<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE ROAD</h1>
<h2>By Jack London</h2>
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<h2><SPAN name="Confession" id="Confession" /><i>Confession</i></h2>
<p>There is a woman in the state of Nevada to whom I once lied continuously,
consistently, and shamelessly, for the matter of a couple of hours. I
don't want to apologize to her. Far be it from me. But I do want to
explain. Unfortunately, I do not know her name, much less her present
address. If her eyes should chance upon these lines, I hope she will write
to me.</p>
<p>It was in Reno, Nevada, in the summer of 1892. Also, it was fair-time, and
the town was filled with petty crooks and tin-horns, to say nothing of a
vast and hungry horde of hoboes. It was the hungry hoboes that made the
town a "hungry" town. They "battered" the back doors of the homes of the
citizens until the back doors became unresponsive.</p>
<p>A hard town for "scoffings," was what the hoboes called it at that time. I
know that I missed many a meal, in spite of the fact that I could "throw
my feet" with the next one when it came to "slamming a gate" for a
"poke-out" or a "set-down," or hitting for a "light piece" on the street.
Why, I was so hard put in that town, one day, that I gave the porter the
slip and invaded the private car of some itinerant millionnaire. The train
started as I made the platform, and I headed for the aforesaid
millionnaire with the porter one jump behind and reaching for me. It was a
dead heat, for I reached the millionnaire at the same instant that the
porter reached me. I had no time for formalities. "Gimme a quarter to eat
on," I blurted out. And as I live, that millionnaire dipped into his
pocket and gave me ... just ... precisely ... a quarter. It is my
conviction that he was so flabbergasted that he obeyed automatically, and
it has been a matter of keen regret ever since, on my part, that I didn't
ask him for a dollar. I know that I'd have got it. I swung off the
platform of that private car with the porter manoeuvring to kick me in the
face. He missed me. One is at a terrible disadvantage when trying to swing
off the lowest step of a car and not break his neck on the right of way,
with, at the same time, an irate Ethiopian on the platform above trying
to land him in the face with a number eleven. But I got the quarter! I got
it!</p>
<p>But to return to the woman to whom I so shamelessly lied. It was in the
evening of my last day in Reno. I had been out to the race-track watching
the ponies run, and had missed my dinner (<i>i.e.</i> the mid-day meal). I was
hungry, and, furthermore, a committee of public safety had just been
organized to rid the town of just such hungry mortals as I. Already a lot
of my brother hoboes had been gathered in by John Law, and I could hear
the sunny valleys of California calling to me over the cold crests of the
Sierras. Two acts remained for me to perform before I shook the dust of
Reno from my feet. One was to catch the blind baggage on the westbound
overland that night. The other was first to get something to eat. Even
youth will hesitate at an all-night ride, on an empty stomach, outside a
train that is tearing the atmosphere through the snow-sheds, tunnels, and
eternal snows of heaven-aspiring mountains.</p>
<p>But that something to eat was a hard proposition. I was "turned down" at a
dozen houses. Sometimes I received insulting remarks and was informed of
the barred domicile that should be mine if I had my just deserts. The
worst of it was that such assertions were only too true. That was why I
was pulling west that night. John Law was abroad in the town, seeking
eagerly for the hungry and homeless, for by such was his barred domicile
tenanted.</p>
<p>At other houses the doors were slammed in my face, cutting short my
politely and humbly couched request for something to eat. At one house
they did not open the door. I stood on the porch and knocked, and they
looked out at me through the window. They even held one sturdy little boy
aloft so that he could see over the shoulders of his elders the tramp who
wasn't going to get anything to eat at their house.</p>
<p>It began to look as if I should be compelled to go to the very poor for my
food. The very poor constitute the last sure recourse of the hungry tramp.
The very poor can always be depended upon. They never turn away the
hungry. Time and again, all over the United States, have I been refused
food by the big house on the hill; and always have I received food from
the little shack down by the creek or marsh, with its broken windows
stuffed with rags and its tired-faced mother broken with labor. Oh, you
charity-mongers! Go to the poor and learn, for the poor alone are the
charitable. They neither give nor withhold from their excess. They have no
excess. They give, and they withhold never, from what they need for
themselves, and very often from what they cruelly need for themselves. A
bone to the dog is not charity. Charity is the bone shared with the dog
when you are just as hungry as the dog.</p>
<p>There was one house in particular where I was turned down that evening.
