
This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Education of a Personage, The Egotist Becomes a Personage
Previous - Book Two, Chapter IV
Book Two - The Education of a Personage, Chapter V - The Egotist Becomes a Personage
“A fathom deep in sleep I lie
With old desires, restrained before,
To clamor lifeward with a cry,
As dark flies out the greying door;
And so in quest of creeds to share
I seek assertive day again...
But old monotony is there:
Endless avenues of rain.
Oh, might I rise again! Might I
Throw off the heat of that old wine,
See the new morning mass the sky
With fairy towers, line on line;
Find each mirage in the high air
A symbol, not a dream again...
But old monotony is there:
Endless avenues of rain.”
Under the glass portcullis of a theatre Amory stood, watching the first great
drops of rain splatter down and flatten to dark stains on the sidewalk. The air
became gray and opalescent; a solitary light suddenly outlined a window over the
way; then another light; then a hundred more danced and glimmered into vision.
Under his feet a thick, iron-studded skylight turned yellow; in the street the
lamps of the taxi-cabs sent out glistening sheens along the already black
pavement. The unwelcome November rain had perversely stolen the day’s last hour
and pawned it with that ancient fence, the night.
The silence of the theatre behind him ended with a curious snapping sound,
followed by the heavy roaring of a rising crowd and the interlaced clatter of
many voices. The matinee was over.
He stood aside, edged a little into the rain to let the throng pass. A small boy
rushed out, sniffed in the damp, fresh air and turned up the collar of his coat;
came three or four couples in a great hurry; came a further scattering of people
whose eyes as they emerged glanced invariably, first at the wet street, then at
the rain-filled air, finally at the dismal sky; last a dense, strolling mass
that depressed him with its heavy odor compounded of the tobacco smell of the
men and the fetid sensuousness of stale powder on women. After the thick crowd
came another scattering; a stray half-dozen; a man on crutches; finally the
rattling bang of folding seats inside announced that the ushers were at work.
New York seemed not so much awakening as turning over in its bed. Pallid men
rushed by, pinching together their coat-collars; a great swarm of tired, magpie
girls from a department-store crowded along with shrieks of strident laughter,
three to an umbrella; a squad of marching policemen passed, already miraculously
protected by oilskin capes.
The rain gave Amory a feeling of detachment, and the numerous unpleasant aspects
of city life without money occurred to him in threatening procession. There was
the ghastly, stinking crush of the subway—the car cards thrusting themselves at
one, leering out like dull bores who grab your arm with another story; the
querulous worry as to whether some one isn’t leaning on you; a man deciding not
to give his seat to a woman, hating her for it; the woman hating him for not
doing it; at worst a squalid phantasmagoria of breath, and old cloth on human
bodies and the smells of the food men ate—at best just people—too hot or too
cold, tired, worried.
He pictured the rooms where these people lived—where the patterns of the
blistered wall-papers were heavy reiterated sunflowers on green and yellow
backgrounds, where there were tin bathtubs and gloomy hallways and verdureless,
unnamable spaces in back of the buildings; where even love dressed as
seduction—a sordid murder around the corner, illicit motherhood in the flat
above. And always there was the economical stuffiness of indoor winter, and the
long summers, nightmares of perspiration between sticky enveloping walls...
dirty restaurants where careless, tired people helped themselves to sugar with
their own used coffee-spoons, leaving hard brown deposits in the bowl.
It was not so bad where there were only men or else only women; it was when they
were vilely herded that it all seemed so rotten. It was some shame that women
gave off at having men see them tired and poor—it was some disgust that men had
for women who were tired and poor. It was dirtier than any battle-field he had
seen, harder to contemplate than any actual hardship moulded of mire and sweat
and danger, it was an atmosphere wherein birth and marriage and death were
loathsome, secret things.
He remembered one day in the subway when a delivery boy had brought in a great
funeral wreath of fresh flowers, how the smell of it had suddenly cleared the
air and given every one in the car a momentary glow.
“I detest poor people,” thought Amory suddenly. “I hate them for being poor.
Poverty may have been beautiful once, but it’s rotten now. It’s the ugliest
thing in the world. It’s essentially cleaner to be corrupt and rich than it is
to be innocent and poor.” He seemed to see again a figure whose significance had
once impressed him—a well-dressed young man gazing from a club window on Fifth
Avenue and saying something to his companion with a look of utter disgust.
Probably, thought Amory, what he said was: “My God! Aren’t people horrible!”
Never before in his life had Amory considered poor people. He thought cynically
how completely he was lacking in all human sympathy. O. Henry had found in these
people romance, pathos, love, hate—Amory saw only coarseness, physical filth,
and stupidity. He made no self-accusations: never any more did he reproach
himself for feelings that were natural and sincere. He accepted all his
reactions as a part of him, unchangeable, unmoral. This problem of poverty
transformed, magnified, attached to some grander, more dignified attitude might
some day even be his problem; at present it roused only his profound distaste.
He walked over to Fifth Avenue, dodging the blind, black menace of umbrellas,
and standing in front of Delmonico’s hailed an auto-bus. Buttoning his coat
closely around him he climbed to the roof, where he rode in solitary state
through the thin, persistent rain, stung into alertness by the cool moisture
perpetually reborn on his cheek. Somewhere in his mind a conversation began,
rather resumed its place in his attention. It was composed not of two voices,
but of one, which acted alike as questioner and answerer:
Question.—Well—what’s the situation?
Answer.—That I have about twenty-four dollars to my name.
Q.—You have the Lake Geneva estate.
A.—But I intend to keep it.
Q.—Can you live?
A.—I can’t imagine not being able to. People make money in books and I’ve found
that I can always do the things that people do in books. Really they are the
only things I can do.
