Harbor (9781101565681) (11 page)

Read Harbor (9781101565681) Online

Authors: Patrick (INT) Ernest; Chura Poole

BOOK: Harbor (9781101565681)
11.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“This reminds me,” he said, “of last summer—when I did Europe in three weeks with Dad.”
The main idea in all courses was to do what you had to but no more. One day an English prof called upon me to define the difference between a novel and a book of science.
“About the same difference,” I replied, “as between an artist's painting and a mathematical drawing.”
“Bootlick, bootlick,” I heard in murmurs all over the hall. I had answered better than I had to. Hence I had licked the professor's boots. I did not offend in this way again.
 
But early in my sophomore year, when the novelty had worn away, I began to do some thinking. Was there nothing else here? My mother and I had had talks at home, and she had told me plainly that unless I sent home better reports I could not finish my four years' course. And after all, she wasn't a fool, there was something in that idea of hers—that here in this quiet old town, so remote from the harbor and business, a fellow ought to be getting “fine” things, things that would help him all his life.
“But look what I've got!” I told myself. “When I came here what was I? A little damn prig! And look at me now!”
“All right, look ahead. I'm toughened up, I've had some good things knocked into me and a lot of fool things knocked out of me. But that's just it. Are all the fine things fool things? Don't I still want to write? Sure I do. Well, what am I going to write about? What do I know of the big things of life? I was always hunting for what was great. I'm never hunting for it now, and unless I get something mighty quick my father will make me go into his business. What am I going to do with my life?”
At first I honestly tried to “pole,” to find whether, after all, I couldn't break through the hard dry crust of books and lectures down into what I called “the real stuff.” But the deeper I dug the drier it grew. Vaguely I felt that here was crust and only crust, and that for some reason or other it was meant that this should be so, because in the fresh bubbling springs and the deep blazing fires whose presence I could feel below there was something irritating to profs and disturbing to those who paid them. These profs, I thought confusedly, had about as much to do with life as had that little “hero of God” who had cut such a pitiful figure when he came close to the harbor. And more pitiful still were the “polers,” the chaps who were working for high marks. They thought of marks and little else. They thrived on crust, these fellows, cramming themselves with words and rules, with facts, dates, theorems and figures, in order to become professors themselves and teach the same stuff to other “polers.” There was a story of one of them who stayed in his room and crammed all through the big football game of the season, and at night when told we had won remarked blithely,
“Oh, that's splendid! I think I'll go out and have a pretzel!”
God, what a life, I thought to myself! None of that for me! And so I left the “polers.”
But now in my restless groping around for realities in life that would thrill me, things that I could write about, I began trying to test things out by talking about them with my friends. What did a fellow want most in life—what to do, what to get and to be? What was there really in business beside the making of money? In medicine, law and the other professions, in art, in getting married, in this idea of God and a heaven, or in the idea I vaguely felt now filtering through the nation, that a man owed his life to his country in time of peace as in time of war. The harbor with rough heavy jolts had long ago started me thinking about questions of this kind. Now I tackled them again and tried to talk about them.
And at once I found I was “queering” myself. For these genial companions of mine had laid a most decided taboo upon all topics of this kind. They did so because to discuss them meant to openly think and feel, and to think or feel intensely, about anything but athletics and other things prescribed by the crowd, was bad form to say the least.
Bad form to talk in any such fashion of what we were going to make of our lives. Nobody cared to warm up on the subject. Many had nothing at all in sight and put off the whole idea as a bore. Others were already fixed, they had positions waiting in law and business offices, in factories, mines, mills and banks, and they took these positions as settled and sure.
“Why?” I would argue impatiently. “How do you know it's what you want most?”
“Oh, I guess it'll do as well as another.”
“But damn it all, why not have a look? We can have a big look now, we've got a chance to broaden out before we jump into our little jobs—to see all the jobs and size 'em up and look at 'em as a part of the world!”
