The Magnificent Ambersons Booth Tarkington (reading like a writer txt) š
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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āNo, sir; I think not. She felt it would be rather a good thingā āhelp to keep me out in the open air. But if perhaps your financesā āā
āOh, it isnāt that so much,ā the old gentleman said hurriedly. āI wasnāt thinking of that altogether.ā He laughed uncomfortably. āI guess we could still afford a new horse or two, if need beā āā
āI thought you saidā āā
The Major waved his hand airily. āOh, a few retrenchments where things were useless; nothing gained by a raft of idle darkies in the stableā ānor by a lot of extra land that might as well be put to work for us in rentals. And if you want this thing so very muchā āā
āItās not important enough to bother about, really, of course.ā
āWell, letās wait till autumn then,ā said the Major in a tone of relief. āWeāll see about it in the autumn, if youāre still in the mind for it then. That will be a great deal better. You remind me of it, along in Septemberā āor October. Weāll see what can be done.ā He rubbed his hands cheerfully. āWeāll see what can be done about it then, Georgie. Weāll see.ā
And George, in reporting this conversation to his mother, was ruefully humorous. āIn fact, the old boy cheered up so much,ā he told her, āyouād have thought heād got a real load off his mind. He seemed to think heād fixed me up perfectly, and that I was just as good as driving a tandem around his library right that minute! Of course I know heās anything but miserly; still I canāt help thinking he must be salting a lot of money away. I know prices are higher than they used to be, but he doesnāt spend within thousands of what he used to, and we certainly canāt be spending more than we always have spent. Where does it all go to? Uncle George told me grandfather had sold some pieces of property, and it looks a little queer. If heās really āproperty poor,ā of course we ought to be more saving than we are, and help him out. I donāt mind giving up a tandem if it seems a little too expensive just now. Iām perfectly willing to live quietly till he gets his bank balance where he wants it. But I have a faint suspicion, not that heās getting miserlyā ānot that at allā ābut that old age has begun to make him timid about money. Thereās no doubt about it, heās getting a little queer: he canāt keep his mind on a subject long. Right in the middle of talking about one thing heāll wander off to something else; and I shouldnāt be surprised if he turned out to be a lot better off than any of us guess. Itās entirely possible that whatever heās sold just went into government bonds, or even his safety deposit box. There was a friend of mine in college had an old uncle like that: made the whole family think he was poor as dirtā āand then left seven millions. People get terribly queer as they get old, sometimes, and grandfather certainly doesnāt act the way he used to. He seems to be a totally different man. For instance, he said he thought tandem driving might be dangerousā āā
āDid he?ā Isabel asked quickly. āThen Iām glad he doesnāt want you to have one. I didnāt dreamā āā
āBut itās not. There isnāt the slightestā āā
Isabel had a bright idea. āGeorgie! Instead of a tandem wouldnāt it interest you to get one of Eugeneās automobiles?ā
āI donāt think so. Theyāre fast enough, of course. In fact, running one of those things is getting to be quite on the cards for sport, and people go all over the country in āem. But theyāre dirty things, and they keep getting out of order, so that youāre always lying down on your back in the mud, andā āā
āOh, no,ā she interrupted eagerly. āHavenāt you noticed? You donāt see nearly so many people doing that nowadays as you did two or three years ago, and, when you do, Eugene says itās apt to be one of the older patterns. The way they make them now, you can get at most of the machinery from the top. I do think youād be interested, dear.ā
George remained indifferent. āPossiblyā ābut I hardly think so. I know a lot of good people are really taking them up, but stillā āā
āāāBut stillā what?ā she said as he paused.
āBut stillā āwell, I suppose Iām a little old-fashioned and fastidious, but Iām afraid being a sort of engine driver never will appeal to me, mother. Itās exciting, and Iād like that part of it, but still it doesnāt seem to me precisely the thing a gentleman ought to do. Too much overalls and monkey-wrenches and grease!ā
āBut Eugene says people are hiring mechanics to do all that sort of thing for them. Theyāre beginning to have them just the way they have coachmen; and he says itās developing into quite a profession.ā
āI know that, mother, of course; but Iāve seen some of these mechanics, and theyāre not very satisfactory. For one thing, most of them only pretend to understand the machinery and they let people break down a hundred miles from nowhere, so that about all these fellows are good for is to hunt up a farmer and hire a horse to pull the automobile. And friends of mine at college thatāve had a good deal of experience tell me the mechanics who do understand the engines have no training at all as servants. Theyāre awful! They say anything they like, and usually speak to members of the family as āSay!ā No, I believe Iād rather wait for September and a tandem, mother.ā
Nevertheless, George sometimes consented to sit in an automobile, while waiting for September, and he frequently went driving in one of Eugeneās cars with Lucy and her father. He even allowed himself to be escorted with his mother and
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