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| Lewis, Harry Sinclair: Babbitt
Lewis, Harry Sinclair: Babbitt
BARRON`S BOOK NOTES
SINCLAIR LEWIS`S
BABBITT
^^^^^^^^^^SINCLAIR LEWIS: THE AUTHOR AND HIS
TIMES
If you go to any large dictionary and open it to the "B"
section, you`ll find two definitions that didn`t exist before 1922: Babbitt--an
uncultured, conformist businessman; Babbittry--smugness, conventionality, and a
desire for material success. These words have become part of our vocabulary,
thanks to Sinclair Lewis. Few authors in American literature have done what
Lewis did in his novel about a middle-aged realtor: in George F. Babbitt he gave
the world a character so vivid and indestructible that the name has come to
stand not just for a single fictional character but for many American
businessmen of that era as well. In some ways Sinclair Lewis was himself much
like Babbitt--midwestern, ambitious, occasionally loud, sometimes obnoxious,
and insecure.
Harry Sinclair Lewis was born on February 7, 1885, in
the small town of Sauk Centre, Minnesota. His father was a physician, devoted
but rather harsh to his son. In later years, Lewis would describe his childhood
in the prairie town as a happy series of Tom Sawyer adventures, but others
remembered his life there differently. He was a homely boy, too skinny, with
bright red hair and bad skin. He was no good at sports. Worse, he lived in the
shadow of an athletic older brother who could do all the things Harry couldn`t.
Perhaps it was the insecurity Lewis felt that made him begin to write not the
fiction that would one day bring him fame, but verse modeled after the works of
the British poet Tennyson, full of the romance and adventure Lewis could not
find in Sauk Centre.
Anxious to escape, at seventeen he convinced his father
to send him to Yale, rather than to the nearby University of Minnesota. He
found, though, that he didn`t fit in any better there than he did in Sauk
Centre. His talent as a writer earned him a place as editor of the college
literary magazine, but he had few friends. His classmates, by and large, were
Eastern aristocrats who had little to say to a small-town doctor`s son. By his
junior year, Lewis was fed up enough to quit school and join a socialist commune
being formed by writer Upton Sinclair. But his interest in socialism was at best
lukewarm (though you can clearly see a lingering distrust of business and an
admiration for labor unions in Babbitt). After six months he left to board a
ship for Panama, where he hoped to find work building the canal. No jobs were to
be had, and he returned to Yale, graduating a year late. Now came nearly a
decade of dead-end jobs and constant traveling. Lewis knew he wanted to be a
writer. But what would he write and how would he earn a living while writing it?
He tried journalism in Iowa, in New York, in California. While in California he
sold ideas for adventure stories to an already established young author named
Jack London. He returned to New York and worked for various publishing
companies. He married. Wherever he was, whatever job he held, he was
writing--first, short stories that he began to sell to magazines, and next, in
1912, a boy`s adventure book called Hike and the Aeroplane. Then came novels:
Our Mr. Wrenn (1914), The Trail of the Hawk (1915), The Innocents and The Job
(both 1917), and Free Air (1919). None of these attracted much attention at the
time, nor are they read much today. But they were preparation for the books that
would make Lewis world famous.
The first of these was published in 1920. Main Street
told the story of Carol Kennicott, a doctor`s wife in Gopher Prairie, Minnesota,
who longed for the culture and sophistication she thought existed in the
glittering cities of the East. Gopher Prairie bore a strong resemblance to Sauk
Centre, and--as Lewis himself later admitted--except for her sex, Carol
Kennicott bore a strong resemblance to the young Sinclair Lewis. Both felt
trapped among people who cared little for music or art or literature--or for
anything except gossip and money.
Main Street created a sensation. Traditionally,
Americans liked to believe their small towns were the centers of national
virtue. But here was a book saying that small-town folk were mostly ignorant
bigots, the small town itself a trap few could escape. All across the country,
people asked themselves, Are we really this bad? Main Street was praised and
attacked--and was purchased by the tens of thousands. Lewis became America`s
best-known author.
The stage was set for Lewis`s second triumph. He wrote
his publisher that his next novel would be "the story of the Tired Businessman,
the man in the Pullman smoker, of our American ruler, of the man playing golf at
the country club, in Minneapolis, Omaha, Atlanta, Rochester." His main character
would be "all of us Americans at 46, prosperous but worried,
wanting--passionately--to seize something more than motor cars and a house
before it`s too late."
To write the story of this businessman, Lewis went to
Cincinnati, which became the model for the medium-sized American city that is
Babbitt`s setting. He worked much as a sociologist or reporter might work,
traveling, interviewing, filling notebooks with his observations. He visited
athletic clubs, attended lodge meetings, went to church services, all to become
familiar with the life that a George F. Babbitt might lead. Before Lewis had
begun to write a word of his story, he had already created complete biographies
of his fictional characters and drawn maps of his imaginary city of Zenith. This
thoroughness insured that his book would become a portrait not just of one man
but of an entire society in that era.
Babbitt was published in September of 1922, and it
became the most talked-about book of the year. Once again, Lewis had struck a
sensitive nerve.
Lewis saw that America was changing in the 1920s. It
was, in fact, well on its way to becoming the urban, industrial nation it is
today. The small towns he had written about in Main Street were dying. Americans
were moving to the cities, working in offices rather than on farms, driving
automobiles, going to the movies. They were proud of being modern. But to Lewis
the new America was even more of a nightmare than the old one had been. Zenith,
"the zip city," is full of pep but empty of intelligence. Instead of art, it has
advertising. Instead of religion, it has boosterism--loud, mindless
self-promotion. Worst of all, as Babbitt to his sorrow learns, in Zenith
everyone must conform. Not only do its residents buy the same davenports (sofas)
and automobiles, but they think the same thoughts. They`re terrified of
radicals, foreigners, different ideas in general.
Lewis wasn`t the only literary figure of the 1920s
critical of American life. Writers like Sherwood Anderson, F. Scott Fitzgerald
and Ernest Hemingway were making some of the same attacks, and many readers
believe they made them with more skill and intelligence. But no other writer
seemed to know the American business world and American middle-class life as
intimately as Lewis knew it. This knowledge was one of the main reasons for
Babbitt`s success. As many readers have noted, Babbitt is not at its heart a
realistic novel. Lewis frequently selects his evidence to make Babbitt and
Zenith appear as bad as possible. Because he portrayed the surfaces of
middle-class American life so accurately, however, he convinces us that his
exaggerated satiric attack on that life is accurate. If some of Lewis`s readers
protested that Babbitt`s world was too horrible to be true, far more feared that
Lewis`s portrait was too correct in all its details not to be
true.
Another reason for Babbitt`s success is its humor.
Despite the seriousness of its subject matter, Babbitt is a very funny book.
Lewis was a satirist--he wanted us to laugh as he went on the warpath. Like one
of his favorite writers, Dickens, he created characters that were often humorous
caricatures, and like Mark Twain he depended on exaggerated everyday speech to
make those caricatures live. (In fact, Lewis was so good at imitating Babbitt
and so fond of performing his imitations that one friend complained that being
with him was like being with a tape recorder you couldn`t turn off.) Of course,
Lewis could have written a bitter and humorless attack on Babbitt and all he
stood for. But he didn`t want to do that, because, as he later admitted, he
liked Babbitt--at least in part. He was fully aware of Babbitt`s absurdity but
he couldn`t bring himself to be utterly harsh with him. After all, Babbitt
represents not just one man but much of what Lewis felt was middle-class
America; and Lewis was too much the child of that America to be able to condemn
Babbitt completely.
The 1920s saw Lewis at the pinnacle of his career. He
followed Babbitt with Arrowsmith (1925), Elmer Gantry (1927), and Dodsworth
(1929), all widely praised best-sellers. In 1926 he was awarded the Pulitzer
Prize for Arrowsmith, but he refused it, possibly out of annoyance that he
hadn`t received it earlier for Main Street or Babbitt. In 1930 he won and
accepted the Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first American ever to
receive the honor.
But the years following the Nobel Prize were not happy
ones. He had divorced his first wife and married the well-known journalist
Dorothy Thompson; he would divorce her as well. He began to drink heavily. His
reputation as a writer declined as critics began to favor younger authors like
Ernest Hemingway, and as Lewis published a string of novels inferior to his
earlier works. His last years were filled with hectic traveling. He was in Rome,
Italy, when he died on January 10, 1951.
Sinclair Lewis`s greatest creation, however, has lived
on. Today`s Babbitt might be selling computers rather than houses, and no doubt
the automobile he now worships is sleeker than the 1920 model. But he still
worries about keeping up with the neighbors, and he gets much of what he thinks
from advertisements and newspaper headlines. (Today he can also watch
television.) He remains a symbol of all that is stupid, ridiculous, and
funny--and, occasionally, sad and noble--about many of us in
America.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THE PLOT
It`s April 1920. Above the morning mist rise the towers
of Zenith, a city of 360,000 somewhere in the American midwest. In a suburban
house, a forty-six-year-old realtor named George Babbitt wakes, shaves, eats
breakfast. Every object he owns is a symbol of his prosperous, respectable life.
Yet Babbitt is filled with a discontent, which he takes out on his patient but
dull wife, Myra, and on his children, Verona, Ted, and Tinka.
As we follow Babbitt through his day, we see his
many--often very funny--failings. Loud, smug, backslapping, he boasts of
business ethics but doesn`t really know what they are. Yet he`s capable of
sensitivity, as when he explains his unhappiness to his best friend Paul
Riesling. Paul, a once-promising violinist who now sells roofing, says that
Zenith`s cutthroat competitive ways make people unhappy. He suggests a week in
Maine away from businesses and families.
Babbitt`s day ends. As Babbitt goes to sleep, Lewis
shows us other scenes of Zenith life: the city`s idle rich and its struggling
poor, its would-be reformers and its cynical politicians. Zenith is modern and
prosperous, but it`s full of conformist citizens like Babbitt and his friends,
who all buy the same products and think the same thoughts.
Social success is as important as business success in
Zenith, and when the Babbitts hold a dinner party they invite their most
"highbrow" friends, including Boosters` Club president Vergil Gunch and famous
poet T. Cholmondeley Frink. But Frink`s dreadful verse and the deadly dull
dinner conversation prove how little genuine art or wit there is in Zenith.
Babbitt persuades his wife to let him go to Maine. The Babbitts then visit the
even more unhappily married Rieslings, where Babbitt bullies clever, bitter
Zilla Riesling into letting Paul go with him.
The Maine woods make Babbitt and Paul feel young again,
and Babbitt vows he`ll change his life. But as soon as he`s back in Zenith, he`s
avidly chasing business success and making crooked deals he refuses to admit are
dishonest. He aids conservative Lucas Prout`s campaign for mayor against the
"radical" lawyer Seneca Doane and addresses the Zenith Chamber of Commerce,
where in a speech that is unintentionally hilarious but at the same time
disturbing, he claims Zenith is the finest city in the world because it contains
so many Standardized American Citizens who think and act alike.
Anxious to improve their social standing, the Babbitts
invite the wealthy Charles McKelveys to dinner, but the McKelveys aren`t
interested in acquiring middle-class friends. The Babbitts, for their part,
behave equally snobbishly to the lower-class Overbrooks. Zenith, we see, claims
to be a place of equality, but its social barriers are impossible to cross.
Zenith also claims to be religious, but its religion is more a high-powered
business than a faith.
Babbitt seems to go from success to success. But he
still worries about business and about his family. While on a business trip to
Chicago, he sees Paul Riesling dining with a strange woman. He tries to get Paul
to end the affair, but a few weeks later, as Babbitt is glorying in his election
as Boosters` Club vice president, he gets word that Paul has shot his wife,
Zilla. She survives, but Paul is put into prison, and Babbitt has lost his only
friend.
Adrift, Babbitt thinks of having an affair himself. He`s
attracted to an elegant client, Mrs. Tanis Judique, but instead turns his
attentions to a teenaged manicurist--unsuccessfully. He goes to Maine, hoping to
find the happiness he found there the year before, but this time sees only the
same greed and conformity he sees in Zenith. On the train home, Babbitt bumps
into Seneca Doane. This much-hated man surprises Babbitt by seeming intelligent,
rational, and humane. Babbitt begins to express sympathy with Doane`s liberal
views, though without really understanding them.
His new beliefs are soon tested when Zenith is hit with
labor strife. While Babbitt`s conservative friends demand the strike be halted,
Babbitt sides with the workers. Now Babbitt begins to see firsthand the price of
any kind of nonconformity in Zenith: his friends grow deeply suspicious of
him.
The strike is crushed. Babbitt, still looking for
something or someone to give meaning to his life, begins to visit Tanis Judique.
Tanis is part of a wild set who call themselves "The Bunch," and when Babbitt is
seen with them, his old friends grow more hostile. Then Babbitt commits another
"crime": he refuses Vergil Gunch`s invitation to join the Good Citizens` League,
a group dedicated to stifling opinions it considers too
liberal.
Mrs. Babbitt, confused and unhappy about her husband,
seeks comfort in the half-baked philosophy of the American New Thought League.
Babbitt feels trapped; even after he ends his affair with Tanis, pressure from
Gunch and his other conservative friends increases. Join the Good Citizens`
League, they demand, and when he again refuses they make him an outcast in his
own city, whispering, spying, denying Babbitt both friendship and
business.
One night Mrs. Babbitt complains of a pain in her side:
appendicitis. The illness terrifies her and Babbitt as well. As they rush to the
hospital, he realizes he`s too weak to continue his rebellion. Zenith has licked
him. He vows loyalty to all the false values he briefly fought: to business, to
success, to Zenith.
Mrs. Babbitt recovers. At the end of the book, Babbitt
is almost the same man he was at its start--except that now he has no illusions
about his dishonest, empty life. When his son Ted shocks the family by eloping,
and asks permission to quit college and become a mechanic, Babbitt takes him
aside and gives his approval. Perhaps the younger generation can make up for
Babbitt`s failure--if, unlike Babbitt, Ted can remain unafraid of his family,
unafraid of Zenith, unafraid of himself. Then disillusioned father and
still-hopeful son march in to greet their family.
Babbitt is a satiric look both at one man and at an
entire society. As such, it`s crowded with characters. Some of them, notably
George Babbitt, are well developed, possessing the mixture of good and bad
qualities that human beings possess. But many others are flat and simple--not
flesh-and-blood people so much as representatives of the various social classes
and occupations that Lewis wants to satirize.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: GEORGE F. BABBITT
George F. Babbitt, the forty-six-year-old realtor who
gives the novel its title, is a figure so vivid he`s come to represent the
typical prosperous, middle-aged American businessman of the 1920s--conservative,
uncultured, smug, conforming, and loud.
Babbitt has dozens of faults, and Lewis the satirist
wants you to laugh at every one of them. Babbitt`s a booster, loudly promoting
his city even when he doesn`t understand what he`s promoting. He takes pride in
being modern, but he knows nothing of the science and engineering he salutes. He
praises business ethics, but he isn`t above making shady deals with the Zenith
Street Traction Company; he talks about leading a moral life but goes to a
brothel and indulges in an adulterous affair. Music and art are threatening
mysteries, great literature is a letter promoting cemetery plots, and education
and religion are merely means of getting ahead in real estate.
And yet Lewis doesn`t want us merely to sneer at
Babbitt. In fact, as he wrote to a friend, he liked Babbitt--and he wants you to
like Babbitt (at least a little) too. At his best, Babbitt is a sympathetic
character. He may not understand his children, but he loves them. And his
friendship with Paul Riesling is a genuine one.
Most important of all, Babbitt is able to see--though
dimly--that his life has serious flaws and that he could be a better man than he
is. Much of the book is devoted to showing Babbitt trying to become that man. He
flees with Paul Riesling to the woods of Maine, which symbolize for him a
masculine world, free and brave. He supports Seneca Doane`s political crusade.
Unfortunately, he isn`t intelligent enough to choose really effective ways of
rebelling. (When his attempt at politics fails, he enters into a rather foolish
affair with the sophisticated Tanis Judique.) Nor is he strong enough to make
his rebellion last.
Babbitt is a comic figure, and Lewis with his gift of
parody will have you laughing at each of his absurd business letters, each of
his boneheaded speeches. But at the end of the book Babbitt emerges as a
pathetic figure as well. He`s in the terrible bind of knowing that he needs to
change but isn`t courageous enough. Is he a more or less hapless victim of the
Zenith mentality and morality? Or is he really responsible for his own plight, a
man suffering only because he`s now forced to follow the standards he demanded
of everyone else? That`s for you to decide. All Babbitt can hope for as his
story ends is that the next generation, represented by his son, Ted, will
somehow manage to lead a better life.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: MYRA BABBITT
Plump, matronly Myra Babbitt has been married to George
Babbitt for twenty-three years. She is no more a traditional heroine than her
husband is a traditional hero. No better educated than Babbitt, she`s both a
victim of and a willing participant in Zenith`s demands for conformity. Her main
worries seem to revolve around social status. She wants to give successful
dinner parties; she longs to be invited to the home of the wealthy Charles
McKelveys.
The Babbitt marriage is a good one by Zenith standards,
but as Lewis paints it, it`s completely devoid of passion or romance. Babbitt
feels trapped by his wife`s dullness and turns first to dreaming of the fairy
girl of his youth and then to pursuing Mrs. Tanis Judique.
Yet Mrs. Babbitt isn`t an unsympathetic character. She
is kind. And she deserves credit for having spent twenty years listening to
Babbitt`s irritable complaints. She can`t understand his desire to rebel, but
she too sees dimly that her life might have been better.
At the end of the book Mrs. Babbitt suffers an attack of
appendicitis that brings the couple together. You may still be having mixed
feelings about her. On the one hand, she`s one of the forces making Babbitt
abandon his rebellion and return to safe, conformist Zenith life. On the other
hand, she`s been a victim of that conformist life as well. When in the ambulance
she suggests it might be better if she did die because no one loves her, you may
see, as Babbitt sees, that she hasn`t had an easy time of it in Zenith
either.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THEODORE ROOSEVELT
BABBITT
Like some seventeen-year-olds, Babbitt`s son, Ted, is
caught up in a rebellion against his father. Babbitt wants Ted to go to college
and then on to law school to have the legal career he was denied. Ted would
rather be a mechanic. Yet despite these warring goals, father and son are more
alike than different. Both are one hundred percent products of Zenith,
mistrusting education, valuing material success above all else, more than
willing to conform to Zenith`s standards. Ted`s high school party may seem wild
to Babbitt, but it`s exactly like every other high school party in the
city.
