<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>To George F. Babbitt, as to most prosperous citizens of Zenith, his motor
car was poetry and tragedy, love and heroism. The office was his pirate
ship but the car his perilous excursion ashore.</p>
<p>Among the tremendous crises of each day none was more dramatic than
starting the engine. It was slow on cold mornings; there was the long,
anxious whirr of the starter; and sometimes he had to drip ether into the
cocks of the cylinders, which was so very interesting that at lunch he
would chronicle it drop by drop, and orally calculate how much each drop
had cost him.</p>
<p>This morning he was darkly prepared to find something wrong, and he felt
belittled when the mixture exploded sweet and strong, and the car didn't
even brush the door-jamb, gouged and splintery with many bruisings by
fenders, as he backed out of the garage. He was confused. He shouted
"Morning!" to Sam Doppelbrau with more cordiality than he had intended.</p>
<p>Babbitt's green and white Dutch Colonial house was one of three in that
block on Chatham Road. To the left of it was the residence of Mr. Samuel
Doppelbrau, secretary of an excellent firm of bathroom-fixture jobbers.
His was a comfortable house with no architectural manners whatever; a
large wooden box with a squat tower, a broad porch, and glossy paint
yellow as a yolk. Babbitt disapproved of Mr. and Mrs. Doppelbrau as
"Bohemian." From their house came midnight music and obscene laughter;
there were neighborhood rumors of bootlegged whisky and fast motor rides.
They furnished Babbitt with many happy evenings of discussion, during
which he announced firmly, "I'm not strait-laced, and I don't mind seeing
a fellow throw in a drink once in a while, but when it comes to
deliberately trying to get away with a lot of hell-raising all the while
like the Doppelbraus do, it's too rich for my blood!"</p>
<p>On the other side of Babbitt lived Howard Littlefield, Ph.D., in a
strictly modern house whereof the lower part was dark red tapestry brick,
with a leaded oriel, the upper part of pale stucco like spattered clay,
and the roof red-tiled. Littlefield was the Great Scholar of the
neighborhood; the authority on everything in the world except babies,
cooking, and motors. He was a Bachelor of Arts of Blodgett College, and a
Doctor of Philosophy in economics of Yale. He was the employment-manager
and publicity-counsel of the Zenith Street Traction Company. He could, on
ten hours' notice, appear before the board of aldermen or the state
legislature and prove, absolutely, with figures all in rows and with
precedents from Poland and New Zealand, that the street-car company loved
the Public and yearned over its employees; that all its stock was owned by
Widows and Orphans; and that whatever it desired to do would benefit
property-owners by increasing rental values, and help the poor by lowering
rents. All his acquaintances turned to Littlefield when they desired to
know the date of the battle of Saragossa, the definition of the word
"sabotage," the future of the German mark, the translation of "hinc illae
lachrimae," or the number of products of coal tar. He awed Babbitt by
confessing that he often sat up till midnight reading the figures and
footnotes in Government reports, or skimming (with amusement at the
author's mistakes) the latest volumes of chemistry, archeology, and
ichthyology.</p>
<p>But Littlefield's great value was as a spiritual example. Despite his
strange learnings he was as strict a Presbyterian and as firm a Republican
as George F. Babbitt. He confirmed the business men in the faith. Where
they knew only by passionate instinct that their system of industry and
manners was perfect, Dr. Howard Littlefield proved it to them, out of
history, economics, and the confessions of reformed radicals.</p>
<p>Babbitt had a good deal of honest pride in being the neighbor of such a
savant, and in Ted's intimacy with Eunice Littlefield. At sixteen Eunice
was interested in no statistics save those regarding the ages and salaries
of motion-picture stars, but—as Babbitt definitively put it—"she
was her father's daughter."</p>
<p>The difference between a light man like Sam Doppelbrau and a really fine
character like Littlefield was revealed in their appearances. Doppelbrau
was disturbingly young for a man of forty-eight. He wore his derby on the
back of his head, and his red face was wrinkled with meaningless laughter.
