<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br/> THE DISCOVERY OF CANNED SHRIMPS AND HESPERIDES</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">On</span> the morning when Milt Daggett had awakened
to sunshine in the woods north of Gopher
Prairie, he had discovered the golden age. As mile
on mile he jogged over new hills, without having to
worry about getting back to his garage in time to
repair somebody's car, he realized that for the past
two years he had forced himself to find contentment in
building up a business that had no future.</p>
<p>Now he laughed and whooped; he drove with one
foot inelegantly and enchantingly up on the edge of
the cowl; he made Lady Vere de Vere bow to
astounded farmers; he went to the movies every
evening—twice, in Fargo; and when the chariot of the
young prince swept to the brow of a hill, he murmured,
not in the manner of a bug-driver but with a stinging
awe, "All that big country! Ours to see, puss! We'll
settle down some day and be solid citizens and raise
families and wheeze when we walk, but—— All those
hills to sail over and—— Come on! Lez sail!"</p>
<p>Milt attended the motion pictures every evening,
and he saw them in a new way. As recently as one
week before he had preferred those earnest depictions
in which hard-working, moral actors shoot one another,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>
or ride the most uncomfortable horses up mountainsides.
But now, with a mental apology to that
propagandist of lowbrowism, the absent Mac, he chose
the films in which the leading men wore evening
clothes, and no one ever did anything without being
assisted by a "man." Aside from the pictures Milt's
best tutors were traveling men. Though he measured
every cent, and for his campfire dinners bought modest
chuck steaks, he had at least one meal a day at a hotel,
to watch the traveling men.</p>
<p>To Claire, traveling men were merely commercial
persons in hard-boiled suits. She identified them with
the writing-up of order-slips on long littered writing-tables,
and with hotels that reduced the delicate arts
of dining and sleeping to gray greasiness. But Milt
knew traveling men. He knew that not only were
they the missionaries of business, supplementing the
taking of orders by telling merchants how to build up
trade, how to trim windows and treat customers like
human beings; but also that they, as much as the local
ministers and doctors and teachers and newspapermen,
were the agents in spreading knowledge and
justice. It was they who showed the young men how
to have their hair cut—and to wash behind the ears
and shave daily; they who encouraged villagers to rise
from scandal and gossip to a perception of the Great
World, of politics and sports, and some measure of art
and science.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>Claire, and indeed her father and Mr. Jeff Saxton as
well, had vaguely concluded that because drummers
were always to be seen in soggy hotels and badly connecting
trains and the headachy waiting-rooms of
stations, they must like these places. Milt knew that
the drummers were martyrs; that for months of a
trip, all the while thinking of the children back home,
they suffered from landlords and train schedules; that
they were Claire's best allies in fighting the Great
American Frying Pan; that they knew good things,
and fought against the laziness and impositions of
people who "kept hotel" because they had failed as
farmers; and that when they did find a landlord who
was cordial and efficient, they went forth mightily
advertising that glorious man. The traveling men, he
knew, were pioneers in spats.</p>
<p>Hence it was to the traveling men, not to supercilious
tourists in limousines, that Milt turned for
suggestions as to how to perform the miracle of changing
from an ambitious boy into what Claire would
recognize as a charming man. He had not met enough
traveling men at Schoenstrom. They scooped up what
little business there was, and escaped from the Leipzig
House to spend the night at St. Cloud or Sauk Centre.</p>
<p>In the larger towns in Minnesota and Dakota, after
evening movies, before slipping out to his roadside
camp Milt inserted himself into a circle of traveling
men in large leather chairs, and ventured, "Saw a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>
Gomez-Dep with a New York license down the line
today."</p>
<p>"Oh. You driving through?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Going to Seattle."</p>
<p>That distinguished Milt from the ordinary young-men-loafers,
and he was admitted as one of the assembly
of men who traveled and saw things and
wondered about the ways of men. It was good talk
he heard; too much of hotels, and too many tight
banal little phrases suggesting the solution of all
economic complexities by hanging "agitators," but
with this, an exciting accumulation of impressions of
Vancouver and San Diego, Florida and K. C.</p>
<p>"That's a wonderful work farm they have at
Duluth," said one, and the next, "speaking of that,
I was in Chicago last week, and I saw a play——"</p>
<p>Milt had, in his two years of high school in St.
