您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Titan, The
chapter XLV - Changing Horizons
Theodore Dreiser
下载:Titan, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ The effect of all this was to arouse in Cowperwood the keenest
       feelings of superiority he had ever yet enjoyed. Hitherto he had
       fancied that his enemies might worst him, but at last his path
       seemed clear. He was now worth, all in all, the round sum of
       twenty million dollars. His art-collection had become the most
       important in the West--perhaps in the nation, public collections
       excluded. He began to envision himself as a national figure,
       possibly even an international one. And yet he was coming to feel
       that, no matter how complete his financial victory might ultimately
       be, the chances were that he and Aileen would never be socially
       accepted here in Chicago. He had done too many boisterous things
       --alienated too many people. He was as determined as ever to
       retain a firm grip on the Chicago street-railway situation. But
       he was disturbed for a second time in his life by the thought
       that, owing to the complexities of his own temperament, he had
       married unhappily and would find the situation difficult of
       adjustment. Aileen, whatever might be said of her deficiencies,
       was by no means as tractable or acquiescent as his first wife.
       And, besides, he felt that he owed her a better turn. By no means
       did he actually dislike her as yet; though she was no longer
       soothing, stimulating, or suggestive to him as she had formerly
       been. Her woes, because of him, were too many; her attitude toward
       him too censorious. He was perfectly willing to sympathize with
       her, to regret his own change of feeling, but what would you? He
       could not control his own temperament any more than Aileen could
       control hers.
       The worst of this situation was that it was now becoming complicated
       on Cowperwood's part with the most disturbing thoughts concerning
       Berenice Fleming. Ever since the days when he had first met her
       mother he had been coming more and more to feel for the young girl
       a soul-stirring passion--and that without a single look exchanged
       or a single word spoken. There is a static something which is
       beauty, and this may be clothed in the habiliments of a ragged
       philosopher or in the silks and satins of pampered coquetry. It
       was a suggestion of this beauty which is above sex and above age
       and above wealth that shone in the blowing hair and night-blue
       eyes of Berenice Fleming. His visit to the Carter family at Pocono
       had been a disappointment to him, because of the apparent hopelessness
       of arousing Berenice's interest, and since that time, and during
       their casual encounters, she had remained politely indifferent.
       Nevertheless, he remained true to his persistence in the pursuit
       of any game he had fixed upon.
       Mrs. Carter, whose relations with Cowperwood had in the past been
       not wholly platonic, nevertheless attributed much of his interest
       in her to her children and their vital chance. Berenice and Rolfe
       themselves knew nothing concerning the nature of their mother's
       arrangements with Cowperwood. True to his promise of protectorship
       and assistance, he had established her in a New York apartment
       adjacent to her daughter's school, and where he fancied that he
       himself might spend many happy hours were Berenice but near.
       Proximity to Berenice! The desire to arouse her interest and command
       her favor! Cowperwood would scarcely have cared to admit to himself
       how great a part this played in a thought which had recently been
       creeping into his mind. It was that of erecting a splendid house
       in New York.
