<h2>CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
<p>“The Shame of the Sun” was published in October.
As Martin cut the cords of the express package and the half-dozen complimentary
copies from the publishers spilled out on the table, a heavy sadness
fell upon him. He thought of the wild delight that would have
been his had this happened a few short months before, and he contrasted
that delight that should have been with his present uncaring coldness.
His book, his first book, and his pulse had not gone up a fraction of
a beat, and he was only sad. It meant little to him now.
The most it meant was that it might bring some money, and little enough
did he care for money.</p>
<p>He carried a copy out into the kitchen and presented it to Maria.</p>
<p>“I did it,” he explained, in order to clear up her bewilderment.
“I wrote it in the room there, and I guess some few quarts of
your vegetable soup went into the making of it. Keep it.
It’s yours. Just to remember me by, you know.”</p>
<p>He was not bragging, not showing off. His sole motive was to
make her happy, to make her proud of him, to justify her long faith
in him. She put the book in the front room on top of the family
Bible. A sacred thing was this book her lodger had made, a fetich
of friendship. It softened the blow of his having been a laundryman,
and though she could not understand a line of it, she knew that every
line of it was great. She was a simple, practical, hard-working
woman, but she possessed faith in large endowment.</p>
<p>Just as emotionlessly as he had received “The Shame of the
Sun” did he read the reviews of it that came in weekly from the
clipping bureau. The book was making a hit, that was evident.
It meant more gold in the money sack. He could fix up Lizzie,
redeem all his promises, and still have enough left to build his grass-walled
castle.</p>
<p>Singletree, Darnley & Co. had cautiously brought out an edition
of fifteen hundred copies, but the first reviews had started a second
edition of twice the size through the presses; and ere this was delivered
a third edition of five thousand had been ordered. A London firm
made arrangements by cable for an English edition, and hot-footed upon
this came the news of French, German, and Scandinavian translations
in progress. The attack upon the Maeterlinck school could not
have been made at a more opportune moment. A fierce controversy
was precipitated. Saleeby and Haeckel indorsed and defended “The
Shame of the Sun,” for once finding themselves on the same side
of a question. Crookes and Wallace ranged up on the opposing side,
while Sir Oliver Lodge attempted to formulate a compromise that would
jibe with his particular cosmic theories. Maeterlinck’s
followers rallied around the standard of mysticism. Chesterton
set the whole world laughing with a series of alleged non-partisan essays
on the subject, and the whole affair, controversy and controversialists,
was well-nigh swept into the pit by a thundering broadside from George
Bernard Shaw. Needless to say the arena was crowded with hosts
of lesser lights, and the dust and sweat and din became terrific.</p>
<p>“It is a most marvellous happening,” Singletree, Darnley
& Co. wrote Martin, “a critical philosophic essay selling
like a novel. You could not have chosen your subject better, and
all contributory factors have been unwarrantedly propitious. We
need scarcely to assure you that we are making hay while the sun shines.
Over forty thousand copies have already been sold in the United States
and Canada, and a new edition of twenty thousand is on the presses.
We are overworked, trying to supply the demand. Nevertheless we
have helped to create that demand. We have already spent five
thousand dollars in advertising. The book is bound to be a record-breaker.”</p>
<p>“Please find herewith a contract in duplicate for your next
book which we have taken the liberty of forwarding to you. You
will please note that we have increased your royalties to twenty per
cent, which is about as high as a conservative publishing house dares
go. If our offer is agreeable to you, please fill in the proper
blank space with the title of your book. We make no stipulations
concerning its nature. Any book on any subject. If you have
one already written, so much the better. Now is the time to strike.
The iron could not be hotter.”</p>
<p>“On receipt of signed contract we shall be pleased to make
you an advance on royalties of five thousand dollars. You see,
we have faith in you, and we are going in on this thing big. We
should like, also, to discuss with you the drawing up of a contract
for a term of years, say ten, during which we shall have the exclusive
right of publishing in book-form all that you produce. But more
of this anon.”</p>
<p>Martin laid down the letter and worked a problem in mental arithmetic,
finding the product of fifteen cents times sixty thousand to be nine
thousand dollars. He signed the new contract, inserting “The
Smoke of Joy” in the blank space, and mailed it back to the publishers
along with the twenty storiettes he had written in the days before he
discovered the formula for the newspaper storiette. And promptly
as the United States mail could deliver and return, came Singletree,
Darnley & Co.’s check for five thousand dollars.</p>
<p>“I want you to come down town with me, Maria, this afternoon
about two o’clock,” Martin said, the morning the check arrived.
