The Rogues’ Gallery went the
way of all good things: it ceased to exist when
the creative spirit was gone. Terry went to Pittsburg,
as we have seen, to find the flaw in the tanning process,
and while he was away Marie attempted to conduct the
academy of anarchism. But she was too much interested
in what is called “life” to make a sustained
mental or moral effort without the inspiring presence
of a man whose central passionate ideas never changed.
The personal jealousies which Terry’s philosophic
attitude and idealism tended to dissipate became, during
his absence, too strong for the bond uniting the “rogues,”
and when Terry returned he found that his little colony
had dispersed and that Marie, unable any longer to
pay the rent, was living with her old friend Katie.
This was, to our idealist, a deep
disappointment. On the heels of his final break
in Pittsburg with society came this sign of woman’s
weakness. Terry might easily have expected it,
but one of the limitations of an idealist is an insufficient
knowledge of realities. To men of his temperament
there is always a distinct shock envolved in coming
face to face with an actuality. Truth is the element
of the idealist, but an abstract truth into which
concrete realities seldom fit. Terry did not,
or tried not to, mind, at this time, this continued
sexual freedom, or rather vagaries, of Marie’s
life; for that fitted into his scheme of personal
freedom: he zealously strove to respect the private
inclinations of every human being. But the least
sign, in any of his acquaintances, of a compromise
with the integrity of the soul, of any essential weakness,
met with no tolerance from him. “He passed
him up,” on the spot, with a scornful wafture
of his hand. That Marie had yielded to the stress
of circumstances, had been unable to hold out in the
Rogues’ Gallery, galled the relatively uncompromising,
exigent idealist. If she had resorted to temporary
prostitution to hold the society together he would
have admired her. But, instead, she weakly sought,
like any merely conservative woman, the shelter of
Katie’s roof. The first seed of the essential
discord which finally resulted, at a much later time,
in their relations was planted thus in this deep irritation
of Terry’s soul; it did not, however, affect
seriously his love for Marie as a person or his interest
in her as a social experiment. But it tended
to make him feel more lonely and to render him more
hopeless of any realisation of the ideal, as he saw
it.
When Terry returned, without a job,
and with no intention of trying for one, and found
Marie living with Katie, he had a long talk with the
two women. Katie was still with her husband,
Nick, but she was willing to quit him in order to
live with and take care of, her darling Marie.
She proposed to Marie and Terry to hire some rooms
and all live together. She would work as cook
in a restaurant and thus support the three of them.
To this eager desire of Katie’s
Terry refused to consent; but he also refused to work.
What was to be done? He was too proud willingly
to live on Katie, and he was principled against labour.
Katie wanted the luxury of her proposed arrangement.
She quarrelled with Terry, but he interested her.
Already she began to look on these two as her superior
cultivated ones, aristocrats, with whom it was a joy
to live and for whom it was a pleasure to work.
To work for them, especially for Marie, she would
drop her old Nick, good dull man, in a moment.
An event which happened just at the
right moment to decide things, finally brought about
the union of the three. One night Terry was drinking
in a saloon, talking philosophy, and quoting literature.
Some rapid lines from Swinburne had just left his
lips when an elderly man, who had been listening to
Terry’s talk approached him and said: “You
are the man I’m looking for, won’t you
have a drink?”
As he spoke, he flashed a fifty dollar
bill over the bar and repeatedly treated the crowd,
all in Terry’s honour.
“Before we separated that night,”
said Terry, telling me the story, “I learned
that the old guy had fifty thousand dollars and that
he would soon go down and out, for he had all sorts
of bad diseases. He knew it himself, but he was
an old sport and he wanted his fling before he died.
He liked me and wanted me to be bar-tender in a saloon
he owned. He lived above the saloon and wanted
a housekeeper to take care of the rooms. So I
told Kate here was her chance. The next day Marie,
Katie, and I moved into the rooms, where the old man
lived, too, and I began my work as a bar-tender.
“I did not regard this job as
work: it was really graft, for I had decided
that my old friend, not long for this world, did not
need all of his money and that I might as well turn
part of it toward Katie, to help maintain a common
house for us all. So, every night, after the day’s
work, I turned the roll that I received behind the
bar over to Katie, who tucked it away in the bank.
I don’t know whether the old guy knew about
it or not, if he did, he did not care. He died
after two or three months, but Katie had increased
her bank account by three or four hundred dollars.”
Terry is strenuous about this story.
He is evidently anxious lest it be thought that he
later became a mere parasite on Katie. He prides
himself on having taught her to steal from an unkind
world, but he does not like the idea that she has
slaved for him without any help in return. Katie
did not prove to be a good pupil. She was not
naturally “wise,” in the slang sense,
but gained what she gained by hard labour. Even
while she was housekeeper for the old guy she felt
she earned all the money she tucked away.
