BEGINNINGS
It was in that red gash of crosstown
brick West Tenth Street that
the new life began. The neighborhood was quaint
and poor, a part of that old Greenwich Village which
at one time was a center of quiet and chaste respectability,
with its winding streets, its old-fashioned low brick
houses, its trees, its general air of detachment and
hushed life. Now it was a scene of slovenliness
and dust, of miserable lives huddled thickly in inadequate
houses, of cheap roomers and boarders, of squalid
poverty a mix of many nations well-sprinkled
with saloons.
But the house was quite charming three
stories, red brick, with a stoop of some ten steps,
and long French windows on the first floor. Behind
those French windows was a four-room flat; beneath
them, in the basement, a room with iron-grated windows.
Into that flat Joe and his mother moved.
The invasion was unostentatious.
No one could have dreamed that the tall, homely man,
dashing in and out in his shirt-sleeves between the
rooms and the moving-van drawn up at the curb, had
come down with the deliberate purpose of making a
neighborhood out of a chaos, of organizing that jumble
of scattered polyglot lives.... In the faded
sunshine of the unusually warm winter afternoon, with
its vistas of gold-dusty air, and its noise of playing
children and on-surging trolleys and trucks and all
the minute life of the saloons and the stores women
hanging out of windows to get the recreation of watching
the confused drama of the streets, neighbors meeting
in doorways, young men laughing and chatting in clusters
about lamp-posts Joe toiled valiantly and
happily. He would rapidly glance at the thickly
peopled street and wonder, with a thrill, how soon
he would include these lives in his own, how soon
he would grip and rouse and awaken the careless multitude....
All was strange, all was new.
Everything that was deep in his life all
the roots he had put down through boyhood, youth, and
manhood into the familiar life of Yorkville was
torn up and transplanted to this fresh and unfriendly
soil.... He felt as if he were in an alien land,
under new skies, in a new clime, and there was all
the romance of the mysterious and all the fear of
the untried. Beginnings always have the double
quality of magic and timidity the dreaded,
delicious first plunge into cold water, the adventurous
striking out into unknown perils.... Did it not
at moments seem like madness to dare single-handed
into this vast and careless population? Was he
not merely a modern Don Quixote tilting at windmills?
Well, so be it, he thought; the goal might be unreachable,
but the quest was life itself.
He had an inkling of the monstrous
size of New York. All his days he had lived within
a half-hour’s ride of Greenwich Village, and
yet it was a new world to him. So the whole city
was but a conglomeration of nests of worlds, woven
together by a few needs and the day’s work, worlds
as yet undiscovered in every direction, huge tracts
of peoples of all races leading strange and unassimilated
lives. He felt lost in the crowded immensity,
a helpless, obscure unit in the whirl of life.
He had fallen in love with Greenwich
Village from the first day he had explored it for
a promising dwelling-place. Here, he knew, lived
Sally Heffer, and here doubtless he would meet her
and she would help shape his fight, perhaps be the
woman to gird on his armor, put sword in his hand,
and send him forth. For he needed her, needed
her as a child needs a teacher, as a recruit needs
a disciplined veteran. It was she who had first
revealed the actual world to him; it was she who had
first divined his power and his purpose; it was she
who had released him from guilt by showing him a means
of expiation.
And yet, withal, he feared to meet
her. There had been something terrible about
her that afternoon at Carnegie Hall, and something
that awed him that evening at the Woman’s League.
Until she had broken down and wept, she had hardly
seemed a woman rather a voice crying in
the wilderness, a female Isaiah, the toilers become
articulate. And he could not think of her as
a simple, vivacious young woman. How would she
greet him? Would her eyes remember his part in
the fire?
At least, so he told himself, he would
not seek her out (he had her address from Fannie Lemick)
until he had something to show for his new life until,
possibly, he had a copy of that magazine which was
still a hypothesis and a chimera. Then he would
nerve himself and go to her and she should judge him
as she pleased.
That first supper with his mother
had a sweetness new to their lives. He ran out
to the butcher, the grocer, and the delicatessen man,
and came home laden with packages. The stove
in the rear kitchen was set alight; the wooden table
in the center was spread with cloth and cutlery; and
they sat down opposite each other, utterly alone ...
no boarding house flutter and gossip and
noise, no unpleasant jarring personalities, no wholesale
cookery. All was quiet and peace a
brooding, tinkling silence. They both smiled
and smiled, their eyes moist, and the food tasted
so good. Blessed bread that they broke together,
the cup that they shared between them! The moment
became sacred, human, stirred by all the old, old
miraculousness of home, that deepest need of humanity,
that rich relationship that cuts so much deeper than
the light touch-and-go of the world.
Joe spoke awkwardly.
“So we’re here, mother ... and it’s
ripping, isn’t it?”
She could hardly speak, but her eyes
seemed to sparkle with a second youth.
“Yes,” she murmured, “it’s
the first time we’ve had anything like this
since you were a boy.”
They both thought of his father, and
the vanished days of the shanty on the hillside, and
his mother thought:
“People must live out their
own lives in their own homes.”
There was something that fed the roots
of her woman-nature to have this place apart, this
quiet shelter where she ruled. It would be a joy
to go marketing, it would be a delight to cook, and
it was charming to live so intimately with her son.
They were a family again.
After supper they washed the dishes
together, laughing and chatting. There were a
hundred pleasing details to consider where
to place furniture, what to buy, whether to have a
servant or not (Joe insisted on one), and all the
incidents of the day to go over.
And then after the dish-washing they
stopped work, and sat down in the front office amid
the packing-cases and the trunks and the litter and
debris. The gas was lighted above them, and the
old-fashioned stove which stood in the center and
sprouted up a pipe nearly to the ceiling and then
at right angles into the wall was made red-hot with
wood and coal. Joe smoked and his mother sewed,
and a hush seemed to fall on the city, broken only
by the echo of passing footsteps and the mellowed
thunder of the intermittent trolley-cars.
“And they call this a slum,” muttered
Joe.
In fact, save possibly for less clear
air and in the summer a noise of neighbors, they might
have been living in New York’s finest neighborhood almost
a disappointment to two people prepared to plunge
into dirt, danger, and disease.... Later Joe learned
that some of the city’s magazine writers had
settled in the district on purpose, not because they
were meeting a crisis, but because they liked it, liked
its quaint old flavor, its colorful life, its alien
charm, and not least, its cheaper rents.
But this evening all was unknown save
the joy and peace of a real home. They went to
bed early, Joe in the room next the office, his mother
in the adjoining room next the kitchen, but neither
slept for a long time. They lay awake tingling
with a strange happiness, a fine freedom, a freshness
of re-created life. Only to the pioneer comes
this thrill of a new-made Eden, only to those who
tear themselves from the easy ruts and cut hazardous
clearings in the unventured wilderness. It is
like being made over, like coming with fresh heart
and eyes upon the glories of the earth; it is the
only youth of the world.
The night grew late and marvelously
hushed, a silence almost oppressive, where every noise
seemed like an invader, and Joe, lying there keenly
awake, seemed to feel the throb of the world, the pauseless
pulsations of that life that beats in every brain
and every heart of the earth; that life that, more
intense than human love and thought, burns in the
suns that swing about heaven rolling the globe of earth
among them; that life that enfolds with tremendous
purpose the little human creature in the vastness,
that somehow expresses itself and heightens and changes
itself in human lives and all the dreams and doings
of men. Joe felt that life, thrilling to it,
opening his heart to it, letting it surcharge and
overflow his being with strength and joy. And
he knew then that he lay as in a warm nest of the
toilers and the poor, that crowded all about him in
every direction were sleeping men and women and little
children, all recently born, all soon to die, he himself
shortly to be stricken out of these scenes and these
sensations. It was all mystery unplumbable, unbelievable
... that this breath was not to go on forever, that
this brain was to be stopped off, this heart cease
like a run-down clock, this exultation and sorrow
to leave like a mist, scattered in that life that
bore it.... That he, Joe Blaine, was to die!
Surely life was marvelous and sacred;
it was not to be always a selfish scramble, a money
rush, a confusion and jumble, but rather something
of harmony and mighty labors and mingled joys.
He felt great strength; he felt equal to his purposes;
he was sure he could help in the advancing processes....
Even as he was part of the divine mystery, so he could
wield that divineness in him to lift life to new levels,
while the breath was in his body, while the glow was
in his brain.
And he thought of Myra, his mate in
the mystery, and in the night he yearned for her,
hungered through all his being. She had written
him a note; it came to him from the mountains.
It ran:
DEAR JOE, You will be glad
to know that I am getting back to myself. The
peace and stillness of the white winter over the
hills is healing me. It seems good merely to
exist, to sleep and eat and exercise and read.
I can’t think now how I behaved so unaccountably
those last few weeks, and I wonder if you will ever
understand. I have been reading over and over
again your long letter, trying hard to puzzle out
its meanings, but I fear I am very ignorant.
I know nothing of the crisis you speak of.
I know that “ye have the poor always with
you,” I know that there is much suffering
in the world I have suffered myself but
I cannot see that living among the poor is going
to help vitally. Should we not all live on
the highest level possible? Level up instead
of leveling down. Ignorance, dirt, and sickness
do not attract me ... and now here among the hills
the terrible city seems like a fading nightmare.
It would be better if people lived in the country.
I feel that the city is a mistake. But of one
thing I am sure. I understand that you cannot
help doing what you are doing, and I know that it
would have been a wrong if I had interfered with
your life. I would have been a drag on you
and defeated your purposes, and in the end we would
both have been very unhappy. It seems to me
most marriages are. Write me what you are doing,
where you are living, and how you are.
Yours,
MYRA.
He had smiled over some of the phrases
in this letter, particularly, “I feel that the
city is a mistake.” Would Myra ever know
that her very personality and all of her life were
interwoven inextricably with the industrial city that
the clothes she wore, the food she ate, the books
she studied, the letter she wrote him, even down to
ink, pen, and paper, the education and advantages
she enjoyed, were all wrought in the mills, the mines,
the offices, and by the interchange and inweaving and
mighty labors of industrialism? The city teacher
is paid by taxes levied on the commerce and labors
of men, and the very farmer cannot heighten his life
without exchange with the city.
And so her letter made him smile.
Yet at the same time it stirred him mightily.
All through it he could read renunciation; she was
giving him up; she was loosening her hold over him;
she was nobly sacrificing her love to his life-work.
And she announced herself as teachable and receptive.
She could not yet understand, but understanding might
come in time.
So in the night he tried to send his
thought over the hills, flash his spirit into hers,
in the great hope that she would thrill with a new
comprehension, a new awakening.... In a world
so mysterious, in an existence so strange, so impossible,
so unbelievable, might such a miracle be stranger
than the breath he breathed and the passions he felt?
And so in that hope, that great wild
hope, he fell asleep in the uneventful beginnings
of the battle. And all through those unconscious
hours forces were shaping about him and within him
to bear his life through strange ways and among strange
people. His theories, so easy as he drank them
out of books, were to be tested in the living world
of men and women, in that reality that hits back when
we strike it, and that batters us about like driftwood
in the whirlpool.