I have had a new and strange experience droll
in one way, grotesque in another and when everything
is said, tragic: at least an adventure.
Harriet looks at me accusingly, and I have had to preserve
the air of one deeply contrite now for two days (no
easy accomplishment for me!), even though in secret
I have smiled and pondered.
How our life has been warped by books!
We are not contented with realities: we crave
conclusions. With what ardour our minds respond
to real events with literary deductions. Upon
a train of incidents, as unconnected as life itself,
we are wont to clap a booky ending. An instinctive
desire for completeness animates the human mind (a
struggle to circumscribe the infinite). We would
like to have life “turn out” but
it doesn’t it doesn’t.
Each event is the beginning of a whole new genealogy
of events. In boyhood I remember asking after
every story I heard: “What happened next?”
for no conclusion ever quite satisfied me even
when the hero died in his own gore. I always knew
there was something yet remaining to be told.
The only sure conclusion we can reach is this:
Life changes. And what is more enthralling to
the human mind than this splendid, boundless, coloured
mutability! life in the making? How
strange it is, then, that we should be contented to
take such small parts of it as we can grasp, and to
say, “This is the true explanation.”
By such devices we seek to bring infinite existence
within our finite egoistic grasp. We solidify
and define where solidification means loss of interest;
and loss of interest, not years, is old age.
So I have mused since my tramp came
in for a moment out of the Mystery (as we all do)
and went away again into the Mystery (in our way, too).
There are strange things in this world!
As I came around the corner I saw
sitting there on my steps the very personification
of Ruin, a tumble-down, dilapidated wreck of manhood.
He gave one the impression of having been dropped
where he sat, all in a heap. My first instinctive
feeling was not one of recoil or even of hostility,
but rather a sudden desire to pick him up and put him
where he belonged, the instinct, I should say, of
the normal man who hangs his axe always on the same
nail. When he saw me he gathered himself together
with reluctance and stood fully revealed. It was
a curious attitude of mingled effrontery and apology.
“Hit me if you dare,” blustered his outward
personality. “For God’s sake, don’t
hit me,” cried the innate fear in his eyes.
I stopped and looked at him sharply, His eyes dropped,
his look slid away, so that I experienced a sense of
shame, as though I had trampled upon him. A damp
rag of humanity! I confess that my first impulse,
and a strong one, was to kick him for the good of the
human race. No man has a right to be like that.
And then, quite suddenly, I had a
great revulsion of feeling. What was I that I
should judge without knowledge? Perhaps, after
all, here was one bearing treasure. So I said:
“You are the man I have been expecting.”
He did not reply, only flashed his eyes up at me,
wherein fear deepened.
“I have been saving up a coat
for you,” I said, “and a pair of shoes.
They are not much worn,” I said, “but a
little too small for me. I think they will fit
you.”
He looked at me again, not sharply,
but with a sort of weak cunning. So far he had
not said a word.
“I think our supper is nearly
ready,” I said: “let us go in.”
“No, mister,” he mumbled,
“a bite out here no, mister” and
then, as though the sound of his own voice inspired
him, he grew declamatory.
“I’m a respectable man,
mister, plumber by trade, but
“But,” I interrupted,
“you can’t get any work, you’re cold
and you haven’t had anything to eat for two
days, so you are walking out here in the country where
we farmers have no plumbing to do. At home you
have a starving wife and three small children
“Six, mister
“Well, six And now we will go in
to supper.”
I led him into the entry way and poured
for him a big basin of hot water. As I stepped
out again with a comb he was slinking toward the doorway.
“Here,” I said, “is a comb; we are
having supper now in a few minutes.”
I wish I could picture Harriet’s
face when I brought him into her immaculate kitchen.
But I gave her a look, one of the commanding sort
that I can put on in times of great emergency, and
she silently laid another place at the table.
When I came to look at our Ruin by
the full lamplight I was surprised to see what a change
a little warm water and a comb had wrought in him.
He came to the table uncertain, blinking, apologetic.
His forehead, I saw, was really impressive high,
narrow and thin-skinned. His face gave one somehow
the impression of a carving once full of significant
lines, now blurred and worn as though Time, having
first marked it with the lines of character, had grown
discouraged and brushed the hand of forgetfulness
over her work. He had peculiar thin, silky hair
of no particular colour, with a certain almost childish
pathetic waviness around the ears and at the back
of the neck. Something, after all, about the
man aroused one’s compassion.
