The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man
by James Weldon Johnson
Boston: Sherman, French & Company, 1912
Copyright, 1912
Preface
This vivid and startlingly new picture of
conditions brought about by the race question in the
United States makes no special plea for the
Negro, but shows in a dispassionate, though
sympathetic, manner conditions as they actually exist
between the whites and blacks to-day. Special
pleas have already been made for and against the
Negro in hundreds of books, but in these books
either his virtues or his vices have been
exaggerated. This is because writers, in nearly every
instance, have treated the colored American as a
whole; each has taken some one group of the race
to prove his case. Not before has a composite
and proportionate presentation of the entire race,
embracing all of its various groups and elements,
showing their relations with each other and to the
whites, been made.
It is very likely that the Negroes of the United
States have a fairly correct idea of what the white
people of the country think of them, for that
opinion has for a long time been and is still being
constantly stated; but they are themselves more
or less a sphinx to the whites. It is curiously
interesting and even vitally important to know what
are the thoughts of ten millions of them
concerning the people among whom they live. In these
pages it is as though a veil had been drawn aside:
the reader is given a view of the inner life of the
Negro in America, is initiated into the
"free-masonry," as it were, of the race.
These pages also reveal the unsuspected fact
that prejudice against the Negro is exerting a
pressure, which, in New York and other large
cities where the opportunity is open, is actually
and constantly forcing an unascertainable number
of fair-complexioned colored people over into the
white race.
In this book the reader is given a glimpse
behind the scenes of this race-drama which is being
here enacted,--he is taken upon an elevation where
he can catch a bird's-eye view of the conflict which
is being waged.
THE PUBLISHERS.
Chapter I
I know that in writing the following pages I
am divulging the great secret of my life, the
secret which for some years I have guarded far
more carefully than any of my earthly
possessions; and it is a curious study to me to analyze
the motives which prompt me to do it. I feel
that I am led by the same impulse which forces
the unfound-out criminal to take somebody into
his confidence, although he knows that the act is
liable, even almost certain, to lead to his undoing.
I know that I am playing with fire, and I feel the
thrill which accompanies that most fascinating
pastime; and, back of it all, I think I find a sort
of savage and diabolical desire to gather up all
the little tragedies of my life, and turn them into
a practical joke on society.
And, too, I suffer a vague feeling of
unsatisfaction, of regret, of almost remorse from
which I am seeking relief, and of which I
shall speak in the last paragraph of this
account.
I was born in a little town of Georgia a few
years after the close of the Civil War. I shall
not mention the name of the town, because there
are people still living there who could be
connected with this narrative. I have only a faint
recollection of the place of my birth. At times
I can close my eyes, and call up in a dream-like
way things that seem to have happened ages ago
in some other world. I can see in this half vision
a little house,--I am quite sure it was not a large
one;--I can remember that flowers grew in the
front yard, and that around each bed of flowers
was a hedge of vari-colored glass bottles stuck
in the ground neck down. I remember that once,
while playing around in the sand, I became
curious to know whether or not the bottles grew
as the flowers did, and I proceeded to dig them up
to find out; the investigation brought me a
terrific spanking which indelibly fixed the incident in
my mind. I can remember, too, that behind the
house was a shed under which stood two or three
wooden wash-tubs. These tubs were the earliest
aversion of my life, for regularly on certain
evenings I was plunged into one of them, and scrubbed
until my skin ached. I can remember to this day
the pain caused by the strong, rank soap getting
into my eyes.
Back from the house a vegetable garden ran,
perhaps, seventy-five or one hundred feet; but to
my childish fancy it was an endless territory. I
can still recall the thrill of joy, excitement and
wonder it gave me to go on an exploring
expedition through it, to find the blackberries, both
ripe and green, that grew along the edge of the
fence.
I remember with what pleasure I used to
arrive at, and stand before, a little enclosure in
which stood a patient cow chewing her cud, how
I would occasionally offer her through the
bars a piece of my bread and molasses, and
how I would jerk back my hand in half
fright if she made any motion to accept my
offer.
I have a dim recollection of several people who
moved in and about this little house, but I have
a distinct mental image of only two; one, my
mother, and the other, a tall man with a small,
dark mustache. I remember that his shoes or
boots were always shiny, and that he wore a gold
chain and a great gold watch with which he was
always willing to let me play. My admiration
was almost equally divided between the watch and
chain and the shoes. He used to come to the
house evenings, perhaps two or three times a
week; and it became my appointed duty whenever
he came to bring him a pair of slippers, and
to put the shiny shoes in a particular corner; he
often gave me in return for this service a bright
coin which my mother taught me to promptly
drop in a little tin bank. I remember distinctly
the last time this tall man came to the little house
in Georgia; that evening before I went to bed he
took me up in his arms, and squeezed me very
tightly; my mother stood behind his chair wiping
tears from her eyes. I remember how I sat upon
his knee, and watched him laboriously drill a hole
through a ten-dollar gold piece, and then tie the
coin around my neck with a string. I have worn
that gold piece around my neck the greater part
of my life, and still possess it, but more than once
I have wished that some other way had been found
of attaching it to me besides putting a hole
through it.
On the day after the coin was put around my
neck my mother and I started on what seemed to
me an endless journey. I knelt on the seat and
watched through the train window the corn and
cotton fields pass swiftly by until I fell asleep.
When I fully awoke we were being driven through
the streets of a large city--Savannah. I sat up
and blinked at the bright lights. At Savannah
we boarded a steamer which finally landed us in
New York. From New York we went to a town
in Connecticut, which became the home of my
boyhood.
My mother and I lived together in a little
cottage which seemed to me to be fitted up almost
luxuriously; there were horse-hair covered chairs
in the parlor, and a little square piano; there
was a stairway with red carpet on it leading to a
half second story; there were pictures on the
walls, and a few books in a glass-doored case.
My mother dressed me very neatly, and I
developed that pride which well-dressed boys
generally have. She was careful about my associates,
and I myself was quite particular. As I look
back now I can see that I was a perfect little
aristocrat. My mother rarely went to anyone's
house, but she did sewing, and there were a great
many ladies coming to our cottage. If I were
around they would generally call me, and ask me
my name and age and tell my mother what a
pretty boy I was. Some of them would pat me
on the head and kiss me.
My mother was kept very busy with her
sewing; sometimes she would have another woman
helping her. I think she must have derived a fair
income from her work. I know, too, that at least
once each month she received a letter; I used to
watch for the postman, get the letter, and run to
her with it; whether she was busy or not she
would take it and instantly thrust it into her
bosom. I never saw her read one of them. I
knew later that these letters contained money and,
what was to her, more than money. As busy as
she generally was she, however, found time to
teach me my letters and figures and how to spell
a number of easy words. Always on Sunday
evenings she opened the little square piano, and
picked out hymns. I can recall now that whenever
she played hymns from the book her tempos
were always decidedly largo. Sometimes on other
evenings when she was not sewing she would play
simple accompaniments to some old southern songs
which she sang. In these songs she was freer,
because she played them by ear. Those evenings
on which she opened the little piano were
the happiest hours of my childhood. Whenever
she started toward the instrument I used to
follow her with all the interest and irrepressible joy
that a pampered pet dog shows when a package
is opened in which he knows there is a sweet bit
for him. I used to stand by her side, and often
interrupt and annoy her by chiming in with
strange harmonies which I found either on the
high keys of the treble or low keys of the bass.
I remember that I had a particular fondness for
the black keys. Always on such evenings, when
the music was over, my mother would sit with me
in her arms often for a very long time. She
would hold me close, softly crooning some old
melody without words, all the while gently
stroking her face against my head; many and many a
night I thus fell asleep. I can see her now, her
great dark eyes looking into the fire, to where?
No one knew but she. The memory of that
picture has more than once kept me from straying
too far from the place of purity and safety in
which her arms held me.
At a very early age I began to thump on the
piano alone, and it was not long before I was able
to pick out a few tunes. When I was seven
years old I could play by ear all of the hymns
and songs that my mother knew. I had also
learned the names of the notes in both clefs, but
I preferred not to be hampered by notes. About
this time several ladies for whom my mother
sewed heard me play, and they persuaded her
that I should at once be put under a teacher; so
arrangements were made for me to study the
piano with a lady who was a fairly good musician;
at the same time arrangements were made
for me to study my books with this lady's
daughter. My music teacher had no small difficulty at
first in pinning me down to the notes. If she
played my lesson over for me I invariably
attempted to reproduce the required sounds
without the slightest recourse to the written
characters. Her daughter, my other teacher, also had
her worries. She found that, in reading,
whenever I came to words that were difficult or
unfamiliar I was prone to bring my imagination to
the rescue and read from the picture. She has
laughingly told me, since then, that I would
sometimes substitute whole sentences and even
paragraphs from what meaning I thought the
illustrations conveyed. She said she sometimes was
not only amused at the fresh treatment I would
give an author's subject, but that when I gave
some new and sudden turn to the plot of the story
she often grew interested and even excited in
listening to hear what kind of a denouement I would
bring about. But I am sure this was not due to
dullness, for I made rapid progress in both my
music and my books.
And so, for a couple of years my life was
divided between my music and my school books.
Music took up the greater part of my time. I
had no playmates, but amused myself with
games--some of them my own invention--which could
be played alone. I knew a few boys whom I had
met at the church which I attended with my
mother, but I had formed no close friendships with
any of them. Then, when I was nine years old,
my mother decided to enter me in the public
school, so all at once I found myself thrown among
a crowd of boys of all sizes and kinds; some of
them seemed to me like savages. I shall never
forget the bewilderment, the pain, the heart-sickness
of that first day at school. I seemed to be
the only stranger in the place; every other boy
seemed to know every other boy. I was
fortunate enough, however, to be assigned to a teacher
who knew me; my mother made her dresses. She
was one of the ladies who used to pat me on the
head and kiss me. She had the tact to address
a few words directly to me; this gave me a
certain sort of standing in the class, and put me
somewhat at ease.
Within a few days I had made one staunch
friend, and was on fairly good terms with most
of the boys. I was shy of the girls, and remained
so; even now, a word or look from a pretty
woman sets me all a-tremble. This friend I bound
to me with hooks of steel in a very simple way.
He was a big awkward boy with a face full of
freckles and a head full of very red hair. He
was perhaps fourteen years of age; that is, four
or five years older than any other boy in the class.
This seniority was due to the fact that he had
spent twice the required amount of time in
several of the preceding classes. I had not been at
school many hours before I felt that
"Red Head"--as I involuntarily
called him--and I were to be
friends. I do not doubt that this feeling was
strengthened by the fact that I had been quick
enough to see that a big, strong boy was a friend
to be desired at a public school; and, perhaps, in
spite of his dullness, "Red Head" had been able
to discern that I could be of service to him. At
any rate there was a simultaneous mutual
attraction.
The teacher had strung the class
promiscuously round the walls of the room for a sort of
trial heat for places of rank; when the line was
straightened out I found that by skillful
maneuvering I had placed myself third, and had piloted
"Red Head" to the place next to me. The
teacher began by giving us to spell the words
corresponding to our order in the line. "Spell
first." "Spell second." "Spell third." I
rattled off, "t-h-i-r-d, third," in a way which said,
"Why don't you give us something hard?" As
the words went down the line I could see how
lucky I had been to get a good place together
with an easy word. As young as I was I felt
impressed with the unfairness of the whole
proceeding when I saw the tailenders going down
before "twelfth" and "twentieth," and I felt sorry
for those who had to spell such words in order
to hold a low position. "Spell fourth." "Red
Head," with his hands clutched tightly behind
his back, began bravely, "f-o-r-t-h." Like a flash
a score of hands went up, and the teacher began
saying, "No snapping of fingers, no snapping of
fingers." This was the first word missed, and it
seemed to me that some of the scholars were
about to lose their senses; some were dancing up
and down on one foot with a hand above
their heads, the fingers working furiously,
and joy beaming all over their faces; others
stood still, their hands raised not so high,
their fingers working less rapidly, and their
faces expressing not quite so much happiness;
there were still others who did not move
nor raise their hands, but stood with great
wrinkles on their foreheads, looking very
thoughtful.
The whole thing was new to me, and I did not
raise my hand, but slyly whispered the letter "u"
to "Red Head" several times. "Second chance,"
said the teacher. The hands went down and the
class became quiet. "Red Head," his face now
red, after looking beseechingly at the ceiling, then
pitiably at the floor, began very haltingly,
"f-u-." Immediately an impulse to raise hands
went through the class, but the teacher checked
it, and poor "Red Head," though he knew that
each letter he added only took him farther out of
the way, went doggedly on and finished, "r-t-h."
The hand raising was now repeated with more
hubbub and excitement than at first. Those who
before had not moved a finger were now waving
their hands above their heads. "Red Head" felt
that he was lost. He looked very big and foolish,
and some of the scholars began to snicker. His
helpless condition went straight to my heart, and
gripped my sympathies. I felt that if he failed
it would in some way be my failure. I raised
my hand, and under cover of the excitement and
the teacher's attempts to regain order, I
hurriedly shot up into his ear twice, quite distinctly,
"f-o-u-r-t-h," "f-o-u-r-t-h." The teacher tapped
on her desk and said, "Third and last chance."
The hands came down, the silence became
oppressive. "Red Head" began, "f"-- Since that day
I have waited anxiously for many a turn of the
wheel of fortune, but never under greater
tension than I watched for the order in which those
letters would fall from "Red's" lips--"o-u-r-t-h."
A sigh of relief and disappointment went up
from the class. Afterwards, through all our
school days, "Red Head" shared my wit and
quickness and I benefited by his strength and
dogged faithfulness.
There were some black and brown boys and
girls in the school, and several of them were in
my class. One of the boys strongly attracted my
attention from the first day I saw him. His face
was as black as night, but shone as though it was
polished; he had sparkling eyes, and when he
opened his mouth he displayed glistening white
teeth. It struck me at once as appropriate to
call him "Shiny face," or "Shiny eyes," or "Shiny
teeth," and I spoke of him often by one of these
names to the other boys. These terms were finally
merged into "Shiny," and to that name he
answered good naturedly during the balance of his
public school days.
"Shiny" was considered without question to be
the best speller, the best reader, the best penman,
in a word, the best scholar, in the class. He was
very quick to catch anything; but, nevertheless,
studied hard; thus he possessed two powers very
rarely combined in one boy. I saw him year after
year, on up into the high school, win the
majority of the prizes for punctuality, deportment,
essay writing and declamation. Yet it did not take
me long to discover that, in spite of his standing
as a scholar, he was in some way looked down
upon.
The other black boys and girls were still more
looked down upon. Some of the boys often spoke
of them as "niggers." Sometimes on the way
home from school a crowd would walk behind them
repeating:
"Nigger, nigger, never die,
Black face and shiny eye."
On one such afternoon one of the black boys
turned suddenly on his tormentors, and hurled a
slate; it struck one of the white boys in the mouth,
cutting a slight gash in his lip. At sight of the
blood the boy who had thrown the slate ran, and
his companions quickly followed. We ran after
them pelting them with stones until they
separated in several directions. I was very much
wrought up over the affair, and went home and
told my mother how one of the "niggers" had
struck a boy with a slate. I shall never forget
how she turned on me. "Don't you ever use that
word again," she said, "and don't you ever bother
the colored children at school. You ought to be
ashamed of yourself." I did hang my head in
shame, but not because she had convinced me
that I had done wrong, but because I was hurt
by the first sharp word she had ever given
me.
My school days ran along very pleasantly. I
stood well in my studies, not always so well with
regard to my behavior. I was never guilty of any
serious misconduct, but my love of fun sometimes
got me into trouble. I remember, however, that
my sense of humor was so sly that most of the
trouble usually fell on the head of the other
fellow. My ability to play on the piano at school
exercises was looked upon as little short of
marvelous in a boy of my age. I was not chummy
with many of my mates, but, on the whole, was
about as popular as it is good for a boy to be.
One day near the end of my second term at
school the principal came into our room, and after
talking to the teacher, for some reason said, "I
wish all of the white scholars to stand for a
moment." I rose with the others. The teacher
looked at me, and calling my name said, "You sit
down for the present, and rise with the others."
I did not quite understand her, and questioned,
"Ma'm?" She repeated with a softer tone in her
voice, "You sit down now, and rise with the
others." I sat down dazed. I saw and heard
nothing. When the others were asked to rise I
did not know it. When school was dismissed I
went out in a kind of stupor. A few of the white
boys jeered me, saying, "Oh, you're a nigger too."
I heard some black children say, "We knew he was
colored." "Shiny" said to them, "Come along,
don't tease him," and thereby won my undying
gratitude.
I hurried on as fast as I could, and had gone
some distance before I perceived that "Red Head"
was walking by my side. After a while he said
to me, "Le' me carry your books." I gave him
my strap without being able to answer. When
we got to my gate he said as he handed me my
books, "Say, you know my big red agate? I
can't shoot with it any more. I'm going to bring
it to school for you to-morrow." I took my books
and ran into the house. As I passed through the
hallway I saw that my mother was busy with one
of her customers; I rushed up into my own little
room, shut the door, and went quickly to where
my looking-glass hung on the wall. For an
instant I was afraid to look, but when I did I looked
long and earnestly. I had often heard people
say to my mother, "What a pretty boy you
have." I was accustomed to hear remarks about
my beauty; but, now, for the first time, I became
conscious of it, and recognized it. I noticed the
ivory whiteness of my skin, the beauty of my
mouth, the size and liquid darkness of my eyes,
and how the long black lashes that fringed and
shaded them produced an effect that was strangely
fascinating even to me. I noticed the softness
and glossiness of my dark hair that fell in waves
over my temples, making my forehead appear
whiter than it really was. How long I stood
there gazing at my image I do not know. When
I came out and reached the head of the stairs, I
heard the lady who had been with my mother
going out. I ran downstairs, and rushed to where
my mother was sitting with a piece of work in
her hands. I buried my head in her lap and
blurted out, "Mother, mother, tell me, am I a
nigger?" I could not see her face, but I knew the
piece of work dropped to the floor, and I felt her
hands on my head. I looked up into her face
and repeated, "Tell me, mother, am I a nigger?"
There were tears in her eyes, and I could see that
she was suffering for me. And then it was that
I looked at her critically for the first time. I had
thought of her in a childish way only as the most
beautiful woman in the world; now I looked at
her searching for defects. I could see that her
skin was almost brown, that her hair was not so
soft as mine, and that she did differ in some way
from the other ladies who came to the house; yet,
even so, I could see that she was very beautiful,
more beautiful than any of them. She must have
felt that I was examining her, for she hid her face
in my hair, and said with difficulty, "No, my
darling, you are not a nigger." She went on,
"You are as good as anybody; if anyone calls
you a nigger don't notice them." But the more
she talked the less was I reassured, and I stopped
her by asking, "Well, mother, am I white? Are
you white?" She answered tremblingly, "No, I
am not white, but you--your father is one of the
greatest men in the country--the best blood of
the South is in you--" This suddenly opened
up in my heart a fresh chasm of misgiving and
fear, and I almost fiercely demanded, "Who is my
father? Where is he?" She stroked my hair
and said, "I'll tell you about him some day."
I sobbed, "I want to know now." She answered,
"No, not now."
Perhaps it had to he done, but I have never
forgiven the woman who did it so cruelly. It
may be that she never knew that she gave me a
sword-thrust that day in school which was years
in healing.
Chapter II
Since I have grown older I have often gone
back and tried to analyze the change that came
into my life after that fateful day in school.
There did come a radical change, and, young as
I was, I felt fully conscious of it, though I did
not fully comprehend it. Like my first spanking,
it is one of the few incidents in my life that I can
remember clearly. In the life of every one there
is a limited number of unhappy experiences which
are not written upon the memory, but stamped
there with a die; and in long years after they can
be called up in detail, and every emotion that was
stirred by them can he lived through anew; these
are the tragedies of life. We may grow to
include some of them among the trivial incidents of
childhood--a broken toy, a promise made to us
which was not kept, a harsh, heart-piercing
word--but these, too, as well as the bitter experiences
and disappointments of mature years, are the
tragedies of life.
And so I have often lived through that hour,
that day, that week in which was wrought the
miracle of my transition from one world into
another; for I did indeed pass into another world.
From that time I looked out through other eyes,
my thoughts were colored, my words dictated, my
actions limited by one dominating, all-pervading
idea which constantly increased in force and
weight until I finally realized in it a great,
tangible fact.
And this is the dwarfing, warping, distorting
influence which operates upon each colored man
in the United States. He is forced to take his
outlook on all things, not from the viewpoint of
a citizen, or a man, nor even a human being, but
from the viewpoint of a colored man. It is
wonderful to me that the race has progressed so
broadly as it has, since most of its thought and
all of its activity must run through the narrow
neck of one funnel.
And it is this, too, which makes the colored
people of this country, in reality, a mystery to the
whites. It is a difficult thing for a white man to
learn what a colored man really thinks; because,
generally, with the latter an additional and
different light must be brought to bear on what he
thinks; and his thoughts are often influenced by
considerations so delicate and subtle that it would
be impossible for him to confess or explain them
to one of the opposite race. This gives to every
colored man, in proportion to his intellectuality,
a sort of dual personality; there is one phase of
him which is disclosed only in the freemasonry of
his own race. I have often watched with interest
and sometimes with amazement even ignorant
colored men under cover of broad grins and minstrel
antics maintain this dualism in the presence of
white men.
I believe it to be a fact that the colored people
of this country know and understand the white
people better than the white people know and
understand them.
I now think that this change which came into
niy life was at first more subjective than objective.
I do not think my friends at school changed so
much toward me as I did toward them. I grew
reserved, I might say suspicious. I grew
constantly more and more afraid of laying myself
open to some injury to my feelings or my pride.
I frequently saw or fancied some slight where, I
am sure, none was intended. On the other hand,
my friends and teachers were, if anything
different, more considerate of me; but I can remember
that it was against this very attitude in
particular that my sensitiveness revolted. "Red" was
the only one who did not so wound me; up to this
day I recall with a swelling heart his clumsy
efforts to make me understand that nothing could
change his love for me.
I am sure that at this time the majority of my
white schoolmates did not understand or
appreciate any differences between me and themselves;
but there were a few who had evidently received
instructions at home on the matter, and more than once they displayed their knowledge in word and
action. As the years passed I noticed that the
most innocent and ignorant among the others
grew in wisdom.
I, myself, would not have so clearly understood
this difference had it not been for the presence
of the other colored children at school; I had.
learned what their status was, and now I learned
that theirs was mine. I had had no particular
like or dislike for these black and brown boys and
girls; in fact, with the exception of "Shiny," they
had occupied very little of my thought, but I do
know that when the blow fell I had a very strong
aversion to being classed with them. So I
became something of a solitary. "Red" and I
remained inseparable, and there was between
"Shiny" and me a sort of sympathetic bond, but
my intercourse with the others was never entirely
free from a feeling of constraint. But I must
add that this feeling was confined almost entirely
to my intercourse with boys and girls of about
my own age; I did not experience it with my
seniors. And when I grew to manhood I found
myself freer with elderly white people than with
those near my own age.
I was now about eleven years old, but these
emotions and impressions which I have just
described could not have been stronger or more
distinct at an older age. There were two immediate
results of my forced loneliness; I began to find
company in books, and greater pleasure in music.
I made the former discovery through a big,
gilt-bound, illustrated copy of the Bible, which used
to lie in splendid neglect on the center table in
our little parlor. On top of the Bible lay a
photograph album. I had often looked at the
pictures in the album, and one day after taking the
larger book down, and opening it on the floor, I
was overjoyed to find that it contained what
seemed to be an inexhaustible supply of pictures.
I looked at these pictures many times; in fact,
so often that I knew the story of each one
without having to read the subject, and then,
somehow, I picked up the thread of history on which
is strung the trials and tribulations of the
Hebrew children; this I followed with feverish
interest and excitement. For a long time King
David, with Samson a close second, stood at the
head of my list of heroes; he was not displaced
until I came to know Robert the Bruce. I read
a good portion of the Old Testament, all that part
treating of wars and rumors of wars, and then
started in on the New. I became interested in the
life of Christ, but became impatient and
disappointed when I found that, notwithstanding the
great power he possessed, he did not make use of
it when, in my judgment, he most needed to do so.
And so my first general impression of the
Bible was what my later impression has been
of a number of modern books, that the
authors put their best work in the first part, and
grew either exhausted or careless toward the
end.
After reading the Bible, or those parts which
held my attention, I began to explore the
glass-doored book-case which I have already
mentioned. I found there "Pilgrim's Progress,"
"Peter Parley's History of the United States,"
Grimm's "Household Stories," "Tales of a
Grandfather," a bound volume of an old English
publication, I think it was called "The Mirror," a
little volume called "Familiar Science," and
somebody's "Natural Theology," which latter, of
course, I could not read, but which, nevertheless,
I tackled, with the result of gaining a permanent
dislike for all kinds of theology. There were
several other books of no particular name or
merit, such as agents sell to people who know
nothing of buying books. How my mother came
by this little library which, considering all things,
was so well suited to me, I never sought to know.
But she was far from being an ignorant woman,
and had herself, very likely, read the majority of
these books, though I do not remember ever
having seen her with a book in her hand, with the
exception of the Episcopal Prayer-book. At any
rate she encouraged in me the habit of reading,
and when I had about exhausted those books in
the little library which interested me, she began
to buy books for me. She also regularly gave
me money to buy a weekly paper which was then
very popular for boys.
At this time I went in for music with an
earnestness worthy of maturer years; a change of
teachers was largely responsible for this. I
began now to take lessons of the organist of the
church which I attended with my mother; he was
a good teacher and quite a thorough musician.
He was so skillful in his instruction, and filled me
with such enthusiasm that my progress--these
are his words--was marvelous. I remember that
when I was barely twelve years old I appeared on
a program with a number of adults at an
entertainment given for some charitable purpose, and
carried off the honors. I did more, I brought
upon myself through the local newspapers the
handicapping title of "Infant prodigy."
I can believe that I did astonish my audience,
for I never played the piano like a child, that is,
in the "one-two-three" style with accelerated
motion. Neither did I depend upon mere brilliancy
of technic, a trick by which children often
surprise their listeners, but I always tried to
interpret a piece of music; I always played with
feeling. Very early I acquired that knack of using
the pedals which makes the piano a sympathetic,
singing instrument; quite a different thing from
the source of hard or blurred sounds it so
generally is. I think this was due not entirely to
natural artistic temperament, but largely to the
fact that I did not begin to learn the piano by
counting out exercises, but by trying to
reproduce the quaint songs which my mother used
to sing, with all their pathetic turns and
cadences.
Even at a tender age, in playing, I helped to
express what I felt by some of the mannerisms
which I afterwards observed in great performers;
I had not copied them. I have often heard
people speak of the mannerisms of musicians as
affectations adopted for mere effect; in some cases
this may be so; but a true artist can no more
play upon the piano or violin without putting his
whole body in accord with the emotions he is
striving to express than a swallow can fly without
being graceful. Often when playing I could not
keep the tears which formed in my eyes from
rolling down my cheeks. Sometimes at the end or
even in the midst of a composition as big a boy
as I was, I would jump from the piano, and
throw myself sobbing into my mother's arms.
She, by her caresses and often her tears, only
encouraged these fits of sentimental hysteria. Of
course, to counteract this tendency to
temperamental excesses I should have been out playing
ball or in swimming with other boys of my age;
but my mother didn't know that. There was
only once when she was really firm with me,
making me do what she considered was best; I did
not want to return to school after the unpleasant
episode which I have related, and she was
inflexible.
I began my third term, and the days ran along
as I have already indicated. I had been
promoted twice, and had managed each time to pull
"Red" along with me. I think the teachers came
to consider me the only hope of his ever getting
through school, and I believe they secretly
conspired with me to bring about the desired end.
