one and two of the
+winter mornings of December, 1892....</p>
+
+<p>Otto Huebner, having broken the ice, told me much
+of his own life then. Owing to family disputes he left
+the manufacturing town in Northern Germany where he
+was born and brought up, and came to New York as a young
+man. He never saw his parents again, and took out
+naturalization papers at once. For years he was employed
+by Steinway’s piano factory, as a common workman
+at first, then as a skilled man. He was unmarried,
+he saved money, he began to study at night; the passion
+for medicine was so strong in him that he made up his
+mind to become a doctor. He attended lectures when he
+could. It was a life of slavery, of incessant toil both day
+and night. He was over forty when he began studying
+for the examinations, and it took him seven years to attain
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
+his end. His health had suffered during this strenuous
+time. He had married well after fifty....</p>
+
+<p>Dear, lovable, much-to-be-pitied old man, my heart went
+out to him; I was determined to do everything I could to
+help. I owed him much for counsel, sympathy and kindness,
+to say nothing of medical attendance and food
+besides, at a time, too, when I believed myself a complete
+failure and thought my life was ruined. England, my
+family, all that I had been accustomed to seemed utterly
+remote; I had cut myself off; I had tumbled into quite
+another world, and the only friend I had, the only being
+I trusted, even loved as well, was the old German morphine
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, it had been very wonderful to me to see
+an irritable, savage old man change in a few minutes
+into a kindly, genial, tender-hearted being, and I began
+to feel an absorbing curiosity about this fine white powder
+labelled “Majendie.” I invariably now rubbed in the
+dose, finding with increasing difficulty a clear space of
+skin in the poor worn old body. I watched the change
+steal over him. It seemed to me pure magic. It began
+more and more to fascinate me.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>A few</span> days after the doctor’s secret had been laid
+bare I received a brief, curt letter from McCloy
+to say he could not keep my place open for ever;
+how soon was I coming back? Six weeks had passed
+already. The doctor convinced me I was not yet in a
+condition to face ten hours’ hard reporting a day. I
+answered McCloy as best I could, thanking him, and telling
+the facts. Dr. Huebner also wrote him a line.</p>
+
+<p>I was distressed and anxious, none the less, and that
+evening I was certainly not at my best. I gave the old
+man but little help. His method of using me was simple:
+if I could manage to interest him, by talk, by music, by
+books, by anything at all, it enabled him to postpone the
+hour of injection. Each time we tried to make this interval
+longer; each time, he told me, he took a smaller
+quantity.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular evening, hungry and depressed as
+I was, I failed to be “interesting,” and no forced attempt
+could make me so. My own condition, in any case, was
+pretty low; my friend’s dejection and excessive irritability
+proved the last straw. We disagreed, we hurt each other’s
+feelings a little, I relapsed into silence finally, the gloom
+was dreadful. My own troubles just then were uppermost
+in my mind. If I lost my job, I kept thinking,
+what on earth would happen to me?...</p>
+
+<p>The old man presently, and long before his time, got
+up in silence and went to the glass cabinet where now the
+Majendie bottle stood. He no longer kept it in his workshop
+out of sight. His face was black as thunder. Conscience
+pricked me; I roused myself, saying something by
+way of trying to prevent, whereupon he turned and said
+savagely: “Do you want to see me die? Or lose my
+reason?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span></p>
+
+<p>As already mentioned, I was totally ignorant of drugs
+and their effect. His words, which I took literally, frightened
+me. I watched him mix the solution, fill his syringe
+slowly with shaking hands, then unfasten his clothes.
+I found the place and rubbed the skin as usual, while he
+sat back in his big chair, in sullen silence. He drew the
+needle out; his face was awful; he sighed and groaned;
+I really thought he was going to collapse before my eyes,
+perhaps to die. I rubbed and rubbed ... while the
+magical change stole slowly over him. His face cleared,
+his smile came back, he looked younger, his very voice
+became mellow instead of harsh and rough, his eyes lit up
+with happiness.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast was astonishing, the effect so rapid.
+And, for the first time, a longing rose in me: if only <i>I</i>
+could have some of this bewitching panacea! My troubles
+would all melt away. I should feel happy. Hunger
+also would disappear. Was it so terrible and dangerous
+after all?</p>
+
+<p>The thought went through me like a burning flame.</p>
+
+<p>It was a thought, merely. I had no intention of asking,
+not even of suggesting, such a thing. I would not
+have dared to; the old man, I knew, besides, would never,
+never consent; his obstinacy was beyond any power of
+mine to modify. None the less, the thought and desire
+were distinctly in me at that moment. It even crossed
+my mind that he was selfish, inconsiderate, unkind, not
+to realize that a little, oh, just a tiny dose, would help me
+and make me happy too.</p>
+
+<p>The change in him was now complete, he settled back
+in his deep chair. I heard him asking for the fiddle. I
+remember the effort it cost me to say something about
+being ready to try, and how I concealed my sulky face
+as I crossed the room to open my case. I felt disappointed,
+rather sore, a trifle angry too; he could so easily open the
+gates of heaven for me. I fumbled with the case, delaying
+on purpose, for no music lay in me, and I did not want to
+play, I felt miserable all over. My back was turned to him.
+And then I heard my name softly spoken close behind me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span></p>
+
+<p>I turned with a start, it was the doctor’s voice, its
+peculiar softness struck me. He was coming slowly
+across the room, a curious smile on his face, peering at me
+over the top of his spectacles, the shoulders bent forward
+a little, his gait slouching, his slippers dragging along the
+carpet, his white hair tumbling about his forehead, moving
+slowly at me—and in his raised right hand was a needle
+poised to strike.</p>
+
+<p>I knew what it meant: he was going to give me
+morphia without even being asked. A queer revulsion of
+feeling came over me. He was saying something, but I
+did not hear the words properly, nor understand them,
+at any rate; his voice, too, was so low and soft. My
+brain was in a whirl. Something in the old man’s appearance
+frightened me. The idea of the drug now also
+frightened me. Then, suddenly, a complete recklessness
+rushed over me.</p>
+
+<p>“Take off your coat,” I heard him say. “And now
+roll your sleeve up. <i>So! Nun, jetzt</i>”—he gazed hard into
+my eyes—“<i>aber—nur—ausnahmsweise!</i>” With slow
+earnest emphasis he repeated the words: “As an exception—only!”</p>
+
+<p>I watched him choose the place on my arm, I
+watched the needle go in with its little prick, I watched
+him slowly press the small piston that injected the poison
+into my blood. He, for his part, never once moved his
+eyes from mine till the operation was ended, and my coat
+was on again. He wore that curious smile the whole time.
+“You needed it to-night,” he said, “just a little, a very
+weak dose—<i>aber—nur—ausnahmsweise</i>!” He walked
+over and put the little Majendie phial back upon the shelf.
+Then he filled his pipe and drew up the operating chair
+for me to lie on. His eye was constantly on me. The
+music was forgotten. He wanted to talk.</p>
+
+<p>Whether he had done this thing really to give me a
+little happiness, or whether his idea was to make me
+“interesting” for his own sake, I do not know. The
+fact is that within three minutes of the needle’s prick I
+was in a state of absolute bliss.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span></p>
+
+<p>A little warm sensation, accompanied by the faintest
+possible suggestion of nausea which was probably my own
+imagination, passed up the spine into the head. Something
+cleared in my brain, then burst. A sense of thawing
+followed, the melting away of all the things that had been
+making me unhappy. I began to glow all over. Hope,
+happiness and a gorgeous confidence flowed in; benevolence,
+enthusiasm, charity flooded me to the brim. I
+wanted to forgive Boyde <i>everything</i> to the end of time,
+sacrifice my entire life to cure my old German friend;
+everything base, unworthy, sordid in me, it seemed,
+had dropped away....</p>
+
+<p>The experience is too well-known to bear another
+description; it varies, of course, with individuals; varies,
+too, according to the state of health or sickness, according
+to whether it is needed or not really needed; and while
+some feel what I felt, others merely sleep, or, on the contrary,
+cannot sleep at all. The strength of the dose,
+naturally, is also an important item. Individual reactions,
+anyhow, are very different, and with Kay, to whom
+later the doctor gave it too, three doses produced no effect
+whatever, while the fourth brought on the cumulative
+result of all four at once, so that we had to walk him up
+and down, pouring strong black coffee down his unwilling
+throat, urging him violently not to sleep—the only thing
+he wanted to do—or he would, old Huebner assured him—never
+wake again.... In my case, at any rate, wasted
+physically as I was, empty of food, under-nourished for
+many weeks, below par being a mild description of my
+body, the result seemed a radiance that touched ecstasy.
+It was, of course, an intensification of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>Such intensification, I well knew, could be produced
+by better if more difficult ways, ways that caused no
+reaction, ways that constructed instead of destroyed ...
+and the first pleasure I derived from my experience, the
+interest that first stirred flashingly and at once through
+my cleared mind, was the absolute conviction that the
+teaching and theories in my books were true....</p>
+
+<p>The doctor sat, smiling at me from his chair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I would not do this for many,” he said in German,
+“but for you it has no danger. <i>You</i> could stop anything.
+You have real will.” After a pause he added: “Now we
+are happy; we are both happy. Let us dream without
+thinking. Let us <i>realize</i> our happiness!...”</p>
+
+<p>The hours passed while we talked, and my hunger was
+forgotten. I only wanted one thing to complete my
+happiness—I wanted Kay, I wanted Boyde, and I wanted
+one figure from across the sea, my brother. Had these
+three come to join the circle in that dingy consulting-room,
+my heaven, it seemed to me, would have been made
+perfect....</p>
+
+<p>The passing of time was not marked. I played the
+fiddle, and we chanted the old man’s favourite passage:
+“O just, subtle and mighty opium!” ... its full meaning,
+with the appeal it held, now all explained to me
+at last. As I laid the instrument down, I saw the white
+face of the little girl just inside the half-opened door.
+She caught my eye, ran up to me, and climbed upon
+my knee.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Uncle Diedel,” she cried, “how big your eyes
+are! I do believe Otto has given you some of his Majendie
+medicine. Are you going to die, too, unless you have it?”</p>
+
+<p>Nothing, it seemed, was hidden from the clear vision
+that lay in me then; the appalling truth flashed into me on
+the instant. The little, stunted figure, the old expression
+in the pallid child-face, the whiteness of the skin, the brilliant
+eyes, all were due to the same one thing. Did the
+doctor, her own father, give <i>her</i> the needle too?</p>
+
+<p>It was on this occasion, this night of my first experience
+with morphine, that I found my letters with the stamps
+torn off. I reached home, as described, about two in the
+morning, still in a state of bliss, although the effect of the
+drug was waning a little then. But there was happiness,
+affection, forgiveness and charity in my heart, I thought.
+This describes my feelings of the moment certainly.
+How they were swept away has been already told. So
+much for the pseudo-exaltation of the drug! And, while
+on this subject, the part played by the drug in this particular
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
+little scrap of history may as well be told briefly
+at once and done with.</p>
+
+<p>The suggestion that I could “stop anything,” combined
+with my own desire, was potent. There was another way
+in which the insidious poisoning also worked: I became
+so “interesting,” and entertained the old doctor so successfully,
+that he found himself able to do without his own
+dose. The stern injunction “<i>nur ausnahmsweise</i>” was
+forgotten. Without the stuff in my blood I was gloomy,
+stupid, dull; with it, I became alive and helped him.
+But the headache and depression, the nausea, the black
+ultimate dejection of the “day after” could be removed
+by one thing only. Nothing else had the slightest effect,
+and only another dose could banish these after-effects—a
+stronger dose. While the old man was soon able to reduce
+not only the quantity he took, but the number of
+injections as well, my own dose, to produce the desired
+effect, had to be doubled.</p>
+
+<p>Every night for four weeks that needle pricked me.
+In my next incarnation—if it takes place—I shall still see
+the German doctor slouching across the room at me with
+the loaded syringe in his poised hand, and the strange look
+in his eyes. It seems an ineradicable memory.... By
+the end of the four weeks, I was working again on the
+newspaper; my visits to the wooden house I cut down to
+two a week, then one a week. It was a poignant business.
+He needed me. Desire for the “balm that assuaged,”
+desire to help the friend who was slowly dying, desire to
+save myself from obvious destruction, these tugged and
+tore me different ways. For the full story I should have
+to write another book.... Three things saved me, I
+think—in the order of their value: my books and beliefs;
+Nature—my Sundays in Bronx Park or the woods of the
+Palisades in New Jersey; and, lastly, the power of the
+doctor’s own suggestion, “<i>you</i> could stop anything!”...</p>
+
+<p>When May came, with her wonder and her magic,
+I was free again, so free that I could play the fiddle and
+talk to the old man by the hour, and feel even no desire
+for the drug. Nor has the desire ever returned to me from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
+that day to this. An experiment with haschisch, a good
+deal later, an account of which I wrote for my paper at
+the time, had no “desire” in it. Foolish and dangerous
+though the experiment was, of course, the <i>cannabis
+indica</i> was not taken for indulgence, nor to bring a false
+temporary happiness into a life I loathed. I did it to earn
+a little extra money; Kay did it with me; three times in
+all we took it. Some of the effects I tried to describe
+years later in the first story of a book, “John Silence.”</p>
+
+<p>My decision, with the steps I had taken, to arrest
+Boyde, I told to the doctor on the afternoon following the
+discovery of his treachery with my letters. He approved.
+This time even his Jekyll personality approved.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll never catch him though,” he growled. “He’s
+too clever for you. He’ll hear about the warrant and be
+out of the State in a day, if not out of the country. In
+Canada they can’t touch him. Besides, the police won’t
+stir a finger. Oh, you’ll never catch him.”</p>
+
+<p>I felt otherwise, however, I meant to catch him,
+while at the same time I did not want to. The horrible
+man-hunt began that very night.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> search for Boyde was a prolonged nightmare:
+used several times already, this phrase alone describes
+it. It lasted over a fortnight. Every
+night, from nine o’clock till two, or even later in the morning,
+it continued. The old doctor almost invariably
+came with me. It was mid-winter and bitter cold, I
+still had no overcoat, a thin summer vest being my only
+underwear. The disreputable haunts we searched were
+heated to at least 70° F., whereas the street air was commonly
+not far from zero, with biting winds or icy moisture
+that cut like a knife. It must have been the drug
+that saved me from pneumonia, for I was in and out of
+a dozen haunts each night.... I was a prey to contrary
+and alternating emotions—the desire to let the fellow go
+free, the conviction that it was my duty to save him from
+himself, to save others from him as well. The distress,
+unhappiness and doubt I experienced made that prolonged
+man-hunt indeed a nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>Plans were laid with care and knowledge. Boyde,
+we argued, had money, or he would have returned to East
+19th Street. Had he enough to bribe the police, or to go
+to Canada? We decided that his contempt for me would
+outweigh any fear he felt that I might take action. The
+“Night Owls” were now away on tour; he would hardly
+go after Pauline M——. We concluded he was “doing
+the town,” as it was called, and was not very far from East
+19th Street. With his outstanding figure and appearance,
+it ought not to be difficult to find some trace of him
+in the disreputable places. The “Tenderloin”—a region
+about Broadway and 30th Street, so packed with illegal
+“joints” that their tribute to the police was the richest
+and juiciest of the whole city—was sure to be his hunting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
+ground. To the Tenderloin haunts, accordingly, we
+went that first night of the chase.</p>
+
+<p>As a reporter I knew the various places well already,
+and felt quite equal to making my search alone, but the
+doctor, though in no condition to traipse about the icy street
+after dark, insisted on accompanying me. Nothing I said
+could prevent him coming. Truth to tell, I was not sorry
+to have him with me—in some of the saloons; besides which
+I had no money, and something—lager beer cost only
+five cents a glass—had to be ordered in each place. We
+hurried from one saloon to another, looking in at various
+gambling hells, opium joints, dancing places and music-halls
+of the poorer kind where men and women met on
+easy terms, and we stayed at each one just long enough
+to make inquiries, and to benefit by the warmth and
+comfort, without being pestered by the habitual frequenters.</p>
+
+<p>I had in my possession a small photograph of Boyde;
+it was on tin, showing the head and shoulders; it had been
+taken one day earlier in our acquaintance when we went
+together to a Dime Museum in 14th Street. It now proved
+very useful. It showed his full face, big eyes, drooping
+moustaches and eyeglass. The absence of the moustache
+altered him a great deal, but the eyeglass and the six feet
+two inches in height counterbalanced this.</p>
+
+<p>At every “joint” I produced this photograph, asking
+the attendants, bar-tenders, and any women I judged to
+be frequenters of the place, whether they had seen the
+original recently, or anyone like him. Some laughed and
+said they had, others said the opposite, but the majority
+refused to say anything, showed insolently their suspicion
+of me and my purpose, and, more than once, made it
+advisable for us to get out before we were put out. At
+such places customers are chary about information of each
+other. Among the women, however, were some who
+knew clearly who it was we “wanted,” though saying
+nothing useful, and soon the doctor decided it was a mistake
+to show the photograph too much, for Boyde would
+be warned by these women, while many, fearful that they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
+themselves were “wanted,” would merely lie in self
+protection, and set us upon false trails. Any woman who
+had not paid her weekly blackmail money to the ward man
+was in danger, and few, to judge by their appearance,
+were not involved in robbery, knock-out drops, or the
+ubiquitous “badger-game.” Yet these, I knew, were
+the places Boyde would feel at home in. My being a
+newspaper man proved of value to us more than once,
+at any rate. My thoughts, as we sat in a curtained
+corner of some “hell,” whose overheated atmosphere of
+smoke, scent, alcohol and dope was thick enough to cut
+with a knife, watching, waiting, listening, must be
+imagined. I watched every arrival. The tension
+on nerves already overstrained was almost unbearable.
+A habit of the doctor’s intensified this strain. He
+did not, I think, remember Boyde very well, and
+was constantly imagining that he saw him. The
+street door would open; he would nudge me and whisper
+“<i>Sehen Sie, da kommt der Kerl nun endlich...!</i>”
+He pointed, my heart leapt into my mouth; nothing
+could induce me to arrest him, it seemed, and my relief
+on seeing it was a stranger was always genuine—at the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>One night—or early morning, rather—the doctor,
+who had been silent for a long time, turned to me with a
+grey, exhausted face. The morphine was beginning to
+fail him, and he must inject another dose. This happened
+several times.... Behind a curtain, or in a place aside
+where we were not even alone, he opened his clothes,
+found a clear space of skin, and applied the needle, while
+I rubbed the spot with my finger for about a minute to
+prevent a blister forming. No one, except perhaps a
+very drunken man or woman occasionally, paid the
+smallest attention to the operation; to them it was evidently
+a familiar and commonplace occurrence....
+“You must not stay up any longer,” he would say another
+time, after a sudden examination of my face. “You
+look dreadful. Come, we will go home.”</p>
+
+<p>I was only too glad to be marched off. We paced the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
+icy streets arm in arm, numerous people still about on
+various errands, tramcars and elevated trains still roaring,
+saloons and joints blazing with light, wide open till dawn,
+while the old man, rejuvenated and stimulated by the drug,
+discoursed eloquently the whole way, I dragging by his
+side, silent, depressed, weary with pains that seemed
+more poignant then than hunger or mere physical
+fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>The next night it would be the same, and the one after
+that, and the next one after that too—the search continued.
+It wore me down. I saw the eyeglass staring
+furtively at me from behind every corner, even in the day-time.
+His footstep sounded behind me often. At night
+I locked my door, for fear he might steal back into the
+room.... Once or twice I reported to headquarters that
+I was on the trail, but the detective had lost interest in
+the case; a conviction was doubtful, anyhow; he was not
+“going to sit around catching flies”; only the fact that I
+was a reporter on the <i>Sun</i> made him pause. “Telephone
+when you get him,” he said, “and I’ll come up and do the
+rest.” Much fresh information about Boyde had also
+come my way; he had even stolen the vases from a Church
+communion table—though he denied this in his confession
+later—and pawned them. In every direction, and this
+he did not deny, he had borrowed money in my name,
+giving me the worst possible character while doing so.
+Probably indeed, I never lived down <i>all</i> he said about
+me....</p>
+
+<p>It was a bitter, and apparently, an endless search.
+From the West Side joints, we visited the East Side haunts
+of vice and dissipation. I now knew Boyde too well to
+think he would “fly high”; his tastes were of the lowest.
+The ache it all gave me I can never describe....</p>
+
+<p>We went from place to place as hour after hour passed.
+We found his trail, and each time we found it my heart
+failed me. A woman, gorgeously painted, showing her
+silk stockings above the knee, her atmosphere reeking of
+bad scent and drink, came sidling up, murmuring this
+and that.... The Doctor’s eye was on me, though he said
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
+no word, made no single gesture.... The tin-type
+photograph was produced.... “Yep, I seen dat fellar,”
+grinned the woman in her “tough” bowery talk they
+all affected in the Tenderloin. “A high flier ... raining
+in London, too”—a gibe at the “English” habit
+of turning up one’s trousers—with a stream of local
+slang, oaths, filthy hints and repeated demands to “put
+’em up,” meaning drinks. Then a whispered growl from
+the old German “<i>Nichts! ... sie luegt ... los mit
+ihr!</i>” A further stream of lurid insults ... and she was
+gone, while another sidled up a little later. They all knew
+German, these women. Was not New York the third
+biggest German city, qua population, in the Empire?
+Few, as a matter of fact, were American. Barring the
+mulattos and quadroon girls, to say nothing of the negresses,
+the majority were French, Hungarian, Spanish, Italian,
+Dutch or some polyglot mixture not even the British
+Museum could define....</p>
+
+<p>Never did the old German’s kindness prove itself as
+in these hideous night-watches. Apart from all questions
+of trouble and expense, he was obliged to take extra doses
+of morphine to meet the charge upon his system, at a time,
+too, when he was struggling to reduce the quantity.
+Compared to what he did, even the fact that he gave the
+poison to others, possibly to his own child among them,
+seemed negligible. Not only did he accompany me during
+the chase, spending hours in low, suffocating dens of beastliness,
+walking the wind-swept streets in mid-winter,
+suffering insults and acute discomfort, but also he bestowed
+practical care and kindness on me during the day, providing
+me with food (I was in no state even to pose in the
+studios at the time), and even suggesting that I should fit
+up a bed in his workshop where he kept the lathe and made
+the chessmen. All this, too, from an old man, himself in
+deep misery, and on the losing side of a fight far more
+terrible than I ever knew or imagined, a fight, <i>he</i> then
+realized already, was to end before very long in failure,
+which meant death. The strange, broken old being,
+twisted and distorted though his nervous system was by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
+a drug, showed—to me, at any rate—that rare thing
+which experience of life proves greater than intellect, than
+success, than power, or brilliance may achieve—a heart.
+If reincarnation, with its karmic law, be true, either he
+owed me a heavy debt from some forgotten past, or I
+owe to him a debt some future life will enable, and enforce
+me, to repay.</p>
+
+<p>It was at the end of the first ten days that, quite by
+chance, we stumbled upon the trail of Boyde. He had
+been seen in a “swell dive” on the West Side—with a
+woman. He was spending money like water. How had
+he come by it? Whom had he swindled now? We were
+in the East Side, following a false clue, when this information
+was given to us—under conditions impossible to describe—and
+we hurried across to the neighbourhood
+indicated. An hour later we were only a short thirty
+minutes behind his glittering path. He was visiting
+expensive joints. Champagne flowed. The woman wore
+furs. He wore a light coloured box-cloth overcoat. Both
+were “high fliers.” And he was drinking hard.</p>
+
+<p>The information, I confess, had the effect of stiffening
+me. It was impossible not to wonder, as we sat in the
+cross-town tram of East 23rd Street, whether in his gay
+career he gave a single thought to the room in East 19th
+Street, where he shared my bed, wore my suit, ate my food,
+such as it was, and where he had left me ill, alone and
+starving. The old doctor was grim and silent, but a repressed
+fury, I could see, bit into him. Was there, perhaps,
+vengeance, in the old, crumpled man? “No weakness,
+remember,” he growled from time to time. “I hold
+him, while you telephone to Mulberry Street. <i>Pflicht,
+pflicht!</i> It is your duty to—to everybody...!”</p>
+
+<p>The trail led us to Mouquin’s, where he had undoubtedly
+been shortly before, then on to a place in 34th Street ...
+and there we lost it hopelessly. It was not a false alarm,
+but the trail ran up a tree and vanished. He had gone
+home with the woman, but who she was or where she lived,
+not even the ward man—whom I knew by chance, and,
+equally by chance, met at the door—could tell us. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
+telephoned to headquarters to warn Detective Lawler to
+be in readiness. Lawler was out on a “big story” elsewhere,
+but another man would come up with the warrant
+the moment I sent word. I had, however, no occasion to
+telephone again that night, nor even the next night,
+though we must evidently have been within an ace of
+catching him. It was like searching for a needle in a
+haystack, or for a rabbit in a warren. The neighbourhood,
+this joint in particular, was alive with similar characters;
+all the women wore furs; all the men were tall, many of
+them had “glass-eyes,” the majority seemed English with
+“their trousers turned up.” We sat for hours in one den
+after another, but we caught no further indication of the
+trail. It had vanished into thin air. And after these two
+exciting and exhausting nights, the old doctor collapsed;
+he could do no more; he told me he felt unequal to the
+strain and could not accompany me even one more time.
+The old man was done.</p>
+
+<p>The day after the search stopped temporarily, Kay
+arrived in the city, to my great delight. It was a keen relief
+to have him back. The tour had been a failure, and the
+company had become stranded in Port Hope, Ontario.
+Salaries were never paid; he had received hotel board,
+railway ticket, laundry, but rarely any cash. What
+luggage he possessed was in the Port Hope hotel, held in
+lieu of payment. It remained there.</p>
+
+<p>We talked things over, and the news about Boyde,
+heard now for the first time in detail, shocked him. There
+was no doubt or hesitation in Kay’s mind. “Of course
+you must arrest him; we’ll go out to-night and look.”
+We did so, but with no result. Kay had the remains of
+a borrowed $10, we dined at Krisch’s; he had cigarettes,
+too.... We passed a happy evening, coming home
+early from the chase. Like myself, he had no overcoat, but
+the money did not reach to getting it from Ikey where
+Boyde had pawned it. We sat indoors, and talked....
+Only a short three months before we had sat talking round
+a camp-fire on our island. It seemed incredible. We
+discussed my plan for settling in the woods, to which he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
+was very favourably inclined. Meanwhile, he explained,
+his Company was preparing another tour with better plays
+and better cast. They hoped to start out after Christmas,
+now only a week away. The word “Christmas” made us
+laugh. I still had the Christmas menu of our Hub
+dinner, and we pinned it upon the wall. It might suggest
+something to the long-suffering Mrs. Bernstein,
+Kay thought.</p>
+
+<p>But instead we ate our oatmeal and dried apples....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>It</span> was on the Tuesday before Christmas that I caught
+Boyde; the day also before the White Star steamers
+sailed. The cold was Arctic, a biting east wind
+swept the streets. There was no sun. If ever there
+was a Black Tuesday for me it was that 18th of December,
+1892.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening, the doctor, I knew, would expect
+me as usual; there was nothing to prevent my going;
+and yet each time the thought cropped up automatically
+in my mind I was aware of a vague, indeterminate feeling
+that somehow or other I should not go. This dim feeling
+also was automatic. There was nothing I knew of to
+induce, much less to support it. I did not mention it to
+Kay. I could not understand whence it came nor what
+caused it, but it did not leave me, it kept tugging at my
+nerves. “You’re not going to the doctor’s to-night,”
+it said, “you’re going elsewhere.”</p>
+
+<p>After dark this odd feeling became more and more
+insistent, and then all at once it connected itself with
+Boyde. Quite suddenly this happened. I had not been
+thinking of Boyde at the moment; now, abruptly, up
+cropped his name and personality. I was to go out and
+catch him.</p>
+
+<p>My mind resisted this idea. Several things, besides,
+were against it. In the first place, we had voluntarily
+given up the hunt and I was resigned to his escape;
+secondly and thirdly, I dreaded being out in the bitter
+cold, and I badly needed the “assuaging balm” of old
+Huebner’s needle. If the first two were negative inhibitions,
+the third was decidedly positive. All three had to
+be conquered if I was to obey the strange prompting
+which whispered, and kept on whispering: “Go out and
+look. You’ll find him.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was, in addition, the usual minor conflict to
+which I had grown quite accustomed, the conflict between
+my desire to be relieved of an unpleasant “duty,” yet the
+conviction that it was a duty I had no right to shirk. In
+spite of my resistance, at any rate, the prompting strengthened;
+as night fell I grew more and more restless and uneasy;
+until at last the touch of inevitability that lay
+behind it all declared itself—and the breaking point was
+reached.</p>
+
+<p>I could resist no longer; it was impossible to contain
+myself. I sprang out of my chair and told Kay I was going
+out to catch Boyde.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t go,” he said. “Waste of time. He’s skipped
+long ago—been warned.” He muttered something more
+about the intense cold. “You’ll kill yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>But the impulsion I felt was irresistible. It was as
+though some inner power drove and guided me. As a
+matter of fact, I went straight to the exact spot where,
+among the teeming millions of the great city, Boyde was.
+Fifteen minutes earlier or later, I should have missed him.
+Also, but for a chance hesitation later—lasting sixty seconds
+at most—he would have seen me and escaped. The calculation,
+whether due to intelligence or to coincidence,
+was amazingly precise. I left our room at nine o’clock;
+at a quarter to ten I stood face to face with Boyde.</p>
+
+<p>The wind was driving a fine dry dust of snow before it,
+and all who could remained indoors. The streets were
+deserted; despite the nearness of Christmas, signs of bustle
+and the usual holiday crowd were absent. I walked very
+quickly to keep warm, an odd subconscious excitement in
+me. I seemed to know exactly where I was going, though,
+had anybody asked me, I could not have told them. Up
+4th Avenue to 23rd Street, then west across Broadway, I
+passed 6th and 7th Avenues, with only one pause of a
+moment. At the corner of 7th Avenue I hesitated,
+uncertain whether to turn north, or to continue west towards
+8th Avenue. A policeman was standing outside
+a saloon side-door, a man I had known in the Tombs
+police court; an Irishman, of course. I recognized him,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
+He was friendly to me because I had used his name in a
+story; he remembered me now. I produced the tin-type
+photograph. He inspected it under the nearest electric
+light.</p>
+
+<p>“Yep,” he said, “I seen that feller only a few minutes
+back—half an hour maybe—only he’s lifted his mustache.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shaved his moustache—yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s what I said,” as he handed back the tin-type.
+“Got a story?” he inquired the same instant. “Anything
+big doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Which way did he go?”</p>
+
+<p>“Up-town,” said the policeman, jerking his thumb in
+the direction north. “Up 8th Avenoo. And he was
+travellin’ with a partner, a big feller, same size as yerself,
+I guess.” He moved off to show he had no more to say.
+Any story that might result would be out of his beat.
+There was nothing in it for him. His interest vanished.