Yet, like Babbitt, Ted has his good side. He does love
his father. Away from home--as on their trip to Chicago--they act more like two
friends than like father and son. When, at the end of the novel, Ted rebels by
eloping with Eunice Littlefield and asking family permission to quit college,
Babbitt gives his approval. He hopes that Ted will be strong enough to avoid the
mistakes Babbitt made--that he won`t be afraid of family, of Zenith, of
himself.
From what you`ve seen of Ted and of Zenith, do you think
Babbitt`s hopes are justified? Will Ted be able to maintain his honest
independence? Or is he destined to become as much a victim of conformity as his
father?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: VERONA BABBITT
Babbitt`s twenty-two-year-old daughter considers herself
superior to everyone around her. A graduate of Bryn Mawr College, she reads
"genuine literature" (books by Joseph Conrad and H. L. Mencken), thinks of
herself as an intellectual, and has vague plans to do social
work.
Yet for all her education, Verona may not seem to you
much different from the rest of her family or from the rest of Zenith. Her
arguments with her brother are petty and childish. Instead of becoming a social
worker, she takes a job as a secretary. Though in her political discussions with
her fiance, reporter Kenneth Escott, she calls herself a radical, her ideas are
only slightly more liberal than Babbitt`s. And at the end of the novel, when Ted
has eloped with Eunice Littlefield, the now-married Verona strongly disapproves.
What can you conclude about Verona when you see she`s become such a staunch
defender of Zenith`s values?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SENECA DOANE
This lawyer and reformer (whose first name comes from a
noble Roman statesman) is perhaps the one person in Babbitt who makes an
intelligent, persistent rebellion against the forces of corruption and
conformity in Zenith. He runs, unsuccessfully, for mayor; he supports striking
workers; he tries to aid a minister condemned for his liberal views. In a way,
Doane and Babbitt have switched places in life. When they were in college
together, Babbitt had wanted to become a lawyer who helped the poor, and Doane
had wanted to become rich. Babbitt gave up his dream to chase business success,
and Doane gave up a lucrative career in corporate law to work with labor unions
and other reform movements. What point do you think Lewis was making with the
Babbitt/Doane reversal? Is it to show how youthful dreams can
change?
Doane understands Zenith more clearly than does any
other person in the novel. In fact, Lewis uses Doane to voice many of his own
thoughts about the city. Zenith is to be admired for its economic efficiency and
for the comfortable life of its middle class, but condemned for its crooked
politics and for the conformity it demands.
T. CHOLMONDELEY FRINK
One of Lewis`s funniest creations is this poet and
advertising "genius" known to his friends as "Chum." Frink, the author of
"Poemulations," a newspaper idea column, and "Ads that Add" is Zenith`s idea of
a great writer. His writing is, of course, terrible, and Lewis has a great deal
of fun showing just how bad his work really is. Verses like "I sat alone and
groused and thunk, and scratched my head and sighed and wunk" are all the
evidence we need of the low level of literature in Zenith.
Yet Frink, like so many others in Babbitt, may win at
least a little sympathy from you because he is a victim of failed dreams. One
foggy night Babbitt observes Frink staggering drunkenly down the street. "I`m a
traitor to poetry," Frink shouts--and it`s the truth. He thinks he could have
been a serious writer; instead he sold his talents to the highest bidder. It`s a
sadly common fate in Zenith.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: VERGIL GUNCH
Vergil Gunch, coal dealer, president of the Boosters`
Club and potential Exalted Ruler of the Elks, is at the start of Babbitt
everything Babbitt himself would like to be. Gunch is Babbitt at his most
extreme--loud, full of jokes, financially successful--but he is not plagued by
any of the doubts that burden Babbitt. But because those doubts make Babbitt in
many ways a sympathetic character, without them Gunch is in many ways a monster.
Once Babbitt begins to rebel against Zenith by supporting Seneca Doane and by
having an affair with Tanis Judique, it`s Gunch he most fears. And for good
reason--Gunch is always whispering about him, spying on him. Gunch`s ugly name
signals his moral ugliness.
Gunch does have his good side, as Zenith has its good
side. His hospital visits to the ailing Mrs. Babbitt show that friendliness does
exist in Zenith, and that it can be a comfort. But Lewis never lets us forget
that Gunch`s friendliness is basically shallow, because it extends only to
people who are exactly like himself. Gunch represents Zenith at its meanest.
When at the end of the book Babbitt once again becomes his friend, it`s another
token of Babbitt`s final defeat.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: TANIS JUDIQUE
A pretty, elegantly dressed widow of not-quite middle
age, Tanis Judique enters Babbitt`s life when she comes to look for an
apartment. Babbitt is immediately attracted to her, but not until he makes an
unsuccessful pass at a young manicurist, and fails as a political rebel, does he
take the enormous--and in Zenith, dangerous--step of having an
affair.
Compared to Babbitt, Tanis is cultured and well
educated. But in some ways she isn`t that superior to the rest of Zenith. She
snobbishly hopes that Babbitt belongs to the elite Union Club. Her friends, who
call themselves "The Bunch," like to believe they`re brave rebels against Zenith
society, but in fact they`re as flighty and thoughtless, and probably as
foolish, as any member of the Booster`s Club.
Eventually, Babbitt begins to think of Tanis as dull and
unattractive, little better than his wife, and he breaks off the affair. When,
in a moment of desperation, he returns to see her, she is cool and distant
toward him.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: ZILLA RIESLING
Zilla Riesling, Paul Riesling`s wife, is another of the
unhappy, would-be rebels in Babbitt. An intelligent, witty woman, she sees
Zenith for the dull, conformist place it is and isn`t afraid to say so. Yet just
as her husband Paul`s insight becomes self-pity, Zilla`s becomes bitterness. She
and Paul turn on each other, making their lives more miserable than they already
were.
Paul first deals with Zilla by having an affair; then,
enraged, he shoots her. She survives, but when some months later Babbitt visits
her, she`s a changed woman. Once blowsy, though lively, and attractive, she`s
now "bloodless and aged," and "dreadfully still." She`s become a devout follower
of the Pentecostal Communion Faith, but religion, far from teaching her
Christian charity, has only increased her bitterness. She claims she`s found
peace, but Babbitt gives an accurate analysis: "Well, if that`s what you call
being at peace, for heaven`s sake just warn me before you go to war, will
you?"
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: PAUL RIESLING
Paul Riesling is Babbitt`s best--perhaps his only
true--friend. In some ways, he`s the most extreme example of the damage Zenith
inflicts on its citizens, of the crippling disappointments they suffer when
their personal dreams are sacrificed to Zenith`s demands for commercial success.
Once a promising violinist, Riesling had hoped to study music in Europe.
Instead, he`s a roofing manufacturer, unhappily married, playing his violin only
for friends.
Riesling is one of the most intelligent characters in
the novel. His thoughts about Zenith--that it is a place of cutthroat
competition and conformity, where one-third of the people are openly miserable
and another third secretly unhappy--are similar to Lewis`s own views. Still,
some readers have found him an unsympathetic character in some ways. Paul blames
his wife, Zilla, for all his suffering and seems to ignore the fact that he has
made her suffer too. When at last his rage and depression lead him to shoot
Zilla, he realizes too late she deserved his understanding more than his anger.
Intelligent critic of Zenith, or self-pitying weakling? Victim or criminal? How
do you see Paul?
After Paul is sent to prison he virtually disappears
from the novel. With him goes the one relationship Babbitt truly valued. That
loss sets the stage for Babbitt`s own open rebellion.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: MAY ARNOLD
May Arnold is a middle-aged widow with whom Paul
Riesling is having an affair. Babbitt sees the pair together in
Chicago.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: KATHARINE "TINKA"
BABBITT
Tinka is Babbitt`s ten-year-old daughter. Because she`s
too young to have been spoiled by life in Zenith, she gives Babbitt comfort when
the rest of his family irritates him.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: FULTON BEMIS
Bemis is a railway clerk; he and Babbitt are the two
male, middle-aged members of the Bunch, Tanis Judique`s group of
friends.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: DR. A. I. DILLING
Dr. Dilling is Mrs. Babbitt`s surgeon and the leader of
the Good Citizens` League.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SIR GERALD DOAK
A visiting British millionaire, Sir Gerald is much
entertained by society hostesses like Lucile McKelvey, who assume he`s
interested in art and culture. In fact as Babbitt happily discovers when he
befriends Doak in Chicago, Doak is as concerned with profits and as ignorant of
art as any Zenith businessman.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SAM DOPPELBRAU
Doppelbrau is Babbitt`s neighbor. Babbitt dislikes him
for his drunken noisy parties. Later, the rebellious Babbitt becomes a
participant in those parties.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THE REVEREND JOHN JENNISON
DREW
Reverend Drew is the pastor of the Chatham Road
Presbyterian Church. Drew represents the way religion in Zenith has been
corrupted by business. He runs his church like a successful corporation, and he
invites Babbitt to use business techniques to increase Sunday School
attendance.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: WILLIAM WASHINGTON
EATHORNE
Eathorne is the head of Zenith`s oldest and richest
family. Banker Eathorne is to Babbitt an awe-inspiring figure. His somber,
dignified manner is very different from the backslapping joking of Babbitt and
his Boosters` Club friends, but he`s just as profit-hungry and unethical as the
rest of the Zenith business community.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: KENNETH ESCOTT
Escott is a young reporter on the Zenith Advocate-Times.
Escott is hired to promote Reverend Drew`s Presbyterian Church. Like Verona
Babbitt, he considers himself a "radical," and their shared beliefs lead to
romance and marriage. But Escott is hardly more liberal than Babbitt, and no
more honest: he abandons his journalistic ideals to take a high-paying
job.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SIDNEY FINKELSTEIN
Finkelstein is a clothing buyer and a member of the
Athletic Club.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: STANLEY GRAFF
A salesman for Babbitt-Thompson Realty, Graff is fired
for dishonesty but accuses Babbitt of being just as dishonest.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: HEALEY HANSON
Hanson is a saloon owner who sells Babbitt illegal
liquor.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: ORVILLE JONES
Jones is a laundry owner who is invited to the Babbitt`s
dinner party.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: EUNICE LITTLEFIELD
Eunice is the seventeen-year-old daughter of Howard
Littlefield. Eunice is a carefree, movie-mad girl who represents some of the
ways America`s youth was changing in the 1920s. At the end of the novel she
elopes with Ted Babbitt.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: HOWARD LITTLEFIELD
One of Babbitt`s neighbors, Littlefield has a Ph.D. in
economics and delights in showing off his knowledge. Yet most of what he knows
is petty and dull, and his opinions are no more thoughtful than the opinions of
any other Zenith businessman.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CONRAD LYTE
Lyte is a greedy speculator who is one of Babbitt`s best
clients.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THERESA MCGOUN
Theresa McGoun is Babbitt`s highly efficient secretary.
He briefly considers having an affair with her.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHARLES MCKELVEY
A college classmate of Babbitt, McKelvey is now a
wealthy, powerful, not very honest contractor who represents the rising American
aristocracy. The Babbitts invite the McKelveys to dinner only to discover that
the McKelveys are not interested in having middle-class
friends.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LUCILE MCKELVEY
Lucile is Charles McKelvey`s wife. She considers herself
superior to the middle-class Babbitts, preferring to entertain English
aristocrats like Sir Gerald Doak.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: MIKE MONDAY
Monday is a prizefighter turned famous evangelist. He`s
based on a real evangelist of the 1920s, Billy Sunday.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: OPAL EMERSON MUDGE
Opal Mudge is a field-lecturer of the American New
Thought League. She gives a ridiculous speech on "Cultivating the Sun Spirit" to
an audience that includes the enthusiastic Mrs. Babbitt and the irritated
Babbitt.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CARRIE NORK
Carrie Nork is a spinsterish member of the
Bunch.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: JAKE OFFUTT
Offutt is a crooked political boss. He plots shady
business deals with the help of Babbitt`s father-in-law.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: ED OVERBROOK
Overbrook is an unsuccessful college classmate of
Babbitt. He and his wife are prevented by class barriers from becoming the
Babbitts` friends, just as those barriers prevent the Babbitts from becoming the
McKelveys` friends.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: JOE PARADISE
Paradise is a wilderness guide in Maine. He disappoints
Babbitt by showing himself to be as lazy, profit hungry, and ignorant of nature
as any Zenith businessman.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LUCAS PROUT
Prout is a conservative mattress manufacturer, who with
Babbitt`s help is elected mayor.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: PROFESSOR JOSEPH K.
PUMPHREY
Professor Pumphrey is the owner of the Riteway Business
College and a member of the Athletic Club.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: IDA PUTIAK
Ida Putiak is an empty-headed, teenaged manicurist, whom
Babbitt takes out on a disastrous date.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SHELDON SMEETH
Smeeth is the choir director at the Presbyterian Church.
He annoys Babbitt with his constant smile and embarrassing lectures about
sex.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: COLONEL RUTHERFORD
SNOW
Colonel Snow is the owner of the Advocate-Times and one
of the leaders of the Good Citizens` League.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: MINNIE SONNTAG
Minnie Sonntag is a sarcastic young member of the
Bunch.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: EDDIE SWANSON
Babbitt`s neighbor, Swanson is a sales agent for Javelin
Motors.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LOUETTA SWANSON
Louetta is Eddie Swanson`s bored, flirtatious young
wife. She first ignores Babbitt`s advances, later responds to
them.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: HENRY T. THOMPSON
Thompson is Babbitt`s father-in-law and partner. His
continued dealings with Jake Offutt prove that the older generation in Zenith is
no more honest than are Babbitt and his peers.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: SETTING
Babbitt takes place in Zenith, an imaginary city of
360,000 in the American Midwest. Zenith is more than just the novel`s setting,
though. Because Lewis wanted Babbitt to portray not just one man but an entire
society, Zenith is in some ways as important a character as Babbitt himself and
is presented in as much satiric detail. And just as Lewis wanted the character
Babbitt to stand for many conformist, success-hungry Americans, he wanted Zenith
to stand for all that is admirable and dreadful about a large segment of
America--not the biggest cities or the small towns but the places in between
where so many of us live. And although on the surface Babbitt may seem to be a
realistic novel, at its heart it really isn`t that; instead it`s a comic attack.
As you read the book you`ll want to ask yourself in what ways Babbitt is an
accurate portrait of America in the 1920s. What do you think has been
exaggerated and what left out of Lewis`s portrait? In what ways is the portrait
still accurate today?
Our first view of Zenith is a stirring one. It seems a
city made for giants, fully worthy of its name, which means "highest point."
It`s one of the engines pulling America into the industrialized twentieth
century. The products it manufactures are sold around the world. Its
laboratories make it a center of science and engineering. Its prosperity has
insured a comfortable life for its middle class.
Yet we see Zenith`s failures in even more glaring
detail. Zenith lives for business profits; everything else is unimportant. It
calls itself religious, but the religion of Mike Monday and John Jennison Drew
mainly keeps the working class under the thumb of the rich. Its literature is
the hack poetry of T. Cholmondeley Frink. Its municipal government is
manipulated by crooked politicians like Jake Offutt and by crooked businessmen
like Henry P. Thompson. It calls itself a land of equality, but the lines
between social classes--between the rich McKelveys and the middle-class
Babbitts, for example--are impossible to cross. It calls itself a democracy, but
its most respectable citizens refuse to tolerate views different from their
own.
This standardization is probably the worst of Zenith`s
flaws. On a minor level, it means that downtown Zenith resembles every other
downtown in America, and that Babbitt`s living room resembles every other living
room in Floral Heights. But more importantly, it means that Babbitt`s opinions
are the opinions of every other member of the Boosters` Club--and that any one
who dares to think differently is considered a threat.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THEMES
Here are the major themes that Lewis treats in Babbitt.
They`re explored in greater detail in The Story section of this
guide.
1. THE TYRANNY OF BUSINESS
In Zenith, business is all important, and the hunger for
business success corrupts every part of life. Zenith politics are manipulated
for personal gain. Friendships are used to advance careers. Education and
culture have no value if they can`t earn you money. Even religion has less to do
with God than with profits.
Lewis`s attacks on the tyranny of business in America
are harsh indeed. Do you think they were valid at the time he wrote? Do you
think they`re still valid now? How important is material success to Americans
today? And what are Americans willing to do to achieve it?
2. STANDARDIZATION OF THOUGHT
Zenith has become admirably prosperous because its
industries churn out standardized products. Unfortunately, Zenith also churns
out standardized citizens, who not only buy the same cars and living room
furniture, but get their information from the same sources and think the same
thoughts. Worse, they oppose anyone who dares to be different. As you read
Babbitt, you`ll want to look at the ways Lewis portrays standardization in
Zenith. And you`ll want to compare Zenith to your world. Where do you get your
opinions? What do you think of people whose views differ greatly from
yours?
3. THE HYPOCRISY OF RESPECTABLE
AMERICANS
Babbitt and his friends think of themselves as highly
respectable businessmen. Yet their honesty is limited at best. They praise
Prohibition but like to drink. Babbitt preaches business ethics but seldom
practices them. He claims to lead a strictly moral life but visits a brothel and
begins an affair with Tanis Judique.
4. AN OBSESSION WITH STATUS
Babbitt and most of the other characters are obsessed
with social status, in large part because the barriers between classes in Zenith
are so difficult to cross. The middle-class Babbitts are denied friendship by
the upper-class McKelveys. The Babbitts in turn deny it to the lower-class
Overbrooks. Such snobbery goes against the ideal of America as a democratic,
classless society. You`ll want to ask yourself if such class division still
exists in America today.
5. AN OBSESSION WITH MATERIAL
POSSESSIONS
Babbitt`s world worships things: alarm clocks, cigar
lighters, automobiles. What does this say about people when they must depend on
material possessions for their sense of self-worth?
