<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p>After we decided to get married, and that as soon as ever we
could,—I being a Freshman at the ripe and mature age of, as
mentioned, just eighteen years, he a Senior, with no particular
prospects, not even sure as yet what field he would go
into,—we began discussing what we might do and where we might
go. Our main idea was to get as far away from everybody as we
could, and live the very fullest life we could, and at last we
decided on Persia. Why Persia? I cannot recall the steps now that
brought us to that conclusion. But I know that first Christmas I
sent Carl my picture in a frilled high-school graduation frock and
a silk Persian flag tucked behind it, and that flag remained always
the symbol for us that we would never let our lives get stale,
never lose the love of adventure, never "settle down,"
intellectually at any rate.</p>
<p>Can you see my father's face that sunny March day,—Charter
Day it was,—when we told him we were engaged? (My father
being the conventional, traditional sort who had never let me have
a real "caller" even, lest I become interested in boys and think of
matrimony too young!) Carl Parker was the first male person who was
ever allowed at my home in the evening. He came seldom, since I was
living in Berkeley most of the time, and anyway, we much preferred
prowling all over our end of creation, servant-girl-and-policeman
fashion. Also, when I married, according to father it was to be
some one, preferably an attorney of parts, about to become a judge,
with a large bank account. Instead, at eighteen, I and this
almost-unknown-to-him Senior stood before him and said, "We are
going to be married," or words to that general effect.
And—here is where I want you to think of the expression on my
conservative father's face.</p>
<p>Fairly early in the conversation he found breath to say, "And
what, may I ask, are your prospects?"</p>
<p>"None, just at present."</p>
<p>"And where, may I ask, are you planning to begin this married
career you seem to contemplate?"</p>
<p>"In Persia."</p>
<p>Can you see my father? "<i>Persia</i>?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Persia."</p>
<p>"And what, for goodness' sake, are you two going to do in
<i>Persia</i>?"</p>
<p>"We don't know just yet, of course, but we'll find
something."</p>
<p>I can see my father's point of view now, though I am not sure
but that I shall prefer a son-in-law for our daughter who would
contemplate absolute uncertainty in Persia in preference to an
assured legal profession in Oakland, California. It was two years
before my father became at all sympathetic, and that condition was
far from enthusiastic. So it was a great joy to me to have him say,
a few months before his death, "You know, Cornelia, I want you to
understand that if I had had the world to pick from I'd have chosen
Carl Parker for your husband. Your marriage is a constant source of
satisfaction to me."</p>
<p>I saw Carl Parker lose his temper once, and once only. It was
that first year that we knew each other. Because there was such a
difference between his age and mine, the girls in my sorority house
refused to believe there could be anything serious about our going
together so much, and took great pains to assure me in private that
of course Carl meant nothing by his attentions,—to which I
agreed volubly,—and they scolded him in private because it
would spoil a Freshman to have a Senior so attentive. We always
compared notes later, and were much amused.</p>
<p>But words were one thing, actions another. Since there could be
nothing serious in our relationship, naturally there was no reason
why we should be left alone. If there was to be a rally or a
concert, the Senior sitting at the head of the dinner-table would
ask, "How many are going to-night with a man?" Hands. "How many of
the girls are going together?" Hands. Then, to me, "Are you going
with Carl?" A faint "Yes." "Then we'll all go along with you." Carl
stood it twice—twice he beheld this cavalcade bear away in
our wake; then he gritted his teeth and announced, "Never
again!"</p>
<p>The next college occasion was a rally at the Greek Theatre.
Again it was announced at the table that all the unescorted ones
would accompany Carl and me. I foresaw trouble. When I came
downstairs later, with my hat and coat on, there stood Carl,
surrounded by about six girls, all hastily buttoning their gloves,
his sister, who knew no more of the truth about Carl and me than
the others, being one of them. Never had I seen such a look on
Carl's face, and I never did again. His feet were spread apart, his
jaw was set, and he was glaring. When he saw me he said, "Come on!"
and we dashed for the door.</p>
<p>Sister Helen flew after us. "But Carl—the other
girls!"</p>
<p>Carl stuck his head around the corner of the front door, called
defiantly, "<i>Damn</i> the other girls!" banged the door to, and
we fled. Never again were we molested.</p>
<p>Carl finished his Senior year, and a full year it was for him.
