While Marie was trying to find some
trace of Terry, the latter was wandering about the
country.
“I have been tramping about
the country,” he wrote me, “living most
of the time in the parks. This life, where you
‘travel by hand,’ crowds out consecutive
meditation, but I like it because I can go away at
the first shadow of uneasiness betrayed on either
side. My existence now is so responsive and irresponsible
that it comes very close to my heart. I am living
a life of contrasts: one week I spent with a rare
friend who has many good books and admires me for
the thing for which all others condemn me. Strange,
is it not, that the one thing which redeems me in
his far-seeing eyes is what places me beyond redemption
in the minds of others. I have spent some sleepless
nights in his fine home, kept awake by the seductions
of social life tugging at my heart-strings. So
one night I stole away from this seduction and slept
with some drunken hoboes in the tall soft grass, where
I could have no doubt about being welcome. I
might as well doubt the grass as those pals, who without
question hailed me as an equal. I, having the
only swell ‘front,’ tackled a mansion,
and the Irish servant-girl, to whom I told the truth,
gave me a whole hand-out in a basket, enough for all
of us. My brother hoboes swore I should be the
travelling agent of the gang. But a copper gave
me the ‘hot foot,’ while I was ‘pounding
my ear’ in the woods with the other ’boes,
so I straightened and hiked to the stock yards, where
I feel more at home with the Hibernians.
“Never have I seen Life more
triumphant and rampant, more brimming over with hope
and defiant of all conditions, hygienic and otherwise.
I am rooming with an Irish family whose floor space
is limited, so we all have shake-downs, and in the
morning can clear the decks for action with no bedsteads
in the way. I am very ‘crummy,’ badly
flea-bitten, overrun with bed bugs, somewhat fly-blown,
but, redemption of it all, I am free and always drunk.
Still, I am really getting tired of playing the knock-about
comedian and shall soon ‘hit the road.’
“I am willing to do anything
for Marie I can, except to love her as I once did,
but never shall again. Even spirits die, and the
spirit of the salon is so dead that it is beyond resurrection.”
Marie, however, would not believe
that the spirit of the salon, or at any rate, as much
of that spirit as depended on the relation between
her and Terry, was dead; she was more conscious than
Terry of the ups and downs of the human nerves and
heart and the ever-present possibility of change,
and she went to work in a wilful attempt to get back
her lover. Her next letter was a triumphant one:
“I am a very happy girl to-day,
and I must write to tell you so before the mood vanishes,
for I have learned that good moods are very fleeting....
The cause of my happiness is, of course, that I have
at last met Terry and we have had a long, delightful
talk together, and I hope our misunderstanding is
all cleared up. Only, now I am afraid I shall
begin to pine and fret because we cannot be together
always, though reason and philosophy and logic all
tell me that the new relation between us two is the
very best, noblest, most ideal or at least
they try to tell me so. It very nearly approaches
the anarchistic standard, too.
“There is something fascinating
in this new state of affairs. It is just like
falling in love all over again: the clandestine
meetings, with the one little tremulous caress at
parting which is all we are bold enough
to exchange thrill me; it is the mysterious
charm of the first love-affair! It makes my blood
sing and dance. I lie awake the whole night thinking
of our meetings and trying to bring them vividly back
to me.
“And, do you know, what makes
me supremely glad is the feeling that Terry is going
to love me again, that I am going to win him back.
He thinks that love is an enslaving thing and harmful
to the soul, but my dear lovely idealist and dreamer
has loved me once and he must love me again.
I am so in love with love and almost as fanatical about
it as the ecstatic artist is about art: love
for love’s sake, art for art’s sake.
I never did and hope I never shall get
over that feeling of awe at the mystery and beauty
and elusiveness of that great force in life love.
And I have always felt so sorry for people, sincere
people, who told me honestly that they have felt that
wonder-in-spring sensation only once in all their
lives. It made me think that I had at least one
thing to be very thankful for, that I was different
from them, that I could experience the divine flame,
and experience it continually. If you knew how
often I have fallen in love with Terry!
