[Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser]@TWC D-Link bookSister Carrie CHAPTER XXXIX 1/32
OF LIGHTS AND OF SHADOWS--THE PARTING OF WORLDS What Hurstwood got as the result of this determination was more self-assurance that each particular day was not the day.
At the same time, Carrie passed through thirty days of mental distress. Her need of clothes--to say nothing of her desire for ornaments-grew rapidly as the fact developed that for all her work she was not to have them.
The sympathy she felt for Hurstwood, at the time he asked her to tide him over, vanished with these newer urgings of decency.
He was not always renewing his request, but this love of good appearance was.
It insisted, and Carrie wished to satisfy it, wished more and more that Hurstwood was not in the way. Hurstwood reasoned, when he neared the last ten dollars, that he had better keep a little pocket change and not become wholly dependent for car-fare, shaves, and the like; so when this sum was still in his hand he announced himself as penniless. "I'm clear out," he said to Carrie one afternoon.
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