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<h2> HAIR </h2>
<p>As I remarked in the preceding chapter of this work, one of the
pleasantest features about being born is that we are born without teeth
and other responsibilities. Teeth, like debts and installment payments,
come along later on. It is the same way with hair.</p>
<p>Born, we are, hairless or comparatively so. We are in a highly incomplete
state at that period of our lives. It takes a fond and doting parent to
detect evidences of an actual human aspect in us. Only the ears and the
mouth appear to be up to the plans and specifications. There is a mouth
which when opened, as it generally is, makes the rest of the face look
like a tire, and there is a pair of ears of such generous size that only a
third one is needed, round at the back somewhere, to give us the
appearance of a loving cup. And we are smocked and hem-stitched with a
million wrinkles apiece, more or less, which partly accounts for the fact
that every newborn infant looks to be about two hundred years old. And
uniformly we have the nice red complexion of a restaurant lobster. You
know that live-broiled look?</p>
<p>As for our other features, they are more or less rudimentary. Of a nose
there is only what a chemist would call a trace. It seems hard to imagine
that a dinky little nubbin like that, a dimple turned inside out, as it
were, will ever develop into a regular nose, with a capacity for freckling
in the summer and catching cold in the winter—a nose that you can
sneeze through and blow with. There are no eyebrows to speak of either,
and the skull runs up to a sharp point like a pineapple cheese. Just back
of the peak is a kind of soft, dented-in place like a Parker House roll,
and if you touch it we die. In some cases this spot remains soft
throughout life, and these persons grow up and go through railroad trains
in presidential years taking straw votes.</p>
<p>And, as I said before, there isn't any hair; only on the slopes of the
cheese are some very pale, faint, downy lines, which look as though they
had been sketched on lightly with a very soft drawing pencil and would
wipe off readily. That, however is the inception and beginning of what
afterward becomes, among our race, hair. To look at it you could hardly
believe it, but it is. Barring accidents or backwardness, it continues to
grow from that time on through our childhood, but its behavior is always a
profound disappointment. If the child is a girl and, therefore, entitled
to curly hair, her hair is sure to come in stiff and straight. If it's a
boy, to whom curls will be a curse and a cross of affliction, he is
morally certain to be as curly as a frizzly chicken, and until he gets old
enough to rebel he will wear long ringlets and boys of his acquaintance
will insert cockle-burs and chewing gum into his tresses, and he will be
known popularly as Sissie and otherwise his life with be made joyous and
carefree for him. If a reddish tone of hair is desired it is certain to
grow out yellow or brown or black; and if brown is your favorite shade you
are absolutely sure to be nice and red-headed, with eyebrows and lashes to
match, and so many cowlicks that when you remove your hat people will
think you're wearing two or three halos at once. Hair rarely or never acts
up to its advance notices.</p>
<p>One of the earliest and most painful recollections of my youth is
associated with hair. I still tingle warmly when I think of it. I should
say I was about eight years old at the time. My mother sent me down the
street to the barber's to have my hair trimmed—shingled was the term
then used. Some of my private collection of cowlicks had begun to stand up
in a way that invited adverse criticism and reminded people of sunbursts.