“I worked hard for the old man,”
she said, “and I only got about one hundred
and thirty dollars for all my work. I thought
I made that much.”
There is a slight difference in the
amount received, in Terry’s account and in Katie’s,
but it is clear that it was not very much. It
is interesting and characteristic that Terry wants
it to appear to have been “graft,” while
Katie looks upon the money as honest wages, received
in an unconventional way.
Nick was definitely deserted, and
the new “salon” formed, with Terry and
Marie as the bright particular stars and Katie as the
happy means of living, if not in luxury at least in
independence. They lived on her eight or nine
dollars a week with the comfortable feeling that there
were several hundred dollars tucked away in the bank,
the result of Katie’s savings and Terry’s
ideas.
The salon was of a more select and
higher order intellectually than had been the Rogues’
Gallery. The people who frequented the three little
slummy rooms on the West Side where Terry, Marie, and
Katie lived were mainly anarchists in theory, and
occasionally one or another of them was so in practice.
They mainly consisted of rebellious labourers who had
educated themselves in the philosophy of anarchism.
They had ideas about politics and government and the
relation between the sexes. They were indeed
all “free lovers,” and quite naturally
so; the rebellious temperament instinctively takes
as its object of attack the strongest convention in
society. Anarchism in Europe is mainly political;
in America it is mainly sexual; for the reason that
there is less freedom of expression about sex in America
than in Europe: so there is a stronger protest
here against the conventions in this field as
the yoke is more severely felt. While I was in
Italy and France I met a number of anarchists who
on the sex side were not ostentatiously rebellious.
They were like the free sort of conservative people
everywhere. But in political ideas they were
more logical, sophisticated, and deeply revolutionary
than is the case with the American anarchists, who,
on the other hand both in their lives and their opinions,
are extreme rebels against sex conventions. It
is only another instance of how unreason in one extreme
tends to bring about unreason in the other. Our
prudishness, hypocrisy and stupid conventionality
in all sex matters is responsible for the unbalanced
license of many a protesting spirit.
So there was many an “orgie”
in the salon sexual and alcoholic:
and many wild words were spoken and many wild things
done. But these same extreme people were gentle
and sensitive, too, and emotionally interested in
ideas. They went to lectures on all sorts of social
subjects, they read good books of literature and crude
books on politics, they grouped together and enjoyed
to a certain extent their communistic ideas.
They published their anarchistic newspapers and they
welcomed into their ranks people who otherwise could
have attained to no consolatory philosophy who
would have had no society and no hope. And they
did not do it for the sake of charity hollow
word! but from a feeling of fellowship
and love. You, reader, who may think ill of thieves
and prostitutes too ill of them, perhaps:
if you can come to see that social differences are
of slight value in comparison with the great primal
things and the universal qualities of human nature,
you will perhaps be better if not more “virtuous”
than before, and may be kinder, less self-righteous,
and do far more good, no matter how “charitable”
you are now inclined to be. You have never been
able to arouse the real interest of the proletariat,
for the simple reason that you have never been really
interested in them. But you do arouse their hatred
and their contempt. They ought not, of course,
to hate and despise anything, especially anything
that means as well as you do. But they, though
they are anarchists, are human, all too human, sometimes,
like the rest of us. Here are some of the ideas
of the salon about you, about us, let me say, as voiced
by Terry and Marie. To begin with, Terry:
about our “culture” he writes:
“There is not much doubt about
the sapping influence of culture. It seems that
narrowness of range means intensity of emotion.
This is seen in the savage, the child, and uncultivated
men as well as other animals. I might even go
farther and say we see it in such titans as Balzac
and Wagner, who seek to compress all the arts into
their own particular art. The mind that finds
many outlets generally overflows in dissipation of
energy instead of digging a deep single channel of
its own. And yet to focus our feelings to one
point may be a dangerous accomplishment. For
instance, the fulminating fire of Swinburne’s
radium rhymes, while harmless to himself, may become
dangerous through me or some other ‘conductor.’
Unfortunately, the inability to foretell the ultimate
effect of any given idea produces that form of inhibition
called conservatism, and to this vice people of so-called
culture are especially prone. It takes recklessness
to be a social experimentalist or really to get in
touch with humanity. Our careful humanitarians,
our charitable ones, never do, for they stick to their
conservatism. How we do fashion our own fetters,
from chains to corsets, and from gods to governments.