“Or, better, meet me at Fourteenth and Broadway at two o’clock.
I’ll be looking out for you.”</p>
<p>At the appointed time she was there; but <i>shoes</i> was the only
clew to the mystery her mind had been capable of evolving, and she suffered
a distinct shock of disappointment when Martin walked her right by a
shoe-store and dived into a real estate office. What happened
thereupon resided forever after in her memory as a dream. Fine
gentlemen smiled at her benevolently as they talked with Martin and
one another; a type-writer clicked; signatures were affixed to an imposing
document; her own landlord was there, too, and affixed his signature;
and when all was over and she was outside on the sidewalk, her landlord
spoke to her, saying, “Well, Maria, you won’t have to pay
me no seven dollars and a half this month.”</p>
<p>Maria was too stunned for speech.</p>
<p>“Or next month, or the next, or the next,” her landlord
said.</p>
<p>She thanked him incoherently, as if for a favor. And it was
not until she had returned home to North Oakland and conferred with
her own kind, and had the Portuguese grocer investigate, that she really
knew that she was the owner of the little house in which she had lived
and for which she had paid rent so long.</p>
<p>“Why don’t you trade with me no more?” the Portuguese
grocer asked Martin that evening, stepping out to hail him when he got
off the car; and Martin explained that he wasn’t doing his own
cooking any more, and then went in and had a drink of wine on the house.
He noted it was the best wine the grocer had in stock.</p>
<p>“Maria,” Martin announced that night, “I’m
going to leave you. And you’re going to leave here yourself
soon. Then you can rent the house and be a landlord yourself.
You’ve a brother in San Leandro or Haywards, and he’s in
the milk business. I want you to send all your washing back unwashed—understand?—unwashed,
and to go out to San Leandro to-morrow, or Haywards, or wherever it
is, and see that brother of yours. Tell him to come to see me.
I’ll be stopping at the Metropole down in Oakland. He’ll
know a good milk-ranch when he sees one.”</p>
<p>And so it was that Maria became a landlord and the sole owner of
a dairy, with two hired men to do the work for her and a bank account
that steadily increased despite the fact that her whole brood wore shoes
and went to school. Few persons ever meet the fairy princes they
dream about; but Maria, who worked hard and whose head was hard, never
dreaming about fairy princes, entertained hers in the guise of an ex-laundryman.</p>
<p>In the meantime the world had begun to ask: “Who is this Martin
Eden?” He had declined to give any biographical data to
his publishers, but the newspapers were not to be denied. Oakland
was his own town, and the reporters nosed out scores of individuals
who could supply information. All that he was and was not, all
that he had done and most of what he had not done, was spread out for
the delectation of the public, accompanied by snapshots and photographs—the
latter procured from the local photographer who had once taken Martin’s
picture and who promptly copyrighted it and put it on the market.
At first, so great was his disgust with the magazines and all bourgeois
society, Martin fought against publicity; but in the end, because it
was easier than not to, he surrendered. He found that he could
not refuse himself to the special writers who travelled long distances
to see him. Then again, each day was so many hours long, and,
since he no longer was occupied with writing and studying, those hours
had to be occupied somehow; so he yielded to what was to him a whim,
permitted interviews, gave his opinions on literature and philosophy,
and even accepted invitations of the bourgeoisie. He had settled
down into a strange and comfortable state of mind. He no longer
cared. He forgave everybody, even the cub reporter who had painted
him red and to whom he now granted a full page with specially posed
photographs.</p>
<p>He saw Lizzie occasionally, and it was patent that she regretted
the greatness that had come to him. It widened the space between
them. Perhaps it was with the hope of narrowing it that she yielded
to his persuasions to go to night school and business college and to
have herself gowned by a wonderful dressmaker who charged outrageous
prices. She improved visibly from day to day, until Martin wondered
if he was doing right, for he knew that all her compliance and endeavor
was for his sake. She was trying to make herself of worth in his
eyes—of the sort of worth he seemed to value. Yet he gave
her no hope, treating her in brotherly fashion and rarely seeing her.</p>
<p>“Overdue” was rushed upon the market by the Meredith-Lowell
Company in the height of his popularity, and being fiction, in point
of sales it made even a bigger strike than “The Shame of the Sun.”