But Littlefield was old for a man of forty-two. He was tall, broad, thick;
his gold-rimmed spectacles were engulfed in the folds of his long face;
his hair was a tossed mass of greasy blackness; he puffed and rumbled as
he talked; his Phi Beta Kappa key shone against a spotty black vest; he
smelled of old pipes; he was altogether funereal and archidiaconal; and to
real-estate brokerage and the jobbing of bathroom-fixtures he added an
aroma of sanctity.</p>
<p>This morning he was in front of his house, inspecting the grass parking
between the curb and the broad cement sidewalk. Babbitt stopped his car
and leaned out to shout "Mornin'!" Littlefield lumbered over and stood
with one foot up on the running-board.</p>
<p>"Fine morning," said Babbitt, lighting—illegally early—his
second cigar of the day.</p>
<p>"Yes, it's a mighty fine morning," said Littlefield.</p>
<p>"Spring coming along fast now."</p>
<p>"Yes, it's real spring now, all right," said Littlefield.</p>
<p>"Still cold nights, though. Had to have a couple blankets, on the
sleeping-porch last night."</p>
<p>"Yes, it wasn't any too warm last night," said Littlefield.</p>
<p>"But I don't anticipate we'll have any more real cold weather now."</p>
<p>"No, but still, there was snow at Tiflis, Montana, yesterday," said the
Scholar, "and you remember the blizzard they had out West three days ago—thirty
inches of snow at Greeley, Colorado—and two years ago we had a
snow-squall right here in Zenith on the twenty-fifth of April."</p>
<p>"Is that a fact! Say, old man, what do you think about the Republican
candidate? Who'll they nominate for president? Don't you think it's about
time we had a real business administration?"</p>
<p>"In my opinion, what the country needs, first and foremost, is a good,
sound, business-like conduct of its affairs. What we need is—a
business administration!" said Littlefield.</p>
<p>"I'm glad to hear you say that! I certainly am glad to hear you say that!
I didn't know how you'd feel about it, with all your associations with
colleges and so on, and I'm glad you feel that way. What the country needs—just
at this present juncture—is neither a college president nor a lot of
monkeying with foreign affairs, but a good—sound economical—business—administration,
that will give us a chance to have something like a decent turnover."</p>
<p>"Yes. It isn't generally realized that even in China the schoolmen are
giving way to more practical men, and of course you can see what that
implies."</p>
<p>"Is that a fact! Well, well!" breathed Babbitt, feeling much calmer, and
much happier about the way things were going in the world. "Well, it's
been nice to stop and parleyvoo a second. Guess I'll have to get down to
the office now and sting a few clients. Well, so long, old man. See you
tonight. So long."</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>They had labored, these solid citizens. Twenty years before, the hill on
which Floral Heights was spread, with its bright roofs and immaculate turf
and amazing comfort, had been a wilderness of rank second-growth elms and
oaks and maples. Along the precise streets were still a few wooded vacant
lots, and the fragment of an old orchard. It was brilliant to-day; the
apple boughs were lit with fresh leaves like torches of green fire. The
first white of cherry blossoms flickered down a gully, and robins
clamored.</p>
<p>Babbitt sniffed the earth, chuckled at the hysteric robins as he would
have chuckled at kittens or at a comic movie. He was, to the eye, the
perfect office-going executive—a well-fed man in a correct brown
soft hat and frameless spectacles, smoking a large cigar, driving a good
motor along a semi-suburban parkway. But in him was some genius of
authentic love for his neighborhood, his city, his clan. The winter was
over; the time was come for the building, the visible growth, which to him
was glory. He lost his dawn depression; he was ruddily cheerful when he
stopped on Smith Street to leave the brown trousers, and to have the
gasoline-tank filled.</p>
<p>The familiarity of the rite fortified him: the sight of the tall red iron
gasoline-pump, the hollow-tile and terra-cotta garage, the window full of
the most agreeable accessories—shiny casings, spark-plugs with
immaculate porcelain jackets tire-chains of gold and silver. He was
flattered by the friendliness with which Sylvester Moon, dirtiest and most
skilled of motor mechanics, came out to serve him. "Mornin', Mr. Babbitt!"
said Moon, and Babbitt felt himself a person of importance, one whose name
even busy garagemen remembered—not one of these cheap-sports flying
around in flivvers. He admired the ingenuity of the automatic dial,
clicking off gallon by gallon; admired the smartness of the sign: "A fill
in time saves getting stuck—gas to-day 31 cents"; admired the
rhythmic gurgle of the gasoline as it flowed into the tank, and the
mechanical regularity with which Moon turned the handle.</p>
<p>"How much we takin' to-day?" asked Moon, in a manner which combined the
independence of the great specialist, the friendliness of a familiar
gossip, and respect for a man of weight in the community, like George F.
