<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>UNDER the rolling clouds of the prairie a moving mass of steel. An
irritable clank and rattle beneath a prolonged roar. The sharp scent of
oranges cutting the soggy smell of unbathed people and ancient baggage.</p>
<p>Towns as planless as a scattering of pasteboard boxes on an attic floor.
The stretch of faded gold stubble broken only by clumps of willows
encircling white houses and red barns.</p>
<p>No. 7, the way train, grumbling through Minnesota, imperceptibly climbing
the giant tableland that slopes in a thousand-mile rise from hot
Mississippi bottoms to the Rockies.</p>
<p>It is September, hot, very dusty.</p>
<p>There is no smug Pullman attached to the train, and the day coaches of the
East are replaced by free chair cars, with each seat cut into two
adjustable plush chairs, the head-rests covered with doubtful linen
towels. Halfway down the car is a semi-partition of carved oak columns,
but the aisle is of bare, splintery, grease-blackened wood. There is no
porter, no pillows, no provision for beds, but all today and all tonight
they will ride in this long steel box-farmers with perpetually tired wives
and children who seem all to be of the same age; workmen going to new
jobs; traveling salesmen with derbies and freshly shined shoes.</p>
<p>They are parched and cramped, the lines of their hands filled with grime;
they go to sleep curled in distorted attitudes, heads against the
window-panes or propped on rolled coats on seat-arms, and legs thrust into
the aisle. They do not read; apparently they do not think. They wait. An
early-wrinkled, young-old mother, moving as though her joints were dry,
opens a suit-case in which are seen creased blouses, a pair of slippers
worn through at the toes, a bottle of patent medicine, a tin cup, a
paper-covered book about dreams which the news-butcher has coaxed her into
buying. She brings out a graham cracker which she feeds to a baby lying
flat on a seat and wailing hopelessly. Most of the crumbs drop on the red
plush of the seat, and the woman sighs and tries to brush them away, but
they leap up impishly and fall back on the plush.</p>
<p>A soiled man and woman munch sandwiches and throw the crusts on the floor.
A large brick-colored Norwegian takes off his shoes, grunts in relief, and
props his feet in their thick gray socks against the seat in front of him.</p>
<p>An old woman whose toothless mouth shuts like a mud-turtle's, and whose
hair is not so much white as yellow like moldy linen, with bands of pink
skull apparent between the tresses, anxiously lifts her bag, opens it,
peers in, closes it, puts it under the seat, and hastily picks it up and
opens it and hides it all over again. The bag is full of treasures and of
memories: a leather buckle, an ancient band-concert program, scraps of
ribbon, lace, satin. In the aisle beside her is an extremely indignant
parrakeet in a cage.</p>
<p>Two facing seats, overflowing with a Slovene iron-miner's family, are
littered with shoes, dolls, whisky bottles, bundles wrapped in newspapers,
a sewing bag. The oldest boy takes a mouth-organ out of his coat pocket,
wipes the tobacco crumbs off, and plays “Marching through Georgia” till
every head in the car begins to ache.</p>
<p>The news-butcher comes through selling chocolate bars and lemon drops. A
girl-child ceaselessly trots down to the water-cooler and back to her
seat. The stiff paper envelope which she uses for cup drips in the aisle
as she goes, and on each trip she stumbles over the feet of a carpenter,
who grunts, “Ouch! Look out!”</p>
<p>The dust-caked doors are open, and from the smoking-car drifts back a
visible blue line of stinging tobacco smoke, and with it a crackle of
laughter over the story which the young man in the bright blue suit and
lavender tie and light yellow shoes has just told to the squat man in
garage overalls.</p>
<p>The smell grows constantly thicker, more stale.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>To each of the passengers his seat was his temporary home, and most of the
passengers were slatternly housekeepers. But one seat looked clean and
deceptively cool. In it were an obviously prosperous man and a
black-haired, fine-skinned girl whose pumps rested on an immaculate
horsehide bag.</p>
<p>They were Dr. Will Kennicott and his bride, Carol.</p>
<p>They had been married at the end of a year of conversational courtship,
and they were on their way to Gopher Prairie after a wedding journey in
the Colorado mountains.</p>
<p>The hordes of the way-train were not altogether new to Carol. She had seen
them on trips from St. Paul to Chicago. But now that they had become her
own people, to bathe and encourage and adorn, she had an acute and
uncomfortable interest in them. They distressed her. They were so stolid.
