Theodore Dreiser

Twelve Men


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dog, cat, canary, best German style, my garden, my birdbox, my pipe; and Sundays, by God, I’ll march ’em all off to church, wife and seven kids, as regular as clockwork, shined shoes, pigtails and all, and I’ll lead the procession.”

      “Yes, yes,” I said. “You talk.”

      “Well, wait and see. Nothing in this world means so much to me as the good old orderly home stuff. One ought to live and die in a family. It’s the right way. I’m cutting up now, sowing my wild oats, but that’s nothing. I’m just getting ready to eventually settle down and live, just as I tell you, and be an ideal orderly citizen. It’s the only way. It’s the way nature intends us to do. All this early kid stuff is passing, a sorting-out process. We get over it. Every fellow does, or ought to be able to, if he’s worth anything, find some one woman that he can live with and stick by her. That makes the world that you and I like to live in, and you know it. There’s a psychic call in all of us to it, I think. It’s the genius of our civilization, to marry one woman and settle down. And when I do, no more of this all-night stuff with this, that and the other lady. I’ll be a model husband and father, sure as you’re standing there. Don’t you think I won’t. Smile if you want to—it’s so. I’ll have my garden. I’ll be friendly with my neighbors. You can come over then and help us put the kids to bed.”

      “Oh, Lord! This is a new bug now! We’ll have the vinecovered cot idea for a while, anyhow.”

      “Oh, all right. Scoff if you want to. You’ll see.”

      Time went by. He was doing all the things I have indicated, living in a kind of whirl of life. At the same time, from time to time, he would come back to this thought. Once, it is true, I thought it was all over with the little yellow-haired girl in Philadelphia. He talked of her occasionally, but less and less. Out on the golf links near Passaic he met another girl, one of a group that flourished there. I met her. She was not unpleasing, a bit sensuous, rather attractive in dress and manners, not very well informed, but gay, clever, up-to-date; such a girl as would pass among other women as fairly satisfactory.

      For a time Peter seemed greatly attracted to her. She danced, played a little, was fair at golf and tennis, and she was, or pretended to be, intensely interested in him. He confessed at last that he believed he was in love with her.

      “So it’s all day with Philadelphia, is it?” I asked.

      “It’s a shame,” he replied, “but I’m afraid so. I’m having a hell of a time with myself, my alleged conscience, I tell you.”

      I heard little more about it. He had a fad for collecting rings at this time, a whole casket full, like a Hindu prince, and he told me once he was giving her her choice of them.

      Suddenly he announced that it was “all off” and that he was going to marry the maid of Philadelphia. He had thrown the solitaire engagement ring he had given her down a sewer! At first he would confess nothing as to the reason or the details, but being so close to me it eventually came out. Apparently, to the others as to myself, he had talked much of his simple home plans, his future children—the good citizen idea. He had talked it to his new love also, and she had sympathized and agreed. Yet one day, after he had endowed her with the engagement ring, some one, a member of the golf club, came and revealed a tale. The girl was not “straight.” She had been, mayhap was even then, “intimate” with other men—one anyhow. She was in love with Peter well enough, as she insisted afterward, and willing to undertake the life he suggested, but she had not broken with the old atmosphere completely, or if she had it was still not believed that she had. There were those who could not only charge, but prove. A compromising note of some kind sent to some one was involved, turned over to Peter.

      “Dreiser,” he growled as he related the case to me, “it serves me right. I ought to know better. I know the kind of woman I need. This one has handed me a damned good wallop, and I deserve it. I might have guessed that she wasn’t suited to me. She was really too free—a life-lover more than a wife. That home stuff! She was just stringing me because she liked me. She isn’t really my sort, not simple enough.”

      “But you loved her, I thought?”

      “I did, or thought I did. Still, I used to wonder too. There were many ways about her that troubled me. You think I’m kidding about this home and family idea, but I’m not. It suits me, however flat it looks to you. I want to do that, live that way, go through the normal routine experience, and I’m going to do it.”

      “But how did you break it off with her so swiftly?” I asked curiously.

      “Well, when I heard this I went direct to her and put it up to her. If you’ll believe me she never even denied it. Said it was all true, but that she was in love with me all right, and would change and be all that I wanted her to be.”

      “Well, that’s fair enough,” I said, “if she loves you. You’re no saint yourself, you know. If you’d encourage her, maybe she’d make good.”

      “Well, maybe, but I don’t think so really,” he returned, shaking his head. “She likes me, but not enough, I’m afraid. She wouldn’t run straight, now that she’s had this other. She’d mean to maybe, but she wouldn’t. I feel it about her. And anyhow I don’t want to take any chances. I like her—I’m crazy about her really, but I’m through. I’m going to marry little Dutchy if she’ll have me, and cut out this old-line stuff. You’ll have to stand up with me when I do.”

      In three months more the new arrangement was consummated and little Dutchy—or Zuleika, as he subsequently named her—was duly brought to Newark and installed, at first in a charming apartment in a conventionally respectable and cleanly neighborhood, later in a small house with a “yard,” lawn front and back, in one of the homiest of home neighborhoods in Newark. It was positively entertaining to observe Peter not only attempting to assume but assuming the rôle of the conventional husband, and exactly nine months after he had been married, to the hour, a father in this humble and yet, in so far as his particular home was concerned, comfortable world. I have no space here for more than the barest outline. I have already indicated his views, most emphatically expressed and forecasted. He fulfilled them all to the letter, up to the day of his death. In so far as I could make out, he made about as satisfactory a husband and father and citizen as I have ever seen. He did it deliberately, in cold reason, and yet with a warmth and flare which puzzled me all the more since it was based on reason and forethought. I misdoubted. I was not quite willing to believe that it would work out, and yet if ever a home was delightful, with a charming and genuinely “happy” atmosphere, it was Peter’s.

      “Here she is,” he observed the day he married her, “me frau—Zuleika. Isn’t she a peach? Ever see any nicer hair than that? And these here, now, pink cheeks? What? Look at ’em! And her little Dutchy nose! Isn’t it cute? Oh, Dutchy! And right here in me vest pocket is the golden band wherewith I am to be chained to the floor, the domestic hearth. And right there on her finger is my badge of prospective serfdom.” Then, in a loud aside to me, “In six months I’ll be beating her. Come now, Zuleika. We have to go through with this. You have to swear to be my slave.”

      And so they were married.

      And in the home afterward he was as busy and helpful and noisy as any man about the house could ever hope to be. He was always fussing about after hours “putting up” something or arranging his collections or helping Zuleika wash and dry the dishes, or showing her how to cook something if she didn’t know how. He was running to the store or bringing home things from the downtown market. Months before the first child was born he was declaring most shamelessly, “In a few months now, Dreiser, Zuleika and I are going to have our first calf. The bones roll for a boy, but you never can tell. I’m offering up prayers and oblations—both of us are. I make Zuleika pray every night. And say, when it comes, no spoiling-the-kid stuff. No bawling or rocking it to sleep nights permitted. Here’s one kid that’s going to be raised right. I’ve worked out all the rules. No trashy baby-foods. Good old specially brewed Culmbacher for the mother, and the kid afterwards if it wants it. This is one family in which law and order are going to prevail—good old ‘dichtig, wichtig’ law and order.”

      I