A snow-blanched evening of ringing pavements and eager lights.
Great golden lights of trolley-cars sliding along the packed snow of the roadway.
Demure lights of little houses.
The belching glare of a distant foundry, wiping out the sharp-edged stars.
Lights of neighborhood drug stores where friends gossiped, well pleased, after the day’s work.
The green light of a police-station, and greener radiance on the snow; the drama of a patrol-wagon—gong beating like a terrified heart, headlights scorching the crystal-sparkling street, driver not a chauffeur but a policeman proud in uniform, another policeman perilously dangling on the step at the back, and a glimpse of the prisoner.
A murderer, a burglar, a coiner cleverly trapped?
An enormous graystone church with a rigid spire; dim light in the Parlors, and cheerful droning of choir-practise.
The quivering green mercury-vapor light of a photo-engraver’s loft.
Then the storming lights of down-town; parked cars with ruby tail-lights; white arched entrances to movie theaters, like frosty mouths of winter caves; electric signs—serpents and little dancing men of fire; pink-shaded globes and scarlet jazz music in a cheap up-stairs dance-hall; lights of Chinese restaurants, lanterns painted with cherry-blossoms and with pagodas, hung against lattices of lustrous gold and black.
Small dirty lamps in small stinking lunchrooms.
The smart shopping-district, with rich and quiet light on crystal pendants and furs and suave surfaces of polished wood in velvet-hung reticent windows.
High above the street, an unexpected square hanging in the darkness, the window of an office where some one was working late, for a reason unknown and stimulating.
A man meshed in bankruptcy, an ambitious boy, an oil-man suddenly become rich?
The air was shrewd, the snow was deep in uncleared alleys, and beyond the city, Babbitt knew, were hillsides of snow-drift among wintry oaks, and the curving ice-enchanted river.
He loved his city with passionate wonder.
He lost the accumulated weariness of business—worry and expansive oratory; he felt young and potential.
He was ambitious.
It was not enough to be a Vergil Gunch, an Orville Jones.
No. “They’re bully fellows, simply lovely, but they haven’t got any finesse.”
No.
He was going to be an Eathorne; delicately rigorous, coldly powerful. “That’s the stuff. The wallop in the velvet mitt.
Not let anybody get fresh with you.
Been getting careless about my diction.
Slang.
Colloquial.
Cut it out.
I was first-rate at rhetoric in college.
Themes on—Anyway, not bad.
Had too much of this hooptedoodle and good-fellow stuff.
I—Why couldn’t I organize a bank of my own some day?
And Ted succeed me!”
He drove happily home, and to Mrs. Babbitt he was a William Washington Eathorne, but she did not notice it. III
Young Kenneth Escott, reporter on the Advocate-Times was appointed press-agent of the Chatham Road Presbyterian Sunday School.
He gave six hours a week to it. At least he was paid for giving six hours a week.
He had friends on the Press and the Gazette and he was not (officially) known as a press-agent.
He procured a trickle of insinuating items about neighborliness and the Bible, about class-suppers, jolly but educational, and the value of the Prayer-life in attaining financial success.
The Sunday School adopted Babbitt’s system of military ranks.
Quickened by this spiritual refreshment, it had a boom.
It did not become the largest school in Zenith—the Central Methodist Church kept ahead of it by methods which Dr. Drew scored as “unfair, undignified, un-American, ungentlemanly, and unchristian”—but it climbed from fourth place to second, and there was rejoicing in heaven, or at least in that portion of heaven included in the parsonage of Dr. Drew, while Babbitt had much praise and good repute.
He had received the rank of colonel on the general staff of the school.
He was plumply pleased by salutes on the street from unknown small boys; his ears were tickled to ruddy ecstasy by hearing himself called “Colonel;” and if he did not attend Sunday School merely to be thus exalted, certainly he thought about it all the way there.
He was particularly pleasant to the press-agent, Kenneth Escott; he took him to lunch at the Athletic Club and had him at the house for dinner.
Like many of the cocksure young men who forage about cities in apparent contentment and who express their cynicism in supercilious slang, Escott was shy and lonely.
His shrewd starveling face broadened with joy at dinner, and he blurted,
“Gee whillikins, Mrs. Babbitt, if you knew how good it is to have home eats again!”
Escott and Verona liked each other.
All evening they “talked about ideas.”
They discovered that they were Radicals.
True, they were sensible about it.