Babbitt.</p>
<p>"Fill 'er up."</p>
<p>"Who you rootin' for for Republican candidate, Mr. Babbitt?"</p>
<p>"It's too early to make any predictions yet. After all, there's still a
good month and two weeks—no, three weeks—must be almost three
weeks—well, there's more than six weeks in all before the Republican
convention, and I feel a fellow ought to keep an open mind and give all
the candidates a show—look 'em all over and size 'em up, and then
decide carefully."</p>
<p>"That's a fact, Mr. Babbitt."</p>
<p>"But I'll tell you—and my stand on this is just the same as it was
four years ago, and eight years ago, and it'll be my stand four years from
now—yes, and eight years from now! What I tell everybody, and it
can't be too generally understood, is that what we need first, last, and
all the time is a good, sound business administration!"</p>
<p>"By golly, that's right!"</p>
<p>"How do those front tires look to you?"</p>
<p>"Fine! Fine! Wouldn't be much work for garages if everybody looked after
their car the way you do."</p>
<p>"Well, I do try and have some sense about it." Babbitt paid his bill, said
adequately, "Oh, keep the change," and drove off in an ecstasy of honest
self-appreciation. It was with the manner of a Good Samaritan that he
shouted at a respectable-looking man who was waiting for a trolley car,
"Have a lift?" As the man climbed in Babbitt condescended, "Going clear
down-town? Whenever I see a fellow waiting for a trolley, I always make it
a practice to give him a lift—unless, of course, he looks like a
bum."</p>
<p>"Wish there were more folks that were so generous with their machines,"
dutifully said the victim of benevolence. "Oh, no, 'tain't a question of
generosity, hardly. Fact, I always feel—I was saying to my son just
the other night—it's a fellow's duty to share the good things of
this world with his neighbors, and it gets my goat when a fellow gets
stuck on himself and goes around tooting his horn merely because he's
charitable."</p>
<p>The victim seemed unable to find the right answer. Babbitt boomed on:</p>
<p>"Pretty punk service the Company giving us on these car-lines. Nonsense to
only run the Portland Road cars once every seven minutes. Fellow gets
mighty cold on a winter morning, waiting on a street corner with the wind
nipping at his ankles."</p>
<p>"That's right. The Street Car Company don't care a damn what kind of a
deal they give us. Something ought to happen to 'em."</p>
<p>Babbitt was alarmed. "But still, of course it won't do to just keep
knocking the Traction Company and not realize the difficulties they're
operating under, like these cranks that want municipal ownership. The way
these workmen hold up the Company for high wages is simply a crime, and of
course the burden falls on you and me that have to pay a seven-cent fare!
Fact, there's remarkable service on all their lines—considering."</p>
<p>"Well—" uneasily.</p>
<p>"Darn fine morning," Babbitt explained. "Spring coming along fast."</p>
<p>"Yes, it's real spring now."</p>
<p>The victim had no originality, no wit, and Babbitt fell into a great
silence and devoted himself to the game of beating trolley cars to the
corner: a spurt, a tail-chase, nervous speeding between the huge yellow
side of the trolley and the jagged row of parked motors, shooting past
just as the trolley stopped—a rare game and valiant.</p>
<p>And all the while he was conscious of the loveliness of Zenith. For weeks
together he noticed nothing but clients and the vexing To Rent signs of
rival brokers. To-day, in mysterious malaise, he raged or rejoiced with
equal nervous swiftness, and to-day the light of spring was so winsome
that he lifted his head and saw.</p>
<p>He admired each district along his familiar route to the office: The
bungalows and shrubs and winding irregular drive ways of Floral Heights.
