Snow lay deep in the streets of Winesburg.
It had begun to snow about ten o’clock in the
morning and a wind sprang up and blew the snow in
clouds along Main Street. The frozen mud roads
that led into town were fairly smooth and in places
ice covered the mud. “There will be good
sleighing,” said Will Henderson, standing by
the bar in Ed Griffith’s saloon. Out of
the saloon he went and met Sylvester West the druggist
stumbling along in the kind of heavy overshoes called
arctics. “Snow will bring the people into
town on Saturday,” said the druggist. The
two men stopped and discussed their affairs.
Will Henderson, who had on a light overcoat and no
overshoes, kicked the heel of his left foot with the
toe of the right. “Snow will be good for
the wheat,” observed the druggist sagely.
Young George Willard, who had nothing
to do, was glad because he did not feel like working
that day. The weekly paper had been printed and
taken to the post office Wednesday evening and the
snow began to fall on Thursday. At eight o’clock,
after the morning train had passed, he put a pair
of skates in his pocket and went up to Waterworks
Pond but did not go skating. Past the pond and
along a path that followed Wine Creek he went until
he came to a grove of beech trees. There he built
a fire against the side of a log and sat down at the
end of the log to think. When the snow began to
fall and the wind to blow he hurried about getting
fuel for the fire.
The young reporter was thinking of
Kate Swift, who had once been his school teacher.
On the evening before he had gone to her house to
get a book she wanted him to read and had been alone
with her for an hour. For the fourth or fifth
time the woman had talked to him with great earnestness
and he could not make out what she meant by her talk.
He began to believe she must be in love with him and
the thought was both pleasing and annoying.
Up from the log he sprang and began
to pile sticks on the fire. Looking about to
be sure he was alone he talked aloud pretending he
was in the presence of the woman, “Oh, you’re
just letting on, you know you are,” he declared.
“I am going to find out about you. You
wait and see.”
The young man got up and went back
along the path toward town leaving the fire blazing
in the wood. As he went through the streets the
skates clanked in his pocket. In his own room
in the New Willard House he built a fire in the stove
and lay down on top of the bed. He began to have
lustful thoughts and pulling down the shade of the
window closed his eyes and turned his face to the
wall. He took a pillow into his arms and embraced
it thinking first of the school teacher, who by her
words had stirred something within him, and later
of Helen White, the slim daughter of the town banker,
with whom he had been for a long time half in love.
By nine o’clock of that evening
snow lay deep in the streets and the weather had become
bitter cold. It was difficult to walk about.
The stores were dark and the people had crawled away
to their houses. The evening train from Cleveland
was very late but nobody was interested in its arrival.
By ten o’clock all but four of the eighteen
hundred citizens of the town were in bed.
Hop Higgins, the night watchman, was
partially awake. He was lame and carried a heavy
stick. On dark nights he carried a lantern.
Between nine and ten o’clock he went his rounds.
Up and down Main Street he stumbled through the drifts
trying the doors of the stores. Then he went
into alleyways and tried the back doors. Finding
all tight he hurried around the corner to the New
Willard House and beat on the door. Through the
rest of the night he intended to stay by the stove.
“You go to bed. I’ll keep the stove
going,” he said to the boy who slept on a cot
in the hotel office.
Hop Higgins sat down by the stove
and took off his shoes. When the boy had gone
to sleep he began to think of his own affairs.
He intended to paint his house in the spring and sat
by the stove calculating the cost of paint and labor.
That led him into other calculations. The night
watchman was sixty years old and wanted to retire.
He had been a soldier in the Civil War and drew a
small pension. He hoped to find some new method
of making a living and aspired to become a professional
breeder of ferrets. Already he had four of the
strangely shaped savage little creatures, that are
used by sportsmen in the pursuit of rabbits, in the
cellar of his house. “Now I have one male
and three females,” he mused. “If
I am lucky by spring I shall have twelve or fifteen.
In another year I shall be able to begin advertising
ferrets for sale in the sporting papers.”
The nightwatchman settled into his
chair and his mind became a blank. He did not
sleep. By years of practice he had trained himself
to sit for hours through the long nights neither asleep
nor awake. In the morning he was almost as refreshed
as though he had slept.
With Hop Higgins safely stowed away
in the chair behind the stove only three people were
awake in Winesburg. George Willard was in the
office of the Eagle pretending to be at work on the
writing of a story but in reality continuing the mood
of the morning by the fire in the wood. In the
bell tower of the Presbyterian Church the Reverend
Curtis Hartman was sitting in the darkness preparing
himself for a revelation from God, and Kate Swift,
the school teacher, was leaving her house for a walk
in the storm.