She had always maintained that there is no American peasantry, and she
sought now to defend her faith by seeing imagination and enterprise in the
young Swedish farmers, and in a traveling man working over his
order-blanks. But the older people, Yankees as well as Norwegians,
Germans, Finns, Canucks, had settled into submission to poverty. They were
peasants, she groaned.</p>
<p>“Isn't there any way of waking them up? What would happen if they
understood scientific agriculture?” she begged of Kennicott, her hand
groping for his.</p>
<p>It had been a transforming honeymoon. She had been frightened to discover
how tumultuous a feeling could be roused in her. Will had been lordly—stalwart,
jolly, impressively competent in making camp, tender and understanding
through the hours when they had lain side by side in a tent pitched among
pines high up on a lonely mountain spur.</p>
<p>His hand swallowed hers as he started from thoughts of the practise to
which he was returning. “These people? Wake 'em up? What for? They're
happy.”</p>
<p>“But they're so provincial. No, that isn't what I mean. They're—oh,
so sunk in the mud.”</p>
<p>“Look here, Carrie. You want to get over your city idea that because a
man's pants aren't pressed, he's a fool. These farmers are mighty keen and
up-and-coming.”</p>
<p>“I know! That's what hurts. Life seems so hard for them—these lonely
farms and this gritty train.”</p>
<p>“Oh, they don't mind it. Besides, things are changing. The auto, the
telephone, rural free delivery; they're bringing the farmers in closer
touch with the town. Takes time, you know, to change a wilderness like
this was fifty years ago. But already, why, they can hop into the Ford or
the Overland and get in to the movies on Saturday evening quicker than you
could get down to 'em by trolley in St. Paul.”</p>
<p>“But if it's these towns we've been passing that the farmers run to for
relief from their bleakness——Can't you understand? Just LOOK
at them!”</p>
<p>Kennicott was amazed. Ever since childhood he had seen these towns from
trains on this same line. He grumbled, “Why, what's the matter with 'em?
Good hustling burgs. It would astonish you to know how much wheat and rye
and corn and potatoes they ship in a year.”</p>
<p>“But they're so ugly.”</p>
<p>“I'll admit they aren't comfy like Gopher Prairie. But give 'em time.”</p>
<p>“What's the use of giving them time unless some one has desire and
training enough to plan them? Hundreds of factories trying to make
attractive motor cars, but these towns—left to chance. No! That
can't be true. It must have taken genius to make them so scrawny!”</p>
<p>“Oh, they're not so bad,” was all he answered. He pretended that his hand
was the cat and hers the mouse. For the first time she tolerated him
rather than encouraged him. She was staring out at Schoenstrom, a hamlet
of perhaps a hundred and fifty inhabitants, at which the train was
stopping.</p>
<p>A bearded German and his pucker-mouthed wife tugged their enormous
imitation-leather satchel from under a seat and waddled out. The station
agent hoisted a dead calf aboard the baggage-car. There were no other
visible activities in Schoenstrom. In the quiet of the halt, Carol could
hear a horse kicking his stall, a carpenter shingling a roof.</p>
<p>The business-center of Schoenstrom took up one side of one block, facing
the railroad. It was a row of one-story shops covered with galvanized
iron, or with clapboards painted red and bilious yellow. The buildings
were as ill-assorted, as temporary-looking, as a mining-camp street in the
motion-pictures. The railroad station was a one-room frame box, a mirey
cattle-pen on one side and a crimson wheat-elevator on the other. The
elevator, with its cupola on the ridge of a shingled roof, resembled a
broad-shouldered man with a small, vicious, pointed head. The only
habitable structures to be seen were the florid red-brick Catholic church
and rectory at the end of Main Street.</p>
<p>Carol picked at Kennicott's sleeve. “You wouldn't call this a not-so-bad
town, would you?”</p>
<p>“These Dutch burgs ARE kind of slow. Still, at that——See that
fellow coming out of the general store there, getting into the big car? I
met him once. He owns about half the town, besides the store. Rauskukle,
his name is. He owns a lot of mortgages, and he gambles in farm-lands.