The porch windows opened on the dining room, and through them I saw a man
eating pie—a big meat-pie. I stood in the open door, and while he talked
with me, he went on eating. He was prosperous, and out of his prosperity
had been bred resentment against his less fortunate brothers.</p>
<p>He cut short my request for something to eat, snapping out, "I don't
believe you want to work."</p>
<p>Now this was irrelevant. I hadn't said anything about work. The topic of
conversation I had introduced was "food." In fact, I didn't want to work.
I wanted to take the westbound overland that night.</p>
<p>"You wouldn't work if you had a chance," he bullied.</p>
<p>I glanced at his meek-faced wife, and knew that but for the presence of
this Cerberus I'd have a whack at that meat-pie myself. But Cerberus
sopped himself in the pie, and I saw that I must placate him if I were to
get a share of it. So I sighed to myself and accepted his work-morality.</p>
<p>"Of course I want work," I bluffed.</p>
<p>"Don't believe it," he snorted.</p>
<p>"Try me," I answered, warming to the bluff.</p>
<p>"All right," he said. "Come to the corner of blank and blank streets"—(I
have forgotten the address)—"to-morrow morning. You know where that
burned building is, and I'll put you to work tossing bricks."</p>
<p>"All right, sir; I'll be there."</p>
<p>He grunted and went on eating. I waited. After a couple of minutes he
looked up with an I-thought-you-were-gone expression on his face, and
demanded:—</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"I ... I am waiting for something to eat," I said gently.</p>
<p>"I knew you wouldn't work!" he roared.</p>
<p>He was right, of course; but his conclusion must have been reached by
mind-reading, for his logic wouldn't bear it out. But the beggar at the
door must be humble, so I accepted his logic as I had accepted his
morality.</p>
<p>"You see, I am now hungry," I said still gently. "To-morrow morning I
shall be hungrier. Think how hungry I shall be when I have tossed bricks
all day without anything to eat. Now if you will give me something to eat,
I'll be in great shape for those bricks."</p>
<p>He gravely considered my plea, at the same time going on eating, while his
wife nearly trembled into propitiatory speech, but refrained.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you what I'll do," he said between mouthfuls. "You come to work
to-morrow, and in the middle of the day I'll advance you enough for your
dinner. That will show whether you are in earnest or not."</p>
<p>"In the meantime—" I began; but he interrupted.</p>
<p>"If I gave you something to eat now, I'd never see you again. Oh, I know
your kind. Look at me. I owe no man. I have never descended so low as to
ask any one for food. I have always earned my food. The trouble with you
is that you are idle and dissolute. I can see it in your face. I have
worked and been honest. I have made myself what I am. And you can do the
same, if you work and are honest."</p>
<p>"Like you?" I queried.</p>
<p>Alas, no ray of humor had ever penetrated the sombre work-sodden soul of
that man.</p>
<p>"Yes, like me," he answered.</p>
<p>"All of us?" I queried.</p>
<p>"Yes, all of you," he answered, conviction vibrating in his voice.</p>
<p>"But if we all became like you," I said, "allow me to point out that
there'd be nobody to toss bricks for you."</p>
<p>I swear there was a flicker of a smile in his wife's eye. As for him, he
was aghast—but whether at the awful possibility of a reformed humanity
that would not enable him to get anybody to toss bricks for him, or at my
impudence, I shall never know.</p>
<p>"I'll not waste words on you," he roared. "Get out of here, you
ungrateful whelp!"</p>
<p>I scraped my feet to advertise my intention of going, and queried:—</p>
<p>"And I don't get anything to eat?"</p>
<p>He arose suddenly to his feet. He was a large man. I was a stranger in a
strange land, and John Law was looking for me. I went away hurriedly. "But
why ungrateful?" I asked myself as I slammed his gate. "What in the
dickens did he give me to be ungrateful about?" I looked back. I could
still see him through the window. He had returned to his pie.</p>
<p>By this time I had lost heart. I passed many houses by without venturing
up to them. All houses looked alike, and none looked "good." After walking
half a dozen blocks I shook off my despondency and gathered my "nerve."