It was past ten o’clock when
Kate Swift set out and the walk was unpremeditated.
It was as though the man and the boy, by thinking
of her, had driven her forth into the wintry streets.
Aunt Elizabeth Swift had gone to the county seat concerning
some business in connection with mortgages in which
she had money invested and would not be back until
the next day. By a huge stove, called a base
burner, in the living room of the house sat the daughter
reading a book. Suddenly she sprang to her feet
and, snatching a cloak from a rack by the front door,
ran out of the house.
At the age of thirty Kate Swift was
not known in Winesburg as a pretty woman. Her
complexion was not good and her face was covered with
blotches that indicated ill health. Alone in
the night in the winter streets she was lovely.
Her back was straight, her shoulders square, and her
features were as the features of a tiny goddess on
a pedestal in a garden in the dim light of a summer
evening.
During the afternoon the school teacher
had been to see Doctor Welling concerning her health.
The doctor had scolded her and had declared she was
in danger of losing her hearing. It was foolish
for Kate Swift to be abroad in the storm, foolish
and perhaps dangerous.
The woman in the streets did not remember
the words of the doctor and would not have turned
back had she remembered. She was very cold but
after walking for five minutes no longer minded the
cold. First she went to the end of her own street
and then across a pair of hay scales set in the ground
before a feed barn and into Trunion Pike. Along
Trunion Pike she went to Ned Winters’ barn and
turning east followed a street of low frame houses
that led over Gospel Hill and into Sucker Road that
ran down a shallow valley past Ike Smead’s chicken
farm to Waterworks Pond. As she went along, the
bold, excited mood that had driven her out of doors
passed and then returned again.
There was something biting and forbidding
in the character of Kate Swift. Everyone felt
it. In the schoolroom she was silent, cold, and
stern, and yet in an odd way very close to her pupils.
Once in a long while something seemed to have come
over her and she was happy. All of the children
in the schoolroom felt the effect of her happiness.
For a time they did not work but sat back in their
chairs and looked at her.
With hands clasped behind her back
the school teacher walked up and down in the schoolroom
and talked very rapidly. It did not seem to matter
what subject came into her mind. Once she talked
to the children of Charles Lamb and made up strange,
intimate little stories concerning the life of the
dead writer. The stories were told with the air
of one who had lived in a house with Charles Lamb
and knew all the secrets of his private life.
The children were somewhat confused, thinking Charles
Lamb must be someone who had once lived in Winesburg.
On another occasion the teacher talked
to the children of Benvenuto Cellini. That time
they laughed. What a bragging, blustering, brave,
lovable fellow she made of the old artist! Concerning
him also she invented anecdotes. There was one
of a German music teacher who had a room above Cellini’s
lodgings in the city of Milan that made the boys guffaw.
Sugars McNutts, a fat boy with red cheeks, laughed
so hard that he became dizzy and fell off his seat
and Kate Swift laughed with him. Then suddenly
she became again cold and stern.
On the winter night when she walked
through the deserted snow-covered streets, a crisis
had come into the life of the school teacher.
Although no one in Winesburg would have suspected
it, her life had been very adventurous. It was
still adventurous. Day by day as she worked in
the schoolroom or walked in the streets, grief, hope,
and desire fought within her. Behind a cold exterior
the most extraordinary events transpired in her mind.
The people of the town thought of her as a confirmed
old maid and because she spoke sharply and went her
own way thought her lacking in all the human feeling
that did so much to make and mar their own lives.
In reality she was the most eagerly passionate soul
among them, and more than once, in the five years
since she had come back from her travels to settle
in Winesburg and become a school teacher, had been
compelled to go out of the house and walk half through
the night fighting out some battle raging within.
Once on a night when it rained she had stayed out
six hours and when she came home had a quarrel with
Aunt Elizabeth Swift. “I am glad you’re
not a man,” said the mother sharply. “More
than once I’ve waited for your father to come
home, not knowing what new mess he had got into.
I’ve had my share of uncertainty and you cannot
blame me if I do not want to see the worst side of
him reproduced in you.”
* *
Kate Swift’s mind was ablaze
with thoughts of George Willard. In something
he had written as a school boy she thought she had
recognized the spark of genius and wanted to blow
on the spark. One day in the summer she had gone
to the Eagle office and finding the boy unoccupied
had taken him out Main Street to the Fair Ground,
where the two sat on a grassy bank and talked.