6. A LACK OF CULTURE
Zenith is ignorant and intolerant of genuine art and
literature. Great poets like Dante and Shakespeare go unread, while business
letters, advertisements, and newspaper poetry columns are hailed as works of
genius. Lewis vividly condemns Zenith`s upside-down cultural values, but some
readers have felt that he shares them in part--that he must in part like the
literary garbage he parodies to be able to parody it so
effectively.
7. THE CORRUPTION OF RELIGION
Religion too has been corrupted by the Zenith business
mentality. Evangelist Mike Monday is brought in to fight labor unions, and the
Reverend John Jennison Drew runs his church like a highly competitive business.
Zilla Riesling`s Pentecostal Faith teaches only bitterness.
8. A FAILURE OF HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS
Most of Babbitt`s relationships are, he admits,
mechanical, empty, unfulfilling. Though he jokes with his friends at the
Athletic Club, he can`t reveal his true feelings of restlessness to them; only
with Paul Riesling can he really be himself. Babbitt`s marriage, too, seems at
best a comfortable but passionless routine.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: STYLE
Probably no aspect of Babbitt has prompted so many
different opinions as has Lewis`s literary style. At its best, it`s vivid, fast
moving, and funny. One favorite technique is to use overly grand language (often
capitalized) to show that Babbitt`s life isn`t nearly as heroic as Babbitt
thinks it is--as when Lewis tells us that Babbitt feels his underwear represents
the God of Progress.
Lewis`s greatest gift, perhaps, is his ability to mimic
his characters` slang-filled speech and parody their ridiculous writings.
Babbitt`s business letters--"I know you`re interested in getting a house, not
merely a place where you hang up the old bonnet but a love-nest for the wife and
kiddies"--are strings of enthusiastic, incoherent cliches. And there are equally
effective parodies of correspondence school advertisements, T. Cholmondeley
Frink`s dreadful poetry, John Jennison Drew`s syrupy sermons, and the mystical
nonsense spouted by Opal Emerson Mudge of the American New Thought
League.
Despite Lewis`s gifts as a parodist, however, many
readers have criticized his writing. Even at its most effective, Lewis`s satire
is seldom subtle. And too often, some readers feel, his strengths become his
weaknesses. He skillfully mimics the speech of the 1920s, but dialogue so
dependent on the slang of one era can seem out-of-date to later generations. And
Lewis is so adept at imitating Babbitt and his friends that he tends to let the
imitations go on too long, running the risk of boring the reader just as Babbitt
himself bores his audiences with his speeches.
Another flaw, some readers feel, is that Lewis is so
eager to give us a broad look at life in Zenith that much of Babbitt--the
discussions of the importance of automobiles, for example, or the role of
women--reads more like journalism or sociology than like a novel; we get the
accurate but superficial acquaintance a newspaper or magazine article might give
us, not the depth of understanding a great novel would provide.
Still, Lewis`s style reflects his familiarity with
Babbitt, Zenith, and a part of America that really hadn`t been set down in
fiction until he came along. And if Lewis`s novel occasionally reads like
something his main character might have written, that may help us know George
Babbitt all the better.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: FORM AND STRUCTURE
Babbitt is a loosely structured novel. There is a
plot--Babbitt`s growing discontent with his life in Zenith, and his attempt to
change by supporting Seneca Doane and engaging in an affair with Tanis Judique.
There are subplots as well: Paul Riesling`s desperation, which leads to a
shooting; Ted Babbitt`s romance and elopement with Eunice Littlefield; the
growth of the Good Citizens` League. But many critics have noted that Lewis is
really more interested in exploring Babbitt`s world in all its variety than he
is in creating a tightly woven plot and moving that plot forward. One thing
doesn`t always lead to another. You could reverse the order of many of the
episodes in the book--say, Babbitt`s speech to the real estate convention and
his church work for the Reverend Drew--without any harm.
Still, Babbitt does possess a structure. Chapters 1
through 7 show a typical day in the life of George Babbitt. Then comes a long
middle section--chapters 8 to 19--that examines Babbitt`s growing restlessness
but also examines various aspects of life in Zenith. We see important social
institutions like dinner parties, leisure activities, business conventions,
political campaigns, and churches. In a sense, not much happens in this middle
section to move the plot forward, but you come away from it with a much greater
understanding of the society George Babbitt lives in, the society against which
he`s about to rebel.
The last section of the book deals with rebellion,
Babbitt`s and others`. Paul`s affair and its aftermath are treated in chapters
20, 21, and 22. Babbitt`s first efforts to change his life--by dating Ida
Putiak, going to Maine, and supporting Seneca Doane--occupy chapters 23 through
27. His open revolt and its failure are recounted in chapters 28 to
34.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: POINT OF VIEW
Babbitt is an example of a third-person, omniscient
narrative. For the most part we experience the story from Babbitt`s point of
view: We`re with him as he wakes up, as he drives to his office, as he has lunch
with Paul Riesling. But the opening scene of the novel demonstrates that Lewis
the narrator is reserving for himself the right to be omniscient, to show us
scenes that Babbitt (who is asleep) couldn`t possibly see: a speeding limousine,
workers leaving a factory. He`ll use the same tactic at the end of Babbitt`s
day, taking us from Babbitt`s house to Lucile McKelvey`s parlor, to a Mike
Monday revival meeting, to the room where Jake Offutt and Henry T. Thompson are
plotting a crooked business deal.
These narrative techniques are very useful for Lewis.
The third-person narrative lets him satirize Babbitt`s failings more easily than
if he had chosen (for example) to have Babbitt narrate the story in the first
person. And by making the narrator omniscient he`s able to smoothly portray not
just one man but an entire society.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 1
Babbitt opens with a view of Zenith, the imaginary
midwestern city that is the novel`s setting. It`s a sweeping, panoramic view--if
this were a movie you could imagine the camera gliding from Zenith`s business
district to its suburbs, moving along the highways and railroad tracks, then
zooming in on specific locales: a speeding limousine, an immense new
factory.
This opening scene tells you much about what Lewis hopes
to do in his novel, and about the way he hopes to do it. Babbitt isn`t just a
portrait of a single man, but of an entire community. You can get a clue to the
way Lewis wants you to understand that community by studying his opening
paragraphs. The name of the city itself, Zenith, is significant. Zenith means
the highest point, the greatest achievement--surely a proud name for a city to
have. And Zenith is proud. It isn`t like older cities whose buildings are
citadels devoted to war or cathedrals devoted to religion. Zenith`s shining
towers are devoted to business, devoted to the new.
This new city has art, represented by the limousine full
of Little Theater actors speeding home from a rehearsal. But the fact that their
rehearsal was a drunken one makes you wonder how seriously this city takes art.
(The sorry state of art and literature in Zenith will be a theme repeated
throughout Babbitt.)
Zenith also has economic power. Its telegraph wires
connect it to Peking and Paris; the goods it manufactures are sold in the Middle
East and in Africa. Modern, successful Zenith seems a city fit for giants, Lewis
says. We`ll soon see if those giants really exist.
NOTE: BABBITT AND MODERN AMERICA In his first success,
Main Street, published two years before Babbitt, Lewis satirized life in the
typical American small town. Now, in the opening paragraphs of Babbitt he
announces he`s going to deal with the post--World War I America that has
replaced the small town. This typical new America is urban, industrial, and
prosperous. It`s the America, indeed, that many of us still live in today--a
fact you should keep in mind as you read the book.
Lewis takes you inside one Zenith residence, the home of
realtor George F. Babbitt. Babbitt is above all a comic, satirical work, and as
Lewis begins to describe his main character, his satire grows sharp. Zenith from
a distance may look like a city made for giants, but Babbitt is anything but a
giant. He`s pink, plump-faced, well-off--not because he`s creative but because
he knows how to sell houses to people for more than they can
pay.
But Babbitt himself isn`t entirely comfortable with his
life. He dreams of a fairy girl who`ll see him not as a middle-aged realtor but
as a heroic youth.
Grumpily Babbitt gets out of bed. He`s suffering from a
hangover, but he`s also suffering from a deeper discontent. That discontent will
become the major theme of the novel. Babbitt looks out at his yard, then goes
into his bathroom and shaves. These actions are simple, everyday ones, but
through them we see one of Lewis`s main criticisms of Babbitt`s life. It`s a
life that puts enormous importance on things. Babbitt`s alarm clock represents
all that is modern, advertised, and expensive. His yard is the neat yard of
every successful Zenith businessman. His bathroom is glittering. In all these
careful descriptions, Lewis is making fun of America`s passion for material
objects. It`s a passion that certainly continues today. If Babbitt were set in
our time, George Babbitt would probably be the proud owner of a video cassette
recorder and a home computer.
If Babbitt is an unlikely hero, the dull and matronly
Myra Babbitt is just as unlikely a heroine. Still, you may find it hard not to
feel a little sympathy for her this morning. Not only must she apologize to
Babbitt for his headache, but she must pretend to listen to his discussion of
suits that--it`s clear--has been repeated every morning for the last twenty
years.
Mrs. Babbitt goes down to breakfast and Babbitt lingers
upstairs, gazing out at downtown Zenith. His irritation disappears as he sees
the city skyline. The tall buildings represent the business prosperity that is
his religion, and he hums an inane song--"Oh by gee, by gosh, by jingo"--as if
it were a hymn.
NOTE: BABBITT The first chapter of Lewis`s novel gives
you a good look at George F. Babbitt and introduces themes you`ll see repeated
later on. One of the things Lewis wants you to do is laugh at this real estate
salesman`s irritable boneheaded ignorance. Babbitt knows little about art and
literature. (That`s shown when he calls William Shakespeare by the name James
J.) He and his wife both seem mainly concerned with material possessions and
with what other people think of the Babbitts.
Yet there`s another side to Babbitt, too, and Lewis
wants us to sympathize with this side, at least a little. Babbitt`s dream of the
fairy child may seem ridiculously sentimental, but it shows that he hopes for a
world better than the one he lives in. His plaid blanket reminds him of a
camping trip, planned but never made, that represents a chance for freedom.
These are the signs that Babbitt may have some rebellious feelings growing
within him. We`ll see those feelings grow stronger as the book
progresses.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 2
Mrs. Babbitt has been married too long to feel any real
sympathy for her husband`s complaints, Lewis says, but long enough to know she
must fake such sympathy. And like the Babbitts` marriage, the Babbitts` house is
more fake than genuine, designed more to impress than to be lived in. The rooms
are acceptably modern, but nothing in them is quite real--the furniture is "very
much like mahogany," and Mrs. Babbitt`s toilet articles are "almost solid
silver." But the Babbitt house, the narrator comments, is not a
home.
The restlessness that Babbitt felt upon awakening stays
with him at breakfast. He grows annoyed with his daughter, Verona, just
graduated from Bryn Mawr and very sure of her intellectual abilities. Verona
wants to do charity work, which to Babbitt is almost socialism--a forbidden
belief. Meanwhile, Ted Babbitt is fighting with his sister for use of the car.
Their squabble is an exaggerated version of arguments every family has but it
makes you wonder if the younger Babbitts are any more intelligent than their
parents.
Babbitt now turns his attention to the morning
newspaper.
NOTE: STANDARDIZATION OF THOUGHT One of the most
important themes in Babbitt is the way American society, though supposedly free
and democratic, tells its citizens what they should think. It`s able to do that,
in large part, because citizens like Babbitt are too lazy to think for
themselves. Just as Babbitt`s furniture is little different from his neighbors`,
his ideas too are echoes of the accepted norm.
You`ll want to compare Babbitt`s world to yours. Do you
think most middle-class Americans still tend to share the same political
opinions--for example, on relations with the Soviet Union, on taxation, on
minorities and women? Do the newspapers and magazines and television of today
give you a truer picture of the world than the Zenith Advocate-Times gives
Babbitt? Are Americans today better informed, or just as smugly
ignorant?
In a gooey, overwritten society column (the first of
many newspaper parodies in Babbitt), Babbitt reads about his wealthy college
classmate, Charles McKelvey. Though he calls McKelvey a snob, it`s clear that he
and Mrs. Babbitt both want to be invited to a McKelvey party. We`ll see that
worries about social status are common in Zenith. Babbitt so sympathizes with
his wife`s social aspirations that he feels a moment of genuine sympathy.
"You`re a great old girl, Hon!" he says. But it`s a brief moment, and Babbitt
covers it up with more characteristic behavior: a complaint.
NOTE: DIALOGUE IN BABBITT When Babbitt talks about
having "a lot liver [livelier] times" than a bunch of "plutes" (short for
plurocrats, or rich people), it`s an example of one of Lewis`s favorite literary
techniques--that of imitating, and exaggerating for comic effect, the
slang-filled speech of ordinary 1920s Americans. Some readers have felt that
Lewis overdoes this kind of dialogue. But for other readers, Babbitt`s dialogue
is responsible for much of the book`s vitality and humor.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 3
Babbitt`s motor car "was poetry and tragedy, love and
heroism." Lewis`s inflated language shows that Babbitt`s life in fact lacks the
poetry and heroism he thinks it possesses. But of course Babbitt isn`t alone in
idolizing his automobile--sixty years later, many Americans still feel the same
way. Lewis wants us to see Babbitt for the shallow man he is, but he also wants
us to remember that there may be more than a little Babbitt in each of us,
too.
Babbitt has as neighbors the Sam Doppelbraus and the
Howard Littlefields. Babbitt dislikes the Doppelbraus. They`re Bohemian--a word
that usually describes artists who disregard society`s standards, but that
Babbitt uses to criticize anyone who has fun in a way he doesn`t approve of.
(Later we`ll see his attitude toward the Doppelbraus, and Bohemians, change.)
Babbitt admires Littlefield, even though he is an intellectual, a member of a
group Babbitt normally distrusts. But even with a Ph.D., Littlefield is as dull
and conventional and devoted to business as Babbitt is--no wonder Babbitt likes
him.
NOTE: NAMES IN BABBITT Like one of his favorite
authors, Charles Dickens, Lewis often uses names that hint, sometimes broadly,
at the nature of his characters. Because "doppel" in German means "double" and
"brau" means "brew," Doppelbrau is a good name for a heavy drinker. Similarly,
Howard Littlefield`s last name reflects the fact that, for all his education,
his field--his area of competence and interest--is small, petty, unimportant.
Later we`ll meet Vergil Gunch, whose unpleasant-sounding last name is a clue to
his personality, and Seneca Doane, whose first name is intended to remind you of
the noble Roman statesman. And "Babbitt" itself carries connotations of "rabbit"
(timid, mindless), "baby," and "babble." What other names in this book do you
find particularly interesting? Why?
Babbitt drives from Floral Heights toward downtown
Zenith, stopping for gas and grandly telling the mechanic that what the country
needs "first last and all the time is a good, sound, business administration."
Howard Littlefield spoke the same words only minutes before--another reminder
that Babbitt possesses few ideas that are his own.
Babbitt picks up a rider. Their conversation is
strained: in fact, we`ll see that many conversations in Babbitt are strained,
because in Zenith only certain opinions are permissible. You can gripe mildly
about the street car company, but to complain seriously is forbidden--that might
be advocating socialism. The only really safe topic is the weather. What is
Lewis really doing when he has Babbitt think to himself that his rider "has no
originality, no wit"?
As Babbitt approaches downtown Zenith, he`s cheered by
the fine spring day and by the bustling city. But his upbeat feeling disappears
by the time he enters the Babbitt-Thompson Realty Company, which he owns with
his father-in-law, Henry P. Thompson. Not even the new "right-thinking"
watercooler (Lewis`s adjective again mocks the importance that material objects
have in Babbitt`s mind) can cheer him up.
Babbitt dictates a letter to his stenographer, Miss
McGoun. Though, of course Babbitt doesn`t admit his failings as a writer, any
letter actually sent the way he dictated it would be thrown into the trash on
arrival. It takes Miss McGoun to make Babbitt`s prose intelligible. Next Babbitt
turns his attention to a form letter that will be mimeographed by the thousands
and sent to customers. Such letters and advertisements are vital to the world of
Babbitt. They take the place of genuine literature, and when Babbitt is writing
them he becomes in his own mind a Poet of Business.
NOTE: PARODY Just as Lewis enjoys imitating his
characters` speech, he takes pleasure in parodying their literary efforts--in
exaggerating their faults for comic effect. We already saw one such parody in
the society column Babbitt read in chapter 1; Babbitt`s advertisements provide
other hilarious examples of Lewis`s skills as a parodist. Parody is a technique
used today by humor magazines such as National Lampoon. You might ask yourself:
are today`s advertisements any better? How?
His dictation finished, Babbitt lets his mind wander to
his pretty stenographer, thinking of her with "a longing indistinguishable from
loneliness." The restlessness he feels is turning him toward thoughts of an
affair--though it seems he still prefers his fairy child to the flesh-and-blood
women around him.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 4
"It was a morning of artistic creation." By now we know
Lewis is being ironic--this morning`s "masterpiece" is an advertisement for
cemetery plots. Babbitt enjoys a similarly ironic moment of "heroism" when he
discovers a new way of quitting smoking. As you`ll see, Babbitt is always trying
to quit smoking, without ever succeeding. In fact, this pattern of failed good
intentions holds true in other ways as well.
Babbitt telephones his best friend, Paul Riesling.
(Throughout the novel you`ll see that this friendship is one of the truly
fulfilling relationships Babbitt has.) Paul Riesling manufactures roofing, but
Babbitt still thinks of him as the promising violinist and poet he was in
college, and treats him as a younger brother.
Babbitt spends the rest of the morning working, as Lewis
shows us in great detail his moral and intellectual limitations. A real estate
salesman might be expected to understand something about architecture, landscape
gardening, and economics. Babbitt understands nothing about these subjects. He
knows little about Zenith except its real estate prices. The political opinions
he reflects on now are as unthinking and inconsistent as those he spouted while
reading the morning newspaper: no one should be forced to join a labor union,
but everyone should be forced to join the Chamber of Commerce. He supports
Prohibition but likes a drink. He preaches ethics but isn`t sure what they
really are, and he`s not so ethical he won`t do business with an out-and-out
crook, Jake Offutt.