+I hurried on to the corner of 8th Avenue, the edge of a
+bad neighbourhood leading down through the negro
+quarter towards the haunts of the river-front, and there
+I paused again for a second or two.</p>
+
+<p>I was still in 23rd Street, but I now turned up the
+Avenue. It was practically deserted, the street cars empty,
+few people on the pavements. The side-streets crossed it
+at right angles, poorly lit, running right and left into a
+world of shadows, but at almost every corner stood a
+brilliant saloon whose windows and glass doors poured
+out great shafts of light. Sometimes there were four
+saloons, one at each corner, and the blaze was dazzling.
+I passed 24th, 25th, 26th and 27th streets. There were
+little flurries of dry snow; I saw no one, nothing but empty
+silent sidewalks swept by the icy wind.</p>
+
+<p>At 28th Street there were four saloons, one at each
+corner, and the blaze of light had a warm, enticing look.
+Through the blurred windows of the one nearest to me,
+the heads of the packed crowd inside as they lined up to
+the bar were just visible, and while I stood a moment,
+shivering in the icy wind, the comforting idea of a hot
+whisky came to me. For the wind cut like glass and neither
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
+my excitement nor the exercise had warmed me. I
+hesitated, standing against a huge electric light pole, in
+whose black shadow I was quite invisible. A hot whisky,
+I reflected, in this neighbourhood would cost 20 or 25 cents;
+I had 30 cents in my pocket; I needed the stimulant;
+I was very weak; I felt cold to the bone. But 25 cents
+was a lot of money, I might want a car-fare home besides
+... and I was still hesitating when two tall figures
+emerged suddenly out of the dark side-street into the flood
+of light, swung sharp round the corner, and passed through
+the glass doors into the saloon. The figures were two men,
+and the first of them was Boyde.</p>
+
+<p>For a second my heart seemed to stop, then began
+immediately racing and beating violently. In that brilliant
+light I saw every detail sharply, Boyde and his companion,
+both mercilessly visible. The man I wanted wore
+a big horsy overcoat of light-coloured box-cloth with large
+white buttons, the velvet collar turned up about his ears.
+The other man I did not know; he was taller than Boyde
+and wore no overcoat; he was the “partner travellin’
+with him” mentioned by the policeman. His gait was
+unsteady, he reeled a little.</p>
+
+<p>The clamour of noisy voices blared out a moment into
+the street before the doors swung to again, and I stood quite
+still for an appreciable time, blotted out of sight in my
+black shadow. Had I not hesitated a moment to reflect
+about that hot whisky I should have passed, my figure
+full in the blaze, just in front of the two men, who would
+have waited in the dark side-street till I was safely out of
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>The state of my nerves, I suppose, was pretty bad,
+and the lack of my customary evening dose accentuated
+it. I know, anyhow, that at first I realized one thing only—that
+I could never have the heart to arrest the fellow.
+This quickly passed, however; the racing of my blood
+passed too; determination grew fixed; I decided to act at
+once. But should I go in, or should I wait till they came
+out again? If I went in there would probably be a fight;
+Boyde’s hulking companion would certainly take his side;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
+the lightest blow in my weak state and I should be
+down and out. On the other hand, there was a side
+door, there were several side doors, and the couple
+might easily slip out, for I could not watch all the doors
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>I decided to go in. And the moment the decision was
+taken, complete calmness came over me, so that I felt
+myself merely an instrument of fate. It was horrible,
+but it had to be. Boyde was to get the punishment he
+deserved. I could not fail.</p>
+
+<p>The way the little scene was stage-managed seemed
+curious to me when it was all over, for as I moved out into
+the light, a couple of policemen came across the broad
+avenue behind and looked inquisitively at what must have
+seemed my queer behaviour. I immediately crossed to
+meet them, while never taking my eye off the swing-doors.
+A man who had just gone into that saloon, I told them,
+was to be arrested.</p>
+
+<p>“That so?” they asked with a grin, thinking me drunk,
+of course. “And what’s he done to get all that?”</p>
+
+<p>I told them I was a reporter on the <i>Sun</i>, that I was the
+complainant in the case, and that Detective Lawler of the
+9th District had the warrant at headquarters. They
+could telephone to him if they liked. They listened, but
+they would not do anything. I could telephone to Lawler
+myself; <i>they</i> weren’t going to act without a warrant.
+They finally agreed to wait outside and “see fair play,”
+if I would go in and fetch “the guy” out into the street.
+“We’ll stop any trouble,” they said, “and take him to
+the station if <i>you</i> make a complaint.” I agreed to this
+and walked in through the swing-doors.</p>
+
+<p>The saloon was crowded, the heat wonderful, the bars
+thronged with men in all stages of intoxication; bar-tenders
+in white jackets flew to and fro; business was
+booming, and at the least sign of a row, everybody, more
+or less, would have joined in. This general impression,
+however, was only in the background of my mind. What
+filled it was the fact that Boyde was looking at me, staring
+straight into my eyes, but in the mirror. The instant the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
+doors swung to I had caught his reflection in the long glass
+behind the bar. Across this bar, a little space on either
+side of him, he was leaning on both elbows, his face resting
+in one hand. The eye-glass—it was asking for trouble to
+wear it in such a place—had been discarded. He was
+alone. His back, of course, was towards me.</p>
+
+<p>For a few seconds we stared at one another in this way,
+and then, as I walked down the long room, pushing between
+the noisy crowd, he slowly turned. I reached him. A
+faint smile appeared on his face. He evidently did not
+know quite what to do, but a hand began to move towards
+me. He thought, it seemed, I was going to shake hands,
+whereas I thought he was probably going to hit me.
+Instead my hand went to his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Boyde,” I said, keeping my voice low, “I want you.
+You’re going to be—arrested.”</p>
+
+<p>The smile died out, and an awful <span id='cor_196'>look<del>ed</del></span> rushed into his
+eyes. His face turned the colour of chalk. At first I
+felt sure he was going to land me a blow in the face, but
+the abrupt movement of his body was merely that he tried
+to steady himself against the bar, for I saw his hand grip
+the rail and cling to it. The same second his features
+began to work.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got to arrest you,” I repeated. “It’s Karma.
+You had better come quietly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Karma——” he repeated in a dazed way and stared.
+He was bewildered, incredulous still.</p>
+
+<p>The same second, however, he grasped that it was
+serious, my face and voice and manner doubtless warned
+him. This, at last, was real; he suddenly knew it. The
+expression of appeal poured up instantly into his eyes,
+those big, innocent, blue eyes where I had so often seen it
+before. Only now there was no moustache, and the
+brutal cunning mouth was bare. He began to speak at
+once, keeping his voice low, for several people were already
+interested in us. He used his softest and most pleading
+tone. With that, too, I was thoroughly familiar.</p>
+
+<p>“Blackwood—for God’s sake let me go. I’m off to
+England to-morrow on a White Star boat. I’m working
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
+my passage over. For the love of God—for my mother’s
+sake——!”</p>
+
+<p>I cut him short. The falseness, the cowardice, the
+treachery all working in his face at once, sickened me.
+At the same time an aching pity rose. I felt miserable.</p>
+
+<p>“You must come out with me. At once.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned quickly and looked about him, his eyes
+taking in everything. Some men beside us had heard our
+talk and were ready to interfere. “What’s your trouble?”
+one of them asked thickly. I realized we must get away
+at once, out into the street, though the scene had barely
+lasted two minutes yet.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s a policeman waiting outside,” I went on.
+“You’d better come quietly. A row won’t help you.”
+But I said it louder than I thought, for several heads turned
+towards the swing-doors. The effect on Boyde, however,
+was hardly what I expected, and seemed strange. He
+wilted suddenly. I believe all thought of resistance or
+escape went out of him when he heard the word “police.”
+His jaw dropped, there was suddenly no expression in
+his eyes at all. A complete blankness came into his features.
+It was horrible. He’s got no soul, I thought.
+He merely stared at me.</p>
+
+<p>“Whose is that overcoat?” I asked, feeling sure it
+was not his own. I already had him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Roper’s,” he said quietly, his voice gone quite dead.
+“Here he is.” His face was still like a ghost’s. It was
+blank as stone.</p>
+
+<p>I had quite forgotten the companion, but at that same
+moment I saw Roper hovering up beside me. His attitude
+was threatening, he was three-parts drunk; a glance
+showed me he was an Englishman, and obviously, by birth,
+a gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>“Roper, if you want your coat, you’d better take it.
+Boyde is under arrest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Arrest be damned!” Roper cried in a loud voice
+that everybody heard. There was already a crowd about
+us, but this increased it. Roper was looking me over.
+He glared with anger. “You’re that cad Blackwood, I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
+suppose, are you? I’ve heard about you. I know your
+whole damned rotten story and the way you’ve treated
+Boyde. But Boyde’s a friend of mine. No one can do
+anything to him while <i>I’m</i> here...!”</p>
+
+<p>He roared and shouted in that crowded bar-room,
+while the whole place looked on and listened, ready to
+interfere at the first sign of “a fuss.” A blow, a little push
+even, would have laid me out, and in the general scuffle
+or free fight that was bound to follow, Boyde could have
+got clear away—but neither he nor Roper thought of this
+apparently. Roper went on pouring out his drunken abuse,
+lurching forward but never actually touching me, while
+Boyde stood perfectly still and listened in silence. He
+made no attempt to shake off my hand even. I suddenly
+then leaned over and spoke into his ear:</p>
+
+<p>“If you come quietly at once it’s only petit larceny—stealing
+the money. Otherwise it’s forgery.”</p>
+
+<p>It acted like magic. An expression darted back into
+his face. He turned, told Roper to shut up, said something
+to the crowd about its being only a little misunderstanding,
+and walked without another word towards the doors.
+I walked beside him, the men made a way; a few seconds
+later we were in the street. Roper, who had waited to
+finish his drink, and was puzzled besides by the quick
+manœuvre, lurched at some distance after us. The two
+policemen, who had watched the scene through the windows,
+stood waiting. Boyde swayed against me when he
+saw them. I marched him up to the nearest one. “I
+make a charge of larceny against this man, and the warrant
+is at Mulberry Street with Detective Lawler. I am the
+complainant.” They told him he was under arrest, and
+we began our horrible little procession to the station in
+West 21st Street.</p>
+
+<p>Boyde was between the two policemen, I was next to
+the outside one, on the kerb, Roper came reeling in the
+rear, shouting abuse and threats into my face. The next
+time I saw Roper was in the court of General Sessions,
+weeks later, when Boyde was brought up for trial. By
+that time he had learned the truth; he came up and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
+apologized. Boyde, he told me, had swindled him even
+more completely than he had swindled me.</p>
+
+<p>The search in the station made me sick at heart;
+every pocket was turned out; there was 80 dollars in cash;
+the sergeant used filthy language. Boyde was taken
+down to a cell, and I, as a newspaper reporter, was allowed
+to go down with him. I stayed for two hours, talking
+through the bars.</p>
+
+<p>It was two in the morning when the sergeant turned
+me out after a dreadful conversation, and when I reached
+home, to find Kay sitting up anxiously still, I was too exhausted,
+from cold, excitement and hunger, to tell him more
+than a bare outline of it all. I had to appear at eight
+o’clock next morning and make my formal charge against
+Boyde, in the Tombs Police Court—the Tombs, of all
+places!—and with that thought in my mind I fell asleep.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Boyde</span> came up with the first batch of prisoners.
+The portentous shadow of the Tombs prison,
+with its forbidding architecture, hung over the
+whole scene.</p>
+
+<p>My first sight of him was sitting among the rows of
+prisoners, waiting to be called. He looked ill and broken,
+he made a pleading sign to me. As a reporter I had the
+right to interview anybody and everybody, and I made
+my way along the serried wooden benches. Lawler sat
+next him, looking very pleased to have secured his prisoner,
+and a good story into the bargain, without any trouble
+to himself; but when I tried to shake hands with Boyde,
+I found to my horror that he was handcuffed.</p>
+
+<p>“Say, boss, be sure and git me name spelled right, and
+tell the reporters that <i>I</i> effected the arrest,” was the first
+thing that Lawler said, using the phrase the detectives
+always used.</p>
+
+<p>By promising the man all he wanted and more besides,
+I managed to get us all three into a corner where we could
+talk without everybody else hearing; also I got the handcuffs
+taken off, for they were quite unnecessary inside the
+building. The first thing Boyde said was to beg for
+a drink; he had taken a lot the night before, his throat
+was parched, his nerves were bad. At the moment this
+was quite impossible, but I got one for him in the reporters’
+room after his case had been called. The second
+thing he said was to beg me to “keep it out of the papers,”
+though this, of course, lay quite beyond my powers.
+Apart from this he said very little except to repeat and
+repeat that he was repentant, and to beg me to withdraw
+the charge, though this was now impossible, the matter
+being out of my hands. Also, he wondered what the sentence
+would be—he meant to plead guilty—and implored me
+to leave out the forgery. He was very badly frightened.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span></p>
+
+<p>That early morning hour in the stinking atmosphere
+of the over-heated police court was too ghastly ever to be
+forgotten, but there were particular moments when pain
+and pity, to say nothing of other strangely mixed emotions,
+stabbed me with peculiar ferocity. When the reporters
+flocked round him like vultures after prey was one of these;
+another was when Boyde stood in front of the Tammany
+magistrate, Ryan by name, and pleaded guilty. A mistake,
+though not actually wrong, had crept into the charge
+sheet. In my excitement of the night before the amount
+stolen had been entered as $32, and though this was the
+truth, I had meant to make it only $25. I was unintentionally
+to blame for this—it was now Grand Larceny
+instead of Petit Larceny. A magistrate could only deal
+with the lesser offence, and Boyde therefore was held for
+trial in General Sessions, instead of being sentenced then
+and there. The look he gave me as Ryan spoke the words
+was like a knife. He believed I had done this purposely.
+A third unforgettable moment was when he was being
+roughly pushed downstairs on his way to a cell in the
+Tombs: he looked back forlornly over his shoulder at me.</p>
+
+<p>In the reporters’ room it was decided to print the
+“Boyde story.” I knew all the men; Acton Davies was
+there for the <i>Evening Sun</i>, specially sent down by McCloy.
+The reporters dragged and tore at me. I realized what
+“interviewed” victims felt when they wished to hide
+everything away inside themselves. Yet the facts had
+to be told; it was best I should give them accurately, if as
+briefly, as leniently, as possible. The sight of all those
+vultures (of whom, incidentally, I was one) scribbling
+down busily the details of my intimate life with Boyde,
+to be hawked later in the streets as news, was likewise a
+picture not easily forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Before the ordeal was over, Lawler returned from the
+cell. He insisted, with a wink at me, that he had made
+the arrest; the credit of the chase he also claimed; he had,
+too, additional facts about Boyde’s past criminal career
+of which I was quite ignorant, supplied by records at
+headquarters. Lawler intended to get all the advertisement
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
+for himself he could. I let his lying pass. On the
+whole it seemed best to let him be responsible for the arrest;
+it made the story more commonplace, and, luckily, so far,
+I had not described this scene.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later I was talking with Boyde between the
+bars of his cell in the Tombs prison, while, two hours later,
+every evening paper in New York had a column or a column
+and a half about us printed on its front page. There were
+scare headlines of atrocious sort. There were posters,
+too, showing our names in big letters. News that day
+happened to be scarce, and the Boyde story was “good
+stuff” apparently. The talk with him in the cell was one
+of many; he was there six weeks before the trial came on.</p>
+
+<p>The papers finished him; the case was too notorious
+for him ever to swindle again unless he changed his name.
+They scarified him, they left out no detail, they hunted
+up a thousand new ones, he had “cut a wide swath”
+(<i>sic</i>) all over New York State, as one of them printed.
+I had not mentioned Pauline M—— or the pastor’s
+daughter, yet both were included. To see my own name
+in print for the first time, the names of my parents, and
+of half the peerage as well, was bad enough; to find myself
+classed with bad company generally, with crooks and
+rogues, with shady actresses, with criminals, was decidedly
+unpleasant. Paragraphs my brother wrote to me appeared
+in London papers too. Copies of the New York
+ones were sent to my father. “Too foxy for Algernon”
+was a headline he read out to my brother in his library.
+Boyde had even written to him, signing himself “your
+cousin,” to ask for money for “your poor son,” but had
+received no reply. There is no need now to mention names,
+but any distinguished connexion either of us possessed
+appeared in the headlines or the article itself. “Nephew
+of an earl held in $1,000 bail,” “Cousin of Lord X,”
+“Scion of British Aristocracy a Sneak-thief,” were some
+of the descriptions. “Son of a duchess in the Soup,”
+was another. The <i>Staatszeitung</i> had a phrase which threw
+a momentary light on an aspect of lower life in the city,
+when Freytag, the German reporter who had taught me
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
+how to write a court story, described me as “Sohn einer <i>sogennanten</i>
+Herzogin.” He only laughed when I spoke to him
+about it. “How should <i>I</i> know,” he said sceptically....</p>
+
+<p>Boyde came up in due course before Recorder Smythe
+in general sessions, the most severe and most dreaded of
+all the judges. He still wore my thick suit, he wore
+also a pair of Harding Davis’s boots, and, I believe, something
+else of Sothern’s. His sentence was two years in
+the Penitentiary on Blackwell Island. A group of other
+people he had swindled, including “Artist Palmer,” were
+in court; so was an assistant of Ikey’s, with <i>all</i> our pawned
+articles. Every single thing, whether stolen goods or
+not, was returned to me. The doctor and Kay were also
+there. Some of his letters are a human document:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class='right pr7'><i>Tombs</i>,</p>
+<p class='right pr1'>December, 1892.</p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>Oh, Blackwood, what black treachery I returned you for
+your many kindnesses, base lying for all your straightforward
+dealing with me! You freely forgave me what ninety-nine men
+out of every hundred would, if not imprisoned me for, certainly
+never have forgiven me. I returned evil for good, and you still
+bore with me. You said—I shall never forget it, for it was when
+you found the stamp torn off your letter—and even at that
+moment I had money in my pocket belonging to you, just as I
+had when you shared your last 50 cent. piece that night at
+Krisches, for I <i>must</i> say this, though I could tear myself to pieces
+when I think of it—You said, ‘B. how you must <i>hate</i> me!’</p>
+
+<p>No, Blackwood, it seems a paradox, but I could not hate you
+if I tried to. I don’t say this because I am in prison, or with any
+desire to flatter. I am sincere in everything I say and it comes
+from my heart. You have every reason to think from my former
+actions that I am not sincere above reward, but I am.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, the old, but nevertheless true remark, TOO LATE!
+It comes home to me with striking and horrible vividness.
+Too Late! I have forfeited the respect of every good and honest
+man, have disgraced my English name and my family. But,
+let me go. Five years of service will be the best thing for me.
+I can enlist under another name and may perhaps get a commission
+in time. Give me the chance of redeeming myself, please.
+If ever any man was sincerely repentant for the past I am that
+man.</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'><span class="smcap">Arthur B.</span></p>
+
+<p>Please excuse mistakes and alterations. I am so fearfully
+shaky.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class='mt1h right pr1'><i>The Tombs City Prison,</i><br>
+ <i>Centre Street, N. Y.</i></p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>Please read through before destroying it.</p>
+
+<p>I have begged another sheet of paper and stamp in order to
+make one final appeal.</p>
+
+<p>Will you not come down again on receipt of this? Please
+do, for God’s sake. No visitors are allowed on New Year’s Day,
+or on Sunday. New Year’s Day! What a new year’s day for
+me! Let me begin it afresh. I have a favour to ask you
+which I must ask you verbally; I cannot put it on paper. It
+is getting dark; so once more I ask you, I implore you, to
+have mercy on me for my mother’s sake. For her sake spare</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ <span class="smcap">Arthur B.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Visiting hours 10-2. I am speaking the truth and nothing
+but the truth when I say that I am sincerely sorry for all that I
+have done and implore your pardon. This is not an insincere
+expression, but one from my heart. Come down again, please,
+even to speak to me, for you don’t know the mental agony I
+am suffering.</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ A. B.
+</p>
+
+
+<p class='mt1h right pr2'><i>Tombs City Prison</i>,</p>
+<p class='right pr1'>New Year’s Day.</p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>It was more than kind of you to come all the way down here
+and then after all not be able to see me; not much loss to you,
+it is true, but a bitter disappointment to me. Palmer came down
+and talked <i>very</i> kindly to me and instilled a little hope in me.
+But this is a wretched New Year’s Day.</p>
+
+<p>I was talking to an old convict this morning, a man who in
+his life has been about sixteen years in jail, and he said that if
+he had only been let off in the first instance with a few days in
+here, he would have been a different man to-day, but after serving
+one term he became reckless and has now become a notorious
+thief. As I said to you, think of me after 20 years’ penal servitude.</p>
+
+<p>Blackwood, won’t you and Palmer stay your hands once more?
+I will leave the country, and if ever I should return you could
+always have me arrested. I will never trouble you again.
+Let me make a fresh start once more.</p>
+
+<p>Should you decide not to press the charge you can go to the
+District Attorney’s Office and inform them of the fact.</p>
+
+<p>I once more <i>implore</i> you and Palmer to have pity on me,
+and please come and see me! May I wish you and Palmer a
+bright and happy New Year, brighter and happier than the past
+one.</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ <span class="smcap">Arthur B.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Many thanks for the paper and envelopes. Bless you!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class='mt1h right pr1'>
+ <i>The Tombs.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>Very many thanks for your visit yesterday. It is the only
+pleasure I have. I believe what you say is true—that I am
+reaping the result of evil done in the past and that the only
+real way to atone is to meet it squarely and accept my punishment
+without grumbling. If Karma is true, it is just, and I
+shall get what I deserve, and not an iota more.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot tell you how grateful I am to you for being so lenient
+to me and even writing to the District Attorney on my behalf.
+I am truly grateful, Blackwood. Please do not think I am not
+sorry for what I have done, or that I am not really penitent,
+for I am indeed.</p>
+
+<p>It was bitterly cold last night and I was awfully glad to have
+my overcoat, and blessed you for sending it. I know you got
+it out of pawn for me, and that is another kindness.</p>
+
+<p>Again, for the last time probably, I thank you for your
+many acts of kindness. I bitterly regret and earnestly repent
+for the manner I treated you, returning evil for good, and I shall
+think much of you when serving my time under a blazing sun
+or in my cramped and chilly cell.</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ <span class="smcap">Arthur B.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class='mt1h right pr1'>
+ <i>Tombs Prison.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>I have just been to the Court House and pleaded guilty.
+My sentence is remanded till Friday week. If I could only get
+that lawyer I might get the sentence reduced a little. But Judge
+Smythe is a very hard man. My small hopes were dashed
+away on hearing that you had been subpœnaed to go before the
+Grand Jury this morning.</p>
+
+<p>Now all hope is gone; only blank, blank despair; no hope,
+all is dark. I wish I could die—much rather that than suffer
+this awful remorse. Do you know I sometimes think I am going
+mad? When I come out I shall be too old for the army, and
+what else can a felon, a criminal, a convict do? Is crime the
+only refuge? Shall I sink lower and lower? Will what small
+sense of decency and honour I have left be utterly destroyed
+and made callous by propinquity with other criminals?</p>
+
+<p>What a frightful nightmare to conjure up! Nightmare?
+No, it is only too true; it is stern, inexorable reality. Thank
+you for sending the clothes. I had no change before. Bless
+you!</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ A. B.
+</p>
+
+<p class='mt1h right pr1'>
+ <i>Tombs City Prison.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class='mtq'>What follows I wish to write voluntarily. It is a Confession
+and relieves me—</p>
+
+<p>I certainly wish to convey to you the fact of my sincere and
+deep sorrow for the shameful manner I treated you and abused
+your confidence and kindness. I fear that one of my letters
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
+cannot have reached you, as I am sure I wrote at length on this
+subject. You mistake and misjudge me when you think it is
+only fear that prompts me to write as I do. My eyes are opened
+to the enormity of my past crimes, opened by thinking and seeing
+things in the proper light. I have been alone with my thought
+for days now, and God knows how many more days will pass over
+my head before I again face the world. It will relieve me to
+give you a full confession of my treachery, for I believe there is
+no real repentance without real confession.</p>
+
+<p>To begin with the editor. I never had a chance of the position
+at Rockaway, although the editor once said casually that he would
+try and find me some similar position. I lied to you all through
+in that, for I wished you to think I had prospects of paying work in
+view. When you used to come down with me to Franklin Street
+(Harper’s) I waited about upstairs and looked at books, etc.,
+and then came down and concocted some lies about what I
+had said and done. I once borrowed $15 from him (Richard
+Harding Davis, Editor “Harper’s Weekly”) and said they were
+for you. My dealings with Sothern were that he from time to
+time lent me money, some $50 in all, and gave me a position at ten
+dollars a week. I told him when borrowing that the money
+was for your doctor, and when borrowing more I said you had
+wasted it in drink. I asked him to cash several of the cheques
+I forged, but he would never do this. I was paid up in full by
+the manager and also for the extra performances of the “Disreputable
+Mr. Reagen.” I little thought when I was playing
+Merivale’s part that I should act it true to life. With Mr.
+Beattie I lied all through. He never had any money of mine
+or knew my mother or ever heard from her. He never bailed
+me out, and I never used to see him as I said I did. You and
+Palmer thought that I spent some time in jail this summer,
+but I would rather not say anything in writing about that.
+My dealings with Palmer were that I borrowed money from him
+and said it was for you. I also went to your banker acquaintance
+and borrowed twenty-five dollars for a specialist, saying it
+was at your request. I did pawn the overcoat you gave me to
+post to Kay, and that time you forgave me for stealing your
+money I had in my pocket the proceeds of three stories of yours
+I had given the <i>Sun</i>, and they had paid for. But, even in the
+face of your forgiveness, I wanted this money so much for my
+indulgences that I could not face the privation of handing it
+over to you. I lied in the face of your kindness and generosity,
+and when you even needed food I was going about drinking and
+womanizing and spending freely. When my funds were exhausted
+I came back to you, for I knew you would always forgive
+me. It is awful. No wonder you want to see me go to prison.
+I am as wicked a man as ever lived, I believe. I wonder what
+caused me to tell such lies. Am I a natural born liar? It
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
+seems like it. You wrong me in one thing—in thinking my
+sorrow is sham and prompted by fear and the hope of getting
+off. I cannot find words to express my contrition. Believe me,
+I would do anything in my power, and will do, when my term
+is up, to make reparation. I submit to the inevitable. I can
+imagine something now of what you must have suffered when I
+left you alone without food or money those four days and nights.
+I think, however, the worst thing I did was telling the pastor’s
+daughter that you tried to prevent our meeting because you
+wished me to marry one of your sisters, though I do not know,
+of course, whether you have any even. That, and the taking
+the stamps off your letters so that I could get beer, seem to weigh
+most heavily with me now in my darkness and loneliness. I
+do not know what my sentence will be—heavy, I suspect, unless
+I can get someone to plead for me, and I have not a single solitary
+friend to do that. I am utterly alone. I have been in this
+cell now twenty-one days, and have a week more before sentence
+is given. It seems like six months. No one can realize what
+prison is like till they have tried it.</p>
+
+<p>Believe me, I am deeply and truly sorry. I speak from my
+heart. Think of me as kindly as you can when I am in the
+Penitentiary. I hope I shall see you once more.</p>
+
+<p class='right pr1'>
+ <span class="smcap">Arthur B.</span>
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I saw Boyde twice in my life afterwards; I heard,
+indirectly, from him once: the prison chaplain wrote to
+ask for “his things” which, Boyde told him, I “insisted
+upon keeping.” He never had any “things” at all while I
+knew him; the letter was indignant and offensive. Boyde
+had evidently “told a tale” to the chaplain.</p>
+
+<p>The first time I saw him was some eighteen months
+after he had been sent up, good behaviour evidently
+having shortened his term. I was walking up Irving Place
+and saw him suddenly about fifty yards in front of me.
+It was my own thick suit I recognized first, then its wearer.
+I instinctively called out his name. He turned, looked at
+me, hurried on, and went round the corner into 21st Street.
+Once round the corner, he must have run like a hare,
+for when I entered the street too, he had disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>The second, and last, time I saw him was in London
+ten years later—at a bookstall in Charing Cross station.
+He saw me, however, first, or before I could come close
+enough to speak, and he melted away into the crowd with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
+swift and accomplished ease. I was near enough, though,
+to note that he had grown his heavy moustache again,
+still wore his eyeglass, and was smartly, even prosperously,
+dressed. He looked very little older. From Lynwood
+Palmer, whom I met soon afterwards in Piccadilly, I
+heard that my old employer, the Horse, had seen him at
+Tattersalls not long before, and that he, Boyde, had come
+and begged Palmer not to give him away as he was “after
+some Jews only”! Artist Palmer took no action.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='smcap'>Mc</span><span class='allcaps'>Cloy</span> took me back on the <i>Evening Sun</i>, according
+to his promise, about mid-January, and about
+the same time Mrs. Bernstein sold her house and
+moved to another lower down the street, almost opposite
+to the doctor’s. There were no insects, all our things
+were out of pawn, we had overcoats again, but we had to
+find a new Ikey, for the old Ikey, of course, would have
+nothing more to do with our trousers, gladstone bag, top
+hat and tennis cups.</p>
+
+<p>The East 19th Street chapter was closed when Boyde
+went to Blackwell Island; another in the same street had
+begun: Mrs. Bernstein begged us to move with her: we
+owed her big arrears of rent; also, for some odd reason,
+she really liked us. In her odd way she even tried to
+mother me, as though her interest, somewhere perhaps her
+pity too, were touched. “You haf had drouble in England,
+I subbose?” she hinted sympathetically. She had
+read the newspapers carefully, and could not understand
+why I should be exiled in poverty in this way unless I
+had done something shady at home. It followed that I
+had been sent out to America for my country’s good.
+She shared, that is, the view most people took of my
+position in New York.</p>
+
+<p>Only three months had passed since we arrived, but
+it seemed years. I had never lived anywhere else. The
+sheltered English life, the Canadian adventures, above all
+the months upon our happy island, lay far away down the
+wrong end of a telescope, small, distant patches, brightly
+coloured, lit by a radiant sun, remote, incredible. It was
+not myself but another person I watched moving across
+these miniature maps of memory. Those happy days,
+states, places, those careless, sanguine moods, those former
+points of view so bright with hope, seemed gone for ever.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
+I now lived in a world where I belonged. I should never
+climb out again.</p>
+
+<p>The intensity of emotion at the time is difficult to
+realize now, and quite impossible to recapture. I only
+know that my feelings burned like fire, all the fiercer, of
+course, for being inarticulate. The exaggeration was
+natural enough; everything was out of proportion in me:
+Boyde had destroyed my faith in people. I believed in no
+one. The doctor had said that to lose belief in others made
+life insupportable. I found that statement true. There
+was a deep bitterness in my heart that for a time was more
+than I could manage, and this distrust and bitterness
+led me into an act of cruelty that shames me to this day.</p>
+
+<p>Into the roar and thunder of that frenzied newspaper
+office stole a hesitating figure one afternoon, a shy youth
+with rosy cheeks and curly hair, dressed in shabby but
+well-cut clothes, and obviously an Englishman. He wore
+gloves and carried a “cane”; these marked him as a
+“Britisher” at once. He was asking for someone;
+fingers were pointed at me; he was faintly familiar; I had
+seen the face before—but where? He came over and
+introduced himself as Calder, son of a Midland coach-builder;
+we had met at some place or other—outside a
+studio door, I think—and he knew Kay. I forget what he
+was doing in New York—-idling, I think, or travelling.
