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Titan, The
chapter XXXIV - Enter Hosmer
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ It is needless to say that the solemn rage of Hand, to say nothing
       of the pathetic anger of Haguenin, coupled with the wrath of Redmond
       Purdy, who related to all his sad story, and of young MacDonald
       and his associates of the Chicago General Company, constituted an
       atmosphere highly charged with possibilities and potent for dramatic
       results. The most serious element in this at present was Hosmer
       Hand, who, being exceedingly wealthy and a director in a number
       of the principal mercantile and financial institutions of the city,
       was in a position to do Cowperwood some real financial harm. Hand
       had been extremely fond of his young wife. Being a man of but few
       experiences with women, it astonished and enraged him that a man
       like Cowperwood should dare to venture on his preserves in this
       reckless way, should take his dignity so lightly. He burned now
       with a hot, slow fire of revenge.
       Those who know anything concerning the financial world and its
       great adventures know how precious is that reputation for probity,
       solidarity, and conservatism on which so many of the successful
       enterprises of the world are based. If men are not absolutely
       honest themselves they at least wish for and have faith in the
       honesty of others. No set of men know more about each other,
       garner more carefully all the straws of rumor which may affect the
       financial and social well being of an individual one way or another,
       keep a tighter mouth concerning their own affairs and a sharper
       eye on that of their neighbors. Cowperwood's credit had hitherto
       been good because it was known that he had a "soft thing" in the
       Chicago street-railway field, that he paid his interest charges
       promptly, that he had organized the group of men who now, under
       him, controlled the Chicago Trust Company and the North and West
       Chicago Street Railways, and that the Lake City Bank, of which
       Addison was still president, considered his collateral sound.
       Nevertheless, even previous to this time there had been a protesting
       element in the shape of Schryhart, Simms, and others of considerable
       import in the Douglas Trust, who had lost no chance to say to one
       and all that Cowperwood was an interloper, and that his course was
       marked by political and social trickery and chicanery, if not by
       financial dishonesty. As a matter of fact, Schryhart, who had
       once been a director of the Lake City National along with Hand,
       Arneel, and others, had resigned and withdrawn all his deposits
       sometime before because he found, as he declared, that Addison was
       favoring Cowperwood and the Chicago Trust Company with loans, when
       there was no need of so doing--when it was not essentially
       advantageous for the bank so to do. Both Arneel and Hand, having
       at this time no personal quarrel with Cowperwood on any score, had
       considered this protest as biased. Addison had maintained that
       the loans were neither unduly large nor out of proportion to the
       general loans of the bank. The collateral offered was excellent.
       "I don't want to quarrel with Schryhart," Addison had protested
       at the time; "but I am afraid his charge is unfair. He is trying
       to vent a private grudge through the Lake National. That is not
       the way nor this the place to do it."
       Both Hand and Arneel, sober men both, agreed with this--admiring
       Addison--and so the case stood. Schryhart, however, frequently
       intimated to them both that Cowperwood was merely building up the
       Chicago Trust Company at the expense of the Lake City National,
       in order to make the former strong enough to do without any aid,
       at which time Addison would resign and the Lake City would be
       allowed to shift for itself. Hand had never acted on this suggestion
       but he had thought.
       It was not until the incidents relating to Cowperwood and Mrs.
       Hand had come to light that things financial and otherwise began
       to darken up. Hand, being greatly hurt in his pride, contemplated
       only severe reprisal. Meeting Schryhart at a directors' meeting
       one day not long after his difficulty had come upon him, he remarked:
       "I thought a few years ago, Norman, when you talked to me about
       this man Cowperwood that you were merely jealous--a dissatisfied
       business rival. Recently a few things have come to my notice which
       cause me to think differently. It is very plain to me now that
       the man is thoroughly bad--from the crown of his head to the soles
       of his feet. It's a pity the city has to endure him."
       "So you're just beginning to find that out, are you, Hosmer?"
       answered Schryhart. "Well, I'll not say I told you so. Perhaps
       you'll agree with me now that the responsible people of Chicago
       ought to do something about it."
       Hand, a very heavy, taciturn man, merely looked at him. "I'll be
       ready enough to do," he said, "when I see how and what's to be
       done."