Week after week his was the credit of the unprecedented performance
of having two books at the head of the list of best-sellers. Not
only did the story take with the fiction-readers, but those who read
“The Shame of the Sun” with avidity were likewise attracted
to the sea-story by the cosmic grasp of mastery with which he had handled
it. First he had attacked the literature of mysticism, and had
done it exceeding well; and, next, he had successfully supplied the
very literature he had exposited, thus proving himself to be that rare
genius, a critic and a creator in one.</p>
<p>Money poured in on him, fame poured in on him; he flashed, comet-like,
through the world of literature, and he was more amused than interested
by the stir he was making. One thing was puzzling him, a little
thing that would have puzzled the world had it known. But the
world would have puzzled over his bepuzzlement rather than over the
little thing that to him loomed gigantic. Judge Blount invited
him to dinner. That was the little thing, or the beginning of
the little thing, that was soon to become the big thing. He had
insulted Judge Blount, treated him abominably, and Judge Blount, meeting
him on the street, invited him to dinner. Martin bethought himself
of the numerous occasions on which he had met Judge Blount at the Morses’
and when Judge Blount had not invited him to dinner. Why had he
not invited him to dinner then? he asked himself. He had not changed.
He was the same Martin Eden. What made the difference? The
fact that the stuff he had written had appeared inside the covers of
books? But it was work performed. It was not something he
had done since. It was achievement accomplished at the very time
Judge Blount was sharing this general view and sneering at his Spencer
and his intellect. Therefore it was not for any real value, but
for a purely fictitious value that Judge Blount invited him to dinner.</p>
<p>Martin grinned and accepted the invitation, marvelling the while
at his complacence. And at the dinner, where, with their womankind,
were half a dozen of those that sat in high places, and where Martin
found himself quite the lion, Judge Blount, warmly seconded by Judge
Hanwell, urged privately that Martin should permit his name to be put
up for the Styx—the ultra-select club to which belonged, not the
mere men of wealth, but the men of attainment. And Martin declined,
and was more puzzled than ever.</p>
<p>He was kept busy disposing of his heap of manuscripts. He was
overwhelmed by requests from editors. It had been discovered that
he was a stylist, with meat under his style. <i>The Northern Review</i>,
after publishing “The Cradle of Beauty,” had written him
for half a dozen similar essays, which would have been supplied out
of the heap, had not <i>Burton’s Magazine</i>, in a speculative
mood, offered him five hundred dollars each for five essays. He
wrote back that he would supply the demand, but at a thousand dollars
an essay. He remembered that all these manuscripts had been refused
by the very magazines that were now clamoring for them. And their
refusals had been cold-blooded, automatic, stereotyped. They had
made him sweat, and now he intended to make them sweat. <i>Burton’s
Magazine</i> paid his price for five essays, and the remaining four,
at the same rate, were snapped up by <i>Mackintosh’s Monthly,
The Northern Review</i> being too poor to stand the pace. Thus
went out to the world “The High Priests of Mystery,” “The
Wonder-Dreamers,” “The Yardstick of the Ego,” “Philosophy
of Illusion,” “God and Clod,” “Art and Biology,”
“Critics and Test-tubes,” “Star-dust,” and “The
Dignity of Usury,”—to raise storms and rumblings and mutterings
that were many a day in dying down.</p>
<p>Editors wrote to him telling him to name his own terms, which he
did, but it was always for work performed. He refused resolutely
to pledge himself to any new thing. The thought of again setting
pen to paper maddened him. He had seen Brissenden torn to pieces
by the crowd, and despite the fact that him the crowd acclaimed, he
could not get over the shock nor gather any respect for the crowd.
His very popularity seemed a disgrace and a treason to Brissenden.
It made him wince, but he made up his mind to go on and fill the money-bag.</p>
<p>He received letters from editors like the following: “About
a year ago we were unfortunate enough to refuse your collection of love-poems.
We were greatly impressed by them at the time, but certain arrangements
already entered into prevented our taking them. If you still have
them, and if you will be kind enough to forward them, we shall be glad
to publish the entire collection on your own terms. We are also
prepared to make a most advantageous offer for bringing them out in
book-form.”</p>
<p>Martin recollected his blank-verse tragedy, and sent it instead.
He read it over before mailing, and was particularly impressed by its
sophomoric amateurishness and general worthlessness. But he sent
it; and it was published, to the everlasting regret of the editor.
The public was indignant and incredulous. It was too far a cry
from Martin Eden’s high standard to that serious bosh. It
was asserted that he had never written it, that the magazine had faked
it very clumsily, or that Martin Eden was emulating the elder Dumas
and at the height of success was hiring his writing done for him.
