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Financier, The
CHAPTER 58
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ This matter of the pardon of Cowperwood, the exact time of it,
       was kept a secret from him, though the fact that he was to be
       pardoned soon, or that he had a very excellent chance of being,
       had not been denied--rather had been made much of from time to
       time. Wingate had kept him accurately informed as to the progress
       being made, as had Steger; but when it was actually ascertained,
       from the Governor's private secretary, that a certain day would
       see the pardon handed over to them, Steger, Wingate, and Walter
       Leigh had agreed between themselves that they would say nothing,
       taking Cowperwood by surprise. They even went so far--that is,
       Steger and Wingate did--as to indicate to Cowperwood that there
       was some hitch to the proceedings and that he might not now get
       out so soon. Cowperwood was somewhat depressed, but properly
       stoical; he assured himself that he could wait, and that he would
       be all right sometime. He was rather surprised therefore, one
       Friday afternoon, to see Wingate, Steger, and Leigh appear at his
       cell door, accompanied by Warden Desmas.
       The warden was quite pleased to think that Cowperwood should finally
       be going out--he admired him so much--and decided to come along to
       the cell, to see how he would take his liberation. On the way
       Desmas commented on the fact that he had always been a model prisoner.
       "He kept a little garden out there in that yard of his," he confided
       to Walter Leigh. "He had violets and pansies and geraniums out
       there, and they did very well, too."
       Leigh smiled. It was like Cowperwood to be industrious and tasteful,
       even in prison. Such a man could not be conquered. "A very
       remarkable man, that," he remarked to Desmas.
       "Very," replied the warden. "You can tell that by looking at him."
       The four looked in through the barred door where he was working,
       without being observed, having come up quite silently.
       "Hard at it, Frank?" asked Steger.
       Cowperwood glanced over his shoulder and got up. He had been
       thinking, as always these days, of what he would do when he did
       get out.
       "What is this," he asked--"a political delegation?" He suspected
       something on the instant. All four smiled cheeringly, and Bonhag
       unlocked the door for the warden.
       "Nothing very much, Frank," replied Stager, gleefully, "only you're
       a free man. You can gather up your traps and come right along,
       if you wish."
       Cowperwood surveyed his friends with a level gaze. He had not
       expected this so soon after what had been told him. He was not
       one to be very much interested in the practical joke or the surprise,
       but this pleased him--the sudden realization that he was free.
       Still, he had anticipated it so long that the charm of it had been
       discounted to a certain extent. He had been unhappy here, and he
       had not. The shame and humiliation of it, to begin with, had been
       much. Latterly, as he had become inured to it all, the sense of
       narrowness and humiliation had worn off. Only the consciousness
       of incarceration and delay irked him. Barring his intense desire
       for certain things--success and vindication, principally--he found
       that he could live in his narrow cell and be fairly comfortable.
       He had long since become used to the limy smell (used to defeat
       a more sickening one), and to the numerous rats which he quite
       regularly trapped. He had learned to take an interest in chair-caning,
       having become so proficient that he could seat twenty in a day if
       he chose, and in working in the little garden in spring, summer,
       and fall. Every evening he had studied the sky from his narrow
       yard, which resulted curiously in the gift in later years of a
       great reflecting telescope to a famous university. He had not
       looked upon himself as an ordinary prisoner, by any means--had
       not felt himself to be sufficiently punished if a real crime had
       been involved. From Bonhag he had learned the history of many
       criminals here incarcerated, from murderers up and down, and many
       had been pointed out to him from time to time. He had been escorted
       into the general yard by Bonhag, had seen the general food of the
       place being prepared, had heard of Stener's modified life here,
       and so forth. It had finally struck him that it was not so bad,
       only that the delay to an individual like himself was wasteful.
       He could do so much now if he were out and did not have to fight
       court proceedings. Courts and jails! He shook his head when he
       thought of the waste involved in them.
       "That's all right," he said, looking around him in an uncertain
       way. "I'm ready."
       He stepped out into the hall, with scarcely a farewell glance, and
       to Bonhag, who was grieving greatly over the loss of so profitable
       a customer, he said: "I wish you would see that some of these
       things are sent over to my house, Walter. You're welcome to the
       chair, that clock, this mirror, those pictures--all of these things
       in fact, except my linen, razors, and so forth."