He was editor of the "Pelican," the University funny paper, and of
the "University of California Magazine," the most serious
publication on the campus outside the technical journals; he made
every "honor" organization there was to make (except the Phi Beta
Kappa); he and a fellow student wrote the successful Senior
Extravaganza; he was a reader in economics, and graduated with
honors. And he saw me every single day.</p>
<p>I feel like digressing here a moment, to assail that old
principle—which my father, along with countless others, held
so strongly—that a fellow who is really worth while ought to
know by his Junior year in college just what his life-work is to
be. A few with an early developed special aptitude do, but very
few. Carl entered college in August, 1896, in Engineering; but
after a term found that it had no further appeal for him. "But a
fellow ought to stick to a thing, whether he likes it or not!" If
one must be dogmatic, then I say, "A fellow should never work at
anything he does not like." One of the things in our case which
brought such constant criticism from relatives and friends was that
we changed around so much. Thank God we did! It took Carl Parker
until he was over thirty before he found just the work he loved the
most and in which his soul was content—university work. And
he was thirty-seven before he found just the phase of economic
study that fired him to his full enthusiasm—his loved field
of the application of psychology to economics. And some one would
have had him stick to engineering because he started in
engineering!</p>
<p>He hurt his knee broad-jumping in his Freshman year at college,
and finally had to leave, going to Phoenix, Arizona, and then back
to the Parker ranch at Vacaville for the better part of a year. The
family was away during that time, and Carl ran the place alone. He
returned to college in August, 1898, this time taking up mining.
After a year's study in mining he wanted the practical side. In the
summer of 1899 he worked underground in the Hidden Treasure Mine,
Placer county, California. In 1900 he left college again, going to
the gold and copper mines of Rossland, British Columbia. From
August, 1900, to May, 1901, he worked in four different mines. It
was with considerable feeling of pride that he always added, "I got
to be machine man before I quit."</p>
<p>It was at that time that he became a member of the Western
Federation of Miners—an historical fact which inimical
capitalists later endeavored to make use of from time to time to do
him harm. How I loved to listen by the hour to the stories of those
grilling days—up at four in the pitch-dark and snow, to crawl
to his job, with the blessing of a dear old Scotch landlady and a
"pastie"! He would tell our sons of tamping in the sticks of
dynamite, till their eyes bulged. The hundreds of times these last
six months I've wished I had in writing the stories of those
days—of all his days, from early Vacaville times on!
Sometimes it would be an old Vacaville crony who would appear, and
stories would fly of those boy times—of the exploits up Putah
Creek with Pee Wee Allen; of the prayer-meeting when Carl bet he
could out-pray the minister's son, and won; of the tediously
thought-out assaults upon an ancient hired man on the place, that
would fill a book and delight the heart of Tom Sawyer himself; and
how his mother used to sigh and add to it all, "If only he had
<i>ever</i> come home on time to his meals!" (And he has one son
just like him. Carl's brothers tell me: "Just give up trying to get
Jim home on time. Mamma tried every scheme a human could devise to
make Carl prompt for his meals, but nothing ever had the slightest
effect. Half an hour past dinner-time he'd still be five miles from
home.")</p>
<p>One article that recently appeared in a New York paper
began:—</p>
<p>"They say of him that when he was a small boy he displayed the
same tendencies that later on made him great in his chosen field.
