IN WHICH I GROW UP
In my eighteenth year, when I had
achieved a position and a salary in the tobacco factory,
I left the Old Market forever, and moved into a room,
which Mrs. Clay had offered to rent to me, in the house
of Dr. Theophilus. During the next twelve months
my intimacy with young George, who was about to enter
the University, led to an acquaintance, though a slight
one, with that great man, the General. As the
years passed my dream of the Great South Midland and
Atlantic Railroad, instead of evaporating, had become
fixed in my mind as the fruition of all my toil, the
end of all my ambition. I saw in it still, as
I had seen in it that afternoon against the rosy sunset
and the anchored vessel, the one glorious possibility,
the great adventure. The General’s plethoric
figure, with his big paunch and his gouty toe, had
never lost in my eyes the legendary light in which
I had enveloped it; and when George suggested to me
carelessly one spring afternoon that I should stop
by his house and have a look at his uncle’s
classical library, I felt my cheeks burn, while my
heart beat an excited tattoo against my ribs.
The house I knew by sight, a grave, low-browed mansion,
with a fringe of purple wistaria draping the long
porch; and it was under a pendulous shower of blossoms
that we found the General seated with the evening
newspaper in his hand and his bandaged foot on a wicker
stool. As we entered the gate he was making a
face over a glass of water, while he complained fretfully
to Dr. Theophilus, who sat in a rocking-chair, with
Robin, the pointer, stretched on a rug at his feet.
“I’ll never get used to
the taste of water, if I live to be a hundred,”
the great man was saying peevishly. “To
save my soul I can’t understand why the Lord
made anything so darn flat!”
A single lock of hair, growing just
above the bald spot on his head, stirred in the soft
wind like a tuft of bleached grass, while his lower,
slightly protruding lip pursed itself into an angry
and childish expression. He was paying the inevitable
price, I gathered, for his career as “a gay
old bird”; but even in the rebuking glance which
Dr. Theophilus now bent upon him, I read the recognition
that the president of the Great South Midland and
Atlantic Railroad must be dosed more sparingly than
other men. Under his loose, puffy chin he wore
a loose, puffy tie of a magenta shade, in the midst
of which a single black pearl reposed; and when he
turned his head, the creases in his neck looked like
white cords sunk deep in the scarlet flesh.
“There’s no use, Theophilus,
I can’t stand it,” he protested. “Delilah,
bring me a sip of whiskey to put a taste in my mouth.”
“No whiskey, Delilah, not a
drop,” commanded the doctor sternly. “It’s
the result of your own imprudence, George, and you’ve
got to pay for it. You’ve been eating strawberries,
and I told you not to touch one with a ten-foot pole.”
“You didn’t say a word
about strawberry shortcake,” rejoined the General,
like a guilty child, “and this attack is due
to an entirely different cause. I dined at the
Blands’ on Sunday, and Miss Mitty gave me mint
sauce on my lamb. I never could abide mint sauce.”
Taking out his prescription book the
doctor wrote down a prescription in a single word,
which looked ominously like “calomel” from
a distance.
“How did Miss Matoaca seem?”
he asked, while Robin, the old pointer, came and sniffed
at my ankles, and I thought of Samuel, sleeping under
a flower bed in the doctor’s garden. “She
has a touch of malaria, and I ordered her three grains
of quinine every morning.”
A purple flush mounted to the General’s
face, which, if I could have read it by the light
of history, would have explained the scornful flattery
in his attitude toward “the sex.”
It was easy to catch the personal note in his piquant
allusions to “the ladies,” though an instinct,
which he would probably have called a principle, kept
them always within the bounds of politeness.
Later I was to learn that Miss Matoaca had been the
most ardent, if by no means the only, romance of his
youth; and that because of some headstrong and indelicate
opinions of hers on the subject of masculine morals,
she had, when confronted with tangible proofs of the
General’s airy wanderings, hopelessly severed
the engagement within a few weeks of the marriage.
