<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>Martin Eden, with blood still crawling from contact with his brother-in-law,
felt his way along the unlighted back hall and entered his room, a tiny
cubbyhole with space for a bed, a wash-stand, and one chair. Mr.
Higginbotham was too thrifty to keep a servant when his wife could do
the work. Besides, the servant’s room enabled them to take
in two boarders instead of one. Martin placed the Swinburne and
Browning on the chair, took off his coat, and sat down on the bed.
A screeching of asthmatic springs greeted the weight of his body, but
he did not notice them. He started to take off his shoes, but
fell to staring at the white plaster wall opposite him, broken by long
streaks of dirty brown where rain had leaked through the roof.
On this befouled background visions began to flow and burn. He
forgot his shoes and stared long, till his lips began to move and he
murmured, “Ruth.”</p>
<p>“Ruth.” He had not thought a simple sound could
be so beautiful. It delighted his ear, and he grew intoxicated
with the repetition of it. “Ruth.” It was a
talisman, a magic word to conjure with. Each time he murmured
it, her face shimmered before him, suffusing the foul wall with a golden
radiance. This radiance did not stop at the wall. It extended
on into infinity, and through its golden depths his soul went questing
after hers. The best that was in him was out in splendid flood.
The very thought of her ennobled and purified him, made him better,
and made him want to be better. This was new to him. He
had never known women who had made him better. They had always
had the counter effect of making him beastly. He did not know
that many of them had done their best, bad as it was. Never having
been conscious of himself, he did not know that he had that in his being
that drew love from women and which had been the cause of their reaching
out for his youth. Though they had often bothered him, he had
never bothered about them; and he would never have dreamed that there
were women who had been better because of him. Always in sublime
carelessness had he lived, till now, and now it seemed to him that they
had always reached out and dragged at him with vile hands. This
was not just to them, nor to himself. But he, who for the first
time was becoming conscious of himself, was in no condition to judge,
and he burned with shame as he stared at the vision of his infamy.</p>
<p>He got up abruptly and tried to see himself in the dirty looking-glass
over the wash-stand. He passed a towel over it and looked again,
long and carefully. It was the first time he had ever really seen
himself. His eyes were made for seeing, but up to that moment
they had been filled with the ever changing panorama of the world, at
which he had been too busy gazing, ever to gaze at himself. He
saw the head and face of a young fellow of twenty, but, being unused
to such appraisement, he did not know how to value it. Above a
square-domed forehead he saw a mop of brown hair, nut-brown, with a
wave to it and hints of curls that were a delight to any woman, making
hands tingle to stroke it and fingers tingle to pass caresses through
it. But he passed it by as without merit, in Her eyes, and dwelt
long and thoughtfully on the high, square forehead,—striving to
penetrate it and learn the quality of its content. What kind of
a brain lay behind there? was his insistent interrogation. What
was it capable of? How far would it take him? Would it take
him to her?</p>
<p>He wondered if there was soul in those steel-gray eyes that were
often quite blue of color and that were strong with the briny airs of
the sun-washed deep. He wondered, also, how his eyes looked to
her. He tried to imagine himself she, gazing into those eyes of
his, but failed in the jugglery. He could successfully put himself
inside other men’s minds, but they had to be men whose ways of
life he knew. He did not know her way of life. She was wonder
and mystery, and how could he guess one thought of hers? Well,
they were honest eyes, he concluded, and in them was neither smallness
nor meanness. The brown sunburn of his face surprised him.
He had not dreamed he was so black. He rolled up his shirt-sleeve
and compared the white underside if the arm with his face. Yes,
he was a white man, after all. But the arms were sunburned, too.
He twisted his arm, rolled the biceps over with his other hand, and
gazed underneath where he was least touched by the sun. It was
very white. He laughed at his bronzed face in the glass at the
thought that it was once as white as the underside of his arm; nor did
he dream that in the world there were few pale spirits of women who
could boast fairer or smoother skins than he—fairer than where
he had escaped the ravages of the sun.</p>
<p>His might have been a cherub’s mouth, had not the full, sensuous
lips a trick, under stress, of drawing firmly across the teeth.
At times, so tightly did they draw, the mouth became stern and harsh,
even ascetic. They were the lips of a fighter and of a lover.
They could taste the sweetness of life with relish, and they could put
the sweetness aside and command life. The chin and jaw, strong
and just hinting of square aggressiveness, helped the lips to command
life. Strength balanced sensuousness and had upon it a tonic effect,
compelling him to love beauty that was healthy and making him vibrate
to sensations that were wholesome. And between the lips were teeth
that had never known nor needed the dentist’s care. They
were white and strong and regular, he decided, as he looked at them.
