His march to greatness was not
without disastrous stumbling.
Fame did not bring the social advancement
which the Babbitts deserved. They were not asked
to join the Tonawanda Country Club nor invited to
the dances at the Union. Himself, Babbitt fretted,
he didn’t “care a fat hoot for all these
highrollers, but the wife would kind of like to be
Among Those Present.” He nervously awaited
his university class-dinner and an evening of furious
intimacy with such social leaders as Charles McKelvey
the millionaire contractor, Max Kruger the banker,
Irving Tate the tool-manufacturer, and Adelbert Dobson
the fashionable interior decorator. Theoretically
he was their friend, as he had been in college, and
when he encountered them they still called him “Georgie,”
but he didn’t seem to encounter them often,
and they never invited him to dinner (with champagne
and a butler) at their houses on Royal Ridge.
All the week before the class-dinner
he thought of them. “No reason why we shouldn’t
become real chummy now!”
II
Like all true American diversions
and spiritual outpourings, the dinner of the men of
the Class of 1896 was thoroughly organized. The
dinner-committee hammered like a sales-corporation.
Once a week they sent out reminders:
TICKLER NO. 3
Old man, are you going to be with
us at the livest Friendship Feed the alumni of the
good old U have ever known? The alumnae of ’08
turned out 60% strong. Are we boys going to be
beaten by a bunch of skirts? Come on, fellows,
let’s work up some real genuine enthusiasm and
all boost together for the snappiest dinner yet!
Elegant eats, short ginger-talks, and memories shared
together of the brightest, gladdest days of life.
The dinner was held in a private room
at the Union Club. The club was a dingy building,
three pretentious old dwellings knocked together, and
the entrance-hall resembled a potato cellar, yet the
Babbitt who was free of the magnificence of the Athletic
Club entered with embarrassment. He nodded to
the doorman, an ancient proud negro with brass buttons
and a blue tail-coat, and paraded through the hall,
trying to look like a member.
Sixty men had come to the dinner.
They made islands and eddies in the hall; they packed
the elevator and the corners of the private dining-room.
They tried to be intimate and enthusiastic. They
appeared to one another exactly as they had in college—as
raw youngsters whose present mustaches, baldnesses,
paunches, and wrinkles were but jovial disguises put
on for the evening. “You haven’t changed
a particle!” they marveled. The men whom
they could not recall they addressed, “Well,
well, great to see you again, old man. What are
you—Still doing the same thing?”
Some one was always starting a cheer
or a college song, and it was always thinning into
silence. Despite their resolution to be democratic
they divided into two sets: the men with dress-clothes
and the men without. Babbitt (extremely in dress-clothes)
went from one group to the other. Though he was,
almost frankly, out for social conquest, he sought
Paul Riesling first. He found him alone, neat
and silent.
Paul sighed, “I’m no good
at this handshaking and ’well, look who’s
here’ bunk.”
“Rats now, Paulibus, loosen
up and be a mixer! Finest bunch of boys on earth!
Say, you seem kind of glum. What’s matter?”
“Oh, the usual. Run-in with Zilla.”
“Come on! Let’s wade in and forget
our troubles.”
He kept Paul beside him, but worked
toward the spot where Charles McKelvey stood warming
his admirers like a furnace.
McKelvey had been the hero of the
Class of ’96; not only football captain and
hammer-thrower but debater, and passable in what the
State University considered scholarship. He had
gone on, had captured the construction-company once
owned by the Dodsworths, best-known pioneer family
of Zenith. He built state capitols, skyscrapers,
railway terminals. He was a heavy-shouldered,
big-chested man, but not sluggish. There was
a quiet humor in his eyes, a syrup-smooth quickness
in his speech, which intimidated politicians and warned
reporters; and in his presence the most intelligent
scientist or the most sensitive artist felt thin-blooded,
unworldly, and a little shabby. He was, particularly
when he was influencing legislatures or hiring labor-spies,
very easy and lovable and gorgeous. He was baronial;
he was a peer in the rapidly crystallizing American
aristocracy, inferior only to the haughty Old Families.
(In Zenith, an Old Family is one which came to town
before 1840.) His power was the greater because he
was not hindered by scruples, by either the vice or
the virtue of the older Puritan tradition.