To a gay young bird the prospect of a storm in a nest
had been far from attractive; and after a fierce quarrel,
he had started dizzily down the descent of his bachelorhood,
while she had folded her trembling wings and retired
into the shadow. That Miss Matoaca possessed “headstrong
opinions,” even the doctor, with all his gallantry,
would have been the last to deny. “She
seems to think men are made just like women,”
he remarked now, wonderingly, “but, oh, Lord,
they ain’t!”
“I tell you it’s those
outlandish heathen notions of hers that are driving
us all crazy!” exclaimed the General, making
a face as he had done over his glass of water.
“Talks about taxes without representation exactly
as if she were a man and had rights! What rights
does a woman want, anyway, I’d like to know,
except the right to a husband? They all ought
to have husbands God knows I’m not
denying them that! the state ought to see
to it. But rights! Pshaw! They’ll
get so presently they won’t know how to bear
their wrongs with dignity. And I tell you, doctor,
if there’s a more edifying sight than a woman
bearing her wrongs beautifully, I’ve never seen
it. Why, I remember my Cousin Jenny Tyler you
know she married that scamp who used to drink and throw
his boots at her. ‘What do you do, Jenny?’
I asked, in a boiling rage, when she told me, and
I never saw a woman look more like an angel than she
did when she answered, ‘I pick them up.’
Why, she made me cry, sir; that’s the sort of
woman that makes a man want to marry.”
“I dare say you’re right,”
sighed the doctor, “but Miss Matoaca is made,
of a different stuff. I can’t imagine her
picking up any man’s boots, George.”
“No more can I,” retorted
the General, “it serves her right that she never
got a husband. No gentleman wants to throw his
boots at his wife, but, by Jove, he likes to feel
that if he were ever to do such a thing, she’d
be the kind that would pick them up. He doesn’t
want to think everlastingly that he’s got to
walk a chalk-line or catch a flea in his ear.
Now, what do you suppose Miss Matoaca said to me on
Sunday? We were talking of Tom Frost’s
running for governor, and she said she hoped he wouldn’t
be elected because he led an impure life. An impure
life! Will you tell me what business it is of
an unmarried lady’s whether a man leads an impure
life or not? It isn’t ladylike I’ll
be damned if it is! I could see that Miss Mitty
blushed for her. What’s the world coming
to, I ask, when a maiden lady isn’t ashamed
to know that a man leads an impure life?”
He raged softly, and I could see that
Dr. Theophilus was growing sterner over his flippancy.
“Well, you’re a gay old
bird, George,” he remarked, “and I dare
say you think me something of a prude.”
Tearing off a leaf from his prescription
book, he laid it on the table, and held out his hand.
Then he stood for a minute with his eyes on Robin,
who was marching stiffly round a bed of red geraniums
near the gate. “It’s time to go,”
he added; “that old dog of mine is getting ready
to root up your geraniums.”
“You’d better keep a cat,”
observed the General, “they do less damage.”
Young George and I, who had stood
in the shadow of the wistaria awaiting the doctor’s
departure, came forward now, and I made my awkward
bow to the General’s bandaged foot.
“Any relative of Jack Starr?”
he enquired affably as he shook my hand.
I towered so conspicuously above him,
while I stood there with my hat in my hand, that I
was for a moment embarrassed by my mere physical advantages.
“No, sir, not that I ever heard of,” I
answered.
“Then you ought to be thankful,”
he returned peevishly, “for the first time I
ever met the fellow he deliberately trod on my toe deliberately,
sir. And now they’re wanting to nominate
him for governor but I say they shan’t
do it. I’ve no idea of allowing it.
It’s utterly out of the question.”
“Uncle George, I’ve brought
Ben to see your library,” interrupted young
George at my elbow.
“Library, eh? Are you going
to be a lawyer?” demanded the General.
I shook my head.
“A preacher?” in a more reverent voice.
“No, sir, I’m in the Old
Dominion Tobacco Works. You got me my first job.”