This begging for food was all a game, and if I didn't like the cards, I
could always call for a new deal. I made up my mind to tackle the next
house. I approached it in the deepening twilight, going around to the
kitchen door.</p>
<p>I knocked softly, and when I saw the kind face of the middle-aged woman
who answered, as by inspiration came to me the "story" I was to tell. For
know that upon his ability to tell a good story depends the success of the
beggar. First of all, and on the instant, the beggar must "size up" his
victim. After that, he must tell a story that will appeal to the peculiar
personality and temperament of that particular victim. And right here
arises the great difficulty: in the instant that he is sizing up the
victim he must begin his story. Not a minute is allowed for preparation.
As in a lightning flash he must divine the nature of the victim and
conceive a tale that will hit home. The successful hobo must be an artist.
He must create spontaneously and instantaneously—and not upon a theme
selected from the plenitude of his own imagination, but upon the theme he
reads in the face of the person who opens the door, be it man, woman, or
child, sweet or crabbed, generous or miserly, good-natured or
cantankerous, Jew or Gentile, black or white, race-prejudiced or
brotherly, provincial or universal, or whatever else it may be. I have
often thought that to this training of my tramp days is due much of my
success as a story-writer. In order to get the food whereby I lived, I
was compelled to tell tales that rang true. At the back door, out of
inexorable necessity, is developed the convincingness and sincerity laid
down by all authorities on the art of the short-story. Also, I quite
believe it was my tramp-apprenticeship that made a realist out of me.
Realism constitutes the only goods one can exchange at the kitchen door
for grub.</p>
<p>After all, art is only consummate artfulness, and artfulness saves many a
"story." I remember lying in a police station at Winnipeg, Manitoba. I was
bound west over the Canadian Pacific. Of course, the police wanted my
story, and I gave it to them—on the spur of the moment. They were
landlubbers, in the heart of the continent, and what better story for them
than a sea story? They could never trip me up on that. And so I told a
tearful tale of my life on the hell-ship <i>Glenmore</i>. (I had once seen the
<i>Glenmore</i> lying at anchor in San Francisco Bay.)</p>
<p>I was an English apprentice, I said. And they said that I didn't talk like
an English boy. It was up to me to create on the instant. I had been born
and reared in the United States. On the death of my parents, I had been
sent to England to my grandparents. It was they who had apprenticed me on
the <i>Glenmore</i>. I hope the captain of the <i>Glenmore</i> will forgive me, for
I gave him a character that night in the Winnipeg police station. Such
cruelty! Such brutality! Such diabolical ingenuity of torture! It
explained why I had deserted the <i>Glenmore</i> at Montreal.</p>
<p>But why was I in the middle of Canada going west, when my grandparents
lived in England? Promptly I created a married sister who lived in
California. She would take care of me. I developed at length her loving
nature. But they were not done with me, those hard-hearted policemen. I
had joined the <i>Glenmore</i> in England; in the two years that had elapsed
before my desertion at Montreal, what had the <i>Glenmore</i> done and where
had she been? And thereat I took those landlubbers around the world with
me. Buffeted by pounding seas and stung with flying spray, they fought a
typhoon with me off the coast of Japan. They loaded and unloaded cargo
with me in all the ports of the Seven Seas. I took them to India, and
Rangoon, and China, and had them hammer ice with me around the Horn and
at last come to moorings at Montreal.</p>
<p>And then they said to wait a moment, and one policeman went forth into the
night while I warmed myself at the stove, all the while racking my brains
for the trap they were going to spring on me.</p>
<p>I groaned to myself when I saw him come in the door at the heels of the
policeman. No gypsy prank had thrust those tiny hoops of gold through the
ears; no prairie winds had beaten that skin into wrinkled leather; nor had
snow-drift and mountain-slope put in his walk that reminiscent roll. And
in those eyes, when they looked at me, I saw the unmistakable sun-wash of
the sea. Here was a theme, alas! with half a dozen policemen to watch me
read—I who had never sailed the China seas, nor been around the Horn, nor
looked with my eyes upon India and Rangoon.</p>
<p>I was desperate. Disaster stalked before me incarnate in the form of that
gold-ear-ringed, weather-beaten son of the sea. Who was he? What was he? I
must solve him ere he solved me. I must take a new orientation, or else
those wicked policemen would orientate me to a cell, a police court, and
more cells. If he questioned me first, before I knew how much he knew, I
was lost.</p>
<p>But did I betray my desperate plight to those lynx-eyed guardians of the
public welfare of Winnipeg? Not I. I met that aged sailorman glad-eyed and
beaming, with all the simulated relief at deliverance that a drowning man
would display on finding a life-preserver in his last despairing clutch.
Here was a man who understood and who would verify my true story to the
faces of those sleuth-hounds who did not understand, or, at least, such
was what I endeavored to play-act. I seized upon him; I volleyed him with
questions about himself. Before my judges I would prove the character of
my savior before he saved me.</p>
<p>He was a kindly sailorman—an "easy mark." The policemen grew impatient
while I questioned him. At last one of them told me to shut up. I shut up;
but while I remained shut up, I was busy creating, busy sketching the
scenario of the next act. I had learned enough to go on with. He was a
Frenchman. He had sailed always on French merchant vessels, with the one
exception of a voyage on a "lime-juicer." And last of all—blessed
fact!—he had not been on the sea for twenty years.</p>
<p>The policeman urged him on to examine me.</p>
<p>"You called in at Rangoon?" he queried.</p>
<p>I nodded. "We put our third mate ashore there. Fever."</p>
<p>If he had asked me what kind of fever, I should have answered, "Enteric,"
though for the life of me I didn't know what enteric was. But he didn't
ask me. Instead, his next question was:—</p>
<p>"And how is Rangoon?"</p>
<p>"All right. It rained a whole lot when we were there."</p>
<p>"Did you get shore-leave?"</p>
<p>"Sure," I answered. "Three of us apprentices went ashore together."</p>
<p>"Do you remember the temple?"</p>
<p>"Which temple?" I parried.</p>
<p>"The big one, at the top of the stairway."</p>
<p>If I remembered that temple, I knew I'd have to describe it. The gulf
yawned for me.</p>
<p>I shook my head.</p>
<p>"You can see it from all over the harbor," he informed me. "You don't need
shore-leave to see that temple."</p>
<p>I never loathed a temple so in my life. But I fixed that particular temple
at Rangoon.</p>
<p>"You can't see it from the harbor," I contradicted. "You can't see it from
the town. You can't see it from the top of the stairway. Because—" I
paused for the effect. "Because there isn't any temple there."</p>
<p>"But I saw it with my own eyes!" he cried.</p>
<p>"That was in—?" I queried.</p>
<p>"Seventy-one."</p>
<p>"It was destroyed in the great earthquake of 1887," I explained. "It was
very old."</p>
<p>There was a pause. He was busy reconstructing in his old eyes the youthful
vision of that fair temple by the sea.</p>
<p>"The stairway is still there," I aided him. "You can see it from all over
the harbor. And you remember that little island on the right-hand side
coming into the harbor?" I guess there must have been one there (I was
prepared to shift it over to the left-hand side), for he nodded. "Gone,"
I said. "Seven fathoms of water there now."</p>
<p>I had gained a moment for breath. While he pondered on time's changes, I
prepared the finishing touches of my story.</p>
<p>"You remember the custom-house at Bombay?"</p>
<p>He remembered it.</p>
<p>"Burned to the ground," I announced.</p>
<p>"Do you remember Jim Wan?" he came back at me.</p>
<p>"Dead," I said; but who the devil Jim Wan was I hadn't the slightest idea.</p>
<p>I was on thin ice again.</p>
<p>"Do you remember Billy Harper, at Shanghai?" I queried back at him
quickly.</p>
<p>That aged sailorman worked hard to recollect, but the Billy Harper of my
imagination was beyond his faded memory.</p>
<p>"Of course you remember Billy Harper," I insisted. "Everybody knows him.