McKelvey was being placidly merry
now with the great, the manufacturers and bankers,
the land-owners and lawyers and surgeons who had chauffeurs
and went to Europe. Babbitt squeezed among them.
He liked McKelvey’s smile as much as the social
advancement to be had from his favor. If in Paul’s
company he felt ponderous and protective, with McKelvey
he felt slight and adoring.
He heard McKelvey say to Max Kruger,
the banker, “Yes, we’ll put up Sir Gerald
Doak.” Babbitt’s democratic love for
titles became a rich relish. “You know,
he’s one of the biggest iron-men in England,
Max. Horribly well-off…. Why, hello, old
Georgie! Say, Max, George Babbitt is getting
fatter than I am!”
The chairman shouted, “Take your seats, fellows!”
“Shall we make a move, Charley?” Babbitt
said casually to McKelvey.
“Right. Hello, Paul!
How’s the old fiddler? Planning to sit anywhere
special, George? Come on, let’s grab some
seats. Come on, Max. Georgie, I read about
your speeches in the campaign. Bully work!”
After that, Babbitt would have followed
him through fire. He was enormously busy during
the dinner, now bumblingly cheering Paul, now approaching
McKelvey with “Hear, you’re going to build
some piers in Brooklyn,” now noting how enviously
the failures of the class, sitting by themselves in
a weedy group, looked up to him in his association
with the nobility, now warming himself in the Society
Talk of McKelvey and Max Kruger. They spoke of
a “jungle dance” for which Mona Dodsworth
had decorated her house with thousands of orchids.
They spoke, with an excellent imitation of casualness,
of a dinner in Washington at which McKelvey had met
a Senator, a Balkan princess, and an English major-general.
McKelvey called the princess “Jenny,” and
let it be known that he had danced with her.
Babbitt was thrilled, but not so weighted
with awe as to be silent. If he was not invited
by them to dinner, he was yet accustomed to talking
with bank-presidents, congressmen, and clubwomen who
entertained poets. He was bright and referential
with McKelvey:
“Say, Charley, juh remember
in Junior year how we chartered a sea-going hack and
chased down to Riverdale, to the big show Madame Brown
used to put on? Remember how you beat up that
hick constabule that tried to run us in, and we pinched
the pants-pressing sign and took and hung it on Prof.
Morrison’s door? Oh, gosh, those were the
days!”
Those, McKelvey agreed, were the days.
Babbitt had reached “It isn’t
the books you study in college but the friendships
you make that counts” when the men at head of
the table broke into song. He attacked McKelvey:
“It’s a shame, uh, shame
to drift apart because our, uh, business activities
lie in different fields. I’ve enjoyed talking
over the good old days. You and Mrs. McKelvey
must come to dinner some night.”
Vaguely, “Yes, indeed—”
“Like to talk to you about the
growth of real estate out beyond your Grantsville
warehouse. I might be able to tip you off to a
thing or two, possibly.”
“Splendid! We must have
dinner together, Georgie. Just let me know.
And it will be a great pleasure to have your wife
and you at the house,” said McKelvey, much less
vaguely.
Then the chairman’s voice, that
prodigious voice which once had roused them to cheer
defiance at rooters from Ohio or Michigan or Indiana,
whooped, “Come on, you wombats! All together
in the long yell!” Babbitt felt that life would
never be sweeter than now, when he joined with Paul
Riesling and the newly recovered hero, McKelvey, in:
Baaaaaattle-ax Get an ax, Bal-ax,
Get-nax, Who, who? The U.! Hooroo!
III
The Babbitts invited the McKelveys
to dinner, in early December, and the McKelveys not
only accepted but, after changing the date once or
twice, actually came.
The Babbitts somewhat thoroughly discussed
the details of the dinner, from the purchase of a
bottle of champagne to the number of salted almonds
to be placed before each person. Especially did
they mention the matter of the other guests.
To the last Babbitt held out for giving Paul Riesling
the benefit of being with the McKelveys. “Good
old Charley would like Paul and Verg Gunch better
than some highfalutin’ Willy boy,” he
insisted, but Mrs. Babbitt interrupted his observations
with, “Yes—perhaps—I think
I’ll try to get some Lynnhaven oysters,”
and when she was quite ready she invited Dr. J. T.
Angus, the oculist, and a dismally respectable lawyer
named Maxwell, with their glittering wives.