The one-story shops on Smith Street, a glare of plate-glass and new yellow
brick; groceries and laundries and drug-stores to supply the more
immediate needs of East Side housewives. The market gardens in Dutch
Hollow, their shanties patched with corrugated iron and stolen doors.
Billboards with crimson goddesses nine feet tall advertising cinema films,
pipe tobacco, and talcum powder. The old "mansions" along Ninth Street, S.
E., like aged dandies in filthy linen; wooden castles turned into
boarding-houses, with muddy walks and rusty hedges, jostled by
fast-intruding garages, cheap apartment-houses, and fruit-stands conducted
by bland, sleek Athenians. Across the belt of railroad-tracks, factories
with high-perched water-tanks and tall stacks-factories producing
condensed milk, paper boxes, lighting-fixtures, motor cars. Then the
business center, the thickening darting traffic, the crammed trolleys
unloading, and high doorways of marble and polished granite.</p>
<p>It was big—and Babbitt respected bigness in anything; in mountains,
jewels, muscles, wealth, or words. He was, for a spring-enchanted moment,
the lyric and almost unselfish lover of Zenith. He thought of the outlying
factory suburbs; of the Chaloosa River with its strangely eroded banks; of
the orchard-dappled Tonawanda Hills to the North, and all the fat dairy
land and big barns and comfortable herds. As he dropped his passenger he
cried, "Gosh, I feel pretty good this morning!" III</p>
<p>Epochal as starting the car was the drama of parking it before he entered
his office. As he turned from Oberlin Avenue round the corner into Third
Street, N.E., he peered ahead for a space in the line of parked cars. He
angrily just missed a space as a rival driver slid into it. Ahead, another
car was leaving the curb, and Babbitt slowed up, holding out his hand to
the cars pressing on him from behind, agitatedly motioning an old woman to
go ahead, avoiding a truck which bore down on him from one side. With
front wheels nicking the wrought-steel bumper of the car in front, he
stopped, feverishly cramped his steering-wheel, slid back into the vacant
space and, with eighteen inches of room, manoeuvered to bring the car
level with the curb. It was a virile adventure masterfully executed. With
satisfaction he locked a thief-proof steel wedge on the front wheel, and
crossed the street to his real-estate office on the ground floor of the
Reeves Building.</p>
<p>The Reeves Building was as fireproof as a rock and as efficient as a
typewriter; fourteen stories of yellow pressed brick, with clean, upright,
unornamented lines. It was filled with the offices of lawyers, doctors,
agents for machinery, for emery wheels, for wire fencing, for
mining-stock. Their gold signs shone on the windows. The entrance was too
modern to be flamboyant with pillars; it was quiet, shrewd, neat. Along
the Third Street side were a Western Union Telegraph Office, the Blue
Delft Candy Shop, Shotwell's Stationery Shop, and the Babbitt-Thompson
Realty Company.</p>
<p>Babbitt could have entered his office from the street, as customers did,
but it made him feel an insider to go through the corridor of the building
and enter by the back door. Thus he was greeted by the villagers.</p>
<p>The little unknown people who inhabited the Reeves Building corridors—elevator-runners,
starter, engineers, superintendent, and the doubtful-looking lame man who
conducted the news and cigar stand—were in no way city-dwellers.
They were rustics, living in a constricted valley, interested only in one
another and in The Building. Their Main Street was the entrance hall, with
its stone floor, severe marble ceiling, and the inner windows of the
shops. The liveliest place on the street was the Reeves Building Barber
Shop, but this was also Babbitt's one embarrassment. Himself, he
patronized the glittering Pompeian Barber Shop in the Hotel Thornleigh,
and every time he passed the Reeves shop—ten times a day, a hundred
times—he felt untrue to his own village.</p>
<p>Now, as one of the squirearchy, greeted with honorable salutations by the
villagers, he marched into his office, and peace and dignity were upon
him, and the morning's dissonances all unheard.</p>
<p>They were heard again, immediately.</p>
<p>Stanley Graff, the outside salesman, was talking on the telephone with
tragic lack of that firm manner which disciplines clients: "Say, uh, I
think I got just the house that would suit you—the Percival House,
in Linton.... Oh, you've seen it. Well, how'd it strike you?... Huh?