Q.—Be definite.
A.—I don’t know what I’ll do—nor have I much curiosity. To-morrow I’m going to
leave New York for good. It’s a bad town unless you’re on top of it.
Q.—Do you want a lot of money?
A.—No. I am merely afraid of being poor.
Q.—Very afraid?
A.—Just passively afraid.
Q.—Where are you drifting?
A.—Don’t ask me!
Q.—Don’t you care?
A.—Rather. I don’t want to commit moral suicide.
Q.—Have you no interests left?
A.—None. I’ve no more virtue to lose. Just as a cooling pot gives off heat, so
all through youth and adolescence we give off calories of virtue. That’s what’s
called ingenuousness.
Q.—An interesting idea.
A.—That’s why a “good man going wrong” attracts people. They stand around and
literally warm themselves at the calories of virtue he gives off. Sarah makes an
unsophisticated remark and the faces simper in delight—“How innocent the poor
child is!” They’re warming themselves at her virtue. But Sarah sees the simper
and never makes that remark again. Only she feels a little colder after that.
Q.—All your calories gone?
A.—All of them. I’m beginning to warm myself at other people’s virtue.
Q.—Are you corrupt?
A.—I think so. I’m not sure. I’m not sure about good and evil at all any more.
Q.—Is that a bad sign in itself?
A.—Not necessarily.
Q.—What would be the test of corruption?
A.—Becoming really insincere—calling myself “not such a bad fellow,” thinking I
regretted my lost youth when I only envy the delights of losing it. Youth is
like having a big plate of candy. Sentimentalists think they want to be in the
pure, simple state they were in before they ate the candy. They don’t. They just
want the fun of eating it all over again. The matron doesn’t want to repeat her
girlhood—she wants to repeat her honeymoon. I don’t want to repeat my innocence.
I want the pleasure of losing it again.
Q.—Where are you drifting?
This dialogue merged grotesquely into his mind’s most familiar state—a grotesque
blending of desires, worries, exterior impressions and physical reactions.
One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Street—or One Hundred and Thirty-seventh
Street.... Two and three look alike—no, not much. Seat damp... are clothes
absorbing wetness from seat, or seat absorbing dryness from clothes?... Sitting
on wet substance gave appendicitis, so Froggy Parker’s mother said. Well, he’d
had it—I’ll sue the steamboat company, Beatrice said, and my uncle has a quarter
interest—did Beatrice go to heaven?... probably not—He represented Beatrice’s
immortality, also love-affairs of numerous dead men who surely had never thought
of him... if it wasn’t appendicitis, influenza maybe. What? One Hundred and
Twentieth Street? That must have been One Hundred and Twelfth back there. One O
Two instead of One Two Seven. Rosalind not like Beatrice, Eleanor like Beatrice,
only wilder and brainier. Apartments along here expensive—probably hundred and
fifty a month—maybe two hundred. Uncle had only paid hundred a month for whole
great big house in Minneapolis. Question—were the stairs on the left or right as
you came in? Anyway, in 12 Univee they were straight back and to the left. What
a dirty river—want to go down there and see if it’s dirty—French rivers all
brown or black, so were Southern rivers. Twenty-four dollars meant four hundred
and eighty doughnuts. He could live on it three months and sleep in the park.
Wonder where Jill was—Jill Bayne, Fayne, Sayne—what the devil—neck hurts, darned
uncomfortable seat. No desire to sleep with Jill, what could Alec see in her?
Alec had a coarse taste in women. Own taste the best; Isabelle, Clara, Rosalind,
Eleanor, were all-American. Eleanor would pitch, probably southpaw. Rosalind was
outfield, wonderful hitter, Clara first base, maybe. Wonder what Humbird’s body
looked like now. If he himself hadn’t been bayonet instructor he’d have gone up
to line three months sooner, probably been killed. Where’s the darned bell—
The street numbers of Riverside Drive were obscured by the mist and dripping
trees from anything but the swiftest scrutiny, but Amory had finally caught
sight of one—One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Street. He got off and with no
distinct destination followed a winding, descending sidewalk and came out facing
the river, in particular a long pier and a partitioned litter of shipyards for
miniature craft: small launches, canoes, rowboats, and catboats. He turned
northward and followed the shore, jumped a small wire fence and found himself in
a great disorderly yard adjoining a dock. The hulls of many boats in various
stages of repair were around him; he smelled sawdust and paint and the scarcely
distinguishable fiat odor of the Hudson. A man approached through the heavy
gloom.
“Hello,” said Amory.
“Got a pass?”
“No. Is this private?”
“This is the Hudson River Sporting and Yacht Club.”
“Oh! I didn’t know. I’m just resting.”
“Well—” began the man dubiously.
“I’ll go if you want me to.”
The man made non-committal noises in his throat and passed on. Amory seated
himself on an overturned boat and leaned forward thoughtfully until his chin
rested in his hand.
“Misfortune is liable to make me a damn bad man,” he said slowly.
IN THE DROOPING HOURS
While the rain drizzled on Amory looked futilely back at the stream of his life,
all its glitterings and dirty shallows. To begin with, he was still afraid—not
physically afraid any more, but afraid of people and prejudice and misery and
monotony. Yet, deep in his bitter heart, he wondered if he was after all worse
than this man or the next. He knew that he could sophisticate himself finally
into saying that his own weakness was just the result of circumstances and
environment; that often when he raged at himself as an egotist something would
whisper ingratiatingly: “No. Genius!” That was one manifestation of fear, that
voice which whispered that he could not be both great and good, that genius was
the exact combination of those inexplicable grooves and twists in his mind, that
any discipline would curb it to mediocrity. Probably more than any concrete vice
or failing Amory despised his own personality—he loathed knowing that to-morrow
and the thousand days after he would swell pompously at a compliment and sulk at
an ill word like a third-rate musician or a first-class actor. He was ashamed of
the fact that very simple and honest people usually distrusted him; that he had
been cruel, often, to those who had sunk their personalities in him—several
girls, and a man here and there through college, that he had been an evil
influence on; people who had followed him here and there into mental adventures
from which he alone rebounded unscathed.