Neither Angus nor Maxwell belonged
to the Elks or to the Athletic Club; neither of them
had ever called Babbitt “brother” or asked
his opinions on carburetors. The only “human
people” whom she invited, Babbitt raged, were
the Littlefields; and Howard Littlefield at times became
so statistical that Babbitt longed for the refreshment
of Gunch’s, “Well, old lemon-pie-face,
what’s the good word?”
Immediately after lunch Mrs. Babbitt
began to set the table for the seven-thirty dinner
to the McKelveys, and Babbitt was, by order, home at
four. But they didn’t find anything for
him to do, and three times Mrs. Babbitt scolded, “Do
please try to keep out of the way!” He stood
in the door of the garage, his lips drooping, and
wished that Littlefield or Sam Doppelbrau or somebody
would come along and talk to him. He saw Ted
sneaking about the corner of the house.
“What’s the matter, old man?” said
Babbitt.
“Is that you, thin, owld one?
Gee, Ma certainly is on the warpath! I told her
Rone and I would jus’ soon not be let in on the
fiesta to-night, and she bit me. She says I got
to take a bath, too. But, say, the Babbitt men
will be some lookers to-night! Little Theodore
in a dress-suit!”
“The Babbitt men!” Babbitt
liked the sound of it. He put his arm about the
boy’s shoulder. He wished that Paul Riesling
had a daughter, so that Ted might marry her.
“Yes, your mother is kind of rouncing round,
all right,” he said, and they laughed together,
and sighed together, and dutifully went in to dress.
The McKelveys were less than fifteen minutes late.
Babbitt hoped that the Doppelbraus
would see the McKelveys’ limousine, and their
uniformed chauffeur, waiting in front.
The dinner was well cooked and incredibly
plentiful, and Mrs. Babbitt had brought out her grandmother’s
silver candlesticks. Babbitt worked hard.
He was good. He told none of the jokes he wanted
to tell. He listened to the others. He started
Maxwell off with a resounding, “Let’s
hear about your trip to the Yellowstone.”
He was laudatory, extremely laudatory. He found
opportunities to remark that Dr. Angus was a benefactor
to humanity, Maxwell and Howard Littlefield profound
scholars, Charles McKelvey an inspiration to ambitious
youth, and Mrs. McKelvey an adornment to the social
circles of Zenith, Washington, New York, Paris, and
numbers of other places.
But he could not stir them. It
was a dinner without a soul. For no reason that
was clear to Babbitt, heaviness was over them and they
spoke laboriously and unwillingly.
He concentrated on Lucille McKelvey,
carefully not looking at her blanched lovely shoulder
and the tawny silken bared which supported her frock.
“I suppose you’ll be going
to Europe pretty soon again, won’t you?”
he invited.
“I’d like awfully to run over to Rome
for a few weeks.”
“I suppose you see a lot of
pictures and music and curios and everything there.”
“No, what I really go for is:
there’s a little trattoria on the Via della
Scrofa where you get the best fettuccine in the world.”
“Oh, I—Yes. That must be nice
to try that. Yes.”
At a quarter to ten McKelvey discovered
with profound regret that his wife had a headache.
He said blithely, as Babbitt helped him with his coat,
“We must lunch together some time, and talk over
the old days.”
When the others had labored out, at
half-past ten, Babbitt turned to his wife, pleading,
“Charley said he had a corking time and we must
lunch—said they wanted to have us up to
the house for dinner before long.”
She achieved, “Oh, it’s
just been one of those quiet evenings that are often
so much more enjoyable than noisy parties where everybody
talks at once and doesn’t really settle down
to-nice quiet enjoyment.”
But from his cot on the sleeping-porch
he heard her weeping, slowly, without hope.
IV
For a month they watched the social
columns, and waited for a return dinner-invitation.
As the hosts of Sir Gerald Doak, the
McKelveys were headlined all the week after the Babbitts’
dinner. Zenith ardently received Sir Gerald (who
had come to America to buy coal). The newspapers
interviewed him on prohibition, Ireland, unemployment,
naval aviation, the rate of exchange, tea-drinking
versus whisky-drinking, the psychology of American
women, and daily life as lived by English county families.
Sir Gerald seemed to have heard of all those topics.
