
IV

THE BABE, TOMMIE, DIED.4 He went
away in a white, insignificant coffin, his small waxen hand
clutching a flower that the girl, Maggie, had stolen from an
Italian.
She and Jimmie lived.
The inexperienced fibres of the boy’s eyes were
hardened at an early age. He became a young man of leather. He
lived some red yearsf without
laboring. During that time his sneer became chronic. He studied
human nature in the gutter, and found it no worse than he thought
he had reason to believe it. He never conceived a respect for the
world, because he had begun with no idols that it had
smashed.
He clad his soul in armor by means of happening
hilariously in at a mission church where a man composed his sermons
of “yous.” While they got warm at the stove, he told his hearers
just where he calculated they stood with the Lord. Many of the
sinners were impatient over the pictured depths of their
degradation. They were waiting for soup-tickets.
A reader of words of wind-demons might have been
able to see the portions of a dialogue pass to and fro between the
exhorter and his hearers.
“You are damned,” said the preacher. And the reader
of sounds might have seen the reply go forth from the ragged
people: “Where’s our soup?”
Jimmie and a companion sat in a rear seat and
commented upon the things that didn’t concern them, with all the
freedom of English gentlemen. When they grew thirsty and went out
their minds confused the speaker with Christ.
Momentarily, Jimmie was sullen with thoughts of a
hopeless altitude where grew fruit. His companion said that if he
should ever meet God he would ask for a million dollars and a
bottle of beer.
Jimmie’s occupation for a long time was to stand on
street-corners and watch the world go by, dreaming blood-red dreams
at the passing of pretty women. He menaced mankind at the
intersections of streets.
On the corners he was in life and of life. The
world was going on and he was there to perceive it.
He maintained a belligerent attitude toward all
well-dressed men. To him fine raimentg was
allied to weakness, and all good coats covered faint hearts. He and
his order were kings, to a certain extent, over the men of
untarnished clothes, because these latter dreaded, perhaps, to be
either killed or laughed at.
Above all things he despised obvious Christians and
ciphersh with
the chrysanthemums of aristocracy in their button-holes. He
considered himself above both of these classes. He was afraid of
neither the devil nor the leader of society.
When he had a dollar in his pocket his satisfaction
with existence was the greatest thing in the world. So, eventually,
he felt obliged to work. His father died and his mother’s years
were divided up into periods of thirty days.5
He became a truck driver.i He was
given the charge of a painstaking pair of horses and a large
rattling truck. He invaded the turmoil and tumble of the down-town
streets and learned to breathe maledictory defiance at the police
who occasionally used to climb up, drag him from his perch and beat
him.
In the lower part of the city he daily involved
himself in hideous tangles. If he and his team chanced to be in the
rear he preserved a demeanor of serenity, crossing his legs and
bursting forth into yells when foot passengers took dangerous dives
beneath the noses of his champing horses. He smoked his pipe calmly
for he knew that his pay was marching on.
If in the front and the key-truck of chaos, he
entered terrifically into the quarrel that was raging to and fro
among the drivers on their high seats, and sometimes roared oaths
and violently got himself arrested.
After a time his sneer grew so that it turned its
glare upon all things. He became so sharp that he believed in
nothing. To him the police were always actuated by malignant
impulses and the rest of the world was composed, for the most part,
of despicable creatures who were all trying to take advantage of
him and with whom, in defense, he was obliged to quarrel on all
possible occasions. He himself occupied a downtrodden position that
had a private but distinct element of grandeur in its
isolation.
The most complete cases of aggravated idiocy were,
to his mind, rampant upon the front platforms of all of the street
cars. At first his tongue strove with these beings, but he
eventually was superior. He became immured like an African cow. In
him grew a majestic contempt for those strings of street cars that
followed him like intent bugs.
He fell into the habit, when starting on a long
journey, of fixing his eye on a high and distant object, commanding
his horses to begin, and then going into a sort of a trance of
observation. Multitudes of drivers might howl in his rear, and
passengers might load him with opprobrium; he would not awaken
until some blue policeman turned red and began to frenziedly tear
bridles and beat the soft noses of the responsible horses.
When he paused to contemplate the attitude of the
police toward himself and his fellows, he believed that they were
the only men in the city who had no rights. When driving about, he
felt that he was held liable by the police for anything that might
occur in the streets, and was the common prey of all energetic
officials. In revenge, he resolved never to move out of the way of
anything, until formidable circumstances, or a much larger man than
himself forced him to it.
Foot-passengers were mere pestering flies with an
insane disregard for their legs and his convenience. He could not
conceive their maniacal desires to cross the streets. Their madness
smote him with eternal amazement. He was continually storming at
them from his throne. He sat aloft and denounced their frantic
leaps, plunges, dives and straddles.
When they would thrust at, or parry, the noses of
his champing horses, making them swing their heads and move their
feet, disturbing a solid dreamy repose, he swore at the men as
fools, for he himself could perceive that Providence had caused it
clearly to be written, that he and his team had the unalienable
right to stand in the proper path of the sun chariot, and if they
so minded, obstruct its mission or take a wheel off
And, perhaps, if the god-driver had an ungovernable
desire to step down, put up his flame-colored fists and manfully
dispute the right of way, he would have probably been immediately
opposed by a scowling mortal with two sets of very hard
knuckles.
It is possible, perhaps, that this young man would
have derided, in an axle-wide alley, the approach of a flying ferry
boat. Yet he achieved a respect for a fire engine.6 As
one charged toward his truck, he would drive fearfully upon a
sidewalk, threatening untold people with annihilation. When an
engine would strike a mass of blocked trucks, splitting it into
fragments, as a blow annihilates a cake of ice, Jimmie’s team could
usually be observed high and safe, with whole wheels, on the
sidewalk. The fearful coming of the engine could break up the most
intricate muddle of heavy vehicles at which the police had been
swearing for the half of an hour.
A fire-engine was enshrined in his heart as an
appalling thing that he loved with a distant dog-like devotion.
They had been known to overturn street-cars. Those leaping horses,
striking sparks from the cobbles in their forward lunge, were
creatures to be ineffably admired. The clang of the gong pierced
his breast like a noise of remembered war.
When Jimmie was a little boy, he began to be
arrested. Before he reached a great age, he had a fair
record.
He developed too great a tendency to climb down
from his truck and fight with other drivers. He had been in quite a
number of miscellaneous fights, and in some general barroom rows
that had become known to the police. Once he had been arrested for
assaulting a Chinaman. Two women in different parts of the city,
and entirely unknown to each other, caused him considerable
annoyance by breaking forth, simultaneously, at fateful intervals,
into wailings about marriage and support and infants.
Nevertheless, he had, on a certain star-lit
evening, said wonderingly and quite reverently: “Deh moon looks
like hell, don’t it?”7