National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ
- Author: Booth Tarkington
Book online «National Avenue Booth Tarkington (best e reader for academics .txt) đ». Author Booth Tarkington
âItâll be a great thing for the city,â his father said, as Danâs car turned homeward with them. âItâs a great thing for you to do and to be remembered by. You were a good boy, Dan; and youâre a good man and a good citizen. You serve your fellow-men well, I think.â
Dan laughed, a little embarrassed by this praise; but although Mr. Oliphant perceived his sonâs embarrassment, he had more to say, and went on with something like timidity, yet with a gentle persistence: âIâd like to tell you another thing, Dan. Itâs something your mother and I never felt we ought to talk about to you, but I believe Iâll mention it to you today. Weâ âyou see your mother and I have always thought thereâs a danger sometimes in letting a person see that you sympathize with him, because it might make him feel that heâs unhappy, or in trouble, whereas, if you just leave him to himself he may go on cheerfully enough and never think about it. But I would like to tell youâ âIâd like to sayâ ââ
He paused, and Dan asked: âYouâd like to say what, sir?â
âWellâ âIâd like just to tell you that your mother and I think youâve always been as kind as you could to Lena.â
Surprised, Dan stared at him; and Mr. Oliphant gravely and affectionately returned his look. âYes, sir,â the son said awkwardly. âI hope so. Thank you, sir.â And he thought that the handsome, kind old face seemed whiter and more fragile than usual.
That was natural, Dan told himself; people couldnât help growing old, and they grew whiter and thinner as age came upon them; but age didnât necessarily mean ill-health. For that matter, his father hadnât nearly reached a really venerable old age; he was more than a decade younger than old-hickory Shelby, who still never missed a dayâs work. Nevertheless, there had been something a little disquieting in Mr. Oliphantâs manner; it was as if he had thought that perhaps he might never have another chance to say what he had said;â âand that night, on the train to which he had hurried after their drive, Dan thought about his father often.
He thought about him often, too, the next day, in New York; and during the conferences there with the landscape architects who were designing the new parks, his thoughts went uneasily westward;â ânot to the green stretches of grove and sward that were to be, but to the quiet old man who had walked so slowly between the tall white gateposts after bidding his son goodbye. Recalling this, it seemed to Dan that he had never before seen him walk so slowly; and he went over in his mind, for the fiftieth time, his fatherâs manner in speaking of Lenaâ âthe slight, timid insistence, as if there might never be another opportunity to say something he had always wished to say. It had given what he said the air of a blessing bestowedâ âand of a valedictory.
Thus Danâs vague uneasiness grew, and although he scolded himself for it, and told himself he was imaginative beyond reason, he could not be rid of it. That was well for him; since such uneasiness may be of help when life is like a path whereon tigers leap from nowhere, as it is, sometimes;â âthe wayfarer will not avoid wounds, but may better survive them for having been in some expectance of them.
For a year Mr. Oliphantâs heart had been ânot just what it ought to beâ; but he told no one that this was his physicianâs report to him. Harlanâs telegram reached New York just as Dan was starting home. Mr. Oliphant had indeed taken his last opportunity to say what he had so long wished to say, for now the kind heart beat no longer;â âbut he had died proud of his son.
XXVNeither Mr. Oliphantâs daughter-in-law nor his grandson was at home at the time of his death. Lena had gone abroad again, for a âthree-monthsâ furlough,â as she called it; and again in spite of Danâs vehement protest that the boy âought to see his own country first,â she had taken Henry with her.
âI wouldnât mind it so much,â Dan said to her before they went;â ââbut you never even stop off and show him Niagara Falls when you take him to New York to visit your family; and when I want to take him with me, you always say heâs got a cold or something and has to stay at home. It seems to me pretty near a disgrace for parents to carry their children all over Europe and pay no attention to the greatest natural wonders in the world, right here at home. My father and mother went to Europe with Harlan and me, but not before theyâd taken us to see Mammoth Cave and Niagara Falls. Why, itâd take five Europes to give me the thrill I got the first time I ever looked at the Falls! Itâs not fair to Henry, and besides, look what it does to his school work! He picked up some French, yes, the other time you had him over there; but he dropped a whole year in his classes. And how much French is he goinâ to need when I take him into business with me? Not a thimbleful in a lifetime! Heâs the best boy I ever knew and got the finest nature; and he ought to be given the opportunity to learn something about his own country instead of too much Paris!â
This patriotic vehemence went for nothing,
Comments (0)