Part 22 (1/2)

”I wonder,” he has written in that portion of the McHurdie Biography devoted to ”The Press of the Years,” ”why, as we go farther and farther into life, invariably it grows dingier and dingier. The 'large white plumes' that dance before the eyes of youth soil, and are bedraggled. And out of the inexplicable tangle of the mesh of life come dark threads from G.o.d knows where and colour the woof of it gray and dreary. Ah for the days of the large white plumes--for the days when life's woof was bright!”

CHAPTER XX

If the reader of this tale should feel drawn to visit Sycamore Ridge, he will find a number of interesting things there, and the trip may be made by the transcontinental traveller with the loss of but half a dozen hours from his journey. The Golden Belt Railroad, fifteen years ago, used to print a guide-book called ”California and Back,” in which were set down the places of interest to the traveller. In that book Sycamore Ridge was described thus:--

”Sycamore Ridge, pop. 22,345, census 1890; large water-power, main industry milling; also manufacturing; five wholesale houses. Seat Ward University, 1300 students; also Garrison County High School, also Business College. Thirty-five churches, two newspapers, the _Daily Banner_ and the _Index_; fifty miles of paved streets; largest stone arch bridge in the West, marking site of Battle of Sycamore Ridge, a border ruffian skirmish; home of Watts McHurdie, famous as writer of war-songs, best known of which is--” etc., etc.

But excepting Watts, who may be gone before you get there,--for he is an old man now, and is alone and probably does not always have the best of care,--the things above annotated will not interest the traveller. At the Thayer House they will tell you that three things in the town give it distinction: the Barclay home, a rambling gray brick structure which the natives call Barclay Castle, with a great sycamore tree held together by iron bands on the terraced lawn before the house--that is number one; the second thing they will advise the traveller to see is Mary Barclay Park, ten acres of transplanted elm trees, most tastefully laid out, between Main Street and the Barclay home; and the third thing that will be pointed out to the traveller is the Schnitzler fountain, in the cemetery gateway, done by St. Gaudens; it represents a soldier pouring water from his canteen into his hand, as he bathes the brow of a dying comrade.

These things, of course,--the house, the park, and the fountain,--represent John Barclay and his money. The town is proud of them, but the reader is advised not to expect too much of them. One of the two things really worth seeing at the Ridge is the view over the wheat fields of the Sycamore Valley from the veranda of the Culpepper home on the hill. There one may see the great fields lying in three towns.h.i.+ps whereon John Barclay founded his fortune. The second thing worth seeing may be found in the hallway of the public library building, just at the turn of the marble stairway, where the morning light strikes it. Take the night train out of Chicago and get to the Ridge in the morning, to get the light on that picture.

It is a portrait of John Barclay, done when he was forty years old and painted by a Russian during the summer when the Barclays were called home from Europe before their journey was half completed, to straighten out an obstreperous congressman, one Tom Wharton by name, who was threatening to put wheat and flour on the free list in a tariff bill, unless--but that is immaterial, except that Wharton was on Barclay's mind more or less while the painter was at work, and the portrait reflects what Barclay thought of a number of things. It shows a small gray-clad man, with a pearl pin in a black tie, sitting rather on the edge of his chair, leaning forward, so that the head is thrown into the light. The eyes are well opened, and the jaw comes out, a hard mean jaw; but the work of the artist, the real work that reveals the soul of the sitter, is shown in three features, if we except the pugnacious shoulders. In the face are two of these features: the mouth, a hard, coa.r.s.e, furtive mouth,--the mouth of the liar who is not polished,--the peasant liar who has been caught and has brazened it out; the mouth and the forehead, full almost to bulging, so clean and white and naked that it seems shameful to expose it, a poet's forehead, n.o.ble and full of dreams, broad over the eyes, and as delicately modelled at the temples as a woman's where the curly brown hair is brushed away from it. But the wonderful feature about the portrait is the right hand. The artist obviously asked Barclay to a.s.sume a natural att.i.tude, and then seeing him lean forward with his hand stretched out in some gesture of impatience, persuaded him to take that pose. It is the sort of vital human thing that would please Barclay--no sham about it; but he did not realize what the Russian was putting into that hand--a long, hard, hairy, hollow, grasping, relentless hand, full in the foreground and squarely in the light--a horrible thing with artistic fingers, and a thin, greedy palm indicated by the deep hump in the back. It reaches out from the picture, with the light on the flesh tints, with the animal hair thick upon it, and with the curved, slender, tapering fingers cramped like a claw; and when one follows up the arm to the crouching body, the furtive mouth, the bold, shrewd eyes, and then sees that forehead full of visions, one sees in it more than John Barclay of Sycamore Ridge, more than America, more than Europe. It is the menace of civilization--the danger to the race from the domination of sheer intellect without moral restraint.

