<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
<p>That Ruth had little faith in his power as a writer, did not alter
her nor diminish her in Martin’s eyes. In the breathing
spell of the vacation he had taken, he had spent many hours in self-analysis,
and thereby learned much of himself. He had discovered that he
loved beauty more than fame, and that what desire he had for fame was
largely for Ruth’s sake. It was for this reason that his
desire for fame was strong. He wanted to be great in the world’s
eyes; “to make good,” as he expressed it, in order that
the woman he loved should be proud of him and deem him worthy.</p>
<p>As for himself, he loved beauty passionately, and the joy of serving
her was to him sufficient wage. And more than beauty he loved
Ruth. He considered love the finest thing in the world.
It was love that had worked the revolution in him, changing him from
an uncouth sailor to a student and an artist; therefore, to him, the
finest and greatest of the three, greater than learning and artistry,
was love. Already he had discovered that his brain went beyond
Ruth’s, just as it went beyond the brains of her brothers, or
the brain of her father. In spite of every advantage of university
training, and in the face of her bachelorship of arts, his power of
intellect overshadowed hers, and his year or so of self-study and equipment
gave him a mastery of the affairs of the world and art and life that
she could never hope to possess.</p>
<p>All this he realized, but it did not affect his love for her, nor
her love for him. Love was too fine and noble, and he was too
loyal a lover for him to besmirch love with criticism. What did
love have to do with Ruth’s divergent views on art, right conduct,
the French Revolution, or equal suffrage? They were mental processes,
but love was beyond reason; it was superrational. He could not
belittle love. He worshipped it. Love lay on the mountain-tops
beyond the valley-land of reason. It was a sublimates condition
of existence, the topmost peak of living, and it came rarely.
Thanks to the school of scientific philosophers he favored, he knew
the biological significance of love; but by a refined process of the
same scientific reasoning he reached the conclusion that the human organism
achieved its highest purpose in love, that love must not be questioned,
but must be accepted as the highest guerdon of life. Thus, he
considered the lover blessed over all creatures, and it was a delight
to him to think of “God’s own mad lover,” rising above
the things of earth, above wealth and judgment, public opinion and applause,
rising above life itself and “dying on a kiss.”</p>
<p>Much of this Martin had already reasoned out, and some of it he reasoned
out later. In the meantime he worked, taking no recreation except
when he went to see Ruth, and living like a Spartan. He paid two
dollars and a half a month rent for the small room he got from his Portuguese
landlady, Maria Silva, a virago and a widow, hard working and harsher
tempered, rearing her large brood of children somehow, and drowning
her sorrow and fatigue at irregular intervals in a gallon of the thin,
sour wine that she bought from the corner grocery and saloon for fifteen
cents. From detesting her and her foul tongue at first, Martin
grew to admire her as he observed the brave fight she made. There
were but four rooms in the little house—three, when Martin’s
was subtracted. One of these, the parlor, gay with an ingrain
carpet and dolorous with a funeral card and a death-picture of one of
her numerous departed babes, was kept strictly for company. The
blinds were always down, and her barefooted tribe was never permitted
to enter the sacred precinct save on state occasions. She cooked,
and all ate, in the kitchen, where she likewise washed, starched, and
ironed clothes on all days of the week except Sunday; for her income
came largely from taking in washing from her more prosperous neighbors.
Remained the bedroom, small as the one occupied by Martin, into which
she and her seven little ones crowded and slept. It was an everlasting
miracle to Martin how it was accomplished, and from her side of the
thin partition he heard nightly every detail of the going to bed, the
squalls and squabbles, the soft chattering, and the sleepy, twittering
noises as of birds. Another source of income to Maria were her
cows, two of them, which she milked night and morning and which gained
a surreptitious livelihood from vacant lots and the grass that grew
on either side the public side walks, attended always by one or more
of her ragged boys, whose watchful guardianship consisted chiefly in
keeping their eyes out for the poundmen.</p>
<p>In his own small room Martin lived, slept, studied, wrote, and kept
house. Before the one window, looking out on the tiny front porch,
was the kitchen table that served as desk, library, and type-writing
stand. The bed, against the rear wall, occupied two-thirds of
the total space of the room. The table was flanked on one side
by a gaudy bureau, manufactured for profit and not for service, the
thin veneer of which was shed day by day. This bureau stood in
the corner, and in the opposite corner, on the table’s other flank,
was the kitchen—the oil-stove on a dry-goods box, inside of which
were dishes and cooking utensils, a shelf on the wall for provisions,
and a bucket of water on the floor. Martin had to carry his water
from the kitchen sink, there being no tap in his room. On days
when there was much steam to his cooking, the harvest of veneer from
the bureau was unusually generous. Over the bed, hoisted by a
tackle to the ceiling, was his bicycle. At first he had tried
to keep it in the basement; but the tribe of Silva, loosening the bearings
and puncturing the tires, had driven him out. Next he attempted
the tiny front porch, until a howling southeaster drenched the wheel
a night-long. Then he had retreated with it to his room and slung
it aloft.</p>
<p>A small closet contained his clothes and the books he had accumulated
and for which there was no room on the table or under the table.
Hand in hand with reading, he had developed the habit of making notes,
and so copiously did he make them that there would have been no existence
for him in the confined quarters had he not rigged several clothes-lines
across the room on which the notes were hung. Even so, he was
crowded until navigating the room was a difficult task. He could
not open the door without first closing the closet door, and <i>vice
versa</i>. It was impossible for him anywhere to traverse the
room in a straight line. To go from the door to the head of the
bed was a zigzag course that he was never quite able to accomplish in
the dark without collisions. Having settled the difficulty of
the conflicting doors, he had to steer sharply to the right to avoid
the kitchen. Next, he sheered to the left, to escape the foot
of the bed; but this sheer, if too generous, brought him against the
corner of the table. With a sudden twitch and lurch, he terminated
the sheer and bore off to the right along a sort of canal, one bank
of which was the bed, the other the table. When the one chair
in the room was at its usual place before the table, the canal was unnavigable.
