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Titan, The
chapter XXX - Obstacles
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ The impediments that can arise to baffle a great and swelling
       career are strange and various. In some instances all the
       cross-waves of life must be cut by the strong swimmer. With
       other personalities there is a chance, or force, that happily
       allies itself with them; or they quite unconsciously ally themselves
       with it, and find that there is a tide that bears them on. Divine
       will? Not necessarily. There is no understanding of it. Guardian
       spirits? There are many who so believe, to their utter undoing.
       (Witness Macbeth). An unconscious drift in the direction of right,
       virtue, duty? These are banners of mortal manufacture. Nothing is
       proved; all is permitted.
       Not long after Cowperwood's accession to control on the West Side,
       for instance, a contest took place between his corporation and a
       citizen by the name of Redmond Purdy--real-estate investor,
       property-trader, and money-lender--which set Chicago by the ears.
       The La Salle and Washington Street tunnels were now in active
       service, but because of the great north and south area of the West
       Side, necessitating the cabling of Van Buren Street and Blue Island
       Avenue, there was need of a third tunnel somewhere south of
       Washington Street, preferably at Van Buren Street, because the
       business heart was thus more directly reached. Cowperwood was
       willing and anxious to build this tunnel, though he was puzzled
       how to secure from the city a right of way under Van Buren Street,
       where a bridge loaded with heavy traffic now swung. There were
       all sorts of complications. In the first place, the consent of
       the War Department at Washington had to be secured in order to
       tunnel under the river at all. Secondly, the excavation, if
       directly under the bridge, might prove an intolerable nuisance,
       necessitating the closing or removal of the bridge. Owing to the
       critical, not to say hostile, attitude of the newspapers which,
       since the La Salle and Washington tunnel grants, were following
       his every move with a searchlight, Cowperwood decided not to
       petition the city for privileges in this case, but instead to buy
       the property rights of sufficient land just north of the bridge,
       where the digging of the tunnel could proceed without interference.
       The piece of land most suitable for this purpose, a lot 150 x 150,
       lying a little way from the river-bank, and occupied by a seven-story
       loft-building, was owned by the previously mentioned Redmond Purdy,
       a long, thin, angular, dirty person, who wore celluloid collars
       and cuffs and spoke with a nasal intonation.
       Cowperwood had the customary overtures made by seemingly disinterested
       parties endeavoring to secure the land at a fair price. But Purdy,
       who was as stingy as a miser and as incisive as a rat-trap, had
       caught wind of the proposed tunnel scheme. He was all alive for
       a fine profit. "No, no, no," he declared, over and over, when
       approached by the representatives of Mr. Sylvester Toomey,
       Cowperwood's ubiquitous land-agent. "I don't want to sell. Go
       away."
       Mr. Sylvester Toomey was finally at his wit's end, and complained
       to Cowperwood, who at once sent for those noble beacons of dark
       and stormy waters, General Van Sickle and the Hon. Kent Barrows
       McKibben. The General was now becoming a little dolty, and
       Cowperwood was thinking of pensioning him; but McKibben was in his
       prime--smug, handsome, deadly, smooth. After talking it over with
       Mr. Toomey they returned to Cowperwood's office with a promising
       scheme. The Hon. Nahum Dickensheets, one of the judges of the
       State Court of Appeals, and a man long since attached, by methods
       which need not here be described, to Cowperwood's star, had been
       persuaded to bring his extensive technical knowledge to bear on
       the emergency. At his suggestion the work of digging the tunnel
       was at once begun--first at the east or Franklin Street end; then,
       after eight months' digging, at the west or Canal Street end. A
       shaft was actually sunk some thirty feet back of Mr. Purdy's
       building--between it and the river--while that gentleman watched
       with a quizzical gleam in his eye this defiant procedure. He was
       sure that when it came to the necessity of annexing his property
       the North and West Chicago Street Railways would be obliged to pay
       through the nose.
       "Well, I'll be cussed," be frequently observed to himself, for he
       could not see how his exaction of a pound of flesh was to be evaded,
       and yet he felt strangely restless at times. Finally, when it
       became absolutely necessary for Cowperwood to secure without further
       delay this coveted strip, he sent for its occupant, who called in
       pleasant anticipation of a profitable conversation; this should
       be worth a small fortune to him.
