Jimmie Higgins
CONTENTS
“Jimmie,” said Lizzie, “couldn't we go see the pictures?”
And Jimmie set down the saucer of hot coffee which he was in the act of adjusting to his mouth, and stared at his wife. He did not say anything; in three years and a half as a married man he had learned that one does not always say everything that comes into one's mind. But he meditated on the abysses that lie between the masculine and feminine intellects. That it should be possible for anyone to wish to see a movie idol leaping into second-story windows, or being pulled from beneath flying express trains, on this day of destiny, this greatest crisis in history!
“You know, Lizzie,” he said, patiently, “I've got to help at the Opera-house.”
“But you've got all morning!”
“I know; but it'll take all day.”
And Lizzie fell silent; for she too had learned much in three years and a half of married life. She had learned that working men's wives seldom get all they would like in this world; also that to have a propagandist for a husband is not the worst fate that may befall. After all, he might have been giving his time and money to drink, or to other women; he might have been dying of a cough, like the man next door. If one could not have a bit of pleasure on a Sunday afternoon—well, one might sigh, but not too loud.
Jimmie began telling all the things that had to be done that Sunday morning and afternoon. They seemed to Lizzie exactly like the things that were done on other occasions before meetings. To be sure, this was bigger—it was in the Opera-house, and all the stores had cards in the windows, with a picture of the Candidate who was to be the orator of the occasion. But it was hard for Lizzie to understand the difference between this Candidate and other candidates—none of whom ever got elected! Lizzie would truly rather have stayed at home, for she did not understand English very well when it was shouted from a platform, and with a lot of long words; but she knew that Jimmie was trying to educate her, and being a woman, she was educated to this extent—she knew the way to hold on to her man.
Upton Sinclair
JIMMIE HIGGINS
London
JIMMIE HIGGINS
CHAPTER I. JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE CANDIDATE
CHAPTER II. JIMMIE HIGGINS HEARS A SPEECH
CHAPTER III. JIMMIE HIGGINS DEBATES THE ISSUE
CHAPTER IV. JIMMIE HIGGINS STRIKES IT RICH
CHAPTER V. JIMMIE HIGGINS HELPS THE KAISER
CHAPTER VI. JIMMIE HIGGINS GOES TO JAIL
CHAPTER VII. JIMMIE HIGGINS DALLIES WITH CUPID
CHAPTER VIII. JIMMIE HIGGINS PUTS HIS FOOT IN IT
CHAPTER IX. JIMMIE HIGGINS RETURNS TO NATURE
CHAPTER X. JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE OWNER
CHAPTER XI. JIMMIE HIGGINS FACES THE WAR
CHAPTER XII. JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS A PATRIOT
CHAPTER XIII. JIMMIE HIGGINS DODGES TROUBLE
CHAPTER XIV. JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES THE ROAD
CHAPTER XV. JIMMIE HIGGINS TURNS BOLSHEVIK
CHAPTER XVI. JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE TEMPTER
CHAPTER XVII. JIMMIE HIGGINS WRESTLES WITH THE TEMPTER
CHAPTER XVIII. JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES THE PLUNGE
CHAPTER XIX. JIMMIE HIGGINS PUTS ON KHAKI. I.
CHAPTER XX. JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES A SWIM
CHAPTER XXI. JIMMIE HIGGINS ENTERS SOCIETY
CHAPTER XXII. JIMMIE HIGGINS WORKS FOR HIS UNCLE
CHAPTER XXIII. JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE HUN
CHAPTER XXIV. JIMMIE HIGGINS SEES THE OTHER SIDE
CHAPTER XXV. JIMMIE HIGGINS ENTERS INTO DANGER
CHAPTER XXVI. JIMMIE HIGGINS DISCOVERS HIS SOUL
CHAPTER XXVII. JIMMIE HIGGINS VOTES FOR DEMOCRACY