TRAVELER,
EDITOR, SCHOLAR
Personal Stories From The First
Edition
TRAVELER, EDITOR, SCHOLAR
THE annual post-game
banquet was winding up. The last rolling "R" of the
speaker's hearty Caledonian accent died away sonorously. The
company of students and alumni, all Scots, began to adjourn
to the spacious bar for stronger stuff than the comparatively
innocuous wines on the tables. A goal-scorer in a soccer game
between my school and its centuries-old rival, I rated some
popularity and the admiration of the moment expressed in famous
ales and whiskey and soda. I was the son of a clergyman and
just past sixteen years of age.
Waking in my hotel room the next day,
I groaned. I didn't want to see or talk to anyone. Then someone
raised my head and put a glass to my lips. "What you need
is 'a hair of the dog that bit you', get this into you."
The smell of the stuff sickened me. I
grimaced, gulped the draught down and fell back on the bed.
Somehow it stayed down and in about fifteen minutes I began
to feel better and managed to eat a fair breakfast. That was
my first experience of the "morning after" drink.
Back to college and my apprenticeship
to a well-known lawyer, the students in their various clubs
and societies, tippled enormously. I gave up the law but stayed
in school to graduate. Through these college years in a city
of well over a million inhabitants I learned all the better
barrooms. Burns and Byron and other colorful profligates were
the literary idols in the gang of "bloods" with whom
I was a popular figure. I thought I was a gay dog and this was
the life.
With nothing but a liberal arts education,
very definitely estranged from my family and already married,
soon after graduation I became a bookmaker's clerk on the British
racing circuits, far better off financially than the average
professional man. I moved in a gay crowd in the various "pubs"
and sporting clubs. My wife traveled with me, but with a baby
coming I decided to settle in a large city where I got a job
with a commission agent which is a polite term for a hand-book
operator. My job was to collect bets and betting-slips in the
business section, a lucrative spot. My boss, in his way, was
"big business." Drinking was all in the day's work.
One evening, the book, after checking
up, was very definitely in the red for plenty through a piece
of studied carelessness on my part, and my boss, very shrewd
and able, fired me with a parting statement to the effect that
once was enough. With a good stake I sailed for New York. I
knew I was through among the English "bookies."
Tom Sharkey's brawling bar on 14th Street
and the famous wine-room at the back were headquarters for me.
I soon ran through my stake. Some college friends got me jobs
when I finally had to go to work, but I didn't stick to them.
I wanted to travel. Making my way to Pittsburgh, I met other
former friends and got a job in a large factory where piecemakers
were making good money. My fellow-workers were mostly good Saturday
night drinkers and I was right with them. Young and able to
travel with the best of them, I managed to hold my job and keep
my end up in the barrooms.
One of my keenest memories is of meeting
Jack London who came in unannounced one night to our favorite
saloon, made a rousing speech, and later set up the drinks all
evening.
I quit the factory and got a job on a
small newspaper, going from that to a Pittsburgh daily, long
ago defunct. Following a big drunk on that sheet where I was
doing leg-work and rewrite, a feeling of nostalgia made me buy
a ticket for Liverpool and I returned to Britain.
During my visit there, renewing acquaintance
with former friends I soon spent most of my money. I wanted
to roam again and through relatives got a super-cargo job on
an Australian packet which allowed me to visit my people in
Australia where I was born. But I didn't stay long. I was soon
back in Liverpool. Coming out of a pub near the Cunard pier
I saw the Lusitania standing out in the middle of the Mersey.
She had just come in and was scheduled to sail in two days.
In my mind's eye I saw Broadway again and Tom Sharkey's bar;
the roar of the subway was in my ears. Saying goodbye to my
wife and baby, I was treading Manhattan's streets in a little
more than a week. Again I spent my bankroll, by no means as
thick as the one I had when I first saw the skyline of Gotham.
I was soon broke, this time without trainfare to go anywhere.
I got my first introduction to "riding the rods and making
a blind."
In my early twenties the hardships of
hobo life did not discourage me but I had no wish to become
just a tramp. Forced to detrain from an empty gondola on the
other side of Chicago by a terrific rainstorm which drenched
me to the skin, I hit the first factory building I saw for a
job. That job began a series of brief working spells, each one
ending in a "drunk" and the urge to travel. My migrations
extended for over a year as far west as Omaha. Drifting back
to Ohio, I landed on a small newspaper and later was impressed
into the direction of boy-welfare work at the local "Y".
I stayed sober for four years except for a one-night carousel
in Chicago. I stayed so sober that I used to keep a quart of
medicinal whiskey in my bureau which I used to taper off the
occasional newspaper alcoholics who were sent to see me.
