The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
Book online «The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) đ». Author Booth Tarkington
George rose abruptly, his face the colour of wrath. âGood night, Miss Morgan. Good night, Mr. Morgan,â he said. âI shall take pleasure in calling at some other time when a more courteous sort of people may be present.â
âLook here!â the hotheaded Fred burst out. âDonât you try to make me out a boor, George Minafer! I wasnât hinting anything at you; I simply forgot all about your grandfather owning this old building. Donât you try to put me in the light of a boor! I wonâtâ ââ
But George walked out in the very course of this vehement protest, and it was necessarily left unfinished.
Mr. Kinney remained only a few moments after Georgeâs departure; and as the door closed upon him, the distressed Lucy turned to her father. She was plaintively surprised to find him in a condition of immoderate laughter.
âI didnâtâ âI didnât think I could hold out!â he gasped, and, after choking until tears came to his eyes, felt blindly for the chair from which he had risen to wish Mr. Kinney an indistinct good night. His hand found the arm of the chair; he collapsed feebly, and sat uttering incoherent sounds.
âPapa!â
âIt brings things back so!â he managed to explain, âThis very Fred Kinneyâs father and young Georgeâs father, Wilbur Minafer, used to do just such things when they were at that ageâ âand, for that matter, so did George Amberson and I, and all the rest of us!â And, in spite of his exhaustion, he began to imitate: âDonât you try to put me in the light of a boor!â âI shall take pleasure in calling at some time when a more courteous sort of peopleâ ââ He was unable to go on.
There is a mirth for every age, and Lucy failed to comprehend her fatherâs, but tolerated it a little ruefully.
âPapa, I think they were shocking. Werenât they awful!â
âJustâ âjust boys!â he moaned, wiping his eyes. But Lucy could not smile at all; she was beginning to look indignant. âI can forgive that poor Fred Kinney,â she said. âHeâs just blunderingâ âbut Georgeâ âoh, George behaved outrageously!â
âItâs a difficult age,â her father observed, his calmness somewhat restored. âGirls donât seem to have to pass through it quite as boys do, or their savoir faire is instinctiveâ âor something!â And he gave away to a return of his convulsion.
She came and sat upon the arm of his chair. âPapa, why should George behave like that?â
âHeâs sensitive.â
âRather! But why is he? He does anything he likes to, without any regard for what people think. Then why should he mind so furiously when the least little thing reflects upon him, or on anything or anybody connected with him?â
Eugene patted her hand. âThatâs one of the greatest puzzles of human vanity, dear; and I donât pretend to know the answer. In all my life, the most arrogant people that Iâve known have been the most sensitive. The people who have done the most in contempt of other peopleâs opinion, and who consider themselves the highest above it, have been the most furious if it went against them. Arrogant and domineering people canât stand the least, lightest, faintest breath of criticism. It just kills them.â
âPapa, do you think George is terribly arrogant and domineering?â
âOh, heâs still only a boy,â said Eugene consolingly. âThereâs plenty of fine stuff in himâ âcanât help but be, because heâs Isabel Ambersonâs son.â
Lucy stroked his hair, which was still almost as dark as her own. âYou liked her pretty well once, I guess, papa.â
âI do still,â he said quietly.
âSheâs lovelyâ âlovely! Papaâ ââ she paused, then continuedâ ââI wonder sometimesâ ââ
âWhat?â
âI wonder just how she happened to marry Mr. Minafer.â
âOh, Minaferâs all right,â said Eugene. âHeâs a quiet sort of man, but heâs a good man and a kind man. He always was, and those things count.â
âBut in a wayâ âwell, Iâve heard people say there wasnât anything to him at all except business and saving money. Miss Fanny Minafer herself told me that everything George and his mother have of their ownâ âthat is, just to spend as they likeâ âshe says it has always come from Major Amberson.â
âThrift, Horatio!â said Eugene lightly. âThriftâs an inheritance, and a common enough one here. The people who settled the country had to save, so making and saving were taught as virtues, and the people, to the third generation, havenât found out that making and saving are only means to an end. Minafer doesnât believe in money being spent. He believes God made it to be invested and saved.â
âBut George isnât saving. Heâs reckless, and even if he is arrogant and conceited and bad-tempered, heâs awfully generous.â
âOh, heâs an Amberson,â said her father. âThe Ambersons arenât saving. Theyâre too much the other way, most of them.â
âI donât think I should have called George bad-tempered,â Lucy said thoughtfully. âNo. I donât think he is.â
âOnly when heâs cross about something?â Morgan suggested, with a semblance of sympathetic gravity.
âYes,â she said brightly, not perceiving that his intention was humorous. âAll the rest of the time heâs really very amiable. Of course, heâs much more a perfect child, the whole time, than he realizes! He certainly behaved awfully tonight.â She jumped up, her indignation returning.
Comments (0)