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<h2> CHAPTER XVI </h2>
<p>THE certainty that he was not going to be accepted by the McKelveys made
Babbitt feel guilty and a little absurd. But he went more regularly to the
Elks; at a Chamber of Commerce luncheon he was oratorical regarding the
wickedness of strikes; and again he saw himself as a Prominent Citizen.</p>
<p>His clubs and associations were food comfortable to his spirit.</p>
<p>Of a decent man in Zenith it was required that he should belong to one,
preferably two or three, of the innumerous "lodges" and
prosperity-boosting lunch-clubs; to the Rotarians, the Kiwanis, or the
Boosters; to the Oddfellows, Moose, Masons, Red Men, Woodmen, Owls,
Eagles, Maccabees, Knights of Pythias, Knights of Columbus, and other
secret orders characterized by a high degree of heartiness, sound morals,
and reverence for the Constitution. There were four reasons for joining
these orders: It was the thing to do. It was good for business, since
lodge-brothers frequently became customers. It gave to Americans unable to
become Geheimrate or Commendatori such unctuous honorifics as High Worthy
Recording Scribe and Grand Hoogow to add to the commonplace distinctions
of Colonel, Judge, and Professor. And it permitted the swaddled American
husband to stay away from home for one evening a week. The lodge was his
piazza, his pavement cafe. He could shoot pool and talk man-talk and be
obscene and valiant.</p>
<p>Babbitt was what he called a "joiner" for all these reasons.</p>
<p>Behind the gold and scarlet banner of his public achievements was the dun
background of office-routine: leases, sales-contracts, lists of properties
to rent. The evenings of oratory and committees and lodges stimulated him
like brandy, but every morning he was sandy-tongued. Week by week he
accumulated nervousness. He was in open disagreement with his outside
salesman, Stanley Graff; and once, though her charms had always kept him
nickeringly polite to her, he snarled at Miss McGoun for changing his
letters.</p>
<p>But in the presence of Paul Riesling he relaxed. At least once a week they
fled from maturity. On Saturday they played golf, jeering, "As a golfer,
you're a fine tennis-player," or they motored all Sunday afternoon,
stopping at village lunchrooms to sit on high stools at a counter and
drink coffee from thick cups. Sometimes Paul came over in the evening with
his violin, and even Zilla was silent as the lonely man who had lost his
way and forever crept down unfamiliar roads spun out his dark soul in
music.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>Nothing gave Babbitt more purification and publicity than his labors for
the Sunday School.</p>
<p>His church, the Chatham Road Presbyterian, was one of the largest and
richest, one of the most oaken and velvety, in Zenith. The pastor was the
Reverend John Jennison Drew, M.A., D.D., LL.D. (The M.A. and the D.D. were
from Elbert University, Nebraska, the LL.D. from Waterbury College,
Oklahoma.) He was eloquent, efficient, and versatile. He presided at
meetings for the denunciation of unions or the elevation of domestic
service, and confided to the audiences that as a poor boy he had carried
newspapers. For the Saturday edition of the Evening Advocate he wrote
editorials on "The Manly Man's Religion" and "The Dollars and Sense Value
of Christianity," which were printed in bold type surrounded by a wiggly
border. He often said that he was "proud to be known as primarily a
business man" and that he certainly was not going to "permit the old Satan
to monopolize all the pep and punch." He was a thin, rustic-faced young
man with gold spectacles and a bang of dull brown hair, but when he hurled
himself into oratory he glowed with power. He admitted that he was too
much the scholar and poet to imitate the evangelist, Mike Monday, yet he
had once awakened his fold to new life, and to larger collections, by the
challenge, "My brethren, the real cheap skate is the man who won't lend to
the Lord!"</p>
<p>He had made his church a true community center. It contained everything
but a bar. It had a nursery, a Thursday evening supper with a short bright
missionary lecture afterward, a gymnasium, a fortnightly motion-picture
show, a library of technical books for young workmen—though,
unfortunately, no young workman ever entered the church except to wash the
windows or repair the furnace—and a sewing-circle which made short
little pants for the children of the poor while Mrs. Drew read aloud from
earnest novels.</p>
<p>Though Dr. Drew's theology was Presbyterian, his church-building was
gracefully Episcopalian. As he said, it had the "most perdurable features
of those noble ecclesiastical monuments of grand Old England which stand
as symbols of the eternity of faith, religious and civil." It was built of
cheery iron-spot brick in an improved Gothic style, and the main
auditorium had indirect lighting from electric globes in lavish alabaster
bowls.</p>
<p>On a December morning when the Babbitts went to church, Dr. John Jennison
Drew was unusually eloquent. The crowd was immense. Ten brisk young
ushers, in morning coats with white roses, were bringing folding chairs up
from the basement. There was an impressive musical program, conducted by
Sheldon Smeeth, educational director of the Y.M.C.A., who also sang the
offertory. Babbitt cared less for this, because some misguided person had
taught young Mr. Smeeth to smile, smile, smile while he was singing, but
with all the appreciation of a fellow-orator he admired Dr. Drew's sermon.
