Formulate it.
Is it already formulated?
Then state it."
Martin took his seat amidst an uproar of voices.
A score of men were on their feet clamoring for recognition from the chair.
And one by one, encouraged by vociferous applause, speaking with fire and enthusiasm and excited gestures, they replied to the attack.
It was a wild night-but it was wild intellectually, a battle of ideas.
Some strayed from the point, but most of the speakers replied directly to Martin.
They shook him with lines of thought that were new to him; and gave him insights, not into new biological laws, but into new applications of the old laws.
They were too earnest to be always polite, and more than once the chairman rapped and pounded for order.
It chanced that a cub reporter sat in the audience, detailed there on a day dull of news and impressed by the urgent need of journalism for sensation.
He was not a bright cub reporter.
He was merely facile and glib.
He was too dense to follow the discussion.
In fact, he had a comfortable feeling that he was vastly superior to these wordy maniacs of the working class.
Also, he had a great respect for those who sat in the high places and dictated the policies of nations and newspapers.
Further, he had an ideal, namely, of achieving that excellence of the perfect reporter who is able to make something-even a great deal-out of nothing.
He did not know what all the talk was about.
It was not necessary.
Words like revolution gave him his cue.
Like a paleontologist, able to reconstruct an entire skeleton from one fossil bone, he was able to reconstruct a whole speech from the one word revolution .
He did it that night, and he did it well; and since Martin had made the biggest stir, he put it all into his mouth and made him the arch-anarch of the show, transforming his reactionary individualism into the most lurid, red-shirt socialist utterance.
The cub reporter was an artist, and it was a large brush with which he laid on the local color-wild-eyed long-haired men, neurasthenia and degenerate types of men, voices shaken with passion, clenched fists raised on high, and all projected against a background of oaths, yells, and the throaty rumbling of angry men.
CHAPTER XXXIX
Over the coffee, in his little room, Martin read next morning’s paper.
It was a novel experience to find himself head-lined, on the first page at that; and he was surprised to learn that he was the most notorious leader of the Oakland socialists.
He ran over the violent speech the cub reporter had constructed for him, and, though at first he was angered by the fabrication, in the end he tossed the paper aside with a laugh.
"Either the man was drunk or criminally malicious," he said that afternoon, from his perch on the bed, when Brissenden had arrived and dropped limply into the one chair.
"But what do you care?" Brissenden asked. "Surely you don’t desire the approval of the bourgeois swine that read the newspapers?"
Martin thought for a while, then said:- "No, I really don’t care for their approval, not a whit.
On the other hand, it’s very likely to make my relations with Ruth’s family a trifle awkward.
Her father always contended I was a socialist, and this miserable stuff will clinch his belief.
Not that I care for his opinion-but what’s the odds?
I want to read you what I’ve been doing to-day.
It’s ‘Overdue,’ of course, and I’m just about halfway through."
He was reading aloud when Maria thrust open the door and ushered in a young man in a natty suit who glanced briskly about him, noting the oil-burner and the kitchen in the corner before his gaze wandered on to Martin.
"Sit down," Brissenden said.
Martin made room for the young man on the bed and waited for him to broach his business. "I heard you speak last night, Mr. Eden, and I’ve come to interview you," he began.
Brissenden burst out in a hearty laugh.
"A brother socialist?" the reporter asked, with a quick glance at Brissenden that appraised the color-value of that cadaverous and dying man.
"And he wrote that report," Martin said softly. "Why, he is only a boy!"
"Why don’t you poke him?" Brissenden asked. "I’d give a thousand dollars to have my lungs back for five minutes."
The cub reporter was a trifle perplexed by this talking over him and around him and at him.
But he had been commended for his brilliant description of the socialist meeting and had further been detailed to get a personal interview with Martin Eden, the leader of the organized menace to society.
"You do not object to having your picture taken, Mr. Eden?" he said. "I’ve a staff photographer outside, you see, and he says it will be better to take you right away before the sun gets lower.
Then we can have the interview afterward."
"A photographer," Brissenden said meditatively. "Poke him, Martin! Poke him!"
"I guess I’m getting old," was the answer. "I know I ought, but I really haven’t the heart.
It doesn’t seem to matter."
"For his mother’s sake," Brissenden urged.