Sister Carrie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 592 pages of information about Sister Carrie.

Sister Carrie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 592 pages of information about Sister Carrie.

Now Carrie was affected by music. her nervous composition responded to certain strains, much as certain strings of a harp vibrate when a corresponding key of a piano is struck.  She was delicately molded in sentiment and answered with vague ruminations to certain wistful chords.  They awoke longings for those things which she did not have.  They caused her cling closer to things she possessed.  One shorts song the young lady played in a most soulful and tender mood.  Carrie heard it through the open door from the parlor below, In was at that hour between afternoon and night when, for the idle, the wanderer, things are apt to take on a wistful aspect.  The mind wanders forth on far journeys and returns with sheaves of withered and departed joys.  Carrie sat at her window looking out.  Drouet had been away since ten in the morning.  She had amused herself with a walk, a book by Bertha M. Clay which Drouet had let there, though she did not wholly enjoy the latter, and by changing her dress for the evening.  Now she sat looking out across the park as wistful and depressed as the nature which craves variety and life can be under such circumstances.  As she contemplated her new state, the strain from the parlor below stole upward.  Within it her to the things which were best and saddest within the small limit of her experience.  She became for the moment a repentant.

While she was in this mood Drouet came in, bringing with him an entirely different atmosphere.  It was dusk and Carrie had neglected to light the lamp.  The fire in the grate, too, had burned low.

" Where are you, Cad?” he said, using a pet name he had given her.

" Here,” she answered.

There was something delicate and lonely in her voice, but he could not hear it. he had not the poetry in him that would seek a woman out under such circumstances and console her for the tragedy of life.  Instead, he struck a match and lighted the gas.

" Hello,” he exclaimed,” you’ve been crying.”

her eyes were still wet with a few vague tears.

" Pshaw,” he said, " you don’t want to do that.”

He took her hand, feeling in his good-natured egotism that it was probably lack of his presence which had made her lonely.

" Come on, now,” he went on; " it’s all right.  Let’s waltz a little to that music.”

He could not have introduced a more incongruous proposition.  It made clear to Carrie that he could not sympathize with her.  She could not have framed thoughts which would have expressed his defect or make clear the difference between them, but she felt it.  It was his first great mistake.

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Project Gutenberg
Sister Carrie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.