<h2> <SPAN name="Six" id="Six"></SPAN><i>Six</i> </h2>
<h2> COTTON </h2>
<p>The cry of the naked was sweeping the world. From the peasant
toiling in Russia, the lady lolling in London, the chieftain
burning in Africa, and the Esquimaux freezing in Alaska; from
long lines of hungry men, from patient sad-eyed women, from old
folk and creeping children went up the cry, "Clothes, clothes!"
Far away the wide black land that belts the South, where Miss
Smith worked and Miss Taylor drudged and Bles and Zora dreamed,
the dense black land sensed the cry and heard the bound of
answering life within the vast dark breast. All that dark earth
heaved in mighty travail with the bursting bolls of the cotton
while black attendant earth spirits swarmed above, sweating and
crooning to its birth pains.</p>
<p>After the miracle of the bursting bolls, when the land was
brightest with the piled mist of the Fleece, and when the cry of
the naked was loudest in the mouths of men, a sudden cloud of
workers swarmed between the Cotton and the Naked, spinning and
weaving and sewing and carrying the Fleece and mining and minting
and bringing the Silver till the Song of Service filled the world
and the poetry of Toil was in the souls of the laborers. Yet ever
and always there were tense silent white-faced men moving in that
swarm who felt no poetry and heard no song, and one of these was
John Taylor.</p>
<p>He was tall, thin, cold, and tireless and he moved among the
Watchers of this World of Trade. In the rich Wall Street offices
of Grey and Easterly, Brokers, Mr. Taylor, as chief and
confidential clerk surveyed the world's nakedness and the supply
of cotton to clothe it. The object of his watching was frankly
stated to himself and to his world. He purposed going into
business neither for his own health nor for the healing or
clothing of the peoples but to apply his knowledge of the world's
nakedness and of black men's toil in such a way as to bring
himself wealth. In this he was but following the teaching of his
highest ideal, lately deceased, Mr. Job Grey. Mr. Grey had so
successfully manipulated the cotton market that while black men
who made the cotton starved in Alabama and white men who bought
it froze in Siberia, he himself sat—</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class='stanza'>
<div>
<i>"High on a throne of royal state</i></div>
<div>
<i>That far outshone the wealth</i></div>
<div>
<i>Of Ormuz or of Ind.</i>"</div>
</div></div>
<p>Notwithstanding this he died eventually, leaving the burden of
his wealth to his bewildered wife, and his business to the astute
Mr. Easterly; not simply to Mr. Easterly, but in a sense to his
spiritual heir, John Taylor.</p>
<p>To be sure Mr. Taylor had but a modest salary and no financial
interest in the business, but he had knowledge and business
daring—effrontery even—and the determination was
fixed in his mind to be a millionaire at no distant date. Some
cautious fliers on the market gave him enough surplus to send his
sister Mary through the high school of his country home in New
Hampshire, and afterward through Wellesley College; although just
why a woman should want to go through college was inexplicable to
John Taylor, and he was still uncertain as to the wisdom of his
charity.</p>
<p>When she had an offer to teach in the South, John Taylor hurried
her off for two reasons: he was profoundly interested in the
cotton-belt, and there she might be of service to him; and
secondly, he had spent all the money on her that he intended to
at present, and he wanted her to go to work. As an investment he
did not consider Mary a success. Her letters intimated very
strongly her intention not to return to Miss Smith's School; but
they also brought information—disjointed and incomplete, to
be sure—which mightily interested Mr. Taylor and sent him
to atlases, encyclop�dias, and census-reports. When he went to
that little lunch with old Mrs. Grey he was not sure that he
wanted his sister to leave the cotton-belt just yet. After lunch
he was sure that he did not want her to leave.</p>
<p>The rich Mrs. Grey was at the crisis of her fortunes. She was an
elderly lady, in those uncertain years beyond fifty, and had been
left suddenly with more millions than she could easily count.