Cloud, and in his boyhood under the genial but
abstracted eye of the Old Doctor, learned that it was
not well thought of to use the knife as a hod and to
plaster mashed potatoes upon it, as was the custom in
Mac's Old Home Lunch at Schoenstrom. But the
arts of courteously approaching oysters, salad, and
peas were rather unfamiliar to him. Now he studied
forks as he had once studied carburetors, and he gave
spiritual devotion to the nice eating of a canned-shrimp
cocktail—a lost legion of shrimps, now two thousand
miles and two years away from their ocean home.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>He peeped with equal earnestness at the socks and
the shirts of the traveling men. Socks had been to
him not an article of faith but a detail of economy.
His attitude to socks had lacked in reverence and
technique. He had not perceived that socks may be
as sound a symbol of culture as the 'cello or even demountable
rims. He had been able to think with
respect of ties and damp piqué collars secured by gold
safety-pins; and to the belted fawn overcoat that the
St. Klopstock banker's son had brought back from St.
Paul, he had given jealous attention. But now he
graduated into differential socks.</p>
<p>By his campfire, sighing to the rather somnolent
Vere de Vere, he scornfully yanked his extra pairs of
thick, white-streaked, yellow cotton socks from the
wicker suitcase, and uttered anathema:</p>
<p>"Begone, ye unworthy and punk-looking raiment.
I know ye! Ye werst a bargain and two pairs for two
bits. But even as Adolph Zolzac and an agent for flivver
accessories are ye become in my eyes, ye generation
of vipers, ye clumsy, bag-footed, wrinkle-sided
gunny-sacking ye!"</p>
<p>Next day, in the woods, a happy hobo found that
the manna-bringing ravens had left him four pairs of
good socks.</p>
<p>Five quite expensive pairs of silk and lisle socks
Milt purchased—all that the general merchant at Jeppe
had in stock. What they lost in suitability to touring<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span>
and to private laundering at creeks, they gained
as symbols. Milt felt less shut out from the life of
leisure. Now, in Seattle, say, he could go into a good
hotel with less fear of the clerks.</p>
<p>He added attractive outing shirts, ties neither too
blackly dull nor too flashily crimson, and a vicious
nail-brush which simply tore out the motor grease
that had grown into the lines of his hands. Also
he added a book.</p>
<p>The book was a rhetoric. Milt knew perfectly that
there was an impertinence called grammar, but it had
never annoyed him much. He knew that many persons
preferred "They were" to "They was," and were
nervous in the presence of "ain't." One teacher in St.
Cloud had buzzed frightfully about these minutiæ.
But Milt discovered that grammar was only the beginning
of woes. He learned that there were such mental
mortgages as figures of speech and the choice of synonyms.
He had always known, but he had never passionately
felt that the invariable use of "hell," "doggone,"
and "You bet!" left certain subtleties unexpressed.
Now he was finding subtleties which he
had to express.</p>
<p>As joyously adventurous as going on day after day
was his experimentation in voicing his new observations.
He gave far more eagerness to it than Claire
Boltwood had. Gustily intoning to Vere de Vere,
who was the perfect audience, inasmuch as she never<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span>
had anything to say but "Mrwr," and didn't mind
being interrupted in that, he clamored, "The prairies
are the sea. In the distance they are kind of silvery—no—they
are dim silver; and way off on the skyline
are the Islands of the—of the—— Now what the devil
was them, were those, islands in the mythology book
in high school? Of the—Blessed? Great snakes'
boots, you're an ignorant cat, Vere! Hesperyds? No!
