Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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Martin was almost feeble. âNo. Iâm afraid Iâm against it.â
âWhy?â
âWell, Iâ âHonestly, Clif, if you donât understand it, I donât know how I can explain the scientific attitude to you. You knowâ âthatâs what Gottlieb used to call itâ âscientific attitude. And as Iâm a scientistâ âleast I hope I amâ âI couldnâtâ âWell, to be associated with a thing like thatâ ââ
âBut, you poor louse, donât you suppose I understand the scientific attitude? Gosh, Iâve seen a dissecting-room myself! Why, you poor crab, of course I wouldnât expect you to have your name associated with it! Youâd keep in the background and slip us all the dope, and get a lot of publicity for phage in general so the Deeâah People would fall easier, and weâd pull all the strong-arm work.â
âButâ âI hope youâre joking, Clif. If you werenât joking, Iâd tell you that if anybody tried to pull a thing like that, Iâd expose âem and get âem sent to jail, no matter who they were!â
âWell, gosh, if you feel that way about itâ â!â
Clif was peering over the fatty pads beneath his eyes. He sounded doubtful:
âI suppose you have the right to keep other guys from grabbing your own stuff. Well, all right, Mart. Got to be teloddeling. Tell you what you might do, though, if that donât hurt your tender conscience, too: you might invite old Clif up tâ the house for dinner, to meet the new lil wifey that I read about in the sassiety journals. You might happen to remember, old bean, that there have been times when you were glad enough to let poor fat old Clif slip you a feed and a place to sleep!â
âOh, I know. You bet there have! Nobody was ever decenter to me; nobody. Look. Where you staying? Iâll find out from my wife what dates we have ahead, and telephone you tomorrow morning.â
âSo you let the Old Woman keep the worksheet for you, huh? Well, I never butt into anybodyâs business. Iâm staying at the Berrington Hotel, room 617â ââmember that, 617â âand you might try and phone me before ten tomorrow. Say, thatâs one grand sweet song of a cutie you got on the door here. What cha think? Howâs chances on dragging her out to feed and shake a hoof with Uncle Clif?â
As primly as the oldest, most staid scientist in the Institute, Martin protested, âOh, she belongs to very nice family. I donât think I should try it. Really, Iâd rather you didnât.â
Clifâs gaze was sharp, for all its fattiness.
With excessive cordiality, with excessive applause when Clif remarked, âYou better go back to work and put some salt on a coupla bacteriaâs tails,â Martin guided him to the reception-room, safely past the girl clerk, and to the elevator.
For a long time he sat in his office and was thoroughly wretched.
He had for years pictured Clif Clawson as another Terry Wickett. He saw that Clif was as different from Terry as from Rippleton Holabird. Terry was rough, he was surly, he was colloquial, he despised many fine and gracious things, he offended many fine and gracious people, but these acerbities made up the haircloth robe wherewith he defended a devotion to such holy work as no cowled monk ever knew. But Clifâ â
âIâd do the world a service by killing that man!â Martin fretted. âPhageotherapy at a yegg sanitarium! I stand him only because Iâm too much of a coward to risk his going around saying that âin the days of my Success, Iâve gone back on my old friends.â (Success! Puddling at work! Dinners! Talking to idiotic women! Being furious because you werenât invited to the dinner to the Portuguese minister!) No. Iâll phone Clif we canât have him at the house.â
Over him came remembrance of Clifâs loyalty in the old barren days, and Clifâs joy to share with him every pathetic gain.
âWhy should he understand my feeling about phage? Was his scheme any worse than plenty of reputable drug-firms? How much was I righteously offended, and how much was I sore because he didnât recognize the high social position of the rich Dr. Arrowsmith?â
He gave up the question, went home, explained almost frankly to Joyce what her probable opinion of Clif would be, and contrived that Clif should be invited to dinner with only the two of them.
âMy dear Mart,â said Joyce, âwhy do you insult me by hinting that Iâm such a snob that Iâll be offended by racy slang and by business ethics very much like those of dear Rogerâs grandpapa? Do you think Iâve never ventured out of the drawing-room? I thought youâd seen me outside it! I shall probably like your Clawson person very much indeed.â
The day after Martin had invited him to dinner, Clif telephoned to Joyce:
âThis Mrs. Arrowsmith? Well, say, this is old Clif.â
âIâm afraid I didnât quite catch it.â
âClif! Old Clif!â
âIâm frightfully sorry butâ âPerhaps thereâs a bad connection.â
âWhy, itâs Mr. Clawson, thatâs going to feed with you onâ ââ
âOh, of course. I am so sorry.â
âWell, look: What I wanted to know is: Is this going to be just a homey grub-grabbing or a real soiree? In other words, honey, shall I dress natural or do I put on the soup-and-fish? Oh, I got âemâ âswallowtail and the whole darn outfit!â
âIâ âDo you meanâ âOh. Shall you dress for dinner? I think perhaps I would.â
âAttaboy! Iâll be there, dolled up like a new saloon. Iâll show you folks the cutest lil line of jeweled
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