They made me look as though my hair were trying to pull itself out by the
roots and escape. So I was sent to the barber's. My little cousin, two
years younger, went along in my charge. It was thought that the
performance might entertain her. I was mounted in a chair and had a cloth
tucked in round my neck, like a self-made millionaire about to eat
consomme. The officiating barber got out a shiny steel instrument with
jaws—the first pair of clippers I had ever seen—and he ran
this up the back of my neck, producing a most agreeable feeling. He
reached the top of my head and would have paused but I told him to go
right ahead and clip me close all over, which he did. When he had finished
the job I was so delighted with the sensation and with the attendant
result as viewed in a mirror that I suggested he might give my little
cousin a similar treat. From a mere child I was ever so—willing
always to share my simple pleasures with those about me, especially where
it entailed no inconvenience on my part. I told him my father would pay
the bill for both of us when he came by that night.</p>
<p>The barber fell in with the suggestion. It has ever been my experience
that a barber will fall in readily with any suggestion whereby the barber
is going to get something out of it for himself. In this instance he was
going to get another quarter, and a quarter went farther in those days
than it does now. I dismounted from the chair and my innocent little
cousin was installed in my place. As I now recall she made no protest. The
barber ran his clippers conscientiously and painstakingly over her tender
young scalp, while I stood admiringly by and watched the long yellow curls
fall writhing upon the floor at my feet. It seemed to me that a great and
manifest improvement was produced in her general appearance. Instead of
being hampered by those silly curls dangling down all round her face, she
now had a round, slick, smooth dome decorated with a stiff yellowish
stubble, and the skin showed through nice and pink and the ears were well
displayed, whereas before they had been practically hidden. She was also
relieved of those foolish bangs hanging down in her eyes. This, I should
have stated, occurred in the period when womankind of whatsoever age and
also some men wore bangs, a disease from which all have since recovered
with the exception of racehorses and princesses of the various reigning
houses of Europe. And now my little cousin was shut of those annoying
bangs, and her forehead ran up so high that you had to go round behind her
to see where it left off.</p>
<p>Filled with a joyous sense of achievement and conscious of a kindly deed
worthily performed, I took my little cousin by her hand and led her home.</p>
<p>My mother was waiting for us at the front door. She seemed surprised when
I took off my hat and gave her a look, but that wasn't a circumstance to
her surprise when I proudly took off my little cousin's cap. She uttered a
kind of a strangled cry and my cousin's mother came running, and the way
she carried on was scandalous and ill-timed. I will draw a veil over the
proceedings of the next few minutes. At the time it would have been a
source of great personal gratification and comfort to me if I could have
drawn a number of veils, good, thick, woolen ones, over the proceedings.
My mother wept, my aunt wept, my little cousin wept, and I am not ashamed
to state that I wept quite copiously myself. But I had more provocation to
weep than any of them.</p>
<p>When this part of the affair was over my mother sent me back to the barber
with a message. I was to say that a heart-broken woman demanded to have
the curls of which her darling child had been denuded. I believe that
there was some idea entertained of sewing them into a cap and requiring my
cousin to wear the cap until new ones had sprouted. Even to me, a mere
child of eight, this seemed a foolish and totally unnecessary proceeding,
but the situation had already become so strained that I thought it the
part of prudence to go at once without offering any arguments of my own. I
felt, anyhow, that I would rather be away from the house for a while,
until calmer second judgment had succeeded excitement and tumult.</p>
<p>The man who owned the barber shop seemed surprised when I delivered the
message, but he told me to come back in a few minutes and he'd do what he
could. I drifted on down to the confectionery store at the corner to
forget my sorrows for the moment in a worshipful admiration of a display
of prize boxes and cracknels in glass-front cases—you should be able
to fix the period by the fact that cracknels and prize boxes were still in
vogue among the young. When I returned the head barber handed me quite a
large box—a shoebox—with a string tied round it. It did not
seem possible to me that my cousin could have had a whole shoebox full of
curls, but things had been going pretty badly that afternoon and my
motives had been misjudged and everything, so without any talk I took the
box and hurried home with it. My mother cut the string and my aunt lifted
the lid.</p>
<p>I should prefer again to draw a veil over the scenes that now ensued, but
the necessity of finishing this narrative requires me to state that it
being a Saturday and the head barber being a busy man, he had not taken
time to sort out my cousin's curls from among the flotsam and jetsam of
his establishment, but had just swept up enough off the floor to make a
good assorted boxful. I think the oldest inhabitant had probably dropped
in that day to have himself trimmed up a little round the edges. I seem to
remember a quantity of sandy whiskers shot with gray. There was enough
hair in that box and enough different kinds and colors of hair and stuff
to satisfy almost any taste, you would have thought, but my mother and
aunt were anything but satisfied. On the contrary, far from it. And yet my
cousin's hair was all there, if they had only been willing to spend a few
days sorting it out and separating it from the other contents.</p>
<p>In this particular instance I was the exception to the rule, that hair
generally gives a boy no great trouble from the time he merges out of
babyhood until he puts on long pants and begins to discern something
strangely and subtly attractive about the sex described by Mr. Kipling as
being the more deadly of the species. During this interim it is a matter
of no moment to a boy whether he goes shaggy or cropped, shorn or unshorn.
