Man is a blind, helpless creature.
He looks back with pride upon his goodly heritage
of the ages, and yet obeys unwittingly every mandate
of that heritage; for it is incarnate with him, and
in it are embedded the deepest roots of his soul.
Strive as he will, he cannot escape it unless
he be a genius, one of those rare creations to whom
alone is granted the privilege of doing entirely new
and original things in entirely new and original ways.
But the common clay-born man, possessing only talents,
may do only what has been done before him. At
the best, if he work hard, and cherish himself exceedingly,
he may duplicate any or all previous performances
of his kind; he may even do some of them better; but
there he stops, the composite hand of his whole ancestry
bearing heavily upon him.
And again, in the matter of his ideas,
which have been thrust upon him, and which he has
been busily garnering from the great world ever since
the day when his eyes first focussed and he drew, startled,
against the warm breast of his mother the
tyranny of these he cannot shake off. Servants
of his will, they at the same time master him.
They may not coerce genius, but they dictate and
sway every action of the clay-born. If he hesitate
on the verge of a new departure, they whip him back
into the well-greased groove; if he pause, bewildered,
at sight of some unexplored domain, they rise like
ubiquitous finger-posts and direct him by the village
path to the communal meadow. And he permits these
things, and continues to permit them, for he cannot
help them, and he is a slave. Out of his ideas
he may weave cunning theories, beautiful ideals; but
he is working with ropes of sand. At the slightest
stress, the last least bit of cohesion flits away,
and each idea flies apart from its fellows, while
all clamour that he do this thing, or think this thing,
in the ancient and time-honoured way. He is
only a clay-born; so he bends his neck. He knows
further that the clay-born are a pitiful, pitiless
majority, and that he may do nothing which they do
not do.
It is only in some way such as this
that we may understand and explain the dignity which
attaches itself to dollars. In the watches of
the night, we may assure ourselves that there is no
such dignity; but jostling with our fellows in the
white light of day, we find that it does exist, and
that we ourselves measure ourselves by the dollars
we happen to possess. They give us confidence
and carriage and dignity ay, a personal
dignity which goes down deeper than the garments with
which we hide our nakedness. The world, when
it knows nothing else of him, measures a man by his
clothes; but the man himself, if he be neither a genius
nor a philosopher, but merely a clay-born, measures
himself by his pocket-book. He cannot help it,
and can no more fling it from him than can the bashful
young man his self-consciousness when crossing a ballroom
floor.
I remember once absenting myself from
civilization for weary months. When I returned,
it was to a strange city in another country.
The people were but slightly removed from my own breed,
and they spoke the same tongue, barring a certain
barbarous accent which I learned was far older than
the one imbibed by me with my mother’s milk.
A fur cap, soiled and singed by many camp-fires,
half sheltered the shaggy tendrils of my uncut hair.
My foot-gear was of walrus hide, cunningly blended
with seal gut. The remainder of my dress was
as primal and uncouth. I was a sight to give
merriment to gods and men. Olympus must have
roared at my coming. The world, knowing me not,
could judge me by my clothes alone. But I refused
to be so judged. My spiritual backbone stiffened,
and I held my head high, looking all men in the eyes.
And I did these things, not that I was an egotist,
not that I was impervious to the critical glances of
my fellows, but because of a certain hogskin belt,
plethoric and sweat-bewrinkled, which buckled next
the skin above the hips. Oh, it’s absurd,
I grant, but had that belt not been so circumstanced,
and so situated, I should have shrunk away into side
streets and back alleys, walking humbly and avoiding
all gregarious humans except those who were likewise
abroad without belts. Why? I do not know,
save that in such way did my fathers before me.
Viewed in the light of sober reason,
the whole thing was preposterous. But I walked
down the gang-plank with the mien of a hero, of a barbarian
who knew himself to be greater than the civilization
he invaded. I was possessed of the arrogance
of a Roman governor. At last I knew what it
was to be born to the purple, and I took my seat in
the hotel carriage as though it were my chariot about
to proceed with me to the imperial palace. People
discreetly dropped their eyes before my proud gaze,
and into their hearts I know I forced the query, What
manner of man can this mortal be? I was superior
to convention, and the very garb which otherwise would
have damned me tended toward my elevation. And
all this was due, not to my royal lineage, nor to
the deeds I had done and the champions I had overthrown,
but to a certain hogskin belt buckled next the skin.
The sweat of months was upon it, toil had defaced
it, and it was not a creation such as would appeal
to the aesthetic mind; but it was plethoric.
