National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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âOf course, we think only the pleasantest things will happen, Dan. And we want you to understand that this house must be home for anybody that belongs to you as much as it is for the rest of us. You know we feel that way, donât you, son?â
âYes, sir. I do hope to bring her here, if youâll let me. Iâve been thinkinâ about it a great deal, and I believe this town is my townââ âDan flushed a little as he spokeâ ââand I want to prove it, and I want Lena to learn to feel about it the way I do. I believe sheâd miss something out of her life if she didnât. And I want you all to learn what a noble girl she is. I know you will, father.â
âWhy, of course!â Mr. Oliphant took his sonâs hand and shook it. âWe didnât happen to say it downstairs, but we do congratulate you, Dan. As far as anybody can tell from a photographââ âhe paused again here, then finished with a great heartiness of voiceâ ââwhy, as far as you can tell from that, why, she looks likeâ âshe looks like a mighty pretty girl.â
âYes, sir.â Dan smiled with a little constraint. âThereâs something else I want to talk over with you when we get time enough. Iâve got hold of a big idea, father.â
âHave you, my boy?â
âItâs about our future,â Dan said nervously. âI mean Lenaâs and mine.â He hesitated, then went on: âI expect it sounds like big talk from a little man, but I believe itâs goinâ to be a great thing for the future of our city, too.â
Upon this his fatherâs expression of friendly concern became complicated by evidences of a slight inward struggle, but he was able to respond with sufficient gravity: âDo you, Dan? What is it?â
âItâs an idea for a big development, sir. I mean a development in the way this cityâs commenced to grow.â
âIndeed?â
âI guess I better tell you another time, sir; itâs got lots of details, and Iâm afraid I ought to be gettinâ on over to Aunt Oliveâs now, sir.â
âI suppose so,â Mr. Oliphant said, relinquishing his sonâs hand. âI only wanted to sayâ âabout your engagementâ âitâs all right with us, old fellow, and we just hope weâll be all right with her.â
Dan was touched. His father spoke with feeling, and the young man could not trust his eyes to be seen. He hurried out into the spacious upper hall, not looking back, though he said: âYes, sir; thank you,â in a choked voice. Then, when he was halfway down the stairs, he called cheerfully: âIâll let you know tomorrow morning if thereâs anything much the matter with young Charlie. Iâll be home for breakfast, anyway, and Iâll tell you about my idea then, too. Itâs goinâ to be a mighty big thing, father!â
âI hope so, my boy,â Mr. Oliphant returned; and although there was moisture in his own eyes, he had difficulty in restraining, until the front door closed, a tendency to laughter.
VIThat green bronze swan of the fountain in the broad yard next door to the Oliphantsâ should have been given a new interpretation this season; the open beak, forever addressing itself obliquely to the eastern sky, might well have been thought to complain to heaven of the spiteful hanging on of winter. It was a winter that long outwore its welcome, and then kept returning like a quarrelsome guest forcing his way back to renew argument after repeated ejectments;â âthe Shelbysâ swan was fortunate to be of bronze, for a wet snow filled that exasperated-looking beak of his choke-full one morning a month after the lilacs had shown green buds along their stems. Then, adding mockery to assault, this grotesque weather spent hour after hour patiently constructing a long goatee of ice upon the helpless bird.
Martha Shelby knocked it off late in the afternoon, though by that time the western sun had begun to make all icicles into opals, radiant with frozen fire and beautiful. âInsulting thing!â Martha said, as she brought the ferrule of her umbrella resentfully against the icicle, which broke into pieces that clattered lightly down to the stone basin below. âOf all the smart alecks I ever knew I think the worst oneâs the weather!â
Her companion, a thin young man with an astrakhan collar to his skirted long overcoat, assented negligently. He had happened to overtake her as she walked up National Avenue from downtown, and was evidently disposed to extend the casual encounter at least as far as her door, for he went on with her in that direction as he spoke.
âYes, I dare say. Nature, in general, has a way of taking liberties with us that we wouldnât tolerate from our most intimate friends. I suspect if we got at the truth of things weâd find that most of our legislation is really an attempt to prevent Nature from getting the better of us.â
âMurder!â said Martha. âThatâs too deep for me, Harlan! Letâs go on talking about poor old Dan and things I can understand. Come into the house and Iâll give you some tea; youâre the only man-citizen I know in town who likes tea. I ought to warn you that papa thinks thereâs something queer about you since that day after the matinĂ©e when you came in and had tea with me. He thought it was bad enough, your being at the matinĂ©eâ âpapa says if an old man is seen at a matinĂ©e it looks as if heâs gone bankrupt and doesnât care, but if itâs a young man he must be out of a job and too lazy to look for a new oneâ âand for any man not only to go to a matinĂ©e, but to drink tea afterwards, well, papa was terribly mystified about anybody named Oliphant doing such a thing! He canât imagine a manâs consenting to drink tea except to help fight off a chill.â
âOh, I know!â Harlan said. âI realize itâs a terrible
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