Main Street Sinclair Lewis (books to read romance TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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âIâve been rereading The Damnation of Theron Ware. Do you know it?â
âYes. It was clever. But hard. Man wanted to tear down, not build up. Cynical. Oh, I do hope Iâm not a sentimentalist. But I canât see any use in this high-art stuff that doesnât encourage us day-laborers to plod on.â
Ensued a fifteen-minute argument about the oldest topic in the world: Itâs art but is it pretty? Carol tried to be eloquent regarding honesty of observation. Miss Sherwin stood out for sweetness and a cautious use of the uncomfortable properties of light. At the end Carol cried:
âI donât care how much we disagree. Itâs a relief to have somebody talk something besides crops. Letâs make Gopher Prairie rock to its foundations: letâs have afternoon tea instead of afternoon coffee.â
The delighted Bea helped her bring out the ancestral folding sewing-table, whose yellow and black top was scarred with dotted lines from a dressmakerâs tracing-wheel, and to set it with an embroidered lunch-cloth, and the mauve-glazed Japanese tea-set which she had brought from St. Paul. Miss Sherwin confided her latest schemeâ âmoral motion pictures for country districts, with light from a portable dynamo hitched to a Ford engine. Bea was twice called to fill the hot-water pitcher and to make cinnamon toast.
When Kennicott came home at five he tried to be courtly, as befits the husband of one who has afternoon tea. Carol suggested that Miss Sherwin stay for supper, and that Kennicott invite Guy Pollock, the much-praised lawyer, the poetic bachelor.
Yes, Pollock could come. Yes, he was over the grippe which had prevented his going to Sam Clarkâs party.
Carol regretted her impulse. The man would be an opinionated politician, heavily jocular about The Bride. But at the entrance of Guy Pollock she discovered a personality. Pollock was a man of perhaps thirty-eight, slender, still, deferential. His voice was low. âIt was very good of you to want me,â he said, and he offered no humorous remarks, and did not ask her if she didnât think Gopher Prairie was âthe livest little burg in the state.â
She fancied that his even grayness might reveal a thousand tints of lavender and blue and silver.
At supper he hinted his love for Sir Thomas Browne, Thoreau, Agnes Repplier, Arthur Symons, Claude Washburn, Charles Flandrau. He presented his idols diffidently, but he expanded in Carolâs bookishness, in Miss Sherwinâs voluminous praise, in Kennicottâs tolerance of anyone who amused his wife.
Carol wondered why Guy Pollock went on digging at routine law-cases; why he remained in Gopher Prairie. She had no one whom she could ask. Neither Kennicott nor Vida Sherwin would understand that there might be reasons why a Pollock should not remain in Gopher Prairie. She enjoyed the faint mystery. She felt triumphant and rather literary. She already had a Group. It would be only a while now before she provided the town with fanlights and a knowledge of Galsworthy. She was doing things! As she served the emergency dessert of coconut and sliced oranges, she cried to Pollock, âDonât you think we ought to get up a dramatic club?â
VI IWhen the first dubious November snow had filtered down, shading with white the bare clods in the plowed fields, when the first small fire had been started in the furnace, which is the shrine of a Gopher Prairie home, Carol began to make the house her own. She dismissed the parlor furnitureâ âthe golden oak table with brass knobs, the moldy brocade chairs, the picture of âThe Doctor.â She went to Minneapolis, to scamper through department stores and small Tenth Street shops devoted to ceramics and high thought. She had to ship her treasures, but she wanted to bring them back in her arms.
Carpenters had torn out the partition between front parlor and back parlor, thrown it into a long room on which she lavished yellow and deep blue; a Japanese obi with an intricacy of gold thread on stiff ultramarine tissue, which she hung as a panel against the maize wall; a couch with pillows of sapphire velvet and gold bands; chairs which, in Gopher Prairie, seemed flippant. She hid the sacred family phonograph in the dining-room, and replaced its stand with a square cabinet on which was a squat blue jar between yellow candles.
Kennicott decided against a fireplace. âWeâll have a new house in a couple of years, anyway.â
She decorated only one room. The rest, Kennicott hinted, sheâd better leave till he âmade a ten-strike.â
The brown cube of a house stirred and awakened; it seemed to be in motion; it welcomed her back from shopping; it lost its mildewed repression.
The supreme verdict was Kennicottâs âWell, by golly, I was afraid the new junk wouldnât be so comfortable, but I must say this divan, or whatever you call it, is a lot better than that bumpy old sofa we had, and when I look aroundâ âWell, itâs worth all it cost, I guess.â
Everyone in town took an interest in the refurnishing. The carpenters and painters who did not actually assist crossed the lawn to peer through the windows and exclaim, âFine! Looks swell!â Dave Dyer at the drug store, Harry Haydock and Raymie Wutherspoon at the Bon Ton, repeated daily, âHowâs the good work coming? I hear the house is getting to be real classy.â
Even Mrs. Bogart.
Mrs. Bogart lived across the alley from the rear of Carolâs house. She was a widow, and a Prominent Baptist, and a Good Influence. She had so painfully reared three sons to be Christian gentlemen that one of them had become an Omaha bartender, one a professor
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