The Gibson Upright by Booth Tarkington
page 22 of 105 (20%)
page 22 of 105 (20%)
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GIBSON: What are they?
NORA: Capitalist and proletariat. You can't get out of your class and I don't want to get out of mine. GIBSON: Nora, the law of the United States doesn't recognize any classes--and I don't know why you and I should. We both like Montaigne and Debussy. You've even condescended to laugh with me at times about something funny in the shop. Of course not lately; but you used to. In everything worth anything aren't we really in the same class? NORA: We are not. We never shall be--and we never were! Even before we were born we weren't! You came into this life with a silver spoon. I was born in a tenement room where five other people lived. My father was a man with a great brain. He never got out of the tenements in his life; he was crushed and kept under; yet he was a well-read man and a magnificent talker; he could talk Marx and Tolstoi supremely. Yet he never even had time to learn English. GIBSON: I wish you could have heard what _my_ father talked for English! Half the time I couldn't understand him myself. He was Scotch. NORA: Your father wasn't crushed under the capitalistic system as mine was. My father was an intellectual. GIBSON: Mine was a worker. They both landed at Castle Garden, didn't they? NORA: What of that? Mine remained a thinker and a revolutionist; yours became a capitalist. |
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