I don’t know that he looked
dissipated, and surely he was not as dirty as I had
at first supposed. Something remained that suggested
a care for himself in the past. It was not dissipation,
I decided; it was rather an indefinable looseness
and weakness, that gave one alternately the feeling
I had first experienced, that of anger, succeeded by
the compassion that one feels for a child. To
Harriet, when she had once seen him, he was all child,
and she all compassion.
We disturbed him with no questions.
Harriet’s fundamental quality is homeliness,
comfortableness. Her tea-kettle seems always singing;
an indefinable tabbiness, as of feather cushions,
lurks in her dining-room, a right warmth of table
and chairs, indescribably comfortable at the end of
a chilly day. A busy good-smelling steam arises
from all her dishes at once, and the light in the middle
of the table is of a redness that enthralls the human
soul. As for Harriet herself, she is the personification
of comfort, airy, clean, warm, inexpressibly wholesome.
And never in the world is she so engaging as when
she ministers to a man’s hunger. Truthfully,
sometimes, when she comes to me out of the dimmer
light of the kitchen to the radiance of the table
with a plate of muffins, it is as though she and the
muffins were a part of each other, and that she is
really offering some of herself. And down in
my heart I know she is doing just that!
Well, it was wonderful to see our
Ruin expand in the warmth of Harriet’s presence.
He had been doubtful of me; of Harriet, I could see,
he was absolutely sure. And how he did eat, saying
nothing at all, while Harriet plied him with food
and talked to me of the most disarming commonplaces.
I think it did her heart good to see the way he ate:
as though he had had nothing before in days.
As he buttered his muffin, not without some refinement,
I could see that his hand was long, a curious, lean,
ineffectual hand, with a curving little finger.
With the drinking of the hot coffee colour began to
steal up into his face, and when Harriet brought out
a quarter of pie saved over from our dinner and placed
it before him a fine brown pie with small
hieroglyphics in the top from whence rose sugary bubbles he
seemed almost to escape himself. And Harriet
fairly purred with hospitality.
The more he ate the more of a man
he became. His manners improved, his back straightened
up, he acquired a not unimpressive poise of the head.
Such is the miraculous power of hot muffins and pie!
“As you came down,” I
asked finally, “did you happen to see old man
Masterson’s threshing machine?”
“A big red one, with a yellow blow-off?”
“That’s the one,” I said.
“Well, it was just turning into
a field about two miles above here,” he replied.
“Big gray, banked barn?” I asked.
“Yes, and a little unpainted house,” said
our friend.
“That’s Parsons’,”
put in Harriet, with a mellow laugh. “I
wonder if he ever will paint that house.
He builds bigger barns every year and doesn’t
touch the house. Poor Mrs. Parsons
And so we talked of barns and threshing
machines in the way we farmers love to do and I lured
our friend slowly into talking about himself.
At first he was non-committal enough and what he said
seemed curiously made to order; he used certain set
phrases with which to explain simply what was not
easy to explain a device not uncommon to
all of us. I was fearful of not getting within
this outward armouring, but gradually as we talked
and Harriet poured him a third cup of hot coffee he
dropped into a more familiar tone. He told with
some sprightliness of having seen threshings in Mexico,
how the grain was beaten out with flails in the patios,
and afterwards thrown up in the wind to winnow out.
“You must have seen a good deal
of life,” remarked Harriet sympathetically.
At this remark I saw one of our Ruin’s
long hands draw up and clinch. He turned his
head toward Harriet. His face was partly in the
shadow, but there was something striking and strange
in the way he looked at her, and a deepness in his
voice when he spoke:
“Too much! I’ve seen
too much of life.” He threw out one arm
and brought it back with a shudder.
“You see what it has left me,”
he said, “I am an example of too much life.”
In response to Harriet’s melting
compassion he had spoken with unfathomable bitterness.
Suddenly he leaned forward toward me with a piercing
gaze as though he would look into my soul. His
face had changed completely; from the loose and vacant
mask of the early evening it had taken on the utmost
tensity of emotion.
“You do not know,” he
said, “what it is to live too much and
to be afraid.”
“Live too much?” I asked.
“Yes, live too much, that is what I do and
I am afraid.”
He paused a moment and then broke out in a higher
key:
“You think I am a tramp.
Yes you do. I know a worthless
fellow, lying, begging, stealing when he can’t
beg. You have taken me in and fed me. You
have said the first kind words I have heard, it seems
to me, in years. I don’t know who you are.