General Ward, who was on the committee that received the picture fifteen years after it was painted, stood looking at it the morning it was hung there on the turn of the stairs. As the light fell mercilessly upon it, the general, white-haired, white-necktied, clean-shaven, and lean-faced, gazed at the portrait for a long time, and then said to his son Neal who stood beside him, ”And Samson wist not that the Lord had departed from him.”

It will pay one to stop a day in Sycamore Ridge to see that picture--though he does not know John Barclay, and only understands the era that made him, and gave him that refined, savage, cunning, grasping hand.

Barclay stopped a week in Was.h.i.+ngton on his return from Europe the year that picture was painted, made a draft for fifty thousand dollars on the National Provisions Company to cover ”legal expenses,” and came straight home to Sycamore Ridge. He was tired of cities, he told Colonel Culpepper, who met Barclay at the post-office the morning he returned, with his arms full of newspapers. ”I want to hear the old mill, Colonel,” said Barclay, ”to smell the grease down in the guts of her, and to get my hair full of flour again.” When he had gorged himself for two days, he wired Bemis to come to the Ridge, and Barclay and Bemis sat on the dam one evening until late bedtime, considering many things. As they talked, Barclay found that a plan for the reorganization of the Provisions Company was growing in his mind, and he talked it out as it grew.

”Lige,” he said, as he leaned with his elbows on a rock behind him, ”the trouble with the company as it now stands is that it's too palpable. There's too much to levy on--too much in sight; too much physical property. How would it do to sell all these mills and elevators, and use the company as a kind of a cream skimmer--a profit shop--to market the products of the mills?” He paused a moment, and Bemis, who knew he was not expected to reply, flipped pebbles into the stream. Barclay changed his position slightly and began to pick stones out of the crevices, and throw the stones into the water. ”That's the thing to do--go ahead and sell every dollar's worth of a.s.sets the company's got--I'll take the mill here. I couldn't get along without that. Then we'll buy the products of the mills at cost of the millers, and let them get their profits back as individual holders of our stock. Our company will handle the Door Strip--buy it and sell it--and if any long-nosed reformer gets to snooping around the mills, he'll find they are making only a living profit; and as for us--any state grain commissioner or board of commissioners who wanted to examine us could do so, and what'd he find? Simply that we're buying our products at cost of the millers and selling at the market price--sometimes at a loss, sometimes at a profit; and what if we do handle all the grain and grain products in the United States? They can't show that we are hurting anything. I tell you there's getting to be too much snooping now in the state and federal governments. Have you got any fellow in your office who can fix up a charter that will let us buy and sell grain, and also sell the Barclay Economy Strip?”

Bemis nodded.

”Then, d.a.m.n 'em, let 'em go on with their commissioners and boards and legislative committees; they can't catch us. There's no law against the railroads that s.h.i.+p our stuff buying the Economy Door Strip, is there? You bet there isn't. And we're ent.i.tled to a good round inventor's profit, ain't we? You bet we are. You go ahead and get up that reorganization, and I'll put it through. Say, Lige--” Barclay chuckled as a recollection flashed across his mind--”you know I've made some of our Northwest senators promise to make you a federal judge. That's one of the things I did last week; I thought maybe sometime we'd need a federal judge as one of the--what do you call it--the hereditaments thereunto appertaining of the company.” Bemis opened his eyes in astonishment, and Barclay grunted in disgust as he went on: ”Of course we can't get you appointed from this state--that's clear--but they think we can work it through in the City--as soon as there is a vacancy--or make a new district. How would you like that? Judge Bemis--say, that sounds all right, doesn't it?”

Barclay rose and stretched his legs and arms. ”Well, I must be going--Mrs. Barclay and my mother want to hear the new organ over in the Congregational Church. It's a daisy--Colonel Culpepper, amongst hands, skirmished up three thousand. They let me pick it out, and I had to put up another thousand myself to get the kind I wanted. Are you well taken care of at the hotel?” When Bemis explained that he had the bridal chamber, the two men clambered up the bank of the stream, crossed the bridge, and at his gate Barclay said: ”Now, I'll sleep on this to-night,--this reorganization,--and then I'll write you a letter to-morrow, covering all that I've said, and you can fix up a tentative charter and fire it down--and say, Lige, figure out what a modest profit on all the grain and grain produce business of the country would be--say about two and a half per cent, and make the capitalization of the reorganization fit that. We'll get the real profits out of the Door Strip, and can fix that up in the books. We'll show the reformers a trick or two.” It was a warm night, and when the organ recital was over, John and Jane Barclay, after the custom of the town, sat on a terrace in front of the house talking of the day's events. Music always made John babble.

”Jane,” he asked suddenly, ”Jane--when does a man begin to grow old?