It had the intellectual quality which distinguished the Chatham Road
congregation from the grubby chapels on Smith Street.</p>
<p>"At this abundant harvest-time of all the year," Dr. Drew chanted, "when,
though stormy the sky and laborious the path to the drudging wayfarer, yet
the hovering and bodiless spirit swoops back o'er all the labors and
desires of the past twelve months, oh, then it seems to me there sounds
behind all our apparent failures the golden chorus of greeting from those
passed happily on; and lo! on the dim horizon we see behind dolorous
clouds the mighty mass of mountains—mountains of melody, mountains
of mirth, mountains of might!"</p>
<p>"I certainly do like a sermon with culture and thought in it," meditated
Babbitt.</p>
<p>At the end of the service he was delighted when the pastor, actively
shaking hands at the door, twittered, "Oh, Brother Babbitt, can you wait a
jiffy? Want your advice."</p>
<p>"Sure, doctor! You bet!"</p>
<p>"Drop into my office. I think you'll like the cigars there." Babbitt did
like the cigars. He also liked the office, which was distinguished from
other offices only by the spirited change of the familiar wall-placard to
"This is the Lord's Busy Day." Chum Frink came in, then William W.
Eathorne.</p>
<p>Mr. Eathorne was the seventy-year-old president of the First State Bank of
Zenith. He still wore the delicate patches of side-whiskers which had been
the uniform of bankers in 1870. If Babbitt was envious of the Smart Set of
the McKelveys, before William Washington Eathorne he was reverent. Mr.
Eathorne had nothing to do with the Smart Set. He was above it. He was the
great-grandson of one of the five men who founded Zenith, in 1792, and he
was of the third generation of bankers. He could examine credits, make
loans, promote or injure a man's business. In his presence Babbitt
breathed quickly and felt young.</p>
<p>The Reverend Dr. Drew bounced into the room and flowered into speech:</p>
<p>"I've asked you gentlemen to stay so I can put a proposition before you.
The Sunday School needs bucking up. It's the fourth largest in Zenith, but
there's no reason why we should take anybody's dust. We ought to be first.
