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Titan, The
chapter L - A New York Mansion
Theodore Dreiser
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       _ The failure of American Match the next morning was one of those
       events that stirred the city and the nation and lingered in the
       minds of men for years. At the last moment it was decided that
       in lieu of calling Cowperwood's loans Hull & Stackpole had best
       be sacrificed, the stock-exchange closed, and all trading ended.
       This protected stocks from at least a quotable decline and left
       the banks free for several days (ten all told) in which to repair
       their disrupted finances and buttress themselves against the
       eventual facts. Naturally, the minor speculators throughout the
       city--those who had expected to make a fortune out of this crash
       --raged and complained, but, being faced by an adamantine exchange
       directorate, a subservient press, and the alliance between the big
       bankers and the heavy quadrumvirate, there was nothing to be done.
       The respective bank presidents talked solemnly of "a mere temporary
       flurry," Hand, Schryhart, Merrill, and Arneel went still further
       into their pockets to protect their interests, and Cowperwood,
       triumphant, was roundly denounced by the smaller fry as a "bucaneer,"
       a "pirate," a "wolf"--indeed, any opprobrious term that came into
       their minds. The larger men faced squarely the fact that here was
       an enemy worthy of their steel. Would he master them? Was he
       already the dominant money power in Chicago? Could he thus flaunt
       their helplessness and his superiority in their eyes and before
       their underlings and go unwhipped?
       "I must give in!" Hosmer Hand had declared to Arneel and Schryhart,
       at the close of the Arneel house conference and as they stood in
       consultation after the others had departed. "We seem to be beaten
       to-night, but I, for one, am not through yet. He has won to-night,
       but he won't win always. This is a fight to a finish between me
       and him. The rest of you can stay in or drop out, just as you wish."
       "Hear, hear!" exclaimed Schryhart, laying a fervently sympathetic
       hand on his shoulder. "Every dollar that I have is at your service,
       Hosmer. This fellow can't win eventually. I'm with you to the end."
       Arneel, walking with Merrill and the others to the door, was silent
       and dour. He had been cavalierly affronted by a man who, but a
       few short years before, he would have considered a mere underling.
       Here was Cowperwood bearding the lion in his den, dictating terms
       to the principal financial figures of the city, standing up trig
       and resolute, smiling in their faces and telling them in so many
       words to go to the devil. Mr. Arneel glowered under lowering
       brows, but what could he do? "We must see," he said to the others,
       "what time will bring. Just now there is nothing much to do.
       This crisis has been too sudden. You say you are not through with
       him, Hosmer, and neither am I. But we must wait. We shall have
       to break him politically in this city, and I am confident that in
       the end we can do it." The others were grateful for his courage
       even though to-morrow he and they must part with millions to protect
       themselves and the banks. For the first time Merrill concluded
       that he would have to fight Cowperwood openly from now on, though
       even yet he admired his courage. "But he is too defiant, too
       cavalier! A very lion of a man," he said to himself. "A man with
       the heart of a Numidian lion."
       It was true.
       From this day on for a little while, and because there was no
       immediate political contest in sight, there was comparative peace
       in Chicago, although it more resembled an armed camp operating
       under the terms of some agreed neutrality than it did anything
       else. Schryhart, Hand, Arneel, and Merrill were quietly watchful.
       Cowperwood's chief concern was lest his enemies might succeed in
       their project of worsting him politically in one or all three of
       the succeeding elections which were due to occur every two years
       between now and 1903, at which time his franchises would have to
       be renewed. As in the past they had made it necessary for him to
       work against them through bribery and perjury, so in ensuing
       struggles they might render it more and more difficult for him or
       his agents to suborn the men elected to office. The subservient
       and venal councilmen whom he now controlled might be replaced by
       men who, if no more honest, would be more loyal to the enemy, thus
       blocking the extension of his franchises. Yet upon a renewal
       period of at least twenty and preferably fifty years depended the
       fulfilment of all the colossal things he had begun--his art-collection,
       his new mansion, his growing prestige as a financier, his
       rehabilitation socially, and the celebration of his triumph by a
       union, morganatic or otherwise, with some one who would be worthy
       to share his throne.