Lots of times, vain-gloriously, I used
to take the bottle out, look at it and say, "I've got you
licked."
The war was getting along. Curious about
it, feeling I was missing something, absolutely without any
illusions about the aftermath, with no pronounced feeling of
patriotism, I joined up with a Canadian regiment, serving a
little over two years. Slight casualties, complicated however
by a long and serious illness, were my only mishaps. Remarkably
enough, I was a very abstemious soldier. My four years of abstinence
had something to do with it, but soldiering is a tough enough
game for a sober man, and I had no yen for full-pack slogging
through mud with a cognac or vin rouge hangover.
Discharged in 1919, I really made up for
my dry spell. Quebec, Toronto, Buffalo, and finally Pittsburgh,
were the scenes of man-sized drunks until I had gone through
my readjusted discharge pay, a fair sum.
I again became a reporter on a Pittsburgh
daily. I applied for a publicity job and got it. My wife came
over from Scotland and we started housekeeping in a large Ohio
city.
The new job lasted five years. Every encouragement
was given me with frequent salary increases, but the sober times
between "periods" became shorter. I myself could see
deterioration in my work, from being physically and mentally
affected by liquor, although I had not yet reached the point
where all I wanted was more to drink. Successive Monday morning
hangovers, which despite mid-week resolutions to do better,
came with unfailing regularity, eventually causing me to quit
my job. Washington, D.C. and news-gathering agency work followed
with many parties. I couldn't stand the pace. My drinking was
never the spaced doses of the careful tippler; it was always
gluttonous.
Returning to the town I had left three
months before, I became editor of a monthly magazine, soon had
additional publicity and advertising accounts and the money
rolled in. The strain of overwork soon led me to the bottle
again. My wife made several attempts to get me to stop and I
had the usual visits from persons who would always ask me "Why?"-as
if I knew! Offered the job of advertising manager for an eastern
automotive company, I moved to Philadelphia to begin life anew.
In three months John Barleycorn had me kicked out.
I did six years of newspaper advertising,
and trade journal work with many, many drunks of drab and dreary
hue woven into the pattern of my life. I visited my family just
once in that time. An old avocation, the collection of first
editions, rare books and Americana, fascinated me between times.
I had some financial success through no ability of my own, and,
when jobless and almost wiped out in 1930, I began to trade
and sell my collection and much of the proceeds went to keep
my apartment stocked with liquor and almost every night saw
me helpless to bed.
I tried to help myself. I even began to
go the rounds of the churches. I listened to famous ministers-found
nothing. I began to know the inside of jails and workhouses.
My family would have nothing to do with me, in fact couldn't,
because I couldn't spare any of my money which I needed for
drink to support them. My last venture, a book shop, was hastened
to closed doors by my steady intoxication. Then I had an idea.
Loading a car with good old books to sell
to collectors, librarians, universities and historical societies,
I started out to travel the country. I stayed sober during the
trip except for an occasional bottle of beer because funds barely
met expenses. When I hit Houston, Texas, I found employment
in a large bookstore. Need I say here that in a very short time
I was walking along a prairie highway with arm extended and
thumb pointed? In the two succeeding years I held ten different
jobs ranging from newspaper copy-desk and rewrite, to traffic
director for an oil field equipment company. Always in between
there were intervals of being broke, riding freights and hitch-hiking
interminable distances from one big town to another in three
states. Now on a new job I was always thinking about payday
and how much liquor I could buy and the pleasure I could have.
I knew I was a drunkard. Enduring all
the hangover-hells that every alcoholic experiences, I made
the usual resolutions. My thoughts sometimes turned to the idea
that there must be a remedy. I have stood listening to street-corner
preachers tell how they did beat the game. They seemed to be
happy in their fashion, they and the little group of supporters,
but always pride of intellect stopped me from seeking what they
evidently had. Sniffing at emotional religion I walked away.
I was an honest agnostic but definitely not a hater of the church
or its adherents. What philosophy I had was thoroughly paganistic-all
my life was devoted to a search for pleasure. I wanted to do
nothing except what it pleased me to do and when I wanted to
do it.
Federal Theatre in Texas gave me an administrative
job which I held for a year, only because I worked hard and
productively when I worked, and because my very tolerant chief
ascribed my frequent lapses to a bohemian temperament. When
it was closed through Washington edict I began with Federal
Writers in San Antonio. In those days my system was always to
drink up my last pay check and believe that necessity would
bring the next job. A friend who knew I would soon be broke
mounted guard over me when I left my job of writing the histories
of Texas cities and put me aboard a bus for the town I had left
almost five years before.
In five years a good many persons had
forgotten that I had been somewhat notorious. I had arrived
drunk but promised my wife I would keep sober, and I knew I
could get work if I did. Of course, I didn't keep sober. My
wife and family stood by me for ten weeks and then, quite justifiably,
ejected me. I managed to maintain myself with odd jobs, did
ten weeks in a social rescue institution and at length wound
up in a second-hand bookstore in an adjacent town as manager.
While there I was called to the hospital in my home town to
see a former partner who had insisted that I visit him. I found
my friend was there for alcoholism and now he was insisting
that he had found the only cure. I listened to him, rather tolerantly.
I noticed a Bible on his table and it amazed me. I had never
known him to be anything but a good healthy pagan with a propensity
for getting into liquor jams and scrapes. As he talked I gathered
vaguely, (because he was a faltering beginner then just as I
am now) that to be relieved of alcoholism I would have to be
different.
Some days later, after he had been discharged,
a stranger came into my shop in the nearby town. He introduced
himself and began to tell me about a bunch of some 60 former
drinkers and drunkards who met once a week, and he invited me
to go with him to the next meeting. I thanked him, pleaded business
engagements and promised I'd go with him at some future date.
"Anyhow, I'm on the wagon now,"
I said. "I'm doing a job I like and it's quiet where I
live, practically no temptations. I don't feel bothered about
liquor."
He looked at me quizzically. He knew too
well that didn't mean a thing just as I knew in my heart that
it would be only a question of time-a few days, a week, or even
a month, it was inevitable-till I would be off on another bender.
The time came just a week later. And as I look back on the events
of two months, I can clearly see that I had been circling around,
half-afraid of encountering the remedy for my situation, half-wanting
it, deferring fulfillment of my promise to get in touch with
the doctor I had heard about. An accident while drunk laid me
low for about three weeks. As soon as I could get up and walk
I started to drink again and kept it up until my friend of the
hospital, who, in his first try at the new way of life had stubbed
his toe in Chicago but had come back to the town to take counsel
and make a new start, picked me up and got me into a hospital.
I had been drinking heavily from one state
of semi-coma to another and it was several days before I got
"defogged" but subconsciously I was in earnest about
wanting to quit liquor forever. It was no momentary emotionalism
born of self-pity in a maudlin condition. I was seeking something
and I was ready to learn. I did not need to be told that my
efforts were and would be unavailing if I did not get help.
The doctor who came to see me almost at once did not assail
me with any new doctrines; he made sure that I had a need and
that I wanted to have that need filled and little by little
I learned how my need could be met. The story of Alcoholics
Anonymous fascinated me. Singly and in groups of two or three,
they came to visit me. Some of them I had known for years, good
two-fisted drinkers who had disappeared from their former haunts.
I had missed them myself from the barrooms of the town.
There were business men, professional
men, and factory workers. All sorts were represented and their
relation of experiences and how they had found the only remedy,
added to their human existence as sober men, laid the foundation
of a very necessary faith. Indeed, I was beginning to see that
I would require implicit faith, like a small child, if I was
going to get anywhere or so it appeared as I lay in that hospital.
The big thing was that these men were all sober and evidently
had something I didn't have. Whatever it was, I wanted it.
I left the hospital on a meeting night.
I was greeted warmly, honestly, and with a true ring of sincerity
by everyone present. That night I was taken home by a former
alcoholic and his wife. They did not show me to my room and
wish me a good night's rest. Instead, over coffee cups, this
man and his wife told me what had been done for them. They were
earnest and obviously trying to help me on the road I had chosen.
They will never know how much their talk with me has helped.
The hospitality of their home and their fine fellowship were
mine freely.
I had never, since the believing days
of childhood, been able to conceive an authority directing the
universe. But I had never been a flippant, wise-cracking sneerer
at the few persons I had met who had impressed me as Christian
men and women, or at any institutions whose sincerity of purpose
I could see. No conviction was necessary to establish my status
as a miserable failure at managing my own life. I began to read
the Bible daily and to go over a simple devotional exercise
as a way to begin each day. Gradually I began to understand.
I cannot say that my taste for liquor
has entirely disappeared. It has been that way with some, but
it has not been with me and may never be. Neither can I honestly
say that I have forgotten the "fleshpots of Egypt."
I haven't. But I can remember the urge of the Prodigal Son to
return to his Father that he might taste of the husks that the
swine did eat.
Formerly in the acute mental and physical
pain during the remorseful periods succeeding each drunk, I
found my recollection of the misery I had gone through a bolsterer
of resolution and afterward, perhaps, a deterrent for a time.
But in those days I had no one to whom I might take my troubles.
Today I have. Today I have Someone who will always hear me;
I have a warm fellowship among men who understand my problems;
I have tasks to do and am glad to do them, to see others who
are alcoholics and to help them in any way I can to become sober
men. I took my last drink in 1937. |