I shall never see you again.”
I cannot well describe the intensity
of the passion with which he spoke, his face shaking
with emotion, his hands trembling.
“Oh, yes,” I said easily,
“we are comfortable people here and
it is a good place to live.”
“No no,” he returned.
“I know, I’ve got my call ”
Then leaning forward he said in a lower, even more
intense voice “I live everything
beforehand.”
I was startled by the look of his
eyes: the abject terror of it: and I thought
to myself, “The man is not right in his mind.”
And yet I longed to know of the life within this strange
husk of manhood.
“I know,” he said, as
if reading my thought, “you think” and
he tapped his forehead with one finger “but
I’m not. I’m as sane as you are.”
It was a strange story he told.
It seems almost unbelievable to me as I set it down
here, until I reflect how little any one of us knows
of the deep life within his nearest neighbour what
stories there are, what tragedies enacted under a
calm exterior! What a drama there may be
in this commonplace man buying ten pounds of sugar
at the grocery store, or this other one driving his
two old horses in the town road! We do not know.
And how rarely are the men of inner adventure articulate!
Therefore I treasure the curious story the tramp told
me. I do not question its truth. It came
as all truth does, through a clouded and unclean medium:
and any judgment of the story itself must be based
upon a knowledge of the personal equation of the Ruin
who told it.
“I am no tramp,” he said,
“in reality, I am no tramp. I began as well
as anyone It doesn’t matter now,
only I won’t have any of the sympathy that people
give to the man who has seen better days. I hate
sentiment. I hate it
I cannot attempt to set down the story
in his own words. It was broken with exclamations
and involved with wandering sophistries and diatribes
of self-blame. His mind had trampled upon itself
in throes of introspection until it was often difficult
to say which way the paths of the narrative really
led. He had thought so much and acted so little
that he travelled in a veritable bog of indecision.
And yet, withal, some ideas, by constant attrition,
had acquired a really striking form. “I
am afraid before life,” he said. “It
makes me dizzy with thought.”
At another time he said, “If
I am a tramp at all, I am a mental tramp. I have
an unanchored mind.”
It seems that he came to a realisation
that there was something peculiar about him at a very
early age. He said they would look at him and
whisper to one another and that his sayings were much
repeated, often in his hearing. He knew that
he was considered an extraordinary child: they
baited him with questions that they might laugh at
his quaint replies. He said that as early as
he could remember he used to plan situations so that
he might say things that were strange and even shocking
in a child. His father was a small professor
in a small college a “worm”
he called him bitterly “one of those
worms that bores in books and finally dries up and
blows off.” But his mother he
said she was an angel. I recall his exact expression
about her eyes that “when she looked at one
it made him better.” He spoke of her with
a softening of the voice, looking often at Harriet.
He talked a good deal about his mother, trying to
account for himself through her. She was not strong,
he said, and very sensitive to the contact of either
friends or enemies evidently a nervous,
high-strung woman.
“You have known such people,”
he said, “everything hurt her.”
He said she “starved to death.”
She starved for affection and understanding.
One of the first things he recalled
of his boyhood was his passionate love for his mother.
“I can remember,” he said,
“lying awake in my bed and thinking how I would
love her and serve her and I could see myself
in all sorts of impossible places saving her from
danger. When she came to my room to bid me good
night, I imagined how I should look for
I have always been able to see myself doing things when
I threw my arms around her neck to kiss her.”
Here he reached a strange part of
his story. I had been watching Harriet out of
the corner of my eye. At first her face was tearful
with compassion, but as the Ruin proceeded it became
a study in wonder and finally in outright alarm.
He said that when his mother came in to bid him good
night he saw himself so plainly beforehand ("more vividly
than I see you at this moment”) and felt his
emotion so keenly that when his mother actually stooped
to kiss him, somehow he could not respond, he could
not throw his arms around her neck. He said he
often lay quiet, in waiting, trembling all over until
she had gone, not only suffering himself but pitying
her, because he understood how she must feel.
Then he would follow her, he said, in imagination
through the long hall, seeing himself stealing behind
her, just touching her hand, wistfully hoping that
she might turn to him again and yet fearing.
He said no one knew the agonies he suffered at seeing
his mother’s disappointment over his apparent
coldness and unresponsiveness.