Hesperides! Yea, bo'! Now that man in the hotel:
'May I trouble you for the train guide? Thanks so
much!' But how much is so much?"</p>
<p>As Claire's days were set free by her consciousness
of sun and brown earth, so Milt's odyssey was only
the more valorous in his endeavor to criticize life. He
saw that Mac's lunch room had not been an altogether
satisfactory home; that Mac's habit of saying to dissatisfied
customers, "If you don't like it, get out," had
lacked something of courtesy. Staring at towns along
the way, Milt saw that houses were not merely large
and comfortable, or small and stingy; but that there
was an interesting thing he remembered hearing his
teachers call "good taste."</p>
<p>He was not the preoccupied Milt of the garage but
a gay-eyed gallant, the evening when he gave a lift to
the school-teacher and drove her from the district
school among the wild roses and the corn to her home
in the next town. She was a neat, tripping, trim-sided
school-teacher of nineteen or twenty.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></SPAN></span>"You're going out to Seattle? My! That's a wonderful
trip. Don't you get tired?" she adored.</p>
<p>"Oh, no. And I'm seeing things. I used to think
everything worth while was right near my own town."</p>
<p>"You're so wise to go places. Most of the boys I
know don't think there is any world beyond Jimtown
and Fargo."</p>
<p>She glowed at him. Milt was saying to himself,
"Am I a fool? I probably could make this girl fall
in love with me. And she's better than I am; so darn
neat and clean and gentle. We'd be happy. She's a
nice comfy fire, and here I go like a boob, chasing after
a lone, cold star like Miss Boltwood, and probably I'll
fall into all the slews from hell to breakfast on the
way. But—— I'd get sleepy by a comfy fire."</p>
<p>"Are you thinking hard? You're frowning so,"
ventured the school-teacher.</p>
<p>"Didn't mean to. 'Scuse!" he laughed. One hand
off the steering wheel, he took her hand—a fresh,
cool, virginal hand, snuggling into his, suddenly stirring
him. He wanted to hold it tighter. The lamenting
historian of love's pilgrimage must set down the
fact that the pilgrim for at least a second forgot the
divine tread of the goddess Claire, and made rapid
calculation that he could, in a pinch, drive from
Schoenstrom to the teacher's town in two days and a
night; that therefore courtship, and this sweet white
hand resting in his, were not impossible. Milt himself<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></SPAN></span>
did not know what it was that made him lay down the
hand and say, so softly that he was but half audible
through the rattle of the engine:</p>
<p>"Isn't this a slick, mean to say glorious evening?
Sky rose and then that funny lavender. And that new
moon—— Makes me think of—the girl I'm in love
with."</p>
<p>"You're engaged?" wistfully.</p>
<p>"Not exactly but—— Say, did you study rhetoric in
Normal School? I have a rhetoric that's got all kind
of poetic extracts, you know, and quotations and
everything, from the big writers, Stevenson and all.
Always been so practical, making a garage pay, never
thought much about how I said things as long as I
could say 'No!' and say it quick. 'Cept maybe when
I was talking to the prof there. But it's great sport to
see how musical you can make a thing sound. Words.
Like Shenandoah. Gol-lee! Isn't that a wonderful
word? Makes you see old white mansion, and mocking
birds—— Wonder if a fellow could be a big
engineer, you know, build bridges and so on, and still
talk about, oh, beautiful things? What d' you think,
girlie?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm sure you could!"</p>
<p>Her admiration, the proximity of her fragrant
slightness, was pleasant in the dusk, but he did not
press her hand again, even when she whispered, "Good
night, and thank you—oh, thank you."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></SPAN></span>If Milt had been driving at the rate at which he
usually made his skipjack carom over the roads about
Schoenstrom, he would by now have been through
Dakota, into Montana. But he was deliberately holding
down the speed. When he had been tempted by a
smooth stretch to go too breathlessly, he halted, teased
Vere de Vere, climbed out and, sitting on a hilltop, his
hands about his knees, drenched his soul with the
vision of amber distances.</p>
<p>He tried so to time his progress that he might always
be from three to five miles behind Claire—distant
enough to be unnoticed, near enough to help in case
of need. For behind poetic expression and the use of
forks was the fact that his purpose in life was to know
Claire.</p>
<p>When he was caught, when Claire informed him
that he "mustn't worry about her"; when, slowly, he
understood that she wasn't being neighborly and interested
in his making time, he wanted to escape, never
to see her again.</p>
<p>For thirty miles his cheeks were fiery. He, most
considerate of roadmen, crowded a woman in a flivver,
passed a laboring car on an upgrade with such a burst
that the uneasy driver bumped off into a ditch. He
hadn't really seen them. Only mechanically had he
got past them. He was muttering:</p>
<p>"She thought I was trying to butt in! Stung
again! Like a small boy in love with teacher. And I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></SPAN></span>
thought I was so wise! Cussed out Mac—blamed
Mac—no, damn all the fine words—cussed out Mac
for being the village rumhound. Boozing is twice as
sensible as me. See a girl, nice dress—start for
Seattle! Two thousand miles away! Of course she
bawled me out. She was dead right. Boob! Yahoo!