       "Mr. Purdy," observed Cowperwood, glibly, "you have a piece of
       land on the other side of the river that I need. Why don't you
       sell it to me? Can't we fix this up now in some amicable way?"
       He smiled while Purdy cast shrewd, wolfish glances about the place,
       wondering how much he could really hope to exact. The building,
       with all its interior equipment, land, and all, was worth in the
       neighborhood of two hundred thousand dollars.
       "Why should I sell? The building is a good building. It's as
       useful to me as it would be to you. I'm making money out of it."
       "Quite true," replied Cowperwood, "but I am willing to pay you a
       fair price for it. A public utility is involved. This tunnel
       will be a good thing for the West Side and any other land you may
       own over there. With what I will pay you you can buy more land
       in that neighborhood or elsewhere, and make a good thing out of
       it. We need to put this tunnel just where it is, or I wouldn't
       trouble to argue with you.
       "That's just it," replied Purdy, fixedly. "You've gone ahead and
       dug your tunnel without consulting me, and now you expect me to
       get out of the way. Well, I don't see that I'm called on to get
       out of there just to please you."
       "But I'll pay you a fair price."
       "How much will you pay me?"
       "How much do you want?"
       Mr. Purdy scratched a fox-like ear. "One million dollars."
       "One million dollars!" exclaimed Cowperwood. "Don't you think
       that's a little steep, Mr. Purdy?"
       "No," replied Purdy, sagely. "It's not any more than it's worth."
       Cowperwood sighed.
       "I'm sorry," he replied, meditatively, "but this is really too
       much. Wouldn't you take three hundred thousand dollars in cash
       now and consider this thing closed?"
       "One million," replied Purdy, looking sternly at the ceiling.
       "Very well, Mr. Purdy," replied Cowperwood. "I'm very sorry.
       It's plain to me that we can't do business as I had hoped. I'm
       willing to pay you a reasonable sum; but what you ask is far too
       much--preposterous! Don't you think you'd better reconsider? We
       might move the tunnel even yet."
       "One million dollars," said Purdy.
       "It can't be done, Mr. Purdy. It isn't worth it. Why won't you
       be fair? Call it three hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars
       cash, and my check to-night."
       "I wouldn't take five or six hundred thousand dollars if you were
       to offer it to me, Mr. Cowperwood, to-night or any other time. I
       know my rights."
       "Very well, then," replied Cowperwood, "that's all I can say. If
       you won't sell, you won't sell. Perhaps you'll change your mind
       later."
       Mr. Purdy went out, and Cowperwood called in his lawyers and his
       engineers. One Saturday afternoon, a week or two later, when the
       building in question had been vacated for the day, a company of
       three hundred laborers, with wagons, picks, shovels, and dynamite
       sticks, arrived. By sundown of the next day (which, being Sunday,
       was a legal holiday, with no courts open or sitting to issue
       injunctions) this comely structure, the private property of Mr.
       Redmond Purdy, was completely razed and a large excavation substituted
       in its stead. The gentleman of the celluloid cuffs and collars,
       when informed about nine o'clock of this same Sunday morning that
       his building had been almost completely removed, was naturally
       greatly perturbed. A portion of the wall was still standing when
       he arrived, hot and excited, and the police were appealed to.
       But, strange to say, this was of little avail, for they were shown
       a writ of injunction issued by the court of highest jurisdiction,
       presided over by the Hon. Nahum Dickensheets, which restrained
       all and sundry from interfering. (Subsequently on demand of another
       court this remarkable document was discovered to have disappeared;
       the contention was that it had never really existed or been produced
       at all.)
       The demolition and digging proceeded. Then began a scurrying of
       lawyers to the door of one friendly judge after another. There
       were apoplectic cheeks, blazing eyes, and gasps for breath while
       the enormity of the offense was being noised abroad. Law is law,
       however. Procedure is procedure, and no writ of injunction was
       either issuable or returnable on a legal holiday, when no courts
       were sitting. Nevertheless, by three o'clock in the afternoon an
       obliging magistrate was found who consented to issue an injunction
       staying this terrible crime. By this time, however, the building
       was gone, the excavation complete. It remained merely for the
       West Chicago Street Railway Company to secure an injunction vacating
       the first injunction, praying that its rights, privileges, liberties,
       etc., be not interfered with, and so creating a contest which
       naturally threw the matter into the State Court of Appeals, where
       it could safely lie. For several years there were numberless
       injunctions, writs of errors, doubts, motions to reconsider, threats
       to carry the matter from the state to the federal courts on a
       matter of constitutional privilege, and the like. The affair was
       finally settled out of court, for Mr. Purdy by this time was a
       more sensible man. In the mean time, however, the newspapers had
       been given full details of the transaction, and a storm of words
       against Cowperwood ensued.