“Poor Terry, I feel so sorry
for him, too; he has no place to stay, though he could
stay indefinitely at three or four houses that I know
of, where his friends would feel only too glad to have
him. But he says he does not want again to attach
himself to any person, place, or cause, because the
time would come when he should have to break away,
and then he should have to experience death again.
So he intends to move about whenever and wherever
the whim suits. But I am sure this life will not
satisfy Terry for long, for there is really very much
of the hermit in him....
“I am going to see him again
in a few days, so I have the pleasantest things to
dream of. If I am to win Terry back, I must be
extremely careful: one false move would be likely
to queer the whole thing. Oh, I am tremendously
happy, for I am sure I shall win my dear Terry back
again!”
The next letter, written about a month
later, has a note of discouragement, and also a slight
suggestion of an effort to steel herself against possible
developments in the future:
“When I go among the comrades
and friends, I must keep such careful watch over myself.
I don’t want to show them how I feel about our
separation. The movement had the strongest conviction
that I was so wrapped up in Terry I was
always so frantically jealous of him, you know that
I would surely die, or go crazy, if I were ever separated
from him. So they are all guessing at present,
and don’t know just what to think of me.
Apparently I am just the same, in fact some better,
for I laugh and talk more, much more than I ever did.
“Terry and I have met several
times since I wrote you, and I am almost discouraged,
and think at times it would be better for me not to
see him at all. I have to be so careful, and
it is awfully hard to control my impulses to tell
him what I feel! But I dare not do that or he
would never see me again, and I hardly think I could
stand that. He is so very cold and friendly;
of course, he does kiss me when we meet and at parting,
but in such an indifferent way, and if I allow my lips
to linger or cling to his for just the least part
of a second, you ought to see how abruptly, almost
roughly, he turns away. And I must not even notice
it, and it hurts terribly. I don’t understand
how anyone can be so dreadfully cold. It makes
me thrill all over when I see him bend his head toward
me for the customary kiss, and I close my eyes so that
I may enjoy more intensely that blissful eternity
which I expect, and alas! only one short, perfunctory
little peck, and it is all over before my
eyes are hardly closed.
“However, hope has not entirely
left me. After being so intimate with Terry for
seven years I ought surely to know something of his
moods and disposition; and I do hope and expect that
he will in time grow weary of roaming about and living
the way he does now and that he will begin to yearn
for feminine influences and caprices and tyrannies,
and I hope, for mine in particular!...
“I should be much happier if
I did not care for him so much, and I hope that in
time I may have only a strong friendly interest in
him. At times I envy him: he is so care-free,
without the slightest responsibility toward anything
or anybody; he can break from old associations and
habits so easily and light-heartedly. I never
could have done that....
“I am awfully absent-minded
these days; you would laugh at some of the funny things
I do. I ride on the cars miles past my street,
and wander about and forget where I am going.
Sometimes I think of things and then forget I was
thinking.”
In another six weeks’ time came still more gloomy
news:
“Our meetings are as uncertain,
unpremeditated, and unarranged as his wanderings about
the city are. It happened that I was all alone
for the whole of last week, eight precious days of
freedom, especially from Katie and her woes.
I love her, as you know, but she does get on my nerves,
at times. So I wrote Terry, asking him to come
and visit with me for several days. It must have
been my Jonah day, for the letter reached him, and
he came and stayed here with me for the whole seven
days. During this time we talked a great deal
of our life together and of our life since we have
not been together, and with his most calm and philosophical
air he spoke of our circumstances, past and present.
It seemed so pleasant and homelike, so much like the
old days, to have dear Terry here with me, and I felt
such lazy content to see and hear him, that at times
I awoke with a start, for I could not keep myself from
the idea that our separation was only a horrid dream.
“So, when he said things that
ought to have hurt me dreadfully, I positively couldn’t
feel hurt. Somehow, the sound of his voice was
so pleasing that I missed the sting of some of his
pessimistic reflections about our love; it seemed
to me that he spoke of others, surely not of our two
selves! But now, since he has gone, and I have
been forced to think of the things he said, many of
the easily accepted but only half understood reflections
on our love have come back to me with all their sting.
And I must now believe that I have passed out from
Terry’s life utterly, and that there is no return,
nor hope of return. The most I could possibly
hope for is an indifferent friendship, for so he has
willed it, or perhaps fate, rather, has so willed it.