...Oh," irresolutely, "oh, I see."</p>
<p>As Babbitt marched into his private room, a coop with semi-partition of
oak and frosted glass, at the back of the office, he reflected how hard it
was to find employees who had his own faith that he was going to make
sales.</p>
<p>There were nine members of the staff, besides Babbitt and his partner and
father-in-law, Henry Thompson, who rarely came to the office. The nine
were Stanley Graff, the outside salesman—a youngish man given to
cigarettes and the playing of pool; old Mat Penniman, general utility man,
collector of rents and salesman of insurance—broken, silent, gray; a
mystery, reputed to have been a "crack" real-estate man with a firm of his
own in haughty Brooklyn; Chester Kirby Laylock, resident salesman out at
the Glen Oriole acreage development—an enthusiastic person with a
silky mustache and much family; Miss Theresa McGoun, the swift and rather
pretty stenographer; Miss Wilberta Bannigan, the thick, slow, laborious
accountant and file-clerk; and four freelance part-time commission
salesmen.</p>
<p>As he looked from his own cage into the main room Babbitt mourned,
"McGoun's a good stenog., smart's a whip, but Stan Graff and all those
bums—" The zest of the spring morning was smothered in the stale
office air.</p>
<p>Normally he admired the office, with a pleased surprise that he should
have created this sure lovely thing; normally he was stimulated by the
clean newness of it and the air of bustle; but to-day it seemed flat—the
tiled floor, like a bathroom, the ocher-colored metal ceiling, the faded
maps on the hard plaster walls, the chairs of varnished pale oak, the
desks and filing-cabinets of steel painted in olive drab. It was a vault,
a steel chapel where loafing and laughter were raw sin.</p>
<p>He hadn't even any satisfaction in the new water-cooler! And it was the
very best of water-coolers, up-to-date, scientific, and right-thinking. It
had cost a great deal of money (in itself a virtue). It possessed a
non-conducting fiber ice-container, a porcelain water-jar (guaranteed
hygienic), a drip-less non-clogging sanitary faucet, and machine-painted
decorations in two tones of gold. He looked down the relentless stretch of
tiled floor at the water-cooler, and assured himself that no tenant of the
Reeves Building had a more expensive one, but he could not recapture the
feeling of social superiority it had given him. He astoundingly grunted,
"I'd like to beat it off to the woods right now. And loaf all day. And go
to Gunch's again to-night, and play poker, and cuss as much as I feel
like, and drink a hundred and nine-thousand bottles of beer."</p>
<p>He sighed; he read through his mail; he shouted "Msgoun," which meant
"Miss McGoun"; and began to dictate.</p>
<p>This was his own version of his first letter:</p>
<p>"Omar Gribble, send it to his office, Miss McGoun, yours of twentieth to
hand and in reply would say look here, Gribble, I'm awfully afraid if we
go on shilly-shallying like this we'll just naturally lose the Allen sale,
I had Allen up on carpet day before yesterday and got right down to cases
and think I can assure you—uh, uh, no, change that: all my
experience indicates he is all right, means to do business, looked into
his financial record which is fine—that sentence seems to be a
little balled up, Miss McGoun; make a couple sentences out of it if you
have to, period, new paragraph.</p>
<p>"He is perfectly willing to pro rate the special assessment and strikes
me, am dead sure there will be no difficulty in getting him to pay for
title insurance, so now for heaven's sake let's get busy—no, make
that: so now let's go to it and get down—no, that's enough—you
can tie those sentences up a little better when you type 'em, Miss McGoun—your
sincerely, etcetera."</p>
<p>This is the version of his letter which he received, typed, from Miss
McGoun that afternoon:</p>
<p>BABBITT-THOMPSON REALTY CO.<br/>
Homes for Folks<br/>
Reeves Bldg., Oberlin Avenue & 3d St., N.E<br/>
Zenith<br/></p>
<p>Omar Gribble, Esq., 376 North American Building, Zenith.</p>
<p>Dear Mr. Gribble:</p>
<p>Your letter of the twentieth to hand. I must say I'm awfully afraid that
if we go on shilly-shallying like this we'll just naturally lose the Allen
sale. I had Allen up on the carpet day before yesterday, and got right
down to cases. All my experience indicates that he means to do business. I
have also looked into his financial record, which is fine.</p>
<p>He is perfectly willing to pro rate the special assessment and there will
be no difficulty in getting him to pay for title insurance.</p>
<p>SO LET'S GO! Yours sincerely,</p>
<p>As he read and signed it, in his correct flowing business-college hand,
Babbitt reflected, "Now that's a good, strong letter, and clear's a bell.
