National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) š
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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To the McMillan view, Lenaās adventure with that dashing sculpture, half genius and half Grecian-shaped meat, Perry Venable, had placed her gentryship in jeopardy, damaged her as a McMillan;ā āin fact, her infatuation for so conspicuous a baritone could not avoid being itself conspicuous; it āmade talk,ā and in answer to the talk she had announced her engagement to him. Then, in the face of the familyās formidable opposition, she made preparations for a clandestine wedding, which Mr. Venable was unable to attend on account of his wifeās arrival from Poland. Thereupon, standing alone against the shock of heavy McMillan explosives, Lenaās impulsive loyalty in defending the godlike baritone led her to make an unfortunate statement: great artists were not to be bound by the ordinary fetters upon conduct, she said;ā āand this prelude not being accepted as of any great force and originality, she followed it hotly with the declaration that she had long been aware of the Polish ladyās existence.
It was in great part to this admission of hers that the unwitting Dan Oliphant owed the familyās consent to his suit for the hand of a McMillan. A McMillan who got herself talked about, and then confessed, not in the manner of confession but with anger, that she had not been deceivedā āsuch a McMillan would conceivably do such a thing again, and a respectable barbarian bridegroom might be the best substitute for those unfortunately obsolete family resources in times of youthful revolt, lettres de cachet and the enforced taking of veils. But, in good truth, Dan may have owed to Lenaās celebrated admission more than the familyās consent, for the familyās austerity of manner toward Lena became so protracted an oppression that she was the readier to be pleased with anything as cheerfully different from that family as Dan was.
Without doubt, too, he owed it to this McMillan austerity that she did not write to him now and break her engagement with him. The Venable affair was two years past, but the austerity went on, unabated. Dan was at least an avenue of escape, and, as Lena had said to her brother, she was āa lot in loveā with him. Yet she hesitated, angry with him because he could not offer what she wanted, and half convinced that escape from what she hated might be an escape into what she would hate more. So she wrote to him finally:
You said you loved me! That isnāt quite easy to believe just now. Why did you let me go on counting upon our having a year abroad? Iām afraid Iāll never be able to understand it. I donāt know what to say or what to do. I think the best thing you could do would be to come East at once. Maybe I could understand better if we talked it over together. It seems to me that you couldnāt have cared for me with any depth or you wouldnāt have allowed things to be as you say they are. A man can always do anything he really wants to, and if you had really wantedā āoh, I know itās futile to be writing of that! You simply didnāt care enough, and I thought you did! The only thing for you to do is to come at once. We must settle whatās to be done, because I canāt go on in the state of unhappiness Iāve suffered since your last letter. Maybe you can convince me that you do care a little in spite of having forced me to give up what I counted on. If you do convince me, I suppose thereās no use putting off thingsā āI donāt want a large, fussy wedding. If we are going ahead with it, we might as well get it over. I donāt know what to do, I admit that; but Iām still
Your half-heartbroken
Lena.
IXNot long ago there was found everywhere in the Midland country a kind of wood then most characteristic of it but now almost disappeared, a vanishment not inexpressive of natureās way of striking chords; for the wood is no longer so like the Midlands as it was. But in the days when Ornaby Addition struggled in embryo, hickory still grew in profusion, and that tough and seasoned old sample of it, Mr. Shelby, withstood at his office desk the hottest summer in several years. He permitted himself the alleviation of a palm-leaf fan, and when his open carriage came for him at a little before six oāclock, every afternoon, he had the elderly negro coachman drive him out to the end of the cedar-block pavement of Amberson Boulevard before going home; but on the day that began the hottest hot spell of the summer he forebore to indulge himself with this excursion, albeit he forebore somewhat peevishly.
āWe got to go straight home this evening, Jim,ā he said, and added, āPlague take it!ā
āYes, suh,ā the coachman assented. āShe lay it down she want me caāy you home quick as I kin git you. I tell āer bettuh not be too quick or Iām goinā have me two nice dead trottinā hosses. Hoss die same as a man, day like this, anā it aināt cool off airy bit sense noon. Look to me like gittinā hottuh, āstid
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