There was the arcanum; each yellow grain conduced
to my exaltation, and the sum of these grains was
the sum of my mightiness. Had they been less,
just so would have been my stature; more, and I should
have reached the sky.
And this was my royal progress through
that most loyal city. I purchased a host of
things from the tradespeople, and bought me such pleasures
and diversions as befitted one who had long been denied.
I scattered my gold lavishly, nor did I chaffer over
prices in mart or exchange. And, because of
these things I did, I demanded homage. Nor was
it refused. I moved through wind-swept groves
of limber backs; across sunny glades, lighted by the
beaming rays from a thousand obsequious eyes; and when
I tired of this, basked on the greensward of popular
approval. Money was very good, I thought, and
for the time was content. But there rushed upon
me the words of Erasmus, “When I get some money
I shall buy me some Greek books, and afterwards some
clothes,” and a great shame wrapped me around.
But, luckily for my soul’s welfare, I reflected
and was saved. By the clearer vision vouchsafed
me, I beheld Erasmus, fire-flashing, heaven-born,
while I I was merely a clay-born, a son
of earth. For a giddy moment I had forgotten
this, and tottered. And I rolled over on my
greensward, caught a glimpse of a regiment of undulating
backs, and thanked my particular gods that such moods
of madness were passing brief.
But on another day, receiving with
kingly condescension the service of my good subjects’
backs, I remembered the words of another man, long
since laid away, who was by birth a nobleman, by nature
a philosopher and a gentleman, and who by circumstance
yielded up his head upon the block. “That
a man of lead,” he once remarked, “who
has no more sense than a log of wood, and is as bad
as he is foolish, should have many wise and good men
to serve him, only because he has a great heap of that
metal; and that if, by some accident or trick of law
(which sometimes produces as great changes as chance
itself), all this wealth should pass from the master
to the meanest varlet of his whole family, he himself
would very soon become one of his servants, as if
he were a thing that belonged to his wealth, and so
was bound to follow its fortune.”
And when I had remembered this much,
I unwisely failed to pause and reflect. So I
gathered my belongings together, cinched my hogskin
belt tight about me, and went away to my own country.
It was a very foolish thing to do. I am sure
it was. But when I had recovered my reason, I
fell upon my particular gods and berated them mightily,
and as penance for their watchlessness placed them
away amongst dust and cobwebs. Oh no, not for
long. They are again enshrined, as bright and
polished as of yore, and my destiny is once more in
their keeping.
It is given that travail and vicissitude
mark time to man’s footsteps as he stumbles
onward toward the grave; and it is well. Without
the bitter one may not know the sweet. The other
day nay, it was but yesterday I
fell before the rhythm of fortune. The inexorable
pendulum had swung the counter direction, and there
was upon me an urgent need. The hogskin belt
was flat as famine, nor did it longer gird my loins.
From my window I could descry, at no great distance,
a very ordinary mortal of a man, working industriously
among his cabbages. I thought: Here am I,
capable of teaching him much concerning the field
wherein he labours the nitrogenic why
of the fertilizer, the alchemy of the sun, the microscopic
cell-structure of the plant, the cryptic chemistry
of root and runner but thereat he straightened
his work-wearied back and rested. His eyes wandered
over what he had produced in the sweat of his brow,
then on to mine. And as he stood there drearily,
he became reproach incarnate. “Unstable
as water,” he said (I am sure he did) “unstable
as water, thou shalt not excel. Man, where are
your cabbages?”
I shrank back. Then I waxed
rebellious. I refused to answer the question.
He had no right to ask it, and his presence was an
affront upon the landscape. And a dignity entered
into me, and my neck was stiffened, my head poised.
I gathered together certain certificates of goods
and chattels, pointed my heel towards him and his cabbages,
and journeyed townward. I was yet a man.
There was naught in those certificates to be ashamed
of. But alack-a-day! While my heels thrust
the cabbage-man beyond the horizon, my toes were drawing
me, faltering, like a timid old beggar, into a roaring
spate of humanity men, women, and children
without end. They had no concern with me, nor
I with them. I knew it; I felt it. Like
She, after her fire-bath in the womb of the world,
I dwindled in my own sight. My feet were uncertain
and heavy, and my soul became as a meal sack, limp
with emptiness and tied in the middle. People
looked upon me scornfully, pitifully, reproachfully.
(I can swear they did.) In every eye I read the
question, Man, where are your cabbages?
