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and the rest of his family. It is a parallel turbulence to that of Dr. Janney which, in "Family in the Wind," is symbolized by the tornado. When Marion states, in "Babylon Revisited," that it is as though both nature and society, "…face all (their) her fear toward (them) him…," she might have been speaking in either story. (Reader, p.313) Fitzgerald presents both Charlie and Dr. Janney as humanitarians through positive evolutionary character development. For example, Charlie treats women of questionable character with respect and kindness. When he tours Paris alone and stops in a brasserie, he buys a woman breakfast, then, as Fitzgerald describes: "…eludes her encouraging stare, (gives) her a twenty franc note and (takes) a taxi to his hotel". (Reader, p.307) Similarly, when Lorraine, an old female friend from his drinking days offers a rekindling of their relationship, Charlie responds kindly, but without accepting her offer. Dr. Janney's humanitarian characteristics are even more prominently expressed than Charlie's. Consider Fitzgerald's soliloquy written for Dr. Janney:
I chuckle or I weep alcoholically and, as I continue to slow up, life accommodatingly goes faster, so that the less there is of myself inside, the more diverting becomes the moving picture without. I have cut myself off from the respect of my fellow man, but I am aware of a compensatory cirrhosis of the emotions. And because my sensitivity, my pity, no longer has direction, but fixes itself on whatever is at hand, I have become an exceptionally good
fellow--much more so than when I was a good doctor. (Reader, p.350)
See BABYLON, page 9
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