<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<p>The Woodburns of Columbus were wealthy by the standards of their day. They
lived in a large house and kept two carriages and four servants, but had
no children. Henderson Woodburn was small of stature, wore a gray beard,
and was neat and precise about his person. He was treasurer of the plow
manufacturing company and was also treasurer of the church he and his wife
attended. In his youth he had been called “Hen” Woodburn and had been
bullied by larger boys, and when he grew to be a man and after his
persistent shrewdness and patience had carried him into a position of some
power in the business life of his native city he in turn became something
of a bully to the men beneath him. He thought his wife Priscilla had come
from a better family than his own and was a little afraid of her. When
they did not agree on any subject, she expressed her opinion gently but
firmly, while he blustered for a time and then gave in. After a
misunderstanding his wife put her arms about his neck and kissed the bald
spot on the top of his head. Then the subject was forgotten.</p>
<p>Life in the Woodburn house was lived without words. After the stir and
bustle of the farm, the silence of the house for a long time frightened
Clara. Even when she was alone in her own room she walked about on tiptoe.
Henderson Woodburn was absorbed in his work, and when he came home in the
evening, ate his dinner in silence and then worked again. He brought home
account books and papers from the office and spread them out on a table in
the living room. His wife Priscilla sat in a large chair under a lamp and
knitted children's stockings. They were, she told Clara, for the children
of the poor. As a matter of fact the stockings never left her house. In a
large trunk in her room upstairs lay hundreds of pairs knitted during the
twenty-five years of her family life.</p>
<p>Clara was not very happy in the Woodburn household, but on the other hand,
was not very unhappy. She attended to her studies at the University
passably well and in the late afternoons took a walk with a girl
classmate, attended a matinee at the theater, or read a book. In the
evening she sat with her aunt and uncle until she could no longer bear the
silence, and then went to her own room, where she studied until it was
time to go to bed. Now and then she went with the two older people to a
social affair at the church, of which Henderson Woodburn was treasurer, or
accompanied them to dinners at the homes of other well-to-do and
respectable business men. On several occasions young men, sons of the
people with whom the Woodburns dined, or students at the university, came
in the evening to call. On such an occasion Clara and the young man sat in
the parlor of the house and talked. After a time they grew silent and
embarrassed in each other's presence. From the next room Clara could hear
the rustling of the papers containing the columns of figures over which
her uncle was at work. Her aunt's knitting needles clicked loudly. The
young man told a tale of some football game, or if he had already gone out
into the world, talked of his experiences as a traveler selling the wares
manufactured or merchandized by his father. Such visits all began at the
same hour, eight o'clock, and the young man left the house promptly at
ten. Clara grew to feel that she was being merchandized and that they had
come to look at the goods. One evening one of the men, a fellow with
laughing blue eyes and kinky yellow hair, unconsciously disturbed her
profoundly. All the evening he talked just as the others had talked and
got out of his chair to go away at the prescribed hour. Clara walked with
him to the door. She put out her hand, which he shook cordially. Then he
looked at her and his eyes twinkled. “I've had a good time,” he said.
