We are starting a real publishing house in Chicago and we
need your support.”
There was no resisting such an appeal. Having cast in my lot with
Chicago, it was inevitable that I should ally myself with its newest
literary enterprise, a business which expressed something of my faith
in the west. Not only did I turn over to Stone the rights to Main
Traveled Roads, together with a volume of verse—I promised him a
book of essays—and a novel.
These aspiring young collegians were joined in '95 by another
Harvard man, a tall, dark, smooth-faced youth named Harrison Rhodes,
and when, of an afternoon these three missionaries of culture each in a
long frock coat, tightly buttoned, with cane, gloves and shining silk
hats, paced side by side down the Lake Shore Drive they had the effect
of an esthetic invasion, but their crowning audacity was a printed
circular which announced that tea would be served in their office in
the Caxton Building on Saturday afternoons! Finally as if to convince
the city of their utter madness, this intrepid trio adventured the
founding of a literary magazine to be called The Chap Book!
Culture on the Middle Border had at last begun to hum!
Despite the smiles of elderly scoffers, the larger number of my
esthetic associates felt deeply grateful to these devoted literary
pioneers, whose taste, enterprise and humor were all sorely needed “in
our midst.” If not precisely cosmopolitan they were at least in touch
with London.
Early in '94 they brought out a lovely edition of Main Traveled
Roads and a new book called Prairie Songs. Neither of these
volumes sold—the firm had no special facilities for selling books, but
their print and binding delighted me, and in the autumn of the same
year I gladly let them publish a collection of essays called
Crumbling Idols, a small screed which aroused an astonishing tumult
of comment, mostly antagonistic. Walter Page, editor of the Forum, in which one of the key-note chapters appeared, told me that over a
thousand editorials were written upon my main thesis.
In truth the attention which this iconoclastic declaration of faith
received at the hands of critics was out of all proportion to its size.
Its explosive power was amazing. As I read it over now, with the clamor
of “Cubism,” “Imagism” and “Futurism” in my ears, it seems a harmless
and on the whole rather reasonable plea for National Spirit and the
freedom of youth, but in those days all of my books had mysterious
power for arousing opposition, and most reviews of my work were so
savage that I made a point of not reading them for the reason that they
either embittered me, or were so lacking in discrimination as to have
no value. In spite of all appearances to the contrary, I hated
contention, therefore I left consideration of these assaults entirely
to my publishers. (I learned afterwards that Miss Taft was greatly
interested in Crumbling Idols. Perhaps she assumed that I was
writing at her.)
Meanwhile in Rose of Dutcher's Coolly, the manuscript of
which I had carried about with me on many of my lecturing trips, I was
attempting to embody something of Chicago life, a task which I found
rather difficult. After nine years of life in Boston, the city by the
lake seemed depressingly drab and bleak, and my only hope lay in
representing it not as I saw it, but as it appeared to my Wisconsin
heroine who came to it from Madison and who perceived in it the mystery
and the beauty which I had lost. To Rose, fresh from the farm, it was a
great capital, and the lake a majestic sea. As in A Spoil of Office, I had tried to maintain the point of view of a countryman, so now I
attempted to embody in Rose of Dutcher's Coolly, a picture of
Chicago as an ambitious young girl from the Wisconsin farm would see
it.
In my story Rose Dutcher made her way from Bluff Siding to the State
University, and from Madison to a fellowship in the artistic and
literary Chicago, of which I was a part. Her progress was intended to
be typical. I said, “I will depict the life of a girl who has ambitious
desires, and works toward her goal as blindly and as determinedly as a
boy.” It was a new thesis so far as Western girls were concerned, and I
worked long and carefully on the problem, carrying the manuscript back
and forth with me for two years.
As spring came on, I again put “Rose” in my trunk and hastened back
to West Salem in order to build the two-story bay-window which I had
minutely planned, which was, indeed, almost as important as my story
and much more exciting. To begin the foundation of that extension was
like setting in motion the siege of a city! It was
extravagant—reckless—nevertheless assisted by a neighbor who was
clever at any kind of building, I set to work in boyish, illogical
enthusiasm.
Mother watched us tear out and rebuild with uneasy glance but when
the windows were in and a new carpet with an entire “parlor suite” to
match, arrived from the city, her alarm became vocal. “You mustn't
spend your money for things like these. We can't afford such luxuries.”
“Don't you worry about my money,” I replied, “There's more where I
found this. There's nothing too good for you, mother.”
How sweet and sane and peaceful and afar off those blessed days seem
to me as I muse over this page. At the village shops sirloin steak was
ten cents a pound, chickens fifty cents a pair and as for eggs—I
couldn't give ours away, at least in the early summer,—and all about
us were gardens laden with fruit and vegetables, more than we could eat
or sell or feed to the pigs. Wars were all in the past and life a
simple matter of working out one's own individual problems. Never again
shall I feel that confidence in the future, that joy in the present. I
had no doubts—none that I can recall.
My brother came again in June and joyfully aided me in my esthetic
pioneering. We amazed the town by seeding down a potato patch and
laying out a tennis court thereon, the first play-ground of its kind in
Hamilton township, and often as we played of an afternoon, farmers on
their way to market with loads of grain or hogs, paused to watch our
game and make audible comment on our folly. We also bought a
lawn-mower, the second in the town, and shaved our front yard. We took
down the old picket fence in front of the house and we planted trees
and flowers, until at last some of the elderly folk disgustedly
exclaimed, “What won't them Garland boys do next!”
Without doubt we “started something” in the sleepy village. Others
following our example went so far as to take down their own fences and
to buy lawn-mowers. That we were planning waterworks and a bath-room
remained a secret—this was too revolutionary to be spoken of for the
present. We were forced to make progress slowly.
Rose of Dutcher's Coolly, published during this year, was
attacked quite as savagely as Main Traveled Roads had been, and
this criticism saddened and depressed me. With a foolish notion that
the Middle West should take a moderate degree of pride in me, I
resented this condemnation. “Am I not making in my small way the same
sort of historical record of the west that Whittier and Holmes secured
for New England?” I asked my friends.
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