Good nut on him, that fellow. Why, they say he's worth three or four
hundred thousand dollars! Got a dandy great big yellow brick house with
tiled walks and a garden and everything, other end of town—can't see
it from here—I've gone past it when I've driven through here. Yes
sir!”</p>
<p>“Then, if he has all that, there's no excuse whatever for this place! If
his three hundred thousand went back into the town, where it belongs, they
could burn up these shacks, and build a dream-village, a jewel! Why do the
farmers and the town-people let the Baron keep it?”</p>
<p>“I must say I don't quite get you sometimes, Carrie. Let him? They can't
help themselves! He's a dumm old Dutchman, and probably the priest can
twist him around his finger, but when it comes to picking good farming
land, he's a regular wiz!”</p>
<p>“I see. He's their symbol of beauty. The town erects him, instead of
erecting buildings.”</p>
<p>“Honestly, don't know what you're driving at. You're kind of played out,
after this long trip. You'll feel better when you get home and have a good
bath, and put on the blue negligee. That's some vampire costume, you
witch!”</p>
<p>He squeezed her arm, looked at her knowingly.</p>
<p>They moved on from the desert stillness of the Schoenstrom station. The
train creaked, banged, swayed. The air was nauseatingly thick. Kennicott
turned her face from the window, rested her head on his shoulder. She was
coaxed from her unhappy mood. But she came out of it unwillingly, and when
Kennicott was satisfied that he had corrected all her worries and had
opened a magazine of saffron detective stories, she sat upright.</p>
<p>Here—she meditated—is the newest empire of the world; the
Northern Middlewest; a land of dairy herds and exquisite lakes, of new
automobiles and tar-paper shanties and silos like red towers, of clumsy
speech and a hope that is boundless. An empire which feeds a quarter of
the world—yet its work is merely begun. They are pioneers, these
sweaty wayfarers, for all their telephones and bank-accounts and automatic
pianos and co-operative leagues. And for all its fat richness, theirs is a
pioneer land. What is its future? she wondered. A future of cities and
factory smut where now are loping empty fields? Homes universal and
secure? Or placid chateaux ringed with sullen huts? Youth free to find
knowledge and laughter? Willingness to sift the sanctified lies? Or
creamy-skinned fat women, smeared with grease and chalk, gorgeous in the
skins of beasts and the bloody feathers of slain birds, playing bridge
with puffy pink-nailed jeweled fingers, women who after much expenditure
of labor and bad temper still grotesquely resemble their own flatulent
lap-dogs? The ancient stale inequalities, or something different in
history, unlike the tedious maturity of other empires? What future and
what hope?</p>
<p>Carol's head ached with the riddle.</p>
<p>She saw the prairie, flat in giant patches or rolling in long hummocks.
The width and bigness of it, which had expanded her spirit an hour ago,
began to frighten her. It spread out so; it went on so uncontrollably; she
could never know it. Kennicott was closeted in his detective story. With
the loneliness which comes most depressingly in the midst of many people
she tried to forget problems, to look at the prairie objectively.</p>
<p>The grass beside the railroad had been burnt over; it was a smudge prickly
with charred stalks of weeds. Beyond the undeviating barbed-wire fences
were clumps of golden rod. Only this thin hedge shut them off from the
plains-shorn wheat-lands of autumn, a hundred acres to a field, prickly
and gray near-by but in the blurred distance like tawny velvet stretched
over dipping hillocks. The long rows of wheat-shocks marched like soldiers
in worn yellow tabards. The newly plowed fields were black banners fallen
on the distant slope. It was a martial immensity, vigorous, a little
harsh, unsoftened by kindly gardens.</p>
<p>The expanse was relieved by clumps of oaks with patches of short wild
grass; and every mile or two was a chain of cobalt slews, with the flicker
of blackbirds' wings across them.</p>
<p>All this working land was turned into exuberance by the light. The
sunshine was dizzy on open stubble; shadows from immense cumulus clouds
were forever sliding across low mounds; and the sky was wider and loftier
and more resolutely blue than the sky of cities . . . she declared.</p>
<p>“It's a glorious country; a land to be big in,” she crooned.</p>
<p>Then Kennicott startled her by chuckling, “D' you realize the town after
the next is Gopher Prairie? Home!”</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>That one word—home—it terrified her. Had she really bound
herself to live, inescapably, in this town called Gopher Prairie? And this
thick man beside her, who dared to define her future, he was a stranger!
