Thursday, September 19, 2019
Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis :: Sinclair Lewis Arrowsmith
"Arrowsmith", by Sinclair Lewis    In the novel "Arrowsmith", by Sinclair Lewis, written in  1925, one can read of our world's lack of idealism in  science, most often found in the medical profession  (Encarta, 1). This book portrays the times in terms of  scientific advancement not being idealistic, mostly in the  medical field. Our scientists could not come up with their  own ideas and our progress was going nowhere, fast.  Although, today we are advancing so rapidly that we have no  choice but to move and experiment, there is no time to slow  down and copy old works. Sinclair Lewis also combines his  life and the life of a graduating microbiologists, who he  interviewed to help him write this book, into his main  character, Dr. Martin Arrowsmith. All of this goes into the  book "Arrowsmith".     Sinclair lewis was born on the seventh of February, 1885,  in the town of Sauk Centre, Minnesota, to his warmhearted  parents, Emma Kermont Lewis and Dr. Edwin J. Lewis. At a  very young age Sinclair read widely in grade school and  continued on in his studies for many years (Grebstein, 16).  Lewis studied at Yale University form 1903 till 1906. There  he studied literary writings and works to help him become a  writer. His father had disagreed with his career choice,  but he went on and did what he wanted to do most, write. At  one time he was so disgusted with his father that he ran  away and tried to join the Spanish-American War as a  drummer boy (Cobletz, 248). He did not get far; his father  caught him before he left town. Back to collage he went and  even through collage Lewis still read many books. One  professor was quoted as saying "He was drawing more books  from the Yale library than, I believe, any undergraduates  before or since." Lewis was known to read such books from  authors Hardy, Meredith, James, Howells, Austen, Bronte,  Tolstoy, Pushkin, Turgenev, Gogol, Flaubert, Zola, Huneker,  Pinero, Jones, Shaw, d'Annunzio, Sudermann, Yeats, George  Moore, Nietzsche, Haeckel, Huxley, Moody, Marx, Gorky,  Blake, Pater, Shelley, Keats, Coleridge, Rossetti,  Swinburne, Clough, and Ibsen. All of these authors were  influential to him, but none more than the famous H. G.  Wells (Grebstein 24).     He accomplished all this during college while keeping two  or more jobs at one time and writing for several papers  along with his own books that he wrote. In October of 1906  he left school for a few months and stayed with his brother  in his utopian colony in New Jersey. A few months later he  remembered the work ethics his father taught him and went  back to school and got his degree in 1907.  					    
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