At intervals a frugal parent trims him to see if both his ears are still
there, or else a barber does it with more thoroughness, often recovering
small articles of household use that have been mysteriously missing for
months; but in the main he goes along carefree and unbarbered, not greatly
concerned with putting anything in his head or taking anything off of it.</p>
<p>In due season, though, he reaches the age where adolescent whiskers and
young romance begin to sprout out on him simultaneously—and from
that moment on for the rest of his life his hair is giving him bother, and
plenty of it.</p>
<p>Your hair gives you bother as long as you have it and more bother when it
starts to go. You are always doing something for it and it is always
showing deep-dyed ingratitude in return; or else the dye isn't deep
enough, which is even worse. Hair is responsible for such byproducts as
dandruff, barbers, wigs, several comic weeklies, mental anguish, added
expense, Chinese revolutions, and the standard joke about your wife's
using your best razor to open a can of tomatoes with. Hair has been of aid
to Buffalo Bill, Little Lord Fauntleroy, Samson, The Lady Godiva, Jo-Jo,
the Dog-Faced Boy, poets, pianists, some artists and most mattress makers,
but a drawback and a sorrow to Absalom, polar bears in captivity and the
male sex in general.</p>
<p>This assertion goes not only for hair on the head but for hair on the
face. Let us consider for a moment the matter of shaving. If you shave
yourself you excite a barber's contempt, and there is nobody whose
contempt the average man dreads more than a barber's, unless it is a
waiter's. And on the other hand, if you let a barber shave you he excites
not your contempt particularly, but your rage and frequently your undying
hatred. Once in a burst of confidence a barber told me one of the trade
secrets of his profession—he said that among barbers every face fell
into one of three classes, it being either a square, a round or a
squirrel. I know not, reader, whether yours be a square or a round or a
squirrel, but this much I will chance on a venture, sight unseen—that
you have your periods of intense unhappiness when you are being shaved.</p>
<p>I do not refer so much to the actual process of being shaved. Indeed there
is something restful and soothing to the average male adult in the feel of
a sharp razor being guided over a bristly jowl by a deft and skillful
hand, to the accompaniment of a gentle grating sound and followed by a
sensation of transient silken smoothness. Nor do I refer to the barber's
habit of conversation. After all, a barber is human—he has to talk
to somebody, and it might as well be you. If he didn't have you to talk to
he'd have to talk to another barber, and that would be no treat to him.</p>
<p>What I do refer to is that which precedes a shave and more especially that
which follows after it. You rush in for a shave. In ten minutes you have
an engagement to be married or something else important, and you want a
shave and you want it quick. Does the barber take cognizance of the
emergency? He does not. Such would be contrary to the ethics of his
calling. Knowing from your own lips that you want a shave and that's
positively all, he nevertheless is instantly filled with a burning desire
to equip you with a large number of other things. In this regard the
barbering profession has much in common with the haberdashering or
gents'-furnishing profession as practiced in our larger cities. You invade
a haberdashering establishment for the purpose, let us say, of investing
in a plain and simple pair of half hose, price twenty-five cents. That
emphatically is all that you do desire. You so state in plain, simple
language, using the shorter and uglier word socks.</p>
<p>Does the youth in the pale mauve shirt with the marquise ring on the
little finger of the left hand rest content with this? Need I answer this
question? In succession he tries to sell you a fancy waistcoat with large
pearl buttons, a broken lot of silk pajamas, a bath-robe, some shrimp-pink
underwear—he wears this kind himself he tells you in strict
confidence—a pair of plush suspenders and a knitted necktie that you
wouldn't be caught wearing at twelve o'clock at night at the bottom of a
coal mine during a total eclipse of the moon. If you resist his
blandishments and so far forget that you are a gentleman as to use harsh
language, and if you insist on a pair of socks and nothing else, he'll let
you have them, but he will never feel the same toward you as he did.</p>
<p>'Tis much the same with a barber. You need a shave in a hurry and he is
willing that you should have a shave, he being there for that purpose, but
first and last he can think of upward of thirty or forty other things that
you ought to have, including a shampoo, a hair cut, a hair singe, a hair
tonic, a hair oil, a manicure, a facial massage, a scalp massage, a
Turkish bath, his opinion on the merits of the newest White Hope, a
shoeshine, some kind of a skin food, and a series of comparisons of the
weather we are having this time this month with the weather we were having
this time last month. Not all of us are gifted with the power of repartee
by which my friend Frisbee turned the edge of the barber's desires.</p>
<p>"Your hair," said the barber, fondling a truant lock, "is long."</p>
<p>"I know it is," said Frisbee. "I like it long. It's so Roycrofty."</p>
<p>"It is very long," said the barber with a wistful expression.</p>
<p>"I like it very long," said Frisbee. "I like to have people come up to me
on the street and call me Mr. Sutherland and ask me how I left my sisters?