Usually, on nights like this, for there had been many lately, he could escape
from this consuming introspection by thinking of children and the infinite
possibilities of children—he leaned and listened and he heard a startled baby
awake in a house across the street and lend a tiny whimper to the still night.
Quick as a flash he turned away, wondering with a touch of panic whether
something in the brooding despair of his mood had made a darkness in its tiny
soul. He shivered. What if some day the balance was overturned, and he became a
thing that frightened children and crept into rooms in the dark, approached dim
communion with those phantoms who whispered shadowy secrets to the mad of that
dark continent upon the moon....
Amory smiled a bit.
“You’re too much wrapped up in yourself,” he heard some one say. And again—
“Get out and do some real work—”
“Stop worrying—”
He fancied a possible future comment of his own.
“Yes—I was perhaps an egotist in youth, but I soon found it made me morbid to
think too much about myself.”
Suddenly he felt an overwhelming desire to let himself go to the devil—not to go
violently as a gentleman should, but to sink safely and sensuously out of sight.
He pictured himself in an adobe house in Mexico, half-reclining on a rug-covered
couch, his slender, artistic fingers closed on a cigarette while he listened to
guitars strumming melancholy undertones to an age-old dirge of Castile and an
olive-skinned, carmine-lipped girl caressed his hair. Here he might live a
strange litany, delivered from right and wrong and from the hound of heaven and
from every God (except the exotic Mexican one who was pretty slack himself and
rather addicted to Oriental scents)—delivered from success and hope and poverty
into that long chute of indulgence which led, after all, only to the artificial
lake of death.
There were so many places where one might deteriorate pleasantly: Port Said,
Shanghai, parts of Turkestan, Constantinople, the South Seas—all lands of sad,
haunting music and many odors, where lust could be a mode and expression of
life, where the shades of night skies and sunsets would seem to reflect only
moods of passion: the colors of lips and poppies.
STILL WEEDING
Once he had been miraculously able to scent evil as a horse detects a broken
bridge at night, but the man with the queer feet in Phoebe’s room had diminished
to the aura over Jill. His instinct perceived the fetidness of poverty, but no
longer ferreted out the deeper evils in pride and sensuality.
There were no more wise men; there were no more heroes; Burne Holiday was sunk
from sight as though he had never lived; Monsignor was dead. Amory had grown up
to a thousand books, a thousand lies; he had listened eagerly to people who
pretended to know, who knew nothing. The mystical reveries of saints that had
once filled him with awe in the still hours of night, now vaguely repelled him.
The Byrons and Brookes who had defied life from mountain tops were in the end
but flaneurs and poseurs, at best mistaking the shadow of courage for the
substance of wisdom. The pageantry of his disillusion took shape in a world-old
procession of Prophets, Athenians, Martyrs, Saints, Scientists, Don Juans,
Jesuits, Puritans, Fausts, Poets, Pacifists; like costumed alumni at a college
reunion they streamed before him as their dreams, personalities, and creeds had
in turn thrown colored lights on his soul; each had tried to express the glory
of life and the tremendous significance of man; each had boasted of
synchronizing what had gone before into his own rickety generalities; each had
depended after all on the set stage and the convention of the theatre, which is
that man in his hunger for faith will feed his mind with the nearest and most
convenient food.
Women—of whom he had expected so much; whose beauty he had hoped to transmute
into modes of art; whose unfathomable instincts, marvellously incoherent and
inarticulate, he had thought to perpetuate in terms of experience—had become
merely consecrations to their own posterity. Isabelle, Clara, Rosalind, Eleanor,
were all removed by their very beauty, around which men had swarmed, from the
possibility of contributing anything but a sick heart and a page of puzzled
words to write.
Amory based his loss of faith in help from others on several sweeping
syllogisms. Granted that his generation, however bruised and decimated from this
Victorian war, were the heirs of progress. Waving aside petty differences of
conclusions which, although they might occasionally cause the deaths of several
millions of young men, might be explained away—supposing that after all Bernard
Shaw and Bernhardi, Bonar Law and Bethmann-Hollweg were mutual heirs of progress
if only in agreeing against the ducking of witches—waiving the antitheses and
approaching individually these men who seemed to be the leaders, he was repelled
by the discrepancies and contradictions in the men themselves.
There was, for example, Thornton Hancock, respected by half the intellectual
world as an authority on life, a man who had verified and believed the code he
lived by, an educator of educators, an adviser to Presidents—yet Amory knew that
this man had, in his heart, leaned on the priest of another religion.
And Monsignor, upon whom a cardinal rested, had moments of strange and horrible
insecurity—inexplicable in a religion that explained even disbelief in terms of
its own faith: if you doubted the devil it was the devil that made you doubt
him. Amory had seen Monsignor go to the houses of stolid philistines, read
popular novels furiously, saturate himself in routine, to escape from that
horror.
And this priest, a little wiser, somewhat purer, had been, Amory knew, not
essentially older than he.
Amory was alone—he had escaped from a small enclosure into a great labyrinth. He
was where Goethe was when he began “Faust”; he was where Conrad was when he
wrote “Almayer’s Folly.”
Amory said to himself that there were essentially two sorts of people who
through natural clarity or disillusion left the enclosure and sought the
labyrinth. There were men like Wells and Plato, who had, half unconsciously, a
strange, hidden orthodoxy, who would accept for themselves only what could be
accepted for all men—incurable romanticists who never, for all their efforts,
could enter the labyrinth as stark souls; there were on the other hand
sword-like pioneering personalities, Samuel Butler, Renan, Voltaire, who
progressed much slower, yet eventually much further, not in the direct
pessimistic line of speculative philosophy but concerned in the eternal attempt
to attach a positive value to life....
Amory stopped. He began for the first time in his life to have a strong distrust
of all generalities and epigrams. They were too easy, too dangerous to the
public mind. Yet all thought usually reached the public after thirty years in
some such form: Benson and Chesterton had popularized Huysmans and Newman; Shaw
had sugar-coated Nietzsche and Ibsen and Schopenhauer. The man in the street
heard the conclusions of dead genius through some one else’s clever paradoxes
and didactic epigrams.
Life was a damned muddle... a football game with every one off-side and the
referee gotten rid of—every one claiming the referee would have been on his
side....
Progress was a labyrinth... people plunging blindly in and then rushing wildly
back, shouting that they had found it... the invisible king—the elan vital—the
principle of evolution... writing a book, starting a war, founding a school....
Amory, even had he not been a selfish man, would have started all inquiries with
himself. He was his own best example—sitting in the rain, a human creature of
sex and pride, foiled by chance and his own temperament of the balm of love and
children, preserved to help in building up the living consciousness of the race.
In self-reproach and loneliness and disillusion he came to the entrance of the
labyrinth.
Another dawn flung itself across the river, a belated taxi hurried along the
street, its lamps still shining like burning eyes in a face white from a night’s
carouse. A melancholy siren sounded far down the river.
MONSIGNOR
Amory kept thinking how Monsignor would have enjoyed his own funeral. It was
magnificently Catholic and liturgical. Bishop O’Neill sang solemn high mass and
the cardinal gave the final absolutions. Thornton Hancock, Mrs. Lawrence, the
British and Italian ambassadors, the papal delegate, and a host of friends and
priests were there—yet the inexorable shears had cut through all these threads
that Monsignor had gathered into his hands. To Amory it was a haunting grief to
see him lying in his coffin, with closed hands upon his purple vestments. His
face had not changed, and, as he never knew he was dying, it showed no pain or
fear. It was Amory’s dear old friend, his and the others’—for the church was
full of people with daft, staring faces, the most exalted seeming the most
stricken.
The cardinal, like an archangel in cope and mitre, sprinkled the holy water; the
organ broke into sound; the choir began to sing the Requiem Eternam.
All these people grieved because they had to some extent depended upon
Monsignor. Their grief was more than sentiment for the “crack in his voice or a
certain break in his walk,” as Wells put it. These people had leaned on
Monsignor’s faith, his way of finding cheer, of making religion a thing of
lights and shadows, making all light and shadow merely aspects of God. People
felt safe when he was near.
Of Amory’s attempted sacrifice had been born merely the full realization of his
disillusion, but of Monsignor’s funeral was born the romantic elf who was to
enter the labyrinth with him. He found something that he wanted, had always
wanted and always would want—not to be admired, as he had feared; not to be
loved, as he had made himself believe; but to be necessary to people, to be
indispensable; he remembered the sense of security he had found in Burne.
Life opened up in one of its amazing bursts of radiance and Amory suddenly and
permanently rejected an old epigram that had been playing listlessly in his
mind: “Very few things matter and nothing matters very much.”
On the contrary, Amory felt an immense desire to give people a sense of
security.
THE BIG MAN WITH GOGGLES
On the day that Amory started on his walk to Princeton the sky was a colorless
vault, cool, high and barren of the threat of rain. It was a gray day, that
least fleshly of all weathers; a day of dreams and far hopes and clear visions.
It was a day easily associated with those abstract truths and purities that
dissolve in the sunshine or fade out in mocking laughter by the light of the
moon. The trees and clouds were carved in classical severity; the sounds of the
countryside had harmonized to a monotone, metallic as a trumpet, breathless as
the Grecian urn.
The day had put Amory in such a contemplative mood that he caused much annoyance
to several motorists who were forced to slow up considerably or else run him
down. So engrossed in his thoughts was he that he was scarcely surprised at that
strange phenomenon—cordiality manifested within fifty miles of Manhattan—when a
passing car slowed down beside him and a voice hailed him. He looked up and saw
a magnificent Locomobile in which sat two middle-aged men, one of them small and
anxious looking, apparently an artificial growth on the other who was large and
begoggled and imposing.
“Do you want a lift?” asked the apparently artificial growth, glancing from the
corner of his eye at the imposing man as if for some habitual, silent
corroboration.
“You bet I do. Thanks.”
The chauffeur swung open the door, and, climbing in, Amory settled himself in
the middle of the back seat. He took in his companions curiously. The chief
characteristic of the big man seemed to be a great confidence in himself set off
against a tremendous boredom with everything around him. That part of his face
which protruded under the goggles was what is generally termed “strong”; rolls
of not undignified fat had collected near his chin; somewhere above was a wide
thin mouth and the rough model for a Roman nose, and, below, his shoulders
collapsed without a struggle into the powerful bulk of his chest and belly. He
was excellently and quietly dressed. Amory noticed that he was inclined to stare
straight at the back of the chauffeur’s head as if speculating steadily but
hopelessly some baffling hirsute problem.
The smaller man was remarkable only for his complete submersion in the
personality of the other. He was of that lower secretarial type who at forty
have engraved upon their business cards: “Assistant to the President,” and
without a sigh consecrate the rest of their lives to second-hand mannerisms.
“Going far?” asked the smaller man in a pleasant disinterested way.