       The last little act of beneficence soothed Bonhag's lacerated soul
       a little. They went out into the receiving overseer's office,
       where Cowperwood laid aside his prison suit and the soft shirt
       with a considerable sense of relief. The clog shoes had long
       since been replaced by a better pair of his own. He put on the
       derby hat and gray overcoat he had worn the year before, on entering,
       and expressed himself as ready. At the entrance of the prison he
       turned and looked back--one last glance--at the iron door leading
       into the garden.
       "You don't regret leaving that, do you, Frank?" asked Steger,
       curiously.
       "I do not," replied Cowperwood. "It wasn't that I was thinking
       of. It was just the appearance of it, that's all."
       In another minute they were at the outer gate, where Cowperwood
       shook the warden finally by the hand. Then entering a carriage
       outside the large, impressive, Gothic entrance, the gates were
       locked behind them and they were driven away.
       "Well, there's an end of that, Frank," observed Steger, gayly;
       "that will never bother you any more."
       "Yes," replied Cowperwood. "It's worse to see it coming than
       going."
       "It seems to me we ought to celebrate this occasion in some way,"
       observed Walter Leigh. "It won't do just to take Frank home.
       Why don't we all go down to Green's? That's a good idea."
       "I'd rather not, if you don't mind," replied Cowperwood, feelingly.
       "I'll get together with you all, later. Just now I'd like to go
       home and change these clothes."
       He was thinking of Aileen and his children and his mother and
       father and of his whole future. Life was going to broaden out
       for him considerably from now on, he was sure of it. He had
       learned so much about taking care of himself in those thirteen
       months. He was going to see Aileen, and find how she felt about
       things in general, and then he was going to resume some such duties
       as he had had in his own concern, with Wingate & Co. He was going
       to secure a seat on 'change again, through his friends; and, to
       escape the effect of the prejudice of those who might not care to
       do business with an ex-convict, he was going to act as general
       outside man, and floor man on 'charge, for Wingate & Co. His
       practical control of that could not be publicly proved. Now for
       some important development in the market--some slump or something.
       He would show the world whether he was a failure or not.
       They let him down in front of his wife's little cottage, and he
       entered briskly in the gathering gloom.
       On September 18, 1873, at twelve-fifteen of a brilliant autumn
       day, in the city of Philadelphia, one of the most startling
       financial tragedies that the world has ever seen had its commencement.
       The banking house of Jay Cooke & Co., the foremost financial
       organization of America, doing business at Number 114 South Third
       Street in Philadelphia, and with branches in New York, Washington,
       and London, closed its doors. Those who know anything about the
       financial crises of the United States know well the significance
       of the panic which followed. It is spoken of in all histories as
       the panic of 1873, and the widespread ruin and disaster which
       followed was practically unprecedented in American history.
       At this time Cowperwood, once more a broker--ostensibly a broker's
       agent--was doing business in South Third Street, and representing
       Wingate & Co. on 'change. During the six months which had elapsed
       since he had emerged from the Eastern Penitentiary he had been
       quietly resuming financial, if not social, relations with those
       who had known him before.
       Furthermore, Wingate & Co. were prospering, and had been for some
       time, a fact which redounded to his credit with those who knew.
       Ostensibly he lived with his wife in a small house on North
       Twenty-first Street. In reality he occupied a bachelor apartment
       on North Fifteenth Street, to which Aileen occasionally repaired.
       The difference between himself and his wife had now become a matter
       of common knowledge in the family, and, although there were some
       faint efforts made to smooth the matter over, no good resulted.
       The difficulties of the past two years had so inured his parents
       to expect the untoward and exceptional that, astonishing as this
       was, it did not shock them so much as it would have years before.
       They were too much frightened by life to quarrel with its weird
       developments. They could only hope and pray for the best.
       The Butler family, on the other hand, what there was of it, had
       become indifferent to Aileen's conduct. She was ignored by her
       brothers and Norah, who now knew all; and her mother was so taken
       up with religious devotions and brooding contemplation of her loss
       that she was not as active in her observation of Aileen's life as
       she might have been. Besides, Cowperwood and his mistress were
       more circumspect in their conduct than they had ever been before.