+He had outlived his cash, at any rate. He was in difficulties.
+I distrusted him instantly. He was, of course,
+another Boyde. I gave him the curtest possible greeting.
+He, in turn, found the greatest possible difficulty in telling
+me his story.</p>
+
+<p>I was sitting at the reporters’ table in shirt-sleeves
+(owing to the suffocating temperature of the over-heated
+office), scribbling at top speed the details of some lurid
+“story,” while Calder told me his tale. He wanted to
+whisper, but the noise forced him to shout, and this disconcerted
+him. No one listened, however; he had merely
+brought a “story” in. He had—but it was his own story.
+I have quite forgotten what it was, or what had happened
+to him; only the main point I remember: he had nowhere
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
+to sleep. Of his story I did not believe a single word,
+though I did believe that he had no bed. “Can I bunk
+with you to-night?” he came finally to the point. I
+told him he most certainly could not. He refused to believe
+me. I assured him I meant it. I was his last hope, he
+said, with a nervous grin. I told him to try a doss-house.
+He grinned and giggled and flushed—then thanked me!
+It would only be for a night or two, he urged. “You
+can’t possibly let me walk the streets all night!” I
+replied that one Boyde had been enough for me. I had
+learnt my lesson, he could walk the streets for the rest of
+his life for all I cared. He giggled, still refusing to believe
+I meant it. His father was sending money. He would
+repay me. He went on pleading. I again repeated that
+I could not take him in. He left, still thanking me and
+blushing.</p>
+
+<p>Visions of another Boyde were in my mind. At the
+time, moreover, our poverty was worse than it ever had
+been. Boyde, I found, had sold six of my French stories
+to McCloy at $5 each, and had pocketed the money.
+My salary was now being docked five dollars each week
+till this $30 was paid off. We had, therefore, only ten
+dollars a week between the two of us. Everything was
+in pawn again, and times were extra hard. To have Calder
+living on us was out of the question, for once he got
+in we should never get him out. I was tired of criminal
+parasites.</p>
+
+<p>It was my head that argued thus; in my heart I knew
+perfectly well that Calder was guileless, innocent as milk,
+an honest, feckless, stupid fellow who was in genuine
+difficulty for the moment, but who would never sponge on
+us, and certainly do nothing mean. Conscience pricked
+me—for half an hour perhaps; in the stress and excitement
+of the day I then forgot him. That evening Acton Davis,
+the dramatic critic, gave me a theatre seat, on condition
+that I wrote the notice for him. It was after eleven
+when I reached home. Curled up in my bed, sound
+asleep, his clothes neatly folded on the chair, lay Calder.</p>
+
+<p>It was February and freezing cold. Kay was away for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
+the week, trying a new play at Mount Vernon, where he
+slept. There was no reason why I should not have let Calder
+spend at least one warm night in the room. But, apart
+from the shock of annoyance at finding him asleep in my
+own bed, and apart from a moment’s anger at his cool
+impudence, the startling parallel with Boyde was vividly
+unpleasant. It was Boyde No. 2 I saw sleeping in my bed.
+If I let him stay one night I should never get rid of him at
+all. $10 a week among three! Calder must take up his
+bed and walk.</p>
+
+<p>I woke him and told him to dress and leave the room.
+I watched him dress, heard him plead, heard him describe
+the freezing weather, describe his walking the streets all
+night without a cent in his pockets. He blushed and giggled
+all the time. It was some minutes before he believed
+I was in earnest, before he crawled out of bed; it was much
+longer before he was dressed and ready to go.... I saw
+him down the stairs and through the front door and out
+into the bitter street. I gave him a dollar, which represented
+two days’ meals for me, and would pay a bed in a
+doss-house for him. When he was gone I spent a wretched
+night, ashamed of myself through and through. It really
+was Boyde who turned him out, but the excuse had no
+comfort in it. The little incident remains unkindly vivid;
+I still see it; it happens over again; the foolish, good-natured
+face, the blushes and shyness, the implicit belief
+in my own kindness, the red cheeks and curly hair—going
+through the front door into the bitter streets. It
+all stands out. Shame and remorse go up and down in me
+while I write it now, a belated confession.... I never
+saw Calder again.</p>
+
+<p>Another thing that still shames me is our treatment of
+old greasy Mother Bernstein. Though a little thing,
+this likewise keeps vividly alive. A “little” thing!
+The big things, invariably with extenuating circumstances
+that furnish modifying excuses and comforting explanations,
+are less stinging in the memory. It is the little
+things that pierce and burn and prick for years to come.
+In my treatment of Mrs. Bernstein, at any rate, lay an
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
+alleviating touch of comedy. In the end, too, the debt
+was paid. Twelve months later—it seemed a period of
+years—Kay got suddenly from a brother £100—an enormous
+sum; while I had twice received from my brother,
+God bless him! post-office orders for £10. This was a long
+time ahead yet, but Mrs. Bernstein eventually received her
+due with our sincerest thanks. She had moved to another
+house in Lafayette Place by then. We paid up and left
+her, Kay going to one boarding-house, I to another.</p>
+
+<p>The payment in full, at any rate, relieved my conscience,
+for the way we bullied that poor old Jewess was inexcusable.
+The excuse I found seemed adequate at the time,
+however—we must frighten her or be turned out. Each
+time she pressed for payment, out came my heavy artillery;
+imaginary insects, threats of newspaper articles, bluster,
+bluff and bullying of every description, often reducing her
+to tears, and a final indignant volley to the effect that
+“If you don’t trust us, we had better go; in fact, if this
+occurs again, we <i>shall</i> go!” More than once we pretended
+to pack up; more than once I announced that we had found
+other rooms; “Next Monday I shall pay you the few dollars
+we owe, and leave your house, and you will read an account
+of your conduct in the <i>Evening Sun</i>, Mrs. Bernstein.”
+She invariably came to heel. “I ask my hospand” had
+no sequel. By frightening and bullying her, I stayed on and
+on and on, owing months’ and months’ rent and breakfast;
+our ascendancy over her was complete. It was, none the
+less, a shameful business, for at the time it seemed doubtful
+if we should ever be in a position to pay the kind old woman
+anything at all....</p>
+
+<p>The fifteen months I now spent reporting for the
+<i>Evening Sun</i> at fifteen dollars a week lie in the mind like
+a smudged blur of dreary wretchedness, a few incidents
+only standing out.... The desire for the drug was conquered,
+the old doctor was dead, Kay had obtained a
+position with a firm in Exchange Place, where he
+made a small, uncertain income in a business that was an
+absolute mystery to me, the buying and selling of exchange
+between banks. Louis B—— had meanwhile
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
+arrived, without a cent to his name. It was a long and
+bitter period, three of us in a small room again, but at
+least an honest three. Louis’s French temperament ran
+to absinthe—when he could get it. He used the mattress
+on the floor, while Kay and I shared the bed between us.
+Our clothes were useless to the short, rotund little Frenchman;
+as the weeks passed he looked more and more like
+a pantomime figure in the streets, and when he went to
+give his rare French and Spanish lessons he never dared
+to take off his overcoat (which he had managed to keep)
+even in the hottest room, nor during the most torrid of
+summer days. Often he dared not unbutton the collar
+he turned up about his neck, affirming with much affected
+coughing that he had a “dreadful throat.” He was, by
+nature and habit, an inveterate cigarette smoker; a cigarette,
+indeed, meant more to him than a meal, and I can
+still see him crawling about the floor of the room on all
+fours in the early morning, “hunting snipe,” as he called it—in
+other words, looking for fag-ends. He was either extremely
+sanguine or extremely depressed; in the former
+mood he planned the most alluring and marvellous schemes,
+in the latter he talked of suicide. His wife, whom he dearly
+loved, had a baby soon after his arrival. He suffered a
+good deal....</p>
+
+<p>He was a great addition to our party, if at the same
+time a great drain on our purse. His keen, materialistic
+French mind was very eager, logical, well-informed, and
+critical in a destructive sense, an iconoclast if ever there
+was one. All forms of belief were idols it was his great
+delight to destroy; faith was superstition; cosmogonies
+were inventions of men whose natural feebleness forced
+them to seek something bigger and more wonderful than
+themselves; creeds, from primitive animism to Buddhism
+and Christianity, were, similarly, man-made, with a dose
+of pretentious ethics thrown in; while soul, spirit, survival
+after death, were creations of human vanity and egoism,
+and had not a single atom of evidence to support them
+from the beginning of the world to date. Naturally, he
+disbelieved everything that I believed, and, naturally,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
+too, our arguments left us both precisely where we started.
+But they helped the evenings, often hungry evenings,
+to pass without monotony; and when, as sometimes
+though but rarely happened, Louis had come by a drop of
+absinthe, monotony was entirely forgotten. He would
+sit crossed-legged on his mattress, his brown eyes sparkling
+in the round little face, his thick curly black hair
+looking like stiff wire, his podgy hands gesticulating, his
+language voluble in French and English mixed, his infectious
+laughter ringing and bubbling out from time to
+time—and the evening would pass like magic. He was
+charged with poetry and music too. On absinthe evenings,
+indeed, it was difficult to get any sleep at all ...
+and the first thing in the morning he would be hunting
+for “snipe” on all fours, cursing life and fate, in a
+black depression which made him think of suicide, and
+looking like a yellow Chinese God of Luck that had
+come to life.</p>
+
+<p>Hunger was agony to him, but, oddly enough, he never
+grew less rotund. He particularly enjoyed singing what
+he called <i>la messe noire</i> with astonishing variations in his
+high falsetto. This “mass” was performed by all three
+of us to a plaster-cast faun an artist had given me in
+Toronto. It had come in the packing-case with our other
+things, this Donatello, and we set it on the mantelpiece,
+filled a saucer with melted candle stolen from a boarder’s
+room, lit the piece of string which served for wick, and
+turned the gas out. In the darkened room the faunish
+face leered and moved, as the flickering light from below
+set the shadows shifting about its features; the fiddle,
+Louis’s thin falsetto, Kay’s bass, badly out of tune, and
+my own voice thrown in as well, produced a volume of
+sound the other boarders strongly objected to—at one
+o’clock in the morning. Yet the only time Mrs. Bernstein
+came to complain, she got no farther than the door:
+Louis had a blanket over his head and shoulders, Kay was
+in his night-shirt, which was a day-shirt really, the old
+Irving wig lying crooked on his head, and I was but half
+dressed, fiddling for all I was worth. The darkened room,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
+the three figures passing to and fro and chanting, the
+strange weird face of the faun, it by the flickering flame
+from below, startled her so that she stood stock-still on
+the threshold without a word. The next second she was
+gone.... What eventually happened to Louis I never
+knew. Months later he moved to a room up-town. We
+lost track of one another, and I have no idea how fate
+behaved to him in after-life. He was thirty-five when he
+sang the <i>messe noire</i>, hunted snipe, and gave occasional
+lessons in French and Spanish.</p>
+
+<p>These trivial little memories remain vivid for some
+reason. To my precious Sundays in Bronx Park, or farther
+afield when the days grew longer, he came too, and
+Kay came with him. We shared the teapot and tin mug
+I still kept hidden behind a boulder, we shared the fire
+I always made—neither of my companions shared my mood
+of happiness.... I was glad when they both refused to
+get up and start at eight, preferring to spend the morning
+in bed. For months and months I never missed a single
+Sunday, wet or fine, for these outings were life to me,
+and I made a rough lean-to that kept the rain off in bad
+weather.... The car-fare was only 30 cents, both ways;
+bread and a lump of cheese provided two meals; there were
+few Sundays when I did not get at least seven or eight
+hours of intense happiness among the trees and wild
+stretches of what was to me a veritable Eden of delight....
+Nothing experienced in later life, tender or grandiose,
+neither the splendour of the Alps, the majesty of the Caucasus,
+the mystery of the desert, the magic of spring in
+Italy or the grim wonder of the real backwoods which I
+tasted later too—none of these produced the strange and
+subtle ecstasy of happiness I found on those Sundays in
+the wastes of scrubby Bronx Park, a few miles from “Noo
+York City.” ... It was, of course, but the raw material,
+so to speak, of beauty, which indeed is true always of
+“scenery” as a whole, but it was possible to find detail
+which, grouped together, made unforgettable pictures
+by the score. Though deprived of technique, I could <i>see</i>
+the pictures I need never think of painting. The selection
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
+of significant detail in scenery is the secret of enjoyment,
+for such selection can be almost endless....</p>
+
+<p>The hours passed too quickly always, but they provided
+the energy to face what, to me, was the unadulterated misery
+of the week to follow. A book was in my pocket and
+Shelley was in my memory. From the tram to the trees
+was half a mile, perhaps, but with the first sight of these,
+with the first scent of leaves and earth, the first touch of
+the wind of open spaces on my tongue, my joy rose like
+a great sea-wave, and the city life, with all its hideousness,
+was utterly forgotten. What occupied my mind during
+those seven or eight hours it would be tedious to describe....
+I was, besides, hopelessly inarticulate in those early
+days; conclusions I arrived at were reached by feeling,
+not by thinking; one, in particular, about which I felt so
+positive that I <i>knew</i> it was true, I could no more have
+expressed in words than I could have flown or made a
+million. This particular conclusion that the Sundays in
+Bronx Park gave me has, naturally, been expressed by
+others far better than I could ever express it, but the first
+time I came across the passage, perhaps a dozen years
+later in London, my thought instantly flashed back to the
+teapot, the tin mug, and the boulder in Bronx Park when
+the same conviction had burned into my own untaught
+mind:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“One conclusion was forced upon my mind ... and my
+impression of its truth has ever since remained unshaken. It
+is that our normal waking consciousness, rational consciousness
+as we call it, is but <i>one special type</i> of consciousness, whilst all
+about us, parted from it by the filmiest of screens, there are
+potential forms of consciousness entirely different. We may
+go through life without suspecting their existence; but apply
+the requisite stimulus and at a touch they are there in all their
+completeness; definite types of mentality which probably somewhere
+have their field of application and adaptation. No
+account of the universe in its totality can be final which leaves
+these other forms of consciousness quite disregarded. At any
+rate, they forbid a premature closing of our accounts with reality.
+The whole drift of my education goes to persuade me that the
+world of our present consciousness is <i>only one</i> out of many worlds
+of consciousness that exist, and that these other worlds must
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
+contain experiences which have a meaning for our life also....
+[The insight in these other states] has a keynote invariably of
+reconciliation. It is as if the opposites of the world, whose
+contradictions and conflict make all our difficulties and troubles,
+were melting into unity.”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<div class='footnotes'>
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> “Varieties of Religious Experience.” William James.</p></div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The immortal may mingle with certain moods, perhaps,
+especially when violent contrast underlies the transition,
+and when deep yearnings, suppressed equally with violence,
+find their sudden radiant outlet. Since those
+Bronx Park days, when Nature caught me with such profound,
+uplifting magic, yet when thought was dumb and
+inarticulate, I am for ever coming across neat expressions
+by better minds than mine of what I then felt, and even
+believed I <i>knew</i>, in some unimagined way. Nature drew
+me, perhaps, away from life, while at the same time there
+glowed in my heart strange unrealizable desires to help
+life, to assist at her Utopian development, to work myself
+to the bone for the improvement of humanity. The contradiction,
+silly and high-flown though it now sounds,
+was then true. Inextinguishable fires to this end blazed
+in me, both mind and heart were literally on fire. My
+failure with Boyde, my meanness with Calder, to mention
+no graver lapses, both bit deep, but the intense longing
+to lose my Self in some Utopian cause was as strong as
+the other longing to be lost in the heart of some unstained
+and splendid wilderness of natural beauty. And the conflict
+puzzled me. Being inarticulate, I could not even find
+relief in words, though, as mentioned, I have often since
+discovered my feelings of those distant days expressed
+neatly enough by others. Only a few days ago I came across
+an instance:</p>
+
+<p>“If Nature catches the soul young it is lost to
+humanity,” groans Leroy, in a truly significant book of
+1922.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<div class='footnotes'>
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">[2]</a> “The Interpreters,” by A. E. The characters “interpret” the
+“relation of the politics of Time to the politics of Eternity.”</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>“No, no,” replies the poet. “The earth spirit does
+not draw us aside from life. How could that which is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
+father and mother of us all lead us to err from the law of
+our being?”</p>
+
+<p>And, again, as I sat puzzling about the amazing horror
+of what was called the Civilization of the New World,
+and doubtless making the commonplace mistake of
+thinking that New York City was America:—</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Every great civilization, I think, has a Deity behind it,
+or a divine shepherd who guided it on some plan in the cosmic
+imagination. ‘Behold,’ said an ancient Oracle, ‘how the
+Heavens glitter with intellectual sections.’... These are archetypal
+images we follow dimly in our evolution.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you conceive of these powers as affecting civilization?”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe they are incarnate in the race; more in the group
+than in the individual; and they tend to bring about an orchestration
+of the genius of the race, to make manifest in time their
+portion of eternal beauty....”&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<div class='footnotes'>
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">[3]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p></div>
+</div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>My conception of the universe, at any rate, in these
+early days was imaginative entirely; the critical function,
+which comes with greater knowledge, with reason, with
+fuller experience, lay wholly dormant. I communed
+with both gods and devils. New York stoked the furnace—provided
+the contrasts. Experience, very slowly, furnished
+the files and sand-paper which lay bare what may
+be real beneath by rubbing away the pretty gilt. Certain
+convictions of those far days, however, stood the test,
+whatever that test may be worth, and have justified
+themselves to me with later years as assuredly <i>not</i> gilt.
+That unity of life is true, and that our normal human
+consciousness is but one type, and a somewhat insignificant
+type at that, hold unalterably real for me to-day. My
+other conviction, born in Bronx Park in 1892 by the teapot,
+tin mug, and familiar boulder which concealed these indispensable
+utensils during the week, is that the Mystical
+Experience known to many throughout the ages with invariable
+similarity is <i>not</i> a pathogenic experience, but is
+due to a desirable, genuine and valuable expansion of
+consciousness which furnishes knowledge normally ahead
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
+of the race; but, since language can only describe the
+experience of the race, that it is incommunicable because
+no words exist, and that only those who have experienced
+it can comprehend it. The best equipped modern “intellectual”
+(above all the “intellectual” perhaps), the
+most advanced scientist, as, on the other hand, the drayman,
+the coster, the city clerk, must remain not only
+dumb before its revelation, stupid, hopelessly at sea,
+angry probably, but contemptuous and certainly mystified:
+they must also appear, if they be honest, entirely
+and unalterably <i>sceptical</i>. Such scepticism is their penalty;
+it is, equally, their judge and their confession.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap xkern'><span class='allcaps'>Among</span> the “incidents” that stand out from the dim,
+miserable smudge of fifteen months, is one that
+centres about a strange figure, and a most lovable
+fellow, named Angus Hamilton. Various odd fish drifted
+on to the paper as reporters, and drifted off again; they
+form part of an unimportant kaleidoscope. But Angus
+Hamilton, with his generosity, his startling habits,
+his undoubted ability, his sad and sudden end, stands
+out.</p>
+
+<p>My position had improved since the publication of the
+Boyde story, chiefly, of course, because of the way the
+peerage had been dragged into its details and its
+headlines. I received no advance in salary, but I
+received an advance in respect. Even McCloy was
+different: “Why waste your time with us?” he spat
+at me like a machine-gun with a rapid smile. “Go
+home. Collect a lot of umbrellas and turned-up trousers
+and letters of introduction. Then come out to ‘visit
+the States,’ marry an heiress, and go home and live in
+comfort!” He was very lenient to my numerous mistakes.
+Other papers “got a beat” on me, I “fell down”
+times without number, I failed to get an interview with
+all and sundry because I could not find “the nerve” to
+intrude at certain moments into the lives and griefs of
+others. But McCloy winked the other eye, even if he
+never raised my pay. Other men were sacked out of
+hand. I stayed on. “You’ve got a pull with Mac!”
+said “Whitey.” New men took the places of the lost.
+Among these I noticed an Englishman. Cooper noticed
+him too. “Better share an umbrella and go arm in arm,”
+he said in his good-natured way. “He’s a fellow-Britisher.”</p>
+
+<p>Why he came to New York I never understood. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
+was a stepson of Pinero, the playwright, and he received
+occasional moneys from Daniel Frohman, by way of
+allowance, I supposed, though I never knew exactly.
+Clever though he was, he was a worse reporter than myself—because
+he didn’t care two straws whether he got the
+news or did not get it. He had a “pull” of some sort,
+with Laffan probably, we thought. He came to our
+boarding-house in East 19th Street. He had a bad
+stammer. His methods of reporting were peculiar to
+himself. Often enough, when sent out on a distasteful
+assignment, he simply went home. He had literary talent
+and wrote well when he liked. When Frohman handed
+out his money, he spent it in giving a big dinner to various
+friends, though he never included Kay, Louis, or myself
+among his distinguished guests. We had no dress-suits,
+for one thing.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton was perhaps twenty-one at the time, a trifle
+younger than myself, at any rate. He came downstairs
+sometimes to spend the evening in our room. In spite
+of his stammer and a certain shyness, he was always very
+welcome. He liked, above all, to listen to weird stories
+I used to tell, strange, wild, improbable tales akin to
+ghost-stories. When the Black Mass failed to attract,
+when Louis was uninspired by absinthe, or when no
+argument was afoot, such as whether poet or scientist
+were the highest type of human being, I discovered this
+taste for spinning yarns, usually of a ghostly character,
+and found, to my surprise, that my listeners were enthralled.
+At a moment’s notice, no theme or idea being
+in my head, I found that I could invent a tale, with
+beginning, middle and climax. Something in me, doubtless,
+sought a natural outlet. The stories, at any rate,
+poured forth endlessly. “May I write that one?”
+Hamilton would ask. “It’s a corker!” And he would
+bring his written version to read to us a few evenings
+later. “It ought to sell,” he said, though I never heard
+that it did sell actually. Certainly, it never occurred
+to me that I might write and sell it myself. And Angus
+Hamilton is mentioned here because it was owing to a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
+chance act of his that I eventually took to writing and
+so found my liberty.</p>
+
+<p>This happened some twelve years later, when I was
+living in a room in Halsey Street, Chelsea, sweating my
+life out in the dried milk business and earning barely
+enough at the job to make both ends meet. A hansom
+stopped suddenly near me in Piccadilly Circus, its occupant
+shouted my name, then sprang out—Angus Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>He came round to my room for a talk over old days;
+he had done well for himself as Reuter’s correspondent
+in the Manchurian War, had published a book on Korea,
+and was just off to China, again as Reuter’s agent. He
+reminded me of the stories I used to tell in the New York
+boarding-house. I had written some of these, a couple
+of dozen perhaps, and they lay in a cupboard. Could he
+see them? Might he take them away and read them?</p>
+
+<p>It had been my habit and delight to spend my evenings
+composing yarns on my typewriter, finding more pleasure
+in this than in any dinner engagement, theatre or concert.
+Why this suddenly began I cannot say, but I guess at a
+venture that the accumulated horror of the years in
+New York was seeking expression. Wandering in Richmond
+Park at night was the only rival entertainment that
+could tempt me from the joy of typing out some tale or
+other in solitude. “Jimbo” I had already written twice,
+several of the “John Silence” tales as well, and numerous
+other queer ghostly stories of one sort or another. From
+among these last Hamilton took a dozen or so away with
+him, but forgot to send them back as he had promised.
+He had gone to China, I supposed, and the matter had
+slipped his mind. It didn’t matter much—I went on
+writing others; the stories were no good to anybody, the
+important thing being the relief and keen pleasure I found
+in their expression. But some weeks later a letter came
+from a publisher: “I have read your book.... My
+reader tells me ...” this and that “about your
+stories.... I shall be glad to publish them for you
+...,” and then a few words about a title and a request
+that I would call for an interview.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>It was some little time before I realized what the
+publisher was talking about. Hamilton, without asking
+permission, had sent my stories to him. Eveleigh Nash
+was the publisher, and his reader at that time was Maude
+Ffoulkes, who later wrote Lady Cardigan’s Memoirs,
+numerous other biographies, also “My Own Past,” and
+to whom I owe an immense debt for unfailing guidance,
+help and encouragement from that day to this. I never
+forget my shrinking fear at the idea of appearing in print,
+my desire to use another name, my feeling that it was all
+a mistake somewhere, the idea that I should have a book
+of my own published being too absurd to accept as true.
+My relief when, eventually, the papers gave it briefest
+possible mention, a few words of not unkindly praise or
+blame, I remember too, and my astonishment, some
+weeks later, to find a column in the <i>Spectator</i>, followed
+not long afterwards by an interesting article in the Literary
+Page of the <i>Morning Post</i> on the genus “ghost story,”
+based on my book—by Hilaire Belloc, as he told me
+years later. All of which prompted me to try another
+book ... and after the third, “John Silence,” had
+appeared, to renounce a problematical fortune in dried
+milk, and with typewriter and kit-bag, to take my
+precious new liberty out to the Jura Mountains where,
+at frs. 4.50 a day, I lived in reasonable comfort and wrote
+more books. I was then thirty-six.</p>
+
+<p>Whether I should be grateful to my fellow-reporter
+on the <i>Evening Sun</i> is another matter. Liberty is priced
+above money, at any rate. I have written some twenty
+books, but the cash received for these, though it has
+paid for rent, for food, for clothing, separately, has never
+been enough to pay for all three together, even on the
+most modest scale of living, and my returns, both from
+America and England, remain still microscopic. Angus
+Hamilton I never saw again. A year or so later, while
+on a lecture tour in New York, things apparently went
+wrong with him. Life drove against him in some way.
+He put a sudden end to himself.</p>
+
+<p>It seems strange to me now that so few incidents,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
+and those such trivial ones, stand out from the long months
+of newspaper work in New York. Harrowing and dreadful
+stories, appalling in their evidence of human degradation,
+or poignant beyond words in their revelation of misery,
+temptation, failure, were my daily experience week after
+week, month after month. I might now have bulky
+scrap-books packed with thrilling plots of every kind,
+all taken from life. My affair with Boyde, moreover,
+had taught me how much of curious psychological interest
+lay behind the most ordinary arrest for a commonplace
+crime. Yet, of all these thousands of cases, I remember
+hardly a single one, while of uninteresting assignments
+Cooper gave me several still live vividly in my memory.
+Social reporting, in particular, both amused and distressed
+me, for which reasons probably it has not faded. Sitting
+in the lobby at Sherry’s or Delmonico’s when a ball or
+society function was in progress and taking the names of
+the guests as they entered, taking the snubs and rudeness
+of these gay, careless folk as well, was not calculated to
+add much to my self-respect. The lavish evidence of
+money, the excess, often the atrocious taste, even stirred
+red socialism in me, although this lasted only till I was
+out in the street again. Various connexions, distant
+or otherwise, of my family often, too, visited New York,
+while more than one had married an American girl of
+prominent name. It was odd to see Lord Ava, Dufferin’s
+eldest son, walk up the steps, and odder still to jot
+down his name upon the list of “those present.” There
+was an American woman, too, who bore my mother’s
+name.... To see any of these people was the last thing
+on earth I wished, much less to speak to them or be
+recognized; they were in another world to mine; none
+the less, I had odd sensations when I saw them....
+A ball of deaf-mutes, too, remains very clear, only the
+shuffling sound of boots, and of the big drum whose heavy
+vibrations through their feet enabled them to keep time,
+breaking the strange hush of the dancing throng, for ever
+gesticulating with busy fingers.</p>
+
+<p>A much-coveted annual assignment once came my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
+way, through the kindness of McCloy, I think—the visit
+to the winter quarters of Barnum and Bailey’s Circus.
+Every newspaper was invited; the animals were inspected;
+an article was written; and the circus opened its yearly
+tour with immense advertisements. In the evening there
+was a—banquet! I came home in the early hours with
+my pockets stuffed for Kay and Louis—cigars, fruit,
+rolls, and all imaginable edibles that might bear the
+transport. But the occasion is clear for another reason—elephants
+and rats. The keeper told us that the elephants
+were terrified of rats because they feared the little beasts
+would run up their trunks. We doubted his story. He
+offered to prove it. In the huge barn where some twenty-five
+monsters stood, chained by the feet against the walls,
+he emptied a sackful of live rats. The stampede, the
+trumpeting of those frightened elephants is not easily
+forgotten. In the centre of the great barn stood masses
+of hay cut into huge square blocks, and the sight of us
+climbing for safety to the top of these slippery, precariously
+balanced piles of hay is not easily forgotten either.</p>
+
+<p>The raid at dawn upon a quasi lunatic asylum, kept
+by an unqualified man, should have left sharper impressions
+than is the case, for it was certainly dramatic and sinister
+enough. Word came to the office that a quack “doctor”
+was keeping a private Home for Lunatics at Amityville,
+L.I., and that sane people, whom interested parties
+wished out of the way, were incarcerated among the
+inmates. The Health Department were going to raid it
+at dawn. It was to be a “scoop” for the <i>Evening Sun</i>,
+and the assignment was given to me.</p>
+
+<p>I started while it was still dark, crossing the deserted
+ferry long before the sun was up, but when I reached
+the lonely house, surrounded by fields and a few scattered
+trees, I found that every newspaper in the city was represented.
+Even the flimsy men were there, all cursing
+their fate in the chilly air of early morning. No lights
+showed in the building. The eastern sky began to flush.
+With the first glimmer of dawn I saw the sheriff’s men
+at their various posts, hiding behind trees and hedges,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
+some crouching under the garden shrubberies, some
+concealed even on the veranda of the house. After a
+long and weary wait, the house began to stir; shutters
+were taken down; a window, then a door, were thrown
+open; figures became visible moving inside from room to
+room; and presently someone came out on to the veranda.
+He was instantly seized and taken away. After several
+men and women had been arrested in this way, a general
+raid of the whole house took place. A dozen of the
+sheriff’s men rushed in. The nurses, male and female,
+the “doctor”-proprietor, his assistants, and every single
+inmate, sane or crazy, were all caught and brought out
+under arrest, before they had tasted breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>It was broad daylight by this time. The whole party,
+of at least thirty, were assembled in a barn where a magistrate,
+brought down specially for the purpose, held an
+impromptu court. If some of the inmates were insane
+at the time and had been so before incarceration, others
+certainly had been deliberately made insane by the harsh
+and cruel treatment to which they had purposely been
+subjected. There were painful episodes, while the testimony
+was hurriedly listened to in that improvised court
+of inquiry. Yet it has all, all vanished from my memory.