Clara had a sudden and almost overpowering desire to embrace him. She
wanted to disturb his assurance, to startle him by kissing him on the lips
or holding him tightly in her arms. Shutting the door quickly, she stood
with her hand on the door-knob, her whole body trembling. The trivial
by-products of her age's industrial madness went on in the next room. The
sheets of paper rustled and the knitting needles clicked. Clara thought
she would like to call the young man back into the house, lead him to the
room where the meaningless industry went endlessly on and there do
something that would shock them and him as they had never been shocked
before. She ran quickly upstairs. “What is getting to be the matter with
me?” she asked herself anxiously.</p>
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<p>One evening in the month of May, during her third year at the University,
Clara sat on the bank of a tiny stream by a grove of trees, far out on the
edge of a suburban village north of Columbus. Beside her sat a young man
named Frank Metcalf whom she had known for a year and who had once been a
student in the same classes with herself. He was the son of the president
of the plow manufacturing company of which her uncle was treasurer. As
they sat together by the stream the afternoon light began to fade and
darkness came on. Before them across an open field stood a factory, and
Clara remembered that the whistle had long since blown and the men from
the factory had gone home. She grew restless and sprang to her feet. Young
Metcalf who had been talking very earnestly arose and stood beside her. “I
can't marry for two years, but we can be engaged and that will be all the
same thing as far as the right and wrong of what I want and need is
concerned. It isn't my fault I can't ask you to marry me now,” he
declared. “In two years now, I'll inherit eleven thousand dollars. My aunt
left it to me and the old fool went and fixed it so I don't get it if I
marry before I'm twenty-four. I want that money. I've got to have it, but
I got to have you too.”</p>
<p>Clara looked away into the evening darkness and waited for him to finish
his speech. All afternoon he had been making practically the same speech,
over and over. “Well, I can't help it, I'm a man,” he said doggedly. “I
can't help it, I want you. I can't help it, my aunt was an old fool.” He
began to explain the necessity of remaining unmarried in order that he
could receive the eleven thousand dollars. “If I don't get that money I'll
be just the same as I am now,” he declared. “I won't be any good.” He grew
angry and, thrusting his hands into his pockets, stared also across the
field into the darkness. “Nothing keeps me satisfied,” he said. “I hate
being in my father's business and I hate going to school. In only two
years I'll get the money. Father can't keep it from me. I'll take it and
light out. I don't know just what I'll do. I'm going maybe to Europe,
that's what I'm going to do. Father wants me to stay here and work in his
office. To hell with that. I want to travel. I'll be a soldier or
something. Anyway I'll get out of here and go somewhere and do something
exciting, something alive. You can go with me. We'll cut out together.
Haven't you got the nerve? Why don't you be my woman?”</p>
<p>Young Metcalf took hold of Clara's shoulder and tried to take her into his
arms. For a moment they struggled and then, in disgust, he stepped away
from her and again began to scold.</p>
<p>Clara walked away across two or three vacant lots and got into a street of
workingmen's houses, the man following at her heels. Night had come and
the people in the street facing the factory had already disposed of the
evening meal. Children and dogs played in the road and a strong smell of
food hung in the air. To the west across the fields, a passenger train ran
past going toward the city. Its light made wavering yellow patches against
the bluish black sky. Clara wondered why she had come to the out of the
way place with Frank Metcalf. She did not like him, but there was a
restlessness in him that was like the restless thing in herself. He did
not want stupidly to accept life, and that fact made him brother to
herself. Although he was but twenty-two years old, he had already achieved
an evil reputation. A servant in his father's house had given birth to a
child by him, and it had cost a good deal of money to get her to take the
child and go away without making an open scandal. During the year before
he had been expelled from the University for throwing another young man
down a flight of stairs, and it was whispered about among the girl
students that he often got violently drunk. For a year he had been trying
to ingratiate himself with Clara, had written her letters, sent flowers to
her house, and when he met her on the street had stopped to urge that she
accept his friendship. On the day in May she had met him on the street and
he had begged that she give him one chance to talk things out with her.
They had met at a street crossing where cars went past into the suburban
villages that lay about the city. “Come on,” he had urged, “let's take a
street car ride, let's get out of the crowds, I want to talk to you.” He
had taken hold of her arm and fairly dragged her to a car. “Come and hear
what I have to say,” he had urged, “then if you don't want to have
anything to do with me, all right. You can say so and I'll let you alone.”