“Oh, biff.” I got little or no response. The greater part of these decent likable fellows could not warm up to anything big, they simply hadn't it in them.
“Why in hell do you want me to get all hot?” drawled one fat sluggard of a friend. “I'll keep alive when the time comes.” And he and his kind set the standard for all. Sometimes a chap who could warm up, who had the real stuff in him, would “loosen up” about his life on some long tramp with me alone. But back in college his lips were sealed. It was not exactly that he was ashamed, it was simply that with his college friends such talk seemed utterly out of place.
“Look out, Bill,” said one affectionately. “You'll queer yourself if you keep on.”
The same held true of religion. An upper classman, if he felt he had to, might safely become a leader of freshmen in the Y. M. C. A. But when one Sunday evening I disturbed a peaceful pipe-smoking crowd by wondering why it was that we were all so bored in chapel, there fell an embarrassing silence—until someone growled good-humoredly, “Don't bite off more'n you can chew.” Nobody wanted to drop his religion, he simply wanted to let it alone. I remember one Sunday in chapel, in the midst of a long sermon, how our sarcastic old president woke us up with a start.
“I was asked,” he said, “if we had any free thinkers here. ‘No,' I replied. ‘We have not yet advanced that far. For it takes half as much thinking to be a free thinker as it does to believe in God.' ”
And I remember the night in our sophomore club when the news came like a thunderclap that one of our members had been killed pole-vaulting at a track meet in New York. It was our habit, in our new-found manliness, to eat with our hats on, shout and sing, and speak of our food as “tapeworm,” “hemorrhage,” and the like. I remember how we sat that night, silent, not a word from the crowd—one starting to eat, then seeing it wasn't the thing to do, and staring blankly like the rest. They were terrible, those stares into reality. That clutching pain of grief was real, so real it blotted everything out. Later some of us in my room began to talk in low voices of what a good fellow he had been. Then some chap from the Y. M. C. A. proposed timidly to lead us in prayer. What a glare he got from all over the room! “Damn fool,” I heard someone mutter. Bad form!
Politics also were tabooed. Here again there were exceptions. A still fiery son of the South could rail about niggers, rapes and lynchings and the need for disenfranchising the blacks. It was good fun to hear him. Moreover, a fellow who was a good speaker, and needed the money, might stump the state for either political party, and his accounts were often amusing. But to sit down and talk about the trusts, graft, trade unions, strikes, or the tariff or the navy, the Philippines, “the open door,” or any other of the big questions that even then, ten years ago, were beginning to shake the country, and that we would all be voting on soon? No. The little Bryan club was a joke. And one day when a socialist speaker struck town the whole college turned out in parade, waving red sweaters and firing “bombs” and roaring a wordless Marseillaise! We wanted no solemn problems here!
Finally, it was distinctly bad form to talk about sex. Not to tell “smutty stories,” they were welcomed by the average crowd. But to look at it squarely, as I tried to do, and get some light upon what would be doubtless the most vital part of our future lives—this simply wasn't done. What did women mean to us, I asked. What did prostitutes mean at present? What would wives mean later on? And all this talk about mistresses and this business of free love, and easy divorces and marriage itself—what did they all amount to? Was love really what it was cracked up to be, or had the novelists handed us guff? When I came out with questions like these, the chaps called “clean” looked rather pained; the ones who weren't, distinctly bored.
For this whole intricate subject was kept in the cellars of our minds, cellars often large but dark. Because “sex” was wholly rotten. It had nothing to do, apparently, with the girls who came chaperoned to the “proms,” it had to do only with certain women in a little town close by. Plenty of chaps went there at times, and now and then women from over there would come to us on the quiet at night. But one afternoon I saw a big crowd on the front campus. It grew every moment, became a mob, shoving and surging, shouting and jeering. I climbed some steps to look into the center, and saw two painted terrified girls, hysterical, sobbing, swearing and shrieking. So they were shoved, a hidden spectacle, to the station and put on the train. Nothing like that on our front campus! Nothing like “sex” in the front rooms of our minds. The crowd returned chuckling. Immoral? Hell, no. Simply bad form.
 