“I think,” he said, “it
hastened her death.” He would not go to
the funeral; he did not dare, he said. He cried
and fought when they came to take him away, and when
the house was silent he ran up to her room and buried
his head in her pillows and ran in swift imagination
to her funeral. He said he could see himself
in the country road, hurrying in the cold rain for
it seemed raining he said he could actually
feel the stones and ruts, although he could not tell
how it was possible that he should have seen himself
at a distance and felt in his own feet the stones of the road. He
said he saw the box taken from the wagon saw it and
that he heard the sound of the clods thrown in, and
it made him shriek until they came running and held
him.
As he grew older he said he came to
live everything beforehand, and that the event as
imagined was so far more vivid and affecting that he
had no heart for the reality itself.
“It seems strange to you,”
he said, “but I am telling you exactly what
my experience was.”
It was curious, he said, when his
father told him he must not do a thing, how he went
on and imagined in how many different ways he could
do it and how, afterward, he imagined he
was punished by that “worm,” his father,
whom he seemed to hate bitterly. Of those early
days, in which he suffered acutely in idleness,
apparently and perhaps that was one of
the causes of his disorder he told us at
length, but many of the incidents were so evidently
worn by the constant handling of his mind that they
gave no clear impression.
Finally, he ran away from home, he
said. At first he found that a wholly new place
and new people took him out of himself ("surprised
me,” he said, “so that I could not live
everything beforehand"). Thus he fled. The
slang he used, “chased himself all over the country,”
seemed peculiarly expressive. He had been in
foreign countries; he had herded sheep in Australia
(so he said), and certainly from his knowledge of the
country he had wandered with the gamboleros of South
America; he had gone for gold to Alaska, and worked
in the lumber camps of the Pacific Northwest.
But he could not escape, he said. In a short time
he was no longer “surprised.” His
account of his travels, while fragmentary, had a peculiar
vividness. He saw what he described, and
he saw it so plainly that his mind ran off into curious
details that made his words strike sometimes like
flashes of lightning. A strange and wonderful
mind uncontrolled. How that man needed
the discipline of common work!
I have rarely listened to a story
with such rapt interest. It was not only what
he said, nor how he said it, but how he let me see
the strange workings of his mind. It was continuously
a story of a story. When his voice finally died
down I drew a long breath and was astonished to perceive
that it was nearly midnight and Harriet
speechless with her emotions. For a moment he
sat quiet and then burst out:
“I cannot get away: I cannot
escape,” and the veritable look of some trapped
creature came into his eyes, fear so abject that I
reached over and laid my hand on his arm:
“Friend,” I said, “stop
here. We have a good country. You have travelled
far enough. I know from experience what a cornfield
will do for a man.”
“I have lived all sorts of life,”
he continued as if he had not heard a word I said,
“and I have lived it all twice, and I am afraid.”
“Face it,” I said, gripping
his arm, longing for some power to “blow grit
into him.”
“Face it!” he exclaimed,
“don’t you suppose I have tried. If
I could do a thing anything a few times without thinking once would
be enough I might be all right. I
should be all right.”
He brought his fist down on the table,
and there was a note of resolution in his voice.
I moved my chair nearer to him, feeling as though
I were saving an immortal soul from destruction.
I told him of our life, how the quiet and the work
of it would solve his problems. I sketched with
enthusiasm my own experience and I planned swiftly
how he could live, absorbed in simple work and
in books.
“Try it,” I said eagerly.
“I will,” he said, rising
from the table, and grasping my hand. “I’ll
stay here.”
I had a peculiar thrill of exultation
and triumph. I know how the priest must feel,
having won a soul from torment!
He was trembling with excitement and
pale with emotion and weariness. One must begin
the quiet life with rest. So I got him off to
bed, first pouring him a bathtub of warm water.
I laid out clean clothes by his bedside and took away
his old ones, talking to him cheerfully all the time
about common things. When I finally left him and
came downstairs I found Harriet standing with frightened
eyes in the middle of the kitchen.
“I’m afraid to have him sleep in this
house,” she said.
But I reassured her. “You do not understand,”
I said.
Owing to the excitement of the evening
I spent a restless night. Before daylight, while
I was dreaming a strange dream of two men running,
the one who pursued being the exact counterpart of
the one who fled, I heard my name called aloud:
“David, David!”
I sprang out of bed.
“The tramp has gone,” called Harriet.
He had not even slept in his bed.
He had raised the window, dropped out on the ground
and vanished.