An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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Please write me, Clyde, a long, cheery letter, even though you donât want to, and tell me all about how you have not thought of me once since Iâve been away or missed me at allâ âyou used to, you know, and how you donât want me to come back and you canât possibly come up before two weeks from Saturday if then.
Oh, dear, I donât mean the horrid things I write, but Iâm so blue and tired and lonely that I canât help it at times. I need someone to talk toâ ânot just anyone here, because they donât understand, and I canât tell anybody.
But there, I said I wouldnât be blue or gloomy or cross and yet I havenât done so very well this time, have I? But I promise to do better next timeâ âtomorrow or next day, because it relieves me to write to you, Clyde. And wonât you please write me just a few words to cheer me up while Iâm waiting, whether you mean it or not, I need it so. And you will come, of course. Iâll be so happy and grateful and try not to bother you too much in any way.
Your lonely
Bert
And it was the contrast presented by these two scenes which finally determined for him the fact that he would never marry Robertaâ âneverâ ânor even go to her at Biltz, or let her come back to him here, if he could avoid that. For would not his going, or her return, put a period to all the joys that so recently in connection with Sondra had come to him hereâ âmake it impossible for him to be with Sondra at Twelfth Lake this summerâ âmake it impossible for him to run away with and marry her? In Godâs name was there no way? No outlet from this horrible difficulty which now confronted him?
And in a fit of despair, having found the letters in his room on his return from work one warm evening in June, he now threw himself upon his bed and fairly groaned. The misery of this! The horror of his almost insoluble problem! Was there no way by which she could be persuaded to go awayâ âand stayâ âremain at home, maybe for a while longer, while he sent her ten dollars a week, or twelve, evenâ âa full half of all his salary? Or could she go to some neighboring townâ âFonda, Gloversville, Schenectadyâ âshe was not so far gone but what she could take care of herself well enough as yet, and rent a room and remain there quietly until the fatal time, when she could go to some doctor or nurse? He might help her to find someone like that when the time came, if only she would be willing not to mention his name.
But this business of making him come to Biltz, or meeting her somewhere, and that within two weeks or less. He would not, he would not. He would do something desperate if she tried to make him do thatâ ârun awayâ âorâ âmaybe go up to Twelfth Lake before it should be time for him to go to Biltz, or before she would think it was time, and then persuade Sondra if he couldâ âbut oh, what a wild, wild chance was thatâ âto run away with and marry him, even if she wasnât quite eighteenâ âand thenâ âand thenâ âbeing married, and her family not being able to divorce them, and Roberta not being able to find him, either, but only to complainâ âwell, couldnât he deny itâ âsay that it was not soâ âthat he had never had any relationship, other than that which any department head might have with any girl working for him. He had not been introduced to the Gilpins, nor had he gone with Roberta to see that Dr. Glenn near Gloversville, and she had told him at the time, she had not mentioned his name.
But the nerve of trying to deny it!
The courage it would take.
The courage to try to face Roberta when, as he knew, her steady, accusing, horrified, innocent, blue eyes would be about as difficult to face as anything in all the world. And could he do that? Had he the courage? And would it all work out satisfactorily if he did? Would Sondra believe himâ âonce she heard?
But just the same in pursuance of this idea, whether finally he executed it or not, even though he went to Twelfth Lake, he must write Sondra a letter saying that he was coming. And this he did at once, writing her passionately and yearningly. At the same time he decided not to write Roberta at all. Maybe call her on long
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