At any rate, I know it became easier in each
succeeding examination for me not only to assist
"Red," but absolutely to do his work. It is
strange how in some things honest people can be
dishonest without the slightest compunction. I
knew boys at school who were too honorable to
tell a fib even when one would have been just the
right thing, but could not resist the temptation
to assist or receive assistance in an examination.
I have long considered it the highest proof of
honesty in a man to hand his street-car fare to
the conductor who had overlooked it.
One afternoon after school, during my third
term, I rushed home in a great hurry to get my
dinner, and go to my music teacher's. I was
never reluctant about going there, but on this
particular afternoon I was impetuous. The
reason of this was, I had been asked to play the
accompaniment for a young lady who was to play
a violin solo at a concert given by the young
people of the church, and on this afternoon we were
to have our first rehearsal. At that time
playing accompaniments was the only thing in music
I did not enjoy; later this feeling grew into
positive dislike. I have never been a really good
accompanist because my ideas of interpretation
were always too strongly individual. I constantly
forced my accelerandos and rubatos upon the
soloist, often throwing the duet entirely out of gear.
Perhaps the reader has already guessed why I
was so willing and anxious to play the
accompaniment to this violin solo; if not,--the violinist was
a girl of seventeen or eighteen whom I had first
heard play a short time before on a Sunday
afternoon at a special service of some kind, and who
had moved me to a degree which now I can hardly
think of as possible. At present I do not think it
was due to her wonderful playing, though I judge
she must have been a very fair performer, but there
was just the proper setting to produce the effect
upon a boy such as I was; the half dim church,
the air of devotion on the part of the listeners,
the heaving tremor of the organ under the clear
wail of the violin, and she, her eyes almost
closing, the escaping strands of her dark hair wildly
framing her pale face, and her slender body
swaying to the tones she called forth, all combined to
fire my imagination and my heart with a passion
though boyish, yet strong and, somehow, lasting.
I have tried to describe the scene; if I have
succeeded it is only half success, for words can only
partially express what I would wish to convey.
Always in recalling that Sunday afternoon I am
subconscious of a faint but distinct fragrance
which, like some old memory-awakening perfume,
rises and suffuses my whole imagination, inducing
a state of reverie so airy as to just evade the
powers of expression.
She was my first love, and I loved her as only
a boy loves. I dreamed of her, I built air castles
for her, she was the incarnation of each beautiful
heroine I knew; when I played the piano it was
to her, not even did music furnish an adequate
outlet for my passion; I bought a new note-book,
and, to sing her praises, made my first and last
attempts at poetry. I remember one day at
school, after having given in our note-books to
have some exercises corrected, the teacher called
me to her desk and said, "I couldn't correct your
exercises because I found nothing in your book
but a rhapsody on somebody's brown eyes." I
had passed in the wrong note-book. I don't
think I have felt greater embarrassment in my
whole life than I did at that moment. I was not
only ashamed that my teacher should see this
nakedness of my heart, but that she should find out
that I had any knowledge of such affairs. It
did not then occur to me to be ashamed of the
kind of poetry I had written.
Of course, the reader must know that all of
this adoration was in secret; next to my great
love for this young lady was the dread that in
some way she would find it out. I did not know
what some men never find out, that the woman
who cannot discern when she is loved has never
lived. It makes me laugh to think how
successful I was in concealing it all; within a short time
after our duet all of the friends of my dear one
were referring to me as her "little sweetheart," or
her "little beau," and she laughingly encouraged
it. This did not entirely satisfy me; I wanted
to be taken seriously. I had definitely made up
my mind that I should never love another woman,
and that if she deceived me I should do something
desperate--the great difficulty was to think of
something sufficiently desperate--and the
heartless jade, how she led me on!
So I hurried home that afternoon, humming
snatches of the violin part of the duet, my heart
beating with pleasurable excitement over the fact
that I was going to be near her, to have her
attention placed directly upon me; that I was going
to be of service to her, and in a way in which I
could show myself to advantage--this last
consideration has much to do with cheerful service.--The
anticipation produced in me a sensation
somewhat between bliss and fear. I rushed through
the gate, took the three steps to the house at one
bound, threw open the door, and was about to
hang my cap on its accustomed peg of the hall
rack when I noticed that that particular peg was
occupied by a black derby hat. I stopped
suddenly, and gazed at this hat as though I had
never seen an object of its description. I was
still looking at it in open-eyed wonder when my
mother, coming out of the parlor into the hallway,
called me, and said there was someone inside who
wanted to see me. Feeling that I was being made
a party to some kind of mystery I went in with
her, and there I saw a man standing leaning with
one elbow on the mantel, his back partly turned
toward the door. As I entered he turned, and I
saw a tall, handsome, well dressed gentleman of
perhaps thirty-five; he advanced a step toward
me with a smile on his face. I stopped and
looked at him with the same feelings with which
I had looked at the derby hat, except that they
were greatly magnified. I looked at him from
head to foot, but he was an absolute blank to me
until my eyes rested on his slender, elegant,
polished shoes; then it seemed that indistinct and
partly obliterated films of memory began at first
slowly then rapidly to unroll, forming a vague
panorama of my childhood days in Georgia.
My mother broke the spell by calling me by
name, and saying, "This is your father."
"Father, Father," that was the word which
had been to me a source of doubt and perplexity
ever since the interview with my mother on the
subject. How often I had wondered about my
father, who he was, what he was like, whether
alive or dead, and above all, why she would not
tell me about him. More than once I had been
on the point of recalling to her the promise she
had made me, but I instinctively felt that she was
happier for not telling me and that I was happier
for not being told; yet I had not the slightest
idea what the real truth was. And here he stood
before me, just the kind of looking father I had
wishfully pictured him to be; but I made no
advance toward him; I stood there feeling
embarrassed and foolish, not knowing what to say or do.
I am not sure but that he felt pretty much the
same. My mother stood at my side with one
hand on my shoulder almost pushing me forward,
but I did not move. I can well remember the
look of disappointment, even pain, on her face
and I can now understand that she could expect
nothing else but that at the name "father" I
should throw myself into his arms. But I could
not rise to this dramatic or, better, melodramatic
climax. Somehow I could not arouse any
considerable feeling of need for a father. He broke
the awkward tableau by saying, "Well, boy, aren't
you glad to see me?" He evidently meant the
words kindly enough, but I don't know what he
could have said that would have had a worse
effect; however, my good breeding came to my
rescue, and I answered, "Yes, sir," and went to him
and offered him my hand. He took my hand into
one of his, and, with the other, stroked my head
saying that I had grown into a fine youngster.
He asked me how old I was; which, of course, he
must have done merely to say something more, or
perhaps he did so as a test of my intelligence. I
replied, "Twelve, sir." He then made the trite
observation about the flight of time, and we lapsed
into another awkward pause.
My mother was all in smiles; I believe that was
one of the happiest moments of her life. Either
to put me more at ease or to show me off, she
asked me to play something for my father.
There is only one thing in the world that can
make music, at all times and under all
circumstances, up to its general standard, that is a
hand-organ, or one of its variations. I went to
the piano and played something in a listless,
half-hearted way. I simply was not in the mood. I
was wondering, while playing, when my mother
would dismiss me and let me go; but my father
was so enthusiastic in his praise that he touched
my vanity--which was great--and more than
that; he displayed that sincere appreciation which
always arouses an artist to his best effort, and,
too, in an unexplainable manner, makes him feel
like shedding tears. I showed my gratitude by
playing for him a Chopin waltz with all the
feeling that was in me. When I had finished my
mother's eyes were glistening with tears; my
father stepped across the room, seized me in his
arms, and squeezed me to his breast. I am
certain that for that moment he was proud to be
my father. He sat and held me standing
between his knees while he talked to my mother. I,
in the meantime, examined him with more
curiosity, perhaps, than politeness. I interrupted the
conversation by asking, "Mother, is he going to
stay with us now?" I found it impossible to
frame the word "father" it was too new to me;
so I asked the question through my mother.
Without waiting for her to speak, my father
answered, "I've got to go back to New York this
afternoon, but I'm coming to see you again." I
turned abruptly and went over to my mother,
and almost in a whisper reminded her that I had
an appointment which I should not miss; to my
pleasant surprise she said that she would give me
something to eat at once so that I might go.
She went out of the room, and I began to gather
from off the piano the music I needed. When I
had finished, my father, who had been watching
me, asked, "Are you going?" I replied, "Yes,
sir, I've got to go to practice for a concert."
He spoke some words of advice to me about being
a good boy and taking care of my mother when
I grew up, and added that he was going to send
me something nice from New York. My mother
called, and I said good-by to him, and went out.
I saw him only once after that.
I quickly swallowed down what my mother had
put on the table for me, seized my cap and
music, and hurried off to my teacher's house. On
the way I could think of nothing but this new
father, where he came from, where he had been,
why he was here, and why he would not stay.
In my mind I ran over the whole list of fathers
I had become acquainted with in my reading, but
I could not classify him. The thought did not
cross my mind that he was different from me, and
even if it had the mystery would not thereby
have been explained; for notwithstanding my
changed relations with most of my schoolmates,
I had only a faint knowledge of prejudice and no
idea at all how it ramified and affected the entire
social organism. I felt, however, that there was
something about the whole affair which had to be
hid.
When I arrived I found that she of the brown
eyes had been rehearsing with my teacher, and
was on the point of leaving. My teacher with
some expressions of surprise asked why I was
late, and I stammered out the first deliberate lie
of which I have any recollection. I told him
that when I reached home from school I found
my mother quite sick, and that I had stayed with
her a while before coming. Then unnecessarily
and gratuitously, to give my words force of
conviction, I suppose, I added, "I don't think she'll
be with us very long." In speaking these words
I must have been comical; for I noticed that my
teacher, instead of showing signs of anxiety or
sorrow, half hid a smile. But how little did I
know that in that lie I was speaking a prophecy.
She of the brown eyes unpacked her violin, and
we went through the duet several times. I was
soon lost to all other thoughts in the delights of
music and love. I say delights of love without
reservation; for at no time of life is love so pure,
so delicious, so poetic, so romantic, as it is in
boyhood. A great deal has been said about the
heart of a girl when she stands "where the brook
and river meet," but what she feels is negative;
more interesting is the heart of a boy when just
at the budding dawn of manhood he stands
looking wide-eyed into the long vistas opening before
him; when he first becomes conscious of the
awakening and quickening of strange desires and
unknown powers; when what he sees and feels is
still shadowy and mystical enough to be
intangible, and, so, more beautiful; when his
imagination is unsullied, and his faith new and
whole--then it is that love wears a halo--the man who
has not loved before he was fourteen has missed
a fore-taste of Elysium.
When I reached home it was quite dark, and I
found my mother without a light, sitting rocking
in a chair as she so often used to do in my
childhood days, looking into the fire and singing
softly to herself. I nestled close to her, and with
her arms around me she haltingly told me who my
father was,--a great man, a fine gentleman,--he
loved me and loved her very much; he was going
to make a great man of me. All she said was
so limited by reserve and so colored by her
feelings that it was but half truth; and so, I did not
yet fully understand.
Chapter III
Perhaps I ought not pass on this narrative
without mentioning that the duet was a great
success; so great that we were obliged to respond
with two encores. It seemed to me that life
could hold no greater joy than it contained when
I took her hand and we stepped down to the
front of the stage bowing to our enthusiastic
audience. When we reached the little
dressing-room, where the other performers were
applauding as wildly as the audience, she impulsively
threw both her arms around me, and kissed me,
while I struggled to get away.
One day a couple of weeks after my father had
been to see us, a wagon drove up to our cottage
loaded with a big box. I was about to tell the
man on the wagon that they had made a mistake,
when my mother, acting darkly wise, told them to
bring their load in; she had them to unpack
the box, and quickly there was evolved from
the boards, paper and other packing
material, a beautiful, brand new, upright piano.
Then she informed me that it was a present to me
from my father. I at once sat down and ran my
fingers over the keys; the full, mellow tone of the
instrument was ravishing. I thought, almost
remorsefully, of how I had left my father; but,
even so, there momentarily crossed my mind a
feeling of disappointment that the piano was not
a grand. The new instrument greatly increased
the pleasure of my hours of study and practice
at home.
Shortly after this I was made a member of the
boys' choir, it being found that I possessed a
clear, strong soprano voice. I enjoyed the
singing very much. About a year later I began the
study of the pipe organ and the theory of
music; and before I finished the grammar school I
had written out several simple preludes for organ
which won the admiration of my teacher, and
which he did me the honor to play at services.
The older I grew the more thought I gave to
the question of my and my mother's position, and
what was our exact relation to the world in
general. My idea of the whole matter was rather
hazy. My study of United States history had
been confined to those periods which were
designated in my book as "Discovery," "Colonial,"
"Revolutionary," and "Constitutional." I now
began to study about the Civil War, but the story
was told in such a condensed and skipping style
that I gained from it very little real information.
It is a marvel how children ever learn any
history out of books of that sort. And, too, I
began now to read the newspapers; I often saw
articles which aroused my curiosity, but did not
enlighten me. But, one day, I drew from the
circulating library a book that cleared the whole
mystery, a book that I read with the same
feverish intensity with which I had read the old Bible
stories, a book that gave me my first perspective
of the life I was entering; that book was "Uncle
Tom's Cabin."
This work of Harriet Beecher Stowe has been
the object of much unfavorable criticism. It has
been assailed, not only as fiction of the most
imaginative sort, but as being a direct
misrepresentation. Several successful attempts have lately
been made to displace the book from northern
school libraries. Its critics would brush it aside
with the remark that there never was a Negro as
good as Uncle Tom, nor a slave-holder as bad as
Lagree. For my part, I was never an admirer of
Uncle Tom, nor of his type of goodness; but I
believe that there were lots of old Negroes as
foolishly good as he; the proof of which is that they
knowingly stayed and worked the plantations that
furnished sinews for the army which was fighting
to keep them enslaved. But, in these later years,
several cases have come to my personal knowledge
in which old Negroes have died and left what was
a considerable fortune to the descendants of their
former masters. I do not think it takes any great
stretch of the imagination to believe there was a
fairly large class of slave holders typified in
Lagree. And we must also remember that the
author depicted a number of worthless if not vicious
Negroes, and a slave holder who was as much of a
Christian and a gentleman as it was possible for
one in his position to be; that she pictured the
happy, singing, shuffling darkey as well as the
mother waiting for her child sold "down river.
I do not think it is claiming too much to say
that "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was a fair and truthful
panorama of slavery; however that may be, it
opened my eyes as to who and what I was and
what my country considered me; in fact, it gave
me my bearing. But there was no shock; I took
the whole revelation in a kind of stoical way.
One of the greatest benefits I derived from
reading the book was that I could afterwards talk
frankly with my mother on all the questions which
had been vaguely troubling my mind. As a
result, she was entirely freed from reserve, and often
herself brought up the subject, talking of things
directly touching her life and mine and of things
which had come down to her through the "old
folks." What she told me interested and even
fascinated me; and, what may seem strange,
kindled in me a strong desire to see the South. She
spoke to me quite frankly about herself, my father
and myself; she, the sewing girl of my father's
mother; he, an impetuous young man home from
college; I, the child of this unsanctioned love.
She told me even the principal reason for our
coming North. My father was about to be
married to a young lady of another great Southern
family. She did not neglect to add that another
reason for our being in Connecticut was that he
intended to give me an education, and make a man
of me. In none of her talks did she ever utter
one word of complaint against my father. She
always endeavored to impress upon me how good
he had been and still was, and that he was all to
us that custom and the law would allow. She
loved him; more, she worshiped him, and she
died firmly believing that he loved her more
than any other woman in the world. Perhaps she
was right. Who knows?
All of these newly awakened ideas and thoughts
took the form of a definite aspiration on the day I
graduated from the grammar school. And what
a day that was! The girls in white dresses with
fresh ribbons in their hair; the boys in new suits
and creaky shoes; the great crowd of parents and
friends, the flowers, the prizes and
congratulations, made the day seem to me one of the greatest
importance. I was on the programme, and played
piano solo which was received by the audience
with that amount of applause which I had come to
look upon as being only the just due to my talent.
But the real enthusiasm was aroused by
"Shiny." He was the principal speaker of the
and well did he measure up to the honor.
He made a striking picture, that thin little black
boy standing on the platform, dressed in clothes
that did not fit him any too well, his eyes burning
with excitement, his shrill, musical voice vibrating
in tones of appealing defiance, and his black face
alight with such great intelligence and earnestness
as to be positively handsome. What were his
thoughts when he stepped forward and looked into
that crowd of faces, all white with the exception
of a score or so that were lost to view. I do not
know, but I fancy he felt his loneliness. I think
there must have rushed over him a feeling akin
to that of a gladiator tossed into the arena and
bade to fight for his life. I think that solitary
little black figure standing there felt that for the
particular time and place he bore the weight and
responsibility of his race; that for him to fail
meant general defeat; but he won, and nobly.
His oration was Wendell Phillips' "Toussant
L'Ouverture," a speech which may now be classed
as rhetorical, even, perhaps, bombastic; but as the
words fell from "Shiny's" lips their effect was
magical. How so young an orator could stir so
great enthusiasm was to be wondered at. When
in the famous peroration, his voice trembling with
suppressed emotion rose higher and higher and
then rested on the name Toussant
L'Ouverture, it was like touching an electric button which
loosed the pent-up feelings of his listeners. They
actually rose to him.
I have since known of colored men who have
been chosen as class orators in our leading
universities, of others who have played on the Varsity
foot-hall and baseball teams, of colored speakers
who have addressed great white audiences. In
each of these instances I believe the men were
stirred by the same emotions which actuated
"Shiny" on the day of his graduation; and, too,
in each ease where the efforts have reached any
high standard of excellence they have been
followed by the same phenomenon of enthusiasm. I
think the explanation of the latter lies in what is
a basic, though often dormant, principle of the
Anglo-Saxon heart, love of fair play. "Shiny,"
it is true, was what is so common in his race, a
natural orator; but I doubt that any white boy
of equal talent could have wrought the same effect.
The sight of that boy gallantly waging with puny,
black arms, so unequal a battle, touched the deep
springs in the hearts of his audience, and they
were swept by a wave of sympathy and admiration.
But the effect upon me of "Shiny's" speech was
double; I not only shared the enthusiasm of his
audience, but he imparted to me some of his own
enthusiasm. I felt leap within me pride that I
was colored; and I began to form wild dreams of
bringing glory and honor to the Negro race.
For days I could talk of nothing else with my
mother except my ambitions to be a great man, a
great colored man, to reflect credit on the race,
and gain fame for myself. It was not until years
after that I formulated a definite and feasible
plan for realizing my dreams.
I entered the high school with my class, and
still continued my study of the piano, the pipe
organ and the theory of music. I had to drop
out of the boys' choir on account of a changing
voice; this I regretted very much. As I grew
older my love for reading grew stronger. I read
with studious interest everything I could find
relating to colored men who had gained prominence.
My heroes had been King David, then Robert the
Bruce; now Frederick Douglass was enshrined in
the place of honor. When I learned that
Alexander Dumas was a colored man, I re-read "Monte
Cristo" and "The Three Guardsmen" with
magnified pleasure. I lived between my music and
books, on the whole a rather unwholesome life for
a boy to lead. I dwelt in a world of imagination,
of dreams and air castles,--the kind of atmosphere
that sometimes nourishes a genius, more often men
unfitted for the practical struggles of life. I
never played a game of ball, never went fishing or
learned to swim; in fact, the only outdoor
exercise in which I took any interest was skating.
Nevertheless, though slender, I grew well-formed
and in perfect health. After I entered the high
school I began to notice the change in my mother's
health, which I suppose had been going on for
some years. She began to complain a little and
to cough a great deal; she tried several remedies,
and finally went to see a doctor; but though she
was failing in health she kept her spirits up. She
still did a great deal of sewing, and in the busy
seasons hired two women to help her. The
purpose she had formed of having me go through
college without financial worries kept her at work
when she was not fit for it. I was so fortunate
as to be able to organize a class of eight or ten
beginners on the piano, and so start a separate
little fund of my own. As the time for my
graduation from the high school grew nearer, the plans
for my college career became the chief subject of
our talks. I sent for catalogues of all the
prominent schools in the East, and eagerly gathered
all the information I could concerning them from
different sources. My mother told me that my
father wanted me to go to Harvard or Yale; she
herself had a half desire for me to go to Atlanta
University, and even had me write for a catalogue
of that school. There were two reasons,
however, that inclined her to my father's choice: the
first, that at Harvard or Yale I should be near
her; the second, that my father had promised to
pay a part of my college education.
Both "Shiny" and "Red" came to my house
quite often of evenings, and we used to talk over
our plans and prospects for the future. Sometimes
I would play for them, and they seemed to enjoy
the music very much. My mother often prepared
sundry southern dishes for them, which I am not
sure but that they enjoyed more. "Shiny" had an
uncle in Amherst, Mass., and he expected to live
with him and work his way through Amherst
College. "Red" declared that he had enough of
school and that after he got his high school
diploma he would get a position in a bank. It was
his ambition to become a banker, and he felt sure
of getting the opportunity through certain
members of his family.
My mother barely had strength to attend the
closing exercises of the high school when I
graduated; and after that day she was seldom out of
bed. She could no longer direct her work, and
under the expense of medicines, doctors, and
someone to look after her, our college fund began to
diminish rapidly. Many of her customers and
some of the neighbors were very kind, and
frequently brought her nourishment of one kind or
another. My mother realized what I did not, that
she was mortally ill, and she had me write a long
letter to my father. For some time past she had
heard from him only at irregular intervals; we
never received an answer. In those last days I
often sat at her bedside and read to her until she
fell asleep. Sometimes I would leave the parlor
door open and play on the piano, just loud enough
for the music to reach her. This she always
enjoyed.
One night, near the end of July, after I had
been watching beside her for some hours, I went
into the parlor, and throwing myself into the big
arm chair dozed off into a fitful sleep. I was
suddenly aroused by one of the neighbors, who had
come in to sit with her that night. She said,
"Come to your mother at once." I hurried
upstairs, and at the bedroom door met the woman
who was acting as nurse. I noted with a
dissolving heart the strange look of awe on her face.
From my first glance at my mother, I discerned
the light of death upon her countenance. I fell
upon my knees beside the bed, and burying my
face in the sheets sobbed convulsively. She died
with the fingers of her left hand entwined in my
hair.
I will not rake over this, one of the two sacred
sorrows of my life; nor could I describe the feeling
of unutterable loneliness that fell upon me. After
the funeral I went to the house of my music
teacher; he had kindly offered me the hospitality
of his home for so long as I might need it. A few
days later I moved my trunk, piano, my music and
most of my books to his home; the rest of my
books I divided between "Shiny" and "Red."
Some of the household effects I gave to "Shiny's"
mother and to two or three of the neighbors who
had been kind to us during my mother's illness;
the others I sold. After settling up my
little estate I found that besides a good
supply of clothes, a piano, some books and other
trinkets, I had about two hundred dollars in
cash.
The question of what I was to do now
confronted me. My teacher suggested a concert
tour; but both of us realized that I was too old to
be exploited as an infant prodigy and too young
and inexperienced to go before the public as a
finished artist. He, however, insisted that the
people of the town would generously patronize a
benefit concert, so took up the matter, and made
arrangements for such an entertainment. A more
than sufficient number of people with musical and
elocutionary talent volunteered their services to
make a programme. Among these was my
brown-eyed violinist. But our relations were not the
same as they were when we had played our first
duet together. A year or so after that time she
had dealt me a crushing blow by getting married.
I was partially avenged, however, by the fact that,
though she was growing more beautiful, she was
losing her ability to play the violin.
I was down on the programme for one number.
My selection might have appeared at that
particular time as a bit of affectation, but I
considered it deeply appropriate; I played Beethoven's
"Sonata Pathétique." When I sat down at the
piano, and glanced into the faces of the several
hundreds of people who were there solely on
account of love or sympathy for me, emotions
swelled in my heart which enabled me to play the
"Pathétique" as I could never again play it.
When the last tone died away the few who began
to applaud were hushed by the silence of the
others; and for once I played without receiving
an encore.
The benefit yielded me a little more than two
hundred dollars, thus raising my cash capital to
about four hundred dollars. I still held to my
determination of going to college; so it was now
a question of trying to squeeze through a year at
Harvard or going to Atlanta where the money I
had would pay my actual expenses for at least two
years.. The peculiar fascination which the South
held over my imagination and my limited capital
decided me in favor of Atlanta University; so
about the last of September I bade farewell to the
friends and scenes of my boyhood, and boarded a
train for the South.
Chapter IV
The farther I got below Washington the more
disappointed I became in the appearance of the
country. I peered through the car windows,
looking in vain for the luxuriant semi-tropical scenery
which I had pictured in my mind. I did not find
the grass so green, nor the woods so beautiful, nor
the flowers so plentiful, as they were in
Connecticut. Instead, the red earth partly covered by
tough, scrawny grass, the muddy straggling
roads, the cottages of unpainted pine boards, and
the clay daubed huts imparted a "burnt up"
impression. Occasionally we ran through a little
white and green village that was like an oasis in a
desert.
When I reached Atlanta my steadily increasing
disappointment was not lessened. I found it a
big, dull, red town. This dull red color of that
part of the South I was then seeing had much, I
think, to do with the extreme depression of my
spirits--no public squares, no fountains, dingy
street-cars and, with the exception of three or
four principal thoroughfares, unpaved streets. It
was raining when I arrived and some of these
unpaved streets were absolutely impassable. Wheels
sank to the hubs in red mire, and I actually stood
for an hour and watched four or five men work to
save a mule, which had stepped into a deep sink,
from drowning, or, rather, suffocating in the mud.
The Atlanta of to-day is a new city.
On the train I had talked with one of the
Pullman car porters, a bright young fellow who was
himself a student, and told him that I was going
to Atlanta to attend school. I had also asked
him to tell me where I might stop for a day or two
until the University opened. He said I might go
with him to the place where he stopped during his
"layovers" in Atlanta. I gladly accepted his
offer, and went with him along one of those muddy
streets until we came to a rather rickety looking
frame house, which we entered. The proprietor
of the house was a big, fat, greasy looking
brown-skinned man. When I asked him if he could give
me accommodation he wanted to know how long I
would stay. I told him perhaps two days, not
more than three. In reply he said, "Oh, dat's all
right den," at the same time leading the way up a
pair of creaky stairs. I followed him and the
porter to a room, the door of which the proprietor
opened while continuing, it seemed, his remark,
"Oh, dat's all right den," by adding, "You kin
sleep in dat cot in de corner der. Fifty cents
please." The porter interrupted by saying, "You
needn't collect from him now, he's got a trunk."
This seemed to satisfy the man, and he went down
leaving me and my porter friend in the room. I
glanced around the apartment and saw that it
contained a double bed and two cots, two
wash-stands, three chairs, and a time-worn bureau with
a looking-glass that would have made Adonis
appear hideous. I looked at the cot in which I was
to sleep and suspected, not without good reasons,
that I should not be the first to use the sheets and
pillow-case since they had last come from the
wash. When I thought of the clean, tidy,
comfortable surroundings in which I had been reared,
a wave of homesickness swept over me that made
me feel faint. Had it not been for the presence of
my companion, and that I knew this much of his
history,--that he was not yet quite twenty, just
three years older than myself, and that he had
been fighting his own way in the world, earning
his own living and providing for his own
education since he was fourteen, I should not have been
able to stop the tears that were welling up in my
eyes.
I asked him why it was that the proprietor of
the house seemed unwilling to accommodate me for
more than a couple of days. He informed me that
the man ran a lodging house especially for
Pullman porters, and as their stays in town were not
longer than one or two nights it would interfere
with his arrangements to have anyone stay longer.
He went on to say, "You see this room is fixed up
to accommodate four men at a time. Well, by
keeping a sort of table of trips, in and out, of the
men, and working them like checkers, he can
accommodate fifteen or sixteen in each week, and
generally avoid having an empty bed. You happen
to catch a bed that would have been empty for a
couple of nights." I asked him where he was
going to sleep. He answered, "I sleep in that
other cot to-night; to-morrow night I go out."
He went on to tell me that the man who kept the
house did not serve meals, and that if I was
hungry we would go out and get something to
eat.
We went into the street, and in passing the
railroad station I hired a wagon to take my trunk
to my lodging place. We passed along until,
finally, we turned into a street that stretched
away, up and down hill, for a mile or two; and
here I caught my first sight of colored people in
large numbers. I had seen little squads around
the railroad stations on my way south; but here
I saw a street crowded with them. They filled
the shops and thronged the sidewalks and lined
the curb. I asked my companion if all the colored
people in Atlanta lived in this street. He said
they did not, and assured me that the ones I saw
were of the lower class. I felt relieved, in spite
of the size of the lower class. The unkempt
appearance, the shambling, slouching gait and loud
talk and laughter of these people aroused in me a
feeling of almost repulsion. Only one thing about
them awoke a feeling of interest; that was their
dialect. I had read some Negro dialect and had
heard snatches of it on my journey down from
Washington; but here I heard it in all of its
fullness and freedom. I was particularly struck by
the way in which it was punctuated by such
exclamatory phrases as "Lawd a mussy!" "G'wan
man!" "Bless ma soul!" "Look heah chile!"
These people talked and laughed without restraint.
In fact, they talked straight from their lungs,
and laughed from the pits of their stomachs.
And this hearty laughter was often justified by
the droll humor of some remark. I paused long
enough to hear one man say to another, "W'at's
de mattah wid you an' yo' fr'en' Sam?" and the
other came back like a flash, "Ma fr'en? He ma
fr'en? Man! I'd go to his funeral jes de same
as I'd go to a minstrel show." I have since
learned that this ability to laugh heartily is, in
part, the salvation of the American Negro; it does
much to keep him from going the way of the
Indian.
The business places of the street along which
we were passing consisted chiefly of low bars,
cheap dry-goods and notion stores, barber shops,
and fish and bread restaurants. We, at length,
turned down a pair of stairs that led to a
basement, and I found myself in an eating-house
somewhat better than those I had seen in passing; but
that did not mean much for its excellence. The
place was smoky, the tables were covered with
oil-cloth, the floor covered with sawdust, and from
the kitchen came a rancid odor of fish fried over
several times, which almost nauseated me. I asked
my companion if this were the place where we were
to eat. He informed me that it was the best
place in town where a colored man could get a
meal. I then wanted to know why somebody didn't
open a place where respectable colored people who
had money could be accommodated. He answered,
"It wouldn't pay; all the respectable colored
people eat at home, and the few who travel generally
have friends in the towns to which they go, who
entertain them." He added, "Of course, you
could go in any place in the city; they wouldn't
know you from white."
I sat down with the porter at one of the tables,
but was not hungry enough to eat with any relish
what was put before me. The food was not badly
cooked; but the iron knives and forks needed to
be scrubbed, the plates and dishes and glasses
needed to he washed and well dried. I minced
over what I took on my plate while my companion
ate. When we finished we paid the waiter twenty
cents each and went out. We walked around
until the lights of the city were lit. Then the porter
said that he must get to bed and have some rest,
he had not had six hours' sleep since he left
Jersey City. I went back to our lodging-house
with him.
When I awoke in the morning there were,
besides my new found friend, two other men in the
room, asleep in the double bed. I got up and
dressed myself very quietly, so as not to awake
anyone. I then drew from under the pillow my
precious roll of greenbacks, took out a ten dollar
bill, and very softly unlocking my trunk, put the
remainder, about three hundred dollars, in the
inside pocket of a coat near the bottom; glad of the
opportunity to put it unobserved in a place of
safety When I had carefully locked my trunk,
I tiptoed toward the door with the intention of
going out to look for a decent restaurant where
I might get something fit to eat. As I was easing
the door open, my porter friend said with a yawn,
"Hello! You're going out?" I answered him,
"Yes." "Oh!" he yawned again, "I guess I've had
enough sleep; wait a minute, I'll go with you."
For the instant his friendship bored and
embarrassed me. I had visions of another meal in the
greasy restaurant of the day before. He must
have divined my thoughts; for he went on to say,
"I know a woman across town who takes a few
boarders; I think we can go over there and get a
good breakfast." With a feeling of mingled fears
and doubts regarding what the breakfast might
be, I waited until he had dressed himself.
When I saw the neat appearance of the cottage
we entered my fears vanished, and when I saw the
woman who kept it my doubts followed the same
course. Scrupulously clean, in a spotless white
apron and colored head handkerchief, her round
face beaming with motherly kindness, she was
picturesquely beautiful. She impressed me as one
broad expanse of happiness and good nature. In
a few minutes she was addressing me as "chile"
and "honey." She made me feel as though I
should like to lay my head on her capacious bosom
and go to sleep.
And the breakfast, simple as it was, I could
not have had at any restaurant in Atlanta at any
price. There was fried chicken, as it is fried only
in the South, hominy boiled to the consistency
where it could be eaten with a fork, and biscuits
so light and flaky that a fellow with any appetite
at all would have no difficulty in disposing of
eight or ten. When I had finished I felt that I
had experienced the realization of, at least, one of
my dreams of Southern life.
During the meal we found out from our
hostess, who had two boys in school, that Atlanta
University opened on that very day. I had
somehow mixed my dates. My friend the porter
suggested that I go out to the University at once and
offered to walk over and show me the way. We
had to walk because, although the University was
not more than twenty minutes distance from the
center of the city, there were no street-cars
running in that direction. My first sight of the
school grounds made me feel that I was not far
from home; here the red hills had been terraced
and covered with green grass; clean gravel walks,
well shaded, lead up to the buildings; indeed, it
was a bit of New England transplanted. At the
gate my companion said he would bid me good-by,
because it was likely that he would not see me
again before his car went out. He told me that
he would make two more trips to Atlanta, and that
he would come out and see me; that after his
second trip he would leave the Pullman service for
the winter and return to school in Nashville. We
shook hands, I thanked him for all his kindness,
and we said good-by.
I walked up to a group of students and made
some inquiries. They directed me to the
president's office in the main building. The president
gave me a cordial welcome; it was more than
cordial; he talked to me, not as the official head of
a college, but as though he were adopting me into
what was his large family, to personally look
after my general welfare as well as my education.
He seemed especially pleased with the fact that I
had come to them all the way from the North.
He told me that I could have come to the school as
soon as I had reached the city, and that I had
better move my trunk out at once. I gladly
promised him that I would do so. He then called
a boy and directed him to take me to the matron,
and to show me around afterwards. I found the
matron even more motherly than the president was
fatherly. She had me to register, which was in
effect to sign a pledge to abstain from the use of
intoxicating beverages, tobacco, and profane
language, while I was a student in the school. This
act caused me no sacrifice; as, up to that time, I
was free from either habit. The boy who was
with me then showed me about the grounds. I
was especially interested in the industrial building.
The sounding of a bell, he told me, was the
signal for the students to gather in the general
assembly hall, and he asked me if I would go. Of
course would. There were between three and
four hundred students and perhaps all of the
teachers gathered in the room. I noticed that
several of the latter were colored. The president
gave a talk addressed principally to new comers
but I scarcely heard what he said, I was so much
occupied in looking at those around me. They
were of all types and colors, the more intelligent
types predominating. The colors ranged from
jet black to pure white, with light hair and eyes.
Among the girls especially there were many so
fair that it was difficult to believe that they had
Negro blood in them. And, too, I could not help
but notice that many of the girls, particularly
those of the delicate brown shades, with black eyes
and wavy dark hair, were decidedly pretty.
Among the boys, many of the blackest were fine
specimens of young manhood, tall, straight, and
muscular, with magnificent heads; these were the
kind of boys who developed into the patriarchal
"uncles" of the old slave régime.
When I left the University it was with the
determination to get my trunk, and move out to the
school before night. I walked back across the city
with a light step and a light heart. I felt
perfectly satisfied with life for the first time since my
mother's death. In passing the railroad station
I hired a wagon and rode with the driver as far as
my stopping place. I settled with my landlord
and went upstairs to put away several articles I
had left out. As soon as I opened my trunk a
dart of suspicion shot through my heart; the
arrangement of things did not look familiar. I
began to dig down excitedly to the bottom till I
reached the coat in which I had concealed my
treasure. My money was gone! Every single
bill of it. I knew it was useless to do so, but I
searched through every other coat, every pair of
trousers, every vest, and even into each pair of
socks. When I had finished my fruitless search
I sat down dazed and heartsick. I called the
landlord up, and informed him of my loss; he
comforted me by saying that I ought to have better
sense than to keep money in a trunk, and that he
was not responsible for his lodgers' personal
effects. His cooling words brought me enough to
my senses to cause me to look and see if anything
else was missing. Several small articles were
gone, among them a black and gray necktie of
odd design upon which my heart was set; almost
as much as the loss of my money, I felt the loss of
my tie.
After thinking for awhile as best I could, I
wisely decided to go at once back to the University
and lay my troubles before the president. I
rushed breathlessly back to the school. As I
neared the grounds the thought came across me,
would not my story sound fishy? Would it not
place me in the position of an impostor or beggar?
What right had I to worry these busy people with
the results of my carelessness? If the money
could not be recovered, and I doubted that it
could, what good would it do to tell them about it.
The shame and embarrassment which the whole
situation gave me caused mc to stop at the gate.
I paused, undecided, for a moment; then turned
and slowly retraced my steps, and so changed the
whole course of my life.
If the reader has never been in a strange city
without money or friends, it is useless to try to
describe what my feelings were; he could not
understand. If he has been, it is equally useless, for
he understands more than words could convey.
When I reached my lodgings I found in the room
one of the porters who had slept there the night
before. When he heard what misfortune had
befallen me he offered many words of sympathy and
advice. He asked me how much money I had left,
I told him that I had ten or twelve dollars in my
pocket. He said, "That won't last you very long
here, and you will hardly be able to find anything
to do in Atlanta. I'll tell you what you do, go
down to Jacksonville and you won't have any
trouble to get a job in one of the big hotels there,
or in St. Augustine." I thanked him, but
intimated my doubts of being able to get to
Jacksonville on the money I had. He reassured me by
saying, "Oh, that's all right. You express your
trunk on through, and I'll take you down in my
closet." I thanked him again, not knowing then,
what it was to travel in a Pullman porter's closet.
He put me under a deeper debt of gratitude by
lending me fifteen dollars, which he said I could
pay back after I had secured work. His
generosity brought tears to my eyes, and I concluded
that, after all, there were some kind hearts in the
world.
I now forgot my troubles in the hurry and
excitement of getting my trunk off in time to catch
the train, which went out at seven o'clock. I
even forgot that I hadn't eaten anything since
morning. We got a wagon--the porter went with
me--and took my trunk to the express office. My
new friend then told me to come to the station at
about a quarter of seven, and walk straight to the
car where I should see him standing, and not to
lose my nerve. I found my rôle not so difficult to
play as I thought it would he, because the train
did not leave from the central station, but from a
smaller one, where there were no gates and guards
to pass. I followed directions, and the porter
took me on his car, and locked me in his closet.
In a few minutes the train pulled out for
Jacksonville.
I may live to be a hundred years old. but I
shall never forget the agonies I suffered that
night. I spent twelve hours doubled up in the
porter's basket for soiled linen, not being able to
straighten up on account of the shelves for clean
linen just over my head.. The air was hot and
suffocating and the smell of damp towels and used
linen was sickening. At each lurch of the car
over the none too smooth track, I was bumped and
bruised against the narrow walls of my narrow
compartment. I became acutely conscious of the
fact that I had not eaten for hours. Then nausea
took possession of me, and at one time I had grave
doubts about reaching my destination alive. If I
had the trip to make again, I should prefer to
walk.
Chapter V
The next morning I got out of the car at
Jacksonville with a stiff and aching body. I
determined to ask no more porters, not even my
benefactor, about stopping places; so I found myself
on the street not knowing where to go. I walked
along listlessly until I met a colored man who had
the appearance of a preacher. I asked him if he
could direct me to a respectable boarding-house
for colored people. He said that if I walked along
with him in the direction he was going he would
show me such a place. I turned and walked at
his side. He proved to he a minister, and asked me
a great many direct questions about myself. I
answered as many as I saw fit to answer; the others
I evaded or ignored. At length. we stopped in
front of a frame house, and my guide informed me
that it was the place. A woman was standing in
the doorway, and he called to her saying that he
had brought her a new boarder. I thanked him
for his trouble, and after he had urged upon me
to attend his church while I was in the city, he
went on his way.
I went in and found the house neat and not
uncomfortable. The parlor was furnished with
cane-bottomed chairs, each of which was adorned
with a white crocheted tidy. The mantel over the
fireplace had a white crocheted cover; a
marble-topped center table held a lamp, a photograph
album and several trinkets, each of which was set
upon a white crocheted mat. There was a cottage
organ in a corner of the room, and I noted that
the lamp-racks upon it were covered with white
crocheted mats. There was a matting on the
floor, but a white crocheted carpet would not have
been out of keeping. I made arrangements with
the landlady for my hoard and lodging; the
amount was, I think, three dollars and a half a
week. She was a rather fine looking, stout,
brown-skinned woman of about forty years of age. Her
husband was a light colored Cuban, a man about
one half her size, and one whose age could not be
guessed from his appearance. He was small in
ize, but a handsome black mustache and typical
Spanish eyes redeemed him from insignificance.
I was in time for breakfast, and at the table
I had the opportunity to see my fellow-boarders.
There were eight or ten of them. Two, as I
afterwards learned, were colored Americans. All of
them were cigar makers and worked in one of the
large factories--cigar making is the one trade
in which the color-line is not drawn. The
conversation was carried on entirely in Spanish, and my
ignorance of the language subjected me more to
alarm than embarrassment. I had never heard
such uproarious conversation; everybody talked at
once, loud exclamations, rolling "carambas,"
menacing gesticulations with knives, forks, and
spoons. I looked every moment for the clash of
blows. One man was emphasizing his remarks by
flourishing a cup in his hand, seemingly forgetful
of the fact that it was nearly full of hot coffee.
He ended by emptying it over what was, relatively,
the only quiet man at the table excepting myself,
bringing from him a volley of language which
made the others appear dumb by comparison. I
soon learned that in all of this clatter of voices
and table utensils they were discussing purely
ordinary affairs and arguing about mere trifles,
and that not the least ill-feeling was aroused. It
was not long before I enjoyed the spirited chatter
and badinage at the table as much as I did my
meals,--and the meals were not bad.
I spent the afternoon in looking around the
town. The streets were sandy, but were well
shaded by fine oak trees, and far preferable to the
clay roads of Atlanta. One or two public squares
with green grass and trees gave the city a touch
of freshness. That night after supper I spoke to
my landlady and her husband about my intentions.
They told me that the big winter hotels would not
open within two months. It can easily be
imagined what effect this news had on me. I spoke to
them frankly about my financial condition and
related the main fact of my misfortune in Atlanta.
I modestly mentioned my ability to teach music
and asked if there was any likelihood of my being
able to get some scholars. My landlady
suggested that I speak to the preacher who had shown
me her house; she felt sure that through his
influence I should be able to get up a class in piano.
She added, however, that the colored people were
poor, and that the general price for music lessons
was only twenty-five cents. I noticed that the
thought of my teaching white pupils did not even
remotely enter her mind. None of this
information made my prospects look much brighter .
The husband, who up to this time had allowed
the woman to do most of the talking, gave me the
first bit of tangible hope; he said that he could get
me a job as a "stripper" in the factory where he
worked, and that if I succeeded in getting some
music pupils I could teach a couple of them every
night, and so make a living until something better
turned up. He went on to say that it would not
be a bad thing for me to stay at the factory and
learn my trade as a cigar maker, and impressed
on me that, for a young man knocking about the
country, a trade was a handy thing to have. I
determined to accept his offer and thanked him
heartily. In fact, I became enthusiastic, not
only because I saw a way out of my financial
troubles, but also because I was eager and curious
over the new experience I was about to enter. I
Wanted to know all about the cigar making
business. This narrowed the conversation down to the
husband and myself, so the wife went in and left
us talking.
He was what is called a
regaliá workman, and
earned from thirty-five to forty dollars a week.
He generally worked a sixty dollar job; that is,
he made cigars for which he was paid at the rate
of sixty dollars per thousand. It was impossible
for him to make a thousand in a week because he
had to work very carefully and slowly. Each
cigar was made entirely by hand. Each piece of
filler and each wrapper had to be selected with
care. He was able to make a bundle of one
hundred cigars in a day, not one of which could be
told from the others by any difference in size or
shape, or even by any appreciable difference in
weight. This was the acme of artistic skill in
cigar making. Workmen of this class were rare,
never more than three or four of them in one
factory, and it was never necessary for them to
remain out of work. There were men who made
two, three, and four hundred cigars of the cheaper
grades in a day; they had to be very fast in order
to make decent week's wages. Cigar making was
a rather independent trade; the men went to work
when they pleased and knocked off when they felt
like doing so. As a class the workmen were
careless and improvident; some very rapid makers
would not work more than three or four days out
of the week, and there were others who never
showed up at the factory on Mondays.
"Strippers" were the boys who pulled the long stems from
the tobacco leaves. After they had served at that
work for a certain time they were given tables as
apprentices.
All of this was interesting to me; and we drifted
along in conversation until my companion struck
the subject nearest his heart, the independence of
Cuba. He was an exile from the island, and a
prominent member of the Jacksonville Junta.
Every week sums of money were collected from
juntas all over the country. This money went to
buy arms and ammunition for the insurgents. As
the man sat there nervously smoking his long,
"green" cigar, and telling me of the Gomezes, both
the white one and the black one, of Macco and
Bandera, he grew positively eloquent. He also
showed that he was a man of considerable
education and reading. He spoke English excellently,
and frequently surprised me by using words one
would hardly expect from a foreigner. The first
one of this class of words he employed almost
shocked me, and I never forgot it, 'twas "ramify."
We sat on the piazza until after ten o'clock. When
e arose to go in to bed it was with the
understanding that I should start in the factory on the
next day.
I began work the next morning seated at a
barrel with another boy, who showed me how to strip
the stems from the leaves, to smooth out each half
leaf, and to put the "rights" together in one pile,
and the "lefts" together in another pile on the edge
of the barrel. My fingers, strong and sensitive
from their long training, were well adapted to this
kind of work; and within two weeks I was
accounted the fastest "stripper" in the factory. At
first the heavy odor of the tobacco almost sickened
me; but when I became accustomed to it I liked the
smell. I was now earning four dollars a week,
and was soon able to pick up a couple more by
teaching a few scholars at night, whom I had
secured through the good offices of the preacher I
had met on my first morning in Jacksonville.
At the end of about three months, through my
skill as a "stripper" and the influence of my
landlord, I was advanced to a table, and began to learn
my trade; in fact, more than my trade; for I
learned not only to make cigars, but also to smoke,
to swear, and to speak Spanish. I discovered that
I had a talent for languages as well as for music.
The rapidity and ease with which I acquired
Spanish astonished my associates. In a short time I
was able not only to understand most of what was
said at the table during meals, but to join in the
conversation. I bought a method for learning the
Spanish language, and with the aid of my
landlord as a teacher, by constant practice with my
fellow workmen, and by regularly reading the
Cuban newspapers, and finally some books of
standard Spanish literature which were at the house, I
was able in less than a year to speak like a native.
In fact, it was my pride that I spoke better
Spanish than many of the Cuban workmen at the
factory.
After I had been in the factory a little over a
year, I was repaid for all the effort I had put forth
to learn Spanish by being selected as "reader."
The "reader" is quite an institution in all cigar
factories which employ Spanish-speaking workmen.
He sits in the center of the large room in which the
cigar makers work and reads to them for a
certain number of hours each day all the important
news from the papers and whatever else he may
consider would be interesting. He often selects
an exciting novel, and reads it in daily installments.
He must, of course, have a good voice, but he
must also have a reputation among the men for
intelligence, for being well posted and having in
his head a stock of varied information. He is
generally the final authority on all arguments
which arise; and, in a cigar factory, these
arguments are many and frequent, ranging from
discussions on the respective and relative merits of
rival baseball clubs to the duration of the sun's
light and energy--cigar-making is a trade in which
talk does not interfere with work. My position
as "reader" not only released me from the rather
monotonous work of rolling cigars, and gave me
something more in accord with my tastes, but also
added considerably to my income. I was now
earning about twenty-five dollars a week, and was able
to give up my peripatetic method of giving music
lessons. I hired a piano and taught only those
who could arrange to take their lessons where I
lived. I finally gave up teaching entirely; as what
I made scarcely paid for my time and trouble. I
kept the piano, however, in order to keep up my
own studies, and occasionally I played at some
church concert or other charitable entertainment.
Through my music teaching and my not
absolutely irregular attendance at church I became
acquainted with the best class of colored people in
Jacksonville. This was really my entrance into
the race. It was my initiation into what I have
termed the freemasonry of the race. I had
formulated a theory of what it was to be colored, now
I was getting the practice. The novelty of my
position caused me to observe and consider things
which, I think, entirely escaped the young men I
associated with; or, at least, were so
commonplace to them as not to attract their attention.
And of many of the impressions which came to me
then I have realized the full import only within
the past few years, since I have had a broader
knowledge of men and history, and a fuller
comprehension of the tremendous struggle which is
going on between the races in the South.
It is a struggle; for though the black man fights
passively he nevertheless fights; and his passive
resistance is more effective at present than active
resistance could possibly be. He bears the fury of
the storm as does the willow tree.
It is a struggle; for though the white man of
the South may be too proud to admit it, he is,
nevertheless, using in the contest his best energies;
he is devoting to it the greater part of his thought
and much of his endeavor. The South to-day
stands panting and almost breathless from its
exertions.
And how the scene of the struggle has shifted!
The battle was first waged over the right of the
Negro to be classed as a human being with a soul;
later, as to whether he had sufficient intellect to
master even the rudiments of learning; and to-day
it is being fought out over his social recognition.
I said somewhere in the early part of this
narrative that because the colored man looked at
everything through the prism of his relationship to
society as a colored man, and because most of his
mental efforts ran through the narrow channel
bounded by his rights and his wrongs, it was to
be wondered at that he has progressed so broadly
as he has. The same thing may be said of the
white man of the South; most of his mental
efforts run through one narrow channel; his life
as a man and a citizen, many of his financial
activities and all of his political activities are
impassably limited by the ever present "Negro
question." I am sure it would be safe to wager that
no group of Southern white men could get
together and talk for sixty minutes without
bringing up the "race question." If a Northern white
man happened to be in the group the time could
be safely cut to thirty minutes. In this respect
I consider the condition of the whites more to be
deplored than that of the blacks. Here, a truly
great people, a people that produced a majority
of the great historic Americans from Washington
to Lincoln now forced to use up its energies in
a conflict as lamentable as it is violent.
I shall give the observations I made in
Jacksonville as seen through the light of after years; and
they apply generally to every Southern
community. The colored people may he said to be
roughly divided into three classes, not so much
in respect to themselves as in respect to their
relations with the whites. There are those
constituting what might be called the desperate class,--the
men who work in the lumber and turpentine camps,
the ex-convicts, the bar-room loafers are all in
this class. These men conform to the
requirements of civilization much as a trained lion with
low muttered growls goes through his stunts under
the crack of the trainer's whip. They cherish a
sullen hatred for all white men, and they value life
as cheap. I have heard more than one of them
say, "I'll go to hell for the first white man that
bothers me." Many who have expressed that
sentiment have kept their word; and it is that fact
which gives such prominence to this class; for in
numbers it is but a small proportion of the colored
people, but it often dominates public opinion
concerning the whole race. Happily, this class
represents the black people of the South far below
their normal physical and moral condition, but in
its increase lies the possibility of grave dangers.
I am sure there is no more urgent work before the
white South, not only for its present happiness,
but its future safety, than the decreasing of this
class of blacks. And it is not at all a hopeless
class; for these men are but the creatures of
conditions, as much so as the slum and criminal
elements of all the great cities of the world are
creatures of conditions. Decreasing their number
by shooting and burning them off will not be
successful; for these men are truly desperate, and
thoughts of death, however terrible, have little
effect in deterring them from acts the result of
hatred or degeneracy. This class of blacks hate
everything covered by a white skin, and in return
they are loathed by the whites. The whites regard
them just about as a man would a vicious mule, a
thing to be worked, driven and beaten, and killed
for kicking.
The second class, as regards the relation
between blacks and whites, comprises the servants,
the washer-women, the waiters, the cooks, the
coachmen, and all who are connected with the
whites by domestic service. These may be
generally characterized as simple, kindhearted and
faithful; not over fine in their moral deductions,
but intensely religious, and relatively,--such
matters can be judged only relatively,--about as
honest and wholesome in their lives as any other grade
of society. Any white person is "good" who treats
them kindly, and they love them for that kindness.
In return, the white people with whom they have to
do regard them with indulgent affection. They
come into close daily contact with the whites, and
may be called the connecting link between whites
and blacks; in fact, it is through them that the
whites know the rest of their colored neighbors.
Between this class of the blacks and the whites
there is little or no friction.
The third class is composed of the independent
workmen and tradesmen, and of the well-to-do and
educated colored people; and, strange to say, for
a directly opposite reason they are as far removed
from the whites as the members of the first class
I mentioned. These people live in a little world
of their own; in fact, I concluded that if a colored
man wanted to separate himself from his white
neighbors he had but to acquire some money,
education and culture, and to live in accordance. For
example, the proudest and fairest lady in the South
could with propriety--and it is what she would
most likely do--go to the cabin of Aunt Mary her
cook, if Aunt Mary were sick, and minister to
comfort with her own hands; but if Mary's
daughter, Eliza, a girl who used to run around my lady's
kitchen, but who has received an education and
married a prosperous young colored man, were at
death's door, my lady would no more think of
crossing the threshold of Eliza's cottage than she
would of going into a bar-room for a drink.
I was walking down the street one day with a
young man who was born in Jacksonville, but had
been away to prepare himself for a professional
life. We passed a young white man, and my
companion said to me, "You see that young man?
We grew up together, we have played, hunted, and
fished together, we have even eaten and slept
together, and now since I have come back home he
barely speaks to me." The fact that the whites
of the South despise and ill-treat the desperate
class of blacks is not only explainable according
to the ancient laws of human nature, but it is
not nearly so serious or important as the fact that
as the progressive colored people advance they
constantly widen the gulf between themselves and their
white neighbors. I think that the white people
somehow feel that colored people who have
education and money, who wear good clothes and live in
comfortable houses, are "putting on airs," that
they do these things for the sole purpose of
"spiting the white folks," or are, at best, going through
a sort of monkey-like imitation. Of course, such
feelings can only cause irritation or breed disgust.
It seems that the whites have not yet been able to
realize and understand that these people in
striving to better their physical and social
surroundings in accordance with their financial and
intellectual progress are simply obeying an impulse
which is common to human nature the world over.
I am in grave doubt as to whether the greater part
of the friction in the South is caused by the whites
having a natural antipathy to Negroes as a race,
or an acquired antipathy to Negroes in certain
relations to themselves. However that may be, there
is to my mind no more pathetic side of this many
sided question than the isolated position into which
are forced the very colored people who most need
and who could best appreciate sympathetic
coöperation; and their position grows tragic when the
effort is made to couple them, whether or no,
with the Negroes of the first class I mentioned.
This latter class of colored people are well
disposed towards the whites, and always willing to
meet them more than half way. They, however,
feel keenly any injustice or gross discrimination,
and generally show their resentment. The effort is
sometimes made to convey the impression that the
better class of colored people fight against riding
in "jim crow" cars because they want to ride with
white people or object to being with humbler
members of their own race. The truth is they object
to the humiliation of being forced to ride in a
particular car, aside from the fact that that car is
distinctly inferior, and that they are required to
pay full first-class fare. To say that the whites
are forced to ride in the superior car is less than a
joke. And, too, odd as it may sound, refined
colored people get no more pleasure out of riding with
offensive Negroes than anybody else would get.
I can realize more fully than I could years ago
that the position of the advanced element of the
colored race is often very trying. They are the
ones among the blacks who carry the entire weight
of the race question; it worries the others very
little, and I believe the only thing which at times
sustains them is that they know that they are in
the right. On the other hand, this class of colored
people get a good deal of pleasure out of life;
their existence is far from being one long groan
about their condition. Out of a chaos of ignorance
and poverty they have evolved a social life of which
they need not be ashamed. In cities where the
professional and well-to-do class is large, they have
formed society,--society as discriminating as the
actual conditions will allow it to be; I should say,
perhaps, society possessing discriminating
tendencies which become rules as fast as actual conditions
allow. This statement will, I know, sound
preposterous, even ridiculous, to some persons; but as
this class of colored people is the least known of
the race it is not surprising. These social circles
are connected throughout the country, and a
person in good standing in one city is readily
accepted in another. One who is on the outside will
often find it a difficult matter to get in. I know
of one case personally in which money to the
extent of thirty or forty thousand dollars and a fine
house, not backed up by a good reputation, after
several years of repeated effort, failed to gain
entry for the possessor. These people have their
dances and dinners and card parties, their musicals
and their literary societies. The women attend
social affairs dressed in good taste, and the men
in evening dress-suits which they own; and the
reader will make a mistake to confound these
entertainments with the "Bellman's Balls" and
"Whitewashers' Picnics" and "Lime Kiln Clubs"
with which the humorous press of the country
illustrates "Cullud Sassiety."
Jacksonville, when I was there, was a small town,
and the number of educated and well-to-do
colored people was few; so this society phase of life
did not equal what I have since seen in Boston,
Washington, Richmond, and Nashville; and it is
upon what I have more recently seen in these cities
that I have made the observations just above.
However, there were many comfortable and
pleasant homes in Jacksonville to which I was often
invited. I belonged to the literary society--at
which we generally discussed the race
question--and attended all of the church festivals and other
charitable entertainments. In this way I passed
three years which were not at all the least
enjoyable of my life. In fact, my joy took such an
exuberant turn that I fell in love with a young school
teacher and began to have dreams of matrimonial
bliss; but another turn in the course of my life
brought these dreams to an end.
I do not wish to mislead my readers into
thinking that I led a life in Jacksonville which would
make copy as the hero of a Sunday School library
book. I was a hale fellow well met with all of the
workmen at the factory, most of whom knew little
and cared less about social distinctions. From
their example I learned to be careless about money;
and for that reason I constantly postponed and
finally abandoned returning to Atlanta University.
It seemed impossible for me to save as much as
two hundred dollars. Several of the men at the
factory were my intimate friends, and I frequently
joined them in their pleasures. During the
summer months we went almost every Monday on an
excursion to a seaside resort called Pablo Beach.
These excursions were always crowded. There was
a dancing pavilion, a great deal of drinking and
generally a fight or two to add to the excitement.
I also contracted the cigar-maker's habit of
riding around in a hack on Sunday afternoons. I
sometimes went with my cigar-maker friends to
public balls that were given at a large hall on
one of the main streets. I learned to take a drink
occasionally and paid for quite a number that my
friends took; but strong liquors never appealed to
my appetite. I drank them only when the
company I was in required it, and suffered for it
afterwards. On the whole, though I was a bit
wild, I can't remember that I ever did anything
disgraceful, or, as the usual standard for young men
goes, anything to forfeit my claim to
respectability.
At one of the first public balls I attended I saw
the Pullman car porter who had so kindly assisted
me in getting to Jacksonville. I went immediately
to one of my factory friends and borrowed fifteen
dollars with which to repay the loan my benefactor
had made me. After I had given him the money,
and was thanking him, I noticed that he wore what
was, at least, an exact duplicate of my lamented
black and gray tie. It was somewhat worn, but
distinct enough for me to trace the same odd
design which had first attracted my eye. This was
enough to arouse my strongest suspicions, but
whether it was sufficient for the law to take
cognizance of I did not consider. My astonishment
and the ironical humor of the situation drove
everything else out of my mind.
These balls were attended by a great variety of
people. They were generally given by the
waiters of some one of the big hotels, and were often
patronized by a number of hotel guests who came
to "see the sights." The crowd was always noisy,
but good-natured; there was much quadrille
dancing, and a strong-lunged man called figures in a
voice which did not confine itself to the limits of
the hall. It is not worth the while for me to
describe in detail how these people acted; they
conducted themselves in about the same manner as I
have seen other people at similar balls conduct
themselves. When one has seen something of the
world and human nature he must conclude, after
all, that between people in like stations of life there
is very little difference the world over.
However, it was at one of these balls that I first
saw the cake-walk. There was a contest for a
gold watch, to be awarded to the hotel head-waiter
receiving the greatest number of votes. There was
some dancing while the votes were being counted.
Then the floor was cleared for the cake-walk. A
half-dozen guests from some of the hotels took
seats on the stage to act as judges, and twelve or
fourteen couples began to walk for a "sure
enough" highly decorated cake, which was in plain
evidence. The spectators crowded about the space
reserved for the contestants and watched them with
interest and excitement. The couples did not walk
around in a circle, but in a square, with the
men on the inside. The fine points to be
considered were the bearing of the men, the precision
with which they turned the corners, the grace of
the women, and the ease with which they swung
around the pivots. The men walked with stately
and soldierly step, and the women with
considerable grace. The judges arrived at their decision
by a process of elimination. The music and the
walk continued for some minutes; then both were
stopped while the judges conferred, when the walk
began again several couples were left out. In this
way the contest was finally narrowed down to
three or four couples. Then the excitement
became intense; there was much partisan cheering as
one couple or another would execute a turn in extra
elegant style. When the cake was finally awarded
the spectators were about evenly divided between
those who cheered the winners and those who
muttered about the unfairness of the judges. This
was the cake-walk in its original form, and it is
what the colored performers on the theatrical stage
developed into the prancing movements now known
all over the world, and which some Parisian
critics pronounced the acme of poetic motion.
There are a great many colored people who are
ashamed of the cake-walk, but I think they ought
to be proud of it. It is my opinion that the
colored people of this country have done four things
which refute the oft advanced theory that they are
an absolutely inferior race, which demonstrate that
they have originality and artistic conception; and,
what is more, the power of creating that which can
influence and appeal universally. The first two
of these are the Uncle Remus stories, collected by
Joel Chandler Harris, and the Jubilee songs, to
which the Fisk singers made the public and the
skilled musicians of both America and Europe
listen. The other two are ragtime music and the
cake-walk. No one who has traveled can
question the world-conquering influence of ragtime; and
I do not think it would be an exaggeration to say
that in Europe the United States is popularly
known better by ragtime than by anything else it
has produced in a generation. In Paris they call
it American music. The newspapers have already
told how the practice of intricate cake walk steps
has taken up the time of European royalty and
nobility. These are lower forms of art, but they
give evidence of a power that will some day be
applied to the higher forms. In this measure, at
least, and aside from the number of prominent
individuals the colored people of the United States
have produced, the race has been a world influence;
and all of the Indians between Alaska and
Patagonia haven't done as much.
Just when I was beginning to look upon
Jacksonville as my permanent home, and was beginning
to plan about marrying the young school teacher,
raising a family, and working in a cigar factory
the rest of my life, for some reason, which I do
not now remember, the factory at which I worked
was indefinitely shut down. Some of the men got
work in other factories in town, some decided to
go to Key West and Tampa, others made up their
minds to go to New York for work. All at once
a desire like a fever seized me to see the North
again, and I cast my lot with those bound for
New York.
Chapter VI
We steamed up into New York harbor late one
afternoon in spring. The last efforts of the sun
were being put forth in turning the waters of the
bay to glistening gold; the green islands on either
side, in spite of their warlike mountings, looked
calm and peaceful; the buildings of the town shone
out in a reflected light which gave the city an air
of enchantment; and, truly, it is an enchanted spot.
New York City is the most fatally fascinating
thing in America. She sits like a great witch at
the gate of the country, showing her alluring
white face, and hiding her crooked hands and feet
under the folds of her wide garments,--constantly
enticing thousands from far within, and tempting
those who come from across the seas to go no
farther. And all these become the victims of her
caprice. Some she at once crushes beneath her
cruel feet; others she condemns to a fate like that
of galley slaves; a few she favors and fondles,
riding them high on the bubbles of fortune; then with
a sudden breath she blows the bubbles out and
laughs mockingly as she watches them fall.
Twice I had passed through it; but this was
really my first visit to New York; and as I walked
about that evening I began to feel the dread power
of the city; the crowds, the lights, the excitement,
the gayety and all its subtler stimulating influences
began to take effect upon me. My blood ran
quicker, and I felt that I was just beginning to
live. To some natures this stimulant of life in a
great city becomes a thing as binding and
necessary as opium is to one addicted to the habit. It
becomes their breath of life; they cannot exist
outside of it; rather than be deprived of it they are
content to suffer hunger, want, pain and misery;
they would not exchange even a ragged and
wretched condition among the great crowd for any
degree of comfort away from it.
As soon as we landed, four of us went directly
to a lodging-house in 27th Street, just west of
Sixth Avenue. The house was run by a short,
stout mulatto man, who was exceedingly talkative
and inquisitive. In fifteen minutes he not only
knew the history of the past life of each one of us,
but had a clearer idea of what we intended to do
in the future than we ourselves. He sought this
information so much with an air of being very
particular as to whom he admitted into his house
that we tremblingly answered every question that
he asked. When we had become located we went
out and got supper; then walked around until
about ten o'clock. At that hour we met a couple
of young fellows who lived in New York and were
known to one of the members of our party. It
was suggested we go to a certain place which was
known by the proprietor's name. We turned into
one of the cross streets and mounted the stoop of
a house in about the middle of a block between
Sixth and Seventh Avenues. One of the young
men whom we had met rang a bell, and a man on
the inside cracked the door a couple of inches;
then opened it and let us in. We found ourselves
in the hallway of what had once been a residence.
The front parlor had been converted into a bar,
and a half dozen or so of well dressed men were in
the room. We went in, and after a general
intro-duction had several rounds of beer. In the back
parlor a crowd was sitting and standing around
the walls of the room watching an exciting and
noisy game of pool. I walked back and joined
this crowd to watch the game, and principally to
get away from the drinking party. The game
was really interesting, the players being quite
expert, and the excitement was heightened by the
bets which were being made on the result. At
times the antics and remarks of both players and
spectators were amusing. When, at a critical
point, a player missed a shot he was deluged
by those financially interested in his making it with
a flood of epithets synonymous to "chump"; while
from the others he would be jeered by such
remarks as "Nigger, dat cue ain't no hoe-handle."
I noticed that among this class of colored men the
word "nigger" was freely used in about the same
sense as the word "'fellow," and sometimes as a
term of almost endearment; but I soon learned that
its use was positively and absolutely prohibited to
white men.
I stood watching this pool game until I was
called by my friends, who were still in the
bar-room, to go upstairs. On the second floor there
were two large rooms. From the hall I looked into
the one on the front. There was a large, round
table in the center, at which five or six men were
seated playing poker. The air and conduct here
were greatly in contrast to what I had just seen in
the pool-room; these men were evidently the
aristocrats of the place; they were well, perhaps a hit
flashily, dressed and spoke in low modulated voices,
frequently using the word "gentlemen"; in fact,
they seemed to be practicing a sort of
Chesterfieldian politeness towards each other. I was
watching these men with a great deal of interest
and some degree of admiration, when I was again
called by the members of our party, and I followed
them on to the back room. There was a
door-keeper at this room, and we were admitted only
after inspection. When we got inside I saw a
crowd of men of all ages and kinds grouped about
an old billiard table, regarding some of whom, in
supposing them to be white, I made no mistake.
At first I did not know what these men were doing;
they were using terms that were strange to me.
I could hear only a confusion of voices exclaiming,
"Shoot the two!" "Shoot the four!" "Fate me!"
"Fate me!" "I've got you fated!"
"Twenty-five cents he don't turn!" This was the ancient
and terribly fascinating game of dice, popularly
known as "craps." I, myself, had played pool in
Jacksonville; it is a favorite game among
cigar-makers, and I had seen others play cards; but here
was something new. I edged my way in to the
table and stood between one of my new-found New
York friends and a tall, slender, black fellow, who
was making side bets while the dice were at the
other end of the table. My companion explained
to me the principles of the game; and they are so
simple that they hardly need to be explained twice.
The dice came around the table until they reached
the man on the other side of the tall, black fellow.
He lost, and the latter said, "Gimme the bones."
He threw a dollar on the table and said, "Shoot
the dollar." His style of play was so strenuous
that he had to be allowed plenty of room. He
shook the dice high above his head, and each time
he threw them on the table he emitted a grunt such
as men give when they are putting forth physical
exertion with a rhythmic regularity. He
frequently whirled completely around on his heels,
throwing the dice the entire length of the table,
and talking to them as though they were trained
animals. He appealed to them in short singsong
phrases. "Come dice," he would say. "Little
Phoebe," "Little Joe," "Way down yonder in the
cornfield." Whether these mystic incantations
were efficacious or not I could not say, but, at any
rate, his luck was great, and he had what gamblers
term "nerve." "Shoot the dollar!" "Shoot the
two!" "Shoot the four!" "Shoot the eight!" came
from his lips as quickly as the dice turned to his
advantage. My companion asked me if I had
ever played. I told him no. He said that I
ought to try my luck; that everybody won at first.
The tall man at my side was waving his arms in
the air exclaiming "Shoot the sixteen!" "Shoot the
sixteen!" "Fate me!" Whether it was my
companion's suggestion or some latent dare-devil
strain in my blood which suddenly sprang into
activity I do not know; but with a thrill of
excitement which went through my whole body I threw
a twenty dollar bill on the table and said in a
trembling voice, "I fate you."
I could feel that I had gained the attention and
respect of everybody in the room, every eye was
fixed on me, and the widespread question, "Who is
he?" went around. This was gratifying to a
certain sense of vanity of which I have never been
able to rid myself, and I felt that it was worth
the money even if I lost. The tall man with a
whirl on his heels and a double grunt threw the
dice; four was the number which turned up. This
is considered as a hard "point" to make. He
redoubled his contortions and his grunts and his
pleadings to the dice; but on his third or fourth
throw the fateful seven turned up, and I had won.
My companion and all my friends shouted to me
to follow up my luck. The fever was on me. I
seized the dice. My hands were so hot that the
bits of bone felt like pieces of ice. I shouted as
loudly as I could, "Shoot it all!" but the blood was
tingling so about my ears that I could not hear
my own voice. I was soon "fated." I threw the
dice--seven--I had won. "Shoot it all!" I cried
again. There was a pause; the stake was more
than one man cared to or could cover. I was
finally "fated" by several men taking "a part" of
it. I then threw the dice again. Seven. I had
won. "Shoot it all!" I shouted excitedly. After
a short delay I was "fated." Again I rolled the
dice. Eleven. Again I had won. My friends
now surrounded me and, much against my
inclination, forced me to take down all of the money
except five dollars. I tried my luck once more, and
threw some small "Point" which I failed to make,
and the dice passed on to the next man.
In less than three minutes I had won more than
two hundred dollars, a sum which afterwards cost
me dearly. I was the hero of the moment, and
was soon surrounded by a group of men who
expressed admiration for my "nerve" and predicted
for me a brilliant future as a gambler. Although
at the time I had no thought of becoming a
gambler I felt proud of my success. I felt a bit
ashamed, too, that I had allowed my friends to
persuade me to take down my money so soon.
Another set of men also got around me, and
begged me for twenty-five or fifty cents to put
them back into the game. I gave each of them
something. I saw that several of them had on
linen, dusters, and as I looked about I noticed that
there were perhaps a dozen men in the room
similarly clad. I asked the fellow who had been my
prompter at the dice table why they dressed in
such a manner. He told me that men who had
lost all the money and jewelry they possessed,
frequently, in an effort to recoup their losses, would
gamble away all their outer clothing and even
their shoes; and that the proprietor kept on hand
a supply of linen dusters for all who were so
unfortunate. My informant went on to say that
sometimes a fellow would become almost
completely dressed and then, by a turn of the dice,
would be thrown back into a state of
semi-nakedness. Some of them were virtually prisoners and
unable to get into the streets for days at a time.
They ate at the lunch counter, where their credit
was good so long as they were fair gamblers and
did not attempt to jump their debts, and they
slept around in chairs. They importuned friends
and winners to put them back in the game, and
kept at it until fortune again smiled on them. I
laughed heartily at this, not thinking the day was
coming which would find me in the same ludicrous
predicament.
On passing downstairs I was told that the third
and top floor of the house was occupied by the
proprietor. When we passed through the bar I
treated everybody in the room,--and that was no
small number, for eight or ten had followed us
down. Then our party went out. It was now
about half-past twelve, but my nerves were at such
a tension that I could not endure the mere thought
of going to bed. I asked if there was no other
place to which we could go; our guides said yes,
and suggested that we go to the "Club." We
went to Sixth Avenue, walked two blocks, and
turned to the west into another street. We
stopped in front of a house with three stories and
a basement. In the basement was a Chinese
Chop-suey restaurant. There was a red lantern at the
iron gate to the areaway, inside of which the
Chinaman's name was printed. We went up the
steps of the stoop, rang the bell, and were
admitted without any delay. From the outside the
house bore a rather gloomy aspect, the windows
being absolutely dark, but within it was a
veritable house of mirth. When we had passed
through a small vestibule and reached the hallway
we heard mingled sounds of music and laughter,
the clink of glasses and the pop of bottles. We
went into the main room, and I was little
prepared for what I saw. The brilliancy of the
place, the display of diamond rings, scarf-pins,
ear-rings and breast-pins, the big rolls of money
that were brought into evidence when drinks were
paid for, and the air of gayety that pervaded, all
completely dazzled and dazed me. I felt
positively giddy, and it was several minutes before I
was able to make any clear and definite
observations.
We at length secured places at a table in a
corner of the room, and as soon as we could attract
the attention of one of the busy waiters ordered
a round of drinks. When I had somewhat
collected my senses I realized that in a large back
room into which the main room opened, there was
a young fellow singing a song, accompanied on
the piano by a short, thick-set, dark man.
Between each verse he did some dance steps, which
brought forth great applause and a shower of
small coins at his feet. After the singer had
responded to a rousing encore, the stout man at the
piano began to run his fingers up and down the
keyboard. This he did in a manner which
indicated that he was master of a good deal of
technic. Then he began to play; and such playing!
I stopped talking to listen. It was music of a
kind I had never heard before. It was music that
demanded physical response, patting of the feet,
drumming of the fingers, or nodding of the head
in time with the beat. The barbaric harmonies,
the audacious resolutions often consisting of an
abrupt jump from one key to another, the
intricate rhythms in which the accents fell in the most
unexpected places, but in which the beat was never
lost, produced a most curious effect. And, too,
the player,--the dexterity of his left hand in
making rapid octave runs and jumps was little short
of marvelous; and, with his right hand, he
frequently swept half the keyboard with clean cut
chromatics which he fitted in so nicely as never to
fail to arouse in his listeners a sort of pleasant
surprise at the accomplishment of the feat.
This was ragtime music, then a novelty in New
York, and just growing to be a rage which has
not yet subsided. It was originated in the
questionable resorts about Memphis and St. Louis by
Negro piano players, who knew no more of the
theory of music than they did of the theory of the
universe, but were guided by natural musical
instinct and talent. It made its way to Chicago,
where it was popular some time before it reached
New York. These players often improvised crude
and, at times, vulgar words to fit the melodies.
This was the beginning of the ragtime song.
Several of these improvisations were taken down
by white men, the words slightly altered, and
published under the names of the arrangers. They
sprang into immediate popularity and earned
small fortunes, of which the Negro originators got
only a few dollars. But I have learned that since
that time a number of colored men, of not only
musical talent, but training, are writing out their
own melodies and words and reaping the reward
of their work. I have learned also that they have
a large number of white imitators and
adulterators.
American musicians, instead of investigating
ragtime, attempt to ignore it or dismiss it with a
contemptuous word. But that has always been
the course of scholasticism in every branch of art.
Whatever new thing the people like is
pooh-poohed; whatever is popular is spoken of as not
worth the while. The fact is, nothing great or
enduring, especially in music, has ever sprung
full-fledged and unprecedented from the brain of any
master; the best that he gives to the world he
gathers from the hearts of the people, and runs it
through the alembic of his genius. In spite of
the bans which musicians and music teachers have
placed upon it, the people still demand and enjoy
ragtime. One thing cannot be denied; it is
music which possesses at least one strong element of
greatness; it appeals universally; not only the
American, but the English, the French, and even
the German people, find delight in it. In fact,
there is not a corner of the civilized world in which
it is not known, and this proves its originality;
for if it were an imitation, the people of Europe,
anyhow, would not have found it a novelty.
Anyone who doubts that there is a peculiar
heel-tickling, smile-provoking, joy-awakening charm in
ragtime needs only to hear a skillful performer
play the genuine article to be convinced. I
believe that it has its place as well as the music
which draws from us sighs and tears.
I became so interested in both the music and
the player that I left the table where I was
sitting, and made my way through the hall into the
back room, where I could see as well as hear. I
talked to the piano player between the musical
numbers, and found out that he was just a
natural musician, never having taken a lesson in his
life. Not only could he play almost anything he
heard, but could accompany singers in songs he
had never heard. He had by ear alone, composed
some pieces, several of which he played over for
me; each of them was properly proportioned and
balanced. I began to wonder what this man with
such a lavish natural endowment would have done
had he been trained. Perhaps he wouldn't have
done anything at all; he might have become, at
best, a mediocre imitator of the great masters in
what they have already done to a finish, or one
of the modern innovators who strive after
originality by seeing how cleverly they can dodge
about through the rules of harmony, and at the
same time avoid melody. It is certain that he
would not have been so delightful as he was in
ragtime.
I sat by watching and listening to this man
until I was dragged away by my friends. The
place was now almost deserted; only a few
stragglers hung on, and they were all the worse for
drink. My friends were well up in this class.
We passed into the street; the lamps were pale
against the sky; day was just breaking. We
went home and got into bed. I fell into a fitful
sort of sleep with ragtime music ringing
continually in my ears.
Chapter VII
I shall take advantage of this pause in my
narrative to more closely describe the "Club" spoken
of in the latter part of the preceding
chapter,--to describe it, as I afterwards came to know it, as
an habitue. I shall do this, not only because of
the direct influence it had on my life, but also
because it was at that time the most famous place
of its kind in New York, and was well known
to both white and colored people of certain
classes.
I have already stated that in the basement of
the house there was a Chinese restaurant. The
Chinaman who kept it did an exceptionally good
business; for chop-suey was a favorite dish among
the frequenters of the place. It is a food that,
somehow, has the power of absorbing alcoholic
liquors that have been taken into the stomach. I
have heard men claim that they could sober up on
chop-suey. Perhaps that accounted, in some
degree, for its popularity. On the main floor there
were two large rooms, a parlor about thirty feet
in length and a large square back room into which
the parlor opened. The floor of the parlor was
carpeted; small tables and chairs were arranged
about the room; the windows were draped with
lace curtains, and the walls were literally covered
with photographs or lithographs of every colored
man in America who had ever "done anything."
There were pictures of Frederick Douglass and of
Peter Jackson, of all the lesser lights of the
prize-fighting ring, of all the famous jockeys and the
stage celebrities, down to the newest song and
dance team. The most of these photographs were
autographed and, in a sense, made a really
valuable collection. In the back room there was a
piano; and tables were placed around the wall.
The floor was bare and the center was left vacant
for singers, dancers and others who entertained
the patrons. In a closet in this room which
jutted out into the hall the proprietor kept his
buffet. There was no open bar, because the place
had no liquor license. In this back room the
tables were sometimes pushed aside, and the floor
given over to general dancing. The front room
on the next floor was a sort of private party room;
a back room on the same floor contained no
furniture, and was devoted to the use of new and
ambitions performers. In this room song and
dance teams practiced their steps, acrobatic teams
practiced their tumbles, and many other kinds of
"acts" rehearsed their "turns." The other rooms
of the house were used as sleeping apartments.
No gambling was allowed, and the conduct of
the place was surprisingly orderly. It was, in
short, a center of colored bohemians and sports.
Here the great prize fighters were wont to come,
the famous jockeys, the noted minstrels, whose
names and faces were familiar on every bill-board
in the country; and these drew a multitude of
those who love to dwell in the shadow of greatness.
There were then no organizations giving
performances of such order as are now given by
several colored companies; that was because no
manager could imagine that audiences would pay to
see Negro performers in any other rôle than that
of Mississippi River roustabouts; but there was
lots of talent and ambition. I often heard the
younger and brighter men discussing the time
when they would compel the public to recognize
that they could do something more than grin and
cut pigeon wings.
Sometimes one or two of the visiting stage
professionals, after being sufficiently urged, would go
into the back room, and take the places of the
regular amateur entertainers, but they were very
sparing with these favors, and the patrons
regarded them as special treats. There was one
man, a minstrel, who, whenever he responded to a
request to "do something," never essayed anything
below a reading from Shakespeare. How well he
read I do not know, but he greatly impressed me;
and I can, at least, say that he had a voice which
strangely stirred those who heard it. Here was
a man who made people laugh at the size of his
mouth, while he carried in his heart a burning
ambition to be a tragedian; and so after all he
did play a part in a tragedy.
These notables of the ring, the turf and the
stage, drew to the place crowds of admirers, both
white and colored. Whenever one of them came
in there were awe-inspired whispers from those
who knew him by sight, in which they enlightened
those around them as to his identity, and hinted
darkly at their great intimacy with the noted one.
Those who were on terms of approach
immediately showed their privilege over others less
fortunate by gathering around their divinity. I was,
at first, among those who dwelt in darkness.
Most of these celebrities I had never heard of.
This made me an object of pity among many of
my new associates. I, however, soon learned to
fake a knowledge for the benefit of those who were
greener than I; and, finally, I became personally
acquainted with the majority of the famous
personages who came to the "Club."
A great deal of money was spent here; so many
of the patrons were men who earned large sums.
I remember one night a dapper little
brown-skinned fellow was pointed out to me, and I was
told that he was the most popular jockey of the
day, and that he earned $12,000 a year. This
latter statement I couldn't doubt, for with my own
eyes I saw him spending at about that rate. For
his friends and those who were introduced to him
he bought nothing but wine;--in the sporting
circle, "wine" means champagne--and paid for it
at five dollars a quart. He sent a quart to every
table in the place with his compliments; and on
the table at which he and his party were seated
there were more than a dozen bottles. It was the
custom at the "Club" for the waiter not to
remove the bottles when champagne was being drunk
until the party had finished. There were reasons
for this; it advertised the brand of wine, it
advertised that the party was drinking wine, and
advertised how much they had bought. This
jockey had won a great race that day, and he was
rewarding his admirers for the homage they paid
him, all of which he accepted with a fine air of
condescension.
Besides the people I have just been describing
there was at the place almost every night one or
two parties of white people, men and women, who
were out sight-seeing, or slumming. They
generally came in cabs; some of them would stay only
for a few minutes, while others sometimes stayed
until morning. There was also another set of
white people who came frequently; it was made up
of variety performers and others who delineated
darky characters; they came to get their
imitations first hand from the Negro entertainers they
saw there.
There was still another set of white patrons,
composed of women; these were not occasional
visitors, but five or six of them were regular
habitues. When I first saw them I was not sure
that they were white. In the first place, among
the many colored women who came to the "Club"
there were several just as fair; and, secondly, I
always saw these women in company with colored
men. They were all good-looking and well
dressed, and seemed to be women of some
education. One of these in particular attracted my
attention; she was an exceedingly beautiful woman
of perhaps thirty-five; she had glistening
copper-colored hair, very white skin and eyes very much
like Du Maurier's conception of Trilby's "twin
gray stars." When I came to know her I found
that she was a woman of considerable culture;
she had traveled in Europe, spoke French, and
played the piano well. She was always dressed
elegantly, but in absolute good taste. She
always came to the "Club" in a cab, and was soon
joined by a well set up, very black young fellow.
He was always faultlessly dressed; one of the
most exclusive tailors in New York made his
clothes, and he wore a number of diamonds in
about as good taste as they could be worn by a
man. I learned that she paid for his clothes and
his diamonds. I learned, too, that he was not the
only one of his kind. More that I learned would
be better suited to a book on social phenomena
than to a narrative of my life.
This woman was known at the "Club" as the
rich widow. She -went by a very aristocratic
sounding name, which corresponded to her
appearance. I shall never forget how hard it was for
me to get over my feelings of surprise, perhaps
more than surprise, at seeing her with her black
companion; somehow I never exactly enjoyed the
sight. I have devoted so much time to this pair,
the "widow" and her companion, because it was
through them that another decided turn was
brought about in my life.
Chapter VIII
On the day following our night at the "Club"
we slept until late in the afternoon; so late that
beginning of search for work was entirely out of
the question. This did not cause me much worry,
for I had more than three hundred dollars, and
New York had impressed me as a place where there
was lots of money and not much difficulty in
getting it. It is needless to inform my readers that
I did not long hold this opinion. We got out of
the house about dark, went round to a restaurant
on Sixth Avenue and ate something, then walked
around for a couple of hours. I finally suggested
that we visit the same places we had been in
the night before. Following my suggestion we
started first to the gambling house. The man on
the door let us in without any question; I
accredited this to my success of the night before. We
went straight to the "crap" room, and I at once
made my way to a table, where I was rather
flattered by the murmur of recognition which went
around. I played in up and down luck for three
or four hours; then, worn with nervous
excitement, quit, having lost about fifty dollars. But
I was so strongly possessed with the thought that
I would make up my losses the next time I played
that I left the place with a light heart.
When we got into the street our party was
divided against itself; two were for going home at
once and getting to bed. They gave as a reason
that we were to get up early and look for jobs.
I think the real reason was that they had each
lost several dollars in the game. I lived to learn
that in the world of sport all men win alike but
lose differently; and so gamblers are rated, not
by the way in which they win, but by the way in
which they lose. Some men lose with a careless
smile, recognizing that losing is a part of the
game; others curse their luck and rail at fortune;
and others, still, lose sadly; after each such
experience they are swept by a wave of reform; they
resolve to stop gambling and be good. When in this
frame of mind it would take very little persuasion
to lead them into a prayer-meeting. Those in the
first class are looked upon with admiration; those
in the second class are merely commonplace; while
those in the third are regarded with contempt. I
believe these distinctions hold good in all the
ventures of life. After some minutes one of my
friends and I succeeded in convincing the other
two that a while at the "Club" would put us all
in better spirits; and they consented to go on our
promise not to stay longer than an hour. We
found the place crowded, and the same sort of
thing going on which we had seen the night
before. I took a seat at once by the side of the
piano player, and was soon lost to everything else
except the novel charm of the music. I watched
the performer with the idea of catching the trick;
and, during one of his intermissions, I took his
place at the piano and made an attempt to imitate
him, but even my quick ear and ready fingers
were unequal to the task on first trial.
We did not stay at the "Club" very long, but
went home to bed in order to be up early the next
day. We had no difficulty in finding work, and
my third morning in New York found me at a
table rolling cigars. I worked steadily for some
weeks, at the same time spending my earnings
between the "crap" game and the "Club." Making
cigars became more and more irksome to me;
perhaps my more congenial work as a "reader" had
unfitted me for work at the table. And, too, the
late hours I was keeping made such a sedentary
occupation almost beyond the powers of will and
endurance. I often found it hard to keep my
eyes open and sometimes had to get up and move
around to keep from falling asleep. I began to
miss whole days from the factory, days on which
I was compelled to stay at home and sleep.
My luck at the gambling table was varied;
sometimes I was fifty to a hundred dollars ahead,
and at other times I had to borrow money from
my fellow workmen to settle my room rent and
pay for my meals. Each night after leaving the
dice game I went to the "Club" to hear the music
and watch the gayety. If I had won, this was
in accord with my mood; if I had lost, it made me
forget. I at last realized that making cigars for
a living and gambling for a living could not both
be carried on at the same time, and I resolved to
give up the cigar-making. This resolution led
me into a life which held me bound more than a
year. During that period my regular time for
going to bed was somewhere between four and six
o'clock in the mornings. I got up late in the
afternoons, walked about a little, then went to the
gambling house or the "Club." My New York
was limited to ten blocks; the boundaries were
Sixth Avenue from Twenty-third to Thirty-third
Streets, with the cross streets one block to the
west. Central Park was a distant forest, and the
lower part of the city a foreign land. I look
back upon the life I then led with a shudder when
I think what would have been had I not escaped
it. But had I not escaped it, I would have been
no more unfortunate than are many young
colored men who come to New York. During that
dark period I became acquainted with a score of
bright, intelligent young fellows who had come
up to the great city with high hopes and
ambitions, and who had fallen under the spell of this
under life, a spell they could not throw off.
There was one popularly known as "the doctor";
he had had two years in the Harvard Medical
School; but here he was, living this gas-light life,
his will and moral sense so enervated and
deadened that it was impossible for him to break away.
I do not doubt that the same thing is going on
now, but I have rather sympathy than censure for
these victims, for I know how easy it is to slip
into a slough from which it takes a herculean
effort to leap.
I regret that I cannot contrast my views of life
among colored people of New York; but the truth
is, during my entire stay in this city I did not
become acquainted with a single respectable
family. I knew that there were several colored men
worth a hundred or so thousand dollars each, and
some families who proudly dated their free
ancestry back a half-dozen generations. I also
learned that in Brooklyn there lived quite a large
colony in comfortable homes, most of which they
owned; but at no point did my life come in
contact with theirs.
In my gambling experiences I passed through
all the states and conditions that a gambler is
heir to. Some days found me able to peel ten
and twenty dollar bills from a roll, and others
found me clad in a linen duster and carpet
slippers. I finally caught up another method of
earning money, and so did not have to depend
entirely upon the caprices of fortune at the gaming
table. Through continually listening to the
music at the "Club," and through my own previous
training, my natural talent and perseverance, I
developed into a remarkable player of ragtime;
indeed, I had the name at that time of being the
best ragtime player in New York. I brought all
my knowledge of classic music to bear and, in so
doing, achieved some novelties which pleased and
even astonished my listeners.. It was I who first
made ragtime transcriptions of familiar classic
selections. I used to play Mendelssohn's
"Wedding March" in a manner that never failed to
arouse enthusiasm among the patrons of the
"Club." Very few nights passed during which I
was not asked to play it. It was no secret that
the great increase in slumming visitors was due
to my playing. By mastering ragtime I gained
several things; first of all, I gained the title of
professor. I was known as the "professor" as
long as I remained in that world. Then, too, I
gained the means of earning a rather fair
livelihood. This work took up much of my time and
kept me almost entirely away from the gambling
table. Through it I also gained a friend who
was the means by which I escaped from this lower
world. And, finally, I secured a wedge which has
opened to me more doors and made me a welcome
guest than my playing of Beethoven and Chopin
could ever have done.
The greater part of the money I now began to
earn came through the friend to whom I alluded
in the foregoing paragraph. Among the other
white "slummers" there came into the "Club" one
night a clean cut, slender, but athletic looking
man, who would have been taken for a youth had
it not been for the tinge of gray about his
temples. He was clean shaven, had regular features,
and all of his movements bore the indefinable but
unmistakable stamp of culture. He spoke to no
one, but sat languidly puffing cigarettes and
sipping a glass of beer. He was the center of a
great deal of attention, all of the old timers were
wondering who he was. When I had finished
playing he called a waiter and by him sent me a
five dollar bill. For about a month after that he
was at the "Club" one or two nights each week,
and each time after I had played he gave me five
dollars. One night he sent for me to come to his
table; he asked me several questions about myself;
then told me that he had an engagement which he
wanted me to fill. He gave me a card containing
his address and asked me to be there on a certain
night.
I was on hand promptly, and found that he was
giving a dinner in his own apartments to a party
of ladies and gentlemen, and that I was expected
to furnish the musical entertainment. When the
grave, dignified man at the door let me in, the
place struck me as being almost dark, my eyes
had been so accustomed to the garish light of the
"Club." He took my coat and hat, bade me take
a seat, and went to tell his master that I had
come. When my eyes were adjusted to the soft
light I saw that I was in the midst of elegance
and luxury in such a degree as I had never seen;
but not the elegance which makes one ill at ease.
As I sank into a great chair the subdued tone, the
delicately sensuous harmony of my surroundings
drew from me a deep sigh of relief and comfort.
How long the man was gone I do not know; but
I was startled by a voice saying, "Come this way,
if you please, sir," and I saw him standing by my
chair. I had been asleep; and I awoke very much
confused and a little ashamed, because I did not
know how many times he may have called me. I
followed him through into the dining-room, where
the butler was putting the finishing touches to a
table which already looked like a big jewel. The
doorman turned me over to the butler, and I
passed with the butler on back to where several
waiters were busy polishing and assorting table
utensils. Without being asked whether I was
hungry or not, I was placed at a table and given
something to eat. Before I had finished eating I
heard the laughter and talk of the guests who
were arriving. Soon afterwards I was called in
to begin my work.
I passed in to where the company was gathered,
and went directly to the piano. According to a
suggestion from the host I began with classic
music. During the first number there was absolute
quiet and appreciative attention, and when I had
finished I was given a round of generous applause.
After that the talk and the laughter began to grow
until the music was only an accompaniment to the
chatter. This, however, did not disconcert me as
it once would have done, for I had become
accustomed to playing in the midst of uproarious
noise. As the guests began to pay less attention
to me I was enabled to pay more to them. There
were about a dozen of them. The men ranged in
appearance from a girlish looking youth to a big
grizzled man whom everybody addressed as
"Judge." None of the women appeared to be
under thirty, but each of them struck me as being
handsome. I was not long in finding out that
they were all decidedly blasé. Several of the
women smoked cigarettes, and with a careless
grace which showed they were used to the habit.
Occasionally a "damn it!" escaped from the lips of
some one of them, but in such a charming way as to
rob it of all vulgarity. The most notable thing
which I observed was that the reserve of the host
increased in direct proportion with the hilarity of
his guests. I thought that there was something
going wrong which displeased him. I afterwards
learned that it was his habitual manner on such
occasions. He seemed to take cynical delight in
watching and studying others indulging in
excess. His guests were evidently accustomed to
his rather non-participating attitude, for it did
not seem in any degree to dampen their spirits.
When dinner was served the piano was moved
and the door left open, so that the company might
hear the music while eating. At a word from the
host I struck up one of my liveliest ragtime
pieces. The effect was perhaps surprising, even
to the host; the ragtime music came very near
spoiling the party so far as eating the dinner was
concerned. As soon as I began the conversation
stopped suddenly. It was a pleasure to me to
watch the expression of astonishment and delight
that grew on the faces of everybody. These were
people,--and they represented a large class,--who
were ever expecting to find happiness in novelty,
each day restlessly exploring and exhausting
every resource of this great city that might
possibly furnish a new sensation or awaken a fresh
emotion, and who were always grateful to
anyone who aided them in their quest. Several of
the women left the table and gathered about the
piano. They watched my fingers, asked what
kind of music it was that I was playing, where I
had learned it and a host of other questions. It
was only by being repeatedly called back to the
table that they were induced to finish their
dinner. When the guests arose I struck up my
ragtime transcription of Mendelssohn's "Wedding
March," playing it with terrific chromatic octave
runs in the base. This raised everybody's
spirits to the highest point of gayety, and the whole
company involuntarily and unconsciously did an
impromptu cake-walk. From that time on until
the time of leaving they kept me so busy that my
arms ached. I obtained a little respite when the
girlish looking youth and one or two of the
ladies sang several songs, but after each of these
it was, "back to ragtime."
In leaving, the guests were enthusiastic in
telling the host that he had furnished them the most
unique entertainment they had "ever" enjoyed.
When they had gone, my millionaire friend,--for
he was reported to be a millionaire,--said to me
with a smile, "Well, I have given them something
they've never had before." After I had put on
my coat and was ready to leave he made me take
a glass of wine; he then gave me a cigar and
twenty dollars in bills. He told me that he would
give me lots of work, his only stipulation being
that I should not play any engagements such as
I had just filled for him, except by his
instructions. I readily accepted the proposition, for I
was sure that I could not be the loser by such a
contract.
I afterwards played for him at many dinners
and parties of one kind or another. Occasionally
he "loaned" me to some of his friends. And, too,
I often played for him alone at his apartments.
At such times he was quite a puzzle to me until
I became accustomed to his manners. He would
sometimes sit for three or four hours hearing me
play, his eyes almost closed, making scarcely a
motion except to light a fresh cigarette, and
never commenting one way or another on the
music. At first, I used sometimes to think that he
had fallen asleep and would pause in playing.
The stopping of the music always aroused him
enough to tell me to play this or that; and I soon
learned that my task was not to be considered
finished until he got up from his chair and said,
"That will do." The man's powers of endurance
in listening often exceeded mine in
performing--yet I am not sure that he was always listening.
At times I became so oppressed with fatigue and
sleepiness that it took almost superhuman effort
to keep my fingers going; in fact, I believe I
sometimes did so while dozing. During such moments,
this man sitting there so mysteriously silent,
almost hid in a cloud of heavy-scented smoke, filled
me with a sort of unearthly terror. He seemed
to be some grim, mute, but relentless tyrant,
possessing over me a supernatural power which he
used to drive me on mercilessly to exhaustion.
But these feelings came very rarely; besides, he
paid me so liberally I could forget much. There
at length grew between us a familiar and warm
relationship; and I am sure he had a decided
personal liking for me. On my part, I looked upon
him at that time as about all a man could wish
to be.
The "Club" still remained my headquarters, and
when I was not playing for my good patron I was
generally to be found there. However, I no
longer depended on playing at the "Club" to
earn my living; I rather took rank with the
visiting celebrities and, occasionally, after being
sufficiently urged, would favor my old and new
admirers with a number or two. I say, without any
egotistic pride, that among my admirers were
several of the best looking women who frequented the
place, and who made no secret of the fact that
they admired me as much as they did my playing.
Among these was the "widow"; indeed, her
attentions became so marked that one of my friends
warned me to beware of her black companion, who
was generally known as a "bad man." He said
there was much more reason to be careful because
the pair had lately quarreled, and had not been
together at the "Club" for some nights. This
warning greatly impressed me and I resolved to
stop the affair before it should go any further;
but the woman was so beautiful that my native
gallantry and delicacy would not allow me to
repulse her; my finer feelings entirely overcame my
judgment. The warning also opened my eyes
sufficiently to see that though my artistic
temperament and skill made me interesting and
attractive to the woman, she was, after all, using me
only to excite the jealousy of her companion and
revenge herself upon him. It was this surly black
despot who held sway over her deepest emotions.
One night, shortly afterwards, I went into the
"Club" and saw the "widow" sitting at a table in
company with another woman. She at once
beckoned for me to come to her. I went, knowing
that I was committing worse than folly. She
ordered a quart of champagne and insisted that I
sit down and drink with her. I took a chair on
the opposite side of the table and began to sip a
glass of the wine. Suddenly I noticed by an
expression on the "widow's" face that something
had occurred. I instinctively glanced around and
saw that her companion had just entered. His
ugly look completely frightened me. My back
was turned to him, but by watching the "widow's"
eyes I judged that he was pacing back and forth
across the room. My feelings were far from
comfortable; I expected every moment to feel
a blow on my head. She, too, was very nervous;
she was trying hard to appear unconcerned, but
could not succeed in hiding her real feelings. I
decided that it was best to get out of such a
predicament even at the expense of appearing
cowardly, and I made a motion to rise. Just as I
partly turned in my chair, I saw the black fellow
approaching; he walked directly to our table and
leaned over. The "Widow" evidently feared he
was going to strike her, and she threw back her
head. Instead of striking her he whipped out a
revolver and fired; the first shot went straight into
her throat. There were other shots fired, but how
many I do not know; for the first knowledge I had
of my surroundings and actions was that I was
rushing through the chop-suey restaurant into the
street. Just which streets I followed when I got
outside I do not know, but I think I must have
gone towards Eighth Avenue, then down towards
Twenty-third Street and across towards Fifth
Avenue. I traveled not by sight, but
instinctively. I felt like one fleeing in a horrible
nightmare.
How long and far I walked I cannot tell; but
on Fifth Avenue, under a light, I passed a cab
containing a solitary occupant, who called to me,
and I recognized the voice and face of my
millionaire friend. He stopped the cab and asked,
"What on earth are you doing strolling in this
part of the town?" For answer I got into the
cab and related to him all that had happened.
He reassured me by saying that no charge of any
kind could be brought against me; then added,
"But, of course, you don't want to he mixed up in
such an affair." He directed the driver to turn
around and go into the park, and then went on
to say, "I decided last night that I'd go to
Europe to-morrow. I think I'll take you along
instead of Walter." Walter was his valet. It was
settled that I should go to his apartments for
the rest of the night and sail with him in the
morning.
We drove around through the park, exchanging
only an occasional word. The cool air somewhat
calmed my nerves and I lay back and closed my
eyes; but still I could see that beautiful white
throat with the ugly wound. The jet of blood
pulsing from it had placed an indelible red stain
on my memory.
Chapter IX
I did not feel at ease until the ship was well out
of New York harbor; and, notwithstanding the
repeated reassurances of my millionaire friend and
my own knowledge of the facts in the case, I
somehow could not rid myself of the sentiment that I
was, in a great degree, responsible for the widow's
tragic end. We had brought most of the
morning papers aboard with us, but my great fear of
seeing my name in connection with the killing
would not permit me to read the accounts,
although, in one of the papers, I did look at the
picture of the victim, which did not in the least
resemble her. This morbid state of mind,
together with seasickness, kept me miserable for
three or four days. At the end of that time my
spirits began to revive, and I took an interest in
the ship, my fellow passengers, and the voyage in
general. On the second or third day out we
passed several spouting whales; but I could not
arouse myself to make the effort to go to the
other side of the ship to see them. A little later
we ran in close proximity to a large iceberg. I
was curious enough to get up and look at it, and
I was fully repaid for my pains. The sun was
shining full upon it, and it glistened like a
mammoth diamond, cut with a million facets. As we
passed it constantly changed its shape; at each
different angle of vision it assumed new and
astonishing forms of beauty. I watched it through
a pair of glasses, seeking to verify my early
conception of an iceberg--in the geographies of my
grammar-school days the pictures of icebergs
always included a stranded polar bear, standing
desolately upon one of the snowy crags. I looked
for the bear, but if he was there he refused to put
himself on exhibition.
It was not, however, until the morning that we
entered the harbor of Havre that I was able to
shake off my gloom. Then the strange sights,
the chatter in an unfamiliar tongue and the
excitement of landing and passing the customs
officials caused me to forget completely the events
of a few days before. Indeed, I grew so
light-hearted that when I caught my first sight of the
train which was to take us to Paris, I enjoyed a
hearty laugh. The toy-looking engine, the stuffy
little compartment cars with tiny, old-fashioned
wheels, struck me as being extremely funny. But
before we reached Paris my respect for our train
rose considerably. I found that the "tiny"
engine made remarkably fast time, and that the
old-fashioned wheels ran very smoothly. I even
began to appreciate the "stuffy" cars for their
privacy. As I watched the passing scenery from the
car window it seemed too beautiful to be real.
The bright-colored houses against the green
background impressed me as the work of some
idealistic painter. Before we arrived in Paris there
was awakened in my heart a love for France
which continued to grow stronger, a love which
today makes that country for me the one above all
others to be desired.
We rolled into the station Saint Lazare about
four o'clock in the afternoon, and drove
immediately to the Hotel Continental. My benefactor,
humoring my curiosity and enthusiasm, which
seemed to please him very much, suggested that
we take a short walk before dinner. We stepped
out of the hotel and turned to the right into the
Rue de Rivoli. When the vista of the Place de
la Concorde and the Champs Elysées suddenly
burst on me I could hardly credit my own eyes.
I shall attempt no such superogatory task as a
description of Paris. I wish only to give briefly
the impressions which that wonderful city made
upon me. It impressed me as the perfect and
perfectly beautiful city; and even after I had been
there for some time, and seen not only its avenues
and palaces, but its most squalid alleys and
hovels, this impression was not weakened. Paris
became for me a charmed spot, and whenever I have
returned there I have fallen under the spell, a
spell which compels admiration for all of its
manners and customs and justification of even its
follies and sins.
We walked a short distance up the Champs
Elysées and, sat for a while in chairs along the
sidewalk, watching the passing crowds on foot and
in carriages. It was with reluctance that I went
back to the hotel for dinner. After dinner we
went to one of the summer theaters, and after the
performance my friend took me to a large café
on one of the grand boulevards. Here it was that
I had my first glimpse of the French life of
popular literature, so different from real French life.
There were several hundred people, men and
women, in the place drinking, smoking, talking,
and listening to the music. My millionaire friend
and I took seats at a table where we sat smoking
and watching the crowd. It was not long before
we were joined by two or three good-looking,
well-dressed young women. My friend talked to them
in French and bought drinks for the whole party.
I tried to recall my high school French, but the
effort availed me little. I could stammer out a
few phrases, but, very naturally, could not
understand a word that was said to me. We stayed
at the café a couple of hours, then went back to
the hotel. The next day we spent several hours
in the shops and at the tailors. I had no clothes
except what I had been able to gather together
at my benefactor's apartments the night before
we sailed. He bought me the same kind of clothes
which he himself wore, and that was the best; and
he treated me in every way as he dressed me, as
an equal, not as a servant. In fact, I don't
think anyone could have guessed that such a
relation existed. My duties were light and few, and
he was a man full of life and vigor, who rather
enjoyed doing things for himself. He kept me
supplied with money far beyond what ordinary
wages would have amounted to. For the first two
weeks we were together almost constantly, seeing
the sights, sights old to him, but from which he
seemed to get new pleasure in showing them to
me. During the day we took in the places of
interest, and at night the theaters and cafés. This
sort of life appealed to me as ideal, and I asked
him one day how long he intended to stay in
Paris. He answered, "Oh, until I get tired of
it." I could not understand how that could ever
happen. As it was, including several short trips
to the Mediterranean, to Spain, to Brussels, and
to Ostend, we did remain there fourteen or fifteen
months. We stayed at the Hotel Continental
about two months of this time. Then my
millionaire took apartments, hired a piano, and lived
almost the same life he lived in New York. He
entertained a great deal, some of the parties being
a good deal more blasé than the New York ones.
I played for the guests at all of them with an
effect which to relate would be but a tiresome
repetition to the reader. I played not only for the
guests, but continued, as I used to do in New
York, to play often for the host when he was
alone. This man of the world, who grew weary
of everything, and was always searching for
something new, appeared never to grow tired of
my music; he seemed to take it as a drug. He fell
into a habit which caused me no little annoyance;
sometimes he would come in during the early
hours of the morning, and finding me in bed
asleep, would wake me up and ask me to play
something. This, so far as I can remember, was
my only hardship during my whole stay with him
in Europe.
After the first few weeks spent in sight-seeing,
I had a great deal of time left to myself; my
friend was often I did not know where. When
not with him I spent the day nosing about all the
curious nooks and corners of Paris; of this I never
grew tired. At night I usually went to some
theater, but always ended up at the big café on the
Grand Boulevards. I wish the reader to know
that it was not alone the gayety which drew me
there; aside from that I had a laudable purpose.
I had purchased an English-French
conversational dictionary, and I went there every night to
take a language lesson. I used to get three or
four of the young women who frequented the place
at a table and buy beer and cigarettes for them.
In return I received my lesson. I got more than
my money's worth; for they actually compelled
me to speak the language. This, together with
reading the papers every day, enabled me within
a few months to express myself fairly well, and,
before I left Paris, to have more than an
ordinary command of French. Of course, every
person who goes to Paris could not dare to learn
French in this manner, but I can think of no
easier or quicker way of doing it. The acquiring
of another foreign language awoke me to the fact
that with a little effort I could secure an added
accomplishment as fine and as valuable as music;
so I determined to make myself as much of a
linguist as possible. I bought a Spanish newspaper
every day in order to freshen my memory on that
language, and, for French, devised what was, so
far as I knew, an original system of study. I
compiled a list which I termed "Three hundred
necessary words." These I thoroughly
committed to memory, also the conjugation of the verbs
which were included in the list. I studied these
words over and over, much like children of a
couple of generations ago studied the alphabet. I
also practiced a set of phrases like the following:
"How?" "What did you say?" "What does the
word ---- mean?" "I understand all you say
except ----." "Please repeat." "What do you
call ----?" "How do you say ----?" These
I called my working sentences. In an
astonishingly short time I reached the point where the
language taught itself,--where I learned to speak
merely by speaking. This point is the place
which students taught foreign languages in our
schools and colleges find great difficulty in
reaching. I think the main trouble is that they learn
too much of a language at a time. A French
child with a vocabulary of two hundred words can
express more spoken ideas than a student of
French can with a knowledge of two thousand. A
small vocabulary, the smaller the better, which
embraces the common, everyday-used ideas,
thoroughly mastered, is the key to a language. When
that much is acquired the vocabulary can be
increased simply by talking. And it is easy. Who
cannot commit three hundred words to memory?
Later I tried my method, if I may so term it, with
German, and found that it worked in the same
way.
I spent a good many evenings at the Grand
Opera. The music there made me strangely
reminiscent of my life in Connecticut, it was an
atmosphere in which I caught a fresh breath of my
boyhood days and early youth. Generally, in the
morning, after I had attended a performance, I
would sit at the piano and for a couple of hours
play the music which I used to play in my mother's
little parlor.
One night I went to hear "Faust." I got into
my seat just as the lights went down for the first
act. At the end of the act I noticed that my
neighbor on the left was a young girl. I cannot
describe her either as to feature, color of her hair,
or of her eyes; she was so young, so fair, so
ethereal, that I felt to stare at her would be a
violation; yet I was distinctly conscious of her
beauty. During the intermission she spoke
English in a low voice to a gentleman and a lady who
sat in the seats to her left, addressing them as
father and mother. I held my programme as though
studying it, but listened to catch every sound of
her voice. Her observations on the performance
and the audience were so fresh and naïve as to
be almost amusing. I gathered that she was just
out of school, and that this was her first trip to
Paris. I occasionally stole a glance at her, and
each time I did so my heart leaped into my throat.
Once I glanced beyond to the gentleman who sat
next to her. My glance immediately turned into
a stare. Yes, there he was, unmistakably, my
father! looking hardly a day older than when I
had seen him some ten years before. What a
strange coincidence! What should I say to him?
