This Side of Paradise (Wisehouse Classics Edition). F. Scott Fitzgerald

This Side of Paradise (Wisehouse Classics Edition) - F. Scott Fitzgerald


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he repeated passionately.

      Myra sprang up, her cheeks pink with bruised vanity, the great bow on the back of her head trembling sympathetically.

      “I hate you!” she cried. “Don’t you ever dare to speak to me again!”

      “What?” stammered Amory.

      “I’ll tell mama you kissed me! I will too! I will too! I’ll tell mama, and she won’t let me play with you!”

      Amory rose and stared at her helplessly, as though she were a new animal of whose presence on the earth he had not heretofore been aware.

      The door opened suddenly, and Myra’s mother appeared on the threshold, fumbling with her lorgnette.

      “Well,” she began, adjusting it benignantly, “the man at the desk told me you two children were up here—How do you do, Amory.”

      Amory watched Myra and waited for the crash—but none came. The pout faded, the high pink subsided, and Myra’s voice was placid as a summer lake when she answered her mother.

      “Oh, we started so late, mama, that I thought we might as well——”

      He heard from below the shrieks of laughter, and smelled the vapid odor of hot chocolate and tea-cakes as he silently followed mother and daughter down-stairs. The sound of the graphophone mingled with the voices of many girls humming the air, and a faint glow was born and spread over him:

       “Casey-Jones—mounted to the cab-un

       Casey-Jones— ‘th his orders in his hand.

       Casey-Jones—mounted to the cab-un

       Took his farewell journey to the prom-ised land.”

      ,

      Amory spent nearly two years in Minneapolis. The first winter he wore moccasins that were born yellow, but after many applications of oil and dirt assumed their mature color, a dirty, greenish brown; he wore a gray plaid mackinaw coat, and a red toboggan cap. His dog, Count Del Monte, ate the red cap, so his uncle gave him a gray one that pulled down over his face. The trouble with this one was that you breathed into it and your breath froze; one day the darn thing froze his cheek. He rubbed snow on his cheek, but it turned bluish-black just the same.

      The Count Del Monte ate a box of bluing once, but it didn’t hurt him. Later, however, he lost his mind and ran madly up the street, bumping into fences, rolling in gutters, and pursuing his eccentric course out of Amory’s life. Amory cried on his bed.

      “Poor little Count,” he cried. “Oh, poor little Count!”

      After several months he suspected Count of a fine piece of emotional acting.

      Amory and Frog Parker considered that the greatest line in literature occurred in Act III of “Arsene Lupin.”

      They sat in the first row at the Wednesday and Saturday matinées. The line was:

      “If one can’t be a great artist or a great soldier, the next best thing is to be a great criminal.”

      Amory fell in love again, and wrote a poem. This was it:

       “Marylyn and Sallee,

       Those are the girls for me.

       Marylyn stands above

       Sallee in that sweet, deep love.”

      He was interested in whether McGovern of Minnesota would make the first or second All-American, how to do the card-pass, how to do the coin-pass, chameleon ties, how babies were born, and whether Three-fingered Brown was really a better pitcher than Christie Mathewson.

      Among other things he read: “For the Honor of the School,” “Little Women” (twice), “The Common Law,” “Sapho,” “Dangerous Dan McGrew,” “The Broad Highway” (three times), “The Fall of the House of Usher,” “Three Weeks,” “Mary Ware, the Little Colonel’s Chum,” “Gunga Din,” The Police Gazette, and Jim-Jam Jems.

      He had all the Henty biasses in history, and was particularly fond of the cheerful murder stories of Mary Roberts Rinehart.

      School ruined his French and gave him a distaste for standard authors. His masters considered him idle, unreliable and superficially clever.

      He collected locks of hair from many girls. He wore the rings of several. Finally, he could borrow no more rings, owing to his nervous habit of chewing them out of shape. This, it seemed, usually aroused the jealous suspicions of the next borrower.

      All through the summer months Amory and Frog Parker went each week to the Stock Company. Afterward they would stroll home in the balmy air of August night, dreaming along Hennepin and Nicollet Avenues, through the gay crowd. Amory wondered how people could fail to notice that he was a boy marked for glory, and when faces of the throng turned toward him and ambiguous eyes stared into his, he assumed the most romantic of expressions and walked on the air cushions that lie on the asphalts of fourteen.

      Always, after he was in bed, there were voices—indefinite, fading, enchanting— just outside his window, and before he fell asleep he would dream one of his favorite waking dreams, the one about becoming a great half-back, or the one about the Japanese invasion, when he was rewarded by being made the youngest general in the world. It was always the becoming he dreamed of, never the being. This, too, was quite characteristic of Amory.

      ,

      Before he was summoned back to Lake Geneva, he had appeared, shy but inwardly glowing, in his first long trousers, set off by a purple accordion tie and a “Belmont” collar with the edges unassailably meeting, purple socks, and handkerchief with a purple border peeping from his breast pocket. But more than that, he had formulated his first philosophy, a code to live by, which, as near as it can be named, was a sort of aristocratic egotism.

      He had realized that his best interests were bound up with those of a certain variant, changing person, whose label, in order that his past might always be identified with him, was Amory Blaine. Amory marked himself a fortunate youth, capable of infinite expansion for good or evil. He did not consider himself a “strong char’c’ter,” but relied on his facility (learn things sorta quick) and his superior mentality (read a lotta deep books). He was proud of the fact that he could never become a mechanical or scientific genius. From no other heights was he debarred.

      Physically. Amory thought that he was exceedingly handsome. He was. He fancied himself an athlete of possibilities and a supple dancer.

      Socially. Here his condition was, perhaps, most dangerous. He granted himself personality, charm, magnetism, poise, the power of dominating all contemporary males, the gift of fascinating all women.

      Mentally. Complete, unquestioned superiority.

      Now a confession will have to be made. Amory had rather a Puritan conscience. Not that he yielded to it—later in life he almost completely slew it—but at fifteen it made him consider himself a great deal worse than other boys . . . unscrupulousness . . . the desire to influence people in almost every way, even for evil . . . a certain coldness and lack of affection, amounting sometimes to cruelty . . . a shifting sense of honor . . . an unholy selfishness . . . a puzzled, furtive interest in everything concerning sex.

      There was, also, a curious strain of weakness running crosswise through his makeup . . . a harsh phrase from the lips of an older boy (older boys usually detested him) was liable to sweep him off his poise into surly sensitiveness, or timid stupidity . . . he was a slave


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