Goat!"</p>
<p>He caught up Vere de Vere, rubbed her fur against
his cheek while he mourned, "Oh, puss, you got to be
nice to me. I thought I'd do big things. And then the
alarm clock went off. I'm back in Schoenstrom. For
keeps, I guess. I didn't know I had feelings that could
get hurt like this. Thought I had a rhinoceros
hide. But—— Oh, it isn't just feeling ashamed
over being a fool. It's that—— Won't ever see her
again. Not once. Way I saw her through the window,
at that hotel, in that blue silky dress—that
funny long line of buttons, and her throat. Never
have dinner—lunch—with her by the road——"</p>
<p>In the reaction of anger he demanded of Vere de
Vere, "What the deuce do I care? If she's chump
enough to chase away a crack garage man that's gone
batty and wants to work for nothing, let her go on
and hit some crook garage and get stuck for an entire
overhauling. What do I care? Had nice trip; that's
all I wanted. Never did intend to go clear to Seattle,
anyway. Go on to Butte, then back home. No more
fussing about fool table-manners and books, and I certainly<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></SPAN></span>
will cut out tagging behind her! No, sir!
Nev-er again!"</p>
<p>It was somewhat inconsistent to add, "There's a
bully place—sneak in and let her get past me again.
But she won't catch me following next time!"</p>
<p>While he tried to keep up his virtuous anger, he
was steering into an abandoned farmyard, parking
the car behind cottonwoods and neglected tall currant
bushes which would conceal it from the road.</p>
<p>The windows of the deserted house stared at him;
a splintered screen door banged in every breeze.
Lichens leered from the cracks of the porch. The
yard was filled with a litter of cottonwood twigs, and
over the flower garden hulked ragged weeds. In the
rank grass about the slimy green lip of the well,
crickets piped derisively. The barn-door was open.
Stray kernels of wheat had sprouted between the
spokes of a rusty binder-wheel. A rat slipped across
the edge of the shattered manger. As dusk came on,
gray things seemed to slither past the upper windows
of the house, and somewhere, under the roof, there
was a moaning. Milt was sure that it was the wind
in a knothole. He told himself that he was absolutely
sure about it. And every time it came he stroked
Vere de Vere carefully, and once, when the moaning
ended in the slamming of the screen door, he said,
"Jiminy!"</p>
<p>This boy of the unghostly cylinders and tangible<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></SPAN></span>
magnetos had never seen a haunted house. To toil of
the harvest field and machine shop and to trudging
the sun-beaten road he was accustomed, but he had
never crouched watching the slinking spirits of old
hopes and broken aspirations; feeble phantoms of the
first eager bridegroom who had come to this place, and
the mortgage-crushed, rust-wheat-ruined man who
had left it. He wanted to leap into the bug and go on.