The McKelveys gave him a Singhalese dinner, and Miss
Elnora Pearl Bates, society editor of the Advocate-Times,
rose to her highest lark-note. Babbitt read aloud
at breakfast-table:
’Twixt the original and Oriental
decorations, the strange and delicious food, and the
personalities both of the distinguished guests, the
charming hostess and the noted host, never has Zenith
seen a more recherche affair than the Ceylon dinner-dance
given last evening by Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKelvey
to Sir Gerald Doak. Methought as we—fortunate
one!—were privileged to view that fairy
and foreign scene, nothing at Monte Carlo or the choicest
ambassadorial sets of foreign capitals could be more
lovely. It is not for nothing that Zenith is in
matters social rapidly becoming known as the choosiest
inland city in the country.
Though he is too modest to admit it,
Lord Doak gives a cachet to our smart quartier such
as it has not received since the ever-memorable visit
of the Earl of Sittingbourne. Not only is he of
the British peerage, but he is also, on dit, a leader
of the British metal industries. As he comes
from Nottingham, a favorite haunt of Robin Hood, though
now, we are informed by Lord Doak, a live modern city
of 275,573 inhabitants, and important lace as well
as other industries, we like to think that perhaps
through his veins runs some of the blood, both virile
red and bonny blue, of that earlier lord o’ the
good greenwood, the roguish Robin.
The lovely Mrs. McKelvey never was
more fascinating than last evening in her black net
gown relieved by dainty bands of silver and at her
exquisite waist a glowing cluster of Aaron Ward roses.
Babbitt said bravely, “I hope
they don’t invite us to meet this Lord Doak
guy. Darn sight rather just have a nice quiet
little dinner with Charley and the Missus.”
At the Zenith Athletic Club they discussed
it amply. “I s’pose we’ll have
to call McKelvey ‘Lord Chaz’ from now on,”
said Sidney Finkelstein.
“It beats all get-out,”
meditated that man of data, Howard Littlefield, “how
hard it is for some people to get things straight.
Here they call this fellow ‘Lord Doak’
when it ought to be ‘Sir Gerald.’”
Babbitt marvelled, “Is that
a fact! Well, well! ‘Sir Gerald,’
eh? That’s what you call um, eh? Well,
sir, I’m glad to know that.”
Later he informed his salesmen, “It’s
funnier ’n a goat the way some folks that, just
because they happen to lay up a big wad, go entertaining
famous foreigners, don’t have any more idea ’n
a rabbit how to address ’em so’s to make
’em feel at home!”
That evening, as he was driving home,
he passed McKelvey’s limousine and saw Sir Gerald,
a large, ruddy, pop-eyed, Teutonic Englishman whose
dribble of yellow mustache gave him an aspect sad and
doubtful. Babbitt drove on slowly, oppressed
by futility. He had a sudden, unexplained, and
horrible conviction that the McKelveys were laughing
at him.
He betrayed his depression by the
violence with which he informed his wife, “Folks
that really tend to business haven’t got the
time to waste on a bunch like the McKelveys.
This society stuff is like any other hobby; if you
devote yourself to it, you get on. But I like
to have a chance to visit with you and the children
instead of all this idiotic chasing round.”
They did not speak of the McKelveys again.
V
It was a shame, at this worried time,
to have to think about the Overbrooks.
Ed Overbrook was a classmate of Babbitt
who had been a failure. He had a large family
and a feeble insurance business out in the suburb of
Dorchester. He was gray and thin and unimportant.
He had always been gray and thin and unimportant.
He was the person whom, in any group, you forgot to
introduce, then introduced with extra enthusiasm.
He had admired Babbitt’s good-fellowship in
college, had admired ever since his power in real
estate, his beautiful house and wonderful clothes.
It pleased Babbitt, though it bothered him with a
sense of responsibility. At the class-dinner
he had seen poor Overbrook, in a shiny blue serge
business-suit, being diffident in a corner with three
other failures. He had gone over and been cordial:
“Why, hello, young Ed! I hear you’re
writing all the insurance in Dorchester now. Bully
work!”
They recalled the good old days when
Overbrook used to write poetry. Overbrook embarrassed
him by blurting, “Say, Georgie, I hate to think
of how we been drifting apart. I wish you and
Mrs. Babbitt would come to dinner some night.”
Babbitt boomed, “Fine!