But when he explained that the tragedy was an early effort of his literary
childhood, and that the magazine had refused to be happy unless it got
it, a great laugh went up at the magazine’s expense and a change
in the editorship followed. The tragedy was never brought out
in book-form, though Martin pocketed the advance royalties that had
been paid.</p>
<p><i>Coleman’s Weekly</i> sent Martin a lengthy telegram, costing
nearly three hundred dollars, offering him a thousand dollars an article
for twenty articles. He was to travel over the United States,
with all expenses paid, and select whatever topics interested him.
The body of the telegram was devoted to hypothetical topics in order
to show him the freedom of range that was to be his. The only
restriction placed upon him was that he must confine himself to the
United States. Martin sent his inability to accept and his regrets
by wire “collect.”</p>
<p>“Wiki-Wiki,” published in <i>Warren’s Monthly</i>,
was an instantaneous success. It was brought out forward in a
wide-margined, beautifully decorated volume that struck the holiday
trade and sold like wildfire. The critics were unanimous in the
belief that it would take its place with those two classics by two great
writers, “The Bottle Imp” and “The Magic Skin.”</p>
<p>The public, however, received the “Smoke of Joy” collection
rather dubiously and coldly. The audacity and unconventionality
of the storiettes was a shock to bourgeois morality and prejudice; but
when Paris went mad over the immediate translation that was made, the
American and English reading public followed suit and bought so many
copies that Martin compelled the conservative house of Singletree, Darnley
& Co. to pay a flat royalty of twenty-five per cent for a third
book, and thirty per cent flat for a fourth. These two volumes
comprised all the short stories he had written and which had received,
or were receiving, serial publication. “The Ring of Bells”
and his horror stories constituted one collection; the other collection
was composed of “Adventure,” “The Pot,” “The
Wine of Life,” “The Whirlpool,” “The Jostling
Street,” and four other stories. The Lowell-Meredith Company
captured the collection of all his essays, and the Maxmillian Company
got his “Sea Lyrics” and the “Love-cycle,” the
latter receiving serial publication in the <i>Ladies’ Home Companion</i>
after the payment of an extortionate price.</p>
<p>Martin heaved a sigh of relief when he had disposed of the last manuscript.
The grass-walled castle and the white, coppered schooner were very near
to him. Well, at any rate he had discovered Brissenden’s
contention that nothing of merit found its way into the magazines.
His own success demonstrated that Brissenden had been wrong.</p>
<p>And yet, somehow, he had a feeling that Brissenden had been right,
after all. “The Shame of the Sun” had been the cause
of his success more than the stuff he had written. That stuff
had been merely incidental. It had been rejected right and left
by the magazines. The publication of “The Shame of the Sun”
had started a controversy and precipitated the landslide in his favor.
Had there been no “Shame of the Sun” there would have been
no landslide, and had there been no miracle in the go of “The
Shame of the Sun” there would have been no landslide. Singletree,
Darnley & Co. attested that miracle. They had brought out
a first edition of fifteen hundred copies and been dubious of selling
it. They were experienced publishers and no one had been more
astounded than they at the success which had followed. To them
it had been in truth a miracle. They never got over it, and every
letter they wrote him reflected their reverent awe of that first mysterious
happening. They did not attempt to explain it. There was
no explaining it. It had happened. In the face of all experience
to the contrary, it had happened.</p>
<p>So it was, reasoning thus, that Martin questioned the validity of
his popularity. It was the bourgeoisie that bought his books and
poured its gold into his money-sack, and from what little he knew of
the bourgeoisie it was not clear to him how it could possibly appreciate
or comprehend what he had written. His intrinsic beauty and power
meant nothing to the hundreds of thousands who were acclaiming him and
buying his books. He was the fad of the hour, the adventurer who
had stormed Parnassus while the gods nodded. The hundreds of thousands
read him and acclaimed him with the same brute non-understanding with
which they had flung themselves on Brissenden’s “Ephemera”
and torn it to pieces—a wolf-rabble that fawned on him instead
of fanging him. Fawn or fang, it was all a matter of chance.
One thing he knew with absolute certitude: “Ephemera” was
infinitely greater than anything he had done. It was infinitely
greater than anything he had in him. It was a poem of centuries.
Then the tribute the mob paid him was a sorry tribute indeed, for that
same mob had wallowed “Ephemera” into the mire. He
sighed heavily and with satisfaction. He was glad the last manuscript
was sold and that he would soon be done with it all.</p>
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