His family possessed a distinct tendency toward conformity and
respectability, but Carl was a companion of every 'alley-bum' in
Vacaville. His respectable friends never won him away from his
insatiable interest in the under-dog. They now know it makes valid
his claim to achievement."</p>
<p>After the British Columbia mining days, he took what money he
had saved, and left for Idaho, where he was to meet his chum, Hal
Bradley, for his first Idaho trip—a dream of theirs for
years. The Idaho stories he could tell—oh, why can I not
remember them word for word? I have seen him hold a roomful of
students in Berlin absolutely spellbound over those
adventures—with a bit of Parker coloring, to be sure, which
no one ever objected to. I have seen him with a group of staid
faculty folk sitting breathless at his Clearwater yarns; and how he
loved to tell those tales! Three and a half months he and Hal were
in—hunting, fishing, jerking meat, trailing after lost
horses, having his dreams of Idaho come true. (If our sons fail to
have those dreams!)</p>
<p>When Hal returned to college, the <i>Wanderlust</i> was still
too strong in Carl; so he stopped off in Spokane, Washington,
penniless, to try pot-luck. There were more tales to delight a
gathering. In Spokane he took a hand at reporting, claiming to be a
person of large experience, since only those of large experience
were desired by the editor of the "Spokesman Review." He was given
sport, society, and the tenderloin to cover, at nine dollars a
week. As he never could go anywhere without making folks love him,
it was not long before he had his cronies among the "sports," kind
souls "in society" who took him in, and at least one strong, loyal
friend,—who called him "Bub," and gave him much excellent
advice that he often used to refer to,—who was the owner of
the biggest gambling-joint in town. (Spokane was wide open in those
days, and "some town.")</p>
<p>It was the society friends who seem to have saved his life, for
nine dollars did not go far, even then. I have heard his hostesses
tell of the meal he could consume. "But I'd been saving for it all
day, with just ten cents in my pocket." I met a pal of those days
who used to save Carl considerable of his nine dollars by
"smooching" his wash into his own home laundry.</p>
<p>About then Carl's older brother, Boyd, who was somewhat
fastidious, ran into him in Spokane. He tells how Carl insisted he
should spend the night at his room instead of going to a hotel.</p>
<p>"Is it far from here?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no!"</p>
<p>So they started out with Boyd's suitcase, and walked and walked
through the "darndest part of town you ever saw." Finally, after
crossing untold railroad tracks and ducking around sheds and
through alleys, they came to a rooming-house that was "a holy
fright." "It's all right inside," Carl explained.</p>
<p>When they reached his room, there was one not over-broad bed in
the corner, and a red head showing, snoring contentedly.</p>
<p>"Who's that?" the brother asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, a fellow I picked up somewhere."</p>
<p>"Where am I to sleep?"</p>
<p>"Right in here—the bed's plenty big enough for three!"</p>
<p>And Boyd says, though it was 2 A.M. and miles from anywhere, he
lit out of there as fast as he could move; and he adds, "I don't
believe he even knew that red-headed boy's name!"</p>
<p>The reporting went rather lamely it seemed, however. The editor
said that it read amateurish, and he felt he would have to make a
change. Carl made for some files where all the daily papers were
kept, and read and re-read the yellowest of the yellow. As luck
would have it, that very night a big fire broke out in a crowded
apartment house. It was not in Carl's "beat," but he decided to
cover it anyhow. Along with the firemen, he managed to get upon the
roof; he jumped here, he flew there, demolishing the only suit of
clothes he owned. But what an account he handed in! The editor
discarded entirely the story of the reporter sent to cover the
fire, ran in Carl's, word for word, and raised him to twelve
dollars a week.</p>
<p>But just as the crown of reportorial success was lighting on his
brow, his mother made it plain to him that she preferred to have
him return to college. He bought a ticket to Vacaville,—it
was just about Christmas time,—purchased a loaf of bread and
a can of sardines, and with thirty cents in his pocket, the extent
of his worldly wealth, he left for California, traveling in a day
coach all the way. I remember his story of how, about the end of
the second day of bread and sardines, he cold-bloodedly and with
aforethought cultivated a man opposite him, who looked as if he
could afford to eat; and how the man "came through" and asked Carl
if he would have dinner with him in the diner. To hear him tell
what and how much he ordered, and of the expression and depression
of the paying host! It tided him over until he reached home,
anyhow—never mind the host.</p>
<p>All his mining experience, plus the dark side of life, as
contrasted with society as he saw them both in Spokane, turned his
interest to the field of economics. And when he entered college the
next spring, it was to "major" in that subject.</p>
<p>May and June, 1903, he worked underground in the coal-mines of
Nanaimo. In July he met Nay Moran in Idaho for his second Idaho
camping-trip; and it was on his return from this outing that I met
him, and ate his jerked meat and loved him, and never stopped doing
that for one second.</p>
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