He's been there forty years. Well, he's still there, that's all."</p>
<p>And then the miracle happened. The sailorman remembered Billy Harper.
Perhaps there was a Billy Harper, and perhaps he had been in Shanghai for
forty years and was still there; but it was news to me.</p>
<p>For fully half an hour longer, the sailorman and I talked on in similar
fashion. In the end he told the policemen that I was what I represented
myself to be, and after a night's lodging and a breakfast I was released
to wander on westward to my married sister in San Francisco.</p>
<p>But to return to the woman in Reno who opened her door to me in the
deepening twilight. At the first glimpse of her kindly face I took my cue.
I became a sweet, innocent, unfortunate lad. I couldn't speak. I opened my
mouth and closed it again. Never in my life before had I asked any one for
food. My embarrassment was painful, extreme. I was ashamed. I, who looked
upon begging as a delightful whimsicality, thumbed myself over into a true
son of Mrs. Grundy, burdened with all her bourgeois morality. Only the
harsh pangs of the belly-need could compel me to do so degraded and
ignoble a thing as beg for food. And into my face I strove to throw all
the wan wistfulness of famished and ingenuous youth unused to mendicancy.</p>
<p>"You are hungry, my poor boy," she said.</p>
<p>I had made her speak first.</p>
<p>I nodded my head and gulped.</p>
<p>"It is the first time I have ever ... asked," I faltered.</p>
<p>"Come right in." The door swung open. "We have already finished eating,
but the fire is burning and I can get something up for you."</p>
<p>She looked at me closely when she got me into the light.</p>
<p>"I wish my boy were as healthy and strong as you," she said. "But he is
not strong. He sometimes falls down. He just fell down this afternoon and
hurt himself badly, the poor dear."</p>
<p>She mothered him with her voice, with an ineffable tenderness in it that I
yearned to appropriate. I glanced at him. He sat across the table, slender
and pale, his head swathed in bandages. He did not move, but his eyes,
bright in the lamplight, were fixed upon me in a steady and wondering
stare.</p>
<p>"Just like my poor father," I said. "He had the falling sickness. Some
kind of vertigo. It puzzled the doctors. They never could make out what
was the matter with him."</p>
<p>"He is dead?" she queried gently, setting before me half a dozen
soft-boiled eggs.</p>
<p>"Dead," I gulped. "Two weeks ago. I was with him when it happened. We were
crossing the street together. He fell right down. He was never conscious
again. They carried him into a drug-store. He died there."</p>
<p>And thereat I developed the pitiful tale of my father—how, after my
mother's death, he and I had gone to San Francisco from the ranch; how his
pension (he was an old soldier), and the little other money he had, was
not enough; and how he had tried book-canvassing. Also, I narrated my own
woes during the few days after his death that I had spent alone and
forlorn on the streets of San Francisco. While that good woman warmed up
biscuits, fried bacon, and cooked more eggs, and while I kept pace with
her in taking care of all that she placed before me, I enlarged the
picture of that poor orphan boy and filled in the details. I became that
poor boy. I believed in him as I believed in the beautiful eggs I was
devouring. I could have wept for myself. I know the tears did get into my
voice at times. It was very effective.</p>
<p>In fact, with every touch I added to the picture, that kind soul gave me
something also. She made up a lunch for me to carry away. She put in many
boiled eggs, pepper and salt, and other things, and a big apple. She
provided me with three pairs of thick red woollen socks. She gave me clean
handkerchiefs and other things which I have since forgotten. And all the
time she cooked more and more and I ate more and more. I gorged like a
savage; but then it was a far cry across the Sierras on a blind baggage,
and I knew not when nor where I should find my next meal. And all the
while, like a death's-head at the feast, silent and motionless, her own
unfortunate boy sat and stared at me across the table. I suppose I
represented to him mystery, and romance, and adventure—all that was
denied the feeble flicker of life that was in him. And yet I could not
forbear, once or twice, from wondering if he saw through me down to the
bottom of my mendacious heart.</p>
<p>"But where are you going to?" she asked me.</p>
<p>"Salt Lake City," said I. "I have a sister there—a married sister." (I
debated if I should make a Mormon out of her, and decided against it.)