Personally she was inclined to spend her money in bettering the
world right off, in such ways as might from time to time seem
attractive. This course, to her husband's former partner and
present executor, Mr. Edward Easterly, was not only foolish but
wicked, and, incidentally, distinctly unprofitable to him. He had
expressed himself strongly to Mrs. Grey last night at dinner and
had reinforced his argument by a pointed letter written this
morning.</p>
<p>To John Taylor Mrs. Grey's disposal of the income was
unbelievable blasphemy against the memory of a mighty man. He did
not put this in words to Mrs. Grey—he was only head clerk
in her late husband's office—but he became watchful and
thoughtful. He ate his soup in silence when she descanted on
various benevolent schemes.</p>
<p>"Now, what do you know," she asked finally, "about
Negroes—about educating them?" Mr. Taylor over his fish was
about to deny all knowledge of any sort on the subject, but all
at once he recollected his sister, and a sudden gleam of light
radiated his mental gloom.</p>
<p>"Have a sister who is—er—devoting herself to teaching
them," he said.</p>
<p>"Is that so!" cried Mrs. Grey, joyfully. "Where is she?"</p>
<p>"In Tooms County, Alabama—in—" Mr. Taylor consulted a
remote mental pocket—"in Miss Sara Smith's school."</p>
<p>"Why, how fortunate! I'm so glad I mentioned the matter. You see,
Miss Smith is a sister of a friend of ours, Congressman Smith of
New Jersey, and she has just written to me for help; a very
touching letter, too, about the poor blacks. My father set great
store by blacks and was a leading abolitionist before he died."</p>
<p>Mr. Taylor was thinking fast. Yes, the name of Congressman Peter
Smith was quite familiar. Mr. Easterly, as chairman of the
Republican State Committee of New Jersey, had been compelled to
discipline Mr. Smith pretty severely for certain socialistic
votes in the House, and consequently his future career was
uncertain. It was important that such a man should not have too
much to do with Mrs. Grey's philanthropies—at least, in his
present position.</p>
<p>"Should like to have you meet and talk with my sister, Mrs. Grey;
she's a Wellesley graduate," said Taylor, finally.</p>
<p>Mrs. Grey was delighted. It was a combination which she felt she
needed. Here was a college-girl who could direct her
philanthropies and her etiquette during the summer. Forthwith
Mary Taylor received an intimation from her brother that vast
interests depended on her summer vacation.</p>
<p>Thus it had happened that Miss Taylor came to Lake George for her
vacation after the first year at the Smith School, and she and
Miss Smith had silently agreed as she left that it would be
better for her not to return. But the gods of lower Broadway
thought otherwise. Not that Mary Taylor did not believe in Miss
Smith's work, she was too honest not to believe in education; but
she was sure that this was not her work, and she had not as yet
perfected in her own mind any theory of the world into which
black folk fitted. She was rather taken back, therefore, to be
regarded as an expert on the problem. First her brother attacked
her, not simply on cotton, but, to her great surprise, on Negro
education; and after listening to her halting uncertain remarks,
he suggested to her certain matters which it would be better for
her to believe when Mrs. Grey talked to her.</p>
<p>"Interested in darkies, you see," he concluded, "and looks to you
to tell things. Better go easy and suggest a waiting-game before
she goes in heavy."</p>
<p>"But Miss Smith needs money—" the New England conscience
prompted. John Taylor cut in sharply:</p>
<p>"We all need money, and I know people who need Mrs. Grey's more
than Miss Smith does at present."</p>
<p>Miss Taylor found the Lake George colony charming. It was not
ultra-fashionable, but it had wealth and leisure and some
breeding. Especially was this true of a circumscribed, rather
exclusive, set which centred around the Vanderpools of New York
and Boston. They, or rather Mr. Vanderpool's connections, were of
Old Dutch New York stock; his father it was who had built the
Lake George cottage.</p>
<p>Mrs. Vanderpool was a Wells of Boston, and endured Lake George
now and then during the summer for her husband's sake, although
she regarded it all as rather a joke. This summer promised to be
unusually lonesome for her, and she was meditating a retreat to
the Massachusetts north shore when she chanced to meet Mary
Taylor, at a miscellaneous dinner, and found her interesting. She
discovered that this young woman knew things, that she could talk
books, and that she was rather pretty. To be sure she knew no
people, but Mrs. Vanderpool knew enough to even things.</p>
<p>"By the bye, I met some charming Alabama people last winter, in
Montgomery—the Cresswells; do you know them?" she asked one
day, as they were lounging in wicker chairs on the Vanderpool
porch. Then she answered the query herself: "No, of course you
could not. It is too bad that your work deprives you of the
society of people of your class. Now my ideal is a set of Negro
schools where the white teachers <i>could</i> know the
Cresswells."</p>
<p>"Why, yes—" faltered Miss Taylor; "but—wouldn't that
be difficult?"</p>
<p>"Why should it be?"</p>
<p>"I mean, would the Cresswells approve of educating Negroes?"</p>
<p>"Oh, 'educating'! The word conceals so much. Now, I take it the
Cresswells would object to instructing them in French and in
dinner etiquette and tea-gowns, and so, in fact, would I; but
teach them how to handle a hoe and to sew and cook. I have reason
to know that people like the Cresswells would be delighted."</p>
<p>"And with the teachers of it?"</p>
<p>"Why not?—provided, of course, they were—well,
gentlefolk and associated accordingly."</p>
<p>"But one must associate with one's pupils."</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly, certainly; just as one must associate with one's
maids and chauffeurs and dressmakers—cordially and kindly,
but with a difference."</p>
<p>"But—but, dear Mrs. Vanderpool, you wouldn't want your
children trained that way, would you?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not, my dear. But these are not my children, they are
the children of Negroes; we can't quite forget that, can we?"</p>
<p>"No, I suppose not," Miss Taylor admitted, a little helplessly.