“What am I going to write about?”
“Games,” said the college. “Only games. Don't go adventuring down into life.”
CHAPTER VII
Then I found Joe Kramer.
He had “queered” himself at the beginning in college. I had barely known him. He belonged to no fraternity, and except on the athletic field he kept out of all our genial life. And this life of ours, for all its thoughtlessness, was so rich in genuine friendships, so filled and bubbling over with the joy of being young, that we could not understand how any decent sort of chap could deliberately keep out of it. We put Joe Kramer down as a “grouch.”
But now that I too was “queering” myself, our queerness drew us together, or rather, Joe's drew mine. In the ten years that have gone since then I have never met any man who drew me harder than he did, than he is drawing me even still—and this often in spite of my efforts to shake him off, and later of his quite evident wish to be rid of me. For Joe had what is so hard to find among us comfortable mortals, a sincerity so real and deep that it absolutely ruled his life, that it kept him exploring into things, kept him adventuring always.
In long tramps over the neighboring hills, on our backs in the grass staring up at the clouds, or in winter hugging a bonfire in the shelter of a boulder, or back in college over our beer or over countless pipes in our rooms, together we adventured through books and long hungry talks down into life—and of the paths we discovered I see even now no end.
Joe was tall and lean, with heavy shoulders stooping slightly. He was sallow, he never took care of himself. He ate his meals at all hours at a small cheap restaurant, where he bought a bunch of meal tickets each week. His face was obstinate, honest, kindly, his features were as blunt as his talk. He was the first to understand what I was so vaguely looking for, and to say, “All right, Kid, you come right along.” And as he was farther along than I, he pulled me after him on the hunt after what he called “the genuine article” in this bewildering modern life.
His own life, to begin with, was a tie with this real modern world that had forced itself on me long ago through the harbor. For Joe had been “up against it” hard. Though blunt and frank about most things he talked little about himself, but I got his story bit by bit. “Graft” had come into it at the start. In a town of the Middle West his father had been a physician with a good practice, until when Joe was eleven years old a case of smallpox was discovered. Joe's father vaccinated about a score of children that week. The “dope” he used was mailed to him by a drug firm in Chicago. It was “rotten.” Over half the children were desperately ill and seven of them died. Joe's father, his mother and both older sisters did duty as nurses day and night. After that they left town, moved from town to town, that story always following, and finally both parents died. Since then Joe had been a teamster, a clerk in a hardware store, a brakeman, a telegrapher, and last, the assistant editor of a paper in a small town. He had scraped and slaved and studied throughout with the idea of coming East to college. He had come at twenty-two, beating his way on freight trains. On the top of a car one night he had fallen asleep and been knocked on the head by a steel beam jutting down under a bridge. Then, after two weeks on a hospital bed, he had arrived at college.
Here he had earned a meager way by writing football and baseball news for a string of western papers. Here he had looked for an education, and here “a bunch of dead ones” had handed him “news from the graveyard” instead.
I can still see him in classroom, head cocked to one side, grimly watching the prof. And once during a Bible course lecture I heard his voice blandly ironic behind me:
“Will somebody ask Mister Charley Darwin to be so good as to step this way?”
“We've been cheated, Bill,” he told me. “We've been cheated right along. Take history, for instance, the kind of stuff we were handed in school. I got onto it first when I was fourteen. It was a rainy Saturday and my mother told me to go and clean out an old closet up in the attic. Well, I found my German grandfather's diary there, written when he was in college in Leipsic, in 1848. The way those kids jumped into things! The way they got themselves mixed up in the Revolution of Forty Eight! To hear my young grandfather talk, that year was one of the biggest times in European history. Our school history gave it five pages and then druled on about courts and kings. ‘I'll go to college,' I made up my mind. ‘College will put me next to the truth.' So I saved my little nickels and came. But college,” he added moodily, “ain't advanced as far as it was in my young grandfather's time.”

Other books

Realm Walker by Collins, Kathleen
Kate Noble by Compromised
Spinning Around by Catherine Jinks
Powder Keg by Ed Gorman
Encrypted by McCray, Carolyn
Consider Divine Love by Donna J. Farris
A Second Helping of Murder by Christine Wenger
Master of the Shadows by Viehl, Lynn
0425272095 (R) by Jessica Peterson