When the chair was not in use, it reposed on top of the bed, though
sometimes he sat on the chair when cooking, reading a book while the
water boiled, and even becoming skilful enough to manage a paragraph
or two while steak was frying. Also, so small was the little corner
that constituted the kitchen, he was able, sitting down, to reach anything
he needed. In fact, it was expedient to cook sitting down; standing
up, he was too often in his own way.</p>
<p>In conjunction with a perfect stomach that could digest anything,
he possessed knowledge of the various foods that were at the same time
nutritious and cheap. Pea-soup was a common article in his diet,
as well as potatoes and beans, the latter large and brown and cooked
in Mexican style. Rice, cooked as American housewives never cook
it and can never learn to cook it, appeared on Martin’s table
at least once a day. Dried fruits were less expensive than fresh,
and he had usually a pot of them, cooked and ready at hand, for they
took the place of butter on his bread. Occasionally he graced
his table with a piece of round-steak, or with a soup-bone. Coffee,
without cream or milk, he had twice a day, in the evening substituting
tea; but both coffee and tea were excellently cooked.</p>
<p>There was need for him to be economical. His vacation had consumed
nearly all he had earned in the laundry, and he was so far from his
market that weeks must elapse before he could hope for the first returns
from his hack-work. Except at such times as he saw Ruth, or dropped
in to see his sister Gertude, he lived a recluse, in each day accomplishing
at least three days’ labor of ordinary men. He slept a scant
five hours, and only one with a constitution of iron could have held
himself down, as Martin did, day after day, to nineteen consecutive
hours of toil. He never lost a moment. On the looking-glass
were lists of definitions and pronunciations; when shaving, or dressing,
or combing his hair, he conned these lists over. Similar lists
were on the wall over the oil-stove, and they were similarly conned
while he was engaged in cooking or in washing the dishes. New
lists continually displaced the old ones. Every strange or partly
familiar word encountered in his reading was immediately jotted down,
and later, when a sufficient number had been accumulated, were typed
and pinned to the wall or looking-glass. He even carried them
in his pockets, and reviewed them at odd moments on the street, or while
waiting in butcher shop or grocery to be served.</p>
<p>He went farther in the matter. Reading the works of men who
had arrived, he noted every result achieved by them, and worked out
the tricks by which they had been achieved—the tricks of narrative,
of exposition, of style, the points of view, the contrasts, the epigrams;
and of all these he made lists for study. He did not ape.
He sought principles. He drew up lists of effective and fetching
mannerisms, till out of many such, culled from many writers, he was
able to induce the general principle of mannerism, and, thus equipped,
to cast about for new and original ones of his own, and to weigh and
measure and appraise them properly. In similar manner he collected
lists of strong phrases, the phrases of living language, phrases that
bit like acid and scorched like flame, or that glowed and were mellow
and luscious in the midst of the arid desert of common speech.
He sought always for the principle that lay behind and beneath.
He wanted to know how the thing was done; after that he could do it
for himself. He was not content with the fair face of beauty.
He dissected beauty in his crowded little bedroom laboratory, where
cooking smells alternated with the outer bedlam of the Silva tribe;
and, having dissected and learned the anatomy of beauty, he was nearer
being able to create beauty itself.</p>
<p>He was so made that he could work only with understanding.
He could not work blindly, in the dark, ignorant of what he was producing
and trusting to chance and the star of his genius that the effect produced
should be right and fine. He had no patience with chance effects.
He wanted to know why and how. His was deliberate creative genius,
and, before he began a story or poem, the thing itself was already alive
in his brain, with the end in sight and the means of realizing that
end in his conscious possession. Otherwise the effort was doomed
to failure. On the other hand, he appreciated the chance effects
in words and phrases that came lightly and easily into his brain, and
that later stood all tests of beauty and power and developed tremendous
and incommunicable connotations. Before such he bowed down and
marvelled, knowing that they were beyond the deliberate creation of
any man. And no matter how much he dissected beauty in search
of the principles that underlie beauty and make beauty possible, he
was aware, always, of the innermost mystery of beauty to which he did
not penetrate and to which no man had ever penetrated. He knew
full well, from his Spencer, that man can never attain ultimate knowledge
of anything, and that the mystery of beauty was no less than that of
life—nay, more that the fibres of beauty and life were intertwisted,
and that he himself was but a bit of the same nonunderstandable fabric,
twisted of sunshine and star-dust and wonder.</p>
<p>In fact, it was when filled with these thoughts that he wrote his
essay entitled “Star-dust,” in which he had his fling, not
at the principles of criticism, but at the principal critics.
It was brilliant, deep, philosophical, and deliciously touched with
laughter. Also it was promptly rejected by the magazines as often
as it was submitted. But having cleared his mind of it, he went
serenely on his way. It was a habit he developed, of incubating
and maturing his thought upon a subject, and of then rushing into the
type-writer with it. That it did not see print was a matter a
small moment with him. The writing of it was the culminating act
of a long mental process, the drawing together of scattered threads
of thought and the final generalizing upon all the data with which his
mind was burdened. To write such an article was the conscious
effort by which he freed his mind and made it ready for fresh material
and problems. It was in a way akin to that common habit of men
and women troubled by real or fancied grievances, who periodically and
volubly break their long-suffering silence and “have their say”
till the last word is said.</p>
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