<h2>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
<p>Mr. Morse met Martin in the office of the Hotel Metropole.
Whether he had happened there just casually, intent on other affairs,
or whether he had come there for the direct purpose of inviting him
to dinner, Martin never could quite make up his mind, though he inclined
toward the second hypothesis. At any rate, invited to dinner he
was by Mr. Morse—Ruth’s father, who had forbidden him the
house and broken off the engagement.</p>
<p>Martin was not angry. He was not even on his dignity.
He tolerated Mr. Morse, wondering the while how it felt to eat such
humble pie. He did not decline the invitation. Instead,
he put it off with vagueness and indefiniteness and inquired after the
family, particularly after Mrs. Morse and Ruth. He spoke her name
without hesitancy, naturally, though secretly surprised that he had
had no inward quiver, no old, familiar increase of pulse and warm surge
of blood.</p>
<p>He had many invitations to dinner, some of which he accepted.
Persons got themselves introduced to him in order to invite him to dinner.
And he went on puzzling over the little thing that was becoming a great
thing. Bernard Higginbotham invited him to dinner. He puzzled
the harder. He remembered the days of his desperate starvation
when no one invited him to dinner. That was the time he needed
dinners, and went weak and faint for lack of them and lost weight from
sheer famine. That was the paradox of it. When he wanted
dinners, no one gave them to him, and now that he could buy a hundred
thousand dinners and was losing his appetite, dinners were thrust upon
him right and left. But why? There was no justice in it,
no merit on his part. He was no different. All the work
he had done was even at that time work performed. Mr. and Mrs.
Morse had condemned him for an idler and a shirk and through Ruth had
urged that he take a clerk’s position in an office. Furthermore,
they had been aware of his work performed. Manuscript after manuscript
of his had been turned over to them by Ruth. They had read them.
It was the very same work that had put his name in all the papers, and,
it was his name being in all the papers that led them to invite him.</p>
<p>One thing was certain: the Morses had not cared to have him for himself
or for his work. Therefore they could not want him now for himself
or for his work, but for the fame that was his, because he was somebody
amongst men, and—why not?—because he had a hundred thousand
dollars or so. That was the way bourgeois society valued a man,
and who was he to expect it otherwise? But he was proud.
He disdained such valuation. He desired to be valued for himself,
or for his work, which, after all, was an expression of himself.
That was the way Lizzie valued him. The work, with her, did not
even count. She valued him, himself. That was the way Jimmy,
the plumber, and all the old gang valued him. That had been proved
often enough in the days when he ran with them; it had been proved that
Sunday at Shell Mound Park. His work could go hang. What
they liked, and were willing to scrap for, was just Mart Eden, one of
the bunch and a pretty good guy.</p>
<p>Then there was Ruth. She had liked him for himself, that was
indisputable. And yet, much as she had liked him she had liked
the bourgeois standard of valuation more. She had opposed his
writing, and principally, it seemed to him, because it did not earn
money. That had been her criticism of his “Love-cycle.”
She, too, had urged him to get a job. It was true, she refined
it to “position,” but it meant the same thing, and in his
own mind the old nomenclature stuck. He had read her all that
he wrote—poems, stories, essays—“Wiki-Wiki,”
“The Shame of the Sun,” everything. And she had always
and consistently urged him to get a job, to go to work—good God!—as
if he hadn’t been working, robbing sleep, exhausting life, in
order to be worthy of her.</p>
<p>So the little thing grew bigger. He was healthy and normal,
ate regularly, slept long hours, and yet the growing little thing was
becoming an obsession. <i>Work performed</i>. The phrase
haunted his brain. He sat opposite Bernard Higginbotham at a heavy
Sunday dinner over Higginbotham’s Cash Store, and it was all he
could do to restrain himself from shouting out:-</p>
<p>“It was work performed! And now you feed me, when then
you let me starve, forbade me your house, and damned me because I wouldn’t
get a job. And the work was already done, all done. And
now, when I speak, you check the thought unuttered on your lips and
hang on my lips and pay respectful attention to whatever I choose to
say. I tell you your party is rotten and filled with grafters,
and instead of flying into a rage you hum and haw and admit there is
a great deal in what I say. And why? Because I’m famous;
because I’ve a lot of money. Not because I’m Martin
Eden, a pretty good fellow and not particularly a fool. I could
tell you the moon is made of green cheese and you would subscribe to
the notion, at least you would not repudiate it, because I’ve
got dollars, mountains of them. And it was all done long ago;
it was work performed, I tell you, when you spat upon me as the dirt
under your feet.”</p>
<p>But Martin did not shout out. The thought gnawed in his brain,
an unceasing torment, while he smiled and succeeded in being tolerant.
As he grew silent, Bernard Higginbotham got the reins and did the talking.
He was a success himself, and proud of it. He was self-made.
No one had helped him. He owed no man. He was fulfilling
his duty as a citizen and bringing up a large family. And there
was Higginbotham’s Cash Store, that monument of his own industry
and ability. He loved Higginbotham’s Cash Store as some
men loved their wives. He opened up his heart to Martin, showed
with what keenness and with what enormous planning he had made the store.
And he had plans for it, ambitious plans. The neighborhood was
growing up fast. The store was really too small. If he had
more room, he would be able to put in a score of labor-saving and money-saving
improvements. And he would do it yet. He was straining every
effort for the day when he could buy the adjoining lot and put up another
two-story frame building. The upstairs he could rent, and the
whole ground-floor of both buildings would be Higginbotham’s Cash
Store. His eyes glistened when he spoke of the new sign that would
stretch clear across both buildings.</p>
<p>Martin forgot to listen. The refrain of “Work performed,”
in his own brain, was drowning the other’s clatter. The
refrain maddened him, and he tried to escape from it.</p>
<p>“How much did you say it would cost?” he asked suddenly.</p>
<p>His brother-in-law paused in the middle of an expatiation on the
business opportunities of the neighborhood. He hadn’t said
how much it would cost. But he knew. He had figured it out
a score of times.</p>
<p>“At the way lumber is now,” he said, “four thousand
could do it.”</p>
<p>“Including the sign?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t count on that. It’d just have to
come, onc’t the buildin’ was there.”</p>
<p>“And the ground?”</p>
<p>“Three thousand more.”</p>
<p>He leaned forward, licking his lips, nervously spreading and closing
his fingers, while he watched Martin write a check. When it was
passed over to him, he glanced at the amount-seven thousand dollars.</p>
<p>“I—I can’t afford to pay more than six per cent,”
he said huskily.</p>
<p>Martin wanted to laugh, but, instead, demanded:-</p>
<p>“How much would that be?”</p>
<p>“Lemme see. Six per cent—six times seven—four
hundred an’ twenty.”</p>
<p>“That would be thirty-five dollars a month, wouldn’t
it?”</p>
<p>Higginbotham nodded.</p>
<p>“Then, if you’ve no objection, well arrange it this way.”
Martin glanced at Gertrude. “You can have the principal
to keep for yourself, if you’ll use the thirty-five dollars a
month for cooking and washing and scrubbing. The seven thousand
is yours if you’ll guarantee that Gertrude does no more drudgery.
Is it a go?”</p>
<p>Mr. Higginbotham swallowed hard. That his wife should do no
more housework was an affront to his thrifty soul. The magnificent
present was the coating of a pill, a bitter pill. That his wife
should not work! It gagged him.</p>
<p>“All right, then,” Martin said. “I’ll
pay the thirty-five a month, and—”</p>
<p>He reached across the table for the check. But Bernard Higginbotham
got his hand on it first, crying:</p>
<p>“I accept! I accept!”</p>
<p>When Martin got on the electric car, he was very sick and tired.
He looked up at the assertive sign.</p>
<p>“The swine,” he groaned. “The swine, the
swine.”</p>
<p>When <i>Mackintosh’s Magazine</i> published “The Palmist,”
featuring it with decorations by Berthier and with two pictures by Wenn,
Hermann von Schmidt forgot that he had called the verses obscene.
He announced that his wife had inspired the poem, saw to it that the
news reached the ears of a reporter, and submitted to an interview by
a staff writer who was accompanied by a staff photographer and a staff
artist. The result was a full page in a Sunday supplement, filled
with photographs and idealized drawings of Marian, with many intimate
details of Martin Eden and his family, and with the full text of “The
Palmist” in large type, and republished by special permission
of <i>Mackintosh’s Magazine</i>. It caused quite a stir
in the neighborhood, and good housewives were proud to have the acquaintances
of the great writer’s sister, while those who had not made haste
to cultivate it. Hermann von Schmidt chuckled in his little repair
shop and decided to order a new lathe. “Better than advertising,”
he told Marian, “and it costs nothing.”</p>
<p>“We’d better have him to dinner,” she suggested.</p>
<p>And to dinner Martin came, making himself agreeable with the fat
wholesale butcher and his fatter wife—important folk, they, likely
to be of use to a rising young man like Hermann Von Schmidt. No
less a bait, however, had been required to draw them to his house than
his great brother-in-law. Another man at table who had swallowed
the same bait was the superintendent of the Pacific Coast agencies for
the Asa Bicycle Company. Him Von Schmidt desired to please and
propitiate because from him could be obtained the Oakland agency for
the bicycle. So Hermann von Schmidt found it a goodly asset to
have Martin for a brother-in-law, but in his heart of hearts he couldn’t
understand where it all came in. In the silent watches of the
night, while his wife slept, he had floundered through Martin’s
books and poems, and decided that the world was a fool to buy them.</p>
<p>And in his heart of hearts Martin understood the situation only too
well, as he leaned back and gloated at Von Schmidt’s head, in
fancy punching it well-nigh off of him, sending blow after blow home
just right—the chuckle-headed Dutchman! One thing he did
like about him, however. Poor as he was, and determined to rise
as he was, he nevertheless hired one servant to take the heavy work
off of Marian’s hands. Martin talked with the superintendent
of the Asa agencies, and after dinner he drew him aside with Hermann,
whom he backed financially for the best bicycle store with fittings
