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New York - The Novel

New York - The Novel

Titel: New York - The Novel Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Edward Rutherfurd
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must be wondering, and she could sympathize. He’s imagining those Oxford colleges, she thought, and what it will do to his reputation if Keller arrives there on his recommendation, and starts making pro-German statements.
    “I remember hearing that Edmund Keller had to study German in connection with his reading at one time,” Rose said blandly. “I believe he speaks several languages. But I can tell you for a fact that his father Theodore doesn’t speak a word of German. The family is as American as, I don’t know, Astor or Hoover, or Studebaker.”
    “Ah.” Elihu Pusey hesitated. “There is another matter, perhaps more serious. I spoke to Nicholas Murray Butler, and he did express to me a slight concern. He feared that some of Mr. Keller’s views might be …” the old man hardly liked even to pronounce the word, “somewhat socialistic.”
    If there was ever a time to dissemble, this was it. For just a moment, Rose looked completely astonished.
    “Socialistic?”
    “Yes.”
    She smiled. “You know Mr. Butler well, I am sure, Mr. Pusey, and he is a man who has prejudices.”
    “True.”
    “Well, I know from my son that Mr. Keller in his lectures, for instance, is always scrupulous to present both sides of a case. And I can imagine Mr. Butler, if he does not care for somebody, accusing them of,” she shrugged, “I don’t know what. But I can assure you of one thing: if Mr. Keller was any kind of a socialist, he’d never have set foot in
my
house.”
    “Butler can be unreasonably prejudiced,” Pusey agreed. “But are you sure about Keller’s private views?”
    “I am for this reason, Mr. Pusey. Just a few years ago, when there was all that trouble about those garment workers striking, I was at a private luncheon. And I heard Mr. Keller speak out—very strongly—against the strikers. He warned everyone there, in the plainest terms, that the strikers were being whipped up by socialists and Russians and anarchists, and that we should give them no consideration at all. He spoke with great passion. I remember it well. And how right he turned out to be.” And having delivered herself of this monstrous, bare-faced lie, she gave old Mr. Pusey a meaningful nod. “So much,” she said drily, “for Nicholas Murray Butler.”
    “Ah.” Elihu Pusey looked immensely gratified. “That is most helpful, Mrs. Master. Really most helpful.”

    It was a couple of months later when Charlie informed her that Edmund Keller would be going away to Oxford.
    “I know it’s what he wanted,” she said with a smile. Three thousand miles away from her impressionable son—everything that she could wish for, but that would remain her little secret.
    “And Keller says that you put in a good word for him with the man who was recommending him. You never told me you did that. Keller’s so grateful to you.”
    “It was nothing. I just happened to meet Mr. Pusey at a party, that’s all.”
    “I know you used not to like Keller too much. I guess you must have changed your mind, after he came to dinner.”
    “Evidently.”
    “I’m so impressed that you could do that. Change your mind, I mean.”
    “Well, thank you.”
    “I can tell you one thing.”
    “What’s that, Charlie?”
    “Edmund Keller,” he said, beaming at her, “is now your friend for life.”
    1925
    Strangely, it was not the death of Anna, nor the war, nor even the bizarre new law—inexplicable to anyone from a wine-producing country—that forbade Americans to consume alcoholic drinks, nor the increasing estrangement of Paolo from his parents that changed the life of Salvatore Caruso’s family. It was his eldest brother Giuseppe and the Long Island Rail Road.
    The LIRR was a wonderful thing. A huge and complex amalgamation of railways and trolley lines, some going back nearly a century, the mighty system ran from Pennsylvania, across Manhattan to Long Island. Through Penn Station in Manhattan, and the great junction at Jamaica, Long Island, millions of commuters now flowed. Naturally, the railroad did everything it could to persuade the world of the merits of Long Island as a place to live, from which you could easily get into the big city. And the expanding island railway lines were chiefly built by Italians.
    As a result, Italian communities had been settling at numerous places along Long Island’s pleasant south shore.
    When America first entered the war, before any conscription lists had been started, Giuseppe Caruso had decided to

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