Main Street Sinclair Lewis (books to read romance TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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âI could stand fighting them. Iâm used to that. But this being taken in, being taken as a matter of course, I canât stand itâ âand I must stand it!â
She alternately detested herself for not appreciating the kindly women, and detested them for their advice: lugubrious hints as to how much she would suffer in labor, details of baby-hygiene based on long experience and total misunderstanding, superstitious cautions about the things she must eat and read and look at in prenatal care for the babyâs soul, and always a pest of simpering babytalk. Mrs. Champ Perry bustled in to lend Ben Hur, as a preventive of future infant immorality. The Widow Bogart appeared trailing pinkish exclamations, âAnd how is our lovely âittle muzzy today! My, ainât it just like they always say: being in a Family Way does make the girlie so lovely, just like a Madonna. Tell meâ ââ Her whisper was tinged with salaciousnessâ ââdoes oo feel the dear itsy one stirring, the pledge of love? I remember with Cy, of course he was so bigâ ââ
âI do not look lovely, Mrs. Bogart. My complexion is rotten, and my hair is coming out, and I look like a potato-bag, and I think my arches are falling, and he isnât a pledge of love, and Iâm afraid he will look like us, and I donât believe in mother-devotion, and the whole business is a confounded nuisance of a biological process,â remarked Carol.
Then the baby was born, without unusual difficulty: a boy with straight back and strong legs. The first day she hated him for the tides of pain and hopeless fear he had caused; she resented his raw ugliness. After that she loved him with all the devotion and instinct at which she had scoffed. She marveled at the perfection of the miniature hands as noisily as did Kennicott, she was overwhelmed by the trust with which the baby turned to her; passion for him grew with each unpoetic irritating thing she had to do for him.
He was named Hugh, for her father.
Hugh developed into a thin healthy child with a large head and straight delicate hair of a faint brown. He was thoughtful and casualâ âa Kennicott.
For two years nothing else existed. She did not, as the cynical matrons had prophesied, âgive up worrying about the world and other folksâ babies soon as she got one of her own to fight for.â The barbarity of that willingness to sacrifice other children so that one child might have too much was impossible to her. But she would sacrifice herself. She understood consecrationâ âshe who answered Kennicottâs hints about having Hugh christened: âI refuse to insult my baby and myself by asking an ignorant young man in a frock coat to sanction him, to permit me to have him! I refuse to subject him to any devil-chasing rites! If I didnât give my babyâ âmy babyâ âenough sanctification in those nine hours of hell, then he canât get any more out of the Reverend Mr. Zitterel!â
âWell, Baptists hardly ever christen kids. I was kind of thinking more about Reverend Warren,â said Kennicott.
Hugh was her reason for living, promise of accomplishment in the future, shrine of adorationâ âand a diverting toy. âI thought Iâd be a dilettante mother, but Iâm as dismayingly natural as Mrs. Bogart,â she boasted.
For twoâ âyears Carol was a part of the town; as much one of Our Young Mothers as Mrs. McGanum. Her opinionation seemed dead; she had no apparent desire for escape; her brooding centered on Hugh. While she wondered at the pearl texture of his ear she exulted, âI feel like an old woman, with a skin like sandpaper, beside him, and Iâm glad of it! He is perfect. He shall have everything. He shanât always stay here in Gopher Prairie.â ââ ⊠I wonder which is really the best, Harvard or Yale or Oxford?â
IIThe people who hemmed her in had been brilliantly reinforced by Mr. and Mrs. Whittier N. Smailâ âKennicottâs Uncle Whittier and Aunt Bessie.
The true Main Streetite defines a relative as a person to whose house you go uninvited, to stay as long as you like. If you hear that Lym Cass on his journey East has spent all his time âvisitingâ in Oyster Center, it does not mean that he prefers that village to the rest of New England, but that he has relatives there. It does not mean that he has written to the relatives these many years, nor that they have ever given signs of a desire to look upon him. But âyou wouldnât expect a man to go and spend good money at a hotel in Boston, when his own third cousins live right in the same state, would you?â
When the Smails sold their creamery in North Dakota they visited Mr. Smailâs sister, Kennicottâs mother, at Lac-qui-Meurt, then plodded on to Gopher Prairie to stay with their nephew. They appeared unannounced, before the baby was born, took their welcome for granted, and immediately began to complain of the fact that their room faced north.
Uncle Whittier and Aunt Bessie assumed that it was their privilege as relatives to laugh at Carol, and their duty as Christians to let her know how absurd her ânotionsâ were. They objected to the food, to Oscarinaâs lack of friendliness, to the wind, the rain, and the immodesty of Carolâs maternity gowns. They were strong and enduring; for an hour at a time they could go on heaving questions about her fatherâs income, about her theology, and about the reason
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