       By degrees this idea of building a New York house had grown upon
       him. His Chicago mansion was a costly sepulcher in which Aileen
       sat brooding over the woes which had befallen her. Moreover, aside
       from the social defeat which it represented, it was becoming merely
       as a structure, but poorly typical of the splendor and ability of
       his imaginations. This second dwelling, if he ever achieved it,
       should be resplendent, a monument to himself. In his speculative
       wanderings abroad he had seen many such great palaces, designed
       with the utmost care, which had housed the taste and culture of
       generations of men. His art-collection, in which he took an
       immense pride, had been growing, until it was the basis if not the
       completed substance for a very splendid memorial. Already in it
       were gathered paintings of all the important schools; to say nothing
       of collections of jade, illumined missals, porcelains, rugs,
       draperies, mirror frames, and a beginning at rare originals of
       sculpture. The beauty of these strange things, the patient laborings
       of inspired souls of various times and places, moved him, on
       occasion, to a gentle awe. Of all individuals he respected, indeed
       revered, the sincere artist. Existence was a mystery, but these
       souls who set themselves to quiet tasks of beauty had caught
       something of which he was dimly conscious. Life had touched them
       with a vision, their hearts and souls were attuned to sweet harmonies
       of which the common world knew nothing. Sometimes, when he was
       weary after a strenuous day, he would enter--late in the night
       --his now silent gallery, and turning on the lights so that the
       whole sweet room stood revealed, he would seat himself before some
       treasure, reflecting on the nature, the mood, the time, and the
       man that had produced it. Sometimes it would be one of Rembrandt's
       melancholy heads--the sad "Portrait of a Rabbi"--or the sweet
       introspection of a Rousseau stream. A solemn Dutch housewife,
       rendered with the bold fidelity and resonant enameled surfaces of
       a Hals or the cold elegance of an Ingres, commanded his utmost
       enthusiasm. So he would sit and wonder at the vision and skill
       of the original dreamer, exclaiming at times: "A marvel! A marvel!"
       At the same time, so far as Aileen was concerned things were
       obviously shaping up for additional changes. She was in that
       peculiar state which has befallen many a woman--trying to substitute
       a lesser ideal for a greater, and finding that the effort is useless
       or nearly so. In regard to her affair with Lynde, aside from the
       temporary relief and diversion it had afforded her, she was beginning
       to feel that she had made a serious mistake. Lynde was delightful,
       after his fashion. He could amuse her with a different type of
       experience from any that Cowperwood had to relate. Once they were
       intimate he had, with an easy, genial air, confessed to all sorts
       of liaisons in Europe and America. He was utterly pagan--a faun
       --and at the same time he was truly of the smart world. His open
       contempt of all but one or two of the people in Chicago whom Aileen
       had secretly admired and wished to associate with, and his easy
       references to figures of importance in the East and in Paris and
       London, raised him amazingly in her estimation; it made her feel,
       sad to relate, that she had by no means lowered herself in succumbing
       so readily to his forceful charms.
       Nevertheless, because he was what he was--genial, complimentary,
       affectionate, but a playboy, merely, and a soldier of fortune,
       with no desire to make over her life for her on any new basis--she
       was now grieving over the futility of this romance which had got
       her nowhere, and which, in all probability, had alienated Cowperwood
       for good. He was still outwardly genial and friendly, but their
       relationship was now colored by a sense of mistake and uncertainty
       which existed on both sides, but which, in Aileen's case, amounted
       to a subtle species of soul-torture. Hitherto she had been the
       aggrieved one, the one whose loyalty had never been in question,
       and whose persistent affection and faith had been greatly sinned
       against. Now all this was changed. The manner in which he had
       sinned against her was plain enough, but the way in which, out of
       pique, she had forsaken him was in the other balance. Say what
       one will, the loyalty of woman, whether a condition in nature or
       an evolved accident of sociology, persists as a dominating thought
       in at least a section of the race; and women themselves, be it
       said, are the ones who most loudly and openly subscribe to it.
       Cowperwood himself was fully aware that Aileen had deserted him,
       not because she loved him less or Lynde more, but because she was
       hurt--and deeply so. Aileen knew that he knew this. From one
       point of view it enraged her and made her defiant; from another
       it grieved her to think she had uselessly sinned against his faith
       in her. Now he had ample excuse to do anything he chose. Her
       best claim on him--her wounds--she had thrown away as one throws
       away a weapon. Her pride would not let her talk to him about this,
       and at the same time she could not endure the easy, tolerant manner
       with which he took it. His smiles, his forgiveness, his sometimes
       pleasant jesting were all a horrible offense.
       To complete her mental quandary, she was already beginning to
       quarrel with Lynde over this matter of her unbreakable regard for
       Cowperwood. With the sufficiency of a man of the world Lynde
       intended that she should succumb to him completely and forget her
       wonderful husband. When with him she was apparently charmed and
       interested, yielding herself freely, but this was more out of pique
       at Cowperwood's neglect than from any genuine passion for Lynde.