’Dead love can never return,’ he said.
And I am now only one of the people he knows!
It is so terrible that I must avoid the blow, must
seek an independence of my own.
“And I had such high hopes,
such dreams of pillowing his dear head on my bosom,
and, alas! he would consider that intolerable.
And, upon reflection, his head would, in fact, rest
very uneasily on my scrawny breast!
“So I am trying to resign myself
and to readjust what is left of my life. It seems
pitiful, though, that my life has been so commonplace
all through. Not one single exception, not one
thing that ever happened to me, or that I ever did,
has been different from the experiences of all the
world. My life with Terry, which I surely expected
would be different, would be an exception to the commonplace
love affairs of all people, has now ended the same
way as everyone else’s.
“Well, I have had seven years
of life, that is perhaps a little more than some people
have, and I ought to be satisfied with that. The
biggest chapter of my life is over and done and closed
for ever and I will try not to look back or think
of it too much. And I shall tell you the same
as if I were making some solemn vow, that I will not
try any more to regain the love I have lost.”
This resolution of Marie’s seemed
to have helped her considerably, for her later letters
are not quite so exclusively concerned with the unhappy
aspect of her relations with Terry. The strong
vitality of mind and temperament which enabled this
factory girl and prostitute to adjust herself to a
relatively intellectual and distinguished existence
still stood her in good stead, and enabled her to
meet the present deeply tragic situation step by step
and not go under: her youth and vitality and
her love of life triumphed, as we shall see, over even
this terrible rupture; the consolatory philosophy
of anarchism, which had educated her, largely fell
away, with the love of the man who had created it for
her. But the work of the social propagandist has
been done on Marie: the woman is a thoroughly
self-conscious individual, as capable of leading her
life as only are very few really distinguished personalities.
Her next letter shows again a more general interest,
though still largely concerned with Terry:
“The other night Terry spoke
for the Social Science League on ’The Lesson
of the Haymarket’ referring, as you
know, to the hanging of the anarchists in 1886. The
Saturday Evening Post had quite a lengthy notice
about it the day before the lecture, and nearly all
the morning papers spoke of it the day after.
The lecture hall was well filled with people who do
not usually attend the S. S. League. And I think
these people, who were not radical, were much shocked
and disappointed, for Terry was not a bit gentle and
well-mannered, nor as philosophical as he nearly always
is. I thought his lecture good, though there was
something forced about it. Perhaps because he
no longer has so much faith was the cause of his greater
violence. It was as if he was trying to remember
what he had once felt; and that made the expression
rougher than if it had been more spontaneous.
I really do not believe that he is, at bottom, at
all violent. But he tried to be so in this lecture.
He advocated assassination and regicide and other
most violent and blood-curdling things. His voice
and manner, however, in saying these terrible things
were not at all convincing. When replying to the
critics, he was most violent, and was hissed and shamed,
over half of the audience leaving the hall, very angry
and indignant. I thought, for a while, that a
regular free fist-fight would follow, and it very nearly
did, but Terry had a few friends with him, among them
a German hen-pecked anarchist I must write you about,
and your friend Jimmy, both of whom were ready to
stand by Terry.
“Needless to say, Terry was
gloriously drunk, and utterly reckless, and after
the meeting was over quite a bunch of us became as
drunk as he, though not quite so gloriously.
He was quite helpless toward the small hours, when
our party broke up, and I took Terry home with me,
as Katie was not there, and on the way I had the pleasure
of acting as a referee when he and a stranger, who
Terry fancied had insulted him, did really have a
fist-fight; I gathered up their hats and neck-ties
and kept out of the way, ready to call assistance
if need be, which fortunately was not necessary, for
they only rolled around in the dirt a little, and
Terry only had his chin smashed slightly by the fall.
“Drunk as he was, he did not
strike the other man, though being stronger he could
have pounded the life out of him; he only tripped him
up and rolled him on the ground. Terry is certainly
instinctively and naturally gentle and chivalrous,
and I loved him as much as ever as I took him home
and put him to bed.