After she had accompanied him to the suburb of workingmen's houses, in the
vicinity of which they had spent the afternoon in the fields, Clara had
found he had nothing to urge upon her except the needs of his body. Still
she felt there was something he wanted to say that had not been said. He
was restless and dissatisfied with his life, and at bottom she felt that
way about her own life. During the last three years she had often wondered
why she had come to the school and what she was to gain by learning things
out of books. The days and months went past and she knew certain rather
uninteresting facts she had not known before. How the facts were to help
her to live, she couldn't make out. They had nothing to do with such
problems as her attitude toward men like John May the farm hand, the
school teacher who had taught her something by holding her in his arms and
kissing her, and the dark sullen young man who now walked beside her and
talked of the needs of his body. It seemed to Clara that every additional
year spent at the University but served to emphasize its inadequacy. It
was so also with the books she read and the thoughts and actions of the
older people about her. Her aunt and uncle did not talk much, but seemed
to take it for granted she wanted to live such another life as they were
living. She thought with horror of the probability of marrying a maker of
plows or of some other dull necessity of life and then spending her days
in the making of stockings for babies that did not come, or in some other
equally futile manifestation of her dissatisfaction. She realized with a
shudder that men like her uncle, who spent their lives in adding up rows
of figures or doing over and over some tremendously trivial thing, had no
conception of any outlook for their women beyond living in a house,
serving them physically, wearing perhaps good enough clothes to help them
make a show of prosperity and success, and drifting finally into a stupid
acceptance of dullness—an acceptance that both she and the
passionate, twisted man beside her were fighting against.</p>
<p>In a class in the University Clara had met, during that her third year
there, a woman named Kate Chanceller, who had come to Columbus with her
brother from a town in Missouri, and it was this woman who had given her
thoughts form, who had indeed started her thinking of the inadequacy of
her life. The brother, a studious, quiet man, worked as a chemist in a
manufacturing plant somewhere at the edge of town. He was a musician and
wanted to become a composer. One evening during the winter his sister Kate
had brought Clara to the apartment where the two lived, and the three had
become friends. Clara had learned something there that she did not yet
understand and never did get clearly into her consciousness. The truth was
that the brother was like a woman and Kate Chanceller, who wore skirts and
had the body of a woman, was in her nature a man. Kate and Clara spent
many evenings together later and talked of many things not usually touched
on by girl students. Kate was a bold, vigorous thinker and was striving to
grope her way through her own problem in life and many times, as they
walked along the street or sat together in the evening, she forgot her
companion and talked of herself and the difficulties of her position in
life. “It's absurd the way things are arranged,” she said. “Because my
body is made in a certain way I'm supposed to accept certain rules for
living. The rules were not made for me. Men manufactured them as they
manufacture can-openers, on the wholesale plan.” She looked at Clara and
laughed. “Try to imagine me in a little lace cap, such as your aunt wears
about the house, and spending my days knitting baby stockings,” she said.</p>
<p>The two women had spent hours talking of their lives and in speculating on
the differences in their natures. The experience had been tremendously
educational for Clara. As Kate was a socialist and Columbus was rapidly
becoming an industrial city, she talked of the meaning of capital and
labor and the effect of changing conditions on the lives of men and women.
To Kate, Clara could talk as to a man, but the antagonism that so often
exists between men and women did not come into and spoil their
companionship. In the evening when Clara went to Kate's house her aunt
sent a carriage to bring her home at nine. Kate rode home with her. They
got to the Woodburn house and went in. Kate was bold and free with the
Woodburns, as with her brother and Clara. “Come,” she said laughing, “put
away your figures and your knitting. Let's talk.” She sat in a large chair
with her legs crossed and talked with Henderson Woodburn of the affairs of
the plow company. The two got into a discussion of the relative merits of
the free trade and protection ideas. Then the two older people went to bed
and Kate talked to Clara. “Your uncle is an old duffer,” she said. “He
knows nothing about the meaning of what he's doing in life.” When she
started home afoot across the city, Clara was alarmed for her safety. “You
must get a cab or let me wake up uncle's man; something may happen,” she
said. Kate laughed and went off, striding along the street like a man.
Sometimes she thrust her hands into her skirt pockets, that were like the
trouser pockets of a man, and it was difficult for Clara to remember that
she was a woman. In Kate's presence she became bolder than she had ever
been with any one. One evening she told the story of the thing that had
happened to her that afternoon long before on the farm, the afternoon
when, her mind having been inflamed by the words of Jim Priest regarding
the sap that goes up the tree and by the warm sensuous beauty of the day,
she had wanted so keenly to draw close to some one. She explained to Kate
how she had been so brutally jarred out of the feeling in herself that she
felt was at bottom all right. “It was like a blow in the face at the hand
of God,” she said.</p>
<p>Kate Chanceller was excited as Clara told the tale and listened with a
fiery light burning in her eyes. Something in her manner encouraged Clara
to tell also of her experiments with the school teacher and for the first
time she got a sense of justice toward men by talking to the woman who was
half a man. “I know that wasn't square,” she said. “I know now, when I
talk to you, but I didn't know then. With the school teacher I was as
unfair as John May and my father were with me. Why do men and women have
to fight each other? Why does the battle between them have to go on?”</p>
<p>Kate walked up and down before Clara and swore like a man. “Oh, hell,” she
exclaimed, “men are such fools and I suppose women are as bad. They are
both too much one thing. I fall in between. I've got my problem too, but
I'm not going to talk about it. I know what I'm going to do. I'm going to
find some kind of work and do it.” She began to talk of the stupidity of
men in their approach to women. “Men hate such women as myself,” she said.