+I forget even what the sequel was, or what sentence the
+infamous proprietor received later on from a properly-constituted
+court. Many a sane man or woman had been
+rendered crazy by the treatment, I remember, and the
+quack had taken heavy payments from interested relatives
+for this purpose. But all details have vanished from my
+mind. What chiefly remains is the wonder of that
+breaking dawn, the light stealing over the sky, the sweet
+smell of the country and the tang of the salt sea. These,
+with the singing of the early birds, and the great yearnings
+they stirred in me, left deep impressions.</p>
+
+<p>One reason, I am sure, why such painful and dramatic
+incidents have left so little trace, is that I had a way of
+shielding myself from the unpleasantness of them, so
+that their horror or nastiness, as the case might be, never
+really got into me deeply. By a method of “detachment,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
+as mentioned earlier, I protected my sensitive inner
+self from being too much wounded. I would depute
+just sufficient intelligence and observation to attend to
+the immediate work in hand, while the rest of me, the
+major portion, lay inactive, uninvolved, certainly inoperative.
+Painful and vivid impressions were, none the
+less, received, of course, only I refused to admit or recognize
+them. They emerged, years later, in stories perhaps,
+these suppressed hieroglyphics, but at the actual time I
+could so protect myself that I did not consciously record
+them. And hence, I think, my faint recollection now
+of a thousand horrible experiences during these New
+York reporting days.</p>
+
+<p>This “detachment,” in the ignorant way I used it,
+was, perhaps, nothing less than shirking of the unpleasant.
+At twenty-three I had not yet discovered
+that better method which consists in facing the unpleasant
+without reservation or evasion, while raising the energy
+thus released into a higher channel, “transmuting” it,
+as the jargon of 1922 describes it. “Detachment,” however,
+even in its earliest stages, and provided it does not
+remain merely where it starts, is an acquisition not without
+value; it can lead, at any rate, to interesting and curious
+experiments. It deputes the surface-consciousness, or
+sufficient of it, to deal with some disagreeable little matter
+in hand, while the subconscious or major portion of the
+self—for those who are aware of possessing it—may travel
+and go free. It is, I think, Bligh Bond, in his “Gate of
+Remembrance,” who mentions that the automatic writer
+whose revelations are there given, read a book aloud
+while his hand with the pencil wrote. Many a literary
+man, whose inspiration depends upon the stirrings of this
+mysterious subconscious region, knows that to read a
+dull book, or talk to a dull person, engages just enough
+of his surface consciousness to set the other portion free.
+Reading verse—though not poetry, of course—has this
+effect; for some, a cinema performance, with the soothing
+dimness, the music, the ever-shifting yet not too arresting
+pictures, works the magic; for others, light music; for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
+others, again, looking out of a train window. There are
+as many ways as individuals. To listen to Mrs. de
+Montmorency Smith telling her tedious dream, while you
+hear just enough to comment intelligently upon her endless
+details, even using some of these details to feed your own
+more valuable dream, is an admirable method—I am
+told; and my own childish habit of squeezing “through
+the crack between yesterday and to-morrow” in that
+horrible bed of East 19th Street, merely happened to be
+my own little personal adaptation of the principle....</p>
+
+<p>Incidents that had held a touch of comedy remain
+more clearly in the memory than those that held ugliness
+and horror only. A member of the Reichstag Central
+Party, for instance, Rector Ahlwardt by name, came
+out to conduct a campaign against the Jews. He was
+violently anti-semitic. I was sent to meet his steamer
+at Quarantine because I could speak German, and my
+instructions were to warn him that America was a free
+country, that the Jews were honourable and respected
+citizens, and that abuse would not be tolerated for a
+moment. These instructions I carried out, while we drank
+white wine in the steamer’s smoking-room. Freytag, I
+noticed with amusement, himself a Jew, was there for
+the <i>Staatszeitung</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Ahlwardt, however, was impervious to advice or warnings.
+At his first big meeting in the Cooper Union Hall,
+arriving late, I noticed at once two things: the seats were
+packed with Jews, while almost as many policemen stood
+about waiting; and the reporters’ tables underneath the
+platform showed several open umbrellas. Both, I knew,
+were ominous signs. Ahlwardt himself, fat, beaming,
+in full evening dress, was already haranguing the huge
+audience. At first he was suave and gentle, even mealy-mouthed,
+but before long his prejudices mastered him and
+his language changed. Up rose a member of the audience
+and advised him angrily to go back to Germany. The
+police ejected the interrupter. Others took his place.
+Then suddenly the fusillade began—and up went the
+reporters’ umbrellas! A flying egg caught the speaker
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
+full on his white shirt-front, another yellowed his dazzling
+white waistcoat, a third smashed over his fat face. Pandemonium
+reigned, during which the German melted out
+of the landscape and disappeared from his first and last
+anti-semite meeting in Noo York City. He attempted a
+little propaganda from the safe distance of Hoboken, N.J.,
+but the Press campaign against him was so violent and
+covered him with such ridicule, that he very soon took
+steamer back to his Berlin. Every little detail of this
+incident, were it worth the telling, I could give accurately.
+There was no reason to be “detached,” unless the protection
+of the <i>World</i> man’s umbrella comes under that
+description.</p>
+
+<p>It was somewhere about this time, too, that another
+trivial incident occurred, refusing to be forgotten. It,
+again, increased the respect shown to me by the staff
+of the paper—Americans being truly democratic!—though
+it did not increase my salary. A belted earl left
+his card on me. Coming in breathless from some assignment,
+I saw McCloy staring at me. “Is this for <i>you</i>?”
+he asked sarcastically, handing me a visiting-card. A
+brother-in-law, “His Excellency” into the bargain,
+“Governor of an Australian Province” to which he was
+then on his way, had climbed those narrow spiral stairs
+and asked for me. The letters after his name alone were
+enough to produce a commotion in that democratic
+atmosphere.... He was staying at the Brevoort
+House, and he certainly behaved “like a man,” thought
+Kay and I, as we enjoyed more than one good dinner
+at his expense in the hotel. Proud of me he had certainly
+no cause to be, but if he felt ashamed, equally, he gave
+no sign of it. He even spoke on my behalf to Paul Dana,
+the editor-proprietor’s son, who assured him that I was
+“a bright fellow”—a description the staff managed to
+get hold of somehow and applied to me ever afterwards.
+His brief visit, both because of its kindness and its general
+good effect, stand out, at any rate, in the “bright fellow’s”
+memory. Like Dufferin in the Hub, he fired a shot for
+me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span></p>
+
+<p>The months dragged by in their dreary, hated length,
+while numerous chances of getting more congenial work
+were tried in vain. Torrid summer heat, with its all-dissolving
+humidity, replaced the bitter winter. The deep,
+baked streets that never cooled, the stifling nights, the
+heat-waves when the temperature stood between 90 and
+100 in the shade, and we toiled about the blazing pavements
+in shirt-sleeves carrying a palm-leaf fan, and when
+the moisture in the air made the very “copy-paper”
+stick to the hand that wrote upon it—those four months
+of New York summer were a misery. We had only our
+winter clothes to wear; a white collar was dirty pulp before
+nine in the morning; the dazzling electric-light sign
+flashed nightly in the air above 23rd Street with its
+tempting legend “Manhattan Beach Swept by Ocean
+Breezes,” while the ice-carts in the streets were the nearest
+approach to comfort we could find. Many a time I
+followed one at close quarters to taste a whiff of cooler
+air. Life became unendurable, yet day followed day, night
+followed night, week followed week, till one’s last breath
+of energy seemed exhausted by the steaming furnace
+of the city air.</p>
+
+<p>The respectable quarters of the town were, of course,
+deserted, but the East Side, and the poorer parts, became
+a gigantic ant-heap, thousands of families sleeping on the
+balconies of the packed tenement houses, as though a
+whole underground-world had risen suddenly to the
+surface. Children died by the hundred; there were heat
+strokes by the score. It was too hot to eat. Reporting
+in such weather was a trying business.... A reporter
+was entitled to a fortnight’s holiday in the year, and
+though none was due to me, McCloy let me go about the
+middle of October. I procured a railway pass and went
+off to Haliburton, Ontario, to spend my precious twelve
+days with a settler in the backwoods. He was a Scotsman
+I had met during our island days, and Haliburton was
+not far from our own delightful lake.... On my way
+back the cable came telling of my father’s death while
+being brought home from Ems. I was spending the night
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
+with an old friend of his, in Hamilton, Ont., where he
+had a church. Originally in the navy, the evangelical
+movement had “converted” him, and he had taken to it
+with such zeal that a church and parish became a necessity
+of life. He was sincere and sympathetic, and the bad
+news could have come to me in no better place.</p>
+
+<p>The next day I returned to New York and resumed my
+life of reporting on the paper.... The elections had been
+fought, and Tammany was beaten, a wave of Republicanism
+sweeping both State and City. A Committee of
+Investigation, under Senator Lexow, was appointed
+to examine into the methods of Tammany Hall, and for
+weeks I sat in court while the testimony was taken, and
+the most amazing stories of crime, corruption, wickedness
+and horror I ever heard were told by one “protected”
+witness after another. It brought to light a veritable
+Reign of Terror. John Goff was prosecuting counsel; he
+became Recorder, in place of Judge Smythe, as his reward.
+Boss Croker, head of Tammany, was conveniently in
+England and could not be subpœnaed. Other leaders,
+similarly, were well out of reach. Tammany, it was
+proved up to the hilt, had extorted an annual income of
+fifteen million dollars in illegal contributions from vice.
+The court was a daily theatre in which incredible melodrama
+and tragedy were played. With this thrilling
+exception, the work I had to do remained the same as
+before ... a second Christmas came round ... another
+spring began to melt the gloomy skies. Conditions, it is
+true, were a little easier, for Louis had left us and Kay was
+earning ten or fifteen dollars a week in Exchange Place,
+but by March or April, the eighteen months of underfeeding
+and trying work had brought me, personally, to the
+breaking point....</p>
+
+<p>It was late in April I read that gold had been found
+in the Rainy River district which lay in the far north-western
+corner of Ontario, the river of that name being
+the frontier between Minnesota State and Canada. The
+paragraph stating the fact was in a Sunday paper I read
+on my way to Bronx Park, and the instant I saw it my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
+mind was made up. It was spring, the primitive instinct
+to strike camp and move on was in the blood, a nostalgia
+for the woods was in it too, and the prospect of another
+torrid, moist summer in the city at $15 a week was more
+than I could face. That scrap of news, at any rate, decided
+me. And, truth to tell, it was not so much the lure
+of gold that called me, as the lure of the wilderness. I
+longed to see the big trees again, to smell the old naked
+earth, to hear water falling and feel the great winds
+blow.... It was an irresistible call.</p>
+
+<p>My one terror, as when I decided to buy the dairy
+two years before, was that someone would tell me there
+was no gold, that it was not worth going, or would prevent
+me in some other way. I deliberately hid from myself
+all unfavourable information, while I collected all possible
+items that might justify my intention. That same night
+I showed the paragraph to Kay. “I’ll go,” he said at
+once, “but let’s get a third, a fourth too, if we can.” He
+mentioned Paxton, an engineer, aged 35, who had just
+lost all his worldly possessions in speculation. Paxton
+said he would come with us. The fourth was R.M.,
+son of the clergyman in Hamilton. R.M., whose father
+was brother to a belted earl, was an insurance agent,
+and making a good living at his job. He was my own
+age, also my own height. He was, besides, a heavy-weight
+amateur boxer of considerable prowess, and his favourite
+time for holding bouts in the ring was Sunday evenings,
+to which fact a rival clergyman had recently taken occasion
+to refer slightingly in his own pulpit. R.M., resenting
+the slur both upon himself and his father, had waited
+outside the church door one Sunday after the evening
+service, and when the clergyman emerged had asked for
+an apology—a public one in the pulpit. On being met
+with an indignant refusal, R.M. invited the other to
+“put ’em up.” The thrashing that followed produced
+a great scandal in the little town, and R.M. found the
+place too hot to hold him. He therefore jumped at the
+idea of the goldfields.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangements were made, of course, by letter,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
+and took some little time; but on a given morning in
+early May R.M. was to join our train as it passed through
+Hamilton. I had been able to procure passes for the lot
+of us as far as Duluth, some fifteen hundred miles distant,
+on Lake Superior, and from there we should have to travel
+another hundred and fifty miles by canoe down the Vermilion
+River to Rainy Lake City, for the foundations of
+which the forest, I read, had already been partially
+cleared. Several further articles had appeared in the
+papers; it was a gorgeous country, men were flocking
+in, and the Bank of Montreal had established a branch
+in a temporary shack. Moreover, as mentioned before,
+it was spring.</p>
+
+<p>That a man of Paxton’s age and experience should
+have made this long expedition without first satisfying
+himself that it was likely to be worth while, has always
+puzzled me. He was an easy-going, good-natured man,
+whose full figure proclaimed that he liked the good things
+of life. But he was in grave difficulties, graver perhaps
+than I ever knew, and I think he was not sorry to contemplate
+a trip across the border. His attitude, at any rate,
+was that he “didn’t care a rap so long as I get out of
+here.” That Kay and myself and R.M. should take the
+adventure was natural enough, for none of us had anything
+to lose, and, whatever happened, we should “get along
+somehow,” and even out of the frying-pan into the fire
+was better than the summer furnace of the city. R.M.
+wrote that he had a hundred dollars, Paxton produced
+fifty, I supplied the railway passes and added my last
+salary, together with some eight dollars that Ikey No. 2
+was persuaded to hand over.</p>
+
+<p>“Send some stuff along,” fired McCloy, opening his
+eyes a little wider than usual when I told him. “Any
+hot stuff you get I’ll use.”</p>
+
+<p>It has already been told how Kay missed the train by
+a few minutes, and how Whitey, waving his parting
+present of a bottle of Bourbon whisky, was the final
+picture Paxton and I had of New York City as the evening
+train pulled out.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Some</span> people, examining the alternate ups and
+downs of life, have thought to detect a rhythm
+in it: like every other expression of energy, from
+heat to history, from sound to civilization, it moves, they
+think, with a definite wave-length. The down and up,
+the hollow of the wave and its crest, follow one another
+in rhythmical sequence. It is an imaginary notion
+doubtless, though it applied to my life aptly enough at
+this time apparently: the Toronto misery, the Island
+happiness; the New York hell, the Backwoods heaven.</p>
+
+<p>I think, when I wrote home the literal truth: “I
+can’t stand this reporting life any longer. I’m off to the
+goldfields, and McCloy has asked me to write articles for
+the paper,” there lay a vague idea in me that these goldfields
+would prove somehow to be comic goldfields, and that
+the expedition would be somewhere farcical. I was so
+eager, so determined to go, that I camouflaged from myself
+every unfavourable aspect of the trip. Green, being still
+my predominant colour, was used freely in this camouflage.
+It was only afterwards I realized how delightfully I fooled
+myself. Yet it was true, at the same time, that a deep
+inner necessity drove irresistibly. The city life was
+killing something in me, something in the soul: get out
+or go under, was my feeling. How easy it would have
+been to go under was a daily thought. Far better men
+than myself proved it all round me every week. It
+seemed, indeed, the natural, obvious thing to do for an
+educated, refined Englishman without character who
+found himself adrift from home influences in this amazing
+city—to sink into the general scum of failures and outcasts,
+to yield to one of the many anæsthetics New York
+so lavishly provided, to find temporary relief, a brief wild-eyed
+happiness, oblivion, then, not long afterwards, death.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span></p>
+
+<p>The draw of the woods, the call of the open air, moreover,
+always potent, had become insistent. Spring
+added its aching nostalgia that burned like a fever in my
+veins.</p>
+
+<p>Thus various influences, some positive, some negative,
+combined to make me feel that anything was better than
+the drudgery of my wretched New York life, and the
+goldfields merely offered a plausible excuse. If I made
+blinkers with my own hands, I made them effectively
+at least. Deep out of sight in the personality there hides,
+perhaps, some overseer who, watching wisely the turns of
+fate, makes such blinkers, ensuring their perfect fit as
+well....</p>
+
+<p>There was a nice feeling, of course, that if one went
+to a goldfield, one picked up gold. Shaking sand in a
+shining pan beside a rushing river was a picture in the
+mind. There were wild men, friends and enemies; there
+were Indians too; but also there were sunsets, tempests,
+dawns and stars. It would be liberty and happiness.
+I should see the moon rise in clear, sweet air above the
+rim of primæval woods. I should cook bacon over an
+open fire of wood. There would be no grinning Chinaman
+to pay for laundry....</p>
+
+<p>The men with whom I was going were not entirely
+satisfactory. I knew them slightly, for one thing; for
+another, the chief drawback, they were going in a very
+different mood from mine. Their one object was to make
+their fortunes. It was real gold, and not the glamour
+of the wilderness, that called them; and in the Emigrant
+Sleeper, as we journeyed towards Duluth, they sketched
+their plans with intense enthusiasm: Paxton, the engineer,
+explained puzzlingly, with the aid of matches, a trolley
+he would construct for bringing the ore from pit to crusher,
+while R.M., with reckless immorality, enlarged upon the
+profits he would derive from running a “joint” of desperate
+sort—“for no one need know that my father’s a
+clergyman, and my uncle in the House of Lords.”</p>
+
+<p>Both men were shadows; they were not real; there was
+no companionship in them for me, at any rate. That
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
+they were fellow-travellers for the moment on a trip
+I did not care about making alone, was sufficient. I
+would just as soon have gone with McCloy or a Tombs
+policeman.</p>
+
+<p>What constitutes one person out of a hundred “real,”
+the other ninety-nine shadows, is hard to define, but an
+instinct in me has ever picked out that “real” one. With
+him or her I know instantly my life is going to be unavoidably
+linked: through love or hate, through happiness or
+trouble, perhaps through none of these, but with the
+conviction that a service has to be rendered or accepted,
+a debt, as it were, to be paid or received, a link at any
+rate that cannot be broken or evaded. Such real people
+are to be counted on the fingers of one hand: R.M. and
+Paxton were certainly not among them. Nor, for that
+matter, was my friend Kay, who, I am reasonably positive,
+missed the train on purpose; while, curiously enough,
+Boyde, that trivial criminal, <i>was</i> among them. Had
+Kay, for instance, done what that cheap ruffian did, I
+should never have taken the trouble to arrest or punish
+him....</p>
+
+<p>The comic opera touch began with Whitey racing
+down the platform waving a bottle of rye whisky; it
+continued next morning when we picked up R.M. at
+eight o’clock. Our train stopped at Hamilton, Ont.,
+for five minutes. We craned our heads out of the window
+and saw a party of young fellows with flushed faces and
+singing voices, and on their shoulders in the early sunshine
+the inert figure of a huge man without a hat. They
+recognized me and heaved him into our compartment,
+where he slept soundly for two hours until we had left
+Toronto far behind. “Ouch! Ouch!” said Paxton—it
+was about all “engineer Paxton” ever did say—“Is that
+R.M.?” They had never met before. We took the
+money out of his pocket for safety’s sake, and it proved to
+be more than his promised contribution. His friends
+had indeed given him a send-off, and the all-night poker
+had proved lucrative.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long, long journey to Duluth, with heartening
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
+glimpses from the window, of river, lake and forest, all
+touched with “spring’s delightful weather.” Shelley
+filled my head and heart. I saw dawn in a vale of the
+Indian Caucasus, I saw Panthea, Asia, fleeting dryads
+and troops of happy fauns. Out of New York City into
+this primæval wilderness produced intoxication. No more
+cities of dreadful night for me! The repressed, unrealized
+yearnings of many painful months burst forth in a kind
+of rapture. Riches can never taste the treasures of relief
+and change provided by the law of contrast. To be free
+to go everywhere is tantamount to going nowhere, to be
+able to do everything is to do nothing. Without school,
+holidays could have no meaning. The intensity of escape,
+with all the gorgeous emotions it involves, is hardly possible
+to the big bank-balances.</p>
+
+<p>I thought of the overheated <i>Sun</i> offices, and saw
+cool, silent woods; of thronged canyon-streets between
+cliffs of buildings, and saw lonely gorges where the deer
+stole down to drink in quiet pools; of Mrs. Bernstein’s
+room, and saw green glades of beauty, a ceiling of blue
+sky, walls of hemlock, spruce and cedar. The May sunlight
+made the whole world sing, as the train rushed through
+the wilderness of the Ontario Highlands. It woke a kind
+of lyrical delight in me. “The day seemed one sent from
+beyond the skies, that shed to earth, above the sun, a
+light of Paradise.” Paxton, with his puzzling matches,
+found me absent-minded and irresponsive to his “ouch!
+ouch!” and R.M., suffering from a bad “hang-over”
+headache, thought me unsympathetic toward his disreputable
+joint.</p>
+
+<p>More clearly than the matches, or the profit and loss
+figures of the joint, I remember the three bullets lying on
+the palm of the engineer’s fat open hand. His solemn
+gravity depressed R.M. It infected me a little too. Why
+in the world should he be so serious? “If we fail, boys,”
+said the engineer laconically, as he looked down with
+grim significance at the three bullets, “I for one—shall
+not return.” He put a bullet in his pocket, he handed
+one to R.M., the third he passed to me. “Is it a deal?”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
+he asked, speaking as one who had come to the end of his
+tether, which, indeed, perhaps really was the case. We
+pocketed our bullets anyhow, and told him gravely:
+“Yes, it’s a deal.” We shook hands on it.</p>
+
+<p>It was all in the proper spirit of gold-seeking adventure,
+begad! and the comic-opera touch, so far as I was concerned,
+had not yet quite fully appeared. I had cut loose
+from everything. I felt as though I were jumping off the
+rim of the planet into unknown space. It was a delightful,
+reckless, half naughty, half childish, feeling. “To hell with
+civilization!” was its note. At the back of the mind lay a
+series of highly-coloured pictures: Men made fortunes
+in a night, human life was cheap, six-shooters lay beside
+tin mugs at camp-fire breakfasts, and bags of “dust”
+were tossed across faro-tables from one desperado in a
+broad-brimmed hat to another who was either an Oxford
+don <i>incognito</i>, or an unfrocked clergyman, or a younger
+son concealing tragic beauty in an over-cultured heart,
+with perhaps an unclaimed title on his strawberry-marked
+skin. R.M., too, was forever talking about staking
+claims: “We’ll get grub-staked by some fellow.... If
+we only pan a few ounces per day it’ll mean success ...”
+to all of which Paxton emitted his “Ouch! Ouch!” as
+a strong man who said little because he preferred action
+to words.</p>
+
+<p>I, meanwhile, had no accurate information to supply,
+though I was the promoter of the expedition. I paraded
+the newspaper accounts. They were of little use.
+Nothing, in fact, was of any use. We were in different
+worlds. <i>They</i> were in an Emigrant Sleeper skirting the
+shores of Lake Superior. <i>I</i> was on the look-out for the
+Witch of Atlas, wandering through the pine forest of the
+Cascine near Pisa, dreaming in the Indian Caucasus, or
+watching Serchio’s stream. Even “Ouch! Ouch!” could
+not keep me in Ontario for long.</p>
+
+<p>It all lies down the wrong end of that ever-lengthening
+telescope now, our trip to the Rainy River Gold Fields.
+Happy, careless, foolish days of sunlight, liberty, wood-smoke
+and virgin wilderness. Useless days, of course,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
+yet sweetly perfumed as in a dream of fairyland. I
+revelled in them. New York was still close enough to
+lend them some incredible glamour by contrast. That
+no gold came our way was nothing, that the days came
+to an end was bitter. Fading into mist, behind veils
+of blue smoke, yet lit by sheets of burning sunshine, lies
+the faint outline still. Each year drops another gauze
+curtain over an entrancing and ridiculous adventure that
+for my companions was disappointingly empty, but to
+me was filled to the brim with wonder and delight. A few
+sharp pictures, rather disconnected, defy both veils and
+curtains, set against a dim background of wild forest, a
+blue winding river with strange red shores, swift rapids,
+and cosy camp-fires at dawn, at sunset, beneath the
+stars, beneath the moon. The stillness of those grand
+woods is unforgettable; the voice of the river was unceasing,
+yet broke no silence; the smells of balsam, resinous
+pitch-pine, cedar smoke rise like incense above the memory
+of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Duluth was all agog with excitement, and in every
+shop-window hung blue-prints of the El Dorado we were
+bound for. Two big-bladed hunting-knives, a second-hand
+Marlin rifle for $8, a Smith and Wesson revolver, were
+our weapons. I already had a six-shooter, given to me
+by the Tombs Court police. It had killed a negro, and
+I had reported the murder trial resulting. Three blankets
+had to be bought, a canoe, and provisions for the week’s
+trip down the Vermilion River—tea, bacon, flour, biscuits,
+salt and sugar. R.M. had a small “A” tent with him
+large enough to hold three; an old, high-prowed bark
+canoe was purchased from an Indian for $6; but our
+money did not run to Hudson Bay blankets, and the
+cheap, thin coverings we bought proved poor protection
+in those frosty nights of early May.</p>
+
+<p>We picked up a guide too, a half-breed named Gallup.
+He was going to Rainy Lake City in any case, and agreed
+to show us the portages and rapids for two dollars a day
+each way. He justified his name. He galloped. He had
+a slim-nosed Maine cedar-wood canoe that oiled along
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
+into the daily head-wind with easy swiftness, whereas
+R.M. and myself in our high-prowed craft found progress
+slow and steering a heavy toil. The wind caught our
+big bows like a sail. Gallup, moreover, sizing us up as
+English greenhorns, expected good food and lots of whisky,
+and, getting neither, vented his spleen on us as best he
+could. His natural evil temper grew steadily worse.
+There were several ways in which he could have revenge.
+He used them all. By “losing his way” down branch
+streams he made the journey last eight days instead of
+five, yet he went so fast in his neat-nosed craft that it
+was all R.M. and I could do to keep him in sight at all.
+The sunlight flashing on his paddle two or three miles
+ahead, the canoe itself a mere dark speck in the dazzle
+of water, was all we usually had to guide us. Paxton,
+weary, much thinner than he had been, useless as a
+paddler, lay in the bottom of the canoe, leaving all the
+work to Gallup. And Gallup did it, even with this dead
+freight against him. To our injunction to make the
+fellow go slower, his “Ouch! Ouch!” was quite ineffective.
+I was careful to keep the provisions in my own canoe, so
+that we could not lose him altogether, and he was faithful
+in one thing, that he waited for us at the rapids and
+portages.</p>
+
+<p>What did it matter? The head wind held steadily
+day after day, blowing from the north-west through a
+cloudless sky. Everything sparkled, the air was champagne;
+such a winding river of blue I had never seen
+before. Every tree wore little fingers of bright fresh
+green. There was exhilaration and wonder at every turn.
+Burned by the hot sun and wet by the flying spray, our
+hands swelled till the knuckles disappeared, then cracked
+between the joints till they bled.</p>
+
+<p>I steered. R.M. sat in the bows. Paddling hour
+after hour against the wind became a mechanical business
+the muscles attended to automatically. The mind was free
+to roam. The loneliness was magical, for it was a peopled
+loneliness. A start at dawn, half an hour for lunch, and
+camp at sunset was the day’s routine. Usually we were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
+too exhausted to cook the dwindling bacon, make the
+fire, put up the tent. What did it matter? Nothing
+mattered. Each mile was a mile of delight farther from
+New York. The trip might last months for all I cared.</p>
+
+<p>We cursed Gallup behind his back and to his face.
+He never even answered. His sulky silence broke only
+round the evening fire, when he would tell us appalling
+tales of murder, violence and sudden death about the
+goldfields whither we were bound. It was another form
+of revenge. The desperadoes, cutthroats, and wild hairy
+men generally who awaited us, <i>us</i> especially since we were
+English, hardly belonged to our happy planet. Yet he
+knew them at first hand, knew them even by name. They
+would all be on the look-out for us. Against several, for
+he had his friendly impulses, he warned us in particular.
+Were we good shots and quick on the trigger? The man
+who pulled first, he reminded us, had the drop on the
+other fellow. There was a “stiff” named Morris who was
+peculiarly deadly, Morris, a Canadian, who had killed his
+man in a saloon brawl across the river and had skipped
+over the border into Minnesota. Morris would be interested
+in “guys” like us. He described him in detail.
+We looked forward to Morris.</p>
+
+<p>They were cheery camp-fire stories Gallup told us
+nightly. We crawled into our chilly tent, wondering a
+little, each in his own thin blanket, what these hairy men
+were going to do to “guys like us.” We did not wonder
+long. Sleep came like a clap. At dawn, the wind just
+rising, and the chipmunks dropping fir-cones on to our
+tent with miniature reports, the hairy men were all
+forgotten. It was impossible to hold an ugly thought
+of any kind. The river sang at our feet, the sky was
+pearl and rose, the air was sharply perfumed with smells
+of forest and wood-smoke, and glimpses of sunrise shone
+everywhere between the trees; trees that stretched without
+a break five hundred miles to the shores of James Bay
+in the arctic seas.</p>
+
+<p>We gulped our tea and bacon, packed tent and blankets,
+split open the cracks in our swollen hands, and launched
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
+the canoes upon a crystal river that swirled along in
+eddies and sheets of colour. Sometimes it narrowed
+to a couple of hundred yards between rugged cliffs where
+the water raced towards a rapid, sometimes it broadened
+into wide, lake-like spaces; there were reaches of placid
+calm; there were stretches white with tumbling foam.
+The sun blazed down; we turned a sharp bend and surprised
+a deer; a porcupine waddled up against a pine-stem;
+a fish leaped in a golden pool; birds flashed and
+vanished; there was a silence, a stillness beyond all telling.
+Nuggets, gold dust, hairy men, six-shooters—nothing
+mattered!</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, this loneliness, this entire absence of
+all other human signs, that gradually betrayed the truth.
+Where was the stream of frenzied gold-seekers? Where
+was the rush the papers mentioned? Beyond a few
+stray Indians on the fourth day, we saw no living being.