She turned in her seat, stared at him. Who was he? Why was he sitting with
her? He wasn't of her kind! His neck was heavy; his speech was heavy; he
was twelve or thirteen years older than she; and about him was none of the
magic of shared adventures and eagerness. She could not believe that she
had ever slept in his arms. That was one of the dreams which you had but
did not officially admit.</p>
<p>She told herself how good he was, how dependable and understanding. She
touched his ear, smoothed the plane of his solid jaw, and, turning away
again, concentrated upon liking his town. It wouldn't be like these barren
settlements. It couldn't be! Why, it had three thousand population. That
was a great many people. There would be six hundred houses or more. And——The
lakes near it would be so lovely. She'd seen them in the photographs. They
had looked charming . . . hadn't they?</p>
<p>As the train left Wahkeenyan she began nervously to watch for the lakes—the
entrance to all her future life. But when she discovered them, to the left
of the track, her only impression of them was that they resembled the
photographs.</p>
<p>A mile from Gopher Prairie the track mounts a curving low ridge, and she
could see the town as a whole. With a passionate jerk she pushed up the
window, looked out, the arched fingers of her left hand trembling on the
sill, her right hand at her breast.</p>
<p>And she saw that Gopher Prairie was merely an enlargement of all the
hamlets which they had been passing. Only to the eyes of a Kennicott was
it exceptional. The huddled low wooden houses broke the plains scarcely
more than would a hazel thicket. The fields swept up to it, past it. It
was unprotected and unprotecting; there was no dignity in it nor any hope
of greatness. Only the tall red grain-elevator and a few tinny
church-steeples rose from the mass. It was a frontier camp. It was not a
place to live in, not possibly, not conceivably.</p>
<p>The people—they'd be as drab as their houses, as flat as their
fields. She couldn't stay here. She would have to wrench loose from this
man, and flee.</p>
<p>She peeped at him. She was at once helpless before his mature fixity, and
touched by his excitement as he sent his magazine skittering along the
aisle, stooped for their bags, came up with flushed face, and gloated,
“Here we are!”</p>
<p>She smiled loyally, and looked away. The train was entering town. The
houses on the outskirts were dusky old red mansions with wooden frills, or
gaunt frame shelters like grocery boxes, or new bungalows with concrete
foundations imitating stone.</p>
<p>Now the train was passing the elevator, the grim storage-tanks for oil, a
creamery, a lumber-yard, a stock-yard muddy and trampled and stinking. Now
they were stopping at a squat red frame station, the platform crowded with
unshaven farmers and with loafers—unadventurous people with dead
eyes. She was here. She could not go on. It was the end—the end of
the world. She sat with closed eyes, longing to push past Kennicott, hide
somewhere in the train, flee on toward the Pacific.</p>
<p>Something large arose in her soul and commanded, “Stop it! Stop being a
whining baby!” She stood up quickly; she said, “Isn't it wonderful to be
here at last!”</p>
<p>He trusted her so. She would make herself like the place. And she was
going to do tremendous things——</p>
<p>She followed Kennicott and the bobbing ends of the two bags which he
carried. They were held back by the slow line of disembarking passengers.
She reminded herself that she was actually at the dramatic moment of the
bride's home-coming. She ought to feel exalted. She felt nothing at all
except irritation at their slow progress toward the door.</p>
<p>Kennicott stooped to peer through the windows. He shyly exulted:</p>
<p>“Look! Look! There's a bunch come down to welcome us! Sam Clark and the
missus and Dave Dyer and Jack Elder, and, yes sir, Harry Haydock and
Juanita, and a whole crowd! I guess they see us now. Yuh, yuh sure, they
see us! See 'em waving!”</p>
<p>She obediently bent her head to look out at them. She had hold of herself.
She was ready to love them. But she was embarrassed by the heartiness of
the cheering group. From the vestibule she waved to them, but she clung a
second to the sleeve of the brakeman who helped her down before she had
the courage to dive into the cataract of hand-shaking people, people whom
she could not tell apart. She had the impression that all the men had
coarse voices, large damp hands, tooth-brush mustaches, bald spots, and
Masonic watch-charms.</p>
<p>She knew that they were welcoming her. Their hands, their smiles, their
shouts, their affectionate eyes overcame her. She stammered, “Thank you,
oh, thank you!”</p>
<p>One of the men was clamoring at Kennicott, “I brought my machine down to
take you home, doc.”</p>
<p>“Fine business, Sam!” cried Kennicott; and, to Carol, “Let's jump in. That
big Paige over there. Some boat, too, believe me! Sam can show speed to
any of these Marmons from Minneapolis!”</p>
<p>Only when she was in the motor car did she distinguish the three people
who were to accompany them. The owner, now at the wheel, was the essence
of decent self-satisfaction; a baldish, largish, level-eyed man, rugged of
neck but sleek and round of face—face like the back of a spoon bowl.
