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the house of pride and other tales of hawaii-第20部分
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under the same conditions; I continued; adding another two thousand
words before I finished; and then the third night I spent in cutting
out the excess; so as to bring the article within the conditions of
the contest。 The first prize came to me; and the second and third
went to students of the Stanford and Berkeley Universities。
My success in the San Francisco Call competition seriously turned my
thoughts to writing; but my blood was still too hot for a settled
routine; so I practically deferred literature; beyond writing a
little gush for the Call; which that journal promptly rejected。
I tramped all through the United States; from California to Boston;
and up and down; returning to the Pacific coast by way of Canada;
where I got into jail and served a term for vagrancy; and the whole
tramping experience made me become a Socialist。 Previously I had
been impressed by the dignity of labour; and; without having read
Carlyle or Kipling; I had formulated a gospel of work which put
theirs in the shade。 Work was everything。 It was sanctification
and salvation。 The pride I took in a hard day's work well done
would be inconceivable to you。 I was as faithful a wage…slave as
ever a capitalist exploited。 In short; my joyous individualism was
dominated by the orthodox bourgeois ethics。 I had fought my way
from the open west; where men bucked big and the job hunted the man;
to the congested labour centres of the eastern states; where men
were small potatoes and hunted the job for all they were worth; and
I found myself looking upon life from a new and totally different
angle。 I saw the workers in the shambles at the bottom of the
Social Pit。 I swore I would never again do a hard day's work with
my body except where absolutely compelled to; and I have been busy
ever since running away from hard bodily labour。
In my nineteenth year I returned to Oakland and started at the High
School; which ran the usual school magazine。 This publication was a
weeklyno; I guess a monthlyone; and I wrote stories for it; very
little imaginary; just recitals of my sea and tramping experiences。
I remained there a year; doing janitor work as a means of
livelihood; and leaving eventually because the strain was more than
I could bear。 At this time my socialistic utterances had attracted
considerable attention; and I was known as the 〃Boy Socialist;〃 a
distinction that brought about my arrest for street…talking。 After
leaving the High School; in three months cramming by myself; I took
the three years' work for that time and entered the University of
California。 I hated to give up the hope of a University education
and worked in a laundry and with my pen to help me keep on。 This
was the only time I worked because I loved it; but the task was too
much; and when half…way through my Freshman year I had to quit。
I worked away ironing shirts and other things in the laundry; and
wrote in all my spare time。 I tried to keep on at both; but often
fell asleep with the pen in my hand。 Then I left the laundry and
wrote all the time; and lived and dreamed again。 After three
months' trial I gave up writing; having decided that I was a
failure; and left for the Klondike to prospect for gold。 At the end
of the year; owing to the outbreak of scurvy; I was compelled to
come out; and on the homeward journey of 1;900 miles in an open boat
made the only notes of the trip。 It was in the Klondike I found
myself。 There nobody talks。 Everybody thinks。 You get your true
perspective。 I got mine。
While I was in the Klondike my father died; and the burden of the
family fell on my shoulders。 Times were bad in California; and I
could get no work。 While trying for it I wrote 〃Down the River;〃
which was rejected。 During the wait for this rejection I wrote a
twenty…thousand word serial for a news company; which was also
rejected。 Pending each rejection I still kept on writing fresh
stuff。 I did not know what an editor looked like。 I did not know a
soul who had ever published anything。 Finally a story was accepted
by a Californian magazine; for which I received five dollars。 Soon
afterwards 〃The Black Cat〃 offered me forty dollars for a story。
Then things took a turn; and I shall probably not have to shovel
coal for a living for some time to come; although I have done it;
and could do it again。
My first book was published in 1900。 I could have made a good deal
at newspaper work; but I had sufficient sense to refuse to be a
slave to that man…killing machine; for such I held a newspaper to be
to a young man in his forming period。 Not until I was well on my
feet as a magazine…writer did I do much work for newspapers。 I am a
believer in regular work; and never wait for an inspiration。
Temperamentally I am not only careless and irregular; but
melancholy; still I have fought both down。 The discipline I had as
a sailor had full effect on me。 Perhaps my old sea days are also
responsible for the regularity and limitations of my sleep。 Five
and a half hours is the precise average I allow myself; and no
circumstance has yet arisen in my life that could keep me awake when
the time comes to 〃turn in。〃
I am very fond of sport; and delight in boxing; fencing; swimming;
riding; yachting; and even kite…flying。 Although primarily of the
city; I like to be near it rather than in it。 The country; though;
is the best; the only natural life。 In my grown…up years the
writers who have influenced me most are Karl Marx in a particular;
and Spencer in a general; way。 In the days of my barren boyhood; if
I had had a chance; I would have gone in for music; now; in what are
more genuinely the days of my youth; if I had a million or two I
would devote myself to writing poetry and pamphlets。 I think the
best work I have done is in the 〃League of the Old Men;〃 and parts
of 〃The Kempton…Wace Letters。〃 Other people don't like the former。
They prefer brighter and more cheerful things。 Perhaps I shall feel
like that; too; when the days of my youth are behind me。
Footnotes:
{1} Malahininew…comer。
End
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