+Gallup’s tales of terror began to lose their sting. Of real
+information he vouchsafed no single item. But who
+wanted real information? Rainy Lake City might be
+the legendary city of gold that lies beyond the mirages of
+the Lybian desert, for all I cared. The City of New York
+was out of sight. That was the important thing.</p>
+
+<p>The series of wild, lonely camps lie blurred in the
+composite outline of a single camp; eight dawns combine
+into one; I remember clear night-skies ablaze with brilliant
+stars; I remember the moon rising behind the black wall of
+forest across the water. All night the river sang and
+whispered. Police courts and Mrs. Bernstein’s room hid
+far away in the dim reaches of some former life. Behind
+these, again, lay a shadowy, forgotten Kent. There were
+haunting faces, veiled by distance, for a strange remoteness
+curtained the past with unreality. The wonder of the
+present dominated. These woods, this river, ruled the
+world, and somewhere in the heart of that old forest the
+legendary Wendigo, whose history I wrote later in a book,
+had its awful lair.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to Gallup’s trick of lengthening the journey,
+our food gave out, but with fish, venison and partridge
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
+it was impossible to starve. The last-named, a grouse
+actually, perches in the branches, waiting to be shot; a
+bullet must take its head off or it is useless for the pot
+but whizzing bullets do not disturb it, and several birds,
+sitting close together, can be picked off <i>seriatim</i>. Some
+dried sturgeon we found, too, on an island—an Indian
+sturgeon fishery—where great odorous strips were hanging
+in the sun. The braves were away, and the squaw left in
+charge was persuaded to sell us slabs of this excellent
+meat. In a deep, clear pool some half-dozen living
+monsters, hooked by the nose, turned slowly round and
+round, waiting the moment of their death. The island
+was interesting for another reason—it was an Indian canoe
+factory. Here the Redskins built their craft of birchbark,
+and a dozen canoes in various stages of completion
+lay in the broiling sun.... To me it was all visible
+romance, adventure, wonder in the heart of an unspoilt
+spring, with Hiawatha round the next big bend. Paxton
+and R.M. took another view....</p>
+
+<p>On the eighth night—our last, had we known it—there
+was an “incident.” Gallup had been unusually silent
+and extra offensive all day, had “galloped” at top speed,
+had refused to answer a single question, and the idea
+came to us all three simultaneously that he was not
+losing his way with the mere object of more money, but
+was taking us out of our route with a more sinister purpose.
+We depended on the fellow entirely; words or violence
+were equally useless; we were quite helpless. He was
+convinced we carried money, for no three Englishmen of
+our type would make such a trip without it. What was
+easier, we whispered to one another, than to murder us
+and bury our bodies in the trackless, lonely forest? We
+watched him....</p>
+
+<p>That night, exhausted to the bone, we camped on a
+point of wooded shore against the sunset. Across the
+broad reach of water, three miles away perhaps, was an
+Indian encampment. Pointed wigwams and the smoke
+of many fires were visible; voices were audible in the
+distance. The wind had died down as usual with the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
+sun. A deep hush lay over the scene. And, hardly
+had we landed, almost too weary to drag ourselves up
+the bank, when Gallup stepped back into his Maine canoe
+and pushed off downstream without a word. He stood
+upright; he did not sit or kneel. His figure was outlined
+one minute against the red sky, the next his
+silhouette merged into the dark forest beyond. He disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone, we agreed, for one of two reasons: to get
+food, or to return in the dark and pick us off, much as we
+picked off the grouse from the branches. We inclined
+towards the latter theory—and kept eyes and ears wide
+open. We made a diminutive fire in a hollow, lest we be
+too visible in the surrounding darkness. We listened,
+watched, and waited. It was already dusk. The night
+fell quickly. River and forest became an impenetrable
+sheet of blackness, our tiny fire, almost too small to cook
+on, the only speck of light. The stars came out, peeping
+through the branches. There was no wind. We shivered
+in the cold, listening for every slightest sound ... and
+the hours passed.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll wait till we’re asleep,” said R.M., keeping his
+eyes open with the greatest difficulty. Paxton fingered
+his revolver and mumbled “Ouch! Ouch!”</p>
+
+<p>Only the cold prevented us falling asleep, as, weapons
+in hand, we took turns to watch and listen. Had we the
+right to fire the instant we saw a figure? Should we wait
+till the scoundrel made a sign? We discussed endlessly
+in whispers. Though no wind stirred the branches, the
+noises in that “silent” forest never ceased, because no
+forest ever is, or can be, really silent. The effort of
+listening produced them by the dozen. On every side
+twigs snapped and dry wood crackled. Soft, stealthy
+footsteps were everywhere on the pine-needles. Canoes
+landed higher up and lower down; paddles dripped out
+in the river as someone approached; sometimes two or
+three dim figures crouched low on the shore, sometimes
+only one. Finally, for safety’s sake, we let the fire go
+out altogether.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span></p>
+
+<p>Armed to the teeth, we were still shivering in the cold
+darkness well on into the night, and at some distance
+from the dying embers, when suddenly—we nearly
+screamed—there was a sound of a voice. It was a man’s
+voice; he was angry; he was cursing. A flame shot up
+beneath the trees. We saw Gallup on his knees blowing
+up the hemlock coals. He had landed, pulled his canoe
+on to the bank, and come up to within a few yards of
+where we stood without our hearing the faintest sound.
+He said no word. He cooked himself no food. He just
+made a huge fire, spread his blanket beside the comforting
+blaze, curled up, and fell asleep. We soon followed his
+example. Probably he had enjoyed a square meal with
+the Indians, then sauntered home to bed.... Next day
+we reached Rainy Lake City, paid him off, and saw him
+push off upstream in his Maine canoe without having
+uttered a single word. He just counted the dollar bills
+and vanished.</p>
+
+<p>Rainy Lake City was a few acres roughly cleared from
+the primæval forest, yet with avenues cut through the
+dense trees to indicate streets where tramcars were to run
+at some future date. River, lake and forest combined to
+make an enchanting scene. There were perhaps a hundred
+men there. There was gold, but there was no gold-dust,
+no shining pans to sift the precious sand; in a word, no
+placer-mining. It was all quartz; machinery to crush the
+quartz had to be dragged in over the ice in the winter.
+Capital was essential, large lumps of capital. A word
+of inquiry in New York could have told me this. I felt
+rather guilty, but very happy. Paxton and R.M. were
+philosophical. No word of blame escaped their lips.
+They had the right to curse me, whereas both played
+the part of Balaam. Even at the time I thought this
+odd. Neither of them seemed to care a straw. “We’ll
+stake a claim,” said R.M. at intervals. Perhaps both
+were so pleased to have arrived safely that they neither
+grumbled nor abused me. The truth was that, like
+myself, though for rather different reasons, both of them
+were relieved to be “away from home.” The engineer,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
+I discovered later, was glad that 1,500 miles lay between
+him and New York City.</p>
+
+<p>We pitched our tent by the shore and proceeded to
+investigate. Living cost little. It was sunny weather,
+it was spring. One company was already sinking a shaft
+and working a small crusher; there were shacks and
+shanties everywhere; the “city” was as peaceful as the
+inside of St. Paul’s Cathedral; we saw no hairy men,
+but we saw mosquitoes. With the first warm nights
+these pests emerged for the season in their millions; they
+were very large and very hungry; they hung in the air
+like clouds of smoke; they welcomed us; as R.M. said,
+they had probably written the newspaper accounts
+that advertised the place. We had no netting. They
+stung the bears blind; they would have stung a baby
+to death, had there been any babies, except ourselves, to
+sting. The only gold we saw was a lump, valued at
+$5,000, lying beside a revolver on the counter of the
+Bank of Montreal’s shack. The clerk allowed us to
+hold it for a second each. It was the only gold we
+touched.... We investigated, as mentioned; we wandered
+about; we fished and shot, we rubbed Indian stuff
+over our faces to keep the mosquitoes off; we enjoyed
+happy, careless, easy days, bathing in ice-cold water,
+basking in hot sunshine, resting, loafing, and spinning
+yarns with all and sundry round our camp-fires. After
+New York it was a paradise, and but for the mosquitoes,
+we could have dressed in fig leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the question of having enough money to
+get out again before the iron winter set in towards October,
+we might have spent the whole summer there. We decided
+to leave while it was still possible. To paddle a hundred
+and fifty miles against the stream was not attractive. We
+would do the trip on foot. Selling tent and canoe to the
+clerk in the bank, we set out across the Twenty-Six Mile
+Portage one day towards the end of June. A party of
+five men, also bound for Duluth, joined us, and one of
+them was—Morris.</p>
+
+<p>Those happy, unproductive goldfields! That untenanted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
+Rainy Lake City where no tramcars ever ran,
+nor faro-tables flourished! Morris, the hairy desperado!
+In the dismal New York days that followed they seemed
+to belong to some legendary Golden Age. Romance and
+adventure, both touched with comedy, went hand in hand,
+beauty and liberty heightening some imagined radiance.
+Wasted time, of course, but for that very reason valuable
+beyond computation. Stored memories are stored energy
+that may prove the raw material of hope in days that
+follow after. Even Morris, the “stiff,” and cut-throat,
+played his little part in the proper spirit. There was a
+price on his head in Canada. We watched him closely;
+we watched his partners too. The Twenty-Six Mile
+Portage cut off an immense bend of the Vermilion River,
+running through the depths of trackless, gloomy forest
+the whole way. Nothing was easier than to “mix us
+up with the scenery” as a phrase of those parts expressed
+it. Especially must we be on our guard at night. One
+of us must always only pretend to sleep. Our former
+mistake about Gallup need not make us careless. A
+natural instinct to dramatize the expedition might have
+succeeded better if Morris, the villain, had not sometimes
+missed his cue and failed to realize the importance of his rôle.</p>
+
+<p>The scenery, at any rate, was right. The weather
+broke the very day we started, and the region justified
+its translated Indian name. A drenching rain fell sousing
+on the world. With our heavy packs we made slow
+progress, crawling in single file beneath the endless dripping
+trees, soaked to the skin in the first ten minutes. There
+was no trail, but Morris had a compass. Darkness fell
+early on the first night when we had covered barely six
+miles. Morris found a deserted lumbermen’s shanty.
+One man chopped down a pitch-pine and cut out its dry
+heart of resinous wood which caught fire instantly;
+another soaked a shred of cedar-wood in a tin mug filled
+with melted bacon fat; a third cooked dinner for the whole
+party; and by eight o’clock we all lay grouped about the
+fire, dodging the streams of water that splashed through
+the gaping remnants of the pine-log roof.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span></p>
+
+<p>Outside in that windless forest the drip of the rain
+was like the sound of waterfalls, but it was a magnificent,
+a haunted, a legendary forest none the less. Our shanty
+was faintly lit by the flickering cedar-candle. Queer
+shadows danced, eyes glittered, the faces here and there
+seemed distorted oddly in the shifting flame and darkness
+that alternately rose and fell. One by one, dog-tired,
+we fell asleep. It was R.M.’s turn to watch. Before
+supper was ended even, he lay soundly slumbering, his
+head, with touselled hair and ragged beard, thrown back
+against the wall, his mouth, containing unswallowed
+food—so weary was he—half-open. I exchanged a
+significant glance with Paxton over his collapsed body,
+meaning that we must watch instead.</p>
+
+<p>Our steaming clothes dried slowly as the night wore on.
+The dripping trickle of the trees became louder and louder.
+Paxton, very thin now, looked like a scarecrow in his
+ragged shirt and coat. His customary exclamation was
+rarely heard. He fell asleep in turn. The rest of the
+party had been snoring for an hour or more. It was
+up to me to watch.</p>
+
+<p>I watched. The next thing I knew was a sudden
+stealthy movement, and a low voice that woke me out of
+a slumber made of lead. The fire was low, the candle
+hardly flickered. Across the gloom I saw the movement
+that had waked me—Morris, the hairy man, was stirring.
+I watched him. He sat up. He leaned cautiously over—towards
+R.M. His hand stretched out slowly. Splendid
+fellow! I felt furious with R.M. for falling asleep, for
+keeping his mouth open in that idiotic way. Stupid
+idiot and faithless comrade! Morris, I saw, was doing
+something to his bulky, motionless figure, just about to
+slit him open perhaps. Well, let him slit! It was the
+head he touched. He was doing something to the sleeper’s
+head—pushing it—pushing it sideways so that a stream of
+water through the roof might just miss falling on his
+shoulder and thus splashing the hairy man’s own face
+with spray. I watched closely, faithful to my job. I
+saw Morris the Stiff take a bit of spare clothing out of his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
+pack and hang it over R.M.’s neck and shoulder. “I
+got no use for it,” he was saying. “Yer friend might
+jest as well hev it.” He knew, therefore, quite well
+that I was watching. But R.M. knew nothing, less than
+nothing. He neither stirred nor woke. A more kindly,
+tender-hearted fellow than Morris the Stiff, no traveller
+in wild places could possibly desire.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps a couple of hours later when I woke
+again, disturbed this time not by noise, but by the sudden
+absence of it. One winter’s night the inhabitants of
+Niagara, similarly, woke up because, ice having formed,
+the thunder of the falls had ceased. I listened a moment,
+then went out. The rain had ceased, the clouds were
+gone, in a clear sky the three-quarter moon shone brightly.
+The rain-washed air seemed perfumed beyond belief.
+Nor did the old moon merely “look round her when the
+heavens were bare,” she sprawled fantastically at full
+length, as it were, in her magnificent blue-black bed of
+naked space. I went out to a clear spot among the trees.
+Far away rose a soft murmur. The air hummed and shook
+with the roar of distant rapids, so calm and still the night
+was. No bird, no animal cried. The earth herself, it
+seemed, stopped turning in that wonderful stillness. Those
+few minutes painted a picture that memory must always
+keep....</p>
+
+<p>Three months later the first week in October found us
+in New York again. The bullets were forgotten and, of
+course, unmentioned, and five months of glorious wasted
+time lay safely behind us.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>If</span> it is impossible to recapture the boyish moods of
+those early days, it is also difficult not to import
+into these notes the point of view and feelings that
+belong to later life. Surely, but gradually, the scale of
+time changes with the years, and with it the range and
+quality of the emotions: to-day, a year seems a very brief
+period; the few months spent in the woods after our
+Gold Fields fiasco seemed both an eternity, yet far too
+brief. A faint flavour of childhood’s immense scale, when
+twelve months was an immeasurable stretch of time, still
+clung to them, perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>But the magnet of New York drew us. Any idea of
+returning to England until I had made good was far from
+me. We arrived in the detested city late in October,
+with livings to earn, and with less money than when we
+had first come two years before. We took separate rooms
+this time, for I had learned my lesson about sharing beds
+and clothes and scanty earnings. It was to be each man
+for himself. Paxton disappeared immediately; only
+occasionally did I hear his “Ouch, Ouch!” again; M. found
+a bed in Harlem and started to teach boxing; I took
+quarters in East 21st Street, on the top floor of a cheap
+but cleanish house, and arranged for breakfast and dinner
+in a neighbouring boarding-house at $2.50 a week.</p>
+
+<p>Two Germans lived in the adjoining attic. Through
+the thin wooden partition I heard their talk, their breathing,
+their slightest movement. They rarely came to bed
+before midnight; they talked the whole night through.
+Informing them in a loud voice that I understood their
+language made no difference; they neither stopped nor
+answered. Yet, oddly enough, I never once saw them;
+never met them on the stairs, nor in the hall, nor at the
+front door. They remained invisible, if not inaudible.
+But I formed vivid pictures of them, and knew from their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
+conversation that they were not better than they need
+be. An old man and a young one, I gathered. An unpleasant
+house altogether, the low rent more easily
+explained than I at first guessed. Long afterwards I had
+my revenge upon those unsavoury Germans—by writing
+an awful story about them, “A Case of Eavesdropping,”
+though by the time it was published they were probably
+either dead or in gaol. A sinister couple, these invisible
+Teutons!</p>
+
+<p>My one main object was to avoid the <i>Evening Sun</i>:
+any work was better, I felt, than a return to that hated
+sensational reporting. A place was always open to me
+under McCloy, but my detestation of the police court,
+and of the criminal atmosphere generally, was so strong
+that I would rather have taken a street-cleaning job
+under Tammany than go back to it. I therefore began
+by trying free-lance work, gathering news items and selling
+them for a dollar or two apiece to various papers, writing
+snippets of description, inventing incidents, and earning
+perhaps ten dollars a week on the average. It was hard
+going, but pawning and free lunches in the saloons made
+it possible to live. I knew all the tricks by now; I used
+them. The blanket off my bed occasionally spent a week-end
+with a new “Ikey,” though getting it out of the house
+and back again was no easy matter, while the smell of the
+moth-balls I always expected must betray me. It was a
+poor blanket, too, worth only 50 cents from Ikey’s point of
+view, and certainly not worth the foolish risk involved.
+For, literally—though this never once occurred to me
+at the time—it was stealing, and the fact that I told Ikey
+where it came from, hoping to extract thereby an extra
+half-dollar from him, could not have exonerated me if
+the landlady had met me on the stairs. Personally, I
+think the quantity of food I devoured at the free lunch
+counters in exchange for a five-cent glass of lager was a
+more flagrant case of theft. Only it was a recognized
+theft. The temporary absence of the blanket, anyhow,
+since I made my own bed, was never discovered, and my
+heart remained innocent of conscious burglary.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span></p>
+
+<p>A dozen years before, aged 12, I had once been accused
+of stealing by the headmaster of the private school I
+adorned in Sevenoaks. I was innocent, but the evidence
+was both ludicrous and damning, so damning, indeed,
+that, strangely, I <i>felt</i> guilty and accepted the punishment.
+A terrifying experience, it haunted me for years, and the
+sight of a policeman, or the words “criminal judge,” sent
+shivers down my spine long afterwards. When a little
+older, I came to suspect that it was worked up against
+me by the master to curry favour with an influential
+parent; but at the actual time I had visions even of
+prison—for something I had not done. All about a
+poem, too!</p>
+
+<p>At evening “prep” a “bit of poetry,” as we called
+it, had to be learnt by heart; my own poetry book was
+lost; I borrowed young Gildea’s. The last thing in the
+world I wanted to own was that poetry book of young
+Gildea, the last thing I wanted to do was to learn that
+poem by heart. I spent the hour, therefore, inscribing
+my name with elaborate flourishes on the title page. Twice
+I wrote it, with capitals, of which I was very proud; I
+thought it ornate and beautiful; and when the hour was
+over I tossed the book into my locker and forgot all about
+it. Next morning I was summoned into the headmaster’s
+presence. He wore red whiskers about an otherwise clean-shaven
+face: a face of natural sternness, with a big nose,
+a mouth of iron, and steely blue eyes. He was a clergyman
+of evangelical persuasion.</p>
+
+<p>I had no idea why I had been summoned, but his
+glance made me at once feel uneasy.</p>
+
+<p>“Blackwood minor,” he said in a solemn and portentous
+voice, “did you do—<i>this</i>?” He held out Gildea’s poetry
+book towards me with the cover open. His finger pointed
+to my name in pencil, flourishes and all.</p>
+
+<p>I was completely puzzled as to what was coming, but
+I admitted the signature of course.</p>
+
+<p>“Is the book yours?” he asked. I said it was not.
+“Gildea has reported the loss of his own copy,” the voice
+of doom went on. “It has been found—<i>in your locker</i>—and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
+with <i>your name written</i> in it.” The voice made me
+think of “and God spake” in the Bible.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me in such a way that I felt sure I was
+going to be flogged. What had I done? And why? I
+couldn’t quite remember. No explanation came to me.
+The simple truth was too silly to mention. I had nothing
+to say except to admit everything. The man, with his
+awful manner and appalling aspect, terrified me. I stood
+speechless and paralysed, wondering what was coming
+next. The red whiskers made me think of Satan.</p>
+
+<p>I little dreamed, however, that the headmaster would
+say what he then did say. He spoke with a terribly slow,
+deliberate emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>“This is as grave a case of stealing,” fell the awful
+words of judgment, “as ever came before a <i>Criminal
+Judge</i>. I have sent for your father.”</p>
+
+<p>I was petrified. It was enough to frighten any boy
+into his boots.</p>
+
+<p>My father in due course arrived; Gildea’s parents,
+both of them, arrived likewise; there were consultations,
+mysterious comings and goings; it was a day of gloom and
+terror; for some reason I made no attempt to defend
+myself; it all flabbergasted, frightened, puzzled me beyond
+understanding. I was made to confess to Gildea and to
+apologize to the parents. To my own father I said
+nothing. He looked troubled, yet somehow not as grave
+as he ought to have looked. Perhaps he had his doubts....
+What that fiendish headmaster, whose name I will
+not mention, had said behind my back, I did not know,
+for my father never referred to the matter afterwards,
+and both I and my brother were removed from the school
+at the end of the term. But I was severely punished—sent
+to Coventry for three days—for doing something
+I had both done and had not done, and the phrase “Criminal
+Judge” was burnt into my memory with letters of
+fire. My revenge was rather an oblique one—a fight
+with that headmaster’s son, though about quite another
+matter. With each blow I landed—and I landed several—I
+saw red whiskers on a boy about my own age!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span></p>
+
+<p>This digression concerning a poetry book occurs to
+me only now, while telling of my wickedness about the
+blanket. The lesson that master wished to teach me
+had no effect, for the simple reason that I had <i>not</i> stolen.
+The fear, however, doubtless remained; the injustice
+scored deep, bitter wounds. I trace back to it a curious
+persistent dread, not entirely obliterated even now: the
+dread of being accused of a crime I have not committed;
+yet where the evidence of guilt seems overwhelming.
+Patanjali’s “Aphorisms” describe a method of living
+through in imagination all possible experiences. A series
+of laborious incarnations would be necessary to exhaust
+these experiences in the ordinary way. They can be lived
+out in the mind instead. In imagination, anyhow,
+thanks to that little school injustice, I have often tried to
+<i>realize</i> the feelings of a man serving a term of imprisonment
+for a crime he has not committed. Patanjali’s interesting
+method is, at any rate, a means of opening the mind to
+a sympathetic understanding of many an experience one
+could not otherwise know. Only imagination must be
+sustained and very detailed, and the projection of the
+personality is not easy.</p>
+
+<p>An interlude of play-acting now enlivened my period
+of free-lance journalism. Kay was in my life again, and
+the opportunity came through him. He had spent the
+summer between odd jobs on the stage, and odd jobs at
+buying and selling exchange in Wall Street. He made
+both ends meet, at any rate, and had a cheap room in the
+purlieus of Hoboken across the river. A part in a third-rate
+touring company had just been offered to him, and
+he said he could get me a part as well. One-night stands
+in the smaller towns of New York State with a couple of
+plays, of which “Jim, the Penman,” was one, formed the
+programme, and my utter ignorance of acting, he assured
+me, need not stand in the way. My salary would be
+$15 a week, with travelling expenses paid. Gilmour, the
+leading man, and organizer of the company, was anxious
+to find someone like myself.</p>
+
+<p>I jumped at it. Gilmour looked me up and down
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
+and said I’d do. I had only one line to say. I was a
+prison warder on sentry duty, pacing to and fro between
+the walls at night, when Gilmour, the hero, escaping from
+his cell, knocks me down after a brief struggle, and disappears
+into the night. A moment later the alarm is given;
+other warders arrive, find me wounded on the ground
+and ask which way the prisoner has gone. “That way,”
+I shout, pointing the direction before losing consciousness;
+whereupon the curtain falls.</p>
+
+<p>It was not an exacting part. Gilmour said I should
+make a “bully warder.” My own shabby clothes, with
+a brown billycock hat, would do as they were. I was to
+carry a large wooden pistol. We rehearsed the scene,
+swaying to and fro, breathing hard, grunting with effort,
+cursing each other fiercely, until the prisoner, wrenching
+the pistol from me, struck me on the head and floored me.
+Such was my rôle.</p>
+
+<p>I played it at Yonkers and Mount Vernon, three nights
+in each place, if memory serves me correctly, but “went
+through it” is the true description of my performance.
+For the theatre, either as a writer or actor, I possess no
+trace of talent, a fact rediscovered recently when playing
+an insignificant part in Drinkwater’s “Oliver Cromwell”
+on tour with Henry Ainley. My dismissal at the end of
+the first week, however, was not due to this lack of skill—it
+was due to a pail of beer and the leading lady. For the
+leading lady, handsome daughter, I remember, of a Washington
+General, was the inspiration of the touring company,
+and it was for her <i>beaux yeux</i> that the enterprise was
+undertaken. Gilmour was what is known as “crazy”
+about her, his jealousy a standing joke among us, so that
+when those <i>beaux yeux</i> were turned upon my lanky, half-starved
+self, there were warnings that trouble might begin.
+But I was looking for salary and food rather than for
+trouble. In the dressing-room we underlings all shared
+together, though “dressing” was of negligible kind,
+I was quite safe. Chance meetings, however, were unavoidable,
+of course, and Bettina’s instinct for adventure
+was distinctly careless. It was here the pail of beer came
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
+in—into our crowded dressing-room. Who brought it,
+I have forgotten; the miscreant who stood treat to the
+band of hungry and thirsty Thespians is lost to memory.
+I only know that, empty of food as I was, my share of
+that gallon pail distinctly cheered me. The <i>beaux yeux</i>
+had been boldly rolling; another pair of eyes, not so lovely,
+had been rolling too. To be ungallantly honest about it,
+my own feelings were not engaged in any way, except on
+this particular night, when they were considerably roused—against
+that stupid, jealous Gilmour. The way he
+glared in my direction stirred my bile; the few glasses of
+beer made me reckless. When the escaping prisoner
+fought with me for the possession of the great wooden
+pistol, I refused to be “thrown.”</p>
+
+<p>The scanty audience that night witnessed a good performance
+of my brief, particular scene. Gilmour cursed
+and swore beneath his breath, but he was a smaller man
+than I was. He could do nothing with me. What was
+a shocking performance in one sense, was a realistic and
+sincere performance in another. Had my share of the
+pail been slightly bigger than it was, I should undoubtedly
+have “thrown” the prisoner and spoilt the curtain. As
+it was, however, Gilmour managed in the end to wrench
+the pistol from me, and in doing so, his fury genuine,
+he landed me a blow on the forehead with its heavy butt
+that stunned me. I fell. He fled. Roars of applause I
+heard dimly. My brown billycock hat, I remember, fell
+on its springy brim, bounced into the air, then hopped
+away against the footlights. And all my interest went
+with my precious hat. To the warders who at once
+rushed on with cries of “He’s escaped! Which way
+did he go?” I used the right words, taking my cue correctly.
+Only I pointed in the wrong direction. I pointed
+towards my old hat against the footlights. It lay outside
+the curtain.</p>
+
+<p>It is odd to think that somewhere in the under-mind
+of the individual who lay half-stunned on the stage of a
+Yonkers theatre, pointing wildly at a dilapidated, but
+precious, old brown billycock, slept a score of books, waiting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
+patiently for expression a few years later. It is difficult,
+indeed, as I write these notes, to realize that the individual
+who describes the incidents is the individual who experienced
+them. The body itself has changed every single
+physical particle at least four times in succession. Nor
+is the mind the same. With the exception of one or two
+main interests, easily handed on by the outgoing atoms
+to the incoming atoms in the brain, “I” possess little that
+the “I” of those distant New York days possessed. Even
+the continuity of memory is bequeathable by atoms leaving
+the brain to the new ones just arriving. Where, then, is
+the self who experienced years ago what the self holding
+this pen now sets down?</p>
+
+<p>The “I,” during the next few years, at any rate, went
+rolling; rolling from one experience to another, if not
+cheerily, at least resignedly. Whatever happened—and
+what happened was mostly unpleasant—there was never
+absent the conviction that it was deserved, and must be
+lived out in a spirit of acceptance, until finally exhausted.
+Any other attitude toward unwelcome events meant evasion,
+and a disagreeable experience shirked merely postponed
+it to another time, either in this life or another.
+There was, meanwhile, a <i>real</i> self that remained aloof, untouched,
+neither happy nor unhappy, a spectator, but a
+royal spectator. Into this eternal Self was gathered
+the fruit and essence of each and every experience
+the lower “I” passed through; the secret of living
+was to identify oneself with this exalted and untroubled
+royalty....</p>
+
+<p>The rolling-stone went rolling, therefore, somewhat in
+this spirit, which helped and comforted, which made most
+things possible, bearable at any rate, because it was the
+outcome of that strange inner conviction established in
+my blood, a conviction, as mentioned, neither argument
+nor evidence could alter.</p>
+
+<p>Letters from home, home memories as well, pertained
+now to some distant, unrecoverable region that was dead
+and gone. My mother’s letters—one every week without
+a single omission—expressed a larger spirit. Her faithful
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
+letters, secure in a sincere belief, were very precious, I
+remember. Sometimes, though never successfully, they
+tempted me almost to giving my full confidence and
+telling more than my camouflaged reports revealed.
+From the rest of my family, with the exception of a
+really loved brother, I knew myself entirely divorced,
+a divorce that later years proved final and somehow
+inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>To my father, who was always something of a stranger
+to me, I could never tell my heart; my mother, on the
+other hand, always had my confidence, coupled with
+an austere respect. Few words passed between us, yet
+she always knew, I felt, my thoughts. And this full
+confidence dated, oddly enough, from an incident in early
+childhood, when I was saying the Lord’s Prayer at her
+knee. There was a phrase that puzzled me even when
+I was in knickerbockers: “Lead us not into temptation....”
+I stopped, looked up into her face, and
+asked: “But <i>would</i> He lead me into temptation unless I
+asked Him not to?” Her eyes opened, she gazed down
+into mine with a thoughtful, if perplexed expression, for
+a moment she was evidently at a loss how to answer. She
+hesitated, then decided to trust me with the truth: “I
+have never quite understood those words myself,” she
+said. “I think, though, it is best to leave their explanation
+to Him, and to say the words exactly as He taught
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Old souls” and “young souls” was a classification
+that ruled my mind in this New York period: my mother
+was of the former, my father of the latter. In the Old
+lay innate the fruits, the results, the memories of many
+many previous lives, and this ripeness of long experience
+showed itself in certain ways—in taste, in judgment, in
+their standard of values, in that mysterious quality called
+tact; above all, perhaps, in the type and quality of goods
+they desired from life. Worldly ambitions, so-called, were
+generally negligible in them. What we label to-day as the
+subconscious was invariably fully charged; also, without
+too much difficulty, accessible. It made them interesting,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
+stimulating and not easily exhausted. Wide sympathies,
+spread charity, understanding were their hall-marks, and
+a certain wisdom, as apart from intellect, their invariable
+gift; with, moreover, a tendency to wit, if not that rare
+quality wit itself, and humour, the power of seeing, and
+therefore laughing at, oneself. The cheaper experiences
+of birth, success, possessions they had learned long ago;
+it was the more difficult, but higher, values they had come
+back to master, and among the humbler ranks of life they
+found the necessary conditions. Christ, I reflected, was
+the son of a carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>The Young Souls, on the other hand, were invariably
+hot-foot after the things of this world. Show, Riches and
+Power stuck like red labels on their foreheads. The
+Napoleons of the earth were among the youngest of all;
+the intellectuals, those who relied on reason alone, often
+the prosperous, usually the well-born, were of the same
+category. Rarely was “understanding” in them, and
+brilliant cleverness could never rank with that wisdom
+which knows that <i>tout comprendre, c’est tout pardonner</i>.
+To me the Young Souls were the commonplace and
+uninteresting ones. They were shallow, sketchy, soon
+exhausted, the <i>Dutzend-menschen</i>; whereas, the others
+were intuitive, mature in outlook, aware of deeper values
+and eager for the things of the spirit....</p>
+
+<p>Thinking over my distinguished relations, I found none
+fit to black the boots of that kindly waiter in Krisch’s
+cheap eating-house, Otto, the Black Forest German, who
+trusted us for food and often forwent his trumpery tip
+with a cheery smile. And there were many others, whose
+memory remains bright and wonderful from those dismal
+New York years.... A volume of “Distinguished People
+I have Met,” for instance, would include the Italian
+bootblack at the corner of 4th Avenue and 20th Street,
+who had the sun in his face, in his bright black eyes and
+brown skin, and who trusted me sometimes for a month,
+although five cents meant as much to him as it did to me.