"Her husband is a plumber—a contracting plumber."</p>
<p>Now I knew that contracting plumbers were usually credited with making
lots of money. But I had spoken. It was up to me to qualify.</p>
<p>"They would have sent me the money for my fare if I had asked for it," I
explained, "but they have had sickness and business troubles. His partner
cheated him. And so I wouldn't write for the money. I knew I could make my
way there somehow. I let them think I had enough to get me to Salt Lake
City. She is lovely, and so kind. She was always kind to me. I guess I'll
go into the shop and learn the trade. She has two daughters. They are
younger than I. One is only a baby."</p>
<p>Of all my married sisters that I have distributed among the cities of the
United States, that Salt Lake sister is my favorite. She is quite real,
too. When I tell about her, I can see her, and her two little girls, and
her plumber husband. She is a large, motherly woman, just verging on
beneficent stoutness—the kind, you know, that always cooks nice things
and that never gets angry. She is a brunette. Her husband is a quiet,
easy-going fellow. Sometimes I almost know him quite well. And who knows
but some day I may meet him? If that aged sailorman could remember Billy
Harper, I see no reason why I should not some day meet the husband of my
sister who lives in Salt Lake City.</p>
<p>On the other hand, I have a feeling of certitude within me that I shall
never meet in the flesh my many parents and grandparents—you see, I
invariably killed them off. Heart disease was my favorite way of getting
rid of my mother, though on occasion I did away with her by means of
consumption, pneumonia, and typhoid fever. It is true, as the Winnipeg
policemen will attest, that I have grandparents living in England; but
that was a long time ago and it is a fair assumption that they are dead by
now. At any rate, they have never written to me.</p>
<p>I hope that woman in Reno will read these lines and forgive me my
gracelessness and unveracity. I do not apologize, for I am unashamed. It
was youth, delight in life, zest for experience, that brought me to her
door. It did me good. It taught me the intrinsic kindliness of human
nature. I hope it did her good. Anyway, she may get a good laugh out of it
now that she learns the real inwardness of the situation.</p>
<p>To her my story was "true." She believed in me and all my family, and she
was filled with solicitude for the dangerous journey I must make ere I won
to Salt Lake City. This solicitude nearly brought me to grief. Just as I
was leaving, my arms full of lunch and my pockets bulging with fat woollen
socks, she bethought herself of a nephew, or uncle, or relative of some
sort, who was in the railway mail service, and who, moreover, would come
through that night on the very train on which I was going to steal my
ride. The very thing! She would take me down to the depot, tell him my
story, and get him to hide me in the mail car. Thus, without danger or
hardship, I would be carried straight through to Ogden. Salt Lake City was
only a few miles farther on. My heart sank. She grew excited as she
developed the plan and with my sinking heart I had to feign unbounded
gladness and enthusiasm at this solution of my difficulties.</p>
<p>Solution! Why I was bound west that night, and here was I being trapped
into going east. It <i>was</i> a trap, and I hadn't the heart to tell her that
it was all a miserable lie. And while I made believe that I was delighted,
I was busy cudgelling my brains for some way to escape. But there was no
way. She would see me into the mail-car—she said so herself—and then
that mail-clerk relative of hers would carry me to Ogden. And then I would
have to beat my way back over all those hundreds of miles of desert.</p>
<p>But luck was with me that night. Just about the time she was getting ready
to put on her bonnet and accompany me, she discovered that she had made a
mistake. Her mail-clerk relative was not scheduled to come through that
night. His run had been changed. He would not come through until two
nights afterward. I was saved, for of course my boundless youth would
never permit me to wait those two days. I optimistically assured her that
I'd get to Salt Lake City quicker if I started immediately, and I departed
with her blessings and best wishes ringing in my ears.</p>
<p>But those woollen socks were great. I know. I wore a pair of them that
night on the blind baggage of the overland, and that overland went west.</p>
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