“Quite a stretch.”
“Hiking for exercise?”
“No,” responded Amory succinctly, “I’m walking because I can’t afford to ride.”
“Oh.”
Then again:
“Are you looking for work? Because there’s lots of work,” he continued rather
testily. “All this talk of lack of work. The West is especially short of labor.”
He expressed the West with a sweeping, lateral gesture. Amory nodded politely.
“Have you a trade?”
No—Amory had no trade.
“Clerk, eh?”
No—Amory was not a clerk.
“Whatever your line is,” said the little man, seeming to agree wisely with
something Amory had said, “now is the time of opportunity and business
openings.” He glanced again toward the big man, as a lawyer grilling a witness
glances involuntarily at the jury.
Amory decided that he must say something and for the life of him could think of
only one thing to say.
“Of course I want a great lot of money—”
The little man laughed mirthlessly but conscientiously.
“That’s what every one wants nowadays, but they don’t want to work for it.”
“A very natural, healthy desire. Almost all normal people want to be rich
without great effort—except the financiers in problem plays, who want to ‘crash
their way through.’ Don’t you want easy money?”
“Of course not,” said the secretary indignantly.
“But,” continued Amory disregarding him, “being very poor at present I am
contemplating socialism as possibly my forte.”
Both men glanced at him curiously.
“These bomb throwers—” The little man ceased as words lurched ponderously from
the big man’s chest.
“If I thought you were a bomb thrower I’d run you over to the Newark jail.
That’s what I think of Socialists.”
Amory laughed.
“What are you,” asked the big man, “one of these parlor Bolsheviks, one of these
idealists? I must say I fail to see the difference. The idealists loaf around
and write the stuff that stirs up the poor immigrants.”
“Well,” said Amory, “if being an idealist is both safe and lucrative, I might
try it.”
“What’s your difficulty? Lost your job?”
“Not exactly, but—well, call it that.”
“What was it?”
“Writing copy for an advertising agency.”
“Lots of money in advertising.”
Amory smiled discreetly.
“Oh, I’ll admit there’s money in it eventually. Talent doesn’t starve any more.
Even art gets enough to eat these days. Artists draw your magazine covers, write
your advertisements, hash out rag-time for your theatres. By the great
commercializing of printing you’ve found a harmless, polite occupation for every
genius who might have carved his own niche. But beware the artist who’s an
intellectual also. The artist who doesn’t fit—the Rousseau, the Tolstoi, the
Samuel Butler, the Amory Blaine—”
“Who’s he?” demanded the little man suspiciously.
“Well,” said Amory, “he’s a—he’s an intellectual personage not very well known
at present.”
The little man laughed his conscientious laugh, and stopped rather suddenly as
Amory’s burning eyes turned on him.
“What are you laughing at?”
“These intellectual people—”
“Do you know what it means?”
The little man’s eyes twitched nervously.
“Why, it usually means—”
“It always means brainy and well-educated,” interrupted Amory. “It means having
an active knowledge of the race’s experience.” Amory decided to be very rude. He
turned to the big man. “The young man,” he indicated the secretary with his
thumb, and said young man as one says bell-boy, with no implication of youth,
“has the usual muddled connotation of all popular words.”
“You object to the fact that capital controls printing?” said the big man,
fixing him with his goggles.
“Yes—and I object to doing their mental work for them. It seemed to me that the
root of all the business I saw around me consisted in overworking and
underpaying a bunch of dubs who submitted to it.”
“Here now,” said the big man, “you’ll have to admit that the laboring man is
certainly highly paid—five and six hour days—it’s ridiculous. You can’t buy an
honest day’s work from a man in the trades-unions.”
“You’ve brought it on yourselves,” insisted Amory. “You people never make
concessions until they’re wrung out of you.”
“What people?”
“Your class; the class I belonged to until recently; those who by inheritance or
industry or brains or dishonesty have become the moneyed class.”
“Do you imagine that if that road-mender over there had the money he’d be any
more willing to give it up?”
“No, but what’s that got to do with it?”
The older man considered.
“No, I’ll admit it hasn’t. It rather sounds as if it had though.”
“In fact,” continued Amory, “he’d be worse. The lower classes are narrower, less
pleasant and personally more selfish—certainly more stupid. But all that has
nothing to do with the question.”
“Just exactly what is the question?”
Here Amory had to pause to consider exactly what the question was.
AMORY COINS A PHRASE
“When life gets hold of a brainy man of fair education,” began Amory slowly,
“that is, when he marries he becomes, nine times out of ten, a conservative as
far as existing social conditions are concerned. He may be unselfish,
kind-hearted, even just in his own way, but his first job is to provide and to
hold fast. His wife shoos him on, from ten thousand a year to twenty thousand a
year, on and on, in an enclosed treadmill that hasn’t any windows. He’s done!
Life’s got him! He’s no help! He’s a spiritually married man.”
Amory paused and decided that it wasn’t such a bad phrase.
“Some men,” he continued, “escape the grip. Maybe their wives have no social
ambitions; maybe they’ve hit a sentence or two in a ‘dangerous book’ that
pleased them; maybe they started on the treadmill as I did and were knocked off.
Anyway, they’re the congressmen you can’t bribe, the Presidents who aren’t
politicians, the writers, speakers, scientists, statesmen who aren’t just
popular grab-bags for a half-dozen women and children.”
“He’s the natural radical?”
“Yes,” said Amory. “He may vary from the disillusioned critic like old Thornton
Hancock, all the way to Trotsky. Now this spiritually unmarried man hasn’t
direct power, for unfortunately the spiritually married man, as a by-product of
his money chase, has garnered in the great newspaper, the popular magazine, the
influential weekly—so that Mrs. Newspaper, Mrs. Magazine, Mrs. Weekly can have a
better limousine than those oil people across the street or those cement people
’round the corner.”