       It is curious how that first and most potent tendency of the human
       mind, ambition, becomes finally dominating. Here was Cowperwood
       at fifty-seven, rich beyond the wildest dream of the average man,
       celebrated in a local and in some respects in a national way, who
       was nevertheless feeling that by no means had his true aims been
       achieved. He was not yet all-powerful as were divers Eastern
       magnates, or even these four or five magnificently moneyed men
       here in Chicago who, by plodding thought and labor in many dreary
       fields such as Cowperwood himself frequently scorned, had reaped
       tremendous and uncontended profits. How was it, he asked himself,
       that his path had almost constantly been strewn with stormy
       opposition and threatened calamity? Was it due to his private
       immorality? Other men were immoral; the mass, despite religious
       dogma and fol-de-rol theory imposed from the top, was generally
       so. Was it not rather due to his inability to control without
       dominating personally--without standing out fully and clearly in
       the sight of all men? Sometimes he thought so. The humdrum
       conventional world could not brook his daring, his insouciance,
       his constant desire to call a spade a spade. His genial sufficiency
       was a taunt and a mockery to many. The hard implication of his
       eye was dreaded by the weaker as fire is feared by a burnt child.
       Dissembling enough, he was not sufficiently oily and make-believe.
       Well, come what might, he did not need to be or mean to be so, and
       there the game must lie; but he had not by any means attained the
       height of his ambition. He was not yet looked upon as a money
       prince. He could not rank as yet with the magnates of the East
       --the serried Sequoias of Wall Street. Until he could stand with
       these men, until he could have a magnificent mansion, acknowledged
       as such by all, until he could have a world-famous gallery, Berenice,
       millions--what did it avail?
       The character of Cowperwood's New York house, which proved one of
       the central achievements of his later years, was one of those
       flowerings--out of disposition which eventuate in the case of men
       quite as in that of plants. After the passing of the years neither
       a modified Gothic (such as his Philadelphia house had been), nor
       a conventionalized Norman-French, after the style of his Michigan
       Avenue home, seemed suitable to him. Only the Italian palaces of
       medieval or Renaissance origin which he had seen abroad now appealed
       to him as examples of what a stately residence should be. He was
       really seeking something which should not only reflect his private
       tastes as to a home, but should have the more enduring qualities
       of a palace or even a museum, which might stand as a monument to
       his memory. After much searching Cowperwood had found an architect
       in New York who suited him entirely--one Raymond Pyne, rake,
       raconteur, man-about-town--who was still first and foremost an
       artist, with an eye for the exceptional and the perfect. These
       two spent days and days together meditating on the details of this
       home museum. An immense gallery was to occupy the west wing of
       the house and be devoted to pictures; a second gallery should
       occupy the south wing and be given over to sculpture and large
       whorls of art; and these two wings were to swing as an L around
       the house proper, the latter standing in the angle between them.
       The whole structure was to be of a rich brownstone, heavily carved.
       For its interior decoration the richest woods, silks, tapestries,
       glass, and marbles were canvassed. The main rooms were to surround
       a great central court with a colonnade of pink-veined alabaster,
       and in the center there would be an electrically lighted fountain
       of alabaster and silver. Occupying the east wall a series of
       hanging baskets of orchids, or of other fresh flowers, were to
       give a splendid glow of color, a morning-sun effect, to this richly
       artificial realm. One chamber--a lounge on the second floor--was
       to be entirely lined with thin-cut transparent marble of a peach-blow
       hue, the lighting coming only through these walls and from without.
       Here in a perpetual atmosphere of sunrise were to be racks for
       exotic birds, a trellis of vines, stone benches, a central pool
       of glistening water, and an echo of music. Pyne assured him that
       after his death this room would make an excellent chamber in which
       to exhibit porcelains, jades, ivories, and other small objects of
       value.
       Cowperwood was now actually transferring his possessions to New
       York, and had persuaded Aileen to accompany him. Fine compound
       of tact and chicane that he was, he had the effrontery to assure
       her that they could here create a happier social life. His present
       plan was to pretend a marital contentment which had no basis solely
       in order to make this transition period as undisturbed as possible.