I like to be mistaken for a Russian pianist. I like for strangers to stop
me and ask me how's everything up at East Aurora. In short, I like it
long."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said the barber, "quite so, sir; but it's very long,
particularly here in the back—it covers your coat collar."</p>
<p>"Indeed?" said Frisbee. "You say it covers my coat collar?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said the barber. "You can't see the coat collar at all."</p>
<p>"Have you got a good sharp pair of shears there?" said Frisbee.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, sir," said the barber.</p>
<p>"All right then," said Frisbee; "cut the collar off."</p>
<p>But not all of us, as I said before, have this ready gift of parry and
thrust that distinguishes my friend Frisbee. Mostly we weakly surrender.
Or if we refuse to surrender, demanding just a shave by itself and nothing
else, what then follows? In my own case, speaking personally, I know
exactly what follows. I do not like to have any powder dabbed on my face
when I am through shaving. I believe in letting the bloom of youth show
through your skin, providing you have any bloom of youth to do so. I
always take pains to state my views in this regard at least twice during
the operation of being shaved—once at the start when the barber has
me all lathered up, with soapsuds dripping from the flanges of my
shell-like ears and running down my neck, and once again toward the close
of the operation, when he has laid aside his razor and is sousing my
defenseless features in a liquid that smells and tastes a good deal like
those scented pink blotters they used to give away at drug-stores to
advertise somebody's cologne.</p>
<p>Does the barber respect my wishes in this regard? Certainly not. He
insists on powdering me, either before my eyes or surreptitiously and in a
clandestine manner. If he didn't powder me up he would lose his sense of
self-respect, and probably the union would take his card away from him. I
think there is something in the constitution and by-laws requiring that I
be powdered up. I have fought the good fight for years, but I'm always
powdered. Sometimes the crafty foe dissembles. He pretends that he is not
going to powder me up. But all of a sudden when my back is turned, as it
were, he grabs up his powder swab and makes a quick swoop upon me and the
hellish deed is done. I should be pleased to hear from other victims of
this practice suggesting any practical relief short of homicide. I do not
wish to kill a barber—there are several other orders in ahead,
referring to the persons I intend to kill off first—but I may be
driven to it.</p>
<p>After he has gashed me casually hither and yen, and sluiced down my
helpless countenance with the carefree abandon of a livery-stable hand
washing off a buggy, and after, as above stated, he has covered up the
traces of his crime with powder, the barber next takes a towel and folds
it over his right hand, as prescribed in the rules and regulations, and
then he dabs me with that towel on various parts of my face nine hundred
and seventy-four—974—separate and distinct times. I know the
exact number of dabs because I have taken the trouble to keep count. I may
be in as great a hurry as you can imagine; I may be but a poor nervous
wreck already, as I am; I may be quivering to be up and away from there,
but he dabs me with his towel—he dabs me until reason totters on her
throne—sometimes just a tiny tot, as the saying goes, or it may be
that the whole cerebral structure is involved—and then when he is
apparently all through the Demoniac Dabber comes back and dabs me one more
fiendish, deliberate and premeditated dab, making nine hundred and
seventy-five dabs in all. He has to do it; it's in the ritual that I and
you and everybody must have that last dab. I wonder how many gibbering
idiots there are in the asylum today whose reason was overthrown by being
dabbed that last farewell dab. I know from my own experience that I can
feel the little dark-green gibbers sloshing round inside of me every time
it happens, and some day my mind will give away altogether and there'll be
a hurry call sent in for the wagon with the lock on the back door. Yet it
is of no avail to cavil or protest; we cannot hope to escape; we can only
sit there in mute and helpless misery and be filled with a great envy for
Mexican hairless dogs.</p>
<p>For quite a spell now we have been speaking of hair on the face; at this
point we revert to hair in its relation to the head. There are some few
among us, mainly professional Southerners and leading men, who retain the
bulk of the hair on their heads through life; but with most of us the
circumstances are different. Your hair goes from you. You don't seem to
