An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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âWell, Bert, how about you? All right? Youâre not going to get cold feet now, are you? Gee, I hope not because this is going to be a good chance to get this thing done and over with. And it isnât like you were going to someone who hadnât done anything like this before, you know, because this fellow has. I got that straight. All you have to do now, is to say, well, you know, that youâre in trouble, see, and that you donât know how youâre going to get out of it unless heâll help you in some way, because you havenât any friends here you can go to. And besides, as things are, you couldnât go to âem if you wanted to. Theyâd tell on you, see. Then if he asks where I am or who I am, you just say that I was a fellow hereâ âbut that Iâve goneâ âgive any name you want to, but that Iâve gone, and you donât know where Iâve gone toâ ârun away, see. Then youâd better say, too, that you wouldnât have come to him only that you heard of another case in which he helped someone elseâ âthat a girl told you, see. Only you donât want to let on that youâre paid much, I meanâ âbecause if you do he may want to make the bill more than I can pay, see, unless heâll give us a few months in which to do it, or something like that, you see.â
Clyde was so nervous and so full of the necessity of charging Roberta with sufficient energy and courage to go through with this and succeed, now that he had brought her this far along with it, that he scarcely realized how inadequate and trivial, even, in so far as her predicament and the doctorâs mood and temperament were concerned, his various instructions and bits of inexperienced advice were. And she on her part was not only thinking how easy it was for him to stand back and make suggestions, while she was confronted with the necessity of going forward, and that alone, but also that he was really thinking more of himself than he was of herâ âsome way to make her get herself out of it inexpensively and without any real trouble to him.
At the same time, even here and now, in spite of all this, she was still decidedly drawn to himâ âhis white face, his thin hands, nervous manner. And although she knew he talked to encourage her to do what he had not the courage or skill to do himself, she was not angry. Rather, she was merely saying to herself in this crisis that although he advised so freely she was not going to pay attention to himâ âmuch. What she was going to say was not that she was deserted, for that seemed too much of a disagreeable and self-incriminating remark for her to make concerning herself, but rather that she was married and that she and her young husband were too poor to have a baby as yetâ âthe same story Clyde had told the druggist in Schenectady, as she recalled. For after all, what did he know about how she felt? And he was not going with her to make it easier for her.
Yet dominated by the purely feminine instinct to cling to someone for support, she now turned to Clyde, taking hold of his hands and standing quite still, wishing that he would hold and pet her and tell her that it was all right and that she must not be afraid. And although he no longer cared for her, now in the face of this involuntary evidence of her former trust in him, he released both hands and putting his arms about her, the more to encourage her than anything else, observed: âCome on now, Bert. Gee, you canât act like this, you know. You donât want to lose your nerve now that weâre here, do you? It wonât be so hard once you get there. I know it wonât. All you got to do is to go up and ring the bell, see, and when he comes, or whoever comes, just say you want to see the doctor alone, see. Then heâll understand itâs something private and itâll be easier.â
He went on with more advice of the same kind, and she, realizing from his lack of spontaneous enthusiasm for her at this moment how desperate was her state, drew herself together as vigorously as she could, and saying: âWell, wait here, then, will you? Donât go very far away, will you? I may be right back,â hurried along in the shadow through the gate and up a walk which led to the front door.
In answer to her ring the door was opened by one of those exteriorly as well as mentally sober, small-town practitioners who, Clydeâs and Shortâs notion to the contrary notwithstanding, was the typical and fairly conservative physician of the countrysideâ âsolemn, cautious, moral, semi-religious to a degree, holding some views which he considered liberal and others which a fairly liberal person would have considered narrow and stubborn into the bargain. Yet because of the ignorance and stupidity of so many of those about him, he was able to consider himself at least fairly learned. In constant touch with all phases of ignorance and dereliction as well as sobriety, energy, conservatism, success and the like, he was more inclined, where fact appeared to nullify his early conclusion in
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