       But more disturbing than the Redmond Purdy incident was the rivalry
       of a new Chicago street-railway company. It appeared first as an
       idea in the brain of one James Furnivale Woolsen, a determined
       young Westerner from California, and developed by degrees into
       consents and petitions from fully two-thirds of the residents of
       various streets in the extreme southwest section of the city where
       it was proposed the new line should be located. This same James
       Furnivale Woolsen, being an ambitious person, was not to be so
       easily put down. Besides the consent and petitions, which Cowperwood
       could not easily get away from him, he had a new form of traction
       then being tried out in several minor cities--a form of electric
       propulsion by means of an overhead wire and a traveling pole, which
       was said to be very economical, and to give a service better than
       cables and cheaper even than horses.
       Cowperwood had heard all about this new electric system some time
       before, and had been studying it for several years with the greatest
       interest, since it promised to revolutionize the whole business
       of street-railroading. However, having but so recently completed
       his excellent cable system, he did not see that it was advisable
       to throw it away. The trolley was as yet too much of a novelty;
       certainly it was not advisable to have it introduced into Chicago
       until he was ready to introduce it himself--first on his outlying
       feeder lines, he thought, then perhaps generally.
       But before he could take suitable action against Woolsen, that
       engaging young upstart, who was possessed of a high-power imagination
       and a gift of gab, had allied himself with such interested investors
       as Truman Leslie MacDonald, who saw here a heaven-sent opportunity
       of mulcting Cowperwood, and Jordan Jules, once the president of
       the North Chicago Gas Company, who had lost money through Cowperwood
       in the gas war. Two better instruments for goading a man whom
       they considered an enemy could not well be imagined--Truman Leslie
       with his dark, waspish, mistrustful, jealous eyes, and his slim,
       vital body; and Jordan Jules, short, rotund, sandy, a sickly crop
       of thin, oily, light hair growing down over his coat-collar, his
       forehead and crown glisteningly bald, his eyes a seeking, searching,
       revengeful blue. They in turn brought in Samuel Blackman, once
       president of the South Side Gas Company; Sunderland Sledd, of local
       railroad management and stock-investment fame; and Norrie Simms,
       president of the Douglas Trust Company, who, however, was little
       more than a fiscal agent. The general feeling was that Cowperwood's
       defensive tactics--which consisted in having the city council
       refuse to act--could be easily met.
       "Well, I think we can soon fix that," exclaimed young MacDonald,
       one morning at a meeting. "We ought to be able to smoke them out.
       A little publicity will do it."
       He appealed to his father, the editor of the Inquirer, but the
       latter refused to act for the time being, seeing that his son was
       interested. MacDonald, enraged at the do-nothing attitude of the
       council, invaded that body and demanded of Alderman Dowling, still
       leader, why this matter of the Chicago general ordinances was still
       lying unconsidered. Mr. Dowling, a large, mushy, placid man with
       blue eyes, an iron frame, and a beefy smile, vouchsafed the
       information that, although he was chairman of the committee on
       streets and alleys, he knew nothing about it. "I haven't been
       payin' much attention to things lately," he replied.
       Mr. MacDonald went to see the remaining members of this same
       committee. They were non-committal. They would have to look into
       the matter. Somebody claimed that there was a flaw in the petitions.
       Evidently there was crooked work here somewhere. Cowperwood was
       to blame, no doubt. MacDonald conferred with Blackman and Jordan
       Jules, and it was determined that the council should be harried
       into doing its duty. This was a legitimate enterprise. A new and
       better system of traction was being kept out of the city. Schryhart,
       since he was offered an interest, and since there was considerable
       chance of his being able to dominate the new enterprise, agreed
       that the ordinances ought to be acted upon. In consequence there
       was a renewed hubbub in the newspapers.
