YOU remember—it’s
not so long ago—the talk there was about
Dredge’s “Arrival of the Fittest”?
The talk has subsided, but the book of course remains:
stands up, in fact, as the tallest thing of its kind
since—well, I’d almost said since
“The Origin of Species.”
I’m not wrong, at any rate,
in calling it the most important contribution yet
made to the development of the Darwinian theory, or
rather to the solution of the awkward problem about
which that theory has had to make such a circuit.
Dredge’s hypothesis will be contested, may one
day be disproved; but at least it has swept out of
the way all previous conjectures, including of course
Lanfear’s magnificent attempt; and for our generation
of scientific investigators it will serve as the first
safe bridge across a murderous black whirlpool.
It’s all very interesting—there
are few things more stirring to the imagination than
that sudden projection of the new hypothesis, light
as a cobweb and strong as steel, across the intellectual
abyss; but, for an idle observer of human motives,
the other, the personal, side of Dredge’s case
is even more interesting and arresting.
Personal side? You didn’t
know there was one? Pictured him simply as a
thinking machine, a highly specialized instrument of
precision, the result of a long series of “adaptations,”
as his own jargon would put it? Well, I don’t
wonder—if you’ve met him. He
does give the impression of being something out of
his own laboratory: a delicate scientific instrument
that reveals wonders to the initiated, and is absolutely
useless in an ordinary hand.
In his youth it was just the other
way. I knew him twenty years ago, as an awkward
lout whom young Archie Lanfear had picked up at college,
and brought home for a visit. I happened to be
staying at the Lanfears’ when the boys arrived,
and I shall never forget Dredge’s first appearance
on the scene. You know the Lanfears always lived
very simply. That summer they had gone to Buzzard’s
Bay, in order that Professor Lanfear might be near
the Biological Station at Wood’s Holl, and they
were picnicking in a kind of sketchy bungalow without
any attempt at elegance. But Galen Dredge couldn’t
have been more awe-struck if he’d been suddenly
plunged into a Fifth Avenue ball-room. He nearly
knocked his shock head against the low doorway, and
in dodging this peril trod heavily on Mabel Lanfear’s
foot, and became hopelessly entangled in her mother’s
draperies—though how he managed it I never
knew, for Mrs. Lanfear’s dowdy muslins ran to
no excess of train.
When the Professor himself came in
it was ten times worse, and I saw then that Dredge’s
emotion was a tribute to the great man’s proximity.
That made the boy interesting, and I began to watch.
Archie, always enthusiastic but vague, had said:
“Oh, he’s a tremendous chap—you’ll
see—” but I hadn’t expected
to see quite so clearly. Lanfear’s vision,
of course, was sharper than mine; and the next morning
he had carried Dredge off to the Biological Station.
And that was the way it began.
Dredge is the son of a Baptist minister.
He comes from East Lethe, New York State, and was
working his way through college—waiting
at White Mountain hotels in summer—when
Archie Lanfear ran across him. There were eight
children in the family, and the mother was an invalid.
Dredge never had a penny from his father after he was
fourteen; but his mother wanted him to be a scholar,
and “kept at him,” as he put it, in the
hope of his going back to “teach school”
at East Lethe. He developed slowly, as the scientific
mind generally does, and was still adrift about himself
and his tendencies when Archie took him down to Buzzard’s
Bay. But he had read Lanfear’s “Utility
and Variation,” and had always been a patient
and curious observer of nature. And his first
meeting with Lanfear explained him to himself.
It didn’t, however, enable him to explain himself
to others, and for a long time he remained, to all
but Lanfear, an object of incredulity and conjecture.
“_ Why_ my husband wants him
about—” poor Mrs. Lanfear, the kindest
of women, privately lamented to her friends; for Dredge,
at that time—they kept him all summer at
the bungalow—had one of the most encumbering
personalities you can imagine. He was as inexpressive
as he is to-day, and yet oddly obtrusive: one
of those uncomfortable presences whose silence is
an interruption.
The poor Lanfears almost died of him
that summer, and the pity of it was that he never
suspected it, but continued to lavish on them a floundering
devotion as uncomfortable as the endearments of a
dripping dog—all out of gratitude for the
Professor’s kindness! He was full, in those
days, of raw enthusiasms, which he forced on any one
who would listen when his first shyness had worn off.
You can’t picture him spouting sentimental poetry,
can you? Yet I’ve seen him petrify a whole
group of Mrs. Lanfear’s callers by suddenly
discharging on them, in the strident drawl of Western
New York, “Barbara Frietchie” or “The
Queen of the May.” His taste in literature
was uniformly bad, but very definite, and far more
assertive than his views on biological questions.
In his scientific judgments he showed, even then,
a remarkable temperance, a precocious openness to
the opposite view; but in literature he was a furious
propagandist, aggressive, disputatious, and extremely
sensitive to adverse opinion.
Lanfear, of course, had been struck
from the first by his gift of accurate observation,
and by the fact that his eagerness to learn was offset
by his reluctance to conclude. I remember Lanfear’s
telling me that he had never known a lad of Dredge’s
age who gave such promise of uniting an aptitude for
general ideas with the plodding patience of the accumulator
of facts. Of course when Lanfear talked like
that of a young biologist his fate was sealed.
There could be no question of Dredge’s going
back to “teach school” at East Lethe.
He must take a course in biology at Columbia, spend
his vacations at the Wood’s Holl laboratory,
and then, if possible, go to Germany for a year or
two.
All this meant his virtual adoption
by the Lanfears. Most of Lanfear’s fortune
went in helping young students to a start, and he
devoted his heaviest subsidies to Dredge.
“Dredge will be my biggest dividend—you’ll
see!” he used to say, in the chrysalis days
when poor Galen was known to the world of science
only as a perpetual slouching presence in Mrs. Lanfear’s
drawing-room. And Dredge, it must be said, took
his obligations simply, with that kind of personal
dignity, and quiet sense of his own worth, which in
such cases saves the beneficiary from abjectness.
He seemed to trust himself as fully as Lanfear trusted
him.
The comic part of it was that his
only idea of making what is known as “a return”
was to devote himself to the Professor’s family.
When I hear pretty women lamenting that they can’t
coax Professor Dredge out of his laboratory I remember
Mabel Lanfear’s cry to me: “If Galen
would only keep away!” When Mabel fell on the
ice and broke her leg, Galen walked seven miles in
a blizzard to get a surgeon; but if he did her this
service one day in the year, he bored her by being
in the way for the other three hundred and sixty-four.
One would have imagined at that time that he thought
his perpetual presence the greatest gift he could
bestow; for, except on the occasion of his fetching
the surgeon, I don’t remember his taking any
other way of expressing his gratitude.
In love with Mabel? Not a bit!
But the queer thing was that he did have a
passion in those days—a blind, hopeless
passion for Mrs. Lanfear! Yes: I know what
I’m saying. I mean Mrs. Lanfear, the Professor’s
wife, poor Mrs. Lanfear, with her tight hair and her
loose figure, her blameless brow and earnest eye-glasses,
and her perpetual attitude of mild misapprehension.
I can see Dredge cowering, long and many-jointed,
in a diminutive drawing-room chair, one square-toed
shoe coiled round an exposed ankle, his knees clasped
in a knot of red knuckles, and his spectacles perpetually
seeking Mrs. Lanfear’s eye-glasses. I never
knew if the poor lady was aware of the sentiment she
inspired, but her children observed it, and it provoked
them to irreverent mirth. Galen was the predestined
butt of Mabel and Archie; and secure in their mother’s
virtuous obtuseness, and in her worshipper’s
timidity, they allowed themselves a latitude of banter
that sometimes turned their audience cold. Dredge
meanwhile was going on obstinately with his work.
Now and then he had queer fits of idleness, when he
lapsed into a state of sulky inertia from which even
Lanfear’s admonitions could not rouse him.
Once, just before an examination, he suddenly went
off to the Maine woods for two weeks, came back, and
failed to pass. I don’t know if his benefactor
ever lost hope; but at times his confidence must have
been sorely strained. The queer part of it was
that when Dredge emerged from these eclipses he seemed
keener and more active than ever. His slowly
growing intelligence probably needed its periodical
pauses of assimilation; and Lanfear was marvellously
patient.
At last Dredge finished his course
and went to Germany; and when he came back he was
a new man—was, in fact, the Dredge we all
know. He seemed to have shed his blundering,
encumbering personality, and come to life as a disembodied
intelligence. His fidelity to the Lanfears was
unchanged; but he showed it negatively, by his discretions
and abstentions. I have an idea that Mabel was
less disposed to deride him, might even have been
induced to softer sentiments; but I doubt if Dredge
even noticed the change. As for his ex-goddess,
he seemed to regard her as a motherly household divinity,
the guardian genius of the darning needle; but on
Professor Lanfear he looked with a deepening reverence.
If the rest of the family had diminished in his eyes,
its head had grown even greater.