These "ethics" are at work in Babbitt`s dealings with
the speculator Conrad Lyte. (In a wonderful bit of description, we see that
Babbitt isn`t the only one in Zenith greedy for material success. Below Lyte`s
eyes are hollows, "as though silver dollars had been pressed against them and
left an imprint"--a superb image of the way Lyte`s eyes and mind are focused on
money.) Lyte has followed Babbitt`s advice to quietly buy land a butcher needs
to expand his shop. When the butcher comes to Babbitt and Lyte, they demand for
the property twice the going price--and get it. Lewis doesn`t want us to feel
sorry for the butcher, who will make up his loss by overcharging his customers.
He does want us to understand that this is the way "honest" businessmen in
Zenith work.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 5
When Babbitt leaves his office, we get a close-up view
of the downtown Zenith we saw earlier at a distance. The city represents Lewis`s
view of the new, modern, industrial America. Everything is standardized, bigness
is more important than beauty, and a person`s worth comes from the material
objects he possesses--in Babbitt`s case, expensive ties and an electric cigar
lighter (for the cigars he has given up smoking).
Babbitt enters the Zenith Athletic Club, which like so
many things in Zenith is an example of false advertising: "It isn`t exactly
athletic, and it isn`t exactly a club." It`s a gathering place for businessmen
like Babbitt who are prosperous but not members of the city`s true elite. That
elite belongs to the more exclusive Union Club.
NOTE: CLASS DIVISION Lewis`s discussion of the Athletic
and Union Clubs picks up a theme that we encountered earlier in Babbitt and that
we`ll encounter again. Zenith (and by extension, all of America, as Lewis views
it) calls itself a democratic and egalitarian society, where everyone from
washerwoman to bank president is equal. But in fact the divisions between
classes are almost impossible to cross, and Babbitt and his family and friends
are always conscious of their social status, always anxious to improve
it.
Babbitt greets his friends, Vergil Gunch, Sidney
Finkelstein, and Professor Joseph K. Pumphrey (whose position as instructor of
Business English tells us what kind of education is valued in Zenith). Babbitt
talks with special enthusiasm to Gunch, for the loud, jolly coal dealer
represents everything that Babbitt himself wants to be. As we might expect,
Babbitt`s conversation with this important man is no more interesting or
original than are most conversations in Zenith.
Paul Riesling enters the club, and Babbitt breaks away
from Gunch and Finkelstein (who with Babbitt and others form The Roughnecks, a
club within the Athletic Club) to share a table with his friend. Such privacy is
considered suspicious by the other club members, but as soon as Babbitt and Paul
start to talk, it`s clear why they value it. Paul is the only man to whom
Babbitt can confess his discontent. All his life, Babbitt says, he`s done the
things society told him to do--supported a family, bought a nice house. Yet he
isn`t satisfied. We see now that Babbitt can be a more sensitive man than he
usually appears.
Paul understands. He had wanted to be a violinist and
now he`s manufacturing roofing and is married to a wife, Zilla, he`d like to
divorce. He`s sick of cutthroat, competitive Zenith.
Now Riesling has gone too far. To criticize business
practices is to talk like a socialist--and Babbitt won`t stand for that even
from his best friend. Riesling backs down, but still he says that of all the
citizens in Zenith, only one-third are truly satisfied with their lives. Another
third are restless but unwilling to admit it. A final third are, like Riesling
himself, openly miserable.
Riesling`s description of Zenith may seem at first an
overly bleak one. But you might consider how you`d describe life in your town or
city. How many people where you live would you describe as happy? Restless?
Openly miserable? Who, or what, is to blame for their
unhappiness?
NOTE: PAUL RIESLING Lewis uses Paul Riesling to voice
many of his own thoughts about Zenith (and its actual counterparts). Like Lewis,
Paul sees Zenith`s shallowness and hypocrisy and itches to rebel against them.
Lewis rebelled, of course, by writing this novel. We`ll see later what form
Riesling`s rebellion takes. As for Babbitt, if Riesling obviously belongs to the
third, miserable category of the Zenith population, Babbitt belongs to the
second--restless, but as yet unwilling to admit it.
Riesling comes up with a plan for escape. The two men
will go camping in Maine without their wives. The trip will surprise their
conventional friends--for in Zenith respectable businessmen can`t even change
hobbies without causing talk--but that`s part of its appeal.
NOTE: FORESHADOWING Babbitt is a loosely structured
novel, and Lewis often pays more attention to examining--and getting us to laugh
at--the various parts of Babbitt`s world than he does to moving a plot forward.
Still, one technique he does use to tie his story together is foreshadowing, the
use of small events to hint at more important events that will occur later. Paul
is angry with his life in Zenith and with his wife, Zilla. Babbitt in turn vows
that if Paul ever needs him, he`ll chuck his other friendships to come to Paul`s
aid. Can you predict now what might come of these hints and
promises?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 6
Babbitt is deeply proud of being modern. As he leads a
client through a run-down tenement, he discourses on the wonders of modern
technology. But his impressive-sounding talk is just talk--Babbitt has no real
understanding of the machines he worships. In his confident ignorance, Babbitt
may seem like people you know. How many times have you heard people brag about
their stereos or automobiles without having the slightest real knowledge of the
engineering behind such products?
Babbitt picks up his father-in-law and partner, Henry T.
Thompson, and drives with him to see Noel Ryland of Zeeco Motors. Babbitt thinks
of Thompson as a human antique, lacking Babbitt`s education and refinement. But
Babbitt also looks down on Ryland, who possesses more education, more
refinement. Why do you think that is? Is insecurity the cause of Babbitt`s--and
Zenith`s--demand for conformity?
Back at the office, Stan Graff, one of Babbitt`s
salesmen, asks for an increase in his commissions, which Babbitt refuses.
Afterwards, Babbitt can hear Graff grumbling to the other employees, and grows
disturbed. This is another sign of his essential insecurity: more than anything
else, he wants everyone to like him.
At dinner he talks about buying a new automobile, giving
rise to a family argument over what he should buy. In Zenith, Lewis says, cars
are the chief way you can tell a person`s rank in society. (Do you think that`s
still true?) When Babbitt, irritated by the discussion, says he won`t be buying
any car until next year, the conversation falls apart.
After dinner, Mrs. Babbitt settles down to darning
socks, Babbitt to reading the newspaper comics, and Ted to doing his
homework--geometry, the Latin poet Cicero, and the poem Comus by the great
seventeenth-century English poet John Milton. Ted`s homework gives Lewis a
chance to satirize education in Zenith, and much of his satire still hits home
today. The Babbitts have little use for real education. Cicero, Shakespeare, and
Milton are among the greatest poets the world has produced, but to Ted they`re
dead and irrelevant because they won`t make money for him. The genteel Mrs.
Babbitt dislikes Shakespeare (whom she hasn`t read) because she`s heard he isn`t
nice. As for Babbitt, though he defends Shakespeare, he doesn`t value literature
any more than his wife or son do; it`s just a necessary requirement to enter
college.
Ted sees a shortcut to success through correspondence
schools, and Lewis displays his gift for hilarious parody as Ted brings out the
school advertisements he`s collected. In one, the traditional symbols of
learning--the lamp, the torch, Minerva (the Greek goddess of wisdom)--have been
replaced by the symbol worshipped by Zenith--the dollar sign.
Babbitt doesn`t know what to say at first, because no
one has told him what to think about correspondence courses. They`ve apparently
become a big business, and big business always impresses Babbitt. Still, because
a degree from a regular college is necessary for business success, Ted must go
to a regular college. Ted finally agrees.
NOTE: BABBITT AND EDUCATION As Ted and Babbitt wrangle
over the value of correspondence schools, we see Lewis satirizing American
attitudes about education that still exist today. Ted wants school to teach him
immediately practical skills. Babbitt wants his son to take more traditional
liberal arts courses--not because he thinks education has any real value in
itself, but because it`s a status symbol necessary to business success in
Zenith. Lewis finds both attitudes narrow-minded, materialistic. You may want to
ask yourself: How much have things changed? Do most students today see education
as a road to wisdom or to wealth? What are your goals? How will education help
you achieve them?
When Ted abandons his homework to go out driving, Mrs.
Babbitt tells her husband it`s time he instruct Ted about sex. Babbitt agrees to
explain the importance of leading a "strongly moral life." (You`ll see later
just how moral Babbitt`s life is.) Then Babbitt walks out on the porch and
broods. Despite his son, his family, his good day at the office, he feels
restless. He remembers when he dreamed of being a lawyer, and his friend Paul
dreamed of being a violinist. The dreams don`t last: Paul loses his when he
marries Zilla Coolbeck, and Babbitt gives up his when he marries Myra Thompson.
Most people in Zenith would call the Babbitts` marriage a good one, but as Lewis
describes it, we see it lacks any passion. Yet in his depression Babbitt feels a
rare moment of sympathy for his wife. "Poor kid, she hasn`t had much better time
than I have," he thinks. On returning to the living room he smoothes her hair,
making her happy and rather surprised, giving us a reminder that he isn`t an
entirely insensitive man.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 7
Babbitt`s living room is decorated to be like every
other living room in Floral Heights, and Babbitt`s conversation with his wife is
no more original or inspiring than the room in which it`s held. Suddenly,
though, he does something unexpected: he announces that he`d like to make a long
motor trip. But he hasn`t worked up the courage to confess he`d like to make the
trip without his wife. His rebellion is still a private one.
Lewis takes as much time to show Babbitt going to sleep
as he did to show Babbitt awakening. Babbitt in the bathtub is a sympathetic
figure, plump, pink, content, childlike. But once he steps from the tub you`re
reminded of the limitations of this man and of his comfortable life. He`s a pawn
of larger organizations. The Elks, the Boosters, the Chamber of Commerce tell
him what to think about his city. The Presbyterian Church tells him what to
worship. The Republican party tells him whom to vote for, and advertisers tell
him what to buy. Lewis is showing you two sides of Babbitt--the naive,
goodhearted man and the unthinking conformist. Which part of his personality do
you think will triumph by the book`s end?
Lewis`s chronicle of Babbitt`s day began with a
panoramic view of Zenith. Now you get another panoramic view as the narrative
moves from Babbitt`s home to other parts of the city. You see the rich: the
smoothly elegant Horace Updike unsuccessfully trying to seduce Lucile McKelvey.
You see the criminal: a cocaine runner murdering a prostitute in Healey Hanson`s
saloon. (You`ll see that saloon in more detail later.) In a laboratory, two
scientists investigate synthetic rubber. In another part of the city, union
leaders discuss a strike. A dying Civil War veteran (a member of the G.A.R., the
Grand Army of the Republic) reminds us of the backwoods-type town Zenith used to
be; the humming, prisonlike Pullmore Tractor Factory shows the modern industrial
center Zenith is today. Lewis gives us our first portrait of religion in Zenith,
as the famous boxer-turned-evangelist Mike Monday (a thinly disguised version of
Billy Sunday, an ex-baseball player who became a well-known evangelist in the
1920s) finishes a prayer meeting. The portrait isn`t a very flattering one. Mike
Monday is valued mainly as a way of averting labor unrest, and his
sermon--another example of Lewis`s gift of parody--is nothing but loud
blather.
Next appear two men who share some of Lewis`s cynicism
toward Zenith: Seneca Doane, the radical lawyer, and Kurt Yavitch, a histologist
whose study of cells has made Zenith a world-famous scientific center. "I hate
your city," Yavitch tells Doane; he hates it for its standardization. Although,
as a radical, Doane might be expected to agree, he doesn`t. Zenith is no more
standardized than are the cities of England or France, Doane argues, and
industrial standardization provides better goods for less money. What Doane
condemns is Zenith`s standardization of thought, the cutthroat competition, the
business trickery of the so-called good family men who lead the
city.
In the next scene, two of those devious men, politician
Jake Offutt and Henry T. Thompson, Babbitt`s father-in-law, plot a shady
business deal in which Babbitt will play a key role. Offutt and Thompson make us
understand that although Lewis is attacking--often fiercely--the modern Zenith,
he doesn`t want us to be nostalgic about the past. Babbitt`s generation may
regard Thompson as a symbol of old-fashioned integrity, but he`s more crooked
than they are.
Offutt and Thompson are worried about Seneca Doane. He
alone seems to understand what they`re up to and is willing to fight them. The
rest of the city can`t share Doane`s outrage. It`s asleep. And Babbitt, too, is
asleep, ready to begin his blissful dream of the fairy child.
NOTE: ZENITH As he did in the first chapter, Lewis
gives us a panoramic view of Zenith with all its strengths and weaknesses. On
the one hand, it`s modern and economically vital; it`s helping pull America into
the prosperous twentieth century. On the other hand, it has deep class
divisions; the gap between the wealthy Lucile McKelvey and the out-of-work man
who kills himself is enormous. Zenith has religion, but it`s the loud, empty
religion of Mike Monday. It has democracy, but it`s a democracy manipulated by
Jake Offutt. It is, as Seneca Doane says, a place of cutthroat competition and
standardization of thought. In short, it`s fascinating, powerful, and deeply
flawed.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 8
The first seven chapters of Babbitt described a single
day in George F. Babbitt`s life. (In fact, Lewis`s original plan was to center
the entire novel around a single day, but he changed his mind.) Now the pace
accelerates. It`s sometime later the same spring. The Babbitts are planning a
dinner party in celebration of a business deal that we know is slightly crooked.
Dinner parties are important status symbols in Zenith, and Babbitt wants this
one to demonstrate how far he`s risen. He plans to invite his most "highbrow"
friends.
Despite his anticipation, the morning of the party is a
tense one for Babbitt. Nagged by his wife, he ventures a sacrilegious thought:
he wonders if "Floral Heights dinners were worth the hideous toil involved."
Lewis, of course, wants you to see that the answer is no. The dinners are like
so many other events in Zenith, empty rituals that blind people to the real joys
of life. Babbitt ignores this truth in the excitement of buying liquor for his
party.
NOTE: PROHIBITION "Now this was the manner of obtaining
alcohol under the reign of righteousness and prohibition." This reign of
Prohibition, implemented by the Eighteenth Amendment, was one of the hallmarks
of the 1920s, and to Lewis it represented all that was narrow-minded, stupidly
puritanical, and hypocritical about America. As Babbitt enters Healey Hanson`s
saloon (where we earlier saw a murder), Lewis`s point is clear: Babbitt calls
himself honest and law-abiding, but he`ll do business with criminals if he has
to. Lewis`s ironic description underlines the hypocrisy: Hanson becomes "an
honest merchant" who speaks "virtuously," and Babbitt feels "honored by contact
with greatness." This is the sorry state of honor and greatness in
Zenith.
The fussy femininity of the Maison Vecchia caterer`s
shop spoils Babbitt`s sense of triumph, and his good mood isn`t restored until
he`s back home mixing a drink.
The guests arrive, and Lewis`s introductions of them
make this collection of "highbrows" sound very unimpressive indeed. There`s
dull, trivial Howard Littlefield, loud Vergil Gunch, car salesman Eddie Swanson,
and Orville Jones who has tried to make his laundry business sound impressive by
calling it "a cleanerie shoppe." Most important of all, there`s T. Cholmondeley
Frink, author of "Poemulations" and "Ads that Add."
With these men are their wives. Lewis analyzes the roles
of the sexes in an interesting way. At first, he says, Zenith women all seem to
be alike--chirping housewives. Yet as you get to know them you see that they`re
very different from one another. And though initially the men`s variety of
occupations makes their personalities seem equally varied, the business world of
Zenith demands such conformity that there`s really little difference between a
"poet" like Chum Frink and a car salesman like Eddie Swanson.
The big moment has arrived: it`s time for Babbitt to
bring out his illicit liquor. Lewis mockingly compares the procedure to a
"canonical rite"--a religious ceremony. Babbitt and his guests behave like
teenagers sneaking their first beers. Especially enthusiastic is Chum Frink, who
only hours before penned a poem (a horrible poem, of course) attacking liquor.
Frink isn`t alone in his hypocrisy: the whole group agrees that the lower
classes can`t be trusted with alcohol, but that good businessmen like themselves
should be allowed to drink whenever they want. Once they`ve finished with this
"required topic," the talk turns to smirking jokes about sex and about the
superiority of Zenith over any small town.
NOTE: BABBITT AND MAIN STREET This dinner table
conversation contrasts the city world of Babbitt to the small-town world Lewis
satirized in his first popular novel, Main Street. In Main Street, Lewis called
the midwestern small town confining and dull. Babbitt and his dinner guests
would certainly agree. But when we hear that Prohibition is a "required topic,"
and when we hear Vergil Gunch and Eddie Swanson and Howard Littlefield parrot
the same beliefs in almost exactly the same words, we may doubt that Zenith is
really any more sophisticated or cultured. That`s Lewis`s point. When Vergil
Gunch enthusiastically says that every small town wants to be just like Zenith,
Lewis intends us to realize that such a fate is far from being happy or
noble.
Now Chum Frink flatters his fellow guests by sharing one
of his literary dilemmas. He`s tried his best to write an ad campaign for Zeeco
Motors, he complains, but he hasn`t been able to dream up anything as brilliant
as the advertisements another writer created for Prince Albert
tobacco.
NOTE: LITERATURE IN ZENITH With his pretentious name
and his terrible writings, T. Cholmondeley Frink represents the sad state of the
arts in Zenith, where ad campaigns are discussed as if they were great
literature, while genuine literature goes ignored. (Later we`ll see that Frink
himself is well aware of his failure.)
As effective as Lewis`s satire of Frink and Zenith is
here, you should remember that he isn`t ridiculing just one man or one city but
a sizable segment of America in the twenties. Do you think he`d be justified in
making the same kind of attack today? How many of your friends, parents, or
teachers are more familiar with last night`s advertisement for hamburgers or
shampoo than they are with Shakespeare or Milton? What do you read more of--the
great literature of the past, or popular novels of the present? How important do
you think it is to appreciate classic works of art, literature, and
music?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 9
Babbitt`s restlessness resurfaces as the dinner drags
on. It`s another sign of his growing discontent that--apparently for the first
time--he admits to himself that these so-called friends bore him. He longs to
escape to Maine.
Spiritualism was a popular fad in the 1920s, and Babbitt
and his guests indulge in it with a seance, trying to summon the spirits of the
dead. Mrs. Jones wants to talk with Dante, the fourteenth-century Italian poet
whose Divine Comedy is widely considered to be one of the greatest works of
world literature. Zenith, of course, knows and cares almost nothing about Dante.