       It was pointed out through Schryhart's Chronicle, through Hyssop's
       and Merrill's papers, and through the Inquirer that such a situation
       was intolerable. If the dominant party, at the behest of so
       sinister an influence as Cowperwood, was to tie up all outside
       traction legislation, there could be but one thing left--an appeal
       to the voters of the city to turn the rascals out. No party could
       survive such a record of political trickery and financial jugglery.
       McKenty, Dowling, Cowperwood, and others were characterized as
       unreasonable obstructionists and debasing influences. But Cowperwood
       merely smiled. These were the caterwaulings of the enemy. Later,
       when young MacDonald threatened to bring legal action to compel
       the council to do its duty, Cowperwood and his associates were not
       so cheerful. A mandamus proceeding, however futile, would give
       the newspapers great opportunity for chatter; moreover, a city
       election was drawing near. However, McKenty and Cowperwood were
       by no means helpless. They had offices, jobs, funds, a well-organized
       party system, the saloons, the dives, and those dark chambers where
       at late hours ballot-boxes are incontinently stuffed.
       Did Cowperwood share personally in all this? Not at all. Or McKenty?
       No. In good tweed and fine linen they frequently conferred in the
       offices of the Chicago Trust Company, the president's office of
       the North Chicago Street Railway System, and Mr. Cowperwood's
       library. No dark scenes were ever enacted there. But just the
       same, when the time came, the Schryhart-Simms-MacDonald editorial
       combination did not win. Mr. McKenty's party had the votes. A
       number of the most flagrantly debauched aldermen, it is true, were
       defeated; but what is an alderman here and there? The newly elected
       ones, even in the face of pre-election promises and vows, could
       be easily suborned or convinced. So the anti-Cowperwood element
       was just where it was before; but the feeling against him was much
       stronger, and considerable sentiment generated in the public at
       large that there was something wrong with the Cowperwood method
       of street-railway control. _
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本书目录

Chapter I - The New City
chapter II - A Reconnoiter
chapter III - A Chicago Evening
chapter IV - Peter Laughlin & Co-
chapter V - Concerning A Wife And Family
chapter VI - The New Queen of the Home
chapter VII - Chicago Gas
chapter VIII - Now This is Fighting
chapter IX - In Search of Victory
chapter X - A Test
chapter XI - The Fruits of Daring
chapter XII - A New Retainer
chapter XIII - The Die is Cast
chapter XIV - Undercurrents
chapter XV - A New Affection
chapter XVI - A Fateful Interlude
chapter XVII - An Overture to Conflict
chapter XVIII - The Clash
chapter XIX - "Hell Hath No Fury--"
chapter XX - "Man and Superman"
chapter XXI - A Matter of Tunnels
chapter XXII - Street-railways at Last
chapter XXIII - The Power of the Press
chapter XXIV - The Coming of Stephanie Platow
chapter XXV - Airs from the Orient
chapter XXVI - Love and War
chapter XXVII - A Financier Bewitched
chapter XXVIII - The Exposure of Stephanie
chapter XXIX - A Family Quarrel
chapter XXX - Obstacles
chapter XXXI - Untoward Disclosures
chapter XXXII - A Supper Party
chapter XXXIII - Mr. Lynde to the Rescue
chapter XXXIV - Enter Hosmer
chapter XXXV - A Political Agreement
chapter XXXVI - An Election Draws Near
chapter XXXVII - Aileen's Revenge
chapter XXXVIII - An Hour of Defeat
chapter XXXIX - The New Administration
chapter XL - A Trip to Louisville
chapter XLI - The Daughter of Mrs Fleming Berenice
chapter XLII - F. A. Cowperwood, Guardian
chapter XLIII - The Planet Mars
chapter XLIV - A Franchise Obtained
chapter XLV - Changing Horizons
chapter XLVI - Depths and Heights
chapter XLVII - American Match
chapter XLVIII - Panicr
chapter XLIX - Mount Olympus
chapter L - A New York Mansion
chapter LI - The Revival of Hattie Starr
chapter LII - Behind the Arras
chapter LIII - A Declaration of Love
chapter LIV - Wanted--Fifty-year Franchises
chapter LV - Cowperwood and the Governor
chapter LVI - The Ordeal of Berenice
chapter LVII - Aileen's Last Card
chapter LVIII - A Marauder
chapter LIX - Capital and Public Rights
chapter LX - The Net
chapter LXI - The Cataclysm
chapter LXII - The Recompense