“Why not?”
“It makes wealthy men the keepers of the world’s intellectual conscience and, of
course, a man who has money under one set of social institutions quite naturally
can’t risk his family’s happiness by letting the clamor for another appear in
his newspaper.”
“But it appears,” said the big man.
“Where?—in the discredited mediums. Rotten cheap-papered weeklies.”
“All right—go on.”
“Well, my first point is that through a mixture of conditions of which the
family is the first, there are these two sorts of brains. One sort takes human
nature as it finds it, uses its timidity, its weakness, and its strength for its
own ends. Opposed is the man who, being spiritually unmarried, continually seeks
for new systems that will control or counteract human nature. His problem is
harder. It is not life that’s complicated, it’s the struggle to guide and
control life. That is his struggle. He is a part of progress—the spiritually
married man is not.”
The big man produced three big cigars, and proffered them on his huge palm. The
little man took one, Amory shook his head and reached for a cigarette.
“Go on talking,” said the big man. “I’ve been wanting to hear one of you
fellows.”
GOING FASTER
“Modern life,” began Amory again, “changes no longer century by century, but
year by year, ten times faster than it ever has before—populations doubling,
civilizations unified more closely with other civilizations, economic
interdependence, racial questions, and—we’re dawdling along. My idea is that
we’ve got to go very much faster.” He slightly emphasized the last words and the
chauffeur unconsciously increased the speed of the car. Amory and the big man
laughed; the little man laughed, too, after a pause.
“Every child,” said Amory, “should have an equal start. If his father can endow
him with a good physique and his mother with some common sense in his early
education, that should be his heritage. If the father can’t give him a good
physique, if the mother has spent in chasing men the years in which she should
have been preparing herself to educate her children, so much the worse for the
child. He shouldn’t be artificially bolstered up with money, sent to these
horrible tutoring schools, dragged through college... Every boy ought to have an
equal start.”
“All right,” said the big man, his goggles indicating neither approval nor
objection.
“Next I’d have a fair trial of government ownership of all industries.”
“That’s been proven a failure.”
“No—it merely failed. If we had government ownership we’d have the best
analytical business minds in the government working for something besides
themselves. We’d have Mackays instead of Burlesons; we’d have Morgans in the
Treasury Department; we’d have Hills running interstate commerce. We’d have the
best lawyers in the Senate.”
“They wouldn’t give their best efforts for nothing. McAdoo—”
“No,” said Amory, shaking his head. “Money isn’t the only stimulus that brings
out the best that’s in a man, even in America.”
“You said a while ago that it was.”
“It is, right now. But if it were made illegal to have more than a certain
amount the best men would all flock for the one other reward which attracts
humanity—honor.”
The big man made a sound that was very like boo.
“That’s the silliest thing you’ve said yet.”
“No, it isn’t silly. It’s quite plausible. If you’d gone to college you’d have
been struck by the fact that the men there would work twice as hard for any one
of a hundred petty honors as those other men did who were earning their way
through.”
“Kids—child’s play!” scoffed his antagonist.
“Not by a darned sight—unless we’re all children. Did you ever see a grown man
when he’s trying for a secret society—or a rising family whose name is up at
some club? They’ll jump when they hear the sound of the word. The idea that to
make a man work you’ve got to hold gold in front of his eyes is a growth, not an
axiom. We’ve done that for so long that we’ve forgotten there’s any other way.
We’ve made a world where that’s necessary. Let me tell you”—Amory became
emphatic—“if there were ten men insured against either wealth or starvation, and
offered a green ribbon for five hours’ work a day and a blue ribbon for ten
hours’ work a day, nine out of ten of them would be trying for the blue ribbon.
That competitive instinct only wants a badge. If the size of their house is the
badge they’ll sweat their heads off for that. If it’s only a blue ribbon, I damn
near believe they’ll work just as hard. They have in other ages.”
“I don’t agree with you.”
“I know it,” said Amory nodding sadly. “It doesn’t matter any more though. I
think these people are going to come and take what they want pretty soon.”
A fierce hiss came from the little man.
“Machine-guns!”
“Ah, but you’ve taught them their use.”
The big man shook his head.
“In this country there are enough property owners not to permit that sort of
thing.”
Amory wished he knew the statistics of property owners and non-property owners;
he decided to change the subject.
But the big man was aroused.
“When you talk of ‘taking things away,’ you’re on dangerous ground.”
“How can they get it without taking it? For years people have been stalled off
with promises. Socialism may not be progress, but the threat of the red flag is
certainly the inspiring force of all reform. You’ve got to be sensational to get
attention.”
“Russia is your example of a beneficent violence, I suppose?”
“Quite possibly,” admitted Amory. “Of course, it’s overflowing just as the
French Revolution did, but I’ve no doubt that it’s really a great experiment and
well worth while.”
“Don’t you believe in moderation?”
“You won’t listen to the moderates, and it’s almost too late. The truth is that
the public has done one of those startling and amazing things that they do about
once in a hundred years. They’ve seized an idea.”
“What is it?”
“That however the brains and abilities of men may differ, their stomachs are
essentially the same.”
THE LITTLE MAN GETS HIS
“If you took all the money in the world,” said the little man with much
profundity, “and divided it up in equ—”
“Oh, shut up!” said Amory briskly and, paying no attention to the little man’s
enraged stare, he went on with his argument.
“The human stomach—” he began; but the big man interrupted rather impatiently.
“I’m letting you talk, you know,” he said, “but please avoid stomachs. I’ve been
feeling mine all day. Anyway, I don’t agree with one-half you’ve said.
