ANNOUNCER:
Now, the VOA Special English program AMERICAN STORIES.
(MUSIC)
Our story today is called "Paul's Case." It was written by Willa Cather.
"Paul's Case" will be told in two parts. Here is Kay Gallant with part one of
the story.
STORYTELLER:
Paul hated school. He did not do his homework. He did not like
his teachers. Paul's father did not know what to do with him. His teachers did
not know either. One afternoon, all his teachers at Pittsburgh High School met
together with him to discuss his case. Paul was late. When he entered the room
his teachers sat waiting for him.
He was tall for his age and very thin. His clothes were too small for him,
but they were clean. He had a bright red flower in the button hole of his black
jacket. One of the teachers asked Paul why he had come to the meeting. Paul said
politely that he wanted to do better in school. This was a lie. Paul often lied.
His teachers began to speak. They had many complaints. One said Paul talked
to the other students instead of paying attention to the lessons. Another said
Paul always sat in class with his hands covering his eyes. A third teacher said
Paul looked out the window instead of looking at her. His teachers attacked him
without mercy.
Paul's eyesbrows moved up and down as his teachers spoke. His smile never
left his face, but his fingers shook as he touched the flower on his coat. At
last the meeting was over. Paul's smile got even wider. He bowed gracefully and
left the room.
His teachers were angry and confused. The art teacher spoke for all of them
when he said there was something about Paul that he didn't understand. "I don't
think he really means to be bad," he said. "There's just something wrong with
that boy." Then the art teacher remembered one warm afternoon when Paul had
fallen asleep in his class. Paul's face was white with thin blue veins under the
skin. The boy's face looked tired and lined, like an old man's. His eyebrows
moved up and down, even in his sleep.
After he left the meeting, Paul ran down the hill from the school whistling.
He was late for his job at the concert hall. Paul was an usher there. He showed
people to their seats. He carried messages for them. He brought them their
programs with a polite bow. Everyone thought he was a charming boy and the best
usher at the hall.
When Paul reached the concert hall that evening, he went immediately to the
dressing room. About six boys were already there. Paul began changing his
clothes with excited hands. He loved his green uniform with the gold pockets and
design.
Paul rushed into the concert hall as soon as he had changed clothes. He ran
up and down the hall, helping people. He became more and more excited. His face
became pink and his eyes seemed larger and very bright. He looked almost
handsome. At last everyone was seated. The orchestra began to play and Paul sat
down with a sigh of relief.
The music seemed to free something in Paul's spirit. Then a woman came out
and began to sing. She had a rich, strong soprano voice. Paul felt truly happy
for the first time that day.
At the end of the concert Paul went back to the dressing room. After he had
changed his clothes again he went outside the concert hall. He decided to wait
for the singer to come out. While he waited he looked across the street to the
large hotel called "The Schenley." All the important people stayed at The
Schenley when they visited Pittsburgh. Paul had never been inside it, but he
used to stand near the hotel's wide glass doors. He liked to watch the people
enter and leave. He believed if he could only enter this kind of a hotel, he
would be able to leave school, his teachers, and his ordinary, gray life behind
him. . . forever.
At last the singer came out of the concert hall. Paul followed her as she
walked to the hotel. He was part of a large crowd of admirers who had waited to
see her. When they all reached the hotel, she turned and waved. Then the doors
opened and she disappeared inside. Paul stared into the hotel as the doors
slowly closed. He could feel the warm, sweet air inside. And for a moment, he
felt part of a golden world of sparkling lights and marble floors. He thought
about the mysterious dishes of food being served in the hotel's dining room. He
thought about green bottles of wine growing cold in silver buckets of ice.
He turned away from the hotel and walked home. He thought of his room with
its horrible yellow wallpaper, the old bed with its ugly red cover. He shook his
head.
Soon he was walking down the street where he lived. All the houses on
Cordelia Street were exactly alike. Middle class businessmen had bought them for
their families. All their children went to school and to church. They loved
arithmetic. As Paul walked toward his house he felt as if he were drowning in
ugliness. He longed for cool colors and soft lights and fresh flowers. He didn't
want to see his ugly bedroom or the cold bathroom with its cracked mirror and
gray floor.
Paul went around to the back of his father's house. He found an open window
and climbed into the kitchen. Then he went downstairs to the basement. He was
afraid of rats. But he did not want to face his own bedroom. Paul couldn't
sleep. He sat on the floor and stared into the darkness until morning came.
The following Sunday Paul had to go to church with his family. Afterwards,
everyone came home and ate a big dinner. Then all the people who lived on
Cordelia Street came outside to visit each other.
After supper Paul asked his father if he could visit a friend to get some
help with his arithmetic. Paul left the house with his school books under his
arm. But he didn't go to his friend's house. Instead he went to see Charley
Edwards. Charley was a young actor. Paul liked to spend as much time as he could
at the theater where Charley Edwards and his group acted in their plays.
It was only at the theater and the concert hall that Paul felt really alive.
The moment he smelled the air of these places he felt like a prisoner suddenly
set free. As soon as he heard the concert hall orchestra play he forgot all the
ugly, unpleasant events in his own life.
Paul had discovered that any kind of music awakened his imagination.
Paul didn't want to become a musician, however. He didn't want to become an
actor, either. He only wanted to be near people who were actors and musicians.
He wanted to see the kind of life these artists led.
Paul found a schoolroom even worse after a night at the theater or the
concert hall. He hated the school's bare floors and cracked walls. He turned
away from his dull teachers in their plain clothes. He tried to show them how
little he thought of them and the studies they taught.
He would bring photographs of all the actors he knew to school. He would tell
the other students that he spent his evenings with these people at elegant
restaurants. Then he would announce that he was going away to Europe or to
California, or to Egypt for a while. The next day he would come to school
smiling nervously. His sister was ill, he would say. But he was still planning
to make his trip next spring.
Paul's problems at school became worse. Even after the meeting with his
teachers, things did not get better. He told them he had no time to study
grammar and arithmetic. He told them he had to help the actors in the theater.
They were old friends of his.
Finally, his teachers went to Paul's father. He took Paul out of school and
made him get a job. He told the manager at the concert hall that Paul could not
work there anymore. His father warned the doorman at the theater not to let Paul
into the place. And Charley Edwards promised Paul's father not to see Paul
again.
All the actors at the theater laughed when they heard about the stories Paul
had been telling. The women thought it was funny that Paul had told people he
took them out to nice restaurants and sent them flowers. They agreed with the
teachers and with his father that Paul's was a bad case.
(MUSIC)
ANNOUNCER:
You have just heard part one of the American story "Paul's Case." It was
written by Willa Cather. Your storyteller was Kay Gallant. Listen again next
week at this time for the final part of "Paul's Case" told in Special English on
the Voice of America. I'm Steve Ember.