CHAPTER 19
Bryan
Ray’s wife Vesta appeared at WLT every morning at ten, a pair of sensible brown shoes, big legs in a long brown tweed skirt, a thick torso in a brown silk blouse, and Vesta’s large head and short brown hair. She was nearly six feet tall. She carried a lit cigarette and a black leather briefcase and her feet clomped as she headed west along the back hall. There was a flash of lipstick and a turban with a green plume, but brown was her trademark. She disappeared into her office in the Women’s Bureau, emerged at five minutes before eleven, strode into Studio B to introduce the Classroom of the Air speaker and tell why his or her topic (“Meeting the Needs of the Cities” or “The Future of Architecture” or “Women in Broadcasting”) was of vital interest to all of us, and then disappeared for the rest of the day to clip out articles from The New Republic and The Women’s Precepts Weekly and to compose a memorandum to Ray, reminding him why he should fire Leo (“a fool”), why they should broadcast the Metropolitan Opera (“to inculcate a love of opera in young children”).
“A child who has learned to love Wagner is a child who could learn to enjoy a pig slaughter,” replied Ray, who was no fan of pig slaughters.
Vesta did not mingle, except at Christmas, and then only because it was Christmas and people expected it. At the WLT party, she stood in a corner of the Star of the North Ballroom and sipped sherry for a few minutes and escaped before the entertainment began. She loathed the sight of smiley people on stage laying on the charm and telling jokes and showing off. To her it was embarrassing that people should be so dishonest in public, but of course that was the point of entertainment, so she preferred to stay away. The terrifying prospect was that Santa (Leo) would see her and call her up to the stage and she would have to stand and grin like an idiot and give away trashy gifts. She fled before Santa arrived.
The worst part of radio was the comedy, and after that came the commercials. Whenever she heard one, she reached for the knob. Disgusting, vile, repulsive things. Someone paid you money to say what they wanted you to say and you said it. “Here’s ten dollars. Say shit,” so you took the money and said it. You said it ten times, as many as they wanted, and you said it with a grin, or whatever they wanted. A horrible truth in America: money talks. Not truth, not society, not art, but money, and when money talks, it doesn’t tell the truth, it talks money.,No wonder the Republic was in the hands of midgets like Harding and Coolidge, when the greatest educational innovation of all time—the permanent invisible universal classroom of the air—is given over to dumbheads to use to sell toilet bowl cleaner. Throw out the professor, bring in the janitor to teach the class.
“This could have been the Acropolis,” she told Ray bitterly, “and you made it a bazaar.”
“It’s only Minneapolis,” he said, “and what’s bazaar about that?” He grinned. She did not feel the slightest impulse to laugh.
Patsy Konopka and Vesta Soderbjerg met in the halls of WLT once, when Patsy took a wrong turn en route to the Ladies’ room, and they circled one another with the poisoned courtesy of wasps in the arborvitae. Patsy considered Vesta an old snoot and Vesta thought Patsy was one of those women Ray took to New York. A whore, in other words.
“Mrs. Soderbjerg—an unexpected pleasure!” said Patsy much too warmly.
Vesta winced. She peered at the girl. “My dear, you have a scrap of fruit in the corner of your mouth,” she murmured, and sailed on.
Patsy dabbed at her mouth. Nothing.
“You have blood running down your stocking,” she called, but the ship had gone around the corner.
The next day, Patsy introduced a family called the Plumbottoms to Friendly Neighbor, William Jennings Plumbottom and his wife Lester. Lester had a voice like a man’s, except plummier and warblier. She talked up in her nose and came to borrow fresh vegetables from the Bensons and stand around as the Bensons picked and she yammered on about the beauty of opera. Lester adored opera, and sometimes she would get so enthused, she burst into a song, “Vesta la jujube,” and she sang out the one line and the rooster crowed. “Well, he likes it,” said Dad.
