Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
Book online «Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ». Author Sinclair Lewis
âIâm glad you think Iâm a wee bit nice.â She, the rose and the adored of all the world, gave him her favor.
âCan I come call on you tomorrow evening?â
âWell, Iâ âPerhaps.â
IIIIt cannot be said, in this biography of a young man who was in no degree a hero, who regarded himself as a seeker after truth yet who stumbled and slid back all his life and bogged himself in every obvious morass, that Martinâs intentions toward Madeline Fox were what is called âhonorable.â He was not a Don Juan, but he was a poor medical student who would have to wait for years before he could make a living. Certainly he did not think of proposing marriage. He wantedâ âlike most poor and ardent young men in such a case, he wanted all he could get.
As he raced toward her flat, he was expectant of adventure. He pictured her melting; he felt her hand glide down his cheek. He warned himself, âDonât be a fool now! Probably nothing doing at all. Donât go get all worked up and then be disappointed. Sheâll probably cuss you out for something you did wrong at the party. Sheâll probably be sleepy and wish you hadnât come. Nothing!â But he did not for a second believe it.
He rang, he saw her opening the door, he followed her down the meager hall, longing to take her hand. He came into the over-bright living-roomâ âand he found her mother, solid as a pyramid, permanent-looking as sunless winter.
But of course Mother would obligingly go, and leave him to conquest.
Mother did not.
In Mohalis, the suitable time for young men callers to depart is ten oâclock, but from eight till a quarter after eleven Martin did battle with Mrs. Fox; talked to her in two languages, an audible gossip and a mute but furious protest, while Madelineâ âshe was present; she sat about and looked pretty. In an equally silent tongue Mrs. Fox answered him, till the room was thick with their antagonism, while they seemed to be discussing the weather, the University, and the trolley service into Zenith.
âYes, of course, some day I guess theyâll have a car every twenty minutes,â he said weightily.
(âDarn her, why doesnât she go to bed? Cheers! Sheâs doing up her knitting. Nope. Damn it! Sheâs taking another ball of wool.â)
âOh, yes, Iâm sure theyâll have to have better service,â said Mrs. Fox.
(âYoung man, I donât know much about you, but I donât believe youâre the right kind of person for Madeline to go with. Anyway, itâs time you went home.â)
âOh, yes, sure, you bet. Lot better service.â
(âI know Iâm staying too long, and I know you know it, but I donât care!â)
It seemed impossible that Mrs. Fox should endure his stolid persistence. He used thought-forms, willpower, and hypnotism, and when he rose, defeated, she was still there, extremely placid. They said goodbye not too warmly. Madeline took him to the door; for an exhilarating half-minute he had her alone.
âI wanted so muchâ âI wanted to talk to you!â
âI know. Iâm sorry. Some time!â she muttered.
He kissed her. It was a tempestuous kiss, and very sweet.
IVFudge parties, skating parties, sleighing parties, a literary party with the guest of honor a lady journalist who did the social page for the Zenith Advocate-Timesâ âMadeline leaped into an orgy of jocund but extraordinarily tiring entertainments, and Martin obediently and smolderingly followed her. She appeared to have trouble in getting enough men, and to the literary evening Martin dragged the enraged Clif Clawson. Clif grumbled, âThis is the damnedest zoo of sparrows I ever did time in,â but he bore off treasureâ âhe had heard Madeline call Martin by her favorite name of âMartykins.â That was very valuable. Clif called him Martykins. Clif told others to call him Martykins. Fatty Pfaff and Irving Watters called him Martykins. And when Martin wanted to go to sleep, Clif croaked:
âYuh, youâll probably marry her. Sheâs a dead shot. She can hit a smart young M.D. at ninety paces. Oh, youâll have one fine young time going on with science after that skirt sets you at tonsil-snatchingâ ââ ⊠Sheâs one of these literary birds. She knows all about liteâature except maybe how to readâ ââ ⊠Sheâs not so bad-looking, now. Sheâll get fat, like her Ma.â
Martin said that which was necessary, and he concluded, âSheâs the only girl in the graduate school thatâs got any pep. The others just sit around and talk, and she gets up the best partiesâ ââ
âAny kissing parties?â
âNow you look here! Iâll be getting sore, first thing you know! You and I are roughnecks, but Madeline Foxâ âsheâs like Angus Duer, some ways. I realize all the stuff weâre missing: music and literature, yes, and decent clothes, tooâ âno harm to dressing wellâ ââ
âThatâs just what I was tellinâ you! Sheâll have you all dolled up in a Prince Albert and a boiled shirt, diagnosing everything as rich-widowitis. How you can fall for that four-flushing dameâ âwhereâs your control?â
Clifâs opposition stirred him to consider Madeline not merely with a sly and avaricious interest but with a dramatic conviction that he longed to marry her.
VFew women can for long periods keep from trying to Improve their men, and To Improve means to change a person from what he is, whatever that may be, into something else. Girls like Madeline Fox, artistic young women who do not work at it, cannot be restrained from Improving for more than a day at a time. The moment the urgent Martin showed that he was stirred by her graces, she went at his clothesâ âhis corduroys and soft collars and eccentric old gray felt hatâ âat his vocabulary and his taste in fiction, with new and more patronizing vigor. Her sketchy way of saying, âWhy, of course everybody knows that Emerson was the greatest thinkerâ irritated him the more in contrast to Gottliebâs dark patience.
âOh, let me alone!â he hurled at her. âYouâre the nicest thing the Lord ever made, when you stick to things
Comments (0)