Part 6 (1/2)
”We can all agree with him there, Farnum.”
”Thank you, sir. I'm not very hopeful about him. He has other things to contend with.”
”I'm not sure I quite know what you mean.”
”I can't explain more fully without violating a confidence.”
”Well, we'll hope for the best, and remember him in our prayers.”
”Yes, sir,” James agreed.
CHAPTER 4
”I met a hundred men on the road to Delhi, and they were all my brothers.”--Old Proverb.
THE REBEL FLUNKS IN A COURSE ON HOW TO GET ON IN LIFE
Part 1
It would be easy to overemphasize Jeff's intellectual difficulties at the expense of the deep delight he found in many phases of his student life. The daily routine of the library, the tennis courts, and the jolly table talk brought out the boy in him that had been submerged.
There developed in him a vagabond streak that took him into the woods and the hills for days at a time. About the middle of his Soph.o.m.ore year he discovered Whitman. While camping alone at night under the stars he used to shout out,
”Strong and content, I travel the open road,” or
”Allons! The road is before us!
”It is safe--I have tried it--my own feet have tried it well.”
Through Stevenson's essay on Whitman Jeff came to know the Scotch writer, and from the first paragraph of him was a sealed follower of R.
L. S. In different ways both of these poets ministered to a certain love of freedom, of beauty, of outdoor s.p.a.ces that was ineradicably a part of his nature. The essence of vagabondage is the spirit of romance. One may tour every corner of the earth and still be a respectable Pharisee. One may never move a dozen miles from the village of his birth and yet be of the happy company of romantics. Jeff could find in a sunset, in a stretch of windswept plain, in the sight of water through leafless trees, something that filled his heart with emotion.
Perhaps the very freedom of these vacation excursions helped to feed his growing discontent. The yeast of rebellion was forever stirring in him. He wanted to come to life with open mind. He was possessed of an insatiable curiosity about it. This took him to the slums of Verden, to the redlight district, to Socialist meetings, to a striking coal camp near the city where he narrowly escaped being killed as a scab. He knew that something was wrong with our social life. Inextricably blended with success and happiness he saw everywhere pain, defeat, and confusion. Why must such things be? Why poverty at all?
But when he flung his questions at Pearson, who had charge of the work in sociology, the explanations of the professor seemed to him pitifully weak.
In the ethics cla.s.s he met the same experience. A chance reference to Drummond's ”Natural Law in the Spiritual world” introduced him to that stimulating book. All one night he sat up and read it--drank it in with every fiber of his thirsty being.
The fire in his stove went out. He slipped into his overcoat. Gray morning found him still reading. He walked out with dazed eyes into a world that had been baptized anew during the night to a miraculous rebirth.
But when he took his discovery to the lecture room Dawson was not only cold but hostile. Drummond was not sound. There was about him a specious charm very likely to attract young minds. Better let such books alone for the present. In the meantime the cla.s.s would take up with him the discussion of predeterminism as outlined in Tuesday's work.
There were members of the faculty big enough to have understood the boy and tolerant enough to have sympathized with his crude revolt, but Jeff was diffident and never came in touch with them.
His connection with the college ended abruptly during the Spring term of his Soph.o.m.ore year.
A celebrated revivalist was imported to quicken the spiritual life of the University. Under his exhortations the inst.i.tution underwent a religious ferment. An extraordinary excitement was astir on the campus.