Vesta never heard the Plumbottoms, but Ray did and he was touched. William Jennings Bryan was his hero. “Patsy knows that, God bless her,” he said. “And I don’t take it amiss. By God, if Bryan had been on the radio, nobody would remember his name today anyway.”
People looked around for the door anytime that Ray mentioned the Great Orator. They remembered urgent errands awaiting them, friends waiting on streetcorners, phones left off the hook.
Ray had seen Bryan in 1896 in Fargo, North Dakota. He remembered the crush of people under the blazing sun, the clouds of dust, and the faraway man in the black frock coat standing tall and motionless on a platform, the bunting and the banners, the crowd so still, straining to hear every word, and the man’s voice rising and calling, crying out —Ray didn’t remember the words, but the voice was clear as a bell. He had waited for Bryan to arrive, counted the days. “This is history,” his father said. “This is something you will remember and tell your grandchildren.” Ray had pressed forward in the crowd, tripped and was nearly trampled, his legs were stepped on, his father shoved through and cursed in Norwegian and people stepped back and he yanked Ray to his feet. He remembered his mother had lost a silver brooch in the crowd. It was hot. A team of horses bolted, it took six men to hold them. Somebody sold cups of cold water for two cents a cup and it was cold. Bryan’s voice—so strong, so vibrant, so beautiful, and he spoke for more than an hour, and the crowd was so still, you could hear the banners flapping when a breeze came up. Bryan was too far away for him to hear, except for a word now and then, and yet it was so moving and memorable. The address was printed the next week in the newspaper. People bought it and read it and then placed it neatly in a trunk, or a box, or in a Bible, pressed like it was a leaf and, though seldom read, it was cherished.
Now it was all gone, Bryan and the Fargo of 1896 and his father and horses and the steam threshers on the farm, all gone, and what had killed it? Radio had.
“Nobody today would walk across the street to hear Bryan speak,” Ray said. “They just want to listen to the radio. You could put Bryan on the radio and there he’d be, the same as a comedian or the fellow who sells soap. Back then, that man could stand on a train platform and hold ten thousand people in the palm of his hand. Today, any jerk who can keep talking, you stick him behind a microphone and fifty-thousand will sit there and listen to him blabber about nothing.”
The tragedy was that Bryan was right. Bryan lost in the 1896, 1900, and 1908 presidential elections, but he was right, boys.
Ray’s voice warmed up. Roy Jr. slid glumly down into the chair. Dad looked out the window streaked with rain. Bryan was opposed to monetary policies that enriched the rich and impoverished the poor—he opposed bloody American imperialism and that jackass Theodore Roosevelt who wanted to out-England the English—he opposed America’s entrance into World War I, the most worthless and ridiculous war ever known to mankind.
Ray stood up and came around the desk. Bryan lost on all these issues! and then he lost in the history books! Today, we mainly remember him as the tired old man who lost to Clarence Darrow in the Monkey Trial in Dayton, Tennessee, 1925. He died of a broken heart. A complete loser on all counts and yet—he was right!
“Remember that,” Ray told Roy Jr.
1896, when Bryan lost to McKinley, was a watershed year. We will be paying for that a long time out here on the prairie. We had no interest in owning Cuba or the Philippines and damn little interest in fighting a crazy worthless European war, but we lost and over we went. Out here on the prairie, we wanted free trade, low tariffs, to keep prices of goods and machinery low, and we lost. We wanted the government to intervene, in behalf of the people, against the power of the railroads and large corporations, and we lost.
“That was the year we voted down the people and voted in Wall Street,” said Ray. Bryan was the great champion of the prairie—but those New York bankers beat him down.
“They tried to buy me out in 1926, the year after Bryan died,” said Ray. “I wouldn’t sell. Those New York bastards tried to get WLT so they could spread their lies a little farther. But I wouldn’t give in to them!” The phone rang. He picked it up. “Yes? Oh. All right.” Roy Jr. could tell it was Vesta on the other end. He nodded to Dad. They stood up and slowly made for the door.