+The bigwigs I interviewed for newspapers are forgotten,
+but the faces of Otto and the Italian shine in memory still.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
+I even remember the sentence the latter taught me.
+It invariably formed our daily greeting: <i>E molto tempo
+che siete stato amalato?</i> Often since have I spouted it
+in Italy, as bewildered by the voluble replies I could not
+understand, as the peasants were by my familiar enquiry
+after their health. Mrs. Bernstein, I think, would be
+entitled to a place, and Grant, who pawned his overcoat
+to buy me food, most certainly to full mention.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>Worthy</span> of more detailed description, however,
+is the figure of an old, old man I met about this
+time, a dignified, venerable and mysterious being,
+man of the world, lawyer, musician, scholar, poet, but
+above all, exile. Incidentally, he was madman too.
+What unkindly tricks fate had played with his fine brain,
+I never learned with accuracy. It was but the ruin of
+a great mind I knew. Pain and suffering of no unusual
+order, as I soon discovered, had, at any rate, left his
+heart as wise and sweet and gentle as any I have ever
+known. His voice, his eyes, his smile, his very gestures,
+even, had in them all the misery and all the goodness of
+the world. Our chance meeting deepened into a friendship,
+the intimacy of which between Padre and Figlio—names
+he himself assigned respectively—yet never permitted
+a full account of his own mysterious past. The
+little I gathered of his personal history before he died
+some dozen years later in England, came to me from
+patchwork sources, but none of it from his own lips. What
+term the alienists might use to describe the mental disorder
+of Alfred H. Louis I do not know.</p>
+
+<p>The first time I saw him he cut a sorry figure; an old
+fellow in far worse plight and even worse down at heel
+than I was myself. It was in an olive-oil warehouse, at
+No. 1, Water Street, on the river front. McKay, the
+owner, whom I had met through some newspaper story
+or other, had converted me to the wisdom of an occasional
+glass of olive oil. It was healthful and delicious, but to
+me its chief value was as food. On this day of broiling
+heat I had wandered in for a glass of oil, and, while waiting
+a moment for the owner to appear, I noticed an old tramp
+seated on a packing-case, gazing at me in penetrating
+fashion. He was a Jew, he was very small, his feet were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
+tiny, his hands, I took in, were beautiful. I thought of
+Moses, of Abraham, some Biblical prophet come to life,
+of some storied being like the Wandering Jew.</p>
+
+<p>His atmosphere, that is, at once sent a message of
+something unusual to my imagination. But it was when
+McKay came in and, to my surprise, calmly introduced
+us as fellow Englishmen, that my mind was really startled—not
+because the old tramp was English, but because when
+he rose to shake my hand, it seemed to me that some great
+figure of history rose to address, not me, but the nations
+of the world. He reached barely to my shoulder, his face
+upturned to mine, yet the feeling came that it was I who
+looked up into his eyes. The dignity and power the frail
+outline conveyed were astonishing. He was a Presence.
+And his voice the same instant—though in some commonplace
+about having known Lord Dufferin—increased the air
+of greatness, almost I had said of majesty, that he wore so
+naturally. It was not merely cultured, deep and musical,
+it vibrated with a peculiar resonance that conveyed
+authority beyond anything I have known in any other
+human voice.</p>
+
+<p>We talked ... <i>he</i> talked, rather ... hunger, thirst,
+the afflicting moist heat of the day were all forgotten, New
+York City was forgotten too. His words carried me beyond
+this world, his language in that astonishing voice wore
+wings that brought escape. His long frock-coat, green
+with age and dirt; his broken boots and frayed trousers;
+his shapeless top hat, brushed the wrong way till it looked
+like a beehive coated with rough plush; his grimy collar
+without a tie; the spots upon his grease-stained waistcoat—all
+vanished completely. It was, above all, I
+think, the poetry in his voice and words that brought
+the balm and healing into my whole being. The way
+his hands moved too. We talked for several hours,
+for it was McKay’s nasal interruption, saying he must
+close the warehouse, that brought me back to—Water
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>Recklessly, though with a diffidence as though I were
+with royalty, I invited him to dine, but in the cheap
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
+Childs’ Eating House where we “fed,” I soon perceived
+that I had no reason to feel embarrassed. A cup of coffee
+and “sinkers” sufficed him, he took my shyness away,
+he won my easy and full confidence; and afterwards—for
+he refused to let me go—as we sat, that stifling night,
+on a bench in Battery Park, tramps and Wearie Willies
+our neighbours, but the salt air from the sea in our nostrils,
+he used a phrase that, giving me the calibre of his thought,
+was too significant ever to be forgotten. I had spoken of
+my hatred of the city and of my present circumstances in
+it. He peered into my face a moment beneath his dreadful
+hat, then, raising a beautiful hand by way of emphasis,
+his deep voice came to me like some music of the sea
+itself:</p>
+
+<p>“No man worth his spiritual salt,” he said with impressive
+gentleness, “is ever entangled in locality.” He
+smiled, and the tenderness of the voice was in the eyes
+as well....</p>
+
+<p>The little park emptied gradually, the heated paving-stones
+lost something of their furnace breath, the stars
+were visible overhead beyond the great arc lights, the
+parched leaves rustled faintly, and I spoke to him of poetry.
+He had lived with Longfellow, he had known Browning.
+The poetry of the world was in his soul—Greek, Latin,
+German, French, above all, Hebrew. I drank in his
+words, unaware of the passing hours. To me it was like
+finding a well in the desert when I was dying of thirst.
+Even the awful city he transfigured. Suddenly his lean
+fingers touched my arm, his voice deepened and grew
+soft, he took his hat off. “I will say my Night-Song to
+you now,” he said. “I can only say it to very, very
+few. For years I have said it to—no one. But <i>you</i> shall
+hear it.”</p>
+
+<p>If there was something in his voice and manner that
+thrilled me to the core, the poem he then repeated on
+that bench in Battery Park at midnight gave me indescribable
+sensations of beauty and delight. I realized
+I listened to a personal confession that was a revelation
+of the mysterious old heart beneath the green
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
+frock-coat. It seemed to me that Night herself spoke
+through him:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Known only, only to God and the night, and the stars and me!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Prophetic, jubilant Song,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Smiting the rock-bound hours till the waters of life flow free;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">And a Soul, on pinion strong,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Flieth afar, and hovers over the infinite sea</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Of love and of melody:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>While the blind fates weave their nets</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>And the world in sleep forgets</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Known only, only to me and the night, and the stars and God!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Song, from a burning breast,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of a land of perfected delights which the foot of man ne’er trod,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Like a foaming wine expressed</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">From passionate fruits that glowed ’mid the boughs of the Eden lost,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Ere sin was born and frost;—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>Song wild with desires and regrets,</i></div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>While the world in sleep forgets</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Known only, only to me and God, and the night and the stars!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">The beacon fire of song,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Flaming for guidance and hope while the storm-winds wage their wars;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Balm for the ancient wrong,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Dropping from healing wings on the wounds of the heart and brain,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Quenching their ancient pain:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Love-star that rises and sets,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>While the world in sleep forgets</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Known only, only to God and me, and the stars and the night!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Dove that returns to my ark,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Murmuring of grief-floods falling, of light beyond all light:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Voice that cleaveth the dark,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Singing of earth growing heaven, of distant lands that bless,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">Though they may not caress,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10">And, blessing, pay Love’s old debts,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent10"><i>While the world in sleep forgets</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Long before he ended the tears were coursing slowly
+down his withered cheeks, and when the last word died
+away a long silence came between us, for I could find no
+words to express the emotion in me. He took my hand
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
+and held it a moment tightly, then presently got up, put
+on his old hat again, with the remark that it was time for
+bed, and followed me slowly to a Broadway cable car.
+His small, frail figure seemed to have dwindled to a child’s
+shadow as he moved beside me; he had a way of hunching
+his thin shoulders that still further dwarfed his height;
+I felt myself a giant physically, but in my mind <i>his</i> stature
+reached the stars. We exchanged addresses. He lived
+in 8th Street, a miserable attic, I learned later, though I
+never actually entered it. Of his mental disorder no
+inkling had then reached me. I watched him melt into
+the shadows of the side street with the feeling that I
+watched some legendary figure, some ancient prophet,
+some mysterious priest. He smiled at me; there was love
+and blessing in the brilliant eyes. Then he was gone....
+For me, at this time, to meet and talk with such a man
+held something of the fabulous. He had set fire to a
+hundred new thoughts and left them flaming in me.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this way began a friendship that has always
+seemed to me marvellous, and that lasted till his death in
+England some fifteen years later. Sweet, patient, resigned
+and lovable to the end, he died incurably insane, the
+charity in him never tainted, the tenderness unstained,
+the passionate love of his kind, of beauty, of all that is
+lovely and of good report, unspoilt. The grimmest pain
+had not soured the natural sweetness in him, his gentle
+spirit knew no bitterness, his megalomania, complicated,
+I believe, with other varieties of disorder, was harmless
+and inoffensive. As Padre he still lives in my memory;
+as The Old Man of Visions (“The Listener”), he still
+haunts my imagination. “You have taken my name
+away,” he chided me with a smile, when I published this
+picture of him. “I am now uncertain who I am. That is
+well. I am Anybody I choose to be. I will be Everybody.”
+He had rooms in Great Russell Street at the time.
+Though baptised by Charles Kingsley into the English
+Church, he later became a Roman Catholic, but, when the end
+came, he reverted to the blood and faith born in him. He
+was buried, by his own wish, in a Hebrew cemetery. The
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
+epitaph he so often told me with an ironic smile he had
+chosen for his own was not, however, used. Talk, he
+always declared, vain, excessive talk, lay at the bottom
+of every misunderstanding in the world. If people
+would talk less, there would be less trouble in life. “Sorry
+I spoke,” was to be cut upon one of his tombstones; “Sorry
+they spoke” upon the other.</p>
+
+<p>A poem he wrote—published, like the Night Song, in
+<i>Harper’s Magazine</i>—describing death, I have kept all
+these years. The strange intensity of expression he put
+into the passage which begins: “The sand of my Being is
+fused and runs ...” lives in my mind to this day. The
+title of the poem was “The Final Word”:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Hence then at last! For the strife is past</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Of the Birth and Death, of the Self and Soul;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The memory breaks, the breath forsakes,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The waves of the æther o’er me roll.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The pulses cease, and the Hours release</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Their wearied school of the nerves and brain;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">I fall on the Deep of the Mystic Sleep,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Where the Word that is Life can be heard again.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And the fires descend, and my fragments blend,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And the sand of my Being is fused and runs</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To the mould of a glass for the rays to pass</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Of the Sun of the centre that rules all suns.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But, or ever I rest, I take from my breast</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">My blood-drained heart for the tablet white</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of a gospel page to the far-off Age—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">O Hand eternal!—Come forth—and write!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap'><span class='allcaps'>The</span> personality of Alfred H. Louis is identified with
+New York for me; he accompanied my remaining
+years there, guide, philosopher and friend. He
+took in hand that indiscriminate heterogeneous reading
+which the Free Library made possible. He proved an
+unfailing and inspiring counsellor. How, why or whence
+he came to be in America at all I never knew. One thing
+that stirred him into vehemence, when the past was
+mentioned, was the name of Gladstone. With flashing
+eyes and voice of thunder he condemned the Grand Old
+Man, both as to character and policy, in unmeasured
+terms. Gladstone, apparently, had done him a personal
+injury as well. “We cannot let that man come among
+us,” was Gladstone’s dictum, when Louis’s name was being
+considered as a candidate for Parliament by the Party.
+“He is too earnest.” This fragment was all he ever told
+me, but there lay evidently much behind it. “<i>Too
+earnest!</i>” he repeated with contemptuous indignation.</p>
+
+<p>Of his days at Cambridge he was more communicative,
+though, unfortunately, I kept no notes. The eloquence
+and earnestness of his speeches at the Union, when Sir
+William Harcourt was president, made, according to his
+own account, a great stir. Of Dr. (Bishop) Lightfoot, of
+Benson, afterwards Archbishop, he had intimate memories,
+coloured by warm praise. His book on “England’s
+Foreign Policy” (Bentley, 1869) apparently angered Gladstone
+extremely, and Louis’s political career was killed.</p>
+
+<p>He was called to the bar. Of success, of important
+cases, he told me nothing. His early brilliance suffered,
+I gathered, a strange eclipse, and from things he hinted
+at, I surmised—I cannot state it definitely—that a period
+in some kind of <i>maison de santé</i> followed about this time.
+That he had been, then or later, in an asylum for the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
+insane, I heard vouched for repeatedly in London years
+later. For an interval before the breakdown came, he
+was editor, or part-editor, of the <i>Spectator</i>, and in some
+similar connexion, as owner or editor, he served the
+<i>Fortnightly</i> too. George Eliot he knew well, giving me
+vivid descriptions of her famous Sundays, and of his
+talks with George Henry Lewes and Herbert Spencer. He
+claimed to be the original of Daniel Deronda. He was a
+pupil of Sterndale Bennett’s on the piano. Of his friendship
+with Cardinal Manning he had also much to tell.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the domain of politics that I first began to
+notice the exaggeration and incoherence of his mind, and
+it was “in politics,” evidently, that the deep wounds
+which would not heal had been received. In music,
+poetry, literature, above all in law, his intelligence had
+remained clear and sound, his judgments consummate,
+his knowledge encyclopædic. Large tracts of memory
+in him were, apparently, obliterated, whole stretches of
+life submerged, but his legal attainments had remained
+untouched. A business friend of mine “briefed” him to
+lecture on International, Company and Patent Law; and
+the substance of those “Lectures” stood the test, years
+later, of the highest English and French Courts.</p>
+
+<p>The lonely old man’s kingdom was his mind, and he
+dwelt in it aloof, secure, contented, unassailable. Into
+the big empty stretches a half education had left in my
+own, he poured his riches with unstinted satisfaction, even
+with delight. Worldly advice he never proffered; the
+world had left him aside, he, in his turn, left the world
+aside. To practical questions he merely shook his Moses-head:
+“That,” he would say, “you must decide for
+yourself. Considered in relation to the Eternities, it is
+of little moment in any case.” To any question, however,
+of a philosophical kind, to any enquiry for explanation
+about what perplexed or interested me in the realm of
+thought, he would reply with what I can only call a lecture,
+but a lecture so lucid, so packed with knowledge and
+learning, with classical comment and quotation, often with
+passages of moving eloquence, and invariably in language
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
+so considered that no single word could have been altered,
+and the “essay” might have been published as it stood—lectures,
+in a word, that enthralled and held me spellbound
+for hours at a time. For his knowledge was not knowledge
+merely, it was knowledge transmuted by emotion into that
+spiritual wisdom called Understanding.</p>
+
+<p>The respect he inspired me with was such that rarely did
+I venture upon a personal question, though I longed to
+know more about himself and his mysterious story. His
+face sometimes betrayed intense mental suffering. On one
+occasion, feeling braver, owing to a happy mood that
+seemed established naturally between us, I attempted
+rather an intimate question of some kind about his past.
+He turned and stared with an expression that startled
+me. It was so keen, so searching. For several minutes
+he made no reply. His eyes narrowed. I felt ashamed.
+I had wounded him. The truth was, it seems, I had
+touched his heart.</p>
+
+<p>“Listen,” he said presently. In a voice full of tears and
+deep emotion, a very quiet, a very beautiful voice, he
+replied to my question. The expression of his eyes turned
+inwards, there rose in memory the ghostly figure of someone
+he had loved, perhaps loved still. The whole aspect of the
+old exiled poet became charged with an intolerable sadness,
+as he spoke the lines, not to myself, but to this vanished
+figure—“Shadowed by yearning memory’s raven wing”:</p>
+
+
+<p class='center mt1'>HEREAFTER</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Thou know’st not, sweet, what must remain unknown</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Through all that my poor words can say or sing,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The measure of the love to thee I bring.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">One day thou wilt, when, by a graven stone</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That bears a name, thou standest, white, alone,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shadowed by yearning memory’s raven wing,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Rained on by blossoms of some wind-torn spring</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Wherefrom thirst-quenching fruit shall ne’er be grown.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Then—power shall rest upon the vanished hand</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Once too much trembling to thy touch for power;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Then—shall my soul at last thy soul command</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">As it might not in Time’s brief fitful hour;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And what Life’s fires might neither melt nor burn</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shall yield with tears to ashes and the urn.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span></p>
+
+<p class='no-indent'>I had my answer. Never again did I venture on a personal
+question.</p>
+
+<p>All our talks came round to poetry in the end. It was
+his deepest love as well. Sound lawyer he may have been,
+but inspired poet, to me at least, he certainly was. His
+own poems he severely deprecated, calling them, with the
+exception of the “Night Song,” “poor things, though
+from my heart.” His room, it seems, was littered with
+them in manuscript, which he rarely tried, and never
+wished, to sell. Some time later Mr. Alden, Editor of
+<i>Harper’s Magazine</i>, questioned me for information “about
+a wonderful old gentleman who comes into the office like
+an emperor, and offers me a poem as though he were
+parting painfully with a treasure he hardly dared let out
+of his keeping, and certainly does not wish to sell for
+cash.” To all, thus, he was a mystery. If he was uncared
+for, he was at the same time indifferent to human care.
+Great intellect, great mind, great heart, he seemed to me,
+a wraith perhaps, but an august, a giant wraith, draped
+by mysterious shadows, dwelling in a miserable slum,
+cut off from his kind amid the dim pomp and pageantry
+of majestic memories.</p>
+
+<p>It was thus, at any rate, with the pardonable exaggeration
+of ignorant twenty-five, I saw and knew the Old Man
+of Visions. It was his deep heart of poetry, rather than
+his fine intellect I worshipped. The under-mind in him,
+the subconscious region, I think, was whole and healed;
+it was the upper-mind, the surface consciousness, that
+alone was damaged. If this mind was wrecked, this brain
+partly in ruins, the soul in him peered forth above the
+broken towers, remaining splendidly aware. Not even
+the imperfect instrument through which it worked could
+prevent this fine expression: behind the disproportion of
+various delusions, behind the outer tumbled ruins, there
+dwelt unaffected in him that greater thing than any intellect—Understanding.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>It</span> was with a singular young man, who claimed proudly
+to be the illegitimate son of a certain duke, that I
+found myself presently in the eau de Cologne business.
+A long difficult winter had passed; all my friends had
+disappeared; there had been periods of dried apples again,
+of posing in studios, of various odd jobs, and of half-starving,
+with black weeks in plenty. I had moved into
+yet cheaper quarters, where I occupied a room that had
+been formerly a butler’s pantry, and was so small that
+when the folding-bed was down the entire space from wall
+to wall was occupied. The wash-hand stand was a sink
+in a recess let into the wall and supplied with a tap.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Louis visited me, as he did frequently, we
+lowered the bed and used it as a divan. The door could
+not open then. I made tea in the sink. We talked....</p>
+
+<p>If Louis’s atmosphere suggested choirs and places
+where they sing, that of Brodie, as I may call him here,
+was associated with bars and places where they drink.
+Not that he drank himself, for he was most abstemious,
+but that in certain superior saloons, all of them far above
+my means, he was usually to be found. A simple, yet
+complex, generous as well as mean creature, with all
+the canniness of the Scot, with his uncanniness as well,
+his education had been neglected, he read with difficulty,
+and only wrote well enough to sign his name laboriously
+to a cheque. He, too, like Louis, had his mystery; there
+was no one, indeed, in my circle of those days whose
+antecedents would bear too close a scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>I was first introduced to him by a burly Swede, with
+hands like beef-steaks, and the shoulders of a heavy-weight
+fighter, who was later arrested and sent to gaol for picking
+pockets. His notoriety as a sneak-thief none of us had
+guessed, and how those bulky hands could have accomplished
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
+anything neat and clever was a puzzle. In the
+Scotsman’s pleasant quarters, somewhat outlandishly
+furnished by himself on a top floor, the Swede had made
+himself at home too long. Brodie, the prey of many
+who, invited for a day or two, stayed on for weeks, was
+glad to see his back. His weak good-nature, refusing
+to turn his guests out, was the cause of endless troubles
+with men who sponged upon his kindness and his purse.
+This and his eau de Cologne business, “me beezness” as
+he called it, were his sole topics of conversation. He had
+money to spend—was it an allowance? We never
+knew—and was always well dressed; many a square meal
+he stood me; there was something in his soft West of
+Scotland voice that drew me to this odd fish in the “perfumery
+line.” It reminded me of happier days. And
+I have described his habits at some length, because it was
+owing to a small service I rendered him, and rendered
+myself at the same time, that I became a partner in “me
+beezness” of manufacturing and selling eau de Cologne
+made from the Johann Maria Farina recipe.</p>
+
+<p>Brodie’s social aspirations were very marked; to
+hear him talk one would have thought him heir to a
+dukedom; he had, too, a curious faculty for getting his
+name associated with people above him in the social world.
+How he managed it was a problem I never solved. His
+instinct for smelling out and using such folk was a gift
+from heaven. To see his name in the paper gave him
+supreme happiness. Real “Society” of course, Ward
+Macallister’s Four Hundred, lay beyond the reach of what
+was actually a peasant type, but there were less select
+fields he worked assiduously with great success. There
+was matter for a play, a novel, a character study, at any
+rate, in Brodie, who himself, I learned much later,
+had come out to New York as valet to Clyde Fitch, the
+playwright, and whose recipe for the “genuine Johann
+Maria Farina,” his successful “beezness,” was stolen
+property. My father’s son knew certainly queer bedfellows
+in that underworld in New York City.</p>
+
+<p>Meeting him in one of his usual haunts one night, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
+complained bitterly of a young man he had invited for a
+week, but who had stayed a month, and stayed on still.
+The name, which need not be mentioned, was a well-known
+one. It was a bad case of imposition, by a man,
+too, who had ample means of his own. I offered to turn
+him out, much to Brodie’s alarm. That is, he both
+desired the result and feared it. Next morning I arrived
+in the oddly-furnished rooms and found Brodie cooking
+breakfast for the undesirable young man who had imposed
+on his host too long, and who still lay in bed. It was a
+comic scene, no doubt, for Brodie, though frightened,
+bore out my accusations while he fried the eggs, and the
+other blustered noisily until he found out that bluster
+was of no avail; and then, threatening an action for
+assault, got suddenly out of bed and dressed himself.
+Half-an-hour later he was, bag and baggage, in the street,
+while I went down and sold the “story” to the <i>New
+York Journal</i>, who printed it next morning with big
+headlines, but also with a drawing showing the eviction
+scene. No action for assault followed, however; I received
+twenty dollars for my “story”; and Brodie, full of
+gratitude—his name was mentioned in flattering terms—offered
+to take me into partnership in “me beezness.”
+I demurred at first. “You might help me with the
+correspondence,” he suggested cautiously. I was to be
+his educated partner and his pen.</p>
+
+<p>All that spring and summer I received ten dollars a
+week which, in addition to free-lance newspaper work,
+enabled me to live in comparative luxury. In a dark
+little back-office on Broadway and 8th Street, the eau
+de Cologne was made. It might have been the secret
+headquarters of an anarchist fraternity, or the laboratory
+of some mediæval alchemist, such was the atmosphere
+of secrecy, of caution and of mystery. It never occurred
+to me that anything was wrong. Our only assistant was
+a young Polish girl named Paola, a beautiful, dark-haired
+Jewess. The precious recipe I was never allowed to see.
+Great flagons in wicker coverings stood in rows upon long
+shelves; the mixing of the ingredients was a delicate
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
+operation lasting an hour; the room smelt rich and sweet
+of spices that made me think of Araby and the East. It
+was a curious and picturesque scene—the rather darkened
+room, the perfume-laden air, the hush no traffic could
+disturb, the great, mysterious flagons, which might
+almost have concealed forty thieves, the canny Scot of
+doubtful origin, the beautiful Jewess, the air of caution
+and suspicion that reigned over all. The filling of the
+bottles in two sizes, affixing the labels, flavouring the soap—we
+made eau-de-Cologne soap too—answering the letters,
+writing flowery advertisements, and so forth, occupied
+the entire day. Brodie, a born salesman, would take
+a cab and visit the big stores with samples—Macy’s,
+Siegel and Cooper, and others whose names I have forgotten.
+He never came back without an order. The
+business flourished.</p>
+
+<p>I made no secret of being in the perfumery trade. I
+had moved into a larger room at my boarding-house.
+I had bought boots, some new linen, and most of my
+things were out of pawn. Then, presently, here and
+there, I began to notice things I did not like. Rumours
+reached me. Hints were dropped, sometimes more than
+hints, that made me wonder and look over my shoulder
+a little. No member of my immediate circle at this time
+was of too sweet origin nor of too stainless habits, yet
+from these came the rumours and the hints. I had better
+“keep my eyes peeled,” and the rest...! One man in
+particular who warned me was an elderly, shrewd German,
+friend of Brodie’s, and himself a mystery. His
+occupation was unknown, however, even to Brodie;
+he hid it carefully away; he led a double life, protecting
+himself with the utmost skill and caution behind a screen
+of detail none of us ever pierced. “Von” Schmidt,
+as he styled himself, was educated; also he had a heart;
+for once, when I was in a state of collapse from hunger,
+he brought oysters for me at great trouble to himself,
+having to go out on a rainy night and bring them some
+distance along the street; from which moment, though the
+unpleasant mystery about him intrigued and cautioned me,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
+I became his friend. We talked German together. His
+one desire, he confided to me, was to marry a rich woman,
+and once he clumsily proposed to arrange a rich marriage
+for myself if I would give him a—commission on
+results!</p>
+
+<p>His personality is worth this brief description, perhaps,
+since it sheds light, incidentally, upon the world I lived in.
+Always most carefully dressed, he occupied a single room in
+a well-appointed house in East 22nd Street, talking airily of
+a bedroom on the floor above, of a bathroom I was sure
+he never used, and complaining apologetically of “this
+awful house I’m in for the moment.” His pose was that
+of an aristocrat, proud and resigned among untoward
+circumstances, and it was through no mistake of his own
+that this humbug did not impose on me. I just knew
+it was all bunkum. His actual business, I felt sure,
+was unsavoury, though Brodie, having once discovered
+artificial flowers in his coat pocket, thought he was a
+floor-walker in some big store. Various suspicious details
+confirmed me later in the belief that his real occupation
+was blackmailing.</p>
+
+<p>In his single room, at any rate, where a piece of furniture
+against the wall covered with framed photographs of
+German notabilities was in reality a folding-bed—I never
+once, since the oysters, betrayed that I knew this—he
+lived “like a gentleman.” Every night, from nine
+o’clock onwards, he was “at home”; a box of cigars,
+various liqueurs, he offered without fail, and “with an
+air” if you please, although the former never held more
+than three or four cigars, the bottles never more than
+enough to fill two glasses, because “my servant, confound
+him, has forgotten again to fill them.” He had no servant,
+of course, and the minimum of replenishing was done by
+himself every evening before nine o’clock. “Then you
+are a Baron really?” I said once, referring to the “von”
+before his name. He looked at me with the disdainful
+smile a prince in difficulties might have worn: “In
+this city of snobs and scoundrels,” he said lightly, “I have
+dropped my title. The ‘von’ alone I find more dignified.”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
+He left the house, I found, every morning sharp at eight,
+and this was in favour of Brodie’s theory that he had
+some regular job. He was an experienced, much-lived
+old bird, a touch of something sinister about him always,
+about most of his friends as well. Some very disagreeable
+types I surprised more than once in his well-furnished
+room. He “knew the ropes,” knew men and women too,
+his counsel was always sound in worldly matters. A
+lack of humour was his chief failing, it seemed to me, while
+his snobbery was another weakness that probably led many
+of his schemes to failure. Every summer, for instance, he
+would go for two weeks to Newport, where the rank and
+fashion went. “When I was at Newport,” or “I am
+going to Newport next week,” were phrases his tongue
+loved to mouth and taste like fine wine. But his brief
+days there were spent actually in a cheap boarding-house,
+although the letters he wrote to all and sundry, to myself
+included, bore one word only as address: “Newport,”
+made from a die, at the head of his coloured paper.</p>
+
+<p>It was von Schmidt, then, who warned me about
+Brodie and his eau-de-Cologne business: “He is a
+fool, a peasant. There will be trouble there. Do not
+identify yourself with him or his business. It is not
+worth while....” And his manner conveyed that he
+could tell something more definite if he liked, which I
+verily believe was the case. Brodie, I was convinced
+later, paid him tribute.</p>
+
+<p>I began to feel uncomfortable. One day I asked
+Brodie, point blank, what his recipe was and how
+he came by it? “That’s me own beezness,” he replied.
+“There’s nothing to be nairvous about.” I consulted
+“old Louis.” “If you feel the faintest doubt,” was his
+answer, “you should leave at once.” I decided to get
+out. Brodie asked me to wait the current month.
+I agreed.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of the month, however, when I left the
+eau-de-Cologne business, a most unpleasant and alarming
+incident occurred. The terrible thing, long dreaded in a
+vague kind of way, had overtaken me at last. I was to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
+be convicted of a crime I had not committed. I might
+even be sent to gaol....</p>
+
+<p>Brodie’s outlandish furnishing of his rooms has been
+mentioned purposely; they were filled with an assortment
+of showy trash that could not have deceived a
+charwoman; fifty dollars would have covered everything.
+He was proud of his curtains, rugs and faked draperies,
+however; showed them off with the air of a connoisseur;
+hinted at their great value. He had insured them, it
+always pleased him to mention. The <i>New York Journal</i>,
+describing the eviction scene, had referred to his fine
+apartment “furnished with exotic taste and regardless
+of cost,” adding this touch of colour which was certainly
+not my own. Brodie, thus encouraged in print,
+promptly took out another fire policy in a second company.
+And one day, while toying with his flagons, he mentioned
+casually that he was having “me place done up a bit,”
+new paint, new paper were to be put on, and—might he
+bring his clothes to my room until this was finished, as
+his own cupboard space was limited?</p>
+
+<p>He brought the suits himself, carrying them one by
+one concealed inside a folded overcoat upon his arm.
+He did this always after dusk. No suspicion stirred
+in me. My own cupboards were, of course, empty.
+Brodie’s fine wardrobe now filled them. It all seemed
+natural enough; certainly it roused no doubt or query in
+me; neither did the party to which I was invited a few
+days later, which included a “distinguished” member,
+of course, a famous dress-designer from Europe, with
+whose publicity campaign in the Press, Brodie had
+contrived to get his name associated.</p>
+
+<p>We were a party of five men, and we met at our host’s
+rooms before going out to dine, the rooms that had just
+been done up; and attention, I recall, was drawn particularly
+to the beauty, rarity and value of his variegated
+trash. The electric light was shaded, a big coal fire
+burned in the grate, at a cursory glance the apartment
+might possibly have produced a favourable impression of
+expense and richness. But our host did not allow us to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
+linger; there was a hurried cocktail, and we were gone. I
+remember that I was last but one in the procession down
+the stairs from this top floor; Brodie, who had held
+the door open for us to pass, came last. Also I remembered
+later, that as we reached the next flight, he said he had
+forgotten something, and dashed upstairs again to fetch
+it. A moment later he rejoined us in the street, and we
+all went on to dinner. “It was a kind of house-warming
+party,” he explained.</p>
+
+<p>The evening passed pleasantly. We went on to Koster
+and Biel’s music hall, and after that, to supper in some
+Tenderloin joint or other. And it was here I first noticed
+a change in our host. Something about him was different.
