An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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For a moment there was written in her eyes the desire and the determination almost, to do as he suggestedâ ârun awayâ âmake a great lark of this, her intense and true love. For, once married, what could her parents do? And was not Clyde worthy of her and them, too? Of courseâ âeven though nearly all in her set fancied that he was not quite all he should be, just because he didnât have as much money as they had. But he would haveâ âwould he notâ âafter he was married to herâ âand get as good a place in her fatherâs business as Gil Griffiths had in his fatherâs?
Yet a moment later, thinking of her life here and what her going off in such a way would mean to her father and mother just thenâ âin the very beginning of the summer seasonâ âas well as how it would disrupt her own plans and cause her mother to feel especially angry, and perhaps even to bring about the dissolution of the marriage on the ground that she was not of age, she pausedâ âthat gay light of adventure replaced by a marked trace of the practical and the material that so persistently characterized her. What difference would a few months make, anyhow? It might, and no doubt would, save Clyde from being separated from her forever, whereas their present course might insure their separation.
Accordingly she now shook her head in a certain, positive and yet affectionate way, which by now Clyde had come to know spelled defeatâ âthe most painful and irremediable defeat that had yet come to him in connection with all this. She would not go! Then he was lostâ âlostâ âand she to him forever maybe. Oh, God! For while her face softened with a tenderness which was not usually thereâ âeven when she was most moved emotionallyâ âshe said: âI would, honey, if I did not think it best not to, now. Itâs too soon. Mamma isnât going to do anything right now. I know she isnât. Besides she has made all her plans to do a lot of entertaining here this summer, and for my particular benefit. She wants me to be nice toâ âwell, you know who I mean. And I can be, without doing anything to interfere with us in any way, Iâm sureâ âso long as I donât do anything to really frighten her.â She paused to smile a reassuring smile. âBut you can come up here as often as you choose, donât you see, and she and these others wonât think anything of it, because you wonât be our guest, donât you see? Iâve fixed all that with Bertine. And that means that we can see each other all summer long up here, just about as much as we want to, donât you see? Then in the fall, when I come back, and if I find that I canât make her be nice to you at all, or consider our being engaged, why, I will run away with you. Yes, I will, darlingâ âreally and truly.â
Darling! The fall!
She stopped, her eyes showing a very shrewd conception of all the practical difficulties before them, while she took both of his hands in hers and looked up into his face. Then, impulsively and conclusively, she threw both arms about his neck and, pulling his head down, kissed him.
âCanât you see, dearie? Please donât look so sad, darling. Sondra loves her Clyde so much. And sheâll do anything and everything to make things come out right. Yes, she will. And they will, too. Now you wait and see. She wonât give him up everâ âever!â
And Clyde, realizing that he had not one moving argument wherewith to confront her, reallyâ ânot one that might not cause her to think strangely and suspiciously of his intense anxiety, and that this, because of Robertaâs demand, and unlessâ âunlessâ âwellâ â, unless Roberta let him go it all spelled defeat for him, now looked gloomily and even desperately upon her face. The beauty of her! The completeness of this world! And yet not to be allowed to possess her or it, ever. And Roberta with her demand and his promise in the immediate background! And no way of escape save by flight! God!
At this point it was that a nervous and almost deranged lookâ ânever so definite or powerful at any time before in his lifeâ âthe borderline look between reason and unreason, no lessâ âso powerful that the quality of it was even noticeable to Sondraâ âcame into his eyes. He looked sick, broken, unbelievably despairing. So much so that she exclaimed, âWhy, what is it, Clyde, dearieâ âyou look soâ âoh, I canât say just howâ âforlorn orâ âDoes he love me so much? And canât he wait just three or four months? But, oh, yes he can, too. It isnât as bad as he thinks. Heâll be with me most of the timeâ âthe lovekins will. And when he isnât, Sondraâll write him every dayâ âevery day.â
âBut, Sondra! Sondra! If I could just tell you. If you knew how much it were going to mean to meâ ââ
He paused here, for as he could see at this point, into the expression of Sondra came a practical inquiry as to what it was that made it so urgent for her to leave with him at once. And immediately, on his part, Clyde sensing how enormous was the hold of this world on herâ âhow integral a part of it she wasâ âand how, by merely too much insistence here and now, he might so easily cause her to doubt the wisdom of her primary craze for him, was moved to desist, sure that if he spoke it would lead her to questioning him in such a way as might cause her to changeâ âor at least to modify her enthusiasm to the point where even the dream of the fall might vanish.
And so, instead of explaining further why he needed a decision on her part, he merely desisted, saying: âItâs because I need you
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