Here I am past forty. I used to think when a man was forty he was middle-aged; every five years I have advanced my idea of what an old man was; when I was fifteen, I thought a man was getting along when he was thirty. When I was twenty-five, I regarded forty as the beginning of the end; when I was thirty, I put the limit of activity at forty-five; five years ago I moved it up to fifty; and to-day I have jumped it to sixty. It seems to me, Jane, that I'm as much of a boy as ever; all this talk about my being a man puzzles me. What's this Provisions Company but a game? And I'm going to play another game; I'm going to get grain and grain produce organized, and then I'm going to tackle meat. In ten years I'll have the packing-houses where I have the mills; but it's just play--and it's a lot of fun.”

He was silent a moment. Jane did not disturb his reveries. She understood, without exactly putting her feeling into language, that she was being talked at, not talked to.

”Say, Jane,” he exclaimed, ”wasn't that 'Marche Triomphante to-night great?” He hummed a bar from the motif, ”That's it--my--” he cried, hitting his chair arm with his fist, ”but that's a big thing--almost good enough for Wagner to have done; big and insistent and strong. I'm getting to like music with go to it--with bang and bra.s.s. Wagner does it; honest, Jane, when I hear his trombones coming into a theme, I get ideas enough to give the whole force in the office nervous prostration for a month. To-night when that thing was swelling up like a great tidal wave of music rolling in, I worked out a big idea; I'm going to sell all the mills and factories back to the millers for our stock, and when I own every dollar of our stock, I'm going to double the price of it to them and sell it back to them; and if they haggle about it, I'll build a new mill across the track from every man-jack who tries to give me any funny business--I'll show 'em. That reorganization ought to clean up millions for us in the next year.

What a lot of fun it all is! I used to think old Jay Gould was some pumpkins; but if we get this reorganization through, I'll go down there and buy the Gould outfit and sell 'em for old iron.”

The current of his thoughts struck under language, as a prairie stream sometimes hides from its surface bed. After a time Jane said: ”Grandma Barclay thought the 'Marche Funebre' was the best thing the man did. I heard the Wards speaking of it in the vestibule; and Molly, who held my hand through it, nearly squeezed it off--poor girl; but she looks real well these days.” Jane paused a moment and added: ”Did you notice the colonel? How worn and haggard he looks--he seems broken so. They say he is in trouble. Couldn't we help him?”

Her husband did not reply at once. Finally he recalled his wandering wits and answered: ”Oh, I don't know, Jane. He'll pull through, I guess.” Then he reverted to the music, which was still in his head.

”He played the Largo well--didn't he? That was made for the organ.

But some way I like the big things. The Largo is like running a little twenty-horse-power steam mill, and selling to the home grocers. But 'The Ride of the Valkyries,' with those screaming discords of bra.s.s, and those magnificent crashes of harmony--Jane, I've got an idea--Wagner's work is the National Provisions Company set to music, and I'm the first trombone.” He laughed and reached for his wife's hand and kissed it; then he rose and stood before her, admiring her in the starlight, as he exclaimed: ”And you are those clarinets, sweet and clear and delicious, that make a man want to cry for sheer joy.

Come on, my dear--isn't it very late?” And the little man limped across the gra.s.s up the steps and into the house. The two stopped a moment while he listened to the roar of the water and the rumble of the mill, that glowed in the night like a phosph.o.r.escent spectre. He squeezed her hand and cried out in exultation, ”It's great, isn't it--the finest mill on this planet, my dear--do you realize that?”

And then they turned into the house.

The next morning he kept two stenographers busy; he was spinning the web of his reorganization, bringing about a condition under which men were compelled to exchange their stock in the National Provisions Company for their former property. He was a crafty little man, and his ways were sometimes devious, even though to outward view his advertised and proclaimed methods were those of a pirate. So when he had dictated a day's work to two girls, he went nosing through the mill, loafing in the engine rooms, looking at the water wheel, or running about rafters in the fifth floor like a great gray rat. As he went he hummed little tunes under his breath or whistled between his teeth, with his lips apart. After luncheon he unlocked a row-boat, and took a cane pole and rowed himself a mile up the mill-pond, and brought home three good-sized ba.s.s. Thus did he spend his idle moments around the Ridge. That night he thumped his piano and longed for a pipe organ. The things he tried to play were noisy, and his mother, sitting in the gloaming near him, sighed and said: ”John, play some of the old pieces--the quieter ones; play 'The Long and Weary Day' and some of the old songs. Have you forgotten the 'Bohemian Girl' and those Schubert songs?”

His fingers felt their way back to his boyhood, and when he ceased playing, he stood by his mother a moment, and patted her cheeks as he hummed in German the first two lines of the ”Lorelei,” and then said, ”We have come a long way since then--eh, mother?” She held his hand to her cheek and then to her lips, but she did not reply. He repeated it, ”A long, long way from the little home of one room here!” After a pause he added, ”Would you like to go back?”

A tear fell on the hand against her cheek. He felt her jaw quiver, and then she said, ”Oh, yes, John--yes, I believe I would.”