       Their movements were more carefully guarded, though the result was
       the same. Cowperwood was thinking of the West--of reaching some
       slight local standing here in Philadelphia, and then, with perhaps
       one hundred thousand dollars in capital, removing to the boundless
       prairies of which he had heard so much--Chicago, Fargo, Duluth,
       Sioux City, places then heralded in Philadelphia and the East as
       coming centers of great life--and taking Aileen with him. Although
       the problem of marriage with her was insoluble unless Mrs.
       Cowperwood should formally agree to give him up--a possibility
       which was not manifest at this time, neither he nor Aileen were
       deterred by that thought. They were going to build a future
       together--or so they thought, marriage or no marriage. The only
       thing which Cowperwood could see to do was to take Aileen away
       with him, and to trust to time and absence to modify his wife's
       point of view.
       This particular panic, which was destined to mark a notable change
       in Cowperwood's career, was one of those peculiar things which
       spring naturally out of the optimism of the American people and
       the irrepressible progress of the country. It was the result, to
       be accurate, of the prestige and ambition of Jay Cooke, whose early
       training and subsequent success had all been acquired in Philadelphia,
       and who had since become the foremost financial figure of his day.
       It would be useless to attempt to trace here the rise of this man
       to distinction; it need only be said that by suggestions which he
       made and methods which he devised the Union government, in its
       darkest hours, was able to raise the money wherewith to continue
       the struggle against the South. After the Civil War this man, who
       had built up a tremendous banking business in Philadelphia, with
       great branches in New York and Washington, was at a loss for some
       time for some significant thing to do, some constructive work which
       would be worthy of his genius. The war was over; the only thing
       which remained was the finances of peace, and the greatest things
       in American financial enterprise were those related to the
       construction of transcontinental railway lines. The Union Pacific,
       authorized in 1860, was already building; the Northern Pacific and
       the Southern Pacific were already dreams in various pioneer minds.
       The great thing was to connect the Atlantic and the Pacific by
       steel, to bind up the territorially perfected and newly solidified
       Union, or to enter upon some vast project of mining, of which gold
       and silver were the most important. Actually railway-building was
       the most significant of all, and railroad stocks were far and away
       the most valuable and important on every exchange in America. Here
       in Philadelphia, New York Central, Rock Island, Wabash, Central
       Pacific, St. Paul, Hannibal & St. Joseph, Union Pacific, and
       Ohio & Mississippi were freely traded in. There were men who were
       getting rich and famous out of handling these things; and such
       towering figures as Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jay Gould, Daniel Drew,
       James Fish, and others in the East, and Fair, Crocker, W. R. Hearst,
       and Collis P. Huntington, in the West, were already raising their
       heads like vast mountains in connection with these enterprises.
       Among those who dreamed most ardently on this score was Jay Cooke,
       who without the wolfish cunning of a Gould or the practical
       knowledge of a Vanderbilt, was ambitious to thread the northern
       reaches of America with a band of steel which should be a permanent
       memorial to his name.
       The project which fascinated him most was one that related to the
       development of the territory then lying almost unexplored between
       the extreme western shore of Lake Superior, where Duluth now stands,
       and that portion of the Pacific Ocean into which the Columbia River
       empties--the extreme northern one-third of the United States.
       Here, if a railroad were built, would spring up great cities and
       prosperous towns. There were, it was suspected, mines of various
       metals in the region of the Rockies which this railroad would
       traverse, and untold wealth to be reaped from the fertile corn and
       wheat lands. Products brought only so far east as Duluth could
       then be shipped to the Atlantic, via the Great Lakes and the Erie
       Canal, at a greatly reduced cost. It was a vision of empire, not
       unlike the Panama Canal project of the same period, and one that
       bade fair apparently to be as useful to humanity. It had aroused
       the interest and enthusiasm of Cooke. Because of the fact that
       the government had made a grant of vast areas of land on either
       side of the proposed track to the corporation that should seriously
       undertake it and complete it within a reasonable number of years,
       and because of the opportunity it gave him of remaining a
       distinguished public figure, he had eventually shouldered the
       project. It was open to many objections and criticisms; but the
       genius which had been sufficient to finance the Civil War was
       considered sufficient to finance the Northern Pacific Railroad.
