An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) š
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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An elevator door flew open. Various guests entered. Then Clyde and another bellboy who gave him an interested glance. At the sixth floor the boy departed. At the eighth Clyde and an old lady stepped forth. He hurried to the door of his guest and tapped. The man opened it, somewhat more fully dressed than before. He had on a pair of trousers and was shaving.
āBack, eh,ā he called.
āYes, sir,ā replied Clyde, handing him the package and change. āHe said it was seventy-five cents.ā
āHeās a damned robber, but you can keep the change, just the same,ā he replied, handing him the quarter and closing the door. Clyde stood there, quite spellbound for the fraction of a second. āThirty-five centsāā āhe thoughtā āāthirty-five cents.ā And for one little short errand. Could that really be the way things went here? It couldnāt be, really. It wasnāt possibleā ānot always.
And then, his feet sinking in the soft nap of the carpet, his hand in one pocket clutching the money, he felt as if he could squeal or laugh out loud. Why, thirty-five centsā āand for a little service like that. This man had given him a quarter and the other a dime and he hadnāt done anything at all.
He hurried from the car at the bottomā āthe strains of the orchestra once more fascinated him, the wonder of so well-dressed a throng thrilling himā āand made his way to the bench from which he had first departed.
And following this he had been called to carry the three bags and two umbrellas of an aged farmer-like couple, who had engaged a parlor, bedroom and bath on the fifth floor. En route they kept looking at him, as he could see, but said nothing. Yet once in their room, and after he had promptly turned on the lights near the door, lowered the blinds and placed the bags upon the bag racks, the middle-aged and rather awkward husbandā āa decidedly solemn and bewhiskered personā āstudied him and finally observed: āYoung fella, you seem to be a nice, brisk sort of boyā ārather better than most weāve seen so far, I must say.ā
āI certainly donāt think that hotels are any place for boys,ā chirped up the wife of his bosomā āa large and rotund person, who by this time was busily employed inspecting an adjoining room. āI certainly wouldnāt want any of my boys to work in āemā āthe way people act.ā
āBut here, young man,ā went on the elder, laying off his overcoat and fishing in his trousers pocket. āYou go down and get me three or four evening papers if there are that many and a pitcher of ice-water, and Iāll give you fifteen cents when you get back.ā
āThis hotelās betterān the one in Omaha, Pa,ā added the wife sententiously. āItās got nicer carpets and curtains.ā
And as green as Clyde was, he could not help smiling secretly. Openly, however, he preserved a masklike solemnity, seemingly effacing all facial evidence of thought, and took the change and went out. And in a few moments he was back with the ice-water and all the evening papers and departed smilingly with his fifteen cents.
But this, in itself, was but a beginning in so far as this particular evening was concerned, for he was scarcely seated upon the bench again, before he was called to room 529, only to be sent to the bar for drinksā ātwo ginger ales and two syphons of sodaā āand this by a group of smartly-dressed young men and girls who were laughing and chattering in the room, one of whom opened the door just wide enough to instruct him as to what was wanted. But because of a mirror over the mantel, he could see the party and one pretty girl in a white suit and cap, sitting on the edge of a chair in which reclined a young man who had his arm about her.
Clyde stared, even while pretending not to. And in his state of mind, this sight was like looking through the gates of Paradise. Here were young fellows and girls in this room, not so much older than himself, laughing and talking and drinking evenā ānot ice-cream sodas and the like, but such drinks no doubt as his mother and father were always speaking against as leading to destruction, and apparently nothing was thought of it.
He bustled down to the bar, and having secured the drinks and a charge slip, returnedā āand was paidā āa dollar and a half for the drinks and a quarter for himself. And once more he had a glimpse of the appealing scene. Only now one of the couples was dancing to a tune sung and whistled by the other two.
But what interested him as much as the visits to and glimpses of individuals in the different rooms, was the moving panorama of the main lobbyā āthe character of the clerks behind the main deskā āroom clerk, key clerk, mail clerk, cashier and assistant cashier. And the various stands about the placeā āflower stand, news stand, cigar stand, telegraph office, taxicab office, and all manned by individuals who seemed to him curiously filled with the atmosphere of this place. And then around and between all these walking or sitting were such imposing men and women, young men and girls all so fashionably dressed, all so ruddy and contented looking. And the cars or other vehicles in which some of them appeared about dinner time and later. It was possible for him to see them in the flare of the lights outside. The wraps, furs, and other belongings in which they appeared, or which were often carried by these other boys and himself across the great lobby and into the cars or the dining-room or the several elevators. And they were always of such gorgeous textures, as Clyde saw them. Such grandeur. This, then, most certainly was what it meant to be rich, to be a person of consequence in
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