Yet the haunt of murmurous memories dignified his
unhappiness. In the soft, tree-dimmed dooryard
among dry, blazing plains it seemed indecent to go on
growling "Gee," and "Can you beat it?" It was a
young poet, a poet rhymeless and inarticulate, who
huddled behind the shield of untrimmed currant
bushes, and thought of the girl he would never see
again.</p>
<p>He was hungry, but he did not eat. He was
cramped, but he did not move. He picked up the books
she had given him. He was quickened by the powdery
beauty of <i>Youth's Encounter</i>; by the vision of laughter
and dancing steps beneath a streaky gas-glow in the
London fog; of youth not "roughhousing" and wanting
to "be a sport," yet in frail beauty and faded
crimson banners finding such exaltation as Schoenstrom
had never known. But every page suggested
Claire, and he tucked the book away.</p>
<p>In Vachel Lindsay's <i>Congo</i>, in a poem called "The
Santa Fe Trail," he found his own modern pilgrimage<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></SPAN></span>
from another point of view. Here was the poet, disturbed
by the honking hustle of passing cars. But
Milt belonged to the honking and the hustle, and it
was not the soul of the grass that he read in the poem,
but his own sun-flickering flight:</p>
<div class="poem" style="width: 21em;"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Swiftly the brazen car comes on.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">It burns in the East as the sunrise burns.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">I see great flashes where the far trail turns.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Butting through the delicate mists of the morning,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">It comes like lightning, goes past roaring,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">It will hail all the windmills, taunting, ringing,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">On through the ranges the prairie-dog tills—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Scooting past the cattle on the thousand hills.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Ho for the tear-horn, scare-horn, dare-horn,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Ho for the gay-horn, bark-horn, bay-horn.<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Milt did not reflect that if the poet had watched the
Teal bug go by, he would not have recorded a scare-horn,
a dare-horn, or anything mightier than a yip-horn.
Milt saw himself a cross-continent racer, with
the envious poet, left behind as a dot on the hill, celebrating
his passing.</p>
<p>"Lord!" he cried. "I didn't know there were
books like these! Thought poetry was all like Longfellow
and Byron. Old boys. Europe. And rhymed
bellyachin' about hard luck. But these books—they're
me." Very carefully: "No; they're I! And she gave
'em to me! I will see her again! But she won't know<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></SPAN></span>
it. Now be sensible, son! What do you expect? Oh—nothing.
I'll just go on, and sneak in one more
glimpse of her to take back with me where I belong."</p>
<p>Half an hour after Claire had innocently passed his
ambush, he began to follow her. But not for days was
he careless. If he saw her on the horizon he paused
until she was out of sight. That he might not fail her
in need, he bought a ridiculously expensive pair of
field glasses, and watched her when she stopped by the
road. Once, when both her right rear tire and the
spare were punctured before she could make a town,
Milt from afar saw her patch a tube, pump up the tire
in the dust. He ached to go to her aid—though it
cannot be said that hand-pumping was his favorite
July afternoon sport.</p>
<p>Lest he encounter her in the streets, he always
camped to the eastward of the town at which she spent
the night. After dusk, when she was likely to end the
day's drive in the first sizable place, he hid his bug in
an alley and, like a spy after the papers, sneaked into
each garage to see if her car was there.</p>
<p>He would stroll in, look about vacuously, and pipe
to the suspicious night attendant, "Seen a traveling
man named Smith?" Usually the garage man snarled,
"No, I ain't seen nobody named Smith. An'thing
else I can do for you?" But once he was so unlucky
as to find the long-missing Mr. Smith!</p>
<p>Mr. Smith was surprised and insistent. Milt had to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></SPAN></span>
do some quick lying. During that interview the cement
floor felt very hard under his fidgeting feet, and he
thought he heard the garage man in the office telephoning,
"Don't think he knows Smith at all. I got a
hunch he's that auto thief that was through here last
summer."</p>
<p>When Claire did not stop in the first town she
reached after twilight, but drove on by dark, he had
to do some perilous galloping to catch up. The lights
of a Teal are excellent for adornment, but they have
no relation to illumination. They are dependent upon
a magneto which is dependent only upon faith.</p>
<p>Once, skittering along by dark, he realized that the
halted car which he had just passed was the Gomez.
He thought he heard a shout behind him, but in a
panic he kept going.</p>
<p>To the burring motor he groaned, "Now I probably
never will see her again. Except that she thinks I'm
such a pest that I dassn't let her know I'm in the same
state, I sure am one successful lover. As a Prince
Charming I win the Vanderbilt Cup. I'm going ahead
backwards so fast I'll probably drop off into the
Atlantic over the next hill!"</p>
<hr/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />