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Authors: 1885-1951 Sinclair Lewis

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Sinclair Lewis
Elmer Gantry
Chapter XXIV
1

It was during his inquiry about clerical allies and rivals—they were the same thing—that Elmer learned that two of his
classmates at Mizpah Seminary were stationed in Zenith.

Wallace Umstead, the Mizpah student-instructor in gymnastics, was now general secretary of the Zenith Y.M.C.A.

“He’s a boob. We can pass him up,” Elmer decided. “Husky but no finesse and culture. No. That’s wrong. Preacher can get a
lot of publicity speaking at the Y., and get the fellows to join his church.”

So he called on Mr. Umstead, and that was a hearty and touching meeting between classmates, two strong men come face to
face, two fellow manly Christians.

But Elmer was not pleased to learn of the presence of the second classmate, Frank Shallard. He angrily recalled:
“Sure—the fellow that high-hatted me and sneaked around and tried to spy on me when I was helping him learn the game at
Schoenheim.”

He was glad to hear that Frank was in disgrace with the sounder and saner clergy of Zenith. He had left the Baptist
Church; it was said that he had acted in a low manner as a common soldier in the Great War; and he had gone as pastor to a
Congregational Church in Zenith—not a God-fearing, wealthy Congregational Church, like that of Dr. G. Prosper Edwards, but
one that was suspected of being as shaky and cowardly and misleading as any Unitarian fold.

Elmer remembered that he still owed Frank the hundred dollars which he had borrowed to reach Zenith for the last of his
Prosperity lectures. He was furious to remember it. He couldn’t pay it, not now, with a motor car just bought and only half
paid for! But was it safe to make an enemy of this crank Shallard, who might go around shooting his mouth off and telling a
lot of stories—not more’n half of ’em true?

He groaned with martyrdom, made out a check for a hundred—it was one-half of his present bank-balance—and sent it to
Frank with a note explaining that for years he had yearned to return this money, but he had lost Frank’s address. Also, he
would certainly call on his dear classmate just as soon as he got time.

“And that’ll be about sixteen years after the Day of Judgment,” he snorted.

2

Not all the tenderness, all the serene uprightness, all the mystic visions of Andrew Pengilly, that village saint, had
been able to keep Frank Shallard satisfied with the Baptist ministry after his association with the questioning rabbi and
the Unitarian minister at Eureka. These liberals proved admirably the assertion of the Baptist fundamentalists that to
tamper with biology and ethnology was to lose one’s Baptist faith, wherefore State University education should be confined
to algebra, agriculture, and Bible study.

Early in 1917, when it was a question as to whether he would leave his Baptist church or to be kicked out, Frank was
caught by the drama of war—caught, in his wavering, by what seemed strength—and he resigned, for all of Bess’ bewildered
protests; he sent her and the children back to her father, and enlisted as a private soldier.

Chaplain? No! He wanted, for the first time, to be normal and uninsulated.

Through the war he was kept as a clerk in camp in America. He was industrious, quick, accurate, obedient; he rose to a
sergeancy and learned to smoke; he loyally brought his captain home whenever he was drunk; and he read half a hundred
volumes of science.

And all the time he hated it.

He hated the indignity of being herded with other men, no longer a person of leisure and dignity and command, whose
idiosyncrasies were important to himself and to other people, but a cog, to be hammered brusquely the moment it made any
rattle of individuality. He hated the seeming planlessness of the whole establishment. If this was a war to end war, he
heard nothing of it from any of his fellow soldiers or his officers.

But he learned to be easy and common with common men. He learned not even to hear cursing. He learned to like large males
more given to tobacco-chewing than to bathing, and innocent of all words longer than “hell.” He found himself so devoted to
the virtues of these common people that he wanted “to do something for them”—and in bewildered reflection he could think of
no other way of “doing something for them” than to go on preaching.

But not among the Baptists, with their cast-iron minds.

Nor yet could he quite go over to the Unitarians. He still revered Jesus of Nazareth as the one path to justice and
kindness, and he still—finding even as in childhood a magic in the stories of shepherds keeping watch by night, of the
glorified mother beside the babe in the manger—he still had an unreasoned feeling that Jesus was of more than human birth,
and veritably the Christ.

It seemed to him that the Congregationalists were the freest among the more or less trinitarian denominations. Each
Congregational church made its own law. The Baptists were supposed to, but they were ruled by a grim general opinion.

After the war he talked to the state superintendent of Congregational churches of Winnemac. Frank wanted a free church,
and a poor church, but not poor because it was timid and lifeless.

They would, said the superintendent, be glad to welcome him among the Congregationalists, and there was available just
the flock Frank wanted: the Dorchester Church, on the edge of Zenith. The parishioners were small shopkeepers and factory
foremen and skilled workmen and railwaymen, with a few stray music-teachers and insurance agents. They were mostly poor; and
they had the reputation of really wanting the truth from the pulpit.

When Elmer arrived, Frank had been at the Dorchester Church for two years, and he had been nearly happy.

He found that the grander among his fellow Congregational pastors— such as G. Prosper Edwards, with his downtown
plush-lined cathedral—could be shocked almost as readily as the Baptists by a suggestion that we didn’t really quite KNOW
about the virgin birth. He found that the worthy butchers and haberdashers of his congregation did not radiate joy at a
defense of Bolshevik Russia. He found that he was still not at all certain that he was doing any good, aside from providing
the drug of religious hope to timorous folk frightened of hell-fire and afraid to walk alone.

But to be reasonably free, to have, after army life, the fleecy comfort of a home with jolly Bess and the children, this
was oasis, and for three years Frank halted in his fumbling for honesty.

Even more than Bess, the friendship of Dr. Philip McGarry, of the Arbor Methodist Church, kept Frank in the ministry.

McGarry was three or four years younger than Frank, but in his sturdy cheerfulness he seemed more mature. Frank had met
him at the Ministerial Alliance’s monthly meeting, and they had liked in each other a certain disdainful honesty. McGarry
was not to be shocked by what biology did to Genesis, by the suggestion that certain Christian rites had been stolen from
Mithraic cults, by Freudianism, by any social heresies, yet McGarry loved the church, as a comradely gathering of people
alike hungry for something richer than daily selfishness, and this love he passed on to Frank.

But Frank still resented it that, as a parson, he was considered not quite virile; that even clever people felt they must
treat him with a special manner; that he was barred from knowing the real thoughts and sharing the real desires of normal
humanity.

And when he received Elmer’s note of greeting he groaned, “Oh, Lord, I wonder if people ever class me with a fellow like
Gantry?”

He suggested to Bess, after a spirited account of Elmer’s eminent qualities for spiritual and amorous leadership, “I feel
like sending his check back to him.”

“Let’s see it,” said Bess, and, placing the check in her stocking, she observed derisively, “There’s a new suit for
Michael, and a lovely dinner for you and me, and a new lip-stick, and money in the bank. Cheers! I adore you, Reverend
Shallard, I worship you, I adhere to you in all Christian fidelity, but let me tell you, my lad, it wouldn’t hurt you one
bit if you had some of Elmer’s fast technique in love-making!”

Last updated on Mon Mar 29 13:19:29 2010 for
eBooks@Adelaide
.

Sinclair Lewis
Elmer Gantry
Chapter XXV
1

Elmer had, even in Zenith, to meet plenty of solemn and whiskery persons whose only pleasure aside from not doing
agreeable things was keeping others from doing them. But the general bleakness of his sect was changing, and he found in
Wellspring Church a Young Married Set who were nearly as cheerful as though they did not belong to a church.

This Young Married Set, though it was in good odor, though the wives taught Sunday School and the husbands elegantly
passed collection plates, swallowed the Discipline with such friendly ease as a Catholic priest uses toward the latest
bleeding Madonna. They lived, largely, in the new apartment-houses which were creeping into Old Town. They were not rich,
but they had Fords and phonographs and gin. They danced, and they were willing to dance even in the presence of the
Pastor.

They smelled in Elmer one of them, and though Cleo’s presence stiffened them into uncomfortable propriety, when he
dropped in on them alone they shouted, “Come on, Reverend, I bet you can shake a hoof as good as anybody! The wife says
she’s gotta dance with you! Gotta get acquainted with these Sins of the World if you’re going to make snappy sermons!”

He agreed, and he did dance, with a pretty appearance of being shocked. He was light-footed still, for all his weight,
and there was electricity in his grasp as his hands curled about his partner’s waist.

“Oh, my, Reverend, if you hadn’t been a preacher you’d have been some dancing-man!” the women fluttered, and for all his
caution he could not keep from looking into their fascinated eyes, noting the flutter of their bosoms, and murmuring,
“Better remember I’m human, honey! If I did cut loose—Zowie!”

And they admired him for it.

Once, when rather hungrily he sniffed at the odors of alcohol and tobacco, the host giggled, “Say, I hope you don’t smell
anything on my breath, Reverend—be fierce if you thought a good Methodist like me could ever throw in a shot of liquor!”

“It’s not my business to smell anything except on Sundays,” said Elmer amiably, and, “Come on now, Sister Gilson, let’s
try and fox-trot again. My gracious, you talk about me smelling for liquor! Think of what would happen if Brother Apfelmus
knew his dear Pastor was slipping in a little dance! Mustn’t tell on me, folks!”

“You bet we won’t!” they said, and not even the elderly pietists on whom he called most often became louder adherents of
the Reverend Elmer Gantry, better advertisers of his sermons, than these blades of the Young Married Set.

He acquired a habit of going to their parties. He was hungry for brisk companionship, and it was altogether depressing
now to be with Cleo. She could never learn, not after ten efforts a day, that she could not keep him from saying “Damn!” by
looking hurt and murmuring, “Oh, Elmer, how can you?”

He told her, regarding the parties, that he was going out to call on parishioners. And he was not altogether lying. His
ambition was more to him now than any exalted dissipation, and however often he yearned for the mechanical pianos and the
girls in pink kimonos of whom he so lickerishly preached, he violently kept away from them.

But the jolly wives of the Young Married Set—Particularly this Mrs. Gilson, Beryl Gilson, a girl of twenty-five, born for
cuddling. She had a bleached and whining husband, who was always quarreling with her in a weakly violent sputtering; and she
was obviously taken by Elmer’s confident strength. He sat by her in “cozy-corners,” and his arm was tense. But he won glory
by keeping from embracing her. Also, he wasn’t so sure that he could win her. She was flighty, fond of triumphs, but
cautious, a city girl used to many suitors. And if she did prove kind—She was a member of his church, and she was talkative.
She might go around hinting.

After these meditations he would flee to the hospitality of T. J. Rigg, in whose cheerfully sloven house he could relax
safely, from whom he could get the facts about the private business careers of his more philanthropic contributors. But all
the time the attraction of Beryl Gilson, the vision of her dove-smooth shoulders, was churning him to insanity.

2

He had not noticed them during that Sunday morning sermon in late autumn, not noticed them among the admirers who came up
afterward to shake hands. Then he startled and croaked, so that the current hand-shaker thought he was ill.

Elmer had seen, loitering behind the others, his one-time forced fiancée, Lulu Bains of Schoenheim, and her lanky,
rugged, vengeful cousin, Floyd Naylor.

They strayed up only when all the others were gone, when the affable ushers had stopped pouncing on victims and
pump-handling them and patting their arms, as all ushers always do after all church services. Elmer wished the ushers were
staying, to protect him, but he was more afraid of scandal than of violence.

He braced himself, feeling the great muscles surge along his back, then took quick decision and dashed toward Lulu and
Floyd, yammering, “Well, well, well, well, well, well—”

Floyd shambled up, not at all unfriendly, and shook hands powerfully. “Lulu and I just heard you were in town—don’t go to
church much, I guess, so we didn’t know. We’re married!”

While he shook hands with Lulu, much more tenderly, Elmer gave his benign blessing with “Well, well! Mighty glad to hear
it.”

“Yep, been married—gosh, must be fourteen years now—got married just after we last seen you at Schoenheim.”

By divine inspiration Elmer was led to look as though he were wounded clear to the heart at the revived memory of that
unfortunate last seeing. He folded his hands in front of his beautiful morning coat, and looked noble, slightly milky and
melancholy of eye. . . . But he was not milky. He was staring hard enough. He saw that though Floyd was still as clumsily
uncouth as ever, Lulu—she must be thirty-three or —four now—had taken on the city. She wore a simple, almost smart hat, a
good tweed top-coat, and she was really pretty. Her eyes were ingratiatingly soft, very inviting; she still smiled with a
desire to be friendly to every one. Inevitably, she had grown plump, but she had not yet overdone it, and her white little
paw was veritably that of a kitten.

All this Elmer noted, while he looked injured but forgiving and while Floyd stammered:

“You see, Reverend, I guess you thought we played you a pretty dirty trick that night on the picnic at Dad Bains’, when
you came back and I was kind of hugging Lulu.”

“Yes, Floyd, I was pretty hurt, but—Let’s forget and forgive!”

“No, but listen, Reverend! Golly, ’twas hard for me to come and explain to you, but now I’ve got going—Lulu and me, we
weren’t making love. No, sir! She was just feeling blue, and I was trying to cheer her up. Honest! Then when you got sore
and skipped off, Pa Bains, he was so doggone mad—got out his shotgun and cussed and raised the old Ned, yes, sir, he simply
raised Cain, and he wouldn’t give me no chance to explain. Said I had to marry Lu. ‘Well,’ I says, ‘if you think THAT’S any
hardship—’”

Floyd stopped to chuckle. Elmer was conscious that Lulu was studying him, in awe, in admiration, in a palpitating
resurgence of affection.

“‘If you think that’s any hardship,’ I says, ‘let me tell you right now, Uncle,’ I says, ‘I been crazy to marry Lu ever
since she was so high. Well, there was a lot of argument. Dad Bains says first we had to go in town and explain everything
to you. But you was gone away, next morning, and what with one thing and another—well, here we are! And doing pretty good. I
own a garage out here on the edge of town, and we got a nice flat, and everything going fine. But Lulu and I kind of felt
maybe we ought to come around and explain, when we heard you were here. And got two fine kids, both boys!”

“Honestly, we never meant—we didn’t!” begged Lulu.

Elmer condescended, “Of course, I understand perfectly, Sister Lulu!” He shook hands with Floyd, warmly, and with Lulu
more warmly. “And I can’t tell you how pleased I am that you were both so gallant and polite as to take the trouble and come
and explain it to me. That was real courtesy, when I’d been such a silly idiot! THAT night—I suffered so over what I thought
was your disloyalty that I didn’t think I’d live through the night. But come! Shall we not talk of it again? All’s
understood now, and all’s right!” He shook hands all over again. “And now that I’ve found you, two old friends like you—of
course I’m still practically a stranger in Zenith—I’m not going to let you go! I’m going to come out and call on you. Do you
belong to any church body here in Zenith?”

“Well, no, not exactly,” said Floyd.

“Can’t I persuade you to come here, sometimes, and perhaps think of joining later?”

“Well, I’ll tell you, Reverend, in the auto business—kind of against my religion, at that, but you know how it is, in the
auto business we’re awful’ busy on Sunday.”

“Well, perhaps Lulu would like to come now and then.”

“Sure. Women ought to stick by the church, that’s what I always say. Dunno just how we got out of the habit, here in the
city, and we’ve always talked about starting going again, but—Oh, we just kinda never got around to it, I guess.”

“I hope, uh, I hope, Brother Floyd, that our miscomprehension, yours and mine that evening, had nothing to do with your
alienation from the church! Oh, that would be a pity! Yes. Such a pity! But I could, perhaps, have a—a comprehension of it.”
(He saw that Lulu wasn’t missing one of his dulcet and sinuous phrases; so different from Floyd’s rustic blurting. She WAS
pretty. Just plump enough. Cleo would be a fat old woman, he was afraid, instead of handsome. He couldn’t of married Lulu.
No. He’d been right. Small-town stuff. But awful nice to pat!) “Yes, I think I could understand it if you’d been offended,
Floyd. What a young chump I was, even if I WAS a preacher, to not—not to see the real situation. Really, it’s you who must
forgive me for my wooden-headedness, Floyd!”

Sheepishly, Floyd grunted, “Well, I DID think you flew off the handle kind of easy, and I guess it did make me kind of
sore. But it don’t matter none now.”

Very interestedly, Elmer inquired of Floyd, “And I’ll bet Lulu was even angrier at me for my silliness!”

“No, by gosh, she never would let me say a word against you, Reverend! Ha, ha, ha! Look at her! By golly, if she ain’t
blushing! Well, sir, that’s a good one on her all right!” Elmer looked, intently.

“Well, I’m glad everything’s explained,” he said unctuously. “Now, Sister Lulu, you must let me come out and explain
about our fine friendly neighborhood church here, and the splendid work we’re doing. I know that with two dear kiddies—two,
was it?—splendid!— with them and a fine husband to look after, you must be kept pretty busy, but perhaps you might find time
to teach a Sunday School class or, anyway, you might like to come to our jolly church suppers on Wednesday now and then.
I’ll tell you about our work, and you can talk it over with Floyd and see what he thinks. What would be a good time to call
on you, and what’s the address, Lulu? How, uh, how would tomorrow afternoon, about three, do? I wish I could come when
Floyd’s there, but all my evenings are so dreadfully taken up.”

Next afternoon, at five minutes to three, the Reverend Elmer Gantry entered the cheap and flimsy apartment-house in which
lived Floyd and Mrs. Naylor, impatiently kicked a baby-carriage out of the way, panted a little as he skipped up-stairs, and
stood glowing, looking at Lulu as she opened the door.

“All alone?” he said—he almost whispered.

Her eyes dropped before his. “Yes. The boys are in school.”

“Oh, that’s too bad! I’d hoped to see them.” As the door closed, as they stood in the inner hall, he broke out, “Oh,
Lulu, my darling, I thought I’d lost you forever, and now I’ve found you again! Oh, forgive me for speaking like that! I
shouldn’t have! Forgive me! But if you knew how I’ve thought of you, dreamed of you, waited for you, all these years—No. I’m
not allowed to talk like that. It’s wicked. But we’re going to be friends, aren’t we, such dear, trusting, tender friends .
. . Floyd and you and I?”

“Oh, YES!” she breathed, as she led him into the shabby sitting-room with its thrice-painted cane rockers, its couch
covered with a knitted shawl, its department-store chromos of fruit and Versailles.

They stood recalling each other in the living-room. He muttered huskily, “Dear, it wouldn’t be wrong for you to kiss me?
Just once? Would it? To let me know you really do forgive me? You see, now we’re like brother and sister.”

She kissed him, shyly, fearfully, and she cried, “Oh, my darling, it’s been so long!” Her arms clung about his neck,
invincible, unrestrained.

When the boys came in from school and rang the clicker bell downstairs, the romantics were unduly cordial to them. When
the boys had gone out to play, she cried, wildly, “Oh, I know it’s wrong, but I’ve always loved you so!”

He inquired interestedly, “Do you feel wickeder because I’m a minister?”

“No! I’m proud of it! Like as if you were different from other men—like you were somehow closer to God. I’m PROUD you’re
a preacher! Any woman would be! It’s—you know. Different!”

He kissed her. “Oh, you darling!” he said.

3

They had to be careful. Elmer had singularly little relish for having the horny-handed Floyd Naylor come in some
afternoon and find him with Lulu.

Like many famous lovers in many ages, they found refuge in the church. Lulu was an admirable cook, and while in her new
life in Zenith she had never reached out for such urban opportunities as lectures or concerts or literary clubs, she had by
some obscure ambitiousness, some notion of a shop of her own, been stirred to attend a cooking-school and learn salads and
pastry and canapés. Elmer was able to give her a weekly Tuesday evening cooking-class to teach at Wellspring, and even to
get out of the trustees for her a salary of five dollars a week.

The cooking-class was over at ten. By that time the rest of the church was cleared, and Elmer had decided that Tuesday
evening would be a desirable time for reading in his church office.

Cleo had many small activities in the church—clubs, Epworth League, fancy-work—but none on Tuesday evening.

Before Lulu came stumbling through the quiet church basement, the dark and musty corridor, before she tapped timidly at
his door, he would be walking up and down, and when he held out his arms she flew into them unreasoning.

He had a new contentment.

“I’m really not a bad fellow. I don’t go chasing after women—oh, that fool woman at the hotel didn’t count—not now that
I’ve got Lulu. Cleo never WAS married to me; she doesn’t matter. I like to be good. If I’d just been married to somebody
like Sharon! O God! Sharon! Am I untrue to her? No! Dear Lulu, sweet kid, I owe something to her, too. I wonder if I could
get to see her Saturday—”

A new contentment he had, and explosive success.

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