Orville Jones calls him "the wop," and Vergil Gunch says that while he hasn`t
read Dante (you may have noticed that in Zenith people are very fond of
criticizing writers they`ve never read), he knows that Dante can`t be as skilled
a poet as the ones (like Chum Frink) whose works fill the pages of American
newspapers.
NOTE: ZENITH AS HELL To help summon the spirit of
Dante, Vergil Gunch invents the dead poet`s eternal address: "1658 Brimstone
Avenue, Fiery Heights, Hell." The name Fiery Heights is a play on the name of
the Zenith neighborhood--Floral Heights--where Gunch and Babbitt and everyone
else at the table live. And some critics have noted that in many ways
Zenith--dull, competitive, and dishonest--resembles a twentieth-century,
all-American Hell.
Dante speaks. It`s a fraud, of course, but Babbitt
distrusts poets so much that he fears one like Chum Frink might actually be able
to communicate with the dead--a talent almost as dangerous as being a socialist.
Yet even now, when he`s being his most narrow-minded, Babbitt reveals some
sensitivity. As he listens to Vergil Gunch`s jokes, Babbitt wishes he had
actually read Dante. He feels a sudden contempt for the people he calls his
friends, and must ignore his feelings by jokingly asking Dante to read a
poem.
At long last the guests leave. Babbitt`s had a terrible
evening, and though he`s kind enough to lie to his wife that the party was
wonderful, he isn`t a good enough liar to convince her. He complains that he`s
tired, and admits that he Wants to go to Maine a week early, without Mrs.
Babbitt.
His wife is hurt that he wants to do something without
her. Finally he breaks down. "But can`t you see that I`m shot to pieces?" Seeing
her husband`s true weariness, Mrs. Babbitt agrees to let him
go.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 10
The Babbitts visit Paul Riesling and his wife, Zilla.
The Rieslings live in an "excessively modern" apartment house, and Zilla
Riesling, too, is more "modern" than Babbitt and his wife are. Zilla is a witty
woman who sees Zenith for the dull place it is and isn`t afraid to say so. Her
wit can turn to bitterness easily, though, when she feels she`s been ignored by
her husband. That`s what happens now. The Babbitts try to convince Zilla that
Paul is tired and deserves an early vacation in Maine. Paul isn`t tired, Zilla
objects: he`s crazy and cowardly.
After this shrill outburst the evening goes from bad to
worse. Zilla accuses her husband of having girlfriends, and Paul admits that
she`s right. Zilla`s stupidity, he says, has driven him to other women. Then
Babbitt attacks Zilla, his harsh words bringing her to tears. Sobbing, she
agrees to let Paul leave for Maine a week early.
On the way home Babbitt feels triumphant, but Mrs.
Babbitt sees that her husband has been a bully and that Zilla is herself a
victim, a woman losing her youth and beauty and trapped with an unloving
husband. Briefly, Babbitt is forced to admit that his wife is right. But like so
many other moments of truth in Babbitt, this one is brushed aside. "I don`t
care," Babbitt tells himself. "I`ve pulled it off."
On the New York express train Babbitt rejoices at his
and Paul`s escape. Yet in some ways he hasn`t really left Zenith. The
conversation among the traveling salesmen in the Pullman smoking compartment
sounds like one that could be heard back at the Athletic Club; consequently,
it`s no surprise that, when Paul Riesling makes the mistake of speaking not
about money but about beauty, the other men can`t understand
him.
A black porter enters the car. He doesn`t seem
respectful enough to the salesmen: they call him offensive names and warn that
blacks must stay in their "place," all the time loudly claiming they aren`t
prejudiced. Their hypocrisy is spelled out even more clearly when one of them
says America needs "to keep those damn foreigners out of the country." The man
speaking is named Koplinsky--a "foreign," Eastern European surname. If his wish
for immigration controls had been granted a generation earlier, his family
probably would not have been allowed into the country.
Paul, fed up, leaves. But Babbitt remains, comfortable
with such familiar conversation.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 11
Babbitt, who loves anything large and new, is anxious to
see the large, new Pennsylvania Hotel when he and Paul arrive in New York. Paul
wants to see an ocean liner. You`ll remember that it was Paul`s youthful
ambition to go to Europe and study the violin. Now as Babbitt and he make their
way to the docks, he insists he will cross the Atlantic some day. (Babbitt would
like to go, too. But while Paul thinks of Europe as a place of culture, Babbitt
thinks of it as a place where he can easily get a drink.) When they reach the
docks, Paul becomes upset. It`s as if the ocean liners are reminders that his
youthful dreams of musical success are now forever out of his
reach.
At last, Maine. The pine woods, the clear lake--symbols
of a masculine, wilderness world completely unlike Zenith--bring Babbitt peace.
After a week at camp, both he and Paul have changed from the boisterous but
unhappy men they are in Zenith into the naive, enthusiastic boys they were in
college. Their families` arrival briefly dampens these good feelings but doesn`t
destroy them.
The next year will be different, Babbitt promises
himself as he returns to Zenith. Perhaps it will be. But you might notice that
the only thing he hopes for is that the Real Estate Board will elect him
president. That`s a sign that he still thinks of his life in terms of business
success, and that his values may not have changed as much over the last few
weeks as he thinks they have.
What do you think it would take to shake up Babbitt and
make him undergo a genuine change of heart? Would anything be sufficient? Or is
he inevitably doomed to conformism, mingled with an occasional tremor of
restlessness?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 12
Lewis immediately throws cold water on any hope that
Babbitt has permanently changed for the better. Babbitt vows again to quit
smoking, and again is unable to quit. He takes up a new hobby, going to baseball
games, but after one week abandons it. It`s back to business as usual--meaning,
in Zenith, hustling, looking busy even when you`re not.
Lewis the sociologist now presents some of the
recreations popular among the American middleclass in the 1920s. Babbitt belongs
to the Outing Golf and Country Club, which he praises even though it lacks the
status of the Tonawanda Country Club (just as Babbitt`s Athletic Club lacks the
status of the Union Club). He goes to the movies, his taste in pictures being
what we probably expected: simple and unsophisticated.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 13
Babbitt enjoys a moment of glory. He is asked to address
S.A.R.E.B., the State Association of Real Estate Boards. The theme of Babbitt`s
talk: real estate men are as worthy of respect as are doctors and
professors.
Babbitt`s speech will be only ten minutes long, but he
goes through agony writing it. If you`ve ever delayed starting an assignment for
school, you`ll probably appreciate Babbitt`s meaningless outlines, his doodles,
his wasted time. The S.A.R.E.B. meeting is to be held in the city of Monach,
Zenith`s chief rival in the state. Babbitt and the other delegates gather at
Union Station, wearing buttons that proclaim, "We Boost For Zenith," singing the
Chum Frink anthem, "Good Old Zenith," and following Babbitt in cheers. Meanwhile
other Zenith residents look on silently--"Italian women with shawls, old weary
men with broken shoes, roving road-wise boys in suits which had been flashy when
they were new but which were faded now and wrinkled." These people are reminders
that Zenith possesses citizens who can`t share in the realtor`s idiotic
optimism, people who have problems that Babbitt and his friends will never
understand.
Just as Zenith contains people too poor to belong to
Babbitt`s world, it contains people too rich to want to belong to it: when
Babbitt spies the wealthy Lucile McKelvey in her compartment, he`s overcome by a
feeling of insignificance that he tries to conquer by lording it over delegates
from towns smaller than Zenith.
The S.A.R.E.B. meeting is an incredible, hilarious
combination of boredom and stupidity. Lewis has fun with the speeches, the
slogans, even the names of the cities--Galop de Vache, for example, is pidgin
French for "cow gallop." Babbitt`s own speech is hailed as "a sensation," but by
now you may suspect that description merely reflects the low standards of
Babbitt`s world.
At the convention`s final session, cities noisily vie to
be next year`s convention site. To advertise Zenith, the delegates parade on
stage costumed as cowpunchers, bareback riders, Japanese jugglers. At the end of
the parade marches Babbitt, dressed as a clown and beating a big bass drum. The
restless, sensitive Babbitt we`ve occasionally seen before is taking back seat
to the booster.
After all the hoopla, the following year`s convention is
awarded to the city of Sparta because it promised to spend the most money to
entertain the delegates. Says one realtor, "Money talks." it does talk, very
loudly indeed, in Babbitt.
Instead of going straight home to Zenith, Babbitt
lingers for a drink in a fellow delegate`s hotel room. In between their drinking
and laughter, Lewis reminds us again that this is a world of failed dreams. Just
as Babbitt wanted to be a lawyer and Paul Riesling a violinist, a young delegate
from Sparta sadly remembers how he wanted to be a chemist but became a
kitchenware salesman instead.
The group goes to dinner, then staggers to a burlesque
show and then on to a speakeasy (where liquor can be bought). The night has been
long and Babbitt is tired. He feels "nothing but a hot raw desire for more
brutal amusement"--and doesn`t object to the suggestion that they visit a
brothel.
Notice the way Lewis mocks Babbitt`s boosterism here.
All through the book Babbitt has been boasting about clean, proper, prosperous
Zenith. Now he continues to boast, but instead of praising industries or
libraries or anything Zenith might legitimately be proud of, he boasts about
Zenith`s large number of bars and brothels.
This chapter shows the humor and enthusiasm of Babbitt`s
world, but it also shows that world`s meanness and hypocrisy. The real estate
men are in many ways laughable. But they`re also pathetic, haunted by failed
dreams. They can be cruel. And they`re hypocritical: they enjoy by night the
things they disapprove of by day. Babbitt has spent an evening he will never
admit to.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 14
Now Lewis presents to us Zenith politics, which are a
miniature version of that era`s national politics. Nationally, Warren Harding is
running for (and will win) the U.S. presidency. Today, Harding is widely
considered one of the weakest presidents ever to have held office--an opinion
Lewis shared at the time. Yet, for much of his presidency, the handsome Harding
was very popular. If the entire country can be so easily fooled, will Zenith be
any wiser? Not according to Lewis.
Zenith`s choice for mayor is between Seneca Doane, the
"radical" we`ve seen earlier, and Lucas Prout, a conservative mattress-maker.
Babbitt naturally supports Prout, and thanks to his new reputation as a public
speaker is invited to deliver political addresses for him. (The nature of
Babbitt`s success is revealed in Lewis`s ironic comment: "He acquired lasting
fame for weeks.") Babbitt`s speeches are as long-winded, foolish, and illogical
as you`d expect, and Lewis takes pleasure in reporting them at some
length.
Prout defeats Doane, and Babbitt is rewarded for his
campaign work with "advance information about the extension of paved highways."
We`ll see later that Babbitt will use this illegally obtained information to
make shady business deals.
Babbitt`s speech-making now wins him an even greater
honor: he`s invited to give the annual address to the Zenith Real Estate
Board.
NOTE: BABBITT`S SPEECH Babbitt`s speech to the real
estate board is considered by many critics to be one of the high points of
Babbitt, for it gives Lewis a chance to show off fully his powers of parody. But
other critics have said that it demonstrates one of Lewis`s chief literary
faults--that here and elsewhere in the book Lewis depends too much on his powers
of imitation and parody and lets Babbitt drone on too long. As you read, try to
pretend you`re in the audience listening, and decide which view you
take.
Babbitt begins his speech with an unfunny joke, then
lists the ways in which Zenith is the best city in the United States. It`s best,
he claims, because it contains the highest proportion of Ideal Citizens,
ambitious men full of Zip and Bang. These citizens are producing "a new kind of
civilization" in which everything--stores, offices, streets, hotels, and
newspapers--will be just as they are in Zenith.
As Babbitt quotes a verse by his friend Chum Frink,
Lewis has a chance to parody another kind of bad writing, the dreadful poetry
that passes for good literature in Zenith. Frink`s message is the same as
Babbitt`s. Wherever you go in America, you`ll meet the same kind of people:
standardized American citizens, Nice Guys.
And what about those people who aren`t standardized? To
Babbitt, they`re menaces. People who call themselves "liberal" and "radical" and
"nonpartisan" are threats. Journalists and professors who criticize business
should be stopped.
NOTE: BABBITT`S PORTRAIT OF ZENITH Babbitt`s speech
shows him at his very worst--loud, smug, intolerant. He brags about schools but
knows only ventilation systems, not teaching; he brags about art museums but
knows only their buildings, not the art they contain. His idea of a park is a
driveway "adorned with grass, shrubs and statuary."
More important, Babbitt`s speech will remind you of
comments made earlier by Seneca Doane. Doane criticized Zenith for the pressures
it puts on its citizens to conform. Babbitt applauds those pressures. He wants
everyone to be an Ideal Citizen. Those people who aren`t--foreigners, liberals,
professors--are threats.
This, Lewis reminds us, is the most dangerous aspect of
Zenith (and American) life. Standardization of hotels is one thing;
standardization of thought is much worse. Babbitt and his friends claim to be
loyal Americans, but they oppose a basic ideal of American democracy--tolerance
for beliefs that differ from your own.
Lewis wants you to laugh at Babbitt`s long-winded speech
but he also wants you to see it as an example of what is wrong with Zenith and
the segment of America Zenith represents. Do you think he is being fair in his
portrait of Zenith`s narrow mindedness or is he exaggerating to make his point?
Do you think that the middle-class business people of today are more tolerant
than Babbitt and his friends or have they simply learned to camouflage their
intolerance better?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 15
After his success as a speaker, Babbitt had hoped to be
invited to join the Union and the Tonawanda country clubs, but no invitations
arrived. Now he pins his hopes for social advancement on his upcoming college
reunion.
The reunion is held at the Union Club, which for all its
snob appeal is housed in an old and ugly building. Anxious to engage in some
social climbing, Babbitt drags along his friend Paul Riesling, as he moves
through the crowd toward Charles McKelvey.
McKelvey is what Babbitt dreams of being: rich,
powerful, and intimidating, even if not overly honest. Part of a rising American
aristocracy, he`s able to hobnob with the wealthy of Europe, men like Sir Gerald
Doak, the British iron millionaire.
Babbitt is flattered when McKelvey compliments his
speeches, and during dinner he makes his move: he invites McKelvey and his wife
for an evening at the Babbitt house. But only when Babbitt hints that he
possesses inside information about real estate does McKelvey accept. This is the
way business and "friendship" operate in Zenith.
Plans for the important dinner are made. Mrs. Babbitt
invites only her most proper friends, and she forces Babbitt into a suit. Yet
despite the preparations, the dinner is a disaster. No one has anything to say
to anyone else, and the McKelveys invent an excuse to leave early. That night
Babbitt hears his wife weeping at their social failure--a failure that is
confirmed when they aren`t invited to any of the McKelveys` parties for Sir
Gerald Doak.
The Babbitts, though, are no less snobbish than the
McKelveys, as we see when they attend a dinner party given by Ed Overbrook--an
unsuccessful college classmate who admires Babbitt as fervently as Babbitt
admires Charles McKelvey. The second dinner exactly parallels the first. (Some
critics have called the parallel too neat, an instance where Lewis makes his
satire too obvious and heavy-handed.) The Overbrooks seem as shabby and dull to
the Babbitts as the Babbitts seemed to the McKelveys, and this evening is also a
social disaster.
NOTE: CLASS DIVISION IN ZENITH These two failed dinner
parties are reminders that Zenith is hypocritical in calling itself a democracy,
where money and class don`t matter. How much do they matter in America
today?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 16
To ignore his disappointment at the McKelveys`
rejection, Babbitt takes refuge in his club meetings. Clubs are important in
Zenith, Lewis explains. They promote business contacts. They give people a sense
of self-importance.
Still, Babbitt remains irritable, discontented. Even the
pleasant evenings at Paul Riesling`s house remind him of failed dreams: when
Paul plays his violin, he`s a lost and lonely man.
Another important part of life in Zenith centers around
religion. But the city`s devotion to God seems little different from--indeed,
almost indistinguishable from--its devotion to business. We`ve already seen one
sorry example of a Zenith religious figure in evangelist Mike Monday. Now we
meet the Reverend John Jennison Drew, more pretentious than Monday but hardly
more devout--he`s proud "to be known primarily as a businessman." Babbitt
greatly admires Drew`s speaking ability, but his sermon is as full of nonsense
as most public speeches in Zenith are.
After the service, Drew asks Babbitt to come to his
office. There Babbitt is joined by Chum Frink and by William Eathorne, the
seventy-nine-year-old president of the First State Bank of Zenith. Eathorne
stands even higher on the social ladder than the McKelveys, for he`s had his
money longer. Babbitt, in awe of the old man, is delighted when Drew invites him
to work with Eathorne on a project to increase Sunday School
attendance.
Naturally, Babbitt knows and cares as little about
theology as he does about science or art. He believes in Heaven, which he
imagines as a good hotel, but he doesn`t really believe in Hell. He goes to
church mainly because being seen there will help earn him a reputation as a
respectable member of the community--an image that`s good for
business.
In his efforts to increase Sunday School attendance,
Babbitt begins investigating the Chatham Road Presbyterian Church as he would a
failing company. He approves of the Busy Folks Bible Class because the lessons
are as entertaining as a good after-dinner speech. The junior classes, taught by
choir director Sheldon Smeeth, embarrass him with their sickly sweet talk of
"the perils and glory of sex." Classes in philosophy are dull enough to remind
Babbitt of the agonies he suffered attending Sunday School as a
youth.
It`s with relief that Babbitt discovers the business
side of Sunday School--the journals, "as technical, as practical and forever
lovely as the real estate columns or the shoe trade magazines." Babbitt has
probably never read the Bible (his promise "to read some of it again, one of
these days," is a pretty hollow-sounding one), but he can understand talk of pep
and of get-up-and-go, and--worst and most hilarious of all--of the "Model for
Pupils to Make Tomb With Rolling Door."
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 17
The Eathornes are the oldest and wealthiest family in
Zenith, their grim, red-brick house symbolizing the power they hold. As much as
he dislikes the present Zenith, Lewis is too realistic to romanticize its past.
The long-established Eathorne is more polite than the backslapping salesmen at
the Athletic Club, but he isn`t any less greedy.
Babbitt finds enough courage to offer his suggestions
for improving Sunday School attendance--suggestions about as ridiculous and
unreligious as we`d expect. Prizes should be awarded to kids who bring in new
members, and the prizes shouldn`t be "poetry books and illustrated Testaments"
but cash or motorcycle speedometers. Other "stunts" include hiring a press agent
to plant favorable stories about the church in the local
newspaper.
Much to Babbitt`s surprise, Eathorne endorses the plans.
The two men`s styles may be very different, but when it comes to important
matters like making money or increasing business, they think very much
alike.
As Babbitt drives home, his happiness at impressing
Eathorne makes every light in the city seem to glow beautifully. It isn`t
enough, he tells himself, to be someone like Vergil Gunch. Now he wants to be
like Eathorne, powerful but dignified. Lewis hints at the futility of these
dreams when Babbitt returns home and Mrs. Babbitt is unable to notice any change
in him.
Babbitt hires Kenneth Escott, a reporter on the Zenith
Advocate-Times, as press agent for the Sunday School. Today we`d call this
arrangement a conflict of interest--reporters should cover the news, not plant
favorable stories about people who are paying them to do so. But in Zenith,
conflicts of interest are accepted. Babbitt`s plan works. The Presbyterian
Sunday School becomes the second busiest in Zenith. The Reverend Drew claims it
would have reached first place but for the "ungentlemanly and unchristian"
tactics of the rival Central Methodist Church. Those tactics probably aren`t
very different from the Reverend Drew`s--Zenith businessmen and men of God both
tend to praise competition up until the moment they lose.
Kenneth Escott becomes friendly with Babbitt`s daughter
Verona. Together they represent the better educated younger generation of
Zenith, yet Lewis doesn`t leave us feeling they`re any more intelligent than
their parents. They call themselves radicals, but their views are little more
liberal than Babbitt`s.
As a press agent, Escott is a success. His articles make
Babbitt so well-known that the distinguished William Eathorne accepts his
invitation to dinner. This attempt at social climbing, unlike the attempt with
the McKelveys, is a success. And because in Zenith social success is always tied
to business success, Eathorne later helps Babbitt in yet another shady business
deal, quietly lending him money.
NOTE: THE CORRUPTION OF RELIGION The past two chapters
have shown that just as real art and literature are almost nonexistent in
Zenith, so is real religion. Dr. Drew is indistinguishable from any Zenith
businessman, and the magazines that promote Sunday School supplies are
indistinguishable from trade journals. When Babbitt advises his son Ted, "I tell
you boy, there`s no stronger bulwark of sound conservatism than the evangelical
church, and no better place to make friends who`ll help you gain your rightful
place in the community than in your own church home," he`s in effect saying he
values religion because it`s enabled him to form a profitable friendship with
William Eathorne.
Compare Lewis`s attitude toward religion to yours. Are
attempts, like Babbitt`s, to popularize it vulgar and out of place, or are they
justified because they bring more people into the church? Do you think most
people attend church out of a genuine belief in God or because it`s the socially
respectable (and perhaps profitable) thing to do? What should the relationship
between religion and business be?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 18
Babbitt tends to be oblivious to his children until they
do something out of the ordinary. Now events force him to pay attention to his
son and daughter. Verona Babbitt is spending a lot of time with reporter Kenneth
Escott, and Babbitt hopes a romance is developing.
Ted Babbitt disturbs his father more. Like a lot of
fathers, Babbitt has hopes for Ted that his son isn`t particularly interested in
fulfilling. He wants Ted to have the law career he didn`t have, but Ted wants
only to work on his car and spend time with cute, frivolous, movie-mad Eunice
Littlefield.
NOTE: BABBITT AS A FATHER Throughout the book, Lewis
takes pleasure in making fun of Babbitt`s many faults. But he doesn`t want us to
ignore Babbitt`s virtues either. Here we see one of those virtues. Babbitt,
Lewis says, is an average father, sometimes bullying, opinionated, ignorant. But
he has "the eternal human genius for arriving by the worst possible routes at
surprisingly tolerable goals." For all his failings, Babbitt genuinely loves his
son. We`ll see that love playing a part in the book`s ending.
Showing Babbitt in his role as sympathetic father is one
of the ways Lewis presents him as a well-rounded character, not just a
one-dimensional clown or villain. Do you think that Babbitt makes up for his
failings by being a well-intentioned father?
Still there is a gap between Ted`s generation and
Babbitt`s, and we see it widen vividly when Ted throws a party for his high
school friends. Babbitt hopes the party will be like the ones he remembers from
his high school days, but Ted and his friends have different
ideas.
NOTE: BABBITT AND THE 1920S Especially in its politics,
Zenith may seem to us a very conservative place. But great changes in social
custom were occurring in America in the 1920s, notably among the young, and not
even conservative, midwestern cities like Zenith were immune. Girls like Eunice,
from respectable families, were doing things their mothers never would have
dreamed of doing--smoking cigarettes, bobbing their hair, wearing short skirts,
and using makeup. Young women and young men both were more open about sex. The
writer F. Scott Fitzgerald brilliantly chronicled these changes in stories like
"Bernice Bobs Her Hair." Ted`s party represents Lewis`s attempt to do the
same.
You`ll notice, though, that Lewis doesn`t really want
you to think that Ted and his friends are more independent-minded than their
parents. Ted`s party is "as fixed and standardized as a Union Club hop," for in
Zenith the pressures to conform affect even the young.
We`ve seen the gap between Babbitt and the younger
generation. Now when Babbitt`s dull, pious mother comes to visit, we see the gap
between Babbitt and the older generation. Still living in the small town,
Catawba, where Babbitt was born, she understands nothing of modern Zenith and
embarrasses Babbitt with her reminiscences of his childhood. Babbitt`s half
brother, Martin, is another reminder of the older, rural America that Zenith is
replacing. As always, Lewis refuses to be nostalgic about that vanishing
America: Martin is a crude man who cares only what things cost.
These visits, along with his children`s squabbles and
demands, feed Babbitt`s irritation at family life, and he`s pleased when a case
of the flu makes him the center of attention. Yet the illness also increases his
restlessness, his depression. As he lies in bed, he bleakly realizes what Lewis
has made us realize throughout the novel--that almost every aspect of his
business, social, and religious life is mechanical and false. He may have wasted
his life, he fears. He doesn`t want to go back to work. But back he
goes.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 19
Earlier in the book we`ve seen hints of a shady business
deal involving Babbitt`s realty company. Now we learn about it in detail. For
aiding Lucas Prout`s campaign for mayor, Babbitt was illegally rewarded with
advance information about the Street Traction Company`s plans to expand trolley
lines and build a repair shop. In chapter 17 we saw him obtaining a secret loan
from William Eathorne so he could quietly purchase the land the traction company
will need. Now the company finds that Babbitt is demanding an inflated price for
the necessary land. They threaten to go to court, until a compromise is reached
that seemingly makes everyone happy.
NOTE: BUSINESS ETHICS IN BABBITT Babbitt benefits from
illegally obtained information, but it`s clear that the Zenith Street Traction
Company hasn`t been hurt by the corrupt deal either. Its purchasing agent buys a
five-thousand-dollar car; its first vice president builds a home. Who does pay?
Babbitt`s father-in-law puts it bluntly: It`s the public that gets
double-crossed. This is the way politics and business work in Zenith--and, since
the traction company president is then appointed ambassador to a foreign
country, it apparently works this way on the national level as well. Babbitt is
only a small part of a large, corrupt system.
Yet hypocritical Babbitt is "overwhelmed to find that he
had a dishonest person working for him": Stan Graff. Graff may be dishonest, but
he understands that Babbitt isn`t any better. "Well, old Vision and Ethics, I`m
tickled to death!" he says when Babbitt fires him. He`d rather work where people
are more open about their lack of ethics, and he threatens to tell everything he
knows about the Street Traction affair if Babbitt prevents him from getting
another job.
Babbitt is enraged but disturbed. We can almost hear him
thinking--is he really as bad as Graff says he is? No, he reassures himself.
He`s "never done anything that wasn`t necessary to keep the Wheels of Progress
moving."
But the strain of the Traction deal and Graff`s
dismissal have left Babbitt tense. To recover, he makes a trip to Chicago with
his son, Ted. On the train the two joke like old friends, Ted trying to imitate
Babbitt`s air of adult command. In Chicago they enjoy an expensive dinner and
laugh at the risque jokes of a musical comedy.
Babbitt is lonely when Ted leaves him and returns to
Zenith. This is the underside of the salesman`s life, the anonymous hotel rooms,
the constant telephoning. Then in the hotel lobby, he spots an equally lonely
looking man: Sir Gerald Doak, the British millionaire who was the star of the
McKelveys` dinner parties back in Zenith. Babbitt introduces himself, then
realizes he has little to say to a British aristocrat. But to his joy he finds
that he and Sir Gerald are in fact very much alike. Doak cares no more for
culture than does the American realtor, and he`s had a terrible time in America
because society hostesses like Lucile McKelvey insist on talking to him about
museums when he`d rather be talking mortgages.
NOTE: SIR GERALD DOAK With Doak, Lewis is making fun of
Americans like Lucile McKelvey who have inflated ideas of the British
aristocracy, but he`s also making fun of the aristocracy itself. George Bernard
Shaw and H. G. Wells were two of Lewis`s favorite writers: when Sir Gerald calls
them traitors (and calls Shaw by the wrong first name) Lewis wants us to see
that the "cultured" English upper class can be as ignorant as the members of the
Zenith Athletic Club. Yet Lewis also sees the good side of Sir Gerald, as he
does of Babbitt--the unpretentious friendliness.
Babbitt, enormously pleased with himself, plans to let
everyone in Zenith know he`s a pal of Sir Gerald. But he isn`t able to enjoy his
success for long. That evening, at the Regency Hotel, he spots his best friend,
Paul Riesling--who is supposed to be in Akron, not Chicago--with "a doubtful
sort of woman." Paul, embarrassed, introduces his old friend to the woman (May
Arnold) merely as an old acquaintance and tries to talk Babbitt out of coming
over to his hotel room that evening. But Babbitt insists.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 20
Babbitt apprehensively takes a taxi to Paul`s hotel,
where he bullies a clerk into letting him into Paul`s room. He half fears that
Paul has committed suicide and is greatly relieved when he opens the bathroom
door and discovers no body.
Paul arrives three hours late, furious that Babbitt has
interfered with his private life. Babbitt attacks his friend for having an
affair--it will threaten Paul`s position in Zenith, Babbitt says
self-righteously, and make his marriage to Zilla even worse than it already is.
What do you think about Paul? Is his way of rebelling against his life a
constructive one or does it reveal his essential weakness?
Paul is too weak willed to maintain his anger for long.
Collapsing in a chair, he explains how Zilla has made his life miserable, how
May Arnold has comforted him. Babbitt softens when he sees his friend`s anguish,
and offers his help. On the way back to Zenith he stops in Akron and mails a
postcard to Zilla, claiming he ran into Paul there, and when he arrives home, he
visits Zilla in person.
If the unhappy marriage has made Paul whining and
unfaithful, it`s made Zilla lazy and bitter. She knows her husband has a woman
in Chicago, she says. Babbitt defends his friend as "the nicest most sensitive
critter on God`s green earth" and makes Zilla promise to treat him
better.
When Paul returns, the Rieslings` marriage does seem to
improve. But Paul whispers to Babbitt, "Some day I`m going to break away from
her." We`ll see in the next chapter just how that break occurs.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 21
Chapter 21 opens with an event that perfectly
exemplifies all the noisy, inane activity that Babbitt and Zenith thrive on: the
Boosters` Club annual election of officers. Lewis takes great pleasure in
showing us this comic side of Zenith life. His language mocks the seriousness
with which these foolish businessmen take themselves. Through the Boosters`
Club, "you... realized the metaphysical oneness of all occupations," from
plumbing to chewing gum manufacture. The Boosters read Dad Peterson`s statement
on "Service and Opportunity," and even though it makes no sense whatsoever,
announce that they understand it perfectly.
This ridiculous world is the world Babbitt feels at home
in much of the time, and he`s overjoyed when his fellow Boosters elect him vice
president. But when in triumph he calls his wife, she gives him shocking news:
Paul Riesling has shot Zilla. He`s in jail, and she isn`t expected to
live.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 22
Babbitt drives to City Prison, but the attendant tells
him Paul is refusing visitors. He rushes to City Hall, and by reminding Mayor
Prout of his campaign work, obtains an order forcing Paul to see
him.
Riesling had first refused the visit fearing that
Babbitt would be "moral" and disapproving. But when Babbitt says instead that
Zilla got what was coming to her, Paul defends his wife. Now--too late--Paul
sees that Zilla didn`t have an easy time of it either. To cheer up his friend
(and himself), Babbitt rambles on about making another trip to Maine, about
helping Paul establish a new life for himself out West.
Babbitt goes to the City Hospital, where he learns that
Zilla will live. At home Mrs. Babbitt is (in Lewis`s cynical but perceptive
phrase) "radiant with the horrified interest we have in the tragedies of our
friends." Mrs. Babbitt offers moralistic opinions about Paul`s crime, but
Babbitt is too dazed to respond.
After dinner he visits Paul`s lawyer and offers to lie
if it will save his friend. He`s lied to succeed in business, he says; he can
lie to save Paul. For the first time, Babbitt has admitted out loud that his
world is a dishonest one. The admission is a sign of his friendship for Paul,
but also a sign of his growing desperation.
Babbitt summons up enough courage to go to the Athletic
Club the next day. Fortunately, his friends are sensitive enough to avoid
discussing Paul`s crime. Paul pleads guilty and is sentenced to three years in
the state penitentiary.
Babbitt`s friendship with Paul was the relationship he
most valued. Now it`s gone. Paul has acted on his feelings of
desperation--feelings that Babbitt to some extent shares. The question is, Will
Babbitt act on his feelings too? Certainly his despair is deepening; he realizes
that he faces "a world which, without Paul, [is] meaningless."
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 23
Babbitt keeps busy to avoid thinking about Paul, but he
feels lonely and at loose ends. His wife and daughter Tinka leave on vacation.
That night, Babbitt restlessly goes into Verona`s room looking for something to
read. Verona likes to think of herself as an intellectual, and the books she`s
collected are to Babbitt`s mind difficult, disturbing, improper. Here Lewis is
having some fun, for among the books Babbitt skims through disapprovingly are
works by writers who were Lewis`s friends: Vachel Lindsay, the poet; H. L.
Mencken, the essayist who satirized American life even more bitterly than did
Lewis; Joseph Hergesheimer, a then-popular novelist. Babbitt reads for escape;
these books offer only "discontent with the good common ways." The truth is that
the books bother him because he, too, has become discontent with the ways of
Zenith.
The night grows foggy. Babbitt thinks of calling Paul,
then realizes that Paul is in prison. He steps out into the dark, and now you
will see that it isn`t only Paul Riesling and Babbitt who feel trapped by their
lives in Zenith. Through the fog Babbitt spies Chum Frink, poet and advertising
"genius," staggering drunkenly down the street. "There`s another fool," Frink
shouts. "George Babbitt." But Frink reserves his greatest scorn for himself. He
could have been a great poet, he announces, a James Whitcomb Riley or a Robert
Louis Stevenson. (Today these nineteenth-century poets are generally considered
good but not great; still, their works are masterpieces compared to
Frink`s.)
NOTE: FAILED DREAMS Like Paul Riesling, like the
convention delegate who had wanted to be a chemist, like Babbitt himself, Chum
Frink has abandoned his dreams, sold his talents to the highest bidder. Now he
is paying the price.
Babbitt is astonished, but too wrapped up in his own
problems to worry about Frink`s for long. His work, his family, his life seem
meaningless. All the things he`s struggled for--wealth, social position,
material possessions--seem worthless. What, he asks himself, is a person
supposed to live for? All he knows is that he misses Paul Riesling`s friendship
and that he desires to love his fairy girl in the flesh. Babbitt`s rebellion has
begun, and so far it seems to be taking the same adulterous shape as Paul`s
did.
That even the smallest rebellion won`t go unnoticed is
made clear the next day when Babbitt sneaks out of his office to attend the
movies. Over lunch at the Athletic Club he`s kidded about being so rich and lazy
he can afford to leave work early. On a normal day Babbitt would have laughed
along, but today he feels only rage. He longs to escape to his dream
woman.
Babbitt first selects Miss McGoun to fill that role, but
she is too businesslike to respond. Then he attends a party given by Eddie and
Louetta Swanson, hopeful that his past flirtations with Louetta will lead to
something more serious. But when he tries to kiss her she turns her head
away.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 24
Babbitt visits Paul Riesling in prison. It`s a place of
death, Lewis says, and Paul himself is in effect dead--pale, meek, defeated.
Babbitt, too, is changed. He no longer cares what others think of him, no longer
has pride in his worldly success. He`s ready to begin his rebellion for
real.
One opportunity arises when a Mrs. Daniel Judique
appears in Babbitt`s office. Slender, elegantly dressed, she impresses Babbitt
so much he offers to rent her an apartment he`s been saving for his friend,
Sidney Finkelstein. On the way to the apartment, the two flirt, but Babbitt
can`t work up enough courage to make a pass at her.
Soon, Babbitt`s thoughts turn from Tanis Judique to the
young manicurist at the Pompeian Barbershop. Impatiently he enters this marble
palace devoted to the care of businessmen and waits for the girl, Ida Putiak, to
be free. She`s pretty but not very bright, and Lewis freely parodies her
ungrammatical conversation.
When Babbitt asks Ida to dine with him that evening, she
accepts, but the date is a disaster. Babbitt`s car breaks down, the headwaiter
at the restaurant refuses to serve them liquor, and Ida allows him only one
brief kiss before refusing him with baby talk. All at once Babbitt feels very
foolish.
You`ve seen Babbitt begin his rebellion. Do you think
Lewis wants you to sympathize with Babbitt`s desire to lead an exciting life? Or
to feel that Babbitt is being foolish? Or both?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 25
The next morning, Babbitt resolves that rebellion has
done him no good. But he can`t make himself return to his old respectable ways
either. Can he find a woman who will make his life better?
That woman isn`t Mrs. Babbitt, he realizes when she
returns from her vacation. In past years he had missed her when she was gone;
now he feels nothing, though he does his best to fake pleasure at her
return.
