Short Fiction Ernest Hemingway (best books for students to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Ernest Hemingway
Book online «Short Fiction Ernest Hemingway (best books for students to read .TXT) đ». Author Ernest Hemingway
Diana subscribing for The Forum. Diana reading The Mentor. Diana reading William Lyon Phelps in Scribnerâs. Diana walking through the frozen streets of the silent Northern town to the Public Library, to read The Literary Digest âBook Review.â Diana waiting for the postman to come, bringing The Bookman. Diana, in the snow, waiting for the postman to bring The Saturday Review of Literature. Diana, bareheaded now, standing in the mounting snowdrifts, waiting for the postman to bring her the New York Times âLiterary Section.â Was it doing any good? Was it holding him?
At first it seemed to be. Diana learned editorials by John Farrar by heart. Scripps brightened. A little of the old light shining in Scrippsâs eyes now. Then it died. Some little mistake in the wording, some slip in her understanding of a phrase, some divergence in her attitude, made it all ring false. She would go on. She was not beaten. He was her man and she would hold him. She looked away from the window and slit open the covering of the magazine that lay on her table. It was Harperâs Magazine. Harperâs Magazine in a new format. Harperâs Magazine completely changed and revised. Perhaps that would do the trick. She wondered.
XSpring was coming. Spring was in the air. (Authorâs Note.â âThis is the same day on which the story starts, back on page three.) A chinook wind was blowing. Workmen were coming home from the factory. Scrippsâs bird singing in its cage. Diana looking out of the open window. Diana watching for her Scripps to come up the street. Could she hold him? Could she hold him? If she couldnât hold him, would he leave her his bird? She had felt lately that she couldnât hold him. In the nights, now, when she touched Scripps he rolled away, not toward her. It was a little sign, but life was made up of little signs. She felt she couldnât hold him. As she looked out of the window, a copy of The Century Magazine dropped from her nerveless hand. The Century had a new editor. There were more woodcuts. Glenn Frank had gone to head some great university somewhere. There were more Van Dorens on the magazine. Diana felt that might turn the trick. Happily she had opened The Century and read all morning. Then the wind, the warm chinook wind, had started to blow, and she knew Scripps would soon be home. Men were coming down the street in increasing numbers. Was Scripps among them? She did not like to put on her spectacles to look. She wanted Scrippsâs first glimpse of her to be of her at her best. As she felt him drawing nearer, the confidence she had had in The Century grew fainter. She had so hoped that would give her the something which would hold him. She wasnât sure now.
Scripps coming down the street with a crowd of excited workmen. Men stirred by the spring. Scripps swinging his lunch-bucket. Scripps waving goodbye to the workmen, who trooped one by one into what had formerly been a saloon. Scripps not looking up at the window. Scripps coming up the stairs. Scripps coming nearer. Scripps coming nearer. Scripps here.
âGood afternoon, dear Scripps,â she said. âIâve been reading a story by Ruth Suckow.â
âHello, Diana,â Scripps answered. He set down his lunch-pail. She looked worn and old. He could afford to be polite.
âWhat was the story about, Diana?â he asked.
âIt was about a little girl in Iowa,â Diana said. She moved toward him. âIt was about people on the land. It reminded me a little of my own Lake Country.â
âThat so?â asked Scripps. In some ways the pump-factory had hardened him. His speech had become more clipped. More like these hardy Northern workersâ. But his mind was the same.
âWould you like me to read a little of it out loud?â Diana asked. âTheyâre some lovely woodcuts.â
âHow about going down to the beanery?â Scripps said.
âAs you wish, dear,â Diana said. Then her voice broke. âI wishâ âoh, I wish youâd never seen that place!â She wiped away her tears. Scripps had not even seen them. âIâll bring the bird, dear,â Diana said. âHe hasnât been out all day.â
Together they went down the street to the beanery. They did not walk hand in hand now. They walked like what are called old married people. Mrs. Scripps carried the birdcage. The bird was happy in the warm wind. Men lurching along, drunk with the spring, passed them. Many spoke to Scripps. He was well known and well liked in the town now. Some, as they lurched by, raised their hats to Mrs. Scripps. She responded vaguely. If I can only hold him, she was thinking. If I can only hold him. As they walked along the slushy snow of the narrow sidewalk of the Northern town, something began to beat in her head. Perhaps it was the rhythm of their walking together. I canât hold him. I canât hold him. I canât hold him.
Scripps took her arm as they crossed the street. When his hand touched her arm Diana knew it was true. She would never hold him. A group of Indians passed them on the street. Were they laughing at her or was it some tribal jest? Diana didnât know. All she knew was that rhythm that beat into her brain. I canât hold him. I canât hold him.
Authorâs Note
For the reader, not the printer.
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