Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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Martin speculated still more as he perceived that all his colleagues were secretly grouped in factions.
Tubbs, Holabird, and perhaps Tubbsâs secretary, Pearl Robbins, were the ruling caste. It was murmured that Holabird hoped some day to be made Assistant Director, an office which was to be created for him. Gottlieb, Terry Wickett, and Dr. Nicholas Yeo, that long-mustached and rustic biologist whom Martin had first taken for a carpenter, formed an independent faction of their own, and however much he disliked the boisterous Wickett, Martin was dragged into it.
Dr. William Smith, with his little beard and a notion of mushrooms formed in Paris, kept to himself. Dr. Sholtheis, who had been born to a synagogue in Russia but who was now the most zealous high-church Episcopalian in Yonkers, was constantly in his polite small way trying to have his scientific work commended by Gottlieb. In the Department of Biophysics, the good-natured chief was reviled and envied by his own assistant. And in the whole Institute there was not one man who would, in all states of liquor, assert that the work of any other scientist anywhere was completely sound, or that there was a single one of his rivals who had not stolen ideas from him. No rocking-chair clique on a summer-hotel porch, no knot of actors, ever whispered more scandal or hinted more warmly of complete idiocy in their confreres than did these uplifted scientists.
But these discoveries Martin could shut out by closing his door, and he had that to do now which deafened him to the mutters of intrigue.
VFor once Gottlieb did not amble into his laboratory but curtly summoned him. In a corner of Gottliebâs office, a den opening from his laboratory, was Terry Wickett, rolling a cigarette and looking sardonic.
Gottlieb observed, âMartin, I haf taken the privilege of talking you over with Terry, and we concluded that you haf done well enough now so it is time you stop puttering and go to work.â
âI thought I was working, sir!â
All the wide placidness of his halcyon days was gone; he saw himself driven back to Pickerbaughism.
Wickett intruded, âNo, you havenât. Youâve just been showing that youâre a bright boy who might work if he only knew something.â
While Martin turned on Wickett with a âWho the devil are you?â expression, Gottlieb went on:
âThe fact is, Martin, you can do nothing till you know a little mathematics. If you are not going to be a cookbook bacteriologist, like most of them, you must be able to handle some of the fundamentals of science. All living things are physicochemical machines. Then how can you make progress if you do not know physical chemistry, and how can you know physical chemistry without much mathematics?â
âYuh,â said Wickett, âyouâre lawn-mowing and daisy-picking, not digging.â
Martin faced them. âBut rats, Wickett, a man canât know everything. Iâm a bacteriologist, not a physicist. Strikes me a fellow ought to use his insight, not just a chest of tools, to make discoveries. A good sailor could find his way at sea even if he didnât have instruments, and a whole Lusitania-ful of junk wouldnât make a good sailor out of a dub. Man ought to develop his brain, not depend on tools.â
âYe-uh, but if there were charts and quadrants in existence, a sailor that cruised off without âem would be a chump!â
For half an hour Martin defended himself, not too politely, before the gem-like Gottlieb, the granite Wickett. All the while he knew that he was sickeningly ignorant.
They ceased to take interest. Gottlieb was looking at his notebooks, Wickett was clumping off to work. Martin glared at Gottlieb. The man meant so much that he could be furious with him as he would have been with Leora, with his own self.
âIâm sorry you think I donât know anything,â he raged, and departed with the finest dramatic violence. He slammed into his own laboratory, felt freed, then wretched. Without volition, like a drunken man, he stormed to Wickettâs room, protesting, âI suppose youâre right. My physical chemistry is nix, and my math rotten. What am I going to doâ âwhat am I going to do?â
The embarrassed barbarian grumbled, âWell, for Peteâs sake, Slim, donât worry. The old man and I were just egging you on. Fact is, heâs tickled to death about the careful way youâre starting in. About the mathâ âprobably youâre better off than the Holy Wren and Tubbs right now; youâve forgotten all the math you ever knew, and they never knew any. Gosh all fishhooks! Science is supposed to mean Knowledgeâ âfrom the Greek, a handsome language spoken by the good old booze-hoisting Hellenesâ âand the way most of the science boys resent having to stop writing little jeweled papers or giving teas and sweat at getting some knowledge certainly does make me a grand booster for the human race. My own math isnât any too good, Slim, but if youâd like to have me come around evenings and tutor youâ âFree, I mean!â
Thus began the friendship between Martin and Terry Wickett; thus began a change in Martinâs life whereby he gave up three or four hours of wholesome sleep each night to grind over matters which everyone is assumed to know, and almost everyone does not know.
He took up algebra; found that he had forgotten most of it; cursed over the competition of the indefatigable A and the indolent B who walk from Y to Z; hired a Columbia tutor; and finished the subject, with a spurt of something like interest in regard to quadratic equations, in six weeksâ ââ ⊠while
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