       Cooke undertook it with the idea of being able to put the merits
       of the proposition before the people direct--not through the agency
       of any great financial corporation--and of selling to the butcher,
       the baker, and the candlestick-maker the stock or shares that he
       wished to dispose of.
       It was a brilliant chance. His genius had worked out the sale of
       great government loans during the Civil War to the people direct
       in this fashion. Why not Northern Pacific certificates? For several
       years he conducted a pyrotechnic campaign, surveying the territory
       in question, organizing great railway-construction corps, building
       hundreds of miles of track under most trying conditions, and selling
       great blocks of his stock, on which interest of a certain percentage
       was guaranteed. If it had not been that he knew little of
       railroad-building, personally, and that the project was so vast
       that it could not well be encompassed by one man, even so great a
       man it might have proved successful, as under subsequent management
       it did. However, hard times, the war between France and Germany,
       which tied up European capital for the time being and made it
       indifferent to American projects, envy, calumny, a certain percentage
       of mismanagement, all conspired to wreck it. On September 18,
       1873, at twelve-fifteen noon, Jay Cooke & Co. failed for approximately
       eight million dollars and the Northern Pacific for all that had
       been invested in it--some fifty million dollars more.
       One can imagine what the result was--the most important financier
       and the most distinguished railway enterprise collapsing at one
       and the same time. "A financial thunderclap in a clear sky," said
       the Philadelphia Press. "No one could have been more surprised,"
       said the Philadelphia Inquirer, "if snow had fallen amid the
       sunshine of a summer noon." The public, which by Cooke's previous
       tremendous success had been lulled into believing him invincible,
       could not understand it. It was beyond belief. Jay Cooke fail?
       Impossible, or anything connected with him. Nevertheless, he had
       failed; and the New York Stock Exchange, after witnessing a number
       of crashes immediately afterward, closed for eight days. The Lake
       Shore Railroad failed to pay a call-loan of one million seven
       hundred and fifty thousand dollars; and the Union Trust Company,
       allied to the Vanderbilt interests, closed its doors after withstanding
       a prolonged run. The National Trust Company of New York had eight
       hundred thousand dollars of government securities in its vaults,
       but not a dollar could be borrowed upon them; and it suspended.
       Suspicion was universal, rumor affected every one.
       In Philadelphia, when the news reached the stock exchange, it came
       first in the form of a brief despatch addressed to the stock board
       from the New York Stock Exchange--"Rumor on street of failure of
       Jay Cooke & Co. Answer." It was not believed, and so not replied
       to. Nothing was thought of it. The world of brokers paid scarcely
       any attention to it. Cowperwood, who had followed the fortunes
       of Jay Cooke & Co. with considerable suspicion of its president's
       brilliant theory of vending his wares direct to the people--was
       perhaps the only one who had suspicions. He had once written a
       brilliant criticism to some inquirer, in which he had said that
       no enterprise of such magnitude as the Northern Pacific had ever
       before been entirely dependent upon one house, or rather upon one
       man, and that he did not like it. "I am not sure that the lands
       through which the road runs are so unparalleled in climate, soil,
       timber, minerals, etc., as Mr. Cooke and his friends would have
       us believe. Neither do I think that the road can at present, or
       for many years to come, earn the interest which its great issues
       of stock call for. There is great danger and risk there." So
       when the notice was posted, he looked at it, wondering what the
       effect would be if by any chance Jay Cooke & Co. should fail.
       He was not long in wonder. A second despatch posted on 'change
       read: "New York, September 18th. Jay Cooke & Co. have suspended."
       Cowperwood could not believe it. He was beside himself with the
       thought of a great opportunity. In company with every other broker,
       he hurried into Third Street and up to Number 114, where the famous
       old banking house was located, in order to be sure. Despite his
       natural dignity and reserve, he did not hesitate to run. If this
       were true, a great hour had struck. There would be wide-spread
       panic and disaster. There would be a terrific slump in prices of
       all stocks. He must be in the thick of it. Wingate must be on
       hand, and his two brothers. He must tell them how to sell and
       when and what to buy. His great hour had come! _