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Tarkington, Booth, 1869-1946

"The Turmoil, a novel"

... I shall never understand it all. I do not know
how it can all be, but my knees bend in spite of me when I speak
of it....
He stopped and looked at her.
"You boy!" said Mary, not very clearly.
"Oh yes," he returned. "But it's true--especially my knees!"
"You boy!" she murmured again, blushing charmingly. "You might read
another line over. The first time I ever saw you, Bibbs, you were
looking into a mirror. Do it again. But you needn't read it--I can
give it to you: 'A little Greek slave that came from the heart of
Arcady!'"
"I! I'm one of the hands at the Pump Works--and going to stay one,
unless I have to decide to study plumbing."
"No." She shook her head. "You love and want what's beautiful and
delicate and serene; it's really art that you want in your life,
and have always wanted. You seemed to me, from the first, the most
wistful person I had ever known, and that's what you were wistful
for."
Bibbs looked doubtful and more wistful than ever; but after a moment
or two the matter seemed to clarify itself to him. "Why, no," he
said; "I wanted something else more than that. I wanted you."
"And here I am!" she laughed, completely understanding.


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