Now what the—I never told McGoun to make a third paragraph there!
Wish she'd quit trying to improve on my dictation! But what I can't
understand is: why can't Stan Graff or Chet Laylock write a letter like
that? With punch! With a kick!"</p>
<p>The most important thing he dictated that morning was the fortnightly
form-letter, to be mimeographed and sent out to a thousand "prospects." It
was diligently imitative of the best literary models of the day; of
heart-to-heart-talk advertisements, "sales-pulling" letters, discourses on
the "development of Will-power," and hand-shaking house-organs, as richly
poured forth by the new school of Poets of Business. He had painfully
written out a first draft, and he intoned it now like a poet delicate and
distrait:</p>
<p>SAY, OLD MAN! I just want to know can I do you a whaleuva favor? Honest!
No kidding! I know you're interested in getting a house, not merely a
place where you hang up the old bonnet but a love-nest for the wife and
kiddies—and maybe for the flivver out beyant (be sure and spell that
b-e-y-a-n-t, Miss McGoun) the spud garden. Say, did you ever stop to think
that we're here to save you trouble? That's how we make a living—folks
don't pay us for our lovely beauty! Now take a look:</p>
<p>Sit right down at the handsome carved mahogany escritoire and shoot us in
a line telling us just what you want, and if we can find it we'll come
hopping down your lane with the good tidings, and if we can't, we won't
bother you. To save your time, just fill out the blank enclosed. On
request will also send blank regarding store properties in Floral Heights,
Silver Grove, Linton, Bellevue, and all East Side residential districts.</p>
<p>Yours for service,</p>
<p>P.S.—Just a hint of some plums we can pick for you—some
genuine bargains that came in to-day:</p>
<p>SILVER GROVE.—Cute four-room California bungalow, a.m.i., garage,
dandy shade tree, swell neighborhood, handy car line. $3700, $780 down and
balance liberal, Babbitt-Thompson terms, cheaper than rent.</p>
<p>DORCHESTER.—A corker! Artistic two-family house, all oak trim,
parquet floors, lovely gas log, big porches, colonial, HEATED ALL-WEATHER
GARAGE, a bargain at $11,250.</p>
<p>Dictation over, with its need of sitting and thinking instead of bustling
around and making a noise and really doing something, Babbitt sat creakily
back in his revolving desk-chair and beamed on Miss McGoun. He was
conscious of her as a girl, of black bobbed hair against demure cheeks. A
longing which was indistinguishable from loneliness enfeebled him. While
she waited, tapping a long, precise pencil-point on the desk-tablet, he
half identified her with the fairy girl of his dreams. He imagined their
eyes meeting with terrifying recognition; imagined touching her lips with
frightened reverence and—She was chirping, "Any more, Mist'
Babbitt?" He grunted, "That winds it up, I guess," and turned heavily
away.</p>
<p>For all his wandering thoughts, they had never been more intimate than
this. He often reflected, "Nev' forget how old Jake Offutt said a wise
bird never goes love-making in his own office or his own home. Start
trouble. Sure. But—"</p>
<p>In twenty-three years of married life he had peered uneasily at every
graceful ankle, every soft shoulder; in thought he had treasured them; but
not once had he hazarded respectability by adventuring. Now, as he
calculated the cost of repapering the Styles house, he was restless again,
discontented about nothing and everything, ashamed of his discontentment,
and lonely for the fairy girl.</p>
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