       A little later Schryhart, meeting Duane Kingsland, learned the
       true source of Hand's feeling against Cowperwood, and was not slow
       in transferring this titbit to Merrill, Simms, and others. Merrill,
       who, though Cowperwood had refused to extend his La Salle Street
       tunnel loop about State Street and his store, had hitherto always
       liked him after a fashion--remotely admired his courage and
       daring--was now appropriately shocked.
       "Why, Anson," observed Schryhart, "the man is no good. He has the
       heart of a hyena and the friendliness of a scorpion. You heard
       how he treated Hand, didn't you?"
       "No," replied Merrill, "I didn't."
       "Well, it's this way, so I hear." And Schryhart leaned over and
       confidentially communicated considerable information into Mr.
       Merrill's left ear.
       The latter raised his eyebrows. "Indeed!" he said.
       "And the way he came to meet her," added Schryhart, contemptuously,
       "was this. He went to Hand originally to borrow two hundred and
       fifty thousand dollars on West Chicago Street Railway. Angry? The
       word is no name for it."
       "You don't say so," commented Merrill, dryly, though privately
       interested and fascinated, for Mrs. Hand had always seemed very
       attractive to him. "I don't wonder."
       He recalled that his own wife had recently insisted on inviting
       Cowperwood once.
       Similarly Hand, meeting Arneel not so long afterward, confided to
       him that Cowperwood was trying to repudiate a sacred agreement.
       Arneel was grieved and surprised. It was enough for him to know
       that Hand had been seriously injured. Between the two of them
       they now decided to indicate to Addison, as president of the Lake
       City Bank, that all relations with Cowperwood and the Chicago Trust
       Company must cease. The result of this was, not long after, that
       Addison, very suave and gracious, agreed to give Cowperwood due
       warning that all his loans would have to be taken care of and then
       resigned--to become, seven months later, president of the Chicago
       Trust Company. This desertion created a great stir at the time,
       astonishing the very men who had suspected that it might come to
       pass. The papers were full of it.
       "Well, let him go," observed Arneel to Hand, sourly, on the day
       that Addison notified the board of directors of the Lake City of
       his contemplated resignation. "If he wants to sever his connection
       with a bank like this to go with a man like that, it's his own
       lookout. He may live to regret it."
       It so happened that by now another election was pending Chicago,
       and Hand, along with Schryhart and Arneel--who joined their forces
       because of his friendship for Hand--decided to try to fight
       Cowperwood through this means.
       Hosmer Hand, feeling that he had the burden of a great duty upon
       him, was not slow in acting. He was always, when aroused, a
       determined and able fighter. Needing an able lieutenant in the
       impending political conflict, he finally bethought himself of a
       man who had recently come to figure somewhat conspicuously in
       Chicago politics--one Patrick Gilgan, the same Patrick Gilgan of
       Cowperwood's old Hyde Park gas-war days. Mr. Gilgan was now a
       comparatively well-to-do man. Owing to a genial capacity for
       mixing with people, a close mouth, and absolutely no understanding
       of, and consequently no conscience in matters of large public
       import (in so far as they related to the so-called rights of the
       mass), he was a fit individual to succeed politically. His saloon
       was the finest in all Wentworth Avenue. It fairly glittered with
       the newly introduced incandescent lamp reflected in a perfect world
       of beveled and faceted mirrors. His ward, or district, was full
       of low, rain-beaten cottages crowded together along half-made
       streets; but Patrick Gilgan was now a state senator, slated for
       Congress at the next Congressional election, and a possible successor
       of the Hon. John J. McKenty as dictator of the city, if only the
       Republican party should come into power. (Hyde Park, before it
       had been annexed to the city, had always been Republican, and since
       then, although the larger city was normally Democratic, Gilgan
       could not conveniently change.) Hearing from the political discussion
       which preceded the election that Gilgan was by far the most powerful
       politician on the South Side, Hand sent for him. Personally, Hand
       had far less sympathy with the polite moralistic efforts of men
       like Haguenin, Hyssop, and others, who were content to preach
       morality and strive to win by the efforts of the unco good, than
       he had with the cold political logic of a man like Cowperwood
       himself. If Cowperwood could work through McKenty to such a
       powerful end, he, Hand, could find some one else who could be made
       as powerful as McKenty.