I want to request you, if you will, to form a committee of advice and
publicity for the Sunday School; look it over and make any suggestions for
its betterment, and then, perhaps, see that the press gives us some
attention—give the public some really helpful and constructive news
instead of all these murders and divorces."</p>
<p>"Excellent," said the banker.</p>
<p>Babbitt and Frink were enchanted to join him.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>If you had asked Babbitt what his religion was, he would have answered in
sonorous Boosters'-Club rhetoric, "My religion is to serve my fellow men,
to honor my brother as myself, and to do my bit to make life happier for
one and all." If you had pressed him for more detail, he would have
announced, "I'm a member of the Presbyterian Church, and naturally, I
accept its doctrines." If you had been so brutal as to go on, he would
have protested, "There's no use discussing and arguing about religion; it
just stirs up bad feeling."</p>
<p>Actually, the content of his theology was that there was a supreme being
who had tried to make us perfect, but presumably had failed; that if one
was a Good Man he would go to a place called Heaven (Babbitt unconsciously
pictured it as rather like an excellent hotel with a private garden), but
if one was a Bad Man, that is, if he murdered or committed burglary or
used cocaine or had mistresses or sold non-existent real estate, he would
be punished. Babbitt was uncertain, however, about what he called "this
business of Hell." He explained to Ted, "Of course I'm pretty liberal; I
don't exactly believe in a fire-and-brimstone Hell. Stands to reason,
though, that a fellow can't get away with all sorts of Vice and not get
nicked for it, see how I mean?"</p>
<p>Upon this theology he rarely pondered. The kernel of his practical
religion was that it was respectable, and beneficial to one's business, to
be seen going to services; that the church kept the Worst Elements from
being still worse; and that the pastor's sermons, however dull they might
seem at the time of taking, yet had a voodooistic power which "did a
fellow good—kept him in touch with Higher Things."</p>
<p>His first investigations for the Sunday School Advisory Committee did not
inspire him.</p>
<p>He liked the Busy Folks' Bible Class, composed of mature men and women and
addressed by the old-school physician, Dr. T. Atkins Jordan, in a
sparkling style comparable to that of the more refined humorous
after-dinner speakers, but when he went down to the junior classes he was
disconcerted. He heard Sheldon Smeeth, educational director of the
Y.M.C.A. and leader of the church-choir, a pale but strenuous young man
with curly hair and a smile, teaching a class of sixteen-year-old boys.
Smeeth lovingly admonished them, "Now, fellows, I'm going to have a Heart
to Heart Talk Evening at my house next Thursday. We'll get off by
ourselves and be frank about our Secret Worries. You can just tell old
Sheldy anything, like all the fellows do at the Y. I'm going to explain
frankly about the horrible practises a kiddy falls into unless he's guided
by a Big Brother, and about the perils and glory of Sex." Old Sheldy
beamed damply; the boys looked ashamed; and Babbitt didn't know which way
to turn his embarrassed eyes.</p>
<p>Less annoying but also much duller were the minor classes which were being
instructed in philosophy and Oriental ethnology by earnest spinsters. Most
of them met in the highly varnished Sunday School room, but there was an
overflow to the basement, which was decorated with varicose water-pipes
and lighted by small windows high up in the oozing wall. What Babbitt saw,
however, was the First Congregational Church of Catawba. He was back in
the Sunday School of his boyhood. He smelled again that polite stuffiness
to be found only in church parlors; he recalled the case of drab Sunday
School books: "Hetty, a Humble Heroine" and "Josephus, a Lad of
Palestine;" he thumbed once more the high-colored text-cards which no boy
wanted but no boy liked to throw away, because they were somehow sacred;
he was tortured by the stumbling rote of thirty-five years ago, as in the
vast Zenith church he listened to:</p>
<p>"Now, Edgar, you read the next verse. What does it mean when it says it's
easier for a camel to go through a needle's eye? What does this teach us?
Clarence! Please don't wiggle so! If you had studied your lesson you
wouldn't be so fidgety. Now, Earl, what is the lesson Jesus was trying to
teach his disciples? The one thing I want you to especially remember,
boys, is the words, 'With God all things are possible.' Just think of that
always—Clarence, PLEASE pay attention—just say 'With God all
things are possible' whenever you feel discouraged, and, Alec, will you
read the next verse; if you'd pay attention you wouldn't lose your place!"</p>
<p>Drone—drone—drone—gigantic bees that boomed in a cavern
of drowsiness—</p>
<p>Babbitt started from his open-eyed nap, thanked the teacher for "the
privilege of listening to her splendid teaching," and staggered on to the
next circle.</p>
<p>After two weeks of this he had no suggestions whatever for the Reverend
Dr. Drew.</p>
<p>Then he discovered a world of Sunday School journals, an enormous and busy
domain of weeklies and monthlies which were as technical, as practical and
forward-looking, as the real-estate columns or the shoe-trade magazines.