"But—it seems to me—that's the modern idea of taking
culture to the masses."</p>
<p>"Frankly, then, the modern idea is not my idea; it is too
socialistic. And as for culture applied to the masses, you utter
a paradox. The masses and work is the truth one must face."</p>
<p>"And culture and work?"</p>
<p>"Quite incompatible, I assure you, my dear." She stretched her
silken limbs, lazily, while Miss Taylor sat silently staring at
the waters.</p>
<p>Just then Mrs. Grey drove up in her new red motor.</p>
<p>Up to the time of Mary Taylor's arrival the acquaintance of the
Vanderpools and Mrs. Grey had been a matter chiefly of smiling
bows. After Miss Taylor came there had been calls and casual
intercourse, to Mrs. Grey's great gratification and Mrs.
Vanderpool's mingled amusement and annoyance. Mrs. Grey announced
the arrival of the Easterlys and John Taylor for the week-end. As
Mrs. Vanderpool could think of nothing less boring, she consented
to dine.</p>
<p>The atmosphere of Mrs. Grey's ornate cottage was different from
that of the Vanderpools. The display of wealth and splendor had a
touch of the barbaric. Mary Taylor liked it, although she found
the Vanderpool atmosphere more subtly satisfying. There was a
certain grim power beneath the Greys' mahogany and velvets that
thrilled while it appalled. Precisely that side of the thing
appealed to her brother. He would have seen little or nothing in
the plain elegance yonder, while here he saw a Japanese vase that
cost no cent less than a thousand dollars. He meant to be able to
duplicate it some day. He knew that Grey was poor and less
knowing than he sixty years ago.</p>
<p>The dead millionaire had begun his fortune by buying and selling
cotton—travelling in the South in reconstruction times, and
sending his agents. In this way he made his thousands. Then he
took a step forward, and instead of following the prices induced
the prices to follow him. Two or three small cotton corners
brought him his tens of thousands. About this time Easterly
joined him and pointed out a new road—the buying and
selling of stock in various cotton-mills and other industrial
enterprises. Grey hesitated, but Easterly pushed him on and he
made his hundreds of thousands. Then Easterly proposed buying
controlling interests in certain large mills and gradually
consolidating them. The plan grew and succeeded, and Grey made
his millions.</p>
<p>Then Grey stopped; he had money enough, and he would venture no
farther. He "was going to retire and eat peanuts," he said with a
chuckle.</p>
<p>Easterly was disgusted. He, too, had made millions—not as
many as Grey, but a few. It was not, however, simply money that
he wanted, but power. The lust of financial dominion had gripped
his soul, and he had a vision of a vast trust of cotton
manufacturing covering the land. He talked this incessantly into
Grey, but Grey continued to shake his head; the thing was too big
for his imagination. He was bent on retiring, and just as he had
set the date a year hence he inadvertently died. On the whole,
Mr. Easterly was glad of his partner's definite withdrawal, since
he left his capital behind him, until he found his vast plans
about to be circumvented by Mrs. Grey withdrawing this capital
from his control. "To give to the niggers and Chinamen," he
snorted to John Taylor, and strode up and down the veranda. John
Taylor removed his coat, lighted a black cigar, and elevated his
heels. The ladies were in the parlor, where the female Easterlys
were prostrating themselves before Mrs. Vanderpool.</p>
<p>"Just what is your plan?" asked Taylor, quite as if he did not
know.</p>
<p>"Why, man, the transfer of a hundred millions of stock would give
me control of the cotton-mills of America. Think of it!—the
biggest trust next to steel."</p>
<p>"Why not bigger?" asked Taylor, imperturbably puffing away. Mr.
