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Sherwood Anderson

And then his mind ran back to another night in Caxton when first he sat eating among strange people at Freedom Smith’s table.  He saw again the tomboy girl and the sturdy boy and the lantern swinging in Freedom’s hand in the close little stable; he saw the absurd housepainter trying to blow the bugle in the street; and the mother talking to her boy of death through the summer evening; the fat foreman making the record of his loves on the walls of his room, the narrow-faced commission man rubbing his hands before a group of Greek hucksters, and then this—­this home with its safety and its secret high aim and him sitting there at the head of it all.  Like the novelist, it seemed to him that he should admire and bow his head before the romance of destiny.  He thought his station, his wife, his country, his end in life, when rightly seen, the very apex of life on the earth, and to him in his pride it seemed that he was in some way the master and maker of it all.

CHAPTER VII

Late one evening, some weeks after the McPhersons had given the dinner party in secret celebration of the future arrival of what was to be the first of the great family, they came together down the steps of a north side house to their waiting carriage.  They had spent, Sam thought, a delightful evening.  The Grovers were people of whose friendship he was particularly proud and since his marriage with Sue he had taken her often for an evening to the house of the venerable surgeon.  Doctor Grover was a scholar, a man of note in the medical world, and a rapid and absorbing talker and thinker on any subject that aroused his interest.  A certain youthful enthusiasm in his outlook on life had attracted to him the devotion of Sue, who, since meeting him through Sam, had counted him a marked addition to their little group of friends.  His wife, a white-haired, plump little woman, was, though apparently somewhat diffident, in reality his intellectual equal and companion, and Sue in a quiet way had taken her as a model in her own effort toward complete wifehood.

During the evening, spent in a rapid exchange of opinions and ideas between the two men, Sue had sat in silence.  Once when he looked at her Sam thought that he had surprised an annoyed look in her eyes and was puzzled by it.  During the remainder of the evening her eyes refused to meet his and she looked instead at the floor, a flush mounting her cheeks.

At the door of the carriage Frank, Sue’s coachman, stepped on the hem of her gown and tore it.  The tear was slight, the incident Sam thought entirely unavoidable, and as much due to a momentary clumsiness on the part of Sue as to the awkwardness of Frank.  The man had for years been a loyal servant and a devoted admirer of Sue’s.

Sam laughed and taking Sue by the arm started to help her in at the carriage door.

“Too much gown for an athlete,” he said, pointlessly.

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Windy McPherson's Son from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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