Oh, how I wish I were a fine lean satirist! with
a great black-snake whip of sarcasm to scourge the
smug and genial ones, the self-righteous, charitable,
and respectable ones! How I would lay the lash
on corpulent content and fat faith with folds in its
belly; chin and hands; those who try to beat their
breast-bone through layers of fat! Oh, this rotund
reverence of morality! ‘Meagre minds,’
mutters George Moore, and my gorge rises in stuttering
rage to get action on them. Verily such morality
as your ordinary conservative person professes has
an organic basis: it has its seat in those vestiges
of muscles that would still wag our abortive tails,
and often do wag our abortive tongues.
“To arouse such fat ones to
any onward flight it may take the tremendous impact
of a revolution. It may take many upheavals of
the seismic soul of man before the hobgoblins of authority
are finally laid in the valley.
“How many free spirits have
been caught and hampered in the quagmire of conservatism.
Yet they have the homing instinct of all winged things:
they return to the soul and seek to throw off the fat
and heavy flesh of social stupidity. Many great
free spirits there have been who possess this orientation
of the race and have brought us tidings of the promised
land. How many thundering spirits have commanded
us to march by the tongued and livid lightning of
their prophetic souls, but how few of us have done
so! Why, to me, this world is a halting hell of
hitching-posts and of truculent troughs for belching
swineherds. The universe has no goal that we
know of unless Eternity be the aim; let us then have
the modesty of the Cosmos, and no other modesty, and
be content to know our course, and be sure to run
it.
“I have tried for freedom, indeed,
everywhere, but I find the ’good ones’
always in my way. How well I know the cost of
my attempt! My heavy heart and my parched and
choking throat, they know! I may indeed beat my
breast alone in the darkness in a silent prayer for
freedom and hear no response from the haunting hollows
of the night. Such hungry freedom I had and have;
and I could share it only with the outcasts of the
world: the fat and rotund charitable ones would
none of it. This freedom is possessed only by
him who is afflicted over much with himself because
he has been crazed by others and made mad by his escape
from them. I suppose I am mad, for to believe
myself perfectly sane in a greatly mad world is surely
a subtle species of lunacy. And yet I am compelled
to act towards others as if they were more sane than
I. To feel as if one were eternally in a court-room
trial, with lean lunatics for lawyers and fat philistines
for judges, this is life.
“I am only one of the human
victims who studies his own malady because he likes
universal history. The world has thrown me back
upon myself and made me at times what is called mad.
After being down-hearted for some time, I grow superstitious
and imagine that some strange and fatal spell is hanging
over us all. Even my own acts and thoughts take
on the futility of nightmare, and Nirvana is very
welcome, if I could be sure of it, but I had rather
stay what I am than start life all over again in some
other shape, with a possible creeping recollection
of my former existence. I have at times startled
intimations that I lived in vain in some former unhappy
time; so I shall try to postpone the eternal recurrence
as best I may.”
Thus Terry tries not only to reject
the laws of “fat” society, but at times
he strives against what he imagines to be the deep
laws of the universe: he tries to stem the tide
of fate, and this in the name of Truth! It shows
how far remote from reality is the truth of the idealist;
and yet such an attitude is often forced upon a sensitive
spirit by rough contact with imperfect society.
Although Terry is the most perfect specimen of the
anarchists I have known, yet they all have more or
less the quality of idealism so marked in him.
Marie’s letters teem with the
spirit of revolt, which of course was the atmosphere
of the salon. With her it is always less ideal,
more personal, more egotistic than with Terry.
In one of her letters she told “how she was
led to try to get a job again, in order to buy some
pretty things.” A few days’ search,
however, disgusted her and brought her back completely
to the mood of the salon, and led her deeply to appreciate
Hedda Gabler, and to condemn American morality
and the “good” people. Of Hedda she
wrote:
“Her character always did appeal
to me, but last night I was in the mood especially
to understand and sympathise with Hedda, to be Hedda,
in fact. For a few hours I was as brave and wonderful
in thought and feeling as she. It was the reaction
from my stupid days in hunting a job. Her disgust
with everything, her search for something new and
different, the fascination she felt for saying and
doing dangerous and reckless things this
I could understand so thoroughly! I was in a very
reckless and discontented mood, but I was able to get
away from myself and become Hedda for awhile; and
this made me think of what a wonderful thing it is,
what a power Ibsen has, to produce such emotions by
merely stringing a few words together. Why, the
very name Hedda, Hedda Gabler! When Eilert says
it, what does it not convey! Terry and I had a
long talk about it, and about literature in general,
so the result was that I became calm, quiet, and reflective as
I love to be, but which I can be only very seldom.
I have an almost continuous craving for something new
and strange, like Hedda. But somehow reading and
thinking about her calmed me. I can find new
emotions in books, and this satisfies me for a time,
but they are never vital enough to last me long.