“They can't use us, they think. What fools! They should watch and study
us. Many of us spend our lives loving other women, but we have skill.
Being part women, we know how to approach women. We are not blundering and
crude. Men want a certain thing from you. It is delicate and easy to kill.
Love is the most sensitive thing in the world. It's like an orchid. Men
try to pluck orchids with ice tongs, the fools.”</p>
<p>Walking to where Clara stood by a table, and taking her by the shoulder,
the excited woman stood for a long time looking at her. Then she picked up
her hat, put it on her head, and with a flourish of her hand started for
the door. “You can depend on my friendship,” she said. “I'll do nothing to
confuse you. You'll be in luck if you can get that kind of love or
friendship from a man.”</p>
<p>Clara kept thinking of the words of Kate Chanceller on the evening when
she walked through the streets of the suburban village with Frank Metcalf,
and later as the two sat on the car that took them back to the city. With
the exception of another student named Phillip Grimes, who had come to see
her a dozen times during her second year in the University, young Metcalf
was the only one of perhaps a dozen men she had met since leaving the farm
who had been attracted to her. Phillip Grimes was a slender young fellow
with blue eyes, yellow hair and a not very vigorous mustache. He was from
a small town in the northern end of the State, where his father published
a weekly newspaper. When he came to see Clara he sat on the edge of his
chair and talked rapidly. Some person he had seen in the street had
interested him. “I saw an old woman on the car,” he began. “She had a
basket on her arm. It was filled with groceries. She sat beside me and
talked aloud to herself.” Clara's visitor repeated the words of the old
woman on the car. He speculated about her, wondered what her life was
like. When he had talked of the old woman for ten or fifteen minutes, he
dropped the subject and began telling of another experience, this time
with a man who sold fruit at a street crossing. It was impossible to be
personal with Phillip Grimes. Nothing but his eyes were personal.
Sometimes he looked at Clara in a way that I made her feel that her
clothes were being stripped from her body, and that she was being made to
stand naked in the room before her visitor. The experience, when it came,
was not entirely a physical one. It was only in part that. When the thing
happened Clara saw her whole life being stripped bare. “Don't look at me
like that,” she once said somewhat sharply, when his eyes had made her so
uncomfortable she could no longer remain silent. Her remark had frightened
Phillip Grimes away. He got up at once, blushed, stammered something about
having another engagement, and hurried away.</p>
<p>In the street car, homeward bound beside Frank Metcalf, Clara thought of
Phillip Grimes and wondered whether or not he would have stood the test of
Kate Chanceller's speech regarding love and friendship. He had confused
her, but that was perhaps her own fault. He had not insisted on himself at
all. Frank Metcalf had done nothing else. “One should be able,” she
thought, “to find somewhere a man who respects himself and his own desires
but can understand also the desires and fears of a woman.” The street car
went bouncing along over railroad crossings and along residence streets.
Clara looked at her companion, who stared straight ahead, and then turned
to look out of the car window. The window was open and she could see the
interiors of the laborers' houses along the streets. In the evening with
the lamps lighted they seemed cosy and comfortable. Her mind ran back to
the life in her father's house and its loneliness. For two summers she had
escaped going home. At the end of her first year in school she had made an
illness of her uncle's an excuse for spending the summer in Columbus, and
at the end of the second year she had found another excuse for not going.