+His behaviour was not what was normal to him. His face
+was pale, his manner nervous and excited; though there
+was no drink in him to account for it, he was overwrought,
+unusually voluble, unable to keep still for a single moment.
+I had never seen him like this before, and the strangeness
+of his behaviour arrested me. Once or twice, <i>à propos</i> of
+nothing, he referred to the money he had spent on his apartment;
+and more than once in asides to me, he spoke of
+the value of his rugs and curtains, engaging my endorsement,
+as it were. The other men, who knew him less
+intimately, probably noticed nothing, or, if they did,
+attributed it to the excitement of alcohol.... But it
+made me more and more uneasy. I didn’t like it; I
+watched him attentively. I came to the strange conclusion,
+long before the evening was over, that he was
+frightened. And when he met suggestions that it was
+time for bed with obstinate refusals, anxious and nervous
+at the same time, I knew that he was more than frightened,
+he was terrified.</p>
+
+<p>Once when I asked him whether he felt unwell, there was
+startled terror in his cunning eyes as he whispered: “I
+dreamed of rats last night. Something bad will be coming.”
+His face was white as chalk. To dream of rats,
+with him, always meant an enemy in the offing; a dozen
+times he had given me instances of this strange superstition;
+to dream of an acquaintance in connexion with these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
+unpleasant rodents meant that this particular acquaintance
+was false, an enemy, someone who meant him harm. I,
+therefore, understood the allusion in his mind, but this
+time, for some reason, I did not believe it. He was
+lying. The terror of a guilty conscience was in those
+startled eyes and in that sheet-white skin. I felt still more
+uneasy. I was glad I had put my resignation from the
+“beezness” in writing. There was trouble coming in
+connexion with that recipe, and Brodie already knew it.</p>
+
+<p>It was after two in the morning when we reached home.
+My rooms were a couple of streets before his own, but he
+begged me to see him to his door. His nervous state had
+grown, meanwhile, worse and worse; his legs failed him
+several times, seeming to sink under his weight; he took
+my arm; more than once he reeled. There was something
+about it all, about himself particularly, that made my
+skin crawl. The awful feeling that I, too, was to be
+involved increased in me.</p>
+
+<p>As we turned out of Fourth Avenue into his street,
+a loud noise met us: a prolonged, hoarse sound, a clank
+of machinery in it somewhere, another sound as well that
+pulsed and throbbed. A dense crowd blocked the way.
+There was smoke. A fire engine was pumping water into a
+burning building—the one that Brodie lived in. These
+details I noticed in the first few seconds, but even before
+I had registered them Brodie uttered a queer cry and
+half-collapsed against me. He was speechless with
+terror, and at first something of his terror he communicated
+to me, too. My heart sank into my boots. The “rats”
+I understood instantly, had nothing to do with his eau de
+Cologne recipe. This was a far more serious matter.</p>
+
+<p>Fires were no new thing to me, and this evidently
+was only a small one, but, none the less, people might
+have been burned to death. Telling my companion to
+wait for me, and to keep his mouth shut whatever happened,
+I produced some paper and pushed my way through
+the crowd to the police cordon, saying I was from the
+<i>Evening Sun</i>. Though I had no fire-badge, the bluff
+worked. I ran up the steps of the familiar house. “Which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
+floor is it? How did it start? Is it insured? Is anybody
+burned?” I asked a fireman. The answer came
+and I jotted it down; it was the top floor, how it started
+was unknown, nobody was hurt—it was heavily insured.</p>
+
+<p>It had been burning for four hours, the worst was
+over, the fire was out; only steam and smoke now filled
+the staircase and corridors. The street was covered with
+a litter of ruined furniture. The occupants of the lower
+floors stood about in various attire; I caught unpleasant
+remarks as I dashed upstairs to Brodie’s floor.
+Hoses, I found, were still at work; the room we had
+left six hours before was gutted; a gaping hole permitted
+a view of the room on the floor below, and this hole
+began immediately in front of the grate. A black woolly
+mat with long hair, I remembered, had lain on the floor
+just there. The unpleasant remarks, as I ran up, had
+reference to insurance; phrases such as “over-insured,”
+“too well insured” were audible. They were the usual
+phrases uttered at the scene of a New York fire, where
+arson was as common as picking pockets; I had heard
+them a hundred times; they had furnished clues for my
+newspaper stories. On this occasion they held a new
+significance.</p>
+
+<p>Brodie shared my folding-bed that night, but he did
+not sleep. He cried a good deal. He said very little.
+He referred neither to the loss of his stuff, nor to the fact
+of its being covered by insurance, nor to how and why
+the fire started. He was frightened to the bone.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, when we visited the burned apartment
+to secure what fire and water had spared, Brodie was
+abused and scarified by the inmates as he went upstairs....
+Weeks of keen anxiety followed, of worse than
+anxiety. The insurance companies refused to pay the
+claims, which Brodie, after much hesitation, had sent
+in. They decided to fight them. The lawyer—a <i>scheister</i>,
+meaning a low, unprincipled type of attorney who would
+take any case for the money it might contain—bled my
+friend effectively by preying on his obvious fear. He was
+summoned to give witness before a hearing in the offices
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
+of the company, and I shall never forget his face when he
+met me that night with the significant words: “They
+know everything about me, everything about you too.
+They even know that I took all my clothes to your room
+before it happened. They are going to summon you to
+give evidence too.”</p>
+
+<p>I consulted with “old Louis,” telling him the full story,
+but making no accusations. “Few people are worthy
+to live with,” was his comment, “fewer still to share one’s
+confidence. You must tell the truth as you know it. You
+have nothing to fear.” I was searchingly examined by
+the company’s lawyer and my evidence made, I saw, a
+good impression. No awkward leading questions were
+put. Brodie had been kind to me; I knew nothing
+definite against him; in his ignorance, which I described,
+he might well have thought his possessions were of value.
+It had nothing to do with me, at any rate, and there was
+a perfectly good explanation for his clothes being in my
+cupboard. None the less, it was a trying ordeal. Worse,
+however, was to follow. The fire marshal, recently
+appointed, a proverbial new broom, was out to put down
+the far too frequent arson in the city. Fire Marshal
+Mitchell—I see his face before me still—intended to
+prosecute.</p>
+
+<p>This was a bombshell. My imaginative temperament
+then became, indeed, my curse. Waiting for the summons
+was like waiting for the verdict of a hostile jury. I
+waited many days, hope alternating with fear. I felt
+sure I was being watched the whole time. Brodie
+and I never met once. I changed my room about this
+time, though for reasons entirely disconnected with this
+unpleasant business (I had obtained a violin pupil in
+another house), and I wrote to the fire marshal informing
+him of my new address, in case, as I understood was
+probable, he might want my evidence.</p>
+
+<p>But what really alarmed me most was my inside
+knowledge of New York justice. I had seen too many
+innocent men sent up; I had heard faked evidence in too
+many police cases; I knew that, without a “pull,” I stood
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
+but little chance of escaping a conviction as an accessory
+to what they would call a wanton case of arson. I was
+not even on the staff of a newspaper at the time. I had
+no influence of any sort behind me. Nor were my means
+of support too “visible,” a Britisher, a highly-connected
+Britisher into the bargain, it was just what the new-broom
+fire marshal was looking for. It would make a big case
+for the Press. The agony of mind I endured was ghastly,
+and the slow delay of long waiting intensified it.... One
+evening, on coming home about dusk, I saw a strange man
+in the little hall-way of my house. He asked me my
+name. I told him. He handed me a blue paper and went
+out. It was the long-expected subpœna from the fire
+marshal. I was summoned to attend at eight o’clock two
+mornings later in his office.</p>
+
+<p>My emotions that night and the next day were new
+experiences to me; I heard the judge sentence me, saw
+myself in prison for a term of years with hard labour. I
+began to <i>feel</i> guilty. I knew I should say the wrong
+thing to the fire marshal. I should convict myself. The
+truth was the truth, but everything pointed against me;
+I knew Brodie as a friend, I was his business associate,
+was frequently in his rooms, had accepted kindnesses
+from him, I needed money badly, I had hidden his good
+clothes in my cupboards a few days before the fire. I had
+been with him on that particular night, I had left the room
+with him—last of the party. I should be looked upon as
+guilty, it was for me to clear myself. Prejudice against
+me, too, as an Englishman would be strong. The Boyde
+episode would be revived, and twisted to show that I
+consorted with law-breakers. I should stammer and
+hesitate and appear to be hiding the truth, to be lying,
+and I should most certainly look guilty. The thing I
+dreaded had come upon me. I thought of my home and
+family.</p>
+
+<p>It all made me realize with a fresh sharpness the kind
+of world poverty had dragged me down to, with the
+contrast between what I had been born to and what I now
+lived in.... I needed every scrap of strength and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
+comfort my books could give me. That I was exaggerating
+like a schoolboy never occurred to me. I suffered the
+tortures of the damned, of the already condemned, at
+any rate. That I was innocent of wrong-doing was, for
+some reason, no consolation: I had got myself into an
+awful mess and should have to pay the price.</p>
+
+<p>The wildest ideas filled my brain; I would call and
+enlist the influence of McCloy, of various officials, of headquarters
+detectives, of D. L. Moody the Revivalist, who
+was then preaching in New York and who had been a
+guest in my father’s house, of the Exchange Place banker,
+even of von Schmidt, though fear of blackmail stopped me
+here. But reflection told me how useless such a proceeding
+would be. The Republicans, besides, were in power at
+the time, and Tammany had no “pull.” I even thought
+of Roosevelt, whom, as President of the Police Board,
+I had often interviewed. The fire marshal would rejoice
+in the case, of course, for, as with the Boyde story, the
+newspapers would print it at great length. There lay
+much <i>kudos</i> for him in it. I had no sleep that night, as I
+had no friend or counsellor either. I thought of spending
+it in Bronx Park with the trees, but it occurred to me that,
+if I were being watched, the act might be interpreted as
+an attempt to escape—for what would a New York fire
+marshal make of my love of nature?</p>
+
+<p>The following day, as the dreaded examination grew
+closer, was a day of acute misery—until the late afternoon,
+when I met by chance the man who saved me. I shall
+always believe, at least, that “saved” is the right word
+to use.</p>
+
+<p>A coincidence, as singular as the coincidence of catching
+Boyde, was involved. Fate, anyhow, brought me across
+the path of Mullins, the one man who could help, just at
+the time and place, too, where that help could be most
+effectively given. The word coincidence, therefore, seems
+justified.</p>
+
+<p>Mullins, the Irishman, was an editorial writer on the
+<i>Evening Sun</i> when I was a reporter there; he disliked
+the paper as heartily as I did, and his ambition was to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
+join the staff of the <i>New York Times</i>, where Muldoon,
+another Irishman, a boon companion, was City Editor.
+He had proved a real friend to me in my days of gross
+inexperience. “If ever I get on the <i>Times</i>,” he used to
+say, “I’ll try and get a place for you, too. It’s a fine,
+clean paper, and they treat a man decently.” He had
+realized his ambition just about the time I went into the
+eau-de-Cologne business, but had said there was no vacancy
+for me. There might be one later. He would let me
+know. For months, however, we had not met, and the
+matter had really left my mind. And it was now, when
+I was casting about in a state of semi-panic for someone
+who might help me, that I suddenly thought of Mullins.
+As a last hope, rather, I thought of him, for it seemed
+a very off-chance indeed.</p>
+
+<p>For various reasons I did not act upon the idea, but
+Mullins was in my mind, so much, so persistently, so often,
+that I kept seeing him in passers-by. I mistook several
+strangers for Mullins, until close enough to see my mistake.
+Then, suddenly, in Union Square, towards evening, I did
+see him. I was sitting on a bench. He walked past me.
+He was on his way to an assignment. I told him the
+whole story, making no accusations, but omitting no
+vital detail. He listened attentively, his face very grave.
+He shared my own misgivings. “It’s just the kind of
+case Mitchell’s looking for,” he said. “He wants to make
+a splash with it. But I think I can fix it for you. Guess
+what my assignment is at this moment?”</p>
+
+<p>And then he told me. His job that evening was a
+special interview with Mitchell, a descriptive story of the
+newly-appointed fire marshal, his personality and character,
+his plans for suppressing arson, and it was to be a front-page
+article. Mullins could make him or mar him; he had
+a free hand in the matter; the <i>Times</i> was a Republican
+organ. It would mean a great deal to Mitchell. “He
+comes from my part of Ireland,” said Mullins with a grin
+and a wink. And then he added that he had spoken to
+Muldoon about me only the day before, and that Muldoon
+had promised me a place on the paper the moment it was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
+possible—in a few weeks probably. “I shall just mention
+to Mitchell that you’re going on the <i>Times</i>,” was his
+significant parting word to me, as he hurried off to keep his
+appointment.</p>
+
+<p>My examination next morning was robbed of much
+of its terror. The fire marshal was evidently not quite
+sure of himself, for, if manner, voice and questions were
+severe, I detected an attitude that suggested wavering. A
+shorthand writer behind me took down every word I
+uttered, and the searching examination about the clothes,
+my social and business relations with Brodie, my knowledge,
+if any, concerning the value of his rugs and curtains,
+especially concerning the night of the fire and the
+details of how we left the room, gave me moments of acute
+discomfort. Although Mitchell rarely once looked straight
+at me, I knew he was observing my every word and
+gesture, the slightest change in facial expression, too.
+He confined himself entirely to questions, allowing no
+hint of his own opinion to escape him, and yet, to my
+very strung-up attention, he betrayed the uncertainty
+already mentioned. I, of course, confined myself entirely
+to answers, brief, but without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>My instinct, right or wrong, was to protect Brodie, a
+man who had shown me real kindness. I remembered the
+meals, for one thing. In any case, it was not for me to
+express opinions, much less to bring an accusation. And,
+towards the end of a gruelling half-hour, I began to feel a
+shade more comfortable. When, with a slightly different
+manner, the fire marshal began to ask personal questions
+about my own career, I felt the day was almost won. I
+gave a quick outline of my recent history, though I never
+once mentioned the name of Mullins; let fall the detail,
+too, that I was an Irishman, and, a little later, seizing an
+opening with an audacity that surprised myself even while
+I said the words, I congratulated Mr. Mitchell upon his
+campaign to crush out the far too frequent arson in the
+city. “As a newspaper man,” I gave this blessing, and
+the shot, I instantly saw, went home. If I could be of
+any use to him on the <i>Times</i>, if any suspicious case came
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
+my way, I added that I should always be glad to serve
+him. For the first time the fire marshal smiled. I shot
+in a swift last stroke for Brodie, though an indirect
+one. “But you don’t want any <i>mis</i>fires,” I ventured,
+inwardly delighted that the play on the word amused him.
+“A big case that failed of a conviction would be damaging.”</p>
+
+<p>We shook hands as I left soon after, though the final
+comfort he denied me. For when I mentioned that my
+present address would always find me “if you need me
+again,” he merely bowed and thanked me. He did <i>not</i>
+say, as I hoped he would, “your presence will not be
+required any more.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class='drop-cap kern'><span class='allcaps'>Six</span> weeks later, when the torrid summer heat was
+waning and September breezes had begun to cool
+the streets, the nights, at any rate, I found myself
+a reporter on the staff of the <i>New York Times</i>. My salary
+of $35 a week seemed incredible. It was like coming into
+a fortune, and its first effect was to make a miser of me.
+I had learned the value of the single cent; I found myself
+fearful of spending even that cent. I understood why
+people who pass suddenly from want to affluence become
+stingy, complaining always of being hard-up. I determined
+to save. I opened an account in a Savings Bank against
+another rainy day. This trait, acquired in my unhappy
+New York period, remains in me still, I notice. Never
+have I known from that time to this what it means to be
+comfortably off, free from financial anxiety for more than
+a month or two ahead, yet each time an extra bit of
+money comes in, I am aware of the instinct to be extremely,
+unnecessarily careful of each penny. The less I have, the
+more reckless I feel about spending it, and <i>vice versa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Those six weeks, however, before Muldoon sent for
+me, proved the most painful and unhappy of all my New
+York days. There was something desperate about them;
+I reached bottom. It was the darkest period before the
+dawn, though I had no certainty that the dawn was
+breaking. My income from the eau de Cologne business
+was ended, my free-lance work struck a bad streak, the
+artists were still out of town, the studios consequently
+empty; my violin pupil had gone to Boston. It was during
+this August that I slept in Central Park, and passed the
+night—for there was not much sleep about it—beneath
+the Bronx Park trees as well, though I had to walk all
+the long weary way to get there. It was, also, <i>par
+excellence</i>, the height of the dried-apple season. With the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
+exception of Old Louis, occasionally Mullins too, I had
+no companionship. Brodie, who by the way received no
+money from the insurance companies, but equally,
+escaped a worse disaster, I never saw again. The post
+on the <i>Times</i>, meanwhile, seemed far away, highly
+problematical too. My comforts were Bronx Park, occasionally
+open-air music, Louis, and my own dreams,
+speculations and, chief of all, the Bhagavad Gita....
+Hours I spent in the free libraries. Never, before or
+since, did I read so many books in so short a time. This
+free reading, of course, never stopped for a moment all
+the years I lived in New York, but during these six weeks
+it reached a maximum.</p>
+
+<p>From the ’vantage ground of easier days I have often
+looked back and wondered why I made no real effort to
+better myself, to get out of the hated city, to go west,
+for a railway pass was always more or less within my
+power, and other fellows, similarly in difficulties, were
+always changing occupations and localities. It was due,
+I think, to a kind of resignation, though rather a fierce
+resignation, a kind of obstinate spirit of acceptance in
+me. “Take it all, whatever comes,” said this spirit.
+“Dodge, shirk, avoid nothing. You have deserved it.
+Exhaust it then. Suck the orange dry.” And, as if life
+were not severe and difficult enough, as it was, I would
+even practise certain austerities I invented on my own
+account. Already I felt myself immeasurably old; life
+seemed nearly ended; external events, anyhow, did not
+<i>really</i> matter....</p>
+
+<p>A rolling-stone sees life, of course, but collects little,
+if any, fruit; though I made no determined efforts to escape
+my conditions at this time, a new adventure ever had
+attractions for me. Having once tasted the essence of a
+particular experience, I found myself weary of it and
+longing for a new one. This vagabondage in the blood
+has strengthened with the years. A fixed job means
+prison, a new one sends my spirits up. Routine is hell.
+To take a room, a flat, a job by the year, means insupportable
+detestation of any of them soon afterwards. It
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
+is a view of life that hardly goes to make good citizenship,
+but, on the other hand, it tends to keep the heart young,
+to prevent too early hardening of the mental arteries, while
+it certainly militates against the dread disease of boredom.
+<i>Une vie mouvementée</i> has its vagabond values. To a
+certain side of my nature Old Louis’s wiser epitaph (“Sorry
+<i>I</i> spoke; sorry <i>they</i> spoke”) made less appeal than some
+anonymous verses I came across in <i>Scribner’s Magazine</i>
+with the title “A Vagrant’s Epitaph”—verses I knew
+by heart after a first reading:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Change was his mistress; Chance his counsellor.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Love could not hold him; Duty forged no chain.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The wide seas and the mountains called him,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And grey dawns saw his camp-fires in the rain.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Sweet hands might tremble!—aye, but he must go.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Revel might hold him for a little space;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But, turning past the laughter and the lamps,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">His eyes must ever catch the luring Face.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Dear eyes might question! Yea, and melt again;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Rare lips a-quiver, silently implore;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But he must ever turn his furtive head,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And hear that other summons at the door.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Change was his mistress; Chance his counsellor.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The dark firs knew his whistle up the trail.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Why tarries he to-day?... And yesternight</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Adventure lit her stars without avail.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The plague of possessions, at any rate, has never
+troubled me, either actually or in desire, while the instinct
+to reduce life to its simplest terms has strengthened. The
+homeless feeling of living in my trunks is happiness, the
+idea of domesticity appals, and the comforts of rich
+friends wake no echo in me, assuredly no envy. A home,
+as a settled place one owns and expects to live in for
+years, perhaps for ever, is abhorrent to every instinct in
+me, and when acquaintances show off with pride their
+cottage, their flat, their furniture, their “collections,”
+even their “not a bad little garden, is it?” my heart
+confesses to a vague depression which makes it difficult
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
+to sympathise and give them my blessing. Life, at its
+longest, is absurdly brief before health and energy begin
+to slip downhill; it is mapped with a cunning network
+of ruts and grooves from which, once in, it is difficult to
+escape; only the lucky ones are never caught, although
+the “caught” are lucky perhaps in another way—they
+do not realize it. Yet even to-day, when times are bad
+and the horizon not too clear for some time ahead, the old
+dread of starvation rises in me; I never see apple rings in
+a grocer’s window without getting their taste and feeling
+them rise and swell within me like some troublesome
+emotion....</p>
+
+<p>To my year and a-half on the <i>New York Times</i> I look
+back with nothing but pleasure; the slogan, “All the news
+that’s fit to print,” was practised; and the men I worked
+with were a good company of decent fellows. Muldoon,
+a fighting Irishman with a grim fierce manner and a warm
+heart, had a sense of humour and a gift for encouraging his
+reporters that made them love him. C. W. Miller was
+editor in chief, and Carey, manager. Who owned the
+paper I have forgotten, but it was not Colonel Jones who
+was present at the Union League Club dinner to my
+father, when I made my maiden speech some nine years
+before. Hours of work were from noon until the night
+assignment was turned in, which meant any time from
+ten o’clock onwards; though, as emergency man, in case
+of something happening late, I often had to stay in the
+office till after one in the morning. Proper food, a new
+suit, comradeship with a better class of men, came, perhaps,
+just in time for me. I remember the pleasure of writing
+home about my new post. I had a dress-suit again. I
+saved $15 a week.</p>
+
+<p>Reporting for a New York newspaper can never be
+uneventful, but the painful incidents of life make deeper
+impressions than the pleasant ones. To meet the former
+means usually to call upon one’s reserves, and memory
+hence retains sharper pictures of them corresponding to
+the greater effort. On the <i>Times</i> I was happy.</p>
+
+<p>Two incidents stand out still in the mind, one creditably
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
+pleasing to vanity; the other, exactly the reverse. The
+latter, though it annoyed Muldoon keenly at the moment,
+fortunately for me appealed to his sense of humour too.
+He had given me an evening off—that is, all I had to do
+was to write a brief report of a Students’ Concert in which
+his little niece was performing.</p>
+
+<p>“Without straining veracity,” he mentioned with a
+grin, “ye might perhaps say something kind and pretty
+about her!” He winked, whispering her name in my
+ear. “Have ye got it?” he asked fiercely. I nodded.
+Was I thinking of something else at the moment? Was
+my mind in the woods that lovely evening in spring?</p>
+
+<p>At the concert I picked out the name I remembered
+and wrote later a sturdy eulogistic notice of an atrocious
+performer, saying the very prettiest and nicest things I
+could think of, then went home to a coveted early bed.
+But Muldoon’s grim smile next day, as I reported at his
+desk for an assignment, gave me warning that something
+was wrong. He did not keep me in suspense. I had
+selected for my praise, not only the crudest performer of
+the concert—that I already knew—but one whom all the
+other pupils disliked intensely, and whose name they
+particularly hoped would be omitted altogether. The
+niece I had not even mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>The other incident that stands out after all these years
+was more creditable. Dr. Lyman Abbott, Editor of the
+<i>Outlook</i>, which once Henry Ward Beecher edited as the
+<i>Church Union</i>, was preaching in Beecher’s Plymouth
+Church, Brooklyn, a series of sermons on “The Theology
+of an Evolutionist,” and Muldoon had persuaded the
+editor-in-chief that a full report on the front page every
+Monday would be a credit to the paper. His proposal was
+agreed to, apparently without too much enthusiasm. The
+Irishman was determined to justify it. “I want ye to
+take it on,” said Muldoon to me. “Ye can write shorthand.
+Make it 150.” A column was 100. To have a
+column and a-half on the front page, if I could do it well,
+would be a feather in my cap. But my shorthand was
+poor, I was out of practice too, bad notes are impossible to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
+read for transcription, and mistakes would mean angry
+letters of correction from Dr. Abbott, probably.</p>
+
+<p>Monday was my day off. I went to Plymouth Church
+with a new notebook and three soft lead pencils, duly
+sharpened at both ends. In the brief interval before
+Sunday I practised hard. The church was packed to the
+roof, as I sneaked up the aisle—an unfamiliar place, I
+felt it!—to a little table placed immediately beneath the
+pulpit. I came in after the service, but just in time for
+the sermon. There were no other reporters present. It
+thrilled me to see Dr. Abbott, who, as a young man of
+twenty-three, had heard Lincoln speak on slavery.</p>
+
+<p>The “Theology of an Evolutionist” was an arduous
+assignment that strained every faculty I possessed, but
+indifferent shorthand lay at the root of the strain. Dr.
+Abbott’s delivery was sure and steady, more rapid than it
+sounded. He never hesitated for a word, he never coughed,
+or cleared his throat, or even sneezed. There were none
+of those slight pauses which help a poor shorthand-writer
+to pick up valuable seconds. The stream of words poured
+on relentlessly, and the rate, I should judge, was 250 a
+minute. Verbatim reporting was impossible to me. I
+had to condense as I went along, and to condense without
+losing sense and coherence was not easy. My pencil was
+always eight or ten words behind the words I actually
+listened to, and the Pitman outlines for the words I wrote
+down had to be recalled, while, at the same time, memory
+had to retain those being actually uttered at the moment.
+Being out of practice I often hesitated over an outline,
+losing fractions of a second each time I did so. These
+outlines come automatically, of course, to a good writer.
+Then there was the sense, the proportion, the relative
+values of argument and evidence to be considered—matters
+that could not be adjusted in the office afterwards, when
+there was barely time, in any case, to transcribe my notes
+before going to Press. The interest I felt in the subject,
+moreover, delayed my mind time and time again. Occasionally
+a pencil-point would break as well, and turning it
+round in my hand meant important delay in a process
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
+where each fraction of a second counts. In the office
+afterwards, each page transcribed was whipped away by
+a printer’s devil before it could be reconsidered and re-read.
+I invariably went to bed after these evenings in church
+with a splitting headache; but the 150 appeared duly on
+the front page every Monday morning, though whether
+good or bad I had no inkling. My impression, due to
+Muldoon’s silence, was that my reports were hardly a
+success.</p>
+
+<p>When the last of the long series came my opening
+report was confused and inaccurate owing to an announcement
+from the pulpit which embarrassed me absurdly.
+Dr. Abbott mentioned briefly that numerous requests to
+print the sermons had reached him, but that he did not
+propose to do so. He referred those interested, instead,
+to the reports in the <i>Times</i> which, he took pleasure in
+saying, were excellent, accurate and as satisfactory as
+anything he could do himself. Being the only reporter
+present, I felt conspicuous at my little table under the
+pulpit in the immense building. But I remember the
+pleasure too. It was an announcement I could use, was
+bound to use, indeed, in my own report next day. Muldoon
+would be pleased. On the Tuesday morning, when I
+appeared at his desk, he looked at me with such a fierce
+expression that I thought I was about to be dismissed.
+“Have ye been to your locker?” was all he said. In the
+locker, however, I found a letter from Dr. Abbott to the
+editor-in-chief, thanking him for the reports of the sermons,
+reports, he wrote, “whose brevity, accuracy, and intelligence
+furnish a synopsis I could not have improved upon
+myself.” He added, too, another important sentence:
+“by your reporter whom I do not know.” It was not
+favouritism therefore. A brief chit to be handed to the
+cashier was in my locker too. My salary was raised to
+$40 a week. The headaches had proved worth while.</p>
+
+<p>The year and a-half with the <i>Times</i> was a happy period,
+though long before it ended I had begun to feel my customary
+weariness of the job, and a yearning for something
+new. The newspaper experience, which began with the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span><i>Evening Sun</i>, was exhausted for me. The pleasant and
+unpleasant sides of it I knew by heart. Though I took
+no action, my mind began to cast about for other fields.
+I had saved a little cash. My thoughts turned westwards,
+California, the Pacific Coast, the bright sunshine and blue
+waters of the southern seas even. I was past twenty-seven.
+To be a New York reporter all my life did not appeal. Nor
+was it yet time to go back to England. No trace of literary
+faculty, nor any desire to write, much less a consciousness
+that I could write perhaps, had declared themselves. My
+summer holidays of two weeks I spent again in the backwoods,
+with a view to some woodland life which was to
+include, this time, Old Louis, too. Obstacles everywhere
+made me feel, however, that it was not to be, for though
+they were obstacles I could have overcome, I took them
+as an indication that fate had other views for my future.
+When a thing was meant to be, it invariably came of
+itself, I found. My temperament, at any rate, noted and
+obeyed these hints. Old Louis, too, who was to collect
+his poems in our woodland home, to write new ones as
+well, met all practical suggestions with, “Let us consider,
+Figlio, a little longer first.” He was to write also a
+political history of the United States and “I must collect
+more data before I am ready to go.” The dread of being
+fixed and settled, a captive in a place I could not leave
+at a moment’s notice, did not operate where Nature was
+concerned. The idea of living in the forests had no fear
+of prison in it.</p>
+
+<p>Events, moreover, which brought big changes into
+my life had always come, I noticed, from outside, rather
+than as a result of definite action on my own part. A
+chance meeting in a hotel-bar set me reporting, a chance
+meeting with Mullins landed me on the <i>Times</i>, a chance
+meeting with Angus Hamilton in Piccadilly Circus led to
+my writing books, a chance meeting with William E.
+Dodge now suddenly heaved me up another rung of life
+into the position of private secretary to a millionaire
+banker.</p>
+
+<p>To me it has always seemed that some outside power,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
+but an intelligent power, pulled a string each time, and
+up I popped into an entirely new set of circumstances.
+This power pushed a button, and off I shot in a direction
+at right angles to the one I had been moving in before.