       "Mr. Gilgan," said Hand, when the Irishman came in, medium tall,
       beefy, with shrewd, twinkling gray eyes and hairy hands, "you don't
       know me--"
       "I know of you well enough," smiled the Irishman, with a soft
       brogue. "You don't need an introduction to talk to me."
       "Very good," replied Hand, extending his hand. "I know of you,
       too. Then we can talk. It's the political situation here in
       Chicago I'd like to discuss with you. I'm not a politician myself,
       but I take some interest in what's going on. I want to know what
       you think will be the probable outcome of the present situation
       here in the city."
       Gilgan, having no reason for laying his private political convictions
       bare to any one whose motive he did not know, merely replied: "Oh,
       I think the Republicans may have a pretty good show. They have
       all but one or two of the papers with them, I see. I don't know
       much outside of what I read and hear people talk."
       Mr. Hand knew that Gilgan was sparring, and was glad to find his
       man canny and calculating.
       "I haven't asked you to come here just to be talking over politics
       in general, as you may imagine, Mr. Gilgan. I want to put a
       particular problem before you. Do you happen to know either Mr.
       McKenty or Mr. Cowperwood?"
       "I never met either of them to talk to," replied Gilgan. "I know
       Mr. McKenty by sight, and I've seen Mr. Cowperwood once." He said
       no more.
       "Well," said Mr. Hand, "suppose a group of influential men here
       in Chicago were to get together and guarantee sufficient funds for
       a city-wide campaign; now, if you had the complete support of the
       newspapers and the Republican organization in the bargain, could
       you organize the opposition here so that the Democratic party could
       be beaten this fall? I'm not talking about the mayor merely and
       the principal city officers, but the council, too--the aldermen.
       I want to fix things so that the McKenty-Cowperwood crowd couldn't
       get an alderman or a city official to sell out, once they are
       elected. I want the Democratic party beaten so thoroughly that
       there won't be any question in anybody's mind as to the fact that
       it has been done. There will be plenty of money forthcoming if
       you can prove to me, or, rather, to the group of men I am thinking
       of, that the thing can be done."
       Mr. Gilgan blinked his eyes solemnly. He rubbed his knees, put
       his thumbs in the armholes of his vest, took out a cigar, lit it,
       and gazed poetically at the ceiling. He was thinking very, very
       hard. Mr. Cowperwood and Mr. McKenty, as he knew, were very
       powerful men. He had always managed to down the McKenty opposition
       in his ward, and several others adjacent to it, and in the Eighteenth
       Senatorial District, which he represented. But to be called upon
       to defeat him in Chicago, that was different. Still, the thought
       of a large amount of cash to be distributed through him, and the
       chance of wresting the city leadership from McKenty by the aid of
       the so-called moral forces of the city, was very inspiring. Mr.
       Gilgan was a good politician. He loved to scheme and plot and
       make deals--as much for the fun of it as anything else. Just now
       he drew a solemn face, which, however, concealed a very light heart.
       "I have heard," went on Hand, "that you have built up a strong
       organization in your ward and district."
       "I've managed to hold me own," suggested Gilgan, archly. "But
       this winning all over Chicago," he went on, after a moment, "now,
       that's a pretty large order. There are thirty-one wards in Chicago
       this election, and all but eight of them are nominally Democratic.
       I know most of the men that are in them now, and some of them are
       pretty shrewd men, too. This man Dowling in council is nobody's
       fool, let me tell you that. Then there's Duvanicki and Ungerich
       and Tiernan and Kerrigan--all good men." He mentioned four of the
       most powerful and crooked aldermen in the city. "You see, Mr.