He was chuckling at her, “Have you got us all straight yet?”</p>
<p>“Course she has! Trust Carrie to get things straight and get 'em darn
quick! I bet she could tell you every date in history!” boasted her
husband.</p>
<p>But the man looked at her reassuringly and with a certainty that he was a
person whom she could trust she confessed, “As a matter of fact I haven't
got anybody straight.”</p>
<p>“Course you haven't, child. Well, I'm Sam Clark, dealer in hardware,
sporting goods, cream separators, and almost any kind of heavy junk you
can think of. You can call me Sam—anyway, I'm going to call you
Carrie, seein' 's you've been and gone and married this poor fish of a bum
medic that we keep round here.” Carol smiled lavishly, and wished that she
called people by their given names more easily. “The fat cranky lady back
there beside you, who is pretending that she can't hear me giving her
away, is Mrs. Sam'l Clark; and this hungry-looking squirt up here beside
me is Dave Dyer, who keeps his drug store running by not filling your
hubby's prescriptions right—fact you might say he's the guy that put
the 'shun' in 'prescription.' So! Well, leave us take the bonny bride
home. Say, doc, I'll sell you the Candersen place for three thousand
plunks. Better be thinking about building a new home for Carrie. Prettiest
Frau in G. P., if you asks me!”</p>
<p>Contentedly Sam Clark drove off, in the heavy traffic of three Fords and
the Minniemashie House Free 'Bus.</p>
<p>“I shall like Mr. Clark . . . I CAN'T call him 'Sam'! They're all so
friendly.” She glanced at the houses; tried not to see what she saw; gave
way in: “Why do these stories lie so? They always make the bride's
home-coming a bower of roses. Complete trust in noble spouse. Lies about
marriage. I'm NOT changed. And this town—O my God! I can't go
through with it. This junk-heap!”</p>
<p>Her husband bent over her. “You look like you were in a brown study.
Scared? I don't expect you to think Gopher Prairie is a paradise, after
St. Paul. I don't expect you to be crazy about it, at first. But you'll
come to like it so much—life's so free here and best people on
earth.”</p>
<p>She whispered to him (while Mrs. Clark considerately turned away), “I love
you for understanding. I'm just—I'm beastly over-sensitive. Too many
books. It's my lack of shoulder-muscles and sense. Give me time, dear.”</p>
<p>“You bet! All the time you want!”</p>
<p>She laid the back of his hand against her cheek, snuggled near him. She
was ready for her new home.</p>
<p>Kennicott had told her that, with his widowed mother as housekeeper, he
had occupied an old house, “but nice and roomy, and well-heated, best
furnace I could find on the market.” His mother had left Carol her love,
and gone back to Lac-qui-Meurt.</p>
<p>It would be wonderful, she exulted, not to have to live in Other People's
Houses, but to make her own shrine. She held his hand tightly and stared
ahead as the car swung round a corner and stopped in the street before a
prosaic frame house in a small parched lawn.</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>A concrete sidewalk with a “parking” of grass and mud. A square smug brown
house, rather damp. A narrow concrete walk up to it. Sickly yellow leaves
in a windrow with dried wings of box-elder seeds and snags of wool from
the cotton-woods. A screened porch with pillars of thin painted pine
surmounted by scrolls and brackets and bumps of jigsawed wood. No
shrubbery to shut off the public gaze. A lugubrious bay-window to the
right of the porch. Window curtains of starched cheap lace revealing a
pink marble table with a conch shell and a Family Bible.</p>
<p>“You'll find it old-fashioned—what do you call it?—Mid-Victorian.
I left it as is, so you could make any changes you felt were necessary.”
Kennicott sounded doubtful for the first time since he had come back to
his own.</p>
<p>“It's a real home!” She was moved by his humility. She gaily motioned
good-by to the Clarks. He unlocked the door—he was leaving the
choice of a maid to her, and there was no one in the house. She jiggled
while he turned the key, and scampered in. . . . It was next day before
either of them remembered that in their honeymoon camp they had planned
that he should carry her over the sill.</p>
<p>In hallway and front parlor she was conscious of dinginess and
lugubriousness and airlessness, but she insisted, “I'll make it all
jolly.” As she followed Kennicott and the bags up to their bedroom she
quavered to herself the song of the fat little-gods of the hearth:</p>
<p>I have my own home,<br/>
To do what I please with,<br/>
To do what I please with,<br/>
My den for me and my mate and my cubs,<br/>
My own!<br/></p>
<p>She was close in her husband's arms; she clung to him; whatever of
strangeness and slowness and insularity she might find in him, none of
that mattered so long as she could slip her hands beneath his coat, run
her fingers over the warm smoothness of the satin back of his waistcoat,
seem almost to creep into his body, find in him strength, find in the
courage and kindness of her man a shelter from the perplexing world.</p>
<p>“Sweet, so sweet,” she whispered.</p>
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