It is only sterile emotions we derive from literature,
and so I turn again restlessly to life.
“But when I turn to life I find
for the most part people who are unwilling to give
themselves up to life, who will not follow out their
moods, or have none. When I am no longer capable
of abandoning myself, why continue? Most people
seem to me to be dried up. They look as if they
never felt anything, so expressionless, so automatic
are they, as if they had been wound up to walk and
talk, and eat and sleep in precisely the same way
for a certain number of years. This seems to be
the American type. I suppose you have read of
the Caruso affair how he kissed a woman
in Central Park, or wanted to, and the howl it made?
The way they all jumped on him, in the name of morality!
And you remember what happened to Gorky, when he was
here? Why, these American stiffs, what do they
mean by morality? Since they are much too cold-blooded
for immortality, what do they know about it?
This country is composed of pie-eating, ice-water
drinking, sour-faced business people. If one with
emotions comes to this country, he is of course immoral.
If there were no foreigners here, this country would
resemble the North Pole.
“I’m glad I am not an
American in blood, for then I would not be as interesting
to myself as I am now. Sometimes I stand before
my mirror and look at myself for a long, long time;
it always surprises me that I look so commonplace.
Surely, something of what I have in me ought to show
in my face. But I know it’s there, anyway.
I know I’m altogether different from anyone
else, I know it with a kind of fierce joy; not better,
of course, but different.
“For instance, this regularity
and system they talk about! You wrote me to be
more regular and the like of that, if I wanted to sleep
better. You, too, are a typical American!
Just imagine me drinking milk to make me sleep or
grow fat! The thought of such a thing makes me
shudder. Your remark about amorous sport being
a soporific if performed regularly and without excitement
made me double up with laughter. But I am quite
sure that the performance of such a ‘duty’
would not induce sleep. I am only moved to such
things by new lovers, and then I desire not sleep but
wakefulness. And then, too, usually such desires
come to me at noon, not at night, and who ever heard
of sleeping at noon!
“As for the other physical exercises
that you recommend, I do walk along muddy, prosaic
streets and work in our household until I grow weary
and ask the gods what sins I have committed.
My beloved cigarettes, which are as dear to me as
sleep itself, my solace when sleep flies, my comfort,
you would take these away from me! What would
I do without them? I am without them sometimes,
when Terry takes some of my tobacco, and then I am
angry at him! The only plan I have is to have
enough tobacco. Otherwise, I have nothing arranged,
no plan. You think there is something fine in
having logical arrangements for all things. I
have never felt that way. I am only a poor creature
of an hour, of a moment, and have never had plans.
I would love to be where you are now, in Paris, that
home of the planless, the free and joyous and emotional
people.”
What most people think is good, is
worth while, is in good taste, the salon rejected;
partly, of course, in the spirit of mere rejection,
of revolt, but based nevertheless on a higher ideal
of human love than obtains in our society. These
anarchists are not historians or practical people
and they are not as much interested in what society
must be as in what society ought to be; and because
they see that society is not what it ought to be,
because they as unfortunate members of the labouring
class feel that the origin of our society is the root
of injustice, they rebel totally against that society,
rejecting the good with the evil. They passionately
believe that the real and radical evil in our social
world is partly kept there by our very justice, by
our very morality, our very religion kept
there not so much by what is called evil in our society
as by what is called good. They see that much
large kindness is prevented by the morality which is
expressed in the idea of private property, that much
large virtue is denied by the institution of marriage,
that psychological truth and Christian kindness at
once are not considered by the social court, which
looks only to the law to the complex, historical
law, so often meaningless and unjust to human feeling,
so often based upon special “interests”
and ancient prejudices.
Their situation, as proletarian interpreters
of the working class, enables them to see whatever
is true in this view with peculiar vividness.
For, of course, it is to their interest to see this
truth; for truth is only an impassioned statement
of our fundamental needs.
The salon was composed of the poor
and the criminal, and what kept it together was the
human desire to form a society, the norms of judgment
of which should give value to the individual members the
deep need of justification.
There were fakirs in the salon,
unkind people, unjust people, vicious people; there
were mere “climbers,” persons who saw their
only chance for recognition and livelihood in the
espousal of anarchistic ideas. But there were
also kind people, relatively just people, and moderate
ones, honest and strenuous with themselves. There
were none perfect, as there are none perfect in any
society. We shall see how Terry became disgusted
finally with the anarchists themselves, preferring
even insanity and probable death to them.
And Marie’s letters are full
of satire of her companions, of the perception of
their weaknesses and inconsistencies. She never
embraces or rejects them so completely as Terry does,
for she sees them more clearly; therefore she sees
them more humorously, understands them better.