“I am beginning to think I am
a genius in taking care of drunken men, for I have
managed in some way to take home and care for quite
a number of them, for instance, Harris, who is the
most unmanageable and perverse creature when drunk.
I had an experience taking him home which I would
not dare write you; and I can hardly realise to this
day how I even succeeded in half carrying and half
dragging him to our home from away down town.
He certainly was the limit.
“On Monday the papers were all
shrieking for Terry’s head wanted
him deported or persecuted or prosecuted. But
Terry has a good many friends and too much of a reputation
as a philosopher; and his friends and his reputation
prevented his becoming a martyr. Two friends,
both newspaper men, managed to eliminate the most
objectionable parts of Terry’s terroristic utterances
from their respective papers, and Terry’s sister,
the lawyer, one sergeant of police, and the ferocious
but humane Tim Quinn did the rest. For the present,
therefore, Terry’s desire to be acquainted with
the inside of a prison, or otherwise to suffer for
the cause which he still half-heartedly believes in,
is frustrated.
“To me the most important aspect
of the lecture was that he prepared it in our home.
So, for another week, we enjoyed one another’s
company; and after the lecture he not only went home
with me, as I have said, but he has remained ever
since. I am trying not to build up any more hopes
on this, because I know that Terry has been in a particularly
reckless mood, and does not care much where he is.
I am sorry that he could not find a better outlet
for his mood than lecturing for the Social Science
League, but that perhaps is a better and more harmless
way than getting in with the criminals, as he has
wanted to do so often of late. You may be sure,
however, that his talk on the platform will not be
forgotten, and should anything happen, in any way
like the McKinley affair, for instance, I am sure
things would be made very unpleasant for him.
So I hope nothing will happen.
“Terry is really harmless.
He expends all of his energy in desiring and thinking
and talking, and has nothing left over for action.
Whenever he had any scheme in mind I did not like,
I used to encourage him to talk about it, knowing
that he thus would be satisfied, without acting.
He lives almost altogether in the head and in the
imagination, and is really a teacher, in his own peculiar
way, rather than an actor or practical man. That
is why he takes offence at what seems to me such little
things: they are not little to him, in his scheme
of things, which is not the scheme of the world, and,
alas! not even mine, I fear. He is so terribly
alone, and growing more so, and I feel so awfully
sorry for him.
“Especially since our rupture
I have been compelled to be so careful not to hurt
his feelings or trespass on his ideas of right and
wrong; for he imagines he can feel what I am thinking
and feeling, even if no words are said. He says
words only conceal thought and do not express it.
At times I feel so oppressed and depressed that I
should experience the keenest ecstasy if I could hurt
him in some physical way, use my muscles on him until
I were exhausted. In imagination I sometimes know
the fierce delight and exaltation of my flesh and
spirit in hurting this man whom I love, in hurting
him morally and physically and I feel the
lightness of my heart as the accumulated burden of
my repression rolls away in the wildest, freest sensations.
“Of course, I have only felt
this way at times; and at those times I know I was
very passionate and unreasonable. I had regular
fits of jealousy and anger, but at other times I had
a boundless pity for him, there was something so pathetic
about his gestures and his voice when he told me he
knows just how I feel about him, that I could have
cried out with the ache of my heart. It was so
terrible to see how he suffered in his heroic attempt
to suffice unto himself, to defy the world. He
tries to think and feel deeper and higher than anyone
else, but this is a terrible, terrible strain.
It is all fearfully sad, and sometimes I wish I had
never known him.”
About his speech, Terry wrote:
“I am one of the by-products
that do not pay just now, until some process comes
along and sets the seal of its approval on me.
Just now I am deemed worse than useless, and since
my speech on ’The Lesson of the Haymarket Riot’
the authorities are looking for a law that will deport
me. This will suit me, as I will swear that I
am a citizen of no man’s land. What I really
need is not deportation, but solitary confinement,
for the sake of my meditations. For even with
my scant companionship I feel as if I were a circus
animal. I still clutch convulsively to the idea
that thought is the only reality and all expression
of it merely a grading down of what was most high.
If I am shut up I must cease talking and may think
about real things, that is, ideal things. That
would help me to put up with the world, which cannot
put up with me unless I am in cold storage. There
is a mental peace which passeth all understanding,
and perhaps I might find that peace in prison.