       In spite of her pretensions of anger, her sneers, and criticisms
       whenever Cowperwood's name came up, she was, nevertheless, hopelessly
       fond of him and identified with him spiritually, and it was not
       long before Lynde began to suspect this. Such a discovery is a
       sad one for any master of women to make. It jolted his pride
       severely.
       "You care for him still, don't you?" he asked, with a wry smile,
       upon one occasion. They were sitting at dinner in a private room
       at Kinsley's, and Aileen, whose color was high, and who was
       becomingly garbed in metallic-green silk, was looking especially
       handsome. Lynde had been proposing that she should make special
       arrangements to depart with him for a three-months' stay in Europe,
       but she would have nothing to do with the project. She did not
       dare. Such a move would make Cowperwood feel that she was alienating
       herself forever; it would give him an excellent excuse to leave
       her.
       "Oh, it isn't that," she had declared, in reply to Lynde's query.
       "I just don't want to go. I can't. I'm not prepared. It's
       nothing but a notion of yours, anyhow. You're tired of Chicago
       because it's getting near spring. You go and I'll be here when
       you come back, or I may decide to come over later." She smiled.
       Lynde pulled a dark face.
       "Hell!" he said. "I know how it is with you. You still stick to
       him, even when he treats you like a dog. You pretend not to love
       him when as a matter of fact you're mad about him. I've seen it
       all along. You don't really care anything about me. You can't.
       You're too crazy about him."
       "Oh, shut up!" replied Aileen, irritated greatly for the moment
       by this onslaught. "You talk like a fool. I'm not anything of
       the sort. I admire him. How could any one help it?" (At this
       time, of course, Cowperwood's name was filling the city.) "He's a
       very wonderful man. He was never brutal to me. He's a full-sized
       man--I'll say that for him."
       By now Aileen had become sufficiently familiar with Lynde to
       criticize him in her own mind, and even outwardly by innuendo, for
       being a loafer and idler who had never created in any way the money
       he was so freely spending. She had little power to psychologize
       concerning social conditions, but the stalwart constructive
       persistence of Cowperwood along commercial lines coupled with the
       current American contempt of leisure reflected somewhat unfavorably
       upon Lynde, she thought.
       Lynde's face clouded still more at this outburst. "You go to the
       devil," he retorted. "I don't get you at all. Sometimes you talk
       as though you were fond of me. At other times you're all wrapped
       up in him. Now you either care for me or you don't. Which is it?
       If you're so crazy about him that you can't leave home for a month
       or so you certainly can't care much about me."
       Aileen, however, because of her long experience with Cowperwood,
       was more than a match for Lynde. At the same time she was afraid
       to let go of him for fear that she should have no one to care for
       her. She liked him. He was a happy resource in her misery, at
       least for the moment. Yet the knowledge that Cowperwood looked
       upon this affair as a heavy blemish on her pristine solidarity
       cooled her. At the thought of him and of her whole tarnished and
       troubled career she was very unhappy.
       "Hell!" Lynde had repeated, irritably, "stay if you want to. I'll
       not be trying to over-persuade you--depend on that."
       They quarreled still further over this matter, and, though they
       eventually made up, both sensed the drift toward an ultimately
       unsatisfactory conclusion.
       It was one morning not long after this that Cowperwood, feeling
       in a genial mood over his affairs, came into Aileen's room, as he
       still did on occasions, to finish dressing and pass the time of
       day.
       "Well," he observed, gaily, as he stood before the mirror adjusting
       his collar and tie, "how are you and Lynde getting along these
       days--nicely?"
       "Oh, you go to the devil!" replied Aileen, flaring up and struggling
       with her divided feelings, which pained her constantly. "If it
       hadn't been for you there wouldn't be any chance for your smarty
       'how-am-I-getting-alongs.' I am getting along all right--fine
       --regardless of anything you may think. He's as good a man as
       you are any day, and better. I like him. At least he's fond of
       me, and that's more than you are. Why should you care what I do?