Her letters teem with “psychological gossip,”
so to speak, in which some of her companions seem
portrayed with relative truth. One she wrote
me, while I was seeing something in London, of an anarchist
named Nicoll, who was a friend of William Morris and
still edits Morris’s old paper, is full of both
appreciation and satire of a number of “radicals”:
“An old friend of Nicoll’s
used to talk to me by the hour about him. He,
the friend, an ordinary, rather stupid fellow, once
helped poor Nicoll, got a room for him and gave him
money, after he was released from prison. He
felt proud to think that a man like Nicoll would accept
hospitality ‘from a poor bloke like me,’
as he put it. His friendship with Nicoll has
been the great event of his life. Whenever anything
occurs in the radical movement which recalls ever so
slightly the affair of which Nicoll was the scapegoat,
his old friend will say, in his funny Jewish Cockney,
’That’s always the wey, like Nicoll’s
kise, for example.’ Then he launches forth
into eloquent streams of denunciation, for he does
not regard Nicoll as at all insane, but on the contrary,
‘the finest man ever downed’ by aristocrats
like Turner and Kropotkin.
“This affair has made our friend
pessimistic about anarchism, at times, and inclined
to join the socialist party. His life is made
miserable by the ceaseless debate of his mind and
soul over which of these two philosophies is the best
one for the race. He, suspiciously, is always
looking for another case like Nicoll’s, and is
doubtful about all movements, not only anarchism and
socialism, but all which preach liberty, justice,
and the like, such as Theosophy, Single Tax, Sun Worshippers,
Spirit Fruiters, Holy Rollers, Upton Sinclair’s
Helicot Colony, and Parker Sercombe’s Spencer-Whitman
Centre. All these he has tested and found more
or less wanting. Life grows daily more melancholy
for him, as he continues, on account of ‘Nicoll’s
Kise,’ to probe beneath the surface of all the
cults and movements which profess boundless love for
humanity, truth, justice and freedom.
“P. R., whom you have also
met in London, has got himself into trouble by making
inflammatory speeches in Germany. When they talked
of arresting him, he immediately claimed American
citizenship. But if he ever turned up in America
again they would clap him in jail so quick it would
make his head swim. He, together with McQueen,
was arrested here some years ago for helping start
the New Jersey riots, but he skipped his bonds, to
the great disgust of the bondsmen, who were comrades
in the movement. The movement in the whole United
States, Canada, Europe, and Asia was divided into
factions over this affair, and very nearly went to
pieces. But it was ridiculous to arrest him in
the first place, for he could not incite a feather
to riot. He is one of those flamboyant wind-bags,
with a terrific command of high-sounding phrases, eloquent
gestures, and fine eyes the kind sixteen-year-old
girls admire to think I once loved him,
or thought I did! He is a big little physical
coward and prides himself on being the realisation
of Nietzsche’s Uebermensch.
“The movement in Chicago is
about to resume its usual winter activity by the opening
of the Social Science League this Sunday evening.
There are many cultured people in this city who think
the Social Science League is too crude and vulgar
to grace with their presence, therefore it has been
resolved to establish another society of a more exclusive
order, in which may be discussed important questions
in a more subdued, rational, and artistic way.
It is especially desired that only the ‘artistic’
anarchist be admitted to this new society. The
crude element of anarchism is to be excluded as much
as possible, but what cannot be excluded is to be
subdued. If this is impossible, it shall be expelled.
All illustrious lights will speak there. Terry
has been invited, but has refused on democratic grounds,
and sticks to that ‘bum’ society, the S.
S. League.
“One of the girls who has gone
over to the ‘swells’ is Mary. She
is a factory girl and an important little person,
who prides herself on the amount of culture she possesses,
and the famous people she has met and talked with.
I introduced her once to a literary man, but she did
not know he was so, at the time, and only nodded coldly.
But when she found he was the famous Mr. F
she was angry at me for not putting her ‘next’
and was much distressed, for here was another famous
man whom she had nearly talked with.
“Another girl whom I know has
done a wonderful thing with a certain man. He
is a great, strong German, who guzzles beer and bullies
the other fellow in his arguments about anarchism.
When I first knew him, several years ago, he was married
to a nice non-resistant sort of a girl, whom he treated
awfully bad without intending to. For
he is really generous and good-hearted, but is firmly
imbued with the idea, which he thought was the beginning
of anarchism, that one must be firm and have one’s
own way and do all that one wants to do, without allowing
any scruple of conscience or morals or delicacy to
interfere; that to be a man and an anarchist one must
never allow a petticoat to come between you and your
desire. So he did what he wanted, regardless of
anybody. He was a sort of brutal Overman; one
could not help admiring the kind of barbaric splendour
there was about him. And his poor wife idolised
him and would stand everything from him.