The memory of his trip to Maine with Paul haunts
Babbitt, and after much thought he decides to make the same trip this year.
Knowing that his wife won`t understand what he`s about to do, he lies that he
must go to New York on business.
All the way to Maine, Babbitt idealizes the woodsmen he
met there the year before. To him, guides like Joe Paradise represent a free and
brave world that is completely the opposite of conformist Zenith. He half talks
himself into abandoning his family to live in the woods. It wouldn`t take any
more nerve to do that, he tells himself, than it did for Paul to go to
prison.
Babbitt arrives in Maine hopeful that Joe Paradise and
the other guides will see that he`s not just an ordinary tourist but is well on
his way to becoming a woodsman. The guides, though, are more interested in their
poker game than they are in Babbitt, and the next morning Babbitt greets Joe "as
a fellow caveman," but we soon see that Joe isn`t nearly as interested in the
wilderness life as Babbitt is. Babbitt wants to hike to camp, Joe wants to go by
motorboat. After Babbitt insists, the two set out on foot, but it`s soon obvious
that Joe is as out-of-shape as is the city-soft Babbitt, and as ignorant of
nature. The next day, when Babbitt--happy to be living the manly life in the
woods--asks Joe what he would do if he had a lot of money, Joe answers that he`d
go to a nearby town and open a shoe store. At heart, Joe is no different from
any member of the Zenith Boosters` Club.
Babbitt finds himself thinking about his office, the
Athletic Club, his family. "I won`t go back," he tells himself. But he realizes
that in fact he`s never left Zenith, because he`s never left himself. Four days
later he`s on the train for home. His attempt at escape has failed, and though
he insists that somehow he`ll make a different life for himself back home, he
knows that the hopes for any real change are slim.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 26
On the train, Babbitt searches for familiar faces, but
he sees only Seneca Doane, the radical lawyer defeated by Lucas Prout. Doane
represents everything Babbitt and his conservative business friends oppose. In
fact, though, he could easily have been one of them, for he was in Babbitt`s
class in college and started a promisingly lucrative career as a corporate
lawyer. Somehow he gave up that career and took what Babbitt considers an almost
traitorous path.
Babbitt is hungry enough for companionship that he
approaches Doane. The two men talk, a little nervously, Babbitt asking Doane
about his political career. Babbitt finds himself warming to Doane. He
apologizes for helping Prout`s campaign against him, but Doane reassuringly
tells Babbitt he understands. And Doane flatters Babbitt by saying that Babbitt
makes a good spokesman for "The Organization"--Doane`s term for the conservative
businessmen who run Zenith--because Babbitt once had a reputation for being a
liberal and sensitive young man. In fact, we learn, in college Babbitt wanted to
be a lawyer so he could help the poor: he wanted to be the kind of man Seneca
Doane eventually became.
Babbitt, proud that someone remembers his past ideals,
tries to convince Doane that they haven`t entirely vanished. He isn`t like other
Zenith businessmen, Babbitt claims; he`s broad-minded and
liberal.
Doane shrewdly takes advantage of Babbitt`s sudden
"liberalism" by asking Babbitt to help defend Beecher Ingram, a
Congregationalist minister removed from his church. Babbitt is flattered enough
to agree. Happily he listens to Doane reminisce about a career that by Zenith
standards has been daring in the extreme. Doane lobbied for the single tax (a
progressive tax measure much debated in the early 1900s) and attended
international labor congresses.
We`ve already seen Seneca Doane to be one of the most
intelligent characters in Babbitt, a man who possesses a real understanding of
Zenith`s problems and who is trying to solve them. His conversation with Babbitt
reveals him to be urbane and sensitive. Yet, as Doane says, "But of course we
visionaries do rather get beaten." And perhaps he is too urbane and sensitive to
be a truly effective fighter against crude, business-mad
Zenith.
As for Babbitt, under Doane`s influence he convinces
himself that he too is daring and idealistic. How much of this is real and how
much is self-delusion? On the one hand, he is sick of his life in Zenith. On the
other hand, he clearly has little understanding of the movements and the people
Doane is talking about.
Babbitt`s beliefs are immediately tested. He goes to
visit Zilla Riesling, full of vague plans to help her and Paul as well. But
Zilla has changed. The plump, lively woman has become old, bloodless, tired; her
shoulder seems permanently crippled.
Babbitt begins to babble cheerfully: Why doesn`t Zilla
ask the governor to pardon Paul? But Zilla isn`t interested. She`s "gotten
religion," she says icily; Paul should stay in prison as an example to all
evildoers.
Babbitt had returned to Zenith determined to transform
himself into a new, liberal man. But Lewis says society is usually strong enough
to change the people who want to change it. Nor is Babbitt the only one who
finds it easier to conform to society rather than to change it. Kenneth Escott
(now engaged to Verona Babbitt) gains fame for newspaper articles attacking
commission houses (companies that buy and sell commodities)--then is hired by a
commission house. This is one of the ways Zenith--and society in general--is
able to render powerless the people who want to reform it.
Ted Babbitt, in college now, seems more interested in
fraternities than in studies, and wants to transfer to engineering school. But
Babbitt insists Ted stay where he is. Babbitt does try out his new beliefs on
his son, defending Seneca Doane, but the defense only shows how shallow the new
beliefs are. Social status is still all-important to Babbitt. The best reason he
can give to become a liberal friend of the working class like Doane is so that
he`ll be invited to parties given by liberal aristocrats like Lord
Wycombe.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 27
Labor strife comes to Zenith, as telephone workers go
out on strike. Violence is threatened; the national guard is called out.
Businessmen who in private life are plump Athletic Club jokesters waddle around
with guns. Hysteria mounts--and Babbitt chooses this time to be publicly
liberal, to make his rebellion an open one.
NOTE: LABOR STRIFE IN 1920S AMERICA Once again Babbitt
mirrors the America of the early 1920s. It was an era of great labor unrest and,
among conservative businessmen, great worry. Were labor unions getting too
powerful? Were they linked to Communism? These fears were strong enough to
divide many cities into warring camps.
At first Babbitt agrees with his Athletic Club friends
that labor agitators should be shot. But when he reads a pamphlet alleging that
workers don`t earn enough money to feed themselves, he`s troubled. He attends
church, hoping to find an answer, but hears the Reverend Drew deliver an attack
on unions that is as vicious as it is illogical. (Again, Lewis shows how
religion in Zenith is used to keep the poor in their place.)
"Oh, rot," Babbitt says of Drew`s sermon. At last he
sees the reverend for the smooth-talking hypocrite he is. Chum Frink, sitting
nearby, looks at Babbitt doubtfully--and you begin to see that Babbitt`s
rebellion will not go unnoticed, or unopposed.
The following Tuesday, Babbitt, driving from his office,
sees a crowd of strikers. At first he reacts as he would have in his old,
conservative days: he hates the strikers for being poor, says they wouldn`t be
common workmen if they had any "pep." He admires the way the National Guard
breaks up the march. But when he sees Seneca Doane and a distinguished professor
marching, too, he`s forced to admit that perhaps the workers have the same right
to the street as anyone else.
At lunch, Babbitt is silent, disturbed. Then, when the
officious Captain Drum of the National Guard says he wishes he`d been able to
use violence against the crowd, Babbitt does something he`s never done before:
he takes a public, political stand against his friends. Their reaction is
immediate and frightening. Professor Pumphrey angrily accuses him of defending
hoodlums. Vergil Gunch, even more ominously, stares at Babbitt like a silent
judge. Babbitt backs down, but his apology doesn`t seem to satisfy anyone. As he
leaves the club, he overhears Chum Frink telling of Babbitt`s attack on the
Reverend Drew. Later, when Babbitt stands listening to Beecher Ingram, he sees
Gunch spying on him.
Babbitt`s new views aren`t popular at home either. Mrs.
Babbitt, astonished at his defense of the strikers, assumes he is joking. His
wife doesn`t understand the new man he`s become, Babbitt realizes. But he
doesn`t really understand himself either. He feels the forces of conformity, led
by Vergil Gunch, massing to attack.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 28
From political rebellion Babbitt switches to romantic
rebellion. Mrs. Tanis Judique calls, and Babbitt agrees to inspect her leaking
roof. The strike has been crushed, and, on the surface, Babbitt`s life is back
to normal (though Vergil Gunch seems less friendly than before). But Babbitt
feels lonely. After lingering in the office to convince himself he`s only
interested in business, he drives to Mrs. Judique`s apartment, happy to be
seeing the lovely woman again.
As Babbitt and Mrs. Judique climb to check the leaking
roof, they flirt with each other, flattering each other`s love of beautiful
views. Babbitt stays for a cup of tea. He enjoys the feeling of security Tanis
gives him, and feels so at ease that he complains of things he never mentions to
his wife.
Babbitt goes into Tanis`s bedroom for an ashtray. When
he returns, he finds his contentment with her simple companionship has been
replaced by a strong desire to touch her. He insists he be allowed to stay for
dinner, and he calls Mrs. Babbitt, lying about a business deal that will keep
him late. He and Tanis sit on the couch, talking of their happiness at finding
each other, and Babbitt doesn`t return home until dawn.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 29
Babbitt`s rebellion reaches its peak. Fortified by his
affair with Tanis Judique, he no longer cares what his old friends think of him.
At the Athletic Club he openly praises Seneca Doane and Lord Wycombe (though we
still may doubt he knows who Lord Wycombe really is), and not even Vergil
Gunch`s rough words make him back down.
At last, Babbitt thinks, he`s found the woman who will
make him happy. Compared to Mrs. Babbitt, Tanis is young, exotic, carefree.
She`s also discreet, pretending to be a business client when out with Babbitt in
public. Babbitt is afraid his wife will find out about the affair (she already
suspects something, he fears), but he finds it impossible even to imitate
affection toward her. When, after New Year`s, Mrs. Babbitt says she must visit
her sick sister, Babbitt doesn`t protest the way he once would have. Instead he
goes to see Tanis.
Babbitt`s entire life changes. The man who had once
seemed completely tied to routine now goes wild with sexual desire, whiskey, and
new friends--Tanis`s friends, who call themselves "The Bunch." They include
Carrie Nork, a spinsterish woman who tries futilely to look youthful; Minnie
Sonntag, clever and sarcastic; three weak-looking young men; and one man of
Babbitt`s age, Fulton Bemis. Babbitt dislikes them at first and dislikes Tanis
for being with them. But he weakens, and within two weeks is almost a charter
member of this gossiping group.
Once Babbitt has undertaken one act of rebellion he
finds chances for others. The old Babbitt had disapproved of his neighbors, the
Doppelbraus, for their loud, drunken parties. The new Babbitt finds them more
interesting than the respectable Littlefields and happily attends the parties he
once condemned. The old Babbitt was unsuccessful in romancing Louetta Swanson.
The new Babbitt succeeds. He`s "a decent and well-trained libertine" now. (That
is, of course, an ironic contradiction in terms.)
The libertine Babbitt drives drunkenly, staggers into
his house, feels stupid for spending time with people he doesn`t like. Every
morning he resolves to change, but by noon his resolve is weakening; by four
he`s drinking from his flask; and by six he`s back with the
Bunch.
But his friends are growing suspicious, and frustrated
at Babbitt`s desire to keep their affair secret, Tanis demands to go places with
him openly. During lunch at the Hotel Thornleigh her elegant dress brings
stares, including--Babbitt is horrified to discover--the stares of Vergil
Gunch.
Later that afternoon Gunch appears at Babbitt`s office.
Babbitt fears that Gunch will make an accusation about Tanis, but the coal
dealer wants to discuss something else. Gunch and other conservative Zenith
businessmen are disturbed by communism, socialism, and labor unrest. A
nationwide organization, the Good Citizens` League, has been formed to combat
such evils, and Gunch wants to form a chapter in Zenith. The League will oppose
anyone who holds political views that differ from its own. "Social
boycotts"--refusing to socialize or do business with nonconformists--will be the
first tactic. If that doesn`t work, Gunch hints, more severe punishments will be
carried out.
NOTE: THE GOOD CITIZENS` LEAGUE Here Lewis is again
satirizing politics as practiced in the America of the early 1920s. As we`ve
already seen, the early part of the decade was a time of considerable political
unrest. One conservative response to this unrest, which was often viewed as
communist inspired, was the formation of groups like the Good Citizens` League.
To Lewis, such groups were far worse than the threats they claimed to fight, for
they were attempting to crush freedom of speech.
Babbitt is at first noncommittal, and when Gunch cites
Seneca Doane as the sort of man the GCL will oppose, he defends Doane as an old
friend. But Gunch warns that even friendship mustn`t stand in the way of the
fight "for decency and the security of our homes."
Now comes the moment Babbitt has been dreading. Gunch
announces that everyone knows about Babbitt`s suspicious friendship with Doane
and about his affair with Tanis Judique. At first Babbitt`s old friends blamed
his errors on the sorrow he felt for Paul Riesling, but they can no longer be so
tolerant. Babbitt had better return to his conservative ways, Gunch warns; he
had better join the Good Citizens` League.
Babbitt goes to dinner alone. He senses that his friends
are talking about him, spying on him. He tells himself that he won`t go to see
Tanis. But for now, his desire remains stronger than his cowardice: he does go
to see her, late at night.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 30
The previous summer, Mrs. Babbitt had been anxious to
return to Zenith. Now she suspects that something is wrong between her and her
husband, and she sends wistful letters hinting that she`d like Babbitt to tell
her he misses her. Impulsively, he writes to say that he does. He tries his best
to give her an eager welcome home, and her gift of a cigar case touches him; he
sees again the lonely young girl he married. But he still hopes to maintain his
affair with Tanis.
Mrs. Babbitt`s suspicions about her husband increase.
And though Babbitt finds himself remembering some moments of their marriage
fondly, he is irritable with his wife.
At this point, Mrs. Babbitt stages her own small,
foolish rebellion. One night a discussion of household finances leads to an
argument over Babbitt`s drinking. And then Babbitt tells his wife what he thinks
of his life in Zenith. He`s tired of the routine, the worrying, he says; he
regrets that he isn`t the great orator he once thought he`d be. But now Mrs.
Babbitt voices her own disappointments. "Don`t you suppose I ever get tired of
fussing?" she asks.
The argument ends with Mrs. Babbitt making her husband
promise to attend a lecture on "Cultivating the Sun Spirit," to be delivered by
Mrs. Opal Emerson Mudge of the American New Thought League, a movement that has
won Mrs. Babbitt`s enthusiastic support.
Mrs. Mudge`s speech is inane, but Mrs. Babbitt finds it
inspiring. Babbitt thinks she`s ridiculous and says so. Mrs. Mudge`s philosophy
is, he sees, just another way for people to run away from themselves. And if
he`s going to run away from himself, he`d rather do it dancing in a
bar.
Babbitt`s words lead to another argument with his wife,
the worst yet. He thinks of separating from her; they drive off in dreadful
silence.
NOTE: THE NEW THOUGHT LEAGUE With Mrs. Mudge and the
American New Thought League, Lewis is satirizing another aspect of American
life, our fondness for half-baked philosophical cults--a fondness that was
especially strong in the 1920s. Do such groups still exist today? Are we more or
less susceptible to them? What do they offer us?
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 31
Babbitt is unable to make up his mind. At times he
thinks fondly of his wife; at other times he feels trapped by her. He is cool to
Tanis; when she writes to ask if she has somehow offended him, he irritably asks
himself, "Why can`t she let me alone?" Then he decides he must see
her.
The following day is tense. At the Union Club, Vergil
Gunch discusses the Good Citizens` League but doesn`t include Babbitt in the
conversation. At the office, Babbitt must listen to the family troubles of a
salesman and the health problems of a client, and at home Mrs. Babbitt complains
about her maid and Tinka about her teacher. It`s with some desperation that
Babbitt makes his escape.
When he arrives at Tanis`s apartment, he finds her as
beautiful as ever. She gives him a drink; she listens to his troubles. But he
grows angry when she tells of hers, which he selfishly considers dull and
unimportant. After a while, the conversation falters. Babbitt sees that Tanis`s
elegance can`t hide the fact that she`s on the verge of unattractive middle age.
It`s time, he decides, to break off the affair.
As Babbitt so often does, he tries to blame his missteps
on someone else. Tanis should not have forced him to visit her when he has so
many other worries. He needs to be free, he proclaims. And she agrees. "Thank
God that`s over," Babbitt cries.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 32
Mrs. Babbitt is annoyed and suspicious when Babbitt
returns from his visit with Tanis. Babbitt becomes angry enough to admit that,
yes, he has been seeing another woman. It`s Mrs. Babbitt`s fault that he has, he
says; she makes him feel dull and old.
Overwhelmed by this attack, Mrs. Babbitt mournfully
concedes that perhaps she has been slightly at fault. Babbitt takes this apology
as evidence that he is completely guiltless. Only briefly does he admit that he
has been a bully--and as usual, this moment of humility doesn`t last. He needs
to be free, he tells himself--free of his wife, of Tanis, of
everyone.
But Babbitt won`t be allowed that freedom. The next day
the social consequences of his rebellion become clearer. At the Boosters` Club
lunch a congressman speaks against foreign immigration. The speech is a "bunch
of hot air," but when Babbitt voices this truth, his friends glare
disapprovingly at him. Particularly indignant is the famous surgeon, Dr. A. I.
Dilling. As Dr. Dilling glowers, Babbitt backs down.
The next day, Dilling, Charles McKelvey, and Colonel
Rutherford Snow, owner of the Zenith newspaper, barge into Babbitt`s office.
They deliver an ultimatum: Babbitt must join the Good Citizens` League. Babbitt,
hardly a sophisticated political thinker, can`t even remember why he refused to
join the league when Vergil Gunch first asked him. But he doesn`t want to be
bullied into anything.
Now you can begin to see the full price of refusing to
conform in Zenith. Colonel Snow points out that Babbitt and his father-in-law
have long been part of the group who profitably (and, we know, not very
honestly) ran the city. If Babbitt wants to turn against that group and run with
a "loose" crowd, side with "radicals" like Seneca Doane, he is free to do that,
Colonel Snow says. But if he does, his old friends will make life very difficult
for him.
