The Turmoil Booth Tarkington (best reads .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
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âPapa, papa!â wailed Mrs. Sheridan. âLook at your hand! Youâd oughtnât to been so rough with Edie; you hurt your hand on her shoulder. Look!â
There was, in fact, a spreading red stain upon the bandages at the tips of the fingers, and Sheridan put his hand back in the sling. âNow then!â he repeated. âYou goinâ to leave my house?â
âHe will not!â sobbed Edith. âDonât you dare order him out!â
âDonât you bother, dear,â said Lamhorn, quietly. âHe doesnât understand. You mustnât be troubled.â Pallor was becoming to him; he looked very handsome, and as he left the room he seemed in the girlâs distraught eyes a persecuted noble, indifferent to the rabble yawping insult at his heelsâ âthe rabble being enacted by her father.
âDonât come back, either!â said, Sheridan, realistic in this impersonation. âKeep off the premises!â he called savagely into the hall. âThis familyâs through with you!â
âIt is not!â Edith cried, breaking from her mother. âYouâll see about that! Youâll find out! Youâll find out whatâll happen! Whatâs he done? I guess if I can stand it, itâs none of your business, is it? Whatâs he done, Iâd like to know? You donât know anything about it. Donât you sâpose he told me? She was crazy about him soon as he began going there, and he flirted with her a little. Thatâs everything he did, and it was before he met me! After that he wouldnât, and it wasnât anything, anywayâ âhe never was serious a minute about it. She wanted it to be serious, and she was bound she wouldnât give him up. He told her long ago he cared about me, but she kept persecuting him andâ ââ
âYes,â said Sheridan, sternly; âthatâs his side of it! Thatâll do! He doesnât come in this house again!â
âYou look out!â Edith cried.
âYes, Iâll look out! Iâd âaâ told you today he wasnât to be allowed on the premises, but I had other things on my mind. I had Abercrombie look up this young man privately, and heâs no âcount. Heâs no âcount on earth! Heâs no good! Heâs nothinâ! But it wouldnât matter if he was George Washington, after whatâs happened and what Iâve heard tonight!â
âBut, papa,â Mrs. Sheridan began, âif Edie says it was all Sibylâs fault, makinâ up to him, and he never encouraged her much, norâ ââ
âââS enough!â he roared. âHe keeps off these premises! And if any of you so much as ever speak his name to me againâ ââ
But Edith screamed, clapping her hands over her ears to shut out the sound of his voice, and ran upstairs, sobbing loudly, followed by her mother. However, Mrs. Sheridan descended a few minutes later and joined her husband in the library. Bibbs, still sitting in his gold chair, saw her pass, roused himself from reverie, and strolled in after her.
âShe locked her door,â said Mrs. Sheridan, shaking her head woefully. âShe wouldnât even answer me. They wasnât a sound from her room.â
âWell,â said her husband, âshe can settle her mind to it. She never speaks to that fellow again, and if he tries to telephone her tomorrowâ âHere! You tell the help if he calls up to ring off and say itâs my orders. No, you neednât. Iâll tell âem myself.â
âBetter not,â said Bibbs, gently.
His father glared at him.
âItâs no good,â said Bibbs. âMother, when you were in love with fatherâ ââ
âMy goodness!â she cried. âYou ainât a-goinâ to compare your father to thatâ ââ
âEdith feels about him just what you did about father,â said Bibbs. âAnd if your father had told youâ ââ
âI wonât listen to such silly talk!â she declared, angrily.
âSo youâre handinâ out your advice, are you, Bibbs?â said Sheridan. âWhat is it?â
âLet her see him all she wants.â
âYouâre aâ ââ Sheridan gave it up. âI donât know what to call you!â
âLet her see him all she wants,â Bibbs repeated, thoughtfully. âYouâre up against something too strong for you. If Edith were a weakling youâd have a chance this way, but she isnât. Sheâs got a lot of your determination, father, and with whatâs going on inside of her sheâll beat you. You canât keep her from seeing him, as long as she feels about him the way she does now. You canât make her think less of him, either. Nobody can. Your only chance is that sheâll do it for herself, and if you give her time and go easy she probably will. Marriage would do it for her quickest, but thatâs just what you donât want, and as you donât want it, youâd betterâ ââ
âI canât stand any more!â Sheridan burst out. âIf itâs come to Bibbs advisinâ me how to run this house I better resign. Mamma, whereâs that nigger George? Maybe heâs got some plan how I better manage my family. Bibbs, for Godâs sake go and lay down! âLet her see him all she wantsâ! Oh, Lord! hereâs wisdom; hereâsâ ââ
âBibbs,â said Mrs. Sheridan, âif you havenât got anything to do, you might step over and take Sibylâs wraps homeâ âshe left âem in the hall. I donât think you seem to quiet your poor father very much just now.â
âAll right.â And Bibbs bore Sibylâs wraps across the street and delivered them to Roscoe, who met him at the door. Bibbs said only, âForgot these,â and, âGood night, Roscoe,â cordially and cheerfully, and returned to the New House. His mother and father were still talking in the library, but with discretion he passed rapidly on and upward to his own room, and there he proceeded to write in his notebook.
XXIIThere seems to be another curious thing about Love [Bibbs wrote]. Love is blind while it lives and only opens its eyes and becomes very wide awake when it dies. Let it alone until then.
You cannot reason with love or with any other passion. The wise will not wish for loveâ ânor for ambition. These are passions and bring others in their trainâ âhatreds and jealousiesâ âall blind. Friendship and a quiet heart for the wise.
What a turbulence is love! It
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