“Now he is here with another
girl. Talk about a change! He has turned
from a lion to a mouse. She is a little bit of
a thing, only nineteen, rather silly and not very
attractive. She is pretty in an outward way,
but her features are unlit by any glimmer of feeling
or thought, or even good nature a slothful,
empty sort of prettiness. She makes him walk a
chalk-line, and it is contemptible and ridiculous and
pitiful to see that big man cringe before this poor,
pretty, empty little thing. Once in a while he
tears himself away, and a glimmer of his old self returns;
for an hour or two he plays his old rôle again, but
if she finds out about it, it is very unpleasant for
him. It is strange how weak women can subdue
at times these big, husky creatures. But the more
they succeed, the more dissatisfied they grow, until
at last they feel contempt for the man they have subdued.
The girl in this case feels that way about this big,
powerful man. If he would assert himself, she
would love him, as she did when she saw how he bullied
his wife and all others. But at bottom we women
are pleased, for it is a triumph for our sex, though
we feel a little jealous because not one of us could
have been the lion-tamer, instead of this weak little
creature. Terry is wild about it, and tries to
lead the enslaved Hercules into evil ways and keep
him out at night, but all these things have lost their
charm for the big man, who now would rather stay at
home with the little girl. She, however, finds
things very tedious, particularly in the day time,
when her big man is at the factory, for she has nothing
to do. So she passes her time at Esther’s
house.
“I would go crazy were I in
Esther’s place. Poor Esther, she doesn’t
know what to do, either, for she cannot be always ill.
She takes pleasure in being an invalid, but she can’t
use this plea for sympathy all the time, people get
tired of it. But Esther is fortunate in having
somebody to whom she can tell all her aches and pains
and their history. She has found a unique occupation,
in scrubbing. She starts Monday mornings and
finishes Saturday afternoons, and then on Monday starts
again. I was with her a week, and that’s
the way she spent the days. Perhaps she is like
Mary Maclain and finds a peculiar inspiration in this
fascinating task. If you were a woman I would
write more about Esther’s scrubbing, which is
very wonderful, but you probably would not understand.
Jay, her lover, comes home from work every evening,
and, after eating the chaste evening meal of rice
and beans, lights his corncob pipe, settles himself
comfortably in his chair and listens carefully to
the description of the aches and pains which have afflicted
Esther that day. These pains continue in spite
of all the beautiful scrubbing. He suggests different
remedies until his pipe is finished, then he calmly
retires to his library and reviews a book and reads
several pamphlets, writes an article for ‘The
Demonstrator’ or ’The Appeal to
Reason’ or some other radical paper and attends
to his voluminous correspondence with the leading
radicals of the day. Then he retires for the
night, also Esther, after the farewell scrub of the
dishes, table, and the rest, and the kids, too, go
to roost. When I was there, I also went to bed,
though it was only about half past eight.
“About half past five in the
morning a most infernal alarm clock emits a most hellish
noise. Jay and Esther tumble from their couch,
light the lamp, and resume their occupations.
After a very chaste breakfast Esther continues her
scrubbing and Jay finishes his correspondence and puts
in the rest of the time until seven o’clock,
when his work in the factory begins, in studying the
new language, Esperanto. Oh, I spent a most charming
and delightful week there; I could hardly tear myself
away.”
One of Marie’s amorous episodes
led her to Detroit, with a “fake” anarchist,
of whom there are many. After a week or two of
dissipation and disillusionment, Marie returned, very
ill, to the “Salon,” where Terry received
her with his usual stoicism, and acted as trained nurse.
Repentant and disgusted, Marie wrote me from her convalescent
bed:
“I am still far from well, but
am much better. My illness was caused by too
much dissipation, which I plunged into for relaxation.
For some weeks previously I had got a particularly
large dose of my environment. Terry and I live
in surroundings which would kill an ordinary person.
Our little home is not as bad in the summer time.
We can have the windows and doors open, but now in
this cold winter we must all live in one room, a very
small room, where there is a stove. The dampness
penetrates right through the walls and the wind comes
through the holes in the window panes. Sundays
are the hardest days for me. Then Kate, queen
of the kitchen, is here, and she delights in cooking
all sorts of things on that day, so for the remaining
six days our home smells of her culinary operations most
abominable, this odour of stale cookery! And
what a mess our rooms are in on Monday morning!
You wouldn’t comprehend, even if I told you.