Government ownership is the basis of your whole argument, and it’s invariably a
beehive of corruption. Men won’t work for blue ribbons, that’s all rot.”
When he ceased the little man spoke up with a determined nod, as if resolved
this time to have his say out.
“There are certain things which are human nature,” he asserted with an owl-like
look, “which always have been and always will be, which can’t be changed.”
Amory looked from the small man to the big man helplessly.
“Listen to that! That’s what makes me discouraged with progress. Listen to that!
I can name offhand over one hundred natural phenomena that have been changed by
the will of man—a hundred instincts in man that have been wiped out or are now
held in check by civilization. What this man here just said has been for
thousands of years the last refuge of the associated mutton-heads of the world.
It negates the efforts of every scientist, statesman, moralist, reformer,
doctor, and philosopher that ever gave his life to humanity’s service. It’s a
flat impeachment of all that’s worth while in human nature. Every person over
twenty-five years old who makes that statement in cold blood ought to be
deprived of the franchise.”
The little man leaned back against the seat, his face purple with rage. Amory
continued, addressing his remarks to the big man.
“These quarter-educated, stale-minded men such as your friend here, who think
they think, every question that comes up, you’ll find his type in the usual
ghastly muddle. One minute it’s ‘the brutality and inhumanity of these
Prussians’—the next it’s ‘we ought to exterminate the whole German people.’ They
always believe that ‘things are in a bad way now,’ but they ‘haven’t any faith
in these idealists.’ One minute they call Wilson ‘just a dreamer, not
practical’—a year later they rail at him for making his dreams realities. They
haven’t clear logical ideas on one single subject except a sturdy, stolid
opposition to all change. They don’t think uneducated people should be highly
paid, but they won’t see that if they don’t pay the uneducated people their
children are going to be uneducated too, and we’re going round and round in a
circle. That—is the great middle class!”
The big man with a broad grin on his face leaned over and smiled at the little
man.
“You’re catching it pretty heavy, Garvin; how do you feel?”
The little man made an attempt to smile and act as if the whole matter were so
ridiculous as to be beneath notice. But Amory was not through.
“The theory that people are fit to govern themselves rests on this man. If he
can be educated to think clearly, concisely, and logically, freed of his habit
of taking refuge in platitudes and prejudices and sentimentalisms, then I’m a
militant Socialist. If he can’t, then I don’t think it matters much what happens
to man or his systems, now or hereafter.”
“I am both interested and amused,” said the big man. “You are very young.”
“Which may only mean that I have neither been corrupted nor made timid by
contemporary experience. I possess the most valuable experience, the experience
of the race, for in spite of going to college I’ve managed to pick up a good
education.”
“You talk glibly.”
“It’s not all rubbish,” cried Amory passionately. “This is the first time in my
life I’ve argued Socialism. It’s the only panacea I know. I’m restless. My whole
generation is restless. I’m sick of a system where the richest man gets the most
beautiful girl if he wants her, where the artist without an income has to sell
his talents to a button manufacturer. Even if I had no talents I’d not be
content to work ten years, condemned either to celibacy or a furtive indulgence,
to give some man’s son an automobile.”
“But, if you’re not sure—”
“That doesn’t matter,” exclaimed Amory. “My position couldn’t be worse. A social
revolution might land me on top. Of course I’m selfish. It seems to me I’ve been
a fish out of water in too many outworn systems. I was probably one of the two
dozen men in my class at college who got a decent education; still they’d let
any well-tutored flathead play football and I was ineligible, because some silly
old men thought we should all profit by conic sections. I loathed the army. I
loathed business. I’m in love with change and I’ve killed my conscience—”
“So you’ll go along crying that we must go faster.”
“That, at least, is true,” Amory insisted. “Reform won’t catch up to the needs
of civilization unless it’s made to. A laissez-faire policy is like spoiling a
child by saying he’ll turn out all right in the end. He will—if he’s made to.”
“But you don’t believe all this Socialist patter you talk.”
“I don’t know. Until I talked to you I hadn’t thought seriously about it. I
wasn’t sure of half of what I said.”
“You puzzle me,” said the big man, “but you’re all alike. They say Bernard Shaw,
in spite of his doctrines, is the most exacting of all dramatists about his
royalties. To the last farthing.”
“Well,” said Amory, “I simply state that I’m a product of a versatile mind in a
restless generation—with every reason to throw my mind and pen in with the
radicals. Even if, deep in my heart, I thought we were all blind atoms in a
world as limited as a stroke of a pendulum, I and my sort would struggle against
tradition; try, at least, to displace old cants with new ones. I’ve thought I
was right about life at various times, but faith is difficult. One thing I know.
If living isn’t a seeking for the grail it may be a damned amusing game.”
For a minute neither spoke and then the big man asked:
“What was your university?”
“Princeton.”
The big man became suddenly interested; the expression of his goggles altered
slightly.
“I sent my son to Princeton.”
“Did you?”
“Perhaps you knew him. His name was Jesse Ferrenby. He was killed last year in
France.”
“I knew him very well. In fact, he was one of my particular friends.”
“He was—a—quite a fine boy. We were very close.”
Amory began to perceive a resemblance between the father and the dead son and he
told himself that there had been all along a sense of familiarity. Jesse
Ferrenby, the man who in college had borne off the crown that he had aspired to.
It was all so far away. What little boys they had been, working for blue
ribbons—
The car slowed up at the entrance to a great estate, ringed around by a huge
hedge and a tall iron fence.
“Won’t you come in for lunch?”
Amory shook his head.
“Thank you, Mr. Ferrenby, but I’ve got to get on.”