+This intelligent supervision I attributed in those days to
+Karma. In the mind, though perhaps with less decision
+there, it operated too. A book, a casual sentence of some
+friend, an effect of scenery, of music, and an express-lift
+mounts rapidly from the cellar of my being to an upper
+story, giving a new extended view over a far, a new
+horizon. Much that puzzles in the obscurity of the basement
+outlook becomes clear and simple. The individual
+who announces the sudden change is unaware probably
+how vital a rôle he plays in another’s life. He is but an
+instrument, after all.</p>
+
+<p>When, by chance, I found Mr. Dodge next me in a
+Broadway cable car, my first instinct was to slip out on
+to the outside platform before he had seen me, with, simultaneously,
+a hope that if he had seen me, he would not
+recognize me. He was a friend of my father’s. We had
+dined at his house on our first visit to New York, and
+once or twice since then our paths had crossed for a moment
+or two. He was a man of great influence, and of tireless
+philanthropy, a fine, just, high-minded personality. He
+stared hard at me. Before I could move, he had spoken
+to me by name. “How was I getting along?” he inquired
+kindly, and did I “like New York?” What was
+I “doing at the moment?”</p>
+
+<p>I seized the opportunity and told him of my longing
+to get out of newspaper work. He listened attentively;
+he examined me, I was aware, more than attentively. In
+the end he asked me to come and see him for a personal
+chat—not in his office, but in his house. He named a
+day and hour. An invitation to his office I should have
+disregarded. It was the kindness of “my house” that
+won me. But the interview was disappointing, rather
+embarrassing as well to me. He asked many personal
+questions about my life and habits, it was all very business-like
+and chilling. In the end he mentioned vaguely that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
+James Speyer, of Speyer Bros., was thinking, he believed,
+of engaging a secretary, and that possibly—he could not
+say for certain—he might, when he next saw him, suggest
+my name for the post. “Of course,” he added, still more
+cautiously, “you will understand I must make inquiries
+about you at the <i>Times</i>.” He promised to let me know if
+anything further came of it. For many weeks I heard no
+word. Then I wrote. The reply asked me to call at his
+office. He was kindness and sympathy personified. “The
+<i>Times</i> gives you an excellent character,” he informed me,
+“and say they will be very sorry to lose you. I am sorry
+there has been this delay.” He handed me a personal
+letter to James Speyer. He invited me to dinner in his
+house the following evening. Before brushing up my
+dress-suit for the occasion—my first dinner in a decent
+house for many years—I had seen Mr. Speyer and had been
+engaged at a salary of $2,000 a year for a morning job,
+from 8 till 2 o’clock daily, with a general supervision during
+the day of his town and country houses, horses, servants,
+charities, and numerous other interests.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner in Mr. Dodge’s Fifth Avenue palace was a
+veritable banquet to me. Immediately opposite, across
+the avenue, was the other palace occupied by James
+Speyer. It was all rather bewildering, a new world with
+a vengeance. Years among the outcast of the city had
+not precisely polished my manners, nor could I feel at
+my ease thus suddenly among decent folk again. I
+remember being absurdly tongue-tied, shy and awkward,
+until M. de Chaillu, who was present, began to talk about
+books, stars, natural history, and other splendid things,
+and took me with him into some unimaginable seventh
+heaven. I had moments of terror too, but the strongest
+emotion I remember is the deep gratitude I felt towards
+Mr. Dodge. A further tiny detail clings as well, when I
+was invited for a week-end to the Dodge country house
+on the Hudson, and was bathing with the son. He was,
+like myself, six feet three inches, well built, but well
+covered too, his age perhaps close on forty. As we stood
+on the spring-board waiting for our second dive, he looked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
+at me. “You certainly haven’t got a tummy,” he
+remarked with admiring envy. “I wish I were as thin!”
+And the casual words made a queer impression on me.
+I realized abruptly how little of certain real values
+such people knew ... how little these protected people
+ever <i>could</i> know. I still see his admiring, good-humoured,
+kindly expression, as he said the empty words....</p>
+
+<p>James Speyer, brother of Edgar, who later became
+a baronet and member of the Privy Council, was
+what we called in New York a “white man.” I hardly
+think I proved an ideal private secretary. His patience
+and kindness began at the first trial interview I had with
+him, when my shorthand—he dictated a newspaper
+financial paragraph full of unfamiliar terms—was not at
+its best, “not <i>very</i> grand,” were the actual words he used.
+As for bookkeeping, I told him frankly that “figures were
+my idea of hell,” whereupon, after a moment’s puzzled
+stare, he laughed and said that keeping accounts need
+not be among my principal duties. A clerk from the
+office could come up and balance the books every month.
+The phrase about hell, the grave expression of my face,
+he told me long afterwards, touched his sense of humour.
+The huge book in which I kept his personal accounts
+proved, none the less, a daily nightmare, with its nine
+columns for different kinds of expenditure—Charities,
+Housekeeping, Presents, Loans, Personal, and the rest.
+It locked with a key. I spent hours over it. No total
+ever came out twice alike. Yet Mr. Hopf, the bright-eyed,
+diminutive German from the office, ran his tiny fingers up
+and down those columns like some twinkling insect,
+chatting with me while he added, and making the totals
+right in a few minutes. Max Hopf, with his slight, twisty
+body, looked like an agile figure of 3 himself. In his
+spare time, I felt sure, he played with figures. He was a
+juggler in my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The first week in my new job was a nervous one, though
+Mr. Speyer’s tact and kindly feeling soon put me at my
+ease. My desk at first was in a corner of an unused
+board room in the bank, where I sat like a king answering
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
+countless letters on a typewriter. The shorthand was
+discarded; I composed the replies from verbal hints and
+general indications. Clerks treated me with respect;
+language was decent; surroundings were sumptuous; it
+was some time before I “found” myself. The second
+morning a caller was shown in, somebody to see Mr. Speyer.
+He took a chair beside my desk, stared fixedly at me,
+opened his mouth and called me by my Christian name—it
+was the Exchange Place banker who used to stay in
+my father’s house and who had last seen me in bed at
+East 19th Street. He congratulated me. I found out,
+incidentally, then, how much my swindling friend of
+those days had “touched” him for on my behalf ...
+and repaid it.</p>
+
+<p>James Speyer proved a good friend during the two years
+or so I spent with him; he treated me as friend, too, rather
+than as secretary. My office was transferred to his
+palatial residence in Madison Avenue, a new house he had
+just built for himself, and it was part of my job to run this
+house for him, his country house at Irvington on the
+Hudson as well. These establishments, for a millionaire
+bachelor, were on a simple scale, though the amount of
+money necessary for one man’s comforts staggered me at
+first. A married French couple were his chief servants,
+the woman as cook, the man as butler; they had been with
+him for a long time; they eyed the new secretary with
+disfavour; they were feathering their nests very comfortably,
+I soon discovered. My hotel experience in
+Toronto stood me in good stead here. But Mr. Speyer
+was a generous, live-and-let-live type of man who did not
+want a spirit of haggling over trifles in his home. I
+gradually adjusted matters by introducing a reasonable
+scale. The French couple and I became good friends. I
+enjoyed the work, which included every imaginable duty
+under the sun, had ample time for exercise and reading,
+and my employer’s zest in the University Settlement
+Movement I found particularly interesting.</p>
+
+<p>James Speyer was more than a rich philanthropist:
+he had a heart. The column for Charities and Presents in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
+the book Mr. Hopf juggled with once a month was a big
+one, while that for Personal Expenditure was relatively
+small. When I dined alone with him in the luxurious
+panelled room I realized that life had indeed changed for
+me. His house, too, was filled with beautiful things. He
+had rare taste. His brother Edgar, whose English career
+had not yet begun, stayed with him on his periodical visits
+from Frankfurt. There was music then, big dinner-parties
+too, to which I was sometimes invited. Social
+amenities were not always quite easy, for the position of a
+Jew in New York Society was delicate, but I never once
+knew James Speyer’s taste or judgment at fault. His
+intelligence showed itself not only in finance; he was
+intelligent all over; imaginatively thoughtful for all
+connected with him, and his philanthropy sprang from a
+genuine desire to help the unfortunate.</p>
+
+<p>For Jews I have always had a quick feeling of sympathy,
+of admiration. I adore their intelligence, subtlety,
+keen love of beauty, their understanding, their wisdom.
+In the best of them lies some intuitive grip of ancient
+values, some artistic discernment, that fascinates me. I
+found myself comparing Alfred Louis with James Speyer;
+their reaction, respectively, upon myself showed clearly
+again the standard of what, to me, was important: the
+one, alone among his unchangeable, imperishable “Eternities,”
+unaware of comfort as of fame, unrecognized, unadvertised,
+lonely and derelict, yet equally as proud of
+his heritage as the other who, in a noisier market sought
+the less permanent splendours of success and worldly honour.
+One filled his modern palace with olden beauty fashioned by
+many men, the other had stocked his mind with a loveliness
+that money could not buy. One financed a gigantic
+railway enterprise, the other wrote the “Night Song.”
+All the one said blessed and ornamented the mind, all the
+other said advised it. One parted with a poem as though he
+sold a pound of his own living flesh, the other was pleased,
+yet a trifle nervous, when Muldoon—thinking to help me
+in my job—wrote a panegyric of easy philanthropies in the
+<i>Brooklyn Eagle</i>, to which his fierce activities had now been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
+transferred from the <i>Times</i>. Both taught me much.
+From one, singing amid his dirt in an attic, I learned about
+a world that, hiding behind ephemeral appearances, lies
+deathlessly serene and unalterably lovely; from the other,
+about a world which far from deathless and certainly less
+serene, flaunts its rewards upon a more obviously remunerative
+scale. Of both poet and financier, at any rate, I
+kept vivid, grateful, pleasant memories.</p>
+
+<p>Between the unsavoury world I had lived in so long and
+the new one I had now entered, the Old Man of Visions,
+himself at home in all and every kind of world, always
+seemed a bridge. His personality spread imaginatively,
+as it were, over all grades and through all strata of humanity.
+In my slow upward climb he seemed to hand me on,
+and in return for his unfailing guidance it was possible
+to make his own conditions a trifle more comfortable:
+possible, but not easy, because there was no help he needed
+and did not positively scorn. He watched my welfare
+with unfailing interest, but nothing would induce him to
+buy a new hat, a new frock-coat, an umbrella or a pair
+of gloves. “Our memories, at any given moment,”
+says Bergson, “form a solid whole, a pyramid, so to speak,
+whose point is inserted precisely into our present action.”
+On that “point” old Louis still drives through my mind
+and wields an influence to-day....</p>
+
+<p>The happier period with James Speyer was, of course,
+an episode, like my other experiences. It was wonderful
+to draw a good salary regularly for pleasant work; to have
+long holidays in the Adirondacks, or moose-shooting in the
+woods north of the Canadian Pacific Railway; wonderful,
+too, when my employer went to Europe for three months,
+to know myself in charge of such big interests, with a
+power of attorney to sign all cheques. But the usual
+restlessness was soon on me again, desire for a change
+stirred in my blood. The Spanish-American War, I
+remember, made me think of joining Roosevelt’s Rough
+Riders, a scheme both Speyer and Louis strongly disapproved,
+and that an attack of typhoid fever rendered
+impossible in any case.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span></p>
+
+<p>It was during convalescence that it occurred to me
+I was nearing thirty, and that if I meant to live in America
+all my life, it was time to become naturalized. And this
+thought caused me to reflect on the question of going
+home. My sister, with her children, passed through New
+York about this time, returning from South Australia,
+where her husband was Governor, and it was at dinner in
+my employer’s house, where he had invited them, that the
+longing to return to England suddenly declared itself.
+To find myself among relatives who called me by the
+unfamiliar childhood name, woke English memories,
+English values, and brought back the English atmosphere
+once more. My mother was still alive.... I remember
+that dinner well. My sister brought a tame little Mexican
+monkey with her. A man, also, called to ask Mr. Speyer
+for help, and when I went to interview him in the hall,
+his long story included a reference to something Mr.
+Dodge, he declared, had done for him. “Mr. Dodge
+gave me this,” he said, and promptly scooped one eye out
+of its socket and showed it to me lying in the palm of his
+hand. The glass eye, the monkey, remain associated in
+my mind still with the rather poignant memories of
+forgotten English days my sister’s visit stirred to life, and
+with my own emotions as I reflected upon the idea of going
+home at last. A chance meeting, again, worked its
+spell.</p>
+
+<p>I had felt that half a universe separated me from the
+world in which my relatives lived, but after they had gone
+I began to realize various things I had not appreciated
+before. New York, I saw, could furnish no true abiding
+city for my soul which, though vagabond, yet sought
+something more than its appalling efficiency could ever
+give. What did I miss? I could name it now, but I
+hardly named it then perhaps. I was always hungry
+there, but with a hunger not of the body merely. The
+hunger, however, was real, often it was devastating. With
+such a lop-sided development as mine had been, my
+immaturity, no doubt, was still glaring. The sense of
+failure, I know, at any rate, was very strong. My relatives
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
+had been travelling, and they reflected a colour of other
+lands that called to me. Thought and longing now turned
+to an older world. There were ancient wonders, soft with
+age, mature with a beauty and tenderness only timelessness
+can give, that caught me on the raw with a power no
+Yosemites, Niagaras, or Grand Canyons could hope to
+imitate. Size has its magic, but size bludgeons the
+imagination, rather than feeds it. My heart turned suddenly
+across the sea. I loved the big woods, but behind, beyond
+the woods, great Egypt lay ablaze....</p>
+
+<p>I talked things over with the Old Man of Visions; he
+advised me to go home. “See your mother before she
+dies,” he urged. “I cannot come with you, but I may
+follow you.” He added: “I shall miss you,” then dropped
+into poetry, as he always did when he was moved....</p>
+
+<p>It was these talks with Old Louis about England, the
+atmosphere of England as well, that my sister somehow
+left behind her, my own yearnings now suddenly reawakened
+too, that decided me. My detestation of the
+city both cleared and deepened. I began to understand
+more vividly, more objectively, the reasons for my feeling
+alien in it. I missed tradition, background, depth. There
+was a glittering smartness everywhere. The great ideal
+was to be sharper, smarter than your neighbour, above all
+things sharp and smart and furiously rapid, above all
+things—win the game. To be in a furious rush was to be
+intelligent, to do things slowly was to be derided. The
+noise and speed suggested rapids; the deep, quiet pools
+were in the older lands. Display, advertisement, absence
+of all privacy I had long been aware of, naturally; I now
+realized how little I desired this speed and glittering
+brilliance, this frantic rush to be at all costs sharper,
+quicker, smarter than one’s neighbour, to win the game
+at any price. I realized why my years in the city had
+brought no friendships, and why they had been starved
+as well as lonely....</p>
+
+<p>Some months passed before I booked a passage,
+however. I was sorry to leave James Speyer. Then one
+day he spoke to me about—marriage. For a year or more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
+I had noticed his friendship with Mrs. Lowry, a Christian,
+well-known figure in the social world; and, being the
+confidant of both parties, I had done all I could to encourage
+a marriage that promised happiness and success.
+In due course, Bishop Potter, of New York, officiated.
+The ceremony was performed in the drawing-room, and
+just before it began, James Speyer came up to me, took the
+beautiful links out of his cuffs, and handed them to me.
+“I should like you to have these,” he said, “as a little
+memento.” I have them still.</p>
+
+<p>A few months later, just before I was thirty, I found
+myself in a second-class cabin in a Cunarder, with my
+savings in my pocket. Old Louis, who followed me a
+year or two later, came down to see me off. I was glad
+when the Statue of Liberty lay finally below the sea’s
+horizon, but I shall never forget the thrill of strange
+emotion I experienced when I first saw the blue rim of
+Ireland rise above the horizon a few days later. A
+shutter dropped behind me. I entered a totally new
+world. Life continued to be <i>mouvementée</i>, indeed, one
+adventure succeeding another, and ever with the feeling
+that a chance letter, a chance meeting might open any
+morning a new chapter of quite a novel kind; but my
+American episodes were finished.</p>
+
+<p>Of mystical, psychic, or so-called “occult” experiences,
+I have purposely said nothing, since these notes
+have sought to recapture surface adventures only.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">
+ INDEX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<ul class="index">
+ <li class="ifrst">“A Case of Eavesdropping,” <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Abbott, Dr. Lyman, sermons on the theology of an Evolutionist, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">tribute to <i>N.Y. Times</i> report of his sermons, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Aberdeen, Lord, Governor-General of Canada, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Advertising extraordinary, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ahlwardt, Rector, anti-semitism of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his meeting at Cooper Union Hall, <a href="#Page_229">229</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Alden, Mr., and A. H. Louis, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Amityville, a quasi lunatic asylum at, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Anti-semitic campaign in New York, <a href="#Page_229">229</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Apples, dried, and hot water, as hunger-appeaser, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Arson, frequency of, among Jews, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Barnum and Bailey’s Circus, a banquet at, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beattie, Mr., Boyde and, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Beauchamp, Montague, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Belloc, Hilaire, an article by, based on author’s book, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bennett, Sterndale, A. H. Louis a pupil of, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Benson, Archbishop, A. H. Louis’s memories of, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bernhardt, Sarah, interview with, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bernstein, Mrs., a long-outstanding account with, settled, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and her third floor back, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reduces rent—and why, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">removes to another house, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Bhagavad Gita,” the, world-scripture of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bingham, Billy, former proprietor of the Hub, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Black Forest, schooldays in the, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blackwood, Algernon, a childish recollection of his mother, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">a poem in <i>The Week</i> by, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">an earl’s visit to <i>Sun</i> office, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">an interlude of play-acting, <a href="#Page_255">255</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Boyde: a scene, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Hub hotel, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as reporter in the Tombs, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as story-teller, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as violinist, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">assigns his interest in the Hub, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attends a ball at Government House, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">becomes a partner in an eau de Cologne business, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">beginning of friendship with Alfred H. Louis, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">credited with powers of Black Magic, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“cribs” from an intoxicated reporter, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of his father, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“detachment” method of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">disagreement with Dr. Huebner, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">discovers Boyde’s forgery, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dissolves partnership with Cooper, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Edinburgh University course of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">eighteen months on staff of <i>New York Times</i>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">essays magazine writing, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">evangelical upbringing of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">examined on a charge of arson, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">first experience of morphine, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
+five months on Lake Rosseau, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">free-lance journalism, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendship with a dying doctor, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his mother’s letters, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">improvises accompaniment to “Invocation to Opium,” <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interviews a lion, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interviews in Tombs prison cell before trial, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">learns French, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">literary apprenticeship of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">loses faith in mankind, and a regretted act, <a href="#Page_210">210</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">maiden speech of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">off to the goldfields, <a href="#Page_235">235</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on staff of <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">parents of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">partner in dairy concern, <a href="#Page_10">10</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">pawnbroking experiences, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">plays in Drinkwater’s “Oliver Cromwell,” <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">poses in studios, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reads Patanjali’s “Yoga Aphorisms,” <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">receives a visit from Pauline, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reports a raid on a quasi lunatic asylum, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reports Dr. Lyman Abbott’s sermons, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resumes duties on <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">returns from Muskoka lakes, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">returns to England, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">secretary to James Speyer, <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">tackles Boyde <i>re</i> a forged cheque, <a href="#Page_138">138</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">talks with Boyde in his cell at Tombs prison, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">teaches French, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">translates French stories, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">unhappy days in New York, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visited by a banker: further disclosures concerning Boyde, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visits of an eccentric German doctor, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visits winter quarters of Barnum and Bailey’s circus, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warned against Boyde, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warns a pastor’s daughter against Boyde, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“Whitey’s” useful hints to, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">why an opening in C.P.R. did not eventuate, <a href="#Page_66">66</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">works by, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Blackwood, Sir Arthur (father), a disregarded counsel of perfection of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Hub venture, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">farewell to author, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fêted in New York, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">marriage of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">religious and temperance views of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bond, Bligh, his “Gate of Remembrance,” <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bookkeeping, author’s frank opinion of, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Borden, Lizzie, interview with, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bostock’s Circus, a lion escapes from: reporting the episode, <a href="#Page_102">102</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Boyde, Arthur Glyn, an echo of, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">arrest of, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">author’s attachment to, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">committed for trial to General Sessions, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">communicates with Sir A. Blackwood, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">confessions of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">disguises himself, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">duplicity of, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his varied experience of New York, <a href="#Page_86">86</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">hunt for, <a href="#Page_182">182</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">last sight of, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to author from Tombs prison, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">meeting with, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">sentenced, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">telegraphs news of his marriage, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
+uneasy suspicions regarding, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warrant for arrest of, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brodie, as salesman, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">heavy insurances of—and a fire, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">how he obtained recipe for eau de Cologne, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">introduction to, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">social aspirations of, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Bronx Park, Sundays in, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Brooklyn Bridge, reflections on, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Buddhism, a German doctor’s opinion of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">author’s interest in, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Dr. Withrow and, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Calder, introduces himself, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">uninvited, sleeps in author’s bed, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Campbell, Sir Alexander, Governor of Ontario, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canada, social customs unwittingly broken by author in, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canadian Pacific Railway, how an opening in, was lost, <a href="#Page_65">65</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Canoeing on Canadian lakes, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Carey, Mr., manager of <i>New York Times</i>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clay, Cecil, introduction to, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Clothes, interchangeable, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Conversion, reflections on, <a href="#Page_23">23</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cooper, Alfred, partner in Islington Jersey Dairy, <a href="#Page_10">10</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cooper, Mr., news-editor of <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Cox, Cleveland, posing for, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Crayford, home life at, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Croker, Boss, head of Tammany, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Dana, Charles A., editor of <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Davies, Acton, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Boyde story, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Davis, Richard Harding, a play by, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">an interview with, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Boyde and, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Davis, R. H., witnesses capture of an escaped lion, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">de Chaillu, M., <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">De Quincey’s “Confessions,” Dr. Huebner and, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dixon, his tight-rope walk across the Niagara, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dodge, William E., a chance meeting with, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Drug stores and their attraction, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Drummond, Professor, Sunday lectures at Edinburgh of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Dufferin, Lord, a photograph of, in Hub hotel, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Duluth, and the gold rush, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Earth’s Earliest Ages,” Pember’s, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Easter Day in the Black Forest, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eau de Cologne business, author and, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Edinburgh University, author at, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Education of Uncle Paul, The,” <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Elephants, their fear of rats, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Eliot, George, and her Sunday receptions, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Etruria</i>, launching of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Evening Sun</i>, slogan of, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Evening World</i>, the, a scoop in, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Evolutionist theology, sermons on, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Ffoulkes, Maude, author’s indebtedness to, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Final Word, The” (poem), <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Free-lunch counters, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Freytag, German reporter, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his advice to author, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Frohman, Daniel, and Angus Hamilton, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Gallup, a half-breed guide, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">camp-fire stories of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Galt, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Germans, talkative, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gibson, Charles Dana, author poses for, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gilmour, jealousy of—and a realistic performance, <a href="#Page_256">256-7</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
+Gilmour, organizes a theatrical touring company, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gladstone, Right Hon. W. E., A. H. Louis and, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Goff, John, replaces Judge Smythe as Recorder, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gold, a quest in search of, <a href="#Page_235">235</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Gosse, Edmund, “Father and Son” of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Grant, and author, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">hears and witnesses Boyde’s confession, <a href="#Page_140">140</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warns author against Boyde, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Hamilton, a clergyman publicly thrashed in, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hamilton, Angus, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and author’s stories, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suicide of, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Harcourt, Sir William, president of Cambridge Union, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Harper’s Magazine</i>, publication of A. H. Louis’s poems in, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Harris, Carlyle, electrocuted, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Haschisch, an experiment with, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Haultain, Arnold, private secretary to Goldwin Smith, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Henry, O., his conception of New York, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Hereafter,” poem by A. H. Louis, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hopf, Max, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hub hotel, advice to new proprietors of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">early customers at, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in hands of a receiver, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">its former proprietor, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">opening of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">purchase of, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Huebner, Dr. Otto, a disappointment for, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">administers morphine to author, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Boyde, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">called in by Boyde, <a href="#Page_116">116</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">confesses himself a morphine taker, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendship with, <a href="#Page_164">164</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his wife and daughter, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">joins in search for Boyde, <a href="#Page_183">183</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">life-story of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">urges author to become a doctor, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">varying moods of, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Hypnotism, experiments in, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Irving, Henry, interview with, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Irvington, Mr. Speyer’s country house at, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Islington Jersey Dairy, partnership in, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">James, General, a dinner to Sir A. Blackwood, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">James, William, “Varieties of Religious Experience” by, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217-18</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jews, a campaign against, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">author’s admiration of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Jimbo,” author’s, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“John Silence,” <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">effects of haschisch described in, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">publication of, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Jones, Colonel, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Joseph Lake, Northern Ontario, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Julius Le Vallon,” <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Kay, John, and the “Hub” venture, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">effect of morphine on, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his immunity to “night-attacks,” <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">histrionic bent of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in search of Boyde, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">poses to Smedley, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">served with a blue writ, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Kingsley, Charles, baptizes A. H. Louis, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Laffan, Mr., of <i>New York Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lake Rosseau, departure for, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">five months on, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
+Lawler, Detective, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lewes, George Henry, A. H. Louis’s talks with, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lexow, Senator, and a Tammany investigation, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Liebesmahl, the, of Moravian Brotherhood, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lightfoot, Bishop, A. H. Louis and, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lion, an escaped, a “strong man” and, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Listener, The,” author’s, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Louis, Alfred H., advice <i>re</i> eau de Cologne business, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and politics, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">arrives, and a description of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as editor, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">breakdown of, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">buried in a Hebrew cemetery, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Cambridge days of, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">claims to be original of Daniel Deronda, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">condemns Gladstone, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“Hereafter” of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his farewell to author, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">legal attainments of, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">meeting with, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“Night Song” of, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">self-chosen epitaph of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">“The Final Word” of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">unfailing guidance of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lowry, Mrs., marries James Speyer, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Lunatic asylum (a quasi), raid on, <a href="#Page_226">226</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Manchester, Duchess of, marries Sir A. Blackwood, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Manning, Cardinal, A. H. Louis and, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mantell, Bob (Shakespearean actor), <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">introduces author to Cecil Clay, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Max Hensig, Bacteriologist and Murderer,” author’s story of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">McCloy, Mr. (managing editor of <i>Evening Sun</i>), <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and author, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">recollections of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">McKay, owner of olive-oil warehouse, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Messe noire</i>, a, and its performers, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Methodist Magazine</i>, author on staff of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Miller, C. W., editor in chief of <i>New York Times</i>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mitchell, Fire-Marshal, examines author, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">prosecutes Brodie, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Moody and Sankey visit England, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Morning Post</i>, an article on the genus “ghost story” in: its writer, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Morphine, and its effects, <a href="#Page_172">172</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Morris (a reputed “stiff” and cut-throat), <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">an instance of his kindness, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mosquitoes of Rainy Lake City, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Muldoon, Mr., and author’s report of a students’ concert, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">City editor of <i>New York Times</i>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">joins staff of <i>Brooklyn Eagle</i>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mullins, editorial writer on <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Muskoka Lakes of Northern Ontario, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Mystical minor poet, a, <a href="#Page_55">55</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Nash, Eveleigh, publishes stories by author, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Nature, spell of, and its influence on author, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">New York, a lively anti-semitic meeting at, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">horrors of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">miseries of summer heat in, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>New York Times</i>, author on staff of, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">slogan of, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Newspaper reporting, reminiscences of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Night Song,” poem by A. H. Louis, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Novelists, instances of their creative power, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
+Olive-oil, its value as food, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Opium, the Invocation to, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Otto, waiter in Krisch’s, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Palmer, Lynwood, and Boyde, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attends trial of Boyde, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">kindness to author, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Patanjali, “Aphorisms” of, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pawnbroking, experiences of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Paxton, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Pember, G. H., evangelical writer of prophetic school, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Police, New York, the Tammany system and, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Potter, Bishop, officiates at wedding of James Speyer, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Prison as “a proper vestibule to a city of Damned Souls,” <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Rainy Lake City, arrival at, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">desolateness of, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Rainy River district, gold discovered in, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reporter, a drunken, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Reporting for New York papers, experiences acquired from, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Revivalist movement, author and, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Roper, and Boyde, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Ryan, a Tammany magistrate, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Schmidt, “Von,” personality of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warns author against Brodie, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Scott, Mr., revivalist, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Scribner’s Magazine</i>, “A Vagrant’s Epitaph” in, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Selton, Morton, and his understudy, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sevenoaks, a reminiscence of schooldays at, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Shakespearean rehearsals on Lake Rosseau, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smedley, Mr., posing for, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smith, Goldwin, and his private secretary, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smith, Stanley, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Smythe, Judge, replaced by John Goff as Recorder, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">sentences Boyde, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“Snipe” hunting, definition of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Social reporting, experiences of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sothern advances money to Boyde, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spanish-American War, the, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><i>Spectator</i> reviews author’s published stories, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spencer, Herbert, A. H. Louis’s talks with, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Speyer, James, a letter of introduction to, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">a present to author, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the University Settlement movement, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as friend and employer, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">as philanthropist, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">author becomes secretary to, <a href="#Page_297">297</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+ <li class="isub1">marriage of, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">tact and kindly feeling of, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Speyer, Sir Edgar, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spiritualism, a doctor’s exposition of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Spiritualist, a cement-maker as, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Staten Island, a cricket match on, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stephen, Sir George, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stevenson, R. L., a dictum of, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Stewart, Sir Donald, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Storey, Mr., editor of <i>Harper’s Young People</i>, accepts an article by author, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Strathcona, Lord, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Studd brothers (cricketers), <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Sullivan, Tim, and his rival saloon, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Tammany Hall, a Committee of Investigation into methods of, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tammany system, the, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">the “Tenderloin” region and, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
+Temperance and General Life Assurance Company, author’s post in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Terry, Ellen, interview with, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theosophical Society meetings, attendance at, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Theosophy, author’s early interest in, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“The Interpreters,” by A. E., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">“The Listener,” <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Tombs Police Court and Prison, the, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">trial of Boyde at, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Toronto, author as hotel proprietor in, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Understanding, a spiritual wisdom, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Union League Club dinner, author’s maiden speech at, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">University Settlement movement, the, James Speyer and, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">“Vagrant’s Epitaph, A,” <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">van Horne, Sir William, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Vermin-infested bedroom, an uncomfortable night in a, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Wallace, Professor, of Edinburgh University, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Whitey, a parting present of a bottle of rye whisky, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">hints to author, <a href="#Page_96">96-98</a></li>
+
+ <li class="indx">Withrow, Dr., editor of <i>Methodist</i> Magazine, <a href="#Page_6">6</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Yonkers theatre, a realistic scene in a, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+
+ <li class="ifrst">Zogbaum, illustrator, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center mt4 mb4">
+<span class="smcap">Printed by</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Cassell &amp; Company, Limited, La Belle Sauvage</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">London, E.C.4.</span><br>
+F. 20.1023
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<div class='transnote mt4'>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+ </h2>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>Footnotes renumbered consecutively and moved to below the paragraph
+in which they were referenced.</li>
+
+ <li>Obvious typographic errors silently corrected.</li>
+
+ <li>Variation in hyphenation kept as in the original.</li>
+
+ <li>P. <a href='#cor_196'>196</a>: changed “an awful looked” to
+ “an awful look” to make the sentence grammatical.</li>
+
+<li>Table of Contents added by the transcriber for reader convenience.</li>
+</ul>
+</div></div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76991 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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