He bought half a dozen of them at a religious book-shop and till after
midnight he read them and admired.</p>
<p>He found many lucrative tips on "Focusing Appeals," "Scouting for New
Members," and "Getting Prospects to Sign up with the Sunday School." He
particularly liked the word "prospects," and he was moved by the rubric:</p>
<p>"The moral springs of the community's life lie deep in its Sunday Schools—its
schools of religious instruction and inspiration. Neglect now means loss
of spiritual vigor and moral power in years to come.... Facts like the
above, followed by a straight-arm appeal, will reach folks who can never
be laughed or jollied into doing their part."</p>
<p>Babbitt admitted, "That's so. I used to skin out of the ole Sunday School
at Catawba every chance I got, but same time, I wouldn't be where I am
to-day, maybe, if it hadn't been for its training in—in moral power.
And all about the Bible. (Great literature. Have to read some of it again,
one of these days)."</p>
<p>How scientifically the Sunday School could be organized he learned from an
article in the Westminster Adult Bible Class:</p>
<p>"The second vice-president looks after the fellowship of the class. She
chooses a group to help her. These become ushers. Every one who comes gets
a glad hand. No one goes away a stranger. One member of the group stands
on the doorstep and invites passers-by to come in."</p>
<p>Perhaps most of all Babbitt appreciated the remarks by William H. Ridgway
in the Sunday School Times:</p>
<p>"If you have a Sunday School class without any pep and get-up-and-go in
it, that is, without interest, that is uncertain in attendance, that acts
like a fellow with the spring fever, let old Dr. Ridgway write you a
prescription. Rx. Invite the Bunch for Supper."</p>
<p>The Sunday School journals were as well rounded as they were practical.
They neglected none of the arts. As to music the Sunday School Times
advertised that C. Harold Lowden, "known to thousands through his sacred
compositions," had written a new masterpiece, "entitled 'Yearning for
You.' The poem, by Harry D. Kerr, is one of the daintiest you could
imagine and the music is indescribably beautiful. Critics are agreed that
it will sweep the country. May be made into a charming sacred song by
substituting the hymn words, 'I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say.'"</p>
<p>Even manual training was adequately considered. Babbitt noted an ingenious
way of illustrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ:</p>
<p>"Model for Pupils to Make. Tomb with Rolling Door.—Use a square
covered box turned upside down. Pull the cover forward a little to form a
groove at the bottom. Cut a square door, also cut a circle of cardboard to
more than cover the door. Cover the circular door and the tomb thickly
with stiff mixture of sand, flour and water and let it dry. It was the
heavy circular stone over the door the women found 'rolled away' on Easter
morning. This is the story we are to 'Go-tell.'"</p>
<p>In their advertisements the Sunday School journals were thoroughly
efficient. Babbitt was interested in a preparation which "takes the place
of exercise for sedentary men by building up depleted nerve tissue,
nourishing the brain and the digestive system." He was edified to learn
that the selling of Bibles was a hustling and strictly competitive
industry, and as an expert on hygiene he was pleased by the Sanitary
Communion Outfit Company's announcement of "an improved and satisfactory
outfit throughout, including highly polished beautiful mahogany tray. This
tray eliminates all noise, is lighter and more easily handled than others
and is more in keeping with the furniture of the church than a tray of any
other material."</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>He dropped the pile of Sunday School journals.</p>
<p>He pondered, "Now, there's a real he-world. Corking!</p>
<p>"Ashamed I haven't sat in more. Fellow that's an influence in the
community—shame if he doesn't take part in a real virile hustling
religion. Sort of Christianity Incorporated, you might say.</p>
<p>"But with all reverence.</p>
<p>"Some folks might claim these Sunday School fans are undignified and
unspiritual and so on. Sure! Always some skunk to spring things like that!
Knocking and sneering and tearing-down—so much easier than building
up. But me, I certainly hand it to these magazines. They've brought ole
George F. Babbitt into camp, and that's the answer to the critics!</p>
<p>"The more manly and practical a fellow is, the more he ought to lead the
enterprising Christian life. Me for it! Cut out this carelessness and
boozing and—Rone! Where the devil you been? This is a fine time o'
night to be coming in!"</p>
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