“I got you your job did
I? Then you’re the young chap that discovered
that blend for smoking. I told Bob you ought to
have a royalty on that. Did he give it to you?”
“I’m to have ten per cent
of the sales, sir. They’ve just begun.”
“Well, hold on to it it’s
a good blend. I tried it. And when you get
your ten per cent, put it into the Old South Chemical
Company, if you want to grow rich. It isn’t
everybody I’d give that tip to, but I like the
looks of you. How tall are you?”
“Six feet one in my stockings.”
“Well, I wouldn’t grow
any more. You’re all right, if you can only
manage to keep your hands and feet down. You’ve
got good eyes and a good jaw, and it’s the jaw
that tells the man. Now, that’s the trouble
with that Jack Starr they want to nominate for governor.
He lacks jaw. ’You can’t make a governor
out of a fellow who hasn’t jaw,’ that’s
what I said. And besides, he deliberately trod
on my toe the first time I ever met him. Didn’t
know it was gouty, eh? What right has he got,
I asked, to suppose that any gentleman’s toe
isn’t gouty?”
His lower lip protruded angrily, and
he sat staring into his glass of water with an enquiring
and sulky look. It is no small tribute to my
capacity for hero-worship to say that it survived even
this nearer approach to the gouty presence of my divinity.
But the glamour of success the only glamour
that shines without borrowed light in the hard, dry
atmosphere of the workaday world still hung
around him; and his very dissipations yes,
even his fleshly frailties reflected, for
the moment at least, a romantic interest. I began
to wonder if certain moral weaknesses were, indeed,
the inevitable attributes of the great man, and there
shot into my mind, with a youthful folly of regret,
the memory of a drink I had declined that morning,
and of a pretty maiden at the Old Market whom I might
have kissed and did not. Was the doctor’s
teaching wrong, after all, and had his virtues made
him a failure in life, while the General’s vices
had but helped him to his success? I was very
young, and I had not yet reached the age when I could
perceive the expediency of the path of virtue unless
in the end it bordered on pleasant places. “The
General is a bigger man than the doctor,” I
thought, half angrily, “and yet the General will
be a gay old bird as long as the gout permits him
to hobble.” And it seemed to me suddenly
that the moral order, on which the doctor loved to
dilate, had gone topsy-turvy while I stood on the
General’s porch. As if reading my thoughts
the great man looked up at me, with his roguish twinkle.
“Now there’s Theophilus!”
he observed. “Whatever you are, sir, don’t
be a damned mollycoddle.”
Young George, plucking persistently
at my sleeve, drew me at last out of the presence
and into the house, where I smelt the fragrance of
strawberries, freshly gathered.
“Here’re the books,”
said George, leading me to the door of a long room,
filled with rosewood bookcases and family portraits
of departed Bolingbrokes. Then as I was about
to cross the threshold, the sound of a bright voice
speaking to the General on the porch caused me to stop
short, and stand holding my breath in the hall.
“Good afternoon, General!
You look as if you needed exercise.”
“Exercise, indeed! Do you
take me for your age, you minx?”
“Oh, come, General! You aren’t old you’re
lazy.”
By this time George and I had edged
nearer the porch, and even before he breathed her
name in a whisper, I knew in the instant that her sparkling
glance ran over me, that she was my little girl of
the red shoes just budding into womanhood. She
was standing in a square patch of sunlight, midway
between the steps and a bed of red geraniums near the
gate, and her dress of some thin white material was
blown closely against the curves of her bosom and
her rounded hips. Over her broad white forehead,
with its heavily arched black eyebrows, the mass of
her pale brown hair spread in the strong breeze and
stood out like the wings of a bird in flight, and
this gave her whole, finely poised figure a swift and
expectant look, as of one who is swept forward by some
radiant impulse. Her face, too, had this same
ardent expression; I saw it in her eyes, which fixed
me the next moment with her starry and friendly gaze;
in her very full red lips that broke the pure outline
of her features; and in her strong, square chin held
always a little upward with a proud and impatient
carriage. So vivid was my first glimpse of her,
that for a single instant I wondered if the radiance
in her figure was not produced by some fleeting accident
of light and shadow. When I knew her better I
learned that this quality of brightness belonged neither
to the mind nor to an edge of light, but to the face
itself to some peculiar mingling of clear
grey with intense darkness in her brow and eyes.