The big man held out his hand. Amory saw that the fact that he had known Jesse
more than outweighed any disfavor he had created by his opinions. What ghosts
were people with which to work! Even the little man insisted on shaking hands.
“Good-by!” shouted Mr. Ferrenby, as the car turned the corner and started up the
drive. “Good luck to you and bad luck to your theories.”
“Same to you, sir,” cried Amory, smiling and waving his hand.
“OUT OF THE FIRE, OUT OF THE LITTLE ROOM”
Eight hours from Princeton Amory sat down by the Jersey roadside and looked at
the frost-bitten country. Nature as a rather coarse phenomenon composed largely
of flowers that, when closely inspected, appeared moth-eaten, and of ants that
endlessly traversed blades of grass, was always disillusioning; nature
represented by skies and waters and far horizons was more likable. Frost and the
promise of winter thrilled him now, made him think of a wild battle between St.
Regis and Groton, ages ago, seven years ago—and of an autumn day in France
twelve months before when he had lain in tall grass, his platoon flattened down
close around him, waiting to tap the shoulders of a Lewis gunner. He saw the two
pictures together with somewhat the same primitive exaltation—two games he had
played, differing in quality of acerbity, linked in a way that differed them
from Rosalind or the subject of labyrinths which were, after all, the business
of life.
“I am selfish,” he thought.
“This is not a quality that will change when I ‘see human suffering’ or ‘lose my
parents’ or ‘help others.’
“This selfishness is not only part of me. It is the most living part.
“It is by somehow transcending rather than by avoiding that selfishness that I
can bring poise and balance into my life.
“There is no virtue of unselfishness that I cannot use. I can make sacrifices,
be charitable, give to a friend, endure for a friend, lay down my life for a
friend—all because these things may be the best possible expression of myself;
yet I have not one drop of the milk of human kindness.”
The problem of evil had solidified for Amory into the problem of sex. He was
beginning to identify evil with the strong phallic worship in Brooke and the
early Wells. Inseparably linked with evil was beauty—beauty, still a constant
rising tumult; soft in Eleanor’s voice, in an old song at night, rioting
deliriously through life like superimposed waterfalls, half rhythm, half
darkness. Amory knew that every time he had reached toward it longingly it had
leered out at him with the grotesque face of evil. Beauty of great art, beauty
of all joy, most of all the beauty of women.
After all, it had too many associations with license and indulgence. Weak things
were often beautiful, weak things were never good. And in this new loneness of
his that had been selected for what greatness he might achieve, beauty must be
relative or, itself a harmony, it would make only a discord.
In a sense this gradual renunciation of beauty was the second step after his
disillusion had been made complete. He felt that he was leaving behind him his
chance of being a certain type of artist. It seemed so much more important to be
a certain sort of man.
His mind turned a corner suddenly and he found himself thinking of the Catholic
Church. The idea was strong in him that there was a certain intrinsic lack in
those to whom orthodox religion was necessary, and religion to Amory meant the
Church of Rome. Quite conceivably it was an empty ritual but it was seemingly
the only assimilative, traditionary bulwark against the decay of morals. Until
the great mobs could be educated into a moral sense some one must cry: “Thou
shalt not!” Yet any acceptance was, for the present, impossible. He wanted time
and the absence of ulterior pressure. He wanted to keep the tree without
ornaments, realize fully the direction and momentum of this new start.
The afternoon waned from the purging good of three o’clock to the golden beauty
of four. Afterward he walked through the dull ache of a setting sun when even
the clouds seemed bleeding and at twilight he came to a graveyard. There was a
dusky, dreamy smell of flowers and the ghost of a new moon in the sky and
shadows everywhere. On an impulse he considered trying to open the door of a
rusty iron vault built into the side of a hill; a vault washed clean and covered
with late-blooming, weepy watery-blue flowers that might have grown from dead
eyes, sticky to the touch with a sickening odor.
Amory wanted to feel “William Dayfield, 1864.”
He wondered that graves ever made people consider life in vain. Somehow he could
find nothing hopeless in having lived. All the broken columns and clasped hands
and doves and angels meant romances. He fancied that in a hundred years he would
like having young people speculate as to whether his eyes were brown or blue,
and he hoped quite passionately that his grave would have about it an air of
many, many years ago. It seemed strange that out of a row of Union soldiers two
or three made him think of dead loves and dead lovers, when they were exactly
like the rest, even to the yellowish moss.
Long after midnight the towers and spires of Princeton were visible, with here
and there a late-burning light—and suddenly out of the clear darkness the sound
of bells. As an endless dream it went on; the spirit of the past brooding over a
new generation, the chosen youth from the muddled, unchastened world, still fed
romantically on the mistakes and half-forgotten dreams of dead statesmen and
poets. Here was a new generation, shouting the old cries, learning the old
creeds, through a revery of long days and nights; destined finally to go out
into that dirty gray turmoil to follow love and pride; a new generation
dedicated more than the last to the fear of poverty and the worship of success;
grown up to find all Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken....
Amory, sorry for them, was still not sorry for himself—art, politics, religion,
whatever his medium should be, he knew he was safe now, free from all
hysteria—he could accept what was acceptable, roam, grow, rebel, sleep deep
through many nights....
There was no God in his heart, he knew; his ideas were still in riot; there was
ever the pain of memory; the regret for his lost youth—yet the waters of
disillusion had left a deposit on his soul, responsibility and a love of life,
the faint stirring of old ambitions and unrealized dreams. But—oh, Rosalind!
Rosalind!...
“It’s all a poor substitute at best,” he said sadly.
And he could not tell why the struggle was worth while, why he had determined to
use to the utmost himself and his heritage from the personalities he had
passed....
He stretched out his arms to the crystalline, radiant sky.
“I know myself,” he cried, “but that is all.”
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