The school teacher tried to bring home to the mind
of the boy some conception of the difficulties he
would have to face as a writer. “You will
have to know life,” she declared, and her voice
trembled with earnestness. She took hold of George
Willard’s shoulders and turned him about so
that she could look into his eyes. A passer-by
might have thought them about to embrace. “If
you are to become a writer you’ll have to stop
fooling with words,” she explained. “It
would be better to give up the notion of writing until
you are better prepared. Now it’s time
to be living. I don’t want to frighten
you, but I would like to make you understand the import
of what you think of attempting. You must not
become a mere peddler of words. The thing to
learn is to know what people are thinking about, not
what they say.”
On the evening before that stormy
Thursday night when the Reverend Curtis Hartman sat
in the bell tower of the church waiting to look at
her body, young Willard had gone to visit the teacher
and to borrow a book. It was then the thing happened
that confused and puzzled the boy. He had the
book under his arm and was preparing to depart.
Again Kate Swift talked with great earnestness.
Night was coming on and the light in the room grew
dim. As he turned to go she spoke his name softly
and with an impulsive movement took hold of his hand.
Because the reporter was rapidly becoming a man something
of his man’s appeal, combined with the winsomeness
of the boy, stirred the heart of the lonely woman.
A passionate desire to have him understand the import
of life, to learn to interpret it truly and honestly,
swept over her. Leaning forward, her lips brushed
his cheek. At the same moment he for the first
time became aware of the marked beauty of her features.
They were both embarrassed, and to relieve her feeling
she became harsh and domineering. “What’s
the use? It will be ten years before you begin
to understand what I mean when I talk to you,”
she cried passionately.
*
On the night of the storm and while
the minister sat in the church waiting for her, Kate
Swift went to the office of the Winesburg Eagle, intending
to have another talk with the boy. After the
long walk in the snow she was cold, lonely, and tired.
As she came through Main Street she saw the fight
from the printshop window shining on the snow and
on an impulse opened the door and went in. For
an hour she sat by the stove in the office talking
of life. She talked with passionate earnestness.
The impulse that had driven her out into the snow
poured itself out into talk. She became inspired
as she sometimes did in the presence of the children
in school. A great eagerness to open the door
of life to the boy, who had been her pupil and who
she thought might possess a talent for the understanding
of life, had possession of her. So strong was
her passion that it became something physical.
Again her hands took hold of his shoulders and she
turned him about. In the dim light her eyes blazed.
She arose and laughed, not sharply as was customary
with her, but in a queer, hesitating way. “I
must be going,” she said. “In a moment,
if I stay, I’ll be wanting to kiss you.”
In the newspaper office a confusion
arose. Kate Swift turned and walked to the door.
She was a teacher but she was also a woman. As
she looked at George Willard, the passionate desire
to be loved by a man, that had a thousand times before
swept like a storm over her body, took possession
of her. In the lamplight George Willard looked
no longer a boy, but a man ready to play the part
of a man.
The school teacher let George Willard
take her into his arms. In the warm little office
the air became suddenly heavy and the strength went
out of her body. Leaning against a low counter
by the door she waited. When he came and put
a hand on her shoulder she turned and let her body
fall heavily against him. For George Willard
the confusion was immediately increased. For a
moment he held the body of the woman tightly against
his body and then it stiffened. Two sharp little
fists began to beat on his face. When the school
teacher had run away and left him alone, he walked
up and down the office swearing furiously.
It was into this confusion that the
Reverend Curtis Hartman protruded himself. When
he came in George Willard thought the town had gone
mad. Shaking a bleeding fist in the air, the
minister proclaimed the woman George had only a moment
before held in his arms an instrument of God bearing
a message of truth.
* *
George blew out the lamp by the window
and locking the door of the printshop went home.
Through the hotel office, past Hop Higgins lost in
his dream of the raising of ferrets, he went and up
into his own room. The fire in the stove had
gone out and he undressed in the cold. When he
got into bed the sheets were like blankets of dry
snow.
George Willard rolled about in the
bed on which had lain in the afternoon hugging the
pillow and thinking thoughts of Kate Swift. The
words of the minister, who he thought had gone suddenly
insane, rang in his ears. His eyes stared about
the room. The resentment, natural to the baffled
male, passed and he tried to understand what had happened.
He could not make it out. Over and over he turned
the matter in his mind. Hours passed and he began
to think it must be time for another day to come.
At four o’clock he pulled the covers up about
his neck and tried to sleep. When he became drowsy
and closed his eyes, he raised a hand and with it
groped about in the darkness. “I have missed
something. I have missed something Kate Swift
was trying to tell me,” he muttered sleepily.
Then he slept and in all Winesburg he was the last
soul on that winter night to go to sleep.