Easterly eyed him. He had regarded Taylor hitherto as a very
valuable asset to the business—had relied on his knowledge
of routine, his judgment and his honesty; but he detected tonight
a new tone in his clerk, something almost authoritative and
self-reliant. He paused and smiled at him.</p>
<p>"Bigger?"</p>
<p>But John Taylor was dead in earnest. He did not smile.</p>
<p>"First, there's England—and all Europe; why not bring them
into the trust?"</p>
<p>"Possibly, later; but first, America. Of course, I've got my eyes
on the European situation and feelers out; but such matters are
more difficult and slower of adjustment over there—so
damned much law and gospel."</p>
<p>"But there's another side."</p>
<p>"What's that?"</p>
<p>"You are planning to combine and control the manufacture of
cotton—"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"But how about your raw material? The steel trust owns its iron
mines."</p>
<p>"Of course—mines could be monopolized and hold the trust
up; but our raw material is perfectly safe—farms growing
smaller, farms isolated, and we fixing the price. It's a cinch."</p>
<p>"Are you sure?" Taylor surveyed him with a narrowed look.</p>
<p>"Certain."</p>
<p>"I'm not. I've been looking up things, and there are three points
you'd better study: First, cotton farms are not getting smaller;
they're getting bigger almighty fast, and there's a big
cotton-land monopoly in sight. Second, the banks and wholesale
houses in the South <i>can</i> control the cotton output if they
work together. Third, watch the Southern 'Farmers' League' of big
landlords."</p>
<p>Mr. Easterly threw away his cigar and sat down. Taylor
straightened up, switched on the porch light, and took a bundle
of papers from his coat pocket.</p>
<p>"Here are census figures," he said, "commercial reports and
letters." They pored over them a half hour. Then Easterly arose.</p>
<p>"There's something in it," he admitted, "but what can we do? What
do you propose?"</p>
<p>"Monopolize the growth as well as the manufacture of cotton, and
use the first to club European manufacturers into submission."</p>
<p>Easterly stared at him.</p>
<p>"Good Lord!" he ejaculated; "you're crazy!"</p>
<p>But Taylor smiled a slow, thin smile, and put away his papers.
Easterly continued to stare at his subordinate with a sort of
fascination, with the awe that one feels when genius unexpectedly
reveals itself from a source hitherto regarded as entirely
ordinary. At last he drew a long breath, remarking indefinitely:</p>
<p>"I'll think it over."</p>
<p>A stir in the parlor indicated departure.</p>
<p>"Well, you watch the Farmers' League, and note its success and
methods," counselled John Taylor, his tone and manner unchanged.
"Then figure what it might do in the hands of—let us say,
friends."</p>
<p>"Who's running it?"</p>
<p>"A Colonel Cresswell is its head, and happens also to be the
force behind it. Aristocratic family—big planter—near
where my sister teaches."</p>
<p>"H'm—well, we'll watch <i>him</i>."</p>
<p>"And say," as Easterly was turning away, "you know Congressman
Smith?"</p>
<p>"I should say I did."</p>
<p>"Well, Mrs. Grey seems to be depending on him for advice in
distributing some of her charity funds."</p>
<p>Easterly appeared startled.</p>
<p>"She is, is she!" he exclaimed. "But here come the ladies." He
went forward at once, but John Taylor drew back. He noted Mrs.
Vanderpool, and thought her too thin and pale. The dashing young
Miss Easterly was more to his taste. He intended to have a wife
like that one of these days.</p>
<p>"Mary," said he to his sister as he finally rose to go, "tell me
about the Cresswells."</p>
<p>Mary explained to him at length the impossibility of her knowing
much about the local white aristocracy of Tooms County, and then
told him all she had heard.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Grey talked to you much?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"About darky schools?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"What does she intend to do?"</p>
<p>"I think she will aid Miss Smith first."</p>
<p>"Did you suggest anything?"</p>
<p>"Well, I told her what I thought about co�perating with the local
white people."</p>
<p>"The Cresswells?"</p>
<p>"Yes—you see Mrs. Vanderpool knows the Cresswells."</p>
<p>"Does, eh? Good! Say, that's a good point. You just bear heavy on
it—co�perate with the Cresswells."</p>
<p>"Why, yes. But—you see, John, I don't just know whether one
<i>could</i> co�perate with the Cresswells or not—one hears
such contradictory stories of them. But there must be some other
white people—"</p>
<p>"Stuff! It's the Cresswells we want."</p>
<p>"Well," Mary was very dubious, "they are—the most
important."</p>
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