The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) š
- Author: Booth Tarkington
Book online Ā«The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) šĀ». Author Booth Tarkington
On the train, going back to college, ten days later, this regret (though it was as much an annoyance as a regret) recurred to his mind, and a feeling developed within him that the new quarter of the cemetery was in bad tasteā ānot architecturally or sculpturally perhaps, but in presumption: it seemed to flaunt a kind of parvenu ignorance, as if it were actually pleased to be unaware that all the aristocratic and really important families were buried in the old section.
The annoyance gave way before a recollection of the sweet mournfulness of his motherās face, as she had said goodbye to him at the station, and of how lovely she looked in her mourning. He thought of Lucy, whom he had seen only twice, and he could not help feeling that in these quiet interviews he had appeared to her as tinged with heroismā āshe had shown, rather than said, how brave she thought him in his sorrow. But what came most vividly to Georgeās mind, during these retrospections, was the despairing face of his Aunt Fanny. Again and again he thought of it; he could not avoid its haunting. And for days, after he got back to college, the stricken likeness of Fanny would appear before him unexpectedly, and without a cause that he could trace in his immediately previous thoughts. Her grief had been so silent, yet it had so amazed him.
George felt more and more compassion for this ancient antagonist of his, and he wrote to his mother about her:
Iām afraid poor Aunt Fanny might think now fatherās gone we wonāt want her to live with us any longer and because I always teased her so much she might think Iād be for turning her out. I donāt know where on earth sheād go or what she could live on if we did do something like this, and of course we never would do such a thing, but Iām pretty sure she had something of the kind on her mind. She didnāt say anything, but the way she looked is what makes me think so. Honestly, to me she looked just scared sick. You tell her there isnāt any danger in the world of my treating her like that. Tell her everything is to go on just as it always has. Tell her to cheer up!
XVIsabel did more for Fanny than telling her to cheer up. Everything that Fanny inherited from her father, old Aleck Minafer, had been invested in Wilburās business; and Wilburās business, after a period of illness corresponding in dates to the illness of Wilburās body, had died just before Wilbur did. George Amberson and Fanny were both āwiped out to a miracle of precision,ā as Amberson said. They āowned not a penny and owed not a penny,ā he continued, explaining his phrase. āItās like the moment just before drowning: youāre not under water and youāre not out of it. All you know is that youāre not dead yet.ā
He spoke philosophically, having his āprospectsā from his father to fall back upon; but Fanny had neither āprospectsā nor philosophy. However, a legal survey of Wilburās estate revealed the fact that his life insurance was left clear of the wreck; and Isabel, with the cheerful consent of her son, promptly turned this salvage over to her sister-in-law. Invested, it would yield something better than nine hundred dollars a year, and thus she was assured of becoming neither a pauper nor a dependent, but proved to be, as Amberson said, adding his efforts to the cheering up of Fanny, āan heiress, after all, in spite of rolling mills and the devil.ā She was unable to smile, and he continued his humane gayeties. āSee what a wonderfully desirable income nine hundred dollars is, Fanny: a bachelor, to be in your class, must have exactly forty-nine thousand one hundred a year. Then, you see, all you need to do, in order to have fifty thousand a year, is to be a little encouraging when some bachelor in your class begins to show by his haberdashery what he wants you to think about him!ā
She looked at him wanly, murmured a desolate responseā āshe had āsewing to doāā āand left the room; while Amberson shook his head ruefully at his sister. āIāve often thought that humor was not my forte,ā he sighed. āLord! She doesnāt ācheer upā much!ā
The collegian did not return to his home for the holidays. Instead, Isabel joined him, and they went South for the two weeks. She was proud of her stalwart, good-looking son at the hotel where they stayed, and it was meat and drink to her when she saw how people stared at him in the lobby and on the big verandasā āindeed, her vanity in him was so dominant that she was unaware of their staring at her with more interest and an admiration friendlier than George evoked. Happy to have him to herself for this fortnight, she loved to walk with him, leaning upon his arm, to read with him, to watch the sea with himā āperhaps most of all she liked to enter the big dining room with him.
Yet both of them felt constantly the difference between this Christmastime and other Christmastimes of theirsā āin all, it was a sorrowful holiday. But when Isabel came East for Georgeās commencement, in June, she brought Lucy with herā āand things began to seem different, especially when
Comments (0)