Soon enough, Babbitt sees the ways in which his old
friends can injure him, as they begin the "social boycott" Vergil Gunch warned
of earlier. Mrs. Babbitt pressures her husband as well, asking why he won`t join
the league when "all the nicest people in town belong." Babbitt defends his
actions with surprising eloquence: the league stands for suppression of free
speech and free thought. But to Mrs. Babbitt her husband`s defense of these
American ideals sounds as foreign and as dangerous as the socialist opinions of
their German furnace man.
Babbitt`s feeling of isolation grows. William Eathorne
ignores his morning greeting. Henry T. Thompson admits that the Good Citizens`
League is a fraudulent group fighting plots that don`t exist, but warns Babbitt
if he doesn`t go along he`ll be labeled an unstable crank. The truth of
Thompson`s warning is proven when Conrad Lyte refuses to do business with
Babbitt and when the Zenith Street Traction Company takes its latest corrupt
deal to a competing firm.
By now Babbitt is so frightened he`d gladly join the GCL
if invited, but no further invitation is extended. He`s no longer asked to poker
parties; he`s ignored by the Chamber of Commerce. Even his secretary, Miss
McGoun, quits. In desperation he visits Tanis, but she is cool and aloof to the
man who so recently deserted her. Mrs. Babbitt offers no comfort. Only Ted and
Eunice Littlefield support him, naively impressed that Babbitt has stood up to
Zenith and unaware of the punishment he is suffering.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 33
That night in bed, Mrs. Babbitt wakes up complaining of
a pain in her side. Babbitt calls Dr. Patten, who finds signs of
appendicitis.
In the face of his wife`s illness, Babbitt loses
whatever courage he still possessed. Though earlier that evening he had been
longing to see Tanis, he now looks at his sick wife and realizes he`s tied to
her permanently, for better or for worse.
In the morning Dr. Patten returns and tells Babbitt
he`ll be bringing in another doctor for consultation. Babbitt goes briefly to
his office but is too distracted to work. When Dr. Patten returns, the
consulting physician turns out to be Dr. Dilling, the surgeon who demanded that
Babbitt join the GCL.
Dilling diagnoses the problem as appendicitis and tells
Babbitt his wife must be operated on immediately lest peritonitis set in. Mrs.
Babbitt is terrified. (An appendectomy was a more serious operation in the 1920s
than it generally is today.) Her fear weakens Babbitt: he vows that he loves her
more than anything in the world, and when she piteously says it might be a good
thing if she did die because she`s old and stupid and ugly, he begins to
sob.
Babbitt`s revolt is over. It was, he sees, doomed from
the start. He`s too tied to his wife; he`s too tied to life in Zenith. All he
had enjoyed was a final fling before "the paralyzed contentment of middle
age."
Mrs. Babbitt is hurried into the operating room while
Babbitt waits and worries. The fear he feels makes him want to completely repent
of his rebellion. He swears faithfulness to his wife, to Zenith, to business, to
the Boosters` Club, to all the values he abandoned by befriending Seneca Doane
and having an affair with Tanis Judique. A nurse announces that the operation
has been a success.
Mrs. Babbitt remains in the hospital for seventeen days.
Her illness brings the husband and wife together: Babbitt hints that he`s had an
affair, but Mrs. Babbitt, far from feeling hurt, seems flattered her husband was
worthy of a "Wicked Woman`s" attentions.
Just as he returns to his wife, Babbitt returns to his
old conservative friends. They rally around the Babbitts in this time of need,
bringing jelly, novels, and bed jackets to Mrs. Babbitt in the
hospital.
NOTE: THE COMFORT AND LIMITS OF FRIENDSHIP IN ZENITH
Past chapters of Babbitt have amply shown you the cruelties of life in Zenith.
This chapter shows you some of the kindnesses. Vergil Gunch and Babbitt`s other
old friends are fond of Mrs. Babbitt and truly anxious about her health. And
they`re genuinely concerned that Babbitt return to their side. But Lewis doesn`t
want you to forget that these are the same people who made Babbitt an exile in
his own city. Zenith is a friendly place, but friendship is extended only to
those who conform. That`s one of the chief ways Zenith guarantees
conformity.
At the end of his visit, Vergil Gunch asks Babbitt to
join the Good Citizens` League. Joyfully Babbitt agrees. Rebellion has taken
more strength than he possesses. Within two weeks he`s calling Seneca Doane
wicked, denouncing labor unions and immigrants, and praising golf, morality, and
bank accounts. Zenith is victorious.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: CHAPTER 34
To begin this, the final chapter of Babbitt, Lewis draws
back to show you not only Babbitt but the city and country he calls home. The
Good Citizens` League has triumphed, especially in Zenith and other midwestern
cities. It`s popular not only among Babbitt and his middle-class friends, but
among the very rich, who use it to keep the lower classes in their
place.
NOTE: LEWIS`S GRIM VIEW OF ZENITH AND AMERICA This is
perhaps Lewis`s grimmest, most cynical view of life in Zenith and in America.
Not only has Babbitt`s rebellion been crushed, but similar rebellions across the
country are being crushed as the Good Citizen`s League spreads. American
democracy has been distorted to maintain class differences but erase difference
of opinion; democracy "did not imply any equality of wealth, but did demand a
wholesome sameness of thought, dress, painting, morals and vocabulary." Do you
think this was an accurate view? And have things gotten better, or worse, since
Lewis`s day?
Babbitt stays an active member of the GCL just long
enough to restore his standing as a respectable citizen. He`s more comfortable
simply resuming his old routine of Boosters` Club meetings.
One thing that does worry him is the possibility that
his fling with Tanis may have imperiled his chances to go to heaven. For that
reason he asks the Reverend Drew for advice. As usual, Drew seems less a man of
God than a hard-driving business executive. His eyes glisten in hopes that
Babbitt will confess some exciting sin, but when Babbitt refuses to go into
detail, Drew grows impatient and says he can spare only five minutes for prayer.
During the prayer, smirking, unpleasant Sheldon Smeeth offers Babbitt his help,
an offer so unnerving that Babbitt rushes to escape.
Slowly Babbitt finds some limited peace. He takes
pleasure in his daughter`s marriage to Kenneth Escott. And he`s once again one
of the best-liked members of the Boosters` Club. As the club laughs at his newly
revealed middle name--the "F" in George F. Babbitt stands for
Follansbee--Babbitt "knows that he [is] secure again and popular" and "that he
would no more endanger his security and popularity by straying from the Clan of
Good Fellows."
In business, too, he regains his lost stature: Jake
Offutt wants to make his next crooked deal with the help of Babbitt-Thompson
Realty. Babbitt vows that as soon as he can, he`ll break away from Offutt and
the Traction Gang, but, as so often before, he loses courage. He begins to think
of the money the Traction deals have earned him, of the isolation that will come
if he offends the Zenith business community a second time. Perhaps, he tells
himself, he can be honest after he retires.
NOTE: BABBITT, THE SLIGHTLY CHANGED MAN Babbitt is
pleased that "the last scar of his rebellion was healed." Yet he isn`t quite the
same man he was at the start of the novel. Then, despite his vague unhappiness,
he was blind to his faults and to the faults of Zenith. Now he sees them in all
their depressing detail. He knows he should be honest but realizes he won`t be;
he admits he isn`t strong enough to withstand Zenith`s demands to conform.
"They`ve licked me; licked me to a finish!" he whimpers--and he`s right. Do you
admire Babbitt for gaining self-knowledge or do you condemn him for his
weakness?
The following weekend Ted comes home from college. On
Saturday night he takes Eunice Littlefield out to a dance. Early the next
morning the Babbitts are horrified to find him sleeping with Eunice in his
bedroom.
"Let me introduce my wife," Ted announces. The scandal
of the elopement brings the Littlefields, Verona and Kenneth Escott, and the
Henry T. Thompsons rushing to Babbitt`s house to proclaim the couple`s
immorality.
"I`m getting just about enough of being hollered at,"
Ted says. And Babbitt, perhaps surprisingly, takes his son`s side. He leads Ted
into the dining room, where he says that the Babbitt men must stick together. He
doesn`t approve of early marriages, but he does approve of Eunice and of
Ted.
Ted wants to quit college and become a mechanic. Slowly,
Babbitt ponders this idea. You can almost hear him thinking about the way his
youthful dream--and Paul`s and so many others` in Zenith--were crushed. "I`ve
never done a single thing I`ve wanted to in my whole life," he tells his
son.
NOTE: BABBITT`S ENDING Lewis has given you much to
laugh about in Babbitt, but he`s also given you much to consider. George Babbitt
is in many ways a comic figure, but now, at the end of the novel, he`s also a
pathetic one. His rebellion is crushed. He`s gained self-knowledge--in that way,
at least, he has grown over the course of the book--but he hasn`t really gained
courage. He knows he needs to change but he also knows he doesn`t have the
strength to change. All he can hope is that Ted will avoid making the mistakes
he made--of being afraid of the family, afraid of Zenith, afraid of
himself.
Given what you know of Zenith, do you think Ted will be
able to fulfill his father`s hopes? Lewis doesn`t answer the question. For the
moment, at least, Babbitt speaks loudly and optimistically to his son. "The
world is yours!" he encourages, and the two of them march into the living room
to face the rest of their family.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: GLOSSARY
AMERICAN NEW THOUGHT LEAGUE Philosophical organization
promoted by Mrs. Opal Emerson Mudge and supported by Mrs.
Babbitt.
ATHLETIC CLUB Middle-class businessmen`s club, less
prestigious than the Union Club, to which Babbitt belongs.
BOHEMIAN Originally a term used to describe artists who
flout society`s conventions. It`s used by Babbitt to describe--first
disapprovingly, then enviously--people like the Doppelbraus or "The Bunch," who
seem to lead lives more exciting than his.
BOOSTERS` CLUB Organization devoted to promoting
business and Zenith: a symbol of Zenith`s loud, mindless
optimism.
THE BUNCH Tanis Judique`s friends, who consider
themselves rebellious nonconformists.
CATAWBA Babbitt`s small, rural hometown, where his
mother and stepbrother still live. It`s a symbol of the older America that`s
being replaced by modern, urban Zenith.
CHATHAM ROAD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Church run by the
Reverend John Jennison Drew; a symbol of religion corrupted by
business.
DANTE Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), Italian poet, author
of The Divine Comedy. He`s jokingly summoned during a seance at the Babbitts`
dinner party.
FLORAL HEIGHTS Upper middle-class Zenith neighborhood
where Babbitt and his friends live.
GOOD CITIZENS` LEAGUE Nationwide organization devoted
to opposing--and silencing--those it considers too liberal.
MONARCH Zenith`s rival city and host of the S.A.R.E.B.
convention.
OUTING GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Babbitt`s country club,
less prestigious than the Tonawanda Country Club.
PENTECOSTAL COMMUNION FAITH Grim religion to which
Zilla Riesling converts after her shooting.
POMPEIAN BARBER SHOP A virtual palace devoted to the
care of businessmen. Its employees include the pretty da
Putiak.
PROHIBITION The outlawing of alcohol in the United
States, which under the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution lasted from
1919 to 1932.
ROUGHNECKS The Athletic Club group with whom Babbitt
usually lunches. It includes Vergil Gunch, Chum Frink, and Howard
Littlefield.
S.A.R.E.B. State Association of Real Estate Boards
organization that Babbitt addresses at its convention.
UNION CLUB The most prestigious men`s club in Zenith.
Charles McKelvey is a member, and Babbitt would like to be.
ZENITH ADVOCATE-TIMES Zenith`s morning newspaper, owned
by Colonel Rutherford Snow, from which Babbitt gets most of his news and
opinions.
ZENITH STREET TRACTION COMPANY Zenith transit utility,
which is involved in many corrupt deals with Babbitt-Thompson
Realty.
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THE BABBITT TYPE
Let me confess at once that this story has given me vast
delight. I know the Babbitt type, I believe, as well as most; for twenty years I
have devoted myself to the exploration of its peculiarities. Lewis depicts it
with complete and absolute fidelity. There is irony in the picture; irony that
is unflagging and unfailing, but nowhere is there any important departure from
the essential truth. Babbitt has a great clownishness in him, but he never
becomes a mere clown.... Every American city swarms with his brothers. They run
things in the Republic, East, West, North, South.... They are the Leading
Citizens, the speakers at banquets, the profiteers, the corruptors of politics,
the supporters of evangelical Christianity, the peers of the realm. Babbitt is
their archetype. He is no worse than most, and no better; he is the average
American of the ruling minority in this hundred and forty-sixth year of the
Republic. He is America incarnate, exuberant and exquisite. Study him well and
you will know better what is the matter with the land we live
in...
-H. L. Mencken, "Portrait of an American
Citizen,"
1922; reprinted in Mark Schorer, Sinclair
Lewis:
A Collection of Critical Essays, 1962
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THE IMPORTANCE OF POSSESSIONS IN
BABBITT
...material possessions are the symbol of power to
Babbitt.... These possessions mark the difference between a real-estate salesman
and a realtor--between the Athletic Club and the Union Club--between the state
university and the eastern colleges--between Babbitt`s less successful friends,
the Overbrooks, whom he snubs, and the socially prominent McKelveys, who snub
him. For the sake of these possessions Babbitt sacrifices both his physical
vigor ("Ought to take more exercise; keep in shape...") and his peace of mind
("Like to go off some place and be able to hear myself think..."). In the course
of acquiring possessions he is forced to alienate himself from the human beings
who work with him. And, having acquired them, he is forced to mold his own
personality into the pattern of the social institutions which dispense or
safeguard these possessions.
-Maxwell Geismer, "On Babbitt," 1947; reprinted
in
Martin Light, The Merrill Studies in Babbitt,
1971
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: ON BABBITT
...Lewis`s conclusions about Babbitt`s future are not
entirely negative. He shares with Lewis`s other heroes a yearning for
self-realization and fulfillment. If it is too late for him to find fulfillment,
at least he may achieve realization. This realization, once established, will
never again allow Babbitt contentment or peace of mind, will never again permit
him to warm himself against the bodies of the herd, but it is worth more than
any of these. Babbitt is not of heroic dimensions--nor could he ever be so ion
the conditions of his world; but he is an adult or promises to become one at the
novel`s end. He walks out to face the world and live in it, although it is no
longer Eden.
-Sheldon Norman Grebstein, Sinclair Lewis,
1962
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LEWIS`S GIFT FOR
MIMICRY
[Lewis] performed a function that has nearly gone out of
American fiction, and American fiction is thinner for the loss. Many American
novelists today tell us about our subjective lives, and on that subject Sinclair
Lewis could hardly speak at all. Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Faulkner--they all had
some sense of the tragic nature of human experience that was denied to Lewis.
Lyric joy, sensuous ecstasy--to these, too, he was apparently a stranger. But he
had a stridently comic gift of mimicry that many a more polished American writer
does not have at all. And a vision of a hot and dusty hell: the American
hinterland. He gave Americans their first shuddering glimpses into a frightening
reality of which until he wrote they were unaware and of which he himself may
also have been unaware.... [He] could document for an enormous audience the
character of a people and a class, and, without repudiating either, criticize
and laugh uproariously at both. In any strict literary sense, he was not a great
writer, but without his writing one cannot imagine modern American literature.
No more, without his writing, could Americans today imagine themselves. His
epitaph should be: He did us good.
-Mark Schorer, Sinclair Lewis, 1963
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: THE WORLD OF BABBITT
...Since Lewis`s folk are not alive in senses, mind, or
spirit, they could scarcely be expected to have a social life. They carry on, of
course, a group existence, for solitude is terrifying to them. Yet when they
have gathered together, they have nothing to say to one another.... Their
sociability is ghastly as any lifeless imitation of a living thing must be
ghastly. It is a dance of galvanized dead. Lewis`s world is a social desert, and
for the best of reasons, that it is a human desert. It is a social void because
each of its members is personally a human emptiness.
-T. K. Whipple, "Sinclair Lewis," 1927;
reprinted in Schorer, 1963
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LEWIS`S USE OF
SATIRE
In the first flush of his triumph in the twenties, when
Lewis did seem to be the bad boy breaking out of school, the iconoclast who was
Mencken`s companion in breaking all the traditional American commandments, it
was easy enough to enjoy his satiric bitterness and regard him as a purely
irreverent figure. But today, when his characters have entered so completely
into the national life and his iconoclasm has become so tedious and safe, it is
impossible to look back at Lewis himself without seeing how much native
fellowship he brought into the novel and how deeply he has always depended on
the common life he satirized...
For what is it about Lewis that strikes one today but
how deeply he has always enjoyed people in America? What is it but the proud
gusto and pleasure behind his caricatures that have always made them so
funny--and so comfortable? Only a novelist fundamentally uncritical of American
life could have brought so much zest to its mechanics; only a novelist anxious
not to surmount the visible scene, but to give it back brilliantly, could have
presented so vivid an image of what Americans are or believe themselves to
be.
-Alfred Kazin, On Native Grounds, 1942
^^^^^^^^^^BABBITT: LEWIS`S WRITING
STYLE
One is led to conclude that the nervous energy that is
so much a part of Lewis`s style, tends to wear readers and critics down....
There is no point in explaining away this characteristic of the Lewis novel
other than to state simply that Lewis is no writer to read in large doses: he is
too singular, too angry, too irritating in both style and statement. This, of
course, is a major source of his power, a way he still makes the presence of his
abrasive personality felt.
-Jane Lundquist, Sinclair Lewis, 1973
Lewis`s flaws of style and some of his puerile notions
will remain a problem for every reader. But perhaps one way to approach his
novels is this: He was a great talker. He began as an admirer of a bad
"literary" language, but he learned the uses of common speech. He employed the
comic potential of the vernacular to expose the boosters and hypocrites he saw
in American life.... He was a demon of anger toward waste and cruelty. Yet he
was sympathetic and could give in to a whimsical imagination, which sought
solace in places governed by a romanticized chivalric code. He began his career
as a journalist and publicist, and perhaps always thought in terms of giant
typography, headlines, billboards. There is amplitude in his best books, and if
he is read for size--for his large quixotic vision--then his faults, in his best
books at least, accordingly diminish.
-Martin Light, The Quixotic Vision of
Sinclair Lewis, 1975
THE END
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