But as he looked, he began to be troubled. Somewhere, stored away
in the recesses of his mind and vaguely remembered, was the impression
that there were people who washed their teeth every day. They
were the people from up above—people in her class. She must
wash her teeth every day, too. What would she think if she learned
that he had never washed his teeth in all the days of his life?
He resolved to get a tooth-brush and form the habit. He would
begin at once, to-morrow. It was not by mere achievement that
he could hope to win to her. He must make a personal reform in
all things, even to tooth-washing and neck-gear, though a starched collar
affected him as a renunciation of freedom.</p>
<p>He held up his hand, rubbing the ball of the thumb over the calloused
palm and gazing at the dirt that was ingrained in the flesh itself and
which no brush could scrub away. How different was her palm!
He thrilled deliciously at the remembrance. Like a rose-petal,
he thought; cool and soft as a snowflake. He had never thought
that a mere woman’s hand could be so sweetly soft. He caught
himself imagining the wonder of a caress from such a hand, and flushed
guiltily. It was too gross a thought for her. In ways it
seemed to impugn her high spirituality. She was a pale, slender
spirit, exalted far beyond the flesh; but nevertheless the softness
of her palm persisted in his thoughts. He was used to the harsh
callousness of factory girls and working women. Well he knew why
their hands were rough; but this hand of hers . . . It was soft because
she had never used it to work with. The gulf yawned between her
and him at the awesome thought of a person who did not have to work
for a living. He suddenly saw the aristocracy of the people who
did not labor. It towered before him on the wall, a figure in
brass, arrogant and powerful. He had worked himself; his first
memories seemed connected with work, and all his family had worked.
There was Gertrude. When her hands were not hard from the endless
housework, they were swollen and red like boiled beef, what of the washing.
And there was his sister Marian. She had worked in the cannery
the preceding summer, and her slim, pretty hands were all scarred with
the tomato-knives. Besides, the tips of two of her fingers had
been left in the cutting machine at the paper-box factory the preceding
winter. He remembered the hard palms of his mother as she lay
in her coffin. And his father had worked to the last fading gasp;
the horned growth on his hands must have been half an inch thick when
he died. But Her hands were soft, and her mother’s hands,
and her brothers’. This last came to him as a surprise;
it was tremendously indicative of the highness of their caste, of the
enormous distance that stretched between her and him.</p>
<p>He sat back on the bed with a bitter laugh, and finished taking off
his shoes. He was a fool; he had been made drunken by a woman’s
face and by a woman’s soft, white hands. And then, suddenly,
before his eyes, on the foul plaster-wall appeared a vision. He
stood in front of a gloomy tenement house. It was night-time,
in the East End of London, and before him stood Margey, a little factory
girl of fifteen. He had seen her home after the bean-feast.
She lived in that gloomy tenement, a place not fit for swine.
His hand was going out to hers as he said good night. She had
put her lips up to be kissed, but he wasn’t going to kiss her.
Somehow he was afraid of her. And then her hand closed on his
and pressed feverishly. He felt her callouses grind and grate
on his, and a great wave of pity welled over him. He saw her yearning,
hungry eyes, and her ill-fed female form which had been rushed from
childhood into a frightened and ferocious maturity; then he put his
arms about her in large tolerance and stooped and kissed her on the
lips. Her glad little cry rang in his ears, and he felt her clinging
to him like a cat. Poor little starveling! He continued
to stare at the vision of what had happened in the long ago. His
flesh was crawling as it had crawled that night when she clung to him,
and his heart was warm with pity. It was a gray scene, greasy
gray, and the rain drizzled greasily on the pavement stones. And
then a radiant glory shone on the wall, and up through the other vision,
displacing it, glimmered Her pale face under its crown of golden hair,
remote and inaccessible as a star.</p>
<p>He took the Browning and the Swinburne from the chair and kissed
them. Just the same, she told me to call again, he thought.
He took another look at himself in the glass, and said aloud, with great
solemnity:-</p>
<p>“Martin Eden, the first thing to-morrow you go to the free
library an’ read up on etiquette. Understand!”</p>
<p>He turned off the gas, and the springs shrieked under his body.</p>
<p>“But you’ve got to quit cussin’, Martin, old boy;
you’ve got to quit cussin’,” he said aloud.</p>
<p>Then he dozed off to sleep and to dream dreams that for madness and
audacity rivalled those of poppy-eaters.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />