The next thing was to see what could
be done with the other art dealers and the paintings
that were left. There were quite a number of them.
If he could get any reasonable price at all he ought
to be able to live quite awhile-long enough
anyhow to get on his feet again. When they came
to his quiet room and were unpacked by him in a rather
shamefaced and disturbed manner and distributed about,
they seemed wonderful things. Why, if the critics
had raved over them and M. Charles had thought they
were so fine, could they not be sold? Art dealers
would surely buy them! Still, now that he was
on the ground again and could see the distinctive
art shops from the sidewalks his courage failed him.
They were not running after pictures. Exceptional
as he might be, there were artists in plenty-good
ones. He could not run to other well known art
dealers very well for his work had become identified
with the house of Kellner and Son. Some of the
small dealers might buy them but they would not buy
them all-probably one or two at the most,
and that at a sacrifice. What a pass to come
to!-he, Eugene Witla, who three years before
had been in the heyday of his approaching prosperity,
wondering as he stood in the room of a gloomy side-street
house how he was going to raise money to live through
the summer, and how he was going to sell the paintings
which had seemed the substance of his fortune but two
years before. He decided that he would ask several
of the middle class dealers whether they would not
come and look at what he had to show. To a number
of the smaller dealers in Fourth, Sixth, Eighth Avenues
and elsewhere he would offer to sell several outright
when necessity pinched. Still he had to raise
money soon. Angela could not be left at Blackwood
indefinitely.
He went to Jacob Bergman, Henry LaRue,
Pottle Frères and asked if they would be interested
to see what he had. Henry Bergman, who was his
own manager, recalled his name at once. He had
seen the exhibition but was not eager. He asked
curiously how the pictures of the first and second
exhibitions had sold, how many there were of them,
what prices they brought. Eugene told him.
“You might bring one or two
here and leave them on sale. You know how that
is. Someone might take a fancy to them. You
never can tell.”
He explained that his commission was
twenty-five per cent, and that he would report when
a sale was made. He was not interested to come
and see them. Eugene could select any two pictures
he pleased. It was the same with Henry LaRue
and Pottle Frères, though the latter had never
heard of him. They asked him to show them one
of his pictures. Eugene’s pride was touched
the least bit by this lack of knowledge on their part,
though seeing how things were going with him he felt
as though he might expect as much and more.
Other art dealers he did not care
to trust with his paintings on sale, and he was now
ashamed to start carrying them about to the magazines,
where at least one hundred and twenty-five to one hundred
and fifty per picture might be expected for them,
if they were sold at all. He did not want the
magazine art world to think that he had come to this.
His best friend was Hudson Dula, and he might no longer
be Art Director of Truth. As a matter
of fact Dula was no longer there. Then there were
Jan Jansen and several others, but they were no doubt
thinking of him now as a successful painter.
It seemed as though his natural pride were building
insurmountable barriers for him. How was he to
live if he could not do this and could not paint?
He decided on trying the small art dealers with a
single picture, offering to sell it outright.
They might not recognize him and so might buy it direct.
He could accept, in such cases, without much shock
to his pride, anything which they might offer, if
it were not too little.
He tried this one bright morning in
May, and though it was not without result it spoiled
the beautiful day for him. He took one picture,
a New York scene, and carried it to a third rate art
dealer whose place he had seen in upper Sixth Avenue,
and without saying anything about himself asked if
he would like to buy it. The proprietor, a small,
dark individual of Semitic extraction, looked at him
curiously and at his picture. He could tell from
a single look that Eugene was in trouble, that he
needed money and that he was anxious to sell his picture.
He thought of course that he would take anything for
it and he was not sure that he wanted the picture
at that. It was not very popular in theme, a
view of a famous Sixth Avenue restaurant showing behind
the track of the L road, with a driving rain pouring
in between the interstices of light. Years after
this picture was picked up by a collector from Kansas
City at an old furniture sale and hung among his gems,
but this morning its merits were not very much in
evidence.
“I see that you occasionally
exhibit a painting in your window for sale. Do
you buy originals?”
“Now and again,” said
the man indifferently-“not often.
What have you?”
“I have an oil here that I painted
not so long ago. I occasionally do these things.
I thought maybe you would like to buy it.”
The proprietor stood by indifferently
while Eugene untied the string, took off the paper
and stood the picture up for inspection. It was
striking enough in its way but it did not appeal to
him as being popular. “I don’t think
it’s anything that I could sell here,”
he remarked, shrugging his shoulders. “It’s
good, but we don’t have much call for pictures
of any kind. If it were a straight landscape or
a marine or a figure of some kind . Figures
sell best. But this-I doubt if I could
get rid of it. You might leave it on sale if you
want to. Somebody might like it. I don’t
think I’d care to buy it.”
“I don’t care to leave
it on sale,” replied Eugene irritably. Leave
one of his pictures in a cheap side-street art store-and
that on sale! He would not. He wanted to
say something cutting in reply but he curbed his welling
wrath to ask,
“How much do you think it would
be worth if you did want it?”
“Oh,” replied the proprietor,
pursing his lips reflectively, “not more than
ten dollars. We can’t ask much for anything
we have on view here. The Fifth Avenue stores
take all the good trade.”
Eugene winced. Ten dollars!
Why, what a ridiculous sum! What was the use
of coming to a place like this anyhow? He could
do better dealing with the art directors or the better
stores. But where were they? Whom could
he deal with? Where were there any stores much
better than this outside the large ones which he had
already canvassed. He had better keep his pictures
and go to work now at something else. He only
had thirty-five of them all told and at this rate
he would have just three hundred and fifty dollars
when they were all gone. What good would that
do him? His mood and this preliminary experience
convinced him that they could not be sold for any
much greater sum. Fifteen dollars or less would
probably be offered and he would be no better off
at the end. His pictures would be gone and he
would have nothing. He ought to get something
to do and save his pictures. But what?
To a man in Eugene’s position-he
was now thirty-one years of age, with no training
outside what he had acquired in developing his artistic
judgment and ability-this proposition of
finding something else which he could do was very
difficult. His mental sickness was, of course,
the first great bar. It made him appear nervous
and discouraged and so more or less objectionable
to anyone who was looking for vigorous healthy manhood
in the shape of an employee. In the next place,
his look and manner had become decidedly that of the
artist-refined, retiring, subtle.
He also had an air at times of finicky standoffishness,
particularly in the presence of those who appeared
to him commonplace or who by their look or manner
appeared to be attempting to set themselves over him.
In the last place, he could think of nothing that he
really wanted to do-the idea that his art
ability would come back to him or that it ought to
serve him in this crisis, haunting him all the time.
Once he had thought he might like to be an art director;
he was convinced that he would be a good one.
And another time he had thought he would like to write,
but that was long ago. He had never written anything
since the Chicago newspaper specials, and several efforts
at concentrating his mind for this quickly proved
to him that writing was not for him now. It was
hard for him to formulate an intelligent consecutive-idea’d
letter to Angela. He harked back to his old Chicago
days and remembering that he had been a collector and
a driver of a laundry wagon, he decided that he might
do something of that sort. Getting a position
as a street-car conductor or a drygoods clerk appealed
to him as possibilities. The necessity of doing
something within regular hours and in a routine way
appealed to him as having curative properties.
How should he get such a thing?
If it had not been for the bedeviled
state of his mind this would not have been such a
difficult matter, for he was physically active enough
to hold any ordinary position. He might have appealed
frankly and simply to M. Charles or Isaac Wertheim
and through influence obtained something which would
have tided him over, but he was too sensitive to begin
with and his present weakness made him all the more
fearful and retiring. He had but one desire when
he thought of doing anything outside his creative
gift, and that was to slink away from the gaze of men.
How could he, with his appearance, his reputation,
his tastes and refinement, hobnob with conductors,
drygoods clerks, railroad hands or drivers? It
wasn’t possible-he hadn’t the
strength. Besides all that was a thing of the
past, or he thought it was. He had put it behind
him in his art student days. Now to have to get
out and look for a job! How could he? He
walked the streets for days and days, coming back to
his room to see if by any chance he could paint yet,
writing long, rambling, emotional letters to Angela.
It was pitiful. In fits of gloom he would take
out an occasional picture and sell it, parting with
it for ten or fifteen dollars after he had carried
it sometimes for miles. His one refuge was in
walking, for somehow he could not walk and feel very,
very bad. The beauty of nature, the activity
of people entertained and diverted his mind.
He would come back to his room some evenings feeling
as though a great change had come over him, as though
he were going to do better now; but this did not last
long. A little while and he would be back in
his old mood again. He spent three months this
way, drifting, before he realized that he must do
something-that fall and winter would be
coming on again in a little while and he would have
nothing at all.
In his desperation he first attempted
to get an art directorship, but two or three interviews
with publishers of magazines proved to him pretty
quickly that positions of this character were not handed
out to the inexperienced. It required an apprenticeship,
just as anything else did, and those who had positions
in this field elsewhere had the first call. His
name or appearance did not appear to strike any of
these gentlemen as either familiar or important in
any way. They had heard of him as an illustrator
and a painter, but his present appearance indicated
that this was a refuge in ill health which he was seeking,
not a vigorous, constructive position, and so they
would have none of him. He next tried at three
of the principal publishing houses, but they did not
require anyone in that capacity. Truth to tell
he knew very little of the details and responsibilities
of the position, though he thought he did. After
that there was nothing save drygoods stores, street-car
registration offices, the employment offices of the
great railroads and factories. He looked at sugar
refineries, tobacco factories, express offices, railroad
freight offices, wondering whether in any of these
it would be possible for him to obtain a position
which would give him a salary of ten dollars a week.
If he could get that, and any of the pictures now
on show with Jacob Bergman, Henry LaRue and Pottle
Frères should be sold, he could get along.
He might even live on this with Angela if he could
sell an occasional picture for ten or fifteen dollars.
But he was paying seven dollars a week for nothing
save food and room, and scarcely managing to cling
to the one hundred dollars which had remained of his
original traveling fund after he had paid all his
opening expenses here in New York. He was afraid
to part with all his pictures in this way for fear
he would be sorry for it after a while.
Work is hard to get under the most
favorable conditions of health and youth and ambition,
and the difficulties of obtaining it under unfavorable
ones need not be insisted on. Imagine if you can
the crowds of men, forty, fifty, one hundred strong,
that wait at the door of every drygoods employment
office, every street-car registration bureau, on the
special days set aside for considering applications,
at every factory, shop or office where an advertisement
calling for a certain type of man or woman was inserted
in the newspapers. On a few occasions that Eugene
tried or attempted to try, he found himself preceded
by peculiar groups of individuals who eyed him curiously
as he approached, wondering, as he thought, whether
a man of his type could be coming to apply for a job.
They seemed radically different from himself to his
mind, men with little education and a grim consciousness
of the difficulties of life; young men, vapid looking
men, shabby, stale, discouraged types-men
who, like himself, looked as though they had seen
something very much better, and men who looked as
though they had seen things a great deal worse.
The evidence which frightened him was the presence
of a group of bright, healthy, eager looking boys
of nineteen, twenty, twenty-one and twenty-two who,
like himself when he first went to Chicago years before,
were everywhere he went. When he drew near he
invariably found it impossible to indicate in any
way that he was looking for anything. He couldn’t.
His courage failed him; he felt that he looked too
superior; self-consciousness and shame overcame him.
He learned now that men rose as early
as four o’clock in the morning to buy a newspaper
and ran quickly to the address mentioned in order to
get the place at the head of the line, thus getting
the first consideration as an applicant. He learned
that some other men, such as waiters, cooks, hotel
employees and so on, frequently stayed up all night
in order to buy a paper at two in the morning, winter
or summer, rain or snow, heat or cold, and hurry to
the promising addresses they might find. He learned
that the crowds of applicants were apt to become surly
or sarcastic or contentious as their individual chances
were jeopardized by ever-increasing numbers.
And all this was going on all the time, in winter
or summer, heat or cold, rain or snow. Pretending
interest as a spectator, he would sometimes stand
and watch, hearing the ribald jests, the slurs cast
upon life, fortune, individuals in particular and in
general by those who were wearily or hopelessly waiting.
It was a horrible picture to him in his present condition.
It was like the grinding of the millstones, upper
and nether. These were the chaff. He was
a part of the chaff at present, or in danger of becoming
so. Life was winnowing him out. He might
go down, down, and there might never be an opportunity
for him to rise any more.
Few, if any of us, understand thoroughly
the nature of the unconscious stratification which
takes place in life, the layers and types and classes
into which it assorts itself and the barriers which
these offer to a free migration of individuals from
one class to another. We take on so naturally
the material habiliments of our temperaments, necessities
and opportunities. Priests, doctors, lawyers,
merchants, appear to be born with their particular
mental attitude and likewise the clerk, the ditch-digger,
the janitor. They have their codes, their guilds
and their class feelings. And while they may
be spiritually closely related, they are physically
far apart. Eugene, after hunting for a place for
a month, knew a great deal more about this stratification
than he had ever dreamed of knowing. He found
that he was naturally barred by temperament from some
things, from others by strength and weight, or rather
the lack of them; from others, by inexperience; from
others, by age; and so on. And those who were
different from him in any or all of these respects
were inclined to look at him askance. “You
are not as we are,” their eyes seemed to say;
“why do you come here?”
One day he approached a gang of men
who were waiting outside a car barn and sought to
find out where the registration office was. He
did not lay off his natural manner of superiority-could
not, but asked a man near him if he knew. It
had taken all his courage to do this.
“He wouldn’t be after
lookin’ fer a place as a conductor now,
would he?” he heard someone say within his hearing.
For some reason this remark took all his courage away.
He went up the wooden stairs to the little office
where the application blanks were handed out, but did
not even have the courage to apply for one. He
pretended to be looking for someone and went out again.
Later, before a drygoods superintendent’s office,
he heard a youth remark, “Look what wants to
be a clerk.” It froze him.
It is a question how long this aimless,
nervous wandering would have continued if it had not
been for the accidental recollection of an experience
which a fellow artist once related to him of a writer
who had found himself nervously depressed and who,
by application to the president of a railroad, had
secured as a courtesy to the profession which he represented
so ably a position as an apprentice in a surveying
corps, being given transportation to a distant section
of the country and employed at a laborer’s wages
until he was well. Eugene now thought of this
as quite an idea for himself. Why it had not occurred
to him before he did not know. He could apply
as an artist-his appearance would bear
him out, and being able to speak from the vantage point
of personal ability temporarily embarrassed by ill
health, his chances of getting something would be
so much better. It would not be the same as a
position which he had secured for himself without fear
or favor, but it would be a position, different from
farming with Angela’s father because it would
command a salary.