I have been insidiously poisoning my own mind for
some time, and unless I can stop this I had better
cease from talking, which does not seem to purge me
of my unconscious pose, and retire to solitude behind
the prison bars. There, undisturbed, I can meditate
and often remember peacefully the beautiful things
I have known in literature and nature. Beauty
is like rain to the desert, it is rare, but it vanishes
only from the surface of things, and deep down who
knows what secret springs it feeds? As my sands
run out, the remembrance of the brief beauty I have
known will break over me like the pleasant noise of
far-off Niagara waters on the stony desert of my life.
“I once thought that I could
help the mob to organise its own freedom. But
now I see that we are all the mob, that all human beings
are alike, and that all I or anyone can do is to save
his own soul, to win his own freedom, and perhaps
to teach others to do the same, not so much through
social propaganda as by digging down to a deeper personal
culture. Though I sometimes think that just now
the prison would help me, yet I also long at times
to talk to the crowd. I wish to tell the smug
ones that we waste our lives in holding on to things
that in our hearts we hold contemptible. I wish
to tell the mob just why there are thirty thousand
steady men out of work in this city: to do this
I may take to the curbstone.”
After his speech Terry returned to
the home of Katie and Marie, as has been described
by Marie, but on no basis of permanence. He thus
speaks of it:
“You may think that I, too,
have ‘cashed in’ my ideals; for I am back
at the Salon for how long nobody knows by
special proxy request of Katie. I will spare
myself and you any moralising on my relapse.”
Katie, explaining Terry’s return,
said: “When he went away, Marie was sad
all the time. She could not eat nor sleep and
was looking for her lover every day. After weeks
had passed I said to her: ’When you see
Terry at the Social Science League, bring him home.’
’Do you mean it, Katie?’ asked Marie,
her eyes sparkling. She did so, and Terry went
quietly into his room, and the next morning I made
coffee as usual and Terry came out, and it was all
right; it might have been all right for good, if this
damned Nietzsche business had not come up.”
But that is anticipating.
It was after Terry’s return
that the famous miner Haywood, just after his acquittal
from the charge of murder in connection with the Idaho
labour troubles, visited Chicago, and spent most of
his time at the Salon with Terry and Marie and several
of their friends. The Salon was temporarily revived,
like the flash in the pan, under Haywood’s stimulating
influence. Terry wrote of him:
“Haywood has the stern pioneer
pride of the West. There is a mighty simplicity
about him. He is Walt Whitman’s works bound
in flesh and blood. He is a man of few words,
and of instinctive psychic force, and is the big blond
beast of Nietzsche. He knows just what he is doing
and why, and has a great influence on the crowd:
the mob went wild at his mere presence, and after
his brief speech he came absolutely to be one of them.
The swaying mass becomes, at his touch, in close contact
with their instinctive leader. He is too much
in touch with the people to agree with narrow trades-union
policies. At a secret meeting in this city with
Mitchell and Gompers he hinted that the Western Federation
of Miners would amalgamate with the American Federation
of Labour on the ground of no trade agreements and
the open shop, and warned them that no man and no
organisation was strong enough to stand in the way
of this development. The Socialist party made
him a big offer, but he replied that the Labour movement
was big enough for him.”
Of Haywood, Marie wrote: “He
is a giant in size, but as gentle as the most delicate
woman. He has only one eye, but that a very good
one which does not miss things. He has been made
into a regular hero by the people here, but he is
the most modest man I have ever met. He is sincere
and unassuming, so calm, with no heroic bluster about
him. His voice is quiet and gentle. We had
a blow-out for him, and all those present were very
discreet. We all forgot our years and our troubles
and we showed him a good time. I hardly think
that even you, with all your democracy, could have
stood for all the things that happened. Haywood
is a big, good-natured boy, but quite sentimental,
too. I think he liked me pretty well. I
am sure he could have won many much more attractive
girls than I, but somehow he took to me right from
the start. I was introduced to him along with
a whole bunch of girls, all good-lookers, too, but
I sat back quietly and was the only one who did not
say nice things to the hero.”