So I avoided their looks, shrinking
close to the kerbstone and by furtive glances directing
my progress. At last I came hard by the place,
and peering stealthily to the right and left that
none who knew might behold me, I entered hurriedly,
in the manner of one committing an abomination.
’Fore God! I had done no evil, nor had
I wronged any man, nor did I contemplate evil; yet
was I aware of evil. Why? I do not know,
save that there goes much dignity with dollars, and
being devoid of the one I was destitute of the other.
The person I sought practised a profession as ancient
as the oracles but far more lucrative. It is
mentioned in Exodus; so it must have been created
soon after the foundations of the world; and despite
the thunder of ecclesiastics and the mailed hand of
kings and conquerors, it has endured even to this day.
Nor is it unfair to presume that the accounts of
this most remarkable business will not be closed until
the Trumps of Doom are sounded and all things brought
to final balance.
Wherefore it was in fear and trembling,
and with great modesty of spirit, that I entered the
Presence. To confess that I was shocked were
to do my feelings an injustice. Perhaps the
blame may be shouldered upon Shylock, Fagin, and their
ilk; but I had conceived an entirely different type
of individual. This man why, he was
clean to look at, his eyes were blue, with the tired
look of scholarly lucubrations, and his skin had the
normal pallor of sedentary existence. He was
reading a book, sober and leather-bound, while on
his finely moulded, intellectual head reposed a black
skull-cap. For all the world his look and attitude
were those of a college professor. My heart
gave a great leap. Here was hope! But no;
he fixed me with a cold and glittering eye, searching
with the chill of space till my financial status stood
before him shivering and ashamed. I communed
with myself: By his brow he is a thinker, but
his intellect has been prostituted to a mercenary
exaction of toll from misery. His nerve centres
of judgment and will have not been employed in solving
the problems of life, but in maintaining his own solvency
by the insolvency of others. He trades upon
sorrow and draws a livelihood from misfortune.
He transmutes tears into treasure, and from nakedness
and hunger garbs himself in clean linen and develops
the round of his belly. He is a bloodsucker
and a vampire. He lays unholy hands on heaven
and hell at cent. per cent., and his very existence
is a sacrilege and a blasphemy. And yet here
am I, wilting before him, an arrant coward, with no
respect for him and less for myself. Why should
this shame be? Let me rouse in my strength and
smite him, and, by so doing, wipe clean one offensive
page.
But no. As I said, he fixed
me with a cold and glittering eye, and in it was the
aristocrat’s undisguised contempt for the canaille.
Behind him was the solid phalanx of a bourgeois society.
Law and order upheld him, while I titubated, cabbageless,
on the ragged edge. Moreover, he was possessed
of a formula whereby to extract juice from a flattened
lemon, and he would do business with me.
I told him my desires humbly, in quavering
syllables. In return, he craved my antecedents
and residence, pried into my private life, insolently
demanded how many children had I and did I live in
wedlock, and asked divers other unseemly and degrading
questions. Ay, I was treated like a thief convicted
before the act, till I produced my certificates of
goods and chattels aforementioned. Never had
they appeared so insignificant and paltry as then,
when he sniffed over them with the air of one disdainfully
doing a disagreeable task. It is said, “Thou
shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother; usury of
money, usury of victuals, usury of anything that is
lent upon usury”; but he evidently was not my
brother, for he demanded seventy per cent. I
put my signature to certain indentures, received my
pottage, and fled from his presence.
Faugh! I was glad to be quit
of it. How good the outside air was! I
only prayed that neither my best friend nor my worst
enemy should ever become aware of what had just transpired.
Ere I had gone a block I noticed that the sun had
brightened perceptibly, the street become less sordid,
the gutter mud less filthy. In people’s
eyes the cabbage question no longer brooded.
And there was a spring to my body, an elasticity
of step as I covered the pavement. Within me
coursed an unwonted sap, and I felt as though I were
about to burst out into leaves and buds and green
things. My brain was clear and refreshed.
There was a new strength to my arm. My nerves
were tingling and I was a-pulse with the times.
All men were my brothers. Save one yes,
save one. I would go back and wreck the establishment.
I would disrupt that leather-bound volume, violate
that black skullcap, burn the accounts. But before
fancy could father the act, I recollected myself and
all which had passed. Nor did I marvel at my
new-horn might, at my ancient dignity which had returned.
There was a tinkling chink as I ran the yellow pieces
through my fingers, and with the golden music rippling
round me I caught a deeper insight into the mystery
of things.
OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA.
February 1900.