I have to clean up all this, and I wish I could fly
away every Sunday. At times I get so tired of
this way of living. I hope some day I may find
a large barn with a hay loft: I would immediately
abolish Kate and her cookery and would be comfortable
for once in my life.
“So I ran away, for a time,
partly for relief, partly because I was rather taken
with a Detroit anarchist who was visiting us.
Though he was a comrade, he was really a Philistine,
which I did not see till afterwards. I saw only
that he was young and lusty and wanted a lark, as
I did, so I went with him on an awful tear, and returned
terribly done up, as you know.
“I have been lying here in this
little room for three weeks. I thought surely
I should die, and I was neither glad nor sorry.
It was curious, this sensation of approaching death.
All these days Terry sat opposite me at a table reading
or writing. I could see him distinctly at times,
at other times everything was misty or completely dark,
only his voice reached me from such a long, long distance.
He sat there like an implacable fate, with calm, cold
eyes, gazing above and beyond me. Between two
slow heart beats I felt it was almost a duty to call
him and bid him farewell, but some strange sense of
shyness held me back. I tried so hard to think
of what I might do, and the most grotesque and comical
things suggested themselves. At one lucid moment
I had the brilliant idea of becoming a jockey!
“Other ways of passing my life
revolved ceaselessly in my brain, and now at last
perhaps I have found it. Now that I am better
I am reading Swinburne aloud, in bed. The sound
of my voice carried along with the music of his matchless
rhythms is to me a delight and a wonder. I have
discovered that the Garden of Proserpine should be
read only when one is in a reclining position.
Then one’s voice conveys more perfectly the
weariness of all things mortal and the sweet delight
of rest. I find I must practice breathing more
deeply, if I wish to render the voluptuous, sinuous
lines. Don’t you think this is a great ambition,
to read Swinburne well? I am so glad to find
something to do, something I love to do. Perhaps
I may escape from all by this.
“It is now five days since I
started to write to you, but I still lie on my back
and dream and have not found my place, and never shall.
Swinburne’s never-ceasing, monotonous rhymes
have palled upon me. Even this is sordid, and
then, if so, what is the rest? the daily
life filled with brutish and shallow men and women?
When I can no longer endure poetry and daily life it
is then that I rush into brutal dissipation, from
which I awake sick in mind and body, without hope or
desire for anything but sleep: and then, once
more, the Garden of Proserpine reveals itself to me,
or some other thing of beauty. It is an eternal
round.
“I often think that the only
way for me to be in harmony with the scheme of things
would be to go down into the gutter. Some years
ago during my brief period of prostitution,
I suppose I felt a strange importance.
It was death to me, but something real, too. I
was fulfilling a need of society, a horrible need,
but a need. And then, too, all my men friends
often go to these houses. All the nice, intellectual
men are to be met there men from all ranks
of life men a girl like me could never meet
in any other way. During that brief time, at moments
between a sleep and a drink, I used to have this fancy,
which sometimes makes me shudder now, as I think of
it, and yet somehow seems such a fine satisfying protest a
feeling that some day I would be seen waddling about
the streets of Chicago, known to all the denizens
of the under world as Drunken Mary! I saw myself
fat and repulsive, begging nickels from the passers-by
and perhaps strangled at the end by some passing hobo
for the few nickels in my stocking. And am I
essentially worse than you, or my lady, or anyone
whom Society protects and honours? To me poet
and pimp, politician, reformer, thief, aristocrat,
prostitute are one. Caste and class distinctions
are too subtle for my poor brain and too outrageous
for my heart, which still tries to beat with and for
humanity.”
Terry refers only in a line or two,
characteristically, to this adventure and illness
of Marie.
“She is seriously ill, the result
of a mad adventure. As I exist for others when
they are in pain, I am her trained nurse. She
is now recovering from the drugs, the debauching,
and the raving madness of sleepless nights. I
will give you an account sometime of a strange piece
of magic charlatanism, practiced under the guise of
beautiful art!...
“I think her growing recovery
is largely due to the inability to secure a doctor
to christen her disease. I feel rather worn with
domestic drudgery, cooking, laundering, wrestling
with disease without and demons within. Still,
as a trained nurse who can go sleepless for three weeks,
I do not look upon myself as a failure.”
Marie’s health improved slowly,
due in part to the unsanitary conditions of her home.
She wrote:
“The roof of this miserable
shack leaks all the time. The other day the owner
came around in his automobile. I was speechless.