       Subsequently he might get a divorce, or he might make an arrangement
       whereby his life would be rendered happy outside the social pale.
       Of all this Berenice Fleming knew nothing at all. At the same
       time the building of this splendid mansion eventually awakened her
       to an understanding of the spirit of art that occupied the center
       of Cowperwood's iron personality and caused her to take a real
       interest in him. Before this she had looked on him as a kind of
       Western interloper coming East and taking advantage of her mother's
       good nature to scrape a little social courtesy. Now, however, all
       that Mrs. Carter had been telling her of his personality and
       achievements was becoming crystallized into a glittering chain of
       facts. This house, the papers were fond of repeating, would be a
       jewel of rare workmanship. Obviously the Cowperwoods were going
       to try to enter society. "What a pity it is," Mrs. Carter once
       said to Berenice, "that he couldn't have gotten a divorce from his
       wife before he began all this. I am so afraid they will never be
       received. He would be if he only had the right woman; but she--"
       Mrs. Carter, who had once seen Aileen in Chicago, shook her head
       doubtfully. "She is not the type," was her comment. "She has
       neither the air nor the understanding."
       "If he is so unhappy with her," observed Berenice, thoughtfully,
       "why doesn't he leave her? She can be happy without him. It is
       so silly--this cat-and-dog existence. Still I suppose she values
       the position he gives her," she added, "since she isn't so interesting
       herself."
       "I suppose," said Mrs. Carter, "that he married her twenty years
       ago, when he was a very different man from what he is to-day. She
       is not exactly coarse, but not clever enough. She cannot do what
       he would like to see done. I hate to see mismatings of this kind,
       and yet they are so common. I do hope, Bevy, that when you marry
       it will be some one with whom you can get along, though I do believe
       I would rather see you unhappy than poor."
       This was delivered as an early breakfast peroration in Central
       Park South, with the morning sun glittering on one of the nearest
       park lakes. Bevy, in spring-green and old-gold, was studying the
       social notes in one of the morning papers.
       "I think I should prefer to be unhappy with wealth than to be
       without it," she said, idly, without looking up.
       Her mother surveyed her admiringly, conscious of her imperious
       mood. What was to become of her? Would she marry well? Would she
       marry in time? Thus far no breath of the wretched days in Louisville
       had affected Berenice. Most of those with whom Mrs. Carter had
       found herself compelled to deal would be kind enough to keep her
       secret. But there were others. How near she had been to drifting
       on the rocks when Cowperwood had appeared!
       "After all," observed Berenice, thoughtfully, "Mr. Cowperwood isn't
       a mere money-grabber, is he? So many of these Western moneyed men
       are so dull."
       "My dear," exclaimed Mrs. Carter, who by now had become a confirmed
       satellite of her secret protector, "you don't understand him at
       all. He is a very astonishing man, I tell you. The world is
       certain to hear a lot more of Frank Cowperwood before he dies.
       You can say what you please, but some one has to make the money
       in the first place. It's little enough that good breeding does
       for you in poverty. I know, because I've seen plenty of our friends
       come down."
       In the new house, on a scaffold one day, a famous sculptor and his
       assistants were at work on a Greek frieze which represented dancing
       nymphs linked together by looped wreaths. Berenice and her mother
       happened to be passing. They stopped to look, and Cowperwood
       joined them. He waved his hand at the figures of the frieze, and
       said to Berenice, with his old, gay air, "If they had copied you
       they would have done better."
       "How charming of you!" she replied, with her cool, strange, blue
       eyes fixed on him. "They are beautiful." In spite of her earlier
       prejudices she knew now that he and she had one god in common--Art;
       and that his mind was fixed on things beautiful as on a shrine.
       He merely looked at her.
       "This house can be little more than a museum to me, he remarked,
       simply, when her mother was out of hearing; "but I shall build it
       as perfectly as I can. Perhaps others may enjoy it if I do not."
       She looked at him musingly, understandingly, and he smiled. She
       realized, of course, that he was trying to convey to her that he
       was lonely. _
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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