An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser (whitelam books .TXT) đ
- Author: Theodore Dreiser
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Just now she had gone through her motherâs room to her own, looking as though she were not very much interested in anything. Her mother had been trying to think of something to suggest that would take her out of herself, when the younger daughter, Bella, fresh from a passing visit to the home of the Finchleys, wealthy neighbors where she had stopped on her way from the Snedeker School, burst in upon her.
Contrasted with her sister, who was tall and dark and rather sallow, Bella, though shorter, was far more gracefully and vigorously formed. She had thick brownâ âalmost blackâ âhair, a brown and olive complexion tinted with red, and eyes brown and genial, that blazed with an eager, seeking light. In addition to her sound and lithe physique, she possessed vitality and animation. Her arms and legs were graceful and active. Plainly she was given to liking things as she found themâ âenjoying life as it wasâ âand hence, unlike her sister, she was unusually attractive to men and boysâ âto men and women, old and youngâ âa fact which her mother and father well knew. No danger of any lack of marriage offers for her when the time came. As her mother saw it, too many youths and men were already buzzing around, and so posing the question of a proper husband for her. Already she had displayed a tendency to become thick and fast friends, not only with the scions of the older and more conservative families who constituted the ultra-respectable element of the city, but also, and this was more to her motherâs distaste, with the sons and daughters of some of those later and hence socially less important families of the regionâ âthe sons and daughters of manufacturers of bacon, canning jars, vacuum cleaners, wooden and wicker ware, and typewriters, who constituted a solid enough financial element in the city, but who made up what might be considered the âfast setâ in the local life.
In Mrs. Griffithsâ opinion, there was too much dancing, cabareting, automobiling to one city and another, without due social supervision. Yet, as a contrast to her sister, Myra, what a relief. It was only from the point of view of proper surveillance, or until she was safely and religiously married, that Mrs. Griffiths troubled or even objected to most of her present contacts and yearnings and gayeties. She desired to protect her.
âNow, where have you been?â she demanded, as her daughter burst into the room, throwing down her books and drawing near to the open fire that burned there.
âJust think, Mamma,â began Bella most unconcernedly and almost irrelevantly. âThe Finchleys are going to give up their place out at Greenwood Lake this coming summer and go up to Twelfth Lake near Pine Point. Theyâre going to build a new bungalow up there. And Sondra says that this time itâs going to be right down at the waterâs edgeâ ânot away from it, as it is out here. And theyâre going to have a great big verandah with a hardwood floor. And a boathouse big enough for a thirty-foot electric launch that Mr. Finchley is going to buy for Stuart. Wonât that be wonderful? And she says that if you will let me, that I can come up there for all summer long, or for as long as I like. And Gil, too, if he will. Itâs just across the lake from the Emery Lodge, you know, and the East Gate Hotel. And the Phantsâ place, you know, the Phants of Utica, is just below theirs near Sharon. Isnât that just wonderful? Wonât that be great? I wish you and Dad would make up your minds to build up there now sometime, Mamma. It looks to me now as though nearly everybody thatâs worth anything down here is moving up there.â
She talked so fast and swung about so, looking now at the open fire burning in the grate, then out of the two high windows that commanded the front lawn and a full view of Wykeagy Avenue, lit by the electric lights in the winter dusk, that her mother had no opportunity to insert any comment until this was over. However, she managed to observe: âYes? Well, what about the Anthonys and the Nicholsons and the Taylors? I havenât heard of their leaving Greenwood yet.â
âOh, I know, not the Anthonys or the Nicholsons or the Taylors. Who expects them to move? Theyâre too old fashioned. Theyâre not the kind that would move anywhere, are they? No one thinks they are. Just the same Greenwood isnât like Twelfth Lake. You know that yourself. And all the people that are anybody down on the South Shore are going up there for sure. The Cranstons next year, Sondra says. And after that, I bet the Harriets will go, too.â
âThe Cranstons and the Harriets and the Finchleys and Sondra,â commented her mother, half amused and half irritated. âThe Cranstons and you and Bertine and Sondraâ âthatâs all I hear these days.â For the Cranstons, and the Finchleys, despite a certain amount of local success in connection with this newer and faster set, were, much more than any of the others, the subject of considerable unfavorable comment. They were the people who, having moved the Cranston Wickwire Company from Albany, and the Finchley Electric Sweeper from Buffalo, and built large factories on the south bank of the Mohawk River, to say nothing of new and grandiose houses in Wykeagy Avenue and summer cottages at Greenwood, some twenty miles northwest, were setting a rather showy, and hence disagreeable, pace to all of the wealthy residents of this region. They were given to wearing the smartest clothes, to the latest novelties in cars and entertainments, and constituted a problem to those who with less means considered their position and their equipment about as fixed and
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