in Oakland. He went further, and in a private talk with Hermann
told him to keep his eyes open for an automobile agency and garage,
for there was no reason that he should not be able to run both establishments
successfully.</p>
<p>With tears in her eyes and her arms around his neck, Marian, at parting,
told Martin how much she loved him and always had loved him. It
was true, there was a perceptible halt midway in her assertion, which
she glossed over with more tears and kisses and incoherent stammerings,
and which Martin inferred to be her appeal for forgiveness for the time
she had lacked faith in him and insisted on his getting a job.</p>
<p>“He can’t never keep his money, that’s sure,”
Hermann von Schmidt confided to his wife. “He got mad when
I spoke of interest, an’ he said damn the principal and if I mentioned
it again, he’d punch my Dutch head off. That’s what
he said—my Dutch head. But he’s all right, even if
he ain’t no business man. He’s given me my chance,
an’ he’s all right.”</p>
<p>Invitations to dinner poured in on Martin; and the more they poured,
the more he puzzled. He sat, the guest of honor, at an Arden Club
banquet, with men of note whom he had heard about and read about all
his life; and they told him how, when they had read “The Ring
of Bells” in the <i>Transcontinental</i>, and “The Peri
and the Pearl” in <i>The Hornet</i>, they had immediately picked
him for a winner. My God! and I was hungry and in rags, he thought
to himself. Why didn’t you give me a dinner then?
Then was the time. It was work performed. If you are feeding
me now for work performed, why did you not feed me then when I needed
it? Not one word in “The Ring of Bells,” nor in “The
Peri and the Pearl” has been changed. No; you’re not
feeding me now for work performed. You are feeding me because
everybody else is feeding me and because it is an honor to feed me.
You are feeding me now because you are herd animals; because you are
part of the mob; because the one blind, automatic thought in the mob-mind
just now is to feed me. And where does Martin Eden and the work
Martin Eden performed come in in all this? he asked himself plaintively,
then arose to respond cleverly and wittily to a clever and witty toast.</p>
<p>So it went. Wherever he happened to be—at the Press Club,
at the Redwood Club, at pink teas and literary gatherings—always
were remembered “The Ring of Bells” and “The Peri
and the Pearl” when they were first published. And always
was Martin’s maddening and unuttered demand: Why didn’t
you feed me then? It was work performed. “The Ring
of Bells” and “The Peri and the Pearl” are not changed
one iota. They were just as artistic, just as worth while, then
as now. But you are not feeding me for their sake, nor for the
sake of anything else I have written. You’re feeding me
because it is the style of feeding just now, because the whole mob is
crazy with the idea of feeding Martin Eden.</p>
<p>And often, at such times, he would abruptly see slouch in among the
company a young hoodlum in square-cut coat and under a stiff-rim Stetson
hat. It happened to him at the Gallina Society in Oakland one
afternoon. As he rose from his chair and stepped forward across
the platform, he saw stalk through the wide door at the rear of the
great room the young hoodlum with the square-cut coat and stiff-rim
hat. Five hundred fashionably gowned women turned their heads,
so intent and steadfast was Martin’s gaze, to see what he was
seeing. But they saw only the empty centre aisle. He saw
the young tough lurching down that aisle and wondered if he would remove
the stiff-rim which never yet had he seen him without. Straight
down the aisle he came, and up the platform. Martin could have
wept over that youthful shade of himself, when he thought of all that
lay before him. Across the platform he swaggered, right up to
Martin, and into the foreground of Martin’s consciousness disappeared.
The five hundred women applauded softly with gloved hands, seeking to
encourage the bashful great man who was their guest. And Martin
shook the vision from his brain, smiled, and began to speak.</p>
<p>The Superintendent of Schools, good old man, stopped Martin on the
street and remembered him, recalling seances in his office when Martin
was expelled from school for fighting.</p>
<p>“I read your ‘Ring of Bells’ in one of the magazines
quite a time ago,” he said. “It was as good as Poe.
Splendid, I said at the time, splendid!”</p>
<p>Yes, and twice in the months that followed you passed me on the street
and did not know me, Martin almost said aloud. Each time I was
hungry and heading for the pawnbroker. Yet it was work performed.
You did not know me then. Why do you know me now?</p>
<p>“I was remarking to my wife only the other day,” the
other was saying, “wouldn’t it be a good idea to have you
out to dinner some time? And she quite agreed with me. Yes,
she quite agreed with me.”</p>
<p>“Dinner?” Martin said so sharply that it was almost a
snarl.</p>
<p>“Why, yes, yes, dinner, you know—just pot luck with us,
with your old superintendent, you rascal,” he uttered nervously,
poking Martin in an attempt at jocular fellowship.</p>
<p>Martin went down the street in a daze. He stopped at the corner
and looked about him vacantly.</p>
<p>“Well, I’ll be damned!” he murmured at last.
“The old fellow was afraid of me.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />