<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>XIX<br/> PROOF OF THE PUDDING</h2>
<p>Spring winked a vitreous optic at Editor Westbrook of the <i>Minerva
Magazine</i>, and deflected him from his course. He had lunched in his favorite
corner of a Broadway hotel, and was returning to his office when his feet
became entangled in the lure of the vernal coquette. Which is by way of saying
that he turned eastward in Twenty-sixth Street, safely forded the spring
freshet of vehicles in Fifth Avenue, and meandered along the walks of budding
Madison Square.</p>
<p>The lenient air and the settings of the little park almost formed a pastoral;
the color motif was green—the presiding shade at the creation of man and
vegetation.</p>
<p>The callow grass between the walks was the color of verdigris, a poisonous
green, reminiscent of the horde of derelict humans that had breathed upon the
soil during the summer and autumn. The bursting tree buds looked strangely
familiar to those who had botanized among the garnishings of the fish course of
a forty-cent dinner. The sky above was of that pale aquamarine tint that
ballroom poets rhyme with “true” and “Sue” and
“coo.” The one natural and frank color visible was the ostensible
green of the newly painted benches—a shade between the color of a pickled
cucumber and that of a last year’s fast-black cravenette raincoat. But,
to the city-bred eye of Editor Westbrook, the landscape appeared a masterpiece.</p>
<p>And now, whether you are of those who rush in, or of the gentle concourse that
fears to tread, you must follow in a brief invasion of the editor’s mind.</p>
<p>Editor Westbrook’s spirit was contented and serene. The April number of
the <i>Minerva</i> had sold its entire edition before the tenth day of the
month—a newsdealer in Keokuk had written that he could have sold fifty
copies more if he had ’em. The owners of the magazine had raised his (the
editor’s) salary; he had just installed in his home a jewel of a recently
imported cook who was afraid of policemen; and the morning papers had published
in full a speech he had made at a publishers’ banquet. Also there were
echoing in his mind the jubilant notes of a splendid song that his charming
young wife had sung to him before he left his up-town apartment that morning.
She was taking enthusiastic interest in her music of late, practising early and
diligently. When he had complimented her on the improvement in her voice she
had fairly hugged him for joy at his praise. He felt, too, the benign, tonic
medicament of the trained nurse, Spring, tripping softly adown the wards of the
convalescent city.</p>
<p>While Editor Westbrook was sauntering between the rows of park benches (already
filling with vagrants and the guardians of lawless childhood) he felt his
sleeve grasped and held. Suspecting that he was about to be panhandled, he
turned a cold and unprofitable face, and saw that his captor
was—Dawe—Shackleford Dawe, dingy, almost ragged, the genteel
scarcely visible in him through the deeper lines of the shabby.</p>
<p>While the editor is pulling himself out of his surprise, a flashlight biography
of Dawe is offered.</p>
<p>He was a fiction writer, and one of Westbrook’s old acquaintances. At one
time they might have called each other old friends. Dawe had some money in
those days, and lived in a decent apartment house near Westbrook’s. The
two families often went to theatres and dinners together. Mrs. Dawe and Mrs.
Westbrook became “dearest” friends. Then one day a little tentacle
of the octopus, just to amuse itself, ingurgitated Dawe’s capital, and he
moved to the Gramercy Park neighborhood where one, for a few groats per week,
may sit upon one’s trunk under eight-branched chandeliers and opposite
Carrara marble mantels and watch the mice play upon the floor. Dawe thought to
live by writing fiction. Now and then he sold a story. He submitted many to
Westbrook. The <i>Minerva</i> printed one or two of them; the rest were
returned. Westbrook sent a careful and conscientious personal letter with each
rejected manuscript, pointing out in detail his reasons for considering it
unavailable. Editor Westbrook had his own clear conception of what constituted
good fiction. So had Dawe. Mrs. Dawe was mainly concerned about the
constituents of the scanty dishes of food that she managed to scrape together.
One day Dawe had been spouting to her about the excellencies of certain French
writers. At dinner they sat down to a dish that a hungry schoolboy could have
encompassed at a gulp. Dawe commented.</p>
<p>“It’s Maupassant hash,” said Mrs. Dawe. “It may not be
art, but I do wish you would do a five-course Marion Crawford serial with an
Ella Wheeler Wilcox sonnet for dessert. I’m hungry.”</p>
<p>As far as this from success was Shackleford Dawe when he plucked Editor
Westbrook’s sleeve in Madison Square. That was the first time the editor
had seen Dawe in several months.</p>
<p>“Why, Shack, is this you?” said Westbrook, somewhat awkwardly, for
the form of his phrase seemed to touch upon the other’s changed
appearance.</p>
<p>“Sit down for a minute,” said Dawe, tugging at his sleeve.
“This is my office. I can’t come to yours, looking as I do. Oh, sit
down—you won’t be disgraced. Those half-plucked birds on the other
benches will take you for a swell porch-climber. They won’t know you are
only an editor.”</p>
<p>“Smoke, Shack?” said Editor Westbrook, sinking cautiously upon the
virulent green bench. He always yielded gracefully when he did yield.</p>
<p>Dawe snapped at the cigar as a kingfisher darts at a sunperch, or a girl pecks
at a chocolate cream.</p>
<p>“I have just—” began the editor.</p>
<p>“Oh, I know; don’t finish,” said Dawe. “Give me a
match. You have just ten minutes to spare. How did you manage to get past my
office-boy and invade my sanctum? There he goes now, throwing his club at a dog
that couldn’t read the ‘Keep off the Grass’ signs.”</p>
<p>“How goes the writing?” asked the editor.
“Look at me,” said Dawe, “for your answer. Now don’t
put on that embarrassed, friendly-but-honest look and ask me why I don’t
get a job as a wine agent or a cab driver. I’m in the fight to a finish.
I know I can write good fiction and I’ll force you fellows to admit it
yet. I’ll make you change the spelling of ‘regrets’ to
‘c-h-e-q-u-e’ before I’m done with you.”</p>
<p>Editor Westbrook gazed through his nose-glasses with a sweetly sorrowful,
omniscient, sympathetic, skeptical expression—the copyrighted expression
of the editor beleagured by the unavailable contributor.</p>
<p>“Have you read the last story I sent you—‘The Alarum of the
Soul’?” asked Dawe.</p>
<p>“Carefully. I hesitated over that story, Shack, really I did. It had some
good points. I was writing you a letter to send with it when it goes back to
you. I regret—”</p>
<p>“Never mind the regrets,” said Dawe, grimly. “There’s
neither salve nor sting in ’em any more. What I want to know is
<i>why</i>. Come now; out with the good points first.”</p>
<p>“The story,” said Westbrook, deliberately, after a suppressed sigh,
“is written around an almost original plot. Characterization—the
best you have done. Construction—almost as good, except for a few weak
joints which might be strengthened by a few changes and touches. It was a good
story, except—”</p>
<p>“I can write English, can’t I?” interrupted Dawe.</p>
<p>“I have always told you,” said the editor, “that you had a
style.”</p>
<p>“Then the trouble is—”</p>
<p>“Same old thing,” said Editor Westbrook. “You work up to your
climax like an artist. And then you turn yourself into a photographer. I
don’t know what form of obstinate madness possesses you, but that is what
you do with everything that you write. No, I will retract the comparison with
the photographer. Now and then photography, in spite of its impossible
perspective, manages to record a fleeting glimpse of truth. But you spoil every
dénouement by those flat, drab, obliterating strokes of your brush that
I have so often complained of. If you would rise to the literary pinnacle of
your dramatic senses, and paint them in the high colors that art requires, the
postman would leave fewer bulky, self-addressed envelopes at your door.”</p>
<p>“Oh, fiddles and footlights!” cried Dawe, derisively.
“You’ve got that old sawmill drama kink in your brain yet. When the
man with the black mustache kidnaps golden-haired Bessie you are bound to have
the mother kneel and raise her hands in the spotlight and say: ‘May high
heaven witness that I will rest neither night nor day till the heartless
villain that has stolen me child feels the weight of another’s
vengeance!’”</p>
<p>Editor Westbrook conceded a smile of impervious complacency.</p>
<p>“I think,” said he, “that in real life the woman would
express herself in those words or in very similar ones.”</p>
<p>“Not in a six hundred nights’ run anywhere but on the stage,”
said Dawe hotly. “I’ll tell you what she’d say in real life.
She’d say: ‘What! Bessie led away by a strange man? Good Lord!
It’s one trouble after another! Get my other hat, I must hurry around to
the police-station. Why wasn’t somebody looking after her, I’d like
to know? For God’s sake, get out of my way or I’ll never get ready.
Not that hat—the brown one with the velvet bows. Bessie must have been
crazy; she’s usually shy of strangers. Is that too much powder? Lordy!
How I’m upset!’</p>
<p>“That’s the way she’d talk,” continued Dawe.
“People in real life don’t fly into heroics and blank verse at
emotional crises. They simply can’t do it. If they talk at all on such
occasions they draw from the same vocabulary that they use every day, and
muddle up their words and ideas a little more, that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Shack,” said Editor Westbrook impressively, “did you ever
pick up the mangled and lifeless form of a child from under the fender of a
street car, and carry it in your arms and lay it down before the distracted
mother? Did you ever do that and listen to the words of grief and despair as
they flowed spontaneously from her lips?”</p>
<p>“I never did,” said Dawe. “Did you?”</p>
<p>“Well, no,” said Editor Westbrook, with a slight frown. “But
I can well imagine what she would say.”</p>
<p>“So can I,” said Dawe.</p>
<p>And now the fitting time had come for Editor Westbrook to play the oracle and
silence his opinionated contributor. It was not for an unarrived fictionist to
dictate words to be uttered by the heroes and heroines of the <i>Minerva
Magazine</i>, contrary to the theories of the editor thereof.</p>
<p>“My dear Shack,” said he, “if I know anything of life I know
that every sudden, deep and tragic emotion in the human heart calls forth an
apposite, concordant, conformable and proportionate expression of feeling. How
much of this inevitable accord between expression and feeling should be
attributed to nature, and how much to the influence of art, it would be
difficult to say. The sublimely terrible roar of the lioness that has been
deprived of her cubs is dramatically as far above her customary whine and purr
as the kingly and transcendent utterances of Lear are above the level of his
senile vaporings. But it is also true that all men and women have what may be
called a sub-conscious dramatic sense that is awakened by a sufficiently deep
and powerful emotion—a sense unconsciously acquired from literature and
the stage that prompts them to express those emotions in language befitting
their importance and histrionic value.”</p>
<p>“And in the name of the seven sacred saddle-blankets of Sagittarius,
where did the stage and literature get the stunt?” asked Dawe.</p>
<p>“From life,” answered the editor, triumphantly.</p>
<p>The story writer rose from the bench and gesticulated eloquently but dumbly. He
was beggared for words with which to formulate adequately his dissent.</p>
<p>On a bench nearby a frowzy loafer opened his red eyes and perceived that his
moral support was due a downtrodden brother.</p>
<p>“Punch him one, Jack,” he called hoarsely to Dawe.
“W’at’s he come makin’ a noise like a penny arcade for
amongst gen’lemen that comes in the square to set and think?”</p>
<p>Editor Westbrook looked at his watch with an affected show of leisure.</p>
<p>“Tell me,” asked Dawe, with truculent anxiety, “what especial
faults in ‘The Alarum of the Soul’ caused you to throw it
down?”</p>
<p>“When Gabriel Murray,” said Westbrook, “goes to his telephone
and is told that his fiancée has been shot by a burglar, he says—I
do not recall the exact words, but—”</p>
<p>“I do,” said Dawe. “He says: ‘Damn Central; she always
cuts me off.’ (And then to his friend) ‘Say, Tommy, does a
thirty-two bullet make a big hole? It’s kind of hard luck, ain’t
it? Could you get me a drink from the sideboard, Tommy? No; straight; nothing
on the side.’”</p>
<p>“And again,” continued the editor, without pausing for argument,
“when Berenice opens the letter from her husband informing her that he
has fled with the manicure girl, her words are—let me see—”</p>
<p>“She says,” interposed the author: “‘Well, what do you
think of that!’”</p>
<p>“Absurdly inappropriate words,” said Westbrook, “presenting
an anti-climax—plunging the story into hopeless bathos. Worse yet; they
mirror life falsely. No human being ever uttered banal colloquialisms when
confronted by sudden tragedy.”</p>
<p>“Wrong,” said Dawe, closing his unshaven jaws doggedly. “I
say no man or woman ever spouts ‘high-falutin’ talk when they go up
against a real climax. They talk naturally and a little worse.”</p>
<p>The editor rose from the bench with his air of indulgence and inside
information.</p>
<p>“Say, Westbrook,” said Dawe, pinning him by the lapel, “would
you have accepted ‘The Alarum of the Soul’ if you had believed that
the actions and words of the characters were true to life in the parts of the
story that we discussed?”</p>
<p>“It is very likely that I would, if I believed that way,” said the
editor. “But I have explained to you that I do not.”</p>
<p>“If I could prove to you that I am right?”</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, Shack, but I’m afraid I haven’t time to
argue any further just now.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to argue,” said Dawe. “I want to
demonstrate to you from life itself that my view is the correct one.”</p>
<p>“How could you do that?” asked Westbrook, in a surprised tone.</p>
<p>“Listen,” said the writer, seriously. “I have thought of a
way. It is important to me that my theory of true-to-life fiction be recognized
as correct by the magazines. I’ve fought for it for three years, and
I’m down to my last dollar, with two months’ rent due.”</p>
<p>“I have applied the opposite of your theory,” said the editor,
“in selecting the fiction for the <i>Minerva Magazine</i>. The
circulation has gone up from ninety thousand to—”</p>
<p>“Four hundred thousand,” said Dawe. “Whereas it should have
been boosted to a million.”</p>
<p>“You said something to me just now about demonstrating your pet
theory.”</p>
<p>“I will. If you’ll give me about half an hour of your time
I’ll prove to you that I am right. I’ll prove it by Louise.”</p>
<p>“Your wife!” exclaimed Westbrook. “How?”</p>
<p>“Well, not exactly by her, but <i>with</i> her,” said Dawe.
“Now, you know how devoted and loving Louise has always been. She thinks
I’m the only genuine preparation on the market that bears the old
doctor’s signature. She’s been fonder and more faithful than ever,
since I’ve been cast for the neglected genius part.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, she is a charming and admirable life companion,” agreed
the editor. “I remember what inseparable friends she and Mrs. Westbrook
once were. We are both lucky chaps, Shack, to have such wives. You must bring
Mrs. Dawe up some evening soon, and we’ll have one of those informal
chafing-dish suppers that we used to enjoy so much.”</p>
<p>“Later,” said Dawe. “When I get another shirt. And now
I’ll tell you my scheme. When I was about to leave home after
breakfast—if you can call tea and oatmeal breakfast—Louise told me
she was going to visit her aunt in Eighty-ninth Street. She said she would
return at three o’clock. She is always on time to a minute. It is
now—”</p>
<p>Dawe glanced toward the editor’s watch pocket.</p>
<p>“Twenty-seven minutes to three,” said Westbrook, scanning his
time-piece.</p>
<p>“We have just enough time,” said Dawe. “We will go to my flat
at once. I will write a note, address it to her and leave it on the table where
she will see it as she enters the door. You and I will be in the dining-room
concealed by the portières. In that note I’ll say that I have fled
from her forever with an affinity who understands the needs of my artistic soul
as she never did. When she reads it we will observe her actions and hear her
words. Then we will know which theory is the correct one—yours or
mine.”</p>
<p>“Oh, never!” exclaimed the editor, shaking his head. “That
would be inexcusably cruel. I could not consent to have Mrs. Dawe’s
feelings played upon in such a manner.”</p>
<p>“Brace up,” said the writer. “I guess I think as much of her
as you do. It’s for her benefit as well as mine. I’ve got to get a
market for my stories in some way. It won’t hurt Louise. She’s
healthy and sound. Her heart goes as strong as a ninety-eight-cent watch.
It’ll last for only a minute, and then I’ll step out and explain to
her. You really owe it to me to give me the chance, Westbrook.”</p>
<p>Editor Westbrook at length yielded, though but half willingly. And in the half
of him that consented lurked the vivisectionist that is in all of us. Let him
who has not used the scalpel rise and stand in his place. Pity ’tis that
there are not enough rabbits and guinea-pigs to go around.</p>
<p>The two experimenters in Art left the Square and hurried eastward and then to
the south until they arrived in the Gramercy neighborhood. Within its high iron
railings the little park had put on its smart coat of vernal green, and was
admiring itself in its fountain mirror. Outside the railings the hollow square
of crumbling houses, shells of a bygone gentry, leaned as if in ghostly gossip
over the forgotten doings of the vanished quality. <i>Sic transit gloria
urbis</i>.</p>
<p>A block or two north of the Park, Dawe steered the editor again eastward, then,
after covering a short distance, into a lofty but narrow flathouse burdened
with a floridly over-decorated façade. To the fifth story they toiled,
and Dawe, panting, pushed his latch-key into the door of one of the front
flats.</p>
<p>When the door opened Editor Westbrook saw, with feelings of pity, how meanly
and meagerly the rooms were furnished.</p>
<p>“Get a chair, if you can find one,” said Dawe, “while I hunt
up pen and ink. Hello, what’s this? Here’s a note from Louise. She
must have left it there when she went out this morning.”</p>
<p>He picked up an envelope that lay on the centre-table and tore it open. He
began to read the letter that he drew out of it; and once having begun it aloud
he so read it through to the end. These are the words that Editor Westbrook
heard:</p>
<p class="letter">
“D<small>EAR</small> S<small>HACKLEFORD</small>:<br/>
<br/>
By the time you get this I will be about a hundred miles away and still
a-going. I’ve got a place in the chorus of the Occidental Opera Co., and
we start on the road to-day at twelve o’clock. I didn’t want to
starve to death, and so I decided to make my own living. I’m not coming
back. Mrs. Westbrook is going with me. She said she was tired of living with a
combination phonograph, iceberg and dictionary, and she’s not coming
back, either. We’ve been practising the songs and dances for two months
on the quiet. I hope you will be successful, and get along all right!
Good-bye.<br/>
<br/>
“L<small>OUISE</small>.”</p>
<p>Dawe dropped the letter, covered his face with his trembling hands, and cried
out in a deep, vibrating voice:</p>
<p><i>“My God, why hast thou given me this cup to drink? Since she is false,
then let Thy Heaven’s fairest gifts, faith and love, become the jesting
by-words of traitors and fiends!”</i></p>
<p>Editor Westbrook’s glasses fell to the floor. The fingers of one hand
fumbled with a button on his coat as he blurted between his pale lips:</p>
<p><i>“Say, Shack, ain’t that a hell of a note? Wouldn’t that
knock you off your perch, Shack? Ain’t it hell, now,
Shack—ain’t it?”</i></p>
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