       You don't, so why talk about it? I want you to let me alone."
       "Aileen, Aileen, how you carry on! Don't flare up so. I meant
       nothing by it. I'm sorry as much for myself as for you. I've
       told you I'm not jealous. You think I'm critical. I'm not anything
       of the kind. I know how you feel. That's all very good."
       "Oh yes, yes," she replied. "Well, you can keep your feelings to
       yourself. Go to the devil! Go to the devil, I tell you!" Her eyes
       blazed.
       He stood now, fully dressed, in the center of the rug before her,
       and Aileen looked at him, keen, valiant, handsome--her old Frank.
       Once again she regretted her nominal faithlessness, and raged at
       him in her heart for his indifference. "You dog," she was about
       to add, "you have no heart!" but she changed her mind. Her throat
       tightened and her eyes filled. She wanted to run to him and say:
       "Oh, Frank, don't you understand how it all is, how it all came
       about? Won't you love me again--can't you?" But she restrained
       herself. It seemed to her that he might understand--that he would,
       in fact--but that he would never again be faithful, anyhow. And
       she would so gladly have discarded Lynde and any and all men if
       he would only have said the word, would only have really and
       sincerely wished her to do so.
       It was one day not long after their morning quarrel in her bedroom
       that Cowperwood broached the matter of living in New York to Aileen,
       pointing out that thereby his art-collection, which was growing
       constantly, might be more suitably housed, and that it would give
       her a second opportunity to enter social life.
       "So that you can get rid of me out here," commented Aileen, little
       knowing of Berenice Fleming.
       "Not at all," replied Cowperwood, sweetly. "You see how things
       are. There's no chance of our getting into Chicago society.
       There's too much financial opposition against me here. If we had
       a big house in New York, such as I would build, it would be an
       introduction in itself. After all, these Chicagoans aren't even
       a snapper on the real society whip. It's the Easterners who set
       the pace, and the New-Yorkers most of all. If you want to say the
       word, I can sell this place and we can live down there, part of
       the time, anyhow. I could spend as much of my time with you there
       as I have been doing here--perhaps more."
       Because of her soul of vanity Aileen's mind ran forward in spite
       of herself to the wider opportunities which his words suggested.
       This house had become a nightmare to her--a place of neglect and
       bad memories. Here she had fought with Rita Sohlberg; here she
       had seen society come for a very little while only to disappear;
       here she had waited this long time for the renewal of Cowperwood's
       love, which was now obviously never to be restored in its original
       glamour. As he spoke she looked at him quizzically, almost sadly
       in her great doubt. At the same time she could not help reflecting
       that in New York where money counted for so much, and with
       Cowperwood's great and growing wealth and prestige behind her, she
       might hope to find herself socially at last. "Nothing venture,
       nothing have" had always been her motto, nailed to her mast, though
       her equipment for the life she now craved had never been more than
       the veriest make-believe--painted wood and tinsel. Vain, radiant,
       hopeful Aileen! Yet how was she to know?
       "Very well," she observed, finally. "Do as you like. I can live
       down there as well as I can here, I presume--alone."
       Cowperwood knew the nature of her longings. He knew what was
       running in her mind, and how futile were her dreams. Life had
       taught him how fortuitous must be the circumstances which could
       enable a woman of Aileen's handicaps and defects to enter that
       cold upper world. Yet for all the courage of him, for the very
       life of him, he could not tell her. He could not forget that once,
       behind the grim bars in the penitentiary for the Eastern District
       of Pennsylvania, he had cried on her shoulder. He could not be
       an ingrate and wound her with his inmost thoughts any more than
       he could deceive himself. A New York mansion and the dreams of
       social supremacy which she might there entertain would soothe her
       ruffled vanity and assuage her disappointed heart; and at the same
       time he would be nearer Berenice Fleming. Say what one will of
       these ferret windings of the human mind, they are, nevertheless,
       true and characteristic of the average human being, and Cowperwood
       was no exception. He saw it all, he calculated on it--he calculated
       on the simple humanity of Aileen. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

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