What would he say to me? Before I had
recovered from my first surprise there came another
shock in the realization that the beautiful,
tender girl at my side was my sister. Then all the
springs of affection in my heart, stopped since my
mother's death, burst out in fresh and terrible
torrents, and I could have fallen at her feet and
worshiped her. They were singing the second act,
but I did not hear the music. Slowly the
desolate loneliness of my position became clear to me.
I knew that I could not speak, but I would have
given a part of my life to touch her hand with
mine and call her sister. I sat through the opera
until I could stand it no longer. I felt that I was
suffocating. Valentine's love seemed like
mockery, and I felt an almost uncontrollable impulse
to rise up and scream to the audience, "Here,
here in your very midst, is a tragedy, a real
tragedy!" This impulse grew so strong that I
became afraid of myself, and in the darkness of one
of the scenes I stumbled out of the theater. I
walked aimlessly about for an hour or so, my
feelings divided between a desire to weep and a
desire to curse. I finally took a cab and went from
café to café, and for one of the very few times in
my life drank myself into a stupor.
It was unwelcome news for me when my
benefactor--I could not think of him as
employer--informed me that he was at last tired of Paris.
This news gave me, I think, a passing doubt as to
his sanity. I had enjoyed life in Paris, and,
taking all things into consideration, enjoyed it
wholesomely. One thing which greatly contributed to
my enjoyment was the fact that I was an
American. Americans are immensely popular in Paris;
and this is not due solely to the fact that they
spend lots of money there; for they spend just as
much or more in London, and in the latter city
they are merely tolerated because they do spend.
The Londoner seems to think that Americans are
people whose only claim to be classed as civilized
is that they have money, and the regrettable thing
about that is that the money is not English. But
the French are more logical and freer from
prejudices than the British; so the difference of
attitude is easily explained. Only once in Paris did
I have cause to blush for my American
citizenship. I had become quite friendly with a young
man from Luxembourg whom I had met at the big
café. He was a stolid, slow-witted fellow, but, as
we say, with a heart of gold. He and I grew
attached to each other and were together
frequently. He was a great admirer of the United
States and never grew tired of talking to me
about the country and asking for information.
It was his intention to try his fortune there some
day. One night he asked me in a tone of voice
which indicated that he expected an authoritative
denial of an ugly rumor, "Did they really burn
a man alive in the United States?" I never knew
what I stammered out to him as an answer. I
should have felt relieved if I could even have said
to him, "Well, only one."
When we arrived in London my sadness at
leaving Paris was turned into despair. After my
long stay in the French capital, huge, ponderous,
massive London seemed to me as ugly a thing as
man could contrive to make. I thought of Paris
as a beauty spot on the face of the earth, and of
London as a big freckle. But soon London's
massiveness, I might say its very ugliness, began
to impress me. I began to experience that sense
of grandeur which one feels when he looks at a
great mountain or a mighty river. Beside
London Paris becomes a toy, a pretty plaything.
And I must own that before I left the world's
metropolis I discovered much there that was
beautiful. The beauty in and about London is
entirely different from that in and about Paris; and
I could not but admit that the beauty of the
French city seemed hand-made, artificial, as
though set up for the photographer's camera,
everything nicely adjusted so as not to spoil the
picture; while that of the English city was
rugged, natural and fresh.
How these two cities typify the two peoples
who built them! Even the sound of their names
express a certain racial difference. Paris is the
concrete expression of the gayety, regard for
symmetry, love of art and, I might well add, of
the morality of the French people. London
stands for the conservatism, the solidarity, the
utilitarianism and, I might well add, the hypocrisy
of the Anglo-Saxon. It may sound odd to speak
of the morality of the French, if not of the
hypocrisy of the English; but this seeming paradox
impressed me as a deep truth. I saw many things
in Paris which were immoral according to English
standards, but the absence of hypocrisy, the
absence of the spirit to do the thing if it might only
be done in secret, robbed these very immoralities
of the damning influence of the same evils in
London. I have walked along the terrace cafés of
Paris and seen hundreds of men and women sipping
their wine and beer, without observing a sign
of drunkenness. As they drank, they chatted and
laughed and watched the passing crowds; the
drinking seemed to be a secondary thing. This I
have witnessed, not only in the cafés along the
Grand Boulevards, but in the out-of-way places
patronized by the working classes. In London I
have seen in the "Pubs" men and women crowded
in stuffy little compartments, drinking seemingly
only for the pleasure of swallowing as much as
they could hold. I have seen there women from
eighteen to eighty, some in tatters, and some
clutching babes in their arms, drinking the heavy
English ales and whiskies served to them by
women. In the whole scene, not one ray of
brightness, not one flash of gayety, only maudlin
joviality or grim despair. And I have thought,
if some men and women will drink--and it is
certain that some will--is it not better that they do
so under the open sky, in the fresh air, than
huddled together in some close, smoky room? There
is a sort of frankness about the evils of Paris
which robs them of much of the seductiveness of
things forbidden, and with that frankness goes a
certain cleanliness of thought belonging to things
not hidden. London will do whatever Paris does,
provided exterior morals are not shocked. As a
result, Paris has the appearance only of being
the more immoral city. The difference may be
summed up in this: Paris practices its sins as
lightly as it does its religion, while London
practices both very seriously.
I should not neglect to mention what impressed
me most forcibly during my stay in London. It
was not St. Paul's nor the British Museum nor
Westminster Abbey. It was nothing more or less
than the simple phrase "Thank you," or
sometimes more elaborated, "Thank you very kindly,
sir." I was continually surprised by the varied
uses to which it was put; and, strange to say; its
use as an expression of politeness seemed more
limited than any other. One night I was in a
cheap music hall and accidentally humped into a
waiter who was carrying a tray-load of beer,
almost bringing him to several shillings' worth of
grief. To my amazement he righted himself and
said, "Thank ye, sir," and left me wondering
whether he meant that he thanked me for not
completely spilling his beer, or that he would thank
me for keeping out of his way.
I also found cause to wonder upon what ground
the English accuse Americans of corrupting the
language by introducing slang words. I think I
heard more and more different kinds of slang
during my few weeks' stay in London than in my
whole "tenderloin" life in New York. But I
suppose the English feel that the language is theirs,
and that they may do with it as they please
without at the same time allowing that privilege to
others.
My "millionaire" was not so long in growing
tired of London as of Paris. After a stay of six
or eight weeks we went across into Holland.
Amsterdam was a great surprise to me. I had
always thought of Venice as the city of canals; but
it had never entered my mind that I should find
similar conditions in a Dutch town. I don't
suppose the comparison goes far beyond the fact that
there are canals in both cities--I have never seen
Venice--but Amsterdam struck me as being
extremely picturesque. From Holland we went to
Germany, where we spent five or six months, most
of the time in Berlin. I found Berlin more to
my taste than London, and occasionally I had to
admit that in some things it was superior to
Paris.
In Berlin I especially enjoyed the orchestral
concerts, and I attended a large number of them.
I formed the acquaintance of a good many
musicians, several of whom spoke of my playing in
high terms. It was in Berlin that my inspiration
was renewed. One night my "millionaire"
entertained a party of men composed of artists,
musicians, writers and, for aught I know, a count or
two. They drank and smoked a great deal,
talked art and music, and discussed, it seemed to
me, everything that ever entered man's mind. I
could only follow the general drift of what they
were saying. When they discussed music it was
more interesting to me; for then some fellow
would run excitedly to the piano and give a
demonstration of his opinions, and another would
follow quickly doing the same. In this way, I
learned that, regardless of what his specialty
might be, every man in the party was a musician.
I was at the same time impressed with the falsity
of the general idea that Frenchmen are excitable
and emotional, and that Germans are calm and
phlegmatic. Frenchmen are merely gay and
never overwhelmed by their emotions. When they
talk loud and fast it is merely talk, while Germans
get worked up and red in the face when
sustaining an opinion; and in heated discussions are
likely to allow their emotions to sweep them off
their feet.
My "millionaire" planned, in the midst of the
discussion on music, to have me play the "new
American music" and astonish everybody present.
The result was that I was more astonished than
anyone else. I went to the piano and played the
most intricate ragtime piece I knew. Before
there was time for anybody to express an opinion
on what I had done, a big be-spectacled,
bushy-headed man rushed over, and, shoving me out of
the chair, exclaimed, "Get up! Get up!" He
seated himself at the piano, and taking the theme
of my ragtime, played it through first in straight
chords; then varied and developed it through every
known musical form. I sat amazed. I had
been turning classic music into ragtime, a
comparatively easy task; and this man had taken
ragtime and made it classic. The thought
came across me like a flash.--It can be done,
why can't I do it? From that moment my
mind was made up. I clearly saw the way of
carrying out the ambition I had formed when a
boy.
I now lost interest in our trip. I thought, here
I am a man, no longer a boy, and what am I
doing but wasting my time and abusing my talent.
What use am I making of my gifts? What
future have I before me following my present course?
These thoughts made me feel remorseful, and put
me in a fever to get to work, to begin to do
something. Of course I know now that I was not
wasting time; that there was nothing I could have
done at that age which would have benefited me
more than going to Europe as I did. The desire
to begin work grew stronger each day. I could
think of nothing else. I made up my mind to go
back into the very heart of the South, to live
among the people, and drink in my inspiration
first-hand. I gloated over the immense amount
of material I had to work with, not only modern
ragtime, but also the old slave songs,--material
which no one had yet touched.
The more decided and anxious I became to
return to the United States, the more I dreaded the
ordeal of breaking with my "millionaire."
Between this peculiar man and me there had grown
a very strong bond of affection, backed up by a
debt which each owed to the other. He had taken
me from a terrible life in New York and by
giving me the opportunity of traveling and of
coming in contact with the people with whom he
associated, had made me a polished man of the world.
On the other hand, I was his chief means of
disposing of the thing which seemed to sum up all in
life that he dreaded--Time. As I remember him
now, I can see that time was what he was always
endeavoring to escape, to bridge over, to blot out;
and it is not strange that some years later he did
escape it forever, by leaping into eternity.
For some weeks I waited for just the right
moment in which to tell my patron of my decision.
Those weeks were a trying time to me. I felt
that I was playing the part of a traitor to my
best friend. At length, one day, he said to me,
"Well, get ready for a long trip; we are going
to Egypt, and then to Japan." The temptation
was for an instant almost overwhelming, but I
summoned determination enough to say, "I don't
think I want to go." "What!" he exclaimed,
"you want to go back to your dear Paris? You
still think that the only spot on earth? Wait
until you see Cairo and Tokio, you may change
your mind" "No," I stammered, "it is not
because I want to go back to Paris. I want to go
back to the United States." He wished to know
my reason, and I told him, as best I could, my
dreams, my ambition, and my decision. While I
was talking he watched me with a curious, almost
cynical, smile growing on his lips. When I had
finished he put his hand on my shoulder.--This
was the first physical expression of tender regard
he had ever shown me--and looking at me in a
big-brotherly way, said, "My boy, you are by
blood, by appearance, by education and by tastes,
a white man. Now why do you want to throw
your life away amidst the poverty and ignorance,
in the hopeless struggle of the black people of
the United States? Then look at the terrible
handicap you are placing on yourself by going
home and working as a Negro composer; you can
never he able to get the hearing for your work
which it might deserve. I doubt that even a white
musician of recognized ability could succeed there
by working on the theory that American music
should be based on Negro themes. Music is a
universal art; anybody's music belongs to
everybody; you can't limit it to race or country. Now,
if you want to become a composer, why not stay
right here in Europe? I will put you under the
best teachers on the continent. Then if you want
to write music on Negro themes, why, go ahead
and do it."
We talked for some time on music and the race
question. On the latter subject I had never
before heard him express any opinion. Between him
and me no suggestion of racial differences had
ever come up. I found that he was a man
entirely free from prejudice, but he recognized that
prejudice was a big stubborn entity which had to
be taken into account. He went on to say, "This
idea you have of making a Negro out of yourself
is nothing more than a sentiment; and you do not
realize the fearful import of what you intend to
do. What kind of a Negro would you make now,
especially in the South? If you had remained
there, or perhaps even in your club in New York,
you might have succeeded very well; but now you
would be miserable. I can imagine no more
dissatisfied human being than an educated, cultured
and refined colored man in the United States. I
have given more study to the race question in
the United States than you may suppose, and I
sympathize with the Negroes there; but what's the
use? I can't right their wrongs, and neither can
you; they must do that themselves. They are
unfortunate in having wrongs to right, and you
would be foolish to unnecessarily take their wrongs
on your shoulders. Perhaps some day, through
study and observation, you will come to see that
evil is a force and, like the physical and chemical
forces, we cannot annihilate it; we may only change
its form. We light upon one evil and hit it with
all the might of our civilization, but only succeed
in scattering it into a dozen of other forms. We
hit slavery through a great civil war. Did we
destroy it? No, we only changed it into hatred
between sections of the country: in the South, into
political corruption and chicanery, the
degradation of the blacks through peonage, unjust laws,
unfair and cruel treatment; and the degradation
of the whites by their resorting to these practices;
the paralyzation of the public conscience, and the
ever overhanging dread of what the future may
bring. Modern civilization hit ignorance of the
masses through the means of popular education.
What has it done but turn ignorance into anarchy,
socialism, strikes, hatred between poor and rich,
and universal discontent. In like manner, modern
philanthropy hit at suffering and disease through
asylums and hospitals; it prolongs the sufferers'
lives, it is true; but is, at the same time, sending
down strains of insanity and weakness into future
generations. My philosophy of life is this: make
yourself as happy as possible, and try to make
those happy whose lives come into touch with
yours; but to attempt to right the wrongs and
ease the sufferings of the world in general, is a
waste of effort. You had just as well try to
bale the Atlantic by pouring the water into the
Pacific."
This tremendous flow of serious talk from a man
I was accustomed to see either gay or taciturn so
surprised and overwhelmed me that I could not
frame a reply. He left me thinking over what he
had said. Whatever was the soundness of his
logic or the moral tone of his philosophy, his
argument greatly impressed me. I could see, in
spite of the absolute selfishness upon which it was
based, that there was reason and common sense
in it. I began to analyze my own motives, and
found that they, too, were very largely mixed with
selfishness. Was it more a desire to help those I
considered my people or more a desire to
distinguish myself, which was leading me back to the
United States? That is a question I have never
definitely answered.
For several weeks longer I was in a troubled
state of mind. Added to the fact that I was loath
to leave my good friend, was the weight of the
question he had aroused in my mind, whether I
was not making a fatal mistake. I suffered more
than one sleepless night during that time.
Finally, I settled the question on purely selfish
grounds, in accordance with my "millionaire's"
philosophy. I argued that music offered me a
better future than anything else I had any
knowledge of, and, in opposition to my friend's opinion,
that I should have greater chances of attracting
attention as a colored composer than as a white
one. But I must own that I also felt stirred by
an unselfish desire to voice all the joys and
sorrows, the hopes and ambitions, of the American
Negro, in classic musical form.
When my mind was fully made up I told my
friend. He asked me when I intended to start.
I replied that I would do so at once. He then
asked me how much money I had. I told him that
I had saved several hundred dollars out of sums
he had given me. He gave me a check for $500,
told me to write to him care of his Paris hankers
if I ever needed his help, wished me good luck, and
bade me good-by. All this he did almost coldly;
and I often wondered whether he was in a hurry
to get rid of what he considered a fool, or whether
he was striving to hide deeper feelings of sorrow.
And so I separated from the man who was, all
in all, the best friend I ever had, except my mother,
the man who exerted the greatest influence ever
brought into my life, except that exerted by my
mother. My affection for him was so strong, my
recollections of him are so distinct; he was such
a peculiar and striking character, that I could
easily fill several chapters with reminiscences of
him; but for fear of tiring the reader I shall go
on with my narration.
I decided to go to Liverpool and take ship for
Boston. I still had an uneasy feeling about
returning to New York; and in a few days I found
myself aboard ship headed for home.
Chapter X
Among the first of my fellow passengers of
whom I took any particular notice, was a tall,
broad-shouldered, almost gigantic, colored man.
His dark-brown face was clean shaven; he was
well dressed and bore a decidedly distinguished air.
In fact, if he was not handsome, he at least
compelled admiration for his fine physical proportions.
He attracted general attention as he strode the
deck in a sort of majestic loneliness. I became
curious to know who he was and determined to
strike up an acquaintance with him at the first
opportune moment.. The chance came a day or
two later. He was sitting in the smoking-room,
with a cigar in his mouth which had gone out,
reading a novel. I sat down beside him and,
offering him a fresh cigar, said, "You don't mind
my telling you something unpleasant, do you?"
He looked at me with a smile, accepted the
proffered cigar, and replied in a voice which
comported perfectly with his size and appearance, "I
think my curiosity overcomes any objections I
might have." "Well," I said, "have you noticed
that the man who sat at your right in the saloon
during the first meal has not sat there since?"
He frowned slightly without answering my
question. "Well," I continued, "he asked the steward
to remove him; and not only that, he attempted
to persuade a number of the passengers to
protest against your presence in the dining-saloon."
The big man at my side took a long draw from
his cigar, threw his head back and slowly blew a
great cloud of smoke toward the ceiling. Then
turning to me he said, "Do you know, I don't
object to anyone having prejudices so long as
those prejudices don't interfere with my personal
liberty. Now, the man you are speaking of had
a perfect right to change his seat if I in any way
interfered with his appetite or his digestion. I
would have no reason to complain if he removed
to the farthest corner of the saloon, or even if he
got off the ship; but when his prejudice attempts
to move me one foot, one inch, out of the place
where I am comfortably located, then I object."
On the word "object" he brought his great fist
down on the table in front of us with such a crash
that everyone in the room turned to look. We
both covered up the slight embarrassment with a
laugh, and strolled out on the deck.
We walked the deck for an hour or more,
discussing different phases of the Negro question.. I,
in referring to the race, used the personal
pronoun "we"; my companion made no comment about
it, nor evinced any surprise, except to slightly
raise his eyebrows the first time he caught the
significance of the word. He was the broadest minded
colored man I have ever talked with on the Negro
question. He even went so far as to sympathize
with and offer excuses for some white Southern
points of view. I asked him what were his main
reasons for being so hopeful. He replied, "In
spite of all that is written, said and done, this
great, big, incontrovertible fact stands out,--the
Negro is progressing, and that disproves all the
arguments in the world that he is incapable of
progress. I was born in slavery, and at
emancipation was set adrift a ragged, penniless bit of
humanity. I have seen the Negro in every grade,
and I know what I am talking about. Our
detractors point to the increase of crime as evidence
against us; certainly we have progressed in crime
as in other things; what less could be expected?
And yet, in this respect, we are far from the point
which has been reached by the more highly civilized
white race. As we continue to progress, crime
among us will gradually lose much of its brutal,
vulgar, I might say healthy, aspect, and become
more delicate, refined and subtile. Then it will be
less shocking and noticeable, although more
dangerous to society." Then dropping his tone of
irony, he continued with some show of eloquence,
"But, above all, when I am discouraged and
disheartened, I have this to fall back on: if there is
a principle of right in the world, which finally
prevails, and I believe that there is if there is a
merciful but justice-loving God in heaven, and
I believe that there is, we shall win; for we have
right on our side; while those who oppose us can
defend themselves by nothing in the moral law,
nor even by anything in the enlightened thought
of the present age."
For several days, together with other topics, we
discussed the race problem, not only of the United
States, but the race problem as it affected native
Africans and Jews. Finally, before we reached
Boston, our conversation had grown familiar and
personal. I had told him something of my past
and much about my intentions for the future. I
learned that he was a physician, a graduate of
Howard University, Washington, and had done
post-graduate work in Philadelphia; and this was
his second trip abroad to attend professional
courses. He had practiced for some years in the
city of Washington, and though he did not say
so, I gathered that his practice was a lucrative
one. Before we left the ship he had made me
promise that I would stop two or three days in
Washington before going on South.
We put up at a hotel in Boston for a couple of
days, and visited several of my new friend's
acquaintances; they were all people of education and
culture and, apparently, of means. I could not but
help being struck by the great difference between
them and the same class of colored people in the
South. In speech and thought they were genuine
Yankees. The difference was especially noticeable
in their speech. There was none of that
heavy-tongued enunciation which characterizes even the
best educated colored people of the South. It is
remarkable, after all, what an adaptable creature
the Negro is. I have seen the black West India
gentleman in London, and he is in speech and
manners a perfect Englishman. I have seen natives
of Haiti and Martinique in Paris, and they are
more Frenchy than a Frenchman. I have no
doubt that the Negro would make a good
Chinaman, with exception of the pigtail.
My stay in Washington, instead of being two
or three days, was two or three weeks. This was
my first visit to the National Capital, and I was,
of course, interested in seeing the public
buildings and something of the working of the
government; but most of my time I spent with the doctor
among his friends and acquaintances. The social
phase of life among colored people, which I spoke
of in an earlier chapter, is more developed in
Washington than in any other city in the country.
This is on account of the large number of
individuals earning good salaries and having a
reasonable amount of leisure time to be drawn from.
There are dozens of physicians and lawyers, scores
of school teachers and hundreds of clerks in the
departments. As to the colored department
clerks, I think it fair to say that in educational
equipment they average above the white clerks
of the same grade; for, whereas a colored college
graduate will seek such a job, the white university
man goes into one of the many higher vocations
which are open to him.
In a previous chapter I spoke of social life
among colored people; so there is no need to take
it up again here. But there is one thing I did
not mention: among Negroes themselves there is
the peculiar inconsistency of a color question.
Its existence is rarely admitted and hardly ever
mentioned; it may not be too strong a statement
to say that the greater portion of the race is
unconscious of its influence; yet this influence, though
silent, is constant. It is evidenced most plainly in
marriage selection; thus the black men
generally marry women fairer than themselves; while,
on the other hand, the dark women of stronger
mental endowment are very often married to
light-complexioned men; the effect is a tendency toward
lighter complexions, especially among the more
active elements in the race. Some might claim
that this is a tacit admission of colored people
among themselves of their own inferiority judged
by the color line. I do not think so. What I
have termed an inconsistency is, after all, most
natural; it is, in fact, a tendency in accordance
with what might be called an economic necessity.
So far as racial differences go, the United States
puts a greater premium on color, or better, lack
of color, than upon anything else in the world.
To paraphrase, "Have a white skin, and all things
else may be added unto you." I have seen
advertisements in newspapers for waiters, bell boys
or elevator men, which read, "Light colored man
wanted." It is this tremendous pressure which
the sentiment of the country exerts that is
operating on the race. There is involved not only the
question of higher opportunity, but often the
question of earning a livelihood; and so I say it is not
strange, but a natural tendency. Nor is it any
more a sacrifice of self respect that a black man
should give to his children every advantage he can
which complexion of the skin carries, than that the
new or vulgar rich should purchase for their
children the advantages which ancestry, aristocracy,
and social position carry. I once heard a colored
man sum it up in these words, "It's no disgrace to
be black, but it's often very inconvenient."
Washington shows the Negro not only at his
best, but also at his worst. As I drove around with
the doctor, he commented rather harshly on those
of the latter class which we saw. He remarked:
"You see those lazy, loafing, good-for-nothing
darkies, they're not worth digging graves for;
yet they are the ones who create impressions of
the race for the casual observer. It's because they
are always in evidence on the street corners, while
the rest of us are hard at work, and you know a
dozen loafing darkies make a bigger crowd and a
worse impression in this country than fifty white
men of the same class. But they ought not to
represent the race. We are the race, and the race
ought to be judged by us, not by them. Every
race and every nation is judged by the best it has
been able to produce, not by the worst."
The recollection of my stay in Washington is a
pleasure to me now. In company with the doctor
I visited Howard University, the public schools,
the excellent colored hospital, with which he was in
some way connected, if I remember correctly, and
many comfortable and even elegant homes. It was
with some reluctance that I continued my journey
south. The doctor was very kind in giving me
letters to people in Richmond and Nashville when
I told him that I intended to stop in both of these
cities. In Richmond a man who was then editing
a very creditable colored newspaper, gave nie a
great deal of his time, and made my stay there of
three or four days very pleasant. In Nashville I
spent a whole day at Fisk University, the home of
the "Jubilee Singers," and was more than repaid
for my time. Among my letters of introduction
was one to a very prosperous physician, He drove
me about the city and introduced me to a number
of people. From Nashville I went to Atlanta,
where I stayed long enough to gratify an old
desire to see Atlanta University again. I then
continued my journey to Macon.
During the trip from Nashville to Atlanta I
went into the smoking compartment of the car to
smoke a cigar. I was traveling in a Pullman,
not because of an abundance of funds, but
because through my experience with my
"millionaire," a certain amount of comfort and luxury
had become a necessity to me whenever it was
obtainable. When I entered the car I found only
a couple of men there; but in a half hour there
were half a dozen or more. >From the general
conversation I learned that a fat Jewish looking
man was a cigar manufacturer, and was
experimenting in growing Havana tobacco in Florida;
that a slender be-spectacled young man was from
Ohio and a professor in some State institution in
Alabama; that a white-mustached, well dressed
man was an old Union soldier who had fought
through the Civil War; and that a tall,
raw-boned, red-faced man, who seemed bent on leaving
nobody in ignorance of the fact that he was from
Texas, was a cotton planter.
In the North men may ride together for hours
in a "smoker" and unless they are acquainted
with each other never exchange a word; in the
South, men thrown together in such manner are
friends in fifteen minutes.. There is always
present a warm-hearted cordiality which will melt
down the most frigid reserve. It may be because
Southerners are very much like Frenchmen in that
they must talk; and not only must they talk, but
they must express their opinions.
The talk in the car was for a while
miscellaneous,--on the weather, crops, business
prospects--the old Union soldier had invested capital
in Atlanta, and he predicted that that city would
soon be one of the greatest in the country--finally
the conversation drifted to politics; then, as a
natural sequence, turned upon the Negro question.
In the discussion of the race question, the
diplomacy of the Jew was something to he admired;
he had the faculty of agreeing with everybody
without losing his allegiance to any side. He
knew that to sanction Negro oppression would be
to sanction Jewish oppression, and would expose
him to a shot along that line from the old soldier,
who stood firmly on the ground of equal rights and
opportunity to all men; yet long traditions and
business instincts told him, when in Rome to act
as a Roman. Altogether his position was a
delicate one, and I gave him credit for the skill he
displayed in maintaining it. The young
professor was apologetic. He had had the same
views as the G.A.R. man; but a year in the
South had opened his eyes, and he had to confess
that the problem could hardly be handled any
better than it was being handled by the Southern
whites. To which the G.A.R. man responded
somewhat rudely that he had spent ten times as
many years in the South as his young friend, and
that he could easily understand how holding a
position in a State institution in Alabama would
bring about a change of views. The professor
turned very red and had very little more to say.
The Texan was fierce, eloquent and profane in
his argument and, in a lower sense, there was a
direct logic in what he said, which was convincing;
it was only by taking higher ground, by dealing
in what Southerners call "theories" that he could
be combatted. Occasionally some one of the
several other men in the "smoker" would throw in a
remark to reinforce what he said, but he really
didn't need any help; he was sufficient in himself.
In the course of a short time the controversy
narrowed itself down to an argument between the
old soldier and the Texan. The latter maintained
hotly that the Civil War was a criminal mistake
on the part of the North, and that the
humiliation which the South suffered during
Reconstruction could never be forgotten. The Union man
retorted just as hotly that the South was
responsible for the war, and that the spirit of
unforgetfulness on its part was the greatest cause of
present friction; that it seemed to be the one great
aim of the South to convince the North that the
latter made a mistake in fighting to preserve the
Union and liberate the slaves. "Can you
imagine," he went on to say, "what would have been
the condition of things eventually if there had
been no war, and the South had been allowed to
follow its course? Instead of one great,
prosperous country with nothing before it but the
conquests of peace, a score of petty republics, as in
Central and South America, wasting their
energies in war with each other or in revolutions."
"Well," replied the Texan, "anything--no
country at all is better than having niggers over
you. But anyhow, the war was fought and the
niggers were freed; for it's no use beating around
the bush, the niggers, and not the Union, was the
cause of it; and now do you believe that all the
niggers on earth are worth the good white blood
that was spilt? You freed the nigger and you
gave him the ballot, but you couldn't make a
citizen out of him. He don't know what he's voting
for, and we buy 'em like so many hogs. You're
giving 'em education, but that only makes slick
rascals out of 'em."
"Don't fancy for a moment," said the Northern
man, "that you have any monopoly in buying
ignorant votes. The same thing is done on a larger
scale in New York and Boston, and in Chicago
and San Francisco; and they are not black votes
either. As to education making the Negro worse,
you had just as well tell me that religion does the
same thing. And, by the way, how many
educated colored men do you know personally?"
The Texan admitted that he knew only one, and
added that he was in the penitentiary. "But,"
he said, "do you mean to claim, ballot or no ballot,
education or no education, that niggers are the
equals of white men?"
"That's not the question," answered the other,
"but if the Negro is so distinctly inferior, it is a
strange thing to me that it takes such tremendous
effort on the part of the white man to make him
realize it, and to keep him in the same place into
which inferior men naturally fall. However, let
us grant for sake of argument that the Negro is
inferior in every respect to the white man; that
fact only increases our moral responsibility in
regard to our actions toward him. Inequalities of
numbers, wealth and power, even of intelligence
and morals, should make no difference in the
essential rights of men."
"If he's inferior and weaker, and is shoved to
the wall, that's his own look out," said the Texan.
"That's the law of nature; and he's bound to go
to the wall; for no race in the world has ever been
able to stand competition with the Anglo-Saxon.
The Anglo-Saxon race has always been and
always will be the masters of the world, and the
niggers in the South ain't going to change all
the records of history."
"My friend," said the old soldier slowly, "if
you have studied history, will you tell me, as
confidentially between white men, what the
Anglo-Saxon has ever done?"
The Texan was too much astonished by the
question to venture any reply.
His opponent continued, "Can you name a
single one of the great fundamental and original
intellectual achievements which have raised man
in the scale of civilization that may be credited
to the Anglo-Saxon? The art of letters, of
poetry, of music, of sculpture, of painting, of the
drama, of architecture; the science of
mathematics, of astronomy, of philosophy, of logic, of
physics, of chemistry, the use of the metals and
the principles of mechanics, were all invented or
discovered by darker and what we now call
inferior races and nations. We have carried many
of these to their highest point of perfection, but
the foundation was laid by others. D'o you know
the only original contribution to civilization we
can claim is what we have done in steam and
electricity and in making implements of war more
deadly; and there we worked largely on principles
which we did not discover. Why, we didn't even
originate the religion we use. We are a great
race, the greatest in the world to-day, but we
ought to remember that we are standing on a
pile of past races, and enjoy our position with a
little less show of arrogance. We are simply
having our turn at the game, and we were a long time
getting to it. After all, racial supremacy is
merely a matter of dates in history. The man
here who belongs to what is, all in all, the greatest
race the world ever produced, is almost ashamed
to own it. If the Anglo-Saxon is the source of
everything good and great in the human race
from the beginning, why wasn't the German forest
the birthplace of civilization?"
The Texan was somewhat disconcerted, for the
argument had passed a little beyond his limits,
but he swung it back to where he was sure of his
ground by saying, "All that may be true, but it
hasn't got much to do with us and the niggers
here in the South. We've got 'em here, and we've
got 'em to live with, and it's a question of white
man or nigger, no middle ground. You want us
to treat niggers as equals. Do you want to see
'em sitting around in our parlors? Do you want
to see a mulatto South? To bring it right home
to you, would you let your daughter marry a
nigger?"
"No, I wouldn't consent to my daughter's
marrying a nigger, but that doesn't prevent my
treating a black man fairly. And I don't see what
fair treatment has to do with niggers sitting
around in your parlors; they can't come there
unless they're invited. Out of all the white men I
know, only a hundred or so have the privilege of
sitting around in my parlor. As to the mulatto
South, if you Southerners have one boast that is
stronger than another, it is your women; you put
them on a pinnacle of purity and virtue and bow
down in a chivalric worship before them; yet you
talk and act as though, should you treat the Negro
fairly and take the anti-intermarriage laws off
your statute books, these same women would rush
into the arms of black lovers and husbands. It's
a wonder to me that they don't rise up and resent
the insult."
"Colonel," said the Texan, as he reached into
his handbag and brought out a large flask of
whiskey, "you might argue from now until hell
freezes over, and you might convince me that
you're right, but you'll never convince me that
I'm wrong. All you say sounds very good, but
it's got nothing to do with facts. You can say
what men ought to be, but they ain't that; so
there you are. Down here in the South we're up
against facts, and we're meeting 'em like facts.
We don't believe the nigger is or ever will be the
equal of the white man, and we ain't going to
treat him as an equal; I'll be damned if we will.
Have a drink." Everybody, except the professor,
partook of the generous Texan's flask, and the
argument closed in a general laugh and good
feeling.
I went back into the main part of the car with
the conversation on my mind. Here I had before
me the bald, raw, naked aspects of the race
question in the South; and, in consideration of the
step I was just taking, it was far from
encouraging. The sentiments of the Texan--and
he expressed the sentiments of the South--fell
upon me like a chill. I was sick at heart. Yet,
I must confess that underneath it all I felt a
certain sort of admiration for the man who could
not be swayed from what he held as his principles.
Contrasted with him, the young Ohio professor
was indeed a pitiable character. And all along,
in spite of myself, I have been compelled to
accord the same kind of admiration to the Southern
white man for the manner in which he defends not
only his virtues but his vices. He knows, that
judged by a high standard, he is narrow and
prejudiced, that he is guilty of unfairness,
oppression and cruelty, but this he defends as stoutly
as he would his better qualities. This same spirit
obtains in a great degree among the blacks; they,
too, defend their faults and failings. This spirit
carries them so far at times as to make them
sympathizers with members of their race who are
perpetrators of crime. And, yet, among
themselves they are their own most merciless critics.
I have never heard the race so terribly arraigned
as I have by colored speakers to strictly colored
audiences. It is the spirit of the South to defend
everything belonging to it. The North is too
cosmopolitan and tolerant for such a spirit. If you
should say to an Easterner that Paris is a gayer
city than New York he would be likely to agree
with you, or at least to let you have your way;
but to suggest to a South Carolinian that Boston
is a nicer city to live in than Charleston would be
to stir his greatest depths of argument and
eloquence.
But, to-day, as I think over that smoking-car
argument, I can see it in a different light. The
Texan's position does not render things so
hopeless, for it indicates that the main difficulty of
the race question does not lie so much in the actual
condition of the blacks as it does in the mental
attitude of the whites; and a mental attitude,
especially one not based on truth, can be changed
more easily than actual conditions. That is to
say, the burden of the question is not that the
whites are struggling to save ten million
despondent and moribund people from sinking into a
hopeless slough of ignorance, poverty and barbarity
in their very midst, but that they are unwilling
to open certain doors of opportunity and to
accord certain treatment to ten million aspiring,
education~and~property-acquiring people. In a
word, the difficulty of the problem is not so much
due to the facts presented, as to the hypothesis
assumed for its solution. In this it is similar to
the problem of the Solar System. By a complex,
confusing and almost contradictory mathematical
process, by the use of zigzags instead of straight
lines, the earth can be proven to be the center of
things celestial; but by an operation so simple
that it can be comprehended by a schoolboy, its
position can be verified among the other worlds
which revolve about the sun, and its movements
harmonized with the laws of the universe. So, when
the white race assumes as a hypothesis that it is the
main object of creation, and that all things else
are merely subsidiary to its well being, sophism,
subterfuge, perversion of conscience, arrogance,
injustice, oppression, cruelty, sacrifice of human
blood, all are required to maintain the position,
and its dealings with other races become indeed a
problem, a problem which, if based on a
hypothesis of common humanity, could be solved by the
simple rules of justice.
When I reached Macon I decided to leave my
trunk and all my surplus belongings, to pack my
bag, and strike out into the interior. This I
did; and by train, by mule and ox-cart, I traveled
through many counties. This was my first real
experience among rural colored people, and all
that I saw was interesting to me; but there was a
great deal which does not require description at
my hands; for log cabins and plantations and
dialect-speaking darkies are perhaps better known
in American literature than any other single
picture of our national life. Indeed, they form an
ideal and exclusive literary concept of the
American Negro to such an extent that it is almost
impossible to get the reading public to recognize
him in any other setting; but I shall endeavor to
avoid giving the reader any already overworked
and hackneyed descriptions. This generally
accepted literary ideal of the American Negro
constitutes what is really an obstacle in the way of
the thoughtful and progressive element of the
race. His character has been established as a
happy-go-lucky, laughing, shuffling,
banjo-picking being, and the reading public has not yet
been prevailed upon to take him seriously. His
efforts to elevate himself socially are looked upon
as a sort of absurd caricature of "white
civilization." A novel dealing with colored people who
lived in respectable homes and amidst a fair
degree of culture and who naturally acted "just
like white folks" would be taken in a comic opera
sense. In this respect the Negro is much in the
position of a great comedian who gives up the
lighter rôles to play tragedy. No matter how
well he may portray the deeper passions, the
public is loth to give him up in his old character; they
even conspire to make him a failure in serious
work, in order to force him back into comedy.
In the same respect, the public is not too much
to be blamed, for great comedians are far more
scarce than mediocre tragedians; every amateur
actor is a tragedian. However, this very fact
constitutes the opportunity of the future Negro
novelist and poet to give the country something new
and unknown, in depicting the life, the ambitions,
the struggles and the passions of those of their
race who are striving to break the narrow limits
of traditions. A beginning has already been
made in that remarkable book by Dr. Du Bois,
"The Souls of Black Folk."
Much, too, that I saw while on this trip, in
spite of my enthusiasm, was disheartening.
Often I thought of what my "millionaire" had
said to me, and wished myself back in Europe.
The houses in which I had to stay were generally
uncomfortable, sometimes worse. I often had to
sleep in a division or compartment with several
other people. Once or twice I was not so
fortunate as to find divisions; everybody slept on
pallets on the floor. Frequently I was able to lie
down and contemplate the stars which were in
their zenith. The food was at times so
distasteful and poorly cooked that I could not eat it. I
remember that once I lived for a week or more on
buttermilk, on account of not being able to
stomach the fat bacon, the rank turnip tops and
the heavy damp mixture of meal, salt and water,
which was called corn bread. It was only my
ambition to do the work which I had planned that
kept me steadfast to my purpose. Occasionally
I would meet with some signs of progress and
uplift in even one of these backwood
settlements--houses built of boards, with windows, and divided
into rooms, decent food and a fair standard of
living. This condition was due to the fact that
there was in the community some exceptionally
capable Negro farmer whose thrift served as an
example. As I went about among these dull, simple
people, the great majority of them hard working;
in their relations with the whites, submissive,
faithful, and often affectionate, negatively content
with their lot, and contrasted them with those of
the race who had been quickened by the forces of
thought, I could not but appreciate the logic of
the position held by those Southern leaders who
have been bold enough to proclaim against the
education of the Negro. They are consistent in
their public speech with Southern sentiment and
desires. Those public men of the South who have
not been daring or heedless enough to defy the
ideals of twentieth century civilization and of
modern humanitarianism and philanthropy, find
themselves in the embarrassing situation of preaching
one thing and praying for another. They are in
the position of the fashionable woman who is
compelled by the laws of polite society to say to her
dearest enemy, "How happy I am to see you."
And yet in this respect how perplexing is
Southern character; for in opposition to the above, it
may be said that the claim of the Southern whites
that they love the Negro better than the Northern
whites do, is in a manner true. Northern white
people love the Negro in a sort of abstract way,
as a race; through a sense of justice, charity and
philanthropy, they will liberally assist in his
elevation. A number of them have heroically spent
their lives in this effort (and just here I wish to
say that when the colored people reach the
monument building stage, they should not forget the
men and women who went South after the war
and founded schools for them). Yet, generally
speaking, they have no particular liking for
individuals of the race. Southern white people
despise the Negro as a race, and will do nothing to
aid in his elevation as such; but for certain
individuals they have a strong affection, and are
helpful to them in many ways. With these
individual members of the race they live on terms of
the greatest intimacy; they intrust to them their
children, their family treasures and their family
secrets; in trouble they often go to them for
comfort and counsel; in sickness they often rely upon
their care. This affectionate relation between
the Southern whites and those blacks who come
into close touch with them has not been overdrawn
even in fiction.
This perplexity of Southern character extends
even to the mixture of the races. That is spoken
of as though it were dreaded worse than smallpox,
leprosy or the plague. Yet, when I was in
Jacksonville I knew several prominent families there
with large colored branches, which went by the
same name and were known and acknowledged as
blood relatives. And what is more, there seemed
to exist between these black brothers and sisters
and uncles and aunts a decided friendly feeling.
I said above that Southern whites would do
nothing for the Negro as a race. I know the
South claims that it has spent millions for the
education of the blacks, and that it has of its own
free will shouldered this awful burden. It seems
to be forgetful of the fact that these millions
have been taken from the public tax funds for
education, and that the law of political economy
which recognizes the land owner as the one who
really pays the taxes is not tenable. It would be
just as reasonable for the relatively few
land-owners of Manhattan to complain that they had
to stand the financial burden of the education of
the thousands and thousands of children whose
parents pay rent for tenements and flats. Let
the millions of producing and consuming Negroes
be taken out of the South, and it would be quickly
seen how much less of public funds there would be
to appropriate for education or any other
purpose.
In thus traveling about through the country,
I was sometimes amused on arriving at some little
railroad-station town to be taken for and treated
as a white man, and six hours later, when it was
learned that I was stopping at the house of the
colored preacher or school teacher, to note the
attitude of the whole town change. At times this
led even to embarrassment. Yet it cannot be so
embarrassing for a colored man to be taken for
white as for a white man to be taken for colored;
and I have heard of several cases of the latter
kind.
All this while I was gathering material for
work, jotting down in my note-book themes and
melodies, and trying to catch the spirit of the
Negro in his relatively primitive state. I began
to feel the necessity of hurrying so that I might
get back to some city like Nashville to begin my
compositions, and at the same time earn at least a
living by teaching and performing before my
funds gave out. At the last settlement in which
I stopped I found a mine of material. This was
due to the fact that "big meeting" was
in progress. "Big meeting" is an institution something
like camp-meeting; the difference being that it is
held in a permanent church, and not in a
temporary structure. All the churches of some one
denomination--of course, either Methodist or
Baptist--in a county or, perhaps, in several adjoining
counties, are closed, and the congregations unite
at some centrally located church for a series of
meetings lasting a week. It is really a social as
well as a religious function. The people come in
great numbers, making the trip, according to their
financial status, in buggies drawn by sleek,
fleet-footed mules, in ox-teams, or on foot. It was
amusing to see some of the latter class trudging
down the hot and dusty road with their shoes,
which were brand new, strung across their
shoulders. When they got near the church they sat
on the side of the road and, with many grimaces,
tenderly packed their feet into those instruments
of torture. This furnished, indeed, a trying test
of their religion. The famous preachers come
from near and far, and take turns in warning
sinners of the day of wrath. Food, in the form of
those two Southern luxuries, fried chicken and
roast pork, is plentiful, and no one need go
hungry. On the opening Sunday the women are
immaculate in starched stiff white dresses adorned
with ribbons either red or blue. Even a great
many of the men wear streamers of van-colored
ribbons in the button-holes of their coats. A few
of them carefully cultivate a fore lock of hair by
wrapping it in twine, and on such festive
occasions decorate it with a narrow ribbon streamer.
Big meetings afford a fine opportunity to the
younger people to meet each other dressed in their
Sunday clothes, and much rustic courting,
which is as enjoyable as any other kind, is
indulged in.
This big meeting which I was lucky enough to
catch was particularly well attended; the extra
large attendance was due principally to two
attractions, a man by name of John Brown, who
was renowned as the most powerful preacher for
miles around; and a wonderful leader of singing,
who was known as "Singing Johnson." These
two men were a study and a revelation to me.
They caused me to reflect upon how great an
influence their types have been in the development of
the Negro in America. Both these types are now
looked upon generally with condescension or
contempt by the progressive element among the
colored people; but it should never be forgotten that
it was they who led/the race from paganism, and
kept it steadfast to Christianity through all the
long, dark years of slavery.
John Brown was a jet black man of medium
size, with a strikingly intelligent head and face,
and a voice like an organ peal. He preached
each night after several lesser lights successively
held the pulpit during an hour or so. As far as
subject matter is concerned, all of the sermons
were alike; each began with the fall of man, ran
through various trials and tribulations of the
Hebrew children, on to the redemption by Christ,
and ended with a fervid picture of the judgment
day and the fate of the damned. But John
Brown possessed magnetism and an imagination
so free and daring that he was able to carry
through what the other preachers would not
attempt. He knew all the arts and tricks of
oratory, the modulation of the voice to almost a
whisper, the pause for effect, the rise through light,
rapid fire sentences to the terrific, thundering
outburst of an electrifying climax. In addition, he
had the intuition of a born theatrical manager.
Night after night this man held me fascinated.
He convinced me that, after all, eloquence
consists more in the manner of saying than in what is
said. It is largely a matter of tone pictures.
The most striking example of John Brown's
magnetism and imagination was his "heavenly
march"; I shall never forget how it impressed me
when I heard it. He opened his sermon in the
usual way; then proclaiming to his listeners that
he was going to take them on the heavenly march,
he seized the Bible under his arm and began to
pace up and down the pulpit platform. The
congregation immediately began with their feet a
tramp, tramp, tramp, in time with the preacher's
march in the pulpit, all the while singing in an
undertone a hymn about marching to Zion.
Suddenly he cried, "Halt!" Every foot stopped with
the precision of a company of well drilled soldiers,
and the singing ceased. The morning star had
been reached. Here the preacher described the
beauties of that celestial body. Then the march,
the tramp, tramp, tramp, and the singing was
again taken up. Another "Halt!" They had
reached the evening star. And so on, past the
sun and the moon--the intensity of religious
emotion all the time increasing--along the milky way,
on up to the gates of heaven. Here the halt was
longer, and the preacher described at length the
gates and walls of the New Jerusalem. Then he
took his hearers through the pearly gates, along
the golden streets, pointing out the glories of the
City, pausing occasionally to greet some
patriarchal members of the church, well known to most
of his listeners in life, who had had "the tears
wiped from their eyes, were clad in robes of
spotless white, with crowns of gold upon their heads
and harps within their hands," and ended his
march before the great white throne. To the
reader this may sound ridiculous, but listened to
under the circumstances, it was highly and
effectively dramatic. I was a more or less
sophisticated and non-religious man of the world, but
the torrent of the preacher's words, moving with
the rhythm and glowing with the eloquence of
primitive poetry swept me along, and I, too, felt
like joining in the shouts of "Amen!
Hallelujah!"
John Brown's powers in describing the delights
of heaven were no greater than those in depicting
the horrors of hell. I saw great, strapping
fellows, trembling and weeping like children at the
"mourners' bench." His warnings to sinners were
truly terrible. I shall never forget one expression
that he used, which for originality and aptness
could not be excelled. In my opinion, it is more
graphic and, for us, far more expressive than St.
Paul's "It is hard to kick against the pricks."
He struck the attitude of a pugilist and thundered
out, "Young man, yo' arm's too short to box wid
God!"
As interesting as was John Brown to me, the
other man, "Singing Johnson," was more so. He
was a small, dark-brown, one-eyed man, with a
clear, strong, high-pitched voice, a leader of
singing, a maker of songs, a man who could improvise
at the moment lines to fit the occasion. Not so
striking a figure as John Brown, but, at "big
meetings," equally important. It is indispensable
to the success of the singing, when the
congregation is a large one made up of people from
different communities, to have someone with a strong
voice who knows just what hymn to sing and when
to sing it, who can pitch it in the right key, and
who has all the leading lines committed to
memory. Sometimes it devolves upon the leader to
"sing down" a long-winded, or uninteresting
speaker. Committing to memory the leading
lines of all the Negro spiritual songs is no easy
task, for they run up into the hundreds. But the
accomplished leader must know them all, because
the congregation sings only the refrains and
repeats; every ear in the church is fixed upon him,
and if he becomes mixed in his lines or forgets
them, the responsibility falls directly on his
shoulders.
For example, most of these hymns are
constructed to be sung in the following manner:
Leader-- "Swing low, sweet chariot."
Congregation--"Coming for to carry me home."
Leader-- "Swing low, sweet chariot."
Congregation--"Coming for to carry me home."
Leader-- "I look over yonder, what do I see?"
Congregation--"Coming for to carry me home."
Leader-- "Two little angels coming after me."
Congregation--"Coming for to carry me home."
-- etc., etc., etc.
The solitary and plaintive voice of the leader
is answered by a sound like the roll of the sea,
producing a most curious effect.
In only a few of these songs do the leader and
the congregation start off together. Such a song
is the well known "Steal away to Jesus."
The leader and the congregation begin:
"Steal away, steal away,
Steal away to Jesus;
Steal away, steal away home,
I ain't got long to stay here."
Then the leader alone:
"My Lord he calls me,
He calls me by the thunder,
The trumpet sounds within-a my soul."
Then all together:
"I ain't got long to stay here."
The leader and the congregation again take up
the opening refrain; then the leader sings three
more leading lines alone, and so on almost ad
infinitum. It will be seen that even here most of
the work falls upon the leader, for the
congregation sings the same lines over and over, while his
memory and ingenuity are taxed to keep the
songs going.
Generally, the parts taken up by the
congregation are sung in a three-part harmony, the women
singing the soprano and a transposed tenor, the
men with high voices singing the melody, and
those with low voices, a thundering bass. In a
few of these songs, however, the leading part is
sung in unison by the whole congregation, down
to the last line, which is harmonized. The effect
of this is intensely thrilling. Such a hymn is "Go
down Moses." It stirs the heart like a trumpet
call.
"Singing Johnson" was an ideal leader; and
his services were in great demand. He spent his
time going about the country from one church to
another. He received his support in much the
same way as the preachers,--part of a collection,
food and lodging. All of his leisure time he
devoted to originating new words and melodies and
new lines for old songs. He always sang with
his eyes,--or to be more exact--his eye closed,
indicating the tempo by swinging his head to and
fro. He was a great judge of the proper hymn
to sing at a particular moment; and I noticed
several times, when the preacher reached a certain
climax, or expressed a certain sentiment, that
Johnson broke in with a line or two of some
appropriate hymn. The speaker understood, and
would pause until the singing ceased.
As I listened to the singing of these songs, the
wonder of their production grew upon me more
and more. How did the men who originated them
manage to do it? The sentiments are easily
accounted for; they are mostly taken from the
Bible; but the melodies, where did they come from?
Some of them so weirdly sweet, and others so
wonderfully strong. Take, for instance, "Go down
Moses." I doubt that there is a stronger theme
in the whole musical literature of the world. And
so many of these songs contain more than mere
melody; there is sounded in them that elusive
undertone, the note in music which is not heard
with the ears. I sat often with the tears rolling
down my cheeks and my heart melted within me.
Any musical person who has never heard a Negro
congregation under the spell of religious fervor
sing these old songs, has missed one of the most
thrilling emotions which the human heart may
experience. Anyone who can listen to Negroes sing,
"Nobody knows de trouble I see, Nobody knows
but Jesus," without shedding tears, must indeed
have a heart of stone.
As yet, the Negroes themselves do not fully
appreciate these old slave songs. The educated
classes are rather ashamed of them, and prefer to
sing hymns from books. This feeling is natural;
they are still too close to the conditions under
which the songs were produced; but the day will
come when this slave music will be the most
treasured heritage of the American Negro.
At the close of the "big meeting" I left the
settlement where it was being held, full of
enthusiasm. I was in that frame of mind which, in
the artistic temperament, amounts to inspiration.
I was now ready and anxious to get to some place
where I might settle down to work, and give
expression the ideas which were teeming in my head;
but I strayed into another deviation from my path
of life as I had it marked out, which led me into
an entirely different road. Instead of going to
the nearest and most convenient railroad station,
I accepted the invitation of a young man who
had been present the closing Sunday at the
meeting, to drive with him some miles farther to the
town in which he taught school, and there take
the train. My conversation with this young man
as we drove along through the country was
extremely interesting. He had been a student in
one of the Negro colleges,--strange coincidence,
in the very college, as I learned through him, in
which "Shiny" was now a professor. I was, of
course, curious to hear about my boyhood friend;
and had it not been vacation time, and that I was
not sure that I would find him, I should have gone
out of my way to pay him a visit; but I
determined to write to him as soon as the school opened.
My companion talked to me about his work among
the people, of his hopes and his discouragements.
He was tremendously in earnest; I might say, too
much so. In fact, it may be said that the
majority of intelligent colored people are, in some
degree, too much in earnest over the race question.
They assume and carry so much that their
progress is at times impeded, and they are unable to
see things in their proper proportions. In many
instances, a slight exercise of the sense of humor
would save much anxiety of soul. Anyone who
marks the general tone of editorials in colored
newspapers is apt to be impressed with this idea.
If the mass of Negroes took their present and
future as seriously as do the most of their leaders,
the race would be in no mental condition to sustain
the terrible pressure which it undergoes; it would
sink of its own weight. Yet, it must be
acknowledged that in the making of a race
over-seriousness is a far lesser failing than its reverse, and
even the faults resulting from it lean toward the
right.
We drove into the town just before dark. As
we passed a large, unpainted church, my
companion pointed it out as the place where he held his
school. I promised that I would go there with
him the next morning and stay a while. The
town was of that kind which hardly requires or
deserves description; a straggling line of brick
and wooden stores on one side of the railroad track
and some cottages of various sizes on the other
side constituted about the whole of it. The young
school teacher boarded at the best house in the
place owned by a colored man. It was painted,
had glass windows, contained "store bought"
furniture, an organ, and lamps with chimneys. The
owner held a job of some kind on the railroad.
After supper it was not long before everybody was
sleepy. I occupied the room with the school
teacher. In a few minutes after we got into the
room he was in bed and asleep; but I took
advantage of the unusual luxury of a lamp which gave
light, and sat looking over my notes and jotting
down some ideas which were still fresh in my
mind. Suddenly I became conscious of that sense
of alarm which is always aroused by the sound of
hurrying footsteps on the silence of the night. I
stopped work, and looked at my watch. It was
after eleven. I listened, straining every nerve
to hear above the tumult of my quickening pulse.
I caught the murmur of voices, then the gallop
of a horse, then of another and another. Now
thoroughly alarmed, I woke my companion, and
together we both listened. After a moment he
put out the light, softly opened the window-blind,
and we cautiously peeped out. We saw men
moving in one direction, and from the mutterings we
vaguely caught the rumor that some terrible crime
had been committed, murder! rape! I put on my
coat and hat. My friend did all in his power to
dissuade me from venturing out; but it was
impossible for me to remain in the house under such
tense excitement. My nerves would not have
stood it. Perhaps what bravery I exercised in
going out was due to the fact that I felt sure my
identity as a colored man had not yet become
known in the town.
I went out, and, following the drift, reached the
railroad station. There was gathered there a
crowd of men, all white, and others were steadily
arriving, seemingly from all the surrounding
country. How did the news spread so quickly?
