Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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His dissecting partner was the Reverend Ira Hinkley, known to the class by a similar but different name.
Ira was going to be a medical missionary. He was a man of twenty-nine, a graduate of Pottsburg Christian College and of the Sanctification Bible and Missions School. He had played football; he was as strong and nearly as large as a steer, and no steer ever bellowed more enormously. He was a bright and happy Christian, a romping optimist who laughed away sin and doubt, a joyful Puritan who with annoying virility preached the doctrine of his tiny sect, the Sanctification Brotherhood, that to have a beautiful church was almost as damnable as the debaucheries of card-playing.
Martin found himself viewing âBilly,â their cadaverâ âan undersized, blotchy old man with a horrible little red beard on his petrified, vealy faceâ âas a machine, fascinating, complex, beautiful, but a machine. It damaged his already feeble belief in manâs divinity and immortality. He might have kept his doubts to himself, revolving them slowly as he dissected out the nerves of the mangled upper arm, but Ira Hinkley would not let him alone. Ira believed that he could bring even medical students to bliss, which, to Ira, meant singing extraordinarily long and unlovely hymns in a chapel of the Sanctification Brotherhood.
âMart, my son,â he roared, âdo you realize that in this, what some might call a sordid task, we are learning things that will enable us to heal the bodies and comfort the souls of countless lost unhappy folks?â
âHuh! Souls. I havenât found one yet in old Billy. Honest, do you believe that junk?â
Ira clenched his fist and scowled, then belched with laughter, slapped Martin distressingly on the back, and clamored, âBrother, youâve got to do better than that to get Iraâs goat! You think youâve got a lot of these fancy Modern Doubts. You havenâtâ âyouâve only got indigestion. What you need is exercise and faith. Come on over to the Y.M.C.A. and Iâll take you for a swim and pray with you. Why, you poor skinny little agnostic, here you have a chance to see the Almightyâs handiwork, and all you grab out of it is a feeling that youâre real smart. Buck up, young Arrowsmith. You donât know how funny you are, to a fellow thatâs got a serene faith!â
To the delight of Clif Clawson, the class jester, who worked at the next table, Ira chucked Martin in the ribs, patted him, very painfully, upon the head, and amiably resumed work, while Martin danced with irritation.
VIn college Martin had been a âbarbââ âhe had not belonged to a Greek Letter secret society. He had been ârushed,â but he had resented the condescension of the aristocracy of men from the larger cities. Now that most of his Arts classmates had departed to insurance offices, law schools, and banks, he was lonely, and tempted by an invitation from Digamma Pi, the chief medical fraternity.
Digamma Pi was a lively boardinghouse with a billiard table and low prices. Rough and amiable noises came from it at night, and a good deal of singing about When I Die Donât Bury Me at All; yet for three years Digams had won the valedictory and the Hugh Loizeau Medal in Experimental Surgery. This autumn the Digams elected Ira Hinkley, because they had been gaining a reputation for dissipationâ âgirls were said to have been smuggled in late at nightâ âand no company which included the Reverend Mr. Hinkley could possibly be taken by the Dean as immoral, which was an advantage if they were to continue comfortably immoral.
Martin had prized the independence of his solitary room. In a fraternity, all tennis rackets, trousers, and opinions are held in common. When Ira found that Martin was hesitating, he insisted, âOh, come on in! Digam needs you. You do study hardâ âIâll say that for youâ âand think what a chance youâll have to influence The Fellows for good.â
(On all occasions, Ira referred to his classmates as The Fellows, and frequently he used the term in prayers at the Y.M.C.A.)
âI donât want to influence anybody. I want to learn the doctor trade and make six thousand dollars a year.â
âMy boy, if you only knew how foolish you sound when you try to be cynical! When youâre as old as I am, youâll understand that the glory of being a doctor is that you can teach folks high ideals while you soothe their tortured bodies.â
âSuppose they donât want my particular brand of high ideals?â
âMart, have I got to stop and pray with you?â
âNo! Quit! Honestly, Hinkley, of all the Christians I ever met you take the rottenest advantages. You can lick anybody in the class, and when I think of how youâre going to bully the poor heathen when you get to be a missionary, and make the kids put on breeches, and marry off all the happy lovers to the wrong people, I could bawl!â
The prospect of leaving his sheltered den for the patronage of the Reverend Mr. Hinkley was intolerable. It was not till Angus Duer accepted election to Digamma Pi that Martin himself came in.
Duer was one of the few among Martinâs classmates in the academic course who had gone on with him to the Winnemac medical school. Duer had been the valedictorian. He was a silent, sharp-faced, curly-headed, rather handsome young man, and he never squandered an hour or a good impulse. So brilliant was his work in biology and chemistry that a Chicago surgeon had promised him a place in his clinic. Martin compared Angus Duer to a razor blade on a January morning; he hated him, was uncomfortable with him, and envied
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