As she stood there chatting gayly
with the General, young George eyed her from the darkened
hall with a glance in which I read, when I turned
to him, a touch of his uncle’s playful masculine
superiority.
“She’ll be a stunner,
if she doesn’t get too big,” he observed.
“I don’t like big girls do
you?”
Then as I made no rejoinder, he added
after a moment, “Do you think her mouth spoils
her? Aunt Hatty calls her mouth coarse.”
“Coarse?” I echoed angrily.
“What does she mean by coarse?”
“Oh, too red and too full.
She says a lady’s mouth ought to be a delicate
bow.”
“I never saw a delicate bow ”
“No more did I but
I’d call Sally a regular stunner now, mouth and
all. Sally!” he broke out suddenly, and
stepped out on the porch. “I’ll go
riding with you some day,” he said, “if
you want me.”
She laughed up at him. “But I don’t
want you.”
“You wanted me bad enough a year ago.”
“That was a year ago.”
Running hurriedly down the steps,
he stood talking to her beside the bed of scarlet
geraniums, while I felt a burning embarrassment pervade
my body to the very palms of my hands.
“Where’s the other fellow,
George?” called the General, suddenly.
“What’s become of him?”
As he turned his head in my direction,
I left the hall, and came out upon the porch, acutely
conscious, all the time, that there was too much of
me, that my hands and feet got in my way, that I ought
to have put on a different shirt in the afternoon.
Sally was stooping over to snip off
the head of a geranium, and when she looked up the
next instant, with her hair blown back from her forehead,
her starry, expectant gaze rested full on my own.
“Why, it’s the boy I used
to know,” she exclaimed, moving toward me.
“Boy, how do you do?” She put out her hand,
and as I took it in mine, I saw for the first time
that she was a large girl for her age, and would be
a large woman. Her figure was already ripening
under her thin white gown, but her hands and feet
were still those of a child, and moulded, I saw, with
that peculiar delicacy, which, I had learned from the
doctor, was the distinguishing characteristic of the
Virginian aristocracy.
“It is a long time since since
I saw you,” she remarked in a cordial voice.
“It’s been eight years,”
I answered. “I wonder that you remember
me.”
“Oh, I never forget. And
besides, if I didn’t see you for eight years
more, I should still recognise you by your eyes.
There aren’t many boys,” she said merrily,
“who have eyes like a blue-eyed collie’s.”
With this she turned from me to George,
and after a word or two to the General, and a nod
in my direction, they passed through the gate, and
went slowly along the street, her pale brown hair still
blown like a bird’s wing behind her.
The General’s sister, young
George’s Aunt Hatty, a severe little lady, with
a very flat figure, had come out on the porch, and
was offering her brother a dose of medicine.
“A good girl, Hatty,”
remarked the great man, in an affable mood. “A
little too much of her Aunt Matoaca’s spirit
for a wife, but a very good girl, as long as you ain’t
married to her.”
“She would be handsome, George,
except for her mouth. It’s a pity her mouth
spoils her.”
“What’s the matter with
her mouth? I haven’t got your eyesight,
Hatty, but it appears a perfectly good mouth to me.”
“That’s because you have
naturally coarse tastes, George. A lady’s
mouth should be a delicate bow.”
A delicate bow, indeed! Those
full, sensitive lips that showed like a splash of
carmine in the clear pallor of her face! As I
walked home under the broad, green leaves of the sycamores,
I remembered the features of the pretty maiden at
the Old Market, and they appeared to me suddenly divested
of all beauty. It was as if a bright beam of sunshine
had fallen on a blaze of artificial light, and extinguished
it forever. Henceforth I should move straight
toward a single love, as I had already begun to move
straight toward a single ambition.