notice it at first; then all of a sudden you wake up to the realization
that your head is working its way up through the hair. You start in then
desperately doing things for your hair in the hope of inducing it to stick
round the old place a while longer, but it has heard the call of the wild
and it is on its way. There's no detaining it. You soak your skull in
lotions until your brain softens and your hat-band gets moldy from the
damp, but your hair keeps right on going.</p>
<p>After a while it is practically gone. If only about two-thirds of it is
gone your head looks like a great auk's egg in a snug nest; but if most of
it goes there is something about you that suggests the Glacial Period,
with an icy barren peak rising high above the vegetation line, where a
thin line of heroic strands still cling to the slopes. You are bald then,
a subject fit for the japes of the wicked and universally coupled in the
betting with onions, with hard-boiled eggs and with the front row of
orchestra chairs at a musical show.</p>
<p>At this time of writing baldness is creeping insidiously up each side of
my head. It is executing flank movements from the temples northward, and
some day the two columns will meet and after that I'll be considerably
more of a highbrow than I am now. At present I am craftily combing the
remaining thatch in the middle and smoothing it out nice and flat, so as
to keep those bare spots covered—thinly perhaps, but nevertheless
covered. It is my earnest desire to continue to keep them covered. I am
not a professional beauty; I am not even what you would call a good
amateur beauty; and I want to make what little hair I have go as far as it
conveniently can. But does the barber to whom I repair at frequent
intervals coincide with my desires in this respect? Again I reply he does
not. Every time I go in I speak to him about it. I say to him: "Woodman,
spare that hair, touch not a single strand; in youth it sheltered me and
I'll protect it now." Or in substance that.</p>
<p>He says yes, he will, but he doesn't mean it. He waits until he can catch
me with my guard down. Then he seizes a comb, and using the edge of his
left hand as a bevel and operating his right with a sort of free-arm
Spencerian movement, he roaches my hair up in a scallop effect on either
side, and upon reaching the crest he fights with it and wrestles with it
until he makes it stand erect in a feather-edged design. I can tell by his
expression that he is pleased with this arrangement. He loves to send his
victims forth into the world tufted like the fretful cockatoo. He likes to
see surging waves of hair dash high on a stern and rockbound head. His
sense of the artistic demands such a result.</p>
<p>What cares he how I feel about it so long as the higher cravings of his
own nature are satisfied? But I resent it—I resent it bitterly. I
object to having my head look like a real-estate development with an
opening for a new street going up each side and an ornamental design in
fancy landscape gardening across the top. If I permit this I won't be able
to keep on saying that I was twenty-seven on my last birthday, with some
hope of getting away with it. So I insist that he put my front hair right
back where he found it. He does so, under protest and begrudgingly, it is
true, but he does it. And then, watching his opportunity, he runs in on me
and overpowers me and roaches it up some more.</p>
<p>If I weaken and submit he is happy as the day is long. If he gets it
roached up on both sides that will make me look like a horizontal-bar
performer, which is his idea of manly beauty. Or if he gets it roached up
on one side only there is still some consolation in it for him I'm liable
to be mistaken anywhere for a trained-animal performer. But once in a very
great while he doesn't get it roached up on either side, but has to stand
there and suffer as he sees me walk forth into the world with my hair
combed to suit me and not him. I can tell by his look that he is grieved
and downcast, and that he will probably go home and be cross to the
children. He has but one solace—he hopes to have better luck with me
next time. And probably he will.</p>
<p>The last age of hair is a wig. But wigs are not so very satisfactory
either. I've seen all the known varieties of wigs, and I never saw one yet
that looked as though it were even on speaking terms with the head that
was under it. A wig always looks as though it were a total stranger to the
head and had just lit there a minute to rest, preparatory to flying along
to the next head. Nevertheless, I think on the whole I'll be happier when
my time comes to wear one, because then no barber can roach me up.</p>
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