I watched these men moving under the yellow
glare of the kerosene lamps about the station,
stern, comparatively silent, all of them armed,
some of them in boots and spurs; fierce,
determined men. I had come to know the type well,
blond, tall and lean, with ragged mustache and
beard, and glittering gray eyes. At the first
suggestion of daylight they began to disperse in
groups, going in several directions. There was
no extra noise or excitement, no loud talking, only
swift, sharp words of command given by those
who seemed to be accepted as leaders by mutual
understanding. In fact, the impression made
upon me was that everything was being done in
quite an orderly manner. In spite of so many
leaving, the crowd around the station continued
to grow; at sunrise there were a great many
women and children. By this time I also noticed
some colored people; a few seemed to be going
about customary tasks, several were standing on
the outskirts of the crowd; but the gathering of
Negroes usually seen in such towns was missing.
Before noon they brought him in. Two
horsemen rode abreast; between them, half dragged,
the poor wretch made his way through the dust.
His hands were tied behind him, and ropes around
his body were fastened to the saddle horns of his
double guard. The men who at midnight had
been stern and silent were now emitting that terror
instilling sound known as the "rebel yell." A
space was quickly cleared in the crowd, and a rope
placed about his neck; when from somewhere came
the suggestion, "Burn him!" It ran like an
electric current. Have you ever witnessed the
transformation of human beings into savage beasts?
Nothing can be more terrible. A railroad tie
was sunk into the ground, the rope was removed
and a chain brought and securely coiled around
the victim and the stake. There he stood, a man
only in form and stature, every sign of degeneracy
stamped upon his countenance. His eyes were
dull and vacant, indicating not a single ray of
thought. Evidently the realization of his fearful
fate had robbed him of whatever reasoning power
he had ever possessed. He was too stunned and
stupefied even to tremble. Fuel was brought from
everywhere, oil, the torch; the flames crouched for
an instant as though to gather strength, then
leaped up as high as their victim's head. He
squirmed, he writhed, strained at his chains,
then gave out cries and groans that I shall always
hear. The cries and groans were choked off by
the fire and smoke; but his eyes bulging from their
sockets, rolled from side to side, appealing in vain
for help. Some of the crowd yelled and cheered,
others seemed appalled at what they had done,
and there were those who turned away sickened
at the sight. I was fixed to the spot where I
stood, powerless to take my eyes from what I did
not want to see.
It was over before I realized that time had
elapsed. Before I could make myself believe that
what I saw was really happening, I was looking
at a scorched post, a smoldering fire, blackened
hones, charred fragments sifting down through
coils of chain, and the smell of burnt flesh--human
flesh--was in my nostrils.
I walked a short distance away, and sat down
in order to clear my dazed mind. A great wave
of humiliation and shame swept over me. Shame
that I belonged to a race that could be so dealt
with; and shame for my country, that it, the
great example of democracy to the world, should
be the only civilized, if not the only state on earth,
where a human being would be burned alive. My
heart turned bitter within me. I could
understand why Negroes are led to sympathize with even
their worst criminals, and to protect them when
possible. By all the impulses of normal human
nature they can and should do nothing less.
Whenever I hear protests from the South that
it should be left alone to deal with the Negro
question, my thoughts go back to that scene of
brutality and savagery. I do not see how a people
that can find in its conscience any excuse
whatever for slowly burning to death a human being,
or to tolerate such an act, can be entrusted with
the salvation of a race. Of course, there are in
the South men of liberal thought who do not
approve lynching; but I wonder how long they will
endure the limits which are placed upon free
speech. They still cower and tremble before
"Southern opinion." Even so late as the recent
Atlanta riot, those men who were brave enough
to speak a word in behalf of justice and humanity
felt called upon, by way of apology, to preface
what they said with a glowing rhetorical tribute
to the Anglo-Saxon's superiority, and to refer to
the "great and impassable gulf" between the races
"fixed by the Creator at the foundation of the
world." The question of the relative qualities of
the two races is still an open one. The reference
to the "great gulf" loses force in face of the fact
that there are in this country perhaps three or
four million people with the blood of both races
in their veins; but I fail to see the pertinency of
either statement, subsequent to the beating and
murdering of scores of innocent people in the
streets of a civilized and Christian city.
The Southern whites are in many respects a
great people. Looked at from a certain point of
view, they are picturesque. If one will put
himself in a romantic frame of mind, he can admire
their notions of chivalry and bravery and justice.
In this same frame of mind an intelligent man can
go to the theater and applaud the impossible hero,
who with his single sword slays everybody in the
play except the equally impossible heroine. So
can an ordinary peace-loving citizen sit by a
comfortable fire and read with enjoyment of the
bloody deeds of pirates and the fierce brutality of
Vikings. This is the way in which we gratify
the old, underlying animal instincts and passions;
but we should shudder with horror at the mere
idea of such practices being realities in this day
of enlightened and humanitarianized thought.
The Southern whites are not yet living quite in
the present age; many of their general ideas hark
back to a former century, some of them to the
Dark Ages. In the light of other days, they are
sometimes magnificent. To-day they are often
ludicrous and cruel.
How long I sat with bitter thoughts running
through my mind, I do not know; perhaps an hour
or more. When I decided to get up and go back
to the house I found that I could hardly stand on
my feet. I was as weak as a man who had lost
blood. However, I dragged myself along, with
the central idea of a general plan well fixed in my
mind. I did not find my school teacher friend at
home, so did not see him again. I swallowed a
few mouthfuls of food, packed my bag, and caught
the afternoon train.
When I reached Macon, I stopped only long
enough to get the main part of my luggage, and
to buy a ticket for New York. All along the
journey I was occupied in debating with myself
the step which I had decided to take. I argued
that to forsake one's race to better one's
condition was no less worthy an action than to forsake
one's country for the same purpose. I finally
made up my mind that I would neither disclaim the
black race nor claim the white race; but that I
would change my name, raise a mustache, and let
the world take me for what it would; that it was
not necessary for me to go about with a label of
inferiority pasted across my forehead. All the
while, I understood that it was not
discouragement, or fear, or search for a larger field of
action and opportunity, that was driving me out of
the Negro race. I knew that it was shame,
unbearable shame. Shame at being identified with
a people that could with impunity be treated worse
than animals. For certainly the law would
restrain and punish the malicious burning alive of
animals.
So once again, I found myself gazing at the
towers of New York, and wondering what future
that city held in store for me.
Chapter XI
I have now reached that part of my narrative
where I must be brief, and touch only lightly on
important facts; therefore, the reader must make
up his mind to pardon skips and jumps and
meager details.
When I reached New York I was completely
lost. I could not have felt more a stranger had
I been suddenly dropped into Constantinople. I
knew not where to turn or how to strike out. I
was so oppressed by a feeling of loneliness that
the temptation to visit my old home in
Connecticut was well nigh irresistible. I reasoned,
however, that unless I found my old music teacher, I
should be, after so many years of absence, as much
of a stranger there as in New York; and,
furthermore, that in view of the step which I had decided
to take, such a visit would be injudicious. I
remembered, too, that I had some property there in
the shape of a piano and a few books, but
decided that it would not be worth what it might
cost me to take possession.
By reason of the fact that my living expenses
in the South had been very small, I still had nearly
four hundred dollars of my capital left. In
contemplation of this, my natural and acquired
Bohemian tastes asserted themselves, and I decided
to have a couple of weeks' good time before
worrying seriously about the future. I went to Coney
Island and the other resorts; took in the
pre-season shows along Broadway, and ate at first class
restaurants; but I shunned the old Sixth Avenue
district as though it were pest infected. My few
days of pleasure made appalling inroads upon
what cash I had, and caused me to see that it
required a good deal of money to live in New York
as I wished to live, and that I should have to find,
very soon, some more or less profitable
employment. I was sure that unknown, without friends
or prestige, it would be useless to try to establish
myself as a teacher of music; so I gave that means
of earning a livelihood scarcely any consideration.
And even had I considered it possible to secure
pupils, as I then felt, I should have hesitated about
taking up a work in which the chances for any
considerable financial success are necessarily so
small. I had made up my mind that since I was
not going to be a Negro, I would avail myself of
every possible opportunity to make a white man's
success; and that, if it can be summed up in any
one word, means "money."
I watched the "want" columns in the
newspapers and answered a number of advertisements;
but in each case found the positions were such
as I could not fill or did not want. I also spent
several dollars for "ads" which brought me no
replies. In this way I came to know the hopes
and disappointments of a large and pitiable class
of humanity in this great city, the people who
look for work through the newspapers. After
some days of this sort of experience, I concluded
that the main difficulty with me was that I was
not prepared for what I wanted to do. I then
decided upon a course which, for an artist, showed
an uncommon amount of practical sense and
judgment. I made up my mind to enter a
business college. I took a small room, ate at lunch
counters, in order to economize, and pursued my
studies with the zeal that I have always been able
to put into any work upon which I set my heart.
Yet, in spite of all my economy, when I had been
at the school for several months, my funds gave
out completely. I reached the point where I could
not afford sufficient food for each day. In this
plight, I was glad to get, through one of the
teachers, a job as an ordinary clerk in a
downtown wholesale house. I did my work faithfully,
and received a raise of salary before I expected
it. I even managed to save a little money out of
my modest earnings. In fact, I began then to
contract the money fever, which later took strong
possession of me. I kept my eyes open, watching
for a chance to better my condition.. It finally
came in the form of a position with a house which
was at the time establishing a South American
department. My knowledge of Spanish was, of
course, the principal cause of my good luck; and
it did more for me; it placed me where the other
clerks were practically put out of competition
with me. I was not slow in taking advantage of
the opportunity to make myself indispensable to
the firm.
What an interesting and absorbing game is
money making! After each deposit at my
savings-bank, I used to sit and figure out, all over
again, my principal and interest, and make
calculations on what the increase would be in such and
such time. Out of this I derived a great deal of
pleasure. I denied myself as much as possible in
order to swell my savings. Even so much as I
enjoyed smoking, I limited myself to an occasional
cigar, and that was generally of a variety which
in my old days at the "Club" was known as a
"Henry Mud." Drinking I cut out altogether,
but that was no great sacrifice.
The day on which I was able to figure up
$1,000.00 marked an epoch in my life. And this
was not because I had never before had money.
In my gambling days and while I was with my
"millionaire" I handled sums running high up into
the hundreds; but they had come to me like fairy
god-mother's gifts, and at a time when my
conception of money was that it was made only to
spend. Here, on the other hand, was a thousand
dollars which I had earned by days of honest and
patient work, a thousand dollars which I had
carefully watched grow from the first dollar; and
I experienced, in owning them, a pride and
satisfaction which to me was an entirely new
sensation. As my capital went over the thousand
dollar mark, I was puzzled to know what to do with
it, how to put it to the most advantageous use.
I turned down first one scheme and then another,
as though they had been devised for the sole
purpose of gobbling up my money. I finally listened
to a friend who advised me to put all I had in
New York real estate; and under his guidance I
took equity in a piece of property on which stood
a rickety old tenement-house. I did not regret
following this friend's advice, for in something
like six months I disposed of my equity for more
than double my investment. From that time on
I devoted myself to the study of New York real
estate, and watched for opportunities to make
similar investments. In spite of two or three
speculations which did not turn out well, I have been
remarkably successful. To-day I am the owner
and part-owner of several flat-houses. I have
changed my place of employment four times since
returning to New York, and each change has been
a decided advancement. Concerning the position
which I now hold, I shall say nothing except that
it pays extremely well.
As my outlook on the world grew brighter, I
began to mingle in the social circles of the men
with whom I came in contact; and gradually, by
a process of elimination, I reached a grade of
society of no small degree of culture. My
appearance was always good and my ability to play on
the piano, especially ragtime, which was then at
the height of its vogue, made me a welcome guest.
The anomaly of my social position often appealed
strongly to my sense of humor. I frequently
smiled inwardly at some remark not altogether
complimentary to people of color; and more than
once I felt like declaiming, "I am a colored man.
Do I not disprove the theory that one drop of
Negro blood renders a man unfit?" Many a night
when I returned to my room after an enjoyable
evening, I laughed heartily over what struck me
as the capital joke I was playing.
Then I met her, and what I had regarded as a
joke was gradually changed into the most serious
question of my life. I first saw her at a musical
which was given one evening at a house to which
I was frequently invited. I did not notice her
among the other guests before she came forward
and sang two sad little songs. When she began I
was out in the hallway where many of the men
were gathered; but with the first few notes I
crowded with others into the doorway to see who
the singer was. When I saw the girl, the
surprise which I had felt at the first sound of her
voice was heightened; she was almost tall and
quite slender, with lustrous yellow hair and eyes
so blue as to appear almost black. She was as
white as a lily, and she was dressed in white.
Indeed, she seemed to me the most dazzlingly white
thing I had ever seen. But it was not her
delicate beauty which attracted me most; it was her
voice, a voice which made one wonder how tones
of such passionate color could come from so
fragile a body.
I determined that when the programme was over
I would seek an introduction to her; but at the
moment, instead of being the easy man of the
world, I became again the bashful boy of
fourteen, and my courage failed me. I contented
myself with hovering as near her as politeness would
permit; near enough to hear her voice, which in
conversation was low, yet thrilling, like the deeper
middle tones of a flute. I watched the men gather
around her talking and laughing in an easy
manner, and wondered how it was possible for them
to do it. But destiny, my special destiny, was at
work. I was standing near, talking with affected
gayety to several young ladies, who, however, must
have remarked my preoccupation; for my second
sense of hearing was alert to what was being said
by the group of which the girl in white was the
center, when I heard her say, "I think his playing
of Chopin is exquisite." And one of my friends
in the group replied, "You haven't met him?
Allow me--" then turning to me, "Old man,
when you have a moment I wish you to meet
Miss ----." I don't know what she said to me
or what I said to her. I can remember that I
tried to be clever, and experienced a growing
conviction that I was making myself appear more and
more idiotic. I am certain, too, that, in spite of
my Italian-like complexion, I was as red as a beet.
Instead of taking the car I walked home. I
needed the air and exercise as a sort of sedative.
I am not sure whether my troubled condition of
mind was due to the fact that I had been struck by
love or to the feeling that I had made a bad
impression upon her.
As the weeks went by, and when I had met her
several more times, I came to know that I was
seriously in love; and then began for me days of
worry, for I had more than the usual doubts and
fears of a young man in love to contend with.
Up to this time I had assumed and played my
rôle as a white man with a certain degree of
nonchalance, a carelessness as to the outcome, which
made the whole thing more amusing to me than
serious; but now I ceased to regard "being a white
man" as a sort of practical joke. My acting had
called for mere external effects. Now I began to
doubt my ability to play the part. I watched her
to see if she was scrutinizing me, to see if she was
looking for anything in me which made me differ
from the other men she knew. In place of an old
inward feeling of superiority over many of my
friends, I began to doubt myself. I began even
to wonder if I really was like the men I
associated with; if there was not, after all, an indefinable
something which marked a difference.
But, in spite of my doubts and timidity, my
affair progressed; and I finally felt sufficiently
encouraged to decide to ask her to marry me. Then
began the hardest struggle of my life, whether to
ask her to marry me under false colors or to tell
her the whole truth. My sense of what was
exigent made me feel there was no necessity of
saying anything; but my inborn sense of honor
rebelled at even indirect deception in this case. But
however much I moralized on the question, I found
it more and more difficult to reach the point of
confession. The dread that I might lose her took
possession of me each time I sought to speak, and
rendered it impossible for me to do so. That
moral courage requires more than physical
courage is no mere poetic fancy. I am sure I would
have found it easier to take the place of a
gladiator, no matter how fierce the Numidian lion, than
to tell that slender girl that I had Negro blood
in my veins. The fact which I had at times
wished to cry out, I now wished to hide forever.
During this time we were drawn together a
great deal by the mutual bond of music. She
loved to hear me play Chopin, and was herself far
from being a poor performer of his compositions.
I think I carried her every new song that was
published which I thought suitable to her voice, and
played the accompaniment for her. Over these
songs we were like two innocent children with new
toys. She had never been anything but
innocent; but my innocence was a transformation
wrought by my love for her, love which melted
away my cynicism and whitened my sullied soul
and gave me back the wholesome dreams of my
boyhood. There is nothing better in all the world
that a man can do for his moral welfare than to
love a good woman.
My artistic temperament also underwent an
awakening. I spent many hours at my piano,
playing over old and new composers. I also
wrote several little pieces in a more or less
Chopinesque style, which I dedicated to her. And so the
weeks and months went by. Often words of love
trembled on my lips, but I dared not utter them,
because I knew they would have to be followed
by other words which I had not the courage to
frame. There might have been some other woman
in my set with whom I could have fallen in love
and asked to marry me without a word of
explanation; but the more I knew this girl, the less
could I find it in my heart to deceive her. And
yet, in spite of this specter that was constantly
looming up before me, I could never have believed
that life held such happiness as was contained in
those dream days of love.
One Saturday afternoon, in early June, I was
coming up Fifth Avenue, and at the corner of
Twenty-third Street I met her. She had been
shopping. We stopped to chat for a moment, and
I suggested that we spend half an hour at the
Eden Musée. We were standing leaning on the
rail in front of a group of figures, more
interested in what we had to say to each other than in
the group, when my attention became fixed upon
a man who stood at my side studying his
catalogue. It took me only an instant to recognize
in him my old friend "Shiny." My first impulse
was to change my position at once. As quick as
a flash I considered all the risks I might run in
speaking to him, and most especially the delicate
question of introducing him to her. I must
confess that in my embarrassment and confusion I
felt small and mean. But before I could decide
what to do he looked around at me and, after an
instant, said, "Pardon me; but isn't this ----?"
The nobler part in me responded to the sound of
his voice, and I took his hand in a hearty clasp.
Whatever fears I had felt were quickly banished,
for he seemed, at a glance, to divine my
situation, and let drop no word that would have
aroused suspicion as to the truth. With a slight
misgiving I presented him to her, and was again
relieved of fear. She received the introduction in
her usual gracious manner, and without the least
hesitancy or embarrassment joined in the
conversation. An amusing part about the introduction
was that I was upon the point of introducing him
as "Shiny," and stammered a second or two before
I could recall his name. We chatted for some
fifteen minutes. He was spending his vacation
North, with the intention of doing four or six
weeks' work in one of the summer schools; he was
also going to take a bride back with him in the
fall. He asked me about myself, but in so
diplomatic a way that I found no difficulty in
answering him. The polish of his language and the
unpedantic manner in which he revealed his culture
greatly impressed her; and after we had left the
Musée she showed it by questioning me about him.
I was surprised at the amount of interest a
refined black man could arouse. Even after changes
in the conversation she reverted several times to
the subject of "Shiny." Whether it was more
than mere curiosity I could not tell; but I was
convinced that she herself knew very little about
prejudice.
Just why it should have done so I do not know;
but somehow the "Shiny" incident gave me
encouragement and confidence to cast the die of my
fate; but I reasoned that since I wanted to marry
her only, and since it concerned her alone, I would
divulge my secret to no one else, not even her
parents.
One evening, a few days afterwards, at her
home, we were going over some new songs and
compositions, when she asked me, as she often did,
to play the "13th Nocturne." When I began
she drew a chair near to my right, and sat
leaning with her elbow on the end of the piano, her
chin resting on her hand, and her eyes reflecting
the emotions which the music awoke in her. An
impulse which I could not control rushed over me,
a wave of exaltation, the music under my fingers
sank almost to a whisper, and calling her for the
first time by her Christian name, but without
daring to look at her, I said, "I love you, I love you,
I love you." My fingers were trembling, so that
I ceased playing. I felt her hand creep to mine,
and when I looked at her her eyes were glistening
with tears. I understood, and could scarcely
resist the longing to take her in my arms; but I
remembered, remembered that which has been the
sacrificial altar of so much happiness--Duty; and
bending over her hand in mine, I said, "Yes, I
love you; but there is something more, too, that I
must tell you." Then I told her, in what words I
do not know, the truth. I felt her hand grow
cold, and when I looked up she was gazing at me
with a wild, fixed stare as though I was some
object she had never seen. Under the strange light
in her eyes I felt that I was growing black and
thick-featured and crimp-haired. She appeared
not to have comprehended what I had said. Her
lips trembled and she attempted to say something
to me; but the words stuck in her throat. Then
dropping her head on the piano she began to weep
with great sobs that shook her frail body. I tried
to console her, and blurted out incoherent words
of love; but this seemed only to increase her
distress, and when I left her she was still weeping.
When I got into the street I felt very much as
I did the night after meeting my father and sister
at the opera in Paris, even a similar desperate
inclination to get drunk; but my self-control was
stronger. This was the only time in my life that
I ever felt absolute regret at being colored, that I
cursed the drops of African blood in my veins, and
wished that I were really white. When I reached
my rooms I sat and smoked several cigars while I
tried to think out the significance of what had
occurred. I reviewed the whole history of our
acquaintance, recalled each smile she had given me,
each word she had said to me that nourished my
hope. I went over the scene we had just gone
through, trying to draw from it what was in my
favor and what was against me. I was rewarded
by feeling confident that she loved me, but I could
not estimate what was the effect upon her of my
confession. At last, nervous and unhappy, I
wrote her a letter, which I dropped into the
mail-box before going to bed, in which I said:
"I understand, understand even better than you,
and so I suffer even more than you. But why
should either of us suffer for what neither of us is
to blame? If there is any blame, it belongs to me,
and I can only make the old, yet strongest plea that
can be offered, I love you; and I know that my love,
my great love, infinitely overbalances that blame,
and blots it out. What is it that stands in the way
of our happiness? It is not what you feel or what
I feel; it is not what you are or what I am. It is
what others feel and are. But, oh! is that a fair
price? In all the endeavors and struggles of life,
in all our strivings and longings there is only one
thing worth seeking, only one thing worth winning,
and that is love. It is not always found; but when
it is, there is nothing in all the world for which it
can be profitably exchanged."
The second morning after, I received a note
from her which stated briefly that she was going
up in New Hampshire to spend the summer with
relatives there. She made no reference to what
had passed between us; nor did she say exactly
when she would leave the city. The note
contained no single word that gave me any clue to
her feelings. I could only gather hope from the
fact that she had written at all. On the same
evening, with a degree of trepidation which
rendered me almost frightened, I went to her house.
I met her mother, who told me that she had left
for the country that very afternoon. Her mother
treated me in her usual pleasant manner, which
fact greatly reassured me; and I left the house
with a vague sense of hope stirring in my breast,
which sprang from the conviction that she had
not yet divulged my secret. But that hope did
not remain with me long. I waited one, two,
three weeks, nervously examining my mail every
day, looking for some word from her. All of the
letters received by me seemed so insignificant, so
worthless, because there was none from her. The
slight buoyancy of spirit which I had felt
gradually dissolved into gloomy heartsickness. I
became preoccupied, I lost appetite, lost sleep, and
lost ambition. Several of my friends intimated
to me that perhaps I was working too hard.
She stayed away the whole summer. I did not
go to the house, but saw her father at various
times, and he was as friendly as ever. Even after
I knew that she was back in town I did not go to
see her. I determined to wait for some word or
sign. I had finally taken refuge and comfort in
my pride, pride which, I suppose, I came by
naturally enough.
The first time I saw her after her return was
one night at the theater. She and her mother sat
in company with a young man whom, I knew
slightly, not many seats away from me. Never
did she appear more beautiful; and yet, it may
have been my fancy, she seemed a trifle paler and
there was a suggestion of haggardness in her
countenance. But that only heightened her
beauty; the very delicacy of her charm melted
down the strength of my pride. My situation
made me feel weak and powerless, like a man
trying with his bare hands to break the iron bars of
his prison cell. When the performance was over
I hurried out and placed myself where, unobserved,
I could see her as she passed out. The
haughtiness of spirit in which I had sought relief was all
gone, and I was willing and ready to undergo any
humiliation.
Shortly afterward we met at a progressive card
party, and during the evening we were thrown
together at one of the tables as partners. This
was really our first meeting since the eventful
night at her house. Strangely enough, in spite
of our mutual nervousness, we won every trick of
the game, and one of our opponents jokingly
quoted the old saw, "Lucky at cards, unlucky in
love." Our eyes met, and I am sure that in the
momentary glance my whole soul went out to her
in one great plea. She lowered her eyes and
uttered a nervous little laugh. During the rest of
the game I fully merited the unexpressed and
expressed abuse of my various partners; for my eyes
followed her wherever she was, and I played
whatever card my fingers happened to touch.
Later in the evening she went to the piano and
began to play very softly, as to herself, the
opening bars of the 13th Nocturne. I felt that the
psychic moment of my life had come, a moment
which if lost could never be called back; and, in
as careless a manner as I could assume, I
sauntered over to the piano and stood almost bending
over her. She continued playing; but, in a voice
that was almost a whisper, she called me by my
Christian name and said, "I love you, I love you, I
love you." I took her place at the piano and
played the Nocturne in a manner that silenced the
chatter of the company both in and out of the
room; involuntarily closing it with the major
triad.
We were married the following spring, and went
to Europe for several months. It was a double
joy for me to be in France again under such
conditions.
First there came to us a little girl, with hair
and eyes dark like mine, but who is growing to
have ways like her mother. Two years later there
came a boy, who has my temperament, but is fair
like his mother, a little golden-headed god, a face
and head that would have delighted the heart of
an old Italian master. And this boy, with his
mother's eyes and features, occupies an inner
sanctuary of my heart; for it was for him that she
gave all; and that is the second sacred sorrow of
my life.
The few years of our married life were
supremely happy, and, perhaps she was even happier
than I; for after our marriage, in spite of all the
wealth of her love which she lavished upon me,
there came a new dread to haunt me, a dread
which I cannot explain and which was unfounded,
but one that never left me. I was in constant fear
that she would discover in me some shortcoming which she would unconsciously attribute to my
blood rather than to a failing of human nature.
But no cloud ever came to mar our life together;
her loss to me is irreparable. My children need
a mother's care, but I shall never marry again.
It is to my children that I have devoted my life.
I no longer have the same fear for myself of my
secret being found out; for since my wife's death
I have gradually dropped out of social life; but
there is nothing I would not suffer to keep the
"brand" from being placed upon them.
It is difficult for me to analyze my feelings
concerning my present position in the world.
Sometimes it seems to me that I have never really been
a Negro, that I have been only a privileged
spectator of their inner life; at other times I feel that
I have been a coward, a deserter, and I am
possessed by a strange longing for my mother's
people.
Several years ago I attended a great meeting
in the interest of Hampton Institute at Carnegie
Hall. The Hampton students sang the old songs
and awoke memories that left me sad. Among the
speakers were R. C. Ogden, Ex-Ambassador
Choate, and Mark Twain; but the greatest
interest of the audience was centered in Booker T.
Washington; and not because he so much
surpassed the others in eloquence, but because of
what he represented with so much earnestness and
faith. And it is this that all of that small but
gallant band of colored men who are publicly
fighting the cause of their race have behind them.
Even those who oppose them know that these men
have the eternal principles of right on their side,
and they will be victors even though they should
go down in defeat. Beside them I feel small and
selfish. I am an ordinarily successful white man
who has made a little money. They are men who
are making history and a race. I, too, might
have taken part in a work so glorious.
My love for my children makes me glad that I
am what I am, and keeps me from desiring to be
otherwise; and yet, when I sometimes open a
little box in which I still keep my fast yellowing
manuscripts, the only tangible remnants of a
vanished dream, a dead ambition, a sacrificed talent,
I cannot repress the thought, that, after all, I
have chosen the lesser part, that I have sold my
birthright for a mess of pottage.
Copyright Information: This book is reprinted here based upon public domain texts produced by Project Gutenberg, Eldritch Press, the Online Book Initiative, and various other sources. Unless otherwise noted, all texts are public domain in the United States.
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