       Hand, the way things are now the Democrats have the offices, and
       the small jobs to give out. That gives them plenty of political
       workers to begin with. Then they have the privilege of collecting
       money from those in office to help elect themselves. That's another
       great privilege." He smiled. "Then this man Cowperwood employs
       all of ten thousand men at present, and any ward boss that's
       favorable to him can send a man out of work to him and he'll find
       a place for him. That's a gre-a-eat help in building up a party
       following. Then there's the money a man like Cowperwood and others
       can contribute at election time. Say what you will, Mr. Hand, but
       it's the two, and five, and ten dollar bills paid out at the last
       moment over the saloon bars and at the polling-places that do the
       work. Give me enough money"--and at this noble thought Mr. Gilgan
       straightened up and slapped one fist lightly in the other, adjusting
       at the same time his half-burned cigar so that it should not burn
       his hand--"and I can carry every ward in Chicago, bar none. If I
       have money enough," he repeated, emphasizing the last two words.
       He put his cigar back in his mouth, blinked his eyes defiantly,
       and leaned back in his chair.
       "Very good," commented Hand, simply; "but how much money?"
       "Ah, that's another question," replied Gilgan, straightening up
       once more. "Some wards require more than others. Counting out
       the eight that are normally Republican as safe, you would have to
       carry eighteen others to have a majority in council. I don't see
       how anything under ten to fifteen thousand dollars to a ward would
       be safe to go on. I should say three hundred thousand dollars
       would be safer, and that wouldn't be any too much by any means."
       Mr. Gilgan restored his cigar and puffed heavily the while he
       leaned back and lifted his eyes once more.
       "And how would that money be distributed exactly?" inquired Mr.
       Hand.
       "Oh, well, it's never wise to look into such matters too closely,"
       commented Mr. Gilgan, comfortably. "There's such a thing as cutting
       your cloth too close in politics. There are ward captains, leaders,
       block captains, workers. They all have to have money to do with
       --to work up sentiment--and you can't be too inquiring as to just
       how they do it. It's spent in saloons, and buying coal for mother,
       and getting Johnnie a new suit here and there. Then there are
       torch-light processions and club-rooms and jobs to look after.
       Sure, there's plenty of places for it. Some men may have to be
       brought into these wards to live--kept in boarding-houses for a
       week or ten days." He waved a hand deprecatingly.
       Mr. Hand, who had never busied himself with the minutiae of politics,
       opened his eyes slightly. This colonizing idea was a little
       liberal, he thought.
       "Who distributes this money?" he asked, finally.
       "Nominally, the Republican County Committee, if it's in charge;
       actually, the man or men who are leading the fight. In the case
       of the Democratic party it's John J. McKenty, and don't you forget
       it. In my district it's me. and no one else."
       Mr. Hand, slow, solid, almost obtuse at times, meditated under
       lowering brows. He had always been associated with a more or less
       silk-stocking crew who were unused to the rough usage of back-room
       saloon politics, yet every one suspected vaguely, of course, at
       times that ballot-boxes were stuffed and ward lodging-houses
       colonized. Every one (at least every one of any worldly intelligence)
       knew that political capital was collected from office-seekers,
       office-holders, beneficiaries of all sorts and conditions under
       the reigning city administration. Mr. Hand had himself contributed
       to the Republican party for favors received or about to be. As a
       man who had been compelled to handle large affairs in a large way
       he was not inclined to quarrel with this. Three hundred thousand
       dollars was a large sum, and he was not inclined to subscribe it
       alone, but fancied that at his recommendation and with his advice
       it could be raised. Was Gilgan the man to fight Cowperwood? He
       looked him over and decided--other things being equal--that he was.
       And forthwith the bargain was struck. Gilgan, as a Republican
       central committeeman--chairman, possibly--was to visit every ward,
       connect up with every available Republican force, pick strong,
       suitable anti-Cowperwood candidates, and try to elect them, while
       he, Hand, organized the money element and collected the necessary
       cash. Gilgan was to be given money personally. He was to have
       the undivided if secret support of all the high Republican elements
       in the city. His business was to win at almost any cost. And as
       a reward he was to have the Republican support for Congress, or,
       failing that, the practical Republican leadership in city and county.
       "Anyhow," said Hand, after Mr. Gilgan finally took his departure,
       "things won't be so easy for Mr. Cowperwood in the future as they
       were in the past. And when it comes to getting his franchises
       renewed, if I'm alive, we'll see whether he will or not."
       The heavy financier actually growled a low growl as he spoke out
       loud to himself. He felt a boundless rancor toward the man who
       had, as he supposed, alienated the affections of his smart young
       wife. _
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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