The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington (little red riding hood ebook .TXT) đ
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The Magnificent Ambersons, winner of the 1919 Pulitzer prize, is considered by many to be Booth Tarkingtonâs finest novel and an American classic. The story is set in the Midwest, where George, the spoiled and oblivious scion of an old-money family, must cope with their waning fortunes and the rise of industry barons in the automobile age.
Georgeâs antiheroic struggles with modernity encapsulate a greater theme of change and renewalâspecifically, the very American notion of a small community exploding into a dark and dirty city virtually overnight by virtue of industrial âprogress.â Tarkingtonâs nuanced portrayal of the often-unlikable Amberson family and his paradoxical framing of progress as a destroyer of family, community, and environment, make The Magnificent Ambersons a fascinating and forward-thinking novelâcertainly one with a permanent place in the American social canon. Despite the often heavy themes, Tarkingtonâs prose remains uniquely witty, charming, and brisk.
The novel is the second in Tarkingtonâs Growth trilogy of novels, and has been adapted several times for radio, film, and television, including a 1942 Orson Welles adaptation that many consider one of the finest American films ever made.
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- Author: Booth Tarkington
Read book online «The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington (little red riding hood ebook .TXT) đ». Author - Booth Tarkington
She began to tremble, regarding him with a fixed gaze. âYou donât care to hear then,â she said huskily, âthat I approve of what youâre doing?â
âCertainly not! Since I havenât the faintest idea what you think Iâm âdoing,â naturally I donât care whether you approve of it or not. All Iâd like, if you please, is to be alone. Iâm not giving a tea here, this afternoon, if youâll permit me to mention it!â
Fannyâs gaze wavered; she began to blink; then suddenly she sank into a chair and wept silently, but with a terrible desolation.
âOh, for the Lordâs sake!â he moaned. âWhat in the world is wrong with you?â
âYouâre always picking on me,â she quavered wretchedly, her voice indistinct with the wetness that bubbled into it from her tears. âYou doâ âyou always pick on me! Youâve always done itâ âalwaysâ âever since you were a little boy! Whenever anything goes wrong with you, you take it out on me! You do! You alwaysâ ââ
George flung to heaven a gesture of despair; it seemed to him the last straw that Fanny should have chosen this particular time to come and sob in his room over his mistreatment of her!
âOh, my Lord!â he whispered; then, with a great effort, addressed her in a reasonable tone: âLook here, Aunt Fanny; I donât see what youâre making all this fuss about. Of course I know Iâve teased you sometimes, butâ ââ
âââTeasedâ me?â she wailed. âââTeasedâ me! Oh, it does seem too hard, sometimesâ âthis mean old life of mine does seem too hard! I donât think I can stand it! Honestly, I donât think I can! I came in here just to show you I sympathized with youâ âjust to say something pleasant to you, and you treat me as if I wereâ âoh, no, you wouldnât treat a servant the way you treat me! You wouldnât treat anybody in the world like this except old Fanny! âOld Fannyâ you say. âItâs nobody but old Fanny, so Iâll kick herâ ânobody will resent it. Iâll kick her all I want to!â You do! Thatâs how you think of meâ âI know it! And youâre right: I havenât got anything in the world, since my brother diedâ ânobodyâ ânothingâ ânothing!â
âOh my Lord!â George groaned.
Fanny spread out her small, soaked handkerchief, and shook it in the air to dry it a little, crying as damply and as wretchedly during this operation as beforeâ âa sight which gave George a curious shock to add to his other agitations, it seemed so strange. âI ought not to have come,â she went on, âbecause I might have known it would only give you an excuse to pick on me again! Iâm sorry enough I came, I can tell you! I didnât mean to speak of it again to you, at all; and I wouldnât have, but I saw how you treated them, and I guess I got excited about it, and couldnât help following the impulseâ âbut Iâll know better next time, I can tell you! Iâll keep my mouth shut as I meant to, and as I would have, if I hadnât got excited and if I hadnât felt sorry for you. But what does it matter to anybody if Iâm sorry for them? Iâm only old Fanny!â
âOh, good gracious! How can it matter to me whoâs sorry for me when I donât know what theyâre sorry about!â
âYouâre so proud,â she quavered, âand so hard! I tell you I didnât mean to speak of it to you, and I never, never in the world would have told you about it, nor have made the faintest reference to it, if I hadnât seen that somebody else had told you, or youâd found out for yourself some way. Iâ ââ
In despair of her intelligence, and in some doubt of his own, George struck the palms of his hands together. âSomebody else had told me what? Iâd found what out for myself?â
âHow people are talking about your mother.â
Except for the incidental teariness of her voice, her tone was casual, as though she mentioned a subject previously discussed and understood; for Fanny had no doubt that George had only pretended to be mystified because, in his pride, he would not in words admit that he knew what he knew.
âWhat did you say?â he asked incredulously.
âOf course I understood what you were doing,â Fanny went on, drying her handkerchief again. âIt puzzled other people when you began to be rude to Eugene, because they couldnât see how you could treat him as you did when you were so interested in Lucy. But I remembered how you came to me, that other time when there was so much talk about Isabel; and I knew youâd give Lucy up in a minute, if it came to a question of your motherâs reputation, because you said then thatâ ââ
âLook here,â George interrupted in a shaking voice. âLook here, Iâd likeâ ââ He stopped, unable to go on, his agitation was so great. His chest heaved as from hard running, and his complexion, pallid at first, had become mottled; fiery splotches appearing at his temples and cheeks. âWhat do you mean by telling meâ âtelling me thereâs talk aboutâ âaboutâ ââ He gulped, and began again: âWhat do you mean by using such words as âreputationâ? What do you mean, speaking of a âquestionâ of myâ âmy motherâs reputation?â
Fanny looked up at him woefully over the handkerchief which she now applied to her reddened nose. âGod knows Iâm sorry for you, George,â she murmured. âI wanted to say so, but itâs only old Fanny, so whatever she saysâ âeven when itâs sympathyâ âpick on her for it! Hammer her!â She sobbed. âHammer her! Itâs only poor old lonely Fanny!â
âYou look here!â George said harshly. âWhen I spoke to my Uncle George after that rotten thing I heard Aunt Amelia say about my
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