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Sinclair, Upton, 1878-1968

"They Call Me Carpenter"

There he was, up in the window, exactly where
he had always been; I thought I had suddenly wakened from a dream.
There had been no "prophet fresh from God," no mass-meeting at Grant
Hall, no editorial in the "Times"! But suddenly I heard a voice at
my elbow: "Billy, what is this awful thing you've been doing?" It
was my Aunt Caroline, and I asked what she meant, and she answered,
"That terrible prophet creature, and getting your name into the
papers!"
So I knew it was true, and I walked with my dear, sweet old auntie
down the aisle, and there sat Aunt Jennie, with her two lanky girls
who have grown inches every time I run into them; and also Uncle
Timothy. Uncle Timothy was my guardian until I came of age, so I am
a little in awe of him, and now I had to listen to his whispered
reproaches--it being the first principle of our family never to "get
into the papers." I told him that it wasn't my fault I had been
knocked down by a mob, and surely I couldn't help it if this man
Carpenter found me while I was unconscious, and made me well.


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