Sure! Just let me know. And the wife and
I want to have you at the house.” He forgot
it, but unfortunately Ed Overbrook did not. Repeatedly
he telephoned to Babbitt, inviting him to dinner.
“Might as well go and get it over,” Babbitt
groaned to his wife. “But don’t it
simply amaze you the way the poor fish doesn’t
know the first thing about social etiquette?
Think of him ’phoning me, instead of his wife
sitting down and writing us a regular bid! Well,
I guess we’re stuck for it. That’s
the trouble with all this class-brother hooptedoodle.”
He accepted Overbrook’s next
plaintive invitation, for an evening two weeks off.
A dinner two weeks off, even a family dinner, never
seems so appalling, till the two weeks have astoundingly
disappeared and one comes dismayed to the ambushed
hour. They had to change the date, because of
their own dinner to the McKelveys, but at last they
gloomily drove out to the Overbrooks’ house
in Dorchester.
It was miserable from the beginning.
The Overbrooks had dinner at six-thirty, while the
Babbitts never dined before seven. Babbitt permitted
himself to be ten minutes late. “Let’s
make it as short as possible. I think we’ll
duck out quick. I’ll say I have to be at
the office extra early to-morrow,” he planned.
The Overbrook house was depressing.
It was the second story of a wooden two-family dwelling;
a place of baby-carriages, old hats hung in the hall,
cabbage-smell, and a Family Bible on the parlor table.
Ed Overbrook and his wife were as awkward and threadbare
as usual, and the other guests were two dreadful families
whose names Babbitt never caught and never desired
to catch. But he was touched, and disconcerted,
by the tactless way in which Overbrook praised him:
“We’re mighty proud to have old George
here to-night! Of course you’ve all read
about his speeches and oratory in the papers—and
the boy’s good-looking, too, eh?—but
what I always think of is back in college, and what
a great old mixer he was, and one of the best swimmers
in the class.”
Babbitt tried to be jovial; he worked
at it; but he could find nothing to interest him in
Overbrook’s timorousness, the blankness of the
other guests, or the drained stupidity of Mrs. Overbrook,
with her spectacles, drab skin, and tight-drawn hair.
He told his best Irish story, but it sank like soggy
cake. Most bleary moment of all was when Mrs.
Overbrook, peering out of her fog of nursing eight
children and cooking and scrubbing, tried to be conversational.
“I suppose you go to Chicago
and New York right along, Mr. Babbitt,” she
prodded.
“Well, I get to Chicago fairly often.”
“It must be awfully interesting.
I suppose you take in all the theaters.”
“Well, to tell the truth, Mrs.
Overbrook, thing that hits me best is a great big
beefsteak at a Dutch restaurant in the Loop!”
They had nothing more to say.
Babbitt was sorry, but there was no hope; the dinner
was a failure. At ten, rousing out of the stupor
of meaningless talk, he said as cheerily as he could,
“’Fraid we got to be starting, Ed. I’ve
got a fellow coming to see me early to-morrow.”
As Overbrook helped him with his coat, Babbitt said,
“Nice to rub up on the old days! We must
have lunch together, P.D.Q.”
Mrs. Babbitt sighed, on their drive
home, “It was pretty terrible. But how
Mr. Overbrook does admire you!”
“Yep. Poor cuss! Seems
to think I’m a little tin archangel, and the
best-looking man in Zenith.”
“Well, you’re certainly
not that but—Oh, Georgie, you don’t
suppose we have to invite them to dinner at our house
now, do we?”
“Ouch! Gaw, I hope not!”
“See here, now, George!
You didn’t say anything about it to Mr. Overbrook,
did you?”
“No! Gee! No!
Honest, I didn’t! Just made a bluff about
having him to lunch some time.”
“Well…. Oh, dear….
I don’t want to hurt their feelings. But
I don’t see how I could stand another evening
like this one. And suppose somebody like Dr.
and Mrs. Angus came in when we had the Overbrooks
there, and thought they were friends of ours!”
For a week they worried, “We
really ought to invite Ed and his wife, poor devils!”
But as they never saw the Overbrooks, they forgot them,
and after a month or two they said, “That really
was the best way, just to let it slide. It wouldn’t
be kind to them to have them here. They’d
feel so out of place and hard-up in our home.”
They did not speak of the Overbrooks again.