National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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âYouâre not goinâ to make me, are you?â he asked piteously.
âNo. Tell her anything you like.â
Mistaking this icy permission, he uttered an almost vociferous sigh of relief. âWell, I do truly thank you, Lena. If youâre noble enough to overlook my selfishness in not thinkinâ about who youâd want to have for Henryâs godmotherâ âwell, my goodness, I am grateful to you, and I know itâs moreân I deserve. Itâs a noble action on your part, and Iâm sure itâs goinâ to lead to splendid results, because now you canât help but get better acquainted with Martha, and youâll do what Iâve hoped for so long: youâll get to likinâ her and thinkinâ as much of her as everybody else does. With her in that relationâ ââ
âIn what relation?â
âIn the relation of the babyâs godmother. From the very day of the christening youâllâ ââ
âThere may not be any such day,â Lena interrupted. âYou seem to have mistaken me. There may not be any christeningâ âat least not here. If sheâs to be the godmother, the baby and I will be with my own family in New York.â
âOh, golly!â Dan said, and sank down on the side of the bed again. âOh, golly!â
Lena became vehement. âI should think you would say âgollyâ! If you had a spark of remorse in you, I think youâd say more than that!â
âRemorse? I donât seeâ ââ
âYou donât?â she cried. âYou donât see what you have to be remorseful for? You bring me out here to the life youâve given me, and you see nothing to regret? You bring me to this flat town and its flat people, where not once in months can I hear a note of real music and where thereâs no art and no beauty and no lifeâ âafter youâd given me your word I should have a full year in Europe!â âand you watch me struggling to bear it, to bear it with the best bravery I have in me, and the most kindness to youâ âand to be cheerfulâ âand I dare you to say I havenât made the best of it! I haveâ âand how hard Iâve had to try most of the time to accomplish it! And what have you been? Who was the man I found Iâd married? Even in this hole of a town heâs called a failureâ âthe town failure! Thatâs who you got me to marry! Even these people out hereâ âyour own peopleâ âeven they take you as a jokeâ âthe town joke! And when I make the best of it I can and bear it the best I can, and go on, month after month, not complaining, and suffer what I suffered when the baby came, you go gayly over to the woman whose hand you held the very first day I came hereâ âyes, you did!â âand the woman youâve compared me to unfavourably every time youâve ever dared to speak of me to herâ âyes, you have; every single time!â âand you ask her to come and be the godmother to my child! You can go over there and tell her anything you likeâ âtell her again you want my baby to be like herâ âbut thereâs one thing youâd better tell her besides, and that is, there wonât be any christening if she comes to it!â
She ran out, the closing of the door reverberating eloquently through the house; and Dan remained seated upon the side of the bed, his head between his hands. It was by no means the first time he had remained in that position when Lena slammed the door.
XVIHis attitude had not changed, fifteen minutes later, when there came a light tapping upon that mishandled door of his; and at the sound he rose quickly, said, âYes, mother,â and tried to regain his usual cheerfulness of aspect as Mrs. Oliphant came in noiselessly. She was smiling, and he was able to construct a smile in return, telling her she looked âmighty prettyâ in her rose-coloured negligeeâ âa compliment not exaggerated. Serenity, a good faith, and a cheerful disposition bring beauty in time even where it has not been; and, where beauty has always been, as it had with Mrs. Oliphant, white hair is only that crowning prettiness so knowingly sought by the ladies of the eighteenth-century when they powdered their blonde or brunette ringlets.
âI just thought Iâd slip in for a minute,â she said apologetically. âI was afraid you might forget you had to be up so early tomorrow morning, and get to thinking about something and not go to bed at all.â
âOh, no; donât worry. Iâll not do that again,â he said. âIt doesnât do any good, I know. I suppose you heard her?â
She patted his cheek, smiling up at him and resolutely withholding from expression the compassion that had brought her to him. âI just wanted to tell you not to be troubled. Youâll have to give her a little more time to get adjusted, Dan. A great many young couples donât manage all these little adjustments until after the first few years of marriage; and I think my own father and mother didnât manage it even that soon;â âIâm afraid I remember their having some rather troubled times when I was a pretty old little girl. You mustnât let yourself be discouraged, dear. Lena really tries to get the best of herself, and though she fails sometimesâ ââ
âIt isnât that,â he interrupted. âAt least it seemed to be something more definite than usual this time. You see, I didnât stop to think about consulting her, and asked Martha to be Henry Danielâs godmother.â
âI heard Fred Oliphant say so, but I thought perhaps he was only trying to tease Lena.â For a moment Mrs. Oliphant looked disturbed, but brightened with a quickly reassuring second thought. âWell, that would be lovely, and Iâm glad you did it; but Marthaâll decline.â
âShe didnât, though, when I asked her.â
âWhat did she say?â
Dan rubbed his forehead. âWell, I donât remember that she said anything.â
âNo?â His mother laughed. âYou wonât have
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