Read An Autobiography of Jack London Online
Authors: Jack London
Edited and Introduced by Stephen Brennan
Copyright © 2013 by Stephen Brennan
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
London, Jack, 1876-1916.
An autobiography of Jack London / Jack London, Stephen Brennan (editor).
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-62087-364-9 (alk. paper)
eISBN 978-1-62087-953-5
1. London, Jack, 1876-1916. 2. Authors, American--20th century--Biography.
I. Brennan, Stephen Vincent. II. Title.
PS3523.O46Z46 2013
813'.52--dc23
[B]
2012034937
Printed in the United States of America
Contents
Part One
THE ROAD
Chapter1
Confession
Chapter2
Holding Her Down
Chapter3
Pictures
Chapter4
“Pinched”
Chapter5
The Pen
Chapter6
Hoboes That Pass in the Night
Chapter7
Road-Kids and Gay-Cats
Chapter8
Two Thousand Stiffs
Chapter9
Bulls
Part 2
THE CRUISE OF THE
SNARK
Chapter10
Forward
Chapter11
The Inconceivable and Monstrous
Chapter12
Adventure
Chapter13
Finding One's Way About
chapter14
First Landfall
Chapter15
Royal Sport
Chapter16
Lepers of Molokai
Chapter17
The House of the Sun
Chapter18
A Pacific Traverse
Chapter19
Typee
Chapter20
Nature Man
Chapter21
The High Seat of Abundance
Chapter22
Cruising in the Solomons
Chapter23
Amateur M.D. 307
Chapter24
Back Word
Part Three
John Barleycorn
Introduction
“We live in an age when men treat art as if it were meant to be a form of autobiography. “
âOscar Wilde
T
he art or practice of autobiographyâthat is, writing about one's selfâhas been going on since folk first took up sticks to scratch their names in the mold. The practice of calling this scribbled self-publication an
autobiography,
is of a more recent origin. The word itself doesn't appear in English until the late 1700, when some wag famously judged it too “pedantic” for general use, and even today the word retains a faintly sophistical air. But eventually a whole literary genre grew up around the idea that one couldâperhaps even shouldâwrite one's own biography, that is, practice autobiography.
We know the impulse well enough. Which of us has not, at one time or another, experienced an almost overwhelming compulsion to tell his or her own story, to get it out and get it down on paper?
I was there and I saw all, and this and that occurred, and this is how I felt about it, and how I feel about it now.
If one accepts a holistic take on the genreâthat is, that autobi-ography comes in many formsâone recognizes an array of sub-genres. There are the diarists and composers of memoir, tell-all, and true-confessions. Even formal journalism is sometimes practiced as a true-life adventure storyâdepending on the point of view. Thus the journal-keepers of an earlier time became the journalists of a later age. Fact is, if you insert yourself into, or are already an actor in, the story you are telling, you are writing autobiography. Sorry, but that's how it is.
And of course there
are
many reasons to sit down and write one's own story.
Brag is one of them.
Look at all I've accomplished! Ain't I swell?
Or, one may purpose apology. Autobiography in ancient times was called
apologia
âtranslated “confession,” mea culpa. This may be regarded as telling a taleâcautionary or otherwiseâon one's self. Or one can write defensively, like an old general attempting to explain or excuse old slaughters; or aggressively, to hurt or wound, to settle old scores, to spin. Or one may write for the sheer pleasure, or pain, of conjuring and confrontingâperhaps re-configuringâold memories, absent friends, heartbreaks.
Implicit in most autobiography is the desire to be remembered, and to be remembered arightâwhatever
aright
might mean. Mark Twain said somewhere that he wished to write his own biography, so he “could rely on getting in all the facts.”
The facts of Jack London's life are not in doubt. He was born John Chaney, in San Francisco in 1876, to an unwed mother by the name of Flora Wellman and a father, W. H. Chaney, whom Jack was never to know. By and by Flora (a music teacher and sometimes spiritualist) married up with John London a hard-working, quiet man, with two daugh-ters. One of these girls, Eliza, is said to have acted as little Jack's mother surrogate. They remained close all of Jack's life. The family lodged in various places in the Bay area, but soon settled in Oakland. There they lived what we might today call a
middle-class
âwhat they called a
working-classâ
life. Either way, theirs was not the abject poverty London was to later suggest. The boy attended school in Oakland, was an indifferent student, and often a truant, routinely slipping away for a day's ramble down on the city's waterfront. Here first, at a young age, Jack learned to drink. Not, as he was later to assert, for the drink itself, for the “jingle,” but more for the company of other men and boys, their acceptance and fellow-ship. By his early teens Jack was ditching school, almost all the time. But, quite amazingly, he had by this time discovered the Oakland Public Library, and in particular the librarian, Ina Coolbrith (she was later to become the first Poet Laureate of the State of California) who loaned the boy books, and guided his course of reading. By night Jack sailed his own small boat, and
oyster-pirated
in the rich shell beds of the Bay, usually managing to elude the harbor patrol. Eventually his little sloop became damaged, and Jack turned around and worked for the State Fishing Patrol, doing his best to thwart other oyster pirates. But soon he had enough of this and signed aboard a sealing schooner bound for the islands in the seal-rich northern Pacific. This experience was to inspire his later fictional masterpiece
The Sea Wolf.
When he returned home, the States were in severe recession owing to the financial panic of 1893. Jack tried his hand at a couple of back-breaking jobs, but quickly gave them up and hit the road, beginning his life as a “tramp.” As the expression went, he joined “Kelly's Army,” an informal association of thousands of unemployed, determined to march on Washington.
These hobo adventures, riding rails, looking for work, begging for food, and ducking the railroad company “bulls,” he was to later chronicle in his memoir
The Road.
In 1894 Jack served a thirty-day sentence for vagrancy, in the Erie County Penitentiary, in Buffalo NY. This time, returning home, he set himself to get an education, completing his high school work and publishing his first short story,
âTyphoon Off the Coast of Japan,”
in the school's magazine.