It made me mad to think of that hound, riding in his
car which we had paid for. Oh, the miserable
people who live in these two houses: old, decrepit
women who earn their living by washing clothes for
others. It would make your blood boil to see
them. And then to see that fat dog in his auto,
accepting money from them and not ever giving them
a whole roof in return. When I saw him I wanted
to say so much. I could only choke. Oh,
when you hear of the brutality of the mob, don’t
believe it. The mob may indeed, under the impulse
of the moment, burn and destroy; but think of the
cold brutality of a judge sitting on his bench and
calmly condemning some poor wretch to be killed, and
this with no emotion. How can this be? The
revolutionists in France were the kindest beings, in
comparison. They had personal injuries to avenge,
and all they did was to strike off an enemy’s
head and that was the end. There was even a chance
of being saved, if the doomed one could find the right
expression, some little sentence that would affect
the brutal (?) people. But this could not happen
before a judge!
“The trouble with the poor is,
they have not enough imagination. They are not
refined in their cruelties. They could never invent
the Bull Pen, but would only quickly destroy.
It is raining to-day, and I have been moving about
trying to find a dry spot where I can continue writing
without having a large splash come down on my nose.
But I guess I’ll have to give it up. Oh,
that cursed landlord! I’d like to do something
to him, not so much for myself as for those poor old
things, they are all rheumatic and stiff, but continue
to live here because, poor souls, they think the rent
is low. Ye gods, the place is not fit for dogs
to live in, and yet he charges all the way from five
dollars up for these filthy, worm-eaten, rotten holes.
And yet the old decrepit inhabitants of this rich
man’s house unbend their stiff knees in profound
salaams whenever he appears.”
But in these leaky rooms of Kate’s
there was often much jollity and gaiety, when the
“Salon” had its sessions, and proletarians
of the pale cast of thought sat and smoked their cigarettes,
drank their beer, kissed their girls, and talked of
philosophy and literature and social evil and possible
regeneration. Then they were always happy, whatever
the subject of their talk. Marie wrote me to my
villa in Italy:
“You write of your beautiful
gardens and seem quite happy. We too are well
and happy in our little old joint; you are the only
one missing to make our circle complete. But
perhaps sometime you can be with us, with a can on
the table and good talk going round, and then I’m
sure you will not miss your Italian garden. Emma
Goldman and Berkman have been visiting Chicago, and
we had some jolly good times while they were here.
She is a good fellow, when she is alone with a few
choice friends. Then she lets herself out.
The other day we gave a social for these two celebrated
ones. Positively, no police, reporters, or strangers
were admitted. Next day there was a hue and cry
in all the papers, dark conspiracy, and so on!
But all we did was to have a great time: everybody
was drunk before morning, and everybody felt kindly
toward the whole world, and would not have cursed
even the greatest ‘exploiter.’ We
finished the evening or rather the morning by an orgy
of kissing. It was quite interesting and innocent.
Smith has at last begun to return my affection.
I think he likes me a little now. At least, he
calls here frequently, and he told me once he would
like to tear me limb from limb! This remark made
me shudder, not unpleasantly. It must be good
to be torn in that way by such a nice man.
“The rose-leaves you sent from
Italy retained some of their sweet smell. The
rose is my favourite flower, and I like to imagine
that perhaps some day my dust will be soil for roses.
Last summer I found a poor little stillborn thing
which had been hastily thrown aside, near a place where
Terry and I were camping. Some poor little ‘fleur
de mal’ which I covered from sight,
in the sand, and marked the place with some stones
and flowers. The next year I found some wild white
daisies growing there. This made a deep impression
on me and strengthened my hope that I, too, might
become soil for roses, flowers of love.
“Henry is a rose, too, in his
way. He is getting more picturesque every day.
At the Emma Goldman social he was ornamented with a
new straw hat, which had a very high crown and narrow
brim with little black ribbons for the side.
Also, an enormous tie, the ends of which fluttered
gaily and coquettishly in the wind. His curling
black locks nearly reached his shoulders, and he has
vowed never again to cut his hair, as a protest against
the conventions of society. I left the social
with him, and as we walked down the street in the
morning he was a target for all eyes. He was
talking philosophy and love to me, but this changed
to fury. He flung his arms about, and shouted
to the crowd: ’Oh, you monkeys, sheep,
dogs,’ and several other kinds of quadrupeds
and birds. Henry is a peculiar man, but he is
as sincere as anybody living and is a friend of that
wonderful man, Kropotkin. When Kropotkin was in
Chicago some years ago a reception was given him at
Hull House. Poor Henry eagerly hastened there
to see his friend dressed in unbecoming
and informal attire. He had not seen Kropotkin
for years, and so anxious was he to meet him again
that he forgot his raggedness. But the dear, sympathetic
settlement workers were decidedly polite in showing
Henry the door. But, at the psychological moment,
Kropotkin appeared, threw his arms around Henry, kissed
him, and carried on like an emigrant who runs across
an exile.”