This year she felt she would have to go home. She would have to sit day
after day at the farm table with the farm hands. Nothing would happen. Her
father would remain silent in her presence. She would become bored and
weary of the endless small talk of the town girls. If one of the town boys
began to pay her special attention, her father would become suspicious and
that would lead to resentment in herself. She would do something she did
not want to do. In the houses along the streets through which the car
passed, she saw women moving about. Babies cried and men came out of the
doors and stood talking to one another on the sidewalks. She decided
suddenly that she was taking the problem of her own life too seriously.
“The thing to do is to get married and then work things out afterward,”
she told herself. She made up her mind that the puzzling, insistent
antagonism that existed between men and women was altogether due to the
fact that they were not married and had not the married people's way of
solving such problems as Frank Metcalf had been talking about all
afternoon. She wished she were with Kate Chancellor so that she could
discuss with her this new viewpoint. When she and Frank Metcalf got off
the car she was no longer in a hurry to go home to her uncle's house.
Knowing she did not want to marry him, she thought that in her turn she
would talk, that she would try to make him see her point of view as all
the afternoon he had been trying to make her see his.</p>
<p>For an hour the two people walked about and Clara talked. She forgot about
the passage of time and the fact that she had not dined. Not wishing to
talk of marriage, she talked instead of the possibility of friendship
between men and women. As she talked her own mind seemed to her to have
become clearer. “It's all foolishness your going on as you have,” she
declared. “I know how dissatisfied and unhappy you sometimes are. I often
feel that way myself. Sometimes I think it's marriage I want. I really
think I want to draw close to some one. I believe every one is hungry for
that experience. We all want something we are not willing to pay for. We
want to steal it or have it given us. That's what's the matter with me,
and that's what's the matter with you.”</p>
<p>They came to the Woodburn house, and turning in stood on a porch in the
darkness by the front door. At the back of the house Clara could see a
light burning. Her aunt and uncle were at the eternal figuring and
knitting. They were finding a substitute for living. It was the thing
Frank Metcalf was protesting against and was the real reason for her own
constant secret protest. She took hold of the lapel of his coat, intending
to make a plea, to urge upon him the idea of a friendship that would mean
something to them both. In the darkness she could not see his rather
heavy, sullen face. The maternal instinct became strong in her and she
thought of him as a wayward, dissatisfied boy, wanting love and
understanding as she had wanted to be loved and understood by her father
when life in the moment of the awakening of her womanhood seemed ugly and
brutal. With her free hand she stroked the sleeve of his coat. Her gesture
was misunderstood by the man who was not thinking of her words but of her
body and of his hunger to possess it. He took her into his arms and held
her tightly against his breast. She tried to struggle, to tear herself
away but, although she was strong and muscular, she found herself unable
to move. As he held her uncle, who had heard the two people come up the
steps to the door, threw it open. Both he and his wife had on several
occasions warned Clara to have nothing to do with young Metcalf. One day
when he had sent flowers to the house, her aunt had urged her to refuse to
receive them. “He's a bad, dissipated, wicked man,” she had said. “Have
nothing to do with him.” When he saw his niece in the arms of the man who
had been the subject of so much discussion in his own house and in every
respectable house in Columbus, Henderson Woodburn was furious. He forgot
the fact that young Metcalf was the son of the president of the company of
which he was treasurer. It seemed to him that some sort of a personal
insult had been thrown at him by a common ruffian. “Get out of here,” he
screamed. “What do you mean, you nasty villain? Get out of here.”</p>
<p>Frank Metcalf went off along the street laughing defiantly, and Clara went
into the house. The sliding doors that led into the living room had been
thrown open and the light from a hanging lamp streamed in upon her. Her
hair was disheveled and her hat twisted to one side. The man and woman
stared at her. The knitting needles and a sheet of paper held in their
hands suggested what they had been doing while Clara was getting another
lesson from life. Her aunt's hands trembled and the knitting needles
clicked together. Nothing was said and the confused and angry girl ran up
a stairway to her own room. She locked herself in and knelt on the floor
by the bed. She did not pray. Her association with Kate Chanceller had
given her another outlet for her feelings. Pounding with her fists on the
bed coverings, she swore. “Fools, damned fools, the world is filled with
nothing but a lot of damned fools.”</p>
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